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10 - The Daily Set'ltirlel, Middleport·l'omerpy, 0 .. Friday, Jan. 31, 1975

Saturday

HOSPITAL

Crisis
Conhnul'l1 from pagr l

Continurrl from page 1
significant progr~ sS in

the

said, "for if we don't so lw tha t.

battle againsl heart and blood

we're not going to solve much

vessel diseases. During 1975.
these diseases will r lt~ im more
than one million lives. Chief
amon~ thest' :1rc heart attack.
stro ke and hypcrten!'i\'t'
diseases . High bltwd pressun·
- a major contribut or to thf"se
killer diseases - afflic ts 2:1

of anything else."
Study panels and dinner
speeches at the meeting are
reflecting the same llleme, and
exploring ways '•the average
buyer can beat the food
distribution system.
Rep . Ed Mezvmsky, D-lowa,

milli on Alncr i{'ans .

told one sessio n a farmers'
market in eac h town was the

Jamrs E. Rous h. chairman
of the 1\·l cigs Cuulll) Heart

answer -an approach tha t

Ftmd

t:ould save consumers as much
as one-third on their grocery

Campa ig n,

residrnts

urges

all

~ uppurt

tu

tomorrow's salt·.

BOARD TIJ

bills.
Others ta lked of the increas·
ing numbers of food co -ops, and

~ IEI·lT

Th(' \'leig s C••unty Fai r
llo&lt;1r&lt;l will tllt'&lt;'l at 8 p.m .
Mocday at the scc rel~tr,r 's
office .on tht&gt;w- Hoc k Springs
Fai rgrolmds .

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT fhru SU NDAY
JAN . Jl .FE B. 2

THE TRIAl OF
BillY JA CK
( Techn1color J

sim ilar a r ra ngements

for

Lit tle, Athens; Fannie Wes t,

Pomeroy: Me lindtt Spen&lt;:cr,
Pomeroy; Susan J. Kin g.
Pomeroy.

DISCHARGED
Dale
Quee n. .James Reynolds, Jr.,
E:ur01 Large nt. Helen Bur tr um .
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharged, Jan. 30!
Helen Arnott, Charles Baker,
Gary Black. Fern Boyles. Mrs.
Th omas

James
Too th man,
an
agric ultural econom ist at

daughter,

Pe nnsylvanta State Unjversity,
said one new develtJpment
being trted out in Europe might
eventually work in the United
States. That, he said , is a store
which handles only perhaps 400
fast moving food items, with a
high lurnover rate, instead of
the 8,000 or so found in big
supermarkets with their high

Emma Crooks, Clint Dav is,

St.=trrmq Tom Lt'lughlin

Thl' f1 r st pat('nt for fal se

teet h wa s gnmtrd on Mclf(.:h !J.
1822 to Char les t.:raharn of New

York City

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

llt·allh uHil'ials
warn ol' Ppidt•m it·

COLUMBUS 1 UPI ) - The
Ohio Health Q.cPHrtment
Veterans Memorial Hospital . reported toda y that I he
ADMITTED
Warren Buckeye State is (n the midsl of
David Reeves, Albany; Mary a "modera te'' in fl uenz&lt;t
Wippel. Po metoy: Terr y epidemic .

crafts .

overhead.

Sho w Star ts 7:00p .m .

NEWS .

Angel&lt;~

Bozicevic
Rose mary

and
Burns,

Bus h, Florence Casey,

Dr . Thonw s Halpin, acting
chief of the commun ica ble
di sease division of 'lthe
Department sa id the viru s is
more se vere than other viruses
wh ich have a ppeared in recent
yCa rs a nd &lt;Jtlacks adults more
fr equently than ch ildren.

~· ive

lilth• nr no pr PI"i pitalion

bonds and three others were
fined in the court of Pomeroy

and liJwcr 40s

Mayor Dale E. Smith Thursday

m11s t1 ~

a nd

lows

in lhe 20s.

night.
Forfeitin~
Benj&lt;.~mi n

Ev~1n s,

Portland, who had

ta ken to Veterans Memorial

Hospttal. Thursday the squad Hill, Alba ny, $22.70, speeding,
was culled at 11 : 10 p.m. for and Max Edward Hill. Racine.
"We haven'\ had th is lype of
Lowe ll McNic kle who was $18.70, speeding.
s tra in for a number of yea rs so
hav ing difficulty breathing. He
Fined were Robert Lambert.
people are susceptible Lo it, "
was ta ken to Holzer Medi ca l Washing ton C. H., $10 and
Halpin sa id .
Cefltcr.

News.

• •

cos ts , rec kl ess ope ra tJOn;

Dennis Lytle,

in Briefs

Miller and son. J ames Morris ,

Mary Ann No rth , Her bert
Parker, Gary Perkins, John
Por ter, Dora Queen, Cledith
Roegers, Char les Rulen, Lisa
Russell, Karo lyn Sexton,
Rebecca Smith, Tony Stamper ,
Amos Waugh, Mrs. Grady
1 Births)

Mrs . Howard

Mens and boys wear- childrens ready to wear . womens
coats. slips- gloves - jewelry. sportswear. womens and
girls sleepwear.

pomeroy
national
bank

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FRIDAY and SATURDAY
9:30 TIL 2:00

MEIGS INN
POMEROY

It

fr om cornmg mt o r oo n1 wl1en lo .:: d1
door IS open

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Cast-Iron liner Plates! Upper sides and
of co mbus tion chamber are fitted with

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Primary Air Vents! Rou nd opcr r; - ~_,&gt; Ill
firebn ck l1ner sec trons bn ng 111 urrr n ary
:iu r from &lt;iutomatr c draft regulat pr .1nd d rstribute 1Levenly 111 burnrng zo nt!

cas t ·1mn liner plates for Iunger operatin.g

l1fe .

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Large Side Door. Loading door and as h
door are constructed of cast iron with as-

gravity into containN bel ow No st1rnng
of ashes reqwr ed!

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- ..... t•estos sea ls for tight fit. Load ing door
opening measu res 10" X 14" to permit

Hinged Ash Chute! Cast-1ron chute drops

insertion of large sections of firewood.

down when door rs o pened . heep1ng ash

Draft Slide! Prov1des supple·
mentary air needed fo r quick starting of

from spilling out

VOL. 10

MRS. PAULINE WHITE

Co n tinucd 011 page 2

rour Invited Guest
.., R enching More
Than 12,000
Families

NO. 1

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1975

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

PRICE 25 CENTS

Middleport ·Pomeroy

Embattled Bradbury School issue will be aired
MIDDLEPORT - 'The Meigs Local
School Board has called a public meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the junior high
o.chool in Middleport to bring into the open
·pros and cons of the Bradbury School.
· The Bradbury School, for fifth and
sixth graders only,. was the object of
criticism by some 15 parents who attended
the last meeting of the board of education.
The parents basically asked for the return
of U!e Bradbury School to a conventional
type school, rather Ulan a nQn,graded
individualized type, marked by the use of
report cards and homework for their
children.
To familiarize· the public with the
educational concept of llle Bra,dbury
School, the following article has. been
prepared from an exlensive activities
report prepared by the staff of the
Bradbury school.
"The Bradbury School was begun in
1970as the first non-graded, individualized
school in Meigs County . .The staff of the

·Cornett

fires .

Large Slide-Out Ash Drawer! For

school worked during the .summer of 1970
preparing the materials and collecting llle
equipment which was to be used in the
program. In the five years since that time,
the leachers have attempted to look at all
children as in~ividuals and plan for them a
schogl program based upon their individual"needs.
"To do this, a great variety of methods
and materials have been used.
"The non-graded concept is certainly
not a new one as this kind of school has
been in exislence since the late 1920s in
many oilier places in the country.
However, since it was new for Meigs

County, meetings for parents were held
prior to the opening of school and have
been held every year since that lime.- At
these mee lings which are held before
school opens in the fall, parents are encouraged to come to the school to discuss
wiih the teachers the type of program
whi.ch their children will have.
"Unfortunately, many pare,nts have

not attended these meetings nor have they
come to the PTA meetings, open house and
other school affairs.
"How often people in the community
have heard the Bradbury School referred
to as a "play school." Nothing could be
farther from the truth. The children have a
long, busy day at Bradbury and work very
hard while they are here, Classes begin at
8 a.m. and continue until 2:15p.m. with
only a 45 minute break for lunch. There are
no recesses and no study halls. The state
law requires that children spend at least
five hours a day in actual classes and this
is exceeded every day at Bradbury by at
least 30 minutes.
"Our program may be a difficult
concept for parents to grasp as most of
U!em have memories of school being dull,
boring, difficult, etc., ana certainly not
fun. However, It has been shown at
Bradbury that the ~hildren have fun and
still are learning as the·children Mve gone
very succesalully lolo a traditional junior

"'"'"'

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high program.
"The emphasis at Bradbury is on selfdirection, self-discipline and self-reliance
as it Is felt that these are of utmost import·
ance in developing a mature student.
"One of the most interesting aspects of
the Bradbury program is the change in
attitudes of the students involved . They
learn very quickly that the program has
been developed for them and they respond
to the teachers' interest in them by
working very hard and growing in many
ways besides academic ones.
"The teachers at Bradbury have tried
very hard to avoid giving the impression
that because their program is different
they are critical of other schools and other
programs. This is a time of great change
and innovations in education and the
program at Bradbury represents only one
kind of change.
"Grade cards are not issued at
Bradbury. Parents are informed of their
continued on page 2

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Model S-7 El ect• 1c
Blower IS an oot10nal feature for me Warm Morn ·
mg circula tor model 701.
Th1 s powerful. Qu i et ·
runnmg blower proJects
the t'leated a1r through a

&gt;t
&gt;t
&gt;t
&gt;t

•
•&gt;t

f &lt;tn ·shaped wa1 m a1r

out-

lf"t under the heater cab ..

lll E!'t . Th 1s spreads a

warmth over the floors,
choice of three blower speeds.
ca~t

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of

Cormo1oox on

bad

of

cabm et g•ves

MODEL 701 SPECIFICATIONS
Herght
............... 33i4 "
Wid lh
.. .. ..
. . 36"
0 ep th .... , . . . .
... ... .. .
. . ... . .
' . 18"
. .......... . . .... . .. . ... . . 6"
Flue size . . . . . . . . . . .
Maximum wood le ngth
. . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . 26"
Loading door, inside dimension . . . . . . . . . . . 10" X 14" ·
Weight crated ........................... ·.... 290 lbs.
Distance from floor to center ot flue outlet ... .. ·: . 26%"

····································· ··························~··········

RUTLAND FURNITURE
RUTLAND, OHIO

ARNOLD GRATE

/42·4211

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NEW GRAND CROAKER - James Roush, right, recently elected Grand
Croaker of the Ohio Society fQr the Promotion of the Bull Frog, meets the outgoing
Grand Croaker, Therepn Johnson. Other (n0\-'10-Ioud) croakers elected by the
society were Earllngles, Jr., grand croaker in charge of vice; Mrs. James Roush,
secretary, and Dale Warner, treasurer. The association last year made $2,4QO ~nd
had expenses of $2,200. Projects in 1975, Roush reported, are to invite to the annual
Frog Jump in June such noted personalities as Euel Gibbons of grapenuts fame, a
representative of the.lndian tribe at Wounded ·Knee; Fannie Fox, who attained
fame recently (Wilbur Mills not included) ; Senators Robert Bird, Robert Taft, ·
Gov . James Rhodes and Gov. Arch Moore. ~ording to Roush letters of invitation,
except to Miss Fox, are in the mail.

'

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DAM 'J11REATENED ·
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)- Public tl!ilrs
·fl. Hoover D&amp;un were clQied Saturday after
telephoned b&lt;m1l tlieala wen made to
blow iJp tbe daJD and tbe tederli ln!llding ·
bere.
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Early draw of $300,000
·made by Gall~a schools

REPLACEMENT NEEDED- Bids will be opened Feb. 20 in Columbus for a
new bridge to replace the inadequate, antiquated bridge over Little Kyger Rd.
near Kyger Creek High School. The'bridge MS been U!e scene of many accidents,
several serious. The bridge ill currently posted for a 5-ton limit.
·

GALUPOUS - Gallla County's Local
Board of Education in a seven hour session
Saturday approved its 1975 appropriations
totaling $3,457,378. That figure represents
$3,143,855 in the general fund, $275,975 in
the lunchroom · program and $37,975 in
bonds .
The board, which is currently $275;00
in debt, approved a motion io make an
advance withdrawal of $300,000, on real
estate taxes. G81lla County Treasurer Oty
M. Stewart closed the first half real estate
tax books Friday.
Checks written in January for the
overall operation of the school system
including the payroll account totaled
$308,218.89, Bills encumbered during the
month amounted to $8,4~.61.
The board, upon the recoz,runendation
of Assistant ProsecutlDg Attorney William
Eachus, approved llle payment of extra
pay to sp,ecial education instructors

DR. THOMAS H. CROW

Pomeroy; two granddaughters, Mrs. Mike
(Donna ) Morrison of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., and Mrs. Rodney (Debbie) Gilkey of
Columbus; three grandsons, Roher! W..
Crow, New Philadelphia; James H. Crow,
Syracuse, and Dan Crow, Alllens, and a,
great-granddaughter, Lori Ann Crow of
New Philadelphia. One niece and ·several
nephews also survive.
Funeral services will he held at 2 p.m .
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. Carl Hick.s officiating. Burial will he
in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime.'
'

reele~ted

GALUPOUS- U. A. ci.:nett, owner
and .operator Of G&amp;J Auto Parts, was
reelected president of the Conunerclaland
Savings Bank here recently.
. Other officers elected during the
annual stockholders meeting were
Richard W. Turner, executive vicepresident; Alva G. Shoemaker, vicepresident and secretary; Mrs. Helen Weal,
•ssistant vice-pre~Ide~t;
Merrill
WilcOl!:en, assistant viCe-president and
branch nuinager; Wayne Niday, cashier; ·.
Mrs. Gall Holley, assistant cashier; Mrs: ·
Allee Slover, assistant cashier, and Mrs,.
Lola Mae Suiter, assistant caabler.
Directin elected were U. A. Cornell,

n1ent, muss -free ash removal!

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Firebrick linin ~ ! Two·inch thiCk firebric k
, .... prc•tects both sides of f~rebox.

Cast·lron Grates! Th ree seclrons of heavy,
slolted grates are ' ventilaled for extended
life Slotted des;gn penwls ashes lo s1ft hv•..-:':'

&gt;t
&gt;t

It

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Built-in Automatic Thermostat! Au tomat i·
ad justs pn mary draft to mai nta in
desired bu rnmg rate and to keep temper·
atu res steady. Conl rol kn ob convenien tly
located at top rea r of ca bmet

Hinged Smoke Curtain' Keep s smoke

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Cloudy, rain probable today,
highs in the upper 30s. Continued cold, lows torjght in U!e
expected, and growing colder.
expected,and growing cOlder.

POMEROY- Dr. Thomas H. CrQw,
86, prominent Pomeroy dentist and
businessman, died late Friday afternoon
at the Holzer Medical Center following a
two month illness.
Dr. Crow, who practiced dentistry 62
years, was active in his profession until the
time he entered the hospital in late
November, He was also CC&gt;&lt;)wner of
Grow's Steak House with his two sons,
Robert H. Crow of Syracuse and Thomas
D. Crow of Pomeroy, who survive.
In his younger years, Dr, Crow was a
teacher, beginning In a one room schooL
He was an outstand.ing athlete, having
pitched in the Ohio River Valley as a semi·
professionaL His baseball career was cut
short when he became 1!1 with typhoid
fever as he was just ready to sign with a
professional team.
He took part in an old timers game
held only 10 years ago.
Aveteran of World War I, he belonged
to Drew Webster .Post 39, American
Legion. He was a member of the Ohio
Dental, Association.
Dr. Crow was born April 3, 1888, the
son of the late Charles and Mary Virginia
Crow. He was the last of his family .
Preceding him in deaU! besides his parents
were six brothers, George, Bert, Fred,
William, Hairy and Wick, and a slsler,
Mrs. Agnes McKinley. ·
Besides hill two sons, Dr. Crow is
survived by his wife, Josephine Webster
Crow; a stepson, Webster -· Hodge of

Porcelain Enamel Finis h! Beautdu ll
styled cab met has att ract1vt' dark brown
finish of p o rc ela!ll enamel for last1 ng
beau ty. Won't rub ort or dt sco l o r~

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and The Hallmarks

..•• ·.,_

shame".

dentist, dies

With
Porcelain Enamel Cabinet Finish
Automati c Draft Regulator
Firebrick Lining
Cast Iron Grates
Ash Drawer

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Every child who stays with the Whites has her own bed and
her own duties around the house. Mrs. White keeps a calendar of
who's washing dishes when. Nightly baths and da ily roor.•
cleanings are required.
"You've got to have rules," she said,· 11 but I'm not a strict
disciplinarian. We live in this house; it's not just some thing to
look at."
Mrs. White attempts to teach her girls the fine points of
cooking and working so they 're prepared fo r the lives they will
have to lead. She expresses great pride in llleir accomplishments
and proves it in photographs of them around llle house to display
to visitors.
There have always been dogs and cats around the house and
the girls love them. "You can't be too good to children. They
appreciale it. !like to take them places ... like Parkersburg or
Huntington for shopping trips, and to the show. But there just
isn't any place here (Gallipolis) for children to go. I think it's a

businessman,

MODEL 701

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·GEO. HALL
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Elberfelds In Pomeroy:

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\Wood-Burning
Deluxe Circulator

OAPSE TO MEET
There will Pe a special
meeting of Ohio Association of
Public School Employes
Monday, Feb. 3, al7 :30 p.m. at
the Meigs Junior High School,
Middleport.

-

tell her she's going to get fat "because Mom's really a great
cook".

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/Uarm 8/orning Also ·Offers You the Finest

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PH. 992-3629

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"Every child is different. I don 't try to force m)'llelf on these
children. They need security. If you talk to them and show that
you care about them, the finally come around."
Mrs. White has long since lost count of all her "girls" - she
has reared only one hoy - but they all call her household
"home," keep up regular correspondence, ·1and visit at every
opportunity, About '!I persons connected with her child-rearing
!X'Oject came home for Christmas.
Right now there are three girls with the Whites; ages 14, 15
and 18. She says teenagers are no problem. "The trouble with

' from broken homes .
children. today is that so many of them come
They need love and security. That'll what we try to give them."
Mrs. White reported that she has only had to let go three of
!1er foster children because they were such problems that they
were impossible to keep. It broke her heart. But the children she
haS, once as many as 17at one lir'ne, are children with rights, and
hopes apd dreams. They go to church and school sponsored
activities and are active in the choir and youth programs at
Grace United Methodist Church.
The children are referred to Mrs. White from Children's
Services of the Gallia County Welfare Department. Sometimes
they are brought to her from broken' homes, sometimes from
another night in jail, sometimes from the streets.
Funds for their keep are minor. "Anyone who thinks you're
going to make a lot of money with children can just forget it ," she
said. The state allolts $2 per day for each child through the Aid
for Dependent Children's program.
·
''That won't even keep them in shoes!'' she said.
So, to keep her children in clollles "clean each day from the
hide out" and well fed, Mrs. White sews and, until recently, kept
a large garden. When a new girl comes, the old family members

Dr. Crow, 86, ·

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to Riverside
Apartments a t 8:56 p.m.
Thursday for Sue Edwards, a
medical patient, who was
i&lt;lken to the Holzer Medical
Center.

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Special sale prices on bath towels - mattress pads - 8
track tapes.
Stop in during this sale- look around in every department on every floor. You'll save plenty during this big
store-wide sale.

__
By Jan Countryman
GALUPOIJS - "I always wanted a big family and I never
h$done. So I've reared other folks' children. I love them."
That's how Mrs. Wylie (Pauline) White feels about the foster
home she ·has maintained for 31 years at 714 Second Ave. She
makes it clear it's a household dedicated to love.
Mts. White has reared footer children since the early years
of her life and bas a daughter of her own 53-years old . Yet she
never tires of the sounds of life and laughter in her big house and
hopes to continue rearing the children until she is no longer able.

Weather

Special Sale Prices
Dollar ·Days Sale

OtherS' children make up her family

·.'

All A~counls Insured to $40,000.00 by the
Federal Deposit ln••Jrance Corp:

. ,,

Temperalurec in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. today was
40 degrees under rainy skies.

Hogs, 40: Sows :!3.25; Boars
30.75; Pigs (by the head) 11-21.
Lambs - 38.50.

ntablllhed !1172

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Aeiker , Racine, $5 and costs ,
driving under suspension.

54.75;

the bank of
the c»ntury

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Pa ., $5 and costs, ra:ilure to

yield the right of way, Charles

'.

COLUMBUS - THE THREE WDGES run by the state, '
Shawnee, Mohican and Hocking Hills, will be turned over to
PTOTO MEET
private operators as soon as contracts by bid can be awarded,
HARRISONVILLE - The says Ohio Natural Resources Director Robert Teater. "I don 't
Harrisonville PTO will meet want to prejudge tile situation,'' Teater said, ''but it seems that
Monda y, Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m. willltaxpayers footing the bill, llley keep llle same number of
Robert Snowden, member of' people on llle payroll or more, regardless of the occupancy rate."
the Meigs Local School Board
The lodges had a 47 per cent occupancy rate last year,
will be the guest spea ker. running from 18 per cent in December to 90 per cent in June a~d
Plans for the annual spring August, said Teater .
carniva l will be mad e.
Former Gov. John J . Gilligan deeided to operate Shawnee,
Members of the third grade Mohican and Hocking Hills with state employes instead of
class will furnish cookies.
awarding the operation to a private firm, which was the policy of
Gov. James A. Rhodes during two previous term•. The contract
to operate state lodges at Salt Fork near Cambridge, Burr Oak
near Athens, Hueston Woods near Oxford and Punderson Manor
ATHENS LIVESTOCK
House in Geauga County Is held by the Ohio Inns Co., Cincinnati,
SALES INC.
under awards made during the previous administration of
Stocker Heifer Calves 19-23; Rhodes.
Cows , Utility 16.10·1 7.75:
Ca nner-Cutter t3 . 10·15.90;
Stocker Cows I by the head ),
140-350; Slaughter Bulls 24.50.
Veals, Choice-Prime, 50·

Commission .

••
•

RACINE - Two Racine area
men have enlisted in the unfied
States Air Force, accordiql to
Danny Anderson, local .,."Air
Force recruiter . They ;,re
Timothy W. Bentz, son of Mi.
and Mrs. Henry Bentz, RaCii,e,
in the delayed · enlistri(ent
program, who will grad@te
from Southern High School'this
·spring, then go to tralnin ~at
Lackland Air Force Base, San
Antonio, Tex., July 18, "and
Robert M. (Mike ) Rhodes,
Racine Route 2, who will hegin
training at the La~kland ;~
Force ,Base on March 31. .,

Open Friday and Saturday Til 8

CAMBRIDGE, OHIO - TiiE CAMBRID(iE Education
Association voted 85-26 Thursday night to strlke~e city's nine
schools which were hit Monday by a work stoppage by the local
chapter of the Ohio Association of Public School Employes.
Most of the system's 200 teachers had been honoring the
picket lines set up by the 95 non..academic employes at the city's
nine schools on Monday and took llle strike vote only hours after
the Board of Education received a co urt order prohibiting the
teachers from honoring the lines any longer. However, the CEA -,
then deeided to take the strike vote as it had been working
without a contract since last fall.

APPOINTMENTS'i'•IADE
Slate Senalor Oakley C.
Collins (R-l7lh District) has
been appointed to serve as a
member of the Educational
Review Committee and the
Ohio Retirem ent Study

•••
•••
•,.•&gt;t
,.,.,.

WELLSTON - Rosco Davis,
43, of 318 South Michigan St.,
was dead on arrival at 4:55
p.m. Thursday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Davis, · according to a
hospital spokesman, died from
internal injuries suffered when
he was crushed by a coal fall at
the Hawk Station Mine of the
Waterloo Coal Company. He
was taken to the hospital by the
Wellston Unit of SEOEMS.

Area men . enlist~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy,:

DeWeese, a son, Leon, W. Va .

rutland

~h ippens burg,

Wellston miner
dies of injuries

•

Wanda Malone, Mrs. Terry

Mr . and

po".. or

were
Brown , Wi Chi ta

ope rator's license; Willi am
J ohnson, nu address record ed,
$20, intoxication; J ames R.

Uurns to her hands, she was

nesday, according to two persons who attended the meeting. He
reportedly made similar comments to associates in Washington.
Rockefeller was quoted as saying tha t information turned up so
far by the commission indic&amp;tes Hoover's role "seems to be
where llle problem began."

Loren Leach, Ann Lemley,

bonds

SQUAD CALLED
Fa lls, Tex ., $250 posted on a
RACINE - The Racine E·R dri ving whi le intoxicated
Squad was called Wednesday charge ; Josep h Griffith ,
at 5: 15 p.m . for Mrs . Norman Tuppers Plains, $30, no

Peggy Fyffe , Arthur Grum.
daughter, Pearl flyman , Andy
Kos ma , Eli Lambert, Sr.,

defendants forfeited

expected. Highs in the 30s

L1rry Elk,ins. Joa nne Ewing,
man . Mrs. Roger · Hill and

:'i forfeit hunds

EXTENDED FORECAST
S unda y through Tuesda y,

Curtl mued from ~ &lt;:1ge I

Wicker and son.

A Safe
Deposit Box can save your skin.
Or your valuables.
Just pennies a day.
A sharp idea.

;

president

WAD UMITS oo this and many other wooden !ridges Mve been reduced as
much as 85 pet. following Inspection by the Gallla· County Highway Department.
This bridge is located on Cemetery Road in Cheshire Twp. ·

Load limits reduced on bridges

William . P·. Cherrington, Alva · G.
Shaemaker, D. ·Paul Davies, Richard W
.
GALUPOUS- Gailia County's high· have three inch plank decks; 55 have four
Turner, Gllbert C. Beard and·Dr. Charles
. way bridges are in such a bad condition inch limber strip decks and 93 bridges
E. H,olzer, Jr .
. that load reductions of up to 85 pet. of were made from salvaged railroad tracks
present capacity have been .ordere\1 as a . as main structural members.
Band concert.is today
safety mea8ure.
·
Types of Ga!Ua's bripges are simple
ThiS was revealed hereSatur~ay in an beam, 206; · concrete slab, 44; jack arch,
GAWPO!JS - Gallia ·Academy's inspeclioh report released by Bob 35; compositive beam, 33; steel truss, 31
annual winter band concert, wider the Williams, Assistant Gallia. County and miscellaneous, five.
direclion of Rodney To!Uver, will be ~ld Engineer.
. The inspeetions further revealed that
at 2:30 this afternoon in the GAHS
William recently finished inspections mos1 of the county's bridges are
aullltorium.
on :J!i4 bridges in Gallia county. A total of inadequate for today's heavy loads. Half of
Homemade candy will be on ·sale 206 bridges C~~~Tently have load limit . the bridges w.er.e cons~cted prior til 1930.
during ·the afternoon activities. Parents of restrictions and the remainder meet
Under the new bridge .program
bandsmen are asked to bring two pounds minimum state standards on weight. ·
through the county highway department,
of candy or $3 for the sale.
·
Williams said that 97 bridges, or '!1.4 all bridges will be Inspected annually. The
pet., are inadequate for a fully loaded inspection will include a study of erosion,
• schoOl · bus; 28 bridges, 7.9 p.t. are abutments and overall condition.
PLANE CRASHED
inadequate for ll(l empty school bus, arid at
· It would cost millions of dollars to
MAYS LANDING. (UP!) - Search least 50 bridges have abutment problems. replace ihe bridges particularly, since
crews were scouring a wooded area near
According to Williams, who beg'!'! most of the spans would have to be brougl)t
L&amp;il'el Dale for a twin-engine airplane, bridge inspec!Jops last smnmer, load · up to federal specifications if they were to
enroute here from 'Co!lliDbuS, Ohio, that limits will be reduced anywho\re from fi~e qualify for federal money for repj8cement.
Crashed · wlille apProaching the Allirntic to 85 Pel.
.
Most of the county's bridges are far
City AjrPort early Sjllur&lt;!a ·
,
. The irlspection revealed 162 bridges narr~er th~n. they should he. Federal
'
•
.;

l

holding valid contracts with the former
school districts in Gallia Comity,
All contracts were honored with the
exception of Mrs. Barbara Manhon's with
the former Southwestern Board of
Education which made her pay retroac·
live, ruled an illegal act .
The holl!'d also approved severance
pay for Mrs. Mary Darnell, former lunch·
room supervisor in the Kyger Creek
District.
William Bahr, president of the Gallia
Local Teachers' Association, fonnally
requested tllat negotiations with the
association begin for the school term 197~
76. Bahr said it was in the agreement
signed last September that either grolip
may initiale negotiations In the month of
January. The board must now m~t in the
next 15 days to plan llle .negotiaUons,
Following an executive session with
hlgb school principals CIIHord WUson o(
North Gallla and Robert L. Lanning of
' Kyger Creek, the board approved a !DOIIon
for expulsion of a Norih Gallla High School
studeill. The decision was Laaed upon the
hoy's conduct at recent school fuactlous
. regulations stale bridges must be at least aDd In classes. The motion staled the boy
28 feet wide.
andbls pal'eillshave a rtgbt to an Informal
Bids will he opened Feb. 4 for the hearing before the board. He molt e!,o
construction of a new bridge to replace the refrain from coming on school property.
Chillicothe Road Bridge.
A s!nillar disciplinary problem was
Feb. 20 is the date bids will be opened discussed With Principal Lanning. Further
for the replacement of the Little Kyger aetlon will be taken on a Kyger
Creek Bduge near Kyger Creek High studeill at next Saturday's special' board
~hoot Th~ two spans have been on llle meeting.
.
planning docket for· the last five yelir,s.
Upon co.nslderation of dlaclpUile
Both projects will be financed 1\Jrough probleDill confrontlug IIIJ' . - y acbool .
funds under Stale Issue No. 1 approved system, 11 was agreed !bat the policy of
during Governor Rhodes' second term.
suspensions will conUnoeto be .enforced by ·
Meanv;hile, county highway depart- U!e board of education.
men! crews will continue to repair and
Suspended !I!Udcata dMirlq hearlap •
replace decks on bridges · which need will have them with tbelt priJM:Ipalslll the
maintenance work.
.
'
schools lbey attend.
Assistant Engineer Williams stressed
J!· was polllted oU~ lbt dlie ·to the
the Importance of public cooperation in receDt Sn~me Cearl rulbll,aladeall
maintaining load r~ductions in order to . uwlertbelmpreaalolltbat ...
prevent further damage to the already bf d . 110 loo&amp;er legal. Tbe etart 1.t4 - lllldelll
. .
bridges. ·
.
muslbaveaheartng.TIJeprlaelpalawllba
1
Map se!s are available to commerctal
·
Continued on p•ge 28 ·
Continued on page 2
. ' ,
s
&lt;
A

;- 'I

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c.-

an
,...-an

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�,_
2- The SlUlday Ttmes- Sentmei,Swtday, Feb 2, 1975

~--~----------~!
I----------Lett en of opinion ""'welcomed
They should be lt•u

Embattled
Contmued from pa ge

James

g-

Cre.:k
School agaillst
Prmclpal
supp~rtm•
LannmgHigh
The grievance
pertained
lo the
I
use of the former pnncipal's office for a
1
chtid
s
progress
thr
ough
extenSive
\1
ntten
lounge The office is now bemg
teachers'
Contmued
from
page
1
1
I
C
\aluc~lt
o
n
s
,11
the
tnd
of
l
d&lt;:h
seme
ster
1
1
fac ulty member present wtll conduct an used as an attendance office and clln1c
'I
hesc
rcpo1
ts
&lt;J! c very comp r('ht.:n.slve e~ nd
I
1
Alsotakenunderadvtsementweretwo
utformal hea rmg The board agreed
tnclude the progrr" of tile chtld 1n each 11 holeheartedly thai discipline must be requests, one from the Vmton VFW and
1
SUbJC'&lt;.' t rll eel M Ul.: h tunc and effor t IS given
upheld tWd that students should conduct the other from a church requesting the use •
bJ the tea chers on these evaluations
of tlle old Eno School Building The VFW
State Rep Ronald James Is and hearing procedures which
themselves In an orderly fashion.
Parent conferences dre .dso held m Ocwould
like
to
use
the
building
as
a
meeting
co-sponsoring
wtth Rep tlle Conunlssion used when
The board took under adviSement a
tober and Aprti to closcuss the child s grtevance filed by the faculty of Kyger hall The church, represented by Rev Thomas J Carney legiSlation
fixing utility rates 1&lt;1 see II IIIey
I
I progress In all area s Parens are a lso
Fuller, wishes to use it as a recreation which would create a citizen- are approprmte considering
I
I encour dgcd to make an appotntment \\ l th
center for Eno Community youth
, legislator conuruttee to study today 's state and national
an) of the l€a chers al a11y ltme when they
Trt Sta r Electncal Company of the
organization
and economic picture," Jamea
Wa nt.• puiJ/i(' to bt• lll•&lt;~ rd
&lt;Ire conce rned about lhc u chald
Gallipolis
was
granted
a
contract
to
rewu-e
procedures
of
the
Public
GallipoliS, Ohto
S81d
The Curriculum
placement test to determtne where the the electrical system for the upstatrs of the Utilities Commission of Ohio
Jan 27,1975
"The study comrruttee will
About the cut rt culum .tt the 81 adbuq
Gall111
COwtty
Board
of
Education
Offtce
to
Representative
James
sa1d
Editor
student should be placed tn the Contmuous
also mqu1re mlo the
Sc hool
tlle study comnuttee would be Jrocedures by which tlle PUCO
By the news media we hear and read about mflatJOn
Progress SpeII ong Ia b Tiussystem enables be located m the old County Home
Sot1al studi es and suence We
The local board wUJ have 1ts ad- asked to determine what handles requests for rate
recessiOn, depressiOn and energy shortages and what our elected
a chtld to study onl; the words he does not
us1ng
refcrcm:e
ski
lls
tn
the
conten
t
stress
Oli!UStrattve
,offtces m four rooms on the changes are necessary to revisions, consumer comfederal offtclals thmk should be done to solve the problems
kn ow The lab IS set up on 16 levels and
area
of
soctal
studtcs
and
science
second
floor
of
the building Gallia County enable the PUCO to more ef- plamts, and safety lnspectio!ll
Locally we hear and read about meettngs bemg held The
conststs of ooer 4 000 words A chtld who
Chi ldren v. ork from p~gs whtch ar e c"n clo more dtfftcult work IS thus afford ed Comrrussloners will pay the cost of the fe ctively perform tis functions
Gallia County and Ga llt}Xllls City Commtss1oners meeltng "llh
to determme if unprovements
wnt
te n by the teachm g slaff 'Jhese pegs
and duties "The b1U stipulates rum be made m tllese areas
representatives of the medical professwn , SEOEMS and Ga llla
lhe opportuml) I he studen t moves ahead work downstatrs
contmn man) actJvltJes through wh1ch as he conquers more dtfftcult ilsts of
Farrell's Glass and Home Mam- that the study COillllUSSion giVe also, " Rep James comCoomty Volllllteer Emergency Squad, some of these held behtnd
children
l
ec~r
n
dascovermg
thmgs
for
tenance
Company was a warded a contract particular regard to the for- mented
CLOSED l.XX'RS Who of thts group was mstrumental m paddm g
words Those compietmg ali 16 levels are
themscl\ es dt thc1r uv.n rate of speed Not then memb ers of the school newspaper for pamting the four rooms, hallway, an mula, auditing , mvesttgatory
the population count of Gallipolis Ctty to obtam the SEOEMS
upslatrs restroom at a cost of $1,400 The
all children c.: omplc tc the sa me act!\ 1hes slaff
ambulance '
electrtcal
contract totaled $1,486
and
chi
ldren
have
opportum
hes
to
choose
The Gallia OJunty Volunteer Emergency Squad ts domg a
Wntmg IS also gtven on a le\el ac
Another
btdder on electrical work was
some
of
thetr
own
dcttvttles
whtr.
:
h
fur
ther
\\onderful serVIce for our commumty Why do their represencepted for ondependenl work Teacher
Roach
's
Electrtc
at $1,598 97.
allows for tndlv ldua hzatJOn !'he social
tatl\es have to be subJected to the CLOSED IXXJR meetmgs
dtrec ted act1 volies ate prepsented and
Other pamt btds were $1,575 from
studaes curn culum sta rts wt th children each chtld w01ks on h1s wrtltng pad
called by the medical profession and SEOEMS ' It all bolls down
Salisbury and Uoyd Danner and
Daryl
first
lem
mng
ab
ut
thetr
1
mmedaate
to one btg factor The average person of this commuruty cannot
Children are encouraged to follow stan$1,500
from
Roger Bostic
ound
angs
a
nd
then
about
other
surr
afford to pay the base fee of J25 or plus and also have the tssue
SAMUEL V CLONCH
dard "1 1tmg procedures and progress Is
Dunbar W Va
In
oilier
matters,
the board took out a
coun ties and con t1ncn ts Sctence In - recorder! by the teacher
BIDWELL - Samuel Vonton
Funeral serv tces wtll be held
placed on theta~ dupltcate top That ts what IS needed to assure
liabiltly IIISurance policy With tlle Ohto Clonch, 69, a resodent of Rt 2 1 p m Monday at the Fred
troduces them to lhe bod) S) Siem and
the services of SEOEMS
En ~ lls h I S presented on a n Individual
B1dwett ~o ed at 8 20 p m Hunter Funeral Home, West
envu onment.al fr~ c tor s Tes ts arc g1ven on level" 1th sl11 dents workmg m ma tertals at School Board Assocmtion at a cost of $20 Fr
Another subject publtctzed ts the anttclpated school bwldmg
tday tn Holzer Med ical
Hollywood Burial will be on
""veral levels so that ever) chtld can show thetr mdependenl tnstructtonal level wtlh per year per member
Cente r
recommendatiOns before the Gallia OJ School Board, and the
Memory Gardens at Ft
Mr Clonch had been on Lauderdale
- Entered into a lease agreement wtth
some measure of progre ss and success
fanlast tc amount of money to be mvolved We each can votce our
man) teacher-&lt;hrected aclovthes '
fatlmg
health one year He was
the Nahonal Cash Regtster Company for
Mathema tics Students 1n tne
opuuon on that matter at the polls
a reti red Galloa County Hogh
Spectal Jeadmg - In these classes an accounting machme _
CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON
Bradbury School used the lndtvtduahzed students a1 e gtven an added cha nge to
way Department employee
When are the City, OJunty , State and Federal offt clals gomg
RIO GRANDE - Graveside
- Accepted the evaluahon forms for
Mr Clonch was born Aug . 8, roles for Christopher Keith
Malhernaltcs Sl sl€m pubhshed by Gtnn tmprove thetr readmg skills Some classes
to recogmze the fact that they .represent the people ' It IS about
and Co This system IS ttn or ganrlatwn of tn spec1ai readmg are spec1ftc skills, IIIS!ructional staffs and prmc1pals and 1905, on Mason County, W Va . Johnson. stoltborn son of Steve
time we (th e tal&lt;(layers ) are asked before large commttments
son of the late Oscar and D and Vlckoe Blankenship
mstructwnal matena ls conststmg of sk11l ca ll phone, vOC'abulary, comprehensiOn, superviSOrs as approved by the GCLTA Katherone Stayton Clonch
are made With our momes
Johnson. Roo Grande, will be
-Granted the Vmton VFW pemiiSSion
He marned tf'le former Edna
foidet s tests, actiVI ties and teacher atds
held at Centenary Cemetery 2
I do not understand why the City Co1Tlll118Sioners 1oaded the
newspaper and hbrary poe try and phomcs
These matenals present the sk1iis and wtlh each class destgned to atd the studen t to use the Vmton Elementary Gym for a Duncan She preceded htm m p m today .with Rev Allred
business district with parkmg meters They are drtvmg the
death on March 6 1970
Holley ofl tclatmg .
concep ts of a tota l elementary m fulhllm g hiS tnd1v1dual needs Since ceremomal meeting Feb 16.
customers out of town Also , why put the swmunmg pool outstde
A mece M&gt;q. Martha Vorey ,
Servoces will be under the
- Accepted the reSignation of Mary was reared m the Clonch home d~rectlon
mathema tiCs prog ram The 11 areas of each student progresses accordmg to hts
Gallipolis when we presently have an energy shortage that w1ll
of Wtllls Funeral ·
be With us for a long ltme '
mstruchon al
m,t leroal
mclude own abohl) no student IS held back and Wallis as a recrutter for the Adult She resides on Sarasota, Fla Home
One s tster, Mrs Carne
Survlvtng
bestdes
the
Education program and employed Mrs
numeratiOn
additton , subtractiOn, f01 ced to watt on hts classmates "
Little Is bemg done to unprove and preserve "The Old
Leemaster, GalltpOIJs , sur
parents are maternal grand
Marilyn
Morgan
as
her
replacement
multiphcatwn diviSIOn fracttons, ap
vtves Four brothers and one parents, Mr and Mrs Roy W
French City " All efforts seem to be directed outSide the ctty
Roun dtng ou t th e c urn culum at
Acknowledged
two
letters
regardmg
soster
preceded hom In death
phcat10ns,
money
,
time,
measurement
Blankenshop, Rt 2. Gallipolis,
limits Why, for whom , wtth what m mmd ' I think the public
Bradbury are Mustc Phys1cal Educalton, the condition of the Hannan Trace
Mr
Clonch
spent
most
of
his
and
paternal grandparents ,
wants to know
and geome try There are mne levels of and Quest
life on Gal Ita County He was a Mr and Mrs Leo Johnson,
School,
one
letter
was
written
Elementary
dtfftcult; for each of these area s
Gallipolis City and Gallia Cowtly is not too large a regton to
member of Belt Chapel Patroot Star Route
Mus1c classes are held three pertods
Placement tests are goventhe ftrst week of a week wtlh no regula r textbook bemg by Mrs Robm T H1te, a parent, and the Church He was employed at
take a survey O" some of these matters It seems our elected
the GSI team several years,
R P ALDERSON
school The results of these 11 tests suggest used Prtnted matenal - the favort te other by Fred Fellure, a janitor
offtcials and others have taken every decrslon from us - Name
and
was a member of the tn
GALLIPOLIS
- Robert P
Authonzed
Supermtendent
C.
1
wtthheld by request
the begmmn g placemen t le1el for each songs of lhe children - ts used
sfttute S baseball squad for a Alderson 92, Kanauga , died at
Comer Bradbury, after discussion Willi number of years He also 8 SO a m Friday In Morris
student Students sho" van ous levels of
• Desptte the fact tha t a spectally Mrs Hlte, to have the two custodians at worked
for the Campbell Memorial Hospital at Milton
performance Students are tested before tramed phystcal educa twn teacher IS not
Towmg
Co,
for a number of
In defense of SEUEMS
He wa s a retired salesman
and after each new um t and are permitted avatlable Bradbury's phystcai educatton Hannan Trace Elementary and Prmc1pal years
Funeral services will be
Pomeroy, Ohio
Funeral servtces will be held conducted Monday at 1 p m
to move to new um ts after thetr tests , program meets the prescrtbed needs of Atlee Fulks attend lhe next board meeting
-Heard reports from Supermtendent 2 p m Monday at the Waugh from the Crow Hussell Funeral
Jan 28,1975
teacher correc l€d , show the student has upper elementary ch tldren The staff
Dear Str
Bradbury
and h1s assistants, Frank Halley Wood Funeral Home Home The Rev Rufus
mastered the un1t •
w tfh Rev Everett De laney and
vel;
selects
acltv1ttes
to
provtde
cooperato
Cromartoe will officiate and
In respoose to r~nlletters concerning SEOEMS, I'd like to
Language arts block - · Thts consists the program Baste sports sktlls are taugh t Cremeans, Dennts Murdock and Dave Rev A L Baldrodge of
bu•lal wilt be In the Lone Oak
make a few comments It Isn't in competition with, nor was it
Campbell regardmg problems in tlleir flcoatlng . Burial witt be m Cemetery Friends were being
of Ieadmg spelling wrt hng and English
wtlh the emphasts bemg on sportsmanship areas.
Mound Holt Cemetery
started to replace any local volunleer groups WE have been
received at the funeral home
The chtldren are gtven a Houghton Muffll n and team\\ork rather than compelolton
Friends may call at the after S p m Saturday
foi1Wl8te there in Meigs and Gallia cowttles to have these
Heard
a
re}Xlrt
gtven
by
hoard
tndiVIduahzed readmg lest and on the
home from 2 4 and 7 9
'
Mr Alderson Is survtved by
Quest ts an enrtchment
actiVIty member Dale Rothgeb , Jr. on tlle progress funeral
dedicated people all tllese years I think there Is need and room
Sunday
p
m
basts of the seoo e and the score on an Iowa handled also by the staff wh1ch has offered
his wife, Lucy Long Alderson,
for both uruts Thirty years ago, It cost me $10 for ambulance
formerly of Point Pleasant, a
Baste Sk1iis lest .or ~ placed m t11e proper over 50 ftelds of acltv1ty ove r the past ftve of board policies and job descriptions.
soster,
Mrs Elizabeth Rankon ,
transportation from Ga!Upolls to Pomeroy Compare hospttal
Board
polictes
have
been
established
readtng level rhe testmg enables the l ears Thts IS held tw1ce a week for 45
Topeka , Kan , several nieces
costs, food and clothing, and utllily bills of today with those of
teacher to ftnd the ch1ld s tnclependen t. mtnules and 1s changed every three weeks Copies were d1str1buted to tlle oilier
and nephews Including Howard
thirty years ago and I'm sure you'll find more than a $15 m- mstruchona l and frustrahon read mg le~•el
RAYMONDJIVIOEN
members, Bruce S Stout, Fred Greenlee,
Long of Point Pleasant
to tnsure vartety and prohtbtl boredom J E Cremeens and J C. Mitchell for tlleir
GALLIPOLIS - Raymond L
crease Seoems Is replacing ambulance services, but you get
Every chtid IS then gtven work that can be Such areas as folk dancmg, golf, patnhng,
Jovoden, 30 a resident of 6440
ORA E VASILE
more for your money Instead of transportation only, you receive
done at hts own rate of speed Some of the cookmg, sewtng, puppetry papter mache, constderation The committee formed last Southwest 21st Sf, West Holly
LETART
FALLS- Mrs Ora
atd from highly trained E M.T 's using the latest equipment, work IS tenchcr-&lt;lu cetecl and some IS done
month ts now workmg on job descriptions wood , Fla , died In Mercery E Vasile, 81, of 625 North
musiC app recta ti on, ca mpmg sk1lls,
Hospolal, Ft Laude•da le, Fla
while m route to the hospital or rest home These people have had
Genoa Road, Massillon. Ohio,
mdependently but all chtldren mus t apply croc heltng co llage, photography and Pohctes formulated will be approved at on Thursday
was pronounced dead on
hours of classroom studies as well as on the job trairung in the
the
March
meeting
themselves as the teac her mamtams a ornamental penmanshtp bemg only a
Mr J ividen Is survived by arrival Friday evening at
hospitals They were hired to do a job and they draw a salary JUSt
- Heard a re}Xlrt from George Walter, hos parents, Mr and Mrs Aultman Hospital In Canton
progress record on the ch1ld s work
small part of the areas covered "
like any other person does There have been times here m
ardtitect lor tlle futtire bulldmg program Raymond (Zelma Skodmore) She had been under a doctor's
" In spellm~ class each ch1ld •s g1ven a
Jividen, West Hollywood Fla , care for a heart aliment
Pomeroy, when a call would come in and all three Wills would be
m the cowtty
former
Gallta
Coun'J
Born 1n Louisiana, Mo, she
out on a call or nm While E MS. Is making a run to Columbus or
residents hos wife, Lois
came to Canton In 1937 from
some oilier out of county place, the volwtteer squad Is st!U here in
Jtvlden
two daughterS, Letart Falls, Ohio She was
BRUSH 'EM ANYWAY
Lynette
and
Mlilnda, both at preceded In death by two
town if needed They couldn't make these long trips and be away
WANTS AGNEW PROBE
LONDON (UP! )- The Health Mtnrstry
home, three sisters, Mrs
husbands , Harry Vasile In 1974,
from their jobs, whUe with Seoems, It Is tlletr job I'm sure that
WASHINGTON ( UPJ I - A freshman satd th e Bnllsh Dental Assoc1ahon
Jackie (Marilyn) Corwon. and Thomas Lewis In 1930 A
MURDERER
VANISHES
certain remarks made in some of the articles did not pertain to congr essman Saturday call ed for a
Northup Mrs. Eddy (Glenna)
and two sons also
MOUNDSVILLE, W Va (UP!)- West Coe, Pine Brook, Fla , and daughler
Me1gs or Gallia counties, but to oilier cowtties that does not have congresstona l mves ltgalton mto the • get- Saturday told parents to have lhetr
preceded
her
In death
Vlrgmta Pemtentiary offtclals said Mrs Robert (Nancy) Gills,
She was a member of Trinity
a volunteer unit Seoems does cover seven counties, and some of n ch-qmck" career of Spro T Agnew Rep children keep on brushmg, no ma tter what
Saturday they do not know the Walkertown, N C , and a United Methodist Church In
tlle remarks were made just generally speaking as a whole We Ronald M MotU D-Ohto, sa1d the former a recent study sa 1d The furor grew out of
brother, Gary. Marianna, Fla Perry Heights and the Sr
wherea!Jouts of convtcted murderer J~sse
Maternal grandparents are Citizens Day Center at Marlin
should feel proud tllat our counties were chosen for this project, v1ce president a nd fo rm er Attorney British newspaper stortes quotmg an ofW Whtte, .15, who escaped Jan 24 while Mr and Mrs L M. Skidmore, Luther Church In Canton
because there are lot of larger towns that are not so far advanced General Rtchard Klet ndtenst should be flct al government report on the state of
Gallipolis and paternal
Survivors
Include
a
m this field Do any of us really know how our tax doll~ are swnmoned lo testify m a public heanng children's Ieeth m Engla nd and Wales m bemg driven from a hospital to the prtson grandmother Is All Jividen,
daughter,
Mrs
Homer
(Mary)
1973
The
report
prmted
a
table
that
mHe got away when a guard drivmg a
actually spent' If your volunteer group doesn't receive financial about thetr acltvtttes as consultan ts to
Roush of Akron , two sons,
vesltgators
satd
showed
lha
t
brushmg
by
pemtentiary car stopped to repatr a fiat
atd from your town or county or state then tt would have to come foretgn '"' estors
Leooard W. Lewis and Ben
f&gt;-year-olds d1d not prevent tooth decay
tire near the commumty of Barracksville
iamln P Lewis. both of
through fund ratsing drives, large donations from clubs and
Massillon, a sister, Mrs
organiZ8 Uons and a U your business places So, It is st!U bemg
Clair
Parks. and a
also mvestigating a breaking brother,Hilda
supported in one way or another by the public and our tax
Hugh Stewart, both of
and entenng at Paul's Barber Canton , nine grand, and 17
dollars It may be free to some, bultlls costing others It would
The
Shop
in Hacme discovered greal-grandchlldren
be nice if aU concerned could work together After all, both
service will be conducted
mornmg
A
roll
of
Saturday
groups have the same goal, to help those m need I 'm m favor of
Monday at 2 30 p m at the
POM EROY
Heav; Robert Hartenba ch satd the
both, we need both - Another laxpayer (name withheld on
the Salem Center School when Road No 9 m Olive Township, quarters was taken from the Reed Funeral Home In Canton,
damages 11 ere caused m the pony, 011ned by James Bohn,
regtsler. Entrance was gained 705 Rail Road. South West,
request ) ·
11 ran mto the path of a ptck up a car drtven by James E
stde of a car dnven by Patty J Rutland had escaped from an
by
breaking g~ss m a rear with Rev Lester, E Flauhaus
truck drtven by Dale Hurst, Jr . 18, V1enna, W Va ,
officiating Burial will be In
door
Searles, 19, Rutland, at 3 30 encl osure and "as betng
Sunset Hills Burial Park
In d efense of Bradbury School
Ntc holson , Mlddleport
went
out
of
control
and
struck
p m Sa turd a) on coun I)' road 3 chased by the Bolm children
Moderate damages were an embankment There was
MARY ELLEN KISER
near here when a ponl struck The drtver was not mjured
reported to Ntcholson's moderate damage to the car,
JanWlry 31, 1975
POMEROY
- Mrs /Mry
the vehtcle
Al7 30 a m Saturda;, a deer vehtcle
To tlle Editor
MINUS WATERGATE
Ellen Koser, 85, Crown City
but
no
tn)urtes
to
tlle
drtver
The department of Shertff was ktiled on Route 124 near
Route 2, died Saturday morWASHINGTON ( UPI)
I am wrltmg this letter m regard to the front page article on
At 12 30 a m Saturday on
The shertff's department IS
ning al the Holzer Medical
Ralph Nader sa1d Fnday Center
Bradbury School System Jan 15 I wish I had been able to attend
Prestdent Ford 's economtc
that meeting, but due to the fact that! was working, ! could not,
Mrs Kiser was born Oct. 16,
1889,
the daughter of the late
rob
tlle
recovery
programs
however I plan to attend Ute public meeting Feb 4
Enlc
and
Sarah Casto She was
at
home
Do
you
think
tl
ts
not
also
used
m
the
other
schools
'
consumer for tlle beneft t of b1g also preceded
One person (opposed to the school ) approached me about my
In death by her
Let 's be honest and realistic
feelings toward Bradbury School, but what he S81d to me in my
busmess and thus, "for con- husband, Samuel, a son, Ervin,
In closmg, I ask, f1nd me more teachers who are as dedicated
sumers, Ford . equals Nllton six brothers and three grand
home was not what he stated, according to the paper, at all He
Continued from page I
to
the
JOb
of
teaching,
as
mtelligent,
understandmg,
JOVial
and
made statements about his son enrolled there and Mrs Phyllis
mmus Watergate " Nader children
Surviving
are
a
daughter,
She
satd
some
of
the
gtrls
think
she's
old
fashioned
when
they
sweet as Mrs Phtlson, Mrs. Morrison, Mrs Fultz and Mrs
Hackett that I could not believe, and in my estimation, it could
branded Ford's mcome tax Mrs Okey (Rosa) Miller of
ftrst
come
to
live
Willi
her
Her
house
rules
mclude
a
ban
on
Hackett These are the teachers I know Do you •
well be considered malioous slander in any court
rebate plan "ashetlgame" and Crown City, a sister, Mrs
steady dating until the age ofl6, but even in this respect Mrs
Nancy Pape and Rosemary Hysell, Laurel St , Mtddlepor t
called for " a veto-proof Canna Gordon, Kenna, W Va.,
Allan King was stated m the paper as saytng, "I believe we
two half sisters, Lora Kidd,
White shows an enlightened judgment "I got mamed tlle flnt
should be sure tlliS IS a school problem and not a parent-teacher
Congres8" to protect conswner Charleston, and Beulah
time at 16; I know 1t was too young But the times are changing
conflict " I believe this IS to be a level beaded, intelligent Value of public libr11ry extolled
mterests m 11 major econoiiUc Schriber, Clendenin , a brother,
Thmgs are different now I want my gtrls to profit from my
statement, that the public and the board should well remember
areas
rangmg from energy George, Clendenin, 20 grand
January 31, 1975 mistakes"
children ,
45
great
in thetr dectston (whether or not ) 1&lt;1 close down our progressive
policy to a conswner protection grandchildren and two greatDear Editor
While
she
believes
there
is
a
great
need
lor
more
foster
school of Bradbury
great grandchildren
Does the average ctltzen of MeigS County really value the homes Mrs White fears "Many cblldren in foster homes are not agency
Funeral services will be held
There have been statements by some people such as. "U they
public library• This is the questtoo whtch many People ask, getting what they 11%ed. I have been m many other footer homes
at 1 p m Monday at the Ewing
just had grade cards I'd like the school "
espectally the ones who are concerned wtth the amount of money
they lack the spirit of love."
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Do you really understand the grading system at Bradbury '
TROUBLE AHEAD?
requtred to run our libraries
Freeland Norris officiating.
Saving lbe Good
Burial will be In the Lelarl
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
In each subject your child ts graded in a very prectse evaluation
The repcrts have JUSt been finished on boolt Ctrculation for
Still, 11 Is tlle hope of saving " tbe litUe bit of good in every
Falls Cemetery Friends may
tllat tells you so much moce about how your child IS doing In each
The
nalton's
mayors
today
MeigS County lor 1974 The Bookmobile trawling a U over the chlld" whtch seems to sustain and encourage this lady.
call at the funeral home at any
subject and "II he could do better and "why" he doesn't !fa child
called for a $15 .2 \j)ilhon lime
counly and to schools, totaled 60,826 book loans - the Pomeroy "Olildren do not bother me. They do not make me nervous, but
learns very qutckly It gives this child the opporturuty to go ahead
economic program to 'tev1ve
library, 24,041 and Middleport library, 12,~1 for a grand total of when I see that I can'tdoa child any good, I know she's better off
enrich~. enlightening and maturing lhts mmd, rather than
the econcmy and save the
96,928 books This does not mclude the nwnber of loans made by Without-me".
GEORGE WICKLINE
bogging them down, bormg them' and losing prectous time How
Cities
from !lscal disaster. One
"Book by Mail'' of which our library IS a member. (!understand
MORGANTOWN, W Va
Mrs. White says she hasn 'I had any trouble as yet wttll ctrug.,,
can an A or C or any other grade used in the other schools tell you there IS a .sizable nwnber of tllese )
of them warned of nots wtthQut George Lyman Wickline, 71,
and she's hopeful. "I can'tbewtth the children every moment, so
all this •
unrnedmte
action by Congress Huntlngton. W Va , died
Also, many people use the reference books tllat cannot be I have to trust tllem. The only thing I can do IS deal wltlllt if it
,Tuesday In Cleveland
My tdea of a good teacher Is one who "knows" each one of
Ctrculated, readi1Js or stu&lt;IJ·mg inside the libraries, and our comes and tell them the right thing!j to do. We give them The mayors, meeting for their
He ·was born Oct 4, 1903 at
her students, tllelr good and bad pomts m learrung, attitude and
81111Ual mldwmter conference, Cadmus to the late C!harles and
llllrarlans answer many reference questions on tlle phone The literature to read and try to keep them informed of the conbehavior. I know my children this wen and at Bradbury tlle
proposed
a
mne-polnt Jennie Patterson Wickline He
three library centers all have phooes and can take requests for sequences of such behaVIor. I believe it's wlllting."
In death by one
teacher "must" and does know them this well to be able to spend hoolts from area , state and even mter--state librartes, II the ineconomic program to deal wttll son, prec.ded
Sherrill Lionel. and two
All m all, l')!rs White attempts to run her hou.sebold actlle added holl1'll 11 takes to eValuate your children's "grades"
tbe recession through a vanety brothers. L Me Kinley " /Me"
formation IS not available locally
cording to the Bill of Rights lor FOISter Olildren which reads, in
In my estimation Bradbury School system ts "getting back"
of public works programs to and L Hobart Wickline
The otal book loans of 96,928 means that every person Ill part
Aretired employeollhe L C
to really teaching each child in liis capaoty of learrung, canng Meigs County averaged reading at least ftve hooks last year
put people back to work and Meyer
"Every foster cbiJd has the inherent rigbl to be cberilhed by
Ce , Huntington, Mr
enQU8h about the job of teaching to spend many more hours than
help local governments whose Wickline was a- graduate of
Now then, DID YOU• - or are you letting someone else a famil,y ol his own _. to receive cciltlnuing loving care and
is reqwred in Ilia oilier schools our children must attend I benefit by the public money which makes education and pleasure respect as a unique human being."
budgets are m the red .
West VIrginia Business Coii!!Qe
and
was • employed as
believe teaching should be a dedicated JOH, but I have had a available through the public libranes Willi books on anl: lof&gt;tc
Mrs. White was bom and reared m Hendersoo, W. Va., and
bookkeeper of the Ford Motor
''teacher" m oor Meigs School System tell me that was "old
available through much unproved local, area and state'tilJOk has been m Gallipolis about 47 )11!11n. Sbe attended PCiiut
Co In . Gallipolis at one time
fashioned. "
Survivors include his wife,
collections and serv~ce.
Pleasant SchoOls and will have been married In November for 46
Iva
Galt!!Qher Wickline; ont
I wish to e%Jrt!SS my feelings also on tbe rumored attacts on
The Met.gs Library Trustees work lor one thing -unproved years to Wylie White, dispatcher at tile Gallipolis City Pollee
son, Charles Lyman Wickline,
Mrs. Hackett. I canoot believe she would or has ever punished a library servtce through educated staff and better management. Statim. For IS years she was a Dlll'lll!'s ald at tbe old Holler
and two sisters, Mrs Erma
iiiEETMONDAY
child In an abusive manner. She will "yell" at them, shake a
Please visit our local Ubrary or booltmoblle and ask what Hospital at a time when there were Gilly two aida In the boriJdl!ll
GALIJPOLIS
Tbe Webster and Mrs Parnle
Miller, both of Pttlrlot _
child, sit a child on a bench alone, or take a child to the office and programs besides just loanmg books are available Volunteer to
Galllpnlil Bllld Boo IIIILft will
Mrs. White lsn 't sure, but she tblnb abe had one ollbe flnt
Funeral services were at the
paddle a cbilil, 11 wan-anted. I realize there are people who do nbt be a Friend of the Library and be interested m the fut,ure of foster homes m Gallia Counly. More are llllll!ntly needed and
meet In lbe band room at a. Hastings ·Funeral Home,
ever punjab their dilld Ill "any" manner lor any ml!deed lillrary service in Me1gs County -Mrs. Roy Holter, pre!!tdent, anyone mterested in the program is enco11111ged to contact
Morgantown, 'FrlclaT, afh!rnoon
bigb IChool, beclmJng at 7:30 with
I'
burial follow ng In the
However. I believe a great many of us have used such measures Meigs Library Board of Trustees
alildren's Services at 446 1963
PJD- Monday.
Morgantown Cerne\err

II

than 300 "ords long (or be subject to redu ction by the
editor) and mu1t be signed with the slgn..,•s address
Names 111ay br withheld upoa publication However, on
request . names '!ill be dtsdosed Letters should be In good
taste. addressing l1sues. not personalities

I , E-tat-. _

! ••• 'lltt- H/1/h:

j

Schools make

Your Wayne National Forest

PUCO stud y act

I

Will hold a meeting and the Ha~ard
AnalySts for that parltcular proJec t IS
gone over and diScussed The Analysts
ts then revtsed to mclude any new
dangers or prob lems whtch the
diScussiOn may have brought to ltght
Many of the DIStnct employees
have gone through scores of these
meetmgs, and ypu mtght thmk that tl
would become a bonng waste of ltme to
many The dtscusstons seem to get
hveher, however, w1th each sessaon,
because the longer our men work at
vartous JObs the more they reahze that
the hazards actually e~ISI They ca n
spot an llllsafe stluahon at a glance and
head off an acctdent before tl occurs
They're proud of thetr record of over
three years wtthout a lost-lime acciden t
and they want tl to keep growmg
The D1str1ct also holds a monthly
safety meeting The chatrmanshtp IS
rotated among our empio) ees. who
may present a program of the1r own or
mvtte a gues t speaker to talk on some
phase of safety These meetmgs are
concluded wtth a dtscusston of any
"near ~mtsses)! or &lt;o.'..'close-calls ' whtch
may have happened to anyone , whether
11 was at home, on the highway, on
vacatiOn or at work Whenever one
occurs on the JOb the supervtsor Immediately gets the crew together and
they determme why such a thmg
happened, beca use understandmg the
why and how of the "near mtss" helps
prevent acctdents A ' near-mtss"

By T. Allan Woller,
District Ranger

!

(Ed Note- Today's arhcle IS
wntten by Ray Schoener, forester on
the Ironton Dtstrlcl)
IRONTON - The subject whtch IS
most strongly stressed m the Forest
Service. IS safety Production os Important, but not if tt's done at the pnce
of an accident or tn)ury to one of the
employees Before any new employee
starts to work , he 1s shown the hazards
of the JOb He 1s g1ven safety mstructiOns and IS shown the correct and
safe way to work
The Forest Servtees does many
JObs Most of them, from ftre-foghting to
limber stand tmprovement work and
timber marking, have an element of
danger All types of handtools, such as
powersaws, c.xes, ma chetes, ftre rakes,
and shovels are part of the everyday
workltfe of our personnel And the only
way we can be sure that we don't get
careless IS to continually stress and
practice the use of safe working
methods
For each prdJect we've developed
What we call a Safety Hazard Analysts
This Analysts IS a list of the hazards
whtch IS apparent on each JOb, together
wtth the precauttons to be taken to
avmd the hazard Every ttme a proJect
IS star ted, the supervtsor or foreman

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

! Area Deaths I

II

'

'

are open to the public and wtll
ge t underway at 6 p m
Banquet ltckets at $6 per
person are available at Ironton's Ftrsl Nat1onal Bank or
from any club member
Keyno te speaker at the
banquet will be State Forest
Wtidllfe BtologJSt Bob Donahoe
who "1ll present a color sltde
program and speak on the
hiStory and management of
Oh1o s Whtte fa tled deer herd

Hutland, Rt I, $50 and costs
$25 sus pended, ftcht tous
regJSiralto.u , Lee R Cadle,
Rutland. $5 and costs, public
mtoxtcatton, CarlE Kennedy,
Jr Rutland, $12 and costs,
speed mg, Nancy Reed, Mtd
dl eporl, $13 and cos ts
speedmg
Forfethng bonds were
Donald Harbron , Mtllon, W
Va Jack H Charles, South
Webster, Laverne L Schul tz,
Munc;, Pa . Stephen W
Harlan Thornville, James F
Ba uknect, Hurncane, W Va ,
Paul W Brown, Parkersburg,
Jen y Powell , Racine, Rt 2,
Harold R McKee, Wellston ,
and James A
Kemp,
Galhpo hs, $27 50 each,
speed1ng, Robert Vor hees ,
Rockbr)dge, $32 50 overload
Robert A Eckles, Nelsonvi lle,
$27 50, overload , J ohn W
Freeman, Rockbndge, $37 50,
overload

G. C. MURPHY
RESTAURANT

A mascot IS a person or thmg
that ts supposed to brtng good
luck from the French si a n~
masco sorcere r

~ILVER BRIDGE PLAZA SOOPPING CENTE
EXCELLENT FOOD AT
REASONABLE PRICES

~

NEED A VALENTINE!

FEATURED TODAY: RIB EYE
STEAK, • LIVER and ON IONS,
CHICKEN and NOODLES.

Peddler's Pantry

We Are Open 9:00a.m. trl8; 00 p.m . Week Days

IRONTON - G P Honchul,
southeast Ohto Area Wildlife
Manager, has been selected as
"Sportsman of the Year" by
the Southern Htlls Sportsmen
Club, lnd
The award, one of two
presented an nually by the
sportsmen's o;gamzalton
recogmze s Honchul's ou tstandtng wqrk tn wtldhfe
management the past 10 years
Employed by the Ohto
DiviSIOn of Wtldhfe the past 15

COLO\Y
·
flw111r·,

.

,,

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

years, "G," as he prefers

to be

called, began hiS career as a
laborer at Rush Run Wtldllfe
Area m Preble County In 1964
he was promoted and transferred to the post of manager of
the Cooper Hollow Wtldlife
Area m Jackson County Under
h1s able management Cooper
Hollow Wtldhfe Area has
become a favortte of area
sportsmen and nature lovers
alike
_.'G " ts re cogmzed by
Dtvlston supervtsors and coworkers as one of the best
Wildlife management men m
the state He IS a member of
the Wtldhfe Society, Ducks

rom antiC

PRICES THRU TUES., FEB.-4TH

Unlimtted (Ohto Chapter board
member ), Ruffed Grouse
Society of North Amertca, Wtld
Turkey Federalton, League of

REG. $25.94
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BANKAMERICARD
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75c per week Motor ro ut e
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MAIL
SUB SC RIPTION RATES
Th e Ga ll ipOl iS Tnbune tn
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all news
dtspat c. he s credi t ed to the
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MEIGS THEATRE
Pomeroy

Marn St.

992-5303
1

00 9 oo

t OitltY HO ,.Attl:t

SPRUCE
UP
THE

SAVE
1.53
EACH

"WON DURA"
FRAMED DOOR
AND WALl MIRRORS

HJOLEDO"
BEDSPREAD

REG. '6.97

Heavy Wetghl
lOD pel cotton wolh
rich bullion fronge

$798

Sleek sty led portable block / wh tte
TV measures only 161 /2 x 11 5/ 8
x 10 Feat ures UHF and VHF an
tenno$ UHF tuner Has outomot tc
gam control earphone IOt;k

REG. '9.98

REG. 17.99 SAFID
CAR SEAl
1

$1499

TOILffiE TRAINER

FUll

SIZE

BABY SAVE
BED $}0

$5299

REG
$62 99

WHITE &amp; WALNUT

OUR
LOW
PRICE

$488

ST.

GAWPOLIS, OHIO

3

t/IVE1
4'1_C

Pretty prtnl pdnhet of cotton /ro~on

Jen•r knit wUh elastic wai st and

: $22~0\0
REGULAR 127.99

'27.44

Chrome frame 3 pos t \

DILU:XI
PLAYARD

t1on adJustable bock
rest plost1c troy wue
shopp1n g basket 1\b.y

eSiurdy
top resosll ng
offset legs,
~on sk od leg
eWashoble vonyl
e3 way ho-omprx:t
tray , foot rest
and seat belt
e35'1.' ' tal l
CHROME
PLATED
STEEL

patchwork vmyl pnnt
match 1ng canopy

~

·G.C. MURPHY C • • • 'I'HE FRIEW!DLY S'I'OREI
SILYER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE ' DQWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

--~7

I

•

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(

,I

eg

CHARGE IT!

UN!SSIMIIID

"THAT OLD. FASHIONED GOODNESS"

PKG OP

Paste ptnk blue mal ~-'1 per p~g

NO-OiARGE
LAYAWAY
SwiY!I Wheel
SIROLLIR

89~

· &amp;.4akt l'qnppr

Rog 57'-'4

SAVE
510

HOLDS ON
'.1 DOWNMURPHY'S

( Sma II Size)
of your choice

Your Order Will Be Wailing

69

1

REG. '6.44
DELUXE

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK

2nd &amp; OLIVE

12 IN. ·~~c::t:.~· Black &amp; ••••
PORIAB..IIILIYISION

SAVE 12

Lomplete assor t men t ot

octagon, c.rcle and door
m1rrors
Woodgrain

(Regular Size)

TO GO OR EAT HERE

'6

NO IRON JACQUARD

1

FEBRUARY 2nd THRU F~BRUARY 8th

LUNf!!H TIME GOODIE. ..
eHOT DOG

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HOME

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLl'

No Subt
No Coupons - No L1mij

PLEASE STOP IN WE WILL BE GLAD YOU DID! !

.

State Street - - - -Galhpohs, Oh1o-

G. P. HONCHUL

los Aneetu fllltl

SHOW TIMES

From s3.00 up

Uunfl!t'!

"ONE OF THE BEST EVER MADE I"

adven ture I

12:00 Noon TiiiS:OOp.m . on Sundays

Bargain

WOKDIR
OriTAI.I.

Ahu la-nous

A BEAUTIFUL HANGING PLANTER
-

PLAN APPEAL
TOLEDO ( UPI)
A
Marathon 011 OJ Official said It
planned to appeal tlle denial by
Federal Court Judge Nicholas
J . Waltnski Jr of lis requestlor
a court order blocking the new
" entitlement program" lor
crude oil At a brief hearing
here Friday, tlle judge said he
d1d not want to change the
current status of tlle program,
destgned lo level out the difference that oil ftrms have to
pay for domestic and foreign
cr ude otl Marathon is
headquartered at Fmdlay,
OhiO

COLSON FREED
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
federal judge Fnday ordered
former Whtle House atde months of a sentence of one to
Charles W Colson released three years handed down June
fr om prtson because of 21 He was held at Maxwell Air
ovemdmg family problems Force Base m Montgomery,
Colson, 42, had served seven Ala

,-----~-----"~------- )

Ohto Sportsmen and the Ohto
Wtldltf e Manag e m e n t
Assoctalton
Honchul's award wtll be
presented at the club's an nual
B1g Bucks Banquet on
February 15 at the Martmg
Hotel m Ironton. Fesllvtties

going to 'G' Honchul

..

.

court bonds

POMEROY
Etght
defendants were fm ed and 12
others forfetted bonds m Me1gs
Cotmty Court Fnday.
Ftned by Judge Robert E
Buck were Cha rles R Bennett,
Jr • The Plmns, $15 and costs,
speedmg , Donald L Lambert
Pomeroy Rt 2, $10 and costs,
excesstve speed Charles F
Johnson Mason, $5 and costs,
tllegal parkmg, Jerry Stobart,
Middleport, no funds , $25 and
costs, 10 days confmement.
resttlutton,
four
days
suspended . Robert Imboden.

sometunes md1cates special problems
• On prOJects whtch reqwre the use
of tools such as the powersa" , or when
new employees make up part of the
crew, "tai lgate' ' sesstons are held after
the crew has unloaded at the works1te
The hazards wh1ch mtght be enCOWl tered that day are gone over before
work IS started
Every man IS responst ble for hts
own and hts co-worker's safety Acctdents not only cost ttme and money,
they HURT' AttentiOn has to he called
to llllsafe acts or tl wouldn't be long
before a"' near-mtss" would turn mto a
real accident Then the employee, h1s
fam1ly and the Forest Servtce would
all suffer
(
The personnel of the Ironton
Ranger Dtstrtct know th iS and they've
sho-.n tl by the way they've kept free of
acctdents wlule at the same tune
keepmg a very htgh level of produc
tmty Thos was recogmzed by Don
Gtrlon, Sup erv isor of the Wayne
Naltonal Forest, when he recently
presented the DJStrtct wtth a Special
Achtevement Award for Outstandmg
Safe Performance for the September
1971 through August 1973 pertod 75,998
hours, equaling 41 man ;ears, were
\\ Orked and 149,040 miles were dnven
- all wt thout a lost-ttme acctdent
Another year's lime and mileage ,has
been added to that total Tht~ IS one
record that we hope to keep and add to

Year's Sportsman award

Others' children

..

up

SUGGESTS

Auto's side damaged by p9ny on run

w"'

12 give

FILE REPO!tT
COLUMBUS IUPI) - The
Clttzens for John Glenn Friday
has ftled a campatgn report
saymg tl had mdtvtdual controbuttons, loans and collecttons totali ng $168,308 48 for the
penod Oct 26-Dec 31, 1974
The committee said tt spent
$180,100 67 m wmdmg up the
senator's successful campa1gn
work II had an oulstandmg
debt of $124,852 68 at the end of
the year, mcludtng $25,000 lent
by Glenn early m the campaign

I

'

�,_
2- The SlUlday Ttmes- Sentmei,Swtday, Feb 2, 1975

~--~----------~!
I----------Lett en of opinion ""'welcomed
They should be lt•u

Embattled
Contmued from pa ge

James

g-

Cre.:k
School agaillst
Prmclpal
supp~rtm•
LannmgHigh
The grievance
pertained
lo the
I
use of the former pnncipal's office for a
1
chtid
s
progress
thr
ough
extenSive
\1
ntten
lounge The office is now bemg
teachers'
Contmued
from
page
1
1
I
C
\aluc~lt
o
n
s
,11
the
tnd
of
l
d&lt;:h
seme
ster
1
1
fac ulty member present wtll conduct an used as an attendance office and clln1c
'I
hesc
rcpo1
ts
&lt;J! c very comp r('ht.:n.slve e~ nd
I
1
Alsotakenunderadvtsementweretwo
utformal hea rmg The board agreed
tnclude the progrr" of tile chtld 1n each 11 holeheartedly thai discipline must be requests, one from the Vmton VFW and
1
SUbJC'&lt;.' t rll eel M Ul.: h tunc and effor t IS given
upheld tWd that students should conduct the other from a church requesting the use •
bJ the tea chers on these evaluations
of tlle old Eno School Building The VFW
State Rep Ronald James Is and hearing procedures which
themselves In an orderly fashion.
Parent conferences dre .dso held m Ocwould
like
to
use
the
building
as
a
meeting
co-sponsoring
wtth Rep tlle Conunlssion used when
The board took under adviSement a
tober and Aprti to closcuss the child s grtevance filed by the faculty of Kyger hall The church, represented by Rev Thomas J Carney legiSlation
fixing utility rates 1&lt;1 see II IIIey
I
I progress In all area s Parens are a lso
Fuller, wishes to use it as a recreation which would create a citizen- are approprmte considering
I
I encour dgcd to make an appotntment \\ l th
center for Eno Community youth
, legislator conuruttee to study today 's state and national
an) of the l€a chers al a11y ltme when they
Trt Sta r Electncal Company of the
organization
and economic picture," Jamea
Wa nt.• puiJ/i(' to bt• lll•&lt;~ rd
&lt;Ire conce rned about lhc u chald
Gallipolis
was
granted
a
contract
to
rewu-e
procedures
of
the
Public
GallipoliS, Ohto
S81d
The Curriculum
placement test to determtne where the the electrical system for the upstatrs of the Utilities Commission of Ohio
Jan 27,1975
"The study comrruttee will
About the cut rt culum .tt the 81 adbuq
Gall111
COwtty
Board
of
Education
Offtce
to
Representative
James
sa1d
Editor
student should be placed tn the Contmuous
also mqu1re mlo the
Sc hool
tlle study comnuttee would be Jrocedures by which tlle PUCO
By the news media we hear and read about mflatJOn
Progress SpeII ong Ia b Tiussystem enables be located m the old County Home
Sot1al studi es and suence We
The local board wUJ have 1ts ad- asked to determine what handles requests for rate
recessiOn, depressiOn and energy shortages and what our elected
a chtld to study onl; the words he does not
us1ng
refcrcm:e
ski
lls
tn
the
conten
t
stress
Oli!UStrattve
,offtces m four rooms on the changes are necessary to revisions, consumer comfederal offtclals thmk should be done to solve the problems
kn ow The lab IS set up on 16 levels and
area
of
soctal
studtcs
and
science
second
floor
of
the building Gallia County enable the PUCO to more ef- plamts, and safety lnspectio!ll
Locally we hear and read about meettngs bemg held The
conststs of ooer 4 000 words A chtld who
Chi ldren v. ork from p~gs whtch ar e c"n clo more dtfftcult work IS thus afford ed Comrrussloners will pay the cost of the fe ctively perform tis functions
Gallia County and Ga llt}Xllls City Commtss1oners meeltng "llh
to determme if unprovements
wnt
te n by the teachm g slaff 'Jhese pegs
and duties "The b1U stipulates rum be made m tllese areas
representatives of the medical professwn , SEOEMS and Ga llla
lhe opportuml) I he studen t moves ahead work downstatrs
contmn man) actJvltJes through wh1ch as he conquers more dtfftcult ilsts of
Farrell's Glass and Home Mam- that the study COillllUSSion giVe also, " Rep James comCoomty Volllllteer Emergency Squad, some of these held behtnd
children
l
ec~r
n
dascovermg
thmgs
for
tenance
Company was a warded a contract particular regard to the for- mented
CLOSED l.XX'RS Who of thts group was mstrumental m paddm g
words Those compietmg ali 16 levels are
themscl\ es dt thc1r uv.n rate of speed Not then memb ers of the school newspaper for pamting the four rooms, hallway, an mula, auditing , mvesttgatory
the population count of Gallipolis Ctty to obtam the SEOEMS
upslatrs restroom at a cost of $1,400 The
all children c.: omplc tc the sa me act!\ 1hes slaff
ambulance '
electrtcal
contract totaled $1,486
and
chi
ldren
have
opportum
hes
to
choose
The Gallia OJunty Volunteer Emergency Squad ts domg a
Wntmg IS also gtven on a le\el ac
Another
btdder on electrical work was
some
of
thetr
own
dcttvttles
whtr.
:
h
fur
ther
\\onderful serVIce for our commumty Why do their represencepted for ondependenl work Teacher
Roach
's
Electrtc
at $1,598 97.
allows for tndlv ldua hzatJOn !'he social
tatl\es have to be subJected to the CLOSED IXXJR meetmgs
dtrec ted act1 volies ate prepsented and
Other pamt btds were $1,575 from
studaes curn culum sta rts wt th children each chtld w01ks on h1s wrtltng pad
called by the medical profession and SEOEMS ' It all bolls down
Salisbury and Uoyd Danner and
Daryl
first
lem
mng
ab
ut
thetr
1
mmedaate
to one btg factor The average person of this commuruty cannot
Children are encouraged to follow stan$1,500
from
Roger Bostic
ound
angs
a
nd
then
about
other
surr
afford to pay the base fee of J25 or plus and also have the tssue
SAMUEL V CLONCH
dard "1 1tmg procedures and progress Is
Dunbar W Va
In
oilier
matters,
the board took out a
coun ties and con t1ncn ts Sctence In - recorder! by the teacher
BIDWELL - Samuel Vonton
Funeral serv tces wtll be held
placed on theta~ dupltcate top That ts what IS needed to assure
liabiltly IIISurance policy With tlle Ohto Clonch, 69, a resodent of Rt 2 1 p m Monday at the Fred
troduces them to lhe bod) S) Siem and
the services of SEOEMS
En ~ lls h I S presented on a n Individual
B1dwett ~o ed at 8 20 p m Hunter Funeral Home, West
envu onment.al fr~ c tor s Tes ts arc g1ven on level" 1th sl11 dents workmg m ma tertals at School Board Assocmtion at a cost of $20 Fr
Another subject publtctzed ts the anttclpated school bwldmg
tday tn Holzer Med ical
Hollywood Burial will be on
""veral levels so that ever) chtld can show thetr mdependenl tnstructtonal level wtlh per year per member
Cente r
recommendatiOns before the Gallia OJ School Board, and the
Memory Gardens at Ft
Mr Clonch had been on Lauderdale
- Entered into a lease agreement wtth
some measure of progre ss and success
fanlast tc amount of money to be mvolved We each can votce our
man) teacher-&lt;hrected aclovthes '
fatlmg
health one year He was
the Nahonal Cash Regtster Company for
Mathema tics Students 1n tne
opuuon on that matter at the polls
a reti red Galloa County Hogh
Spectal Jeadmg - In these classes an accounting machme _
CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON
Bradbury School used the lndtvtduahzed students a1 e gtven an added cha nge to
way Department employee
When are the City, OJunty , State and Federal offt clals gomg
RIO GRANDE - Graveside
- Accepted the evaluahon forms for
Mr Clonch was born Aug . 8, roles for Christopher Keith
Malhernaltcs Sl sl€m pubhshed by Gtnn tmprove thetr readmg skills Some classes
to recogmze the fact that they .represent the people ' It IS about
and Co This system IS ttn or ganrlatwn of tn spec1ai readmg are spec1ftc skills, IIIS!ructional staffs and prmc1pals and 1905, on Mason County, W Va . Johnson. stoltborn son of Steve
time we (th e tal&lt;(layers ) are asked before large commttments
son of the late Oscar and D and Vlckoe Blankenship
mstructwnal matena ls conststmg of sk11l ca ll phone, vOC'abulary, comprehensiOn, superviSOrs as approved by the GCLTA Katherone Stayton Clonch
are made With our momes
Johnson. Roo Grande, will be
-Granted the Vmton VFW pemiiSSion
He marned tf'le former Edna
foidet s tests, actiVI ties and teacher atds
held at Centenary Cemetery 2
I do not understand why the City Co1Tlll118Sioners 1oaded the
newspaper and hbrary poe try and phomcs
These matenals present the sk1iis and wtlh each class destgned to atd the studen t to use the Vmton Elementary Gym for a Duncan She preceded htm m p m today .with Rev Allred
business district with parkmg meters They are drtvmg the
death on March 6 1970
Holley ofl tclatmg .
concep ts of a tota l elementary m fulhllm g hiS tnd1v1dual needs Since ceremomal meeting Feb 16.
customers out of town Also , why put the swmunmg pool outstde
A mece M&gt;q. Martha Vorey ,
Servoces will be under the
- Accepted the reSignation of Mary was reared m the Clonch home d~rectlon
mathema tiCs prog ram The 11 areas of each student progresses accordmg to hts
Gallipolis when we presently have an energy shortage that w1ll
of Wtllls Funeral ·
be With us for a long ltme '
mstruchon al
m,t leroal
mclude own abohl) no student IS held back and Wallis as a recrutter for the Adult She resides on Sarasota, Fla Home
One s tster, Mrs Carne
Survlvtng
bestdes
the
Education program and employed Mrs
numeratiOn
additton , subtractiOn, f01 ced to watt on hts classmates "
Little Is bemg done to unprove and preserve "The Old
Leemaster, GalltpOIJs , sur
parents are maternal grand
Marilyn
Morgan
as
her
replacement
multiphcatwn diviSIOn fracttons, ap
vtves Four brothers and one parents, Mr and Mrs Roy W
French City " All efforts seem to be directed outSide the ctty
Roun dtng ou t th e c urn culum at
Acknowledged
two
letters
regardmg
soster
preceded hom In death
phcat10ns,
money
,
time,
measurement
Blankenshop, Rt 2. Gallipolis,
limits Why, for whom , wtth what m mmd ' I think the public
Bradbury are Mustc Phys1cal Educalton, the condition of the Hannan Trace
Mr
Clonch
spent
most
of
his
and
paternal grandparents ,
wants to know
and geome try There are mne levels of and Quest
life on Gal Ita County He was a Mr and Mrs Leo Johnson,
School,
one
letter
was
written
Elementary
dtfftcult; for each of these area s
Gallipolis City and Gallia Cowtly is not too large a regton to
member of Belt Chapel Patroot Star Route
Mus1c classes are held three pertods
Placement tests are goventhe ftrst week of a week wtlh no regula r textbook bemg by Mrs Robm T H1te, a parent, and the Church He was employed at
take a survey O" some of these matters It seems our elected
the GSI team several years,
R P ALDERSON
school The results of these 11 tests suggest used Prtnted matenal - the favort te other by Fred Fellure, a janitor
offtcials and others have taken every decrslon from us - Name
and
was a member of the tn
GALLIPOLIS
- Robert P
Authonzed
Supermtendent
C.
1
wtthheld by request
the begmmn g placemen t le1el for each songs of lhe children - ts used
sfttute S baseball squad for a Alderson 92, Kanauga , died at
Comer Bradbury, after discussion Willi number of years He also 8 SO a m Friday In Morris
student Students sho" van ous levels of
• Desptte the fact tha t a spectally Mrs Hlte, to have the two custodians at worked
for the Campbell Memorial Hospital at Milton
performance Students are tested before tramed phystcal educa twn teacher IS not
Towmg
Co,
for a number of
In defense of SEUEMS
He wa s a retired salesman
and after each new um t and are permitted avatlable Bradbury's phystcai educatton Hannan Trace Elementary and Prmc1pal years
Funeral services will be
Pomeroy, Ohio
Funeral servtces will be held conducted Monday at 1 p m
to move to new um ts after thetr tests , program meets the prescrtbed needs of Atlee Fulks attend lhe next board meeting
-Heard reports from Supermtendent 2 p m Monday at the Waugh from the Crow Hussell Funeral
Jan 28,1975
teacher correc l€d , show the student has upper elementary ch tldren The staff
Dear Str
Bradbury
and h1s assistants, Frank Halley Wood Funeral Home Home The Rev Rufus
mastered the un1t •
w tfh Rev Everett De laney and
vel;
selects
acltv1ttes
to
provtde
cooperato
Cromartoe will officiate and
In respoose to r~nlletters concerning SEOEMS, I'd like to
Language arts block - · Thts consists the program Baste sports sktlls are taugh t Cremeans, Dennts Murdock and Dave Rev A L Baldrodge of
bu•lal wilt be In the Lone Oak
make a few comments It Isn't in competition with, nor was it
Campbell regardmg problems in tlleir flcoatlng . Burial witt be m Cemetery Friends were being
of Ieadmg spelling wrt hng and English
wtlh the emphasts bemg on sportsmanship areas.
Mound Holt Cemetery
started to replace any local volunleer groups WE have been
received at the funeral home
The chtldren are gtven a Houghton Muffll n and team\\ork rather than compelolton
Friends may call at the after S p m Saturday
foi1Wl8te there in Meigs and Gallia cowttles to have these
Heard
a
re}Xlrt
gtven
by
hoard
tndiVIduahzed readmg lest and on the
home from 2 4 and 7 9
'
Mr Alderson Is survtved by
Quest ts an enrtchment
actiVIty member Dale Rothgeb , Jr. on tlle progress funeral
dedicated people all tllese years I think there Is need and room
Sunday
p
m
basts of the seoo e and the score on an Iowa handled also by the staff wh1ch has offered
his wife, Lucy Long Alderson,
for both uruts Thirty years ago, It cost me $10 for ambulance
formerly of Point Pleasant, a
Baste Sk1iis lest .or ~ placed m t11e proper over 50 ftelds of acltv1ty ove r the past ftve of board policies and job descriptions.
soster,
Mrs Elizabeth Rankon ,
transportation from Ga!Upolls to Pomeroy Compare hospttal
Board
polictes
have
been
established
readtng level rhe testmg enables the l ears Thts IS held tw1ce a week for 45
Topeka , Kan , several nieces
costs, food and clothing, and utllily bills of today with those of
teacher to ftnd the ch1ld s tnclependen t. mtnules and 1s changed every three weeks Copies were d1str1buted to tlle oilier
and nephews Including Howard
thirty years ago and I'm sure you'll find more than a $15 m- mstruchona l and frustrahon read mg le~•el
RAYMONDJIVIOEN
members, Bruce S Stout, Fred Greenlee,
Long of Point Pleasant
to tnsure vartety and prohtbtl boredom J E Cremeens and J C. Mitchell for tlleir
GALLIPOLIS - Raymond L
crease Seoems Is replacing ambulance services, but you get
Every chtid IS then gtven work that can be Such areas as folk dancmg, golf, patnhng,
Jovoden, 30 a resident of 6440
ORA E VASILE
more for your money Instead of transportation only, you receive
done at hts own rate of speed Some of the cookmg, sewtng, puppetry papter mache, constderation The committee formed last Southwest 21st Sf, West Holly
LETART
FALLS- Mrs Ora
atd from highly trained E M.T 's using the latest equipment, work IS tenchcr-&lt;lu cetecl and some IS done
month ts now workmg on job descriptions wood , Fla , died In Mercery E Vasile, 81, of 625 North
musiC app recta ti on, ca mpmg sk1lls,
Hospolal, Ft Laude•da le, Fla
while m route to the hospital or rest home These people have had
Genoa Road, Massillon. Ohio,
mdependently but all chtldren mus t apply croc heltng co llage, photography and Pohctes formulated will be approved at on Thursday
was pronounced dead on
hours of classroom studies as well as on the job trairung in the
the
March
meeting
themselves as the teac her mamtams a ornamental penmanshtp bemg only a
Mr J ividen Is survived by arrival Friday evening at
hospitals They were hired to do a job and they draw a salary JUSt
- Heard a re}Xlrt from George Walter, hos parents, Mr and Mrs Aultman Hospital In Canton
progress record on the ch1ld s work
small part of the areas covered "
like any other person does There have been times here m
ardtitect lor tlle futtire bulldmg program Raymond (Zelma Skodmore) She had been under a doctor's
" In spellm~ class each ch1ld •s g1ven a
Jividen, West Hollywood Fla , care for a heart aliment
Pomeroy, when a call would come in and all three Wills would be
m the cowtty
former
Gallta
Coun'J
Born 1n Louisiana, Mo, she
out on a call or nm While E MS. Is making a run to Columbus or
residents hos wife, Lois
came to Canton In 1937 from
some oilier out of county place, the volwtteer squad Is st!U here in
Jtvlden
two daughterS, Letart Falls, Ohio She was
BRUSH 'EM ANYWAY
Lynette
and
Mlilnda, both at preceded In death by two
town if needed They couldn't make these long trips and be away
WANTS AGNEW PROBE
LONDON (UP! )- The Health Mtnrstry
home, three sisters, Mrs
husbands , Harry Vasile In 1974,
from their jobs, whUe with Seoems, It Is tlletr job I'm sure that
WASHINGTON ( UPJ I - A freshman satd th e Bnllsh Dental Assoc1ahon
Jackie (Marilyn) Corwon. and Thomas Lewis In 1930 A
MURDERER
VANISHES
certain remarks made in some of the articles did not pertain to congr essman Saturday call ed for a
Northup Mrs. Eddy (Glenna)
and two sons also
MOUNDSVILLE, W Va (UP!)- West Coe, Pine Brook, Fla , and daughler
Me1gs or Gallia counties, but to oilier cowtties that does not have congresstona l mves ltgalton mto the • get- Saturday told parents to have lhetr
preceded
her
In death
Vlrgmta Pemtentiary offtclals said Mrs Robert (Nancy) Gills,
She was a member of Trinity
a volunteer unit Seoems does cover seven counties, and some of n ch-qmck" career of Spro T Agnew Rep children keep on brushmg, no ma tter what
Saturday they do not know the Walkertown, N C , and a United Methodist Church In
tlle remarks were made just generally speaking as a whole We Ronald M MotU D-Ohto, sa1d the former a recent study sa 1d The furor grew out of
brother, Gary. Marianna, Fla Perry Heights and the Sr
wherea!Jouts of convtcted murderer J~sse
Maternal grandparents are Citizens Day Center at Marlin
should feel proud tllat our counties were chosen for this project, v1ce president a nd fo rm er Attorney British newspaper stortes quotmg an ofW Whtte, .15, who escaped Jan 24 while Mr and Mrs L M. Skidmore, Luther Church In Canton
because there are lot of larger towns that are not so far advanced General Rtchard Klet ndtenst should be flct al government report on the state of
Gallipolis and paternal
Survivors
Include
a
m this field Do any of us really know how our tax doll~ are swnmoned lo testify m a public heanng children's Ieeth m Engla nd and Wales m bemg driven from a hospital to the prtson grandmother Is All Jividen,
daughter,
Mrs
Homer
(Mary)
1973
The
report
prmted
a
table
that
mHe got away when a guard drivmg a
actually spent' If your volunteer group doesn't receive financial about thetr acltvtttes as consultan ts to
Roush of Akron , two sons,
vesltgators
satd
showed
lha
t
brushmg
by
pemtentiary car stopped to repatr a fiat
atd from your town or county or state then tt would have to come foretgn '"' estors
Leooard W. Lewis and Ben
f&gt;-year-olds d1d not prevent tooth decay
tire near the commumty of Barracksville
iamln P Lewis. both of
through fund ratsing drives, large donations from clubs and
Massillon, a sister, Mrs
organiZ8 Uons and a U your business places So, It is st!U bemg
Clair
Parks. and a
also mvestigating a breaking brother,Hilda
supported in one way or another by the public and our tax
Hugh Stewart, both of
and entenng at Paul's Barber Canton , nine grand, and 17
dollars It may be free to some, bultlls costing others It would
The
Shop
in Hacme discovered greal-grandchlldren
be nice if aU concerned could work together After all, both
service will be conducted
mornmg
A
roll
of
Saturday
groups have the same goal, to help those m need I 'm m favor of
Monday at 2 30 p m at the
POM EROY
Heav; Robert Hartenba ch satd the
both, we need both - Another laxpayer (name withheld on
the Salem Center School when Road No 9 m Olive Township, quarters was taken from the Reed Funeral Home In Canton,
damages 11 ere caused m the pony, 011ned by James Bohn,
regtsler. Entrance was gained 705 Rail Road. South West,
request ) ·
11 ran mto the path of a ptck up a car drtven by James E
stde of a car dnven by Patty J Rutland had escaped from an
by
breaking g~ss m a rear with Rev Lester, E Flauhaus
truck drtven by Dale Hurst, Jr . 18, V1enna, W Va ,
officiating Burial will be In
door
Searles, 19, Rutland, at 3 30 encl osure and "as betng
Sunset Hills Burial Park
In d efense of Bradbury School
Ntc holson , Mlddleport
went
out
of
control
and
struck
p m Sa turd a) on coun I)' road 3 chased by the Bolm children
Moderate damages were an embankment There was
MARY ELLEN KISER
near here when a ponl struck The drtver was not mjured
reported to Ntcholson's moderate damage to the car,
JanWlry 31, 1975
POMEROY
- Mrs /Mry
the vehtcle
Al7 30 a m Saturda;, a deer vehtcle
To tlle Editor
MINUS WATERGATE
Ellen Koser, 85, Crown City
but
no
tn)urtes
to
tlle
drtver
The department of Shertff was ktiled on Route 124 near
Route 2, died Saturday morWASHINGTON ( UPI)
I am wrltmg this letter m regard to the front page article on
At 12 30 a m Saturday on
The shertff's department IS
ning al the Holzer Medical
Ralph Nader sa1d Fnday Center
Bradbury School System Jan 15 I wish I had been able to attend
Prestdent Ford 's economtc
that meeting, but due to the fact that! was working, ! could not,
Mrs Kiser was born Oct. 16,
1889,
the daughter of the late
rob
tlle
recovery
programs
however I plan to attend Ute public meeting Feb 4
Enlc
and
Sarah Casto She was
at
home
Do
you
think
tl
ts
not
also
used
m
the
other
schools
'
consumer for tlle beneft t of b1g also preceded
One person (opposed to the school ) approached me about my
In death by her
Let 's be honest and realistic
feelings toward Bradbury School, but what he S81d to me in my
busmess and thus, "for con- husband, Samuel, a son, Ervin,
In closmg, I ask, f1nd me more teachers who are as dedicated
sumers, Ford . equals Nllton six brothers and three grand
home was not what he stated, according to the paper, at all He
Continued from page I
to
the
JOb
of
teaching,
as
mtelligent,
understandmg,
JOVial
and
made statements about his son enrolled there and Mrs Phyllis
mmus Watergate " Nader children
Surviving
are
a
daughter,
She
satd
some
of
the
gtrls
think
she's
old
fashioned
when
they
sweet as Mrs Phtlson, Mrs. Morrison, Mrs Fultz and Mrs
Hackett that I could not believe, and in my estimation, it could
branded Ford's mcome tax Mrs Okey (Rosa) Miller of
ftrst
come
to
live
Willi
her
Her
house
rules
mclude
a
ban
on
Hackett These are the teachers I know Do you •
well be considered malioous slander in any court
rebate plan "ashetlgame" and Crown City, a sister, Mrs
steady dating until the age ofl6, but even in this respect Mrs
Nancy Pape and Rosemary Hysell, Laurel St , Mtddlepor t
called for " a veto-proof Canna Gordon, Kenna, W Va.,
Allan King was stated m the paper as saytng, "I believe we
two half sisters, Lora Kidd,
White shows an enlightened judgment "I got mamed tlle flnt
should be sure tlliS IS a school problem and not a parent-teacher
Congres8" to protect conswner Charleston, and Beulah
time at 16; I know 1t was too young But the times are changing
conflict " I believe this IS to be a level beaded, intelligent Value of public libr11ry extolled
mterests m 11 major econoiiUc Schriber, Clendenin , a brother,
Thmgs are different now I want my gtrls to profit from my
statement, that the public and the board should well remember
areas
rangmg from energy George, Clendenin, 20 grand
January 31, 1975 mistakes"
children ,
45
great
in thetr dectston (whether or not ) 1&lt;1 close down our progressive
policy to a conswner protection grandchildren and two greatDear Editor
While
she
believes
there
is
a
great
need
lor
more
foster
school of Bradbury
great grandchildren
Does the average ctltzen of MeigS County really value the homes Mrs White fears "Many cblldren in foster homes are not agency
Funeral services will be held
There have been statements by some people such as. "U they
public library• This is the questtoo whtch many People ask, getting what they 11%ed. I have been m many other footer homes
at 1 p m Monday at the Ewing
just had grade cards I'd like the school "
espectally the ones who are concerned wtth the amount of money
they lack the spirit of love."
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Do you really understand the grading system at Bradbury '
TROUBLE AHEAD?
requtred to run our libraries
Freeland Norris officiating.
Saving lbe Good
Burial will be In the Lelarl
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
In each subject your child ts graded in a very prectse evaluation
The repcrts have JUSt been finished on boolt Ctrculation for
Still, 11 Is tlle hope of saving " tbe litUe bit of good in every
Falls Cemetery Friends may
tllat tells you so much moce about how your child IS doing In each
The
nalton's
mayors
today
MeigS County lor 1974 The Bookmobile trawling a U over the chlld" whtch seems to sustain and encourage this lady.
call at the funeral home at any
subject and "II he could do better and "why" he doesn't !fa child
called for a $15 .2 \j)ilhon lime
counly and to schools, totaled 60,826 book loans - the Pomeroy "Olildren do not bother me. They do not make me nervous, but
learns very qutckly It gives this child the opporturuty to go ahead
economic program to 'tev1ve
library, 24,041 and Middleport library, 12,~1 for a grand total of when I see that I can'tdoa child any good, I know she's better off
enrich~. enlightening and maturing lhts mmd, rather than
the econcmy and save the
96,928 books This does not mclude the nwnber of loans made by Without-me".
GEORGE WICKLINE
bogging them down, bormg them' and losing prectous time How
Cities
from !lscal disaster. One
"Book by Mail'' of which our library IS a member. (!understand
MORGANTOWN, W Va
Mrs. White says she hasn 'I had any trouble as yet wttll ctrug.,,
can an A or C or any other grade used in the other schools tell you there IS a .sizable nwnber of tllese )
of them warned of nots wtthQut George Lyman Wickline, 71,
and she's hopeful. "I can'tbewtth the children every moment, so
all this •
unrnedmte
action by Congress Huntlngton. W Va , died
Also, many people use the reference books tllat cannot be I have to trust tllem. The only thing I can do IS deal wltlllt if it
,Tuesday In Cleveland
My tdea of a good teacher Is one who "knows" each one of
Ctrculated, readi1Js or stu&lt;IJ·mg inside the libraries, and our comes and tell them the right thing!j to do. We give them The mayors, meeting for their
He ·was born Oct 4, 1903 at
her students, tllelr good and bad pomts m learrung, attitude and
81111Ual mldwmter conference, Cadmus to the late C!harles and
llllrarlans answer many reference questions on tlle phone The literature to read and try to keep them informed of the conbehavior. I know my children this wen and at Bradbury tlle
proposed
a
mne-polnt Jennie Patterson Wickline He
three library centers all have phooes and can take requests for sequences of such behaVIor. I believe it's wlllting."
In death by one
teacher "must" and does know them this well to be able to spend hoolts from area , state and even mter--state librartes, II the ineconomic program to deal wttll son, prec.ded
Sherrill Lionel. and two
All m all, l')!rs White attempts to run her hou.sebold actlle added holl1'll 11 takes to eValuate your children's "grades"
tbe recession through a vanety brothers. L Me Kinley " /Me"
formation IS not available locally
cording to the Bill of Rights lor FOISter Olildren which reads, in
In my estimation Bradbury School system ts "getting back"
of public works programs to and L Hobart Wickline
The otal book loans of 96,928 means that every person Ill part
Aretired employeollhe L C
to really teaching each child in liis capaoty of learrung, canng Meigs County averaged reading at least ftve hooks last year
put people back to work and Meyer
"Every foster cbiJd has the inherent rigbl to be cberilhed by
Ce , Huntington, Mr
enQU8h about the job of teaching to spend many more hours than
help local governments whose Wickline was a- graduate of
Now then, DID YOU• - or are you letting someone else a famil,y ol his own _. to receive cciltlnuing loving care and
is reqwred in Ilia oilier schools our children must attend I benefit by the public money which makes education and pleasure respect as a unique human being."
budgets are m the red .
West VIrginia Business Coii!!Qe
and
was • employed as
believe teaching should be a dedicated JOH, but I have had a available through the public libranes Willi books on anl: lof&gt;tc
Mrs. White was bom and reared m Hendersoo, W. Va., and
bookkeeper of the Ford Motor
''teacher" m oor Meigs School System tell me that was "old
available through much unproved local, area and state'tilJOk has been m Gallipolis about 47 )11!11n. Sbe attended PCiiut
Co In . Gallipolis at one time
fashioned. "
Survivors include his wife,
collections and serv~ce.
Pleasant SchoOls and will have been married In November for 46
Iva
Galt!!Qher Wickline; ont
I wish to e%Jrt!SS my feelings also on tbe rumored attacts on
The Met.gs Library Trustees work lor one thing -unproved years to Wylie White, dispatcher at tile Gallipolis City Pollee
son, Charles Lyman Wickline,
Mrs. Hackett. I canoot believe she would or has ever punished a library servtce through educated staff and better management. Statim. For IS years she was a Dlll'lll!'s ald at tbe old Holler
and two sisters, Mrs Erma
iiiEETMONDAY
child In an abusive manner. She will "yell" at them, shake a
Please visit our local Ubrary or booltmoblle and ask what Hospital at a time when there were Gilly two aida In the boriJdl!ll
GALIJPOLIS
Tbe Webster and Mrs Parnle
Miller, both of Pttlrlot _
child, sit a child on a bench alone, or take a child to the office and programs besides just loanmg books are available Volunteer to
Galllpnlil Bllld Boo IIIILft will
Mrs. White lsn 't sure, but she tblnb abe had one ollbe flnt
Funeral services were at the
paddle a cbilil, 11 wan-anted. I realize there are people who do nbt be a Friend of the Library and be interested m the fut,ure of foster homes m Gallia Counly. More are llllll!ntly needed and
meet In lbe band room at a. Hastings ·Funeral Home,
ever punjab their dilld Ill "any" manner lor any ml!deed lillrary service in Me1gs County -Mrs. Roy Holter, pre!!tdent, anyone mterested in the program is enco11111ged to contact
Morgantown, 'FrlclaT, afh!rnoon
bigb IChool, beclmJng at 7:30 with
I'
burial follow ng In the
However. I believe a great many of us have used such measures Meigs Library Board of Trustees
alildren's Services at 446 1963
PJD- Monday.
Morgantown Cerne\err

II

than 300 "ords long (or be subject to redu ction by the
editor) and mu1t be signed with the slgn..,•s address
Names 111ay br withheld upoa publication However, on
request . names '!ill be dtsdosed Letters should be In good
taste. addressing l1sues. not personalities

I , E-tat-. _

! ••• 'lltt- H/1/h:

j

Schools make

Your Wayne National Forest

PUCO stud y act

I

Will hold a meeting and the Ha~ard
AnalySts for that parltcular proJec t IS
gone over and diScussed The Analysts
ts then revtsed to mclude any new
dangers or prob lems whtch the
diScussiOn may have brought to ltght
Many of the DIStnct employees
have gone through scores of these
meetmgs, and ypu mtght thmk that tl
would become a bonng waste of ltme to
many The dtscusstons seem to get
hveher, however, w1th each sessaon,
because the longer our men work at
vartous JObs the more they reahze that
the hazards actually e~ISI They ca n
spot an llllsafe stluahon at a glance and
head off an acctdent before tl occurs
They're proud of thetr record of over
three years wtthout a lost-lime acciden t
and they want tl to keep growmg
The D1str1ct also holds a monthly
safety meeting The chatrmanshtp IS
rotated among our empio) ees. who
may present a program of the1r own or
mvtte a gues t speaker to talk on some
phase of safety These meetmgs are
concluded wtth a dtscusston of any
"near ~mtsses)! or &lt;o.'..'close-calls ' whtch
may have happened to anyone , whether
11 was at home, on the highway, on
vacatiOn or at work Whenever one
occurs on the JOb the supervtsor Immediately gets the crew together and
they determme why such a thmg
happened, beca use understandmg the
why and how of the "near mtss" helps
prevent acctdents A ' near-mtss"

By T. Allan Woller,
District Ranger

!

(Ed Note- Today's arhcle IS
wntten by Ray Schoener, forester on
the Ironton Dtstrlcl)
IRONTON - The subject whtch IS
most strongly stressed m the Forest
Service. IS safety Production os Important, but not if tt's done at the pnce
of an accident or tn)ury to one of the
employees Before any new employee
starts to work , he 1s shown the hazards
of the JOb He 1s g1ven safety mstructiOns and IS shown the correct and
safe way to work
The Forest Servtees does many
JObs Most of them, from ftre-foghting to
limber stand tmprovement work and
timber marking, have an element of
danger All types of handtools, such as
powersaws, c.xes, ma chetes, ftre rakes,
and shovels are part of the everyday
workltfe of our personnel And the only
way we can be sure that we don't get
careless IS to continually stress and
practice the use of safe working
methods
For each prdJect we've developed
What we call a Safety Hazard Analysts
This Analysts IS a list of the hazards
whtch IS apparent on each JOb, together
wtth the precauttons to be taken to
avmd the hazard Every ttme a proJect
IS star ted, the supervtsor or foreman

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

! Area Deaths I

II

'

'

are open to the public and wtll
ge t underway at 6 p m
Banquet ltckets at $6 per
person are available at Ironton's Ftrsl Nat1onal Bank or
from any club member
Keyno te speaker at the
banquet will be State Forest
Wtidllfe BtologJSt Bob Donahoe
who "1ll present a color sltde
program and speak on the
hiStory and management of
Oh1o s Whtte fa tled deer herd

Hutland, Rt I, $50 and costs
$25 sus pended, ftcht tous
regJSiralto.u , Lee R Cadle,
Rutland. $5 and costs, public
mtoxtcatton, CarlE Kennedy,
Jr Rutland, $12 and costs,
speed mg, Nancy Reed, Mtd
dl eporl, $13 and cos ts
speedmg
Forfethng bonds were
Donald Harbron , Mtllon, W
Va Jack H Charles, South
Webster, Laverne L Schul tz,
Munc;, Pa . Stephen W
Harlan Thornville, James F
Ba uknect, Hurncane, W Va ,
Paul W Brown, Parkersburg,
Jen y Powell , Racine, Rt 2,
Harold R McKee, Wellston ,
and James A
Kemp,
Galhpo hs, $27 50 each,
speed1ng, Robert Vor hees ,
Rockbr)dge, $32 50 overload
Robert A Eckles, Nelsonvi lle,
$27 50, overload , J ohn W
Freeman, Rockbndge, $37 50,
overload

G. C. MURPHY
RESTAURANT

A mascot IS a person or thmg
that ts supposed to brtng good
luck from the French si a n~
masco sorcere r

~ILVER BRIDGE PLAZA SOOPPING CENTE
EXCELLENT FOOD AT
REASONABLE PRICES

~

NEED A VALENTINE!

FEATURED TODAY: RIB EYE
STEAK, • LIVER and ON IONS,
CHICKEN and NOODLES.

Peddler's Pantry

We Are Open 9:00a.m. trl8; 00 p.m . Week Days

IRONTON - G P Honchul,
southeast Ohto Area Wildlife
Manager, has been selected as
"Sportsman of the Year" by
the Southern Htlls Sportsmen
Club, lnd
The award, one of two
presented an nually by the
sportsmen's o;gamzalton
recogmze s Honchul's ou tstandtng wqrk tn wtldhfe
management the past 10 years
Employed by the Ohto
DiviSIOn of Wtldhfe the past 15

COLO\Y
·
flw111r·,

.

,,

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

years, "G," as he prefers

to be

called, began hiS career as a
laborer at Rush Run Wtldllfe
Area m Preble County In 1964
he was promoted and transferred to the post of manager of
the Cooper Hollow Wtldlife
Area m Jackson County Under
h1s able management Cooper
Hollow Wtldhfe Area has
become a favortte of area
sportsmen and nature lovers
alike
_.'G " ts re cogmzed by
Dtvlston supervtsors and coworkers as one of the best
Wildlife management men m
the state He IS a member of
the Wtldhfe Society, Ducks

rom antiC

PRICES THRU TUES., FEB.-4TH

Unlimtted (Ohto Chapter board
member ), Ruffed Grouse
Society of North Amertca, Wtld
Turkey Federalton, League of

REG. $25.94
BATTERY OPERATED
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BANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL
Published every Su n day b y
The OhiO Valley Pu b liShing
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O htO 11 5631
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evenmg except Saturday
Second Class P ostage Pa td at
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T H E DAILY S ENTINE'
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Pomeroy 0
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da y even ng e&gt;&lt;cept Saturday
Enlered as sec on d cla ss
ma llm g ma t ter a t Pom ero y,
OhiO Post Offtce
By earner da•IY and Sunday
75c per week Motor ro ut e
$J 25 per month
MAIL
SUB SC RIPTION RATES
Th e Ga ll ipOl iS Tnbune tn
Oh 1o and West V1rg1nta one
year $22 00 SIX month s Sll SO.
three mont hs S7 00 Elsewhere
$26 00 per year SIX\ mont hs
$13 50 t hree months $7 SO,
mo tor route $3 25 monthly

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and push button
controls

Co

~oJolt&gt;t &gt;hi Rllil; ill&gt; b! ~I
~ Wt it m:tloU En!~ llfi:i it ~

Th e DallY Sent mel on e fear
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S1X
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thr ee months $7 00 Elsewhere
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St X months $13 50
three month s S7 50
Th e Un1 t ed ' Press
In
ternattonal t S ex.c lu s vely
ent 1t le d t o th e u se for
p u bl rcaf ton o f
all news
dtspat c. he s credi t ed to the
n ewspaper and also t he local
n ew s publi Sh e d her em

ARTS WEDNESDAY
2 DAYS ONLY

MEIGS THEATRE
Pomeroy

Marn St.

992-5303
1

00 9 oo

t OitltY HO ,.Attl:t

SPRUCE
UP
THE

SAVE
1.53
EACH

"WON DURA"
FRAMED DOOR
AND WALl MIRRORS

HJOLEDO"
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REG. '6.97

Heavy Wetghl
lOD pel cotton wolh
rich bullion fronge

$798

Sleek sty led portable block / wh tte
TV measures only 161 /2 x 11 5/ 8
x 10 Feat ures UHF and VHF an
tenno$ UHF tuner Has outomot tc
gam control earphone IOt;k

REG. '9.98

REG. 17.99 SAFID
CAR SEAl
1

$1499

TOILffiE TRAINER

FUll

SIZE

BABY SAVE
BED $}0

$5299

REG
$62 99

WHITE &amp; WALNUT

OUR
LOW
PRICE

$488

ST.

GAWPOLIS, OHIO

3

t/IVE1
4'1_C

Pretty prtnl pdnhet of cotton /ro~on

Jen•r knit wUh elastic wai st and

: $22~0\0
REGULAR 127.99

'27.44

Chrome frame 3 pos t \

DILU:XI
PLAYARD

t1on adJustable bock
rest plost1c troy wue
shopp1n g basket 1\b.y

eSiurdy
top resosll ng
offset legs,
~on sk od leg
eWashoble vonyl
e3 way ho-omprx:t
tray , foot rest
and seat belt
e35'1.' ' tal l
CHROME
PLATED
STEEL

patchwork vmyl pnnt
match 1ng canopy

~

·G.C. MURPHY C • • • 'I'HE FRIEW!DLY S'I'OREI
SILYER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE ' DQWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

--~7

I

•

'(

(

,I

eg

CHARGE IT!

UN!SSIMIIID

"THAT OLD. FASHIONED GOODNESS"

PKG OP

Paste ptnk blue mal ~-'1 per p~g

NO-OiARGE
LAYAWAY
SwiY!I Wheel
SIROLLIR

89~

· &amp;.4akt l'qnppr

Rog 57'-'4

SAVE
510

HOLDS ON
'.1 DOWNMURPHY'S

( Sma II Size)
of your choice

Your Order Will Be Wailing

69

1

REG. '6.44
DELUXE

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK

2nd &amp; OLIVE

12 IN. ·~~c::t:.~· Black &amp; ••••
PORIAB..IIILIYISION

SAVE 12

Lomplete assor t men t ot

octagon, c.rcle and door
m1rrors
Woodgrain

(Regular Size)

TO GO OR EAT HERE

'6

NO IRON JACQUARD

1

FEBRUARY 2nd THRU F~BRUARY 8th

LUNf!!H TIME GOODIE. ..
eHOT DOG

SAVE

HOME

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLl'

No Subt
No Coupons - No L1mij

PLEASE STOP IN WE WILL BE GLAD YOU DID! !

.

State Street - - - -Galhpohs, Oh1o-

G. P. HONCHUL

los Aneetu fllltl

SHOW TIMES

From s3.00 up

Uunfl!t'!

"ONE OF THE BEST EVER MADE I"

adven ture I

12:00 Noon TiiiS:OOp.m . on Sundays

Bargain

WOKDIR
OriTAI.I.

Ahu la-nous

A BEAUTIFUL HANGING PLANTER
-

PLAN APPEAL
TOLEDO ( UPI)
A
Marathon 011 OJ Official said It
planned to appeal tlle denial by
Federal Court Judge Nicholas
J . Waltnski Jr of lis requestlor
a court order blocking the new
" entitlement program" lor
crude oil At a brief hearing
here Friday, tlle judge said he
d1d not want to change the
current status of tlle program,
destgned lo level out the difference that oil ftrms have to
pay for domestic and foreign
cr ude otl Marathon is
headquartered at Fmdlay,
OhiO

COLSON FREED
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
federal judge Fnday ordered
former Whtle House atde months of a sentence of one to
Charles W Colson released three years handed down June
fr om prtson because of 21 He was held at Maxwell Air
ovemdmg family problems Force Base m Montgomery,
Colson, 42, had served seven Ala

,-----~-----"~------- )

Ohto Sportsmen and the Ohto
Wtldltf e Manag e m e n t
Assoctalton
Honchul's award wtll be
presented at the club's an nual
B1g Bucks Banquet on
February 15 at the Martmg
Hotel m Ironton. Fesllvtties

going to 'G' Honchul

..

.

court bonds

POMEROY
Etght
defendants were fm ed and 12
others forfetted bonds m Me1gs
Cotmty Court Fnday.
Ftned by Judge Robert E
Buck were Cha rles R Bennett,
Jr • The Plmns, $15 and costs,
speedmg , Donald L Lambert
Pomeroy Rt 2, $10 and costs,
excesstve speed Charles F
Johnson Mason, $5 and costs,
tllegal parkmg, Jerry Stobart,
Middleport, no funds , $25 and
costs, 10 days confmement.
resttlutton,
four
days
suspended . Robert Imboden.

sometunes md1cates special problems
• On prOJects whtch reqwre the use
of tools such as the powersa" , or when
new employees make up part of the
crew, "tai lgate' ' sesstons are held after
the crew has unloaded at the works1te
The hazards wh1ch mtght be enCOWl tered that day are gone over before
work IS started
Every man IS responst ble for hts
own and hts co-worker's safety Acctdents not only cost ttme and money,
they HURT' AttentiOn has to he called
to llllsafe acts or tl wouldn't be long
before a"' near-mtss" would turn mto a
real accident Then the employee, h1s
fam1ly and the Forest Servtce would
all suffer
(
The personnel of the Ironton
Ranger Dtstrtct know th iS and they've
sho-.n tl by the way they've kept free of
acctdents wlule at the same tune
keepmg a very htgh level of produc
tmty Thos was recogmzed by Don
Gtrlon, Sup erv isor of the Wayne
Naltonal Forest, when he recently
presented the DJStrtct wtth a Special
Achtevement Award for Outstandmg
Safe Performance for the September
1971 through August 1973 pertod 75,998
hours, equaling 41 man ;ears, were
\\ Orked and 149,040 miles were dnven
- all wt thout a lost-ttme acctdent
Another year's lime and mileage ,has
been added to that total Tht~ IS one
record that we hope to keep and add to

Year's Sportsman award

Others' children

..

up

SUGGESTS

Auto's side damaged by p9ny on run

w"'

12 give

FILE REPO!tT
COLUMBUS IUPI) - The
Clttzens for John Glenn Friday
has ftled a campatgn report
saymg tl had mdtvtdual controbuttons, loans and collecttons totali ng $168,308 48 for the
penod Oct 26-Dec 31, 1974
The committee said tt spent
$180,100 67 m wmdmg up the
senator's successful campa1gn
work II had an oulstandmg
debt of $124,852 68 at the end of
the year, mcludtng $25,000 lent
by Glenn early m the campaign

I

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f -'

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Thursday club pears
Mrs. Dorothy Shaw
A. Thom as and Mrs . Hichard
Sha \v . Although shr m nved
from north ern Oh1 11 to

Gallipolis only la&gt; l sp nn g.
Mrs . Shaw fr rqucntl) \' l.Silcd
ht~ r gra ndpa rcnb lll'l't' dunng
her gir lhood .
After· gradu a tmg fr orn Ohio
State Unin•rsit\ Mrs Shaw
lt1ug ht Englb;h ~nd had 1i1~my
years e xpc r ierH't' 111 b(lok
rev~e win g, dramatws and
creativ e writirg. As n or othr

Derry Shaw she ha s prese nted

FEBRUARY

-• •~

.-/

:-

SAVE

20%

tlt&gt;r book reviews and ori ginal
IPc lures to hundreds of groups •

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport
992 -2156

.:] ·1 (, -

in the grea ter Cleveland area . .:
Mrs. Shaw delig hted the
members of the Thursday Cl ub
with one of her programs titled

2Yt2

" Pe ttiroa ts and. Pie." This w:1 s
a ,tromposi l(' look at fiv e books
wri ttcn by Della Thompson
I.ute s.
They
are
an
aut ob iog raphical acuount of
her life on a fa rm in southern

Michigan in the IR70s . Mrs.
Shaw

incl ud ed a cl eve r
of the clothes worn

des~ripti on

in that period and the bountiful
meals the fa rm famil y enjoyed
th ree times each day . The
c haracte r of the au th or 's
father was del::1iled in his
relationships with his w!~e and
da ug hter, his m a ny relatives

''

and neighborhood friends. The
authm•'s own firs t experi ences
as a teacher in country schools

at age 15 were sympathetically
recounled by DoroU1y Shaw.
Mrs . Gil lin gha m se rved
re fr es hments from a Leu Utble

decorated with a Valentine
motif. She was assisted by Mrs .
John Halliday and Mrs. George
Bush. The nex t meeling of the
Thursday Clu b will be Feb. 6 at
the home i1f Mrs. John Carty.

pr.u...

.......

e. :; .: tr e :::e ..cal

I. College

TO

50%

'lit
. .......
. '"
".~ ·~:. :::.

j .

~~

News

»

On Many

•

Woman's World

..

'•

Items

BEREA - Rick Grymes has
recenuy been pledged to the
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at \
Baldwin-Wallace, Berea. He is i
the son of Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
.
Grymes, 485 Jackson Pike, ,
Gallipolis. Rick Is a freshman ·
: physical education major, and
is a member of the Yellow"&lt;&lt;ackets football team.

SINGING - Christopher Griffin, Gallipolis, right, joins fellow Green Parks performers
Cathy Anderson, left, and Lee Ann Hutchinson in recreating Ohio'• pioneer days with.songs,
music and native humor as The Appal.achian Green Parks Projects comes to tele~ioion Wed·
·
nesday, Feb. 5, at 9 p.m . on WOUB-TV fO·

j

C:LARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.
. Gallipolis; Ohio

...........iiriiriolliroiiiooo.......

WOUB

This is the time of year to begi n thinking about buying an air
conditioner . Don't forget to compare the energy efficiency ratios
. to get the most cooling power for your money and your needs.
Divide the B.T.U. rating per hour by the watts raliflll . The
higher the resulting number, from 4.7 to 12.2, the better. The
highly effi cient models may cost more initially , but the savings in
electricity will make up the difference. Many manufacturers
voluntarily label the efficiency ratio of their products.- H.W.,
. Pensacola, Fla .

SIIJIS-

Has A Whole New Look
For Spring
Junior Sportswear 5-13

For future reference
Take the wrapping paper from gifts you receive, smooth it out
on your ironing board and press it with a warm iron on the wrong
side. If wrinkles persist, rub a barely damp cloth over it lightly
and iron again .
Then spread the paper in layers and roll it on a large tube , as
fro,., aluminum foil. Place a rubber band at each end of the roll
and store it with your wrapping supplies for the future. - A.S..
Creston, !a.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Get that

MIDDLEPORT - Projects
of assistance to hospitalized
• veterans and others who are
sick and shut-in were planned
during a meeting of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Be nnett Post 128,
Tuesday night at the hall.
The District 8 junior community service pa rty was
announced for Feb . 20 at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
Good used jewelry, purses,
hose and handkerchiefs are
needed for the party and the
juniors will solicit contributions. It is expected that
there will be a bout 40 men and
women at tbe party .
The girls also discussed
plans for favors which they will
provide each month to the 32patient diabetic ward at the
Sandusky Veterans Hospital
"adopted" by the auxiliary. In .
addition they will be oending
each month money and gifts
for the veterans .
Mro. Bonnie Dailey, advisor,
told of her recent trip to the
Peck of Wee Ones Home
where she delivered several
boxes of clothing and other .
items. Each month the jmtiors
contribute for the children by
having a shower at their
meetings.
Friday, Mrs. Dailey met with
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja of the
• Meigs Boodmobile to present
books on flag etiquette, "Tbe
Ohio Government Digest",
''The Flag Code" and "Know
Your American
Legion
Auxiliary". These books will
also be presented to the Middleport Library .
The unit subscribed to the
Legislative Bulletin, the
CarVille Star and the Firing
Line .
Reports were given on the
various projects carried out
during tbe past two months. It
was noted that a box of fun eral

.

ATHENS
The Appalac hian Green
Parks
Project, acclaimed for its
talented touring company of
young musicians and singers,
is coming to television as the
subject of an hour long music
special to air Wednesday, Feb.
5 at 9 p.m. on WOUB-TV20 and
WOUC-TV44.
Chri stopher Griffi n is a
member of the touring company
from
Gallipolis .
Christopher sings " The E-r-ie" and square dances with the
audience. Christopher is the

Thirst quenchers

Sr; Citizens
Calendar

Try drinking water for variety. It's the cheapest thirst
quencher there is, and much healthier than most of the overGALLIPOLIS - The Senior
.
sug ared. ca[bonated drin k~ we often use.
When you want fru it juice, make certain it's real fruit juice. Citi~ens Center, located in the
not the imitation fruit drinks loaded with sugar, artificial County Home Building at 220
Jackson Pike, is open Monday
fl avori ngs and colorings with a bit of vitamin C thrown in.
through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3
Insulation ideas
p.m.
The schedule of activities for
When insulating around electri cal receptacles be sure to use
this
week is as follows:
extra insulation behind the receptacle box to help cut down on air
drafts.
Monday, Feb. 3, Olde Tyme
If paneling is used, caulking the space between the receptacle Chorus Practice, 1:30 p.m.
and the paneling will help eliminate air drafts-around the recepTuesday, Feb. 4, Crafts, 1-3
tacle. - T.H.W.. Hanover, Pa.
,
p.m.
Wedllesday, Feb. 5, Blood
Hot water helps .
Pressure Check, l- 2 p.m. ;
Think about economics when you're placing a water heater. Cards and Games, 1-3 p.m.
The farther water has to travel in a pipe from the heater to where
Thursday,. Feb. 6, Movie
it will be used. the more expensive it is'.
about
a biography "Harriet
Suggest .that your builder install water heaters closer to launTubman
and the Underground
dry faciliti es. kitchens and bathrooms. - R.M., Ishpeming, Mic .
Railroad ," I.J p.m.
1Ha ve you a clever way to save energy or flgbt inflation? Send
Friday, Feb . 7, Center
your idea to The Inflation Fight er in care of this newspaper. Th e Chai rperson's Meeti ng, 1-3
best ideas will be used in future columns. and tbelr authors will p.m. ; Art Class, 1-3 p.m. ;
be reward'ed "'ilh a free copy of the $!.50 book "Sa••e Money-Save Center open, 7 p.m.
Gas.")
Senior Nutrition Program
serves meals daily at 12 noon.

FAMILY RETURNS
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Van Inwagen have
purchased a home on Lincoln
Heigh ts. The couple just
recently returned to Meigs
CoWJty from Florida. Sunday
they joined her parents, Mr.
and Mrs . David Grindstaff for
a trip to Beckley , W. Va., to
visit relatives.

WHITE LAB COATS
AND

WHITE TOPS
To help chase the chills on cold days

OR ·

basket ribbons had been sent oo
the Dayton Veterans Hospital
where they are made into rugs
along with 50 new ties.
Donations were made to the
Middleport firemen for
Qlristmas food baskets, oo the
Middleport emergency squad, .
and to the Gifts for the Yanks
who Gave. Presented at the
meeting was a certificate from
Department conunending the
WJit for contributing to the
Gifts for the Yanks program .
Other Christmas projects
included favors for Veterans
Memorial Hospital, assiswryce
on fruit and gifts taken to the
Meigs County Infirmary, the
Gallia County Children's Home
and the Syracuse Nursing
Home . The girls also furnished
floral centerpieces, favors,
Qlristmas plates and napkins,
loot bags for the Chillicothe
party in December .
It was noted that two parties
have been held for the veterans
at the Athens Mental Healt h
Center recenUy with gills and
refreshments totaling . over
$100. The juniors also assisted
with the expense of preparing
53 fruit trays for the charter
members, shut-i ns and gold
star mothers of the post and
unit . Fruit baskets were
delivered to their " Adopted"
handicapped child and their
"ado pted" senior citizen .
Olristmas cards were sen t to
all area servicemen where
addresses were available.
Little Miss Poppy and Junior
Miss Poppy were selected and
will be announced later this
month . Poppy Days will be
May 23 and· 24 and at the same
time the juniors will have a
rummage sale. A bake sale
was ten ta tively set for
Saturday before Easter at
Dudley Florists.
Set as an objective for this
year was one Christmas card

"--.:,..

'

Celebrate
LoveDay!
Let Hallma'rk Valenlines,
party sets and gifts color
your Valentine's Day with
love. For Friday. Feb. 14.

Mitchell Office
Supply
Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

on BABY SHOE BRONZING

DURING FEBRUARY
bab~llood
)Our ~

can bo: pn

.a

pr ecrous

pe nonal tr ~Hure Your baby's
~hM~ r, cnr, pres~rved rn ~o l rd

rite ta l .1dh

~verr crea~e. cr,n ~ 1 e
lo r~ ver .

Your cho•ce ot

SERVICE SET
GALLIPOLIS - The Paint
Creek Baptist Church will
observe Youth Sunday today
with services beginning at
10:45 a.m. All area youth are
cordially invited.

tra1t

~Llnos

boo ~.ends.

ard

mJnt

sl) res .. Now At Grta t

Sa\· o1g~

All styles available in
Bright Bronze,
Antique Bronze, Silver,
" Pewte.r ", and Gold
STYLE 5 1

45 Portrait Stand
50 B o oken ds · ~ poir

Rri~:~t Bronre
Rnguta r $7.95

ON

SALE

Reg. Pr rces
Bri ght Bronl~

Style

Unmounted Shoe

son of John T. and Eve Griffin,
618 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The film was produced for
WOUB te levision with the
support of the Ohio Arts
Council, the Ohio Educational
· Television Network Commission,
the
Ce ntr al
Educational Network and the
George Fund Foundation with
the assis tance of the Ohio·
American Revolution Bfcen,
tennial Advisory Commission.

por
ot~~~

$596

each

SALE PRI CES
Br 1gl\l fll onw

62 0'31 Mm&lt;ature

27.95

82 Asht ray

$23.96
22.46
20.96

16.95

12.71

131.95
29 .95

PLUS MANY MORE Ask for Free Folder
Engrawing only 15c per lellc r

BRING SHOES IN NOW ••• SALE ENDS FEB. 28
----~---------

TAWNEY JEWELERS

422 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

GALLIPOLIS

.l146..0090
"

.~

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

••

•

,.

:,

,

fur young drug addi&lt;'l&amp;. will
speak 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Church of Christ ; public invited .
MEETING at 4 p. m. at
Royal Crown ~arage on North
Second Ave.. Middleport, to
organize girls' softball learns.
All interested persons urged to
attend.
MEMBERS OF Drew
Webster Post .39 American
Legiol1 , Pomeroy, to meet, in a
body, to attend services at
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Members are to meet
at 10:25 a . m.

personnel with the Soutllcrn
Ohio COlli Cu. si nce the family
movl'd here ubout two ,year s
·agu . They rwvc res ided in the
up:; lai rs apartment over the
Mei gs Mu.selml .
At the party were Becky

Mc:IUri sha

~ nd

Karen Stanl'ey
Nease .

Nelso n,

Donna

Party fetes· Bill Baer··
SYRACUSE - A surprise
birthday party was held at the
Syracuse School Tuesday at
the first recess in honor of the
principal BUI Baer.
Mr . ~er was presented a
gift by Mrs. Alma Louks, Mrs .
Sandr a HilL Mrs . Debbie.
Harris, Mrs. Pauline HUI, Mrs .
Ruth Stearns, Debbie Wilson,

·Mrs. Eleanor Wingett, Mrs.
Ruby Congo and Mrs. Herbert
.Roush.
The guest of honor wu
presented a cake, "Happy
Birthday Mr. Baer," decorated
. with white icing, blue fiowent,
and green leaves baked by
Mrs: Roger Roush, served with
Ice cream, coffee and tea.

,.,

Whirlpool Shopper's
11 11 111

1

Sweepstakes

1111\

·

Win A New 1975 VEGA

MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p. m. Founder 's Day program
by Miss Triplett's third grade
students. Past presidents will
be recog nized and nominating
committee announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:45
p. m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple , instead of Tuesday
night due to meeting conflicts.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mrs . Erma Mulford
. Hersman, Kanauga, announces the engagement and ap·
proaching marriage of her daughter, Debbie Mulford, to
Riek Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ona Moore, Gallip&lt;ilis. The
bride-elect is the daughter of the late Qlarles Mulford. Miss
Mulford is a senior at Gallia Academy High School. Moore is
a 1973 graduate of Gallia Academy. An open church wedding
will he the event of June 14 at the Qleshire Methodist Church
at 7:30pm.

Miss Denise Hendricks

. HARRISONV ILLE PTO 7:30
p.m. Robe.rt Snowden, .guest
speaker. Refreshments.
OHIO Association of Public
School Employes special
meeting at 7:30p.m. at Meigs '.
Junior Hi gh, Middleport.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Beal, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their
foster daughter, Marlyn Denise Hendricks, Parkersburg, to
Randall Lee Boring , son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Boring,
Reedsville. Miss Hendricks is a 1973 graduate of Meigs High
School and a 1974 graduate of Mountain State College. Boring
is a 1973 graduate of Eastern High School and is employed by
Fenton Art Glass, Williamsoown1 W. Va . Wedding plans are
·
incomplete.

TUESDAY
REGULAR meeting, Meigs SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
County Fair Board, 8 p.m. , Gospel Musi c Association at
secreU!ry's office on Rock home of Larry McGraw, SR 160'
north of Holzer Medical
Springs Fairgrounds.
Center. PoUuck at 6 p.m .
POMEROY Garden Club, meeting at 7 p.m.
OHIO EU! Phi Chapter, Beta
7:30 p.m. at home of Mrs. Jr.
ving Karr.
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30p .m.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters at the Columbus and Southern
POMEROY - Mrs . Theresa Swatzel, who was ill and unable
8 p.m. at the high school.
Ohio Electric Co. "Bakeless"
to attend the ''This is Your Life" for Bob Hoeflich, held at the
MIDDLEPORT Garden bake sale . Cultural report by
attractiye home of Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Piekens, came up with the
Club, 7,30 p.m. at the home of , Mrs . Sharon Bailey, with
suggestion to honor Bob.
Mrs. Roy Cassell 721 Hooker hostesses, Mrs. Batley and
It was one of the nicest programs this reporter has ever ..I St., Middleport. Co-hostesses, Kathy Cumings.
attended. All those taking part are to b~ conunended. By the
Mrs. Walter Hayes and Mrs . E.
MEIGS County Chapter ?f .
way, Mary, the refreslunents were delicious.
D. Tewksbary. Mrs. James the American Red Cross, 7:30
And to Armand Turley, who played the organ from early
Titu s Sr. to demonstrate p.m. at Veterans Memorial
evening until quite late without stopping, you were ~eat. Ar·
creati~g d;ied arrangements. Hospital cafeteria . All board
mand is a very talented person and everyone enJOyed his
Members to take their own members asked to be present.
playing .
materials containers and frog
WEDNESDAY
All in all it was a fabulous affair.
or s tyrofo~ .
MIDDLEPORT Firemen 's
·THANKS MUCH!
RACINE Chapterl 34 , OES, B Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m .. at the
p.m . at the Masonic Temple. firehouse. Mrs . Euvette
UNDERSTAND that the flu that is hitting the country is near
TUESDAY
Bechtle and Mrs. Emma
epidemic stage in the Cleveland area .
.
CHESTER Council 323, D of WaY Ian d ,
h ostesses .
Locally there 1\l"e many siek people. So take care, and take
A 7:30. p;m., a t th e haII . Nomination of officers.
the vitamins. It might help.
Balloting to take place . Silent
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
auction by the home and or- 7:30p.m. All Master Masons
ABIT unusual but, Scotty Hill proudly announces the arrival
phans committee.
invited.
of a baby sister, Heather RaeAne, at Holzer Medical Center
Sunday,J.an. 26. She weighed Sibs., 8oz., and was 18inches long.
Scotty and Heather are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
E. Hill, Racine. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
A. Powell, Racine, paternal grandmother, Mrs. Inez Hill,
Racine, great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Oval Diddle ,
..Jlacine, Mrs. Mayme Custer, and Mrs. Lillian Duffy, both of

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

Automobile Or One Of Many Whirlpool
Appliantes. Nothing To Buyl Register At
Your Participating Whirlpool Dealers! Today!

FIRST PRIZE!
A NEW 1975

VEGA
AUTOMOBILE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary Koenig,
Tuppers Plains ; Jesse Bush,
Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Charles
Haw k, Marcia Capehart,
Jeffrey Roush, Walter Barrett,
Jr., Vicky Lee, Floyd Bush,
Carol Russell, Ir is Carr, Alice
Riffle, Melinda Spencer,
Rober t Goldsberry, Billy
Mcl..aughlin;-·Helen Thomas,
Ada Hess, Rebecca Hess.

1
I

RULES:

Whirlpool

r."·

2. "'

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s..,~

(o. or mtmller of h!s i m~t~tdlalt
t.mily 11 .. y tlftp\ayll tf '"'
parrldpoti111 Ottltr ot
tf hi' lmmdiata fem iiJ it til·
gilll• 11 win 111'1 prln.

m•••r

"Serving you since 1936"
Gallipoli s, Ohio

REbl':&gt; TIUdiON 1\LANK

&lt;'1-flo

I. 1M wl11111r tl the Y... iultiM~it. wilt ~. r11pe111•t. f1r
i111 DIIY llttllll t.u 1M ~e•l
Mi l l "' ltl4 tutt. .lia.

DAI-4 THOMAS
AND SON

-I
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l. Jlt rttlttrtllt wM i1 ltu rlt.ft
• .. ~ftfll yNU tf ... It t!ltl...
t. •••

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Shopper'~ Sweep~loke' 7~

Date-------Nam•------------------Addross ...................................__________
(ily - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - Slate
Dealer's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...._..,..._

--------------Phone------

Address---------------Cily------------------Siate .......................-

·

Twirling competition set
POMEROY - Final plans tained by contacting the
are being made by the 'Meigs Contest Director, Judy Riggs
Band Boosters to hold a at Chester 98li-3595.
Valentine Twirling Festival
. Feb. 9 at the Meigs High
School.
The N.B.T.A. sanctioned
class "A open" contest will
PLEASANT VALLEY
start at 12:30 p.m. and run all
DISCHARGED - Ethel
·afternoon, with food being Thornoon, Leon; Mrs. Darwin
served by the Band Boosters. Robbins, Mason; Mrs. Van
A special division for High Wright, Pliny; Lawrence
School Majorette Lines will Baier, MI. Alto; Cecil Mattox,
also be featured in the contest, Point Pleasant; Margaret
along with corps, teams and Rainey, Henderson ; Mrs .
individual competitions.
Leslie Sh owe rs, Gallipolis;
Entry forms may be ob- Lorena Miller, Point Pleasant.

. •:··:

I
I

II
I

2-SPEED, 4-CYCLE
WASHER
Model LAA 5700
• 4 washing cycles; NORMAL, .
KNIT, PERMANENT PRESS
and GENTLE
• proper. wash and spin speed
os provrded automatically
when cycle is selected
• 3/oad-size ·water level
,
selections
• Efficienllint filter
• 4 wash / rinse waterlemp
selections
• Big family-size capacity
Washer alone $294.95

**
*
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3-TEMP, 5-CYCLE
DRYER

'

Model LAE 5700
• Diallhe setting to fit the
fabric: HEAVY, PERM'T PRESS/TUMBLE PRESS
KNITS, DELICATE lor FLUFF
lor aor drying without heat
• TUMBLE PRESS• contrdl .
helps reslore creases in
clean Permanent Press gar·
menta wrinkled from storage
• Sh ut~ of! automatically when
door 1s opened
• Convenient lint screen·

. Drver alone $209.95

.THE .PAIR .NOW ONLY

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~

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you've got it•

..Au tomatic focusing • Full remote control-forward, and
reverse cycle conl rols on remote cord and at projectOr

• Sharp '4" tl3.5 projection len·s • Infinite-step automatic

slide changing tlm~r with control conveni~n lly located on
· remote cord • Convenient pop-up editor • Transparent
lens protector stays in place dur ing projeptlon • COfn·

$469?.~ .

(USE IT WI$EL Y) ,

plate with sell-contained carrying case and GAF tOOslide tray.

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WtUTI! SWAN·
UNII'OIIIIMS

REG. $164.95 Now
Yottr Wbite. Swall Di;stri~tor
..

..

,Juhn , hc1 s been dirt~etur uf

l

area. Ev.erything necessary for the Gals in White.

Ave., Gallipolis, 0.

Ml's. McGraw' s husband ,

Farms," a re habHit.ation pb1ce

B Black Patent _ _ _ $24 .99

We pride ourselves as having one of the largest selections in the

i~6~-.f~CI

llchhie Fintaw .

Thlatady realty had no right to be famous. She waa
the wile of a aublltanHaf'Ftorentine merchant named Glocondo
when, In t49!1, Da Vinci's portrait made her Immortal. The
myeterloua Mona Lilt! smile? Perhapnhe was tl!tnklng lboul
gol.!lll shopping. Of courae, If she'd !)ad Master Charge,
ltke you do now, she'd be grinning from ear to ear.

'A •

*~,OP'\ ~~

lhc Piltsln»\gh, Pu ., m·cu nex t
month, Ht a cH rd dub party
rc c:c ntly al the hum c of .Mrs.

i\ndcrsnn, Su~n Baer, Karen

t. r,in s,

.
I
WASHER AND
WhIr poo} DRYER PAIR

To wear as tops with vour slacks.
Regardless of your reason , stop in and see our large selection.
We'll help you choose just the right one. to fit you and your :
;ituation .

I

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I'OMI-: 1\0Y - /I ~i fl was
pr ese nte d to Mr s. KC:Jrcn
Mc&lt;:ruw who will be m oving to

SUNilAY
DICK Smith from ··His Plat·e

Syracuse.

OR

I

Card club party honors Mrs. McGraw recently

BRIGHT BRONZE

ro keep your, uniforms neat and clean

'

·~!

OCial !
i Calendad

Miss Debbie Mulford

SAVE 25%

'1mdn
. b1cntly
l of

~~'

and one gift tag for every
hospitalized veteran in Ohio .
Last year these items were
provided for 2,500 veterans.
Winning prizes in the cancelled stamp contest were Paul
Cunningham, 868 and Sandra
Might, 652 in the over 10 class;
and Christi Smith , 1,665, and
r..Ois Roush, 367, in the under 10
class. The stamps are being
sent oo Mount Carmel Hospital
for a special project in the
name of Christi Smith 's
mother, Mrs. Kathern Smith, a
shut-in, and her uncle, Roy
Miller, who is a patient there.
The door prize was won by
Sherri Fox. Becky Roush is
president, and Mrs. Dailey is
advisor with Patty Might as
her assistant.

and scuH reta1 red

l I,
HAS

·~~

shu~-ins

Juniors will aid sick,

The Inflation Fighter to air
Gre·en Parks

Aim for cooling power

s - - ·:"•'·' ..

~~·;&lt;;~~..·-:·:·:·-.·.......-.:--.······...
• • ••••••••••·•••

I

4- The S1111day Times - Sentinel, Sunday , Feb. 2, 1975

GALLIPOLIS - The Thursday Club met at the home of
Mrs . Garland Gillingham Jun .
30. Mrs. Harold Wcthrrholt
introduced her guesl, , Mrs. 'I'

I'

Mon. &amp; Fri.9:30til8p.nl'.
Tues .' Wed. Sat. 9:30til5 p.m.
· Thursday 9:30 til12 noon

•

•1 .1995

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK

TAWNEY STUDIO
GALLIPOUS

... 8ecotto AWNull' I .... ...,. .,. o.o. .
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'

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.
. ·' I

.

'

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................. .-......................................·....---. .... ,......................... .:

Thursday club pears
Mrs. Dorothy Shaw
A. Thom as and Mrs . Hichard
Sha \v . Although shr m nved
from north ern Oh1 11 to

Gallipolis only la&gt; l sp nn g.
Mrs . Shaw fr rqucntl) \' l.Silcd
ht~ r gra ndpa rcnb lll'l't' dunng
her gir lhood .
After· gradu a tmg fr orn Ohio
State Unin•rsit\ Mrs Shaw
lt1ug ht Englb;h ~nd had 1i1~my
years e xpc r ierH't' 111 b(lok
rev~e win g, dramatws and
creativ e writirg. As n or othr

Derry Shaw she ha s prese nted

FEBRUARY

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20%

tlt&gt;r book reviews and ori ginal
IPc lures to hundreds of groups •

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport
992 -2156

.:] ·1 (, -

in the grea ter Cleveland area . .:
Mrs. Shaw delig hted the
members of the Thursday Cl ub
with one of her programs titled

2Yt2

" Pe ttiroa ts and. Pie." This w:1 s
a ,tromposi l(' look at fiv e books
wri ttcn by Della Thompson
I.ute s.
They
are
an
aut ob iog raphical acuount of
her life on a fa rm in southern

Michigan in the IR70s . Mrs.
Shaw

incl ud ed a cl eve r
of the clothes worn

des~ripti on

in that period and the bountiful
meals the fa rm famil y enjoyed
th ree times each day . The
c haracte r of the au th or 's
father was del::1iled in his
relationships with his w!~e and
da ug hter, his m a ny relatives

''

and neighborhood friends. The
authm•'s own firs t experi ences
as a teacher in country schools

at age 15 were sympathetically
recounled by DoroU1y Shaw.
Mrs . Gil lin gha m se rved
re fr es hments from a Leu Utble

decorated with a Valentine
motif. She was assisted by Mrs .
John Halliday and Mrs. George
Bush. The nex t meeling of the
Thursday Clu b will be Feb. 6 at
the home i1f Mrs. John Carty.

pr.u...

.......

e. :; .: tr e :::e ..cal

I. College

TO

50%

'lit
. .......
. '"
".~ ·~:. :::.

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News

»

On Many

•

Woman's World

..

'•

Items

BEREA - Rick Grymes has
recenuy been pledged to the
Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at \
Baldwin-Wallace, Berea. He is i
the son of Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
.
Grymes, 485 Jackson Pike, ,
Gallipolis. Rick Is a freshman ·
: physical education major, and
is a member of the Yellow"&lt;&lt;ackets football team.

SINGING - Christopher Griffin, Gallipolis, right, joins fellow Green Parks performers
Cathy Anderson, left, and Lee Ann Hutchinson in recreating Ohio'• pioneer days with.songs,
music and native humor as The Appal.achian Green Parks Projects comes to tele~ioion Wed·
·
nesday, Feb. 5, at 9 p.m . on WOUB-TV fO·

j

C:LARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.
. Gallipolis; Ohio

...........iiriiriolliroiiiooo.......

WOUB

This is the time of year to begi n thinking about buying an air
conditioner . Don't forget to compare the energy efficiency ratios
. to get the most cooling power for your money and your needs.
Divide the B.T.U. rating per hour by the watts raliflll . The
higher the resulting number, from 4.7 to 12.2, the better. The
highly effi cient models may cost more initially , but the savings in
electricity will make up the difference. Many manufacturers
voluntarily label the efficiency ratio of their products.- H.W.,
. Pensacola, Fla .

SIIJIS-

Has A Whole New Look
For Spring
Junior Sportswear 5-13

For future reference
Take the wrapping paper from gifts you receive, smooth it out
on your ironing board and press it with a warm iron on the wrong
side. If wrinkles persist, rub a barely damp cloth over it lightly
and iron again .
Then spread the paper in layers and roll it on a large tube , as
fro,., aluminum foil. Place a rubber band at each end of the roll
and store it with your wrapping supplies for the future. - A.S..
Creston, !a.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Get that

MIDDLEPORT - Projects
of assistance to hospitalized
• veterans and others who are
sick and shut-in were planned
during a meeting of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Be nnett Post 128,
Tuesday night at the hall.
The District 8 junior community service pa rty was
announced for Feb . 20 at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
Good used jewelry, purses,
hose and handkerchiefs are
needed for the party and the
juniors will solicit contributions. It is expected that
there will be a bout 40 men and
women at tbe party .
The girls also discussed
plans for favors which they will
provide each month to the 32patient diabetic ward at the
Sandusky Veterans Hospital
"adopted" by the auxiliary. In .
addition they will be oending
each month money and gifts
for the veterans .
Mro. Bonnie Dailey, advisor,
told of her recent trip to the
Peck of Wee Ones Home
where she delivered several
boxes of clothing and other .
items. Each month the jmtiors
contribute for the children by
having a shower at their
meetings.
Friday, Mrs. Dailey met with
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja of the
• Meigs Boodmobile to present
books on flag etiquette, "Tbe
Ohio Government Digest",
''The Flag Code" and "Know
Your American
Legion
Auxiliary". These books will
also be presented to the Middleport Library .
The unit subscribed to the
Legislative Bulletin, the
CarVille Star and the Firing
Line .
Reports were given on the
various projects carried out
during tbe past two months. It
was noted that a box of fun eral

.

ATHENS
The Appalac hian Green
Parks
Project, acclaimed for its
talented touring company of
young musicians and singers,
is coming to television as the
subject of an hour long music
special to air Wednesday, Feb.
5 at 9 p.m. on WOUB-TV20 and
WOUC-TV44.
Chri stopher Griffi n is a
member of the touring company
from
Gallipolis .
Christopher sings " The E-r-ie" and square dances with the
audience. Christopher is the

Thirst quenchers

Sr; Citizens
Calendar

Try drinking water for variety. It's the cheapest thirst
quencher there is, and much healthier than most of the overGALLIPOLIS - The Senior
.
sug ared. ca[bonated drin k~ we often use.
When you want fru it juice, make certain it's real fruit juice. Citi~ens Center, located in the
not the imitation fruit drinks loaded with sugar, artificial County Home Building at 220
Jackson Pike, is open Monday
fl avori ngs and colorings with a bit of vitamin C thrown in.
through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3
Insulation ideas
p.m.
The schedule of activities for
When insulating around electri cal receptacles be sure to use
this
week is as follows:
extra insulation behind the receptacle box to help cut down on air
drafts.
Monday, Feb. 3, Olde Tyme
If paneling is used, caulking the space between the receptacle Chorus Practice, 1:30 p.m.
and the paneling will help eliminate air drafts-around the recepTuesday, Feb. 4, Crafts, 1-3
tacle. - T.H.W.. Hanover, Pa.
,
p.m.
Wedllesday, Feb. 5, Blood
Hot water helps .
Pressure Check, l- 2 p.m. ;
Think about economics when you're placing a water heater. Cards and Games, 1-3 p.m.
The farther water has to travel in a pipe from the heater to where
Thursday,. Feb. 6, Movie
it will be used. the more expensive it is'.
about
a biography "Harriet
Suggest .that your builder install water heaters closer to launTubman
and the Underground
dry faciliti es. kitchens and bathrooms. - R.M., Ishpeming, Mic .
Railroad ," I.J p.m.
1Ha ve you a clever way to save energy or flgbt inflation? Send
Friday, Feb . 7, Center
your idea to The Inflation Fight er in care of this newspaper. Th e Chai rperson's Meeti ng, 1-3
best ideas will be used in future columns. and tbelr authors will p.m. ; Art Class, 1-3 p.m. ;
be reward'ed "'ilh a free copy of the $!.50 book "Sa••e Money-Save Center open, 7 p.m.
Gas.")
Senior Nutrition Program
serves meals daily at 12 noon.

FAMILY RETURNS
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Van Inwagen have
purchased a home on Lincoln
Heigh ts. The couple just
recently returned to Meigs
CoWJty from Florida. Sunday
they joined her parents, Mr.
and Mrs . David Grindstaff for
a trip to Beckley , W. Va., to
visit relatives.

WHITE LAB COATS
AND

WHITE TOPS
To help chase the chills on cold days

OR ·

basket ribbons had been sent oo
the Dayton Veterans Hospital
where they are made into rugs
along with 50 new ties.
Donations were made to the
Middleport firemen for
Qlristmas food baskets, oo the
Middleport emergency squad, .
and to the Gifts for the Yanks
who Gave. Presented at the
meeting was a certificate from
Department conunending the
WJit for contributing to the
Gifts for the Yanks program .
Other Christmas projects
included favors for Veterans
Memorial Hospital, assiswryce
on fruit and gifts taken to the
Meigs County Infirmary, the
Gallia County Children's Home
and the Syracuse Nursing
Home . The girls also furnished
floral centerpieces, favors,
Qlristmas plates and napkins,
loot bags for the Chillicothe
party in December .
It was noted that two parties
have been held for the veterans
at the Athens Mental Healt h
Center recenUy with gills and
refreshments totaling . over
$100. The juniors also assisted
with the expense of preparing
53 fruit trays for the charter
members, shut-i ns and gold
star mothers of the post and
unit . Fruit baskets were
delivered to their " Adopted"
handicapped child and their
"ado pted" senior citizen .
Olristmas cards were sen t to
all area servicemen where
addresses were available.
Little Miss Poppy and Junior
Miss Poppy were selected and
will be announced later this
month . Poppy Days will be
May 23 and· 24 and at the same
time the juniors will have a
rummage sale. A bake sale
was ten ta tively set for
Saturday before Easter at
Dudley Florists.
Set as an objective for this
year was one Christmas card

"--.:,..

'

Celebrate
LoveDay!
Let Hallma'rk Valenlines,
party sets and gifts color
your Valentine's Day with
love. For Friday. Feb. 14.

Mitchell Office
Supply
Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

on BABY SHOE BRONZING

DURING FEBRUARY
bab~llood
)Our ~

can bo: pn

.a

pr ecrous

pe nonal tr ~Hure Your baby's
~hM~ r, cnr, pres~rved rn ~o l rd

rite ta l .1dh

~verr crea~e. cr,n ~ 1 e
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Your cho•ce ot

SERVICE SET
GALLIPOLIS - The Paint
Creek Baptist Church will
observe Youth Sunday today
with services beginning at
10:45 a.m. All area youth are
cordially invited.

tra1t

~Llnos

boo ~.ends.

ard

mJnt

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All styles available in
Bright Bronze,
Antique Bronze, Silver,
" Pewte.r ", and Gold
STYLE 5 1

45 Portrait Stand
50 B o oken ds · ~ poir

Rri~:~t Bronre
Rnguta r $7.95

ON

SALE

Reg. Pr rces
Bri ght Bronl~

Style

Unmounted Shoe

son of John T. and Eve Griffin,
618 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The film was produced for
WOUB te levision with the
support of the Ohio Arts
Council, the Ohio Educational
· Television Network Commission,
the
Ce ntr al
Educational Network and the
George Fund Foundation with
the assis tance of the Ohio·
American Revolution Bfcen,
tennial Advisory Commission.

por
ot~~~

$596

each

SALE PRI CES
Br 1gl\l fll onw

62 0'31 Mm&lt;ature

27.95

82 Asht ray

$23.96
22.46
20.96

16.95

12.71

131.95
29 .95

PLUS MANY MORE Ask for Free Folder
Engrawing only 15c per lellc r

BRING SHOES IN NOW ••• SALE ENDS FEB. 28
----~---------

TAWNEY JEWELERS

422 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

GALLIPOLIS

.l146..0090
"

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

••

•

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:,

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fur young drug addi&lt;'l&amp;. will
speak 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Church of Christ ; public invited .
MEETING at 4 p. m. at
Royal Crown ~arage on North
Second Ave.. Middleport, to
organize girls' softball learns.
All interested persons urged to
attend.
MEMBERS OF Drew
Webster Post .39 American
Legiol1 , Pomeroy, to meet, in a
body, to attend services at
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Members are to meet
at 10:25 a . m.

personnel with the Soutllcrn
Ohio COlli Cu. si nce the family
movl'd here ubout two ,year s
·agu . They rwvc res ided in the
up:; lai rs apartment over the
Mei gs Mu.selml .
At the party were Becky

Mc:IUri sha

~ nd

Karen Stanl'ey
Nease .

Nelso n,

Donna

Party fetes· Bill Baer··
SYRACUSE - A surprise
birthday party was held at the
Syracuse School Tuesday at
the first recess in honor of the
principal BUI Baer.
Mr . ~er was presented a
gift by Mrs. Alma Louks, Mrs .
Sandr a HilL Mrs . Debbie.
Harris, Mrs. Pauline HUI, Mrs .
Ruth Stearns, Debbie Wilson,

·Mrs. Eleanor Wingett, Mrs.
Ruby Congo and Mrs. Herbert
.Roush.
The guest of honor wu
presented a cake, "Happy
Birthday Mr. Baer," decorated
. with white icing, blue fiowent,
and green leaves baked by
Mrs: Roger Roush, served with
Ice cream, coffee and tea.

,.,

Whirlpool Shopper's
11 11 111

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MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA 7:30
p. m. Founder 's Day program
by Miss Triplett's third grade
students. Past presidents will
be recog nized and nominating
committee announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:45
p. m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple , instead of Tuesday
night due to meeting conflicts.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mrs . Erma Mulford
. Hersman, Kanauga, announces the engagement and ap·
proaching marriage of her daughter, Debbie Mulford, to
Riek Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ona Moore, Gallip&lt;ilis. The
bride-elect is the daughter of the late Qlarles Mulford. Miss
Mulford is a senior at Gallia Academy High School. Moore is
a 1973 graduate of Gallia Academy. An open church wedding
will he the event of June 14 at the Qleshire Methodist Church
at 7:30pm.

Miss Denise Hendricks

. HARRISONV ILLE PTO 7:30
p.m. Robe.rt Snowden, .guest
speaker. Refreshments.
OHIO Association of Public
School Employes special
meeting at 7:30p.m. at Meigs '.
Junior Hi gh, Middleport.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Beal, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their
foster daughter, Marlyn Denise Hendricks, Parkersburg, to
Randall Lee Boring , son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Boring,
Reedsville. Miss Hendricks is a 1973 graduate of Meigs High
School and a 1974 graduate of Mountain State College. Boring
is a 1973 graduate of Eastern High School and is employed by
Fenton Art Glass, Williamsoown1 W. Va . Wedding plans are
·
incomplete.

TUESDAY
REGULAR meeting, Meigs SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
County Fair Board, 8 p.m. , Gospel Musi c Association at
secreU!ry's office on Rock home of Larry McGraw, SR 160'
north of Holzer Medical
Springs Fairgrounds.
Center. PoUuck at 6 p.m .
POMEROY Garden Club, meeting at 7 p.m.
OHIO EU! Phi Chapter, Beta
7:30 p.m. at home of Mrs. Jr.
ving Karr.
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30p .m.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters at the Columbus and Southern
POMEROY - Mrs . Theresa Swatzel, who was ill and unable
8 p.m. at the high school.
Ohio Electric Co. "Bakeless"
to attend the ''This is Your Life" for Bob Hoeflich, held at the
MIDDLEPORT Garden bake sale . Cultural report by
attractiye home of Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Piekens, came up with the
Club, 7,30 p.m. at the home of , Mrs . Sharon Bailey, with
suggestion to honor Bob.
Mrs. Roy Cassell 721 Hooker hostesses, Mrs. Batley and
It was one of the nicest programs this reporter has ever ..I St., Middleport. Co-hostesses, Kathy Cumings.
attended. All those taking part are to b~ conunended. By the
Mrs. Walter Hayes and Mrs . E.
MEIGS County Chapter ?f .
way, Mary, the refreslunents were delicious.
D. Tewksbary. Mrs. James the American Red Cross, 7:30
And to Armand Turley, who played the organ from early
Titu s Sr. to demonstrate p.m. at Veterans Memorial
evening until quite late without stopping, you were ~eat. Ar·
creati~g d;ied arrangements. Hospital cafeteria . All board
mand is a very talented person and everyone enJOyed his
Members to take their own members asked to be present.
playing .
materials containers and frog
WEDNESDAY
All in all it was a fabulous affair.
or s tyrofo~ .
MIDDLEPORT Firemen 's
·THANKS MUCH!
RACINE Chapterl 34 , OES, B Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m .. at the
p.m . at the Masonic Temple. firehouse. Mrs . Euvette
UNDERSTAND that the flu that is hitting the country is near
TUESDAY
Bechtle and Mrs. Emma
epidemic stage in the Cleveland area .
.
CHESTER Council 323, D of WaY Ian d ,
h ostesses .
Locally there 1\l"e many siek people. So take care, and take
A 7:30. p;m., a t th e haII . Nomination of officers.
the vitamins. It might help.
Balloting to take place . Silent
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
auction by the home and or- 7:30p.m. All Master Masons
ABIT unusual but, Scotty Hill proudly announces the arrival
phans committee.
invited.
of a baby sister, Heather RaeAne, at Holzer Medical Center
Sunday,J.an. 26. She weighed Sibs., 8oz., and was 18inches long.
Scotty and Heather are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
E. Hill, Racine. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
A. Powell, Racine, paternal grandmother, Mrs. Inez Hill,
Racine, great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Oval Diddle ,
..Jlacine, Mrs. Mayme Custer, and Mrs. Lillian Duffy, both of

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

Automobile Or One Of Many Whirlpool
Appliantes. Nothing To Buyl Register At
Your Participating Whirlpool Dealers! Today!

FIRST PRIZE!
A NEW 1975

VEGA
AUTOMOBILE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary Koenig,
Tuppers Plains ; Jesse Bush,
Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Charles
Haw k, Marcia Capehart,
Jeffrey Roush, Walter Barrett,
Jr., Vicky Lee, Floyd Bush,
Carol Russell, Ir is Carr, Alice
Riffle, Melinda Spencer,
Rober t Goldsberry, Billy
Mcl..aughlin;-·Helen Thomas,
Ada Hess, Rebecca Hess.

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·

Twirling competition set
POMEROY - Final plans tained by contacting the
are being made by the 'Meigs Contest Director, Judy Riggs
Band Boosters to hold a at Chester 98li-3595.
Valentine Twirling Festival
. Feb. 9 at the Meigs High
School.
The N.B.T.A. sanctioned
class "A open" contest will
PLEASANT VALLEY
start at 12:30 p.m. and run all
DISCHARGED - Ethel
·afternoon, with food being Thornoon, Leon; Mrs. Darwin
served by the Band Boosters. Robbins, Mason; Mrs. Van
A special division for High Wright, Pliny; Lawrence
School Majorette Lines will Baier, MI. Alto; Cecil Mattox,
also be featured in the contest, Point Pleasant; Margaret
along with corps, teams and Rainey, Henderson ; Mrs .
individual competitions.
Leslie Sh owe rs, Gallipolis;
Entry forms may be ob- Lorena Miller, Point Pleasant.

. •:··:

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2-SPEED, 4-CYCLE
WASHER
Model LAA 5700
• 4 washing cycles; NORMAL, .
KNIT, PERMANENT PRESS
and GENTLE
• proper. wash and spin speed
os provrded automatically
when cycle is selected
• 3/oad-size ·water level
,
selections
• Efficienllint filter
• 4 wash / rinse waterlemp
selections
• Big family-size capacity
Washer alone $294.95

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DRYER

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Model LAE 5700
• Diallhe setting to fit the
fabric: HEAVY, PERM'T PRESS/TUMBLE PRESS
KNITS, DELICATE lor FLUFF
lor aor drying without heat
• TUMBLE PRESS• contrdl .
helps reslore creases in
clean Permanent Press gar·
menta wrinkled from storage
• Sh ut~ of! automatically when
door 1s opened
• Convenient lint screen·

. Drver alone $209.95

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· remote cord • Convenient pop-up editor • Transparent
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Yottr Wbite. Swall Di;stri~tor
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Ml's. McGraw' s husband ,

Farms," a re habHit.ation pb1ce

B Black Patent _ _ _ $24 .99

We pride ourselves as having one of the largest selections in the

i~6~-.f~CI

llchhie Fintaw .

Thlatady realty had no right to be famous. She waa
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when, In t49!1, Da Vinci's portrait made her Immortal. The
myeterloua Mona Lilt! smile? Perhapnhe was tl!tnklng lboul
gol.!lll shopping. Of courae, If she'd !)ad Master Charge,
ltke you do now, she'd be grinning from ear to ear.

'A •

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lhc Piltsln»\gh, Pu ., m·cu nex t
month, Ht a cH rd dub party
rc c:c ntly al the hum c of .Mrs.

i\ndcrsnn, Su~n Baer, Karen

t. r,in s,

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To wear as tops with vour slacks.
Regardless of your reason , stop in and see our large selection.
We'll help you choose just the right one. to fit you and your :
;ituation .

I

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I'OMI-: 1\0Y - /I ~i fl was
pr ese nte d to Mr s. KC:Jrcn
Mc&lt;:ruw who will be m oving to

SUNilAY
DICK Smith from ··His Plat·e

Syracuse.

OR

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Card club party honors Mrs. McGraw recently

BRIGHT BRONZE

ro keep your, uniforms neat and clean

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i Calendad

Miss Debbie Mulford

SAVE 25%

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and one gift tag for every
hospitalized veteran in Ohio .
Last year these items were
provided for 2,500 veterans.
Winning prizes in the cancelled stamp contest were Paul
Cunningham, 868 and Sandra
Might, 652 in the over 10 class;
and Christi Smith , 1,665, and
r..Ois Roush, 367, in the under 10
class. The stamps are being
sent oo Mount Carmel Hospital
for a special project in the
name of Christi Smith 's
mother, Mrs. Kathern Smith, a
shut-in, and her uncle, Roy
Miller, who is a patient there.
The door prize was won by
Sherri Fox. Becky Roush is
president, and Mrs. Dailey is
advisor with Patty Might as
her assistant.

and scuH reta1 red

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Juniors will aid sick,

The Inflation Fighter to air
Gre·en Parks

Aim for cooling power

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• • ••••••••••·•••

I

4- The S1111day Times - Sentinel, Sunday , Feb. 2, 1975

GALLIPOLIS - The Thursday Club met at the home of
Mrs . Garland Gillingham Jun .
30. Mrs. Harold Wcthrrholt
introduced her guesl, , Mrs. 'I'

I'

Mon. &amp; Fri.9:30til8p.nl'.
Tues .' Wed. Sat. 9:30til5 p.m.
· Thursday 9:30 til12 noon

•

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COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK

TAWNEY STUDIO
GALLIPOUS

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7- The ~d~y Times - Sentinel, Sunday , Feb. 2, 1975

I.

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R- ,.,~mtlovTi~ -Sentlnei.Suridav.Feb. 2, !975

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENt - The engagement of
Kathy Norris and Benny Hash is being announced. Miss
Norris is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs .. William D. Norris, Rt.
I, Bidwell . She is a 1974 graduate of Kyger Creek High School
and is employed at Robbins and Myers. Hash is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Hash, Rt. I, Bidwell. He will be a 1975
graduate of North Gallia High SchooL An · open church
wedding is planned for Feb. lll at 2:30p.m. at the White Oak
Baptist Church. There will be a reception immediately
following the wedding at the church camp dining hail.
~~~"'-"""'~~'*'-&lt;l=*':~~':'l'».X~1

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S:r. c·tttzens
.
·· Calendar

~~

S:

~·

POMEROY - The Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in the
Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 9 a.m.-'1 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
Activities this week include :
Monday, Feb . 3, Crafts,
Square Dancing, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 4, Cards and
Games, Chair caning, Chorus,
12:30.2 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 5, Talk on
Cancer Facts&amp; Figures, 10:30.
11 :30a.m. women; 12:!5 a. m.12:45 p.m. men and women ;
Bingo 1-3 p.m.: Quilting.
Thursday, Feb. 6, Cards and
Gllllles, decoupage.
·
Friday, Feb. 7, Bowling 1-3
p.m.
Senior Clllzens lunch
program, 11:30 p.m.-12:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNs;ED -Mrs. Janet E. Nease,
Racine, and Robert R. Gooch, Florida, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Cynthia Lynn Gooch, to Verne
Alvin Ord, son of Bobby and Leah Ord, Syracuse. Miss Gooch
and her fiance are both 1974 graduates of Southern High
School. Miss Gooch is employed at Elberfelds, Pomeroy, and
Ord IS taking a course in mining technology at Pikeville
College, Pikeville, Ky. Wedding plans are incomplete.

POMEROY - The 40th
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs was
observed with an open house
last Sunday at the Meigs
County Infirmary dining room.
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, Mrs .
Jan e Jaco bs , Mrs. Oma
Nelson, Mrs. Linda Burnem
and Miss Diarte Lewis were
hostesses for the observance. A
red and white color scheme
was carried out and a tiered
cake decorated the refreshment tabie.
Gifts were presented to the
honored couple and entertatninent was provided by
Steve and Becky Eblin along
with other members of the
choir of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church where Mr.
and Mrs. Jacobs are members .
Among those missing from
the celebration were Mr. and
Mrs. Jacobs' son, Larry, and

MON.-TUES.-WED.

LARGE SHIPMENT

ANTIQUE SATIN

$395

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OPEN DAILY 10 AM· 6 PM

hi s wife who reside in Houston ,
Tex. , and Mrs. Shirley Ann
Frazier, Columbus , who was
ill. Both telephoned during the
day. The couple also received
calls of congratulation from
relativ es and fri ends in
Pleasant City and Columbus,
and over 300 cards.
Attending the ce lebration
were Mr. and Mrs . Phil Wise,
Beverly; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Burnem, Miss Robin Burnem,
Lebirl Falls; Mrs. Virginia
Hayman , Racine : Mrs. Mary
Ours, Porlland; Mrs. Sybil
Dorst, Chesler ; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Jacobs, Jan, Jill and Jay,
Southshore , Ky ,; Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Jacobs, Columbus; Mrs.
Becky Card, Athens.
Mr . and Mrs . William
Ochier, Belpre ; Mrs. James
Ridenour, Chester ; Mrs.
Elizabeth Hayes, Long BotIolli ; Mrs . Mildred Circle,
Minersville ; Mrs. Lucy Gaul,
Sumner ; Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ja~obs and Sean, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Eric
Chambers, Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne, Diane Lewis, Mrs.
. Harry Clark, ·Mrs. Mary Lee,
Mary Ann Hoffman, Betty
Wills, Jean Windon, Mr. and
· Mrs. Harold Hanson, Sherrie
Clark, Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
Shook, Mrs . James Gilmore,
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Haggy
~nd Pam, Mr . and Mrs. Dick
Karr, Mr, and Mrs. Steve
Eblin, Tom Lewis , Greg Eblin,
Becky Eblin, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Van Inwagen, Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, all of
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Lavenna Ebersbach,
'Rev. and Mrs. Carl F.. Hicks,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wells, Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Mr.
and Mrs. Otto Lohn, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Powell, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralpb Frank, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bowen, Sr., Mrs.
B. A. Baronick, Miss Susan
Fleshman, Mrs . Robert
Warner, Mrs. Jack Robson,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Clark, Mrs.
Mary Se!lman. Mrs. A. David,

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~Youth

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Com·ing
Events

•

of lllis IMW Admlr1IT.V•.

·ANNUAL meeting , Church
·Women · United, Grace United
Methodist Church, 2 p.m. Installation of officers. Public
welcome.
MONDAY
FRENCH Co lony Chapter
DAR, ! ::Ill p.m. at the home
. ci Miss Catherine ·Hayward.
'ruESDAY
BETTY Starn Sunday School
Class. regular monthly .
mee t'mg ·m the fe 11owship
room, 7: 30 p.m.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets ..

Slim, trim, covered in s imulated
patchwork blue denim! Uses less
power than .. 40 watt light bulb.

alignmenl. Comes with. Admi ral's live-

" Equal Ease" UHF tun ing, ear·

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.Year protection plan.

phone, other deluxe features.

EN GUSH Club will meet at the
home of Mrs. Isabelle Bias at7

BAK~ER

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FURNITURE

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M .IDDLEPOR:r, OHIO .

.&amp;s;se:'&amp;--;::~:::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:&gt;.':~;;;:;:::..~~=~

host meettngl

..;;f ·

BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. C. J.
Davis, Thunnan, announce the engagement of their ·
daughter, Connie,to Nick Ogg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Veri Ogg,
Nelsonville. The brid~lect is a 1970 graduate of Southwestern High School and has been active in Girl Scouts, 4-H
Club, saddle club, church and· choir. Miss Davis is a
December graduate of Morehead State University, Ky. While
at Morehead she majored in physical education and minored
in agriculture with a specialization in horse science. She was
active in the Ag. Club. Ogg is a 1970 graduate of NelsonvilleYork High School and is a member of the United Methodist
Church, He has been active in choir, band, Berean Community Players and is an alumni member of the Ohio State
Youth Omir. He is presently employed at Ogg's Wholesale
Inc., Nelsonville. An open church wedding is planned fo;
April 5 at the United Methodist Church, Nelsonville.

hawthorn, flowering dogwood.
bitter swee t vines and ma ny

others. Dense evergree ns alsO
offer a place to fee d and cover
against severe winter weather.
.,;ven !lowers and garden
flower seeds will atlract
cer tain varieties of birds. But
to attract and hold the bird s,
feeding especially in the winter
months is necessa ry. Once we
start feedin e th " hir~ co wf'

Slephen Hysell, Mark Matson
Jim Dobbins and Norma Jea~
Hysell.
Leaders who attended were
Theron Durham, Sharon
Durham, Glenna Long, Diafle
Hersman, Beverly Spires.
Others attending were Mrs.
Glenna Cockran, Mr. and Mrs.
!Jebnar Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Woody Russell , Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Thacker, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Shupe, Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Hysell, Mrs . Laneva
RusselL
Scripture was r ead by
Theron Durham.

Make

Tuesda y evening with her and Louella Haning of Lancaster visited the Mike Epples
brother, Rober t Alkire.
The Lend-A-Hand Circle met and Mrs. Letha Cowen on
Tuesday evening with Stella Wednesday .
. Mrs. Mae Mason recently
Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mr . and Mrs. K. C. Welch visited her son, Russell Mason
altended the Presbyterian and family of Athens.
Church mec ling in Columbus
Rev . and Mrs . Stebbins of
and visiled the Robert Welches Gallipolis visited Gene Young
on Tuesday.
Wedn esday afternoon. Mr .
Mrs. Minnie Foil, Mrs . Earl ·Young has been quite poorly.
Foil and daughter of Columbus

• • .eombJ.R
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SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

!:iprlng

a

festival of colors with this
many -shaded · sandal. It's
easy walking wear tor
nearly any skirt or pant

l.~~uryJt ensemble you put with it.
.h~

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And so many colors green, yellow , sky blue,

Jlyntg eJ~.;;also

•'
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••

sh iny

ATHENS- The Ohio University Artist Series will
presen t the Israel Chamber
Orcheslra, an ensemble of
strings, woodwinds, brass and
percussion at 8 p.m. Tuesday,
Memorial
Feb . 11 al
Auditoriwn.
The orchestra was founded in
1965 by Gary Bertini, conductor
and
composer.
Originally numbering 17 the
group has grown to the present
40 artists. The orchestra
pe,rforms repertory from the
Baroque period through the
Classic and Romantic periods
to the present day.
· The Israel Chamber Orchestra is supported by the
Israel Ministry of Education
and Culture in cooperation with
the America-Israel Cultural
Foundation and the Bethsahee
de Rothschild Foundation for
the Arts.
The program lor Tuesday's
performance is Symphony in c
minor , No. 95, Joseph Haydn ·
Suite from "El Amor Brujo,'~
Manuel De Falla; Variations
for Chamber Orchestra,
Mordecai Sater and Symphony

QUEEN NAMED
MIDDLEPORT - Linda
Grimm was named queen for
the week at a meeting of the
TOPS Club Tuesday night at
the American Legion Hall in
Middleport. Runner-up was
Mrs. Paulette Leach . Selection
was made on the basis of most
weight loss . Twenty-three
members attended.
HOSPITALIZED
POMEROY - Mrs. Cecil
Wise underwent surgery
Thursday at the Holzer
Medical Center.

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

•

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Payne
and family wer e weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Darold
Graham and family of Newark .
Mr. and Mrs . !Jebnar Rhodes
of New Marshfield called on
Mrs. Ella Anderson and the
Bob Clarks on Saturday afternoon.
Mr-. and 'Mrs . Mike Epple
visited Mr. and Mrs. Hie!
French Wednesday afternoon.
Dwight Seiple of Dayton is
spending a few days with Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
visited her parents Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Hart of Hamden over
the weekend.
Mark Gibson of Columbus
visited his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Douglas and
Lana Gibson over the weekend.
Mr. !l(ld Mrs. Allen Gibson of
Columb~s visited hi.s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Gibson
over the weekend.
E. R. Carr called on Guy
Bolen one evening the past
week.
Mrs . Danny Sbinley and son
of Pagetown visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Felix
Alkire on Wednesday.
Virginia Burke .and Helen
Pickens of Racine visited

1...

your

be gi~en by Mrs. Zelma Northcult on "Catherine Ma.ll
and Her Works."

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Tickets are available at the
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calling 594-3471 .

GALLIPOLIS - Nineteen
members of Ann Judson Bible
Class of the First Baptist
Chur ch enjoyed a potluck
dinner Tuesday evening in the
fellowship room of the church.
A slate of new officers wa s
presented for the approval of
the group when Eva Gilmore,
outgoing president, was · in
charge.
Grace was given by Mrs.
Esther Gooch . The meeting
opened with group singing of
"When The Roll is Called Up
Yonder 11 and 11 He Le:adeth Me"
accompanied by Miss Ruth
Fiske.
'Prayer was offered by Mrs .
Ethel Steele. First Corinthians
13 was read by Miss Eva
Gilmore. The president called
for a report of the nomina ling
committee with the following
names submitted and accypled
by the group: president, Mrs.
Jack Carter; vice president,
Mrs . Homer
McCully;
secrebiry , Miss Freda Sneller;
assistant secretary, Mrs.
Leslie Brewer; treasurer, Mrs.
Mae Lawrence; assistant
treasurer, Miss Belle Ecker,
Outgoing officers were
hostesses for the evening, The
newly elec~d officers met
briefly to set a place and date
for compiling the yearbooks.
The meeting d~missed with
prayer by Mrs, Esther Gooch.

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should continue to do so until
spring. Feed them each .
morning . and just put oul
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Miss Roberts eni:led the
program by reading a poem by
Helen Prodoehl en titled, " In .
The Forest. "
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. The meeling ··
was adjourned .

43•

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new
spring items that
have arrived.

•

QUANTITIES LIMITED

Orchestra will play

.•,•.

Time to think
about Spring!

SUNDAY
PAINT Creek Baptist Ch,urch,
youth Sunday. Services begin
10:45 a.m. All youth, pleAse
attend .

ormance. lender-de pth PreCISion
In-Line Pi.cture lube design saves
space , provides laclory ' set color

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drnlral® TV 's
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GAWPOUS - The Open
Mi,ss Roberts siatetl that the
· Gate Garden Club met at the birds can be of great value to
home of Mrs. Art Lanham Jan . the home owner . But to fully
28.
'
enjoy their benefits and beauty
President, Edna Graham we must care for these colorful
called the meeting to order. crea tures.
For the exhibit of the month,
In order to assure ourselves
Mrs. Lanham used a white of having plenty of birds to
cherub compote in which she enjoy all year, we should plant
· had arranged artificial fruit trees and shrubs that attra ct
and nuts around a large candle . birds. A bird bath and feeders
It made a seasonal table will help to keep the birds
arrangement.
around your home .
· rilrs. Dan Morgan read the
Regular visits by scarl et
minutes of the Dece mber cardinal can add color, sound
meeting, Minutes were ap- and life to an otherwise bleak
proved. Ten members an- winter landscape . Or, in the
swered roll.
spring and summer, purple
Treasurer's report was given martins can help control in·
by Mrs. Ed Slagle. The sects during an eve ning's
president read a thank you relaxation. The antics of robins
letter from the Volunteer frolicking in a bird bath can
Services of the Gallipolis State cause laughter and interest to
Institute.
all who are lucky enough to see
Miss Faye Roberts had the them, particularly for people
program on uBirds." Miss who bike time to feed them.
Roberts started the program
By feeding on insects, the
by passing out pictures of birds are a part of the balance
different birds to each mem- of nature.
ber. Each member, in turn,
Trees are also valuable lo
rea~ the ?rief description,
birds as sources of food so we
feeding habits and migrating should plant trees and shrubs
patterns of the birds pictured that produce berries that will
on the cards.
attract the birds. Birds like the

Miss Connie Davis

Peter G. Chase

Mrs. Ella Roslofer, Mrs. Etta
Ellis, Mrs . Bertha Righthouse .
James Levi and Mrs. Joan
DEXTER - The Midway
Tuttle.
Youth
Group of the Midway
Sending gil ts were Mrs. Ed
Church on the LangsvilleMurphy. Mr. and Mrs .. Rodney
. Dexter road met at 1:30 p.m.,
Gaul. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul
Jan . 24 with the following
and Dr . R. R. Pickens.
groups attending, Wesleyan
Methodi st, fr om Morgan
Center, Morgan Center Gospel
W
0
Mission, ,and the Midway
Community Church.
KANAUGA _ The Sew and
Special singers were Diane,
So Club met at the home of Joan and Ernest Thacker from ·
Mrs. Marion Caldwell for the the Fairview Church of Christ
regular January session. New in Christian Union.
officers and assisbints are,
A special number on a
president, Mrs. Lawson saxophone was played by
Dailey; vice president, Mrs. Karen Shupe and the Shupe
Gilbert Caldwell ; secretary, family sang a special song.
Mrs. Earl Caldwell; assistant Special songs also were sung
secrebiry, Mrs. Bruce Unroe; by Morgan Ce nter Youth
lreasurer, Mrs. Bobby ·Clary ; Group and Midway . Youth
assisbint treasurer, Mrs . John Group. Several other young
Ostergren; new s reporter , people also sang songs.
Mrs.
Marion
Caldwell;
Youths at tend ing were
assistant news reporter , Mrs. Timmy Spires, Debbie Spires,
Mary Hall.
Billy
Cockran ,
Phyllis
Devotions and games for the. Cockran, Darlene Cockran ,
evening's enlerbiinment were Chris Baugher, Jeff Cockran,
led by Mrs. Marion CaldwelL Leann Davis, Dawana Davis,
The prize went to Mrs. Wyman Melissa Durham, Brian
Sheets. Secret sister birthday Durham , Delmar Davis Sr.,
gifts were drawn for the new Sandy
Davis ,
Richie
year and members were Vanhauen, Robin Rathburn ,
reminded to start bringing Terry Hysell, Bruce Hysell,
Wanda Thompson , Leneva
items for the pandora box.
Mrs . Larry Hall was Russell, Linda HersmaU:
welcomed as a new member. Paula Justice, Phylli.s Ferrell ,
Anyone wishing to join may Stephen Lee Ferrell, Shirley
contact any of the members. Vance, Diane Thacker. Joann ·
The next meeting will be 'Feb. Mollohan, Donald Shupe,
20 at the home of Mrs . Wyman Donna Shupe, Geraldine
Sheets. Members are asked to Shupe, Terry Russell, Janice
bring more than one item for a Ferrell, Frankie Russell,
· Karen Shupe, Paul Matson,
white elephant sale.
Attending were Mrs. Marion
Caldwell, Mrs. Gilbert Caldwell, Mrs. Earl Caldwell, Mrs.
Pierre Sees "Pollution"
Bobby Clary, Mrs. Mary Hall,
MONTREAL ( UPI) - Prime
Mrs . Wyman Sheets and Mrs.
Minister
Pierre
Elliott
Bruce Unroe ,
Trudeau says the Watergate
A thought . for the day: scandal h~~ " polluted the
Roman poet Ovid said, "To be atmosphere of the democratic
loved , be lovable."
nallons. Trudeau, speaking at
a Liberal party fund raising
~-~----------~
~
dinner Friday, said the
'V&gt;'V."'-M:Ah..
overflow fr om Watergate has
brought SusPicion and mislrust
of government to Canada.

.......

'Gardeners meet in Lanham home

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Turner, Rutland, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter', Brenda Kay, to Peter G. Chase, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred L Chase, Arlington, Mass. Both the prospective
bride and groom are employed by the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
An open church ceremony will be observed at the Chillicothe
Bible Church, Egypt Pike, Chillicothe, Saturday, May 17,
with pre-nuptial music beginning at 2 p.m. Pastor Harlan
Aispach will officiate.
·

Couple marks 40th anniversary

SALE

'

Miss Brenda
Kay Turner

Miss Cynthia Lynn Gooch

Miss Kathy Norris

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7- The ~d~y Times - Sentinel, Sunday , Feb. 2, 1975

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R- ,.,~mtlovTi~ -Sentlnei.Suridav.Feb. 2, !975

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENt - The engagement of
Kathy Norris and Benny Hash is being announced. Miss
Norris is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs .. William D. Norris, Rt.
I, Bidwell . She is a 1974 graduate of Kyger Creek High School
and is employed at Robbins and Myers. Hash is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Hash, Rt. I, Bidwell. He will be a 1975
graduate of North Gallia High SchooL An · open church
wedding is planned for Feb. lll at 2:30p.m. at the White Oak
Baptist Church. There will be a reception immediately
following the wedding at the church camp dining hail.
~~~"'-"""'~~'*'-&lt;l=*':~~':'l'».X~1

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S:r. c·tttzens
.
·· Calendar

~~

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POMEROY - The Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in the
Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 9 a.m.-'1 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
Activities this week include :
Monday, Feb . 3, Crafts,
Square Dancing, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 4, Cards and
Games, Chair caning, Chorus,
12:30.2 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 5, Talk on
Cancer Facts&amp; Figures, 10:30.
11 :30a.m. women; 12:!5 a. m.12:45 p.m. men and women ;
Bingo 1-3 p.m.: Quilting.
Thursday, Feb. 6, Cards and
Gllllles, decoupage.
·
Friday, Feb. 7, Bowling 1-3
p.m.
Senior Clllzens lunch
program, 11:30 p.m.-12:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNs;ED -Mrs. Janet E. Nease,
Racine, and Robert R. Gooch, Florida, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Cynthia Lynn Gooch, to Verne
Alvin Ord, son of Bobby and Leah Ord, Syracuse. Miss Gooch
and her fiance are both 1974 graduates of Southern High
School. Miss Gooch is employed at Elberfelds, Pomeroy, and
Ord IS taking a course in mining technology at Pikeville
College, Pikeville, Ky. Wedding plans are incomplete.

POMEROY - The 40th
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs was
observed with an open house
last Sunday at the Meigs
County Infirmary dining room.
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, Mrs .
Jan e Jaco bs , Mrs. Oma
Nelson, Mrs. Linda Burnem
and Miss Diarte Lewis were
hostesses for the observance. A
red and white color scheme
was carried out and a tiered
cake decorated the refreshment tabie.
Gifts were presented to the
honored couple and entertatninent was provided by
Steve and Becky Eblin along
with other members of the
choir of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church where Mr.
and Mrs. Jacobs are members .
Among those missing from
the celebration were Mr. and
Mrs. Jacobs' son, Larry, and

MON.-TUES.-WED.

LARGE SHIPMENT

ANTIQUE SATIN

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OPEN DAILY 10 AM· 6 PM

hi s wife who reside in Houston ,
Tex. , and Mrs. Shirley Ann
Frazier, Columbus , who was
ill. Both telephoned during the
day. The couple also received
calls of congratulation from
relativ es and fri ends in
Pleasant City and Columbus,
and over 300 cards.
Attending the ce lebration
were Mr. and Mrs . Phil Wise,
Beverly; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Burnem, Miss Robin Burnem,
Lebirl Falls; Mrs. Virginia
Hayman , Racine : Mrs. Mary
Ours, Porlland; Mrs. Sybil
Dorst, Chesler ; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Jacobs, Jan, Jill and Jay,
Southshore , Ky ,; Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Jacobs, Columbus; Mrs.
Becky Card, Athens.
Mr . and Mrs . William
Ochier, Belpre ; Mrs. James
Ridenour, Chester ; Mrs.
Elizabeth Hayes, Long BotIolli ; Mrs . Mildred Circle,
Minersville ; Mrs. Lucy Gaul,
Sumner ; Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ja~obs and Sean, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Eric
Chambers, Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne, Diane Lewis, Mrs.
. Harry Clark, ·Mrs. Mary Lee,
Mary Ann Hoffman, Betty
Wills, Jean Windon, Mr. and
· Mrs. Harold Hanson, Sherrie
Clark, Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
Shook, Mrs . James Gilmore,
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Haggy
~nd Pam, Mr . and Mrs. Dick
Karr, Mr, and Mrs. Steve
Eblin, Tom Lewis , Greg Eblin,
Becky Eblin, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Van Inwagen, Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, all of
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Lavenna Ebersbach,
'Rev. and Mrs. Carl F.. Hicks,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wells, Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Mr.
and Mrs. Otto Lohn, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Powell, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralpb Frank, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bowen, Sr., Mrs.
B. A. Baronick, Miss Susan
Fleshman, Mrs . Robert
Warner, Mrs. Jack Robson,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Clark, Mrs.
Mary Se!lman. Mrs. A. David,

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~Youth

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Com·ing
Events

•

of lllis IMW Admlr1IT.V•.

·ANNUAL meeting , Church
·Women · United, Grace United
Methodist Church, 2 p.m. Installation of officers. Public
welcome.
MONDAY
FRENCH Co lony Chapter
DAR, ! ::Ill p.m. at the home
. ci Miss Catherine ·Hayward.
'ruESDAY
BETTY Starn Sunday School
Class. regular monthly .
mee t'mg ·m the fe 11owship
room, 7: 30 p.m.
WAYSIDE Garden Club meets ..

Slim, trim, covered in s imulated
patchwork blue denim! Uses less
power than .. 40 watt light bulb.

alignmenl. Comes with. Admi ral's live-

" Equal Ease" UHF tun ing, ear·

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.Year protection plan.

phone, other deluxe features.

EN GUSH Club will meet at the
home of Mrs. Isabelle Bias at7

BAK~ER

_________

FURNITURE

.

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M .IDDLEPOR:r, OHIO .

.&amp;s;se:'&amp;--;::~:::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:&gt;.':~;;;:;:::..~~=~

host meettngl

..;;f ·

BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. C. J.
Davis, Thunnan, announce the engagement of their ·
daughter, Connie,to Nick Ogg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Veri Ogg,
Nelsonville. The brid~lect is a 1970 graduate of Southwestern High School and has been active in Girl Scouts, 4-H
Club, saddle club, church and· choir. Miss Davis is a
December graduate of Morehead State University, Ky. While
at Morehead she majored in physical education and minored
in agriculture with a specialization in horse science. She was
active in the Ag. Club. Ogg is a 1970 graduate of NelsonvilleYork High School and is a member of the United Methodist
Church, He has been active in choir, band, Berean Community Players and is an alumni member of the Ohio State
Youth Omir. He is presently employed at Ogg's Wholesale
Inc., Nelsonville. An open church wedding is planned fo;
April 5 at the United Methodist Church, Nelsonville.

hawthorn, flowering dogwood.
bitter swee t vines and ma ny

others. Dense evergree ns alsO
offer a place to fee d and cover
against severe winter weather.
.,;ven !lowers and garden
flower seeds will atlract
cer tain varieties of birds. But
to attract and hold the bird s,
feeding especially in the winter
months is necessa ry. Once we
start feedin e th " hir~ co wf'

Slephen Hysell, Mark Matson
Jim Dobbins and Norma Jea~
Hysell.
Leaders who attended were
Theron Durham, Sharon
Durham, Glenna Long, Diafle
Hersman, Beverly Spires.
Others attending were Mrs.
Glenna Cockran, Mr. and Mrs.
!Jebnar Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Woody Russell , Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Thacker, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Shupe, Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Hysell, Mrs . Laneva
RusselL
Scripture was r ead by
Theron Durham.

Make

Tuesda y evening with her and Louella Haning of Lancaster visited the Mike Epples
brother, Rober t Alkire.
The Lend-A-Hand Circle met and Mrs. Letha Cowen on
Tuesday evening with Stella Wednesday .
. Mrs. Mae Mason recently
Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mr . and Mrs. K. C. Welch visited her son, Russell Mason
altended the Presbyterian and family of Athens.
Church mec ling in Columbus
Rev . and Mrs . Stebbins of
and visiled the Robert Welches Gallipolis visited Gene Young
on Tuesday.
Wedn esday afternoon. Mr .
Mrs. Minnie Foil, Mrs . Earl ·Young has been quite poorly.
Foil and daughter of Columbus

• • .eombJ.R
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•
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SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

!:iprlng

a

festival of colors with this
many -shaded · sandal. It's
easy walking wear tor
nearly any skirt or pant

l.~~uryJt ensemble you put with it.
.h~

wltt

And so many colors green, yellow , sky blue,

Jlyntg eJ~.;;also

•'
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sh iny

ATHENS- The Ohio University Artist Series will
presen t the Israel Chamber
Orcheslra, an ensemble of
strings, woodwinds, brass and
percussion at 8 p.m. Tuesday,
Memorial
Feb . 11 al
Auditoriwn.
The orchestra was founded in
1965 by Gary Bertini, conductor
and
composer.
Originally numbering 17 the
group has grown to the present
40 artists. The orchestra
pe,rforms repertory from the
Baroque period through the
Classic and Romantic periods
to the present day.
· The Israel Chamber Orchestra is supported by the
Israel Ministry of Education
and Culture in cooperation with
the America-Israel Cultural
Foundation and the Bethsahee
de Rothschild Foundation for
the Arts.
The program lor Tuesday's
performance is Symphony in c
minor , No. 95, Joseph Haydn ·
Suite from "El Amor Brujo,'~
Manuel De Falla; Variations
for Chamber Orchestra,
Mordecai Sater and Symphony

QUEEN NAMED
MIDDLEPORT - Linda
Grimm was named queen for
the week at a meeting of the
TOPS Club Tuesday night at
the American Legion Hall in
Middleport. Runner-up was
Mrs. Paulette Leach . Selection
was made on the basis of most
weight loss . Twenty-three
members attended.
HOSPITALIZED
POMEROY - Mrs. Cecil
Wise underwent surgery
Thursday at the Holzer
Medical Center.

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

•

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Payne
and family wer e weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Darold
Graham and family of Newark .
Mr. and Mrs . !Jebnar Rhodes
of New Marshfield called on
Mrs. Ella Anderson and the
Bob Clarks on Saturday afternoon.
Mr-. and 'Mrs . Mike Epple
visited Mr. and Mrs. Hie!
French Wednesday afternoon.
Dwight Seiple of Dayton is
spending a few days with Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
visited her parents Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Hart of Hamden over
the weekend.
Mark Gibson of Columbus
visited his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Douglas and
Lana Gibson over the weekend.
Mr. !l(ld Mrs. Allen Gibson of
Columb~s visited hi.s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Gibson
over the weekend.
E. R. Carr called on Guy
Bolen one evening the past
week.
Mrs . Danny Sbinley and son
of Pagetown visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Felix
Alkire on Wednesday.
Virginia Burke .and Helen
Pickens of Racine visited

1...

your

be gi~en by Mrs. Zelma Northcult on "Catherine Ma.ll
and Her Works."

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f

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COnON BALLS

No. 3 in D major, Franz
Schubert.
Tickets are available at the
Memorial Auditorium box
office week days 1-4 p.m. or by
calling 594-3471 .

GALLIPOLIS - Nineteen
members of Ann Judson Bible
Class of the First Baptist
Chur ch enjoyed a potluck
dinner Tuesday evening in the
fellowship room of the church.
A slate of new officers wa s
presented for the approval of
the group when Eva Gilmore,
outgoing president, was · in
charge.
Grace was given by Mrs.
Esther Gooch . The meeting
opened with group singing of
"When The Roll is Called Up
Yonder 11 and 11 He Le:adeth Me"
accompanied by Miss Ruth
Fiske.
'Prayer was offered by Mrs .
Ethel Steele. First Corinthians
13 was read by Miss Eva
Gilmore. The president called
for a report of the nomina ling
committee with the following
names submitted and accypled
by the group: president, Mrs.
Jack Carter; vice president,
Mrs . Homer
McCully;
secrebiry , Miss Freda Sneller;
assistant secretary, Mrs.
Leslie Brewer; treasurer, Mrs.
Mae Lawrence; assistant
treasurer, Miss Belle Ecker,
Outgoing officers were
hostesses for the evening, The
newly elec~d officers met
briefly to set a place and date
for compiling the yearbooks.
The meeting d~missed with
prayer by Mrs, Esther Gooch.

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~----~~!!9_~~-P~-~QS______ ~-------Q~J!~~:~p_R~Gj____ _

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MIDDLEPO'RT OH.IO

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with Mrs . Charles rate, 7:30

~:te:~d~~~
The program. will

--,.------------------------:1
... ........
VALUABLE COUPON

·,.,•

•24 New AMF lanes

Come in and look

c~ostess.

fip

should continue to do so until
spring. Feed them each .
morning . and just put oul
enough food for one day.
Miss Roberts eni:led the
program by reading a poem by
Helen Prodoehl en titled, " In .
The Forest. "
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. The meeling ··
was adjourned .

43•

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

Put a " new look" in
your child's wardrobe with Qne of
the
many
new
spring items that
have arrived.

•

QUANTITIES LIMITED

Orchestra will play

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Time to think
about Spring!

SUNDAY
PAINT Creek Baptist Ch,urch,
youth Sunday. Services begin
10:45 a.m. All youth, pleAse
attend .

ormance. lender-de pth PreCISion
In-Line Pi.cture lube design saves
space , provides laclory ' set color

t-------------~..&amp;-_.;._.,;.

s· ... ::::

club convenes

drnlral® TV 's
t"--------------_,_______
J Way Super S.g

::

5e and 5

QUALITY
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GAWPOUS - The Open
Mi,ss Roberts siatetl that the
· Gate Garden Club met at the birds can be of great value to
home of Mrs. Art Lanham Jan . the home owner . But to fully
28.
'
enjoy their benefits and beauty
President, Edna Graham we must care for these colorful
called the meeting to order. crea tures.
For the exhibit of the month,
In order to assure ourselves
Mrs. Lanham used a white of having plenty of birds to
cherub compote in which she enjoy all year, we should plant
· had arranged artificial fruit trees and shrubs that attra ct
and nuts around a large candle . birds. A bird bath and feeders
It made a seasonal table will help to keep the birds
arrangement.
around your home .
· rilrs. Dan Morgan read the
Regular visits by scarl et
minutes of the Dece mber cardinal can add color, sound
meeting, Minutes were ap- and life to an otherwise bleak
proved. Ten members an- winter landscape . Or, in the
swered roll.
spring and summer, purple
Treasurer's report was given martins can help control in·
by Mrs. Ed Slagle. The sects during an eve ning's
president read a thank you relaxation. The antics of robins
letter from the Volunteer frolicking in a bird bath can
Services of the Gallipolis State cause laughter and interest to
Institute.
all who are lucky enough to see
Miss Faye Roberts had the them, particularly for people
program on uBirds." Miss who bike time to feed them.
Roberts started the program
By feeding on insects, the
by passing out pictures of birds are a part of the balance
different birds to each mem- of nature.
ber. Each member, in turn,
Trees are also valuable lo
rea~ the ?rief description,
birds as sources of food so we
feeding habits and migrating should plant trees and shrubs
patterns of the birds pictured that produce berries that will
on the cards.
attract the birds. Birds like the

Miss Connie Davis

Peter G. Chase

Mrs. Ella Roslofer, Mrs. Etta
Ellis, Mrs . Bertha Righthouse .
James Levi and Mrs. Joan
DEXTER - The Midway
Tuttle.
Youth
Group of the Midway
Sending gil ts were Mrs. Ed
Church on the LangsvilleMurphy. Mr. and Mrs .. Rodney
. Dexter road met at 1:30 p.m.,
Gaul. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul
Jan . 24 with the following
and Dr . R. R. Pickens.
groups attending, Wesleyan
Methodi st, fr om Morgan
Center, Morgan Center Gospel
W
0
Mission, ,and the Midway
Community Church.
KANAUGA _ The Sew and
Special singers were Diane,
So Club met at the home of Joan and Ernest Thacker from ·
Mrs. Marion Caldwell for the the Fairview Church of Christ
regular January session. New in Christian Union.
officers and assisbints are,
A special number on a
president, Mrs. Lawson saxophone was played by
Dailey; vice president, Mrs. Karen Shupe and the Shupe
Gilbert Caldwell ; secretary, family sang a special song.
Mrs. Earl Caldwell; assistant Special songs also were sung
secrebiry, Mrs. Bruce Unroe; by Morgan Ce nter Youth
lreasurer, Mrs. Bobby ·Clary ; Group and Midway . Youth
assisbint treasurer, Mrs . John Group. Several other young
Ostergren; new s reporter , people also sang songs.
Mrs.
Marion
Caldwell;
Youths at tend ing were
assistant news reporter , Mrs. Timmy Spires, Debbie Spires,
Mary Hall.
Billy
Cockran ,
Phyllis
Devotions and games for the. Cockran, Darlene Cockran ,
evening's enlerbiinment were Chris Baugher, Jeff Cockran,
led by Mrs. Marion CaldwelL Leann Davis, Dawana Davis,
The prize went to Mrs. Wyman Melissa Durham, Brian
Sheets. Secret sister birthday Durham , Delmar Davis Sr.,
gifts were drawn for the new Sandy
Davis ,
Richie
year and members were Vanhauen, Robin Rathburn ,
reminded to start bringing Terry Hysell, Bruce Hysell,
Wanda Thompson , Leneva
items for the pandora box.
Mrs . Larry Hall was Russell, Linda HersmaU:
welcomed as a new member. Paula Justice, Phylli.s Ferrell ,
Anyone wishing to join may Stephen Lee Ferrell, Shirley
contact any of the members. Vance, Diane Thacker. Joann ·
The next meeting will be 'Feb. Mollohan, Donald Shupe,
20 at the home of Mrs . Wyman Donna Shupe, Geraldine
Sheets. Members are asked to Shupe, Terry Russell, Janice
bring more than one item for a Ferrell, Frankie Russell,
· Karen Shupe, Paul Matson,
white elephant sale.
Attending were Mrs. Marion
Caldwell, Mrs. Gilbert Caldwell, Mrs. Earl Caldwell, Mrs.
Pierre Sees "Pollution"
Bobby Clary, Mrs. Mary Hall,
MONTREAL ( UPI) - Prime
Mrs . Wyman Sheets and Mrs.
Minister
Pierre
Elliott
Bruce Unroe ,
Trudeau says the Watergate
A thought . for the day: scandal h~~ " polluted the
Roman poet Ovid said, "To be atmosphere of the democratic
loved , be lovable."
nallons. Trudeau, speaking at
a Liberal party fund raising
~-~----------~
~
dinner Friday, said the
'V&gt;'V."'-M:Ah..
overflow fr om Watergate has
brought SusPicion and mislrust
of government to Canada.

.......

'Gardeners meet in Lanham home

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Turner, Rutland, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter', Brenda Kay, to Peter G. Chase, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred L Chase, Arlington, Mass. Both the prospective
bride and groom are employed by the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
An open church ceremony will be observed at the Chillicothe
Bible Church, Egypt Pike, Chillicothe, Saturday, May 17,
with pre-nuptial music beginning at 2 p.m. Pastor Harlan
Aispach will officiate.
·

Couple marks 40th anniversary

SALE

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Miss Brenda
Kay Turner

Miss Cynthia Lynn Gooch

Miss Kathy Norris

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1-TheSunda,y
_'i'tmes -Sentinel, Sunday ,Fe~. 2,1975

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' Garden clubs meet

J Aj'&gt;IES E.-DUKE

New pastor
welcomed
MER CE RVILLE
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church introduces their new
pastor and announ ces a three
night meeting, Feb. 7-9.
Bro. James E. Duke is the
new pastor of the Providence
Baptist Church. He was raised
in Nashville, Tenn. Bro. Duke
was pastor of the New
Testament Baptist Church,
Isabella, Puerto Rico, in 1963.
He attended Lexington Baptist
College in Lexington, Ky., 11164
to 1968 and while in college
was pastor of the Bryan Sl&lt;ltion
Mission, Bath County, Ky., and
Battle
Baplfs l Church,
Harrodsburg, Ky ,
Alter college he was minister
for the First Baptist Church of
Harrison, Ohio for 41&gt; years.
During this time he served as
missionary to Puerto Rico for
three years. He is married to
the former Edna Heffner,
Chesapeake, and they have one
son, James, Jr., 9. They live in
Lawrence County,
Bro. Bob Lake, Wayne, W.
Va. will speak F:iday night;
Bro. Kenneth Sanders, Pastor
of Victory Baptist Church will
speak Saturday , and Bro.

GALLIPOLIS
The
, Cheshire Garden Club met with
' Nature's Garden , Club Wednesday eve ning at the
Gallipolis SUite Institute,
Mrs, Garnet Wood welcomed
members and guests and gave
the roll call : All stood and
repeated · the Gardener's
Pledge,
Secretary's report was given
by Alice Atchinson. Some
business was transacted, then
the ineeting was turned over to
Mrs. Helen Presloo . She gave a
s hort talk reviewing the
prev ious associations of the
two clubs. She then conducted_
a quiz on the identification of
dri ed materi als which she ,
exhibited.
She made several modern
arrangements using dried
ga rlic , allium, lanl&lt;lil willow,
wisteria vines .and pink tulips.
A cylindrical conlainer which
she had made to use with a gold
colored metal background was
displayed .
Mrs . Rose Wilson demon.s traled a contemporary
a'rrangement of garlic and
various seed pods, painted
vines and eucalyptus.
Mrs .
Phyllis
Hawley
a
modern
exhibited
arrangement of artificial red

ASK TOWED
POMEROY - Donalq Keith
LJsle, 21, Columbus, and Karen
K. Johnson, 17, Middleport.

Harry Balmer, ' Franklin
Furnace, will speak Sunday.
Providence Church Is located
on Teens Run Road near
1\!ercervlllt!'. The meetings wUI
slart each night at 7, Everyone
Is invited .

jan's Side
by
Dorothy ]. Countryman

Sorority makes _
crusade plans

crabl!pples, red etlcalyptus and , ·
corkscrew willow in a moon
shape~ vase with redHlsh,
, brown and gold overtones.
Mrs. Woods exhibited,
several dried grasses and other
driefj plan Is which she had
gathered In her garden. · .,
"Happy Birthday"· was sung
to Mary Sl&lt;led who was having
• birthday on that day ,
·
Aller grace was said by Eva
Sherer refreshments were
served bf Mrs. Preston, Mrs.
Wilson and Mrs . Hawley,
members of the Cheshire Club
who attended.
A dismissal prayer by
Nature 's Club closed the
mee ting.

RUTLAND --- Mr. and Mrs.
C, W. Buck will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary
today from 2 to 4 p,m, with an
open hou;e at their home on
Main St. where they 'have
resided the past 41 years,
Married in Gallipolis Feb. 6,
1925, they have three children,
Mrs. Roger (Betty) Phillips,
Scottsdale, Ariz . ; William
( Bill ). Cheshire, and Mrs .
Nancy Pope, Middleport, '
Randy Phillips, who graduated
in December from Arizona
SUite University, is here with
his mothh for the celebration,

Miss Sandra jo Cheuvront

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Announcement is made
of the engagement of Miss Sandra Jo OJeuvront, daughter of ·
SUSPECT HEW
Mr. and Mrs. Byron T. OJeuvront, Rt. 3, Proctorville, and
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (UPI)
Keith Alan Swain, son of Mr . and Mrs. Verlin Swain, Rt, I,
--., Howard Edward Kellogg
Crown City, The bride-elect is a graduate of Fairland High
Jr ., 32, Cincinnati, was
School and is employed as a bookkeeper by FJW Industries,
arrested here Friday in conHuntington, W. Va, The prospective groom is a graduate of
nection with the murder of
Hannan Trace High School and is employed on his father's ·Nathan Fink, 73, during a
dairy farm. The open church wedding wiU be an event of Feb.
robbery of his west end Cin8 at .7:30 p.m. in the Johnson Memorial United Methodist
cinnati dry goods store 15
Olurch, Huntington , with Rev. Richard Holliday officiating.
months ago.

Mason homemakers enjoy session
MASON, W. Va, - The
January meeting of the Mason
Homemakers Extension Club
was held at the home of Mrs.
Richard Gilkey Tuesday with
hostesses Mrs. Clara Williams
and Mrs .. Laure]le Lewis.
The meeting was opene.:l by
president Mrs , Dorothy Queen
who led the group in giving the
flag salute and the Lord's .
Prayer._
,
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Nancy Van Meter who
used for her scriptwe Matthew
6 : ~32. She also read a poem
titled "Strong Shoes."
,'
Mrs. Catherine Smith gave a
prayer that .th~ club might be .
more useful m the coming
year.
The
secretary
and

treasurer's reports were given,
roll call and dues were paid for
the entire year. Pennies for
Friendship were also collected,
Mrs. Roberl&lt;l-, Young and
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart were
appointed lo make plans and
submit menus to the alumni
committee of Wahama High
Scliool for
the club's
serving of the alumni
banquet the last part of May.
Other business brought
before the club by the president
was the making of pillow tops
in West Virginia Heritage
design for the National Convention of Homemakers which
will be held .in Morgantown
August 1976. West Virginia
Homemakers will host this
convention and each visiting
.

GALlJPOlJS - I was really delighted to see the large group
of folks attending-last week's organizational meeting of the
Gallla Q&gt;unty Historical Society.
'
Ever since ,I was a small child, conllng here on the weekend
bips my parents were so fond of, I've had a thing about the
history of the area. When we were barely bl8 enough to
remember such things mother was regaiJng us with storle1 of the
IIY RUTH MILLER
Retardation lor , Gallia
French Five Hundred and shushing us on tours of Our Houae. We
GALlJPOlJSJan.
30
was
Jackson
and Meigs Counties:
'
knew, almost top to bottom, the saga of the Holzer Hospital and
another busy and enjoyable He gave an interesting U.lk on
Its founder. We wandered about this old city, lmpre118ed by lis
day at the cent~r , Ap- drugs · and drug abuse after
age and fond· of lis buildings. ,
proximately
40 people enjoyed , which we sang "Happy BirthIt indeed seemed a trlfle strange to me that such a place had
a delicious lunch through our day" to Ruby Long, Garnet
no real museum. For while Our House is super, Its treasures
nulrltion program, This Johnson, Gordon and Nora
surely represent only a smattering of what the area hW~ and a
' program is getting bigger and Wooten, , Gertrude Markel,
museum or museums would be something great.
Evelyn Rothgeb, Leona Boster,
better,
Then t¥re's that parkfront. Oh what a beautiful place, don't
Alter· lunch the Registered Edna Payoe, Gladys Sparl&lt;ln
~u think? It must be, by far, the prettiest town square In Ohio.
Nurses,
Ginny
Killen; and Maxine Northup,
So we get to talking about what Mrs. VanMeter had to say lasi
weekend and I'll share with you the visions she conjured up in my
Margreda Williams and Ella
Ruby received a gift as the
head.
Condee were there to do the youngest and Gertrude Markel
It might help for the people Involved in this historical musing
blood pressure check ups. for the oldest; a spry 82 years
There were 43 check ups and 16 , of age,
to see what's been done In Chillicothe. The old south quadrant has
been saved - happy day - for the most part by the work of
were new ones. There is no
Refreshments of cake and
Cllllll's J;listorical group. It holda f""" museums, an assortment • charge for UU. service.
punch were served to
or gorgeous old houses and a church or two. Out near old Camp
Al 1:30 p.m. there was a approximately 50 , people atSterman there's Gonsetown. This Is the German sector of birthday party for everyone tending the party. Those Senior
Oillllcothe and smack in the middle of downtown there's an athaving birthdays in January. Citizens can really bake some
tempt bel,ng made to restore the building fronls and save the
The program was opened by a delicious cakes.
al,mosphere of Ohio's fir!ll capital.
poem by Elias Sisson. It was
Don't forget potluck Feb, 13
So both Mrs. Van Meter and I come to you with an assort: plaitned by last month's birth- at 6:30p.m. and the Valimtine
rnent of visions in our heads that have been prompted by the. 'day people.
party Feb. 14. Wouldn't you
restoration of Carlisle Coi-ner and the remodeling of the Gazette
Our guest speaker was Dr. like to join our social acoffiCe.
Jerry Walke of the Community tivitie&amp;' The phone number is
What I see at any rate is a hiStorical district, submitted for
Menial Health and . MenU.! : 446-7000 for information ,
the National Reljister, covering the area from Court Street to the
old hospital along First Ave., and Including the park and maybe
the Olamber of Commerce building lor a· northerly boundary.
It could be a wa)klng tour extraordlnare, as the French
would say, and there's the place, I think, to begin building
tourism for this area. It's aU very good and well that we have a
dynasty out ,at Rio Grande. There we've got the Bob Evans
Fanns, tjJe college and an outdoor drama. And that's super.
But when Gallipolis Is another year old, no cne Is blowing
COLUMBUS-- Former U. s.· President · Emeritus of San
out birthday candles in Rio Grande and it's high time we had
Attorney
General and newly Francisco SUite .College, will
something of our own.
.
.
appointed
Ambassador to be the guest speaker at the
Do you realize·that, in this cliy where French Influence· Is
India,
William
B. Saxbe, will third ·general session at 3:15
11101t felt along the river, there Is no French restaiU'ant. No cne
speclalllel in \h08e delicate, airy French con{ections that warm be the guest banquet speaker p.m., Friday at the Rhodes
when over 1,000 elementary Bulldirlg. His topic will be
, the heart of any gourmet. We ought to glve'oiU' vialtors a taste of
principals attend the Ohio " Youth, Adolescence and
the kln:l ol Parisian llavor we claim in this ci~. · Such a
Association of Elementary Maturity."
restaurant would be one way to do it.
Schooll'rinclpals'
17th Annual
_Guest speaker lor the fourth
Wben I wailder about town an loot, as I al\en have during
Professional
ConferP.nce
at the general session, Saturday at 9
good weather, I ,see .numerou.s plates attached to house frools
.oonoernlng their age. Do we have a ~t or a•broclaire Ohio Ji:xposition ·Center in a.m. in the Rhodes Building
lelllnil people where to find these Old bulldiqJs and something Columbus, February 6, 7 and 8. will be Dr. Dean Berkley,
The lhetne of the con{erence School of Education, Indiana
about their beglnnlngs? How about a map of to-tm that bas red
Is,
" A Principal For All , University. His topic will be
marks for each J;llstorical site?
·
S
easons."
"Digltalllis,"
And wby Clll't we do something about the brush down over
1&gt;r,
Albert
Shuster,
Chairthe banlt at Mound Hili to Improve the vi. , of the river? You
This year Dr. Russell
man of the Department of Spillman,
Can't reallY ask for a mOre ~c spot and yo11 see lor miles from
Ohio
State
Elementary Education, Untverslty, will conduct a
up thel:e'
We bad SO people at the opening meellilg ol the society . I hope College of EduCjltion, Ohio mini-workshop on "Inducing
University, will be the keynote Change ill' Tile Eleinenlary
we'll have more when the group COnvenes again in February.
_
speaker
on
Thursday, School," and sii&lt; clinics on as .
There's so much that C8l1 be done in Gallipolis - National
February
6,
_
at
4
p.m.
in the many school related areas will
~ enbies, regislrations, research, tour planning. It will
Arts and Crafts Building. His . be available for the conferees.
take a batch of people, wotklng a lot ot bours to do the job and
subject
wlll be " The
then, when we begin to see some lt:irid of Ugbt on the subjeCt, we
Autonomous
Principal."
,
need to designated a· belch of BlcenteMial projects and get
Fr'day
. 9 a.m., Marilyn
1
at
UDdenray.lfllliagolng to be'here before we know it.
CHILD BURNED
Van
l)erbur,
a
former
Miss
M for ' BI~tennlal projects the field Ia wide open. We can
POMER,OY - The Pomeroy
cleqnate playa, flow:er plantl!wB,school projecta, parades- tlie America, a Phi Beta Kappa emergency squad was called to
graduate 01. the Unlvenity ol the Chuck Bartels born.,., ·
l1ll Ia endlea.
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Coltndo
Mel an a~lished Mulberry Ave., · Saturday
Ill the next feW' .weeki! both the blst«&lt;cal aoctety and the
lllcentennlal Qunmlaslon need to get underway with • re.a1 gueotlecturer, willapeaitat the morning for the 14-roonth old
bug. They need the help of every Gallla Countlan. I hope you'll ' second general session ' at the son of the Bartels, Joshua' who
Rhodes Building. Her topi~ will was .biU'ned by hot coffee.' He
join...
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be "Goals and ~ams."
was taken . to the Holzer
,
Have a nil:e ~Dr· S. I. Hayakn•a, Medical Center.

State's principals will
hear Ambassador S8xbe

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POMEROY - Plans to
conduct the Cancer Crusade in
Pomeroy on Sunday afternoon,
Feb. 23, were made when Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beia
Sigma Phi Sorority met Thursday night at the home of Mrs,
Judy Werry.
A report was given on the
March of Dimes Mothers '.
March and it was noted that in
Middleport where Xi · Gamma
Mu Chapter members went
door-10-&lt;ioor a total of $406,56
was collected,
Charlotte Haning presided at
, the' meeting with the cultural
report being given by -Phyllis
Bennett and Sarah Bechtle. A
pitta party was held following
the meeting,
Attending were Carol
Adams, Becky Anderson,
Jennifer And'erson, Susie
Baer, Miss Bechtle, Mrs .
Bennett, Jane Bourne, Donna
Byer, Annie Chapman, Doris
Ewing, Debbie Finlaw, Vikki
Gloeckner, Charlotte Haning,
Ri 1&lt;1 Lewis, Carol McCullough,
Donna Nease, Iris Payne,
Carolyn Satterfield, Lynn
Shuler, Texanna Well, and the
hostess.

Anniversary
celebrated

Nutrition program growing

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delegate will be given a pillow
lop.
The numb~r of lops Mason
Homemakers will contribute
will be decided at a later date,
The lesson, " Electrical
Hazards and Repairs" was
presented by Mrs. Hazel Smith
who urged all mefllbers to be
more careful of electrical
appliances and to have made
more prompt repairs.
Hostesses for the February
meeting will be Mrs. Matilda
Noble and Mrs. Alma Marshall ; lesson leaders, Mrs.

Joyce Carson.
Refreshments were served to
the following members: Mrs.
Dorothy Queen, Mrs, Elmer
(Nancy) Van Meter, Mrs. Cecil
(Hazel) Smith, Mrs. Albertus
(Roberl&lt;l) Young, Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs. Laurene Roush
and Mrs. John (Alma) Marshall, Mrs. Landon (Catherine)
Smith, Mrs. Lesl&lt;lr (Laura)
Johnson, Mrs. Uoyd (Clara)
WiUiams, Mrs. Laurene Lewis
and Mrs. Matilda Nobles.
Mrs. Sara Willis, Pomeroy,
was a guest. ·

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CALLED TWICE
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
to Southern High School at 9:45
p.m. Friday for Greg Dudding
who was having muscle
spasms of the back. He was
l&lt;lken to Vel&lt;Jrans Memorial
Hospital. At 9:45a.m .- Saturday
Gracie Roush, Racine, a
me&lt;,~ical patient, was taken to
Vel&lt;lrans Memorial Hospil&lt;ll
by the Racine unit.

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-The &amp;llclayTinies-Sent~l,Sunda,y,Feb. 2, 1975

Shower fetes
Miss Henry

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ENJOY TOUR - A week-long cruise to Cap Ha!Uen, Sari:
Juan, St. Thomas and Puerto Plata on board the M~!
SkYWard of Norwegian Caribbean Lines, WWI part of a recent,:
vacation lor Arthur and Ruth Wroblewakl, Gallipolis.
SCHEDULE CHANGED
GALLIPOlJS - Due to a
scheduling conflict, dales for
the annual MGM Scout District
swimming program, at Lyne
Center have been revised. The
program will sl&lt;lrt March 29
and run for five consecutive
Saturdays, April oth, 12th, 19th
and 26lh.It will feature a Jearn
to swim class for Cubs ,

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Aquanaut Skill -Award %1,\r
Webelos ana Swimming !iJIIll
Award and Merit Badge illr
Scouts. The price will be 50 ·
cents per boy, per day. Unit
Leaders should send in money
and reservations to Frank
DiClemente,
Box
455,
Gallipolis before March '1s.
More informa lion will 'be
coming soon.
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In
SILVER BRIDGE

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Miss linda Gail Pinkerman
1\NNOUNcE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Delano
engagement
and
marriage of theirannounce
daughter,the
Linda
Gail, to Pvt.
:.:~:~~~~G~a~llit'~po~lisFerry,
L. ·
son of !&gt;Irs. Anna Mae Barnes, Crown

_._,,v. Miss Pinkerman is a 1973 graduate of Point Pleasant
School and is presently employed at the Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Gallipolis. Pvt. Barnes is a 1974 graduate of
Hannan-Trace Hi~ School; Mercerville, and is now serving
in the U. S. Army at Fort Lee, Va. The wedding will take
place .at the Faith Gospel Olurch at Gallipolis Ferry,
Tuesday, Feb. 7. Tbe tradition of open church will be observed.

PLAZA
OPEN MONDAY NIGHT'
"
TIL 9 O'CLOCK

SPORTCOAT
SALE

others have meeting

100% POLYESTER KNIT
Regular Values
To $55.00
Not a 11 sizes .
meeting began with the
i!'flllers praying the ·league
Mrs. Charles Bostic
tiduooted the meeting, various
gave reports .
~l&gt;ers vol&lt;ld to give $25 to
sUite O.C.C.L. scholarship
fund.
this was craft night 14
~~oers answered roll _call
"What craft I would like
" Names were drawn
1ho!Cnet sisters.
. Glen Ward demonhow to make flowers
· burlap,: hoW' to make
holders from empty
fgiadrle bowls; and how to
pin cushions from jar lid
~~~d Mrs. Gar! Gillespie
!j
rugs which had been
from old hose, macrame
Alch she had made, and also
itJlfwed how to make a quilt an
way. These demon·
~~:;~s were interesting and
-1
that a lot of articles

Cherokee club meets
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va.
- The Cherokee Extension
Homemakers Club met at the
home of Mrs: K. K. Scites, on
Tuesday evening, lor the
regular monthly meeting.
The president, Mrs, ·Ollie
Browning presided and the
pledge to the flag was given:
Mrs. Luther Smith was in·
charge of devotions. The
thought was Looking Up.
Scripture was Psalm 121 :1-2.
She gave a reading and closed
with prayer:
Seven members were
present to answer the roll. The
minutes were read and approved and the treasurer's
report given,
The president read the duties
of the vari_ous committee

I·

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chairmen . She asked lor
co mmittee reports. The
projects selected by the
members for this year were
given to Bell&lt;lr Living projects
chairman, Mrs. K. K. Scltes.
The president reported she
had received a card from Mrs.
Joseph Scites family thanking
the club for flowers received
for the funeral of Mrs. Scltes
father, Mr. Luewellyn s·.
Williams,
The preslden t read the bylaws of the Cherokee Club. The
by-laws have no,t been revised
for quite some time but will be
revised within the next two
months. Some items of _note
were (I) any member who is
absent from regular meeting
for as !llany as three months in
succession, without good
reason such as illness, should
be dropped from the roll. The
secretary shall send a wr1 lten
reminder mentioning this by'
law upon the second successive
absence; (2) The term of office
for officers of the organization
shall not exceed three years,
(3) The ex·ecutive committee
shall consist of officers of the
club.
The )esson, "Simple Electrical Repairs" was taught by
Mrs. Ollie Browning.
Mrs. K. K. Scites and Mrs.
Ollie Browning shOwed slides.

that are usually discarded can
be put to good use.
A dessert was served by the
hostess and Mrs, Raymond
DeLJlle. Next meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Carl
Gillespie.

Legion posts
marking two
special events

RODNEY - Miss Lu Ann
Henry , bride-elec t of Kessler
Adkins, was honored at a
bridal shower given by Mrs,
Robert Cornwell, Jan , 8. The
guests assembled at Miss
Henry's future home in Quail
Creek Subdivision, Rodney. A
rainbow of decorations in blue,
pink, yellow and green carried
out the. bridal theme.
Attending · were Connie
Brumfield , Kathy Sniith,
Claudette Daniels, Kim
Shaver, Debbie Johnson, Mrs.
Otis Johnson, Mrs , SU.nley
Shaver, Mrs , Gary Groves and
son, Mary Sl&lt;lphenson, Barbara Evans, Mrs. Nelgene
Pegg _ Margaret Wolfe, Mrs,
Mary Long, Wavelene Sl&lt;lge,
Thelma Thivener, Mrs , Robert
Cornwell and Mrs. Velma
Henry, mother of the brideelect.
Sending gills were Fran
Tussey, OJarolette Tussy, Mrs.
Jessie Johnson, Jill Jeffers,
Mrs . Joe Dobbins, Sandy Lockhart, Mrs. Basil Evans,
Winifered Greenlee, Elsie
Ours , Leona Whitt, Lucy
Earwood, Dorothy French,
Kathleen Thompson, Naomi
Haskins, Opal McGuire, Maxie
Erit, Mary Rollins and Mildred
Harrison.
At the conclusion of the
evening games were played
with prizes awarded to Nelgene
Pegg and Claudette Daniels.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED

I· ·;

OPEN 8 AM · 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 AM - 10 PM SUN-DAYS

I

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Brick/es

Wedding vows exchanged
style with an overlay of lace,
Her bridal bouquet was pink
and white roses with baby's
breath and pink streamers,
Her only jewelry was a gold
necklace, gift from the groom,
T~e bride's bouffant veil of
bridal illusion fell from a
crown of lace accenl&lt;ld with
seed pearls,
Miss Tammie DeBord,
cousin of the bride, was brides•
maid. Her gown was pink
accented with red trim, She
carried a bouquet of pink and
white roses with white
streamers.
Rodney Frecker, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, was best man and
the ushers were Ronnie Wood,
Pomeroy, brother of the bride,
and Bruce Brickles, Pomeroy,
brother of the groom,
For her daughter's wedding ,
Mrs. Wood wore a dress of blue
knit with bodice covered with
lace and a pearl necklace, Her
corsage was white mums
tinl&lt;ld with pink to match the
GALLIPOLIS- The Federal bride's bouquet Mrs. Brickles
Communications Commission wore a gown of yellow k~it with
has announced that sl&lt;lrting a corsage of white mums tinted
March I, the fee for a license yellow,
for an Citizen Radio sl&lt;ltion will
Immediately following the
be $4.
ceremony a reception was held
The current application fee is in the social room of the
$20 for Citizen Radio license . , chu•ch. , The bride's table
Citizen Band Radio is the featured a three-ltered cake
largest single radio service lopped with two wedding rings
administered by the F.C.C. and and doves,
already accounts for 4 to 6
Denise Brickles; sister of the
million transmitters licensed groom, registered the guests,
to more than 1 000 000 and serving were Deloris King,
operators.
' '
Judy Gilliam, and Juanil&lt;l
In anticipation of an in· Heal, aunts of the -bride, and
creased volume of new ap- Carolyn Banks and Rheba
pllcatlons, particularly from Hysell, sisters of the groom,
prospective Citizen Radio
The couple res1des at Rt. 4,
licenses the commission Pomeroy, .
stressed that the $4 application
The bride 1s a graduate of
lee would not be accepted until Me1gs H1gh School and 1s
March l, 1975. Until then, it employed at the Beauty Spot,
said, the application fee would Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Brickles, also
continue to be $20. •
a graduate of Meigs . High
School, · is attending the
Manpower Training Center at
Jackson.
advisor, with eight members
Attending the wedding from
present. Officers were elected
out
of the county were Carolyn
and project books dis\fibuted,
The next meeting will be and Sl&lt;lphanie Banks, MaryFebruary 22 at the home of land; Mr . and Mrs, Sl&lt;lnley
Megan Long . - Debbie Heal, Cleveland, and Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Gillian and Terri,
Woodyard.
Zanesville .
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene was
the setting for the Oct. 12
wedding of Miss Carolyn Sue
Wood, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Wood, and
Steven Brickles, son of Mrs.
lona Brickles, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
and Donald Brickles, Glouster.
Rev. Clyde Henderson of.
ficiated at the double ring
ceremony at 2:30 p.m.
following a program of music
by Mrs. Grace White.
Pink and while roses with
1&lt;111 white l&lt;lpers decoraled the
chu_rch.
Given in marriage by her
lather, the bride was attired in
a gown of white sa'tin princess

MGM will make
district awards
GALLIPOLIS
MGM
District Scout Executive Steve
Jones said Saturday that the
" District Award of Merit" is a
relatively new award.
Jones said it can be
presented.by a local district in
the same manner that the
Silver Bearer, a National
Award, is presenl&lt;ld by local
councils.
Two District Awards of Merit
will be given out this year In
the MGM District The award
is available to all adult leaders
who have rendered service of
an outsl&lt;lnding nature at the
district level. It has been ruled
that no holder of the Silver
Beaver Award may be eligible
for this award.
Nominations including a
description of his or her
noteworthy service should be
sent to Dr. Bernard Niehm,
Gallipolis State Institute, by
the end of February.

CB license
fee reduced

POMEROY- Meigs County
American Legion Posts are
Observing Religious Emphasis
Week, . Feb. 1·7, and Four
Chaplains Day today,
The observance commemorates one of the most
thrilling incidents of World
War II when four Armed
Forces chaplains, a Jewish
rabbi, a Roman Catholic priest Dorchester, after it was torand two Protesl&lt;lnt ministers pedoed on Feb. 3, 1943.
calmly issued life belts to
When the supply of life
American servicemen aboard preservers exhausted, the four
the troop transport, the USS ' chaplains removed their own
life belts and gave them to four
soldiers and then stood calmly
on the sinking ship, their arms
around
one
another's
shoulders, their heads bowed in
prayer.
Inspired by the heroic deed,
the Amei'ican Legion each year
marks the anniversary of the
supreme sacrifice.

t·
~~

•:.

l:LUB ORGANIZED
POMEROY - The Rockets
4-H Club organized Jan. 25 at
the home of Mrs, Viola Haning,

r

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GOING OUT
OF BUSINESS

Make this YOUR Silver
Investment for the FutUre!

FLAVORITE
20 oz.
LVS.

BREAD.....•.

I

USDA BABY BEEF SALE

RIB STEAK

LB.

KINGSBURY HOMES IS HAPPY TO
ANNOUNCE THE ADDITION OF MR.
PEARL ASH TO OUR SALES STAFF•

···f . ' ~
-- ·-·'•' ·- · h-~

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Mr. Ash would like to extend an invitation to all his frie!'lds to stop by
our mobile home lot and, visit with him . We are featuring this week
the all new tor·197s-2+2 Gettysburg by Castle. This home is a total
electric 65x21 ·model with many luxuries, including two full baths_
and is· pr.iced far below comparable models.

Every Item Replated at Sale Prices
For , Instance

'.

'

SALE
.

Ani eM

Teapot
Creamer

MANY-MANY-MANY .

!!tin

$40.95 $32.16 .
2UO 11.04

f

p

c

~ ·

t

I:
Gallipolis, '1.

Drop In _and' chat with Mr. Ash about tnls ho,me
or one af the many other fine buys In our ·
'

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BARGAINS

412--414 Second 'Ave.

; S.l•

Candlestick
!per inch) 2.30 1.85
Su1ar bowl 23.60 18.88
Trays lper
.185 .148
sq. inJ

,,••=

NOW IN PROGRESS

Aea.

Castle or Skyline products.
'

SALEENDSFEBRUARY28
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

, i\UL- DAVIES JEWELERS :
~Ohio

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KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE, INC•
1100

e. Main St ,, Pomeroy; Ohio

••
I

,

-··

I

1100 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Hours 11:00 a.m . to 6:00p.m. Mon. thru Fri.-9:00 ti16: 00 Sat.
.
PHONE 6l4-992-7034
' '
Available Other Hours by Appoiritme11t.
Call Pearl Ash 99.2-3~23_or Roger Davis 992-7671
C"

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1..

I

USDA BABY
BEEF SALE

GROUND.BEEF
OR
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3 LBS.

--~.--.

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';- ';.1'.
f.

CIS$~1i
.; . •1'· .

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'

DURING FEBRUARY ONLY

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:r:; No charge for straightening*

f:·

NO SALES TO DEALERS

STORE HOURS

ALL
REPLATlNG
REDUCED.2.0%

-~;:

PRICES GOOD THRU 2-8-75

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MO~E

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1-TheSunda,y
_'i'tmes -Sentinel, Sunday ,Fe~. 2,1975

-

' Garden clubs meet

J Aj'&gt;IES E.-DUKE

New pastor
welcomed
MER CE RVILLE
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church introduces their new
pastor and announ ces a three
night meeting, Feb. 7-9.
Bro. James E. Duke is the
new pastor of the Providence
Baptist Church. He was raised
in Nashville, Tenn. Bro. Duke
was pastor of the New
Testament Baptist Church,
Isabella, Puerto Rico, in 1963.
He attended Lexington Baptist
College in Lexington, Ky., 11164
to 1968 and while in college
was pastor of the Bryan Sl&lt;ltion
Mission, Bath County, Ky., and
Battle
Baplfs l Church,
Harrodsburg, Ky ,
Alter college he was minister
for the First Baptist Church of
Harrison, Ohio for 41&gt; years.
During this time he served as
missionary to Puerto Rico for
three years. He is married to
the former Edna Heffner,
Chesapeake, and they have one
son, James, Jr., 9. They live in
Lawrence County,
Bro. Bob Lake, Wayne, W.
Va. will speak F:iday night;
Bro. Kenneth Sanders, Pastor
of Victory Baptist Church will
speak Saturday , and Bro.

GALLIPOLIS
The
, Cheshire Garden Club met with
' Nature's Garden , Club Wednesday eve ning at the
Gallipolis SUite Institute,
Mrs, Garnet Wood welcomed
members and guests and gave
the roll call : All stood and
repeated · the Gardener's
Pledge,
Secretary's report was given
by Alice Atchinson. Some
business was transacted, then
the ineeting was turned over to
Mrs. Helen Presloo . She gave a
s hort talk reviewing the
prev ious associations of the
two clubs. She then conducted_
a quiz on the identification of
dri ed materi als which she ,
exhibited.
She made several modern
arrangements using dried
ga rlic , allium, lanl&lt;lil willow,
wisteria vines .and pink tulips.
A cylindrical conlainer which
she had made to use with a gold
colored metal background was
displayed .
Mrs . Rose Wilson demon.s traled a contemporary
a'rrangement of garlic and
various seed pods, painted
vines and eucalyptus.
Mrs .
Phyllis
Hawley
a
modern
exhibited
arrangement of artificial red

ASK TOWED
POMEROY - Donalq Keith
LJsle, 21, Columbus, and Karen
K. Johnson, 17, Middleport.

Harry Balmer, ' Franklin
Furnace, will speak Sunday.
Providence Church Is located
on Teens Run Road near
1\!ercervlllt!'. The meetings wUI
slart each night at 7, Everyone
Is invited .

jan's Side
by
Dorothy ]. Countryman

Sorority makes _
crusade plans

crabl!pples, red etlcalyptus and , ·
corkscrew willow in a moon
shape~ vase with redHlsh,
, brown and gold overtones.
Mrs. Woods exhibited,
several dried grasses and other
driefj plan Is which she had
gathered In her garden. · .,
"Happy Birthday"· was sung
to Mary Sl&lt;led who was having
• birthday on that day ,
·
Aller grace was said by Eva
Sherer refreshments were
served bf Mrs. Preston, Mrs.
Wilson and Mrs . Hawley,
members of the Cheshire Club
who attended.
A dismissal prayer by
Nature 's Club closed the
mee ting.

RUTLAND --- Mr. and Mrs.
C, W. Buck will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary
today from 2 to 4 p,m, with an
open hou;e at their home on
Main St. where they 'have
resided the past 41 years,
Married in Gallipolis Feb. 6,
1925, they have three children,
Mrs. Roger (Betty) Phillips,
Scottsdale, Ariz . ; William
( Bill ). Cheshire, and Mrs .
Nancy Pope, Middleport, '
Randy Phillips, who graduated
in December from Arizona
SUite University, is here with
his mothh for the celebration,

Miss Sandra jo Cheuvront

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Announcement is made
of the engagement of Miss Sandra Jo OJeuvront, daughter of ·
SUSPECT HEW
Mr. and Mrs. Byron T. OJeuvront, Rt. 3, Proctorville, and
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (UPI)
Keith Alan Swain, son of Mr . and Mrs. Verlin Swain, Rt, I,
--., Howard Edward Kellogg
Crown City, The bride-elect is a graduate of Fairland High
Jr ., 32, Cincinnati, was
School and is employed as a bookkeeper by FJW Industries,
arrested here Friday in conHuntington, W. Va, The prospective groom is a graduate of
nection with the murder of
Hannan Trace High School and is employed on his father's ·Nathan Fink, 73, during a
dairy farm. The open church wedding wiU be an event of Feb.
robbery of his west end Cin8 at .7:30 p.m. in the Johnson Memorial United Methodist
cinnati dry goods store 15
Olurch, Huntington , with Rev. Richard Holliday officiating.
months ago.

Mason homemakers enjoy session
MASON, W. Va, - The
January meeting of the Mason
Homemakers Extension Club
was held at the home of Mrs.
Richard Gilkey Tuesday with
hostesses Mrs. Clara Williams
and Mrs .. Laure]le Lewis.
The meeting was opene.:l by
president Mrs , Dorothy Queen
who led the group in giving the
flag salute and the Lord's .
Prayer._
,
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Nancy Van Meter who
used for her scriptwe Matthew
6 : ~32. She also read a poem
titled "Strong Shoes."
,'
Mrs. Catherine Smith gave a
prayer that .th~ club might be .
more useful m the coming
year.
The
secretary
and

treasurer's reports were given,
roll call and dues were paid for
the entire year. Pennies for
Friendship were also collected,
Mrs. Roberl&lt;l-, Young and
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart were
appointed lo make plans and
submit menus to the alumni
committee of Wahama High
Scliool for
the club's
serving of the alumni
banquet the last part of May.
Other business brought
before the club by the president
was the making of pillow tops
in West Virginia Heritage
design for the National Convention of Homemakers which
will be held .in Morgantown
August 1976. West Virginia
Homemakers will host this
convention and each visiting
.

GALlJPOlJS - I was really delighted to see the large group
of folks attending-last week's organizational meeting of the
Gallla Q&gt;unty Historical Society.
'
Ever since ,I was a small child, conllng here on the weekend
bips my parents were so fond of, I've had a thing about the
history of the area. When we were barely bl8 enough to
remember such things mother was regaiJng us with storle1 of the
IIY RUTH MILLER
Retardation lor , Gallia
French Five Hundred and shushing us on tours of Our Houae. We
GALlJPOlJSJan.
30
was
Jackson
and Meigs Counties:
'
knew, almost top to bottom, the saga of the Holzer Hospital and
another busy and enjoyable He gave an interesting U.lk on
Its founder. We wandered about this old city, lmpre118ed by lis
day at the cent~r , Ap- drugs · and drug abuse after
age and fond· of lis buildings. ,
proximately
40 people enjoyed , which we sang "Happy BirthIt indeed seemed a trlfle strange to me that such a place had
a delicious lunch through our day" to Ruby Long, Garnet
no real museum. For while Our House is super, Its treasures
nulrltion program, This Johnson, Gordon and Nora
surely represent only a smattering of what the area hW~ and a
' program is getting bigger and Wooten, , Gertrude Markel,
museum or museums would be something great.
Evelyn Rothgeb, Leona Boster,
better,
Then t¥re's that parkfront. Oh what a beautiful place, don't
Alter· lunch the Registered Edna Payoe, Gladys Sparl&lt;ln
~u think? It must be, by far, the prettiest town square In Ohio.
Nurses,
Ginny
Killen; and Maxine Northup,
So we get to talking about what Mrs. VanMeter had to say lasi
weekend and I'll share with you the visions she conjured up in my
Margreda Williams and Ella
Ruby received a gift as the
head.
Condee were there to do the youngest and Gertrude Markel
It might help for the people Involved in this historical musing
blood pressure check ups. for the oldest; a spry 82 years
There were 43 check ups and 16 , of age,
to see what's been done In Chillicothe. The old south quadrant has
been saved - happy day - for the most part by the work of
were new ones. There is no
Refreshments of cake and
Cllllll's J;listorical group. It holda f""" museums, an assortment • charge for UU. service.
punch were served to
or gorgeous old houses and a church or two. Out near old Camp
Al 1:30 p.m. there was a approximately 50 , people atSterman there's Gonsetown. This Is the German sector of birthday party for everyone tending the party. Those Senior
Oillllcothe and smack in the middle of downtown there's an athaving birthdays in January. Citizens can really bake some
tempt bel,ng made to restore the building fronls and save the
The program was opened by a delicious cakes.
al,mosphere of Ohio's fir!ll capital.
poem by Elias Sisson. It was
Don't forget potluck Feb, 13
So both Mrs. Van Meter and I come to you with an assort: plaitned by last month's birth- at 6:30p.m. and the Valimtine
rnent of visions in our heads that have been prompted by the. 'day people.
party Feb. 14. Wouldn't you
restoration of Carlisle Coi-ner and the remodeling of the Gazette
Our guest speaker was Dr. like to join our social acoffiCe.
Jerry Walke of the Community tivitie&amp;' The phone number is
What I see at any rate is a hiStorical district, submitted for
Menial Health and . MenU.! : 446-7000 for information ,
the National Reljister, covering the area from Court Street to the
old hospital along First Ave., and Including the park and maybe
the Olamber of Commerce building lor a· northerly boundary.
It could be a wa)klng tour extraordlnare, as the French
would say, and there's the place, I think, to begin building
tourism for this area. It's aU very good and well that we have a
dynasty out ,at Rio Grande. There we've got the Bob Evans
Fanns, tjJe college and an outdoor drama. And that's super.
But when Gallipolis Is another year old, no cne Is blowing
COLUMBUS-- Former U. s.· President · Emeritus of San
out birthday candles in Rio Grande and it's high time we had
Attorney
General and newly Francisco SUite .College, will
something of our own.
.
.
appointed
Ambassador to be the guest speaker at the
Do you realize·that, in this cliy where French Influence· Is
India,
William
B. Saxbe, will third ·general session at 3:15
11101t felt along the river, there Is no French restaiU'ant. No cne
speclalllel in \h08e delicate, airy French con{ections that warm be the guest banquet speaker p.m., Friday at the Rhodes
when over 1,000 elementary Bulldirlg. His topic will be
, the heart of any gourmet. We ought to glve'oiU' vialtors a taste of
principals attend the Ohio " Youth, Adolescence and
the kln:l ol Parisian llavor we claim in this ci~. · Such a
Association of Elementary Maturity."
restaurant would be one way to do it.
Schooll'rinclpals'
17th Annual
_Guest speaker lor the fourth
Wben I wailder about town an loot, as I al\en have during
Professional
ConferP.nce
at the general session, Saturday at 9
good weather, I ,see .numerou.s plates attached to house frools
.oonoernlng their age. Do we have a ~t or a•broclaire Ohio Ji:xposition ·Center in a.m. in the Rhodes Building
lelllnil people where to find these Old bulldiqJs and something Columbus, February 6, 7 and 8. will be Dr. Dean Berkley,
The lhetne of the con{erence School of Education, Indiana
about their beglnnlngs? How about a map of to-tm that bas red
Is,
" A Principal For All , University. His topic will be
marks for each J;llstorical site?
·
S
easons."
"Digltalllis,"
And wby Clll't we do something about the brush down over
1&gt;r,
Albert
Shuster,
Chairthe banlt at Mound Hili to Improve the vi. , of the river? You
This year Dr. Russell
man of the Department of Spillman,
Can't reallY ask for a mOre ~c spot and yo11 see lor miles from
Ohio
State
Elementary Education, Untverslty, will conduct a
up thel:e'
We bad SO people at the opening meellilg ol the society . I hope College of EduCjltion, Ohio mini-workshop on "Inducing
University, will be the keynote Change ill' Tile Eleinenlary
we'll have more when the group COnvenes again in February.
_
speaker
on
Thursday, School," and sii&lt; clinics on as .
There's so much that C8l1 be done in Gallipolis - National
February
6,
_
at
4
p.m.
in the many school related areas will
~ enbies, regislrations, research, tour planning. It will
Arts and Crafts Building. His . be available for the conferees.
take a batch of people, wotklng a lot ot bours to do the job and
subject
wlll be " The
then, when we begin to see some lt:irid of Ugbt on the subjeCt, we
Autonomous
Principal."
,
need to designated a· belch of BlcenteMial projects and get
Fr'day
. 9 a.m., Marilyn
1
at
UDdenray.lfllliagolng to be'here before we know it.
CHILD BURNED
Van
l)erbur,
a
former
Miss
M for ' BI~tennlal projects the field Ia wide open. We can
POMER,OY - The Pomeroy
cleqnate playa, flow:er plantl!wB,school projecta, parades- tlie America, a Phi Beta Kappa emergency squad was called to
graduate 01. the Unlvenity ol the Chuck Bartels born.,., ·
l1ll Ia endlea.
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Coltndo
Mel an a~lished Mulberry Ave., · Saturday
Ill the next feW' .weeki! both the blst«&lt;cal aoctety and the
lllcentennlal Qunmlaslon need to get underway with • re.a1 gueotlecturer, willapeaitat the morning for the 14-roonth old
bug. They need the help of every Gallla Countlan. I hope you'll ' second general session ' at the son of the Bartels, Joshua' who
Rhodes Building. Her topi~ will was .biU'ned by hot coffee.' He
join...
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be "Goals and ~ams."
was taken . to the Holzer
,
Have a nil:e ~Dr· S. I. Hayakn•a, Medical Center.

State's principals will
hear Ambassador S8xbe

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POMEROY - Plans to
conduct the Cancer Crusade in
Pomeroy on Sunday afternoon,
Feb. 23, were made when Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beia
Sigma Phi Sorority met Thursday night at the home of Mrs,
Judy Werry.
A report was given on the
March of Dimes Mothers '.
March and it was noted that in
Middleport where Xi · Gamma
Mu Chapter members went
door-10-&lt;ioor a total of $406,56
was collected,
Charlotte Haning presided at
, the' meeting with the cultural
report being given by -Phyllis
Bennett and Sarah Bechtle. A
pitta party was held following
the meeting,
Attending were Carol
Adams, Becky Anderson,
Jennifer And'erson, Susie
Baer, Miss Bechtle, Mrs .
Bennett, Jane Bourne, Donna
Byer, Annie Chapman, Doris
Ewing, Debbie Finlaw, Vikki
Gloeckner, Charlotte Haning,
Ri 1&lt;1 Lewis, Carol McCullough,
Donna Nease, Iris Payne,
Carolyn Satterfield, Lynn
Shuler, Texanna Well, and the
hostess.

Anniversary
celebrated

Nutrition program growing

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delegate will be given a pillow
lop.
The numb~r of lops Mason
Homemakers will contribute
will be decided at a later date,
The lesson, " Electrical
Hazards and Repairs" was
presented by Mrs. Hazel Smith
who urged all mefllbers to be
more careful of electrical
appliances and to have made
more prompt repairs.
Hostesses for the February
meeting will be Mrs. Matilda
Noble and Mrs. Alma Marshall ; lesson leaders, Mrs.

Joyce Carson.
Refreshments were served to
the following members: Mrs.
Dorothy Queen, Mrs, Elmer
(Nancy) Van Meter, Mrs. Cecil
(Hazel) Smith, Mrs. Albertus
(Roberl&lt;l) Young, Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs. Laurene Roush
and Mrs. John (Alma) Marshall, Mrs. Landon (Catherine)
Smith, Mrs. Lesl&lt;lr (Laura)
Johnson, Mrs. Uoyd (Clara)
WiUiams, Mrs. Laurene Lewis
and Mrs. Matilda Nobles.
Mrs. Sara Willis, Pomeroy,
was a guest. ·

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CALLED TWICE
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
to Southern High School at 9:45
p.m. Friday for Greg Dudding
who was having muscle
spasms of the back. He was
l&lt;lken to Vel&lt;Jrans Memorial
Hospital. At 9:45a.m .- Saturday
Gracie Roush, Racine, a
me&lt;,~ical patient, was taken to
Vel&lt;lrans Memorial Hospil&lt;ll
by the Racine unit.

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-The &amp;llclayTinies-Sent~l,Sunda,y,Feb. 2, 1975

Shower fetes
Miss Henry

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ENJOY TOUR - A week-long cruise to Cap Ha!Uen, Sari:
Juan, St. Thomas and Puerto Plata on board the M~!
SkYWard of Norwegian Caribbean Lines, WWI part of a recent,:
vacation lor Arthur and Ruth Wroblewakl, Gallipolis.
SCHEDULE CHANGED
GALLIPOlJS - Due to a
scheduling conflict, dales for
the annual MGM Scout District
swimming program, at Lyne
Center have been revised. The
program will sl&lt;lrt March 29
and run for five consecutive
Saturdays, April oth, 12th, 19th
and 26lh.It will feature a Jearn
to swim class for Cubs ,

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Aquanaut Skill -Award %1,\r
Webelos ana Swimming !iJIIll
Award and Merit Badge illr
Scouts. The price will be 50 ·
cents per boy, per day. Unit
Leaders should send in money
and reservations to Frank
DiClemente,
Box
455,
Gallipolis before March '1s.
More informa lion will 'be
coming soon.
'

In
SILVER BRIDGE

•

Miss linda Gail Pinkerman
1\NNOUNcE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Delano
engagement
and
marriage of theirannounce
daughter,the
Linda
Gail, to Pvt.
:.:~:~~~~G~a~llit'~po~lisFerry,
L. ·
son of !&gt;Irs. Anna Mae Barnes, Crown

_._,,v. Miss Pinkerman is a 1973 graduate of Point Pleasant
School and is presently employed at the Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Gallipolis. Pvt. Barnes is a 1974 graduate of
Hannan-Trace Hi~ School; Mercerville, and is now serving
in the U. S. Army at Fort Lee, Va. The wedding will take
place .at the Faith Gospel Olurch at Gallipolis Ferry,
Tuesday, Feb. 7. Tbe tradition of open church will be observed.

PLAZA
OPEN MONDAY NIGHT'
"
TIL 9 O'CLOCK

SPORTCOAT
SALE

others have meeting

100% POLYESTER KNIT
Regular Values
To $55.00
Not a 11 sizes .
meeting began with the
i!'flllers praying the ·league
Mrs. Charles Bostic
tiduooted the meeting, various
gave reports .
~l&gt;ers vol&lt;ld to give $25 to
sUite O.C.C.L. scholarship
fund.
this was craft night 14
~~oers answered roll _call
"What craft I would like
" Names were drawn
1ho!Cnet sisters.
. Glen Ward demonhow to make flowers
· burlap,: hoW' to make
holders from empty
fgiadrle bowls; and how to
pin cushions from jar lid
~~~d Mrs. Gar! Gillespie
!j
rugs which had been
from old hose, macrame
Alch she had made, and also
itJlfwed how to make a quilt an
way. These demon·
~~:;~s were interesting and
-1
that a lot of articles

Cherokee club meets
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va.
- The Cherokee Extension
Homemakers Club met at the
home of Mrs: K. K. Scites, on
Tuesday evening, lor the
regular monthly meeting.
The president, Mrs, ·Ollie
Browning presided and the
pledge to the flag was given:
Mrs. Luther Smith was in·
charge of devotions. The
thought was Looking Up.
Scripture was Psalm 121 :1-2.
She gave a reading and closed
with prayer:
Seven members were
present to answer the roll. The
minutes were read and approved and the treasurer's
report given,
The president read the duties
of the vari_ous committee

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chairmen . She asked lor
co mmittee reports. The
projects selected by the
members for this year were
given to Bell&lt;lr Living projects
chairman, Mrs. K. K. Scltes.
The president reported she
had received a card from Mrs.
Joseph Scites family thanking
the club for flowers received
for the funeral of Mrs. Scltes
father, Mr. Luewellyn s·.
Williams,
The preslden t read the bylaws of the Cherokee Club. The
by-laws have no,t been revised
for quite some time but will be
revised within the next two
months. Some items of _note
were (I) any member who is
absent from regular meeting
for as !llany as three months in
succession, without good
reason such as illness, should
be dropped from the roll. The
secretary shall send a wr1 lten
reminder mentioning this by'
law upon the second successive
absence; (2) The term of office
for officers of the organization
shall not exceed three years,
(3) The ex·ecutive committee
shall consist of officers of the
club.
The )esson, "Simple Electrical Repairs" was taught by
Mrs. Ollie Browning.
Mrs. K. K. Scites and Mrs.
Ollie Browning shOwed slides.

that are usually discarded can
be put to good use.
A dessert was served by the
hostess and Mrs, Raymond
DeLJlle. Next meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Carl
Gillespie.

Legion posts
marking two
special events

RODNEY - Miss Lu Ann
Henry , bride-elec t of Kessler
Adkins, was honored at a
bridal shower given by Mrs,
Robert Cornwell, Jan , 8. The
guests assembled at Miss
Henry's future home in Quail
Creek Subdivision, Rodney. A
rainbow of decorations in blue,
pink, yellow and green carried
out the. bridal theme.
Attending · were Connie
Brumfield , Kathy Sniith,
Claudette Daniels, Kim
Shaver, Debbie Johnson, Mrs.
Otis Johnson, Mrs , SU.nley
Shaver, Mrs , Gary Groves and
son, Mary Sl&lt;lphenson, Barbara Evans, Mrs. Nelgene
Pegg _ Margaret Wolfe, Mrs,
Mary Long, Wavelene Sl&lt;lge,
Thelma Thivener, Mrs , Robert
Cornwell and Mrs. Velma
Henry, mother of the brideelect.
Sending gills were Fran
Tussey, OJarolette Tussy, Mrs.
Jessie Johnson, Jill Jeffers,
Mrs . Joe Dobbins, Sandy Lockhart, Mrs. Basil Evans,
Winifered Greenlee, Elsie
Ours , Leona Whitt, Lucy
Earwood, Dorothy French,
Kathleen Thompson, Naomi
Haskins, Opal McGuire, Maxie
Erit, Mary Rollins and Mildred
Harrison.
At the conclusion of the
evening games were played
with prizes awarded to Nelgene
Pegg and Claudette Daniels.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED

I· ·;

OPEN 8 AM · 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 AM - 10 PM SUN-DAYS

I

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Brick/es

Wedding vows exchanged
style with an overlay of lace,
Her bridal bouquet was pink
and white roses with baby's
breath and pink streamers,
Her only jewelry was a gold
necklace, gift from the groom,
T~e bride's bouffant veil of
bridal illusion fell from a
crown of lace accenl&lt;ld with
seed pearls,
Miss Tammie DeBord,
cousin of the bride, was brides•
maid. Her gown was pink
accented with red trim, She
carried a bouquet of pink and
white roses with white
streamers.
Rodney Frecker, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, was best man and
the ushers were Ronnie Wood,
Pomeroy, brother of the bride,
and Bruce Brickles, Pomeroy,
brother of the groom,
For her daughter's wedding ,
Mrs. Wood wore a dress of blue
knit with bodice covered with
lace and a pearl necklace, Her
corsage was white mums
tinl&lt;ld with pink to match the
GALLIPOLIS- The Federal bride's bouquet Mrs. Brickles
Communications Commission wore a gown of yellow k~it with
has announced that sl&lt;lrting a corsage of white mums tinted
March I, the fee for a license yellow,
for an Citizen Radio sl&lt;ltion will
Immediately following the
be $4.
ceremony a reception was held
The current application fee is in the social room of the
$20 for Citizen Radio license . , chu•ch. , The bride's table
Citizen Band Radio is the featured a three-ltered cake
largest single radio service lopped with two wedding rings
administered by the F.C.C. and and doves,
already accounts for 4 to 6
Denise Brickles; sister of the
million transmitters licensed groom, registered the guests,
to more than 1 000 000 and serving were Deloris King,
operators.
' '
Judy Gilliam, and Juanil&lt;l
In anticipation of an in· Heal, aunts of the -bride, and
creased volume of new ap- Carolyn Banks and Rheba
pllcatlons, particularly from Hysell, sisters of the groom,
prospective Citizen Radio
The couple res1des at Rt. 4,
licenses the commission Pomeroy, .
stressed that the $4 application
The bride 1s a graduate of
lee would not be accepted until Me1gs H1gh School and 1s
March l, 1975. Until then, it employed at the Beauty Spot,
said, the application fee would Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Brickles, also
continue to be $20. •
a graduate of Meigs . High
School, · is attending the
Manpower Training Center at
Jackson.
advisor, with eight members
Attending the wedding from
present. Officers were elected
out
of the county were Carolyn
and project books dis\fibuted,
The next meeting will be and Sl&lt;lphanie Banks, MaryFebruary 22 at the home of land; Mr . and Mrs, Sl&lt;lnley
Megan Long . - Debbie Heal, Cleveland, and Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Gillian and Terri,
Woodyard.
Zanesville .
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene was
the setting for the Oct. 12
wedding of Miss Carolyn Sue
Wood, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Wood, and
Steven Brickles, son of Mrs.
lona Brickles, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
and Donald Brickles, Glouster.
Rev. Clyde Henderson of.
ficiated at the double ring
ceremony at 2:30 p.m.
following a program of music
by Mrs. Grace White.
Pink and while roses with
1&lt;111 white l&lt;lpers decoraled the
chu_rch.
Given in marriage by her
lather, the bride was attired in
a gown of white sa'tin princess

MGM will make
district awards
GALLIPOLIS
MGM
District Scout Executive Steve
Jones said Saturday that the
" District Award of Merit" is a
relatively new award.
Jones said it can be
presented.by a local district in
the same manner that the
Silver Bearer, a National
Award, is presenl&lt;ld by local
councils.
Two District Awards of Merit
will be given out this year In
the MGM District The award
is available to all adult leaders
who have rendered service of
an outsl&lt;lnding nature at the
district level. It has been ruled
that no holder of the Silver
Beaver Award may be eligible
for this award.
Nominations including a
description of his or her
noteworthy service should be
sent to Dr. Bernard Niehm,
Gallipolis State Institute, by
the end of February.

CB license
fee reduced

POMEROY- Meigs County
American Legion Posts are
Observing Religious Emphasis
Week, . Feb. 1·7, and Four
Chaplains Day today,
The observance commemorates one of the most
thrilling incidents of World
War II when four Armed
Forces chaplains, a Jewish
rabbi, a Roman Catholic priest Dorchester, after it was torand two Protesl&lt;lnt ministers pedoed on Feb. 3, 1943.
calmly issued life belts to
When the supply of life
American servicemen aboard preservers exhausted, the four
the troop transport, the USS ' chaplains removed their own
life belts and gave them to four
soldiers and then stood calmly
on the sinking ship, their arms
around
one
another's
shoulders, their heads bowed in
prayer.
Inspired by the heroic deed,
the Amei'ican Legion each year
marks the anniversary of the
supreme sacrifice.

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l:LUB ORGANIZED
POMEROY - The Rockets
4-H Club organized Jan. 25 at
the home of Mrs, Viola Haning,

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GOING OUT
OF BUSINESS

Make this YOUR Silver
Investment for the FutUre!

FLAVORITE
20 oz.
LVS.

BREAD.....•.

I

USDA BABY BEEF SALE

RIB STEAK

LB.

KINGSBURY HOMES IS HAPPY TO
ANNOUNCE THE ADDITION OF MR.
PEARL ASH TO OUR SALES STAFF•

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Mr. Ash would like to extend an invitation to all his frie!'lds to stop by
our mobile home lot and, visit with him . We are featuring this week
the all new tor·197s-2+2 Gettysburg by Castle. This home is a total
electric 65x21 ·model with many luxuries, including two full baths_
and is· pr.iced far below comparable models.

Every Item Replated at Sale Prices
For , Instance

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SALE
.

Ani eM

Teapot
Creamer

MANY-MANY-MANY .

!!tin

$40.95 $32.16 .
2UO 11.04

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p

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Gallipolis, '1.

Drop In _and' chat with Mr. Ash about tnls ho,me
or one af the many other fine buys In our ·
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BARGAINS

412--414 Second 'Ave.

; S.l•

Candlestick
!per inch) 2.30 1.85
Su1ar bowl 23.60 18.88
Trays lper
.185 .148
sq. inJ

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NOW IN PROGRESS

Aea.

Castle or Skyline products.
'

SALEENDSFEBRUARY28
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

, i\UL- DAVIES JEWELERS :
~Ohio

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KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE, INC•
1100

e. Main St ,, Pomeroy; Ohio

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1100 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Hours 11:00 a.m . to 6:00p.m. Mon. thru Fri.-9:00 ti16: 00 Sat.
.
PHONE 6l4-992-7034
' '
Available Other Hours by Appoiritme11t.
Call Pearl Ash 99.2-3~23_or Roger Davis 992-7671
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USDA BABY
BEEF SALE

GROUND.BEEF
OR
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3 LBS.

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f.

CIS$~1i
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DURING FEBRUARY ONLY

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:r:; No charge for straightening*

f:·

NO SALES TO DEALERS

STORE HOURS

ALL
REPLATlNG
REDUCED.2.0%

-~;:

PRICES GOOD THRU 2-8-75

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Diet important in ~ de~tal health

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11 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975 '

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GALLIPOIJS - February 28 is the 27th annual National ·
Children 's Dental Health
Week . As part of the obseNance, the Sunday Times-

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Sentinel, in cooperation with

' '.the Rehwinkel Dental Society
today begins a series of articles
on facts one should kn ow about
dental health .
Keep in mind that a well
balanced diet that promotes
overall health promotes dental
health, too. But if you have any

Paul Kuentz Chamber Orchestra of Paris

questions about nutrition or

meal-planning, yo ur family

Kuentz orchestra
coming on Feb. 9
~

GALLIPOLIS
cham ber

"Our best

orches tra,"

ac~

cording to the Paris ··Journal
Musical Francais.". is the- Pa ul
Kuent.z Chamber Orchestra of
Pa ris . an ense mbl e of 15
talented and attractive French
artists which will appear here
at 3 p.m. Sunday; Feb. 9, at the
Gallia Academy High School
auditoriwn under the auspices
of the Tri-County Concert Assn.
This outstanding group made
il.o; first appea rance in North
America during the 1 961~2
season with an OO.Cily tour of
a a. It broukht its first
visit t a climactic close wi th a
P
ance in New York 's
Metropoli tan Museum of Art
where an invited audience
greeted the zestful Parisians
with feNor.

19 technicians
attended class
RUTLAND ~ Nineteen new
members who have completed
medi cal te chnician .s tudies
under the instruction of Larry
Baker were welcomed when
the
Rutland
Volunteer
Emergency Medical Service
met at its town hall quarters·
Thursday night.
The group had a training
session on cardio pulmonary
resuscitation . Plans were
made for a bake sale on Feb. 15
with the location-to be set later
and for a spaghetti supper
later . Proceeds from the
events will go into the unit's
building fund .

h&lt;J\'C been heard m we ll over

1,000

conce r ts,

includ ing

perfor mances for rad io and
telev ision in Paris. In addition,

they ha ve toured extensively
on the Continen t.
The instrUmentation of the
group normally consists of
seven violi ns, two violas, two
cellos , one double bass , and
either piano, clavichord or
organ . To this basic unit may
be added wind instruments
(flut e, oboe, hassoon, trumpet,
horn ) to achieve the combinatio ns desired to the
presen tation of more complex
scores, such as the Bach
Brandenburg concertos.
Thus, the ensemble main·
tains a flexibility and vir·
tuosity that enables it to perform works of ail styles and
.
" The·seven men and seven periods.
In ge neral, the all..,mbracing
women play with precision
repertory
of the Paul Kuent.z
skill and spirit," reported th~
Chamber
Orchestra spans
New York Timer.
three
centuries
of masterworks
Paul Kuent.z, founder and
director of the orches tra, was a for small orchestra.
From the pre-Bach period
student at !'Ecole Superieure
are
many beautiful but rarely
de Musique of Paris and a
compositions
of
heard
winner of its first prize. He
organized his ensemble in 1950 Couperln, Leclair, Rameau,
from among other prize win- and other Baroque masters. A
ners at the conservatory, some perennial favorite with Us
In top Eureopean instrumental audiences is its interpretation
competition . The group of Vi valdi's " The Four
presented its first concert in Seasons " with Monique
April 1951 and met wi th in- Frasca-Co lombier (Mrs .
Kuentz ) as violin soloist. Out of
stantaneous success.
Since then, the young pla yers the genius of Bach came in
addition to the great B;andenburg Concertos , The Art of
the Fugue and Musical Of.
fering, first performed by this
group in Paris in I!ltil in a
se ries of six memoriable
concerts.
F'rom the classical period
come the varied instrumental
concerti of Handel, Haydn and
Mozart, with Mozart's spark·
ling " Eine Kleine Nachtmusik " as a slie!:ial treat.
Contemporary music is
represented by a large
selection of works by such
composers as Bela Bartok,
· Abler! Roussel, Samuel
Barber, and Alexander
Tcherepnin.
A few seasons ago American
audiences reacted with par·
licular pleasure to the atonal
JAMES E. ROUSH
scherzo of the young Montreal
composer now resident in
Paris, ·Andre Prevost; and to

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JW'RJSONED, FINED
WASHINGTON ( UPI) ~ A
:federal . judge has sen lenced.
:rormer Montana Gov. Tim
· ;BabcGCk to one year in pruon
a $1,0011 fine for taking part
In i1Jegal contribution of money
14 ICII'IIIer Praldent Nixon's
;Im campaign. u. s. Oi3trld
;Judge Ge«ge L. Hart Jr. or· .
!lered !hat Babcock be paroled
and put on two years' probation
~r II!Ning four months.

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TOLEDO . ~ A leading
busmes~ md1cator poi nts to
boom hmes for . Ohio's aut o
' repair indus try, as econonw•
concerned motorists de&gt;ci de lo
'
fix up rather than trade in thei r
' cars .
•·.
Figures compiled bv the
state associati on of 185 ~t aster
Charge banks show a 57 per
~! · cen t increase in spending via
"'
~he ban k card for auto re pairs
In 19H over 1973. In dollar
"' tem1s, this means a $2 million
"' rise , fr om $3.5 million to $5.5
million.
'
Both mecha nica l and rust·
proofin g work on automobiles
• shO\ved a healtl1y inerease last
year . acco rding to Paul
Gla uder, president of Auto
Service Coun cils of Ohio.
"The cost of new cars and
•... greater public concern with
::; gasoline mileage have helped
:: - ow· business ," Glauder said,
:. " be ca use the bette r gas
" mileage of some of the older
,., cars is impor tant to many
: economy.minded motorists. ' '
: Much of the growth has come
: fr om major engine a nd transmission overhaul s.
·'
.• Consumers considering major
~ auto repairs should be aware of
: both the mec hanical an d
: structural aspects of the car,
: Glauder sai d. An engine repair
job on a car with a severely
: corroded inner body would be "
; poor investment.
:
Figures of local interes t
here, by Zip Code areas, show
Chillicothe and the 456 area an
increase of 29 per cent !;om
$11,364 to $14,661, and Athens
and the 457 area , up 254 per
• ce nt from $2,981 to $10,567.

At The Alcove

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Books, Records
&amp; Tapes

LOVE OF CATS
LOVE OF OOGS
LOVE OF HORSES
$4!1

Each
· Beautiful illustrations ·
.In color.

;;

9:30-5 Dally
9:30-8 Mon. &amp; Fri.
446-7653

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42. Court St., Gallipolis

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SUNDAY FEBRUARY 1ST

"Save More Than
You Spend"
GROUP OF MEN'S

SHOES
(JARMAN SHOES INCLUDED)

BOOTS· CHUKA BOOTS
OXFORDS • SLIP-ONS
VAWES

MON. THRU SAT. 10 TIL 9
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

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RATH'S

FULLY .COOKED HAM
BUTT

SHANK LB.
HALF

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Students learn in the school store

LB.

Distribution, marketing new course
to he offered at area career center
GALLI POLIS ~ A new
Di s tributiv e Edu cation
program, "Distribution and
Mar keting," will be offered
next year lo students attending
the Buckeye Hills Career
Ce nter at Rio Grande.
The
Distribution and
Marketin g program will have a
two year course of study incl udin g a junior year of
operating the school store
studying sales fundamentals:
advertising, sales promotion ,
management technique~ and
other related areas, and an
academic course. The senior
year will consist of a half-day
at th e school studying
management, public relations
and communications, and a
minimwn of three hours work
in the community at an ap-

proved training station.
The school store, located at
the entrance to the vocational
building, will train the juniors
in all phases of slore operation
including inventory, buying,
marking,
sales ,
sales
promotion, and management.
Students will select and offer
for sale school supplies, school
related clothing and sundry
items. Adjacent to the school
store will be a 12-foot display
wmdow for the Distribution
and Marketing students to
learn display and promotion
techniques.
During the senior year
students will co-op (work
parttime) at local businesses
where they will receive actual
on-the-job training. Local
employers will work with the

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

SHOPPING FOR A MOBILE
HOME?

'.

student's school instructor m
developing a complete and
comprehensive course of study
for that individual student.
Graduates of the program
will become qualified as direct
salespersons, store buyers,
fashion coordinators •
management trainees, display
and promotion coordinators, or
stock supervisors.
Students interested ·In the
areas of retail selling,
wholesale or industrial selling,
sales promotion, stockkeeping
or other related areas should
consider
entering
the
Distribution and Marketing
program. For more information contact the GalliaJackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School staff at 61424f&gt;.033ti.

20 LB. BAG

IGA
10 OZ. PKG.
MARSHM.ALLOWS

(Perhaps you don't want
delivery fill Spring?)

BUY YOUR MOBILE HOME
NOW AT LARRY'S

Super Savings.

I

r

..

$9 97 .

TO $24.95

Second AVt.lU~

WE'LL MAKE YOUR FIRST (2)

PAYMENTSI.Stop by for Details
Ex: On an $1000 12·yr. Loan Payments about
$105.55 Monthly
YOU start paying tht lrd month!

--- &amp;tc. •
liallil~lis,

-Offer Good Til March lst-

Ohio..M--....-.-....-.

Fingertip Switch
Famous
- Hoover ·
action rally deep
cleans.
!nstant - rug
adJUstment ... low pile to
shag.
·
Extra
large
disposable bag needs
changing less often.
Two- Speed
motor
automatically shifts
to high with attachments.
Headlight
Edge Cleaning

,_

STE.A,l t

HOUSE~

Eastern Avenue • Galllpt;!ls, Ohio
.=-~..,.....

COMPLETE

WITH

Real Home Cookin' the
Whole Family Will Enjoy
Anytime!
••••
......
..••' .
•• i

t

Choose from 12 tender steak dinners
char- broiled to your liking , or enjo; .
some fmger lickin ' good Kentucky
Fned Chicken. Please your appetite
with salads , Bob Evans sausage and
eggs or sandwiches from our wide
selection . Top your meal off with our
homel'!lade desserts and rolls.
.

•••
••••
•••
•••
•• ••
'!II

• ••

ATTACHMENTS

95

"Servlce Gfter the !!;,.,,,."
FEATURES YOU'LL LIKE
• Automatic Power Drive Makes Cleaning

Effortless
• "Action-Grip" Co~ trois Direction &amp; Speed
• Lockout Button For- Manual Control

AXWELL HOUSE

;·• Convenient Switch

• Rigid Bag Housing With Carrying Handle
• Dial Your Cleaning Need-Power Dial
Regulates Suction
• Converts Easily For Cleaning Attachment•
·
• Large Throw-Away Bag
• Triple Filtered Exhaust Air
• Check Bag Signal
• Three Position Handle
• Clean Air System
• Powerful Motor
• Wrap-Around Vinyl Furniture Guard
• Vinyl, Non-Marking Drive Wheels
• Automatic Flpating Rug Adjustment
• Cleans Any Carpet-Low Pile to' Shag

INSTANT
COFFEE

COMPLETE

.,

'

WITH
'

..,.--.-..----___..;:;$154

·:
.

95

Our shop will also still carry our many. many items we have always
carried. We will be open every day except Sunday and will be staying
open Monday
and Friday evenings till
00.
.
.

s;

'

'\ . .

Our Opening Special Will Be
• Our ()per a tors Say
WELCOME
• Karen Burns
• Darlene Swain
• Jean Wells

'
" Stop In for ttie
New Look" '

BRING THE FAMILY!·
.- ;r--- . --:'1

YOUR CHOICE,TABLE

Of A Beauty Shop Additon To Our Store

BE SURE TO WATCH
WOMEN SUPER STARS
SPONSORED BY. HOOVER
TODAY ON TVI

..

10 OZ.
JAR

• Positive Agitation -

ATTACHMENTS

-

:and

boom times ~~j\l'' ..
".,'

SUNDAY SPECIAL

WARTALKIRKSTEDDY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) ~
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·
the sc intillating pizzica to Priz du Disque, lives up to its
Mass., says he's against any
movements of Benjamin name by playing the full range
proposal to use force to secure
Britten's "Simple Symphony." of chamber works of orchestral
Middle East oil supplies. "I am
The Paul Kuent.z Chamber scale. It also comes rightfully fully opposed to any such
Orchestra of Paris, which by its designation as a "Paris" action and., even to iLs active
twice has been awarded the orchestra, for Mr. Juent.z and consideration," he said Friday.
highest tribute of the French all of his young players are
The use of force in the Middle
recording industry, the Grand Parisians.
East to secure oil would be
wrong."

- Heart campaign

homes.

Auto repair
" industry in

LEATHER &amp; SUEDE

.

POMEROY . ~ James E.
Roush will serve as chairman
of the 1975 Heart Fund cam·
pa!gn in Meigs County, it was
announced today by Dr .
Raym ond
Boice
M.D.,
president of the Meigs County
Heart Association.
Roush , County Auditor, will
coordinate the effor ts of
community volunteers who will
visit all resi denti al areas
, during February, designated
' as American Heart Month.
. Volunteers will distribute
. educallonal materials and
collecl fund s to support
research , educational and
community prog rams spon, sored by the Meigs Coun ty
, Hearl Association.
The Heart Fund Chairman
: pain ted out that heart disease
• !he leading cause of death i~
: the nation, kills more
...:Americans than all . othe r
- causes combined. Of all deaths
recir'ded in Meigs County in
1973, 265;_64 .~ pet. or 170 deaths
were caused by heart disease.
He urg¢ .area residents·. to
supper! lhe Heart Fund drive
illld to give generously when a
Heart volunteer visi ts their

products (3-4 servings 4aily );
meat and fish ( 2 or more
ser vings daily); vegetables
and fruits (4 or more servings
daily ), and bread and cereals
(4 or more seNings daily ).
The pre-school years are an
excellent time to begin to help
your children establish good
eatmg habits. It is at this time
that you can control their diets
by providing the proper food
and by elimination an abundance of between meal sweet
snacks and soft drinks.
In place of sugary snack
foods, try seNing such foods as
raw vegetables , m'lk
1 , cheese,
nuts, eggs, fresh fruits Jun.
cheon meats, sug~rless
candy or gum and dietic soft
drinks. At the same time, avoid
such foods as jams and jellies,
dr1ed fruits , and all kinds of
sugared candies and pastries.
Finally, don't reward good
behavior with cookies. Give the
youngsters apples, pears,

MARLENE MIFFED
LONDON (UPI ) .:_ Marlene .
Dietrich flew in from Brussels
for a two-week
stage
engagement and limped slowly
from her airplane Friday at
Heathrow airport. Her pace
was slow, due to injuries
suffered when she fell off the
stage .16 months ago, but she
still had time to fire off more
than a few sharp remarks to
newsmen : "You are all
morons," she said. 11 Why don't
you go and get a proper job?"

Monique Frasca-Colombier
with viola d 'amour

:Housh to head

.

dentist .will be abk to giye you ·
snme personalized nuttition
coun seling.
..
Most people today ea t far too
many sweets, and sugarcrich
foods are a factor in dental
decay. Simply, sugars ac tivate
the b&lt;~ctc ria in the mouth,
which in turn starts the formation ol decay-causing acids.
So to help prevent dental
decay, it is wise to limit the
co nsumpti on of suga r-ric h
!oods and beve rages at
mealt imes. Avoid sur ga ry
fo ods
between
meals,
especially hard candies
suckers, breath mints and the'
like . These foods are kept in the
mouth for long periods of time
and bathe the teeth continually
in a pool of sugar thus causing
prolon ged acid attacks on the
teeth .
Make sure that meals in- ·
elude adequate amoun ts of
food from the four basic· food
gr oups : Milk and dairy

popcorn or peanuts instead.
Coupled with good home.oral
hygiene habits . and periodic ·
visits to the dentist, a proper
diet can he.lp you and your
family maintain healthy teeth
for a lifetime.

SHAMPOO
&amp; STYLE

·.

.
Only

S300

· ·-~

.Green Giant Peas, Hunt's Tomatoes,
Del Monte Green
Beans, Stokely Corn
.
.

.

•

Cal,l For An . Appointment

RHONE 446-9332

GHERKE'S goi/llj£

·35 Court Street

·

.

.

Gallipolis, Ohio.

'

"lt''he•re onl~ the best food is. good enough"
/
·\
\
\

.'

I

I
I

'

-•

I

.i

[.

�'
l .

Diet important in ~ de~tal health

•••
••

'

11 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975 '

~

GALLIPOIJS - February 28 is the 27th annual National ·
Children 's Dental Health
Week . As part of the obseNance, the Sunday Times-

•

..•
..••
~

Sentinel, in cooperation with

' '.the Rehwinkel Dental Society
today begins a series of articles
on facts one should kn ow about
dental health .
Keep in mind that a well
balanced diet that promotes
overall health promotes dental
health, too. But if you have any

Paul Kuentz Chamber Orchestra of Paris

questions about nutrition or

meal-planning, yo ur family

Kuentz orchestra
coming on Feb. 9
~

GALLIPOLIS
cham ber

"Our best

orches tra,"

ac~

cording to the Paris ··Journal
Musical Francais.". is the- Pa ul
Kuent.z Chamber Orchestra of
Pa ris . an ense mbl e of 15
talented and attractive French
artists which will appear here
at 3 p.m. Sunday; Feb. 9, at the
Gallia Academy High School
auditoriwn under the auspices
of the Tri-County Concert Assn.
This outstanding group made
il.o; first appea rance in North
America during the 1 961~2
season with an OO.Cily tour of
a a. It broukht its first
visit t a climactic close wi th a
P
ance in New York 's
Metropoli tan Museum of Art
where an invited audience
greeted the zestful Parisians
with feNor.

19 technicians
attended class
RUTLAND ~ Nineteen new
members who have completed
medi cal te chnician .s tudies
under the instruction of Larry
Baker were welcomed when
the
Rutland
Volunteer
Emergency Medical Service
met at its town hall quarters·
Thursday night.
The group had a training
session on cardio pulmonary
resuscitation . Plans were
made for a bake sale on Feb. 15
with the location-to be set later
and for a spaghetti supper
later . Proceeds from the
events will go into the unit's
building fund .

h&lt;J\'C been heard m we ll over

1,000

conce r ts,

includ ing

perfor mances for rad io and
telev ision in Paris. In addition,

they ha ve toured extensively
on the Continen t.
The instrUmentation of the
group normally consists of
seven violi ns, two violas, two
cellos , one double bass , and
either piano, clavichord or
organ . To this basic unit may
be added wind instruments
(flut e, oboe, hassoon, trumpet,
horn ) to achieve the combinatio ns desired to the
presen tation of more complex
scores, such as the Bach
Brandenburg concertos.
Thus, the ensemble main·
tains a flexibility and vir·
tuosity that enables it to perform works of ail styles and
.
" The·seven men and seven periods.
In ge neral, the all..,mbracing
women play with precision
repertory
of the Paul Kuent.z
skill and spirit," reported th~
Chamber
Orchestra spans
New York Timer.
three
centuries
of masterworks
Paul Kuent.z, founder and
director of the orches tra, was a for small orchestra.
From the pre-Bach period
student at !'Ecole Superieure
are
many beautiful but rarely
de Musique of Paris and a
compositions
of
heard
winner of its first prize. He
organized his ensemble in 1950 Couperln, Leclair, Rameau,
from among other prize win- and other Baroque masters. A
ners at the conservatory, some perennial favorite with Us
In top Eureopean instrumental audiences is its interpretation
competition . The group of Vi valdi's " The Four
presented its first concert in Seasons " with Monique
April 1951 and met wi th in- Frasca-Co lombier (Mrs .
Kuentz ) as violin soloist. Out of
stantaneous success.
Since then, the young pla yers the genius of Bach came in
addition to the great B;andenburg Concertos , The Art of
the Fugue and Musical Of.
fering, first performed by this
group in Paris in I!ltil in a
se ries of six memoriable
concerts.
F'rom the classical period
come the varied instrumental
concerti of Handel, Haydn and
Mozart, with Mozart's spark·
ling " Eine Kleine Nachtmusik " as a slie!:ial treat.
Contemporary music is
represented by a large
selection of works by such
composers as Bela Bartok,
· Abler! Roussel, Samuel
Barber, and Alexander
Tcherepnin.
A few seasons ago American
audiences reacted with par·
licular pleasure to the atonal
JAMES E. ROUSH
scherzo of the young Montreal
composer now resident in
Paris, ·Andre Prevost; and to

3

_

-

•

••
"•
,"'
•

•

•
••
•

JW'RJSONED, FINED
WASHINGTON ( UPI) ~ A
:federal . judge has sen lenced.
:rormer Montana Gov. Tim
· ;BabcGCk to one year in pruon
a $1,0011 fine for taking part
In i1Jegal contribution of money
14 ICII'IIIer Praldent Nixon's
;Im campaign. u. s. Oi3trld
;Judge Ge«ge L. Hart Jr. or· .
!lered !hat Babcock be paroled
and put on two years' probation
~r II!Ning four months.

''

I

,,

•

'

.

.,.

TOLEDO . ~ A leading
busmes~ md1cator poi nts to
boom hmes for . Ohio's aut o
' repair indus try, as econonw•
concerned motorists de&gt;ci de lo
'
fix up rather than trade in thei r
' cars .
•·.
Figures compiled bv the
state associati on of 185 ~t aster
Charge banks show a 57 per
~! · cen t increase in spending via
"'
~he ban k card for auto re pairs
In 19H over 1973. In dollar
"' tem1s, this means a $2 million
"' rise , fr om $3.5 million to $5.5
million.
'
Both mecha nica l and rust·
proofin g work on automobiles
• shO\ved a healtl1y inerease last
year . acco rding to Paul
Gla uder, president of Auto
Service Coun cils of Ohio.
"The cost of new cars and
•... greater public concern with
::; gasoline mileage have helped
:: - ow· business ," Glauder said,
:. " be ca use the bette r gas
" mileage of some of the older
,., cars is impor tant to many
: economy.minded motorists. ' '
: Much of the growth has come
: fr om major engine a nd transmission overhaul s.
·'
.• Consumers considering major
~ auto repairs should be aware of
: both the mec hanical an d
: structural aspects of the car,
: Glauder sai d. An engine repair
job on a car with a severely
: corroded inner body would be "
; poor investment.
:
Figures of local interes t
here, by Zip Code areas, show
Chillicothe and the 456 area an
increase of 29 per cent !;om
$11,364 to $14,661, and Athens
and the 457 area , up 254 per
• ce nt from $2,981 to $10,567.

At The Alcove

.

Books, Records
&amp; Tapes

LOVE OF CATS
LOVE OF OOGS
LOVE OF HORSES
$4!1

Each
· Beautiful illustrations ·
.In color.

;;

9:30-5 Dally
9:30-8 Mon. &amp; Fri.
446-7653

..

42. Court St., Gallipolis

~

SUNDAY FEBRUARY 1ST

"Save More Than
You Spend"
GROUP OF MEN'S

SHOES
(JARMAN SHOES INCLUDED)

BOOTS· CHUKA BOOTS
OXFORDS • SLIP-ONS
VAWES

MON. THRU SAT. 10 TIL 9
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

•"i"'

. .' ~

L~

V

\~

;

RATH'S

FULLY .COOKED HAM
BUTT

SHANK LB.
HALF

~

HALF

Students learn in the school store

LB.

Distribution, marketing new course
to he offered at area career center
GALLI POLIS ~ A new
Di s tributiv e Edu cation
program, "Distribution and
Mar keting," will be offered
next year lo students attending
the Buckeye Hills Career
Ce nter at Rio Grande.
The
Distribution and
Marketin g program will have a
two year course of study incl udin g a junior year of
operating the school store
studying sales fundamentals:
advertising, sales promotion ,
management technique~ and
other related areas, and an
academic course. The senior
year will consist of a half-day
at th e school studying
management, public relations
and communications, and a
minimwn of three hours work
in the community at an ap-

proved training station.
The school store, located at
the entrance to the vocational
building, will train the juniors
in all phases of slore operation
including inventory, buying,
marking,
sales ,
sales
promotion, and management.
Students will select and offer
for sale school supplies, school
related clothing and sundry
items. Adjacent to the school
store will be a 12-foot display
wmdow for the Distribution
and Marketing students to
learn display and promotion
techniques.
During the senior year
students will co-op (work
parttime) at local businesses
where they will receive actual
on-the-job training. Local
employers will work with the

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

SHOPPING FOR A MOBILE
HOME?

'.

student's school instructor m
developing a complete and
comprehensive course of study
for that individual student.
Graduates of the program
will become qualified as direct
salespersons, store buyers,
fashion coordinators •
management trainees, display
and promotion coordinators, or
stock supervisors.
Students interested ·In the
areas of retail selling,
wholesale or industrial selling,
sales promotion, stockkeeping
or other related areas should
consider
entering
the
Distribution and Marketing
program. For more information contact the GalliaJackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School staff at 61424f&gt;.033ti.

20 LB. BAG

IGA
10 OZ. PKG.
MARSHM.ALLOWS

(Perhaps you don't want
delivery fill Spring?)

BUY YOUR MOBILE HOME
NOW AT LARRY'S

Super Savings.

I

r

..

$9 97 .

TO $24.95

Second AVt.lU~

WE'LL MAKE YOUR FIRST (2)

PAYMENTSI.Stop by for Details
Ex: On an $1000 12·yr. Loan Payments about
$105.55 Monthly
YOU start paying tht lrd month!

--- &amp;tc. •
liallil~lis,

-Offer Good Til March lst-

Ohio..M--....-.-....-.

Fingertip Switch
Famous
- Hoover ·
action rally deep
cleans.
!nstant - rug
adJUstment ... low pile to
shag.
·
Extra
large
disposable bag needs
changing less often.
Two- Speed
motor
automatically shifts
to high with attachments.
Headlight
Edge Cleaning

,_

STE.A,l t

HOUSE~

Eastern Avenue • Galllpt;!ls, Ohio
.=-~..,.....

COMPLETE

WITH

Real Home Cookin' the
Whole Family Will Enjoy
Anytime!
••••
......
..••' .
•• i

t

Choose from 12 tender steak dinners
char- broiled to your liking , or enjo; .
some fmger lickin ' good Kentucky
Fned Chicken. Please your appetite
with salads , Bob Evans sausage and
eggs or sandwiches from our wide
selection . Top your meal off with our
homel'!lade desserts and rolls.
.

•••
••••
•••
•••
•• ••
'!II

• ••

ATTACHMENTS

95

"Servlce Gfter the !!;,.,,,."
FEATURES YOU'LL LIKE
• Automatic Power Drive Makes Cleaning

Effortless
• "Action-Grip" Co~ trois Direction &amp; Speed
• Lockout Button For- Manual Control

AXWELL HOUSE

;·• Convenient Switch

• Rigid Bag Housing With Carrying Handle
• Dial Your Cleaning Need-Power Dial
Regulates Suction
• Converts Easily For Cleaning Attachment•
·
• Large Throw-Away Bag
• Triple Filtered Exhaust Air
• Check Bag Signal
• Three Position Handle
• Clean Air System
• Powerful Motor
• Wrap-Around Vinyl Furniture Guard
• Vinyl, Non-Marking Drive Wheels
• Automatic Flpating Rug Adjustment
• Cleans Any Carpet-Low Pile to' Shag

INSTANT
COFFEE

COMPLETE

.,

'

WITH
'

..,.--.-..----___..;:;$154

·:
.

95

Our shop will also still carry our many. many items we have always
carried. We will be open every day except Sunday and will be staying
open Monday
and Friday evenings till
00.
.
.

s;

'

'\ . .

Our Opening Special Will Be
• Our ()per a tors Say
WELCOME
• Karen Burns
• Darlene Swain
• Jean Wells

'
" Stop In for ttie
New Look" '

BRING THE FAMILY!·
.- ;r--- . --:'1

YOUR CHOICE,TABLE

Of A Beauty Shop Additon To Our Store

BE SURE TO WATCH
WOMEN SUPER STARS
SPONSORED BY. HOOVER
TODAY ON TVI

..

10 OZ.
JAR

• Positive Agitation -

ATTACHMENTS

-

:and

boom times ~~j\l'' ..
".,'

SUNDAY SPECIAL

WARTALKIRKSTEDDY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) ~
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·
the sc intillating pizzica to Priz du Disque, lives up to its
Mass., says he's against any
movements of Benjamin name by playing the full range
proposal to use force to secure
Britten's "Simple Symphony." of chamber works of orchestral
Middle East oil supplies. "I am
The Paul Kuent.z Chamber scale. It also comes rightfully fully opposed to any such
Orchestra of Paris, which by its designation as a "Paris" action and., even to iLs active
twice has been awarded the orchestra, for Mr. Juent.z and consideration," he said Friday.
highest tribute of the French all of his young players are
The use of force in the Middle
recording industry, the Grand Parisians.
East to secure oil would be
wrong."

- Heart campaign

homes.

Auto repair
" industry in

LEATHER &amp; SUEDE

.

POMEROY . ~ James E.
Roush will serve as chairman
of the 1975 Heart Fund cam·
pa!gn in Meigs County, it was
announced today by Dr .
Raym ond
Boice
M.D.,
president of the Meigs County
Heart Association.
Roush , County Auditor, will
coordinate the effor ts of
community volunteers who will
visit all resi denti al areas
, during February, designated
' as American Heart Month.
. Volunteers will distribute
. educallonal materials and
collecl fund s to support
research , educational and
community prog rams spon, sored by the Meigs Coun ty
, Hearl Association.
The Heart Fund Chairman
: pain ted out that heart disease
• !he leading cause of death i~
: the nation, kills more
...:Americans than all . othe r
- causes combined. Of all deaths
recir'ded in Meigs County in
1973, 265;_64 .~ pet. or 170 deaths
were caused by heart disease.
He urg¢ .area residents·. to
supper! lhe Heart Fund drive
illld to give generously when a
Heart volunteer visi ts their

products (3-4 servings 4aily );
meat and fish ( 2 or more
ser vings daily); vegetables
and fruits (4 or more servings
daily ), and bread and cereals
(4 or more seNings daily ).
The pre-school years are an
excellent time to begin to help
your children establish good
eatmg habits. It is at this time
that you can control their diets
by providing the proper food
and by elimination an abundance of between meal sweet
snacks and soft drinks.
In place of sugary snack
foods, try seNing such foods as
raw vegetables , m'lk
1 , cheese,
nuts, eggs, fresh fruits Jun.
cheon meats, sug~rless
candy or gum and dietic soft
drinks. At the same time, avoid
such foods as jams and jellies,
dr1ed fruits , and all kinds of
sugared candies and pastries.
Finally, don't reward good
behavior with cookies. Give the
youngsters apples, pears,

MARLENE MIFFED
LONDON (UPI ) .:_ Marlene .
Dietrich flew in from Brussels
for a two-week
stage
engagement and limped slowly
from her airplane Friday at
Heathrow airport. Her pace
was slow, due to injuries
suffered when she fell off the
stage .16 months ago, but she
still had time to fire off more
than a few sharp remarks to
newsmen : "You are all
morons," she said. 11 Why don't
you go and get a proper job?"

Monique Frasca-Colombier
with viola d 'amour

:Housh to head

.

dentist .will be abk to giye you ·
snme personalized nuttition
coun seling.
..
Most people today ea t far too
many sweets, and sugarcrich
foods are a factor in dental
decay. Simply, sugars ac tivate
the b&lt;~ctc ria in the mouth,
which in turn starts the formation ol decay-causing acids.
So to help prevent dental
decay, it is wise to limit the
co nsumpti on of suga r-ric h
!oods and beve rages at
mealt imes. Avoid sur ga ry
fo ods
between
meals,
especially hard candies
suckers, breath mints and the'
like . These foods are kept in the
mouth for long periods of time
and bathe the teeth continually
in a pool of sugar thus causing
prolon ged acid attacks on the
teeth .
Make sure that meals in- ·
elude adequate amoun ts of
food from the four basic· food
gr oups : Milk and dairy

popcorn or peanuts instead.
Coupled with good home.oral
hygiene habits . and periodic ·
visits to the dentist, a proper
diet can he.lp you and your
family maintain healthy teeth
for a lifetime.

SHAMPOO
&amp; STYLE

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Only

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Del Monte Green
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RHONE 446-9332

GHERKE'S goi/llj£

·35 Court Street

·

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Gallipolis, Ohio.

'

"lt''he•re onl~ the best food is. good enough"
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•

12.:... The &amp;mday Times· Sentinel, SWJdai, Feb. 2, 1975

•

Vinton
By State Rep. Ronald James
·
COLUMBUS - I want to begin this week's View
From The Statehouse by saying that I will attempt
to b.e available to speak before any group who may
deSire a speaker (rom the General Assembly.
Please wnte or call me far enough in advance so
that I am able to arrange my schedule.
As the first fuU month of legislative activity is
completed, veteran watchers of the Ohio
Legislature are predicting that the !lith General
Assembly may very well set records for the number
of bills introduced.

, NATIONAL CHILDREN'S Dental Health Week has been
proclaimed by Gallipolis City Manager Paul Willer, right.
Looking on is Gallipolis Dentist Dr. John Sheets. Mr. Willer
urges aU citizens and community organizations to join in the
observance .

Relaxed pollution
controls advised
CLEVELAND IUP!) - Ohio
Attorney General William J .
Brown recommended Friday
that the state relax its
requirements for air pollution
control by electric utilities.
Assistant Attorney General
Blaine ~·telding outlined the
recommendations at. meeting
with officials of Cleveland
Electric Illuminating. The
recommendations,
Fielding
said, were J)lade to new Ohio
'

Wolfpen
News, Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Ben Denison of
Louisville were weekend
visitors of her brother, Mr. and
Mrs . James Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Denison
were Saturday evening dinner
'guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
lleeves, Bryan and Jamie of
Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Denison of
Louisville and Mr. and Mrs.
James Reeves were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Pat~ Darnell, locaL
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey,
Jr. are now living in their new
trailer.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Brown
and Mrs-. Helen Johnson were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
family of Rutland were Sunday
afternoon visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
of Columbus ·were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr . and Mrs. Bill
McElroy, Jeff and Joey.
Dale Russell of Columbus
and Mr. Lincoln Russell visited
Sunday afternoon wiU1 Mrs.
Lincoln Russell who is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
H~pi4U . Mr. Guy Russell was
also a visitor.
Mr. and Mrs. George Warner
were Sunday visitors of her
mother Faye Dunlavy in
Columbus.
Monday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp , Kail , Kevin and
Charles, and Mrs. Lena Knapp
of Langsville. Cake and ice
cr,e.am were served to
celebrate Charles and Kevin's
ninth birthday.

Environmental Protection
Agency Director Ned Williams
at Williams' request.
Williams recently suspended
an order governing pollution
control which was issued in
December by his predecessor
Ira Whitman .
Brown recommended that
Williams:
- Lower Ohio's standards on
sulfur dioxide pollution to the
federal standard' which is
lower.
- Extend the date for
compliance with some standards lo Jan . I, 1980, almost 41&gt;
· years beyond the Federal
Clean Air Act deallne .
- l&lt;:xtend the date for
compliance with smoke and Oy
ash pollution to beyond April
. 1977, where warranted.
-Commit the necessary
resources to determine the
quality of Ohio's air so he can
rule where installation of
certain removal equipment is
necessary.

To date over 200 House bills
and over 75 Senate bills have
been introduced . At this stage
of the last General Assembly
(January 31, 1973 ), only 145
House bills and 39 Senate bills
had been introduced.
While the quality of
legislative action certainly
cannot be measured by the
numbe,ofbills introduced, I do
believe that the pace of bill
introduction indicates we will
be having a very active
General Assembly.
Th&amp; principal workhorses of
the General Assembly are the
standing committees. All these
bills which have been introduced will eventually go to a
standing committee where
they will be "heard".
Essentially, the hearing
process is an investigative

process, one In which the
committee seeks to find out
what the bill proposes to do,
and what it proposes not to do.
The bill:s proponents testify
before the committee, ad·
vacating the reasons why the
bill should become law. If the
bill has opponents, . the op·
ponents can testify against the
bill, advocating the reasons
why the bill should not become
law.
In the end, it is tQe committee which must wiegh the
arguments and the evidence. It
is the committee which must
decide whether a bill has merit
and should be sent to the full
house for floor consideration.
Its recommendations Io the full
membership is rarely reversed.
In the Ohio House there are
17 standing committees, five of
these have standing su~­
committees. The foliowing~s a
listing of the Ohio House

committees:

Agriculture and Natural
Resources , Commerce and
Labor , Economic Affairs and
Federal Relations 1Housing
Subcommittee and Aging.
Subcommittee ),
Education,
Energy and Environment ,
Finan,.;e,

Appropriations ,

Education Section, General
Section , Human Resources
Section.
Also, Highways and Highway
Safety, Human Resources,
Insurance,

Utilities

what commi ttees are hearing
what legislation, the House and
Senate have established a toll
free Hotline in the State
Capitol. If you live outside
Franklin County, dial free , J.
800-282-025.1. If you are in
Franklin County and need
information, call 446-8842: The
individuals who answer will
give you the information you
need.
Of course, I am always
ava ilable if you have any
questions for me . My phone
number in Columbus is 614-4668010.

In 1974, President Richard
Nixon assured Premier Lon No!
tllat the United States would
continue to give maximum
possible assistance to his
Cambodian government.

BY MARIE ALEXANDER
The ladies of the Vinton
Baptist Church held their
regular meeting Thursday
evening in the 'fellowship room
of the church with 11 members
present.
Mrs .
Bill
Pickens,
Charleston, W. Va . was an
overnight ~uest of Mrs. Elsie
McCoy recently.
Mrs. Marie Alexand,.er attended the wedding of her
grandson, William Nicholas
Alexander to Lau~a Lynn
Fellows, at the Eastview
United Methodist Church in
Columbus Saturday evening.
Jan. 18, at 7:30p.m.
Several from here attended
baptismal serv ices at the
Baptist churcl) in Rio Grande
for Audrey Hatten, Jimmy
Isaacs and April Wooten, all
from the Vinton Baptist Church
with their pastor. Rev. Jerry
Neal officiating.
Florence Shepherd and
Hazel Sterbenz, Columbus
. Friday until Sunday'
spent from
rece ntly with Mrs. Sterbenz's

mother, Mrs . Lucy Har!sook.
The . Vinton Friendship
Garden Club met with Beatrice
Bush Tuesday evening.
Marianne Fitch entertained
with a'Sarah Coventry party at
ber home recetttiy.
Recent callers of Mrs. Neva
Denney were Mrs. Mildred
Shumaker, Bidwell, Mrs. Mary
Denney, daughler, Mrs .
Debbie Malone, Jackson, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clark, locaL ·

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Vallance
and family have purchased
property in Rio Grande and
have moved there.

SJasher's

Mrs. Cora McGhee was an
overnight guest of her
daughter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs.
George
Johnson,
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Elsie McCoy and Mrs.
Mari'anne Fitch were shopping
in Huntington recently.

MO left
•

LAS!' Monday (January 27) was the 38th aMiver~ry of the
Old French City's worst fl.ood in history . The date passed by
unnoti.ced.

+++
IT was on January 27, 1937, that the mighty Ohio River
· soared to 67.5 feet at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam in Eureka.
The city's parkfront gauge measured 66.10'4 on that historic
.
date.

+++
LAS!' major Ohio River flood here was recorded II years
ago, March 13, 1964. It crested at 52.10 on tbe park front gauge
and 54.5 at the Gallipolis Dam. As a result of several new Oood
prevention projects throughout the Ohio Valley during 'the past
decade, it's doubtful if we'U ever again witness an inundation
similar to the 1937 disaster.

THE FOUOWING STORES
ARE HERE TO SERVE YOU!

+++

HOWEVER, during the month of January in 1937, a record
11.20 inches of precipitation was recorded in Gallia County.
During the past month, only 2.33 inches was recorded locally,
about 1.31 below normal conditions lor this area. The current
river level is stable. For example, Wednesday, the Gallipolis
Dam reported a 27.6 reading, 15 feet above normal pool stage of
12.6.

efree parking
for over 1,000
cars

and

Financial In st i tutions
(Financial Institutions Subcommittee), Interest
Cooperation, Judiciary
( Judicial Administration
Section, Commercial Affairs
Section ), Local Government,
Reference, Rules, State
Government
1Elections
Subcommittee), Transportation and Urban Affairs
and Ways and Means.
All House members serve on
at least two of these com·
mittees; in many instances,
members serve on three.
In contrast to the House's 17
committees, the Senate has II
standing committees. They are
Agriculture and Conservation,
Comme rce
and
Labor ,
Education and Welfare ,
Elections, Financial In·
stitutions and Insurance,
Energy and Environment,
Finance,
Health
and
Retirement, Judiciary, Rules,
Transportation and Local
Government and Ways and
Means.
Committee hearings are
open to the public . Ariyone can
come to a hearing to voice his
opinion about legislation being
considered.
If anyone wishes to know

eARnErs
eJIM BALDWIN FINE GUNS
.COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK
.COX'S DEPT. STORE
eFORT PITT SHOES
eFULL HOUSE OF HALLMARK CARDS
.G. C. MURPHY
eRITE AID
eSEARS
.SHOPPERS MART
eYOUNG'S MOBILE HOM.E SALES

WE HAVE

•SKIRTING
•All YOUR
MOBILE HOME
NEEDS

SERVICE &amp; QUALITY AT ITS BEST

Paul &amp; Madge Northup
Owners
PoiDtPieasant W.Va.

Phone

304-875-0000

o11 give )'tJu the~t ba
It's not a voice, it's a chorus. Every member of
our staff ... from the president to each and
every teller ... has taken the pledge. All of us
are dedicated to two words that· sum up our
attitude to.ward our customers ... "WE WILL!"
What does it mean? Simply a positive
attitude to your financial request and needs

a flat $40 per pupil rate.
niscretiun for use of the
appropriated funds is left up to
se houl boards rather than
given directly to teachers and
other sc hool personnel as

majority

District! sa id F'rida)1 funding
of p1·inwry mHI .secondar y
(•ducot ion was the outstauding

their own -

ll

slighUy reviS~d

vcrsiun

of the spen ding
pro~ram dr0:1wn up by the
fnrmer governor before he left
offiec.
They intend lo use this bill

issue in the General 1\ssembly

la st wrek. Highhghls of the
controversy wL'n: i11lrodul·tion
of a Democrat appi'Opri&lt;~lion

SUHgested

t H. B. 155) as " vehicle ror
for the 1976-71 budget hearings until Governor
bicnniUJn ; difference IJctween Hhodes submits his budget in
Republi can legi.slcdo rs an·d March, and possibly as an
majoril~' Democ1·ats over use
alternative to his recori1·
of Sltrplus st::~te funds; a nd mcndations thereafter. The
presentation of 1:1 report to budget brings before the
legislature leadership by the Genera l Assembly conGeneral Assembly's Eductllion sideration or funding for

bill

(bud~ ell

Review Committee.

primary and secondary
educa ti on ror the next two
years. but is contingent upon

1i·aditionally, the Gover nor
present s the

bi e nnial ap -

propriation bill to the Gcnerul

app lica tion of funds available
from a projected state surplus
and proposed revision of the
state schooi subsidy formula .
In heated action on the House
floor H.B. 81, the Democrat
sponsored supplemental ap·
propriation for primary and

---------was a quiet-living truckdriver,
not a derelict, who lived in a
modest apartment not far from
the scene of the previous
slayings, followed by another
killing in a cheap hotel.
Almost ali the victims were
small, weak, middle aged,
crippled, seriously ill, drunk or
otherwise helpless.
,.

by

Governor

Rhodes.
Several amendments were
rejected which took issue with
the method of financing rather
than with the appropriation
itself. They had two general
purposes - to change the
subsidy formula and to delay
dislribution of appropriated
funds. i\ was generally
the
acknowledged that
distribution formula was
considerably less than · ideal
since the flat rat~ failed to
compensate ror non-unirorm ·
Hnancial conditions among

school districts.
Concern was also vuked over
the timing of this measure in
light of recent recommendations by the bipartisan
Education Review Committee
to revise the school foundation
formula for the next biennium .
The commi !tee suggested an
"equalization goal" which

secondary education, was

pushed tl1rough as reported out
of committee . It would give
Ohio school disb·icts some .$91
million from March to June at

REAGAN DISAGREES
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Gov. Ronald Reagan says a
return to political life for
Richard Nixon is ':out of the
question" and Nixon knows it.
Reagan, who had dinner with
Nixon this week, commented
Friday on a remark by Sen.
Barry Goldwater, R·Ariz., that
the former president would like
to return to politics- not as a
candidate for office but
working for the Republica n
Party.

·-'

Arnold Grate Announces :

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only at

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RUTLAND FURNITURE

... an attitude that influences every .service in
our bank-convenient checking accounts, savings
accounts, personal loans, financial counsel, and
any other way we can help you.
•
important thing is this: Come in to see us
with your particular need. Just ask, "Will
you?" ... and get ready for, "We Will!"

,SAVE QN ALL

Betty

lf-

Our Biggest Sale Ever!

RD

Ohlinger's

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WOMEN'S
Ladies'

SHOES

DRESS
BOOTS

Values to •19.00

VAWES TO '23.00
One Group
One Group

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Men's Dress Shoes

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WEYENBERG

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A quality sofa at a super pri ce. Rea l value.

Better Dress &amp; Sport

2 Pairs
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"Two week period" means you won't hove much time
to toke advantoge of this factory-sponsored event.

Classic Styling and Comfort

Dress &amp; Sport

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No wonder

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OFF REG. PR

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Women's Dress Shoes

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MA'l"CHING

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and FaShion Craft. All from regular stGc.k.

million.

In 1876, the National Baseball
..League was fonned, comprised
of teams lri Boston, Chicago, .
Cincinnati, New York, Phlladel·
phia, Sl. Louis, Louisville,
KentuGkY, and Hartford, COO.

Two Weeks Only!,
Sale Ends. Feb. 15

'3 OFF R~GULAR PRICE

•

Mi$eellaneous Group
LAdies' ancl! Children's Slippers, Ladies'
Dross Slloes.•

nectlcut.
In i933, IWQ qays after

.

, gaining office, Nazi Chancellor
Adolf HiU~ ordered dissolution
Of the Reicllslag-the German
parliament.
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opportunity to purcha se guaranteed, quality-built,
beautifully-upholstered furniture at genuin'e savings.

The Almanac
By United Press International
TOday is Sunday, Feb. 2nd,
the 33rd day of 19'15 with 332 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
last quarter,
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
· Austrian violiriist and composer Fritz Kreisler was born
Feb. 2nd, 1875.
On this day in history:
In 1848, Mexico signed a
treaty giving Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona and Cali!oniia
to the United States for $15

•••

Assembly ,

Ocmocrats recefllly introduced

began oo said
skidherow
Dec. to
I, r---~~--~~--~~--------~----------~--~~------~--~--------~----~------~----~------------------.,
detectives
appeared
have b&lt;ien killed Tuesday night
or early Wednesday, only
hours before the slasher cut the ·
throat of another man, George
Frias, 45, in an apartment
house a half mile away.
Ali the previous slasher
slayings to"ok place on a
Wednesday or during the
weekend.
Detectives said the slasher
leaves a number of distinctive
clues. The shoes of the first
victim had been removed and
.pointed at the dead man's feet,
invesligators said, and subse·
quent
victims have had their
+++
shoes
removed.
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
One of the greatest manhunts
and weekly Gallla Times .. : Snow impedes valley area traffic ...
in the city's history searched
D. 0. Taber to head Gallla's freedom drive ... G. R. Phillips, 71,
for
the prime suspect, de ·
election board member, succumbs ... Atty. H. W. Cherrington ·
scribed
as a 6-loot-tall, 19().
named president of Gallipolis Golf Club ... Delegation opposes
pound
man
in his 20s, with a
riverfront parking lot project ... Robert Danner picked as brass
player for Ali-state orchestra ... V"mton's Wilson Watkins nets 63 prominent nose and stringy,
points as Tigers rip Hamden, 96-87 ... GAHS slams Athens 77-42 collar-length hair of a dirty
for 30th straight SEOAL cage win. Blue Imps stretch three-year blond color. Police said the
slasher is believed to be a
winning streak to U in a row with 55-36 victory over Bullpups.
homosexual, who kills out of
sexual frustration .
with Major Hoople
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
A composite picture of the
MA
man was developed from the
SEKIWIORAL
hundreds of interviews, police
PSY CKOLOGIST,
CLYDE:,l BELIEVE
said.
IN LE ...~NING
Six men matching the de·
SY DOING: SO
scription
were arrested
I
I'VE M,&gt;,TCHED
Friday, including one sighted
NIGHT NE.WS
I
BURKE WIT~ ·
in a restaurant a few blocks
KLONDIKE
from
Hay's apartment house.
CLYDE.'
/
Ali were released after
questioning.
Police warned that the killer,
breaking out of his original
pattern that earned him the ·
"skid row slasher" nickname,
"can strike anytime, any·
where."
His first four victims were
The· letter re-printed above contains informotion that con
derelicts, killed as they lay
save
us both money.
&lt;lrunk in alleys and doorways
in Los Angeles' "skid row"
"Special loctpry price "re duction" means WE pay less
area. The fifth was another
for Norwalk Furniture.
derelict, but was killed In his
room at a cheap hotel. The next
"Unusua lly good values" means thot YOU have the

GALUPOUS has had 13 major floods during the past 91
years. In chronological order, they are:
CREST
CITY DAM
MONTH-YEAR
63.9
Feb. 11, 1884
58.79
Mar. 7,1907
63.5
Mar. 13,1913
54.4
Mar. 22, 1933
58.2
Mar.21,1936
Jan. 27, 1937
66.10¥• 67.5
Jan.2,1~
58.6 60.4
Mar, 9,1945
?J.35 59.2
Aprll16, 1948
59.25 61.1
Jan. 30,1952
52.1
53.9
55.9 57.5
Mar. 8,1955
52.9 54.31
Mar. 8,1963
52.10 5-1.5
Mar. 13,1964

.ABC KIDDIE SHOP .

STOP IN AND VISIT
WITH US TODAY

MOBILE
HOMES

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - The
''skid row slasher" apparently
killed his eighth and ninth
victims within hours of each
other, carrying his mysterious
terror from the alleys of the
central city to middle class
Hollywood apartment
houses.
Police revealed that one of
the marks of the allegedly
homo_sexual killer is that he
removes the shoeS of his vic·
tims.
The body of Clyde C. Hay, 34,
an employe of the National
Cash Register Co., was found
Friday in his $131kl-month
bachelor apartment in East
Hollywood.
His throat was cut from ear
to ear in Uie by now
gruesomely familiar way, and .
police said "there is no
question" he was killed by the
slasher.
Although Hay was the ninth
victim found since tbe slayings

COI.UMBUS ·- Slate Sen.
Oakley C. Collins 1H • t7lh

pensation insurance. A similar
bill is pending In th~ Senate
.which would set the
requirement at $260. .
.
One objection to the present ·
law is that its $50 limit overly
complicates hiring and
payment of part-time labor ,
Under current law domestic
help or an occasional employee
hired to cut grass, shovei,snow, ,
or babysit who earns over $60 a · •
quarter must be covered by ,
workmen's
compensation ~
Insurance. By raising this
cutoff level these bllts would
reduce restrictive burdens
placed upon the average
citizen hiring parttime help.

+++

' SAVES THE TIME OF BUILDING
AND WIU SAVE YOU MONEY.

K&amp;K

FOR area newC&lt;lmers, 49.5 feet will put water on the Garfield
Ave., bridge. At 51.4, it covers Eastern Ave., near the city
waterworks. At 58.6, the mid-eection of the 300 block of First
Ave., becomes flooded. At 53.9, the GSI bridge is underwater.

stores

ROOM!
SEE OUR ADD-A-ROOMS

ePAINTS

+++

ePark near the

NEED AN EXTRA

•AWNINGS

m new area

By Hobart Wilsolr Jr.

the Collins report

would result in a roughly
uniform total combination of
local tax revenues and state
aid for all Ohio school districts.
In effect, after meeting
minimum prope1 ty tax millage
requirements, poorer districts
would be subsidized by the
state to achieve financial
equality among all districts.
The provisions of H. B. 81 do
not conform . to this plan. No
doubt when the budget bill is
heard in the Senate, similar
efforts will be made to get
these amendments included.
A bill passed in the Senate
and referred to the House
would permit grants to be
awarded to a school district
from the disaster fund to
match or supplement federal
or other grants for restoration
and-or Improvement of
facilities
and
services
imapaired by disaster. Direct
grants from tl1e fund were
previously available only to
local governmental subdivisions.
Important legislation has
been introduced in the House
which would raise to $400 the
amount paid In a three-month
calendar quarter by an employer before he 'must pur·
chase· workmen's com-

t

I

1•00
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pair

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RUTLAND ·. FURNITURE

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~~~~~~~~--~~~~~.--~~----~~~~~~----.,~~~~~,~~~~--~~~~~,MM~.--~,~~~~~~.W~~~.--.~.~~~ ~

• '.

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. .
ARNOLD GRATE

.,. .

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•

12.:... The &amp;mday Times· Sentinel, SWJdai, Feb. 2, 1975

•

Vinton
By State Rep. Ronald James
·
COLUMBUS - I want to begin this week's View
From The Statehouse by saying that I will attempt
to b.e available to speak before any group who may
deSire a speaker (rom the General Assembly.
Please wnte or call me far enough in advance so
that I am able to arrange my schedule.
As the first fuU month of legislative activity is
completed, veteran watchers of the Ohio
Legislature are predicting that the !lith General
Assembly may very well set records for the number
of bills introduced.

, NATIONAL CHILDREN'S Dental Health Week has been
proclaimed by Gallipolis City Manager Paul Willer, right.
Looking on is Gallipolis Dentist Dr. John Sheets. Mr. Willer
urges aU citizens and community organizations to join in the
observance .

Relaxed pollution
controls advised
CLEVELAND IUP!) - Ohio
Attorney General William J .
Brown recommended Friday
that the state relax its
requirements for air pollution
control by electric utilities.
Assistant Attorney General
Blaine ~·telding outlined the
recommendations at. meeting
with officials of Cleveland
Electric Illuminating. The
recommendations,
Fielding
said, were J)lade to new Ohio
'

Wolfpen
News, Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Ben Denison of
Louisville were weekend
visitors of her brother, Mr. and
Mrs . James Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Denison
were Saturday evening dinner
'guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
lleeves, Bryan and Jamie of
Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Denison of
Louisville and Mr. and Mrs.
James Reeves were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Pat~ Darnell, locaL
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey,
Jr. are now living in their new
trailer.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Brown
and Mrs-. Helen Johnson were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
family of Rutland were Sunday
afternoon visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
of Columbus ·were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr . and Mrs. Bill
McElroy, Jeff and Joey.
Dale Russell of Columbus
and Mr. Lincoln Russell visited
Sunday afternoon wiU1 Mrs.
Lincoln Russell who is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
H~pi4U . Mr. Guy Russell was
also a visitor.
Mr. and Mrs. George Warner
were Sunday visitors of her
mother Faye Dunlavy in
Columbus.
Monday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp , Kail , Kevin and
Charles, and Mrs. Lena Knapp
of Langsville. Cake and ice
cr,e.am were served to
celebrate Charles and Kevin's
ninth birthday.

Environmental Protection
Agency Director Ned Williams
at Williams' request.
Williams recently suspended
an order governing pollution
control which was issued in
December by his predecessor
Ira Whitman .
Brown recommended that
Williams:
- Lower Ohio's standards on
sulfur dioxide pollution to the
federal standard' which is
lower.
- Extend the date for
compliance with some standards lo Jan . I, 1980, almost 41&gt;
· years beyond the Federal
Clean Air Act deallne .
- l&lt;:xtend the date for
compliance with smoke and Oy
ash pollution to beyond April
. 1977, where warranted.
-Commit the necessary
resources to determine the
quality of Ohio's air so he can
rule where installation of
certain removal equipment is
necessary.

To date over 200 House bills
and over 75 Senate bills have
been introduced . At this stage
of the last General Assembly
(January 31, 1973 ), only 145
House bills and 39 Senate bills
had been introduced.
While the quality of
legislative action certainly
cannot be measured by the
numbe,ofbills introduced, I do
believe that the pace of bill
introduction indicates we will
be having a very active
General Assembly.
Th&amp; principal workhorses of
the General Assembly are the
standing committees. All these
bills which have been introduced will eventually go to a
standing committee where
they will be "heard".
Essentially, the hearing
process is an investigative

process, one In which the
committee seeks to find out
what the bill proposes to do,
and what it proposes not to do.
The bill:s proponents testify
before the committee, ad·
vacating the reasons why the
bill should become law. If the
bill has opponents, . the op·
ponents can testify against the
bill, advocating the reasons
why the bill should not become
law.
In the end, it is tQe committee which must wiegh the
arguments and the evidence. It
is the committee which must
decide whether a bill has merit
and should be sent to the full
house for floor consideration.
Its recommendations Io the full
membership is rarely reversed.
In the Ohio House there are
17 standing committees, five of
these have standing su~­
committees. The foliowing~s a
listing of the Ohio House

committees:

Agriculture and Natural
Resources , Commerce and
Labor , Economic Affairs and
Federal Relations 1Housing
Subcommittee and Aging.
Subcommittee ),
Education,
Energy and Environment ,
Finan,.;e,

Appropriations ,

Education Section, General
Section , Human Resources
Section.
Also, Highways and Highway
Safety, Human Resources,
Insurance,

Utilities

what commi ttees are hearing
what legislation, the House and
Senate have established a toll
free Hotline in the State
Capitol. If you live outside
Franklin County, dial free , J.
800-282-025.1. If you are in
Franklin County and need
information, call 446-8842: The
individuals who answer will
give you the information you
need.
Of course, I am always
ava ilable if you have any
questions for me . My phone
number in Columbus is 614-4668010.

In 1974, President Richard
Nixon assured Premier Lon No!
tllat the United States would
continue to give maximum
possible assistance to his
Cambodian government.

BY MARIE ALEXANDER
The ladies of the Vinton
Baptist Church held their
regular meeting Thursday
evening in the 'fellowship room
of the church with 11 members
present.
Mrs .
Bill
Pickens,
Charleston, W. Va . was an
overnight ~uest of Mrs. Elsie
McCoy recently.
Mrs. Marie Alexand,.er attended the wedding of her
grandson, William Nicholas
Alexander to Lau~a Lynn
Fellows, at the Eastview
United Methodist Church in
Columbus Saturday evening.
Jan. 18, at 7:30p.m.
Several from here attended
baptismal serv ices at the
Baptist churcl) in Rio Grande
for Audrey Hatten, Jimmy
Isaacs and April Wooten, all
from the Vinton Baptist Church
with their pastor. Rev. Jerry
Neal officiating.
Florence Shepherd and
Hazel Sterbenz, Columbus
. Friday until Sunday'
spent from
rece ntly with Mrs. Sterbenz's

mother, Mrs . Lucy Har!sook.
The . Vinton Friendship
Garden Club met with Beatrice
Bush Tuesday evening.
Marianne Fitch entertained
with a'Sarah Coventry party at
ber home recetttiy.
Recent callers of Mrs. Neva
Denney were Mrs. Mildred
Shumaker, Bidwell, Mrs. Mary
Denney, daughler, Mrs .
Debbie Malone, Jackson, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clark, locaL ·

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Vallance
and family have purchased
property in Rio Grande and
have moved there.

SJasher's

Mrs. Cora McGhee was an
overnight guest of her
daughter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs.
George
Johnson,
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Elsie McCoy and Mrs.
Mari'anne Fitch were shopping
in Huntington recently.

MO left
•

LAS!' Monday (January 27) was the 38th aMiver~ry of the
Old French City's worst fl.ood in history . The date passed by
unnoti.ced.

+++
IT was on January 27, 1937, that the mighty Ohio River
· soared to 67.5 feet at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam in Eureka.
The city's parkfront gauge measured 66.10'4 on that historic
.
date.

+++
LAS!' major Ohio River flood here was recorded II years
ago, March 13, 1964. It crested at 52.10 on tbe park front gauge
and 54.5 at the Gallipolis Dam. As a result of several new Oood
prevention projects throughout the Ohio Valley during 'the past
decade, it's doubtful if we'U ever again witness an inundation
similar to the 1937 disaster.

THE FOUOWING STORES
ARE HERE TO SERVE YOU!

+++

HOWEVER, during the month of January in 1937, a record
11.20 inches of precipitation was recorded in Gallia County.
During the past month, only 2.33 inches was recorded locally,
about 1.31 below normal conditions lor this area. The current
river level is stable. For example, Wednesday, the Gallipolis
Dam reported a 27.6 reading, 15 feet above normal pool stage of
12.6.

efree parking
for over 1,000
cars

and

Financial In st i tutions
(Financial Institutions Subcommittee), Interest
Cooperation, Judiciary
( Judicial Administration
Section, Commercial Affairs
Section ), Local Government,
Reference, Rules, State
Government
1Elections
Subcommittee), Transportation and Urban Affairs
and Ways and Means.
All House members serve on
at least two of these com·
mittees; in many instances,
members serve on three.
In contrast to the House's 17
committees, the Senate has II
standing committees. They are
Agriculture and Conservation,
Comme rce
and
Labor ,
Education and Welfare ,
Elections, Financial In·
stitutions and Insurance,
Energy and Environment,
Finance,
Health
and
Retirement, Judiciary, Rules,
Transportation and Local
Government and Ways and
Means.
Committee hearings are
open to the public . Ariyone can
come to a hearing to voice his
opinion about legislation being
considered.
If anyone wishes to know

eARnErs
eJIM BALDWIN FINE GUNS
.COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK
.COX'S DEPT. STORE
eFORT PITT SHOES
eFULL HOUSE OF HALLMARK CARDS
.G. C. MURPHY
eRITE AID
eSEARS
.SHOPPERS MART
eYOUNG'S MOBILE HOM.E SALES

WE HAVE

•SKIRTING
•All YOUR
MOBILE HOME
NEEDS

SERVICE &amp; QUALITY AT ITS BEST

Paul &amp; Madge Northup
Owners
PoiDtPieasant W.Va.

Phone

304-875-0000

o11 give )'tJu the~t ba
It's not a voice, it's a chorus. Every member of
our staff ... from the president to each and
every teller ... has taken the pledge. All of us
are dedicated to two words that· sum up our
attitude to.ward our customers ... "WE WILL!"
What does it mean? Simply a positive
attitude to your financial request and needs

a flat $40 per pupil rate.
niscretiun for use of the
appropriated funds is left up to
se houl boards rather than
given directly to teachers and
other sc hool personnel as

majority

District! sa id F'rida)1 funding
of p1·inwry mHI .secondar y
(•ducot ion was the outstauding

their own -

ll

slighUy reviS~d

vcrsiun

of the spen ding
pro~ram dr0:1wn up by the
fnrmer governor before he left
offiec.
They intend lo use this bill

issue in the General 1\ssembly

la st wrek. Highhghls of the
controversy wL'n: i11lrodul·tion
of a Democrat appi'Opri&lt;~lion

SUHgested

t H. B. 155) as " vehicle ror
for the 1976-71 budget hearings until Governor
bicnniUJn ; difference IJctween Hhodes submits his budget in
Republi can legi.slcdo rs an·d March, and possibly as an
majoril~' Democ1·ats over use
alternative to his recori1·
of Sltrplus st::~te funds; a nd mcndations thereafter. The
presentation of 1:1 report to budget brings before the
legislature leadership by the Genera l Assembly conGeneral Assembly's Eductllion sideration or funding for

bill

(bud~ ell

Review Committee.

primary and secondary
educa ti on ror the next two
years. but is contingent upon

1i·aditionally, the Gover nor
present s the

bi e nnial ap -

propriation bill to the Gcnerul

app lica tion of funds available
from a projected state surplus
and proposed revision of the
state schooi subsidy formula .
In heated action on the House
floor H.B. 81, the Democrat
sponsored supplemental ap·
propriation for primary and

---------was a quiet-living truckdriver,
not a derelict, who lived in a
modest apartment not far from
the scene of the previous
slayings, followed by another
killing in a cheap hotel.
Almost ali the victims were
small, weak, middle aged,
crippled, seriously ill, drunk or
otherwise helpless.
,.

by

Governor

Rhodes.
Several amendments were
rejected which took issue with
the method of financing rather
than with the appropriation
itself. They had two general
purposes - to change the
subsidy formula and to delay
dislribution of appropriated
funds. i\ was generally
the
acknowledged that
distribution formula was
considerably less than · ideal
since the flat rat~ failed to
compensate ror non-unirorm ·
Hnancial conditions among

school districts.
Concern was also vuked over
the timing of this measure in
light of recent recommendations by the bipartisan
Education Review Committee
to revise the school foundation
formula for the next biennium .
The commi !tee suggested an
"equalization goal" which

secondary education, was

pushed tl1rough as reported out
of committee . It would give
Ohio school disb·icts some .$91
million from March to June at

REAGAN DISAGREES
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Gov. Ronald Reagan says a
return to political life for
Richard Nixon is ':out of the
question" and Nixon knows it.
Reagan, who had dinner with
Nixon this week, commented
Friday on a remark by Sen.
Barry Goldwater, R·Ariz., that
the former president would like
to return to politics- not as a
candidate for office but
working for the Republica n
Party.

·-'

Arnold Grate Announces :

.,

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only at

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RUTLAND FURNITURE

... an attitude that influences every .service in
our bank-convenient checking accounts, savings
accounts, personal loans, financial counsel, and
any other way we can help you.
•
important thing is this: Come in to see us
with your particular need. Just ask, "Will
you?" ... and get ready for, "We Will!"

,SAVE QN ALL

Betty

lf-

Our Biggest Sale Ever!

RD

Ohlinger's

... .

WOMEN'S
Ladies'

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DRESS
BOOTS

Values to •19.00

VAWES TO '23.00
One Group
One Group

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A quality sofa at a super pri ce. Rea l value.

Better Dress &amp; Sport

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"Two week period" means you won't hove much time
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Classic Styling and Comfort

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OFF REG. PR

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million.

In 1876, the National Baseball
..League was fonned, comprised
of teams lri Boston, Chicago, .
Cincinnati, New York, Phlladel·
phia, Sl. Louis, Louisville,
KentuGkY, and Hartford, COO.

Two Weeks Only!,
Sale Ends. Feb. 15

'3 OFF R~GULAR PRICE

•

Mi$eellaneous Group
LAdies' ancl! Children's Slippers, Ladies'
Dross Slloes.•

nectlcut.
In i933, IWQ qays after

.

, gaining office, Nazi Chancellor
Adolf HiU~ ordered dissolution
Of the Reicllslag-the German
parliament.
'

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bu t

opportunity to purcha se guaranteed, quality-built,
beautifully-upholstered furniture at genuin'e savings.

The Almanac
By United Press International
TOday is Sunday, Feb. 2nd,
the 33rd day of 19'15 with 332 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
last quarter,
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
· Austrian violiriist and composer Fritz Kreisler was born
Feb. 2nd, 1875.
On this day in history:
In 1848, Mexico signed a
treaty giving Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona and Cali!oniia
to the United States for $15

•••

Assembly ,

Ocmocrats recefllly introduced

began oo said
skidherow
Dec. to
I, r---~~--~~--~~--------~----------~--~~------~--~--------~----~------~----~------------------.,
detectives
appeared
have b&lt;ien killed Tuesday night
or early Wednesday, only
hours before the slasher cut the ·
throat of another man, George
Frias, 45, in an apartment
house a half mile away.
Ali the previous slasher
slayings to"ok place on a
Wednesday or during the
weekend.
Detectives said the slasher
leaves a number of distinctive
clues. The shoes of the first
victim had been removed and
.pointed at the dead man's feet,
invesligators said, and subse·
quent
victims have had their
+++
shoes
removed.
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
One of the greatest manhunts
and weekly Gallla Times .. : Snow impedes valley area traffic ...
in the city's history searched
D. 0. Taber to head Gallla's freedom drive ... G. R. Phillips, 71,
for
the prime suspect, de ·
election board member, succumbs ... Atty. H. W. Cherrington ·
scribed
as a 6-loot-tall, 19().
named president of Gallipolis Golf Club ... Delegation opposes
pound
man
in his 20s, with a
riverfront parking lot project ... Robert Danner picked as brass
player for Ali-state orchestra ... V"mton's Wilson Watkins nets 63 prominent nose and stringy,
points as Tigers rip Hamden, 96-87 ... GAHS slams Athens 77-42 collar-length hair of a dirty
for 30th straight SEOAL cage win. Blue Imps stretch three-year blond color. Police said the
slasher is believed to be a
winning streak to U in a row with 55-36 victory over Bullpups.
homosexual, who kills out of
sexual frustration .
with Major Hoople
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
A composite picture of the
MA
man was developed from the
SEKIWIORAL
hundreds of interviews, police
PSY CKOLOGIST,
CLYDE:,l BELIEVE
said.
IN LE ...~NING
Six men matching the de·
SY DOING: SO
scription
were arrested
I
I'VE M,&gt;,TCHED
Friday, including one sighted
NIGHT NE.WS
I
BURKE WIT~ ·
in a restaurant a few blocks
KLONDIKE
from
Hay's apartment house.
CLYDE.'
/
Ali were released after
questioning.
Police warned that the killer,
breaking out of his original
pattern that earned him the ·
"skid row slasher" nickname,
"can strike anytime, any·
where."
His first four victims were
The· letter re-printed above contains informotion that con
derelicts, killed as they lay
save
us both money.
&lt;lrunk in alleys and doorways
in Los Angeles' "skid row"
"Special loctpry price "re duction" means WE pay less
area. The fifth was another
for Norwalk Furniture.
derelict, but was killed In his
room at a cheap hotel. The next
"Unusua lly good values" means thot YOU have the

GALUPOUS has had 13 major floods during the past 91
years. In chronological order, they are:
CREST
CITY DAM
MONTH-YEAR
63.9
Feb. 11, 1884
58.79
Mar. 7,1907
63.5
Mar. 13,1913
54.4
Mar. 22, 1933
58.2
Mar.21,1936
Jan. 27, 1937
66.10¥• 67.5
Jan.2,1~
58.6 60.4
Mar, 9,1945
?J.35 59.2
Aprll16, 1948
59.25 61.1
Jan. 30,1952
52.1
53.9
55.9 57.5
Mar. 8,1955
52.9 54.31
Mar. 8,1963
52.10 5-1.5
Mar. 13,1964

.ABC KIDDIE SHOP .

STOP IN AND VISIT
WITH US TODAY

MOBILE
HOMES

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - The
''skid row slasher" apparently
killed his eighth and ninth
victims within hours of each
other, carrying his mysterious
terror from the alleys of the
central city to middle class
Hollywood apartment
houses.
Police revealed that one of
the marks of the allegedly
homo_sexual killer is that he
removes the shoeS of his vic·
tims.
The body of Clyde C. Hay, 34,
an employe of the National
Cash Register Co., was found
Friday in his $131kl-month
bachelor apartment in East
Hollywood.
His throat was cut from ear
to ear in Uie by now
gruesomely familiar way, and .
police said "there is no
question" he was killed by the
slasher.
Although Hay was the ninth
victim found since tbe slayings

COI.UMBUS ·- Slate Sen.
Oakley C. Collins 1H • t7lh

pensation insurance. A similar
bill is pending In th~ Senate
.which would set the
requirement at $260. .
.
One objection to the present ·
law is that its $50 limit overly
complicates hiring and
payment of part-time labor ,
Under current law domestic
help or an occasional employee
hired to cut grass, shovei,snow, ,
or babysit who earns over $60 a · •
quarter must be covered by ,
workmen's
compensation ~
Insurance. By raising this
cutoff level these bllts would
reduce restrictive burdens
placed upon the average
citizen hiring parttime help.

+++

' SAVES THE TIME OF BUILDING
AND WIU SAVE YOU MONEY.

K&amp;K

FOR area newC&lt;lmers, 49.5 feet will put water on the Garfield
Ave., bridge. At 51.4, it covers Eastern Ave., near the city
waterworks. At 58.6, the mid-eection of the 300 block of First
Ave., becomes flooded. At 53.9, the GSI bridge is underwater.

stores

ROOM!
SEE OUR ADD-A-ROOMS

ePAINTS

+++

ePark near the

NEED AN EXTRA

•AWNINGS

m new area

By Hobart Wilsolr Jr.

the Collins report

would result in a roughly
uniform total combination of
local tax revenues and state
aid for all Ohio school districts.
In effect, after meeting
minimum prope1 ty tax millage
requirements, poorer districts
would be subsidized by the
state to achieve financial
equality among all districts.
The provisions of H. B. 81 do
not conform . to this plan. No
doubt when the budget bill is
heard in the Senate, similar
efforts will be made to get
these amendments included.
A bill passed in the Senate
and referred to the House
would permit grants to be
awarded to a school district
from the disaster fund to
match or supplement federal
or other grants for restoration
and-or Improvement of
facilities
and
services
imapaired by disaster. Direct
grants from tl1e fund were
previously available only to
local governmental subdivisions.
Important legislation has
been introduced in the House
which would raise to $400 the
amount paid In a three-month
calendar quarter by an employer before he 'must pur·
chase· workmen's com-

t

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pair

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~~~~~~~~--~~~~~.--~~----~~~~~~----.,~~~~~,~~~~--~~~~~,MM~.--~,~~~~~~.W~~~.--.~.~~~ ~

• '.

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. .
ARNOLD GRATE

.,. .

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'

14-The

$1 billion daily asked of t~Xpayers

1975

• • •

WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford said Saturday
he will ask Congress to spend
$349 bllllon-"abnost $1 billion
a day;'-t~ext fiscal year, it\..
eluding record peacetime.
deficit spending of $1 blllion a
week.
The :President warned that
his projected $52 blllion deficit
could swell to $70 blllion if
laWmakers do not approve his
anti-recession budget cuts.
"I will wallt the extra mile
and give all of my strength to
getting the national economy in
shape," Ford told reporters in
a trlef, personal preview of the
budget he will send Congress
Monday.
"I will ask the Congress to
walk that eJ!(ra mlle with me so
that together we will lead the
country with strength and

Of the
POMEROY-Bill \'oong who is speMing some time in the
Big Bend area is taking on a project of getting the Naylors Run
Park restored. An ambitious projeCt, but already he's met with
some success in m~tering help. The park is a nice spot in
Pomeroy so we're wishing Bill "lotsa luck".
Incidentally, Bill was Meigs Coun~y's representative to the
1st annual Jaycee All State convention held Jan. 24-26 at the
Commodore Perry Hotel in Tol!'do.
Registration on Friday was followed by a board of directors
meeting and a social hour and Saturday's activities included
forums on leadership, environmental pollution, bi-&lt;:entennial
planning, chapter planning and yearend award banquets. On
Sunday morning a mock legislative session ended the weekend
agenda. Coshocton was selected as the site for the state junior
golf lournament and Middletown as the spot for the state junior
tennis tournament. A total of 840 Ohio Jaycees attended the
Toledo all-state conyention. The second all-state session will be
held at Akron in March. ·

1
TO

7

DAILY
10 TO 9

..
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING-PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY, FEB. 2nd &amp;3rd

FREDERICK SMITH, SR., Middleport, and Edgar Van In
wagen, Pomeroy, were at Fort Knox, Ky ., to attend the
·graduation of Frederick Smith, Jr., from the U.S. Army's school
:for motor mechanics. In about a week Smith will be headed for
, Germany and be's really looking forward to the experience.

425

COLEMAN

SHERRY KJNG- a real sports buff- daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William King, Bradbury, had a new experience recently.
Sherry participated in a donkey basketball game at Malone
College where she is enrolled. She played It smart and saved
carrots 1m her donkey, which must have paid off, because she
was h1gh scorer at the end of the conti!St.
A FEW WEEKS AGO IN THIS column we printed a letter
from Tina Miller who expressed her delight with the Bradbury
School. Since that time, some 15 parents have lodged complaints
against the school with a public hearing to be the result.
The hearing \.111 be held at 7:3Cl p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Junior High School. Other students have now reacted and have
sent along their sentiments for publication. Their letter reads: ·
Dear Mr. HoeOlch:
We would like to tell you how much we appreciate Bradbury.
The teachers work very hard for u• and because they do, we've
learned a lot.
·
We are very (X'oud of our school and want to stand up for it.
We think we should have our say since our parents always do. We
are glad that we got to come to a school like this. We can work on
our subjects anytime we want to. We are allowed to work a• fast
as we can. We DON'T waste time! We have Individualized
materials In everything.
We don't want to lose a school Uke Bradbury and go where we
bave to have recesses and get out at 3:30 and go back to a conventional classroom. We want II just the way It is!
Signatures on the letter are Nancy Wallace, Beckie Long,
Jayne Hoeruch, Rhonda Southern, Verne Slaven, Brian Bauer,
Britt Dodson, David I~arelll, Terry Wayland,. Kenny
McHaffie, Jeff Peckham, Jack Miller, Tony Scott, Michael
Dor31, Melissa SJ)encer, Cathy Hess, Angle Houchins, Linday
Long, Jean Horton, Pauletta Sigman, Joy Majors, Tammy
Blake, CfrKiy Smith, Biily Ross, Glenn Baker, Keith Pummel,
Ricky Ebersbach, Amy Halley, Vangie Hart, Patty Cremeans,
Ray Smith, David Dernosky, Ruth Blake, Max Geary, John
Cremeans and Sheri Stewart.
THURSDAY -NIGHT GAYLE PRICE, who has been interested in local history for yean, will be at a meeting of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society at the m~eum in
Pomeroy.
Price wlll present Information on the Price and Curtis
famllles as well as Information on PorUand. The program will
start at 7:30p.m. and Is open to all interested persons as well as
society members.
I WOULD BE REMISS If I didn't publicly mend thank to
Preceptor Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, for honors of
Thursday night. The occasion was one ol those "moments to ·
remember".that just don't happen too frequently In life. Thank
you so much.
February 3-5 In Columbus.
ZOO EXPECTED
COLUMBUS - More then Registration costs $15, and
ZOO penons are expected to Includes the banquet. For more
attend the !28th annual winter information contsct William
meeting of the Ohio State McNutt, 245 N. High Street,
Horticultural Society (OSIIS ) Columbus, 43216.

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Clothing to

junbag \itimts - jentintl
'

CHESHIRE -

J

Over I ,000

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1975

NO. 1

clothing a! the Community

'•'•'•'•'Y'&lt;h'•'•'Y'•'''•~.r_.y.._v.,,-..,.~..,.,...,.~-.v.r..-.-.._-.·.-.,.:

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Car sales pushed up

11

..
..VJY'o..........._---- -----:-;.,

PAGE 15
'·

-.._y,._..._-.-~._., ~

third,

• but industry slump continues
,

of 16 die
on booze flight

•i~ Five
~

x.
~·
~:
~

1erc • I the Cheshire Community Ce nter . For the past six
monlh s

th e

agency

Gromyko upstaging Kissinger trip

..

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I ',

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.

'

"

.

1,000

unemployment has increased

th e demand fo r children's
clothin g, cooking ute nsils,
curtains. linens , and bed
clothing.
Tile agency thanks all persons in Meigs and Gallia
Cotmties lor all donations.

has

sponsored a fr ee clothin g day
once a month . Recent fire
victims have also received

assistance.
Mrs. Letha Proffitt and Mrs.

All's well for
July mission

I

i

\\,

Grace Thomas. Community
Action Outreach Workers, are
in cha rge of this. project. The
risin g cost of inflation and

Action Agencies clothing bank

VOL. 10

~/

ov~r

persons have received free

J

\

HEAD PROJECT - U.tha Proffit, left, and Grace
Thomas are in charge of the free clothing project at
Cheshire.

"We were supposed to spend
By BRUCE E. HICKS
HOUSTON (UP!) - A three hours today going around
champagne flight carrying the development and go to a big
middle-inclime Oklahomans to dance tonight and they were
MOSCOW
(UPII
an expense paid weekend to flying us back tomorrow."
Preparations for the historic
Mrs. Little SliM the group
promote a lakeside resort
"I've drafted a bill which I
space
rendczvou~
of
was
to stay at Waterwood
development
ended
Saturday
hope will prevent the chronic
American astronauts and
in the crash of their plane in a Lodge with all meals pald for.
misuse of deficit spending and
Russian cosmonauts ar e
muddy field. Five of the 16 She and her husband, Roy,
promote long term . fiscal
being successfully comwere asked along only Friday
persons aboard were killed.
responsibility," said Wylie. "I
pleted, a member ol the
The pilot, copilot, a land afternoon because some memplan to introduce It this week
Soviet crew sold Saturday.
salesman and two potential bers of the group had canceled
Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov
and the bill simply would
customers died in the twisted, out. She said ·her brother-inrequire that ~ Congress
said In an Interview with the
upside down wreckage of the law, Melvin LltUe, and a group
declare a state of economic
Tass ·news ugency that untwin-engine aircraft which was from Southland Life Insurance
emergency if there is to be ,
specified problems In "space
making an instrument landing Co., in Tulsa had organized the
deficit'financing".
technology" have been
in foggy, rainy weather at trip alter learning of the free
Wylie said the bill would
solved during meetings beHouston Intercontinental Air- weekend with no obligatio~ to
require Congress "to declare a
tween Soviet and American
port. It crashed short of the buy.
experts prepnrlng for the
stste of necessity if a budget is
"Some of them were pretty
runway.
to be out of balarice or if a
scheduled July 15 blastoll
Ten passengers were hos- well off, but none in the really
deficit budget is to be the tool
with the linkup two days
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A those ideas being floated pitalized, two in serious condi- high income bracket," she
to stimulate the economy or to
later.
The Soviets and
provide for emergency situa- WASHINGTON (UP!)- The proposal to finance highway around are not our program," tion. Another was treated and said. "I don't think any of them
Americans will orbit the
first $1 of President Ford's construction which calls for a 4 Rhodes said. "It Is primarily released from a hospital and could really afford to buy
tions.
earth In unison lor two days.
"Without such a declaration, price-raising $3-per·barrel cent a gallon increase on the work of the county six· rescue workers · were something there, but we hadn't
crude oil import· tax went lnto gasoline taxes and increases of engineers, who are m!lking a treated in hospl\als f9r inha!li, b'l'W, it yet. And it wa'-'fr!J0 1 . w.~m::::c&gt;~::o~;;~:~:;;;a.i
Congress or the president could
effect Saturday, but Congress $10 apiece in the sale of license big pitch for money to' repair tion of airplane fuel fumes .'
"We were all tired ~pm the
not spegd more money than the
votes next week on legislation plates and drivers licenses, bridges, and of the contractors
long
night. We had an liOur and
Moot of the cuSiM!er group
go\ierriment receives," said
to reverse it.
will be introduced into the Ohio who have had little to do the were from Tulsa and Sapulpa, '8 half drive to Waterwood back
Wylie
A veto is probable unless · General Assembly, it was past four years."
Okla.; and were being treated from Houston, they told us. We
"Deficit spending has brought
Ford and House Ways and reported Saturday.
•
The
newspapers
said
the
by the Horizon Corp., to the just wanted to get it over with
us to the present state of
Means Committee Chairman
plan
worked
out
by
the
conbytbattime.
I
rememl&gt;erwhen
Scripps-Howard Newspapers
expense pald trip to a luxurious
economic instability/' said AI Uliman D.Qre., can work
tractors,
representatives
of
the
said
representatives
of
the
resort development on Lal\e we found out we weren't going
Wylie. ''The deficils over the
out a face..savlng compromise. highway construction industry, petroleum industry and county Livingston. The plane left. to land in Huntsville (Tex.),
past several years have multi- The two have met twice so far,
my brother-In-law said he
Tulsa Friday night.
ple effecls and they have all but neither has yielded ground. petroleum industry and county engineers calls for:
-A
2
cents
a
gallon
increase
Linda Uttle, 25, of Sapulpa, wished he hadn't 'come." ·
engineers worked out the
The committee is attempting proposal and it will be in· in gasoline and diesel fuel tax. who was in satisfactory condlThe flight ran into fog and
By D.ONALD LAMBRO
to prompt a showdown with troduced with bipartisan sup- Imposition of the state tion at a hospital, said the trip rain attempting to land at
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Ford by attaching a 91klay port although it does not have sales tax on gasoline and diesel went wrong from the begin- Huntsvllle near the develop- federal appeals ·court panel
delay of 'the import fee the support of Gov. James A. fuel which would amount to ning.
ment, and was diverted to Saturday heard opposing attorschedule to a bill increasing the Rhodes.
about 2 more cents a gallon.
The
National neys dispute a judicial decision
"They paid for the flying Houston.
national debt ceiling from $495
-A $10 increase in auto tags both ways," she said. "We Weather Service said at the that Richard M. Nixon's White
"This is not our program bul
billlon to $531 bllllon.
we will have a highway con- and a $10 increase in drivers were supposed to have had a. time of the crash at 3:08 a.m. House tspes and documenls
The administration says it struction bond issue shortly licenses.
champagne fllght, but all we the. ceiling was 100 feet ob- belong to the government. It
must have the new ceiling by with details for finsncing it still
If the plan is passed by the had were sandwiches. Every- scured with li visibility of one- adjourned without announcing
Feb. 18 il it is to continue to be worked out," Rhodes told General Assembly it is expect- body was pretty well high when half mile.
·
whether It would uphold that
borrowing money to pay its Scripps-Howard.
The prop plane sl~ed into ruling.
ed to cost the average motorist they (the plane) .got there
MAYS LANDING, N. J. bills. The House votes on the
Continued on page 26
anyway.
"We will have a program but' $44.15 a year.
Attorneys for Nixon debated
(UP!) - A twin~ plane celllng bill Wednesday and the
lawyers from the Justice
attempting in snow to land at Senate could act before the
Department und'lllc Watergate
an airport near'fiere crashed week is out.
special prosecutors office
and burst Into flames SaturWays · and Means, meanbefore the three judge panel
day, killing two penons on wblle, begins making its major
which Friday night agreed to
board, state pollee said.
tax decision Monday and is
stay the Nixon tspes ruling
Police said the plane was likely to junk Ford's plan in
WHEEUNG, W. V. (UPI)- the "suffering of Appalachian
issued earlier in the day by
making an instrument landing favor of a $19 billion cut A group of prominent Catholic poor" as "a symbol of the
Charge Appalachia's poor victims
U.S. District Judge Charles R.
at the National Aviation Faclll, proposed by its chairman, leaders calling for a "just suffering whicj&gt; awaits the
Richey .·
ties Experimental Center in Ullman, which would give society" Saturday urged action majority of plain people in our
of
economic
exploitation;
urge
Appeals court officials said
Pomona about !0:30a.m. when more tax rellef to low and aimed at -abollshlng economic society, if they are laid off, if
after the hearing had adjourned
it disappeared from the radar mnderate income persons than exploitation of the Appalachian
di~logue, testing f~r new reforms
that no decision would be
major illness occurs, if a wage
screen and crashed In a would Ford's bill.
poor.
earner dies, or il anything else
announced before Monday, at
swampy area off Route 50,
Unless Congress overrides a
Twenty-four archbishops goes wrong."
the earliest.
. about three miles short of the veto or Ford barks down, signed a historic document
The letter called for a
At issue , essentially, is
ruvway.
1
nd testin g multi.fUitional ]j!bor movement safety, education and attaining Nixon's request that the ap. f diaoguea
prices of gasoline and other dealing with the issues of (X'Ocesso
They said the (X'ivate plane, petroleum prnducts will begin justice and ·faith in a 13-Btate
whe re bY "the Catholi c com• rooted In the division of justice a greater ''public voice in peals panel vacate Richey 's
which took off from Columbus, to rise at the end of the month region.
· · t ogether WI'th which would act as a counter local, state and national · order on the tapes issue and
munl'ty can )Olfi
Ohio, was immediately when importers must pay the
The pastoral letter, entitled all peopIeo f goo dwl'll thro ugh• force to the unaccountable politics" by the average require a three-judge pane1 to
engulfed in flames, with the Febmary fee.
"This Land is Home to ·Me," ou· t there g1on tore nec t an act power of these multi-national citizen, the letter stated.
decide the constitutiona 1ity of a
two persons aboard trapped
· t SOCie
· 1y."
corporations," the document
The bishops referred to the newly enacted law glvtng
. . the
Ford plans to Impose another was made public here at the for a more JUS
inside.
"""
b'sh
·
ed
·
'ta
said
traditional
"sufferings"
of
peo$!-per-barrel fee on March 1 opening of the semi..annual
,,e 1 opslSSU an mVl •
·
materials to the government.
The two, described by state and an additional $1 on A(X'ill. mf!!ting of the Catholic. Com- tion for the ct;A to draft a
pie "in the coal mines, in the
In a decision that would have
police as the pilot and co-pilot, The Import fee on finished mittee of Appa]j!chla. Among comprehensIve Pla n of acti on
. ues the com
steel
mills
(and)
In
the
other
Among the
ISS
·
•
sweeping . impact upon the
were tentatl vely listed as petroleum products will be 60 those who endorsed the docu- In which the church can mittee should . consider In harsh jobs that surrounded righls of any future president,
Gilbert Steine and Kenneth cents March 1 and $1.20 Aprill. ment was Archbishop Joseph operate with other major in- formulating this plan are the coal and steel."
Richey ruled Friday that the
Morgan, both of Columbus.
·
d
role
of
coal
m
'
the
life
of
Ap""'e
letter
stressed
that
"the
E~tes of the p:ice effect -. t!erilardin of Cincinnati, presl- stit\lt1ons
to
cons! er
'"
millions of tapes and docuPollee_ said 110 emergency of Ford s action vary· Ad· dent of the U. s. Conference of "economic questions" facing palachia and the nation, living God, the Lord whom we men is Nixon left behind in the
signals were received from the ministration offlcials. have Catholic Bishops.
the common people.
energy consumption and lifes- worship, is the God of the White House are gov ernment
plane before it went down. testified tbat the entll'e InThe 12-page Jetter described
This plan would Include "a lyles, occupational health and poor ... "
property and Nixon has no
Troojlers had to, ''walk and crease will add only about 4
,.
right to take possession of
crawl" to get into the swampy cents a gallon to the (X'Ice of oil ·
them
area, they Bctded.
products. But congressional
Firefighters spent more than crltics'llay the first $1 alone wlll
five hours trying to put out the add at least 3.5 cents per gallon
By United Presslnternatlonai stance and surrender some Foreign Minister Abdel Halim The Tel Aviv report quoted lawsulls involving possession of
Dames, pollee salt!.
to the price of gasoline.
Soviel FOI'eign Minister An· more of the Sinai in a troop Khaddam and was scheduled to American officials as saying the materials.
The cause of the crash was · Ford imposed the Import
drei
Grornyko flew to the withdrawal agreement wiil! meet ·President · Hafez Assad, the delays are technical, but
Nixon is also · suing to
under lnvestlgation by state tariff over congressional obMiddle
East
Sat)ll'day
lor
talk$
Egypt.
government
sources
said.
He
cited
souces
in
Washington
as
overturn
the congressional act
pollee and fedel'al aviation jections to force Congress ,Into
Gromyko said on arrival In may also talk with Palestinian seeing "a connection between which declared the tspes ·and
action on his' energy programs with Syrian and Egyptian
autborlties.
leaders
only
a
few
days
before
Damascus
he was confident' his Liberation Organization leader the promise to supply Israel documenls _to be ,government
The Ohioans were silid to -which include a $2-per-barrel
the
expected
arrival
of
~ere·
43-hour
visit
would help Vasser Arafat.
with modern Fl4 and Fl&gt; material. Richey h~s that.case
have stopped at Harrisburg, tax on all oil-and to begin the
Gromyko's visit before Kis- planes and a settlement that ;too . And when he fall~d to 'S!!Ue
Pa., m l'lliJte to AtlaDtlc City to (X'oce5S of cutting oil Imports. tary of State Henry Kissinger strengthen Syrian-Soviet rela·
In
search
of
peace.
lions
and
contribute
to
the
singer's
arrival underscored tile would involve a withdrawal /l simultaneous dectswn on tt,
· Some 40 per · cent of th~
plclr. up fo!D' sales 1epreaenla·
.
In
Washington,
State
Departestablishment
of
"just
peace
Soviels'
determination to have from the mountain passes of Nixon'sattorneys quickly ask!'d
Uvea of the EBCO Corp., a country's oil-6.5 mlllioo barthe
United
for
all
of
the
countries
in
the
a
say
in
any eventual Arab- the Sinai."
the appeals court to stay his
ment
officials
said
.
rerrtger'ation manufacturing rels per day-t~ow Is imported,
Israel! peace settlement, the · Israeli leaders say , they are basic tapes ruling.
,
firm, wbo bad attended a trade largely from the Organization States will grant Syria $25 Middle East."
mlllioo
in
economic
aid
In
an
Dl
'
plomatic
sources
·
said
sources
said.
willing
to
pull
back
between
20
The
panel
did
so
and
l!lhlbltion.
.
'of Petroleum Exptt ling Counconvened an unusual Saturday
_ Damaseus to Gromyko was invited to The Israeli radio said the and 30 miles from the present heanng
.
• · NOOSE TIGIITENED
tries cartel. Ford wants to cuf effort to convince
·
PNOM PENH (UPI) thoee impol't4 by 2 mlllion follow a moderate course in the Damascus and Cairo to hear U.S. holdups in supplying cease.fire lines as part of an
Middle
East.
_
the
Syrian
and
Egyptian
stand
sophisticated
weaponry
were
interim
settlement
but
DefenSe
"I
don'tbelleve
any lawyer
barrels
per
day.
'
Ccmmunillt forces intensified .
At
!'
!
&lt;
same
time,
the
Israeli
on
.
negotiations
with_
Kissinger,
expected
to
last
WI
til
.
after
Minister
Shimon
P~res
said
the
can
read
~t
(
congressiona~)
Coogress baa !lela)'ed action
~lr drive to throttle Phn!XIl
Penh Saturday, pressing their oo Ford's mtire . energy pro- national radio said the United ,'due in the 'Middle East around Kissinger . launches the next Israelis would not give up the .statute. and n~t understand.the
round Of his "shuttle di· strategic Giddi anp Mitla consUtutio"ll:l questlons ttrha~s~
attack from all ·sides and gram While It conaiden Ford's •States is holding up weapons Feb . 10.
deals
with
Israel
in
~opes
it,
Gromyko
met
with
Syrian
plomacj"
in the .Middle East. ' passes .or their captured. Egyp- .... over pnva1• owners lp,
movi·ng in heavy rein- $18.5 billion quick tax cut for
. ' ·
tiari oiUields: · ·
.
.Miller told the co\11'1.
indlvlduaiB and till jiOi atioJIS'. too, will take" a muderate
filrcements.
'
I • ·'·
(~
.I

'

'

Conn~lly

.
resigns
'

hoard
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford announced the
resignation of John B. 'Con·
nally, the former Tr~sury
secretary indicted on bribery
and perjury charges, from the
Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board Saturday .
Ford's terse announcement
gave no reason for Connally's
resignation from the presidential panel, which reviews the
activities of th• CIA and other
intelligence agencies ,
Connally, 57, a sliver-haired
Texas mlllionalre and a major
Republican political figure ,
was indicted July 29, 1974 on
two counts of taking . bribes,
two counts of lying to a Grand
Jury and one count of conspiracy to commit perjury and
obstruct justice, all in con·
nection with Nixon administration milk fund .c:Ontroversies.
He pleaded innocent and got
the charges separated for trial
purposes, with one trial pending on the bribery . charges
and a second on . the false
testimony charges .
Richard, M. Nixon appointed
Connally to the intelligence
advisory panel on Aug . 1, 1972.
The government accuses
Connally of haying acrepted
$10,000 frorn Texas mill\ lobbyist Jake Jacobsen as
payment !or persuading Nixon
to raise milk price supports.
Nixon subsequently did so but
denied any improper influence
was involved. ·
The perjury and obstruction
of justice charges relate to
Connally's alleged attempt to
cover up his Involvement.
Connally has publicly stated
he refused Jacobsen's offer.
The federal indictment interrupted Connaliy •s me teor ic
rise as a converted Republican
politician of possible Presiden.tial timber.
1n mld-1973, when Watergate
bad begun to destroy the Nixon
White House staff, the former
President and the Republican
· on Conna
party relied
. lly and
former.DefenseSecretaryMel~ Laird to aid Nixon as
special advisers.
Connally, a lifelong Democrat,hadconV.rtect!dRe
. putilicanism in the party's darkest
Watergate ·hours of 1973, and
5eemedtogainpollticalstature
for it.
Until the indictments came
down, -- many considered

~o~~~~~o~ss~~ h~ :~~~~n ~ ~~~n:~:rcan a pre~:~e::t:t

candidate and he ' made no
S&lt;)CI'et be was interested.
· There was even considerable
speculation,. never Confirmed,
that Nixon preferred Connally
to Gerald Ford 88 a vice
presidential choice when Spiro
T. Agnew resigned, and was
talked out of It by Republican
party elders.
' C 0 n n allY en I ere d
Washington politics as an aide
to e&lt;;ngressman Lyhdon B.
Johnson. He rose through
many influential jobs, In·
eluding 'legal adviser· to l'~
ollmen,Navy secretary In 1961,
governor of 'rlllllS from ltiB3 to

a

HECK'SQG.
$1.19
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l.

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HECK'S REG.
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HECK'SRIG. $12.88

HIQC'SIIG. $3,77

HECK'S
REG. •1.44

DEPT

ZIP CAMERA

The President voiced
distaste for such enormous
deficit spending- the amount

.- 4_

•

Catholic leaders call for 'justice

EXTENSION CORDS

~

POLAROID

next."

)

2 Ohio
men die
in crash

POLAROID

PROPANE
FUEL,..l.:.J,.
$ 39

"In short, il the economy
were operating at the rate of
only a year ago, I would not be
forecasting such a ]j!rge difference between revenues and
expeditures," he said. "[n fact,
we would have balanced
budgets both this year and

..'

Arguments
contmue
over tapes

7" PAN AND ROLLER SET

To '4.99

'

new modern lighting.
• Panels easily
removed for cleaning.

/JIIIT.

Heck's Reg.

NEW CEILINGS ADD
BEAUTY and INSULATE TOO!

• Permits choke of

NABWARI

7ft

and eo ry to handle.

ment ~tdds as much to
a 'new modern look as
h id ing old cracked
ceilings or lowering
old fashioned h igh
ceilings . • lns4lates,
wh il e it conceals ducts,
pipes and wiring.

HICK'SRIG.
$3.99

$321.

GAUGE

assistance .

was spending the rest of "the
day working in his office. In the
evening, he and his wile Betty
planned to attend the 28th
"popular notion" that some
"Mardi Gras Ball" given ~y
government expenditures wilf members of the Louisiana
"go on and on whether we like congressional delegation at the
Sheraton Park Hotel . Ford's
·it or not."
daughter
Susan, 17, was chosen
Spending for social welfare
programs, · such as Social to be one of 35 "princesses" at
Security and medicare, are the affair.
The President was expected
getting out of hand and must be
to
take It easy Sunday before
brought under control, , Ford
leaving Monday on an oversaid .
He already has proposed a &gt; night visit to Atlanta, where he
per cent ceiling on increases scheduled two public speeches,
for all government aid pro- a meeting with eight Southern
grams tied to consumer prices governors and a news conferand he indicated Saturday that ence Tuesday.
The visit Is one of an upmany of his recoll)ll1endations
coming
series designed to .help
·for the $17 billion in budget culs
Ford sell his new economic and
would fall in thl.s area.
White House aides said Ford energy conservation proposals,
The President said he is
proposing no new s(iending
programs, except for energy,
and will not accept the

Oil tax
£acmg
• · Road builders'
rev.e rsal plan opposed -.

FALL AND
WINTER CLOTHING

SHOTGUN
SHELLS

-

A Low-Cosi W.oy to
Lower Old FoshionH
High Ceilings. No ·
other home improve·

/JII'T.

ANTIQUE ·KIT

LANTERN

recesslon, and a sharp rise in

government spending in unem- .
ployment beneflls and other

the government would borrow
to make up revenue shortfalls-but said it was necessary
in 1976 to get the country's
staggering economy going
again.
"!am resolved to take those
steps that will make such
deficits unnecessary in the
future. That requires, most of
all , the restoration of a
vigorous economy in this
country," he said.
"We must recognize that, in
times like th,ese, it is good
national policy both to provide
financial support to those
Wlemployed and to introdace a
measured amoWit of additional
stimulus into the private
economy by a tax reduction.
"My budget .. . does just
that."

DETROIT (UP!) -Cash rebates of $200 to $800 being
given to new car buyers pushed auto sales In tbe final 10 -!;l
, days of January up at le.ast a third over mid-month : : ~'&lt;:
:~ deliveries, Industry analysts said Saturday.
;:l
The Jan. 21-31 sales report, due Tuesday and Wed·
nesday, wm be the first In which all lour U.S. automakers
~ offered the cash rebates. Sales In the middle period of
' January were up 41 per cent from the first 10 days, before
the rebates started.
~
Despite
the
two
strong
sales
reports,
analysts
~
contributed to runaway . inOa·
cautioned
that
the
U.
S.
aulo
Industry
hasn't
snapped
oul
~~
tlon and have led to the present
of lis worst postwar sales siUDJp, Close to 180,000 workers ~
mixture of recession and
are on open-ended ]j!yoffs that may not end until mid· 1:1
inflation."
summer.
~
~%~lim:~~::::~:~~: trc;:x&amp;:«:: ~ ": o"t•::::::::::·ect '"·: "~!:::-~-..;:..;s;;~:!~~.·

RED DEVIL

PROP4NE

' He said the budget includeS
no new government programs
other than energy spending, It
covers fiscall976, which hegins
July 1, 1975.
Ford, speaking at a budget
briefing for repot'ters "in the
State Department auditorium,
did not go into many specifics.
But he strongly defended his
proposal for the biggest deficit
on record other than $54.9
billion in 1943 at the peak of
World War U;
"It 1.s a big budget, call.ing for
expenditures of $349 billion - ,
almost $1 bllllon a day," said
Ford.
By comparison, the government has estimated it will
spend $313.4 blllion in the
current fiscal year and the

COLUMBUS '(UPI) - Rep. Chalmers Wylie, R·
Ohio, said Saturday his initial reaction to President
Ford's proposed budget was "one of disap·
pointment" and said he would introduce legislation
asking that an "economic state of emergency" be
declared by Congress.
"I had hopes that the president would make a
better attempt to balance the budget this year, "
Wylie said. "I think his budget might provide for
short term solutions but it has not answered the
ongoing problem of inflation."

'4.99

COLEMAN 2 MANTLE

12, 16 &amp; 20

UOORGRILL

sse

· RIGHT

Americans/' he said.

dedrtroald run around $30
billion.
Ford said the d,eficits antcipated in both 1975 and 1976.
would result largely from the
,combinstion of reduced federal
tax revenues because of the

Wylie unhappy
with Ford plan

DEODORANT

$}299

A RECORD NUMBER OF 3Cl NEW COUPLES was enrolled
in the Belles and Beaus dance class Thursday night. Over several
weeks couples receive instruction in square dancing at the archery building at Royal Oak Park. Upon completion of the course
there are graduation ceremonies. During the period of in·
struction couples who have completed the course assist

newcomers.

ALUMINUM

purpose to a fuller life for all

::1 ~ ~~.~~

special White Hoaae adviser.

'

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I

·

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r.

.

•.

/

'

'

'

14-The

$1 billion daily asked of t~Xpayers

1975

• • •

WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford said Saturday
he will ask Congress to spend
$349 bllllon-"abnost $1 billion
a day;'-t~ext fiscal year, it\..
eluding record peacetime.
deficit spending of $1 blllion a
week.
The :President warned that
his projected $52 blllion deficit
could swell to $70 blllion if
laWmakers do not approve his
anti-recession budget cuts.
"I will wallt the extra mile
and give all of my strength to
getting the national economy in
shape," Ford told reporters in
a trlef, personal preview of the
budget he will send Congress
Monday.
"I will ask the Congress to
walk that eJ!(ra mlle with me so
that together we will lead the
country with strength and

Of the
POMEROY-Bill \'oong who is speMing some time in the
Big Bend area is taking on a project of getting the Naylors Run
Park restored. An ambitious projeCt, but already he's met with
some success in m~tering help. The park is a nice spot in
Pomeroy so we're wishing Bill "lotsa luck".
Incidentally, Bill was Meigs Coun~y's representative to the
1st annual Jaycee All State convention held Jan. 24-26 at the
Commodore Perry Hotel in Tol!'do.
Registration on Friday was followed by a board of directors
meeting and a social hour and Saturday's activities included
forums on leadership, environmental pollution, bi-&lt;:entennial
planning, chapter planning and yearend award banquets. On
Sunday morning a mock legislative session ended the weekend
agenda. Coshocton was selected as the site for the state junior
golf lournament and Middletown as the spot for the state junior
tennis tournament. A total of 840 Ohio Jaycees attended the
Toledo all-state conyention. The second all-state session will be
held at Akron in March. ·

1
TO

7

DAILY
10 TO 9

..
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING-PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY, FEB. 2nd &amp;3rd

FREDERICK SMITH, SR., Middleport, and Edgar Van In
wagen, Pomeroy, were at Fort Knox, Ky ., to attend the
·graduation of Frederick Smith, Jr., from the U.S. Army's school
:for motor mechanics. In about a week Smith will be headed for
, Germany and be's really looking forward to the experience.

425

COLEMAN

SHERRY KJNG- a real sports buff- daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William King, Bradbury, had a new experience recently.
Sherry participated in a donkey basketball game at Malone
College where she is enrolled. She played It smart and saved
carrots 1m her donkey, which must have paid off, because she
was h1gh scorer at the end of the conti!St.
A FEW WEEKS AGO IN THIS column we printed a letter
from Tina Miller who expressed her delight with the Bradbury
School. Since that time, some 15 parents have lodged complaints
against the school with a public hearing to be the result.
The hearing \.111 be held at 7:3Cl p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Junior High School. Other students have now reacted and have
sent along their sentiments for publication. Their letter reads: ·
Dear Mr. HoeOlch:
We would like to tell you how much we appreciate Bradbury.
The teachers work very hard for u• and because they do, we've
learned a lot.
·
We are very (X'oud of our school and want to stand up for it.
We think we should have our say since our parents always do. We
are glad that we got to come to a school like this. We can work on
our subjects anytime we want to. We are allowed to work a• fast
as we can. We DON'T waste time! We have Individualized
materials In everything.
We don't want to lose a school Uke Bradbury and go where we
bave to have recesses and get out at 3:30 and go back to a conventional classroom. We want II just the way It is!
Signatures on the letter are Nancy Wallace, Beckie Long,
Jayne Hoeruch, Rhonda Southern, Verne Slaven, Brian Bauer,
Britt Dodson, David I~arelll, Terry Wayland,. Kenny
McHaffie, Jeff Peckham, Jack Miller, Tony Scott, Michael
Dor31, Melissa SJ)encer, Cathy Hess, Angle Houchins, Linday
Long, Jean Horton, Pauletta Sigman, Joy Majors, Tammy
Blake, CfrKiy Smith, Biily Ross, Glenn Baker, Keith Pummel,
Ricky Ebersbach, Amy Halley, Vangie Hart, Patty Cremeans,
Ray Smith, David Dernosky, Ruth Blake, Max Geary, John
Cremeans and Sheri Stewart.
THURSDAY -NIGHT GAYLE PRICE, who has been interested in local history for yean, will be at a meeting of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society at the m~eum in
Pomeroy.
Price wlll present Information on the Price and Curtis
famllles as well as Information on PorUand. The program will
start at 7:30p.m. and Is open to all interested persons as well as
society members.
I WOULD BE REMISS If I didn't publicly mend thank to
Preceptor Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, for honors of
Thursday night. The occasion was one ol those "moments to ·
remember".that just don't happen too frequently In life. Thank
you so much.
February 3-5 In Columbus.
ZOO EXPECTED
COLUMBUS - More then Registration costs $15, and
ZOO penons are expected to Includes the banquet. For more
attend the !28th annual winter information contsct William
meeting of the Ohio State McNutt, 245 N. High Street,
Horticultural Society (OSIIS ) Columbus, 43216.

-

70Z. ·

TOVE

RIGHI GUARD

HICK'SIIG.

SPORTS

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DEPT.

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:GUARD
. -

HECK'S REG.
$15.99
Ht...-s g·2-hlolft'Mir stoYt tfolot's tconomKal and
its-to• porrobi~ty ,.,.....rm o solid ap~al
for budget-minded campen wlto liM• to tra..,.J.
2 Y.r pint I uti upac:ity . Folds to
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SJ99
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HECK'S REG. 118.99

HECK'S REG.
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REMINGTON

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10 QT.·TULIP
WASTE
BASKET

Housewares Dept.

Housaware
You con hovo Cellingi
.thot Stoy BeouHful
year ofter yeorl
We

Cl!ln

gi ve you a

cho ice-of the f inest
dramatic designs to
give your new ceilings

G.E. ·

FAIRFIELD

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ceiling that w ill
absorb up to 80 %
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ESTIMATES

Heck's Reg. •3.29

•

ggc

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ttiSIIITit-1.

-·

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND SUPPLY COMPANY

!'

· POINT PLEASANT
PHoNE 675-1160iiiiiiiiiiiii
'

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Clothing to

junbag \itimts - jentintl
'

CHESHIRE -

J

Over I ,000

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1975

NO. 1

clothing a! the Community

'•'•'•'•'Y'&lt;h'•'•'Y'•'''•~.r_.y.._v.,,-..,.~..,.,...,.~-.v.r..-.-.._-.·.-.,.:

:-:v.•.................,.....,...............................,....~'YN'N.&lt;;.Y.h;

~

Car sales pushed up

11

..
..VJY'o..........._---- -----:-;.,

PAGE 15
'·

-.._y,._..._-.-~._., ~

third,

• but industry slump continues
,

of 16 die
on booze flight

•i~ Five
~

x.
~·
~:
~

1erc • I the Cheshire Community Ce nter . For the past six
monlh s

th e

agency

Gromyko upstaging Kissinger trip

..

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.

'

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.

1,000

unemployment has increased

th e demand fo r children's
clothin g, cooking ute nsils,
curtains. linens , and bed
clothing.
Tile agency thanks all persons in Meigs and Gallia
Cotmties lor all donations.

has

sponsored a fr ee clothin g day
once a month . Recent fire
victims have also received

assistance.
Mrs. Letha Proffitt and Mrs.

All's well for
July mission

I

i

\\,

Grace Thomas. Community
Action Outreach Workers, are
in cha rge of this. project. The
risin g cost of inflation and

Action Agencies clothing bank

VOL. 10

~/

ov~r

persons have received free

J

\

HEAD PROJECT - U.tha Proffit, left, and Grace
Thomas are in charge of the free clothing project at
Cheshire.

"We were supposed to spend
By BRUCE E. HICKS
HOUSTON (UP!) - A three hours today going around
champagne flight carrying the development and go to a big
middle-inclime Oklahomans to dance tonight and they were
MOSCOW
(UPII
an expense paid weekend to flying us back tomorrow."
Preparations for the historic
Mrs. Little SliM the group
promote a lakeside resort
"I've drafted a bill which I
space
rendczvou~
of
was
to stay at Waterwood
development
ended
Saturday
hope will prevent the chronic
American astronauts and
in the crash of their plane in a Lodge with all meals pald for.
misuse of deficit spending and
Russian cosmonauts ar e
muddy field. Five of the 16 She and her husband, Roy,
promote long term . fiscal
being successfully comwere asked along only Friday
persons aboard were killed.
responsibility," said Wylie. "I
pleted, a member ol the
The pilot, copilot, a land afternoon because some memplan to introduce It this week
Soviet crew sold Saturday.
salesman and two potential bers of the group had canceled
Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov
and the bill simply would
customers died in the twisted, out. She said ·her brother-inrequire that ~ Congress
said In an Interview with the
upside down wreckage of the law, Melvin LltUe, and a group
declare a state of economic
Tass ·news ugency that untwin-engine aircraft which was from Southland Life Insurance
emergency if there is to be ,
specified problems In "space
making an instrument landing Co., in Tulsa had organized the
deficit'financing".
technology" have been
in foggy, rainy weather at trip alter learning of the free
Wylie said the bill would
solved during meetings beHouston Intercontinental Air- weekend with no obligatio~ to
require Congress "to declare a
tween Soviet and American
port. It crashed short of the buy.
experts prepnrlng for the
stste of necessity if a budget is
"Some of them were pretty
runway.
to be out of balarice or if a
scheduled July 15 blastoll
Ten passengers were hos- well off, but none in the really
deficit budget is to be the tool
with the linkup two days
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A those ideas being floated pitalized, two in serious condi- high income bracket," she
to stimulate the economy or to
later.
The Soviets and
provide for emergency situa- WASHINGTON (UP!)- The proposal to finance highway around are not our program," tion. Another was treated and said. "I don't think any of them
Americans will orbit the
first $1 of President Ford's construction which calls for a 4 Rhodes said. "It Is primarily released from a hospital and could really afford to buy
tions.
earth In unison lor two days.
"Without such a declaration, price-raising $3-per·barrel cent a gallon increase on the work of the county six· rescue workers · were something there, but we hadn't
crude oil import· tax went lnto gasoline taxes and increases of engineers, who are m!lking a treated in hospl\als f9r inha!li, b'l'W, it yet. And it wa'-'fr!J0 1 . w.~m::::c&gt;~::o~;;~:~:;;;a.i
Congress or the president could
effect Saturday, but Congress $10 apiece in the sale of license big pitch for money to' repair tion of airplane fuel fumes .'
"We were all tired ~pm the
not spegd more money than the
votes next week on legislation plates and drivers licenses, bridges, and of the contractors
long
night. We had an liOur and
Moot of the cuSiM!er group
go\ierriment receives," said
to reverse it.
will be introduced into the Ohio who have had little to do the were from Tulsa and Sapulpa, '8 half drive to Waterwood back
Wylie
A veto is probable unless · General Assembly, it was past four years."
Okla.; and were being treated from Houston, they told us. We
"Deficit spending has brought
Ford and House Ways and reported Saturday.
•
The
newspapers
said
the
by the Horizon Corp., to the just wanted to get it over with
us to the present state of
Means Committee Chairman
plan
worked
out
by
the
conbytbattime.
I
rememl&gt;erwhen
Scripps-Howard Newspapers
expense pald trip to a luxurious
economic instability/' said AI Uliman D.Qre., can work
tractors,
representatives
of
the
said
representatives
of
the
resort development on Lal\e we found out we weren't going
Wylie. ''The deficils over the
out a face..savlng compromise. highway construction industry, petroleum industry and county Livingston. The plane left. to land in Huntsville (Tex.),
past several years have multi- The two have met twice so far,
my brother-In-law said he
Tulsa Friday night.
ple effecls and they have all but neither has yielded ground. petroleum industry and county engineers calls for:
-A
2
cents
a
gallon
increase
Linda Uttle, 25, of Sapulpa, wished he hadn't 'come." ·
engineers worked out the
The committee is attempting proposal and it will be in· in gasoline and diesel fuel tax. who was in satisfactory condlThe flight ran into fog and
By D.ONALD LAMBRO
to prompt a showdown with troduced with bipartisan sup- Imposition of the state tion at a hospital, said the trip rain attempting to land at
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Ford by attaching a 91klay port although it does not have sales tax on gasoline and diesel went wrong from the begin- Huntsvllle near the develop- federal appeals ·court panel
delay of 'the import fee the support of Gov. James A. fuel which would amount to ning.
ment, and was diverted to Saturday heard opposing attorschedule to a bill increasing the Rhodes.
about 2 more cents a gallon.
The
National neys dispute a judicial decision
"They paid for the flying Houston.
national debt ceiling from $495
-A $10 increase in auto tags both ways," she said. "We Weather Service said at the that Richard M. Nixon's White
"This is not our program bul
billlon to $531 bllllon.
we will have a highway con- and a $10 increase in drivers were supposed to have had a. time of the crash at 3:08 a.m. House tspes and documenls
The administration says it struction bond issue shortly licenses.
champagne fllght, but all we the. ceiling was 100 feet ob- belong to the government. It
must have the new ceiling by with details for finsncing it still
If the plan is passed by the had were sandwiches. Every- scured with li visibility of one- adjourned without announcing
Feb. 18 il it is to continue to be worked out," Rhodes told General Assembly it is expect- body was pretty well high when half mile.
·
whether It would uphold that
borrowing money to pay its Scripps-Howard.
The prop plane sl~ed into ruling.
ed to cost the average motorist they (the plane) .got there
MAYS LANDING, N. J. bills. The House votes on the
Continued on page 26
anyway.
"We will have a program but' $44.15 a year.
Attorneys for Nixon debated
(UP!) - A twin~ plane celllng bill Wednesday and the
lawyers from the Justice
attempting in snow to land at Senate could act before the
Department und'lllc Watergate
an airport near'fiere crashed week is out.
special prosecutors office
and burst Into flames SaturWays · and Means, meanbefore the three judge panel
day, killing two penons on wblle, begins making its major
which Friday night agreed to
board, state pollee said.
tax decision Monday and is
stay the Nixon tspes ruling
Police said the plane was likely to junk Ford's plan in
WHEEUNG, W. V. (UPI)- the "suffering of Appalachian
issued earlier in the day by
making an instrument landing favor of a $19 billion cut A group of prominent Catholic poor" as "a symbol of the
Charge Appalachia's poor victims
U.S. District Judge Charles R.
at the National Aviation Faclll, proposed by its chairman, leaders calling for a "just suffering whicj&gt; awaits the
Richey .·
ties Experimental Center in Ullman, which would give society" Saturday urged action majority of plain people in our
of
economic
exploitation;
urge
Appeals court officials said
Pomona about !0:30a.m. when more tax rellef to low and aimed at -abollshlng economic society, if they are laid off, if
after the hearing had adjourned
it disappeared from the radar mnderate income persons than exploitation of the Appalachian
di~logue, testing f~r new reforms
that no decision would be
major illness occurs, if a wage
screen and crashed In a would Ford's bill.
poor.
earner dies, or il anything else
announced before Monday, at
swampy area off Route 50,
Unless Congress overrides a
Twenty-four archbishops goes wrong."
the earliest.
. about three miles short of the veto or Ford barks down, signed a historic document
The letter called for a
At issue , essentially, is
ruvway.
1
nd testin g multi.fUitional ]j!bor movement safety, education and attaining Nixon's request that the ap. f diaoguea
prices of gasoline and other dealing with the issues of (X'Ocesso
They said the (X'ivate plane, petroleum prnducts will begin justice and ·faith in a 13-Btate
whe re bY "the Catholi c com• rooted In the division of justice a greater ''public voice in peals panel vacate Richey 's
which took off from Columbus, to rise at the end of the month region.
· · t ogether WI'th which would act as a counter local, state and national · order on the tapes issue and
munl'ty can )Olfi
Ohio, was immediately when importers must pay the
The pastoral letter, entitled all peopIeo f goo dwl'll thro ugh• force to the unaccountable politics" by the average require a three-judge pane1 to
engulfed in flames, with the Febmary fee.
"This Land is Home to ·Me," ou· t there g1on tore nec t an act power of these multi-national citizen, the letter stated.
decide the constitutiona 1ity of a
two persons aboard trapped
· t SOCie
· 1y."
corporations," the document
The bishops referred to the newly enacted law glvtng
. . the
Ford plans to Impose another was made public here at the for a more JUS
inside.
"""
b'sh
·
ed
·
'ta
said
traditional
"sufferings"
of
peo$!-per-barrel fee on March 1 opening of the semi..annual
,,e 1 opslSSU an mVl •
·
materials to the government.
The two, described by state and an additional $1 on A(X'ill. mf!!ting of the Catholic. Com- tion for the ct;A to draft a
pie "in the coal mines, in the
In a decision that would have
police as the pilot and co-pilot, The Import fee on finished mittee of Appa]j!chla. Among comprehensIve Pla n of acti on
. ues the com
steel
mills
(and)
In
the
other
Among the
ISS
·
•
sweeping . impact upon the
were tentatl vely listed as petroleum products will be 60 those who endorsed the docu- In which the church can mittee should . consider In harsh jobs that surrounded righls of any future president,
Gilbert Steine and Kenneth cents March 1 and $1.20 Aprill. ment was Archbishop Joseph operate with other major in- formulating this plan are the coal and steel."
Richey ruled Friday that the
Morgan, both of Columbus.
·
d
role
of
coal
m
'
the
life
of
Ap""'e
letter
stressed
that
"the
E~tes of the p:ice effect -. t!erilardin of Cincinnati, presl- stit\lt1ons
to
cons! er
'"
millions of tapes and docuPollee_ said 110 emergency of Ford s action vary· Ad· dent of the U. s. Conference of "economic questions" facing palachia and the nation, living God, the Lord whom we men is Nixon left behind in the
signals were received from the ministration offlcials. have Catholic Bishops.
the common people.
energy consumption and lifes- worship, is the God of the White House are gov ernment
plane before it went down. testified tbat the entll'e InThe 12-page Jetter described
This plan would Include "a lyles, occupational health and poor ... "
property and Nixon has no
Troojlers had to, ''walk and crease will add only about 4
,.
right to take possession of
crawl" to get into the swampy cents a gallon to the (X'Ice of oil ·
them
area, they Bctded.
products. But congressional
Firefighters spent more than crltics'llay the first $1 alone wlll
five hours trying to put out the add at least 3.5 cents per gallon
By United Presslnternatlonai stance and surrender some Foreign Minister Abdel Halim The Tel Aviv report quoted lawsulls involving possession of
Dames, pollee salt!.
to the price of gasoline.
Soviel FOI'eign Minister An· more of the Sinai in a troop Khaddam and was scheduled to American officials as saying the materials.
The cause of the crash was · Ford imposed the Import
drei
Grornyko flew to the withdrawal agreement wiil! meet ·President · Hafez Assad, the delays are technical, but
Nixon is also · suing to
under lnvestlgation by state tariff over congressional obMiddle
East
Sat)ll'day
lor
talk$
Egypt.
government
sources
said.
He
cited
souces
in
Washington
as
overturn
the congressional act
pollee and fedel'al aviation jections to force Congress ,Into
Gromyko said on arrival In may also talk with Palestinian seeing "a connection between which declared the tspes ·and
action on his' energy programs with Syrian and Egyptian
autborlties.
leaders
only
a
few
days
before
Damascus
he was confident' his Liberation Organization leader the promise to supply Israel documenls _to be ,government
The Ohioans were silid to -which include a $2-per-barrel
the
expected
arrival
of
~ere·
43-hour
visit
would help Vasser Arafat.
with modern Fl4 and Fl&gt; material. Richey h~s that.case
have stopped at Harrisburg, tax on all oil-and to begin the
Gromyko's visit before Kis- planes and a settlement that ;too . And when he fall~d to 'S!!Ue
Pa., m l'lliJte to AtlaDtlc City to (X'oce5S of cutting oil Imports. tary of State Henry Kissinger strengthen Syrian-Soviet rela·
In
search
of
peace.
lions
and
contribute
to
the
singer's
arrival underscored tile would involve a withdrawal /l simultaneous dectswn on tt,
· Some 40 per · cent of th~
plclr. up fo!D' sales 1epreaenla·
.
In
Washington,
State
Departestablishment
of
"just
peace
Soviels'
determination to have from the mountain passes of Nixon'sattorneys quickly ask!'d
Uvea of the EBCO Corp., a country's oil-6.5 mlllioo barthe
United
for
all
of
the
countries
in
the
a
say
in
any eventual Arab- the Sinai."
the appeals court to stay his
ment
officials
said
.
rerrtger'ation manufacturing rels per day-t~ow Is imported,
Israel! peace settlement, the · Israeli leaders say , they are basic tapes ruling.
,
firm, wbo bad attended a trade largely from the Organization States will grant Syria $25 Middle East."
mlllioo
in
economic
aid
In
an
Dl
'
plomatic
sources
·
said
sources
said.
willing
to
pull
back
between
20
The
panel
did
so
and
l!lhlbltion.
.
'of Petroleum Exptt ling Counconvened an unusual Saturday
_ Damaseus to Gromyko was invited to The Israeli radio said the and 30 miles from the present heanng
.
• · NOOSE TIGIITENED
tries cartel. Ford wants to cuf effort to convince
·
PNOM PENH (UPI) thoee impol't4 by 2 mlllion follow a moderate course in the Damascus and Cairo to hear U.S. holdups in supplying cease.fire lines as part of an
Middle
East.
_
the
Syrian
and
Egyptian
stand
sophisticated
weaponry
were
interim
settlement
but
DefenSe
"I
don'tbelleve
any lawyer
barrels
per
day.
'
Ccmmunillt forces intensified .
At
!'
!
&lt;
same
time,
the
Israeli
on
.
negotiations
with_
Kissinger,
expected
to
last
WI
til
.
after
Minister
Shimon
P~res
said
the
can
read
~t
(
congressiona~)
Coogress baa !lela)'ed action
~lr drive to throttle Phn!XIl
Penh Saturday, pressing their oo Ford's mtire . energy pro- national radio said the United ,'due in the 'Middle East around Kissinger . launches the next Israelis would not give up the .statute. and n~t understand.the
round Of his "shuttle di· strategic Giddi anp Mitla consUtutio"ll:l questlons ttrha~s~
attack from all ·sides and gram While It conaiden Ford's •States is holding up weapons Feb . 10.
deals
with
Israel
in
~opes
it,
Gromyko
met
with
Syrian
plomacj"
in the .Middle East. ' passes .or their captured. Egyp- .... over pnva1• owners lp,
movi·ng in heavy rein- $18.5 billion quick tax cut for
. ' ·
tiari oiUields: · ·
.
.Miller told the co\11'1.
indlvlduaiB and till jiOi atioJIS'. too, will take" a muderate
filrcements.
'
I • ·'·
(~
.I

'

'

Conn~lly

.
resigns
'

hoard
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford announced the
resignation of John B. 'Con·
nally, the former Tr~sury
secretary indicted on bribery
and perjury charges, from the
Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board Saturday .
Ford's terse announcement
gave no reason for Connally's
resignation from the presidential panel, which reviews the
activities of th• CIA and other
intelligence agencies ,
Connally, 57, a sliver-haired
Texas mlllionalre and a major
Republican political figure ,
was indicted July 29, 1974 on
two counts of taking . bribes,
two counts of lying to a Grand
Jury and one count of conspiracy to commit perjury and
obstruct justice, all in con·
nection with Nixon administration milk fund .c:Ontroversies.
He pleaded innocent and got
the charges separated for trial
purposes, with one trial pending on the bribery . charges
and a second on . the false
testimony charges .
Richard, M. Nixon appointed
Connally to the intelligence
advisory panel on Aug . 1, 1972.
The government accuses
Connally of haying acrepted
$10,000 frorn Texas mill\ lobbyist Jake Jacobsen as
payment !or persuading Nixon
to raise milk price supports.
Nixon subsequently did so but
denied any improper influence
was involved. ·
The perjury and obstruction
of justice charges relate to
Connally's alleged attempt to
cover up his Involvement.
Connally has publicly stated
he refused Jacobsen's offer.
The federal indictment interrupted Connaliy •s me teor ic
rise as a converted Republican
politician of possible Presiden.tial timber.
1n mld-1973, when Watergate
bad begun to destroy the Nixon
White House staff, the former
President and the Republican
· on Conna
party relied
. lly and
former.DefenseSecretaryMel~ Laird to aid Nixon as
special advisers.
Connally, a lifelong Democrat,hadconV.rtect!dRe
. putilicanism in the party's darkest
Watergate ·hours of 1973, and
5eemedtogainpollticalstature
for it.
Until the indictments came
down, -- many considered

~o~~~~~o~ss~~ h~ :~~~~n ~ ~~~n:~:rcan a pre~:~e::t:t

candidate and he ' made no
S&lt;)CI'et be was interested.
· There was even considerable
speculation,. never Confirmed,
that Nixon preferred Connally
to Gerald Ford 88 a vice
presidential choice when Spiro
T. Agnew resigned, and was
talked out of It by Republican
party elders.
' C 0 n n allY en I ere d
Washington politics as an aide
to e&lt;;ngressman Lyhdon B.
Johnson. He rose through
many influential jobs, In·
eluding 'legal adviser· to l'~
ollmen,Navy secretary In 1961,
governor of 'rlllllS from ltiB3 to

a

HECK'SQG.
$1.19
.

. HouSewares Dept.

l.

99~

HECK'S REG.
•1.49

HECK'SRIG. $12.88

HIQC'SIIG. $3,77

HECK'S
REG. •1.44

DEPT

ZIP CAMERA

The President voiced
distaste for such enormous
deficit spending- the amount

.- 4_

•

Catholic leaders call for 'justice

EXTENSION CORDS

~

POLAROID

next."

)

2 Ohio
men die
in crash

POLAROID

PROPANE
FUEL,..l.:.J,.
$ 39

"In short, il the economy
were operating at the rate of
only a year ago, I would not be
forecasting such a ]j!rge difference between revenues and
expeditures," he said. "[n fact,
we would have balanced
budgets both this year and

..'

Arguments
contmue
over tapes

7" PAN AND ROLLER SET

To '4.99

'

new modern lighting.
• Panels easily
removed for cleaning.

/JIIIT.

Heck's Reg.

NEW CEILINGS ADD
BEAUTY and INSULATE TOO!

• Permits choke of

NABWARI

7ft

and eo ry to handle.

ment ~tdds as much to
a 'new modern look as
h id ing old cracked
ceilings or lowering
old fashioned h igh
ceilings . • lns4lates,
wh il e it conceals ducts,
pipes and wiring.

HICK'SRIG.
$3.99

$321.

GAUGE

assistance .

was spending the rest of "the
day working in his office. In the
evening, he and his wile Betty
planned to attend the 28th
"popular notion" that some
"Mardi Gras Ball" given ~y
government expenditures wilf members of the Louisiana
"go on and on whether we like congressional delegation at the
Sheraton Park Hotel . Ford's
·it or not."
daughter
Susan, 17, was chosen
Spending for social welfare
programs, · such as Social to be one of 35 "princesses" at
Security and medicare, are the affair.
The President was expected
getting out of hand and must be
to
take It easy Sunday before
brought under control, , Ford
leaving Monday on an oversaid .
He already has proposed a &gt; night visit to Atlanta, where he
per cent ceiling on increases scheduled two public speeches,
for all government aid pro- a meeting with eight Southern
grams tied to consumer prices governors and a news conferand he indicated Saturday that ence Tuesday.
The visit Is one of an upmany of his recoll)ll1endations
coming
series designed to .help
·for the $17 billion in budget culs
Ford sell his new economic and
would fall in thl.s area.
White House aides said Ford energy conservation proposals,
The President said he is
proposing no new s(iending
programs, except for energy,
and will not accept the

Oil tax
£acmg
• · Road builders'
rev.e rsal plan opposed -.

FALL AND
WINTER CLOTHING

SHOTGUN
SHELLS

-

A Low-Cosi W.oy to
Lower Old FoshionH
High Ceilings. No ·
other home improve·

/JII'T.

ANTIQUE ·KIT

LANTERN

recesslon, and a sharp rise in

government spending in unem- .
ployment beneflls and other

the government would borrow
to make up revenue shortfalls-but said it was necessary
in 1976 to get the country's
staggering economy going
again.
"!am resolved to take those
steps that will make such
deficits unnecessary in the
future. That requires, most of
all , the restoration of a
vigorous economy in this
country," he said.
"We must recognize that, in
times like th,ese, it is good
national policy both to provide
financial support to those
Wlemployed and to introdace a
measured amoWit of additional
stimulus into the private
economy by a tax reduction.
"My budget .. . does just
that."

DETROIT (UP!) -Cash rebates of $200 to $800 being
given to new car buyers pushed auto sales In tbe final 10 -!;l
, days of January up at le.ast a third over mid-month : : ~'&lt;:
:~ deliveries, Industry analysts said Saturday.
;:l
The Jan. 21-31 sales report, due Tuesday and Wed·
nesday, wm be the first In which all lour U.S. automakers
~ offered the cash rebates. Sales In the middle period of
' January were up 41 per cent from the first 10 days, before
the rebates started.
~
Despite
the
two
strong
sales
reports,
analysts
~
contributed to runaway . inOa·
cautioned
that
the
U.
S.
aulo
Industry
hasn't
snapped
oul
~~
tlon and have led to the present
of lis worst postwar sales siUDJp, Close to 180,000 workers ~
mixture of recession and
are on open-ended ]j!yoffs that may not end until mid· 1:1
inflation."
summer.
~
~%~lim:~~::::~:~~: trc;:x&amp;:«:: ~ ": o"t•::::::::::·ect '"·: "~!:::-~-..;:..;s;;~:!~~.·

RED DEVIL

PROP4NE

' He said the budget includeS
no new government programs
other than energy spending, It
covers fiscall976, which hegins
July 1, 1975.
Ford, speaking at a budget
briefing for repot'ters "in the
State Department auditorium,
did not go into many specifics.
But he strongly defended his
proposal for the biggest deficit
on record other than $54.9
billion in 1943 at the peak of
World War U;
"It 1.s a big budget, call.ing for
expenditures of $349 billion - ,
almost $1 bllllon a day," said
Ford.
By comparison, the government has estimated it will
spend $313.4 blllion in the
current fiscal year and the

COLUMBUS '(UPI) - Rep. Chalmers Wylie, R·
Ohio, said Saturday his initial reaction to President
Ford's proposed budget was "one of disap·
pointment" and said he would introduce legislation
asking that an "economic state of emergency" be
declared by Congress.
"I had hopes that the president would make a
better attempt to balance the budget this year, "
Wylie said. "I think his budget might provide for
short term solutions but it has not answered the
ongoing problem of inflation."

'4.99

COLEMAN 2 MANTLE

12, 16 &amp; 20

UOORGRILL

sse

· RIGHT

Americans/' he said.

dedrtroald run around $30
billion.
Ford said the d,eficits antcipated in both 1975 and 1976.
would result largely from the
,combinstion of reduced federal
tax revenues because of the

Wylie unhappy
with Ford plan

DEODORANT

$}299

A RECORD NUMBER OF 3Cl NEW COUPLES was enrolled
in the Belles and Beaus dance class Thursday night. Over several
weeks couples receive instruction in square dancing at the archery building at Royal Oak Park. Upon completion of the course
there are graduation ceremonies. During the period of in·
struction couples who have completed the course assist

newcomers.

ALUMINUM

purpose to a fuller life for all

::1 ~ ~~.~~

special White Hoaae adviser.

'

J.

I

·

�I

.

'

-~

.,

16 - The Swtday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975

17- The Sunda.v,Times • Sentinel , Sunday. Feb. 2; 197&amp;

OU drops
74-69 tilt

RALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) F'reslunan guard Brad Davis
sank a J().foot jump shot with
two seconds left Saturdsy to
give eightit-ranked Maryland a
911-97 upset win over secondranked North Carolina State.
. The Terrapins, ending a twogame Atlantic Coast Conference losing streak, had led
by as many as 18 points in Ute
first hall and were out front by
14 at the hall, 57-43.
But witit All America David
Thompson scoring 25 ol his 38
points in the second hall of the
nationally televised game, the
WoUpack battled back to take

Gamecocks upset
HOUSTON 1UPI I - Otis Bi rdsong had 24 poin l.s. Dunbar
Bi rdsong and Louis Dunbar z:t and Presley 21.
combined for 47 p.oi nts
Houston led at the half 41 -34
Sa turday to lead tile University and pulled away to as mu ch as
of Houston Couga rs to a 90-84 a 12-point lead on Presley's
upse t wi n ove l' the South layup with 8:16 left in the
Carolina Gamecocks.
second half to make it 72.jW.
Houston took the lead to stay
Ale x English led South
with5:30leftin thefirs thalf on Carolina with 25 poinl.s and
two free throws by Maurice T.om Boswell added 22.
Pres ley to ma ke it 27-26 .

on, 64-43

Storm halts golf play
HONOLULU· (U P! ) - The
third round of the $220,000
Hawaiian Open was postponed
Saturday wh en a tropical
storm drenched U1e course.
A spokesnl a ~ said, ,.Today's
round was pos tponed due to
inability to get the course into
condition for play."
PGA offi cials said th e
remainin g rounds or the
tourney wiU be played Sunday
and Monday .

AI Gelberger was leading the
tournament with a total of 135 .
He has a orle-shot lead over
Forrest Fetzler: Eddie Pearce,
Arnold Palmer and Gary Groh.
Geiberger, the pride of U1e
Sacramento Valley, shot a parshattering 66 the first day in
lhe rain. He came back during
Friday's boistrous winds to
card a 69 for his 135 after 72
holes .

Notre Dame thumps Xavier five
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!) Notre Dame jumped out to an
IHl lead and never trailed
Sa turday, getting poinl.s from
all 15 players in a 96-58 romp
over Xavier.
Sophomore Adrian Dantley,
the na tion's leading scorer
entering the game, suffered a
cut over his rig ht eye when he
ran in to a Xavier player with
about seven minutes lert to
play. He was taken out of the
game but still led all scorers

wllh 23 points.
By halrtime. the . fighting
Irish had more thari doubled
Xavier's scoring, holding a 5425 lead. Coach Digger Phelps
began substituting freely witit
five minutes left in the game.
xavier, 7-9 overall, was led
in scoring by Gary Deidrick
with 15 points and ·Mike
Plunkett with 13. Notre Dame,
which hit on 60 per cent of its
shots, is 11-6.

Saturday's College
Basketball Results
By United Press lnternallonal
Georgetown ( DC ) 77 Penn St.

GATORS WIN
GAINESVIlLE, Fla. (UP I)
- Junior forward Gene Shy's
two -foul shots in overtime
Saturday enabled Florida to
break away to a 101-90 win over
Vanderbilt in a Southeastern
''
Conference game.

6ti

.

.MrLLER SHOOTS - Gallipolis forward Cindy Miller
attempts shot against red-bot Southern during Saturday's
GAHS..Southern girls basketball game on Ute Washington
hardwood. The Meigs County team won 64-'13 to remain
unbeaten.

'

CHICAGO I UP!)· - Terry
Ruskowski broke a second
period tie wtt)l his first goal
since Dec. 17 Sa turday to lead
Houstou to a 6-5 World Hockey
Associati on v ictor y ove r
Chicago, the Aeros' l ith
straigh t triumph ove r the
Cougars.
It was Chicago's seven U1loss
in il.s last eight games. The

Co ugars hav e not bea ten
Houston since Dec. 15, 1973.
Andre Hines pulled Houston
in to a 3-3 tie with his 27th goal
on a power play 2: 55 into the
second period . Less than two
minu tes later , Ru skowski
banged in a rebound from 15
fee l out to put the Aeros in front
to stay.
Rich Preston lofted a 3().
foote r over goa lie Cam
Newton 's should er with 51
seconds left in the period to
make it f&gt;-3. Ga ry MacGregor
scored his 25th goal to pull
Chicago within 5-'1 only 47
seconds into the third period .
Murray Ha ll scored three
minutes later wi th his team
short -handed to restore a twogoal edge.
Chicago's Bobby Uddington
scored his second goal of the
game with 4:46 gone in the
period but Houston goalie Ron
Grahame checked lhe Cougars
the rest of Ute way to record his
13 t h vic toq• ag ainst se ven
losses.

RPI 80 Hobart 53
Dayton i6 Loyola ( Ill .) 63
~'""''''&lt;!l':;,.'-=.'*-'~'%'%~'1),Florida 101 Vanderbilt 90, ot
QUEBEC CITY (UP! ) Maryland 98 No. Carolina St. 97
Talks
went into the weekend
Wisconsin 86 Iowa 8.\, ot
on
attempts
to drastically
Boston Coli. 91 Fordham 74
reduce
spending
on Mayor
Bucknell 63 Delaware 62
Jean Drapeau' s village
project to house athletes for
the 1976 Summer Olympics
in Montreal.
MADISON. Wis. 1 UP! ) BIBBYTRADEO
Drapeau's self-linandng
Dale
Koe ltier scored 38 poinl.s,
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Center schemes for the games have
including the winning free
Neal Walk and guard Jim
been under. lire by the
throw with 38 seconds left in
Barnett of the New Orleans Quebec Government for the
the game Saturday. to help the
Jarz were traded Saturday to past two weeks because· of
Wisconsin
Badgers break a !().
the New York Knicksfor Henry high costs.
ga~e losing streak with a
Bibby and an undisclosed
The !Dayor received
comebac
k 86-85 overt ime
amoWlt of cash .
another minor setback
\ 1ic tory over Iowa.
Bibby, one of the NBA's Friday when Fernand
Fred Haberech t led Iowa
deadliest shots from long Lalonde, tile Quebec Cabinet
with
29 poi nts.
distance, never realized his Minister attached to the
The
score was tied 77-77 at
potential after his college games, inYited an o~posltlon
Ute end of regulation time and
championship days with party member, Marcel
Habere cht scored eight
UCLA. Playing behind Walt · Leger,
(lartlclpate in
straight points in the overtime
Frazier, Dick Barnett and Earl ' negotlallons to revise the
to boos t Iowa to an 85-80 lead
. Monroe, Bibby was the benc)l buUdlllg contract for Ute
·wi\h over two minutes
man Knick coach Red Holzman olympic village.
remaining.
DAYTON (UP!) - Wright
called oo to spell ·tbe starling
Leger, a member of the
But
Haberecht
fouled
opt
and
State
, led .by Bob Gro~ with 17
guards.
Pard Quebecois, has been a
the
Badgers
held
Iowa
poi
nts
and Dan Brinkman witit
strong adversary of the
scoreless the rest of the way. 14, p'uUed away from Franklin
permanent Olympic VIllage
1
Ke ohler made one of two free (Ind.) midway in the fir st hall
plan.
.
Utrows ·wi th 38 seconds left to for an easy 87-00 victory over
Tbe talks, which began
give Wisconsin an 86-85 lead, the Grirzlies SatiiJ"day. .
Friday, will continue
ROCKETs TRIUMPH
lheir
first lead of the se(:ond
The Raiders, now 10·7,
NEW YORK (UPI) - nie through lbe weekend In an
hSll.
outscQred
Franklin 26-4 over ·
Houston Rllckets; fighting New attempt to reach a new
Ute
last
10
minutes to take a
A last second shot by Iowa's
agreement with the conYork Knicb and Cleveland for
47-22 lead at
a wlld.au-t! playoff berth in the , tractor. )'be legislative Scott Th('ll'lpson missed and commanding
intennission.
the
Badgers
had
their
first
Big
co\nmisslon investlgat!J!g
NBA Eaatein Conference,
Dan Helm's 15 points was
Ten win in nine conference
costs
of the games reopens
defeated the Kliicb, 115-83, 6n
high
for Franklin, which shot
games. The Badgers are 4-12
the strength of Cai·MIIfP!y's 32 · hearings Tuesday at ~ p.m.
overall and Iowa is 4-S in lhe only 35 per cent for the game
points Saturday ~·
ano . was outrebOwtded &amp;5-37.
. . ·.·.·. ··.·.·=·· -::·:·:·.•·.·········:·:..·:·:-.:··· ,Big Ten and 7-10 overall.

•

loop title with wzn

OUR SEMI-ANNUAL

standings

NOW IN PROGRESS
eSUITS eSPORTCOATS
eCOATS eSLACKS
eALL REDUCED

THE FORD PLAN:

Whe el ersburg 69 Northwest 58
Chilli co th e 47 Portsmouth 42
South Point 57 Coa l Grove 54

Jackson rolls 73-58
over Wellston squad
JACKSON - With four
players scoring in double
· figures the Jackson lronmen
disposed of the visiting
Wellston Golden Rockets 73..58
Friday night to up their luop
record to 7-4.
The underdog Rockets, now
1-10 in SEOAL competition,
played well in the early going
as Jackson led just 16-14 after
the first period.
Early in the second period
the Rockel.s managed to tie lhe
score at 18-18 before the
lronmen went on ,a tear and
outscored Ute visitors 23-5 to
take a 41-23 halftime lead.
Mike McDonald led the
balanced Jackson attack with
15 poinl.s with Steve Morr~w
and Mark Buchanan each'
getting 13, and.Greg Fannin 12.
Randy Peoples swished. 14
points for Wellston with
Rodger wng adding 13.
Jackson hit well from the
floor as the lronmen connected
on 30 of &amp;8 attempl.s for 52 pet.
and 13 of 24 free throws .
Wellston finished witit 34 pet.
on 23 of 67 from the floor and 12

1Oth win 87-60

.......

'

THE BLOCK PLAN:
rebates

2. Would !(i ve a ma ximum $1,000 reba te to
th ose with a n income tax of $8,333.
tMosl taxp ayers wit h incom es of $40,000
or more wo uld receive a $1,000 rebate.)

J . .Would g ive th e la rges t rebates to those
wh o a re leas t likely to s pend the mon ey .

4. Would ba s e the tax rebate
mn ou nt of t he 1974 tax pa id .

on · the

1. Would give graduated declining percentage rebates totaling ari amount to be
determined by Congress.
2. Would give a maximum 40% tax rebate
at lowest income levels declining to zero
for those with an Adjusted Gross Income in excess of $40,000.

3. Would give the largest rebates to low
and middle income persons most in need
of tax relief and most likely to spend
the money.
4: Would base the tax rebate percentAge
on Adjusted Gross Income and then
apply it to the tax ... eliminating addi,t ional tax advantage to those already
benefiting from tax shelters.

bbC:Llb

of 20 at the charity line.
The Jronmen pulled down 45
rebounds witit Mark Buchanan
grabbing i2 missed shol.s while ·
Terry McKinniss picked off 12
of Wellston's 34 snags.
The box score:
WELLSTON ( S8l - Sc ites 23-7 ; P e oples 7-0-14 ; Arnold 2-4·
8 ; Gill 3-2-8 ; McK innl s s 2 - ~ - 4 ;

rip Vikings
International Hockey
L e a~ue Standings
By United Press International
Norttl
w. 1. t . pts gf ga
saginaw 32 19 2 66 204 172
F l i n1
31 16 4 66 193 146
Mu skegon JO 20 2 62 212 149
Pt Huron 21 26 3 .:15 168 177
K81ama . 13 32 3 29 130 185
12 28 I 25 145 217
x -Lan s..
• South
w. 1. t. pts gl ga
Dayt on
32 15. 3 67 207 171
Columbus 29 22 1 59 215 _188
Tole~
22 27 3 .:17 188 190

Des

Moines
21 28 3 34 17 4 199
Ft. wayn~ 1,8 28 3 39 170 191
x -team disbanded
·
Friday's Results
Des MOines 5 Fort Wayne 2
Muskegon 6 Dayton 4 . ·
Kalamazoo S F lint 3

n:rw r or .. wow ....
Week of February 3, 1975

.,. ;

~~

8111!11

DATE-GYMNASIUM
Feb. 3 4-8 p.m. Community Dance
4-8 p.m . Athletics

POOL

8-9: 30 p.m. Open Recreation

8-9:30 p.m.
Open Swim

.4: 15p.m. Women vs . Ohio Dominican

9: 30· 12 m lntramurals

Feb. 4 4-8 :p.m. Athletics

WRITE TH E PRESIDENT, YOUR REPRESENTATIVES AND SENATORS - Ma)te your
views know n , whichever plan you prefer. They are the ones who will pass and approve
s uch legislation .

8-9:30 p.m. Open Recreation

9:30-12 m. lntramurals
Feb. s 6 p.m. JV:s vs. Ohio Dominican

vs. Ohio ~miniC:an
9:30-12m . lntramurals
Feb. 6 4-8 p.m. Athletics
.
·
.
7:30p.m. Women vs ..Marletta
8 p.m . Varsity

FI LE EARLY - The Internal Revenue Service is urging taxpayers to file their returns early.

It is likely · that th e s ooner the return is filed the sooner the taxpayer will receive any rebate

to a regular tax refund . . . the sooner

9: JQ-12 lntramurals
Feb. 7 4-8 p.m. Athlet11:s
8-9:30 p.m. Open Recreation

"
If you have any questions about your income- taxes . . . visit or ·call any
one of our mora than , 7,000 offic.es nationwide. Thera is never a charge .for
tilx information or for answering your questions.

Feb. 8 1 p.m, Track Club Rood Race
2-4 Open Recreation

l '

POOL CLOSED

'

6-e' p.m:
Scuba Diving
POOL CLOSED

•

•

'

I

·'

CHESAPE11KE
Chesapeake's
offensively
potent Panthers broke the
century mark for the second
· time in a week Friday night
when it roared to a 103-70
triumph over Symmes Valley.
Evening their record to 6-6,
the Pan titers were sparked by
four starters in double figures.
Twelve Chesapeake players
scored in the romp. Roger
Adkins led the balanced
scoring with 20 points, while
Kevin Rice added 19 and Dale
Russell 14.
J.
A . Myers 23, Myers 2, Sctlaffer
17 , Brammer 23, Estep 5.
CHESAPEAKE {1031 McKinney 8, Johnson 1 2,
Adk i ns 20, Dale Russell - 14,
Rice 19, J~nk l ns 8, Marshal l 6,
McGuire 6 , CoK 4, McW!)orter
2, Ooak P!ussel l 2. Mar cum 2.
Score by quarters:
S. Valley
14 15 21 20- 70
&lt;;hesapeake, 21 29 22 31 - 103

'

SYMMES VALLEY (70) -

PALM' SPRINGS, Calif.
(UPI) - Rnscoe Tanner of
Lookout Mowttain Tenn., gave
the U.S. a 1-1 split of its Davis
Cup match with Mexico Friday
· by defeating Rnbe'\0 Chavez,
&amp;-1, 6-3, 6-3.
in the oPening singles match,
Mexico's Raul flarnil'ez upset
· Stan
Smith, 3-6, .6-4,
&amp;-I, ~.
'

2-A p.rt] .
Open Swim

7-9 p.m. Open RO&lt;reatlcin

•'

8-9:30 p.m.
Open Swim

8-9:30 p.m.
Open Swim

'

5:45 p.m. JV's vs. Springfield
8 p.m. Varsity vs. Malone .
Feb. 9 2·4 p.m. Open Recre~~tton . ·

-,

Long 6-1-13; Millike n 1-:.1 -4.
TOTALS 23· 11· 58.
JACKSON (73) - McDonald
7-1-15 ; Fannin 4-4-12 ; M"orrow
6 1 -13 ; 1 Buchanan
5 -3·-13 ;
Osborne 1-1·7 ; Schmid 1-0·2;
Grillo 1-1-3 ; Coli 1-2-4; Swingle
2-0 -4. TOTALS 30-13-73.
Score by quarters :
'
Wells ton
14 9 14 21-SB
Jackson
16 25 15 17- 73
Reserves :
J ack son
37
Wellston 36.

Pro Standings Panthers

LYNE CENTER GYM&amp; POOL SCHEDULE

WHAT SHOULD YOU DO?

permitted by n ew legislation. And, if you are entitled
yo u file, the s oon er y ou will r eceive it.

attempts tor 42.9 percent. The
Gallians were I~ of 19 at the ·
chari ty line (68.4 percent).
Gallipolis had 17 personals, 32
rebounds and a season-low nine
turnovers .
Niday led the Devils in
scoring with 22 points. Sickles
had 14 and Snowden 10. Tom
Valentine had tO rebounds and'
Sickles nine .
Logan shot a cool 33 percent
from the field, sinking 18 of &gt;4
attempts. The Chiefs were
better at the foul circles, hit·
ling 19 ol 25 for 76 'percent•.

cLASH AT MID-COURT - Logan's Jan Myers (20) and
Gallia's Tom Valentine scramble for lodse ball at Logan's
Hilltop Gym during Friday's SEOAL hardwood contest. On

wgan had 22 personals and 38
rebowtds. The Chiefs had 18
turnovers.
Mi~h Wright led Logan's
attack with 17 points. Don
Young added 14 and Jim
Kemper 11. Kemper and
Dennis Fuller each had nine •
rebounds for the lanky
Chieftains. Wright h8d eight.
Gallipolis will host newlycrowned champion Waverly
Friday. The Chieftains travel
to Meigs. Tuesday, Logan will
host NelSonville-York in a nonleague game.

left is wgan's Mitch Wright. IDue Devil Tony Folden (10)
right, and Logan's Mike McBroom (10) look on. (Steve
Wilson photos).

GAHS-Logan box...

Imps in third
Basketball · all alone after win

Following the announcement of President Ford's proposed income tax rebate
plan for individuals. I recommended an alternate plan to both the President
and Congressional leaders. I believe my plan is more equitable and would
maximize the economic impact. Hera's how I compare the two plans·:

1. Would !rive fl a t 12 percent
totalin g $ 12 billio n.

minutes uf the third stanzu. peri od, 57-44 with 2:27
Mike MrBroom's two charity remaining and 58-45 at the 1:55
tosses with 3:51 left in the mark.
period gave Logun its final lead · 'The Chieftains never gave .
of the gume. Mike Sickles up. Coach Scott Fitzg~ra ld 's
ra nued two charity tosses luds came back to oul.score the
(3:23) to mukc 1132-31. That put Gallians 1().3 during the final90
GAHS ahead to stay.
seconds of play. At'One point,
Field goals by Tom Valen- the Chiefs cut Gallia 's margin
:tine, Jim Niday and Gary to four, 59-55. with 21 seconds
Snowden and charity tosses by left. Niday 's backhanded layup
.Folden and Sickles gave the at the buzzer completed !he
Gallians a 41-34 advantage game's scoring . It was Gallia's
after three periods ..
JJth straight win uver Logan
GAHS built up a 13-point since the 196~70 campaign ..
advantage twice in the final
GAHS hit 24 of 56 field goal

Waverly gains tie for

.

Raiders post

•

the lead with 1:22 left in the time out and then put the ball ill
play with one second showlnl
game at~ .
The· two teams exchanged on the clock. But Stoddard'a
steals and possession of Ute inbound pass to Thompson at
ball wttil Owen Brown, fouled th·e other end of the court waa
by N. C. Stale's Tim Stoddard, blocked .a s the game ended.
Maryland's victory was Ita
made a pair of free throws to
put Maryland back on top at~ second this season over tbe
Wolfpack and gave the Terps a
95 with 28 seconda to go.
Thompson made two at lhe 14-3 overall record and a 5-3
line 10 seconds later after he mark in the conference.
North Carolina Slate, which
was fouled by Steve Sheppard.
Mary land then got Ute ball and had not lost at Reynolda
held it for the final shot of the Colisell11l in 36 home games,
game which Davis took and feU to 1~ overall and 4-2 in the
'ACC.
made good.
North Carolina State called
Maurice Howard led the
Terps with 29 points and Brown
added 23. Davis chipped in witb
18 and John Lucas had 12.
In addition to Thompson,
whose 38 points gave him a
career scoring, record for the
school, N. C. State had two
players in double figures,
Kenny Carr with 20 and
Maurive Rivers wilh 14.
Maryland hit a phenomenal
points in the second half.
68 per cent of its flrst-balf shots
Rick Schmidt, who matched and outrebounded Nortb
up against Furlow on bolh Carolina State 19-12 before
offense and defense, led Illi~ois intermission.
'
with 17 poinl.s. At one stage
The Wallpack in tbe first half
midway in the second hall, the had lr011ble getting the ball
two players exchanged blows inaide and wowtd up wilh a
but no infractions were first half shooting mark of 46
assessed and they shook hands per cent.
about three minutes later.

Aeros whip Cougars An Open · Letter To The Public From
Henry Block Of H&amp;R Bl9ck
11th time in row
Regarding Income
Tax Rebates.
.

Badgers
end losing
streak 86-85

.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!) Junior Terry Furlow scored 19
poinl.s in Ute first hall while
Michigan State built a 35-25
lead and the Spartans held
command the rest of Ute way
Saturday for a 75-60 Big Ten
victory over cold-shooting
Illinois.
MichigawState raised il.s Big
Ten record to 5-'1 and il.s OV£rall
GALLII'OIJS - Southern's
mark to 11-6 while Illinois fell
powerful girls baske !ball team
to :J..6 in the conference and 7-10
rolled over host Gallipolis 64-43 overall.
on the Washington hardwood to
Furlow, who entered the
remain
unbeaten
here game as conference's third
Saturday afternoon .
leading scorer, finished with 27
The loss left Coach Jackie
poinl.s, hitting on 11-of-19 shots.
Knight's gals with a 2-2 season
Wi tit I :30 left in the first half,
record. Both GAHS losses have
Furlow hit a basket from Ute
been to Southern .
left corner to give him 19 points
The visitors were on top 15·11
and equal the entire scoring
after one period of pl ay.
output of the Illinois team. The
Southern piled up 24 points in Spartans led 3().!9 at that point.
the second stanza and limited
lllinois, shooting 30 per cent
the Gallians to three, giving
from Ute field for the game,
Coach Connie Andrews gals a
never got closer than eight
comfortable 39-14 halftime
advantage. It was 47-23 after
three periods of play . The Blue
Angels outscored Southern 2(). the Blue Angels play at
17 in the final canto.
Nelsonville-York.
Jennifer Musgrave paced the
Box score of Saturday 's
Tornad o ladies with 16 varsity game :
markers . Sheryl Larkins added
SOUTHERN
(64)
13.and Brenda Lawrence nine. Musgrave 8-0-16 ; Larkins 5-3Karen Sprague led Gallia's 13; Lawrence 4-1-9; roush 3-1attack with nine points. Barb 7; Sayre 4-0-8; Koy 2-0-4;
Ritchart 2-0-4; Ord 1-0-2;
Edelman, Amy Carter each Roseberry -1-1. TOTALS 29-4had eight and Brenda Wilson 64.
BLUE ANGELS (43) seven.
Sprague
4-1 -9; Edelman 3·2-8;
In Saturday's preliminary Carter 3-2-8;
Wilson 2·3-7; Wall
game, the GAHS freshmen 3-0-6; Miller 1-1-3; Young 1-0-2 .
were defeated 6().34 by Pt. TOTALS 17-9-43.
Score by quarters:
Pleasant. The frosh will play at Soothern
15 24 8 17~
Pt. Pleasant Thursday while _Blue Angels
11 3 9 2Q-43

Southern
gals roll

opening 20 minutes.
Loyola, paced by Tony
Parker with 21 points,
managed to cut the margin to
nine points on a couple occasions in Ute second hall but
·could get no closer.
Allen Elijah had 17 points
and Jim Testerman 14 for
Dayton, while Ralph Vallot
scored 16 and Rodney Callihan
15 for the Ramblers, also now
8-9.

LOGAN
- . Gallipoli s'
remained in a tie for third
place with Jackson in tile
Southeaste rn Ohi o Leagu e
cage standings foll owing a 6!55 triun1ph over Logan before
900 parenl.s ' night fans here
Friday night.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils, now 11-6 on the year and
74 in conference play, fell
behind 7-0 during the fird two
minutes of pla y.
Logan was ahead 2-0 before
the opening tip as a result of
two technical fouls against
GAHS for touching tbe rilJI of
lhe basket during warmups.
· After Mitch Wright's two
pre--game charity tosses,
Logan Center Don Young got
an eas)' layup and a free throw
and Jim Kemper popped io a
·• tong jumper with 5:48 showing
on the clock to make it 7-0. It
looked like the Chieftains were
going to avenge that 63-50 loss
at Gautpolls back in December.
Mike Sickles broke the ice for
GAHS with a layup at the 5:34
mark. Tony Folden's driving
layup cut Logan's margin to 7-'1
with 5:09 left in the stanza.
After Sickles' crip with 3:38
left, lanky Denhis Fuller put
LHS on top 9-6. Fuller's free
YOUNG SCORES - Logan's 6-4 senior center Don Young (40) eludes Gallia 's Tom
Valentine (22) and Mike Sickles (30) for a twin-pointer during Friday's GAHS-Logan cage
throw (1:53) made it 10-6.
llllcounter at wgan. GAHS downed the Chieftains, 61..55.
Folden reduced it to !().8 with
1:32 left.
Jim Niday scored two goals
within !Oseconds to give GAHS
its first lead of the game, 12-10.
Kemper's long jwnper at the
0:09 mark tied it 12-all.
In the second stanza, the lead
exchanged hands three times
and the score was tied five
times. Mitch Wright's long
jwnper with seven seconds left
in the half put the Chiefs on top
for
37
pet.,
and
12
of
26
free
With
just
2:14
remaining
in
26-24 during intermission.
·WAVERLY- Coach Carroll
Hawhee's Waverly Tigers the contes t Waverly had out- throws.
The teams battled on even
Tim Duduit hauled down 18 terms during the first five
played defense Friday night score-d Athens 22-3 and were
and the result was a convincing .riding atop a huge 56-32 leed- of the Tigers' 31 rebounds while
All five Tiger players scored Randy Horn picked off eight of ------------~-,
61-40 ·victory over the visiting
in double figures with four 25 Bulldog missed shots.
Athens Bulldogs.
The sticky Waverly defense
;rhe big win puts the Tigers players getting a dozen poinl.s
forced
Athens into 26 costly
each
as
the
well-balanced
into at least a tie for the
turnovers
while the Tigers
SEOAL championship with an attack continues.
Doug Tracy, Joe Holland, turned the ball over just II
11-0 record with only three
Tim
Duduit, and Tom Pfeifer times.
games remaining while the
ATHENS (40) ~ Chon k o J .Q.
all
had
12 while Butch Laswell
ALL GAMES
Bulldogs slipped into sixth
6; Ellwood J. J.J ; Faulkn er 2+
Te.am
W L
P
OP
had 16.
place at 4-7.
8; Gr e e r 3-2-8 ; Horn l -4-6;
14 1 939 771
waver l y
None of. the Athens players Da i l ey 2-1-5; Bla ckford 1-0-2; Wh eele r sburg 13 2 923 758
Waverly led by quarter
1-0 ·2. TOTALS 14· 12 -40 .
Hannan Trace 12 2 973 756
reached
twin-figures as Bill Heady
scored of 14-10, 25·15, and 36-29.
WAVERLY(6ll - Tracy 4-4 ·
South Point
12 4 1077 940
12; Holland 5-2 -12; Duduit 5-2·
9 5 79 6 777
J acksQn
However, the Tigers came Greer and Matt Faulkner each 12
; Pfe i fer 6-0-12 ; La swell 5·0·
9 s 929 856
!rontoh
out shooting in the fourth had eight markers.
10 ; Whal ey 0-2-2; Thoma s 0 -1-1.
G allipoli s
8 6 81 4 733
Statistics show Waverly TOTALS 25·11-61.
Logan
8 6 87 0 811
quarter, hit six of their first
Score by quarters :
Portsmouth
7 7 837 811
25
of
61
shots
for
41
pet.
hitting
seven shot.s, and tallied 12
Athens
10 5 14 11- 40
Athens
s
10 852 857
14 11 11 25 - 61
Wellston
2 12 6 93 935
wtanswered points to jwnp into and converting II of 16 at the Waverly
Reserves :
Waverly
43,
M e igs
1 13 768 909
line while Athens made 14 of 38 A t hens 34.
a conunanding 48-29 lead.
Area results:

Spartans trip
Illini, 75-60

TOUGH DEFENSE - Three Southern high school players surround a GAHS Blue Angel
during Saturday's contest on Washington hardwood at Gallipolis. Left to right are Brenda
Lawrence (13), Becky Sayre ( 14) ~ nd Jennifer Musgrave (21) . Southern won, 64-'13.

Flyers
end streak 76-63
. .
D A Y T 0 N (UP! ) Sophomore guard Johnny
Davis scored 22 points
Saturday to lead u,a University
of Dayton to a 71Hi3 victory
over cold-shooting Loyola of
Chicago, ending lhe Flyers'
titree-game losing streak.
Dayton, now 8-9 on Ute year,
jumped to quick 18-4 edge and
led J9..23 at halftime over Ute
Ramblers, who shot only 23 per
cent from Ute floor in the

Gallipolis trips Logan

Pack upset in
inal secon.d s.

•
KENT, Ohio (UP! ) - Fresh· a jumper by Jamison with 9:49
man guard Tony Jam ison remaining in the game gave
came off the bench Sa turday to the Flashes the lead for good,
scored 24 points and lead Kent 49-'18. Kent led 61..52 with ~: 30
State to a 7~9 Mid-America n left to play .
Walter Luckett , the MAC's
Conference victory over Ohio
leading scorer, led the Bobcats
University.
The win was the second in a with 20 points, but went 13
row over a conference title minut es during the latter
contender for the Flashes, who stages of the second hall
had dropped their first six wilhout a point.
George Gr een added IS
MAC games.
points
and Scott Love 14 for the
After an eve n fir st 10
Bobcats,
while
Randy
mir.utes, Kent surged to a 35-20
lead and still held a 37-26 Felhaber had H and Brad
Robinson and freshman Mike
margin at the intermission .
The Bobcats, now 4-'1 in the Miller 10 each for the Flashes,
conference and 9~ overall , now 2-6 in the MAC and 4-12
rallied to grab a 46-'15 lead , bu t overa ll.

.'

'

lndep.
·

CIDCAGO (UPl) - World

Football League President
Olris
Hemmeter said Friday a
2-4 p.m.
Open Swim . decision would be made about
· 1-9 p,m.
March 15 oo whether or not the
Open Swim
Jeague would operate again
next season. , . j

SEOAL VARSITY
W. L
Fl
Waverly
11 0 707

T eam

Ironton
a 3 13 1
Gallipoli s
7 4 665
Jac kson
7 4 618
Logan
s 6 683
4 7 618
A t hens
Well st on
1 10 545
Meig s
1 10 619
TOTALS
44 44 S186
Friday's results:
Gatlipolis 61 Logan 55
Waverly 61 Athen s 40
Ironton 67 Meigs .59
Ja c kson 73 Wellston 58

OP

580
658
579
618
64 2
601
.77 8
730
5186

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L
P
OP
waver ly
· 9 2 450 341
Athens
8 3 500 399
Gallipolis
7 A 428 414
Meigs
6 5 417 361
Logan
6 s 471 417
Jackson
5 6 442 457
·Ironton
3 8 410 48 0
Wellston
o 11 341 590
TOTALS
-44 44 3459 3459
Friday's results:
Gall ipolis 43 Logan 36
Waverly 43 Athens 34
Ironton 42 Meig s 39
Ja c kson 37 Wellston J-6
Feb. 4 games:
Nelsonvill e-York at Logan
Southwestern at Hannan Trac e
Feb. 7 games :
Hannan Trace a t Tr i mbl e
waverly at Gallipoli s
A t hens at Wellston
Jac kson at Ironton
t.ogan at Meig s
Whee l ersburg a t No r thwe st
South Po i nt at Roc k Hill

Feb. 8 games :
Wellston at Oak Hill
Portsmouth at Gallipol is

SEOAL FRESHMEN
Team
W L P OP
Logan
9 2 · 522 337
Athens
8 3 427 389
Gallipolis
8 3 495 432
Waverly
7 4 433 359
Meigs
5 6 437 439
Ironton
3 8 363 &lt;W2
Jackson
3 8 358 482
Wellston
I 10 290 485
TOTALS
44 44 3325 3325
Thursday's results :

Logan 62 Galllp,olls 32
Athens 32 Waverly 3t
Meigs &lt;W lropton 38
Wellston 37 Jacksqn 3.4

Feb. 6 games:

Gallipolis at Waver ly
Wellston at Athens
Meigs at Logan

. Ironton at JJackson

Woman wants
football job
ROCKY RIVER, Ohio (UP!)
'-- Alice Robinson wants to be
the football coach of Ute Rocky
',River High School team.
·Mrs. Robinson, a social
studies teacher at th,e suburban
Cleveland high school, bas
applied to replace the head
coach who quit in frustration
after three losing seasons.'
. If Mrs. Robinson whO· says
she's a football buff, would get
lhe job, she'd have her work
cut out for her. The team los\ 22
games straight prior to lheir·
first victory las!' year. The 1974
re~ord was 2-7.

..

J.

....

LOGAN - Gallia Academy
High School's Blue Imps
reserve team took over undisputed third place in the
SEOAL standings Friday night
following a hard-fought 43-36
triumph over Coach Jack·
Elgin's Logan Papooses.
The Imps, 9..5 on the yeQr and
7-'1 in conference play, will now
prepare for Friday's invasion
of league-leading Waverly (~
2). The Tiger Cubs humiliated
the Imps 52-24 at Waverly on
Jan . 3.
At Logan Friday , David
(Little C) Warren hogged the
backboards witit 14 caroms
while the Imps displayed a
balanced scoring attack in
posting their second win of the
year over Logan.
Gary Swain, despite early
foul trouble, managed to toss in
13 poinl.s. Kent Epling and
Keith Jackson chipped in with
eight apiece and Warren, in his
best effort of the season, added
six. Kev Jackson and Don Bush
each had four markers. Mike
Dressel and Jerry Wade came

PU\YER-Pos.
Mike Sickles, I
Tom Valentine, c
Jim Niday, g
Tony Folden, I
.Gary Snowden, g
Jim Warren. c
Brett Wilson , g
TOTALS

off the bench and turned in
0-0
0·0
I
0
I
0
good performances for the
24-56 13-19 11 32
9 61
winners.
LOGAN CHIEFTAINS (55)
The Imps hit 18 of 34 field PLAYER-Pas.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
0-3 o.o 2 0 6 . 0
goal attempts for 52 percent. Jan Myers, g
Scott Gosnell, g
0
0·2 0·1 4 0 I
GAHS was seven of II at the Jim Kemper, f
3-13 5-6
3
9
1 11
charity line . Coach Buddy Don Young, c
5-12
4-6 5 7
I
14
5-8 7-8 4 8 2 17
Moore's team had 20 personals, Mitch Wright, I
Dennis Fuller. c
3-9
1-2
2
9
4
1
29 rebounds and 14 turnovers. Mike
McBroom , f
6
2-3 2·2 0 2 ·I
Guard Brian Hawk paced the Bi ll Seel, I
0-3 0-0 I 2 0 0
I
0
0
0-1 0-0 I
Papooses, now 6-5 inside Ute Tim Mulholland. g
TOTALS
'16
55
18·54 lt-25 22
38
loop, with 11 points. The home
Score by quarters:
club had a bad night at the ' GAHS Blue Devi ls
12 12 17 20 - 6t
12 14 8 21 - 55
charity line, sinking only eight Logan Chieftains
Officials
Tom
Frampton,
Musklngum
·Valley Chapter &amp;
of 25 gratis shol.s.
Larry Moyer. Licking Valley Chapter.
GAHS trailed 11-6 after one
period. It was 18-16 at halftime
in favor of the Blue Imps. The
Mooremen were on top 3i-23
after three periods.
Box score:
GAHS BLUE IMPS t4ll -

Kt . Ja c kson, 3 - 2-B;
Kev .
Ja c kson , 2-0 -4 ; Swain , 5-3 -13 ;
Warren , 2-2-6: Epling , 4-0-8 ;
Wade. 0 -0-0 ; Dressel. (),Q.Q;
Bush , 2 -0 · 4. TOTALS 18·7-43.
LOGAN PAPOOSES (361 L anning , 1-0·2 ,' Hawk , 4-3-11 ;
C all, 3 · 1-7; Russell. l -0 -2;
Wrighl. 2· 1·5 ; Davidson , 2-0 -4 ;
Peppel'S, D-0-0; Sm ith , 0·2-2;
Cl.ark , 0 -0-0 ; Dollison, 1·0-2;
Aiken, 0 -1· 1. TOTALS 14-8·3'6.
Score by quarters :
Blue Imps
6 12 13 12- 43
Papooses
8 8 7 13- 36

Triple A drawing set
Feb. 9 at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - Drawing
for the seven-team Class AAA
Sectional Basketball Tournament will be held at Lyne
Center here on-Sunday, Feb. 9,
beginning at 2 p.m.
was
announced
This
Saturday by . Arthur W.
Lanham, tournament
manager.
Participants are Athens,
Chillicothe, Lancaster, Logan,
Marietta ' Portsmouth · and
Miami Trace.
· The Triple A Sectional dates
are Feb. 20, 21, 22 and 27 and
March I.
,.
The upper bracket winner
and lower bracket winner will
both advance to Ute Triple A
District, to be held at Ohio
University's Convocation
Center.
Coaches must bring an
eligibility sheet and team
roster to the drawing for

.

program information.
No pep bands, noise makers,
signs or banners will be permitted.
Two teams will be seeded by
the participating coaches.
To determine the seeds a
point system will be used . A
first place vote is worth three
points and a second place vote ·
is worlh one point. The ·~am
witit the most points will be
seeded first and the team with
the second highest number of
points will be seeded second.
NEWYORK(UPI) -Filbert
· Bay! of Tanzania rocketed to
the front after ihe second iap of
the Milirose GameS Wanamak-'
er Mile and stayed Utere
· throughout Friday night, bolding off a desperate fi!Jiahing
kick from Brigham Yowtg's
Paul Cummings to win in a
meet record time of 3:59.3.

~INSULATlON_;_·

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
-Fire Retardant..free. Estimates~
. No ObUgatioia

·'

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT·
'

GAHS BLUE DEVILS (61)
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
14
5·9 4-4
4
9
~
I
4·9
0-2 3 10
8
' 8-19 6-7
3
I
22
5
3-9 1-2 . 2
7
2
2
4-9
2-4 3 3 2 10
3
0·1 0-0 I
0
0

Middleport, Oh.io

.
.'

l

I

,,
,,

�I

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-~

.,

16 - The Swtday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975

17- The Sunda.v,Times • Sentinel , Sunday. Feb. 2; 197&amp;

OU drops
74-69 tilt

RALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) F'reslunan guard Brad Davis
sank a J().foot jump shot with
two seconds left Saturdsy to
give eightit-ranked Maryland a
911-97 upset win over secondranked North Carolina State.
. The Terrapins, ending a twogame Atlantic Coast Conference losing streak, had led
by as many as 18 points in Ute
first hall and were out front by
14 at the hall, 57-43.
But witit All America David
Thompson scoring 25 ol his 38
points in the second hall of the
nationally televised game, the
WoUpack battled back to take

Gamecocks upset
HOUSTON 1UPI I - Otis Bi rdsong had 24 poin l.s. Dunbar
Bi rdsong and Louis Dunbar z:t and Presley 21.
combined for 47 p.oi nts
Houston led at the half 41 -34
Sa turday to lead tile University and pulled away to as mu ch as
of Houston Couga rs to a 90-84 a 12-point lead on Presley's
upse t wi n ove l' the South layup with 8:16 left in the
Carolina Gamecocks.
second half to make it 72.jW.
Houston took the lead to stay
Ale x English led South
with5:30leftin thefirs thalf on Carolina with 25 poinl.s and
two free throws by Maurice T.om Boswell added 22.
Pres ley to ma ke it 27-26 .

on, 64-43

Storm halts golf play
HONOLULU· (U P! ) - The
third round of the $220,000
Hawaiian Open was postponed
Saturday wh en a tropical
storm drenched U1e course.
A spokesnl a ~ said, ,.Today's
round was pos tponed due to
inability to get the course into
condition for play."
PGA offi cials said th e
remainin g rounds or the
tourney wiU be played Sunday
and Monday .

AI Gelberger was leading the
tournament with a total of 135 .
He has a orle-shot lead over
Forrest Fetzler: Eddie Pearce,
Arnold Palmer and Gary Groh.
Geiberger, the pride of U1e
Sacramento Valley, shot a parshattering 66 the first day in
lhe rain. He came back during
Friday's boistrous winds to
card a 69 for his 135 after 72
holes .

Notre Dame thumps Xavier five
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!) Notre Dame jumped out to an
IHl lead and never trailed
Sa turday, getting poinl.s from
all 15 players in a 96-58 romp
over Xavier.
Sophomore Adrian Dantley,
the na tion's leading scorer
entering the game, suffered a
cut over his rig ht eye when he
ran in to a Xavier player with
about seven minutes lert to
play. He was taken out of the
game but still led all scorers

wllh 23 points.
By halrtime. the . fighting
Irish had more thari doubled
Xavier's scoring, holding a 5425 lead. Coach Digger Phelps
began substituting freely witit
five minutes left in the game.
xavier, 7-9 overall, was led
in scoring by Gary Deidrick
with 15 points and ·Mike
Plunkett with 13. Notre Dame,
which hit on 60 per cent of its
shots, is 11-6.

Saturday's College
Basketball Results
By United Press lnternallonal
Georgetown ( DC ) 77 Penn St.

GATORS WIN
GAINESVIlLE, Fla. (UP I)
- Junior forward Gene Shy's
two -foul shots in overtime
Saturday enabled Florida to
break away to a 101-90 win over
Vanderbilt in a Southeastern
''
Conference game.

6ti

.

.MrLLER SHOOTS - Gallipolis forward Cindy Miller
attempts shot against red-bot Southern during Saturday's
GAHS..Southern girls basketball game on Ute Washington
hardwood. The Meigs County team won 64-'13 to remain
unbeaten.

'

CHICAGO I UP!)· - Terry
Ruskowski broke a second
period tie wtt)l his first goal
since Dec. 17 Sa turday to lead
Houstou to a 6-5 World Hockey
Associati on v ictor y ove r
Chicago, the Aeros' l ith
straigh t triumph ove r the
Cougars.
It was Chicago's seven U1loss
in il.s last eight games. The

Co ugars hav e not bea ten
Houston since Dec. 15, 1973.
Andre Hines pulled Houston
in to a 3-3 tie with his 27th goal
on a power play 2: 55 into the
second period . Less than two
minu tes later , Ru skowski
banged in a rebound from 15
fee l out to put the Aeros in front
to stay.
Rich Preston lofted a 3().
foote r over goa lie Cam
Newton 's should er with 51
seconds left in the period to
make it f&gt;-3. Ga ry MacGregor
scored his 25th goal to pull
Chicago within 5-'1 only 47
seconds into the third period .
Murray Ha ll scored three
minutes later wi th his team
short -handed to restore a twogoal edge.
Chicago's Bobby Uddington
scored his second goal of the
game with 4:46 gone in the
period but Houston goalie Ron
Grahame checked lhe Cougars
the rest of Ute way to record his
13 t h vic toq• ag ainst se ven
losses.

RPI 80 Hobart 53
Dayton i6 Loyola ( Ill .) 63
~'""''''&lt;!l':;,.'-=.'*-'~'%'%~'1),Florida 101 Vanderbilt 90, ot
QUEBEC CITY (UP! ) Maryland 98 No. Carolina St. 97
Talks
went into the weekend
Wisconsin 86 Iowa 8.\, ot
on
attempts
to drastically
Boston Coli. 91 Fordham 74
reduce
spending
on Mayor
Bucknell 63 Delaware 62
Jean Drapeau' s village
project to house athletes for
the 1976 Summer Olympics
in Montreal.
MADISON. Wis. 1 UP! ) BIBBYTRADEO
Drapeau's self-linandng
Dale
Koe ltier scored 38 poinl.s,
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Center schemes for the games have
including the winning free
Neal Walk and guard Jim
been under. lire by the
throw with 38 seconds left in
Barnett of the New Orleans Quebec Government for the
the game Saturday. to help the
Jarz were traded Saturday to past two weeks because· of
Wisconsin
Badgers break a !().
the New York Knicksfor Henry high costs.
ga~e losing streak with a
Bibby and an undisclosed
The !Dayor received
comebac
k 86-85 overt ime
amoWlt of cash .
another minor setback
\ 1ic tory over Iowa.
Bibby, one of the NBA's Friday when Fernand
Fred Haberech t led Iowa
deadliest shots from long Lalonde, tile Quebec Cabinet
with
29 poi nts.
distance, never realized his Minister attached to the
The
score was tied 77-77 at
potential after his college games, inYited an o~posltlon
Ute end of regulation time and
championship days with party member, Marcel
Habere cht scored eight
UCLA. Playing behind Walt · Leger,
(lartlclpate in
straight points in the overtime
Frazier, Dick Barnett and Earl ' negotlallons to revise the
to boos t Iowa to an 85-80 lead
. Monroe, Bibby was the benc)l buUdlllg contract for Ute
·wi\h over two minutes
man Knick coach Red Holzman olympic village.
remaining.
DAYTON (UP!) - Wright
called oo to spell ·tbe starling
Leger, a member of the
But
Haberecht
fouled
opt
and
State
, led .by Bob Gro~ with 17
guards.
Pard Quebecois, has been a
the
Badgers
held
Iowa
poi
nts
and Dan Brinkman witit
strong adversary of the
scoreless the rest of the way. 14, p'uUed away from Franklin
permanent Olympic VIllage
1
Ke ohler made one of two free (Ind.) midway in the fir st hall
plan.
.
Utrows ·wi th 38 seconds left to for an easy 87-00 victory over
Tbe talks, which began
give Wisconsin an 86-85 lead, the Grirzlies SatiiJ"day. .
Friday, will continue
ROCKETs TRIUMPH
lheir
first lead of the se(:ond
The Raiders, now 10·7,
NEW YORK (UPI) - nie through lbe weekend In an
hSll.
outscQred
Franklin 26-4 over ·
Houston Rllckets; fighting New attempt to reach a new
Ute
last
10
minutes to take a
A last second shot by Iowa's
agreement with the conYork Knicb and Cleveland for
47-22 lead at
a wlld.au-t! playoff berth in the , tractor. )'be legislative Scott Th('ll'lpson missed and commanding
intennission.
the
Badgers
had
their
first
Big
co\nmisslon investlgat!J!g
NBA Eaatein Conference,
Dan Helm's 15 points was
Ten win in nine conference
costs
of the games reopens
defeated the Kliicb, 115-83, 6n
high
for Franklin, which shot
games. The Badgers are 4-12
the strength of Cai·MIIfP!y's 32 · hearings Tuesday at ~ p.m.
overall and Iowa is 4-S in lhe only 35 per cent for the game
points Saturday ~·
ano . was outrebOwtded &amp;5-37.
. . ·.·.·. ··.·.·=·· -::·:·:·.•·.·········:·:..·:·:-.:··· ,Big Ten and 7-10 overall.

•

loop title with wzn

OUR SEMI-ANNUAL

standings

NOW IN PROGRESS
eSUITS eSPORTCOATS
eCOATS eSLACKS
eALL REDUCED

THE FORD PLAN:

Whe el ersburg 69 Northwest 58
Chilli co th e 47 Portsmouth 42
South Point 57 Coa l Grove 54

Jackson rolls 73-58
over Wellston squad
JACKSON - With four
players scoring in double
· figures the Jackson lronmen
disposed of the visiting
Wellston Golden Rockets 73..58
Friday night to up their luop
record to 7-4.
The underdog Rockets, now
1-10 in SEOAL competition,
played well in the early going
as Jackson led just 16-14 after
the first period.
Early in the second period
the Rockel.s managed to tie lhe
score at 18-18 before the
lronmen went on ,a tear and
outscored Ute visitors 23-5 to
take a 41-23 halftime lead.
Mike McDonald led the
balanced Jackson attack with
15 poinl.s with Steve Morr~w
and Mark Buchanan each'
getting 13, and.Greg Fannin 12.
Randy Peoples swished. 14
points for Wellston with
Rodger wng adding 13.
Jackson hit well from the
floor as the lronmen connected
on 30 of &amp;8 attempl.s for 52 pet.
and 13 of 24 free throws .
Wellston finished witit 34 pet.
on 23 of 67 from the floor and 12

1Oth win 87-60

.......

'

THE BLOCK PLAN:
rebates

2. Would !(i ve a ma ximum $1,000 reba te to
th ose with a n income tax of $8,333.
tMosl taxp ayers wit h incom es of $40,000
or more wo uld receive a $1,000 rebate.)

J . .Would g ive th e la rges t rebates to those
wh o a re leas t likely to s pend the mon ey .

4. Would ba s e the tax rebate
mn ou nt of t he 1974 tax pa id .

on · the

1. Would give graduated declining percentage rebates totaling ari amount to be
determined by Congress.
2. Would give a maximum 40% tax rebate
at lowest income levels declining to zero
for those with an Adjusted Gross Income in excess of $40,000.

3. Would give the largest rebates to low
and middle income persons most in need
of tax relief and most likely to spend
the money.
4: Would base the tax rebate percentAge
on Adjusted Gross Income and then
apply it to the tax ... eliminating addi,t ional tax advantage to those already
benefiting from tax shelters.

bbC:Llb

of 20 at the charity line.
The Jronmen pulled down 45
rebounds witit Mark Buchanan
grabbing i2 missed shol.s while ·
Terry McKinniss picked off 12
of Wellston's 34 snags.
The box score:
WELLSTON ( S8l - Sc ites 23-7 ; P e oples 7-0-14 ; Arnold 2-4·
8 ; Gill 3-2-8 ; McK innl s s 2 - ~ - 4 ;

rip Vikings
International Hockey
L e a~ue Standings
By United Press International
Norttl
w. 1. t . pts gf ga
saginaw 32 19 2 66 204 172
F l i n1
31 16 4 66 193 146
Mu skegon JO 20 2 62 212 149
Pt Huron 21 26 3 .:15 168 177
K81ama . 13 32 3 29 130 185
12 28 I 25 145 217
x -Lan s..
• South
w. 1. t. pts gl ga
Dayt on
32 15. 3 67 207 171
Columbus 29 22 1 59 215 _188
Tole~
22 27 3 .:17 188 190

Des

Moines
21 28 3 34 17 4 199
Ft. wayn~ 1,8 28 3 39 170 191
x -team disbanded
·
Friday's Results
Des MOines 5 Fort Wayne 2
Muskegon 6 Dayton 4 . ·
Kalamazoo S F lint 3

n:rw r or .. wow ....
Week of February 3, 1975

.,. ;

~~

8111!11

DATE-GYMNASIUM
Feb. 3 4-8 p.m. Community Dance
4-8 p.m . Athletics

POOL

8-9: 30 p.m. Open Recreation

8-9:30 p.m.
Open Swim

.4: 15p.m. Women vs . Ohio Dominican

9: 30· 12 m lntramurals

Feb. 4 4-8 :p.m. Athletics

WRITE TH E PRESIDENT, YOUR REPRESENTATIVES AND SENATORS - Ma)te your
views know n , whichever plan you prefer. They are the ones who will pass and approve
s uch legislation .

8-9:30 p.m. Open Recreation

9:30-12 m. lntramurals
Feb. s 6 p.m. JV:s vs. Ohio Dominican

vs. Ohio ~miniC:an
9:30-12m . lntramurals
Feb. 6 4-8 p.m. Athletics
.
·
.
7:30p.m. Women vs ..Marletta
8 p.m . Varsity

FI LE EARLY - The Internal Revenue Service is urging taxpayers to file their returns early.

It is likely · that th e s ooner the return is filed the sooner the taxpayer will receive any rebate

to a regular tax refund . . . the sooner

9: JQ-12 lntramurals
Feb. 7 4-8 p.m. Athlet11:s
8-9:30 p.m. Open Recreation

"
If you have any questions about your income- taxes . . . visit or ·call any
one of our mora than , 7,000 offic.es nationwide. Thera is never a charge .for
tilx information or for answering your questions.

Feb. 8 1 p.m, Track Club Rood Race
2-4 Open Recreation

l '

POOL CLOSED

'

6-e' p.m:
Scuba Diving
POOL CLOSED

•

•

'

I

·'

CHESAPE11KE
Chesapeake's
offensively
potent Panthers broke the
century mark for the second
· time in a week Friday night
when it roared to a 103-70
triumph over Symmes Valley.
Evening their record to 6-6,
the Pan titers were sparked by
four starters in double figures.
Twelve Chesapeake players
scored in the romp. Roger
Adkins led the balanced
scoring with 20 points, while
Kevin Rice added 19 and Dale
Russell 14.
J.
A . Myers 23, Myers 2, Sctlaffer
17 , Brammer 23, Estep 5.
CHESAPEAKE {1031 McKinney 8, Johnson 1 2,
Adk i ns 20, Dale Russell - 14,
Rice 19, J~nk l ns 8, Marshal l 6,
McGuire 6 , CoK 4, McW!)orter
2, Ooak P!ussel l 2. Mar cum 2.
Score by quarters:
S. Valley
14 15 21 20- 70
&lt;;hesapeake, 21 29 22 31 - 103

'

SYMMES VALLEY (70) -

PALM' SPRINGS, Calif.
(UPI) - Rnscoe Tanner of
Lookout Mowttain Tenn., gave
the U.S. a 1-1 split of its Davis
Cup match with Mexico Friday
· by defeating Rnbe'\0 Chavez,
&amp;-1, 6-3, 6-3.
in the oPening singles match,
Mexico's Raul flarnil'ez upset
· Stan
Smith, 3-6, .6-4,
&amp;-I, ~.
'

2-A p.rt] .
Open Swim

7-9 p.m. Open RO&lt;reatlcin

•'

8-9:30 p.m.
Open Swim

8-9:30 p.m.
Open Swim

'

5:45 p.m. JV's vs. Springfield
8 p.m. Varsity vs. Malone .
Feb. 9 2·4 p.m. Open Recre~~tton . ·

-,

Long 6-1-13; Millike n 1-:.1 -4.
TOTALS 23· 11· 58.
JACKSON (73) - McDonald
7-1-15 ; Fannin 4-4-12 ; M"orrow
6 1 -13 ; 1 Buchanan
5 -3·-13 ;
Osborne 1-1·7 ; Schmid 1-0·2;
Grillo 1-1-3 ; Coli 1-2-4; Swingle
2-0 -4. TOTALS 30-13-73.
Score by quarters :
'
Wells ton
14 9 14 21-SB
Jackson
16 25 15 17- 73
Reserves :
J ack son
37
Wellston 36.

Pro Standings Panthers

LYNE CENTER GYM&amp; POOL SCHEDULE

WHAT SHOULD YOU DO?

permitted by n ew legislation. And, if you are entitled
yo u file, the s oon er y ou will r eceive it.

attempts tor 42.9 percent. The
Gallians were I~ of 19 at the ·
chari ty line (68.4 percent).
Gallipolis had 17 personals, 32
rebounds and a season-low nine
turnovers .
Niday led the Devils in
scoring with 22 points. Sickles
had 14 and Snowden 10. Tom
Valentine had tO rebounds and'
Sickles nine .
Logan shot a cool 33 percent
from the field, sinking 18 of &gt;4
attempts. The Chiefs were
better at the foul circles, hit·
ling 19 ol 25 for 76 'percent•.

cLASH AT MID-COURT - Logan's Jan Myers (20) and
Gallia's Tom Valentine scramble for lodse ball at Logan's
Hilltop Gym during Friday's SEOAL hardwood contest. On

wgan had 22 personals and 38
rebowtds. The Chiefs had 18
turnovers.
Mi~h Wright led Logan's
attack with 17 points. Don
Young added 14 and Jim
Kemper 11. Kemper and
Dennis Fuller each had nine •
rebounds for the lanky
Chieftains. Wright h8d eight.
Gallipolis will host newlycrowned champion Waverly
Friday. The Chieftains travel
to Meigs. Tuesday, Logan will
host NelSonville-York in a nonleague game.

left is wgan's Mitch Wright. IDue Devil Tony Folden (10)
right, and Logan's Mike McBroom (10) look on. (Steve
Wilson photos).

GAHS-Logan box...

Imps in third
Basketball · all alone after win

Following the announcement of President Ford's proposed income tax rebate
plan for individuals. I recommended an alternate plan to both the President
and Congressional leaders. I believe my plan is more equitable and would
maximize the economic impact. Hera's how I compare the two plans·:

1. Would !rive fl a t 12 percent
totalin g $ 12 billio n.

minutes uf the third stanzu. peri od, 57-44 with 2:27
Mike MrBroom's two charity remaining and 58-45 at the 1:55
tosses with 3:51 left in the mark.
period gave Logun its final lead · 'The Chieftains never gave .
of the gume. Mike Sickles up. Coach Scott Fitzg~ra ld 's
ra nued two charity tosses luds came back to oul.score the
(3:23) to mukc 1132-31. That put Gallians 1().3 during the final90
GAHS ahead to stay.
seconds of play. At'One point,
Field goals by Tom Valen- the Chiefs cut Gallia 's margin
:tine, Jim Niday and Gary to four, 59-55. with 21 seconds
Snowden and charity tosses by left. Niday 's backhanded layup
.Folden and Sickles gave the at the buzzer completed !he
Gallians a 41-34 advantage game's scoring . It was Gallia's
after three periods ..
JJth straight win uver Logan
GAHS built up a 13-point since the 196~70 campaign ..
advantage twice in the final
GAHS hit 24 of 56 field goal

Waverly gains tie for

.

Raiders post

•

the lead with 1:22 left in the time out and then put the ball ill
play with one second showlnl
game at~ .
The· two teams exchanged on the clock. But Stoddard'a
steals and possession of Ute inbound pass to Thompson at
ball wttil Owen Brown, fouled th·e other end of the court waa
by N. C. Stale's Tim Stoddard, blocked .a s the game ended.
Maryland's victory was Ita
made a pair of free throws to
put Maryland back on top at~ second this season over tbe
Wolfpack and gave the Terps a
95 with 28 seconda to go.
Thompson made two at lhe 14-3 overall record and a 5-3
line 10 seconds later after he mark in the conference.
North Carolina Slate, which
was fouled by Steve Sheppard.
Mary land then got Ute ball and had not lost at Reynolda
held it for the final shot of the Colisell11l in 36 home games,
game which Davis took and feU to 1~ overall and 4-2 in the
'ACC.
made good.
North Carolina State called
Maurice Howard led the
Terps with 29 points and Brown
added 23. Davis chipped in witb
18 and John Lucas had 12.
In addition to Thompson,
whose 38 points gave him a
career scoring, record for the
school, N. C. State had two
players in double figures,
Kenny Carr with 20 and
Maurive Rivers wilh 14.
Maryland hit a phenomenal
points in the second half.
68 per cent of its flrst-balf shots
Rick Schmidt, who matched and outrebounded Nortb
up against Furlow on bolh Carolina State 19-12 before
offense and defense, led Illi~ois intermission.
'
with 17 poinl.s. At one stage
The Wallpack in tbe first half
midway in the second hall, the had lr011ble getting the ball
two players exchanged blows inaide and wowtd up wilh a
but no infractions were first half shooting mark of 46
assessed and they shook hands per cent.
about three minutes later.

Aeros whip Cougars An Open · Letter To The Public From
Henry Block Of H&amp;R Bl9ck
11th time in row
Regarding Income
Tax Rebates.
.

Badgers
end losing
streak 86-85

.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!) Junior Terry Furlow scored 19
poinl.s in Ute first hall while
Michigan State built a 35-25
lead and the Spartans held
command the rest of Ute way
Saturday for a 75-60 Big Ten
victory over cold-shooting
Illinois.
MichigawState raised il.s Big
Ten record to 5-'1 and il.s OV£rall
GALLII'OIJS - Southern's
mark to 11-6 while Illinois fell
powerful girls baske !ball team
to :J..6 in the conference and 7-10
rolled over host Gallipolis 64-43 overall.
on the Washington hardwood to
Furlow, who entered the
remain
unbeaten
here game as conference's third
Saturday afternoon .
leading scorer, finished with 27
The loss left Coach Jackie
poinl.s, hitting on 11-of-19 shots.
Knight's gals with a 2-2 season
Wi tit I :30 left in the first half,
record. Both GAHS losses have
Furlow hit a basket from Ute
been to Southern .
left corner to give him 19 points
The visitors were on top 15·11
and equal the entire scoring
after one period of pl ay.
output of the Illinois team. The
Southern piled up 24 points in Spartans led 3().!9 at that point.
the second stanza and limited
lllinois, shooting 30 per cent
the Gallians to three, giving
from Ute field for the game,
Coach Connie Andrews gals a
never got closer than eight
comfortable 39-14 halftime
advantage. It was 47-23 after
three periods of play . The Blue
Angels outscored Southern 2(). the Blue Angels play at
17 in the final canto.
Nelsonville-York.
Jennifer Musgrave paced the
Box score of Saturday 's
Tornad o ladies with 16 varsity game :
markers . Sheryl Larkins added
SOUTHERN
(64)
13.and Brenda Lawrence nine. Musgrave 8-0-16 ; Larkins 5-3Karen Sprague led Gallia's 13; Lawrence 4-1-9; roush 3-1attack with nine points. Barb 7; Sayre 4-0-8; Koy 2-0-4;
Ritchart 2-0-4; Ord 1-0-2;
Edelman, Amy Carter each Roseberry -1-1. TOTALS 29-4had eight and Brenda Wilson 64.
BLUE ANGELS (43) seven.
Sprague
4-1 -9; Edelman 3·2-8;
In Saturday's preliminary Carter 3-2-8;
Wilson 2·3-7; Wall
game, the GAHS freshmen 3-0-6; Miller 1-1-3; Young 1-0-2 .
were defeated 6().34 by Pt. TOTALS 17-9-43.
Score by quarters:
Pleasant. The frosh will play at Soothern
15 24 8 17~
Pt. Pleasant Thursday while _Blue Angels
11 3 9 2Q-43

Southern
gals roll

opening 20 minutes.
Loyola, paced by Tony
Parker with 21 points,
managed to cut the margin to
nine points on a couple occasions in Ute second hall but
·could get no closer.
Allen Elijah had 17 points
and Jim Testerman 14 for
Dayton, while Ralph Vallot
scored 16 and Rodney Callihan
15 for the Ramblers, also now
8-9.

LOGAN
- . Gallipoli s'
remained in a tie for third
place with Jackson in tile
Southeaste rn Ohi o Leagu e
cage standings foll owing a 6!55 triun1ph over Logan before
900 parenl.s ' night fans here
Friday night.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils, now 11-6 on the year and
74 in conference play, fell
behind 7-0 during the fird two
minutes of pla y.
Logan was ahead 2-0 before
the opening tip as a result of
two technical fouls against
GAHS for touching tbe rilJI of
lhe basket during warmups.
· After Mitch Wright's two
pre--game charity tosses,
Logan Center Don Young got
an eas)' layup and a free throw
and Jim Kemper popped io a
·• tong jumper with 5:48 showing
on the clock to make it 7-0. It
looked like the Chieftains were
going to avenge that 63-50 loss
at Gautpolls back in December.
Mike Sickles broke the ice for
GAHS with a layup at the 5:34
mark. Tony Folden's driving
layup cut Logan's margin to 7-'1
with 5:09 left in the stanza.
After Sickles' crip with 3:38
left, lanky Denhis Fuller put
LHS on top 9-6. Fuller's free
YOUNG SCORES - Logan's 6-4 senior center Don Young (40) eludes Gallia 's Tom
Valentine (22) and Mike Sickles (30) for a twin-pointer during Friday's GAHS-Logan cage
throw (1:53) made it 10-6.
llllcounter at wgan. GAHS downed the Chieftains, 61..55.
Folden reduced it to !().8 with
1:32 left.
Jim Niday scored two goals
within !Oseconds to give GAHS
its first lead of the game, 12-10.
Kemper's long jwnper at the
0:09 mark tied it 12-all.
In the second stanza, the lead
exchanged hands three times
and the score was tied five
times. Mitch Wright's long
jwnper with seven seconds left
in the half put the Chiefs on top
for
37
pet.,
and
12
of
26
free
With
just
2:14
remaining
in
26-24 during intermission.
·WAVERLY- Coach Carroll
Hawhee's Waverly Tigers the contes t Waverly had out- throws.
The teams battled on even
Tim Duduit hauled down 18 terms during the first five
played defense Friday night score-d Athens 22-3 and were
and the result was a convincing .riding atop a huge 56-32 leed- of the Tigers' 31 rebounds while
All five Tiger players scored Randy Horn picked off eight of ------------~-,
61-40 ·victory over the visiting
in double figures with four 25 Bulldog missed shots.
Athens Bulldogs.
The sticky Waverly defense
;rhe big win puts the Tigers players getting a dozen poinl.s
forced
Athens into 26 costly
each
as
the
well-balanced
into at least a tie for the
turnovers
while the Tigers
SEOAL championship with an attack continues.
Doug Tracy, Joe Holland, turned the ball over just II
11-0 record with only three
Tim
Duduit, and Tom Pfeifer times.
games remaining while the
ATHENS (40) ~ Chon k o J .Q.
all
had
12 while Butch Laswell
ALL GAMES
Bulldogs slipped into sixth
6; Ellwood J. J.J ; Faulkn er 2+
Te.am
W L
P
OP
had 16.
place at 4-7.
8; Gr e e r 3-2-8 ; Horn l -4-6;
14 1 939 771
waver l y
None of. the Athens players Da i l ey 2-1-5; Bla ckford 1-0-2; Wh eele r sburg 13 2 923 758
Waverly led by quarter
1-0 ·2. TOTALS 14· 12 -40 .
Hannan Trace 12 2 973 756
reached
twin-figures as Bill Heady
scored of 14-10, 25·15, and 36-29.
WAVERLY(6ll - Tracy 4-4 ·
South Point
12 4 1077 940
12; Holland 5-2 -12; Duduit 5-2·
9 5 79 6 777
J acksQn
However, the Tigers came Greer and Matt Faulkner each 12
; Pfe i fer 6-0-12 ; La swell 5·0·
9 s 929 856
!rontoh
out shooting in the fourth had eight markers.
10 ; Whal ey 0-2-2; Thoma s 0 -1-1.
G allipoli s
8 6 81 4 733
Statistics show Waverly TOTALS 25·11-61.
Logan
8 6 87 0 811
quarter, hit six of their first
Score by quarters :
Portsmouth
7 7 837 811
25
of
61
shots
for
41
pet.
hitting
seven shot.s, and tallied 12
Athens
10 5 14 11- 40
Athens
s
10 852 857
14 11 11 25 - 61
Wellston
2 12 6 93 935
wtanswered points to jwnp into and converting II of 16 at the Waverly
Reserves :
Waverly
43,
M e igs
1 13 768 909
line while Athens made 14 of 38 A t hens 34.
a conunanding 48-29 lead.
Area results:

Spartans trip
Illini, 75-60

TOUGH DEFENSE - Three Southern high school players surround a GAHS Blue Angel
during Saturday's contest on Washington hardwood at Gallipolis. Left to right are Brenda
Lawrence (13), Becky Sayre ( 14) ~ nd Jennifer Musgrave (21) . Southern won, 64-'13.

Flyers
end streak 76-63
. .
D A Y T 0 N (UP! ) Sophomore guard Johnny
Davis scored 22 points
Saturday to lead u,a University
of Dayton to a 71Hi3 victory
over cold-shooting Loyola of
Chicago, ending lhe Flyers'
titree-game losing streak.
Dayton, now 8-9 on Ute year,
jumped to quick 18-4 edge and
led J9..23 at halftime over Ute
Ramblers, who shot only 23 per
cent from Ute floor in the

Gallipolis trips Logan

Pack upset in
inal secon.d s.

•
KENT, Ohio (UP! ) - Fresh· a jumper by Jamison with 9:49
man guard Tony Jam ison remaining in the game gave
came off the bench Sa turday to the Flashes the lead for good,
scored 24 points and lead Kent 49-'18. Kent led 61..52 with ~: 30
State to a 7~9 Mid-America n left to play .
Walter Luckett , the MAC's
Conference victory over Ohio
leading scorer, led the Bobcats
University.
The win was the second in a with 20 points, but went 13
row over a conference title minut es during the latter
contender for the Flashes, who stages of the second hall
had dropped their first six wilhout a point.
George Gr een added IS
MAC games.
points
and Scott Love 14 for the
After an eve n fir st 10
Bobcats,
while
Randy
mir.utes, Kent surged to a 35-20
lead and still held a 37-26 Felhaber had H and Brad
Robinson and freshman Mike
margin at the intermission .
The Bobcats, now 4-'1 in the Miller 10 each for the Flashes,
conference and 9~ overall , now 2-6 in the MAC and 4-12
rallied to grab a 46-'15 lead , bu t overa ll.

.'

'

lndep.
·

CIDCAGO (UPl) - World

Football League President
Olris
Hemmeter said Friday a
2-4 p.m.
Open Swim . decision would be made about
· 1-9 p,m.
March 15 oo whether or not the
Open Swim
Jeague would operate again
next season. , . j

SEOAL VARSITY
W. L
Fl
Waverly
11 0 707

T eam

Ironton
a 3 13 1
Gallipoli s
7 4 665
Jac kson
7 4 618
Logan
s 6 683
4 7 618
A t hens
Well st on
1 10 545
Meig s
1 10 619
TOTALS
44 44 S186
Friday's results:
Gatlipolis 61 Logan 55
Waverly 61 Athen s 40
Ironton 67 Meigs .59
Ja c kson 73 Wellston 58

OP

580
658
579
618
64 2
601
.77 8
730
5186

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L
P
OP
waver ly
· 9 2 450 341
Athens
8 3 500 399
Gallipolis
7 A 428 414
Meigs
6 5 417 361
Logan
6 s 471 417
Jackson
5 6 442 457
·Ironton
3 8 410 48 0
Wellston
o 11 341 590
TOTALS
-44 44 3459 3459
Friday's results:
Gall ipolis 43 Logan 36
Waverly 43 Athens 34
Ironton 42 Meig s 39
Ja c kson 37 Wellston J-6
Feb. 4 games:
Nelsonvill e-York at Logan
Southwestern at Hannan Trac e
Feb. 7 games :
Hannan Trace a t Tr i mbl e
waverly at Gallipoli s
A t hens at Wellston
Jac kson at Ironton
t.ogan at Meig s
Whee l ersburg a t No r thwe st
South Po i nt at Roc k Hill

Feb. 8 games :
Wellston at Oak Hill
Portsmouth at Gallipol is

SEOAL FRESHMEN
Team
W L P OP
Logan
9 2 · 522 337
Athens
8 3 427 389
Gallipolis
8 3 495 432
Waverly
7 4 433 359
Meigs
5 6 437 439
Ironton
3 8 363 &lt;W2
Jackson
3 8 358 482
Wellston
I 10 290 485
TOTALS
44 44 3325 3325
Thursday's results :

Logan 62 Galllp,olls 32
Athens 32 Waverly 3t
Meigs &lt;W lropton 38
Wellston 37 Jacksqn 3.4

Feb. 6 games:

Gallipolis at Waver ly
Wellston at Athens
Meigs at Logan

. Ironton at JJackson

Woman wants
football job
ROCKY RIVER, Ohio (UP!)
'-- Alice Robinson wants to be
the football coach of Ute Rocky
',River High School team.
·Mrs. Robinson, a social
studies teacher at th,e suburban
Cleveland high school, bas
applied to replace the head
coach who quit in frustration
after three losing seasons.'
. If Mrs. Robinson whO· says
she's a football buff, would get
lhe job, she'd have her work
cut out for her. The team los\ 22
games straight prior to lheir·
first victory las!' year. The 1974
re~ord was 2-7.

..

J.

....

LOGAN - Gallia Academy
High School's Blue Imps
reserve team took over undisputed third place in the
SEOAL standings Friday night
following a hard-fought 43-36
triumph over Coach Jack·
Elgin's Logan Papooses.
The Imps, 9..5 on the yeQr and
7-'1 in conference play, will now
prepare for Friday's invasion
of league-leading Waverly (~
2). The Tiger Cubs humiliated
the Imps 52-24 at Waverly on
Jan . 3.
At Logan Friday , David
(Little C) Warren hogged the
backboards witit 14 caroms
while the Imps displayed a
balanced scoring attack in
posting their second win of the
year over Logan.
Gary Swain, despite early
foul trouble, managed to toss in
13 poinl.s. Kent Epling and
Keith Jackson chipped in with
eight apiece and Warren, in his
best effort of the season, added
six. Kev Jackson and Don Bush
each had four markers. Mike
Dressel and Jerry Wade came

PU\YER-Pos.
Mike Sickles, I
Tom Valentine, c
Jim Niday, g
Tony Folden, I
.Gary Snowden, g
Jim Warren. c
Brett Wilson , g
TOTALS

off the bench and turned in
0-0
0·0
I
0
I
0
good performances for the
24-56 13-19 11 32
9 61
winners.
LOGAN CHIEFTAINS (55)
The Imps hit 18 of 34 field PLAYER-Pas.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
0-3 o.o 2 0 6 . 0
goal attempts for 52 percent. Jan Myers, g
Scott Gosnell, g
0
0·2 0·1 4 0 I
GAHS was seven of II at the Jim Kemper, f
3-13 5-6
3
9
1 11
charity line . Coach Buddy Don Young, c
5-12
4-6 5 7
I
14
5-8 7-8 4 8 2 17
Moore's team had 20 personals, Mitch Wright, I
Dennis Fuller. c
3-9
1-2
2
9
4
1
29 rebounds and 14 turnovers. Mike
McBroom , f
6
2-3 2·2 0 2 ·I
Guard Brian Hawk paced the Bi ll Seel, I
0-3 0-0 I 2 0 0
I
0
0
0-1 0-0 I
Papooses, now 6-5 inside Ute Tim Mulholland. g
TOTALS
'16
55
18·54 lt-25 22
38
loop, with 11 points. The home
Score by quarters:
club had a bad night at the ' GAHS Blue Devi ls
12 12 17 20 - 6t
12 14 8 21 - 55
charity line, sinking only eight Logan Chieftains
Officials
Tom
Frampton,
Musklngum
·Valley Chapter &amp;
of 25 gratis shol.s.
Larry Moyer. Licking Valley Chapter.
GAHS trailed 11-6 after one
period. It was 18-16 at halftime
in favor of the Blue Imps. The
Mooremen were on top 3i-23
after three periods.
Box score:
GAHS BLUE IMPS t4ll -

Kt . Ja c kson, 3 - 2-B;
Kev .
Ja c kson , 2-0 -4 ; Swain , 5-3 -13 ;
Warren , 2-2-6: Epling , 4-0-8 ;
Wade. 0 -0-0 ; Dressel. (),Q.Q;
Bush , 2 -0 · 4. TOTALS 18·7-43.
LOGAN PAPOOSES (361 L anning , 1-0·2 ,' Hawk , 4-3-11 ;
C all, 3 · 1-7; Russell. l -0 -2;
Wrighl. 2· 1·5 ; Davidson , 2-0 -4 ;
Peppel'S, D-0-0; Sm ith , 0·2-2;
Cl.ark , 0 -0-0 ; Dollison, 1·0-2;
Aiken, 0 -1· 1. TOTALS 14-8·3'6.
Score by quarters :
Blue Imps
6 12 13 12- 43
Papooses
8 8 7 13- 36

Triple A drawing set
Feb. 9 at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - Drawing
for the seven-team Class AAA
Sectional Basketball Tournament will be held at Lyne
Center here on-Sunday, Feb. 9,
beginning at 2 p.m.
was
announced
This
Saturday by . Arthur W.
Lanham, tournament
manager.
Participants are Athens,
Chillicothe, Lancaster, Logan,
Marietta ' Portsmouth · and
Miami Trace.
· The Triple A Sectional dates
are Feb. 20, 21, 22 and 27 and
March I.
,.
The upper bracket winner
and lower bracket winner will
both advance to Ute Triple A
District, to be held at Ohio
University's Convocation
Center.
Coaches must bring an
eligibility sheet and team
roster to the drawing for

.

program information.
No pep bands, noise makers,
signs or banners will be permitted.
Two teams will be seeded by
the participating coaches.
To determine the seeds a
point system will be used . A
first place vote is worth three
points and a second place vote ·
is worlh one point. The ·~am
witit the most points will be
seeded first and the team with
the second highest number of
points will be seeded second.
NEWYORK(UPI) -Filbert
· Bay! of Tanzania rocketed to
the front after ihe second iap of
the Milirose GameS Wanamak-'
er Mile and stayed Utere
· throughout Friday night, bolding off a desperate fi!Jiahing
kick from Brigham Yowtg's
Paul Cummings to win in a
meet record time of 3:59.3.

~INSULATlON_;_·

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
-Fire Retardant..free. Estimates~
. No ObUgatioia

·'

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT·
'

GAHS BLUE DEVILS (61)
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
14
5·9 4-4
4
9
~
I
4·9
0-2 3 10
8
' 8-19 6-7
3
I
22
5
3-9 1-2 . 2
7
2
2
4-9
2-4 3 3 2 10
3
0·1 0-0 I
0
0

Middleport, Oh.io

.
.'

l

I

,,
,,

�.,
l9 1 The SIDlday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975
18 ~ The SWlday Times - Sentinel, SWJdav, Feb . 2, 1975

Ironton hard -pressed in beating Meigs, 67-59

Creek
h~t Ea~tenr f' • 1J p~l11-1 ' jl~
th
c,tg rs snappf'l .1
re(' ~Hll1~ !11-. \.fl•' SIT t' 'tk hCit'
F'ndav mgtlt ~.1,5~~ uv ,' K . ' '
Creek.
.
u ~!-:~r
In wrnnr ng (\ lctch Ril l
.
Ph II
U1 t aps ' Eaglt&gt;.s l'Ont uJm•d
ear 1ong wrnnm!:! !Strrak U\'l' r
the Bobcats Two otlwr Er~J.dt•s
Wf'r e In double ftl!ll!"t'!-i Hc-mfh
Bla k e, SC'mor _1-!U&lt;II d dllrntwd Il l
,
17 pOint~ nnd Cn•g Hark' htHI

rtW\\.ar d., l,ed tht• Bobca ts or

Coad1 Kr tth Ccu·tcr WJth 16
f
b k
t '!h
on ~ur as cts c-m d
erg I free thl ows
Bill Metzner, ll JUllWr , had 10
potnb bf'folt' l ~_'&lt;tv ln g the g.:rmt•
v•. Jtt 1 &lt;HI , lflJUI')
I':'
,• ,as ter n
Jl1!1l pl'fl mto :1 lh.JI f1rst penod
1 d
ea_ ,beht.nd ' !he, shou_trng of
HI
c
. Hk l • RCH IC_'v .Ill( 1 vpencer
{ uII n:11 tl&lt;H I 6 of II1£' a I'-&gt;OJcat
t
p111nr,;;;
'I Jlllts

:H-:~2 at the hcdf on tht' strength
uf Spt•nfcr 's nine p oinL~:; Don
f' "
.
·. tdun gt~r had three porn~
dunng llw penll() wtnlc Mike
HarT IS. Blak e and Bar re,,
!:i.l'(lred Iwo l'-;.1Ch Mt' L:w er wul
(
Otl rt• ll led the Cctllmll S with
.•ax JWifl ts cactl
F u ll uw~ng th&lt;' thu·d penod
· tern bel.! an a st..all
ltp-off. !·.as
, . t·&lt;l &lt;t few
\\h]('h '' as abando11
111 lnule.s I.:1IPr The E~r gles lhen

I'Onnt•dcd for three fi eld ~oals
,. ·I
ld ( I,
Rlttkf' added two goa ls and&lt;:~
foul shot whrle Etdrmger -a nd
Hmtis hatl free throws. Senior
Dave w1.,. . .. and .,..ottrell paced
"'
,_,
thC' Bubc~t
scoring
that pertod
K
c k
ygcr
ree
outscor ed
Evstcrn , 19-1' durtnu the
n
fourth pert'od as,} both &lt;·o·•ches
0
en1ptted tttc tr benc.·hes.
Huth c lubs enjoyed a fmc

mght at the foul ltne . Vtsiting Nestlings scored their second
Kyger Cree k connected on 19 of vtctory of the season in the
24 attempt.&lt; while Eastern sa nk SVAC reserve league with a 3120 of 26 at the charity stripe. 20 win . Mark Hawk and Phtl
F.astern htt 26 of 73 floor at- LaComb led the winners with
tempts for 35 pe t.
nine points each. Ralph Baylor
The vtctory ga ve the Eagles topped the Bobkittens wtth
a 3-0 slate in the Southern ·seven pomts.
Valley Athle!tc Conference and
Kyger Creek hosted Symmes
:l-12 mark overall .
Valley Saturday and wtll play
Kyg er Creek dropped to 1-tl Hannan, W. Va . m a make--up
overall and 0-9 in the SV AC
game Wednesday afternoon at
Duane
Wo lfe '!:i
Green Ches hire. Eastern wtll host

Highlanders
~,.?"~.~~~. ~.?!.~ ..?!~. !~ornados,
.' l .
top F.a ConS
PATRIOT
Kevm Wolker
and Terrr Carter pumped m 24
point&lt;; each as the !iouth \lf'Sh:•rn UJg illlmder.s roll pd to
nn f'a!oiy 71l-59

nctor y over the

Wahama Wh1tc FHk ons here
FncJay mghl.
Wal ker and Carter eac h htl
10 fr om the fteld and 4 a t the
ltne, whi le ge lttng twin fig11re
scoring help fr om Keith Grate
wi th 10 points
Scott Roush und Dan HHrmon led Wa hama wtlh 10 points
each as the Ftdcons dropped to
2-; on the ycnr . The Highlanders are now 8-0, 54 tn the
SVAC
1'he Highla nd ers put Ute

game away ea l'ly, out scoring
Wah ama 24-11 in the fir st
q11arter and 13-9 in the second
pen Od to hold a commanding
37-20 mtermi ssion lead
Sout hwestern conti11 ucd to

outscore the visJtm·s the r~st of
tht&gt; way, leading 53-35 after ~
three peri ods .

Pirates, holdmg off a Southern
comeback in U1e second half
Wtth phenomenalfoul shooting
notched thetr ninth win in 12
outmgs with a 5748 victory
Ule Tornados here F'rtday
Pirates at 8-2 in

:::~1
Th~

The Highlanders Jut 32 of 64
fie ld goa l a ttempts for 38 pet , SV AC, . Ulus hold onto ~:
wh tl e the Wh ite Falcons possessiOn of second place
connected JUSt 24 tunes m 70 ~hile the Tornados drop to 5-4
trtes for 34 pet.
. Southwes tern held a big
re boundtng margtn , 56-31, . The Pi;ates took a 16-&lt;l lead
wttl1 Ll oyd Wood 's 22 caroms m the ftrst quarter and inleading uoth squads
creased the margin to 16 at 22-0
.
T11 esday th e Hi ghla nd e rs
trave l to Hannan Trace before
ho,ting Easter n Friday
In Friday's prelinunary, the

A Great @

NorthGallia had been hitting
just 54 pet. of its foul shots on

points, Mike ~~~~d~ra~~
Fred Logan 10
Mlk R b ·
e
o erts paced the

U1

:;::~~~nfi 1~

By United Press International Conference.
pomts in the second half of the
The Buffalo Braves' nickThe Celtics, now 34-14 for tbe third period. Perry added lour
name for Bob McAdoo tells season, defeated the Cleveland reboundlland six assists during
more abou~ Ule 6-foot 10 center Cavaliers 121-99. The Celtics the rally. Gail Goodrich led the
Ulan Ule fact he is the Nation Ill took command of the game late Lakers with 34 points.
Basketball Association's in the second period when they
Bucks 101 76ers 97
leading scorer.
soared to a 57-43 lead and
Kareem
Abdul -Jabbar
They call him "The Game Coach Tom Heinsohn cleared scored 28 points for the Bucks
Breaker."
Ule bench in the fourth period. but it was Jim Price's 2!J.foot
McAdoo showed why his Jo Jo White led the Celtics with jump shot with six seconds left
teammates think that way 24 points.
which clinched Milwaukee 's
again Friday night when he
The Phoerux Suns beat the victory at Philadelphia. The
broke loose for 16 points in th e Los Angeles Lakers 105-101, the triumph enabled the llucks to
Ulird period and led the Braves Milwauk ee Bucks topped the climb out of the cellar of Ule
to a 111-101 triumph over the Philadelphia 76ers 101-97, the Midwest Division ahead of Ule
Atlanta lifiwks. The spurt Chicago Bulls down ed the idle Kansas City Kings.
lifted the Braves to an 115-77 Golden State· Warriors I'J:/·103
BuDs 12'1 Warriors 103
lead and M~Adoo led a later - the Washington Bullets
spurt ~tth SIX of Buffalo's 12 Ule New Orleans Jazz 106-101
pomts ICIIll! the_ viclory . .
and the Seattle SuperSoni,;
McAdoo flntshed . wtlh a beat the Portland Trail Blazers
game-lugh 26 porn!.&lt; and took 106-103 in other NBA games
Lakers 101
·
down_ 17 rebounds while Jim Suns
The Suns fought back from a
McMillia n added 19 poD:'ts to
the Buffalo ca~e. _The vtcto~y 15-point third-period deli~ it
was Ule Braves runth in thetr with Dick Van Arsdale and
last 10 game~ but left them two Curtis Perry leading the rally
games . behtnd th e Boston f&lt;Jr their .,triumph at Phoenix
Celttcs "' the NBA 's Eastern Van Arsdale had eight of his

beai

ABA Standings
Un1fed Press International
east
w. 1. pet g.b
35 13 129 N ew Yor"34 14 .7 08 1
Kentucky
20 32 .3 85 17
St LOUrS
14 36 280 22
Memph1S
10 39 204 25 1/,
Vr rg1nra

By

More

Kyger Creek I Sl) - Co tfr ell
16 Metzner 4 2 10, W•Se 2 I
5, Sfrdham 2 0 -1 . Trm Lucas 3
1 7. Terry LlJcas. 1 7 4 , Sm 1t11 1
1 3 and Bil ylor 0 J J Totals 17 19-SJ
Easfern (72) - Bla ke 8 I 17,
Barley 6 I 13, Nelson 1 0 2
Bowen 0 0 0, Spence r 7 7 21'
Erc h1nger I 4 7 Conde 1 2 4
Harr 1s 1 4 8 Total s 16-20-72 ·
48

West
w

Danny Brown I~ the Southern
boThard assault With 17 ~roms.
e Ptrates cormrutted 24

Bob Love scored 34 points
and Jerry Sloan had 'l:l In the
Bulls' triumph over the Warriors. Rick Barry scored 40 for
the Warriors who lost their
third straight game. It was the
lOth win in 12 games for Ule
Bulls.
Bullets 106 Jazz 101
Elvin Hayes scored 31. points
as the Bullets won tbeir 36th
game of the season while
handing the Jazz their 42nd
loss. Wes Unseld had 26 point.
and Phil Chenier 23 for
Washington while Louie Nelson
had 24 for the Jazz.

turnovers to just 17 for
Southern, while North Gallia
blocked 5 Tornado shots.
The evening ended on a sour
note when Southern's Greg
Dunning was taken to a local
hospital alter suffering back
spasms m the lockerroom.
Dunning, according to head
coa~h Carl Wolfe, was still
havmg much difficulty late
Frtday night and it is not
known whether he will be able
to see action Tuesday when the
Tornados travel to Eastern for
a battle with the arch-rival
Eagles .
"We did everytlling well but
shoot," said Wolfe following
the game. "We played an
overall good game. Both teams
played well," he concluded.
In Friday's preliminary, Ule
Southern reserves edged the
Pirate jWJior varsity 34-32.
Dave Roush led the Tornado
reserves with 12 points while
Mark Theiss, Brett Tackett
and Robert Neal each had 8 for
Nortll Gallia.
Tuesday the Pirates travel to
Wahama while Ule Tornados
m eet Eastern before hosting
Symmes Valley Friday.
NORTH GALLIA ( 571 ~
Log an 3 4-10, Runyon 2 () 4
Camden 5 1-11 , James 7 5 19;
Payne 4 5-13 TOTALS 21·15-57
SO UTHERN (48) _ Hdl O 2:
2• Ervin 1-0-2, Roberts 7 0.14
Brown 5 1-11, Shu lfz 5 2- 12;
~unnmg 3 1 7 TOTALS 21. 6 . 48 ,

1. pet

g.b .

&lt;~1

Denver
San Antonro
ln drana

11 HIS J2 2 4 571 11
24 25 .4 90 15 1h
U t ah
22 29 43 1 18 lJ,
San D1ego
21 JO 412 19 112
Fnday's Results
Kent ucky 134·St Lov rs 104
lnd1ana 107 Utah 93
V1rgrnr a 108 Memph is 97
New York 114 Denver 101
Sa n An ton10 125 San D1ego 11 2
NBA Slandmgs
By Umfed Press lnternaftonal
Ea slern Cunference
AtlantiC 01V IS1Dn

w

r

pet

Boston
34 14 .708
Bu ffa lo
33 17 660
New York
26 23 531
Ph1 la
20 30 -100
Central 01lliS 10n
w.

1.

g. b
2
Qlh
15

pet . g. b

Wast1mgton 36 13 735
Houst on
24 25 J90 12
Cle11eland
22 26 458 1J'h
Allan ta
21 32 396 161h
N ew Or leans
5 42
106 30 ,
We stern Conference
M•dw est Div•sion
w . 1. pet. g b.
Detroit
30 21 588
Ch1cago
28 21 57 1
Mil waukee
24 24 500
KC Omaha
25 26 490
POCi fiC DIVISIOn
w. I. pet. g. b .
Gol den State 30 19 612
Se allle
23 76 469 1
Portland
22 27 449 8
20 27 426 9
Phoenix
Los An gel es
19 29 396 J0''2
Fnday's Resu lf s
Bos ton 121 Cleveland 99
Buffalo 11 1 Atlanta 101
Milwau kee 101 Philadelp hia 97
WaSh1ng ton 106 New Orlea ns
101
Ch1cago 127 Golden State 103
Phoenix 105 Los Angeles 101
Seattle 106 Portla nd 103

FAIRFAX , Va . (UP!) _
Martina Navratilova of Czechoslovakia upset top&lt;&gt;eeded
Chns Evert of F'ort Lauderdale, ~a ., 3-li, 64, 7-6, Fr1day
rugh t m the quarterfinasl of of
the Vir ginia
Slims of
Washington Tennis Tour nament.

t05

held on
Meigs

was led by , Dale
Brownm~ with 12 points, wh1le
JeH Mnrtm chtpped m a.
Ackt so n pa ce d Ir onto n
scoriog with 15 point. , followed
by Fairchild with 18.
The Mara uders hos t Logan
Fr ida y while Iron ton entertains the Jackson reserves.
h on loll
4 11 15 12- 42
Metgs
to B 11 10-39

r9

WINTER SPECIALS!

IRON TO N (42) - Sesher 3 0
6, Mason 0-0-0. Acklson 7-1-15
Murnr!lhan 0-0 -0, Fairchild 4 3'
I L K1II S 2· 2-6, HoustQn 2 0 4
TOTALS 18-6-42 .
.,
MEIGS (3 9} - Brown inQ 3-6!2, Dodson 2 1-5, Stewart 1-0 2.
Martm 4 0 8, Ma r shllll 2 1 5
Sc it es 22 6, Hamilton 01 ·1,
Hullon 0 0-0 TOTALS 14-11 -39 '

NH L Standi ngs
Unit ed Pr~s s Int ernation al
DIVISIOn I
w . I t . pts gt ga
w . I t PfS g l ga
11 10 7 69 171 101
Nl'w England 27 19 2 !i6 165 t68 Phll~dlph
NY Rangr s 25 15 9 59 20 1 160
Cte\leland
21 25 1 44 131 153 NY
lslndrs 20 17 12 52 167 13 7
ChiCago
18 28 I J7 158 186
21 20 10 52 1J2 146
lnd rcma polis 10 JS 3 n 10/ 197 Atlan ta
DI VISion 1
Wes t
w . I. t pts gl ga
w . I f. pts g f ga
Vancouve-r 25 20 S 55 169 157
Houston
79 rt~ o sa 201 f4 J Ch1cago
24 1 1 J 52 1611.&amp;3
PhOenr)(
14 10 6 5J 11 1 164
19 72 8 46 157 175
Mlnnesolt~
25 zo0 50 187 150 St . Lou rs
12 29 6 30 127 :wa
Srtn Orego
n 10 I -H l 'i 6 151 M•nnesotil
x Balt 1more IJ 31 J 29 IIJ 191 Kans rt s Cr t 10 32 6 i 6 121 205
Of\11S10n J
Canad ian
w . I. t pts gt ga
w . 1 t pt s gt ga
8 13 11 115 107
Quebec
JO 16 0 60 201 154 LoSA nQe ls 2 9
Toronto
'1.1 19 2 56 208 117 Montreo.'t l 28 9 13 69 230 141
20 19 10 so 200 186
Edrnonfon
23 11 2 48 158 l.t 2 P1ttsb.rgh
Det ro 1t
lJ 26 9 35 142 189
WaShmQtn
4 41 5 13 106 260
Van couvt-:r
1 ! 23 2 44 139 153
D1vis1on 4
Winnipeg
10 ? I 2 ~7 l i' O 151
w I t pts gf ga
x-franc h1se fransle red fro m
Bu ffa lo
31 10
7 71 211 1 Ci()
M1Ch1gan
Fr rd ay'-s- Result$
Boston
76 13 10 6~ 225 147
N ew England 4 B"ll lmorc 2
Toronto
18 25 7 4J 167 198
Toron1o 6 Vancou\ler o
Mrnnesota 4 Houston 1
Calr fornta 12 32 9 JJ 140 209
Cle11e1 and 2 Edmonton o
Fndily ' s Result
St Lou is 4 Atlanta 2
WHA Sfand1ngs.
Un 1ted Press ln te r ncH 1onal
ea st

James led all
rught, hitting 7

at~~

McAdoo sparks Braves, 111-101

Wahama reserves remamed

unbea ten, edg ing Southwestern
38-35. Ttm Smtih paced the
Whtte Falcons with 15 while
Lart·y Cltrter 's 12 point.&lt; were
tops for the Highlander junior
varisty ,
SO UTHWESTERN (79~ -Walker 10 ~ 2.1 , Wood 3 2 s,
Carte r 10 4 24, Gr ate 4 2 10
N1da J 0 6. Russe ll2 o 4, Crou se
0 3 3. TOTALS l2 -1S-79
WAHAMA ( S9t Gil land J 0
6 Johnson 4 0 8, Harmon 4 2 10,
Tucker 1 0 2. Ho lbrook J 2 7,
Rovsn J 4 10, Dn v1s. 2 o -1
TOTALS 24-11-59.

reserves, ·42-39

By

curacy. The Pirates hit 15 of 17
free throws , all m the second

ch:o;z, stripe, hitting 6 of _8.
Gallia_ held a distmct
:-a2 rebou~ding edge, _with

:;:'~~::: ~:C~t~ :t~; w~~~ ~a::~ulled away m the final

~~~~~as;'ed

~i~~a~~~:c~~~ ~~~~~=:r~~ ~~t.hitting l4 in a row at one :;~1: ~= ~ for. 19 poinets, ~:::..es.~u:.;de~ r:~H=~

Cubs upset Meigs
MORRISON GYMNASIUM
- The Ironton reserves, down
1a-11 in the• second quarter,
came back sb·ong tn the final 15
uunutes of action to r eg ister a
42-39 victory over the Mergs
Marauder rcscr\'es here
FndaJ• night.
The Marauders jumped out
to a 104 first quarter margm
and held a slim Ia-15 le&gt;Jd al
in ternus.&lt;ton before the Tigers
overtook Meigs 11 rter three
periods, :J!J.29.
The Marauders, who hit well
from the fo ul line in Ule early
gomg, !.act a c hance to catch ·
Jronton in the flnul rmnutes of
pla y but went cold at the line
and from the fi eld as the Tigt'(S

Southern attack With 14 pomts
while Paul Shul\2 added 12 and
Danny Brown 11 .
The Pirates hit 21 of 56 field
~~~temptsfor 38pct.,_while
times
35m 21
Southern also far!ct :ell

wi~:~~~ 4~na~ed tos~y

Pro Standings

win 57-48

frame bef
·
to within o;;e
z:o7:
:o
termlSSion
.
f
g mg n
e
The To~ados stormed ba k ~':a ~":r~r b. ~ore North
in the third quarter, pulling~ from the :~sid~ tor~ J~~:
wtthm t point on several oc- and he responded with a good
castons only to see Ule Pirates offensive showing as the

:;u~~n

Southern Tuesday.
By quarters:
a 14 12 19-53
Ky ger Creek
16 18 23 15-72
Eastern

By

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LOT ON SALE NOWI

SAVINGS GAllERY

MISTER CASH

12's-14's

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-SECTIONALS

•

COSTA.
DEL
SOL,
SEVPIF,

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• HE ENABLES YOU TO:
,.. Cash A Uleck any hour of the Pay.

!lOrin

Flamenco
Holiday

The "hottest"
item in the
, kitchen is the
liTTON MICROWAVE OVEN
GET ONE FRU WHEN YOU SElECT
YOUR NfW HOME F_ROM JOHNSON'S

';~son

·J ie occupancy
- Ruond-tr lp charter jet from Columbus on Overseas
National Airways
- Fi rst cras-s a ir-conditioned hotel rooms. pr1vate bath
- Welcome Sagria Party in each city
- Guided sightseeing in each city
·
- Hospilatity Desk open daily to assist you
~Spec•al Span1sh Barbecue dinner
- Fa bulous Banquet at hotel in Madrid
- Lunch at a countrys ide restaurant
.-Continental breakfast every mornmg
- Att dinners except irv Madrid where banqu~t only ·Js
included
--"-'All tra n-sportation between cities. hotels and airports
.- All related ti ps, taxes, admission fees
Leaves May 23, 1975

u

.,

..- 365 Days A Year.

)

.

'

IS

a

Checking Account.
MONDAY : Dnve-ln -Walk-Up 8 30 am to 7_30 p.m

W.e have a full line of VINDALE MOBILES,
50x24' - as well as 14' wides. Wide
selection and price range with ~any floor
plans to choose from.

In terest Payable Quarterly

90 to 364 Days 5.5%

In terest Payable Quarterly

12 to 30 Months 6%

Interest Payab le Quarterly

Super Six 6.27%

Interes t Compounded Daily
Pay~ble Annually

30 to -48 Months 6.5%
Super 6"h 6.81%

TUESDAY: Dnve-tn-Walk-Up 8:30a.m . to 5· 00 p m
WEDNESDAY . Dr ive-In-Walk Up 8:30 to 5:00p.m.
Lobby 9 a .m. to 3: 00 p.m

Six Year CO's 7¥2%

Interest Payable Quarterly
Interest Compo unded Dail
Payable Annually
Y
Interest Payable ..,arterly
Interest Payable QUarterly

THURSDAY : Drive-ln-Watk-Up 8:3o'.l.m t S·oo
Lobby 9:00 a.m. to 1J oo Noon
P m.
FRIDAY : Drive-l n-Wa lk-U p a:30 am to 7 30
Lobby9·ooa .m. to3 : 00pm . B. 5:30. m
p .m.
SATURDAY : Dri ve -In Walk-Up 8 30:-, :o7. 30p m .
· · a I· 00 p.m.
Lobby 9 •00 am to l. 01l p.m.

°·

Cl'fiZENS.NATIONAL BANK
OF POINT PLEASANT .
"WI ARE-THE OLJI!ST MOBil! HOM! DEAUR INS.!. OHIO"

•

I

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Interest Compounded Ou&gt;cfor lu.

30 to 89 Days 5%

Four Year CO's 7.25%

v And it's FREE.·All you need

SPA'CE LIMITED
Ca 11. write or visit your AAA Travel Avent ioctay
·
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Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone 446-0699

Gold Point Savings 5.5%

CERTIFICATE~ OF DEPOSIT

Travel Bamin

il9

SAVINGS RATES
Interest From Day of
Regular Sa~ 5%
Dcpostt to Withdrawal

.f---bll

MORRISON GYMNASIUM
- The,Ironton Tigers exploded
to a commanding third quarter
lead, !hen held off a fourth
period Meigs rally eriroute to a
67-59 victory here Friday night.
The Tigers, in upping their
season mark to 9-4, 8-2 in
SEOAL play, were never

from 20 feet at the . buzzer to
give the visitors ttie lead (or
good at 33-31.
The Tigers exploded m the
third quarter, outscoring the
Mara uders 1S.:7 to take a 49-38
lead tnto the final 8 minutes.
Ironton upped the margin to
14 at 6046 with 2 : ~1 remaining

-----

Friday's

GALLIPOLIS
Ge ne
Layton, 13, son or Mr . and Mrs
Gene Layton, Thurman , and a
student at Sou th\\ es tern,
winner of the Elks Annual
Hoop Shoot con test in distri ct
competiton, will compete for
state h on~rs Feb 15 at Ashland
College , Ashland, Ohio.
Layton sank 21 of 25 free
throw a tt empts tn dtstr ict
action at Athens , but later
lear ned he must return to the
hardwood to break a !te wttll
Rt ck Bell of Logan. F1ve attempts were made to break the
tie. Gene's compehtor made 3
of 5, but or Layton , there wa s
notlltng but net five times in a
row , giving him 26 of 30 and a
fine district trophy .
Should Layton win in slate
competition, he would then

Ohto H1gh School
Basketball Scor es
By United Press lnfernational
Friday
Chillicothe 47 Portsmouth 42
Valley 60 Portsmouth West 42
C! av 59 Wester n 40
Midd letown 78 Lima Sen 1or 68
Ottawa Glandorf 75 L1ma Bath
73
j:el1na 74 El1da 52
Delphos
St
Jo hns I 88
Wapakoneta 54
Van Buren 65 Cory Rawson 61
Crestview 67 A! !en East 64
St. Marys 79 Van Wert 75
Lrn co lnv !ew 95 Columb us
Gro\l e 85
ZaneSv ill e 66 Upper Arl mgton
61
Newark 57 Mar/ella 49
Zanesville Rosecra ns 78
Centerburg 52
West Muskingum 65 Tr 1 Val ley
60
Sheridan 85 Crooks11ille 71
Shenandoah 46 Caldwel l 36
LICking Valley 102 Watkin S
Memoria l 59
Maysv ill e 75 New Lexi ngton 69
Miller 68 Glouster 64
New Concord 81 Ph1 lo 51
Oover 42 Coshoc ton 38
Garaway 65 Tu sky Catholic 58
Ind ian Valley South 64 Hiland
52

68

ADVANCES TO STATEGene Layton, 13, Thurman,
will take part in the finals of
the 1975 Ohio State Hoop Shoot

'

Cle John Marsha ll 67 Cle
Rhodes 65
Cle Lincoln west 61 Cle wesf
Tech 56
Cle Heights 99 Sha kt-:r Heig ht s
82

Normand y 63 Brush 55
Valley Forge 5 1 Pa rma 44
Maple Heigh ts 60 Bedford .t5
WillouQhby South 62 Mayfie ld
47
Midpark· 52 Menfor 49
Olmsted Fal ls 64 Medina 59
Brecksvi ll e 55 Strongs\lill e 51
Cuyahoga Heights 74 Brooklyn
69
Solon 60 Chagrin Falls 59
Chardon 56 Ke nston 52
Chane l 74 Elyria Catholi C 53
Midview 82 Brookside 74
Clearview 69 Wellington 44
F1re1ands 73 Lutheran Wes t 46
South Amherst 66 Key stone 58
Elyria 42 Mar 1on JJ
Mansfie ld St. Peter 71 Sf.
Joseph 70
Ravenna 60 Nordonia 55
Shelby 52 Norwalk 48
Mansfield Mad 1son 75 Mansfield Ma labar 69
Youngstown Rayen 90 Youngs town , W. Va. 64
Austintown Fitch 60 Hubbard
58
Boardman
57
Campbell
Memoria! 47
Youngstown
Mooney
53
Struthers 38
Canfield 67 Girard 53
Barberton 87 War en Harding 62
Niles 79 Mass illon sa
Cte St. tgna ti'u s 56 South 52
Lakewood 64 Euc l1d 47
Eastlake North 60 Berea 51
Avon Lake 57 Nor th Olmsted 55
Rocky R1ver 67 Bay 64
westlake 104 Fa1r111ew 55
Warrensville 51 Independence
49
West Geauga 58 Orange 57
Springfie ld North 76 Troy 65
Dayton StebbinS 50 Fairborn
Baker 37
Vandalia 11 West Milton 56
Ttpp City 64 Oakwood 60
Piqua 76 Tec umseh 48 '
Cots East 77 Co ts Mohawk 73
Cots Mifflin 78 Co!s South 53
Col~ Marion Fran k! m 62 Cols
Norfh 57
Cols Brookhaven 66 Co ts Cots
west 52
Cots McKmley 84 Cots Whet stone 59
Col s Eastm'oor 71 Cols Walnut
R1dge 6 4
Cols Central 87 Co ls Norfhland
83
Groveport 63 Cols Westland 53
Worthington 67 Westerville 50
Whitehal l 74 Dela war e· 73
Hilliard 76 Reynoldsburg 73
Gahanna 60 Mt Vernon 40
Cot s St Char les 61 Co ts Ready

lui fr om 7 feet to put the game
out of reach in the dosmg
St'COnds .
II wa s a s uperb night for 6-5
center Dea n F ttzpa lnck, with
the lanky jwuor lut tmg 8 of 12
floor attempt. and just 1 of 4 at
U1e line fo r 17 points, while also
hauling in 17 rf'bnunrl -. to lead

state hoop shoot event

cage scores

Ashland 57 New Philadelphia
54
Bu ckeye Sout h 82 Mar1 1n s
Fer ry 76
St . Clairsville 83 Cambndge 66
Jeflerson Union 62 Toronto 52
Conotton Valley 71 MadiSOn 60
Springf!eld Local 101 Lee ton1a
63
Cle John Ada ms 65 Cle
Collinwood 42
Cle Glenvill e 84 Cle East 66
Cle East Tech 70 C!e John Hay

before Meigs caught fire a nd
outscoced the Ttgers 1\-3 in the
next one and a half mmutes to
pull within 6 a t 63-57 with just
1 08lefl as Dan Dodson can ned
a !5 footer from the base ltne.
But Crockrel hit the fron t end
of a one-&lt;~~d-one, as did Ed
Howard. before Mike Brown

both teams on U1e !wards.
10.
Fttzpatnck got do1tble fig ure
Ironton hit 29 of 66 field goal
help from Mark Fairchild wtth _a ttempts for 44 pet., and just 9
14, F:d Howard wtth 13 and of 17 at the charity stripe.
Cruc krel with 11.
Me igs connec ted just 23
The Marauders were pac~ times in 6.1 fl oor trtes for 37
by sophomore Greg Browmng pet., whtle hitting 13 of 1a foul
wtlh 19 pmnts, followed by shot..
Coa ts with 18 Md Dodson with
The Tigers 'held a com-

Layton to take part in

high school

represe nt the sla te age . 8-9 William Fmnearthy. Athens;
l!J.ll - Chns Spnggs, Portsmouth and 12- 13 Gene l.avton
C:alhpolis .
·
'
Tlu s is the hst of wmners and
their schools who have parltctpated since Elks Hoop Shoot

started fow· years ago.
1971-72
a-9, Gene Layton - Southwestern School Dts tnct: l!J.ll ,
Jeff Brown, Gallipolts Ct ty
School District and 12-13, Terry
Car ter - Soutltwestern School
District
1972-73
8-9, Jeff Ca ll , Rio Grimde· lOl l, ' Dan Spencer, Coo l~tlle
1 Meigs County) and 12- t:l ,
Crtinso n Pratt , Mtddl eport
(Meigs County ).
1973-74
advan ce to the regional semi•
8-9. Sam Hale, Cadmus
final contes t. The time and Elementary : 10-11 , Tim
place will be a nnounced late r Lanier,
Rio
Grande
for that event. If he is suc- Elemen tary and 12-13, Dan
cessful in wmning the reg ional , Spencer , Coolville 1Metgs
he would then go to the national Cotm ty).
event, whtch will be held
1974-75
during Ul·e NAIA Invttational
8-9, Randy Layton, South·
Contest, to be held at Ashlaua, Tournament in Kansas City,
wes tern Dtstr!Ct; 10.11, Jeff
Ohto College on Saturday, Feb. Mo. on March 15.
Call, Rio Grande a nd 12!13
15. Layton won district honors
Randy Layton, Ge ne's
Gene Layton, Southwester~
at Athens last week in the Elks- brotller, represented the 8-9
Dis trict ( District Winner) .
sponsored contest.
years old group. Randy sank 13
The South Central District is
of 25 attemps which was good composed of 14 lodges, eight of
enough for second place tie. whi c h par ticipated in the
Randy lost the tie and had to dtstrict contes t. Those who
settle for Ulird place. The local took part in the contest at
10-11
age
gro up
was Athens had competed with
represented by Jeff Call, son of approxunately I ,200 boys and
Tuffs 93 Worcester Tech 77
Un 1on 85 Hoba rt 66
Mr . and Mrs. Don E. Call, Rio g1rls.
Vt 77 R I 68
Grande. Jeff sank 12 of 25
Carroll E. Waugh is youth
Vil lanova 95 St Francis 84
York 78 Washn gtn &amp; Lee 63
which gave him fo urth place. acttvity
chair man
lor
Other
wmners
who
will
Gallipohs
Elks
Lodge
No
107.
South
Arm strong St. 87 Sou the rn
Tech as
Ga St. 80 Fla Sn OJ
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) Howard 100 So Ca r St 82
DETROIT (UP!) - The
Paul
Dietzel, former head
No Car AS. T 88 Del St 86
Detroit
Lions Friday traded
No Ga . 77 Og lefhorpe 71
football coach and athletic
veteran guard Chuck Walton to
director at South Carolina,
Midwest
the Denver Broncos for lineLake Forest 58 Ri pon 57
resigned Friday from an adLaw rence 61 Belo1t 52
hacker 'Bill Laskey.
Mich igan Tech 69 M111n Morris ministrative job. Dietzel re.
62
Northwestern ( Ia ) 72 Befhe l 52 signed as head coach alter last
season and had accepted the
Rock ford 83 Aurora 60
So Oakofa 90 No. Iowa 88. ot newly created position of v1ce
president lor university relaWest
Bo 1se Sf. 81 Weber St 76
tions but decided Friday to quit
Montana 53 Go nzaga 51
altogether
.
Oregon 79 Oregon Sf 68
USF 97 Pepperdine 89
San ta Cla ra 92 Loyola 77
Hayw ard St. 99 Hummbo ld l Sl
MIAMI ( UPI) - Laura Baugh
59
· Sf Mary s 95 Nevada Reno 93 shot a lour-WJder.par 68 Friday
Gonzaga 53 Montana 51
UC Oa111S 99 Sacra mento St 98 to take a one-shot lead in the
Alas ka 81 St Martins 79
first round of the $40;000
LWS and Clr k lll W Bapf1 Sf 54
Burdlnes Invitational Golf
Idaho 93 Montana 79
Tournament.

Meigs-Ironton box. . .·

Tol edo Rogers 72 Cen tra l 63
Genoa 88 G1bsonburg 66
Def iance 79 Kenton 39
Fr emont Ro ss 53 Sandu sky 52
Lorain Adm 1ra1 Kmg 67 Manon
Hardmg 65
G_al!on 87 Upper Sandusky 60
Cm Roger Bacon 74 Cin Purcell
64

Cin Hughes 79 C1n A1ke n 32
Hamilton Taft 81 Princeton 66
Cin Elder 72 Ci n St Xavie r 65
Cin Moell er 63 em LaSalle 62
lo ll

Cin W1th row 53 Cin Western
Hills 45
Peebles 92 Georgetown 66
Greenfield 58 washington c H .
54

(67)

FG-A FT-A
4-8 0 0
B 12 1-4
714 0-0
1-2 0-0
1-6 0-0
414 5-9
4-9
3-4
0-1 0-0
29-66 9-17
MEIGS {59)
FG-A FT-A
1-7
1-1
1-7 2-2
4-10 2-2
816 3-6
0I
00
0-3
3-4
8-17 2-2
1-2
00
23-63 13-18

Mark F.:m chdd

M1ke Brown
Rick Howard
Ed Howard
Bob Crockrel
Scott Wylie
TOTALS

RB. PF TP
9
2
&amp;
17
2 17
12
2 t4
I
2
2
I
3
2
9
3 13
2
2 11
0

"

Akron central -Hower: 62 Akron
Kenmore 61
Akron East 60 Akron North ·54
Akrgn South 61 Akron Garf ieiCt

s•

.

Walsh Jesuit 60 Akron Hobun
57
.
Barberton 87 Warren Hac_ding
62
Tallmadge 70 Kent Roosevelt

OAKLAND l UPI ) - Meliasa
Militano of Dix Hills, N.Y., and
Johnny Johns of Bloomfield
Hills, Mich., won the national
pairs tiUc Friday at the U.S.
Figure
Skating
Championships.

'

See Our Large
Selectinn of

MOBIL£
HOMES

•

and

SECTIONAL
HOMES
•MARLETTE
•ncoNA ·
•ARLINGTON
•GRANVILLE
•SPRINGBROOK

Californians Tal Babilonla of
Mission Hills and Randy
Gardner of Los Angeles finished second and also quallf!ed
lor the team that w!U represent
the U.S. at the World Olamplonshlps in Colorado Springs,
Colo ., in March.

~~we

service Whit we sell"

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Upper Rt. 7 ·
Gallipolis
Phone 446-U4Q

• Cui high labor co1t1. Build It youraelt. ,
• Pr•cllcatly no down payment ...
low monthly payment•
• Build the home you want ... where
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• Your land doe•n'l have to be tully paid lor to 1tart.
• You get pre-cut materials , delivery, blueprints ... slep-by-slep Instruction• . . , aome
loundellon materlalt
Mu d Co upo n fo r
Sl &lt;ul a N t:w L11e1

the Whole

rI ---------------Great
lrlea
Dept
Send me ~ou r FREE New 197 5
MILES HOMES,
OH·2

Slor y

I
I

There'• a representative near vou

Phone· (614) 826-71)90

G'JIJfi}P~
CJ
J 1 -~ GJiom""~
~

·------------The Do· II · You rse ller s Fnend

I

Homes

Book

R. R. 2, Concord Sq ., New Concord, Oh . 43762
tbmr -

-

-

Still!

Zrp _

_

_

:

________________ ..I

L Pttonl! 1

1

Sears Automotive Sale!,
Steel Belt Radials ...
Save $ $ $ on 2nd Tire
When you buy 1st tire at regular
price,
1\I.!:IU lo' l'rS

liiZ E

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NOW :1 FOR •

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8.25-14
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Guaranteed
Battery

. GUARANTEE
F rue r c/'11\o.;l-'ur••n l "'r llrm •)() ~I I! YII
nf pure w~· tf hnlt• ry JJI"IIVl' ~ &lt;lc·
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d••fcc·tive, c h~tr g mK only fur t ho
perrod IJfuwncn~ h t l l,
munl hly
c ha r ge!! fnr owncnthip
co m ·
Jmtcd hy d rvrr! m.c the cu rre nt
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S hock Aboorb~rs
· G uara ntee

•

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If Heuvy-D u t y Sh ock A lutor hcr

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Save '13.96
Heavy-Duty

f~:~ ulty

mr:ll.urra18 cJr
or weArs-out wh ile
the o•ir&lt;inal purc huBCr u wn11 the
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car, rl .., ,]j herl'p lacOO upon rtllur.h
fr ee of c harRe, o r the r•urdurfl('
IJJ"rce w d l be refunded, If the
defec t lVI} 11.ho&lt;:k 11.ht!or her Willi rn·

by Sean, we will 1netall
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..•Jl.98
Sears Has A Credit Plan To Suit Most Eve~y Need
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.

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----~--

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Silver Bridge Plna
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OLIVE STREET

1
I

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

1
I "'""
C11~

•

.I

67

•

68

Akron Springfield 55 Stow 47
Ravenna 60 Nordonla 55
Cle Holy Name 66 Cle MaK
Hayes 59
Cle · central Catholic 77 Cie
Byzantine 53 ·
Avon 64 Buckeye 61 {otl
Toledo Bowsher 54 Toledo Start
52 (oil
Toll!dO. Scott ,79 Toledo Waite 48
Toledo Macomber 64 Toledo
Woodward 49
Toledo St. Francis60Toledo St.
Johns 40

CHAMONIX, France (UP!)
- Bernadette Zurbriggen of
Switzerland won the Arlberg:
Kandahar downhill and
Austria's Anne Marie MoserProeU won the combined title
to open an 8I.point lead at the
end of the European women's
world cup skiing season,
Cindy Nelson of Lutsen
Minn ., finished fourth .
'

0

1
17

51

manding 51-35 board edge, led
by Fitzpatrick's 17. Fairchild
picked off 12 for the visitors.
Meigs reboWJding was led by
Chip Brauer with 9.
Friday the Marauders, at 113 overall, 1-10 in the SEOAL,
host Logan while Ironton enterta ins Jackson .

PLAYE R .
RB PF TP
Mitch Meadows
3
5
0
M1 ck Davenporf
2 4
Dan Dodson
5
1 10
19
6
Greg Bro~·mm~
Steve Rando tp
0
4 0
Chip Brauer
9
3
Lonn 1c Coa ts
18
6
3
Stev e Wa lburn
2
0
0
TOTALS
lS 18 '$9
Score by Quarters :
!ronlon Tig ers
19 14 16 IB
67
Me1gs Marauders
11 20 7 21
59
Offl c1als. Max Sc hwarze!, Clyde Jar11 is

Friday's college scores
Frtday 's College Ba sketball
Results
By Un1ted fJre ss lnternat 1onal
East
Allentown 95 EISenhow er 87
Buff St 100 Bnghmfn St 69
Coast Guard 67 Bowdo in 62
Colgate 58 Northeastern 55
Dartmouth 78 Columb 1a 77
Duques ne 72 St. Peter 's 71
Fredonia Sf 40 Cortland st. 32
Glassboro Sl 66 wm . Pa t
ferso n 64
Har va rd 90 Corn el l 67
Ket-:ne St. 93 Pt Gorham 82
Pace 68 Montclarr St 67
Penn 72 Brown 67
Pr1n ce ton 62 Ya le 50

IRONTON

PLAYER
Dean Roy al
Dean Fr tzpatrick

56

Cots Harfley 67 Cols Wehrle 55
Cols Watterson 14 Cots De Sales
73
Teays Valley 76 Fran klin
Heights 63
Hamilton
Township
66
Marysvil le 61
Olentangy 64 Dublin 43 .
West Jefferson 61 Gra nd 11iew
59
Grove City 86 Lancaster 54
East Knox 75 Cols Academy 58
Canal Winchester 89 Bloom
carrol l 62
Logan Elm 87 Mtllers porf 49
Lancaster\ Fisher 90 Amanda
Clearcreek 70
Fairfield Un ion 56 Berne union
s.t (ot)
Licking Heights 60 Heath 5 1
Granville 52 Johnstown 50
Dayton Stive rs 108 Bexley 77
Buckeye Valley 51 Mt Gi lead
A3
Circleville 60 Wilmington 51
Louisville St. Thoma s Aquinas
61 Centra I Cathol !c 54
Alliance 68 East Liverpool 58
Louisville 59 canton South SO
Perry 53 Junctipn 42
Oakwood 56 Glenwood 41
Fairless 46 Merlingtan 38
Sandy Valley 66 Minerva 53
Lake 15 Tuslaw 44
Akron Buchtel 64 Akron Ellett

\

/

headed as they opened up a 1!111 first quarter lead, although
Meigs managed to pull into a
31-31 deadlock on a Lonnie
Coats 19 footer with 7 seconds
remaining in Ule first half.
But that tie was short-ltved,
as Ironton's Bob Croc krel
banked in a twi stmg jumper

''I '

�.,
l9 1 The SIDlday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975
18 ~ The SWlday Times - Sentinel, SWJdav, Feb . 2, 1975

Ironton hard -pressed in beating Meigs, 67-59

Creek
h~t Ea~tenr f' • 1J p~l11-1 ' jl~
th
c,tg rs snappf'l .1
re(' ~Hll1~ !11-. \.fl•' SIT t' 'tk hCit'
F'ndav mgtlt ~.1,5~~ uv ,' K . ' '
Creek.
.
u ~!-:~r
In wrnnr ng (\ lctch Ril l
.
Ph II
U1 t aps ' Eaglt&gt;.s l'Ont uJm•d
ear 1ong wrnnm!:! !Strrak U\'l' r
the Bobcats Two otlwr Er~J.dt•s
Wf'r e In double ftl!ll!"t'!-i Hc-mfh
Bla k e, SC'mor _1-!U&lt;II d dllrntwd Il l
,
17 pOint~ nnd Cn•g Hark' htHI

rtW\\.ar d., l,ed tht• Bobca ts or

Coad1 Kr tth Ccu·tcr WJth 16
f
b k
t '!h
on ~ur as cts c-m d
erg I free thl ows
Bill Metzner, ll JUllWr , had 10
potnb bf'folt' l ~_'&lt;tv ln g the g.:rmt•
v•. Jtt 1 &lt;HI , lflJUI')
I':'
,• ,as ter n
Jl1!1l pl'fl mto :1 lh.JI f1rst penod
1 d
ea_ ,beht.nd ' !he, shou_trng of
HI
c
. Hk l • RCH IC_'v .Ill( 1 vpencer
{ uII n:11 tl&lt;H I 6 of II1£' a I'-&gt;OJcat
t
p111nr,;;;
'I Jlllts

:H-:~2 at the hcdf on tht' strength
uf Spt•nfcr 's nine p oinL~:; Don
f' "
.
·. tdun gt~r had three porn~
dunng llw penll() wtnlc Mike
HarT IS. Blak e and Bar re,,
!:i.l'(lred Iwo l'-;.1Ch Mt' L:w er wul
(
Otl rt• ll led the Cctllmll S with
.•ax JWifl ts cactl
F u ll uw~ng th&lt;' thu·d penod
· tern bel.! an a st..all
ltp-off. !·.as
, . t·&lt;l &lt;t few
\\h]('h '' as abando11
111 lnule.s I.:1IPr The E~r gles lhen

I'Onnt•dcd for three fi eld ~oals
,. ·I
ld ( I,
Rlttkf' added two goa ls and&lt;:~
foul shot whrle Etdrmger -a nd
Hmtis hatl free throws. Senior
Dave w1.,. . .. and .,..ottrell paced
"'
,_,
thC' Bubc~t
scoring
that pertod
K
c k
ygcr
ree
outscor ed
Evstcrn , 19-1' durtnu the
n
fourth pert'od as,} both &lt;·o·•ches
0
en1ptted tttc tr benc.·hes.
Huth c lubs enjoyed a fmc

mght at the foul ltne . Vtsiting Nestlings scored their second
Kyger Cree k connected on 19 of vtctory of the season in the
24 attempt.&lt; while Eastern sa nk SVAC reserve league with a 3120 of 26 at the charity stripe. 20 win . Mark Hawk and Phtl
F.astern htt 26 of 73 floor at- LaComb led the winners with
tempts for 35 pe t.
nine points each. Ralph Baylor
The vtctory ga ve the Eagles topped the Bobkittens wtth
a 3-0 slate in the Southern ·seven pomts.
Valley Athle!tc Conference and
Kyger Creek hosted Symmes
:l-12 mark overall .
Valley Saturday and wtll play
Kyg er Creek dropped to 1-tl Hannan, W. Va . m a make--up
overall and 0-9 in the SV AC
game Wednesday afternoon at
Duane
Wo lfe '!:i
Green Ches hire. Eastern wtll host

Highlanders
~,.?"~.~~~. ~.?!.~ ..?!~. !~ornados,
.' l .
top F.a ConS
PATRIOT
Kevm Wolker
and Terrr Carter pumped m 24
point&lt;; each as the !iouth \lf'Sh:•rn UJg illlmder.s roll pd to
nn f'a!oiy 71l-59

nctor y over the

Wahama Wh1tc FHk ons here
FncJay mghl.
Wal ker and Carter eac h htl
10 fr om the fteld and 4 a t the
ltne, whi le ge lttng twin fig11re
scoring help fr om Keith Grate
wi th 10 points
Scott Roush und Dan HHrmon led Wa hama wtlh 10 points
each as the Ftdcons dropped to
2-; on the ycnr . The Highlanders are now 8-0, 54 tn the
SVAC
1'he Highla nd ers put Ute

game away ea l'ly, out scoring
Wah ama 24-11 in the fir st
q11arter and 13-9 in the second
pen Od to hold a commanding
37-20 mtermi ssion lead
Sout hwestern conti11 ucd to

outscore the visJtm·s the r~st of
tht&gt; way, leading 53-35 after ~
three peri ods .

Pirates, holdmg off a Southern
comeback in U1e second half
Wtth phenomenalfoul shooting
notched thetr ninth win in 12
outmgs with a 5748 victory
Ule Tornados here F'rtday
Pirates at 8-2 in

:::~1
Th~

The Highlanders Jut 32 of 64
fie ld goa l a ttempts for 38 pet , SV AC, . Ulus hold onto ~:
wh tl e the Wh ite Falcons possessiOn of second place
connected JUSt 24 tunes m 70 ~hile the Tornados drop to 5-4
trtes for 34 pet.
. Southwes tern held a big
re boundtng margtn , 56-31, . The Pi;ates took a 16-&lt;l lead
wttl1 Ll oyd Wood 's 22 caroms m the ftrst quarter and inleading uoth squads
creased the margin to 16 at 22-0
.
T11 esday th e Hi ghla nd e rs
trave l to Hannan Trace before
ho,ting Easter n Friday
In Friday's prelinunary, the

A Great @

NorthGallia had been hitting
just 54 pet. of its foul shots on

points, Mike ~~~~d~ra~~
Fred Logan 10
Mlk R b ·
e
o erts paced the

U1

:;::~~~nfi 1~

By United Press International Conference.
pomts in the second half of the
The Buffalo Braves' nickThe Celtics, now 34-14 for tbe third period. Perry added lour
name for Bob McAdoo tells season, defeated the Cleveland reboundlland six assists during
more abou~ Ule 6-foot 10 center Cavaliers 121-99. The Celtics the rally. Gail Goodrich led the
Ulan Ule fact he is the Nation Ill took command of the game late Lakers with 34 points.
Basketball Association's in the second period when they
Bucks 101 76ers 97
leading scorer.
soared to a 57-43 lead and
Kareem
Abdul -Jabbar
They call him "The Game Coach Tom Heinsohn cleared scored 28 points for the Bucks
Breaker."
Ule bench in the fourth period. but it was Jim Price's 2!J.foot
McAdoo showed why his Jo Jo White led the Celtics with jump shot with six seconds left
teammates think that way 24 points.
which clinched Milwaukee 's
again Friday night when he
The Phoerux Suns beat the victory at Philadelphia. The
broke loose for 16 points in th e Los Angeles Lakers 105-101, the triumph enabled the llucks to
Ulird period and led the Braves Milwauk ee Bucks topped the climb out of the cellar of Ule
to a 111-101 triumph over the Philadelphia 76ers 101-97, the Midwest Division ahead of Ule
Atlanta lifiwks. The spurt Chicago Bulls down ed the idle Kansas City Kings.
lifted the Braves to an 115-77 Golden State· Warriors I'J:/·103
BuDs 12'1 Warriors 103
lead and M~Adoo led a later - the Washington Bullets
spurt ~tth SIX of Buffalo's 12 Ule New Orleans Jazz 106-101
pomts ICIIll! the_ viclory . .
and the Seattle SuperSoni,;
McAdoo flntshed . wtlh a beat the Portland Trail Blazers
game-lugh 26 porn!.&lt; and took 106-103 in other NBA games
Lakers 101
·
down_ 17 rebounds while Jim Suns
The Suns fought back from a
McMillia n added 19 poD:'ts to
the Buffalo ca~e. _The vtcto~y 15-point third-period deli~ it
was Ule Braves runth in thetr with Dick Van Arsdale and
last 10 game~ but left them two Curtis Perry leading the rally
games . behtnd th e Boston f&lt;Jr their .,triumph at Phoenix
Celttcs "' the NBA 's Eastern Van Arsdale had eight of his

beai

ABA Standings
Un1fed Press International
east
w. 1. pet g.b
35 13 129 N ew Yor"34 14 .7 08 1
Kentucky
20 32 .3 85 17
St LOUrS
14 36 280 22
Memph1S
10 39 204 25 1/,
Vr rg1nra

By

More

Kyger Creek I Sl) - Co tfr ell
16 Metzner 4 2 10, W•Se 2 I
5, Sfrdham 2 0 -1 . Trm Lucas 3
1 7. Terry LlJcas. 1 7 4 , Sm 1t11 1
1 3 and Bil ylor 0 J J Totals 17 19-SJ
Easfern (72) - Bla ke 8 I 17,
Barley 6 I 13, Nelson 1 0 2
Bowen 0 0 0, Spence r 7 7 21'
Erc h1nger I 4 7 Conde 1 2 4
Harr 1s 1 4 8 Total s 16-20-72 ·
48

West
w

Danny Brown I~ the Southern
boThard assault With 17 ~roms.
e Ptrates cormrutted 24

Bob Love scored 34 points
and Jerry Sloan had 'l:l In the
Bulls' triumph over the Warriors. Rick Barry scored 40 for
the Warriors who lost their
third straight game. It was the
lOth win in 12 games for Ule
Bulls.
Bullets 106 Jazz 101
Elvin Hayes scored 31. points
as the Bullets won tbeir 36th
game of the season while
handing the Jazz their 42nd
loss. Wes Unseld had 26 point.
and Phil Chenier 23 for
Washington while Louie Nelson
had 24 for the Jazz.

turnovers to just 17 for
Southern, while North Gallia
blocked 5 Tornado shots.
The evening ended on a sour
note when Southern's Greg
Dunning was taken to a local
hospital alter suffering back
spasms m the lockerroom.
Dunning, according to head
coa~h Carl Wolfe, was still
havmg much difficulty late
Frtday night and it is not
known whether he will be able
to see action Tuesday when the
Tornados travel to Eastern for
a battle with the arch-rival
Eagles .
"We did everytlling well but
shoot," said Wolfe following
the game. "We played an
overall good game. Both teams
played well," he concluded.
In Friday's preliminary, Ule
Southern reserves edged the
Pirate jWJior varsity 34-32.
Dave Roush led the Tornado
reserves with 12 points while
Mark Theiss, Brett Tackett
and Robert Neal each had 8 for
Nortll Gallia.
Tuesday the Pirates travel to
Wahama while Ule Tornados
m eet Eastern before hosting
Symmes Valley Friday.
NORTH GALLIA ( 571 ~
Log an 3 4-10, Runyon 2 () 4
Camden 5 1-11 , James 7 5 19;
Payne 4 5-13 TOTALS 21·15-57
SO UTHERN (48) _ Hdl O 2:
2• Ervin 1-0-2, Roberts 7 0.14
Brown 5 1-11, Shu lfz 5 2- 12;
~unnmg 3 1 7 TOTALS 21. 6 . 48 ,

1. pet

g.b .

&lt;~1

Denver
San Antonro
ln drana

11 HIS J2 2 4 571 11
24 25 .4 90 15 1h
U t ah
22 29 43 1 18 lJ,
San D1ego
21 JO 412 19 112
Fnday's Results
Kent ucky 134·St Lov rs 104
lnd1ana 107 Utah 93
V1rgrnr a 108 Memph is 97
New York 114 Denver 101
Sa n An ton10 125 San D1ego 11 2
NBA Slandmgs
By Umfed Press lnternaftonal
Ea slern Cunference
AtlantiC 01V IS1Dn

w

r

pet

Boston
34 14 .708
Bu ffa lo
33 17 660
New York
26 23 531
Ph1 la
20 30 -100
Central 01lliS 10n
w.

1.

g. b
2
Qlh
15

pet . g. b

Wast1mgton 36 13 735
Houst on
24 25 J90 12
Cle11eland
22 26 458 1J'h
Allan ta
21 32 396 161h
N ew Or leans
5 42
106 30 ,
We stern Conference
M•dw est Div•sion
w . 1. pet. g b.
Detroit
30 21 588
Ch1cago
28 21 57 1
Mil waukee
24 24 500
KC Omaha
25 26 490
POCi fiC DIVISIOn
w. I. pet. g. b .
Gol den State 30 19 612
Se allle
23 76 469 1
Portland
22 27 449 8
20 27 426 9
Phoenix
Los An gel es
19 29 396 J0''2
Fnday's Resu lf s
Bos ton 121 Cleveland 99
Buffalo 11 1 Atlanta 101
Milwau kee 101 Philadelp hia 97
WaSh1ng ton 106 New Orlea ns
101
Ch1cago 127 Golden State 103
Phoenix 105 Los Angeles 101
Seattle 106 Portla nd 103

FAIRFAX , Va . (UP!) _
Martina Navratilova of Czechoslovakia upset top&lt;&gt;eeded
Chns Evert of F'ort Lauderdale, ~a ., 3-li, 64, 7-6, Fr1day
rugh t m the quarterfinasl of of
the Vir ginia
Slims of
Washington Tennis Tour nament.

t05

held on
Meigs

was led by , Dale
Brownm~ with 12 points, wh1le
JeH Mnrtm chtpped m a.
Ackt so n pa ce d Ir onto n
scoriog with 15 point. , followed
by Fairchild with 18.
The Mara uders hos t Logan
Fr ida y while Iron ton entertains the Jackson reserves.
h on loll
4 11 15 12- 42
Metgs
to B 11 10-39

r9

WINTER SPECIALS!

IRON TO N (42) - Sesher 3 0
6, Mason 0-0-0. Acklson 7-1-15
Murnr!lhan 0-0 -0, Fairchild 4 3'
I L K1II S 2· 2-6, HoustQn 2 0 4
TOTALS 18-6-42 .
.,
MEIGS (3 9} - Brown inQ 3-6!2, Dodson 2 1-5, Stewart 1-0 2.
Martm 4 0 8, Ma r shllll 2 1 5
Sc it es 22 6, Hamilton 01 ·1,
Hullon 0 0-0 TOTALS 14-11 -39 '

NH L Standi ngs
Unit ed Pr~s s Int ernation al
DIVISIOn I
w . I t . pts gt ga
w . I t PfS g l ga
11 10 7 69 171 101
Nl'w England 27 19 2 !i6 165 t68 Phll~dlph
NY Rangr s 25 15 9 59 20 1 160
Cte\leland
21 25 1 44 131 153 NY
lslndrs 20 17 12 52 167 13 7
ChiCago
18 28 I J7 158 186
21 20 10 52 1J2 146
lnd rcma polis 10 JS 3 n 10/ 197 Atlan ta
DI VISion 1
Wes t
w . I. t pts gl ga
w . I f. pts g f ga
Vancouve-r 25 20 S 55 169 157
Houston
79 rt~ o sa 201 f4 J Ch1cago
24 1 1 J 52 1611.&amp;3
PhOenr)(
14 10 6 5J 11 1 164
19 72 8 46 157 175
Mlnnesolt~
25 zo0 50 187 150 St . Lou rs
12 29 6 30 127 :wa
Srtn Orego
n 10 I -H l 'i 6 151 M•nnesotil
x Balt 1more IJ 31 J 29 IIJ 191 Kans rt s Cr t 10 32 6 i 6 121 205
Of\11S10n J
Canad ian
w . I. t pts gt ga
w . 1 t pt s gt ga
8 13 11 115 107
Quebec
JO 16 0 60 201 154 LoSA nQe ls 2 9
Toronto
'1.1 19 2 56 208 117 Montreo.'t l 28 9 13 69 230 141
20 19 10 so 200 186
Edrnonfon
23 11 2 48 158 l.t 2 P1ttsb.rgh
Det ro 1t
lJ 26 9 35 142 189
WaShmQtn
4 41 5 13 106 260
Van couvt-:r
1 ! 23 2 44 139 153
D1vis1on 4
Winnipeg
10 ? I 2 ~7 l i' O 151
w I t pts gf ga
x-franc h1se fransle red fro m
Bu ffa lo
31 10
7 71 211 1 Ci()
M1Ch1gan
Fr rd ay'-s- Result$
Boston
76 13 10 6~ 225 147
N ew England 4 B"ll lmorc 2
Toronto
18 25 7 4J 167 198
Toron1o 6 Vancou\ler o
Mrnnesota 4 Houston 1
Calr fornta 12 32 9 JJ 140 209
Cle11e1 and 2 Edmonton o
Fndily ' s Result
St Lou is 4 Atlanta 2
WHA Sfand1ngs.
Un 1ted Press ln te r ncH 1onal
ea st

James led all
rught, hitting 7

at~~

McAdoo sparks Braves, 111-101

Wahama reserves remamed

unbea ten, edg ing Southwestern
38-35. Ttm Smtih paced the
Whtte Falcons with 15 while
Lart·y Cltrter 's 12 point.&lt; were
tops for the Highlander junior
varisty ,
SO UTHWESTERN (79~ -Walker 10 ~ 2.1 , Wood 3 2 s,
Carte r 10 4 24, Gr ate 4 2 10
N1da J 0 6. Russe ll2 o 4, Crou se
0 3 3. TOTALS l2 -1S-79
WAHAMA ( S9t Gil land J 0
6 Johnson 4 0 8, Harmon 4 2 10,
Tucker 1 0 2. Ho lbrook J 2 7,
Rovsn J 4 10, Dn v1s. 2 o -1
TOTALS 24-11-59.

reserves, ·42-39

By

curacy. The Pirates hit 15 of 17
free throws , all m the second

ch:o;z, stripe, hitting 6 of _8.
Gallia_ held a distmct
:-a2 rebou~ding edge, _with

:;:'~~::: ~:C~t~ :t~; w~~~ ~a::~ulled away m the final

~~~~~as;'ed

~i~~a~~~:c~~~ ~~~~~=:r~~ ~~t.hitting l4 in a row at one :;~1: ~= ~ for. 19 poinets, ~:::..es.~u:.;de~ r:~H=~

Cubs upset Meigs
MORRISON GYMNASIUM
- The Ironton reserves, down
1a-11 in the• second quarter,
came back sb·ong tn the final 15
uunutes of action to r eg ister a
42-39 victory over the Mergs
Marauder rcscr\'es here
FndaJ• night.
The Marauders jumped out
to a 104 first quarter margm
and held a slim Ia-15 le&gt;Jd al
in ternus.&lt;ton before the Tigers
overtook Meigs 11 rter three
periods, :J!J.29.
The Marauders, who hit well
from the fo ul line in Ule early
gomg, !.act a c hance to catch ·
Jronton in the flnul rmnutes of
pla y but went cold at the line
and from the fi eld as the Tigt'(S

Southern attack With 14 pomts
while Paul Shul\2 added 12 and
Danny Brown 11 .
The Pirates hit 21 of 56 field
~~~temptsfor 38pct.,_while
times
35m 21
Southern also far!ct :ell

wi~:~~~ 4~na~ed tos~y

Pro Standings

win 57-48

frame bef
·
to within o;;e
z:o7:
:o
termlSSion
.
f
g mg n
e
The To~ados stormed ba k ~':a ~":r~r b. ~ore North
in the third quarter, pulling~ from the :~sid~ tor~ J~~:
wtthm t point on several oc- and he responded with a good
castons only to see Ule Pirates offensive showing as the

:;u~~n

Southern Tuesday.
By quarters:
a 14 12 19-53
Ky ger Creek
16 18 23 15-72
Eastern

By

EVERY MOB.ILE ON
LOT ON SALE NOWI

SAVINGS GAllERY

MISTER CASH

12's-14's

. THE ELECTRIC MARVEL

-SECTIONALS

•

COSTA.
DEL
SOL,
SEVPIF,

MACAO

• HE ENABLES YOU TO:
,.. Cash A Uleck any hour of the Pay.

!lOrin

Flamenco
Holiday

The "hottest"
item in the
, kitchen is the
liTTON MICROWAVE OVEN
GET ONE FRU WHEN YOU SElECT
YOUR NfW HOME F_ROM JOHNSON'S

';~son

·J ie occupancy
- Ruond-tr lp charter jet from Columbus on Overseas
National Airways
- Fi rst cras-s a ir-conditioned hotel rooms. pr1vate bath
- Welcome Sagria Party in each city
- Guided sightseeing in each city
·
- Hospilatity Desk open daily to assist you
~Spec•al Span1sh Barbecue dinner
- Fa bulous Banquet at hotel in Madrid
- Lunch at a countrys ide restaurant
.-Continental breakfast every mornmg
- Att dinners except irv Madrid where banqu~t only ·Js
included
--"-'All tra n-sportation between cities. hotels and airports
.- All related ti ps, taxes, admission fees
Leaves May 23, 1975

u

.,

..- 365 Days A Year.

)

.

'

IS

a

Checking Account.
MONDAY : Dnve-ln -Walk-Up 8 30 am to 7_30 p.m

W.e have a full line of VINDALE MOBILES,
50x24' - as well as 14' wides. Wide
selection and price range with ~any floor
plans to choose from.

In terest Payable Quarterly

90 to 364 Days 5.5%

In terest Payable Quarterly

12 to 30 Months 6%

Interest Payab le Quarterly

Super Six 6.27%

Interes t Compounded Daily
Pay~ble Annually

30 to -48 Months 6.5%
Super 6"h 6.81%

TUESDAY: Dnve-tn-Walk-Up 8:30a.m . to 5· 00 p m
WEDNESDAY . Dr ive-In-Walk Up 8:30 to 5:00p.m.
Lobby 9 a .m. to 3: 00 p.m

Six Year CO's 7¥2%

Interest Payable Quarterly
Interest Compo unded Dail
Payable Annually
Y
Interest Payable ..,arterly
Interest Payable QUarterly

THURSDAY : Drive-ln-Watk-Up 8:3o'.l.m t S·oo
Lobby 9:00 a.m. to 1J oo Noon
P m.
FRIDAY : Drive-l n-Wa lk-U p a:30 am to 7 30
Lobby9·ooa .m. to3 : 00pm . B. 5:30. m
p .m.
SATURDAY : Dri ve -In Walk-Up 8 30:-, :o7. 30p m .
· · a I· 00 p.m.
Lobby 9 •00 am to l. 01l p.m.

°·

Cl'fiZENS.NATIONAL BANK
OF POINT PLEASANT .
"WI ARE-THE OLJI!ST MOBil! HOM! DEAUR INS.!. OHIO"

•

I

I

I

Interest Compounded Ou&gt;cfor lu.

30 to 89 Days 5%

Four Year CO's 7.25%

v And it's FREE.·All you need

SPA'CE LIMITED
Ca 11. write or visit your AAA Travel Avent ioctay
·
33 Court Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone 446-0699

Gold Point Savings 5.5%

CERTIFICATE~ OF DEPOSIT

Travel Bamin

il9

SAVINGS RATES
Interest From Day of
Regular Sa~ 5%
Dcpostt to Withdrawal

.f---bll

MORRISON GYMNASIUM
- The,Ironton Tigers exploded
to a commanding third quarter
lead, !hen held off a fourth
period Meigs rally eriroute to a
67-59 victory here Friday night.
The Tigers, in upping their
season mark to 9-4, 8-2 in
SEOAL play, were never

from 20 feet at the . buzzer to
give the visitors ttie lead (or
good at 33-31.
The Tigers exploded m the
third quarter, outscoring the
Mara uders 1S.:7 to take a 49-38
lead tnto the final 8 minutes.
Ironton upped the margin to
14 at 6046 with 2 : ~1 remaining

-----

Friday's

GALLIPOLIS
Ge ne
Layton, 13, son or Mr . and Mrs
Gene Layton, Thurman , and a
student at Sou th\\ es tern,
winner of the Elks Annual
Hoop Shoot con test in distri ct
competiton, will compete for
state h on~rs Feb 15 at Ashland
College , Ashland, Ohio.
Layton sank 21 of 25 free
throw a tt empts tn dtstr ict
action at Athens , but later
lear ned he must return to the
hardwood to break a !te wttll
Rt ck Bell of Logan. F1ve attempts were made to break the
tie. Gene's compehtor made 3
of 5, but or Layton , there wa s
notlltng but net five times in a
row , giving him 26 of 30 and a
fine district trophy .
Should Layton win in slate
competition, he would then

Ohto H1gh School
Basketball Scor es
By United Press lnfernational
Friday
Chillicothe 47 Portsmouth 42
Valley 60 Portsmouth West 42
C! av 59 Wester n 40
Midd letown 78 Lima Sen 1or 68
Ottawa Glandorf 75 L1ma Bath
73
j:el1na 74 El1da 52
Delphos
St
Jo hns I 88
Wapakoneta 54
Van Buren 65 Cory Rawson 61
Crestview 67 A! !en East 64
St. Marys 79 Van Wert 75
Lrn co lnv !ew 95 Columb us
Gro\l e 85
ZaneSv ill e 66 Upper Arl mgton
61
Newark 57 Mar/ella 49
Zanesville Rosecra ns 78
Centerburg 52
West Muskingum 65 Tr 1 Val ley
60
Sheridan 85 Crooks11ille 71
Shenandoah 46 Caldwel l 36
LICking Valley 102 Watkin S
Memoria l 59
Maysv ill e 75 New Lexi ngton 69
Miller 68 Glouster 64
New Concord 81 Ph1 lo 51
Oover 42 Coshoc ton 38
Garaway 65 Tu sky Catholic 58
Ind ian Valley South 64 Hiland
52

68

ADVANCES TO STATEGene Layton, 13, Thurman,
will take part in the finals of
the 1975 Ohio State Hoop Shoot

'

Cle John Marsha ll 67 Cle
Rhodes 65
Cle Lincoln west 61 Cle wesf
Tech 56
Cle Heights 99 Sha kt-:r Heig ht s
82

Normand y 63 Brush 55
Valley Forge 5 1 Pa rma 44
Maple Heigh ts 60 Bedford .t5
WillouQhby South 62 Mayfie ld
47
Midpark· 52 Menfor 49
Olmsted Fal ls 64 Medina 59
Brecksvi ll e 55 Strongs\lill e 51
Cuyahoga Heights 74 Brooklyn
69
Solon 60 Chagrin Falls 59
Chardon 56 Ke nston 52
Chane l 74 Elyria Catholi C 53
Midview 82 Brookside 74
Clearview 69 Wellington 44
F1re1ands 73 Lutheran Wes t 46
South Amherst 66 Key stone 58
Elyria 42 Mar 1on JJ
Mansfie ld St. Peter 71 Sf.
Joseph 70
Ravenna 60 Nordonia 55
Shelby 52 Norwalk 48
Mansfield Mad 1son 75 Mansfield Ma labar 69
Youngstown Rayen 90 Youngs town , W. Va. 64
Austintown Fitch 60 Hubbard
58
Boardman
57
Campbell
Memoria! 47
Youngstown
Mooney
53
Struthers 38
Canfield 67 Girard 53
Barberton 87 War en Harding 62
Niles 79 Mass illon sa
Cte St. tgna ti'u s 56 South 52
Lakewood 64 Euc l1d 47
Eastlake North 60 Berea 51
Avon Lake 57 Nor th Olmsted 55
Rocky R1ver 67 Bay 64
westlake 104 Fa1r111ew 55
Warrensville 51 Independence
49
West Geauga 58 Orange 57
Springfie ld North 76 Troy 65
Dayton StebbinS 50 Fairborn
Baker 37
Vandalia 11 West Milton 56
Ttpp City 64 Oakwood 60
Piqua 76 Tec umseh 48 '
Cots East 77 Co ts Mohawk 73
Cots Mifflin 78 Co!s South 53
Col~ Marion Fran k! m 62 Cols
Norfh 57
Cols Brookhaven 66 Co ts Cots
west 52
Cots McKmley 84 Cots Whet stone 59
Col s Eastm'oor 71 Cols Walnut
R1dge 6 4
Cols Central 87 Co ls Norfhland
83
Groveport 63 Cols Westland 53
Worthington 67 Westerville 50
Whitehal l 74 Dela war e· 73
Hilliard 76 Reynoldsburg 73
Gahanna 60 Mt Vernon 40
Cot s St Char les 61 Co ts Ready

lui fr om 7 feet to put the game
out of reach in the dosmg
St'COnds .
II wa s a s uperb night for 6-5
center Dea n F ttzpa lnck, with
the lanky jwuor lut tmg 8 of 12
floor attempt. and just 1 of 4 at
U1e line fo r 17 points, while also
hauling in 17 rf'bnunrl -. to lead

state hoop shoot event

cage scores

Ashland 57 New Philadelphia
54
Bu ckeye Sout h 82 Mar1 1n s
Fer ry 76
St . Clairsville 83 Cambndge 66
Jeflerson Union 62 Toronto 52
Conotton Valley 71 MadiSOn 60
Springf!eld Local 101 Lee ton1a
63
Cle John Ada ms 65 Cle
Collinwood 42
Cle Glenvill e 84 Cle East 66
Cle East Tech 70 C!e John Hay

before Meigs caught fire a nd
outscoced the Ttgers 1\-3 in the
next one and a half mmutes to
pull within 6 a t 63-57 with just
1 08lefl as Dan Dodson can ned
a !5 footer from the base ltne.
But Crockrel hit the fron t end
of a one-&lt;~~d-one, as did Ed
Howard. before Mike Brown

both teams on U1e !wards.
10.
Fttzpatnck got do1tble fig ure
Ironton hit 29 of 66 field goal
help from Mark Fairchild wtth _a ttempts for 44 pet., and just 9
14, F:d Howard wtth 13 and of 17 at the charity stripe.
Cruc krel with 11.
Me igs connec ted just 23
The Marauders were pac~ times in 6.1 fl oor trtes for 37
by sophomore Greg Browmng pet., whtle hitting 13 of 1a foul
wtlh 19 pmnts, followed by shot..
Coa ts with 18 Md Dodson with
The Tigers 'held a com-

Layton to take part in

high school

represe nt the sla te age . 8-9 William Fmnearthy. Athens;
l!J.ll - Chns Spnggs, Portsmouth and 12- 13 Gene l.avton
C:alhpolis .
·
'
Tlu s is the hst of wmners and
their schools who have parltctpated since Elks Hoop Shoot

started fow· years ago.
1971-72
a-9, Gene Layton - Southwestern School Dts tnct: l!J.ll ,
Jeff Brown, Gallipolts Ct ty
School District and 12-13, Terry
Car ter - Soutltwestern School
District
1972-73
8-9, Jeff Ca ll , Rio Grimde· lOl l, ' Dan Spencer, Coo l~tlle
1 Meigs County) and 12- t:l ,
Crtinso n Pratt , Mtddl eport
(Meigs County ).
1973-74
advan ce to the regional semi•
8-9. Sam Hale, Cadmus
final contes t. The time and Elementary : 10-11 , Tim
place will be a nnounced late r Lanier,
Rio
Grande
for that event. If he is suc- Elemen tary and 12-13, Dan
cessful in wmning the reg ional , Spencer , Coolville 1Metgs
he would then go to the national Cotm ty).
event, whtch will be held
1974-75
during Ul·e NAIA Invttational
8-9, Randy Layton, South·
Contest, to be held at Ashlaua, Tournament in Kansas City,
wes tern Dtstr!Ct; 10.11, Jeff
Ohto College on Saturday, Feb. Mo. on March 15.
Call, Rio Grande a nd 12!13
15. Layton won district honors
Randy Layton, Ge ne's
Gene Layton, Southwester~
at Athens last week in the Elks- brotller, represented the 8-9
Dis trict ( District Winner) .
sponsored contest.
years old group. Randy sank 13
The South Central District is
of 25 attemps which was good composed of 14 lodges, eight of
enough for second place tie. whi c h par ticipated in the
Randy lost the tie and had to dtstrict contes t. Those who
settle for Ulird place. The local took part in the contest at
10-11
age
gro up
was Athens had competed with
represented by Jeff Call, son of approxunately I ,200 boys and
Tuffs 93 Worcester Tech 77
Un 1on 85 Hoba rt 66
Mr . and Mrs. Don E. Call, Rio g1rls.
Vt 77 R I 68
Grande. Jeff sank 12 of 25
Carroll E. Waugh is youth
Vil lanova 95 St Francis 84
York 78 Washn gtn &amp; Lee 63
which gave him fo urth place. acttvity
chair man
lor
Other
wmners
who
will
Gallipohs
Elks
Lodge
No
107.
South
Arm strong St. 87 Sou the rn
Tech as
Ga St. 80 Fla Sn OJ
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) Howard 100 So Ca r St 82
DETROIT (UP!) - The
Paul
Dietzel, former head
No Car AS. T 88 Del St 86
Detroit
Lions Friday traded
No Ga . 77 Og lefhorpe 71
football coach and athletic
veteran guard Chuck Walton to
director at South Carolina,
Midwest
the Denver Broncos for lineLake Forest 58 Ri pon 57
resigned Friday from an adLaw rence 61 Belo1t 52
hacker 'Bill Laskey.
Mich igan Tech 69 M111n Morris ministrative job. Dietzel re.
62
Northwestern ( Ia ) 72 Befhe l 52 signed as head coach alter last
season and had accepted the
Rock ford 83 Aurora 60
So Oakofa 90 No. Iowa 88. ot newly created position of v1ce
president lor university relaWest
Bo 1se Sf. 81 Weber St 76
tions but decided Friday to quit
Montana 53 Go nzaga 51
altogether
.
Oregon 79 Oregon Sf 68
USF 97 Pepperdine 89
San ta Cla ra 92 Loyola 77
Hayw ard St. 99 Hummbo ld l Sl
MIAMI ( UPI) - Laura Baugh
59
· Sf Mary s 95 Nevada Reno 93 shot a lour-WJder.par 68 Friday
Gonzaga 53 Montana 51
UC Oa111S 99 Sacra mento St 98 to take a one-shot lead in the
Alas ka 81 St Martins 79
first round of the $40;000
LWS and Clr k lll W Bapf1 Sf 54
Burdlnes Invitational Golf
Idaho 93 Montana 79
Tournament.

Meigs-Ironton box. . .·

Tol edo Rogers 72 Cen tra l 63
Genoa 88 G1bsonburg 66
Def iance 79 Kenton 39
Fr emont Ro ss 53 Sandu sky 52
Lorain Adm 1ra1 Kmg 67 Manon
Hardmg 65
G_al!on 87 Upper Sandusky 60
Cm Roger Bacon 74 Cin Purcell
64

Cin Hughes 79 C1n A1ke n 32
Hamilton Taft 81 Princeton 66
Cin Elder 72 Ci n St Xavie r 65
Cin Moell er 63 em LaSalle 62
lo ll

Cin W1th row 53 Cin Western
Hills 45
Peebles 92 Georgetown 66
Greenfield 58 washington c H .
54

(67)

FG-A FT-A
4-8 0 0
B 12 1-4
714 0-0
1-2 0-0
1-6 0-0
414 5-9
4-9
3-4
0-1 0-0
29-66 9-17
MEIGS {59)
FG-A FT-A
1-7
1-1
1-7 2-2
4-10 2-2
816 3-6
0I
00
0-3
3-4
8-17 2-2
1-2
00
23-63 13-18

Mark F.:m chdd

M1ke Brown
Rick Howard
Ed Howard
Bob Crockrel
Scott Wylie
TOTALS

RB. PF TP
9
2
&amp;
17
2 17
12
2 t4
I
2
2
I
3
2
9
3 13
2
2 11
0

"

Akron central -Hower: 62 Akron
Kenmore 61
Akron East 60 Akron North ·54
Akrgn South 61 Akron Garf ieiCt

s•

.

Walsh Jesuit 60 Akron Hobun
57
.
Barberton 87 Warren Hac_ding
62
Tallmadge 70 Kent Roosevelt

OAKLAND l UPI ) - Meliasa
Militano of Dix Hills, N.Y., and
Johnny Johns of Bloomfield
Hills, Mich., won the national
pairs tiUc Friday at the U.S.
Figure
Skating
Championships.

'

See Our Large
Selectinn of

MOBIL£
HOMES

•

and

SECTIONAL
HOMES
•MARLETTE
•ncoNA ·
•ARLINGTON
•GRANVILLE
•SPRINGBROOK

Californians Tal Babilonla of
Mission Hills and Randy
Gardner of Los Angeles finished second and also quallf!ed
lor the team that w!U represent
the U.S. at the World Olamplonshlps in Colorado Springs,
Colo ., in March.

~~we

service Whit we sell"

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Upper Rt. 7 ·
Gallipolis
Phone 446-U4Q

• Cui high labor co1t1. Build It youraelt. ,
• Pr•cllcatly no down payment ...
low monthly payment•
• Build the home you want ... where
you went , .. clly or country
• Your land doe•n'l have to be tully paid lor to 1tart.
• You get pre-cut materials , delivery, blueprints ... slep-by-slep Instruction• . . , aome
loundellon materlalt
Mu d Co upo n fo r
Sl &lt;ul a N t:w L11e1

the Whole

rI ---------------Great
lrlea
Dept
Send me ~ou r FREE New 197 5
MILES HOMES,
OH·2

Slor y

I
I

There'• a representative near vou

Phone· (614) 826-71)90

G'JIJfi}P~
CJ
J 1 -~ GJiom""~
~

·------------The Do· II · You rse ller s Fnend

I

Homes

Book

R. R. 2, Concord Sq ., New Concord, Oh . 43762
tbmr -

-

-

Still!

Zrp _

_

_

:

________________ ..I

L Pttonl! 1

1

Sears Automotive Sale!,
Steel Belt Radials ...
Save $ $ $ on 2nd Tire
When you buy 1st tire at regular
price,
1\I.!:IU lo' l'rS

liiZ E

Alt78-13
CR78-13
ER78·14
FH78-14
G R78-14
GR78-L5
HH78-15
JR78-15
LR78-15

lo:At: ll WAR •

NOW :1 FOR •

6.00 -1:1
$43.16
~48,01
6.50·13
7.35-H
$53.08
-c 7.75-H
$57.31
$60.45
8.25-14
8.25-15
$65.5$
.
8.55-15
$68.76
8.85-15
$72.94
9.15-15
:$76.10
•Pn ccs Include Federal Exc i1c Tax

Save
Place Orders
Today

$67.24
$73.76
Sl1.36
$87.70
$92.42
$100.06
$104.88
$111 .16
$115.90

•s.so

42-Month
Guaranteed
Battery

. GUARANTEE
F rue r c/'11\o.;l-'ur••n l "'r llrm •)() ~I I! YII
nf pure w~· tf hnlt• ry JJI"IIVl' ~ &lt;lc·
(ccttvc , Aft.cr ~JO days we "Ill rc •t w rlh u new lmLWry 1f
d••fcc·tive, c h~tr g mK only fur t ho
perrod IJfuwncn~ h t l l,
munl hly
c ha r ge!! fnr owncnthip
co m ·
Jmtcd hy d rvrr! m.c the cu rre nt
BCI! mg pncc h.•l;ll trud c-m n l t he
trme () f re turn, by the nu mher of

p11lcll

Were '34.45

Your
w1JI IJ(I

munth11 of 1nmru ntt:e

II IJ{h VoltuK~: "''.!&lt;IIIII ~l nuKht- i hrtiUj{h-lhu-puril·
I ron cell &lt;:&lt;ml'ltJt :t orll &lt;iHlr ver m"r"
I! I .!H t.in~
JHIWCr t h un u n ol hcrwu!C rdm!I ICIII buUt•ry w1U1
up-r1nd· ovcr c:l-' 11 co n n~·l&lt;"l l"!

11111 1111

Need Rome Improvements?

-STOP ••. Look Here First!
'

S hock Aboorb~rs
· G uara ntee

•

It's the best home improvement move
to make. Before you redo the house, add a
room or paint, ... and do the job rightl

If Heuvy-D u t y Sh ock A lutor hcr

failB due W

Save '13.96
Heavy-Duty

f~:~ ulty

mr:ll.urra18 cJr
or weArs-out wh ile
the o•ir&lt;inal purc huBCr u wn11 the
INorkmnn~hrp

car, rl .., ,]j herl'p lacOO upon rtllur.h
fr ee of c harRe, o r the r•urdurfl('
IJJ"rce w d l be refunded, If the
defec t lVI} 11.ho&lt;:k 11.ht!or her Willi rn·

by Sean, we will 1netall
new ahock ai)M(Jrhcr wllh. no

s t..allcd
the

Shocks

cha rge for !.11 bur.

Were

.

STOP IN AND CHECK .O UR PRICES FIRST

CARTER &amp;·.EVANS INC.

..•Jl.98
Sears Has A Credit Plan To Suit Most Eve~y Need
I

SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

.

'

----~--

Sears

Silver Bridge Plna
PHONE 446-2770
•

l -

Each

• Sale Ends March 12th

• Sblpplllg, .Inslallallou iucluded

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back'

'8'"

·Installed.

'

"CASH &amp; CA-RRY"
OLIVE STREET

1
I

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

1
I "'""
C11~

•

.I

67

•

68

Akron Springfield 55 Stow 47
Ravenna 60 Nordonla 55
Cle Holy Name 66 Cle MaK
Hayes 59
Cle · central Catholic 77 Cie
Byzantine 53 ·
Avon 64 Buckeye 61 {otl
Toledo Bowsher 54 Toledo Start
52 (oil
Toll!dO. Scott ,79 Toledo Waite 48
Toledo Macomber 64 Toledo
Woodward 49
Toledo St. Francis60Toledo St.
Johns 40

CHAMONIX, France (UP!)
- Bernadette Zurbriggen of
Switzerland won the Arlberg:
Kandahar downhill and
Austria's Anne Marie MoserProeU won the combined title
to open an 8I.point lead at the
end of the European women's
world cup skiing season,
Cindy Nelson of Lutsen
Minn ., finished fourth .
'

0

1
17

51

manding 51-35 board edge, led
by Fitzpatrick's 17. Fairchild
picked off 12 for the visitors.
Meigs reboWJding was led by
Chip Brauer with 9.
Friday the Marauders, at 113 overall, 1-10 in the SEOAL,
host Logan while Ironton enterta ins Jackson .

PLAYE R .
RB PF TP
Mitch Meadows
3
5
0
M1 ck Davenporf
2 4
Dan Dodson
5
1 10
19
6
Greg Bro~·mm~
Steve Rando tp
0
4 0
Chip Brauer
9
3
Lonn 1c Coa ts
18
6
3
Stev e Wa lburn
2
0
0
TOTALS
lS 18 '$9
Score by Quarters :
!ronlon Tig ers
19 14 16 IB
67
Me1gs Marauders
11 20 7 21
59
Offl c1als. Max Sc hwarze!, Clyde Jar11 is

Friday's college scores
Frtday 's College Ba sketball
Results
By Un1ted fJre ss lnternat 1onal
East
Allentown 95 EISenhow er 87
Buff St 100 Bnghmfn St 69
Coast Guard 67 Bowdo in 62
Colgate 58 Northeastern 55
Dartmouth 78 Columb 1a 77
Duques ne 72 St. Peter 's 71
Fredonia Sf 40 Cortland st. 32
Glassboro Sl 66 wm . Pa t
ferso n 64
Har va rd 90 Corn el l 67
Ket-:ne St. 93 Pt Gorham 82
Pace 68 Montclarr St 67
Penn 72 Brown 67
Pr1n ce ton 62 Ya le 50

IRONTON

PLAYER
Dean Roy al
Dean Fr tzpatrick

56

Cots Harfley 67 Cols Wehrle 55
Cols Watterson 14 Cots De Sales
73
Teays Valley 76 Fran klin
Heights 63
Hamilton
Township
66
Marysvil le 61
Olentangy 64 Dublin 43 .
West Jefferson 61 Gra nd 11iew
59
Grove City 86 Lancaster 54
East Knox 75 Cols Academy 58
Canal Winchester 89 Bloom
carrol l 62
Logan Elm 87 Mtllers porf 49
Lancaster\ Fisher 90 Amanda
Clearcreek 70
Fairfield Un ion 56 Berne union
s.t (ot)
Licking Heights 60 Heath 5 1
Granville 52 Johnstown 50
Dayton Stive rs 108 Bexley 77
Buckeye Valley 51 Mt Gi lead
A3
Circleville 60 Wilmington 51
Louisville St. Thoma s Aquinas
61 Centra I Cathol !c 54
Alliance 68 East Liverpool 58
Louisville 59 canton South SO
Perry 53 Junctipn 42
Oakwood 56 Glenwood 41
Fairless 46 Merlingtan 38
Sandy Valley 66 Minerva 53
Lake 15 Tuslaw 44
Akron Buchtel 64 Akron Ellett

\

/

headed as they opened up a 1!111 first quarter lead, although
Meigs managed to pull into a
31-31 deadlock on a Lonnie
Coats 19 footer with 7 seconds
remaining in Ule first half.
But that tie was short-ltved,
as Ironton's Bob Croc krel
banked in a twi stmg jumper

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County agent's Kroger freeze hits thaw

•••

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corner
By Bryson R. &lt;Bud&gt; Carter
Galli a County Extension i\gt•nt
GALUPOUS - On Tuesday and Wednesday this past week,
Fred, Bettie and I attended an agent training workshop at the
Athens County Exte~ion Office. All o! the Extension Agents
·!rom the nine-county Jackson area were asked to attend. The
trainln~ was desig~ed to help us do a more effective job in our
ExtenSion work by involving committees and community leaders
in all phases or our work.
I have often wondered how many people realize that most o!
what we as agents do day-by-day throughout the year is based on
the direction th~t local committees and people give us. I use the
work "most" because there are a number of matters that ucome
down from above," but by and large, our ef!orts are directed
according to tN! needs and interests o! local Gallia County
people.
We all three have different committees advising us in our
respective areas o! agriculture, community development, home
economics and 4-H club work.
There is one committee, however, that looks at our total
Extension program and gives us direction and support in regard
to our overall program. This committee is called the County
Extensioo Advisory Committee . Every county in the state has
such a committee and I look to this group here in Gallia County
for advice and guidance concerning major areas of program and
policy as well as day-to-day kinds of matters.
The folks on the committee here in Gallia County are a great
group of people who have helped us in many ways.
Members of the Extension Advisory Committee are Verlin
SWain, president; ~nard Newberry, vice-president; Mrs. Ted
Stoney, secretary, and Mrs. Lewis Persinger, Mrs. Raymond
Willis, Mrs. Dan Swisher, Jino Evans, Clarence Thompson, Stan
Bahmer, Mrs . Charles Shaver, Paul Butler, Bill Carter, Merrill
Rose and John Payne .

A TELEPHONE CAll.. CAME in the other day concerning
the deadline for farm Income tax filing. Farmers who did not file
a declaration of estinoated tax by January 15 have until March 3
to file their 1974 Federal Income Tax return and pay any tai due.
SEVERAL DAYS AGO I received a request-for Information
tllat doesn't occur lrequently. The caller wanted plans for a
smokehouse for smoking and storing meat. We had ooe back
home on the farm Pnd I remember '\ery well·seeing and smelling
tile smoke that came from ~uch a building.
I found one copy of a plan and bill of materials for a
smokehouse, so If you're Inti! rested, let me know. I'll send you a
photo-ropy.

IF YOU'RE PLANNING TO HAVE a vegetable garden this
year, partlclllarly U you've been away !rom garqening for some
time, I encourage you to read and study up on the subject. I'll try
to keep gardening Information coming to you tllrQUgh this
coiWM, but I suggest you call us for the following pubUcation,
Bulletin No. 287, Home Vegetable Gardening. You can obtain
your free copy by clilllng tl8--!612, writing us at P. 0. Box 72,
Gallipolis, or stopping by tile Gallia County Courtllouse.
For example, do you know how much seed you need for a 100
ft. row of sweet corn? Our specialists say you need four ounces.
It's inoportant that you plan ahead as to how much produce you
will need and can take care of from your garden. Knowing how
much seed to buy for your needs is also Important. This
pubUcation I'm talking about will help you a great deal with this
kind of planning. Better get your copy today!
ARE YOU LOO~G FOR A GOOD FARM record keeping

book this year? The.re are several good·ones available. U you
:paven 't seen ours, then stop by alid look it over. It's caUed the
Ohio CommercJal Farm Account Book. Cost is $3.50. n's
designed to me,et tile needs of commercial farmers. Every effort
•bas been made to keep II simple, yet complell! enough to Include
. details needed for analysis and tax purposes.
'

•
OOMING EvENTS -February 6and 7, Farm Familles may
come to the Extension Oftlce for help In assembling their farm
records for computer anaJysLs;
Felruary 11, 12 and 13, Beef producers tllroughoul Ohio will
vote on an amendment to the Ohio Beef Marketing Program. The
Gallla County Extension Oftlce will be open each of these tllree
~days from 8a.m:io 4 p.m. so local beef producers may vote.
Felruary 13 - 1-4 p.m., .Meeting on "Financing Local
Government" for Gallia .County Community, Business and
Governmental leaders at Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
March 5, 7:30p.m. Winter Tobacco Meeting with Jino
at Hannan Trace High School.

By Joho C. Rlce

Extension Agent, Agriculture

POMEROY - I.iming is the !irst step in the total program to
produce crop5 effectively and efficiently, according to Donald K .
Soil Cons. St.•rvicr
Myers. E~tension agronomist at The Ohio State University.
PT. PLEASANT - One of
. Liming acld soils is necessary for suStained high yields and
th e se rvi ces o£ Soil Cu n· mruntenance of soil productivity , the agronomist explained.
se rvati on Service. which is Lunestone IS the basis of a soil inoprovement program and
provided thr ough the Western eventually "?il acidity rnust be re ckoned with if soil productivity
Soil Conse rv ~ t i on District, is to IS to be mamlained.
·
prov ide soils in£onnation for
Myers notes that as tile soil pH (acidity vs . alkalinity ratio )
an y one needing such in- approaches pH 7, most plwlt nutrients necessary for plant funcformation.
tions become more available. 'rhus, if a soil pH level, which
would create maximum availability lor most nutrients is
lay uf tht• l:uul
desired,
a pH of 6.5 to 7.0 (on the acidic side ) appears appropriate
.
for
Ohio
conditions .
Mos t people \ hink cf soils
.
He
said
research indicates that aUalfa yields co~only
information as being needed by
mcrease
twotothreetonsper
acre when acid soils in the pH 5.0 to
farmers. We are now getting
requests from many other 5.5 range are linoed up to pH 6.6 to 6.8.
The process of nitrogen fixation is favored by liming, tile
types of land users for such
continued. Conditions are more favorable for growth
agronomist
information .
Two of the most recent of bacteria and the fixation of atmosphoric nitrogen at a pH of 6.5
reques ts that we have serviced to 7.0,
This nitrogen fixation should be of interest to farmers using
involved a building site in the
row
crops following legumes in the rotation . Decomposition of
corporation of New Haven and
plant
residue and breakdown of soil organic matter are more
an other site that an investment
pronounced
on linoed soils .
compan y is planning to use as a
Myers made theSI" suggestions:
subdivision for what the in:Consider limestone as a fertilizing agent that provides
vestor calls " mini-farms."
calctum
for plant growth, production, and maintenance.
The location in New Haven is
- Uming increases the efficiency of fertilizer . This is of
near the sewage disposal plant
special
signUicance today with the concerns about fertilizer
and we provided the service to
availability
and price.
Prime
Builders
from
Trends
In nitrogen price and supply may influence the
Columbus, Ohio. This company
is planning to build a attention given to legumes. Producers may decide to produce a
residenti al complex that they portion of th~ir row-crop nitrogen needs, especially producers
call a " townhouse ." The who are following a crop-rotation program. Nitrogen-fixing
reason that they requested our hacterta are quite sensitive to low pH's.
- Linoestone adds value to the land. It is a long-term assel
service for sons- information
sinollar
to fences and drainage.
was that they were interested
Agronomic
crop5 possess the highest dollar value in
in knowing the stability of the
history.
If
producers
plan to try to get tile highest possible
soil in order to determine size
and depth of footers. The response !ram production practices, now is the tinoe .
report to them also included
susceptibility for flooding at
their location.
R&amp;E Investments, Inc. of
Huntington bought the Roy
Newell farm and !hat company
is interested in soils in·
formation from the standpoint
of sewage disposal.
GALLIPOUS - Officers and County , secretary.
Recently we got some
Seven members selected to
brochures explaining how soils members of the board of serve on the board of directors
information can benefit people directors for the newly- were Carney A. Ball, Gallia
interested in recreation , organized Southern Ohio County ; Bob Swann. Jackson
developers and builders, home Farmers C&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;p were named County; Jack Neal, Gallia
builders, construction Saturday following receipt of County ; Ray Hanner and Sam
the State's approval of the
englne~rs, people interested in
organization
's request · for a Turck, Jackson County, and
waste disposal, people inWilliam A. Reynolds and
terested in appraising farm charter.
Officers
are
Luther Dayton Garber, Gallia County.
land, land use planners and
Joseph Cain will serve as the
farmers and ranchers. These Ferguson, Gallia County , organization's statutory agent.
brochures can be picked up at prestdent; Dwight M. Uoyd . Ally . Cain prepared the
County.
vi ce
the SCS office by interested Jackson
organization's charter.
president
;
Floyd
T.
Avis,
people .
Pre sident Ferguson anMeigs County, treasurer, and
nounced
the C&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;p will hold a
Mrs. Loretta Sexton, Gallia
special meeting Tuesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the
Jackson Production Credit
Building, Upper Rt. 7, in Gallia
County.
Hillbillies see 4 demonstrations
The Co-op will ac cept
initiation
fees
during
POMEROY - The Hillbillies Finger .
4-H Club met Jan . 29 at the
Health and Safety talks were Tuesday's meeting. Orders will
home of Maxine Dyer with 11 given on the causes of colds be taken on barbed wire and
members and two advisors and kitchen safety by Mark baling twine. Individuals .must
present. Demonstrations were and Mike McGuire. Refresh- have paid up memberships in
given by Patty_ Dycr, Carving men Is were served by Mrs . · order to place orders. Area
Paraffin; Mark McGuire , How· Christine
Napier
and farmers are invited to attend
T? Manage Money; Opel Dyer, recreation was led by Kevin Tuesday's session.
For further information,
Time Schedule for Planning a Napier and Patti Dugan. farmers
should contact
· Meal, and Mike McGuire, How Patty Dyer.
President
Ferguson
at 245-5622.
To Wrap A Sprained Wrist and
By John Cnop.-r

chai.riJlisubcommittee

•· COLUMBUS - State Rep.
Ronald James (1).92) bas been
appointed chairman of a
•special3-man subfommittee of
SPECIAL PROGRAM
BIDWEll.. - The North
: GaUla Hlgb School F.F.A.
wUl bave a special program
at their regular meeting
Tuesday, Feb. 4 at 7:30 p.m.
: at the scbool.
The program, sponsored
, by N•Cbors Uquld Food
Sapplemeol, wUI be by
Cbesll!r M. Pucket~ regional
manager, aod Baxter B.
Atera, district manager. All
feeders o! livestock are
welcome.
Hi

U:

I

tile House Energy and Environment t;ommittee which
will study possible use of

,

CAME OUT EARLY
CHI CAGO
l UP! I
GrOundh ogs don' t work on
Sunday - at least not the one
at Lincoln Park Zoo. So on
Friday, zoo o!ficials took their
groundhog named Chubby out
to fore cast the weather - two
da ys ahead of the officia l
Groundhog Day.
Lured by vegetable greens
out of his winter burrow
Chubby blinked into th~
overcast and failed to see his
shadow, indicating improved
weather and an early spring.
Had he spotted his shadow,
Chicago and a good part of
Illinois would have been
doomed to six more weeks of
winter, according to the legend
of Groundhog Day .

PURINA

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M

••
••

••

••
•
••
•••
••
••

••
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•

PURA-MYCIN INJECTABLE
Pur ona Pura Mtc · ~ l"te( lobl~ con·
'" ". "'~ hrtamt&lt;-•n. &amp;llaCk5 O&gt;SU\ 9

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po;&gt;e•b l ~ to g e l ho~ll leyt l ~ ~ ~

Ter •omycon ' 10

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Pur~ M:,. cou ln t e ct~ble •l~ o loiih ls
"'""~ ;econdhf1 mtettoon~ IOIIOW008

d f,eas e

o u t ore~k•

•
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compl et~ l y.

Nn n l~er "'" llle a~t • b aloe · ~ i ec t • bl e
K• vt• you Oelte• con tr ol ol ~o man1
do t! erenl do&gt;e~&gt;e cond otton• th'n
Punn• Pu r ~ · Myc •n lnt.C iat le It's

&lt;O'""'"ent droo
l!~l~

ea~1

~no poe~

''II Pu"n' l'ura MyC I!I lntec t abl e a no
k eCP I on hand
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o• 'H111e out Stop on

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"'"''I ull&gt;er tru lmenh may

,,..,, ..... , •••. "'''"' ~ co.

Vine St .

••••
••
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Gallipolis, Ohio

Cl

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J. D. North Produce Co.

••
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Tobacco Supplies

•
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BUY NOW. • •

••
••
••
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•
·•
•••
••

eBRO-MO-GAS
eFUMIGATION COVERS
eSIMPLEX APPLICATORS

•
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••

••

eSUCKER STUFF
eMH0:30

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IDTRILSIYA
If llllil, lie.,

Glltl ali, Ollil

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

- :"

~

Now You Can AffordJhat New
Garden Tractor. • •

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•
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~

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•

INTERNATIONAr

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'7 4 Carryover Sale!

·-----------------'----------~------

•

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PLEASE FOLD HERE

.a•

3

'

ANNOUNCES•••

~

l hr&lt;&gt;J~Ilau iiM 1)00 '1 II" ~ th~ I~&gt;IM I

"'"I

(BRAND NEW)

severance tax reVenues for
reclamation or orphaned strip
mine lands.
Otller members are Reps.
Vernon Cook (0-.19 ) and Walter
McClaskey (R-86).
·
The subcOmmittee will study
the feasibility of House Bill 28
which would earmark 75 pe;
cent of severance lax revenues
for reclamation of orphaned
strip mined land and abandoned oil and gas wells. The
bill also calls for the
restoration of land dlaturbod
by drilling and the plugging of
oil and gas wells following
service to conform to present
law.

Head, who did not disclose
exact figures. " Despite the end
of the freeze, we hope to be a bli!
to keep some of tllese new .
customers.
·

©UJJOO ©&amp;IIDrnlf

I

James

"Many products with sugar
content - like cereals, pud·
ding, juices and soft drinks have increased in cost .substantially," said Head. "We
hope the Conswner realizes
that lor the past two months we
Eve held the line and lila! at
'some point in time we have to
pass 0 0 OW' price increases."
Before the freeze began.
Kroger estimated it had .9.5
million shoppers weekly.
· " By customer count, the
freeze was a succes_s because
we gained customers ," said

f

..

Co-op elects its
charter officers

weus

.

CINCIN!&gt; i\'J'l I UPI ) - The
Kr oger su perm arket chaln
whic h earlier sa id ·it was
" poss ible" a two month price
fr eeze. migh t cOntinue beyO_nd
toda y's cutoff date, is no t
renewing the program beca use
it cut so dee ply into profi ts.
Some of the 1.100 items that
had been "frozen " in pril'e
since Dec . I w~re targeted lor
an immediate price increase
today .
"Ow· mark-u p gross profit
was substantially reduced the
pas t two months," Kroger
merchand ising direc tor · Bill
Head complained Friday. " It
became an increasingly expensive program."
Kroger , the nation's thlrd ·
la r ges t superm ark et chain
with 1,240 stores in 20 sta tes,
froz e pri ces of 1,100 "basic ''
grocery iterns on Dec. I.
Asked if Kroger made a
profi t the past two months,
Head said ," Not much, if
anything."
"During the two months we
had to pay an average of 400
price increases . a week from
manufacturers." he said .
That figure was for all 8,000
items stocked by Kroger, buf
Head said it included many of
the 1,100 fr_ozen items. Hi said
the 1,100 represented about
twa-thirds an average grocery
purchase .

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A Trailerload Of

~

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l""'n

10-12-14-

•

I
I

16 HP

w1ne
JUST RECEIVED!

HUY
NOW

AND

.,
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Your Federal Land Bank Association can help!
. Are you a city-dweller who would like to bw your first
country home? Or do you already live in the countiy and
plan to build, or buy a new home? We can he! p . .. with a
rural home loan.
The qualification~ are simple. So why not come in and
· · .talk 1 to us about your mortgage
credit needs:

228 .Upper River ·Roa.d

''

SAVE

Want a loan to buy
a country home?

P.O. Box207, Gallipolis

Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

SAVE
AS MUCH AS

•200
EVE.RY SIZE DISCOUNTED!
•
BUY EARLYl

POMEROY
Serving Meigs,' Gallia and Mason
Counties·. Jack W. Carsey; Mgr. '

.Ph. 992-2181
5tore Open B-.6 Mon •• Sat.
Statioil24 Hours Daily

..•

·-E .... .i:
.,- ..
oj

·....~~-·-··

MEIGS :EQUIPMENT 00~
POMEROY~ .O HIO·

PHONE M2·2176

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County agent's Kroger freeze hits thaw

•••

.-

corner
By Bryson R. &lt;Bud&gt; Carter
Galli a County Extension i\gt•nt
GALUPOUS - On Tuesday and Wednesday this past week,
Fred, Bettie and I attended an agent training workshop at the
Athens County Exte~ion Office. All o! the Extension Agents
·!rom the nine-county Jackson area were asked to attend. The
trainln~ was desig~ed to help us do a more effective job in our
ExtenSion work by involving committees and community leaders
in all phases or our work.
I have often wondered how many people realize that most o!
what we as agents do day-by-day throughout the year is based on
the direction th~t local committees and people give us. I use the
work "most" because there are a number of matters that ucome
down from above," but by and large, our ef!orts are directed
according to tN! needs and interests o! local Gallia County
people.
We all three have different committees advising us in our
respective areas o! agriculture, community development, home
economics and 4-H club work.
There is one committee, however, that looks at our total
Extension program and gives us direction and support in regard
to our overall program. This committee is called the County
Extensioo Advisory Committee . Every county in the state has
such a committee and I look to this group here in Gallia County
for advice and guidance concerning major areas of program and
policy as well as day-to-day kinds of matters.
The folks on the committee here in Gallia County are a great
group of people who have helped us in many ways.
Members of the Extension Advisory Committee are Verlin
SWain, president; ~nard Newberry, vice-president; Mrs. Ted
Stoney, secretary, and Mrs. Lewis Persinger, Mrs. Raymond
Willis, Mrs. Dan Swisher, Jino Evans, Clarence Thompson, Stan
Bahmer, Mrs . Charles Shaver, Paul Butler, Bill Carter, Merrill
Rose and John Payne .

A TELEPHONE CAll.. CAME in the other day concerning
the deadline for farm Income tax filing. Farmers who did not file
a declaration of estinoated tax by January 15 have until March 3
to file their 1974 Federal Income Tax return and pay any tai due.
SEVERAL DAYS AGO I received a request-for Information
tllat doesn't occur lrequently. The caller wanted plans for a
smokehouse for smoking and storing meat. We had ooe back
home on the farm Pnd I remember '\ery well·seeing and smelling
tile smoke that came from ~uch a building.
I found one copy of a plan and bill of materials for a
smokehouse, so If you're Inti! rested, let me know. I'll send you a
photo-ropy.

IF YOU'RE PLANNING TO HAVE a vegetable garden this
year, partlclllarly U you've been away !rom garqening for some
time, I encourage you to read and study up on the subject. I'll try
to keep gardening Information coming to you tllrQUgh this
coiWM, but I suggest you call us for the following pubUcation,
Bulletin No. 287, Home Vegetable Gardening. You can obtain
your free copy by clilllng tl8--!612, writing us at P. 0. Box 72,
Gallipolis, or stopping by tile Gallia County Courtllouse.
For example, do you know how much seed you need for a 100
ft. row of sweet corn? Our specialists say you need four ounces.
It's inoportant that you plan ahead as to how much produce you
will need and can take care of from your garden. Knowing how
much seed to buy for your needs is also Important. This
pubUcation I'm talking about will help you a great deal with this
kind of planning. Better get your copy today!
ARE YOU LOO~G FOR A GOOD FARM record keeping

book this year? The.re are several good·ones available. U you
:paven 't seen ours, then stop by alid look it over. It's caUed the
Ohio CommercJal Farm Account Book. Cost is $3.50. n's
designed to me,et tile needs of commercial farmers. Every effort
•bas been made to keep II simple, yet complell! enough to Include
. details needed for analysis and tax purposes.
'

•
OOMING EvENTS -February 6and 7, Farm Familles may
come to the Extension Oftlce for help In assembling their farm
records for computer anaJysLs;
Felruary 11, 12 and 13, Beef producers tllroughoul Ohio will
vote on an amendment to the Ohio Beef Marketing Program. The
Gallla County Extension Oftlce will be open each of these tllree
~days from 8a.m:io 4 p.m. so local beef producers may vote.
Felruary 13 - 1-4 p.m., .Meeting on "Financing Local
Government" for Gallia .County Community, Business and
Governmental leaders at Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
March 5, 7:30p.m. Winter Tobacco Meeting with Jino
at Hannan Trace High School.

By Joho C. Rlce

Extension Agent, Agriculture

POMEROY - I.iming is the !irst step in the total program to
produce crop5 effectively and efficiently, according to Donald K .
Soil Cons. St.•rvicr
Myers. E~tension agronomist at The Ohio State University.
PT. PLEASANT - One of
. Liming acld soils is necessary for suStained high yields and
th e se rvi ces o£ Soil Cu n· mruntenance of soil productivity , the agronomist explained.
se rvati on Service. which is Lunestone IS the basis of a soil inoprovement program and
provided thr ough the Western eventually "?il acidity rnust be re ckoned with if soil productivity
Soil Conse rv ~ t i on District, is to IS to be mamlained.
·
prov ide soils in£onnation for
Myers notes that as tile soil pH (acidity vs . alkalinity ratio )
an y one needing such in- approaches pH 7, most plwlt nutrients necessary for plant funcformation.
tions become more available. 'rhus, if a soil pH level, which
would create maximum availability lor most nutrients is
lay uf tht• l:uul
desired,
a pH of 6.5 to 7.0 (on the acidic side ) appears appropriate
.
for
Ohio
conditions .
Mos t people \ hink cf soils
.
He
said
research indicates that aUalfa yields co~only
information as being needed by
mcrease
twotothreetonsper
acre when acid soils in the pH 5.0 to
farmers. We are now getting
requests from many other 5.5 range are linoed up to pH 6.6 to 6.8.
The process of nitrogen fixation is favored by liming, tile
types of land users for such
continued. Conditions are more favorable for growth
agronomist
information .
Two of the most recent of bacteria and the fixation of atmosphoric nitrogen at a pH of 6.5
reques ts that we have serviced to 7.0,
This nitrogen fixation should be of interest to farmers using
involved a building site in the
row
crops following legumes in the rotation . Decomposition of
corporation of New Haven and
plant
residue and breakdown of soil organic matter are more
an other site that an investment
pronounced
on linoed soils .
compan y is planning to use as a
Myers made theSI" suggestions:
subdivision for what the in:Consider limestone as a fertilizing agent that provides
vestor calls " mini-farms."
calctum
for plant growth, production, and maintenance.
The location in New Haven is
- Uming increases the efficiency of fertilizer . This is of
near the sewage disposal plant
special
signUicance today with the concerns about fertilizer
and we provided the service to
availability
and price.
Prime
Builders
from
Trends
In nitrogen price and supply may influence the
Columbus, Ohio. This company
is planning to build a attention given to legumes. Producers may decide to produce a
residenti al complex that they portion of th~ir row-crop nitrogen needs, especially producers
call a " townhouse ." The who are following a crop-rotation program. Nitrogen-fixing
reason that they requested our hacterta are quite sensitive to low pH's.
- Linoestone adds value to the land. It is a long-term assel
service for sons- information
sinollar
to fences and drainage.
was that they were interested
Agronomic
crop5 possess the highest dollar value in
in knowing the stability of the
history.
If
producers
plan to try to get tile highest possible
soil in order to determine size
and depth of footers. The response !ram production practices, now is the tinoe .
report to them also included
susceptibility for flooding at
their location.
R&amp;E Investments, Inc. of
Huntington bought the Roy
Newell farm and !hat company
is interested in soils in·
formation from the standpoint
of sewage disposal.
GALLIPOUS - Officers and County , secretary.
Recently we got some
Seven members selected to
brochures explaining how soils members of the board of serve on the board of directors
information can benefit people directors for the newly- were Carney A. Ball, Gallia
interested in recreation , organized Southern Ohio County ; Bob Swann. Jackson
developers and builders, home Farmers C&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;p were named County; Jack Neal, Gallia
builders, construction Saturday following receipt of County ; Ray Hanner and Sam
the State's approval of the
englne~rs, people interested in
organization
's request · for a Turck, Jackson County, and
waste disposal, people inWilliam A. Reynolds and
terested in appraising farm charter.
Officers
are
Luther Dayton Garber, Gallia County.
land, land use planners and
Joseph Cain will serve as the
farmers and ranchers. These Ferguson, Gallia County , organization's statutory agent.
brochures can be picked up at prestdent; Dwight M. Uoyd . Ally . Cain prepared the
County.
vi ce
the SCS office by interested Jackson
organization's charter.
president
;
Floyd
T.
Avis,
people .
Pre sident Ferguson anMeigs County, treasurer, and
nounced
the C&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;p will hold a
Mrs. Loretta Sexton, Gallia
special meeting Tuesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the
Jackson Production Credit
Building, Upper Rt. 7, in Gallia
County.
Hillbillies see 4 demonstrations
The Co-op will ac cept
initiation
fees
during
POMEROY - The Hillbillies Finger .
4-H Club met Jan . 29 at the
Health and Safety talks were Tuesday's meeting. Orders will
home of Maxine Dyer with 11 given on the causes of colds be taken on barbed wire and
members and two advisors and kitchen safety by Mark baling twine. Individuals .must
present. Demonstrations were and Mike McGuire. Refresh- have paid up memberships in
given by Patty_ Dycr, Carving men Is were served by Mrs . · order to place orders. Area
Paraffin; Mark McGuire , How· Christine
Napier
and farmers are invited to attend
T? Manage Money; Opel Dyer, recreation was led by Kevin Tuesday's session.
For further information,
Time Schedule for Planning a Napier and Patti Dugan. farmers
should contact
· Meal, and Mike McGuire, How Patty Dyer.
President
Ferguson
at 245-5622.
To Wrap A Sprained Wrist and
By John Cnop.-r

chai.riJlisubcommittee

•· COLUMBUS - State Rep.
Ronald James (1).92) bas been
appointed chairman of a
•special3-man subfommittee of
SPECIAL PROGRAM
BIDWEll.. - The North
: GaUla Hlgb School F.F.A.
wUl bave a special program
at their regular meeting
Tuesday, Feb. 4 at 7:30 p.m.
: at the scbool.
The program, sponsored
, by N•Cbors Uquld Food
Sapplemeol, wUI be by
Cbesll!r M. Pucket~ regional
manager, aod Baxter B.
Atera, district manager. All
feeders o! livestock are
welcome.
Hi

U:

I

tile House Energy and Environment t;ommittee which
will study possible use of

,

CAME OUT EARLY
CHI CAGO
l UP! I
GrOundh ogs don' t work on
Sunday - at least not the one
at Lincoln Park Zoo. So on
Friday, zoo o!ficials took their
groundhog named Chubby out
to fore cast the weather - two
da ys ahead of the officia l
Groundhog Day.
Lured by vegetable greens
out of his winter burrow
Chubby blinked into th~
overcast and failed to see his
shadow, indicating improved
weather and an early spring.
Had he spotted his shadow,
Chicago and a good part of
Illinois would have been
doomed to six more weeks of
winter, according to the legend
of Groundhog Day .

PURINA

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PURA-MYCIN INJECTABLE
Pur ona Pura Mtc · ~ l"te( lobl~ con·
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Pur~ M:,. cou ln t e ct~ble •l~ o loiih ls
"'""~ ;econdhf1 mtettoon~ IOIIOW008

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Nn n l~er "'" llle a~t • b aloe · ~ i ec t • bl e
K• vt• you Oelte• con tr ol ol ~o man1
do t! erenl do&gt;e~&gt;e cond otton• th'n
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Vine St .

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Gallipolis, Ohio

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J. D. North Produce Co.

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Tobacco Supplies

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BUY NOW. • •

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eBRO-MO-GAS
eFUMIGATION COVERS
eSIMPLEX APPLICATORS

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eSUCKER STUFF
eMH0:30

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IDTRILSIYA
If llllil, lie.,

Glltl ali, Ollil

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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Now You Can AffordJhat New
Garden Tractor. • •

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INTERNATIONAr

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'7 4 Carryover Sale!

·-----------------'----------~------

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PLEASE FOLD HERE

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ANNOUNCES•••

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l hr&lt;&gt;J~Ilau iiM 1)00 '1 II" ~ th~ I~&gt;IM I

"'"I

(BRAND NEW)

severance tax reVenues for
reclamation or orphaned strip
mine lands.
Otller members are Reps.
Vernon Cook (0-.19 ) and Walter
McClaskey (R-86).
·
The subcOmmittee will study
the feasibility of House Bill 28
which would earmark 75 pe;
cent of severance lax revenues
for reclamation of orphaned
strip mined land and abandoned oil and gas wells. The
bill also calls for the
restoration of land dlaturbod
by drilling and the plugging of
oil and gas wells following
service to conform to present
law.

Head, who did not disclose
exact figures. " Despite the end
of the freeze, we hope to be a bli!
to keep some of tllese new .
customers.
·

©UJJOO ©&amp;IIDrnlf

I

James

"Many products with sugar
content - like cereals, pud·
ding, juices and soft drinks have increased in cost .substantially," said Head. "We
hope the Conswner realizes
that lor the past two months we
Eve held the line and lila! at
'some point in time we have to
pass 0 0 OW' price increases."
Before the freeze began.
Kroger estimated it had .9.5
million shoppers weekly.
· " By customer count, the
freeze was a succes_s because
we gained customers ," said

f

..

Co-op elects its
charter officers

weus

.

CINCIN!&gt; i\'J'l I UPI ) - The
Kr oger su perm arket chaln
whic h earlier sa id ·it was
" poss ible" a two month price
fr eeze. migh t cOntinue beyO_nd
toda y's cutoff date, is no t
renewing the program beca use
it cut so dee ply into profi ts.
Some of the 1.100 items that
had been "frozen " in pril'e
since Dec . I w~re targeted lor
an immediate price increase
today .
"Ow· mark-u p gross profit
was substantially reduced the
pas t two months," Kroger
merchand ising direc tor · Bill
Head complained Friday. " It
became an increasingly expensive program."
Kroger , the nation's thlrd ·
la r ges t superm ark et chain
with 1,240 stores in 20 sta tes,
froz e pri ces of 1,100 "basic ''
grocery iterns on Dec. I.
Asked if Kroger made a
profi t the past two months,
Head said ," Not much, if
anything."
"During the two months we
had to pay an average of 400
price increases . a week from
manufacturers." he said .
That figure was for all 8,000
items stocked by Kroger, buf
Head said it included many of
the 1,100 fr_ozen items. Hi said
the 1,100 represented about
twa-thirds an average grocery
purchase .

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A Trailerload Of

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10-12-14-

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16 HP

w1ne
JUST RECEIVED!

HUY
NOW

AND

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Your Federal Land Bank Association can help!
. Are you a city-dweller who would like to bw your first
country home? Or do you already live in the countiy and
plan to build, or buy a new home? We can he! p . .. with a
rural home loan.
The qualification~ are simple. So why not come in and
· · .talk 1 to us about your mortgage
credit needs:

228 .Upper River ·Roa.d

''

SAVE

Want a loan to buy
a country home?

P.O. Box207, Gallipolis

Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

SAVE
AS MUCH AS

•200
EVE.RY SIZE DISCOUNTED!
•
BUY EARLYl

POMEROY
Serving Meigs,' Gallia and Mason
Counties·. Jack W. Carsey; Mgr. '

.Ph. 992-2181
5tore Open B-.6 Mon •• Sat.
Statioil24 Hours Daily

..•

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MEIGS :EQUIPMENT 00~
POMEROY~ .O HIO·

PHONE M2·2176

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23- The Sunday Times~ Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975

Record puts cloud on ,Governor's _S_fatement
_
.......

.

LEE LEONARD
1 Slatehouoe Reporter
LUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
es A. Rhodes says he has
t!olmlllled t350 from his original
-palgn promise of a $1,000
for Ohio public school
hers
because
the
lature last · July ap·
~ted pa~of the money
It\! Jntended to use.
;_~et a check of the record
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Racine
Social Eventsi

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''li'LATWOODS, Ky . - The
Little Devil Chess Club of the
Russel! Middle School is inviting all area junior high
schools ' to participate in it..
invitational chess team
tournament.
The tournament will he Feb.
8 and is open to both rated and
unrated team players. There is
a limit of seven players per
team. Highest four scores
count. Rules are four round
Swiss team competition. There
will be team trophies for first
and second place: Please bring
chess clocks, boards, set.. and
pencils. Registration time is 9
to 10 a.m.
,
Tournament directors will be
Paul Smith and Bob Duncan.
Douglas Thompson, sponsor of
the Little Devil Chess Club, can
he reached at 606-836-8153.
To get to the school foltow US
23 north from Ashland, Ky.,
turn left at Hill's Dept. Store,
then right onto Red Devil Lane .
The school address is Russell
Middle ·School, Box M, Flatwoods, Ky. , 41139.

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t/1

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs . · Etta Mae Hill has
re turno!d home after surgery at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton
are, both iU with flu at their
home. ·
Tom Wolfe is ill with
pneumonia at his home.
Owen Watson is ill at his
home.
Hazel Carnahan, Frances
Foster and Lucy Taylor visited
Mrs. Lottie Wilcoxen at Marks·
Rest Center in McConnelsville
Thursday, Jan. 23.
Mrs. Lillian Jividen returned
home from Athens after
spending several weeks with
her.son, Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Jividen.
Mt. and Mrs. Harold White of
Lal)gsville were weekend
gu~t.. of Mrs. Grace Krider.
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster
werie guest.. of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hilt. Their son,
who ruid spent ten days with his
grandparents, returnerl home
with them.
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
spent Saturday with her
brother·in'law and sister, Mr.
an&lt;{ Mrs. Dale Smith i'l
Pomeroy.
J14r. and Mrs. Waid Diddle
and: family of Tennessee were
guests saturday of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Powell.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cleland, saturday, were
Mr. and Mrs. John Leary and
family of Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
and son, David·, of Baltimore
were guests of his mother, Mrs.
&lt;'.arrie Nease ori saturday.
Mrs. Ffieda Howell of
Pomeroy spent a day recently
with relatives.
Larry Wilcoxen of Ohio State
University spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Wilcoxen.

ATIILI!:TlCS TOR~
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)
- A compi'O!IIiBe agreement
between team officials and the
city of Binningham Thursday
ll\llllallteed lbe return of the
Binillngham Athletics for the
1975 baseball season.

c

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and bath , .garden ,

:a

. Phone 446-0168 .

~

shows Rhodes did not make his said, adding that one of his first salary up above the national
proposal of $1,000 per teacher · acts as governor wou)d be to average, that we're projecting
and $500 for non-teaching ask .!the leglslature for $30 per ourself in expenditures of
employes until five weeks after pupil to be distributed to the expanding . education and I
think our budget message will
part of the money was already school districts.
It
was
not
until
Sept.
2
at
a
be
ready by March .lOth and I
spent
Stark
County
presa
conference
think
we'll elaborate upoo the
Rhodes held his first formal
ll,hodes
called
for
$1,000
pr~ure
of what has hapthat
news conferen"l' since taking
office Friday and was asked per teacher and $500 for each jlened in the paSt 10 years with
why, when he had orfllinaUy non-teaching employe -a lobbying for the schoolteacher
proposed a $1,000 pay hike for package costing roughly $141 and what's happened to the
teachers, he offered only $650 million when only a $108 educational system." .
The governor said he is still
in a proposal released earlier million surplus was projected.
Rhodes
was
asked
Friday
hopeful
for "compromise "
this week.
whether
the
$650
per
teacher
with
Democrats
controlling the
" At that time," Rhodes
answered, "the $108 million would be available for future General Assembly on a suppjemental appropriation
surplus and the $20 per pupil contract years.
"WeD,
here,
let
me,
uh
...
I
providing
$40 per pupil to each
that they (the leglslature) gave
look
at
it
this
way,"
he
said.
school
district.
them (school districts ), some
He said he did not know
$46 million, they based that on "Unless we start paying the
2.3 11)illion (pupils), that's $46 teachers and geting their whether he would veto the
million, and $110 million and
$46 million would give them
{teachers) approximately
$1,000.
"But the $46 million is in·
eluded in that when they gave
that and I made that ($1,000
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1975
proposal) I think in July," the
governor continued.
"Remember that they appropriated the $46 million was 6:1l0-Thls Is The Life 10.
$20 per pupil and then they 6 :3G-International Zone 4; Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
came along about a week later 7:QO-This Week 4; Communique 6; Talking Hands B,· Look Up
and Live 10.
. and said there was $108 million. 7: 15--Tete
-Bible Time 4.
That$108million and what they 7:3()-This is the Life 3; Church by Side of the Road 4; Rvlval
had given, there would have
Fires/,; Old Fashioned Gospel Hour 8 ; Camera Three 10;
been enough money in there for
Newsmaker ' 75 .
8: DO-Morm on Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Gospe l Caravan 6;
$1,000 for every schoolteacher,
Mr. Gospel Guitar 10; Mamre Church 13.
'
and that's the reason we're 8·3()-0ral
Roberts 3; Your Health 4; Kathryn Kuhlman 6; Day
sticking to a formula here of
of Discovery 8; James Robi son Present s 10; Rex Hum bard
$650 for every schoolteacher ."
13; To Be Announced 15.
In fact, the General 8:55- Biack Cameo 4.
Assembly made lhe $46 million 9:1l0-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Rex Humbard
6; Rev . Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts 10; Across the
appropriation, or $20 per pupil,
Fence 15.
on July 24. On Aug. 9, the state
9:3()-Yours
for the Aski ng 4; What Does the Bible Plainly Say
Taxation Department
8; Church Service 10; Christ Is the Answer 13; Insight 15.
projected another $108 million 10:0()-Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy Jenkins 6;
surplus.
Kathryn Kuhlman 8; Movie " Boeing Boeing" 10; Ji mmy
Swaggart 13; Faith for Today 15.
On Aug. 14 at a campaign
appearance in Willoughby, 10:3G-Go 3; Doctors on Call 4; Hart Fund Bowlathon 6;
Thinking in Black 8; ,Faith for Today 12; What Does the Bible
Rhodes recommended spenPlainly
Say 13; This is the Life 15.
ding $69 million of the surplus 11 :OG-TV Chapell
: Foccus on Columbus 4; Rex Humbard 8,15;
on a $30 per-pupil apRev. Henry Mahan 13.
propriation, not just for 11 :3()-This Is The Answer 3; Make A Wish 6,13; Two-Way Slreel
4.
teachers' salaries.
12:00-At
I ssue 3; Harold Ensley : The Sportsman's Friend 4;
"We need an inunediate
Bowling 6; Face the Nation 8: Columbus Town Meeting 10;
injection of stale funds to
Rev. Calvin Evans 13; Sacred Heart 15.
forestall school closings," he 12:15--0pen
Bible
15.
..
. -

Democratic bill if it comes to
~desk in its preseni form, but
said he prefers his own $650
bonus plan. · ·
I

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

Now ready for occupancy.
Model Open
Daily 5-7 p.m .
Sat. &amp; Sun . 1 to 4 p.m.
One &amp; two bedroom
garden
apartments.
Rent starts from $150
per mo., located 112 mi.
west
of
Holzer
Hospital. on Rt. 35 .
Ph. 446 -1599

For Sale
J P I ECE' tJ C'(1rOOI11 sui t e. V a11ity
d r esse r . qood co nd i t ion , p r ice
!!~S N ew d incl l e Sl,li l e , 7 p iece
$7S . ! ? ){ 13 17 n y lon I r u g , n e w
Wilt1 pad , $60 . Stn gJe be d 5 10,
o th er items . Cal l 66 7 :1333
nft e r 3 p . m .
') '} )IC

tr ac tor .
new m ot o r . good rubb er . ll C W

19 53

30

pa int

$ 1,?00. Phon e 985 359•1.

6' M O W E R . 3 pi hit c h fit s F ord

Fe r g u son

trac 1or 1 $1 00

N ew cult i vat or. $125

Ph one

98 ~ 3594

'} ') li p

196 5 J O H N Dee r e Dozer . 4
cy l i nd e r , d e i s e l. B' bl a d e
N ew
c l u t c ttes .
c an o p y .
b ra kes , n n d t r a c k s ; A 1
co ndit ion . 56 .500 PhOr} e 985
3594
'1 2 ltp

EX TR A n1ce corn f ed trc eJe r
bee t, your c hoi ce Ph one 949
.1]67

2 2 Jt c

Television log for easy viewing
•

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY, February 2. 1975
ACROSS
1 Traveled
7 News beat

Islang)
12 Ali ghts

17 Way out
21 Sarca sm
22 Kind of
pneumonia
23 Wide awake
24 City in Nevada
25 Near
26 Face of clock
28 Place in
position
30 Puts in
vigorous
action
32 Conjunction
33 Greek letter
35 Shellfish
37 K ind of beans

(pi)

39 South African
Dutch
40 Rude cabin
41 · Symbol lor
tellurium

43 Hall
45 Make · up
47 Mili tary Pot1ce

(abbr.)

48 Unusual
49 Residue

52 Retain by

Ioree
54 Denudes
56 Matched
57 Tactile organ
of an animal
59 Footwear
61 Mother ot

Apollo·

62 Theater box
63 Sailors

(co lloq)

64 Conjunction
66 Aflernoon
pa~y

67 G.reek Iefier
68 Food fish
69 Most Worthy
(abbr.)
71 Printer's
IT!easure lpl.)

72 Son ol Adam
74 Slate-colored
76 Go by water
77 Capuchin
monkey
78 Rupees (abbr )
79 Lettlargy
81 Guido's high
note
82 Related
83 Masculine
84 Man's name
85 Stupid person
87 Calm
89 Bristlelike

90 Dash
92
94
95
96

97
99
100
101
10~

103
105
107

Mix
Shor1 jacket
Hold back
Worthless ·
matter (slang )
Looked at
mtently
Sea eag le
Solar disk
Gra in
Church
serv1ce
Farm animal
T1dier
Centimeters

labbr I
109 Tierra del
Fuegan Indian
1 10 Lig ht ram
111 Cubic meter
113 Ceremony
1 14 Prohibit
115 LiQuid
measure

(abbr.!

116 Seasoning
1 t 7 Music : as
written
118 Female sheep

120 Sun god

121 Walking stick

122 Shore bird
123
124
126
128
130
132
134

Farm building
Seines
Restricted
Vapor
Harm
Devastation
Satiates

135 Rip

136 Pronoun

137 Pellets ·
139
141
142
143
145
147
149
152
153

Roman (Oad
Pronoun
Be m1staken
Burrow ing
animal
At no time
lamb 's pen
name
Cheer
French art icl e
Be present

155 Cui

157 Volcan1c
emanation
159 Note of sca le
160 Girl"s name
162 Aquat ic
mammal ·
164 Pertaining to
the kidneys

166 High hal

168 Scorch
169 Walks ·
uhsteadi ty
170 Breaks
suddenly
171 Nat ional hymn
Down
1 Former
Russian rul er
2 Solemn vow
3 Guido·s low
note
4 Free of
· 5 Man ·s name
6 Loved oneS
7 Solici tor at

law Iabbr.!

8 Pol iceman

(slang I
9 Old Greek

coin
10 Fertile spot in
desert
11 Makes ready

12 Astate (abbr.I
13
14
15
16

Beverage
One following
Visions
Strip of
leather
17 Bitter vetch

18 Sytnbol lor

Kenan
19 Make certam
20 Sou nded a
horn
27 Strip of wood
29 Gossip
31 Symbol for
thallium
34 Not these
36 Stup 1d person
. 38 Certainty

40 Detest

42
44
46
48
49
50
51
53
55
56
58
60
62
65
68
69
70
72
73
75
76

Moray s
Parce l of land
Fiber plant
Rant
La ter
Junctures
Compass
point
Performs
River in Italy
Gangsters
girl lneM
V1gorous
Sto·ry
Cut of meat
Corded cfotn
Decl ared
Perta ining to
the cheek
Deal w ith
Make amends
Most flexible
High mounta in
Mule driver

Icolloq I

77 Meph istopheles
79 Marsh bir"
80 Evaluates
82 Fruit olthe

oak

83 Measuring
device
84 Genus of
heaths
86 Evergreen
1ree

88 Devoured
89 Mediterranean
vessel
90 Sharpen
9,1 Publish

93 Rlght·angled

parallelograms
95 Climbing palm

97 T1me gone by

98 Female dee r
Smalllactory
Smg1ng b1rd
Ventilate
Molorles s
boat
108 Ship 's
complem ent

102
104
106
107

lpl. )

110 Cr ipple
11 1 Exert to th e
utm ost
112 Pilcher
114 Trade
116 0 1Si r1C t 1n
Germany
117 Coarse
hominy
119 Sew1ng case
121 Slufl
122 H1nd part
123 College
. degree labor.)
125 loca tion
127 Conjunction
128 Gravestones
129 Cylindrica l
130 Stnke out
131 Young eels
133 Girl's
nickname
136 Engine
138 Numb er
140 Lasso
143 Mountain
(abbr.l
144 Heraldry :

gralled

146 Rockl ish
148 River in
England
150 Toward
sheller
151 Damage
153 Swiss river ·

t54 ASlate (abbr I
156 Knock
158 likelv
161 Symbol lor
tantalum

163 Rupees (abbr.)
165 Legal seal

(abbr.)
167 Symbol lor
phenyl

12: Jo-M eef rne Pr ess 3,4, 15; Evangel ist Calvi n Evans B; Day of
Miracles 13.
1:DO-Wagon Train 3; Movie " The Spira l Road" 4; CBS Sports
Spectacular 8, 10; LOwer Lig hthouse lJ; International
Wrestling 15.
1:JQ-Issues &amp; Answe r s 6, 13.
2:00- Women 's Super st ars 6,13 ; To Be Announced 15.

2· 2 Jlp

---'------...Acc ord ion and c a se,

or igi nal p r ice S:350; w i ll se ll
for Sl 75 . Ph one J (304 ) 773 ·
54?7 ·.
2 2 Jtc
1971 Y A M A H A 250. new par ts,
extra s, good condit ion. Phone
Y9'J '1258 aft er 6 p, m ,
,.
J.J0-6tc
~

-- --

H &amp; N day old Or star.ted
L fog horn pullets. Both floor or
·cage
grow n
available .
Poultry
hou s ing
&amp;
aU to mation , Modern Fl'oultry ,
399 w. Main , Pomeroy , 992·
2164.
2· 2· lfC

-TABLE
----------;---saw and jointer for
G RAVE L Y tr actor Pre -season

special . Purchase any new
Gr avely conver tibl e trac tor
at regular l ist pr ice and we
wil l give you a new 30" rotary
mower attachment, FREE .
No tradG ·in and no delivery on
th is offer good through Feb. 8 ~.
197 5. Grave l y Tractor Sa les,
Pom eroy , Oh io. Phone (614)
992 2975 .
t -29 ·6t c

----

Auto Parl !i, Rut land , Ohio .
Phone { 61 4 1 74? ~ 09.:1
1 22 78tp

1957

Pa rt s · NEW
tra cti on bar s, 111
iac ~ er
air shoc ks, hoo~ er
hea ders, w i th J" col lect or s for
sn1.111 bloc k . Cal l 992.) 496
ott er 6 p . m BES T OFF ER .·
·
1017!1c
C H EVY

La k. e~voo d

I NT . 3 botl . · 14 " plow . No . v .F

20&amp;80. Also , J pt. h it ch trac tor
c arr i er l i ft H D . Phone
147. 511 3.

...

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

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

3: 3()-lf Takes A Thief 3: Wide World ol Sports 6, 13; Probe : The
Wor ld Around Us 4

''

This 'Aunt' Can Sting

4: Jo-Mov ie " Madame X " 3; Er ica 33.
5: 45- M ak ing Things Work 33.
5:0D- Hawai lan Open 6, 13; Un to the Hill s 33.
5: 30- Championship Fish ing B; Face the Nation 10; Walsh's
Anima ls 33.

6:()1).4)0.Minules 8, 10; Villa Alegre 33.
6;3()- NBC News 3, 15; News 4; Zoom 33.
7:0()-Lasto'. the Wild 3;,4; Let's Make A Deal6:· Wild Kingdom
13.15: Ammal Wor ld 8; In the Know 10; Romagnolls' Table
20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:3()-World of Disney 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man 6,13;
Sullivan Years 8,10;; Nova 20: Feeling Good 33 .
8:3()-Amy Prentiss 3.4.15; Movie 'Crazy Joe" 6, t3; Kojak 8,10;
Masterp iece Theatre 20,33 .

9:3G-Mannlx 8,10; Firing Line 20.33.
lO·OG-NBC News 3,4, 15.
W:3G-Change withi n the Unchanging 4; News 6,8; Capi tol Beat
33: High Road to Adventure 10; Bobby Go ldsboro 13:
Soundstage 20.
11 :()()-News 3,4,10,13, 15; My Partner the Ghost 6: CBS News A;
Janak! 33 .
11:1 5---Movie "Circle of Deception" 8; CBS News 10.
11 : JG-Salnt 3; Change W i thin the Unchang ing 4; Jhnny Carson
15; Urban League 10; Don Kirshner's Ro~:k Concer t 13.
12: DO-Johnny Carson 4 ; Good News 6; Movle " T he Fami ly" 10.

12 :3()-ABC News 6.
l:llO-ABC N ~ws 13 .
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1975
6:0D-Sun ri se Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.

Rap:

I'm 18 and look much older. Last summer I worked as
lifeguard at a summer resort and met a woman who was staying
there while her husband was on a business trip. We got friendly.
She's probably 35 but seems younger. It was a great summer!
I've been writing to her, but not saying much because her .
husband might read the letters. Now she has asked me to visit
them on my vacation - but I'm supposed to be her "nephew."
She says sh~ has lots .of relatives, so her husband won't know the
dlilerence. Besides, he's gone a lot.
It would' be a great vacation. But do you think I'm taklnll on
more than I can handle? - PHONY NEPHEW
P.N.:
Yes! You could get stung in this pbony aunt's next. HELEN

'

+++

Phony :
... not to spesk of getting beaten up by an ersatz uncle. SUE

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm getting married soon. My problem Is I cry too much. I'm
afrai~. I'll flood lhe church with my tears, not to spesk of ~­
harrassing everyone, plus ruining my make-up. When I start
crying, I can't seem to stop.
Help ?- TEARFUL AND FEARFUL

6:15---English 505 3.
6:25---Farm Rporl 13.
6:3()-Five Minu tes to Live By 4;

Dear T and F .:
Perhaps your .doctor might prescribe a mUd tranquiUzer for /
News 6; Bible Answers 8:
Concerns &amp; Comment s; Good News 13.
the wedding. Other than that - we're stumped . Suggestions,
6:35---Columbus Today 4.
anyone? - HELEN AND SUE
6:45---Mornlng Reporl 3: Farmtlme 10.
+++
7:1l0-Today 3,,&amp;, 15; A.M. America 6.13; CBS News 8,10.
Rap
:
8:1l0-Lassie6; Capl. KangarooS; Popeye 10; Sesame St. 33.
'lblsglrlismyfrlend, but she's asking too much -Isn't she?
6; 25---Capt. Kangaroo 10.
She and Tony broke up over a year ago. Recently.he asked
8:3()-Big Valley 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15: Bullwinkle 8; me to go with him. Now she's saying that I chase every guy she
Mo rning with D . J . 13.
likes and take them away from her.
9:25---Chuck White Reports 10.
Tony dated several other jllrls after the split with her. He
9:30--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping Gourmet 8;
tells me she's accused each on"eof being the cause, so don't let it
Tatt letales 10; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:0()-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Joker 's Wild 8, 10; Movie bother me; but I do because we've both· been friends since the
sixth grade. She won't even talk, so I can explain.
.
"Arriverderci, Baby!" 13.
!like Tony and don 'I want to give him back (even U he'd go,
10 :3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10.
11 ;()()-High Rollers 3.4.15; One Life to Live 6; Now You See It whlchhewon'l). Whatcanido? -FEELJNGGUILTY
8, 10.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bun ch 6; News 4; Love of
'
Dear' Feeling
Guilty:
~
Life 11.10; Sesame St. 33.
There
isn't
milch
yciil
CAN
do
with
or
for
a
girl
who
won't
11:55-Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8; D an I mel's World IOJ
accept the truth . Tony has the best .advice : don 'I let false ac·
News 13.
12 :()()-Jackpot 3, 1S: Password' All Stars 6,13: Bob Braun's 50·50 cusatlons bother you. - HE1LEN
Club 4; News 8,10.
+++
12: 3Q,-Biank Check 3, 15;
Split Second 6.13; Search lor F.G.:
Tomorrow 8, 10; To Be Announced 33.
You should alsO hope she finds a new boyfriend soon - before
12:45---Eiec. Co. 33.
she
loses ALL her girl friends. - SUE
12:55---NBC News 3,15. , 1 .
+++
1:llO-News 3; All My Chlldren,.6.13; Rhll Donahue 8: Young &amp;
Rap :
the Restless 10; Not .For Women Only 15.
1:3()-How to Survive a Marrlage3,4,15; Let"s Make a Deal6,13;
I'd like to know if you beUeve in horoscopes. My guess is that
As the World Turns 8, 10.
you don't. - HOROSCOPE OBEYER
2:0D-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
L~ML1~
.
H.O.:
2:3()-Doctors 3,4,15; Blg Showdown 6,13; Edge of Nlght 8, 10.
You guessed right. But thefre fun to read. - HELEN
3:1l0-Another Wor ld 3,4,15: General Hospital 6.13; Price Is
. +++
Right 8,10; Woman 20; Personality &amp; Behavioral :
Development 33.
• H.O.: ·
'\
3:30-{)ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6,· Match G
8 10
If my horoscope tells me what I want to hear, I go along.
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
ame ' ; Otherwlse-well,mysignsaysl'mskeptical.-SUE
.
4:oo-Mr. Cartoon J; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset IS;

Gilligan's Is: 6: Tattletales 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie
"Love That Brute" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4:3()- Bewitched 3; Merv &lt;&gt;rnnn 4: Mod Squad 6 : Lucy Show 8;
Bonanza 15.

5:0D- FBI 3; Andy Gr iffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
· 20,33; Ironside 13.
.
5:3()-News6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Gel
Smart 15; Elee. Co. 33.
6:1l0-News. 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 20; Ad lerian
Counseling 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS News
8, 10; Zoom 20.
7:0G-Truth or Cons. 3,.4 ; Bowl ing for Dollar s6; What's My Line ·

8; News 10; New Candid Camera 13; Wally's Workshop IS:
Ohio This Week 20; Lilas YO!la &amp; You 33.
7:3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: Masquerade Party 4;
Police Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8:: Municipal Court 10;
To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed World 15; W.ashington
Straight Talk 20: Episode .Action 33.
8:1l0-Smothers Brothers 3,4, 15; Rookies 13; College Basketball
·.
6: Gunsmoke 8. 10; An Eames Celebration 20,33; Mov ie ·

HELP WANTED

CURl WAITRESSES
We _o ffer paid vacations, · profit
shar1ng, p~id hospital insurance,
pleasant working conditions. Apply in
person .

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

" Doctor 's Wi ves" 3,.4,15; Movie " Thti Only Game lh Town"

13; Maude 8, 10.
9:3G-Rhoda 8, 10; Romantic Rebellion 20,33.
10:1l0-Movie '"The Only Game in Town" 6; Medical Center
8, 10; News 20; Washington Straight Talk 33.
10:3()-Behlnd the Lines 33.
11 :1)().,-News 3.4,8.10.13,15; ABC News 33.
I
11 :JG-J ohnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 13; Movie
"Penelope" 9: Movie "Of Human Bondage•• 10; Janak! 33.
12:1l0-New: 6.
12 :3()-FBI 6.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3.4: News 13.

-t

SERVICE
25 Years experience with
mOre than tour thousand

successlul sall!s to our
credit. For free estimate
a~d

advice relating to

your sale .-all :

COL. R. E. KNOTTS
&amp; SON, DAVE
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph.' 4.46.291 7

sell anylhtng tor
anvb&lt;idy at our Auction•
· or In your home. For

Information an.d

pt~kup

service· call 256-6967 after 5

Every Saturday Night
At1p.m. ·

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
., Olive.

.Eastern Ave.

THIRTY 'FIV.E WEST
·TOWN_HOUSE_S

BEFORE YOU MAKE..ANOTHER··MOVE
. ClUJ. 446-3746 DAYS:
446-9883 NIGHTS &amp; WEEKENDS

NOW A VA.JLABLE..,.:. .
.
.
twO BEDROOM TCWNHOUSES
..:..Private Entries ;_Miiintenance ·Free Living
Private Patios .,-Swimming Pool ·
-Refrigerator··,; ~nges
-Washer,&amp; Dryer Hookups
-Wall to Wall Caroet
~Free 'Trash . Colle.ction
..:..An .utilities
·

,,

'.

•

I

.. ..•
,

I

I

..
:i

. -J

',,.:

•

ELEC T RO LU X Swee·pe rt.! 1L e
1.J1 .3tp
model . Complete wi th all
c l e anin g att a ch, m ent s and MILLION S of r ugs have been
use s pap er bags . 'S l igh tly IJSed
cl ean ed wi th Btue Lustre . It's
but clea ns and tooks like new
Amer ic a ' s
finest.
Rent
Will se ll for ~ 37 . 2 5 cash or
ei E!clr ic shampooer Sl Baker
terms av(l ilabl e. PhOne 992
Furniture Company .
ns5
· 1-JJ.Jt c
12 18 tfc . T WO powE!r saw s, one M e ·
CL OS E OU T on n ew Zi g Zag
Cu llough . other So l en' s .
se w ing ma chin es. For sew ing
Phon e 742 ·36 56.
str etch f abr ics, bull oriho tes,
l · 31·2tp
fancy des igns , et c . Paint
sl ig h tl y bl emi shed. Choice o f 150 REWARD for th e return ol
c arrying c ase or sew in g
our Black and Decker electr ic
stand . 549 .80 cash or terms
saw , 71 ·1 in. blade , Phone ( 1)
av ail abl e. Phone 99 2.7755.
66 / J7J7 . Vivian Ma)(.ey .
12 18 lfc
~
J.JJ.6tp

3:15--Howard Cosell Sports Magazi ne 6; Chtmging Time s 13.
3: 25-- F ilm 4.

4:QO- NHL Hockey 4,15: Antiques 33.

,I

sale Ph o(le 843 ·2292 .

U SE D pa rt s, Fr ye ' s Truck end

2:3()-Soul Train 3.
3: oo-E terna l Light 15; NBA Basketball 8.10.

m

en

Wh eel. Ph on e 99 2-78 69 .

.FERG U SO N

. 2 2 7t p

or

19 72 Y A M AHA 175 CC , 2 1" front

NEW

I ''

For Sale

For Sale

•

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•I

I

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I·

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I

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·.-,-.....

23- The Sunday Times~ Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975

Record puts cloud on ,Governor's _S_fatement
_
.......

.

LEE LEONARD
1 Slatehouoe Reporter
LUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
es A. Rhodes says he has
t!olmlllled t350 from his original
-palgn promise of a $1,000
for Ohio public school
hers
because
the
lature last · July ap·
~ted pa~of the money
It\! Jntended to use.
;_~et a check of the record
· ·.. ~

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Racine
Social Eventsi

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'

''li'LATWOODS, Ky . - The
Little Devil Chess Club of the
Russel! Middle School is inviting all area junior high
schools ' to participate in it..
invitational chess team
tournament.
The tournament will he Feb.
8 and is open to both rated and
unrated team players. There is
a limit of seven players per
team. Highest four scores
count. Rules are four round
Swiss team competition. There
will be team trophies for first
and second place: Please bring
chess clocks, boards, set.. and
pencils. Registration time is 9
to 10 a.m.
,
Tournament directors will be
Paul Smith and Bob Duncan.
Douglas Thompson, sponsor of
the Little Devil Chess Club, can
he reached at 606-836-8153.
To get to the school foltow US
23 north from Ashland, Ky.,
turn left at Hill's Dept. Store,
then right onto Red Devil Lane .
The school address is Russell
Middle ·School, Box M, Flatwoods, Ky. , 41139.

N

-- ..

"
"'

..

1111'1

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE

--~----~----~--~~~~~~~~~~--------~~--------------~----------------------------------~·;
-"

.

'" .

....
t/1

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs . · Etta Mae Hill has
re turno!d home after surgery at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Olden Thaxton
are, both iU with flu at their
home. ·
Tom Wolfe is ill with
pneumonia at his home.
Owen Watson is ill at his
home.
Hazel Carnahan, Frances
Foster and Lucy Taylor visited
Mrs. Lottie Wilcoxen at Marks·
Rest Center in McConnelsville
Thursday, Jan. 23.
Mrs. Lillian Jividen returned
home from Athens after
spending several weeks with
her.son, Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Jividen.
Mt. and Mrs. Harold White of
Lal)gsville were weekend
gu~t.. of Mrs. Grace Krider.
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster
werie guest.. of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hilt. Their son,
who ruid spent ten days with his
grandparents, returnerl home
with them.
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
spent Saturday with her
brother·in'law and sister, Mr.
an&lt;{ Mrs. Dale Smith i'l
Pomeroy.
J14r. and Mrs. Waid Diddle
and: family of Tennessee were
guests saturday of Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Powell.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cleland, saturday, were
Mr. and Mrs. John Leary and
family of Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
and son, David·, of Baltimore
were guests of his mother, Mrs.
&lt;'.arrie Nease ori saturday.
Mrs. Ffieda Howell of
Pomeroy spent a day recently
with relatives.
Larry Wilcoxen of Ohio State
University spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Wilcoxen.

ATIILI!:TlCS TOR~
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)
- A compi'O!IIiBe agreement
between team officials and the
city of Binningham Thursday
ll\llllallteed lbe return of the
Binillngham Athletics for the
1975 baseball season.

c

"I

m

:a

~ - \I:

and bath , .garden ,

:a

. Phone 446-0168 .

~

shows Rhodes did not make his said, adding that one of his first salary up above the national
proposal of $1,000 per teacher · acts as governor wou)d be to average, that we're projecting
and $500 for non-teaching ask .!the leglslature for $30 per ourself in expenditures of
employes until five weeks after pupil to be distributed to the expanding . education and I
think our budget message will
part of the money was already school districts.
It
was
not
until
Sept.
2
at
a
be
ready by March .lOth and I
spent
Stark
County
presa
conference
think
we'll elaborate upoo the
Rhodes held his first formal
ll,hodes
called
for
$1,000
pr~ure
of what has hapthat
news conferen"l' since taking
office Friday and was asked per teacher and $500 for each jlened in the paSt 10 years with
why, when he had orfllinaUy non-teaching employe -a lobbying for the schoolteacher
proposed a $1,000 pay hike for package costing roughly $141 and what's happened to the
teachers, he offered only $650 million when only a $108 educational system." .
The governor said he is still
in a proposal released earlier million surplus was projected.
Rhodes
was
asked
Friday
hopeful
for "compromise "
this week.
whether
the
$650
per
teacher
with
Democrats
controlling the
" At that time," Rhodes
answered, "the $108 million would be available for future General Assembly on a suppjemental appropriation
surplus and the $20 per pupil contract years.
"WeD,
here,
let
me,
uh
...
I
providing
$40 per pupil to each
that they (the leglslature) gave
look
at
it
this
way,"
he
said.
school
district.
them (school districts ), some
He said he did not know
$46 million, they based that on "Unless we start paying the
2.3 11)illion (pupils), that's $46 teachers and geting their whether he would veto the
million, and $110 million and
$46 million would give them
{teachers) approximately
$1,000.
"But the $46 million is in·
eluded in that when they gave
that and I made that ($1,000
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1975
proposal) I think in July," the
governor continued.
"Remember that they appropriated the $46 million was 6:1l0-Thls Is The Life 10.
$20 per pupil and then they 6 :3G-International Zone 4; Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
came along about a week later 7:QO-This Week 4; Communique 6; Talking Hands B,· Look Up
and Live 10.
. and said there was $108 million. 7: 15--Tete
-Bible Time 4.
That$108million and what they 7:3()-This is the Life 3; Church by Side of the Road 4; Rvlval
had given, there would have
Fires/,; Old Fashioned Gospel Hour 8 ; Camera Three 10;
been enough money in there for
Newsmaker ' 75 .
8: DO-Morm on Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Gospe l Caravan 6;
$1,000 for every schoolteacher,
Mr. Gospel Guitar 10; Mamre Church 13.
'
and that's the reason we're 8·3()-0ral
Roberts 3; Your Health 4; Kathryn Kuhlman 6; Day
sticking to a formula here of
of Discovery 8; James Robi son Present s 10; Rex Hum bard
$650 for every schoolteacher ."
13; To Be Announced 15.
In fact, the General 8:55- Biack Cameo 4.
Assembly made lhe $46 million 9:1l0-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Rex Humbard
6; Rev . Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts 10; Across the
appropriation, or $20 per pupil,
Fence 15.
on July 24. On Aug. 9, the state
9:3()-Yours
for the Aski ng 4; What Does the Bible Plainly Say
Taxation Department
8; Church Service 10; Christ Is the Answer 13; Insight 15.
projected another $108 million 10:0()-Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy Jenkins 6;
surplus.
Kathryn Kuhlman 8; Movie " Boeing Boeing" 10; Ji mmy
Swaggart 13; Faith for Today 15.
On Aug. 14 at a campaign
appearance in Willoughby, 10:3G-Go 3; Doctors on Call 4; Hart Fund Bowlathon 6;
Thinking in Black 8; ,Faith for Today 12; What Does the Bible
Rhodes recommended spenPlainly
Say 13; This is the Life 15.
ding $69 million of the surplus 11 :OG-TV Chapell
: Foccus on Columbus 4; Rex Humbard 8,15;
on a $30 per-pupil apRev. Henry Mahan 13.
propriation, not just for 11 :3()-This Is The Answer 3; Make A Wish 6,13; Two-Way Slreel
4.
teachers' salaries.
12:00-At
I ssue 3; Harold Ensley : The Sportsman's Friend 4;
"We need an inunediate
Bowling 6; Face the Nation 8: Columbus Town Meeting 10;
injection of stale funds to
Rev. Calvin Evans 13; Sacred Heart 15.
forestall school closings," he 12:15--0pen
Bible
15.
..
. -

Democratic bill if it comes to
~desk in its preseni form, but
said he prefers his own $650
bonus plan. · ·
I

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

Now ready for occupancy.
Model Open
Daily 5-7 p.m .
Sat. &amp; Sun . 1 to 4 p.m.
One &amp; two bedroom
garden
apartments.
Rent starts from $150
per mo., located 112 mi.
west
of
Holzer
Hospital. on Rt. 35 .
Ph. 446 -1599

For Sale
J P I ECE' tJ C'(1rOOI11 sui t e. V a11ity
d r esse r . qood co nd i t ion , p r ice
!!~S N ew d incl l e Sl,li l e , 7 p iece
$7S . ! ? ){ 13 17 n y lon I r u g , n e w
Wilt1 pad , $60 . Stn gJe be d 5 10,
o th er items . Cal l 66 7 :1333
nft e r 3 p . m .
') '} )IC

tr ac tor .
new m ot o r . good rubb er . ll C W

19 53

30

pa int

$ 1,?00. Phon e 985 359•1.

6' M O W E R . 3 pi hit c h fit s F ord

Fe r g u son

trac 1or 1 $1 00

N ew cult i vat or. $125

Ph one

98 ~ 3594

'} ') li p

196 5 J O H N Dee r e Dozer . 4
cy l i nd e r , d e i s e l. B' bl a d e
N ew
c l u t c ttes .
c an o p y .
b ra kes , n n d t r a c k s ; A 1
co ndit ion . 56 .500 PhOr} e 985
3594
'1 2 ltp

EX TR A n1ce corn f ed trc eJe r
bee t, your c hoi ce Ph one 949
.1]67

2 2 Jt c

Television log for easy viewing
•

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY, February 2. 1975
ACROSS
1 Traveled
7 News beat

Islang)
12 Ali ghts

17 Way out
21 Sarca sm
22 Kind of
pneumonia
23 Wide awake
24 City in Nevada
25 Near
26 Face of clock
28 Place in
position
30 Puts in
vigorous
action
32 Conjunction
33 Greek letter
35 Shellfish
37 K ind of beans

(pi)

39 South African
Dutch
40 Rude cabin
41 · Symbol lor
tellurium

43 Hall
45 Make · up
47 Mili tary Pot1ce

(abbr.)

48 Unusual
49 Residue

52 Retain by

Ioree
54 Denudes
56 Matched
57 Tactile organ
of an animal
59 Footwear
61 Mother ot

Apollo·

62 Theater box
63 Sailors

(co lloq)

64 Conjunction
66 Aflernoon
pa~y

67 G.reek Iefier
68 Food fish
69 Most Worthy
(abbr.)
71 Printer's
IT!easure lpl.)

72 Son ol Adam
74 Slate-colored
76 Go by water
77 Capuchin
monkey
78 Rupees (abbr )
79 Lettlargy
81 Guido's high
note
82 Related
83 Masculine
84 Man's name
85 Stupid person
87 Calm
89 Bristlelike

90 Dash
92
94
95
96

97
99
100
101
10~

103
105
107

Mix
Shor1 jacket
Hold back
Worthless ·
matter (slang )
Looked at
mtently
Sea eag le
Solar disk
Gra in
Church
serv1ce
Farm animal
T1dier
Centimeters

labbr I
109 Tierra del
Fuegan Indian
1 10 Lig ht ram
111 Cubic meter
113 Ceremony
1 14 Prohibit
115 LiQuid
measure

(abbr.!

116 Seasoning
1 t 7 Music : as
written
118 Female sheep

120 Sun god

121 Walking stick

122 Shore bird
123
124
126
128
130
132
134

Farm building
Seines
Restricted
Vapor
Harm
Devastation
Satiates

135 Rip

136 Pronoun

137 Pellets ·
139
141
142
143
145
147
149
152
153

Roman (Oad
Pronoun
Be m1staken
Burrow ing
animal
At no time
lamb 's pen
name
Cheer
French art icl e
Be present

155 Cui

157 Volcan1c
emanation
159 Note of sca le
160 Girl"s name
162 Aquat ic
mammal ·
164 Pertaining to
the kidneys

166 High hal

168 Scorch
169 Walks ·
uhsteadi ty
170 Breaks
suddenly
171 Nat ional hymn
Down
1 Former
Russian rul er
2 Solemn vow
3 Guido·s low
note
4 Free of
· 5 Man ·s name
6 Loved oneS
7 Solici tor at

law Iabbr.!

8 Pol iceman

(slang I
9 Old Greek

coin
10 Fertile spot in
desert
11 Makes ready

12 Astate (abbr.I
13
14
15
16

Beverage
One following
Visions
Strip of
leather
17 Bitter vetch

18 Sytnbol lor

Kenan
19 Make certam
20 Sou nded a
horn
27 Strip of wood
29 Gossip
31 Symbol for
thallium
34 Not these
36 Stup 1d person
. 38 Certainty

40 Detest

42
44
46
48
49
50
51
53
55
56
58
60
62
65
68
69
70
72
73
75
76

Moray s
Parce l of land
Fiber plant
Rant
La ter
Junctures
Compass
point
Performs
River in Italy
Gangsters
girl lneM
V1gorous
Sto·ry
Cut of meat
Corded cfotn
Decl ared
Perta ining to
the cheek
Deal w ith
Make amends
Most flexible
High mounta in
Mule driver

Icolloq I

77 Meph istopheles
79 Marsh bir"
80 Evaluates
82 Fruit olthe

oak

83 Measuring
device
84 Genus of
heaths
86 Evergreen
1ree

88 Devoured
89 Mediterranean
vessel
90 Sharpen
9,1 Publish

93 Rlght·angled

parallelograms
95 Climbing palm

97 T1me gone by

98 Female dee r
Smalllactory
Smg1ng b1rd
Ventilate
Molorles s
boat
108 Ship 's
complem ent

102
104
106
107

lpl. )

110 Cr ipple
11 1 Exert to th e
utm ost
112 Pilcher
114 Trade
116 0 1Si r1C t 1n
Germany
117 Coarse
hominy
119 Sew1ng case
121 Slufl
122 H1nd part
123 College
. degree labor.)
125 loca tion
127 Conjunction
128 Gravestones
129 Cylindrica l
130 Stnke out
131 Young eels
133 Girl's
nickname
136 Engine
138 Numb er
140 Lasso
143 Mountain
(abbr.l
144 Heraldry :

gralled

146 Rockl ish
148 River in
England
150 Toward
sheller
151 Damage
153 Swiss river ·

t54 ASlate (abbr I
156 Knock
158 likelv
161 Symbol lor
tantalum

163 Rupees (abbr.)
165 Legal seal

(abbr.)
167 Symbol lor
phenyl

12: Jo-M eef rne Pr ess 3,4, 15; Evangel ist Calvi n Evans B; Day of
Miracles 13.
1:DO-Wagon Train 3; Movie " The Spira l Road" 4; CBS Sports
Spectacular 8, 10; LOwer Lig hthouse lJ; International
Wrestling 15.
1:JQ-Issues &amp; Answe r s 6, 13.
2:00- Women 's Super st ars 6,13 ; To Be Announced 15.

2· 2 Jlp

---'------...Acc ord ion and c a se,

or igi nal p r ice S:350; w i ll se ll
for Sl 75 . Ph one J (304 ) 773 ·
54?7 ·.
2 2 Jtc
1971 Y A M A H A 250. new par ts,
extra s, good condit ion. Phone
Y9'J '1258 aft er 6 p, m ,
,.
J.J0-6tc
~

-- --

H &amp; N day old Or star.ted
L fog horn pullets. Both floor or
·cage
grow n
available .
Poultry
hou s ing
&amp;
aU to mation , Modern Fl'oultry ,
399 w. Main , Pomeroy , 992·
2164.
2· 2· lfC

-TABLE
----------;---saw and jointer for
G RAVE L Y tr actor Pre -season

special . Purchase any new
Gr avely conver tibl e trac tor
at regular l ist pr ice and we
wil l give you a new 30" rotary
mower attachment, FREE .
No tradG ·in and no delivery on
th is offer good through Feb. 8 ~.
197 5. Grave l y Tractor Sa les,
Pom eroy , Oh io. Phone (614)
992 2975 .
t -29 ·6t c

----

Auto Parl !i, Rut land , Ohio .
Phone { 61 4 1 74? ~ 09.:1
1 22 78tp

1957

Pa rt s · NEW
tra cti on bar s, 111
iac ~ er
air shoc ks, hoo~ er
hea ders, w i th J" col lect or s for
sn1.111 bloc k . Cal l 992.) 496
ott er 6 p . m BES T OFF ER .·
·
1017!1c
C H EVY

La k. e~voo d

I NT . 3 botl . · 14 " plow . No . v .F

20&amp;80. Also , J pt. h it ch trac tor
c arr i er l i ft H D . Phone
147. 511 3.

...

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

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

3: 3()-lf Takes A Thief 3: Wide World ol Sports 6, 13; Probe : The
Wor ld Around Us 4

''

This 'Aunt' Can Sting

4: Jo-Mov ie " Madame X " 3; Er ica 33.
5: 45- M ak ing Things Work 33.
5:0D- Hawai lan Open 6, 13; Un to the Hill s 33.
5: 30- Championship Fish ing B; Face the Nation 10; Walsh's
Anima ls 33.

6:()1).4)0.Minules 8, 10; Villa Alegre 33.
6;3()- NBC News 3, 15; News 4; Zoom 33.
7:0()-Lasto'. the Wild 3;,4; Let's Make A Deal6:· Wild Kingdom
13.15: Ammal Wor ld 8; In the Know 10; Romagnolls' Table
20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:3()-World of Disney 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man 6,13;
Sullivan Years 8,10;; Nova 20: Feeling Good 33 .
8:3()-Amy Prentiss 3.4.15; Movie 'Crazy Joe" 6, t3; Kojak 8,10;
Masterp iece Theatre 20,33 .

9:3G-Mannlx 8,10; Firing Line 20.33.
lO·OG-NBC News 3,4, 15.
W:3G-Change withi n the Unchanging 4; News 6,8; Capi tol Beat
33: High Road to Adventure 10; Bobby Go ldsboro 13:
Soundstage 20.
11 :()()-News 3,4,10,13, 15; My Partner the Ghost 6: CBS News A;
Janak! 33 .
11:1 5---Movie "Circle of Deception" 8; CBS News 10.
11 : JG-Salnt 3; Change W i thin the Unchang ing 4; Jhnny Carson
15; Urban League 10; Don Kirshner's Ro~:k Concer t 13.
12: DO-Johnny Carson 4 ; Good News 6; Movle " T he Fami ly" 10.

12 :3()-ABC News 6.
l:llO-ABC N ~ws 13 .
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1975
6:0D-Sun ri se Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.

Rap:

I'm 18 and look much older. Last summer I worked as
lifeguard at a summer resort and met a woman who was staying
there while her husband was on a business trip. We got friendly.
She's probably 35 but seems younger. It was a great summer!
I've been writing to her, but not saying much because her .
husband might read the letters. Now she has asked me to visit
them on my vacation - but I'm supposed to be her "nephew."
She says sh~ has lots .of relatives, so her husband won't know the
dlilerence. Besides, he's gone a lot.
It would' be a great vacation. But do you think I'm taklnll on
more than I can handle? - PHONY NEPHEW
P.N.:
Yes! You could get stung in this pbony aunt's next. HELEN

'

+++

Phony :
... not to spesk of getting beaten up by an ersatz uncle. SUE

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm getting married soon. My problem Is I cry too much. I'm
afrai~. I'll flood lhe church with my tears, not to spesk of ~­
harrassing everyone, plus ruining my make-up. When I start
crying, I can't seem to stop.
Help ?- TEARFUL AND FEARFUL

6:15---English 505 3.
6:25---Farm Rporl 13.
6:3()-Five Minu tes to Live By 4;

Dear T and F .:
Perhaps your .doctor might prescribe a mUd tranquiUzer for /
News 6; Bible Answers 8:
Concerns &amp; Comment s; Good News 13.
the wedding. Other than that - we're stumped . Suggestions,
6:35---Columbus Today 4.
anyone? - HELEN AND SUE
6:45---Mornlng Reporl 3: Farmtlme 10.
+++
7:1l0-Today 3,,&amp;, 15; A.M. America 6.13; CBS News 8,10.
Rap
:
8:1l0-Lassie6; Capl. KangarooS; Popeye 10; Sesame St. 33.
'lblsglrlismyfrlend, but she's asking too much -Isn't she?
6; 25---Capt. Kangaroo 10.
She and Tony broke up over a year ago. Recently.he asked
8:3()-Big Valley 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15: Bullwinkle 8; me to go with him. Now she's saying that I chase every guy she
Mo rning with D . J . 13.
likes and take them away from her.
9:25---Chuck White Reports 10.
Tony dated several other jllrls after the split with her. He
9:30--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping Gourmet 8;
tells me she's accused each on"eof being the cause, so don't let it
Tatt letales 10; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:0()-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Joker 's Wild 8, 10; Movie bother me; but I do because we've both· been friends since the
sixth grade. She won't even talk, so I can explain.
.
"Arriverderci, Baby!" 13.
!like Tony and don 'I want to give him back (even U he'd go,
10 :3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10.
11 ;()()-High Rollers 3.4.15; One Life to Live 6; Now You See It whlchhewon'l). Whatcanido? -FEELJNGGUILTY
8, 10.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bun ch 6; News 4; Love of
'
Dear' Feeling
Guilty:
~
Life 11.10; Sesame St. 33.
There
isn't
milch
yciil
CAN
do
with
or
for
a
girl
who
won't
11:55-Take Kerr with Graham Kerr 8; D an I mel's World IOJ
accept the truth . Tony has the best .advice : don 'I let false ac·
News 13.
12 :()()-Jackpot 3, 1S: Password' All Stars 6,13: Bob Braun's 50·50 cusatlons bother you. - HE1LEN
Club 4; News 8,10.
+++
12: 3Q,-Biank Check 3, 15;
Split Second 6.13; Search lor F.G.:
Tomorrow 8, 10; To Be Announced 33.
You should alsO hope she finds a new boyfriend soon - before
12:45---Eiec. Co. 33.
she
loses ALL her girl friends. - SUE
12:55---NBC News 3,15. , 1 .
+++
1:llO-News 3; All My Chlldren,.6.13; Rhll Donahue 8: Young &amp;
Rap :
the Restless 10; Not .For Women Only 15.
1:3()-How to Survive a Marrlage3,4,15; Let"s Make a Deal6,13;
I'd like to know if you beUeve in horoscopes. My guess is that
As the World Turns 8, 10.
you don't. - HOROSCOPE OBEYER
2:0D-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
L~ML1~
.
H.O.:
2:3()-Doctors 3,4,15; Blg Showdown 6,13; Edge of Nlght 8, 10.
You guessed right. But thefre fun to read. - HELEN
3:1l0-Another Wor ld 3,4,15: General Hospital 6.13; Price Is
. +++
Right 8,10; Woman 20; Personality &amp; Behavioral :
Development 33.
• H.O.: ·
'\
3:30-{)ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6,· Match G
8 10
If my horoscope tells me what I want to hear, I go along.
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
ame ' ; Otherwlse-well,mysignsaysl'mskeptical.-SUE
.
4:oo-Mr. Cartoon J; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset IS;

Gilligan's Is: 6: Tattletales 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie
"Love That Brute" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4:3()- Bewitched 3; Merv &lt;&gt;rnnn 4: Mod Squad 6 : Lucy Show 8;
Bonanza 15.

5:0D- FBI 3; Andy Gr iffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
· 20,33; Ironside 13.
.
5:3()-News6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Gel
Smart 15; Elee. Co. 33.
6:1l0-News. 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 20; Ad lerian
Counseling 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS News
8, 10; Zoom 20.
7:0G-Truth or Cons. 3,.4 ; Bowl ing for Dollar s6; What's My Line ·

8; News 10; New Candid Camera 13; Wally's Workshop IS:
Ohio This Week 20; Lilas YO!la &amp; You 33.
7:3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: Masquerade Party 4;
Police Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8:: Municipal Court 10;
To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed World 15; W.ashington
Straight Talk 20: Episode .Action 33.
8:1l0-Smothers Brothers 3,4, 15; Rookies 13; College Basketball
·.
6: Gunsmoke 8. 10; An Eames Celebration 20,33; Mov ie ·

HELP WANTED

CURl WAITRESSES
We _o ffer paid vacations, · profit
shar1ng, p~id hospital insurance,
pleasant working conditions. Apply in
person .

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

" Doctor 's Wi ves" 3,.4,15; Movie " Thti Only Game lh Town"

13; Maude 8, 10.
9:3G-Rhoda 8, 10; Romantic Rebellion 20,33.
10:1l0-Movie '"The Only Game in Town" 6; Medical Center
8, 10; News 20; Washington Straight Talk 33.
10:3()-Behlnd the Lines 33.
11 :1)().,-News 3.4,8.10.13,15; ABC News 33.
I
11 :JG-J ohnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 13; Movie
"Penelope" 9: Movie "Of Human Bondage•• 10; Janak! 33.
12:1l0-New: 6.
12 :3()-FBI 6.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3.4: News 13.

-t

SERVICE
25 Years experience with
mOre than tour thousand

successlul sall!s to our
credit. For free estimate
a~d

advice relating to

your sale .-all :

COL. R. E. KNOTTS
&amp; SON, DAVE
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph.' 4.46.291 7

sell anylhtng tor
anvb&lt;idy at our Auction•
· or In your home. For

Information an.d

pt~kup

service· call 256-6967 after 5

Every Saturday Night
At1p.m. ·

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
., Olive.

.Eastern Ave.

THIRTY 'FIV.E WEST
·TOWN_HOUSE_S

BEFORE YOU MAKE..ANOTHER··MOVE
. ClUJ. 446-3746 DAYS:
446-9883 NIGHTS &amp; WEEKENDS

NOW A VA.JLABLE..,.:. .
.
.
twO BEDROOM TCWNHOUSES
..:..Private Entries ;_Miiintenance ·Free Living
Private Patios .,-Swimming Pool ·
-Refrigerator··,; ~nges
-Washer,&amp; Dryer Hookups
-Wall to Wall Caroet
~Free 'Trash . Colle.ction
..:..An .utilities
·

,,

'.

•

I

.. ..•
,

I

I

..
:i

. -J

',,.:

•

ELEC T RO LU X Swee·pe rt.! 1L e
1.J1 .3tp
model . Complete wi th all
c l e anin g att a ch, m ent s and MILLION S of r ugs have been
use s pap er bags . 'S l igh tly IJSed
cl ean ed wi th Btue Lustre . It's
but clea ns and tooks like new
Amer ic a ' s
finest.
Rent
Will se ll for ~ 37 . 2 5 cash or
ei E!clr ic shampooer Sl Baker
terms av(l ilabl e. PhOne 992
Furniture Company .
ns5
· 1-JJ.Jt c
12 18 tfc . T WO powE!r saw s, one M e ·
CL OS E OU T on n ew Zi g Zag
Cu llough . other So l en' s .
se w ing ma chin es. For sew ing
Phon e 742 ·36 56.
str etch f abr ics, bull oriho tes,
l · 31·2tp
fancy des igns , et c . Paint
sl ig h tl y bl emi shed. Choice o f 150 REWARD for th e return ol
c arrying c ase or sew in g
our Black and Decker electr ic
stand . 549 .80 cash or terms
saw , 71 ·1 in. blade , Phone ( 1)
av ail abl e. Phone 99 2.7755.
66 / J7J7 . Vivian Ma)(.ey .
12 18 lfc
~
J.JJ.6tp

3:15--Howard Cosell Sports Magazi ne 6; Chtmging Time s 13.
3: 25-- F ilm 4.

4:QO- NHL Hockey 4,15: Antiques 33.

,I

sale Ph o(le 843 ·2292 .

U SE D pa rt s, Fr ye ' s Truck end

2:3()-Soul Train 3.
3: oo-E terna l Light 15; NBA Basketball 8.10.

m

en

Wh eel. Ph on e 99 2-78 69 .

.FERG U SO N

. 2 2 7t p

or

19 72 Y A M AHA 175 CC , 2 1" front

NEW

I ''

For Sale

For Sale

•

'

•

�'

..

'

''

.

I .

(.

'

),

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24-TheStmday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975
"'

For- ·Fast ·Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel .Classifieds
•

· In MemllfY

Notice

Notice

IN MEM O~Y of Orover C
' Salser who passe-d awcty Fe b
I. 1973 In your hearl':i you w i ll
always be W tf e, Children .
and Grandchildr en
2 ' ltp

A~YO N E

rOR your "O il o f M 1nk "
Cosmeti cs Phon e BROWN 'S.

IN LOVING memory of Jante
El lzabem Sntder who pa ssed
away F ebrua ry 5. 19 72 Trm£&gt;

SHOOT I NG MAT C I'-l , Corn
Ho llow Gun Club , tu rn l•r st
right a ft er Miles Cemete r y .
. Rutland
F,H to ry c nok ed
guns only Sunday , rebruary
1 .. 1 p m
I 30 3t c

ne\ler
eras e
Ol£1
m emor ies of a l ov rng g rand

W i ll

mettler wh om we m •SS ve ry

-

I

mvch
Sad I y mrssed by
Barbara , P aulett e. N.1n c y
Randy , T amm).', Jommrc dnd
great grandch il dren
2 1 li e

•ntcr es ted in starting

a fundamen tal. Ind ependent
Baph5 1 Church . wr 1te Rev .
Jnmes Gilnt Box ?-1 3. Alba n y .
Otuo or c all ~ 11 69 8 303 -1
1 26 Hp

AUC TI O N Sal e Eve ry Fr10ay ,
7 p m Village AUct i On , } 15 N
Sec ond . M 1dd tepor1
2 20 JO tc
TAX Pre pa red
by
iiPPOlnlnrcn r Pt10ne 991 3388
I 2 61C

See r.1s l •k c only ve'!. terday
Since God Ci'lllec' vou ilwily
Days go b y , t 1me w 111 pa so;
But your memory wdl alw,, y s
la st
0 t1 , t10W WC W1Sh )'O U LOUi d bC
near
You ar e i n our hC&lt;lri S
And m our tho ugh ts
Year afl er vear
Sadl y m1ssed by wile .
c h i ldre n , il nd grilnd Chlldren
1 2 II C
IN LOVIN G m ~mory o f our
daughler . M &lt;! le na M rG u1re
wh o passed awa y Fcl:l ?. 195&lt;~
I know God nee d s someon e
spec1a1
For H e called he r home tha t
day ,

But d1d H e know th e n1ilrlY
heart aches ,
It br oke a l ong lh e way
Sadly missed by tw•n Si sl er
Re gena , Mother . Dad . S1ster s
and Brother s
1 2 li e

Card of Thanks
WE WOULD li l&lt;. e to express our

AUC TI O N Thu r sa ay !W'jht
p m
a t M ason J\uc t 10 F,,
tl o rtl§n St In Milson W Va .
Cons,g nment s, we l come
Ptwne (30~ 1 77 3 5.171
1 :t tf c

'

FREE BOOK T ELLS STO RY ,
!'I n mte res tm g nook call ed t h e
Mas rery o f L •l e w 1ll be sen t to
you WtfhOUI Ob l l gc'I I IO n Th1S
book wil l tel l how you rnity
re ce 1ve
lhc
untque
Ros•cru Ci an method to r s el l
un fo ld men t 1n lh e prtvacy ot
vov r home Address . Sc r1b E'
I I I
ROSI Cr u c ian Orde r .
1\ MORC. San Jose Cnllf orn•a
951 1,J
'I 2 lip
5H00 TIG Ma t ch , RaCl!H' Gvn
Cl ub . Sunday , r eb r unry /, I
pm
I' 29 4t c:

CAS H USS FOR JU NK CAR S N EWLY
furn is h e d apr. 2
Com pl e te , F RY e'S T R U CK
bedr ooms . r ef erence Phone
A ND AUTO PART S. Ru t lan d
9J9 3783
Phone 742 h09 4
2 2 Jtp
t n 26tp
FUR N IS HED apr 3 rooms and
WAN TED to buy
a u se d
ball'\, newly dec orated Phon e
G r n v e l y Trar::lor w it h Mower
991 2 ~ 37
and rid tng su t k.y and plow
1 2 6tp
a na chmen ts Phone (3 04 ) 88:&lt;'
7525 or evenmg s. 882 2344
I 2h I 21r.

991 ~1 1 3

I ! I IC

Mobile Homes For Sale
1?.)1;.14 NEW Moon mobile home ,
1970 mode l Phone 99? 73 85
1 11 Jtc

OL D CO IN S and paper m on ey O NE . ant , que bathtub with
wooden edge around top Tub
for M e •g-s County 's o nl y
measure s 6 ft lon g , 211 ft.
mon t hl y co m auc1 10n Ca l l Ed
deep , Best offer wil l be ac
Burk e t t , 997 ) ~ 76, after 5 30
ce pted Ca l l 992 5933
pm
2 2 lt c
I 31 l?t c

IO :d 5 Part tall y carpe l ed . a c ,
S2 gal lon hot wal er h eat er;,.
•mderp•n n• ng Ca ll 997 Sl 53
1 30 12rc

CO N SIG NMENT S wel come at
P&amp;J Auct•on . 1 15 No rtt1
Sec ond , M•ddlepor t
1 9 JOt c

C AP'I'AJ ~
~!:i T

C, ' IJioC t:l-1:;

'&gt;',.\ 00

\VOl

WA NT ED Old upngt1t PIANO S,
any co nd 1t1on
Pav •ng $10
eact1 Fr r st floor on l y Wr.te
an d g •ve d •r ec l •on s to W1!1 en
P1ano Co , Box 188 , Sardis ,
Oh 10 , 43 946.

Real Estate For Sale

1969 IMPALA Cus l om. QOOd
conditiOn F actory air , p s,
p b , pn ce d to sel l Pt10ne 992
7617
1 29 6t c

ApproK•mate l y one acre •n
Rutland , set up tor mobile
home Pt1on e ( 1 J 446 9662
1·30-7tc

1960 MGA 2 dr conve r tib l e ,
- - - - - - -------~- ~~tp · very good cond111on Pt1one
992 77 37 a ft er 5 p .m
OL D lurn•lure , i ce bo xes , bra ss
1·29 .6t c
beds , or c omplete house hold s.
Wr i te M . 0 . Mi l ler , Rl 4,
1973 F ORD Cou n try SQu1re
Pomeroy , Oh•o Call 992 77 60
wagon , 20, 000 mile s. a ll
10 7 74
equipment
, 53 ,500 Phone 992
----- ---- ..--- ~-3493 or 992 ·2720. ~
JUN K au1os , complete and
- - - - - - - -- - -----de liv ered to our yard We pi ck
up aut o bod1es and buy all
klnQs of sc rap metal s and
iron R1d er 's Sa l vage, St Rt . WAN T ED Old upr ,gh t p1anos ,
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy , Oh10
any condit 10n . Pa y ing $10
Ca ll 99 2 5468
eac t1 . F1 rst fl oor only Write
10 11 ti c
and g•v e directi ons to W1tten
Piano Co , Box 188 . Sard i S,
CA SH pa 1d for a l l makes and
Oh10 43946:
mod e l s of mob1le no mes
1·29 6tp
Phon e area code 614 -l 23 9531
4 1J.tfc

BUILDI N G lot . 80ft frontage
by 165f t The seco nd l ot on l eft
o n R i ver view Drive , L 1n coln
Hi l l. Pomeroy , Ot110 If in
teres ted call 992 · 323 0 a ft er 5 p

m.

Wanted To Rent

5 ROOM neu se, Darwin Phone
J B O ' Brien , attorney , 99 2·
2720
2· 2·6tp

5 ROOM t10u se , ss .ooo . Phone

--------- ------Help Wanted

1-\1.\ ML,l •.',• T '~ U'

FR 1•'LI"' .

992 5871
2·2·12tp

WANTED .
Manager
for
f inan cia l Ins t itution
Salary·
open in line wi th expen ence .
Fr1nge benei1IS Write Box
729A, The Daily Sentinel.
Pomeroy , Ohio 45169.
1 30 Jtc
Salesman or Agent wanted
TEXA S OIL COMPANY needs
dependabl e man wt1o can work
withOut supervisio n •n Me1gs
Coun ty
area
Contac t
customers Age unimportant ,
.. Jt matur•tv •S
We tra i n
Aimall G N . D ick , Pres .,
Sou thw es tern Petroleum , Box
789 , F t Worth, T x . 76 101
1·29 ·4tC

mE PIIANTOM

R N . lor parttime POS1t1on with
planned parentt1ood , c lini cs.
education , and so c ial se rvi ces
responsibilities . 16 nours oer
week . Call off•ce , 992 5912
w eekdays except Thursday .
1 29 ·6tC

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

WAITRE SS ES needed , apply in
person . Craw 's Steak Hou se .
Pomeroy
1 7 tf c
_ _ _ _ __, _ _ _ _ _ _ - - ..!..-

ALLEi' OOP

Pels For Sale
BLACK , tan , and wh i te Beag l e,
fema le, 11 months old .and
Regis t ered . Co nfa cr C!yda
Bing . Bradbury , or ca ll 992
3357
1-31 -3tc

Employment Wanted
p l umbing,
healtng , and all types of
gene ral
repair
Work
gua rant eed 20 years ex .
perien c E!' Phone 992 -2409
1 !9 tf c

IJTTLE ORPH.\N A~Nu.:

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

For Rent
5858

10.27 ttc

•,

I H OUS~ . UllfUrOIShed, 7 rooms
and bath , n•ce . Phone 992 -27 80
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

I r-€ !"115 '"1£&lt;5'1" 15 ,.150...0 JC!Nrt:.v
~" t::'ALPH N o\1)61;.' •WD Ro\L ~
P'&gt;~.'\I\['€N- 6..JI 1HE&gt;;:E .o~.;;:i;i'
...0 lt• .\L Lbro..Gt?~ 'VT" E' .5n-E
,.. ~

.. oe:::

c~;: ~

, ~ --

Strout Realty
14 Acre
Farmette
House with J bedrooms ,
45x45 pole barn. large fenced
po;,d, T P C water, large
lawn, lots of s hrubbery,
excellent location for subdivi sion $26,500.00 .

From t h e largest Tru ck or
Bulldo zer Rad1 a tor to the
sma l lest H eater Co r e.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specials1t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

·APT 3 rooms . all e1ecfr1c , has
table top range . wall oven ,
real niCe and clean , mod e rn .
in
Pom er oy
L ocated
overlooking tne Oh10 River .
Phone GallipoliS , day 446 7699 , even i ngs 446 95 39
1·26 .tfn

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs.
serv 1ce , al l makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Serv ice We sha rp en Sc isso r s
3·29 ·tf C
DOZER work , land c l earing by
the acre , hOurly or contract
Farm ponds. roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
w i th over 20 years ex
perience P'ullins Excavating ,
Pomero~. Oh 10. Phone 992
2478
12.19 .tf c
Improvement
and
-tO ME
Repair Se rvr ce Any thing
r.xed around th e t1om e, from
roof to basemen! You Will
like our work and rates.
Phone 742 5081
12 ·29 -tfc
C REMEANs- cONCRETe- de ·
liver ed Monday
through
Sa turday
and
eve n1ngs .
Phone A46· 1142
6 lJ .tfc

- --,....1..~ ------ ----

TRAILER SPACE , J.il ' mile
nortf\ of Me igs High Sc hoo l on
ol d Rt 33. Flt1one 992 .2941.
1· 23.tfc

5 RM , APT . furnished , utilitiespa id , no children or pets .
Phone 992 .5810 , 814 East
Main , Pomeroy .
------~ -------and 4 ROOM furn ished 8nd
unfurn i shed
apartments .
Phor.e 992 -5434 .
• · 12-tfc

J

-PR-------------IVATE '!lee!lng
for

Real Estate For Sale

J BR, full basement, 2 car
garage, carpet'LR and DR ,
frnanc lng available .

RUTLAND - All elec. new
home, 3 BR , large kitchen,
Maytag washer &amp; dryer,
refr.gerator ,
air
con ditioning , 1.8 acres ground .
You have to see it to ap -

MIDDLEPORT -

2 BR.

older home, large bullf. in
kitchen, garage , utility
bldg , closed in porch, carpet

LR &amp; DR. $15,500.00.

CARPENTER 2 story
frame , 4 BR, 1'12 baths,
dining R. porches·, storage

bldg . 2 garages, about 2
acres. $8,000.00.
POMEROY - Business R.
and furnished apartment .
Located on Main St. in good
traffic area . Good income
investment. Priced to sell.

. PORTLAND - 4 nice lots,
good drilled well and water
system,

block

garage,

Older

storage building, 2 slory

home, 2 or J BR. , garage,
some built-In cabinets, some
ca rpeting , quiet street.

house needs some repair .
Whole works at just $4,700.

$11 ,000 .00

307 Spring Avenue
Pomeroy
992-2298
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

Phone

992·3874_.
11 -l .. . tfc

--------------, HOUSE

FO~

~ENT ,

NEW LISTING 5 room '
home, bath, gas furnace, lots ol
paneling and ceiling tile . City
water, with large level lot.
Only $10,000.00 .
NEW LISTING - 4~ acres: foi
bottom, the rest In woods, 2
bedroom home, bath, gas heat,
rural
water.
Quiet with
BUILDING LOT- With slone

foundation on good quiet street,

ou I of high water.
BARGAIN ..: 5 room frame
with basement, . city water,
natura I gas and electric: on
corner
lot . $3,000
.00.
.
.

POMEROY -

'NEAR

LANGSVIlLE -

About 10 acres. on good
ffshing creek, close to mlne

areas, good blacktop road .
ASKING just $4,000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY LET US
KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
- PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST AT THIS TIME .
992-2259 or 99n568

Nice renovated

..

•

•

OUR STOCK
IN TRADE

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

Phone (6141 992·2798

PHONE
949. 3832 or 84J.2667

STRIPPING . FINISHES
FURNITURE-METALS-ETC.
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

Refmishing . Repairing
Burnishing
Caning
Upholstering.
We Also Buy Antiques
Pick. up Service Available

1974 LTD Ford Counby Squire

~~!~.~~!~ O~~~~~~~b~~~~
and full equ ipm ent

From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding/ roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, expert carpeting,
etc .

P&amp;J
Home
Maintenance ,
hea11ng, cooling , refrig ,
plumb i ng , e le ctr i ca l ap
pl ia n ces W e se rvice and
repa~r anyting in the home or
bus•ness . 2 15 N
Second ,
M1ddl epor t Phone 992 3509 .
I 9 30tc
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- Sw~epers, toast ers, irons ,
a ll small appli.:m ces. · Lawn
mowers, next to State High .
. way Garage on Route 7. Home
Phone 985 ·3825 .

REFRIGERATORS
from 125

Electric or Gas Ranges;

HAVING
T.R 0 U 8 L E
SELLING,
CALL
A
PROF ESSIDNAl SAlESMAN
AT

~ Dlyers; and

Wringer Washm
"

.

"At Caution Light, Rt. 7"
Tuppers Pl&lt;lins, Ohio .
Phone 667-3851
OPEN WED. THRU
SUNOAYtA.M.-7 P.M.

163•

____________

H tic'

•

WAS

L1ke new . a t half pn ce

'7500

V-8 4 Or . Sedan, - auto.
Extra nice

1970 Ford Maverick
w ithout au!o . t r ans.

as low as

See: Fred BlaeHnar, Darrell Dodrill,
or Dan Thompson

A A K5

• Q2

• a74

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING

... Ka765
EAST

WEST

461 S. Third Ave.

"'J 10 a

"'9 7 62

• 7 5 43

.9

t K Q 10

t A J 52
... AJ1092

SOUTH!DI

AQ 4 3
• A K J 10 a6
• 9 6 :1

•Q

Middleport, 0.

•1710

H IDE·A· BE IJ,,,~g~re~y;;;::;:;;;:;=======-'9.95
I OLD SOFA,-;:
25.00
3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE,
219.95
French
Prov., A:~~~=======~269.95
WOOD
ROCKER
24.95
14.95
NEW RECLINER
88.00
49.95
BROWN CHAIR, maple, wood trim
29.95
14.95

Includes: Parts &amp; labor, new spark plugs &amp;
points, adjust timing · dwell - carburetor
valves, plus engine compression check.

.

.

$800

GE PORTABLE TV, B&amp;W - - - - - - - -·69.95
2 WHITE WROUGHT IRON LAWN CHAIRS
like new, ~a. 39.95
3 ~OliO OAK TABLES, wlfhdrowers -79.95
59.95
3 NEW TABLES, maple or walnut
59.95
39.95
3 BIG DARK OAK, Mediterranean or
3 BIG MAPLE TABlES, (Set)
149.95
88.00
6 BIG SETS N.EW COMMODE TABLES,
(each)
79.95
39.95

. MUFFLER SPECIAL

OFFER EXPIRES 2/14/75
If convenient, please call for an appointment.

Our guarantee: Quality at the lowest possible
price. We use only NEW parts &amp; guar~ntee all
service &amp; parts for 6 mo.nths or 6,000 m1les.

1-REF-RIGERATOR,white ~
· - - - - - - - 3 5 . 1 1 0-

·r---~;.,.SPECIAL NO. 2---_...;1
SOLID STATE
Was
STEREO COMPONENT $69.95

19.95'

Don Watts V.W., Inc.

i-':~EEc':r~~~~~:::•~G~E~S~,H~ch~==:rnift:f.95s- ~:=

''

!'

Mobile Honies For Sale

'. .

Mobile Homes

TRI · STATE

MOBILE HOMES

·'

1720 EASTERN AVE .
10x:50 Belmont 2 BR
lOxSO 1·959 Fleetwood 2 BR
10x50 1961 Fleetwood 2 BR
10x50 Marl ette 2 BR
8X40 1959 Roy Craft 2 BR
8x40 1956 America 2 BR
8x23 1969 Tra vel Tra i l er
IOx~O Branstrat t er 2 BR

10x50 Kaywo'od 2 BR

Authorized
Dealer

Ph. 446-9800

Gallipolis, Oh .

110.00
49.95 Up

Pass

2.

Pa ss

2 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

4.

Pels
AKC REG . GERMAN
SHEPHERD
FOR Stud ServiCe Excellent
pedigree Call 446· 1325
22-6
BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES.
K &amp; P Kennels, 38 8 8274 . Rt .
554, ' ~ m i east of Porter
305 .tf
MINIATURE male Dachshund
black and brown , 7 weeks otd,
$45 . Ph 367 ·0249 after 4 p m
_

_ _ _ _ _ _ "T"' _ _ _

16
sec ondary
Cir c uli
cond tt lon
17 Co d ,1nd condens e r
condtfton
18. Breaker pomt condttion
19 Cam lobe acc uracy
20 Hydroc ar bon paris ·
cr u, o;c spd .

spd .
28
Carbon
monoxide
percent
29 . Charging voltage
10 . Exhaust restriction

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
500 East Main St.

Pomeroy

Phone 992-2174

Pomeroy, Qhio

1970
1967
1962
1966
!966
1951

AKC IriSh Setter pu~s, wvrrT". cd
Chesapeake, 867 ·553.5
27 ·26
NORWEGIAN Elkhound s , 4
males, 6 wks. old Ph . 256·
6715

Bobbf's Poodle BOL•t1quc
PRO F E SS IO NAL groom1ng by
appo intm ent only Ph Bobb 1e
Ca sto . 446 19J d
212 If
PINE RIDGE COLLIES
AKC Reg Co lt ,es. sable and
Wl'11 !e (614 ) 2S 6 1167
263 If

BABYSITTER wanted some
days , some evenings . 446
7498
27 ·3
EXPERIENCED bartender
and waitress Apply King's
Arm N i ght Club , Rt
7,
Che shire
21 ·3
NEW &amp; used Car Salesman
good work i ng cond , good
draw plus ccmm•ssion , car
furnished Chances for ad ·
van ce menl. Write Box 355. c o
Ga llipolis Daily Tribune
26·3
CASH I ER - R ECE PTION 1ST
NEAT individual who en1ovs
meeting and serv1ng · the
publi c , mus'T be able 'o type
and work with figures ;
business experience desirable
but not necessarv . send
resume to box No. 354. co
Ga!H pol•s Daily Tribune .

23 -6

-~ - ----~-

---------------25-6

-----

,

'

---t------------ ---.--...... ----:---.---:-

kmg won the trick
South promptly led a low club
and the moment of truth had
arrived . East pulled out the
ace; pushed it back ; pulled 11
out again ; pushed II back once
more, and finally played low
East blamed his partner for
playing the SIX He was nght
about that. In that partocular
sotuat10n lhe h1gh·card pla y
should be reserved to show the
quee.n. not the number
East also explained that he
had dec1ded that South held
three small spades. se ven
trumps and no clubs
East was really wrong in that
last though t . W1th seven
trumps. a void suit and only
e1ght h1gh·card pomts. South
would not have opened one heart
He would have made a preemp·
tive bod 1f he did not pass The
actual deception had been that
Easl dece1ved h1mself

'
b
II
Dl

I HICE[)

.

·•

For Rent or Sale

LARGE 2 apt. house 1n city, 1
apt , 3 rms arrd bath . 1 apt. S
rm s and ba th Please write
Box 354 C·O Gall i polis Daily
Tr i bune .
19 tf

\[I XX)1ITJ THE [I I I)

w":io":..

(4nnl'f'rl

'

1974 OPEL MANTA ................... sz695
2 Door, orange fini sh. blk. . v 1nyl inter ior . buc ke t sea ts , less
' than 5, 000 miles. Radlo, deluxe bumpers .

M~1ntlay)

Jumll\, ~: TWEET BANAL DOUBLY
Yr!lh'rll"' ·~
. \ i\u~~•·r : u,!lllf lw 1111' lmxil' rlf II

own~r car &amp; on ly 10.400 mi .. V-8 engine with

automatic , power stee ring , P. brakes, lac. air, tinted
glass, deluxe body and wheel opening mouldings, sand·
st one viny l seats . Beautiful dark red finish . Truly a cream
puff

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise anawtr, u
suggest ed by the above cartoon •

lATEST
'
•e
(/IHitiiiH'fll - A TABL..

1974 CHEVELLE ....................... S3095
M a libu H T Cpe ., 350 V-B engine, power steering, fectory
air, tinted glass, radio, wheE;!I cove rs , good tires, blk .
Interior, silver grey finish .

The boddmg ha s been
Notlh

Easl

P.J SS

I ¥

Pa ss

Pass

3•

Pass

South

Wl1&lt;1l flo vou do nuw ~
A - Sonic slnm tr y is indicntt•d .
\\'r r l."l.'Om mcnd fnur dubs.

I t

lA
''

You. Sou th . hold

TODAY 'S QUES'I'ION
You do bi d four cl ubs and your
pa rtn er btd s four dtamonds What
do you do now '1

.
r
GALLIPOLIS
.
.,..,

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CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH

1973 PLY. STA. WAGON ............ !2795
Su burban J Seat, V·B engine, automati c trans., power
steering &amp; brakes, factory air co nditioning, luggage rack,
green ffnish ,. radio. Like. new W·W tlres.

1972 NOVA SIS .......................s2195
2 Door, 350

·-··1

,.. ~· ...;.;
.. ··~

.,._ (

v.a automBtlc,

Rally wheel &amp; w-w tires. radio.

brown fin ish, blk . vinyl interior, loca l car &amp; real n ice.
'

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1, I

,

.,

·---------------------GOOD USED TRUCKS

1971 CHEV. 2 TON CAB ...... :..... s3495
350 engine, 2 speed, 825 tires

Bill Joe John-

:::::-;:::::;::::::~:;:::::=-;::::::x:::::::::.,;::::-t-:::::::::-~:'(.:::w;&gt;:=~::::'f.-».:y;x:*.:-;~:«~:xx&gt;::::xx-~tx.x*.:-;·:-;·:·:-;w&gt;;-;.Yu;t»~w-&gt;;..

,,,,!WM~MJIJJ2:~,,,,~!~,~,N.%91!!~,~,~,~f~~!,~,9,,~!t,!,;,,2~,~~.
vOtECK THESE TERRIFIC SALE PRICES
1973 W4 (THE THINGL ................... :........................12295
Check this one.

1974 DODGE atARGER SE........................................ 13795
Loaded, Was $3995.00.

1972 OLDS. CUTlASS SUPREME,· 2 DR HT... ................. 12995

1972 CHEV. % TON ................... s2250
8' Fleetslde, 4 speed, V·8.

1972 CHEVROLET

lfz

TON............ s2150

8' Fleetslde, 6 c yl ., std . t rans , n ice

SAVE NOW THRU FEB. 28
New 75 Vegas's
New 75 Nova's
New 75 Monza's

$200, Factory Rebate
$200 Factory Rebate
$500 Factory Rebate

Good Stock New Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks

Loaded with extras.

1972 FORD GALAXIE '500' 2 DR Hl ........................... 11695
Air, P.S., P.B.

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR HT.. ........................... s2195
Check this one .
1972 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 4 DOOR .............................. 11888 .

We Have The Right Deal For You!
Good stock new 15 Chevrolet 'h &amp; l/• Ton
Pickups, Vans. Blazers, 4 wheel drive
Suburbans.

Air &amp; all extras. special.

1970 DODGE DART 2 DR HT ......................................11195
'6' SticK.

1970 MERCURY MONTEGO 2 DR ...... ~ -···· ····· ·········· ···· ·· 5 788
6 engine •. SPECIAL!
1970 CHEVY IMPALA 2DR HT..................................... 11295
Local car, auto. trans., P.S.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
oo·?.?126 Open Eves. Till 8 Pomeroy

1970 CHEVY BELAIR 4 DOOR ..................................... 11195··.
New car trac:~e , autQ. trans., P.S.

1970 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 2 llR.................................. 11195

Regency, Inc. Aoartments

6 Cyl. engine.

1968 PONTIAC TEMPEST ............................................ 1795
6 Cylin.der. automatic trans.

OVER 40 NICE CLEAN LATE
MODELS TO CHOOSE FRf"M

vCHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU --

~ GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
i639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS; 446-3273

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4 Dr .. 1

THE COUNTRY

OFTEN !70 THIS .

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1974 CHEV. IMPALA .. ~ ...............s4195

PEOPLE WHO HATE

.AQ 76 ¥ 2 .K.f 5 4 ... A.OA 2

23-5

HAtn WEAVERS ,.... No • Ex perience necessary . Free
Tra i n~ng . big salary plus
comm i ssion . Send stamped
envelope to · FANTAS TIC
HAIR WEAVING. P . 0 ~ Box
14139 , Philadelph i a , Pa .,
19 138.
.

ECONOMY MOBILE
HOME SAL"ES ,.
10xSO EXC. cond . • Id ea! f or
coup I~. l arge be~ room 1 b ig
12~~2-BR-Mob lle~H om e
living room w ith a.r cond . We
s i tuated on I acre· for sale.
buy used hom es 1401 Ea ste rn
Bath an d v, , furn call 44 6· .
Ave 446· 1425
.
,
· 15.t f
2890.
25 J
'

Unscrumblc these four Jumbles,
one l etter to l'arh sqmtre, tn
form four ordinary wurds .

___ _

B&amp; 5 MOBILE HOMES
Pt . Pl easa nt
concord 12x: 60 2 BR
Champ ion 12x60 2 B~
New Moon 10x55 2 BR
Champ i on 1'2x~O 2 BR
Li berty 12X50 2 BR
Great Lake Bx45 2 6R

446·7572 .reank Financ.ng

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Z rlo

Help Wanted

'3 REFRIGERATORS, priced to sell-.--~ $15-$2"-$25

'

Plus Tax

Includes: Parts &amp; labor - new muffler, 2 new
chrome tailpipes. new clamps &amp; gaskets .

ELEC. DRYER, Hoover,white
aa.oo
69.95 Up
3 MAYTAG DRYERS
3 WRINGER WASHERS
39.95 Up
WASHER-DRYER, auhi .. groon, pai•- - 319.95 239.95

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$3745

1967-1974
Beetles

9.95
59.95

Gmte or lienc ~n1ith

Pass

273

79.95
D~S~K~~~~~~~~9~9-~95~ 69.95
19.95

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Plus Tax

Includes: Oil change, clean oil strainer, lube
front suspension, check &amp; fill battery, correct
tire pressure, fill win_dshield washer, cl!eck
transmission fluid, Iuiie door liinges, stnker
plates. heat(!r cables, &amp; hood &amp; trunk latches.

19.95 Up

Sec Ht?rb. Ddvc, Mil&lt;•:

Sout)l.

the stx ·in order to give his

OIL &amp; LUBE SERVICE

149 95

..

Plus Tax
Type 2, 3, &amp; 4
slightly higher

__,

Ruti&lt;md, O.

East

partner a count and dummy's

2 Pc. Brown Living Room Suite, A-1 shape
3 Tables &amp; 2 Lamps. •
•

742-4211

North

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
George Coffon hsts today's
hand under D for deception. It
seems that East won th~ third
doamond on order to lead the
jack of spades
South played the three ; West

TUNE-UP
Type 1
'Beetle'

1.

West

Opemng lea d - K •

'VALENTINE SPECIALS'

•

+

East- West vulnerable

VOLKSWAGEN

Rutland Furniture

power balance
~PM all cylinder drop
24 . Spare plugs under load
25
Acc elerator
pump
action .
26 . Ttming advance •
11 . Hydroc\'l rbon parts·high

n

·m 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

NURTH

K

BEDDING, twin &amp; lullslu_~~----

percent,

ca 11 Bob Griffith today for an appointment for your car , on our Sun Di.agnostic Equipment .
Service Hours : Monday - Friday 8 a .m. to &lt;1: 30 p . m . Saturdays 8 a .m 111111 noon

$895 Deception is self conceived

2 Dr Sedan, cho1ce of f our fine cars w1 fh and

(formerly Keith Goble Ford)

'

monoxide

22 . cylinder

m ~ ulation

7

Carbon

WIN AT BRIDGE

FORD INC.

fo--BEOS, twin &amp; lull, without bedding, _ __
with bidding _ _ _ _ __

21.

IT JUST MAKES SENSE TO DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

... 4 3

13US

PERFECT
TUNE-UPS
.EVERY

.

11 Dwell variation
t? Cml Polanty
13. Spark plug ftring
vol tage
14 . MaKtmum carl output
I S Secondary circu1t in -

" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of OoLng Business"

DAN THOMPSON .

1-30" ElECTRIC RANGE
2'1-GAS RANGES

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We are the ONLY Dea ler m Metgs and Galli a Count1es with thi s modet"n testing e qutpm ent.
We are Ihe only dealer who can properly tun e your car, sa l ely and effective ly .
3 N lASE certifted . qualified mechanics. Complete radtato r and heater servtee .
Servrce Management wtfh over 20 years expenence on all makes of cars .

Cadtllac - Oldsmobile

Open E•es.

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SMITH NELSON MOTORS OFFERS YOU ANOTHER FIRST.
AGAIN!

6995

GMAC Fmancing Available

992·5342

larry Lavender

WOOD
DESK, like new
BIG OFFICE
WOOD WARDROBE
I BOOK SHELF
UTILITY CABINETS, copper, glass doors
FORMICA TOP, A-1

5

NOW

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Any one ot the se see m1ngly small thmg s. can alfect or cu t down on th e p ertorman ce of your car . And
the only way a ll of these tc ':i t s can be perform ed , 1s on Sun Electronic Oiagnosf!C Equipment, by
l ramed mechantcs. Th e only way t o properly tune and adju st all makes oii 97S model cars.

KARR &amp;VAN ZAN DT

Blown Into Wa lis
and Attics
Free Estimates

6 BREAKFAST SETS

9 PCV Tt"''
10 M,,rufold v clcuum

Charcoal grey with leather interior. full power
AM- F M stereo, new steel radial
tires. climate control air conditioning.

fire Retardant
Insulation

NO. 1 _.;........_

'""

eq~ipment.

'""d~ 52 95

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8 Carbon Jnonoxldl"

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

and best smd ll Dodge, and lh1 s one IS doub le
ba rre l sharp

EXCAVATI NG , dozer, loader
Phone 992-3993
and backhoe work; seplic
Daily After 5:00
ta nk s installed ; dump trucks.
and lo · boys for h1re ; w!ll haul
fill dirt , top so11. lrmestone &amp; · EXCAVA11NG,
dozer ,
grave! ; Call Bob or Roger
backhoe ,
and
ditcher ,
Jeffers , day phone 992 .7089; ,
waterline , footers , drains,
night ph one 992 -3525 or 992 ·
roads, and brush cleaning, no
5232
iob too small. no weather toot
2. 11 -tf c
bad Charles R . Hatfield, Rt I
Rutland , 0 Phone 742.6092 .
EXCELSIOR Salt Works. East
1· 7· 26tc
Ma10 St., Pomeroy All kinds
of salt, waler pellets, wate r
CARPET installaTIOn, $1 25 per .
nuggets, blo c k salt and own
y.a(d . Phone Richard wesr,
Ohio River Salt . Pt1one 992 ·
. 843 ·2667.
3891 .
12 ·24 -26tp
6·5·tfC

t"""'-~---SPECIAL

7 HydrocdrbDn pa r ts, idle

$4795

!!~9~1a~!e s~~n~.~~~~l,oned, lmes~ 1995

Green, copper, white

Clean
used
appliances. All with 30day
money-back
guarantees!

her tn m

v

6 lrut1al T1mmq

Vinyl roof. fac tory air . steel radial fi res . SS
wheels, bucket sea ts. consol e, 6 way power
seal. low mileage SHARP'

SAVE

Sla Wagon Official 's ca r ne\1er lltl ed Fu ll y
equ•pped w1 th fin es t Very , very low m1leage ..

REFRIGERATORS, like now, frost-free, Hell _ _ 249.95

3 bedroom home, Lots of ,nlce

Lincoln Hgts ., Pomeroy, or
Phone Pomeroy . 992 -3575 or
Gallipclis .. ..t,.21.. 9.
,_......_

8 A.M. . 6 P.M.

STOKER-MATIC HEATER, c o a l - - - - - - 388.00
2 LAMPS, BOTH
29.95
NEW LAMPS, (Palrl'==---'---7'1.95
55 .00
NEW BEDROOM SUITES
10 USED BEDROOM SUITES, solid maple,
'!lalnut, pecan~ dark oak ·
88.00 Up

paneling. wall to . wa II car·
any organ1lat1on , phone 992 - petlng, 2 pcirches, ,basement,
3975
and fenced y~rd . $17.500.00.

-FURNISHED
-----------apt . Adults Only.

Open Mon .- 5at.

WAS SAlE
HIDE-A-BED, green -- - - -- -....,.J49.95 119.95

RUTLAND - All elec. brick .

roo~

3-ll ·tiC

Ph . 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work

Pomeroy, Ohio

Cr.1 nk111q c o1l output
J Cr,, nlunq vacuum
-1 ldll:' '&gt; pt'l&gt;d ·
~ DwPII

74 Olds Cutlass Sup. Cpe.

Yes , we will give you an ADDITIONAL discount on
no trade basis or a very generous allowance on
your trade, or even an additional check if agreeable
with bank or finance company. We can give you the
service before and after the sale. Compare service
too! There is nonsense to our rebates. BOTH Dan
and Ford rebates .

W ~l t~m O r -ruttreesO r
sh rubbery ,
clean
out
basements , atf rcs , etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 ·4441.
1 26. 26tc

acreage of any size to sell,
please call 992 .2298 .

CO U NTR Y Mobile Ho'm e Par k ,
Rt 33 , ten miles north of
Pomeroy . Large tots Wi th
concrete patios , sidewa l ks ,
runners
and
off
street
l)ark ing . Flhone 992 -7.479 .
orivacv . $12,000 .00 .
. ~ ,.
___,
12·31 -ttc '

_______ ______

towards

TAN KS
cleaned.
S EPTIC
Modern San1tat• on , 992 3954 or
992 734 9
9· 18 tfc

1-31 -3tp

FURNISHED
1
bedroom
tra il er , a l l utilities , 493
Broadway Stree t , Middleport
1·28.1fc

100 Kerr Street

by -pass

MORE

,,

rerfect~!

Tests To Make Your Car Run

/)\;•,;!

I. (r,"'llkmq vo 1t.1gt&gt;

Than Factory Cash Rebates
Of Up To '500.00

On Slate Rt . 124, 112 mi. from
Route 7
Rutland.

t

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C BRADF- ORO , Aucflone-er
Complete servic.e
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Rac i ne. Oh10
Critt Bradford
5· 1·tfC

4 ROOM house , furn l shet~ . m
Rutla nd Phon e 7.i2.J751

Middleport.

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
6stimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992 -3995
or 992-5700

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

EXPERT l ree serv i ce, free
esflm ales , 20 years ex
penen c e Call ( I) 667 3041 or
9n .Jo57
I 21 26tp

DI·.E ..... ':'
N l'ffi

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

]

Oi~gnostic

30 Electronic

YOU GET MUCH

-If you have a farm or

MIDDLE PORT -

TRA •l.t:K space , 2 miles from
Pomeroy , R f 143 , Pt1one 992

tl'L ABN ER

N E W HOME S No Money Down
Payments according to
inc om e on Fa rmers Home
A dm•n•slra t• on loan . Co n ·
vent iona l financing
al so
available with minimum
down Lovely homes in three
1oca t1ons •n Mergs County
Some hom es w1th wooded
lots
Cal l for
mor e in
format•on . 991 .5976 .
1 15 261C

preciate .it.

REMODELI~G .

.-.

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HOU SE for sal e in Portland . 6
rooms and bath , good we l l 2
acres , 1i6,700 Call 843 2292
I 28 ·6tc

•LAD I ES , turn your spare t1m e
.nto money
Posit ion now
open for amb i tiou s person
Phone 99 2.2868
2 2·3tc

t·M"&gt;Sr-

HE(L

The Furniture Fixer · Modem Chemicals

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

~'!: 10: 4Pr~&gt;.• \1.\ !e~

~

EXPERIENCED
Radl .. +•·u

For Sale or Trade

EAS \'

Tl-41~ B ~ \l "' E-'ll

'

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Auto Sales

SHOOT IN G ma t ch , Rac1 nc Gun
Club , Sunday 1 p . m . Asso r te d
meats and f ac tory choke guns
only .
12
lfc

---- ----------,---

Business S·e rvices
.
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MOBILE HOME S FOR SALE
NOl t CE!
Due
to
th e
Ph . 992-2174
Pomeroy
for eclosu r e on one o f Oh• o 's
largest MObile Home Dea l er s 700. BALES of QOod da1 ry hay STEREO RADIO , 8 tra c k tap e
co m bin ation , am . fm rad iO , 4
we w il l olfer for sale th e
Phone 742 3187
lollowmg Mobile H·omes a t a
way speak er sound sys t em
2 2 61p
v£&gt; r y . very large di SC oun t
Ba lan ce SIO i 89. or use our
6.1l( 11 Li berty , J bedroo m
budg et terms Ca ll 992 3965
1 29 ttc
60&gt;!1 L' berly . 2 b e dcoom
843-2824 or 843-2293
1- 50x 12 R rchardson . 2 be droom
1 60xl2 P M (, 3 bed r oom
1973 OL D SM OB IL E Cu tl ass S GROC ERY business for sale .
Portland, Ohio
P S . P B and l acto r y air
1 60x1? l •tan . 7 b ed r oom
BU1id1ng fo r sa l e or lease
1 60x 12 Parkwood , 1 bed r oom
?S 500 m il es
Call 992 39 14
REPAIR-Broken
Phon e 773 5618 from 8. 30p . m
l - 60 x 11 Elconn , 2 bed r ooms.
aft er 5 p m
to 10 p m tor appoi ntm ent
Parts Mended
2 2 6tp
ce nlra l .;1 1r
3 10 tf c
1- 65x12
R 1c hardson .
J
---STRIPPING-By
bedroom . ? l ull bat h s. 8:.. 12 IYlJ CUT LA SS
S,
1 dr .. STEREO RADIO, 8 tra c k ta pe
eK pando
au ton•at1 c, Power S t ee r~n g,
Hand
combiOat,on . am fm radio , 4
We al so have a good sc lec r 1on o f
br a kes and wmdow s . c r ui se
way speaker sound system .
NO DIP TANKS
ot her 8, 10 and 12 wtde Mob•le
cont ro l , tilt whe el. am f m
Ba l an ce SlOB 14 , or use our
Homes These are m os tly all
s t er eo ta pe pl aye r , n e w
budget ter m s Ca ll 992 3911 5
~up plies · Strippers
lat e mode l Ho m es (som e have
brake s and shock s, rad1a 1s
1 21 tf c
Stains . Finsihes
n ever bee n l ilted m&gt; It yov
and tow h •fc h . M e ta l l •c blue
ar e •n ter es t ed •n a good
W1fh black mteno r
Wol"-f-t1
Free Pickup and Oeliver.y
Mobile Home a t a very larg e
S3, 400, se ll for $1 ,500 Call 992
3453 or 992 33 81
d• sc ount, don' t wa1t Stop in
today a t BERRY MILLER
l J I Si c
READY MIX CO N CRE T E · cfe .
8 IN C H 3 pt h i t ct1 post ho le
Mob i le Hom e Sales , 70 5 -----------livered r.gl1t to your pro1ect
d1
g
ger
or
trade
for
3
pt
hrfch
F ar son Slr ee t. Belpre , Ot11o
1'i 71 FOR D Pinto 2 dr se dan .
Fas l
and
eas y
F ree
p•ckup
d1sc
Phone
742
53
22
phone 423 953 1
n ew en g m e, new tires, $1 ,000
cstim ates Phon e 992 3284
2 2 Jtp
1 30 10tc
or will trade for a va n Ca ll
Goeg l ein Ready MiK Co .
949 57·11 a ft er 5 p m
M•ddl eporl Oh 10
1 31 3tc
6 30 ·tf c

Wanted To Buy

n

HOOVER D•al A Mat1c wdh
pow e E d
e and attachments
575 P one 85 J IJ2
1 29 l Otp

THE SUN. HAS ARRIVED IN THE BIG BEND AREA

'

For Sale

l 97J GREENBR 1 E~7 bed ro o m .
all electr•c . 'li6 901!! Ca ll 99 1
7328
7 2 Jt c

G I G A N f i C BooK Sa le Thrif t
St10 p ncross f rom Pomeroy
Pos t O fl •ce Op ~ n F r ,day and
Sc1 1urday 'C i oth•n g hand
ma d e furn.tur e. glassware
1 29 3tc

hea r tf elt th ank s an d deep
appreciation to all those who
were so kind and h e lpful at
the passing away of our loved
one ,
Hom e r
Johnso n
Especially to the · Mason NOW se l l 1ng Fu ller Bru sh
Rescue Squad for t t1 ei r
Pro duc ts, phone 992 3410
prompt r esponse to th e
I 1 ~ Tf c
Fogl es on g Fune ral Home for
their efficient .arrangements, I N CO ME Tax Pr e par ed bo th
the Rev . George Ho scha r , fo r
Fe d eral and Sl1'1t e Taxes will
hiS c onsol ing words and
bC done by
appomt men ts
comfort in g sen •ce . to the
o nly Ple ase phon e 992 2272 or
singers , Patty Jordan Md
see M r s Wa n d a E blin. Laurel
Gloria warn e r , to all t hose
Cl i ff Rd ... Po mero,y , Oh io
who called , sent flow er s. fo od ,
1 3 30f c
and the man y beftutifu l card s.
We deeply apprec iate you r AUL TION ,
Thur sday
and
words of co mfort an d acts of
Satu rda y n ight . 7 p m a !
compa ssion May God b less
Mason Auct ion . Horton 51 i n
ea c h and eve r y one o f you
Mason , W Va . Consig nm ent s
Lucy Johnson and F amily
we lcome . Phon e 1304 ) 773 ·
') 2 lip
5471
10 3 tf c

F.or Rent

Wanted To Buy

IN C OM E

1nlOVING memor ·p~ o t J &lt;HlWS P
Snider wh o pas se d awar
February I, 19TO

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24-TheStmday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2, 1975
"'

For- ·Fast ·Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel .Classifieds
•

· In MemllfY

Notice

Notice

IN MEM O~Y of Orover C
' Salser who passe-d awcty Fe b
I. 1973 In your hearl':i you w i ll
always be W tf e, Children .
and Grandchildr en
2 ' ltp

A~YO N E

rOR your "O il o f M 1nk "
Cosmeti cs Phon e BROWN 'S.

IN LOVING memory of Jante
El lzabem Sntder who pa ssed
away F ebrua ry 5. 19 72 Trm£&gt;

SHOOT I NG MAT C I'-l , Corn
Ho llow Gun Club , tu rn l•r st
right a ft er Miles Cemete r y .
. Rutland
F,H to ry c nok ed
guns only Sunday , rebruary
1 .. 1 p m
I 30 3t c

ne\ler
eras e
Ol£1
m emor ies of a l ov rng g rand

W i ll

mettler wh om we m •SS ve ry

-

I

mvch
Sad I y mrssed by
Barbara , P aulett e. N.1n c y
Randy , T amm).', Jommrc dnd
great grandch il dren
2 1 li e

•ntcr es ted in starting

a fundamen tal. Ind ependent
Baph5 1 Church . wr 1te Rev .
Jnmes Gilnt Box ?-1 3. Alba n y .
Otuo or c all ~ 11 69 8 303 -1
1 26 Hp

AUC TI O N Sal e Eve ry Fr10ay ,
7 p m Village AUct i On , } 15 N
Sec ond . M 1dd tepor1
2 20 JO tc
TAX Pre pa red
by
iiPPOlnlnrcn r Pt10ne 991 3388
I 2 61C

See r.1s l •k c only ve'!. terday
Since God Ci'lllec' vou ilwily
Days go b y , t 1me w 111 pa so;
But your memory wdl alw,, y s
la st
0 t1 , t10W WC W1Sh )'O U LOUi d bC
near
You ar e i n our hC&lt;lri S
And m our tho ugh ts
Year afl er vear
Sadl y m1ssed by wile .
c h i ldre n , il nd grilnd Chlldren
1 2 II C
IN LOVIN G m ~mory o f our
daughler . M &lt;! le na M rG u1re
wh o passed awa y Fcl:l ?. 195&lt;~
I know God nee d s someon e
spec1a1
For H e called he r home tha t
day ,

But d1d H e know th e n1ilrlY
heart aches ,
It br oke a l ong lh e way
Sadly missed by tw•n Si sl er
Re gena , Mother . Dad . S1ster s
and Brother s
1 2 li e

Card of Thanks
WE WOULD li l&lt;. e to express our

AUC TI O N Thu r sa ay !W'jht
p m
a t M ason J\uc t 10 F,,
tl o rtl§n St In Milson W Va .
Cons,g nment s, we l come
Ptwne (30~ 1 77 3 5.171
1 :t tf c

'

FREE BOOK T ELLS STO RY ,
!'I n mte res tm g nook call ed t h e
Mas rery o f L •l e w 1ll be sen t to
you WtfhOUI Ob l l gc'I I IO n Th1S
book wil l tel l how you rnity
re ce 1ve
lhc
untque
Ros•cru Ci an method to r s el l
un fo ld men t 1n lh e prtvacy ot
vov r home Address . Sc r1b E'
I I I
ROSI Cr u c ian Orde r .
1\ MORC. San Jose Cnllf orn•a
951 1,J
'I 2 lip
5H00 TIG Ma t ch , RaCl!H' Gvn
Cl ub . Sunday , r eb r unry /, I
pm
I' 29 4t c:

CAS H USS FOR JU NK CAR S N EWLY
furn is h e d apr. 2
Com pl e te , F RY e'S T R U CK
bedr ooms . r ef erence Phone
A ND AUTO PART S. Ru t lan d
9J9 3783
Phone 742 h09 4
2 2 Jtp
t n 26tp
FUR N IS HED apr 3 rooms and
WAN TED to buy
a u se d
ball'\, newly dec orated Phon e
G r n v e l y Trar::lor w it h Mower
991 2 ~ 37
and rid tng su t k.y and plow
1 2 6tp
a na chmen ts Phone (3 04 ) 88:&lt;'
7525 or evenmg s. 882 2344
I 2h I 21r.

991 ~1 1 3

I ! I IC

Mobile Homes For Sale
1?.)1;.14 NEW Moon mobile home ,
1970 mode l Phone 99? 73 85
1 11 Jtc

OL D CO IN S and paper m on ey O NE . ant , que bathtub with
wooden edge around top Tub
for M e •g-s County 's o nl y
measure s 6 ft lon g , 211 ft.
mon t hl y co m auc1 10n Ca l l Ed
deep , Best offer wil l be ac
Burk e t t , 997 ) ~ 76, after 5 30
ce pted Ca l l 992 5933
pm
2 2 lt c
I 31 l?t c

IO :d 5 Part tall y carpe l ed . a c ,
S2 gal lon hot wal er h eat er;,.
•mderp•n n• ng Ca ll 997 Sl 53
1 30 12rc

CO N SIG NMENT S wel come at
P&amp;J Auct•on . 1 15 No rtt1
Sec ond , M•ddlepor t
1 9 JOt c

C AP'I'AJ ~
~!:i T

C, ' IJioC t:l-1:;

'&gt;',.\ 00

\VOl

WA NT ED Old upngt1t PIANO S,
any co nd 1t1on
Pav •ng $10
eact1 Fr r st floor on l y Wr.te
an d g •ve d •r ec l •on s to W1!1 en
P1ano Co , Box 188 , Sardis ,
Oh 10 , 43 946.

Real Estate For Sale

1969 IMPALA Cus l om. QOOd
conditiOn F actory air , p s,
p b , pn ce d to sel l Pt10ne 992
7617
1 29 6t c

ApproK•mate l y one acre •n
Rutland , set up tor mobile
home Pt1on e ( 1 J 446 9662
1·30-7tc

1960 MGA 2 dr conve r tib l e ,
- - - - - - -------~- ~~tp · very good cond111on Pt1one
992 77 37 a ft er 5 p .m
OL D lurn•lure , i ce bo xes , bra ss
1·29 .6t c
beds , or c omplete house hold s.
Wr i te M . 0 . Mi l ler , Rl 4,
1973 F ORD Cou n try SQu1re
Pomeroy , Oh•o Call 992 77 60
wagon , 20, 000 mile s. a ll
10 7 74
equipment
, 53 ,500 Phone 992
----- ---- ..--- ~-3493 or 992 ·2720. ~
JUN K au1os , complete and
- - - - - - - -- - -----de liv ered to our yard We pi ck
up aut o bod1es and buy all
klnQs of sc rap metal s and
iron R1d er 's Sa l vage, St Rt . WAN T ED Old upr ,gh t p1anos ,
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy , Oh10
any condit 10n . Pa y ing $10
Ca ll 99 2 5468
eac t1 . F1 rst fl oor only Write
10 11 ti c
and g•v e directi ons to W1tten
Piano Co , Box 188 . Sard i S,
CA SH pa 1d for a l l makes and
Oh10 43946:
mod e l s of mob1le no mes
1·29 6tp
Phon e area code 614 -l 23 9531
4 1J.tfc

BUILDI N G lot . 80ft frontage
by 165f t The seco nd l ot on l eft
o n R i ver view Drive , L 1n coln
Hi l l. Pomeroy , Ot110 If in
teres ted call 992 · 323 0 a ft er 5 p

m.

Wanted To Rent

5 ROOM neu se, Darwin Phone
J B O ' Brien , attorney , 99 2·
2720
2· 2·6tp

5 ROOM t10u se , ss .ooo . Phone

--------- ------Help Wanted

1-\1.\ ML,l •.',• T '~ U'

FR 1•'LI"' .

992 5871
2·2·12tp

WANTED .
Manager
for
f inan cia l Ins t itution
Salary·
open in line wi th expen ence .
Fr1nge benei1IS Write Box
729A, The Daily Sentinel.
Pomeroy , Ohio 45169.
1 30 Jtc
Salesman or Agent wanted
TEXA S OIL COMPANY needs
dependabl e man wt1o can work
withOut supervisio n •n Me1gs
Coun ty
area
Contac t
customers Age unimportant ,
.. Jt matur•tv •S
We tra i n
Aimall G N . D ick , Pres .,
Sou thw es tern Petroleum , Box
789 , F t Worth, T x . 76 101
1·29 ·4tC

mE PIIANTOM

R N . lor parttime POS1t1on with
planned parentt1ood , c lini cs.
education , and so c ial se rvi ces
responsibilities . 16 nours oer
week . Call off•ce , 992 5912
w eekdays except Thursday .
1 29 ·6tC

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

WAITRE SS ES needed , apply in
person . Craw 's Steak Hou se .
Pomeroy
1 7 tf c
_ _ _ _ __, _ _ _ _ _ _ - - ..!..-

ALLEi' OOP

Pels For Sale
BLACK , tan , and wh i te Beag l e,
fema le, 11 months old .and
Regis t ered . Co nfa cr C!yda
Bing . Bradbury , or ca ll 992
3357
1-31 -3tc

Employment Wanted
p l umbing,
healtng , and all types of
gene ral
repair
Work
gua rant eed 20 years ex .
perien c E!' Phone 992 -2409
1 !9 tf c

IJTTLE ORPH.\N A~Nu.:

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

For Rent
5858

10.27 ttc

•,

I H OUS~ . UllfUrOIShed, 7 rooms
and bath , n•ce . Phone 992 -27 80
or 992 3432
1 9 tfc

I r-€ !"115 '"1£&lt;5'1" 15 ,.150...0 JC!Nrt:.v
~" t::'ALPH N o\1)61;.' •WD Ro\L ~
P'&gt;~.'\I\['€N- 6..JI 1HE&gt;;:E .o~.;;:i;i'
...0 lt• .\L Lbro..Gt?~ 'VT" E' .5n-E
,.. ~

.. oe:::

c~;: ~

, ~ --

Strout Realty
14 Acre
Farmette
House with J bedrooms ,
45x45 pole barn. large fenced
po;,d, T P C water, large
lawn, lots of s hrubbery,
excellent location for subdivi sion $26,500.00 .

From t h e largest Tru ck or
Bulldo zer Rad1 a tor to the
sma l lest H eater Co r e.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specials1t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

·APT 3 rooms . all e1ecfr1c , has
table top range . wall oven ,
real niCe and clean , mod e rn .
in
Pom er oy
L ocated
overlooking tne Oh10 River .
Phone GallipoliS , day 446 7699 , even i ngs 446 95 39
1·26 .tfn

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs.
serv 1ce , al l makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Serv ice We sha rp en Sc isso r s
3·29 ·tf C
DOZER work , land c l earing by
the acre , hOurly or contract
Farm ponds. roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
w i th over 20 years ex
perience P'ullins Excavating ,
Pomero~. Oh 10. Phone 992
2478
12.19 .tf c
Improvement
and
-tO ME
Repair Se rvr ce Any thing
r.xed around th e t1om e, from
roof to basemen! You Will
like our work and rates.
Phone 742 5081
12 ·29 -tfc
C REMEANs- cONCRETe- de ·
liver ed Monday
through
Sa turday
and
eve n1ngs .
Phone A46· 1142
6 lJ .tfc

- --,....1..~ ------ ----

TRAILER SPACE , J.il ' mile
nortf\ of Me igs High Sc hoo l on
ol d Rt 33. Flt1one 992 .2941.
1· 23.tfc

5 RM , APT . furnished , utilitiespa id , no children or pets .
Phone 992 .5810 , 814 East
Main , Pomeroy .
------~ -------and 4 ROOM furn ished 8nd
unfurn i shed
apartments .
Phor.e 992 -5434 .
• · 12-tfc

J

-PR-------------IVATE '!lee!lng
for

Real Estate For Sale

J BR, full basement, 2 car
garage, carpet'LR and DR ,
frnanc lng available .

RUTLAND - All elec. new
home, 3 BR , large kitchen,
Maytag washer &amp; dryer,
refr.gerator ,
air
con ditioning , 1.8 acres ground .
You have to see it to ap -

MIDDLEPORT -

2 BR.

older home, large bullf. in
kitchen, garage , utility
bldg , closed in porch, carpet

LR &amp; DR. $15,500.00.

CARPENTER 2 story
frame , 4 BR, 1'12 baths,
dining R. porches·, storage

bldg . 2 garages, about 2
acres. $8,000.00.
POMEROY - Business R.
and furnished apartment .
Located on Main St. in good
traffic area . Good income
investment. Priced to sell.

. PORTLAND - 4 nice lots,
good drilled well and water
system,

block

garage,

Older

storage building, 2 slory

home, 2 or J BR. , garage,
some built-In cabinets, some
ca rpeting , quiet street.

house needs some repair .
Whole works at just $4,700.

$11 ,000 .00

307 Spring Avenue
Pomeroy
992-2298
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

Phone

992·3874_.
11 -l .. . tfc

--------------, HOUSE

FO~

~ENT ,

NEW LISTING 5 room '
home, bath, gas furnace, lots ol
paneling and ceiling tile . City
water, with large level lot.
Only $10,000.00 .
NEW LISTING - 4~ acres: foi
bottom, the rest In woods, 2
bedroom home, bath, gas heat,
rural
water.
Quiet with
BUILDING LOT- With slone

foundation on good quiet street,

ou I of high water.
BARGAIN ..: 5 room frame
with basement, . city water,
natura I gas and electric: on
corner
lot . $3,000
.00.
.
.

POMEROY -

'NEAR

LANGSVIlLE -

About 10 acres. on good
ffshing creek, close to mlne

areas, good blacktop road .
ASKING just $4,000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY LET US
KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
- PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST AT THIS TIME .
992-2259 or 99n568

Nice renovated

..

•

•

OUR STOCK
IN TRADE

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

Phone (6141 992·2798

PHONE
949. 3832 or 84J.2667

STRIPPING . FINISHES
FURNITURE-METALS-ETC.
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

Refmishing . Repairing
Burnishing
Caning
Upholstering.
We Also Buy Antiques
Pick. up Service Available

1974 LTD Ford Counby Squire

~~!~.~~!~ O~~~~~~~b~~~~
and full equ ipm ent

From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding/ roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, expert carpeting,
etc .

P&amp;J
Home
Maintenance ,
hea11ng, cooling , refrig ,
plumb i ng , e le ctr i ca l ap
pl ia n ces W e se rvice and
repa~r anyting in the home or
bus•ness . 2 15 N
Second ,
M1ddl epor t Phone 992 3509 .
I 9 30tc
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- Sw~epers, toast ers, irons ,
a ll small appli.:m ces. · Lawn
mowers, next to State High .
. way Garage on Route 7. Home
Phone 985 ·3825 .

REFRIGERATORS
from 125

Electric or Gas Ranges;

HAVING
T.R 0 U 8 L E
SELLING,
CALL
A
PROF ESSIDNAl SAlESMAN
AT

~ Dlyers; and

Wringer Washm
"

.

"At Caution Light, Rt. 7"
Tuppers Pl&lt;lins, Ohio .
Phone 667-3851
OPEN WED. THRU
SUNOAYtA.M.-7 P.M.

163•

____________

H tic'

•

WAS

L1ke new . a t half pn ce

'7500

V-8 4 Or . Sedan, - auto.
Extra nice

1970 Ford Maverick
w ithout au!o . t r ans.

as low as

See: Fred BlaeHnar, Darrell Dodrill,
or Dan Thompson

A A K5

• Q2

• a74

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING

... Ka765
EAST

WEST

461 S. Third Ave.

"'J 10 a

"'9 7 62

• 7 5 43

.9

t K Q 10

t A J 52
... AJ1092

SOUTH!DI

AQ 4 3
• A K J 10 a6
• 9 6 :1

•Q

Middleport, 0.

•1710

H IDE·A· BE IJ,,,~g~re~y;;;::;:;;;:;=======-'9.95
I OLD SOFA,-;:
25.00
3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE,
219.95
French
Prov., A:~~~=======~269.95
WOOD
ROCKER
24.95
14.95
NEW RECLINER
88.00
49.95
BROWN CHAIR, maple, wood trim
29.95
14.95

Includes: Parts &amp; labor, new spark plugs &amp;
points, adjust timing · dwell - carburetor
valves, plus engine compression check.

.

.

$800

GE PORTABLE TV, B&amp;W - - - - - - - -·69.95
2 WHITE WROUGHT IRON LAWN CHAIRS
like new, ~a. 39.95
3 ~OliO OAK TABLES, wlfhdrowers -79.95
59.95
3 NEW TABLES, maple or walnut
59.95
39.95
3 BIG DARK OAK, Mediterranean or
3 BIG MAPLE TABlES, (Set)
149.95
88.00
6 BIG SETS N.EW COMMODE TABLES,
(each)
79.95
39.95

. MUFFLER SPECIAL

OFFER EXPIRES 2/14/75
If convenient, please call for an appointment.

Our guarantee: Quality at the lowest possible
price. We use only NEW parts &amp; guar~ntee all
service &amp; parts for 6 mo.nths or 6,000 m1les.

1-REF-RIGERATOR,white ~
· - - - - - - - 3 5 . 1 1 0-

·r---~;.,.SPECIAL NO. 2---_...;1
SOLID STATE
Was
STEREO COMPONENT $69.95

19.95'

Don Watts V.W., Inc.

i-':~EEc':r~~~~~:::•~G~E~S~,H~ch~==:rnift:f.95s- ~:=

''

!'

Mobile Honies For Sale

'. .

Mobile Homes

TRI · STATE

MOBILE HOMES

·'

1720 EASTERN AVE .
10x:50 Belmont 2 BR
lOxSO 1·959 Fleetwood 2 BR
10x50 1961 Fleetwood 2 BR
10x50 Marl ette 2 BR
8X40 1959 Roy Craft 2 BR
8x40 1956 America 2 BR
8x23 1969 Tra vel Tra i l er
IOx~O Branstrat t er 2 BR

10x50 Kaywo'od 2 BR

Authorized
Dealer

Ph. 446-9800

Gallipolis, Oh .

110.00
49.95 Up

Pass

2.

Pa ss

2 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

4.

Pels
AKC REG . GERMAN
SHEPHERD
FOR Stud ServiCe Excellent
pedigree Call 446· 1325
22-6
BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES.
K &amp; P Kennels, 38 8 8274 . Rt .
554, ' ~ m i east of Porter
305 .tf
MINIATURE male Dachshund
black and brown , 7 weeks otd,
$45 . Ph 367 ·0249 after 4 p m
_

_ _ _ _ _ _ "T"' _ _ _

16
sec ondary
Cir c uli
cond tt lon
17 Co d ,1nd condens e r
condtfton
18. Breaker pomt condttion
19 Cam lobe acc uracy
20 Hydroc ar bon paris ·
cr u, o;c spd .

spd .
28
Carbon
monoxide
percent
29 . Charging voltage
10 . Exhaust restriction

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
500 East Main St.

Pomeroy

Phone 992-2174

Pomeroy, Qhio

1970
1967
1962
1966
!966
1951

AKC IriSh Setter pu~s, wvrrT". cd
Chesapeake, 867 ·553.5
27 ·26
NORWEGIAN Elkhound s , 4
males, 6 wks. old Ph . 256·
6715

Bobbf's Poodle BOL•t1quc
PRO F E SS IO NAL groom1ng by
appo intm ent only Ph Bobb 1e
Ca sto . 446 19J d
212 If
PINE RIDGE COLLIES
AKC Reg Co lt ,es. sable and
Wl'11 !e (614 ) 2S 6 1167
263 If

BABYSITTER wanted some
days , some evenings . 446
7498
27 ·3
EXPERIENCED bartender
and waitress Apply King's
Arm N i ght Club , Rt
7,
Che shire
21 ·3
NEW &amp; used Car Salesman
good work i ng cond , good
draw plus ccmm•ssion , car
furnished Chances for ad ·
van ce menl. Write Box 355. c o
Ga llipolis Daily Tribune
26·3
CASH I ER - R ECE PTION 1ST
NEAT individual who en1ovs
meeting and serv1ng · the
publi c , mus'T be able 'o type
and work with figures ;
business experience desirable
but not necessarv . send
resume to box No. 354. co
Ga!H pol•s Daily Tribune .

23 -6

-~ - ----~-

---------------25-6

-----

,

'

---t------------ ---.--...... ----:---.---:-

kmg won the trick
South promptly led a low club
and the moment of truth had
arrived . East pulled out the
ace; pushed it back ; pulled 11
out again ; pushed II back once
more, and finally played low
East blamed his partner for
playing the SIX He was nght
about that. In that partocular
sotuat10n lhe h1gh·card pla y
should be reserved to show the
quee.n. not the number
East also explained that he
had dec1ded that South held
three small spades. se ven
trumps and no clubs
East was really wrong in that
last though t . W1th seven
trumps. a void suit and only
e1ght h1gh·card pomts. South
would not have opened one heart
He would have made a preemp·
tive bod 1f he did not pass The
actual deception had been that
Easl dece1ved h1mself

'
b
II
Dl

I HICE[)

.

·•

For Rent or Sale

LARGE 2 apt. house 1n city, 1
apt , 3 rms arrd bath . 1 apt. S
rm s and ba th Please write
Box 354 C·O Gall i polis Daily
Tr i bune .
19 tf

\[I XX)1ITJ THE [I I I)

w":io":..

(4nnl'f'rl

'

1974 OPEL MANTA ................... sz695
2 Door, orange fini sh. blk. . v 1nyl inter ior . buc ke t sea ts , less
' than 5, 000 miles. Radlo, deluxe bumpers .

M~1ntlay)

Jumll\, ~: TWEET BANAL DOUBLY
Yr!lh'rll"' ·~
. \ i\u~~•·r : u,!lllf lw 1111' lmxil' rlf II

own~r car &amp; on ly 10.400 mi .. V-8 engine with

automatic , power stee ring , P. brakes, lac. air, tinted
glass, deluxe body and wheel opening mouldings, sand·
st one viny l seats . Beautiful dark red finish . Truly a cream
puff

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise anawtr, u
suggest ed by the above cartoon •

lATEST
'
•e
(/IHitiiiH'fll - A TABL..

1974 CHEVELLE ....................... S3095
M a libu H T Cpe ., 350 V-B engine, power steering, fectory
air, tinted glass, radio, wheE;!I cove rs , good tires, blk .
Interior, silver grey finish .

The boddmg ha s been
Notlh

Easl

P.J SS

I ¥

Pa ss

Pass

3•

Pass

South

Wl1&lt;1l flo vou do nuw ~
A - Sonic slnm tr y is indicntt•d .
\\'r r l."l.'Om mcnd fnur dubs.

I t

lA
''

You. Sou th . hold

TODAY 'S QUES'I'ION
You do bi d four cl ubs and your
pa rtn er btd s four dtamonds What
do you do now '1

.
r
GALLIPOLIS
.
.,..,

'

CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH

1973 PLY. STA. WAGON ............ !2795
Su burban J Seat, V·B engine, automati c trans., power
steering &amp; brakes, factory air co nditioning, luggage rack,
green ffnish ,. radio. Like. new W·W tlres.

1972 NOVA SIS .......................s2195
2 Door, 350

·-··1

,.. ~· ...;.;
.. ··~

.,._ (

v.a automBtlc,

Rally wheel &amp; w-w tires. radio.

brown fin ish, blk . vinyl interior, loca l car &amp; real n ice.
'

I '

.
1, I

,

.,

·---------------------GOOD USED TRUCKS

1971 CHEV. 2 TON CAB ...... :..... s3495
350 engine, 2 speed, 825 tires

Bill Joe John-

:::::-;:::::;::::::~:;:::::=-;::::::x:::::::::.,;::::-t-:::::::::-~:'(.:::w;&gt;:=~::::'f.-».:y;x:*.:-;~:«~:xx&gt;::::xx-~tx.x*.:-;·:-;·:·:-;w&gt;;-;.Yu;t»~w-&gt;;..

,,,,!WM~MJIJJ2:~,,,,~!~,~,N.%91!!~,~,~,~f~~!,~,9,,~!t,!,;,,2~,~~.
vOtECK THESE TERRIFIC SALE PRICES
1973 W4 (THE THINGL ................... :........................12295
Check this one.

1974 DODGE atARGER SE........................................ 13795
Loaded, Was $3995.00.

1972 OLDS. CUTlASS SUPREME,· 2 DR HT... ................. 12995

1972 CHEV. % TON ................... s2250
8' Fleetslde, 4 speed, V·8.

1972 CHEVROLET

lfz

TON............ s2150

8' Fleetslde, 6 c yl ., std . t rans , n ice

SAVE NOW THRU FEB. 28
New 75 Vegas's
New 75 Nova's
New 75 Monza's

$200, Factory Rebate
$200 Factory Rebate
$500 Factory Rebate

Good Stock New Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks

Loaded with extras.

1972 FORD GALAXIE '500' 2 DR Hl ........................... 11695
Air, P.S., P.B.

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR HT.. ........................... s2195
Check this one .
1972 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 4 DOOR .............................. 11888 .

We Have The Right Deal For You!
Good stock new 15 Chevrolet 'h &amp; l/• Ton
Pickups, Vans. Blazers, 4 wheel drive
Suburbans.

Air &amp; all extras. special.

1970 DODGE DART 2 DR HT ......................................11195
'6' SticK.

1970 MERCURY MONTEGO 2 DR ...... ~ -···· ····· ·········· ···· ·· 5 788
6 engine •. SPECIAL!
1970 CHEVY IMPALA 2DR HT..................................... 11295
Local car, auto. trans., P.S.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
oo·?.?126 Open Eves. Till 8 Pomeroy

1970 CHEVY BELAIR 4 DOOR ..................................... 11195··.
New car trac:~e , autQ. trans., P.S.

1970 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 2 llR.................................. 11195

Regency, Inc. Aoartments

6 Cyl. engine.

1968 PONTIAC TEMPEST ............................................ 1795
6 Cylin.der. automatic trans.

OVER 40 NICE CLEAN LATE
MODELS TO CHOOSE FRf"M

vCHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU --

~ GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
i639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS; 446-3273

I
'

'

4 Dr .. 1

THE COUNTRY

OFTEN !70 THIS .

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

I

1974 CHEV. IMPALA .. ~ ...............s4195

PEOPLE WHO HATE

.AQ 76 ¥ 2 .K.f 5 4 ... A.OA 2

23-5

HAtn WEAVERS ,.... No • Ex perience necessary . Free
Tra i n~ng . big salary plus
comm i ssion . Send stamped
envelope to · FANTAS TIC
HAIR WEAVING. P . 0 ~ Box
14139 , Philadelph i a , Pa .,
19 138.
.

ECONOMY MOBILE
HOME SAL"ES ,.
10xSO EXC. cond . • Id ea! f or
coup I~. l arge be~ room 1 b ig
12~~2-BR-Mob lle~H om e
living room w ith a.r cond . We
s i tuated on I acre· for sale.
buy used hom es 1401 Ea ste rn
Bath an d v, , furn call 44 6· .
Ave 446· 1425
.
,
· 15.t f
2890.
25 J
'

Unscrumblc these four Jumbles,
one l etter to l'arh sqmtre, tn
form four ordinary wurds .

___ _

B&amp; 5 MOBILE HOMES
Pt . Pl easa nt
concord 12x: 60 2 BR
Champ ion 12x60 2 B~
New Moon 10x55 2 BR
Champ i on 1'2x~O 2 BR
Li berty 12X50 2 BR
Great Lake Bx45 2 6R

446·7572 .reank Financ.ng

''

Z rlo

Help Wanted

'3 REFRIGERATORS, priced to sell-.--~ $15-$2"-$25

'

Plus Tax

Includes: Parts &amp; labor - new muffler, 2 new
chrome tailpipes. new clamps &amp; gaskets .

ELEC. DRYER, Hoover,white
aa.oo
69.95 Up
3 MAYTAG DRYERS
3 WRINGER WASHERS
39.95 Up
WASHER-DRYER, auhi .. groon, pai•- - 319.95 239.95

'

$3745

1967-1974
Beetles

9.95
59.95

Gmte or lienc ~n1ith

Pass

273

79.95
D~S~K~~~~~~~~9~9-~95~ 69.95
19.95

'

Plus Tax

Includes: Oil change, clean oil strainer, lube
front suspension, check &amp; fill battery, correct
tire pressure, fill win_dshield washer, cl!eck
transmission fluid, Iuiie door liinges, stnker
plates. heat(!r cables, &amp; hood &amp; trunk latches.

19.95 Up

Sec Ht?rb. Ddvc, Mil&lt;•:

Sout)l.

the stx ·in order to give his

OIL &amp; LUBE SERVICE

149 95

..

Plus Tax
Type 2, 3, &amp; 4
slightly higher

__,

Ruti&lt;md, O.

East

partner a count and dummy's

2 Pc. Brown Living Room Suite, A-1 shape
3 Tables &amp; 2 Lamps. •
•

742-4211

North

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
George Coffon hsts today's
hand under D for deception. It
seems that East won th~ third
doamond on order to lead the
jack of spades
South played the three ; West

TUNE-UP
Type 1
'Beetle'

1.

West

Opemng lea d - K •

'VALENTINE SPECIALS'

•

+

East- West vulnerable

VOLKSWAGEN

Rutland Furniture

power balance
~PM all cylinder drop
24 . Spare plugs under load
25
Acc elerator
pump
action .
26 . Ttming advance •
11 . Hydroc\'l rbon parts·high

n

·m 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

NURTH

K

BEDDING, twin &amp; lullslu_~~----

percent,

ca 11 Bob Griffith today for an appointment for your car , on our Sun Di.agnostic Equipment .
Service Hours : Monday - Friday 8 a .m. to &lt;1: 30 p . m . Saturdays 8 a .m 111111 noon

$895 Deception is self conceived

2 Dr Sedan, cho1ce of f our fine cars w1 fh and

(formerly Keith Goble Ford)

'

monoxide

22 . cylinder

m ~ ulation

7

Carbon

WIN AT BRIDGE

FORD INC.

fo--BEOS, twin &amp; lull, without bedding, _ __
with bidding _ _ _ _ __

21.

IT JUST MAKES SENSE TO DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

... 4 3

13US

PERFECT
TUNE-UPS
.EVERY

.

11 Dwell variation
t? Cml Polanty
13. Spark plug ftring
vol tage
14 . MaKtmum carl output
I S Secondary circu1t in -

" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of OoLng Business"

DAN THOMPSON .

1-30" ElECTRIC RANGE
2'1-GAS RANGES

I

~.__,

!

We are the ONLY Dea ler m Metgs and Galli a Count1es with thi s modet"n testing e qutpm ent.
We are Ihe only dealer who can properly tun e your car, sa l ely and effective ly .
3 N lASE certifted . qualified mechanics. Complete radtato r and heater servtee .
Servrce Management wtfh over 20 years expenence on all makes of cars .

Cadtllac - Oldsmobile

Open E•es.

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SMITH NELSON MOTORS OFFERS YOU ANOTHER FIRST.
AGAIN!

6995

GMAC Fmancing Available

992·5342

larry Lavender

WOOD
DESK, like new
BIG OFFICE
WOOD WARDROBE
I BOOK SHELF
UTILITY CABINETS, copper, glass doors
FORMICA TOP, A-1

5

NOW

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Any one ot the se see m1ngly small thmg s. can alfect or cu t down on th e p ertorman ce of your car . And
the only way a ll of these tc ':i t s can be perform ed , 1s on Sun Electronic Oiagnosf!C Equipment, by
l ramed mechantcs. Th e only way t o properly tune and adju st all makes oii 97S model cars.

KARR &amp;VAN ZAN DT

Blown Into Wa lis
and Attics
Free Estimates

6 BREAKFAST SETS

9 PCV Tt"''
10 M,,rufold v clcuum

Charcoal grey with leather interior. full power
AM- F M stereo, new steel radial
tires. climate control air conditioning.

fire Retardant
Insulation

NO. 1 _.;........_

'""

eq~ipment.

'""d~ 52 95

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8 Carbon Jnonoxldl"

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

and best smd ll Dodge, and lh1 s one IS doub le
ba rre l sharp

EXCAVATI NG , dozer, loader
Phone 992-3993
and backhoe work; seplic
Daily After 5:00
ta nk s installed ; dump trucks.
and lo · boys for h1re ; w!ll haul
fill dirt , top so11. lrmestone &amp; · EXCAVA11NG,
dozer ,
grave! ; Call Bob or Roger
backhoe ,
and
ditcher ,
Jeffers , day phone 992 .7089; ,
waterline , footers , drains,
night ph one 992 -3525 or 992 ·
roads, and brush cleaning, no
5232
iob too small. no weather toot
2. 11 -tf c
bad Charles R . Hatfield, Rt I
Rutland , 0 Phone 742.6092 .
EXCELSIOR Salt Works. East
1· 7· 26tc
Ma10 St., Pomeroy All kinds
of salt, waler pellets, wate r
CARPET installaTIOn, $1 25 per .
nuggets, blo c k salt and own
y.a(d . Phone Richard wesr,
Ohio River Salt . Pt1one 992 ·
. 843 ·2667.
3891 .
12 ·24 -26tp
6·5·tfC

t"""'-~---SPECIAL

7 HydrocdrbDn pa r ts, idle

$4795

!!~9~1a~!e s~~n~.~~~~l,oned, lmes~ 1995

Green, copper, white

Clean
used
appliances. All with 30day
money-back
guarantees!

her tn m

v

6 lrut1al T1mmq

Vinyl roof. fac tory air . steel radial fi res . SS
wheels, bucket sea ts. consol e, 6 way power
seal. low mileage SHARP'

SAVE

Sla Wagon Official 's ca r ne\1er lltl ed Fu ll y
equ•pped w1 th fin es t Very , very low m1leage ..

REFRIGERATORS, like now, frost-free, Hell _ _ 249.95

3 bedroom home, Lots of ,nlce

Lincoln Hgts ., Pomeroy, or
Phone Pomeroy . 992 -3575 or
Gallipclis .. ..t,.21.. 9.
,_......_

8 A.M. . 6 P.M.

STOKER-MATIC HEATER, c o a l - - - - - - 388.00
2 LAMPS, BOTH
29.95
NEW LAMPS, (Palrl'==---'---7'1.95
55 .00
NEW BEDROOM SUITES
10 USED BEDROOM SUITES, solid maple,
'!lalnut, pecan~ dark oak ·
88.00 Up

paneling. wall to . wa II car·
any organ1lat1on , phone 992 - petlng, 2 pcirches, ,basement,
3975
and fenced y~rd . $17.500.00.

-FURNISHED
-----------apt . Adults Only.

Open Mon .- 5at.

WAS SAlE
HIDE-A-BED, green -- - - -- -....,.J49.95 119.95

RUTLAND - All elec. brick .

roo~

3-ll ·tiC

Ph . 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work

Pomeroy, Ohio

Cr.1 nk111q c o1l output
J Cr,, nlunq vacuum
-1 ldll:' '&gt; pt'l&gt;d ·
~ DwPII

74 Olds Cutlass Sup. Cpe.

Yes , we will give you an ADDITIONAL discount on
no trade basis or a very generous allowance on
your trade, or even an additional check if agreeable
with bank or finance company. We can give you the
service before and after the sale. Compare service
too! There is nonsense to our rebates. BOTH Dan
and Ford rebates .

W ~l t~m O r -ruttreesO r
sh rubbery ,
clean
out
basements , atf rcs , etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 ·4441.
1 26. 26tc

acreage of any size to sell,
please call 992 .2298 .

CO U NTR Y Mobile Ho'm e Par k ,
Rt 33 , ten miles north of
Pomeroy . Large tots Wi th
concrete patios , sidewa l ks ,
runners
and
off
street
l)ark ing . Flhone 992 -7.479 .
orivacv . $12,000 .00 .
. ~ ,.
___,
12·31 -ttc '

_______ ______

towards

TAN KS
cleaned.
S EPTIC
Modern San1tat• on , 992 3954 or
992 734 9
9· 18 tfc

1-31 -3tp

FURNISHED
1
bedroom
tra il er , a l l utilities , 493
Broadway Stree t , Middleport
1·28.1fc

100 Kerr Street

by -pass

MORE

,,

rerfect~!

Tests To Make Your Car Run

/)\;•,;!

I. (r,"'llkmq vo 1t.1gt&gt;

Than Factory Cash Rebates
Of Up To '500.00

On Slate Rt . 124, 112 mi. from
Route 7
Rutland.

t

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C BRADF- ORO , Aucflone-er
Complete servic.e
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Rac i ne. Oh10
Critt Bradford
5· 1·tfC

4 ROOM house , furn l shet~ . m
Rutla nd Phon e 7.i2.J751

Middleport.

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
6stimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992 -3995
or 992-5700

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

EXPERT l ree serv i ce, free
esflm ales , 20 years ex
penen c e Call ( I) 667 3041 or
9n .Jo57
I 21 26tp

DI·.E ..... ':'
N l'ffi

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

]

Oi~gnostic

30 Electronic

YOU GET MUCH

-If you have a farm or

MIDDLE PORT -

TRA •l.t:K space , 2 miles from
Pomeroy , R f 143 , Pt1one 992

tl'L ABN ER

N E W HOME S No Money Down
Payments according to
inc om e on Fa rmers Home
A dm•n•slra t• on loan . Co n ·
vent iona l financing
al so
available with minimum
down Lovely homes in three
1oca t1ons •n Mergs County
Some hom es w1th wooded
lots
Cal l for
mor e in
format•on . 991 .5976 .
1 15 261C

preciate .it.

REMODELI~G .

.-.

__ ____ _j_ ~ ~~fc

HOU SE for sal e in Portland . 6
rooms and bath , good we l l 2
acres , 1i6,700 Call 843 2292
I 28 ·6tc

•LAD I ES , turn your spare t1m e
.nto money
Posit ion now
open for amb i tiou s person
Phone 99 2.2868
2 2·3tc

t·M"&gt;Sr-

HE(L

The Furniture Fixer · Modem Chemicals

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

~'!: 10: 4Pr~&gt;.• \1.\ !e~

~

EXPERIENCED
Radl .. +•·u

For Sale or Trade

EAS \'

Tl-41~ B ~ \l "' E-'ll

'

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Auto Sales

SHOOT IN G ma t ch , Rac1 nc Gun
Club , Sunday 1 p . m . Asso r te d
meats and f ac tory choke guns
only .
12
lfc

---- ----------,---

Business S·e rvices
.
- ·-

I

MOBILE HOME S FOR SALE
NOl t CE!
Due
to
th e
Ph . 992-2174
Pomeroy
for eclosu r e on one o f Oh• o 's
largest MObile Home Dea l er s 700. BALES of QOod da1 ry hay STEREO RADIO , 8 tra c k tap e
co m bin ation , am . fm rad iO , 4
we w il l olfer for sale th e
Phone 742 3187
lollowmg Mobile H·omes a t a
way speak er sound sys t em
2 2 61p
v£&gt; r y . very large di SC oun t
Ba lan ce SIO i 89. or use our
6.1l( 11 Li berty , J bedroo m
budg et terms Ca ll 992 3965
1 29 ttc
60&gt;!1 L' berly . 2 b e dcoom
843-2824 or 843-2293
1- 50x 12 R rchardson . 2 be droom
1 60xl2 P M (, 3 bed r oom
1973 OL D SM OB IL E Cu tl ass S GROC ERY business for sale .
Portland, Ohio
P S . P B and l acto r y air
1 60x1? l •tan . 7 b ed r oom
BU1id1ng fo r sa l e or lease
1 60x 12 Parkwood , 1 bed r oom
?S 500 m il es
Call 992 39 14
REPAIR-Broken
Phon e 773 5618 from 8. 30p . m
l - 60 x 11 Elconn , 2 bed r ooms.
aft er 5 p m
to 10 p m tor appoi ntm ent
Parts Mended
2 2 6tp
ce nlra l .;1 1r
3 10 tf c
1- 65x12
R 1c hardson .
J
---STRIPPING-By
bedroom . ? l ull bat h s. 8:.. 12 IYlJ CUT LA SS
S,
1 dr .. STEREO RADIO, 8 tra c k ta pe
eK pando
au ton•at1 c, Power S t ee r~n g,
Hand
combiOat,on . am fm radio , 4
We al so have a good sc lec r 1on o f
br a kes and wmdow s . c r ui se
way speaker sound system .
NO DIP TANKS
ot her 8, 10 and 12 wtde Mob•le
cont ro l , tilt whe el. am f m
Ba l an ce SlOB 14 , or use our
Homes These are m os tly all
s t er eo ta pe pl aye r , n e w
budget ter m s Ca ll 992 3911 5
~up plies · Strippers
lat e mode l Ho m es (som e have
brake s and shock s, rad1a 1s
1 21 tf c
Stains . Finsihes
n ever bee n l ilted m&gt; It yov
and tow h •fc h . M e ta l l •c blue
ar e •n ter es t ed •n a good
W1fh black mteno r
Wol"-f-t1
Free Pickup and Oeliver.y
Mobile Home a t a very larg e
S3, 400, se ll for $1 ,500 Call 992
3453 or 992 33 81
d• sc ount, don' t wa1t Stop in
today a t BERRY MILLER
l J I Si c
READY MIX CO N CRE T E · cfe .
8 IN C H 3 pt h i t ct1 post ho le
Mob i le Hom e Sales , 70 5 -----------livered r.gl1t to your pro1ect
d1
g
ger
or
trade
for
3
pt
hrfch
F ar son Slr ee t. Belpre , Ot11o
1'i 71 FOR D Pinto 2 dr se dan .
Fas l
and
eas y
F ree
p•ckup
d1sc
Phone
742
53
22
phone 423 953 1
n ew en g m e, new tires, $1 ,000
cstim ates Phon e 992 3284
2 2 Jtp
1 30 10tc
or will trade for a va n Ca ll
Goeg l ein Ready MiK Co .
949 57·11 a ft er 5 p m
M•ddl eporl Oh 10
1 31 3tc
6 30 ·tf c

Wanted To Buy

n

HOOVER D•al A Mat1c wdh
pow e E d
e and attachments
575 P one 85 J IJ2
1 29 l Otp

THE SUN. HAS ARRIVED IN THE BIG BEND AREA

'

For Sale

l 97J GREENBR 1 E~7 bed ro o m .
all electr•c . 'li6 901!! Ca ll 99 1
7328
7 2 Jt c

G I G A N f i C BooK Sa le Thrif t
St10 p ncross f rom Pomeroy
Pos t O fl •ce Op ~ n F r ,day and
Sc1 1urday 'C i oth•n g hand
ma d e furn.tur e. glassware
1 29 3tc

hea r tf elt th ank s an d deep
appreciation to all those who
were so kind and h e lpful at
the passing away of our loved
one ,
Hom e r
Johnso n
Especially to the · Mason NOW se l l 1ng Fu ller Bru sh
Rescue Squad for t t1 ei r
Pro duc ts, phone 992 3410
prompt r esponse to th e
I 1 ~ Tf c
Fogl es on g Fune ral Home for
their efficient .arrangements, I N CO ME Tax Pr e par ed bo th
the Rev . George Ho scha r , fo r
Fe d eral and Sl1'1t e Taxes will
hiS c onsol ing words and
bC done by
appomt men ts
comfort in g sen •ce . to the
o nly Ple ase phon e 992 2272 or
singers , Patty Jordan Md
see M r s Wa n d a E blin. Laurel
Gloria warn e r , to all t hose
Cl i ff Rd ... Po mero,y , Oh io
who called , sent flow er s. fo od ,
1 3 30f c
and the man y beftutifu l card s.
We deeply apprec iate you r AUL TION ,
Thur sday
and
words of co mfort an d acts of
Satu rda y n ight . 7 p m a !
compa ssion May God b less
Mason Auct ion . Horton 51 i n
ea c h and eve r y one o f you
Mason , W Va . Consig nm ent s
Lucy Johnson and F amily
we lcome . Phon e 1304 ) 773 ·
') 2 lip
5471
10 3 tf c

F.or Rent

Wanted To Buy

IN C OM E

1nlOVING memor ·p~ o t J &lt;HlWS P
Snider wh o pas se d awar
February I, 19TO

'

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'

�.. • ...

•

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1

~

'

'

I-

I '

'

~-p~; ·p~;'tR~sults Use The Sund;Jy_T
_i_m_es-S~_
nt_inel Classifieds
lrotice

For Sale

For Rent

~U SS'S

GLA~ S

SE RVICE
' term w t ndow&lt;&gt; rt'p i\trted
.. l £' ,uglils s
C\Uhl
Ql ~ s.s
!l. tnlrrOrS C1CCOI i\ 101 ol !ld LUI 10
• StlC .lJS St•c Avt'
M r osc;
troll) IIH' P 0 trl GC\IIri:'OitS
~ Pn J...\6 763?
nJ 18

.

?0 I f

~·

or

on .~

IQ

r omplr-T•

tol,l l ('i('c trr &lt;.. '
lh' &lt;l r oon r '100
l l)ed r oorn
"i l~
Pl +orH r1r-lllf'l or 116
1'-' 1 I

Al(lfHl E nome

ol CC CSSOI of' S

(,m IJ(' Sl'Ct1 ,ll

( l' lllr rll /IV(

0 1 ph

l i ~NI'IH

'!&gt; I ·~

l il t( +\

ll

pt r

11 o

1 ll'o 1! p (1 1

tHY

Pll

I JI

Ph '

I~p

Compll2te
Soo kke~p mg &amp; Tax Serv1ce
8usrne ss by apporrltm e nt
f: hon e H6 7900 Sec Bob for
our bookkceprng and tncomc
t •)C needs
45 71 1 Second
Avenue ( i\cross from Post
Olf rce} Gall rpol! s 0 ~5 631

l

' f&gt; I

SL EEPIN G r oorn'&gt; W! lk.ly r,IIP
J "

AUCTION SAL E f'vt&gt;ry F r rday
'""' t-.Jht al 7 at 715 N Sec ond
T ne
vollagc
rddleport
18 t I

TW O WJ\Y R&lt;lOIOS S il i CS &amp;
ServiCe N e ~tv &amp; USNI (IJ S
p olrcc rnonr l ors &lt;~n lennd s
'""'et c Ool.l s Cilrl t'n P,and f.'i+drO
Eou p
G&lt;'orQes Crrek. Rd
"*riilllrpolrs Otl •O 116 1~1!
!,.
'l I? 1 f

HI

1 RO O M :&gt; nnd b&lt;'l!tl
S t n•e 1

'} 6 t!

'300

J ROOM furn 1sned ap&lt;1rtrncnt rn
CitY tJ6 110 3 or .Ub 1.Sl2
?5 3

For Sale

I R O OM furni ShCd apMim enl
Phon e 116 ?58 9

15)

'* For Many Ha pp y Return s
:":'
See

WIL SO N RU SK
Cerlrfr ed
In come Tax Agent
Phon e 446 2476
House Calls Made

•

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...

2

liR MO B I L E
Creek 1-15 50'} 1

36"x23 "x.009

m ti CS

MOBILE HOME
'} '
from to wn ~...\6 OJ YO

Aluminum
Sheets

713

!1 Ofl1 C

] I If

D. EA D stock re mov e d
,ctlar ge Cal l :! 11551-1

No
?07 If

~

~

Matthews Excavating

~

p ozer, loader

backhoe

&amp;

,_1'11
;..."_·3_67-·0_3_37_._ _ _~--:-"'~

Se wmg

and

Machm e Rcparr , Parts and
S"'i,lpplie ~
P 1c k up
and
ae l rve ry
Dt'lvr Vacuum
CI C&gt;aner . '· mile up Georges
rreek. Road Ph JJ6 0?94
lit
12 ,,

"

1-- ---

...
FREE BOOK
'"
TELL SST ORY
ArtiN TERESTING book called
lne Mastery of L rfe wrll be
!H!nt to you w1thout ob l 1ga t lon
Tfirs book wdt tell you how
Ybu mitY recer ve the un1Que
lios1cruc•an method fer sel l
en foldmcnt rn the pr1vacv o f

your nom e

Addr ess

Scnbe

~
_ __________ _

IN CHE SHIRE ? BR Mc b le
Home 50:.:. I? .waila t.Jie reb 15
c !'ln see between 8 a rn •I p rn
or on weekends S 146 15 pe r
rno rncludcs gilrbage or gas
Pay own el ec tn c Ca ll 367
7645
24-6

Rostcrucran
Order
ORC . San Jose
Calif
9.-5 14

2 BR tr&amp;• ler 211 mrleS'· fr om
hosp rtal Children a cce pted
Ulil111 es paid for $ I dO per rno
or pay own utrl l l teS for 595
Ph 440 0 157
17 3
--- ---

2

----

&lt;\!d,

273
OFF ICE space ground flo or
Approx 200 sq f! Upper Rt
7 Ph 24 5 5050
?13
5 RM turn apt S\ 50 J rm furr t
apt S 110 11 crly Wrth d coos1t
and
r ef e rcr1 ce
Floyd
Srmmons . Jr ,146 1397 or 446
0952
271f

5 RM ap t 431 Seco nd Ave $100
Ph 446 ]4 J.t or 4J6 1615 or ~46
12J)

1

por tun1ty to thank al l our
friends an d nerghbors for
r~etr k i ndn ess
whlle my
h,USband was rn the hosprlrtl
r ecently A spec1al tha n ks to
McCoy Moor&amp; Ambulance
sr r vlce , to Or Harder Dr
c"far ke and al l the nurses ond
tud es on fourth floor at Holzer
Hosp 1tal and to the m m1 ster s
who ¥1S rled Charley and ot
tl!'t-ed co nsol rng woras We
a~so apprecrated the lovely
cards . flowe r s . the ¥rs1 tor s
il rtd t elephone calls We ere
very
mu c h
rndebted l o
everyone who offe r ed a
prayer 1n our behalf Mily God
bless each o f you
,
Venn•e cas te

FUR N apl J rm and ba th
cent r i'l ll y l ocated , co rner of
Cou rt and Sec on C1 S125 Ph
446 1615 or 446 1243
27 If

•

GAUGE
Sho tg un ,
automa t ic , lost
belween Keystone Road and
Plfle Grove Church Road
F r rday n1Qhl 388 SH6
_ _ L._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _25 3

'

A TANN I SH yellow and Willie
dog on Eas t ern Ave Reward
S59 Call J.a6 1215 or A-46 0986
216

Wanted To Rent
WANTED TO RENT Fur
n~hed sl eep ing room or ef
f1~1 e ncy
apartmenl
w rth
c aokrng
la c lrt1es
rn
Gal lipOliS SSO S70 range W II
need Feb 14 Call 4J 6 Q58b
after 5 p m
24 1f
- - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

Wanted To Do

_ ____________ _
___,.._

38 8 991&lt;1

27 6

FU RNITUR-E ..
UPHOLSTER lNG
Specral
prrces now through Feb ruar y
197S F ree est i mat es P1Ck up
and del1very
Prom pt Ser

with built on room

Ph

67 5

Quail Creek
Mobile Commumty
&amp;Sales
contact N ewt Jon e~
Rodn ey Cora Rd
Rodne y. OhiO
P h .145· 9314- 24S 5021

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

CUS:rOM ~e wm g , allera11ons on
all types of cloth ing , l urs
ReWeavrng . P h 446 7570 or
.444 1771

?,'\ II

--1-------- - --- TYPI..NG SE RVICES Wrl l do
my

H o l slern s pr1nge r
$60 0 Ph 4J6 ~ 053

W e rent m obil e hom e l ots .
n ot lust a palc e to p ark v ou r
home W e ha ve m o r e to off er
than anv mobil e commun1ty
i n so uth eastern Oh iO

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1'12 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison , Ohio
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

Z54 If

25 L ocus t Sf
Howa r d Brannon , BrGk er
OH 446 -2674
Lu crlle Brannon
E'lle 44 6 1226 or il 46 2674

DOWNTOWN
J AR
t
bath w w carpet downsta rr s
n1 c e krtchen
formal DR
sp a c rou s fam 11y R den
nrnple c losel s n ew fu r n~ce
&amp; roo f stone &amp; brtck pa t10
alumrnum s rdr"g deep lot
Ca l l now to see lhrs hom e
BR t CK -- Near new hosprtal
large we l l lnndscdped lol , 3
BR 1 , bath a k rl chen to be
proud of wrth a ll the bud!
ms
w w
c arpet
fu l l
frnrshed 7 car
busement
garage nrce &amp; prrvate QUI Ck
possess ron

2 NEW BRICK &amp; FRAME
H OMES Al l ele c lrr c w w
carpe t 3 BR II ba th , large
e~1 t n k•t c hen s $~9 500

4 46 953 9

STA N DIN G
8490
-·~--

SL EEP I NG ROOMS
w eekly
rates PMk. Cen tral Hot el
) 06 If
weekly

157 If
LARGE t r~rler space on Rt J5 ,
one mrl e from hOSP i tal ~ 10

3805

'JlJ II

197 tf
SL EEPING room Rang e and
refrtgeralor 550 per mo
Utrlllles pard One person
446 J.&lt;l1 t after 2 p m
~--- ---- -------

B.RADSU.RY Sr"''all frrst floor
efflc1Cncy
apartment
Ut rl tl!es pa 1d Av~Hiable by
the J.th One ad ult no pets
Anyone mteres t ed contact
earl)' .
0957 729 Second

t956FORO 2 T Wtth cattle rack
$475, frontend loader $375
~ &lt;146 487 1
\Iff

·F- URNIS H ED apartment 3 rm
with pnvate bath al 845
Second Ca l l .446 21 15
24 If

Ave

UNFURNISHED 2 BR house
rn town f enced m yard ;! 0 ~ &gt;
pay utrlrtres, 5110 permo .,..a
.t46' 2A1S a fl er 6 P _..
m
74 6

---r.------------ __________
256

23 t1

____

TRAILER . loc ated 1 block fram
ce nJer of m.;.rn part of town ,
adu lts only Ph 4.46 4671 after
6 p m
24 12

Wanted To Buy
GENERATOR for Renault 10
Ph on e 388 8610 or 388 8502
..........
74tf

_______ _______

JUNK auto an d scrap metal
Phone 388 8776
24 12

- -

trmber

Ph

- -- - -

Ci!ll

388

our l argt;- Scle c t .o n ot
dramo r1d s.
and
wat c lll'S
Comp,1 r e our pr rces T a w tH'Y
Jew e ler s
'218 If

O HIO ST OK ER

W Vii lum p
f rr ewood Bloc ks It]('
Cl?ment mortar GatlrpQ IIS
Block Co Ph ~~6 2!83
793 !I
co ~l

513 Magnoha Dr

GOOD ctean lump nnd stok er
coal
Carl W1111~rs
R oo
Grande Ph 'l ~'i 5115
2-15 If
ALL
TYPE S ot
bu rl d rng
mat Nr als bloc k brrck sewer
P•Pl?S , w rndows lrntels . etc
Claude Wr nl ers R ro Grande
0 Phon e 2J5 51'2 1 aft er 5
I 23 It
19 70 DODGE PU ,
ton good
ccnd t1on Call 256 1737 alter 6
1•

25 3

--uve ONFERTILizER-

Agrrco . prem 1um ler t rllze r
Or d er s are now be rng Taken
for February delivery Call
Tom Jones , Thurman , Ohro
2a6 2394 co l lect afle-r 6 P m
25]

256
--i962CH"EvY~ckupf; sale or
w 11 trade for c.ar of same
v~ lu e Phone .:tJ6 0519
25 3

OffiCe Ph 446· 1694
Even1ngs
Charles M Ne al , 446 1546
J Mtchael Nea l , 446 1503

Just Arrived

J BR home m

Kanaug a all
c arpeted wrth some pa n elrng ,
k1tchen rncludes r efrig era tor
and new elec tr rc range ,
fenced rn yard ...\...\6 2539
21 12

NEW 3 bedroom brrck . Lake
Orrve
Subdlvt son ,
Rro
Grande. OhiO, 7 pet to~n
a'llat labl e- Prr c:e upper $J O s.
P h
24S
S439

Ph 446

1415 Ea st er n Ave

25 tf

"'1-;;;;~;i;d~ 1
bedr tom t1ome wr th o4 62
acres . close to town Ca ll 446
2890
25 3

9230

1 ~6 8

1 ~68

l

1q11
1Q]J

CoMPLETEL

N ew GMC
Truck H ea dqu ar t er s
1, T GMC Pr c kup
I I T
GMC
J ~ T Chev
Prckup
11 T
Chev Prckup
1
T GMC Prckup
1 1 T GMC Prckup
' • T F ord P ICkUP
I T GMC Prckup
•, T GMC P• c k up
1 1 T G MC P1cku p
CMC S.ubu rba n
• T GMC Ptckup
SOM MERS G M C
TRUCKS , INC
13SP rn e St
446 'lS32

- -

~ 47 tf

!'lEW 3 BR home 2 comp le te
balhrooms. a ll c.:,rpeted
Complete bur It tn k1tchen W1th
stove and re!rrg Good buv 3
rntles from City on Geor ge-s
Creek Rd call 446 9322 after
5 Call 446 1&lt;~26
246
-~-- - --- - - - ---

GRAVELY Tractor Pre Season
Spe cral
Pu r chase any new
Gra¥ely con..-e rt rble tra c tor
at regu l ar 11s1o pr.ce and we
w tl l grve you a new 30 •n
rotary mower at tachment.
lr ee
No trade m a nd no
d eli very on th rs offer Good
tl'lrouQt'r F eb s. 1975 Grav ely
T racto r Sale s
Pomer oy,
Oh iO Ph til &lt;I 99 2 2975
23 6

FOR SALE OR TRADE
By Own er, 4 bedroom newly
remode led ho m e on L ow er
Sec ond
Ave
Can
h elp
fmance PhDne 446 1079 446
1854 after 5 p m

-----

GENE PLANT S &amp; SON
PLU MBING ~ Heat rng - A rr
Cond 1 ~ 1 onmg , 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637
tf
48

---------

AICe-'~S-N-; W

&amp; useD FURN
NEW 5 PC MAPLE FINISH
ALL WOOD DIN.ETTE SETS
st29H REG '-1499S
854 Sec , 446 n2l
23 If

STANDARD
Plum b1ng H ea ttng
214 Thrrd Ave . 446-3782
187 If

----~---·-----~-----

AU L T S Mob•le Home Serv rc e
Sk rrt rng root co at rng, pat ros ,
awnmgs , anchors . C('ment
wor k Free est•mates Call
446 2950 after 4 30 p m

?J5 1I

u

-·

t IJ ' t ten et pa~d s

6J I 1

Cal l 156
297 If
l'

Now
sel ler s don't wan t to carry the house through th e w r
Most will con s1der offers now tha t wou ldn ' t m the 5 P~~~~r
if you have a permanent 10b don ' t pay r e nt any t~ader
than absolutely necessary a nd before you bu y a
com ]')are 1t to ow mng.:_ home
$29,900

1

To hear some roos t ers crow
vo u d lhmk the sun was
r srn g espec •a lly for th em
Start at the bottom . bu t don I
stay th er e

On e family dwe l lrng f rame
on Eastern Avenue three
be d r ooms
front
r oo m
k. !chen awnrng and garage
pr rced at $13 900
Two story ho.use on Sec on d
Avenue 3 bedrooms up and 3
rooms down tn good con
dr t ron wtlh a dtorn•ng J room
apartmen t w rlh prt vate
entrance $27 500
512 fourth Aven ue f1 ve
room
one s tory
frame
clw e llm g ne eds remodel m g
la r ge lot and gara ge 512.000

Buy Now and Save
l f yo u had bought a home like th iS 5 yrs ago you paul~
have sa ved s7 .ooo oo on t h e purcl" ase pn ce above t on
owne r must se ll th 1s attra c rveh 3
loose a ny more bedroom home w1 fh beauti fu l bu t II m kttchen, 2 ~I ~~
larg e fam1 ly room , 2 ca r garage excel le nt ne rghbor oo

Farms and Bare (Bear) Land

Rodney V~l l age II
ap
rox rmately te n h o uses
~variab l e $532 down wrlh th e
balance p a td over a 33 yea r
pcnod All th r ee bedroom
ho mes
ca r peted
garag e.
etect r c heat

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AN 0 HEATING
cor Fourth &amp; P1n e
Phon e 44 6 3888 or 446· 4477
165 tf
'~"

RUSSELL ' S
PLUMBI NG &amp; ~EATING
r..illhpolrs , 446
'"'[

478~

297 tf

DEWITT' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING •
. Raule 160 o.t Evergreen
Phon e 446 2135
18 7 If

pr esent New msu lat1on r oof, bath etc Excellent flat crop
land , pl enty of pas t ur e and bal an ce 1n ltmber $45,000
•nc ludes machinery and a good buy at that. Fina ncmg
ava ilab le

HOME &amp; BUSINESS SITE
P11 story 3 BR f ra m e hom e w tth 24x26 basem ent, loca ted
on 1 25 acres, 310' frontage on US 35, 4 lane h 1ghway and
176' frontage on County Road .deal spot fo r motel, serv tce
statron , or merca ntt le building Only $27 ,000

152

WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE
ACRE Farm wtth an ol d dwell ing and barn , 70x l4 3 BR

mob1le home w it h 18xl4 ilv mg room w 1th woodburnmg
fireplace and real n1 ce kr tchen Tobac co base and 60 acres
til la ble land Prr ced at $28.000
YOU CAN AFFORD THIS
Assume present 7 12 Pet
l oan Mo nthl y payment
$1B5 00 , lovely J bedroom
home
wrt h
ca r pet rng
th roug hout , huge bullf m
Krtchen, central a rr
J1 1
y r s Qld

AS LITTLE A"S $1,250 00
DOWN - You bec ome the
owner of lhrs n1c e we l l
3 bedroom hom e
bu rtt
In c lud es drnrng and famr ly
rooms Prrce .s $25 ,9() 0 See
11 tod ay

Gall .a Co.'s Larg es t Rear
E state Sales Agency
Oflrce 446-3643
Evenrngs Call

There are thrngs you can do 1t
yo u re mdustnous enough tha t
wri t save you money ta ter on
Get out the repcur krt Go to
work

VOLKSWAGEN

GASOLINE IS GOIN~
UP • UP • UP • UP
AND

RATIONING MAY BE
ON IT'S WAY.
(Rationing
printed)

coupons have already

been

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

BY OWNER 7 A land 6 rm
house , 3 bedrooms , bath ,
modern ktfchen , wall to wall
carpettng
Call :256 6540
7
m tie s below GallipoliS · on
Route 7
236

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) You wtll not1ce tod ay that
those In yo ur peer group Will
look to you for leaders hi p
Assert yo urse lf 1f you fee l rt s
necessary

71 FORD LTD

73 DODGE % TON

Yo u re extremely competent
today tn helptng others sort out
the rr mudd les The advrce
you II offer rs sound an d l arsee•ng

EXCELLENT
SELECTION
OF

ELECTRICAL
servrce.
remodel rng
gutter work
Free estimates Call 446 2582
after 5 P m
tf
304

&amp;

- KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OH 10

C'tJI~'"'

2 Dr . Hdtp., black on black with
bucket seats. air , AM-FM tape, P.
windows and seat, e'tclra sharp.

•4297

'4197

1974 CAMARO

1973 BUICK
ELECTRA CUSTOM
2 Dr. Hdtp., air, AM-FM-tape,
18,246 miles, p. windows. tilt
wheel. premium !Ires. Worth

3697

mo•.

1973 BUICK REGAL
2 Dr. Hdfp.. air, white with
burgundy vinyl fop, AM-FM. Low
miles. Worth more.

•3597

'3497

1974 BUICK
CENTURY 4 DR ·

1974 CHEVELLE

Air, new 75 Century trade. Was
$3795.00. Check this now.

2 Dr. Hdtp., air cond., General
Motors official's car. Two to
choose from. Check these.

'3397

'2997
1973 MAZDA
4 DR RX2

1973 BUICK
2 Dr. Hdtp., air, AM-FM. custom
vinyl Inferior.. This Is the least we
ever priced one of these.

LANDSCAPING
SHRUBS ,
TREES,
ROC K

GARDENS ,

Air cond., rotary engine. 18,000
miles, autom&lt;Jflc trans. Lot of car
here for the money.

36 MONTHS 'BANK &amp; GMAC

-----

HOL s TEiN-CoNCR ETE
all
typ es of co ncr ete work
footings , walls , co ncre te
flniShrng , ca rp e nt e r work
F ree estrmates Ph 367 0417
or .4.46 7795
276 80

-------------TERMITE PEST CONTROL

FREE 1nspectton Call 446 3245
Merrrll oDe l l . Operator by
Extermtnal Term1te Servrce
10 Belmont Or
267 tf

75 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
Services Offered
SA NDY AND
BEAVER In
surance Co
h as off ere d
serv 1ces for Fi r e Insurance
cove rag e rn Gal Ira County for
almos t a ce ntury
F a rm s.
ho mes
an d
pe r sonal
prop erty
c o ver ages are
avar l abl e to meet tn d rvrdual
ne eds
C on t.;tcl
Harry
P1tchford 1 your n erg h bor and
agent
2H

•

NOW YOU ·CAN BUY A DODGE DART
FOR $200 LESS THAN DEAL~RS COST!

ALBERT EHMAN
Wafer Oelrvery Servrce
Patnot Star , Gall•poh s

PU BLlC NOTICE
RESOLUTION

AMOUNT
MONEYS,

Ph lH-2 1l3
243 tf

POPES E l ec trr ca l Con l rac t tng
tndu strr at, commercral and
res1dentlal Ph da y Jaa 8747
or evenm gs , Jaa 8657
283 tf

Writes AI Types of Insurance For
Your Auto. Heme or Business
WeprU.nt
Llghtnlns Rod Mutual
Insurance Company
&amp;tow· tost Auto lnsurance--:-compate our rates
Polocy ,
r
.l.'ow CosI Homeowner
wners Pol1c y tor Rent ers
•Lbw Cost H~~
Complete Protect ton in One

w=~·Mot,ilec~omeowner

Poltcy

Bust ness

· par e our rates with your present
com
We know we can ,.......--save- -- - --money.
--

ALL DODGE DARTS IN STOCK ,
74 &amp; 75 MODElS - SPORTS, SWINGERS &amp; CUSTOMS

CLOSE-OUT - DEALERS COST
Now you can buy a Dodge Dart at dealers
cost and receive a 1200 rebate from the factory.
Good this week only - Offer ends
February 8, 1975

-

FOR

HURRY • FIRST COME BASIS

DON'T DELAYI

CARROLL NORRIS Qadg~
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

50 STATE STREET
Services Offered

Services Offered

Services Offered

PASQ UA L E Elec t nc al &amp; ln
TRl STA R
toJ c edar so '
sulatmg
Etectrrc Contractors
Garlltpo tl s. Afler 5 p m P h COM P L ETE electriC a l serv 1ce.
4.46 2116
Gal ftpol tS, Ot110 Ph 361 0311
20 If
~07 tf

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

- - --..---~-----

.-- --

I

'

......

-------

''

OF

6 cyl . engine. power steering, ii!Ufo,, radio,

beige finish with black vinyl inferior, w-s- w
miles. Like new cond .

County D1str~tt Library o f
tires. Less than 5,000
Ga llra County , Ohto , that on
estimate duly made moneys of
t he sa id Library , aggreg.at1ng a
ma xi mum
amount
of
SilO 000 00, sha ll be awarded n
mactlve deposits
Be It resolved, that the
rna c l!ve moneys of the Li br a ry
shall b e depos1ted .n a bank or
banks as pro vi ded by law , an(j
be rt furth er
R esolved, that the bank or
banks In Galtla County of fering
the highest rate of Interest per\
annum on rnacttve dep osits be
m ade
t he
depository
or •
depositor res of said Library for
a peri od of two years from the
EASTERN AVE,
11th day of Febru8ry , 1975 If,
however , no bank In the county
brds a sat i sfactory rate of In
ler es t per annUm on uJd
inactive deposit s, then th e bank
r .....:Aor banks conven iently located
..JC'I~
outstde the county bidding the ..LOGUE contracting , block and
highest rate of Interest per
br ic k
wor~
SpeCJIItY
annum on Inacti ve depos1ts,
frr• ptaces 388 9939
shall be made the depos itory of
•
20 12
said funds or sa1d library. _ __ - - - - - - - - - - - inte r es t on mactrve de-ooslts to PROTECT your mobl te home
be pa1d quarterly on the date of
with TIE DOWN ANCHORS
depositories . and be l t furthe:r
Call Ron Ski dmore , 4,.6 1756
Resolved , ttl at b ids will be
after 3 p m
r e ceived unt1! 5 00 PM of the
221 tf
1Hh day of February , 1915, and - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - that notice t o all banks U may THOMA S Fain Exter m 1nat1ng
be nec essary be Qtven b)(
co Termite and Pest Control ,
publi cation , as provid ed by law
WheelerSburg, Ohio
The L i brary reserves the rlgl'lt
' 23311
......_
to re lect any or aU bids and be
it further
GARAG E ; a ttic and basement
Resolved t hat the Board of
cleaning Trash hauling Free
Trustees of sa rd L tbrary shall
estimates . Ph 4&lt;~6 OJSS or "A6
meet at 1fS regular meetrng
2950
--~ 18 If
place on th e Hth day Of
!=ebruary , 1975 at 5 00 PM for
deslg natlbn of deposttor!et

REFRIGERATOR : washer and
dryer ser vice - 25 years ex ~
perrenc e . afternoon
and
even 10gs $6 Servace calls and
E st Bob , 379 231 8
26 6 , :I an

--~----

~----'74 CHEVROLET NOV~ COUPE

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Offered

..

Ph 141'-7699
Gallipolis, Ohio
512 s~~con •f Av e.

lNACTIVE
DATE OF

Be rt resolv ed , by th e Ga llla

Polley .

:~.!~!l ~~~~~~~~r Pacllege Poltcy tor Your

OF
AND

DESlGNATlON
DE POSlTOR lES

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE est rm a te s. l rab d rty In
suran ce Pr unrn g trrmmmg
and cav rty wo r k tree and
stu mp r e moval Ph 446 o49.S3
73 tf
GENERAL CONTRACTING
Home rmprovem en ts and ad
dtt1ons Roof tn g. vrny l srd rng
Cal l 446 0668 or 7&lt;~5 'il 38
_ _ ...!.... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
152_ 56

ESTIMATING

MEETING

Leadingham Agency

..

'2597

7

AL L

GUARANTEED
Pat10 and
poolland scaprng Slon e, sand
coal. shrubbery tr 1mm1ng
Dump truck serv1ces
245
9131
187 tf

Leadingham Agency
~ \I,Htl f ?L~

1974 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE

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

Don Watts V. W., Inc.

BIG SELECTION OF
TRUCKS
F-100
F-250

That shiny new '75 car is not out of
your reach . Because your present car
is worth more at trade-in time than
ever before. Let's talk price now.

FORDS

-----------

WRECKING Ph 446 949 9
Established rn 19&lt;~0
169 tf

'

6 cyl , st and. lrans., pa ste l lime in
co lor

Yes! You can afford to step up!

1973 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX

2 Dr. Hdtp .• air cond.. bucket
seats. AM-FM-tape, steel belted
tires. This car Is extra. extra nice.

your car Is wonh more

Services Offered

TANK CLEANING AND
REPAlR
A L SO HOUSE

*U.S. Environmental Protection Agency tests
proved V. W. to be the most econom,ical line of
cars built in the WORLD. To wit:
'75 Beetle- 33 miles per gallon, '75 Rabbit &amp;
Scirocco-38 m.p.g., 75 Dasher-35 m.p.g.
Check the E. P.A. results on all mal&lt;es a.
models ol cars posted in our showroom. It is
quite

Chassis &amp; cab , air cond .. P.S. ,
P. B., local. sharp. red •n color

1n

'42 7

1973 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

71 FORD F-100

4 dr. , fylly equipped, ivy glqw
color

~5497

•4197

73 CHEV. PICKUP

71 FORD LTD

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)

-------------GILLENWATER 'SS EPTIC

lET US CURE YOUR GAS PAINS.

RANGER XL T
P. S., P 8, air cond .. sharp, two
lone green

Auto, P.S. , P. B , w1th topper,
gold with malching top.

Air, steel· belted tires. new
Firebird trade Expect th e best.

Automatic, air .cond .• Z28 engine,
burgundy, billboard tires, lot of
car here.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
GratJfytng results await 1f you
direct your full energ1es and
atte ntron to your most lmpor
ta nt goals and amb1 tron s

- ----M ,;~- &amp; Sons Water

OON1 BE LEFT AT THE PUMP.

1974 MERCURY
COUGAR XR7

Air , 16,124 miles, AM-FM tape.
Cruise Control. bucket seats,
vmyl lop. Expect the best.

73 FORD F-1 00

Fully equipped. lighl blue, dark
blue roof.

ROOFING &amp; Spou tr ng Shrng 1e

Gallipolis, Ohio

6 Pass , w1ndow van. air cond ,
p s , p.b , brown &amp; white.

2 dr Sedan, 4 speed, clean car
light blue

kee p o utside rs noses o ut o f
your bu srness However fam1iy
d1scussron s wrll bear frUit

D- p Delrvery
Serv1c e
Your
patronage
wrll
be
ap
prec iated Ph 446 0463
2 1f

Ph. 446-9373

4 Dr sedan, fully equipped

72 PINTO

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dac.
21) Its best for the present to

JJ ACRES Good bu 1ld mg
sr te or mvestmenl property
located on Thompson Rd
Morgan Twp Will se l l on
land contract

House _ J BR , tully car·
peted, tull basement wath
fireplace , •n City school
diStrict ,

74 FORD ECONOLINE

6 Pa ssenger, fully equip

You re not ttl e ty pe of person
who goes unot1ced Tod ay you
wrll draw even more attentron
th a n usual

and Butldup rool Hot an d
Cold process
Hom e rm
provement rn genera l
For
free est1mates , phon e Rob er t
Meade , 388 811 4, B rdwe lt.
Ohio
263 tt

RA NCH O COMPANY
R eal t ors- Aucltoneers
446 0001 367 0300
NICE bulldmg lot . Farrfreld
Burld to su1t Frve acre home
s1te &gt;5 000 47 A farm. new
hGme S2&lt;1 ,900
771 tf

73 CHEV. IMPALA

73 TORINO STW.

M&amp;M

*A Volkswagen Owner lsi

ca r,

BEST DEALS
ON TRUCKS!

Dr .• fu ll y equ ipped. white &amp; b l~e
in color .

4

d1trons are develop rng th at
aren' t yel ¥1Sibl e or apparen t
They II have a fav orable effec t
o n your fma nces

DOZER work , c tearrng , ex
c avat1ng , stump r e moval.
bush hoggrng Ph 446 0051
28 0 ff

ARE YOU RE~DY?

" SAND BUGGY"
Sharp, low mtles, local
beauttful maroon finish .

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sapt 22) Th tS

Sm rth , 24 hr
wrec k er
serv 1ce P11 245 5034 or 446
9311
263 If

88

69 VOLKSWAQEN

73 GRAN TORINO

IS not a day to stay home and
stare at fou r wall s Ge t 1n touch
w1th people you like Ge nerat~
somethmg exctt mg

25 A CRES Nrce sma ll
fa rm wt th two be droom
m obile home large barn ,
tob acco base located 5 m des
f ror:n town rn c rty sc hool
d•str ct

We~erholl 446·,t24~

CLEAN CARSI

4 dr sedan, blue w1th while roof,
auto , F' S , P B , sharp car local
m1i es

Square Ba ck, sharp, low mil eage.
bi ue 1n color

be lots of act1vrty aro und your
house It wi ll be ac tron you re
co mfortable with and personal
ty en)oy

Paul

2 ACRES - Good bu 1ld.ng
sr t e rn cr t y school d 1st r1 ct on
Rt /75 lUSt o ff Rt 141

Eventn•s Call
John M. Fuller 446-43'17 •
l ee Johnson 256·6740

69 CHEV. IMPALA

73 VOLKSWAGEN

Importa nt goals w11i be achr eved this year and your standmg
1n the eyes of others will be
enhanced Your lrnanc 1a1
prospects also look favorable
- stay on ta rget

11 1 ACRES - Good barn o ld
house
n1ce l and rn t he
country
PO SSib l e
la n d
contracl to quallfr~d buyer

ACRES E x tra nrce
farm wrth a good thr ee
bedroom home l arge bqrn ,
1950 pounds tobacco base
n rce pond Can be bought
w1th or wtfhout c attle and
•eQUipm ent
Cal ' for more
r.. formill ron

want on the car You want

LOW MILEAGE

Feb. 2, 1975

i l i Wr s~~a n 446- 31 ! t
E . N_ Wrseman, 446·4500
Bud McGhee, 446 - 12~ 5

•

Daug wetherholt.
452 SecondTvtnue
Gamaolls, Ohla 4S4ll
LOVELY RANCH HOME
You wtll like the three large
bed rooms . fdm 1ly room . wrfe
approved k 1t c h en , Jlh bath s,
l rvrng room W1 fh fireplace ,
basement
large t wo car
garage wtth etect r 1c eye
Nt ce Je¥el lo t on Rt 35

GEMINI (May 21·June 20)

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct, 23) Con

MODERN HOME 50 AC. - Neariy new 3 bedr oom home
with 21n baths , famtl y a nd drnrng roo m s W B firep l ac e,

] bedroom home on Bulav tll e
Road c rt y water . gas and
se wer large tot. stove and
r cfrrgerato r 1nc lu ded In t~ e
Gal l rpol s s chool drstrlc
prrced $12 500
A n 1ce 111re e bed r oom home .
good ha r dwood floors . l arge
ex t ra nr ce krtchen cab rn ets,
ut l lrty room
g as fu rn ace .
bath
s mall . b ase m e nt
walk ng d ts tan ce to school
lot 42 x 14 2. w 111 se l l on l and
contract wr th a r easona bl e
down payme nt $15,500

You II be lucky today 1n
s rt uat1ons tt1at ca l l to r
teamwork Your part ner w1ll
ba c k stop anythmg slrpp1ng
pas t you

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) The'e II

153 Ac w1 th home and la rge barn Hou se IS under rep a tr at

446-1066

1974 OLDS 98
REGENCY 4 DR DT
Automatic, air. power everything,
AM - FM tap e Compare new ,
$8500 .00

t1as oeen a trytng week You re
ent1lled to relax and let yo ursell
go Arra ng e som eth rng th at s
fun wrth a few fn e nd s

dose to Thurman

REALTOR

10 &amp;ellhe Deal

ARIES (March, 21 -Aprll 19)
Persons wrlh wt1 om yol.t t1ave
strong e motronal tres are most
anxrous now to appease your
rn terests and al ms

CANCER (June 21-July 22) 11

150 Ac good older home w tth bath and ce ntral h eat, 35 A
bottom , 50 A f1llabl e, 75 A pa sture Good set of bu1ldrngs,

-- ~ ·

Plumbmg &amp; Heating

235

LI M E!,lO NE tor dr•vcw., ys
CMI Wmters Phon co 2H Sll5

MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILAHLE
1s the t 1m e t o buy Prrces are Iow er now because
nter

140 Ac w 1t h ol d house m need of co mple te remodelu~.9 10b
Pe r fec t for summer home or sportsmen Good t 1mber
covers most of the gently ro lli ng toh1l l land

WOOD,

Doug

..-=-7~ -;,~ -cHROME Steel
D rsh . s.lolted wheels comf?lele
Wttl'l hub covers and lug nuts
Ne¥er b~en used S100 Ph
245 5308

good cond • t ully equ1pped -,- . ,;- J\;obr l l' Ho mL' One mrle
Call 5 30 p m -146 3921
from !losp l lal Adults Ph ~.:t6
25 3
Jao5
261 II

....... - -- -- ~----

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

81f

.......,

163

-~

LOT S f01 sale m CtiY and
Country a l so Busrness S1tes
Robert A Quen Phone 4.:16
0108

__ ______________llf
--------1974~GRANo
PRIX Pont1ac .

KI TCHEN t a bli! w tth 4 charrs
red form rca top S30 Ca ll 446
0822

RUSSEll ~

IROIC.RS
Otcar Bllrd, Joftn FYIItr,

Sam Neal , 446-7358

3 Truck load s of U sed
Fur mtu re We ha ve co uc hes,
cha rrs , bed s, m attresses &amp;
bo x
spnngs ,
washers ,
dryer s.
refngerators ,
sto¥es All at low pnces

1968
1966
19 70
1Y7J
1965
1969
1¥71

WORLD 'S LARGE ST
TH E L EA DER SINCE IVOO
IN
SERVING
TH E
N A TION S BUYERS AND
SELLERS
Ph 446 00 08

For Sun&lt;loy , Feb. 2, 1975

TAURUS (April 20-Moy . 20)

US JS _ 10 A app rOK I 850
It rd l r on1ag e all u t rlrtr cs
a v a rl ab le
Buy and sub
d rvrde

IS A fa r m 5 rm house w 1th
bath rura l water. located 5
m1 fr om town on blac ktop
r oa d

GRAVEL
lnl1estone
sa11d
Mason sand . f il l drrl Pr t run
De l tvered by th e !on J J 6 1 1 J ~
147 If

PARSON'S
FURNITURE

AGEN(;Y

I NEXPENS I VE COUNTRY
LIVING - 5 r m s and bath
cellar sma ll barn shop and
2 ac re s. ncar vmt on \10 500

NEAL REALTY

4637 , 4460013

NAQMI ' s Wtg Sl\" lrng
Sell
and style all tash ro ns Wtgs
w 1g1ets fall s · Pho ne 388 8308
286 It

For Sale

'

BRICK &amp; FRAME - Ranc h
s tyle J B R . 2 ba th s w w
Cclrpet nrce family r oom
e&lt;~ t rn krt chen utdrty r oom
g.=rraye , a ll e lec trrc , 1 1 acre
lot S2d 500
WANTED
GOOD LISTIN GS
Now rs tt1 e li me to get you r
property on t he market l or
lh.:r t cu r ly sule LI ST TODAY
- I T WILL PAY

Where Ga llipo lis Chrtsttan
Chu r ch m ee t s
For 1n
form a Iron ca ll 446 3230 . 446

171

SEE

P m

2 ACRES
Ret1rement
t10me 3 BR &amp; bath formal
OR yarilge ba rn &amp; chrcken
house
located at Ce n
terpom I

FOR SA LE

LARGE , beaulllul burldmg lol
In Pl antz Subd rvrs1on with
utrlt ti es Wrll se l l on l and
contract or take aucl ron Ci!ll
44 6 2917
2l 26

__________ ___ _

1962 BUICK Electra , good
conditton , See Mr Sh aw ,
ups(arrs 919 2nd Ave. 10 a m
to o4 p m

1967 GMC I~ T PICkUp v 6
standard sh1ft Ph 256 6812
17 3

173

17 If

H2 ACRES
One story
remodel ed hom e m good
co nd rlro n 2 barns J 000 l b
toba cco base JO A ltllable
balan ce m tr mber &amp; pastur e
Jus! 12 m• from c rly

Old Warner Pro perly

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

Nl t. E 1rtuler space t:~ l Rodn ey
Otlro F ree rent l rl Feb l Ph
-1..16 343&lt;1 or., 446 43:l7

__.__

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

A N T I QUE chma cabrnet
245 50.SO

367-7250

SLEEPING rooms
rat e Gall•a H(ltel

--

27]

HA NN AHS husband Hecto r
hate5 hard work so he c l erw s
the r ugs With Bl ue Lustre
R ent e leclrrc st1 ampooer $1
Central Supply
176

---------Auto SaleS

--~ ---

'

REALTY

,..our Ttre and n,1tt cry
n ee d s COrn e t o S~: nr s Trre
Shop rn lhe Silv er Br td qP
Pl .l lil
?36 I I

Galltpoll s, Ohoo

446 . 1111

•

Mowrey's Uph o lslery
~
Ptmt Pl easa nt. w V:a
67 5 41S4
1-tf

m

IJJilJllllWIL

FOR

Mallr ess &amp; Bo,.; Spnngs
starting at S4S 00 each
Corbtn Snyder Furn Co
955 Second Ave

WISEMAN

beau t1tu l built m kitc h en a nd 1s all c lea n

Willis T. Leadingham

· un•~ lllOX sPRiht

5 tf

AD DI SON TWP
New
sec trona! hom e rs all e l ec lrr c
for yo ur convPnren ce and
co mfort
Fea tur es J BRs
b~ t h
shag l a rp e l krlchen
wdh
r r1n ge
hood
and
r e l r rcte rat or S 1Uated on a
larq e t lat to t on a BT r d

RANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

FILE S cabr ne ts
hi ng sup
pl 1es desks o flt c e charrs
S1 mmons. Pt g &amp; Off ce Eo u1p
306 If

PERFECT
SLEEPER

~00

R EMODELE D 2 STORY Thts lov ely home Is located
rn A dd rso n T wp nnd offers
lots of good 1 vrng for on l y
!.?3 ~i'OO Some fea t ures are
new alum rnum ~ 1 dmg , storm
w ndow s natural ga!&gt; heal
n ew factory k•l chen wrth
t ,lbrncls ranq~ d shwashc r
and r c t rrgerator
lormal
d •nrn q rm
and a lmos t 1
a cH s c lose to town

1- - - - - -

For Sale

~886

VICE!'

all k1nds of typmg
home catt 446 4999

1. 15

4·16 7699

Home Ph .

on ly

O WNER
WILL
H ELP
FINANCE - Mode rn hom e
o il e r s
~
rms
bath
bc1 semen t and over 1 acr e of
rollrnq l an d_ Just l rs t ed

BRAND new nev er used Ford
515 mower Extra blade belt
dr rven S6 75 Cal l 146 1806 after
5
May be se l:!n at
PI
Pl ea sant
13 5

O N E :t BR tr a il er
N ergh
borhood Rd, one 2 BR l rur lcr
a1' Gtt ll iPO I s F erry
Phon e
675 161!6
19 If

"'

R~ m tno ton .

Ph

Ph.

un 15
over
QOOd

MAKE SUR E YVU SEE
THI S O NE Lrke new lr
k•vel offers '} 800 sq II of
l rvrnq spa ce plu s a '1 car
qaraq e O ther f ea tu res are 4
BRs 2 1 baths sunken LR
dream ktl c hen f am rly rm
Wtl h W B f1rep 1ace cen t a rr
pat ro and larq e l ot Lo cat ed
rn on e of th e areas n tce r
subdrvr s ron s

..

CORB I N SNYDER
FURN CO
BREAKFA ST set and I c ha rrs
har vest gold. el cc
range
couc l1 and charr 3 pc ena
table set a r e f r~qcra t or like
new harvest go ld
95S Seco nd Ave , 446 117 1

J TRAILER S N etql'lbor hood
Rd one at Galllpo l rs Fe rry

like to H'tk.e th rs op

ooieR work

7.t T RAC TO R
Intern eurona l
14 0 w1th ag !Ires used only
JO hour s Accessor1 cs, 3 pt
h rt ch draw bar comb mat ron
hn 1~ h ho(l and mower , 7 fl
blad e, peg harrow ilnd drsc A
$4 500 va l ue now for $3 50 0
Pr' ~ .I S 5200 b elween t and 10
rn cvE• nm gs Can be tman ced
21 Jl c

BR Houselrall er rn Mer
c ervllle Oh10 P11 25 6 127 1

--i---- ---------Card of Thanks

--.-....,....---'
Lost

I Dai~:~~.~:ne

n

P A RK

1.39 'i OO

? I If

lN ., LOV IN G memor y of Bar
t!llra Cheval\er Willtilms who
died F cb 3, 19 71
W e. Wtll always remember the
way she looked ,
The way she spok.e and smrled
TM little th ing s she sard and

~ULD

·Gallipolis

17 1t

In MemoF'I

Are w rth us all the while
..Sil dl y missed by Dad
~o th e r. SISter and bro lh ~~s

6 for $1.00

--'T~-

17

........

20t

1

work , dump truck &amp; septrc
tlnk rnslalled Al50 ccal for
sale, S2 0 per ton dehvered .

SWEEPER

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY US ES

H O ME

Ch cs h rrl wrlh 6 rf' nt a l
hilS renr po l enr ra l of
S/ 00 per monlh
f.•
ITJOn '? y
m .=rfo.. L r to r

l ot

subdrvr s on
approx
m+ICS lrom Ga llipOli S
qood
road
Ulrlr
ava fa ble Ca ll now
GO OO " OLD STYL E "
1 STORY HOM E
on Sta t e Rt 7 north
G olllrpol rs P len t y of room
G as lurnil cc On l evel lot
On ly S I B 500 00
VACANT LO T
ST A T E RT 1
Close to Ga l l tp o l rs
leve l
and crea n
HOU SE TRA IL ER ON
LOT 100'x120'
1e11el lo t All
2 Bedroom
lor on I y S6500 00
MUST SELL
G IV E US AN OFFER
11 Room s mode rn spill
lev el home 2 t rr epla ces
famr l y roo m ? both s '1 CM
garag e ba semen t I
pl us n rce landsc ap ed yard
wrth l ot s of shrub bery
Goo d bla c k top road
mil es lrom Ga l trpotrs I
of
room
for
lot s
wrth
po ss tbr lll• es
tlorn e
180 ACRES
VACANT LAND
App r ox 7.5 ac res c l
lo ts of woods t rn e
Cheshrr e Townshtp
S160 oo per acre
3BEOROOM
1 YR O LO HOUSE
23 , A cres cl ean level l and
6 room s plu s n 1ce ba th
mod er n krt c hen ca rpetrng
plenty of good water Ld(,e
to fish ? C lose to Tycoon
Lake
sc r eened rn front
porctl Jus t a r ea l nrce new
counlry home or1 clean
leve l land Only 5 15,500 00
25 ACRES
3 b edrooms
6 Room s
ba t h e tec trr c sto11e ref
alum Srd rn g. 5
furnrlun· go es, s totca&lt;J&lt;
-"bu rl dmg
c h1 c k c n hou
cellar . 10 ac r es can
cu lt 111 ated
1 acr es
t1mber
11 acre
On l y $2 1 900 00

Ph 446-3345

V ne

r.,.,OBILE

BUILDERS SPECIA L
15 Vi! Cilnl l O I S t il Cl pl 31

Pure bred btJIL 8 mo .
old. papers available.

B E DR OOM mobrle ll o ne r1
Ga l l rpoi 1S Cil ll 6/S 1000
?66

uctron

l&lt;~rq P

CHAROLAIS

prt '.'&lt;l t e
dC[C'
lo t' Ten tllirlU tl'S fr om town
P t1o ne ti t:&gt; 7bJ1
?63

l 9 10, B R t r a l c r

NEAR

OJ WHITER D
lrke new
nrr ck and f r ame r an c h offer s
1 l rHCJ t' BR &lt;:. ') hillhS t'a cro ry
k.rl l h Cn torrni'll d nrnq r m
1/JW c .1rp 1 1 q,lr,HI'
patro
l n(j t.'lrqc Hill lot

WILL TAKE TRAD E IN
'LATE MO DEL CAR
OR PICKUP
6 Roo rll llom c ? o;tnry c. rly
walcr
woo d bu rn +ng
lrr e pl,1 ce lo c alcd or1 a

FOR SALE

l +bOy H olt I

w

••

rt

rii RM
13

ac re s ot
c l ean rol l rnCI lan d
pont1
l arqe QardL•n 'i pct cc 1 ba rn s
5 rm s anU
ce llar hou se
billh ~ 16 'lOO

Gallrpolis, Ohio

"'

I 1!'1

PJ\AY
V INT ON

Real Estate Broker
512 Second Avenue

I I(. I O'I H

l/1 I I

Lane 's

16

llti IJJfB

76 3

1Qr.rl(0f.(V E I I I:
liN I

TEAFORD Sr.

tr ,wC'I lrrt l er
w.r11 1\d ch .t n ct illl

H O I t ()I\Y

NOW IS THE TIME

THE

Virgil B.

~

'"

1/ If

liJI

h ob

28

( ll l 111'1 110\,ll lc r

ld,l'n o w

STR,QUl REALTY .

Real Estate For Sate

n1ss qur t ar

~:l~: c rro c

mel c u!&gt;l om e lccl r c dmplilr cr

'J.lllOmo nll l

I V. OIJIOJ.lh'
l It&gt; ll l HI

f-'1 1•

CLEARAN CE CARNIVAL IS
' f'IOW on
at CorrH'r Crafts
Vergre Rob ert s
·~

1 cr.. DE R

MOAIL E H C
\IIll +n G,lll+pOI+S. I1J'

______ _______ _

-----------.-.--ORAFTlNG SERVlCE

Martha M MacKenzie
President of the
Board of Trustees
Gall Ia County
District Library
26

DESIGNER - Draftsmen will
do Topo sit•, remodeling.....
commercial.
or
rttw
resldtntlat plans lS years
experience in clvU and lr C t'\lt~ctural. Ph 1 682 7,.98 ..-~...........&lt;- -- -----t- ..J..--__.__

285 If
__

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Services Offered
CUSTOM

REMODELING , 20

years

..

'""

experience, 388 8308
New dry wall ceiling w rth
swtrl or texture de s ig n s
Other dry wall , repair , vin y l "'
wallpapering , new baths , new
kitchens
Anything
fn
remodeling or r epa rr

lllf
FRENCH CITY BLO(iK , .4 46
3608 , locl! ted at Kerr Beltrel
Kemper Hollow rnt er sec l ton
150 tf

....·''

Cam ping Equipment
1

VACATION over , ~Open Jan.. 16
Don't miss our w i nter price on
Starcraft folddown :itarcraft
Trlh•et trailers arr1ving F ~b

1'

~

t '

Camp Con.ley St1rcr1ft Salts
Rt. 62 N . of Pt. Pte111nl
8ehlnd lied C1rpe1 tnn.

...
-------

'

)

27-11

~"

...

�.. • ...

•

''

1

~

'

'

I-

I '

'

~-p~; ·p~;'tR~sults Use The Sund;Jy_T
_i_m_es-S~_
nt_inel Classifieds
lrotice

For Sale

For Rent

~U SS'S

GLA~ S

SE RVICE
' term w t ndow&lt;&gt; rt'p i\trted
.. l £' ,uglils s
C\Uhl
Ql ~ s.s
!l. tnlrrOrS C1CCOI i\ 101 ol !ld LUI 10
• StlC .lJS St•c Avt'
M r osc;
troll) IIH' P 0 trl GC\IIri:'OitS
~ Pn J...\6 763?
nJ 18

.

?0 I f

~·

or

on .~

IQ

r omplr-T•

tol,l l ('i('c trr &lt;.. '
lh' &lt;l r oon r '100
l l)ed r oorn
"i l~
Pl +orH r1r-lllf'l or 116
1'-' 1 I

Al(lfHl E nome

ol CC CSSOI of' S

(,m IJ(' Sl'Ct1 ,ll

( l' lllr rll /IV(

0 1 ph

l i ~NI'IH

'!&gt; I ·~

l il t( +\

ll

pt r

11 o

1 ll'o 1! p (1 1

tHY

Pll

I JI

Ph '

I~p

Compll2te
Soo kke~p mg &amp; Tax Serv1ce
8usrne ss by apporrltm e nt
f: hon e H6 7900 Sec Bob for
our bookkceprng and tncomc
t •)C needs
45 71 1 Second
Avenue ( i\cross from Post
Olf rce} Gall rpol! s 0 ~5 631

l

' f&gt; I

SL EEPIN G r oorn'&gt; W! lk.ly r,IIP
J "

AUCTION SAL E f'vt&gt;ry F r rday
'""' t-.Jht al 7 at 715 N Sec ond
T ne
vollagc
rddleport
18 t I

TW O WJ\Y R&lt;lOIOS S il i CS &amp;
ServiCe N e ~tv &amp; USNI (IJ S
p olrcc rnonr l ors &lt;~n lennd s
'""'et c Ool.l s Cilrl t'n P,and f.'i+drO
Eou p
G&lt;'orQes Crrek. Rd
"*riilllrpolrs Otl •O 116 1~1!
!,.
'l I? 1 f

HI

1 RO O M :&gt; nnd b&lt;'l!tl
S t n•e 1

'} 6 t!

'300

J ROOM furn 1sned ap&lt;1rtrncnt rn
CitY tJ6 110 3 or .Ub 1.Sl2
?5 3

For Sale

I R O OM furni ShCd apMim enl
Phon e 116 ?58 9

15)

'* For Many Ha pp y Return s
:":'
See

WIL SO N RU SK
Cerlrfr ed
In come Tax Agent
Phon e 446 2476
House Calls Made

•

!';
...

2

liR MO B I L E
Creek 1-15 50'} 1

36"x23 "x.009

m ti CS

MOBILE HOME
'} '
from to wn ~...\6 OJ YO

Aluminum
Sheets

713

!1 Ofl1 C

] I If

D. EA D stock re mov e d
,ctlar ge Cal l :! 11551-1

No
?07 If

~

~

Matthews Excavating

~

p ozer, loader

backhoe

&amp;

,_1'11
;..."_·3_67-·0_3_37_._ _ _~--:-"'~

Se wmg

and

Machm e Rcparr , Parts and
S"'i,lpplie ~
P 1c k up
and
ae l rve ry
Dt'lvr Vacuum
CI C&gt;aner . '· mile up Georges
rreek. Road Ph JJ6 0?94
lit
12 ,,

"

1-- ---

...
FREE BOOK
'"
TELL SST ORY
ArtiN TERESTING book called
lne Mastery of L rfe wrll be
!H!nt to you w1thout ob l 1ga t lon
Tfirs book wdt tell you how
Ybu mitY recer ve the un1Que
lios1cruc•an method fer sel l
en foldmcnt rn the pr1vacv o f

your nom e

Addr ess

Scnbe

~
_ __________ _

IN CHE SHIRE ? BR Mc b le
Home 50:.:. I? .waila t.Jie reb 15
c !'ln see between 8 a rn •I p rn
or on weekends S 146 15 pe r
rno rncludcs gilrbage or gas
Pay own el ec tn c Ca ll 367
7645
24-6

Rostcrucran
Order
ORC . San Jose
Calif
9.-5 14

2 BR tr&amp;• ler 211 mrleS'· fr om
hosp rtal Children a cce pted
Ulil111 es paid for $ I dO per rno
or pay own utrl l l teS for 595
Ph 440 0 157
17 3
--- ---

2

----

&lt;\!d,

273
OFF ICE space ground flo or
Approx 200 sq f! Upper Rt
7 Ph 24 5 5050
?13
5 RM turn apt S\ 50 J rm furr t
apt S 110 11 crly Wrth d coos1t
and
r ef e rcr1 ce
Floyd
Srmmons . Jr ,146 1397 or 446
0952
271f

5 RM ap t 431 Seco nd Ave $100
Ph 446 ]4 J.t or 4J6 1615 or ~46
12J)

1

por tun1ty to thank al l our
friends an d nerghbors for
r~etr k i ndn ess
whlle my
h,USband was rn the hosprlrtl
r ecently A spec1al tha n ks to
McCoy Moor&amp; Ambulance
sr r vlce , to Or Harder Dr
c"far ke and al l the nurses ond
tud es on fourth floor at Holzer
Hosp 1tal and to the m m1 ster s
who ¥1S rled Charley and ot
tl!'t-ed co nsol rng woras We
a~so apprecrated the lovely
cards . flowe r s . the ¥rs1 tor s
il rtd t elephone calls We ere
very
mu c h
rndebted l o
everyone who offe r ed a
prayer 1n our behalf Mily God
bless each o f you
,
Venn•e cas te

FUR N apl J rm and ba th
cent r i'l ll y l ocated , co rner of
Cou rt and Sec on C1 S125 Ph
446 1615 or 446 1243
27 If

•

GAUGE
Sho tg un ,
automa t ic , lost
belween Keystone Road and
Plfle Grove Church Road
F r rday n1Qhl 388 SH6
_ _ L._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _25 3

'

A TANN I SH yellow and Willie
dog on Eas t ern Ave Reward
S59 Call J.a6 1215 or A-46 0986
216

Wanted To Rent
WANTED TO RENT Fur
n~hed sl eep ing room or ef
f1~1 e ncy
apartmenl
w rth
c aokrng
la c lrt1es
rn
Gal lipOliS SSO S70 range W II
need Feb 14 Call 4J 6 Q58b
after 5 p m
24 1f
- - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

Wanted To Do

_ ____________ _
___,.._

38 8 991&lt;1

27 6

FU RNITUR-E ..
UPHOLSTER lNG
Specral
prrces now through Feb ruar y
197S F ree est i mat es P1Ck up
and del1very
Prom pt Ser

with built on room

Ph

67 5

Quail Creek
Mobile Commumty
&amp;Sales
contact N ewt Jon e~
Rodn ey Cora Rd
Rodne y. OhiO
P h .145· 9314- 24S 5021

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

CUS:rOM ~e wm g , allera11ons on
all types of cloth ing , l urs
ReWeavrng . P h 446 7570 or
.444 1771

?,'\ II

--1-------- - --- TYPI..NG SE RVICES Wrl l do
my

H o l slern s pr1nge r
$60 0 Ph 4J6 ~ 053

W e rent m obil e hom e l ots .
n ot lust a palc e to p ark v ou r
home W e ha ve m o r e to off er
than anv mobil e commun1ty
i n so uth eastern Oh iO

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1'12 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison , Ohio
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

Z54 If

25 L ocus t Sf
Howa r d Brannon , BrGk er
OH 446 -2674
Lu crlle Brannon
E'lle 44 6 1226 or il 46 2674

DOWNTOWN
J AR
t
bath w w carpet downsta rr s
n1 c e krtchen
formal DR
sp a c rou s fam 11y R den
nrnple c losel s n ew fu r n~ce
&amp; roo f stone &amp; brtck pa t10
alumrnum s rdr"g deep lot
Ca l l now to see lhrs hom e
BR t CK -- Near new hosprtal
large we l l lnndscdped lol , 3
BR 1 , bath a k rl chen to be
proud of wrth a ll the bud!
ms
w w
c arpet
fu l l
frnrshed 7 car
busement
garage nrce &amp; prrvate QUI Ck
possess ron

2 NEW BRICK &amp; FRAME
H OMES Al l ele c lrr c w w
carpe t 3 BR II ba th , large
e~1 t n k•t c hen s $~9 500

4 46 953 9

STA N DIN G
8490
-·~--

SL EEP I NG ROOMS
w eekly
rates PMk. Cen tral Hot el
) 06 If
weekly

157 If
LARGE t r~rler space on Rt J5 ,
one mrl e from hOSP i tal ~ 10

3805

'JlJ II

197 tf
SL EEPING room Rang e and
refrtgeralor 550 per mo
Utrlllles pard One person
446 J.&lt;l1 t after 2 p m
~--- ---- -------

B.RADSU.RY Sr"''all frrst floor
efflc1Cncy
apartment
Ut rl tl!es pa 1d Av~Hiable by
the J.th One ad ult no pets
Anyone mteres t ed contact
earl)' .
0957 729 Second

t956FORO 2 T Wtth cattle rack
$475, frontend loader $375
~ &lt;146 487 1
\Iff

·F- URNIS H ED apartment 3 rm
with pnvate bath al 845
Second Ca l l .446 21 15
24 If

Ave

UNFURNISHED 2 BR house
rn town f enced m yard ;! 0 ~ &gt;
pay utrlrtres, 5110 permo .,..a
.t46' 2A1S a fl er 6 P _..
m
74 6

---r.------------ __________
256

23 t1

____

TRAILER . loc ated 1 block fram
ce nJer of m.;.rn part of town ,
adu lts only Ph 4.46 4671 after
6 p m
24 12

Wanted To Buy
GENERATOR for Renault 10
Ph on e 388 8610 or 388 8502
..........
74tf

_______ _______

JUNK auto an d scrap metal
Phone 388 8776
24 12

- -

trmber

Ph

- -- - -

Ci!ll

388

our l argt;- Scle c t .o n ot
dramo r1d s.
and
wat c lll'S
Comp,1 r e our pr rces T a w tH'Y
Jew e ler s
'218 If

O HIO ST OK ER

W Vii lum p
f rr ewood Bloc ks It]('
Cl?ment mortar GatlrpQ IIS
Block Co Ph ~~6 2!83
793 !I
co ~l

513 Magnoha Dr

GOOD ctean lump nnd stok er
coal
Carl W1111~rs
R oo
Grande Ph 'l ~'i 5115
2-15 If
ALL
TYPE S ot
bu rl d rng
mat Nr als bloc k brrck sewer
P•Pl?S , w rndows lrntels . etc
Claude Wr nl ers R ro Grande
0 Phon e 2J5 51'2 1 aft er 5
I 23 It
19 70 DODGE PU ,
ton good
ccnd t1on Call 256 1737 alter 6
1•

25 3

--uve ONFERTILizER-

Agrrco . prem 1um ler t rllze r
Or d er s are now be rng Taken
for February delivery Call
Tom Jones , Thurman , Ohro
2a6 2394 co l lect afle-r 6 P m
25]

256
--i962CH"EvY~ckupf; sale or
w 11 trade for c.ar of same
v~ lu e Phone .:tJ6 0519
25 3

OffiCe Ph 446· 1694
Even1ngs
Charles M Ne al , 446 1546
J Mtchael Nea l , 446 1503

Just Arrived

J BR home m

Kanaug a all
c arpeted wrth some pa n elrng ,
k1tchen rncludes r efrig era tor
and new elec tr rc range ,
fenced rn yard ...\...\6 2539
21 12

NEW 3 bedroom brrck . Lake
Orrve
Subdlvt son ,
Rro
Grande. OhiO, 7 pet to~n
a'llat labl e- Prr c:e upper $J O s.
P h
24S
S439

Ph 446

1415 Ea st er n Ave

25 tf

"'1-;;;;~;i;d~ 1
bedr tom t1ome wr th o4 62
acres . close to town Ca ll 446
2890
25 3

9230

1 ~6 8

1 ~68

l

1q11
1Q]J

CoMPLETEL

N ew GMC
Truck H ea dqu ar t er s
1, T GMC Pr c kup
I I T
GMC
J ~ T Chev
Prckup
11 T
Chev Prckup
1
T GMC Prckup
1 1 T GMC Prckup
' • T F ord P ICkUP
I T GMC Prckup
•, T GMC P• c k up
1 1 T G MC P1cku p
CMC S.ubu rba n
• T GMC Ptckup
SOM MERS G M C
TRUCKS , INC
13SP rn e St
446 'lS32

- -

~ 47 tf

!'lEW 3 BR home 2 comp le te
balhrooms. a ll c.:,rpeted
Complete bur It tn k1tchen W1th
stove and re!rrg Good buv 3
rntles from City on Geor ge-s
Creek Rd call 446 9322 after
5 Call 446 1&lt;~26
246
-~-- - --- - - - ---

GRAVELY Tractor Pre Season
Spe cral
Pu r chase any new
Gra¥ely con..-e rt rble tra c tor
at regu l ar 11s1o pr.ce and we
w tl l grve you a new 30 •n
rotary mower at tachment.
lr ee
No trade m a nd no
d eli very on th rs offer Good
tl'lrouQt'r F eb s. 1975 Grav ely
T racto r Sale s
Pomer oy,
Oh iO Ph til &lt;I 99 2 2975
23 6

FOR SALE OR TRADE
By Own er, 4 bedroom newly
remode led ho m e on L ow er
Sec ond
Ave
Can
h elp
fmance PhDne 446 1079 446
1854 after 5 p m

-----

GENE PLANT S &amp; SON
PLU MBING ~ Heat rng - A rr
Cond 1 ~ 1 onmg , 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637
tf
48

---------

AICe-'~S-N-; W

&amp; useD FURN
NEW 5 PC MAPLE FINISH
ALL WOOD DIN.ETTE SETS
st29H REG '-1499S
854 Sec , 446 n2l
23 If

STANDARD
Plum b1ng H ea ttng
214 Thrrd Ave . 446-3782
187 If

----~---·-----~-----

AU L T S Mob•le Home Serv rc e
Sk rrt rng root co at rng, pat ros ,
awnmgs , anchors . C('ment
wor k Free est•mates Call
446 2950 after 4 30 p m

?J5 1I

u

-·

t IJ ' t ten et pa~d s

6J I 1

Cal l 156
297 If
l'

Now
sel ler s don't wan t to carry the house through th e w r
Most will con s1der offers now tha t wou ldn ' t m the 5 P~~~~r
if you have a permanent 10b don ' t pay r e nt any t~ader
than absolutely necessary a nd before you bu y a
com ]')are 1t to ow mng.:_ home
$29,900

1

To hear some roos t ers crow
vo u d lhmk the sun was
r srn g espec •a lly for th em
Start at the bottom . bu t don I
stay th er e

On e family dwe l lrng f rame
on Eastern Avenue three
be d r ooms
front
r oo m
k. !chen awnrng and garage
pr rced at $13 900
Two story ho.use on Sec on d
Avenue 3 bedrooms up and 3
rooms down tn good con
dr t ron wtlh a dtorn•ng J room
apartmen t w rlh prt vate
entrance $27 500
512 fourth Aven ue f1 ve
room
one s tory
frame
clw e llm g ne eds remodel m g
la r ge lot and gara ge 512.000

Buy Now and Save
l f yo u had bought a home like th iS 5 yrs ago you paul~
have sa ved s7 .ooo oo on t h e purcl" ase pn ce above t on
owne r must se ll th 1s attra c rveh 3
loose a ny more bedroom home w1 fh beauti fu l bu t II m kttchen, 2 ~I ~~
larg e fam1 ly room , 2 ca r garage excel le nt ne rghbor oo

Farms and Bare (Bear) Land

Rodney V~l l age II
ap
rox rmately te n h o uses
~variab l e $532 down wrlh th e
balance p a td over a 33 yea r
pcnod All th r ee bedroom
ho mes
ca r peted
garag e.
etect r c heat

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AN 0 HEATING
cor Fourth &amp; P1n e
Phon e 44 6 3888 or 446· 4477
165 tf
'~"

RUSSELL ' S
PLUMBI NG &amp; ~EATING
r..illhpolrs , 446
'"'[

478~

297 tf

DEWITT' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING •
. Raule 160 o.t Evergreen
Phon e 446 2135
18 7 If

pr esent New msu lat1on r oof, bath etc Excellent flat crop
land , pl enty of pas t ur e and bal an ce 1n ltmber $45,000
•nc ludes machinery and a good buy at that. Fina ncmg
ava ilab le

HOME &amp; BUSINESS SITE
P11 story 3 BR f ra m e hom e w tth 24x26 basem ent, loca ted
on 1 25 acres, 310' frontage on US 35, 4 lane h 1ghway and
176' frontage on County Road .deal spot fo r motel, serv tce
statron , or merca ntt le building Only $27 ,000

152

WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE
ACRE Farm wtth an ol d dwell ing and barn , 70x l4 3 BR

mob1le home w it h 18xl4 ilv mg room w 1th woodburnmg
fireplace and real n1 ce kr tchen Tobac co base and 60 acres
til la ble land Prr ced at $28.000
YOU CAN AFFORD THIS
Assume present 7 12 Pet
l oan Mo nthl y payment
$1B5 00 , lovely J bedroom
home
wrt h
ca r pet rng
th roug hout , huge bullf m
Krtchen, central a rr
J1 1
y r s Qld

AS LITTLE A"S $1,250 00
DOWN - You bec ome the
owner of lhrs n1c e we l l
3 bedroom hom e
bu rtt
In c lud es drnrng and famr ly
rooms Prrce .s $25 ,9() 0 See
11 tod ay

Gall .a Co.'s Larg es t Rear
E state Sales Agency
Oflrce 446-3643
Evenrngs Call

There are thrngs you can do 1t
yo u re mdustnous enough tha t
wri t save you money ta ter on
Get out the repcur krt Go to
work

VOLKSWAGEN

GASOLINE IS GOIN~
UP • UP • UP • UP
AND

RATIONING MAY BE
ON IT'S WAY.
(Rationing
printed)

coupons have already

been

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

BY OWNER 7 A land 6 rm
house , 3 bedrooms , bath ,
modern ktfchen , wall to wall
carpettng
Call :256 6540
7
m tie s below GallipoliS · on
Route 7
236

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) You wtll not1ce tod ay that
those In yo ur peer group Will
look to you for leaders hi p
Assert yo urse lf 1f you fee l rt s
necessary

71 FORD LTD

73 DODGE % TON

Yo u re extremely competent
today tn helptng others sort out
the rr mudd les The advrce
you II offer rs sound an d l arsee•ng

EXCELLENT
SELECTION
OF

ELECTRICAL
servrce.
remodel rng
gutter work
Free estimates Call 446 2582
after 5 P m
tf
304

&amp;

- KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OH 10

C'tJI~'"'

2 Dr . Hdtp., black on black with
bucket seats. air , AM-FM tape, P.
windows and seat, e'tclra sharp.

•4297

'4197

1974 CAMARO

1973 BUICK
ELECTRA CUSTOM
2 Dr. Hdtp., air, AM-FM-tape,
18,246 miles, p. windows. tilt
wheel. premium !Ires. Worth

3697

mo•.

1973 BUICK REGAL
2 Dr. Hdfp.. air, white with
burgundy vinyl fop, AM-FM. Low
miles. Worth more.

•3597

'3497

1974 BUICK
CENTURY 4 DR ·

1974 CHEVELLE

Air, new 75 Century trade. Was
$3795.00. Check this now.

2 Dr. Hdtp., air cond., General
Motors official's car. Two to
choose from. Check these.

'3397

'2997
1973 MAZDA
4 DR RX2

1973 BUICK
2 Dr. Hdtp., air, AM-FM. custom
vinyl Inferior.. This Is the least we
ever priced one of these.

LANDSCAPING
SHRUBS ,
TREES,
ROC K

GARDENS ,

Air cond., rotary engine. 18,000
miles, autom&lt;Jflc trans. Lot of car
here for the money.

36 MONTHS 'BANK &amp; GMAC

-----

HOL s TEiN-CoNCR ETE
all
typ es of co ncr ete work
footings , walls , co ncre te
flniShrng , ca rp e nt e r work
F ree estrmates Ph 367 0417
or .4.46 7795
276 80

-------------TERMITE PEST CONTROL

FREE 1nspectton Call 446 3245
Merrrll oDe l l . Operator by
Extermtnal Term1te Servrce
10 Belmont Or
267 tf

75 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
Services Offered
SA NDY AND
BEAVER In
surance Co
h as off ere d
serv 1ces for Fi r e Insurance
cove rag e rn Gal Ira County for
almos t a ce ntury
F a rm s.
ho mes
an d
pe r sonal
prop erty
c o ver ages are
avar l abl e to meet tn d rvrdual
ne eds
C on t.;tcl
Harry
P1tchford 1 your n erg h bor and
agent
2H

•

NOW YOU ·CAN BUY A DODGE DART
FOR $200 LESS THAN DEAL~RS COST!

ALBERT EHMAN
Wafer Oelrvery Servrce
Patnot Star , Gall•poh s

PU BLlC NOTICE
RESOLUTION

AMOUNT
MONEYS,

Ph lH-2 1l3
243 tf

POPES E l ec trr ca l Con l rac t tng
tndu strr at, commercral and
res1dentlal Ph da y Jaa 8747
or evenm gs , Jaa 8657
283 tf

Writes AI Types of Insurance For
Your Auto. Heme or Business
WeprU.nt
Llghtnlns Rod Mutual
Insurance Company
&amp;tow· tost Auto lnsurance--:-compate our rates
Polocy ,
r
.l.'ow CosI Homeowner
wners Pol1c y tor Rent ers
•Lbw Cost H~~
Complete Protect ton in One

w=~·Mot,ilec~omeowner

Poltcy

Bust ness

· par e our rates with your present
com
We know we can ,.......--save- -- - --money.
--

ALL DODGE DARTS IN STOCK ,
74 &amp; 75 MODElS - SPORTS, SWINGERS &amp; CUSTOMS

CLOSE-OUT - DEALERS COST
Now you can buy a Dodge Dart at dealers
cost and receive a 1200 rebate from the factory.
Good this week only - Offer ends
February 8, 1975

-

FOR

HURRY • FIRST COME BASIS

DON'T DELAYI

CARROLL NORRIS Qadg~
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

50 STATE STREET
Services Offered

Services Offered

Services Offered

PASQ UA L E Elec t nc al &amp; ln
TRl STA R
toJ c edar so '
sulatmg
Etectrrc Contractors
Garlltpo tl s. Afler 5 p m P h COM P L ETE electriC a l serv 1ce.
4.46 2116
Gal ftpol tS, Ot110 Ph 361 0311
20 If
~07 tf

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

- - --..---~-----

.-- --

I

'

......

-------

''

OF

6 cyl . engine. power steering, ii!Ufo,, radio,

beige finish with black vinyl inferior, w-s- w
miles. Like new cond .

County D1str~tt Library o f
tires. Less than 5,000
Ga llra County , Ohto , that on
estimate duly made moneys of
t he sa id Library , aggreg.at1ng a
ma xi mum
amount
of
SilO 000 00, sha ll be awarded n
mactlve deposits
Be It resolved, that the
rna c l!ve moneys of the Li br a ry
shall b e depos1ted .n a bank or
banks as pro vi ded by law , an(j
be rt furth er
R esolved, that the bank or
banks In Galtla County of fering
the highest rate of Interest per\
annum on rnacttve dep osits be
m ade
t he
depository
or •
depositor res of said Library for
a peri od of two years from the
EASTERN AVE,
11th day of Febru8ry , 1975 If,
however , no bank In the county
brds a sat i sfactory rate of In
ler es t per annUm on uJd
inactive deposit s, then th e bank
r .....:Aor banks conven iently located
..JC'I~
outstde the county bidding the ..LOGUE contracting , block and
highest rate of Interest per
br ic k
wor~
SpeCJIItY
annum on Inacti ve depos1ts,
frr• ptaces 388 9939
shall be made the depos itory of
•
20 12
said funds or sa1d library. _ __ - - - - - - - - - - - inte r es t on mactrve de-ooslts to PROTECT your mobl te home
be pa1d quarterly on the date of
with TIE DOWN ANCHORS
depositories . and be l t furthe:r
Call Ron Ski dmore , 4,.6 1756
Resolved , ttl at b ids will be
after 3 p m
r e ceived unt1! 5 00 PM of the
221 tf
1Hh day of February , 1915, and - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - that notice t o all banks U may THOMA S Fain Exter m 1nat1ng
be nec essary be Qtven b)(
co Termite and Pest Control ,
publi cation , as provid ed by law
WheelerSburg, Ohio
The L i brary reserves the rlgl'lt
' 23311
......_
to re lect any or aU bids and be
it further
GARAG E ; a ttic and basement
Resolved t hat the Board of
cleaning Trash hauling Free
Trustees of sa rd L tbrary shall
estimates . Ph 4&lt;~6 OJSS or "A6
meet at 1fS regular meetrng
2950
--~ 18 If
place on th e Hth day Of
!=ebruary , 1975 at 5 00 PM for
deslg natlbn of deposttor!et

REFRIGERATOR : washer and
dryer ser vice - 25 years ex ~
perrenc e . afternoon
and
even 10gs $6 Servace calls and
E st Bob , 379 231 8
26 6 , :I an

--~----

~----'74 CHEVROLET NOV~ COUPE

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Offered

..

Ph 141'-7699
Gallipolis, Ohio
512 s~~con •f Av e.

lNACTIVE
DATE OF

Be rt resolv ed , by th e Ga llla

Polley .

:~.!~!l ~~~~~~~~r Pacllege Poltcy tor Your

OF
AND

DESlGNATlON
DE POSlTOR lES

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE est rm a te s. l rab d rty In
suran ce Pr unrn g trrmmmg
and cav rty wo r k tree and
stu mp r e moval Ph 446 o49.S3
73 tf
GENERAL CONTRACTING
Home rmprovem en ts and ad
dtt1ons Roof tn g. vrny l srd rng
Cal l 446 0668 or 7&lt;~5 'il 38
_ _ ...!.... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
152_ 56

ESTIMATING

MEETING

Leadingham Agency

..

'2597

7

AL L

GUARANTEED
Pat10 and
poolland scaprng Slon e, sand
coal. shrubbery tr 1mm1ng
Dump truck serv1ces
245
9131
187 tf

Leadingham Agency
~ \I,Htl f ?L~

1974 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE

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

Don Watts V. W., Inc.

BIG SELECTION OF
TRUCKS
F-100
F-250

That shiny new '75 car is not out of
your reach . Because your present car
is worth more at trade-in time than
ever before. Let's talk price now.

FORDS

-----------

WRECKING Ph 446 949 9
Established rn 19&lt;~0
169 tf

'

6 cyl , st and. lrans., pa ste l lime in
co lor

Yes! You can afford to step up!

1973 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX

2 Dr. Hdtp .• air cond.. bucket
seats. AM-FM-tape, steel belted
tires. This car Is extra. extra nice.

your car Is wonh more

Services Offered

TANK CLEANING AND
REPAlR
A L SO HOUSE

*U.S. Environmental Protection Agency tests
proved V. W. to be the most econom,ical line of
cars built in the WORLD. To wit:
'75 Beetle- 33 miles per gallon, '75 Rabbit &amp;
Scirocco-38 m.p.g., 75 Dasher-35 m.p.g.
Check the E. P.A. results on all mal&lt;es a.
models ol cars posted in our showroom. It is
quite

Chassis &amp; cab , air cond .. P.S. ,
P. B., local. sharp. red •n color

1n

'42 7

1973 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

71 FORD F-100

4 dr. , fylly equipped, ivy glqw
color

~5497

•4197

73 CHEV. PICKUP

71 FORD LTD

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)

-------------GILLENWATER 'SS EPTIC

lET US CURE YOUR GAS PAINS.

RANGER XL T
P. S., P 8, air cond .. sharp, two
lone green

Auto, P.S. , P. B , w1th topper,
gold with malching top.

Air, steel· belted tires. new
Firebird trade Expect th e best.

Automatic, air .cond .• Z28 engine,
burgundy, billboard tires, lot of
car here.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
GratJfytng results await 1f you
direct your full energ1es and
atte ntron to your most lmpor
ta nt goals and amb1 tron s

- ----M ,;~- &amp; Sons Water

OON1 BE LEFT AT THE PUMP.

1974 MERCURY
COUGAR XR7

Air , 16,124 miles, AM-FM tape.
Cruise Control. bucket seats,
vmyl lop. Expect the best.

73 FORD F-1 00

Fully equipped. lighl blue, dark
blue roof.

ROOFING &amp; Spou tr ng Shrng 1e

Gallipolis, Ohio

6 Pass , w1ndow van. air cond ,
p s , p.b , brown &amp; white.

2 dr Sedan, 4 speed, clean car
light blue

kee p o utside rs noses o ut o f
your bu srness However fam1iy
d1scussron s wrll bear frUit

D- p Delrvery
Serv1c e
Your
patronage
wrll
be
ap
prec iated Ph 446 0463
2 1f

Ph. 446-9373

4 Dr sedan, fully equipped

72 PINTO

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dac.
21) Its best for the present to

JJ ACRES Good bu 1ld mg
sr te or mvestmenl property
located on Thompson Rd
Morgan Twp Will se l l on
land contract

House _ J BR , tully car·
peted, tull basement wath
fireplace , •n City school
diStrict ,

74 FORD ECONOLINE

6 Pa ssenger, fully equip

You re not ttl e ty pe of person
who goes unot1ced Tod ay you
wrll draw even more attentron
th a n usual

and Butldup rool Hot an d
Cold process
Hom e rm
provement rn genera l
For
free est1mates , phon e Rob er t
Meade , 388 811 4, B rdwe lt.
Ohio
263 tt

RA NCH O COMPANY
R eal t ors- Aucltoneers
446 0001 367 0300
NICE bulldmg lot . Farrfreld
Burld to su1t Frve acre home
s1te &gt;5 000 47 A farm. new
hGme S2&lt;1 ,900
771 tf

73 CHEV. IMPALA

73 TORINO STW.

M&amp;M

*A Volkswagen Owner lsi

ca r,

BEST DEALS
ON TRUCKS!

Dr .• fu ll y equ ipped. white &amp; b l~e
in color .

4

d1trons are develop rng th at
aren' t yel ¥1Sibl e or apparen t
They II have a fav orable effec t
o n your fma nces

DOZER work , c tearrng , ex
c avat1ng , stump r e moval.
bush hoggrng Ph 446 0051
28 0 ff

ARE YOU RE~DY?

" SAND BUGGY"
Sharp, low mtles, local
beauttful maroon finish .

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sapt 22) Th tS

Sm rth , 24 hr
wrec k er
serv 1ce P11 245 5034 or 446
9311
263 If

88

69 VOLKSWAQEN

73 GRAN TORINO

IS not a day to stay home and
stare at fou r wall s Ge t 1n touch
w1th people you like Ge nerat~
somethmg exctt mg

25 A CRES Nrce sma ll
fa rm wt th two be droom
m obile home large barn ,
tob acco base located 5 m des
f ror:n town rn c rty sc hool
d•str ct

We~erholl 446·,t24~

CLEAN CARSI

4 dr sedan, blue w1th while roof,
auto , F' S , P B , sharp car local
m1i es

Square Ba ck, sharp, low mil eage.
bi ue 1n color

be lots of act1vrty aro und your
house It wi ll be ac tron you re
co mfortable with and personal
ty en)oy

Paul

2 ACRES - Good bu 1ld.ng
sr t e rn cr t y school d 1st r1 ct on
Rt /75 lUSt o ff Rt 141

Eventn•s Call
John M. Fuller 446-43'17 •
l ee Johnson 256·6740

69 CHEV. IMPALA

73 VOLKSWAGEN

Importa nt goals w11i be achr eved this year and your standmg
1n the eyes of others will be
enhanced Your lrnanc 1a1
prospects also look favorable
- stay on ta rget

11 1 ACRES - Good barn o ld
house
n1ce l and rn t he
country
PO SSib l e
la n d
contracl to quallfr~d buyer

ACRES E x tra nrce
farm wrth a good thr ee
bedroom home l arge bqrn ,
1950 pounds tobacco base
n rce pond Can be bought
w1th or wtfhout c attle and
•eQUipm ent
Cal ' for more
r.. formill ron

want on the car You want

LOW MILEAGE

Feb. 2, 1975

i l i Wr s~~a n 446- 31 ! t
E . N_ Wrseman, 446·4500
Bud McGhee, 446 - 12~ 5

•

Daug wetherholt.
452 SecondTvtnue
Gamaolls, Ohla 4S4ll
LOVELY RANCH HOME
You wtll like the three large
bed rooms . fdm 1ly room . wrfe
approved k 1t c h en , Jlh bath s,
l rvrng room W1 fh fireplace ,
basement
large t wo car
garage wtth etect r 1c eye
Nt ce Je¥el lo t on Rt 35

GEMINI (May 21·June 20)

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct, 23) Con

MODERN HOME 50 AC. - Neariy new 3 bedr oom home
with 21n baths , famtl y a nd drnrng roo m s W B firep l ac e,

] bedroom home on Bulav tll e
Road c rt y water . gas and
se wer large tot. stove and
r cfrrgerato r 1nc lu ded In t~ e
Gal l rpol s s chool drstrlc
prrced $12 500
A n 1ce 111re e bed r oom home .
good ha r dwood floors . l arge
ex t ra nr ce krtchen cab rn ets,
ut l lrty room
g as fu rn ace .
bath
s mall . b ase m e nt
walk ng d ts tan ce to school
lot 42 x 14 2. w 111 se l l on l and
contract wr th a r easona bl e
down payme nt $15,500

You II be lucky today 1n
s rt uat1ons tt1at ca l l to r
teamwork Your part ner w1ll
ba c k stop anythmg slrpp1ng
pas t you

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) The'e II

153 Ac w1 th home and la rge barn Hou se IS under rep a tr at

446-1066

1974 OLDS 98
REGENCY 4 DR DT
Automatic, air. power everything,
AM - FM tap e Compare new ,
$8500 .00

t1as oeen a trytng week You re
ent1lled to relax and let yo ursell
go Arra ng e som eth rng th at s
fun wrth a few fn e nd s

dose to Thurman

REALTOR

10 &amp;ellhe Deal

ARIES (March, 21 -Aprll 19)
Persons wrlh wt1 om yol.t t1ave
strong e motronal tres are most
anxrous now to appease your
rn terests and al ms

CANCER (June 21-July 22) 11

150 Ac good older home w tth bath and ce ntral h eat, 35 A
bottom , 50 A f1llabl e, 75 A pa sture Good set of bu1ldrngs,

-- ~ ·

Plumbmg &amp; Heating

235

LI M E!,lO NE tor dr•vcw., ys
CMI Wmters Phon co 2H Sll5

MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILAHLE
1s the t 1m e t o buy Prrces are Iow er now because
nter

140 Ac w 1t h ol d house m need of co mple te remodelu~.9 10b
Pe r fec t for summer home or sportsmen Good t 1mber
covers most of the gently ro lli ng toh1l l land

WOOD,

Doug

..-=-7~ -;,~ -cHROME Steel
D rsh . s.lolted wheels comf?lele
Wttl'l hub covers and lug nuts
Ne¥er b~en used S100 Ph
245 5308

good cond • t ully equ1pped -,- . ,;- J\;obr l l' Ho mL' One mrle
Call 5 30 p m -146 3921
from !losp l lal Adults Ph ~.:t6
25 3
Jao5
261 II

....... - -- -- ~----

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

81f

.......,

163

-~

LOT S f01 sale m CtiY and
Country a l so Busrness S1tes
Robert A Quen Phone 4.:16
0108

__ ______________llf
--------1974~GRANo
PRIX Pont1ac .

KI TCHEN t a bli! w tth 4 charrs
red form rca top S30 Ca ll 446
0822

RUSSEll ~

IROIC.RS
Otcar Bllrd, Joftn FYIItr,

Sam Neal , 446-7358

3 Truck load s of U sed
Fur mtu re We ha ve co uc hes,
cha rrs , bed s, m attresses &amp;
bo x
spnngs ,
washers ,
dryer s.
refngerators ,
sto¥es All at low pnces

1968
1966
19 70
1Y7J
1965
1969
1¥71

WORLD 'S LARGE ST
TH E L EA DER SINCE IVOO
IN
SERVING
TH E
N A TION S BUYERS AND
SELLERS
Ph 446 00 08

For Sun&lt;loy , Feb. 2, 1975

TAURUS (April 20-Moy . 20)

US JS _ 10 A app rOK I 850
It rd l r on1ag e all u t rlrtr cs
a v a rl ab le
Buy and sub
d rvrde

IS A fa r m 5 rm house w 1th
bath rura l water. located 5
m1 fr om town on blac ktop
r oa d

GRAVEL
lnl1estone
sa11d
Mason sand . f il l drrl Pr t run
De l tvered by th e !on J J 6 1 1 J ~
147 If

PARSON'S
FURNITURE

AGEN(;Y

I NEXPENS I VE COUNTRY
LIVING - 5 r m s and bath
cellar sma ll barn shop and
2 ac re s. ncar vmt on \10 500

NEAL REALTY

4637 , 4460013

NAQMI ' s Wtg Sl\" lrng
Sell
and style all tash ro ns Wtgs
w 1g1ets fall s · Pho ne 388 8308
286 It

For Sale

'

BRICK &amp; FRAME - Ranc h
s tyle J B R . 2 ba th s w w
Cclrpet nrce family r oom
e&lt;~ t rn krt chen utdrty r oom
g.=rraye , a ll e lec trrc , 1 1 acre
lot S2d 500
WANTED
GOOD LISTIN GS
Now rs tt1 e li me to get you r
property on t he market l or
lh.:r t cu r ly sule LI ST TODAY
- I T WILL PAY

Where Ga llipo lis Chrtsttan
Chu r ch m ee t s
For 1n
form a Iron ca ll 446 3230 . 446

171

SEE

P m

2 ACRES
Ret1rement
t10me 3 BR &amp; bath formal
OR yarilge ba rn &amp; chrcken
house
located at Ce n
terpom I

FOR SA LE

LARGE , beaulllul burldmg lol
In Pl antz Subd rvrs1on with
utrlt ti es Wrll se l l on l and
contract or take aucl ron Ci!ll
44 6 2917
2l 26

__________ ___ _

1962 BUICK Electra , good
conditton , See Mr Sh aw ,
ups(arrs 919 2nd Ave. 10 a m
to o4 p m

1967 GMC I~ T PICkUp v 6
standard sh1ft Ph 256 6812
17 3

173

17 If

H2 ACRES
One story
remodel ed hom e m good
co nd rlro n 2 barns J 000 l b
toba cco base JO A ltllable
balan ce m tr mber &amp; pastur e
Jus! 12 m• from c rly

Old Warner Pro perly

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

Nl t. E 1rtuler space t:~ l Rodn ey
Otlro F ree rent l rl Feb l Ph
-1..16 343&lt;1 or., 446 43:l7

__.__

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

A N T I QUE chma cabrnet
245 50.SO

367-7250

SLEEPING rooms
rat e Gall•a H(ltel

--

27]

HA NN AHS husband Hecto r
hate5 hard work so he c l erw s
the r ugs With Bl ue Lustre
R ent e leclrrc st1 ampooer $1
Central Supply
176

---------Auto SaleS

--~ ---

'

REALTY

,..our Ttre and n,1tt cry
n ee d s COrn e t o S~: nr s Trre
Shop rn lhe Silv er Br td qP
Pl .l lil
?36 I I

Galltpoll s, Ohoo

446 . 1111

•

Mowrey's Uph o lslery
~
Ptmt Pl easa nt. w V:a
67 5 41S4
1-tf

m

IJJilJllllWIL

FOR

Mallr ess &amp; Bo,.; Spnngs
starting at S4S 00 each
Corbtn Snyder Furn Co
955 Second Ave

WISEMAN

beau t1tu l built m kitc h en a nd 1s all c lea n

Willis T. Leadingham

· un•~ lllOX sPRiht

5 tf

AD DI SON TWP
New
sec trona! hom e rs all e l ec lrr c
for yo ur convPnren ce and
co mfort
Fea tur es J BRs
b~ t h
shag l a rp e l krlchen
wdh
r r1n ge
hood
and
r e l r rcte rat or S 1Uated on a
larq e t lat to t on a BT r d

RANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

FILE S cabr ne ts
hi ng sup
pl 1es desks o flt c e charrs
S1 mmons. Pt g &amp; Off ce Eo u1p
306 If

PERFECT
SLEEPER

~00

R EMODELE D 2 STORY Thts lov ely home Is located
rn A dd rso n T wp nnd offers
lots of good 1 vrng for on l y
!.?3 ~i'OO Some fea t ures are
new alum rnum ~ 1 dmg , storm
w ndow s natural ga!&gt; heal
n ew factory k•l chen wrth
t ,lbrncls ranq~ d shwashc r
and r c t rrgerator
lormal
d •nrn q rm
and a lmos t 1
a cH s c lose to town

1- - - - - -

For Sale

~886

VICE!'

all k1nds of typmg
home catt 446 4999

1. 15

4·16 7699

Home Ph .

on ly

O WNER
WILL
H ELP
FINANCE - Mode rn hom e
o il e r s
~
rms
bath
bc1 semen t and over 1 acr e of
rollrnq l an d_ Just l rs t ed

BRAND new nev er used Ford
515 mower Extra blade belt
dr rven S6 75 Cal l 146 1806 after
5
May be se l:!n at
PI
Pl ea sant
13 5

O N E :t BR tr a il er
N ergh
borhood Rd, one 2 BR l rur lcr
a1' Gtt ll iPO I s F erry
Phon e
675 161!6
19 If

"'

R~ m tno ton .

Ph

Ph.

un 15
over
QOOd

MAKE SUR E YVU SEE
THI S O NE Lrke new lr
k•vel offers '} 800 sq II of
l rvrnq spa ce plu s a '1 car
qaraq e O ther f ea tu res are 4
BRs 2 1 baths sunken LR
dream ktl c hen f am rly rm
Wtl h W B f1rep 1ace cen t a rr
pat ro and larq e l ot Lo cat ed
rn on e of th e areas n tce r
subdrvr s ron s

..

CORB I N SNYDER
FURN CO
BREAKFA ST set and I c ha rrs
har vest gold. el cc
range
couc l1 and charr 3 pc ena
table set a r e f r~qcra t or like
new harvest go ld
95S Seco nd Ave , 446 117 1

J TRAILER S N etql'lbor hood
Rd one at Galllpo l rs Fe rry

like to H'tk.e th rs op

ooieR work

7.t T RAC TO R
Intern eurona l
14 0 w1th ag !Ires used only
JO hour s Accessor1 cs, 3 pt
h rt ch draw bar comb mat ron
hn 1~ h ho(l and mower , 7 fl
blad e, peg harrow ilnd drsc A
$4 500 va l ue now for $3 50 0
Pr' ~ .I S 5200 b elween t and 10
rn cvE• nm gs Can be tman ced
21 Jl c

BR Houselrall er rn Mer
c ervllle Oh10 P11 25 6 127 1

--i---- ---------Card of Thanks

--.-....,....---'
Lost

I Dai~:~~.~:ne

n

P A RK

1.39 'i OO

? I If

lN ., LOV IN G memor y of Bar
t!llra Cheval\er Willtilms who
died F cb 3, 19 71
W e. Wtll always remember the
way she looked ,
The way she spok.e and smrled
TM little th ing s she sard and

~ULD

·Gallipolis

17 1t

In MemoF'I

Are w rth us all the while
..Sil dl y missed by Dad
~o th e r. SISter and bro lh ~~s

6 for $1.00

--'T~-

17

........

20t

1

work , dump truck &amp; septrc
tlnk rnslalled Al50 ccal for
sale, S2 0 per ton dehvered .

SWEEPER

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY US ES

H O ME

Ch cs h rrl wrlh 6 rf' nt a l
hilS renr po l enr ra l of
S/ 00 per monlh
f.•
ITJOn '? y
m .=rfo.. L r to r

l ot

subdrvr s on
approx
m+ICS lrom Ga llipOli S
qood
road
Ulrlr
ava fa ble Ca ll now
GO OO " OLD STYL E "
1 STORY HOM E
on Sta t e Rt 7 north
G olllrpol rs P len t y of room
G as lurnil cc On l evel lot
On ly S I B 500 00
VACANT LO T
ST A T E RT 1
Close to Ga l l tp o l rs
leve l
and crea n
HOU SE TRA IL ER ON
LOT 100'x120'
1e11el lo t All
2 Bedroom
lor on I y S6500 00
MUST SELL
G IV E US AN OFFER
11 Room s mode rn spill
lev el home 2 t rr epla ces
famr l y roo m ? both s '1 CM
garag e ba semen t I
pl us n rce landsc ap ed yard
wrth l ot s of shrub bery
Goo d bla c k top road
mil es lrom Ga l trpotrs I
of
room
for
lot s
wrth
po ss tbr lll• es
tlorn e
180 ACRES
VACANT LAND
App r ox 7.5 ac res c l
lo ts of woods t rn e
Cheshrr e Townshtp
S160 oo per acre
3BEOROOM
1 YR O LO HOUSE
23 , A cres cl ean level l and
6 room s plu s n 1ce ba th
mod er n krt c hen ca rpetrng
plenty of good water Ld(,e
to fish ? C lose to Tycoon
Lake
sc r eened rn front
porctl Jus t a r ea l nrce new
counlry home or1 clean
leve l land Only 5 15,500 00
25 ACRES
3 b edrooms
6 Room s
ba t h e tec trr c sto11e ref
alum Srd rn g. 5
furnrlun· go es, s totca&lt;J&lt;
-"bu rl dmg
c h1 c k c n hou
cellar . 10 ac r es can
cu lt 111 ated
1 acr es
t1mber
11 acre
On l y $2 1 900 00

Ph 446-3345

V ne

r.,.,OBILE

BUILDERS SPECIA L
15 Vi! Cilnl l O I S t il Cl pl 31

Pure bred btJIL 8 mo .
old. papers available.

B E DR OOM mobrle ll o ne r1
Ga l l rpoi 1S Cil ll 6/S 1000
?66

uctron

l&lt;~rq P

CHAROLAIS

prt '.'&lt;l t e
dC[C'
lo t' Ten tllirlU tl'S fr om town
P t1o ne ti t:&gt; 7bJ1
?63

l 9 10, B R t r a l c r

NEAR

OJ WHITER D
lrke new
nrr ck and f r ame r an c h offer s
1 l rHCJ t' BR &lt;:. ') hillhS t'a cro ry
k.rl l h Cn torrni'll d nrnq r m
1/JW c .1rp 1 1 q,lr,HI'
patro
l n(j t.'lrqc Hill lot

WILL TAKE TRAD E IN
'LATE MO DEL CAR
OR PICKUP
6 Roo rll llom c ? o;tnry c. rly
walcr
woo d bu rn +ng
lrr e pl,1 ce lo c alcd or1 a

FOR SALE

l +bOy H olt I

w

••

rt

rii RM
13

ac re s ot
c l ean rol l rnCI lan d
pont1
l arqe QardL•n 'i pct cc 1 ba rn s
5 rm s anU
ce llar hou se
billh ~ 16 'lOO

Gallrpolis, Ohio

"'

I 1!'1

PJ\AY
V INT ON

Real Estate Broker
512 Second Avenue

I I(. I O'I H

l/1 I I

Lane 's

16

llti IJJfB

76 3

1Qr.rl(0f.(V E I I I:
liN I

TEAFORD Sr.

tr ,wC'I lrrt l er
w.r11 1\d ch .t n ct illl

H O I t ()I\Y

NOW IS THE TIME

THE

Virgil B.

~

'"

1/ If

liJI

h ob

28

( ll l 111'1 110\,ll lc r

ld,l'n o w

STR,QUl REALTY .

Real Estate For Sate

n1ss qur t ar

~:l~: c rro c

mel c u!&gt;l om e lccl r c dmplilr cr

'J.lllOmo nll l

I V. OIJIOJ.lh'
l It&gt; ll l HI

f-'1 1•

CLEARAN CE CARNIVAL IS
' f'IOW on
at CorrH'r Crafts
Vergre Rob ert s
·~

1 cr.. DE R

MOAIL E H C
\IIll +n G,lll+pOI+S. I1J'

______ _______ _

-----------.-.--ORAFTlNG SERVlCE

Martha M MacKenzie
President of the
Board of Trustees
Gall Ia County
District Library
26

DESIGNER - Draftsmen will
do Topo sit•, remodeling.....
commercial.
or
rttw
resldtntlat plans lS years
experience in clvU and lr C t'\lt~ctural. Ph 1 682 7,.98 ..-~...........&lt;- -- -----t- ..J..--__.__

285 If
__

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Services Offered
CUSTOM

REMODELING , 20

years

..

'""

experience, 388 8308
New dry wall ceiling w rth
swtrl or texture de s ig n s
Other dry wall , repair , vin y l "'
wallpapering , new baths , new
kitchens
Anything
fn
remodeling or r epa rr

lllf
FRENCH CITY BLO(iK , .4 46
3608 , locl! ted at Kerr Beltrel
Kemper Hollow rnt er sec l ton
150 tf

....·''

Cam ping Equipment
1

VACATION over , ~Open Jan.. 16
Don't miss our w i nter price on
Starcraft folddown :itarcraft
Trlh•et trailers arr1ving F ~b

1'

~

t '

Camp Con.ley St1rcr1ft Salts
Rt. 62 N . of Pt. Pte111nl
8ehlnd lied C1rpe1 tnn.

...
-------

'

)

27-11

~"

...

�.,

..

•"

I

' I

.

' .. .

'

~

28:-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , !Ceb. 21 197~

d
lim
..
•
·
'
Loa
.

'

'

•

·,

·

Sahd Hollow . · '15 ; K;iner Sand Hollow, 65 ,
Pitchford, '! 5. Paxton, -30; Paxton'; -35;

Its

Continued from page t
haulers at the County Engineer,'s Office.
Load I' 't ·
.
uru stgns will be J)os~ on
brtdges in the near future .
·
Here are the results of bridges inspecfed 1' h G IIi
a a County and the perc.entages of legal weight allowed. Minus
ftgures represent the amounts to be

Garfield -Blazer, -70; Blazer , -80.
Greenfield Township ·
'
Of&amp; 0 , 110 ; CH &amp; D, 170; CH &amp; D. 190
CH &amp; D, 11 5; CH &amp; D, I tO; CH &amp; D; t50 ; CH
&amp; D, 130 ; CH &amp; 0 , t90 ; CH &amp; 0, -75 ; CH &amp;

D, 170 ; Camp Creek. -65 ; Camp Creek , ·10;
Camp Creek, -5; Hoodley, -45; Farney; .
80 ; Poke Patch, -55 ; Poke Patch. 40 ;
Symmes Creek . -50 ; Symmes Creek -30 ·
Symmes Creek . m : Frank Shafter: •as :·
Frank Shafter, 135;• Gall ia.Centerpoint,
105 ; ~heatwood- Wagner , -70 ; Pat Fielding.

\/'

\ _..

..

.

•

..

· m .on, 10 ; ~oush Hol low, -10 ; Long
Britllch , /0 ; Long ,Bran ch, -20 ; Ward, 60 ,
D. Grover , ·55 ; D. Grov er , 4() ; Nlorgan
Lane, 15 ; Thompson , 35 ; Thompson , 1do ;
Thompson, 80 ; White Oak , -65 : White Oak,
-50 : Up Creek , -50 ; Tom Thal(ton , BC .
Hom er McCla skey, -30; Clark Chur ch ·ss ·

'

Goble Ford ·now Thompson Ford

Clark Church 140; Clark Church, ' 65 :
Clark Church .. ·45 ; Clark Church. 50;
Clark Church .. -70 ; Nibert, -40; Roy.Sp ires.

By Bob Hoeflich
on Wednesday.
MIDDI.EPOH'r. - Danny
" [ would rather be a dealer
Thompso~:,~, kn own widely in
140 , E::rnest P1per . -65 ; Wheaton , -50 ; Wifr
in Middleport than any city in
Grey, - 5~ .
M ei g~ Coun ty as an automobile
th e United States ," said
Ohio TowrJship
salesman and as a singer . bas JoThompson, who is optimistic
. Swan Creek . 115 · Swan Creek , 45 ;
purcha 5ed the Keith Goble towards the future of this area .
reduced.
·BS ; Sandfork-Peniel. 160- Sandfork -Peni el ,
Kmg, 100; Ham ilton. -65 ; Peters Branch
Ford
Agency al 461 S. Third
t30 ; Sandfork -Peniel , lOS ; Sandfork ·
105; Cargo, -10 ; Bladei1 -Mer ce r vil le 5:
" We have some plans and as
.
l,n all , :t.o bridges , whose load Peniel. .'&lt;IS ; Sandfork -Pen iel, ; 30 ; Sand
Bladen - ~ercerville ,
-50 :
Bladen ' Av e.
speCJflcations are nol known yet. are not fork -Pen ie l , -80 ; Cambria Furnace, -70 ;
the area grows we will grow
Mercerv _
1Ue, 140 ; Stewart, -75 ; Stewart,
listed,
The age ncy, Wlder several
Tom Coker . -50 ; Potter , -35.
with it. Fortunately, this
230 ; Eblm Holl ow, 155 ; Ebl in Hollow 5
Addison Township,
Elliott, -15.
· · owners, has been in the same area is in better shape
,
Guy an Township
Bulaville -Addison , -55 , \' Bulaville - .
Georges Creek , -10; Veorges Creek .
loca ttOII fur over 50 years and
ec onomically than many
Addls,on , 15 ;· Georges Creek , 135; 10 ; J. P. Haskins, -65 ; Dally. -80 ; Rocky
Perry Township
features a new car cmd service
Buiav1lle-Porter , -25 ; Bula ville-Porfer ,
metropol itan areas . The
Cora -Beaver , 110 ; Roush , 140; Rou sh, .
Fork , -70 ; Rocky Fork. 195 : Rock v Fork.
JO ;. Johnson Ridge , -35 ; 011 Hollow, 75 , Creek, -60; School Creek, -5; Lew
build ing with an ad juinin g: used
30 ; Tom Woods, -60 ; Nebo, -70 ; Saunders ,
n;bate
plan on lhe purchase
Bnck School. -35 ; Little Kyger , -60 ; Little So.tJt~ers, -30 ; Williams Creek. unknown ;
45 ; . Vernon Woods , 100 , Symmes Creek , car ~li es area.
of
new
automotllv.es has
Kyger, -15 ; Reese Hollow, 140 ; Reese Wdl 1ams Creek , unknown ; Wi lliam s
ll~ , Symmes Creek , -25 ; Cora Rodney, . • Thompson, who was general
Hollow, -75 ; Reese Hollow, 180.
be en quite effective in
Creek, unknown; Bladen -Mercerville
SS . Mud, 105; Bethel , 110 ; Bethel , t7S :
Cheshire Township
unknown ; William -Berry , -4.5 ,· Stewarl
Hol c_omb Hollow, ·50 ; Tyn Rhos , 130 : manager for the Guble Agency
bringing people into our
Cemetery. -85 ; Van Zan t,. .JO ; Ward , Chapel, -55 ; Johns Creek, -45 ; Johns
Dav 1_s Moss berger , 260 ; Dan Jones, 120: lhe pasl eighl years, compler,cl
showroom
,'' Thompson sa id.
liS ; Ward, -75 ; Ward. 20 ; Grove Hill , -25 ; Creek, -30; Johns Creek 190; Johns Creek,
Patr1ot Cadmus, -45 ; Guthrie, -60 .
the final pa per work for th e
Turkey Run , 110 : Stingy Creek . 185 ; Stingy 100 ; Mercerville, -55; Mercerville, -45; Les
Th
ompson
indica ted that no
Raccoon Township
transfer
of
th
e
agency
to
him
Creek.nO ; Little Kyger, ·40 ; Little Kyger, Gothard, -85 ; Bill ie Holley , ·65 ; Cecil
. Ple_asant Val ley , -65 ; Clark Evan s, 60 ;
major chang es in personnel
lSC; Lttlle Kyger, SO Little Kyger, 120, Sheets, 100; Fulks, -80.
T1ck R1~g e, -80 : M t . Tabor , ·55 ; Bidwe ll
are
planned. The firm, which
1
L•ttt~ Kyger , '75; Swi sher Hill. -40 ; Moore·
Woodsmtl /, -40 ; Glassburn , -85 : Tyn Rhos,
Harrison Township
Jerncho, ·85 ,· Africa . -10; Jessie Creek .
will
be
knoen as Dan Thompson
-65 ; Garners Ford , 40 : Garners Ford ·40 .
Smokey Row , -45: Smokey Row , -45 ;
SS ; Jess ie . Creek , -65 ;
'
Old
Rt
.
35.
'
'
Ford, In c., employs 18 people.
Smokey Row , -60 ; Smokey Row, ·50 ;
Capt. M ullt·n is
Clay Township
Springfi eld Township
Smokey Row. -5 , Smokey Row, 125; Teens
Former
owner, Keith Goble
Clay Chapel . Yellowtown. -65 ; Clay
un -Provldence, -35 ; Little Bullskin , -75 ;
Bu l av i ll e-Porter , -55 ; Bulav il le.
Chapel · Yellowtown , 190; Clay Chapel . R_
died
las
t April. A formai
Porter, 115 : Harrisbu rg -Kerr, -60 ; Bid
l~ttle Bullskln , 140 ; little Bul lskin, 175 ;
at
Myrtle
lka£'11
Y~ll _ow town , 180 : William s Hollow , 155 ;
opening
will
be slaged in early
Ltttle Bullsk ln, 130; Little Bullskin ·45; well -Rodney , ·50; Bidwell -Rodney, 110;
Wtll 1am s Hollow, -IS ; Williams Holl ow , . Lewis , SO ; Johnson, -50 ; Johnson , -35 ;
B1dwei~ · Rodney , -SO ; Campaign , 110 ;
s prin~ .
30 ; Rocky Run , 285 ; Teens Run . Johnson, -25 ; Carter, -35: Carter ,
MIDDLEPORT - Now
Campa1gn , 155 ; Oliver White , 110 ;
Thomp::~Orl · is married to the
Providence , -25 ; Teens Run . Providence, . Unknown; Carter, Un known; Car t er:
Everg r een Prospect , -75 ; Prospect servin~ at Myrtle Beach Af B.
65_; Teens RtJn - Providence, -10 ; Friendl y
Dan Thompson has purchased the Keith Goble Ford
forme~gise
Winebrenner of
Unknown ; Carter, Unknown, Rock Lick
Church, -40 ; Buck Ridge, -30 ; ~~thel
Rtdge , -30 ; Clark-Webster, -70; Clark · 100; Clay Li ck , -50 ; Houck -Trotter, lOS ; Church, . 140 , Mt. Zion, 120; Bidw..tJ . S. C., is Ca ptain Sean F;. Midd
Agency,
461 S. Third Ave.ln Middleport. The agency wUI now
They
have
two
Webster , -60 ,· BarclJS Hollow, 35 .
Mullen , son of ·Mr . and Mrs.
Woodsmlll, -40 ; Swango Brookman Lane
Uttle Paregon , Unk'IOWn ; Ri ce, 130 ;
he
known
as Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.
daught , Mrs. Jonnie Sue
Gallipolis Township
65 ; Swango Brookman Lane , -20: Gr e~~ Don E. Mull en of 583 S. Second
Northup-YeHowtown , -10; Lincol n Pike
Mill Creek , -85; Mill Creek, 130; Mill 130; Lincoln Pike, 140; Lincoln Pike, 120; Duly , -5; Kemper Hollow , -60 ; Kemper St., Middl epo rt. Cap1a1n Kinney of Columbus, and Miss
Creek , -SO ; Mill Creek , 110; Newsome , -50 : Mable Beaver. -75 ; Han nan Trace, 235 .
Hollow, 115 ; W. T. Wa tson, -50 : Evergreen
Nancy Thompson who is
Smith , -SO .
·50 ; Old Rt. 160, 140.
' Mullen. a pha rmacy officer, assoc iated with the Clintonville member of the Middleport
Huntington Townsh ip
pany dealers in Zone-F. A
Green Township
previously was assigned at
Walnut Town ship
Adney, 170; Adney, ·55 . Adney, 210 ;
Buhl Morton , -35 ; Mitchell , -40 ; Strong Run , 115 ; Strong Run -5: Tom
First
Bapti
st
Church
and
Federal
Savings
and
Loan
Co.
talented tenor , Thompson h3s
Cadmus Crossroads, -70 ; Cadmus Seotl AFB , 111.
F al rf I el d -CP.n l fln~r v . ·45 : Centenary
belongs
lo
.
the
MiddleportCrossroads, 125 ; German Hollow, -'15 :
Glenn , -60 ; Jackson , -80 ; Jackson ,
in
the
Columbus
area.
Mr
.
and
appeared
in many musicals
A 1966 graduate of MidChurch, -IS; Graham School , -55 ; Pleasant Unknown ; M t . Tabor , 2 15; Coal Valley , German Hollow, 120; Saunders, -80 ; Flagg
Pomeroy
Rotary
Club.
He
is
Mrs
.
Thompson,
who
reside
on
and programs across the
Hill School, -50; Pleasant Hill School. 105; 105; Coa l Valley, Unknown ; Sherman Springs· Crossroads, 110 ; Wi serr.an, -25 : dleport Hi gh School, the
Fairfteld Church, -30 ; Fairlleld Church, . Har tsook , 200 ; Lew Jones , -SS ; Lew Jones, Mudsoc -Fiag Springs, -IS ; Web Ster , 130 ; captain received hi s bachelor's Beec~ St. , in Pomeroy, have vice chairman of Ford Com- county over the past 30 years.
30 ; Nerman-Northup, 160; Ingalls, ·65 ; ·60 ; Lew Jones, 135 ; Shepherd l ane, -30 ; Webster , 135; Webster, 125 : Eakman , -40 ;
degree in 1971 from Ohto Slate two grandsons, Danny and
Norlhup-Patrlo t, 135 ; Northup-Patriot, Se lmer .Andrews , 195.
SptJ r lock, ·40 ; McCombs, -25 ; Barlow , -SO ;
Duke Kinney.
165 ; l:aylor, 150; Tay lor -60; Taylor, U-K;
P~ters Cav~. -10; Sandfork -Peniel. 125 ; Univer sity and was com·
Morgan Township
Biess!nQ , 610; Biesslno. -85 ; Bless lnq , 140;
Employed in auto sales for
Lmcoln Pi ke, -30; Lincoln Pike, ·65 · missioned the following year
E~o - VInton, 100 ; Eno-Vinton, 110;
SERVICE GROUNDED
traffic accidents, has been
Blessong, -AS ; Starcher.Holbrick, tOO ; Eno.Vmton,
Patriot Cadmus, -70 ; Bush ; Hulf Hol low , :
some 25 years with severa l
·25; Eno-Vinton , 140 ; Eno Ltncoln Pike, 140; Lincoln Pike, 140; VInton, 285; Eno·VInton, 165; Eno-Vinton ,. 10 ; Mill er, -25 ,· Hannan Trace, -30 : upon completion of Officer
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
The
suspendi!d
. Guard officials say
Lincoln Plke,-10 Lincoln Pike, -70; Kr iner. 25 ; Eno-VInton , -60 ; Eno-VInlon, 190; Eno- Drummond , -60.
Training School al Lackland agencies tn the Big Bend area, Ohio
Nationa
l
Guard's
,,
the
suspension
of the program
,.
AFB. Tex. Captain Mullen 's Thompson is a past master of Medicopter program, which followi!d receipt of a federal
13 DIE IN MOSQUE
wife, Paula, is the daughte r-of Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, involves the use of Guard directive disc ontinuin g the
caved in the roof of a mosque In
CAffiO (UP[) - Thirteen a Nile Della village Friday,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Russell F &amp;AM and belongs to ·other helicopters in transp o~ting program because of a question
Masonic bodies. He is an active
Moslem worshippers were government offlvlals said
of SyraciiSe . ·
persons seriously injured in of liability responsibility.
killi!d and another 22 Injured Saturday.
Continued from page 1~
when a minaret collapsed and
a high-voltage power line,
shearing off the right wing and
leaving lhe wing tip ,hanging In
Ute structure,
The plane sliced through
trees and crashed upside down
in a boggy field two and a half
OOLI)MBUS (UP! ) - The
I
state
Public
Utilities
miles west of the airport.
"I remember one of the main Comission says Ohio gas and
guys (company officials ) electric utilites have agreed to
saying this guy (the pilot) extend credit or work out
•
,
could land the plane on a high- budgeted payments for hard~-:11!-'.~'Lway," Mrs .. Little said, "He pressed customers rather than
said he could land It in a disconnect the servii:e.
meadow or anything. We were
The Coalition of Concerned
all tired from the long night Utility Users, however, objectsams good neighbor.
and were teas~tg and joking if ed to the budget payment plan
we would make it okay.
because it provides "no su~
Here's my new State Farm office, whore 1 can serve
"And then the next thing 1 stantive relief for beleaguered
vou with the best value in car, home, life and hea lth
knew was ~ kind of jerking rate payers." The coalition is a
insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time.
feelin g, And I knew im- consumer group formed to
mediately, I knew. I could feel oppose the Columbus &amp; SouthCARROL K. SNOWDEN
it hitting trees and the next ern Electric Co. rate increase
24 State St.
Ph. 446-4290
.
Utlng
Iknew it was like beihg request.
SJATff411M
propelled
.
" We are concerned by
"•vnMtt..,...
Kllllllllllltu;
"This is my first and my last reporta of consumers facing
plane ride."
disconne ction . this winter because they cannot pay their
utility bills," said PUCO
member Sally Bloomfield.
"While we cannot expect Ute
companies to bear Ute burden
of noni)8yment by those who
'
CQnslstenUy fail to meet their
financial obligations, we feel
special consideration is due
.
consumers
who
hav e
historically paid their billls and
are having trouble In this time
of spiraling inflation,"said
Mrs. Bloomfield.
"We are especially pleased
that this program will help
lessen the burden on Ohio's
elderly, the low-Income consumer and aU Ohioans on fixed
$.
incomes,'' she said.
Mrs. Bloomfield said the
companies would :
-Offer customers the options of weekly or biweekly
payments as well as the
present monthly plan, · plus
L AN INCOME CHECK EVERY MONTH.
other forms of extendi!d credit.
-Send a company representative to the home prior to Ute
2. A HIGH RATE OF RETU~N ON YOUR INVESTMENT.
time the service Is to be
disconnected to see if it can be
averted.
- Tell what Ute customer can
3. NO DEPLETION OF YOUR OR.IGINAL CAPITAL
do to keep the service.
-Cooperate with consumer
groups who wish to reach gas
4. GUARANTEED SAVINGS
and electriC customers who
may not hav~ been contac~ in
oUt..- ways. ,
5. NO RISK OF MARKET LOSSES.
The coalition said " four
points provide no substantive
relief for beleaguered rate
·payers."
6. WITHDRAW ANY TIME.
"The extension of a budget
payment plan serves no PW'·
pose for low-Income or elderly
Our Monthly _Income Plan guarantees you an income check every month .
consumers
who simply can't
II also provtdes a hrgh rate of return on your investment, with no
afford the base 1!10nthly rate,"
· depletion of your original capital and no r&lt;skof market losses.
saJd Ed Harter!, attorney for
, The Plan is ideal for retired persons, wic1ows, families putting
the coalition. '
chtldren through college- and for many others whofleed a safe, steady
.
He said the PUCO under "a
mcome.
cloud of smoke" is trying to
Ea~ly American, Traditional and Modern styles. Famous Kroehler
sidetrack the real issue of
nattonally known quality, Herculon an·d nylon Kr oehler per" unreasonable · rates and
!
formance tested fabrics. ~reens, browns and golds .
hidden "utility costs by issuing
Ask us about our Month I y Income Pian .
this agreement."
He said the final three points
~top in- Elberfelds Jrd Floor F~rnitu~e Department_ See these
You work hard for your money.
of the PUOO plan, providing
fme Kroehl.er suites and save now.
·
We make it wor~ hard for you.
for noli~ ' to conswners about
available alternatives to pre.
vent diCOlUleclions, actually
pr~vide no alternatives.

Foley is third

Utilities
to offer
budgets

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Furniture Department 3rd Floor

~ ~,m
,·r·)

~ ,IH

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

,

ASK ABOUT OUR

MONTHLY.
INCOME
PLA·N

. 1 Sa\e·
KROEHLER 2-PIECE
svect3 orot\fl• . LIVING ROOM SUITES
eJect
,
S
Regular Price s439.00 to '489.00

35

SPECIAL SALE PRICE

.

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS.
and LOAN. COMPANY

·.

Opposite

PtJone 441&gt;-3832
.

(

Po" Office
.. .

•

"Safe Savings Since 1886"
·
Gallipolis, Ohio

SIX DROWNED
NACOGDOCHE S, Tex .
(UPI) -Police .sais Saturday
six personS. drowned and 2,000 ·
others were forced from their
homes. by floodwaters which
overflowed two creeks choked
· with rain ' fro01 nightloog
storms . .·

See a!l the other. fine Kr~lller SQfas, Sli~es and ~ Seats·all at ~ prices.

ELBERFELQS IN POMEROY
·'

Who, by what book, says 5QO,OOO live or die '. daily

to admit guilt
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach today reported Ute
arrest of a third P.rson, Craig
C. Foley, 19, Rt. 1, Reedsvllle,
. in connection with a breaking
and entering of the J . B.
O'Brien property on Owl
Hollow Road, Orange Township, on Nov, 30.
The sheriff said Foley has
also given his department a
statement admitting his part In
Ute theft of first aid kits, fire
extinguishers, flares and fuses
belonging to the Eastern local
Scbool District taken from
buses parki!d across from the
grade school at 'l'Jppers Plains
on Nov. 20.
Foley was taken before
COmmon Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon Saturday on a bill of

Information prepared by
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard
V. Fultz. Foley entered a plea
· of guilty and was remanded to
the sheriff of Athens County
where he is being · held on
charges pending there.
A pre:Oentence examination
will he conducted by the State
of Ohio to help determine
wheUter Foley should be
placed on probation. Two
othermen lnvolvi!d In the Incidents, Monte Ray Barringer
and David ArthW' Barringer,
Hockingport, are In the Meigs
County jail at this time
awaiting sentencing.
Sheriff Hartenbach said also
Saturday Utat Lonnie Ross
BlaCk, 18, Rutland Route 1,
Contitiued on page 8

§:

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§

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L

WAiiHINGTUN(UP I) - Two monU1s ago, 92 persons were
killi!d In an airplane crash. The pilots' association says the
air controller was at fault. The air controller blames the
pilot.
Evidence at the National Transportation Safety Board
hearings Into Ute Dec. 1 crash of TWA's Flight ~14 indicates
the rules are unclear. Tite pilots and controllers use separate
maps and rule books.
That difference may mean life or deaUt to any of the 5110,000
persons who fly each day,
The second week of hearings begins today. Scheduled to
tbtify w..-e the pilot of a·corporate jet who got too low on the
Same landing approach and the air controller who warni!d
him of it --unlike the pair on Dec. 1.
,.
The pilots and the air controllers aJ!I'eed .Sunday on one
point : sweeping reforms are needed at the Federal Aviation
Administration, that it s)tould become an Independent,
nonpolitical agency.
"Too frequently, the resources available to the FAA are
allocati!d as a result of political Influence," said J .J.
O'Donnell of the Air Line Pilots Association.
"The system and the regulatory agency are reactors and
not planners," said John Leyden of the Air Traffic Controllers Association. "We pay the price . By we, 1 mean the
controllers and the pilots and the flying public,"
They were Interviewed on a television show on WMAL-TV.
::OLd

L

~

. ~· ... ac,::;:::w:;:m Q UL

VOL XXVI

'·

en tine

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-MJtson A re11
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 205

'

'

Now You Know
Richard Ill was the only
English monarch since the
Norman Conquest to be killed
in battle.

PHONE 992-2156

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1975

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

'

Ford pleads or control on spending
WASHINGTON (UP!)- President Ford today described his
$349 billiOn federal budget for fiscal1976 as the first step "along
the permanent road to fiscal integrity" and called ujlon Congress
tojoinwiUthiminiJUttinapermanentcQntroisonspendin~,

"WiUtout question, our inunedlate task Is the restoration of
active growth In our economy -and that goal is reflected In the
projeCted budge deficit" of $52 billion, Ford said In remarks to he
deliveri!dasheslgriedthebWprlortosendingittoCongress.
The package wa.S·to Ji'Seitt to Congress at noon ,
Earlier In the day, Ford held a breakfast for Democratic and
Repulillcan congressional leaders to reiv·iew the record budget
and to urge them to support his requesta for tax rebates and a
long range energy program. He takes off for Atlanta this a!ternoon to generate public support for his program.
"To sustain our economic growth over the long haul,'' Ford

. -· ei,;~.'~in Briefi

MANILA-A'~~~~~~~ma;:oji-jetcaughtfire

~~P:d t~~~:11 ~~2b;r:~b~~~

:=ffbJ
an alrllite spokesman said, Roger Douglas Collins, a 51-year.()ld
American, crawled from Ute·burning wreckage wiUt hjs clothes
on fire.
''Help me! Help me! My legs! My legs!" he screamed. UP!
photographer Wlllle·Vi coy said rescue workers roUi!d Collins In a
dry rice paddy to douse Ute flames, He was taken to Las Plnas
·hospital, where he was listed In crltjcal condition, The HawkerSiddley prop-jet was bound for Dllgari city, about 550
tO the
south, when its right engine caught fire just after lakeoff at 6
am., according to Elazlo Adriano, vice president of the government-owned airline,
·

mlles

MARCUS HOOK, PA,- THE WRECKAGE OF an olltanker
burni!d on the Delaware River today, at least three and possibly
as many as 28 persons were dead, and a 1s.mile slick threatened
. the lives of 30,000ducks. Mllllons of gallons of oU spewed from the
Greek tanker Corinthoa after It was rammed by an Amer~
tanker Friday, resulting In a series of spectacular explosions
which killed at le~~st three persons.
· ·
At least 33 persona were lnjuri!d and a search for 25 unaccounted for crewmen was called off untU after the fire is extlngulshi!d. A Coast Guard spokesman said Ute fire would be
permitted to burn In hopes of ellmlnaUng some of Ute oU. Between liMl and 125.diving ducks had)&gt;Oj!n collected from 11181'8hes
and taken to four collection centers by late Sunday, according to
Ken Chitwood, a coordinator for the Fish and WUdllfe Service.
.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. - THE. FBI and Michigan and
Cltlo law enforcement agencies today were Jleal'ching for Robert
Young, '17, a former mental patient accused of klilnajllng a young
woman and a 10-year-old girl; The man ,reportedly stopped for
gattOtine at Toledo, Ohio, where the yoong woman escaped, An
F'Bl official said they had checked 1~ . Cincinnati area without
finding any trace of the man, also known as Robert Holland.
The WlidenWii!d child, who said she was semally molested,
was found tii!d to a tree In Clarksville, Mich., In Ionia County,
Friday night, The woman, identified 1111 Ten'\ Rock, 19, w"!' handcuffi!d and placed in the trunk of a car. The FBI obtained
unlaWful flight and kidnap warrants against YoWJg, who has a
record of mental Ulness, Kentwood City Pollee Chief Robert
Dryer said.
·

'

future national budget Into balance during perinds of good
economic growth."
·
Calling for congressional cooperation, the President said, "if
Utese were normal economic times, the ConJ!I'eSS would be
receiving a budget In balance for the coming fiscal year rather
Ulan one with such a large deficit. But these are not normal
times."
He explalni!d tllat the measures he proposes to boost Ute
economy - tax rebates and reductions and assistance to the
Wlemployed - wlll cause some of the deficit. He blamed Ute
remainder of the deficit on lagging recelpta from tax revenues.
"Despite the huge deficit we project,'' he said, "the budget
bein£ submitti!d today is a compassionate one. It has muscle as
well. It has discipline and honest self-denial, It's a start In a new
.

. .

·.I

.

,

.

•

direction along the permanent road' of fiscal integrity which
Americans must achieve for the long.term good of our country."
Ford warned that If ConJ!!'ess fails to go along with his
request for spending reductions totaling $17 billion; the deficit
will go even higher.
"If we are to achieve long range economic stability In this ·
country free from ever-l'lsing Inflation, we must put into effect
permanent reduction in program expenditures," be said.
He said Utat he firmly rejects ·the view that some government expenditures are uncontrollable. "They are controllable if
the Congress and the President joined !ogeUter to hold down
excessive spending," he said.
"This bUdget is designed to bring some of Utese a~alli!d
'uncontrollable' programs ba.ck into line. 1 alit the Collgreu to

.

.

work with me toward this objective."
He said the President and the Congress mu~t act together to
stimulate the economy and ri!duce the rate at which federal
expenditures have been growing over the past IOyears,
Ford also pralsi!d outgoing Budget Director RQy Ash for
staying until Ute 1978 budget requests were completed, He said be
looked to Ash's successor, former HUD Secretary · James T,
Lynn, to enhance fW'ther the capability of s6Ud managljrrleirl so
necessary to that office."
•
Personally previewing the budget for reporters last SatW'·
day , Ford acknowledged that he wants the United State~~ to spend
almost a billion dollars a day beginning July 1, 1975,
"ll'sa big budget," he said, "caUlng for expelllllllrel of $Me
lillian - almolt tl blilkJn • day."

.

get $340 mt.III.on
.WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford asked Congress
today to approve $340 million
for regional development aid to
Appalachia in Fiscal 1976, and.
to give states a greater role in
choosing programs to he
financed.
The funds, administered by

Teachers
•
staymg
on jobs
COLUMBUS (UP!) - City
teachers remained on the job
today pending the outcome of
further negotiations with the
Columbus Board of Education

on a new contract.

During a lengthy SWJday
meeting, members or the
Columbus· Education Association unanimously voted, by
standing up, to reject the
board's proposal of an immediate 6 per cent pay Increase,
and another 2 per cent hike In
September. The board of
governors of the Columbus
Education Association had
·e tt'on of th
recommended reJ c
e
latest contract offer and urged
·
members to resume their strike

WASHINGTON - THE NATION'S CHIEF coal mine safety
today.
Teachers voted against walkagency was budgeted for an $11.6 mllllon Increase over.last ~
.
lng
out for the second time In a
under President Ford's Fiscal1976 budget presented to Congress
monUt.
The governors had
today. Ford asked Congreu to include $79.5 mllllon for
W'ged the walkout despite the
operations of the Mining Enforcement and Safety Administration
standing order of Common
wltich ovenees and enforces the federal mine health and safety
Pleas Court Judge Jay Flowers
law passed by Congreas in 1989, ·
..
'
t
o .remain· on th,e jOb. F1 owers
·. MESA is one of the l1l08t controv.mal agencies in governDJellt, with James Day, i!a administrator, under strong attack , issued the court order to end
the teachers' one-week strike
from tbe United Mine Workers wllon and some Capitol Hill
Jan. II ,
~ialatO..alfor his administration of the laws. One of the major
teachers have dropped
aieas of tncrease in.tbe 19'16 bUdget is lunda to ustst states in th The
·
deinanda fr'om' 20
etr
pay
per
flnandng the c0ttt of improvementa in Uteh; mining safety inI
1
9 per cen t· The board
cen
.
o.
, apection pflllll'arns. An Increase of f3,4 mlllloo was IOU8Iit for
has improved its offer since. the
Utat progi'am,
walkout ended from 4 to 6 per
t
' '
cen ·
. :·. . . ..·.·. ·.. ' .-..·.··. :.BRADBURY NOTE
A car Wit!! heaVily damaged, , an embankment, spinned
A
public meeting to
arowtd
for
another
30
feet,
Ita driver·charged with driving
dlscuSI
lbe Bradbury Scbool'
finally
striking
and
knocking
while intoxicated, as lhe result
will
be
held at 7:30 p.m. ·
down
a
utility
pole,
of an accident on Union Ave. at
Tuesday ·a l tbe Meigs Junior
Bass and a passenger, James
5:20p.m. Sun~ay.
.
'
Jligh School ID Middleport,
Milliron,
Racine,
were
taken
to
Pojneri&gt;y police said the car,
district superlatendut
driven by Gene Bass, 46, Veterans Memorial Hospital
c;&gt;eorge
Hargraves reminded
Pomeroy, went off Ute left side . where lbey were treated and •
lodliy.
'
of.the road, sideswiped a utility released.
.-:-.·:·:·:-:-:-:-:.-:-:-:·:·:·:.:·:-:.v.·.·-·
·.·· ·.
-::
pole, careeried 123 feet and hit
.I
I

Auto damaged, driver charged

...

~

'

from the airport. It was 11 :09 :22 a.m.
[)ameron said his Instruction meant Brock should fly at
7,000feet for another 24 miles before descending. ~' I thought
my clearance was clear and precise, that It was not confusing," said the 20-year veteran. "I thought I knew what Ute
pilot would do.
"I think the pilot thought thesameway.lf he was confused,
he would have asked me."
Recordings of In-flight conversations show Brock thought
the clearance meant he could immediately go down to 1,800
feet. He told his·copilot, Lenard W, Kresheck, 40, to disregard
"that dumb sheet" --&lt;1 navigation chart showing a minimum
safe .altitude of 3,400 feet.
Other pilots say they would have done the same Uting.
Controllers say their responsibility is to prevent midair
CQUisions and that it is up to the pilot to keep his plane above
the J!l'ound.
Dameron, whose government approach chart did not
CQntain MI. Weather, became frightened when his yellowJ!I'een radar screen showed the plane at 2,000 feet. He tried to
get Brock on the radio.
It was too late. The jet was buffeted by wlnda tha.t pushed It
down 250 fee,t, tossed it up 150 feet and back down 200 feel in
less than a minute.
·
.
·
Th~ radar a ltimeter warning horn shrieked. "Get some
power on," Brock yelled two seconds before the crash.

• »1~~11818;fi!!HI!I'~·~SilOIS!Jig:·l!l·~o~~;::_~!! ······ \'. V 'eY:~"s;&amp;~~;~~:~:~~:~:i:~:::::~8::::::~:~:::~::::::::::::::m.-::::..\.~~"!»:."C.ai&amp;&amp;.&amp;.sm.•. j 1::~~~"'--IRIS!II~W!IN~illlllll11881!1!1111111t111

a1y

&lt;

./

TI1e testimony so far indicates the instrum~nt landing rules
are ambiguous, TWA complaini!d to the FAA in 1970 about
the widespread confusion. The regulations were changed,
then canceled five months later. Awitness this week will ·be
asked to explain,
In .the first 32 dai's of 197~. 12 perso~ died in instrument
landing crashes. In 1974, th e death toll was 466 in eig ht
crashes. Four, which killed 366, occurred during some phase
of landing.
Controller Merle W, Dameron, the last man to talk to the
airplane, pleaded for clarity. Discussing the different charts
and rules, he said "these publications evidently present .all
the saine information, but differently.
" If we could standardize our publications so traffic controllers and pilots are using the same book, so you don't have
50 different things you're oeferring to, then they (all) would
know what's going on.
Everyone aJ!I'ees on this : Dameron gave Flight ~14, piloti!d
by Richard L Brock, an Instrument approach Clea rance to
Runway 12 at Dulles International Airport. The "VORDME".type approach shows a pilot the course and distance
to the airport, not the angle of landing.
"You're cleared for a VOR-DME approach to Runway onetwo," said Dameron. ·
A few minutes later, the Boeing 727 hit 1,764-foot MI.
Weather, a mountaintop in the Blue Ri&lt;lge range, 23 miles

•

Weather
Chance of light snow tonight
and Tuesday. Lows tonight In
the upper 20s, highs Tuesday,
upper 30s. Probability of
precipitation 20per cent today,
30 per cent tonight, 40 per cent
Tuesday.

'

Five of 16

:

·'

Kentucky, Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi,
Alabama, Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Maryland, and New York.
The ARC is·. a· federal-state
partnership which funnels fed·
eral money tq· ,the states and
oversees the programs.
Included in .,the FY 1976
budget request was $180 million
for continuation of the Appala- ·
chian Development Highway
System, designed to improve
accessibility to ' the poverty
region , reduce highway trans-·
portation costs, and provide·
•·
facilities to accelerate overall
JUBILEE TUREE STAR - Earl Hoffman, right, wiUt the "Jubilee Three" which was
developmen\ of Appalachia.
voted
the best country gospel group for 1974 by the KCZT Tape and Fan Club, Hoffman ill
The .government estimated
formerly of Pomeroy,
that 1,300 miles of highway
would be completed at the end
of FY 1976, along with _an
$II
additional 500 miles of access
~
roads,
A former Meigs County man, primarily to promoting lesser · There was a tie vote this year
No one
j ed
·•-•
The major change in aid
Earl Hoffman, is a member of known and new talent In the · between the JubUee Three and
was W' or Cl~
uld
· 1 d'
· in two traffic accidents wo
come 111 un mg area a Bellevllle, ado area group, country-western and gospel Jim and Jesse and The
.
development programs which
Investigated
over
Ute will include health and child The Jubilee Three, which music field, The club has about VIrginia Boys, a group which
weekend by the GaUia-Meigs development, community racili- recently was awarded trophies 3110 members In Ute United has been a member of Ute
Post State Highway Patr~l.
ties and-housing, vocational and for the best COWitry 80spel States and 10 foreign countries. Grand Ole Opry many yean. A
Tapes are sent to members second vote was taken with Ute
The first occurred at l1 :30p. other education , enterprise group for 1974. The trophies
by
KCZT
Tape
throughout
the year fealurlitg Jubilee Three winning ,
were
awarded
m. Saturday on Rt. 143 iri Meigs development and toW'ism, natuHoffman is the son of Mrs.
Fan
Club
.with the lesser known recording
County where Clarence M. ral resources and environment, and
Fraley, 21 , Rt. 3, Albany, lost and non-highway transporta· headquarters In Philadelphia, artists. A tape is sent In Julia Gibbs who llves· at Rt. 1,
Pa .
control of his car on a sharp .
January Utat features eligible Pomeroy, He \VSS emp!Qyed
curve. The auto left the high- ti~~- past years, the ARC has The KCZT Tape and Fan KCZT artista In each category with Robinson 's Laundry many
years before leaving Meigs
way striking a utility pole and decided the programs which the Club is an orga~~on devoted from which votes are cast,
CoWity.
tree . There was moderate
damage.
respective states would use any
A 1 h'
ASundayrru'shapoccurred
ppa ac ta money. h
- 'tn
Gallia County on McCully Rd.,
.The new concept, owever,
one and two-tenths miles west would provide $125 million In an
allocation program similar . to
of Rt. 7 where cars driven by the bloc grants of the federal
Nick C. Lagaras, 46, Gallipolis, revenue sharing program .
and James J. Armbruster, 16,
h d d
t 'd th
Addison, coiUded on a hillcrest.
T e bu get ocumen 881 e
would permit
There Was mode'rale damage allocations
"
te tate n 'bil't
· th
1 Y '"
to both cars. No ,charges were · grea t r s d ki ext
e•
d
of
filed.
amoun an
n
projects
By BERNARD BRENNER administratiQn wants an ex- Real spending on some
undertaken,"
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) - panded federal crop insurance programs was scheduled to
Another · $11:5 mllllon was
President Ford's new budget program with farmers paying Increase. A boost ·of $42 mllllon
Included In the ARC budget for
today called for cutbacks in a most · of the cost through to a new total of $592 million
. the research and local develnnwas piannect for agricultural
Meigs County .farmers have
., lilfl8 list of farm a"d rural premiums, the budget said.
ment district program whereby programs and predicted farm
The
budget
sh9Wed
total
'
r
esearch, mainly to Increase
until Feb. 15 to file for a new
planning assistance is provided pr'iee support spending .in the planned AgricultW'e Depart- farm .producti-&lt;ity; and for
corn allotiilent for 1975· Ap- tl)rough gr.ants to multi-county
year starting July 1 would drop men! spending in the 1976 fiscal allied items such as extension
plications can be securi!d at the
development districta. Grants to the lowest level in 25 years. y~r beginning Jitly 1 at $9.7 work , and grants to state
local Agriculture Stabilization
and Conservation Servi~e are llUide up to 75 per. cent of
Ford said he will try to lrim billiori, up more than $900 experiment statfons. Exjlenses
Office in the Farmers Bank administrative expenses of the farm spending even further million from the currept fisc~! for meat and poultry inspection
districts.
with legislation eliminating year, The increase, however, were also up $9 mlllloo.
Bllildlng at Pomeroy.
But for most federal· farm
· · provisions that grain and cotton was · a bookkeeping change
. Farmers who have not
growers who suffer weather produced , because of a sche· programs, the trend was down.
h8rves~ their 1974 corit due to
The budget predicted .direct .
disasters will collect about $592 duled $2 billion decline.in sales
bad weather conditions can flle
of
government·
loan
papef
to
payments
to lllf1lltr., wblc:h bit
million
this
fiscal
year
and
ail
for disaster payments not later
private
investors.
·
nearly
$4
bllllon
in u-1 19'13,
estimated $254 million in the
than 1~ days after har\testing iS
LOCAL TEMPS
' If the $2 bllllon change is .would !lroP from Sl llllllon to
compl~ted. Evidence ~~
The temperature In down- year starting July 1·
disaster must be present and ·town Pomer~y at 11 a.m. -. In place of the disaster ignored, ' actual government $401 mlllloo In the year allrbt
residue. of tbe crop cannot be · Monday ~as 38 degrees under payments linked to the crop program operations wo!lid be · July I. All price ,IIJIIPOI1,i
'destroyed.
s1111ny skies.
· Cpntinuetl 'on
price support program, the reduced $1.1 billion.
.'
. . '1
. • .
''
'
' .
.,,
the Applachian Regional Commission, would equal the
estimated FY 197~ outlay.
"In 1976, Appalachia regional
development programs will
continue to undergo changes
designed to provide greajer
flexibility in meeting the
diverse problems of Appalachia,'' the budget report said.
It added that fiscal'~esources
"will be concentra~ 'on the
overall economic development
objectives of the region."
Included in the Appalachian
region is the entire state of
West Virginia, and parts of

Only autos
dam
· ued

Meigs man in award winning group .

m
'

Farm, rural problems
cut back in Fordplan

File date set

.

Pill!.!--

.

'

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