<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15157" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15157?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T16:49:56+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48251">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/552b6223e93e1b54c116a70af5d4bc8b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c4cf39a8cffdbce84b70f1abafa08ea3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48677">
                  <text>•

.lt-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Ponieroy, o.. rri&lt;hly, July 8,1977

Student

Wife's fate

~-----A.;~;-0~;th~-~--! Author, educator, will

-

CREWMAN KILLED
DELPilOS. Olalo iUPI)
- Ae Ol1lo P-er Ca.

Seven hurt
in Meigs'

CRWDilla WU eleetnc!uted
1
(Continued fiUII pap 1)
MRs.
GR4CE
VIII
VERL
B.
TUTTLE
•lcllt willie
Tb•raday
health .services Will be per- and 9. to join him in Taiwan,
TUPPE
RS
PLAINS
Veri
Mrs.
Grace
Pauley
Via
,
78
.
worklq
to
repa.lr
clamal•
formed. The clini~ is for aU ran replied, "Yes''
B. Tuttle. . 78, of Tuppers formerly of Middleport, died
first
book
portrayed
the
CIUied
by
a
twldenlenll
ATHENS
Educator
' ages and income status has
Fan painted a grim picture
Plains died Friday morning Thursday in Borger. Te•. She
whlclt struck the area,
no bearing on thos~ at- of llfe in mainland China, al St. Joseph's Hospital in was preceded In death by her Jon•than Kozol, author of the dlscrlmlnation be witnessed
there
as
a
public
school
aulhoritleo
tald.
Parkersburg
ending
an
ex.
parents,
her
husband,
Lewis
award-winning
book
"Death
tending. Several hundred saying there is a food
tended
illness.
Via,
and
two
brothers.
teacher.
.
Marti&amp;
Nutter,
Zl,
at
an
Early
Age"
will
speak
more can be accommodated shortage that has gone
persons suffered
He was born in Orange
Surviving are two slsten, on the Ohio University
Through
this
experience,
Delphos,
was
dead
on in)Seven
and those mterested are to .. unnoticed by foreign visitors Townst:lip. a son of the lale Mrs. ·John (Cecil) Kincaid,
uries
in three Meigs
he mel a group of black
arrival at a Lima tM.pltal
/ can 992-7886 to be registered. because of tight controls on Walter and ' May Huffman Midd leport and Miss Oahlla campus next Tuesday.
County traffic • accident•
Tbe acddeat occurred which the Gallipolis post of
Tuttle .
Pauley, Columbus, and a
Sponsored by the Kennedy parents who decided to deal
Miss Geyer will be working their travels.
He is survived by his wife, number of nieces and Lecture series, Kozol's with their situation by
whBe power crew• were the Ohio Highway Patrol
with two other medical
"I came here to seek
Bertha. and five children. nephews .
starting
a
free
school
to
wort1u1 ill · a rural area iDveotlgated Thursday.
. students at the clinic in the freedom and ~uman rights Mrs. Onelta Cole. Tuppers
Graveside rites will be at 1 speech will be at 8:15 p. rn. in
respond
directly
to
the
needs
southeast of here. ".
1
counseling and referral area . which are totally lacking on. . Plains i Mrs. Juanita Guthrie p.m. Sunday at the Riverview Morton Han 235.
Southbound David M.
Kozol, who won the and wishes of the neigh- =:~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::.::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::~:::::::::::::::;:;:;:; J Huston, 18, Syiacuse, met
Health education parnp)Jlets the China mainland " Fan and Mrs. Eleanor Douglas, Cemetery in Middleport with
both of Coolville; Bob, of the Rev : Robert Bumgarner National Book Award for his borhood in which it was
and materials covering a said on landing, toss'ing his Columbus
northbound Ha•el Marie
, and Bill, of offic iating . The Rawlings broad . area . of ~ealth cap to the ground. " It's the
Fairborn : a brother, V. Clay Coats Funeral Home is in fii'S! publication, has also located. Many other free
Bi!ll!l, 58, Rt. 3, Pomeroy on
authored "Free Schools" and sc~ools have cropped up
education wtll be on dtsplay Communists who forced me . Tuttle, Middleport: fQur charge of ar-rangements.
US 331.~ miles soutJi.of Rt. 7.
~alJia Huston's
~· more recent book entitled' around .the country and their
at the clinic and · will 'be to do this. 1 just cannot take it sisters, Veda Parrish, Miami,
car struck the Biggs
Fla .; Vesta Tuttle, Akron ;
experiences provld~d the
N'fght
is
Dark
and
I
Am
"The
available to the public.
any more." ·
car
in
the.left
front and then
Bernita
Harding ,
Mer material for his second book.
Far From Home. .,
BERTHA WETZEL
Fan will receive a reward cerville, and Flora Marie
went
off the left side of the
The latest volume is an
Mrs. Bertha Wetzel, 86,
CANCELLED
Kozol has worked for
of 5,000 ounces of gold worth Gibson, Akron : 19 gr~nd ­ Pomeroy,
highway where it hit a utility
died
early
Friday
angry
expose of the
chlldren
and
16
great.
The Middleport Amateur nearly $800,000, under a
nearly
10
years
to
improve
pole. The Huston c11r was
morn i n9
at
Veterans
· processing individuals unGardeners Club has can- standing offer to Chinese air grandchildren.
demolished, and the Biggs
Hospital.
A the education of the children
Besides his parents, one Memortal
celled the July picnic which ·force defectors . by the grandchild preceded him in member of Trinity Church, in the ghettos of Boston. His dergo as public school
car had severe damage.
studentS.
David Daryl Shoemaker of
was scheduled Wednesday, Nationalist government. death"!' Funeral services will she was preceded in death by
Huston, charged with left of
be at 2 p.m. Sunday at the her husband, David V ., and a
Nashville, Tenn., recently center, claimed injury, but
July 13.
Fan was leading a patrol Whi
daughter
,
Pauline
Me·
te Funeral Home here
graduated
from
the was not irnmedlatel~ treated;
mission along the Coalit of with .Mr. Eugene Underwood Cullock.
Management
Trattrlng
.
Swvlvlng
are
three
nor was Timothy J. ThompTaiwan Thursday when he officiatirlQ. Burl"l wilt be in
, Mrs. Lennie
Program at the Chauncey son, 18, Racine, Rt. 2, who
suddenly veered east toward · the Tuppers· Plains Christian daughters
•
Church Cemetery. Friends (Norm(!!) JeWell, POmeroy,
Sparks Center for Develop- also
THR!l FRIDAY
claimed
injury.
the Nationalist island and may
Holzer Medical Ceuter
call after 1 p.m : with whom she tnade her
VETERAN$ MEMORIAL
mental
·
and
Learning
home:
Mrs.
Harold
(Bertha)
Thompson
was
a
passenger
informed·Taiwanese
officials
Saturday .
(Discharges, July&amp;)
Brolin
ADMITTED - Ernestine , Disorders at the UniverSity of
Edmonds, Columbus, and
by _~dlo he planned to Hmd
Helen
Boyd,
Doris
Brewer,
Fischer,
Racine ;
Ida Alab$rna· in Birmingham with Huston.
Mrs . Fred ~Genevieve)
Ronnie Cox
The Biggs car also went off
his jet and defect,
Lorey, Mt . Vernon; four Clarence Burris, Mrs. Paul llcadaker, Pontiac, Mich.; (UAB).
the
left side of the road, over
The other MiGs gave chase
grandchildren , Stephen Byus and· daughter, Karen Eula Evans, Pomeroy;
IN
The
program
is
.designed
to
Jewell,
Pomeroy;
Mrs.
'
an
embankment,
and into a
to their leader to head off the
Clark, Floyd Drummond, Sal)dra Sheets, Reedsville; increase the managerial
Heydinger,
BeHontalne
;
MrS.
small
Cl'el!k.
The
wreck oc-,
defection, but turned back
''THE CAR"
Jacquelyne Fain , Wendell Audrey Arnold, Pomeroy;
Rlchar~ Cahoon, In Samoa,
skills
of
administrative
curred
at
10:30
p.m.
into Communist air space
and R1chard Lorey, Sum. Grate, Kathryn Halley, Ruby Mayme Buchanan, Pomeroy;
when Nationalist jets began (Continued from ,..88 1)
ALSO
mervllle. S.. c. and eight Harper, Christopher Kapp, Shirley Hubbard, Pomeroy; personnel who work with the
disabled. It
.....
great-grandchildren.
closing in, avertin~ a possible
Amos Leonard, John Lewis, Robert Baker, Middleport. developmentally
JOHN E. PARTWW, 18,
Funeral
arrangements
are
is
a
one
year
continuing
"SIDECAR RACER"
annual
rate
of
4
per
cent
in
air battle.
Doris Lilllco, Louise Lively,
being completed at the Ewing
DISCHARGED
Christine
Pomeroy
Rt. 3, driving west
program funded by
the last three months, Funeral Home.
Michael Lucas, .Timothy Branham, Christopher education
on
TR
1311
at 9:50p.m. carne
compared to more than 10 per
Masters, Isaac McCormick, Becker, Ella stewart, Claude HEW's Office of Develop- to the Y-intersection with TR
mental Disabilities and is the
cent in the first three mooths
Artha Peoples, Joe Pickens, Randolph; Maudie Wood.
of 1977.
'
only
course of its kind in the 145. He went straight ahead
Vida Scott, Blanche Steele,
into a bank. Moderate
June's
incre~s'e
in
Edithe Vaughn , Stella .:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: country.
damage was done and. no
Sh~rnaker is a Socia) Work
unemployment was . caused
Walters, Elnora Woosley,
Supervisor at Clover BottQlll citation was issped.
primarily by a larger than
Vickie
Wright.
Partlow had visible si~ of
Pedestrians
'may
normal influx of · available
Developmental Center in
(Blrtb,Juoe6)
injury,
as did hiS passenger,
Nashville. He has a master's
workers into the American
use
Ohio
bridge
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thurman
Robert
T. Baker, 15, Middegree in Social Work from
labor
market.
After
Oiler,
a
daughter,
Vinton.
·
dleport:
The Pomeroy
adjustment for seasonal facthe University of Tennessee
PT. PLEASANT - A
.
(Discharges,
July7)
emergency
squad
!Qok both to
in Nashville and has been
tors, the increase in available
West Virginia Department
Mildren
Arnold,
Dottie
the
Veterans
Memorial
employed in his present
workers was 480,000.
Sylvia Bennett to Col. Bailey, Eric Brown, John of Highways official aoAlthough employment rose Southern Ohio El~. Co., 6 A.,
position for the pa'st five 'Hospital.
uounced today there bas
Dunlavey,
Mabel
Durbin,
T'v&gt;o other passengers
for the eighth consecutive Lebanon.
years.
been no decision as to when
Mrs.
Charles
Green
and
son,
removed
to VMH by the
month, it could not keep pace
Mr .
Shoemaker
is
Sylvia Beruiett to Col. &amp; William Gunnell, Angelia the new SHver Memorial
patrol
itseU
were Dell T. Call,
with this increase. Moreover,
originally from GallipOlis.
Southern Ohio Elec. Co., int. Holt, Ireland Hunt, Elizabeth Bridge wm be reopened to
17,
Pomeroy,
and Gary L:
there were nearly 1.1 milli,on in 6 A., Lebanon.
vehicle traffic.
Johnson,·
Ma'
r
gare't
Jopes,
Priddy,
15,
Rt.
4 Pomeroy,
persons too discouraged to
II was learned, however,'
Jasper
Bennett
Jr.,
Shelba
Wanda
Kay,
Carolyn
both
claiming
injury.
look for work in the past thr~ ·
that pedestrian !raffle wUI
At 4 p.m. on SR 7, tw&lt;r
months - the highest number Jean Bennett to Columbus &amp; Nicholson, .Luther Pittenger, be permlUed to use the
Southern
Ohio
Elec.
Co.,
Int.
Margaret
Priddy,
Kimberly
tenths
of a mile north Of SR
since the worst . of the
bridge
during
the
time
the
in
6
A.,
Lebanon.
681, a southbound car' struck
Robinett, Fred Robinson,
recession in July-September,
· Jasper Bennett Jr., Shelba ·Elaine Rouse, Sandra Stroud, structure · lsc closed to
a parked vehicle. Parked off
1975.
vehicle traffic.
to
Columbus
&amp; Mary Thompson, Evelyn Van
Jean
Bennett
the
road was Marion E.
The ratio of American citi;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
Southern
Ohio
Elec.
Co.,
6
A.,
Mayle,
Cpolville, headed
Fosse~.
Evelyn
Williams.
•ens
to
·jobholders
Gallia Country will open its south. Driving south was
Lebanon.
(Birtb.&amp;,July7)
·
nonetheless continued to
fifth season, st11rting -at 9 Theodore D. ConnoUy, 35,
William Elmer Bennett to
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Ervin,
climb, moving close to the
o'clock this evening, at Bob ·Reedsville Rt. I, who went off
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio a daughter, Wellston. Mr. and
record highs of early 1974.
Want some financial help 7
Evans Farms, Rio Grande. the left side of the road and
Women workers suffered a Elec. Co., Int. in 6 A., Mrs. Richard Manley, a
' Following tonight's opening struck the Mayle car in the
And good advice?
daughter, Vinton.
severe setback in June, when Lebanon.
performance,
additional
Willliim Elmer Bennett to
Come to the place where yo u· re the bosiC
their unemployment rate
Lows tonight in the low 70s. presentations are scheduled left rear.
A passenger, Lenore E.
We like doing things your way.
rose from 6.6 per cent to 7.2 Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Cloudy, not as warm Saturday and Sunday, and
·
E;)ec.
Co.,
6
A,.
Lebanon.
Mayle,
23, Coolville, claimed
per cent. Joblessness also
Satutday, chance of thun- again on the weekends of July
Edna
May·
Hering
injury,
and was taken to
AID
UNIT
CALLED
rose among teen.agers. But
dershowers, highs to mid 80s. 15-17, 22-24 and 29-Jl.
(Hearring
)
to
Columbus
&amp;
Parkersburg
hospital by the
The
Pomeroy
Emergency
unemployment · for men
Probability of precipitation
••
The historical music drama EMS. Moderate damage was
Southern
Ohio
Elec.
Co.,
Int.
was
called
to
118·
Squad
. declined to 5 per cent.
50 per cent today, tonight and is produced by· the Gallla ·
done both cars. The patrol
·Laurel St. at 12:50 p.m. Saturday.
The average duration of · in 6 A., Lebanon.
Dramatic Arts Society.
Sally
Pierce,
Donald
Pierce
.
charged
Connolly with DWI.
Thursday
for
Eula
Evans
joblessness declined slightly,
to
Elmer
Pierce,
Charlotte
who was taken to Veterans
and there were 100,000 fewer
Memorial Hospital. At 2:45
persons whO had been out of Pierce, Lot, Pomeroy.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Mary L. Winll,ett, I.J,well a.m. Friday, the fire
work for 15 weeks or more.
The
Bedford Township
rutland
pomerOr
But
short-term Wingett to Bennie J . Wright, department went to county
trustees
will meet in 8pe:clal
,
road 46, off ·Route 681, to ·
h . . . . . ~..
unemployment of less than 8.68 A., Salisbury.
IN HOSPITAL
session
at
6:311 p.m. July 14 at
Terry Realty, Inc. to extinguish a fire in an auto Nellie ~blin, Pomeroy, is a
•
five weeks rose by 275,000
the home of Helen Swartz,
Lorraine
P.
Aeiker,
Cindy
owned
by
Robert
Glass.
thebar*cA •
persons.
patient at Holzer Medical clerk, to prepare a budget for
the century
Most of the increased Aeiker, Lot, Chester.
Center in Gallipolis. In
year 1978.
Jasper Bennett, dec., to
•• [t ,.,... 1872
employment occurred in
satisfactory condition, Nellie
CLUB TO MEET
service industries in June , Sylvia Bennett, Jasper · Lee
will soon be released fronl the
A regular meeting of the· hospital and will make her
unlike previous months when Bennett Jr., William Ebner
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
PLAN WORK PARTY
the gains have · been Bennett, Edna Mae Hearring, . Twin City Shrine Club will be horne at the W~llston Nursing
Kroger
Co. today reported a
The
Meigs
County
Jaycees
occurring prima ~ily in Raymond Bennett; Charles held at 7:311 p.m. Monday at Home on P_ark Ave. in
10.8
per
cent increase i.i1 sales
will hold a work party at the
Halley Bennett, Wilda Fay the clubhouse in Racine . Wellston.
manufacturing.
·
mini-park in .Pomeroy at 6 and a 48..8per cent increase in
Moyer, Aff. for Trans ., Plans will be made for a
p.m. to be followed by a earnings for the second
Lebanon.
·
picnic.
.
_
b
usiness meeting. In case of quarter of 1977.
Edna
May . Hering
Kroger Chaihnan James P.
rain
the meeting will be held
LOTTERY WINNERS
(Hearrlng) to Columbus &amp;
Herring
said the earnings
at
8
p.m.
at
the
.Meigs
Inn.
TbiB week's wlooiDg Ohio
Southern Ohio Elec. Co., 6 A., Elec. Co., 6 A., Lebanon.
growth
resulted
from
Wilda Fay Moyer, Andrew
Lottery Pot 0' Gold
Lebanon.
•
The Cool Pleasing
strength
and
sustained
sales
numbers:
Raymond Bennett to Moy.e r to Columbus &amp; SouthTAG DAY
more
effective
operations
Three-digit number
Atmosphere Of
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio em Ohio Elec. Co., Int. in 6
Eastern High School band throughout the finn.
..
131.
Elec. Co., Int. in 6 A., A., Lebanon.
members who are holding tag
Sales during the 12 weeks
. Wilda Fay Moyer, Andrew
Three-didll number
Lebanon.
day Saturday should meet at endil)g Julle 18 were $1.51
Raymond Bennett to Moyer to Columbus &amp; South- 718.
the school at 8:30 a.m. They billion, up $146 millioo for the
Five-digit uumber
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio ern Ol!io Elee. Co., 6 A.,
should wear their band !- same period a year ago. Net
Lebanon.
28810.
Elec. Co., 6 A., Lebanon.
shirts and .take a · small earning during the second
Harlan Wehrung, com.,
,C harles Holley (Halley)
containe~.
quarter of 1977 were $15.4
Bennett to Columbus &amp; Harry H. Wehring,' dec. to
million, or $1. r4 per share,
SOuthern Ohio Elec. Co., Int. Harland Wehrung, Edwin
1:001pared to $10.4 million and
Wehrung, Louise Wehrung,
in 6 A., Lebanon.
77-cents per $are dlll'ing last
Charles Halley. Bennett to Barbara AITD Schnitzler,
year's second qiiBrter.
Spencer,
Lots,
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Judy
(
Ccntlnued
from
pqt
1)
"We are seeing the result of.
Pomeroy.
four,
until
mine
inspectors
ordered
them
out.
the
major capital Investment
Marvin R. Spencer, dec. , to
which
has been made in
·
Judith D. Dixon formerly
OOLUMBUS
U.
S.
DISTRICT
&lt;XIURT
Judge
Robert
Kroger
'facilities during the
Judith Spencer, Cert. for
Duncan
warned
Columbus
school
board
members
Tburaday
past
several
years," H~
trans., Pomeroy.
that
a
r~nt
U.
S.
Supreme
Court
decision
on
school
·
said.
"This
bas better
Barbara AM Schnitzler,
desegregatioo
in
Dayton
would
not
greatly
affect
his
l')l1lng
equipped
Kroger
to oller the
Robert H. Schnitzler to
about
Columbps
because
the
cases
are
not
comparable.
prici!Jg,
quality
and
variety
Franklin E. !hie, Lots,
Th.e high court,ruled. ~t ~e d~atloo plan ordered of merchandise which
Pomeroy.
. Harland Webrung, Aileen for Dayton was too drasttc m v1ew of the viqllltlons proved. But attracts today's' shoppers. •,;.
By the end of this · year,
INTEREST
G.
Wehrung,
Edwin Duncan . sa1d he had found eY!dence .oe system-,,,Jde
Webrung, lsabeUe Wehrung, segregation in tol.bus, so he still wants a system- Kroger will have invested
Louise Wehrung, . Judith remedy from the board. The judge did agree, however, to ID(l('t than $500 million 1D
Spencer Dixon, F. Donald permit the Columbus board to submit ame~~ta to the improved facilities durin&amp; the
Dixon to Franklin .E. Ihle, school desegregation plan for busing 46,000 pupils •t filed June past six yeat'l primarily for
:Ill. The amendments would reduce the n~ to 4,000.
larger, m~ retaU stores.
'
Lots, Pomeroy.
•
Glenn Ragan, Doris Ragan,
Dorothy Mercer to Flossie
Ragan, 25 -A., Columbia.
Hannah M. Walsh to Nigel
R. Atkin, Maureen S. Witney,
Parcels, Columbia.
Robert F. McNeil, aka
Robert F. Nell, Maslne
EWott, atty. · in fact., to
Mlldred lngram, "Malcobn
lngram, 1 A., Rutland.
Amos Tlllis, Ruth 'Tilll8 to
Holllehold of Faith MWion ot
- . Many sen~tional sale prices on men's ilnd boys'
Rutland, Ohio, Lot, Rutland.
children's and women's wearing apparel. icieal for wear
Thomas 0. McKay to Dan
The Athens County
rlghf now and warmer days to come - Stap in - laok
Smith, Donna Jean Smith,
Slvints &amp; Loan Co.
Int. ill Parcels: Chester.
around and take advantage of the special July Clearance
296 Stcond St.
Barbara Wetmmg, dec., to .
Pomerey, Olllo
Sale prices.
Harry Webrung, Harlan
Webrung, Edwb) Wehrun8,
Delphln WebruJ!g, Marvin R.
' 992-3629
POMEROY
Spencer, A~f: for Trana.,
'
Pomeroy. ·

speak in Athens series

(Oanllmaed frool pqt 1)

She did just what
fortune dealt out

1

accidents

For_mer
residents die
in auto wreck

.

PUPPY LOVE - Mrs. Epple rewards Mr dog, ·:spotty," after a friendly romp
her back yard. A constant companion to Mrs. Epple, Spotty performs 131ricks
including jumping through a hoop, chasing his tail, and sneezing for attention!

HOSPITAL NEWS

MASON DR. IN

tn

'
ByJudyOwea
POMEROY - "I'm really jll!o1 a
simple, ordinary person," insisted Mrs.
John J. (Emma ) Epple recently at her
home on CR 25. "Just like everyone else,
I've simply done that which comes

8 :-l!i!

natui-ally, that which I've had to do," she

Born Emma Eastman in 1904 in
Bedford township, Mrs. E:ppl~ is the
daughter of the late Samuel A. and Ida D.
Eastman. The only vivid memories of her
early childhood at home with her parents
and nini. other children, six brothers and
three sisters are of hard work and attending school.ivla foot ) in Texas com-.
munity, a neliibborhood not far from
where she presently lives.
Although 10 children made the hard
times even rougher, Mrs. Epple recalls

said.
Mrs. Epple is a modest lady. Circumstances have necessarily. laid. out the
pattern of her 73 years and throughout her
life have contributed to making her a hard
working, family oriented, and very
.
talented and interesting woman.
What can be said about this lady who
claims that one of the biggest differences
in the life sHe leads now and the one she led
several years back is ill the time she rolls .
out of bed in the morning' Obviously a
believer in the ' 1early to bed, early to rise''
philosophy, Mrs. Epple ls accustomed to
lights out at 10 p.m. She recalls a time
when she rose at 3:30a.m. daily. Now she
allows herself the luxury of sleeping in
until 6:45. Her daughter-in-law, Mrs.
Roger Epple, jokes that just recently' she
shocked the family by staying in bed until

.

·James

vo. 12

Meig~

Weather

=··ror

natlona
bank

Kroger sales,

earnmgs up
in 2nd quarter

News •• in Briels

3 Pc. Group, Fai_
rborn, 0.

-

TONlGHT. &amp; SATURDA_Y.
10:00 til 2:00

On' Certificates
Of Deposit
$1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

Meip

Elberfelds In·Pomeroy
OPEN FRIDAY 11L 8 P.M.

ca Branch

- ··~JULY CLEARANCE SAtE

THE MEIGS· INN

OPEN SAtURDAY .9:1,. M1 TO 5 PM

·,

~

•'

~

.

that " we never felt that we were missing

anything or did without."
In 1925 she married John Joseph
Epple. From that union, which lasted
through the hardship of Mr. Epple's battle
with multiple sclerosis and ended with .his
death in 1970, came four daughters, Freda
Will; Margaret Baily, Dolores Holter, and
Continued on page A-2

THEY BLOOM AND GROW - Mrs. Epple, here watering some of her puints
and flowets, is a whiz in the garden. You might say she has a perpetual green
!bumS. Gladlolas are among ber favorites. She recalls once pulling-pansies while
the snow was still on the ground.

•

tmts·

Unemployment '

Ga11ia' Country
to open fifth
season tonight

homestead, since her marriage.

+

c

Property
Transfers

Her entire life, with the exception of
five short years in Athens, has been spent
in this area and she has resided in her
present home, the Epple family

'

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 23

Union demands
blamed-for
store closing

Registration

/""

that the Jones Boys has not properly paid
their employees or provided henefits."
He said, "The Jones Boys is one of the
most progressive retail companies in this
area regarding pay and henefits. In fact,
seven of the employees presently on the
picket lines made over .$10,000 last year
and three of those seven made approximately $12,000."
In addition, Mr. Stiffler stated, "the

so many economic reversals that it is

average full time hourly wage earner at

necessary for it to close."
He further stated "the Pomeroy store
has never had a fair opportunity to sueceed. The economic !Qsses due to the
Mason bridge shut-downs during 1975 and
1976 were factors; the other, and more
damaging factor has bOcn the excessive
demands made by Food store Employees
Union, Local 347, Amalgamated Meat
Cutters &amp; Butcher Workmen of North
America, Al'L-CIO, of Charleston, W.Va.,

the Jones Boys made $6,279 in 1976. This
average does not include department
managers and supervisors. During the last
six years of Jones Boys history, there have
been 12 pay raises for bourly employees.'
Prior to union negotiations, Jones
Boys .employees had . the following
benefits :
.
.
1.
Blue
Cross-.Biue
Shield
hospitalization insuran ce, the best
available incl~ding Major Medical.

in their recent negotiations."

ln addition, Stifner commented, "It
appears the union has been more interested in shutting us down than in
representing our employees. After all, the
union has a much bigger obligation to our
major chain Competitors than they do to
our employees."
• Mr. stiffler went on to say, "I am
·shocked at the rllffiors and insinuations

2.' Paid vacations.

3. Income protection insurance, if
employee is sick or huh on or off the job.
4. Life insuran~e equal to one year's
· salary.
.
5. Liberal sick leave benefits payable
at the end of each year if not used.
6. Very liberal paid excused ahsences
uptothreedaysduetodeathlnthefamily.

"Van Houten jury recesses in
'second murder' deliberations ·
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A jury
Saturday deliberated for about three hours
in the second murder trial of former
Charles Manson "family" member Leslie
Van Houten and then recessed for the
weekend.
Miss VanHouten was charged with first" degree murder . in the 1969 LaBianca
stabbing deaths, a grisly sequel to the
· murdei's of actress Sharon Tate and four
other~ _two nights earlier :
The second trial of Miss Van Houten
went to tlie jury Friday after her attorney
told the court she should be found guilty of
manslaughter, not murder .
.
''
She was convicted of murder the first
time but won a new trial on appeal because
her attorney disappeared during tbe first
1rial. She served seven years and if the
• jury returned a. verdict of manslaughter
she would be eligible for immediate
parole. .
·
·
The key dispute in the second, threemonth tria! was whether Miss Van Houten
was legally in full control of herself when
she helped kill Rosemary at\d Leno
LaBianca Aug. 10, 1969.
Her defense was that she w~s incapable
of prerneditaflon needed in first-degree
murder because her mind was weakened
by r.&lt;;D and she was under the inHuence of
Charles Manson.
·
The LaBianca killings . occurred two
nighta after the Manson followers
• slaughtered actress Sharon Tate and four
others at the Tate home.
"We are n&lt;* asking for outright
OPEN DOOR SET
representative- from -Congri,&gt;SSRla
"nArPne• E. MHler's office will &lt;:Qnduct an
open door session from 10 a.m.-12 noon in
the courthouse in. Pomeroy on July 13.
WJNDOW FOliNO BROKEN
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis police
crulaing ._rty Friday morning found a
- broken window in Tom's Stereo, but there
,..Jiad been no entry and nothing wa~
mllsing, Dilcovery Was made at 5:45a.m.

acquittalt" her attorney, Maxwell Keith,
said. 11 ! am asking, because Ule evidence
shows it proper, for a verdict of
manslaughter."
But prosecutor Stephen Kay, in
summing up, said the LaBianca slayings
were nQthing less than murders in the first
degree. "In the name of justice I beg you,"
he said, "not to forget Rosemary and Leno
LaBianca in the jury room.
"She made her decision and now yoU
have to make yours."
Miss Van Houten also was charged with
conspiracy to 'cornmit murder in the five
deaths at the Tate home.
The jury also had the choice of returning
a verdict of secood-degree murder, homicide without premeditation.

HOSTAGES FREED
KUWAIT (UP!) - A' baud of
~noed hijackers Saturday, freed
• more · thail 30 hostages held since
f'.riday night following guarantees of
safe passage to South Yemen,
Kuwait radio reported.
The spokesmaa said that as part
of the agreemeoi seven! top Arab
olficlals from Kuwait, South Yemen
and ' the Palestine Llber,uon
Orgaolzalton would accompany the
pinted Boeing 707 jet on Ita night tel
South Yemea.
Tbe gu.ameu, whose numben

reportedly vary from nine to 1%, .
seized the Beirut-to-kuwait bouud
jet Friday a"ud demanded the
release of hundreds of Palestinian
pP&amp;oaeri.ill..A.nb aoll_laraeU ja118. Later they alllo reportedly asked for
au uadlsrl01ed s•m of money.
Tbe terrorlslo earUer released
18 of their hoolagea, JncJgdlq an
women and chHdreu pauengen aDd
a middle-aged maa who suffered au
appa~t heart attack. Twelve c"'w
memben a... Z7 paloe111en •till
were aburd tile ,._, toaotJac ill
temperalllrel apIa 111 de.,._.

••

tntmt
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

law uphelilon straight party lines by high court

By LEE LEONARD
UP1 Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The Ohio Supreme Court has upheld majority
Democratic leaders of the General Assembly and ruled that an election day
voter registration law should take immediate effect and not be subject to repeal
through public referendum.
The high court's 4-3 decision Friday along straight political party lines
direcied Secretary of State Ted W. Brown to put into immediate effect the
entire Democratic voter registration reform package adopted last May.
The decision means an unregistered voter in any upcoming school district
election may present himself at the polls on election day and , upon showing an
approved piece of identification, register and vote that day.
The secretary of state is also directed to institute the other ~lized voter
registration procedures, including permanent regiSiratiori, registration at
alternate county offices and slgnups a\deputy motor vehicle registrars' offices.
The court decision, which held that the law·is an appropriation, also ruled
out repeal through referendum..
.
In an accompanying 5-a opinion, the high court held that Attorney General
William J. Brown should certify the sample repeal petition of Ohioans for the
Preservation Qf Honest Elections (OPHE), but it also repeated that
appropriations are not subject to referendum under the Ohio Constitution.
Ted Brown, a Republican who fought the election day registration
provision, was provided with $2.3 million in the law to carry out the new
reg~ation procedures.
It was that appropriation which was the focus of the court case.
The four Democratic jurisls ruled that because ihe measure contained an
appropriation . the secretary of state had no ri~ht to delav imolementation of
.
'

..

GALLIPOLIS - It was announced
Saturday by James A. Stlfn.er, president of
The Jones Boys; Incorporated, that the
· Jones Boys Country Store in Pomeroy will
be closed Tuesday, July 13, at the end of
business.
·
Stiffler told the Sunday TimesSentinel:
"lt is unfortllnate that such '!t
beautiful, progressive store should suffer

SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1977

•

Opening night ,·

Firemen.'s mascot
•
is mother of six
Dalmatian puppies

·attracts 500
RIO GRANDE - Approximately liOO
persons were on hand for the opening night
· performance Of Gallla Country ··here
Friday evening in spite of oppressive heat
and threat of rain.
Rain bega n falling about 15 minutes
after the historical music· pageant got·
underway.
The event was resumed following a ISminute delay.
Second perfonnance was held last
evening and the third presentation is
scheduled to begin at 9 o'clock this evening
at the open air theatre on Bob Evans
Fanns.

Commission will
conduct hearing

~

GALLIPOLIS - Princess, lbe
, three-year-old mascot of the GaWpolls
volunteer lire department, Is the
mother of six Dalmatian puppies, just
now sbaklly moving about and bllol&lt;iog
their eyes from their cubicle ou the
· grouud floor at the bright red trucks
visible lbrougb ihe door.
Eight pups wen born, bot two died.
. There are two males, Ml'8. Ray Bush
brought one of the others out to meet
tbe people In the pollee department
Saturday, and this dlmiuullve
DabnatiBn is the only one with a name:
"Farrah Fawcett Majors."
The dogo were born June 18-19.

Safety striping
-handed cyclists

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City
Planning Commission will Mid a public
GALLIPOLIS -Two worn"~! from the
hearing Friday, July 29, at 2 p.m.' in the auxiliary of the Veterans ol Foreign Wars
Municipal Building.
stationed themselves Saturday on the
Purpose of this meeting will be to act -steps of the Gallipolis Municipal building
upon a request for a zoning change of and gave away safety striping to
certain. property from an R-2 zone to a C-1 bicyclists.
zone (from Residential to Commercial).
the women were Alberta Saunders
This proP&lt;:rtY is located on the northeast or and Betty Griffin of Post 4464, who put red
upper half of Lot No. 378, fronting on stripes on the front and back of each
Second Ave.
bicycle whicb stopped, and white stripes
on the handle bars and wheels.
·
Last May the same pair did the same
job at the Grande Squares building in East
Gallipolis, at the Spring Valley ShOpping
, plaza, and at the VFW building on Third
Avenue.

.Car splits,

five are·killed
EAS'!' LIVERPOOL, Ohio (UP!) - Five
persilns were killed and one injured early
Saturday morning in a on&lt;H:ar accident on
Ohio 1»7 just liQrth of East l-iverpool in
Columbiana County.
All of the victinls were from East •
Liverpool. The Ohio Highway Patrol said
the car, driven by Michael Jordon, 16,
went off the road, struck a tree and a road
sign and split in hall.
Jordan was hospitalized.
Jl:!lled were; Leigh Ann Page, 13,
Chri~her Earlch, 19, ~obert Laughlin,
.J..i, Klti!Y. ~gnnn, I~ and Roy Harv_.n,_
· 20.

LOSING ANOTIIER
GALLIPOLIS - C..llipolis police will
lose another officer this wee~end ~hen
Patrolman Robert Hi!J, 21, joins the
Cambridge city pollee force. The move Ill
by civil """lee trlllllfer. He is the son-inlaw of Silas J. Hamilton.

the new law for 90 days.
Minority Republican justices, Jed by Chief Justice C. Willlain O'Neill, filed
dissenting opinions aod said the ruling "repeals the people's constitutional
right to referendum."
OPHE, a group of county election officials, had sought to repeal the election
day registration and permanent voter registration provisions.
The entire law, sought by the Ohio Democratic party and organized labor in
anticipation of next year's statewide election, was adopted by tbe General
Assembly after majority Democrats added the appropriation to make it
effective immediately.
Rhodes vetoed election day registration, permanent registration and
signups at deputy motor vehicle registrars' offices, but he was overridden by
the legislators.
·
Justices Frank D. &lt;fl~brezze, William B. Brown, A.W. Sweeney and Ralph
S. Locher wrote the mafilrity opinion which found that . the bill was an
appropriation effective immediately.
. ·
The justices quoted a 1915 Supreme Court opinion which held., that "laws
providing for state levies, appropriations for current expenses Qf the state
govenunent arid state institutions and emergency laws ... go into immediate
effect by. the express language of. the Constitution."
. "The foregoing statement of more than·60 years vintage makes dear. the
role of the secretary of state in connection with the laws mentioned in Section
ld, Article II : he has no function in approving or otherwise authorizing the
effectiveness of such laws," wrote the jurists.
Secretary of State Brown held that the section apPropriating his entire $6.8
million budget for 19711-79, including the $2.3 million for new procedures, was the
ooly section taking immediate effect.
·

Gallia p·r oject on
list for funding
CQLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov. James A.
Rhodes announced Saturday the II
projects which will be furided with the
slate's $11,960,000 fede~al Public Works
Employment Act funds. Included is .a
$158,520 project in Rio ·· Grande, Gallia
County.
The II projects include three state
projects and eight local projects which
were eligible, but were not funded, under
the local grant program. The state
projecis are:
- Completion of the horse and cattle
complex at the state fairgrounds. The
structure will house 1,000 horses and 1,500
cattle and w111 replace barns destroyed by
fire in 1972. Cost is $4,853,745.
- Construction of an Ohio Senior ·
Citizens Center at the state fairgrounds.
The ' center will have a covered
auditorium, outpatient health fa¢ilities,
nutrition program facilities and offices.
Cost is $2,566,000.
. - A department of transportation
project to relocate Ohio 39 in East
Liverpool in Columbiana County: Cost is
$453,000.
The local projects are:
- Construction to increase water
storage capacity in Rio Grande in Gallia
County. Cost is $158,520.
·
- Redevelopment of the Public
Square in Cleveland, including
beautlricatlon projects and new planting
and landscaping. Cost is $1,ii00,000.
- Spring Str~t bridge replacement in

McArthur in Vinton County. Cost is
$167,625.
- Construction of sanitary sewers in

Urbana. Cost Is $1,ii00,000.
·
- Water system upgrading in
Laurelville in Hocking County. Cost ~
$181,566.
- Construction of ·a fire station in
Paulding in Paulding County. .Cost is
$28,000.
- Construction of a municipal
building in Murray Ciiy in Hocking
County. Cost is $160,000.
.
-Construction of a two-lane bridge on
Barrett Mill Road in Highland County.
Cost is $138,814.

Direct

} •
poop e ID
city this mo.nth
0ry

- GALLIPOLIS - OffiCial represen·
tatives of the R. L. Polk &amp; Co., publishing
.fino, taylor, Mich .. will be in Gallipolis
the next three to four weeks obtaining
infonnation for that firm's 1978 Gallipolis
City Directory.
Officials will be checking with
residents for accurate information in the
forthcoming edition of the new directory.
Mrs. E. J. Layne will be stationed at
the Libby Hotel to answer any questions
pertaining to the directory. her room
number is 101. Her phone number is 4460432.

Bridge Still Closed_; No -

Two thefts, B&amp;E,

Word On Reopening .

:ptobed by sheriff .·

The Silver Memort8! Bridge apparently will remain
closed through the remainder of the weekend.
The eight year-old bridge was closed ·Wednesday
evening when a crack In a weld joininB two main beams
was discovered.
.
On Friday DeputY. Comrnlaaioner' of 'the State Department ofHiahways, Dean Blake,l1!at0d that the cauae and
0 oolutlon had not- been found ,_,-but-that they expected
to find It within the nest couple of daya.
Workers were on the brlc!ge Saturday as they wera the
past couple of days but nc/ One from the Department of
Highways in ChsrlestQII has been available for additional
comment.
·
According to spokesmen at the State Pollee office in
Point Pleuant and the Mason County Sherifrs Department, a large nJUDber of calls were received from area ·
residents u to when the bridge wiU reopen and which Ill
the falhlt route to take.
•

POMEROY
Meigs .
County Sheri If James J. ·
Proffitt's department is in- .
vestigaling two thefts and a
breaking and entering of the
Bethlehem Church near
· &lt;,
Great Bend.
Robert Lewi.s, Rt, . 2,
Racine, reported that the
Bethlehem Church had been
entered earlier ui the week:
The only thing taken or
bothered was aboul $1 .70 in
the birthday offering.
Lewis also reported that a
diving board was stolen from
his property. a little park
with a picnir, swjrnrning, and
camping area on the back·

~

water of the Ohio River,
sometime Monday night.
. Franklin Lemley, Rt. 2,
Racine, notified the sherlfrs
department that a 20 inch
.gasoline powered llfWn
mower was stolen from his
property in the Stringburg
area below Tanners Run
sometime Friday evening.
Apparently the mower ran
out of gas while Lemley was
mowing his lawn. He left the
mower where it stopped and
went to a station to get
gasoline only to discover,
upon his return an hour later, •
that hi{ mower was gone.
·

.,
•

·.

I

I

I

�•

..

~-3-TheSwJdayTimes-Sentinei , Stmday,July 10. 19'11

1

A-2-The Sunday Tim~ulinel. Sw&gt;day. Julv J0, J977

She did just

Young motorist

.

fac~ng

Cmtinut!d from page, A·l
Nola Brown, and a son, the youngest of her
brood, Roger (who resides with his family
nearby).
Shortly before her last child was bom,
39 years ago, Mr. Epple became ill with
what was later diagnosed as M.S. The
disease hampering his activities, much
added responsibility fell on his wife's
shoulders.
In addition to her job as head dietitian
at the University Health Center in Athens,
to which She commuted each day from 1941
up until her retirement in 1968, Mrs. Epple
cared for their. cattle, chickens and pigs;
baled hay, -did the gardening; and in·
dulged in the motherly activities of caring
for .her family , baking, cooking, · and
canning her homegrown products.
Mrs. Epple is much reminiscent a bout
those days and recalls with humor the tilneshe rode her horse through the snow. "The
poor horse,." she laughs, "could hardly
make it."
That incident was in the days before
she had a car and was in the habit of
walking to US 33 where She met the bus to
Athens each morning. ,
Even when she lived in Athens from
1961 to 1966 she travelled back and forth
between there and the family home each
day to do the chores.
Caring for her husband, bedfast for the
last five years of his life, was not the only
experience Mrs. Epple had in con·
valescing. She remembers at one point
staying up every other night with an in·
valid aunt and keeping herself awake, with
the only company being a noisy old oil
furnace and rackety refrigerator, to keep
watch on a brother, ill with cancer. An
uncle was also among her "patients."
Other memories shared by Mrs. Epple
were of the days when , in the absence of a
water line from a spring to her house, she
and her children carried water from a
-distance of 420 feet for -evei'ything from
household use to bam needs. Acclaimed as
the largest in the area·, that spring still
provides her with water, pumped through
a plastic line, for all her needs.
A favorite tale of her son's proves that
getting used to a tractor after many years
of plowing her fields with a horse, was
quite an orde~l for Mrs. Epple.
One day , after backing the tractor
against the barn and being unable to stop
it, she began scre.aming, IJWhoa!"
When all of her children were living at
home Mrs, Epple made 40 gallons of apple
butter every year. She now has reduced
that amount to 12 per year.
.
Today Mrs . Epple's life, .while
somewhat slower, continues active.
A member of the United Brethren·
Church and the Women's Missionary
Association, she spends her mornings in
the garden where She is a whiz with
flowers and operates a rototiller in her
..
fields nearly every day.
Slowing down in the afternoons for a
' little rest, Mrs. Epple cans her homegrown
vegetable~ (beans, Iimas, tomatoes, and
pickles) along with peaches and pears
given to her by neighbors.
She also enjoys entertaining frequent
visitors, sewing most of her own clothes, a

..

charge

GALUPOUS- Injured in
his overturned car, a young
motorist fa ced a charge
Saturda~ filed by the State
Highway Patrol of excessive
speed for conditions.
Officers said W.year-old
Thomas M. Gillilan. Chester,
was driving south on SR 143 in
Meigs County, three-tenths-of
a mile north of CR 17 at 7 p.m.
Friday. As he rounded a
curve, officers said Gillilan
lost control on wet pavement,
went orr the right side of the
highway, struck a ditch, and
his automobile overturned.
He had visible signs of injury,
but W;IS not ilnmediately
treated. There was severe
damage to the vehicle.

Sires Stakes
set this week
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Four
· Ohio Sires Stakes will be
ALL IN. A DAY'S WORK - One of
raced this week , the biggest
Mrs. · Epple 's near daily chores is
week of the Sires Stakes
.. gardenil\g. Here she operates her rotor
racing so far this season.
tiller in the fields at tbeir CR 25 home
Three races will be at
which prOduce beans, tomatoes, and
Northfield
Park and one at
other vegetarian delights. "I've worn
Scioto
Downs.
·
one (rotor tiller) out already," boasts
Two-year-old
pacing fillies
Mrs. Epple. The first one held out for i8
wlll
race
.at
Northfield
years, this one is in its second.
Monday night ; two-year-old
trotting fillies will race there
/
Wednesday night and. again
Thursday night and threehabit she got into when her children were year-old trotting fillies will
younger and she made all of their school race a( SCioto Downs Friday
clothes with help from her sister Etta, and night.
baking. Her . specialties are homemade
The Monday night race has
rolls and two ~ath er unusual pies - milk 'drawn . 30 starters and the
and grape. The grape pie, a recipe from race is split into three
her mother 's kitchen, is her favorite.
divisions.
"If yo\J.'ve never tasted it," she
exclaims, "you really don't know what
you're missing !"
Quilting is another Epple hobby and
BILLY WALKS OUT
a good way she contends, remembering
the cold months of not too long ago, to
FORT WORTH , Tex. (UPI )
spen&lt;l winter afternoons. Estilnating that - Billy Carter, who has been
she completes an average offour quilts per known to speak his mind
winter , to date she has made one for each . without reservation, walked
of her 11 gran(jchildren, one great grand· out of a party attended by
child, "and then some. "
House Majority Leader Jiln
Thursday mornings are set aside for a · Wright and several of the
frip to town. Mrs. Epple has had her city's" top political leaders
operator's license since around 1926 and · because the fundraiser was
still drives today.
ioo much like a "Democratic
rally."
R
. efl ecting on her life, and looking·
baek on her experiences, Mrs. Epple, who
But his sister, Ruth Carter
Will belebrate her birthday on the 25th of Stapleton·, just said her
this month, concedes that she could pever
brother had too much to
have done all that She has without the help. drink. "I'm leaving, " Carter
and support she has received from her
said as he left the hall Friday
children.
night. "It is set up as a
One concludes that while her children Democratic rally, and I'm
have, of course, played an important role leaving."
in her life, Mrs. Epple is a very deterThe 4t).year-old Georgian,
mined in~ividual, a strong-willed lady of who has become a &lt;trawing
great ~haracter in the finest American
card for celebrations across
tradition.
the country since President

carter's election. sbjd, " I'm

not really a Democrat. What I
do is nonpolitical.
" He just had one beer too
many," said Mrs . .Stapleton,
from Auditor Howard Frank, who remained at the dinner
introduced the speaker.
Treasurer
George Collins, after her brother left.
Stitzlein circulated a
Jane
Wagner,
clerk of the
packet
of
illustrative
Meigs
Local
Schools,
Jane
material pertinent to his
Walton
,
Pomeroy
village
subject showing figures
ANOTHER BOMB
obtained
from official clerk, and other county and
CAIRO (UPI) - A fanatic
sources in the Meigs County state agencies. The reports
gove rnment. These were were compiled by Jim Moslem sect set off a bomb in
Javurek, Ohio University a central Cairo square
intern. Both Javurek and Saturday. The Interior
Stitzlein work out of the MiniStry ordered the arrest of
Jackson Area Extension more of its members and said
RECUITS PLAYERS
Center.
TIFFIN, Ohio (UP! ) the group's total collapse was
A brief discussion followed . inuninent. The boJllb ex·
Heidelberg College football
presentation, ploded near a bus terminal in
coach Bob Rankin has Stitzlein's
recruited eight more football' centering largely on alleged Ataba square, where the
" unfairness" of the tax on General Post Office and the
players.
They include: Andy Gase, real property.
Fire Department are located.
Guests of the club . were ·
Tiffin Columbian linebacker;
Dozens of persons rap. for
Guy Hull, Amelia tackle; Jeff Mark Rice, son of Rotarian cover, but no one was injured
Long, Rockford Parkway John Rice ,· and Fumiko and damage was minor.
safety; Jeff · Sitterle, Pitts- Iwasaki, . the Rotary exburgh, (Pa.) North Catholic change student who will be
TJTO TO R-USSIA '
defensive back ; John Smiih; returning to her native land
BELGRADE,
Yugoslavia
Sheffield Lake Brookside August 28. She will speak her
(UP
I
)
President
Tito will
halfback ; ·B ret Trayler, · "farewell" to the club on
pay
an
official
visit
to the
Massilloh Wash i ngton August 22. • ·
Soviet
Union
In
the
second
Next Friday evening the
quarterback; Mark Yontz,
club
will be guests of half of August, his first since
Amelia lineb;~cker; and
Michael Zelar, Delpl)os St. Rotarian and Mrs. Ray 1973, the · government an·
Pickens on Pomeroy Heights. nounced Saturday.
J ohn's split end.

Stitzlein speaker to Rotarians
MIDDLEPORT - John
Stitzlein of Jackson explained
where local tax dollars come
from and go In a talk using
slides to members of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club Friday evening at Heath
United Methodist Church
following dinner.
President Carl Denison,
presiding over his first
meeting of the 1977-78 Rotary
year, called for a meeting of
the hoard of directors after
the meeting. John Rice ,
program chairman of the
evening, and county extension agent, agriculture,

CALGARY, canada (UP!-)
- Prince Charles wiped o'ff
the Indian war paint and
donned a white stetson
Friday to join the cowboys
and lead the Stampede
parade through the streets of
calgary.
A record crowd of more
than a quarter of a million
people lined the downtown
area to watch the 28-year-old
heir to the British throne
lead
a
90·minute
procession
of
cow·
boys, Indians, pipe bands
and floats as grand marshal
of the Calgary Stampede
parade .

Racine

Social

Weather

Gallia 4-H Club News

Cloudy and cooler today
and tonight. Highs in the 80s.
Lows tonight near 70. Fair
Monday and bot. Highs in the
90s. Chance of precipitation
20 per cent today and tonight,
tittle or none Monday.

SARA DAILEY

GALLI POLIS -

~vlc::ts for Sara

Garrett Watson , StanteY
Montgomery . Carl W11ugh
and Jim Hurst.

45631.
Published every weekday
aceyt

eve"in~

Sillurd&lt;ly. Set'Orxl

Clci!i.S

PosWge Paid at Gallipulls, Ohio

45631.
.THE DAILY SENTINEL

Jll Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769.'

Published every week day evening

eu.oept Saturday. Enltred ~:~s secund
cl41.ss mHiling lQiltter at Pomeroy,

Ohio PUst OCfice.
By cBrrilf!f" ~ily cmd Sund.oly 75c
fji.r week . M&lt;ltor nmte $3.25 JJC!r mun-

consecutive years . He
retired from teaching while
at Hannan Trace. He also

taught In other Gallia County
schools during the past four

MAIL

0

He married Nellie Saunders on Jan. 10. 1931. in Rev .

Earl Cremeens' home In

Northup. She survives along

with two sons and tw'o
daughters, Kenneth Lee
Dennison, Sti~lburne Falls,
Mass .;
Gerald
Wayne
Dennison , Mercerville; Mrs.

Merrill (Ramona) McCully,

Columbus, and MPs. Norris

along with one sister and one
brother in Infancy.
Mr . Dennison was a

member of Siloam Baptist
Church, Ohio Valley Lodge

with Rev . Kenneth Sanders
otf!clat lng . Burial w'ill follow

In

C:recw.ed lO !.he nenp~~pcr &lt;H'ld

the 10011- publlirh&lt;d t...-ein.•

altiiJ

AMBLESIDE GARDENS INC.
ROUTE '35 WEST

Rldgelawn Cemetery

Mercerville

1895, he was the son of the late
Alonzo and Suzanne Stiles. He
was a veteran of World Wars
.1and II, and a member of the

Presbyterian Church.
He Is survived by one
sis ter. Mrs. Harriet Temple
of Columbus ; one brother,
Jess Stiles, Portland, Ore.;
one n iece, and several
cousi ns.
Funeral services wlll be

ficiating . Burial will be in
Wells Cemetery . Friepds
may ca ll at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy on Sunday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .

'

":lornmg a
Veterans Memor~al Hospital,

have been setfor 2 p.m. today

at. the Ew ing Funeral Home

Masonic services will be w•lh the Rev. W. H. Perrin
held at the Willis Funeral off&gt;e&gt;atlng. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery
Home a I 7 :30 p.m . Sunday. Friends may call at the
r~lends may call at the funeral home at any time
Will i s

Funera~ Home from 2-4· Mrs . Wetzel was a daughte~

and 1·9 p.m . Sunday .

oflhe late John and Catherine
Findling VIncent.

JAMES C. HOOK, JR .
GALliPOLIS - James
Ct arence Hook, Jr., 66, a
resident of 844 First Ave:,
' died Frlda.y afternoon in

Holzer Medical Center
following a lingering illness.
He was born April9, 1911 , In
Glouster , son of the late
James Clarence and Ruth
Maude Yocum Hook, Sr.
He had res ided In Gallla
County since 1938. He was a
retired employee of tlte Ohio
Valley Electric Corp., Kyger
Creek Plant. He retired in
April , 1973.
He married Beulah Jane
Lane on Feb. 19. 1938. In
Catlettsburg . Ky. She surv·
vies. _They had no children.
'He was a member' of lhe First
Baptist Church and the
Veterans of Foreign Wars . He
served with the U.' S. Navy
during World War 11
Surviving in addition to his
•wife Is one sister, Mrs.
Hadley Stahl, Glouster and
'"'"brother, Delford E. Hook,
Marion, Ohio. Several nieces
and nephews also surv ive.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
First Baptist Churth with
Rev. Joseph Godw in of·
ficlaling: Burial will follow in
Ol&gt;lo Valley Memory Gar·
. de~~iends may call at the
Cremeens Funeral Home
after 12 noon on Monday and
the family will recei ve
friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
011 Mooday .
The body will lie in state 4 t

,

the church one hour prior to

Kyger

····•

By Rita J. White
The community
was
saddened recently due to the
death of two area residents,
Walter W. Rife and -Nettie
Swisher.
Mr AI '
Whi
·
s. lCe
te, . Mmers·
ville, and Mrs. Vern Salser1
and children, Miki! art!f
Donna, Sheffield Lake, were
· i ·
F 'da
VIS tmg rl y evening and
Saturday afternoon \vith Mr.
· and Mrs. Joseph White . .
·Mrs. Robert Swisher and
daughter, Joyce, spent a few
days vacationing in Nash·
ville, Tenn . ·where they
visited Opry Land and other
points of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Emory Cart
and daughter, Kathy, were
visiting his sister, Mr. and
M
B H lfhill
d
rs. ea a
an son,
Tom, recently.
Richard
Bradbury- ,
Columbus, spent the weekend
with his ·parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Bradbury. His
. wife, Linda, and daughter
accompanied him home after
a week's visit with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne

charges which indude
unlawfully N&gt;Ospiring "in 1he
distribution ~of controlled
substances (nareo tlcs) ,
interstate transportatioo of
stolen property, receipt of
stolen property ... and mail
fraud ."
The report culn1inaied an
18-month investigation by
FBI,agents into a web of six
interconnecting crime 11 networks,'1where narcotics and
stolen property allegedly

More millions asked
in five Beverly lawsuits
COVINGTON,Ky . (UPI)Five additional lawsuits ,
seeking more than $92 million
in damages, have been filed
on behalf of victims of the
May 28 Beverly Hills Supper
Club fire.
The .suits bring the total
being sought by survivors of
the fire or by relatives of the
164 victims to nearly $400
milliun.
One suit, filed Friday by
the Second National Bank of

week.
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell
Black, Rutland, visited
Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. _JoSeph White and Mrs.
Muriel Spires.
Tom Knight, Proctorville,
was calling on Joe White
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jarvis
and Ronnie Jarvis, Colum·
bus, were Fourth of July
weekend guests of Mrs. Lilly
Mae Oxyer and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Robie, Mesa, Arizona, have
been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
, Wayne Oxyer, Kim, Kelly
and Kyle and Mr. and Mrs.
HowardHarrison and family.
. Spending the holiday
weekend with Mr. and Mrs,
Charles Tate were Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Tate and
daughters and Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Tate, Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs . Larry .Tate,
Gallipolis, Michael Tate,
Jackson, and Rev . and Mrs.
Robert Smith.
Hortie Roush spent Sunday
wiih his son, Mr. and Mrs . .
Joe Roush and daughters, ·
who were camping on the ·
Musklngum River.
Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth
Brewer, Glenwood, W. Va.,
and Mr. and Mrs. William
Brewer, Ashton, and Wayne
Massie were visiting Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Owyer
Short and family and Mr. and
Mrs . Freddie Rupe and
daughter, Mary Lou.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Price and
sons, Mark and Tim, spent a
_ week vacationing at Myrtle
· Beach, S. C.
Mr .. and Mrs. William
White, Huntington, W. Va.,
and William Beck were
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Jones._

Ashland, Ky., as executor of
the estate of Mrs. Ruth John
Jones of Ashland, asks for $8
million in damages from the
Union light, Heat and Power
Co. of Covington.
Also named as defendants .
in the suit are lhe 4-R Corp.,
Richard Schilling and his
three sons, owners of the
nightclub.
William R.
Roeding, ar~hitect for the
city of Southgate, and the
state of Kentucky.
The other four suits were
filed by members of the
Harry C. Thornill, Jr .,
family. Thornhill, 58, of
Western Hills, ·asks for more
than$10millionfor the estate
of his 18-year.old daughter,
Darlene.
Mrs. Barbara Thornhill, 34,
asks for $21 million on behalf
of her husb8lld, Robert, 36.
Larry Thornhill, 34, of
Miami Heights, asks for more
than $31 million in damages
for lhe death of his wife,
carolyn, 34, and an unborn
child.
Ronald Lape, 25, son~n-law
of Harry Thornhill, asks for
more than $21 million in
damages for the death of his
wife, Diane, 25.

were ~:athered, distributed
and S&lt;•ld. .
1'he panel's report said
thn!;e indicted conspired with
each other in racketeering
aclivity and with 96 other
perS(llls, none of whom were
named as defendant.
Most prominently named in
the 59-page report was
Herschel H. Weintrub , ) i6,
Middletown, manager of
Spencer's Jewelry Store in
Middletown. He waa accused
of financing the. purchase of
narcotics and distributing the
drugs to "whole!;alers." He
also was charged with
'!!'ranging "the purchase and
resale .of stolen . property,
inClUding stolen jewelry and
stolen firearms."
The indictments: named as
Weintrub's principle partner
Carl Sutton Jr ., 42, of the
Cincinnati suburb of Forest
Park, accused of arranging
for the purchase of heroin
outside Southwest Ohio and
its delivery to the area. He
also "was · charged with
supervising the ucutting," or
dilution and repackaging of
heroin, and its distribution.
The
six
Hnetworlcs"
supposedly operating under
the direction of Weintrub and
Sutton were :
"The Adams Network" al·
legedly involved Edwin ' A.
Adams,
41,
Carlisle,
proprietor of
Edwin's
Jewelry, Franklin; " T.he
Hensley Network", allegedly
involved Otis Hensley, 29,
· Franklin;. "The Harrison
Networ~", allegedly involved
Commodore Perry "C.P."
Harrison , 57, Cincinnati;

" The . Harris

I
:
1

dress. Namea lnay be withheld upoo pubUcaUon.
However, on requeat, names Wlll be dllcl01ed. Letten
!hould be ill good taste, addreuillg llauea, Dot per-

1

~&lt;~nalltles.

E'NTIRE
STOCK.·

.,

CLOSEOUT fOR THE SEASON. DON'T MISS ITI

•.

..
•
•

OPEN
MONDAY
NIGHT

•
•

Larry's Wayside Furniture
'

f.ORNER THIRD &amp; OUVE

•

•
•

.

•

I

l

Gl' IIPOIJS, OHIO

...

.

•
•
•
.:

RICHA~ED

. R.
Ml DOLE PORT - F~neral
services for R. Richard Reed.
72. formerly of Middleport,
3S34 · Redding Road, Upper
. Arlington, were held Thurs·
day afternoon at the John
Quint and Sons Funeral
Home In Columbus.
Mr. Reed was a dental
technician for Lamb ari'd
Taylor for many years unlllls
tong Illness. He att.,!le&lt;f
school In Middleport and was
married to the former M/Jiry
Louise
Gloeckner
of
Pomeroy, who died In 1942.
He Is survived by a
dauvh~r and son-In-law. Dr.

TAll TIMBERS
NITE a.ua
Rt. 7
· Pomeroy, 0.
Featuring Live Music

SUNDAY. JllY 10
Afternoon and
Evening

Man

~In

TONIGHT THRU
TUESDAY
JULY 10-11-12
CAR WASH

PG

THE HINDENBURG

PG

•

thiSSUmm«,

pt

•
· Last year you thought
about it but then just never

, got around to Jt. This
~ummer make the decision

tha t will change your whole

your
bad.
life
style
j;~,~r·~£:.;!'
t
Pools come
tn

PRUL
NEWMRN
ROBERT
REDFORD
.
ROBERT
SHRW

t.~ariety

of si zes and shapes

Call or write today, our friendly

sales people willsive you any
mlorrJlat ion you like with

cp~J\eS~elv~oobl ioat;on.

'

Plann•nl klt a~IJ•Iable
how tl1j!s/ze &amp; sha~
.
pool you choo~e would loolc
1n a ski!ICh of vour own back yard

s~

/·•.I•M,II"IIfiiii"M

"THE STING"
~A '. I

H• IIIII• " ' ' ' "

A 'li/1'/ I W. AI JOt 1•1 1

855

I..... •0

Gallipolis, 446· 7900
You a~e a .l ittle late i.n the season now but get your pool
In, En1oy 1t some thts year, and have it ready for use

CARTOON

dll ~epyou
on yOur feet ·
whileyouie
.flat oil yOur back?
'

1.
I

I
:
1

i}~J
..r.t~~
: ••• ~.. uuurc,:

lI

I

I

:

1

next spring.

"--·

1
1

.

Second Avenue

.

I

Deplores cJ,emolishment of home
Dear Sir :
During my summer visits to my childhood horne in

,

Ooops! How could you know
you were one misplaced
rollerskate away from
this? Oh well, medical in· ·
surance takes care of the ·
hospital, x-rays, the dodtor.
But haven't you forgotten ·
somethir,tg? Whose
paycheck feeds your

Gallipolis, I was disappointed to find the former Mauck
residence on Third Avenue demolished. I was further
dismayed to hear that the lovely old trees on the property may
be destroyed.
Perhaps I am now more aware of my surroundings since I
have lived for several years in a community where old
buildings are restored and where the destruction of even one
tree arouses ,a public outcry. Certainly many residents of
Gallipolis would alSo like to see the preservation of old homes,
lawn.! and trees and perhaps are not aware of plans to destroy
them. Tbe trees on the Third Avenue property provide shade
and beauty for not only nearby residents, but also for the ffiiUlY
peoplewhoparkandshop in the downtown area.
I've always thought my hometown a pretty place with its
river, park am trees, and woulillike to see it stay that way. &amp;lri)lu-a Bailey Porco, Chapel Hill, N. C.

I

family? That's where we
come in. With a' personal
lo.an from The Willing
Bank , you won't have
to fight off the wolf at
the door with a rented
·crutch. Who'll help you
you get .ba~k on
"'!
feet? We Will! _

&lt;WE '
Will!

&gt;...,

~
.

SUNDAY
THRU SATURDAY ONLY
..

OhioValley Bank
Gallipolis . Ohio

M~mbcr FDIC

·~:-.

'

.!ULY 10 THIIU JULY 16
'

DINNER· BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•'MASHED POTATOES ·
&amp; GRAVY

•SllW

•

No Subt.'
1'
No Coupon( No Limit · • .

49
.

'

(!o~1Jl}

Alii(~,~~ 17o

.,;()1)1- v~

.....

UII.Ltl

POI'ULU.

uuu

GaiHpalis, 1'1

'?~"

•

f~/

--

·'

'

A

the Standard. Lo-Huhg
Oelw1e Cl5nCrt!le.models .
They come !f't an inf inite

'•

'·
'

SUD Mon Tae
JulY 101112

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

.---:~------- --~ --:------------~

1
Letten of opiDioo are welcomed. They 1b0111d be
1 less than 300 wordlloag (ot be subject to reduclloo by
I the ecUIOr) aud illlllt be li&amp;Ued wldi die II&amp;Dee'l ad·

char~ed witll "supplying
heroin to Sutton." Elkins and
Carter were identified as
officers of the John carter
Exterminating
Co.,
Cleveland.

t:OI.O\'
" • ,,,,(J,,!·

allegedly· invol ve&lt;l Samuel
Lee Harris, 31, Cincinnati;
','The
Craven-Glenn
Network", allegedly involved
Charles E. Craven, 39, and
Armentrus " Ditty" Glenn 48
both of Cincinnati and "''!'he'
_Rankin Network", allegedly
involved a man named as
Prince Albert " Chuckle "
Rankin III, 28, currently

Sisson.

Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Darnell spent a week with
their son, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
William F. !Bilfl Kiser
GALLIPOLIS - William Darnell, High Point, North
Franklin (Bill) Kiser, 86, Rt . Carolina, and visited various
2, Patriot, died at 8 p.m. points of interest.
Friday in Oak Hill hospital. A
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
retired . State Highway WamsJev spent the Fo"'"'h of
department employee In
'
~•
Gall Ia county , he once served July weekend at their
on the Gall Ia . County campsite at Hidd_en Lakes.
Democratic Party Executive Visiting them there were
committee. He was a World
war J Army veteran . .
Mrs. Nancy Preston and
Surviving are the widow, daughter, Cindy, Mrs. Linda
Blanche Oney Kiser, Rt. 2, Wamsley and children, Julie
Patriot; three daughters, and Brian, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs .
Ruth
Heading,
Columbus ; Mrs . Dorothy ·norse! Lark"'s and family,
King, Oak Hill ; Mrs. Joann and Mr. and Mrs. Lou
Holbrook, Patriot ; two sons, Louden.
Robert and Morlan Kiser,
Pastor AI Dittes, AmesPatriot; 17 grandchildren ; ville, was calling on Mr. and
eleven preat-grandchlldren,
and a soster, Mrs. Darlene Mrs. Joseph White, Tuesday
Fielding, Akron .
evening. ..
Services will' be held at 1: 31).
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Louden
p.m. Monday at the Kuhner · have returned home after a
Lewis Funeral home, Oak
'Hill , where friends may call -vacation trip to Florida. They
6-9 p.m . Sunday.
also stopped in Myrtle Beach.
The Rev. Gerald Brown u
ret
·
h
th
will olflciale, arid burlal will
pon
J!rnmg orne
ey
be In the cemetery of the called on .his mother, Mrs.
Gallia Baptist church, of . Grace. witden, Chester.
which hew.. a member.
Miss Judy Darst ac·
Mr. Kiser was born March companied Mr. and . Mrs.
.4, t89t , in Lawrence county to Doyle Sh.uler and dau~"'er,
Robert and Jane Myers
"'"
Kiser.
Mary Ann tn- Myrtle Beach,
where they v:"cationed for a

serving time for a separate
&lt;'OOviction at the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility.
Tbe report said tbat.among
others who allegedly played
an important role in the
rackcooering was Herschel
Weintrub's brother, Norbert
52, manager of the Rev.,;
Discount Drug Center in the
Ci ncinnali suburb of St.
Bernard.- Norbert Weintrub
WIIS accused of " utilizing his
position as a licensed
pllhrmacist and manager" of
the drug store "to obtain
legitilnately manufactured
controlled substances and to
distribute them " to his
brother .
Two
other
persons
allegediy prominent in the
Illegal enterprise were
Joseph S. Elkins, 39, and
Dyeatra Ann " Deedee"
carter, 30, both of Cleveland
'

Network" ,

the services .

'

.t.,

Doily Sentinel•
y.. r
IZ2..Ge; Sil: months $11 .50; U1ree-nonU. p .e . Ellewhen:' $26.00; SIX
-·13.'0; lhn!e mooUlliS7.j().
The Unit.ed Press lnternliOI'Yd is
exclusi'RI)o endUed w Lhe u.st for
publk:Uion W aU news dtspHtches

,

No. 536. Crown City, Mer ~

CLOSE OUT .SALE

SUBSCRH'TION RATES

~

George

cervllle Grange No. 2737, and
. the Galli a County Retired
MRS. BERTHA IYETZEL
Teachers Assn.
. POMEROY _ Funeral
Funeral services. will be services for Mrs B th
held 2 p.m . MQnday at the
·
· er a
Mercerville Baptist Church ~:~eli=r1~ayPomeroy , who1

LAWN FURNITURE

OFF
0
.

CASH AND CARRYI

Hallenfleld.

Rev ~

!Maxine) Jeffers, (olumbus,
held Monday at 11 a.m . at
and nioe grandchildren .
One brother. Earl Den- Harrisonville Presbyterian
nison , preceded him i n death, Church with Jay Stiles of.

'

The Gallipolis O..ily Tribune 1ll

Ohio .00 Wt!st VirginW one ye~r
S22.0CI; sb: months $11 .50; lhree rnoJJ0.: fl.po, Elsewherf' $26.00 per
year; six months Ut:iO; Uu~ 11'ltlrr
thiS 1'7.50; motor rook p .2$ rnon-

services was the

FINLEY H . STILES
HARRISON VIlLE
decades . .
He was bor-n March 14, Finley H. Stiles, Columbus,
1907 1 In Lawrence County , son formerly of Harrisonville
of the late George W. and died Saturday mornlnq at his
Harr iett Saunders Dennison . residence . Born on May 27 ,

-

DURING· THE MONTH 'OF
.
JULY ·ALL SHRUBS
.

1

Burial - was In Sunset
Cemetery. Officiating at

40

•

AND
TREE- .

ana Mr•. Jerry (Camille!
Theobald, Pompano Beach,
Fla ., and their six children,
~rv Lou . Michael. Nancv.
eralyn and Joe ; his wile,
Mary Scott Hinson Reed ;
three •tep·chlldr.,. Adrian
Hinson and wife, Darlene,
and their four children of
Kl~kersvllle ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ph•llp !Patricia I Meteer and
lhel r three sons ol Lancaster ;
Mr . and Mrs. Robert A.

By ROBERT SANGF.ORGE
ClNCINNATI (UPIJ - The
myaterioos underworld of organized . crime seldom
stuiaces to reveal ita inner
workings, but a federal grand
jury report on racketeering in
southwestern Ohio offered a
tantaliting glilnpse this week
into the activities of a major
nkrcotic&amp; and stolen property
ring.
. ~ Thirty
' -Beven persons were
indicted by the ~ra nd jury for
•

Mr s. Edith Lamb, Columbus,
and Mrs. Maude Betz
M i ddleport and severai
nieces and nephews.

school teacher , having taught

,

.

I

lersonvllle, Ind.
Thr&lt;!e sisters and a brother
preceded him In death. other
SIJrvivors are two sisters,

ALBERT U. DENNISON
_": GALLIPOLIS - Albert U.
Dennison, 70, a r~idenl of
Eureka
Star ·
Route,
Gallipolis, died at his home
around 12: 55 ~.ni. FridaY..
He had been In ta•ling
health the post two yean.
Mr . Dennison was a retired

we:.

Publltihtd every Sundoy b_r T~
DAILY TRIBUN E
825 Third Ave., Galhflolis, Ohio

l Underworld mysteries.bared in jury report

(Adonna) Duncan and 1hQir
son and daughter of Jef.

SUI! day Times-Sentinel
GAlLIPOLLS

Funeral

Evgenla

Oatley will be held 2 p.m.
Sunday at Good Hope Church
Thhe bOdy will lie In state ai
t e church one hour prior to
the services.
.
_Pallbearers will be Arden
Fulks. · Golden Watson

, f r--~-------....;..,

Oho Valley Publishing Co.

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

Area Deaths

1

The Triangle f.H &lt;.1ub met on the parts of a dairy caU.at Joey and Bobby Fostel"s Randy and Gary Caldwe
'home for the beginning of the showed how to groom a steer;.,
club tour. President Randy Keith McGuire showed how to•
Caldwell presided. Joey and care for a rabbit. Tamm)h
Bobby Foster showed off McGuire gave, a fishing
By Mrs. Francis Morris
their
steers and hogs. From demonstration and Sherry~
Monte Sheets of Gallipolis
there
the club went to Tandy Cox gave a demonstration on:
was guest speaker at the
Pope's
home. Tandy showed first aid. The club advisor.,
, First Baptist Church Sunday
the
club
her steer and hogs. pre'\ient were Paul Dean:
morning in the absence of VEHICLE DEAlERS
Then
the
club went to April Niday, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn:
Rev . Walker, who -- is on
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Graham'
s
home . April Graham. The parents ancl.
vacation .
Ohio House Thursday passed,
showed
the
club
her rabbits. guests of the meeting wereGuests of Mr. and Mrs. 66 to 22, and returned to the
From
there
the
club
went to Mr. Fred Dee!, Tim MasseyGilbert Hart were Mr.' and Senate for concurrence in
Gary
Nibert's
home.
Gary and Mrs. Pope and her=
Mrs. Bary Hart and amendments a bill making
Showed
the
club
his
tobacco
daughter Mandy·. Nex
daughter. Amy, of Mansfield, major changes in . the
field
.
Then
the
club
went
to
meeting will be July 22. The ·
Ohio and Mrs . Thomas licensing law for motor
John
Johnson's
house
.
John
club
reporter is ApriF
Hayman of Syracuse. Mr. vehicle
dealers
and
prouldy showed the club his Graham.
Ha~ r~turned to his work at salesmen.
tobacco
field.·
Next
the
club
Vinton
Hlghlighters
meC
the Philip Sporn Plant July 5 ' The measure, sponsorect by
after recoverin__g from an Sen. ThiX!Ias E. ·Carney, .!). went to Paul Duncan's home. July 2 at VInton Park. BariC
accident on January 13. . Girard, establishes separate · Paul showed the club his TYman and Tammy Potts ledMr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre · licensing requirements for , steer and his heifer. From devotions. Mitchell Potts ha&lt;J:.
and son of Jackson spent new and used motor vehicle there the club ·went to charge of the program.
Sunday and July 4 with Mr. dealers and increases license Gwynne and Lynne Niday's had our 4-H picnic. The fai
home. Lynne showed the club was discussed. Miss Esta·
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre. Mr. fees .
and Mrs. Dave Sayre and Mr.
It also for the first tilne her cow and Gwynne showed Childers was ~ observer fo
and Mrs. Dan Sayre, local, would require a special off her cow and newborn calf. Rio Grande College. The nexC
joined them Sunday and license foc dealers leasing -Next we went to Melanie . meeting will be at Lyrul:
Niday's home. Melanie Marcum's home Oct.. 5 at 7'"
enjoyed a family get· vehicles.
showed the club her dairy p.in. on Selmer Andrew Rd.£
together.
calf. Then the club went to Vinton. Betty J. Davis . iJ.
-Guests of Mrs. Bertha
Ran&lt;ly and Gary Caldwell's advisor. Members presenC
Robiilson were Mrs. Evelyn
home.
Gary and . Randy were Ron Davis, Mitchell:
Berry arid Mrs. Frances . spent the Fourth of July with
Caldwell
showed the club Potts, Donna Potts, Lyrur
Stover of Columbus and Mrs. , his parents, Mr. and_ Mrs.
their
steers.
A sack lunch on MBJ"cum, Barbara Tyman~r!d!e Wolfe, lo~al , on Edison Brace.
.
the
lawn
was
enjoyed by all at and Tammy Potts. Guests
~~urday. !vfr. and Mrs .
Mrs. Bessie 'Rowe of
the
Caldwell
farm. After were Bobby Lynn Young
oward Rob10son of Ravens- Michigan is visiting her
eating
the
club
went
to Bryan Esta Childers, Mr. G_eorge •
wood, W. Va . and. July 4 sister ; Mr. and Mrs. Wiley
Knapp's home and saw his Tyman, Mr. Jim Davis, Tina ·
were Mrs. Mabel Shields and Ours.
Mrs. Eileen Buck of East
Mrs. Leona Ebersbach is rabbits, to Keith and Tammy Spence and Russell Potts. Letart.
visiting her daughter, Mr. McGuire's house to see their Reporter • Tammy Potts.
Cheshire Cats and Kittens :·
Thomas . Hayman of and Mrs. TommY Ebersbach rabbits and then to Sherry
Cox's
home
to
see
her
raJ&gt;.
met
July 1 with Pat Reese. Syracuse v1s1ted Colter and family in Michigan.
bits.
.Demonstrations
were
'
Pauline
White presided and ~
Hayman Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
given
-by
Joey
Foster
on
how
had
charge
of the program. :
, Mrs. George Wallace and visited Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
to
select
a
·
steer.
Bobby
Debbie
Roush
led devotions. W1Jma of Columbus ~nt the Hart at their trailer home on
Foster
told
how
to
wash
a·
Speaker
was
Ron
Lemley, a holiday weekend With her Hocking River Sunday. ·.
steer
and
the
equipment
to
policeman
from
Cheshire.
He •
par~nts, Mr. and. Mrs. Blythe
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Ours
The1ss. .
and familY of Wellsville and use . Tandy Pope told how she talked on safety ·in general Mr. and Mrs. Henry E~i~e · Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Ours watered and fed her steer and !'nd about safety outdoors, hbgs. April Graham showed safely in the school; safety iJJ :
ac~ompamed Mrs . DIXIe and family of East Liverpool
S"':1th to Veto Lake and visited over the weekend with how to plant· a tree . Gary an emergency, safety on the :
vis1ted Mr. and Mrs. Robert their aunt, Mrs. Ellen Amott. Nibert told how he fertilized streets and at home, bicycle
Walters ~nd ~elebrated Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart his tobacco . John Johnson safety and how to act in a
Walters
birthday . Al.so spent sometime over July 4th showed how to hoe his tornado and thunderstorm.
present were Mrs. Juamta weekend at their camper on tobacco and told about his We had a demonstration from •
Duncan Pam Ranegar on breads and •
.La.nnagon and son of Cam· Hocking River near Frost, tobacco. Paul
demonstrated how to take Christy Curfman gave a ..
bridge.
Ohio.
Edward Howell of FluShing
Dale Roush is - in care of his steer. Melaine demonstration on safety.
.was an overnight guest of his Columbus to help the David Niday gave a demonstration Pauline White opened the:
meeting·. The American ·
·
s1ster, Mrs. Mae. Cleland and Roush family move into their
pledge was by Michelle Reese ·
spent ..July 4 w1th relatives new home.
'
and the 4·H pledge by Debra and ff1end. Dennis Manuel visited
Holland. The next meeting.•
Raymond Kraeuter of over the weekend with his
DUCHESS MJ\RRIES
Col~mbus ~pent ov~r the family from ·.his employment.
POECKlNG , West . Ger· will be with Amy Roush at 6
hohday weekend w1th hlS
Edison Brace returned to many (UPIJ - Duchess p.m . on July 28. Advisor is ·
brother: Eldon Kraeuter.
his employment on the boat Andrea von Hapsburg, oldest . Mrs. Bea White. Members
Mr. and Mrs. Ed1son Brace Shaver Jr. after ten days at daughter of Otto von Haps- present were Christy Curl·
and Mrs. P earl Adams spent home.
burg, a son of the· last man , !JJ!a Wright, Dawn
Tuesday m. Ashland, Ky. and
Traci and Rodney Hart of Austrian emperor, and Count Wright, Debra Holland,
St. Albans, W. Va.
. Newark are visiting their Karl-Eugen of Neipperg, Michelle Reese , Charlene
Mr. and Mrs. Richard , grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. were married Saturday in a White, Pauline White, Pam
Roberts and children are Ronald Hart.
civil ceremony: Only a few Ranegar and Debbie &amp;ush. •
enroute to Fort Sill,
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Wolfe bystanders looked on 'as the Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Oklaho~a after spending ten and daughter of Bradley, 111. 2._year:Oid duchess alighted Wright, Patty Ranegar, Pat;
days w1th Mr. and Mrs. Elza and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wolfe from her battered Volks· Reese , Mr. and Mrs. Lemley · .
B1rch .
of Jackson spent' a recen,t wagen in front of the city hall apd Shelly Ranegar and ·
Mr. and Mrs. James Bra.ce . weekend with their parents, in this 'Bavariali tmvn .
· Beverly Self . . Reportar
and children of Crown CttY Mr. -a nd Mrs. Dory Wolfe.
•

Events'

----------

•

�•

'

Laws made and killed _b y the book!
Ry LEI&lt;: LEONARD
Immediately thereafter.
UPI Stateh,ous&lt;• Rep&lt;1rter
h&lt;Jwever. both the Democrats
l'O!.UMBUS (UP!) - Last and Republicans made plans
week at the Ohio Statehouse to resurrect tlo&lt; concept of aid
produced
a
veritable - to elderly and disabled
textbook on how laws are homeowners with new
made, or killed.
proposals.
The week began with a
1n the House Agriculture
mortal W\lund to legislati011 and Natural Resources
off1\ring low-income elderly Committee, with only six of
ana disabled h&lt;Jmeowners a the 13 members voting, an
break oo their winter heating amendment was made which
bills.
reversed the entire thrust of
Mi.norit¥ Republican s Senate-passed legislation
allowing the state to perform
experimental drilling lor gas
under Lake Erie.
The amendment, pl!ssed on
didn 't hke the way the a 4-2 vote, eliminated the
propoSal was financed and proposed · test wells and
Democratic sponsors refused extended the ban on drilling
to alter their plan. ·
lor another two years.
ConservAtion won out over
Consequently, the Republicans fought back with the the search for fuel in that
ooly weapon they had - small group, but the Senate
voting for an emergency sponsor expects a more
clause and then sandbagging favorable reception on the
the bill itself.
House floor, where energy
Rather than save the meas- needs are being emphasized.
The proposal may be
ure as a non-&lt;!niergency, the
Democrats allowed it to die amended back to its original
and heaped blame on the form when it reach&lt;lS the
Republicans, notably House floor .
A bill authorizing the sale
Minority Leader Charles F.
Kurfess,
an
avowed of laetrile in Ohio won 79-10
candidate for governor next approval in the House
chamber, but the vote may
year.

Ohio politics

$10 and costs, failure to
register dogs .
Also fined were David A.

Helton, Beaver; Gene David
Phillips, Little Hocking; and

Dana Murray, Pomeroy,
Gilbert , Ironton , $20 and $3Q.50 and Cllsts, speeding ;
.
d 1
d
· ·
costs, d tsar er y con uct; Edward Mullins, Columbus,
Douglas ,Adams, Reedsville, ' $30.50, passing on right ;

"SUNSffiNE EXPRESS," a today mUSical group both vocal am instrumental - which musically can span
from the big band era to rock 'n roll am from
contemporary pop to country rock has been booked as the

.'Twenty-one
.

defendants fined m

Fined . were Albert R.
Siedna bek , .Pomero y ;
Charles W. Hoard, Parkersburg, W. Va ., and Bruce
Hannan, Athens, $10 and

plan through the Senate and
over to the House on a partyline vote.
They denied it was
retaliatory lor f\epuhUcan
ahgnment of the districts in
1964, 1968 and 1972, but
conceded politics played a
major part,
When Republicans complained _the plBn was being
" crammed
down
our
throats" and warned that
" the people know ~t is
wrong," Sen . Mangene
Valiquette, D-Toledo, the
chief sponsor, couldn't resist
a quote from Jd'nathan Swill
to remind the GOP of its past •
deeds.
" Irony," she said, "is the
mirror in which the h&lt;Jlder
sees everybody's face except
his own."
·
Another bit of irony may be
that once the bill gets to the
House, it may lace more.
intense opposition from
Democrats who do not like
the proposed districts.

"See

CHUCK WALKING WHJTEY aft.er
the cistern.

WHITEY AT bottom of cistern.

Whitey, a.pony, rescued from

Jl$ychiatric inpotient facility .
Clinical-Psychiatric Social Workers . Must have a
master's degree in clinical-psyC hiatric social work
with at least one year of supervised experience in

2.

me or
insurance Deeds:'

.

Wishes To Thank You One and AJI 'For The Wann Reception Given To
.

..

,

0

.

"YOUR PERFECT COMPANION''

rx

KJ I

•

&lt;

.•

·'
Reporter ; John Allen-AnncJUncer; Bill Miller - Vice
Manager ;
Dene
Wagner . Pres .- General
" Chatterbox "; Paul E. Wagn er- Pres! Wagner
Broadcasting Corp. ; Allen White-Sales . Unavailable
for picture : Pam Eshenaur-Maintenance; Julie
Eshenau.r-Maintenance
and
Ray
Weiher Maintenance .
·

FRONT ROW, L TO R: Ann Foss - News
Reporter ; Jackie Figgens - Receptionist ; Terry
Wickline - Traffic; Lynn Wagner , ComP,uter- ·
Programmer (WYPCl; . Bill · Gray-WYPC . Stati on
Manager ; Wanda Eshenaur - Sales; Doug Mul_ltneaux
. Staff Announcer ; Dale Whitt - Announcer-Sales.
Stan'dihg , L toR. Dick Thomas· News Director ; Da vi d
Dunn -Account -Sales; . Read
Shepherd - Nf'w&lt;

'·

.'

WE PLEDGE OUR CONTINUED EFFORTS TO BRING YOU THE BEST IN ENTERTAIN-MENT, NEWS, SPORTS,
•
SPECIAL EVENTS AND COMMUNITY SERVICE ON BOTH RADIO STATIONS

yp

EH 990AM

0

101.5 FM

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.'

.

,,

,,

4
.,

I

t

uo r n .x]''

I

service that is being planned
for you and your family? Call
the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center at 992-7886 for
an appointment. · Transportation will be provided for
anyone in the .county if
needed.
Even though it is the
middle of sununer, let's not
forget the long hard winte~ of
1977. Now is the time to have
your home winterized for
next' winter . The · GalliaMeigs Community Action

Moines, Ia.; $27, speed. Larry 35, Rt. 3, Ashland, Ky ., speed.
G. Russell, 18, Rt. I, Dennis Sorrell, Jr., 44,
Greenfield, $32,Jeft of center . . Wellston, speed. Michael D.
, Floyd W. Kingery, 23, Rt. 1, Farley, 27, Rt. 3, South Point,
Bidwell, $27, speed. Lewis E. speed. James L. Vaughan, 41,
Woodward, 64, Patriot Star Yellow Springs, Ohio, speed.
JULY 11 · 16, 1977 -7;30 NIGHTLY
)lt. , Gallipolis, $312, DWI. Betty J . Gorby, 35, Rt. 4,
The Gallia County Fairgrounds (across from Holler
Mark A. Lynch, 19, Point Proctorville, speed. Jacob ll.
Hospita!l
Pleasant, $27, speed. &amp;huler, 18, Rt. 1, Portland,
Bond forfeitures, all at the speed. Leo Thomas, 57,
EVANGELISTS: Norman Taylor~ Don lllackwell.
Larry Thomas. Danny Roberts, Junior Conger
$22 minimum level:
Louisville , Ky ., speed.
!Others).
John W. Williams, 34, William W. Smith, 36,
SPECIAL SINGING NIGHTLY
Columbus, speed. Pat M. Charleston, W. Va ., speed.
McMeans, 19, Greenville,
The Heavenly Lights Trio, Glad Hearts Quartette,
Texas, speed . James E.
Musser Family Singers. Shaffer Family Singers,
Reymer Tabernacle Quartette.
Clarkson, 20, Rt: 3, Oak Hill,
In 1962, the Telstar satellite
speed. Leslie L. Hughes, 20, relayed television pictures
Ashton, W.Va., speed. Donna from the United States to
America stands in great need of turning back to Gadl
F. ·Misner, 34, Rt. I, Cheshire, Europe, while Americans
Hear straight Bible preaching .
speed. Everett Wells, Jr. , 35, received clear pictures back
Rio Grande. Wanda L. -from Britain and France . .
Theiss, 30, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
speed. Ladoona J.' Taylor, 24,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, cross
median strip on four-lane
highway. Karen S. Ebers. bach, 25, Gallipolis, cross
median of four-lane highway.
.
Martha ·A. Dotson, 25,
Gallipolis, speed ..Kenneth W.
Johnson, 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
failure to yield half the highway. Elizabeth A. Tope, 20,
Gallipolis, rear ol vehicle too
high. 'rbomas E. Smith, 27,
Syracuse, speed. Thomas E.
Harley, 32, Saginaw; Mich.,
'
speed. Lyne B. Johnson, 24,
Rt. I; Bidwell, speed. Robert
E. Shaver, 39, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, speed. Carlos R.
~te
Be
Stephens, 21, Rt. 2, Patriot,
forfeited $22 bond on. each of
two charges : no registration,
and improper passing. ~er
G. Short, 61, Rt. I, ~hire,
permitting an unlicensed
minor to operate a motor
243 Third Ave .
Gallipolis, o.
vehicle. Dennis L. Stat·
Ph. 446-7886
terthwalte, 26, Rt. 31 Athens,
speed. James F, Dickerson,

Agency is taking applications
for winterization, such a,s
putting up stonn windows;
adding insu.lation, etc. to ·
make your home warner and
cut the cost of fuel bills.
Applications for Home
Winterization are availa,ble.
·
at the ,: ~ CAA Qlff&lt;le ~
Courtholig,! ~roy, ~:- '
the GalllfMfjp !:!AAI
_
~ Glfice ' •
In Cbeshte,.ot1,_, taililii the'\' :

t:;heshireJ.HI~ a~ ~7~7~1; o~ ; : :

writing tli BOx Zl~. Cheshire, • · ·
Ohio 4li620. ' ,
·::
.•

- ~ FARM SAL~
- SAlURDAY, JULY 16, J917
10:00 A.M.

LOCATION: From Huntington, W. Ya. follow Route 60
West to Carson Street !Camden Park Are•). turn left
and watch for AUdion Arrows for apprl)ximately 5
miles .

·The Following will be Offered : ;;·

JD 4030 Diesel (80 hp) witp PS and CAB !J?O hrs.l. JD
2640 Diesel (70 hp) wilh PS (63 hrs), JD~'!(I Manure,
Spreader, J D 640 Hay Rake, J D 336
. Hl&gt;y BoJer, J,Q•&gt;4·
Row Corn · Planter, JD Semi-Mounted 16" .~ lldlt&lt;!Jt\'
Plows. J D35 For age Harvestor. JD 428 Grir'!1 Elevaiilr
40 II .. 2 Grain Beds - One with Wa~,.l6 ft ., Harv~t
Handler with 3 hp Gasoline Englnli. Gehl Mix"'"
Grinder, Nl Cui Conditioner, 300 Galibn 8 'Row Corn
Sprayer. 3 Pl. NH Mowing Machine 7ft .. 3 Pt. Bagbelle
Fertillzer Spreader, 3

pt,

2 Row Cultivators, Ford A

Bottom Plows. Piftsburgh lOft . Disc. Ford Rotary Hoe.
Old 2 Row Cultivator, 3 Pt. Disc, 300 Gallon Fuel

Tank, Water Tank, NH Forge Blower with 50 ft. Pipe,
Martin 30x50 Silo, Badger Silo Unioilder Wllh '\s' lt.
Auger. Surge Low -Line 3 Sla ll Mllklhg P6i'lor !With 30
and 60 Surge Alamo Vacuum Pumps, Su&lt;ge 6 Sial

Diagonal Milking Parlor with Ele.ctrlc -Feeilefs (Jin~h
welded stainless steel pipe) with 2-16· !CI'MJ Alamo
Vacuum Pumps , 90 Gal. Cherry-Burrell, Haverly 5b0

Gailon Bulk Tank, some Hand Tool•. '
·
,~. · LIVESTOCK
Approxim.alely 40 Head of Holste jn Hel!~s from 6
months to 2 years olage. Ali the!le Heifers ore Opened,
most of these Heifers were .artiflcally sir'ed.'

TERMS :

CAS~

••

WILLIAM H. NUDO, OWNER
LEE JOHNSON - AUCTIONEER

.

Court suspends 10-day county jail sentences

GALLIPOLIS - Acting
Municipal Judge Thomas S.
Moulton, on charges of petit
larceny, assessed the same
penalty against four defen·
dants Friday in Gallipolis
MuniCipal Court - 10 days in
jail, but the jail sentence is
supended after fine and costs
$128) are paid. Here's the
quartet:
Donald Adkins, Elmer
Yates, Ernie Fisher and
Buddy Aldfich.
Donald A. Gabritsch, Point
Pleasant Rt. 1, was grant_ed a
continuance to Monday on a
charge of DWI .
· Paul Ray Bright, 18,
Cheshire Rt. 1, was (ined $20
and co(!ts an charge of failure
to yield the right of way.
Willard B. Saunders, 61 ,
MelbOurne, Fill., was fined
·$20 and costs oli a charge of
speed. Gary W. Allen, 28, Rt.
I; Crown City, $10 and co.sts,
no headlights: Bobby L.
Schoonover; 19, Gallipolis,
continued 'to July 20 on a
charge of improper passing
at an intersection. Elbert
Bradley trial set for Tuesday
on a charge of no fishing
Jiceriae.
Bond forfeitures, where the
bond was greater than the '$22
minimum:
Ralph Robbins, $37, no
fishing license. Rickey
George Flint, $32, drunk and
disorderly. James Henley
Williams, 59, Rt. 3.,
Galllpolla, f32, failure to yield
rlghtofway. RonnyL. Bul!ll,
:110, Rio Grande, $312.75, DWI.
WIIUam D. Curnutt. 29, Irvine, Ky., $27, IIJIMd. Davfd
0. Whittaker, 30, Rt. 3,
Proctorville, ffl, speed.
WIIUam J .1Cubbllge, 34, Des

I

SENIOR CITIZENS' CENTER

abandoned cistern .in Meigs
.
County by police,·firemen

1. Psychiatric Nurses &lt;for Emergency Services and
OUtreach. Must be a registered nurse with at least one
year of - postgraduate supervised ' experience in ·

'

-~ I

educational and enjoyable for
V
the children.
· ·
t, .1 - .
Donations fm the camp
were given by Powell's Super
Valu, Mark V, D&amp;D Meats,
Gateway Market, Shuler's
1
Market, Simon's Market,
Children ·attending the
camp were Kim and Dixie
Eblin, Terry, Jennifer, and IGAMENT
Barbara Carter, Jimmy and
Rhonda McDaniel, James
and John ijess, Larry and Sue
. Panons, Rodney and Larry
,,
HISVAL
o,KJein' Jimmy and Christina
Now Bf'rang• ~ Ci&amp;:cled
Hysell, Robyn Buffington,
lorm rho sufpr;S. •"'"'"· is\~iwagested by~ •"?liil.,e':?oon. .
,
Sonja Parker, Pam West and
Ken Van Matre.
The camp was also atPrinlanswerhere :
tended by Annie Moon and
(~wors-Monday)
Myrtle Clark, aides lor the
Expanded Nutrition Yesterday's Jumbles: IMBUE GAMUT DISOWN !HANGAR
Answer: Why 111ey arrest&amp;J the l&gt;hllahddlino
program.
hunter-HE WAS A"SIG·ClAMIST''

BY GLENNA SHULER
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Searls and daughter Vickie,
Columbus, are spending two
w'eeks vacation with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Searls.
POMEROY
Senior
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cline, Citizens, are you taking the
Marysville spent the weekend time to call our center for an ..
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert appointment
for
the
Conkle and Cindy.
Multiphasic Health Clinic?
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires, This clinic is an opportunity
By Manon C. Crawford
They didn't have a belt large
Denise, Julie · and Stephen, for you and your whole family
Meigs County HumaneSoelety
enough to go around the pony, so they
spent
a day recently \yith to have a good physical
POMEROY - This week has been rigged up ropes around it's middle just
Mrs. Florence Caldwell and exam. Although this program
an unusually busy one for at least three below the front legs and put another
Johnny
at Gallipolis. Also is not a substitution for a
people in the Meigs County Humane around the neck. Then we waited for
there
were
Mr. and Mrs. com p Jete
'Physic a 1
Society. The Humane Agent, Joan. another necessary item to get the pony
Curtis
Sizemore,
Mrs.
Ruby
examination
by
your family
Browning, was on the run ahnost every out, a wrecker. The minute it got on the
Caldwell,
Charles
and
it
will
allow
many
doctor,
day seeing alxlut cruelty and neglect scene, they hooked the crane to the line
Howard
Lee
Janey
and
major
health
problems
to be
calls concerning lxlth dogs and cats. on the pony and while they lilted the
Debbie
Caldwell.
discovered.
Meantime, Major Miller arid I are on l&lt;icking animal out, directed and
· Mrs. Velma Sargent is
The clinic is being held July
the phone from 8 a.m. until 7? finding assisted by Chuck Bailey, who was in
visiting her daughter, ·Mrs. 18, 19,· 20 an&lt;\ 21 at'the Midhomes for aU the homeless dogs and the cistern with the pony, I took d series
William Murphy and family dleport Junior ' High School.
cats we get calls on from readers.
of pictures of the rescue.
·
at New Philadelphia, Ohio. The testing is free with the
CHUCK BAILEY reassures Whitey
But, I guess the most exciting event
By the way, Chuck was not with
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Young, exception of the blood test,
as
he
is
lifted
from
the
eistern.
took ·place last Friday when Mrs. either the police department or fire
Coolville,
called on Mr. and which you must request. The
Marvin (Ra bbit) Craig got in touch department, he was sitting in the Court
Mrs.
Marlin
Rile a day fee is $6.50. If you are having
with the Humane Society to help her Street Grill (having a cool one}' and
recently.
Steve
has accepted a blood test, remember not to
solve a doozey of a problem . Her pony, heard on the scanner about the plight of
a
position
as
traveling eat solid foods lor 8 to 12
·"Whitey", sometime during the night the pony, and came to help.
manager
for
Bonded
oil hours before your scheduled
bas fallen though an old relic of a cover
ijis whole family was op hand to
station.
:&gt;8.68.
appointment. Persons under
over an unused cistern and was stan- cheer him on as he went down into the
Mrs. Inna Bales called on 18 will not be given the blood
Kittens, 6 weeks old, 2 snow white, 1
ding down there about 15 feet, belly old cistern and assisted the pony out,
the Denny Spires family .a tests unless specifically
deep in water and debris. How the poor talking all the time to caim it.
. black,! black and whi\e,1 "turtle", 992- day
recently.
•
requested by parents and"a
thing ever manage~ to fall that far
On the scene first and directing all . 7119.
Calling
on
Rev.
and
Mrs.
Minx-Persian
Kitten,
3
months
old,
consent fonn signed.
without hurting itself is beyond me, but our traffic, as weii as giving 'tlany
Raymond
Fife
recently
were
white
boots,
long
hair,
grey
striped,
742· Testing will be give!) for
sure enough, . when we got there, humerous hir)ts on how to help the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Buddy
Fife,
3162.
Blood Pressure, Vision,
.camera in hand, there .stood Whitey situation was Patrohnan Louis B.
Cats, female and kittens, five weeks Turkey Run, Mr. and Mrs. Dental, Hearing and Speech,
acting pretty em6arrass'eii over the Vaughan of the· Pomeroy Police
old, 985-3875.
George Keefer, Mr. and Mrs. &amp;oliosis (curvature of the
whole affair.
·
Department and several really nice
Joe Keefer, aU of Leon, W. spine), Urinalysis, . and
Kitten,
grey
stripe,
8
weeks
old,
Mrs. Craig (Constance ) had gone fellas· from the Pomeroy Fire Depart.
female,
992-2428.
Va .
Tuberculosis.
Inoculations
out to call to the pony that morning and ment. Each of these men should be
Kittens,
7
weeks
old,
2
snow
white
Mrs. Martha BrlllrulOn, Oid will be given to children, if
hadn't received her usual response, so . commended for their genuine concern
males, 1 black and gray tiger male, 992- Kyger, called on Illr. and needed. A record of their
went out into the yard, thinking Whitey for the safety of the pony and its suc5834.
Mrs. Marlin Rife a day previous inoculations should
had ventured out beyond a pile of cessful recovery from its wet and cold
Please
folks,
when
you
·
have
recently.
be brought to t)Je clinic. A
lumber stacked there. As she got closer . confines.
animals
advertised
here
in
the
Sentinel,
on
the
Rifes
Others
calling
consultaJll will· be available
to the old cistern, she noticed the·cover
It is a relief to me to know that we
either in the classified, or with me, call · recently were Glenn Young, for persons who. hav.e
all askew and peered inside ; down have men such as this in Meigs County.
us when you place these animals so that Rt. I Bidwell, Ralph Jones, breathing problems.
below was the pony.
I thanl.-.you. so much ori behalf of Mrs.
we
can make room for other homeless Gallipolis, Misses Brenda
This clinic ·is for Meigs
She ran to the house, really not Craig, the Humane SoCiety, and last but
animals.
The .above pets w11i not .be and Roberta Young',• Little Countians of all ages. Why
knowing what to do, but did the smart not least, Whitey.
listed next week unless I hear one way Kyger Rd. Brenda has ac- not take advantage of . a
-thing, called someone she knew in the
Animals lor adoption this week as
or
the other concerning their status.
cepted a position at GSI.
Pomeroy Police Department, . J ed follows :
In
closing
today
friends,
I
would
Calling on Mr. and. j\lrs.
Webster. He advised her to call the
German Shepherd, Female, 3 months
like to remind you that in such hot Alex Shuler recently were
Humane Society, which she did. Major old, nice 247-2284.
weather don't forget to keep plenty of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baker;.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Miller immediately went into action
German Shepherd-Collie, I year old,
water
out
for
your
animals
and
make
GALLIPOLIS
The .
The
Bakers
were
enroute
(with me at her elbow spurring her on) Pregnant 742-3063.
regular
meeting
of
the
Gallia
sure
they
have
shade
arid
shelter,
I
home
in
New
Boston,
after
and called the Fire Department. They
Collie-St. Bernard, 9 monthS old,
keep reminding you, but there are sure spending a few days with Mr. County District Library
· had just been alerted about it by male, lawn and white, 949'2586.
lo! of people that for get about the fact and Mrs. William Larkin at Board of Trustees will be held
a
someone and were on the way. We left
Collie, Miniature, male, fawn and
Tuesday, July 12, at5 p.m. in
that
animals get hot and uncomfortable Hannibal.
right away and by the time we got lost a white, 6 mo. old, 992-3453. ·-the
librarian's office at the
too.
.
coupletin\es in a part ofthe country I'd
Hound type, small breed, black and
Thanks
sa
much
to
those
of
you
who
library,
corner of State St .
never been in before (and the Major brown, male, very friendly 949-2789.
have called and written, your support is
and Third Ave.
had forgotten even existed), the police
Mixed breed puppies, 9 weeks old,
E-RCALLED
most
certainly
appreciated,
not
only
by
·
were already there looking over the 992-7680.
POMEROY
The
this writer, but by (he Humane Society
situation and the lire department
Mixed b~eed, 7 monthS old, male
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
and the animals we try to protect ..
arrived shortly thereafter.
(looks like Collie) biack and white, 992was called to 12~ Butternut
Ave., at 2:13p.m. Friday lor
Edward Bowen who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted.

is currently accepting applications for the
following positions : ·

.

POMEROY - On July 6
and 7. sunm1er assistants of
the Meigs County Extension
Oflice held a two-day camp at
the Middleport Municipal
ParK. Each day the group
took part in recreation, crafts
·and nutrition education.
The first day of camp was
highlighted by a visit from
the county game warden,
Andy Lyes, wh&lt;J discussed
wildlife and brought along a
small raccoon which the kids
. enjoyed.
The second day of camp
began with a tourofthe Royal
Crown Bottling company in
Middleport. This was both

one lener 10 each square. to form

R·un
.
·Storys

HOOFS•.-.and. •• PAWS

The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health Center

'

'

Summer aides .in. ~!~~~::.·TE:!~
_2-day work camp 1'o~~~~~s ·

his ordeal at the bottom of

The Management and Staff Of Wagner Broadcasting Corporation

..

'

.

$14 and cos ts, speeding; James D. Council, Langsclinical eva luation and psycholherapy.
Richard Mays, Reedsville, ville, $30 .50, high rear
$15 and costs, no cycle bumper; Jeffrey A. Kidd,
3. Clinical Psychologists. Must · have Ph.D. with
license; Cecil E. Tableu, N'ewark, $4 3.50,-speeding-;
intensive experience in psychological assessment,
.
clinical ev•hYtion/ consultation and psychotherapy.
Stewart, $20 an d CoSt$, Lee Ramey,. Pomeroy,
$53, ,
Mlisl hoi~ or be eligible for current Ohio licen$e.
passing at intersection ; Janet &lt;lisorderly conduct, ·and
K. Green, Rutland, $25 and Theodore D. Connoll y,
4. F'&gt;ychometrist. Must have masler's degree in
costs, licticious registration; $37:&gt;.00, DWL
·
psychology and knowledge of full range of basic
Kenny Morris, Pomeroy, $25
psychological test batteries and interpretation ,
and costs, trespassing; Jane ~j;iio'_;;____;.;;_,~
including some acquaintance with prolectives.
grandstand attraction for the Meigs County Fair at 8 p.m.
on Thursday, Aug.l8. Admission !Q the show of !be group
Newell , $2:&gt; and costs
Carol! K. Snowden
s. Psychiatrists. Must hold an Ohio license and have
is included in the general admission price onto the
suspended
fine
and
completed psychiatric residency in an approved
fairgrounds.
probation, ' disorderly con24 State Street
facility . Will be responsible for medical direction of
duct; Paul Walker , Pomeroy,
Phone 446-4290
Inpatient lfnit , staff development, and certain
Grueser, Pomeroy, $10 and failure to register dogs, $20
outpatient responsibilities.
•
costs , pa ssing at in- and costs ; and Edward Lee
(I all
The Mental Health Center is a private, nontersection ; Richard Mays, Ramey, Pomeroy $100 and
)'0111'
profit corporation and an equai opportunity
$10 and costs , no eye . costs. pM a $50 suspended fAmily
employer . Please contact . Dr. Harriet
protection on motorcycle; fine and -probation, disturbing
,
..
Kaufman -or Or: David DeRita at 446-4950 if "
Roger L. Sidders, Pomeroy, ,
the
peace.
""'"'"
Likeagoodneigh~
qualified
and interested . Additional
$10 and costs, insecure load;
Forfeiting bond were
_a
SC.teFannJS'
there.
· f
t' ·
·1 bl th
h th Ce t ·
~'" orma ron IS avar a e roug
e . n er
CllstS each, speeding; Mona Ralph E. Searls, Rutland, $10 Miguel Equilvz, Cleveland;
p J
uuv u•m,.
S!l l eflrn~m ,ur .,ttcOII'IpiiiiiS
Receptionists or through the Ohio Bureau of •
L. Johnson, Rutland, $10 and find ~ costs, no mUffler ; R M . . Sh
ose asttls,La~ra. ron,Belpre;
a.; . •;~~=~::-~":::'•_::n~·~
·~:··~··~""~·'::l~~n:::_
•·• L--E;,;.m;,;.:;,p.;.;lo;.:y;,;.m.;.;.;e;,;.nt-..Se.-.rv,;,i;;;c;,:;!!;.;S;.·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
costs, stop sign; Stephen K. Thomas J. Martin; Pomeroy, Michael
7580
Nelson, Pomeroy, $10 and $10 and costs. high bumper; Thomas Trador, Sum•
costs, left of center; Donna J . and Joel Andrendi, Pomeroy, rningheld, Pa .; Danny

.Meigs county court Friday
POMEROY
Mei gs
'County Judg~ Robert E. Buck
lined 21 persons and 12 forfeited lxlnds in Meigs County
Court Friday.

have been deceivmg .
J.awmakers were uneasy
about
endorsing
the
rontroversial substance, said
to reta-rd the growth of
cancer. They went against
the advice of rr!edical
authorities in approving the
bilL
Two schools of thought
seemed to pair up to secure
passage for the bill. One said
that it -would be wrong to
withhold from the public a .
substance which might work
to slow the growth of the
dread disease, even if the
effect
were
only
psychological.
·
The other school or thought .
was that approval by the
legislature would remove the
Haura - · of
mystique''
surrounding laetrile and
making it more popular
every day.
Finally, in a purely
political action, Democrats
pushed.
their ·
own
con~ressional
redistricting

A-'lbeSaaday~llnei.Sunday,Juiv IO,I!m

'·

1f..

-

safe waters

Old Time ·

-WIENYOU .
SAVE REGULAILY

TENT MEETING

. .

At

COMMERQAC.I
NGS·BAIIK-

.Ourt·. :

.~

'

Time and

Will

Announcecll

.....;:;

,.:~~·~
....... . "~

~!idge
"'-"-"' f

.
lli•r
,.,- , · ·

),•;

:

Plaza

·--------·-------FROM

· You'll Have To Hear To Believe. Debut

..

•

COMING SOON!

A Phenomenal Stereo Speaker System

h1.

youtr~t

, .'

It's smooth sailing
all the woy when you
put your savings to
work ot a bank that
knows lh business.

.

'

~1.- .

'·

.'
Member FDIC

~hat's us- we'll steer you to-a plait that's Net--~
· I* f"-'i'~t
· individual situation and needs .. ~ guide you ~ ~~
. harbor of flnancial •ecurity. Entrust your ship. ~
to us. We 'II help you And your treasure!
'

�A~-The Sunday Tlmes-senlinei,Sundiiy,

July 10.1977

~r~~,,,:,B:'TEE£~visJaFl'' ' '~·r ~miJ:i;~;.. Parked cars
ill\....

..

;::i

VIEWING

Iii
·"·)

SUfo!DAY. JULY 10.1977
6:00-This is lhe Life 10.
6:JO-.Jerry Falwell 4; Talking Hands 8. .American

;::j

Thinking· in Black 8; Public Policy..f=orums 10; Glen

.,

Probl~ms &amp; Challenges 10.· Newsmaker ' 77 13.
7: oo-:=-Ctiristopher CloSceup 3; Tenne.sse~ TuKedo 6;

Bernice Bede Osol

e~ accidents

People 6; Jerry Falwell 8; Amazing Grace Bible

Class 13. ·
7:55-Biack Cameo 4,

Matenat prospects look en·
cOLuag.ng for you lh•s comulg :
year prov Gied you don't • take
tooi 1S h flyers . l The slow. but
steady . rou1e IS your best path lo

"th e bank ,

B:oo-Mormon Choir J ; Day of Discovery 4; Com
,munique ·6; Church Sen1 1ce 10; Dr. E .J. Daniels
Presents Happiness Is 13; Sesame St. 20.

CANCER (Juno 21·Julr 22)
Select act,v•t•es today that. are
lun but also 1ne~~:p enSive .
Pleasurable pursuits with a high
pnce tag will give a bad case of
the grumbles. Find out more
about yourself by send•ng tor
your copy of Astra-Graph Letler.
Ma11 50 cenls tor each and a
to.ng . self-ad dres'Sed . stamped
envelope to As,tro -Graph . P.O.
Box 489, Aacj10 C1ty Station. NY.
)0019 Be sure to specify your

8:JO-Oral Roberts J; J immy Swaggart 4 ; Celebration
of Pra ise 6; Oay of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13; Open Bible 15.
9 :QO-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3t Robert Schuller 4;

Oral Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard
Repass 8; Better Way 15 ; Mister Rogers 20.

9·30-What Does lhe Bible Plainly Say? 8; It Is Written
10; Jim Franklin 13; This is the Life 15; Sesame St .

.

10:00-Christ is the Answer 3;· Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkins 6 ; Robert Sch!JIIer 15; Christian Center 8;

btrth s•gn

Mov ie " Mr. Skeffington" 10: J immy Swaggart 13.'

LEO ~July 23-Aug. 22) Someone
work 1ng quretiy behind the scene
w 1t1 help you pull sometpmg olf
today that you couldn't on your

10 :30-Big Blue Marble J ; Junior ,A lmost Anything

Goes6; Yours for the Asking 4; Robert Schuller 8;
Garner· Ted Amstrong 13; Zoom 20 .

11 :00-Volce of Huntington Christian ·Academy 3;

own, Share the credit.

Rev~

Doctors on Call4 ; Hot Fudge 6; Rex H umbard 8, 15 ;
Henry Mahan 13; Elec . Co. 20 .
li: Jo-Tv··chapel 3; Animals, Animals, Animals 6;
Focus on Columbus 4; Blueridge Quartet 133; Onte

on that wh 1ch IS hopeiul

Upon' a Classic 20.

mvolvements today In this instance , the good far outWetghs
the bad H ')IOU IQOk for 1t.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl.. 22) Dwell

12:CJO-At Issue 3; New s Conference 4; Issues &amp; An
swers 6; Face the Nation 8; Evangelistic Outreach
13; Insight 15; Great Performances 20.
12:30-Meet the Press 3,4,15; Directions 6 ; Testimony
'time 8; The Issue 10 ; Willard Wilcox 13 .

1:00-Movle "Tammy

&amp; the .Mill ionaire" 3; Movie
" The Spectre Qf E.dgar Allan Poe" .4 ; America's
Black Forum 6; Bob Jones University 8; Face the ·.
Nation ·10; Issues &amp; Answers' 13; M usic Halt

America 15: Nova 20; Leonard Bernstein Conducts

33.
1 :3D-Aware 6; Ben Haden 8; Movie " Queen of Outer

Space" 10; Medi x 13.

2:45-Baseball Warm -Up 4.
3:()0-Baseball 3,.4; Pro Soccer 15; Tennis 8; Wildl ife

Crisis 10; Tribal Eye 20.
J: JD-Celebrity Bowling 10;. Americana 33.

4:00-Bewilched 6; Sports Special 8,10; Hollis Su mmers 20; Documentary Showcase 33.
4: 3D-Ter'lnis 6,13 ; Documentary Showcase 20.
5:oo-Ecce Homo 15i Age of Un cer tai nty 33.
5:3o- Bewltched 3.; Bobby Vinton 4; Americana 20 .
6:00--News 3,4; Andy Griffith 6; Andy Williams 8;
TownTopics

13;

Wal ly's

Workshop 15; Sesame St. 20:' Wall Street Week 33.'
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; News 6 ; 30-Minutes 8; Wor ld
Press 33 : $128.000 Question 10: Newsmaker ' 77 13.
7:oo-Worldof Disney 3,4, 15; Destination : Amer ica 6;

60-Minutes 8,10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20:
7: 30-Antlques 20.
8:00-McMillan 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man 6,13;
Rhoda 8,10; Evening at Pops 20.33.
8:30-Phyllls 8,1 0.
9:00-Movie " The Scalphunters" 6,1J; Swilch 8.10;
Model " 3,4, 15 .

TAURUS (April ~0 - Mar 20) Ear.
ly in the day others may find You

10:()()-Delvecchio 8, 10; Piccadilly Circus 33; Dance in
•· America 20.
11 :05-Monty

Python' s Flying Circus 33.
11 :15-ABC News 6; CBS News 8,1 0; PMA Pulse 15.

ll : J~Movie " Guns of the Magnificent Seven " 3,15;
Movie " House of Cards" 4; FBI 6; Movie " From
the Earth to the Moon " 8; Hawaii Five.O .10;
Ironside 13.
·

11 :35-Janaki 33; 12 :30-ABC News 13:
1: 30-Peylon Place 4.
Movie Ctlannel - sand 9 p.m. - Obsession ; 7 and 11
p.m. - Hindenberg.

MONDAY, JULY 11,1977
6:00-PTL Club 8; Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13; 6:20-Not For Women Only 13 ,
6:3o-:.Columbus ·Today 4; News 6; Medix 10.
6:45--Morning Report 3.. ·
-.\
/
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6' 55-Goor
·

7:00-Today 3,4,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Chuck Wfilte Reports 10; 7:0~Po rky Pig
10.
7:·30-Schoolies 10.
.
8:00-Howdy Doody 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6;.
9:00-Cross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy ,
·
Grjfflth 8; Mike Douglas 10; Biography 33 .
9:30-A.M. J; Edge of Night 6; Concentration .8;

Oasis in Space 33 .

11 :DO-Wheel

of Fortune _3,4, 15: Happy Days 6, 13;
Community of Living Things 33; 11 : 20-Biog raphy
33.
.
.
11 :JO-lt's Anybody's Guess 3,4, 15; Fam il y Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8,1 0.
11:55-CBS News 8; Ms. Fix it 10.

I T MAY

tON .

19 case~ of Legionnaires'
disease. have been reported
across the country since last
summer when the illness
killed 29. persons attending a
Philadelphia convention. The
national Center on Disease
Control said in a report
released Friday that six of
the 19. died from the aihnent.

Sta te Of Ohio.'
Cene raJ Mo tor s Accep tanc e
Co rpor,at ion r ese rves the
right to bid a t th is sale.
Th e cQII atera l is presently
stor ed and may be seen at
Pa m eroy Motor Ccir11 pany ,
la w s of ·the

Pomeroy , Ohio -45769 .
GENERAL MOTOR S

ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION

(7 l . 10,

perftctly
·

11.-.

bolat~c.•d

opr lflro~u rfi'

kvrttinog,

ol'l a . . .

9-.olt

ffCWIMIO.

OYHAMAIIK
1L1C1111C STAn I . .

RIDER LAWN MOWER

6, 13; Koiak 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC NewsJ3.
12:00-Movle " Ma on Fire" 10; Janak! 33.
l2:4G--Toma 6,13; Movie " Three Guys Named Mike''
8.
1: oo- T omorrow 3,4.

Court 8; Midday 13 ; Forsythe Saga 33.
6.13; Bob

1:50-News 13.
.
Movie Channei- 5 and 7 p.m. MOonrunners; 9 and 11
p.m. Alvin Purple
'
Cable Channel Fiv'e- 6:30p.m. - Testi!'lony Time;
1:00- Paul Gaudino Family Fitness; 7:30p.m.,Home Digest; 8:30 ·p.m. - Cable Spotlight; 9:30
p.m.- High Ad'venture ; 10:00 p.nt . - 700 Club.

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.

1:DO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 9;
Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not tor Women Only 15;
·Great Performances 33 .

1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World -Turns
8, 10.
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13; At The Top 33.

SPORTS DEPT.

Hardware Dept.

30QUART

IYSEA&amp;$1(1

TANNING
LOTION·
80Z.SID

FOAM COOLER

99(

Cosmetk Dept. ·

ROOSTER.
TAIL

JOH.NSON

8 OZ. KIT ·wAX
Wl1ll APPUCAOI TOP

No. 1 No. 2 No. 3
each
SPORTS DEPT.

D-CON

ALL

6-12PLU~

INSECT REPELLENT
IIAIIDWAN
.IIIPT.

99(

FISHING REELS

2

%OFF
•

2;30-0octors 3.4.l5i· One Life to live 6,13; Guiding.

Light 8.10.
.
3:00-Another World 3.4, 15; All In The Family 8,10;
· Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; Romagnoli's Table
33.
.J: 15-General Hospital 6, 13.
3:30-Match Game 8,10; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20; t-tow ·
To Buy a Home JJ.
.
4:00-Mister Carloon J; .Gong Show 4,15; New Mtckey
Mouse Club 6;· Gilligan 's Is. 8; Sesame SI.2Q,33;
Movie "The Delica te Delinquent" 10; .Dinah 13 . ·
4:30-My Three Sons J; Star Tre~ 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Gr iffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 15. ·
,
5:00-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers
Neighborhood 20.33; Emergency One 13; Mission:
lmposslbl¢ IS. ·
s :JO-Adam -1 2 4; News 6; Family Affair B; Elec.

•

Co.20t33.

~

6:00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20;
Austin City Lim its 33.
. .
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Andy Gnlftth 6;
CBS News 8,10: Vegetable Soup 20
,
7·00-Truth or Cons. 3: To Telllhe Truth 4: Liar's Club
6 : Buck Owens8 ; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Americana 20; Montage 33.
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Se~rch of 4;
Muppet Show ~ · Gong Show 9; MacNe'ti-Lehrer
Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13;
· Nashville on the Road 15 .
8:00-Little House on the Prairie 3.4, IS; Nancy Walker
6,13; Jeffersons 8,10: Meat 20; Once Upon a Cl~sslc
JJ.

SPORTS DEPT.

COMPLETE SEL_;CTION. OF

CONVALESQNT
'
.
.. EQUIPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES·

•

• Home Oxygen • Oxygen Regulators
•Hospital Beds ·• Flowmeters
• Wheel Chairs • Bedside Commodes
• canes
' • Humidifiers
• Walkers
• Respiraloly Support
· ·Crutches
Systems

·. DUPONT ·
REDWOOD
STAIN

4UART

GULFLm

CHARCOAL
·sTARTER

.59(.

HOME DELIVERY AVAILABLE

HARDWARE DEPT.

TRI-COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY

56 State StrHt
G;o llipolis. o.
Mrs . Ronald L. Saunders
Manager &amp; Sales Representative

______

14 44•-38'ill

.._.

Gallipolis-Point Ple4sant

Pomet:oy-Middkport

:Swunmmg was enjoyed by
the group before enjoying a
delicious pools ide buffet
meal. Following the meal the
meeting was called to order·
by the new class president.
J eff Smith, who also led the
group in a period of devotion
using the . book '' None of
These Diseases" as a basis _
for the .discussion.
Special guests for the
evening were Rev . and Mrs.
Harry Cole of Cedarville who
is forme• associate pastor of
First Baptist and former
teacher of the Ambassadot
·
Class.

LiJrry Pickens and Drema Jenkins

..

TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Shain, Racine,
are announcing the engagement and approaching mar·
riage of their daughter, Dreama LaDorma Jenkins, to
Larry Stevan Pickens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry 'Pickens,
Route 4, Pomeroy. The wedding will be an event of Aug. 20
at 2:30 p.m. at the Racine First Baptist Church. A receP'
lion will be held following the ceremony in the church
social room. The Rev. Don Walll&amp;r of Racine will perform
the ceremony. Miss Jenkins is a 1977 graduate of Southern
High School. Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed with his father in the painting
business.

LISA FERRELL

Lisa
Ferrell
.
celebrates her
·ninth birthday
,.

Those enjoying the evening
were': Dr.' and Mrs. lsmael
Jamora·and children Dennis,
Tony and Gina, Mrs. Lloyd
Danner and dau ghters Becky
Sherri Lee Whitman
and Rachel, Mr. and Mrs.
PLANS TO WED - Mr . and Mrs . Arthur A. Whitman; Rt. Larry Marr, J eff Smith, Rev.
I, Milton Road, announce the forthcoming marriage of their and Mrs. Cole and the host
daughter, Sherri Lee, to Lewis Franklin Faudree, son of Mt. and hostess, Mr. and Mrs.
. and Mrs. Lewis W. Faudree of 500 OaJ&lt; Drive, Gallipolis. The · Tom Milstead and children,
weddiryg ceremony is plarmed for Saturday , JUly 23, 7:30p.m. Nancy, Tommy and Matat the Main Street Baptist Church with the Rev . John W. thew.
Bradley officiating . The gracious custom of OJlen church will
be observed. A reception wiU follow in the church.

NEW HAYEN ~ Lisa Rena
Ferrell of Hartford, W. Va.
was honored on her ninth
birthday recently with a
cookout at the New Haven
Park hosted by her mother,
Linda Ferrell.
A Mickey Mouse cake,
GALLIPOLIS - Plans the Rev. James V. Frazier
chips, hotdogs, and
potato
have been completed in the officiating. The open &lt;;burch
koolaide
were served to Mr.
wedding of "Miss Cynthia wedding )l'ill begin ·with
and
Mrs.
Harold Reeves and
Ly nn Boggs, daughter of Mrs. music at 6 p.m. and . the
Trina, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Madge E.' Boggs, Route 2, ceremony starting at 6:30.
. Mrs. Lynn Black, Joy and
Gallipolis to William Dean Brant Adams will be organist
Kenneth,
Brenda
• Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. and Mary Ann Beman,
Allensworth,
New
Haven ;
J . Richard Thomas, 507 soloiSt. There will be a
Misty
Gibbs,
Jimffiy
· Turn·
reception immediately
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
bull,
Mrs.
Terry
Lewis
and
The candlelight ceremony · following in the Fellowship
Terry,
Mrs.
Gibbs
and
Mim·
wl!l he an event of July 16 at . Room of the church.
my, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
the First Baotist Church with
Rairden, Hartford, W.Va.
.
.
Gilts and cards were
presented to Lisa. She also
received a gift from Mr. and
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Donna Larry Smith, Mason, W. Va.;
Mrs. Danny Rairden of
Knapp entertained on the Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Piersall,
Ravenswood.
After the
Fourth of July wee~end with · Point Pleasant ; .Mrs. Ger·
cookout
a
slwnber
party was
a chicken barbecue in !rude Mitchell, Pomeroy;
RUTLAND-A program of Henderson, John Sisson, Der· Hysell, Janet Davis, Lily held at the home of grand·
celebration of the birthday ~f Mrs. Lillian Smith, New songs and scriptures Tuesday rik Tillis, Robert Rictunond, Robson, Edna Mae Swick,
her husband, Robert Knapp. Raven, W. Va.; Mrs. Im· night concluded the combined Jason Black, Lee Ann Goode, MarCia Denison, ·Roger parents , Mr. and Mrs.
Rairden .
He was presented with a caRe ogene Knapp, Syracuse ; Mr. .Daily Vacation Bible School Lisa Tillis, Sabrina Wilson, Black, and Pearle Canaday .
and Mrs. Tom Knapp and of the Rutland Church of and Angie McDo na ld, all
and gilts.
Worship services specials
Attending were Mr. and daughters, Brenda and Trish, Christ and the Rutland ·perfect attendance; J~rry · were presented by the Rev.
Mrs. Joseph Lish and •Columbus.
United Methodist Church. A Blackburn, Tracie Wright, Mr. Hilt, Dennis Smith, Mrs.
Sending girts were Eddie total of 102 Rutland area Leslee Shepard, J. R. Walker, Hilt who gave a flanne lgraph ~
daughter, Lisa, and grand·
son, Franky Lish, Mr. and Lish and Cheryl of Mason, W. children enrolled for the Kathy Hobstetter, Eric Prid· story, Ruth Tillis v,:ho talked
Mrs. Larry Noble and sons, Va. and Mr. and Mrs. B1ll school held at the Methodist dy, faithful ; Danyan Majors, about missionary life in
HOSPITALIZ~D
Jeff and Chris, .Mr. and Mrs. Knapp, Colwnbus.
Amy Eskew, Kent Eads, Carl Africa; and Sharon Stewart
Church.
Ida
Mae Thompson is
The offering of $66 given by Williams, Mandy Black, and Becky Glaze who gave a
recovering
from surgeryin
the children during the week Shawn Felty, Shelly Adams, puppet show.
room
312
at
St . Anne 's
i
was contributed , to the Charles Priddy, and Chuckie
The children enrolled ·
Hospital,
1555
Bryden
Road,
Christina Smith Fund while · Harman.
re.ceived certificates and the
the · offering taken on the . Middlers: Hazel Hilt, Joy adults were presented Columbus 43205. Cards and
night of the program of $77.79 Sauer, and Karla Brown, · ·bookmarks. Directors were letters would be Welcome.
wentto help defray costs of teachers ; Becky Vance, Min· Mrs. Hilt, Mts.Wise and .Fay Her father, Ross Harding,
who resides near his
the school.
dy McDonald, Janet Hysell ; Sauer.
home, is under the
daughter's
The program opened with a Brian Henderson, Hawthorne
Those wno were not there to
weather
and
would also like
processional of all the Murphy, Clu·is Cross, Ernie receive their certificates are
to
hear
from
his friends.
students to "Onward Chris· Cross, Robbie Sisson, Robbie to telephone 742·2301.
tian Soldiers" with Donna Eads, Jackie Goode, Sherrie
Webfl.r at the organ, and Jane Wilso n. perfect attendance;
Wise at the piano. The Beth Hobstetter, Greta Ke,n·
pledges to the American flag, nedy, Diana Williamson, Ted·
the Christian flag, and the Bi· dy Van Cooney , Willie
ble were given and Mrs, l;ialfhill, and Kevin Thoma,
. Hazel Hilt, one of the direc· · faithful; Ricky Wise , John
tors, extended the welcome. Wolfe, Tony Schuler, Missy
The invocation was by the Howard, Marty Hart, Tam·
Rev. Wilbur Hilt with the con- my Gilkey, Christy Black,
gregation singing "Stand Up John Goode, Angel Harman,
for Jesus" and " Amazing Pam Smith, and Andy
.Grace'."
Halfhill.
All of the children sang the · Juniors: Janet Williamson,
theme song, "Jesus, Teach . Kimbe.rly Birchfield,
Me" and ''Sow a Little Gospel teach ers; Betty Murphy,
Seed." The beginners and Connie Murphy, Diana Ma·
· primary class joined to sing jors, Chris Richmond, Len
"Jesus Loves Me" and "Deep Sayre, Jeff 'Gilkey, Terry
and Wide." The parable of Thoma, and Tina Goode,
the feast was dramatized by perfect attendance ; Sonia
the middlers and thejuniors Wise,· April Ellis, Steve Patreviewed the parables of .the terson, faithful; Cathy Dean,
week's study using a televi· Shal•n Ea~, Tammy Black, ·
sion show.format. The closing Earl Goode, Cindy Priddy
song was "Bless Be the Tie" and Brad Alexander.
with Dennis Smith, pastor of
Youth: Dennis Smith,
the
Church
of
Christ
giving
Marga ret Edwards, teacher;
Thunna · V. Vau~han
the benediction. The crart Darla Williamson , Anita
ENGAGED- Mr. and Mrs. Leo L. Vaughan, Martin display was viewed ·by the Might, Shelia Blackburn,
St., Pomeroy' announce the engagement and approaching
parents and friends atten- faithful ; Mary Smith' . Libby
Watkins, Buddy Ellis and
marriage of their daughter, Thunna V., to Bruce L
ding.
.
Cindy
Weaver.
.
McDaniel, son of Dr. and Mrs. Uoyd E. McDaniel, 1055
. Recognized and presented
Emma En~lish and Keith Ashley ·
Donna
Weber,
Jane
Wise,
Sleepy Hollow Lane, Plainfield, N.J. The brid~lect is the -certificates . were : Begingraoddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Harrah, Long Bot·
ners : Catherme Colwell, Lo1s - and Ellen Rice had charge of
PLANS TO WED - Aruiouncement is made of the
be') Walker, teachers; ~ary Col· craft and music during the
tom, and Walter Va~ghan, Pomeroy. The wedding
engagement
and approaching marriage of Enuna Je!\11
an event of Aug. 14 a.). the United Methodist i':iiiircr,-- well, helper; Jeff B1rchf1eld, week with Teresa Brown ser- English,
daughter
of Ellis R. English and the late Freda
Ryan Burson, ·Susan Goode, ving as secretary, and Duane
Pomeroy, with the lloev. ·William Spencer and the Rev.
F.
English,
Coolville,
and Keith D: Ashley, son of Mr. and
Aida Spencer, New Jersey, and the Rev. Robert Hayden of
Scott Gtlkey, Cheryl Thoma, Weber as custodian. Ruth
Mrs.
Robert
D.
Ashley
of Letart Falls. Tbe bride is a 1971
· Pomeroy officiating. Prenuptial music will begin at 2 p.m.
B1lly Ellis,Wendy G1lkey, Erlewlne was chairman for
graduate
of
Federal
Hocking
High School and 1975 cum
A,ng.ie Elhott, . Ryan ~efreshments.
with the ceremony to he perfonned at 2:30p.m. The
laude
graduate
of
Ohio
University
where she received a
Others who provided
custom of open church will be obserVed with a reception to
N1chol"?"• Anna St,archer,
follow in the church dining room. Tbe brid~lect is a
Tony Miller, all perfect atten· transporation, refreshments, _ BSED. Miss English is presently employed by t.he Meigs
Local School District at Rutland Elementary. T1te groom
graduate of Pomeroy High School and Capital Univ•.rsity
dance; Shelly Blaek, Rose and assisted generally in the
is
a 1971 graduate of Southern Local High School and also
of Colwnbus where she received a bachelor of science
Murphy, Mandy Nicholson, school operation were Mary
a
1975
cum laude grl!duate of Ohio JJniversity where he
degree. She is employed at the University of Rochester
faithful attendance; Andy Ruth Becker, Ann Webster, .
received
a BBA. Mr. Ashley is currently teaching
School of Medicine in medical research. Mr. McDaniel is a
Hatfield,_ Mark . Matth~w, Margaret Parsnns, Jack
business
courses
at Gallla Academy High School and
graduate ·or Plainfield High School and a graduate of
Aar?n Riek, Angle Larkms, Walker, Richard Grueser,
·Gallipolis
Business
College. Presently, he is attending
Rutgers University, class of 1967. He served with the U.S.
Afi!lle Black, Angte Ru":'~ll, Jessie GI'Ueser, Janet Morris ,
school
at
Ohio
UniversitY where he is working on
graduate
Anny in Vietnam with one year as a mecica-asslstant&lt;He
Enc Goode, Laurie B.lack, Myrville Brown, Mat·ie Birhis masters in Educational Administration. The open
chfield Harold Sauer . Harold
is agraduate of the Unzyersity of Connecticut School of
f111ckey and Sarah.H~rma~.
church wedding will be Saturday, September 3, at 7:30
Law and a member of the Connecticut Bar, and resides in
Prunary : MarJone R1ce, Rice, Margaret Weber, Mar·
p.m. at the Racine Baptist Churc)l. Tlie Reverend
Rochester N. Y. where he is editor of tbe Lawyers
Rosemary Burson and Kelly jot·ie Milhoan, Mae Weber,
Freeland
Norris will officiate.
Cooperati~e Publishing Co.
Brown, teachers; Gre~ Pearl Little, Bertie Mm'

Miss Cynthw BoRRs
completes weddinR plans

.

ltc

11 :3D-J ohnny Carson 3,4, 15; Streets of San Francisco

12; QO--News 3, 4,6,10; Shoot tor the Sta r s 15; Divorce
Hop~

PUBLIC· SALE
WHOM

8:30-Baseball 6,13; Shields &amp; Yarnell 8,10: Jean
Shepherd's America 33 . .
9:00-Movre " Breakout" 3.4.15; Maude 8,10; Sea Blrc:J
33.
9:30-AII's Fair 8,10.
.
.
. .
10:oo-.-sonny &amp; Cher 8,10; News 20; Austin Ctty Ltmots
33.
.
11 :Oil-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; Monty Python's .Flying
Circus 20; · Black Journal 33.

American .Heritage ,JJ.

10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3_,4, 15; Dinah 6 ; Here's Lucy B. 10; .
Mike Douglas 13; Once Upon a Classic 33.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,1 5: Price Is Right 8,10;

the Man 3,15; Ryan's

durotllt, ,.e ...... , ..,.., Oftd
for hovn of non-tirirtt
Ha'
tomfqrtoble, hond-contouNd honch. Gi¥es 141 200 hour,

T'w Trwuwre Trod.ef' d

SIJN.

a trifle dill ic': ult . bu f later in the CERN :
.. ·
-.
Not ice is herfby given
. ~fternoon your cheery d ls'?_OSJ· tha t on Ju fy 21. 1977, at 10:00
.
A .t:JI . a pubtic sa le wl 11 be held
!ton emerg~s ., ,
GEMINI (M•r 21 •.iune 20) · at. Pomeroy ~oto r Company ,
· .. .
b
. t
Pomeroy, Oh to 45769 , to sel l
Responslblltttes w 11
I . e easter o tor cas h th e f ol l owing
cope wtth · today tf you keep col lateral , to w it: 19 73
belore you the ulttmate good Chevrolet Fleetside Pi ckup
they 'll engender by being hand!Truck
Serial
No1
rl
CCQ143F.t64848,
sa i d
e d prope y.
collateral • be ing held to
secure an ob li gation ar isi ng
under a retail instalment
r i t y agreement hel d by
DISEASE REPORTED . secu
Genera l Motor s Acc~ptance
. ATLANTA · (UP! )
Corporation
as secu red
part.v . Said p ublic sale is to be
l"ederal health .officials say conc;lucted
according to the

11 : 00--NeWs 3,4,6,R,10, 13,1 S.

&amp;

METAL DETEaOR

~1101,1(~
TO

992-2156

f joanne Goodnite ·
TO WED - Mrs. Mary Goodnite of Letart, W. Va. wishes
to armounce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of her
daughter, Joanna Lynn, to Randy Joe Clark, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Clark of New Haven. Miss Goodnite is a 1974
graduate of Wahama High School and is ctirrently employed
by the People's Bank of Point Pleasant. Mr. Clark is a 1972
graduate of W;~hama High School and a 1976 graduate of
Marshall University where he received his B.A. degree. Mr.
Clark is currently employed by the Mason County Schools and
is actively seeking a Master's degree in Educational
Administration. The open church wedding will be an event of
Sunday, July 24 at 2:30p.m. The services will be conducted at
the Broad Run Zion Lutheran Church with Pastor George
Weirick officiating.

ARIES (M•rch 21-April19) Your

NOTICE OF

446-2342

GALLIPOLIS
The.
Ambassador and Christian In
Action Class of First Baptist
Chu~ch recently held a
swimming party as their
June outing at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Milstead
on D~bby Drive.

ALL SUMME··R
CLOTHING

chances for acquiSition. are mhced today Gams could come
through relatives , possi.b le
losses through something
speculati\le

MaSterpiece Theatre 20,.3 3 .
,
9:JQ--Mov.i e " Stonestreet: Who K i lled the Centerfold

12: 30-Chlco

A

your own attitude . Look tor
sunshme . not shadows

pnedin Line 33.

Morning, Tri State 13.

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No~. , :i2)

Situation that's been troubling
yolb' can be alleviated today
!hrougll compromise . Negotiate,
You 'JI be ll)e one w hO ultimately
bene ftls the most.

THREE RUNS MADE
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to the
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22.Jan. 19) Grueser apartments on N.
Ltmtltng your generostty toward Second Ave. at 3:07 p.m.
one who has always freely given Friday for Rubert Taylor who
to you is not m keeping w ith your was taken to Veterans
nobler instincts . An te up if asked Memorial Hospital. At 10 :30
today . '
p.m., the squad went back to
A'QUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fob. 19) the apartments and picked up
.You are more ~ fortunate .m' en- Tayl0r, taking him to Holzer
dings today than in beginnings . Medical Center. At 8:24 a.m.
Reca ll the story of the hare ·a nd
tortr11se tf you get oft to a slow Saturday, the squad went to
892 S. Second Ave . for
srart.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) The Thomas Justice, who was
only thing !hal could keep this also taken to Holzer Medical
from betng an en joyable day ts Center.

Rat Race" 13. ,

10;

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct 23) There's
an 4;tXCellent possibil1ty that you
can change sometl'1ing important today for the better . Be of
stout heart. for it wtll take some
doing .

Charlene Hoeflich

Swim party hosted

21) The pnde you 'll feel from
overcom ing challenges is we.ll
worth any effort you 'll expend.
Do not duck when 'd'uty calls to·
day

2:30-Redscene '773; Celebr ity Bowling 8: Movie " The

Heroes

your

World

·~··································,·········~- ~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.

.,. 2:00--Wrestling 15; Movie "Johnny Come Lately" 6;
Football Highl ight~ · 8 ; , Alabama 500 13; Age of
Uncertainty 20; UN Day Concert 33.

.Hogan ' s

tn

GALUPOLIS- Only slight
damage was done in two
traf!ic accidents Friday in
.GaUipolis, both involving a
parked car.
At 10:20 p.m. Richard H.
Maynard of Rt. 2, BldweH,
was parked headed up the
street af-Mg· Second Ave.;
when · 1S.year'&lt;lld Louis M.
Pasquale, Gallipolis, tried to
avoid a semi·rig hogging the
street. The youth swerved to
the right and sideswiped and ·
damaged the left front fender
of the pa•ked automobile.
Damage to the Pasquale car .
was to the right front fender
and bumper.
At 9: '45 a.m. James H.
Wood, 69, Patriot Star Route,
Gallipolis, was backing his
·truck out of side-by-side
parking on the Pennyfare lot
on Court St. His right front
fender scratched the left
front fender of a car parked
by Ethel F. Hill, Rt. 2, Bid·
well. Wood came to the police
station in person to report the
minor accident, saying that
the sudden flashing of a
bright light made it so that he
couldn't see the car parked
beside him.

S

Catherine Benet ·

Jut, 10,_11n

Mollette 13.
·
·
7:30-This is the Life 3; Your Health 4; Show My

20.

Woman

involved in

1

.

Closing for joint
VBS is observed

Party held at Knapps '

will

Mr. and Mrs. ·Fulton
to obs.erve anniversary
CHESffiRE ~ Mr. and
Mrs. Huber Fulton of Route 1,
Cheshire, will celebrate their
40th wedding anniversary on'
Sunday, July 17. They were
married at the home of Rev.
E. C. V~nz in Kanauga. Mr.
and Mrs. Fulton are the
parents of .David of Griffin,
Ga., Michael of' Milford
Center, and Margaret Sue

(Mrs. Dennis) Mulford of
Ripley, all of whom, - with
their fa milies, plan to be
home for the day. They will
be hosts for a small informal
open house for their parents
at their home on Little Kyger
· Road. Friends and relatives
are cordially invited. to call
between the hours of two and
six in the afternoon.

Beck reunion held
GALLIPOLIS - The Beck
reunion was held at 'ihe home
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Holley on the Fairlieid·Vanco
Road. The blessing was asked
by Rev. Charles Hively.
Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Holley, Rev. and
Mrs. Alfred Holley, Diane, .
Mark and Pa(ll. Mrs. Charles
Coon, Mr. and Mrs. William
Milstead, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Coullon, Rev . and Mrs.
Charles Hively, Sharon,
Charlene and Doris, Walter
_Hively, Judy,- Lynn and Carl,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Bass and
Lisa, Mrs. Hazel Wilcoxen,
Mr: and Mrs. Garland
Leriear, Cathy and Na~cy
· Sue, Mrs. Dick Groves, Mark
and Janet, Mrs . Esta
Snodgrass, Linda and Chad of
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Marie. Hively, Marlen
and Dan, Mr. and Mrs.
Webster Sewitt of Bidwell ;
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Holly,
Debbie and Connie, Mr. and

Mrs, Dav.id Rolley, Michelle,
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. John
Paul Holley , Eddie and
Johnnie, of Vinton.
Joe -Hively of Thunnan;
Mrs. Pauline Elliott, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Walter, Mr. and
Mrs. Leon. Queen and Leon
Dean of Northup; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Coulfon, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Coulfon, Mickie
and Brigiga Pitt, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Hively, J-iike,
Rick, Gary and Greg, Mr.
and Mrs. John Darthen and
Jason, ol Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Hollis B. Meyers, Mr.
and Mrs. Aulton Myers; Net,
Allen, Adam, Arron and
Andy, Mr. and ~rs. Robert
Hutoh, Brian and Keith of
Lancaster.
'
Visitors· were George
Adkins, Richard Creemas of
Gallipolis; Saitdy Boyer and
Lig Smith of Lancaster. The
day was spent visiting and
taking pictures.

.

•

I

.

Jackie Wauih and Steven Suver

'

wiLL WED - Mrs. Erma Waugh is announcing the
engagement and approaching weddin~ of Jackie Lvnn.
Waugh, Rt. 2 Crown City, and Steven Douglas Suver, Rt:
I Bidwell. Sbe is the daughter of Erma and the late Lee
Waugh. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Suver.
Jackie is a student at Buckeye Hills Career Center. Steve
is a deckhand on a Crounce boat. The wedding will be1111
event of July 30 at the Mt. Zion Church of swan Creek. at
7:30p.m. All open church wedding will be presented. The
Rev.. Clifford Gore will he perfqrming the ceremony. ·

•

�.'
--

•

S.2-The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel. Sw•day. July 10. 1!177

Has birthda_y

Personality Profile.
•
By Charlene Hoellic:h
After 33 years of teaching in Meigs
County elements" Cl.assi'OOIJIS, Bernice Carpenter of Pomeroy has retired.
But she's the first. to admit that come
August when the school !leU.. ring,
nostalgia is sure to strike.
Mrs. Carpenter began her teaching
career after two years at Capital
University in a small school at Forest
Run where she taught the first four
grades with·a grand total of 16 children.
Her next two years were spent teaching
first grade at the Letart FaU.. School,
and then she went to the Middleport
Eleinentary School where she has
taught first grade for the past 29 years.
Reading, writing and arithmetic
while emphasized by Mrs. Carpenter,
bave always been supplemented by
units on conservation, art, music;
animals, and the American Indian. In
teaching, Mrs. Carpenter says it's her
contention that the " extras" keep the
classroom alive and prepare the
children for the more fundamental
studies.
As for changes in the classroom over
the past 33 years, Mrs. Carpenter feels
that the children haven't really chang· ed, but the change has come in the
home enviroiUTlent, parent attention or
lack of, it, and the influence of television, all affecting the ·classroom perfonnance.
Rocking chair retirement isn't in the
pictw-e for Mrs. Carpenter. While she

-GALIJPUf.iS - Cathy Ann
Davis of Hilltop Drive, Rt. 2
Gallipolis, celebrated her
second birthday Sunday,
June 19.
She received presents from·
Mr. and Mrs. Jennings
Ferguson, Rodney, graM·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Dillon, Coal Grove and
brother, Scott, and Mrs.
Gladys Grove, Ironton. She
was honored Monday with a
birthday cake by Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Dillon an~ great·
aunts, Mrs. Clara Sites ; and
Miss Cecelia Dillon who is a
missionary home on furlough
from Africa.
Cathy was also treated the
following Wednesday to a
visit to Charleston for
Ringling Brothers an·d
Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus by
her parents, Merrill and Jane
Davis.

• •

plans to live a little·inore l•isurely . sh.!
intends to keep active and involved. · :
Her interests are vari.ed. She's a whiz
at gardening and growing houseplants.· .
delights in arranging f!owef$, loves antiques, and does sewing and embroidery. She has been a member of the
Bend 0' the River Garden Club since its .
organization and bas held several counl'
ty and regional offices in the Ohio
Assooiation of Garden Clubs.
Her husband, a retired master pilot .of
the UniO{I Barge Line, shares her in. teres! in antiques and does mu.c h of the
repairing and refinishing in Jlis wilodworking shop -at _thei.r Mulberry Ave.
home.
·
Mrs.Carpenter is a past matron of
BERNIE CARPENTER
Racine Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star and a member of the United
Methodist Church of Pomeroy. As for
professional organizations, she is a Carpenter is the daughter of former
member of the Ohio Education Associa- teachers, Mrs. Ruth Barnitz, Pomeroy,
tion, the American Assooiation of and the Late W. 0. Barnitz.
University Women, MiddleportAll three of Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter's
Pomeroy Area Branch, of .which ahe children, Jim of n~ar Coolville; Janet
bas been vice president for the past four YoWJg of Lancaster, and Alita Carroll
years, and Alpha Delta Kappa.
of Cincinnati; have been educated to
She graduated frOm Ohio University teach . .
picking up part of her courses at the
Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter have five
Lancaster Branch whefl! she would grandchildren- Jay Carpenter,
drive after school and then return to Phillip, Robin and Lisa Young, and
W.ch school the next day. During the Matthew Carroll.
teacher corps program in Meigs CounThe retirement of both Mr. and Mrs.
ty, Mrs. Carpenter took additional work Carpenter means more time for that
through Ohio.
which gives them the greatest pleasure
A native Meigs Countfan, Mrs. -their family and home.

rs;:"~=c:;:;r

Cathy Ann

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center ac- ·
tivities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday , July 11 ~ Blood
Pressure Testirig 12:30 p.m.;
Square _Dance. 12:3(1.3 p.m.
Tuesd~y. July 12 - Knitting, 10-11:30 a.m.; Jim Lans-·
ford, Community Mental
Health, 10 :30 a.m.; Blood
Pressure T_e$1ing, 12:30 P·'\'·;
Chorus, 12 :15-1 p.m.; Kitchen
Band, 1-2 p.m.
Wednesday, July 13 Social Security Represen·
tative, 9:30 a.m.-12 :30 p.m.;
Games, 12:30;2 p.m .
Thursday, July 14 Nutrition Education, 10:45
a.m.; craft Making for Fair,
10 : 15 a.m.; Sing-a-Long,
12:15 p.m .; Horseshoes, 12:30
p.m.
Friday, July 15 - Art
class,
10·11 : 30
a.m.;
Crocheting, 10-11 :30 a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m. .
Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11:30 a.m.-12:30
p.m.MondaythroughFriday.
Menu for July II through
July 15, 1977:
Monday- Baked spaghetti
tossed salad, pineapple
slices, (2) sugar cookies,
buttered hot Italian bread,
butter, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Pot ·roast of
beef-gravy, mashed potatoes,
buttered carrots, ice cream,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Baked pork
chop, Au gratin potatoes,
buttered green beans, apple ·
crisp, roll, butter, milk.
Thursday - Salisbury
stea~, baked potato, peach
salad, buttered beets, rice
pudding with raisins, bread,
butter, milk.
. Friday - Turkey salad
sandwich, potato chips,
bu\(ered peas, cho~olate cake
with icing, milk, apricots.
Coffee, tea, buttermilk ·and
juice served daily.

a

Davis

round

For 28 year.s I have fitted

VISlTING
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Shelby King of Lansing,
Mich. is here visiting twr
mother , Mrs. · Helen
Reynolds.
·

PICNIC
POMEROY - The women
of the St. Paul and St.
Lutheran Church wiJI hold
their annual picnic Tuesday,
July 12, at the roadside park
on Rt. 33, left hand side.
Members are to bring a
covered dish and their own
table service. For other in·
formation call Margaret
32 oz. pop bottle, a needle, Balettnar, 992-2412.
thread imd scissors. All other
items will be provided for by
the center. The project is a
REUNION
money makine one for the
RUTLAND - There wiJI be
Center and the dolls will be a ' 'JACKS" reunion held on
sold at the Bob Evans Farm Sunday, July 17 at the Fort
Festival.
M~igs Park, Rutland . This
will be the first Jacks reunion
to be held in over 25 years. All
relatives and friends are
i_nvited and urged to attend.
Dray, Lee, Mike antl Dick
McCalla, John North, Miifred
ANNIVERSARY
and Gail Sheets, all ·of
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Gallipolis.
Mrs.
Gene Wyatt, 2710 Lewis
John and Sarah Fisher · of
Ave.,Apt.
A, Suitland, Md. ,
Pomeroy; Robert and Faye
20023,
will
celebrate their
. Proffit and Bob and Beth
~olden wedding anniversary
Diddle and son of Belpre;
· !l'uesday at their home, Mrs.
Bernard and Opal Diddle, ·
Marlene; Molly, Larry and Wyatt is the former Audrey
Fultz of Middleport.
Amy Fisher of Racine, and
Sid, Pearl, Butch, Glen,
!Wn and Willie Thomas of
Ashville, Ohio.

ai"ds
alwavs
combining quality product
and profe&amp;siona I
with reasonabl&amp; cost. While
we will continue to serve

cut

hearing

The diamond
shape of her
choice. Brilliant and

our oHice we will now
reward those who can by
lixing the price at $275.00
for the best known custom
made and- individual fitted
hearing
aids.
Prior
medica I and audiologica I
examination encouraged .
If yo~ have · a question o~
wish an appointment call
me at 592-6238 .

'300.00
leu '25.00

Cash Discount

beautiful in

whatever carat
size you select .
But regardless
of size and
price ; you are
as$ured of
quality that is
beyond
question .

Fisher l{iven Anny discharRe
GAWPOUS - On June
19, Spec. 4 James· M. Fisher
returned home from serving
a two year tour in Germany.
James was discharged June
18 after serving four years in
the U. S. Army. ·
Jim was welcomed home
with a party by family and
friends. Welcoming him
home were his parents,
Kermit and Jane, Phillip and
cDevere Fisher, Barb Woodall
and Charlie Mayes, Andy and
Debbie Chevalier, Vance
DOLLS BOTH REAL and homemade, are shown in this photograph taken at the Senior
Citizens' ee~ter. From left to right is Maxine Northup, instructor, and Nella Tayl~r, Ethel
Layne and Mae Lawrence looking on . .
'·

Rio reunion planned
RIO GRANDE - The
annual Rio Grande High
School Alumni Association
will hold its reunion Saturday, July 16 at the old Rio
Grande High School building.
Several requests hal(e been
made to visit the old school
and a larger. crowd is expected this year.

.

·Meigs 4;9 Club News

..... . ·.

POMEROY - The :;.Point
Star Stitcher J.L.'s met July
5th at Forked Run Stat_e Park

The schedule of activities
for this week at the Senior
Citizens Center is as follows:
Monday, July II, Physical
Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; Olde
Tyme Chor_us Practice, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, July 12, Quilting
and Visiting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Bottle Doll Craft Class (A 32·
ounce pop bottle, needle,
thread, and scissors are
needed), 1-3 p.m.
Wednesday, July
13,
I Physical Fitoess, 11':30 a.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 14, Tearing
Carpet Rags, 9a.m.-3 p.m.;
Quilting and Vi_sjting, 9 a.m.-3
p.m.
.
I Friday, .July 15, Nutrition
Games Day, 1-3 p.m.; Art
Class,l-3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7
Exhibit for the month of July -New Jersey Group Show, 20
p.m.
.
Watercolors, Caseins and Acrylics from Old Bergen.
The menu for the Senior
Gallery How-s : Saturdays and Sundays 1 p.m. until5 D.ll'l.: Nutrition Program is:
• Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.JR . until 3 p.m. Riverby.
.
Monday
· Baked
July 19 - 8 p.m., F.A.C. Interdepartmental Meeting,
spaghetti, tossed salad,
Riverby.
.
pineapple slices, buttered hot JOHN F. Kennedy Jr. is
July 26-8p.m., F .A.C. Trustees Meeting, Rlverby.
Italian bread, sugar cookies, spending pari of his summer
August Exhibit - 34 prize winning paintings for the River . milk.
far from the madding crowd.
Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Tuesday - Pot roast of Kennedy, 16, is participaling
in a survival fitness exercise
August 28 - "Annie Oakley" by the Fanfare Childr.e n's beef,
gravy,
mashed on an uninhabited island off
Theatre out of New York.
·.
potatoes, buttered peas and the Maine .::oast. Equipment
carrots, bread, ~utter, ice Includes only basic lools and
cream, milk.
. .
supplies.
Wednesday ..:.. Liver and
We're Just
And the excitement
i s due to the In ·
Onions, Au gratin potatoes, Bursting with
traduction of our
battered green beans, roll,
many new produ cts
Excitement!
as well as new
butter, peach crisp, mUI&lt;.
. Open Sunday 1 lo 6 p.m.
shades and sizes in
Thursday
.,..Salisbury
.some of your. "o ld
favorites .·" Stop in
steak, baked potato, peach ·
soon and see what 's
salad, buttered beets, bread,
new for YOU! Affer
bolter, rice pudding with
11.
at a Merle
n
Cosmetic
raisins, mill{. ,
, you'll always
Friday - Chicken salad
step wit h the
sandwich, potato chips,
buttered
peas,
butter,
Denim Sli~n has Rope
chocolate cake with icing,
Wedge, Cushioolnsole.
milk.
'
Choice of beverage served
· with each meal.

r--------.- ----·----.:.&amp;...-._,

I

II

I
I
I
I

Calendar

TAKING A TRIP
.

'

IF SO_
LET US SUGGEST
·
.,
SOMETHING BEnE•,

NEW STORE HOURS

~~~:~~;~;:~~~;:c~;~:;~;;:::;~1

I
I

9 a.m. til7 p.m. Dally
Closed Sunday

~

SUPER SAVINGS!

.......

Non-Discrimnatory

basis."

2.90

,

Juanita's BEAUTY SHOPPE &amp;

mERLE noRmAn .COSmETIC STUDIO
i'llone 446-2673
Go IIi polis
OPERATORS:
O.rlene Ro;tch Hill and kcky Elliott

Jfllelfnont Or.

. r

UJDGING TAX
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
--=="'.i
Ohio Senate Thursday gave
UYUT- MollorCnorooO&lt;3(1.1 approval to leg_islati~
Open
permitting townships ill
303 Upper River Rood
Mon.- Sat.
which state lodges are
Across From Silver Bride- Plaza 9 • .m. till 9 p.m .
located to use the lodging tax
S..n. 1til6
receipts to aid schools.
'-"':.:.;''-----C.II to know us; you11Miriltu~A--~-'

*

(;""Good

f

,_

'

,Jnn.

AMERICAN EXPRESS ,
TRAVELERS CHEQUES

Sunwawr

"Services rendered on a

Calendar

MOJIIDAY
REGULAR MEETING,
:Twin City Shrine Club, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the clubhouse. ·
: WORK PARTY for Meigs
-Jaycees, 6 p.m. Monday at
· 'the mini-park in Pomeroy
· Jollowed by a meeting . In
case of rain, meeting will be
·held at 8 p.m. at the Meigs

JONES BOYS "

FRIENDLY SERVICE! .

r~··

SUNDAY
HYMN SING at the Hart·
ford Church oi· Christ in
Christi~n Union Sunday, 2
p.m-. with Dan Hayman and
!he Country Hymntimers.

WILl YOU .BE CARRYING LARGE SUMS OF MONEY? .

with thr&lt;!! advisors and 11
members attending.
A
Hawaiian dinner- on July 8
. and a Safety Speaking
Contest on July 19 were
c!iscussed; Hiking
and
swimming were enjoyed. The
group had a potluck lunch. Carolyn Bowen.
THE . HILLBlLLlE!i 4-H
Club met July 5 at the Dyer
residence with eight mem. bers and one advisor }lresent.
Judging dates and a swimming party were discussed.
Opal ana Patty Dyer modeled
their 4-H clothing out(its and
explained how the garments
were constructed.
Crystal Roush explained
how to prepare a cherry
cobbler and then showed the
finished product. Billy Dyer
had a roll call abuut tractor
safety. Ball tag was played
for recreation. Refreshments
were served by the Dyers and
Crystal Roush. - Opal Dyer.

=social ....

,.,, ,· ,,u~·;·u·~~·

,.,-•

.

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

Call a former classmate or
a!wnnl and ll_lan to meet
Saturday, July 16, noon for a
picnic style reunion at the old
high school building.
Bring one meat dish, one
covere.d dish,' table service.
Soft drinks will be furnished.
There is• a $1 charge for
registration.

404 Second ,btftut
_1.47 · lllltllpOHa.Ohlo

i

If lost or stolen you can ge.t your money back.

1
1

2. American Express Travelers Cheques are good at more

1i

I

hotels, restaurants, retail outlets, and gas stations than any
I "· other :ravelers Cheques.
I=

~
I
I
I

J. American El!press

Travel~rs Cheques are supported by over I!

650 travel offices around the world. They other two major

travelers cheques aren't backed tiy any travel offices.
4. More

trave- ler~ use American Express Travelers Cheques

than ·any other kmd . ·

IL

~~u're ~a

. ·.

So if
king a trip get
leading travelers cheques.

5.

.

.

·

I
I

Americ~n Express. the world's 1·

.
.-.--.-.---·--------------------------.s
AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS atEQUES ARE ·
1

.

AVAILABLE FROM
3 Locations To Serle ·You!
MAIN ~-SECOND AVE.
lHtRD AVE. BRANQt-JHIRD AVE. .
VINtON BRANat-VINlON
"You~ Full Service People To People Bank"

···---~----------------------------~
,.
'.

Store Hours
8 A.M.-10 P.M.
Mon.-Sat.
10 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
JULY 16, 197r.

Rev. and Mrs: Greiser

New pastor coming to area
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Kerr

'~SS

It

. ~ell

weds

.

VINTON - The Reverend University,
Madison
If you think this ring looks
John Wesley Greiser Is the Graduate school at Harrison• · ~autiful
in prinf, you
new pastor or the North burg, Va., The Eastern
ought to see it on your
finge-r'.
Gallia United Methodist Mennonlte.Seminary, and the
Church, which consists of the W. Va. University Graduate ·
Master Charge
United MethGdist Cl\Urches at School. Rev. Greiser plans to
BankAmericard
Evergreen, Bidwell, Porter cqntinue his studies at United
and Vinton. He will reside In Tfteological Seminary at.
the parSonage at Vinton willi Dayton, Ohio, this Fall.
his wife Hazel and aoft,
Rev. Greiser has been a
Tommy.
_
United
Methodist Pastor for
Rev. Greiser was born .and
fourteen
years aDd was orreared in West Virginia,
.DIAMONDS
dained
a
Deacon
in 1970. The
1 ·
attending public schoo s ill Greisers have a singing
Charleston. He answered the ministry and are faithful in
call to preach at the age of
thirty-six. He graduated from working with the youth. They
Glenville State College In 1968 are happy to be in this
424 Second Ave.
with a B.A. In ElementarY. community alid are looking
forward to a ftultful and
Gallipolis. Ohio
Education. He bas been d spiritual movement of God in
student at Duke University's
A• ,dvenised on
Pastor School, the candler this area.
School of Theology at Emoryt·
-·
.
.
-· ·
_
I

POMEROY - The South They earned flowe1-s w
Bethel Uniled Methodist match their dresses. Their
Church was the setting fur the ensem bl es were completed
June 11 wedding of Miss Bar- wilh white picture hats ami
bara Well, daughter of Mrs. ucckiaccs, gifts of the bride.
Fl ..yd E. W
_ell, Pomeroy·,
Miss Amy Well served as
'
Route 3, and Scott K~n. sun flower girl for her aum. She
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Kerr, wtire a pink dress · of style
Miugo Juuctioi1.
similiar. to the other att~uThe 2:30 p.m. double ring dants and carried a basket of
"CI'C'lJIOIIY was perfm-med by
rose petals. Slui also wore a
'
the
Rev.
Duane white picture hat.
Sydenstricker, Belpre.
All au Anderson, Mingo
Mrs. Linda Well, sister·in- Junction, nephew uf the
law of the bride was the groom, was the ring bearer.
pianist; and soloists were
Best man was Steve KelT,
I
Elsie Sydenstricker and Sleu!J&lt;,nville, brother of the
1
.
·
Kathy Pullins. Selections in- gn&gt;Util, aud Brian Well, Route .
f'
I
rluded '· Love Story " _, 3, Pomeroy, brother of the
REEDSVILLE
The 1
"Evergreen" and "The Wed- bride. The groom's att~n- birthdays of Joy Sauer, Mid- I
ding Prayer." The aii.Hr was dants wore black tuxedoes dleport, MarY Ruth Becker, I
decm·ated with two St!ve.u w1~h pink and green_ ru.ffled Rio .. Gra·n de, and David
branch candelabra adorned . shn'lstumatchthebndesat- Weber Reedsville were I
with carnations and ribbons t~ndanls. Ead1 wore a earn~- · celebr~ted at the family dln-1
tied ill lover 's knots. f.'ews uun_bouton mere to '.~atch lu~ ner party held recently at the
••
.were marked with bows aqd shut am_Ith~ grwm s bouton Webet home in Reedsville..
-lilies of the valley. An ar- me1 e. was a pmk rose wtth
Hosting the celebration I
rangementofpinkcarnatio11s babysbreath.
,
wereMrs.DenverWeberana I
decorated the table.
For her daughters W&lt;'&lt;i- Mrs. Harold Sauer. The. din- 1
The bride was escll1"ted to d111g:_Mrs . Well wore a guw11 ner was followed by a lighted 1
the altar by h~r brother, of mmt green polyester w1th decorated birthday cake. At- 1
..a
Deryl Well. She wure a gown · cape sleeves and bra1d trun. tending were Mr. allQ 1\'!rs. 1
Frlgi~~:~CIIre
of polyester trinuned with ,She had a m1nt green_ carna- - William Meredith, Beverly; I
lace and fashioned with a uon corsage. F~tl•lowlllg the Charles Meredith Clrclevllle · I
highstandupsplitcoll~r,long ceremony, the ,brtde Mr. and Mr~. Ernesi
sheer puffed sleeves w1t)11ace presented her mother w1th a Whitehead, Jane and Juli, 1
·
cuffs, and a cathedral tram ' long stem1J.Wdrose._
Reedsville; · Ed Herich, 1
which fell from the gathered
J11rs·. Kerr was UJ a pale Cl~veland· Dr. ·and Mrs. I
enopire waist. She carried a pink gown topped with a DotiglasB~cker RioGrande· I
wh1te bible with pink ruses sheer satin edged cape. Her Mr
and M~s 9111 rre.) I
aud baby's breath. Her finger son pt·esented her wilb a long Pickens Reedsville · ·Mr. and I
tip veil trimmed with lace fell stemmed •yse. She wore a Mrs. Denver weber and 1
from a camelol:style ci.l p p111k c~rnallon corsage.
Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. 1
truruned With While Oowers
A t:e«:eptwn fol' the couple 'HarQ!dSauerandJoy.
I
and pearls. The bride wo1·e a was held at the home of the
1
watch, gifl of the groom, and bride. Tables were decorated
I
• rind beltnJding to her with roses.
TOPIC ANNOUNCED
Bahr.
The three tierl'll cake
. The work .of 1
· aGramlmother
"
" .
POMEROYy
· y
Jeannie Bahr, Tuppers fealured white pillars !J&lt;,t- the Christian Record Braille I
Plains. was the matron of ween the layers and was top- Foundation, a ministry to I
·honor and was in a pale green ped with double rings, doves, · blind people sponsored l!y IJli. I
·
ftrlll'
style gtiwn with Juliet and an arch. The second Seventh-day . Adhntfil 1
sleev~s ador11ed wilh white layerfealuredwhitebeilsand Church, ·will be disCusSed it I
lace. She carried a lung stem- a lighted fountain with the Pomeroy Adventist I
med car11atton to match her greenery . while two oval. ~ Cliurch, according to ~ara I
.
dress. Julie Schultz .a11d layers were used at the base. Mcintyre, lay activities · 1 · .
·
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
Alberta Schultz, Route 3, Pink and green flowers were director.
.
,
•
1._ _________ .._. __________
Po1neroy,
were the · usedonthecake.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

SeJ'f'Ofeen

-----••---llllllllil--------1.
WAREHOUSE

Tri-"/e treat

Name Bran d .
A p' p· i a nces A t

G REAT SAVINGS·

Admiral

Speed Oue•n

Ca lorlc

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1
I
_I
I
I
I
I
I

I

1

1 .·
I
1
I.
I
I
I
I
I
1
1
I
1
I
·

RANGES
DISHWASHERS
DEHUMIDIFIERS

COLOR
STEREO
WASHE- ftRYERS

cury

f

new

8ak'er Furnt"ture

Jum:.s, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Grate, South
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Golden Baht·, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ward,
Mingo Junction; · Mr. and
Mrs. George Kuvach, Mrs.
D'j111na Anderson and sons,
Min~v Jom:tiun ; ,Mrs. John
0Hmtlnick
Hlld
sun,
Sn\Jtllfieid; Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Fetty and daughtt•l's,
Mmgo Junction: Halph Hand.
Brilhanl. Mr. and Mrs. Juliu.' J
V1·rlmvic, Sr., Rarland;
Mildn'd Lipsey~ East CarU.~1.
UtaiJ: Kenneth Wdl, Colmv·
bus : Mr. an&lt;l Mrs~ Dltll Kt.•JT,
, Mlllgo .Jund lun: ~lid Sit\'\'
K~T.
I

Slrub(·llvJ IH·.

..

BEEF•••·••• ::·.

I.

REFR GERATORS
FREEZERS

Presiding at the table were
Mrs. Doris Well , sister-in-law
of the bride, ·and Norma
Hawtlwrne. They were
assisted by Lana Clark, Sandy Marcinko, Nancy Roush,
• Beverly Willford, and Jeannie Bahr. Janet Stivers
registered the guests.
Fur her going-away outfit,
the bride changed into a lly&lt;&gt;piece bJ·own and white
polyester pantsuit.
The cnitple resides at 216
1\ilcLester Ave., Mingo Junction. The bride 'is a gradual e
uf Eastern High School, class
of 1973. Mr. Kerr graduated in ..
1972 from Mingo High School
and he is employed at Sears
and Roebuck Co.
Out of ·town guests here for
the wedding were Mrs. Becky
Meeks, 'Athens; Mrs. Zelda
Howard, Mr. and M1-s. Bertie
Bahr, Athens; Mr. and
Mt·s. · -Harold . Winters,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Kyle
· Bahr, Beckley, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Spt!l,t-er Gl!ard and
·ramily, Mansfield; Mrs. Lana
Clark, Gallipolis ; David

GROUND

I

CLEARANCE SALE

TUESDAY
: ORGANIZATIONAL meet·
'ing of the Meigs County
:Pomona Junior Grange 7:30
~p.m. Tuesday in the Meigs
Fair Board building on !Wck
::springs Fairgrounds. All i)ridcsmaids. Julie wore a
• Meigs CountY youngsters, 5· pink gown and Alberi.H , a
: 14 years are eligible. Parents green gown, both styled iden, of children need not be tical to the mat~on uf. hml()r.
; grange members. Children
: wili he charter members.
&gt; MEIGS COUNTY Better
~ Livestock Dairy 4-H Club
· : meeting, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday
AT DUTY STATION
: at home of Bill Kautz.
WEST
COLUMBIA, W. Va.
• PUBLIC MEETING,
Marine
Private Tim L.
; Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at Mt.
Crites,
son
.of Mr. and Mrs.
~ Union Baptist Church at
Van
E.
Crites
of Rt. 1, Box
' which health team members
SOA,
West
Columbia,
has
: will speak ori multiphasic
;· screening clinic to be held reported for duty with the 2nd ·
July 18-21 at Meigs Junior Marine Division, Marine ·
Corils Base, Camp Lejeune,
High, Middleport.
RACINE LODGE meeting N. C. He joined the Marine
: at 7:30 Tuesday for stated Corps in.February 1977.
~ meeting with work in tlie
~ third degree.
·
•· WOMEN of St. Paul and St.
, Lulheran Church, annual
the Almanac
:: picnic Tuesday at the
United Press International
·· roadside park on route 33, left
Today is SWlday, July ~0,
: hand side. Bring a covered the 19111t day of 1977. with 174
~ dish and your own table to follow.
~ service. Fm: informat.ion·call .. The 'moon is in .the last
• Margaret Blaettnar, 992-24f2. quarter moving ~ard a new
. ;, WINDING Trail Garden moon.
,, Club, annual picnic Tuesday
The morning stars are
• evening at the. home of Mrs. Venus, Mars and Jupiter .
t Alice Thompson with Mrs.
The evening stars are Mer:' Addalou Lewis, cv-hostcss.
and Saturn .
: Plant auction to be hdd.
Those born on -this date are
Plans for the Meigs County under the sign of Cancer: ·
Fair flower show to be made.
American patnter James
WEDNESDAY
Whiatler was born July 10,
; WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30 1!134.
~ Wednesday at the Columbus
On this day in history: ..
~ and Southern Ohio Electric
In 1890, Wyomi~g was
~ Co. social room.
admitted to the Union as the
' •
44th state.
;.
ln
1938,
American
•
PICNIC P~NNED
lndWilrialilt. Howard Hughel'
( DEx;TER - A Bible school and a crew of folr
picnic will be held at 7 p.m. around lbe _.lei In 11 bows.
t Tuesday night a! the Dexter , ln 1974, Florida Republican
~ Church of Chris1.' The Bible Sen. Edward Gw'ney was
• school children and their Indicted on extortloo racket
parents an; Invited to attend. . ·charges.

t

P0 WE L · 'S

'

M•

diamond

those who cannot come ta

The Campaign Youth
Group held its meeting July 7
at 7 p.m.
The Lord's Prayer· was led
by
.Charlene
Hively .
Treasurer's report was by
Sharon Hively, secretary's
report by Charlene Hively.
New and old bUsiness was
discuSSed. Reading was read
" Letter to My Father.''
Closing prayer was by Doris
Hively.
Next meeting ·will be July
14 at 6 p.m. at the church.

~··:· Calendar

love
is

·Make a doll ofyour own
GALL!POUS - Bottle Doll
Crafts will be taught. three
, times during the month of
July at the Senior Clitizens'
Center at Gallipolis. The
classes will be held on July
12, 18 and 27 from I until J
p.m.
Materials needed will be a

UJDGE MEETING
RACINE - Tbe !bclne.
l.od8e ~I will bold their
stated meeting July 12 at
7:30. There will be work in the
third degree.

WHOLEWATERMELON••~·.
DOMINO SUGAR

~~~!~~~

79

5LB.
BAG

I
I
I

JI

~·
W/C

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
res July 13, 1977
Offer

•

SUMMER FAVORITES
.. .

. . .•

J. ' .T

.

&lt;

dany .•sle
LOCUST STREET .

NOW
ON

SPECIAL

992·5248

REGULAR '1.95

Choose Any 2 Side 01-ders
With Each Dinner

'

Wlltl ;ur.dlilf of
salldwlc~

.

W/C

.~ PC. DINNER

_';"'""

any

$109

· Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
1977

"

..........:................. _,_.._ .. _____ _
fRENCH FRIES

PLASTIC
GALLON ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

French Fries, 1',\1151)~ Poi a toes &amp; Gravy, Baked , .
!leans, Staw; Rol,l.

This WMk's sPtcial

ELF VINEGAR

"'
'

Ailt For Your free

ELF POP
1

~~~ ' 10/$1

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At P!Jweil's .
· Offer
13, 1977

Sundae. Club Card
----~~--~--------WITH ANY PURCHASE:
FREE BASEBALl. CARD - - Z
FREE BASEBAU. CARDS WITH
PURCHASE OF. '1 OR MORE

LOOK FOR OUR

MYSTERY

SPECIAL
SUNDA I: &amp; MONDAY

�r

'

.

.

•
•

Epple-Ridgeway vows repeated ·
CHESTEH
l'&lt;tnd~labl·a

ft•n•

.cmd

Spiral

entwined with
stepha.nHiis

and

tk'tklmt:. t'IIIJUI'l' waa:-.1, and ·:..c:Utl t:&gt;lyh: gu" IL\ ltt .O:IIIhlll'iJ lJy
l4,1lg UJpen'&lt;l sll~H·s ~lu d1 Mr&gt;. lldlbll· F111la\\ 111 blut'.
fas!cnLod wtth snl(:llJ eO\'I!fl"() ydlu\... . peuch,. grct•u and

butiUIIS aUhu Wl'l~l. l.ctl~ ruf- lavt·ndcr. Tlwy fcatUI'!\d
nt.•ll'illl3l't'CIIll-"lithl'lll't:klutc Sl'l)llp UL'1.; k llllt'S Willi shnrt
mull H..·ulort~ d
da1stt·s- · amlllM._• Wt'ISt aloug With the pufft'&lt;l •lewes, aud t't'ru lat t'
dt'l·uratt..'tl the ultar of tin· butlnm of the buurrant sk1rt u·m1. !11 a guwn of the s.amt'
Cllcstcr Unite'(] Mclhoo.li&gt;t wll1ch fluwc'lltlllu a cmh&lt;.'&lt;lral &lt;.lt•st~ll was the nuwl!l' ~ u· l,
Jcun.ifcr W1l l. cuusm of the
CIJU rd • fur the weddmg uf train.
Tl~tt bt'ide wol't~ a matching llndc, uf Culuu1llus. She carSherry Lynn Epple, dauglncr
uf )\1L and Mr•. J . Ruger E;p- fingt!rtip ma11tilla of •white nt.:&lt;.l a white princess IJ.a ·kct
ple. Mmhsville, Route I, a1id tulle and chamilly lace which filled wtlh multi·culorcd
Jeffery Lee Ridgway, son of was lwld in place by a f•·anwr ·da!SICS anu baby'S bl'eaLh.
Cohmial bt1uqut.•tS uf multiof lace.
Dr. John H. Ridgway and Ms.
&lt;:utore&lt;.l
daisies wilh baby 's
Hattie Ridgway , !Joth uf
To
carry
out
the
tradition
of
breath
bed
with r~inl&gt;ow ril&gt;Chester Road, Pomeruy.
~·
sUtnct'itin
g
old·,
somethinl-(
l&gt;1111
were
c.:arrit:d
by the tnaid
The wedc.ling was an . event
ttew,
something
bnrruwt&gt;d
11f
h111Utr
and
the
bridcs1naids.
uf Jun~ 19 at 2:30 p.m . with
The groom's attcndanl,S"'
the Rev . Rubert Hayden per-' aud somettuug- blu~· ·, the
running the double ring bride wore earrings uf her were in tuxedos of colors Lu
ceremo1ty following a pro- sister, a !Jluc g~rter, an old match the bride's attendants,
gram of traditional wedding guarter belonging lo her while the g1·oom wore white,
music by organist Teresa aunt, Mr&gt; . Freda Will, and a anti the father of the bnde,
gray. Phil Ohlinger was best
Buckley, Tuppers Plains. A new penny in her shoe.
She
carried
a
l.Jvuquet
of
man and the ushers were
t'Onwx designed arrangebaby's
breath
featuring
Ma1:;y Seelig, Bob Seelig and
ment of daisies was Used on
marguerite
daisies
uf
pink,
Jim
McClure all of Pomeruy
the organ and decorating U1e
blue,
yellow,
green
ami.
area,
and Don Stivers, Mh:l·
lighted aisle tapers were
lavender
with
white
roses
and
die
port.
Ringllearer was
sprays uf bally's breath, ferr-.,
s
t
ephanotis
blossoms
Floyd
Ridenum·,
Chester,
and multi·&lt;:olored daisies
throughout.
Bridal
satjn
t•ed
wusin
of
the
bride
.
The
male
with flu ffy white lx1ws markin
·
l
over's
knots
flowed
from
attendants
wore
lloutinniere
Ing the family pews. A .
the bouquet.
of white carnations set in
similiar !Jouquet was used al
Den.ise Dean, Route 3, baby's breath while lhe
tl1e kneeling bench and a !JouPomeroy was the bride's gr_oum 's b~utunniere featured
quet of white daisies tied with
maid of honor and her a' white rose set in the center
blue and white lace adorned
bridcsnwids were Diana E'J}' or a white carna tion SUI'•
the quest register table .
·
ple,
sister of the bride, rounded by baby'&gt; breath.
Given in marriage by her
Minersville:
. Lucy Holter,
For her daughter 's wedparents, th e bride . was
Chester,
cousin
uf
the
bride;
ding,
Mrs. Epple wore a
escorted tu the altar by her
Jan
Wilson,
and
Pam
Kautz,
peach
gown
with a matchi ng
fath er. She was attired in a
Pomeroy,
·
cape
a
nd
black
acce.ssur ics.
formal gown of while ciJantilThey
were
irrnwtching
pea~
She
had
a
white
orchid cur:lY lace fashiur\ed with a scoop
\'QS~ n(

wh!LC galdwli With
baby'.li
ltl'ealh
and

"
'

•

•

' ·

Mr. and Mrs. jeffery RidRway
'

College
•

i·'

News

~

~

NamedtotheDe,n's List of
Ohio University were :
Barbara Louise Hughes, Rt.
1, Gallipolis; Ida Mae Mills,
610 Fifth Ave., Gallipolis;
Patrick Donald Staggs, 106
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Vicki Kelly, 301 Sixth St.,
Middleport, was named to the
Dean's List at Kent Slate.
Asa Rucker and Alan
Wasmer . of Oak Hill were
named to the Dean's List at
Shawnee State.

DAV TO MEET
POMEROY
Meigs
Chapter
53,
Disabled
American Veterans, will
mheet at 7:30 ph.m. TuesdaBy a t
t e chapter orne on u1\emu\ Ave.

lANDMARI&lt;'S
BIG JULY

Ju

•

f

!

Brenda Jean Stewart of,
Gallipolis has accepted a
position on the English
faculty at Bob Jones
University, Greenville, S. C.,
according
to . an . announcement by Dr. Bob Jones
III, university president.
.A graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, Miss
Stewart is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A.
Stewart of Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
She received the bachelor of
science degree from Rio
Grande College in 1972 and
the master of science degree ·
from Bob Jones University in
Jline. BJU granted her a
gfaduate assistantship to
pursue her master's degree.
Prior to accepting her
present pOsition at BJtJ, Miss
Stewart was employed by
Gallia Academy High School
for three years.
Receiving degrees from
Ohio State University,
Columbus, were :
Dennis Roland Eichinger,
Chester ; Gregory Dale
Howard, : RfD 4 ,jlox 42,
Pomeroy; Vicki Sue Spencer,
RFD 3 Pomeroy; Lawrence
Alan Wilcoxen, Rt. 2, Racine;
Karie Robin Humphrey, Box
128, ReedsviUe; Sara Ellen
Betz, 608 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis; Charles· Mark
Kiesling , 42 Lincoln St.,
Gallipolis; Harland Brent
Sanders, Box 781 , Gallipolis ;
Valorie Gale Sheets, 120 First
Ave ., Gallipolis; David
Wendell Thomas, RFD 3, Box
68, Gallipolis; . Rita Jo
Valentine, Patriot Star Rt.,
Gallipolis ;. Jan
Alice
Wiseman,
2 Glendale ,
Gallipolis; Sally (;ail Winters, Box 171, Rio Grande;
Edward Martin Vollborn, Rt.
2, Thurman.
Georgetown College has
.an.nounced
that
Kent
Shawver, 20 Evans Heights,
Gallipolis, will receive a
George L. Bagby . Scholar- ship, a footbalL scholarship,
and a general scholarship
from Georg!'(own College.
. Mr. Shawver is a 1977
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School where he was
president of the Key Club,
sports editor of the school
paper and a member of the
'Thespians and Varstty G
Club. He was co-captain of
the track and football teams
and was named to the AUSEOAL 1st Team, AA All
Di!trld, and AA AU State
Honorable Mention in football.
A member of First

PrabpterlJn Church, he is
the 11011 oi Mrs. Julia J.
Shawver and ifte late James
" K. Shawver.

They res1dc at Bnx 279, R,
G. C. Rio Grande . Mrs.
llldgway IS cnl'tlllcd at the
l\1u Grande Cl•llmw•ity Cols&lt;:~gt·. Maa. 1-tttl~•\-ay was II\ a
lt.·~c .
Mr. Ridgway, a
JK_•adt and brown fhwi.!l )!uwn ),.!raduate of Mmgs H1~h
.aud wurt• a "&gt;flfllfl n~ &lt;:ur- &amp;huol, L~ an operator for the
~~l'. The gnuH.h nulht·rs and
J. R. Coal Co.
J~ n · rH-~randmuthcrs
aiM'
Here from out of till! cow1ty
wun· wlutr orclliJ corSijgcs.
fur the wedding were Tim
hmnedialely full•'" 111~ lhc Massie, Gallipolis; Mr. anu
wc&lt;ldmg a recept1un wa&gt; held Mrs. Donald S. Ridenour,
111 1he chureh sucial ruum. Scottsdale, Ariz.; Mr. and
The bridal table featured a Mrs . Galen C. Will, Steve and
thrL'C tiered cake dwuratc'&lt;l Jennirer, . Colwnbus; John
' with free hand lace in pale Pay!'"· Vinton; Ja ck and
blue with hearts, bells, doves Carol Eiselstefn, Columbus;
JOINS MARINES
and r{ISes in while. It was lup- Mr. and Mrs . Janies Gress ,
RACINE! - Joseph Wade
pc'&lt;l with doves. Each uf the Too.ld and Michelle, Mr. and · Holman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
tll'rs were separated lly Mrs. Wilbur Webb, New Earl Holman , Racine, a
Rlnnan .colw:ru.ts, The cake Haven, W. ·v,( Mrs. Jack graduate or Southern High
· was encircled with wlrile Buggs, Colwnbus; Nola and School, joined the U. S.
daisies and fern. At either Larry Brown and children, Marines on July ] . His adend of the table were ar· Greg
and
Cindy, dress is Pvt . . James Wade
raugements
mulli-eolored Yow1gstown; Hollis and Max- Holman 280-M-9016, PLT
daisies and baby's breath. ie Walters, Tarpan Springs, 108HCO, 1st Bat.; M.C.R.D.
The pa&gt;td mints were in- Fla .; Mr. and Mrs. Daru•y Parris Island, S. C. 29905.
scribed with the names of the
couple.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Julia Will, Minersville,
and presidiug ai the refreshment table were Nancy
•
Rideuotir, Tuppers Plai1is,
•
aunt of the bride; Cindy

or

Brown,

Youngstown, and

Mary Ridgway, Pomeroy,
assisted by the women uf the
church.

Distributing the bags of

sunflowers were Greg Brown,
Youugstuwn , and Steve Will ,
Culwnbus.
Fur a wedding trip to Myrtle Beach, S. C., the bride
changed into a yel(ow pants ui! and wore a white rosebud

WE5rBENOe
BAG MAKER
/SEALER

.20 Cu. Ft. Chest

Mrs. Daniel Dunkle

SUPPLIES EARLY

Mitchell Office Supplies

GALLIPOLIS '
On
Saturday, Apri19, Deborah L.
Saunders, daughter of James
and
Louise
Saunders,
Gallipolis, was united in
marriage to Michael K .
Siliunons, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Glenn Simmons, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va.
The wedding took place at
2:30p.m. in the First Baptist
Church with Rev . Alvis
Pollard performing the
double ring ceremony. The
organist was Mrs. Ruth Ann
Corbin ·and the soloist was
Mrs. Alvis Pollard. Before
the ceremony Mrs. Pollard
sang · "Saviour Like a
Shepherd Lead Them" and
"Sunri~, Sunset.'' ·During
the ceremony she sapg
" Wedding Prayer."
The church altar was
decorated with Easter lilles
and there were candle
bolders covered with ivy in
each window. The church was
decorated by Mrs. Marsha

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

456 2nd Ave.

now .. . get
WATER&amp;ICE
without opening
the door!

DISOOUNT

MICROWAVE OVENS

NEW.LOW~PRICED
LAUNDRY PAIR!

WE LOWERED THE PRICE TO CLEAR OUT ·
LAST YEAR'S BEST HOTPOINT MODEL!
0 Deluxe microwave oven
with 1.3 cu. ft. capacity.
0 3 Power levels with
defrost cycle.
0 Digital timer up to 60
minutes.
0 Automatic cooking by
time or temperature. )

DISCOUNT
•

ll'olp••inl

llol

COMPACTORS
CONVERTIBLE
DR BUILT-IN
TRASH
COMPACTORS
+hrl:p.oi..n.t:

COME IN TODAY
FOB AN EXCITIMG
DEMONSTRATION!.

Mode l HCH411

DELUXE 10 CYCLE CONVI:RT·
lBLE WITH THE DISH &amp; POTWASH CYCLE .TOO!
Model HOB876

SAVE s75 ON THIS MODEL

$5Q

DISCOUNT

..

~~~~~~
. SEE OUR UNIQUE DISPLAY OF
BUILT·INS PLUS DO·IHIIUR·
SELF MOVIES l ·LITERATURE.

S5Q

DISCOUNT

p••tn~l

SAVE . ONTHEPAIR!
0 2 Speed ;vasher 0 Porte·

.

'

Q 2 Heal 1imed drying selec-

lain ·ename l 1oP, lid, and wash
ba sket 0 Li d switch.

t•on 0 Porcelain enamel drum
0 4 Venting options .

Washer Mode l WLW2100T

Dryer Mode l DLB1250T

•so DISCOUNT
•

I!IJI
CUSTOMER CARE
. . . . . EVEitYWHERE
F.t"&gt;l D~pendabie Sf&gt;, ~•ce

DRIVE AtimE AND SAVE A LOT - FREE
DELIVERY WITHIN 75 MILES' ..:.. YES! WE
SERVICE AT YOUR LOCAL HOTPOINT DEALER

POMEROY
LANDMA'RK
w.
ro
JACK

CARSEY, MGR. · ·
PllltE 992·2181 ·
SERVING MEIGS, (ill I lA &amp; MASON COUNnES

maid of honor wore a light
blue cape made of lace. The
glrls carried one longstemmed yellow rose with a
blue ribbon : Each wore a halo
of yellow rosebuds and baby's
breath.
Glenn Simmons, Jr.,
brother of the groom, was the
best man . Ushers were
Robert
Spradling,
Pt .
Pleasant ; Rock Evick, Pt.
Pleasant , cousin of the
groom, and Tim Chevalier,
See
Gallipolis. They wore dark
Wendy Bagwell and
blue tuxedos and white shirts
The Sqnlighters
trirrurted in dark blue. Each
July17,2:30p.m,
wore a white carnation
dipped in blue. The groom's
MOUNTAINEER
boutonniere was a whit e .
OPRY HOUSE
rosebud.
The bride's mother wore an
Exit 28'ofl t.64
Tickets SJ .SO Adv.
aqua sleeveless dress With a
54.00 door, $S.OO res
white ·and aqua print jacket.
Children6. 12 Sl-. 00
The groom's mother wore a
Information Call
light pink dress with a
matching pink jacket. Both daisy mums .
FAITH BOOK SHOP
Mrs. Charles · Pennell and
mothers wore corsages of
Gallipolis
Ron,
Pat
and
Mike,
RavensMiss
Becky
Danner
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. wood.
Lioyd Danner, Gallipolis, was
the flower girl, and Stewart
Corbin, son of Mrs : Ftuth Ann
Corbin, Gallipolis, was the
ring bearer.
The reception, which · was
•
given by the bride's aunt,
Miss Earlene Saunders, was
held in the church following
the ceremony. The table was
decorated with (wo crystal
bud vases in which the
bridesmaids placed their
roses. The three-tiered cake
was decorated with yellow
and blue roses with two
/
.
H"ld• •heblonke4
wedding bells on the top. The
•
o( yuur cho1ce ·
cake and punch were served
Balance to be paid in full
by Mary Bechtle and Lisa
Boyce.
·
by Octob.er 1st, 1977
· Out of town guests attending wer.e Mr. and Mrs.
Gardner McCormick,
Chillicothe; John and Doris
Luellin, Chillicothe; Mr. and
Mrs.
Phillip
Wimer,
Harrisonburg, Va . ; Mrs.
David Hartman, Harrisonburg, Va.; Mrs . Paul Boyce
and Lisa, Harrisonburg, Va.;
··m.~·"·'"..-.....- ...
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Pen. nington, Franklin, W. Va.:
AJ'lD TUE WINNERs are: Hel~n Fenderbosch, Ileanie Smith, Jeannine Cunningham,
Jean Gloss, Zelia White and Opal Baker. .
·
Smith and Mrs . Kathy
Keenan.
·
The bride, given in
marriage by her father, wore ·
· a j!ress of silk organza that
1\Ad a high alencon lace collar
with alencon lace ovet the
.shoulders and down the bib
front to the natural waist. The
gown had sheer ·organza
sleeves with lace trim. The
skirt was trimmed with motif
alencon lace that went into a
chapel train. The fingertip
veil had a small off the race
cap· and was trimmed , with
matching lace.
Miss Penny Saunders,
sister of the bride, was maid
of honor. She bridesmaids
were Lu Saunders, sister of
the bride ; Sl\ and Paula
Pullins, cousins of'the bride,
and Mitzi Leedy . They wore
light blue A-line polyester
knit gowns with a keyhole
neckline. ·The sleeveless
dreS.ses were accented by a
blue flowered cape . . The

Club tournament wraps up

TRASH

l.,le&gt;del CS~24MT . 23 6 c~ 11 35.'• wod")
( Mod~l CSF12Ml ~1 1 tu II 33" "' '.tf'

Danny Hosley . Advisors are
Rose Springer and Martha
Bosley.
Morgan Raiders met July 5
at Mrs. George's home . Vicki
George presided and had
charge of the program. Elise
Caldwell led the American
pledge and M~\\ ~dgers the
4-H pledge. udgmg at the
fa~r was discussed and .
refreshment!&gt;"'· were served.
Robm George demonstrated
how tn ma.ke cloverleaf rolls,
Ann R~dg~rs, h0\1! to clean
carrots, !hta G&lt;;orge, ho":' to
make a dart; Lmda Ftggms,
how to get jars ready for
CljMlng. The next mtV\l!'g
w1ll be July 19, 7 ~.m. w1th
M~s . George. Advtsors .are
M1ldred George , Ntkkt
Johnson and
Lawanda
Rodgers. Members pres~nt
·were Cheryl B~ll, Elise
C~ldwell, Stepharu.e Crouser,
R1ta George, Robm George,
Vicki George, Matt Rodgers,
Ann Marie Rod gers. and
Linda Figgins. Linda Figgins
- news reporter .
Gallia Couniy .Frontiers. men met July 6 with Jacque
Glassb urn . Mary Wood
presided
and
Legea .
Glassburn and Ross Swisher
led devotions. The roll call
was parts of the horse. We
decided to meet on July 12 at
10 a.m. at the American
Handicrafts shop to make
wooden name plates for our
hor ses for the fair . We
worked on our project books
and Jacque checked to see
that we had our Coggin's tests
taken. The next meeting will
be July 13, 6:30 p.m. at the
fairgrounds with our horses.
Advisors
are
Jacque
Glassburn and Jerry Hhodes.
Members present were Lege a
Glassburn, Lisa Sisson, Ross
Swisher, Sherman Marcum
and Mary Wood. Gl\ests were
Mrs. Lovina Swisher, Mr .

=-.

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES
Miss Wonderful , Values to $24.99
Calif . Cobblers, Values to $26.99
Connies, Values to 521.99
Auditions, Values to $21.99
Naturalizers, Values to 526.99
Jacque I
Values to S26.99

·smRE HQURS: 8:30 5:30 - , ·
MIU. a OSES AT 5:00 PM

GALLIPOLIS - 'The
women of the Gallipolis Golf
Club wound up their club
tournament
Wednesday.
Winning the FirSt Flight and
the new club champion was
Helen Fenderbosch. Deanie
Smith was · the runner-up. ·
Jeannine
Cunningham
·captured first place in the
Second Flight and Jean Gloss
was runner-up. The Third
Flight winner was · Zelda
White and Opal Baker runner-up. Low net for the day
was won by 'Jeannine Cunningha.m, There . were four
chip-ins.; Hilda Lemley,
number 1 hole; Helen FenderbosCh on 8; Eloise Brown
on 5; and Mary Willis on 14.
Following play, members
enjoyed lunch in the club

house. Snacks had been
prepared by Tournament
Chainnan, Mary Willis and
her committee. Afterwai'da,
the monthly business meeting
was conducted . by the
president, Esther Bechtel. ·
The Tribune Handicap
Tournament will start on
Wednesday, ·July 13. Mem- .
bers are urged to sign up in
the club. house no later than
Sunday, July 10. One must
have at least five scores
recorded for eighteen holes
played this season, in order to
be eligible. Participant~ will
be paired for match play and
each scheduled match may
be played any time from
Wednesday through Tuesday
of the following week .

,..~•• 330

Second Avenue!

~,, ·says.:.-

.SUMMER·
CLEARANCE
•

---

~

CHERISHED
·coPIES

20%oFF

30%oFF.

Women's
mmer Sanaa
Reduced

.Women's

Grasshoppers
by Ked's
Now

30% to
40%"

Summer
Hand
Bags

·"

Sale
one Group

Men's Nunn Bush

Oxfords

ssso

and

JULY

KETS

"'

'

Comet
72x90 in. Solid

Reg.H.OO

999

Cowt l1 1 ;).jlj4 Ac:riitn, -t.J':\ tl:l')' lic IIUiid rolor
W.nkM in ~hiJO irlch .U... A hotnd110me then-1

wn~e in !!Uiid "'hife, bill". minlfll'ftfl. li.!!hl
I(Qid . ch .moio •nd oprioot. Th...., r••
,,..rron1 y.

Queen
Si~.P

over

4.00

on every
Blanket

Garden of Dreams
7;!,:90 in. t'loral Print

.

Heg. 14.00

II

Elegance
Sc;hiffli Embroidered
72x90 in Solid Color

999

H
· g. 1l99

A 11111rt Kenwood bhnUt by Ch•thom ... belutlful..:nen.print
in blui!. mir'll ,.wn ond bmwn . Filii 72r.90 illch .OU... thio
W.nht c•'""• the MonNnlo w1rnn1~ for th&gt;'w lull tU rt Ql • ---~~·~
fiQOfTPalweAr. rtiund 01' l'fpl.lcr~nm1 .... ~ mu.rnod ,..;m 1at1 •nrl
u.le.oalip to M01111n10.

16.00

Thi, •nlid m lnr t'ill&lt;"l"""ll\ f ll blltnkl'l i~ ill
.. ~id '"l&lt;n of "hilt. blue, mill! MT"'' "·
chlnll!i.! 1nd ljli"H,/1 ~;;,!or,_. Full ;:!,'11) ino.h
Sll.l! .. ;lh • IM'IIIl.ilul So·hiffli buodif~.K on
n1tll"hin11 &lt;11k&gt;ro. , ..,,,~.,. 'IOINinl"·~ thrn~
)~~ r

w•..,. !l ~t.._t .. ar&lt;anl) .

Rosepoint Print

Our experts willmal&lt;c a .'&gt;X7 nlack &amp; Whftot As-Is
copy of any picture in good condition, and we Will
show you how hand ~painted miniattlrcs , e ven full

,.

size oil paintings, l:an be made from · c hcri~hed
pictures • U phc_Jtos arc time Worn , additional
charges Ior restoration arc rt&gt;-.~ so nahly priced
a lso.

Now 511.00
Now $11.00
Now $12.00
· Now 512.00
Now $13.00
$14.00

SAVE

Mr. and Mrs. Michael K. Simmons

1 00 DOWN

Model RE930T

.EXTERIOR WATER AND ICE SERVICE NOW ON
TWO NO FROST HOTPOINT SIDE-BY-SIDES.

Tht• Maple Shade Kids
GAI,LIPOLJS - With th~ tn Nitro. W. Va. Aftrr a E .N.P. 4-H Club or~anized at
tranquil ba ckdrop of the weddinA trip to Drn•Pr. the home of Martha Bosley.
- Colorado Rockies .as a set- - Jackson Hole, Wyo. , and The dub elected ·officers:
ling, Miss Beverly Ann Yellowstone National Park, president. Tony Bosley; vice
Bennett, dau ghter of Mrs. E. the · co uple returned to president. Edan Springer;
Kay Evans and Mr. Ralph L. Gallipoli s to live at 416 secrelary, Carmel Long;
Bennett of •Gallipolis, wed Jackson Pike.
news reporter, Danny
Daniel
Dee
Dunkle,
Out of town guests included Bosley; recreation leader,
Gallipolis, son of Mr . and Steve Cordray and Gene and Judy Siders; health and
Mrs. Dee D. Dunkle of Me- Elaine Guzzo, all or Arvado safety, Vic ky Siders. The
Connelsville.
and Kurt Crum of Pueblo.
Rroup talked about their
The wedding-was an event
duties as officers and then
of June 9, with the Rev . Lyle .,:,:,:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:::::::·:&gt;::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::;::::·:: went into the kitchen to make
Schossow of Rockland
SUNDAY DEADLINE
pizza, which was enjoyed by
Com munity Church ofThe qeadline for wedding
aU. The next meeting will be
fi ciating. The double ring \'!, and engagement noUces · next Thursday , July 14 at 6
p.m. The group will learn
and society news Items for
' ceremony took place on
Lookout Mountain , Golden,
the Sunday Tlmes·Sentlntl
about nutrition and make
Colorado.
·
Is 1% noon on the Thursday · their own·milk shakes. Those
The bride wore a cream
preceding l'ubllcatlon.
present at the meeting were
colored, calf-length dress of
Information may be turo~d
Carmel Long, Judy Siders,
polyester knit and' carried
in or mailed to the office of
Vicky Siders, Edna Springer,
yellow daisies with baby's
the
Gallipolis
Dally
Andrea Rutan, Jane s·i ders,
breath. She was attended by
Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
Tommy Burton, Raymond'
Mrs . Steve (Peggy) Cordray
Sentinel. Engagement and
Drwrunond, Kathy Mathias,
of Arvado, Colo. Mr. Dunkle's
wedding
forms
are
Tommy Bosley, Lee Bosley,
best man was Justin Miller of
available upon request.
Bobby
Mathias ,
Lisa
Columbus .
Springer, Gina Rutan and
The bride is a 1971 graduate :,:,:::::::::,:::~::::::':,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
of Gallia Academy High
School and is employed by
Empire
Furniture
pf
Gallipolis. The bridegroom is
a 1966 graduate of M&amp;M High
School in McConnelsville. He
is employed at Union Boiler

Don 'Swisher, Mrs. Martha Donald Conklin, Michelle
Scott
Taylor,
S1sson and D. !.. Glassburn. Taylor,
Dalenda
Taylor,
Crystal
reporter - Mary Wood.
Yellowtown Buckeyes met Hodgson, Tamara Hodgson,
July 5 at the Gallia County Tammy Patrick, Kenny
Junior Fairgrounds. Paul Patrick Jr., Tonya and Paul
McNeal presided and led McNeal, Ruth McClaskey,
devotions . Ken and Kathy Jell and Kim Rathburn.
Patrick, advisilrs, had charge Adam Lewis, Kelly..,nd Kevin
of the program. We discussed Jolley and Jeff Siders. Guests
all the final things to get were Mrs. Norm~ Boggs, Mr.
ready before the first judging Jack Rathburn and Chris,
day - home economics, July Mrs. Jpan Siders, Kenny and
14. Adam Lewis showed hiS Wayne ; Mrs. Gamet McNeal,
wood-working projects that Cathy Buttrick, Tonya
he's getting ready for the Taylor , Tommy Darrell and
fair. He finished his letter Leighana and Lucas P-atrick.
holder and is working on his Reporter . Sherri Conklin.
4-H bookends. The meeting
was followed by a wiener
roast and . then we ate
watermelon. Agood time was .
had by 'all . the P,rents-came
too and we played ball. The MORE JOBLE'lS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
ne&gt;rt meeting will be July 16
at Bob Evans Farms. Ad- riumber of newly unemployed
visors are Ken and Kathy persons filing claims at the
Patrick. Members present Ohio Bureau of Employment
were Tammy Buttrick, Darla Services inc rea sed 8.3 per
cent last week.
Boggs
Sherri Conklin
....- ·- - - - - - -·- - - - - - - -.....

ANNUAL

Model CTF16EV

'50

Couple weds in Colorado Gallia 4-H Club News

Miss Deborah Saunders. weds

•BooTH DECORATIONS, ETC.

\N .StOCK

r.:oo;t Oep{'ndable Serv1ce

opetcu,ng costs
AdJustable cab 1ne"l she Illes o.t
tempe(~d gtass
0 Ad1ustab1e door s~elves
0 Rolls .out on adtustable wh,Ej:l s

·················~·················

All S\ZES

ii~~~~~~iliiil

0

•
•••

FREEZERS

'··

shoppmg tnps

••
•
••

UN ICO

WITH PURCHASE
OFANYUNICO
FREEZER
DURING
LANDM._YK. JULY!

8 Power,sa ve r sw1tch helps reduce

•

lARGEST SELECTION IN THE AREA

Holds 710 lbs. Two sliding
baskets for easy food selection . Model QH20 {210574). Also available in 8..
10, 15 and 25 cu. ft. siz-es .
Reg . $368.95 .

0 Automalrc l[:emaket"suoolres storage
bm· w1t h 10~ lb .. rc e !about
275 c ubes)
[) G1ant freezer can .reduce

'

APPLIANCE SPECTACULAR

l ~y FREEZER
L SPECIAL!

William Smith, Rt . 3,
Gallipolis, is attendfug the
Youth Conservation Corps
Cam~ at Wilmington Coll~ge.

114-The SWJday Times-Sentinel, Swlday, July 10, 1977

~·lmncr, Rndney ; Klitrin~
Matheny, Belpre; Steve
Jcnkni!i and Diana Ridgway,
Culwnbus: Mr. and Mrs. ·
David V. Rl!Sl&gt;ell and Eri&lt;,:,
New Haven ; Marty Seelig,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Cllmpbell, Crown City; Dean and Marilyn Mason,
Gallipolis; Marg11ret and
Russell Bailey, Tarpan SprIngs, Fla; Dennis i111d Pat
Cant'Clli, R10 Gr11nde; Jay
Cremeans, Patricia Windon,
Betsy Amsbary, Gallipolis.

{1Jfb(l~t......

72x90 in. Heg. 13.00
,::--~

Starlight

7~x'lll in. Solid Color Thermal

LEAR PHOTOGRA.PHY ·

. Reg.

15.001099

likJ% l~ul'ont Dacron•
polyestt'r Hbf.rooil. The
~•I fiber lor blanii.P.UI.
Wt~llhllhlto .

warm

pt't'lt)'·

Spring Valley Plaza-Gallipolis ,

~tultr&gt;t tnnto.inl :hl"4 AcrU1n. 4,j'~ lcrylic rib&lt;"f' . Solid c:.;;.lor
::!•'AI inch lliu in ll&gt;lid 10hit#, biiH'. ~fttn . ~ t!IO" . 1• k•moi~ and

•J1rk••l ,., ,lnr~ , , \tun,.mn II""" •••or "•r••rll)

Open Tues. thru

Sat. 10-5, tillS on Thurs.

446-7494

. ON SALE IN ST. ALBANS MAU-NITRO-MADISON-C:LENDININ-RAVENSWOOD_:,;,ILUCfiELI).:!..HINTON
WHITE
OHIO
v

. '

�'•

B-7-The Sunday Times-Senunel. Sunday, July IO. l!'77

8-0-The Sunday Tlmes-&amp;nlluel. Sunday. July 10. !97?

..

Three awarded scholarships

EMPIRE

I

Rick Stbley. Becky !:rouse'. active in 4-H for six years and
and Doug Miller were is a member of the Ohio River
recently awarded the 4·H Muskrats 4-H club.
scholarship award at Hannan
Becky is ihe daughter of
Trace and Southwestern High Mr. and Mrs. Harley Crouse,
Schools.
Patriot Star Route. Becky
Rick is the · son of Mr. and has been very active in 4-H
Mrs. Carl Sibley of Route 2 work for nine ye8TS and is a
Crown City. He has been member of the Mountaineers
4-H dub.
Doug is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Miller, Patriot.
Doug has been involved in 4-H
wo'k for nine years and is a
TRUCKER FATALITY
; member of the Cadmus
WHEELING, W. Va. IUPI ) Redskins 4-H club.
• - James Hardman, 38, of
The wards are given to the
Laurelville, Ohio ; died outstanding boy and girl of
Thursday when his ri g the Senior class and are
plunged off an overpass on sponsored by the following 4·
Interstate 70, just west of the H dubs: The Cadmus RedWheeling tunnel. and landed skins. The Hilltoppers, ·The
oo a car parked on Main Mountaineers and the Rebels
Street.
4-H club.

WE HAVE COMPLETED OUR INVENTORY

AND HAVE FOUND SOME REAL BARGAINS

REG. 1399.95
•

,;:;::::::::::::::::-.:::::::~~~--!~!

I _Comi~g

•

By DICK KLEINER
his acting career to guide her- stuff in Las Vegas and other
HOLLYWOOD- (NEA)- career , makes a good places-kecpherawaymuch
Sometimes, you can walk into counterpoint to Ann. They en· of the time. In the calendar
a room and know who lives joy each other's. foibles and year, 1976, she was at home
there.
peculiarities.
ooly for one month. For five
l\ eli':S"r
'' I call Roger ·Garry Gim· months, she shot "Beau
That's the way it is at Ann·
Margret's house . If you know mick,' " Ann says. " He runs Geste," for three montha, she
her at all, you know she's out and buys every new elec· shot " Joseph Andrews," and
basically a sunny, un· Ironic gadget that comes three months were spent
complicated
person along. Last night we ate din- rehearsinnnd performing
dedicated to the proposition ner outside, in our gazebo. ber act.
So, when she's home, she
that the best thing to be is He'd seen an electronic bug
... tn tell you how simply grand ''Gallia Country" is and
happy.
.killer in Miami Beach and 1 indulges in her favorite lux· what a talented cast and se\ production is behind it. Members
And so you walk into her bought one. But it makes so ury- entertaining.
6! the press and local YIP's were entertained with a fun filled
If you have to find an area country style press party before the opening. Jt was a super
living room and it 's he.r. It's . much noise as it disintegrates
. bright and airy, done in tones the bugs- zzzzt! -that I ask· where Ann·Margret . is leSs gathering and I had the chance tn mee~ so many interesting
of green and yellow, full of ed him to disconnect it." than totally happy , it is in the people. Bob and Jewel Evans hosted tbe bash at the Bob Evans
He has his gadgets. She has fact that she has no child. She Shelter House and proved to be sueh gracious hosts that no one
flowe.r s and fluffy pillows and
populated with cats: both real her animals, mostly cats. has three stepchildren - 19, noticed a slight downpour ~hich delayed the play by a few
and embroidered.
She's down to a manageable 18, 15- but none of her own.
minutes. Attendance at "Gallia Country" is a must for all to
" Yes, I'd like a cliild of my see.
I told her the room looked five cats now. She used to
like her and she said that was have so many that Roger and own," she says. " That's all I
the nicest thing I could have the rest of their friends called really need. We' ll see what
For the more rugged types, Bob Evans Farms also opened
said to her. I could think of a her "The Cat Lady of happens."
the Grandma Gatewood Trail this weekend. Dig up a pair of
few nicer things, but that's Benedict Canyon." But a few
Her health, considering the hiking shoes and hit tbe trail.
·
her business.
of the cats have fallen viCtim terrible accident she had on
Anyhow, she fits her room to the coyotes that roam the stage in Las Vegas a year or
Has summer got you down with the muggy heat and no
and her house and her life. At canyon, and Ann hasn 'I so back, is remarkably good. . poolto cool off in? Why notfreshen your mind with a trip tn the
this point, she appears to be replaced them. .
,
''The only thing from the Gallia County District Ubrary? My two old chums, Ed Rauh of
the happiest person this .s ide · Mostly, that's because accident I notice ," she says, the main office, and Betty Lambert on the bookmobile hilve the
of the continental divide. And she'S so seldom home. That's '' Is that I can't.turn my head latest in reading material. Keep up on the best sellers by
she talks about her happiness the only problem with being all the way around to the left. keeping up on your local library. And for those times when you
so much even she realizes it's as popular and successful an And when I get tired, there's wake up in the middle of the night suffering with the heat why
almost too much.
entertainer she is.
.
a slight tremor in my r ight not soothe yourself back to sleep by calling Dial-A..Story . • "Sometimes I know I sound
She loves her home. In a hana.
"I can see the difference in
like a Pollyanna," she say~. culture where most people,
Bewatchingfor a three part health care series to run in the
"But I can't help it -it's all particularly stars, move on my face - there are some Tribune.
so wonderf'll. I really am a an average of once every. bones missing in my che.ek happy lady."
three or four years, she is and Roger can, too , but
The French Art Colony has a new exhibit for the month of
July . It is a New Jersey Group Show featuring 30 watercolors,
There are two chief · con· something of a stick-in-the&lt; nobody else cari.
tributory causes to her ra· mud. She's lived in the same
"I just don't invite trouple caseins and acrylics. Drop by Riverby for a relaxing
diant happiness. She's happi· garden spol for nine years any . more - Roger has · afternoon.
ly married and she's happily now.
grounded me from my motor·
occupied. , She loves being . It's a 10-acre place, far' up cycle for a year." .
Book-&lt;Jf-the-week .: H you're one· of th~se strong mind over
Mrs. Roger Smith and she in the canyon, off the beaten · Otherwise she 's the pic· matter types and want to beat the heat d1g out your old copy of
loves being Ann·Margret and track and yet convenient to ture of a co~tenfed lady, and , Doct~ Zhivago and get frost bite. _It has always ranked as my
doing the professional things the city.
.
she's smari enough to realize. favonte novel and as a rule I hate flction .
." I kilew when I walked in she's got it made.
Ann-Margret does.
Quote-&lt;Jf-t.he-week: A life without surrender is a life
''I can't believe," she says, • the entry hall,' ' Ann-Margret
" ! am · so fortunate, " she
without
commitment. Jerry Rubin .
" that Roger and I have been says, "that this was my says. " So many people my
together for 13 years. On nouse."
age have no joy at all. I'm
A special thank you tn the people of the Ught House
paper, it's 10 years, but we
Still the demands on her reallyaveryluckyperson. "
Tabernacle
and their pastnr Sam Calhoun for the warm thanklived together for three years time - movies and doing her .
you
note
and
autngraph copy of " Eyes to Behold Him" written
before we got married."
by
Michael
Gaydos.
I'm very pleas~ to hesr that they broke
Despite that record, she's
their attendance record. ·
hardly the domestic sort. You
won't find any Ann·Margret
· The Fourth of July celebration was. simply grand. Never
recipes in " The Collected
.
..
before have I seen a town pull together all!l experience a
Cooking Secrets of the
Mr.
·
and
Mrs.
James
days.
They
called
on
Mrs.
feeling
of (pardon my military background showing through )
Stars."
Gaston
entertained
the
Mr.
and'
espnt
de
corps. It was truly a commun1ty effort and a most
Jeffers'
cousins
" I still do not cook,'' she
following
family
members
J.
F.
Bostaph
at
successful
one. Talking to two lovely ladies from Holzer
Mrs.
says. ' 'I've never had the
for
a
recent.
weekend.
Those
Orlando
Florida
and
also
Med1cal
Center,
Mary Ann Campbell and Janet Byers about
slightest interest in cooking.
Ml'.
and
present
included
stopped'
to
see
friends
and
how
!lluch
is
.d&lt;ine
Gallipolis and the effort that everyone
My mother tried and tried to
Mrs.
Tony
Zite,
Cleveland;
former
residents
of
this
puts
mto
making
this
a
charrrung place tn live. The park front
teach me,-but it wasn 't any
Mrs.
Ellen
Hess,
Mr.
and
community Mr. and Mrs. and bandstand (my favorite place in the city) never looked
lise. Actually, my mother and
Mrs:
Clarence
Hess
and
Mr.
John L. Ra,;,lings at JackS&lt;ln· m':"'e beautiful than during the celebration. Congratulations on
my grandmother were great
Jack
Hess
and
·
children,
ville and saw several points a JOb well done.
cooks - they had a bakery in
Springfield;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
of interest in Florida before
Sweden.
' " But I don't cook, and you Robert Hess and daughter, returning to Ohio.
Mr. and · Mrs . .Dwaine Clark, Otester, also went
know something? I don't feel Fairfield; Mr. and Mrs. Fritz
PRODUCTION
guilty about not cooking, Penrod, Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Jordan a'n d Sarah Frye, with her grandparents.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
either. ·And I guess that's Jay Hess and Mr. and Mrs. along }Vith Mrs: Willia,m
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan
Ronnie Hess and children, Culwell, were in Columbus on . and Clay William, who have The
National
Coal
what's really rotten."
Hamilton
;
Mrs.
Shirley
Association
Friday
estimated
Tuesday.
been living near WeSt Palm
She considers herself' a
and
children,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey Beach, Florida, visited here bituminous coal production in
totally liberated woman, and Gibson
says she was liberated even Gnadenhutten;· Mr. and Mrs. accompanied their son-in-law with her parents, Mr. and the United States for the week
July
2
at
befo;e that temi became Howard Crowe and family, and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. L. D·. Cottrill near Pt. ended
·Dover, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Harrisonville, Rock, and other relatives approximately 11,465,000
fashionable.
"I've been liberated since I Otarles Crowe and family, to Columbus to see Mr. here over the weekend. They tons .
Production for the correwas 13,' ' she says. "That's Detroit, Michigan.
Starkey's sister, Jessie were enroute to Salt Lake
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Owen
Arnson
sponding
period in 1976 was
Jewell, who is still confined to City, Utah, where Mr. Jordan
when I first won some money
(Nancy
Thomas
)
and
8,305,000
tons.
a hospital there. Miss Tamra has employment.
singing in a contest. From
then on, I knew I could take daughters of the Hollywood,
Florida area,. and Mr. and
care of myself."
Mrs.
Charles Leist (Marilyn
Still,' taking care of herself
Thomas)
and daughters,
does not mean she wants to be
Gaithersburg,
Maryland,
colljpletely independent. Far
from it. In fact, she says she have · been vacationing here
likes the feeling of being at the hom~ farm with their
mother, Lucy Thorn/IS. Mrs.
dependent on a man.
Thomas,
who has spent Jhe
" I am dependent on a
past
several
weeks with the
man," she says, "because I
Leist
family
in
Gaithersburg,
choose to be, b)lt I could exist
alone. Just the same, I find will now be at her borne bene
Vinyl Latex
I'm more comfortable with a for some time.
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Reed
Jeffers
FLATWALL FINJSH
man around. 1 find it a comforting .feeling to have a man acc0111panied Mrs. - Cleora· .
proteCting me and looking out MCGreevy to her )!&lt;)me in
Barefoot Bay, Florida, where .
for me·"
Roger, who has abandoned they were guests for several ·

as

CarpenJer Personals

!n

PAINT ·

SAVINGS UP T0 -50.%'

B.ll¢'

DOUG MILLER

BECKY CROUSE

RICK' SmLEY

~~aW\:
to~e. \I

I •

Velva-hue

Il:;:l .

o\nd still seaRhinc for thearocory store ond more
tloHIIfiiCII
1
It's my job to http you feel at home lost. As your
WELCOII£ WAGON Hoattu I tan supply answort to your.
new iltfahborltood quutlons and brine a baskot of &amp;ills to
· dtli&amp;flt your f1mll~.
Hundrtds of
you In
have
called me. I hope 111 will, too.
.

,_,.,lin

~~~- 446
. 1

, 937

tERESA IIHL

.

PH.

••

•

'

SUNDAY
THE THURMAN United
Methodist Women . cookout
and potluck supper at the
Moses home in Thurman at
6:30.
NORTHUP
Missionary
Baptist Church 10:40 service.
. Gu.est speakers Rev . Earl
Hunkle and Rev. Ralph
Workman .
MONDAY
MERCERVILLE Grange
regular meeting 8 p.m.
Monday.
GALLIA Chapter, OCSEA,
will hold a special meeting
Monday, July 11, at 7:30p.m.
at the Grand Squar~s Club
Room on Eastern Avenue.
Special guest from Colum·
bus. All members urged to
attend.
TUESDAY
·THE FRENCH City Garden
Club open meeting at Grace
. United Methodist Church
7:30 p.m; ·Kenneth Tomlin: ·
son, Gallia County Game
Warden, will show slides and
speak on "Wildlife." Public
invited.

· FOUNDER DIES ·
NEW YORK (UPI)- Louis
J . Brecker, founder' and
· owner of Roseland - Dance
City, &lt;Ued of cancer Friday at
Doctors Hospital. He was 79
years old. Brecker and his
wife, Dorothy, opened the
original Roseland at 51st
Street and Broadway in
Manhattan on New Year's
Eve, 1919. In l9li8 it was.
.moved to its present site at
52nd Street and Broadway.
In the 58 years since its
opening, an estimated ·60
million persons have danced
. at the two Roselands. Some
.suo married couples 'are said
to have met at the fabled
dance hall.-

Am

ATHENS
MALL

Proudly
presents

Harper Gallery's
.International
ARTS-CRAFTSHOW

students · enrolled .in . a
summer-study program at the Treasury Department.
1
' There 's going to be a tax
cut ... if we wouldn 't offer a
tax cut (to Congress) we
wouldn't. ge t anywhere, ''
Blumenthal said.
Blumenth a l offered no
details on the l'Uls which will
be included in the tax reform
packa ge the administration
has been reviewing since late
winter. The proposals are
expected to be ready for
Congress by September.
Blumenthal specifically
hacked a negative income tax
providing a basic
guaranteed payment - for

ihe very poorest Americans.
He said treasury will
' 'dovetail" its tax proposals
with the Department of
Health, Education and
Welfare's programs of
assistance tn low income
families .
The integration of low
income allowances with the
tax ~ystem would produce a
"negative income tru(, 11 a
form of payment direct~
especially
toward
the
working poor .
The secretary emphasized
that the administration's
proposals would be only the.
beginning of a lengthy
process that will include

BEIGE RECUNER

· REG. '99.95

REG. 1199.95

STRATOLOUNGER
GREEN PLAID
WALL-AWAY RECLINER

recommendaiions from other
Cabinet departments, the
private sector and Congress.
Blumenthal said
congressio.lllll coosideration
alone will take more than a
year. !(the administration is
"luckY" In ·dealing with the
House and Senate, he said
ihere will be tax cuts for most
Americans by 1979.
Blumenthal said qui
administration's goal
"particularly in cutting ... (is
to reach) the lower and lower .
middle income groups"
which he described as tax
._ payers wiui annual incomes
of $15,000 to $25,000.
·

REG.
VINYL SOFA

1 GROUP• PLAID

CHAIR AND OTIOM~N
..

SWIVEL ROCKERS

BROWN

REG. 1149.95

REG.

VELVET

QfAIR AND OTIOMAN

Fri., July 8 thru Sat.; July 16
• 15 International Artisans
• Displaying &amp; creating their
crafts

RUST

·Fire-retardant materials
may cause death .by gases_

•

Am

ATHEN~
MALL

20 .fine stores un~er one roof on East
State St., Athens, Ohio.
o·pen Mon.· Sat., 10 a.m.· 9:30p.m.
Sunday 12:30 • 5:30 p.9J.

By
p A T R I C 'I A
M&lt;U&gt;RMACK
UPI Health Writer
IIIEW YORK ( UP! ) - Fire
officials believe that flame·
resistant
and
flameretardant
materials,
ironieally, may cause death
by giving off noxious gases.
The dense smoke which
killed five Danbury, Conn.,
federal. prison inmates and 62".

others this week is beli!lved to
have come from flameresistant melting pimeling.
Other fires, such as the one
at a nightclub in Southgate,
Ky., that killed more than 160
people , most of whom died of
smoke inhalat,ion, indicate
that
some
materials
composed of . plastics and
other petrochemicals can ·
give off a veritable laundry

Approval l(iven bank takeover

ANY LIVING ROOM &amp; HALL
This offer includes llvl"'l room and hall
way up to 300 sq. 11. ONLY.

$2995

NOW . .
ONLY

·

CALL NOW'
. Stanley Steamer can be reached af this
Number.

614/446-4201

~cot~bgiJOJ:d®
PROTECTION

PH. 446·199!

By 1£0NARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Treasury Secretary Michael
Blumenthal
says
the
administration favors tax
cuts for families earning less
than $25,000 a year and a
negative income tax for the
very poor by 1979.
The administration 's
actions might seem to be "not
good economic sense," said
Blumenth!'l, but · President
Carter is ·intent ,on carrying
out his campaign promises to
provide tax relief.
Blumenthal laid out the
administration position
WC!Inesday in a meeting with
a group of . college graduate

There's nothing like Stanley Steemer's ability to give you whole house cleaning
with minimal inconvenience. Stanley Steamer stays outs1de, only the cleantng
wand enters your home. Stanley Steemer Power cleans better and dries faster. ·
Stanley Steamer does not use your hot water or electricity. Call Stanley Steemer
today for this special carpet cleaning ofler . . .
·

EST 1947

. a past president himself, also installed John Rice, right,
as vice president, and Wilbur Theobald, standing, left, as
treasurer. Directors are, standing, 1-r, Robert
Bumgarner, Robert Buck and Paul Smart. Absent was
John Werner, secretary.

Tax cuts for middle incomes,
payment to very poor favor.e d

CARPET CLEANING SPECIAL

y) e

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING

NEW PRESIDENT OF CLUB - Carl Denison,
seated,left, receives the gavel symbolical of presidential
authority from C. E. Blakeslee, installing officer, at a
recent meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club in
Heath United Methodist Church in Middleport. Blakeslee,

HAVE YOU BEEN
STANLEY STEEMED LATELY?

IASY TO APPLY
I I AD
QUICK DIY!NG
( M I Jll D ·e NO ODOR
e LAST LONGII

2- BASSETT

OAK CHAIRS

NOW YOU KNOW
Ughtning kills about 200
Americans a year - more
than usually die in tornadoes,
hurricanes Q,r floods. ,.

e

749 3ltD AVE.

'

~Events

~

New In your
neighborhOOd?

••

2- OAK
CORNER HUTCH

Ann-Mf!rgaret 'sliberation

'l

TO PASS ON TO YOU.

J

for car theft

gas." .
It usually is just plain
carbon monoxide that kills in
a fire despite all the gasses
connected with the bW'ning of
plastic materials, dyes and

list of deadly fumes .
It was not the fiberglass
alone that should be faulted
if as the · Danbury prison ·resins.
officials suspect, that melting
Grigo said melting plastics
fiberglass paneling made-the give off many different
cellblock fire worse. ·
·
gasses. Some emit oxides of
Stanley Collins, director 'of nitrogen, others.free chlorine
corporate information for gas.
Owens-Corning Fiberglas
Some give qff dense oily
. Corp. in ' Toll\do, Ohio, Sa)'$ smoke such as observed in a
fiberglass melts at '·2,00.0 recent prison . lite in
degrees Fahrenheit, the Tennessee. The ·same thick
same as ordinary window smoke from
manmade
_ materials
glass.
in
interior
But the fiberglass in decorations ,.ere blamed for
paneling is mixed with other raising the toll in the
materials, usually plastics. Southgate nightclub fire.
Depending on the kind . of
plastic, the dyes and resins or
bonding agents mixed with
-.
the
fiberglass,
many
different chemical· reactions
oc~ur when the mixture is
ignited.
said
some ·
Collins
fiberglass paneling may be ·
safer in a £ire th311 others.
Hans Grigo, technical
consultant with the home
department of the National
Safety Council in Chi('llgo,
said dyes added to fiberglass
paneling or materials can
BEFORE
change the chemistry in a
fire.
"It's
complicated
chemistry," he said, "and
even the intensity of a fire
can change the chemistry.
" And it's not just manmade

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ap- National Bank of Lorain
County,
Lorain, · was
proval of the application of
announced Friday by the
The Central Bancorporation,
Federal Reserve Bank of
Inc., Cincinnati, to acquire to
The
Central
Secur1tv Cleveland.
· ·Central . Ban corporation,
the eighth largest banking
organization in Ohio, controls
nine banks with aggregate
deposits of $1.12 million and
Central Security is the 13th
lar gest of 32 banking
CINCINNATI (UP!) ;_ A organizations competing m
Cincinnati man has been the Cleveland banking
arrested by the FBI on market and has deposits of
charges
of
interstate $90.1 million.
.
transportation and sale of
The CiQcinnati corporat10n
stolen
motor vehicles, aiso
has
a . pending
' Thomas W. Kitchens, special application before the FRB's
agent in charge of the · board of governors tn acqmre
Cincinnati · FBI offi~, has the First National Bank of
disclosed.
Mercer County, Celina. ·
Gary o. Sparks, 25, was
apprehended ThursdaY on a
bench warrant issued in Lex·
ington, Ky., as a result of a
six-count indictment handed
doWn by a federal grand jury
in Lexington.
Sparks is accused ?f
usj:JUe • Footworks
·stealing three automobiles 10
. Ohio and taking them to
Kentucky for sale. He was
Hush Puppies
being held Friday in the
Kenton County, Ky., Jail.
.
,

-Man arrested

materials that show· the dif.
terence. Paneling made of
linen, paper and wood fibers
give off carbon monoxide
when smouldering or burning
slowly. When it burns fast, 'it
gives off lesS of the deadly

TIME TO
HAVE YOUR
OLD
DIAMOND
·RESET

LADIES SHOES

MAY GET 10 YEARS
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
Dale Geuder, 18, Barberton,
faces a possible ten years in
prison after pleading guilty
Friday to charges relating to
the June 23 · Naphtha ex·
ploaions which did an
estimated - $10.5 million
· damage to lhe city's sewers
and streets. Gauder, a
~·· utility worker for
Patch Rubber Co. suspended
ltlorily before the explosions,
pleaded plitY to breaking
, and entering a.nd vandalism.

y

4 •

VINYL BEIGE

WOOD ARM SOFA
PLAID
REG. 1299.95

PR.

SUNDAY
ONLY .,
diamond fn a dramatic new

GROUP OF

setting selected from our
Keopsake cata log.

·MEN'S SHOES
ODDS &amp; ENDS BRAND NAMES
Dexter, Trufit
SUNDAY ONLY

$}

~
PR. '
.

· ~®
~

BLUE GOLD AND WHITE VELVET
REG.
WALNUT 6 PC.

CHESTNUT 5 Pit

BEDROOM SUIJE

BEDROOM SUITE

. REG. 1599.95

REG. 1599.9.5

6 PC. SOLID OAK

BEDROOM SUITE
REG. 11499.95

$109995
1 GROUP

~I

·ROOM DIVIDERS

•• •&lt;l&lt;--t.4.,k

ON

BUNK BEDS

SKIPPERS 'BEDS!

Second Ave.
G•IIIDOlls, Ohio ,

.....,., ..oll00k1110.000

SAVE -

95

AND

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
342

1 nL 5

$999
SAVE

!Mmond Rinp

~•1 ,

'· ,

SOFA AND LOVESEAl

REG. 11299.95
Dramatiz~;:: yoUr precious·

.'

$59995

BEDROOM SUITE

Natural Walkers

•

SOFA; LOVESEAT; ·
CHAIR AND OliOMAN

5 PC. SOLID)'PINE

$990

•

REG. -'449.95

···" ·'

1;2 .

OFF

•'

�•

•

•

t

B-8-TheSundayTime;;-Senttnc(,Sunday. July 10, 1977

erators ·ignOre_
announced cutbacks in down with him at tbe Haybenefits under the union 's Adams Hot el.
·· we haven 't received
health plan was over and
anything
formally, " said a
most miners Would return to
work on Monday.
coal association spokesman.
The re ce ntly re-elected " We're not in any position to
union chief, whO" still faces a make any comment.' '
Dressed in a blue suit,
challenge on the legality of
the electiou. told reporters he Miller told reporters •the
wanted to reopen th~ 19H reason he has asked for the
coal contract, as wei! ·as co ntract talks· ;.,, " I want to
negotiate on the new con· find out if coal operators are
tract , if the Bituminous Coa'i serious about talking abQut
Operators Association will sit problems, or whether they
want to break this union ."
The industry has refused to
divert money going into a
surplus union benefit fund to
avoid forcing about 80,()()(f
retired miners from having to
pay the initial ~00 of their
hospitalization. The funds
have been reallocated twice
already, and the ifldustry
said to · do it a third 'time
presented during the fair. would be for it to subsidize
This award is based on the wildcat strikes.
Miller blamed the initial
person's contributions to the
community after age 60 , strike over the benefit cutAnother award will be given backs, which erupted just
by each · Area Agency on prior to the annual two-week
Aging to an organization that vacation period, on a handful
has contributed to the of " troublemakers. " Or·
comm unity of senior citizens. dering the miners back to
P lan ned senio r citizen work , Miller said, " I have
- activities will be held the first urged the membership not to
12 days of the fa\r, August 16 allow this minority' group to
through August 27 in the destroy this union."
He said the way to solve the
Columbus Building located
problem
is at the bargaining
near the south end of the
table
with
the industry.
fairgrounds .
Although
Miller said he
Senior cit izens may purbelieves
the
men will return
chase tickets at half price
to
work.
he
still
accused the
($1.5{)) from the local Area
"
foisting
strikes
industry
of
Agency on Aging, or by mail
on
us
.
.,
from the Ohio Commwion on
·The union leader said he is
Aging , 34 N. Hi gh St.,
resea
rching the possibility of
Columbus, Ohio 43215, prior
filing
suit to force the into the Fair. Checks should be
dustry
to agree to a
made payable to the Ohio
reallocation,
but has made·no
State Fair when ordering
final
determina
tion yet .
tickets by mail.
.

Program all set
for Sr. citizens

COLUMBUS Taient
shows, a craft sale, dance
contests, information booths,
and awards are activit.ies
that over 40,000 senior
citizens expected to attl!nd
the 1977 Ohio State Fair have
in store for them.
Demonstrations on crime
prevention ,
particularly
dealing with home safety and
door locks , as well as a series
of games concerning consumer advoca c'y, transportation lor the elderly, and
nursing homes are new
programs added to educate
the elderly. These activities
are designed to entertain
participants while providing
them with vital information
about these topics.
Senior citizens may dance
to records at another new
event- a dance contest held
each day from 12-12:30 p.m.
Contestants
be judged
and prizes given out at the
end of the contest. ·
Ragtime bands, fashion
and minstrel shows were just
a few of the acts presented at
last year's ta lent show.
Participants this year will be
able to exhibit their abilities
from to a.m. to 2 p.m. daily.
Once again ha nd-made
crafts will be sold by senior
,
citizens; proceeds from the
By SAL GIDFFRE
sale will ·go to the senio r
FRANKFORT, Ky . (UP! )
citizen and their club, center . - State · Agi-iculture Comor senior organization. · All missioner Tom Harris is
craft i!ems will be priced working this weekend with
agricultural experts · on the
under $5.
Booths prov iding in- college, State and federal
formation on Medicare, . levels to hammer out a
Social Security, Retiree solution to the J a panese
Labor G'roups, Amer icna Beetle pro blem plaguing
Association of Retired areas of Northern Kentucky.
Persons, National Retired
" We'll see what we can
Teachers
Association, come up with and what the
National Association of experts recommend," Harris
Retired Federal Programs, said Fr iday following a dayNational Council .of Senior· . long tour of the area.
Citizens, and Library SerHarris visited fa rms and
vices will be available to homes in the Boone .and
·those wishing information. Kenton County. areas as w.ell
Additions to this section in- as the Greater Cincinnati
elude a display ·on Title IX Airport to survey damage
giving information on em- caused by the infestation of
ployment fo r the elderly, and . Japa nese beetles the last two
a Veterans Administration weeks:
display explaining benefits
Meanwhile, the beetl es are
available to veterans, their in a breeding period right
widows and families.
now and it will be nearly
In addition to activities three more weeks before they
held· during _the 12 day go underground ~ain lor a
program, the All Ohio State nine-month period' and then
Fair Band and Youth Choir th e cycle begins again,
will provide musical . en- Harris siad. They remain
tertainment in the senior above ground, doing their
citizen area from J to 3:30 damage, up to five weeks.
" i fo un d the heaviest
daily.
~e senior citizen from concentration of the pests to
each county · will be the · be in the northern Kentucky
recipient of the Outstanding area of the airport, near
Senior Citizen ) Award to be Florence," Harris said.

will

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED

!

I

c:orn in Mississippi 1 Ala bam a,
Georgia and Florida , and the
region-wide condition of the
ctop was only lair k&gt; good.
Agriculture
Department
off icials said last week that

THE REV. AND MRS. WILLIAM TILUS and
daughter, Connie, fulltime evangelistic workers , will
preach and sing at revival services at the Rutland
Community Church, 7:30 each evening through July 11.
The church is located on Main St., Rutland, across from
the Walker Funeral H&lt;me . The Rev . Amos Tillis, pastor,
extends an invitation to the public.

EXPENSlVE SPILLS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Seven payments totaling
$16,468 have been made to the
Ohio Department of Natural
Reso urces' Division of
Wildlife lor the death or fish
and other wild animals as the

I

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

:

Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.

I

result of pollution to Ohio 's
streams·. The largest of the
claims was $11,202 paid by
Sohi gro of Conover in Miami
County. The company killed
47,671 fish when a s&lt;lybean
herbicide entered the east
branch of Lost Creek in May,
1976.

THE NEW

Total nutntion
No hunger oangs
No drugs
Orrnk mrfkshakes
&amp; eat regular foods

GV~~~

SuhsranhA l wA rQhl ant1

inch loss
Con~r der able sa&lt;J ings
on load bills
NG momh ly dues

N-o meetings to att end

No

e ~~; e r crse

No grmmu;ks
Money-back guarantee

i In e

,.. "·~·"' ~ k»oloo' ""' ""' ....

lnneGJiBal

Phone
446 -2206

See J im Sta at s or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340

No chemic als
Gain eJCtra ene r g~

Haro tO be;18Yit? Not tor lOOSe WOO haw II t«&lt; rt and are loSiflQ up to 30 poo.JI'IdS
In tM first month! What can )QU lose by ioOII:~ 111~ ~?Only sornethang
'

MOBILE HOMES INC.

SPRING
VALLEY
P LAZA

llnBI!)I!)I!

MRS. HERMAN DILLON RN, MANAGER
MRS. SUSAN TAYLOR RN, ASST. MANAGER ·

.Gallipolis·, Ohio

vexe.s Kentuc.ky

Color TV

AT

RUTLA-ND FURNITURE

STRIKE IT RICH in SAVINGS !
·

strike COLOR w ith new

Mayt~aljfolnia Q-ol&lt;l
The
l\eal Treasure is
MATTA~

Dependability
REG. '799,95

·sALE

'599°

0

17.0

an oven
that can clean
while it cooks.
From .Frigidaire;

Cu.Ft~
Model AT17F3

Ouat.rv

fp~rurr~

p rut Duv - b

aDtll

rna'"'

1n11

gtiC!~O&lt;~t s ner~el

'2 gtule-

- ll~- rach O"ot •O~il ron;.,. • iid
oee ma!TPo

Oven clean ing is tess of a chore,
thanks to continuous--cteaninQ side

a

~rtiOI'I a.Jtu ~ t ­

'"lut ".nso ers con~ l!Htlbte­
"'"'"'~ln!e doc~r' tllilm(lll•ble
r;ap,~botot~

Frost*Ciear

1

and back panels that begin reduc lr'lg

normal spallers to a presentably
c lean appearance during bak ing or

Refieuator Freezer

.-_i.e

15.3 cu.ft.

roasting , And the panels remove fo r
c leaning of heavy, soil at the r.ink .
The reslof the oven is easily access- I
ible fo r norma l cleanin.g lhani&lt;s to
an oven door that lifts ri9ht off and

Gibson·
Chest

out or the way. Thi" model also adds

AC-30

Freezer

!

Today's
hurlers

Rio Grande to host
Pony League tourney

.Brewers ·
slip by
Red Sox

All-Star honorary
captains named

Tigers'1nhonnpson
.is run-producer

Dorsett to start
July 18th
pro drills today

Jets hold

•

Energy-Saving
Frigidaire
·RefrigeratorFreezer
Uses less energy than
any ott,er 16.0 cu-ll or .
larger refr igera tor·
lreezer. 4 full-widtti
Sl'le!\le$ and twin Veg- etable Hydrators.

4.44 cu-lt treet ercompa rtmen t
'hllr

~·tilolld

,11! 71

~"""!Mu ,

:=:::::~~d ,:;/~ •n!PJ.[,odn~y

Elegance.

By
Frigidaire~ .
20.3-cu-n llde-by-slde has
i 7.o-4 -CIJ·h freezer eompartm&amp;nt. 100% FfostProof. Autom atlc Ice
available (eX1ra charge).

SAVE

... I11&lt; M Jill, ti:P:.OtrftTIIIT Ql

O..to'Towcl "''" ll•tiiO&lt;I 1nd

F•• u"o lolly •111 &gt;n l tlul l
uol, d.-o1ndong .m nome '"'
~UOMIIM ,

•w•

&amp;tOr

Ojllfto~f.

1YIII

$$$

on
elegance•.

By
Frigidaire.
cu . ft. ol
convenience.

12 .3

includln9 a 4.75 cu.
11 ., top freeJer .
Reversa-doors.

$35995
W{T

Meigs Legion -to host
Parkersburg nine

Two

'I

'

say

446-749JI

I'

an easy·to·re8d clock and a handy
minute timer to your kitchen without
taki ng up an i nch of wall or counter

space.

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA- GALLIPOLIS
Open Tues. lhru Sat. 10-5, 1ill8 on Thurs.

•

II Y MICHAEL KEATS
victory.
collection of 16 major vic- yard seventh_ hole - the · Watson' s concentration
longest on the oourse- which went to the extent that he
TURNBERRY, Scotland
Watson, who won the crown tories.
opened
the way for a bridle fully expected Nicklaus to
He reached for his driver at
(UPI) - Tom Watson, never \wo years ago, carded a fivehole the last massive putt. " If
four.
in doubt he could win, rolled under-par 65 in the final the 431 - yard 18th when
" When you beat the I had relaxed and thought he
·in a, 66-foot putt on the 15th round to beat out Nicklaus'by Watson played safe with a Jhole Saturday to.~urn the tide one stroke and his aggregate iron orr the tee. The drive greatest player in the game wouldn't make it I could have
in his epic' showdown with of 268 demolished the former weht off line imd although you have to have great missed my own putt'" '
mighty Jack Nicklaus, rerord low total lor the ·Nicklaus put the second shot satisfaction .'' Watson said. Watson said.
His British ()pen check
rewriting the record books of tournament of 276.
on the green from some gorse "Jack played magnificent
That one putt brought the bushes and sank a :!a-foot golf but his driving has been boosted the $269,115 he
the 106-year-&lt;&gt;ld British Open
already has collected .this
Golf Classic with his one·shot ' 27-year-old Masters cham- putt, Watson sent a seven iron off for the past two days,"
pion from Kansas City, Mo., to Jess than three feet of the
The two players matched season to head the U. S. list of
back on even terms with the flag.
rounds of 68, 70 and 65 for the money winners.
first
three days and played
"Golden Bea r" after being
The crowd of 18,000 exthree Strokes down four holes ploded when Watson sank the together Friday for the first
u.s. Open Cha;;,pion Hubie
into the final round.
putt to end one of the greatest time .
Green
made up some lost
Wat son , now fired up, matches seen on the 6,875Nicklaus said he felt he
chances
to take third place
birdied the 17th to take the yard Ailsa Course, host to the gave the last round his best
with
a
67
to give him an
lead for the first time when Open for the first time, and but " I am getting tired of
aggregate
of
279 - the only
Sunday' s Probable Pitchers
giving it my best shot to find
37-year-old Nicklaus miSsed co llect $11,000.
other
sub-par
total from the
United Press International
his chance of beating the
" I never had anY doubt I that it's. not enough."
64
players
left
in the final
{AU Times EDT)
He said his younger opregulation fi ve by sliding a couid win even when I was
round.
American League
four-fooi putt past the cup. three down;" said Watson, a .ponent played "bett er and he
Green shot a 74 F riday,
Ch ic ago (Wo od 3-21 at
Nicklaus, who tie d for graduate in Psychology.
did not allow himself to make
which
included a triple bogey
Detroit (Rozema H I, 1:30 second last year and runnerWatson said the 15th was any mistakes. What else can
p.m .
up on four other occasions, the key hole but added that an )lou say abo ut Tom?" seven, after earlier rounds of
New York {Torrez 8-7) at made a brave bid to stay in equally crucial shot for him Nicklaus, added, "You can't 72 and 68 and hit the first of
Baltimore (Grimsley 7-4 ), 2 the huni for the title he won was a drive of about 250 yards say that he was playing badly two aces in the tournament in
the second day's play.
p.m.
twice before. in his record off the fairway on the 528"
Toronto (Byrd 0·21 a t
Cleveland (Bibby S-5 ), 2 p .m;
Boston {Tiant 5-7 and Wise
4-4 ) at Milwaukee (Caldwell
1-1 and Haas 5-5 ), 2, 2 p.m .
Sea11le ' (Thomas 2-5) at
Mhmesota (Redfern 2·4), 2: 15
CONTEST WINNERS- - Presenting certificates to Jinuny Harris, left, and Sheila Gailp,m.
Saunders, is Ed Schiller , assistant public relations 'director , Valley Vista Sports Camp,
.Oakland (Medlch 5-4) at
Bainbridge, Ohio. The two Ga llla Countians were named winners of a recent contest
Kansas City (Spllttorff &amp;-51,
CHICAGO (UP1) - Keith the Chicago CUbs.
filled the bases. srott singled from third.
sponsored by Newberry's Sporting Goods Store, 53 Court St., Gallipolis. Both youngsters
2:30 p.m.
·
Hernandez
doubled
with
home two runs, then stole
Hernandez
went
3-lor-4
and
The Cards added a run in
earned a one week camp session (free) at Valley VIsta . Harris, 16, will be a junior at GAHS
Ca!Homla !Brett ~ ) at
two
out
to
ignite
a
three-run
second.
scored
twice
while
Tony
Scott
When
catcher
Steve
the third when Hernandez
this fa ll. Miss Saunders, 12, Eureka Star Route, attends school in the Hannan Trace distric!.
Texa s (Blyleven 6-9( , 8:35
first inning off loser Steve s w;.,her's throw to second singled and Cruz walked.
singled
home
a
pair
of
runs
p.m.
Saturday to pace the St. Louis Renko, 1).!, before walks to went into center field for an Donni e Moore replaced
National League
'
Cardinals to a 4-3 victory over Ted Simmons and Heity Cruz error, Simmons dashed in Renko and, after an infield
St. LouiS (Forscb lD-4 aod
out, Scott was intentionally
· Falcone 4·6 ) at Chicago
walked to fill the bases and
(Krukow 7-6 and Bonham 9·
Ken
Re.itz singled in Her:
7), 2, 1 p.m. ·
nandez
for a 4-0 lead. Tom
Philadelphia (Lonborg 2·2
Underwood
wente 1-3 innings
apd Kaat 3-5) at Pittsburgh
.
for the victory.
•
~ R eus s 3-9 and Rooker 6-5 ), 2,
The
Cubs
scored
twice
in
1:05 p.m.
the
fourth
when
they
loaded
Montreal {Brown 6-6 ) at
the bases on a single by Larry
New
York (Zachry 3-9) , 2:05
RIO GRANDE .:.._ An in· teams in the 12-team, single Aug. 1, 1977. No all'S\a r
B
iittner , a walk to Bobby
vitationa l Pony League elimination event.
teams will be permitted. p.m .
Murcer
and an inlield hit by
Cincinnati I Norman 9-3 and
NEW YORK (UPI) - Joe Dimaggio' belted the· only
baseball tournament will be
Entries will be accepted on There 'will be no exceptions io
Jerry
Morales.
Steve OnMo s kau 0·1) at Houston
Dimaggio and Willie Mays, homer of the game in the Allheld on the Stanley L. Evans a first come, first ser ved this rule.
tiveros
hlt
Into
a
double
play
_ MILWAUKEE (UP! ) who were the hitting stars of Star Classic held on July II ,
diamond here beginning on basis. Six teams of the Ga Uia
For additional information, · H.arson 0-3 and Richard 7-6),
Steve Dillard's fielding error the two previous All-Star . 1939 - !he first one played at with one run scoring and
County League, the tour- contact Don Jones, Rt. 3, 2, 3:05p.m.
Wednesday, July 13 .
Atlanta (E asterly 2-3 and on Cecil Cooper's grounder games played at Yankee · Yankee Stadium - won by Mick Kelleher's slow roller to
Trophies will be presented nament hosts, have already Gallipolis, phone 446-7687.
1,9ere
named the American 'League 3-1. the mound scored the other.
to first and second place been accepted. Six more
.Dr awi ng for the t our- Hargan 8-1 ) at San Francisco allowed Charlie Moore to Stadium,
The final Chicago run came
t~ams are to be accepted.
nament will be held on July (Williams 3-2 and Montefusco score the go-ahead run with Honorary Captains Saturday Mays went 3-for-4; including in the sixth on a sacrifice fly .
one out in the eighth inning for the 48th AU-Star game to a home r un, in a ~ National
2-7), 2, 3:05p.m.
Entry fees are $15, p!Qs two 12.
Saturday,
giving Milwaukee be played at the stadium July League victory on July 13; by Greg Gross.
·
San
Dlegn
(
D'
Acquisto
1-1
baseballs.
Gam es will start at 6 p.m.
1960.
·
Boys cannot play if they on weekdays and 12 noon on .and Wehrmeister 1-2) at Los Brewers a 3-2 victory over the 19.
Boston
Red
Sox
and
Ferguson
Commissioner
Bowie
AL!:eles {Sutton 10-3 and
became 16 years . old before Saturdays.
· Kuhn, who began the
_Jenkins.
Rhodeo 10-4) , 2, 4 p.m.
Th_e Brewers scored the honorary captain concept in
winning run when Moore 1975, .announced the two
Monzon resumes opened the eighth with a legendary centerfielders will
single.
Bob
Sheldon have the honor of ac- .
sacrificed
and
Robin
Yount companying the All-Star
sparring Saturday
singled Moor e to third. managers to the 9 re-game
ROME :UPI ) - On the day Cooper then hit a bouncer to conference at home plate and
FOXBORO, Mass. (UPI) he was supposed to defend his Dillard at second base, who will remain in uniform
JIY RICHARD L. SHOOK
year. I'm a lot more confide~!
'I'Ile promise of a great season
the
game.
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. carrier in the history of title against Colombia 's bobbled the ball, allowing throughout
UPI Sporis Writer
n,ow, too.
takes root July 18 when 47 ·(UPI)- The Dallas Cowboys college football and winner of Rodrigo Valdez, World Moore to s core. Jerry Dimaggio ·will represent the .
DETROIT
(UP!)
Jason
" I'm a little more explayers report to the New ope n
Cha!Tlpion Augustine, 10-9, wa s the American League. while
t heir
pre-sea son the Reisman Trophy last year Middleweight
Thompson,
two
years
into
perienced,
too, and that helps
England P atriots' training training .camp ·Sunday and while pushing the Pittsburgh Carlos Monzon ·resumed winning pitcher with relief Mays will captain th e
what
looks
like
a
long
career
a
lot.
I
realize
you can't pull
camp in Smithfield, R. I.
·
instant commotion is ex- Panthers to .the National sparring Saturday after a 12- help from Bill Castro in the. National.
as
the
Tigers'
first
baseman,
the
ball
all
ihe
time.
Another 39 veterans will pected.
,.
• Ch a mpionship, was the day interruption due to a ninth.
has
an
opportunity
to
ac"
La
st
year
I wasn't
report July 22 to the camp on
. Milwaukee took a 1-0 lead
. Among the more than 68 second player chosen in the training injury.
complish
something
this
protecting
the
plate
with two
the campus of .Bryant
MonzOJJ's ·hilt eyebrow in the second when Moore
rookies and free agents who NFI, draft last May.
no
Detroit
batter
has
strikes.
This
year
I
shorten .
season
College, whet e the Patr\ots ·are scheduled to show up at
;J'be Cowboys acquired the injured by Ita!ian sparring · slammed his second home
done
since
1968
drive
in
100
up
my
swing
and
try
to
make
will remain until Sept . 2.
BESTTlME
California Luther an College Seattle Seahawks No ; 1 partner Franco Saputo with a run into the leftfield
better contact with two
Coming off a surprising 1I -3
BERLIN (UPI ) - Andrea runs.
Sunday is Tony Dorsett, who selection in exchange for a sharp uppercut June 27 , bleachers off Jenkins, 7-6.
was
that
long
ago
two
strikes.
I'm going to left field
It
record and shooting for a has
Pollack, an Olympic silver
created the most ex- number of draft picks and appeared completely healed The Red Sox tied the score in
years
before
Detroit
won
the
more."
Super Bowl berth , the
medalist, won the women's
ci t eme nt a mong Cowb oys chos e Dor sett aft er the and the Argentinian champ the fifth. George Scott drew a
The Holly wood , Calif. ,
Patriots will ha ve three fans since Dallas won the _Buccaneers made USC All- looked in good form during two-out walk and Butch !00-meter butt~y in 11 world World Series - that Willie
Horton
hit
the
century
mark
product
has come a long way
weeks to prepare for th~ir Super Bowl six seasons ago. Ji!fu!erica Ricky Bell their his three-round workout with Hobson skipped an RBI season best time of 1:01.27
in
RBI
right
on
the
nose.
in
a
short
time. Less than a
first National F~otball
,\merican · Mateo Warren . d&lt;&gt;uble past leftfielder Jamie Saturday at the East Gennan
The Cowboys ar~ one of two first choice.
and
names
like
year
after
being Detroit's ·
Ten
seasons
League exhibition game Aug. Nat iona l F ootball League
National
Swimming
Cowbo ys offi cials are I&gt;hysician Roberto Palladino Quirk.
AI
Kallite,
Jim
Northrup,
fourth
pick
in
the ·June, 1975,
6 against the hosting New clubs to start training this expecting a host of requests had pronounced him fit to
,The Brewers got the lead Championships in Leipzig, Norm Cash, Bill Freehan and draft he was the Tigers' .
York Giants.
.
back in the sixth when the East German News Horton have gone by but none regular first baseman.
weekend - the Still winless lor Dorsett interviews during resume training .
Coach Chuck Fairbanks Tampa Ba y Buccaneers the training camp and in an
Monzon's title ~~~fense Sheldon led off with a single. · Agency ADN reported.
-East Gennany's Kornella if them managed to stay hot
will conduct an afternoon being the other.
attempt to preserve as much against Valdes . at·. Monte Yount sacrificed and Cooper
or
healthy
enough
through
a
He
spent
the . first four
Ender, who quit competitive
dri.ll July 19 and begin two-aAnd for once there will be , of their star rookie' s time as · Carlo had originally been singled in Sheldon. The score
162-game
schedule
to
drive
games
of
the
1976 season in "
day workouts July 20. The mo re interest in the COwboys possible , they have an- scheduled for Saturday; but became tied again in the sport after . last year' s
home
100
runners.
·
the
Minors
after
spending his
Montreal games, holds the
f!Tst combined practi ce
camp when the rookies show nounce d a special news was postponed three weeks eighth when Dillard singled
The closest bas been Rusty first pro season at the doublesession of rookies a nd up than when the veterans conference for Monday.
untll July 30 as a result of the and
scor ed
on
Rick official world record of Staub, who was four shy last A level in Montgomery, but
1:00.13.
veterans will take place July trek into town on J uly 22.
Burleson's double.
"His time will be r estricted injury.
season.
was called up and installed at
23.
Dorsett, the leading ba ll throughout the remainder of
Now Thompson; one of first after Dan Meyer got off
The club will play its home
th e tr a ining camp," a
severalyoung playersDetroit· to a slow start.
exhibition operwr Aug. 28
Cowboys spokesman said.
He was hot in his first
is counting on to carry it back
against the Pittsburgh
to
prominence
in
the
month
in the Majors, hitting
t~ms
Steelers on new artificial
American League within a safely in 14 of his first 16
turf.
season or two, is more than games. Thompson then had
..
The club opens the regular
halfway there with half the nine home runs and 22 RBI
season Sept. 18 at Schaefet
schedule left to be played. . during June.
Stadium against the Kansas
first
Thompson, who turned 23.
Then
the
pitchers
TUNIS
tUPI
)
·Adrian
,City Chiefs.
on July 6, drove tn·his 49th,' welcomed him to the league.
Paulen, president of the
50th and 51st · runs during And he defeated himself · by
International Amateur
1977
practice
Athletics Federation , anbases, and Mitch wlls out Detroit's 72nd game on June trying to pull everything over
SYRACUSE - The Meigs two important DPs.
Schmidt taken
nounced Saturday that
stealing home on the same 29 and had 56 with Iii homers Tiger · Stadium's unfriendly ·
Meigs .Second
Leg ion ba~eball team hosts
right field wall, whi&lt;;h is close
·African countries will take
Wall singled, Wilfebrenner play that CannM was out at through July 4. .
NEW YORK (UPI) - A Parkersburg South today on
"l
really
bear
down
with
at
325 feet down the line and·
in
the.
first
World
Track
third.
.
part,
out of lineup
pair of rookies compiled the its • home· dlamoniT at bounced out, Wayland'singled .
and Field Cup in Dusseldorf fastest times for the· 46-yard., Syracuse starting at 1 p.m. driving in Wall. Rick Johnson · After a 10 minute rain men on base," he said. "I try more than IOQ feet high.
Sept . 2-4 despite earlier dash Saturday at !he firllt with its bats well-tuned from singled, Wayland scored on delay, Fairborn got tbree to hit _the ball hard some
He had 17 home runs by
PITTSBURGH (UPI}
place.
I
try
not
to,
but
maybe
mid-Augu~
~ and wound up
boycot fears .
New York Jets' workout at a 9-4 slugfest over Fairborn Sayre's bunt, Sayre being out bits in the fifth after Wall was
Philadelphia Phillies slugger
nobody
on
with
exactly
that number, a
I
ease
up
with
Paulen said Senegal' s
Mike Schmidt was scratched Lamine Diack, president · of their (raining camp. at Hof- Saturday also at Fairborn at first, and Mitch singled, wild, giving up three bases on base.
figure
which
still
led the club.
stra University.
,Saturday also at Syracuse. driving in Johnson . Three balls and Alexand~ singled
from the starting lineup the
"With a man on third and Thompson ended with a .218
African
Athletics
two runs borne.
·
Wide receiver · Wesley The victory raised Meigs' runs on four hits.
Saturday because of an in·
less
than two out I try to hit batting average and 54 RBI. in
Federation, signed official Walker a second-round draft l,'eCord to 12-14. .
In
tlie
Fairborn
seventh
Meigo Third
jury he received in a brawl
the
ball
to.the outfield. With a 123 games.
documents pledging African choice 'from California, and
Hamllton doubled off the Sayre replaced Wal! on the
Meigs really needed only
Friday night between ' the .participation at a ceremony
mail
on
second
I try to hit the
" I thou~ht I should , have
free-agent running back three innings to whip Fair· centerfield fence, Davenport mound after Fairborn's Wells
Phlllles and the Pittsburgh in Tunis.
ball
hard
·
through
the
indone
a lot better last. year,"
BruceHarperofKutztownSt. born , gettiltg 3 runs in the doubled, Hamilton stopping tripled leading off.
Pirates.
field.
"
he
said
candidly. "But I
The signing was witnessed were both !ilocked in 4.5 secpnd and two In the third. at third, and Wall singled
Meigs bitters .were DavenA team spokesman said ·byAugust Kirsch, chainnAn
There
were
times
toward
didn't
.
Last
year I didn't
port and Winebrenner each a
seconds for fie dash . as the Terry Wall, who opened on both home .
Schmidt sprained the ring
of the cup 's organizing jets worked out for the first the Meigs mound, worked
double and single, Cannan, · the end of last season when know quite wbat to expect.
Meigs Fourth
finger of his right hand in a
conunittee.
Singles
by
Rick
Johnson,
R. H. Johnson, Mitch and Thompson wasn't hitting the And I got tired for tbe first
time under new head coach until the seventh when he got
scuffle !hat began when he
ball hard any place. K'\ time in my life. I had never
Officials had feared Walt Michaels.
help from Sayre after having Sayre, Mitch and it looked Wall · each two singles,
charged ~ mo)md after African oountries might stay
number
of things got to the ) played that many games in a
rookie free-agents .::_ .-cooll!d off dunng a 10 minute . like the rains were about to Hamllton a double and
being hit by a pitch thrown by away from the wo_rld ~up in ,a
left-handed
hitter during his season before. ·
come; and Meigs wanted to Wayland and Sayre each · a
George Millll, a defensive end delay.
Bruce Kllon.
•
rookie
year,
among them
" But llearned what I have
repeat of their olymplcs frOm Nebruka, and temple
Manager Charlie 'Hamilton get out of the inning. Meigs single.
'lbe spokesman did not
do to play in this league
fatigue
and
the
closeness
of
to
games boycott last year in
when Schmidt would return Montreal. That boyoott was wide receiver Ken WUBaiDI cited the defensive play of gO! Fairborn out In top of the Fairborn ooo m 11().....4 U the right field seats in Tiger and I'm going to do it. 1 have
032 120 lOX- 9 15 0
fifth for a complete game. Meigl
to the llarting lineup, but said in prote1t against the par- - flunked their .Friday Infielders Rick Johnson (38 ),
to hit the ball all around. I
Johnson
was
out
stealing,
Sampson
(LP), Elsnaugle Stadium.
he would be avaUable If ticipation of New Zealand, · physicals and did not par· Mick Davenport Iss) , Mike
"
I've
got
a
lot
better
atjust hope r don't do what 1 did
Wflll
singled
Sayre
home,
(4)
and
Alexander.
Wall,
tlcipate in
Saturday's Wayland (2B l and Brtan
laeClJFUY 011 I "day to day"
!han
1
bad
last
last
year, again."
titude
now
which maintains sporting ties workouts.
·
Hamilton (1B) , who! turned Hamilton walked to load the (WPj, Sa¥te 7 and Mitchi
.
with apartheid Soulh Afdr)l.
.l

African
will participate

~njoy

Gibson

LEA'R PHOTOGRAP... Y

'

greet. 47 on

Model RC-30

church or chapel and the
reception , also striking portraits.
And ours are fine quanty ·
profossional color photographs al
reasonable rates.
Call us now. We'll make your
wedding lruly unforgettable!

I
I

SPORTS

at son edges Nicklaus
for British Open title

Patrif)ts to

-lt"·. . idaire 30" Electric

otter candid coverage at the

1

C·l-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, July 10, 1977

Cards nip CUbs, 4 to 3

AMERICAN MODULAR HOME
SEE fT AT

I

L--~--------------~------j

Beetle problem

lmag&lt;ne the thrill for you ano
your d11tdren when1 ten years from
. now you open your wedding
album and see il all over agam .
Your oress, your husband with the
ring. the families and friend.s.
Why not arrange wit!J us for
your wedding photog raphy. We

•

while much depends on soybean growing cooditions
WASHINGTON !UPI J Hams across most of the Corn moisture supplies during the except in the Southeast and
Belt last week stepped up next critieal six weeks or so, parts of Virginia . Cotton was
l(rowth ~nd d••velopment of good weather through this said to be developing early
the crop and pushed it toward period oould result in a and rating f~ir to good, and
the winter wheat crop was
earlier - ·than - normal record corn crop.
reported
56 per cerit
'I'Ile weekly crop weather
maturity , the Agri culture
harvestedslightly ahead of
report, covering conditions
Department says .
The department's weekly through July 3, added !hal normal.
crl&gt;p and livestock report rains last weE&gt;k improved
Wednesday said corn ' in
eastern Corn Belt states was
6 to 25 inches taller than I
normal, while the crop in
DIRT EXTRACTION METHOD
western parts of the belt was
1
RESIOEfiTIAL - COMMERCIAL
:
twice as high as normal.
Str eakless Machine Wa II Was hi ng
In the south where drought 1
1•
I
Upholster
y
WindowsFloors
1
has been plaguing farmer s,
Complete Li ne of • . . .
1
however, officials said there I
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies
1
was new drought damage to I

Miller's request
By ANDREW GALLAHER
CHARLESTON , W. Va .
I UPI ) ~ The bituminous coal
industry's
national
negotiating ann has refused
comment on a press-relayed
request by United Min e
Workers President Arnold
Miller that coal c-ontracts
talks be open~d on July 18 in
Washington.
Miller held a news conference here ~' riday to tell
reporters he believed ' a
wildcat .strike sparked by

to.earlier maturity

Com pushed

i

I

bUill·

.

...

.

,_

�'

.

'

C-3-The Sunday Til~r~inel , Sunday, July

LYNE CENTE~ GYM&amp; POOUCHEDULE
·
JULY 11· 11 , 1917
DATE- GYMNAS IU M

POOL

12·2 p.m . Open Swim
M .30p.m.Camp
Crescendo
0-8 p.m . ()pen Swim
8-lOp m _Camp Crescendo
July 126-Bp .m . Open Gym
7-5. 30 p.m. Camp Crescendo
8-l.o p ,m Camp Crescenco
6-8 p.m . Open Sw im .
.July 136 8 p .m . Open Gym
12-2 p .m . Open Swim
2-5 ·30 p m . Camp
8-IOp .m . Camp Crescendo
CrescendO
6 B p.m. ()pen Sw im
8-10 p m. Camp Crescendo
July 14 6 8 p m . Open Gym
2-5: 30 p m . Camp Crescendo
.July 1168 p.m . Open Gym
"4
· 8-lOp.m . Camp Crescendo

8- 10 p .m Camp Crescendo

.July 15 6-8 p.m Open Gym
.July 16 2· 30-4. 30 p.m . Open Gym
July 17 2. J0.4: 30 P m Open Gym

6-8 p .m . Open Swim

12-2 p.m . ()pen
6-S p.m. Open
2. 30-4 30 p .m . Open
2 · 30-•·.30 p .m . Open

Sw1 m
Swim

Swim
Swim

-:·:::·:::·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:::::·:·:::·:::·~·:;:·.·:::::::·:::8:-:-:-:-:.:~:-:-:-:-:-·-:-:-:-:-:;:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-: :::·:;:·:::·:~:::·.;:::·:·::::·

Bidwell team
still .unbeaten
BIDWELL - Bidwell's
Uttle League team challied
up three more triumphs last
week to remain qnbeaten on
the year.
Here's the results:
Bidwell 8, Centerville 0
Leading hitters for Bid·
well : Robbie Caldwell, 3-3 ;
Kenny Neal, 2·2 ; Eric
Russell, 2-2; Eric Penn1ck,
home run. Winning pitcher,
Eric Russell and losing
pitcher , Nida.
Bidwell Ztl, Addavllle 3
Leading hitters for Bid·
well : Eric Russell, 4-4: Aaron

By United Press lnternattonal
American League
East
W L Per. GB
48 35 578
Ne-w York
45 34 570 I
Boston
46 37 554 2
Baltimor
38 40 487 71'2
Clevelnd
38 43 469 9
M llwauke
36 45 444 11
Detroit
30 51 370 17
Toronto
West
W L
Pet. GB
Ch .cago
48 32 .600
M innesot
46 37 .554 31 1 ~
K.anss Cty
44 36 550 4
Californi
39 40 494
8 11~
Texas
40 41 .494 8' 1
Oakland
34 47 .420 14'12
Seattle
36 50 .419 15
Fnday•s Results
Chicago 10, Detrott 7, ntght
Cleveland 11 , Toronto 5, n ig ht
New York 7, Balt imor e 5,
night
Boston 7, Mt l waukee 3, night
n t :h~osas pty 6. Oakland 2.
seattle 13, Minnesota 11.
l'ltght
Texas 9, California 5. n1ght
Sunda·v·s· Giimes
Oakland at Kansas City
Toronto at Cl eveland
Seattle at M 1nnesota
New Yor k at Baltimore
Chteago at 0(;&gt;tro tt
Boston at Milwaukee. 2
Cal1forn ta at Texas, n tght

•

Ma1or League Standmgs ,
By Un•ted Press lnternat•onal
Nat•onal League

W.
51
47
43

Ch tcago
Philad lph

P1ttsbrgh

St LOUIS
Montreal
New York

44

L Pet. GB
29 638
33 .588 4
38 531 8''&gt;
39

530

8112

38 43 .469 l3 1h

31 51 378 21

By MIKE TULLY
UPI Sports Writer
By the time Pittsburgh and
Philadelphia finished playing
Friday night 1t was hard to
tell which had more dents,
the players or the balls.
The Pirates defeated the
Phillies 8-7, on a bases-loaded
walk in the ninth, but not until
they had combined for 24hits ,
two beanballs, two bench·
clearing inc1dents and
enough violence for a
teleVIsion series.
"I can't blame him for his
reaction," Sllld Pirate pitcher
Bruce Kison , who had
provoked the first rpund by
plunking slugger Mike
Schmidt. " No one likes to get
hit I respect him for making
his point I'm definitely a
COJ'Ilpeti tor and he sure 1s,

too."

..

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Impatiens took the early lead Rochester
41 40 .506 7 .
and held on for a nose victory Syracuse
40 4 1 .494 8
To ledo
37 46 .446 12
over Apollo One in the Columbus
31 51 .378 17'h
featured eighth race at SCIOto
F r1da v's R esu Its
Sy racuse 4, Columbus o, 1st , 7
Downs fnday night.
1n0 10 QS
The winner , driven by Syr
acuse 8, Columbus 3, 2nd.
Robert O'Donnell, covered 7 1nn 1ngs
PC!_wtucket at T tdewater ,
the mile in 2:03 and returned ppd
, ratn
$3.40, $3.40 and $2.40. Missel Rochester 10, Tol edo 3
Charleston 4, RIChmond 3
was third.
The ninth race trifecta
combination of 10-7-4 paid a
whopping $3,094.50 and the
nightly double pairing of
THISTLEDOWN
Spats Pick (1) and Super-b . NORTH RANDAlL, Otuo
Freight (I) was worth $25.40. '&lt;( UP! ) - Berkshire Lass ran
A crowd of 6,685 wagered the six fur longs in 1: 12 3-5
$43'2,928.
Friday to win the featured
eighth race at Thistledown .
The winner, ridden by
Tommy Meyers, paid $4 .20,
WINS TWO TILTS
$2.60and $2.40. Pert Near was
and
Ballard's
ADDISON- Addaville's T- second
·Ball team, sponsored by Daughter was third.
The 3-8-10 ninth race
Jim'sSohw, won two contests
rec~ntly. In one game, the tr ifecta of So Elegant,
Sohw team edged Addaville's Western Approaches and Up
R1sing Star squad, 20-18. In Jump Tbe Devil paid $578.70.
another outing Friday, the The 10-11 daily double of
Soh1o team won 34·22 over Whitsun Folly and Prmce
Brazos was worth $238.60.
Clay.

'

'

SUNSHINE SPECIALS
on new MF equipment

&amp;-\
•

•
'

•

I•

SAVE 55800.00
SAVE 52450.00
SAVE 52200.00
SAVE 52000.1)0
SAVE, 11600.00
SAVE $715 .00
SAVE S75 .oo
SAVE mo.oo
SAVE ·$145.00
SAVE $75.00

Personalized MF financing,
parts and service available.

Shinr(~ T~or Sales
451-1630

pmch hit, two-rim double also
in the seventh provided the
power to carry the erratic
Capilla to his second win in
two starts since coming to the
Reds from St. Louis one
month ago.
But there was serious doubt
whether Capilla would
surv1ve the first three innings
as Houston put nme runners
on base . Capilla not only
survived, he kept the Astros
scoreless through tho~e

irming and Cesar GPrnnimo's

Leon, W. VI.

doubles by AI Oliver and
Rennie Stennett and RBI·
singles by Phil Gamer and
Dave Parker-it happened
again.
Willie Stargell took a
McGraw p1tch in his side. He
dropped his hat and strolled
toward the mound. Both ben·
ches emptied but there were
no blows. As a matter of
,rules, McGraw and Manager
Danny Ozark were ejected .
" I wasn't throwing at
him ," sa1d McGraw . "I really
don't think Willie was angry.
fie only reacted because of
what happened earlier."
A double by Oliver,
mtentional walks to StargeU
and Fernando Gonzalez and a
pass on four pitches to pmch
hitter Jim Fregosi produced
the game-winner.
In other games, Chicago
tipped St: Louis 7-&lt;l, Montreal
defeated New York 5-4,
Cmcinnati ripped Houston 83, Los Ange)es halted San
Diego f&gt;.3 and San Francisco
nipped Atlanta 3-2.
t:ubs 7, Cards 6
Ch1cago scored the tying
run in the eighth when
umpire Bruce Froemmmg
called a balk on reliever Clay
CarrolL St. Lows Manager
Vern Rapp blasted the call.
"The league is doing a poor
job," he said. "It better start
getting these guys (umpires)
on the ball."
Expos 5, Mets 4
Jerry Koosman's errant

Friday's linescores
By

Press International
N_ational League

Unit~

St L

210 020 001- 6 11 1

Tenance ;
Hooton
and
Yeager W - Hooton , 8 3 LGrtff i n ,
S 7
HR s....:._ Los
Angeles . Baker (17) , Yeag er
ClO ); San Diego. Kmgman

Cht
003 ooo lJx- 1 9 o
Rasmussen , Ea stwrck (B), Car
( 12 I.
'
ro ll (8) and S1mmons , Burns,
Hernandez (5) , Reuschel (8),
Sutter ( 9 ) and Sw1sher wBy United Pfess lnternalranal
Reuschel , J. l. L - Ea~tw1ck , J-4
HRs- St
Louts7 T yso n (4), Amer-ican League
Ternpl e t6n (.4 ); Chtcago, DeJ e
Ch;
102 003 &lt;O~ 10 17 I
sus ( 2)
Oet
103 100 2007 11 2
(3 ) and
Phil '
200 ooo no ~ 1 11 o Knapp, Kirkwood
P it ts
ooo 030 041- s 13 1 E ssi an . Fidrvch . Crawforcf (6 ),
Chrtstenson , McGraw (7) , Grilli (7l and Klmm. May wGarber ( 8 ), Brusstar (8) and Kirkwood, 2 0. L- Ftdrych , 6-.4 .
Boon e; Kison, Te kulve (8), HR- Detr0 1L Kemp (11 ).
Gossage (9 ) and Ott
woor 000 001- 2 6 o
Gossage, 7-5 L- Brusstar , 3 2 Oak
K ans
001 500 oox- 6 12 o
HR - Ph 1ladel ph ia, Maddox (8)
Blue . Torrealba (4). Bair (7),
/W:mt
000 200 12Q- 5 7 0 Coleman (8) and SanguitJen ;
N .Y
001001002- &lt;81 Leonard and Martmez WTwit chell, Kerrigan (7), Alcala Leonard , 7-9 L- Biue, 6~ 11
(9 1. At krnson ( 9 ) and Carter ,
016 123 00~ 13 15 3
Koosman. Apodaca {8 ). Bald Seat
021 004 004- 11 12 2
w rn ( 8 ) and Stearns . w- M 1nn
Tw,tchell. 2-5 L - Koosman. 6 Abbott , Laxton (3), Montague
10 HR - New York. Botsctarr ( 7), R.omo (9) and Stinson ;
Tho,.modsgard , But 1 e r (3) ,
14 ).
Holly (6) , 0 Johnson (9 J artd
Cine
ooo 200 60o- a 11 1 Wynegar W- Laxton . 3 2. L Ho us
000 030 002- 5 1 1 Thormodsgard , 6-S HRs- Seatt .
Capilla , Murray (7) and Bench . le , Stein 2 (8), Cruz ( 1), Stanton
Bannister , McLatJghltn {7} and (9). Minnesota , Hisle (19),
Chiles (2)
FerguS&lt;ln W-Capdta, 2-0. LBannrster, 4-7. HR s-Houston ,
000 000 203- 5 12 2
Ferguson (13) ; C1ncmnatr , Cal
Tex
321 030 OOx - 9 10 2
FOSfer (24 l.
Ryan . Barlow (3). Hartzell
At l
002 000 600-- 2 4 3 (6). Ro ss [7) and Humphrey .
S. F.
100 001 001 - 3 6 0 Hampton ; Ellis . lmdblad (8),
N 1ekro and
Pocoroba ; Knowles (9 ) and Sundberg. W Ell IS, 57 L- Ryan . 118.
Barr , Lav elle {9 ) and Hrll
W - Lavelle , 6 4 . L - Ntekro ,
000 000 203- 5 6 o
8-10 H R- Aflanta . Montanez Tor
Clev
020 050 22x- 11 13 l
112 I
S D.
000 200 100- 3 5 1 l em a n c z y k, Johnson (5),
L. A
030 001 10x-5 9 1 DeBarr (5), Hartenstern (7) ,
(8) and
Griff in , Sotllner (8} and Bruno (8), Wttlis
AshbY i Eckersley and Keodall
w - Eckersley , 8-7 L-Lemernc-.
zyk, 7-7. HRs- Toronto, Ewrng

Busiuesd)pportdnilie&amp;
$10,000 PER YEAR

MF 1135 Tractor ( 120HPI
MF 275 Tractor (67 HP J
MF 265 Tractor (60 HP )
MF 255 Tractor (50 HP J
MF 245 Tractor (42 HP I
MF l24 Hay Baler
MF 29 Hay Rake
MF 41 Dynabalance Mower
MF 42 P ilnam Mower
MF 58 Rotary~ utter

ease off.
"That's not the way I
manage," Anderson said to
such a !bought, " I pnsh hard
and the ones who are still
around are tbe ones I want: :
That philosophy paid off
once again Friday night in
the&gt;ease of Capilla, a cocky :;. •
foot-8 Hawaiian who was
pitching in the Astrodome for
the first time.
George Foster's three..-un
home run in the seventh

.

_Pirates halt Phillies
winning steak, 8 to 7

Schm1dt leads the ma]qr
Wesl
leagues
in homers. He
W L Pet. GB
Los Angels
56 t1 .67 5
expects to ·get shaved now
Cinclnnat
45 35 .563 9 1/~
t1ouston
37 47 .440 19117 and then. What he didn't
Sn Frncsc
36 48 429 20 1/s expect was a fastball m the
San D1ego
35 51 .407 22h
At lan ta
30 52 . 366 25111 back after Garry Maddox'
two-run
homer
gave
.
Fr•day 's Games
Ch1cago 7, St. LOUiS 6
Philadelphia
a
4-3 lead. He
Montreal 5, New York 4,
jawed and JX&gt;inted at Kison .
n1ght
Pittsburgh 8, Philadelph ia 7, He fired his heimet to the
01ght
Cincinnati 8, Houston S, n ight ground, threw a punch at
Lo s Angeles 5, San D 1ego 3, Kison and the Thrilla' · in
n1ghf
San Fram;isco 3. Atlan ta 2. Pittsburgh was on.
The Phils went up 7-3 on
n•g ht
,
·sunday 's Games
hits by Richie Hebner, Jay
Montrea l at New York
Johnstone and pitcher Tug
Phi la delphia at Pittsburgh. 2
McGraw in the eighth.
St Levis at Ch ic ago, 2
C•nc lnnat• at Houston\
When Pittsburgh scored
San Diego at Los Angeles, 2
fqur
runs in ihe eighth on
Atlanta at San Francisco , 2
lnlerna1tona1League
U ni1ed Press I ntet;nationa I
W . L Pet .
GB
Pawt ucke-t
48 33 593
Charleston
44 37 543 4
R t chmond
42 37 .532 5
Ttdewater
40 38 513 61; 2

·.
·.

•

By GARY TAVLOR
UP! Spurts Writer '
HOUSTON ·( UPI )
Pitcher Doug Capilla is one
rookie who is glad that the
Cincinnati Reds pitchi ng
troubles have not changed
manager Sparky Anderson ,
Anderson, a man called
"Captain Hook," by his pitching staff, frays pitchers' feel·
mgs almost as often as he
sends one to the showers. But
as his staff is being rew&lt;X'ked,
he has had the opportunitv to

'

Beach, 2-3; Kenny Neal, 2·2;
Eric Pennick, 2·2 ; Scott
Pickens, 2-3. Winning pitcher,
Eric Russell; losing pitcher,
Martm.
Bldwell36, Vinton 8
Leading hitters lor Bid·
well : Paul Hollingshead, 4-5;
Robbie Caldwell, 3·5 in·
eluding home run; Kenny
Neal, 3-4; Eric Pennick, 3-3
including 2 home runs ; Aaron
Beach, 3-3 including a home
run. Wmning pitcher, Kenny
Neal and losing pitcher, Tana
George.

East

Foster belts· 24th as
Reds tOp Astros, ·s-5

PAATTIME!!
$40,000 PER YeAR
FULL TIME POT EN·

TIALit

TOY WORLO
Parker, Games,
Fisher
Price,
Mtlton
Brt~dley , Tonka.
No selling or experience
necessary , you wrll restock
beautiful displays w1th the
country 's faste st selling
r'tationally adve(tised toys
In high traff ic compan y
established accounts that
will be turned over to you
Your reorders will be
computer processed by one
of the oldest and largest
brand
name
lOY
wholesalers m the u S
This offer is being made
available
ent i rely
by
Nationa l Markef tng Ser
vice , and is not directly or
indirectly affiliated w•th
any manufacturer men
Ironed above
Applicants
must be responsible, able
to make decisions, and be
capable
of
makinv
mtnrmum cash investment
ol $5,250 00 100 pel mer Ctllndise buy ~:Jack. Call
Mr . Bell : Toll Free any
ttme . 1·800 -621 -7725, Ext
A 121 Sunday calls: ac

Mattei ,

epled .

121, Woods
Blanks 2 (51
N .Y .

Bait

151.

Mator League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Batting
(based on 200 at ba ts)
National Leag ue
G. AB

S!mmns , St L
Grtffey , Cin
Parker , P itt
Valentin, M tl

H . Pet .

77 268 92 343
79 324 110 .340
81329110 334
75 305 100 328
77 283 91 322
70 264 85 322
77 269 86 .320
77l 32D 102 319
76 298 95 319

Mora les , Ch 1
Luzmski , Phi l
Trillo, Chi
Templtn. Sf L
Stennett , P ttt
Cromart1 , Mtl
80 1319 101 .317
Scoff , St. L
7'1 218 69 317
American League

G Al\ . H Pet.

Carew, M rnr1
Stng teton . Sit
Dade , Clev

79 310 125 403
74 2~2 91 347
69 217 ?S 346
Bostock, Mn.n
79 296 97 328
Ftsk, Bos
75 260 85 327
Fairly , Tor
71 245 79 322
Bailor , Tor
69 276 88 319
Munson , NY
76 300 95 317
Rice, Bos .
79 321 100 312
Bannister. Ch
78 317 99 .312
Rtver s, NY
72 282 88 312
Home Runs
National League: . Schmtdt,
Phtl 25. Foster 1 C1n 24 ; Garvey,
LA 22. .Burroughs. At I 21 ,

Bench , Ctrf ,_1 9.
Amer•can League : Scott , Bos
24 , R1ce, Bos 21. Z1sk, Chi and
Hfsle, Mrnn 19; Bor1ds, Cal and
Ne-ttles , NY 17.
Runs BaHed In
National League : Foster , Cin
80; Garvey, LA 79 ; Cey, LA 71 ;
Bench , Cm 63 , Winfteld , SO 62.
American
League :
Hisle ,
M 1nn 74 ; Munson, NY 64 , Zisk,
Chi 61 ; Yastrzemsk i, Bos 58;
Thompson , Det 57
Stolen Bases
National League : . Taveras.
P1tf 33. Rtchards , so 29,
Morgan. Cin 28 . Cedeno. Hou
27 •• Cabell and Cruz. Hou and
LoPes , LA 26.
American League : Remy , Cal
27 , Patek, KC 25 , Bonds, Cal
20, Page , Oak 19 , Le Flore , ' Oet

18.

•

P_itch1ng
Most Victories
National League : R Reuschel,
Chi 12-2; Carlton, Ph1l 11 .4;
Sutton, LA 10 3. Rhoden, LA
and Forsch , st L 10-4
American League: . Tanana ,
Cal 12-6 ,
Ryan , Cal 11 8;
T .Johnson , Minn 10-3 ; R May
and Pa lmer, Bait and Colborn ,
KC 10-8. ·
_
Earned Run Average
( Hased on 72 innings pitched)
Nat1onal League : Sutter , Ch t
1 08 ; Go s sage , Pitt 1 73 ,
R Reuschel. Chi 2 08, Can
delar i a, P itt 2 56 , Sutton , LA

2.58

Cleveland and Fisk ; Slaton ,
Rodrigue Z 161
and
Moore.
Haney {6L W- Cievetand. 7 -4 L
- Slaton ,
6-8 .
HRs- Boston.
Scott (24 ), Carbo (8). Rice
(21L Milwaukee, Sando (12) .

1

Braves post
two PL wins
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Pony League
Braves upped their season
mark to 7-3 following a
makeup win and regular
season triumph on Memorial
Field Friday evening.
In the makeup game with
the Giants, the Braves won,

'
Press
By
United
InternaUooal
Hot weather usually
bringings a renewed interest
m fishing for catfish. Casting,
trdlling and 'other fc.-ms of
fishing are unoecesssry. This
fish is a bottom feeder. You
simply toss out your bait and
wait foc a hit.
The best baits are usually
worms, crayfish and the
entrails of chickens or otlrer
fish .
The best tactic is to let an.
unweighted bait sink slowly
to the bottom with your reel
left on free-.;pooloc with the
bail left open if you use
spinnning gear. Yoti'll . see
line begin to play out when
the fish picks up the bait.
He' ll swim off a short
distance mouthing the bait as
he goes. Then he'll stop,
swallow the bait, and
continue on in search of
another easy meal.
When the line begins to
move, wait a couple of
seconds before setting !he
hook. This will allow enough
time for the fish to get the
bait securely in his mouth
and make a successful catch
more likely. Keep in mind
that the line will usually come
off the spool fairly slowly
sincethere'snoreasonfortbe
fish to be in a hurry.
If lazy bank fishing isn't
your thing, you can go after
catfish via the "jug." This is
similar to the rig used for
turtt.;. It consists of a length
of lin~ attached to a plastic
jug floating freely on a lake
or river. When a fish gets
hooked, the ·fishennan simply
rows his boat out to the jug
and retrieves his fish.
Jugging is not pennitted in
all waters. Consult the
pamphlet that came with
your fishing license before
making your sets.
Another popular method of
taking catfish-&lt;!Spe&lt;:ially for
food- is the trot line. This is
nothing more than a long,
stout c&lt;X'd with many hooks
set along its length. Each
hook is baited and the whole
affair placed in the water
with one or both ends secured
to the bank. Again, consult

•

the regulations pertaining to

Chuck Derifield was
credited with the win. Terry
Queen was charged with the
loss. For the Braves,
Derifield had a double and
triple , Todd Lingo three
singles, Boo Weaver a double.
For the losers, Ted Adams
had a triple.
In the nightcap, the Braves
downed the Giants, 13·4.
Derifield was credited with
the win. Gary Hamner was
charged with the loss.
For the wmners, Derifield
had two singles, Mark Sheets
a home run, triple and single.
Boo Weaver had a triple. For
the losers, Kessel had three
singles. The Giants are U on
the year.

v
By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Spurta Writer
Thurman Munson has this
thing about wood. He loves
holding it in his hands but
feels very guilty when he's

CLEVELAND (UPI) _
\Jtility players have to be
ready atall times and Larvell
Blanks was just that Friday

AI Hunter will

a

fight suspension

'B engals

expect 58

for drills

OOLVERINE®
6" WELT MlRK BOOT
• Pebble lexlured cowhide
lealher
• Weh construction
• Cushron insole and sleel
shank arc~ support
• OH resistant neoprene sole
and heel

CARL'S
SHOE STORE
Gallirnlis, Ohio

WE SPECIALIZE IN

AIR CONDITIONING

SERVICE.
ALL MAKES AND MODELS
PHONE. 446-2282
for appointment
•

GALLI POll 0.

1911 EASTERN AVE.

•

m~;;m~;i~~· ~;~~· ·~~~~;~·~~~ ·~~~ ·~;~-~~~· ····~-:
Wood-Burning
Deluxe Circulator
•••••••••• •

Porcelain Enamel Cabmet Fin ish
Aulornat 1c Draft Regulator
F1rebnck L1ning

Cast Iron Grates
Ash Drawer

with purchase of an MF 85 lawn tractor.

...

Use It for any other
MF lawn &amp; garden
products In our store!

""''I'''''Yo

t

"'~·

Hlna•d 1mokl cunainl Kttos

lrom comtn&amp; tnto room when 1
OOOf tSOPfffi

Pt1m.,y Air Ytlllll Ro LJnd operur1 11) m

..-lii-JI..I.~

llftbrot~ /u!fr ~e!: \101"11 b nt'IQ ., 1 ";o'~,'i•
ilpr lrom iiUIO&lt;IJi!I!C dr;,lt r.l!.,:u l~tor ill
'''bute ,, IIW!'nt~ '" llurnmgzone

Gra1n1 '""" "'"•"'; o'
•1hf~ ~:~~;!l: iii:;;~~~;·~~;!;:;:;;;~

Ca11 11'01'1

(c~i

gr~t\ll!y m~
or uhH requ~te&lt;l l

HincH lil) Chul•l C~5! orcp ctlute ""'' . /
OO..n .men door 15 opened "'~'una

from

great seleolion

sg.~lhllll

I.MP

The lowest pnces ever!
Come '" and see our

01J1

Slldi-Diit Atll Dr....,l For ,~• .,.,.,.

n1en1, mu.s fru

a~

rf!IT'Dial'

............•...................•

today

~

.

0 0 •••••••••••••••• 0 •••••••••••••••••••

MODEL 701 SPECIFICATIONS
I~TZ

HONDA

l'!@tE I'It
Wor,1lh
Depth
flue 51ze

SAL~S

•
Mu1mum wood lenath
Load,ng dOOf ~~ ide d1mens10n
We11ht crated
Do1tance from floor to center oi flue outlet

Rt. 1 Golllpallt, o.
Phone 446·2241
0 ••••••••• 0 ••• 0

Now

CENTRAL INDUSTRIES, INC.

Ftlf11round Rolld, Rt. 1

Pt. PIHsant, W. Va. 25550
j__;,_ _ _. . , . . ""·
- _675-2332

••••••••••••• 0 . . . ...

18'

.

6
. 26'
tO" X 14'
• 290 IDS
26~ ~

..
0 •••••• 0 ••••• 0 • • • • • • • • • • • 0. 0 • • • • • 0 •• ~ •

LIST PRICE '46000

CUSTOM MADE FRAMING

you can have your favorite picture or mirror·
custom fruied by expert craftsmen. O..r 110 flnilhed
moulcllngl to choose from. Also 1 la1'9t selection of
beautiful prlntl available for your o- custom mado
frame.
Now In stock a large selection of beautiful framed
Ri.. rboato wfllch make very nice gifts for a man of 1ht
river.
See our showroom at CENTRAL INDUSTRIES,
Faif11round Rd-WIIdsworlh Avonue betwten 1:01 A.M.
&amp; 4:00 P.M. m..,ctay lhru Frldly.

331,\:h
36'

.'

•

-'"'""'0!Y

NOW '399

91

·Shinn's Tractor Sales

ONLY 7 IN STOCK ·
•

Pick a new, smooth mowing 8 hp MF 85 lawn tractor
with mower and we'll give you a certHicate worth
$200 for your purchase of other quality MF lawn &amp;
,garden producl$. Choose from dozer blades. dump
carts, lawn sweeper~. snowthrowers, and more. But
act now! Offer exp~res July 29, 1977.
Personalized MF financing,
um,...,,.
1
parte and service avallabl.e. "'·

CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC~
BUILDING SUPPLIES

, 451-1630
LEOI, W.VA.

A crowd of 3,495 wagered
$364,029.

miss a game. You've got to
know yoursell whether you
feel up to it'"' not and I knew
I could handle it."
Munson handled it alright.
His two-run homer and tworun
double
snapped
Baltimore's seven-game
winning 'streak and dropped
the Orioles two games off the
pace in the East .
After wiping out a 2-0
deficit on Graig Nettles' tworun double in the second, New
York took the lead in the third
when Willie Randolph singled
and MulliJOn ·drilled a Rudy
May fastball into the left-field
seats. In the fifth Munson
pushed a single to right for
two runs that upped the lead
to 6-2.
May, an ex-Yankee who
had beaten New York live
straight times prior to Friday
night's game, probably
wishes {l'lunson did his
· thinking from the bench.
In other American League
games, Chicago npped
Detroit 10-7, Cleveland routed
Toronto 11-5, Boston defeated

Milwaukee 7-3. Texas
dumped C!flifornia 9·5,
Seattle outslugged Minnesota
13-11 and Kansas City topped
Oakland 8-2.
White Sux 10, Tigen 7
Jorge Orta collected five
RBI with a three..-un double
and a sixth-mning single that
drove Mark Fidrych· to his
second straight loss and the
Tigers' to their fifth. ')'he
White Sox have won eight in a
row. About 30 fans re&lt;:eived
sununonses from the police
for ~torming the field and
throwing chairs 1rom the
stands during a rain-delay .
Red Sox 7, Brewers 3
George Scott and Bernie
Carbo hit solo homers and
Jim Rice added a two-run
shot to support ' Reggie
Cleveland's eight-hitter . Sal
Rando hit his 12th homer for
Milwaukee.
Rangers 9, Angels 5
Juan Beniquez followed
four Nolan Ryan walks with a
two-run double in the first
inning and the Rangers

.

GALLIPOLIS - Evans
Emps heat Skyline 8-4 at the
fairgrounds Friday.
Toots Nibert was credited
with the win. John Nance was
charged with the loss.
For the winners, Ted
Staton, George Hayes and 0 .
,J. Ross had two h1ts each.
D. Fitch, Nibert, Porter,
Beaver, Ray Wolfe, B. Pertie,
and Bevans all had smgles for
the Emps.
Evans will play Vi's at 6:15
Tuesday on Price's Field.
Evans Is 8-3 during second
half play with two games left
to play.

ree more teams eliminated in
Kyger Creek LL Tournament

CHESHIRE - Three more
teams fell by the' wayside as
action in the 19th armual
Kyger Creek Little League
baseball tournament con·
tinued here on the James B.
HalTeld Field Fridsy night.
In the first game, Tuppers
Plains edged the Racine
Cardinals, 8-7; Gallipolis Red
Sox downed Raccoon Valley,
16-8 and Pt. Pleasant John·
son's Market downed the
Middleport Indians, 18-4.
In third round action last
night, Pomeroy Tigers took
on Vinton, Syracuse battled
the Pt. Pleasant Steelworkers
and the Gallipolis Athletics
took on the Pt. Pleasant
Jaycees.
·
Monday, Bidwell will battle
Mason County Insurance in a
6 p.m. game. The Pomeroy
Pirates will play Hannan
Trace at 7:15p.m . and in the
nightcap, Rutland's Dodgers
will tackle the Gallipolis

T1gers.
Tuppers Plains will now
play Pt. Pleasant Malleable
Iron at 6 p.m. Thursday . In
Tuppers Plains win over
Racine Friday, Mark Goddis
led the winners with two hits.
Bauman was credited with
the win In relief. M. Weese
was charged with the loss. K.
Curpman led the losers with
two hits.
In the second contest
Friday, the Gallipolis Red
Sox advanced to second
round action and will meet
Pt. Pleasant Johnson's
Market at 7:15 p.m. Thursday.
For the Red Sox, Bostic
was the big stick man with
two hits. He was also credited
with the win. Walker started
on the hilL
For Raccoon Valley, M.
Knox and P. Bailey each had
three hits. D. Markin was the
losing hurler. He was
relieved by P. Bailey in the

fifth.
In the nightcap, J. Oliver
and B. Dalton each had two
h1ts apiece for Johnson's
Market. T. Mul)lns was

POMEROY - In Little
League action Chester No. 1
downed Chester No. 2 16-5
with Keith Brogan getting the
win, He fanned ten and
walked seven while giving up
four hits. Brogan also socked
two homers and a single to
lead the hitting. B. Bissell
and C. Bailey had doujrles,
and Bailey, B. Call and K.
Bentz hit singles.
D. J . Randolph, J . Newell
and T. Crow shared the
mound for the losers and
struck out ' eight and walked
fifteen. D. Gaul had a triple
~nd single, Newell a double,
and R. Maxson a single to
ro~nd out the hitting.
CNo.l
~37 2-16 8 2
CNo.2
010 4--5 4 2

Sports transactions
By .Unlted Press Inter-national
Baseball
Cleveland - Placed outfield ·
er Johnny Grubb on the 15-day
disabled
list
and
recalled
outfielder Chari le Spikes trom
Toledo .
Football
New York. Jets Signed
quarterback Marty Domres and
safety Steve Ebbecke as free

agents.
New York G 1ants - Obtained
offensive guard Jim Files from
Pittsburgh for an undisclosed
1978 draft choice.
Tampa Say - $1gned place
kicker Kinney Jor'dan and
defensive tacRie Larrv Woods
as free agents and waived
linebacker Mike Holmes .

In Girls Senior Softball,
Meigs beat Pomeroy twice,
'15.0 and 17.j). Tracy Burdette
led the hitting with two home
runs, two doubles, and a
single. Other hitters were :
Kathy Howard, two doubles
and a single; Jo McKinney,
double and single; Vicki '
Ebersbach, three singles;
Mary Boggs, two singles and
two doubles; Glenda Brown,
four singles; Kellee Burdette,
tr:iJJle and single; Chris
ebersbach, three singles;
Ma_ry Ann Miller, single and
Missy Cale, single.

DoneIIi's Recreation
SWIMMI.It.
G
I
PICNICING
tllfeauard Supervision)
.
PLUS-C1111pinc f1oilities with Eleotrio . Hook-up.
Fishlnc IYiillltle only to C1111pers. Isle· 1bout
Olr lrOUI 11111.

\

.GIRLS INSTRUCTION
JULY 18-22
BASKETBAll.

.VOLLEYBAll

GWEN HOOVER
OTIERBEIN COLLEGE

SHARON JOHNSON
CENTRAL STATE
UNIVERSilY

LIGATED IETWEEI .IIOISOI liD IILLIPOLIS
' OFF OOIITY Rl. 11.
GALLIPOLIS

TENNIS

OONELU 'S

PEGGY PRUitT
'

f

CLAIMS TITLE
DUBLIN
(UPI)
Australia's Mary Sawyer
defeated 'Marta Bueno of
Bl'Jizil, 2-$, 8-3, 11-1; Saturday
to Win the Women's Singles
TWe It the Irlsb Open Tenms
!Jramplonshlps.

.

Outdoors man
.work shoes
for workmen. Oual1ty buill
to slay "or duly" when
you're "on duly "
Des 1gned lo keep you
comfortab le all day . .
and d&lt;jlj ver the
kind of long wear
you expect for your

Youth league results

GALfJPOLIS - In· Tbursdsy's Pee Wee action the
Cardinals came from behind
to upset the Eagles 7-&lt;l. They
scored six runs In the last
inmng to win .
The Cardinals were led by
G. Roderick with a single and
double, and the only other hit
was by G. Duncan. •
Spurlock led the Eagles
with a triple while 'HalTison
had a single.
Sullivan, the Eagles'
se.;ond baseman, made three
good plays (one an unassisted
double play) to keep the
Cardinals from scoring early
in the game.
J . Haner was the winning
pitcher.

credited with the win.
Cremeans ~nd ·Snider had
the Indians only safe blows.
Cremeans was charged with
the loss.

Go to work
in quality

Car«Js rally,
upset' Eagles

coasted. Ryan, 11-8, walked
seven batters and struck out
three in 2 1-3' irmings, his
shortest outing this season .
Dock Ellis won his third
game m four decisi011s since
corning to Texas, yieldmg six
hits in seven innings before
being replaced by Paul Undblad.
Mariners 13, Twins II
Bill Stein hit two homers to
drive in four runs and Lee
Stanton added a homer ,
double and single to drive in
fiv e more. Larry Hisle hit his
19th homer for the Twins and ·
Butch Wyne gar drove m
three runs w1th four hits. Rod
Carew went Uor-4, upping
his average to .~03.
Royals 6, A's 2
Kansas City chased Vida
Blue, 6-11, with five straight
hits leading off the fourth ,
including back-to-back
· doubles by Amos Otis and
John
Mayberry
a nd
consecutive triples by Fred
Patek and Frank White .
Dennis i.konard, 7-9, struck
out 13.

'

~h

is

OHIO UNIVERSilY
PHONE (614)-634-2233
'

"'fOR DE":'Aii.i
",

/

1.

'•

ST.

..

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI' (UP!)
'Competitive won the featured
allowance race Friday at
River Downs by a head over
Careless Jennisah, Challenge
the Lark was third.
Jockey Romero Hidaljo
guided the winner over the
mile and 70 yards in 1:44.
.Lava .Lady and BaShful
Native won the first two races
to return $51 on the ·daily
double combination of 7 and

winner, 8 to 4

NEWYORK(UPI) -Com·
missioner Larry O'Brien in·
dicated Friday the NBA
would oppose any· move by
the New York Nets to New
Jersey if that move would
jeopardize whal he called
"the principal of territorial
exclusivity,"
The Nets and New York
Knicks recently commenced
litigation o\ler the Nets' at·
tempt to move their franchise
from Long Island to a yetunbuilt facility in the Medow·
.lands Sports Complex in
Hackensack, New Jersey.
"I Wtderstand that such
litigation involves, in the first .
instance, Uie interpretation of
a contract between the Nets ·
and the Knicks, which each
side claims supports its
position," O'Brien said·in a
written statement.
"However, to the extent
that the litigation in any way
challenges the grant of exclu·
sive terrotories to NBA
teams," he contined, "I have
directed that the resources of
the NBA be committed to
supporting the principal of
territorial exclusivltv ."

MODEL 701
W1lh

E~ps

Evans

NBA plBns to
oppose move

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 •• 0 •••••••••

Poo c•lt ln Enamel F'inilh'
styled t.tlintt 'llli

president.
"I want everyone to know
that I was found innocent...!
was acquitted unanimously of
any rules violation," Hunter
said in a prepared statement.
"The public must be made to
understand
that
my
suspension was in the face of
this determination."
Hunter said he will file suit
against the \miversity in tbe
next lew weeks, seeking an
order that he be allowed to
return to school in the fall and
play football.
"I feel confident I have a
career waiting for me in
professional football and to
suspend me for the fall
semester for doing nothing is
a serious curtailment of these
plans," Hunter added.

Hadfield
may play
this year

Smith Buick-Pontiac

victory over the l!altimore
Orioles. He just C911idn't. The
guilt pangs were too much lor
him to stand.
"I wanted to play )lretty
badly becall$0 I felt · okay
before the game," said
Munson,
last
year's
American League MVP. "I
feel so guilty when I have to

sitting on it.
The Yankee catcher
required seven stitches to
close a thumb \YOWld earlier
in the week and contemplated
s1tt1ng out Friday night's 7-S

"I just went up to the plate
looking for the ball and
swinging the bat like I always
do," said Blanks, who drilled
night.
a three-run homer off
The Cleveland bark-up reliever Jerry Johnson to cap
shorlstoJ&gt;*COnd baseman a five-run fifth inning and
drove in five runs with pair sent one into the left field
of .. homers and Dennis stands in the seventh to score
Eckersley picked up his Bruce Boehle.
eighth victory as the Indians
"1 wasn't swinging lor
snapped a three-game losing homers because I'm not a
streak '!'ith a 11~ victory hqme run hitter," addec!
SOUTH ijEND, Ind. (UP!)
over the Toronto Blue Jays. Blanks. "Th,is is the first time
·Notre Dame football star
I've ever driven In live runs
or hit two homers in one AI Hunter says the university
has left him no choice but to
game."
While Blanks sparked the go to court to figlit his
offensive show that produced suspension lor the fall
13 hits off six Toronto semester.
The senior haHback !rom
pitchers, Eckersley took a
Greenville,
N.C., the first
neat two-hitters into the ninth
Notre
Dame
ball-carrier to
when the Blue Jays started
total
1,000
yards,
announced
ruffling th~ir leathers.
Friday
he
will
sue the
Two were out when the
university
for
suspending
Jays scored three times on a
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Cin· solo homer by Sam Ewing him "for doing nothing.''
clnnati Bengats head coach and a two-run homer of'f the
Hunter was suspended
Bill Johnson expects 58 bat of AI Woods.
after being accused of
players lor the club's training
"I had a good breaking ball visiting the room of a female
camp opening at Wilmington and off speed pitch but after I student "alter hours." He
College July 22..
got the first two outs in the was cleared of the charges in
Forty-two veterans and 17 ninth I became a thrower a university judicial hearing
rookies make up the instead of a pitcher," said in May, but the ruling was
Cincinnati training camp Eckersley, who struck out overturned by Rev. Theodore
roster as of this week.
Hesburgh, the university's
nine and walked three. ·
Johnson said the three days
"b just lost my composure
of practice planned for in the ninth although I still
rookies at Spinney Field in had my stuff," added
'Cincinnati prior to the Eckersley, who gave up a
opening of camp is designed run«oring single to Ewing
to get the rookies ''further and a sacrifice fly to Woods
into our programs so we can lor a pair of Tornoto runs in
really
get
going at the seventh.
Wilmington."
"This year's training camp
will be somewhat shorter
!han those in the past, so we'll
PI'M'SBURGH (UPI)
have to get things done
Veteran
left wing Vic Had·
quickly and efficiently," Northfield
field
says
he loves hockey too
Johnson added.
much to retire and may play
The Bengals will have
one
more season.
barely two weeks of drills
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
Hadfield,
now a free agent,
before their first pre&lt;Jeason (UPI) - Jambouger slipped
missed
almost
all of the 1976game, against the Green Bay past New Deal in the stretch
,
77
season
with
the
Pittsburgh
Packers, Aug. 6. Johnson will Friday night to capture the
of knee
Penguins
because
hold two-a-day sessions $49,150 Walter J . Michael
trouble.
He
underwent
during the first two weeks of Memorial Pace.
camp.
Jamhooger and New Deal, surgery last summer · but
The Bengals first regular both winners earlier in the needed another operation last
season game will be against evening to eam a berth in the December.
He notified Pittsburgh
!he Cleveland Browns Sept. three-year-old pacmg stakes,
newsmen
from his Ontario
18 at Riverfront Stadium.
put together a classic stretch
home
that
doctors are
battle in the finals, roaring
pleased
with
his
progress and
the final quarter-mile In 28 2·
predict
full
re&lt;:overy.
Before
Lobsters top
5 side by side.
coming
down
with
Injuries,
But . Jamhooger, the 1·2
favorite
with George Sholty Hadfield scored 61· goals in
Nets, 30-21
at the helm, went ahead by a two seasons for the Penguins
alter a long and distinguished
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- nose to win with a 2:00 1-5 career- with the. New York
Martina Navratilova and mile returning $3, $2.50 and Rangers.
Greer Stevens downed Peggy $2.20. Inner Circle was third.
"Tbe doctors say I'm right
New Deal took the first
Michel and Wendy Turnbull
on
schedule," Hadfield said.
in women's doubles Friday division In 2:00 3-5, posting a "I'm not ready to quit the
. night to lead the Boston 1\'z lengtlr victory to return game yet. I Jove it too much. I
· · Lobsters to a 30-21 victory $11 .40, $4.40 and $2 .80. still get a kick out of being
over the Cleveland Nets in Jamhooger scored in the with the guys and I still enjoy
second division in 2:00 3-5
World Team Tennis.
the idea of helping the club."
The Navratilova • Stevens also and returned $3.20, $3.60
The 35-year-old · Hadfield
victory was the 22nd in 23 and $3.20.
said he had not talked con·
WTT matches this season lor
tract with the Penguins and
the duo.
would not until training
The Lobsters won four 'ef
camp, but would prefer to
five matches enroute to
remain in Pittsburgh.
StrikeouTS
' victory as a crowd of a bout
National t.eague t Niekrc, Atl .. "I want to finish my career
127, Rogers, Mt l 108, R!ichard,
' 3,200 watched the WTT debut ~ou
107; Koosman, NY 102; in Pittsburgh," he said. "I've
here.
enjoyed my seasons there
Seaver, Ctn 98
American LNgue: Ryan, Cal and I'm looking forward to
Wimbledon · champion
; Tanana, Cal U6 ; Leonard.
Bjorn Borg gave Cleveland 214
KC 119; J=lalmer , Bait 108; this season. But It wouldn't be
its only victory, downing Roy Eckersley, Clev 104.
lair to the Penguins to talk
(elim inates early)
Emerson 7~ In men's singles.
contract· unless I know I can
play. I won 'I know that until I
try. And that's all I can
promise right now - that I'll
try."
.·

trot lines to be sure you are
using them properly.
One pleasant characteristic
of a trot line is that it often
resulls in multiple catches
when left in the water for
some time. This may be the
best way · to get a large
number of delicious fish fer a
summer fish fry.
Catfish are good eating.
Many restaurants offer them
as a standard menu item.
One of the best wayt to cook
them is to -simply dip the fiSh
in hatter and deep-fry them.
Don't overcook them or the
flesh will start to separate
and make them difficult to
serve. Three or four minutes
in liot fat should be plenty if
the !Ish are mediwn sized.
Experiment with your own
batters or get some from your
favorite cookbook. No matter
how you fix them, you'll find
catfish make a delicious
meal.

12-1.

f1ms h of

American League: Lyle , NY
1 66; Tanana, Cal 2. 11; Campbell. Bos 2 4S , Rozema, Oet
? 'i9 : Blvteven . Tex 2.65 .

022 020001 - 7122
200 000 300- 5 10 o

.012 001 012- 7 14 o
010 000 011 - 3 8 I

.

innU'lgS.
·:I was pitching stupid,"
Capilla said, " It was like I
didn 't know wha~ I was doing
out there, and I do know what
I'm doing.''
With the game scoreless in
the bottom of the third inning,
and one man on base,
Anaerson came to the mound
to speak to Capilia .
"You couldn't put in the
paper what he said to me, but
I was sure glad that he said
it, " Capilla said. "I needed
someone to yell at me and ten
me that I was pitching st"''id.
I'm too g~ a pitcher to let
things bother me."
The rookie pitcher gave up
a three-run homer to Joe
Ferguson in the fifth inning .
"Joe hit a rolling curve
ball, the worst curve I've
ever thrown. And I'm just not
saying that, you can ask Joe.
He was our catcher in St.
Louis. He would say the same
thing. I will never do that
again," Capilla said.
Astros starting pitcher
F1oyd Barmister struck out
nine Reds in the hrst five
innings but was touched for
Foster's homer which started
a six-run seventh inning.
Reds second baseman Joe
Morgan was impressed with
Bannister and Capilla.
"He's (Capilla is) the type
of guy that I like on a pitching
staff/' Morgan said. l1He S a
cocky type guy and that's
cool. I like it. Wberi Tom
Seaver stands up there, you
know he 's going to he tough.
This guy stands up there like
Seav.er does."

'

Cleveland.

Gullett , Tidrow (7), Lyle (8 )
and Munson ; R , May , 0
Martinez ( S) and Oemps:ey ,
Skaggs (2) W- GUIIett, 7-3 L R May , 10-8 HRs- New York
Munson (12) , Nettle~;
(17J1
Baltimore, Murray (12)

Bos
Mil

pickoff throw with the bases
loaded in the fourth wiPed out
a J.j) New York lead and Jose
Morales' pinch-hit sacrifice
fly in the seventh snapped a 2·
2 tie that sent the Mets to
their ninth straight loss, most
for them since 1965.
Giants 3, Atlanta 2
Pinch hitter Jack Clark
doubled to left to score Vic
Harris from second base with
the winning run in the nmth.
Gary Lavelle, 6-4, relieved
starter Jim Barr in the ninth
to earn the victory. Phil
Niekro fell to 8-10.
Dodgers 5, Padres 3
Dusty Baker drove in three
runs with his 17th home run of
the season and a single. Burt
Hooton, 8-3, pitched a fivehitter. Dave Kingman hit a
tworun homer for San Diego.

Outdoors

·oles, 7-5

Munson's bat stops

Indians romp
over Toronto

C-2-The SUnda-y Tun..,.-&amp;nltn~l. Sunday, Jul)' 10. l!li7
:=:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·~·:::-:-:-:·:-:·:·:·:-:··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~·-·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:: ••:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-~-:-:-:-:-;;.;.;.:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:···:

10:l!l'ii

'

Open at 12 .Noon
!

111111111$1 ••

•

Co. Rd 77

Davis
Road

Co. Ra. 17
J~KSON

�'

'

6 Calls Taken

~The Sunday Times-8entinel, SundBy, July 10, t977

By Area Squads

•

Six persons were takep to
various hospitals by the
rescue squads In Mason
County on Friday.
Mary ·Perry, Mason, was
taken to Holzer Medical
.Center by the Mason Squad as
a medical patient.

SONG EV ANGEUSTSHarold and ADD Sturm,
Lancaster, 0., ..mbe song
· The Point Pleasant Squad evangelists lor tile annual
took Karen Krebs , Point Union Camp !lleellog lo be
Pleasant, Irene White, Point held July t:J-24, spoD5ored
Pleasant
and
Odessa ' by 38 Uolted Methodist
Greenlee. Point Pleasant, all Churches of Point Pleasant
to Pleasant Valley ijospital. BDd Mason-New Haven
area. Rev. Sturm Is pastor
Florence Kaylor, New at Mills Mell!orlal United
Haven, and Robert Warth, Jr., Method ist Church lo
Hartford, were
taken to Lancaster. The Camp
Pleasant Valley Hospital and Meeting will be held at the
Holzer Medical Center, Outdoor Sawdust Trail
respectively, by the New Tabernacle, located two
Haven Squad.
miles south of New Haven,
oo Union Road.

CENTER RECEIVES GRANT-The Bend Area Medical Center received a,$25,000 Rural Health lvtlative Grant from
the United States Public Health Service. Tl)'e center, which may open In August, will be located on Main St., New Haven. Tht
building was recently purchased by .Pleasant Valley Hospital.

•.

A $2S,o00 grant has been awarded to the Bend Area
Medical Center by the United States Public Health
Service, according to an announcement made Friday
afternoon by United States Senator Jennings Randolph's

Harry Miller, president of the Bend Area Medical
Center Inc., is out of town and was not available for
comment tOday.

ollie~.

,Sellards said that the Medical Center has now acquired
the services of Dr. Esther Larson, who apparently will
set up a general practice in New Haven.
'fhe ldea of a medical center in the Bend Area was
conceivect some time ago by James Farley, executive
director of Pleasant Valley Hospital in order to bring
health care facilities closer to some of the outlying
communities of the .county.
Recently, the hospital purchased a building on Main
St., New Haven, which will be used as the Medical
Center.

Besides the announcement of the grant money,

- The funds, laiciwn as a Rural Health Initiative Grant,
.will go towards the further establiShment of a Primary
.Medical Care Center, acording to Mike Sellards who has
been actilig as the coordinator between Pleallant Valley
Hospital ani! the Bend Area Medical Center Inc.
• He said lhii, money will be used primarily to purchase
medical and Qffice equipment, drugs and salaries.
Sellai-ds, who ·was surprised by the announcment of the
grant, noted· that this money may help to have the
medical facility open by August 1.

·Cliffftrds make union switch
COLUMBUS '
Dora . the state institution will
Clifford has resigned as · · follow her lead. Clifford said
president of the Ohio Civil a move is underway to
Service Employees enlarge the AFSCME rolls
Association {OCSEA ) local at throughout the state from
Gallipolis state Institute and OCSEA membership.
In a letter dated Friday to
taken the post of chief
stewart for the Americ11n the OCSEA membership at
Federation of State, County the hospital, Mrs. Clifford
and Municipal Employees said she was leaving OCSEA
(AFSCME) there.
because the union "is in poor
. ' Her husband, Michael financial condition and
·CJiffotd; ·a·n·: international unable to represent the
staff representative fqr membership to the greatest
AFSCME; Sa.ttirday forecast extent possible."
·that niariy ~tber employees at
She .said OCSEA is more
MURDER CHARGED
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Harold Cook, 31, Colerain
Township, ha~ been charged
with murder ·in the Friday
night fatal stabbing of Donald
Weis, 32, an off-duty Cin·
cinnati fireman, following a
suburban intersection traffic
· collision. Hamilton County
C. C. CtJckler to Mik.e police said the two argued
Floccad ,' Bessie FJoccan , , over 8 right-of-way issue and
AA;~J~~;;;,~t, pari lol 18 , a fight started. .
.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

•

RozEma B. Genhel"mer, dec.
to John E. Genheim er, Betty

A.

Knight,

Rachel

M.

Sheri dan, Judith L . Vanica .
Cert . for trans., Chester .

Bedford.

Raymond

Bertha

E:

F";

Hatfield ,

Hatfield

to

Buckeye Rural Electr ic
, Coop, Inc., Ease., Rutland .
.~
Glenn Vance, Cora E ,
• Vance to Buckeye Rura l
Eledric, Ease., Pomer-oy .
Second Argyle Associates
to Ohio Power Co .. Ease .,
' Columbia.
~

Bedford .

James Arnold. Ruth Arnold
to Truman D. Hall, Ilene D .

. Hall, Lots, Bradfield Add.,

Pomeroy .
Leo Morris, Linda Morris
to Ph illi p , L. Bullington ,
· Karen J . BuAHngton, Parcels,

·Rutland.

'

union's staff.

heayy case load, we are
. spending up to $60,000 to
$65,000 monthly,'' she said.
· . The cases, Mrs. Niben
said, have built up over a two·
year period.
OCSEA contracts for Its
legal services. AFSCME
keeps its costs for similar
repr;el;ientation lower through'"'
. the use of in-house counsel,
Cliffl&gt;rd said. AFSCME
monthly dues are $7. OCSEA's $6.50, he mlded.
Although '':
Nibert
characterize&lt;'
;elf as "no
fan" of Karl ~:, Jrt, OCSEA
executive J""''or, she said
she voted In fAunr of a succes · _;,~ m.;uun \· ~. table a
rnoH' 11' ·:~".b··o.l' te Stew~rt

1

Mrs. Nibert said thE! union
was ""operating on a budget'
set up on dues from •28,000
members, but in reality between 24,500 and 26,500. ·
.
WOMAN KU.LED
Also, the legal fees of a
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP! )
program to represent
Candy Mellor, 19, Warren, member's in actions arising ·
Mich., was killed Saturday from
the
removals,
when she ran In front of a car suspensions, . redu ctions ,
on Interstate 280 near transfers and layoffs "are
downtown Toledo, police killing us," Mrs. Nibert said
said. Miss Mellor . and two in the letter.
"We realize approximately
other girls were hitchhiking
when she was killed. The S37,000 in $38,000fortegal fees
monthly. However, with the
driver was not cited.
.

chief lobbyist and hire a new
director.
" There is no money to hire
a new director and we don't
need the kind of publicity that
would accompany that kind
of action

i .. "

Arch ie McKlnney , Eva
McKinney to Robert William
Hatfield ,
Anne
Maude
Hatfield. I ,400 sq , f1.. Rutla nd

Village.
)

BOSSES ON JOB
AKRON, Ohio {UP!)
East Ohio Gas Co. super·
visory P.rsonnel worked as
, repairmen Friday when the
.2,200 members of Natural
·, Gas Workers Union Local 555
struck the system for the first
. time in seven years. The gas
workers had been working
without a contract since June
15 when their old one expired .
East Ohio's proposed pay
tn~rease of 1S.6 per cent for
the average worker over the
· ne:~t two yean "as rejected
• : by the union as inadequate.
·. Under the old . contract,
:·workers earned from ~.22 to
. $8.1111 per hour.

We Invite
You To Stop
In And
Look Over
Our Fine·
Selection
Of Mobile
Homes.

she said in the

letter, a copy of which Clif·
ford gave to The Dispatch.
Clifford himself is a former
OCSEA field representative
who joined ti]e AFSCME staff
in late June. He said he
resigned after he was unable
to cash two or his OCSEA pay
checks on time. On both
occasions, he said, he was
asked by union officials to
wait a day before he cashed
them .
He spent two weeks with
the Communications Workers
of America before joining.

GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Zelda

M . Hobstetter, Fred W. Crow,
. Jr ,, Eleanor K. Crow to Raj
-· K. Malhotra, Madhu a .
:• Malhotra, .1.01 acre, Chester .
Asi) C. HOskins to Jul ian W.
Hoffman, Julia Gibbs, 37 .85
.. acres, BedfDf"d.
Asa Hoskins to Richard C.
·
Meredith. Mary L. Meredith.
"7 9. 40 acres , 90 acres ,

-.

than $188,000 in the red:
"Approximately one-third
ofthestaffhasbeenlaidoff ...
There · is no longer a
Department of Labor
RelatiOns or !he·Department
of. Negotiations. All these
functions are fi'ow handled by
one man who also is assigned
to cover field staff duties,H
she wrote.
Clifford said his wife's
decision was based partially
on a letter .Mr~. Dorothy
Nibert, of Gallfpolis, an
OCSEA state ~xecutive board
member, sent to local
presidents" the day alter a
June )7·18 board meeting;
"lt is no secret that we
have serious · financial
tro uble. Membership is down,
or at least the number of
members from whom we are
receiving money is down,"
Mrs. Nibert· wrote as she
outlined the cuts in the

BUMP TO VISIT HERE- The Goodyear Blimp,
America, will be at tl)e Valley Volunteer,..Fire Depart·
ment, Apple Grove, Tuesday from 4 to 6 p.m. The blimp is
shown here at the Bicentennial Celebration last year in

Visit Slated
The Goodyear blimp,
America, Is in the Tri..State
Area and will be in Mason
County t~is ·Tuesday, according to a company
spokesman.
.
The blimp will be located at
the Valley Volunter Fire
De partment, App le Grove
between~ p.m. The public is
invited to view the massive
helium filled balloon
The America has been in the
area since July 12th at various
shows and fairs. While public
flights are not available,
many Goodyear dealers and
customers have been selected
to fly on the blu;,p.
The blimp carries six
passengers at a time and
averages an incredible 8,000
passengers a year.
,One of the features of this

Ambassador to
East Gennany
is David Bolen

tractOr, Ariens feels that takmg the
ti.me to· compare various tracto r

of. four .m. Goodyear s fleet of ,
bhl!'ps 1s Its Super S~~cuiar,
.which · flashes public serv1ce
messages as well as Goodyear
sales promot10~ messages to
after dark audiences on the
ground below.
.•
The Goodyear blll1lps ~re
frequently seen on. televiSIOn,
generally at sportmg events,
such as the Rose Bowl and
Orange_Bowl football ~ames,
the lndianapoli~, Ontar1o and
Daytona &gt;OO ~1le auto races,
the Amenca s Cup ya~ht
races and the World Senes.
The America IS 192.1 feet
long, 50 feet ~ide, and is
powerd by twm 210 h?r·
sepower fuel~mjected, .s1x·
cylmder push~r-type engmes.
It has a cru1smg. speed of 35
mph and can attam a speed of
&gt;0 mph. It normally reac!les
heights of 1,000 to 3,000 feet but
can go as high as 8,500 feet.

• Victorian

HUGE DISCOUNTS
48 MONTHS FINANCING .
LIBERAL TRADES

Smith,cf Buick-Pontiac
·r.4

.

'.

1911 Easte,rn Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

- Ace Is the pla"u .,.,ilh
tt"le Helpful Hard111are Man ·· , .

XNTERMATIC

Jacbon Ave.
Pot,nt Pleasant .
675;3000

-

•

...:..

'.1

•

ACCORDING to City Manager M. Harold Brown, several
area groups are prepared to help. the city complete the new
municipal swlnuning pool if city tathers cannot obtain
financial assistance on state or federal levels.

+++

'

· DURING .last week's regular city coinmission meeting,
Brown told commissioners "we've not been turned down, yet.
Thus we must assume we're still being considered. This Is

encouraging."

. +++

Buck Wilcox Road (TR
261 ), Jacks Road (TR 46 ),
'Burlingham Road (CR 40 ),
Carpenter Hill Road (CR 10)
(From CR 4 to SR 143),
Dexter Road (CR 10 ) (From
SR 1~4 to CR 4), Pilgrim
· Ridge Road (TR ·326 ) , and
Warner Road (Till78) .

year's severe winter.

Representative James
that this P,rogram
· IS , funded by the Federal
C~rrimunity Services Ad·
ministration under provisions
of the Economic Opportunity.
Act of 1964. James. said that
Ohio'sshareis$13.3millionof
the total $200 million appropriated by Congress. The
purpose of this service, ac·
cording to James, is to
relieve the burden of high ·
energy bills which have fallen
~xplained

'

SUZY SAMUELS

Miss Samuels awarded
Murphy. scholarship

Conservation Service
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District (S.W.C.D.)
has concluded its contest to determine the ,
largest tree in Meigs County. There ,.as a
total of 2&gt; trees entered by 14 people. The
contest was sponsored by the Meigs
S.W.C.D. to encourage wise woodland
management and to show tlie growth
potential of various tree species in Meigs
County. •
The ''Big Tree Winner" is Thad Dye of
Rt. A Pomeroy. Thad entered the
sycamore. tree located on the G. B. M.
Peck Estate property at the junction of
Raccoon Creek and _Buzzard Run in
Columbia Township. Th.e tree is on bottom
land about one mile east of the Vinton
County line and one mile south of the
Athens County line.
'
Measured at 4'h feet above the highest
ground point, this sycamore was 19'·11"
around its trunk. Its height was 123 feet
and average crown spread was 85 feet. By
using the American Forestry Association's
system of measurement the tree had a
pointtotal of 3831'•. One point is allowed lor
each inch of trunk circumference, one
point per each foot in height and one-fourth
point per average foot of crown spread.
We hope ,to have a picture of this
winning tree in the newspaper later. An 8
by lO.inch framed picture of the tree and
Thad Dye will be presented to him at the MEIGS S.W.C.P. annual meeting and

,..

.'

,f

•

• . j.

'

.J"

•

banquet this fall. HelllinK'to tneasure the
tree was Thad Dye, his i;{s(t{ I"~.Pye,
and Chuck Manuel, CoflS4!l'vtltlon AUl with.
the Soil Conservation S~cl!. · ·
Even though the tr~ hajj a.lllrge li'atk:
in hole In one side of the trultk, it was aliveand well. The 7·1001 high ontranco led the
way to a hollowed on( : Inside area
measuring 9 feet by 4 feet lit. U1e g~d.
Two persons have camped 1nside tlle.b'unk ""
occasionally. · ·
.;
.
After checking will! tile Ohio Forestry
Association to see how .Otll' farge~ tree lrl
Meigs County compares to others in the
State, we found that the largest sycamore
in Ohio is located ill Perry County. Its
measurements are 25 feet. circumference,
127 feet tall and a crown spread of 117 feet.
Our Meigs County t!'ee however beat
_ the largest trees which recently won "Big
Tree" contests in Athena and Vinton
counties. The largest tree in Athens
County wsa a white oalo whil:b measured 19
feet-7 inches around,..1111 feet taU and ~
crown spread of 95 feet. . ,.. ., ,
The big tree in YtntGti. C01lll!Y,,'!"as a "
sycamore which was -17•. fl!cHI mChes
around, 118 feet tall and a cro~n spread of
102feet. The competitlon1sallillfW1, but it
is also fun to win.
Next week we will anmiillfl!e ·the
placing of the remaining 24 trees, keep
your eyes posted. Congratulatitms !O Thad
Dye for entering the "Biggest Trea in the
Meigs Soil and Watef Conservation

liOME individuals may not believe this, but the drive to
ATHENS - Suzy Samuels, Club, and president of the
build a new swimming pool in the.Oid French City began not in on the poor or near poor daughter of Mary Alice French Club. She was named
1973, but as far back as 1966. The issue came up during a recent persons ln Ohio.
Samuels, 536 W. Main, a National Merit Finalist,
public hearing on recreation wben an Individual asked ' James pointed out the only Pomeroy, lias been a warded John Phillip Sousa Award
current recreation board officials why they waited until the old way a resident in Meigs or an Emily c. Murphy winner, and Girls State
Gallia County can receive an
pool was "gooe" before starting on a new one.
at
Ohio. delegate, was ·listed in
application
is at the Meigs Scholarship
r
+++
. County Welfare
University
for
the
1977-78
" Who's
Who
Among
Department .
MRS. B. B. Matthews, the recreation board's excellent
aca.
d
emic
year.
American High School
secretary for the past dozen or so years, came to the board's Upon requesting an ap·
Miss
Samuels
atte
nded
Students/'
and was selected
rescue on that one. She !Upped nwnerous pages of minutes plication, the client must Meigs High School wllere she to play with the United States
back to June 6, 1966 - eleven years ago - and promptly read provide proof of income was a member of the concert, Collegiate Wind Band. .
eligibility as well as proof of
'
what transpired that night.
Miss Samuels plans to
program eligibility. The sym phonic, and .marching
.
+++"
bands,
the
·
National
Honor
major
in music at OU.
WE checked Daily Tribune files on June 7, 1966, and this is County Welfare Department SOciety, student counf'iL PPp
District.'
~
what appeared on that particular meeting. "The Gallipolis will and must check each
to
verify
program
applicant
Recreation Board spent most of the evening discussing a bond
issue for the purpose of raising funds for a new swimming pool eligibility.
If the applicant is found to
to maintain and improve the present recreation setup.
be eligible, the County
. .
+++
Welfare
Department will
"One )loard spokesman pointed out the present pooi, now
authorize
the
County Auditor ::1:
in its 27th year ot ·operation, is actually operating on a 'day-toto
issue
a
payment
to the fuel , ~;~
day' basis.
supplier which will · be ~~
+++
Hy Bob Hoeflich
~:
" 'It lias seen its day," said another board spokesman. It credited to the customer.
income eligibility shall
was closed the final three weeks of the 1965 season because of beThe
SUMMER
households with income no
Lilies blooming by the
numerous breakdowns. Large sums of money was spent to
higher than 120 percent 'Of the
roadside,
POMEROY - Undoubtedly, we're going to be able to look
keep the pool in operation in 1966.
Community Services Ad· back on 1977 as a year of extremes as far as weather is Daisies waving to_ and fro ;
+++
Susans nodding
rriin~stration ' s
poverty concerned. Haven't the scorching days of the past week been a Black-eyed
gaily ,
"ANOTHER reason for a bond issue, according to a board guidelines.
contrast to earlier months this year when most of us were Beauty everywhere we go.
member is because of tremendous increase in recre~tion
The program of eligibility shivering in our boots? However, the situation makes for
activities.in the past 11 years. The recreation program had 72
Fragrance wafted on the
boys In 195S, compared with 367 (ages 7·16) in 1966, and that is for house.holds which, brilliant conversation which includes the individual's opinion
br·eezes
qecause of large unpaid bills, on which is wprse,the extreme cold or the scorching heat.
From th.e field s of new
figure excludes girls activities."
had their utilities sh ut off, ar.e
mowed hay;
We may be sailing down the path of "progress'! but let's
+++
with
.shut-off,
or
As
the sun goes down .i n glory
threatened
ON June 27, 1966, the Tribune said that John Milhoan, pool threatened with inability to face it. There's little ive can do about the weather except talk At t_he
close of a summer day .
manager, told recreation board officials that ·the local. tank' obtain delivery of heating about it. And - speal&lt;;ing of progress, you probably are quite
aware that the computer - like 1r or not -is playing quite a Corn now growing tall and
was having a "banner year," despite the problems ".'enlloned
Three Guys NamE!d
fuel. For this category, a one- role in your life. Personally, I'm at a time in life when 1 can't
stately.
above. Milhoan said 5,906 bathers bad used the tank during its time
payment of up to $2&gt;0 . really get too thrilled at, these new gadgets.
Fields of wheat bent !ow,
CREDIT CONWAY DIET riot-,.,
first [our weeks of operation.
with grain ;
may
be
made
on
behalf
of
the
I
probably
could
be
more
enthused
about
computers
if
I
•
+++
Telling of abundan t harvest,
The three gentlemen pictured above have a lot
household. Households must
· ON July 11, 1966, Ken Morgan, then president of tbe present unpaid bills and-or a hadn't received a bill from one company last week for $1 ,023. That we have not worked in
to smile about and a lot in common. Each one's
vain .
The correct amoung was $10.75. A repre!lentative of the
recreation board, met with the city commission and Mrs. J.
first name is Bill . each has 'lost over 150 pound s
notice or any ad· company explained away the computer but didn't mention If
Gordon Gibert met with the city school board to discuss the shut-off
and
each credits the Conway Diet In stitute for
Meadow Lark and Bob White
proposed l.S mill bond issue. Both were informed the ditional documents that ·the computer has liability insurance to cover heart attacks,
call ing
the -successful program .. _. .
providing
indebtedness.
extreme shocks and other physical ailments brought on by its To thei r mates In f ield and·
recreation board could not place a bond issue on the ballot, verify
PicttJred left l o right are Bill. Ej'eebe, :-vho has
Those households which
tree ;
because its members were appointed. It would have to be done can provide proof of dire errors.
Butterflies so busy fl itting
lost 157 pounds,' Bill DeP.ds who Ms lost 21 ()' ·
Then ~a me a note from Ohio University stating that due to
by the city schooi board or the city commission. This was
financial need at the time of a computer error lists of university graduating seniors and Whi le t heir colors bright we · pou nds and Bill Foreman who shed 1s.a pounds. ·
reported to fellow recreation board members Calvin Layne,
see.
. " It's ihe co mbin at ion that works,~·a terr jl:i c
the late ~ley Evans and Mrs. B. B. Matthews on Aug. 8, application as a result of students on the dean's list were missing a few names.
having paid large utility bills According to the revised liSt, Michael Dean Davenport, Yes, it;'s summer in ohio
healthy diet, intelligent. helpful sernli)a(,&amp; arld tlie
1966. That was as far as it got until ground was broken for the in whole or in part are also
our iobs just come anq
Middleport; Mary Sue Hayes, Pomeroy; Martin Allen And
atmosphere
of success. T!1e CarwvM: prtlgr,am &gt;,
current re&lt;'reation complex in the spring of 1975.
eligible. A one-time payment Vaughan, Pomeroy; Vicki Kara Wolfe, Racine; Judith Ann .cdme;
worked for us." say the three EJills:'! , ;.. ,,;,_; · 'f
Yet
we
have
peace
and
+++
of up to $50 may be directly
contentment
suBJEcr of tbe new swimminli pool came up again last obtained by voucher to Sams, Route 1, Reedsville; Julia Ann Hutchison, Route I,
0
Rutland, and Mark Allen Morris, Rutland, were named to the As we look at tasks well done .
week as area ~esi~nts baked in humid !!().plus degree h~t.
eligible households in this dean's list. Meigs students who graduated with high honors not
You wil t save the usual Aegist ration - ~p f. $5 t~
Tired from labor, tasks
category.
in the original listing are Edith A. King, Route I, Middleport ;
if you bring this.coupon with you to ' lin;f,tneetl"~· .•
This time schedule was Lucy Jean Holter, Route 3, Pomeroy, and Linda RebecCJI Wecompleted,
listed . Offer expires Friday, July 2~ .
;;,.• ,. ' ' ,!
can rest at close of day ;
released by Representative Rupe, Pomeroy. Julia Ann Hutchison graduated with high Thanking God for all His
'
James for the Special Crisis honors.
Blessings
Weekly
Insight
Motivation
·
s~m1hius
That come to us on our way .
Intervention.
Time wa8 when employes handled these matters and if and
.a.·. '
July 11 - On or about July wben they erred, they were given you know what. Now - 1 . - Elizabeth R. Jordan. AI ·
.
.
11 , the County Welfare wonder. Just how dP you reprimand a computer?
Pomeroy-Mondays, 7:30p.m. Meigs Inn, 1~ .Jjllain Sf.
bany, Ohjo.
Athens-Wednesdays, 7:30 p. m. Athetls ''Uhlverslty, "
Department will begin ac·
Inn, .331 Richland ( Rt. 33)
,. .
'; ~~
cepting applications.
EVEN FROM A PRACTICAL, money-saving standpoint~
Nelsonville-Mondays,
7:30p.m
.
Shafer'!'
ll.ittaur8nt,
.'
August 12 - Cut-off date lor not to mention peace of mind in knowingtbat you're healthy 33
applications.
Rt.
, Orc~ll992-3382or385-4~~ ·: ·: ..'
·• ,.
more people should be registering for the three multiphasic
August 12-19 - The County health clinic to be held at the Meigs Junior High School in
A thought for the day:
Welfare Department finishes Middleport July 111-21.
•
•
Canadian Dr. William Osler
New Members Always Welcome
determination of eligibility.
A health team \viii perform numerous free tests on you said, "Tact is the saving
Registration $5 .00 plus Weekly Seminars $2.75
August 26 - The County during the clinic - tests which would cost a hunk of money if virtue without which no
Welfare Department shall you had tllern done elsewhere. TestS will d"!!l with vision, blood woman can be a success."
notify the fuel supplier which pressure, hearing and speech, oral, scoliosis (curvature of the
accounts will be paid and the spine) and tuberculosis . One day there will be a foot specialist
amounts of such payments. on hand and you can even get blood tests done if you wish. The
Aug\lst. 30 - The fuel blood tests are optiooal and will cost $6.&gt;0 - the only charge
supplier will give the County involved in the whole ball of wax -; Those wishing the blood
Welfare Department a list of tests but are under 18 must have a signed consent slip from ·
those accounts whi ch have their parents.
.
been ·credited. and a list of
The program is not a substitution for a complete physical
,.
those whose service has been examination but will ~low many major health problems to be
restored.
discovered. Any problems found will be referred to the
August 31 - The County personal physician or to a specialist.
Welfare Department in·
-Insulates against cold
Remember a stitch in time, so do call992-7886and make an
structs the County Auditor to appoiniment for the clinic. The clinic is for all ages and is free
or heal. ·
· issue a vendor payment to regardless of income status. Several hundred more persons
-Will not chip, crack or
each participating fuel ca n be prodcessed during the four day period.
peel.
to
suppller · according
-No need to tear off
amounts determined by ille
'
A PARTY FOR POMEROY Chamber of Commerce
your roof to repair any
County Welfare Department. mempers and their guests will be held Sunday, July 17, at the
slate,
melal ; shingle or
Representative Jarnes home of Paul and Allie Simon on Route 7. Members will be
built-'up roof . Make it
suggests Meigs Countians contacted this week as io their attendance and undoubledlY
leakproof with beautiful
contact Mrs. Barbara Shuler, they 'll be looking forward to the event since the Simons are
175 Race Street, P. 0. Box known to be such marvelous hosts. Party time·wiD be f p.m . . Granules.
191, ~iddleport , Ohio, 45760,
-· Choose yours in any
614-992·2117 to see if they are
color of your choice.
eligible lor part of the $58,~4
-Add years of life to
given to Meigs County.
your present home or
In Gallia County he
building.
suggests peophi . contact
which
is
to
be
enlarged,
visitors to the Saturday af·
Virgil Cross, 848 Third
serves
all
of
French-speaking
ternoon
Sabbath School to
Avenue, P. 0. Box 219,
Africa
from
its
base
on
the
learn
of
the
worldwide work
Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, 614west
coast
of
the
continent.
of
Seventh-day
Adventists.
446-3222 to see if they are
The
offering
tn.
September
Music and small·group
eligible lor part of the $67,856
will go to build a new dor· discussion are also part of the
given to Gal!ia County.
mitory at the school.
hour-long service beginning
ONLY
Mrs. Mcintyre invites at 2.

·so

I

.

' ...

Lost!

,

\

MASTER CONTROL'M

24
HOUR

AUTOMATIC

f'

CONWAY,DIET INSTITUTE-No

24

·for

' GlVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW''

INDIVIDUAL
TIME
SEmNGS

'•

.•.-...., ~'".~&lt;;......~~
"'
.."
. ' .~~

u
·I

,.,.._ r!

'

.WOK AND.PROTECTION
TO YOUR OLD ROOF

iii'

~

;
(

~.

Exclusive
• Manual
Control.

$

• Cordless Plug-in Design.
• Full1 year Warranty.
-

~-

ol ' ' '

lo, ,,

---~-----

'

FREE

--

/'

ESTIMATES

-

$72

FORA
10' x 15' ROOM

J;

Mobile Homes

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

received their new nwnbers:

By Boyd A. Ruth

.

' .

1

their Garden T ractors wll.-1 be
Sland~out quality favorites wt"len
you've made it. If you'd H)l:e more
information about the c.omp1ete
Ar!ens Garden Tractbr line, please

K&amp;K

I

GalliJJ

the following roads have

,

Poets'
corner

IN STOCK ·
READY TO GO

• Easy to set;
makes will be a rewarding experi"ence an.;t time well spent. Ask
questions about each ll_ ke:·

announces that the hot.ises on

'By REP.. RON JAMES
COLUMBUS
State
Representative
Ron
James
I said today that some of his
constituents may lJ!' eligible
I for utility benefits and over
due fuel bills due to last

I

James

Fleming, Page, Stolte, Inc.,

'

l·

I

POMEROY

Page. project engineer for

_B ig tree contest winner ·a nnounced
.

ana

PONTIAC$

PROGRAMMED PROTECTION!

Ariens welcomes your thorough
comparison and is confident that

'

.

1"9ads numbered

,

~~~ ~_~tt'

fJ

Park • Governor

AND

•

1. How easy. is ii to attach and remove implement• from your
tractor like a Mower - Tiller or Snow-TI)rower? -$HOW ME
2. Are the attachments for your tractor Shalt Driven or Belt
Driven?- SHOW ME
~
.
3. Can 1 use more tha n one attachment at the 1ame 1ime on your
lractor?
4. Do you ofler a 2-stage Snow Thrower lor All your Garden
Tractors.?
6. '-Y.hil is the capacity of your tractor's. gaalank? ,

• Schult • Holly

77 BUIC.K S

particul~r blimp, wh,lch is one

WASI:HNGTON (UPI ) David B. BOlen, a career
diplomat, ·· is President
Carter's man for the job as
East
ambassador
to
Germany. 'Bolen, 53, a
diplomat for 27 years, a
native of Heflin, La., already
bas served at ambassadorial
posts in Botswana, LeSotho
and Swaziland.
Carter made several other
ambassadoria I nominations
Friday, amons them:
Bulgaria - Dr. Raymond
L. Garthoff, 48, Milford,
Conn., a specialist on Soviei
affairs for 20 years for the
Army, NATO and. the State
Department.
Nicaragua - Dr. Mauricio
Solaun, 42, a native of Cuba, a
sociologist at the University
of)llinois since 1966 ..
Guyana - John R. Burke,
52, Madison, Wis., a State
Department foreign service
officer since 1956 and deputy
chief of mission in Bangkok
since 1976.

Ask these
questions
before
,buying any
Garden Tractor.
When you're shopplnQ fo r a. garden

Eligibility e~plained
-f or utility benefits
r------------------------y
1 Datelirie
.I

•

Suppleu;tental Grant Given
Bend Area Medical Center

..

REV. &amp; MRS. STURM

Houses on seven

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND .,
SUPPLY COMPANY

915-3308

•

Store Hrs. Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sit. 8-12
•

Adventists to

enlarge college
POMEROY - In a. ~pie­
to-people program, members
of the Pomeroy Seventh-day
Adventist Church will give an
offering later this year to
enlarge a college in the
United Republic of Cameron. ·
Clara Mcintyre, Sabbath
School Superintendent, said
the Aodventlst Seminary at
, Nanga-Eboko, Cameron .

GUARANTEE
ON BOlH

MATERIAlS AND.
lABOlt

Required-

�•
D-1-TI&gt;eSwulay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Juiy 10. 1!177

I.A&gt;-1 ne :.unoay

.

137 PINE ST., GAU.IPOUS

BANQUET

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY

CHICKEN

SMOKED
·PICNICS
WHOLE

MONDAY, JULY 11TH

COUHTnY STOnES

THRU
SATURDAY, JULY 16TH

BANQUET

USDA CHOICE

GROUND
'

'

CHICKEN
LIVERS

'

SIRLOIN ·STEAK

BEEF

s

FAIRBANKS, Alaska tUPI) - Oil in the Alaska pipeline
apparently spilled out through a malfunctioning valve and ignited, setting off an explosion that destroyed a key pumping
station, killed a man and brought the flow of oil from Alaska's
north slope to a halt for the second lime in five days,
investigators reported today.
The explosion and resulting fire at Pump Station No. 8 on the
Alaska pipeline filled the sky wiUJ clouds of biUowing smoke
that could be seen in Fairbanks, 37 miles to the north.
'
The Department of Transportation in Washington said a
preliminary report from pipeline· safety officials at the scene
indicated the explosion resulted from a valve malfunction at
the station.
•
" They .were switching from one pump to the other," said
spokesman David Jewell, "and they had completed the switch·
over and started to do m;~intenance work.
"Ap_parently - and I stress the word apparently- something went wrong with a valve and a large am~unt of oil st(t'd

'

2 LB.

SALE DATES:

Oil piPeline valVe malfunctions, .man killed

FRENOt CITY BRAIID

2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

59t

39

SLICED

~utWa}J' ~imts-

SMOKED PICNICS.-........~:.69~

LB.

flowing into the station itself.
"What ignited U1e oil we don't know and we may never know .
The station was completely demolished. Apparently it's a total
writeoff."
Pipeline and government experts were to survey the damage
.and try to determine whether the pumping station could be
bypassed and the oil now resumed.
Transportation Secretary Brock Adams will make the final
decision based on a recommendation by his Oifice of Pipeline
Salety,-Jewell said. If ijle propusal is rejected, he said, "the
pipeline will be shut down."
.
. He said, however, that "it appears" there was no damage to
the pipeline itself.
smoke billowed up from the pump _building, above the
underground pipeline, and could be seen in Fairbanks, 37.miles
away .. So,me oil escaped and spilled in the pwnp station
complex, cleared from a thick forest.
·

VOL

12

/

'NO. 23

,imtitttl
?AGE 1-D

SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1977

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

BANQUET

TASTEE

JONES BOYS

BOLOGNA.

· SLICE-D BACON

59~.

MACARONI

BUFFET
SUPPERS
32 99~

Energy is topic

20 COUNT

DINNERS

WIENERS

7~

$}00
oz.
•

.·

ALL TEMPERATURE .

CHEER
SALTINES

·.
84

oz.

. $19~

1-LB. ZESTA

''

···.·~

STORE HOURS: 9 TO 7

........·.. --.,-.. "• .....
"•

.

'

CLOSED SUNDAY

89~

R·ISCO OlL
2

CORONET

LADIES' &amp; GIRLS'

LADIES' • MEN'S

SUMMER

BOYS' - GIRLS'

SHOES
·500A&gt;off

A'LL .

.

'

NAPKINS

180 COUNT

8g~

PEPSI COLA ·

or

SUMMER
CLOTHING

20 COUNT HEFTY
•

TRASH BAGS

LADIES' &amp; GIRLS'-

jSUMMER.

SLEEPWEAR

LADIES' • MEN'S
BOYS' • GIRLS'

SWIM
SUITS

rboff

o0 ·
.OFF
SPECIAL GROUP

FISHING
T·ACKLE

By 'LEE LEONARD
Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senale is to vote
Tuesday on House-passed
legislation providing for " lair
distnissal" procedures and
requiring
ev3luation ,
programs . for all public
school teachers.
The measure, ·strpngly
ba~ked by Ule Ohio Education
Association, representing
80,000 teachers, requires that
each of Ohio's 616 school
boards establil!h a procedure
for
evaluating
the
performance of teachers by
March 1, 1978.
,
The follo\\ing school year,
dismissals aod promotions
will have to hinge on Ulose

TISSUE

hijack
plane

DEL MONTE

PEACHES.
89~

·3

ILK

13 oz.

.YELLOW

ONIONS

·PEACHE.S
ICEBERG

' any

Gunmen

4 PACK

PORK &amp; BEANS ·
ELBERTA
FREE STONE

and

dismissals will have to be
ac~ompariied
by
fair
hearings with ample notice.
Any teacher not to be rehired for the 19711-79 school
year would ooveto be notified
in writing by April 30,. 1978,
under terms of the bilL
Althou~h those teachers

COnONELLE BATHROOM

~ 59-~

3 LBS.

LBS.

$1

3
H!ADS$1
LEITUCE

'

'

firm facing
criminal suits

KUWAIT (UP!)- A band
of gunmen disguised as
Syrian soldiers took over a
Beirut-to-Kuwait flight with
mo~ethan 40 persons aboard
Friday and forced it to land in
Kuw;:~it, where Uley began
freeing hostages · while
reportedly demanding the
release of 300 prisoners from
six Arab countries. · ·
The Palestine Liberiition
Organization identified the
leader of the hijackers ~
believed to number between 9
and 12 - as Abu Saad and
said he was a forger and
"intelligence -agent for
certain circles" wanted by
· the Arabs themselves.
By late this afternoon the
gunmen had released 18 hostages. Approximately 39
others,
including
12
crew,members, were still
aboard the Kuwait Airways
Boeing 707 in sweltering, usdegree heat.
Reliable sources said the
hijackers had promised to
release all the hostages if a
high Kuwaiti offi&lt;;ial would
accompany
them an a Oight
1
lo Aden, South Yemen, where
they said they would
SW"render 1o auth(ll'ities.

would be able to respond to
but not appeal Ule decision ,
sponsors believe it would
eliminate mass layoffs for no
good reason .before the bill
takes effect July I, 1978.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. Michael P. Stinziano, ·[)..
Columbits, sets up five types
of co,ntracts for teachers. The

By DOUGLAS STANGLIN
MOSCOW (UP!) ~ The
Soviet Union said Saturday
talk about U.S. development
of Ule neutron bomb shows
Ulal President Carter's " love
of man" philosophy is
11
nothing more than rhetoric
aroWJd a myth."
The Soviet news agency
signed by political analyst
Yuri Korriilov, said the
controversia l
weapon,
designed to kill people while
leaving buildings intact,
opeos a new rou11d in the
arms race and creates new
problems in strategic arms
limitation talks.
" But there is another
aspect to Ulis question," Tass
said. "The moral aspect Ulat
· stems precisely from the
destructive and refined
nature of the new •wonder
~ weapon.'"

President Carter has said

"co ntinuing

contract''

es tablishing tenure comes
after three years' experience
and 18 hours of course work .
Teacllers-achieving tenure
would be able to be dismissed
ooly for failure to" fulfill a
contra ct or for gross immoral
conduct.
Although some ·c hanges
have been made in the bill
since it left the House, school
admin,istrator groups are still
opposed to it btlcause it1imils

sehool board flexibility in Committee is expected to wells in Ule eastern portimi of
dismissals.
vote· Tuesday afternoon on the lake.
The
House
Finance legislation extending the ban
An
amendment
in
Committee will continue its on gas drilling under Lake committee
last
week
work this week on the Senate· Erie for two more years.
reversed Ule intent, but Sen .
passed " language" portion. of
As passed by t!&gt;e Senate, Anthony 0. Calabrese, 0the 1978-79 b\'dget, wtlh the bill banned oil drilling Cieveland, chief sponsor, said
meetmgs Tuesday afternoon · permanently but authorized he · hopes
to
restore
and
Wednesda y
and the state to drill three test gas
Thursday mornings.
,
.
A n.
e d li c a t i o. ri ~:rt?~?t~~{?~~~f\J~?!~~~~I\~????t~~?~.:~~r~~~~~~~~~~~~;)~ff~~~~~~I~t~~t:~~f~:
subcommittee will continue
its consideration of the school

~~~ft\"t:'/~~:::~~~h~hich is

,

A House Commerce and
Labor subcommittee has
scheduled meetings Tuesday
afternoon and Thursday
morning on a public employe
bargaining bill already
approved by the Senate.
The House Agriculture and
Natural Resources

he will decide· next. month
whetlier the new bombs
should be produced.
Tass chided the White
House for ill; talk about "love
of peace and love o£ man,"
saying: "How can one pose as
a champion of human rights
and at the . same time
brandishing the · neutron
bomb that Ulreatens the lives
of millions of people?"
"Its propaganda campaign
about its 'love of man' is
nothing more than rhetoric

around a myt.Ji.."

new types ot neutron
warheads for use in artillery
shells and missiles. It hopes
to put· them into production

Congress this year, although
the Senate voted to freeze the · ·
money until Carter makes his

next year, for operation in

Proponents of the weapon
say it will leave Soviet tanks
more vulnerable am! also will
affect a smaller area . than
present nuclear devices.

1979, pending any scrapping
of funds by Congress.
Funds for production of the
bomb itself were approved by

decision.

KSU protest
•
•
contmumg.·

The neutron warhead has
only· about one-tenth of the
blast and heat of the present By ROBERT PENICK ·
law, the requirements of the
nuclear weapon, but spreads
KENT, Ohio (UP!')
contract, and Ule obligations
an intense cloud of neutron Despite the threat of arrest of UJe state and the university
radiation toot kills people . Sunday morning, "Tent City" to insure peaceful and
whlle leavmg str ucture squatters protesting a orderly compliance with the
.
proposed gymnasium law.
mtact. .
There IS no evtdence the complex near the site of the
" We have considered
neutron warhead is currently 1970 Kent State shootings, rotating the position of the
m productton , although . the "vow to " peacefully resist" building on the site to
Pentagon wants to butld three expulsion.
accomodate concern for the
Kent State University trees, hills and proximity to · ·
President Glenn A. Olds told Ule actual shootings of May 4, .
the
st udents
Saturday 1970,wilh no feasible )ega! or
morning they must vacate viable results," he said ..
the area so construction can
Olds said he told the Tent
begin on the:$6 million gym. . City residents May· 18 he
"All students and other "would alert aU of you here so.
persons
are hereby ordered you would have ample tinte to
experimental drilling when
to
leave
and vacate the area vacate the premises. The
the measure reaches the
on
and
around
Ule site of the time has come and that's why
House floor .
new
health,
physical I'm here ."
The Senate has scheduled a
education
and
recreation
Alan Canfora, one of the
Monday vote on legislation
building
no
later
than
nine
wounded in 1970 and a
encouraging homeowners to
Sunday,
July
10,
at
8
a.m,"
T~nt
City
resident, said, "We
insulate properly.
The Senate reconvenes Olds told the residents of will not be moved. We are
here to stay and guard this
Monday at 7:30p.m. an.d the "Tent City."
ADO\lt
100
persons
oove
land."
House Tuesday · ai 10:30
been camped out on Ule site
As Olds walked away, stua.m.
since May 12 as a protest dents chanied, " Remember
against the gym, which would Kent State." ,
··
occupy part of · the ground · During memorial services
where four KSU students last May 4, activist attorney
were killed and nine wounded William Kunstler, who
by Ohio National Guard defended students charged
troops during an antiwar with various crimes following
protest on May 4, 1970 .•1
the shootings, said he would .
They say tile area shoUld be defend any persons arrested
left alone, or designated an while protesting the gym.
historical
site
as
a
Canfora said Mr. and Mrs.
memorial to the killed and Martin Scheuer, parents of
wounded.
Sandra Scheuer, one the slain
HUNTINGTON PARK ,
Olds did not specify what students, would, be at the site
Calif. (UP!)~ Police , at first action would be taken, but . Sunday morning. They .and
baffled by why four children told those gathered several parents of other killed qr
walked directly into the path times that the site "would be wounded in the shooting have
of a freight · train, whistle ·cleared. "
participated .in protests
'blaring and a brakeman '. After
reading . his against the gym. Canfora
screaming at them, learned statement, Olds said, "We said the Tent City residents
Friday that some of the have
consulted
with plan to " peacefully resist
children may have been interested parties to explore arrest."
mentally handicapped.
and confinn the intent of the
Three were killed and the
fourth critically injured .

Pope's patience
•
•
IS runnmg out
By ERNEST SAKLER
.. VATICAN CITY (UP!)
The Vatican said SaturdaY
Pope Paul VI has reacted
with "patience" toward rebel
French Archbishop Marcel
Lefebvre but that he may
have to excommunicate him
and take steps against his
followers.
'The warning came as the
traditionalist archbishop,
who has called the Pope a
"heretic" and a "tool of
Communism," is preparing
to visit Texas, Mexico, Peru
and Brazil in an attempt to
drum up support for his
conservative views. ·
Discussing the case foc the
first time since Lefebvre last
month ordained 14 new
priests at 'his Swiss seminary
in violation of a papal ban,
Msgr. Romeo Panciroli, the
Vatican spokesman, said
Lefebv.[~ · had repeatedly
defied papal·autbority.
"In such a case of blatant
dissidence , which causes
feelings of profound pain and
spiritual bitterneos, it is
wulerstandable that the Holy
See · ~hould proceed with
patience, cautiousness and
. due objectivity, always
taking into aCcount the right
to resort to SIICh ·canon law
sanctions as may be
required," Panclroll said.
Since.the Pope bas already
suspended Lefebvre from his
priestly functions, the only
possible sanction left against
him would be formlll excom·
munication - an order
. cutting him ell f!'&lt;m the
Roman Catholic Chllrch and
barring him from receiving
any of its seven sacraments.

Toughest project ever Children
undertaken by private walk into
construction industry sure death

FAIRBANKS, Alaska. (UPI) -The $9 billl~n, 799-mile
Alaskati pipeline Is the great~st project ever taken by the
. private construction industry.
Over physical obstacles of logistics and dispiriting cold,
and human roadblocks of environmentalists and others, the
pipeline and its 12 pumping stations snaked from Prudhoe
Bay on the Arctic Ocean to the town of Valdez on Alaska's
southent coast during the three years of actual construction.
" When you consider the distance - everydmt and bolt
had to be brought to tlie site," said Phil Greene, spokesman
for the largest contractor on the-"projecto, F1uor Engineers
and Construetnrs.
,
Not only the distance Involved but Ule environmental
·restrictions were Uke nothing that has ever been Imposed on
a private project before. "
In some areas, no maps were available and the plpellne
company had to survey before they could pl!ln' tbe rpute.
Tem(eralures at Prudhoe Bay sometimes get so cold thai a
man can only work for 10 minutes , then has to go Inside lor 20
or 30 minutes to warm up. ·
·. , .
Roads had to be built across lbe permafrost and tundra
all the while taking special precautions to minimize environ:
mental damage.
·
Tbe 411-inch pipe Is elevated for 382 miles of Its length,
and underground for the rest. When at Its penk, it is expected
to deliver enough oll to Valdez to fill 21 oil tankers a week,
to 110,000 parrels an hour.
loading 80,000
.

Vatican sources said. the
reference to "canon law"
"We
have
received
sanctions in(iicated that if the
information
that
at
least one
Pope decides to act against
of
the
children
was
mentally
Lefebvre,
he
. would
retarded
and
that's
all we
excommunicate him in full
know,"
said
Police
Chief
legal form instead of simply
Russell Loren ; "We are ,
declaring that he ms cut
investigating Ule possibility
himself off from the church.
WASHINGTON (UPI) Ulat the other children may
. The last archbishop to be
President Carter served
also
have
had
some
kind
of
excommuniiJB ted was South
notice on Congress Saturday
oondicaps ..
Vietnam's Pierre Martin Ngo
he will "be back again next
We
do
not
believe
the
"
Dinh Thuc in 1976 · for
year" oo Capitol Hill with any
childrenwere
playing
a
game
unlawful ordinations of
parts of his energy package
of
'chicken'
and
we
don't
priests in Spain. Thuc, a
believe they were trying to which · are not approved this
brother of slain former South
commit suicide- that we're se~Ssion.
Vietnamese President Ngo
" ! don 't think there is any
sure
of," the police chief
Dinh Diem, has since become
doubt that the nation faces
reconciled with the Church.
::t:t:::::::::::::::::::::;t:;:::::;:::t:::tf:::::: .
of the children was devastating consequences in
Persons excommunicated
the
absence
of
a
deaf,
Loren
added.
from the .Roman Catholic
Julia Kline 10, along with comprehensive and fair and
Church over the centuries
Jason Lack, 6, and his sister understanda~1e · energy ·
have ranged from such early
Amanda, 7, all of nearby policy," Carter said . .
heretics as Arius, the 4UJ
Cudahy, were' killed instantly
" If we do 11ot get 100 per
Cehtury priest who said
Thursday when Uley were hit cent of oitr program Uiis
.
ALLENWOOD,
Pa.
(UP!)
boycotted
diruier
Thursday
Christ was not equal to. God,
by
the
slow'moving year, we will be hack next
to "Henry IV, ·the ·,&lt;Jerman - Convicted Watergate and breakfast ~nd lunch .
locomotive as they , walked year,'' he told reporters after
Gorilon·Uddy
\\:as
.FJiday
to
protest
a
burglar
G.
emperor who won absolution
along railroad lies between a three-hour question and
from Pope Gregory VII in one of 530 irunates who staged rearrangement of thefr living
the tracks . Julia's ~ster, answer session attended by 43
1077bykneeling before him in a hunger strike at the quarters.
Holly,
8, was critically governors.
Allenwood federal minimum
Justice Department
the snow at .Can ossa.
Florida Gov. Reubin
pris on,
,and sources said Uddy might be injured.
M o r e
r e c e n I security
When
the
brakeman
,
, Askew, chairman of the
excommunicates
included authorities indicate . ~th e jeopardizing a possible
Governors'
Maurice Dieu, 56, first saw National
action
could
cloud
his
favorable
decision
by
the
U.S.
Napoleon Bonaparte, late
the children and realized they Conference whic h jointly
·
application
for
parole.
.
·
Parole
Commission,
which
·is
.
Argentine dictator Juan D.
The strike ended Friday scheduled to vote Tuesday on were not heeding the train's sponsored the two-day
Peron, who later became
deafening horn, he got out of. gathering at the White House,
·
aflet
all but 10 of the 540 his parole application.
reconciled with the Church,
Ule cabin and stood on the said it would "~!!! to!lllly
and Haiti's Francois "Papa inmates at the prison
platform at the very front of incorrect" to assume the
Doc" Duvalier.
Ule train, holding oo ,by one session was a bid to lobby for
Lefebvre, 71, a former
hand and screaming to the Carter's energy program.
archbishop of Dakar, has
children.
But the President made a
been at odds with the Vatican
The train, with brakes on strong pu.sh for his proposals
for . three years for · his
heart attack, Ule FBI said. and slowed to IS miles an and indirectly. acknowledged
CHICAGO
(UP!)
opposition to the modern
The Chicago Tribune hour , slammed into - the that oome of his plans may
' language Mass, other Church Anthony J . " Big tuna "
Accardo was children as they walked with not make it through Congress
Accardo,
a
onetime . reported
reforms
and
fri~ndly
their heads dOW!\, not once Ulis year.
relatiOIIS with nooCaUJolics, bodyguard for crime czar AI stricken two weeks after a
looking up at Ule train.
As
congressional
non-Christians ·· and Capone and reputed head of " mini-summit meeting" of
"They never kne\0 what hit ' committees the past few
the Chicago l·rime syndicate, Midw•st syndicatl! leaders in
nonbelievers.
thei'n," said Dieu,
weeks deleted major parts of
is recuperating from a severe. Ule Bahamas.

Carter will be
back next year

~

.:::::::tt:{::::;r::: : : : :f :\:ffff : ::::tt::::::: :

~ ad~~~

-Liddy messed up parole big

Bodyguard for Capone i~ ill

. l
(

•

TOLEDO, Ohio ~UP!) - Three oorthwestern Oblo
archaeological sites have been nominated for listing on the
National&gt; Register of Historic Places by lite Ohio Historic
Preservation Office.
The three sites are all in Wood County along the east
bank of the Maumee River. They represent three dllferent
time periods in the prehistoric occupation of northwestern
Ohio.
The three sites are the Fort Meigs site at Fort Meigs
State Mem&lt;lrial Park·; the MacNichol site "ear Perrysburg
and the Dodge Site near Waterville.
G. Michael Prall, regional archaeologist for the
Preservation _Office and an adjunct instructor In
anthropology at the University of Toledo, said the sites were
occupied more than 1,670 ye~rs ago.

Soviets criticize president

Tass, in a commentary
COLUMBUS ( UP! ) Attorney General William
Brown said ·Friday he filed
suits in Hamilton County
courts against the S . &amp; · J
Mortgage Service, cbargirig
Fran~ J. jansen and Michael
Sheppard with violating the
state's Consumer Sales
Practices Act and the state's
debt pool slatute.
The two were charged with
misrepresenting the services
they offer and the price of
such services, ope rating
without a license aqd
misleading consumers.

Ancient Ohio sites bid
for historic register

'FBir dismissal' vote by Ohio Senate Tuesday

evaluations,

32 oz.
CANNISTER

Debt pooling .

WASHINGTON (UP! ) the
absence
of
a Askew, who is chairman of
President Carter answered
comprehensive, and fair and the National Governors'
energy-related questions
understandable energy ., Conference, said the meeting
policy."
"marks ... a real dialogue
from 43 governors for nearly
three hours today, then
" The implementation of between
the
federal
warned that "the nation faces
such a policy ... falls to a government " and Ule states .
devastating consequences"
major · degree on the
Askew ca lled it "a very
very
unless Congress approves a shoulders of governors and constructive . .. .
comprehensive plan to deal also offi cials of (he locltiJeve! productive exchange.' '
The conference was schewith the energy shortage. . of government," he said.
''H we do not get 100 per
Carter said the governors duled to include 44 governors,
cent of our program this would be invited to return to but Texas Gov. Dolph Briscoe
year , we will be back next the White Ho~ soon for skipped it because of a
year," Carter told reporters another session tmt would special session of the Texas
during a recess of a two-day deal
with
enhanced state legislature.
energy · conference with production of energy. ·
Carler 's chief energy
governors.
The president said his ex- adviser, James Schlesinger,
" !don't think there is any change with the governors said the administration is
doubt that Ule nation faces was
" frank
and shooting for a one-third
devaslating consequences in · . productive."
increase in domestic energy,
'Florida Gov . Reub in supplies.

UP~

.

lrrunediately after the explosion, at 3:40p.m. Alaska time ,
the oil in Ule pipeliqe was halted and locked in the pipeline. rt
had already flowed 30 miles past the pwnping station when the
blast occurred .
The body of the victil]l, who was not identified, was found in
the debris hours after the blast 'The live other pipeline
workers were treated for minor injuries at nearby hospitals
and released. _ . ,
Adjoining buildings, including three oil storage tanks, did
not appear to have been affected by the blast, which destroyed
tWo giant turbines which keep the oil moving, according to UP!
reporter Robert J. Fuss, who flew over~ scene early today.
Fuss said smoke was still rising froni'{the remains of the
demoli~ed building and the area around tll&amp;pump station was
l;&gt;lackened from the fire and explosio.n.
· . SOme300 men wereatthe site, but most were in a camp area,
hundreds of yards away from where the explosion occurred.
Tanker airplanes dropped chemicals on the raging fire and the
Air Force rushed special crash trucks from a nearby air base.
The fire was cootrolled Friday evening.
Three National Transportation Safety Board investigators
new from Washington, accompanied by board member
William R. Haley, to conduct a full probe o~ thii explosion.

"'

'

.}

'

Carter's propoSal, such as the
standby gasoline tax, White
House policy bas been to fight
for restoration of the plan
further
long in
the
congressional process.
But now Carter, who has
complained about the intenSe
lobbying efforts of oil and
automobile interests,
appears to he cooceding that
some of. the proposals may be
lost for this session.
While the White House
described the conference as a
vehicle to exchange ideas
with state officials, Carter
also made clear he. is trying
to enlist.: support for . his
prograin.
He told reporters the
success of such attempts
"fall to a major degree on the
shoulders of governors and
also officials of the local level
of governll!ent."
The conference was part of
a series of While· House
efforts to publicize dwindling
energy supplies. In April the
President said . an energy
crisis was at hand and
outlined actions he said were
needed to cope with it,
Besides
pushing
for
congressional action on his
energy program, Carter oos
conducted a campaign to
garner public support for
energy conservation and
increase public awareness.

l

�•
D-%- ,.,.., SUtlda)' Tull&lt;'S-&amp;IItlllt'l, Swlday, Julr 10. t•m

the late

Ohio dairy field . day set for West Virginia;

noted t.·onservation ist and
Pulitzer·praze winnmg

•

Gallipo,lis cow makes good at Malabar farm
C. C. Lewis

Number 51
earns $3,0()0'

•

host .Tuesday
GALUPOUS - Ohio is
putting on a !ield day in West"
Virginia. Actually , tt' s
Southeast Ohio Wlth its dairy
field day scheduled Tuesday,
• July !ZontheC. C. LewiS, Jr.,
farm four mtles above Point
Pleasant on Rt. 62 , a farm
renowned for its highly
productive Holsteins . 300 of
til em
The extenston servtce,
centered 1n Jackson~ is
putting on tile event which
will run from 12:30 to 2:45
p.m . Registration is from 12
to 12:30.
First phase of the event will
be to tour the alfalfa and corn
fields . There are 100 acres of
alfalfa and 400 acres of corn,
and emphasis wtll he on htgh·
yieldmg hay and use of the
haybine. For com there 'll he
a study of MOM tolerance
hybrtds
( Matze
dwarf
mosaic) in cooperation with
West Virginia University.
C. C. Lewis wiU he there
along witll his farm manager
- Cody Evtck- and John F.

C. C. LEWIS, JR., AND WIWAM P. SMITII,
Jackson area extension agent, farm management, survey
part of tile 30&lt;kow Holstein dairy l:lerd oo LewiS's !ann
nortll of Pmnt Pleasant where the Southeastern Ohio dairy
fteld day wtU he held July 12. The structure is a free-stall

Agriculture and
our community

Underwood, Jackson, Ohio,
·area agronomist, and Charles
Sperow, West Virgima
Universtty
extension
agronomist. .
Next phase for the visiting
dairymen will he feed storage
and handling. Agam with
Host Lewis will he, for the
mspection of dairy cattle, Dr.
John Staubus, Ohio State
University extenston datry
specialist; for calf-raising,
there'll he a relatively new
calf bam to see.
Third phase will he con·
sideratwn of daity housmg,
featuring a free-stall bam
and group feeding Glenn
Simmons, Lewis
herd
manager R. ~lv~ Porterfield,
extension
dairy
OSU
specialist, and William P
Smith, Jackson, Ohio, area
•xtension f&amp;nn management
- "'eCiahst, w1ll be heard.
'
Subjects · wUl be profttable

By Bryson R. (Bud) Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

GALIJPOUS- Next Tuesday, July 12, is a special day
that we have planned for local dau-yrnen. I am referring to tile
summer Dairy Field Day at the Charles C. Lewis, Jr. Oldtown
Farm on Route 62 above Pt. Pleasant. Last year we held a
stmilar event at tile Roush !ann tn Metgs County and we hope
thiS will become an annual event for our area. It will take the
partictpation of dall')' families to make II a success.
So I encourage Gallia dairymen to take time out in the
afternoon and attend.
The program will revol~ aroond Mr .. Lewis sharing with us
what IS working on his dairy farm m tenns of facilities,
feeding, herd health, com and alfalfa production and farm
management.
Some ofthe thmgs you will see and hear about mclude:
- 300 Holsteu1 Cow Herd - Bred AI
- 16,000 lb. Roll!ng Herd Ave,
-Free Stall Housing.
- Drylog Feedii!g; Magnetic Concentrate Feeders, Truck
Mixer with Scales, Alfalfa Haylage and Hay and Com Silage .
- Special Calf Raising Bam.
- Effective Fann Management.
f::arm
m anacC" ment
- 300 Acres of Com: Corn Hybrid Virus Trials (W.Va.
~ . oeedure s, DHlA (Datry University).
nerd Imp ro veme nt
- 100 Acres of Alfalfa - Orchardgrass.
assllciation ) recilrds 1 and
- Efficient Milking Facilities.
herd health.
The program gets underway at 12 :30 pm ..and wiU he over
The datry field day will end • at 2:45p.m.- in time for you to get home to milk. So, plan now
Nitll a tour of tile milkrng to attend. I think you'll he"l!lad you did.
'
facilitieS.

.

Southside pond completed
By John Cooper
Couservatlon Service
POINT PLEASANT
Work has been completed on
· the Don Bell pond at
Southside . ThiS pond ts
located adjacent to Route 35 a
mile or so above Little Six·
teen Mile Creek
It is a dugout pond and has
dimensions of 300 feet length,
100 feet width and a depty of
SIX leet. The Side slopes rnto
tile pond are approximately

•

lay of the land
2:1. Twenty-seven hundred
yards of earth were excavated in order to make the
pond basin and the excavated
area is estimated to hold
626,000 gallons of water.
The Bells plan to use the

water

t"

for

recreation,

livestock water and fire
control. The main part or the
excavation was done by the
bulldozer belonging to the
Western Soil ConservatiOn
District operated by Chester
Stone. However , T. A.
Wtlhamson, a neighbor,
assisted some witll the earth·
moving with his D-7 Cater·

pillar bulldozer.

being built on the lower side
or the drall) tile in order to
Clifford Barnett on Ten Insure that all the water is
Mile Creek behtnd West collected The water will be
Columbia has started con· conveyed from the catch
struction ol a diverswn ditch basin to a reservoir at a lower
and waterway. The diversion elevation where the pwnp
1f located on the lower side of will be tnstalled which will
tile road and parallel with the pump the water to the
road with tile purpose of the headquarters area.
ditch heing to collect water
from some road culverta and
Plans are completed c and
to carry it to a constructed construction is expected to
waterway nearby. By catch· start in the near future on tile
ing the water and carrying pond at the Riverside Golf
it m a planned channel, a wet Course. The purpose of this
area will he ehminated. Work pond is to raise northern pike
on these projects is being fingerlings which will he
done by the district bulldozer. released tnto the Ohio River
nearby.
Harry Kreglo, whose farm
Steve Mutll, Fish Btologjst·
is on Long Ridge off Jerries of the Department of Natural
Run Road, is working on two Resources, has wtiated a
spring developments These pike fingerling program, in
•.springs will be used to Mason County. Two previous
provide livestock water and pike fingerlmg ponds have
other uses around the !ann been built. One of these is on
headqua11ers. These springs the Clair Lee Cottrill farm at
are seepy places on the oide West Columbia and the other
of the hill. The water is is on the A. E. Sommer farm
collected by use of 15 feet or at Southside.
so of four-mch drain tile
which will collect the water
PLEASANT VALLEY
and cam::y tt to a catch basin.
DISCHARGES - Golden
A concrete cutoff wall is
Keck, Point Pfeasant; Mrs.

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . - - - - - · John
McGuire,
Northup;Point
Mrs.
William
Litchfield,
Pleasant; Andrew BJ.Irton,
Mason; Cora Bonecutter,
Point
Pleasant;
Pearl
McOermitt, Point Pleasant;
Harry Searls, Southside ;
Betty Ross, Racine; Ms.
Robert Thornton. Point
Pleasant;
Mrs. Charles
- J.a..
Woodall, Kanauga; Shirley
Harmon, Henderson; Mrs.
Dewey Wroten , Gallipolis
versary 1s an approFerry; Glenn Paxton, Point
priate T1me to salute the
Pleasant; George Roberts,
greatest producer of food
Point Pleasant and George
and f1be' 1n the world Reitrnite, Pomeroy.
Amerocan farmers
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Sixty,years ago, the Land Bank
established lo help the farmer by
Admitted
William
pro111ding dependable. long-term
Morris, Pomeroy;
Ava
fmancmg .
Greenlees, Pomeroy; Ida
We 've changed a lot over !hose
Young , Shade;
Wilma
years , bul our purpose has remamed
Parrnalee, Middleport;
the same .. to provtde farmers w1lh
Edward Bowen, Pomeroy;
THE BANK OF
the credit to produce that food
Clara Lavendar, SyracUBe.
GENERATIONS
and fiber
Discharged
Pearl
Clyde&amp;. Walker Mgr.
Reeves,
Shirley
Hubbard,
Gallipolis Pb.446-0203
Rlnr Rood
Gilberl Wtlson.

The American

farmer desenes---lot f!fcr~dit.

•

barn, the manger running along a pavement under a roof
projection. A truck witll a ration-mixer in the bed moves
along the pavement and augers a complete ration into tile
manger. Mindy Kearns took ttus?"wsphoto .

County agent's
corner

By JohnC.Rlce
Esteusloo Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - Blanching is a must for most foods in aU
fonns of home food preservation, says Evelyn Gray,
Extension nutritionist at The Ohio State University. Blanching
IS treating lruits and vegetables mlive steam or boiling water,
she explains.
The purposes of blanching are to:
-Inactivate tile enzymes (protein substances tllat recur
naturally m all living tiSSues) . Heating changes the form, of
enzymes so tlley can no longer cause undesirable changes m
the product bemg preserved.
-Soften the product, til us making it easier to band! e.
- Remove gases normally held in livmg tissues.
- Improve tile flavor by removing eartlly or viny flavors.
- Remove some of the organisms nonnally present on the
product. These come from soil and all'.
Why must enzymes he inacbvated? In vegetables,
especially, they function to mature the product. Their action
does not stop when the product is harvested. If enzymes are not
inactivated, changes in vegetables will make tllem ~rser or
more woody and change the flavors. Enzymes m fruit more
often result in browning or otller off colors.
Hard water is undesirable for blanching because it toughens
many vegetables. If water is hard, It may he softened with
water softening chemicals. Follow manufacturer's
instructions lor softener use.
HOW TO BLANCH
For all methods of preservation some steps in blanching
are the same:
1. Prepare tile food to he blanched as you would for table
use. Wasl1. If pesticide residues are present, use a detergent
wash and rmse in cold water. Drain, prepare (peel, cut, core,
etc.) as appropriate.
2. Place food to he blanched in a blanching basket or
ImproVISed container such as a french.fry basket, a double
thickness of cheesecloth over a shaped-wire banger, or another
kind of open colander or basket.
3. Blanche the produce : (a) Brmg water to a boilm a large
covered kettle with a rack above the water leveL When steam
flows freely around edges of tile lid, open kettle and place
product (not over 1 or 2 pounds or I or 2pints) on rack. Replace
lid. When steam again flows around lid, begin to count time .
(b) Bring water to a boil In a large kettle . Use at least four
quarts of water for each I .pound hatch of vegetables to he
blanched at one time. Add vegetables, either in wire basket or
cheesecloth bag, or directly into water. Begin to count time as
soon as vegetables are immersed.
4. Time the process for freezing. This is very Important.
Exact timing will provide enough heat to inactivate the
enzymes, yet keep the desired fresh' flavor .
5. Remove and chill at once for freezing.
6. Process. You should know that : (I) Preparing lruit in
hot syrup is a blanching metllod; (2) Steam blanching causes
leSs loss of nutrients into water; (3) blanching water is usually
discarded because of soil and strong flavors. Change water
frequently when blanching in bo!ling water.
GREEEN LEAFY VEGETABLES and snap beans should
he l&gt;lanched in water at 175-180degrees F., not steam. (Recent
research shows that newer, more lender varieties of beans
soften if boiled or steamed.)
Recommended blanching times for various vegetables and
fruits are listed in Form 369A, "How To Freeze Fruits and
Vegetables in the Home," available at county Extension
Service offices. They may also he found in otller freezing and
equipment guidebooks.
These are general directions. For more detatls, contact
yow- county Extension Service Office.
TWO REAPPOINTED
OOLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes Friday
reappointed
Oscar
L.
Teagarden, Oak Harbor, to
the
Ohio
' Turnptke
Commission and Edwin F.
Mulligan,
to the

Ohio Water Development
Authority.
Teagarden 11:1 president of
the J. - Weller Co. and
president of the National
Bank of Oak Harbor.
Mulligan is president of the
Jones Metal Products Co.

Louis Bromfield,

By J . B. Porter
POINT PLEASANT - By
coincidence , with a show of
Holsteins at the C. C. Lewis
Jr. farm next Tuesday lor
Ohioans, an Ohio Holstem
cow has rated the United
Press International for tops
in production.
She is GaUiool!s Matt Fran,
born in the Gallipolis State
Institute, sold as a heifer, and
now setting records at Louis
Bromfield's Malabar farm
Dr. Charles E . Holzer, Sr ,
and the late Mr. Bromfield
were colleagues in soil and
water conservation. Older
GaUipolitans thought it good
that the old Bromfield farm
would have a cow named
"GaUipolts," even though the
bovtne ts too young to have
known etther.
Here's the UPI story ori a
great Holst em :
MANSFIELD , Ohio Galltpolis Matt Fran, one of
the nation's top Holstem milk

oeveral bams, ponds and
outbulldrngs 'Oil the 11011-ecre
property 10 miles soutlleast ol
Mansfield .

author .
" It's hard for me to believe
these ftgures . and I wouldn 't LOAN SHARKS
if I didn't see them here on
COLUMBUS (UP!)_ Loan
pape r, " said Wtlliam St
sharks would be subject to
Joh11. an 8fl.year-&lt;Jid retired •
allies under a bill
Iarmer who now ltves in severe pen
Cuvaboga Falls.
given unanimow approval by
,;You realize that's double tile Ohio House Thursday and
what an a verage dairy cow sent to the Se','ate.
The legiSlatum, sponaored
gtves."
Heisone ofthehundredsof by Rep . Peter N. Crossilu?d,
persons who monthly tour the D-Akron. provtdes penalti~
farm, operated by the state of one to 10 years m priso
Dtvision of Parks and and a maximum !me of $5,000
Recreation and open to the for criminal usury ~r e~;
public daily The complex tortton in the extens•on o
includes a 32-room mansion creQtl.
.
"
built bv Bromfield as an
Crimtnal usury 11:1 defined
additiOn to an old farmhouse as an interest rate in excess
of tile prpperty he purchased of 25 per cent per year unless
m 1939 There also are otllewise authorized by law.

Beat the beat on

costs with our

SUNSHINE
SPE I LSI

producers, earns nearly

SAVE

$3,000 annually at nearby
Malabar Farm .
Number 51, as she is known
at the Ohio Department of &lt;-.....:::"1
Natural Resources property
now bemg changed !rom a
working farm to a center for

conservatiOn education , gives
100 poun(ls of milk from
about 12 gallons a day. That is
about twtce the amount gtven
by the average datry cow.

Before the prize seven..
year-&lt;Jld cow gave birth to a
set of large twins three
months ago, she produced
28,780 pounds of milk during a
31!klay lactation period. That
m&amp;ludes I ,081 pounds of nch
butterfat, or about 3.7 per
cent of butterfat per pound.
· Malabar park manager
Jtm Berry estimates the
30,500 pounds of milk g1ven
305 days a year is worth
$2,745, so farm manager
figures Number 51 is worth
about $3,000.
Her
mtlk
productton
figures recently brought an

5995

1

Big $avings too, on most new MF
farm implements, hay &amp; forage
equipment, and many Industrial units

MF 1085 ...................... '13.995
With m ulli·power-Roll bar-canopy

MF 255.... .. .'................ :. '7.895

" ehte classification" from

Personalized MF financing,
parts and service available.

the U. S. Department of
Agriculture, plactng her m
the two 2 per cent of Holstem
dairy cows m the nation
The very calm, gentle
black and wh1te spotted

anunal

1s

Fu ltqn-Thompson
· Tractor Saler

one of nme cows

still milked following curtailment or the dairy
operation In the Pleasant
Valley area of Richland
County.
Vtsttors are amazed at
Number 51 and her calves rn
the barnyard of the home of

1).3-TheSundayT\m~tinel,Sunday, July 10, 1m

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
.. NomSWEEPER Ofld sew ing ma&lt;:hine
r•palr. parts and supplies P1dc
up ond deh ... ery , Dovtt Vacuum
Cleaner, 'It m1le up Georg•'
Creek Rd. Ph 446-0294.
PASQUALE Elect ncal Service
~6- ~16 day or ntght .
BEGIN your sprmg cleaning by
havtng your carpets cleaned by
best method known Remove
all the d~rt . Make your cor~t
look new again. For free
e~Umote co11379 -2682
' · OEAD Stock removed No chorge
Co112•S SSt• .
THURMAN HOUSE, ont1ques Fur
"' ntture strtpping, repo1r and
refinished County Ad 8 oft 35
:_Eente ~ lle V1~ge . 245· 9479
WE 00 PORTRAITS Commerctal
ond Wedding Pho!Qgrophy ,
Ol$0 copies and full lme of
Amotevr Supplies, Tawney
Stud•os Pauperis m color
whde you watt No oppotnl·
ment necessary ,
TREE HAVEN CERAMICS DAY OR
NIGHT Classes , greenware and
supplies, 'custom ftring Ph
245-9484 or Ja$ 8811
8 AND D TROPICAL FISH 823 •th
Ave , Gall ipolis. Hrs, 12-8 Sun
tl"lru Thurs . Bob Gre::
•n:.;.._ _
GET YOUR EAkS Pierced tree wtlh
tl"le purchase of $10 potr of
~ rnmg~ , Town-:_ys J~~
HIGLEYS BARBER SHOP AND
TRADING POST. Open 5 days ,
8 8, closed Sundqy and Mon ·
day l 1/ 1 M11es north of S. B.
Shoppmg Plaza Rt 7, Guns .
Books, Pottery
PARTS AND CRAFTS FAIR
15 Craftsman at work Athens
Moll , Now to Ju ly 16. Open 10
to 9:30, Mon . to Sot. 12 JO to
530Sun .
I WISH TO CORRESPOND wtlh person related to or knows facts
about Matthew A Thompson
and Ruth Cherrington of Green
Townsh•p in the ~;ounty of
Golho , OtHo TI-ley hod on c:mly
chtld , daughter Sarah E.
Thompson born June 22, 1839
ot Rodney, Oh•o Ruth's father
wos John Cl"lerrmgton Soroh
morned o Mr McCreedy and
hod two sons Bert and Lon
Please wnte Mrs Beverlee M•t
hno 20699 Coochwood, R1verv1ew M1ch 48192 ( for the pur
pose bf contmumg fom1ly
· genealogy )
HAvE- vAcANCY f or mon or
womon 1n my home local
referen ces Phone Shtrley
Jones, {614 )667 3402.
TO MY Friends and Customers,
Cothte Wood (Mrs Robert ) tS
now employed ol Fashton
Deouty Sl"lop, Pomeroy Coli
992 2702 for oppointmeot
Thank you.
SHARON STEWART wdl now be
ployed at Brenda s Bauhque
formerly Jeonnte's Beauty
Solon M1ddleport. Open Mon ·
day thru Saturday , call for op·
~ ~nt , 992-3667_
-~

ACROSS

FatMroiLNif
Strlk..
17 Young beara
21 SlhTHJIIII
22 Subject of
7
12

Pomeroy, Ohio

"IICOUfM

Clertcal collar
24 Mountains ol

23

quality
You can tell it by the way a Cub Cadet is bUill Aut6mot1ve type frame
and dlfect dnve transmiSSIOn with no chams to break or belts to slip
You can tell by the qwel. With iso-mount rubber mounttngs to
cush &gt;on the eng me. Plus extra layers of steel insu latiOn and a superSIZed muffler.
You can also tell by features like the '' Maintenance Mmde( ... a
spec1al clock thllt tells you when it's time for period&gt;c maintenance
It's one more way we help keep your Cub Cadet l1ke new long after
others qu11
And &gt;t's qual1ty that makes Cub Cadet
htgh m resale value Its your no 1 buy.
And what better l&gt;me than nght now.
Choose from f1ve models, 10 to 16 hp ,
hydrostatic o r gear 'dnve

EU&lt;OOO

Note of scate
... ,28 Stlppltcatea
t, 28 Wide awake
., 3:&gt; Calllf!Q
... 32 Symbot lor
• tellunum
It 33 Pronoun
_t 35 Masculine
• 37 Condescendtng
1..
looks
• ., 39 Stalk
,... .&amp;0 Oevpured
~ 41 Bone
" 43 Th1n str•P of
wood
" 45 Lasso
" 47 Teutonic detl'l'
~ 48 C&amp;PIIBI Of tne
Ukra1ne
: 49 Frwt
52 Heckle
!· 54
Manlpulaled
25

Here's why.Cub Cade~"
is your No.·1 tractor buy

Pertaining 10
1111 mind

Ph. 992- 5101

--~Iii______

~rvi.,..,; Offered -

Mobile Homet1 for Safe

1973 b5 I( 12 TOTAl •lee. GrHn·
brier Mobile Home 3 bedroom ,
1 x 11 roll-out off of living
'
room , porch, owninq, under·
pinning and c:entra l air Good
condition Call . John Benh: ,
•
Puppies, w•U moke good pets .
949-2876.
367-7176
1915 AlAN 12 w: 55 2 bedroom ,
SEllEN PUPPIES: Ph 1•6·0121
factory mstolled woodburnmg
f~reploce 1n living room Con b.
SIX PUPPIES , 6 weeks old, */,
seen at Kmgsbury Home Sales ,
Dachshund, beautiful , Ph
1100 E. Mom 5_!:, Po~eroy __
2•S-S02 •.
SMALl PART BEAGLE DOG , Ph. 197• SCHULTZ Clo,.;c t• x 70, 3
bedrooms, 7 x tO tr e)(pondo In
2.5 5bS9.
living room , Rock-A-Boy wtn FEMALE COLLIE, One yeor old, 3
dow m bedroom. unfurniShed
_J&gt;art Beagle~~ Ph .44~57
except stove and refrigerator .
Been l1ved 1n 2 yrs underpinn ing, onchonng and porch, E• c:ellent cond•tion , $11 ,000 Call
2A7 3791
--GENERAL Controclon. Do oil
mosonory , carpenter &amp; plumb·
1ng. lnttoll and repotl' oil
dn~ewoys . Ph. 446-9587.
PIANO TUNING . Lone Oontels . 12
years of serv1ce. Phone
CoNcRETE AND BLOCK WOR K.' by
992-2082
the hour or by the conlroct.
Free estimates Ph 367-0295 or PENNZOIL RUTLANO;;~,;ily
367-0676
ttll 10 Closed Mondays ,
HOUSE PAINTING . FREE , wrecker serv1ce, ttre repatr .
Phone 7A2 9575 or 742·2081.
Estimates, CoiiJBS-8660.
EXPERIENCED DRY WALL SEWING MACHINE REPAIM , all
mokes, 446-4235
FINISHER . Textured Ceiling. Ph.
3as.9J2l.
A·l refngerotton S A1r Cond SerVICe for homes , commerctol
ond autos P~ 388-9927 or
lfii_ffib: flu• 1 8 ff~ 388-9939
AUlT MOBilE HOMES SER\IICE. Sandy and 6aovar
ln.suronce Co
Skirting onchonng , end pahos
has offered services for Fire In_ coil 446 3608 after 4
surance coverage In Gal~to
County for almost o c:entu ry,
TRISTATE MOBILE HOMES
forms homes and personal
1220 Eastern Ave.
property
cove rages ore
GALLIPOliS OH
available to meet 1ndlvidual
1%9 Richardson 12w:60
needs Contact Cl"lodeS Neal
1%9Acodemy l2x60
your netghbor ond og ~
en
~t~~
1972
Monarch
12•60
l9JJlmcaln l4•b4
ALLEN S GENERAL CONTRAC·
1974 l 1l Hobo T T., A c
TORS, remodeling. house wlr·
1969FonT.T
ing, house .plumb•ng, free
estimates 446-2910
BANDS MOBilE HOM ~S
CANOES AND KYAC~ . Country
PT. PLEASANT, W VA
Peddler, 28 State St. Ph
1973 Allen 12x40 2 Br
446·1411.
1913 Victoria 14x67 3 Br., 2 both
SANDY
AND BEAVER INSURANCE
1972 Monorcn 12x50 2 Br cent.
CO.
has
offered serv1ces far
Olr.
Fire Insurance co..,erage 1n
1972 Cameron 12x60 2 Br
Golho County fo r almost o c&amp;n·
1958 Marlett IOx.H 2 Br
fury , Forms , homes and per·
--.....,..-::-;--::-· sono l property, c:averages al'eo
12 x 68 Ho lly Pork Troller, with
avo1loble to meet tnd1v1dual
expondo, washer and dryer,
ne-eds Contact T. F Burleson
dtshwosl"ler , underpinning, 12 x
your ne1ghbor and agent.
12 oulbldg , Ph. 606 638 4060
1%9 KING , 2 br troller, washer &amp; ·
dryer o1r cond , loco ted
Johnsons Troller Park 44b -t9l5
or 44b':'7'.'5~27'-------.,.-.
12 x 60. 2 Br 1971 K1rkwood tn ·
eludes refng range 8 x 12
awnmg underpinning, a~r
cond. fuel oil tank
Ph
245·939B
I972 FREEDOM TRAilER . 14 x 64 .
Ph 2Sb·b62::c7_c'--~
12 x tiJw•th s )( 12 aluminum own
tng tap condttton. Real n1c:e ,
s2sOo Also, 2 offtce desks $25
each Coli 949·2537, loco ted
~OI.l.I'IOS
next to Steamboat Inn

DAVID BRICKLES
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

~---

.

---

THE PHOTO PLACE

~--

•

•

• 56
;
f 57
_,.,
='1 59
~ 61
;• 62
&lt;'-· 63

••
; 64

...
.... 66

-

.t 67
'!j B8
,.. 69

;

phORe

numbers
Skeleton
mtltlary urut
Calise to
remerflber
Flack
Measure'
duration ol
Speeetttess
Arab1an
seaport
For e11ample
{abbr)
T1t1e of
resoect
Number
Patntul
Astele (abbr)

7.. Young ..lmon
!pi.I
n1 Plumlike trull
'11 Q,....._I.U•
78 Symbol for tin
7V Lltd IWIY

81
82

Pronoun
M l~~:

83 WOOOy Of..,!
B4 ScorCh

Etf.llhly
E)Q)tllid
PIICI Of bed
hnen
90 Feet contrtlton
lOt
'92 Spoken
94 Hea11enly
85

87
8i

body

9S Freel from d1rt
98 Canter upon
97 Aslate
99 Scon lst'l own
100 Damage
101 Obla1ns
102 Cnapeaus
103\. Rodent
105 \Cit.iate
107 Sun god
109 Before
110 Planet
111 Ur!iiedon
113 Hurry
114 Sco11tst1 caD
115 Sleamsh•D
labbr)
1 Hf Contai!'WS
111 Cool•no
devtce
118 Weigt11 of
lndta
120 Pref1x down
121 lake 1n Italy
122 Huoe tubs
f23 EvalUate
124 Abound
126 Contmued
story
128 Consecrate
13Q Wnle
132 Harvest
134 Th1n h~ net

135 0 ....
138 Contunclton
~37 Go .in
1:111 Toad
141 SYQtiOI for
xenon

142 Avny
'143 Prepoattlon
145 Hebrew
Wllghi
t47 SlrtnQ
149 Plunge
152 HypDthetlcal
Ioree
153 Unlocked
155 PhOentttan
c•1y
157 Noose
159 PreoOIIIIOn
160 Check
162 Part of step
164 Downy duck
166 Armed Dan131
188 Gaelic
169 Pertorrned
170 Ftowert
171 Fug1t1Ytlrom
Sov1el Ausala

17 Mona...,
18 ChlldHrt clly

34
38

........

Wll'lellred
GrHn+and
MHl~

38 BlemtSI"'Mi

(collOQ l

16 Beet ammal

68 Sk l&lt;ldeci
69 Glass
70 Food
programs
72 Aema1nerect
73 Rumors
75 Greek latter
713 Strtcter
n Choice oart
79 Prophets
00 Challenges
82 Sedate
83 AI that place
84 Freshet
86 Tallered cloth
86 MUS IC as
wfltlen
89 L.ong, deep
CUI
90 Rants

1 Artttmetlc
Great lake
3 Ne!ilahve
4 Vat
5 Alloy ol gold
and srtver
6 Lawful
7 -rmy dlltcer
'aDbr )
8 Exclainahan
9 Warn1ng
deVICe
10 Mohammedan
nobel
11 Sea nymph
12 Sentor (abbr)
13 100000
rupees
14 Arab•an
garments
15 Seoaraled
2

40

fiSh

-IUPltc:Mra

113 Lona·-od

19 Cllt:emlx

20 Part ol JICk•t
27 Tlllcll ~leo
29 Parfldloua ·
31 Prlrttar s

Autttant
42 Twtrl
44 HeSIII"'I
46 OrltMal
O.r.cmg grrl
48 G1rlS
nickname
49 Snatches
50 Part of
f0111f1CIIton
51 Printers
r
meature
53 Journey
55 College
degree (abOt )
56 Heal
58 Eapellrom
country
60 Sketch
62 Moroccan
65 L.ong, slender

OOWN

1111

1115Pt.nu•
91 Padc:U•s

Sill ScOld

.......

102 Ugty, Old

10.
106
107

108

Tnat
Embryo flower
Ha'tlng
branchea
So.~&gt;

tMant

110 Smell ruga
111 DinlnQ
112 Antlerid
ontmal

114 L.aborec:l

116 Food fiSh
t 17 Olml!'lllh
t 19 Send bar

121 Cructalpoml
122 Reject
123 Reglattrec:l
nurse (atlbr )

125 Refuse from
gr~Qea

t27

L.at~n

COnjUf1ChOn
128 Earl l• than
129 Pantry
13:1 Sarcutlc
13 1 Wetrder
133 Body of water
136 Mustca l drama
138 Wtreless
140 Feel one a
way

143 .Ab0'189
144 Btrd s home
148 Brtck ·carry 1ng
devtces.
148 Fale
150 Roman road
151 Attitude
153 NUmber
154 River In
Scotland
156 Bom
158 Greek tetter
161 EKIIIS
163 Road tabbr I
165 Rupees(abbr I
167 Senior graDe
(abbr 1

Owners of Over

1,000,000

•

Milk Cows Chose
Sweetlix ·Rabo"·Blocksfor Fly Control
Staley SweetliJC Rabon Blocks are the PROVEN

WAY to Feed ROL Rabon Oral Larvicide

HERE'S WHY:

'

• CONTROLLED DAILY CON SUMPTION- SELF·FED
o SAvfS HOURS OF H,AND
FEEDING
• NOWASTAGE - COMPLETELY

~

~~~

CONSUMED
• PROVIDES COWS BALANCED
MINERAL PLUS VITAMIN' A
Le1 us show yc&gt;u how a 'regular Rabon Block feed.ng program
IS the best way to con trol flies tn your herd

~---------------------~
See Our Full Une of Cub Cadels
Ready For Immediate Delivery

CENTRAL SOYA

.'
CO.IIipolis

Olive

,

Meigs Equipment Company
'J.:i=~----~~~~~~~~---POMEROY,
J

PASQUALE lnsulotmg 100 Cedar RISING SlAR ~K•rine( loordrng,
St Go11 1pol is Ph 446 2116 or lndoor·Outd6or l'vns . groomtng
oil brMds. clean Ktnltory
44 61092
·
·
loctltti•s oe 367·7112. Cheshire
CUSTOM REMODELING , 20 ytKJrs Pllone {614) 367-029'2 .
~
ew:perie~ce , 388 8308, New dry HOOt: HOLLOW. Buy, ;ell, trade
woll ce•lmg wtth swtrl or ••• ·
• h
or lra.n
arses. RUTH REEVES ,
lure d es.'gns 0 ther d_ry wa II • troln•r. Phone(614)698 3290
repair , vtnyl wallpopertng , new • .J.
_ - -· _
_
baths, new kttchens. An.,thlng AKC SHETLANO sheep dogs
tn r•m6de1tng or repolr.
(Min.) Co litH, 2 females , 7
soB;s cB R;diO . E-;.,p~ w-ks o1d . Shots and warmed
er thing tn Two Way Radio Phone (614) 367 -0292 or
av
y nos and occfh. Geofgn' _ ____,._:._
3677112
An ten
_ . ----.-.. __
Creek Fld., GaUlpolls , .t46·4S17. MEIGS COUNTY Mlfmono Satiety
'
wheel I··
Ali'!lnment,
SMITH- excAVATING~ dozer, Animol Coteftn•, 9'92 -?680; or
tune-up,
balancing,
bock hoe, trencher, dump trudt, -~fer 6 P m., 992-5-127.
minor
work,
work done ot reosonoblt rlJt6s DOGGIE BEAUTY Parlor, oil
brake
PI-I. 446·3981 , John Sm1th Jr .
breeds styled the w_oy vou like
repair.
BORDER 'S GARAGE DOOR - sfR- No drugt used Cafl for op·
Behind Rutland Grade
VICE. Commeric:ol ond reslden- pointment, 742-3162.
School. Evening work by
tial , speciollztng In operators, AKC REG. Mal• English Sl"l•ep·
oppolntment. Ph. 742-2005.
locol256-6472.
dog, 1 y*Ot old, has oil snots.
6·5·1 mo. Pd.
DOZER WORK , excavating, land Pl"lone985--411l .
-GIVE-A-WAY 5 Port Collie pt~p·
cleoring, Ph. 446·0051
Decreosa It-lose fuel bt!1&amp; and in· p1es, phone ~2-3451 or after 5
creose the volue of yoUr hotri• _2PO:·m
~.992~~
· 20
~
··:.:.·,--,---,,--,­
with a ftraplace from t6GUE 2 KlnENS, 1 male and I female
CONTRACTING. ~U Phone992·209ll.
ESTIMATES. PHONE 300·
At&lt;:C REG. COllie puppies , 6
STANLEY STEEMER CARPET weeks old Phone 7•2·2292.
Route 2
.
Cl~ANER Any livmg room and
d
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
I
hall $'29 95 up to 300 Sq, Fl , FREE KITIENS , contact Fred le
Kitchen Cabinets - Rooflng
Southeastern Ohta· No
1 Houdoshelt offer 6 p.m. Phone
- Concrete Pat ios .
~orpet
Cleonen,
Ph , _·:_992~~
-2;520~·~-----=
New
Sidewa lks
6U 446·•208,
MALTEsE SMAll )'/HITE FUFFY
Construction
&amp;
COUGHENOUR WATER DELIVERY
REG . PUPPIES $150 .. Moles
Remodeling.
4.46·3962 or 4A6·41A.'2 anytime
$1 ?5 Females, Pt. PL Ph
Ph. 992-71t9or696-1055
675·SSI1.
Estimates
applted to job.
CHAIN LIN~ FENCING, WOODEN
-6·27·1 mo. pd.
FENCING AWNINGS Patio CHOW·CHOW A~C REO MALE, b
covers ' Au It's Ho~e lm· mos. $150., Also AKC Wh• te
prove~ents. Ph. 446·3608 after Female German Shepard , SSO.
•·
_o:P~h·~·~
·6~·7~8c::7B::_.,~_._-~BACKijOE, DOZER, Dt!C11ER, and
dump truck Concrete wotk;
Hatfield Backhoe Ser., RutiOM'lf,
I09 High St.
Oh: Ph ?42-2008or44b-2?'86
Pomeroy
_::::""-"'""~-~TV SERVICE Elec;tronic TV Clinlc,
Weddings
756 2nd Ave , Ga11ipolts, AUCTION, EVERY Friday, ? p.m.
Portraits
"46-3990 Service CaU $5 95, Ne'oii ond used m'erehandise.
plus parts and labor Servtce Ohio River Auctloo In Meigs
Passports
calls witl"l1n 2,. Hrs
Plozo 409 Pearl St. , Middleport,
Anniversaries
STUCCO PLASTERING ond Plaster ~O~h~io::,:·,:P;:h;:
on:::•;:l:;::l0-4
?):_77~3:--5::4;:_~-:1.'-:­
Special Occasions
repotr Textuf'ed Celltng. swltl, ANTIQUE AUCTION , Hoving oc·
float on brush design. 32 yn. qutrlod on extro large estate of
exp Work by the hour or by the antiques Will e.ell dt public auc·
Bob HoeU•ch
992-52'12
job 256-1182 lti·Co. Plosl•r· tton locOted ot 1Y, mtles east of
6·22·1 mo
ing ond Stucco
Wtlkesvtlle 0 on St. Rt 124 at
DACK TERMITING SPECIALIST, the Legion ground also known
PEST CONtlii:OL, ltcensed IN'- as 1he beon dtnner grounds .
sured , Free Inspection , Watch for sale s1gns Since we
EXPERIENCED
Member NPCA ond OPCA c. con t sell it oil tn one day we
M Hall , Wtlke:svllle, Qh 1o. Ph. wtll have two consecut1ve
Radiator ...--......,
669. 491•
soles 1st SALE SAT. JULY 16
TIME 10 00 A.M Old books
Service
V E. FILLINGER Water Del1vel-y lrom early 160Q, elated fru1t
Service , · Ph 379•212.C or jot'$, stone 1ars 10 orld 20 gal . 5
379-2172
gal. clear gloss tugs, l cream
HOME
IM· sep•rotors. old baskets w1ld
ROOFING .
PROVEMENTS, PAINTING , cherry wdrdrobe, wood
rcSI dynamite boJtes. Arbuckle col·
fee box. 1nstJiofors collection
Carpenter wor k • gene •
rep tor, PH . 446·431 6 Or of old bottles, old ""-•n bOll:, lots
446·8SbS
••
SMITH ft4ELSON
of ptcture frames, lanterns, 2
DUNCAN ANO PETTRY'S PLUMB· drop leaf tcbles 2 copper
lNG , heot1ng, new lnsulotior'l. botlers , love seat, lots of dining
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 367 7672
room cl-Io irs, ports of o spinning
P~ 992-2174
PllllltiiiJ
NEALS WATER DELIVERY 24 Hrs., wheel. cone l"ligh bock rocker
round table, spool leg stand ,
Ph. 347·7101 or ••6·3987
orgon stool, ox yokes, wall
OUtYS BUILDING AND REMODEl - telephoner wash stOnd , several
ING , FREE ESTIMATES Ph. old wood tOckers comel and
25b· l3S2
square trunks, 5 gal. cream CARPENTER, floortng ceiling,
WATER· WELL DRILLING. WUIIom cons, old milk bottles, several ~elt ng . Phone 992 2759
011 lamps. Aloddir1 lamps ,
T. Grant. Ph. 742-287q otter 6.
childs old toy w&amp;~gon , non
Jrees. cost Iron bean pots,
buggy wheals wicker ct~atr ,
wicker flower stand , kraut cutters, wickerlovnge, several old
cl"lurns, secretory desk, 30 gal.
cost 1ron kettle old crocks,
frosted nonging light ook pie FRIENDLY TOY Parttes hos open·
1ngs for Manager s ond
sole, old sod Irons, lord press ,
Demonstrators Demol'tstrote
sausage grinder, W'osh boards,
guaranteed toys and g1fts. "'o
morn1ng glory horn , wood
cosh tnvestment. No collecting
buckets, stone j&lt;frs and fugs,
or deltvertng_, no s~rvice
copper coffee pot , woodenchorge Car and telephone
washing machine, steelyard
necessary. Coli collect to Corol
scales, square oak tab les,
Ooy (518) 48q·8395 or write
cherry wardrobe, sleigh bed ,
Frtendly Toy Porttes 20
smgle trees, hond tools, hand
Rotlrood Ave Albany , N Y
mode quilts, 12 pc. good car1220S.
nival gloss, l)ld pitcher and
bowl. ruby candle holders. EXPERIENCED STORE Manager
frosted ttas&amp; fruit bowl. 16t!i of
needed •n local bus1n ess Must
preu cut pieces. 2ND SALE:
have expenence '" merchon
SAT. JULY 23 TIME 10·00 AM .
dtsing and all departments of
large coll84:tlcn of old bottles.
management Wnte Bo• 729 C,
carbide lights , old cha1rs old
co The Do1ly Senlthei Pomeroy
post hole digger , 2 old
Ohto 4$769
dressers. sewing machine, iron
WANTED
. MIDDLE Aged lody who
baby bed wltl"l brass knobs .
IS m need of home to lt ...e tn
w~cker baby buggy , picture
wtlh elderly woman tn Pomeroy
frames , Iorge hot blast cool
area . light housework. no
heater (old but ln good condt·
laundry for more deta1ls , call
tlon) , secretary desk, peweter
949·261 0 or 992·S708.
pteces, pio'no rolls, laundry
tran , 2 carnival whisky bottles, NURSE . RN LPN PARAMEDIC OR
one type duletmer (mustco1) In·
QUALIFIFED
QUALIFIEO
any m
strument, marble top wash
MEOIC.Al
ASSIST
ANT
to provide
t1oned
stand, ' 2 marble top dr&amp;sserJ
Insurance .Companies wHh
must be
Se1th Thomas 8 day mantle
med1cal dote on their op
to make
cloc:k , regulator school house
pliconts. local work, flextble
capable
clock orllomps, Aladdin lamps ,
minimum ca
hovrs, port time , L1fedate
ptlcher and bowl , Sesston 8 day
of $5,250.00
pet. mer Medical Services 801 So
mantle dock, reol Indian orchandise buy back. C•11
GelnStone Sptd MO 65602 I
Mr . Bell : Toll Free any
rows and bow , la;Jo Sprtngfteld
{417) 869·2966
11m e. 1 800·62J.7725, Ext
munal loodtng shot gun , 4570
Al'21 Sunda)l CllliS IC ·
Springfield muzzel loader
cepted
(1S13) , 1836 Deriilgor •1 Cal .. EARN EXTRA MONEY AT Home .n
!pore ttme Ph 4.46·000
=2 _ _
Po ll'llt:Jid ailftr (min. btd). 36
caL StagQCoac'h Colt revolver, EXP STORE MANAGER NEEDED
(mm b1d), II)Opplng planters.
IN LOCAL BUSINESS must hove
'
Auctioneers note . Th11 tS JUSt 0
liOAROING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
exp. tn merchondts ing and all
porttal lt~tlrtil of ltt!ms at thts
K &amp; P ~ennels, 3911·827•. Rt .
depts of management , Write
sole Coma early and look
55.4, % m1leeas1ofPorter.
Box 604 tn core of Gollipolts
around
Owner
Donald
Do1ly Tnbvne.
BRIARPATCH ~ennols 8oordlng',
Matheney, Terms of sole cosh
Grooming , AKC Gord6n let·
or check wtth poslttve ID. NOT tMMD OPENING for House
ters , Engltsh Cocker Sponiel1.
Parents at Mason Co Childs
RESPONSI~LE FOR ACCIDENTS .
Ph. 446-.191
Home, HS Diploma or GED reluncn .served by tl't&amp; Wtlkesville
quired . Send resume to Mason
lodtes softbot leoque, AucRISII'jG STAR KENNEL
Co. Cl"ltlds Home, 306 12th St.
ttoneer Bill Brawn,' New Mar·
Boordmg, tndoor-Outdoof' Runs ,
shfield Ohio PI-lone (614) .,. Pt. Pleosnt , W Va. 25550.
Groommg , All Breeds. Clean
Sanitary facdittes, Cheshii"e, Ph
664-350.. Cl;p This Ad .
EXPERIENCED , DOM~STIC. Car
367·0292
Mechantc wonted, c:on tocl Song
ot Rtverstde AMC Jeep and
Volkswagen , Golhpolts , on
· Apply; in person no phone
colt•.

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
. ALIGNMENT

------

71 E'tll
72 Mul

PetA for Sa:J..

Business Services

Will CARE for eldttrly women '"
my hOme. Coli 9117-7314

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
1

110 Sprin9 St.

.

AKC SHETLAND
• (Min collies). Shah and worm ·
ed. Free Health Guor. Ph
' 347·02'12
DRAGONWYNO CoiiO!f•Konnol.
Chow Chow pu_PP.lel arr1ved ,
AKC. Reds ond llacko .
l1tmaloyan Ktllths, {Pitt's IbM) ,
CFA . Ph. ••6·~~ ciftor 1 pnl.
AKC SHETLAND SHEEP DOGS ,
Mtnoture Colli•s. shots ond
wormed
Full health
guorahteed Ph 367·0292 or
367·7112
A~C Rog. M;n. S&lt;hnoul"':flpujso,6
wks old, mak• wondt ul p.tti, .

Ph. t.7t-40?2.

:.

-

~AP;AfcjQ~~~·

g,_, ·bfoko. S.75 .. Ph.
•.,..•,.4,
.
y11 ..

PURi&amp;RED B;;gle ~-u~' $25 , Ph
•46·2170

SWAIN'S

CARTER'S

Automatic
Transmission Service

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE
RATES

Electrica I &amp;
Refrigeratio~
300 Main 51.

'

.

•

RH&lt;Isville, 0 . Ph. 371-6150
5-27·TFC

Pomeroy. Ohio

Phone 992-6282
8A.M.Io4:30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6·23-1 mo. Pd.

.
' Superior
Steam Extraction

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Star m
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

Young's tapeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

BISSEll SIDING CO

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Esti~ates
Na Sunday Calls Please
6- 13· 1 mo.

''The Originators
Not The Imitators"
2·23·1 mo

FREE ESTIMATES

GlfTTER SERVICE

-mown

Insulation SerYices
fi~t~ntlftl Awatllblt:
Bloon 1016 Walls &amp; AHics

continuous one piece
gutters. we hong it, or do it
yourself. Special prices to
builders.
Phone 949-2814
9 iJ.m. to S p'.m.

SIORII

WlllllOIIS&amp;DOORS
REP\AC[IIIEIIT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

LARRl,"~"~'~DER
Ph. 992·3993

4-10·1 mp ,

RACINE CAR,ET
SHOP6-16-1 mo.

1

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT ANO ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK,
IO :oo to 5:00
Nobil Summit Road
Rt. 1
Middleport, o
992-5124
!Complete
Sales and
'Sel-vice and Supplies.

CRAm LADIES
HANDICRAFT
804 West

Main Street
Just Below the Jones
Boys' in Pomeroy, Ohio
" Phone 9'12·2298
6-1S·1 mo.

it~~~es-_~-

....c:::_=.._~

~

0 ,::.;_ ":.

':..---;::-_ _ :

BRADFORD, Aucftoneer, Com- HARRISON S T V Repotr. Servtce
Coils .. 276 Sycomore. St., Mtd·
plete Servtce Phone 949:-2487
dleporf. Phone 992 -2522
or 949-20CXJ Rocme , Ohto, Cntf
Bradford
ELWqOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers, toasters, 1rons, all DEMONSTRA.TOR)
small oppltonces lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
SALE
on Route 7. PI-lone (614) 985·
3825.
Gravely Model 514 tractor
REMODELING Plumb1ng , heating
with duol wheels and 30
and all types of general rapatr,
inch rotary mower. Used
Work guaranteed 20 years exabout 6 hours.
pertence PI-lone 992-2409.
'
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs, ser·
List Price smo
v1ce, all mokes, 992 2284 The
FabriC Shop , Pomeroy .
Sale Price
Authonzed' S1nger Sales and
Service We shorpen Scissors
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and 1 . New. tractor warranty.
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo boys for hire w1ll hau l
fdl dtrl, to so1l, limestone and
Snapper 8 HP "High
grovel Coli Bob or Roger JefVacuum" riding mower
fers , day phone 992-7089 , with 30 bushel Bag-Nmght phone 992·3525 or 992·
Wagon grass catcher.
S232
EXCAVATING, dozer backhoe
List price $1070
ond dltcher Charles R Hatheld Bock Hoe Service, .
Sale Price
Rutland , Ohio Phone 7.42 2008.
WILL do rooftng constructton,
plumbmg. and heottng, No 1ob
Used about 5 hours. New
too Iorge or foo smo ll. Phone
Warranty
742-2348
MOBILE,~H;,o~m-e~-R.-p-a~,-.-::E,-Ie_c_,
plumbing ond heattng Phone
992·Sa58
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covottng , sept1c systems
dozer, backhoe1 dump truck, Pomeroy, Ohio 614-992-2975
ltmestone, grovel, blacktop
Open Mon.-Fri. 9 to 5
po..,mg, Rl 143 Phone 1 (614)
Sat. 9to noon
698 7331

Sl295

sags

GRAVELY TRACTOR
·SALEs

ESTATE SALE
THURSPAY, JULY 14,19n -5:30P.M.
This is the estate sale of the personal property of the
late Daniel J. Humphrey at 1262 Powell Sf.,
Middleport, Ohio.

HOUSEHOLD
23 in. color T.V., &lt;..to. combination relrlgerotor, Magic
Chef gas stove, May lag "prlght ~eep freeze, dinette sel
W·4 chairs (llkenewl. folding table, 2 metal wardrobes,
platform rocker &amp; ottoman, couch , ~liner, chairs.
lamps, end tables, rugs, Hoover sweeper, radio, 8 band
Realistic radio, dishes, linens, misc. chairs &amp; table,
bed, 3 pc. bedroom sul'te, chest of drawers &amp; dresser,
card lables.

A-NTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS

-'

LOOKING FOR A CHANCE
,TO· ADVANCE1
Your olflllll1unlty Is in Consumer Finane~ .
amHIW Is groWing. Wo how an openong as a
btotich mMtiiW tralnoo for an ambitious person who
lo wllllrlil to lfot't at a modett but comfortable sa lory
ond lOOk forworcl to urnlng well above aver•!'"·
Qj~

Previous eaperlence not necessary, we tr•tn you.

You'll work with our customers both inside and outside
of tho office In o friendly manner. You'll be helping
peOple witll tllelr flnonclal problems. You'll have an
eacollont .,.rtuhlty to learn tht consumer finance

ltllilll~

....,Its

InclUde: Unit partlclpotlon,
11111•a:ttftiif-tnltftt fllln and group Insurance.

lihotlt . ..- ~· ., 446-2165,

CAPITALFINANCIALSERVI(_ES
416 SICOnd AYe., Gallipolis, 0 .
Equal Opportunity Employer ,

'----~

Dishes, set of Royal Rose line china ~or B, claw and 6
legged stands, glass door oak d"pboard . stone jar &amp;
jugs, b"ffet, old mirror, desk, 011 lamp, violin
(~ntonlus Stradivarius
made In Germany,
CremononsiQ conster- Vis-tory) w-case.

MISCELLANEOUS
Rod &amp; reels and misc . . fishing equipment, air
condllioner, o&lt;ygen lank, large tool box. 23 channel
Granda C. B. radio.

CAR
1970 Ambassodor 204 Rambler, less than 75,000 miles.
CASH
ESTATE OF DAN J . HUMPHREY
Administratrix- Betty Gilkey
Dan Smith
J . (4rnahan
L. Donohue.
949-2033
t.49·2708
742·3061
1

�D-4- TheSundayTimes-Senlinel.Swlday.July IO, l m

1)-S-TbeSUnday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, July 10,1977

~or Besf Results Use Sunday J;ilnes·Sentinel Oassjlieds
-

BUYS ~

1976 atEVY VAN G20 •••••••• '5695

76 Cadillac Sed. DeVille

Lo(:al owner, 350, V8, automat ic: power steer ing and

power , factory air, AM-FM stereo radio,
T&amp; T steering wheel , 13,000 miles . •

landau si lver, red custom inte.rlor, power split seat,
alr , power steering and brakes, power door locks and
windows, rad io and tape, much more:. save a plenty .

1976 AMC HORNET~ ·~······· · s3695

,75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

brakes, deluxe equipment, white wall tires, IJ.,Iggage

$2895

.

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE. ••••••• '1895
1973 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN •••'1695

•3800

1972 FORD LTD e•••······· su95
Country Squire, V·tt engine. automatic. power steering.
1974 atEVY C10 ••••••••••••• '3095
8' Fleelside. automatic , P. steering &amp; brakes, 35C V-8,

H.

duty springs, mirrors , R . step bumper, radio,
chrome equip. 2 tone)lue &amp; white .
·
.

-----------------------·
Think Chevrolet -

1974COMET, 367·0541.
76 DODGE VAN , STAND. TRANS.
b dy .. $3600 .. Ph. 446-7B2B .
1959 PANEL FORD TRUCK , 3 spd . ,

6 cyl. good cand ., motor
r ebuilt . must see. to oppreicote.
$700 ., Ph . «6·7B10.

SLEEPING Rooms , weekly r(ltes.
Pork Central Hotel.

--

·POMEROY MOTOR CO

LIGHT housekeeping room , Pork
Cen tral Hotel.
SLEEPING rooms for rent, Gall ic
Hote0.:,1==-==c=:c-::-"c:cSMALL OFFlCE FOR RENT, 144 Sq .
Ft., Libby Hotel.

Open Eveniii95,Unti18 p.m.

-

FURNISHED APT. Adults only. no
pet&amp; . Phone 992-3874 , Mid·
d!eport .

'

AVAILABLE at Villoge Menor
Aportments - 1 bedroom fully
'arpeted with k itchen ap·
pliances , furnished. Starti ng ot
$104 per mont Phone 992-7721 .
EqO"cl housing opporlunfly .
~

-rent. S miles

~~

·~

from 'Pomeroy and Middleport
Phone 992-5858.
TRAILER SPACE for rent, complete
hook ·up neor Meigs Mines on
S.R. 124 . Cell742 ·2166 .
2 BEDROOM TRAILER . Adults only . Phone 992·3324 .
2

STAR.CRAFT , 1Oth Anniversary
Sole on Mini Motors , trailers
and fold' downs , Travel Star 25
Ft. , $.4400 ., 20Ft: . Mini Motor ,
$10,850. , We sell service and
qualit y. Camp Conley Star Craft
Soles . lh. 62 N. of Pt · Pleasant ,
W. Vo .
'
CAMPER TRAILER . 17Ft. Sleeps 4,
Ph: 367 -051" or 361 -7242 .
~
~·
14 FT . FLEETWING CAMPER .
: Sleeps 5,. $500., Apple Bee.
1 • campers sleeps b , $300 .. Truck
camper,· sleeps, $150. , Ph.
446-5971 .

----:-'--"

• LOW weekly and monthly rates of
libby Hotel , 44b-1743_. _ ~

Pom~roy

-TRAILER SPACE for

BEDROOM Mobile Home,
utilities paid . References re qu ired. Phone 992-7b66 after 5

__,P:,:·m
= .- - - - - - - - -

OVER 4,000 lb. Tobacco base far
lease, or ren t. Ph. 44b-01 b6.
--'-'-'~-~~---- ' - ~
BRADBURY RENTALS , Second
floorfunished eH. oport. adults
onlv . nO pets , 7~ 2nd Ave .,
Dep ., P ~ 44b-0957 .
.
FOR RENT OR LEASE , Over A,OOO
lbs . robocco, bose, Robert
Queen . Ph. 446-01 b8.
2,-B
c:R
c;.:::M
:::O
';'B
:':I-"
LE:':H
'-'O
:_:,:
Me:
E:::,:F:'u-:r-n ..
plus uti lties , Neighborhood
Rd ., Dep . Req ., oduhs only , Ph .
446-4757 after 3 PM.

$125:

FURN. APART, "' rooms and both ,
centrally located , one or two
odults , Se&lt;: . Dep . Req . ca ll
446-0444 before 5 Pm .
NICE MOBILE HOME , centra l oir ,
adi lts on ly, depos it req,uired .
p~ 446·033B
FURNISHED APARTMENT , mce
$175 , utilit ies paid, First floor ,
adults , 44b·441b after 6 pm .

SEMI-FU ISHED Efficiency apart" men!, suitobl~ for one adult . SAVE BIG, Do r,our own rug ond
up,olstery c eoning with Blue
located in the Coates Building
lustre. Rent electric shompQ9er
over Dutton's Drug Store . Coli
$1
at Central Supply Co.
992·3641 or inquire at Apt. lb.
FOR RENT OR SALE ~ 1972 Model 1 1'913 mobile tlome . all electric ,
furn ished Phone 367 -7438
bedroom mobile home , 12 K 45 . .
See at 493 Broadway St . Mid · MOBILE HOME, 2 Br . air corid ,
dleport .
stove, refr ig., and water furn .
~
_..,...
..........l....~~
CA!\1fiNG SITES along the Ohio ~- _l_a!]J!.Iot, on 21B , coll44~ 1990.
River for rent on State Rt. 338 . FURN . 2 8r . MH . St. Rt . 7, 5 miles
See Robert Lewis or call
from city , nice location, adults ,
8"3 2-432 . ___ --~~~~
no_p_! ~P~ 446-4170. • __
BUSINESS BUILDING in New LOT FOR MOBILE HOME. ot AdHaven , W .Va .. 20 x 45 main
dison , water o'nd' sewoge lurn ~
SWISS COL'ONY travel trailers
business corner. Phone (bU)
Ph . 256-1.::
2:.::
10::..
.-custom mode ; MAPLE LEAF
747 -2755 .
RiV
eRVIEW
,
2
Br . Trailer: Adults
tandems 16' up; CRICKET truclo; ~
.
only . ln9uire at Sheppard Sales
campers speciol or CODNER's r-URN . EFFICINECY , $110., Ut1l•tes
and Set'vice. First and Olive Sts .
CAMPERS ~ Ralnbow Ridge.. Pd, s1ngle , Ph. 44b-4416 after 7
Open evenings. Toke Meigs 28
PM, .
FURN. APT . Adults only. Older
or 32 to Boshan . Owner , Robert
couple preferred, Ph. 446-9523.
Codner , Lon~ Bor~orn , Ohio.
PASTURE , 75 acres wooded ,
ST ARCRAFT I Qth anniversary sole
reasonable rates, Ph. 388·9334
On mmi -motors , trailers , and
evenings or weekend.
TOWNHOUS
folddowns . Trovelstar 25 h.
2 BR . TRAILER tn Cheshire, oduhs
$4400.00; 20 ft. mini -motor
APARTMENTS
only , Ph . 367-7329 ,
$10,850 00. We sell service and
4
2
Bedroom
quality. Camp Conley Starcrafr
5 ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS
Sales, Rr. 62 norrh· of Pt , Plea·
Townshuses
ONLY , no pets, Bob McCormick
sent .
Rd .. Ph . 4A6·2650.
11!z Baths
Mc:Pc'lN
c.G
Trailers ,
JA YCO- -C::-Ac':'
BlUE LUSTRE NOT ONlY RIDS
Pay Only One Utility
custom mode SWISS COLONY ,
CARPETS of soil but leaves pile
Acldison,
Ohio
small tandems Maple Leaf,
soft and Iotty. Rent electric
For Information
CODNER"S CAMPERS , Sales,
!&gt;hampooer $1. Ce~trol Supply.
R•ntal,
Service , Supplies ;
Call Shirley Adlcins.
U~~TAIRS APARTMENT, A mem•
Meigs 28 or 32 to Boshan .
overlooking City Pork , adults
O~her Robert Codner . long
only , Ph. 4A6· 19'!1 .
BolPom . Ohio . t

r----:---------,

TARA

361~7250

1974 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

'2295

P.S. , P. B., P. W., air, vinyl top . Sold this one
new. Good buy.

•

Did you compare prices? If so, you will se'e that Smith Nelson can
save you money. We are The Friendly Dealer. We have the sharpe.st
pencil in town. Call or see one of these friendly salesmen: Ceward
Calvert., J . D. Story, or Bill Nelson.
·
•
We ho'n9r Senior Citize·ns Golden Card for Service and Parts.

NEWGM~

Chevrolet

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt.
33. ten miles north of .Pomeroy.
large lots with concrete potios,
sidewalks , runners ond off
street parking. Phone 992-7479 .

'1895

-

.

-

Truck Headquarters
T. GMCPickup
1973 1/t T. Che\' . PU
1974 Vt T. GMC Pickup
1973 1/t Che'll . Pickup
1974 'ItT . GMC PU
1972 IJ1 T Chev . pickt,Jp
1- 1973 1/ t T. Che'll . PU
1974 Yr T. Chev PU
1973 EICamino with top
1970 Olds Delta 88
1974 Yt T. Ford PU
.
1973 three -fourth T, Ford PU
1974 three -fourth Chev , ~U
1974 three -fourth T. GMC pu_
1975 1/ r T. GMC PU
1972 1/ , T. GMC PU
19b6Ch'ev . Sta. Wagon
1973 1.6 T. GMC 4 W.D.
1971 GMC9500Troctar
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS , INC.
133 Pine St.
446·2532
1974

71 PONTIAC CATALINA, PB , PS,
air cond . new fires , one owner.
446 .9537

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

500 E. MAIN

1976 CHEVY LAGUNA, 350;
Outomatjc , PS. · PB, air, AM
rad io with tope player, real
sharp and in excel lent condi tion . Phone 992 -2386.
1972

DODGE
CHARGE'R ,
outomati ~. air , power steering.
new power brakes , rear
defroster . (ear speaker, viny l
roof , buc·et sears , rally wheels ,
stee l belted rad ials , new elC houst system , low miles. $1Sfi5
or besf offe r. Phone 992 -3372 ,
~2 . 5169 .

19bb GMC three ·quarter ton
pickup Mechanically sound ,
goad
transportdtlon . 5350 . •
Phone 949- 27~ after 8 ~ .m .

CADALLIC DEVILLE, $1375, 71
Codallfc SlbSO, 73 Plymouth
1971 HORNET .4 door , 6 cyl. good
~Furry$1675 . Ph44b·981B _
shape , automatic . Phone
1965 THUNDERBIRD , p.s., p.b, olr '
992·752• .
elec . sect. 390 engine. many
more extras. Ph"'367 -7750
· 1973 MONTE CARLO londou V·S,
power steering. power brakes ,
}974 Plymouth Satellite, ps, pb,
air conditioning , stereo B track
fcc. oir , coli 367-039" or 367and am radio . Phone 985 -4123 .
nS6
-:--::,-:~,-197S MONTE CARLO 35C, VB. 19b8 CAMARO , new point job,
1967 Chevelle. P~b6 Pontiac
outo, low mileage, A -1 cor:-d.
Tempest. Phone (614) 667 -386b.
Loaded wi th eKfras . "46-7507
72 LTD air PS , PB . auto. low 1974 CHEVROLET S"uburban 9
passenger, under 34.000 miles
mi leage, brown vinyl top, 2 dr .
with extras. Phone 985-3553.
25b·1975 alter 3 p.m.

.,

~

economy cars.
'77 Pinto . ,..
A lot of little car

'77 Maverick
Still the simple

y,

"2·5724

Sellice llld' Supplas
!---~--:::::::::---:--:::::::::::0::,

T., Ph. 1967 6 ely . Chev•lle , 1967 Buick ,

1977 DODGE VAN· TRADESMAN
100, fully • insulated and
carpeted. b dy. auto . $b300 ..
1967 Ford V-8, 2 Or. HT, good
cond ., $425., Ph . 388-9325 .
1974 PlYMOUTH SAT .. PS,PB. foe .
air, good con~ . Ph. 3b7 ·0394 .
1974 CAMARO. 350 ,
$2695 .. Ph. 388-BABS.

.

4 spd ..

197" DODGE DART Custom , PS ,
auto .. also 1974 Ford 250
camper Special. auto . . PS.PB,
borh in exc. tond, Ph. 4"6-3968.

PLYMOUTH
..

~-

.

VALIANT, 6 ely.
PS ,P8, air, 33.000 miles. $1995 .
73 Chev. Truck, 350, PS,PS,
with fibergkJss top, 58 ,000
miles, $1995.256-1249.

73LTD. Brougham , olr PS,P8. AM.
FM stereo, CB Radio , $2700. Ph.
367-0567 .
191&gt;5 CORVETTE, 1912 OLDS
' CUTLASS
Supreme ,
Ph .
446-0b38after6 Pm .

'77 Mustang II .

1972 OLDS CUSTOM STATION
Wagon, oir, PO ,PB , PW, am ,
fm , stereo lope player, cruise
control, 28,000 !Tliles.~ Ph
446·3839.
1975 RALLY SPORT CAMARO ,
Good cond, 256·6689 after 5
pm . 156-1537.
1960 BUICK. good running cond ..
S175.. Ph . 446·47311 before 2
Pm.

197S RENGADE LEVI JEEP, 4 whl, 1970 PONTIAC , new rodial tires.
std. shift, low mileage. $3900 .. ' PS .PB , air cond .. 4 Or .. Ph.
Ph . AA6 -339S .
4:4b- ~bl~osk for 0o'lle,

j

ONE 8' x 8' x 7' wolk·in cooler
with compressor, SlOO Manual
push mowei , $10: Ph ilea
refrig.rotor. $15; Formica kit·
chen table , SlO; Dining ro.am
tabl• and choirs. $15 ; clarinet,
sso; Coronet lrumpet, $25;
Manual odding machi ne , $20; 8

V-6, stand .. Qr trade for pidt
up: one or both, Ph : 367-7604 .

Our sporty little

oersonal car ·

•

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Buckeye Golden
Card Honored On
Parts &amp; 5ervice

S.. Pat Hill, Rocky H-or Dllrrel Daotrlll
For 1 GGid Deal ana New or UMdVohlclo
Opon IYIIIIn~t tll7: DO IXCepf

· Thursday end Satu~. CloHd Sw11hly

m .m,

Middleport,

o.

m.m. movte projector, $35, 3
botlle cool•rs with compr•11or;
todo fountain complete with
difl*'tOrs ~ and com com·
prMtor. $50; 2 ueom tobl.,.,
$40 ooch; 6 ft. &lt;andy ce•• $50;
peddle 1ewlng mochiM, $20;
portable record player, $10
11ereo record player, $15 . 139
and 141 Butternut Avertue,
Pomeroy.

11J ACRES OF hardwood timber for
oale. Cofl'l85·4:195.
REGISTERED 'II ARAalAN a-Iding,
6 yn . old . Gcocl hofter hondlo,
S2CO. &amp;hy Hill , FletwoodJ
.. bad, . Pomero,-,
phone

912-3885.

. Russell D. Wood

r-COUNTRY MOMii Wl \ "H
•evERYTHING-Make an
"'appointment to see this 4
old brlc k located about&lt;
21 mi. tram HM C . • This
G'beeuty Is situated on 10
a:res of lend In the cltr.
u school district with l4 m .
2trontage
on
Raccoon
ncreek .
Other
s,eecial
ntestures are 4 BR s, 3111
C baths, tam lly room wJth w.
flreptace, fol'n'lal dining
n broom,
formal entrance,
t laundry room, large
screened In patio a·nd 2 car
garage. Over $1~000.

:yr.

!:liAR .USIN•SS &amp; HOTEL
u.- Be ya.ur own bOSS wlfh
-this once In 1 lifetime In -vestment. L..oCetecl on a
2corner lot In Middleport.
f;cell for more Information .

ROOM T6 "ROAM. I

446-4618

think~

you would say that this

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR
446-1066

w

sprawling brick lrf level Is z
one of tfle nicest country V\
homes you've ever seen. (!)
This beauty Is situated on
4'12 acres of land about Jlf2
miles from Rodney. Why 1not let your family en/or. 4 "'
BR's, 3 baths, large I v !19
and dining room, compiele
kitchen, family room with
stone fireplace and 2 car.c
I!" rage . Be the first to see:111
J!)IS one.
C

!

:::i

I

NE~

LISTING - The one UJ
you ' ve been Wait i ng for . UJZ
Modern 3 BR ranch with
· full basement PLUS 22 v.
acres of land, 2 barns &amp; C)
milk house near Addison .
$45.000.
-

z
....

HUNTER 'S DELIGHT 2 53.5 acres. M · L mostly
rr wooded, ideal for your · HARDWARE STORE - ~
IT weekend camp . Located in Here' s your chance to get .J
C Morgan Twp . and priced at started ,..... i n your own
business. This pra·perty is
111 s12.5oo.
located in Vinton, Ohio &amp; C
C BABY FARM - lJ acres can be bought for 512,900 Ul
1 on state Route 218 in the plus stock &amp; equ i pment. O
city school dist . PlUS a 2
BR cottage w i th n1ce SWIMMING POOl - NewUI.
fireplace, barn &amp; a mobile Bi -leve l near town offers LLI
_home pad. S19,9&lt;10 with lots of good li.ving tot some
_financing available .
lucky family . Brick ana ell
frame beauty featurl';!s 3 Cl
ZTHE ·· OLD .
KiWANIS
BR ' s , 2 baths, complete
&lt;ilcAMP is fof sale . 200 acres
kitchen with dishwasher, Z
"'of woodland near Rio
ZGrande with lots of fran. range &amp; refrig., 20,;24
family rm ., 2 car garage vt
rrtage on a blacktop road for
"$75.000. Other features are and large lot near town . a 27x5S lodge with kitchen GROCERY BIZ - Cal l far .J
Cs; f i replace , shelter hou.se, more
Information on this 1
mni ce 2 BR &amp; bath cottage
Cw lth new carpet &amp; several well established b!.!Siness.
Income figures available to 0
small cabins .
serious buyers .
·w
~PACIOUS TRI LEVEL -Thlsbeautyoffers3 BR, 2111 LOT FOR SALE near W
Vlbalhs . family rm . With WB
Vinton . 175x200 clean tract L1J
-ltireplace, formal dining
is ideal for building or a
zrm ., complete- kitchen , mobile hOme . . City water
G'Jcent . air &amp; a 2 car garage . available . $320&lt;1 .
.,
VIAll this for SAY,SOO .
PORTER - 17 acres level (!)
NEAR LECTA - 101 acre land . ldi}a l for develop - ~
mta rm with 45 A. til labl e, 5 ment
or
specu l ation . ~
rm . house, 3 barns, several $23.000. Call today .
vt ..
ma!her outbuildin9s, cellar
•
Chouse. spring water &amp; a GRAHAM SCHOOL RD . - ..J "
mJsoo lb . fob . base . $50,000. Bargain priced lot for sale .

~---

rV:

z

i=

I

c

z

z

C N~AR TOWN .- 5.13 acres

I vacant l and on Route- 160
about 2 mi. aut . lots of
!: potential tor 514,000 .
Cit ·

-4 LOTS OF LOTS - Located

~~~~5~2;Gh'. h

I

ca . water tor C

UJ

MORGAN TOWNSHIP - Q
103 acres vacant land . Lots LLI
of bottom land and lots of
woods for S32,000 .
uJ

- on Graham School Rd..
Z
Z l inco!n Pike &amp; Georges PIZZA BUSINESS - An II'
C'&gt;creek Rd . Mobile names excellent opportunity tor 1 ""
some business minded ,.,
V'twelcome .
..
person . This large corner· Z
z .A SOUND INVt!S'tM'EN\ lot . with a modern br;ck
m describes this 53 acre· tract bu1ldmt 1S a good place .to

!;;

~ '~e~~"~,o ~;:~d~. ·~~ir ~! fl:~~~~{~~~~~~~~~~~r. C~~ ~

z

.....

NEW LISTING : New 3 bedroom carpeted home,
constructed on .06 acre lat . Large 2o·~u· living room,
w. b fireplace, 1112 baths. heated &amp; cooled ~Y heat pump,
2-car garage w -auto door
located within 5 mis .
Holzer Ho,;pi!'at.

I

m LINCOLN

WN YOUR OWN CAMP·
~ITE ln the wilderness of
I he wayne National Forest.
5 to 8 acre tracts of
woodland now avaUable
adjoining thousands or
acres of governme~t la nd .
Public hunting, f lshmg ~nd
camping permltt~d . P.nces
s~art at _$2500 w i th fman Cl119 available .

lc

IJJ

0

W
W

Z:

..,

0

Z.

BARGAIN · lOS acre farm inclu ding this 3 bedroom
comfortabl'e shaded h ome, situated within 10 miles
from Galli~lis on Rt. 218 . Lots of possibil ities for only
$3B,OOO .OO.

3 YEARS OLD: 3 bedroom home s;tualed on large lot
in growing Green Acres' S. D. Only S mms. from
Gallipolis.
$32,500.00.

OWner

moving

out

of

state .

Price

PLANTZ SUBDIVISIONS: 3 bedroom home, nat. gas
f. a. furnace , full basement , lg. living room, 1112 baths,
modern kitchen, ·largo lot. Price $35,000.00 .
LOOKING FOR : 2 bedroom home, with _turni ture , ;n
Centenary area, Gallipolis City School D1st; 1 ~ere of
land within sight of Green School. Also, 30 x30 2 car
gcirage, could be used ' for shop or storage. Price
Including furniture; $~27,,500.00.
' ,

,,:..:-.~~~: _t, c)Cc'C' i 'E'ti":::':':o~n''D';

FOLLOW RT . 218 : and Lillie B"uii Skin Rd. to
Macedonia Rd . and see this 3 bedroom home situated
on lJ.a acre tot. Call fOr an appointment to see . Pr1ce

only SH,soo.oo.

.

"*cw

-

r

Q

w

z

.

~

w

z

•~ LISTINGS NEEDED:_ LISTINGS NEEDE·D..:_

j£9FsaJ--- ~·

-

--

._ mil~

a

from town is a roomy 3 BR. l lJ2 bath home ~ith
full
basement. Situated on a ?Ox210 fool lot. Call now for an

•

ACREAGE WITHIN CITY OF GALLlPO~fS:
Property extends from Garfield Ave . to O_h1o Rtver .
Has cottage with living room. 2 b:edrooms, dtnlng area,
kit. and bath. Nat. gas heat plus w-b firepla ce. Byy all
for $32,000.00.

.

'

TWO-STORY :. 3 bedroom home including 3·SO'x150'
lots overlooking Ohio River. Price $16,000.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING : Located . 1222 Secbnd
Ave .• GaiUpolis . Price $17; 5CO .OO.
10 ACRES : Fronts on Ne;ghborhood Rd . Buildings lots
. no mobile 'homes. Price $15,000.00 .

""""'

Newlyweds or retired couple, this home is just right for
either . Located in Eureka, has 2 BR's, LR. bath and
kitchen. Priced at only $17,900.

APPROX.
3 ACRES : On
c:Orner . lot
along
Neighborhood Rd. No mobile homes. Pnce 51B,OOO .OO.

PIKE - Lots for
Centenary
available.

m sa le . Located in
0 wlth ·co. water

SALE
197b HONOA, 36Q , low mileage, SWIMMI NG POOL SUPPLIES. 100
exc. cond ., Ph . 379-2607.
lb. Clarine, $74 .95, 100 1b Filter
Sand , $9.00 , 25 lb. Eorlh, $5.50,
70 HONDA Harley Hardtail. chop·
Do It Yourslf Pool Kits , 16 x 32 ,
1974 KAWA5KI 100. good shape,
ped and customized. $700. Ph.
$2195. Over I ,000 Pool1tems in
$400 .. also 4 ET Mags , for Vega
245-5024 or 4A6·BSS6.
stock. Coalvil le, 667·3146, Hun ·
or Monzo, $100., Ph . 245-5823
lii'RAW, $1.00 ;n Ueld. $L25 in
tington , W. Vo ., 73b-0311,
after 5 pm.
born , Butler Hereford Farm ,
Lower RiVer ~oad. Ph . 256-11 13 '73, 750 TRIUMPH , loW mileage.
LIGHT WEIGHT CHIMNEY BLOCK ,
or256·6Sl8.
~xc.
cond ., ' $1050. , Ph .
8KI3, BK8 , Gollipolls Block ,
446-2783
k
I
d
446-4
..
6
::
0:_
FIREWOOD , Pk
up
oo ·
:: 2.,..__·:-:-~-.....,--~
delivered $40. , $30., not· 40 -INCH Stainless steel rang e
FARM FENCE POSTS, All SlZES .
delivered, Ph. 245•9507.
hood, $30. , Sears electric water
over 6,000 to choose from .•
$1.99 and up, shingJes . .$14.95 NON
FERSROUS
METALS .
pump and cold water storage
tonk , $125., Ph . 446-0458.
per sq., Anderson windows ,
autobotteries scrap a 1urn.
studs, other building material ,
sidings, Ph. 256· 1{40, Crown DOUBLE OVEN ELECT . STOVE, Ph.
Open daily 9-7, Franks Bargain
Oty .
_:4:::46:_·_:92:::5~2:....:-:-:-:---::-:::-:--.~
Center, Rt. 160' Porter, Ohio.
BOACK HARLEY DAVISON . 1972 HONDA 35C cc , 7,500 mHes.
1975 250 MX CANAM Motorcycle ,
61 .. ·377-4703, July Clearance
good shape' Ph. 446·7194.
$500., Ph. 367·0586.
Sale, 1977 Sporster electric 73 HONDA 450 cc , low mileage,
SIGNS, Hondpainted'·Professionol
start , $2899., 1977 Supersl1de
eKC. cond , $795. Ph. 245·5884 .
quality , business signs, store
Electric Start , $3199. , 1977 Cafe
G . 78x 15 ,
Goodyear
windows. truck doQrs. banners,
Racers(, $2900.95 , low rider, NEW
Polysteel tire. Ph . .4.46-0349 .
posters , moil box names .
$379S. , Good July 9 to 16.
Phone 446·0161, Tim Tope 525
CENTRAL AI~ COND .. VERY STRAW , 200 Boles. clean, oat
Third Ave.
·straw . some sultOble for hQ.y ,
GOODCONO ., Ph. 446-1336.
ales and stacked . Also so.me
HIGLEY 'S NEW &amp; USED BOOK
SEARS MENS Free Spirit , 10 spd.,
spolied hoy for mulch. ' Ph .
STORE.
10,000 paperbacks .
3 yrs. old, good cand., call
388 -9334
evenings
or
Buy-5ell , 446·0002
446·486? .
weekends .
HOSPITAL BED . Ph. 446·0?56.
1975 HONDA F. with extras. Ph. !973 YAMAHA 175. $2500. Jus_t
0 BUMGARDNER POOL SALES,
367-7116or.367-7522.
Rebuilt , call .446-2515. or
complete sales, servite and 1973 HD Sportster. $1600. , 19b9
~46- 3102 .
supplies. Nabil Summill Rd. Rt 1
Ford Von , $900.. Smith ac· 71 H.i:&gt;NDA Motorcycle, rebuilt
Middleport~ 992-5724
ce tylene outfit camp. wlth cart
molar and tran s., $350. Ph .
HA:Y, Phon• 245-5652
and tanks , $200., block hawk
44tl.o34 8.
10 ton porta power $.1 00., Binks __:::::::.:::o:::::'--::cco:-:--=:---:-:::-:--:c-:::2 HORSETRAILER, 446·20?5
No. 7 ond No . 18 paint guns, RAYS USED FURN, Ph. 367-0637,
Wood Bros . Corn .Picker , needs
$50 . eoch, Rodoc air file and jitair condi ti Oner. fans , breakfast
elevator vee Belt. Coli after 5
ter bug , $40. each Morgan
set ,
electric
range ,
Knocker, $40., automatic trans .
outo ., washer and dryer, coffee
887
388
PM
'
" '
for 66 Dodge Van, $50., Ph.
and end tables . several onti Small pon'f. saddle, Never been
256 -6717 .
~ _ ques . Addison. Oh.
us~ . Coli after 5 PM 388-8B74
17 Ft .
b
·..F
, .---d l k ANTIQUE IRON FENCE, roll top 1968 YELLOWSTONE,
1974 Crew Co • 1 ton or p c up,
desk. oak and walnut tables . .camper. axe. cond., and gas
exc. cond.,7 tiret on rims , cop,
ct'toirs , pie safe, ecf. Wh ites
dryer. Ph . 4.ti6-10Q.4 .
cattle rack.' 60,000 miles. S;est
Ph
.
1"974
, 16Ft .. Flbergla·,.
.:,-cBo
:--o~t.-cM-'e-r-Antiques,
Rodney.
Oh.
offer. Call otter 5 Pm 388-B87"
245·5050.
__
cury , b5 HP. outboard motor.
5 HP Outboard Motor and 12. ft . 2. 6. 71 Detroit Di•sel238 Motors,
trailer and ski access. Ph.
Aluminum boot' $250Exc . cond.
for parts, both for $750. ,
4"6·8570.
Ph 675-4671
RT0 ,9513 Roodronger Trans.
BICYCLE REPAIR , COVNTRY Ped1976 Glostron Boot , 175 HP Mere:.
Used , S700., Pog• Trdiler air
~er , 28 S.!_D_!e ~t.:.:.. _P~..: 4A6· 1.. 11 .
Metolfloke, bceptionol Shope
aw:le, "' air bOgs , $4001, 19b8
Cadilliac 4 Door HT . $350. , 1963 TENNIS REACKET AND RESTR ·
446-AS69 _ _ _--,..-:-·
White 2050T Smgle Axle TracINGING. COUNTRY Peddler
17Ft. S.O lr..ze Runabout 50 HP,
tor, .200 Engin•. 5 spd. trans ,
Sole•. 2B Stele St. Ph . 446-1411.
Chry~oler engine, heavy duty
---~-electric 2 spd rear, with 16ft.
troller , fiberglost .hull, walk
PUCH, The No . 1 Moped Solei!. and
toW boy equlpt trailer, Price Service. Country Peddler, 28
thru window and aki access ..
S2500 .. Ruber Sus,.nsion 38M,
11100.• Ph. 675·241~.
State St. Ph. 4"6·1 411 ,
beoi-nt, rebrushed,Price $500 .,
.
--·-- ~8FT. DUMP BED. for 1/t ton or )/•
1913 .KAWASKI 350 tC, like new,
500 Tru, Flow air compressot
Troil bike ond street &amp;qLii.P com·
us.O Price $75. Alto 1971 Elec·
ton pickup true~ . ·ssoo. Ph.
ploto, Ph . 67S-2415.
't
"tra Buick, $750. Ph . .tlo46·8510.
669·3951 or 388 · 8~5.
~--

Ken Morgan
..Ev:e'nings
446-0971

Evenings

Ill

-

NobiiSolmmltRci.
Rt. 1, Mldd leport

2~ ·6729 .

7A

•

HAY 1 ion GMCfi:'Uck . oc-ree
-n~
-.
in 'porch for housetroiler. Asia
290 gallon tonk mounted on
troller. Phone843-2353.

I
c;l

446-0307 or
2S6-6S3S

BOAT, 16 FT. Run·A-Baut 40 h.p.
motor, trailer, electric start, all
con trol&amp; or trade lor smaller
boat, Gravely tractor or
anything equal value. Phone
992·7494.

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

..J

!:

FOR' THE BEST IN ' FURNITURE
1975 CR125 Handa Elsinore.
UPH0LSTERING,Jree Est imates
phone 949·24 (9. ·
Pick up ond deli vetv service,
coli Mowrey's Upholstery , Pt.
1974 SUZUKI .. OO. Phone247 -2542.
Pleasant, W. Va 675 4154
CURING THE Month of July , the
Women 's Auxiliary of Veteran's
Memonal Hospital Is selling
Montgomery Ward
Watkins vanilla and block pep·
per. Order from any auxil~a ry
Sales Agency
member or call 992-5074,
For Sale ·
992·2939 or '192-2089.

~-~

63 Cl:tEV. Pickup
256-6729 .

-!;;z
-

ond has agre_e d to
C finance to the right party.
j Potential Plus for $55,000.
_
,
PRICED REDUCED TG,
Vt $13,000 - Owner says sell
.-t this 6 room and bath home
-with new aluminum siding,
Z Iaroe LR &amp; .kitchen, 3 BR' s,
(f) dining room, oil furnace
VI and flat lot In Thurman.

REFRIGERATOR ,
RANGES ,
Washers and dryers . GENE
SKAGGS. 1294 Eastern Ave . .
Ph . 446-739B .

B.rancl) BUD McGHEE.,Manager

VI
~

m rel ldng

493 Broadway
Middleport

8 YR. Old Sear's Sil'llertone col·
ored T.V ., floor model . Goad
picture. $150. Phon&amp; 9&lt;49· 2133
anytime.

We've got
great little

--

1975 DODGE window Van Sport-1 1970 AMC Hornet, b cylinder
automatic , good condition,
smon Royal , 25.000 miles $.4195
$550 . Call after 5 p.m.
Coll245-9210 or AA6·3863
992·2747 .·
1976 HONDA CIVIC, 15'000 rrules ,
4 speed trans. ,• $2495 Call 1968 (AMARO 327 outomot ic,
best offer Call after 6 p.m.
245 -9210 or 446·3869
247·2541 '
1970 VW Campmobile , exc .
1977 CHEVROlET three quarter
cond., Phone 446-4211
ton pickup, power steerinp.
1969 Ford Falcon , 6 cyl . Best offer .
power brakes 1 1O,CXXI miles
Ph 388-8874
with tOpper . Phone 992-7628 .
1961 INT . TRACTOR , 340 oOod 197:i PLYMOUTH , $Soo~ -Phone
cond ., witt! 5 ft . brush hog.
949-2307 . '
~e_r:ic&amp;d to se_!l. Ph. 67_51~~~ · - 1972 GRAN TORINO, best offer.
63 CHEV Piclo;up 'h T.. Ph.
Phone 7"2·2746.

WROUGHT IRON,
FLOWER STANDS;
FIGURINES OF
ALL KINDS

VELLOW FREESTONE canning
peaches now in season .
AV(Iiloble at any quanities.
Please bring containers. Midway Mkt. PomerQy. 992-2582 or
Bob's Market, Moson . 773-5721 .

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2174

MEXICAN POTIERY

9 PIECE DINING room set with
Duncan Fife table , pot-bellied
wood burning stove . Old bedframe w -high heodb6ord . Call
I
992 ·3427 .

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

1/ ;

FORSAli

JOHN DEERE 420 live power , 3 .
paint hitch. John Deer No . 5
mower. 7 pt .· cut . John Deer ,2
row culti'IOtor Ford - two 14 in .
bottom plow. Cpll2-47-2195 .

Auto Sales

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

3 AND A RM . furnished ond un:
furnished opts . Phone 992·
S434.

•695

2 Dr. H. B., auto., P.S., P. B. New Buick
trade. Nice car.

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
· Of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open EveningsTii6:00 - Tilsp .m . Sat.

CHEVY VANS
TEC-MINI HOMES
TEC CUSTOMIZED VANS
SWINGING TURTLE by Turtle Top

No more like this one. Auto., P. S., P. B.,
local owner . Must see to believe.

1974 BUICK APOU.O

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Think Pomeroy Motor Co.

t ' odtenf

ONLY

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, or Marvin Keebaugh.

292 eng i ne, 15,000 lb .. 2 speed rear axle, 108" cab to
axle, clean cab, like new , 82Sx20 tires.

1969 CHEV. IMP. CONV.

work car .

446·923.1

-

'1995

air.

2 Dr . H. T., body a little rough but a good

ALL FULLY EQUIPPEO

1973 CHEVROLET 2 TON •••••• '3695

•1995

All TYPES ol building motenols ,
block , brick , sewer pipes, win dows , lintels , etc. Claude
Winters . Rio Grande, 0. Phone
245-5121 after5 .

VS REALTY

I

v

~~v 1~ ~~~
o'. ~:""

Custom 4 dr. H. T., gold, black vinyl top,
ready to go on that summer vacation. Has

1969 PONTIAC LEMANS

NOW IN STOCK
3-1977 SEDAN. DEVILLES
&amp;
1-1977·COUPE DEVILLE

brakes, door locks, windows &amp; seats, 8 pass .• air. radio.
Like new tires, many more extras.

"'(our Chevy Dealer"

ONLY

'

SWIMMING

1972 CHEV. IMPALA

Sport coupe, auto., P.S., P. B., air. A nice
little family car. New Firebird trade in .

Full power, air, stereo.

Wagon, v.s, Automatic, P.s .. P . B .. . Radio. Blue f inish,
air, good tires.

1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

LAYNE'S NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
NEW
Maple bedroom suit~. $300; BR
suite, $190;Mediterranean sofa
,_ 2
and love seat $325 : Ear Am sofo
••\ '
q, ;o o.~ -...
&amp; chair, woad trim $250 and
$300; modern sofa , choir,
·
- ALUMINUM
loveseat $275, sofa bed with
- STEEL
matching choir $150 ; Recliners
-SUPPLIES
$100 ; and up : Tobles. Coffee ,
Bud Harrison
oak Hexagon , maple or pine
Evenings 446-3750
$60 each :mogazine racks ,
John Fuller
mople $28 ; Boston Rocker $55 ;
Day 446-3434
maple table, A chairs $200;
E111enings 446-1327
t able end six choirs , 7 pc .
Dinette, $109; dtnette table and
four chairs $55. Bunk beds com 1974 KAWASAKI 175 dirtbike ,
plete $150; mottreu and box
$400; 1972 SUZUKI streetbike ,
springs $60 eo firm ; chest of
$750. Call evenings alter 6 p.m ..
drawer $40 , Queen size mat·
949·2463 .
. tress &amp; box springs set $130.
,
COAL NUMBER 6. ·sTOKER OR GOODUSED
.LUMP DELIVERED. Coli (614) 2 Roll -away beds , TV's, Dinette
Choirs $10 eOch ,
Washers,
38A·2814.
dryers, ,ranges , relrigerotors,
ONE HOT water heoter, one 4
bedroom suites , beds , chests,
C'ylinder header , baby scales , 4
dressers ,
. tables ; lamps,
white wooden shutters doors
chairs , other items,2 wringer
for closets , one Sky board. Call · washers , room size oir cond .,
992-5501 .
dryer · operates on 110, gas
dryer, 3 wood kitchen cabinets ,
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
Antique book case , 2 sofas.
Badger loader mounted on
coli 4&lt;4b·0322 day or evening , 3
. Ford truck w-power unit &amp; W •
pulpwood groppl•: Taylor . mi out Buloville Rd.
model S-112 ; John Deere 4408
Skidder; Contoct Dennis Smurr ,
phone (614) 838·S3A5.

'4595
1972 PONTIAC LEMANS SPORT

PIGS PHONE 949 -28S7

~hone

Air , cruise. vinyl top, one of the nicest in
town . Only

4 Dr. H. T., cruise, air, vinyl lop. Local one
owner .

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille·

Garden Center

447 SECOND AVE .

1975 CHRYSLER 2 DR HT .

'5500

4 Cyl., 4 speed trans ., Rad io, good tires, real economy .

&amp;

•

LISTINGS NEE_DED

-

I

'

HANGING BASKETS , pots. end
geraniums .
C l eland ' s
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland , Racine, Ohio.

HanisGn's
SeMce Center

•4995

1975 BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM

air. cruise control , T&amp; Twheel, full stereo, '1
owner .

Miller Produce

We sold this new. Extra nice. Low mileage.

•3295

7
4
.
S
edan
DeVille
Vinyl roof, leather seats, full power, tactory

1 owner, clean interior, air , P. steering &amp; brak.es,
automatic, I ike new W·W tires.

992-2126 -

speed . Extra low mileage, local one
owner. Like new.

'6800

1974 FORD LTD CPE. ••••••••• '2795

'·

1975 pONTIAC GRAND.PRIX

4

Travel top, 2s8 cu . in. 6 cyl. engine. auto. trans .. like
new tires; radio, 2 wheel dr ive .

•

CHECK THESE BUYSI I

1976 DATSUN B 210

Strlckly whoiHale to all.
Not tess Ilion '12 case.

EcONOMY TRACTOR wUh oil et·
tachments. Like new. asking
$2250. Phone (h!A) 698 -3290.

'

Full power ~ factory air, leather seals, T&amp; T
wheeL stereo, 32,000 miles.

rack, dark areen fin ish, 10,000 miles, showroom clean .

~

,

'.

CASE LDT
CAN GOODS

1·"2 in. cast iron klrchensink . I
basin and 1 drain board , hong
on wall type , white, 1-3 burner
gas, hot plate. Phone 992-5714.

•

•8800

Sportabout. e. cylinder. automatic, power steering and

'

IF YOU DID AND DIDN1 CHECK WITH
SMITH NELSON IT COULD HAVE COST
Y()U MONEY.

•

76
Cadillac
Coupe
DeVille
Charcoal grey, silver leather interior, full

1976 MONTE CARLO ••••••••• ~948

.

..

'8900

brakes, rally wneels, chrome equipment,
Interior paneled and insulated, carpeted, ready to add
yovr r;»wn camping equ i pment.

1974 SCOUT. II

A NEW OR USED CAR RECENTLY?

Light blue, blue vinyl roof. de-elegance
interior. full power and air, AM-fM .slereo
with tape , T&amp; T steering wheel.

-,..-LISTINGS NEEDED -

Real Estate for Sale

eAJtC.oRN

•

RED HOT

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate for Sale

COAL , limestone, and calci.vm GENERAl ELEC. washer ond
chlor ide on4 cokium brine lor
dryer, $27S, C.nerol Elec .
dust control ond lpeciol mixing
refrigerator freet.er , no frost ,
toll for formers, b:celsior Salt
$250 , both I year old. lost
work•. Main Street. Pom•roy , trailer, Car,.o!l St., Syracuse ,
Ohio at phone 992· 3891 .
4'' c--, -, -:-;Ohio. 992 -6::1c::2;::
CAMPER. $600. Also, horse
;for sole . .tOO bushel.
trailer. $450. Phone (61") 698Phone (614) 69B-4A'I9.
3290.
1954 FERGUSON-=::..:30
.::...-cT
::-r-oc-cl-or- .
SPRING GARDEN Suppl;es , Cobplows , disc . and mowin~
boge, cauliflower , broccoli ,
machine, $1600 . Coii9BS ·3985.
and head
lettuoe plant1 ,
H
&amp;
N DAY Old or started leghorn
yellow. white, and red onion
pullets Bolh floor ar toge
~oets , on ion plorlts, Kennebec ,
liJrown available. Poultry Hous ·
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Pohtiac
ing ond ALJtamotlon, Modern.
and Red losodo seed potatoes .
Poultry . 3911W. Moin , Pomerov.
Bulk gorden seeds, potting soil.
Phone 992-2164.
pear most . lrujl trees and rose
bLJshes . Midway Market ,
Pomeroy , Oh io, 992~ :2582 .
•
Bob :t Market, Mason , W.Va.
(304) 77J-S721 .

Di_d You Buy

~( -

•

For ·Best Results Use Sunday Times·S.e ntinel Classifieds
For'Side

We've Got A Deal For You!

~

·'

'

NEW LlST.ING : Nice 2 bedroom home situated en 3f•
acre lot , 5th Ave., Kanauga . Nat. gas f.a. furnace,
refrigerator , steve, washer &amp; dryer goes with house for
S24,000.00.
· BARGAIN : 2 bedroom cottage located at 6B Mill Creek
Rd. Let size SS'x?S' . Price $7,500.00.
MOBILE HOME : Clean 2bedroom Fleetwood, located
along Kemper Hollow Rd. , 1 acre lot. Rural water, 2
outbuildings, A .C.. some furniture, all for only
512,000.00 .

ONner is very
II I very clean home.
has central air and heat, eat-In kitchen includ ing range
and hood, utility room, family room, attached garage,
and much more. lt 1 S situated on a flat well landscaped
lot. Price reduced to $32,500.

16'14 ACRES NEAR EVERGREEN : Plus 3 bedroom
home, on old Rt . 160 north ol Holzer Hasp; tal. Fuel oil
heat, rural · water, pr_lce $3·7,500.00 or owner wtll se l l
house with 1 acre for $22 ,000.00 .

For the handyman who likes lots of room. 12.75· acres
' with a 11/2 story home located only 6 miles from
Gallipolis . Owner is anxious to sell. $23,500 .

PRICE REOUCED : On 4 bedroom carpe'.ed home. 2
baths 2 w -b fire places~ rec reatiQn room, dmlng room,
modern k;tchen with all matching ll xlures, situated on
approx. '3 acres, within 10 minutes from downtown
Gallipolis. City Schoof Dis!. Heated and cooled by 2
heat pumps. P'r ice $65,000.00.
WITHIN CITY : 2-slory home loca ted on 3rd Ave. near
schools and recreation area. Nice neigh~orhood, can
be used as investment property or res1de.nce . Also
rental mobile home on rear of property. Pnce for all
53?. 500 .00.

THE DREAM HOME : Overlooking the ·Ohlo Vall~y,
this 3 bedroom carpeted home exhibits many qua my
anemities. 2 w ·b fi repla ces, fo rmal dif'!ing room. 2
magnificent family rooms, nestles wlthm a wooded
area. 22 acres In alt. howev~ r, owner. will sell house
· with 5 acres: Also, owner wtll help fmance. Call for
more information.
WE NEED LISTINGS : IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SE-LLING GIVE US A CALl ..., LET US ljELP YOU I
YOU'RE

PLANNINO.

~'iJ~LL.A C .Ai~s~S, ~~
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS,
AND WE 'RE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU .

IF YOU DON'T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD , CALL WE
MAY BE ABLE TO FINO
IT FOR YOU .

.. -~............-

-

--

2 BR . MH, $100 .. 3 BR .. MH , S12S .,
Ph. 446-01 ?S
M081LE HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBIL£ COM·
' MUNITV
Located on Rt. 14l, city wa ter , city
schools . 5 min . from Gallipolis
and Holzer Hospital.
~

-

-~

-'

SEARS KENMORE WASHER ,.
ORVER . $250 .. Carnplete se l of
Bopkcase style bunk bed ,
$125 ., Ph 446-2062.

Forth~ bargain hunter we are offering a two BR home
with bath and living room , kitchen and din ing area .
'The lot is 150 lee! deep. Call ·now, s.1s,soo.
This one has it all . It's located at C\29 Deen ie Dr. You
will love this all brick L shaped ranch with a sunken
LR, w-llreplace, formal dining, complete k;t.. 3 15x15
BR 's, 2 full baths, lots of closets, fu ll complet~ly
t;nlshed basement -{5 rooms w -fireplacel. Mid $?Q s.
Tired of living elbow to elbow? If so, wby .not_take a
look at the Colon ia l on Little Kyger Rd. Just one mile
from K .C. high school. It has four BR' s, living room
And sitting room, formai i:Hnlng room , a family _room
plus three baths. It also has two functional lireplaces .
Situated on 2 acres of land . Appointment only, cal l now .

New paint on the outside and well cared for on t.he
Inside. This home hBs four BR ' s, a full basement w•th
famf.l¥..;!_oom, carpet on the mal~ f!oor, kitchen has
built-In cabinet s joined by a formal dining room. If you
are looking for a small lot with a room house, thts could
be If. $25,900.

It you are looking for a choice lot locared in a restricted
subdivision perhaps thls Is II. Containing 2.98 acres,
this lot is located in Charolals Hills. Call today for
complete de'.ails.

-----iiuirif§-=ijdQdi~
~~·.~----·~

Any day new this home will be sold. For on l y S2S,900
you can have·3 BR's, kif. w;+" ~n,\t'G 1blneh;, range,
refrlg ., and disposi"'tl'~~
,mal fireplace. ,
partial basement, 91 ;)l"u-_..u snap and a perfect view
of the beaUtfful Ohio River. Call now!

c ft\,v ....

151 ACRE ·FARM: Near Vinton. Include~ tillable and
timber land. Also , 4 bedroom home, equ1pmelit shed .
Bottom land borders Raccoon Cre~k. Cal l, for more
Information.

IF

•

•

354 Third Ave. has new carpet, paint, and needs a new
ow.ner. Enjoy the conven ience of living downtown close
to ch~rches and stores .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANDHEATlNG
Cor. Fourth &amp; Pine
~Phc:me 114btB88 or 446-·4"7~7--­
S ANDARD
Plumbir\g · Heat ing
215 Third Ava .• 4"6-3782

-- -:-:':":-GENE PLANTS &amp; SON

PLUMBING - Hooting - Air
Condilioning, 300 Fourth Ave.
Ph. 446·1637.

--

DEWITT'S PLU.MBING
AND HEATING
Route160ot Evergteen
Phone 4(6· 273S

'-

•

VS Realty just listed an excellent building sll~. It' s
loca'.ed bn the ielt side of Rl. 141 only 4 miles from
Gallipolis. You will find several small trees on a well
sodded 120x2/IJ foot lot . Call now and make an olfer.

OUR. SAliS ARE GREAT. WE NEED LISTINGS!

PHONE
446-0552-ANmME .
.
~

428 2nd AVE.

GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

�I

•

D-6-T~SundAy Tunt'S-&amp;&gt;ntuk•l, ~unday, July 10. tm

For Best

Resul~s

Real &amp;late for SaJp

m

Use Sunday

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Times~Sentinel

For ;Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Classifieds

•

,-

Real Estate Cor Sale

Real &amp;tate (or Sale

RMI Eetale forSal.e

R..at !o;•tate for Sale

H.,al t;•tate for SAIP

Real E•late for Sale

I

The Cars listed below are above averlij!;e,

·THE- WISEMAN AGENCY

Smith

one owner cars. All carry a 100% warranty

GALLIA COUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

says:

and are exceptionaly_nice.

25'12 Locus1 51.
Gallipolis, Ol)io

REALTOR .

RE' AllOif

-

-

Due
•

CANADAY REAL

~7-Tl!t'Sunday Tmtt&gt;s-.."-•nlll1d, Suti&lt;L•y. Julv 10. l~Y/7

:

Merrill Carter
Associate
Ph. Home ·379-2184

CALL 446-3643

- \oonle Stute$- -

76 DODGE ASPEN

Associate
Ph. Home 446-2885

STA.' WAG.

Gallia County's Fasfest' Growing Real Estate Agency

76 CAMARO L·T
Air cond., vinyl top ,
sport
wheels,
automatic,
super
sharp .

Spec . Edi1ion, 6,000
miles , 77
Pontiac
tra.de ,
showroom
cond.

window, mud rm. laundry off 2 car garage, eat. m
kitchen with range, hood, oven , refrig ., dishwasher.
formal OR, c~n. air. city schools, Fifties
WANT A RANCH on a couple of acres? Here it is 3-BR.
1'12 baths, lamdy sized kitchen and ll"lng room . Fully
carpeted, all electric. Better than new cond.
THIRTIES ... FHA-VA.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION Plans for this new 3 BR
frame call for a fireplace in the LR, formal dining,
range, dishwasher, dlsp. in spacious kitchen, 1112 baths,
breezeway to 2 car garage Over 1300 sq . ft. living area

--

IN TOWN- Excellent location In town, close to shops
&amp; schools. Nice large house w1th S bedrooms, 21f7 baths.

Isn't This Where You Want To Be
One of the very finest areas In fhe community . A
setting you' ll be proud of and a golden opportunity lor
your children too. Just consider these outstanding
features Format center hall entrance, large living and
formal dining , b1g equipped eat- In kitchen with pantry,
handsome fireplace in family room, 2'h baths and 3
large bedrooms
a full basement and 2 car garage.
Over an oe&lt;rP '''

family room. fully carpeted, beautiful in ground
swimming pool. spend your vacation at home this year.
$49,500.
JUST LISTED - Very good home , has new kitchen
cabinets, new l 1f2 baths, new carpet, exterior has
aluminum siding. Old Rt 160 at Evergreen $32,000
LOVELY RANCH - Has a brick front, 3 bedrooms,
bath with shower, carpet. concrete drive, large level
lot. Bulavllle Rd. Price reduced to $28,500

Concrete dri"e ... 1.2 acre lot. Just listed! $4.1,900.
BRAND NEW colonial ranch nearing completion, ~
BR, 2 lull ~?aths, CEN AIR, lg living rm . with
fireplace, formal dining, fully carpeted, 2 car garage
patio 1 acre lot . You can still choose your favoritf'
decor for this one! Just listed! S4S.900.
BRICK AND FRAME RANCH ... nearly new. 2 BR.
large LR, k1tchen has lots of cabinets, b\Jilt in oven,
counter top range, dining area . Utility rm . 100' x150' lot
Priced to sll at S20,000.
COUNTRY LIVING yet only minutes from city- 3 BR
onck ranch features beamed ceiling In comb . family
rm kitchen. Snack bar, range, hood, dlshwashel,
•efrlg. disposal 2 full baths, 2 car garage. Nearlv '\&lt;
acre lot $40,500
BUSINESS AND HOME, lower level Ideal lor almost
1ny type business- over 1,900 sq . ft, showroom, work
area and attractive carpeted office. Upstairs. a
lastefully decorated 3 BR home. Lg. modern kitchen.
carpeting throughout. Separate gas heating systetn for
both floors . Cen. air cond. lots of parking space Super
location. Ovmer relocated in area. $40,500.
NEW ON THE MARKETI 5.03 acres ... se"eral
excellent bldg . sites .- Good 2 story, 3 BR frame. home.
Only 5 m1les from city on blacktop rd. C1ly school dlst.
$37,000.
"DOWN BY THE OHIO" Very appealing 2 story
moderniZed older home features fireplace In LR, lg
formal dining room , .4 BR, fully carpeted, rural water,
city schools. River frontage . $20,000
l BLOCKS FROM DOWNTOWN, nice 2 story, 3 BR

frame . Fully carpeted except kitchen . Lennox gas
forced air furnace . Low gas budget. Kitchen fully
equipped with refrigerator , range, dishwasher,
disposal, washer and dryer. S28,500.
BEAUTIFUL WOODED SETTING - 3 BR brick and
frame~ 2 full baths, modern kitchen with •ange, hood
and refrig Uti11ty rm . with washer and dryer. Other
rooms partially furnished . CarfM!Ied . Excellent cond
throughout. With 3 acres S32. 000~ to acres "$37,500
ROOMY, REASONABLE 3 ·BR home in Bidwell.
Exterior recently modernized with new siding.
Garage, other outbuildings. lg lot with garden space.
Rural water, septic tank. ·'516.000.
KYGER CREEK AREA- 3 BR frame. family rm.,
country kitchen with nice cabinets and pantry. Garage.
Near grocery and churches. FHA-VA. $28,900.
BETTER THAN NEW 3 yr . old frame ranch, cedar
shake trim, 3 BR , all electric, fully carpeted excep1
bath and kit. 1 car garage , nice level lawn. $28,500
BUDGET PRICED l'h miles from city- 3 BR frame,
kitchen , low cost gas heat Best you'll find for
$23,000.
."!
MONEY MAKERS 100' x 90' lot , sept1c tank, cit)
water, city schools, 2 fully furnished late model mobil•
homes. Near Spring Valley Plaza $21,500 With one
mobile hom"!, $15,500
1/ACANT LAND IN CITY -Approx. 2 acres nice level
land. Exc~llenl bullding sites. JUST LISTED S30,000
~?at-In

"ARMER'S FARM - SJ acres, 15-20 llllable, resr
fenced pasture and timber. Pond and streams. Tob.
base. lg. barn. tool shed. 3 BR modernized home has
&lt;myl siding, all electric with fireplace in LR. Modern
kitchen with range, hood, refng .-freezer. $37,000.
EIGHTY THREE ACRES, 30 pasture, pond, 3.100 ib
tobacco base. good barn. No house but a perfect bldg
or mobile home s•le. S21,500
90 ACRES, 60 tillable, 100 acres pasture fenced , 2
ponds, tobacco base, some timber, 3 barns, other
outbldg. 4 BR brick home. nearly completed. Fireplace
In LR, lull basement, garage Perfect for best cattle.
C.all for appointment
i3 ACRES, remodeled one story , A BR home. forced air
Jurnace. w1th good barn and storage bed, 666 lb.
lobacco base. S28,000.
NINETY SIX ACRE hill farm. some tlllable land, 2050
'b. tobacco base, 1972 Homette 2 BR mobile home,
septic tank,-good water supply, Hannan Trace Schools.
Just listed S25,000.
TYCOON LAKE HIDEAWAY, '4 acre wooded lot.
Gallia County rural water, sept1c tank. 2 BR mobile
home underpinned. In good cond $7,000.
BUILD YOUR HOME en one of these choice lots.
Several locations available. O.J . While Rd .• Rt. 160, Rt.
141 , Lower R.1ver .Rd. with view of Oh io River, at
131aden w•lh nver frontage. Addison Call for complete
details.
COMMERCIAL LOT AND BUILDING for sale or
lease. In city of GallipoliS- lot 66'xt74'. City water and
gas ."l mmediale possession. $25,000. Call for details on
lease.
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT property near Holzer
Hospital and Spring Valley Plaza Mobile home park,
11 pads with 4 late model mobile homes. All Utilities .
lnfome figures available to serious buyer.
IDEAL FO' THE HANDYMAN: 2 story house or
large lot in city . Good mvestment property . Needr
som;e repair . $6,500.

m

WE NEED LISTINGSI
RON 'CANADAY, REALTOR - REAl lOll"
Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate

446-3636

Hour

MODERNBR0&lt;i"M R:ANC
WITH SWIMMING POOL
Swimming pool worries are over . Lookl Almost new &amp;
modern [n every way, swimming pool mcluded'
Beautiful Ioyer . 3 bedrooms nice, large 4 double
closets, 1 smgle, l R. 11'x18' , lormal D.R .. utility R,
nlc;e family R., complete kitchen, nic:e s1ze &amp; handy ,
large 2' car garage attached These are a few of the
lnslde features. Now the rest - Lots of shrubbery,
attractiYe gate entrance to beautifully finished
walkway lead~g mto a modern new oval pooL size
17'x35' with diving board and n1ght ltght Pool
completely fenced ln. There is plenly more. 2 extra
lots , plenty of yard or garden space . fenced in on 3
sides. apple trees, grape v1nes , central air, gas for ced
air furnace, lots of insulation , low heat bills, basketball
court I quit - please call for the rest4
COUNl;'RY MANOR
S ROOM COTTAGE
WITH AN
CHILLICOTHE RD .
ARTISTIC SETTING
Wel l kept 2 bed room home,
One of Gallla County's best bath, I1V1ng fo om , torma !
3,200 sq . ft over all , ap . OR Nic e s ize k1tchen . full
prox1mately 8 acres of basement , attached
land, n1ce pond House garage. Two porct1es, one
consists of 8 rooms , 3 or 4 is a lafge front porch , n1ce
bedrooms , 3 full baths, 2 to enioy There 1S also a
showers, sunken 11v1ng
larg e garden area .;~nd
room 16'K19' W1th masstve yard Th1S property must
stone fireplace K1tchen 1S be sold It 1s pr1 ced right.
beyond words You wilt you can buy it today Move
have to see to believe .n tomorrow .
n1ce pantry , bay WtndOW
6 ROOM FRAME
loOking out aver valley.
ON 2.84 ACRES
Heat pump for heattng and
In Mercerv ille 2 or 3
coot 1ng. 28'x8 ' decking
bedrooms , rural water , 2
runn~ng length of house 2
car garage wood .IJurrHng
car garage.and many mare 11rep!ace , barn, srno'ke
features Tt1 1s good famf!y
hOIJSe wtth ce llar Large
Is leav1ng ~ounty Call
shade tree , also peath &amp;
today for appo 1ntment
apple tr ees All m.neral
LOOK WHAT WE HAV E!
r•ghtS • goes All of th1 S
ONLY S25 .000 00
EDGEMONT DRIVE
3 bedroom home - modern
COUNTRY HOME
in every way Fully car 1
&amp; 40 ACRES
peted, except k1tch en &amp; S Bedrooms, bath , wh 1te al
bath Kitchen 1S complete Siding, n 1ce country kit
- all built -tn, nice s1ze, ct1en w1th bu 1lt ·•n cabs
also eat in area N1ce
Elec wall oven table top
formal d1nin9 room . The
range Fuel oiljurnace antt
Hvtng room Is beaut1fu l
a wood ·burn 1ng space
fln1shed off by a fireplace
heater, also a wood for the fam 1ly C1rcle. Fu ll
burn ing f ireplace . Dnlled
basement New forced a1r well with etectr1c pump
natvral gas
furna ce' Barn , corn cr1b. chi eke ?
central a1r Garage . Nice house,
good pasture ,
lot . Seldom caf'l you buy a fencmg , 1S to 20 acres of
home on Edgemon t Dr 1ve
t imber , approx 20 A ,
These fme people ,u st don 't tillable land, All .mmerai
move . The area speaks tor r lghls goes , several app le
Itself. Ca ll now
trees . Cal l now
" HOMEANI.o 161ACRES
BUSINESS
WALNUT TWP .
Located on State H1ghwa .
Here 1S a lot of fa rm that
1, 3 Bedroom .hom~ w•th
can be bought at a
bath, living room , eat-I n reason4ble pf1Ce . Lots of
kttchen. Th is home Wi!IS pasture , l 1mber , 30 A
completely refin ished last tillable , most tv level land,
year and looks yery nice
plenty Qf water stream
Garage , cellar , u .rra running through farm,
building lot AlSO w1th th 1S tobacco base , 2 l ar~e
property
is
a
well barns , several other out •.
established grocery store buildings •Most fences ar~
which has done business good . some are new , lot-s of
for at leas t 40 yrs House road frontage Bldg area ,
and bus1ness each has new many poss tbil1 t1es Thi s
roof ih•s propertv cou ld man really wants to sell
be a good 1nvestm ent We are ready to help Call
property . Call now'
Today
37ACRES
180ACRESPLUS
YOUR. RETREAT
Vacant - A woodland
N1ce bUild 1ng area. plenty wonderland
same
of timber , water , .3m ile off 'pasture and til lable land .
Hwy 141
Less than Sl60 per ~e r e

GOOD BUY- Good 4 bedroom home with bath, 1am1ly
room, nice kitchen wtth range , refrlg .. storage
building, garden space. located on St. Rt . 554 at
Bidwell. $19,500.
IN TOWN - Good investment or commercial site, 2
houses on a full city lot Located on Olive St. Price
reduced to 526.500.

Before You Buy You OWe It To Yourself
To See Th1s Bi-level
No wife can make her husband do a thing ... but she can
make him wish he had . Don't wish you had after this
very attracltve home is sold to someone else . J nice
sized bedrooms, large living , attractive kitchen, 2
baths. big family room. sun deck &amp; pat1o. 2 car garage
on an acre lot surrounded by woods Price $35,000
Just listed, 4Bedroom Home 529,000.00
Yes, 4 bedrooms, yet easy to heat It's a Jlh: story
frame with large llv1ng room, d1nmg or family room ,
bit kitchen and garage . Loc~led on a flat shady lot
Looking For A Good Investment
Th1s Ouplex wilt pay for itself m less than. 8 years and
then provide you an lncome of $300 or more dollars a
month. Fur~iture stays - Good location , $28 ,500.
Want Some Acreage Close to Town?
Here's 65 ac. of beautiful wooded hills and valleys
Build 1 to 12 homes -:. Perfect yJew and location .
How About A Good Older Home in Town
This is a goodie - This old home has been cared for
properly Includes center hall formal dining, large kit
w1th breakfast nook, glassed In porch, 4 bedrooms . 2
baths, large garage and flat lot Pnced under $.50,000
One of the Nicest Homes for the Money

'
On the ¥arkel
BeautifuL nearly new, brtck with everything your
heart des1res Formal entrance, living rOom and
elegant dining , very attractive family room with wood· ·
burning fireplace, a wife-approved kitchen (with buillIns), 2 baths , plus utiltfy room Full basement and2 car
garage . All this on a 1 ac. landscaped lot with garden
This one has had the very best care and w1ll not break
you up to pay for it.
Here's A Golden Opportunity For You
A fine setting on :v. acre (plus another acre if you wish}
at the very edge of town. Perfect place to raise ch1ldren
and ~IDY some peace and quiet 3 large bedrooms ,
large I tying and dining, famil y sized kitchen, 2112 baths ,
w-bfireplace and family room, plus plenty of fresh air ,
peac~ and quiet. Reduced to $42,500.
4 Bedroom Ranch Overlooking River~ New List~ng}
Set on the front deck and spend an evening look in g at
the river~ 4 bedrooms 1 formal d1ning, large kttchen,
family room, 2 baths, full basement with finished bar
and rec. room . 2 car garage plus over 6 a c. with small
woods and room for a garden Kyger Ck School
District.

BIDWELL- Nice 3 bedroom home, bath with shower.
family room . beautiful carpet, very mce and tn
excellent condition, county water . $24,900.

nch In
Here
a very comfortable modern 3 or .f bedroom
home that can put an end to your house hunting . It
tnclvdes a n•ce large eat in kitchen, 1112 bat~s, 2 car
carport and Is located only S blocks from city park .
Pnce SA1,900.00.

17 ACRES - Lo"ely brick home with 4 bedrooms.
dinmg room. 2 fireplaces , basement, garage Beautiful
wooded land, close to hospital. $.57,000

34 ACRES - Nice S room house just remodeled, new
bath, new kitchen, new carpet, nice fireplace . has
several buildings . Located on FairY iew Rd. Close to
Mercerville . $28,500.

Building Lots - We have some really great plots to
build on - From I to 60 Ac . - How about these - 3
wooded acres on a hill - 300 tt of road frontage - water
available - or 2 acres wooded, overlooking a beautiful
take wtfh water and road .

WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS &amp; PICTURES OF ALL
OUR LISTINGS IN THE OFFICE . COME· IN &amp; LET
US HELP WITH YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

-

Attractive 3 Bedroom Ranch
You'll enjoy this lovely big family room N1ce kitchen,
home is carpeted throughout located on a flat lot with
garden. Grade school is jusl across the street.

WE BUY, SEll . OR TRADE
EVENINI)5 CALL
John Fuller---44&lt;1-4327
Oscar Baird
146 4432
Lee Joltnson-256-6740
Earl Winters---44&lt;1-3828
Doug Wetherholl---446-4244

One of the Area 's Best Buys
Here is a dandy 4 bedroom home with format dmtng
room , nice kitchen and full basement with f1nish family
room , and garage, Located on over an ac. with small
orchard and big garden - Kyger Ck $40,500.

Home &amp; II Acres, Only 520,000.00
Near Danville In Meigs County Two story frame, four
bedroom~ . dining room, nice kitchen , cellar,
basement , heated with Doxol gas Barn also used as
garage , land lays good " Work shop and chicken house
Call Mr . WiS'I!man 446 -4500 .
'
A Gentleman' s Farm -us Acre
One of the very best •beef farms in Southeastern Ohio.
90 Ac ol highly Improved hay and pasture land and 30
ac. of wooded pasture. Drive over all of it in your car.
N~w fe~ce over most. 2 ponds. 6 automatic cattle water
fountains, 3 new metal barns with concrete loafing
pads. builtin feeders, grain storage loading shule with
head gate . 3 bedroom home is like brand new and
1nclvdes large family room with handsome wood·
burning fireplace, modern kitchen with all the builtIns llf&gt; baths, 2 car carport . It' s a perfect spot located
on Stale Highway about 9 miles from Holzer Medical
·
Center.
135 Acres of Excellent Farm Lind
No buildings but some of the most beautiful rolling
grass and cropland '"the county. Some road frontage
and is perfect for development less than SSOO.OO an
acre. 7 m1les from Holzer Medical Center .

75 FORO ,1. Ton, Super Cab . Ph

245-944 1

UTILITY TRAILER, 4 ft . x 7
covered , Phone 949-2328

ff~

•

SUPER~DOLLAR
RETAIL LOCATIONS WANTED
Super Dollar Stores, Inc., a
discount variety store chain
with more than 125 stores in
the Cl!rolinas, Virginias, and
Ohio with capital resources
In excess of three million
dollars, needs store buildings
for Immediate occupancy and
future sites.

6 ROOM HOME, NOT TOO

room, 121 X24', total electric,
thermopane windows, rural water system. nice metal
storage building located on a nice level landscaped
fenced in lot. concrete driveway Nice home at only
$23.500.00.
CITY PROPERTY
SUPER BUILDING
CONVENIENTLY
SITE-27 ACRES
LOCATED
Th •s 1s 1he one vou have
One block Below City Park ,
been looking for ,.., ver 27
nice home. completely
ac land Old hon ~stead,
restored , you must see the
very litt le va lue ~Kc ept
ins ide to believe the e)!. tent
wonderful choice area for
1t has been remodeled and
butl'dtnQ . Rural water line
redecorated 6 rooms , 2
runs t1 e lengtt1 of approx
baths , F A . gas furnace,
12 acres , ready to develop
new wiring , plumbing , dry
Approx . 15 acres t1mber
wall. paper. &amp; completely
land all W!lh ln 5 miles of
CiJrpeted with top grade
GallipOliS Blacktop rd to
carpet ing
.F ~replace,
the area ihis will go tast .
t10use 1s covered WITn new
alum s1d1ng, garden area,
150 ACRE;~
ail of this &amp; more Th1s one
5350.00 PER ACRE
IS ready to move Into
Th 1s IS a good Hill Farm
Lo~s
of posslbtlittes 85
NEW BRICK HOME
acres of pasture, -40 au:-e_s
HWV . 160
or more ftllab le , s6m)!
ThtS 1S a real nice home,
good locatton, large L R , 3
ttmber. Line fences are
BRs , bath, formal OR .
good 10 rooms remodeled ,
complete' k1tchen, nice s1ze
2 storv house, 3 well built
eat.m area Full basement .
barns. 2 sheds and other
Due ro toss of a loved one.
·outbuildmgs
Call for
this home IS not all cam
appo1ntment
p\eted
outside
Tt1e
MOBILE HOME
materials are supposed to
LIKE NEW
all be on the
s to
Kirkwood
197-4 model
comp lete home
Is
14 ' x65 '
5
rooms.
2
well 1a1d out, ni
bedrooms , bath &amp; shower,
roOm s If you are a booBd•r
modern kitche n all bunt 1n
or want to finish up your
with a double w!lill oven 5
own home . Call Today A
ptece dme!te. set, llvmQ
nice lady 1S anxious to sell
room furn1ture, bt!:droom .
furn1ture, a~r conri1tioner
MOBILE
10 'x7' metal stora \ • bldg
HOME &amp; LOT
Sm oke alarm II all ~ oes A
ONLY $590000 on State
qu ,ck home for a modest
H1ghway 554
1963 3
price Call now
bedroom Town House
COMFORTABLE HOME
Mob ile Home w1lh dr illed
RIVER FRONTAGE
well w•th electric pump,
6 roams &amp; bath , partial
atso storage bldg 12'x12',
basement. nice front porch ,
located on level lot 29
beauttfUI vle.w of nver .
Acre Qu 1c k home for
Th is property tS clean &amp;
someone
attract ive It has had mafw
9ROOM
man hrs spent on it It 1S
COUNTRY HOME
made more beautiful with
W1th 3 acres . more or less,
garden area , mcludes
of level land . Less than lh
raspberries, strawberries,
mite off black.top road 5
cherry trees and grapes .
bedrooms, 11!1 bath , front &amp;
Less. tlian o4 l'nlles of '
builf.in bEJck porch. large
Gall1polls t south on Rt . 7
16'h'x221f2 t ivmg room,
VACANT LAND
automatiC washer &amp; dry er
3ACRESM.OR L.
goes, built -in cabinets, s s
leval land m Gallipolis
dbt. sink, elec cook stove .
Clty School Dist. an Clay
Hot water circulating heat
Chapel Rd . llh m1tes from
plus
woad burn1ng
State H1ghway 7 750 fl .
fireplace Has 1ts awn
frontage on Burnt Run R~ .
water system This is a
&amp; 150 ft frontage on Clay
nice up -to date count ry
Chapel Rd Only S3.000 00
home .
7ROOMS
RIVERFRONT
4BEOROOMS
COTTAGE
Gallipolis School District,
1 acre plus 2 bedrooms , 4
basement , 11h
baths,
room cot-tage , garage and
modern kitchen , complete
other outbuildings Has 1ts
with b1rch cabinets , F A
own wat~r
s st,em. Approx
furnace , carport, 2 wood
230 ft fro
on the Oh 10
burnmg fireplaces . family
River, so frontage along
room, large lot with fruit
Rt . 1 Shade trees, storm
trees and a larpe storage
doors , heated with gas ,
build ing . Within 5 miles of
front &amp; bacK porches Like
Gallipolis Nice home at a
to fish'? Boat? or Relax to
good price
the breeze of the nver?

E._N. WISEMAN, BROKER·•46 t5

WE NEED LISTINGS
500 2ND AVE.

CALL 446 3643

VARo' SALE, lamps, plct ~res , cor· IF YOU have o service to offer , CASH po1d For all makes and
models of mobde homes
mvol gloss , 1ron pots, d1shes
want to buy or sell someth1ng
Phone orea code 614 423-9531
stone jars. bed clothang table,
oe lookmg lor work
. or
clothes, Jot of dothes and
whatever
yau·n get results TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro m1sc. 810 South Second Street
foster w1th a Sentmel Wont Ad
ducts. Top pnce lor stand 1ng
Middleport , Ohio start~ng July
__ __
sawtimber. Coli 992 5965 or
Coll9'12 2156
11 thru 13th,
Basement Sole, June 27 , 28 from 8
Kent Hanby, 1-,.46·8570
3 FAM/l Y YARD Sole, good selec111 1 dark good clean clothmg COlNS , CURRENCY, tokens, old
hon of dothmg , m•sc 1tems.
toys . b1kes, rotohller , one mtle
pocket watch~s and cllai ns
July12 13, 1o49om hll4pm
from Kyger Creek Htgh School
s•lver and gold . We need 1964
Dorrell , Dugan , Broadway.
on litt le Kyger Rood
and older s1lver coins. Buy sell
Roetne, Ohio .
GARAGE SALE Monday and
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley
5 FAMilY YARD Sale, Monday ,
TUesday , July 11 and 12, 10 am
7_.2·2331.
to 6 pm , 2Vt m1le$ out M1llo
:,-L-:::DC"F:-U
:.R:.:N
_ITc_U
_R
_E
___oc_•_b
c-0- ,-e-,-. -b-,0- . ,
Tues ., Weds Cloth1rig toys. ,
m1sc . Robert Roush Res1dence,
Creek. Women end Mens
beds , etc
comple t e
Rac.tne.
Cloth1ng , furn1ture , d1shes ,
households . WnteM . D. Miller ,
1927 FARMAll TRACTORon steel ·
cerami(S and m1sc. 11ems . Ra1n . Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio or cell
double 12" drag plowS , oJi , orShme.
992·n60.
steel • 2 row cult1votor s Also, GARAGE SALE Tues
Wed -'-'-"-'-'='-'--------~
Extra block and other parts for
Tllurs ., Fn. 12.l 3,U ls. 9 AM SEVERAL BRACKETS and st,el
th t t Ph
742 233
,
rolls for convoss wagon
- A
to S PM, good mens and
unlooders ~II collect 378-6295
e rae or one
YARD SALE July l.f , 15, 16 829
w:ome.ns , boys, girls clothing
or 378-6289
• Page . St Middleport Entire
baby 1tem~ m1sc Brick HOuse
CASH• 1 Junk cars, Fry's Truck &amp;
collection of Avon bottles
In MercerYIIIe
Auto , Rutlopd. Phone 742-2081
other old b6ttles , glassware: YARD SALE .-Across from Post Qf.
or 7-42-9575. Closed Mondays
tloth)ng, someont1ques , etc.
f1ce 1n Vinton , Man Tuues .. 9 to
USED PINTO , must have standard
YARD SALE , ra1n or shine, 681 Wl
? ---'"transmi SSIOn m good condit ion.
mile 10 ~ 15 16 lots of smoll
fires, etc Call Rascoe Satterclothes
_
loeld~~
~YARD SAlE on Church St. tn
WE WANT TO BUY LAND 1-6
Syracuse at John Bentley
acres zoned multi-tomuy with
reSidence, Weds July 13 to fn · NEW COMPANY - B1g Bend
woter and sewer John Winkel
Developers Fmest m remDjJelday , July 15, 9 00 till 5 00 P.M
_(61_4~
~~88
mg, po1ntlng and concrete
Vary mea g•rls' dresses. jeons.
work . Interior and exterior WANTEIJ o1a p•onos , any cond1·
cut-offs , and tops , s1zes 6-10.
Free est1mates. Phone
ladies dresses, shorts , blouses,
t1on Pay•ng $10 and $2S.OC
992-3573
and slacks, sizes 8 12. Some
each. F1rS'I floor only. Exper
moterntt)' clothes , s1ze 12, EXCAVATION· COMPLETE sephc
movrng Fully 1nsured com
pony. Wnte g1vlng direct•ons
men's suites and slacks, p•csystems. Springs devol op~
tures , clocks , boby ammg pol
W1tten Ptonos, Bo,. 189 Sord1s
All work 1s , guaranteed. Bred
Ohoo 43946. Ph 614-483•1605 '
ty , carseot, bock pock , electr1c
l ew1s , phone 7-42-2451
worm1ng
d11h
walker .
24 Ft. to 26 Ft. se lf contom ed
Bedspreads, drapes. pat10 urn · EXCAVATING, BA CKHOE dozer ,
traveltra1ler, Ph -446 -3681.
trencher
,
Low
Boy
,
dump
truck
brello
b1cycles, d1slles
trucks , sept1c systems ' B•ll NON - FER~IS METALS, SCRAF
typitwriters, books ele&lt;.lf•c;
Pullins . phone 997-2478 doy or
ALUIM SIDING, AUTO BAT·
deep fryer .' el&amp;ctrtc razor stop
nlght.
by~n rour way to he pool. !.
TERIES Ph 256 1440
1

GALLIPOLIS

JUNK auto and sc'rop metal. Ph
388-8776.
GOOD USED FURNITURE , Excep tlng Uphostered. Ph. ,.46·0322

Downtown-Shopping Centers
Strip Centers-Free Standing
• Existing or new construction

Send in/ormation to:
George P. Culbertson
Super Dollar Stores, Inc.
Box 17804
Raleigh, N. C. 27609

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

West bites the bullet

FOUND - ONE ballglove, M;d.
' dleport Football Fteld. If owner
con identify, ca11992·2882.
LOST - FEMAlE IRISH SETTER In
v1cmity of Cherry Ridge. Phone
992·6093 evenmgs 1f found
LOST FEMALE S1omase cot weormg wh1te collar in Pomeroy
VICinity. Call992·3214.
FOUND YOUNG mole block onl:t
tan dog near long Bottom area .
Phone 985-4244 ,
.-~--~~~----,

SWAIN

.,.,ON BARN

••
ftU\111
We sell enything for
anybody •• our Auchon
B•rn or In vuor 1\ame. For
lnfarm1t10n end pickup
.serv1ce call 2:56-1 f67.
S•le Every Saturd•y
Nl9hlll7 p .m.

Location: 112 mile out Jerrico Road in Poin1
Pleasant.

Listing in part: 2 platform rockers, stuffed
chair, large sofa, 2 TV's, table lamps,
bookcase, Early American living room
suite, Turf-Master riding lawn mower
kitchen cabinet with roll, child's merry-go:
round, iron bed, 2 kitchen tables, large cutoff saw, odd chairs, record cabinet, 4 milk
cans, fruit jars •. old table, hand tools,
wardrol)e, bass1nette, books, sweeper,
dishwasher, book shelf, table top electric
range, pictures, _dishes, AM- FM stereo,
smoker, 2 old rad1os, trunks, old med,clne
cabinet, sewing machine, buggy with
rubber tires and lots of miscellaneous.
Owner, Skip

&amp; DoHie Campbell

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Konnoth Swain, i\oct.
Carner Tltird &amp; Oliv•
1.----------~

SWAIN AUCTlO,N SERVICE
Kenneth Swain Auctioneers
beryl Alban
O.lllpols, Ohio
Oak Hill, Ohio .

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

9

NORTH !D)

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JULY 16 AT 10:30 AM

'4897

Air, Rayye wheels,
marlin blue , white
landau top. Extra
nice .

steering. 6,801 miles.
original price new
$4400. Now only

Air, AM- FM, cruise.
driven only 32,256,
senior citizens trade.

3 bedrooms, famUy

•4797

'2997

75 CAMARO LT

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

Air, 350 eng., Rallye
wheels.
local
businessman's
daughter' s
trade .
Only 29.469 mile s.
Expect the best.

Air, 6 cyl., auto .• P.
steering,
custom
interior,
lot
of
econo my here .

•4097

•2997

74 BUICK CENTURY
WXUS CPE.

73 BUICK UMITED

Air
cond..
27 ,2 70
m i les. we sold it new .
Extra nice .

•3697
75 CHEV. IMPALA
SPT. CPE.
Air, new radial tires.
local • businessman 's
trade, Marlin blue
with dart blue top.

'3597
72 INTERNATIONAL
Travelall . St . Wagon,
automatic. air cond.,
travel
tow
pkg.,
driven only 37,270
miles. Lot of wagon
here .

4 Dr . , loaded with
extras,
burgJUndy,
white vinyl top .- good
road car .

'2997

•3497

•2697

HOMESITES
sale 1 acre and 'RELAND MORTGAGE CO.
2 BR. HOME , 2 acres, also 15 THREE B.
BY OWNER , exSpeC10hz1ng 1n FHA ond VA
up M1ddleport , near Rutland .
Home loons. Als.o Ref1nanc1ng .
acres, 379·2566 see Lee Sword , tro Iorge fomdy rm , W1th
Coll992-7481
R1 1 Northuq.
fireplace , beouhful k1tchen lots
463 2nd Ave. loco ted 2nd floor.
of cabmets . d1shwosher , range, NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
Gallipolis Ph 446 7172
all etec , 1 acre M1ddleport.
ON GEORGES CREEK RD .. :Y. m1le
din rm . w1th mce v1ew. lg
off Bulovllle, Hil ltop lot, 51J, to util1ty room w1th shelves for _ close to Rutland. Phone 992- GRADE A DAIRY, One of Gollio
County s best lAO A fertile
7481.
ll acres, good rood pnc~s
canned food , 2 baths, lots of
land, mostly t111able, 8 cow
range from $A500 to $9500 Ph
closet space sets on 1 acre SMAll form for sale , 10% down ,
porlor , 18 x 50 s1lo w1th
A46 -4635
level lot with 5 acres posture
owner financed Monroe Coun-unlooder
end feeder , 60 free
HOUSE IN TOWN, 1'/1 lots
od10101ng, garage . two porty W. Vo Phone (304 ) 772stalls,
other
barns , cnbs ond
$13.500 Ph . 4A6-3224 after 5
ches on 8ulov1lle Rd near
3102 or (30.) 772-3227.
remodeled .home, StOO,OOO ·
Shrme Club coll446 0352
Strout Realty .446·00()8: "
3 BRS BATH . Iorge kttchen, plen·
ty cobmets space. Iorge uhlt1y 4 BR HOUSE on one ocrtt lot m
s,dwell. Ph 38B B746
roo m, hardwood floors o~r
cond , carpet new gbroge ond FARM . bO Acres House, 3 Brs ,
work shop orea PH AA6·9723
pnced
reasonable ,
Ph .
after 5 PM
256-1509
•
4 BR .HOME OFF Rt 160 in Grond·
Y1ew Est N1ce ndlslde setting
large fenced yard. LR w1tk
coth ce1hng and f1replace , OR
K1tc . w1th bu 1lt -ms lower level .~!!&lt;:!!"!!!~
REAL lOR
MAIN
has b•g Fam . WBFP , lrg laun
VIRGIL
B.
TEAFORD.
SR.
POMEROY,
dry rm and 2 more good Sized
REALTOR
rms present ly used as storage
APPROX. 1 Acre close in
216 E. Second Street
ond play rms 3 baths , double
Lovely
equipped
BOB LAN
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
garage w1 th auto, opner, cen·
kitchen,
2
bedrooms.
bath,
BRAN.CH
MANAG.ER
Phone
992-3325
trol 01r and gas heat Shown by
SSS SECOND AVENUE
carpeting,
panel1ng,
oppt only. late $-tO.s coli
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .
formal d1nlng , garage,
GOOD CONSTRUCTION 446-7229.
Office
446-7900
basement A low $16,500.00 .
Glass stucco outside f•nish.
Home
446-l 049
Equipped ki chen, dining ,
3
ALMOST NEW
VA·FHA, 30 yr. fmancmg . Ireland
basement with fireplace . 2
bedrooms ,
2
baths,
Mortgage , 77 E. State, Athens ,
'lirE. NEED YOUR
car garage on corner lot .
carpeted. lo"ely kitchen,
phone (614) 592-3051.
dmlng , 1 acre of
formal
S3S.OOO.
"PROPERTY TO
5 ROOM HOUSE both, 2 porches,
ground,
carport . VERY
RT.
7
TUPPERS
PLAINS
SELL NOW!
one screened in , goroge and
NICE $30,000 00
- Corner lot old 8 room
carport Wolk 1ng d1stance to
NEW LISTING
IN THE
house,
metal
roof ,
COUNTRY liViNG Elementary School and town
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
4 BEDROOM 2 story
nome
electricity,
T
P
.
water
About 2 acres, 1V2 baths,
Very
well
constru
cted
3
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Forced a~r furnace. Located ot
Forced Olf furnace , Middleport
tormal dining, 4 bedrooms.
available $5,000.
bedroom w1th carport and
ATHENS
COUNTY
304
Wetzgoll
St.,
Pomeroy
.
call
Phone m-3457
storage area 1n Ga lli ,:&gt;Oils
SAVI NGS
some carpeting, storage
IN TOWN - 4 bedroom
ofter.S , 992·3488
City School o ,str lct Th iS
&amp; LOAN COMPANY
2 BEDROOM HOUSE on Rr. 124.
bldg 2 car garage, close to
large
older
home
on
corner
home has a large lot with It
PLAINTIFF
n1ce
Ou1ck sale. Phone
mine
lof.
Beautiful
woodwork.
2area .
ONLY
and
is
close
to
the
Sliver
vs
7422174
car garage and double lot.
$10,500.00.
Bridge Plaza and Route 7
CHARLES D HATFIELD.
and 35. Moderately priced
ET AL
Walk to the stores . Just
VERY LOVELY BRICK HOUSE FOR sale, 3 bedrooms.
at S27 ,ooo .oo.
DEFENDANTS
•
wall
·
to-woli
corpet
,
lull
base·
HaS-ever'Yfhmg 1ndudmg S
SJS,OOO.
No. 16,364
ment,
garage
on
2
acres
land
4
acres
of ground. Modern
COUNTRY
ACRENew
NEW
LISTING
LEGAL NOTICE
y(s old Beauhfu l house and o
Pursuant to an order of
eqUippeOkitchen,
3 large
one
year
old
ranch.
3
good location 1h mile from
Get away from 1t ali! very
Sa le issued by the Common
bedrooms,
large
rec
room
bedroom
home
with
2
Pleas Court of Me!gs County,
Tuppers Plains on St Rl 7 Ask nice 3 bedroom brick
with stone f1replace, 2
baths, equipped kitchen ,
Oh•o; I witt offer for sale at ~
setting an 3 acres of lend
•ng $2a.ooo Phone (614)
public auction on the 16th day
near Rio Grande ThiS
baths. ALMOST NEW
dining , and utility rooms.
667 -3644.
No. 208 - 1 acre bi-level
of July , 1977 at 10 ·00 A.M. at
home has a quiet, scenic
BRICK - 4 bedrooms, ll/2
$45,200.00.
home. 7 rooms. 2'1&gt; baths.
the court House Steps, In the 5 ROOM HOUSE tn country, also
location and is bargain
baths, fireplace In the
LOOK ABOUT lf&gt; ACRE V1llage ot Pomeroy , County
targe family room with
priced at SSO,OOO.OO.
furn1ture. Phone 99:2·587\
ll"ing
room,
carpeting,
Storage
bu•ldlng ,
2
,-'--.:'---of Meigs , State of Ohio, the
fireplace, 2 car garage,
to I tow1ng described real 3 BEDROOM HOUSE , f1replace 1n
BUSINESS
natural gas furnace, all
bedroom mobi le home.
central
air
conditioning,
liVIng room full basement 2 car
OPPORTUNITY
estate
utilities on corner lot .
bath, _ carpeting, e:xcellent
lots of closet space. Owner
Sa1d real estate situated In
garage ,
near
Eastern
ne
ighborhood. _ lmmed late
524,-ooo.
transferred out of area.
Village ot Middleport , County
Go1ng business that can be
High .School Phone98~·3867
MIDDLEPORT - L~rge 5
posses sion As.klng. just
bought at a close -out prtce
of Me1gs and State of Oh1o ,
Price S44.000.
Being lots 3AO, 341 and 5' off ONE ACRE to 5 acres, bu•ld1ng
Call in Ieday for more
bedroom brick home on
$8.000.00.
No. 211-SO a ., M or l, with
the west side of L~t 339 m
lots Coli 992-5869 or 985·3595
deta11s .
112 baths and
spacious
lot.
3
RETIRE HERE - Very
i'
l
l!ow
r
anch
style
home.
Horton's lower Pom~rOy sub · _,__
.
2
wood·burning
'
fireplaces
.
yard to cut, 3 n~ee
little
dtvislon of the Village of HOUSE and one-fourth ocre with
cent 'air, cen. vac. system,
NEAR MINES
Middleport
more land available . W1ll1am ltottc::hen completely fur .,
Gameroom w1th built-i n
bedroom s , bath , lull
Reference Deed : Volume
A Clonch , BraCibury tust post
Recently constructed 3
bar. Central healing and
basement. newer home,
fireplace. large bedrooms
bedroom home which st111
261 page 11. Meigs County
WMPO.
hardwood
floors and
fully
c~rpeted
•
w-walk-in
closets.
2lf2
Deed Records
_____.... - - - - - . --·--- ·-ht~s some finish work to be
baths,
with
other
carpeting . SEE THIS
COUNTRY HOME - 3
Terms of sale· Cash for not SYRACUSE, WITH vtew olrwer. a
completed . You will really
less than two thirds of the
Peat 3 bedroom house w1th 2 outbuildings Want to live
enjoy tt'le Quiet location of
bedrooms, full basement,
TODAY - $18,000 00
this property. P'rlced at
appraised value. subject to --'cor garage on 6'/2 acres Fronts
In quiet country setting?
automatic
furnace
,
POMEROY - 2 story
ly $17 ,SOO
\1: ; 1or real eslate. taxes for
on both State Rt 1:iA and
This Is for you .
carport-garage, and 2
frame, .4 bedrooms, bath,
7
Property appraised at
Snowboll Mill . Acreage would
acres of land. 525,000.
porches, some carpeting
IN TOWN
No. 207- 125 a . farm, 5 B R
$6,000 oo
make a beautiful sub -d•v•s1on
FLEA
MARKET
and
paneling , N G. heat
home,
w
free
gas.
James J. Proffitt
Starkey Realty , call Ron
Good rental lnYestment
$6,725.00.
Suitable
building
In
Dexter.
carpeted,
mod
.
kitchen
;
Sheriff of
McOqde. (6U) 592-2419 or Vtc
opportunity, or whatever . 2
Will sell on land contract.
MANY OTHER GOOD
Meigs County, Ohio
Wolle, 949·2286
several good outbuildings.
story,· 3 bedroom with
16) 12', 19, 22 , 171 3. 10
separate dining room and
Mt
DOLE
PORT
·2
BUYS TO SEE - FOR
Land
lays
good
for
APPROX 20 ACRES on Flatwoods
garaoe (not attached) .
bedrooms.
large
living,
and
YOUR NEEDS' IN REAL
dewlopmenl.
Rood No 26 Real homes1te or
Priced at only 516.500 The
small lot to mow. All
ESTATE SEE OR CALL
w•ll sub-d1vide. Water and elec tot alone will be worth tt11S
ln time . With some work ,
utilities. Only $11,000.
us.
tf!City available. See Eskey H11i.
B04W. Mlin
this can be mad~ Into a
STOP AND THINK, WILL
Pomeroy , Oh1o
Phone
HENRY E. CLELAND
Pomeroy
992-2291
hPautlful home
For Lease
992 3885.
. REALTOR
THESE BE HIGHER
After Hours Call
OTHER COUNSELORS :
NEXT YEAR?
.
Hank, Kathy L leona
992-7133
Modern Apl. .ove rlook~ng ctty I •;, STORY FRAME hQuse 10
pork LR , 2 BR K1t.- dm rm,
CONTACT:
Htlon L. THiord
Cleland
Rutlond , 3 bedrooms , both,
C~O)'/N CITYU6-1456
~
Joe Crans
w1th range &amp; refng . $130 per
Lois Pauley
jforced air furnace , new
G. Bruce THiord
•
Associates
Ni'tional Adver:tising Withi
mo_ plut ut1l1t1es Call PJs
Branch Manager
flreptoce rail fence Shwan by
Auocl.tos
992-2259-985-4112
-G•hH"y oL liomts ..
4-46 llll9 or 446-4425
appt onl;:, 747 2089
-----~~--

~~

TEAFORDm

1

Owners, developers, brokers,
investors invited to Inquire.

ANTIQUES, Furn. , m1sc. 1tems.
Ph 2•5-SOSO ~
GOOD USED Rr:GRIGERATOR
AND FREEZER UPRIGHT ..QR
_c=H:.:E=S:.:T:..·:.P:.:
h·:.:4:..:4:::6..:·00:.:;.::22~---

Firethorne. wh ite ,
like new. Landau top .

o.

3000 to 8000 square feet

E. M. WISIMAN 446-3796

7,600
m i les.
Ecbnomy V-6 eng. ,

76 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 76 CHRYSLER NEWPORT
4 DR
Automatic,
P .

76 MONTE CARLO

-

.

You'll Have A Wonderful Feeling
When you ste-p Inside this beautiful new colonial home
you will absolutely fall In love with e"erythlng you see
Center hall entrance, formal living and din ing, very
attractive kitchen (dishwasher. range. etc .) fantastic
fireplace in the famtly room . 2 full sparkling baths, 3
large bedrooms, oversized 2 car garage and an acre tot
that is well landscaped . This one has more class than
all the rest m the price range
... - - ·-

Ai~.

•4697

'4797
INVE$.T IN THE BE
3 5• acres
shaped 3 B R brick ranch. Covered front porch entry~
2'/, baths, family rm, fireplace, lg. LR with bay

.
76 BUICK REGAL
2 DR HT

• Q 109 6

.

:•
.:
;:

• A J 10
tKJ
• Q 10 9 3
EAST
WEST
• A87 3
• KJ2
• K4 '
.97653
• 9 7 52
tB 13
•842
.K7
SOUTH

.54
• Q82
t A Q 10 6
.A J65
North-South vulnerable

:•
•

I.,.

Well , North Ea1t

Sooth

Pass

2N T

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

3N .T. Pass

I · OpenillJI lead -

It

Pass

s•

the play that received East's
approval He decided there
was no future in the heart suit
and that the only way to
defeat the contract would be
to collect three quick spade
tncks. So he promptly led his
kmg of spades and continued
with the deuce.
South looked long and hard
mall directions, finally reached over· and played dummy's
queen . East took llis ace and
returned the suit. West made
h1s jack and that was enough
South really shouldn't have
fallen fbr West's play . If West
actually held the ace and kmg
he would have under-led them
to start with. On the other
hand , there . ~ad to be •orne
real ment tO the play West
made smce 1t did succeed.

By O.wald &amp; James Jacoby
"Quite a play partner,"
chortled Eut.
"I £Uell I was desperate,"
replied West
West made the normal
OJ!"ninl load or the hve or
hearts. Ea!l won with the kinl
and returned the su1t South
wr.n 1n dummy, led the queen
of r;lubll and let it ride. West
!JJ&lt;Ik h1s ktnKII•.r•· '" where We~t made

I'

A California reader wants to
know h1s chance of making all
seven trump tricks. He holds
ace-king-queen-111-x x x and
dummy has none
The chance is 52 per cent.
He has a 36 per cent chance or
hndlng the suit divided 3-3,
plus a 16 per cent chance of
(tnding one opponent with
J'!-ck-x
\

STROUT

-

-

�D-8- TheSunda)

Tlllll'~-&amp;ntmd.Swlday , July

IO,t!li'i

-

Music festival mastennind
plans jamboree at Wheeling

Second courtroom stirred up
•
by wife of tobacco farmer
.By PAULA SCHWED
she said. It was hard to McGreevy of Hollywood.
!Scottsboro 1, " McGreevy
WINCHESTER,
Tenn . remember.
Ray rraley charged that said . " The scene ... was in'
(UP! l' - Virginia Pnce . Mrs. Street said she was McGreevy invented dialogue vented, yes.
Street, a 70-year-Qld tobacco hounded by telephone calls that portrayed Mrs. Street as · Asked why the testimony,of
farmer's wile who along with and visits from people who a " character of low life.,'
several witnesses were
a friend brought nine black had seen the movie. Her
McGreevy said he based omitted from the TV version,
youths to trial for rape almost husband , Dean Street, said his script on a book about the McGreevy said he had to
a half cent~ry ago, is stirring , the picture made her ill.
case, "Scoltsboro : A Tragedy condense two weeks of trial
up another courtroom .
" She was nervous- and of the American SQuth." He into about 100 minutes.
This time , she has brought crying and I thought I'd pave said he also checked newsNBC's attorney plans to
the National Broadcasting to carry her to the doctor," he · paper accounts.
· PARTNER in what
call Carter, who wrote the
Company to trial for airing a said.
tern observers
Wes
Fraley aske&lt;l if a reference . book as~ graduate student in
, moyie ·about the "Scottsboro
,
speculate
may be a
Friday , Mrs. Street '.s in the movie to the yoimg history, to the stand Monday
Boys· • rape ·case. Charging lawyer questioned the man Victoria as a "whore" was when the latest episode in the
developing two-man top
her character has been who wrote the movie version invented . .
leadership in Peking is
still controversial Scottsborp
smeared with lies that por- ~f the Scottsboro case. John
Defense Minister Yeh
" It was based on what I. case continues.
trayed her as a " low life,"
Chienying.
Yeh, also a vice
read in Dan ·T. Carter's book
Mrs. Street is suing tile
chairman of the Comnetwork for $6 million.
muo.ist party,ls believed to
Mrs. Street claims nine
be the power behind the
blacks, known as the "Scottsrise of Chairman Hua Kuoboro Boys," raped her on
feng. The Chinese press
March 25, 1931 , as she and a
recently has been giving ·
friend, Ruby Bates · Schut,
prominent play to botb Hoa
rode a freight train from
and Yeh.
By
CATHY
BOOTH
"'!
wasn't
lookin'
for
no
fight.
I
was
!;hattanooga to Huntsville,
NEW YORK (UP!) - For 46 years, .
look in' for work. Those we1e precious
Ala .
·
Clarence
Norris
has
lived
with
a
lie.
times.
It was hard to find a job," he s~ys .
All nine were convicted and
.
Someone
else's,
he
says.
'
'Times
were so hard he couldn't afford
sentenced. They . served a
In
1931,
Norris
and
eight
other
black
new
shoes
to replace his wornout ones or
total of 130 years in jail, but
·
youths
the
Scottsboro
·Boys
were
even
a
five-cent
frankfurter.
au now have been cleared.
convicted
on
charges
of
gang-raping
two
"I
never
did
get
no education 'cuz I
Mrs. Street, a heavy-set
white
girls
on
a
frei
ght
train
near
Scottswas
work
in'
in
the
. field," he says,
white woman, took the stand
boro,
Ala.
recalling
his
early
days
in the South.
on the first day of the trial
Together
they
served
a
total
of
over
Their
first
trial
took
only
one day. The
Thursday to brand the movie
130
years
in
prison.
It
wasn't
until
last
Scottsboro Boys were convicted and eight
version of the case " all lies."
November
,
after
30
years
as
a
fugitive,
or them sentenced to die in the electric
HUNTINGTON The
She sobbed. She muttered
that
the
last
surviving
member
of
the
chair.
Retrials
and
a
series
of
appeals
regular
monthly
bloodmobile
about trying to live a quiet,
Scottsboro Boys, Norris , flew to Alabama
.
followed in a drawn-out legal battle.
visits sponsored by the local
m 0ral life. At one point, she
to
pick
up
his
official
pardon.
·
'
'
Norris
said
lie
had
11ever
even
been
in
Red Cross chapter will have
surprised the federal court· Now one of "two girls," Vir~inia Price
a courthouse before. .
shorter hours for most visits
room by jerking down the
Street, 70, has filed $6 million civil suit
" I never seen people would lie on
·during the summer. But more
front of her blue dress to
people
like I did there. For what reason 7
NBC,
charging
the
network
with
against
blood donors will be needed ,
reveal a sca r she said the
falsely portraying her in a TV movie as an
You know for what reason. Cause we were
explained Red Cross officials.
boy$ left.
·
adulteress who may not have been raped . black," he says.
The reasons for shortening
"I got scars that the
by the nine young men .
.
He spent 15 years in Alabama prisons
the hours is an economic one.
colored boys put on me, all
" I have no sympathy for that woman.
before he was granted parole and ned.
More
orgclnization
in
over me," she said.
During
the
30
years
he
was
a
fugitive,
None.
She's
lying
and
she
knows
she's
scheduling
donors
to
appointThe movie, "Judge Horton
Ruby Bates Schut - the other "victim" lying," Norris says. "'I hope her conment times should result in
and the Scottsboro Boys,"
recanted her testimony. Virginia Street
science
will
whup
her
to
death."
better production of the pints
portrayed Mrs. Street, then
He clicks his fingernails nervously for
stuck to her story .
of blood given at ea&lt;;h,mobile
21, as an adulteress who
Next Tuesday, Norris will be 65. He
a moment, then adds :
visit .
perhaps never had been
"
I
want
to
tell
you
the
truth.
I',m
retires
this month from his job as a
With sufficient planning in
,.. raped.
warehouseman for New York City. All he
saying it now and I will always say it. I
all areas of blood collection,
mrs. Schut, who also filed a
didn 't have nothin' to do with those
wants is to live in peace, ·he says.
cost to the hospital patient
libel suit agajnst NBC last
women.
This
woman
that
's
living
now
she.
"I'm free now. I used to carry a whole
needing blood will be kept to a
year but has since died of
knows
.
s
he's
lying.
I
never
had
the
weight
lot
of
hate
in
my
heart,
but
since
I'm
free
I
cancer , , recanted
her
minimum.
don't carry no bitterness against nobody.''
of my hands on that woman."
Every time you have
testimony following the
Still, he says, "if I wa s stittin' across
Norris was just 19 at the time and he
nurses and staff working
original trial. She said the
from that woman, I don't know what might
recalls that a group of "white boys"
longer than necessary you
young Virginia Price had had
happen.
I just might go crazy . I know she's
started
a
fight
on
the
train
that
day
by
are adding expenses, exsex with a married man .in a
throwing some gravel at the black youths.
lying. And she knows it too."
plained Ro Y L. Thomas,
Huntsville railroad yard the
administrator of the Tri-State
morning before they hopped a
Red Cross Blood Program.
train to Chattanooga.
Over the past year we
NBC lawyer Bob Campbell
read part of the original trial
transcript in · whi ch Mrs.
Street identified a Jack
Tiller, who was married, as
her "boyfriend. " Mrs . Street
denied ever making such a
statement. .
Campbell read other parts
GALLIPOLIS - In the hor secover, colla r s, 'a nd sheriff foun d a horse collar
of the transcript in which' she library of the Ohio Historical bandages.
and a damaged ha ir mathad made comments similar ·Society is an interesting legal
·
In the library, the sheriff tresS.
to those made by the actress document dated November 12 foimd a number of books on
The lega l document was
in the movie.
1791.lt is a listof'the property horses and blacksmithing. signed by AB Due and Louis
Mrs. Street became con- of Frederick Bergeret, once a · Also found were general LeClerc as county officials By MICHAEL J. CONLON
fused. It was a long time ago, , resident of Gallipolis. medical dictionaries, books with ll.S.J. LeSure and
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A
sur.vey
shows American conBergeret
apparently on physical recreations, a Couvine as witn~sses.
At the end of the doc ument sumers are dissaiisfied with
SHIPS SHADOWED
diSappeared in 1790:
dictionary of fishing , a die·
we
learn who the Antoine is one of every . five items they
WASHINGTON (UP! )
" In the year 1791, tionary on plants, a book on
Four Russian navy vessels November 12, I the un- natural hi story, a complete who is mentioned in 'the buy, but fewer· than half
sailing within 35 miles of the dersigned, Louis Pierre case of mathematics. Also in opening paragraph. He wa§ bother to' complain.
The poi! also showed there
U. S. coast in the Gulf of ' LeClerc, deputy sheriff of this the library were pinknives, Antoine Due. Apparently
may
be good reason for the
MexiCo are being shadowed • · cit~ of Gallipolis, Washington scissors, a billfold, and field Bergeret had. left his
la~k
of
action - among those
possessions at Due's house.
by the destroyer USS Bigelow County, declare- that by glasses.
who
do.
protest, only one in
There is one other source in
and Navy P3 patrol bombers. virtue of two writs delivered
The document also states
'three
winds
up with a
The Pentagon said the by Mr. Anselm Tupper, that the sher iff made inquiry the Ohio Historicai library
satisfactory
answer,
Bigelow steamed ·from esquire, at Marietta, by the with the other residents of that can help the historian
The survey, publislied in
Jacksonville, Fla:, Wed- request and in favor of the Gallipolis to see if any of determine what items were
the
current edition of the
nesday to track the Russian creditors of the aforesaid city Bergeret's property was at brought by the French to
Harvard
Business Review, is
task force which includes a for the space of twelve someone else's house. The Gallipolis. The other source is
based
on
a 1975 telephone
guided mlasile cruiser, two months with no new~.~f.him, sheriff found at LaForge 's a the Winthrop Sargent papers.
sampling
of
2,400 households.
miasile destroyers and an oil that !S ' why I went to the not in favor of Bergeret for Sargent , who resided in
It
was
~onsored
by a mediatanker.
·
residence of the aforesaid the sum of 72 pounds, a horse Marietta in 1790, was the man
based
consumer
action
Antoine where are deposited saddle, a light cart, a .IJorse responsible for organizing the
by
Ralph
organization
and
MAN ACQUJTrED
the furniture and effects of cover, the front part of a pack horse train that
TOKYO '( UP! ) - An 86- the aforesaid Bergeret. .·1 carriage and 2 wheels, a brought the French across Nader's Genter for the Study
yea r-ol d man accused of · have made the following military chest, 6 boxes. of the mountains. - Jam&lt;;s of Responsive Law.
Sands, Box 3, Barlow, Ohio · ·Chief among the goods and
murder 62 years ago .Won inventory in the presence of · carpenter's tools.
services drawing ·consuiner
acquittal in a high court the aforesaid Duke Turcy and
At Mt. .Michaux 's house the 45712.
complaints · was
the
Thursday in Japan's longest- Francis Coupin, the un·
automobile
repair
industry,
fought criminal case.
dersigned."
where more than one of three'
The Hiroshima High Court
Alnong the items found
persons protested such things
ruled that Shinichi Kato was were one personal cabinet,
as poor workmanship and
not guilty of killing 50-year- two trunks, a box of drugs
"wasn 'I done right in the first
old Kisuke ota, who died July and a small library. Since
place
."
11, 1915. Presiding Judge Mr. Bergeret had not been
Close
behind on complaints
Yoshiaki Hoshiba held that - seen since 1790, it would be
were
·
appliances, home
there ·, was not enough logicaltoassumethatmost of
repairs,
mail
order
evidence to prove Kato guilty the items in his possession
promoting
tourism
and
atpurchases,
toys,
automobiles,
were brought from France.
CAMBRIDGE
The
of th e murder, for which he
tracting visitors to the region vacuum
cleaners
and
·
·
r
II)
the
personal
cabinet
Buckeye
Tourist
c.ou.ndl, a
1
serv ed a pr1son tenn o more
clothing.
were these items : {all rnade VO untary assoc1a!10n .of to join its efforts.
than 14 years.
Membership fees have
o.f porcelain ) a tea pot, bowl, . individuals, attractions and
been
lowered so that any
saucer, milk pot, sugar bowl, · busmesses interested in
jar of cosmetics. There was a promoting tourism is kicking business or attraction
STILL SERIOUS
copper compass, a tin coffee off a month l9ng membership regardless of size can become
GALLIPOLIS - Danny
pot and two small tin boxes, dr1ve durmg July. Ralph .a member.' Interested per- J eeters, husband of Deborah
and these items made of iron: Moorehead of the Farmers sons or businesses should Voreh Jeeters, ·.was still in
compass, pincers, lance, and Merchants Bank of contact the Buckeye Tourist serious condition' ift.a Florida
scissors, knife, teeth file. The Logan is directing · the Council for additional ·in' hospital Saturday. Mr,.
following items were made of me~bership effort of the formation at 910 Wheeling J eeters' wife andber parents,
Ave., Cambridge.
silver: chafing dish , can- BTC.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Voreh,
dlesticks , sponge dish, coffee
The purpose of the Buckeye
were killed last Wednesday in
spoons, needles and two Tourist Council is to promote
a semi truck-ear collision
silver boxes . Also there was travel and tourism in the
near Tallahassee, Fla.
crystal glass ·and two ebony Buckeye Region. This region
TWO SENTENCES
boxes.
covers 18 counties in mid- and
See me.
MEDIA,
P~ . (UP!)
In one of the trunks were a southeastern Ohio including .
County Judge
TRYOUTS SLA·TED
CAROU K. SNOWDEN whip, embroidery frame , Athen $, Belmont, Carroll, Delaware
Howard
F.
t;teed
Junior
has
COLUMBUS
(UPf) _ The
Dari)asc·us blade , locks, Coshocton, Guernsey,
. 24 State Street
sentenced
a
15-y~ar-old
Columbus
Clipper-Pittsburgh
fishing . lines, horse tools, Harrison, Hocking, Holmes,
Phone 446-4290
gimlets and a bridle.
Jefferson, Meigs, Monroe, Chester g1rl to two hfe sen- · Pirate Try.Out Camp will be
The other trunk contained a Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, tenc for the arson-related held July. 26 at the Clippers'
spy-glass, lantern, tea, pin Perry, Stark, Tuscarawas de~th f two young brothers. home park of Franklin
,
cushion, braiding, twine, and
Washington.
The · Trma arnett, who ~as a County Stadium.
ne~ghb
r
of
the
Vlctims
Prospects
musi
be
at
least
thermometer, thread, yarn, Buckeye Region has the only
II'UUUNCt
lead, pewter forks and active tourist council on a rece1ve the sentence Thurs- 17 years of age and furnish
.
'
day fo her sec~d-&lt;legree their own gloves, spikes, hats
~oons, leather gun case, regilfnal basis in Ohio.
dressing gown, . napkin s,
The Buckeye Tourist murder : convlctwn . ,last and other necessary gear
shirts, sheets, stockings, Co uncil invites all in- March 17 for the deaths of · The Clippers will provlde
Insurance Companies
gaiters, a bonnet, night cap, 5 dividuals,
firms ,
or Derrick Harvey, 6, and his bats, b~Ils ·and catchers
HOrt'lt Offl~e.s: Bf()(']minolon.llJinols
equipment.
• coats, 4 waistcoats. breeches, organJzations intere•te&lt;l in brother, Bnan, 13.

Clarence Norris says iis someone
else's lie .he has lived with for 46'years

By ANN W LORDO
NEW YORK (UP!) -Mel
Lawrence's calling ca rd
should
read
" crowd
specialist."
The -New
York-born
producer has spent the past
15 years predicting the
easiest, most efficient way of
transporting, feeding and
protecting thousands of
people attending outdoor
music festivals across the
country.
The mastermind of the
WoodStock, Monterey, Miami
and Newport Pop Festivals,
Lawrence is planning the
first all-star country music
jamboree for July 1&amp;.17 at the ·
Brush Run Theatrical Center
15 miles west of Wheeling,
W.Va., in St. Clairsville, ·
Ohio.
Johnny Cash, Tammy
Wynette, Donna Fargo,
Freddie Fender, June Carter

Bloodmobile visits
to be shorter

a

What Frenchmen brought
with them to Gallipolis

Few bother

maintained the six hour
visits, hqwever, an anlysis of
donor flow showed that
usually the extra hours did
not show an increase · oi
donors. The new procedure
will be followe~ by the 53
counties served by the TriState Blood Center, Thomas
added.
·
During the past year
Thomas stated there were
58,166 blood donation s either
at bloodmobile visits or at the
sub-center
Center
or
fa cilities. This was a record
year again for blood
donations. There were an
average of 88 donors during
(he six hour bloodmobile
visits, Since these visits are
set up to accommodate approximately 25 per$ons .p er
hour then we must be more
effective in our recruitment
efforts and scheduling of
donors , Thomas added.

and other country greats will
headline "Jamboree in the
Hills," the musical event
whose origins date· back to
the old days of the Louisiana
Hayride.
Lawrence believ~s the concept of the festival is here to
stay.
"Huge numbers of people,
I'm talking about over 10,000
people, aU together in one
place create a certain
energy," said the 42-year-Qld
Lawrence;
"And this energy is
infectious not only to the
crowd creating it, but to the
artists performing to it.

There's an enormous amount
of power in groups of people,
a special kind of magic that
can't be replaced," he said.
Lawrence recalled an incident during the Miami Pop
Festival:
" When I did the Miami Pop
Festival, these black clouds
sta,rted popping up and it
looked like it was going to
rain . There were 35,000
people in the stands. I
happened to be at the mike
and I said 'Why doesn' t
everybody raise their ·hands
and think no .more rain."'
Lawrence clapped his
hands and said, "The clouds
broke . I'm saying 35 ,000
people, everybody's
individual energy broke up
those clouds . physically. A
physical thing occurred." ·
The success of the.festivals
resides in Lawrence's ability
to foresee problems- traffic,
sanitation, health, and food and cover lbem.

" When people enter the
ga te, if they !eel 'ah, this
place is together,' then they'll
be together," Lawrence said.
Despite the high concentration of people power, violence
rarely breakouts.
"There has never been a
fist fight," Lawrence said.
"Woodstock with a half a
million people to it, and there
was not one fist fight. Now
you tell me a weekend in any
lllwn where there are a half a
million people in it, that they
don't have· at least three

however.

admits that country music
fa~ 3re "more considerate"
than their rock and pup
counterparts .
"At the country shows I've
attended, there's been li!Ue
disturbance. For example,
when people come up to take
pictures, they come up one at
a time. I mean a person takes
the picture, returns to his
seat arid then the next person
comes up. It's Ul)believable,"
he said.
The glamour. of prDducing
star-studded shows rarely
touches La wrcnce . He spendS
most of his time with his crew
in the local bars, drinking
beer and "living the life of the
average working stiff."
He believes the lyrics of
country music reflect the true
mood of Americans.
"The lyrics you find in
country music i~ what's happening
in
America,"

Lawrence· said,

11

no~

•

THE MODERN. spacious Jones Boys' Store on Pomeroy'~ west Main St.
will close at the end of business Tuesday, accordilig to an aMouncement by
James A. Stiffler, president ol Jones Boys, Inc. The store has been a majrir

that

etheral acid trip kind · of
stuff." ·
·
:·People go through those
little things like Donna
!'.,argo's song 'You're crazy
about me and I'm crazy about
you but you're married and
I'm married so Jet's forget it.'
That's why the crowdS are so
attentive.
"When Charlie Rich sits
down at the piano and plays
three notes Of 'Behind Closed
Doors,' the audience goes
nuts . because that song
touches everybody." he said.
The festival wiD feature
food prepared on open
barbecue pits and a SUnday
morning religious service by
the "Chaplain of Bourbon

Street,"

Rev.

MECHANIC STREET

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Carter ac!mlnistration wiU proceed With full construction on a $U billion uranium
enrichment plant at Piketon, Ohio, Sens. · John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum, both OOhio, announced today ,
Glenn and Metzenbaum said the Energy ReSearch and
Development AdministraUon is expected to make a formal
announcement today of its decision to proceed with the
complete project at Piketon.
Uranium processed at the four-unit plant will be used in
nuclear power facilities around the world.
The plant will be the largest public works facility- in terms
a! dollars spent at a al!llle locaU,on - in Ohio history . It is
expected to result in more than 6,000 construction jolis over a

.,

Rhodes hails
, . · ··. _ ·
. . Carter .acti·o· n

By United Press lntmLaUOIUII

HONG KONG - ClUNA MUST DEVELOP " the most
advanced weapons in the world" . to deal With a poasible
surPri8e attack by the Soviet Uniorl _ "our most dangerous
enemy," the official newspaper of the Chinese anned forces

said~~bject of defense

modernization and the ne.ed for
ussed 1 th ·
stepped up "war preparations" was disc
at eng ·man
article published by the newspaper, Liberation Army Daily.
ThearUcle, broadcast!&gt;y Peking RadloSwxllly, was the loth in
•
·
d
a series by the paper'S "commentator • on revampmg an
"mod·-'-'ftn" the armed forces. "Conunentator" articles in
"''~"'
such authoritative publications in China usually indicate they
are written by a high~anklng official and reflect a major
policy position.
.
TOKYO_ THE RUUNG LIBERAL DEMOcRATiC party
today appeared beaded for victory in its first electoral test
since Prime MlniBter Takeo Fukuda assumed power in

•

CON DillON ERS
SIZES FROM 4,000 TO
18,000 BTU IN STOCK

December· The balloting for 126 seats In the 252-member upper
chamber was Viewed as a crucial test for the Liberal
Democrats, conservative despite its name,"and its ability to
cootlnue governing Japan as It has since World Warn.
·
With ball~ for 96 of the 126. seats at stake counted,
· lDIOfflcialt§bulatlons gave the Liberal Democra!s 58 seats.
The Sociallats, the largest opposition party, had 21 seats. The
centrist Komeito party had eight, the moderate Democratic
Socialist party had three, the Japan Conununist party three
and minority parties and indpendenta had two each. Final
results were erpected later today .

Rotary Com pressors

Dehumidifies the

CAlRO - PRESIDENT ANWAR ·sADAT and Jordan's
King HUI&amp;ein are trying to clear a major hurdle in Arab-Israel!
peace 1alks by agreedlng that Palestinians should have an
"explicit link" to Jordan. "We are one people and one family,"
Hussein said in a television interview broadcast SUnday after
he returned to Jordan from two day~ of talkB With Sadat in
Ale:l!lndria.
. ·
Egyptian officials did not give details .of the Sadat-Hussein
agreement, but said It may get arOWICI Israel's steadfast
opposltlm to Palestinian participation at the Geneva
cooference on the Middle East. By unifying !be Palest!llians
and ,JordanianS in advance, the Palestinians would thus be
Indirectly represented at any peace talks, the officials said.

Cools~

10 Year

Case Warranty
.•

BUY NOW AND STAY A

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Gov.

ployrnent in Ohio.''

:J:;~;:~;~:::~:~~~~!
r!t:~~·::.::.~ ~~r~:!
derohowers Wednesday

LONDON. (ifi&gt;I) - .Kim ·with a few words of affection,

HOT, HUMID WEATHER.
•
'

I

Casali, cartoonist of the
"I.Dve Is..., series, gaw
blrtoh Sunday to a. boy ~ 17
moritha after the child's
'fatber died af cancer.
Mn. casali; 35, IBid MUo
Casali was conceived by
- .artlflclal ~tim with
sperm given by her late
lwiNind RobertO when he
. diKovesed two years ago he
lad cancer.
"Love Is ...n came into
be~ wben Roberto Cuali,
111 11111111, lll)owed love hotn
written to bl!il by New
Z.l~

Kim Grove and

to an American newspaper.
The couple moved to
England and built up a
multlmiiiiondollar business
from the cartoon, which
appears In newspapers in 80

couniries.
PRAYER CANCELLED

There will be no county
wide prayer meeting · this
month according to Glen R.

Blaell.

BOARD TO MEET
The Sollthn Local Board
of Education will meet In

drawlnP ol cpecial ..too July 13, at 8
.... tiny flauns captlooad . p.m. at Ole blgb

Iii!'*! off willl

t

The Middleport E-R Unit
answered a call to 70
Riverview Place at 10:10
p.m. Sunday for Lindy
Barber who had an arm injury. The patient was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for treatment.

. At 11 :15 p.m . Saturday,
Ann Davis of 30 Riverview

Place was taken to Pleasant
Valley Ho~ital and at 12:03
p.m . Saturday Charles
Beller, New Lima Road, was
taken to the office of Dr. R. R.
Pickens in Middleport..

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 60

and F~lday, and
Thursd'ay. Warm
humid with hlgbs in
mid 80s to lower 99•
overnight lows in the

fair
and
the
and
80s.

~~~eAi_:;:l~v"."=~ th?':;;a~o~i~:~~eur~~ =~:~r:::tt~f{{:::~:~::::t:::::::~::;:::::;:::r::::~
decision to locate a $4.1
billion uraninwn enrichment
plant at Piketon will mean a

officials of Ohio's major
natural gas. 11tilities on the
gas supply situation for .tbe

"We have. enough gas to
carry
us through a win!er like
"new birth of ·prosperil)' in a coming win terhea ling
we
had
in 197().1977," said
region !hat · has been season
f
tten too I
..
Rbod.es· w·as to'ld bv an . Rhodes after the briefing.
orgo
ong.
Rhodes said other gas utiliRhodes was Informed of the officiai of the Columbia Gas
decision bY the u.s. .Energy Co. of Ohio that industrial ties should "take leaves out of
ReSearch and Development curtailments would again be the book of East Ohio" and
Adflllnistration at a morning . IOOpercentforboilers, which learn from that utility's
news conference.
have
'lternative
fuel experience with drilling for
He immediately dispatched capabilities, and. between 10 gas within Ohio.
Rhodes also reported on his
an aide to draft a telegram to per cent and 20 per cent for
Carter expressing his other large indutrial and weekend, White House
•'profound gratitude on the commercial customers which meeting with Carter along
part of the people ol Ohio" for can switch to other fuels:'
with the governors of 43 other
the decision. .
Those projections are states. Rhodes said he urged
"In'my years of public life, based on a recurrence of last Carter Ill speed up the federal
Ihaveseldomseensuchunity winter 's extraordinary government's research into
on the part of political and weather,saidtheofficial,and fluidized bed combustion
community leaders," wrote the curtailments would be technology to utilitlie !be
Rhodes, mentioning the more severe without Rhodes' clean burning of high-sulfur
collective efforts of both of efforts to prompt gas coal.
Ohio's U.S. senators as well produced from Ohio wells be
Rhodes . said he briefed
as leaders of the Ohio transmitted through Carter and federal energy
General Assembly in urging Columbia's Interstate officials on his Ohio program
President Carter to sUck with ' pipelines to Ohio industries. to use state fundS to spur
In the service area of the development of four fluidized
his campaign promise to
locate the plant at Piketon. East Ohio Gas Co., c&lt;mpany .bed systems in order to prove
"The project will mean a official Art Davis told Rhodes the technique 's applicability
new birth of prosperity in a that his company would have · to large . electric Utjlity
region that has been 1,000 new wells tied into its . boilers.
In
fluidized
bed
forgotten for too long," added own transmission lines by the
combusUon,
finely-ground
'
end of thts year.
Rhodes.
"Establishment of the
Davis . s~id East Ohio's high-sulfur epa! is milled With
plant will serve as a success with its Ohio drilling limestone before it is burned.
springboard for further progra~
"shows
the Combustion of the mixture
industrial development and wisdom"
of
further results in a sharp reduction of
revitalization of the area, exploration of native g~s polluting sulfur dioxide
which has the highest unem- supplies.

.gases.

ICbool.

HELSINKI, Finland (UP!) and explosives.
·- Two Russian-speaking .
Finnish officials described
gunmen today threatened to the hijackers as "young" and
blow up their hijacked said negotiations were
Aeroflot jet with 29 hostages continuing "to . avoid all
aboard unless Finnish accidents." . But they said
alflclals refuel it, provide a &gt;·they had no Finnish crews
new crew and allow the plane trained to fly thE Tupolev 134
to fly to Sweden.
jet.
.
Chief Pollee In•pector
The
heavily
armed
Kyosti JousimH told a news hijackers released the 22
conference the hijackers WOnleJI and children first,
suddenlyhadsetadeadllneof then several hours later
4 p.m. ( 10 a.m. EDT) ·for allowed 19 male hostages to
meeting their demands.
leave the twinengine Tupolev
The gunmen, who already · 1:M parked on the tannac at
released
41
boatag~. Helsinki airport. All the
including all the wmten and boltagea are Soviets,
·
children; claim they are '\.The guruneti took over the
armed with hand IJ'I!IllldeS pull)e Sunday on
37:knlle

e

reason for countries around the world to lliunch their own fuel
enrichment programs. This lessens the· world-Wide nuclear
proliferation dang~r of having smaller and smaller countries
with the capacity to build atomic deVices."
·
Glenn and Metzeilbaum also praised the efforts of citizens
throughou\ southern Ohio who worked to save the Piketon
project, particulary those wbo organized a rally at Portsmouth
oh April 23, 1977, which was attended by ERDA's acting
administrator, Robert Fri.
"That was a memorable rally," Glenn and Metenbaumsaid.
"It united so many different groups - labor, b,usineas, civic
leaders, government officials - and impressed Upon Dr. Fri
that Ohioans were serious about wanting tbe p,lant at Piketon."

New probes begin

Born 17 months 'later :Threat made to blow up jet

SJIP AHEAD OF THIS SUMMER'S

•

facilitY lie gins full operation.
. ''BUilding this plant ·at Piketon will stimulate econolilic
Adr!llnistration officials indicated earlier . this year that ., development in a part of our state where unemployment is
ERDAmightswitchpartoftheoperation to Oak Ridge, Tenn·. double the national average," they said.
However, thls plan was scrapped probably because ·or the
''Today's aMouncement also leaves no doubt that President
extra cost- about $200million- of ~lilting the project.
Carter meant what he said," the senators said. "During the
"This is the best news that Ohio has received in a long time," 1976 campaign he told citizens of southern Ohio that he favored.
Glenn and Metzenbaum said in a joint statement.
construction of the new plant at .Piketon. The preasures to
" It is doubtful whether we as senators will ever work on a reverse that stand and move the plant elsewh&lt;ire were very
project as important as this one for Ohio,'' they said. " When intense,
you consider the l&gt;enefits that $4.1 billlion- much of it spent in
"By moving foward with the plant, America will be able to
our state - will have on the econemy, the impact is obVious. honor its nuclear fuel supply contracts well into the 198011 and
''Toctay's anno!!ll!;.ement. wJ.ll have .JI..IlOSitlve effec!. Q.!L !ti,!lt is very impcrtan\,'' they said "If the United States can
southern Ohio,for generations," they said.
. ·
guarantee nuc ear fuel deliveries, there will be much leas

·~~::;:.:~:,::,:;:,::,,:;,:,,::::~~!;~~:,::,:;ry, ·
~.~.!IN.:
.· ews. .• ·•in ·Brie+s;.
J .' ~. i,_

A'SK ABOUT OUR
SENSIBlE CREDIT PLAN

E-R called in Middleport

$4.1 billion U ·plant expansion at
Piketon· assured say Ohio senators

Bob

WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC ST.

engineers employed by the
state and the contracting
f1rn1 that boUt the bridge
would have to "evaluate
fully" the effect of tbe
cracked girder, before a
definitlve answer could be
given on the time the bridge
will be closed, and on e:l!lct(y
how the fracture will be
repaired .

time the bridge lOlght be
closed. HundredS of commuters, from Ohio to West
Virginia and from West
Virginia to Ohio are either
taking the detour over the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge ) a to
mile trip ) or parking tbeir
.cars on their own side of the
river and walking acroas.
E~rlier, spokesmen for the
highway department said

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 11, 1977

ROOM AIR

Air As It

supplier of the grocery and dry goods needs ·or Big Berid residents. Union
demandS teamed with the failure of the store to get a good economic footing
due to the closing of the Pomeroy-Mason briilge in 1975 and 1976 caused the
closing of the Pomeroy store according to Mr. Stiffler,

POINT PLEASANT - The
Silver Memorial bridge will
· be closed two to four more
weeks, a ~kesman~ the
West VIrginia S~ghway
department said today.
Speaking "unofficially,"
the spokesman Indicated !he
American Brid'~e Co!JII)8ny
may do the repair work on a
crack in a jotiit high up over
the floor of the big span over
the Ohio river that connects
Kanauga and West Virginia
just below Henderson.
Pedestrian traffic continues, with numerous cars
parked near the access routes
which are blocked by "road
closed" signs.
Highway department of·
ficials were not prepared at
11 a.m. today to make a more
~ecific conunitment about

•

Harrington. A crowd of 40,000
is expected.
Lawrence has produced
shows for every major group
including the Rolling Stones,
the Byrds, and · the Beach
Boys. What's next on his list?
''The first Star festival, y·au
know like 'Star' Wars'," the
wild-eyed Lawrence said.
"Can you ima gine a festival
out there'?"

survey says

'

·-

Lawrence,

WAREHOUSE ON

STATE FARM
,.

murders."

to complain

council's goal in '77

.

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

Promotion.of tourism

'

Bridge to stay.
closed 2-4 weeks

'

flight from Petrovskoye,
about 100 mi!es1 north of
· Moscow, to Lenin~J&gt;ad. They
ordered the pilot to fly to
Stockholm but he said he had
only enough fuel to make it to
. Helsinki.
Finland and the Soviet
Union have a hijack treaty
requiring that hijackers be
returned to their countries
and officials said the pilot
was aware of the treaty and
wanted to take advantage of
it.
•
Officials said the hijackers
have demandad their plane
be refueled to fiy to Sweden
with a new crew. TlMi Swedes
(Continued on·pBge 8)

Investigations were opened
into four incidents of theft
over the weekend ·by the
Meigs County sheriff's
department . Two traffic
accidents, both minors, also
were reported. ·
The first accident involved
Roy F. Boggs, 43, Middleport,
and Rodney D. Jordan, 23,
Rutland. Boggs wao hacking
from a parkirig space at the
.Tall Timbers Nightclub
parking lot at approximately

12:05 a.m. Sunday when he
struck a parked auto
belonging to Jordan. There
was light · damage to both
vehicles. ·
Sunday at4:20 a.m. an auto
driven by Larry C. Justice,
28, of Middleport, was southbOund on SR 7 near Eastern
High school when a doe .deer
jumped from the left side of
the road into t.h e path of his
auto. The deer was killed and

Pomeroy E-R called 3 times
The ·Pomeroy E-R Squad
was called to the former
county infinnary building on
the Harrisonville road at 3:53
p.m. Sunday for Thomas
Sarver who was having chest
pains. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 11:54 p.m. Saturday .the
squad went to Mechanic St.
for Linda Chapman who was
ill from a possible appendicitis attack. She was
!akeq to Holzer Medical
Center.

Ex-missionary

to speak at
A~Iow

~ .

.

'•

meetmg
· ·

At 4 p.m. Saturday, the
squad went to Mulberry
Heights where Arnold
Priddy, Route I, Rutland, had
been injured in a motorcycle
accident: Pomeroy Pollee
said a wheel on the vehicle
locked causing Priddy to lose
control. He was admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

there w~s heavy damage to .
the front end of the auto.
Don Roush· of Syracuse
reported someone vandalized
his home on the fourth or fifth
of July by throwing a beer
bottle through a side window
and shooting approximately
nine holes in "his roof.
Tom Gillilan of Chester
reported the theft of a 2.'1
chaMel CB and · 4 chrome
slotted deep dish mag wheels
from his auto. The car had
been wrecked earlier in the
evening on SR 143 and he had
not yet had the opportunity to
have it towed. The accident
was investigated by the Ohio
State Highway Patrol.
Approximately $200 worth
· of miscellaneous tools and
one RCA radio were stolen
from a small outbuilding on
the Richl!rd Mees property on
US 33: The theft was
·discovered on Sunday. July
10; but the date of oceurrence
was not known.
Charles E. Barnett of
Racine reported the theft of
an aluminum 12 ft. boatfrom
the Ohio River near the
Racine locks. The boat had
the name, "Wolverine" on its
hack. Also stolen were rope
arid a wire minnow trap In the
boat the the time.

ROAST BAX'i'ER
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Ted Baxter, the pompous,
egotistical anchorman on the
"Mary Tyler Moore Show,"
will be roasted by his real-life
counterparts.
Local news personalities
Jess Marlow, Connie Chung,
Bill Stout, ~ge Putnam,
Dr. George Fischbeck and
· film · reviewers
David
Sheehan and John Barbour
will "roast" actor Ted
Lows tonight in the upper
Knigh!, who played Baxter in 60s, showers likely. Cloudy,
the popular television series chance of showers Tuesday,
which recenUy ended.
highs in the upper 80s.
'The July 26 dinner, hosted . Probability qf precipitat)on
by the Ac~~lmy of Television 70 per cent today, 60 per cent
Arts &amp; ScJ.:nces, will honor tonight, 50 per cent Tuesday.

Weather .

The women's
Aglow
Fellowship wiU meet July 14
at the Pomeroy American
Legion Hall at 7 p.m. The
featured speaker' will be
Betty Charles, Lancaster,
Pa.
Raised'' in a Mennonite Baxter's retirement."
home, Betty and her husband
spent 19 years In Brazil as
missionaries and will return
to minister there occasionally. She is a popular
Betty Ann Cox, · 35, St . broke the wma...,euls of two
full gospel speaker, Bible
Marys, W.Va., was uninjured auiomobUea at noon Saturday
teacher and counselor:·
The public is Invited to when her car struck a tree off on SR 160 1n GaUia co~y,
attend ·
.this
non- SR 124 at the Intersection of two-tenths of a mile north of
,
deriominatlonal meeting. Meigs CR 50 at 10:45 p.m. CR 4.
Saturday.
Patrolmen
said
that Melvin
Relervatlons musj be called
Moderate
damag~
was
Brown, 29, Rt. I, Ewtngton,
in by this evening 'to any of
the following numbers : done her automobile. The waa driving the dump truck
Gloria Jolwson, 992-5845 ; state Highway patrol filed no' north, when he hit a bump
Elaine Sayre, 247-2031; JW!e charge. She was driving west, which jolted the gravel out ol
Baker, 949-2723; or Joyce · went over a hillcrest, lost his vehicle. Also driving
Control, went off the highway north was George Krlllbmp~
Hot.ck, 949-2325.
· the right, came back 58, Rt. 2, Vinton, and driving
to
1n the GaWpolla area, call
across
the road and off to the $0uth was Clint Fitch, 17, Rt.
Judy Jones, 448-0946 and 1n
I, Vinton. Brown wu cited on
the Mason area phone Carol left, atrlking the tree. .
Gravel
fallln't,
from
a
truck
a
charge
inaecure
stanley, ~768.

Tree hit by car.

ff

'rd.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="792">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11327">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48679">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48678">
              <text>July 10, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1390">
      <name>dailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="384">
      <name>dennison</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5419">
      <name>hook</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2288">
      <name>kiser</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="594">
      <name>reed</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7587">
      <name>stilles</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2296">
      <name>wetzel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
