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~ lO- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Frjday, July II, 1975

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: . Vetera.o s Memorial H.ospltal ~Bumgardner, James Wilson .
ADMISSIONS Dortha Sarali
Co ngo, . Thelma
Salser, Racine ; Robert Grueser, Lawrence Har ' Deemer, Syracuse; Robe'rt linger , Edith McCoy, James
Arms, Pomeroy ; Kevin Gibson.
, Howard , Pome.roy; Carla
., Kauff, Hemlock Grove;
PLEASANT VALLEY
Harold Jeffers, Pomeroy .
DISCHARGES - Audrey .
·'
DISCHARGES Peggy Davis, Gallipolis. 0.; Jerry
Grady : Buffalo; Mrs. Jack
Hendrink , Point Pleasant;
Donald Pauley, Albany; Mrs.
Gordon Clark, Clay; Richard
Canterbury,
Mason. and
·'
Tonight - Wednesday
Delphia Pancake, · Point
Pleasant.

MEIGS THEATRE

AIR PORT 1975
"
( Technicolorl
•• Based on the novel by
Ar1hur Hail ey
.. Rated PG "

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Show starts at 7:00p.m.

MASON DRIVE-IN
'.~. 1 ,,111

W

/1, ( ,u loo11

1

V.1

NH1~ 1 tly

TONIGHT

Double Feature
;, "AMERICAN GRAFFITI"
Rated PG
Plus

•

"CHARLEY VARR.ICK"
Rated PG

,"-----....a
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Holzer Medical Center
1 Discharges, July 101
Betty Bloomfield, Leslie
Brewer, Hazel Campbell,
Goldie Clendenin, Donald
Creel, Opal Cummins, Frieda
Faehnle, Mrs.
Thomas
Fletcher and infant daughter,
Duane Henders on. Donald
Hick s. Virginia HoHman
'Leroy Kennedy, Nora Lit-'
tlejohn , Anna Long, Forrest
Payne, Marvel Quillen,
Thomas Racer. Etta Reese,
Willard Saunders, Lois
Swain, Edward Thompson,
Melissa Underwood, Robert
Walton, Elizabeth Walls.
(Births}
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Watson, a son, West Columbus,
W.Va .

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SAVE $100

makers.

'399
Charter No.1980

There will be a meetil)g of
the
Meigs County Amateur
- - · (cOntinued from page 1)·
Football
team Sunday, July
floor passage.
Rep . J. Leonard Camer11, D-Lorain, committee chairman, 13, at 1 p.m. at · the Senior
has called off further meetings on the measure. He said he Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
doesn't expect a committee vote until the week after next, and ~ All players must attend or
then only if the 50 votes are counted in the 59-member call 949-2404.
Democrat1c caucus. "We're not going to get any votes fFom
the other side 1Republicans) on this bill, that's for sure," said
DIVORCE ASKED
Camera of the proposal which cleared the Senate on a straight
Filing for divorce in Meigs
party-line vote last May 22.
County common pleas court
COLUMBUS PRESIDENT FORD has been Thursday was Ada McHaffie,
Wlanimously endorsed for the Republican Presidential Roush 's Landing, Racine,
nomination next year b)' the Ohio Republican Stat:e Com- from George McHaffie , Jr .,
mittee, which took no stand on Vice President Nelson A. Apt. 131, 2396 Campbell Rd.,
Rockefeller being Ford's running-mate . The committee also Newport News, Va.
decided Thursday to entA!r a party convention slate in Ford's
behalf if he enters the Ohio primary.
State Chairman Kent B. McGough said afterwards
"nothing was said" at the hastily called meeting about
FUN FU)'-'0 TEA
Rockefeller as a running-mate. He said it was not a slight, nor
Lewis Manley Unit 263 will
did it indicate any sentiment for former California Gov. hold a Fun-Fund tea at the
Ronald Reagan as a vice presidential choice.
Mt. Moriah Church Sunday,

Mrs.
Annice
Mae
Ohlinger, So. Third Ave.,
Middleport, died Thursday
morning at the Holzer
Medical Ce~ter at the age of
86. Born Feb . 9, 1889, in

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Call No. 494

News •. in Briefs

Mrs. Ohlinger died Thursday

BAKER FURNITURE

National Bank Region No.4

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

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of Pomeroy in the State of Ohio, at the close of business on JIDle 30, 1975
published in respo1111e to call made by Comptrolhir of the Currency, IDlder Title
12, United States Code, Section 161.
'

Shawnee, Ohio, she was the
daughter of the late Ed and
Lizzie Thomas Elder.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Wesley P .
Ohlinger, in 1970; one
daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth
Parsons in 1972, and two
brothers.
Surviving are a son, David
W. Ohlinger, Middleport;
four granddaughters, Mrs .
Richard W. (Ruby) Vaughan,
Middleport, with whom she
made her home since 1970;
Mrs. Sandra lannarelli,
Middleport; Mrs. Susan
Baer, Middleport, and Miss
Sonya Ohlinger, Middleport;
one
grandson,
Russell

Parsons; a
ASSEI'S
Cash and due from bank - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $ 1,497,181.76
U.S. Treasury se·Curities - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9,005,650.98
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations - - - - - - - - 136,594,94
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
2,257 ,886. 42
Othersecurities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 37,742.50
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - 800,000.00
Loans - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8,391,671. 76
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - 285,588.00
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - )4.582,51
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - m.i_26.898,87
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - - $4,605,433.11
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
parlnerships, and vvrporations - - - - - - - - 13,400,300.97
Deposits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - 193,513.73
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 2,125,536. 75
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 72,816.94
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - $20,397,60150
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - $ 6,034,327.15
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - $14,363,274.35
Other liabilities - - - - - .. - - - - - - - - - 270i343. 76
TOTAL LIABILITIES - - - - - - - - - - - - $20,667,945.28
. RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - $115,423.14
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
$11M23.14
CAPITAL ACCOUNI'S
Equity capital-total - - - - - . - - - $1,643.530.45
Common Stock-total par value
200,000.00
No. shares authorized 8,000
No. shares outstanding 6,000
Surplus , - - - . - - - - - 1,000,000.00
Undivided profits - - - - · - TOTAL CAPITAL M9t:oUNTS
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$22,426,898.87
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
· .daYS ending with call date - - - - - - •
$19,934,866.50
Average. of tol1!lloans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - $ 8,340,194.55

SERVICE SET
Masonic funeral services
for Kenneth Miller will be
held today at Ewing Funeral
Home at 7:30 p.m . by
Pomeroy LOdge 164.

Coal

belief.

sister-in~law,

Second Street and At The

Mechanic Street Warehouse

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
3 Guys

and A Gal

other way
in hearing
BYKATIECROW
POMEROY - It ws not the end of the
world here Friday night.
However, the serious mein on the
faces of all principals in the case of
Whirlaway vs. Bimpine, f.'laY have
misled a neutral, .unJnitiated observer.
Testimony was taken in open hearing by
three judges to declare the winner of the
first Frog Derby in the history of the
United States Saturday, June 21 in
Pomeroy at the peak of the Big Bend
Regatta Weekend activities.
Judges
sitting we•e Benny Ewing, undertaker ;
Dale Warner, insurance executive, and
Bill Downie, merchant, all of Pomeroy, all
reputed for total dedication to enshrining
fairness in sports into the national
character.
,
On the day in question "Bimpine"
jockeyed by Mike Custer was declared the
winner. Owner of Bimpine is Sybil Ebersbach and his trainer was Eleanor Crow.
A protest was flied against Bimpine's
jockey by banker George Hobstetter,
POMEROY - Mike Custer, jockey
of the Frog Blmplne, the winner of the .
first Frog Derby ever held in the U. S.
Saturday challenged George Hobstetter
to a race with his Frog Whlrlaway at
the earliest possible time.
The challenge followed the decision
of a board of Inquiry Saturday that
reversed the decision of the judges at
the frog jump from Blinplne to .
Whlrlaway.

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"TEMPER AN t:E ''

We Wire Flowers

FRIDAY AND

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BOARD OF INQUIRY - Judges, 1-r, Ben H. Ewing, Dale Warner , presidiug
judge and William B. Downie, Friday night listened to testimony in regard to the
protest made by jockey George Hobstetter against jockey Mike Custer. The
Frog, Bimpine, jockeyed by Custer was declared the winner of the first frog
derby ever held in the U.S: Saturday morning following testimony Friday evening
the judges ruled that the winner of the Frog Derby be reversed and Whiriaway be
declared the winner.

QUE8TIONED CLOSEL'(-Their recollections of things seen and heard were
probed deeply in a board of inquiry Friday evening. Principals, 1-r, are Mike
Custer, jockey of Bimpine; Earl Ingels, field judg~, and George Hol&gt;stetter,
Jockey. Custer's frog, Pimpine, was declared the winner at the derby but the
judges reversed the decision giving the win to Whiriaway jockeyed by Hobstetter.
to their uttermost, it being iinpossible for When the judges came out they informed
him to jump and everybody knows a fr og the men that they would rule on the matter
jumps with his back legs."
Saturday morning and that a formal
Combatting Ingels testimony was written statement would be presented .
evidence provided by Atty. Fred Crow
This was the statement issued by the
(naturally, the husband of Eleanor) that ju~ges Saturday morning.
he watched Bimpine and was certain he ~
This heanng conducted under the
never stopped moving.
authonty of The Ohw Soc1ety for
Although at the height of the ex- Promotwn of Bullfrogs, Inc ., a compiatnt
citement of the race , Ingels had declared by the jockey of .Whtrlaway asserted that
Whirlaway the winner Bimpine finished
B1mpme was d1squal1fted by duly apahead _ by hook or cr~ok (or toe ) -and
pointed judges . One reason, unable to
despite Ingels ruling, stood as the winner . fm1sh the alloted ~.o urse , and two , could
Hence, the protest filed by Hobstetter .
not ~~ap properly. .
.
It was pointed out by Hobstetter, and
Although B1mptne was leadtng at the
Ingels agreed, that Hobstetter's frog , end of the alloted t1me ( ftv~ mmutesl,
Whirlaway was way out in .front and
there was no evtdence that Wh1rlaway was
Hobstetter raced according to the rules , III .any way racmg tmproperly. It IS the
using a yardstick to touch Whirlaway into
opmwn of th1s panel that the dec1s10n of the
the idea of jumping .
judges on disqualifying Bimpine was in
Confusion entered the hearing when order. It 1s also the opmwn of the panel
Jockey Mike custer said he udderstood
that some innoc~nt bystander may hav e
that as one didn't throw the frog, or cause tnfluenced the judges on thts dec1ston.
it to turn over he was well within the rules . After all testimony was presented at th1s
When Ingels ~id that frogs only can · hearing , it is concurred by this panel. th~t
move.,with the hind legs, Custer broke in to the rules regulatmg and other perttnent
declare that "That is if ihe frog is not facts be presented and made known to the
trained, my 'rrog Was trained."
part~;ipants in ":it_ing ." . .
.
Following the questioning the judges
Therefore ,, 11 15 the optmon of th1s
dismissed the jockeys, Ingels and Fred panel that the wmner of the Frog Derby be
Crow to make their decision.
reversed and Whirlaway be declared the
Ingels, Crow and the jockeys waited
winner." Signed by judges Dale C. Warpatiently for the decision of the judges.
ner, Ben H. Ewing and William B. Downie.

580 persons served by mental health ce.n ter

~

SI'TURDAY
10:00,.2:00

S~op

The M.e igs Inn
PHONE 992-:i629
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J'OJVIlmOi, OHIO

. Ph . 992·571!

MIDDLEPORT Steve Dawson,
supervisor of the Meigs County Mental
Health Center, which services GalliaJackson-Meigs Counties, told the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club ·Friday
evening 580 peJsons are receiving help
through the service.
Dawson said there .are presently 50
people Oli . the waiting list from Jackson .
and :iOfromGallia County .. The center is a .
private; non-profit corporation, a contr~ct ·
agency of the Gallia, Jackson and Me1gs
Counties Mental Health and Retardation
'646" Board.
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Services' pro ··ided at Ul~ Meigs of(ice

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include observation, psychotropic . drug
therapy, group o11d individual treatment,
home· visitatton, consultation and
psychological testing and evai~ati'in .
Daw,on stated further there is no
average age kind of problem encountered
in patients. They serve people from 6 to 90
years of age.
r Funding of the center comes paF.Uy
from federal and state monies and the rest
through community levies.
The cost uf interviews per person is
$46, but no one is refused services on the
basis of inability tu pay. A sliding fee

schedr.le is used according to the income
arid number of dependents of the patient,
Dawson 11oted.
P.ighty.five new persons come for
servic.e each month and 100 are terminatetl
a m onth . Future plans call for in-patient
facilities in GaUia County and a da y care
clinic.
Hollis Wood of Gallipolis was a visitin g
Rotarian .
·
The mec• in g was he!~, at the Heath
United Methodi st Church and dinner was
prepared ,.and served by la dies of · the
church.

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period .

Boone. Bill ~pires; Col.

Saltord,

Tim

The effort&gt; of producing thi s year's • Heaton ; , John Burford , lee Durieux ;
Gallia Co untry has been succe~sful. Shawnee , Patty Spires ; Cather ine
Cameron. Nancy Walker ; Captain Nve.
Everything from .the music to the Jim
Enyart ; Bareth (age 12), Mike
backstage details has a professi onal touch Rov.:an .
·
Gwendolyn (ages 18 and 33), lanl
and prov ides an evening of (amily enRoss ; Bareth . lages 18 ~nd 33) , Allen
tertainmen1.
Saunders : Millcreek Nymphs , Unda
Skaggs .. Todd Mayes. Beth Jeffers ; Sadie,
Julie Eshenaur ; Goo Goo Gandee, Bob
Herdman ; SfaaP Driver . Todd Maves;
Shakespearean Actor , Robert Ervin ;

A spec1a1 "~'amity Night' ' is planned
this evening. A family of four will be ad·
milled for $6 with additional members
admitted for $1 each . The drama is.
scheduled tu run tonight.. July 18-20 and
July 25-27. The audience is advised to bring
a lig ht sweather or wrap to the perform.
ancc .

SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1975

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GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

· ~-·'~..
goes

Judge Bradbury , Roger Willtams ;
" Odd " M c intyre, Kevin Spires ; " M"
Mcintyre, Kimberly Joy Hawks ; Daniel

Bartender (Forty Bee r Flannigan). John
Ecker : Pie ·Anna Player , Brant Adams ;
Biney . David Brohard ; Q~ artet , Roger
Will iams , James Enyart , John Ecker,
" Red " Suiter : Elwyn , Paul Bro wn ;
Gwillem , Tom Bishop ; Penelope , Anna
Lee Rogar ; T~n ne ssee Hill Girl, Joyce

Hawks : John Hunt Morgan , Steve Evflhs; ,
Rev . Haning, Paul ffowks : Pollllcion,
John Ecker ; Madam Roxy, Joyce Hawks:
Yvetle. Jatquo Gabrltsch: Fidelities,
EdnaWhitely. Lonl Ross, Wilma Mullins,
Amv Holter . Nancv Wfllker , Dawn Derks :
Fandango. Judy Sheets; Linus Evansp As .
Hlmselt ; Pharoh, As Himself .
.•
Dancers, Slngen, Actors
Karen Allen, Kathy Bennett, Susan
Bennett, Terry Bently, Alisa Beverly, Sue
Beverly, Pamela Beverly, Ann Circle,
Kathy Clark , Ramona Compton, Fred
Derks, Mary Derks , · Clyde Ev4_ns,
Margaret Evans, Pam Factor, .Stephanie
Fadelev, Doo Gabrltsch. G!'ff Gobtltsc~,
Nancy Gill , Keith 'Hawkeye' Hankins,
Don Hippensteel , Hal Hodges. Susan .
Lanham , Kelly Lemley. Jozle -McKenzie,

Amy Jo McNealy , VIcki McPherson. Jean

Meadows, Jeff Parsons, Kathy Price. Bev
Rockwell , Cindy Roush. Lisa Roush, Dan
Rowan , Kimberly Saunders, Amy ~clir ·

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IContlnued on Page 181

Your Invited Guest
R e11ching More
Th11n 12,000
Families
..._,

Devoted To The Gre11ter ,\ !fiddle Ohio V111/ey

'

Der~y

The Cast

tmts

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VOL. 10 NO. 24

jockey of "Whirlaway." Hobstetter
£!aimed Bimpine's jockey was disqualified
once and that time had elapsed with
Whirlaway'~ well out in front.
Whirlaway was trained by Edison
Hobstetter, president of the Pomeroy
National Bank, and sponsored by his bank.
During questioning Earl Ingels, field
judge of the derby stated under oath he
saw Bimpine's jockey shove his entry with
his toe and that Bimpine was not hopping .
The back legs were stretched, out to the
rear and it was impossible for the frog to
jump as they jump with the back legs, he
testifieq.
Under direct questioning, field judge
Ingels S&amp;id he disqualified the frog
Bimpine not once, but three times on
grounds he observed Bimpine's jockey
shoving his entty with his great toe ~d
that Bimpine definitely was nQt engaged m
hopping : "Jn~fact," he testified, further ;
"Bimpine's back legs were stretched

KILLED BY BOLT
SANDUSKY, Ohio ( UPI) Stephen W. Stefanowicz, 34;
Angola, Ind., was killed
Thursday on the midway at
y Cedar Point amusement park
when he was struck by
Ugh !(ling.

Pomeroy flower

...

going on, but as I pointed out
progress has been made,"
Kissinger replied.
But he said nothing about
talks toward a treaty limiting
nuclear tests to blasts of up to
150 kilotons. A senior U.S .
official indicated on-site
inspections could help police
peaceful blasts.
President Ford and Soviet
Communist leader Leonid
Brezhnev
agreed
last
November in Vladi.vostock to
limit each country to 2,400
nuclear missiles and planes,
including 1,320 missiles with,
multiple warheads.
Today's talks were expected to also include
Kissinger's efforts to get
Israel and Egypt to agree to
an interim Middle East peace
pact.
Aides exp~ained the bar
was the only spot in
Kissinger's headquarters
hotel that was both airconditioned and easily
protected by bodyguards.

Free Customer ~arking on

992-2039

•.,,,,

progress in the search for a
strategic arms agreement,
met again · today with Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko in the Carnival Bar
of the Geneva International
Hotel to nail down some of the
details.
Kissinger, winding up talks
with Gromyko before flying
to West Germany' - for a
meeting with Israeli Premier
Yitzhak Rabin , said the
United States and the Soviet
Union are making progress
toward a new Strategic Arms
Limitation Talks treaty .
"With respect to SALT, we
had extensive discussions

Save During Our ·Storewide
July Clearance Sale

Cloudy, cooler tonight and
Saturday, highs Saturday
near 75. Low tonight near 55.
Probability of precipitation
10 per cent today, 20 per cent
tonight and Saturday

. Ph. 992 · 2039

•~-r·

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
UPI Senior Editor
GENEVA,
Switzerland
(UP!) - Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger, reporting

Open Tonight ·Until 8 PM

· Mr$. Milfard van M~tter

••

Kissinger meet~g GromykQ

o/·

cxtellent. The colorful outfits are one of
the highlights of the show . They arc a
beautiful representation or the time

•

Partly cloudy with little
temperature change through
Monday . Chance &lt;if showers
or thundershowers, maiJily in
afternoon and evening hours.
Highs both days mid 70s to
low 80s. Lows SWlday night in
low and mid 50s.

A TYPICAL Rehearsal scene from "Gallia Country" is pictured above. The historical
outdoor pageant opens this evening at 9 p. m . at the Bob Evans Farms amphitheatre in Rio
Grande. The drama is scheduled to run tonight through July 13, July 18-20 and July 25-27.
(John Butler photo. I

Weather

We, the undersigned director§ attest the correctness of this report of condltlm and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our .
knowledge and bl)lief is true and correct,
Edison Hobstetter
R. Jl;. Boice
Directors
Warren Plc~s

Weather

(Continued from page 1)
West Virginia's chances of
securing the plant within its
DIES IN CRASH
borders,
Albertazzie
WASHINGTON COURT
responded, "of course it HOUSE, Ohio (UP!) - R.
could."
Dale Wade, Washington
·The commissioner termed
Court House, was killed
efforts of smaller coal opera- Wednesday night when his
tors in Monongalia County as
small plane crashed into a
a "step in the right direccornfield about 10 miles south
tion."
of here . Witnesses said they
Burkey Lilly, chairman of
saw a plane flying at a low
the Monongalia County
altitude just before it
Development Corp., told
crashed. Authorities said the
Albertazzie that a group of
plane struck high voltage ... and progress was made, "
small, independent operators
electrical lines just prior to Kissinger said on emerging
in the .area met thi~ week and
the crash.
at midnight Thursday from
vowed to pledge 46,900 tons of •
seven hours of talks.
coal for Cocalcon each day
MRS. ROOT ILL
Reporters asked Kissinger
for the next 20 years.
Ada Root, 96, Ash St., if progress was made toward
Albertazzie said
this
Middleport, was admitted to settling the major stumbling
commitment was more than
Veterans Memorial Hospital block to a new SALTlact sufficient to meet the
where she was taken by the verification:
·
requirements of Coalcon and
Middleport Emergency
"I
cannot
go
into
the
details
would serve to boost the site
Squad at 8:48a .m. today.
of a discussion that is still
proposed in Monongalia
County for location of the
plant.
Gov. Arch Moore, however,
presented
three
other
potential sites in the Mountain State for location of the
facility and they have not
been bolstered by similar
commitments of coal supplies.
"I'm a little bit concerned
because we haven't gotten
the type of cooperation (from
large coal operators) that
we've gotten from other
people
interested
in
Coalcon," said Albertazzie,
referring to local support by
civic groups and the like.
Albertazzie met with three
members of the Coalcon site
selection committee Thursday in an attempt to refine
details concerning
the
proposed plant, such as the
necessary water supply, soil
Main Store, Annex and Warehouse
requirements and geological
data.
Open Saturday 9:30 to 8 PM
He predicted the selection
committee would narrow
West Virginia'sentries to one
site by the end of the month,
then pit it against the individual sites offered by
competing states.

FLOWERS

Maxine Griffith

BY SARAH CARSEY
Galli a · Country .
aJl d chure u~ raphy all contribuled to
RIO GRANDE - A near fult house
· Mrs. 0 . ·0 . Mclnt)Te . Slatr St ., making " Gallia Country" an entertaining
enj9yed the opening performance Friday Gallipuhs, was honured · a l a spt.·rial cvt•ning . Many hours of work have gone
night of the historical musical drama receplion at the home uf Bob Evans in Hio into pruduc ti on and the effort has been
"Gallia Country" in the natural outdoor Grande prior io the performance . Mrs . su&lt;'Cessful . lt effectively traces signifi can t
amphitheater on the Bob Evans Farms in Mcintyre was introduced at lhe beginnin g history or thr area .
,
...
Rio Grande.
of the pageant's intermission by Paul
Mut·h talent was evident in "Gallia
News representatives from Ohio and as Wagner .
Cuunlry" butli onstagc and behind lhe
.far east as Philadelphia, New Hampshire
" Gallia Country ;" written by Lee scenes . The cast did a fi ne job in porand Massachusetts attended the per· Durieux. is produced by the Gallia traying the people wh o;visited and sell led
formance . The evening was officially Dramatic Arts Society. Paul Wagner . this a rea . The musi ca l numbe r s,
designated, "0. 0 . Mcintyre Night." ·
president. The drama covers the period especially in the second act, are used in a
0. 0 Mcintyre, a native of Gallipolis, from 1792 to the t890s. Colorful characters sp lendid mann er to tell the history
was one ot ·~e first nationally syndicated ·Who settled the Gallia County area in TI1be outdoor setting on a beautiful
Broadway coh..'l\nisls. His columns were eluding Jackson, Lawrence. Meigs and ......~!,~m.mer evening in addition to the excarried in more •han 500 newspapers Vinton counties are portrayed~
cellen l scenery also makes the drama
during the 1920s and ~'Is. The character,
The cast and production staff exhibit enjoyable . The ent,i re appearance gives a
"Odd" Mcintyre played ~l' Kevin Spires excellent work in this year's performance . realisti c feelin g.
wa; added to this year's prtsentati on of The music , acting , scenery, costuming,
Costwning for ,;Gall ia CoWllry'' is

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Mrs. Mary Elder, Flushing,
Mich., and
11 greatgrandchildren.
She was a member of the
First United Presbyterian
Church, Middleport,
Evangeline Chapter 172
O.E.S., White Shrine of
Jerusalem, White Rose
Lndge 291, and the Royal
Neighbors.
Funeral services will be
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
:·Rawlings-Costs
Funeral
Home with the R~v. Dwight
Zavitz officiating. Burial will
follow in Beech Grove
Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the
'funeral home today from 2
until4 p.m. and from 7 until 9
p.m. and tomorrow until
services.

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July 13. from 2 to 4 p.m. The
public is invited .
·

t, Maxine Griffith, Cashier; of the alioye-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and --

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Gallia CoUntry opeRs with bow to 'Odd:' Mclntyr~.

GRID.DE~ MEET

WASHINGTON - FORMER PRESIDENT NIXON'S 1972
campaign fund st111 has a balance of more than $1.5 million but the funds are rapidly being depleted by payment of legal
fees of some Watergate defendants.
The Nixon re-election committee filed a campaign
spending report with the Federal Election Commission Thursday, showing it had paid some of the lawyers' fees of former
Attorney General John Mitchell. The report said it was considering doing the same for former Commerce Secretary
Maurice Stans and Nixon re-election campaign lawyer Kenneth Parkinson.
Mitchell's legal fees in the Watergate coverup case totaled
$471,390.76, and the Nixon committee has paid him $200,000, the
report showed.

from the regular
low price
Special buy on 2 piece
living room suites by famous
NOW

• I

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD HAS filed his first
official campaign finance fund report. In ten days he raised
$10,000 and spent nearly two-thirds of it. The President Ford
Committee report was among hundre~flooding the Federal
Election Commission as it observed its first filing deadline
under the new campaign spending law.
Ford's relatively small financial report was in contrast to
those fil~ . ~~rlier_-by two leading Democratic presidential
contenders. Gov. George Wallace of Alabama and Sen. Henry
Jackson of Washington said they had raised a total of $6.6
miUion for their 1976 campaigns .
Ford's funds came ·in 10 individual contributions of $'1,000
each. The donors were listed as Rhoda, Russell and Ted Lund
of Minneapolis, Lauren and John Berry of Dayton, Ohio, Navy
Secretary J. William Middendorf and his wife Esabelle, Noel
Porter of Palo Alto, Calif., and industrialist David Packard
and his wife.

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PRICE 25 CENTS

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Transit plan
•
IS approved
ATHENS - The Appalachian Ohio
Regional Transit Association 1AORTA)
disclosed Saturday that its grant ap·
plication for expansion of service into
Meigs, Jackson, Vinton. and Gallia
Counties has been forwarded on to the
Federal Highway Administration by the
Ohio Department of Transportation.
The AORTA grant proposal received
the highest recommendation of the
fourteen applications reviewed by the
State . AORTA ranked number one in three
categories of : best potential for continuation. best overall proposal and best
proposal for its size of FHWA grant
requested .
Preliminary information provided by
ODOT indicated that the FHWA should
complete the preliminary project selection
by late August or early September . Final
project selection cannot occur until public
hearings are held in each of the counties
1after the preliminary project selections
are announced).
The project is sumA&gt;arized as follows:
It is designed to combine many of the
present transportation programs in seven
Southeastern Ohio counties into one
comprehensive transportation sys tem .
This project will enable the Appalachian
Ohio Regional Transit Association
I AORTA ) to expand service into Meigs ,
Jackson, Vinton and Gallia co unties where
public transit service is non-existent, and
through this expansion establish self.
sufficiency by the end of three years.
The needs of intercoWlty as well as intracounty commuters, the poor, the
elderly , the handicapped and all citizens of
the seven counties will be addressed .&gt;

The project will offer complete pubhc
transportation se rvice to the region including but not limited to; fixed rural
r oute s, demand-responsive service,
contract services, bus leases, special
event service and small group charters.
Transportation of the labor force will
be one of the primary objectives of the
expanded AORTA serv ice. Other potential
user needs that will be addressed. are:
transportation to small urban areas for
shopping, medi cal and sOcial functions;
transit- ··Service to universities and
technical education facilities; and transportation to hospitals, out-patient clinics,
and health care facilities and also labor
commuter services .
All of the'se special service and
commuter route. would be In addition to
regular fixed route service that meet the
basic transportation needs of all residents
!Shopping, medical and social functions 1.
One fixed route that AORTA Intends to
establish would be passenger and freight
service from Athens to Pomeroy. This
route was previously serviced by
Lakeshore Inc., which has recently gone
. out of business. Other fixed routes would
be determined on the basis of potential
user need and demand.
The Demdnstration Program is for 3
Years at a total . cos t of $1,146,546.
Equipment will include eight 19-to 28
passenger buses 15 with wheelchair
capability), one mobile maintenance van ..
equipped, and Communications equip·
· ment. Total project cost is $1,146,546, of
which a DOT Grant provides ·$369,584 132
pe t.) , and Other , $776,962 (68 pet. ).

Insurance desk robbed
GALLlPOLrS Approximately
12,314.05 was taken in an apparent walk-in
robbery Friday at the insurance office of
Howard Baker Saunders, 437 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis .
According to Gallipolis City Police, Mrs.
Betsy Canaday, the office secretary, left
the office to go across tlie street to the Post
Office. When she returned, two to three
minutes later, she found the desk drawers
open and an Ohio Valley Bank money
bag missing.
Mrs. Canaday said she did not loc k the
fr ont door when she left. Office~s said the
intruder must have known where the
money bags were kept. Gone was $1,088 in
cash and $1,226.05 in checks payable to
Howard Baker Saunders.
Money, spark plugs and stee l-belted

Storm hit one farm
hard in east Meigs
BASHAN - Mrs . James BaHe.y
reported Saturday the storm at 4 p.m.
Thursday did extensive damage to her
family 's farm. A silo was blown 'down by
wind, shingles were blown off the roof, a
r oof was torn fr om an outbuilding; and the
garden was destroyed. Hailstones
measurett"Olii!"half inch in diameter at 6: 30
p.m . The ground looked like it had snowed.
No other damages were reported in the
co unty .

Oeliquent tax list
eertif~ed

for sale

radia·l tires was taken in a breaking and
entering Thursday night or early Friday
morning at Sommers' GMC Sales at 133
Pine St.
Lawson Sommers reported entry was
made by breaking a glass on the north si de
of the building. Missing was $5 in change
taken from a cash regiSter; several sets of
AC sparkplugs and several tire s.

DONALD WRIGHT

Wright files
for city board
GALLIPOLIS- Donald E. Wright, 44,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, Friday became the first
candidate to file a nominating petition with
the Gallia County Board of Elections for. a
seat on the Gallipolis City Board of
Education.
Wright attended Gallla Academy High
School and is a seven year vet&lt;!l-an of the
U. S. Army. He has been associated with
the Ohio Valley Publishing Company
!Gallipolis Tribune ) for the last 16 years.
Wright was a former
Tribune
photographer and now is a graphics arts
photoman .
He attends evening classes at Ria
Grande College and will be a junior there
this fall majoring in elementary
education. He is married and has five
children .
Wright became the eighth person to file
a petition for the November General
Elections . Others filing have been township clerk candidates Eudora Montgomery, Guy an Twp., and Esther Gordon,
Addison Twp . and township trustee candidates, Herman R. Reese, Cheshire
Twp .; Allan E. Swisher, Addison 'l'wp.;
Earl Call , Green Twp.; WiUard Woodruff,
Huntington Twp .; and Jack E . Davis,
Greenfield Twp.

Soyuz standing ·
on launch pad

Also missing was a busin ess radio

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . (UP! } Russia sent its Soyuz to the launch pad
Saturday and America 's cool Apollo
commander Thomas P. Stafford landed at
lhe spacepo rt in a thunderstorm
proclaimmg, " We 're in great shape and
ready to go" on Tuesday 's U.S.-&amp;viet
rendezvous blastoffs.
" I hope we have all the bad weather
today. Hope it 's not like this next
Tuesday, " Stafford said after he zoomed
into Patrick Air Force Base at 4:40p.m.
EDT through a thick layer of black storm
clouds . Rain pattered on his bald head and
soaked his yellow flight suit as he talked
briefly to newsmen .
Fellow astronauts Vance D. Brand and
Donald K. " Deke" Slayton left the Johnson
Space Center at Houston in other T38 jet
trainers after Stafford to Oy to the launch
C of C direetors will
site .
At the Soviet cosmodrome at Baikonur
in
the Central Asian desert cosmonauts
meet at Holidav• Inn
Alex'ei A. Leonov , a miner's son and ,
cQ)onel in the Red Air Force, and space
GALLIPOLIS - The monthly meeting companion Valeri N. Kubasov, a civilian
of the board of directors for the Gallipolis engineer, were reported in "excellent'
Area Chamber of Commerce will be held · spirits " as they rehearsed parts of their
at noon Monday at the Holiday l,nn.
flight schedule .
Improvements for the year's projects
and other business will be discussed . All
directors are urged to attend .
valued at 11,500 taken fr om an M. T.
Epling truck parked inside the building. A·
pop machine was also damaged .
Miscellaneous items and money were
taken in a break-in at the Ohio Valley
Livestock Company restaurant at 52
Vinton Ave. Entry was made by unlocking
a window. Taken was $5 in change from a
cash register and $5 to 110 worth of candy,
cigars and pop .
Gallia County sheriff's deputi es
Saturday investigated a breaking and
entering at a house owned by Ferdie J ones
of Eno. Taken was a jar containing $23 in
half-dollars.

POMEROY - Meigs Cpunty Auditor
Howa rd E. Frank has certified t20 parcels
CRUSADE ANNOUNCE.D
of land to Prosecuting Attorney Bernard
GALLIPOLIS - President Bill NorFultz .to be sold under ch~pter 5719 of the
thup announced today the American
Ohi o Hevised Code.
· Cancer Society 9f Gailia County will begin
TI1is certification is a list of delinquent
the business district crusade Monday, July
real estale taxes published as a legal ' 14 . Man y merchants will be contacted
notice No' . 28, 1972.
duri ng the month of July of volunteers.

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MIDDLEPORTPOM £ROY

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FREE CWTHING
CHESHIRE - The Gal)ia-Meigs
Community Action Agency will have a free
clothing day Monday, July 14, for low
income persons . The hours will be from 9
a .m. to 2 p.m . This will be in the new
location at the qld Cheshire High School
Building.
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TOMTIEUE

By Tum Tiede
WASHINGTON 7 II passed
tulally without public note the
ulher day, but the Soviet
Uni un actua ll y ma de . a
payment toward il&lt; World
War I debt to America .
Yes, by · jingo, you read
right. · True. the $12 milli on
Ru ssian c heck was HO years
past due. and is merely a
nibble of their $722 million
oou lstandin g loan, but sur ely
mass celebration is in order.
Hooi st the colors . Go wake
grandma. Anytime America
is repaid a nythin g is lime for

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whnopee.

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"I see not all construction has stopped!"

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Letters of op11u"n an' -'eiC'ti'med. They should be
less than 300 words !HJtg tor be subject to reduction by
the editor) and must be sigocd with the signee's ad·
dress. Names may b&lt; withh eld upon publication.
However, on requrs1 . name' will be disclosed. LeUen
should be In good t• ste. arldresstng Issues, not per~onalitles.

f)~l:dith
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too much

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SPRmGFIELD, Ill. (UP!)
- Tax collector John H.
I
I Haynes met with state
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I Revenue Director Robert
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I Alphin and other officials
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Friday,
admitted
wa;ns th;~t time is short
iregularities in his work and
asked
the consequences.
Dear Sir :
The voice of one crying for this generation : Are you ready When told, he killed hiinself.
A spokesman for the
for the appearing ryf Jesus'
Department of
Illinois
Matthew 24:34, 44 - Verily I say unto you, This generation
shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled . Therefore be ye Revenue said that Haynes,
also ready ; for in such an hour as ye thmk not the Son of Man · 57, who worked out of the
department 's East St. Louis
cometh.
office,
was called to
AS WE are seeing these things come to pass, know that His
coming is near, even at the doors. We know if anyone is at the Springfield after a private
door the next step is entrance. It doesn 't take long to enter business complained of irregularities in his handling of
through a door once it is opened.
By this we know time would be short.
• its case.
Haynes met with his
Therefore the Son of man is coming in such an hour that
the children of darkness (unsaved) will not be ready to be with supervisor Marcellus
F1oerke, Allphin, and three
the L&lt;lrd .
read
a
Children of the Light (saved) are not in darkness, that that investigators,
irstatement
acknowledged
• day should overtake us as a thief. Let us watch and be sober.
• For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation regularities in his handling of
-the matter and asked what
by our Lord Jesus Christ.
We can be ready for the appearing of Jesus, by being born would happen to him, of• again and walking in the light. -Mrs. Juanita Tackett, Patriot ficials said.
"He was told he would be
:. ·Star Route, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
suspended pending
Thanks for a fine festival
discharge; after which facts
::·
I wish to thank everyone who helped make the lOth Annual about the case would be
.: River Recreation Festival a tremendous success.
reviewed," the spokesman
The conunittee chairpeople were especially helpful, along said. "At that point, Mr.
: with the emcees, the sound people, and aU the groups that Haynes reached into his
participated.
briefcase, pulled out a snub·;
I wish especially to thank Mrs. Thelma Elliott, executive nosed .38-caliber revolver
:~. secretary to the Gallipolis Chamber of Conunerce, without and backed up a~inst the
whom my job as chairman and many other individual jobs wall."
···Would have been impossible.
Haynes asked Floerke to
;,
I wish for the same support next year for a bigger and tell his wife that he loved her
better Festival. - Casby "Skip" Meadows III, Chairman, and then told Floerke he was
·' River Recreation Festival.
a "nice guy.''
"He then shot himself once
* More posies to McKenzie
in the right temple," . the
' Dear Sir:
spokesman said.
The Community Action Agency extends thanks to Don
Haynes' job was to collect
McKenzie for the fine work he is doing in supervising GaUia- delinquent taxes from busiMeigs Community Action Agency Summer Student Work nesses and individuals. The
Experience Enrollees. Seeing these young people working spokesman said all revenue
• together sickling weeds, cleaning up the streets, and parking collectors are called in for
lots, proves what can be done with a program such as this questioning when taxpayers
when excellent supervision is provided.
complain of mishandling or
Pomeroy Village is not the only site providing good irregularities.
supervision but since Mr. McKenzie's work has been brought
The department would not
to the public's attention , we want to add our appreciation for elabOrate on the accusation
' his efforts. Boys will be boys, and without proper supervision against Haynes.
: nothing much can be accomplished.
·• ·····The youths working for our agency should respect Mr.
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• accomplishment in a job well done at the end of the program.
~ :- Hazel McKelvey, Assistant C.A.A. Director.

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Dear Sir :
:.'
I would like to use your "Letters to the Editor" section to
::try to make contact with "long lost relatives" who may still
'vein Meigs County.
:; My great-great-grandparents, John s. and Elizabeth
· Westfall, at least
. three of their sons, and two of their daughters
• came to Me1gs County around 1853 from what was then
·'Harrison County, Virginia, now West Virginia . They settled on
:land in Columbia Township and farmed there for at least thirty
' ·'years; before two of the sons, Levi and Zachariah and their
': ~milies uproo~ed themselves again and came to Kansas·about
· 1880. My own great-grandfather, Zachariah, only stayed in
,Kansas a year or. so, and then settled in Nodaway County,
· Missouri, where he remained for the rest of his life. ·
.!.; I have put a great deal of time and effort into tracing as
&lt;,many facts as I can a 'bout my Westfall anci!Biors in order to
· .compile a family history for my children. I would like to make
;J:Ontact with any descendants of JohnS. and Elizabeth Westfall
~ho might still live in that area. I know that one of their sons,
~ames L. remaiped behind when his brothers moved to
' &lt;Kahsas. I'm almo~ .ce'l¢.!un that at l~ast one of the daughters,
' · ane, who married Williarit Rife, may al;io have remilined in
' :JI~igs County. I don't know what became of any of the_o!,her
, • l!llildren.
·: U there is anybne out there who is related to this f!lillliY , ram
' J110St arudousto get in touch witll you. Please contact me at this
• 'llildresa: Mrs. Dennis R . . Dunklee, 3036 Ran!!olph, Topeka,

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conse nsus that even

were

there a will there would not
be a way to collec t on the bulk
of the foreign debt. That debt,
includin g World War I, now
totals mor~ than $56 billion ,
and as a practica l matte r is
lar ge ly an accounting of

money that is gone forever.
The w;orld War I swn has
been a moot issue for years
and is kept on _tlle officia l
books only because no one in
authority has ever seriously
tried to hav e it removed. As
for the rest of the deb t I $32.8
billion) it is mos tly the res ult
of diplomatic lar gess rather
than hard-headed busmess
procedures, thus returns of
friendships or advantages
a r e expected but not
necessarily
the
loa ns
themselves.
On occasions the United
States can get toug h ove r old
debts . To collect par t of some
claims
against
Czechos lovakia , it once
se ized $125 million worth of
Czech gold, and later con.
fiscated Czech funds in this
country meant to build a ste.el
mill . Currently, the governmen t is foll owing similar
strategies to satisfy claims
against the new regime in
South Vietnam . But such
collection tactics are rar e.
Normally the United States
forgives its debts as it in- ·
variably forgives its debtors
- $11 billion worth of World
War II Lend Lease to Russia
was forg otten in the 1940's,
as , more recently , wa s $2
billi on in Indi a n-o wn ed
rupees .
In essence, Senator Byrd,
Congressman Kemp and
their cluster of congressional
protesters would put bounds
to the U.S. generosity. They
feel loans should not be made
unless
repayment
is
reasonably a ssured. Th ey
feel pragmatism as well as
diplomacy should be part of
the loan negotiation process.
And they feel the ultimate
welchers should be removed
from the list of future considerations.
To this end they have introduced various legislation
which, l'iven the mood of
Congress on this hoary issue,
is not expected to go far . But
one never knows. If the
Soviets are suddenly wri ling
out obligation checks to this
country, then anything is
possible .

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Woodr um .

Much the sam~ thing is happening to the food stamp program as has happened to the Social
Security system.
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Born in the Great Depression, Social Security was intended to proVIde a mmllllum mcome
for those no longer working or unable to work . Its purpose was to stave off dire poverty among
the elderly, the disabled, the widowed or orphaned.
.
.
.
Since then , of cou rse, for millions of Americans Social Securoty has beo:&gt;me their sole ·
retir ement income rather than merely a supplement to other income or sav mgs. As ev~ry
working per·son knows, payroll deductions needed to pay for steadi ly in creasmg Social Secur~ty
benefits ha ve soared to the point where many Americans-ate paymg more m Social Security
taxes than in income taxes.
.
.
Ukewise, food stamps were origina lly conceived as a food-purchase s ubsidy prov1ded by
the federal government for famili es or individuals below a certam level of mcome. Smce 1971,
enrollment in the program has r isen from about 9.4 mtlhon people to nearly 20 rruUion and Its
cost is expected to reach $6.5 billion in the fiscal year that began July 1_. .
Ho'\\' far we have departed from th e original concept of the program ts shown by the rC£ent
ruling by th e U.s. Court of Appeals in Wa shington invalidat ing the formula upon wh •ch food
stamp payments are based. The action was taken in response to a class-aclton su1t brought by
nine low~n come families , the city of New York, Commonwealth of Pennsylvama and the
National Welfare Rights Organization .
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. "For a family th at needs a loaf of bread, the offer of a slice is poor comfort," sa1d a threejudge panel , orderin g the Agriculture Department to come up wtth a new formula that allows
.
.
foo d stamp recipients to pu rchase "a nutritionally adequate diet. "
Most people will probably go along with this, just as they have gone along With the tdea that
Social Security should provide every American with an a dequate sta ndard of hvmg assuming that we can agree on what is "adequate" in either case.
But while the Agriculture Dep:r'rtrnent is liberalizin g its eligibility requirements for those
who really need food stamps, it is long past time for it to tighten up 'its procedures to exclude
those who don 't need them.
Congress ha s passed a temporary law banning stamps for students claimed as dependents
by well-&lt;&gt;ff families. Just the other day, however, the Senate Agnculture Comnu~tee was told
that the department's complicated schedule of deducations is allowmg many muldle-mcome·
fl'milies to qualify for government help in paying their grocery bills. Expenses that can be
subtracted from gross income include such things as federal, state and local taxes, Soc18l
Security taxes, medical costs over $10 a month, child care payments, tuition fees , rent or mortgages payments and union dues and alimony payments.
.
.
.
Urging its members not to be "too proud " to apply for food stamps, the Nattonal Edu~tion
Assn . r eports that one Minnesota teacher , with six children, qualifted for stamps despite an
income of $14,900.
Twenty million is a lot of people. It 's nearly one out of every 10 Americans. In that-large a
number of food stamp recipients there are 'bound to be abuses, as we ll as instances where truly
needy families are not receiving as much as they need. No doubt there ar,e also many
Americans who could qualify for the stamps but cling to the rather old-fashiOned idea that they
are r esponsible for .their own support and that of their children.
The trouble is that the food stamp program is merely a kind of Band-Aid remedy applied to
one symptt&gt;m of the underlying sickness in the economy. As noted, its enrollment has more
than doubled in four years. Unless the fundamental problems of inflation and unemployment
are solved, it could grow even more prodigiously .in comtng years.

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politician's dream.
UPI Science Writer
His Short, stocky build only
Cosmonaut Alexei A. hints at the power which
Leonov has been described as enabled him to survive a
a
natural
politician_=l1&lt;lrachuting accidenT and iie
misplaced in the world, an the first man to spacewa lk
asset which obviously made outs(de his craft .
him a n idea l choic e to
In contrast , his massive
represent Russia in the fir st han ds delicately wield a
meeting of two nations in brush to paint space sce nes
space.
and l andscapes. He is
His constant smile and working on his third book of
warm handshake make paintings which will include
automatic friends as in a work he plans to do during the
joint Apollo-Soyuz flight this
month .
Leonov , 41, who uses the
name
Aimas - Russian for
Huntington ; two grand c h il dren ; thr ee brother s,
diam o nd
- durin g
Wi lliam , James and Thomas
spacefli
ghts,
will
command
Rece . a ll ol V inton , and two
the Soyuz which will link up
sis ters, M rs . James (Verda)
Casto , Vinton , and Mrs. Okey
with the Apollo in the first
(~ry) Myers , Delaware .
international space renFuneral services will be
dezvous . He and Valeri N.
he l d at 2 p.m . Monday from
the Willis Funeral Home on
Kubasov will spend 44 hours
Garfield Ave . wi th Re\1' . working , eating and playing
Kenne th ViCKer s offici ating .
Burial will fol low in Dry with astronauts Thomas P.
Ri dge Cemetery a t Gallia . Stafford, Donald K. "Deke"
Friends may cal l at th e Slayton and Vance D. Brand.
funer al home from 2-4 and 7 -9
"He's a delightful gentp .m . today .

lem11n." Slayton 5aid. "He' s
gregarious and a complete
extr overt. I think if he Uved in
this country he'd make a
first ~lass politician. He just
likes people and likes things
going on ."
He has BJlevilish humor. an
expe rt at quick one-line jokes
a nd often pokes good-natured
fun at his
Ameri can
colleagues claiming they are
going hald together . ·
But his friends say that
only belies his dedication and
will to do the job. He once
beca me tangled in the lines of
a parachu te during a training
jump and a metal plate wa s
jammed behind his thighs . He
reached behind his legs and
bent the metal away and
freed the lines with only
moments to spare. It taught
him, he sa id , that few people
work to their capacity.
" I tell my subordinates the
same thing: ·we must bend
the ir on." ' Leonov said
du~ing an interview at the

ALSO
BANUMERICARD
OR MASTER OORGE

Since then, iie has not been
publicly active, although tie is
deputy . ~nder of the
Yuri Garagip Space Center ..
He has his own art studio
near the cosmonaut training
center, Star City, and is
editor of a local · " wall
newspaper, " a typewritten
journal · t acked o n wa ll s
chronicling local events and
Conununist party dogma.

(:OLO\) ·
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Starring · Kurt Russell, Joe
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By BRUCE E. HICKS

Johnson Space Center in
Houston.
Leonov, born the son of a
miner in the Siberian town of
Ustvyanka, began painting
in his youth and nearly chose
it as.his profession . After high
school, he atte nded art
classes but sudden ly dropped
out and enrolled in Soviet
flight training.
He graduated from the
Chuguyev Air Force School
and became an instructor in
parachute training . He· was
named to the fledgli ng space
program in 1960, becoming a
member of the first group of
cosmonauts whi ch included
the late Yuri Gagarin, the
firs~" man in space .
·
Leonov got into top shape
for his first and on ly flight
through punishing physica l
exercise which he continues
today. In March 1965 he and
Pavel Beliayev flew Voskhod
2, a predecesso r of the Soyuz
craft.
The short, 21Hlour flig ht
propelled Leonov into fan1e
as the first man to dare step
outside a spacecraft into the
vacu um of space.

SUN DAY'TIMES..SENTINEI

MEIGS lliEATRE

Reporting Requirement
A BILL OF which I was
the chief sponsor, requires
the reporting of deaths to
specifled officia.ls by the
public and the reporting of
certain violent or unusual
dea ths to the Office of the
Coroner passed the House on
Thursday.
Am . H.B. 750 is an attempt
to clarify a discrepancy in
current law, which came
about with the adoption of the
New Criminal Code . The new
code repealed the section
relative to the reporting of
deaths and substituted a new
section. The existing section,
however, is not identical to
the repealed section. Am. H.
B. 750 woulH re-&lt;!stablish
prohibitions and penalties for ·
withholding facts concerning
a death and for unlawfully
disturbing a body or the
clothing or other articles on
or near the body.

New Hope

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(Hazel) Henry, Crown City ;

MASON DRIVE-IN

THE HOUSE approved
leg i s la lion
Wednesda y
important program .
cre at ing an Ohio Public
Serving in a workin g Defender Commission to
capacity is not the only provide, s upervis e a nd
function of the RSVP. Th ey coordinate legal represe nhave made a trip to a nursin g tation at state expense for
home to get more insight to indigen t persons. The major
SUCH PLACES as the the conditions of !hat par- purpose of Sub. H. B. 1164 is
By Ada Keels
Gallia County Volunteer ticular life-s tyle. More trips to comply with recent United
New
Hope
Church located
Emergency Squad, WJEH, such as this are bei ng States and Ohio Supreme
Senior Citizens, Red Cross, planned for the future. Two Court decisions which ex- on 554 about three miles from
Bidwell will hold its annual
City Health Department, times a ye ar there are panded the
cons titutiona l
Fr.iendly Visitations to ' festivities honorin g t he rights of indi ge nt persons, uni on meeting Sunday, July
Churches, Guiding Hand retired seniors. Again, this s pecifi cally the right to ?0. Morning services will be
conducted by the pastor,
School in Cheshire, and the re-&lt;!mpha s1zes
·
th e1r
· worth as counsel. The bill extends the
CAP clothing distribution well as fulfill s their social right to coWJsel to anyone Rev. M, Cuffie from Ironton, ·
have been blessed to have needs .
who is unable to pay and to Ohio. The afternoon services
·senior help. Not only do the
If anyone wishes to be a
those who cannot obtain legal will be conducted by Rev.
Ford from Ironton, Ohio.
businesses profit by getting
counsel to defend them.
part of, ·RSVP, please contact
If enacted, the bill would :.
Deacon Robert Cooper wife
personnel aid, but the Mrs.
Roush, 9-4 p.m., at 446ty h
Edna
, Mrs. Murle Howard
volunteers gain equally well&lt;' 4521 or 446-3361 after 6 p .m .
- Give each coun
t e
They have talent, skill; and Or if you need volunteer help......... option to es.tablish a county and Mrs. Jackie Howard
time to offer ; and unless they again call the co-ordinator so public defender system,' to fr om New Hope attended the
are put to use, they are of no that she can answer your participate in a joint county annual union meeting at
value.
reqlJest.
defender system, or to pay Paint Creek Church Sunday
The latter had a
The RSVP van provides
.
coun t y 1·s ve r y for ·c ounsel selected by an afternoon.
Ga 11 1a
part
on
the
prograil).
transportation
for
the fortWlate to have so many ,indigent or appointed by the
Mr. Wesley Howell who
volunteers and they are programs for the enrichment court at the indigent 's
at Cleveland, Ohio, who
lives
covered by accident and of her senior citizens. The request.
liability insurance ·to the job, RSVP is only one but it is
- Require the State to formally was raised around
while on the job, .and un.til certainly doing a fantastic reimburse counties for 50 here would like to hear from
they return h9fne.
job . we should continue to percent of the total cost of the his old friends. He lives at
Cleveland, Ohio, 3186 East 132
IT IS A beautiful ex- encourage and . promote the defender operation .
Sf.
44021. He will be ninety-eix
perience to see someone give philosophy of RSVP : " You 've - Requires the Ohio Public ·
of himself. The RSVP learned a lot fr om 60 years of Defender Commission to years old on his ned birassures that- experience 'for living."
es tabli s h sta ndards for thday .
Mr. Sam Hutchison is
each participant. There is no
_Don' ! keep it to YOIII'self. operation of the system .
assisting
the · . ~oward
monetary gain for the senior
- Specifies the types of
"
While
you
're
helping
others,
cases
in
which
defense
se
rbrothers
with
'their farm
citizens. However, till!y can you are also helping yourwork.
be; reimbursed if ever they self." Those of us who are . vices are to be provided .
Mus. Marvella Smith spent
need to provide for food or under 60 and can offer opSub. H. B. . 164 calls for a
transportation. RSVP is portunities to the volunteers $2 .8 million appropri~tion the weekend with her siste~
partially funded by a federal should certainly do· so. from !be State ,Emergency Mrs. Audrey Pryor, husprogram called ACTION . Rio Per.lfaps many of us do not' Fund for the operation of the band, Dr . Pryor and Mark in
Public
Defender
Com- Cincinnati, Ohio.
Grand f. College is , the 1ocal realize that we will soon be
Mr. Dewy Keels received
grantee fot RSVP. Loeal senior citizens, too' It's now
mis sio n . If enacted, the
word
that Mr. Frank Harper
support from ·avlc groups time to honor th ose "of age..
provisions of the bill would
.
died
.Tuesday
In Oak Hill
take effect on and after
and individuals is also needeq so .that honor ca n come to our
Hospital and was buried at
January 1, 1976.
to insure the success of this a~e now.
Blackfork Friday afternoon.

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married

RALPH RECE
Mrs. Randy - ( Annab elle-l
GALL IPOL I S Ralph
All en, Mrs . Russell (Louise)
Clark Rece , 11.7, a resident of
Schotelock and Mrs . Robert
ll8Mabel ine Or .. died at 7: 34
(Li nda )
Aiken ,
all
of
p
.m . Friday in the Holzer
Columbus .
IV\ed ical Cen ter . He had been
She
marr ied ·
Tinny ' in ta ilin g health several
Saunders, who died in 1973.
weeks .
Step -ch il dren surviving are
Mr . Rece was an emp loyee
Mrs . Lewis { Ha zell Ryan , in
of Thorof are Markets Inc. for
Wi sconsi n ; John Saunders,
21 yea rs and eight mon ths. A
Patriot , and Dona l d Saun member of the Wellston
ders, Chi cago ; these bro thers
Eagles Aerie No. 637 , he was
and sisters. She ll y Woodrum , . born in Put nam County , W.
Huntington ; Ira Woodrum ,
Va . Feb . 24. 1928 son of the
Lesage, W . Va .; M rs. Bessi e
late Thomas Harvey Rece
Mounls . Glenwood, W. Va .;
an d Ka thr yn Wysong Rec:e of
Mrs . Bulah Poin ter and Mrs .
Vinton .
Delta Wh ile. Dna . W. Va :
In addi ti on to h is mother,
Mrs. Erma Purdue, Lesage ;
he is sur vived by his wife,
Mrs. Ortha Pointer , Hun Do ro th y
Evelyn
Ray
tingto n; and Mrs . Mary
Sa l isbury Re ce , whom he
Cooper, Point Pleasant ; 25
ma r ried in A pr il, 1975 at
grandchildren, 26 great P en brook ,
Va .;
t hree
grand c h il dren , and one gr ea t - ch ildren Qy a pre vious
great -grandchild .
marriage, Carlos Re ce of the
She was a member of the
U. S. Navy at Pensa cola,
Providen ce Bap ti st Chu r ch .
Fla .: Debra Mahaffey of
Last rites will be conduc ted
Columbus . and Amada Rece
al 1 p .m. Monday from lh e
of Gall ipo lis ; six st e p Waugh -Hatley -Wood F uneral
c hildren , Dale and Dar y l
Home with Willia m B. Kughn
Sa l isbur y, Gallipolis ; Dennis
officiating. Burial wi ll be in
Salisbury, Eure ka; Donald
the
Pro vi dence
Ch ur ch
Salisb ur y, Boise, Idaho ;
Cemetery. Vi sitation w ill be
Steve n Sa li sbury , se rv ing
held at the funeral home from
"w ith th e U. S. Mar ines at
2-4 and 7·9 toda y.
Paris Island , N. C., and Mr s.
Cheryte Salisb ury Bu sh of

View from the Statehouse

,

She

Jam es McClure Jn 1916. He
died in t9JJ.
Born t o that union were
these c hildren : Jacob and
James M cC lu re of Cedar .
vi lle , Ohio ; Roy McClure.
Spri,ngfield ; Mrs. lawrence

Food stamps: costly economic first aid

agencies as well as the police .
- Ma kes sexual abuse and
impairment of mental hea lth
new grounds for charges.
- Gives profe ss ionals the
a uthority to take co lor
ph otograph s of a visibly
abused child . Under current
law this procedure can be
undertaken only by permission by the couret.
Ch ild abuse in Ohio is a
little public ized pr oblem .
Committee testimony on this
piece of legislation revealed
that there had been nearly
1,500 reported abuse cases in
our state during the first half
of las t year. The expansion of
our abuse laws will help
curtail this problem. ·
The bill has been sent to the
Senate for consideration.
Hopefull y, it will receive
immedia te consideration.

I

RUBY M . SAUNDERS
GALLIPOLIS - Ruby M.
Saunders ,
74 ;
Rt.
2,
Gall ipoli s, died at l : :lo p .m .
Friday at the Holzer Medical
Center . She had been in
serious condition the past two
weeks .
She was born Sept. 12, 1900
at Lesage, W . Va ., daughter
of the -late Jam es C. WOQd .
rum and V ic toria Toney ·

v

opinion, features

Area ·neaths . :·Leonov natural leader
.

I

By Rep. Ron James
COLUMBUS - The House
unanimo l's l y p assed
legislation last week which
tightens regul ati on s and
broadens requirements for
reportin g incidents of child
abuse or ne glect . I cosponsored the bill . Major
provisions include :
Broadening
the
requirements for reporting
incidents of child abuse and
neglect to include attorneys,
psychologists , s pe ec h
pathologists , health care
professionals, employees of
child care agencies and
cor oners . Present
law
already mandates that school
authorities, do c tors and
social workers report abuse

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past 60 one can be. As a
matter of fact, there were two
women up in their 70's who
together have donated over
200hours of volunteer work in
one man th !__ .
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kditoriaf comment,

r'I''N~:r~:i!"T~"I :::1~:!~~.:!:~.~

Respondez s 'il vous plait, a
French expression which is
commonly abbreviated as
RSVP, means "to respond."
In Gallia County there is
another RSVP abbreviation
which means "to respond. "
The Retired Senior Volunteer
Program is designed to
respond to the needs of the
senior citizens in our area.
For so many years people
have been brainwashed into
believing that by age 60 all
that is left to do is to sit
peacefully in a nice comfortable rocking chair, twittle
their thumbs, and bide their
time (gracefully, of course) .
However, times have
changed. And so has the
The yoWlg people of the thinking of many people.
community will give a They realize that age 60 can
· program Sunday afternoon, be a very productive and
July 27 at the church. We rewarding year, as well as
invite everyone to come.
those golden years to follow.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Not only can the ·special
Cooper attneded the fUneral group of people find worth in
of Frank Harper at Union themselves, they can also
Church, Blackfork, Friday. share this blessing with other
Mrs.
Telitha
Keels people in the same situation .
Williams who had surgery in
THIS IDEA was basic to a
Columbus, Ohio is at her special program the sole
home 2027 Millbrook Way, purpose of which is .achieving
Columbus, Ohio 43219. She those goals. There is a
wishes to hear from her many Retired Senior Volunteer
friends.
Program in Gallia County
whose co-ordinator is Mrs.
Maye Roush. She began in
her position on December 7,
1973 with a little over 25
Kansas 66611.
participan.ts. Now she can
If there are any descen- proudly show a record of over
dants . of Abijah McClain, 100· senior volun leers.
whose daughter Cordelia
The ·only requirement of
married 1Zachariah Westfall, RSVP is that one must be at
I'd like to hear from you, too. least 60 years of age. This is
-Lorna fWestfalll Dunklee, for both men and women.
Mrs. Dennis R. Dunklee.
There is no limit on how much

New Hope

: Westfall descendants sought

Actually, Russia is not the
only nation making some
restit uti on tOr Ameri ca n
generosity in the war against
the Kaiser. From lime to
time Greece and Finlimd also
pay installments on their
obligations of the period .
Otherwise, though , the
United States rece ives
nothing . Original American
loans in World War I totalled
$12 billion and , with interest,
have since doubled , yet only
crumbs of the total will ever
be recovered . Seventeen
nati ons, including France,
Italy and Britain , refuse
outright to repay a single
copper.
But if there is a lesson here
concerning the risks and
barren fruits of international
generosity, some ·in this town
wonder if it will ever be
learned. Even now , say a few
grumbling members of
Congress, the United States is
continuing to make massive
loans around the world with
little hope of fair return. Sen .
Harry Byrd of Virginia says
nations
ha ve
foreign
currently accumulated at
least $32 .8 billion in U.S.
credit of which they will not
in some cases and can not in
others repay . Rep. Jack
Kemp of New York adds that
the charity in the best of
times is of dubi ous merit, but
is damnright nutsy in periods
when the cheese is hard .
Byrd and Kemp are among
a small group of federal
lawmakers who periodically
growl legislatively about the
merits of lending money
without attaching collection
guarantees . Their efforts are
studiously ignored . Complaining in Congress about
the foreign debt is of a . class
with complaining about the
public debt - a preserve of
those hardy enough to
withstand the snickers of
their fellows.
Byrd points out vigorously
that taxpayers who are now
contributing $100 million a
day in interest on the national
debt are tired of having both

intereSt and pri ncipa l ig nored
on m 'JSt ,,f 1f1e fureign debt.
His protests, however, ar e
greeted with snores .
In fact, the snores are not
covert insul ts; .rather they
r eprese nt the congress ional

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The high. cost of
deadbeats

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3- The-Sunday Times- Sentinel, 'Sunday, July 13, 1975

2- TheSundayTimes -Sentinel, E.,. :ay,july p , 1975

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TOMTIEUE

By Tum Tiede
WASHINGTON 7 II passed
tulally without public note the
ulher day, but the Soviet
Uni un actua ll y ma de . a
payment toward il&lt; World
War I debt to America .
Yes, by · jingo, you read
right. · True. the $12 milli on
Ru ssian c heck was HO years
past due. and is merely a
nibble of their $722 million
oou lstandin g loan, but sur ely
mass celebration is in order.
Hooi st the colors . Go wake
grandma. Anytime America
is repaid a nythin g is lime for

;~,~-~
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~~

whnopee.

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•~tJ!};'
. r;r;
'V#:4

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"I see not all construction has stopped!"

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Letters of op11u"n an' -'eiC'ti'med. They should be
less than 300 words !HJtg tor be subject to reduction by
the editor) and must be sigocd with the signee's ad·
dress. Names may b&lt; withh eld upon publication.
However, on requrs1 . name' will be disclosed. LeUen
should be In good t• ste. arldresstng Issues, not per~onalitles.

f)~l:dith
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too much

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SPRmGFIELD, Ill. (UP!)
- Tax collector John H.
I
I Haynes met with state
I • • •
I Revenue Director Robert
I
I Alphin and other officials
I
I
Friday,
admitted
wa;ns th;~t time is short
iregularities in his work and
asked
the consequences.
Dear Sir :
The voice of one crying for this generation : Are you ready When told, he killed hiinself.
A spokesman for the
for the appearing ryf Jesus'
Department of
Illinois
Matthew 24:34, 44 - Verily I say unto you, This generation
shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled . Therefore be ye Revenue said that Haynes,
also ready ; for in such an hour as ye thmk not the Son of Man · 57, who worked out of the
department 's East St. Louis
cometh.
office,
was called to
AS WE are seeing these things come to pass, know that His
coming is near, even at the doors. We know if anyone is at the Springfield after a private
door the next step is entrance. It doesn 't take long to enter business complained of irregularities in his handling of
through a door once it is opened.
By this we know time would be short.
• its case.
Haynes met with his
Therefore the Son of man is coming in such an hour that
the children of darkness (unsaved) will not be ready to be with supervisor Marcellus
F1oerke, Allphin, and three
the L&lt;lrd .
read
a
Children of the Light (saved) are not in darkness, that that investigators,
irstatement
acknowledged
• day should overtake us as a thief. Let us watch and be sober.
• For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation regularities in his handling of
-the matter and asked what
by our Lord Jesus Christ.
We can be ready for the appearing of Jesus, by being born would happen to him, of• again and walking in the light. -Mrs. Juanita Tackett, Patriot ficials said.
"He was told he would be
:. ·Star Route, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
suspended pending
Thanks for a fine festival
discharge; after which facts
::·
I wish to thank everyone who helped make the lOth Annual about the case would be
.: River Recreation Festival a tremendous success.
reviewed," the spokesman
The conunittee chairpeople were especially helpful, along said. "At that point, Mr.
: with the emcees, the sound people, and aU the groups that Haynes reached into his
participated.
briefcase, pulled out a snub·;
I wish especially to thank Mrs. Thelma Elliott, executive nosed .38-caliber revolver
:~. secretary to the Gallipolis Chamber of Conunerce, without and backed up a~inst the
whom my job as chairman and many other individual jobs wall."
···Would have been impossible.
Haynes asked Floerke to
;,
I wish for the same support next year for a bigger and tell his wife that he loved her
better Festival. - Casby "Skip" Meadows III, Chairman, and then told Floerke he was
·' River Recreation Festival.
a "nice guy.''
"He then shot himself once
* More posies to McKenzie
in the right temple," . the
' Dear Sir:
spokesman said.
The Community Action Agency extends thanks to Don
Haynes' job was to collect
McKenzie for the fine work he is doing in supervising GaUia- delinquent taxes from busiMeigs Community Action Agency Summer Student Work nesses and individuals. The
Experience Enrollees. Seeing these young people working spokesman said all revenue
• together sickling weeds, cleaning up the streets, and parking collectors are called in for
lots, proves what can be done with a program such as this questioning when taxpayers
when excellent supervision is provided.
complain of mishandling or
Pomeroy Village is not the only site providing good irregularities.
supervision but since Mr. McKenzie's work has been brought
The department would not
to the public's attention , we want to add our appreciation for elabOrate on the accusation
' his efforts. Boys will be boys, and without proper supervision against Haynes.
: nothing much can be accomplished.
·• ·····The youths working for our agency should respect Mr.
••
• McKenzie for ·his interest in them and should feel a sense of
• accomplishment in a job well done at the end of the program.
~ :- Hazel McKelvey, Assistant C.A.A. Director.

!

''1/l•

•

:~.

Dear Sir :
:.'
I would like to use your "Letters to the Editor" section to
::try to make contact with "long lost relatives" who may still
'vein Meigs County.
:; My great-great-grandparents, John s. and Elizabeth
· Westfall, at least
. three of their sons, and two of their daughters
• came to Me1gs County around 1853 from what was then
·'Harrison County, Virginia, now West Virginia . They settled on
:land in Columbia Township and farmed there for at least thirty
' ·'years; before two of the sons, Levi and Zachariah and their
': ~milies uproo~ed themselves again and came to Kansas·about
· 1880. My own great-grandfather, Zachariah, only stayed in
,Kansas a year or. so, and then settled in Nodaway County,
· Missouri, where he remained for the rest of his life. ·
.!.; I have put a great deal of time and effort into tracing as
&lt;,many facts as I can a 'bout my Westfall anci!Biors in order to
· .compile a family history for my children. I would like to make
;J:Ontact with any descendants of JohnS. and Elizabeth Westfall
~ho might still live in that area. I know that one of their sons,
~ames L. remaiped behind when his brothers moved to
' &lt;Kahsas. I'm almo~ .ce'l¢.!un that at l~ast one of the daughters,
' · ane, who married Williarit Rife, may al;io have remilined in
' :JI~igs County. I don't know what became of any of the_o!,her
, • l!llildren.
·: U there is anybne out there who is related to this f!lillliY , ram
' J110St arudousto get in touch witll you. Please contact me at this
• 'llildresa: Mrs. Dennis R . . Dunklee, 3036 Ran!!olph, Topeka,

..

-

'

:
I
•'

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conse nsus that even

were

there a will there would not
be a way to collec t on the bulk
of the foreign debt. That debt,
includin g World War I, now
totals mor~ than $56 billion ,
and as a practica l matte r is
lar ge ly an accounting of

money that is gone forever.
The w;orld War I swn has
been a moot issue for years
and is kept on _tlle officia l
books only because no one in
authority has ever seriously
tried to hav e it removed. As
for the rest of the deb t I $32.8
billion) it is mos tly the res ult
of diplomatic lar gess rather
than hard-headed busmess
procedures, thus returns of
friendships or advantages
a r e expected but not
necessarily
the
loa ns
themselves.
On occasions the United
States can get toug h ove r old
debts . To collect par t of some
claims
against
Czechos lovakia , it once
se ized $125 million worth of
Czech gold, and later con.
fiscated Czech funds in this
country meant to build a ste.el
mill . Currently, the governmen t is foll owing similar
strategies to satisfy claims
against the new regime in
South Vietnam . But such
collection tactics are rar e.
Normally the United States
forgives its debts as it in- ·
variably forgives its debtors
- $11 billion worth of World
War II Lend Lease to Russia
was forg otten in the 1940's,
as , more recently , wa s $2
billi on in Indi a n-o wn ed
rupees .
In essence, Senator Byrd,
Congressman Kemp and
their cluster of congressional
protesters would put bounds
to the U.S. generosity. They
feel loans should not be made
unless
repayment
is
reasonably a ssured. Th ey
feel pragmatism as well as
diplomacy should be part of
the loan negotiation process.
And they feel the ultimate
welchers should be removed
from the list of future considerations.
To this end they have introduced various legislation
which, l'iven the mood of
Congress on this hoary issue,
is not expected to go far . But
one never knows. If the
Soviets are suddenly wri ling
out obligation checks to this
country, then anything is
possible .

,,'
,,•
•
i,'

.C

Woodr um .

Much the sam~ thing is happening to the food stamp program as has happened to the Social
Security system.
.
.
. . .
.
Born in the Great Depression, Social Security was intended to proVIde a mmllllum mcome
for those no longer working or unable to work . Its purpose was to stave off dire poverty among
the elderly, the disabled, the widowed or orphaned.
.
.
.
Since then , of cou rse, for millions of Americans Social Securoty has beo:&gt;me their sole ·
retir ement income rather than merely a supplement to other income or sav mgs. As ev~ry
working per·son knows, payroll deductions needed to pay for steadi ly in creasmg Social Secur~ty
benefits ha ve soared to the point where many Americans-ate paymg more m Social Security
taxes than in income taxes.
.
.
Ukewise, food stamps were origina lly conceived as a food-purchase s ubsidy prov1ded by
the federal government for famili es or individuals below a certam level of mcome. Smce 1971,
enrollment in the program has r isen from about 9.4 mtlhon people to nearly 20 rruUion and Its
cost is expected to reach $6.5 billion in the fiscal year that began July 1_. .
Ho'\\' far we have departed from th e original concept of the program ts shown by the rC£ent
ruling by th e U.s. Court of Appeals in Wa shington invalidat ing the formula upon wh •ch food
stamp payments are based. The action was taken in response to a class-aclton su1t brought by
nine low~n come families , the city of New York, Commonwealth of Pennsylvama and the
National Welfare Rights Organization .
·
·
.
. "For a family th at needs a loaf of bread, the offer of a slice is poor comfort," sa1d a threejudge panel , orderin g the Agriculture Department to come up wtth a new formula that allows
.
.
foo d stamp recipients to pu rchase "a nutritionally adequate diet. "
Most people will probably go along with this, just as they have gone along With the tdea that
Social Security should provide every American with an a dequate sta ndard of hvmg assuming that we can agree on what is "adequate" in either case.
But while the Agriculture Dep:r'rtrnent is liberalizin g its eligibility requirements for those
who really need food stamps, it is long past time for it to tighten up 'its procedures to exclude
those who don 't need them.
Congress ha s passed a temporary law banning stamps for students claimed as dependents
by well-&lt;&gt;ff families. Just the other day, however, the Senate Agnculture Comnu~tee was told
that the department's complicated schedule of deducations is allowmg many muldle-mcome·
fl'milies to qualify for government help in paying their grocery bills. Expenses that can be
subtracted from gross income include such things as federal, state and local taxes, Soc18l
Security taxes, medical costs over $10 a month, child care payments, tuition fees , rent or mortgages payments and union dues and alimony payments.
.
.
.
Urging its members not to be "too proud " to apply for food stamps, the Nattonal Edu~tion
Assn . r eports that one Minnesota teacher , with six children, qualifted for stamps despite an
income of $14,900.
Twenty million is a lot of people. It 's nearly one out of every 10 Americans. In that-large a
number of food stamp recipients there are 'bound to be abuses, as we ll as instances where truly
needy families are not receiving as much as they need. No doubt there ar,e also many
Americans who could qualify for the stamps but cling to the rather old-fashiOned idea that they
are r esponsible for .their own support and that of their children.
The trouble is that the food stamp program is merely a kind of Band-Aid remedy applied to
one symptt&gt;m of the underlying sickness in the economy. As noted, its enrollment has more
than doubled in four years. Unless the fundamental problems of inflation and unemployment
are solved, it could grow even more prodigiously .in comtng years.

.I

politician's dream.
UPI Science Writer
His Short, stocky build only
Cosmonaut Alexei A. hints at the power which
Leonov has been described as enabled him to survive a
a
natural
politician_=l1&lt;lrachuting accidenT and iie
misplaced in the world, an the first man to spacewa lk
asset which obviously made outs(de his craft .
him a n idea l choic e to
In contrast , his massive
represent Russia in the fir st han ds delicately wield a
meeting of two nations in brush to paint space sce nes
space.
and l andscapes. He is
His constant smile and working on his third book of
warm handshake make paintings which will include
automatic friends as in a work he plans to do during the
joint Apollo-Soyuz flight this
month .
Leonov , 41, who uses the
name
Aimas - Russian for
Huntington ; two grand c h il dren ; thr ee brother s,
diam o nd
- durin g
Wi lliam , James and Thomas
spacefli
ghts,
will
command
Rece . a ll ol V inton , and two
the Soyuz which will link up
sis ters, M rs . James (Verda)
Casto , Vinton , and Mrs. Okey
with the Apollo in the first
(~ry) Myers , Delaware .
international space renFuneral services will be
dezvous . He and Valeri N.
he l d at 2 p.m . Monday from
the Willis Funeral Home on
Kubasov will spend 44 hours
Garfield Ave . wi th Re\1' . working , eating and playing
Kenne th ViCKer s offici ating .
Burial will fol low in Dry with astronauts Thomas P.
Ri dge Cemetery a t Gallia . Stafford, Donald K. "Deke"
Friends may cal l at th e Slayton and Vance D. Brand.
funer al home from 2-4 and 7 -9
"He's a delightful gentp .m . today .

lem11n." Slayton 5aid. "He' s
gregarious and a complete
extr overt. I think if he Uved in
this country he'd make a
first ~lass politician. He just
likes people and likes things
going on ."
He has BJlevilish humor. an
expe rt at quick one-line jokes
a nd often pokes good-natured
fun at his
Ameri can
colleagues claiming they are
going hald together . ·
But his friends say that
only belies his dedication and
will to do the job. He once
beca me tangled in the lines of
a parachu te during a training
jump and a metal plate wa s
jammed behind his thighs . He
reached behind his legs and
bent the metal away and
freed the lines with only
moments to spare. It taught
him, he sa id , that few people
work to their capacity.
" I tell my subordinates the
same thing: ·we must bend
the ir on." ' Leonov said
du~ing an interview at the

ALSO
BANUMERICARD
OR MASTER OORGE

Since then, iie has not been
publicly active, although tie is
deputy . ~nder of the
Yuri Garagip Space Center ..
He has his own art studio
near the cosmonaut training
center, Star City, and is
editor of a local · " wall
newspaper, " a typewritten
journal · t acked o n wa ll s
chronicling local events and
Conununist party dogma.

(:OLO\) ·
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th e Ohio

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Featurette : Goofy Spor tacular, Disney
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Second Cl ass Postage Paid at
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THE DAILY SENl;I NE~
11 1 Court S t . , Pomeroy , 0 .
" 57 69 . Published eve ry we ek day eveni ng exce p t Saturday .
En t ered as seco n d class
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July 11 -15
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THE STRONGEST MAN
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Starring · Kurt Russell, Joe
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By BRUCE E. HICKS

Johnson Space Center in
Houston.
Leonov, born the son of a
miner in the Siberian town of
Ustvyanka, began painting
in his youth and nearly chose
it as.his profession . After high
school, he atte nded art
classes but sudden ly dropped
out and enrolled in Soviet
flight training.
He graduated from the
Chuguyev Air Force School
and became an instructor in
parachute training . He· was
named to the fledgli ng space
program in 1960, becoming a
member of the first group of
cosmonauts whi ch included
the late Yuri Gagarin, the
firs~" man in space .
·
Leonov got into top shape
for his first and on ly flight
through punishing physica l
exercise which he continues
today. In March 1965 he and
Pavel Beliayev flew Voskhod
2, a predecesso r of the Soyuz
craft.
The short, 21Hlour flig ht
propelled Leonov into fan1e
as the first man to dare step
outside a spacecraft into the
vacu um of space.

SUN DAY'TIMES..SENTINEI

MEIGS lliEATRE

Reporting Requirement
A BILL OF which I was
the chief sponsor, requires
the reporting of deaths to
specifled officia.ls by the
public and the reporting of
certain violent or unusual
dea ths to the Office of the
Coroner passed the House on
Thursday.
Am . H.B. 750 is an attempt
to clarify a discrepancy in
current law, which came
about with the adoption of the
New Criminal Code . The new
code repealed the section
relative to the reporting of
deaths and substituted a new
section. The existing section,
however, is not identical to
the repealed section. Am. H.
B. 750 woulH re-&lt;!stablish
prohibitions and penalties for ·
withholding facts concerning
a death and for unlawfully
disturbing a body or the
clothing or other articles on
or near the body.

New Hope

I

(Hazel) Henry, Crown City ;

MASON DRIVE-IN

THE HOUSE approved
leg i s la lion
Wednesda y
important program .
cre at ing an Ohio Public
Serving in a workin g Defender Commission to
capacity is not the only provide, s upervis e a nd
function of the RSVP. Th ey coordinate legal represe nhave made a trip to a nursin g tation at state expense for
home to get more insight to indigen t persons. The major
SUCH PLACES as the the conditions of !hat par- purpose of Sub. H. B. 1164 is
By Ada Keels
Gallia County Volunteer ticular life-s tyle. More trips to comply with recent United
New
Hope
Church located
Emergency Squad, WJEH, such as this are bei ng States and Ohio Supreme
Senior Citizens, Red Cross, planned for the future. Two Court decisions which ex- on 554 about three miles from
Bidwell will hold its annual
City Health Department, times a ye ar there are panded the
cons titutiona l
Fr.iendly Visitations to ' festivities honorin g t he rights of indi ge nt persons, uni on meeting Sunday, July
Churches, Guiding Hand retired seniors. Again, this s pecifi cally the right to ?0. Morning services will be
conducted by the pastor,
School in Cheshire, and the re-&lt;!mpha s1zes
·
th e1r
· worth as counsel. The bill extends the
CAP clothing distribution well as fulfill s their social right to coWJsel to anyone Rev. M, Cuffie from Ironton, ·
have been blessed to have needs .
who is unable to pay and to Ohio. The afternoon services
·senior help. Not only do the
If anyone wishes to be a
those who cannot obtain legal will be conducted by Rev.
Ford from Ironton, Ohio.
businesses profit by getting
counsel to defend them.
part of, ·RSVP, please contact
If enacted, the bill would :.
Deacon Robert Cooper wife
personnel aid, but the Mrs.
Roush, 9-4 p.m., at 446ty h
Edna
, Mrs. Murle Howard
volunteers gain equally well&lt;' 4521 or 446-3361 after 6 p .m .
- Give each coun
t e
They have talent, skill; and Or if you need volunteer help......... option to es.tablish a county and Mrs. Jackie Howard
time to offer ; and unless they again call the co-ordinator so public defender system,' to fr om New Hope attended the
are put to use, they are of no that she can answer your participate in a joint county annual union meeting at
value.
reqlJest.
defender system, or to pay Paint Creek Church Sunday
The latter had a
The RSVP van provides
.
coun t y 1·s ve r y for ·c ounsel selected by an afternoon.
Ga 11 1a
part
on
the
prograil).
transportation
for
the fortWlate to have so many ,indigent or appointed by the
Mr. Wesley Howell who
volunteers and they are programs for the enrichment court at the indigent 's
at Cleveland, Ohio, who
lives
covered by accident and of her senior citizens. The request.
liability insurance ·to the job, RSVP is only one but it is
- Require the State to formally was raised around
while on the job, .and un.til certainly doing a fantastic reimburse counties for 50 here would like to hear from
they return h9fne.
job . we should continue to percent of the total cost of the his old friends. He lives at
Cleveland, Ohio, 3186 East 132
IT IS A beautiful ex- encourage and . promote the defender operation .
Sf.
44021. He will be ninety-eix
perience to see someone give philosophy of RSVP : " You 've - Requires the Ohio Public ·
of himself. The RSVP learned a lot fr om 60 years of Defender Commission to years old on his ned birassures that- experience 'for living."
es tabli s h sta ndards for thday .
Mr. Sam Hutchison is
each participant. There is no
_Don' ! keep it to YOIII'self. operation of the system .
assisting
the · . ~oward
monetary gain for the senior
- Specifies the types of
"
While
you
're
helping
others,
cases
in
which
defense
se
rbrothers
with
'their farm
citizens. However, till!y can you are also helping yourwork.
be; reimbursed if ever they self." Those of us who are . vices are to be provided .
Mus. Marvella Smith spent
need to provide for food or under 60 and can offer opSub. H. B. . 164 calls for a
transportation. RSVP is portunities to the volunteers $2 .8 million appropri~tion the weekend with her siste~
partially funded by a federal should certainly do· so. from !be State ,Emergency Mrs. Audrey Pryor, husprogram called ACTION . Rio Per.lfaps many of us do not' Fund for the operation of the band, Dr . Pryor and Mark in
Public
Defender
Com- Cincinnati, Ohio.
Grand f. College is , the 1ocal realize that we will soon be
Mr. Dewy Keels received
grantee fot RSVP. Loeal senior citizens, too' It's now
mis sio n . If enacted, the
word
that Mr. Frank Harper
support from ·avlc groups time to honor th ose "of age..
provisions of the bill would
.
died
.Tuesday
In Oak Hill
take effect on and after
and individuals is also needeq so .that honor ca n come to our
Hospital and was buried at
January 1, 1976.
to insure the success of this a~e now.
Blackfork Friday afternoon.

.'

married

RALPH RECE
Mrs. Randy - ( Annab elle-l
GALL IPOL I S Ralph
All en, Mrs . Russell (Louise)
Clark Rece , 11.7, a resident of
Schotelock and Mrs . Robert
ll8Mabel ine Or .. died at 7: 34
(Li nda )
Aiken ,
all
of
p
.m . Friday in the Holzer
Columbus .
IV\ed ical Cen ter . He had been
She
marr ied ·
Tinny ' in ta ilin g health several
Saunders, who died in 1973.
weeks .
Step -ch il dren surviving are
Mr . Rece was an emp loyee
Mrs . Lewis { Ha zell Ryan , in
of Thorof are Markets Inc. for
Wi sconsi n ; John Saunders,
21 yea rs and eight mon ths. A
Patriot , and Dona l d Saun member of the Wellston
ders, Chi cago ; these bro thers
Eagles Aerie No. 637 , he was
and sisters. She ll y Woodrum , . born in Put nam County , W.
Huntington ; Ira Woodrum ,
Va . Feb . 24. 1928 son of the
Lesage, W . Va .; M rs. Bessi e
late Thomas Harvey Rece
Mounls . Glenwood, W. Va .;
an d Ka thr yn Wysong Rec:e of
Mrs . Bulah Poin ter and Mrs .
Vinton .
Delta Wh ile. Dna . W. Va :
In addi ti on to h is mother,
Mrs. Erma Purdue, Lesage ;
he is sur vived by his wife,
Mrs. Ortha Pointer , Hun Do ro th y
Evelyn
Ray
tingto n; and Mrs . Mary
Sa l isbury Re ce , whom he
Cooper, Point Pleasant ; 25
ma r ried in A pr il, 1975 at
grandchildren, 26 great P en brook ,
Va .;
t hree
grand c h il dren , and one gr ea t - ch ildren Qy a pre vious
great -grandchild .
marriage, Carlos Re ce of the
She was a member of the
U. S. Navy at Pensa cola,
Providen ce Bap ti st Chu r ch .
Fla .: Debra Mahaffey of
Last rites will be conduc ted
Columbus . and Amada Rece
al 1 p .m. Monday from lh e
of Gall ipo lis ; six st e p Waugh -Hatley -Wood F uneral
c hildren , Dale and Dar y l
Home with Willia m B. Kughn
Sa l isbur y, Gallipolis ; Dennis
officiating. Burial wi ll be in
Salisbury, Eure ka; Donald
the
Pro vi dence
Ch ur ch
Salisb ur y, Boise, Idaho ;
Cemetery. Vi sitation w ill be
Steve n Sa li sbury , se rv ing
held at the funeral home from
"w ith th e U. S. Mar ines at
2-4 and 7·9 toda y.
Paris Island , N. C., and Mr s.
Cheryte Salisb ury Bu sh of

View from the Statehouse

,

She

Jam es McClure Jn 1916. He
died in t9JJ.
Born t o that union were
these c hildren : Jacob and
James M cC lu re of Cedar .
vi lle , Ohio ; Roy McClure.
Spri,ngfield ; Mrs. lawrence

Food stamps: costly economic first aid

agencies as well as the police .
- Ma kes sexual abuse and
impairment of mental hea lth
new grounds for charges.
- Gives profe ss ionals the
a uthority to take co lor
ph otograph s of a visibly
abused child . Under current
law this procedure can be
undertaken only by permission by the couret.
Ch ild abuse in Ohio is a
little public ized pr oblem .
Committee testimony on this
piece of legislation revealed
that there had been nearly
1,500 reported abuse cases in
our state during the first half
of las t year. The expansion of
our abuse laws will help
curtail this problem. ·
The bill has been sent to the
Senate for consideration.
Hopefull y, it will receive
immedia te consideration.

I

RUBY M . SAUNDERS
GALLIPOLIS - Ruby M.
Saunders ,
74 ;
Rt.
2,
Gall ipoli s, died at l : :lo p .m .
Friday at the Holzer Medical
Center . She had been in
serious condition the past two
weeks .
She was born Sept. 12, 1900
at Lesage, W . Va ., daughter
of the -late Jam es C. WOQd .
rum and V ic toria Toney ·

v

opinion, features

Area ·neaths . :·Leonov natural leader
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By Rep. Ron James
COLUMBUS - The House
unanimo l's l y p assed
legislation last week which
tightens regul ati on s and
broadens requirements for
reportin g incidents of child
abuse or ne glect . I cosponsored the bill . Major
provisions include :
Broadening
the
requirements for reporting
incidents of child abuse and
neglect to include attorneys,
psychologists , s pe ec h
pathologists , health care
professionals, employees of
child care agencies and
cor oners . Present
law
already mandates that school
authorities, do c tors and
social workers report abuse

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past 60 one can be. As a
matter of fact, there were two
women up in their 70's who
together have donated over
200hours of volunteer work in
one man th !__ .
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kditoriaf comment,

r'I''N~:r~:i!"T~"I :::1~:!~~.:!:~.~

Respondez s 'il vous plait, a
French expression which is
commonly abbreviated as
RSVP, means "to respond."
In Gallia County there is
another RSVP abbreviation
which means "to respond. "
The Retired Senior Volunteer
Program is designed to
respond to the needs of the
senior citizens in our area.
For so many years people
have been brainwashed into
believing that by age 60 all
that is left to do is to sit
peacefully in a nice comfortable rocking chair, twittle
their thumbs, and bide their
time (gracefully, of course) .
However, times have
changed. And so has the
The yoWlg people of the thinking of many people.
community will give a They realize that age 60 can
· program Sunday afternoon, be a very productive and
July 27 at the church. We rewarding year, as well as
invite everyone to come.
those golden years to follow.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Not only can the ·special
Cooper attneded the fUneral group of people find worth in
of Frank Harper at Union themselves, they can also
Church, Blackfork, Friday. share this blessing with other
Mrs.
Telitha
Keels people in the same situation .
Williams who had surgery in
THIS IDEA was basic to a
Columbus, Ohio is at her special program the sole
home 2027 Millbrook Way, purpose of which is .achieving
Columbus, Ohio 43219. She those goals. There is a
wishes to hear from her many Retired Senior Volunteer
friends.
Program in Gallia County
whose co-ordinator is Mrs.
Maye Roush. She began in
her position on December 7,
1973 with a little over 25
Kansas 66611.
participan.ts. Now she can
If there are any descen- proudly show a record of over
dants . of Abijah McClain, 100· senior volun leers.
whose daughter Cordelia
The ·only requirement of
married 1Zachariah Westfall, RSVP is that one must be at
I'd like to hear from you, too. least 60 years of age. This is
-Lorna fWestfalll Dunklee, for both men and women.
Mrs. Dennis R. Dunklee.
There is no limit on how much

New Hope

: Westfall descendants sought

Actually, Russia is not the
only nation making some
restit uti on tOr Ameri ca n
generosity in the war against
the Kaiser. From lime to
time Greece and Finlimd also
pay installments on their
obligations of the period .
Otherwise, though , the
United States rece ives
nothing . Original American
loans in World War I totalled
$12 billion and , with interest,
have since doubled , yet only
crumbs of the total will ever
be recovered . Seventeen
nati ons, including France,
Italy and Britain , refuse
outright to repay a single
copper.
But if there is a lesson here
concerning the risks and
barren fruits of international
generosity, some ·in this town
wonder if it will ever be
learned. Even now , say a few
grumbling members of
Congress, the United States is
continuing to make massive
loans around the world with
little hope of fair return. Sen .
Harry Byrd of Virginia says
nations
ha ve
foreign
currently accumulated at
least $32 .8 billion in U.S.
credit of which they will not
in some cases and can not in
others repay . Rep. Jack
Kemp of New York adds that
the charity in the best of
times is of dubi ous merit, but
is damnright nutsy in periods
when the cheese is hard .
Byrd and Kemp are among
a small group of federal
lawmakers who periodically
growl legislatively about the
merits of lending money
without attaching collection
guarantees . Their efforts are
studiously ignored . Complaining in Congress about
the foreign debt is of a . class
with complaining about the
public debt - a preserve of
those hardy enough to
withstand the snickers of
their fellows.
Byrd points out vigorously
that taxpayers who are now
contributing $100 million a
day in interest on the national
debt are tired of having both

intereSt and pri ncipa l ig nored
on m 'JSt ,,f 1f1e fureign debt.
His protests, however, ar e
greeted with snores .
In fact, the snores are not
covert insul ts; .rather they
r eprese nt the congress ional

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The high. cost of
deadbeats

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3- The-Sunday Times- Sentinel, 'Sunday, July 13, 1975

2- TheSundayTimes -Sentinel, E.,. :ay,july p , 1975

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Bernard Burcham and Frank
Capehart, all Of Pt. Pleasant;
Clara B. Shanklin, Virginia
and Ray Greathouse, all 'Of
Hu~tinglol) ~Chapter ,8;
member of Wilkesville, Ohio
•of
Chapter 207; Irenia Gear- Virginia . Haddock
Marlinton;
Carrie
Atkinson,
hart, Pt. Pleasant 75 and
Flossie J . Da~ison, Minnie
Grand Repres~ntative of
Marsh
and Glenn Atkinson, ,
Saskatchewan; NeUie Casto,
all of Athens, Ohio; Marie
Grand Represe ntative of
Scotland
and
.wanda Turner of Wilkesville, Ohio;
Gabrit.sch, Grand Ruth of Helen Williams of Indian
West Virginia and member of Head, Md. and Opal Zerltle
of Racine,' Ohio.
Mason 157.
Everyone enjoyed a social
Other guesls in attendance
were Cindy Zerkle , Agnes hour and potluck following
Farber , Mary Burcham , the meeting.

-·
OES
installs
officers
Hoinemakers'
••.....J

Circle
featuring
Annie Anybody

BY BE1TIE CLARK

Exlelllloo .Ueat,

HomeEe.._...

Mrs. FredLeRoy Bryant

Couple exchange
vows in Florida
EGLIN· AIR FORCE
BASE, Fla. - Chapel Three
at Eglin Air Force Base,
Florida was the setting for
the 3:30p.m. wedding June 28
ln which Miss Karen Sue
Hankins became the bride of
Captain Fred LeRoy Bryant.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Hom~: H.
'Hankins, Gallipolis, vhio.
The groom's parents are Mrs.
Donald (Eliza) Bryant of Fall
Creek, Wis. and Mr. Donald
L. Bryant of Ozark Acres,
Ark.
Capt. Worrell Holby, USAF
Chaplain, officiated at the
ceremony . Mrs. William
Thomas was the organist and
she played a selection of
nuptial music which included
uJesu, Joy of Man's
Desiring," "Psalm 19," and
"The Lord's Prayer."
Chllpel Dowers were yellow
chrysan themurns and daisies
accented with baby's breath.
Two brass candelabra
decor a ted with greenery
were on either side of . the
altar.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore .a gown
of white French maracaine
featuring an inset waist
encrusted with rhinestones
and seed pearls. Gathers fell
from a yoke on either side of
the V-neckline. The long
slender sleeves added to the
look of simplicity, yet
elegance. The floor length
lldrt swept back to a chapel
train. She wore a headpiece,
. of Moorish design, which
framed the face and ·was
made of Venlse lace embellished with rhinestones
and seed pearls. The veil was
fingertip length. Her only
jewelry was pearl earri~s. a
gift from the groom.
She carried a bouquet of
sentimental · white roses
combined with delicate
stephanotis and baby's
breath, lied up with ribbon
streamers into an old world
style arrangement.
Attending the bride as
mali-on of honor was Mrs.
Edwin P. Foster, Jr. Her
dress of yellow crepe knit
featured n empire waistline
and bell sleeves of white
eyelet. She wore a yellow
plclure hat which was bordered with daisies. Her
bouquet was a nosegay of

daisies, yellow roses, and
. baby's breath.
Edwin P . Foster, Jr. was
the groom's best man . Ushers
were Kei tr. H Hankins and
Kraig E. Hankins, both
brothers of the bride.
The bride's mother was
attii:ed in a light blue crepe
formal length gown featuring
an empire waistline and bell
sleeves .
The
groom's
mother wore a formal length
· gown of pale pink. Both
mothers wore corsages of
phalaenopsis orchids.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held at the
Hurlburg Officers Club. An
arrangement of yell'ow
mums, daisies, and baby's
breath adorned the hors
d'oeuvre table . The threetiered wedding cake was
decorated in yellow flowers
and stairsteps cascaded up
one side. Two doves topped
the cake. Mike Branch played
guitar selections throughout
the evening.
Out of town guests included
SM Sgt. and Mrs. Paul E.
Sites, aunt and uncle of the
bride, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. Little, aunt and
uncle of the bride, Nashville,
Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
W. Bryant, brother and
sister-in-law of the groom,
Newport, N.C.; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Swan, Columbus.
The bride and groom left
for a honeymoon in Ocho
Rios, Jamaica and upon
relurnlng they will live in
Shalimar, Fla.

~

85741

has-

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Eterna 27
By Revlon

Sl Q75

s20 SIZE NOW

Flora Diane Chambers

- - - £'CC,

Matthew Gmeser, Miss Meeks

·- --------·----·-------..

Couple plan to wed

THE

SHADE - Mr. and Mrs .
John A. Meeks, Rt. I Shade,

UNIFORM CENTER

are

SALE
114 OFF
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;Plans completed

BABY DOLL PAJAMAS
LONG GOWNS
.SHORT GOWNS

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the

Ohio University's Alden
Library. Her fiance is a
graduate of Alexander High
School and is employed by the
Alexander
Board
of
Educati on .
The wedding will be an
even t of Oct. 4 al2 :30 p.m. in
Sacred
Heart Church,
Pomeroy. A reception will
follow the ceremony.

•

ALL SUMMER SLEEPWEAR

II

announcing

•engagement and forthcomi ng
.marriage of their daughter.
Florence Marie, to Matthew
.Paul Grueser, son of Mr. and
'Mrs. Mark W. Grueser, Rt . I.
Shade.
·: The bride-elecl is a
graduate of Meigs Hi gh
School and is employed by

is having a

tI

LONG ROBES
SHORT ROBES

I

.L--366 Second Ave.-.....----------- Gallipolis--

...

.,

~ATI()~AL

GALLIPOLIS - Wedding
plans have been completed
olor the marriage of Daleen
Harbour, daughter of Mr. and
'Mrs.
Dale
Harb our ,
'Gallipolis ; to Bob Dotson, son
:Of Mr. and Mrs . Jack Dolson,
:Centerpoint.
· The ceremony will be at the
Grace United Methodist
Church at 4 p.m. Saturday,
~uly 19. A half-hour of nuptial
music will precede the
ceremony. Soloist will be
Susan Sprow accompanied by
. • ,• Mrs . Merelyn Ross, organist.
Rev. Paul Hawks will of·

ficiate.
The matron of honor will be
Mrs .
Deborah
Meeks ,
Morehead. Serving as best
man will be Joe Burdick;
Indiana. Flower girl will be
Mary Ellen Dolson , sister of
the groom . Ring bearer will
be Michael Harbour, nephew
of the bride . Ushers will be
Gene and Roger Harbour.
brothers of the bride.
The gracious custom of
open ch urch will be observed
with an open reception to
immediately follow the
ceremony .

ti()Mr=
AVVLIA~CI:
'

SAVE

SAVE

~75

8

Coldspot

50

Coldspot
Frostless 15.2 Cu. Ft.
Refrigerator with
Spacious Freezer
Was $349.95

Regutar. Priced 12 Cu. Ft.
Regrigerator ... Only $239.95

8299 95

85521

SAVE '15

Was $197.99

•15835

~

'01

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Re1ax.. ,you've got
Master Charge •
~r,)

SILVIa U~l PLAZA

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COL!RT STaEET, GAUIPOLIS

18995

'87

. Sears Has. a Credit Plim to Suit Most Every Need
• Shipping, Installation Extra
• Sale
• Prices are Catalog Prices

'I

·COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK

Was $112

·•
En~s July 31

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SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE

Satisfaction Guarant~ed ·or Your Mon ey 'Back

I

Sears

Silver Bridge Plaza
Ph. 446'2770

SEARS, ROEBl'CI: AND CO.

PLAN TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Tillis, .
Rutland are announcing the engagement and approacru,;g marriage of their daughter, Esther Louise, to
Daniel Joaeph Roush, son of Rev . and Mrs. Eugene Roush,
Rt. 1, Shade . The wedding will be an event of Aug. 9 at the
Rutland Community Church at 2:30 p.m. The gracious
custom of open church will be observed.

.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Janey of Rt. 1, Langsville, announce the engagement of
·• their daughter, Mary Faye, to Tom Crisp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Crisp, also of Langsville. The bride elect is a
1974 graduate of Meigs High School and is presently
employed by the Leading . Creek Conservancy District.
Her fiance, a 1972 graduate of Meigs High School, is
currently employed by the Peabody Coal Col. Wedding .
plans are incomplete. ·

DAUGHTERS VISIT
GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
Varney Faye Cle nde nin
enjoyed her two daughters
and their fami lies. over the
Fourth of July. Harriet ( ~r.s.
Ros Santos ) and family of
_ Swoyersville, Pa . visited f~r
the first time tn five years.
Also visiting her mother was
Barbara (Mrs. Allen Cline)
and family of Kettering. Mrs.
Clendenin will visit two
weeks in Cleveland helpmg
care for her new grandson.
She •will leave Friday .

Robert Adkin s. of Fort
Pierce. Fla .
The bride-to-be will be
altcnding LPN school at
Buckeye Hill Career Center,
this fall. Adkins is employed
with the James C. Dawkins
Construction Co. in Greenville, S.C.
Weddin g plans are incomplete.

.

'lost' American pazntzngs
this project.
'
.
The regional Inventory will
be the source from which
paintings will be selected lor
exhibition at the Huntin gton
Galleries fr om Feb. 1 through
March 28. 1976. The exhibit
will consist of appro&lt;imalely
250 works to be displayed
throughout
the
entire
museum. This exhibit and
inventory are be!Dg furd ed
through the generosity of the
We s t Virginia Arts and
Humanities Council. An
accompanying catalogue will
be published by the GalleriesJ
which will contain a survey of
the periods and styles of
American
art
with
illustrations
and com·
mentari~s on the paintings

selected for e&lt;hibition . Paintings thu s far selected range
fr om two portraits done in
1670 to works by members of
the Ashcan School which
includes Henri. Pre ndergast.
Lawson, Sloan and . other
early 20th ce ntury arllsts..
Persons or gr ou ps In·
teresled in organizing a local
sur~ey lUlder the guidance of
their own arl, anhque or
history experts so that the art
in a particular area becomes
part of the historical records
or persons having access to
an early painting who would,
like a Painting Reporl form.
should contact William
sargent. Huntington
Galleries. Park Hills. Hun·
tington , W.Va. 25701 .

h
Partici~'~ating in WOYFCS oh
'J"'
J:'
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ATHENS - Jean Clark,
R.N., 136 First Ave . and
Jackie Knight, 126 First Ave .,
Gallipolis, are among those
participating in the MiniWorkshops on Health being
held this week on the campus
of Ohio University.
One of a series of work·
shops sponsored by the State
Department of Education,
the program will cover such
topics as nutrition, venereal
disease, the Inside-Out
Program, and Sex Education .
Workshop Consultant will be
Dana Davis, Co-Director of
the Heallh·Drug Education
Curriculum Center at Kent

on-!

· Mary Faye Janey

GALLIPOLIS - Capt. and
Mrs . Harry Chambers of
Neighborhood Road,
Gallipolis, a nn ou nce the
engagement of their daughter
Flora Diane. to Steven
Adkins, son of Mr. and Mrs .

Galleries collecting area
· HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Do you have a painting or
know someone who has one
which was done before 1914 ?
Are these old paintings
hanging in your church, bank
or library? " The Bicentennial
Inventory
of
American Pain ti ngs
Executed Before 1914" is a
nationwide project of the
National Collection of Fine
Arls,
Smithsonian
In·
s litution, Washington. intended to record as many
historically " lost" American
paintings as possible and
return them to record along
side their better recognized
fellow~, creating a truly
comprehensive index of
American painling . The
Huntington Galleries,
Huntington, W. Va ., responded to the Smithsonian's request for assistance and has become the
insti tution responsible for
organizing the Inventory in
the tri·s"'te area of West
d
Virginia, southern Ohio an
te K t k
eas
Elfrn ts en
t0 uc
d t Y· h
been
or
a e ave th
very rewarding. In 1973, e
Inventory had a total of
sixteen paintings listed for
the state of West Virginia . As
of June, 1975 over four-hundred paintings have been inventoried mainly in the
Huntington . Ashland area,
indicating a vast reservoir of
untapped cultural resources
in the region. It is anticipated
that hundreds of additional
paintings will be submitted as
groups throughout the tristate area become involved in

ff you're
of the many people who don 't.l'njoy summer
without a boat, get a sailboat instead of a motorboat. You'll
save a fortune on gas, a11d won't have to pollute the environ·
men! to enjoy y6urself.
- R. M., Babylon,N. Y.
Wrapper wisdom
.
Save foil wrappers from margarine sticks. Store them tn
freezer until needed for wrapping potatoes for baking. You
won't need to grease potatoes since foil has a small amount of
margarine sticking to it still. Saves tune. mess and money .
"
- L. H., Ravenna, Neb.
Stores heat saves
Use stored heat to cook. Turn off the heat of electric
burners a few minutes before the food is entirely cooked and
the heat in the burner· will finish it.
- G. F ., St. Paul, Neb.
Vent if off
.
Use vents and exhaust fans to pull heat and moisture.frol)l
attics kitchens and 1aun&lt;lries directly to the outside. Close
these ~ft when not in use in an airconditioned room, or they'll
pull the cold air out too.
- S.D., Roanoke, N.C.
Creditably good
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Find out if the sture you're patronizing gives a discount 1!
you use cash rather than major credit cards. Some will give
you three per cent or more off.
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CHILD BORN
CLEVELAND - Mr. and
Mrs . .George Christ (Betty
Clendenin) announce · the
birth of their second son,
Anthony Harry Christ, June
30. He has a brother, Ryan, at
home , age 3 yrs. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs . Varney
Faye Clendenin; Court St .,
Gallipolis. Paternal grand·
parents are Mr. 'and Mrs.
(Have you a clever way to save energy or fight inflation ?
George Christ, Sr. of Parma . Send your idea to The Inflation Fighter in care of lhts news·
Mrs. Clendenin now has nine paper. The best ideas will be used,in future·columns, and th~tr
grandchildren .
· authors will be rewarded with a free copy of the ·$1.50 book
"Save Money : Save Gas.") ,
"'

Pamela Anne Myers

Chambers engaged

'

Ecological sailing

125

Kenmore Zig-Zag
Stretch Stitch
Sewing Machine

Was $229.95

t"AI ." &amp;l OQIII OU~ftd ' PI a'&gt;NJO 'Et ~ll.l ' lt JMIItll:\tJ.. 'U ,
I'P"W-a '6 iltKIS 1,1 ®fllen ' {. llii!QI '9 ljltlll.....l\ 'S: PIII.....J '? u.o., '£ U~MS 'l
I8Ufc:llllltlld '9(

SAVE

Kenmore
Dishwasher with
No Pre-rinsing

A Malter Chal'fle card is not just

the moot accepbod CI!J'd in thio ·
country. It'• oowtlie mo.t
accepted c:8td in the world. Good
in over 1,600,000 places.
From Madrid to Manila. From

'15199

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SAVE .•40

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Compact Stereo with
S-Track, AM/FM,
Automatic Changer

Was $178.99

•ot

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Stere&lt;i with AM/FM,
Automatic Changer

Esther Louise Tillis

The Inflation Fighter

Compact Coldspot
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Chest Freezer

SAVE '20.64

can, airlines. Relax, world travite.,-You'w
Maoter Cliarae.

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·STAYED OVERNlGHT
GAWPOLIS - 1\Jr. and
i lin, Bow•rd Williamson,
Fa.totia, spent ' Thursday
11!111ht with Mr. and Mrs.
1 LOwell
Glassburn. Lester
'Oiz '' unl IIIIo spent the

l

. .l30 Second

Was $214.95

CopenhaJen to Caracao. At
hotels, reotauranb,iohops, rent-a·

·-·'

&gt;-

Sears Regular Price

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Elaine Grogan, Martha:
Nellie Casto, Electa; Betty
Rickard, warder and. Jacque
Gabrilsch, sentinel. Jackie
Aldridge will be installed as
Adah in July.
Olher members of Mason
157 in attendance incl ed the
ufficers named abov and
Mildred Jewell , W nda
Rou sh, Virginia Wils n,
Garnel Burdette, Sal
Smith, Belva Roush , Nanc
VanMeter, Edna F . Roush,
Palty and Vernon Roush.
Distinguished
guests
introduced during meet.
ing
were
Catherine
Shenefield. Deputy Grand
Matron of District 24 and

Frostless 19.6 Cu. Ft.
Upright Freezer
with Built-in Lock

.!

,.......,.,

Jeanenrie Johnson, Esther;

VALUE

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Sears

Jo MacKnight, ·. associate
conductress; Margie Cart.
wright, chaplain : Betty Fox,
marshal; .Josephine Kirby,
organist; Ann Blake, Ruth ;

Was $454.95

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Family holds reunion

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GALUPOUS - Anyone who plans to make jellies, jams
or preserves at home will need the proper equipment and
containers to do a""satisfactory job.
A large kettle is essential. To bring a mixture to a full boil
without it boiling over, use an 8 or 10-quart kettle with a broad
flat bottom.
A jelly bag or a fruit press of several thicknesses of closely
woven cheesecloth, of flml unbleached muslin, or canton
flannel with napped side in. Use a jelly bag or cheesecloth to
strain pressed juice. A special stand or a colander will hold the
jelly bag.
In making fruit products without added pectin, a jelly,
candy, or deepfat thermometer is helpful.
Other kitchen equipment that may lie useful includes a
quart measure, measuring cup and spoons, paring and utility
knives, food chopper, masher, reamer, grater, bowls, wire
basket, colander,long-handled spoon,ladle, clock with second
hand, and household scale. You will need a boiling .water bath
(to process 5 minutes) for jams and preserves, parafin for
jellies.
Containers such as jelly glasses or canning jars may be
used as containers for jellied fruit products such as jams and
preserves. Be sure all jars and closures are perfect. Discard
any with cracks or chips; defects prevent the airtight seal that
is needed for jams and preserves.
For jellies and for fruit products firm enough to be sealed
with paraffin, use glasses or straight-&lt;&gt;ided containers that will
make an attractive mold. For preserves and soft jams, use
canning jars with lids that can be tightly sealed. (Paraffin
tends to loosen and break the seal on such products.)
Get glasses or jars ready before you start to make the
jellied product. Wash containers in wann, soapy water and
rinse with hot water. Keep them hot- either in a slow oven or
in hot water-until they are used. This will prevent containers
SWIM PARTY HELD
from breaking them filled with hot jelly or jam.
MASON. W. Va. - MemWash and rinse all lids and bands. Metal lids with sealing l)ers of the Riggs Royal-ettes
compound may need boiling or holding in boling water for a Junior Dance-Twirl Team
few minutes - follow the manufacturer's directions .
were recently entertained
ff you use porcelain-lined zinc caps, have clean, new rings with a swimming party after
of the right size for jars. Wash rings in hot, soapy water. Rinse
baton practice at the home of
well.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Roush of
For further details about making jams, jellies and
Mason City . Those members
. preserves, contact your County Extension Home Economist at
attending were Alicia Ann
the Cooperative Extension Service office in the Court House,
Roush, daughter of the hosts;
phone 446-4612, extension 32.
Teresa Carr, Janet Ambrose ,
Vicki Sheels, Becky Windon,
Teresa Wildermuth, Lori
Longenette, Sally Goebel,
and
guests,
Teresa
RACINE - A reunion of the Rochester, Pa.;· Mr. and Mrs. Longenetle, Kenny Ray
Ray McDade family was held Frank Arnott, Beaver Falls, Riggs, Mrs. Rose Carr and
recently at the Racine home Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs. Herman the instructor, Judy Riggs.
of Mr. and Mrs . Dale (Thelma)
Reese
and
McGraw. All members of the Rosalie, Cheshire; Glen
family but one grandson were Smith, Gallipolis; Mr. and
able to attend.
Mrs. Tom Reese, JacksonThose attending were Rose ville, Fla . ; Mr. and Mrs .
McDade, Middleport; Norma Ronald McDade, Mandy and
Shamblin, Columbus; Mr . Chris, Athens and friend; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary . Shamblin, and Mrs. Don McDade, Brian
Sonya and Toby, New Rich- and Melissa, Gallipolis .
mond; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Next year's reunion will be
Mo•t hema at Reduced Prices
Shamblin, Terrance and held at the home of Norma
Heather, Bexley; Mr. and, Shamblin, Columbus.
Mrs. Dale (Wilma) McGraw,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Lanny
REUNION SET
Adams, and Christi, ReedsBUFFALO,
W. Va.- The .
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
(Om a) Arnott, Ray and Plymale Reunion will be
Daren, Monaca, Pa .; Mr. and Sunday, July 20 from 10 a.m.
Mrs. Eddie Meyers, Tabatha, to 4 p.m. at Buffalo High
Bill,
and
Cinnamon, School, Rt. 1, Wayne Co., W.
Va.

man, cunductress; Frances

Frostless 17.1 Cu. Ft.
Refrigerator With
Power Miser Switch

HAS GOW BAR
i&gt;
REEDSVILLE "-- Michael ( ~
G. Boring,' son of Mr. and
1
Mrs. Grant 'L. Boring of ~
Reedsv~ has been commissioned
a
second
lleutenan t through the Air
Force Reserve Officers
· I· Training Corps program and
i •warded
his bachelor's
,· I~ at Ohio Univeflllty. .
l Ueutenant Boring is a 1971
! ~te of Eastern High
[lcbool. His wife, Robyn, is
·IIi dllughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mills of· RR 3,

l Pomeroy.

l.•e l.i lchfield,, associa le
pair on : .Maxine Aldridge,
secre tary: Phyllis Gilkey.
treasurer ; Carol J . Work-

MASON. W. Va. - Mason
Chapter Nu. 157; Order of the
Eastern Star, held · installaliun of officers in the
Chapter .Room r.ecenlly . 'Fhe
Mason c hapter is beginning
its lith year of active
membership in the Grand
Jurisdicti11n of West Virginia.
In s talling officers were
Janett
Capehart,
Pt.
Pleasant Chapt er 75, In ·
stalling Officer; Jean Carlwright, Mason Chapter 157,
installing marshal; !,Quise
Crow, Pt. Plea san l · 75, installing chaplain; Gertrude
Bateson , Pt. Pleasant 75,
installing· or~anist; Bar·
bar a dugan. ~cine Chapter 134 (Ohio), installing
warder and Sara Willis. Thea
192 !Glouster, Ohio) as installing sentinel. Verlie
Workman, Mason Chapter's
very first worthy matron ,
served as honorary assistant
to worthy matron during
installation. Verlie and her
husband, Ray E. "Pop"
Workman . .were honored
during the meeting because
t.hey are life members of the
chapter. Miss Lena Gibbs and
Mrs . Tillie LaRue are also
life members, but they were
unable to attend.
Officers installed were
Mary J. McDermitt, worthy
matron ; Oscar Casto, worthy
pair on: .B a,tbara Dunn,
associate matron : Marion

S"'te University .
The workshop is directed
by Dr . Freda Phi' ilips of the .
Oh1'o Uni'versi'ty School of
Health , Physical Education,
and Recreation.

SON BORN
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Greene,
Mrs .
Dannie
Gallipolis, are proudly an·
nourcing the birth of their
Jourlh child, a son, Scott
Daniel, Tuesd·ay, June 17,
at Holzer Medical Center
weighing 11 lbs., one oz. and
22 inches long . Scottie wa s
welcomed home by three
sisters, Danella Renee , 9;
Deborah Denise, 5112, and
Dena Noele, 22 mos. Also
welcoming . Scottie arc his
maternal grandparents, and
great-grandparents, Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Elliott, Mrs. Eloise
Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Harrison, all of Gallipolis : .
paternal grandparents and
grea !-grandparents, Mrs.
Garnet Greene, Buckeye
Lake; Mr . and Mrs . Wood·
ford Greene, Beverly, . and
Mr. and Mrs. 'Noah T. Clark,
Crown City and aunts and
urcles, Mr. and Mrs . James
Edwards and Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Rupe, Jr.,
of
Gallipolis.

Engagement announced
COLUMBUS - Mr . and
Mrs . Russe ll L. Myers,
Columbus announce the
engagement
of
their
daughter, Pamela Anne to
Roger Wesley Barrett, son of
Richard W. Barrett and the
late Mrs . Barrett, Mill Creek
Rd., Gallipolis .
Miss Myers is a 1975

graduate of Ohio University
where she majored in· social
work.
Barrett, a graduate of Ohio
University is a computer
programmer for the U.S.
Dept. of Defense in Arlington,
Va .
·
The wedding will be an
event of Sepl. 13 In Athens.

Concert
fanned

P

GALLIPOLIS _ A Gospel
Conce rt at the Gallia County
JlUlior FairgrolUlds, SR 35,
Gallipolis, is planned for
Friday, July 18 at 7:30 p.m.
Groups featured will be the
Lester Family and The
GatewayBoys,Sl.Louis, Mo.
They have 3 show on
lelevi s ion . en tilled " The
Lester Family Sings." The
program reac hes ou t to two
million people . The Shaffer
family from Crown City will
also lake part. The groups
will perform in the open air
on s"'ge at the Gallia Courty
Jurior Fairgrourds.
Bring your lawn chairs.
There will be a sheller in case
of rain.
Arefreshmenlstand will be
available for soft drinks. A
free will offering will be
la ken lo help support the
si ngers. The event is sponsored by the Southeastern
Ohio
Gospel
Music
Association .

IN TOWN
GALLIPOLIS - Joe W.
Phiullips of Concord , Calif.
and his sister, Mrs . Marie
Ellen Voreh of Tallahassee ,
Fla. visited Wednesday
evening with their urcle and
allill, Mr. and Mrs . Lowell
Glassburn.

Brenda Kay Miller
TO BE WED - Mr. and Mrs. Robert E . Miller, Rl. 1,
Middleport, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Brenda Kay to Stephen Hollis Taylor, son of Mrs. Hazel
Taylor, Rutland, and the late Mr. Wayne Taylor . The
bride-elect is a mid-term 1975 graduate of Meigs High
School. Taylor is a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School and
is employed at Fostoria Distribution Services in Fostoria .
The wedding will be an event of March 13, 1976, at the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene, Rutland at 6:30p.m. The
gracious custom of open church will be observed with an
open reception following.

Mrs. Stover entertained

GALLIPOLIS
Mrs . .
Brady Stover, the former
Brenda Ross, was honored
with a bridal shower at the
home of her sister Mrs. Don
Kingery on Juiy 9.
The guest enjoyed an
eve ning of fun and games.
Prizes were won by Mrs.
Harry Chambers, Mrs.
Carolyn Barry, and Mrs.
Darla Chambers. The door
prize w•s won by Miss Diana
Chambers.
The guest later enjoyed
refreshmenls of cake and
punch. A color scheme of pink
wedding bells and a bride
centerpiece were used on the
.
gift "'ble.
Those attending were the
honoree, Mrs . Brenda Stover
and Cea ~ay. the hostesses,
Mrs . Don Kingery and Mrs.
Kenneth ·Siders, and ·Jeff,
Kenny Wayne and Kevin
HOMECOMING SET
Siders, her grandmother,
GALLIPOLIS - There will Mrs. Lawrence Moon~y, Mrs.
be a Homecoming at the Lee Holcom b, Mrs . Clarence
French City Baptist Church, Mooney, Mrs. John Mooney
Sur day, July 20 beginning at and Amanda, Mrs. Carolyn
the morning 'Serv ices . and Barry, Miss Anita Barry,
continuing in the afternoon. Mrs . J ea nnie Ross, Mrs .
There will be ·a special Edna Kingery, Miss Connie
homecoming service at 3 Kingery ,Mrs . Fred Sanders,
p.ll!. Speaking at both ser· Miss Lori Sanders, Mi'ss
vices will ' be Dr . Ray Della Sanders, Mrs. Merrie!
Roberts. Dinner will ~e on the Sanders and Jeff. Miss Jackie
ground s al I p.in . Every one is Sanders, Mrs . Gaylan Bush,
welcome to at lend .
Mrs . Karen ·Taylor. Mrs.

Bonnie Warren, Mrs . Harry
Chambers. Mrs . Debbie
Pralor Miss Diana Cham·
bers 'and Miss Darla
Chambers.
Sending gifls but urable to
attend were her grand·
mother, Mrs . Homer Ross,
Miss connie Cremeen, Mrs .

Edith Fulks, Miss Teresa
Cochran, Miss Lula Mae
Blake and Mrs , Sophie
Clifflon .
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Stover
were united in marriage on
June 11, at Richcreek, Va .
They are now residing on
Lower River Road .

They'll Do It Every Time
0GPR&lt;.Y, ~~
OPfOME.i'l&lt;iSf.
RWOVE.S

YOUR

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e.~~s

,;&lt;.E.? 1'H~Y

.

S~IP A.ND )
WOSB~f:!

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...
H~Rf. .. L.E.f'S
fAKE. A t...OOK .'

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'fHE.N HE.
E.XPU.i'S YOU
. 'Ttl R~D .i'H E.
~AVIN()

ON ~E. HEAD
OF A PIN"·
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CECM!t! Cii..EN
C/7'Y,

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'

Bernard Burcham and Frank
Capehart, all Of Pt. Pleasant;
Clara B. Shanklin, Virginia
and Ray Greathouse, all 'Of
Hu~tinglol) ~Chapter ,8;
member of Wilkesville, Ohio
•of
Chapter 207; Irenia Gear- Virginia . Haddock
Marlinton;
Carrie
Atkinson,
hart, Pt. Pleasant 75 and
Flossie J . Da~ison, Minnie
Grand Repres~ntative of
Marsh
and Glenn Atkinson, ,
Saskatchewan; NeUie Casto,
all of Athens, Ohio; Marie
Grand Represe ntative of
Scotland
and
.wanda Turner of Wilkesville, Ohio;
Gabrit.sch, Grand Ruth of Helen Williams of Indian
West Virginia and member of Head, Md. and Opal Zerltle
of Racine,' Ohio.
Mason 157.
Everyone enjoyed a social
Other guesls in attendance
were Cindy Zerkle , Agnes hour and potluck following
Farber , Mary Burcham , the meeting.

-·
OES
installs
officers
Hoinemakers'
••.....J

Circle
featuring
Annie Anybody

BY BE1TIE CLARK

Exlelllloo .Ueat,

HomeEe.._...

Mrs. FredLeRoy Bryant

Couple exchange
vows in Florida
EGLIN· AIR FORCE
BASE, Fla. - Chapel Three
at Eglin Air Force Base,
Florida was the setting for
the 3:30p.m. wedding June 28
ln which Miss Karen Sue
Hankins became the bride of
Captain Fred LeRoy Bryant.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Hom~: H.
'Hankins, Gallipolis, vhio.
The groom's parents are Mrs.
Donald (Eliza) Bryant of Fall
Creek, Wis. and Mr. Donald
L. Bryant of Ozark Acres,
Ark.
Capt. Worrell Holby, USAF
Chaplain, officiated at the
ceremony . Mrs. William
Thomas was the organist and
she played a selection of
nuptial music which included
uJesu, Joy of Man's
Desiring," "Psalm 19," and
"The Lord's Prayer."
Chllpel Dowers were yellow
chrysan themurns and daisies
accented with baby's breath.
Two brass candelabra
decor a ted with greenery
were on either side of . the
altar.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore .a gown
of white French maracaine
featuring an inset waist
encrusted with rhinestones
and seed pearls. Gathers fell
from a yoke on either side of
the V-neckline. The long
slender sleeves added to the
look of simplicity, yet
elegance. The floor length
lldrt swept back to a chapel
train. She wore a headpiece,
. of Moorish design, which
framed the face and ·was
made of Venlse lace embellished with rhinestones
and seed pearls. The veil was
fingertip length. Her only
jewelry was pearl earri~s. a
gift from the groom.
She carried a bouquet of
sentimental · white roses
combined with delicate
stephanotis and baby's
breath, lied up with ribbon
streamers into an old world
style arrangement.
Attending the bride as
mali-on of honor was Mrs.
Edwin P. Foster, Jr. Her
dress of yellow crepe knit
featured n empire waistline
and bell sleeves of white
eyelet. She wore a yellow
plclure hat which was bordered with daisies. Her
bouquet was a nosegay of

daisies, yellow roses, and
. baby's breath.
Edwin P . Foster, Jr. was
the groom's best man . Ushers
were Kei tr. H Hankins and
Kraig E. Hankins, both
brothers of the bride.
The bride's mother was
attii:ed in a light blue crepe
formal length gown featuring
an empire waistline and bell
sleeves .
The
groom's
mother wore a formal length
· gown of pale pink. Both
mothers wore corsages of
phalaenopsis orchids.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held at the
Hurlburg Officers Club. An
arrangement of yell'ow
mums, daisies, and baby's
breath adorned the hors
d'oeuvre table . The threetiered wedding cake was
decorated in yellow flowers
and stairsteps cascaded up
one side. Two doves topped
the cake. Mike Branch played
guitar selections throughout
the evening.
Out of town guests included
SM Sgt. and Mrs. Paul E.
Sites, aunt and uncle of the
bride, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. Little, aunt and
uncle of the bride, Nashville,
Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
W. Bryant, brother and
sister-in-law of the groom,
Newport, N.C.; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Swan, Columbus.
The bride and groom left
for a honeymoon in Ocho
Rios, Jamaica and upon
relurnlng they will live in
Shalimar, Fla.

~

85741

has-

1

;

Eterna 27
By Revlon

Sl Q75

s20 SIZE NOW

Flora Diane Chambers

- - - £'CC,

Matthew Gmeser, Miss Meeks

·- --------·----·-------..

Couple plan to wed

THE

SHADE - Mr. and Mrs .
John A. Meeks, Rt. I Shade,

UNIFORM CENTER

are

SALE
114 OFF
I
I
I
I

;Plans completed

BABY DOLL PAJAMAS
LONG GOWNS
.SHORT GOWNS

I
I
I
I
I

the

Ohio University's Alden
Library. Her fiance is a
graduate of Alexander High
School and is employed by the
Alexander
Board
of
Educati on .
The wedding will be an
even t of Oct. 4 al2 :30 p.m. in
Sacred
Heart Church,
Pomeroy. A reception will
follow the ceremony.

•

ALL SUMMER SLEEPWEAR

II

announcing

•engagement and forthcomi ng
.marriage of their daughter.
Florence Marie, to Matthew
.Paul Grueser, son of Mr. and
'Mrs. Mark W. Grueser, Rt . I.
Shade.
·: The bride-elecl is a
graduate of Meigs Hi gh
School and is employed by

is having a

tI

LONG ROBES
SHORT ROBES

I

.L--366 Second Ave.-.....----------- Gallipolis--

...

.,

~ATI()~AL

GALLIPOLIS - Wedding
plans have been completed
olor the marriage of Daleen
Harbour, daughter of Mr. and
'Mrs.
Dale
Harb our ,
'Gallipolis ; to Bob Dotson, son
:Of Mr. and Mrs . Jack Dolson,
:Centerpoint.
· The ceremony will be at the
Grace United Methodist
Church at 4 p.m. Saturday,
~uly 19. A half-hour of nuptial
music will precede the
ceremony. Soloist will be
Susan Sprow accompanied by
. • ,• Mrs . Merelyn Ross, organist.
Rev. Paul Hawks will of·

ficiate.
The matron of honor will be
Mrs .
Deborah
Meeks ,
Morehead. Serving as best
man will be Joe Burdick;
Indiana. Flower girl will be
Mary Ellen Dolson , sister of
the groom . Ring bearer will
be Michael Harbour, nephew
of the bride . Ushers will be
Gene and Roger Harbour.
brothers of the bride.
The gracious custom of
open ch urch will be observed
with an open reception to
immediately follow the
ceremony .

ti()Mr=
AVVLIA~CI:
'

SAVE

SAVE

~75

8

Coldspot

50

Coldspot
Frostless 15.2 Cu. Ft.
Refrigerator with
Spacious Freezer
Was $349.95

Regutar. Priced 12 Cu. Ft.
Regrigerator ... Only $239.95

8299 95

85521

SAVE '15

Was $197.99

•15835

~

'01

.

I

8

Re1ax.. ,you've got
Master Charge •
~r,)

SILVIa U~l PLAZA

.

L

COL!RT STaEET, GAUIPOLIS

18995

'87

. Sears Has. a Credit Plim to Suit Most Every Need
• Shipping, Installation Extra
• Sale
• Prices are Catalog Prices

'I

·COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK

Was $112

·•
En~s July 31

.'
'

SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE

Satisfaction Guarant~ed ·or Your Mon ey 'Back

I

Sears

Silver Bridge Plaza
Ph. 446'2770

SEARS, ROEBl'CI: AND CO.

PLAN TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Tillis, .
Rutland are announcing the engagement and approacru,;g marriage of their daughter, Esther Louise, to
Daniel Joaeph Roush, son of Rev . and Mrs. Eugene Roush,
Rt. 1, Shade . The wedding will be an event of Aug. 9 at the
Rutland Community Church at 2:30 p.m. The gracious
custom of open church will be observed.

.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Janey of Rt. 1, Langsville, announce the engagement of
·• their daughter, Mary Faye, to Tom Crisp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Crisp, also of Langsville. The bride elect is a
1974 graduate of Meigs High School and is presently
employed by the Leading . Creek Conservancy District.
Her fiance, a 1972 graduate of Meigs High School, is
currently employed by the Peabody Coal Col. Wedding .
plans are incomplete. ·

DAUGHTERS VISIT
GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
Varney Faye Cle nde nin
enjoyed her two daughters
and their fami lies. over the
Fourth of July. Harriet ( ~r.s.
Ros Santos ) and family of
_ Swoyersville, Pa . visited f~r
the first time tn five years.
Also visiting her mother was
Barbara (Mrs. Allen Cline)
and family of Kettering. Mrs.
Clendenin will visit two
weeks in Cleveland helpmg
care for her new grandson.
She •will leave Friday .

Robert Adkin s. of Fort
Pierce. Fla .
The bride-to-be will be
altcnding LPN school at
Buckeye Hill Career Center,
this fall. Adkins is employed
with the James C. Dawkins
Construction Co. in Greenville, S.C.
Weddin g plans are incomplete.

.

'lost' American pazntzngs
this project.
'
.
The regional Inventory will
be the source from which
paintings will be selected lor
exhibition at the Huntin gton
Galleries fr om Feb. 1 through
March 28. 1976. The exhibit
will consist of appro&lt;imalely
250 works to be displayed
throughout
the
entire
museum. This exhibit and
inventory are be!Dg furd ed
through the generosity of the
We s t Virginia Arts and
Humanities Council. An
accompanying catalogue will
be published by the GalleriesJ
which will contain a survey of
the periods and styles of
American
art
with
illustrations
and com·
mentari~s on the paintings

selected for e&lt;hibition . Paintings thu s far selected range
fr om two portraits done in
1670 to works by members of
the Ashcan School which
includes Henri. Pre ndergast.
Lawson, Sloan and . other
early 20th ce ntury arllsts..
Persons or gr ou ps In·
teresled in organizing a local
sur~ey lUlder the guidance of
their own arl, anhque or
history experts so that the art
in a particular area becomes
part of the historical records
or persons having access to
an early painting who would,
like a Painting Reporl form.
should contact William
sargent. Huntington
Galleries. Park Hills. Hun·
tington , W.Va. 25701 .

h
Partici~'~ating in WOYFCS oh
'J"'
J:'
,L

ATHENS - Jean Clark,
R.N., 136 First Ave . and
Jackie Knight, 126 First Ave .,
Gallipolis, are among those
participating in the MiniWorkshops on Health being
held this week on the campus
of Ohio University.
One of a series of work·
shops sponsored by the State
Department of Education,
the program will cover such
topics as nutrition, venereal
disease, the Inside-Out
Program, and Sex Education .
Workshop Consultant will be
Dana Davis, Co-Director of
the Heallh·Drug Education
Curriculum Center at Kent

on-!

· Mary Faye Janey

GALLIPOLIS - Capt. and
Mrs . Harry Chambers of
Neighborhood Road,
Gallipolis, a nn ou nce the
engagement of their daughter
Flora Diane. to Steven
Adkins, son of Mr. and Mrs .

Galleries collecting area
· HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Do you have a painting or
know someone who has one
which was done before 1914 ?
Are these old paintings
hanging in your church, bank
or library? " The Bicentennial
Inventory
of
American Pain ti ngs
Executed Before 1914" is a
nationwide project of the
National Collection of Fine
Arls,
Smithsonian
In·
s litution, Washington. intended to record as many
historically " lost" American
paintings as possible and
return them to record along
side their better recognized
fellow~, creating a truly
comprehensive index of
American painling . The
Huntington Galleries,
Huntington, W. Va ., responded to the Smithsonian's request for assistance and has become the
insti tution responsible for
organizing the Inventory in
the tri·s"'te area of West
d
Virginia, southern Ohio an
te K t k
eas
Elfrn ts en
t0 uc
d t Y· h
been
or
a e ave th
very rewarding. In 1973, e
Inventory had a total of
sixteen paintings listed for
the state of West Virginia . As
of June, 1975 over four-hundred paintings have been inventoried mainly in the
Huntington . Ashland area,
indicating a vast reservoir of
untapped cultural resources
in the region. It is anticipated
that hundreds of additional
paintings will be submitted as
groups throughout the tristate area become involved in

ff you're
of the many people who don 't.l'njoy summer
without a boat, get a sailboat instead of a motorboat. You'll
save a fortune on gas, a11d won't have to pollute the environ·
men! to enjoy y6urself.
- R. M., Babylon,N. Y.
Wrapper wisdom
.
Save foil wrappers from margarine sticks. Store them tn
freezer until needed for wrapping potatoes for baking. You
won't need to grease potatoes since foil has a small amount of
margarine sticking to it still. Saves tune. mess and money .
"
- L. H., Ravenna, Neb.
Stores heat saves
Use stored heat to cook. Turn off the heat of electric
burners a few minutes before the food is entirely cooked and
the heat in the burner· will finish it.
- G. F ., St. Paul, Neb.
Vent if off
.
Use vents and exhaust fans to pull heat and moisture.frol)l
attics kitchens and 1aun&lt;lries directly to the outside. Close
these ~ft when not in use in an airconditioned room, or they'll
pull the cold air out too.
- S.D., Roanoke, N.C.
Creditably good
.
'
. •
.
Find out if the sture you're patronizing gives a discount 1!
you use cash rather than major credit cards. Some will give
you three per cent or more off.
•
~
_ T. D., Rockville, Neb.

CHILD BORN
CLEVELAND - Mr. and
Mrs . .George Christ (Betty
Clendenin) announce · the
birth of their second son,
Anthony Harry Christ, June
30. He has a brother, Ryan, at
home , age 3 yrs. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs . Varney
Faye Clendenin; Court St .,
Gallipolis. Paternal grand·
parents are Mr. 'and Mrs.
(Have you a clever way to save energy or fight inflation ?
George Christ, Sr. of Parma . Send your idea to The Inflation Fighter in care of lhts news·
Mrs. Clendenin now has nine paper. The best ideas will be used,in future·columns, and th~tr
grandchildren .
· authors will be rewarded with a free copy of the ·$1.50 book
"Save Money : Save Gas.") ,
"'

Pamela Anne Myers

Chambers engaged

'

Ecological sailing

125

Kenmore Zig-Zag
Stretch Stitch
Sewing Machine

Was $229.95

t"AI ." &amp;l OQIII OU~ftd ' PI a'&gt;NJO 'Et ~ll.l ' lt JMIItll:\tJ.. 'U ,
I'P"W-a '6 iltKIS 1,1 ®fllen ' {. llii!QI '9 ljltlll.....l\ 'S: PIII.....J '? u.o., '£ U~MS 'l
I8Ufc:llllltlld '9(

SAVE

Kenmore
Dishwasher with
No Pre-rinsing

A Malter Chal'fle card is not just

the moot accepbod CI!J'd in thio ·
country. It'• oowtlie mo.t
accepted c:8td in the world. Good
in over 1,600,000 places.
From Madrid to Manila. From

'15199

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Compact Stereo with
S-Track, AM/FM,
Automatic Changer

Was $178.99

•ot

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SAVE •40

Play /R'\cord S-Track ·
Stere&lt;i with AM/FM,
Automatic Changer

Esther Louise Tillis

The Inflation Fighter

Compact Coldspot
9.0 Cu. Ft. Thinwall
Chest Freezer

SAVE '20.64

can, airlines. Relax, world travite.,-You'w
Maoter Cliarae.

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·STAYED OVERNlGHT
GAWPOLIS - 1\Jr. and
i lin, Bow•rd Williamson,
Fa.totia, spent ' Thursday
11!111ht with Mr. and Mrs.
1 LOwell
Glassburn. Lester
'Oiz '' unl IIIIo spent the

l

. .l30 Second

Was $214.95

CopenhaJen to Caracao. At
hotels, reotauranb,iohops, rent-a·

·-·'

&gt;-

Sears Regular Price

.

•

Elaine Grogan, Martha:
Nellie Casto, Electa; Betty
Rickard, warder and. Jacque
Gabrilsch, sentinel. Jackie
Aldridge will be installed as
Adah in July.
Olher members of Mason
157 in attendance incl ed the
ufficers named abov and
Mildred Jewell , W nda
Rou sh, Virginia Wils n,
Garnel Burdette, Sal
Smith, Belva Roush , Nanc
VanMeter, Edna F . Roush,
Palty and Vernon Roush.
Distinguished
guests
introduced during meet.
ing
were
Catherine
Shenefield. Deputy Grand
Matron of District 24 and

Frostless 19.6 Cu. Ft.
Upright Freezer
with Built-in Lock

.!

,.......,.,

Jeanenrie Johnson, Esther;

VALUE

I

I

Sears

Jo MacKnight, ·. associate
conductress; Margie Cart.
wright, chaplain : Betty Fox,
marshal; .Josephine Kirby,
organist; Ann Blake, Ruth ;

Was $454.95

I'
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Family holds reunion

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GALUPOUS - Anyone who plans to make jellies, jams
or preserves at home will need the proper equipment and
containers to do a""satisfactory job.
A large kettle is essential. To bring a mixture to a full boil
without it boiling over, use an 8 or 10-quart kettle with a broad
flat bottom.
A jelly bag or a fruit press of several thicknesses of closely
woven cheesecloth, of flml unbleached muslin, or canton
flannel with napped side in. Use a jelly bag or cheesecloth to
strain pressed juice. A special stand or a colander will hold the
jelly bag.
In making fruit products without added pectin, a jelly,
candy, or deepfat thermometer is helpful.
Other kitchen equipment that may lie useful includes a
quart measure, measuring cup and spoons, paring and utility
knives, food chopper, masher, reamer, grater, bowls, wire
basket, colander,long-handled spoon,ladle, clock with second
hand, and household scale. You will need a boiling .water bath
(to process 5 minutes) for jams and preserves, parafin for
jellies.
Containers such as jelly glasses or canning jars may be
used as containers for jellied fruit products such as jams and
preserves. Be sure all jars and closures are perfect. Discard
any with cracks or chips; defects prevent the airtight seal that
is needed for jams and preserves.
For jellies and for fruit products firm enough to be sealed
with paraffin, use glasses or straight-&lt;&gt;ided containers that will
make an attractive mold. For preserves and soft jams, use
canning jars with lids that can be tightly sealed. (Paraffin
tends to loosen and break the seal on such products.)
Get glasses or jars ready before you start to make the
jellied product. Wash containers in wann, soapy water and
rinse with hot water. Keep them hot- either in a slow oven or
in hot water-until they are used. This will prevent containers
SWIM PARTY HELD
from breaking them filled with hot jelly or jam.
MASON. W. Va. - MemWash and rinse all lids and bands. Metal lids with sealing l)ers of the Riggs Royal-ettes
compound may need boiling or holding in boling water for a Junior Dance-Twirl Team
few minutes - follow the manufacturer's directions .
were recently entertained
ff you use porcelain-lined zinc caps, have clean, new rings with a swimming party after
of the right size for jars. Wash rings in hot, soapy water. Rinse
baton practice at the home of
well.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Roush of
For further details about making jams, jellies and
Mason City . Those members
. preserves, contact your County Extension Home Economist at
attending were Alicia Ann
the Cooperative Extension Service office in the Court House,
Roush, daughter of the hosts;
phone 446-4612, extension 32.
Teresa Carr, Janet Ambrose ,
Vicki Sheels, Becky Windon,
Teresa Wildermuth, Lori
Longenette, Sally Goebel,
and
guests,
Teresa
RACINE - A reunion of the Rochester, Pa.;· Mr. and Mrs. Longenetle, Kenny Ray
Ray McDade family was held Frank Arnott, Beaver Falls, Riggs, Mrs. Rose Carr and
recently at the Racine home Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs. Herman the instructor, Judy Riggs.
of Mr. and Mrs . Dale (Thelma)
Reese
and
McGraw. All members of the Rosalie, Cheshire; Glen
family but one grandson were Smith, Gallipolis; Mr. and
able to attend.
Mrs. Tom Reese, JacksonThose attending were Rose ville, Fla . ; Mr. and Mrs .
McDade, Middleport; Norma Ronald McDade, Mandy and
Shamblin, Columbus; Mr . Chris, Athens and friend; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary . Shamblin, and Mrs. Don McDade, Brian
Sonya and Toby, New Rich- and Melissa, Gallipolis .
mond; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Next year's reunion will be
Mo•t hema at Reduced Prices
Shamblin, Terrance and held at the home of Norma
Heather, Bexley; Mr. and, Shamblin, Columbus.
Mrs. Dale (Wilma) McGraw,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Lanny
REUNION SET
Adams, and Christi, ReedsBUFFALO,
W. Va.- The .
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
(Om a) Arnott, Ray and Plymale Reunion will be
Daren, Monaca, Pa .; Mr. and Sunday, July 20 from 10 a.m.
Mrs. Eddie Meyers, Tabatha, to 4 p.m. at Buffalo High
Bill,
and
Cinnamon, School, Rt. 1, Wayne Co., W.
Va.

man, cunductress; Frances

Frostless 17.1 Cu. Ft.
Refrigerator With
Power Miser Switch

HAS GOW BAR
i&gt;
REEDSVILLE "-- Michael ( ~
G. Boring,' son of Mr. and
1
Mrs. Grant 'L. Boring of ~
Reedsv~ has been commissioned
a
second
lleutenan t through the Air
Force Reserve Officers
· I· Training Corps program and
i •warded
his bachelor's
,· I~ at Ohio Univeflllty. .
l Ueutenant Boring is a 1971
! ~te of Eastern High
[lcbool. His wife, Robyn, is
·IIi dllughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mills of· RR 3,

l Pomeroy.

l.•e l.i lchfield,, associa le
pair on : .Maxine Aldridge,
secre tary: Phyllis Gilkey.
treasurer ; Carol J . Work-

MASON. W. Va. - Mason
Chapter Nu. 157; Order of the
Eastern Star, held · installaliun of officers in the
Chapter .Room r.ecenlly . 'Fhe
Mason c hapter is beginning
its lith year of active
membership in the Grand
Jurisdicti11n of West Virginia.
In s talling officers were
Janett
Capehart,
Pt.
Pleasant Chapt er 75, In ·
stalling Officer; Jean Carlwright, Mason Chapter 157,
installing marshal; !,Quise
Crow, Pt. Plea san l · 75, installing chaplain; Gertrude
Bateson , Pt. Pleasant 75,
installing· or~anist; Bar·
bar a dugan. ~cine Chapter 134 (Ohio), installing
warder and Sara Willis. Thea
192 !Glouster, Ohio) as installing sentinel. Verlie
Workman, Mason Chapter's
very first worthy matron ,
served as honorary assistant
to worthy matron during
installation. Verlie and her
husband, Ray E. "Pop"
Workman . .were honored
during the meeting because
t.hey are life members of the
chapter. Miss Lena Gibbs and
Mrs . Tillie LaRue are also
life members, but they were
unable to attend.
Officers installed were
Mary J. McDermitt, worthy
matron ; Oscar Casto, worthy
pair on: .B a,tbara Dunn,
associate matron : Marion

S"'te University .
The workshop is directed
by Dr . Freda Phi' ilips of the .
Oh1'o Uni'versi'ty School of
Health , Physical Education,
and Recreation.

SON BORN
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Greene,
Mrs .
Dannie
Gallipolis, are proudly an·
nourcing the birth of their
Jourlh child, a son, Scott
Daniel, Tuesd·ay, June 17,
at Holzer Medical Center
weighing 11 lbs., one oz. and
22 inches long . Scottie wa s
welcomed home by three
sisters, Danella Renee , 9;
Deborah Denise, 5112, and
Dena Noele, 22 mos. Also
welcoming . Scottie arc his
maternal grandparents, and
great-grandparents, Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Elliott, Mrs. Eloise
Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Harrison, all of Gallipolis : .
paternal grandparents and
grea !-grandparents, Mrs.
Garnet Greene, Buckeye
Lake; Mr . and Mrs . Wood·
ford Greene, Beverly, . and
Mr. and Mrs. 'Noah T. Clark,
Crown City and aunts and
urcles, Mr. and Mrs . James
Edwards and Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Rupe, Jr.,
of
Gallipolis.

Engagement announced
COLUMBUS - Mr . and
Mrs . Russe ll L. Myers,
Columbus announce the
engagement
of
their
daughter, Pamela Anne to
Roger Wesley Barrett, son of
Richard W. Barrett and the
late Mrs . Barrett, Mill Creek
Rd., Gallipolis .
Miss Myers is a 1975

graduate of Ohio University
where she majored in· social
work.
Barrett, a graduate of Ohio
University is a computer
programmer for the U.S.
Dept. of Defense in Arlington,
Va .
·
The wedding will be an
event of Sepl. 13 In Athens.

Concert
fanned

P

GALLIPOLIS _ A Gospel
Conce rt at the Gallia County
JlUlior FairgrolUlds, SR 35,
Gallipolis, is planned for
Friday, July 18 at 7:30 p.m.
Groups featured will be the
Lester Family and The
GatewayBoys,Sl.Louis, Mo.
They have 3 show on
lelevi s ion . en tilled " The
Lester Family Sings." The
program reac hes ou t to two
million people . The Shaffer
family from Crown City will
also lake part. The groups
will perform in the open air
on s"'ge at the Gallia Courty
Jurior Fairgrourds.
Bring your lawn chairs.
There will be a sheller in case
of rain.
Arefreshmenlstand will be
available for soft drinks. A
free will offering will be
la ken lo help support the
si ngers. The event is sponsored by the Southeastern
Ohio
Gospel
Music
Association .

IN TOWN
GALLIPOLIS - Joe W.
Phiullips of Concord , Calif.
and his sister, Mrs . Marie
Ellen Voreh of Tallahassee ,
Fla. visited Wednesday
evening with their urcle and
allill, Mr. and Mrs . Lowell
Glassburn.

Brenda Kay Miller
TO BE WED - Mr. and Mrs. Robert E . Miller, Rl. 1,
Middleport, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Brenda Kay to Stephen Hollis Taylor, son of Mrs. Hazel
Taylor, Rutland, and the late Mr. Wayne Taylor . The
bride-elect is a mid-term 1975 graduate of Meigs High
School. Taylor is a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School and
is employed at Fostoria Distribution Services in Fostoria .
The wedding will be an event of March 13, 1976, at the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene, Rutland at 6:30p.m. The
gracious custom of open church will be observed with an
open reception following.

Mrs. Stover entertained

GALLIPOLIS
Mrs . .
Brady Stover, the former
Brenda Ross, was honored
with a bridal shower at the
home of her sister Mrs. Don
Kingery on Juiy 9.
The guest enjoyed an
eve ning of fun and games.
Prizes were won by Mrs.
Harry Chambers, Mrs.
Carolyn Barry, and Mrs.
Darla Chambers. The door
prize w•s won by Miss Diana
Chambers.
The guest later enjoyed
refreshmenls of cake and
punch. A color scheme of pink
wedding bells and a bride
centerpiece were used on the
.
gift "'ble.
Those attending were the
honoree, Mrs . Brenda Stover
and Cea ~ay. the hostesses,
Mrs . Don Kingery and Mrs.
Kenneth ·Siders, and ·Jeff,
Kenny Wayne and Kevin
HOMECOMING SET
Siders, her grandmother,
GALLIPOLIS - There will Mrs. Lawrence Moon~y, Mrs.
be a Homecoming at the Lee Holcom b, Mrs . Clarence
French City Baptist Church, Mooney, Mrs. John Mooney
Sur day, July 20 beginning at and Amanda, Mrs. Carolyn
the morning 'Serv ices . and Barry, Miss Anita Barry,
continuing in the afternoon. Mrs . J ea nnie Ross, Mrs .
There will be ·a special Edna Kingery, Miss Connie
homecoming service at 3 Kingery ,Mrs . Fred Sanders,
p.ll!. Speaking at both ser· Miss Lori Sanders, Mi'ss
vices will ' be Dr . Ray Della Sanders, Mrs. Merrie!
Roberts. Dinner will ~e on the Sanders and Jeff. Miss Jackie
ground s al I p.in . Every one is Sanders, Mrs . Gaylan Bush,
welcome to at lend .
Mrs . Karen ·Taylor. Mrs.

Bonnie Warren, Mrs . Harry
Chambers. Mrs . Debbie
Pralor Miss Diana Cham·
bers 'and Miss Darla
Chambers.
Sending gifls but urable to
attend were her grand·
mother, Mrs . Homer Ross,
Miss connie Cremeen, Mrs .

Edith Fulks, Miss Teresa
Cochran, Miss Lula Mae
Blake and Mrs , Sophie
Clifflon .
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Stover
were united in marriage on
June 11, at Richcreek, Va .
They are now residing on
Lower River Road .

They'll Do It Every Time
0GPR&lt;.Y, ~~
OPfOME.i'l&lt;iSf.
RWOVE.S

YOUR

~ I CK
e.~~s

,;&lt;.E.? 1'H~Y

.

S~IP A.ND )
WOSB~f:!

.
.
...
H~Rf. .. L.E.f'S
fAKE. A t...OOK .'

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'fHE.N HE.
E.XPU.i'S YOU
. 'Ttl R~D .i'H E.
~AVIN()

ON ~E. HEAD
OF A PIN"·
-rMNI' m

.;: COOT"$,

CECM!t! Cii..EN
C/7'Y,

.

N.£WvE~£Y

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6- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sll!lday; July 13, 1975
.

r:::::::::;:;;:;G;;:;;;;'i~:;:y~ii:;::::&lt;:y~~:i

'f/oorah
'performance
.
.
scheduled for .Riverby

I

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GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony will
present the Appalachian
Green Parks . Pr ojec t , a
performing folk group, in
'' Hoorah ," a program of
music and square dancing for
the whole family on Monday,
July 28, at 6:30 .m .. on the
patio at Riverby In Gallipolis.
Members of the group are
young singers, actors and

dancers from Ohio University
and the Ohio Valley Theatre,
In c., of Athens, who have a
deep interest in traditi onal
Appalachian music and folk lore.
The group was
established in the s ummer of
1973, a nd they began to
perform in Southeastern Ohio
during that summer. They
share songs and dances with
the audience in much the

Women plan picnic

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

.,

same spirit- . that the early
Ohio settlers had shared with
lJOe another .
Now in their third year of
touring, the members of the
Appalachian Green Parks
Project travel throughout the
count ry · performing
traditiona l
Appalachian
songs and telling stories of
early Ohio life . This year's
produc tion of "Hoorah" is a
par t of the official Ohio
Bi ce ntennial Touring
Project.
The public is invited to
corhe and enjoy
this
delightful evening on the
lawn at Riverby . Bring the
entire family and share and
enjoy folk tradition as it
existed nearly 200 years ago.
Most or the so ngs are
traditional folk songs that
·many 'people know . A few
•m ore difficult song s are
" lined " or taught line by line
to the a udience before they
are sung . This encourages
everyone to join in the
singing .
In case of rain on the
evening of July 28, the performance will be held in
Wa sh in g ton
Schab!
Auditorium. ·
A reception for the
audience and the performers
will follow the program at
Riverby.

· POMEROY·- The Catholic
Women's CHub of Sacred
Heart Parish will hold its
annual picnic Aug . 7. The
picnic date was decided when
the club met at its regular
monthly meeting Thursday.
night.
The picnic will be held at'
the Middleport Municipal
Park at 7 p.m. and members
are asked to bring a covered
dish and their own table
service.
Father John Welton opened
the meeting with prayer
!oliowed by the pledge to the
flag . The club also decided to
have a rummage sale Sept. 4
from 9 a .m. until 3 p .m .
·Members are asked to
prepare for the sale Sept. 3. A
donation was made by the

GALIJPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Centet, located at 220
Jackson Pike on the County
Home Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9:00 a .m . to :t:OO p.m. The
schedule of activities for this
week Is as follows:
Monday, July 14, Shopping
at Silver Bridge Plaza, 1-3
p.m.
'lilesday, July 15, Visiting
and. Quilting, 9 a .m .-3 p.m.
Wednesday, July 16, Csrd
Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 17, Blood
Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m.;
Council meeting, 2 p.m.
Friday, July ·18, Nashville
Trip (Bus leaves the Center
at ' a .m.); Art Class, 1-3
p.m .; ~Die! ~ ?Pen for
social hour, 7 p.m. c··
Meals are served from
11 :30-12:30 daily.

' 'ro HOW PICNIC
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers'
Association will hold a picnic
at the New Haven Park at the
dam site July 19 at 5:30 p.m.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center is
located at Pomeroy Junior
High SchooL The center Is
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Activities for
the week include :
Monday, July 14, Crafts;
Square Dancing, 12:30 - 3
p.m.
Tuesday, July 15, Chair
caning; chorus 12:30-2 p.m.
Wecmesday, July 16, Home
Nursing Course, 2nd part, at
ce11ter, 10:30 -11:30 a.m.;
Teresa Collins of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, instructor; Bingo, 12:30 p.m.;
Blood l'ressure Day, 12: I~
1:30 p.m.
Thursday, July 17, Kings
Island Trip, 7 a .m . Rise and
shine! Chair caning.
Frjday, July 18, Bowling, 13 p.m.
·
Senior Citizens lunch
program, 11:30 a .m.-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.

...

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Men 's Club for kitchen
repairs . Jo Ellen Roush
reported on the Catholic
Women's Club Convention
held in Steubenville in June.
C.C.D. classes will begin
Sept. 10, and confirmation
will be held some time in midOctober.
The meeting was closed by
prayer. Refreshments were
served by Mildred Wells and
Christina Grueser.

POMEROY - A layette
shower was held recently for
Mrs . Vincent (Susie) Knight
at the home of Mrs. .._ R.
Knight. Hosting the ~&gt;ilent
were Lois Young and Vera
Crow.
Gifts were placed in a
bassinette and refreshments
of cake, punch, nuts and
mints were served.
The guest list included Mrs .
Annie Knight, Mrs. Judy
Flagg, Mrs. Juanita Grueser
and Angie: Miss Mary Baird,
•.

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Prints exhibited

...

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Mr. and Mrs. William
.

Hall-Christian wed

'

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Christian of Rutland
announce the marriage of
their daughter, Saridra Lynn,
to William R. Hall, Jr . June
17, in Tazewell, Va .
The bridegroom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. William R.
Hall, Sr. of Rutland .
The couple was honored
with a shower given by Mrs .
Donna Grate, Mrs. Gl cria
drate , Mrs. Cassie Hall and
Mrs. Mary Christian on July

..,

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trooto no.ooo ...,._...... -....

CLARK'S
Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

OUR ENTIRE SJOCK

MEN'S LEISURE

SUITS

WEAR

REG.
110.00 .

.~[

Suits 60.00

REG.

·=-:·

90.00

SltOIT SLEEYE SPORT

SHIRTS
SHIRTS Now 3.90
SHIRTs Now 6;30
.·r.:.: SHIRTS Now-9.40

SWIM WEAR
Reg.lO"

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.:SHIRTS
REG.

OUR ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK!

SHIRTS 3.00
SHIRTS ,- 3.90
SHIRTS 4.70

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SHOES-

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15.90
SHOES 19.90

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IIOIIDAY &amp; FRII)AY 9:30 1i 8 Pll
TUES., WED, THURS., SAT. 9:30 li 5 PM
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lafayette· Mall
.•.

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Second Avenue~

~'.; STOREWIDE I ~.
SUMMER
j
CLEARANCE
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ZENITH CLEARANCE
ON ALL
1975 MODELS

10 oz.
JAR

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COATS
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Control panel and grille area
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25" diagonal Zenith Advanced

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195.00

Coats 64.00
Coats 75.00

MEN'S KNIT DRESS

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Reg. 15~
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located in The Lafayette Mall, a Linen and
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A complete line of

·'

Bath Accessories
Towels - Mats &amp; Seat Covers
Shower Curtains - Rods - Soaps
Matched or Single Waste Baskets. Hampers
&amp; Tooth Brush Holders.
Toilet Seats, Mirrors - Cosmetic Trays

FOR THE BEDROOM

Sheets, King, Queen, Double &amp; Twin
Size
Pillow Cases to Match
Electric Blankets
Insulated
Blankets &amp; Bed Spreads.

-

,,.

-THE "STEEN"
COM PACT 19"·

••

Grained
Kashmir
Walnut color
Zenith
Quality
Black · and ·;
White TV Chass-is ·
Custom Perm a -Set VHF •
Fine Tuning Control ··
Deluxe Video Range 82 ·'

'

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Channel Tuning System
Zenith Royalty
Tube s .
·

$348 .

Crest

SAi[$128~

GIBSON SALE
BIG 14 CU. FT. GISSON
FROST-CLEAR

&amp; KITCHEN

SALE

Keep Your Head
Above Inflation!
BUSH

REFRIGERATOR

FOR THE DINING ROOM

$278

I ll I

PINTO
BEANS t4 oz.

."

6 CANS

t lj l

$} 00 ·

·'"
''"
.li:.O

-

' / If &gt;

Table Cloths, Placemafs &amp; Napkins,
Tea Towels.

t;HEST AND UPRIGHT

FREEZERS

'

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-·-

.

-DRASTICALLY REDUCED-

·C

....

THE ASHINGTON

MODEL F-4002

SALE

·. -1"
~

.....•

Also beautiful, beautiful
accessories for bathroom, et&lt;..

R-ID.. ·ENOUR

.....

TV Rc. APPLIANCE '
GAS SERVICE .

985-.JJ07

"'

OHIC

•

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c

Now 11.90. ...
Now 15.90 ....
.....
Now 24.00 ...

AU BOYS SWIM

Reg. 5"

·E

==-----J I ,.~
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~00 Second Ave.

S5S .OD

AU. IKIYS' SPORT

NOW 15.90
~~.~ · NOW 19.00
25.00 ~~.~; NOW 24.00

...

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Now 4.70
Now 6.70
Now 7.80

~E

COATS .."'
Coats 44.00 ..

BOYS' SUMMER KNIT

• ,. GIIOUI' OF MEWS
j.

REG.
$70.00

AU. SIOCit MEN'S

Rea. 6"
Rea. 8"

AU. MEN'S SPORT

Now 29.60
Now 48.00
Now 56.00

$60.00

REG.
IIJO.M

.....

1;. C:G.
137 .00

REG .

.stO.oo

;11 &lt; 1,

Buy~

COUPLE ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Neutzling, Pomeroy, are armouncing !!t. L~.!!gagement of their
dsughter, Stella Sue, to Arthur Paul Snyder, .son of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur D. Snyder, Oakfield, N.Y. Miss Neutzling is employed with the Federal Bureau of Investigation
as a file clerk. Her fiance is employed with the
Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D. C.
Wedding plans have been set for Oct. 16 in Wheaton, Md .

VISITED RELATIVES
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. David Mitchell and son
Michael spent last weekend
at Plain City visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Mitchell, Tera and
Travis . They have just moved
into their new home in Plain
City.

SAVE AS
MUCH AS

...
••
••"'

~~~~~it;,:~~~~

Stelkz Sue Neutzling

RETURNED HOME
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and
Mrs. David Mitchell, State
Rte . 160, and son, Michael
·Mitchell , Columbus, have
just returned from two weeks
spent in Va. with relatives.
They visited several points of
interest, including the White
Top Mountains, Bristol
Caverns and Salt Works in
Va . and Grandfathers MI. in
North Carolina.

~

"LAFA VETTE MALL"

·.

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VBSSET
" Back to the Bible " is the
theme for the Vacalion Bible
School which will be conducted by the Chap el Hill
Church of Chri st, July 14-18.
from 7 to 6:30 p.m. Classes
will be for all ages, including
adults. All are invited to
attend and participate tn
these classes.

-...

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Games were played and
prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Irene Kennedy, Pam North,
Mrs. Lois Walker , Mrs . Nellie
Vale and Mrs . Marie Birchfield won the door prize.
The new Mrs. Hall will be a
se nior at Meigs High School
in the fall . · Hall is a 1975
g raduat e o f Meigs High
School and is employed at the
Walker Funeral Hom e,
Rutland . The bride and
groom reside on Main St. in
Rutland.

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REUNION PLANNED
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Alumni Association is
holding a reunion of all Rio
Grande
High
School
graduates Saturday, July 19
at noon at the Community
Hall on the
Ri o Grande
College Campus. Dress is
casual. The meal will be
picnic style. Bring one meat
dish, a covered dish and table
service. Soft drinks will be
furnished. · All
former
teachers are welcome.

I.

We'llgo to any length ... to bring
our customers real savings!

POMEROY CHAMBER of
Commerce at noon '!t Meigs
ln Q.,..

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STARTS FRIDAY,

Hall, ~jr.

YOUR DOllAR'S WORtH

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

.
' .

MONDAY
SECOND Monday Sewing
Club, 6 p. m . home- of Mrs.
Robert Lewis.
WEEK LONG meeting,
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
.Churcll, 7:30 p. m . Different
s peaker each evening,
Mondsy through Sunday.
FREE
clothing
day_
'
Monday for low income
persons sponsored by GalliaMei gs Communi ty Action
Agency . Location is in the old
high school building at
Cheshire. Hours are from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m.

GalliDOiis. 0.

· Sent*-!!

.'.

n n~..l protcc t('d
;~gai nst loss.

rr j..p:,tl'rcd

·:

PORTLAND - 'lbe Golden
·Age Club met July 9, at the
. ·home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hilton,' Portland. A potluck
dlimer""as served at noon.
The ~lng was given by
Mrs. O..i! Patterson. ·
· The 'program included a
' reading and recitation . by . ·
.:Mrs. Pattenon ~ slides
were shown by Darre II
Taylor A get well card was
lipied lllld tent to Daytpn
• McEJnt' wbo Ia a patien! at ·
Velel'an* lbpital. The club
dona~ •
to tbe Pomeroy
I • center;
' 9t
attendlns ·were
HoUle Starcher, ·carol
Tayl~. ,Mary · Orcle, Eihel
Johnaon, Kalbleen Waril,
Garnlt, Efwlne aild · Eunie
•

hc&lt;~r tlw
Kc~·p:-&lt;l k {· diam on d I ~ r crm:l ncnd y

Social
Calendar

SUNDAY
UVE SAVING lessons at
Middleport pool beginning
Mondsy. Registration · must
be done Sat~day or Sunday
at the pool. Cost is $8 plus text
book . Lessons in senior and
junior life saving.

THEHASKINS-TANN.ERco.

::

..... ......:.~.

gem di;-unond ~
rwme Keep-.akt• Your
fitW'i l

Lafayette Mall

Club has
rrieeting

§:

BEGINS FRI •., JULY 11TH

.
Q(AO.OII\eG
·

300 Second Ave.

i

There is no finer
diamond ring.
011l\' the

..

:.;~~~:~m~fdi=•~\\Ollmlll8atl

I

Keepsak~

Hospital News

•'•'

7- The Sunday Times:. Sentinel, S.Oday, July 13, j975

. were served by tM hostesses
to Mrs . Chadwell, Mrs.
Brown Mrs. Tom Spencer
'
and Jared,
Mrs. Bise, Mrs.
Donald Myers, Mrs. YO\IIlg,
Mrs . Weber, Mrs . Wilson,
Mrs. R. H. Hannum and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson. There will be
no July or August meetings .

SLUMBER PARTY HELD
REEDSVILLE
. A
slumber party for Girl Seoul
troop 67 was held recently at
Stewart Hall. Prior to the
sliunber party, Mrs. Howard
Lawrence surpri11ed her
daughter, Patty, with a
decorated birthday cake, ice
cream and Kool-Aid which
was served to the girls. Attending were Jodi Smith,
Carla
Cowdery,
Patty
Lawrence, Cathy Cowdery,
Dee Dailey, Diana Smith,
Mary Masters, Ann Jones,
Teresa Dailey, Patricia
Boston, Sheila Buchanan,
Teresa Hannum,
Judy
Holter. Kim Reed, Susan
Hannum and Kay Balderson,
scouts, and leaders , Marilyn
Hannum and Ruth Anne
Balderson.

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Flower arranging wo.rkshop.
enjoyed.by local gardeners .

DEAR HELEN AND SUE.:
REEDSVILLE - Members was named chairman of the
·I am 20 years old and have two serious girlfriends who
know nothing about each other. I love them both and feel. I of the Riverside Garden Club program committee . Othel's·
· either up, a1though the~ persona lltl es enjoyed a nower arranging to serve are Mrs . Donald
wouldn't want to giVe
are as different as night and day.
work3hvpat the home of Mrs. Putman, Mrs. Gene · Young
I also date and have short relationships with other girls Harliss Frank recently. Mrs. and Mrs. Denver , Weber.
that come along every now and them. All this activity has kept Ronald Osborne served as ca- Members of the club are
. dismisse
' . d from h OS tess •
invited to a stork dinner for
my pocket empty a nd me on the verge of be mg
Arrangemen ts •··
college foi'poor gra des.
-were rna de Mrs . Steve Cowdery Aug . 5,
I really want to change for the better, and hold on to one by the members. Judges at 6 p.m . at the home of Mrs .
steady girlfriend who will help me towarij my career goals.
were Mrs. Gene Wilson, Mrs. Denver Weber .
How can I strl!ighten up and get on the right track? Frank Bise and Mrs. Lyle
Interesting games were
DEPRESSED
B;llderson. Blue ribbon went cond ucted
with
prized
P.S. Is it wrong to be unfaithful to your girls (if no deep to Mrs. Walter Brown, red to awarded by Mrs. Chadwe ll .
feelings are involved with the "extras"), but expect them to be Mrs. Osborne, and white to
The devotional period was
faithful to you?
Mrs. Denver Weber.
conducted by Mrs. Cowdery
DEAR DEPRESSED:
RoU call was. answered by with " More Blessed To Give"
Youdoo'twaottochaogefort!Jebette~beeauae-foryou members naming a wild
as her theme .
Delicious refreshments
- that would be worse. UnW you're ready to major In .nower. Mrs. David Chadwell
something more than aex, or unW your girls Jearn they're part
of a juggling act, I don't aee mucb future for you at eollege.SUE
DEAR DEPRESSE;D:
If you're really depressed, maybe you're on the edge ol
learning there's "satiety In nmnbers."
Why not flip • eoln and narrow the field down to oae? And
may she be as "faithful" to you as you've always been to ber!
(Answer to your P .S. Is YES!l-H.
RAP :
Here's another answer to "Crying on the Inside, Laughing
on the Outside" who is miserable because he thinks he's so
ugly that girls only accept him as friends.
I'm going steady with a l!uY who isn't a real knockout for
looks, but !love him because he is the most terrific person I've
ever met. I've gotten kidded by thoughtless pevple who ask,
" What do you see in IDM?" or say, "You could do better."
I've had opportunities to go with better looking guys, but so
often these spoiled fellows treat girls like dirt, or have a super
•
macho thing. They couldn't come cl011e to my guy, who is ldnd,
considerate, honest, sensitive, understanding. He's also
BY JANET MAGGIED
outgoing, ambitious, intelligent, loving and confident, and I
wouldn't trade him for Robert Redford.
If COILOO is so popular he's elected school president, he
won't·have any trouble finding a great girl-that is if he slops
thinking of himself as Old Ugly.- VERY LUCKY
DEAR RAP:
GALUPOLIS - Fifty-one Art Colony, 530 First Avenue,
A couple of months ago I met a guy on a three-day school
prints by 51 different artists Gallipolis, for its July exhibit.
trip. We had lots of fun together. He writes me once a week,
Included in the exhibit are
are presently on display ~t
and has been down to see me ( lz:Hnile trip) several times
etchings,
engravings, silk
Riverby, home of the French
He has a steady girl he's been going with for two years,
screen,
collographs,
and she wants to get engaged in September. He says he's not
serigraphs, photo etchings,
sure he wants that. (She knows about me.)
lithogoraphs and linocuts .
I'm not ready for serious dating - I'm 16 and he's 18 - but
GUARD RETURNS
The California Society of
I like him a lot as a friend. Am I wrong to contirwe writing to
LUCAsVILLE, Ohio (UP!) Prinlmakers, formed in 1911
him and seeing him occasionally?-CAN'T LET GO IN - A tower guard at the
in San Francisco, was
JERSEY
.
Southern Ohio Correctional · originally a regional group
DEAR CLGU:
FacUlty, one of 61 persons but now has members
There's no reason why a boy and girl can't be friends, even
fired during a May strike at throughout the nation .
though he's got a steady be may not want to keep. As for
the prison, returned to his job
These are outstanding
"something more"-don't waste over a couple of daydreams
Friday after it was deter- professionals and they
oo II. The other girl Is closer, and sbe got there flrst.-HELEN
mined he tried to work during believe that printmaking is a
AND SUE
the walkout. Ballard Caudell vital form of creative exJr. agreed not to press for pression. Their aim is to
some 60 days worth of back foster exhibition and appay.
preciation of contemport
prin !making.
Duplicates of the 51 prints
Mrs . Nancy Collins, Mrs.
at prices ranging from $20 to
Pam Williams, Mrs. Pam
PROBE
OPENS
$200
may be ordered at the
Calvert, Mrs. Linda Hudson
Veterans Memorial Hospital
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Ten
and Lori, Mrs. Carolyn
ADMISSION - Ada Root, emplgyes of state store No. French Art Colony.
The exhibit is circulated by
Bartels, Mrs. Marge Goett, Middleport; Candy Proffitt,
134
i.lf.:Cleveland
are
being
Old Bergen Arl Guild of
Mrs. Marylin Poulin, Mrs. Portland; Callie Matheney,
queslfoned
by
police
and
Ohio
Bayonne, N. J .
Marie Smith, Mrs. Rose Ewington; Kathryn Link,
liquor
inspectors
after
a
Galleries are open on
Sisson, Mrs. Mazie Hannahs, Athens; Paula Cunningham,
suspected
$48
bookkeeping
Saturdays
and Sundays from
Mrs. Phyllis Hennessy, Mrs. Letart, W. Va.; Alice Dodson,
error
led
the
state
to
crack
its
I to 5 p .. and on Tuesdays and
Erma Cleland, Mrs. Katie Long Bottom.
own safe and discover the Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 5
Crow, · Mrs .
Virginia
DISCHARGES - Harold
embezzlement of $7,291 from p .m . For special showings
Buchanan, Mrs. Rita fields, Jeffers, M.e linda . Custer.
the store, according to Ohio call 446-0547. The public is
Mrs. Diana Whitt and Usa Sandra Neigler, Russeli
Liquor Director Clifford E . invited and there is no adand Mrs. Evelyn Knight.
Slayton, Dortha Salser.
Reich:
mission charge.

,•,•.

r

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By H.,J,.,;',.,,d sue Bolle!

Layette shower held

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6- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sll!lday; July 13, 1975
.

r:::::::::;:;;:;G;;:;;;;'i~:;:y~ii:;::::&lt;:y~~:i

'f/oorah
'performance
.
.
scheduled for .Riverby

I

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'

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GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony will
present the Appalachian
Green Parks . Pr ojec t , a
performing folk group, in
'' Hoorah ," a program of
music and square dancing for
the whole family on Monday,
July 28, at 6:30 .m .. on the
patio at Riverby In Gallipolis.
Members of the group are
young singers, actors and

dancers from Ohio University
and the Ohio Valley Theatre,
In c., of Athens, who have a
deep interest in traditi onal
Appalachian music and folk lore.
The group was
established in the s ummer of
1973, a nd they began to
perform in Southeastern Ohio
during that summer. They
share songs and dances with
the audience in much the

Women plan picnic

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

.,

same spirit- . that the early
Ohio settlers had shared with
lJOe another .
Now in their third year of
touring, the members of the
Appalachian Green Parks
Project travel throughout the
count ry · performing
traditiona l
Appalachian
songs and telling stories of
early Ohio life . This year's
produc tion of "Hoorah" is a
par t of the official Ohio
Bi ce ntennial Touring
Project.
The public is invited to
corhe and enjoy
this
delightful evening on the
lawn at Riverby . Bring the
entire family and share and
enjoy folk tradition as it
existed nearly 200 years ago.
Most or the so ngs are
traditional folk songs that
·many 'people know . A few
•m ore difficult song s are
" lined " or taught line by line
to the a udience before they
are sung . This encourages
everyone to join in the
singing .
In case of rain on the
evening of July 28, the performance will be held in
Wa sh in g ton
Schab!
Auditorium. ·
A reception for the
audience and the performers
will follow the program at
Riverby.

· POMEROY·- The Catholic
Women's CHub of Sacred
Heart Parish will hold its
annual picnic Aug . 7. The
picnic date was decided when
the club met at its regular
monthly meeting Thursday.
night.
The picnic will be held at'
the Middleport Municipal
Park at 7 p.m. and members
are asked to bring a covered
dish and their own table
service.
Father John Welton opened
the meeting with prayer
!oliowed by the pledge to the
flag . The club also decided to
have a rummage sale Sept. 4
from 9 a .m. until 3 p .m .
·Members are asked to
prepare for the sale Sept. 3. A
donation was made by the

GALIJPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Centet, located at 220
Jackson Pike on the County
Home Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9:00 a .m . to :t:OO p.m. The
schedule of activities for this
week Is as follows:
Monday, July 14, Shopping
at Silver Bridge Plaza, 1-3
p.m.
'lilesday, July 15, Visiting
and. Quilting, 9 a .m .-3 p.m.
Wednesday, July 16, Csrd
Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 17, Blood
Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m.;
Council meeting, 2 p.m.
Friday, July ·18, Nashville
Trip (Bus leaves the Center
at ' a .m.); Art Class, 1-3
p.m .; ~Die! ~ ?Pen for
social hour, 7 p.m. c··
Meals are served from
11 :30-12:30 daily.

' 'ro HOW PICNIC
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers'
Association will hold a picnic
at the New Haven Park at the
dam site July 19 at 5:30 p.m.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center is
located at Pomeroy Junior
High SchooL The center Is
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Activities for
the week include :
Monday, July 14, Crafts;
Square Dancing, 12:30 - 3
p.m.
Tuesday, July 15, Chair
caning; chorus 12:30-2 p.m.
Wecmesday, July 16, Home
Nursing Course, 2nd part, at
ce11ter, 10:30 -11:30 a.m.;
Teresa Collins of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, instructor; Bingo, 12:30 p.m.;
Blood l'ressure Day, 12: I~
1:30 p.m.
Thursday, July 17, Kings
Island Trip, 7 a .m . Rise and
shine! Chair caning.
Frjday, July 18, Bowling, 13 p.m.
·
Senior Citizens lunch
program, 11:30 a .m.-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.

...

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Men 's Club for kitchen
repairs . Jo Ellen Roush
reported on the Catholic
Women's Club Convention
held in Steubenville in June.
C.C.D. classes will begin
Sept. 10, and confirmation
will be held some time in midOctober.
The meeting was closed by
prayer. Refreshments were
served by Mildred Wells and
Christina Grueser.

POMEROY - A layette
shower was held recently for
Mrs . Vincent (Susie) Knight
at the home of Mrs. .._ R.
Knight. Hosting the ~&gt;ilent
were Lois Young and Vera
Crow.
Gifts were placed in a
bassinette and refreshments
of cake, punch, nuts and
mints were served.
The guest list included Mrs .
Annie Knight, Mrs. Judy
Flagg, Mrs. Juanita Grueser
and Angie: Miss Mary Baird,
•.

=·

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.e .

Prints exhibited

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Mr. and Mrs. William
.

Hall-Christian wed

'

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Christian of Rutland
announce the marriage of
their daughter, Saridra Lynn,
to William R. Hall, Jr . June
17, in Tazewell, Va .
The bridegroom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. William R.
Hall, Sr. of Rutland .
The couple was honored
with a shower given by Mrs .
Donna Grate, Mrs. Gl cria
drate , Mrs. Cassie Hall and
Mrs. Mary Christian on July

..,

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•o

K'•

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Rl!tOitrom

trooto no.ooo ...,._...... -....

CLARK'S
Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

OUR ENTIRE SJOCK

MEN'S LEISURE

SUITS

WEAR

REG.
110.00 .

.~[

Suits 60.00

REG.

·=-:·

90.00

SltOIT SLEEYE SPORT

SHIRTS
SHIRTS Now 3.90
SHIRTs Now 6;30
.·r.:.: SHIRTS Now-9.40

SWIM WEAR
Reg.lO"

. ILl. IO'IS SUIIIIER SPORT

.:SHIRTS
REG.

OUR ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK!

SHIRTS 3.00
SHIRTS ,- 3.90
SHIRTS 4.70

REO.
15.1o

'

.....

REG.

~.ULY

lltb--;. .9:30 AM

SHOES-

. REO.

.b . ,

SHOES

15.90
SHOES 19.90

. 119.t5 .

.

!lEO.
U4." _
II o'

REO.
SJI .ff '

P'

'

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

i

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IIOIIDAY &amp; FRII)AY 9:30 1i 8 Pll
TUES., WED, THURS., SAT. 9:30 li 5 PM
'

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Gallipolis, 0.

. 300 Second Ave.

lafayette· Mall
.•.

I~ ! (

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J.

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Second Avenue~

~'.; STOREWIDE I ~.
SUMMER
j
CLEARANCE
---etc.

· ~

ZENITH CLEARANCE
ON ALL
1975 MODELS

10 oz.
JAR

COCA·
COLA

....

'

.,

·•
H

,,,

64

oz.

.

..

...

MIRACLE WHIP
SALAD
DRESSING

NEW 1976 MODELS ARRIVING SOON

•225 ON CLEARANCE MODELS

v

"

•I'

·''

QT.

"THE MILLET

...

F4714W

Of

oM

Lowboy console with genu ine

•• Jlllll

_,

..
•

INSTANT COFFEE

...

OPENING

;

That Win by a Neck!
FOLGER'S

"

GRAND

..'•"• •.
. ....
...
....

.....

SHOES

..
,. I''

•

.

SHIRTS &amp; TANKS
REG.

$2 .00

.....

REG.
REG.

~'5.00 .

.NOW 1.55
NOW 2.40
NOW 3.90

COATS
REG ~.

sn.Ja

OPEN MOIIIIAY I FIIIIIAY nL 8~

1866

1975 '

-..

·"·::

REG .

oil finished Walnut venee-rs ,
to'p and ends . Front and legs of
simulated wood material .
Control panel and grille area
are in matching Walnut color .
25" diagonal Zenith Advanced

THE
LINEN

Chromacolor

Picture

Tube .

Chromatic One .butfon Tuning
p lus Zenith patented AFC.

""

..

Why Delay?
Shop Now!

.

CRISCO
OIL

o,' J

·"

-....

REG.
Jl!O.OO

REG.
195.00

Coats 64.00
Coats 75.00

MEN'S KNIT DRESS

SLACKS
Reg. 15~
Reg. 20"'

Reg.30"

WEAR
Reg. 6-&gt;

l:..••

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

...

Gallipolis, Ohio

Now 3.90
Now 4.7.0

.......

.,~.

.

...t
...,.

...-.
...-.

:

SPORT
COATS
.

· OFF

·50%~- · '

.,.e

. New to the Tri-County marketing area, now
located in The Lafayette Mall, a Linen and
Bath Shoppe! Now available everything to
coordinate your bathroom.

A complete line of

·'

Bath Accessories
Towels - Mats &amp; Seat Covers
Shower Curtains - Rods - Soaps
Matched or Single Waste Baskets. Hampers
&amp; Tooth Brush Holders.
Toilet Seats, Mirrors - Cosmetic Trays

FOR THE BEDROOM

Sheets, King, Queen, Double &amp; Twin
Size
Pillow Cases to Match
Electric Blankets
Insulated
Blankets &amp; Bed Spreads.

-

,,.

-THE "STEEN"
COM PACT 19"·

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Grained
Kashmir
Walnut color
Zenith
Quality
Black · and ·;
White TV Chass-is ·
Custom Perm a -Set VHF •
Fine Tuning Control ··
Deluxe Video Range 82 ·'

'

,,
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Channel Tuning System
Zenith Royalty
Tube s .
·

$348 .

Crest

SAi[$128~

GIBSON SALE
BIG 14 CU. FT. GISSON
FROST-CLEAR

&amp; KITCHEN

SALE

Keep Your Head
Above Inflation!
BUSH

REFRIGERATOR

FOR THE DINING ROOM

$278

I ll I

PINTO
BEANS t4 oz.

."

6 CANS

t lj l

$} 00 ·

·'"
''"
.li:.O

-

' / If &gt;

Table Cloths, Placemafs &amp; Napkins,
Tea Towels.

t;HEST AND UPRIGHT

FREEZERS

'

.,

-·-

.

-DRASTICALLY REDUCED-

·C

....

THE ASHINGTON

MODEL F-4002

SALE

·. -1"
~

.....•

Also beautiful, beautiful
accessories for bathroom, et&lt;..

R-ID.. ·ENOUR

.....

TV Rc. APPLIANCE '
GAS SERVICE .

985-.JJ07

"'

OHIC

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c

Now 11.90. ...
Now 15.90 ....
.....
Now 24.00 ...

AU BOYS SWIM

Reg. 5"

·E

==-----J I ,.~
'

~00 Second Ave.

S5S .OD

AU. IKIYS' SPORT

NOW 15.90
~~.~ · NOW 19.00
25.00 ~~.~; NOW 24.00

...

..

Now 4.70
Now 6.70
Now 7.80

~E

COATS .."'
Coats 44.00 ..

BOYS' SUMMER KNIT

• ,. GIIOUI' OF MEWS
j.

REG.
$70.00

AU. SIOCit MEN'S

Rea. 6"
Rea. 8"

AU. MEN'S SPORT

Now 29.60
Now 48.00
Now 56.00

$60.00

REG.
IIJO.M

.....

1;. C:G.
137 .00

REG .

.stO.oo

;11 &lt; 1,

Buy~

COUPLE ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Neutzling, Pomeroy, are armouncing !!t. L~.!!gagement of their
dsughter, Stella Sue, to Arthur Paul Snyder, .son of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur D. Snyder, Oakfield, N.Y. Miss Neutzling is employed with the Federal Bureau of Investigation
as a file clerk. Her fiance is employed with the
Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D. C.
Wedding plans have been set for Oct. 16 in Wheaton, Md .

VISITED RELATIVES
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. David Mitchell and son
Michael spent last weekend
at Plain City visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Mitchell, Tera and
Travis . They have just moved
into their new home in Plain
City.

SAVE AS
MUCH AS

...
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~~~~~it;,:~~~~

Stelkz Sue Neutzling

RETURNED HOME
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and
Mrs. David Mitchell, State
Rte . 160, and son, Michael
·Mitchell , Columbus, have
just returned from two weeks
spent in Va. with relatives.
They visited several points of
interest, including the White
Top Mountains, Bristol
Caverns and Salt Works in
Va . and Grandfathers MI. in
North Carolina.

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"LAFA VETTE MALL"

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VBSSET
" Back to the Bible " is the
theme for the Vacalion Bible
School which will be conducted by the Chap el Hill
Church of Chri st, July 14-18.
from 7 to 6:30 p.m. Classes
will be for all ages, including
adults. All are invited to
attend and participate tn
these classes.

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Games were played and
prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Irene Kennedy, Pam North,
Mrs. Lois Walker , Mrs . Nellie
Vale and Mrs . Marie Birchfield won the door prize.
The new Mrs. Hall will be a
se nior at Meigs High School
in the fall . · Hall is a 1975
g raduat e o f Meigs High
School and is employed at the
Walker Funeral Hom e,
Rutland . The bride and
groom reside on Main St. in
Rutland.

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REUNION PLANNED
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Alumni Association is
holding a reunion of all Rio
Grande
High
School
graduates Saturday, July 19
at noon at the Community
Hall on the
Ri o Grande
College Campus. Dress is
casual. The meal will be
picnic style. Bring one meat
dish, a covered dish and table
service. Soft drinks will be
furnished. · All
former
teachers are welcome.

I.

We'llgo to any length ... to bring
our customers real savings!

POMEROY CHAMBER of
Commerce at noon '!t Meigs
ln Q.,..

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STARTS FRIDAY,

Hall, ~jr.

YOUR DOllAR'S WORtH

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

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MONDAY
SECOND Monday Sewing
Club, 6 p. m . home- of Mrs.
Robert Lewis.
WEEK LONG meeting,
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
.Churcll, 7:30 p. m . Different
s peaker each evening,
Mondsy through Sunday.
FREE
clothing
day_
'
Monday for low income
persons sponsored by GalliaMei gs Communi ty Action
Agency . Location is in the old
high school building at
Cheshire. Hours are from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m.

GalliDOiis. 0.

· Sent*-!!

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n n~..l protcc t('d
;~gai nst loss.

rr j..p:,tl'rcd

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PORTLAND - 'lbe Golden
·Age Club met July 9, at the
. ·home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hilton,' Portland. A potluck
dlimer""as served at noon.
The ~lng was given by
Mrs. O..i! Patterson. ·
· The 'program included a
' reading and recitation . by . ·
.:Mrs. Pattenon ~ slides
were shown by Darre II
Taylor A get well card was
lipied lllld tent to Daytpn
• McEJnt' wbo Ia a patien! at ·
Velel'an* lbpital. The club
dona~ •
to tbe Pomeroy
I • center;
' 9t
attendlns ·were
HoUle Starcher, ·carol
Tayl~. ,Mary · Orcle, Eihel
Johnaon, Kalbleen Waril,
Garnlt, Efwlne aild · Eunie
•

hc&lt;~r tlw
Kc~·p:-&lt;l k {· diam on d I ~ r crm:l ncnd y

Social
Calendar

SUNDAY
UVE SAVING lessons at
Middleport pool beginning
Mondsy. Registration · must
be done Sat~day or Sunday
at the pool. Cost is $8 plus text
book . Lessons in senior and
junior life saving.

THEHASKINS-TANN.ERco.

::

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gem di;-unond ~
rwme Keep-.akt• Your
fitW'i l

Lafayette Mall

Club has
rrieeting

§:

BEGINS FRI •., JULY 11TH

.
Q(AO.OII\eG
·

300 Second Ave.

i

There is no finer
diamond ring.
011l\' the

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:.;~~~:~m~fdi=•~\\Ollmlll8atl

I

Keepsak~

Hospital News

•'•'

7- The Sunday Times:. Sentinel, S.Oday, July 13, j975

. were served by tM hostesses
to Mrs . Chadwell, Mrs.
Brown Mrs. Tom Spencer
'
and Jared,
Mrs. Bise, Mrs.
Donald Myers, Mrs. YO\IIlg,
Mrs . Weber, Mrs . Wilson,
Mrs. R. H. Hannum and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson. There will be
no July or August meetings .

SLUMBER PARTY HELD
REEDSVILLE
. A
slumber party for Girl Seoul
troop 67 was held recently at
Stewart Hall. Prior to the
sliunber party, Mrs. Howard
Lawrence surpri11ed her
daughter, Patty, with a
decorated birthday cake, ice
cream and Kool-Aid which
was served to the girls. Attending were Jodi Smith,
Carla
Cowdery,
Patty
Lawrence, Cathy Cowdery,
Dee Dailey, Diana Smith,
Mary Masters, Ann Jones,
Teresa Dailey, Patricia
Boston, Sheila Buchanan,
Teresa Hannum,
Judy
Holter. Kim Reed, Susan
Hannum and Kay Balderson,
scouts, and leaders , Marilyn
Hannum and Ruth Anne
Balderson.

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Flower arranging wo.rkshop.
enjoyed.by local gardeners .

DEAR HELEN AND SUE.:
REEDSVILLE - Members was named chairman of the
·I am 20 years old and have two serious girlfriends who
know nothing about each other. I love them both and feel. I of the Riverside Garden Club program committee . Othel's·
· either up, a1though the~ persona lltl es enjoyed a nower arranging to serve are Mrs . Donald
wouldn't want to giVe
are as different as night and day.
work3hvpat the home of Mrs. Putman, Mrs. Gene · Young
I also date and have short relationships with other girls Harliss Frank recently. Mrs. and Mrs. Denver , Weber.
that come along every now and them. All this activity has kept Ronald Osborne served as ca- Members of the club are
. dismisse
' . d from h OS tess •
invited to a stork dinner for
my pocket empty a nd me on the verge of be mg
Arrangemen ts •··
college foi'poor gra des.
-were rna de Mrs . Steve Cowdery Aug . 5,
I really want to change for the better, and hold on to one by the members. Judges at 6 p.m . at the home of Mrs .
steady girlfriend who will help me towarij my career goals.
were Mrs. Gene Wilson, Mrs. Denver Weber .
How can I strl!ighten up and get on the right track? Frank Bise and Mrs. Lyle
Interesting games were
DEPRESSED
B;llderson. Blue ribbon went cond ucted
with
prized
P.S. Is it wrong to be unfaithful to your girls (if no deep to Mrs. Walter Brown, red to awarded by Mrs. Chadwe ll .
feelings are involved with the "extras"), but expect them to be Mrs. Osborne, and white to
The devotional period was
faithful to you?
Mrs. Denver Weber.
conducted by Mrs. Cowdery
DEAR DEPRESSED:
RoU call was. answered by with " More Blessed To Give"
Youdoo'twaottochaogefort!Jebette~beeauae-foryou members naming a wild
as her theme .
Delicious refreshments
- that would be worse. UnW you're ready to major In .nower. Mrs. David Chadwell
something more than aex, or unW your girls Jearn they're part
of a juggling act, I don't aee mucb future for you at eollege.SUE
DEAR DEPRESSE;D:
If you're really depressed, maybe you're on the edge ol
learning there's "satiety In nmnbers."
Why not flip • eoln and narrow the field down to oae? And
may she be as "faithful" to you as you've always been to ber!
(Answer to your P .S. Is YES!l-H.
RAP :
Here's another answer to "Crying on the Inside, Laughing
on the Outside" who is miserable because he thinks he's so
ugly that girls only accept him as friends.
I'm going steady with a l!uY who isn't a real knockout for
looks, but !love him because he is the most terrific person I've
ever met. I've gotten kidded by thoughtless pevple who ask,
" What do you see in IDM?" or say, "You could do better."
I've had opportunities to go with better looking guys, but so
often these spoiled fellows treat girls like dirt, or have a super
•
macho thing. They couldn't come cl011e to my guy, who is ldnd,
considerate, honest, sensitive, understanding. He's also
BY JANET MAGGIED
outgoing, ambitious, intelligent, loving and confident, and I
wouldn't trade him for Robert Redford.
If COILOO is so popular he's elected school president, he
won't·have any trouble finding a great girl-that is if he slops
thinking of himself as Old Ugly.- VERY LUCKY
DEAR RAP:
GALUPOLIS - Fifty-one Art Colony, 530 First Avenue,
A couple of months ago I met a guy on a three-day school
prints by 51 different artists Gallipolis, for its July exhibit.
trip. We had lots of fun together. He writes me once a week,
Included in the exhibit are
are presently on display ~t
and has been down to see me ( lz:Hnile trip) several times
etchings,
engravings, silk
Riverby, home of the French
He has a steady girl he's been going with for two years,
screen,
collographs,
and she wants to get engaged in September. He says he's not
serigraphs, photo etchings,
sure he wants that. (She knows about me.)
lithogoraphs and linocuts .
I'm not ready for serious dating - I'm 16 and he's 18 - but
GUARD RETURNS
The California Society of
I like him a lot as a friend. Am I wrong to contirwe writing to
LUCAsVILLE, Ohio (UP!) Prinlmakers, formed in 1911
him and seeing him occasionally?-CAN'T LET GO IN - A tower guard at the
in San Francisco, was
JERSEY
.
Southern Ohio Correctional · originally a regional group
DEAR CLGU:
FacUlty, one of 61 persons but now has members
There's no reason why a boy and girl can't be friends, even
fired during a May strike at throughout the nation .
though he's got a steady be may not want to keep. As for
the prison, returned to his job
These are outstanding
"something more"-don't waste over a couple of daydreams
Friday after it was deter- professionals and they
oo II. The other girl Is closer, and sbe got there flrst.-HELEN
mined he tried to work during believe that printmaking is a
AND SUE
the walkout. Ballard Caudell vital form of creative exJr. agreed not to press for pression. Their aim is to
some 60 days worth of back foster exhibition and appay.
preciation of contemport
prin !making.
Duplicates of the 51 prints
Mrs . Nancy Collins, Mrs.
at prices ranging from $20 to
Pam Williams, Mrs. Pam
PROBE
OPENS
$200
may be ordered at the
Calvert, Mrs. Linda Hudson
Veterans Memorial Hospital
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Ten
and Lori, Mrs. Carolyn
ADMISSION - Ada Root, emplgyes of state store No. French Art Colony.
The exhibit is circulated by
Bartels, Mrs. Marge Goett, Middleport; Candy Proffitt,
134
i.lf.:Cleveland
are
being
Old Bergen Arl Guild of
Mrs. Marylin Poulin, Mrs. Portland; Callie Matheney,
queslfoned
by
police
and
Ohio
Bayonne, N. J .
Marie Smith, Mrs. Rose Ewington; Kathryn Link,
liquor
inspectors
after
a
Galleries are open on
Sisson, Mrs. Mazie Hannahs, Athens; Paula Cunningham,
suspected
$48
bookkeeping
Saturdays
and Sundays from
Mrs. Phyllis Hennessy, Mrs. Letart, W. Va.; Alice Dodson,
error
led
the
state
to
crack
its
I to 5 p .. and on Tuesdays and
Erma Cleland, Mrs. Katie Long Bottom.
own safe and discover the Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 5
Crow, · Mrs .
Virginia
DISCHARGES - Harold
embezzlement of $7,291 from p .m . For special showings
Buchanan, Mrs. Rita fields, Jeffers, M.e linda . Custer.
the store, according to Ohio call 446-0547. The public is
Mrs. Diana Whitt and Usa Sandra Neigler, Russeli
Liquor Director Clifford E . invited and there is no adand Mrs. Evelyn Knight.
Slayton, Dortha Salser.
Reich:
mission charge.

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By H.,J,.,;',.,,d sue Bolle!

Layette shower held

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· _8- Tbe Sunday 'l)mes-Sentlnel, SUllday, July 13,1975

Katie's. Korner.
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Missar to teach
. GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony is pleased
to announce that William H.
Missar, son of Mrs. Hugh P .
Kirkel, will be teaching a six
week drawin g class at
Riverby be ginning either
Wednesday July 16 fr om 7-9
p.m. or Saturday July 20 )
fr om 1-3 p.m . The cost will be
$12 for French Art Colony
members and $15 for nonmembers .
Mr . Mi ssar 1s a 1974
graduate of Nap erville
Centra l , Hi g h
School,
Naperville , Ill .; ma joring in
art. During his junior year in
high school he wa s the fir st
place winner of the Student
Art Scholarship competition
sponsored by the Naperville
Art League , a juried show.
Missar was a warded the
Ridley - Netzley scholarship
award of $100.
He was again the recipient
of a $100 studen-t scholarship
first place award the
year.
Upon
following
gradua tion , he was acce~ted
into the Chicago Art Institute
where he is presently a
student. His m ost re cen t
accomplishmen t was a
presentation to the students
and Faculty of the Ch1cago
Art Institute of a composi te
program consistin g of an
original story , music , balle t,
painting, and narration .- all

I'll cross the river Jordan
And on the other side,
I'll see Jesus Christ my Saviour
And forever there abide.

.,.~ ''

There's a place around God's Throne
Especially for me,
For I've made my Reservation
And my Lord at last I'll see.

,
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J

MISSAR TO TEACH COURSE - William H. Missar,
son of Mrs. Hugh P . Kirkel, Gallipolis, will be teaching a
six week drawing course at Riverby this month. Missar is
a stud ent at 1;. Chicago Art Institute.

If you 'd like to join Him there

It won't be hard to do,
Just aceept God 's Precious Love
And He'll save a place for you.

Mr. and Mrs. David Lee Beauer

··· Beauer-Mugrage
united in marriage

'

LETART FALLS - Jennifer Lee Mugrage became
the bride of David Le e ·
' Beauer before an altar
decorated with daisies and
'· candelabra at 2 p.m., June 14
at the Letart Falls Methodist
, Church. She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L.
Mugrage, Rt. 2, Racine , and
he Is the son of Mrs. Patricia
• Beauer and the late Mr.
Harmon Beauer, Rt. 3, New
Matamoras.
" Rev. Howard Shively officiated at the double ring
ceremony. Mrs . Jocelyn Baer
provided music, and Mrs.
· Judy Pape sang the "Lord's
" Prayer."
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
.: and veil fashioned by her
, , mother. It· as an A-line floor
lerigth gown of white dotted
: " swiss. with a high ruffled
neckline and puffed sleeves.
· " T~e shoulder length veil of -br1dal111uswn was held by a
band of rosettes made of
· "dotted swiss matching the
dress. The bride wore a single
pearl necklace which had
belonged to her grandmother.
Her bouquet was made of
daisies.
. Miss Linda Hill, Racine,
served her cousin as maid of
honor. She was attired In a
floor length gown of pink and
blue floral pQlyester with
·;pink accessories. She carried
pink carnations. Vallarie
-little, niece of the bride was
, fiower girl.
. : The . best man was E?aul
·. Valentine, New Matamoras,
·';"and ushers were Todd
,, Milgrage, Rt. 2, Racine ,
,, !&gt;~'other - of the_ bride, ,and
, _Allen Pape, Racine, COUSin of
,.. ,the bride.
The _bride~ :p!other wore a
Door length polyester powder
"' ' blue gown_ with white ac._, cessories and white car-

·".nations.
·' :. The
'

mother

of

the

bridegroom chose a floor
l.ength navy a nd white
polyester gown with white
accessories and whi te carnations.
Mrs. Charles L Mugrage
registered guests. A r ecepli on was held foll owing the
wedding at the Le tar t Falls
Community Hall . A four tier
cake with pink roses made by
the bride 's mother was set on
the bride's table which was
dec ora ted with white candles
in crystal candle holders and
punch bowL Presiding at the
table were Mrs. Renee Little,
Mrs . Virgmia Salser, Mrs.
Erma Hill and Mrs. Evelyn
Mugrage.
Following a short trip to
Cedar Point, Sandusky, the
newlyweds are residing in
their mobile home RL 2,
Racine.
The bride is a 1975 graduate
of Southern High School. Her
husband is a 1972 gr.aduate of
Frontier High School, New
Matamoras and is employed
with Ricru:rds' Sand and
Gravel.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs .
Rusty Lit~le and family
Columbus; Mr. anti Mrs:
Christopher
Mugrage,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles 1. Mugrage and son,
Mrs . Rose Yanda and son,
Miss Bobbi Seidman and
Mrs. Carl Provost' and
family
all
.of
New
MataU:oras; Mrs. w. 0.
Chapman and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Chapman and family, all
of Tuppers Plains; Mrs. w.
H. Wagner, Mrs. David
W11gner and sons, and Mrs .
Charles Wagner and son, all
of Stockport; Mrs. Patricia
Beauer, Kelly Beauer, and
Mr.
and
Mrs .
Gary
Conge! ton
of
New
Matamora~· Mr. and Mrs.
Russell LittJe and Mrs . Marie
Birchfield and Kim of
Rutland .

-

·:·:Grange is inspected
'" · POM~ROY - Star Jr. painting, Patty Dyer , Judy
~ . ;. Grange No. 878 received a Holliday, Floyd Holliday;
score of 80 percent on its wooden keyboard , Patty
Jl!spectlon from Elizabeth Dyer; egg carton creation,
_Jordan,deputy jr. matron, at Billy Dyer; Patty Dyer, Opal
a recent meetin_g. ·
Dyer;
pennant,
Judy
· The literary program with Holliday, Mary Colwell.
the theme, "I Love My
The next meeting will be
Country," was held with Aug. 2 at the Star Grange
selections and readers as Hall .
·follows : "America, I Love
You," by Gary Holliday;
"My ·country," Opal Dyer ;
"Freedom," Mary Colwell;
VISITING FRIENDS
"'nle Flai! Is Passin~ By,"
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Barbara Peyton; ''Patch- Mrs. William Hall, Lakeland,
work Quilt,'' Elizabeth Fla., have been visiting
Jordan; "Get Me There On friends in Gallia County. Mrs ..
Time.," Jill\my Peyt-on; Hall will be attending the 1975 •
"Summer Is," Patty Peyton; grand family reunion of the
"Friends, " Judy Holliday; OES in Columbus, Sunday .
"Notable Quote ;" Maxine Her husband has returned to
"Bila of' Wisdom ' ;, Florida: The Halls_are.former
~.
• Floyd Halliday; " Bare residents of Gallipolis.
Facets," Billy Dyer; "Ex·
cerciae," by all; "The
Fellow," · Patty ·Dyer;
phoaograpli record, Patty
Dyer, and "Defenseless,"
'Dean CohfeU. . , ' '
ASK TOWED
Q:aft conteaf8·'·were held
POMEROY ~ Daniel Mark
with wlnnenlln llie various ' Dodson, 18, Mjddleport, and .
dlvtlia. u follows: P4J11er :Anna Frances Weddle,, l'l, Rt. .
platple, Patty
2, ' 'Racine; Jame,s Lt'\flie ,..
.- DIJu Colwjlll popslcle' .s ttck . Hubbai'd , 22, Syracu~, aud
. blll!let, . Patty Dy.e r, Billy· Carol Ann Dailey, 16,
.....Dyer, QPal Dye,r; rock Pomeroy. '
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A UNIQUE Bicentennial Commemorative Token is being
issued by 11\e Robert Edwards Company of West Chester , Pa .
The token features a finely detailed engraving or the
Liberty Bell on one side, with a classic rendition of an
American Eagle on the reverse side. With a good magnifying
glass, the inscription on the Liberty Bell is clearly visible .
Tokens will .be made available to collectors and will also be
offered to banks, business firms and organizations for various
Bicentennial programs, explained Edward Wilson, an
executive of the firm.
Additional information may be obtained by writing to the
Robert Edwards Company, 1252 Memory Lane, West Chester,
Pa . 19380.
MRS. RAYMOND (Judy) Jewell, Pomeroy, has been
chosen to serve on the jury of the U. S. District Court,
Columbus. J\ldY will return to Columbus Thursday to serve for
the second time. She will have to serve 13 more times for a
total of 15.
IT'S A SMALL world. The Ohio State Frog Jump held at
Pomeroy during the !lig Bend Regatta was written in the
Northern Daily News, Kirkland Lake, Ontario, Canada.
Bernard and Opal Diddle , Brooks and June Sayre, Mike
and Paula Swatzel, Norman and Wibna Styler and Howard and
Paul Sayre were at Gowganda, Ontario, Canada at Firth Lake
and the Montreal River for a week 's fishing.
Food, mail and papers were flown in by plane three times
a week. The group drove six miles to get a paper. to keep up on
the news thinking and hoping their names would appear in the
local paper there as they would hear people say " there is a
whole family that has Burnham's camping grounds rented for
a week."
Opal Diddle was reading Tuesday's paper and much to her
surprise she read where bu!Urog leaps over 15 feet, $500 net for
first·prize, owner of the winning frog, "Mike" was none other
than John Young of Racine.
This would be ·exciting news for a resident of Racine to
read in a paper published in Canada .
Fred Crow should be delighted with such news since he
instigated the frog jump . Come to think of it Fred is a frog nut
and since the jump is over and won't be held for another year
he is constantly planning on events for next year and some in
between.
All kidding aside the frog event is the biggest event at the
Regatta.
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Picnic enjoyed by
~burch members
SYRACUSE - Members of
the nursery and kindergarten
classes at Syracuse Asbury
United Methodist Church and
their families enjoyed a
picnic recently at the State
park on US Rt . 33.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . Jack Williams and Jane
Ann, Mr . and Mrs. Dennis
Moore and Jerod, Mr. and
Mrs. John Lisle, Todd and
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Don .
Harden and D. J., Mr. and
Mrs. James Pape, , Kristen
and Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Buckley and Tammy,
Mr. and Mrs. Barry McCoy,

.

·'

Barry Jr. and Michelle, Mr.
and Mrs. John Sauvage and
Tammi, Mrs. Judy King,
Kevin and Kristen , Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Fry, Wendy and
Stacie, Mrs. Janet Pickens
and Cathy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ceward Calvert, Jr., and
Kim, Mrs. Brenda Wolfe,
,Shelly and Tara, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Slavin, Mary Beth
and Shannon, Mr. and Mrs,
Bill Arnott, Shawn and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins
and Kimberly, Fritz Sisson, ·
Jean Ann Ritchhart, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Slawter and
Kristen.

ANNIVERSARY SALE
Begins Monday- 10 A.M.

MIPDLEPORT The
Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middle!J9rt ·United . Pentecostal Church held their
July meeting at Fo~t Meigs in
Rutland.
It was combined with a
baby shower. The meeting
was opened by prayer by

Special
OFFER
UNTIL
JULY 15, 1975

l

Introducing
aNew
American
Tradition
FANT ASI A

GALLIPOLIS - The exhibit for the month of July:
Old Bergen's California Society of Printmakers.
fuesday, July 15, 8 p.m ., F.A.C . Interdepartmental
Meeting, Riverby.
fuesday, July 22, 8 p .m ., FAC. Trustees Meeting,
COLUMBUS
Two
Riverby .
Gallipolis
students
have
been
Monday, July 28, 8:30 p,m,, Ohio Valley Summer Theatre
Green Parks Production , "Hoorah", The Patio at Riverby . named to the dean's list at
Capital University for the
Reception for audience and performers follows program.
Wednesday through Saturday, July 30-Aug . 2, F.A.C. second semester. They are 0. Brant Adams of Lower
Booth at the Galli a County Junior Fair.
Thursday, July 31, 9:30-11:30 a .m ., Olristmas Workshop, ·River Rd. and Katherine A.
Fischer of 613 2nd Ave . About
no reservations necessary, Riverby ,
400 .Of Capital's nearly 2,000
undergraduates were named
to the spring honor listing. To
be eligible, a student must be
enrolled full-time at the
university and have earned at
BUSINESS
least a 3.4 grade average for
the semester on a 4.0 basis . .
CINCINNATI - Melody
Shahan, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Darrell · Shahan,
;
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, was
•
among more than 5,300
graduates of the University of
Cincinnati June 15. Bhe
received a BA degree in the
McMicken College of Arts
.._ _ _ _ ___ _ _. . and Sciences.

The diamond
eternity ring
by

!IRTQlRVED

REGUlAR

ssoo.oo

Now Until
July 15th

Limit One

Per Family

S NOWFLAI&lt;E

A beautiful new way
to celeb rate annive rsa rie s,
b~rlh days.

I he

b~r l h

of a chi ld ,

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

and ot her
spe cia l occas-ions.

held

Mrs. Sue HoWard wtio is a
pastor's wife from Miamisburg and who is visiting the
Rev. and Mrs . William
Knittel of Pomeroy.
A potluck dinner was
served an&lt;\ the business
session was opened by Joyce
Sauters
readin'g
the
secretaryt's report. Money
making
projects
were
discussed and it was decided
to hold a yard sale In August.
Following the meeting a
shower for Betty Wickline
was held. She was presented
numerous gifts. Games were
. played and prizes awarded to
Edie Zirkle, Betty Wickline,
Joyce Sa1,1ters and Mabel
Pearman.
Others attending were
Linda Knittel and Tony,
Velma Keller , Livinia Neal,
Linda Acree, Stephanie ·and
Aaron, Sarah Dunii, Manda
Eastman, Dora Holley, May
Mason, Sherry Sauters, Tim
and Charles, Joy Sauters,
Michele Zirkle and Pamela,
Pauf Wickline · and Tommy,
Mrs. Bob Richards and Steve,
and Allee Priddy. The next
meeting will be in September
at Middleport.

KANAUGA - Kanauga
United Methodist Women met
T~ursday evening with Mrs.
Audrey Brownell. Florence
Allen gave the call to worship, Matt.16:26. The opening
song was "Give of Your Best
to the Master." Prayer was
given by Mrs. Lena Mae
Raike. The roll call was
answered to scripture verse
beginning with the letter J .
Scripture reading was Luke
14: lf&gt;-24 by Virginia Roush .
Reading excuses were given
by Mrs. Emma Spencer . Also
read were talks on Bible
Excuses; Cain by Mrs. Judy
Barthelmas; Moses by
Evelyn Rothgeb; Bible
questions, Pina Ward. Bible
study Hebrews, Chapter 9.
Benediction was led by Ethel
Wright.
During
the
business
meeting, dues were collected

JEWELERS

ANNUAL

1.00 DOW~_Y,!'!:!...

DINNER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•FRENCH FRIES
eSLAW
eROLl

and minutes read. There was
nortff!eting in June because of
the family picnic . Cards were
sent to the sick and 90 sick
calls were reported. The
birthday of Florence Allen
was observed.
Mrs . Spencer gave the
blessing before refreshments
of pineapple sundae, cake,
iced tea and coffee were
served to nine members by
the hostess assisted by Mrs.
Raike . The next me~ting will
be with Virginia Roush .

No Coupons · No limit

12, 14, S~ctional and

'

....

SENTENCING SET
MElLA, Pa. ( UP!)
Former United Mine Workers
President W. A. "Tony"
Boyle, convicted in the 1969
slayings of union rival Joseph
"Jock" Yablonski, . his wife
and daughter, has been ordered to appear Aug . 5 for
sentencing.

2nd &amp; Olive

II"

STARLIGHT :7',' .,,,...

12"

100"' .PuPOnt Dotron~~' polyesier .fibercoil. '

The ideal fib.r lot blonkek. Washable,

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

worm ond pretty.·

.. .

..........
.

'

N

• '

SAVE

20% 50%
TO

ON
OCCASIONAL TABLES

w

$349

95

GlASS TOP TABLE,
4 CANE CHAIRS - ~

'3-2500

REG.
N

0

w

~99.95

$499

95

WUfl

. '

' : ~·

95

OTHER DINEnE
SETS AT
SALE PRI
.

' '

0

11"

H))% Virgin Acrilan • olrylic. This b!Gnktt has '
Montonto's O«olade of ~n~rit - ~r ,
Woo,·Oolod.....
..
•

·I • .

'

REG. 1540.00

SAVE ON All 011fER .
LIVING ROOM FURNITURE
7
-. -

Hutch • Chair • Tables ~,~~II
To Match · &gt;-c-~~tt1f&gt;
.,::

'

G

l .

20%ro 50%
PICTURES, LAMPS
AND MIRRORS

TABLE. 6 CHAIRS
IN OFF WHITE

UP TO 33% OFF
11...

On Early American
Pine - Maple Group

95

$3'99

w

10"

.

=

DINING ROOM FURNITURE

1 ~74.00
-REG.
.

0

55% virgin Acrilon'~ ocryli~;/4S% acrylic fiben.
Th i1 handsomely woytn blanket is ideal for all
JOOIOn '• c;omlorf, 3-yeor weor-Ooted:lguorontee.

NOW

"IOSEPOIQ.

$499

N

1 MODERN 2 PC.
RUST SUITE

Lar~~st S~lecti~n ~he Area

0.

SAVE

CLOSEOUT!

TABLE, 4 SWIVEL
CHAIRS ON CASTERS

LOVE SEAT'

fOOicTH

"'- cellutoyer blanket. 55% virgin A~;rilonS
ocrylic/45% ocrylic fibers . 3 -y.arWe&lt;ir- Dated'~
guorontee. SchiHii embroidered binding at head
hem . . . A touch of Elegance.

POPIILAI
IUIIY ,

PAIL'Il

TABLE. 6 SWIVEL
CHAIRS
REG. 1674.00

~

EARLY AMERICAN PINE

EUGAICE

'

Double-Wide Mobile

CHROMCRAFT
Dl NETIE SETS

LIVING ROOM
FURNITURE
"""'

Nf.W STORE HOURS
OPEN 7 DAYS
10 AM TIL 11 PM

No Subt.

CONTINUES SAVE 20% TO 50%

CHAIRS

. "VORKTOWNE" BY PFALTZGRAFF - SELECTED
.......... ~IECES ·AND ..GIFT SETS

\

A thought for the day: U.S.
historian Henry Brooks
Adams said, "What one ·
knows is, in youth, of little
moment; they know enough
who know how to learn."

SEMI-

Iaione• to be paid In lull
by October I. 1975 •

'

.

SUNDA¥ THRU SATURDAY ONLY
'
JULY 13TH THRU JULY 19TH

Gallipolis, Ohio

ONE GROUP

WAU ACCESSORIES 50% OFF
SAVINGSYUParongs. Rin5o%dOFF
.STATUES .
25% OFF

Countryfare

and shelter is available in case of rain,

I

l 2 PRICE

1':
~7':' 1, 1i.H

chapter received recognition
as " Reporter of the Month"
for the momth of May .
Be tty Sayre read devOtl('f)S,
"You Decide.'' Songs were
led by Kathy McDaniel ,
The chapter meets each
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Middle port American Legion
Hall . Anyone interested Is ,
welcome to attend .

Ave.

404 Second

CD'Imthrrii?:J
,-,-, ,. ,

Be tty Sa yre received TOPS
pins for a chhwements in an
earlier contes t.
Betty J oe Clark read an
in s pirati onal letter fr om
Sandy Gier, area-supervisor,
teUin g of a n officers' workshop to be held a t the
Mar ie tta Fairgrounds, July
19. It a lso re la ye d th e
message th a l th e loca l

SUMMER SING PLANNED - A Summer Sing will be held Friday, July 18 a t 7:30p.m .
at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds , Featured gospel groups will be the Lester Family
and Gateway Boys. Local groups will also be performing. There will be a free-will offering

BRIDGE PLAZA

WILLIAMSBURG REPRODUCTIONS ••
GLASSWARE, BRASS, DELFT, WOODEN
.
ACCESSORIES

'

POMEROY
He le h
Spears was honored as TOPS
. \Take Off Pounds Sensibly )
Officer of Chapter 570 for the
month of June during the
club's weekly mee ting.
Bes t lose r for the week was
Phyllis Mc Millan with Nina
The iss as runner-up. Shirley
Al es hire,
Linn ie
Be ll
Aleshire, De lor es Hawk a nd

EMPIRE FURNITURE

PAUL DAVIES

tANNUAbJUhY LAY-A-WAY
SAVE 4.01 01
EVERY BLANKET

'

Helen Spears honored

Precious diamo nds
on a band of 14 -karal gold
10 symbol 1ze
you r ete rnal love.
Fro m $175

•

,.

,•

Church women meet
·Camera With
F-1.8 Lens

July Calendar

20% OFF

'
'

•

IN THE SILVER

.

DY•.

original works.
William entered the 1975
French Art Colony Jurled Art
Show and won fil'llt place In
three divisions : (Amateur
and High School Drawing,
High School Painting and
Amateur
Watercolor
Division.)
Ceramics classes £or
children 8 through 12 years
old have been rescheduled for
Wednesday July 30 from 3:30
to 5 p.m. This class ·wm be
ta ught by Corrinne Lund and
will run for six weeks. The
cost is $12.
Adult Ceramics classes will
· begin Tuesday, August 5,
fr om 7 to 9 p .m . under the
instruc ti on of' Marcy Kubbs .
This is an eight week course
and the cost if $16 for French
Art Colony members and $20
for non-members.
For registration or information, please call Mrs.
John Byers at 446-1903.

mee~ing

Honeywell ESII

CARDS WOULD be appreciated by Otho Murray,
Pomeroy, who is a surgical patient at Holzer Medical Center.
His roo in number is 234. We wish you a speedy recovery.

""er·

PWe

]ulj

I

'

9 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, SUIIday, July 13, !975
I .

.

'

I .

I'm going on a journey
I don 't know exactly when,
But I've made my Reservation
With the Saviour of all men .

"

''

..

'

·I

POMEROY- Kathryn Carnahan Ellis, Cottageville, W.
Va ., writes that in her younger day s she was frightened abnost
to the point of panic when she thought of death, but since has
accepted Christ as her Savior and now has an entirely different
ou~~
.
Mrs. Ellis is the daughter of Mrs. Della Carnahan , RD
Chester . Mrs. Carnahan marked her looth birthday on May 10.
Mrs. Ellis wrote the f~llowing poem and dedi cated it to her
Mamma, Mrs. Carnahan .

' ".

'

!

'

By Katie Crow

" ',._,

'

I

'

'

~

'

WASHER
DRYER
PAIR

up ·
TO

SAVE

1 SET ONLY
LAAJ,700 '
LAE-5700 ·

DINING ROOM FURNITURE
SERVER, TABLE,
6 CHAIRS
REG. 11949:95 ·

$1250

00

BASSffi WHITE
FRENQi ·HUTCH
-REG. 1249.95

00

~125

REG. •544~90 PAIR

$46990PAIR
AVOCADO ONLY

OTHER WHIRLPOOL
APPLIANCES ON SALE

�' I

.'

.,

'

.

'

· _8- Tbe Sunday 'l)mes-Sentlnel, SUllday, July 13,1975

Katie's. Korner.
I '~'

.

"

Missar to teach
. GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony is pleased
to announce that William H.
Missar, son of Mrs. Hugh P .
Kirkel, will be teaching a six
week drawin g class at
Riverby be ginning either
Wednesday July 16 fr om 7-9
p.m. or Saturday July 20 )
fr om 1-3 p.m . The cost will be
$12 for French Art Colony
members and $15 for nonmembers .
Mr . Mi ssar 1s a 1974
graduate of Nap erville
Centra l , Hi g h
School,
Naperville , Ill .; ma joring in
art. During his junior year in
high school he wa s the fir st
place winner of the Student
Art Scholarship competition
sponsored by the Naperville
Art League , a juried show.
Missar was a warded the
Ridley - Netzley scholarship
award of $100.
He was again the recipient
of a $100 studen-t scholarship
first place award the
year.
Upon
following
gradua tion , he was acce~ted
into the Chicago Art Institute
where he is presently a
student. His m ost re cen t
accomplishmen t was a
presentation to the students
and Faculty of the Ch1cago
Art Institute of a composi te
program consistin g of an
original story , music , balle t,
painting, and narration .- all

I'll cross the river Jordan
And on the other side,
I'll see Jesus Christ my Saviour
And forever there abide.

.,.~ ''

There's a place around God's Throne
Especially for me,
For I've made my Reservation
And my Lord at last I'll see.

,
'•

J

MISSAR TO TEACH COURSE - William H. Missar,
son of Mrs. Hugh P . Kirkel, Gallipolis, will be teaching a
six week drawing course at Riverby this month. Missar is
a stud ent at 1;. Chicago Art Institute.

If you 'd like to join Him there

It won't be hard to do,
Just aceept God 's Precious Love
And He'll save a place for you.

Mr. and Mrs. David Lee Beauer

··· Beauer-Mugrage
united in marriage

'

LETART FALLS - Jennifer Lee Mugrage became
the bride of David Le e ·
' Beauer before an altar
decorated with daisies and
'· candelabra at 2 p.m., June 14
at the Letart Falls Methodist
, Church. She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L.
Mugrage, Rt. 2, Racine , and
he Is the son of Mrs. Patricia
• Beauer and the late Mr.
Harmon Beauer, Rt. 3, New
Matamoras.
" Rev. Howard Shively officiated at the double ring
ceremony. Mrs . Jocelyn Baer
provided music, and Mrs.
· Judy Pape sang the "Lord's
" Prayer."
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
.: and veil fashioned by her
, , mother. It· as an A-line floor
lerigth gown of white dotted
: " swiss. with a high ruffled
neckline and puffed sleeves.
· " T~e shoulder length veil of -br1dal111uswn was held by a
band of rosettes made of
· "dotted swiss matching the
dress. The bride wore a single
pearl necklace which had
belonged to her grandmother.
Her bouquet was made of
daisies.
. Miss Linda Hill, Racine,
served her cousin as maid of
honor. She was attired In a
floor length gown of pink and
blue floral pQlyester with
·;pink accessories. She carried
pink carnations. Vallarie
-little, niece of the bride was
, fiower girl.
. : The . best man was E?aul
·. Valentine, New Matamoras,
·';"and ushers were Todd
,, Milgrage, Rt. 2, Racine ,
,, !&gt;~'other - of the_ bride, ,and
, _Allen Pape, Racine, COUSin of
,.. ,the bride.
The _bride~ :p!other wore a
Door length polyester powder
"' ' blue gown_ with white ac._, cessories and white car-

·".nations.
·' :. The
'

mother

of

the

bridegroom chose a floor
l.ength navy a nd white
polyester gown with white
accessories and whi te carnations.
Mrs. Charles L Mugrage
registered guests. A r ecepli on was held foll owing the
wedding at the Le tar t Falls
Community Hall . A four tier
cake with pink roses made by
the bride 's mother was set on
the bride's table which was
dec ora ted with white candles
in crystal candle holders and
punch bowL Presiding at the
table were Mrs. Renee Little,
Mrs . Virgmia Salser, Mrs.
Erma Hill and Mrs. Evelyn
Mugrage.
Following a short trip to
Cedar Point, Sandusky, the
newlyweds are residing in
their mobile home RL 2,
Racine.
The bride is a 1975 graduate
of Southern High School. Her
husband is a 1972 gr.aduate of
Frontier High School, New
Matamoras and is employed
with Ricru:rds' Sand and
Gravel.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs .
Rusty Lit~le and family
Columbus; Mr. anti Mrs:
Christopher
Mugrage,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles 1. Mugrage and son,
Mrs . Rose Yanda and son,
Miss Bobbi Seidman and
Mrs. Carl Provost' and
family
all
.of
New
MataU:oras; Mrs. w. 0.
Chapman and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Chapman and family, all
of Tuppers Plains; Mrs. w.
H. Wagner, Mrs. David
W11gner and sons, and Mrs .
Charles Wagner and son, all
of Stockport; Mrs. Patricia
Beauer, Kelly Beauer, and
Mr.
and
Mrs .
Gary
Conge! ton
of
New
Matamora~· Mr. and Mrs.
Russell LittJe and Mrs . Marie
Birchfield and Kim of
Rutland .

-

·:·:Grange is inspected
'" · POM~ROY - Star Jr. painting, Patty Dyer , Judy
~ . ;. Grange No. 878 received a Holliday, Floyd Holliday;
score of 80 percent on its wooden keyboard , Patty
Jl!spectlon from Elizabeth Dyer; egg carton creation,
_Jordan,deputy jr. matron, at Billy Dyer; Patty Dyer, Opal
a recent meetin_g. ·
Dyer;
pennant,
Judy
· The literary program with Holliday, Mary Colwell.
the theme, "I Love My
The next meeting will be
Country," was held with Aug. 2 at the Star Grange
selections and readers as Hall .
·follows : "America, I Love
You," by Gary Holliday;
"My ·country," Opal Dyer ;
"Freedom," Mary Colwell;
VISITING FRIENDS
"'nle Flai! Is Passin~ By,"
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Barbara Peyton; ''Patch- Mrs. William Hall, Lakeland,
work Quilt,'' Elizabeth Fla., have been visiting
Jordan; "Get Me There On friends in Gallia County. Mrs ..
Time.," Jill\my Peyt-on; Hall will be attending the 1975 •
"Summer Is," Patty Peyton; grand family reunion of the
"Friends, " Judy Holliday; OES in Columbus, Sunday .
"Notable Quote ;" Maxine Her husband has returned to
"Bila of' Wisdom ' ;, Florida: The Halls_are.former
~.
• Floyd Halliday; " Bare residents of Gallipolis.
Facets," Billy Dyer; "Ex·
cerciae," by all; "The
Fellow," · Patty ·Dyer;
phoaograpli record, Patty
Dyer, and "Defenseless,"
'Dean CohfeU. . , ' '
ASK TOWED
Q:aft conteaf8·'·were held
POMEROY ~ Daniel Mark
with wlnnenlln llie various ' Dodson, 18, Mjddleport, and .
dlvtlia. u follows: P4J11er :Anna Frances Weddle,, l'l, Rt. .
platple, Patty
2, ' 'Racine; Jame,s Lt'\flie ,..
.- DIJu Colwjlll popslcle' .s ttck . Hubbai'd , 22, Syracu~, aud
. blll!let, . Patty Dy.e r, Billy· Carol Ann Dailey, 16,
.....Dyer, QPal Dye,r; rock Pomeroy. '
•.
' ,

A UNIQUE Bicentennial Commemorative Token is being
issued by 11\e Robert Edwards Company of West Chester , Pa .
The token features a finely detailed engraving or the
Liberty Bell on one side, with a classic rendition of an
American Eagle on the reverse side. With a good magnifying
glass, the inscription on the Liberty Bell is clearly visible .
Tokens will .be made available to collectors and will also be
offered to banks, business firms and organizations for various
Bicentennial programs, explained Edward Wilson, an
executive of the firm.
Additional information may be obtained by writing to the
Robert Edwards Company, 1252 Memory Lane, West Chester,
Pa . 19380.
MRS. RAYMOND (Judy) Jewell, Pomeroy, has been
chosen to serve on the jury of the U. S. District Court,
Columbus. J\ldY will return to Columbus Thursday to serve for
the second time. She will have to serve 13 more times for a
total of 15.
IT'S A SMALL world. The Ohio State Frog Jump held at
Pomeroy during the !lig Bend Regatta was written in the
Northern Daily News, Kirkland Lake, Ontario, Canada.
Bernard and Opal Diddle , Brooks and June Sayre, Mike
and Paula Swatzel, Norman and Wibna Styler and Howard and
Paul Sayre were at Gowganda, Ontario, Canada at Firth Lake
and the Montreal River for a week 's fishing.
Food, mail and papers were flown in by plane three times
a week. The group drove six miles to get a paper. to keep up on
the news thinking and hoping their names would appear in the
local paper there as they would hear people say " there is a
whole family that has Burnham's camping grounds rented for
a week."
Opal Diddle was reading Tuesday's paper and much to her
surprise she read where bu!Urog leaps over 15 feet, $500 net for
first·prize, owner of the winning frog, "Mike" was none other
than John Young of Racine.
This would be ·exciting news for a resident of Racine to
read in a paper published in Canada .
Fred Crow should be delighted with such news since he
instigated the frog jump . Come to think of it Fred is a frog nut
and since the jump is over and won't be held for another year
he is constantly planning on events for next year and some in
between.
All kidding aside the frog event is the biggest event at the
Regatta.
•

I

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(

Picnic enjoyed by
~burch members
SYRACUSE - Members of
the nursery and kindergarten
classes at Syracuse Asbury
United Methodist Church and
their families enjoyed a
picnic recently at the State
park on US Rt . 33.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . Jack Williams and Jane
Ann, Mr . and Mrs. Dennis
Moore and Jerod, Mr. and
Mrs. John Lisle, Todd and
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Don .
Harden and D. J., Mr. and
Mrs. James Pape, , Kristen
and Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Buckley and Tammy,
Mr. and Mrs. Barry McCoy,

.

·'

Barry Jr. and Michelle, Mr.
and Mrs. John Sauvage and
Tammi, Mrs. Judy King,
Kevin and Kristen , Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Fry, Wendy and
Stacie, Mrs. Janet Pickens
and Cathy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ceward Calvert, Jr., and
Kim, Mrs. Brenda Wolfe,
,Shelly and Tara, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Slavin, Mary Beth
and Shannon, Mr. and Mrs,
Bill Arnott, Shawn and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins
and Kimberly, Fritz Sisson, ·
Jean Ann Ritchhart, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Slawter and
Kristen.

ANNIVERSARY SALE
Begins Monday- 10 A.M.

MIPDLEPORT The
Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middle!J9rt ·United . Pentecostal Church held their
July meeting at Fo~t Meigs in
Rutland.
It was combined with a
baby shower. The meeting
was opened by prayer by

Special
OFFER
UNTIL
JULY 15, 1975

l

Introducing
aNew
American
Tradition
FANT ASI A

GALLIPOLIS - The exhibit for the month of July:
Old Bergen's California Society of Printmakers.
fuesday, July 15, 8 p.m ., F.A.C . Interdepartmental
Meeting, Riverby.
fuesday, July 22, 8 p .m ., FAC. Trustees Meeting,
COLUMBUS
Two
Riverby .
Gallipolis
students
have
been
Monday, July 28, 8:30 p,m,, Ohio Valley Summer Theatre
Green Parks Production , "Hoorah", The Patio at Riverby . named to the dean's list at
Capital University for the
Reception for audience and performers follows program.
Wednesday through Saturday, July 30-Aug . 2, F.A.C. second semester. They are 0. Brant Adams of Lower
Booth at the Galli a County Junior Fair.
Thursday, July 31, 9:30-11:30 a .m ., Olristmas Workshop, ·River Rd. and Katherine A.
Fischer of 613 2nd Ave . About
no reservations necessary, Riverby ,
400 .Of Capital's nearly 2,000
undergraduates were named
to the spring honor listing. To
be eligible, a student must be
enrolled full-time at the
university and have earned at
BUSINESS
least a 3.4 grade average for
the semester on a 4.0 basis . .
CINCINNATI - Melody
Shahan, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Darrell · Shahan,
;
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, was
•
among more than 5,300
graduates of the University of
Cincinnati June 15. Bhe
received a BA degree in the
McMicken College of Arts
.._ _ _ _ ___ _ _. . and Sciences.

The diamond
eternity ring
by

!IRTQlRVED

REGUlAR

ssoo.oo

Now Until
July 15th

Limit One

Per Family

S NOWFLAI&lt;E

A beautiful new way
to celeb rate annive rsa rie s,
b~rlh days.

I he

b~r l h

of a chi ld ,

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

and ot her
spe cia l occas-ions.

held

Mrs. Sue HoWard wtio is a
pastor's wife from Miamisburg and who is visiting the
Rev. and Mrs . William
Knittel of Pomeroy.
A potluck dinner was
served an&lt;\ the business
session was opened by Joyce
Sauters
readin'g
the
secretaryt's report. Money
making
projects
were
discussed and it was decided
to hold a yard sale In August.
Following the meeting a
shower for Betty Wickline
was held. She was presented
numerous gifts. Games were
. played and prizes awarded to
Edie Zirkle, Betty Wickline,
Joyce Sa1,1ters and Mabel
Pearman.
Others attending were
Linda Knittel and Tony,
Velma Keller , Livinia Neal,
Linda Acree, Stephanie ·and
Aaron, Sarah Dunii, Manda
Eastman, Dora Holley, May
Mason, Sherry Sauters, Tim
and Charles, Joy Sauters,
Michele Zirkle and Pamela,
Pauf Wickline · and Tommy,
Mrs. Bob Richards and Steve,
and Allee Priddy. The next
meeting will be in September
at Middleport.

KANAUGA - Kanauga
United Methodist Women met
T~ursday evening with Mrs.
Audrey Brownell. Florence
Allen gave the call to worship, Matt.16:26. The opening
song was "Give of Your Best
to the Master." Prayer was
given by Mrs. Lena Mae
Raike. The roll call was
answered to scripture verse
beginning with the letter J .
Scripture reading was Luke
14: lf&gt;-24 by Virginia Roush .
Reading excuses were given
by Mrs. Emma Spencer . Also
read were talks on Bible
Excuses; Cain by Mrs. Judy
Barthelmas; Moses by
Evelyn Rothgeb; Bible
questions, Pina Ward. Bible
study Hebrews, Chapter 9.
Benediction was led by Ethel
Wright.
During
the
business
meeting, dues were collected

JEWELERS

ANNUAL

1.00 DOW~_Y,!'!:!...

DINNER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•FRENCH FRIES
eSLAW
eROLl

and minutes read. There was
nortff!eting in June because of
the family picnic . Cards were
sent to the sick and 90 sick
calls were reported. The
birthday of Florence Allen
was observed.
Mrs . Spencer gave the
blessing before refreshments
of pineapple sundae, cake,
iced tea and coffee were
served to nine members by
the hostess assisted by Mrs.
Raike . The next me~ting will
be with Virginia Roush .

No Coupons · No limit

12, 14, S~ctional and

'

....

SENTENCING SET
MElLA, Pa. ( UP!)
Former United Mine Workers
President W. A. "Tony"
Boyle, convicted in the 1969
slayings of union rival Joseph
"Jock" Yablonski, . his wife
and daughter, has been ordered to appear Aug . 5 for
sentencing.

2nd &amp; Olive

II"

STARLIGHT :7',' .,,,...

12"

100"' .PuPOnt Dotron~~' polyesier .fibercoil. '

The ideal fib.r lot blonkek. Washable,

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

worm ond pretty.·

.. .

..........
.

'

N

• '

SAVE

20% 50%
TO

ON
OCCASIONAL TABLES

w

$349

95

GlASS TOP TABLE,
4 CANE CHAIRS - ~

'3-2500

REG.
N

0

w

~99.95

$499

95

WUfl

. '

' : ~·

95

OTHER DINEnE
SETS AT
SALE PRI
.

' '

0

11"

H))% Virgin Acrilan • olrylic. This b!Gnktt has '
Montonto's O«olade of ~n~rit - ~r ,
Woo,·Oolod.....
..
•

·I • .

'

REG. 1540.00

SAVE ON All 011fER .
LIVING ROOM FURNITURE
7
-. -

Hutch • Chair • Tables ~,~~II
To Match · &gt;-c-~~tt1f&gt;
.,::

'

G

l .

20%ro 50%
PICTURES, LAMPS
AND MIRRORS

TABLE. 6 CHAIRS
IN OFF WHITE

UP TO 33% OFF
11...

On Early American
Pine - Maple Group

95

$3'99

w

10"

.

=

DINING ROOM FURNITURE

1 ~74.00
-REG.
.

0

55% virgin Acrilon'~ ocryli~;/4S% acrylic fiben.
Th i1 handsomely woytn blanket is ideal for all
JOOIOn '• c;omlorf, 3-yeor weor-Ooted:lguorontee.

NOW

"IOSEPOIQ.

$499

N

1 MODERN 2 PC.
RUST SUITE

Lar~~st S~lecti~n ~he Area

0.

SAVE

CLOSEOUT!

TABLE, 4 SWIVEL
CHAIRS ON CASTERS

LOVE SEAT'

fOOicTH

"'- cellutoyer blanket. 55% virgin A~;rilonS
ocrylic/45% ocrylic fibers . 3 -y.arWe&lt;ir- Dated'~
guorontee. SchiHii embroidered binding at head
hem . . . A touch of Elegance.

POPIILAI
IUIIY ,

PAIL'Il

TABLE. 6 SWIVEL
CHAIRS
REG. 1674.00

~

EARLY AMERICAN PINE

EUGAICE

'

Double-Wide Mobile

CHROMCRAFT
Dl NETIE SETS

LIVING ROOM
FURNITURE
"""'

Nf.W STORE HOURS
OPEN 7 DAYS
10 AM TIL 11 PM

No Subt.

CONTINUES SAVE 20% TO 50%

CHAIRS

. "VORKTOWNE" BY PFALTZGRAFF - SELECTED
.......... ~IECES ·AND ..GIFT SETS

\

A thought for the day: U.S.
historian Henry Brooks
Adams said, "What one ·
knows is, in youth, of little
moment; they know enough
who know how to learn."

SEMI-

Iaione• to be paid In lull
by October I. 1975 •

'

.

SUNDA¥ THRU SATURDAY ONLY
'
JULY 13TH THRU JULY 19TH

Gallipolis, Ohio

ONE GROUP

WAU ACCESSORIES 50% OFF
SAVINGSYUParongs. Rin5o%dOFF
.STATUES .
25% OFF

Countryfare

and shelter is available in case of rain,

I

l 2 PRICE

1':
~7':' 1, 1i.H

chapter received recognition
as " Reporter of the Month"
for the momth of May .
Be tty Sayre read devOtl('f)S,
"You Decide.'' Songs were
led by Kathy McDaniel ,
The chapter meets each
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Middle port American Legion
Hall . Anyone interested Is ,
welcome to attend .

Ave.

404 Second

CD'Imthrrii?:J
,-,-, ,. ,

Be tty Sa yre received TOPS
pins for a chhwements in an
earlier contes t.
Betty J oe Clark read an
in s pirati onal letter fr om
Sandy Gier, area-supervisor,
teUin g of a n officers' workshop to be held a t the
Mar ie tta Fairgrounds, July
19. It a lso re la ye d th e
message th a l th e loca l

SUMMER SING PLANNED - A Summer Sing will be held Friday, July 18 a t 7:30p.m .
at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds , Featured gospel groups will be the Lester Family
and Gateway Boys. Local groups will also be performing. There will be a free-will offering

BRIDGE PLAZA

WILLIAMSBURG REPRODUCTIONS ••
GLASSWARE, BRASS, DELFT, WOODEN
.
ACCESSORIES

'

POMEROY
He le h
Spears was honored as TOPS
. \Take Off Pounds Sensibly )
Officer of Chapter 570 for the
month of June during the
club's weekly mee ting.
Bes t lose r for the week was
Phyllis Mc Millan with Nina
The iss as runner-up. Shirley
Al es hire,
Linn ie
Be ll
Aleshire, De lor es Hawk a nd

EMPIRE FURNITURE

PAUL DAVIES

tANNUAbJUhY LAY-A-WAY
SAVE 4.01 01
EVERY BLANKET

'

Helen Spears honored

Precious diamo nds
on a band of 14 -karal gold
10 symbol 1ze
you r ete rnal love.
Fro m $175

•

,.

,•

Church women meet
·Camera With
F-1.8 Lens

July Calendar

20% OFF

'
'

•

IN THE SILVER

.

DY•.

original works.
William entered the 1975
French Art Colony Jurled Art
Show and won fil'llt place In
three divisions : (Amateur
and High School Drawing,
High School Painting and
Amateur
Watercolor
Division.)
Ceramics classes £or
children 8 through 12 years
old have been rescheduled for
Wednesday July 30 from 3:30
to 5 p.m. This class ·wm be
ta ught by Corrinne Lund and
will run for six weeks. The
cost is $12.
Adult Ceramics classes will
· begin Tuesday, August 5,
fr om 7 to 9 p .m . under the
instruc ti on of' Marcy Kubbs .
This is an eight week course
and the cost if $16 for French
Art Colony members and $20
for non-members.
For registration or information, please call Mrs.
John Byers at 446-1903.

mee~ing

Honeywell ESII

CARDS WOULD be appreciated by Otho Murray,
Pomeroy, who is a surgical patient at Holzer Medical Center.
His roo in number is 234. We wish you a speedy recovery.

""er·

PWe

]ulj

I

'

9 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, SUIIday, July 13, !975
I .

.

'

I .

I'm going on a journey
I don 't know exactly when,
But I've made my Reservation
With the Saviour of all men .

"

''

..

'

·I

POMEROY- Kathryn Carnahan Ellis, Cottageville, W.
Va ., writes that in her younger day s she was frightened abnost
to the point of panic when she thought of death, but since has
accepted Christ as her Savior and now has an entirely different
ou~~
.
Mrs. Ellis is the daughter of Mrs. Della Carnahan , RD
Chester . Mrs. Carnahan marked her looth birthday on May 10.
Mrs. Ellis wrote the f~llowing poem and dedi cated it to her
Mamma, Mrs. Carnahan .

' ".

'

!

'

By Katie Crow

" ',._,

'

I

'

'

~

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WASHER
DRYER
PAIR

up ·
TO

SAVE

1 SET ONLY
LAAJ,700 '
LAE-5700 ·

DINING ROOM FURNITURE
SERVER, TABLE,
6 CHAIRS
REG. 11949:95 ·

$1250

00

BASSffi WHITE
FRENQi ·HUTCH
-REG. 1249.95

00

~125

REG. •544~90 PAIR

$46990PAIR
AVOCADO ONLY

OTHER WHIRLPOOL
APPLIANCES ON SALE

�.

I

.

,

I

.

.

.

'

I
I

'

.- I

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·'

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'

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.

•

.,

Rn AILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JULY 19, 1975

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JULY 19, l975

..

SUPER MARKETS

ARMOUR* ST AR-U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

OPEN DAILY 9 Tl~ 9 - CLOSED SUNDAY
252 TltiRD AVENUE .,. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
2500 JACKSON AVENUE - PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

I

~\

"------4

Made with U.S. Govt. Inspected Beef

SELF-BASTING

I

r

YOU G TUR E S

SLICED ·
BACON

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

•

FREEZER QUEEN

ENTR-EES ·

BEEF
'LIVER

BREASTS .... .......... .... lb. 99c
DRUM STICKS ......... . .... lb.59c
THIGHS ...... ~ .............lb.69c
WINGS ............. . ....... .lb. 49(
DRUM METTE:S ..... . ....... lb. 69c
BACKS &amp; NECKS .. . .......lb.19c
liVERS .. ..... _ ....... .. lb. 69c
GIZZARDS &amp; HEARTS ... ... lb 69c

lb •

U.S. Govt. Inspected

FRESH SLICED

PLUMS •••••

or

CHIPPED CHOPPED
1-lb. Pkg ••••

lb.

HAM ·

89c

lb.

ORANGES.. 4 ~ 98
SUNKIST VALENCIA

'

KRAFT

ICE CREAM CUPS

BARBEQUE SAUCE
~ -

Pt.
2-oz.

Jar

JOH~SON

&amp; JOHNSON

BABY OIL

Cans

s

Qtrs.

LUCKY LEAF

BABY SHAMPOO

CIDER VINEGAR

4-oz.

11-oz.

Bot.

Bot.

$

19

Gallon$

Bot.

P;nnura~
. . ..... ..

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE Frozen

PIZZA .

~. ~

. CHEESE. SAUSAGE,
PEPPERONI or DELUXE

'

Dn~RGENT
25' ofnabel.

PARKAY FEATURES
S!lft Diet PARlAY •• -~~i!=.·c.69•

MORTONS Frozen

DONUTS
n

Squeeze PARlAY •••••• ,...... 79•
MIRACLE BOWL ••••••• ,... - 83•

CHOCOU ICED ••• ; •• , , , , • t .... She
BAVARIAN CREAM ••••••• , , • 12.... She
LEMON FILlm •• , •••• • •• , , , '12-••· She

.

~

One..,,,-

Raeua. httlll Without Coupon-t2.10

Lhoolt
Coupon
Y.U41hru let. July 19, 1975
LlfllltO..Co·p:anPerc..,....., -.

1-Qt.
14-oz.
.Cans

10-oz.
Pkgs.

·~

J

' I
(

'

• I

,

\

.

ICED TEA MIX
l-Ib. 1-oz.
Pkg.
10-Pak

F!lu1

s 29
plus W.·Va. Tax

w. Va. Bev.

'

.

'·

,•

WAFERS

NUTTER BUTTER PEANUT BUTTER
13

COOKIES
~:~·
or
.
FIG NEWTONS

CHEER lOS
CEREAL

15-oz. Plcg.

~

. . .uler htell Without Cou,on - P•
Umlt On. Pt.e.ller Coup an
V•lltll'hru s.t. July 19, 19'75
Limit

'

'
'

VANIL~A
. 12..z.
Pkg.

''''-····--·-

'

NABISCO Nllla

. RALSTON

: : -69c

Pkg.

'
....

65•
... ••• IIICIIh ............. 4T- 65•
.
, ..... 93•
llllril 0•-· .•, •ocoo~t• . . .. .. . . - '
g • • llllhl 1a • llo .. , .. , .. ~,-· 93•

C. a llf Style llsalts .. .. .. .. .. • a...

FREAKIES CEREAL

13.5-oz.

.'

NESTEA Instant

N

. . Y,ttiSK Liquid

·

$
Loaves
l-Ib.

BLENND

BROCCOLI SPEARSor
LESUEUR .E.J. PEAS

'

'

WHITEBREAD

REYMERS

l.lmlt 2

AT ANT PENNY FARE WITH THIS COUPON

STATE FARE Sliced

~

Doz.

GREEN GIANT Frozen

09

.

~

l-Ib.

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

WHITE EGGS

MARGARINE

FRUIT COCKTAIL·
' l-Ib.

THOROFARE Grade A Large

GOOD LUCK

STOKELY

~-

12
5-oz.
Cups

PLUS
DEPOSIT

CELERY
HEARTS

SLICED

. 2-lb. Pkg.

49c

.

CRISP TENDER

SWin PREMIUM ~ U.S. Govt.lnspected

GRAVY &amp; SLICED TURKEY, SALISBURY STEAK, MAN SIZE BEEF PAnY,
CHARCOAL BEEF PAnY and MEAT LOAF

SANTAROSA

.

lbs.

12-oz:. Pkg.

12~oz.Pkg.

12-oz. Pkg.

'1

WILSON CORN KING - U.S. Govt. ln1pected

CHEESE

NLESS
WIENERS

for

•
KRAFT Single Wrap
SLICED AMERICAN, PIMENTO or SWISS PROCESS

WILSON CORN KING
U.S. Govt. Inspected

oz. BOTTlES

Family Pak
5-lbs. or
more

•
•

32

'

10 to 14-lb.
AVERAGE

PEACHES

COCA-COLA

D BEEF

.

FRESH

SUPER MARKETS

PENNYFARE QUALITY

\

.

...

o... Coupon.._ cun......

.

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Rn AILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JULY 19, 1975

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JULY 19, l975

..

SUPER MARKETS

ARMOUR* ST AR-U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

OPEN DAILY 9 Tl~ 9 - CLOSED SUNDAY
252 TltiRD AVENUE .,. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
2500 JACKSON AVENUE - PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

I

~\

"------4

Made with U.S. Govt. Inspected Beef

SELF-BASTING

I

r

YOU G TUR E S

SLICED ·
BACON

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

•

FREEZER QUEEN

ENTR-EES ·

BEEF
'LIVER

BREASTS .... .......... .... lb. 99c
DRUM STICKS ......... . .... lb.59c
THIGHS ...... ~ .............lb.69c
WINGS ............. . ....... .lb. 49(
DRUM METTE:S ..... . ....... lb. 69c
BACKS &amp; NECKS .. . .......lb.19c
liVERS .. ..... _ ....... .. lb. 69c
GIZZARDS &amp; HEARTS ... ... lb 69c

lb •

U.S. Govt. Inspected

FRESH SLICED

PLUMS •••••

or

CHIPPED CHOPPED
1-lb. Pkg ••••

lb.

HAM ·

89c

lb.

ORANGES.. 4 ~ 98
SUNKIST VALENCIA

'

KRAFT

ICE CREAM CUPS

BARBEQUE SAUCE
~ -

Pt.
2-oz.

Jar

JOH~SON

&amp; JOHNSON

BABY OIL

Cans

s

Qtrs.

LUCKY LEAF

BABY SHAMPOO

CIDER VINEGAR

4-oz.

11-oz.

Bot.

Bot.

$

19

Gallon$

Bot.

P;nnura~
. . ..... ..

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE Frozen

PIZZA .

~. ~

. CHEESE. SAUSAGE,
PEPPERONI or DELUXE

'

Dn~RGENT
25' ofnabel.

PARKAY FEATURES
S!lft Diet PARlAY •• -~~i!=.·c.69•

MORTONS Frozen

DONUTS
n

Squeeze PARlAY •••••• ,...... 79•
MIRACLE BOWL ••••••• ,... - 83•

CHOCOU ICED ••• ; •• , , , , • t .... She
BAVARIAN CREAM ••••••• , , • 12.... She
LEMON FILlm •• , •••• • •• , , , '12-••· She

.

~

One..,,,-

Raeua. httlll Without Coupon-t2.10

Lhoolt
Coupon
Y.U41hru let. July 19, 1975
LlfllltO..Co·p:anPerc..,....., -.

1-Qt.
14-oz.
.Cans

10-oz.
Pkgs.

·~

J

' I
(

'

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,

\

.

ICED TEA MIX
l-Ib. 1-oz.
Pkg.
10-Pak

F!lu1

s 29
plus W.·Va. Tax

w. Va. Bev.

'

.

'·

,•

WAFERS

NUTTER BUTTER PEANUT BUTTER
13

COOKIES
~:~·
or
.
FIG NEWTONS

CHEER lOS
CEREAL

15-oz. Plcg.

~

. . .uler htell Without Cou,on - P•
Umlt On. Pt.e.ller Coup an
V•lltll'hru s.t. July 19, 19'75
Limit

'

'
'

VANIL~A
. 12..z.
Pkg.

''''-····--·-

'

NABISCO Nllla

. RALSTON

: : -69c

Pkg.

'
....

65•
... ••• IIICIIh ............. 4T- 65•
.
, ..... 93•
llllril 0•-· .•, •ocoo~t• . . .. .. . . - '
g • • llllhl 1a • llo .. , .. , .. ~,-· 93•

C. a llf Style llsalts .. .. .. .. .. • a...

FREAKIES CEREAL

13.5-oz.

.'

NESTEA Instant

N

. . Y,ttiSK Liquid

·

$
Loaves
l-Ib.

BLENND

BROCCOLI SPEARSor
LESUEUR .E.J. PEAS

'

'

WHITEBREAD

REYMERS

l.lmlt 2

AT ANT PENNY FARE WITH THIS COUPON

STATE FARE Sliced

~

Doz.

GREEN GIANT Frozen

09

.

~

l-Ib.

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

WHITE EGGS

MARGARINE

FRUIT COCKTAIL·
' l-Ib.

THOROFARE Grade A Large

GOOD LUCK

STOKELY

~-

12
5-oz.
Cups

PLUS
DEPOSIT

CELERY
HEARTS

SLICED

. 2-lb. Pkg.

49c

.

CRISP TENDER

SWin PREMIUM ~ U.S. Govt.lnspected

GRAVY &amp; SLICED TURKEY, SALISBURY STEAK, MAN SIZE BEEF PAnY,
CHARCOAL BEEF PAnY and MEAT LOAF

SANTAROSA

.

lbs.

12-oz:. Pkg.

12~oz.Pkg.

12-oz. Pkg.

'1

WILSON CORN KING - U.S. Govt. ln1pected

CHEESE

NLESS
WIENERS

for

•
KRAFT Single Wrap
SLICED AMERICAN, PIMENTO or SWISS PROCESS

WILSON CORN KING
U.S. Govt. Inspected

oz. BOTTlES

Family Pak
5-lbs. or
more

•
•

32

'

10 to 14-lb.
AVERAGE

PEACHES

COCA-COLA

D BEEF

.

FRESH

SUPER MARKETS

PENNYFARE QUALITY

\

.

...

o... Coupon.._ cun......

.

C

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12 -The Sunday Times- Sentint'l, Sunday, Ju ly 1:1, 1975
'

'

Attractions stored

·Production desijne-r has hard lob
ATHENS - Wh o - is the
busiest man in Athens th~se
days? The answer is Stan
Abbott, production designer
for Godspell and the Ohio
Valley Summer Theater 's
Techni ca l Direc tor . In this
latter capa c i ty , he coordinate s th e t echn ical
bud get. lime, and tec hnicians
to mee t the deadlines of a ll
the produ cti ons - includin g
his uwn .
As designer for God spell ,
Stan Abbo tt has created an
atmosphere of theatricality
and magi c. The playing area
is simple and fun c ti onal. The
lighting utilizing over ninety
in s trume nts, provides the
colo r , t one and texture .
The cast, dressed in Susan
Mur ar 's br ig ht costumes, will
use nine mi croph ones to fill
th e F oru m Th e at er with
music . " Th e sound will be

in Southern Ohio

said Mr. Abbott, "is to make
Abbott said, " because of the sure that these pepple ai'e
$2,000 sound mixer through trained an.d not lost in the
which
mikes and or- shufne with the professional
.c 'hestra the
will run ."
crew . They provide an imSta n' Abbott must be . portant part of the technical
careful to keep the creative company. ,For instance, five
and technical in balance, not of the nine follow spot
only in designing the set, but operators are high school
in buildin g it as well. He has a students.
s taff or fourU.en professional
"Godspell has been a fun
people and many volun U.ers show · to do," Mr. Abbott
fr om the community. "One of claimed.
my main responsibilities,"
Another of Mr . Abbott 's
responsibilities is to inU.grate

the classroom theory with the
. practical production work .for
a complete learning experience for the 0. U.
student in. the Production
Design department.
And with the buzzing of the
theater continuing, Stan
Abbott was off again
checking the thousand and
one details that make him an
inU.gral part of the Ohio
Valley Summer Theater~ ·
Godspell opens in the
Forum Theater on July 16.

dram e~
pr ese n ted
civilization and . the early Ttl es da y thr oug h Sunday.
days of Ohio's s tatehood , to Jun e 24 - Sep tember 1 a t !lie
the contemp orary bus tle o( Sug ar loaf Mountain Amm odern-day to wn s . s outh- phithea te r .
wes U.rn Ohio holds a wealth
The Am phitheate r sits in
Of histori c , c ultural all d the hl'ai·t of wlla t ftn('e Wt~S
natural attrac ti on s . that a r e
I11rlian coun try. The path
sure to delig ht e ve ry membe r
leading to the sellli -circu lar
of your fam ily t his s um m er . theat e r wa s, a t on e ti me, a
Star t your lour of this area Uuffa l() trail bla zed !Jy the
with the warm hospitality Indians . Behind the theate r
Adena has bee n offering to li e th e r olling hills of tile
vis itors for over 100 year s.
Pickaway P lains.
Situated ju s t north of
" Tecum se h" traces the life
Chillicothe, at op a hi ll whi c h . of the grea t Shawnee chief ,
overl ooks the fiv e san ds toned de pict ing 111a jor cvenlo,; in hi s
of Rt. I, Bidwell, Wallace
RUTLAND
Jeffrey Jonathan Roland (J .R. ).
-peaked hills which inspired · life , until hi s dea th m 181 2.
Ryan , four month old son of
Other guests atU.nding the McClurg of Dayton , Mrs.
the design of The Great Sea l Jrs a s tory about the love of
Mr . and Mrs. Jack R. Walker, service were the great · Jesse Gill of Wheelersburg,
A COSTUMED Adena guide stops to admire a flow er
of Oh io, Adena is I he forme r an i."rlian for his land and his
Rutl a nd , wa s c hristened grandparen ts , Mr . and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hall,
in a large forma l garden near the mansion house.
re s iden c e of Ohio's s ix th peo ple . The pe rf orm i1n ce s
Sunday , June 29 at the Curtis Pollard of Stockdale Rutland.
gov ernor, Thomas Worth - run nightly at 8:45 p.m .
Following the service, the
Hutla nd United Met h odist and Mrs. Mae M·cclurg of
ington.
Admission for ad~Ill"i is $4
Church, by his grandfa ther, Portsmouth; grandparents, families and friends were
Worthingt on, a nat ive Children Wider 1:1 pay n
· The Rev . W. Dale McClurg . Rev. a nd Mrs. Dale McClurg, joined by Rev. J effr ey
Virgil)ianl was anxious to . Southwest Ohio offers a
M the· alta r with Ryan and
of Portsmouth, and Mr. and Gerber and ·Mr. and Mrs.
build a home that would numbe r &lt;•f park s a nd
his parents was his brother. ·Mrs. Denver A. Walker of Rt. Otho Pollard, Lorenda, and
resemble the fine planation r ec r e ationa l ar e a s
fur
I , Bid"!,ell . Miss Rosalee Brenda of Jackson . A buffet
homes he had left behind, and campe rs . Amon g the bes t is
Walker and Ron O'Brien of dinner was served at the Jack
one thai would be large Scioln Trail. on US 2:!, then
Columbus, Mr. Roger Walker Walker residence.
enough to accommodate his half a mile to the eas t on SR
U. n children, and sizeable 372. Scioto Trail offers 248
staff of servants .
acres of na tural beauty for
In 1807, Adena was born, the budget- mwded tra ve ler ,
and now , in 1975, it stands just in addition to riding, fishin g
GALLIPOLIS
The
as it did . Extensive research and boating. Or try Sun
Gallipolis Area J aycee Wives
through
diaries,
man- Valley Lake, eight miles on
have scheduled the Cobras
uscripts , correspondence US 35.
for their Harvest Ball.
and even carpenU.r's bills. · Before leaving the. area,
The dance will be Oct. 25 at
and receipts, has ena bled the spend a few moments lea rnthe Elks Club and will be open
Ohio Historical Society to ing and seeing how people
to the public. A limiU.d
restore the building to the lived tens of thousands of
number of tickets will be sold
way it looked when Worth- yea rs ago by vi siting the
a month in advance for $10 a
Ci ty
Nationa l
ington and his family were in Mound
couple. Bonnie Stutes was
residence.
Monument. On e of the slate 's
appointed ticket chairman .
Costumed inU.rpreters are fi ne s t e xamples of t he
Pam Harris was appointed
on hand to greet you as you Hopewell Ind ian Cul ture, it is
c hairman of the decorating
enter the Georgian-style loca ted four miles nor th of
commilU.e and Gloria Young
man sion house, and to briefly Ch illicothe on SR 104. A
was appoinU.d chairman of
THE MANSION House at Adena is furnished with period pieces from the early 19th
explain Adena's colorful past. m o der n , well -e quipped
the food commitU.e.
century.
You l,e arn that Adena has visito r cen ter houses a
At the July meeting it was
played host to many guests museum· which will orient
also decided to change their
who figured in America's you to the Indian mounds
meeting date to the third
history, including the two out s ide. You can e ithe r
No liVJn ~ llung IS big get than Tuesdar of each month. Any
c hi efs. survey the mounds from the
g reat Shawnee
the blue '1-\.hJ ie. It ~ tongue alon e Jaycees wife Is. welcome to
Tecumseh and Blue J acke t. observation deck , wh ich
we1ghs lh ree-a nd·a· half tons' The attend the meetings. .
Tecwnseh, during his visit affords a n outstandin g view
W
r greal nmmnal a lto ins 150 tons A _Ha l\oween-party for
POMEROY - The TOPS
f th 1• 1 J ,
e a e ean
a r ne · 3.1 t im es th e \•,: eig ht ul Jn Gwdmg Hands School was
presented Worthing ton with a of the entire area, while you 1Takes Off Pound s Se nsibly l o
·
also discussed .
tomahawk, which is still On · hea r a brief - recorded area officers ' workshop will Be tty Clark re"d " Tops Ten" eleph a nt
devoti ons .
display in the Governor 's history . of the mounds, or be held July 19 at the
A·nyone interes ted in
library.
walk th e marked nature Marietta Fairgrounds.
joining the club are welcome.
Now, you are free to tour trails ar ound the earthworks,
The workshop is to he lp The club mee ts on Tuesday at
providing a close-up look at officers of the area with a ny
the house and grounds.
the Ame ri can Legion Hall in
Run your hand over the these in teresting ceremonial questions about forms ,
Middleport at 7 p .m .
rich, native walnut paneling, places. Open daily 8 a .m. to 8 contests, or any other inand take your time to s tudy
p .m. it's free to the-public .
for mati on pertaining to
the clever tapes tries, which
Seip Mound, on US 50 near TOPS. The workshop is open
Come help u s clear our Summer stock. We'll
LAFF • A - DAY
are still being repr()(!uced Bainbridge, is ' an other giant tu any .m embers interested in"
help you find s uper value in top quality
mo und
of
th e a tU.ndmg. ·
today by some of the in- burial
clothes .. . ever ything you need, everywhere
•
..
\-- ·
you go .
terpreters . Examine the Hopewells , featuring an open
1
Jo.an Eads an d Fred a
1'.
· , . ~'c 1 ' ~
!
lovely marble fireplace, and exhibit pavilion prese nting Henderson ti ed for weekly , ~\ \
~J c': 'J
•
,
thtf furniture, much of which the history of Seip Mound. A
best loser w1th Donna Jean
f \~ 1
Register for $50
1
was made on the estate by di g , an excava tion in
Smith as runner up . De lores
-,.. ·);)
~
..;;rc
Gift Certificate to
local carpenters, in the progress, offers th e op- Hawk was quarterly best
· 1
•/ "':\ ~
":\ •· ·
be
given
away
Hepplewhi te and Sheraton portunily to actually see the
Extra Sp ecial
loser with a loss of 30 1 .,
· ~.._
'1, c, ,:
-1
Mon., July 14th.
. style, so popular in the 18th Ohi o Historical Soc iet y's
GROUP
MEN'S
Bastille and ~ave$$$$$
century.
archeology staff at work.
months. Wanda Faulk was
·
· 1 :
1
Then, wander through the
Be sure, too, to s top at F ort
monthly best loser.
,~"
:~ -~~
.
stately dining room, where Hill , probably one of the most
Betty Joe Clark, leader, ''PI{ &gt;--:_
~___,
the !able is set with fine scen ic spots in Southwest
received a receipt fr om the
'"
.... • ···
examples of early china and Ohio. Fort Hill, loca ted on SR
TOPS Medical Research "God 1&gt;1&lt;-ss daddy ... and please
give him the health and
glassware . Admire the 41 in Highl a nd Co un ty ,
Foundation for the donation strength to survive the tax
rotating shelf un its in the offers 1,000 acres of deep
se nt by the chapU.r in honor audit. ..
back wall which enabled woods, a nd a modern
VALUES TO 1100
servants to serve the food, museum w hi c h displays
and clear the table more exhibi ts of Ohio's prehistoric
efficiently.
inhabitants. Picnic faCilities
YOUR YEAR FOR
Cross the hall to the kit- are avai la ble, and nature
chen, where an interpreU.r trails offer a relaxing way of
will point out the small , wire following in our firs t anbasket which was used to ces tors' footsteps.
make toast, and explain
For a free booklet on· all 56
2 Unforgetable Weeks- Departing Aug . 2
the Jeffersonian that fill the of th e Ohio Hi sto ri ca l
room . In the adjacent pantry Soc i ety ' s Yesterday
4ISLAND ESCORTED TOUR
·you'll see a collection of the Getaways, writ., the Public
large pitchers and crocks Information Offi cio, Ohi o
GROUP
used during the peri od. .
Historical CenU.r , 1-71 and
Upstairs are the family's 17th Ave ., Columbus, Ohio
446-0699
handsomely - furnished 43211.
SO YOU NEVER TRAVEL ALONE
bedrooms , the m ore intimate
Special
GROUP MEN'S
ball room, and not far fr om
MEN'S
Large
the children's rooms, the
Group
KNIT
small, empty "crying.roorn"
Men's
where the children were put
VALUES TO 1
when they were punished.
When you've explored the.&gt;
house from top to bottom, go
&lt;m,tsjde and stroll through the
TO
house 's restored semi-formal
ENTIRE
gardens, offering, again, a bit
STOCK
Vaiue To
of Wor thington 's native
SHORT
SLEEVE
$20.00
'
Virginia.
·
·,
NOW
Explore · the
estate's
several outbuildings - · the
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S
smokehouse, where you ca n
YOUNG
MEN'S
HOPSACK
still smell the delicious ·
· hickory aroma of fresh-cured·
. bacons and ·hams ; the wash
cool, dark sorimr-·
house ;
Reg • .
house, where butter and mH~-"'
$14.00 .
were kept, · the . servant's
1
•
~ters; anq the spacious
barn Which still houses a
.,
collection .of sheep, cows and .
LIGHT
horses, ' all of which wander
CHOICE
the eslate during . daylight
•
WEIGHT
hours. ~
·
Adena is ()pen 10 a .m. to 5
p.m. daily ·excep\ Monday.
. The fee Is Sl for .ad!llts and 50
'
· ' ,c ents for children under 13 or ~
ftee wiU,·parent.
· Tliel!, for !IDOther look at .
Mon. thru Sat.
Ohio'• hiltory,, .!~is time
10 A.M. til9 P : M .
through the red -man's eyes,
SII,VER 'BRIDGE PLAZA
Sunday 1 P . M. til S P . M .
' '
From

the

dawn

of

dow·

I

I

especia lly exciting," Mr .

WE NEED SIX USED
SPINET PIANOS

WIU PAY TOP DOLLAR

CONTACT
MR. BRAMMER
4446-0687 .
BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.

Area workshop planned

!. !

:Sa-; til Ltt

Come Celebrate

Ji

vf· ltJ -· -.."J.-

DAY

I

- --

MONDAY, JULY 14th

)

Storm The

ENTIRE STOCK

SUITS&amp; .
SPORT COATS

· SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS

20%
50%

NOW

HIIWII/1

TO

WORlD WIDE TRAVEL

OFF

TIES

JEAN SHIRTS

SUNDAY SPECIAL

DRESS
PANTS·

JULY 13th ONLY

20%
50% OFF

HIGH .

KNIT
.DRESS
PANTS

NOW

DRESS PANTS

Styles To. Choose.

20% OFF

Values to 14.99

JEANS ·

~- $699
w

•.

Wedding vows read
GALLIPOLIS - Melanie
Wiseman
and
Michael
Triplett were
married
recently before the altar of
the Christian Church in
Morehead, Ky.
The altar was decorated
· with a large basket of pink
and white gladioli an d mums.
Palms flanked the beautiful
white candelabra on both
sides of the allar.
The bride is the daughU.r of
Mr . and Mrs. Ha rold
Wiseman of Gallipolis and the
granddaughU.r of Mrs. Zeima
Northcutt and Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Wiseman , also of
Gallipolis. The bridegroom is
the son of Mr . and Mrs . J. B.
Triplett of Warfield, Ky .
The 2:30 p.m . wedding
ceremony was performed
May 24 with Rev. Clifford
Boothe, uncle of the groom,
officiating at the double ring
ceremony.
Traditional
wedding
music
was
presented by Mrs . Mike
Thompson, organist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
in an ivory gow n trimmed in
lace and seed pearls . Her full
length veil was trimmed in
matching lace . She ca rried a

tt'

25%
OFF

· 300 ·. SECOND AVENUE •

LOCATED IN THE· lAFAYEtTE MALL .

.,

-~.

..

,

MON.-SAT.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

PRICES GOOD THRU 7-19-75

Luetta Charlene Weaver

August wedding planned
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
A. Weaver of New Haven, are announcing tbe engagement
of their daughter, Luetta Charlene to Michael Lee
Milliron, son of Dorothy and GObert Milliron of Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will take place at 7 p.m.
August 8, at the New Haven United Methodist Church with
the Rev. John C. Campbell officiating . An open reception
will follow at ScoU Memorial Hall at the church. ·
Miss Weaver is a graduate of Wahama High School
and is employed at Holzer Medical Center. Milliron is a
graduate of Gallia Academy High School and is employed
by Carter and Evans of Galllpolls.
Concentrated efforts on the
part of the driving public are
needed to provide Ohioans
with safe transportati on,
according to the Ohio Department of Highway Safety .

Miracle Whip
Salad

Dressi~

qt.
.

)ar

.

Storys"Run
BY GLENNA SHULER
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Leach
spent Monday at Quick, W.
Va. visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Stricker. He is quite
ill with a heart condition .
Mrs. Stricker is a sister of
Mr. Leach.
Leo, Maxine and Glenna
Rice of Wayne , W. Va., Jim
and Elsie Folmer of Che_sU:r,
David, Betty and Billy Ross
of Zuspan Hollow s pen t
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs .
Joe Edwards, Janet and
Joey.
Mr':"'and Mrs. Junior White
and Mrs . Muriel Spires of
Kyger called on Mr. a nd Mrs .
Denny Spires and family a
day recently .
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas
Halfhill, Connie, John and
Jamie visited Mrs. Halfhill's
brother, Jim Walters, near
Dallas, Texas recently.
Robert Conkle is home
from Holzer Medical Center
and improving nicely from a
recent heart a ttac k.
Mr . and Mrs. Eddie
Carruthers spent Friday and
Saturday with Mr . and Mrs .
Eddie Carruthers, Jr. and
Matt at Mansfield.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Marlin Rife during th e
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.

I

The Fabric Shop

-~
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IT COSTS NO

FOR THE BEST

FRIGI.DAIRE·

17.0 ca. ft. of IC)OO/o ft wt Ps oof elctancc.
Rcadj for autOmadc Ice when ljOII IN.
ft ou• ft ltlda're.

Wilson's Evaporated

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cans

$469

Pillill l .. lla.lt l'lli¥1¥11~DDMIIIIIMIIlDh•llloneiCk•II.M.ota L

The most unique

theatric al experience
of the decade.

by John Mic h ae l T ebe lak
and Stephen Schwartz ..

Popular songs abound: uoay by Day, "
Jt 's' All For the [Jest,'' 1 ' T urn Back, 0 Man,,'
and "Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord. , ..

11

8:30pm- July 16 - 20;' ·July 23-27

Air-conditioned Forum The8ter

Ticket OHi ce
(6 t4) 594- 50 10

2 to 5 Pm Mon . ·;1nd Tu es .
2 to 9 p m Wed. rhrou.;:h S un . '
.

17 SoUth Colle ~t e St.
P. 0, Box 303
Ath C'OS, 0, 4)70 1

.

Get

••
I

From Frigidaire, here's an
Environment Maker Room
Air Conditioner that cools
automatically. The big
• 15,000 BTUs / hr. • cooling
capacity of this room air
conditioner handles hot
days and a warm room .
Provides set~it-and-'orget­
it Comfort Power by automatically controliing compressor and fan speed as
room temperature
changes. A great addition
to your home environment.
•Certified bY. AHAW , wtui~ nperatif19
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I

•

CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S Club
monthly lun c heon , 12 : IS
p.m., at the Holiday Inn In
Kanauga. Heritage Day is the
theme . Wear old-fashioned
dresses. Special feature will
be· "Antiquing." Speaker will
be Esther Bechtle. Call 44G47!3 for reservations. Babysitting provided,

PM

10·A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

bouquet of pink roses and
whit., carnations.
Lor i Wiseman, s ister of the
bride, was her only attendant. She wore an off-whill!
dress trimmed in pink with a
LAF A VETTE Shrine 44
matching picture hat. She
will
meet at 8 p.m.
car ried a bouquet of pink
car nations.
J ohn Triplett of Warfield,
brother of the groom, served
as best man. Tom Wiseman , Mrs. ~nny Spires a day
Traffic accidents resulting
,
brother of the bride, and John recently.
ln deaths, injuries and
Mr . and Mrs. Junior Searls, property destruction continue
Small, cousin of the groom,
Dayton,
Mrs. Franklin Wray
served as ushers.
as a major problem in Ohio.
A reception honoring the of Baltimore, Ohio, Mrs . We can no longer delegate the
couple was held at the Rosa Searls, Middleport, Mr. responsibility of safety to owand Mrs. Hershel! Gilkey, Rt. enforcement agencies alone .
Holiday Inn in Morehead.
Miss Anne Wiseman, sister I Cheshire, and Mrs. Joan
of the bride, presided at the Fife, Timmy and Melissa, Rt.
7, called on Mr. and Mrs .
guest book.
A s howe r honoring Melanie Paul Searls a day recenUy.
Mrs. Marie Spires and
was held May 12 at the home
children
called on Mrs.
of Mrs. Earl Durham. Mrs.
Neil Sanders a nd Mrs . Keith Florence Caldwell a day
Thomas served as co- recently. Also there were Mr. ,.
and Mrs. Curtis Sizemore,
hostesses.
Mr
. and Mrs. Harley Taylor
The Durham home was
decorated beautifully in the and Uzzle.
Mrs. Marjorie Wigal and
bridal m otif. The table
grandson, Kyle Simpson of
carried out Melanie 's color
Mrs. Ross
scheme of pink and white. Middleport,
Miss Becky Durham, Miss Shuler, Rt . 1 Langsville and
Lori Wiseman and Miss Anne Steven, Mrs. Debbie Lambert
Wiseman served refresh- and Trudy, Rt. 1 Langsville,
ments from the beautifully called on Mr .. and Mrs. Alex
ltl!' -....
. ~
'
Shuler recenUy.
appoin U.d table.
.:&gt;.
Keith Bradbury,
Bill
'i¥~' fl ip a panel: ~ew ln.thf-toun&lt;l !
Cochran of Colwnbus and
lkd~ lve ~~ fulurt ,
Mrs . Malinda BradbiD'y spent
bu u onfi!lltll l u ep bu i\Gnhokr,
pulh.Ounon bobbin ,other ldvancu.
4th of July at Ripley, W. Va.
Urryinl tue or ublnel ulra.
Dale Mulford called on
Hurley Rife and children of Robert Conkle on WedWellston, Mr . and Mrs . nesday.
Dallas Rife of Wellston, Mr.
Mrs . Phena Stanley of
and Mrs. Glenn Young and Pomeroy spent Sunday with
Michelle, Rt. I Gallipolis.
Mrs. Malinda Bradbury.
Rev. and Mrs . Raymond Mrs. Leslie Hawley of
......
Fife spent a day recently with Middleport .spent Wednesday
Mr . and Mrs. John Veith .
with Mrs. BradbtD'y.
Don, Roseann and Melanie
Beecher of Charleston, Pearl,
Becky and Linda Edwards of
~ORE
ChesU.r spent a day recently
with Mr. and Mrs . Joe Edwards, Janet and Joey.
Mrs. Ruth Lambert, Rt. 1
Pomeroy, s pent a day
recently with Mrs . Joann
Conkle.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Fife, Jr., Turkey RWI , Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe E. Fife of
Cheshire spetit Sunday with
Rev. and Mrs. Raymond Fife.
Teakwood trim and distinctive
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires
smoked onyx accents are elegant
and Denise, Julie and
hints of convenience inside.
Stephen, called on Mr . and
Top-freezer has 4.75 cu . ft . with
Mrs. Calvin Caldwell and
separate ice storage and a shell.
Johnny a day recently at
Automatic Ice Maker, with
Gallipolis. Ricky and Donald
exclusive Cube Level Control ,
Martin were there .
can be added-now or later
Little Stephen Spires was
{extra . charge). Storage includes
one year old July 3~
twi n Vegetable Hydrators. Meat
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
Tender, door compartments.
called on Mr. and Mrs . Alva
Rife, Rt. I , Middleport, a day
·recently.
Doc Caldwell; Zuspan
Hdllow, called on Mr . and

20%

JACKETS

~·

Mrs. Michael Triplett

DRESS SHIRTS

Several Colors and

lo Bet "Tecwn'Seh /' an out~

'3.99·

·a AM-10

nJESDAY
FRIENDSHIP
GARDEN
• Club will meet at the home of
Ludena Stollings at 10:30
a .m. Janet Bolin will
demonstrate.
RANK WORK at Knights of
Pythias Lodge, 8 p.m .

$698

PLATFORMS

the

16.00

STORE HOURS

MONDAY
FREE CLOTIIING Day, 10 to
2 at the Morgan Center Home
Mission on the Eno-Vinton
Road.

jeffrey Walker is christened

Harvest Ball
planned

u·

SUNDAY
WAY MINISTRY ChrisUan
Fellowship. 81J.m. at the City
Park. All ages welcome.
Songs,
teaching
and
· fellowship. Teaching will be
"All
Giving
equals
.Receiving."

MIDDLEPORT, 0Ht0.

..

GREER
' 160Z
.APPLESAUCE ••~~!~ •..

'f"

FOR

'",.,
,)

"

":..
''

'

i'

I

�, I

..

•·

12 -The Sunday Times- Sentint'l, Sunday, Ju ly 1:1, 1975
'

'

Attractions stored

·Production desijne-r has hard lob
ATHENS - Wh o - is the
busiest man in Athens th~se
days? The answer is Stan
Abbott, production designer
for Godspell and the Ohio
Valley Summer Theater 's
Techni ca l Direc tor . In this
latter capa c i ty , he coordinate s th e t echn ical
bud get. lime, and tec hnicians
to mee t the deadlines of a ll
the produ cti ons - includin g
his uwn .
As designer for God spell ,
Stan Abbo tt has created an
atmosphere of theatricality
and magi c. The playing area
is simple and fun c ti onal. The
lighting utilizing over ninety
in s trume nts, provides the
colo r , t one and texture .
The cast, dressed in Susan
Mur ar 's br ig ht costumes, will
use nine mi croph ones to fill
th e F oru m Th e at er with
music . " Th e sound will be

in Southern Ohio

said Mr. Abbott, "is to make
Abbott said, " because of the sure that these pepple ai'e
$2,000 sound mixer through trained an.d not lost in the
which
mikes and or- shufne with the professional
.c 'hestra the
will run ."
crew . They provide an imSta n' Abbott must be . portant part of the technical
careful to keep the creative company. ,For instance, five
and technical in balance, not of the nine follow spot
only in designing the set, but operators are high school
in buildin g it as well. He has a students.
s taff or fourU.en professional
"Godspell has been a fun
people and many volun U.ers show · to do," Mr. Abbott
fr om the community. "One of claimed.
my main responsibilities,"
Another of Mr . Abbott 's
responsibilities is to inU.grate

the classroom theory with the
. practical production work .for
a complete learning experience for the 0. U.
student in. the Production
Design department.
And with the buzzing of the
theater continuing, Stan
Abbott was off again
checking the thousand and
one details that make him an
inU.gral part of the Ohio
Valley Summer Theater~ ·
Godspell opens in the
Forum Theater on July 16.

dram e~
pr ese n ted
civilization and . the early Ttl es da y thr oug h Sunday.
days of Ohio's s tatehood , to Jun e 24 - Sep tember 1 a t !lie
the contemp orary bus tle o( Sug ar loaf Mountain Amm odern-day to wn s . s outh- phithea te r .
wes U.rn Ohio holds a wealth
The Am phitheate r sits in
Of histori c , c ultural all d the hl'ai·t of wlla t ftn('e Wt~S
natural attrac ti on s . that a r e
I11rlian coun try. The path
sure to delig ht e ve ry membe r
leading to the sellli -circu lar
of your fam ily t his s um m er . theat e r wa s, a t on e ti me, a
Star t your lour of this area Uuffa l() trail bla zed !Jy the
with the warm hospitality Indians . Behind the theate r
Adena has bee n offering to li e th e r olling hills of tile
vis itors for over 100 year s.
Pickaway P lains.
Situated ju s t north of
" Tecum se h" traces the life
Chillicothe, at op a hi ll whi c h . of the grea t Shawnee chief ,
overl ooks the fiv e san ds toned de pict ing 111a jor cvenlo,; in hi s
of Rt. I, Bidwell, Wallace
RUTLAND
Jeffrey Jonathan Roland (J .R. ).
-peaked hills which inspired · life , until hi s dea th m 181 2.
Ryan , four month old son of
Other guests atU.nding the McClurg of Dayton , Mrs.
the design of The Great Sea l Jrs a s tory about the love of
Mr . and Mrs. Jack R. Walker, service were the great · Jesse Gill of Wheelersburg,
A COSTUMED Adena guide stops to admire a flow er
of Oh io, Adena is I he forme r an i."rlian for his land and his
Rutl a nd , wa s c hristened grandparen ts , Mr . and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hall,
in a large forma l garden near the mansion house.
re s iden c e of Ohio's s ix th peo ple . The pe rf orm i1n ce s
Sunday , June 29 at the Curtis Pollard of Stockdale Rutland.
gov ernor, Thomas Worth - run nightly at 8:45 p.m .
Following the service, the
Hutla nd United Met h odist and Mrs. Mae M·cclurg of
ington.
Admission for ad~Ill"i is $4
Church, by his grandfa ther, Portsmouth; grandparents, families and friends were
Worthingt on, a nat ive Children Wider 1:1 pay n
· The Rev . W. Dale McClurg . Rev. a nd Mrs. Dale McClurg, joined by Rev. J effr ey
Virgil)ianl was anxious to . Southwest Ohio offers a
M the· alta r with Ryan and
of Portsmouth, and Mr. and Gerber and ·Mr. and Mrs.
build a home that would numbe r &lt;•f park s a nd
his parents was his brother. ·Mrs. Denver A. Walker of Rt. Otho Pollard, Lorenda, and
resemble the fine planation r ec r e ationa l ar e a s
fur
I , Bid"!,ell . Miss Rosalee Brenda of Jackson . A buffet
homes he had left behind, and campe rs . Amon g the bes t is
Walker and Ron O'Brien of dinner was served at the Jack
one thai would be large Scioln Trail. on US 2:!, then
Columbus, Mr. Roger Walker Walker residence.
enough to accommodate his half a mile to the eas t on SR
U. n children, and sizeable 372. Scioto Trail offers 248
staff of servants .
acres of na tural beauty for
In 1807, Adena was born, the budget- mwded tra ve ler ,
and now , in 1975, it stands just in addition to riding, fishin g
GALLIPOLIS
The
as it did . Extensive research and boating. Or try Sun
Gallipolis Area J aycee Wives
through
diaries,
man- Valley Lake, eight miles on
have scheduled the Cobras
uscripts , correspondence US 35.
for their Harvest Ball.
and even carpenU.r's bills. · Before leaving the. area,
The dance will be Oct. 25 at
and receipts, has ena bled the spend a few moments lea rnthe Elks Club and will be open
Ohio Historical Society to ing and seeing how people
to the public. A limiU.d
restore the building to the lived tens of thousands of
number of tickets will be sold
way it looked when Worth- yea rs ago by vi siting the
a month in advance for $10 a
Ci ty
Nationa l
ington and his family were in Mound
couple. Bonnie Stutes was
residence.
Monument. On e of the slate 's
appointed ticket chairman .
Costumed inU.rpreters are fi ne s t e xamples of t he
Pam Harris was appointed
on hand to greet you as you Hopewell Ind ian Cul ture, it is
c hairman of the decorating
enter the Georgian-style loca ted four miles nor th of
commilU.e and Gloria Young
man sion house, and to briefly Ch illicothe on SR 104. A
was appoinU.d chairman of
THE MANSION House at Adena is furnished with period pieces from the early 19th
explain Adena's colorful past. m o der n , well -e quipped
the food commitU.e.
century.
You l,e arn that Adena has visito r cen ter houses a
At the July meeting it was
played host to many guests museum· which will orient
also decided to change their
who figured in America's you to the Indian mounds
meeting date to the third
history, including the two out s ide. You can e ithe r
No liVJn ~ llung IS big get than Tuesdar of each month. Any
c hi efs. survey the mounds from the
g reat Shawnee
the blue '1-\.hJ ie. It ~ tongue alon e Jaycees wife Is. welcome to
Tecumseh and Blue J acke t. observation deck , wh ich
we1ghs lh ree-a nd·a· half tons' The attend the meetings. .
Tecwnseh, during his visit affords a n outstandin g view
W
r greal nmmnal a lto ins 150 tons A _Ha l\oween-party for
POMEROY - The TOPS
f th 1• 1 J ,
e a e ean
a r ne · 3.1 t im es th e \•,: eig ht ul Jn Gwdmg Hands School was
presented Worthing ton with a of the entire area, while you 1Takes Off Pound s Se nsibly l o
·
also discussed .
tomahawk, which is still On · hea r a brief - recorded area officers ' workshop will Be tty Clark re"d " Tops Ten" eleph a nt
devoti ons .
display in the Governor 's history . of the mounds, or be held July 19 at the
A·nyone interes ted in
library.
walk th e marked nature Marietta Fairgrounds.
joining the club are welcome.
Now, you are free to tour trails ar ound the earthworks,
The workshop is to he lp The club mee ts on Tuesday at
providing a close-up look at officers of the area with a ny
the house and grounds.
the Ame ri can Legion Hall in
Run your hand over the these in teresting ceremonial questions about forms ,
Middleport at 7 p .m .
rich, native walnut paneling, places. Open daily 8 a .m. to 8 contests, or any other inand take your time to s tudy
p .m. it's free to the-public .
for mati on pertaining to
the clever tapes tries, which
Seip Mound, on US 50 near TOPS. The workshop is open
Come help u s clear our Summer stock. We'll
LAFF • A - DAY
are still being repr()(!uced Bainbridge, is ' an other giant tu any .m embers interested in"
help you find s uper value in top quality
mo und
of
th e a tU.ndmg. ·
today by some of the in- burial
clothes .. . ever ything you need, everywhere
•
..
\-- ·
you go .
terpreters . Examine the Hopewells , featuring an open
1
Jo.an Eads an d Fred a
1'.
· , . ~'c 1 ' ~
!
lovely marble fireplace, and exhibit pavilion prese nting Henderson ti ed for weekly , ~\ \
~J c': 'J
•
,
thtf furniture, much of which the history of Seip Mound. A
best loser w1th Donna Jean
f \~ 1
Register for $50
1
was made on the estate by di g , an excava tion in
Smith as runner up . De lores
-,.. ·);)
~
..;;rc
Gift Certificate to
local carpenters, in the progress, offers th e op- Hawk was quarterly best
· 1
•/ "':\ ~
":\ •· ·
be
given
away
Hepplewhi te and Sheraton portunily to actually see the
Extra Sp ecial
loser with a loss of 30 1 .,
· ~.._
'1, c, ,:
-1
Mon., July 14th.
. style, so popular in the 18th Ohi o Historical Soc iet y's
GROUP
MEN'S
Bastille and ~ave$$$$$
century.
archeology staff at work.
months. Wanda Faulk was
·
· 1 :
1
Then, wander through the
Be sure, too, to s top at F ort
monthly best loser.
,~"
:~ -~~
.
stately dining room, where Hill , probably one of the most
Betty Joe Clark, leader, ''PI{ &gt;--:_
~___,
the !able is set with fine scen ic spots in Southwest
received a receipt fr om the
'"
.... • ···
examples of early china and Ohio. Fort Hill, loca ted on SR
TOPS Medical Research "God 1&gt;1&lt;-ss daddy ... and please
give him the health and
glassware . Admire the 41 in Highl a nd Co un ty ,
Foundation for the donation strength to survive the tax
rotating shelf un its in the offers 1,000 acres of deep
se nt by the chapU.r in honor audit. ..
back wall which enabled woods, a nd a modern
VALUES TO 1100
servants to serve the food, museum w hi c h displays
and clear the table more exhibi ts of Ohio's prehistoric
efficiently.
inhabitants. Picnic faCilities
YOUR YEAR FOR
Cross the hall to the kit- are avai la ble, and nature
chen, where an interpreU.r trails offer a relaxing way of
will point out the small , wire following in our firs t anbasket which was used to ces tors' footsteps.
make toast, and explain
For a free booklet on· all 56
2 Unforgetable Weeks- Departing Aug . 2
the Jeffersonian that fill the of th e Ohio Hi sto ri ca l
room . In the adjacent pantry Soc i ety ' s Yesterday
4ISLAND ESCORTED TOUR
·you'll see a collection of the Getaways, writ., the Public
large pitchers and crocks Information Offi cio, Ohi o
GROUP
used during the peri od. .
Historical CenU.r , 1-71 and
Upstairs are the family's 17th Ave ., Columbus, Ohio
446-0699
handsomely - furnished 43211.
SO YOU NEVER TRAVEL ALONE
bedrooms , the m ore intimate
Special
GROUP MEN'S
ball room, and not far fr om
MEN'S
Large
the children's rooms, the
Group
KNIT
small, empty "crying.roorn"
Men's
where the children were put
VALUES TO 1
when they were punished.
When you've explored the.&gt;
house from top to bottom, go
&lt;m,tsjde and stroll through the
TO
house 's restored semi-formal
ENTIRE
gardens, offering, again, a bit
STOCK
Vaiue To
of Wor thington 's native
SHORT
SLEEVE
$20.00
'
Virginia.
·
·,
NOW
Explore · the
estate's
several outbuildings - · the
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S
smokehouse, where you ca n
YOUNG
MEN'S
HOPSACK
still smell the delicious ·
· hickory aroma of fresh-cured·
. bacons and ·hams ; the wash
cool, dark sorimr-·
house ;
Reg • .
house, where butter and mH~-"'
$14.00 .
were kept, · the . servant's
1
•
~ters; anq the spacious
barn Which still houses a
.,
collection .of sheep, cows and .
LIGHT
horses, ' all of which wander
CHOICE
the eslate during . daylight
•
WEIGHT
hours. ~
·
Adena is ()pen 10 a .m. to 5
p.m. daily ·excep\ Monday.
. The fee Is Sl for .ad!llts and 50
'
· ' ,c ents for children under 13 or ~
ftee wiU,·parent.
· Tliel!, for !IDOther look at .
Mon. thru Sat.
Ohio'• hiltory,, .!~is time
10 A.M. til9 P : M .
through the red -man's eyes,
SII,VER 'BRIDGE PLAZA
Sunday 1 P . M. til S P . M .
' '
From

the

dawn

of

dow·

I

I

especia lly exciting," Mr .

WE NEED SIX USED
SPINET PIANOS

WIU PAY TOP DOLLAR

CONTACT
MR. BRAMMER
4446-0687 .
BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.

Area workshop planned

!. !

:Sa-; til Ltt

Come Celebrate

Ji

vf· ltJ -· -.."J.-

DAY

I

- --

MONDAY, JULY 14th

)

Storm The

ENTIRE STOCK

SUITS&amp; .
SPORT COATS

· SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS

20%
50%

NOW

HIIWII/1

TO

WORlD WIDE TRAVEL

OFF

TIES

JEAN SHIRTS

SUNDAY SPECIAL

DRESS
PANTS·

JULY 13th ONLY

20%
50% OFF

HIGH .

KNIT
.DRESS
PANTS

NOW

DRESS PANTS

Styles To. Choose.

20% OFF

Values to 14.99

JEANS ·

~- $699
w

•.

Wedding vows read
GALLIPOLIS - Melanie
Wiseman
and
Michael
Triplett were
married
recently before the altar of
the Christian Church in
Morehead, Ky.
The altar was decorated
· with a large basket of pink
and white gladioli an d mums.
Palms flanked the beautiful
white candelabra on both
sides of the allar.
The bride is the daughU.r of
Mr . and Mrs. Ha rold
Wiseman of Gallipolis and the
granddaughU.r of Mrs. Zeima
Northcutt and Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Wiseman , also of
Gallipolis. The bridegroom is
the son of Mr . and Mrs . J. B.
Triplett of Warfield, Ky .
The 2:30 p.m . wedding
ceremony was performed
May 24 with Rev. Clifford
Boothe, uncle of the groom,
officiating at the double ring
ceremony.
Traditional
wedding
music
was
presented by Mrs . Mike
Thompson, organist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
in an ivory gow n trimmed in
lace and seed pearls . Her full
length veil was trimmed in
matching lace . She ca rried a

tt'

25%
OFF

· 300 ·. SECOND AVENUE •

LOCATED IN THE· lAFAYEtTE MALL .

.,

-~.

..

,

MON.-SAT.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

PRICES GOOD THRU 7-19-75

Luetta Charlene Weaver

August wedding planned
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
A. Weaver of New Haven, are announcing tbe engagement
of their daughter, Luetta Charlene to Michael Lee
Milliron, son of Dorothy and GObert Milliron of Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will take place at 7 p.m.
August 8, at the New Haven United Methodist Church with
the Rev. John C. Campbell officiating . An open reception
will follow at ScoU Memorial Hall at the church. ·
Miss Weaver is a graduate of Wahama High School
and is employed at Holzer Medical Center. Milliron is a
graduate of Gallia Academy High School and is employed
by Carter and Evans of Galllpolls.
Concentrated efforts on the
part of the driving public are
needed to provide Ohioans
with safe transportati on,
according to the Ohio Department of Highway Safety .

Miracle Whip
Salad

Dressi~

qt.
.

)ar

.

Storys"Run
BY GLENNA SHULER
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Leach
spent Monday at Quick, W.
Va. visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Stricker. He is quite
ill with a heart condition .
Mrs. Stricker is a sister of
Mr. Leach.
Leo, Maxine and Glenna
Rice of Wayne , W. Va., Jim
and Elsie Folmer of Che_sU:r,
David, Betty and Billy Ross
of Zuspan Hollow s pen t
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs .
Joe Edwards, Janet and
Joey.
Mr':"'and Mrs. Junior White
and Mrs . Muriel Spires of
Kyger called on Mr. a nd Mrs .
Denny Spires and family a
day recently .
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas
Halfhill, Connie, John and
Jamie visited Mrs. Halfhill's
brother, Jim Walters, near
Dallas, Texas recently.
Robert Conkle is home
from Holzer Medical Center
and improving nicely from a
recent heart a ttac k.
Mr . and Mrs. Eddie
Carruthers spent Friday and
Saturday with Mr . and Mrs .
Eddie Carruthers, Jr. and
Matt at Mansfield.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Marlin Rife during th e
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.

I

The Fabric Shop

-~
·"':" "

IT COSTS NO

FOR THE BEST

FRIGI.DAIRE·

17.0 ca. ft. of IC)OO/o ft wt Ps oof elctancc.
Rcadj for autOmadc Ice when ljOII IN.
ft ou• ft ltlda're.

Wilson's Evaporated

MILK.-•••••••..•••••

tall

cans

$469

Pillill l .. lla.lt l'lli¥1¥11~DDMIIIIIMIIlDh•llloneiCk•II.M.ota L

The most unique

theatric al experience
of the decade.

by John Mic h ae l T ebe lak
and Stephen Schwartz ..

Popular songs abound: uoay by Day, "
Jt 's' All For the [Jest,'' 1 ' T urn Back, 0 Man,,'
and "Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord. , ..

11

8:30pm- July 16 - 20;' ·July 23-27

Air-conditioned Forum The8ter

Ticket OHi ce
(6 t4) 594- 50 10

2 to 5 Pm Mon . ·;1nd Tu es .
2 to 9 p m Wed. rhrou.;:h S un . '
.

17 SoUth Colle ~t e St.
P. 0, Box 303
Ath C'OS, 0, 4)70 1

.

Get

••
I

From Frigidaire, here's an
Environment Maker Room
Air Conditioner that cools
automatically. The big
• 15,000 BTUs / hr. • cooling
capacity of this room air
conditioner handles hot
days and a warm room .
Provides set~it-and-'orget­
it Comfort Power by automatically controliing compressor and fan speed as
room temperature
changes. A great addition
to your home environment.
•Certified bY. AHAW , wtui~ nperatif19
on 230 YOitl; 14 ,500 S . VI Ih, , Q
208 vOlt&amp; .

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BAKER FURNITURE
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I

•

CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S Club
monthly lun c heon , 12 : IS
p.m., at the Holiday Inn In
Kanauga. Heritage Day is the
theme . Wear old-fashioned
dresses. Special feature will
be· "Antiquing." Speaker will
be Esther Bechtle. Call 44G47!3 for reservations. Babysitting provided,

PM

10·A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

bouquet of pink roses and
whit., carnations.
Lor i Wiseman, s ister of the
bride, was her only attendant. She wore an off-whill!
dress trimmed in pink with a
LAF A VETTE Shrine 44
matching picture hat. She
will
meet at 8 p.m.
car ried a bouquet of pink
car nations.
J ohn Triplett of Warfield,
brother of the groom, served
as best man. Tom Wiseman , Mrs. ~nny Spires a day
Traffic accidents resulting
,
brother of the bride, and John recently.
ln deaths, injuries and
Mr . and Mrs. Junior Searls, property destruction continue
Small, cousin of the groom,
Dayton,
Mrs. Franklin Wray
served as ushers.
as a major problem in Ohio.
A reception honoring the of Baltimore, Ohio, Mrs . We can no longer delegate the
couple was held at the Rosa Searls, Middleport, Mr. responsibility of safety to owand Mrs. Hershel! Gilkey, Rt. enforcement agencies alone .
Holiday Inn in Morehead.
Miss Anne Wiseman, sister I Cheshire, and Mrs. Joan
of the bride, presided at the Fife, Timmy and Melissa, Rt.
7, called on Mr. and Mrs .
guest book.
A s howe r honoring Melanie Paul Searls a day recenUy.
Mrs. Marie Spires and
was held May 12 at the home
children
called on Mrs.
of Mrs. Earl Durham. Mrs.
Neil Sanders a nd Mrs . Keith Florence Caldwell a day
Thomas served as co- recently. Also there were Mr. ,.
and Mrs. Curtis Sizemore,
hostesses.
Mr
. and Mrs. Harley Taylor
The Durham home was
decorated beautifully in the and Uzzle.
Mrs. Marjorie Wigal and
bridal m otif. The table
grandson, Kyle Simpson of
carried out Melanie 's color
Mrs. Ross
scheme of pink and white. Middleport,
Miss Becky Durham, Miss Shuler, Rt . 1 Langsville and
Lori Wiseman and Miss Anne Steven, Mrs. Debbie Lambert
Wiseman served refresh- and Trudy, Rt. 1 Langsville,
ments from the beautifully called on Mr .. and Mrs. Alex
ltl!' -....
. ~
'
Shuler recenUy.
appoin U.d table.
.:&gt;.
Keith Bradbury,
Bill
'i¥~' fl ip a panel: ~ew ln.thf-toun&lt;l !
Cochran of Colwnbus and
lkd~ lve ~~ fulurt ,
Mrs . Malinda BradbiD'y spent
bu u onfi!lltll l u ep bu i\Gnhokr,
pulh.Ounon bobbin ,other ldvancu.
4th of July at Ripley, W. Va.
Urryinl tue or ublnel ulra.
Dale Mulford called on
Hurley Rife and children of Robert Conkle on WedWellston, Mr . and Mrs . nesday.
Dallas Rife of Wellston, Mr.
Mrs . Phena Stanley of
and Mrs. Glenn Young and Pomeroy spent Sunday with
Michelle, Rt. I Gallipolis.
Mrs. Malinda Bradbury.
Rev. and Mrs . Raymond Mrs. Leslie Hawley of
......
Fife spent a day recently with Middleport .spent Wednesday
Mr . and Mrs. John Veith .
with Mrs. BradbtD'y.
Don, Roseann and Melanie
Beecher of Charleston, Pearl,
Becky and Linda Edwards of
~ORE
ChesU.r spent a day recently
with Mr. and Mrs . Joe Edwards, Janet and Joey.
Mrs. Ruth Lambert, Rt. 1
Pomeroy, s pent a day
recently with Mrs . Joann
Conkle.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Fife, Jr., Turkey RWI , Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe E. Fife of
Cheshire spetit Sunday with
Rev. and Mrs. Raymond Fife.
Teakwood trim and distinctive
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires
smoked onyx accents are elegant
and Denise, Julie and
hints of convenience inside.
Stephen, called on Mr . and
Top-freezer has 4.75 cu . ft . with
Mrs. Calvin Caldwell and
separate ice storage and a shell.
Johnny a day recently at
Automatic Ice Maker, with
Gallipolis. Ricky and Donald
exclusive Cube Level Control ,
Martin were there .
can be added-now or later
Little Stephen Spires was
{extra . charge). Storage includes
one year old July 3~
twi n Vegetable Hydrators. Meat
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
Tender, door compartments.
called on Mr. and Mrs . Alva
Rife, Rt. I , Middleport, a day
·recently.
Doc Caldwell; Zuspan
Hdllow, called on Mr . and

20%

JACKETS

~·

Mrs. Michael Triplett

DRESS SHIRTS

Several Colors and

lo Bet "Tecwn'Seh /' an out~

'3.99·

·a AM-10

nJESDAY
FRIENDSHIP
GARDEN
• Club will meet at the home of
Ludena Stollings at 10:30
a .m. Janet Bolin will
demonstrate.
RANK WORK at Knights of
Pythias Lodge, 8 p.m .

$698

PLATFORMS

the

16.00

STORE HOURS

MONDAY
FREE CLOTIIING Day, 10 to
2 at the Morgan Center Home
Mission on the Eno-Vinton
Road.

jeffrey Walker is christened

Harvest Ball
planned

u·

SUNDAY
WAY MINISTRY ChrisUan
Fellowship. 81J.m. at the City
Park. All ages welcome.
Songs,
teaching
and
· fellowship. Teaching will be
"All
Giving
equals
.Receiving."

MIDDLEPORT, 0Ht0.

..

GREER
' 160Z
.APPLESAUCE ••~~!~ •..

'f"

FOR

'",.,
,)

"

":..
''

'

i'

I

�/,

I

.

,.

·,

I I
I'

'

Lafayette Mall·-·
officially open
I

•

A GAZEBO IS one of the features in Bernadine's in the Lafayette Mall. The replica
gazebo is a beautif)ll addition to the women's apparel store.

BY SARAH CARSEY
GALLIPOLIS
The
Lafayette Mall, an unusual
idea in downtown shopping,
was officially opened this
weekend at 300 Second Ave .
The mall, formerly the
Lafayette Hotel, contains six
shops. Hoyt V. Mullins ,
owner, conceived the idea as
part of his dream to in·
corporate new business into
the tri-county marketing
area . Through attracting
different
businesses,
"projects like this will be the
lifesaver of downtown areas
like Gallipolis," said Mullins.
Mullins, a native of southwestern Virginia, first came
to Gallipolis in 1959. He said
he and his wife were attracted to tile beauty of the
area.
The mall occupies · the
building or the former
·Lafayette Hotel, built in 1927.
The hotel was empty seven
years before Mullins purchased it in April, 1973. The

the use of !-beams, concrete
walls and fire walls, floor
base and roof base.
In addition to three floors,
the building has· a full and
completely dry basement. All
stores on the street level are
leased and remodeling was
done
according
to
specifications of the store
owners. The second phl!se of
development includes the
basement and eventually, the
second. and third floors .
The interior of the mall is
designed in an "Old Worltl
Decor ." Window display
cases are featured inside .
Two of the cases exhibit
historical material fr om
Gallipolis . The others will be
used for display by the shops.
Stores operating in the mali
are The Bastille, Ber·
nadine's, My Sister's Closet,
National Fireplace and The
Alcove. The Linen Cupboard,
a novelty shop specializing in
bathroom accessories, was
opened this weekend.

\

I

Miss Turner wed
in May ceremony

Kyger

linen Cupboard offers everything ,in bathroom decor

,/

Ill

II
·111

r

SHELVES ARE UNIQUE- Mary Shinn looks at the
shelves located in The Linen Cupboard. The unusual
shelves are made from ladders. The Linen Cupboard held
its grand opening in the Lafayette Mall this weekend.
Sisson, at Marion on July 9.
The
Bradbury-Jenkins
family reunion was held on
June 29 at the Kyger Lodge
Hall. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. John Bradbury and
Sandra, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Betz and children, Bobbie
and Nathan , Mr . and Mrs.
Bruce Stout and Mark, Annabelle Ball, Mrs . Jim
Bradbury and children, J .D.,
Michael and Beth Ann, Mr .
and Mrs. Dale! Sisson, Mr .
and Mrs . Paul Schuler, Mr .
and Mrs. Wade Rupe, Mrs.
Malinda Bradbury, Keith
Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Kennedy, Mrs . Louise .Roush,
Ortha Roush, Mrs. Darlene

Price and children, Donnie,
Cindy, Mark and Timmy;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Price and
children, Becky and Frankie,
Mrs. Lucille Mulford, Bob
Mulford, Mrs. Martha
Brunson and Greg, Mr. and
Mrs . Bob Holland and
children, Becky and Michael,
Mr . and Mrs. Wendell"
Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Bradbury, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Bradbury and
grandchildren, Stevie and
Wendy, Comer Bradbury ,
Mrs . Pamela Shaw and
Kevin, Michael Tate, Mike
Bareswilt, Barbara Hornick,
Mary Ann Miles, Rose
Higginbottom, Kathy O'Dell
and Joanna Rhodes. Clyde
Bradbury offered grace and
cards were signed and sent to
Wymond ' Bradbury and
Galen Mulford, who were
unable to attend. Mrs. Clyde
Bradbury showed films of
past reunions.

PAY
YOUR .
TELEPHONE

BILLS
AT
DUnON'S

DUTTON .
Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Drug Store"

992-3106
M i d~_~o~t._ Q.

SUMMER ClEARANCE
ALL 1975 MODELS

OLD WORLD DECX&gt;R FEATURED - The interior of the Lafayette Mall has been
decorated to resemble an Old World decor. Pictured above is the inside of the mall. The mall
held its grand opening tbis weekend.

MEN'S
LEATHER
WORK BOOTS
19th
$
.
,
6 BOOT
'

!

'hiiMMILY PL«1 TO SAVi

P~ICES GOOD THRU

SAT., JULY

l~THER . UPPERS .
REINFORCED STITCHING

.

•

SOLES RESIST MOST FORMS OF OIL
AND GREASE

8" BOOT$

••

c.

THE ALCOVE, pictured above, is one of the stores located in the Lafayette Mall. The
Alcove carries books and record albums.

OUR GREAT
SUMMER CLEARANCE

00

REG.

'16.95

"1Vk.Jscl9' From Homelite

CONTINUES THROUGH JULY

00

• 3 blg , powerful machines to choose from (16.1 3 and 10 H.P).

BARGAINS ON SALE

REG.

~ERQIANDISE BY NAME

18.97.

BRAND MANlJFACfURERS FOR
BOTH MEN AND WOMEN.

1

BROWN
-· ............ ...

• •Anti-sc alp mowers that attach to the fro nt axle so they follow the contoLJrs
of your lawn .
a 42" and 48" triple rotary mower deckS lor smooth , last 'Cutting .
• Hydrostatic, shu1tle and all gear transmiss ions.
• Front &amp; Rear tractor r1rl'o'en P.T.O.' s.
• Over 30 easy·to-lit i ..~cflments to handle Blmost every job. Like snow
removal, rota tilling, lawn revitalizing, lawn rolling .. tqr year-round

yard care.
•

Safety ign ition i nterlock and mower chute deflec lor. reduce danger ol

accidental injury and damage.

L~DEN .

SIZES TO 12

IPMENT
'

·RIDENOUR SUPPLY . . .
QIESJER, 01110
1

'

I '

.

''

, I. •'... . . . ' .

I•

'
. '.

,,

officiated at the double ring
ceremony. Marita Perry,
Chillicothe, provided organ
music, and Cole Duffy,
Athens, was the soloist.
The altar was decorated
with
arrangements
of
gladiolus, daisy pompons,
and spider mums.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a fulllength gown of white peau de
soie featuring a matching v.ell
held by a camelot headpiece
with pearl trim. She carried a
colonial bouquet of white
carnations, white daisy
pompons, violets and baby's
breath.
Mrs .
Mary
Cooper,
Bluefield , W. Va . , was
matron of honor, and wore a
full-length gown of lavender
linen-sateen with a matching
picture hat . She carried a
colonial bouquet of lavender
daisy pompons, white carnations , and baby's breath.
Junior bridesmaid was
Miss Robin Duff, Columbus,
niece of the bride . She wore
a full-length gown of pale
BETH ROCCHI
green summer knit and
carried a colonial bouquet of
. white daisy pompons, white
carnations, and baby's
breath.
Miss Roni Duff, Columbus, also a niece of the bride
served as flower girl in a full·
length gown of Holly-Hobby
GALLIPOLIS . Beth design or pale yellow
Marie Rocchi, Gallipolis, flowered dotted swiss.
celebrated her first birthday
All gowns were made by
June 22. Beth is the daughter Mrs. Osa Duff, Columbus,
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert sister of the bride .
Rocchi. A cookout, fojlowed
Robert Cooper, Bluefield,
by cake and ice crealfl, was W. Va., was best man and
held in honor of her birthday. ushers were Stuart Hake, and
Helping Beth celebrate were Doug DeMar, Athens. Lance
her grandparents Mr. and Turner,
Harrisonville,
Mrs. Rocchi and Mrs. Stover, nephew of the bride, was
her cousins Sandy, Debbie ring bearer.
and Billy Patterson, her
The mother of the bride
brothers Bobby and Randy was attired in a full-length
and her sister Carla .
gown of pink flowered chiffon
and knit, with a corsage of
pink carnations.
The mother of the
bridegroorr. wore a . fullVISITED FLORIDA
length gown of tW'quoise knit
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Earl
acceQted by a corsage of
(Mayme) Custer, Syracuse, white carnations.
recently retW'ned from a visit
Registering guests were
with Mr . and Mrs. Doy
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ellis,
Higgonbottom, formerly of
Athens.
Meigs County, in Tampa, Fla.
A reception honoring the
After flying to Florida, she newlyweds ~was held in the
I. took in tours of Busch Gar'
church basement following
· dens, Clearwater Beach, and
the ceremony. Hostesses
th;
Gulf
of
Mexico presiding at the bride's table
where she caught two fish. which was decorated with
She was taken to Colum~us arrangements of lavender
International Airport 'by and white daisy pompons and
Jerry A. Powell, Donna Wolfe baby's breath were Mrs.
and Aimie. Mr., J!'"L ..Mrs. Janet Bolin, Rutland;. Mrs.
Austin Wolfe, 'Aimie and S.herrie Might, Pomeroy;
Jerry met her . upon her Mrs. Susie Ellis, Athens;
return.
Mrs. Osa Duff, Columbus ;
and Mrs. Robert Haynes,
Chillicothe.
Ji'LA'l'J REPORTED FINE ·
Following ·a wedding trip to
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) Hocking Hills Lodge, the
- Grand Ole Opry Star couple is residing at 539'h
Lester F1att was reported in Bryan Place, Middleport.
good spirits Friday following
The new Mrs. Chase is a
five hours of open heart graduate of Rutland High
surgery.
.
School. and Is employed at
"He's doing just fine," a Southern Ohio Coal Co. The
hosplial spokesman reported. brtdegroom is a graduate of
"He's in some pain, but he Arlington High School, .
felt well enough to receive Arlington, Mass., and 0hio
some visitors and even joked University. He is also emwith them about bringing him ployed' with Southern Ohio
some vegetables from their Coal Co.
garden."
Flatt, famo,us. for ,his
OFFICER SHOT
rousing duets wtth . banjo
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
player Earl Scruggs, was (UPI) -Police officer Frank
hospitalized (o( surgery Phillips from the Youngstown
Thursday lo bypass · three suburb of Campbell, shot in
blocked coronary arteries. the abdomen Friday night
DQctors. reported that the while
investigating
a
surgery went smoothly and reported variety store
that there were no complica- bW'glary, was ip guarded
Uons.
condiiion' Satilrday .
RUTLAND - Brenda K.
Turner, Rutland, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Turner,
Rutland, became the bride of
Peter G. Chase, Middleport,
in a 2:30 p.m. ceremony at
the Chlllicothe Bible ChW'ch,
Chillicothe, May 17. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L.
Chase, Arlington, Mass.
Pastor Harlan Alspach

.

., ,
'

..

i·

·Birthday
cekbrated

.

31511

ALL

Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Chase

ENTER THROUGH JAIL DOORS- The Bastille, located in the new Lafayette Mall, is
entered through j!ill doors in the mall. Bastille means "jail" in French.

~

Evelyn Whaley, age 51, at
Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy , July 5. She was the
aunt of Mrs . Bales and Mr .
White.
Mr . and Mrs . Marion
Darnell attended the Arts and
Crafts Festival at Ripley, W.
Va., on Sunday.
Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Rupe were Mr . and
Mrs. Dan Boggs of Piqua .
Mr. and Mrs. Ron White
attended the Snyder family
reunion at South Point on
July 5.
Connie, Bonnie and Kenny
Ray Barnett of Gallipolis
spent a few days with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Barnett.
The Church of God of
Prophecy sponsored a hot dog
sale on July 5 at the garage of
Marvin Loveday.
Wednesday evening guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Darnell were Mr. and Mrs.
Fritz Frey and sons of Sierra
Vista, Arizona.
Mrs. MW'iel Spires. and
Junior White visited his
grandmother, Mrs. Ruth
Hendricks, who is a patient at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson,
Mrs. Helen Fife and Dale
Sisson a !tended funeral
services for their aunt, Edna

- PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp; 'MONDAY

I

hotel was f'On~trnrt.pfl with

Mr. and Mrs . Bob Elkins
and family spent the holiday
weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Will Filch and family at
Sidney and attended the lith
annual Elkins family reunion
at Troy on July 6. There were
MY SISTER'S CLOSET is pictured from the second floor of the store. My Sister's Closet
106 present.
is a junior apparel store and is part of the Lafayette Mall.
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Ward, Jeff and Carl, Mrs.
Celcus Reynolds and William
Reynolds and daughter ,'
Karen, returned home on
Tuesday after spending
several days at Rock Lake,
GALLIPOLIS - A unique Linen Cupboard provides
The Linen Cupboard also near Sault Ste. Marie, Onaddition to the Gallipolis everything needed to coor- carries accessories for
tario, Canada, with Mr. and
shopping area was in- dinate a bathroom decor bedrooms, dining rooms and
Mrs. Clarence Easton and
troduced this weekend with including towels, mats and kitchens.
family and Mr. and Mrs.
the ~rand opening of The seat covers, shower curtains,
Th shop is one of six stores Gary Reynolds and family .
Linen Cupboard in the wicker
furniture, located in the Lafayette Mall Jeff remained at Rock Lake
Lafayette Mall, 300: Second monogrammed soap, mat- and may be entered from
and will retUrn later with
Ave.
ched or single waste baskets, Court St. .and from Second Gary Reynolds. While there,
The store offers a complete hampers, toothbrush holders, Ave. Mrs. Reva Mullins
Mrs. Celcus Reynolds,
line of accessories for mirrors and cosmetic trays. manages The Linen CupWilliam Reynolds and Karen
decorating a bathroom. The
board.
and Jeff and Carl Ward at.
tended church services at
Bruce Mines.
Weekend callers of Mr . and
Mrs.
..
Wayne Oxyer and
....,
family were Mr . and Mrs.
Henry Patterson of Swanton,
Mr. and Mrs . John Rhodes of
Bidwell and Mr . and Mrs.
'Howard Harrison and family
of Cheshire .
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bales
and Junior White attended
funeral services for Mrs.

•

SUMMER

llC600J

CLOTHING

PANASONIC

AM-FMDIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO •
e luih·in FM/AM onten.nc:a e .Mut.ic bull~.Mi
0t

e

60-minvte s1.-p hmer w;th outomotk.
ak.
feature 2.&amp;-hour d~itol clod.
Qna.onty ~ t
lighted digital c:la&lt;k fo&lt;t • Sotid-stalt' •n_9inee . •
up

e

e
y! PM

0

·;:;.:::~:- 53
.
=
3"
.,..,..,.

OFF

$44.96

K

ILIII'IJ)

BRUSH

· Heck's Regular l.Qw Price
KY PERCUSSION

01 KENTUCKY

$

29''

HECK'S ·
REG. 137.96

FLINT -LOCK

GUN KITS

LIFE
LIIE

TOOTH

JEWELRY
DEPT.

All kits ore complete with detailed. step by ~tep instructions, for proper assembly . The stoclu ore fully in letted! Holes
drilled and topped ! Steel barrels , hardwood stoclu and case hardened locks . Choose from a selection of reody to
finish wood stock kits.

e 45 CAL. PISTOL KITS

45 CaL, Rifled St~:el. Octagon Borre.( Hardwood Stock,
Engraved, Fully lnletted , 15 V.-" Overall length, Wt . ~
lbs. 9 ou. Qetail Instructions Incl uded.

• MEDIUM

HECK'S REG.
$ 59 ' 95 KIT

e HARD
CIOIC.E

30C

liT

fortable polyfoam head rest
covered with vinyl plastic.

45 Col ., Rifled Drawn Steel. Octogon Sorrel , Hardwood
o . .erolllength,
Wt . 8 lb!. Detoil Instruct ions Included .

Stock , Engro ... ed lock , Fully lnletted , 50"

HECK'S REG.
$89.95 KIT

HECK'S REG.
69' EACH

.,.,

••
38

• 45 CAL. RIFLE KITS

IACH

CfJSMITit ·

CHOICE

$

MECHANICS
CRI:EPER
Rugged- easy lo roiL Com-

$

CHOICE

HECK'S lUG. $8.99

At/TtJ. DEPT.

BICENTENNIAL

THERMOS
a oz.

EVERYNIGHT
SHAMPOO

' ·1

Heck's Reg.

QUART
SIZE

3.88

1

VINYL

p

JOHNSON

5

1----....·

WORM

BEDDING

77c

• HERBAL
• STRAWBERRY

HECK'S REG
$1.22

83C
utH ·

.-~

HKit'SRIG.
$1.491ach

$1.99
S/IIMTS IJBT.

~-T.

FESCO TRASH BAGS
20 GALLON-1 0 COUNT ·

UNION CARBIDE
"D" COMMANDER

FLASHLIGHT
•
.

HECK'S REG.

99 1

SI'MTS
IJPT.

HECK'S RIG.

'

.i

99C

- j

HECK'S RIG. $1.

SPRINT
"NO-BUFF"
CAR WAX

J··~

HICK'S .
RIG.
$2.49

,.,.,

40. QUART WICKER

WASTE

-

199
FESCO PLASTIC
HECK'S

CAKE PlATE &amp; COVER

$1

HECK'S REG.
66
'3.66
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

IIDUSIWAIIE DEPT.

WEN 10 INCH '
'

14".
VARNISHm PAnO

BLOCK BROOM

CHAIN SAW

The best sllling electric chain sow in the world.
Sow weighs just 8 lbs . Instant starts for cutting
trees up to'2 feet in diameter. Double insulated.
10 ins.~ reversible Oregon ~or and 20% more
effic~~ ht micro chisel· chotn. Double en.ded
wren&lt;:h included for bar and clutch ad1~••·
ments .
•

88

$

$166

HECK'S REG.
$57.88

HICK'S RIG. $2.41

IIA/IIJWA/11

a•wAIII. .' r.

10 QT.

GALVANIZED

HANDY PAIL

SJ44

IJPT.

\

.

�/,

I

.

,.

·,

I I
I'

'

Lafayette Mall·-·
officially open
I

•

A GAZEBO IS one of the features in Bernadine's in the Lafayette Mall. The replica
gazebo is a beautif)ll addition to the women's apparel store.

BY SARAH CARSEY
GALLIPOLIS
The
Lafayette Mall, an unusual
idea in downtown shopping,
was officially opened this
weekend at 300 Second Ave .
The mall, formerly the
Lafayette Hotel, contains six
shops. Hoyt V. Mullins ,
owner, conceived the idea as
part of his dream to in·
corporate new business into
the tri-county marketing
area . Through attracting
different
businesses,
"projects like this will be the
lifesaver of downtown areas
like Gallipolis," said Mullins.
Mullins, a native of southwestern Virginia, first came
to Gallipolis in 1959. He said
he and his wife were attracted to tile beauty of the
area.
The mall occupies · the
building or the former
·Lafayette Hotel, built in 1927.
The hotel was empty seven
years before Mullins purchased it in April, 1973. The

the use of !-beams, concrete
walls and fire walls, floor
base and roof base.
In addition to three floors,
the building has· a full and
completely dry basement. All
stores on the street level are
leased and remodeling was
done
according
to
specifications of the store
owners. The second phl!se of
development includes the
basement and eventually, the
second. and third floors .
The interior of the mall is
designed in an "Old Worltl
Decor ." Window display
cases are featured inside .
Two of the cases exhibit
historical material fr om
Gallipolis . The others will be
used for display by the shops.
Stores operating in the mali
are The Bastille, Ber·
nadine's, My Sister's Closet,
National Fireplace and The
Alcove. The Linen Cupboard,
a novelty shop specializing in
bathroom accessories, was
opened this weekend.

\

I

Miss Turner wed
in May ceremony

Kyger

linen Cupboard offers everything ,in bathroom decor

,/

Ill

II
·111

r

SHELVES ARE UNIQUE- Mary Shinn looks at the
shelves located in The Linen Cupboard. The unusual
shelves are made from ladders. The Linen Cupboard held
its grand opening in the Lafayette Mall this weekend.
Sisson, at Marion on July 9.
The
Bradbury-Jenkins
family reunion was held on
June 29 at the Kyger Lodge
Hall. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. John Bradbury and
Sandra, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Betz and children, Bobbie
and Nathan , Mr . and Mrs.
Bruce Stout and Mark, Annabelle Ball, Mrs . Jim
Bradbury and children, J .D.,
Michael and Beth Ann, Mr .
and Mrs. Dale! Sisson, Mr .
and Mrs . Paul Schuler, Mr .
and Mrs. Wade Rupe, Mrs.
Malinda Bradbury, Keith
Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Kennedy, Mrs . Louise .Roush,
Ortha Roush, Mrs. Darlene

Price and children, Donnie,
Cindy, Mark and Timmy;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Price and
children, Becky and Frankie,
Mrs. Lucille Mulford, Bob
Mulford, Mrs. Martha
Brunson and Greg, Mr. and
Mrs . Bob Holland and
children, Becky and Michael,
Mr . and Mrs. Wendell"
Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Bradbury, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Bradbury and
grandchildren, Stevie and
Wendy, Comer Bradbury ,
Mrs . Pamela Shaw and
Kevin, Michael Tate, Mike
Bareswilt, Barbara Hornick,
Mary Ann Miles, Rose
Higginbottom, Kathy O'Dell
and Joanna Rhodes. Clyde
Bradbury offered grace and
cards were signed and sent to
Wymond ' Bradbury and
Galen Mulford, who were
unable to attend. Mrs. Clyde
Bradbury showed films of
past reunions.

PAY
YOUR .
TELEPHONE

BILLS
AT
DUnON'S

DUTTON .
Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Drug Store"

992-3106
M i d~_~o~t._ Q.

SUMMER ClEARANCE
ALL 1975 MODELS

OLD WORLD DECX&gt;R FEATURED - The interior of the Lafayette Mall has been
decorated to resemble an Old World decor. Pictured above is the inside of the mall. The mall
held its grand opening tbis weekend.

MEN'S
LEATHER
WORK BOOTS
19th
$
.
,
6 BOOT
'

!

'hiiMMILY PL«1 TO SAVi

P~ICES GOOD THRU

SAT., JULY

l~THER . UPPERS .
REINFORCED STITCHING

.

•

SOLES RESIST MOST FORMS OF OIL
AND GREASE

8" BOOT$

••

c.

THE ALCOVE, pictured above, is one of the stores located in the Lafayette Mall. The
Alcove carries books and record albums.

OUR GREAT
SUMMER CLEARANCE

00

REG.

'16.95

"1Vk.Jscl9' From Homelite

CONTINUES THROUGH JULY

00

• 3 blg , powerful machines to choose from (16.1 3 and 10 H.P).

BARGAINS ON SALE

REG.

~ERQIANDISE BY NAME

18.97.

BRAND MANlJFACfURERS FOR
BOTH MEN AND WOMEN.

1

BROWN
-· ............ ...

• •Anti-sc alp mowers that attach to the fro nt axle so they follow the contoLJrs
of your lawn .
a 42" and 48" triple rotary mower deckS lor smooth , last 'Cutting .
• Hydrostatic, shu1tle and all gear transmiss ions.
• Front &amp; Rear tractor r1rl'o'en P.T.O.' s.
• Over 30 easy·to-lit i ..~cflments to handle Blmost every job. Like snow
removal, rota tilling, lawn revitalizing, lawn rolling .. tqr year-round

yard care.
•

Safety ign ition i nterlock and mower chute deflec lor. reduce danger ol

accidental injury and damage.

L~DEN .

SIZES TO 12

IPMENT
'

·RIDENOUR SUPPLY . . .
QIESJER, 01110
1

'

I '

.

''

, I. •'... . . . ' .

I•

'
. '.

,,

officiated at the double ring
ceremony. Marita Perry,
Chillicothe, provided organ
music, and Cole Duffy,
Athens, was the soloist.
The altar was decorated
with
arrangements
of
gladiolus, daisy pompons,
and spider mums.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a fulllength gown of white peau de
soie featuring a matching v.ell
held by a camelot headpiece
with pearl trim. She carried a
colonial bouquet of white
carnations, white daisy
pompons, violets and baby's
breath.
Mrs .
Mary
Cooper,
Bluefield , W. Va . , was
matron of honor, and wore a
full-length gown of lavender
linen-sateen with a matching
picture hat . She carried a
colonial bouquet of lavender
daisy pompons, white carnations , and baby's breath.
Junior bridesmaid was
Miss Robin Duff, Columbus,
niece of the bride . She wore
a full-length gown of pale
BETH ROCCHI
green summer knit and
carried a colonial bouquet of
. white daisy pompons, white
carnations, and baby's
breath.
Miss Roni Duff, Columbus, also a niece of the bride
served as flower girl in a full·
length gown of Holly-Hobby
GALLIPOLIS . Beth design or pale yellow
Marie Rocchi, Gallipolis, flowered dotted swiss.
celebrated her first birthday
All gowns were made by
June 22. Beth is the daughter Mrs. Osa Duff, Columbus,
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert sister of the bride .
Rocchi. A cookout, fojlowed
Robert Cooper, Bluefield,
by cake and ice crealfl, was W. Va., was best man and
held in honor of her birthday. ushers were Stuart Hake, and
Helping Beth celebrate were Doug DeMar, Athens. Lance
her grandparents Mr. and Turner,
Harrisonville,
Mrs. Rocchi and Mrs. Stover, nephew of the bride, was
her cousins Sandy, Debbie ring bearer.
and Billy Patterson, her
The mother of the bride
brothers Bobby and Randy was attired in a full-length
and her sister Carla .
gown of pink flowered chiffon
and knit, with a corsage of
pink carnations.
The mother of the
bridegroorr. wore a . fullVISITED FLORIDA
length gown of tW'quoise knit
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Earl
acceQted by a corsage of
(Mayme) Custer, Syracuse, white carnations.
recently retW'ned from a visit
Registering guests were
with Mr . and Mrs. Doy
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ellis,
Higgonbottom, formerly of
Athens.
Meigs County, in Tampa, Fla.
A reception honoring the
After flying to Florida, she newlyweds ~was held in the
I. took in tours of Busch Gar'
church basement following
· dens, Clearwater Beach, and
the ceremony. Hostesses
th;
Gulf
of
Mexico presiding at the bride's table
where she caught two fish. which was decorated with
She was taken to Colum~us arrangements of lavender
International Airport 'by and white daisy pompons and
Jerry A. Powell, Donna Wolfe baby's breath were Mrs.
and Aimie. Mr., J!'"L ..Mrs. Janet Bolin, Rutland;. Mrs.
Austin Wolfe, 'Aimie and S.herrie Might, Pomeroy;
Jerry met her . upon her Mrs. Susie Ellis, Athens;
return.
Mrs. Osa Duff, Columbus ;
and Mrs. Robert Haynes,
Chillicothe.
Ji'LA'l'J REPORTED FINE ·
Following ·a wedding trip to
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) Hocking Hills Lodge, the
- Grand Ole Opry Star couple is residing at 539'h
Lester F1att was reported in Bryan Place, Middleport.
good spirits Friday following
The new Mrs. Chase is a
five hours of open heart graduate of Rutland High
surgery.
.
School. and Is employed at
"He's doing just fine," a Southern Ohio Coal Co. The
hosplial spokesman reported. brtdegroom is a graduate of
"He's in some pain, but he Arlington High School, .
felt well enough to receive Arlington, Mass., and 0hio
some visitors and even joked University. He is also emwith them about bringing him ployed' with Southern Ohio
some vegetables from their Coal Co.
garden."
Flatt, famo,us. for ,his
OFFICER SHOT
rousing duets wtth . banjo
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
player Earl Scruggs, was (UPI) -Police officer Frank
hospitalized (o( surgery Phillips from the Youngstown
Thursday lo bypass · three suburb of Campbell, shot in
blocked coronary arteries. the abdomen Friday night
DQctors. reported that the while
investigating
a
surgery went smoothly and reported variety store
that there were no complica- bW'glary, was ip guarded
Uons.
condiiion' Satilrday .
RUTLAND - Brenda K.
Turner, Rutland, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Turner,
Rutland, became the bride of
Peter G. Chase, Middleport,
in a 2:30 p.m. ceremony at
the Chlllicothe Bible ChW'ch,
Chillicothe, May 17. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L.
Chase, Arlington, Mass.
Pastor Harlan Alspach

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.

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ALL

Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Chase

ENTER THROUGH JAIL DOORS- The Bastille, located in the new Lafayette Mall, is
entered through j!ill doors in the mall. Bastille means "jail" in French.

~

Evelyn Whaley, age 51, at
Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy , July 5. She was the
aunt of Mrs . Bales and Mr .
White.
Mr . and Mrs . Marion
Darnell attended the Arts and
Crafts Festival at Ripley, W.
Va., on Sunday.
Monday callers of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Rupe were Mr . and
Mrs. Dan Boggs of Piqua .
Mr. and Mrs. Ron White
attended the Snyder family
reunion at South Point on
July 5.
Connie, Bonnie and Kenny
Ray Barnett of Gallipolis
spent a few days with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Barnett.
The Church of God of
Prophecy sponsored a hot dog
sale on July 5 at the garage of
Marvin Loveday.
Wednesday evening guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Darnell were Mr. and Mrs.
Fritz Frey and sons of Sierra
Vista, Arizona.
Mrs. MW'iel Spires. and
Junior White visited his
grandmother, Mrs. Ruth
Hendricks, who is a patient at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson,
Mrs. Helen Fife and Dale
Sisson a !tended funeral
services for their aunt, Edna

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Mr. and Mrs . Bob Elkins
and family spent the holiday
weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Will Filch and family at
Sidney and attended the lith
annual Elkins family reunion
at Troy on July 6. There were
MY SISTER'S CLOSET is pictured from the second floor of the store. My Sister's Closet
106 present.
is a junior apparel store and is part of the Lafayette Mall.
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Ward, Jeff and Carl, Mrs.
Celcus Reynolds and William
Reynolds and daughter ,'
Karen, returned home on
Tuesday after spending
several days at Rock Lake,
GALLIPOLIS - A unique Linen Cupboard provides
The Linen Cupboard also near Sault Ste. Marie, Onaddition to the Gallipolis everything needed to coor- carries accessories for
tario, Canada, with Mr. and
shopping area was in- dinate a bathroom decor bedrooms, dining rooms and
Mrs. Clarence Easton and
troduced this weekend with including towels, mats and kitchens.
family and Mr. and Mrs.
the ~rand opening of The seat covers, shower curtains,
Th shop is one of six stores Gary Reynolds and family .
Linen Cupboard in the wicker
furniture, located in the Lafayette Mall Jeff remained at Rock Lake
Lafayette Mall, 300: Second monogrammed soap, mat- and may be entered from
and will retUrn later with
Ave.
ched or single waste baskets, Court St. .and from Second Gary Reynolds. While there,
The store offers a complete hampers, toothbrush holders, Ave. Mrs. Reva Mullins
Mrs. Celcus Reynolds,
line of accessories for mirrors and cosmetic trays. manages The Linen CupWilliam Reynolds and Karen
decorating a bathroom. The
board.
and Jeff and Carl Ward at.
tended church services at
Bruce Mines.
Weekend callers of Mr . and
Mrs.
..
Wayne Oxyer and
....,
family were Mr . and Mrs.
Henry Patterson of Swanton,
Mr. and Mrs . John Rhodes of
Bidwell and Mr . and Mrs.
'Howard Harrison and family
of Cheshire .
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bales
and Junior White attended
funeral services for Mrs.

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By MICHAEL ROSS
BE:IRUT, Lebanon (UPI )
- Palestinian guerrillas who
kidnaped U.S. Anny Col.
Ernest R. Morgan 13 days
earlier freed him unhanned
Saturday, dropping him at
the doorstep or Lebanon 's
premier three hours before
he was due to die.
Morgan, looking tired but
healthy, declared: " It's nice
to be back home."
The kidnapers, who had
threatened to kill Morgan at 2

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him because he had confessed to being a spy and
because the United States
had paid their ransom.
Morgan denied he was a
spy and the U.S. Embassy
denied it paid his ransom.
Morgan told . newsmen he
had been treated well and had
even developed a fondness for
the Arabic food his kidnapers
fed ' him.
"The food was great but
I'm not a spy like they

charged," he said.
The &lt;13-year..old oFFicer
from Petersburg, Va., was
dragged from a taxi in a
Palestinian - controlled suburb or Beirut June 29 during a
stopover on his trip from
Pakistan to Turkey.
Twice his abductors sent
Morgan 's tape recorded remarks to officials and twice
they set deadlines for killing
him unless their demands
were met. The Palestine
Uberation Organization tried

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( UPI) - They are coming in
caravans of campers,
flotillas of boats and swarms
of airt_llanes.
Gift shops are stocked up
with tacky beer mugs, tie
pins, medals, irono()n patclles, key chains, license
. plates, decals, pennants and
booklets.
Area motels are booked up,
even -with a three-night minimum.
Brevard County officials
expect as many as one
million persons to scatter
along 27 miles of beaches to
view the American end of the
Apollo
Soyuz mission,
scheduled for
blastoff
Tuesday.
It will be a last dip in the
well for the local food,
lodging and booze merchants.
Th~re will be no more
American manned
spaceflights until 1979 when
the space shuttle goes into
operation.
"It looks like it's building
up to be something in the
neighborhood of Apollo 11,"
said a spokesman for ·the
Florida Highway Patrol.
While it's hard to get an
actual body count, with the
spectators spread over the
beaches, in boats and on
rooftops, it was estimated the
Apollo 11 moon mission attracted one million spectators
and
350,000
automobiles.
At the NASA news
the girl behind the counter
was still in diapers when

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BylUCHA1tD H. GROWALD passes in the Sinai-seized in
UPI Senior Editor
the 1967 war.
LONDON
(UPI)
At their meeting at Castle
Secretary of State Henry A. Gymnich, outside Bonn ,
Kissinger talked with Israeli Rabin said his ambassador to
Prime Minister Yitzhak the "tlnlted States, Simcha
Rabin Saturday about a Dlnitz, would take word of
possible Israeli-Egyptian cabinet decisions on the
peace
plan
involving peace diplomacy back to
stationing some U.S. troops in Washington.
H the · Israelis agree to
the Sinai desert, a senior U.S.
official aboard Kissinger's proceed--now that they are
plane.sald.
armed
with · " various
KiSsinger and Rabin met clarifications"
supplied
for almost four hours near Rabin by Kissinger-the next
Bonn, We$ German~, and step would be to sound out the
the Israeli .pronounced Egyptians.
himSelf suffiCiently satisfied
Should the Egyptian and
to be able to fly home Israeli positions prove
Saturday night to see If his ligreeable, Kissinger could be
cabinet will approve such an back .in !,he Middle East to
wrap up a new interim setinterim peace plan.
The secretary stopped in tiement as early as next
London briefly for an airport month.
. meeting with British Foreign
The senior U.S. offic1al told
Secretary James . Callaghan newsmen Kissinger would not
before flyinif · back to • go back to the Middle East for
Washington Saturday night. another round of ~uttle diAboard Kissinger's plarie, plomacy unless he 1s certam
the senior U.S. official said of success.
one matter discussed with
Rabin was th'ii use of • KILLED BY POLICE
American technology ·CINCINNA.TJ ('{JPI )
probably inCluding a small Earl C. Fields, 49, suburban
number of men-to ·provide Rossrnoyne , was shot and
an early warning system in' . kill~d by police Friday night,
the Sinal desert between climaxing a two-hour conEgyptian and Israeli forces. frontation with officers from
A slUffipling block in efforts .20 suburban communities;
to reach a . settlement has Authorities said Fields armbeen · Israel's fears abOut eri with a pistol, barricaded
having :proper military alert liirnself in his home when
facilities. Egypt'wants Israel officers attempted to serve a
to withdraw from at least the res training order obtained by
key military. Gidi and Mitla · his wife.
·

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Sputnik first barked Its
chaUenge to Americans, so
her indifference to detente in
space can be forgiven.
"Oh, and here 's a little gift
from our Russian friends,"
she said, handing over a red ,
white and blue badge with the
word "Pres" printed in gold.
"Isn't that nice of them ?"
As a credential, the badge
is as worthless as the tacky
Apollo..SOyuz souvenirs ·being
peddled in beach-side shops
and cafes trying to cash in on
the flight. NASA recognizes
only its own paper badges
which are being issued to
some 2,000 newsmen expected for Tuesday's launch.
The girl behind the counter
wasn't even born on a
swruner day 25 years ago this
month when a "giant rocket"
called Bumper 8, measuring
56 feet tall and six feet in
dlameter, leaped out of the
swamps of Cape Cana vera! to
inaugurate a new era . ·
One of the few newsmen
who covered the launch at tbe
old Long Range Proving
Ground on July 24, 1950, was
inspired to write the next
day :
"The thrill is gone. Cape
Canaveral
has
been
christened. Soon, Brevard
County residents will merely
shrug when they hear that
thunder roar. 'Just another
rocket,' they'll say."
Uttle did he realize that
when men started climbing
aboard, rocket-watching
would become one of
America's favorite spectator
sports.

Kissinger would
offer U. S. arms

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race.
The
guerrillas
had
demanded that rood be
distributed in a Beirut siJUll
wracked by recent fighting
between
Moslem
and
Christian militias and ·the

Oregon lake

"Apollo. and soyuz have linked up- why don't
we? "

Million people
may see launch

YOUR TRADE-IN·--······ 100.00

unsuccessruUy to track down
the kidnapers and persuade
them to free Morgan.
· In the second .tape,
delivered last Thursday, the
colonel, who is black, asked
the United States not . to
abandon him because or his

food giveaway started
Friday.
A statement issued by the
Socialist Revolutionary
Organization- the group that
claimed responsibility for
Morgan's abduction-881d it
released hiril after .the
American government gave
in to Its demands.
The . statement described
Morgan as a spy and said he

' 'was subjected to a .thorough
interrogatiQn about his activities which cover~d
several parts of the world :md
he made a total confession."
Asked what be thought of
the Palestinians after his
eliJ)erlence, Morgan replied":
" I want to know more about
the Palestinian · case. IM I
am not, as they charged, a
spy."

Ford sure
i'unba:JJ ~imts - ~tnfitttl his policy

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By JANE DENISON
WASiflNGTON ( UPI)
The embattled Central Intelligence Agency
has
acknowledged it sends employes to work in other
federal agencies including
the White House but denies
this means it is spying on
government activities. ,
In a rare public statement
issued late Friday, the CIA
specificaUy denied it bad
planted Alexander P. Butterfield in Richard Nixon 's
White House. While Butterfield had special intelligence clearances, the

Church
purge
opened

CIA said, he never worked for
the · agency
"in
any
capacity.~~

The agency said it did
detail employes to other
agencies but said this by no

means meant "penetration"
or " infi1tration/' since the
heads of the agencies knew
about it.
Butterfield - H:R. Haldeman's back-up man in the
Nixon White House who told
the
Senate
Wa.tergate
Committee about the tapes
that led to Nixon's downfall has become the focal !Hlint of
the
latest contro versy
surrounding CIA domestic
activities.
Retired Air Force Col.
Fletcher Prouty touched it off
when he said he had been told
Butterfield was the CIA's
"contact man" at the White
House. Both the White House
and
congressional
investigators said they had no
evidence that was true.
The charge was also denied
by Butterfield 's wife. Butlerfield himself, a former Air
Force colonel who quit under
fire earlier this year as head
of the Federal Aviation

By DAVID E . ANDERSON
UPJ Religion Writer
WASHINGTON (UP!) "The purge has begun," a
delegate to the Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod
convention sighed after
colleagues voted to ·give the
church president authority to
remove from office eight
dissident district presidents
(bishops) .
But the Rev. Sam Roth,
president of Evangelical
Ltilllerans in Missions, the
HINTON , W. Va. (UPI ) organization of moderates
Jerry Kirk, vice president of
branded divisive in the
the Izaak Walton League in
denomination dominated by
West Virginia, says Apconservatives,
holds
palachian Power Co. is trying
President Jacob A.O. Preus
to use '~money and influence"
personaUy responsible for the
to silence opposition to the
move.
controversial Blue Ridge
hydroelectric
project.
"Jack Preus led a purge
Appalachian plans to build
movement in this church for
two
huge dams on the New
five years," he said in an
River, a project that has met
interview. "He can't disclaim
with
heavy protest from
responsibility ..for it now."
conservation
groups, politicaf
Whether the purge conleaders and others who say it
tinues or the division leads to
a final break-up of the 2.8 will damage the river in
Carolina,
West
million
member North
Virginia
and
Virginia.
denomination now waits on
The West Virginia division
two things:
of
the Walton League joined
- how Preus uses the
.
with
two other organizations
authority granted him by the
convention last week to in filing a legal brief to be
remove from office the eight included in North Carolina's
dissident moderate district court efforts to halt the
project.
presidents.
The case is in the U. S.
- what EIJM's response is
Court
of Appeals.
to the convention's deterAppalachian filed a motion
mination that it is schismatic,
asking
that the brief be
that it should close its
disallowed
as part of op"seminary in exile" and
position testimony in the case
return to the fold .
because it was submitted to
Already, the eight district
the court too late.
presidents, in a dire ct
"Appalachian is still trying
chaUenge to Preus' authority, to use their money and in· have vowed to continue to
fluence to suppress the voice
perform the acts - ordination of graduates of the
rebel Seminex - that have
gotten them into trouble.
ELIM will hold its annual
BRUSSELS,
Belgium
general assembly meeting in (UPI) - The leaders of the
August in Chicago to debate nine European Common
its strategy and map a course Market nations come to the
of action following the suinmit next week· without
Anaheim convention.
their usual baggage of
Both moderates and con- grandiose projec~ and longservatives
within
;he range dreams.
·
denomination wracked by
Possibly for that reason,
"dissent over authority and they are approaching it with
Biblical interpretation a lighter. step and a greater
believe a splii could involve air of confidence than any
·"as many as a quarter of the European,summit in the past
church's 6,000 congregations. two year-s~
- 'l'he dispute is. given difThe Brussels meeting next
fering interprel;ltlons by the . Wednesday and Thursday
conservative and mOderate will concern itself strictly
factions and has left many of with short-term practical
tbe rank and file members of problems- the eco nomic
the
church
confused , sit uat inn, 1110netary
bewi.ldered and at times problems, what to say in
dispirited.•
forthcoming talkswith the oil

···,.

CRATER LAKE, Ore.
1UPI) - State !Hllfce and
l\dministration,
remained · forest rangers Saturday
unavailable for comment.
blocked all entrances to
Prouty said the CIA has
spectacular Crater Lake
" thousands" of contacts
National Park, containing
throughout government . A
the nation's deepest lake,
secret 1973 CIA report
because of an outbreak of
revealed that for many years,
epidemic nausea which
employes have been detailed
forced the park's abrupt
to various agencies as the
closure.
need for their expertise
'' There were a Jot of
arises, including "the White
disappointed people here
House and to components
today;• said a ranger who
associated with the office of
turned away 50 cars
th e President ."
himself.
But the CIA said these
Inside the park, the
emplo yes were merely
situation was summed up
loaned out and always with
by a note In the main lodge
the knowledge of superiors in
guest book, saying, "The
the borrowing agencies.
Crat e r Lake crud has
One such · employe apstruck."
parently was a ~ecretary who
worked for fo'nner White
House a ide and Commerce
Secretary-Peter G. Pelerspn
!
while remaining on the CIA
payroll. The Washington Post
said the woman, identified as
Mary M. Wengrzynek, insisted she dido 't tell the
agency of Peterson 's activities.
" I swear to God I didn 't
report back to the CIA," the
. Post quoted her as saying .
By GE06GE J. MARDER

of West Virginians opposed to
the Blue Ridge Project," said
Kirk, a Hinton resident.
" We're flattered by their
action,'' he said. ''Their move
is testimony to the validity of
the points raised in our

brief.-"
He said the Blue Ridge
dams would "ruin New River
for fishing and recreational
activities" and that Appalachian "knows it will and
they know we know it."
Kirk said the brief was filed
later than the deadline set by
the court because "we can't
afford attorneys on a fulltime retainer to guide us
through the legal jungles and
tell us eve ry step to
take ... we're still looking for
donationS to pay for the
brief..."
Kirk said he felt the brief
speaks "for the people of

West Virginia" and "we're
confident the co urt will agree
to hear our plea in spite of
Appalachian's opposition ."
Filing th e brief with the
league were the Coalition of
Save the New River and the
Appalachian Research and
Defense Fund.

Dreams dimmed
producers and . t he Third
World nations.
With this low-key approach, the summit- not to
be confused with the late r :ISnation summit •in Helsinki to
finish the European Security
Conference - is evolving into
the routine, work-a-day affail:
it was intended to be. .
The Common Market,
founded in 1958, went 10 years
without a summit. Then it
held one in 1969 at which
France agreed to let Britain
into the bloc. ·
Encouraged by this success, it held annual summits
in 1972, 1973 ·and 1974. The
first two, in Pans a nd
Copenhagen, are conside red
IContinued on Page 18 )

a " precipitous rise "

in

consumer gasoline costs.
In a reglonaUy televised
news conference, Ford said
he would go along with an
extension of the present price
control law, which expires
Aug. 31, as long aslt gave him
some flexibility. But he made
clear he would view such an
extension as a temporary
expedient.
About 40 ·per cent or
America's domestic oil
production is considered "old
oil ," produced from wells
that were drilled before 1972,
and sells for a controlled
price of $5.25 a barrel.
Removing price controls
would let oll from such wells
be sold at the world market
price, now about $13 a barrel.
Administration plans call
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ for decontrol to take place
One of the Ford ad- over two years . That
ministration's proposals to represents a compromise
cut u .S. oil consumption between the original adco uld hit the American ministration goal of 1mtaxpayer twice.
mediate decontrol and conIt would offer utility gressional pressures for a
companies a tax break worth more gradual program.
at least $600 million a year for
Latest Federal Energy Adbuilding power plants that do ministration . calc~lations
not burn oil _ in effect - show gasoline IS selling for a
boosting federal taxes ·· lfor nallonal average of 57.5 ~nts
everyone else _ and it might a gallon . Some congressw~al
trigger new electric rate energy experts predict
hikes so the tax break could decontrol would push gas
take effect
prices up by about 4 cents a
The ta~ break would gallon, but oil industry ofprovide, in the words of licials have said the increase
Treasury Secretary William could be from 8 to II cents.
Simon, " a cash contribution
by the Federal government
for the construction of additional electric power
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
plants. n
UPI)
- Sitting in the
(
But, Simon told a recent
session of the House Ways shadow of next week's Apolloint ernational
and Means Committee, the Soyuz
contribution would be ef- spaceflight is an unmanned
fective "only if regulatory project that costs four times
authorities and consumers as much - the $1 billion
cooperate in doing their Viking exploration of Mars.
Whil~ some 1,300 engineers
part."
Plainly sta ted , higher and technicians are readying
elec tric rates would be the Apollo spacesh ip for
needed, in part because launch Tuesday, a team of 275
utilities could use the tax is preparing the first of two
break only to offset tax Vikings for flight Aug . 11.
Viking is an automated
liability.
·
laboratory
designed to land
Despite recent record rate
increases, the utility industry gently on the Martian surface
is still in financial trouble. and conduct the first search
Simon said rate increases for extraterrestrial life. It
would insure power com- carries cameras to scan the
panies earn enough to have a surrounding terrain and
tax liability. Otherwise they instruments to analyze the
planet's soil for evidence of
could not use the credit.
In
addition;
state life, to monitor the Martian
regulatory
comm1sswns weather, detect. Marsquakes
would have to allow new plant and carry out other studies .
The first Viking is
investments to become part
or the base on which current scheduled to complete its 50Smillion mile voyage by
electric rates are set. That would mean still swinging into orbit around
higher bills for the electric the red planet next June. If
consumers of today, to help aU goes well, it wiU land near
pay for the power plants of
tomorrow.
Under the administration
proposal, utilities would get a
QUAKE REPORTED
12 per cent permanent investGOLDEN, Colo. (UP I )
ment tax credit for all new The National Earthquake
electric power plants except In f P rm a ti o n Service
those fueled by oil.
Saturday recorded a minor
, Until this year, the utility earthquake north of Ottawa,
investment ·credit was 4 per •, Ont., which was felt as far
cent. The rate temporarily away as extreme nor-th New
went up to 10 per cent this York state . An NE IC
year, for utilities as for other spokesm&lt;!ll said the quake
businesses , in the tax registered 4.6 on the Richter
reduction biU enacted earlier , scale. No injuries or damage
this year.
were r eported .

Double
whammy
on taxes

Power company
tacticSt are hit

'

park closed

By RICHARD E. LERNER
CHICAGO
(UPI )
President Ford said Saturday
he will ask a skeptical
Democratic Congress next
week to wipe out price controls on U.S. crude oil, a move
that could boost retail
gasoline prices between 4 and
II cents a gaUon.
Calling his plan responsible
and well-timed, Ford said it
would reduce reliance on
foreign oll by letting higher
prices stimulate domestic
production - without causing

Ford held his news conference durln_g a three-day
Midwestern swing billed by
the White House as nonpolitical. The trip, Ford's
fll'st since he announced his
candidacy, also featured a .
commencement address at
Chicago State University and
a conference with lllinols
Republican leaders.
In response to questions,
the President also said:
- He does not think this
administration has suffered
any !allures. Its successes, he
said, include a restoration of
" public confidence in the
White House", a slower rate
of inflation, strengthened ties
with NATO, disengagement
in Vietnam and the Mayaguez
incident.
- --- . - He was pleased by news of
the safe release of U.S. Army
Col. Ernest Morgan , abducted 13 days ago in Beirut.
He said "our representative
in Lebanon worked very
closely with the Government
of Lebanon .. . to make Sure
Col. Morgan was returned."
- The GOP convention will
determine whether Vice
President
Nelson
A.
RockefeUer is on the party's
ticket in 1976, "just as they
will decide whether I will be
the candidate in 1976." He
said both he and Rockefeller
will be campaigning for
convention delegates.
- He is not prepared to
discuss broadening Richard
M. Nixon's Watergate pardon
to cover the former
President's recent grand jury
testimony . Ford said the
pardon "was the right
decision at the time and
otherwise I don't . think I
should
speculate
on
something that hasn 't taken
place and may not take
place ."
- He does not know personally of any Central Intelligence Agency agents now
(Continued on Page 18)

Viking also gets ready
the' mouth of a huge canyon
on July 4, 1976 - the n~tion's
200th birthday.
The second Viking is to take
off on a Titan 3C rocket Aug ..
21 and land on Mars Sept. 9,
1976.

West Virginia
site is ideal
says senator
WASIDNGTON (UPI )
Other energy research
projects already · are under
way in West Virginia, so the
Mountain State would he an
"ideal" site for the $1 billion
Coalcon plant, for which Ohio
also is competing, Sen .
Robert c. Brrd, D-W. Va.,
said Saturday.
·
" West Virginia would be
the ideal site for such a
project," Byrd wrote to officials of Coillcon, a consortium planning the energy
research project.
"A number of other energy
researc~
activities are
already being conducted · in
the state, and I would do
everything I could to assure
that the project, if locateq in
·West Virginia, Is fully fund~~&lt;!
on a continuous basis," Byrd
said.
Byrd is chairman' of a
Senate appropriations subcommittee that approved · · •
$233 million in contracts for •
the first phase ol the proj"j!t
"
to produce a clean boiler fuel
and pipeline gas from coal.

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BE:IRUT, Lebanon (UPI )
- Palestinian guerrillas who
kidnaped U.S. Anny Col.
Ernest R. Morgan 13 days
earlier freed him unhanned
Saturday, dropping him at
the doorstep or Lebanon 's
premier three hours before
he was due to die.
Morgan, looking tired but
healthy, declared: " It's nice
to be back home."
The kidnapers, who had
threatened to kill Morgan at 2

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p.m . EDT, said they released .
him because he had confessed to being a spy and
because the United States
had paid their ransom.
Morgan denied he was a
spy and the U.S. Embassy
denied it paid his ransom.
Morgan told . newsmen he
had been treated well and had
even developed a fondness for
the Arabic food his kidnapers
fed ' him.
"The food was great but
I'm not a spy like they

charged," he said.
The &lt;13-year..old oFFicer
from Petersburg, Va., was
dragged from a taxi in a
Palestinian - controlled suburb or Beirut June 29 during a
stopover on his trip from
Pakistan to Turkey.
Twice his abductors sent
Morgan 's tape recorded remarks to officials and twice
they set deadlines for killing
him unless their demands
were met. The Palestine
Uberation Organization tried

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of airt_llanes.
Gift shops are stocked up
with tacky beer mugs, tie
pins, medals, irono()n patclles, key chains, license
. plates, decals, pennants and
booklets.
Area motels are booked up,
even -with a three-night minimum.
Brevard County officials
expect as many as one
million persons to scatter
along 27 miles of beaches to
view the American end of the
Apollo
Soyuz mission,
scheduled for
blastoff
Tuesday.
It will be a last dip in the
well for the local food,
lodging and booze merchants.
Th~re will be no more
American manned
spaceflights until 1979 when
the space shuttle goes into
operation.
"It looks like it's building
up to be something in the
neighborhood of Apollo 11,"
said a spokesman for ·the
Florida Highway Patrol.
While it's hard to get an
actual body count, with the
spectators spread over the
beaches, in boats and on
rooftops, it was estimated the
Apollo 11 moon mission attracted one million spectators
and
350,000
automobiles.
At the NASA news
the girl behind the counter
was still in diapers when

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BylUCHA1tD H. GROWALD passes in the Sinai-seized in
UPI Senior Editor
the 1967 war.
LONDON
(UPI)
At their meeting at Castle
Secretary of State Henry A. Gymnich, outside Bonn ,
Kissinger talked with Israeli Rabin said his ambassador to
Prime Minister Yitzhak the "tlnlted States, Simcha
Rabin Saturday about a Dlnitz, would take word of
possible Israeli-Egyptian cabinet decisions on the
peace
plan
involving peace diplomacy back to
stationing some U.S. troops in Washington.
H the · Israelis agree to
the Sinai desert, a senior U.S.
official aboard Kissinger's proceed--now that they are
plane.sald.
armed
with · " various
KiSsinger and Rabin met clarifications"
supplied
for almost four hours near Rabin by Kissinger-the next
Bonn, We$ German~, and step would be to sound out the
the Israeli .pronounced Egyptians.
himSelf suffiCiently satisfied
Should the Egyptian and
to be able to fly home Israeli positions prove
Saturday night to see If his ligreeable, Kissinger could be
cabinet will approve such an back .in !,he Middle East to
wrap up a new interim setinterim peace plan.
The secretary stopped in tiement as early as next
London briefly for an airport month.
. meeting with British Foreign
The senior U.S. offic1al told
Secretary James . Callaghan newsmen Kissinger would not
before flyinif · back to • go back to the Middle East for
Washington Saturday night. another round of ~uttle diAboard Kissinger's plarie, plomacy unless he 1s certam
the senior U.S. official said of success.
one matter discussed with
Rabin was th'ii use of • KILLED BY POLICE
American technology ·CINCINNA.TJ ('{JPI )
probably inCluding a small Earl C. Fields, 49, suburban
number of men-to ·provide Rossrnoyne , was shot and
an early warning system in' . kill~d by police Friday night,
the Sinal desert between climaxing a two-hour conEgyptian and Israeli forces. frontation with officers from
A slUffipling block in efforts .20 suburban communities;
to reach a . settlement has Authorities said Fields armbeen · Israel's fears abOut eri with a pistol, barricaded
having :proper military alert liirnself in his home when
facilities. Egypt'wants Israel officers attempted to serve a
to withdraw from at least the res training order obtained by
key military. Gidi and Mitla · his wife.
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Sputnik first barked Its
chaUenge to Americans, so
her indifference to detente in
space can be forgiven.
"Oh, and here 's a little gift
from our Russian friends,"
she said, handing over a red ,
white and blue badge with the
word "Pres" printed in gold.
"Isn't that nice of them ?"
As a credential, the badge
is as worthless as the tacky
Apollo..SOyuz souvenirs ·being
peddled in beach-side shops
and cafes trying to cash in on
the flight. NASA recognizes
only its own paper badges
which are being issued to
some 2,000 newsmen expected for Tuesday's launch.
The girl behind the counter
wasn't even born on a
swruner day 25 years ago this
month when a "giant rocket"
called Bumper 8, measuring
56 feet tall and six feet in
dlameter, leaped out of the
swamps of Cape Cana vera! to
inaugurate a new era . ·
One of the few newsmen
who covered the launch at tbe
old Long Range Proving
Ground on July 24, 1950, was
inspired to write the next
day :
"The thrill is gone. Cape
Canaveral
has
been
christened. Soon, Brevard
County residents will merely
shrug when they hear that
thunder roar. 'Just another
rocket,' they'll say."
Uttle did he realize that
when men started climbing
aboard, rocket-watching
would become one of
America's favorite spectator
sports.

Kissinger would
offer U. S. arms

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race.
The
guerrillas
had
demanded that rood be
distributed in a Beirut siJUll
wracked by recent fighting
between
Moslem
and
Christian militias and ·the

Oregon lake

"Apollo. and soyuz have linked up- why don't
we? "

Million people
may see launch

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unsuccessruUy to track down
the kidnapers and persuade
them to free Morgan.
· In the second .tape,
delivered last Thursday, the
colonel, who is black, asked
the United States not . to
abandon him because or his

food giveaway started
Friday.
A statement issued by the
Socialist Revolutionary
Organization- the group that
claimed responsibility for
Morgan's abduction-881d it
released hiril after .the
American government gave
in to Its demands.
The . statement described
Morgan as a spy and said he

' 'was subjected to a .thorough
interrogatiQn about his activities which cover~d
several parts of the world :md
he made a total confession."
Asked what be thought of
the Palestinians after his
eliJ)erlence, Morgan replied":
" I want to know more about
the Palestinian · case. IM I
am not, as they charged, a
spy."

Ford sure
i'unba:JJ ~imts - ~tnfitttl his policy

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By JANE DENISON
WASiflNGTON ( UPI)
The embattled Central Intelligence Agency
has
acknowledged it sends employes to work in other
federal agencies including
the White House but denies
this means it is spying on
government activities. ,
In a rare public statement
issued late Friday, the CIA
specificaUy denied it bad
planted Alexander P. Butterfield in Richard Nixon 's
White House. While Butterfield had special intelligence clearances, the

Church
purge
opened

CIA said, he never worked for
the · agency
"in
any
capacity.~~

The agency said it did
detail employes to other
agencies but said this by no

means meant "penetration"
or " infi1tration/' since the
heads of the agencies knew
about it.
Butterfield - H:R. Haldeman's back-up man in the
Nixon White House who told
the
Senate
Wa.tergate
Committee about the tapes
that led to Nixon's downfall has become the focal !Hlint of
the
latest contro versy
surrounding CIA domestic
activities.
Retired Air Force Col.
Fletcher Prouty touched it off
when he said he had been told
Butterfield was the CIA's
"contact man" at the White
House. Both the White House
and
congressional
investigators said they had no
evidence that was true.
The charge was also denied
by Butterfield 's wife. Butlerfield himself, a former Air
Force colonel who quit under
fire earlier this year as head
of the Federal Aviation

By DAVID E . ANDERSON
UPJ Religion Writer
WASHINGTON (UP!) "The purge has begun," a
delegate to the Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod
convention sighed after
colleagues voted to ·give the
church president authority to
remove from office eight
dissident district presidents
(bishops) .
But the Rev. Sam Roth,
president of Evangelical
Ltilllerans in Missions, the
HINTON , W. Va. (UPI ) organization of moderates
Jerry Kirk, vice president of
branded divisive in the
the Izaak Walton League in
denomination dominated by
West Virginia, says Apconservatives,
holds
palachian Power Co. is trying
President Jacob A.O. Preus
to use '~money and influence"
personaUy responsible for the
to silence opposition to the
move.
controversial Blue Ridge
hydroelectric
project.
"Jack Preus led a purge
Appalachian plans to build
movement in this church for
two
huge dams on the New
five years," he said in an
River, a project that has met
interview. "He can't disclaim
with
heavy protest from
responsibility ..for it now."
conservation
groups, politicaf
Whether the purge conleaders and others who say it
tinues or the division leads to
a final break-up of the 2.8 will damage the river in
Carolina,
West
million
member North
Virginia
and
Virginia.
denomination now waits on
The West Virginia division
two things:
of
the Walton League joined
- how Preus uses the
.
with
two other organizations
authority granted him by the
convention last week to in filing a legal brief to be
remove from office the eight included in North Carolina's
dissident moderate district court efforts to halt the
project.
presidents.
The case is in the U. S.
- what EIJM's response is
Court
of Appeals.
to the convention's deterAppalachian filed a motion
mination that it is schismatic,
asking
that the brief be
that it should close its
disallowed
as part of op"seminary in exile" and
position testimony in the case
return to the fold .
because it was submitted to
Already, the eight district
the court too late.
presidents, in a dire ct
"Appalachian is still trying
chaUenge to Preus' authority, to use their money and in· have vowed to continue to
fluence to suppress the voice
perform the acts - ordination of graduates of the
rebel Seminex - that have
gotten them into trouble.
ELIM will hold its annual
BRUSSELS,
Belgium
general assembly meeting in (UPI) - The leaders of the
August in Chicago to debate nine European Common
its strategy and map a course Market nations come to the
of action following the suinmit next week· without
Anaheim convention.
their usual baggage of
Both moderates and con- grandiose projec~ and longservatives
within
;he range dreams.
·
denomination wracked by
Possibly for that reason,
"dissent over authority and they are approaching it with
Biblical interpretation a lighter. step and a greater
believe a splii could involve air of confidence than any
·"as many as a quarter of the European,summit in the past
church's 6,000 congregations. two year-s~
- 'l'he dispute is. given difThe Brussels meeting next
fering interprel;ltlons by the . Wednesday and Thursday
conservative and mOderate will concern itself strictly
factions and has left many of with short-term practical
tbe rank and file members of problems- the eco nomic
the
church
confused , sit uat inn, 1110netary
bewi.ldered and at times problems, what to say in
dispirited.•
forthcoming talkswith the oil

···,.

CRATER LAKE, Ore.
1UPI) - State !Hllfce and
l\dministration,
remained · forest rangers Saturday
unavailable for comment.
blocked all entrances to
Prouty said the CIA has
spectacular Crater Lake
" thousands" of contacts
National Park, containing
throughout government . A
the nation's deepest lake,
secret 1973 CIA report
because of an outbreak of
revealed that for many years,
epidemic nausea which
employes have been detailed
forced the park's abrupt
to various agencies as the
closure.
need for their expertise
'' There were a Jot of
arises, including "the White
disappointed people here
House and to components
today;• said a ranger who
associated with the office of
turned away 50 cars
th e President ."
himself.
But the CIA said these
Inside the park, the
emplo yes were merely
situation was summed up
loaned out and always with
by a note In the main lodge
the knowledge of superiors in
guest book, saying, "The
the borrowing agencies.
Crat e r Lake crud has
One such · employe apstruck."
parently was a ~ecretary who
worked for fo'nner White
House a ide and Commerce
Secretary-Peter G. Pelerspn
!
while remaining on the CIA
payroll. The Washington Post
said the woman, identified as
Mary M. Wengrzynek, insisted she dido 't tell the
agency of Peterson 's activities.
" I swear to God I didn 't
report back to the CIA," the
. Post quoted her as saying .
By GE06GE J. MARDER

of West Virginians opposed to
the Blue Ridge Project," said
Kirk, a Hinton resident.
" We're flattered by their
action,'' he said. ''Their move
is testimony to the validity of
the points raised in our

brief.-"
He said the Blue Ridge
dams would "ruin New River
for fishing and recreational
activities" and that Appalachian "knows it will and
they know we know it."
Kirk said the brief was filed
later than the deadline set by
the court because "we can't
afford attorneys on a fulltime retainer to guide us
through the legal jungles and
tell us eve ry step to
take ... we're still looking for
donationS to pay for the
brief..."
Kirk said he felt the brief
speaks "for the people of

West Virginia" and "we're
confident the co urt will agree
to hear our plea in spite of
Appalachian's opposition ."
Filing th e brief with the
league were the Coalition of
Save the New River and the
Appalachian Research and
Defense Fund.

Dreams dimmed
producers and . t he Third
World nations.
With this low-key approach, the summit- not to
be confused with the late r :ISnation summit •in Helsinki to
finish the European Security
Conference - is evolving into
the routine, work-a-day affail:
it was intended to be. .
The Common Market,
founded in 1958, went 10 years
without a summit. Then it
held one in 1969 at which
France agreed to let Britain
into the bloc. ·
Encouraged by this success, it held annual summits
in 1972, 1973 ·and 1974. The
first two, in Pans a nd
Copenhagen, are conside red
IContinued on Page 18 )

a " precipitous rise "

in

consumer gasoline costs.
In a reglonaUy televised
news conference, Ford said
he would go along with an
extension of the present price
control law, which expires
Aug. 31, as long aslt gave him
some flexibility. But he made
clear he would view such an
extension as a temporary
expedient.
About 40 ·per cent or
America's domestic oil
production is considered "old
oil ," produced from wells
that were drilled before 1972,
and sells for a controlled
price of $5.25 a barrel.
Removing price controls
would let oll from such wells
be sold at the world market
price, now about $13 a barrel.
Administration plans call
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ for decontrol to take place
One of the Ford ad- over two years . That
ministration's proposals to represents a compromise
cut u .S. oil consumption between the original adco uld hit the American ministration goal of 1mtaxpayer twice.
mediate decontrol and conIt would offer utility gressional pressures for a
companies a tax break worth more gradual program.
at least $600 million a year for
Latest Federal Energy Adbuilding power plants that do ministration . calc~lations
not burn oil _ in effect - show gasoline IS selling for a
boosting federal taxes ·· lfor nallonal average of 57.5 ~nts
everyone else _ and it might a gallon . Some congressw~al
trigger new electric rate energy experts predict
hikes so the tax break could decontrol would push gas
take effect
prices up by about 4 cents a
The ta~ break would gallon, but oil industry ofprovide, in the words of licials have said the increase
Treasury Secretary William could be from 8 to II cents.
Simon, " a cash contribution
by the Federal government
for the construction of additional electric power
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
plants. n
UPI)
- Sitting in the
(
But, Simon told a recent
session of the House Ways shadow of next week's Apolloint ernational
and Means Committee, the Soyuz
contribution would be ef- spaceflight is an unmanned
fective "only if regulatory project that costs four times
authorities and consumers as much - the $1 billion
cooperate in doing their Viking exploration of Mars.
Whil~ some 1,300 engineers
part."
Plainly sta ted , higher and technicians are readying
elec tric rates would be the Apollo spacesh ip for
needed, in part because launch Tuesday, a team of 275
utilities could use the tax is preparing the first of two
break only to offset tax Vikings for flight Aug . 11.
Viking is an automated
liability.
·
laboratory
designed to land
Despite recent record rate
increases, the utility industry gently on the Martian surface
is still in financial trouble. and conduct the first search
Simon said rate increases for extraterrestrial life. It
would insure power com- carries cameras to scan the
panies earn enough to have a surrounding terrain and
tax liability. Otherwise they instruments to analyze the
planet's soil for evidence of
could not use the credit.
In
addition;
state life, to monitor the Martian
regulatory
comm1sswns weather, detect. Marsquakes
would have to allow new plant and carry out other studies .
The first Viking is
investments to become part
or the base on which current scheduled to complete its 50Smillion mile voyage by
electric rates are set. That would mean still swinging into orbit around
higher bills for the electric the red planet next June. If
consumers of today, to help aU goes well, it wiU land near
pay for the power plants of
tomorrow.
Under the administration
proposal, utilities would get a
QUAKE REPORTED
12 per cent permanent investGOLDEN, Colo. (UP I )
ment tax credit for all new The National Earthquake
electric power plants except In f P rm a ti o n Service
those fueled by oil.
Saturday recorded a minor
, Until this year, the utility earthquake north of Ottawa,
investment ·credit was 4 per •, Ont., which was felt as far
cent. The rate temporarily away as extreme nor-th New
went up to 10 per cent this York state . An NE IC
year, for utilities as for other spokesm&lt;!ll said the quake
businesses , in the tax registered 4.6 on the Richter
reduction biU enacted earlier , scale. No injuries or damage
this year.
were r eported .

Double
whammy
on taxes

Power company
tacticSt are hit

'

park closed

By RICHARD E. LERNER
CHICAGO
(UPI )
President Ford said Saturday
he will ask a skeptical
Democratic Congress next
week to wipe out price controls on U.S. crude oil, a move
that could boost retail
gasoline prices between 4 and
II cents a gaUon.
Calling his plan responsible
and well-timed, Ford said it
would reduce reliance on
foreign oll by letting higher
prices stimulate domestic
production - without causing

Ford held his news conference durln_g a three-day
Midwestern swing billed by
the White House as nonpolitical. The trip, Ford's
fll'st since he announced his
candidacy, also featured a .
commencement address at
Chicago State University and
a conference with lllinols
Republican leaders.
In response to questions,
the President also said:
- He does not think this
administration has suffered
any !allures. Its successes, he
said, include a restoration of
" public confidence in the
White House", a slower rate
of inflation, strengthened ties
with NATO, disengagement
in Vietnam and the Mayaguez
incident.
- --- . - He was pleased by news of
the safe release of U.S. Army
Col. Ernest Morgan , abducted 13 days ago in Beirut.
He said "our representative
in Lebanon worked very
closely with the Government
of Lebanon .. . to make Sure
Col. Morgan was returned."
- The GOP convention will
determine whether Vice
President
Nelson
A.
RockefeUer is on the party's
ticket in 1976, "just as they
will decide whether I will be
the candidate in 1976." He
said both he and Rockefeller
will be campaigning for
convention delegates.
- He is not prepared to
discuss broadening Richard
M. Nixon's Watergate pardon
to cover the former
President's recent grand jury
testimony . Ford said the
pardon "was the right
decision at the time and
otherwise I don't . think I
should
speculate
on
something that hasn 't taken
place and may not take
place ."
- He does not know personally of any Central Intelligence Agency agents now
(Continued on Page 18)

Viking also gets ready
the' mouth of a huge canyon
on July 4, 1976 - the n~tion's
200th birthday.
The second Viking is to take
off on a Titan 3C rocket Aug ..
21 and land on Mars Sept. 9,
1976.

West Virginia
site is ideal
says senator
WASIDNGTON (UPI )
Other energy research
projects already · are under
way in West Virginia, so the
Mountain State would he an
"ideal" site for the $1 billion
Coalcon plant, for which Ohio
also is competing, Sen .
Robert c. Brrd, D-W. Va.,
said Saturday.
·
" West Virginia would be
the ideal site for such a
project," Byrd wrote to officials of Coillcon, a consortium planning the energy
research project.
"A number of other energy
researc~
activities are
already being conducted · in
the state, and I would do
everything I could to assure
that the project, if locateq in
·West Virginia, Is fully fund~~&lt;!
on a continuous basis," Byrd
said.
Byrd is chairman' of a
Senate appropriations subcommittee that approved · · •
$233 million in contracts for •
the first phase ol the proj"j!t
"
to produce a clean boiler fuel
and pipeline gas from coal.

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~8- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday,

County .
ACT I
. ~::en£ 1, Grtllipol ic City Park (1890's); ·
" Patriotic.; Song ~nd Dance Nledl~y . "

Judge Bradbury . Odd Mc lnlyre, " M," &amp;

(Continued from page I I
I'

berry, Bruce Scarberry . Jennifer

Company .
Scene 7. Rock Shelter along Raccoon

Creek ( 1797), " Hill s of Kentucky," Daniel
Boone' " Louis Phillippe ," John Burford ;
" Ga llipo l is," Cor . Saflord : " Roarin'
R1ver ," Burford &amp; Shawn ee .

~car ·

berry , Lewis Sc hmidt, Mar y Skaggs. John
Sowers , Nan cy Sparkman , U si Spi r es and
Jenny Trowbridge .

,

~ ORCHESTRA

Scene 3. ThJt N ight ~ Frenc h 500' Gall ipolis .
" Welshen Ring ," Daniel Boone &amp;

Br ant Adams , Chip Arm st rong , Laura
Ar mstrong , J eff H il b~~rt, _!?_rent Ma llo,; ,
Karla Ma ttox, Renee Smi lll , ~r"Red " Su iter .
Lyn n Wagner , Scott Well m an, Ed na
Wh i te ley , Brenda Wilson .
USHERETTES
Ci ndy Roush , Kaye Swisher . Karen
Folden , Ca t hy Twy man . She li a T ucker .
Diane Haltelt . Debbie William s. Ca thy
Green , Lorene Nol an , Lynnita Newberry
an d Robin W i lliam s
PRODUCTION STAFF
Auth or , Lee Ourieux . Execu t ive
Direc tor. Murl H. Rush ; Asst Director .
Catherin e Rush ; Musical Di re cto r,
Kim ball Suiter : Music Ar ra nger s, Br ant
Adams, AI Evan s ; Choreographer . Gi lli an
M oor e ; Assf . Choreogra pher . Beth Jef fe rs : 5 ta ge·· Manager , Ru ss Mi ll er ,
Prog r a m &amp; Design . Mu r l H. Rush . M. E.
Wetherhol t; Costume. Design &amp; War drobe ,
Nora Price ; L 1gh tmg D1rector , M a x
Ell i ott ; Light i n g Techni c ia ns. Paul
Per r oud . James Be nnett, Jon Louden :
Prompte r . Jayne Wiggle sworth ; 5tage
Crew . A I Sca rber ry , Doug Brown , Ma ck
Nic he ls . . Tom Myers , kent Shawver.
Robert Candee Jr .. Mike Wood . " Th urn ·
per " Johnson.
M a keu p , Evelyn Mor row .
Costume Design &amp; Wardrob e. Mrs .
Nora Price. Mr s. June Adams . Mr s John
Lyn ch. Mr s. Cha rl ene Ba tey . tv:-r s Clyde
Ev aos, Mrs . Michelle Mittleman :
Photograp h y, Dr . John W. Buf_ler ._
Cr ed i ts and thanks to : Gall 1pOI1s Ar ea
Cha rvber of Commer ce , Columbu s ?
Southern O hio E le ct r ic , Rio Grande
Coll ege, Bob Evans Farms, E vel y n 's
Salon of Beauty , Raccoon Creek Livery,
Mrs . Pa ul Wagner , Byer &amp; Bowma n Adv.
Agency In c ., Ga l icy House ( Div . Frenc h

I

III

Fr ench 500 .
" Fondest Dreams of You, " Catherine
Cam eron.
" Ma jestic Ohi o. " Cather ine Cameron
and Col. Safford .
Scene 4, Canal Boat Dock , Chillicothe

118441.

" Gwendolyn ," Bareth ( 12 years old).

" Towpath Mul e." Captain Nye and
Canawlers and "Canawers ."
ACT II
.
Sce ne l, Adamsville Mill. Adamsville
( 1850) , "Adamsville M i ll ,'' Gwendolyn and
Bareth ; " Adam s ville M i ll Ballet."
Millcreek Nymphs .
Scene 2 - Adam sv ille Sa l oon (Same
Dayl Adamsv i lle, " Siren of Cen terville ," Sadie ; " Why Shud We ln -

co rpur a te' " R.C.C. Club ' " R.C.C.C.

Quartet ; " Saloon -a -ti cs", Penelope &amp;
Furr ies .
Scene J, F ortificat ion Hill , Gallipolis

Barelh al the Mill ; Episode II , "Come

Back To Tennessee ,:; Tennessee Hill Girl :
" John Morgan's Cavalry ," John Hunt
Morgan &amp; Raiders .
Scene 5, First Annual Rio Grande
Bean Dinner ( 1871) . "When the Roll is
Called Up Yonder," Rev. Haning &amp;
Beaners : " General Grant," Politician ;

" Doodleups, " (Dood le bugs), The
Doodteups ; "Tenti ng Tonight," Beaner
Quintel.
Scene 6, Roxy's Emporium of Novelty,

Colony Ind .). Lalayelle Mall.

Gallipol is 11890), " Foxy Roxy," Les In -

Patrons are J . Tim Evans . Em erson
Evans , Robert Evans , Commercial &amp;
Savi ng s Bank , First Nati onal Bank , Ohio
Valley Bank, Mrs. Claudia Mil ler Bab -

fidelities. Yvette and Madam Rxoy ; " Miss

cock, Harland Marlin . Robert S Wood ,
Robbins &amp; Myers , Inc. , C. H . McKenz ie ,

"Gay Nineties Medley, " "Good Ole
Suminertime, 11 "Daisy," "Northwest

Lanna 's Salon of Beauty .
THE PAGEANT

Territory , "

Hockinbush Female Academy," The
F idelities.
Fin~le . Grtllioolis Cilv Park (1890's) ;

"S trawberry
" Waltz," Judae Bradbury &amp;
"M" &amp; Odd Mcintyre.

Dreams

Ford sure

1Continued from Page 171
today
to
have
been
disasters-the first because it
laid out a detailed blueprint
for European union that has
since been shattered by
events, the second because it
was stampeded into decisions
that could not be carried out.
The leaders, chastened,
met in Paris last December
largely to discuss how to get
more out of their meetings.
They depided to meet three
times yearly, but to stop
calling
their
sessions

1Continued from Page 17)
working under cover at the
White House. Asked if any
CIA personnel were secretly
on the White House staff
during the Nixon administration , he replied:
"That matter will be
analyzed.''
When a reporter asked who
will conduct the analysis,
Ford said "The press, for
one. And I applaud that.
Secondly, I assume Congress
will make investigations. And
we (in the administration)
will in a responsible way find
out anything possible."
Ford said he had "no
specific information " that
Alexander P. Butterfield, the
former presidential aide who
revealed the existence of
Nixon's secret taping system,
was a CIA contact in the
White House. He said it was
premature to speculate on the
truth of allegations that
Butterfield played such a
role.
At another point, Ford said
he sees no room for
"legitimate criticism" that
his administration lacks
compassiol) for the urban
crisis.
" This administration has a
record of compassion," he
said, citing his budget
requests for " the less fortunate in the cities," a
recommendation for the
extension of general revenue
sharing and other specific
programs.
The President said he and
Chicago Mayor Richard J .
Daley, one of the nation's
most powerful Democrats,
had a "very friendly, very

''summits." Instead, they

!I"

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Company ,

::::;:;: ::::::::::::: :;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

dubbed them "European
Councils."
This nomenclature put the
summits into the eVery-day
context of the regular
meetings of lower-ranking
Common Market ministers,
which are also called
"councils." The idea was to
de-glamorize the summits
and make them a part of
ordinary European decicsionmaking.
"European
The first
Council" was held in Dublin
and was devoted to hagglin&amp;
over Britaih 's terms for a
better deal · within the
Common Market. British
Prime Minister Harold
Wilson got w)lat he wanted
and the British voted in a
referendum last month to
stay in the Common Marbt,
thus removmg one maJor
problem from the European
agenda.
The British referendum, a
realistic report on the
market's problems, and other
developments have produced
the atmosphere of a fresh
start, with the nine nations
content to cooperate in small
ways and to leave the great
dreams for later.

•.

By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASIUNGTON (UP!) The General Accounting
OffiCe said Saturday that 65
per cent of approved on-thejob training programs for
veterans are inactive, largely
because of the lack of
government followup efforts.
The report was based on a
survey of eight selected
Veterans Administration
regional offices and was
released by Sen. Yance
Hartke, D-lnd., chairman of
the Senate Veterans Affairs
Comtnittee.
Hartke said the report
indicates " striking neglect
and mismanagement by the
government in aiding Vietnam veterans obtain employment."
He said the failure
systematically to refer young
veterans to available job
training opportunties is

chases.
- Budget cuts of 2.5 per
cent this year throughout
the university for the third

consecutjve

year .

- Increases of from $10
to $30 per quarter In
student rees.
-Higher salaries for
faculty, administrative and
professional staff and civil
service personn'el.

Co nstru ctive,'' meeting
Friday in which revenue
sharing was one subject
discussed.

Monday through Wednesday, chance of showers
dally, Highs will be In the
low or mild 80s and lows
will be In the upper 50s or
the 60s.

SILENT RUN MADE
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer
firemen here Friday made a
silent run to Chestnut St.
where brush along the
railroad tracks had apparently been set on fire .
Firemen used 200 gallons of
water to extinguish the blaze.
Seven men responded.

WOMAN CHARGED
POMEROY - Ruth A.
Priddy, Middleport, was
charged with leaving the
scene of an accident following
a hit-skip accident at the
corner of Spring Ave. and
Main St. around midnight
Friday. A car owned by Jack
Follrod, Pomeroy, was
legally parked at the corner
when Mrs. Priddy was said to
have ran into it, causing light
damage.
MARTIN COX DIES
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Martin Cox, 17, Nova, Ohio,
the longest surviving liver
transplant patient in the
coun try, died here Friday
night at Lakeside Hospital,
only two days before the sixth
anniversary of his operation.
Cox underwent the transplant
operation at Colorado's
General Hospital in Denver
July 13, 1969, His liver was
being destroyed by Wilson's
Disease, brought on by
deposits of copper not
properly assi'milated and
thrown off by his body.

••

NOW YOU KNOW
The tongue of the blue
whale weighs more than an
elephant.

Contingent from

" particularly tragic when we
recall that young veteran
unemployment rates have
been and continue· to be
substantially higher than
those for comparable nonveterans.''
Although the VA on-job
training program s have
opened a "large number " of
job opportunities for Vietnam
veterans, the GAO said, " it
appears that many more
qualified veterans could have
been placed in approved
programs."
The GAO survey covered
VA offices in the District of

Arrow conference. which is
held every 2 years, includes
training in subjects related to
Scout camping, service
projects, and administration
of the lodge program. It also
features a band and chorus
made up of Order of the
Arrow members , outdoor
activities, including Indian
dance competition, and
demonstrations of Scouting
skills .

Storyteller

THE WEEK
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SUSAN SPEAKS OUT
TOPEKA, Kan. (UP!)
Susan Ford says she would be
offended if it were suggested
she got her summer job with
the Topeka Capital-Journal
merely because she is . the
Presidimt 's daughter.
"l like to be considered
simply Susan, and not the
President's daughter," she
told a news conference. 11 l 'tl
like to be a person rather than

AS 1971!

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

&lt;,

a figure."

• ••

Miss Ford said she was
accepted to work as an intern
in the paper's photo department because the newspaper
seriously wants to help young
people
develop
their
photographic talent.

~ Ohio ~~~y B~~~

(EXCEPT CLOSED SATURDAY
MIDNIGHT TILL 9 A.M. SUNDAY)

'"

POOLER INJURED
POMEROY - William
Pooler, Jr ., 34, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, was treated and
released from Veterans
Memorial Hospital following
an accident at 4:30 p.m.
Friday investigated by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
Pooler travelling west on
county road 34 in Sutton
Twp., eight tenths of a mile
east of SR 124, came too close
to the edge, went in a ditch,
crossed over the end of a
culvert and struck an embankment. There was heavy
damage to his car. Pooler
was taken to the hospital by
private car .

._

arli-Gard·
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S. KOREi\ ALERTED
SEOUL, South Korea
(UP!)- South Korea put its
entire armed forces on
emergency alert Saturday
"\' and charged that six North
~ Korean navy vessels vi.olated
"" South Korean waters.
.~
In Panmunjom, meanf- while, the United Nations
:· Command lodged a strong ·
:'~ prote~t with North Korea for
,;. a June· 30 attack by North
Korean soldiers on a U. S.
Army major. The Command
also demanded that the attackers be punished. c

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GAME CHARGED
MOSCOW · (UP!) - The
Communist P!lrty newspaper
Pravda warned Saturday
'that Defense Secretary
. ~ames Schlesinger played
"dangerQus gatl)e:;JILI!IIkirig
about nuclear war at a time
of reduced international
tensions. The attack against
the American defense ~hie!
:. ·was ~e sharpest to appear
here lri w~ekS. It was signed
' by \he pseudonym "ob. server " ' . indicating
it
emanated from a top
government or party official .

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EHS

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A modern mobile home may be the
best solution to your housing needs.
Take a look at how nice mobile
home living can be .. . then, see
us for the financing. You'll get

·,

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POMEROY - The Bashan
Bunc h met July 2a t the home
of Kim Bickers . A dem·onstration was given· by Becky
Phillips on setting a· table .
Baseball wa s pla yed for
re creation . Refres hmen ts
were served by the hostess to
two advisors and 13 members . - Tina Beaver.
THE STIVERSVILLE
Stitchers met a1 the home of
Ada Van Meter July 3. The
club discussed the ' initiation
of new n!embers, prog ress on
projects, and a pknic at
· F ork ed Run State Park .
Keith Circle. one of the Meigs
Minutemen , spoke about the
bice·nt ennial. Fris bee wa s
ALIAS, A MUSICAL GROUP based in Jackson, and
played . The nex t meeting will
made up of former members of Woodquilt and Uticia
also be•at Ada Van Meter 's
F1ash, will present a concert - dance at the Pomeroy
Junior High building Friday, July 18, from 8:30 to 11:30
home July 18. The refres hments
were served to tw o
p.m. Admission is $1.50. Festival seating (a blanket and a
advisors
and eight members
friend) .
by the hostess. - Elaine
Lehew.
THE SUNBEAMS 4,H Club
mel at J oyce Ritchie's hom e
July 2. Sewing, cooking, and
home furnishing s projects
were di sc ussed . Membe r s
GALLIPOLIS - Linda July .
made onion burgers for
Stow , the storyteller fr om
The films "Nick " and lhe
refreshments .
Seven
Ohio Valley Area Libraries in " Cow who fell in the canal"
members. five visitors, and
Wellston ,
will
pre sent were enjoyed by a lar ge
another story hour for the group of c hildren last week . two advisors attended .
primary children at II a. m.
Miss Wanda Morris, a staff Croquet was played. - Paula
Life .
Tuesday, July 15, at the member. is the storyteller for
pre-schoolers .
All
THE FIVE POINT Bucks
Gallia County Distric t the
Library .
c hildren of the area are in- and Does met July 8 at the
Pre-schoolers will meet at . vited to attend. Story Hour home of Mr . and Mrs. Darling
with two advisors and 11
10 a.m. Tu~gay, July 15, and closes on July 29.
members attending. Pledges
the following Tuesdays in
were said, and ' jackets
distributed . Tad Darling
displayed his project. Tag
was played, and refreshments served. The next
meeting will be July 28 at
Renee Riebel's home where
the lair projects will be
discussed. - Renee Riebel.

SPECIAL
OF
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Club News

larry's Mobile Homes

Tri-State~s

Order of Arrow go to Miami
HUNTINGTON, W. Va :Under the leadership of Paul
Benford, Lay Advisor, and
Phil Kahler, Staff Advisor,
Tri-state Area Council, Order
of the Arrow, the group of 12
Scouts and leaders from
Huntington, Ashland and Pt.
Pleasant, will join with some
4,500 other Order of the
Arrow members for the
National Conference to be
held at Miami University,
Oxford, August 18-22.
Outstanding Scout campers
who are members of the
Order of the Arrow from this
area will take part in
training, recognition, and
competition.
·
Members of the local ThalCoo-Zyo Lodge of the Order of
the Arrow will also have
major roles in the operation
and p'r ogram of the 4-day
conference, which will include Bob Cooper, Lodge
Chief of Ashland, Ky .
The Order of the Arrow,
founded in 1915 at the
Treasure Island Scout Camp
near Philadelphia, Pa., is an
integral part of the camping
program of the Tri-state
Area Council, Bo y Scouts of
America. As a national
brotherhood of honor campers, it recognizes Scout
campers who best exemplify
the Scout Oath and Law in
tlieir daily lives, promote
Scout camping, and develop
and maintain camping
traditions and spirit, according to Benford. ,
The national Order of the

pointing on-job training
statistics.
To
obtain
maximum benefit, it said, all
employers with approved
training programs should ,be
contacted periodically to
insure their continued
commitment to the progrlllll
Columbia ,
and to determine · their
Kansas,
current or future needs.
Oklahoma,
Neither tbe Veterllllll AdWisconsin .
ministration nor the . Labor
In October,
Department presently has
areas had a total
machinery to conduct tbe
approved emnlnvo;\.
followup programs it is
training programs,
recommending, GAO said.
4,241 or 35 per cent
A telephone survey of 271
· active. The r emaining 7,777 employers covered found
employers were involved in only 38 with veterans in
inactive programs, either training. Eleven, or 29 per
because of no job openings at cent, indicated immediate
the time or the failure of the need for an additional trainee
VA to refer qualified and said they would have
veterans.
accepted one or more
The GAO blamed lack of qualified veterans if referred
VA followup for the disap: by the VA . .

Many ~veterans' progra
•
•
znactzve on lack of fun

IIUDGf:T TIGHTENED ·
I'OI.UMBUS I UP I) The Ohio State University
Board of Trustees has
approved a 1971&gt;-76 budget
of $345.13 million, 9.5 per
ct•nt larger than the
previous fiscal document.
OSU President Harold L.
Pharson. summarizing
details of the budget for the
board, said major points
Included :
- Reduction In services,
use of energy and pur-

( 1863) . " Ga lli a Country. " Col. Safford;
" Fondest Dreams of You ,' ' Safford &amp;
Catherine Cameron .
Scene 4 , Raccoon Townsh ip &amp; HUis of
Tennessee (1863) , Episode I. Gwendolyn &amp;

Time : 1790's . 1890's, Place. Gallia

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19- The Sunday Time8-Sentiilel, Sllnday, July 13.197~
I

July 13, 1~75

· Gallia Country

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~8- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday,

County .
ACT I
. ~::en£ 1, Grtllipol ic City Park (1890's); ·
" Patriotic.; Song ~nd Dance Nledl~y . "

Judge Bradbury . Odd Mc lnlyre, " M," &amp;

(Continued from page I I
I'

berry, Bruce Scarberry . Jennifer

Company .
Scene 7. Rock Shelter along Raccoon

Creek ( 1797), " Hill s of Kentucky," Daniel
Boone' " Louis Phillippe ," John Burford ;
" Ga llipo l is," Cor . Saflord : " Roarin'
R1ver ," Burford &amp; Shawn ee .

~car ·

berry , Lewis Sc hmidt, Mar y Skaggs. John
Sowers , Nan cy Sparkman , U si Spi r es and
Jenny Trowbridge .

,

~ ORCHESTRA

Scene 3. ThJt N ight ~ Frenc h 500' Gall ipolis .
" Welshen Ring ," Daniel Boone &amp;

Br ant Adams , Chip Arm st rong , Laura
Ar mstrong , J eff H il b~~rt, _!?_rent Ma llo,; ,
Karla Ma ttox, Renee Smi lll , ~r"Red " Su iter .
Lyn n Wagner , Scott Well m an, Ed na
Wh i te ley , Brenda Wilson .
USHERETTES
Ci ndy Roush , Kaye Swisher . Karen
Folden , Ca t hy Twy man . She li a T ucker .
Diane Haltelt . Debbie William s. Ca thy
Green , Lorene Nol an , Lynnita Newberry
an d Robin W i lliam s
PRODUCTION STAFF
Auth or , Lee Ourieux . Execu t ive
Direc tor. Murl H. Rush ; Asst Director .
Catherin e Rush ; Musical Di re cto r,
Kim ball Suiter : Music Ar ra nger s, Br ant
Adams, AI Evan s ; Choreographer . Gi lli an
M oor e ; Assf . Choreogra pher . Beth Jef fe rs : 5 ta ge·· Manager , Ru ss Mi ll er ,
Prog r a m &amp; Design . Mu r l H. Rush . M. E.
Wetherhol t; Costume. Design &amp; War drobe ,
Nora Price ; L 1gh tmg D1rector , M a x
Ell i ott ; Light i n g Techni c ia ns. Paul
Per r oud . James Be nnett, Jon Louden :
Prompte r . Jayne Wiggle sworth ; 5tage
Crew . A I Sca rber ry , Doug Brown , Ma ck
Nic he ls . . Tom Myers , kent Shawver.
Robert Candee Jr .. Mike Wood . " Th urn ·
per " Johnson.
M a keu p , Evelyn Mor row .
Costume Design &amp; Wardrob e. Mrs .
Nora Price. Mr s. June Adams . Mr s John
Lyn ch. Mr s. Cha rl ene Ba tey . tv:-r s Clyde
Ev aos, Mrs . Michelle Mittleman :
Photograp h y, Dr . John W. Buf_ler ._
Cr ed i ts and thanks to : Gall 1pOI1s Ar ea
Cha rvber of Commer ce , Columbu s ?
Southern O hio E le ct r ic , Rio Grande
Coll ege, Bob Evans Farms, E vel y n 's
Salon of Beauty , Raccoon Creek Livery,
Mrs . Pa ul Wagner , Byer &amp; Bowma n Adv.
Agency In c ., Ga l icy House ( Div . Frenc h

I

III

Fr ench 500 .
" Fondest Dreams of You, " Catherine
Cam eron.
" Ma jestic Ohi o. " Cather ine Cameron
and Col. Safford .
Scene 4, Canal Boat Dock , Chillicothe

118441.

" Gwendolyn ," Bareth ( 12 years old).

" Towpath Mul e." Captain Nye and
Canawlers and "Canawers ."
ACT II
.
Sce ne l, Adamsville Mill. Adamsville
( 1850) , "Adamsville M i ll ,'' Gwendolyn and
Bareth ; " Adam s ville M i ll Ballet."
Millcreek Nymphs .
Scene 2 - Adam sv ille Sa l oon (Same
Dayl Adamsv i lle, " Siren of Cen terville ," Sadie ; " Why Shud We ln -

co rpur a te' " R.C.C. Club ' " R.C.C.C.

Quartet ; " Saloon -a -ti cs", Penelope &amp;
Furr ies .
Scene J, F ortificat ion Hill , Gallipolis

Barelh al the Mill ; Episode II , "Come

Back To Tennessee ,:; Tennessee Hill Girl :
" John Morgan's Cavalry ," John Hunt
Morgan &amp; Raiders .
Scene 5, First Annual Rio Grande
Bean Dinner ( 1871) . "When the Roll is
Called Up Yonder," Rev. Haning &amp;
Beaners : " General Grant," Politician ;

" Doodleups, " (Dood le bugs), The
Doodteups ; "Tenti ng Tonight," Beaner
Quintel.
Scene 6, Roxy's Emporium of Novelty,

Colony Ind .). Lalayelle Mall.

Gallipol is 11890), " Foxy Roxy," Les In -

Patrons are J . Tim Evans . Em erson
Evans , Robert Evans , Commercial &amp;
Savi ng s Bank , First Nati onal Bank , Ohio
Valley Bank, Mrs. Claudia Mil ler Bab -

fidelities. Yvette and Madam Rxoy ; " Miss

cock, Harland Marlin . Robert S Wood ,
Robbins &amp; Myers , Inc. , C. H . McKenz ie ,

"Gay Nineties Medley, " "Good Ole
Suminertime, 11 "Daisy," "Northwest

Lanna 's Salon of Beauty .
THE PAGEANT

Territory , "

Hockinbush Female Academy," The
F idelities.
Fin~le . Grtllioolis Cilv Park (1890's) ;

"S trawberry
" Waltz," Judae Bradbury &amp;
"M" &amp; Odd Mcintyre.

Dreams

Ford sure

1Continued from Page 171
today
to
have
been
disasters-the first because it
laid out a detailed blueprint
for European union that has
since been shattered by
events, the second because it
was stampeded into decisions
that could not be carried out.
The leaders, chastened,
met in Paris last December
largely to discuss how to get
more out of their meetings.
They depided to meet three
times yearly, but to stop
calling
their
sessions

1Continued from Page 17)
working under cover at the
White House. Asked if any
CIA personnel were secretly
on the White House staff
during the Nixon administration , he replied:
"That matter will be
analyzed.''
When a reporter asked who
will conduct the analysis,
Ford said "The press, for
one. And I applaud that.
Secondly, I assume Congress
will make investigations. And
we (in the administration)
will in a responsible way find
out anything possible."
Ford said he had "no
specific information " that
Alexander P. Butterfield, the
former presidential aide who
revealed the existence of
Nixon's secret taping system,
was a CIA contact in the
White House. He said it was
premature to speculate on the
truth of allegations that
Butterfield played such a
role.
At another point, Ford said
he sees no room for
"legitimate criticism" that
his administration lacks
compassiol) for the urban
crisis.
" This administration has a
record of compassion," he
said, citing his budget
requests for " the less fortunate in the cities," a
recommendation for the
extension of general revenue
sharing and other specific
programs.
The President said he and
Chicago Mayor Richard J .
Daley, one of the nation's
most powerful Democrats,
had a "very friendly, very

''summits." Instead, they

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Blonde,"

Company ,

::::;:;: ::::::::::::: :;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

dubbed them "European
Councils."
This nomenclature put the
summits into the eVery-day
context of the regular
meetings of lower-ranking
Common Market ministers,
which are also called
"councils." The idea was to
de-glamorize the summits
and make them a part of
ordinary European decicsionmaking.
"European
The first
Council" was held in Dublin
and was devoted to hagglin&amp;
over Britaih 's terms for a
better deal · within the
Common Market. British
Prime Minister Harold
Wilson got w)lat he wanted
and the British voted in a
referendum last month to
stay in the Common Marbt,
thus removmg one maJor
problem from the European
agenda.
The British referendum, a
realistic report on the
market's problems, and other
developments have produced
the atmosphere of a fresh
start, with the nine nations
content to cooperate in small
ways and to leave the great
dreams for later.

•.

By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASIUNGTON (UP!) The General Accounting
OffiCe said Saturday that 65
per cent of approved on-thejob training programs for
veterans are inactive, largely
because of the lack of
government followup efforts.
The report was based on a
survey of eight selected
Veterans Administration
regional offices and was
released by Sen. Yance
Hartke, D-lnd., chairman of
the Senate Veterans Affairs
Comtnittee.
Hartke said the report
indicates " striking neglect
and mismanagement by the
government in aiding Vietnam veterans obtain employment."
He said the failure
systematically to refer young
veterans to available job
training opportunties is

chases.
- Budget cuts of 2.5 per
cent this year throughout
the university for the third

consecutjve

year .

- Increases of from $10
to $30 per quarter In
student rees.
-Higher salaries for
faculty, administrative and
professional staff and civil
service personn'el.

Co nstru ctive,'' meeting
Friday in which revenue
sharing was one subject
discussed.

Monday through Wednesday, chance of showers
dally, Highs will be In the
low or mild 80s and lows
will be In the upper 50s or
the 60s.

SILENT RUN MADE
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer
firemen here Friday made a
silent run to Chestnut St.
where brush along the
railroad tracks had apparently been set on fire .
Firemen used 200 gallons of
water to extinguish the blaze.
Seven men responded.

WOMAN CHARGED
POMEROY - Ruth A.
Priddy, Middleport, was
charged with leaving the
scene of an accident following
a hit-skip accident at the
corner of Spring Ave. and
Main St. around midnight
Friday. A car owned by Jack
Follrod, Pomeroy, was
legally parked at the corner
when Mrs. Priddy was said to
have ran into it, causing light
damage.
MARTIN COX DIES
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Martin Cox, 17, Nova, Ohio,
the longest surviving liver
transplant patient in the
coun try, died here Friday
night at Lakeside Hospital,
only two days before the sixth
anniversary of his operation.
Cox underwent the transplant
operation at Colorado's
General Hospital in Denver
July 13, 1969, His liver was
being destroyed by Wilson's
Disease, brought on by
deposits of copper not
properly assi'milated and
thrown off by his body.

••

NOW YOU KNOW
The tongue of the blue
whale weighs more than an
elephant.

Contingent from

" particularly tragic when we
recall that young veteran
unemployment rates have
been and continue· to be
substantially higher than
those for comparable nonveterans.''
Although the VA on-job
training program s have
opened a "large number " of
job opportunities for Vietnam
veterans, the GAO said, " it
appears that many more
qualified veterans could have
been placed in approved
programs."
The GAO survey covered
VA offices in the District of

Arrow conference. which is
held every 2 years, includes
training in subjects related to
Scout camping, service
projects, and administration
of the lodge program. It also
features a band and chorus
made up of Order of the
Arrow members , outdoor
activities, including Indian
dance competition, and
demonstrations of Scouting
skills .

Storyteller

THE WEEK
14X70 KIRKWOOD- 1975 Model, 3 bedroom, carpet throughout, 2
door refrigerator , eye level oven , surface range, separate ·utility
room , wired dryer, plumbed washer and much more .

FOR THIS WEEK ONLY

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OPEN SUNDAYS 1:00-6:00

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9 8 Mon . Fri 9 6 S.1t

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Pom(_• ro v Oh1o

DAY PEOPL •••• NIGHT
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ooming Tuesday

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yet it operates on 115-volt circuit
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-- ·-- -~--

'

SUSAN SPEAKS OUT
TOPEKA, Kan. (UP!)
Susan Ford says she would be
offended if it were suggested
she got her summer job with
the Topeka Capital-Journal
merely because she is . the
Presidimt 's daughter.
"l like to be considered
simply Susan, and not the
President's daughter," she
told a news conference. 11 l 'tl
like to be a person rather than

AS 1971!

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

&lt;,

a figure."

• ••

Miss Ford said she was
accepted to work as an intern
in the paper's photo department because the newspaper
seriously wants to help young
people
develop
their
photographic talent.

~ Ohio ~~~y B~~~

(EXCEPT CLOSED SATURDAY
MIDNIGHT TILL 9 A.M. SUNDAY)

'"

POOLER INJURED
POMEROY - William
Pooler, Jr ., 34, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, was treated and
released from Veterans
Memorial Hospital following
an accident at 4:30 p.m.
Friday investigated by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
Pooler travelling west on
county road 34 in Sutton
Twp., eight tenths of a mile
east of SR 124, came too close
to the edge, went in a ditch,
crossed over the end of a
culvert and struck an embankment. There was heavy
damage to his car. Pooler
was taken to the hospital by
private car .

._

arli-Gard·
®
llJl

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S. KOREi\ ALERTED
SEOUL, South Korea
(UP!)- South Korea put its
entire armed forces on
emergency alert Saturday
"\' and charged that six North
~ Korean navy vessels vi.olated
"" South Korean waters.
.~
In Panmunjom, meanf- while, the United Nations
:· Command lodged a strong ·
:'~ prote~t with North Korea for
,;. a June· 30 attack by North
Korean soldiers on a U. S.
Army major. The Command
also demanded that the attackers be punished. c

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INTRODUCTORY
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the instal1ation. A visible red
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This UL listed residen tia l unit
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detects the lirst signs of com-

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Meigs 4-H

SAME LOW PR ICE

"'
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GAME CHARGED
MOSCOW · (UP!) - The
Communist P!lrty newspaper
Pravda warned Saturday
'that Defense Secretary
. ~ames Schlesinger played
"dangerQus gatl)e:;JILI!IIkirig
about nuclear war at a time
of reduced international
tensions. The attack against
the American defense ~hie!
:. ·was ~e sharpest to appear
here lri w~ekS. It was signed
' by \he pseudonym "ob. server " ' . indicating
it
emanated from a top
government or party official .

,.

EHS

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A modern mobile home may be the
best solution to your housing needs.
Take a look at how nice mobile
home living can be .. . then, see
us for the financing. You'll get

·,

..

POMEROY - The Bashan
Bunc h met July 2a t the home
of Kim Bickers . A dem·onstration was given· by Becky
Phillips on setting a· table .
Baseball wa s pla yed for
re creation . Refres hmen ts
were served by the hostess to
two advisors and 13 members . - Tina Beaver.
THE STIVERSVILLE
Stitchers met a1 the home of
Ada Van Meter July 3. The
club discussed the ' initiation
of new n!embers, prog ress on
projects, and a pknic at
· F ork ed Run State Park .
Keith Circle. one of the Meigs
Minutemen , spoke about the
bice·nt ennial. Fris bee wa s
ALIAS, A MUSICAL GROUP based in Jackson, and
played . The nex t meeting will
made up of former members of Woodquilt and Uticia
also be•at Ada Van Meter 's
F1ash, will present a concert - dance at the Pomeroy
Junior High building Friday, July 18, from 8:30 to 11:30
home July 18. The refres hments
were served to tw o
p.m. Admission is $1.50. Festival seating (a blanket and a
advisors
and eight members
friend) .
by the hostess. - Elaine
Lehew.
THE SUNBEAMS 4,H Club
mel at J oyce Ritchie's hom e
July 2. Sewing, cooking, and
home furnishing s projects
were di sc ussed . Membe r s
GALLIPOLIS - Linda July .
made onion burgers for
Stow , the storyteller fr om
The films "Nick " and lhe
refreshments .
Seven
Ohio Valley Area Libraries in " Cow who fell in the canal"
members. five visitors, and
Wellston ,
will
pre sent were enjoyed by a lar ge
another story hour for the group of c hildren last week . two advisors attended .
primary children at II a. m.
Miss Wanda Morris, a staff Croquet was played. - Paula
Life .
Tuesday, July 15, at the member. is the storyteller for
pre-schoolers .
All
THE FIVE POINT Bucks
Gallia County Distric t the
Library .
c hildren of the area are in- and Does met July 8 at the
Pre-schoolers will meet at . vited to attend. Story Hour home of Mr . and Mrs. Darling
with two advisors and 11
10 a.m. Tu~gay, July 15, and closes on July 29.
members attending. Pledges
the following Tuesdays in
were said, and ' jackets
distributed . Tad Darling
displayed his project. Tag
was played, and refreshments served. The next
meeting will be July 28 at
Renee Riebel's home where
the lair projects will be
discussed. - Renee Riebel.

SPECIAL
OF
.

'

.•

Club News

larry's Mobile Homes

Tri-State~s

Order of Arrow go to Miami
HUNTINGTON, W. Va :Under the leadership of Paul
Benford, Lay Advisor, and
Phil Kahler, Staff Advisor,
Tri-state Area Council, Order
of the Arrow, the group of 12
Scouts and leaders from
Huntington, Ashland and Pt.
Pleasant, will join with some
4,500 other Order of the
Arrow members for the
National Conference to be
held at Miami University,
Oxford, August 18-22.
Outstanding Scout campers
who are members of the
Order of the Arrow from this
area will take part in
training, recognition, and
competition.
·
Members of the local ThalCoo-Zyo Lodge of the Order of
the Arrow will also have
major roles in the operation
and p'r ogram of the 4-day
conference, which will include Bob Cooper, Lodge
Chief of Ashland, Ky .
The Order of the Arrow,
founded in 1915 at the
Treasure Island Scout Camp
near Philadelphia, Pa., is an
integral part of the camping
program of the Tri-state
Area Council, Bo y Scouts of
America. As a national
brotherhood of honor campers, it recognizes Scout
campers who best exemplify
the Scout Oath and Law in
tlieir daily lives, promote
Scout camping, and develop
and maintain camping
traditions and spirit, according to Benford. ,
The national Order of the

pointing on-job training
statistics.
To
obtain
maximum benefit, it said, all
employers with approved
training programs should ,be
contacted periodically to
insure their continued
commitment to the progrlllll
Columbia ,
and to determine · their
Kansas,
current or future needs.
Oklahoma,
Neither tbe Veterllllll AdWisconsin .
ministration nor the . Labor
In October,
Department presently has
areas had a total
machinery to conduct tbe
approved emnlnvo;\.
followup programs it is
training programs,
recommending, GAO said.
4,241 or 35 per cent
A telephone survey of 271
· active. The r emaining 7,777 employers covered found
employers were involved in only 38 with veterans in
inactive programs, either training. Eleven, or 29 per
because of no job openings at cent, indicated immediate
the time or the failure of the need for an additional trainee
VA to refer qualified and said they would have
veterans.
accepted one or more
The GAO blamed lack of qualified veterans if referred
VA followup for the disap: by the VA . .

Many ~veterans' progra
•
•
znactzve on lack of fun

IIUDGf:T TIGHTENED ·
I'OI.UMBUS I UP I) The Ohio State University
Board of Trustees has
approved a 1971&gt;-76 budget
of $345.13 million, 9.5 per
ct•nt larger than the
previous fiscal document.
OSU President Harold L.
Pharson. summarizing
details of the budget for the
board, said major points
Included :
- Reduction In services,
use of energy and pur-

( 1863) . " Ga lli a Country. " Col. Safford;
" Fondest Dreams of You ,' ' Safford &amp;
Catherine Cameron .
Scene 4 , Raccoon Townsh ip &amp; HUis of
Tennessee (1863) , Episode I. Gwendolyn &amp;

Time : 1790's . 1890's, Place. Gallia

..
~:
';
,.

19- The Sunday Time8-Sentiilel, Sllnday, July 13.197~
I

July 13, 1~75

· Gallia Country

•I

.. •/

..

, C )~~

(

/

�I

.

J

.

'
20- The SUnday Times·

Sent~!, Slmday, July 1;, 1975
.

'
. . 33 .
6:00-:Green Acres 3; News 4; FBI 6;. Conversations
with Eric Sevareld 8, 10; World of Survival 13; .
. Outdoors with Ken Callaway 15. Villa Alegre J3.
6.3G-NBC News 3,4,15; Friends of Man IJ; Walsh's
Animals 33. ·
·
. 7:00-:Lasl of the Wild 3.4; Wild, Wild World of Animals
6; Animal World 8 ; In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom
13, H; The Romag_nolls' Table 20; French Chef 33
7: Jo-Wo~!d of Disney 3,4,15 : Movie " Strange NeV.:
World 6, 13; Joey and Dad 8, 10; Evening at Pops
20.33.
.
8: 3G-McMIIlan and wife 3, 4, 15, Kojak a, 10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20,33.
9:3G-Unlon in Space 6, 13; 60 Minutes a. 1Q: Firing Line
33 ; KUP's Show 20.
IO :Jo-We Think You Should Know 3; News 4,6,8; High
Road to Adventure 10; Bobby Goldsborp 13; Police
Surgeon 15; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20;
Jeanne Woll with 33.
.
·
11 :00-:News 3, 10, 13, 15; Bonanza 4; My Partner the
Ghost 6; CBS News 8; KUP's Show 33 .
11 : 15-Sammy and Company 8; CBS News 10.
11 :3o-Saint 3; Tennis All -Star Match 15; Movie
'iDavld Copperfield" 10; Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 13.
12: 00-: Tennis All -Star Match 4; ABC News 6.
I :00-:ABC NAews 13 .
1:00-:Peylon Place 4.

I

'Tel~vision

Log

SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1975
6:00-:Thls Is The Jllfe 10.
6:Jo-Travelogue 4; Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
7:00-:This Week 4: Talking Hands 8; Marshall Efron' s
Sunday School 10; Newsmaker ' 75 13.
7:1$-Tele-Bibte Time 4. ·
7:3G-This Is The Life 3; i':hurch by the side of the
Road 4; Revival Fires o; Jerry Fa lwell 8; Carner a
Three 10; Lower Lighthouse 13.
8:00-:Mormon Choir 3; Day of Dlscoyery 4; GosP.,i
Caravan· 6: Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
8:JO.-&lt;Jral Roberts 3; . Your Health 4; Kathryn
Kuhlman 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presenls 10; Rex. Humbard 13; See the U.S.A. 15 .
8:5s-:-Btack Cameo 4.
9:00-:Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Oral

I

I

Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass
8; Acaross the Fence 15 .
9::»-Yours for the Asking 4; What Does the Bible

Plainly Say? 8; It Is written 10; Christ Is the answer
13; Insight 15.
10:00-:Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4 ; Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8; Movie " Seven Seas
to Calais" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13: Faith For
Today 15.

MONDAY, JULY 14, 1975
6· 25-Farm Report 13 .
·
6:3G-Flve Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An swers 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Good News 13
6:35-Coiumbus Today 4 .
·
6:45--Morning Report 3 ; Farmllme 10.
6 :55-News 13.
7:cx;,;-;::oday 3,4, 15 ; A. M . America 6, 13; CBS News .
~ : Do-Lassie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolies 10;
Sesame Street 33.

B:3G-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8: 55-Chuck While Reports 10.
9 :0G-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4, 15; Muriel Stevens 8;
Captai n Kangaroo 10: Morning With D. J . 13.
9:3G-Nof For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10 :00-:
_ Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15,· SP1n.Off 8,10;
D1nah 1. 13; Jody's Body Shop 33.
10:3G-Wheel Of Fortunre 3,4,15,· Gam bit 8, 10;
Des Ignlng Women 33.
11 : 00-:High Rollers 3,4, 15 ; One Life to Live 6 · Tattletales a, 10.
'
11 :3G-Hollywood Squares· 3, 15; Brady Bunch IJ ;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan imel 's World 10
12:0G-Magnlfl~ent Marble Machine 3, 15," Shows 13;
Bob Brauns 50-50 Cl ub 4; News 6,18,10; Miste
Roegers 33 .
r
12 :3G-Jackpol! 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search
For Tomorrow 8, 10; Electric Company 3;
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
.
1:00-:News 3: Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue a·
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only'
15; Carrascolendas 33.
1:Jo-Days Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make A Deal
6, 13; As the World turns 8, 10; Folk Guitar 33 .

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY, JUlY 13, 1975
ACROSS

68 Note of scole

Atmospheric

89 Metal
135 Man's name
25 Partner
70 Everybody's uncle 137 Smell amounts 27 Shield

disturbance
level
Son of Noah
Memento
Punctuation mork
Baked cloy
Food fish

23 Spanish for
''tomorrow''

71 Walk unsteadily
73 Fhght of atepo
75 Seomon

n

~state

78 Norse gods
80 Mountains of
Central Asia

134 Parent Icolloq.! 23 Flesh
139 Sou1hem
blackbird
140 Oinn
141 leoko through
143 Crieolike cow
145 Fish eggs
146 loose-sleeved

81 Printer's

jackets

l'!'laesuro IPI.1
82 Ringing

148 Dl Hgroement
160 Kind of

28 Individuals

84 Odors
86' H~y sp~der

152 Beer mug•

29 RUemlinb on
29
30 Periods of time

87 Kind ol dog
89 Encountered
92 Take unlawfully

32 Alms boKea

96 Challenges

24 Witty
IKprenion

33 ~ccomplishment 98 Falls behind
34 Golf mound
99 Period of dme
36 Hawaiian
101 S uma
wreaths

37 Greenland
118ttlement

103 Roman tyrant

104 Mature
105 Horse's

39 Worthless leaving
neck hair ·
40 Narrow,
108 Indefinite
flat.~oard
anicle
41 Wr:ttmg
107 Part ~f "to be"

Implements

42 Snt~~ and---44 Fug~ttve fro~
Sovtttt Rusata

46
47
&lt;48
50

Observed
Sa.ucy
Wn:hered

Gave

52 Average

53 A state labbr.l

55 F~od P.rogram

82 llfTib
64 Weak food

66 Eptstle (abbr.)

29 College
93 Small bird
officio!
94 Latin conjunction
31 Coarse hominy 96 Silkworm
33 Escaped
97 Melody
36 Sow
100 Compass point
38 lease
102 Pierce
40 Look to be
105 After-dinner
41 Futl
r
candy
43 Goddnallf
109 Projecting tooth
discord
112 Army meal
45 Class
46 Brook

113 Let it stand
11~ Reverberations

153 Se11oning
47 Point of hammer 116 Poker stake
154 Chriatmaocarol49 Morays
·
118 snatch
156 Sounded a horn 51 Pertaining
120 Unit for
157 Shouts
to Norway
measuring sound
158 Emmets
52 Anchored
121 Deposits
159 Strike lstang l 53 Girl's name
122 Occurs
160 S tudded
54 Algonquian
123 Microbe
Indian
'to25 Alcoholic
DOWN
56 Adding
beverages
59 Part of ship
-126 Woolly
Shon duration 60 Principal
2 Indian tents
61 Smoke and fog
3 Beginnings
63 Communication
4 Outfit
65 Cronies ·

Flying mammals
Disturban ce
Rocks
Girl's nickname

5 Additional

111 Ea':fh goddess
112 ChtneH dynasty

6 Distance
67 Greek letter
measure labbr.) 69 Negative prefix
7 Brim
70 Cooked in

134 Nuisances
136 North American
scoter

113 Pintail duck
115 Symbo1 for

B Appellation of
buttered dish
Athena
72 Paints

138 Shabby Icolloq.!
140 Sea eagles

tantalum

9 Frights

10 European

119 Sy.mbol for silver

120 La~ro

ermine

lcolloq.l

127
129
131
132

110 Noi&amp;e

121 Sewin~

12

13
14
.

74 Pronoun

141 Dregs

142 Winter

n

City in New .York

79 Unit of Portu·
Abstract being
guese currency
Parent !colloq., 83 Sum up
Transported
85 Sweethearts
with delight
86 South African

128 Haberdasher

15 Compass point

130 Openings
132 Moccasins
133 Unit of electrical

16 Lamp
17 Notch
18 Crates

mea1urement

20 Venture

133 Small lumps

76 Exists

11 Vandals

57 Pr~nter • meeaure 124 Prohibits
58 Model
126 For fear that
59 Bord
.
127 Port of "to be"
60 Manuscnpt
l~bbr.l

annuity policy

91 Doctrine
92 Music : as
written

108 Permrts

117 Tolled

Light 8, 10:

Consume'r Survival Ki t 33

2:3«&gt;-:Doctors3,4.15: Rhym ea.nd Reason6,IJ, Edge of
N1ght 8, 10, Jean Shepherd's America 33.
3 :OQ-- Another World 3,4, 15: General Hospital 6.13:
, Pnc~ Is Right 8, 10 : Woman 20: Feeling Good 33.
3:3()-{)ne Lile to Live 13 : Lucy Show 6 ; Match Game
8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Man Builtds, Man

Destroys 33.
• ·a«&gt;-:Mr . ,cartoon 3,

NBC News

Special 4, 15;

G tl l1gan s I stand 6; Musi.ca l Chairs B; Sesame

Street 20,33; Movie "The Delicate Delinquent" 10;
M1ke Douglas 13 .
4:3G-Bewilched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad Mickey
.

Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.

5:00-:FB I 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers ' Neigh .
borhood 20,33; Ironsldfe 13 .
5:3G-News 6; Andy Griffith 8: Get Smart 15 : Electr ic
Company 20,33.
'
6:00-:News 3,4,8, 10,13.15: ABC News 6; Sesame Slreet
20: Jeanne Wolf With .. 33 .
6:3G-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6 :
CBS News 8,10 : Jody's Body Shop 33 .
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars
6: What's My Line? 8; News 10; New Candid
Camera 13 ; Wally's Workshop 15: Making If Count
20: One of a Kind 33 .
7:3G-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
Party 4; Police Surgeon 4; $25.000 Pyramid 8;
Evening Edition wi th Marlin Agronsky 20 ·
Municipal Court 10; To Te!l The Truth 13 ; Untamed
World15; Episode Action 33.

6:QO---Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10

10:Jo-Go 3: Garner Ted Armstrong 4: Jimmy
Swaggart 6; Thinking In Black 8; What Does the
Bible Plainly Say? 13; This Is The Life 15.
11:00-:TV Chapel 3; Doctors on Call4; Point of View 6;
Rex Hum bard 8, 15; Rev. Henry Mahan 13 .
11 :Jo-Human Dimension 3; Make a wish ; Focus on
Columbus 4; Rev. Calvin Evans. 13.
12 :00-:AI Issue 3; NFL Action '75 4; CBPA Bowling 6;
Face The Nation 8; The Issue 10; Goober 13; Sacred
Heart 15.
'&gt;
12:15-()pen Bible 15.
12:30-Meet The Press 3.4, 15; Evangelist Calvin Evans
8; Make A Wish 13.
,
" 1:00-:Speaklng With Your Hands 3; Movie "Back
Street" 4; Camera Three 8-; Urban League 10;
Medlx 13; Public Policy Forum 15; Sinners 33 .
1 :»-Wagon Train 3; Issues and Answers 6, 13;
Summer Forum 8; Movie "The Buacaneer" 10.
2.: 00-Communlque 6; NFL Championship Games 13;
To Be Announced 15; Family at War 33.
2:»-Aware 6; Viewpoint 8; American Music Scene
13; Health Security Act 15.
"
2:5S-Movle "Mister · Moses" 4.
3:00-:Movle "The Far Out West" 3; American Angler
6 ; Fisherman 8; Wrestling 15; Saga of Western
.
Man JJ.
3:30-Call of The West 6; Champions 8; Untouchables
13.
.C:I»-Frlends of Man 6; Face The Nation 10; To Be
Announced 15; Anntlques JJ.
4:Jo-Women's Golf 3,10; Pro Tennis 6, 13; Pro Tennis
8; Play Chess JJ.
4:45-Zoo Farle 4.
5:1»-Bonanza 4; To Be Anounced 15; Erica 33.
5: 1s-Theon Ia 33.
5:30-Champlonship Fishing 8; Let's Grow a Garden

6
10
14
19
21
22

2·00- -$10.000 · Pyramid 6.13 : t;uldlng

I
celebratect their J3rd wedding
anniversary on July 8. .
'
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Norris
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Coc hran and Mrs.
Hattie Norris at Point
Pleasant,' Saturday evening:
Mrs . Doris Roush is a
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Recent weekend guests of
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Tate
and Michael were Mr. and
Mrs . Raym ond Rupe or
Winter Park, Fla .
Mr . and Mrs . Bill Price
vacationed' in Cincinnati
where they visited with her
sister, Miss Ortha Roush.
They also attended a baseball
game at the River[ronl
Stadium and went to Kings
Island .
Mr . and Mrs . Fred Sisson
were Saturday supper gues ts
or Mr. and Mrs . M~hael
Schukert, Dane and Jill, at
Albany .
Recent callers or Mrs . Allie
Tribble were Jerry Lemley
and children or Fostoria.
Sunday guests or Mrs.
Muriel Spires and Irma Bales
were Mr. and Mrs. Denny
Spires and children or Story's
Run and Mr. and Mrs . Jim
Ables or acine.
Mr . and Mrs . Wallace
Wilson, parents or Mrs . Pat
Brister, have moved rrom
Gallipolis to Poplar Church '
Road next to the Brister

Dutch

prectpttation

'44 Supercilious
person

147 Be ill
148 Man 's nickname
149 Afternoon party
151 Also

87 Waste metal
88 Boy attendant
89 Greek letter

153 A continent
labbr 1
155 Army. officer
90 Star in Oraconia
!abbr.)'

8:00-:Movle " The Rangers" 3,4, 15:'

Rookies 6, 13;

Gunsmoke 8, 10; Mmnesota Orchestra at Orchestra

Hall 20,33 .

J : O«&gt;-:S,,W,~ . T ._

6,13; Maud• "1n
9 :3G-Movie " A Maller of Wife and Death" 3,4,15;
:c~~:. 8,10: Jeanne Wolf With ... 20 : Caugh t in the
10 :00-:s
· Caribe 6, 13 ; Medical Center 8 10 · News 20
tnners 33 .

'

'

;

11. 00-:News 3,4.6.8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 33
News Special 3,4, 15; Movie "G~t Christie
33ove . 13. FBI 6; CBS News Special 8.10; Janaki

11 : 3CAI~'C

12 : ~sJa~~~~: Carson 3,4, JS :

Movie " Lizzie " B; Movie

residence.

12 :3G-Movie 6
13

I : 00-:News

1:30--Tomorrow 3,4.
;·

sons, Heath and Seth, spent a
week with her grandmother,
Mrs . Garnett Gray at HunBy Mrs. Irma Bales
tington, W.
Va ., and
Spending Saturday with celeb~ated the Fourth or July
Mr. and Mrs . C. M. Casto with her.
were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Recent callers or Mr. and
Brown and ramily or Mrs. Bee Halfhill and Mrs.
Bulaville.
Judy Thompson were Sadie
Mrs. Debby White spent Bright and Linda Shoemaker
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. of Addison.
Frank Sears or Middleport.
Mrs. Kay Hockman and
Mrs. Patsy Spires, Diane, Billy and Mrs. Leona Whitt or
Timmy and Rodney Jr. and Gallipolis spent several days
Cathy Darst spent Monday at with Mr . and Mrs. Alva
Forked Run State Park.
Roush at Mogadore.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Spending July 4 with Mr.
Bryant and son or Bradrord, and Mrs. Clarence Searls
Mass ., are spending their were Mr. and Mrs. Terry
vacation with her parents, Searls, Racine. and Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth Ralph . Mrs. Wayne Sear ls or
Mrs. Bryant is the rormer Goldsboro, N. C.
Joyce Ralph.
Miss Linda Jenkins spent
Sunday dinner guests or Sunday at Lake Alma near
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swisher Wellslon
with
Mabel
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harri.son and Mr. and Mrs.
Stewart and ramily.
James Smith and ramily
Vera
Thomas
and where they enjoyed picMargaret Kail called on Mr. nicking and swimming .
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs at ; · Holiday weekend callers or
Laurel Clitr on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones
Saturday evening callers of were Mr. and Mrs. Merle Wilt
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Casto or Bucyrus, Jerry Lemley
were Lillian Napper and and two children or Fostoria,
Allen Dill of Minersville.
and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Houseguests of Mr. and Couch and children or Lorain.
Mrs. Marion Darnell are Mrs.
Friday evening guests or
Georgia Awalt of Ramona, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Casto
Cali£., and her daughter-in- were Mr. ~d Mrs. Lawrence
law, Mrs. Joe Hutchinson of Napper and family or
Allice, Texas. Mrs. Awalt is · Aberdeen.
the [ormer Mrs . John HutTimmy Spires celebrated
chinson or Point Pleasant and his 12th birthday on July 1.
she came especially to attend _ Helping him celebrate were
her class reunion. She is also his parents, Rodney and
visiting with rriends in Point Patsy Spires, his ·sister ,
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
Diane, and David Meaige.
Monday afternoon guests or Cake, ice cream and Kool-Aid
Mrs. Nettie Swisher were her were served.
·
grandson and family, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Mrs. Bobby Swisher and Swisher called on Robert
Melany, Robbine and Sherry Davis and Elizabeth Davis or
Wycofr.
Rose Hill on Tuesday.
Walden Darst or i\ddaville
Mr. and Mrs. Bee Halrhill
called on Mr. and Mrs. Bee
Hal£hill on Tuesday evening.
Spending the Fourth with
Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Rupe
were Mr. and Mrs. Owyer
Short
and
Junior
or
Reynoldsburg.
Mrs. Mary Darnell and her
houseguests, Mrs. Georgia
Awalt of Ramona, Cali£., and
Mrs. Joe Hutchinson or
Allice, Texas, recenUy spent
two days in Columbus visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Jeck and ramily and Dr. and
Mrs. Burdette Holmes.
Mrs . Lowell Halfhill and
daughters , Christie and
Carla, spent several days
with Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Thompson and family at
Columbus.
Rita White observed her
birthday on July 5.
Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Rupe ·
were overnight guests or her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Brewer at Glenwood, W. Va. on Saturday.
Mrs. Brenda Jenkins and

Kyger

Rev . William Kuhn and Joe
Hal[hill called on Mrs.
Kenne_th Halfhill at Morgan
Center Tuesday afternoon.
Miss Linda Jenkins has
summer employment at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Norris
were honored on the occasion
or their 25th wedding anniversary. July I, with a
lovely dinner on the lawn
given by their children, Mr.
and Mrs. Benny (Kathy)
Hash, Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Norris, Patricia Ann, Carol
Jean, Janet Lee, David and
Donald Norris . Also served
was a lovely decorated cake

with ice cream.

1

Don Price has returned
home [rom Tampa, Fla.,
where he had employment.
Jim Brister who has employment near Minot, N. D ..
flew home to spend the
holiday weekend with his
wire, Pat, and family .
Junior White recently
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Sammy Gibbs at Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bradbury and childre n, J. D.,
Michael and Beth Ann, entertained Sunday with a
cookout. Guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Johnny Berkley,
Cassandra and Nathan or
Marietta, Mrs. Nora Berkley
and Phyllis or Reese Hollow,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave McCoy,
Susan, Lorri and Jill, Addison, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Berkley or Kanauga, Mrs.
Virginia Rainey or Gallipolis
and Mrs. Richard Eblin and
daughter,
Angela
or
Gallipolis Route.
Tony and Monica Fisher,
Billy Thornton and Louis
Brister spent the holiday
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Mack Hensley and rriends at
Oliver Springs, Tenn. and
Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Mrs. AnderSon Spaulding is
a patient at the Holzer

~

,
•

•

Reed honored

TWirler winners listed

"tJARJ?!N(jTO~
...
f-· •.. I - -

POMEROY - Ted Reed ,
Jr ., president or The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company ,
was surprisrul Wedne sd ay
night when the directors and
s tarr or the bank gave a
dinner party in his honor ror
25 years with The Farmers
Bank at iiie''P'oiiii 'or View in
Parkersburg .
Paul Kloes, vice president
and secretary to lhe bank's
board or dire c lors, read
e&lt;cerpts rrom the minutes
over the past 25 years ,
highlighting Reed's career
with the bank .
0. E . Anderson , retired
·executive vice president or
the Ohio Bankers Association
and a long time [riend and
associate of the Reed ramily ,
was master of ceremonies .
Ati&lt;!nding were Mr . and
Mrs. Ted Reed , Jr ., Mr . and
Mrs. 0 . E . Anderson, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul G. Eich, Mr . and
Mrs . Thereon Johnson, Mr .
and Mrs. Paul E : Kloes , Mr.
and Mrs. Fred W. Crow. Jr ..
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Follrod, Mr . and Mrs . Ferman Moore, Dorothy B. Will,
Patricia Young, Lois A. Burt,
Addie Norris, Sharon Smith,
Evelyn Lanning, Susan
Andrews, Jon Karschnik,
Joanne Williams, Roger W.
Hysell, Mary Riggs, Charlene
Thomas, Recka McGuire ,
Jenny Smith, Joan Vaughan,
Susan Abbott, Diana King
and George Hicks.
Mr. Reed was presented
numerous girts by the starr
and directors or the bank.

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"S
. ave

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1 ;,orr e

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$79.95

"Cash &amp; Carry"

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

=

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heavyweights ror governor.
" My gosh, I'm not a freak.
I might look like one; but I' ve
been in business here in
Baton Rouge £or 31 years.
Certainly I· don't need a
freakout run up and down the
streets [or advertising
purposes."
Beside the m -cent phone
calls and rree breakfasts, the
Lewis platrorm includes
proposals to make Gulf
States Utilities become a
wholly-owned Louisiana
corporation , rorce South
Central Bell to split orr a unit
strictly ror Louisiana ( Lewis
says it would be known as
" La Bell" ), change penalties
ror marijuana use and
driving while intoxicated,
and increase the size or a

,

WORK SHOE
HEADQUARTERS
In srock

IRED WING 1~1

On weekda ys, water

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

Carmel News,
By the Day

i

... no wailin'g

_C an a d a ' s 12 R- f oo t - high
Kaka beka Fal ls fl ows only on

Sund ays

number of state agencies,
thereby offering ''plenty of
jobs.''
He says he's willing to
listen to big campaign
contributors, but won't be
tied down.
" I'm not selling out to
anybody. H I have to sell out
there's no use in being
elected .
" H someone came to me
and said 'yes, I'll put up
$25,000', I've got to listen to
him , but I've got to see what
strings he's got. Because the
other candidates are going to
get big money, I'd say let's
hear the whole story.
"There's no way in the
world to run people off
you've got to listen to
everybody."

from the "N iagara of the North "
in western Ontano IS di verted
through a flum e Ia generate
TORONTO (UP!) - A 15- 11 It's a nice night and we will hyd roe lectn c powe r
Gallipolis
'
342 Second Ave.
watch with interest but we 're
ye~-o ld Toronto schoolgirl,
swimming powerfully , after not going to patrol them as ~
more than 15 hours in the such."
Angela, who said she was
water, appeared almost
inspired
by the hit recording
certain Saturday to become
Stale Baak No. 130
the youngest swimmer ever " I Am Woman" and other
pop
songs,
was
accompanied
to couquer unpredictable
on her voyage by an inCONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF
Lake Ontario .
At about 3 p.m. EDT, flatable dinghy carrying two
blonde Angela Kondrak was racers as well as a boat
· only 6 miles off the Toronto carrying her rather , Terry,
Mr. and Mrs . George
or Gallipells In the State of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries at the cloae of
shoreline
and
pushing and her swimming coach, Art
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. James
business on June 30, 1975.
steadily closer in the 55- Durresne.
Circle of New Haven, W. Ya .
Durresne
had
a
tape
were at the home or Mary degree water. A flotilla or machine aboard and played
small craft sailed out to greet
Circle on Sunday.
ASSETS
some or her favorite tunes
her and escort her in.
Mr. Stanley Roush or
Cash
and
due
from
banks
- - - - - - " " - " - - " " $ 2,453,313.91
over
a
loud
hailer
ror
enA pace swimmer acSpring£ield, Missouri and son
5,539,486.25
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - companyiQg the 5-foot-'2-inch, couragement.
Philip and daughter Lynn of
Obligations
of
Federal
Financing
Bank
.
5,539,486.25
who
plans
to
Miss
Kondrak,
120-pound schoolgirl girl
St. Louis, Missouri spent the
Obligations or other U.S. Government
reported by radio: " She's swim the English channel
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
agencies and corporations - - - - - . 1,201,337.38
next
month,
railed
by
only
kidding about and she is in
Edson Routh. Lynn is visiting
Obligations
or
States
and
political
subdivisions
5,077,302.59
great spirits. I just know about 700 yards to beat Lake
[or two weeks with Mr . and
Other securities (including $1 corporate stocks) . Ontario last summer.
- " 203,770.80
she's going to make it."
Mrs. Edson Roush .
Federal runds sold and securities purchased
In a hectic rinish and in the
The girl started the 32-mUe
Jenny Joe Greuser or
UI!tler agreements to resell - - - - - " 2,800,000.00
swimrrom Youngstown, N.Y. midst or conflicting advice
Logan, Ohio was Saturday
Other
loans
.
•
21,573,814.62
shouted
by
well-wishers,
she
late Friday night.
night guest or Rebecca Lee.
Bank
premises,
rurniture
and
fixtures,
and
She had intended to leave was pulled rrom the water
Mrs. Robert Lee, Rebecca
other assets representing bank premises - 737,674.23
on her marathon swim rrom dazed and exhausted, pushed
and Bob BiU called at the
- 294,019.36
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - • - the U.S. Coast Guard base of£ course by heavy swells.
home or Mr.~ and Mrs. Arthur
"
"
TOTAL
ASSETS
•
•
"
"
"
$39,880,719.14
The
new
attempt
was
here, but Coast Guard orOrr or Chester on Saturday. ficials rerused her permission organized under a security
LlABll.ITIES
Sheryl LeAnn and Patrick to leave from the base itself. arrangement approved by
Demand deposits or individuals, partnerships
Johnson spent Sunday night
and corporations · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . $ 8,204,194.37
the
Ontario
Association
or
A Coast Guard spokesman
with their great grand- said the Coast Guard was in Solo Swims, set up under
Time and savings deposits or individuals,
mother, Mrs. Dean Brinker . no way involved in the at- . Ontario government sponpartnerships, and corporations - - - • . • - - . • • • . 25,860,023.62
Mr. and Mrs . Frank tempt by the girl to conquer sorship
Deposits
o!United States Government - . . - - - . - . . - 209,890.56
rollowing
the
Hudson or Racine called at the lake.
Deposits of States and political subdivisions . - - • . • . - - - 912,661.61
drowning or a 17-year old
the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Deposits or commercial banks - - - - . • • • . . • . • . 1,000.00
"We have nothing to do Toronto youth in a poorly
Allan Taylor on Tuesday with it," the spokesman said. planned lake attempt last
Certi[ied and ofricers' checks, etc. - - . • - • • • . • • . - 140,184.42
evening.
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - • · - - - •
$35,327,954.58
summer.
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - · - - - $ 9,367,587.93
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - ,• . • $25,960,366.65
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - • . - - • • . •
1,272,941.45
if you were discharged after
TOTAL LIABILITIES · · · · - - - - - - • - - - · $36,600,896.03
January 31. 1955, you are eligible for
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
benefits under the G. I. Bill .
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
$336,590 .47
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings ) - - - - - - - - TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
$336,590.47
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total - - - - - - - .
- $2,943,232.64
Common stock-total par value
760,000.00
No. shares authorized 75,000
No. shares outstanding 75,000
" - - " " " " " " " " 1,350,000.00
Surplus · - · • • · • · · - •
Undivided profits - - - - - " 843,232.64
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
2,943,232.64
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$39,880,719.14
MEMORANDA
Average or total deposits £or the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - • - • - - $34;895,699.16
Average o£ total loans for the 15. calendar
days ending with call date : - . - - - $23,977,102.08
Train 3 nights per week and receive
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Full Time ..Benefits. Check the chart
Pledged
assets
and
securities
loaned (book value) :
below for your monthly !!ducational
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed
allowance .
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities - - . - - - $1,846,763.30
Other assets pledged to secure deposits ansi other
liabilities (including notes and bills rediscounted and
securities sold under repurchase agreement ) - . - - - - - . 96,966.25
Single
Married
1 Dependent
TOTAL · • - • • · • · - · · - , - · - - • · - - - · $1,943,729.55
2 Dependent

d

THE OHIO VALLEY BANK COMPANY

gallipolis
business

- -· ·

$16,900

of the features offered in this lovely

• TOTAL ELECTRIC • OVER 1440' OF GRACIOUS
LIVING • l BEDROOM ,• MIRRORED WARDROBE
o)00RS • CARPET • STORM WIMOOWS
THROUGHOUT "• I)ELUXE DINING ROOM HUTOfBUFFET • '14'' INTERIOR PANELING• SMOKE DiTEC'I'OR
•IIUILT- IN. WALL OVEN . • 2"x4" ~!DEWALL
CONSTRUCTION •l"x6" SUI FLOOR
CONSTRUCTION • 40 GALLON ELECTRIC WATER
HEATER • LARGE SUDER WINDOWS THROUGHOUT
. . . and lots more!

JOHNSON'S MOBILE.
HOMES INC.
RT. 7

446-3547

GALLIPOLIS, 0 . .

S270,()()
3 Dependent

-'

S410.()()

321.00

1
•

4 Dependent

S432.()()

S366.()()
S Dependent

454.00

1

IJ88.()()
6 Dependent

476.00

1

Enroll Now for New Quarter and Receive Advance Payment When
school Beqins .

CALL 446-4367
I

For Information or
Appointment
.

You Served Uncle Sam-Let llim make you successful now.

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Regular

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REDUCEDTO

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on Cooling BiW'

;, An Unpolitical Person"
By PEI'ER M. ZOLLMAN
BATON ROUGE, La :
(UPI) - Ken Lewis . is off
and running for gove!illor or
Louisiana - on a platrorm or
2""·et!nt pay-telephone calls
and r~ee breakrasts at the
governor's mansion.
" Just decrease .the cost or
the telephon e ca lls by having
the company sell these 40
tokens for a dollar, " he says
or his odd-sounding plan to
cut the price of a pay-pbone
call, still a nickel in
I .ou isian.a .
As Jor breakrast at the
mAnsion, Lewis - who proclaims himself as "an unpolitical person" - says that
during his administration
" every morning, Monday
through Friday, rrom 8 a .m .
to II :30 a .m ., a £ree breakrast will be served to groups
. designated ror that parti cular day."
Lewis scheduled a pews
conrerence today to formally .
announce his candidacy ror the second time this
week . Only one reporter
showed up ror his rirst toss or
the political [edora.
The Baton Rouge insurance salesman has run
ror orrice three times before'
always unsuccess£ully. He
insists he is serious about
challenging the political

college

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no

less.

0

LEARN!

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r nr rcl't tu x -- nc1 m or e and

Schoolgirl.only
i}
SIX m es away

YOU

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REGULAR
S49.95

.
a ud1l · to de ter mine only the

POMI::HOY - Twirle r s by th e Riggs · Be l-Park
trave led from as ra r a s J ohn- Spinn e r s of th e Be lpr es town , Pa ., 305 mil es away , to Pa rker sbur g area .
tak e part in lhis year 's
The winners of the TriRegatta Ba to·n Twirlin g Coun ty Champi ons hips were
co mpe ti li on,
whi ch
is Cindy Pa tterson , Dalelene
directed annually by Mrs. Scott, Becky Windon and
Judy Riggs, and sponsored by Teresa Carr .
the Me igs Band Boosters.
Olhe r winner s in th e
Winne rs or -the large h1gh vari Ous divi sions of the
point
trqphies
we re : contest were· Donna Kaye
I Beg inner s 1 0-6 Melis sa Mille r , Sandy Whi te, Mindy
Carpenter or Parkersburg; 7· Godbey, Mary Ann Uhl , Lisa
10
Debbie
Whitlatch. Kuhn, Sandi Craft, Tina
Parkers bur g; 11 -14 Lori Ce la ne , Becci Youn g, Cindy
Williams , Ironton ; 15-20 Cra rt , Tam1 Coleman , Julie
Jan e l Ambrose, Ches ter . Whil&lt;!, Tony a Ross. Polly
( Interm e diate) 7-10 Susan Anna Chadwell , Diane Lucas ,
Rl!nd olph, Charleston; 11-14 Erin l.a ceys , Myra Smittley,
Dana Caldwell . St. Albans; Donna Rowley, Lori Langfitt,
15-20 Teresa Carr or Tuppers Carol yn Clark, Jodi Lavelle,
Plains . 1Advanced) 7-10 Nicki Gaddis. Alicia Roush ,
Tawney Broadbent, East Paula
Ric hard s.
VIcki
Liverpool; 11-14 Cindy Sch- She ets . Ang ela Caroey ,
midbauer , Latrobe , Pa ., 15-20 Demse Hull, Vicki Parmer, ·
Becky Lang£itt, Parkers- Suzette
Burdette,
Lori
Ferrell, Lisa Wissinger .
burg
.
The Junior Parade Corps
Winning the Kni[e Twirlin g
competition was won by the Contes t was Karl Snider or
Charleston Sequinettes , and Coolville and Becky Langfitt,
the Riggs Royal..,ttes won and U sa Kuhn or Belpre.
r~r.s l places in Juvenile and
Duets 121-28 ) were won by
Senior Twirling Teams, and Ke ll y Hughes and Be th
Juni or Dance-Twirl and Snider or Co olville, and
Juvenile Ensemble com- Ca rolyn Clark of J ohnstown,
petiti on. First place in the Pa ., won the travel trophy .
Junior Twirl Tetlm~ w:.~ won

EARN WHILE

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•
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.
yours or a ne1~hbor's. the
·
ta, n t th mg
'
u~por
to kee-p 1n
mind is the purpose or an

Land of 'chicken in: every pot'
"'
has another colorful canf!,idate

VETERANS

"

CARTER &amp; EVANS,. lNC.
..

ta xp aye rs·

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cases,

re turns are a cce pted as rijed,
or examinations result in a.
re£und .
,...
The IRS is requi red lo
collect only the correct la x no more and no less. Bul if
taxpayers do not substantiate
items when requesl&lt;!d, lhe to a single score ror each
IRS ha s to a ct on a vailable re turn . Returns having high
mrormation , whi ch mar be scores ar e candidates [or
inc omplei&lt;!. That IS why th e a udit .
taxpayer 's coopera ti on is so
Bac ks lupping the comimportant.
put ers are experienced IRS
Last year, the IRS re vised empl oyees who look al
1ts audit letters to reli eve returns selecl&lt;!d by DIF to
taxpayer appre hension a bout see i£ local conditions. such as
audits and yel most tax- real estate taxes , would
payers rind it very hard no I to jus tify
unusually
high
be nervous at the prospect or d e ductions, perhaps
racing an IRS auditor, in spite eliminating the need ror an
or the [act that th ese per- audi t.
sonne l make every erfort to
Recognizing that economic
be courteous, ef£icient and and other conditions play a
fair to taxpayers. Some big r ole in the figures aptaxpayers do indeed re ceive pearing on lax returns, the
rerunds, not bills , after an IRS regularly conducts
audit. One famil y, rar studies to update DIF [orexample , received in come mulas. In fact, some returns,
from a garage business, a perhaps yours, are selected
home supply concern , and ror audit at random to help
antique sales. The hu sband make sure thai DIF is doing
riled a return showing $2,795 ItS job.
due in taxes. The IRS conIn addition to using DIF
ducted an audit, found an and random samp lin g, the
error in Ihe taxpayers' in- IRS may also pick returns
ventory
figure s,
and be cause they are related to
authorized a $1 ,6H3 rerund . ones
already
being
The possibility of an audit examined. For example, ir
not only helps " keep people the returns or one partner in a
honest ," but , more im - business are being examined,
portan tiy , also r educes the the IRS may examine the
nwnber of errors on tax re turns of the other partners
return s. During the most as well . Other returns are
recent fis cal year , the IRS chosen ror audit when the IRS
r_eceived 81.6 million in- matches
associated
dividual and
fiduciary documents, such as wage and
returns. Some or them were lax statements ( Form W-2)
bound to con lain err ors . But and statements for recipients
which ones' It would be or
dividends
and
extravagantly waste[ul and distributions, or interest
lime consumin g to examine ( Form 1099) , with ineach return. So, how does the rormation reported on a tax
IRS select returns ror audit' return . The IRS also makes it
What was needed was a a practice to screen all highway to pinpoint returns . income returns for audit

••

.~

,'

many

24 1x64'

AniC FANS

'.

and ded uctions. that an a udit
does nol alwa ys resull in
m ore tax due , a nd tha i
selection of a re tur n for
. e~am i nati on does not 1rnpty
di sh onesty or suspicion or
criminal lia bili ly. The a udit
letter rur ther explai ns tha t in

..
potenbal.
Howe v e r a r e 1urn . IS
·
selected, and whe ther it"s
•
·•

at surprise
dinner parly

•

6x6 10 GA.
·5~ WIDE 150' LONG

.'

verify income, exemptions,

th r t t
d I
g ~ g ea es ne~ . or
exammat1 qn. TheiRS
studied
.
1
. r' '" problem at len gth and
ound lhat 1t could hnd a
r e l a ti o n ~ hip .b e twe e n
c harac ter is ti cs'
of
informa ti on gtven on a re turn
and the frequency or tax
error
. Ultimatelv.
·
this researc h
led Ia a ~omputer system
whi r h ass igned weights to
var ious il&lt;!ms on a re turn and
the relations hip between
these
ite ms . Co mplex
ma thematica l rormula s were
dev ised and the system was
dubbed the " Discriminant
Fun c tion.'' or "DIF." for
sh or t.
Today . this system is applied lo all individual tax
rc turns as they fl ow through
com puter processing . DIF is
a s ys tem ·that does not
r es p ond to a
" high"
deduction here or a " low"
in come figure there , but to
how a whole group or figures
appear together on a return .
The composite picture leads
ha vin

•

REINFORCING WIRE .

OL:IVE· STREET

CIN CINNATI - You have
jus I rece ived a letter fr om the
Internal Re ve nu e Se. r vice
in[orming you thai yo ur in
.·
come tax return ·has been
selected [or a udl l.
Your
ha n ~ s . become
clam~y . Persptr atwn brea ks
out on your brow .. "Why
me '" 'vo u as k . " Wh a t
mistakes did I ma ke ''.. .
You read a h ttle fur ther.
The IRS
poin ts out thai
r e turn s a re e xa mtned to

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Thompson and family of
Columbus spent the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Bee
Halrhill and ramily.
Overnight guests or Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Hockman
and family on Monday were
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Hockman
and Judy or Troy.
Mrs. Helen Jenkins, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Whealdon
and sons, Mike and Dave, or
Thurman , and Mrs. Rilla
Rusk and Buddy or Gallipolis
spe nt Sunday at the Arts and
Crarts Festival at Ripley, w.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Norris
and rarnily and Mr. and Mrs.
Benny Hash spent the Fourth
at Lake Alma where they
enjoyed picnicking and
fishing.

BUY NOW AND SA VEl

CHROM~LO.X

i

Tax return selection sys~em is ,pure· routine

a

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tate
and Michael attended the
wedding or Dale Backus Jr .
at Rio Grande on July 5.
Junior White recently
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell Black at Rutland.
Tony Fisher,son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Brister, has left for
Jonesboro, Ark., where he
will attend college this ran .
A family picnic at Forest
Acres Park on July 5 was
enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ralph, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Ralph, Jerry, Jef£, Jill
and Julie; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Curfman, Richie and
Kimmy; Mr. and Mrs.
Clirford Bryan I and 'Steve;
and Rev. and Mrs. W. C.
Curfman.
Spending the Fourth with
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Loveday and family and Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Barnett were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barnett
and
son, . Matthew or
Wilmington and Connie
Raines or Ripley, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Oxyer and Pat or Jessup,
Md., spent two weeks as the
houseguests or Mr. and Mrs.
Wayn_e Oxyer and flliJlily.

•

, 21 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Slfnday , July 13, 1975

Medical Center.
Mrs. Judy Parsons of Inez,
Ky. , spent
rew days with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Barnett and also
visited her sister, Mrs. Ruth
A.rin Loveday and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Norris'
and family attended the
hymn sing at the Bob Evans
Shelter House Sunday.
Holiday weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tate
and Michael were Mr. and
Mrs . Ernest Backus of
Mogadore, Mr. and Mrs ..
Gerald Tate and daughter,
Helen, or Dayton, and Mr.
and Mrs . Emmett Backus
and son, Joe, Mrs. Maxine
Leavey and daughters, Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Tate,
Carroll Tate and Dale
ifackus, all or Columbus.
Sunday callers or Mrs. Allie
Tribble were Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Wright or Columbus' and
Mrs. Bertha Shaver or St.
Albans, W. Va. Mrs . Shaver
accompanied the Wrights
home ror a visit.
Mr . and Mrs. Dan Boggs or
Piqua called on Mrs. Muriel
Spires on Monday aftern'/On .
Mrs. Etta Mae Webster of
Pennsylvania is spending a
few days with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Anderson
Spaulding.

,.

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I, C. Leon Saunders, Vice President and Cashier, or the above-named bank,
do solemnly a £firm that this report or condition is true and correct, to the best or
my knowledge and belie£.
Correct-Attest : C. Leon Saunders
Emerson E. Evans
Frank H. Mills, Jr. - Directors
E. N. Wiseman

•

State or Ohio, County or Gallia, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 9th day of July, 1975, and I hereby
certi[y that I am not an orficer or director of this bank.
·
Phyllis P. Wilcoxoh, Notary Public.
My commission expires April 8, 1980.

.

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'
20- The SUnday Times·

Sent~!, Slmday, July 1;, 1975
.

'
. . 33 .
6:00-:Green Acres 3; News 4; FBI 6;. Conversations
with Eric Sevareld 8, 10; World of Survival 13; .
. Outdoors with Ken Callaway 15. Villa Alegre J3.
6.3G-NBC News 3,4,15; Friends of Man IJ; Walsh's
Animals 33. ·
·
. 7:00-:Lasl of the Wild 3.4; Wild, Wild World of Animals
6; Animal World 8 ; In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom
13, H; The Romag_nolls' Table 20; French Chef 33
7: Jo-Wo~!d of Disney 3,4,15 : Movie " Strange NeV.:
World 6, 13; Joey and Dad 8, 10; Evening at Pops
20.33.
.
8: 3G-McMIIlan and wife 3, 4, 15, Kojak a, 10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20,33.
9:3G-Unlon in Space 6, 13; 60 Minutes a. 1Q: Firing Line
33 ; KUP's Show 20.
IO :Jo-We Think You Should Know 3; News 4,6,8; High
Road to Adventure 10; Bobby Goldsborp 13; Police
Surgeon 15; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20;
Jeanne Woll with 33.
.
·
11 :00-:News 3, 10, 13, 15; Bonanza 4; My Partner the
Ghost 6; CBS News 8; KUP's Show 33 .
11 : 15-Sammy and Company 8; CBS News 10.
11 :3o-Saint 3; Tennis All -Star Match 15; Movie
'iDavld Copperfield" 10; Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 13.
12: 00-: Tennis All -Star Match 4; ABC News 6.
I :00-:ABC NAews 13 .
1:00-:Peylon Place 4.

I

'Tel~vision

Log

SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1975
6:00-:Thls Is The Jllfe 10.
6:Jo-Travelogue 4; Lamp Unto My Feet 10.
7:00-:This Week 4: Talking Hands 8; Marshall Efron' s
Sunday School 10; Newsmaker ' 75 13.
7:1$-Tele-Bibte Time 4. ·
7:3G-This Is The Life 3; i':hurch by the side of the
Road 4; Revival Fires o; Jerry Fa lwell 8; Carner a
Three 10; Lower Lighthouse 13.
8:00-:Mormon Choir 3; Day of Dlscoyery 4; GosP.,i
Caravan· 6: Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
8:JO.-&lt;Jral Roberts 3; . Your Health 4; Kathryn
Kuhlman 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presenls 10; Rex. Humbard 13; See the U.S.A. 15 .
8:5s-:-Btack Cameo 4.
9:00-:Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Oral

I

I

Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass
8; Acaross the Fence 15 .
9::»-Yours for the Asking 4; What Does the Bible

Plainly Say? 8; It Is written 10; Christ Is the answer
13; Insight 15.
10:00-:Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4 ; Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8; Movie " Seven Seas
to Calais" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13: Faith For
Today 15.

MONDAY, JULY 14, 1975
6· 25-Farm Report 13 .
·
6:3G-Flve Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An swers 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Good News 13
6:35-Coiumbus Today 4 .
·
6:45--Morning Report 3 ; Farmllme 10.
6 :55-News 13.
7:cx;,;-;::oday 3,4, 15 ; A. M . America 6, 13; CBS News .
~ : Do-Lassie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolies 10;
Sesame Street 33.

B:3G-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8: 55-Chuck While Reports 10.
9 :0G-A.M. 3: Phil Donahue 4, 15; Muriel Stevens 8;
Captai n Kangaroo 10: Morning With D. J . 13.
9:3G-Nof For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10 :00-:
_ Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15,· SP1n.Off 8,10;
D1nah 1. 13; Jody's Body Shop 33.
10:3G-Wheel Of Fortunre 3,4,15,· Gam bit 8, 10;
Des Ignlng Women 33.
11 : 00-:High Rollers 3,4, 15 ; One Life to Live 6 · Tattletales a, 10.
'
11 :3G-Hollywood Squares· 3, 15; Brady Bunch IJ ;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan imel 's World 10
12:0G-Magnlfl~ent Marble Machine 3, 15," Shows 13;
Bob Brauns 50-50 Cl ub 4; News 6,18,10; Miste
Roegers 33 .
r
12 :3G-Jackpol! 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search
For Tomorrow 8, 10; Electric Company 3;
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
.
1:00-:News 3: Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue a·
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only'
15; Carrascolendas 33.
1:Jo-Days Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make A Deal
6, 13; As the World turns 8, 10; Folk Guitar 33 .

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY, JUlY 13, 1975
ACROSS

68 Note of scole

Atmospheric

89 Metal
135 Man's name
25 Partner
70 Everybody's uncle 137 Smell amounts 27 Shield

disturbance
level
Son of Noah
Memento
Punctuation mork
Baked cloy
Food fish

23 Spanish for
''tomorrow''

71 Walk unsteadily
73 Fhght of atepo
75 Seomon

n

~state

78 Norse gods
80 Mountains of
Central Asia

134 Parent Icolloq.! 23 Flesh
139 Sou1hem
blackbird
140 Oinn
141 leoko through
143 Crieolike cow
145 Fish eggs
146 loose-sleeved

81 Printer's

jackets

l'!'laesuro IPI.1
82 Ringing

148 Dl Hgroement
160 Kind of

28 Individuals

84 Odors
86' H~y sp~der

152 Beer mug•

29 RUemlinb on
29
30 Periods of time

87 Kind ol dog
89 Encountered
92 Take unlawfully

32 Alms boKea

96 Challenges

24 Witty
IKprenion

33 ~ccomplishment 98 Falls behind
34 Golf mound
99 Period of dme
36 Hawaiian
101 S uma
wreaths

37 Greenland
118ttlement

103 Roman tyrant

104 Mature
105 Horse's

39 Worthless leaving
neck hair ·
40 Narrow,
108 Indefinite
flat.~oard
anicle
41 Wr:ttmg
107 Part ~f "to be"

Implements

42 Snt~~ and---44 Fug~ttve fro~
Sovtttt Rusata

46
47
&lt;48
50

Observed
Sa.ucy
Wn:hered

Gave

52 Average

53 A state labbr.l

55 F~od P.rogram

82 llfTib
64 Weak food

66 Eptstle (abbr.)

29 College
93 Small bird
officio!
94 Latin conjunction
31 Coarse hominy 96 Silkworm
33 Escaped
97 Melody
36 Sow
100 Compass point
38 lease
102 Pierce
40 Look to be
105 After-dinner
41 Futl
r
candy
43 Goddnallf
109 Projecting tooth
discord
112 Army meal
45 Class
46 Brook

113 Let it stand
11~ Reverberations

153 Se11oning
47 Point of hammer 116 Poker stake
154 Chriatmaocarol49 Morays
·
118 snatch
156 Sounded a horn 51 Pertaining
120 Unit for
157 Shouts
to Norway
measuring sound
158 Emmets
52 Anchored
121 Deposits
159 Strike lstang l 53 Girl's name
122 Occurs
160 S tudded
54 Algonquian
123 Microbe
Indian
'to25 Alcoholic
DOWN
56 Adding
beverages
59 Part of ship
-126 Woolly
Shon duration 60 Principal
2 Indian tents
61 Smoke and fog
3 Beginnings
63 Communication
4 Outfit
65 Cronies ·

Flying mammals
Disturban ce
Rocks
Girl's nickname

5 Additional

111 Ea':fh goddess
112 ChtneH dynasty

6 Distance
67 Greek letter
measure labbr.) 69 Negative prefix
7 Brim
70 Cooked in

134 Nuisances
136 North American
scoter

113 Pintail duck
115 Symbo1 for

B Appellation of
buttered dish
Athena
72 Paints

138 Shabby Icolloq.!
140 Sea eagles

tantalum

9 Frights

10 European

119 Sy.mbol for silver

120 La~ro

ermine

lcolloq.l

127
129
131
132

110 Noi&amp;e

121 Sewin~

12

13
14
.

74 Pronoun

141 Dregs

142 Winter

n

City in New .York

79 Unit of Portu·
Abstract being
guese currency
Parent !colloq., 83 Sum up
Transported
85 Sweethearts
with delight
86 South African

128 Haberdasher

15 Compass point

130 Openings
132 Moccasins
133 Unit of electrical

16 Lamp
17 Notch
18 Crates

mea1urement

20 Venture

133 Small lumps

76 Exists

11 Vandals

57 Pr~nter • meeaure 124 Prohibits
58 Model
126 For fear that
59 Bord
.
127 Port of "to be"
60 Manuscnpt
l~bbr.l

annuity policy

91 Doctrine
92 Music : as
written

108 Permrts

117 Tolled

Light 8, 10:

Consume'r Survival Ki t 33

2:3«&gt;-:Doctors3,4.15: Rhym ea.nd Reason6,IJ, Edge of
N1ght 8, 10, Jean Shepherd's America 33.
3 :OQ-- Another World 3,4, 15: General Hospital 6.13:
, Pnc~ Is Right 8, 10 : Woman 20: Feeling Good 33.
3:3()-{)ne Lile to Live 13 : Lucy Show 6 ; Match Game
8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Man Builtds, Man

Destroys 33.
• ·a«&gt;-:Mr . ,cartoon 3,

NBC News

Special 4, 15;

G tl l1gan s I stand 6; Musi.ca l Chairs B; Sesame

Street 20,33; Movie "The Delicate Delinquent" 10;
M1ke Douglas 13 .
4:3G-Bewilched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad Mickey
.

Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.

5:00-:FB I 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers ' Neigh .
borhood 20,33; Ironsldfe 13 .
5:3G-News 6; Andy Griffith 8: Get Smart 15 : Electr ic
Company 20,33.
'
6:00-:News 3,4,8, 10,13.15: ABC News 6; Sesame Slreet
20: Jeanne Wolf With .. 33 .
6:3G-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6 :
CBS News 8,10 : Jody's Body Shop 33 .
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars
6: What's My Line? 8; News 10; New Candid
Camera 13 ; Wally's Workshop 15: Making If Count
20: One of a Kind 33 .
7:3G-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
Party 4; Police Surgeon 4; $25.000 Pyramid 8;
Evening Edition wi th Marlin Agronsky 20 ·
Municipal Court 10; To Te!l The Truth 13 ; Untamed
World15; Episode Action 33.

6:QO---Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10

10:Jo-Go 3: Garner Ted Armstrong 4: Jimmy
Swaggart 6; Thinking In Black 8; What Does the
Bible Plainly Say? 13; This Is The Life 15.
11:00-:TV Chapel 3; Doctors on Call4; Point of View 6;
Rex Hum bard 8, 15; Rev. Henry Mahan 13 .
11 :Jo-Human Dimension 3; Make a wish ; Focus on
Columbus 4; Rev. Calvin Evans. 13.
12 :00-:AI Issue 3; NFL Action '75 4; CBPA Bowling 6;
Face The Nation 8; The Issue 10; Goober 13; Sacred
Heart 15.
'&gt;
12:15-()pen Bible 15.
12:30-Meet The Press 3.4, 15; Evangelist Calvin Evans
8; Make A Wish 13.
,
" 1:00-:Speaklng With Your Hands 3; Movie "Back
Street" 4; Camera Three 8-; Urban League 10;
Medlx 13; Public Policy Forum 15; Sinners 33 .
1 :»-Wagon Train 3; Issues and Answers 6, 13;
Summer Forum 8; Movie "The Buacaneer" 10.
2.: 00-Communlque 6; NFL Championship Games 13;
To Be Announced 15; Family at War 33.
2:»-Aware 6; Viewpoint 8; American Music Scene
13; Health Security Act 15.
"
2:5S-Movle "Mister · Moses" 4.
3:00-:Movle "The Far Out West" 3; American Angler
6 ; Fisherman 8; Wrestling 15; Saga of Western
.
Man JJ.
3:30-Call of The West 6; Champions 8; Untouchables
13.
.C:I»-Frlends of Man 6; Face The Nation 10; To Be
Announced 15; Anntlques JJ.
4:Jo-Women's Golf 3,10; Pro Tennis 6, 13; Pro Tennis
8; Play Chess JJ.
4:45-Zoo Farle 4.
5:1»-Bonanza 4; To Be Anounced 15; Erica 33.
5: 1s-Theon Ia 33.
5:30-Champlonship Fishing 8; Let's Grow a Garden

6
10
14
19
21
22

2·00- -$10.000 · Pyramid 6.13 : t;uldlng

I
celebratect their J3rd wedding
anniversary on July 8. .
'
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Norris
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Coc hran and Mrs.
Hattie Norris at Point
Pleasant,' Saturday evening:
Mrs . Doris Roush is a
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Recent weekend guests of
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Tate
and Michael were Mr. and
Mrs . Raym ond Rupe or
Winter Park, Fla .
Mr . and Mrs . Bill Price
vacationed' in Cincinnati
where they visited with her
sister, Miss Ortha Roush.
They also attended a baseball
game at the River[ronl
Stadium and went to Kings
Island .
Mr . and Mrs . Fred Sisson
were Saturday supper gues ts
or Mr. and Mrs . M~hael
Schukert, Dane and Jill, at
Albany .
Recent callers or Mrs . Allie
Tribble were Jerry Lemley
and children or Fostoria.
Sunday guests or Mrs.
Muriel Spires and Irma Bales
were Mr. and Mrs. Denny
Spires and children or Story's
Run and Mr. and Mrs . Jim
Ables or acine.
Mr . and Mrs . Wallace
Wilson, parents or Mrs . Pat
Brister, have moved rrom
Gallipolis to Poplar Church '
Road next to the Brister

Dutch

prectpttation

'44 Supercilious
person

147 Be ill
148 Man 's nickname
149 Afternoon party
151 Also

87 Waste metal
88 Boy attendant
89 Greek letter

153 A continent
labbr 1
155 Army. officer
90 Star in Oraconia
!abbr.)'

8:00-:Movle " The Rangers" 3,4, 15:'

Rookies 6, 13;

Gunsmoke 8, 10; Mmnesota Orchestra at Orchestra

Hall 20,33 .

J : O«&gt;-:S,,W,~ . T ._

6,13; Maud• "1n
9 :3G-Movie " A Maller of Wife and Death" 3,4,15;
:c~~:. 8,10: Jeanne Wolf With ... 20 : Caugh t in the
10 :00-:s
· Caribe 6, 13 ; Medical Center 8 10 · News 20
tnners 33 .

'

'

;

11. 00-:News 3,4.6.8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 33
News Special 3,4, 15; Movie "G~t Christie
33ove . 13. FBI 6; CBS News Special 8.10; Janaki

11 : 3CAI~'C

12 : ~sJa~~~~: Carson 3,4, JS :

Movie " Lizzie " B; Movie

residence.

12 :3G-Movie 6
13

I : 00-:News

1:30--Tomorrow 3,4.
;·

sons, Heath and Seth, spent a
week with her grandmother,
Mrs . Garnett Gray at HunBy Mrs. Irma Bales
tington, W.
Va ., and
Spending Saturday with celeb~ated the Fourth or July
Mr. and Mrs . C. M. Casto with her.
were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Recent callers or Mr. and
Brown and ramily or Mrs. Bee Halfhill and Mrs.
Bulaville.
Judy Thompson were Sadie
Mrs. Debby White spent Bright and Linda Shoemaker
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. of Addison.
Frank Sears or Middleport.
Mrs. Kay Hockman and
Mrs. Patsy Spires, Diane, Billy and Mrs. Leona Whitt or
Timmy and Rodney Jr. and Gallipolis spent several days
Cathy Darst spent Monday at with Mr . and Mrs. Alva
Forked Run State Park.
Roush at Mogadore.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Spending July 4 with Mr.
Bryant and son or Bradrord, and Mrs. Clarence Searls
Mass ., are spending their were Mr. and Mrs. Terry
vacation with her parents, Searls, Racine. and Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth Ralph . Mrs. Wayne Sear ls or
Mrs. Bryant is the rormer Goldsboro, N. C.
Joyce Ralph.
Miss Linda Jenkins spent
Sunday dinner guests or Sunday at Lake Alma near
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swisher Wellslon
with
Mabel
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harri.son and Mr. and Mrs.
Stewart and ramily.
James Smith and ramily
Vera
Thomas
and where they enjoyed picMargaret Kail called on Mr. nicking and swimming .
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs at ; · Holiday weekend callers or
Laurel Clitr on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones
Saturday evening callers of were Mr. and Mrs. Merle Wilt
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Casto or Bucyrus, Jerry Lemley
were Lillian Napper and and two children or Fostoria,
Allen Dill of Minersville.
and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Houseguests of Mr. and Couch and children or Lorain.
Mrs. Marion Darnell are Mrs.
Friday evening guests or
Georgia Awalt of Ramona, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Casto
Cali£., and her daughter-in- were Mr. ~d Mrs. Lawrence
law, Mrs. Joe Hutchinson of Napper and family or
Allice, Texas. Mrs. Awalt is · Aberdeen.
the [ormer Mrs . John HutTimmy Spires celebrated
chinson or Point Pleasant and his 12th birthday on July 1.
she came especially to attend _ Helping him celebrate were
her class reunion. She is also his parents, Rodney and
visiting with rriends in Point Patsy Spires, his ·sister ,
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
Diane, and David Meaige.
Monday afternoon guests or Cake, ice cream and Kool-Aid
Mrs. Nettie Swisher were her were served.
·
grandson and family, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Mrs. Bobby Swisher and Swisher called on Robert
Melany, Robbine and Sherry Davis and Elizabeth Davis or
Wycofr.
Rose Hill on Tuesday.
Walden Darst or i\ddaville
Mr. and Mrs. Bee Halrhill
called on Mr. and Mrs. Bee
Hal£hill on Tuesday evening.
Spending the Fourth with
Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Rupe
were Mr. and Mrs. Owyer
Short
and
Junior
or
Reynoldsburg.
Mrs. Mary Darnell and her
houseguests, Mrs. Georgia
Awalt of Ramona, Cali£., and
Mrs. Joe Hutchinson or
Allice, Texas, recenUy spent
two days in Columbus visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Jeck and ramily and Dr. and
Mrs. Burdette Holmes.
Mrs . Lowell Halfhill and
daughters , Christie and
Carla, spent several days
with Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Thompson and family at
Columbus.
Rita White observed her
birthday on July 5.
Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Rupe ·
were overnight guests or her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Brewer at Glenwood, W. Va. on Saturday.
Mrs. Brenda Jenkins and

Kyger

Rev . William Kuhn and Joe
Hal[hill called on Mrs.
Kenne_th Halfhill at Morgan
Center Tuesday afternoon.
Miss Linda Jenkins has
summer employment at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Norris
were honored on the occasion
or their 25th wedding anniversary. July I, with a
lovely dinner on the lawn
given by their children, Mr.
and Mrs. Benny (Kathy)
Hash, Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Norris, Patricia Ann, Carol
Jean, Janet Lee, David and
Donald Norris . Also served
was a lovely decorated cake

with ice cream.

1

Don Price has returned
home [rom Tampa, Fla.,
where he had employment.
Jim Brister who has employment near Minot, N. D ..
flew home to spend the
holiday weekend with his
wire, Pat, and family .
Junior White recently
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Sammy Gibbs at Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bradbury and childre n, J. D.,
Michael and Beth Ann, entertained Sunday with a
cookout. Guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Johnny Berkley,
Cassandra and Nathan or
Marietta, Mrs. Nora Berkley
and Phyllis or Reese Hollow,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave McCoy,
Susan, Lorri and Jill, Addison, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Berkley or Kanauga, Mrs.
Virginia Rainey or Gallipolis
and Mrs. Richard Eblin and
daughter,
Angela
or
Gallipolis Route.
Tony and Monica Fisher,
Billy Thornton and Louis
Brister spent the holiday
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Mack Hensley and rriends at
Oliver Springs, Tenn. and
Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Mrs. AnderSon Spaulding is
a patient at the Holzer

~

,
•

•

Reed honored

TWirler winners listed

"tJARJ?!N(jTO~
...
f-· •.. I - -

POMEROY - Ted Reed ,
Jr ., president or The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company ,
was surprisrul Wedne sd ay
night when the directors and
s tarr or the bank gave a
dinner party in his honor ror
25 years with The Farmers
Bank at iiie''P'oiiii 'or View in
Parkersburg .
Paul Kloes, vice president
and secretary to lhe bank's
board or dire c lors, read
e&lt;cerpts rrom the minutes
over the past 25 years ,
highlighting Reed's career
with the bank .
0. E . Anderson , retired
·executive vice president or
the Ohio Bankers Association
and a long time [riend and
associate of the Reed ramily ,
was master of ceremonies .
Ati&lt;!nding were Mr . and
Mrs. Ted Reed , Jr ., Mr . and
Mrs. 0 . E . Anderson, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul G. Eich, Mr . and
Mrs . Thereon Johnson, Mr .
and Mrs. Paul E : Kloes , Mr.
and Mrs. Fred W. Crow. Jr ..
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Follrod, Mr . and Mrs . Ferman Moore, Dorothy B. Will,
Patricia Young, Lois A. Burt,
Addie Norris, Sharon Smith,
Evelyn Lanning, Susan
Andrews, Jon Karschnik,
Joanne Williams, Roger W.
Hysell, Mary Riggs, Charlene
Thomas, Recka McGuire ,
Jenny Smith, Joan Vaughan,
Susan Abbott, Diana King
and George Hicks.
Mr. Reed was presented
numerous girts by the starr
and directors or the bank.

•'

"S
. ave

••
•••

"

••

..•

1 ;,orr e

••
•
~

.....~
...•

...
....•:..

$79.95

"Cash &amp; Carry"

.

••
••
"',.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

=

• ··

-•

I I

heavyweights ror governor.
" My gosh, I'm not a freak.
I might look like one; but I' ve
been in business here in
Baton Rouge £or 31 years.
Certainly I· don't need a
freakout run up and down the
streets [or advertising
purposes."
Beside the m -cent phone
calls and rree breakfasts, the
Lewis platrorm includes
proposals to make Gulf
States Utilities become a
wholly-owned Louisiana
corporation , rorce South
Central Bell to split orr a unit
strictly ror Louisiana ( Lewis
says it would be known as
" La Bell" ), change penalties
ror marijuana use and
driving while intoxicated,
and increase the size or a

,

WORK SHOE
HEADQUARTERS
In srock

IRED WING 1~1

On weekda ys, water

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

Carmel News,
By the Day

i

... no wailin'g

_C an a d a ' s 12 R- f oo t - high
Kaka beka Fal ls fl ows only on

Sund ays

number of state agencies,
thereby offering ''plenty of
jobs.''
He says he's willing to
listen to big campaign
contributors, but won't be
tied down.
" I'm not selling out to
anybody. H I have to sell out
there's no use in being
elected .
" H someone came to me
and said 'yes, I'll put up
$25,000', I've got to listen to
him , but I've got to see what
strings he's got. Because the
other candidates are going to
get big money, I'd say let's
hear the whole story.
"There's no way in the
world to run people off
you've got to listen to
everybody."

from the "N iagara of the North "
in western Ontano IS di verted
through a flum e Ia generate
TORONTO (UP!) - A 15- 11 It's a nice night and we will hyd roe lectn c powe r
Gallipolis
'
342 Second Ave.
watch with interest but we 're
ye~-o ld Toronto schoolgirl,
swimming powerfully , after not going to patrol them as ~
more than 15 hours in the such."
Angela, who said she was
water, appeared almost
inspired
by the hit recording
certain Saturday to become
Stale Baak No. 130
the youngest swimmer ever " I Am Woman" and other
pop
songs,
was
accompanied
to couquer unpredictable
on her voyage by an inCONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF
Lake Ontario .
At about 3 p.m. EDT, flatable dinghy carrying two
blonde Angela Kondrak was racers as well as a boat
· only 6 miles off the Toronto carrying her rather , Terry,
Mr. and Mrs . George
or Gallipells In the State of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries at the cloae of
shoreline
and
pushing and her swimming coach, Art
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. James
business on June 30, 1975.
steadily closer in the 55- Durresne.
Circle of New Haven, W. Ya .
Durresne
had
a
tape
were at the home or Mary degree water. A flotilla or machine aboard and played
small craft sailed out to greet
Circle on Sunday.
ASSETS
some or her favorite tunes
her and escort her in.
Mr. Stanley Roush or
Cash
and
due
from
banks
- - - - - - " " - " - - " " $ 2,453,313.91
over
a
loud
hailer
ror
enA pace swimmer acSpring£ield, Missouri and son
5,539,486.25
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - companyiQg the 5-foot-'2-inch, couragement.
Philip and daughter Lynn of
Obligations
of
Federal
Financing
Bank
.
5,539,486.25
who
plans
to
Miss
Kondrak,
120-pound schoolgirl girl
St. Louis, Missouri spent the
Obligations or other U.S. Government
reported by radio: " She's swim the English channel
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
agencies and corporations - - - - - . 1,201,337.38
next
month,
railed
by
only
kidding about and she is in
Edson Routh. Lynn is visiting
Obligations
or
States
and
political
subdivisions
5,077,302.59
great spirits. I just know about 700 yards to beat Lake
[or two weeks with Mr . and
Other securities (including $1 corporate stocks) . Ontario last summer.
- " 203,770.80
she's going to make it."
Mrs. Edson Roush .
Federal runds sold and securities purchased
In a hectic rinish and in the
The girl started the 32-mUe
Jenny Joe Greuser or
UI!tler agreements to resell - - - - - " 2,800,000.00
swimrrom Youngstown, N.Y. midst or conflicting advice
Logan, Ohio was Saturday
Other
loans
.
•
21,573,814.62
shouted
by
well-wishers,
she
late Friday night.
night guest or Rebecca Lee.
Bank
premises,
rurniture
and
fixtures,
and
She had intended to leave was pulled rrom the water
Mrs. Robert Lee, Rebecca
other assets representing bank premises - 737,674.23
on her marathon swim rrom dazed and exhausted, pushed
and Bob BiU called at the
- 294,019.36
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - • - the U.S. Coast Guard base of£ course by heavy swells.
home or Mr.~ and Mrs. Arthur
"
"
TOTAL
ASSETS
•
•
"
"
"
$39,880,719.14
The
new
attempt
was
here, but Coast Guard orOrr or Chester on Saturday. ficials rerused her permission organized under a security
LlABll.ITIES
Sheryl LeAnn and Patrick to leave from the base itself. arrangement approved by
Demand deposits or individuals, partnerships
Johnson spent Sunday night
and corporations · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . $ 8,204,194.37
the
Ontario
Association
or
A Coast Guard spokesman
with their great grand- said the Coast Guard was in Solo Swims, set up under
Time and savings deposits or individuals,
mother, Mrs. Dean Brinker . no way involved in the at- . Ontario government sponpartnerships, and corporations - - - • . • - - . • • • . 25,860,023.62
Mr. and Mrs . Frank tempt by the girl to conquer sorship
Deposits
o!United States Government - . . - - - . - . . - 209,890.56
rollowing
the
Hudson or Racine called at the lake.
Deposits of States and political subdivisions . - - • . • . - - - 912,661.61
drowning or a 17-year old
the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Deposits or commercial banks - - - - . • • • . . • . • . 1,000.00
"We have nothing to do Toronto youth in a poorly
Allan Taylor on Tuesday with it," the spokesman said. planned lake attempt last
Certi[ied and ofricers' checks, etc. - - . • - • • • . • • . - 140,184.42
evening.
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - • · - - - •
$35,327,954.58
summer.
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - · - - - $ 9,367,587.93
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - ,• . • $25,960,366.65
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - • . - - • • . •
1,272,941.45
if you were discharged after
TOTAL LIABILITIES · · · · - - - - - - • - - - · $36,600,896.03
January 31. 1955, you are eligible for
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
benefits under the G. I. Bill .
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
$336,590 .47
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings ) - - - - - - - - TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
$336,590.47
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital, total - - - - - - - .
- $2,943,232.64
Common stock-total par value
760,000.00
No. shares authorized 75,000
No. shares outstanding 75,000
" - - " " " " " " " " 1,350,000.00
Surplus · - · • • · • · · - •
Undivided profits - - - - - " 843,232.64
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
2,943,232.64
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$39,880,719.14
MEMORANDA
Average or total deposits £or the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - • - • - - $34;895,699.16
Average o£ total loans for the 15. calendar
days ending with call date : - . - - - $23,977,102.08
Train 3 nights per week and receive
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Full Time ..Benefits. Check the chart
Pledged
assets
and
securities
loaned (book value) :
below for your monthly !!ducational
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed
allowance .
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities - - . - - - $1,846,763.30
Other assets pledged to secure deposits ansi other
liabilities (including notes and bills rediscounted and
securities sold under repurchase agreement ) - . - - - - - . 96,966.25
Single
Married
1 Dependent
TOTAL · • - • • · • · - · · - , - · - - • · - - - · $1,943,729.55
2 Dependent

d

THE OHIO VALLEY BANK COMPANY

gallipolis
business

- -· ·

$16,900

of the features offered in this lovely

• TOTAL ELECTRIC • OVER 1440' OF GRACIOUS
LIVING • l BEDROOM ,• MIRRORED WARDROBE
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CONSTRUCTION •l"x6" SUI FLOOR
CONSTRUCTION • 40 GALLON ELECTRIC WATER
HEATER • LARGE SUDER WINDOWS THROUGHOUT
. . . and lots more!

JOHNSON'S MOBILE.
HOMES INC.
RT. 7

446-3547

GALLIPOLIS, 0 . .

S270,()()
3 Dependent

-'

S410.()()

321.00

1
•

4 Dependent

S432.()()

S366.()()
S Dependent

454.00

1

IJ88.()()
6 Dependent

476.00

1

Enroll Now for New Quarter and Receive Advance Payment When
school Beqins .

CALL 446-4367
I

For Information or
Appointment
.

You Served Uncle Sam-Let llim make you successful now.

I'

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d

Regular

'

REDUCEDTO

•
.1••

on Cooling BiW'

;, An Unpolitical Person"
By PEI'ER M. ZOLLMAN
BATON ROUGE, La :
(UPI) - Ken Lewis . is off
and running for gove!illor or
Louisiana - on a platrorm or
2""·et!nt pay-telephone calls
and r~ee breakrasts at the
governor's mansion.
" Just decrease .the cost or
the telephon e ca lls by having
the company sell these 40
tokens for a dollar, " he says
or his odd-sounding plan to
cut the price of a pay-pbone
call, still a nickel in
I .ou isian.a .
As Jor breakrast at the
mAnsion, Lewis - who proclaims himself as "an unpolitical person" - says that
during his administration
" every morning, Monday
through Friday, rrom 8 a .m .
to II :30 a .m ., a £ree breakrast will be served to groups
. designated ror that parti cular day."
Lewis scheduled a pews
conrerence today to formally .
announce his candidacy ror the second time this
week . Only one reporter
showed up ror his rirst toss or
the political [edora.
The Baton Rouge insurance salesman has run
ror orrice three times before'
always unsuccess£ully. He
insists he is serious about
challenging the political

college

•

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no

less.

0

LEARN!

•

r nr rcl't tu x -- nc1 m or e and

Schoolgirl.only
i}
SIX m es away

YOU

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REGULAR
S49.95

.
a ud1l · to de ter mine only the

POMI::HOY - Twirle r s by th e Riggs · Be l-Park
trave led from as ra r a s J ohn- Spinn e r s of th e Be lpr es town , Pa ., 305 mil es away , to Pa rker sbur g area .
tak e part in lhis year 's
The winners of the TriRegatta Ba to·n Twirlin g Coun ty Champi ons hips were
co mpe ti li on,
whi ch
is Cindy Pa tterson , Dalelene
directed annually by Mrs. Scott, Becky Windon and
Judy Riggs, and sponsored by Teresa Carr .
the Me igs Band Boosters.
Olhe r winner s in th e
Winne rs or -the large h1gh vari Ous divi sions of the
point
trqphies
we re : contest were· Donna Kaye
I Beg inner s 1 0-6 Melis sa Mille r , Sandy Whi te, Mindy
Carpenter or Parkersburg; 7· Godbey, Mary Ann Uhl , Lisa
10
Debbie
Whitlatch. Kuhn, Sandi Craft, Tina
Parkers bur g; 11 -14 Lori Ce la ne , Becci Youn g, Cindy
Williams , Ironton ; 15-20 Cra rt , Tam1 Coleman , Julie
Jan e l Ambrose, Ches ter . Whil&lt;!, Tony a Ross. Polly
( Interm e diate) 7-10 Susan Anna Chadwell , Diane Lucas ,
Rl!nd olph, Charleston; 11-14 Erin l.a ceys , Myra Smittley,
Dana Caldwell . St. Albans; Donna Rowley, Lori Langfitt,
15-20 Teresa Carr or Tuppers Carol yn Clark, Jodi Lavelle,
Plains . 1Advanced) 7-10 Nicki Gaddis. Alicia Roush ,
Tawney Broadbent, East Paula
Ric hard s.
VIcki
Liverpool; 11-14 Cindy Sch- She ets . Ang ela Caroey ,
midbauer , Latrobe , Pa ., 15-20 Demse Hull, Vicki Parmer, ·
Becky Lang£itt, Parkers- Suzette
Burdette,
Lori
Ferrell, Lisa Wissinger .
burg
.
The Junior Parade Corps
Winning the Kni[e Twirlin g
competition was won by the Contes t was Karl Snider or
Charleston Sequinettes , and Coolville and Becky Langfitt,
the Riggs Royal..,ttes won and U sa Kuhn or Belpre.
r~r.s l places in Juvenile and
Duets 121-28 ) were won by
Senior Twirling Teams, and Ke ll y Hughes and Be th
Juni or Dance-Twirl and Snider or Co olville, and
Juvenile Ensemble com- Ca rolyn Clark of J ohnstown,
petiti on. First place in the Pa ., won the travel trophy .
Junior Twirl Tetlm~ w:.~ won

EARN WHILE

•

•
.

.
yours or a ne1~hbor's. the
·
ta, n t th mg
'
u~por
to kee-p 1n
mind is the purpose or an

Land of 'chicken in: every pot'
"'
has another colorful canf!,idate

VETERANS

"

CARTER &amp; EVANS,. lNC.
..

ta xp aye rs·

:
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••

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•

cases,

re turns are a cce pted as rijed,
or examinations result in a.
re£und .
,...
The IRS is requi red lo
collect only the correct la x no more and no less. Bul if
taxpayers do not substantiate
items when requesl&lt;!d, lhe to a single score ror each
IRS ha s to a ct on a vailable re turn . Returns having high
mrormation , whi ch mar be scores ar e candidates [or
inc omplei&lt;!. That IS why th e a udit .
taxpayer 's coopera ti on is so
Bac ks lupping the comimportant.
put ers are experienced IRS
Last year, the IRS re vised empl oyees who look al
1ts audit letters to reli eve returns selecl&lt;!d by DIF to
taxpayer appre hension a bout see i£ local conditions. such as
audits and yel most tax- real estate taxes , would
payers rind it very hard no I to jus tify
unusually
high
be nervous at the prospect or d e ductions, perhaps
racing an IRS auditor, in spite eliminating the need ror an
or the [act that th ese per- audi t.
sonne l make every erfort to
Recognizing that economic
be courteous, ef£icient and and other conditions play a
fair to taxpayers. Some big r ole in the figures aptaxpayers do indeed re ceive pearing on lax returns, the
rerunds, not bills , after an IRS regularly conducts
audit. One famil y, rar studies to update DIF [orexample , received in come mulas. In fact, some returns,
from a garage business, a perhaps yours, are selected
home supply concern , and ror audit at random to help
antique sales. The hu sband make sure thai DIF is doing
riled a return showing $2,795 ItS job.
due in taxes. The IRS conIn addition to using DIF
ducted an audit, found an and random samp lin g, the
error in Ihe taxpayers' in- IRS may also pick returns
ventory
figure s,
and be cause they are related to
authorized a $1 ,6H3 rerund . ones
already
being
The possibility of an audit examined. For example, ir
not only helps " keep people the returns or one partner in a
honest ," but , more im - business are being examined,
portan tiy , also r educes the the IRS may examine the
nwnber of errors on tax re turns of the other partners
return s. During the most as well . Other returns are
recent fis cal year , the IRS chosen ror audit when the IRS
r_eceived 81.6 million in- matches
associated
dividual and
fiduciary documents, such as wage and
returns. Some or them were lax statements ( Form W-2)
bound to con lain err ors . But and statements for recipients
which ones' It would be or
dividends
and
extravagantly waste[ul and distributions, or interest
lime consumin g to examine ( Form 1099) , with ineach return. So, how does the rormation reported on a tax
IRS select returns ror audit' return . The IRS also makes it
What was needed was a a practice to screen all highway to pinpoint returns . income returns for audit

••

.~

,'

many

24 1x64'

AniC FANS

'.

and ded uctions. that an a udit
does nol alwa ys resull in
m ore tax due , a nd tha i
selection of a re tur n for
. e~am i nati on does not 1rnpty
di sh onesty or suspicion or
criminal lia bili ly. The a udit
letter rur ther explai ns tha t in

..
potenbal.
Howe v e r a r e 1urn . IS
·
selected, and whe ther it"s
•
·•

at surprise
dinner parly

•

6x6 10 GA.
·5~ WIDE 150' LONG

.'

verify income, exemptions,

th r t t
d I
g ~ g ea es ne~ . or
exammat1 qn. TheiRS
studied
.
1
. r' '" problem at len gth and
ound lhat 1t could hnd a
r e l a ti o n ~ hip .b e twe e n
c harac ter is ti cs'
of
informa ti on gtven on a re turn
and the frequency or tax
error
. Ultimatelv.
·
this researc h
led Ia a ~omputer system
whi r h ass igned weights to
var ious il&lt;!ms on a re turn and
the relations hip between
these
ite ms . Co mplex
ma thematica l rormula s were
dev ised and the system was
dubbed the " Discriminant
Fun c tion.'' or "DIF." for
sh or t.
Today . this system is applied lo all individual tax
rc turns as they fl ow through
com puter processing . DIF is
a s ys tem ·that does not
r es p ond to a
" high"
deduction here or a " low"
in come figure there , but to
how a whole group or figures
appear together on a return .
The composite picture leads
ha vin

•

REINFORCING WIRE .

OL:IVE· STREET

CIN CINNATI - You have
jus I rece ived a letter fr om the
Internal Re ve nu e Se. r vice
in[orming you thai yo ur in
.·
come tax return ·has been
selected [or a udl l.
Your
ha n ~ s . become
clam~y . Persptr atwn brea ks
out on your brow .. "Why
me '" 'vo u as k . " Wh a t
mistakes did I ma ke ''.. .
You read a h ttle fur ther.
The IRS
poin ts out thai
r e turn s a re e xa mtned to

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Thompson and family of
Columbus spent the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Bee
Halrhill and ramily.
Overnight guests or Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Hockman
and family on Monday were
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Hockman
and Judy or Troy.
Mrs. Helen Jenkins, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Whealdon
and sons, Mike and Dave, or
Thurman , and Mrs. Rilla
Rusk and Buddy or Gallipolis
spe nt Sunday at the Arts and
Crarts Festival at Ripley, w.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Norris
and rarnily and Mr. and Mrs.
Benny Hash spent the Fourth
at Lake Alma where they
enjoyed picnicking and
fishing.

BUY NOW AND SA VEl

CHROM~LO.X

i

Tax return selection sys~em is ,pure· routine

a

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tate
and Michael attended the
wedding or Dale Backus Jr .
at Rio Grande on July 5.
Junior White recently
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell Black at Rutland.
Tony Fisher,son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Brister, has left for
Jonesboro, Ark., where he
will attend college this ran .
A family picnic at Forest
Acres Park on July 5 was
enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ralph, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Ralph, Jerry, Jef£, Jill
and Julie; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Curfman, Richie and
Kimmy; Mr. and Mrs.
Clirford Bryan I and 'Steve;
and Rev. and Mrs. W. C.
Curfman.
Spending the Fourth with
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Loveday and family and Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Barnett were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barnett
and
son, . Matthew or
Wilmington and Connie
Raines or Ripley, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Oxyer and Pat or Jessup,
Md., spent two weeks as the
houseguests or Mr. and Mrs.
Wayn_e Oxyer and flliJlily.

•

, 21 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Slfnday , July 13, 1975

Medical Center.
Mrs. Judy Parsons of Inez,
Ky. , spent
rew days with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Barnett and also
visited her sister, Mrs. Ruth
A.rin Loveday and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Norris'
and family attended the
hymn sing at the Bob Evans
Shelter House Sunday.
Holiday weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tate
and Michael were Mr. and
Mrs . Ernest Backus of
Mogadore, Mr. and Mrs ..
Gerald Tate and daughter,
Helen, or Dayton, and Mr.
and Mrs . Emmett Backus
and son, Joe, Mrs. Maxine
Leavey and daughters, Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Tate,
Carroll Tate and Dale
ifackus, all or Columbus.
Sunday callers or Mrs. Allie
Tribble were Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Wright or Columbus' and
Mrs. Bertha Shaver or St.
Albans, W. Va. Mrs . Shaver
accompanied the Wrights
home ror a visit.
Mr . and Mrs. Dan Boggs or
Piqua called on Mrs. Muriel
Spires on Monday aftern'/On .
Mrs. Etta Mae Webster of
Pennsylvania is spending a
few days with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Anderson
Spaulding.

,.

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I, C. Leon Saunders, Vice President and Cashier, or the above-named bank,
do solemnly a £firm that this report or condition is true and correct, to the best or
my knowledge and belie£.
Correct-Attest : C. Leon Saunders
Emerson E. Evans
Frank H. Mills, Jr. - Directors
E. N. Wiseman

•

State or Ohio, County or Gallia, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 9th day of July, 1975, and I hereby
certi[y that I am not an orficer or director of this bank.
·
Phyllis P. Wilcoxoh, Notary Public.
My commission expires April 8, 1980.

.

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j
22- TIM:·SUnday Times- Sentinel, Sftriuay, July 13, 1975 '

I

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Tom
CARNOtlSTJE, Scotland
(UP!) - American Tom
Watson calmly rolled in a 12foot putt on the last hole
Satw-day to earn a 72-hole tie
with faltering Jack Newton of
Australia and force an 18-hole

Hard work
promised
MIAMI (UP!) - On the
eve of the opening of swnrner
training
camp,
Miami
Dolphin Coach Don Shula is m
with a warning for his players
and opponents alike.
"I'm going to work tlus
club as hard or harder than
the one in 1970," he said
Saturday.
That was the year Shula
moved from Baltimore to
Miami and it was the year
Shula ordered unprecedented
four-a-&lt;lay practices.
Shula doesn ' t plan on
bearing down quite that hard
again for the 21 veterans and
38 rookies reporting Sunday,
but he does have plans for two
workouts a day, plus a 7. 30
p.m. meeting six days a
week.
The rock-jawed coach also
expects plenty of help from
his players in stepping up
effo~ts.

"The thiug I've been

im~

pressed with among our
players is the renewed
dedication,"
he
said.
"There's none of the attitude
problems that stared to creep
in last year. Our players
realize whl't they must do to
get back o·n top."
Shula calls last season
"disappointing," despite
winning the AFC Eastern
Division championship. The
Dolphins lost to Oakland in
·the first round of the playoffs.
He wants to "rebound"
from last year but faces a
handicap in the loss to the
WFL Memphis Southmen of
running backs Larry Csonka
and Jim Kiick and wide
receiver Paul Warfield.

.

at son's putt for,ces playoff

playoff for the 104th British
Open Golf cham pionship
Sunday .
"Fate was wtth me," the
25-year-old Watson said of the
shot Ihat earned htm an even
par 72 and a four-round total
of 279, nine under par.
A disappointed Newton,
also 25. bogeyed three of the
last four holes and finished
with a two-wer -par 74.
"It wasn 't a case of Tom
winning a tie with me, 1 '
Newton said. "It was a case
of me giving him a lie ."
A str ong wind from the
East finally roused this Tiger
of a Carnoustie Course, put a
stop to a par busting rampage
over its-.. 7 ,065-yards of
htllocks, and allowed only
four subpar rounds on the last
day of thts oldest of golf
classics to a final field of 60.

The gusty winds could not
deter Watson and Newton
from breaking Ben Hogan's
22-year-o ld
Ca rnoustie
Tournament record of 282,
but it dtd keep them away
fr om the open mark of 276 set
by Arnold palmer in 1962 and
equalled by Tom Weiskopf
two years ago.
The winner of Sunday's
playoff stands to gain $16,500,
with the loser entitled to
$13,200 from a 'total purse of
$165 ,000.
The bookies tmmediately
made Watson a 4-5 favorite
and offered even money on
Newton.
Wat son was four strokes
behind leader Bobby Cole of
South Africa and at1other
three behind Newton when he
se t out in a fmal round drive
to prove once and for all that

he could stand the pressure
since his successive blowups
as the leader of the last two
U. S. Opens.
r
Cole, playing with Newton,
skied to a 76 with three
bogeys in the last'fow- holes
and finished one stroke back
at 280 in a three-way tie with
the two big guns of golf, Jack
Nicklaus and Johnny Miller.
Nicklaus struggled through
the middle holes with bogeys
at six and nine but recovered
with birdies at 12 and 14 to
rally back into contention .
But iron troubles on the final
three holes never gave him a
chance with a makeable
birdie putt. He finished with
an even par 72.
The two-time champion of
this event shook his head and
said, "l just lost another
British Open by one stroke,"

Ex-Bengal Reid
comes to play
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Mike Reid has come-to play.
Reid has brought the same
preparation and dedication to
show business that made him
an All-America at Penn State
and an All-Pro defensive
tackle with the Cincinnati
Bengals.
Mike put his rock combo on
the road six weeks ago after
months
of
selecting
musicians and rehearsing at
his home in Cincinnati. When
they were ready, he started to
take bookings and is now in
his sixth week with Mike
Reid's Band at the Anthony
· House in suburban Pittsburgh.
Mike is a master of all
keyboard instruments. He
has been studying music
about as long as he played
football and has become so
accomplished · as a pianist
that he has been a guest with
both the Dallas and Cincinnati symphony orchestras.
Reid also studied composition in his years at Penn
State, where he . was
graduated as a music major.
Reid was redshirted one
)"'M at Penn State when he
N eived hi!: first knee injury.
During this year, he al"
p~ared
in
a
campus
;.roduction as Big Julie in
"Guys and Dolls."
After five years with the
Bengals, - Reid said football
was making him "stagnant."

I was not moving forward,"
he said.
"Games were getting
harder to get ready for,"
Reid added, "and the excitement was gone. It seems I
was hurting all the time. The
stiffness left by Wednesday
when practice started and
then I would start hurting all
over again.
"I had a good career, but
football was not helping me
or the Bengals. We parted in
perfect harmony," said
Reid .
Reid said he is still the
property of the Bengals.
George Perles, owner of the
Anthony House and the
defensive line coach with the
Pittsburgh Ssteelers, kidded
Reid by saying he would
change his mind about
playing football when he saw

referring to four previous
second place finishes for the
leading money winner in
gold.
_
Miller lost a stroke to par at
the first hole by carelessly
mtssing a four footer, but
then made a run at the
leaders and had himself in
contention by the 14th hole,
where he chipped to within
three feet and dropped the
putt for a birdie that put him

'"

23- the SWlday Times- Sentinel, Sw1tlay, July 13, 1975

•

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•

The only sub .p ar roWld by
needed for the top spot. But
any
of the top 10 finishers was
his blast caught the brick-like
edge of uie trap and rolled a 71 shot by Australian ' •J
back down into the sand at his Graham Marsh, who finished
next at 281.
feet.
Defending champion and
" I have to say this is the
three
time winn'er Gary
most disappointing finish of
any tournament 'I was ever Player ended the tournament
in," a dejected Miller said. "I With a 73 for 292 and his ..
parnter,
Lou ''
missed the playoffs by an playing
Graham,
the
U.
S.
Open
inch or two ... l just figure
'this isn't your tournament, champion, shot a 76 for 292.
Palmer finished with a 73
big fella."
for 288, Weiskopf had a 72 fnr
287. two time winner Lee
Trevino had 75 for 293 and
Hale Irwin, Uurd leading
money winner on the U. S. • '
The nine-&lt;lay competition Nash, Tim Shaw, Bob ProfessiOnal Tow- , had a 75 "
for 283 .
includes swimming, diving , · Tierney and Fred Tyler.
synchronized-swimming and
On the distaff side, Shirley
water polo .
Babashoff, Lynn Colella Bell,
-~ ·
The group includes 37 Bonnie Brown, Kim Dunson,
swimmers, seven divers , Jenni
Franks,
eight synchronized swim- Heather Greenwood, Kathy
mers and an 11-member Heddy, Unda Jezek, Valerie
water polo team .
Lee, Marcia Morey, Karen f'•
The swimmers include Reeser, Kelly Rowell, La uri /
Robin Backhaus, Richard Siering, Jill · Symons, Tauna
Bohan, Joe Bottom, Andy Vandeweghe, "Ellen Wallace
Coan, Rick Colella, Bill and Camille Wright.
SAT.• JULY 19, 1975
Forrester, Bruce and Steve
Divers include Phil Boggs,
l : OOP.M.
Furniss, Brian Goodell, Dave Tim Moore, Kent Vosler,
!.
JACKSON COUNTY
Hannula, Ri.ck Hofstetter, Janet Ely, Carrie Irish,
.
LIVESTOCK YARDS
Paul Hove, Greg Jagenbw-g, Christine Loock and Debra
Ripley, W.Va.
Tim McDannel, Jim Mont- Keplar \',j&gt;lson.
gomery, John Murphy , Mel
77 HEAD SELL!NG77
one sltoke behind the then co,
leaders Newton and Cole.
the
28-year~ld
But
Californian,· too, found
himself pushing his irons off
target and suffered an 18th
hole bQgey that cost him a
plac~ in the playoff.
Miller pushed his drive into
a bunker and took a six-iron
for a 'rnake-{)r break attempt
at reaching the green and
making a birdie he thought he

BASEBALL

.

ROUING SPRINGS
FARMS
Complete
CHAROlAIS
DISPERSAL

' ~.

American L11gue Standings
By United Press J~
· Unittid Press International
East

·
w. I. pel.

the first workouts of the
steelers which begin July 16.
Mike just laughed when
Perles said, "Maybe we can
make a trade and have you
come back as a Steeler."
Later, Perles was asked if
he thought Reid could break
into his front four of Joe
Greene, Dwight White, Ernie
Holmes and L. C. Greenwood.

.523
.523
.494
.452
.440

Oakland
Kansas City
Chicago
Texas
Calif.
Minnesota

.624
.547 6112
.470 13
.466 13112
.449 15
.448 15

"I don't know," Perles

.565

32
39
44
47
49
39 48

3112

6
9112
10'1'

Sunday's Games:

said, "but I'd like to be faced
with that deciSion."
As for the Mike Reid Band,
Reid plays one original song,
"Lovely Lady·, " which has a
chance to get on the charts.
With a few more songs like
this and a good album, Reid,
who is now working for about
$2,000 a week, could very well
be making far more than the
$75,000 a year he made under
·a Bengals contract.

Cyclists rest before

3112

w. t. pel. g.b.

53
47
39
41
40

7 Bulls- 68 Females

g.b.

48 37
Milwaukee 45 41
New York
45 41
Baltimore
41 42
Cleveland
38 46
Detroit
37 47
West
Boston

&lt;

. Ja~kling

French Alps

NICE, France (tlPI) With the trials of the
Pyrenees' Mountains behind
them, the 107 survivors of the
62nd Tour De France
Maratlion cycling race took
their second day of rest
Saturday in two weeks before
tackling the French Alps
Sunday.
Enjoying the warm sunshine at this French Riviera
resort, the cyclists, who flew
in from Puy_De Dome Friday
evening, rested up for Sunday's first assault ' of the

French Alps.
The 130.5 mile 15th stage
will take the cyclists over
four major peaks before the
final uphill sprint to the
winter resort station of Pra
Loup in the upper French
Alps.
Starting from Nice early
Sunday, the cyclists will have
20 miles of slightly rising
country in which to prepare
themselves for the first
challenging ascent, the 1,500
yard La Colmiane-Col St.
Martin .

"Large selection
of quality Polled,
French &amp;
Domestic
bloodlines"
3-in -1 combinations

Cows and calves
Bred females
Open He~fer.s· •

•

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'"

'"
"

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;

...• •

6 DAYS

A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT

..

...

Dodgers fallll games

Burglar is

behind red hot Reds

identified

CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Cincinnati Reds ran · their
winning streak to a season
high eight games Fnday
night by sweeping a double
header from the New York
Mets to boost their lead to
101&gt; games over the Dodgers
in the National League Wes t.
Johnny Bench and Danny
Driessen socked homers as
the Reds won the second
game 4-1, to give Clay Ktrby
hts seventh victory in 10
decisions.
However, the Reds' right
hander 1 whose la ~t six v•c·
tories have come in a r ow.

needed help from Clay
Carroll and \\'ill McEnaney
whe n
he
s uffere d
a
recurrence of an old shoulder
injury after pi(chi ng s ix
scor e less innings.
McEnaney , who picked up
his 101h save in the second
game. gained hts ninth wh en ·
the Reds won the opener . 4-3.
as Fredie Norman n'otched
his fifth victory in etght
decisions.
A double by Pete Rose and
a walk to Ke n Griffey
preceded Bench 's first-inntng
homer in the second game.
Vi ct im of th e home r ,

RPnch 's 19th ot the seasun.
was ruukie Met right hander

Bollinger, Zanesville, Oluo:
bes t free throw shooter, Andy
Davenport. Dayton, Ohio.
Junwr Varsity Basketball
- MVP, Ted Chaffin , Grove
City, Ohto: Bes t defensive
player. Arthur De Stephen,
Jack so n,.
Oht o:
Best
rebounder, Chuck Ktng:
Coaches award , Dusty
l';t c·"an , Lancaster , Ohto .
Cr og, Country - MVP.

t1 IWIH&gt;UI s ingle by Felix
Handy Tate . The three RBI 's Millan in the sixth was the
buusted lhe Heds' catcher 's unly other hit off Ktrby before
season Iota! to 73.
his departure .
The Reds' only other run in
The Mets only run \n the
the second game came in the second game came ·in ' the
eighth mning when Driessen eighth mning . Pinch hitter Ed
tagged Ken Sanders for a . Kranepool doubled with one
two-out homer. hts third of out off Carroll. One out later,
the season .
Carroll walked Millan and
Kirby had a na-hitter going J uh n Milner to load the bases.
in the second game until
Mci':naney then replaced
Dave Kin gman led off the Carroll and plunked Rusty
ftflh wtth a sing le to left . One Staub with a pitch to force
oul later , Mtke Phillips hume Kranepou1 However,
stn gled, but J onn Stearns hit the 23-year-old lefty went on
into a double pla y to end the lo blank the Mets the rest of

Bernard Ttll•y, Wheelersburg. Ohio; Most improved,
J ohn Climer. Londonderrv .
Oht o: Outstanding Freshman. Ch uck Schoeppner.
Track - MVP, Bernard
Tilley, Wheelersburg , Ohio:
Mos t improved. Harry White,
McCo nnellsville, Ohio and
Dave Musser, Chesapeake:
Coaches award, Harry
White; x - Consistency

WATKINS GLEN N.Y.
(UP!)- An estimated 75,000
auto racing fans were expected to converge on this
small
community
this
weekend as top drivers from
the United States and Europe
meet for a full weekend of
racing on the Glen's 3.4 mile

circuit.
Official qualifying and
practice was held Friday as a
prelude to two major professional events, Saturday ' s
World Championship Of
Makes SixHour Endurance
Test and Sunday's Formula
5000 contest.

HIGHEST RATES
7112%

GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP! )
- The Green B~y Packers
said Friday they have signed
Rudy Sims, one of the
Canadian Football League's
top defensive linemen .
Sims, a 6-foot, 255-pound
former Florida A&amp;M star, is
seen as the answer to the
Packers need for an explosive pass rusher. Dick
Corrick , director of pro
player personnel for the
Packers, said, "We hope that
he's the guy to add to an area
where we need some help ..:..
in rushing the passer."

6112% .

Have you outgrown your present mobile
· homefFamily increased? Want better
~nstruction? Need something a little easier
to heat? Would you like .new furn~ture
&amp; appliances?

53,4%

..
51f4%

Where are we when you need us? R1gh t he re Ready to
grve yo u 1mmed1a te del1very on a VW lh e o r1g rna l gas save r But
if yo u get a V'N 2t11c tl y to sa ve gas . be prepa red l o r some surpll ses L1111e ex tras . l1ke VW quality The VW Owne r 's Secu rtty
Blanket w1 th Comput e r Analysts , the most advance d ca r cove rage pl an 1n the world
See us now It'll be nice Ia sta rt d11vrng a ca r that has a
sense of values
Including saving gas

•

;j: KINGSBURY MOBILE HOMES ·..

\

..

·

SALES AND SERVICE

•

'

•

•
.•

..

. .;
'

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·-

Wagner is

Braves new
·head coach

9th senior
tournament
announced
JACKSON - The ninth
.Annual Southern Ohio Seniors
golf tournament will be held
Tuesday , August 26, at the
Fairgreens Country in
Jackson County, with over a
hundred male golfers, 50
years of age and older, expected to play in the IS-hole
event.
Golfers from Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia are
expected to enter the event to
be held on the 51-year old
hilly nine-hole course which
measures
3,131
yards .
Golfer;; will use their own
club handicaps, and compete
by age groups in the day-long

.p.

Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
PH. 446-9800

•

DELAWARE - Gerald
(Popey) Wagner, a 24-year
coaching veteran and former
Galli an , has been named
head basketball and head
baseball coach at Olentangy
High School near here . The
Braves are Class AA.
Wagner moved to Olentangy with a career record of
292-224 as a head basketball
coach. In baseball, his teams
have c ompiled a 128-66
record
last
basketball
His
coaching assignment was at
Arlingt on High School, a
Class A sc hool in Hancock
County . While at Arlington,
his teams won two outright
Blanchard Valley League
lltles, compiling a 9-0 record
m the 1969-70 season and
again in 1971l-71.
Last season at Arlington,
the Red Devils were 7-12,
losing eight games by six
points or less, including two
in overtime. Wagner's best
season was the 1956-59
campaign when he guided
Coalton to a 21-3 record.
Hts coaching tenure also
included a stop at Fairfield
Union where the Falcons
bowed to Vince Chickerella 's
Class AA state champion
Linden - McKinley squad,
bowing by nine points in
Central District play.
Wagner is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Wagner, Rt . I, Bidwell. He is married to Dorthy
Russell, the daughter of Dale
and Garnet Russell.

Ackerman, and John Weber.
Prizes and trophies will be
awarded at a banquet which
will conclude the day's
festivities .

LOOKING
FOR

~OME:T HING
? Dl ~~E:RE:NT?

E:XPLORE: ' A

Ne-w

~

•
DSIOD
AT

DON WATTS V.W., INC.
"

•

I

R10 GRAND€
AUTHORIZED
OfALEA

COLLEGE I COMMUNI ,T Y COLLEGE

•

.

·,

'

'

"

.,

,SOf'ltiHING
FASCIN,O..TING
,O..BOIJ'T 'THI5
HOUSE-!
MUS 'T R!:SEI\RCH
iT ! 15 II 1'Hf.

..
T&gt;lP..T~
THE

OL.Df.ST
HOOKUP
SINCE lttf

IN Tr\£
c.IT Y?

"
"

ROMNI

B/I.IHS!

.,

."'
..-,
'"

:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

•

•

GERRY WAGNER

uniforms. Uniforms wlll be
offered the first of the
week.

Come_in today.
Start sav1~ gas_
tomorrow.

.

'·';' ,, .

GALLIPOLIS - The Uttle
League Orioles led by J .
Saxton's home run defeated
the Athletics, 2~ in summer
league action here Friday
night. In the other little
league game, the Senators
took a 7-4 victory from the
Cubs .
In pony league action, the
Phils edged the Dodgers, 7-4.

Co-chairmen again this
year are'Jack Stiffler, Sr . of
Jackson and Chet Harless of
Wellston: with Otto Sharp,
McArthur , honorary
chairman Mrs. Lorraine
Mtc hael,
Jackson
ts
executtve secretary of the
Southern Ohio Seniors.
Members of the Fairgreens
Women 's Golf Association
Will assist in tournament
arrangements, registration
and scoring with a "family
car" offered as a prize for
any hole-in-one made that
day by a semor golfer.
The seniors committee
includes Sharp, Stiffler ,
Harless , and Charles Gaskill,
Jerry Dobbins, Herby Clark,
Dan Washam, John Lambert,
Joe Thomas , Mrs . Michael,
Fanny ·wilcox, Virginia

I

..

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

OLDE!&gt;T

event.

Pomeroy Landmark

6%

LL victories

and me .. ~ ""ements for

Twin-Rib..

When You
Save With Us

Orioles post

FOOTBALL REMINDER
GALLIPOLIS
A
meeting has been set for
the r.ewly
organized
amateur football team of
Gallta County for 3 p.m.
today at the Gallipolis
Public Use Area.
All Interested parties
wanting to play football on
this team ( 18 yrs. or older)
must be present to sign
pa~e•
•nd give wtlghts

Houseboat- Terra Marine

Denver club
is sold by ·
Carl Scheer

Senators aitd

:·:.:·· ·-:···:·:·:.:. ;.·-:·:·:·:·:·&gt;&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·

By United
Press
InUnited Press International
NEW YORK ( UPI)- First
baseman Bob Watsorl of the
Houston Astros will receive a
$1,000 quartz watch as his
reward for scoring major
league
baseball 's
one
millionth run in ceremonies
prior to the All-Star game in
Milwaukee's County Stadium
this Tuesday .
Watson 's historic stamp on
home plate took place on May
4 when he carne in on Milt
May's home run . Dave
Concepcion of Cincinnati was
a tick back that day .

'

"

Award, Harvey Brown ,
Bidwell.
Baseball - MVP, Rick
Hoberts. Proc torville, Ohio;
Pitcher with most wins, Gary
Swinehart, Crooksville , Ohio ;
Best defensive player, Dusty
Moran , Lancaster, Ohio;
I.ead tn g
hitter ,
Paul
Albanese, New Lexington,
Ohw .

Sports Briefs

OATE- GYMNASIUM
'
July 13- 12+ 30·20pen Rec .
2-5:30 camp Crescendo
7·8:300pen Rec.
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
July 14--7·8:300pen Rec.
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo

.

illlilll~ .

Noe, Brown trophy recipients
RIO GRANDE - Tw o
Gallians were among the
athletes recently honored for
their outstanding efforts for
the sports programs at Rio
Grande College.
They are Jim ·Noe, former
Blue Devil basketball great
who was the Mdst Valuable
Player in basketball, the best
reboWlder and player havmg
the most assists . Harvey
Brown of Bidwell won the
Consistency Award in track .
Recipients were: Athlete
of the Year - Bernard Tilley
I track and Cross country).
Runner Up Athlete of the
Year - Gary Swinehart
(baseball, basketball) .
Basketball (women's) MVP,
Pam
Douthitt ,
Marietta ; Most improved,
Clare Flekher, Pittsburgh ,
Pa.
Swimming twom~ n's ) MVP, Susie Thomas, Oak
Hill.
Most Improved - Gail
Waddell, Pataskala , Ohio.
Softball ( women 's )
MVP,
Pam
Douthitt,
Marietta, Ohio; Most tmproved, Cathy Perkins ,
Newark, Ohio.
Coaches
Awards
( women's)
- , Karyn
Williams, Columbus, Ohio ;
Janice Wasek, Caldwell, N. J .
Basketball ( varsity ) - x
MVP, Jim Noe, Gallipolis,
Ohio; x- Best rebounder, Jim
Noe; x - most assists, Jim
Noe; Best defensive player ,
Bob Caldwell, Reedsville,
Ohio; coaches award, Dan

L YNE CENTER GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
Week qf July 1!, 1975

POOL
12: 30·20J&gt;enSwlm
;
'2·5:30 camp Crescendo
lhe game tu preserve lhe
"I got to admit ·that
7-8:300penSwlm
vJclury .
Matlack had real good stuff
B: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
- 12: 30-20penSwlm
Tony Perez's 13th homer, tonight, " said Reds' manager
2-5:30
camp Crescendo
coming in lhe second inning Sparky · Andersoti . " We were
7-8:300penSwlm
off Met starter Jon Matlack, just bouncing balls all over
8: 30·10 Camp Crescendo
J uly 1s--7- 8: 30 Open Rec .
t(luched off the Reds' scoring- the place. "
12: J0-2 Open Swim
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
2-5:30 Camp Crescendo
in the first game.
One of the bouncers was a
7·8: 30 Open Swim
In the sixth inning , when ball off the bat of Norman, J uly 16--7 8: 300pen Rec .
12: 30·2 ()pen Swim
the Reds scored the three which Matlack mu!Oed for an •
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
2-5:30 camp Crescendo
,
7·8:300pen Swim
runs which carried lllem to error to load the bases in the
J uly 17- 7.8: 30 Open Rec .
12
. 30-20pen Swim
victory, Perez doubled to left . sixth inning .
7·8: 30 Open Swim
The loss was the seventh of
Pete Rose followed with
12: 30·2 Open Swim
J uly 18--7 a· 30 Open Rec
.
7-8:300pen Swim
the season against 10 vic- another bouncer. which Dave
July
19--CLOSED
CLOSED
tories for Matlack, who 'll be Kingman , the Mets' first
NOTE : The secon d session of youth swimming classes at
one
of
the
pitchers baseman, had to "eat" when
Rio Grande College will begin Monday, July 21 with
represenhn~ the National
Matlack failed to cover first . registration on Sunday. July 20 tram 4:30-6 p.m. In Lyne
Cen ter . The cos t will be SID per student and must be paid In lull
League in the All-Star game .
Meanwhile, Merv Ret- during registration . Swimmers must be 6 years of age .. A
It was a loss also which left tenmiUid crossed the · plate
swimmer may enroll In one session only per summer .
Matlack with a 1-8 lifetime with what turned out to he the
record against the Reds.
winning run of the game. ·

.

AAU announces team
INDIANAPOLIS , Ind.
(UP!) - The AAU Saturday
announced a 75-member
team that will represent the
United States in the Second
Aquatic
ChamWorld
pionships opening at Cali,
Colombia, July 18.

Reds hike. . lead, Continue streak

•

BaltimO!'e (Grimsley 5·10)
Family Groups
at Oakland I Holtzman 10-7),
4:30p.m .
SALE HOOTS: McCoy
Cleveland I Hood 2-5) at
Motor
Lodge
California (Tanana 7-5). 4
AUCTIONEER
: Merlin
p.m.
Woodruff
Detroit (Coleman 5-12) at
ij;ansas City (Leonard 5-4) ,
2.:30 p.m .
FOr catalog and inChicago (Wood 6-13 ) at
formation contact
,,
Milwaukee (Colborn 4-7),
JIM COLLIVER SALES
2:30p.m .
MANAGEMENT
Minnesota (Goltz 7-6) at
1172 GrandView Ave.,
New York IMay 7-6). 2 p.m .
Columbus
OH 43212
Texas (Hargan 6-4) at
Ph: 614- 486-3243
Boston (Wise 10-6). 2 p.m .
National League
•
Standilrgs
.,
East
w•.J . pel. g.b.
Pittsburgh 54 32 - ·:628
Phila.
48 39 .552 6112
New York
43 40 .518 9'12
St. Louis
41 44 .482 12 112
Chicago
42 47 .472 13112
•
Montreal
34 46 .425 17
West
"
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Pinch with his 12th home run of the
FORT PIERCE, Fla.
w.
I. pet. g.b.
59 29 .670
hitter Bake McBride hit a year off AI Downing, who was Cincinnati
(UPl) James Tracy
high chopper up the middle in trying for his eighth con- Los Angeles 49 41 .533 11 1
Summerville,
a heavyweight
San Fran.
40 47 .459 18 12
the lOth inning to drive in secutive victory over the San Diego
MON. thru SAT.
boxer
who
fought
out of
40 48 .455 19
Marshall
then Atlanta
Buddy Bradford from second Cards.
37 48 .435 20 112 Miami Beach, has been
32 58 .356 28
base and give the St. Louis replaced Downing and he left Houston
identified as the unarmed
Saturday's Gmes
game
in
the
top
of
the
lOth
the
Cardinals a 2-1 victory
burglar who was shot dead by
St. Louis 2 Los Ange les 1
Saturday over Los Angeles for a pinch hitter. ·
830 E. Main
Sunday's Gfmes
police here Friday.
Los _Angeles
second
San Diego (Strom 4·2) at
Dodgers in a nationally
Pomeroy, Ohi.o
Police said the 30-year-old
Full strength performance.
baseman Dave Lopes belted a Pittsburgh (Ellis 6·Sl. 1:35
televised contest.
fighter,
who
had
one
robbery
p.m.
.,..,
.
Ken Reitz opened the lOth two-{)ut home run in the fifth
One-third the weight of galvanized. ::
San Francisco I Falcone 7- ..com&gt;'~on before becoming a
inning off loser Rick Rhodin off St. Louis starter Lynn 6) at Chicago (Stone 6-31. 2:15 · b'&lt;ixel: r was shot by an
A man and a boy could handle it. Once Ka1ser Aluminum i'oofa
( 1-1) with a single past third McGlothleri to give the p.m.
Los Angeles (Messersmith midentified officer as he ran
ing and sidmg is up, it hclngs in there for years and years.
Dodgers
the
early
lead.
Lopes
baseman Ron Cey and Buddy
12·6) at St. Louis (Reed 9·81. out of a supermarket. Police
ll's rugged and rustless, never needs a paint brush.
Bradford came in to run for was one . of only two runners 2:15p.m.
withheld the name of the
Helps
beat the heat, too You save time and manpower putAll steel bottom, aluminum top. 21
Montreal (Scherman 0·21 at
the Cardinal third baseman. to get past first base off
ting
it
up. And save again and
officer
"because
of
the
Atlanta (Morton 9-9), 2: 15
ft. long, 8ft. wide, Evinrude motor,
Mike
Tyson sacrificed McGlothen and Hrabosky. p.m.
possil)llity of threats on his
again on maintenance, So, no
KAISER
Bradford
to
second
and
matter
what
kind
of
l
shelter
New
York
(Seaver
13-4)
at
life and the lives of hi&gt;
will sleep 4 nicely. In good condition.
ALUMINUM
you're planning to build .
McBride, batting for winning . CHICAGO (UP!) - Steve Cincinnati (Nolan 8-S), 2:15 famlly."
p.m.
barn, boal cover, patio cover or
pitcher AI Hrabosky ( 4-2), Stone, given a five-run
- Summerville made
Philadelphia
(Underwood
vacation
cabin . . . you'll be
Call Boo Simpson 992-5141,
then delivered his 17th RBI of cushion in the fll'st two in- 9-6) at Houston (Dierker 8-9), frequent appearances at
better
off
with
Kaiser~Aium i num
nings with the help of a two- 3:05p.m.
Check Our
the season.
roofing and siding.
Miami
Beach,
but
perhaps
New Low Prices
run
double
by
Rick
Monday
Reggie Smith forced the
reasonable price
his best fight was in March of
ALL LENGTHS
game into extra inninb~ wh~n and a two-run single by Jerry
IN STOCK
1973 when he knocked out
he led off the ninth inning Morales, struck out three
Irish
'
. ·. Jack O'Halloran,
straight San Francisco
lilthOiJllh O'Halloran scored a
•
batters under pressure
technrcal
knockout in a
540 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Saturday to lead the Chicago
rematch
a
month
later.
Jack
W.
Carsey
,
Mgr.
Ph. 992-2181
Cubs to a 6-4 victory over the
Summervllle,
who
was
6"Giants. ·.
FARMER
FARMER/ FARMER
4" tall, weighed 345 pounds
Stone, 7-3, was touched for
DENVER (UP!) - Denver
OWNED
CONTROllED
when he began his boxing
nine hits but he reached back Nugget
President-General
career, but later slimmed
in the seventh inning to strike Manager
Carl
Scheer
'
out the side after the Giants Saturday announced the down to 243 pounds.
had scored one run and had purchase of the American
two men on.
Basketball Association Club ·
711? Pet.' Per year on a 4 year
6 Pel. Per year on
year cerA
single
by
Bobby
Murcer
by a group of Colorado
c'ertlflca1e of deposit •1,000.00
tificates of deposit Sl,DOO.DD
and
ll
double
by
Willie
businessmen.
minimum deposits, interest paid
mlnJmum deposits, inter.est paid
I
au(irterly.
Montanez gave the Giants a
"This is indeed a milestone
quarterly.
first inning run. But the Cubs in Denver sports history
came back to score three because it gives us all the
times off loser Mike Caldwell, ingredients of a winning
'
now 5-9. Caldwell, who failed situation - the best coach in
Slf• Pet. Per ·year on 90 day
61/2 Pet. Per year on 30 month
to retire the first two batters all of basketball (Larry
certificates
of
deposit
$1,000.00
.certificates of deposit Sl,OOO.OO
minimum
deposits,
interest
paid
in the ·second inning, gave up Brown), outstanding players
minimum deposits. interest paid
quarterly.
quarterly .
a two-run double to Monday and a management com.'
and a run -scoring single to mitted to complete success
~' ·
51!• Pet. Paid on all passbook savings ·accounts,
Andy Thornton.
both on and off the court,"
interest paid from date of .deposlt to date of with Whatev'e r the reason, your old mobile hom~ is worth
The Cubs scored three Scheer said.
drawal, as long as the account remains open . No
more on trade at Kingsbury_ We will also accept as trademore runs in the second,
Scheer, who will retain his
minimum or maximum deposits needed.
highlig!lted by Morales' titles under the new
ins, travel trailers and motor vehicles.
bases-loaded single.
ownership, said the club was
Notice: By Federal regulation. a substantial penally Is Invoked on all cerDerrel Thomas' leadoff purchased from Frank
fificateaccounts withdrawn prior to the date of maturity.
·
~
Kingsbury handles only the best homes by Skyline,
All accounts Insured, up to 540.000.00 per account. by the F.S. L.I.C. . an agency
homer in the third inning, his Goldberg
and
Arnold
Castle and Memory by Elcona.
nl the Federal Gov.
fourth of the season, cut the · Fiseher, who headed ·a group
Cubs' lead to '6-2. Stone then of San Diego businessmen.
New Business Hours; Effective July 1, 1975
:Watch for fhe arrival of our totally new Skyline double
retired 12 men in a row before Goldberg, who held the
wide.
·
Mon.-Wed., 9 to 3- Thursday 9.-12
Gary .Thomasson led off the majority lnter~st in the club,
'
Friday 9-5.- Saturday 9-12
WE HANDLE HOMES BY SKYLINE,
seventh with a sin,gle. Steve purchased the team three
CASTLE
AND MEMORY BY ELCONA.
Ontiveros singled and Dave . years ago when it was known
· Rader doubled to right, . as the Denver Rockets.
scoring :r'hama.sson. Stone
Since the name changed to
then struck ·out pinch-hitter the Nuggets prior to the-·1974. FHI AFHINS COUNFJ
Glenn Adams, Von Joshua 75 season and the addition of
SAVINGS a LOAN CO.
· '&lt;md Thomas.
Brown and several top young ·
:· :Pomeroy
...
992-7034
- ,
Ohio
- ... Ill ••• ,
( .,. ·~ .,.,.
Chris .Speier's fourth home players, Denver complied .th~
hrs.:
9
to
7
Mon.:
Sat.
Closed
Sunda;•
run of the season with two out best record in professional
Rld.!Md E. J-., fl\ltlagor
or Call for A~pointment
· in the' eighth ended · the basketball and earned the
Pearl
Ash
992-3323, Roger Da.vis 992-7671
Giants' scoring.
ABA Western Division Title.

.OPENe

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DRAWINGS JULY 15
District 12 Women's Slo
PilCh Tournament will be
held in Beverly , July 19 and
20. Drawing will be held in
Marietta, Hadley Field, July
15 at 8 p.m .
Entry fee will be $45 which
will be paid before the
drawing Four teams will
advance to State Tournament
play . For, more information
co nta ct Reuben Ritchey,
Route 6, Marietta, Ohio.
Manager must be present at
drawing.

Call No. 494

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CharterNo.138

NaUooalllaDk Regloo No. f

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUIISIDIARIES, OF THE

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Gallipolis Ohio In tbe State of Oblo, at tbe close of baslnen on June 30, 1975
published In 'response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, und~r Title
12, United States Code, Section 181.
'
ASSETS
- · - - - - - - $ 2,086,107.71
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - ·
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - · - - · - - - - - - - 1,720,370.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions · - - - - - - - 3,995,182.15
Other securities - - - - - • - · - - - - - - - - - - · - · - 110,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
1,950,000.00
under agreements to resell - - - - - 9,819,925.61
Loans - - - - - - - - - • - - · - - · Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
- - 183,182.24
other assets representing bank premises - - Real estate owned other than bank premises - - .- - - - 2,250,00
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - · - - - · - . - · - - - - - - $19,867,767.71
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and ~rporations - - - - - . - - - - · - - - - - - - $ 4,605,384.25
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10,608,045.85
Deposits of United States Goverrunent - - - - - - - - - - · 104,744.81
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - · · - · · - 832,487.79
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - · · - - - 314,467.29
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - $16,465,129.99
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - - ~ $ 5,857,084.14
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - - - $10,608,045.85
Federal funds purcha;red and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase - - - - - · · - - - - · 650,000.00
Other liabilities - - - - - - · - · - · - - - - - - - · 819,172.99
TOTAL LIABILITIES - - - - - · - - - - • • • - - $~7,934,302. 98 .
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - • - - - • · - - · - - - - $132,127.80
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
· - - - $132,127.80
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - -· - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,801,336.93
Common Stock-total par value - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - 100,000.00
No. shares authorized 1,000
No. shares outstanding 1,000
Surplus - - -. - . - . • . - - - . - - - - - - - - - - 1,100,000.00
Undivided profits - - - - - - - - - - - - 601,336.93
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
1,801,338.93
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
'$19,887 ,767.71
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calend::tr
days ending with call date - - - - - - - - · - - - · · - • $16,324,275.79
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - 9,738,288.39

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1, Harold Thomp..;n, Assistant Vice President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
Harold T!Jompaon ·
• '11;.

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
··
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
·
Jobn E. Halljjlay
Russell Wood
- Dlredors
E . E ; Null

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j
22- TIM:·SUnday Times- Sentinel, Sftriuay, July 13, 1975 '

I

'·

Tom
CARNOtlSTJE, Scotland
(UP!) - American Tom
Watson calmly rolled in a 12foot putt on the last hole
Satw-day to earn a 72-hole tie
with faltering Jack Newton of
Australia and force an 18-hole

Hard work
promised
MIAMI (UP!) - On the
eve of the opening of swnrner
training
camp,
Miami
Dolphin Coach Don Shula is m
with a warning for his players
and opponents alike.
"I'm going to work tlus
club as hard or harder than
the one in 1970," he said
Saturday.
That was the year Shula
moved from Baltimore to
Miami and it was the year
Shula ordered unprecedented
four-a-&lt;lay practices.
Shula doesn ' t plan on
bearing down quite that hard
again for the 21 veterans and
38 rookies reporting Sunday,
but he does have plans for two
workouts a day, plus a 7. 30
p.m. meeting six days a
week.
The rock-jawed coach also
expects plenty of help from
his players in stepping up
effo~ts.

"The thiug I've been

im~

pressed with among our
players is the renewed
dedication,"
he
said.
"There's none of the attitude
problems that stared to creep
in last year. Our players
realize whl't they must do to
get back o·n top."
Shula calls last season
"disappointing," despite
winning the AFC Eastern
Division championship. The
Dolphins lost to Oakland in
·the first round of the playoffs.
He wants to "rebound"
from last year but faces a
handicap in the loss to the
WFL Memphis Southmen of
running backs Larry Csonka
and Jim Kiick and wide
receiver Paul Warfield.

.

at son's putt for,ces playoff

playoff for the 104th British
Open Golf cham pionship
Sunday .
"Fate was wtth me," the
25-year-old Watson said of the
shot Ihat earned htm an even
par 72 and a four-round total
of 279, nine under par.
A disappointed Newton,
also 25. bogeyed three of the
last four holes and finished
with a two-wer -par 74.
"It wasn 't a case of Tom
winning a tie with me, 1 '
Newton said. "It was a case
of me giving him a lie ."
A str ong wind from the
East finally roused this Tiger
of a Carnoustie Course, put a
stop to a par busting rampage
over its-.. 7 ,065-yards of
htllocks, and allowed only
four subpar rounds on the last
day of thts oldest of golf
classics to a final field of 60.

The gusty winds could not
deter Watson and Newton
from breaking Ben Hogan's
22-year-o ld
Ca rnoustie
Tournament record of 282,
but it dtd keep them away
fr om the open mark of 276 set
by Arnold palmer in 1962 and
equalled by Tom Weiskopf
two years ago.
The winner of Sunday's
playoff stands to gain $16,500,
with the loser entitled to
$13,200 from a 'total purse of
$165 ,000.
The bookies tmmediately
made Watson a 4-5 favorite
and offered even money on
Newton.
Wat son was four strokes
behind leader Bobby Cole of
South Africa and at1other
three behind Newton when he
se t out in a fmal round drive
to prove once and for all that

he could stand the pressure
since his successive blowups
as the leader of the last two
U. S. Opens.
r
Cole, playing with Newton,
skied to a 76 with three
bogeys in the last'fow- holes
and finished one stroke back
at 280 in a three-way tie with
the two big guns of golf, Jack
Nicklaus and Johnny Miller.
Nicklaus struggled through
the middle holes with bogeys
at six and nine but recovered
with birdies at 12 and 14 to
rally back into contention .
But iron troubles on the final
three holes never gave him a
chance with a makeable
birdie putt. He finished with
an even par 72.
The two-time champion of
this event shook his head and
said, "l just lost another
British Open by one stroke,"

Ex-Bengal Reid
comes to play
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Mike Reid has come-to play.
Reid has brought the same
preparation and dedication to
show business that made him
an All-America at Penn State
and an All-Pro defensive
tackle with the Cincinnati
Bengals.
Mike put his rock combo on
the road six weeks ago after
months
of
selecting
musicians and rehearsing at
his home in Cincinnati. When
they were ready, he started to
take bookings and is now in
his sixth week with Mike
Reid's Band at the Anthony
· House in suburban Pittsburgh.
Mike is a master of all
keyboard instruments. He
has been studying music
about as long as he played
football and has become so
accomplished · as a pianist
that he has been a guest with
both the Dallas and Cincinnati symphony orchestras.
Reid also studied composition in his years at Penn
State, where he . was
graduated as a music major.
Reid was redshirted one
)"'M at Penn State when he
N eived hi!: first knee injury.
During this year, he al"
p~ared
in
a
campus
;.roduction as Big Julie in
"Guys and Dolls."
After five years with the
Bengals, - Reid said football
was making him "stagnant."

I was not moving forward,"
he said.
"Games were getting
harder to get ready for,"
Reid added, "and the excitement was gone. It seems I
was hurting all the time. The
stiffness left by Wednesday
when practice started and
then I would start hurting all
over again.
"I had a good career, but
football was not helping me
or the Bengals. We parted in
perfect harmony," said
Reid .
Reid said he is still the
property of the Bengals.
George Perles, owner of the
Anthony House and the
defensive line coach with the
Pittsburgh Ssteelers, kidded
Reid by saying he would
change his mind about
playing football when he saw

referring to four previous
second place finishes for the
leading money winner in
gold.
_
Miller lost a stroke to par at
the first hole by carelessly
mtssing a four footer, but
then made a run at the
leaders and had himself in
contention by the 14th hole,
where he chipped to within
three feet and dropped the
putt for a birdie that put him

'"

23- the SWlday Times- Sentinel, Sw1tlay, July 13, 1975

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The only sub .p ar roWld by
needed for the top spot. But
any
of the top 10 finishers was
his blast caught the brick-like
edge of uie trap and rolled a 71 shot by Australian ' •J
back down into the sand at his Graham Marsh, who finished
next at 281.
feet.
Defending champion and
" I have to say this is the
three
time winn'er Gary
most disappointing finish of
any tournament 'I was ever Player ended the tournament
in," a dejected Miller said. "I With a 73 for 292 and his ..
parnter,
Lou ''
missed the playoffs by an playing
Graham,
the
U.
S.
Open
inch or two ... l just figure
'this isn't your tournament, champion, shot a 76 for 292.
Palmer finished with a 73
big fella."
for 288, Weiskopf had a 72 fnr
287. two time winner Lee
Trevino had 75 for 293 and
Hale Irwin, Uurd leading
money winner on the U. S. • '
The nine-&lt;lay competition Nash, Tim Shaw, Bob ProfessiOnal Tow- , had a 75 "
for 283 .
includes swimming, diving , · Tierney and Fred Tyler.
synchronized-swimming and
On the distaff side, Shirley
water polo .
Babashoff, Lynn Colella Bell,
-~ ·
The group includes 37 Bonnie Brown, Kim Dunson,
swimmers, seven divers , Jenni
Franks,
eight synchronized swim- Heather Greenwood, Kathy
mers and an 11-member Heddy, Unda Jezek, Valerie
water polo team .
Lee, Marcia Morey, Karen f'•
The swimmers include Reeser, Kelly Rowell, La uri /
Robin Backhaus, Richard Siering, Jill · Symons, Tauna
Bohan, Joe Bottom, Andy Vandeweghe, "Ellen Wallace
Coan, Rick Colella, Bill and Camille Wright.
SAT.• JULY 19, 1975
Forrester, Bruce and Steve
Divers include Phil Boggs,
l : OOP.M.
Furniss, Brian Goodell, Dave Tim Moore, Kent Vosler,
!.
JACKSON COUNTY
Hannula, Ri.ck Hofstetter, Janet Ely, Carrie Irish,
.
LIVESTOCK YARDS
Paul Hove, Greg Jagenbw-g, Christine Loock and Debra
Ripley, W.Va.
Tim McDannel, Jim Mont- Keplar \',j&gt;lson.
gomery, John Murphy , Mel
77 HEAD SELL!NG77
one sltoke behind the then co,
leaders Newton and Cole.
the
28-year~ld
But
Californian,· too, found
himself pushing his irons off
target and suffered an 18th
hole bQgey that cost him a
plac~ in the playoff.
Miller pushed his drive into
a bunker and took a six-iron
for a 'rnake-{)r break attempt
at reaching the green and
making a birdie he thought he

BASEBALL

.

ROUING SPRINGS
FARMS
Complete
CHAROlAIS
DISPERSAL

' ~.

American L11gue Standings
By United Press J~
· Unittid Press International
East

·
w. I. pel.

the first workouts of the
steelers which begin July 16.
Mike just laughed when
Perles said, "Maybe we can
make a trade and have you
come back as a Steeler."
Later, Perles was asked if
he thought Reid could break
into his front four of Joe
Greene, Dwight White, Ernie
Holmes and L. C. Greenwood.

.523
.523
.494
.452
.440

Oakland
Kansas City
Chicago
Texas
Calif.
Minnesota

.624
.547 6112
.470 13
.466 13112
.449 15
.448 15

"I don't know," Perles

.565

32
39
44
47
49
39 48

3112

6
9112
10'1'

Sunday's Games:

said, "but I'd like to be faced
with that deciSion."
As for the Mike Reid Band,
Reid plays one original song,
"Lovely Lady·, " which has a
chance to get on the charts.
With a few more songs like
this and a good album, Reid,
who is now working for about
$2,000 a week, could very well
be making far more than the
$75,000 a year he made under
·a Bengals contract.

Cyclists rest before

3112

w. t. pel. g.b.

53
47
39
41
40

7 Bulls- 68 Females

g.b.

48 37
Milwaukee 45 41
New York
45 41
Baltimore
41 42
Cleveland
38 46
Detroit
37 47
West
Boston

&lt;

. Ja~kling

French Alps

NICE, France (tlPI) With the trials of the
Pyrenees' Mountains behind
them, the 107 survivors of the
62nd Tour De France
Maratlion cycling race took
their second day of rest
Saturday in two weeks before
tackling the French Alps
Sunday.
Enjoying the warm sunshine at this French Riviera
resort, the cyclists, who flew
in from Puy_De Dome Friday
evening, rested up for Sunday's first assault ' of the

French Alps.
The 130.5 mile 15th stage
will take the cyclists over
four major peaks before the
final uphill sprint to the
winter resort station of Pra
Loup in the upper French
Alps.
Starting from Nice early
Sunday, the cyclists will have
20 miles of slightly rising
country in which to prepare
themselves for the first
challenging ascent, the 1,500
yard La Colmiane-Col St.
Martin .

"Large selection
of quality Polled,
French &amp;
Domestic
bloodlines"
3-in -1 combinations

Cows and calves
Bred females
Open He~fer.s· •

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6 DAYS

A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT

..

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Dodgers fallll games

Burglar is

behind red hot Reds

identified

CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Cincinnati Reds ran · their
winning streak to a season
high eight games Fnday
night by sweeping a double
header from the New York
Mets to boost their lead to
101&gt; games over the Dodgers
in the National League Wes t.
Johnny Bench and Danny
Driessen socked homers as
the Reds won the second
game 4-1, to give Clay Ktrby
hts seventh victory in 10
decisions.
However, the Reds' right
hander 1 whose la ~t six v•c·
tories have come in a r ow.

needed help from Clay
Carroll and \\'ill McEnaney
whe n
he
s uffere d
a
recurrence of an old shoulder
injury after pi(chi ng s ix
scor e less innings.
McEnaney , who picked up
his 101h save in the second
game. gained hts ninth wh en ·
the Reds won the opener . 4-3.
as Fredie Norman n'otched
his fifth victory in etght
decisions.
A double by Pete Rose and
a walk to Ke n Griffey
preceded Bench 's first-inntng
homer in the second game.
Vi ct im of th e home r ,

RPnch 's 19th ot the seasun.
was ruukie Met right hander

Bollinger, Zanesville, Oluo:
bes t free throw shooter, Andy
Davenport. Dayton, Ohio.
Junwr Varsity Basketball
- MVP, Ted Chaffin , Grove
City, Ohto: Bes t defensive
player. Arthur De Stephen,
Jack so n,.
Oht o:
Best
rebounder, Chuck Ktng:
Coaches award , Dusty
l';t c·"an , Lancaster , Ohto .
Cr og, Country - MVP.

t1 IWIH&gt;UI s ingle by Felix
Handy Tate . The three RBI 's Millan in the sixth was the
buusted lhe Heds' catcher 's unly other hit off Ktrby before
season Iota! to 73.
his departure .
The Reds' only other run in
The Mets only run \n the
the second game came in the second game came ·in ' the
eighth mning when Driessen eighth mning . Pinch hitter Ed
tagged Ken Sanders for a . Kranepool doubled with one
two-out homer. hts third of out off Carroll. One out later,
the season .
Carroll walked Millan and
Kirby had a na-hitter going J uh n Milner to load the bases.
in the second game until
Mci':naney then replaced
Dave Kin gman led off the Carroll and plunked Rusty
ftflh wtth a sing le to left . One Staub with a pitch to force
oul later , Mtke Phillips hume Kranepou1 However,
stn gled, but J onn Stearns hit the 23-year-old lefty went on
into a double pla y to end the lo blank the Mets the rest of

Bernard Ttll•y, Wheelersburg. Ohio; Most improved,
J ohn Climer. Londonderrv .
Oht o: Outstanding Freshman. Ch uck Schoeppner.
Track - MVP, Bernard
Tilley, Wheelersburg , Ohio:
Mos t improved. Harry White,
McCo nnellsville, Ohio and
Dave Musser, Chesapeake:
Coaches award, Harry
White; x - Consistency

WATKINS GLEN N.Y.
(UP!)- An estimated 75,000
auto racing fans were expected to converge on this
small
community
this
weekend as top drivers from
the United States and Europe
meet for a full weekend of
racing on the Glen's 3.4 mile

circuit.
Official qualifying and
practice was held Friday as a
prelude to two major professional events, Saturday ' s
World Championship Of
Makes SixHour Endurance
Test and Sunday's Formula
5000 contest.

HIGHEST RATES
7112%

GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP! )
- The Green B~y Packers
said Friday they have signed
Rudy Sims, one of the
Canadian Football League's
top defensive linemen .
Sims, a 6-foot, 255-pound
former Florida A&amp;M star, is
seen as the answer to the
Packers need for an explosive pass rusher. Dick
Corrick , director of pro
player personnel for the
Packers, said, "We hope that
he's the guy to add to an area
where we need some help ..:..
in rushing the passer."

6112% .

Have you outgrown your present mobile
· homefFamily increased? Want better
~nstruction? Need something a little easier
to heat? Would you like .new furn~ture
&amp; appliances?

53,4%

..
51f4%

Where are we when you need us? R1gh t he re Ready to
grve yo u 1mmed1a te del1very on a VW lh e o r1g rna l gas save r But
if yo u get a V'N 2t11c tl y to sa ve gas . be prepa red l o r some surpll ses L1111e ex tras . l1ke VW quality The VW Owne r 's Secu rtty
Blanket w1 th Comput e r Analysts , the most advance d ca r cove rage pl an 1n the world
See us now It'll be nice Ia sta rt d11vrng a ca r that has a
sense of values
Including saving gas

•

;j: KINGSBURY MOBILE HOMES ·..

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SALES AND SERVICE

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Wagner is

Braves new
·head coach

9th senior
tournament
announced
JACKSON - The ninth
.Annual Southern Ohio Seniors
golf tournament will be held
Tuesday , August 26, at the
Fairgreens Country in
Jackson County, with over a
hundred male golfers, 50
years of age and older, expected to play in the IS-hole
event.
Golfers from Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia are
expected to enter the event to
be held on the 51-year old
hilly nine-hole course which
measures
3,131
yards .
Golfer;; will use their own
club handicaps, and compete
by age groups in the day-long

.p.

Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
PH. 446-9800

•

DELAWARE - Gerald
(Popey) Wagner, a 24-year
coaching veteran and former
Galli an , has been named
head basketball and head
baseball coach at Olentangy
High School near here . The
Braves are Class AA.
Wagner moved to Olentangy with a career record of
292-224 as a head basketball
coach. In baseball, his teams
have c ompiled a 128-66
record
last
basketball
His
coaching assignment was at
Arlingt on High School, a
Class A sc hool in Hancock
County . While at Arlington,
his teams won two outright
Blanchard Valley League
lltles, compiling a 9-0 record
m the 1969-70 season and
again in 1971l-71.
Last season at Arlington,
the Red Devils were 7-12,
losing eight games by six
points or less, including two
in overtime. Wagner's best
season was the 1956-59
campaign when he guided
Coalton to a 21-3 record.
Hts coaching tenure also
included a stop at Fairfield
Union where the Falcons
bowed to Vince Chickerella 's
Class AA state champion
Linden - McKinley squad,
bowing by nine points in
Central District play.
Wagner is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Wagner, Rt . I, Bidwell. He is married to Dorthy
Russell, the daughter of Dale
and Garnet Russell.

Ackerman, and John Weber.
Prizes and trophies will be
awarded at a banquet which
will conclude the day's
festivities .

LOOKING
FOR

~OME:T HING
? Dl ~~E:RE:NT?

E:XPLORE: ' A

Ne-w

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•
DSIOD
AT

DON WATTS V.W., INC.
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R10 GRAND€
AUTHORIZED
OfALEA

COLLEGE I COMMUNI ,T Y COLLEGE

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,SOf'ltiHING
FASCIN,O..TING
,O..BOIJ'T 'THI5
HOUSE-!
MUS 'T R!:SEI\RCH
iT ! 15 II 1'Hf.

..
T&gt;lP..T~
THE

OL.Df.ST
HOOKUP
SINCE lttf

IN Tr\£
c.IT Y?

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B/I.IHS!

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:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

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GERRY WAGNER

uniforms. Uniforms wlll be
offered the first of the
week.

Come_in today.
Start sav1~ gas_
tomorrow.

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'·';' ,, .

GALLIPOLIS - The Uttle
League Orioles led by J .
Saxton's home run defeated
the Athletics, 2~ in summer
league action here Friday
night. In the other little
league game, the Senators
took a 7-4 victory from the
Cubs .
In pony league action, the
Phils edged the Dodgers, 7-4.

Co-chairmen again this
year are'Jack Stiffler, Sr . of
Jackson and Chet Harless of
Wellston: with Otto Sharp,
McArthur , honorary
chairman Mrs. Lorraine
Mtc hael,
Jackson
ts
executtve secretary of the
Southern Ohio Seniors.
Members of the Fairgreens
Women 's Golf Association
Will assist in tournament
arrangements, registration
and scoring with a "family
car" offered as a prize for
any hole-in-one made that
day by a semor golfer.
The seniors committee
includes Sharp, Stiffler ,
Harless , and Charles Gaskill,
Jerry Dobbins, Herby Clark,
Dan Washam, John Lambert,
Joe Thomas , Mrs . Michael,
Fanny ·wilcox, Virginia

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OUR BOARDING HOUSE

OLDE!&gt;T

event.

Pomeroy Landmark

6%

LL victories

and me .. ~ ""ements for

Twin-Rib..

When You
Save With Us

Orioles post

FOOTBALL REMINDER
GALLIPOLIS
A
meeting has been set for
the r.ewly
organized
amateur football team of
Gallta County for 3 p.m.
today at the Gallipolis
Public Use Area.
All Interested parties
wanting to play football on
this team ( 18 yrs. or older)
must be present to sign
pa~e•
•nd give wtlghts

Houseboat- Terra Marine

Denver club
is sold by ·
Carl Scheer

Senators aitd

:·:.:·· ·-:···:·:·:.:. ;.·-:·:·:·:·:·&gt;&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·

By United
Press
InUnited Press International
NEW YORK ( UPI)- First
baseman Bob Watsorl of the
Houston Astros will receive a
$1,000 quartz watch as his
reward for scoring major
league
baseball 's
one
millionth run in ceremonies
prior to the All-Star game in
Milwaukee's County Stadium
this Tuesday .
Watson 's historic stamp on
home plate took place on May
4 when he carne in on Milt
May's home run . Dave
Concepcion of Cincinnati was
a tick back that day .

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Award, Harvey Brown ,
Bidwell.
Baseball - MVP, Rick
Hoberts. Proc torville, Ohio;
Pitcher with most wins, Gary
Swinehart, Crooksville , Ohio ;
Best defensive player, Dusty
Moran , Lancaster, Ohio;
I.ead tn g
hitter ,
Paul
Albanese, New Lexington,
Ohw .

Sports Briefs

OATE- GYMNASIUM
'
July 13- 12+ 30·20pen Rec .
2-5:30 camp Crescendo
7·8:300pen Rec.
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
July 14--7·8:300pen Rec.
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo

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Noe, Brown trophy recipients
RIO GRANDE - Tw o
Gallians were among the
athletes recently honored for
their outstanding efforts for
the sports programs at Rio
Grande College.
They are Jim ·Noe, former
Blue Devil basketball great
who was the Mdst Valuable
Player in basketball, the best
reboWlder and player havmg
the most assists . Harvey
Brown of Bidwell won the
Consistency Award in track .
Recipients were: Athlete
of the Year - Bernard Tilley
I track and Cross country).
Runner Up Athlete of the
Year - Gary Swinehart
(baseball, basketball) .
Basketball (women's) MVP,
Pam
Douthitt ,
Marietta ; Most improved,
Clare Flekher, Pittsburgh ,
Pa.
Swimming twom~ n's ) MVP, Susie Thomas, Oak
Hill.
Most Improved - Gail
Waddell, Pataskala , Ohio.
Softball ( women 's )
MVP,
Pam
Douthitt,
Marietta, Ohio; Most tmproved, Cathy Perkins ,
Newark, Ohio.
Coaches
Awards
( women's)
- , Karyn
Williams, Columbus, Ohio ;
Janice Wasek, Caldwell, N. J .
Basketball ( varsity ) - x
MVP, Jim Noe, Gallipolis,
Ohio; x- Best rebounder, Jim
Noe; x - most assists, Jim
Noe; Best defensive player ,
Bob Caldwell, Reedsville,
Ohio; coaches award, Dan

L YNE CENTER GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
Week qf July 1!, 1975

POOL
12: 30·20J&gt;enSwlm
;
'2·5:30 camp Crescendo
lhe game tu preserve lhe
"I got to admit ·that
7-8:300penSwlm
vJclury .
Matlack had real good stuff
B: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
- 12: 30-20penSwlm
Tony Perez's 13th homer, tonight, " said Reds' manager
2-5:30
camp Crescendo
coming in lhe second inning Sparky · Andersoti . " We were
7-8:300penSwlm
off Met starter Jon Matlack, just bouncing balls all over
8: 30·10 Camp Crescendo
J uly 1s--7- 8: 30 Open Rec .
t(luched off the Reds' scoring- the place. "
12: J0-2 Open Swim
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
2-5:30 Camp Crescendo
in the first game.
One of the bouncers was a
7·8: 30 Open Swim
In the sixth inning , when ball off the bat of Norman, J uly 16--7 8: 300pen Rec .
12: 30·2 ()pen Swim
the Reds scored the three which Matlack mu!Oed for an •
8: 30-10 Camp Crescendo
2-5:30 camp Crescendo
,
7·8:300pen Swim
runs which carried lllem to error to load the bases in the
J uly 17- 7.8: 30 Open Rec .
12
. 30-20pen Swim
victory, Perez doubled to left . sixth inning .
7·8: 30 Open Swim
The loss was the seventh of
Pete Rose followed with
12: 30·2 Open Swim
J uly 18--7 a· 30 Open Rec
.
7-8:300pen Swim
the season against 10 vic- another bouncer. which Dave
July
19--CLOSED
CLOSED
tories for Matlack, who 'll be Kingman , the Mets' first
NOTE : The secon d session of youth swimming classes at
one
of
the
pitchers baseman, had to "eat" when
Rio Grande College will begin Monday, July 21 with
represenhn~ the National
Matlack failed to cover first . registration on Sunday. July 20 tram 4:30-6 p.m. In Lyne
Cen ter . The cos t will be SID per student and must be paid In lull
League in the All-Star game .
Meanwhile, Merv Ret- during registration . Swimmers must be 6 years of age .. A
It was a loss also which left tenmiUid crossed the · plate
swimmer may enroll In one session only per summer .
Matlack with a 1-8 lifetime with what turned out to he the
record against the Reds.
winning run of the game. ·

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AAU announces team
INDIANAPOLIS , Ind.
(UP!) - The AAU Saturday
announced a 75-member
team that will represent the
United States in the Second
Aquatic
ChamWorld
pionships opening at Cali,
Colombia, July 18.

Reds hike. . lead, Continue streak

•

BaltimO!'e (Grimsley 5·10)
Family Groups
at Oakland I Holtzman 10-7),
4:30p.m .
SALE HOOTS: McCoy
Cleveland I Hood 2-5) at
Motor
Lodge
California (Tanana 7-5). 4
AUCTIONEER
: Merlin
p.m.
Woodruff
Detroit (Coleman 5-12) at
ij;ansas City (Leonard 5-4) ,
2.:30 p.m .
FOr catalog and inChicago (Wood 6-13 ) at
formation contact
,,
Milwaukee (Colborn 4-7),
JIM COLLIVER SALES
2:30p.m .
MANAGEMENT
Minnesota (Goltz 7-6) at
1172 GrandView Ave.,
New York IMay 7-6). 2 p.m .
Columbus
OH 43212
Texas (Hargan 6-4) at
Ph: 614- 486-3243
Boston (Wise 10-6). 2 p.m .
National League
•
Standilrgs
.,
East
w•.J . pel. g.b.
Pittsburgh 54 32 - ·:628
Phila.
48 39 .552 6112
New York
43 40 .518 9'12
St. Louis
41 44 .482 12 112
Chicago
42 47 .472 13112
•
Montreal
34 46 .425 17
West
"
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Pinch with his 12th home run of the
FORT PIERCE, Fla.
w.
I. pet. g.b.
59 29 .670
hitter Bake McBride hit a year off AI Downing, who was Cincinnati
(UPl) James Tracy
high chopper up the middle in trying for his eighth con- Los Angeles 49 41 .533 11 1
Summerville,
a heavyweight
San Fran.
40 47 .459 18 12
the lOth inning to drive in secutive victory over the San Diego
MON. thru SAT.
boxer
who
fought
out of
40 48 .455 19
Marshall
then Atlanta
Buddy Bradford from second Cards.
37 48 .435 20 112 Miami Beach, has been
32 58 .356 28
base and give the St. Louis replaced Downing and he left Houston
identified as the unarmed
Saturday's Gmes
game
in
the
top
of
the
lOth
the
Cardinals a 2-1 victory
burglar who was shot dead by
St. Louis 2 Los Ange les 1
Saturday over Los Angeles for a pinch hitter. ·
830 E. Main
Sunday's Gfmes
police here Friday.
Los _Angeles
second
San Diego (Strom 4·2) at
Dodgers in a nationally
Pomeroy, Ohi.o
Police said the 30-year-old
Full strength performance.
baseman Dave Lopes belted a Pittsburgh (Ellis 6·Sl. 1:35
televised contest.
fighter,
who
had
one
robbery
p.m.
.,..,
.
Ken Reitz opened the lOth two-{)ut home run in the fifth
One-third the weight of galvanized. ::
San Francisco I Falcone 7- ..com&gt;'~on before becoming a
inning off loser Rick Rhodin off St. Louis starter Lynn 6) at Chicago (Stone 6-31. 2:15 · b'&lt;ixel: r was shot by an
A man and a boy could handle it. Once Ka1ser Aluminum i'oofa
( 1-1) with a single past third McGlothleri to give the p.m.
Los Angeles (Messersmith midentified officer as he ran
ing and sidmg is up, it hclngs in there for years and years.
Dodgers
the
early
lead.
Lopes
baseman Ron Cey and Buddy
12·6) at St. Louis (Reed 9·81. out of a supermarket. Police
ll's rugged and rustless, never needs a paint brush.
Bradford came in to run for was one . of only two runners 2:15p.m.
withheld the name of the
Helps
beat the heat, too You save time and manpower putAll steel bottom, aluminum top. 21
Montreal (Scherman 0·21 at
the Cardinal third baseman. to get past first base off
ting
it
up. And save again and
officer
"because
of
the
Atlanta (Morton 9-9), 2: 15
ft. long, 8ft. wide, Evinrude motor,
Mike
Tyson sacrificed McGlothen and Hrabosky. p.m.
possil)llity of threats on his
again on maintenance, So, no
KAISER
Bradford
to
second
and
matter
what
kind
of
l
shelter
New
York
(Seaver
13-4)
at
life and the lives of hi&gt;
will sleep 4 nicely. In good condition.
ALUMINUM
you're planning to build .
McBride, batting for winning . CHICAGO (UP!) - Steve Cincinnati (Nolan 8-S), 2:15 famlly."
p.m.
barn, boal cover, patio cover or
pitcher AI Hrabosky ( 4-2), Stone, given a five-run
- Summerville made
Philadelphia
(Underwood
vacation
cabin . . . you'll be
Call Boo Simpson 992-5141,
then delivered his 17th RBI of cushion in the fll'st two in- 9-6) at Houston (Dierker 8-9), frequent appearances at
better
off
with
Kaiser~Aium i num
nings with the help of a two- 3:05p.m.
Check Our
the season.
roofing and siding.
Miami
Beach,
but
perhaps
New Low Prices
run
double
by
Rick
Monday
Reggie Smith forced the
reasonable price
his best fight was in March of
ALL LENGTHS
game into extra inninb~ wh~n and a two-run single by Jerry
IN STOCK
1973 when he knocked out
he led off the ninth inning Morales, struck out three
Irish
'
. ·. Jack O'Halloran,
straight San Francisco
lilthOiJllh O'Halloran scored a
•
batters under pressure
technrcal
knockout in a
540 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Saturday to lead the Chicago
rematch
a
month
later.
Jack
W.
Carsey
,
Mgr.
Ph. 992-2181
Cubs to a 6-4 victory over the
Summervllle,
who
was
6"Giants. ·.
FARMER
FARMER/ FARMER
4" tall, weighed 345 pounds
Stone, 7-3, was touched for
DENVER (UP!) - Denver
OWNED
CONTROllED
when he began his boxing
nine hits but he reached back Nugget
President-General
career, but later slimmed
in the seventh inning to strike Manager
Carl
Scheer
'
out the side after the Giants Saturday announced the down to 243 pounds.
had scored one run and had purchase of the American
two men on.
Basketball Association Club ·
711? Pet.' Per year on a 4 year
6 Pel. Per year on
year cerA
single
by
Bobby
Murcer
by a group of Colorado
c'ertlflca1e of deposit •1,000.00
tificates of deposit Sl,DOO.DD
and
ll
double
by
Willie
businessmen.
minimum deposits, interest paid
mlnJmum deposits, inter.est paid
I
au(irterly.
Montanez gave the Giants a
"This is indeed a milestone
quarterly.
first inning run. But the Cubs in Denver sports history
came back to score three because it gives us all the
times off loser Mike Caldwell, ingredients of a winning
'
now 5-9. Caldwell, who failed situation - the best coach in
Slf• Pet. Per ·year on 90 day
61/2 Pet. Per year on 30 month
to retire the first two batters all of basketball (Larry
certificates
of
deposit
$1,000.00
.certificates of deposit Sl,OOO.OO
minimum
deposits,
interest
paid
in the ·second inning, gave up Brown), outstanding players
minimum deposits. interest paid
quarterly.
quarterly .
a two-run double to Monday and a management com.'
and a run -scoring single to mitted to complete success
~' ·
51!• Pet. Paid on all passbook savings ·accounts,
Andy Thornton.
both on and off the court,"
interest paid from date of .deposlt to date of with Whatev'e r the reason, your old mobile hom~ is worth
The Cubs scored three Scheer said.
drawal, as long as the account remains open . No
more on trade at Kingsbury_ We will also accept as trademore runs in the second,
Scheer, who will retain his
minimum or maximum deposits needed.
highlig!lted by Morales' titles under the new
ins, travel trailers and motor vehicles.
bases-loaded single.
ownership, said the club was
Notice: By Federal regulation. a substantial penally Is Invoked on all cerDerrel Thomas' leadoff purchased from Frank
fificateaccounts withdrawn prior to the date of maturity.
·
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Kingsbury handles only the best homes by Skyline,
All accounts Insured, up to 540.000.00 per account. by the F.S. L.I.C. . an agency
homer in the third inning, his Goldberg
and
Arnold
Castle and Memory by Elcona.
nl the Federal Gov.
fourth of the season, cut the · Fiseher, who headed ·a group
Cubs' lead to '6-2. Stone then of San Diego businessmen.
New Business Hours; Effective July 1, 1975
:Watch for fhe arrival of our totally new Skyline double
retired 12 men in a row before Goldberg, who held the
wide.
·
Mon.-Wed., 9 to 3- Thursday 9.-12
Gary .Thomasson led off the majority lnter~st in the club,
'
Friday 9-5.- Saturday 9-12
WE HANDLE HOMES BY SKYLINE,
seventh with a sin,gle. Steve purchased the team three
CASTLE
AND MEMORY BY ELCONA.
Ontiveros singled and Dave . years ago when it was known
· Rader doubled to right, . as the Denver Rockets.
scoring :r'hama.sson. Stone
Since the name changed to
then struck ·out pinch-hitter the Nuggets prior to the-·1974. FHI AFHINS COUNFJ
Glenn Adams, Von Joshua 75 season and the addition of
SAVINGS a LOAN CO.
· '&lt;md Thomas.
Brown and several top young ·
:· :Pomeroy
...
992-7034
- ,
Ohio
- ... Ill ••• ,
( .,. ·~ .,.,.
Chris .Speier's fourth home players, Denver complied .th~
hrs.:
9
to
7
Mon.:
Sat.
Closed
Sunda;•
run of the season with two out best record in professional
Rld.!Md E. J-., fl\ltlagor
or Call for A~pointment
· in the' eighth ended · the basketball and earned the
Pearl
Ash
992-3323, Roger Da.vis 992-7671
Giants' scoring.
ABA Western Division Title.

.OPENe

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DRAWINGS JULY 15
District 12 Women's Slo
PilCh Tournament will be
held in Beverly , July 19 and
20. Drawing will be held in
Marietta, Hadley Field, July
15 at 8 p.m .
Entry fee will be $45 which
will be paid before the
drawing Four teams will
advance to State Tournament
play . For, more information
co nta ct Reuben Ritchey,
Route 6, Marietta, Ohio.
Manager must be present at
drawing.

Call No. 494

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CharterNo.138

NaUooalllaDk Regloo No. f

REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMESTIC SUIISIDIARIES, OF THE

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Gallipolis Ohio In tbe State of Oblo, at tbe close of baslnen on June 30, 1975
published In 'response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, und~r Title
12, United States Code, Section 181.
'
ASSETS
- · - - - - - - $ 2,086,107.71
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - ·
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - · - - · - - - - - - - 1,720,370.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions · - - - - - - - 3,995,182.15
Other securities - - - - - • - · - - - - - - - - - - · - · - 110,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
1,950,000.00
under agreements to resell - - - - - 9,819,925.61
Loans - - - - - - - - - • - - · - - · Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
- - 183,182.24
other assets representing bank premises - - Real estate owned other than bank premises - - .- - - - 2,250,00
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - · - - - · - . - · - - - - - - $19,867,767.71
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and ~rporations - - - - - . - - - - · - - - - - - - $ 4,605,384.25
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10,608,045.85
Deposits of United States Goverrunent - - - - - - - - - - · 104,744.81
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - · · - · · - 832,487.79
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - · · - - - 314,467.29
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - $16,465,129.99
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - - ~ $ 5,857,084.14
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - - - $10,608,045.85
Federal funds purcha;red and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase - - - - - · · - - - - · 650,000.00
Other liabilities - - - - - - · - · - · - - - - - - - · 819,172.99
TOTAL LIABILITIES - - - - - · - - - - • • • - - $~7,934,302. 98 .
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - • - - - • · - - · - - - - $132,127.80
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
· - - - $132,127.80
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - -· - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,801,336.93
Common Stock-total par value - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - 100,000.00
No. shares authorized 1,000
No. shares outstanding 1,000
Surplus - - -. - . - . • . - - - . - - - - - - - - - - 1,100,000.00
Undivided profits - - - - - - - - - - - - 601,336.93
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
1,801,338.93
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
'$19,887 ,767.71
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calend::tr
days ending with call date - - - - - - - - · - - - · · - • $16,324,275.79
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - 9,738,288.39

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1, Harold Thomp..;n, Assistant Vice President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
Harold T!Jompaon ·
• '11;.

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
··
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
·
Jobn E. Halljjlay
Russell Wood
- Dlredors
E . E ; Null

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_24- The Sund~y Times -Sentinel, SWlday, July 13, 1975

"

Ohio .
· Mint 86-!0ti : F1rst - Ed die
Forsythe. Washington C'ourt
Hous e. Ohi o : ' Seco nd Shannon Bobb, Bambndge ,
Oh1o ; Third -' Th omas
Ferguson, Barboursville, W.
Va .; Fourth____··TOi:ld Bobb,
Bainbridge, Ohio; Fifth- Jeff
Sheridan, Washm gton Co urt
House, Ohi o.
Junior Cla~s: F1rst- Erroll
Ru sse ll, Cheshire. Oh10 .
Second - Robe rt E lli ott,
Bainbndge, Ohw; Third Tina Pauley, Alum Creek, W
Va .; Fourth - Wesley Smith,
Pomeroy , Ohto ; Fifth - Terry
Stansberry. Wells ton, Ohw .

100&lt;'&lt;' Class : First - Kevi n
Ruush, M as1i n, W. Va .;

c

to, and we hav e to accept It.
Everybody concerned with
the race went mto it With the
best of mtenlions. There was

no greed, no viciOusness
involved. No one wanted to
see either horse get hurt. "
" l've" been accused of being
a poor winner," said John L.
Gree r, owner of Foolish
Plea s ure. "They say my
horse should have stopped
runnin g (after Ruffian
stumbled) or that I oughtn ' t
to have accepted the trophy .
There have been a lot of
poison pen letters. People
have called me past midnight I've not enjoyed this
victory ."
Frank Whiteley Jr , Ruf-

fian's trainer, has been
confronted with a barrage of
questions by the media
concermng the condition of
Ruffian and the dectsion to
kill the horse mercifully when

J ohnsnn. Racine, Ohio: F'1fth

- Keith Durs t, Pom l Pleasant,
W. Va
125 A Class: First - Eddie
Atktn s. Galhpo li s, Olu u:
Second - Lonn ie Newell . •w
Hav en, W Va . Third -. Gary
Baisden, Chapma nville, W.
Va.
125 B Class: F~rst- Russe ll
lian1 rg, Albany, · Ohio :
Second - !'.lark Steele , Pomt
Pleasa nt , W. Va · Tl11rn -

1t was suffering a ft er ktckmg
off its cast foll owmg surgery .
But, unlike the Fooh s h
Pleasur e camp, the public
seems to have e xtend ed Its
sympathy to Whtteley and
Ruffian' s owner, Stuart A.
Janney.
"I've gotten over 500 letters , mostly sympathetic,"
Whiteley said. "There have
on ly been about a haJf-&lt;lozen
crank letters. I lived with that
fill y since it was a yearhng. It
wa s a deep personal loss but
th1s kind of thing has been
happening ever since horse
racing began .
" I don' t suppose we'll ever
kn ow exactly what ca used the
injury, why tt happened .
People will probably be
talking about it for years to
come but It'll never be settled . I've got to live with it
and not put the blame on
anybody or anythin g."

•
.T wo Gallipolis teams wm
CHESHIRE
Two
Ga,lllpolis teams, the Red Sox
and Indians, and Fruth's
Pharmacy of Point Pleasant
posted victories Friday night
in the 17th Annual Kyger
Creek' Uttle League Tournament.
The Gallipolis Red Sox
plated three runs in the first
inning and one in the fifth to
edge Addaville, 4-3.
In the opening frame, a
walk to Allen, a single by
Marchi and three Addaville
errors led. to three runs. The
winning run crossed the plate
in the fifth on a walk, error
and single by Mike Burger.
Addaville scored single

Mrs. Oayton
wins finals
TOLEDO (UP!) - Mrs.
Lemuel Clayton Jr., of Portsmouth s(!()red an easy 6 and 5
victory over Miss SheUa Scott
of Ashtabula in their
scheduled 36-hole finals of the
52nd annual Women's Ohio
State Golf Association
tow-nament Friday to caplure the championship on her
first try.
· Mrs. Clayton, 27, an exceptionally long hitter, took a
5-up lead at the end of the
morning roWld and coasted
home: ·:

rWls in each of the first,
second and fifth mnings .
Burger led the Red Sox
with two hits. The losing
pitcher, Wilhe Noble had the
only Addaville hit, a double.
Burger was the winning
pitcher.
· Two errors and a triple
produced the winning runs as
Point Pleasant's Fruth
Pharmacy posted a 7-5 ;victory over the Middleport
Reds. J . Jones led the winners with two triples and a
double in four at bats. J.
Sullivan slammed a home
run, D. Simpson singled and
C. Simpkins doubled .
Ge!tin'g hits for Middleport
were ·stewart with a double
and single; Justus, a double
and Duckworth, a single .
The Gallipolis Indians took
advantage of 16 walks, three
errors and collected six hits
to post a lopsided 22-5 win

TOURNAMENT SET
District 12 Industrial Slo
Pitch Tournament will be
held in Marietta. Drawing
will be held July 15 at 7:30
p.m. at Hadley Field. Entry
fee is $46.50 which will be paid
before the drawing. Team
manager must be present.
Two teams will advance to
State play at Zanesville. For
more
information
ca ll
Reuben Ritchey, Route 6,
Marietta.

"

Mays, Kiner will _
•
- ~play m

WDue

'

.

over
the Harrisonville
Bobcats.
M. Alhson, S. Harrington
and S. Willer led the Indians
with two hils each.
S. Hanning had the only
Harrisonville hit

TENNIS UPSET
GSTAAD,
Switzerland
( UP!) - Karl Meller of
Germany upset defending
champ ion Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina, 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4,
Saturday in the semifinals of
the Swiss International
Tennis Champiohships.
In SWlday's final, Meller
will meet 40-year-&lt;Jld Ken
Rosewall of Australia, who
defeated Jairo Velasco of
Colombia, 9-7, 6-0, 6-2.
In the women's final , Unky
Boshoff of South Africa will
face Glynis Coles of Bntain.
· On Saturday, Miss Boshoff
defeated Naoko Sato of
Japan , 6-0, 6-4, and Miss
Coles scored a 6-0, 6-3 victory
over Monica Giorgi of Italy .

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn .
(UP!) - Public address
announcer Robert utecht
testified Friday in" Hennepin
County District Court that
Dave Forbes of the Boston
Bruins "drove" his hockey
stick into the eye of Henry
Boucha of the Minnesota
North Stars with a jabbing
motion iri a right during a

250 R Class: First - Russ~ I!
B11bb , Bal!lhradg e , Ohio;
Seco nd
J ef f Wood,
Hurrica ne , W Va . ; Third Tony Keath ly, Letart, W Va .
Open A Class: F'1rst- David
G.rin.dstaff , Racine , Ohto ;
Second - Alva Sulliva n,
Galhpohs . Ohio ; Third - Lee
Floyd, Pomeroy, Ohw ;
Fourth - Wilh am Bagby, St.
Albans , W. Va
Open B Class: First •
Mi chael Sm1thers , Letart, W.
Va . ; Second - Btl! Mars hall,
Mason, W Va
The next race at Hidden
Hills Race way will be on July
20th .

Oeveland rookie hits
inside the park homer
ByJIMCOUR
UPI Sports Writer
(U P!)
ANAHEIM
Cleve land Indtans ' rookie
outfi elder Rick Mannmg saw
the humor of hts ftrst maJOr
league home run .
"I kn ew it was gone as soon
as I saw 11 bounce agamst the
fence," he sm iled .
Manning's mside-the-park
homer with John Lowenstein
aboard ca pped a three-run
seventh inning Friday night
to g ive the Indians a 5-3
vtctory over the California
Angels.
He sped arouhd the bases
after Dave Co llin s and
Mickey Rivers collided m the
outfield. Collins was knocked
down and Rtvers bent over
his fallen teammate.
To the Anaheim Stadium
crowd of 9,034, It appeared
R1vers was a sking Colli ns If
he was okay
"When Dave went down, I
thought he had the baiL"
Rivers sa id. "I asked him if
he had tt but he said, 'No, no,
l am't got it.' Then I said, 'I'll
s tart looking for it."'
" Mickey thought l had the
ball," confirmed Co lhns .
'' After he threw the ball m, he
asked me if I was a ll right."
Dick Wtlliams, the intense
Angels ' skipper, was asked if
he'd added any more gray
hairs to his moustache.
Cleveland scored its fifth
stratght win over the Angels
this seAson and its lith m a
row here . California hasn 't
beate n the Indians at

Jones wins
gold title
TOLEDO, Ohio ( UP! ) Rick Jones, a Youngstown
steel salesman, carded a 71 to
wm the Ohio State Amateur
Golf Championship by five
strokes Friday over faltering
Pat Lindsey of Toledo.
Jones finished with a threeunder-par 281, while Undsey
slipped to a 74 and 286.
Jones fell into a tie Friday
wt th Lindsey at the end of
nine holes at even par for the
tourney, but then fired a
blistering three-under 31 to
pull away.
,
Trailing were Stu Francis
of Madison at 289 and Lalu
Sabotin of Warren at 292.

Anaheim Stadtum smce July
17, 1973. ~
Manning's homer came off
Scott after !be Indtans t1 ed
the score at 3-3 on back-toback doubles by Frank Duffy
and Lowenstein .
"I've had balls hit the top of
the fe nce twice this year,"
noted Manning, "So I'll take
th 1s one ."

In bes tmg Lange, now 3-2,
Rorie Harrison gave up nine
hits m eight innings-plus to
register his fourth win
against a pair of losses.
" My performance wasn 't
exactly what you call a work
of art," said Harrison . " I just
couldn ' t seem to find my
rhythm. But the guys did a
good job of ptcking me up .''
Boog Powell belted his 15th
homer of the season for
Cleveland wht!e Collins had
three hils, includmg a double,
and stole a ba se.

game Jan. 4.
In the first U.S. trial of a
hockey player for conduct
during a game, Forbes is
accused of hitting Boucha
with a ''dangerous weapon,"
his hocke¥ stick.

I.

POMEROY - John Phillip
Young , 1956 gr a duate of
Pomeroy High School, has
been named head football
coach at Lancaster High
SchooL
Young has been serving as
assistant wrestling coach and
has been teaching at Lancaster for the past 10 years.
After g rad uating from
Pomeroy High in 1956, Young
attended Ohio University and
graduated from there in 1961.
Young rec~ived his master's
degree in physical education
in 1965 from Xavier.
Young is married to the
former Janet Carpenter and
they have three c hildren,
Phillip, age 11, Robin, ag" 9,
and Lisa, age 8.
John Phillip Young is the
son of the late Mr . and Mrs.
Hank YoWlg .

PORTSMOUTH The
Bonanza Slo-Pikh Softball
Classic will be held July 26th
and 27th at Portsmouth . ASA
sanctioned tournament .
E ntry fee is $40 for sanctioned and $48 for nonsanctiOned teams. Umpires
are experienced ASA sanctioned.
Team trophies go to 1st,
2nd, and 3rd place finishers.
First place finisher will
rece1ve
15
individual
trophies. The player with the
most home rWls for the
tournament receives a home
·run trophy and all players
ge tting a home run will be
rewarded with a steak dinner
courtesy of Bonanza Sirloin
P1t in Portsmouth.
- Drawing will be held July
20 at field one at 7 p .m .
- En try fee must be paid
before the firs t game. played.
- For more information
conl&lt;!ct Jeff Berry or Tom
July in Portsmouth.

~\\1//

.
~
LEAGUES NOW OVER!

Pomeroy A~s nip
Racine team,· 6-4
concerning a writeup in
Fnday's paper on the Thursday night Pony League game
between
Racine
and
Cheshire.
It was written that in the
first mee ting between the two
clubs the. game was a
disputed one. According to
Coach Hilton Wolfe , Jr ., of
Racine , who was the home
learn , the first contest was
not a disputed contest and
was played without incident.

POMROY - The Pom~ roy
A-s held on to defeat the
Racine Pony LeaguerSl 6-4
Fnday ni gh t with Dale
Browning going the distance
fanning 12, walking one and
giving up just one hit. Mark
Sayre was the losi ng pitcher
for Racine _ Mike Huddleston
came on in the fifth to relieve
Sayre. Sayre then came bac k
to the mound in the seventh to
finish.
Sayre fanned mne, walked
one and hit one while Huddleston fanned three and
walked one.
Wt th the A-s lead ing 5-ll in
the fifth , the Racine club
narrowed" the score by plahng
four runs in that frame. After
the uprising by Ra c1ne
Brownmg settled down and
pitched the rest of the way .
Getting Racine 's six singles
were Mar)&lt; Sayre, Mike
Huddleston , Scott Wolfe,
Steve Hill, Richard Teaford ,
and Herbie Ervtn . ·
For the wtnning A-s the
hitters were Hamilton, Bob
McClure,
Mark Mitch,
Smith, and J ohnson each with
a single . John son a lso
doubled.
One cor recti on to be made

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SERVICE
Check

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Tens•on All Onve Belts
Check

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Parto;. .II. Repair E)(fra

•••••••••••

SMITH

BUICK-PONTIAC
Gallipolis

JULY SPECIAL
TUESDAY. JULY 15th
THURSDAy I JULy 17th

AUTOMOBILE WASHED
'1.00
'

FREE- FREE

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POMEROY · - Nineteen
were fined and 14 forfeited
bond in Judge Robert Buck 's
Court Friday_
Defend an Is fined were Joe
M. Bell, Jr., Land over Hi:ls,
Md., Donald G. Guthrie, Rt . 2
Coolville, Robert A. Griffith,
Pomeroy, $13 and costs each
•
speeding ; Alvin W. Goff,
Tuppers Plains, David L.
Grate, Rutland, Robert L.
Ritchie , Syracuse, $11 each,
speeding; Max E . Haynes,
Lancaster, Ohio, $15 and
costs, speeding ; Paul A.
Haynes, Middleport, Parts
Browning, Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va., $12 and costs·, ·each,
speeding; Michael S. Caton,
Rt. 1. Vinton, $19 and costs,
speedmg; Robert Black, Rt . 1
Portland, $150 and costs, 3
days confinement, 3 day
license suspension in Ohio,
drivmg while intoxicated;
William F . Farley, LangsVIlle, $10 and costs, left of
center.
Rer W. O'Brien , Stewart,
Ohio, $15 and costs, no con-_
test, left of center; James
Grueser, Rutland, $15 and
costs, fishing without a
license; Dan Lee Cremeans
Rt . 2 Belpre, $20 and costs:

CARPENTER- Vacation
Bible School has been concluded at the Mt. Union
Baptist Church near here.
The theme of the one week

session .was UJesus Touch
Me."
Attendance for pupils and
teachers ranged from 81 to

HOURS: 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM

Superior Car Wash
GALLIPOLIS, 0.

TUB ENCLOSURES.
an inexpensive way to add glamour to your bathroom.
operation •. . no
wheel•, bearing• or
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runners. Choice of
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Start At

446-3362

'Sign Up At Desk"

1

'~II N~w AMF. Equipment"
, Ohio

for a trtp uf undetermined
length. Gurdon says they wtll
JUSl keep goin~ until they ~e l
ltrcd. the n they wtll re turn
M1ke Gurre ll IS Jn Florid a for
a week .
David and Lois Dodderer
are vacationing and spending

ftuJ-w tse, but they wish it had
been more of a success
mnney· wise . There were
probably just too many thmgs
gm ng un that rug ht. !elias.
Try again
The horse s how at the Ba r30 on June 28 wa s a b1g

thetr tune at a mount.ain :s uccess The weather was
musica l fes tival where David . perfect as was · the turnout.
will be participat mg in the The only thing that marred
'
mustc-making , wh1le
mom the eve ning 1or I should say,
Jess te will be JOurneying to the mor nin g ) was t he fa ct
Kings Is land wtth the Senior that the judge had car battery
Citize ns. Effie Sanders trouble a nd we didn 'l gel h1m
vacati oned in Canada with sta rted
£or
hom e
m
members of the fami ly and I Clulhcuthe until 5 a.m.
was supposed to be laking a
We didn ' t learn much of a
vacation a week or so ago, but lesson though, because we
I came dow n wtth the are going to another horse
epezutls and It wa sn~ l much show - sponsor ep by the
of a vacatton.
OVHSA - on Sunday July 20.
· HAVE YOU HEARD' The Why don ' t yo u come down
latest rumor is tha t Roger and watch'
Brooks has dectded to forsa ke
One of the most mteres ting
single blessedness for a girl classes 1s the r oadster poney:
named Captola Cole . Do you these high ste pping little
suppose it ts really true•
fell ows with the ir sulky and
The love bug ha s been busy the dnver m the colorful silks
as eviden ce d
by
the ar e great entertainment. I
prepa rati ons for an August thmk everyone in your family
wedding for Pam Balser and would enjoy the show Spend
Ketth Miller
a little time on SWld •y. the
I guess the firemen 's dance 20th, at the horse show .
on July 5 was a huge success
And to continue talkmg

SGT. LAWHORN
MASON, W, Va.
Marine Staff Sergeant
Stewart M. Lawhorn, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Lawhorn of Fourth St., has
been selected to tour part
"' of the United States with an
armed forces bicentennial
caravan starting from
Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base. A former
student of Pomeroy High
School, he joined the
Marines In October 1955.

._,_

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ROOF COATING

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ONLY)

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NOW ON DISPLAY
THE ALL NEW

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investigated
GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
traffic accidents were inVf$tigated Friday in downtown Gallipolis.
The first occurred on Court
St. where an auto driven by
Sandra S. Burris, 29, Rt. 2,
Vinton, attempted to park
and struck an auto owned by
Charles W. Williams, Jr., Rt.
2, Vinton .
A backing mishap occurred
on Second Ave. where an auto
driven by Elmora E. Price,
51, Gallipolis, backed intQ a
car operated by Wilma C.
McKenzie, 40, of Gallipolis.

Beauty, durability, safety. comfort and
_privacy are built into the house from the
beginning. Tough. natural and synthetic
materials combine to give you. the homeowner. many years of trouble-free, main tenance free service. Title I F.H.A. Loan
Available .

B'arbs
By PHIL PASTORET

LATEX PAINT

CARPET

Exterior- Interior

$2

66ut.

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MOBILE HOMES INC.

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Ph!)ne 446-9340
·
Ga Iii polis, Ohic

Men never gossip They pass
tt along as fact.
Come home ~inging a song
and the wife will worry all
evening about what you 've b(;en
up to.

316-6th St.

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The freezmg season 's here . fres h frUits and
vegetables w1ll be plent 1fu l and economical
You can star t f1ll mg your Un1 c0 freezer now With a head start on the meat' Don 't wa1t. offer
good thr u July 31. 1975 only Stop m today'

Your yard IS a lot more tha a lav .l . so you need a lo t more
lha;n a mower. You need the ...,,mpl1c1ty System . Choose
your power: 8, tO , 13, t6 o r 19'.&gt; hp M ov ng Widths 36" to
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CAROLINA LUMBER
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675-1160

with the kids and demonstrations and classes are held
to improve the honemanshlp
and horse sense of the 4-H
members. Jr. ls lhe dean of
the men at the camp.
PERSONAL NOTES; Mr.
and Mrs. 0011 Green from
Charleston, W. Va., spent
Sunday with Mr. and Ura.
Everett Parker and Mr. and
Mrs Darrell Laridon.
Ballard and Dolly Horn,
drove in from West Virginia ,
m their 24-foot motor home
and spent the weekend in
Tuppers Plains. You \till
remember that Ballard was
!he former owner of the
As hland station . He and Dolly
spent the weekend visiting
friends in the area .
Bill Cole and Robin Ritchie
atte nded an
American
Quarterhorse Association
show m Portsmouth before
joi mng other members from
Cole Stables in Lancaster at
an open s how. Bill showed his
quarterhorse stud "Phoebus"
and placed second In the
halter class at Portsmouth.
This was an excellent
s howi ng
as
American
Quarterhorse shows are
difficult to s how In because
the best horses from all over
the country participate and
Continued on page 32)

.

Minor bwnps

12Ft. Wide

..

BY NORMA· NEWLAND
TUPPERS PLAINS - Le t
me start today by advisJn~ all
my readers of a peculiarity
reckless operation; Curtis
that I have whtch might make
Smith , Rutland , $20 and
understa nding the co lumn
costs , disorderly conduc t ;
easier some times. I have a
Lee Bing, Rt . I, Rutland, $10 wetrd hab it of renamin g
and costs, Not Guilty - Found
people : for example, 1 have a
Guilty, speeding : J oyce
ftt trying to find Rose
Grady , RD Racme, 38 days
Douglas ' telephone number
jail, 30 days suspension, 6 some times because I forget
months probation and costs,
to look for Carr mstead of
No operator's license .
Douglas, arid like , I kn ow that
F orfeitfng bonds we re
Bob Woods' wife 's name ts
Donald R. Lewis, Smithfield,
Edna, but nevertheless, all
Pa ., David R . Thomas,
the years I have known her , I
Middleport, Willard C. Willis,
ha ve ca lled her Th e lm a .
Jr .. Youngstown , Ohio, David
She's got to the point where
Wayne Grovengo, Benwood,
s he answers to it. And that's
W. Va ., James Stringer,
only a couple of examples
Warren, Ohio, James E.
There are so many more.
Roush , Painesville , Ohio,
So, Helen and Bob Durst, I
Ellis L. Stiers, Athens, Ohio,
am sorry I named you Swartz
Carl E. Heig hton, Ironton,
but for some reason , I Insist
Ohio, George A. Perkins,
on calling Helen a Swartz .
Col umbus , Ohio,
Cecil
From nnw on, keep on yo ur
G. DeLong, Sardis, Ohio,
toes, folks, or you won't kn ow
Lawrence
E.
Nichols,
who I am talking about
Columbus, Ohio, $27 .50 each, , The fa ct that rain was
speeding;
Edward
J.
falhng all around Tuppers
Berkich, Gallipolis, Ohio,
Plains and none on Tuppers
Beth I. Chambers, PittsPlains led me to believe that
burgh, Pa., $32.50, speeding ;
we should investigate the
Benjamm Brown,
Witc itizenry to find out who
chit&amp; Falls, Texas , $25,
wasn ' t
"paymg
the
disorderly conduct ; and
preacher ", to com a phrase.
Joseph Gute, Ashland , Ky .,
After serious thought on the
$27.50, passing over yellow
subject, it was concluded that
line.
drought might be better than
an expose' of the ci tizenry .
I'll bet everyone (me included) was glad it rained on
our town on Wednesday to
break the spell .
WELL
TH &amp;
LOCAL
110 with an average of 100.
baseball
season
is
drawing
to
There were a total of 98
children attending with 53 a close. Tuesday evening, the
having perfect ' attendance. Tuppers Platns No . 2 team
Students and teachers ranged lost a heartbreaker to the
in age from 68 years to three Reedsville No. I team by a
score of 10-~ You can bet that
weeks.
Teachers and assistants was a thrilling game _ Hope
were, nursery class, Darlene everybody has been turning
Vanaman, teacher, Marlene out to support these little
Barrett,
Wanda
Oxley league players .
Paul and Estelle Baker of
and Ann Barrett helpFleming
spent Tuesday afers:
beginners
class,
Beverly Rupe, teacher , ternoon with hiS aunt, Mrs .
Esther Scragg , assistant; Louisa Newland . Paul has
primary class, Helena Riggs , been having quite a lot of
teacher, Jean Peavley and trouble wtth one ear, but
Peg Malone assistants ; hopes to clear it up after
junior class, Wayne Turner, having an Impac ted tooth
teacher, Teresa Wood, pulled, which was discovered
Loretta Stansbury and Ann to be the source of the ear
Sargent, assistants; teens · problem.
There IS lots of camping
class, Nancy White, teacher"
going
on . Grant Newland and
and
Nellie
Hatfield,
assistant; music by Mabel Steve Millhone motorcycled
Pauley, Sandy McMilliams to Gauley Bridge, W. Va . and
camped out a couple of days .
and Pamela Wilson.
Gordon and Helen CaldServing on the refreshment
well
, Nita Jean Ritchie and
committee
were
Ann
Williams and Louise Myers; daughters eindy and Robin
story time, Tom McElroy and and Chuck and Judy Weber
and son Jimmy spent several
Geneva King; · other helpers,
Wilma Jolly, Sadie Carr, days at Kmgs Island . I understand Gordon wanted to
Florence Barrett, Rose Cox,
become a lifeguard there but
Diane Young and Mary
Helen felt the strain on his
Allen; directors of the school
eyes would be too much.
were Rosalie Sayre and
· After returning to Tuppers
Gracie Wilson, Pastor is the
Plains, Nita Jean and theRev. Cecil 'Cox.
girls finishing the week
Students were entertained
camping at Carthage Gap
with a picnic lunch on the last
where a wing-&lt;ling of il dance
day of school and presented a
was held for the July 4
program of songs, prayers,
celebration. Helen and
recitations and skits on
Gordon will be continuing on
Sunday evening. A large
down through the Tennessee
crowd attended.
Valley and the Ozark Mounts

about ponies. here are the vtsittng s1sters Thelma,
resul ts of the July 5 pony pull Mildred Brook~ and Florence
whtch was held at the Bar-30 Wy er!t. Then the Wedges will
by the Tuppers Plams Pony contmu e on to Columbus to
Pull Association. There were · visit re lati ves there before
50 entr ies - think of that ! - I re turning to Florida .
50 pairs of pontes pulhng. In
DALE
SAN DE R S'
th e 1050 class, firs t place was telephone was out of order
won by Bob Callaway's team: fr om the storm so 1 talked
second by Gilbert Seevers with Mrs. Loll about Flora
and third by J oe Ewart. In Hawk. She says that Flora is
the 1350 pound class, the ftrst slowly improvmg . Flora ts
place was won by Arc hie able to ~et arow1d the house
Dille 's team; second by Bill a nd it is no longer necessary
Pul li ns and th~rd by Gene fur sr,meone to stay with her.
Lester is now chief cook and
Holida y.
In the 1650 pound class, bottle wa sher .
OH, LET ME TELL you
firs t place was won by Jerry
Moore 's learn: second by Ray more about Efli e Sanders'
Stack a nd third by Ralph vaca'twn trip Effte, daughter
Talbot.
Trophies
wer e Inez Belle and her husband ,
awarded to all fir st and Ch uck Wlntehead , all went to
Sea World, v1ewed Niagara
second place wtnners .
Also,
the
pullin g Falls and loured Canada by
association e lected new_ of- bus. They were gone five
fi cers who will assume thetr days a nd Effie had a marduttes on Augus t 2. The new ve lous time.
office rs are · Bill Pulhns,
JR. KENNEDY AND SON,
prestdent ; Leonard Keirns, Tony are attending 4-H camp
vice president; Jan e Pulhns, in Lucasville . You hea rd me
tr eas ure r ; Dottte Cox. right Lucasville, but not at
secretary; and J anie Ke irns, the prison, at the Scwto
refreshment cha irman .
Co un ty Fairgrounds . The
HAZ E L AND ROSCOE ca mp is for 4-H members
Wedge were overnig ht guests from a n ~OWlly area with
of Th elm a Walkin s. The facilities for 125 boys and
Wedges reside in Newport girls and 100 hor ses It is a
Ritchey, Florida. Hazel, one working camp in that tnof the " Pulhns girls" is structors come in for sessions

Bible school concluded

••

:±:::-HHiti s,,•• ,h. •ilent

Tuppers Plains newsletter

= ~ Meigs County Court ;:

WITH 15 GAL. OF GAS

EASTERN AVE.

I

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Slo-pitch

Young is
Lancaster announced
grid coach

·

e24 New AMF Lanes
Captain's lounge

WATKINS GLEN , N. Y.
!UP[) - South Africa's J ody
Scheckter ; in the pole
pos ition, took the early lead
Saturday in · the Worl d
Championship for Ma kes' sixhour enduran ce test at the
3.4-mile track in thi s small
upstate c ommuntty .
The star t of the race was
delayed for an hour because
of an accident in the
qualifymg rWl for SWlday's
Formula 5000 contest. No
injuries resulted from the
accident.
The two events br ought
many of the United S tate ~·
and . Europe 's top drivers to
the Glen
Seheckter won the pole
position for the s1x-hour race
wtth a qualtfying time Friday
of 118.15 m .p.h . in an Alpine
Renault , edging Gerard
Larrousse of France, timed
in 117 5, in the second Alpine
Renault entry .
Eng land 's Derek Bell and
Frenchman Henri Pescarolo,
this year's champions in the
24 hours of Le Mans, were
teamed in another Alpha and
finished third in the qualifier.
Mario Andrettt, fourth high
qualifier and winner of the
1969 lndinapolis 500 Classic,
was teamed with [\alian
Arturo Merzario, in an Alpha
Romeo .
The third leg of the For)llula 5000 Championship trail
wtll be run Sunday with last ·'
year 's c hampiOn , · England's
Brian Redmond , defending
his title. He is being chased·
closely by Andretti for this
year's championship.

·-- ·-

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

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Scheckter
has early
race lead

classic is

SKYLINE LANES
- and PRO-SHOP

Cincy

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The . League m home rWls for
118~ of former baseball seven consecutive seasons
~~ to be here for the
1946 through 1952, while
c:llnclnnati R\lds' annual Old· playing for the Pittsburgh
ntilers Game today includes Pira,les.
Mays and Ralph Kiner,
Kiner 's season best was 54
ito of the all-time top home homers
in 1949, and he
rfii hitters.
·
finished his career with 349
" l'he old-timers wlU play a home rWls .
feolt Innings before the 2: 15
Other old-timers scheduled
tf;m. start of the: regular to play .include Yogi Berra,
~New York Mets game.
Ernie Bank$;'"'1\raiiry Wills,
~YI hit 860 home rlins, ' Bill Mazeroski, Joe Nuxhall,
Hllrd h!gl;test total in major Johnny Vander , Meer, Carl
history, during his Erskine, Elroy Face, Jim
I
, with. the Sail Fran- Konstanty,. Johnny Poctres,
&amp;lco Glanta and New York Ralp_h
Branca,
Bobby
M6'1i
.
Adams, Roy McMillan,
~~, who will be Inducted Smoky Burgess, Wally Post
WO the Hall of -Fame later and_Wally Moon .
lllliiUIIIIJ¥l",led the Nafional

Terry Abbott , Gallipo li s,
Oluo; ~·o urt h - Mike Oll'ry,
Gallipolis, Ohio; Fift h - Chm
Early , Colwnbus, Ohio.
200&lt;'1' Class : First -Clifford
Snyder , We ll sto n , Ohi o;
Sec ond - Mark Robson,
Chauncey, Ohio; Third ·
David Merry , Bidwell, Ohto ;
Fourth - J ohn Ruth , Belpre .
Ohw, F1fth - F:zra Darnell ,
Wells ton, Ohto.
250 A Class: Ftrst - Brerry
Hudson, Pmnt Pleasant, W.
Va .; Second - William Bagby,
SL Albans , W. Va .; Tlurd ·
Steve LaValley, Ra cin e,
Ohw , · Fourth
S teve
Whitecoff. Charles ton, W Va.

Second - Rick G illil a nd ,
We ll s ton , Ohio ; Third Chff ord
Snyde r ,
Jr . ,
Wells ton, Ohio; Fourth - Bob

Letters, calls
•
accompany win
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ugly
letters and crank calls keep
coming
in,
disturbing
reminders to the owner and
trainer of Foolish Pleasure of
their colt's tainted victory
over Ruffian at Belmont on
black SWlday.
"People just don't understand," said Leroy Jolley ,
trainer of the colt, who
galloped to an easy victory in
the nationally• televised
$350,000 match race with
Ruffian last week after the
filly broke a leg early in the
race .
·~I've had dozens of letters
from people who have no
understanding of horses,"
Jolley said. "I'm sure they 're
very nice, very concerned
people who were terribly
upset seeing the horse break
down and then hearing it was
put down . But these things
happen, nobody wants them

'1

Z - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sllnday, July 13 1975 ·

Moto-cross race results an.n ounced
Hidden Hills Raceway
celebrated the Fourth of July
weekend with a dirt bike
moto-cross race on SUnday,
July 6. The event took place
in the hills located between
Rio Grande and Rodney, on
Slate Route 35.
In the following classes, ·
prize money and trophies
were awarded to:
Mini 0-85 : First - Rusty
Elliott, Bainbripge , Oh1o:
Second - Willie Noble,
Gallipolis, Ohio; Third -Rick
):larnitz, Mason , W, Va .;
Fourth - Rick Taylor,
Washington Court Hou se,
Ohio ; Fifth - Travis Taylor,
Washington Court Hou se.

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_24- The Sund~y Times -Sentinel, SWlday, July 13, 1975

"

Ohio .
· Mint 86-!0ti : F1rst - Ed die
Forsythe. Washington C'ourt
Hous e. Ohi o : ' Seco nd Shannon Bobb, Bambndge ,
Oh1o ; Third -' Th omas
Ferguson, Barboursville, W.
Va .; Fourth____··TOi:ld Bobb,
Bainbridge, Ohio; Fifth- Jeff
Sheridan, Washm gton Co urt
House, Ohi o.
Junior Cla~s: F1rst- Erroll
Ru sse ll, Cheshire. Oh10 .
Second - Robe rt E lli ott,
Bainbndge, Ohw; Third Tina Pauley, Alum Creek, W
Va .; Fourth - Wesley Smith,
Pomeroy , Ohto ; Fifth - Terry
Stansberry. Wells ton, Ohw .

100&lt;'&lt;' Class : First - Kevi n
Ruush, M as1i n, W. Va .;

c

to, and we hav e to accept It.
Everybody concerned with
the race went mto it With the
best of mtenlions. There was

no greed, no viciOusness
involved. No one wanted to
see either horse get hurt. "
" l've" been accused of being
a poor winner," said John L.
Gree r, owner of Foolish
Plea s ure. "They say my
horse should have stopped
runnin g (after Ruffian
stumbled) or that I oughtn ' t
to have accepted the trophy .
There have been a lot of
poison pen letters. People
have called me past midnight I've not enjoyed this
victory ."
Frank Whiteley Jr , Ruf-

fian's trainer, has been
confronted with a barrage of
questions by the media
concermng the condition of
Ruffian and the dectsion to
kill the horse mercifully when

J ohnsnn. Racine, Ohio: F'1fth

- Keith Durs t, Pom l Pleasant,
W. Va
125 A Class: First - Eddie
Atktn s. Galhpo li s, Olu u:
Second - Lonn ie Newell . •w
Hav en, W Va . Third -. Gary
Baisden, Chapma nville, W.
Va.
125 B Class: F~rst- Russe ll
lian1 rg, Albany, · Ohio :
Second - !'.lark Steele , Pomt
Pleasa nt , W. Va · Tl11rn -

1t was suffering a ft er ktckmg
off its cast foll owmg surgery .
But, unlike the Fooh s h
Pleasur e camp, the public
seems to have e xtend ed Its
sympathy to Whtteley and
Ruffian' s owner, Stuart A.
Janney.
"I've gotten over 500 letters , mostly sympathetic,"
Whiteley said. "There have
on ly been about a haJf-&lt;lozen
crank letters. I lived with that
fill y since it was a yearhng. It
wa s a deep personal loss but
th1s kind of thing has been
happening ever since horse
racing began .
" I don' t suppose we'll ever
kn ow exactly what ca used the
injury, why tt happened .
People will probably be
talking about it for years to
come but It'll never be settled . I've got to live with it
and not put the blame on
anybody or anythin g."

•
.T wo Gallipolis teams wm
CHESHIRE
Two
Ga,lllpolis teams, the Red Sox
and Indians, and Fruth's
Pharmacy of Point Pleasant
posted victories Friday night
in the 17th Annual Kyger
Creek' Uttle League Tournament.
The Gallipolis Red Sox
plated three runs in the first
inning and one in the fifth to
edge Addaville, 4-3.
In the opening frame, a
walk to Allen, a single by
Marchi and three Addaville
errors led. to three runs. The
winning run crossed the plate
in the fifth on a walk, error
and single by Mike Burger.
Addaville scored single

Mrs. Oayton
wins finals
TOLEDO (UP!) - Mrs.
Lemuel Clayton Jr., of Portsmouth s(!()red an easy 6 and 5
victory over Miss SheUa Scott
of Ashtabula in their
scheduled 36-hole finals of the
52nd annual Women's Ohio
State Golf Association
tow-nament Friday to caplure the championship on her
first try.
· Mrs. Clayton, 27, an exceptionally long hitter, took a
5-up lead at the end of the
morning roWld and coasted
home: ·:

rWls in each of the first,
second and fifth mnings .
Burger led the Red Sox
with two hits. The losing
pitcher, Wilhe Noble had the
only Addaville hit, a double.
Burger was the winning
pitcher.
· Two errors and a triple
produced the winning runs as
Point Pleasant's Fruth
Pharmacy posted a 7-5 ;victory over the Middleport
Reds. J . Jones led the winners with two triples and a
double in four at bats. J.
Sullivan slammed a home
run, D. Simpson singled and
C. Simpkins doubled .
Ge!tin'g hits for Middleport
were ·stewart with a double
and single; Justus, a double
and Duckworth, a single .
The Gallipolis Indians took
advantage of 16 walks, three
errors and collected six hits
to post a lopsided 22-5 win

TOURNAMENT SET
District 12 Industrial Slo
Pitch Tournament will be
held in Marietta. Drawing
will be held July 15 at 7:30
p.m. at Hadley Field. Entry
fee is $46.50 which will be paid
before the drawing. Team
manager must be present.
Two teams will advance to
State play at Zanesville. For
more
information
ca ll
Reuben Ritchey, Route 6,
Marietta.

"

Mays, Kiner will _
•
- ~play m

WDue

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over
the Harrisonville
Bobcats.
M. Alhson, S. Harrington
and S. Willer led the Indians
with two hils each.
S. Hanning had the only
Harrisonville hit

TENNIS UPSET
GSTAAD,
Switzerland
( UP!) - Karl Meller of
Germany upset defending
champ ion Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina, 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4,
Saturday in the semifinals of
the Swiss International
Tennis Champiohships.
In SWlday's final, Meller
will meet 40-year-&lt;Jld Ken
Rosewall of Australia, who
defeated Jairo Velasco of
Colombia, 9-7, 6-0, 6-2.
In the women's final , Unky
Boshoff of South Africa will
face Glynis Coles of Bntain.
· On Saturday, Miss Boshoff
defeated Naoko Sato of
Japan , 6-0, 6-4, and Miss
Coles scored a 6-0, 6-3 victory
over Monica Giorgi of Italy .

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn .
(UP!) - Public address
announcer Robert utecht
testified Friday in" Hennepin
County District Court that
Dave Forbes of the Boston
Bruins "drove" his hockey
stick into the eye of Henry
Boucha of the Minnesota
North Stars with a jabbing
motion iri a right during a

250 R Class: First - Russ~ I!
B11bb , Bal!lhradg e , Ohio;
Seco nd
J ef f Wood,
Hurrica ne , W Va . ; Third Tony Keath ly, Letart, W Va .
Open A Class: F'1rst- David
G.rin.dstaff , Racine , Ohto ;
Second - Alva Sulliva n,
Galhpohs . Ohio ; Third - Lee
Floyd, Pomeroy, Ohw ;
Fourth - Wilh am Bagby, St.
Albans , W. Va
Open B Class: First •
Mi chael Sm1thers , Letart, W.
Va . ; Second - Btl! Mars hall,
Mason, W Va
The next race at Hidden
Hills Race way will be on July
20th .

Oeveland rookie hits
inside the park homer
ByJIMCOUR
UPI Sports Writer
(U P!)
ANAHEIM
Cleve land Indtans ' rookie
outfi elder Rick Mannmg saw
the humor of hts ftrst maJOr
league home run .
"I kn ew it was gone as soon
as I saw 11 bounce agamst the
fence," he sm iled .
Manning's mside-the-park
homer with John Lowenstein
aboard ca pped a three-run
seventh inning Friday night
to g ive the Indians a 5-3
vtctory over the California
Angels.
He sped arouhd the bases
after Dave Co llin s and
Mickey Rivers collided m the
outfield. Collins was knocked
down and Rtvers bent over
his fallen teammate.
To the Anaheim Stadium
crowd of 9,034, It appeared
R1vers was a sking Colli ns If
he was okay
"When Dave went down, I
thought he had the baiL"
Rivers sa id. "I asked him if
he had tt but he said, 'No, no,
l am't got it.' Then I said, 'I'll
s tart looking for it."'
" Mickey thought l had the
ball," confirmed Co lhns .
'' After he threw the ball m, he
asked me if I was a ll right."
Dick Wtlliams, the intense
Angels ' skipper, was asked if
he'd added any more gray
hairs to his moustache.
Cleveland scored its fifth
stratght win over the Angels
this seAson and its lith m a
row here . California hasn 't
beate n the Indians at

Jones wins
gold title
TOLEDO, Ohio ( UP! ) Rick Jones, a Youngstown
steel salesman, carded a 71 to
wm the Ohio State Amateur
Golf Championship by five
strokes Friday over faltering
Pat Lindsey of Toledo.
Jones finished with a threeunder-par 281, while Undsey
slipped to a 74 and 286.
Jones fell into a tie Friday
wt th Lindsey at the end of
nine holes at even par for the
tourney, but then fired a
blistering three-under 31 to
pull away.
,
Trailing were Stu Francis
of Madison at 289 and Lalu
Sabotin of Warren at 292.

Anaheim Stadtum smce July
17, 1973. ~
Manning's homer came off
Scott after !be Indtans t1 ed
the score at 3-3 on back-toback doubles by Frank Duffy
and Lowenstein .
"I've had balls hit the top of
the fe nce twice this year,"
noted Manning, "So I'll take
th 1s one ."

In bes tmg Lange, now 3-2,
Rorie Harrison gave up nine
hits m eight innings-plus to
register his fourth win
against a pair of losses.
" My performance wasn 't
exactly what you call a work
of art," said Harrison . " I just
couldn ' t seem to find my
rhythm. But the guys did a
good job of ptcking me up .''
Boog Powell belted his 15th
homer of the season for
Cleveland wht!e Collins had
three hils, includmg a double,
and stole a ba se.

game Jan. 4.
In the first U.S. trial of a
hockey player for conduct
during a game, Forbes is
accused of hitting Boucha
with a ''dangerous weapon,"
his hocke¥ stick.

I.

POMEROY - John Phillip
Young , 1956 gr a duate of
Pomeroy High School, has
been named head football
coach at Lancaster High
SchooL
Young has been serving as
assistant wrestling coach and
has been teaching at Lancaster for the past 10 years.
After g rad uating from
Pomeroy High in 1956, Young
attended Ohio University and
graduated from there in 1961.
Young rec~ived his master's
degree in physical education
in 1965 from Xavier.
Young is married to the
former Janet Carpenter and
they have three c hildren,
Phillip, age 11, Robin, ag" 9,
and Lisa, age 8.
John Phillip Young is the
son of the late Mr . and Mrs.
Hank YoWlg .

PORTSMOUTH The
Bonanza Slo-Pikh Softball
Classic will be held July 26th
and 27th at Portsmouth . ASA
sanctioned tournament .
E ntry fee is $40 for sanctioned and $48 for nonsanctiOned teams. Umpires
are experienced ASA sanctioned.
Team trophies go to 1st,
2nd, and 3rd place finishers.
First place finisher will
rece1ve
15
individual
trophies. The player with the
most home rWls for the
tournament receives a home
·run trophy and all players
ge tting a home run will be
rewarded with a steak dinner
courtesy of Bonanza Sirloin
P1t in Portsmouth.
- Drawing will be held July
20 at field one at 7 p .m .
- En try fee must be paid
before the firs t game. played.
- For more information
conl&lt;!ct Jeff Berry or Tom
July in Portsmouth.

~\\1//

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~
LEAGUES NOW OVER!

Pomeroy A~s nip
Racine team,· 6-4
concerning a writeup in
Fnday's paper on the Thursday night Pony League game
between
Racine
and
Cheshire.
It was written that in the
first mee ting between the two
clubs the. game was a
disputed one. According to
Coach Hilton Wolfe , Jr ., of
Racine , who was the home
learn , the first contest was
not a disputed contest and
was played without incident.

POMROY - The Pom~ roy
A-s held on to defeat the
Racine Pony LeaguerSl 6-4
Fnday ni gh t with Dale
Browning going the distance
fanning 12, walking one and
giving up just one hit. Mark
Sayre was the losi ng pitcher
for Racine _ Mike Huddleston
came on in the fifth to relieve
Sayre. Sayre then came bac k
to the mound in the seventh to
finish.
Sayre fanned mne, walked
one and hit one while Huddleston fanned three and
walked one.
Wt th the A-s lead ing 5-ll in
the fifth , the Racine club
narrowed" the score by plahng
four runs in that frame. After
the uprising by Ra c1ne
Brownmg settled down and
pitched the rest of the way .
Getting Racine 's six singles
were Mar)&lt; Sayre, Mike
Huddleston , Scott Wolfe,
Steve Hill, Richard Teaford ,
and Herbie Ervtn . ·
For the wtnning A-s the
hitters were Hamilton, Bob
McClure,
Mark Mitch,
Smith, and J ohnson each with
a single . John son a lso
doubled.
One cor recti on to be made

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BUICK-PONTIAC
Gallipolis

JULY SPECIAL
TUESDAY. JULY 15th
THURSDAy I JULy 17th

AUTOMOBILE WASHED
'1.00
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POMEROY · - Nineteen
were fined and 14 forfeited
bond in Judge Robert Buck 's
Court Friday_
Defend an Is fined were Joe
M. Bell, Jr., Land over Hi:ls,
Md., Donald G. Guthrie, Rt . 2
Coolville, Robert A. Griffith,
Pomeroy, $13 and costs each
•
speeding ; Alvin W. Goff,
Tuppers Plains, David L.
Grate, Rutland, Robert L.
Ritchie , Syracuse, $11 each,
speeding; Max E . Haynes,
Lancaster, Ohio, $15 and
costs, speeding ; Paul A.
Haynes, Middleport, Parts
Browning, Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va., $12 and costs·, ·each,
speeding; Michael S. Caton,
Rt. 1. Vinton, $19 and costs,
speedmg; Robert Black, Rt . 1
Portland, $150 and costs, 3
days confinement, 3 day
license suspension in Ohio,
drivmg while intoxicated;
William F . Farley, LangsVIlle, $10 and costs, left of
center.
Rer W. O'Brien , Stewart,
Ohio, $15 and costs, no con-_
test, left of center; James
Grueser, Rutland, $15 and
costs, fishing without a
license; Dan Lee Cremeans
Rt . 2 Belpre, $20 and costs:

CARPENTER- Vacation
Bible School has been concluded at the Mt. Union
Baptist Church near here.
The theme of the one week

session .was UJesus Touch
Me."
Attendance for pupils and
teachers ranged from 81 to

HOURS: 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM

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, Ohio

for a trtp uf undetermined
length. Gurdon says they wtll
JUSl keep goin~ until they ~e l
ltrcd. the n they wtll re turn
M1ke Gurre ll IS Jn Florid a for
a week .
David and Lois Dodderer
are vacationing and spending

ftuJ-w tse, but they wish it had
been more of a success
mnney· wise . There were
probably just too many thmgs
gm ng un that rug ht. !elias.
Try again
The horse s how at the Ba r30 on June 28 wa s a b1g

thetr tune at a mount.ain :s uccess The weather was
musica l fes tival where David . perfect as was · the turnout.
will be participat mg in the The only thing that marred
'
mustc-making , wh1le
mom the eve ning 1or I should say,
Jess te will be JOurneying to the mor nin g ) was t he fa ct
Kings Is land wtth the Senior that the judge had car battery
Citize ns. Effie Sanders trouble a nd we didn 'l gel h1m
vacati oned in Canada with sta rted
£or
hom e
m
members of the fami ly and I Clulhcuthe until 5 a.m.
was supposed to be laking a
We didn ' t learn much of a
vacation a week or so ago, but lesson though, because we
I came dow n wtth the are going to another horse
epezutls and It wa sn~ l much show - sponsor ep by the
of a vacatton.
OVHSA - on Sunday July 20.
· HAVE YOU HEARD' The Why don ' t yo u come down
latest rumor is tha t Roger and watch'
Brooks has dectded to forsa ke
One of the most mteres ting
single blessedness for a girl classes 1s the r oadster poney:
named Captola Cole . Do you these high ste pping little
suppose it ts really true•
fell ows with the ir sulky and
The love bug ha s been busy the dnver m the colorful silks
as eviden ce d
by
the ar e great entertainment. I
prepa rati ons for an August thmk everyone in your family
wedding for Pam Balser and would enjoy the show Spend
Ketth Miller
a little time on SWld •y. the
I guess the firemen 's dance 20th, at the horse show .
on July 5 was a huge success
And to continue talkmg

SGT. LAWHORN
MASON, W, Va.
Marine Staff Sergeant
Stewart M. Lawhorn, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Lawhorn of Fourth St., has
been selected to tour part
"' of the United States with an
armed forces bicentennial
caravan starting from
Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base. A former
student of Pomeroy High
School, he joined the
Marines In October 1955.

._,_

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ROOF COATING

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ONLY)

$695
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NOW ON DISPLAY
THE ALL NEW

~outhwOod®
byRcdmany

investigated
GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
traffic accidents were inVf$tigated Friday in downtown Gallipolis.
The first occurred on Court
St. where an auto driven by
Sandra S. Burris, 29, Rt. 2,
Vinton, attempted to park
and struck an auto owned by
Charles W. Williams, Jr., Rt.
2, Vinton .
A backing mishap occurred
on Second Ave. where an auto
driven by Elmora E. Price,
51, Gallipolis, backed intQ a
car operated by Wilma C.
McKenzie, 40, of Gallipolis.

Beauty, durability, safety. comfort and
_privacy are built into the house from the
beginning. Tough. natural and synthetic
materials combine to give you. the homeowner. many years of trouble-free, main tenance free service. Title I F.H.A. Loan
Available .

B'arbs
By PHIL PASTORET

LATEX PAINT

CARPET

Exterior- Interior

$2

66ut.

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See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Ph!)ne 446-9340
·
Ga Iii polis, Ohic

Men never gossip They pass
tt along as fact.
Come home ~inging a song
and the wife will worry all
evening about what you 've b(;en
up to.

316-6th St.

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2 Ga l Can 301 Whole Latex. Reg $20 65 . . . . . . S18.58
1Gal Can415RedBarnPamt. Reg 5765 ..•... ' . $6.88
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2 Gal Can 415 Red Barn Pamt . Reg S15.05
1 Gal Can 251 One-coal Whi le (ml base). Reg $12 45 $11 .20
2 Gal Can 25t One-coal Wh1te Reg $24 55 .. . .. $22.09
1 Ga l Can 315 Red Latex . Reg $9 29 . . • . . . . . . $8.36
1 Gal Can 301 While La1e&gt; . Reg $10 75

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The freezmg season 's here . fres h frUits and
vegetables w1ll be plent 1fu l and economical
You can star t f1ll mg your Un1 c0 freezer now With a head start on the meat' Don 't wa1t. offer
good thr u July 31. 1975 only Stop m today'

Your yard IS a lot more tha a lav .l . so you need a lo t more
lha;n a mower. You need the ...,,mpl1c1ty System . Choose
your power: 8, tO , 13, t6 o r 19'.&gt; hp M ov ng Widths 36" to
attachments for 1:--wn, gar jen. gravel. snow
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Store Open 8-6 Mon.-Sat.
Station 24 Hours Daily

BALE

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with a tractor.

CAROLINA LUMBER
·&amp; Supply Co.
675-1160

with the kids and demonstrations and classes are held
to improve the honemanshlp
and horse sense of the 4-H
members. Jr. ls lhe dean of
the men at the camp.
PERSONAL NOTES; Mr.
and Mrs. 0011 Green from
Charleston, W. Va., spent
Sunday with Mr. and Ura.
Everett Parker and Mr. and
Mrs Darrell Laridon.
Ballard and Dolly Horn,
drove in from West Virginia ,
m their 24-foot motor home
and spent the weekend in
Tuppers Plains. You \till
remember that Ballard was
!he former owner of the
As hland station . He and Dolly
spent the weekend visiting
friends in the area .
Bill Cole and Robin Ritchie
atte nded an
American
Quarterhorse Association
show m Portsmouth before
joi mng other members from
Cole Stables in Lancaster at
an open s how. Bill showed his
quarterhorse stud "Phoebus"
and placed second In the
halter class at Portsmouth.
This was an excellent
s howi ng
as
American
Quarterhorse shows are
difficult to s how In because
the best horses from all over
the country participate and
Continued on page 32)

.

Minor bwnps

12Ft. Wide

..

BY NORMA· NEWLAND
TUPPERS PLAINS - Le t
me start today by advisJn~ all
my readers of a peculiarity
reckless operation; Curtis
that I have whtch might make
Smith , Rutland , $20 and
understa nding the co lumn
costs , disorderly conduc t ;
easier some times. I have a
Lee Bing, Rt . I, Rutland, $10 wetrd hab it of renamin g
and costs, Not Guilty - Found
people : for example, 1 have a
Guilty, speeding : J oyce
ftt trying to find Rose
Grady , RD Racme, 38 days
Douglas ' telephone number
jail, 30 days suspension, 6 some times because I forget
months probation and costs,
to look for Carr mstead of
No operator's license .
Douglas, arid like , I kn ow that
F orfeitfng bonds we re
Bob Woods' wife 's name ts
Donald R. Lewis, Smithfield,
Edna, but nevertheless, all
Pa ., David R . Thomas,
the years I have known her , I
Middleport, Willard C. Willis,
ha ve ca lled her Th e lm a .
Jr .. Youngstown , Ohio, David
She's got to the point where
Wayne Grovengo, Benwood,
s he answers to it. And that's
W. Va ., James Stringer,
only a couple of examples
Warren, Ohio, James E.
There are so many more.
Roush , Painesville , Ohio,
So, Helen and Bob Durst, I
Ellis L. Stiers, Athens, Ohio,
am sorry I named you Swartz
Carl E. Heig hton, Ironton,
but for some reason , I Insist
Ohio, George A. Perkins,
on calling Helen a Swartz .
Col umbus , Ohio,
Cecil
From nnw on, keep on yo ur
G. DeLong, Sardis, Ohio,
toes, folks, or you won't kn ow
Lawrence
E.
Nichols,
who I am talking about
Columbus, Ohio, $27 .50 each, , The fa ct that rain was
speeding;
Edward
J.
falhng all around Tuppers
Berkich, Gallipolis, Ohio,
Plains and none on Tuppers
Beth I. Chambers, PittsPlains led me to believe that
burgh, Pa., $32.50, speeding ;
we should investigate the
Benjamm Brown,
Witc itizenry to find out who
chit&amp; Falls, Texas , $25,
wasn ' t
"paymg
the
disorderly conduct ; and
preacher ", to com a phrase.
Joseph Gute, Ashland , Ky .,
After serious thought on the
$27.50, passing over yellow
subject, it was concluded that
line.
drought might be better than
an expose' of the ci tizenry .
I'll bet everyone (me included) was glad it rained on
our town on Wednesday to
break the spell .
WELL
TH &amp;
LOCAL
110 with an average of 100.
baseball
season
is
drawing
to
There were a total of 98
children attending with 53 a close. Tuesday evening, the
having perfect ' attendance. Tuppers Platns No . 2 team
Students and teachers ranged lost a heartbreaker to the
in age from 68 years to three Reedsville No. I team by a
score of 10-~ You can bet that
weeks.
Teachers and assistants was a thrilling game _ Hope
were, nursery class, Darlene everybody has been turning
Vanaman, teacher, Marlene out to support these little
Barrett,
Wanda
Oxley league players .
Paul and Estelle Baker of
and Ann Barrett helpFleming
spent Tuesday afers:
beginners
class,
Beverly Rupe, teacher , ternoon with hiS aunt, Mrs .
Esther Scragg , assistant; Louisa Newland . Paul has
primary class, Helena Riggs , been having quite a lot of
teacher, Jean Peavley and trouble wtth one ear, but
Peg Malone assistants ; hopes to clear it up after
junior class, Wayne Turner, having an Impac ted tooth
teacher, Teresa Wood, pulled, which was discovered
Loretta Stansbury and Ann to be the source of the ear
Sargent, assistants; teens · problem.
There IS lots of camping
class, Nancy White, teacher"
going
on . Grant Newland and
and
Nellie
Hatfield,
assistant; music by Mabel Steve Millhone motorcycled
Pauley, Sandy McMilliams to Gauley Bridge, W. Va . and
camped out a couple of days .
and Pamela Wilson.
Gordon and Helen CaldServing on the refreshment
well
, Nita Jean Ritchie and
committee
were
Ann
Williams and Louise Myers; daughters eindy and Robin
story time, Tom McElroy and and Chuck and Judy Weber
and son Jimmy spent several
Geneva King; · other helpers,
Wilma Jolly, Sadie Carr, days at Kmgs Island . I understand Gordon wanted to
Florence Barrett, Rose Cox,
become a lifeguard there but
Diane Young and Mary
Helen felt the strain on his
Allen; directors of the school
eyes would be too much.
were Rosalie Sayre and
· After returning to Tuppers
Gracie Wilson, Pastor is the
Plains, Nita Jean and theRev. Cecil 'Cox.
girls finishing the week
Students were entertained
camping at Carthage Gap
with a picnic lunch on the last
where a wing-&lt;ling of il dance
day of school and presented a
was held for the July 4
program of songs, prayers,
celebration. Helen and
recitations and skits on
Gordon will be continuing on
Sunday evening. A large
down through the Tennessee
crowd attended.
Valley and the Ozark Mounts

about ponies. here are the vtsittng s1sters Thelma,
resul ts of the July 5 pony pull Mildred Brook~ and Florence
whtch was held at the Bar-30 Wy er!t. Then the Wedges will
by the Tuppers Plams Pony contmu e on to Columbus to
Pull Association. There were · visit re lati ves there before
50 entr ies - think of that ! - I re turning to Florida .
50 pairs of pontes pulhng. In
DALE
SAN DE R S'
th e 1050 class, firs t place was telephone was out of order
won by Bob Callaway's team: fr om the storm so 1 talked
second by Gilbert Seevers with Mrs. Loll about Flora
and third by J oe Ewart. In Hawk. She says that Flora is
the 1350 pound class, the ftrst slowly improvmg . Flora ts
place was won by Arc hie able to ~et arow1d the house
Dille 's team; second by Bill a nd it is no longer necessary
Pul li ns and th~rd by Gene fur sr,meone to stay with her.
Lester is now chief cook and
Holida y.
In the 1650 pound class, bottle wa sher .
OH, LET ME TELL you
firs t place was won by Jerry
Moore 's learn: second by Ray more about Efli e Sanders'
Stack a nd third by Ralph vaca'twn trip Effte, daughter
Talbot.
Trophies
wer e Inez Belle and her husband ,
awarded to all fir st and Ch uck Wlntehead , all went to
Sea World, v1ewed Niagara
second place wtnners .
Also,
the
pullin g Falls and loured Canada by
association e lected new_ of- bus. They were gone five
fi cers who will assume thetr days a nd Effie had a marduttes on Augus t 2. The new ve lous time.
office rs are · Bill Pulhns,
JR. KENNEDY AND SON,
prestdent ; Leonard Keirns, Tony are attending 4-H camp
vice president; Jan e Pulhns, in Lucasville . You hea rd me
tr eas ure r ; Dottte Cox. right Lucasville, but not at
secretary; and J anie Ke irns, the prison, at the Scwto
refreshment cha irman .
Co un ty Fairgrounds . The
HAZ E L AND ROSCOE ca mp is for 4-H members
Wedge were overnig ht guests from a n ~OWlly area with
of Th elm a Walkin s. The facilities for 125 boys and
Wedges reside in Newport girls and 100 hor ses It is a
Ritchey, Florida. Hazel, one working camp in that tnof the " Pulhns girls" is structors come in for sessions

Bible school concluded

••

:±:::-HHiti s,,•• ,h. •ilent

Tuppers Plains newsletter

= ~ Meigs County Court ;:

WITH 15 GAL. OF GAS

EASTERN AVE.

I

~ 19 fined Friday iii

44x24-52x24-60x24

Specializing in AMF &amp;
Columbia Bowling Balls.

OPEN BOWLING
,DAILY &amp; EVENINGS

Slo-pitch

Young is
Lancaster announced
grid coach

·

e24 New AMF Lanes
Captain's lounge

WATKINS GLEN , N. Y.
!UP[) - South Africa's J ody
Scheckter ; in the pole
pos ition, took the early lead
Saturday in · the Worl d
Championship for Ma kes' sixhour enduran ce test at the
3.4-mile track in thi s small
upstate c ommuntty .
The star t of the race was
delayed for an hour because
of an accident in the
qualifymg rWl for SWlday's
Formula 5000 contest. No
injuries resulted from the
accident.
The two events br ought
many of the United S tate ~·
and . Europe 's top drivers to
the Glen
Seheckter won the pole
position for the s1x-hour race
wtth a qualtfying time Friday
of 118.15 m .p.h . in an Alpine
Renault , edging Gerard
Larrousse of France, timed
in 117 5, in the second Alpine
Renault entry .
Eng land 's Derek Bell and
Frenchman Henri Pescarolo,
this year's champions in the
24 hours of Le Mans, were
teamed in another Alpha and
finished third in the qualifier.
Mario Andrettt, fourth high
qualifier and winner of the
1969 lndinapolis 500 Classic,
was teamed with [\alian
Arturo Merzario, in an Alpha
Romeo .
The third leg of the For)llula 5000 Championship trail
wtll be run Sunday with last ·'
year 's c hampiOn , · England's
Brian Redmond , defending
his title. He is being chased·
closely by Andretti for this
year's championship.

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

eSnack Bar and

Scheckter
has early
race lead

classic is

SKYLINE LANES
- and PRO-SHOP

Cincy

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The . League m home rWls for
118~ of former baseball seven consecutive seasons
~~ to be here for the
1946 through 1952, while
c:llnclnnati R\lds' annual Old· playing for the Pittsburgh
ntilers Game today includes Pira,les.
Mays and Ralph Kiner,
Kiner 's season best was 54
ito of the all-time top home homers
in 1949, and he
rfii hitters.
·
finished his career with 349
" l'he old-timers wlU play a home rWls .
feolt Innings before the 2: 15
Other old-timers scheduled
tf;m. start of the: regular to play .include Yogi Berra,
~New York Mets game.
Ernie Bank$;'"'1\raiiry Wills,
~YI hit 860 home rlins, ' Bill Mazeroski, Joe Nuxhall,
Hllrd h!gl;test total in major Johnny Vander , Meer, Carl
history, during his Erskine, Elroy Face, Jim
I
, with. the Sail Fran- Konstanty,. Johnny Poctres,
&amp;lco Glanta and New York Ralp_h
Branca,
Bobby
M6'1i
.
Adams, Roy McMillan,
~~, who will be Inducted Smoky Burgess, Wally Post
WO the Hall of -Fame later and_Wally Moon .
lllliiUIIIIJ¥l",led the Nafional

Terry Abbott , Gallipo li s,
Oluo; ~·o urt h - Mike Oll'ry,
Gallipolis, Ohio; Fift h - Chm
Early , Colwnbus, Ohio.
200&lt;'1' Class : First -Clifford
Snyder , We ll sto n , Ohi o;
Sec ond - Mark Robson,
Chauncey, Ohio; Third ·
David Merry , Bidwell, Ohto ;
Fourth - J ohn Ruth , Belpre .
Ohw, F1fth - F:zra Darnell ,
Wells ton, Ohto.
250 A Class: Ftrst - Brerry
Hudson, Pmnt Pleasant, W.
Va .; Second - William Bagby,
SL Albans , W. Va .; Tlurd ·
Steve LaValley, Ra cin e,
Ohw , · Fourth
S teve
Whitecoff. Charles ton, W Va.

Second - Rick G illil a nd ,
We ll s ton , Ohio ; Third Chff ord
Snyde r ,
Jr . ,
Wells ton, Ohio; Fourth - Bob

Letters, calls
•
accompany win
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ugly
letters and crank calls keep
coming
in,
disturbing
reminders to the owner and
trainer of Foolish Pleasure of
their colt's tainted victory
over Ruffian at Belmont on
black SWlday.
"People just don't understand," said Leroy Jolley ,
trainer of the colt, who
galloped to an easy victory in
the nationally• televised
$350,000 match race with
Ruffian last week after the
filly broke a leg early in the
race .
·~I've had dozens of letters
from people who have no
understanding of horses,"
Jolley said. "I'm sure they 're
very nice, very concerned
people who were terribly
upset seeing the horse break
down and then hearing it was
put down . But these things
happen, nobody wants them

'1

Z - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sllnday, July 13 1975 ·

Moto-cross race results an.n ounced
Hidden Hills Raceway
celebrated the Fourth of July
weekend with a dirt bike
moto-cross race on SUnday,
July 6. The event took place
in the hills located between
Rio Grande and Rodney, on
Slate Route 35.
In the following classes, ·
prize money and trophies
were awarded to:
Mini 0-85 : First - Rusty
Elliott, Bainbripge , Oh1o:
Second - Willie Noble,
Gallipolis, Ohio; Third -Rick
):larnitz, Mason , W, Va .;
Fourth - Rick Taylor,
Washington Court Hou se,
Ohio ; Fifth - Travis Taylor,
Washington Court Hou se.

.,

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�I
'l1- The Sunday ~e:s - Sentinel, &amp;.ldal', July J8, 1975

July 13,' 1975

1

Oteap food

far
down
•
our community
the road

By Bryson I{ t Rud) C'.u t!'r
Galha Count} l'xlens101 !\gent
GALUPOLIS - Wath the 1975 Gallw County Jumor ~ mr
Just two weeks a\\ay l want to express some of my thoughts
recall some hast&lt;wy and tell you a httle btl .tbout thas }Cars
faar
The faar gets underwa) Tuesday evemng July 29 at 7
p m, and goes through Saturday August 2 ~ &lt;opy of the of.
flClal program ts m the cenlet pages of each Jumot Fa tr
prenuum book
Bettae Clark our ExtensiOn Agent Horne Econom ics tells
me she expects JUSt as many exhtbtts as e\ er m the Horne
Econom1cs ca tegones These mclude clothmg, nutntwn home
furrushmgs home management chtld ca re ftrsl atd and
nursmg Last year about 400 Home Economtcs proJects were
on exhtbtt
Accordm g to Fred Dee!, Count) Ex tenswn Agent 4 H Ttm
Massi e and Don Cox the expectatwns .are for a s tmtlar
number of exhtbtts as last }ear m the Acttvtty Butldmg
These fellows JUSt gave me the total number of ammals
entered for th1s years fatr and tf all entrtes sho w up )OU wall
fmd 73more ammals on exhtbtl than you dtd last yeat
Rtght no\\ 6!4 ammals hm e been entet eo co mpared to 541
exhibited last )eat All 73 a ddttwnal annnals wtll probably not
be there, but from all mdtcaltons lhts years aruma! exhtbtl
wtll be the largest ever
Uvestock numbers are up 111 all but three a reas (datry ts
down one, swme do" n 40 head and gumea ptgs-pocket pets
down 6) fhe greatest mcrease ts m rabbtls - 82 compared to
37last year Better get Jour freezet s cleared out to make room
for 100 steers 51 lambs and 94 hogs

By LEONARD CURRY
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON ( UP! 1
Don t look lor cheap food
pnces anytune soon
The era of low food prtces
and dechnmg food pnces as at
an end,' FTC eco nomtsl
Russell Parker told reporters
Fnday Food ts gomg to be
more dear than m the
past '

The FTC ISSUed a spectal
report on food cham profits
which noted there has been a
45 per cent nse m conswner
food pnces smce 1972
Parker and FTC economic
chtef Fredenc Scherer satd
supermarkets mcreased thetr
profit margms from about 0 8
per cent to I 4 per cent on
total sales between 1972 and
1974 But the FTC saad lhts
rate was not exorbitant
Agnl1!lture Secretary Earl
Butz satd Fnday the Soviet
Umon probably will buy be
tween 5 and !0 mallion tons of
gram - mostly corn -from
the Umted States m the
commg year
I FOUND BILL SMITH S 1953 Annual ExtensiOn Report
But he satd thts should have
and at the 1953 Junwr Fatr the lollo~&lt;m g numbers of ammals
m11umal" unpact tn rrusmg
were exhtbtted I FFA figures are not available except for U S food pnces, because U S
steers)
corn and wheat crops are
10 Beef Heifers and Cows, 12 Fat Steers 30 Daary Ammals, expected to htt record levels
7 Swme, 4 Sheep and 6 Poultry
Sovtet purchase of 19
The 1953 faar was the fourth annual fatr and was held at the mallion tons of Arnencan
Holzer Atrport
gram m 1972 contnbuted to
later mcreases m U S food
THE LAST TWO PARAGRAPHS on page mne of the 1975 pnces
Galha County Jumor Fatr premium book convey a message
The Agnculture Departthat I want to refer to and I fee l should not be passed over hght- ment satd predtcted U S
ly The wordmg ts as follows
crops of 6 btllwn bushels of
"The Jumor Fatr provides an opportumty for every youth corn and 2 2 balhon bushels of
of Gallia County to exhibit his talents and be recogmzed, thas as wheat 'appear large enough
an exhabation of the year's hard work and of cooper atiOn and to meet substanltal mcreases
tireless effort on the part of both county and ctty 1 estdents, lhts tn domestic and foretgn
ts the goal of the Gallia County Agncultural Soetet~
demand" whtle sllll per"The Juruor Fatr has served as a means of arspmng youth Till ttmg U S gram reserves to
to greater achievements whale provtdmg enJoyment and nse
~ttsfaction for all who come to vtew the exlubtls and program
Hot, dry weather has cut
and those who work hard to make at a success each year Thts the Sovaet gram harvest 10
continues to be the goal of the Gallla County Agnculture per cent below goals
S0c1ety "
I fmd essentwlly the same wordmg m the 1958 premtum
book Key pomts m this message are 'on the part of both
county and caty residents,' "a means of mspmng youth
while provading enJoyment and sattslactwn for all who come
and those who work hard "
Hyouarea newcomer to our community, we hope you w1ll TRIAL SITE CHANGE
OAKLAND, Calif ( UPI) attend and partacapate m the faar It wtll take you a httle while
to fully understand JUSt what the two paragraphs that I have Joseph Remtro, and Russell
referred to really say You wtll, however, see evidence that the Lattle, Symbtonese
goals of the AgriCultural Socaety have been out front all the Ltberatwn Army members
way Goals and ob)ecttves have not only been met a nd passed, already convtcted of murder,
will be trled elsewhere for
but new ones have been established
H you are a native of Gallia County or have been a long- !hear alleged attempt to
time restdent I feel you need to pat yourself on the back" for break out of the Alameda
the job you have done And when you look at where you were County Jatl March I
Superior Court Judge
wath the f3ll' over 20 years ago (I wasn't here but I have some
knowledge of the early days) and where you are today, you Uonel Wilson Fnday saad a
know I'm not kadding or trymg to gtve phony praise You have hearmg would be held Aug 13
accomplished some thmgs that challenge all of us to look to determme the sate of thetr
ahead With the goal of achaevmg new obJectives not only wath tnal He granted the motiOn
for the change of lraal Site on
the fall', but vanous aspects of community life
grounds pubhcaty would
reduce the chance for a fatr
satd
FLIP, BETI'Y TO VISIT
Wtlson has been devotmg trtal m Oakland
Remiro, 28, and Lattle, 25,
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
most of hts appearances to
Fhp Wilson will accompany charatable causes m recent were convtcted last month m
Frrst Lady Betty Ford on a years and was gtven the Sacramento, Calif , of assastour of the Washmgton, DC
Cancer
Socaety's smatmg Oakland School
hospatal Monday morrung, a humanttanan award thas Superintendent Marcus
Foster
spokesman for the comtc year

PROMENADE SHOP

Pads, Brushes, Saddle Soap, Bits The whole works!
-JUST ARRIVED-

SHIRTS - HATS - BELTS
ASSORTED TROPHY BUCKLES

.

INCLUDING
4-H CLUB, SILVER DOUAR, U.S. &amp; MANY OTHERS

Promenade Shop

'
.

OPEN MON. THRU THURS. 10-5
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY - 10-9
• SUNDAY 12-6
1313 EASTERN
446-1228
- AVE.
'
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'' ' '
1-

-·'

'

'

•

•

hke 1t m fa c t, JUSt about everyone
1t 1

hkes
Ic e cream"
No It s a five y~a r old program
called the Youth Conse rvatt on Corps
IYCC )
The YCC Program ts destgned as a
patd working expenence for young

.women and men mterested

serv 1ce

tr a 1mn g

for

and teac her growth

One of tts htghlights was a
recognttton banquet honormg

teachers for service awards
and also celebrahng 50 years
of servtcc to Oh10 tn
Agt tculture Educatton
Recetvtng awards from
Gallia County was Tom Pope
Hannan frace who recetved
Dtstra c t 14 Outstandtng
Young Teacher Award and
also recogmzed as havmg
attatned ftv e years of

t.eaclung serv1ce

1n

cnnservatwn

GAl I !PO! IS - Severa l
Gallta Count} Agnculture
Educati on leaders attended
the annual senunar of Ohto
reachers of VocatiOnal
Agrtculture held at Scot s Inn
m Columbus recenll}
1 heme for lhts ) ea r s
confe1 enre was 50 Years of
Su ccess
I ooktng To
Tom orrow
prov1dm g 1n
currtculum, student se lectum faclhhe s Impr ovement

YotJr Wayne National Forest
lly T Allan Wolter,
District Ranger
IRONTON - Parents like tl
leg tslators like tl, the young and old

Ag-Ed leaders
attend seminar
in Columbus

Yes I satd patd For thetr ef
fot ts, each camper as patd $2 10 per
hour whtch amounts to about $193 1n
take home pay At the end of the first
four week penod , a new group of
Campers t that s what they re
call ed 1 arnve to begtn thetr learn
and earn expenence
Oh10 camps will accommodate
350 ht gh schoolers lhts summer
most of whom would olherwase be
unemp)O)ed were I( nO( for YCC
For the hagh school s tudent the
program began late last wanter
~&lt;hen over 1,100 htgh schools 111 the
state 1all were nottlted 1 recel\ed an
mvttahon to submtl the name s of
students Interested tn conservalton
work Mos t sc hools destgnated thetr
counse lors to handle the recruat
ment
Students were selected wtlhout
regard to race, religiOn wealth or
academtc s landtn g 1 he prtme
reqwrement was a strong and
demonstratable mterest tn conservahon Age limtts are 15-18_
Two of the OhiO camps operated
by the Ohto Department of Natural
Resources are located on the
Shawnee and Zaleski Stale Forest
One camp as operated by the U S
Fash and Wtldlif~ Servtce at the

Hebron Ftsh Hatchery The (ourth
camp IS operated by the U S Forest
Servtce near New Matamoras, OhiO
on (you guessed tl) the Wayne
Natwnal Forest
Last \\eek l was tnvtted to the
Lttlle Muskingum camp operated by
the U S Forest Servtce to asstst m
one of ats evemng ed ucahona l
projects I allowed extra lime tn m)
schedule lo vtstl work prOJeCts I
saw young men and women tot lin g m
the 90 degree heat mstalling er oston
control devtces called gabtons part
of a new Forest Service boat landmg
lacality on the Ohto Rtver
Ftlhng yard square wtre baskets
by hand wt th crushed rock as not a
demandmg JOb exce pt on one s back
After 60 seconds on the JOb there s

Durmg the break the natural htslory
of a box turtle that happened to
amble
by
was
dascussed
Educataonal breaks such as thts,
plus evemng prog rams, are a planned part of the educational program
Other YCC prOJects mclude
wildlife habttal development limber
stand tmproYement and recreatiOn
area constructiOn
It's not all work There's tune
for recreatiOnal htkes swl1111lltng,
volleyball and tourmg nearby points
of mterest l umbeqack style meals
add flav or to the outdoor expenence
Alter lour weeks of hard work, good
food, a new perspective on conservation and a host of new lrtends,
some cam pers are launched mto

not much left to learn' However

Dan Atzenhoefer coordmator
for all of Ohto s camps IS en
thustasltc about the program and
opttmtsltc about ats future "Next
year ' he satd we are expectmg
lundmg to double the program
Current legtslalton ca lls for a 60
mtlhon dollar nattonwtde program
We may not get that much, but tl's a
great program and I'm ophsmthc "
Among other duties, Atzenhoeler coo rdtnaled the JOint
statewade recruttmg of students for
the program We had over 2 500
apphcants for the 350 slots, more
than we had last year and we expect
a larger number next year '
Atzenhoeler added, ' there's a lot
of unfmanced work to do tn our
parks and forests, I can't thmk of a
better way to get 1! done "
Netlher can I Wtth mcreased
fundmg , there's a good posstbtlit}
that the Ironton Dastrtct wtll have a
YCC program next summer

precedmg one Campers were dmng

the total JOb I quesltoned several on
the JOb Each had a go&lt;XI workmg
kno~&lt;ledge of what they were domg
and why they were dOing at Thts
total Involvement and tatal JOb
concept IS stressed m all four Ohto
camps
A short dtstance down the road
from the boat dock , a small crew
compnsed of two gtrls and four boys
~&lt;as butldmg a three male segment of
h1king tratl tn some of Ohw s most
rugged terram It was hot and
mugg) work wtlh several ztlhon
sweat bees to keep life mterestmg
Work was proceedmg mcely and the
campers were m excellent spants
Whtle I was there, the work
leader calll!d a short rest break

the trouble stems from a go
anywhere, do an;;thmg
attt tude on the part of some
people
Under Forest Servtce
management, the former
stnp mmed area has become
a very popular spot lor
recrealwmsts Over 30 ponds
have been stocked wat~ lash
and provtde some of the best

Round hales a~e endorsed
By John Cooper
Sml Cons Service
POJN I PLEASANT
Conserv ah omsts were In
tetested m the recent Grass
land Fteld Day and the
Western Sot! Conservahon
Dastrtct as one of the co
sponsors, was happy to see
many Mason County farmers
there exarmnmg the haymaking process and equtp

lay of the land
men! that dtd tl We were also
happy to see many of our
farmer fnends from Roane
County there
Dtstrtcts and SCS have
endorsed the use of round
bales for several years and
feel that thetr use wtll brtng
about better conservahon
farmmg The large round
bales that we saw at the
Grassland Fteld Day seemed
much more attractive to us
and more usable than the
smaller bales that had

DAYTON - Plans for the
organazlltlon of the 57th annual state convention of The
Arneracan Legaon of Ohio to
be held m Dayton, July lS-20
(the fli'St time m Dayton m 40
years, smce 1935) are all but
complete wtth mmor detatls
expected to be fmalized at a
meetmg of the veterans
organization's state
executave cornmattee m the
Dayton Inn on Thurday, July
17
The three-day sesswn of the
130,000
members
organtza!ton wtll be conducted m the Dayton Convention Center and will adJOUrn July 20 followmg the
election and mstallatwn of
state offteer-s
Delegates of the Legion, ats
Auxihary and the Forty and
Eaght (Legaon honor socaety)
will begin arrlVlng m Dayton
on July 17 and wall occupy
some 2,200 rooms m hotels
and motels m the city Including the 1,800 delegates,
some 10,000 Legtonnatres,
the~r waves and others are
expected· to conv~rge on the
City of Dayton

prevwusly been made
We have noted several

farmers who are now usmg

worth passmg along to any
one who mtght be readmg

large round bales m Mason lhts column We will save
County Some of them are some for a later date , but
lettmg them he on the ground mention one now
At our home we habtlually
where they come from the
baler Others are liftmg the feed bards and squtrrels
bales and movmg them to the tn the wtnterttme These
edge of the fteld or on to btrds and sqUirrels do
htgher ground wathm the faeld not seem to realize that they
should be on thetr own m the
so that tf the land would flood
summer so they contmue to
the hay would not get wet
Hay making by thts process come ;o our back yard and
\\ould enable a farmer to eahilinous ltdbtts whatever
make hay enhrely by htmsell may be found m the garden or
They help
\\tlhout any other help frUit trees
provided he had the proper themselves to the sweet corn
m the garden The rabbits eat
eqwpment
WE HAVE BEEN helpmg the broccoJa wtth gusto and
Clements Tree Nursery wtlh lately a fox squtrrel has
the construclton of water- developed a liking for apples
ways, daverslons and some that are npenmg on a tree
some 30 feet from our back
land levellmg at the nursery
The desagn of one par!lcular door We were not a\\ are that
waterway calls lor a depth of sqwrrels had such~ likmg for
H foot and 20 feet wade wath frwt, but thts one fox sqwrrel
the bottom bemg parabolic comes to the tree regularly
and helps hamself to a large
(rounded)
m
nature
Waterways, as well as other red apple Someltmes he eats
conservalton pracltces that 11 m the tree and other tunes
we desagn and help mstall, carnes t! m has mouth to
are designed m such a way as some large tree near the back
to handle the water expected of our lot We suppose that
so that eroswn wtll not occur semJ-domesttcat10n can
once the sod ~as been change the habtts even of
established Thas waterway \\lldlife
would be very shallow and
extend for a wade wtdlh It
has been found that a shallow
flow of water does not erode
nearly so read!ly as a deeper
flow of water even though the
•
grade of the dtfferent
satuahons mtght be the same
WE HAVE OBSERVED
some
trat ts
of
waldhle that we feel are

THE FAMILY of Mr and Mrs
Paul Baker gratefully ap

3 FAM ILY Y!llrd Sate July U
and
IS
(Monday
and
Tuesday ) 10to Jon George 1
Creek.
Rd
For
exact
locat 10n cal l
4078 or 992
3!87 Lots ot children s and
good clothmg of all stzes
tncludtng
summer
and
Wtnter wear
Shoes
etc
Also
adult clothmg
cur
latns
bedspreads
dtshes

precJate the e•pre-sslons of

sorrow and sympathies by
word food and the many
beautiful flowers over the
unt•mely deilth of !herr son
and brother Carroll Baker
of Sy racuse Oh10
7 13 ltp

------------I WISH to e)(press mv thanks

Memor~al Hosp 1tal
To my
mtnrster Clifford Sm tih to
those who v1s1ted me and
those who sent cards dur.ng
my recent Illness
My
evertastmg graltlude to one
and all
Gladys M Shumway

Notice
NO HUNTING trespassmg or
f ts hmg
Wtthaut wrttfen
perm tSSi on on Davtd Da'V s
property
Hysell
Run
Vtolators will be prosecufed
7 13 6tp

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

NOW seltrng Fuller
Brusl'1
Products
phone 992 3410
1 2.'1 ttc
WOULo- me=-tO COrfeSpond
wtth any descendants ot
Isaac Darst born about 1B01
tn Vtrg•n•a Dted Sept 2
1872 tn Metgs County Oh 10
H1s Wtfe was Mary Scott
Had
Jac kson
marrted
Beltnda
Lamberson
Samantha marned David
Wrtght Isaac Jr and Mary
&lt; My
grear great
grandmolher who marned
Benram1n Lang) Wtll an
swer ALL letters
Wrrte
Karen
Zach
R R
7
Crawfordsvtlle
lndtana
47933
7 11 6tp
- - - ---------- -

Help Wanted

for these activities

Accordtng to Wolter,
dumptng, httermg and
mtsuse of the area by off-road
vehtcles are the mam
problems
We 've done everythmg
short of post guards," Wolter
satd, to keep vehtcles off
newly reclatmed, lragtle
areas that can't take heavy
use Our efforts have been
thwarted wtth vandalized
sagns, and barncades are run

HAR fKE ASKS FUNDS
FRENCH UCK,lnd (UP!)
-Sen Vance Hartke, D-Ind ,
says if Presadent Ford does
not want to use gasoline taxes
for haghway construction and
mamtenance, he should turn
the money over to the states
for thear own haghway
programs
Speakmg to the Arnencan
Roadbualders Assocaatlon
Fnday,
Hartke
sa ad,
"Presadent Ford does not
have a national haghWI'Y
program
"ThiS IS ObVIOUS • because
the l'resldent wants to reduce
• the amount of the federal
gasohne tax which supports
the Haghway Trust Fund
from four cents to one cent,"
he saad

•

damage

Wanted To Buy
OLD furntture
tee boxes
brass beds
or com plete
households
Wr.te M
0
Mtller
Rt 4 Pomeroy
Oh 10 Call 992 7760
10 7 74
PoRTABLE ~em-;nt - m Xer
Phone 992 7190
7 10 Stc

--------------V.anted
au

tASH paid for
makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 61-4 423
9531
4 13 tfc

Yard Sale
YARD SALE 2 weeks July 12
thru 26th Anttques alladm
lamp old clocks depresston
glass mtsc -4 miles south of
Athens on Rt 33
7 10 14tc
YARD SALE at Eastern Htgh
School on July 11 and 12 qto
5 p
m
by EHS cheer
leaders
Proceeds
w111
be used for camp
7 10 Jtc
RUMMAGE SALE at the
Langsville Fellowship Rm
Monday
through
Wed
nesday 10 am till 4 p m
1 13 3tc
YARD Sale at the Davtd
Haggy restdence Happy
Hollow Road R uti and Lot
of dtshes
otd
wooden
stratght chatrs
Start on
Sunday lasts all week
7 13 Jtp

NOW YOU CAN

--------

Buy a 11/2 bushel Windvane
Feeder and get a so lb. bag
of HiM Mineral or Medi Pac
Mineral FREE!

19 73 DUSTtR
flake Wtlh Whtte str1pe A r
cond tttoned
p s
p b
automattc transm tSSton
25 000 m lies
340 mopar
engme am fm rad10 good
cond tftO n Call 991 7768 after
S p m
7 8 6tc

----- -- ----

ForRent

TRAILER space for rent 1n
Mtddleporl Phone 992 5434
1 8 6tp
-----------MOBILE Home tor rent tn
Racme
Phone q49 2261
Albert Htll
7 I 0 Ate

a

day

PRIVATE meehng room tor
any organ•zatton phone 992
3\175
3 11 lfc
A PT ltke new 3 rooms wtth
large bath tab letop range
large closet East Matn '"t
Pomeroy See to apprec1ate
Phone Galltpolts durmg day
4J6 7699 eventP\QS 446 9539
Ll 1o tfc

0

fbe Almaaac
By ' united Pre••
International
Today IS Sunday, July 13,
the !94th day of 1975 wtth 171
to follow
The moon 18 approaching
fu-st quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupater
The evenmg stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the stgn of Cancer
Amertcan actor Sadney
Blackmer, and Ameracan
educator Mary
Emma
Wooley were born on July 13,
she m 1873 and he In 1895
On this day m history
In 1863, opposition to the
Federal Conscription Act led
to rtots m New York City, m
which more than 1,000 persons were killed
In 11166, Horace Greeley
wrote an editorial m the New
York Tribune m which be
satd "Go west, young man, go
west and grow up wath the

country"
In 1878, the Russo-Turkish
war ended
In 1974, the Senate
Watergate committee
recommended dr88tlc reform
of the U S electaon laws

I

III I
TRONIA

•

t

NespEP WHEN THE
MONAFCCH I~ 5TIL..L
AN INFANT.

0

COPL/E [

I

circled (olton

\J I I to form the aurpnae answer. u
~~A~~~iiiii~~;l~;;;-;.r:-.r":"';ge~otfed~by the abo•• cartoon.
IPrineSIRIIIISIIIIml "[X XXJ ( I XX]"
\j

Now arranretbe

(Antwf'tt M~• ..day)

Jurnltlr• MOLDY GAUGE
Yr1trrd•y

11

J

2

Am1wrr: ~oundH flli.t

PREFER FLATLY

llttlf cam II( 11UJ 0111 ( tlrtllflld

the/rock-A LAP

DOG

1f

.,

c

RM apt w th wal l lo wall
caroet
104 S prtnQ
fl.vc
PQmeroy Cal l 992 5908
6 12 l f c

BEORM
double Wid e
furntshed ut tl llte S patd
country locatton yet near
Pomeroy No pets Phon e
992 76 66 or 992 7017
7 13 ]I c

TWO
bedrm
reference
and
reQutred
Phone

tra ile r
depos r
992 3419
7 13 61p

COUNTRY
Mob1le
Home
Park Rt 3J ten mtl es north
ot Pomeroy Larg e to t s w•th
conc rete pat os s d ewa lk. s
runners and off street
parkt ng P hone 9'i7 7 179
17 J 1 tic

For Sale
YOUNG rabbtt s for sale
Reedsv 1tle Phone 378 6161
1
7tc

e

HAY for sale de ltvered or
ptcked up 1n f1eld Phone
742 3743
7 8 6tc
1971 J50 CL Honda
3529

Phone

9n

1 8 61p

TOMATOES
cucumbers
Cleland Farms
Gerald ne
Cleland
7 6 ffc
F 1SH 1N G license
Canadtan
Nile crawlers 60c doz Du g
worms 3 doz 11 Ottler bat
tackle guns ammo cbs
lnd•lln
Joe s Sp ort s
JOB
Page St Phone 992 3509
7 I 26tc
LARGE grttl w t h rottsserte
new large gll ttar 7 h p 76
cut Huffy rtdtng mower
good cond1l1on Phon e 997
3442
7 10 Stc

REG polled Hereford bulls 2
yearlmgs 1 tour yr Old
Phone 991 5565 or \192 2826
7 13 6tc

&amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets Both floor
or cage grown available
Poultry
housmg
and
automat on
Modern
Poultry
399 W
Mam
Pomeroy 992 2164
7 13 He

l'i71 TRUCK camper over c ab
steeper f1tS any 6 ft bed
truck
was carr1ed on a
Datsun ptckup
Excellent
condttton Can be seen at
K tngsbury Home Sales or
call
992 7034
Monday
through Saturday .t..._
--, 13 Jlc

1959 DODGE ptckup
Phone 992 3907

v

8

1 123 Jtp

48 IN PONY S40 btlly goat
$15
Shetland pony
S20
Phone '247 2711
7 13 3tc
garden
1974 SEARS 36 10
tractor and mower electr1c
start
l1ght and
wheel
we1ghts Ltke new Call 992
2257 after 3 p m
7 9 4tC

Walnut Consol e
ste r eo rad•o combmatton J
spee d c hanger
Balance
SlO t JO or termo:. Call 99 7
]965
7 9 t fc

MODEf.o!N

Real Estate For Sale
3

BEDROOM house wtttl 5
a cres of land on Welch town
H II Phone 997 70B4

Business Opportunities
HI C a nafronalty advert i sed
noncarbonated 'Vttam 1n C
enrtched frutt drmk 1s
avarlable for vendrng 1n 12
oz
cans
IndiVIdual s who
are serrously cons1denng a
bUStness of thetr own should
mvesttgate
an
ex
traordtnary
opportuntty
currently available m thts
area
Thts ts a secure.
bustness for those who c an
spare a few hours each week
(no selltngl
restockrng
vendors placed on locatron
by
our
speclalrsts
A
qualtfted tndtvldual may
start part ltme and expand
with company fmancmg •o a
full t1me busmess
CASH
REQUIRED
Plan 1 S3 450 Plan 2 - S6 240 Plan
3
$10 22S
Trammg
provrded No exper i ence
required Tax shelter wtth
wrtte off
Investm ent
secured by new equ1pment
&lt;f1ve year warranty) and
1nventory
Earntngs
guaranteed wtth a wntten
buy back agreement For
1mmed1ate rnformalton or
tntervrew calll collect (301)
345 7300 or wrtle 1nclud ing
ph number to SUNR IPE
INC 6215 Greenbelt Road
College Park
Maryland
20140 I Not a subs1d1ary of
Coca Co la Co )
7 13 ltp

fo r sa te located near
Ches t er 1 acre all el ec tr tc
J bedroom ? baths d sh
wa s her
c arp e t
full
basemenl ? ca r garage all
brt c k. Wee k day s c a ll 985
t) 67 weekends f 304 J ' !J
') 1? 8
7 13 6tc

1 BEDRM

n Chesler
l B 61p

B R C K ho u se o n Secon d St
Pomeroy
downtown
Sudable l or 1 v mg Quar te rs
upsta ~rs
smal
bu s ne ss
down o fft ce or home w lhm
walk•ng d s ta nce of a ll
sto r es Call 997 3&lt;189
7 10 3tc

-

Strout Realty

1 71 ACRE S l and and l ocu s I
posts Also
96 S r ord LTD
Phon e 71 2 3656
S Z3 57t p
5

home

Phon (' 98 ') 35 87

7 II )I C

RUTLAND - Lovely older
home ' or s B R mod_.

RMS
bath
alum num
s dtng r emodel ed kt t ch en
lnqu,re Don Say r e 44 3 St)(th
Avenue
Mtddleport
Oh o
45760
7 9 .:l ip

k1tchen w1th d1sposal &amp;
dtshwasher
all
new
plumbtng and wtrtng fully
m sulated

JOHNSON
REMODELING
V1nyl sidtng alumtnum
sidmg pat1o co vers storm
windows
kitchens
bathrooms and garages
We Carry
Ltabthtv Insurance
Ph
760B
Evenmgs 742 4902
7 7 1 mo

m

home fu l l baseme nt close
to tow n and st ores

MIDDLEPORT -

FA RM and 2 homes year old
tota l etec
Double w tde
trailer
co mp le tely car
peted
3 large bedrooms
wtth l arge closets and 7 f u ll
baths home also has den
I vcng room dtncng room
and k tchen w1fh plenty of
storage space
All large
rooms
A lso pond a bov e
trad e r
Also
on same
property s a 7 story 7 rm
farm
house
r eal g ood
plumb ng
plenty of well
water and newly patnted on
the outstde Huge barn and
garage other bu tl d ngs too
Great g raz1 ng and garden
land All on 20 acres for sale
Call 992 7590
7 7 6tc

4 apl

c omplex
all st reet
parktng wllh!n walking
d1sfance of stores good buy

a l $2S 000 00

I WE DO

Roofing
S1dmg
Complete
Home
Matntenance.

All-WEATHER
ROOFING

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER
" AI CauiJon Light"
Rt 1 Tuppers Ptatns, 0
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
Open 9 5 Wed lhrough Sun
Ph 667 3858
11 1

mo

From the largest l ruck or
B~ltdozer Radiator to tne
srrianes t Heatrr Core

..

N•than B•IJII
R•dl•tar Spectalist

'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,

.,

Ph 992 2174

I
1 327 N

2nd

Middleport
s 30 I mo

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
Small Appliance
Repair

CONTACT

992-3313
6 11 1 mo

CAPTAIN EASY

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSEU.'S
GARAGE

Blown
Insulation Serv1ces

c

Blown •nto Walls &amp; AHtcs 1
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDJNG-SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

2 M1les West
On St Rl 124
Off Rt 7 6y Pass

ALL

MECHANICAL
WORK
Phone 992-5682

LARRY LAVE8DER

or 992 7121

Ph 991.1993

Syracuse Uhto

••

4 10 I mo

7 8 1 mo

Free Eshmates
PH 992 2550

PhonA

Branch Manager

Guaranteed
appliances,
used furn1ture at

Construction
and Plumbmg

307 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy
992 2298
Lots Pauley

CASH ' N CARRY
SAVES U S'son

·r-::::-:---------, ..
Does your home '
requtre any of these
servtces,

POMEROY - 2 BR older

HOU SE •n Portland 5 rms
and bath good well 7 acres
at
9 "" 0und
Take
over
paym en t s Phon e 843 229?
7 9 t 2tc

EXCAVATING
backhoe
dozer
and d •tcher
Gas •..,!.
etectrtc and water line
burta l basements tooters, "'
septJC systems and brush""f
cle anmg Wtll haul fill dirt, .., ,
lop soil ~and and ~ravel
ltmestone f or dnvewavs and
roads
Phone Charles R
Half le1d Backhoe Service
Rt
I Rutland Ohio 7.42 .,..,

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Your He11 Dealer
Thtrd St
R a erne, Ohro
Ph 949 .5961

6091

7 11 901c' "

Emergency
949 2211 or 992 5700
Complete atr con dH ,ontng
sa tes and serv•ce heaftng
pt um b1ng
roof1ng and
gene ral sheet metal work
Free Esttmates
7 II I mo

EXCAVATrNG tlozer •odoer
and backhoe work
septic
tanks
m s talled
dump "'
truck s and lo boys for h•re
w 11 haul ftlt dtrt top soli
limestone and gravel Call ..
Bob or Roger Je ffers dey
phon e 99 2 7089 ntgh l phone
997 352 5 or 9q2 52J2
2 11 tfc .,.
G ENERAL Repatr c lean up
-----"
) LJ
and
haul ng
c uttmg
•
weldtng
carpentry
NEED
A
new
Home
built
on
plumbtng elec masonry
your toP Contact Mitocr B ,
and general remodel•ng
Hutchtson
Rutland
Oh1o
Ca ll Sktl Pool
Phone 9'92
Phone 742 3615
5 126
6 17 tfc
5 B tfc " 1
- - - - - - - - - - - - t ...
ROOF I'H.r
;, pout1ng
a lum mum ar:~d vtnyl 5tding \ 1
co mplete
remodellnq
Phone 742 627] or (30,f) 773 ""'
5684 Free estimates
6 2S 26tp - ...~
.,.,...

___ _______

WILL 1 KIM or cut trees and ,. h
shrubbery and paint roofs ""
Phone 949 3221 or 1-12 4441
6 2&lt;1 26tp "''

--------------- •
WOULD

CLElAND
608 E
MAIN

REALTY

--------- --

-

1 story frame 2 BR
bath basement new steel
s1 d1ng own water and c1ty
water 2112 acres m lawn
some
burld1ng
sttes
$!0 500

Ex

MACHINE
Repe trs serv.ce all makes ,.
992 2284 T he Fabnc Shop , 1
Pom e ro y Alltho riZed Srnoer .,
Sales and Serv1ce
We ~ ~ ...
sharpen Sc tssors
tfc :.
3 29

SEWING

cellent condtf1on and very
comfortable 2 story frame

bath

dtntng R ut!ltty R ntce
k1tchen cab range ref 2nd

r '

floor 2 n1ce BR $15 500
NEW HOME -

DOZER work la nd clearmg .,__..
by the acre
hourly or
co ntract
Farm
ponds ,.. ...
roads elc Large dozer and
ope rator wtth over 10 vears
e:xpertence
Putl•ns Ex
c avatmg
Pomeroy
Oh10
••
Ptlon e 992 1478
12 19 lfc

I level

acre 3 BR large closets
bath
n1ce kitchen and
d1n1ng ut dtfy R garage
your cho1ce of colors tn
carpeting F u ll f1nancmg to

nght party $20 000

t:LWUVu bUWtt&lt; ~ t&lt;EPAIR

Sweepers roasters trOn'$
all small appliances Lawr
mower ne.:t to State H rgh
way Ga ra ge on Route 7
Phone 985 3B25
J 16 ff&lt;

POMEROY- l 'h acres 2
BR. bath large k•lchen
uttltty R garage
or c1ty water

CELLENT

pnvate
IN EX

urn E ORPHAN

CONDITION

ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-T'tEmE

OUOIIT TO BE A

LAW
CARPET tnstaltatton
Sl 25
per yard
Call
R1chard
Wes t phone 843 2667
7 2 26tp

$8 900

THE
SAFEST
IN
VESTMENT THAT YOU
CAN MAKE IS IN A HOME
SEE OR CALL US
TODAY

-

..

(

- -- -

lcaford Realty
Vi1q1 I B
'I

Sr

BELIEVE' '

PLUMB! NG heat1ng repatr
and .nstallatton electrical
...
water pump repatr roofing
_
Mouse and roof painting
uJ
general repair reasonable 1J'
rates
free estimates
15
'
years
exper t ence
Call ...~
Charles Stnclalf 985 4121 or • v
992 2221
7 10 12tc

TUPPERS PLAINS- Rt 7

lsi floor has 1 BR

YOU

Butld an all steel butld1ng ar
P ol e Barn prtces? Golden ,_::
Gtant All $tee1 Buildings ,....Rt
4 Box 148 Waverly ~ w
Oh 10 Phone 947 2296
lu
6 24 26tc ,.

m E PHANTOM

PnMEROY.o

BEANS ptck your own S2 SO
per bushel Phone 843 2353
after 7 p m
7 11 3tc
HONDA CB 750
excellent
condtt1on
Phone 949 2220
7 11 6tc

R EORO O M house for
PF'lon e- '9 R'l 4 101
6 10 76 1c

HOU SE tor sa te near Easlern
H tgh Schoo l n R1 ggsc rest 3
bedrm
l a rg e lt'V ng room
wth
! r ep lac e
Full
b.a semen l 7 baths lam ly
rm and ktt c hen large tot
Phon e 98'&gt; 3R6l
7 13 lip

APPROX 6 fl )( 7 fl new
plu sh
carpe t
r emna nt
neulrat color
SIS
Phone
997 34¥6 alter S J O
7 9 tic

PIGS for sale 6 weeks otd one
mare pony One geldmg 6
years old Phone 378 6152
7 9 4tp
HORSE saddle and nll.. t'
br tdle Phone 742 3842
7 11 3tc

Sc" l('

For Sale

MIDDLEPORT
27 F T prtvate owned travel
trailer ful ly self conla1ned
tandem wheels fully car
peted
atr
condlftoned
awn1ng
See any ftme at
Youngs
Mobtle
H ome
Cour I R I 7 Gall tpOi tS Oh 0
1 ! 3 7tp

fv''JO

HOU S~

ONE
West nghou se roaster
wtth cabtnel and c lock S75
Pho ne 992 2267
7 10 3t c

H

• SHUTEYE PATCHES
• PINk EYE AEROSOL .

7 10 61p
------brown metal

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

KNUSK

p er
Phone

~

------------ 30

-

197Z TOVOTA wagon
m P 9 Phone 991 2082

one letter to eath square, to
form rour ord1nary words

PINKEYE PROBLEMS?

• KORLAN 24 E

1968 vw good runntng con
dtlton ssoo Phone Roger
Karr 985 3538 Chester after
S p m
7 13 ltp

~l]]J.OOID~®""" u.•-"..1 .-4 , _

WINDVANE
FEEDERS

THESE SALT AND
MINERAi FEE-DERS
CAN'T RUSt OUT

1967 DODGE Potara w1th new
set of ttres Ci!!tr Paut Baker
Sy ra cuse 991 2395
7 IJ Jlc

J ROOM fllrntshed and
unfurntshed
apanmenls
Phone 992 5&lt;l34
J 12 tfc

BEDRM
mobde home
12x60 Phone 992 5858
7 11 Jtc

TRI SONIC
188 h p
H er c r utse r 18ft long Ford
30? V8 enQ tne ca th eral haul
ltght brand new \4 500 See
al John Gtbson Moler C ry
1\. lh ens 593 71 58 or 7J 7 J69J
weekends and e11encnqs
1 13 ') I c

19 11

s:n

n•u· large yard bath and
190
South
&lt;' ccond
1
M1ddt e oor-t
adults only
Phone 99 2 S26:7 even nq s,

1971 PINTO 4speed 2000cu
1n
low m tleage Phone 991
7180 or 9Cj12 5271
1 13 3tp

) AND

elec
a c
un turn shed
reasonable
Must
sell
mov•ng tn two weeks Call
qq2 2536 any t1me
7 13 ltc

ON

1 BE CROOM lratiN
week ultltl es patd
991 3324

U RN apt 5 r ooms an d balh

TRA-iLER space all uhltt es
c heap Phone 992 5535
6 29 tfc

i973 MosrLEhOme- gaSSnd

UP
TO

BEDRM
house
Ut1
furn.shed Als o 1 furn tshcd
apt Phon e 991 2780 or 99'1
) 132
6 '19 lfc

4 ROOM unfllrn shed hou se
1650 Ltncoln Hgts
pho ne
992 387.4
7 6 tfc

Auto Sales

1=URNISHEO
apartmer~t
adults only tn Mtddteport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 tfc

1973 - 12 x 70 H1llcrest Mobtle
Home
3 bedroom
total
electnc red shag carpet
t hroughout
underp •nn.ng
and 2 sets of steps tn c luded
Phone 747 3941
7 9 6tc

228 Upper Rtver Road
P.O Box 207, Galhpohs
Clyde B. Walker, Mgr

3

Mar.ne Sal es
196-S
SEA RAY
tnboard
outboard 19ft long 120 h p
Mcrcrurser ne-w C h E"v~ I I 4
cy l c ngme n ew lowc:r un 1t
n ew tnlcr,or d eep vee hol e
\ 2 500 E .:ce ll enl Sk.t bOa I
See at John G1bson Motor
C ty Athe ns 593 U &lt;.J S or 74 ')
J69&lt;l
weekends
and
even ngs
7 13 ?I c

7 6 Tf c

ocated on 143 2m res from
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
7 2 ttc

Mobile Homes For Sale

You ve been thtnktng about that acreage for some ttmet! s good land and offers a great opportuntty to expand
Can you afford that btg step forward? Adequate ftnancmg
could be the keyl
Long-term credtt at compettttve mterest rates through
the Land Bank Assoctatton can spread expanston costs
over extra years for smaller. payments Come by soon
you may be pleasantly surpnsed at
what you can afford

J E\EDRM 65x1 ? mob lc home
for rent
uftlt1 es pa td
loca t ed 10 Burl nqh am Cilll
9q1 775 1
7 1 11 c

J BEDROOM mobtle home

TODAY

3

- ----

7 10 6tp

On
Lmcoln H1ll
Pomeroy and
m Syracuse
Phone 992-2156

The roads and tratls have
been stgned to let vtsttors
know whtch areas are open to
vehtcles In addihon, maps
and brochures are avatlable
both at the Ironton and Lake
Vesuvms Offtces of the U S
Forest Servace

SAVE

-

7 IJ 2tc

YARD SALE l'Jesd8y- i"nd
"'-ednesday mornmg .ua S
Second
M 1ddleport
Sponsored by E ght and
Forty Salon 710
1 13 2tc

WATER tank S1 00
Phone 992 S704

BE A
"SENTINEL
CARRIER"

n

For Rent

etc

1 13 ltp

WE V'.ISH to thank all those
who hcloed 1n any way
durmg l ht: •llness and death
of Edgc!llr Do,~~
Wtfe
Sybil
sons and
tam II es
1 3 lt p

S'ale
"'"'6

to Dr- R ldgway nurses and
staff of
the
Veterans

over or Ignored "
Cooper a !ton from the
Lawrence Count~ Sheraff and
Game Protector, both who
have Jurtsdtc!ton m the
Wayne have aaded the
Ranger's efforts Arrests
have been made lor Jittenng,
dumpmg and am proper use of
the off-roa d vehtcle trailstlut
Wolter satd, "we must have
the cooperatiOn of the public
to effechvely admmaster the
area and prevent further

ltshmg m Southeast Ohao
Hunltng, frog spearmg,
varmtnt calling, berry
packmg and swtrnmmg are
popular acttvtttes of th1s
public area
Spectal trails for dune
buggtes, Jeeps and motor
cycles have been designated

'

•
•

Yard

•

conservatiOn careers

they were domg more than JUSt the
manual labor Set up on a nearby
htllstde was a surveyor s level Each
g~bwn had to be placed exactly on
the same grade and level as the

Card of Thanks

Litterbugs pose forest problems

Attendmg fr om Buck e) e
Htlls Career Center were
IRONTON - The U s
Larr)
Marr
Local
F'orest Servtce contmues to
Agnculture Supervtsor, and
experaence dtlfacul!tes tn
hts wafe, Karen Dwt g ht
managmg the Hangtng Rock
Jenktns
Agriculture
area of the Wayne NatiOnal
Mechamcs, and Ben Roland
Forest
Forestry Others altendmg
Accordmg to Dtslrtct
were Jeff Pope North Galha,
Ranger AI Wolter much of
Tom Pope, Hannan Trace,
David Carter Hannan frace, western and Howard Taylor
J Robert Evans, South- Galha Academy

convention is
being planned

line of Saddles, Bridles, Halters, Saddle

'

"'II

Legion's 57th

Stop by today and see the new TexTan

•

fiNC. SF T
HOY Mc1~s
lounl} Jr Fmr livestock
I« ling "Ill ht• held July 28
29 •I ""' abnounrcd at the
'ounty .Jr Fair Hoard
m cet m~ I hnrsday night at
the Me1gs High School
The annual 4-H stylt•
f&lt;Vte" "'II be Aug 5 al
7 30 p m at Meigs High
and the theme of a parade
to be held fr Fair Night
"'II br Happ} Birthday.
America
The
nexl
meetmg of the board
he Aug 4

.

WESTERN WEAR

I,

r~.~

POM~

Agriculture and

•

........

- ~-

R1ol.:•'t

fREEZE

.-

bedrooms w1th closets
modern kitchen tncludmg
stove
breakfast nook
full
basement and double garage
Excellent locat1on

...,
~

•

c:.O
SEPTIC ,1-&lt;.,~,... .., . . ._.._
R ea sonable RATE S Phone
:IJ6 4782 Ga ll potts
John
Russell own er
4 9 lfc
SEPTIC
TAN KS Cleaneo
Modern San ti at on 992 J95.t
or 992 73 49
q I B tfc

call 992 6 190 or 992 5837
6 15 26tc
•READY MiX. CONLt&lt;tTE
d e ltv ered r ght to your
pro1ect Fa'lt and easy Free
es t1mat es Phone 992 J284
Goeg tem Ready Mt'X Co
M ddl epo rt Ohta
6 30 tf(

D &amp; D TR EE - Trtmm ng

20
years exper.ence Insured
free esf ma1es Call 992 3057
Coo tv li e
Phone ( 1) 667
304 1
4 30 tfc

PINE COUNTRY - Good
hunting plenty of bulldmg
s1tes and elbow room No one
close
1ust prtvacy
and
freedom 97 acres w tth all
minerals

HOUSE

.'

HOU ~I:: ana roor IJdHHtny dn ....
r e pa~rs For free est1mates

f!.,.( h.11111 •) 1

l''·'nf·J lY Ohtrt

SMALL

, ...

,.
••

••

••
&gt;

..'•

..=..- (._ --- --- -- ~~""~ IN ILL do odd tObS patnt1ng

roOitng
mowmg

2

halll1ng
and
Phone 992 7409
7 6 12tc

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

bedrooms bath, natural gas
c1ty water and compact lot

,.ets For Sale

A5k•ng $6 000 00
OUT OF TOWN - 3 bedroom
mobile home and large lot
L C water and natural gas
Want only $9 500 00

••
•

•'•
J

•

RE G temate Beagles 9 weeks
old $40 Phone 992 3717
7 11 3tc

••

7 7 6tc

••
•

LARGE- i'e room older home
1n town !iu dable for apart
ments and enough space to
butld
All ut1l1hes
An ex

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

?EMODELING
Plumbing
heat 1ng and all types of
general
repatr
Work
guaranteed
20 crears ex
per1ence
Phone 992 2409
S 1 tfc

eel lent buy at $9 000 00

•••

•,,••
- - -------- ----....,.... ••'
CAkPENTRY
WORK
••
Cetl mg panel rng floorrng
••
etc Phone 992 2759
6 24 27tc
•
----------- --- -.•

'

I

�I
'l1- The Sunday ~e:s - Sentinel, &amp;.ldal', July J8, 1975

July 13,' 1975

1

Oteap food

far
down
•
our community
the road

By Bryson I{ t Rud) C'.u t!'r
Galha Count} l'xlens101 !\gent
GALUPOLIS - Wath the 1975 Gallw County Jumor ~ mr
Just two weeks a\\ay l want to express some of my thoughts
recall some hast&lt;wy and tell you a httle btl .tbout thas }Cars
faar
The faar gets underwa) Tuesday evemng July 29 at 7
p m, and goes through Saturday August 2 ~ &lt;opy of the of.
flClal program ts m the cenlet pages of each Jumot Fa tr
prenuum book
Bettae Clark our ExtensiOn Agent Horne Econom ics tells
me she expects JUSt as many exhtbtts as e\ er m the Horne
Econom1cs ca tegones These mclude clothmg, nutntwn home
furrushmgs home management chtld ca re ftrsl atd and
nursmg Last year about 400 Home Economtcs proJects were
on exhtbtt
Accordm g to Fred Dee!, Count) Ex tenswn Agent 4 H Ttm
Massi e and Don Cox the expectatwns .are for a s tmtlar
number of exhtbtts as last }ear m the Acttvtty Butldmg
These fellows JUSt gave me the total number of ammals
entered for th1s years fatr and tf all entrtes sho w up )OU wall
fmd 73more ammals on exhtbtl than you dtd last yeat
Rtght no\\ 6!4 ammals hm e been entet eo co mpared to 541
exhibited last )eat All 73 a ddttwnal annnals wtll probably not
be there, but from all mdtcaltons lhts years aruma! exhtbtl
wtll be the largest ever
Uvestock numbers are up 111 all but three a reas (datry ts
down one, swme do" n 40 head and gumea ptgs-pocket pets
down 6) fhe greatest mcrease ts m rabbtls - 82 compared to
37last year Better get Jour freezet s cleared out to make room
for 100 steers 51 lambs and 94 hogs

By LEONARD CURRY
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON ( UP! 1
Don t look lor cheap food
pnces anytune soon
The era of low food prtces
and dechnmg food pnces as at
an end,' FTC eco nomtsl
Russell Parker told reporters
Fnday Food ts gomg to be
more dear than m the
past '

The FTC ISSUed a spectal
report on food cham profits
which noted there has been a
45 per cent nse m conswner
food pnces smce 1972
Parker and FTC economic
chtef Fredenc Scherer satd
supermarkets mcreased thetr
profit margms from about 0 8
per cent to I 4 per cent on
total sales between 1972 and
1974 But the FTC saad lhts
rate was not exorbitant
Agnl1!lture Secretary Earl
Butz satd Fnday the Soviet
Umon probably will buy be
tween 5 and !0 mallion tons of
gram - mostly corn -from
the Umted States m the
commg year
I FOUND BILL SMITH S 1953 Annual ExtensiOn Report
But he satd thts should have
and at the 1953 Junwr Fatr the lollo~&lt;m g numbers of ammals
m11umal" unpact tn rrusmg
were exhtbtted I FFA figures are not available except for U S food pnces, because U S
steers)
corn and wheat crops are
10 Beef Heifers and Cows, 12 Fat Steers 30 Daary Ammals, expected to htt record levels
7 Swme, 4 Sheep and 6 Poultry
Sovtet purchase of 19
The 1953 faar was the fourth annual fatr and was held at the mallion tons of Arnencan
Holzer Atrport
gram m 1972 contnbuted to
later mcreases m U S food
THE LAST TWO PARAGRAPHS on page mne of the 1975 pnces
Galha County Jumor Fatr premium book convey a message
The Agnculture Departthat I want to refer to and I fee l should not be passed over hght- ment satd predtcted U S
ly The wordmg ts as follows
crops of 6 btllwn bushels of
"The Jumor Fatr provides an opportumty for every youth corn and 2 2 balhon bushels of
of Gallia County to exhibit his talents and be recogmzed, thas as wheat 'appear large enough
an exhabation of the year's hard work and of cooper atiOn and to meet substanltal mcreases
tireless effort on the part of both county and ctty 1 estdents, lhts tn domestic and foretgn
ts the goal of the Gallia County Agncultural Soetet~
demand" whtle sllll per"The Juruor Fatr has served as a means of arspmng youth Till ttmg U S gram reserves to
to greater achievements whale provtdmg enJoyment and nse
~ttsfaction for all who come to vtew the exlubtls and program
Hot, dry weather has cut
and those who work hard to make at a success each year Thts the Sovaet gram harvest 10
continues to be the goal of the Gallla County Agnculture per cent below goals
S0c1ety "
I fmd essentwlly the same wordmg m the 1958 premtum
book Key pomts m this message are 'on the part of both
county and caty residents,' "a means of mspmng youth
while provading enJoyment and sattslactwn for all who come
and those who work hard "
Hyouarea newcomer to our community, we hope you w1ll TRIAL SITE CHANGE
OAKLAND, Calif ( UPI) attend and partacapate m the faar It wtll take you a httle while
to fully understand JUSt what the two paragraphs that I have Joseph Remtro, and Russell
referred to really say You wtll, however, see evidence that the Lattle, Symbtonese
goals of the AgriCultural Socaety have been out front all the Ltberatwn Army members
way Goals and ob)ecttves have not only been met a nd passed, already convtcted of murder,
will be trled elsewhere for
but new ones have been established
H you are a native of Gallia County or have been a long- !hear alleged attempt to
time restdent I feel you need to pat yourself on the back" for break out of the Alameda
the job you have done And when you look at where you were County Jatl March I
Superior Court Judge
wath the f3ll' over 20 years ago (I wasn't here but I have some
knowledge of the early days) and where you are today, you Uonel Wilson Fnday saad a
know I'm not kadding or trymg to gtve phony praise You have hearmg would be held Aug 13
accomplished some thmgs that challenge all of us to look to determme the sate of thetr
ahead With the goal of achaevmg new obJectives not only wath tnal He granted the motiOn
for the change of lraal Site on
the fall', but vanous aspects of community life
grounds pubhcaty would
reduce the chance for a fatr
satd
FLIP, BETI'Y TO VISIT
Wtlson has been devotmg trtal m Oakland
Remiro, 28, and Lattle, 25,
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
most of hts appearances to
Fhp Wilson will accompany charatable causes m recent were convtcted last month m
Frrst Lady Betty Ford on a years and was gtven the Sacramento, Calif , of assastour of the Washmgton, DC
Cancer
Socaety's smatmg Oakland School
hospatal Monday morrung, a humanttanan award thas Superintendent Marcus
Foster
spokesman for the comtc year

PROMENADE SHOP

Pads, Brushes, Saddle Soap, Bits The whole works!
-JUST ARRIVED-

SHIRTS - HATS - BELTS
ASSORTED TROPHY BUCKLES

.

INCLUDING
4-H CLUB, SILVER DOUAR, U.S. &amp; MANY OTHERS

Promenade Shop

'
.

OPEN MON. THRU THURS. 10-5
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY - 10-9
• SUNDAY 12-6
1313 EASTERN
446-1228
- AVE.
'
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'' ' '
1-

-·'

'

'

•

•

hke 1t m fa c t, JUSt about everyone
1t 1

hkes
Ic e cream"
No It s a five y~a r old program
called the Youth Conse rvatt on Corps
IYCC )
The YCC Program ts destgned as a
patd working expenence for young

.women and men mterested

serv 1ce

tr a 1mn g

for

and teac her growth

One of tts htghlights was a
recognttton banquet honormg

teachers for service awards
and also celebrahng 50 years
of servtcc to Oh10 tn
Agt tculture Educatton
Recetvtng awards from
Gallia County was Tom Pope
Hannan frace who recetved
Dtstra c t 14 Outstandtng
Young Teacher Award and
also recogmzed as havmg
attatned ftv e years of

t.eaclung serv1ce

1n

cnnservatwn

GAl I !PO! IS - Severa l
Gallta Count} Agnculture
Educati on leaders attended
the annual senunar of Ohto
reachers of VocatiOnal
Agrtculture held at Scot s Inn
m Columbus recenll}
1 heme for lhts ) ea r s
confe1 enre was 50 Years of
Su ccess
I ooktng To
Tom orrow
prov1dm g 1n
currtculum, student se lectum faclhhe s Impr ovement

YotJr Wayne National Forest
lly T Allan Wolter,
District Ranger
IRONTON - Parents like tl
leg tslators like tl, the young and old

Ag-Ed leaders
attend seminar
in Columbus

Yes I satd patd For thetr ef
fot ts, each camper as patd $2 10 per
hour whtch amounts to about $193 1n
take home pay At the end of the first
four week penod , a new group of
Campers t that s what they re
call ed 1 arnve to begtn thetr learn
and earn expenence
Oh10 camps will accommodate
350 ht gh schoolers lhts summer
most of whom would olherwase be
unemp)O)ed were I( nO( for YCC
For the hagh school s tudent the
program began late last wanter
~&lt;hen over 1,100 htgh schools 111 the
state 1all were nottlted 1 recel\ed an
mvttahon to submtl the name s of
students Interested tn conservalton
work Mos t sc hools destgnated thetr
counse lors to handle the recruat
ment
Students were selected wtlhout
regard to race, religiOn wealth or
academtc s landtn g 1 he prtme
reqwrement was a strong and
demonstratable mterest tn conservahon Age limtts are 15-18_
Two of the OhiO camps operated
by the Ohto Department of Natural
Resources are located on the
Shawnee and Zaleski Stale Forest
One camp as operated by the U S
Fash and Wtldlif~ Servtce at the

Hebron Ftsh Hatchery The (ourth
camp IS operated by the U S Forest
Servtce near New Matamoras, OhiO
on (you guessed tl) the Wayne
Natwnal Forest
Last \\eek l was tnvtted to the
Lttlle Muskingum camp operated by
the U S Forest Servtce to asstst m
one of ats evemng ed ucahona l
projects I allowed extra lime tn m)
schedule lo vtstl work prOJeCts I
saw young men and women tot lin g m
the 90 degree heat mstalling er oston
control devtces called gabtons part
of a new Forest Service boat landmg
lacality on the Ohto Rtver
Ftlhng yard square wtre baskets
by hand wt th crushed rock as not a
demandmg JOb exce pt on one s back
After 60 seconds on the JOb there s

Durmg the break the natural htslory
of a box turtle that happened to
amble
by
was
dascussed
Educataonal breaks such as thts,
plus evemng prog rams, are a planned part of the educational program
Other YCC prOJects mclude
wildlife habttal development limber
stand tmproYement and recreatiOn
area constructiOn
It's not all work There's tune
for recreatiOnal htkes swl1111lltng,
volleyball and tourmg nearby points
of mterest l umbeqack style meals
add flav or to the outdoor expenence
Alter lour weeks of hard work, good
food, a new perspective on conservation and a host of new lrtends,
some cam pers are launched mto

not much left to learn' However

Dan Atzenhoefer coordmator
for all of Ohto s camps IS en
thustasltc about the program and
opttmtsltc about ats future "Next
year ' he satd we are expectmg
lundmg to double the program
Current legtslalton ca lls for a 60
mtlhon dollar nattonwtde program
We may not get that much, but tl's a
great program and I'm ophsmthc "
Among other duties, Atzenhoeler coo rdtnaled the JOint
statewade recruttmg of students for
the program We had over 2 500
apphcants for the 350 slots, more
than we had last year and we expect
a larger number next year '
Atzenhoeler added, ' there's a lot
of unfmanced work to do tn our
parks and forests, I can't thmk of a
better way to get 1! done "
Netlher can I Wtth mcreased
fundmg , there's a good posstbtlit}
that the Ironton Dastrtct wtll have a
YCC program next summer

precedmg one Campers were dmng

the total JOb I quesltoned several on
the JOb Each had a go&lt;XI workmg
kno~&lt;ledge of what they were domg
and why they were dOing at Thts
total Involvement and tatal JOb
concept IS stressed m all four Ohto
camps
A short dtstance down the road
from the boat dock , a small crew
compnsed of two gtrls and four boys
~&lt;as butldmg a three male segment of
h1king tratl tn some of Ohw s most
rugged terram It was hot and
mugg) work wtlh several ztlhon
sweat bees to keep life mterestmg
Work was proceedmg mcely and the
campers were m excellent spants
Whtle I was there, the work
leader calll!d a short rest break

the trouble stems from a go
anywhere, do an;;thmg
attt tude on the part of some
people
Under Forest Servtce
management, the former
stnp mmed area has become
a very popular spot lor
recrealwmsts Over 30 ponds
have been stocked wat~ lash
and provtde some of the best

Round hales a~e endorsed
By John Cooper
Sml Cons Service
POJN I PLEASANT
Conserv ah omsts were In
tetested m the recent Grass
land Fteld Day and the
Western Sot! Conservahon
Dastrtct as one of the co
sponsors, was happy to see
many Mason County farmers
there exarmnmg the haymaking process and equtp

lay of the land
men! that dtd tl We were also
happy to see many of our
farmer fnends from Roane
County there
Dtstrtcts and SCS have
endorsed the use of round
bales for several years and
feel that thetr use wtll brtng
about better conservahon
farmmg The large round
bales that we saw at the
Grassland Fteld Day seemed
much more attractive to us
and more usable than the
smaller bales that had

DAYTON - Plans for the
organazlltlon of the 57th annual state convention of The
Arneracan Legaon of Ohio to
be held m Dayton, July lS-20
(the fli'St time m Dayton m 40
years, smce 1935) are all but
complete wtth mmor detatls
expected to be fmalized at a
meetmg of the veterans
organization's state
executave cornmattee m the
Dayton Inn on Thurday, July
17
The three-day sesswn of the
130,000
members
organtza!ton wtll be conducted m the Dayton Convention Center and will adJOUrn July 20 followmg the
election and mstallatwn of
state offteer-s
Delegates of the Legion, ats
Auxihary and the Forty and
Eaght (Legaon honor socaety)
will begin arrlVlng m Dayton
on July 17 and wall occupy
some 2,200 rooms m hotels
and motels m the city Including the 1,800 delegates,
some 10,000 Legtonnatres,
the~r waves and others are
expected· to conv~rge on the
City of Dayton

prevwusly been made
We have noted several

farmers who are now usmg

worth passmg along to any
one who mtght be readmg

large round bales m Mason lhts column We will save
County Some of them are some for a later date , but
lettmg them he on the ground mention one now
At our home we habtlually
where they come from the
baler Others are liftmg the feed bards and squtrrels
bales and movmg them to the tn the wtnterttme These
edge of the fteld or on to btrds and sqUirrels do
htgher ground wathm the faeld not seem to realize that they
should be on thetr own m the
so that tf the land would flood
summer so they contmue to
the hay would not get wet
Hay making by thts process come ;o our back yard and
\\ould enable a farmer to eahilinous ltdbtts whatever
make hay enhrely by htmsell may be found m the garden or
They help
\\tlhout any other help frUit trees
provided he had the proper themselves to the sweet corn
m the garden The rabbits eat
eqwpment
WE HAVE BEEN helpmg the broccoJa wtth gusto and
Clements Tree Nursery wtlh lately a fox squtrrel has
the construclton of water- developed a liking for apples
ways, daverslons and some that are npenmg on a tree
some 30 feet from our back
land levellmg at the nursery
The desagn of one par!lcular door We were not a\\ are that
waterway calls lor a depth of sqwrrels had such~ likmg for
H foot and 20 feet wade wath frwt, but thts one fox sqwrrel
the bottom bemg parabolic comes to the tree regularly
and helps hamself to a large
(rounded)
m
nature
Waterways, as well as other red apple Someltmes he eats
conservalton pracltces that 11 m the tree and other tunes
we desagn and help mstall, carnes t! m has mouth to
are designed m such a way as some large tree near the back
to handle the water expected of our lot We suppose that
so that eroswn wtll not occur semJ-domesttcat10n can
once the sod ~as been change the habtts even of
established Thas waterway \\lldlife
would be very shallow and
extend for a wade wtdlh It
has been found that a shallow
flow of water does not erode
nearly so read!ly as a deeper
flow of water even though the
•
grade of the dtfferent
satuahons mtght be the same
WE HAVE OBSERVED
some
trat ts
of
waldhle that we feel are

THE FAMILY of Mr and Mrs
Paul Baker gratefully ap

3 FAM ILY Y!llrd Sate July U
and
IS
(Monday
and
Tuesday ) 10to Jon George 1
Creek.
Rd
For
exact
locat 10n cal l
4078 or 992
3!87 Lots ot children s and
good clothmg of all stzes
tncludtng
summer
and
Wtnter wear
Shoes
etc
Also
adult clothmg
cur
latns
bedspreads
dtshes

precJate the e•pre-sslons of

sorrow and sympathies by
word food and the many
beautiful flowers over the
unt•mely deilth of !herr son
and brother Carroll Baker
of Sy racuse Oh10
7 13 ltp

------------I WISH to e)(press mv thanks

Memor~al Hosp 1tal
To my
mtnrster Clifford Sm tih to
those who v1s1ted me and
those who sent cards dur.ng
my recent Illness
My
evertastmg graltlude to one
and all
Gladys M Shumway

Notice
NO HUNTING trespassmg or
f ts hmg
Wtthaut wrttfen
perm tSSi on on Davtd Da'V s
property
Hysell
Run
Vtolators will be prosecufed
7 13 6tp

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

NOW seltrng Fuller
Brusl'1
Products
phone 992 3410
1 2.'1 ttc
WOULo- me=-tO COrfeSpond
wtth any descendants ot
Isaac Darst born about 1B01
tn Vtrg•n•a Dted Sept 2
1872 tn Metgs County Oh 10
H1s Wtfe was Mary Scott
Had
Jac kson
marrted
Beltnda
Lamberson
Samantha marned David
Wrtght Isaac Jr and Mary
&lt; My
grear great
grandmolher who marned
Benram1n Lang) Wtll an
swer ALL letters
Wrrte
Karen
Zach
R R
7
Crawfordsvtlle
lndtana
47933
7 11 6tp
- - - ---------- -

Help Wanted

for these activities

Accordtng to Wolter,
dumptng, httermg and
mtsuse of the area by off-road
vehtcles are the mam
problems
We 've done everythmg
short of post guards," Wolter
satd, to keep vehtcles off
newly reclatmed, lragtle
areas that can't take heavy
use Our efforts have been
thwarted wtth vandalized
sagns, and barncades are run

HAR fKE ASKS FUNDS
FRENCH UCK,lnd (UP!)
-Sen Vance Hartke, D-Ind ,
says if Presadent Ford does
not want to use gasoline taxes
for haghway construction and
mamtenance, he should turn
the money over to the states
for thear own haghway
programs
Speakmg to the Arnencan
Roadbualders Assocaatlon
Fnday,
Hartke
sa ad,
"Presadent Ford does not
have a national haghWI'Y
program
"ThiS IS ObVIOUS • because
the l'resldent wants to reduce
• the amount of the federal
gasohne tax which supports
the Haghway Trust Fund
from four cents to one cent,"
he saad

•

damage

Wanted To Buy
OLD furntture
tee boxes
brass beds
or com plete
households
Wr.te M
0
Mtller
Rt 4 Pomeroy
Oh 10 Call 992 7760
10 7 74
PoRTABLE ~em-;nt - m Xer
Phone 992 7190
7 10 Stc

--------------V.anted
au

tASH paid for
makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 61-4 423
9531
4 13 tfc

Yard Sale
YARD SALE 2 weeks July 12
thru 26th Anttques alladm
lamp old clocks depresston
glass mtsc -4 miles south of
Athens on Rt 33
7 10 14tc
YARD SALE at Eastern Htgh
School on July 11 and 12 qto
5 p
m
by EHS cheer
leaders
Proceeds
w111
be used for camp
7 10 Jtc
RUMMAGE SALE at the
Langsville Fellowship Rm
Monday
through
Wed
nesday 10 am till 4 p m
1 13 3tc
YARD Sale at the Davtd
Haggy restdence Happy
Hollow Road R uti and Lot
of dtshes
otd
wooden
stratght chatrs
Start on
Sunday lasts all week
7 13 Jtp

NOW YOU CAN

--------

Buy a 11/2 bushel Windvane
Feeder and get a so lb. bag
of HiM Mineral or Medi Pac
Mineral FREE!

19 73 DUSTtR
flake Wtlh Whtte str1pe A r
cond tttoned
p s
p b
automattc transm tSSton
25 000 m lies
340 mopar
engme am fm rad10 good
cond tftO n Call 991 7768 after
S p m
7 8 6tc

----- -- ----

ForRent

TRAILER space for rent 1n
Mtddleporl Phone 992 5434
1 8 6tp
-----------MOBILE Home tor rent tn
Racme
Phone q49 2261
Albert Htll
7 I 0 Ate

a

day

PRIVATE meehng room tor
any organ•zatton phone 992
3\175
3 11 lfc
A PT ltke new 3 rooms wtth
large bath tab letop range
large closet East Matn '"t
Pomeroy See to apprec1ate
Phone Galltpolts durmg day
4J6 7699 eventP\QS 446 9539
Ll 1o tfc

0

fbe Almaaac
By ' united Pre••
International
Today IS Sunday, July 13,
the !94th day of 1975 wtth 171
to follow
The moon 18 approaching
fu-st quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupater
The evenmg stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the stgn of Cancer
Amertcan actor Sadney
Blackmer, and Ameracan
educator Mary
Emma
Wooley were born on July 13,
she m 1873 and he In 1895
On this day m history
In 1863, opposition to the
Federal Conscription Act led
to rtots m New York City, m
which more than 1,000 persons were killed
In 11166, Horace Greeley
wrote an editorial m the New
York Tribune m which be
satd "Go west, young man, go
west and grow up wath the

country"
In 1878, the Russo-Turkish
war ended
In 1974, the Senate
Watergate committee
recommended dr88tlc reform
of the U S electaon laws

I

III I
TRONIA

•

t

NespEP WHEN THE
MONAFCCH I~ 5TIL..L
AN INFANT.

0

COPL/E [

I

circled (olton

\J I I to form the aurpnae answer. u
~~A~~~iiiii~~;l~;;;-;.r:-.r":"';ge~otfed~by the abo•• cartoon.
IPrineSIRIIIISIIIIml "[X XXJ ( I XX]"
\j

Now arranretbe

(Antwf'tt M~• ..day)

Jurnltlr• MOLDY GAUGE
Yr1trrd•y

11

J

2

Am1wrr: ~oundH flli.t

PREFER FLATLY

llttlf cam II( 11UJ 0111 ( tlrtllflld

the/rock-A LAP

DOG

1f

.,

c

RM apt w th wal l lo wall
caroet
104 S prtnQ
fl.vc
PQmeroy Cal l 992 5908
6 12 l f c

BEORM
double Wid e
furntshed ut tl llte S patd
country locatton yet near
Pomeroy No pets Phon e
992 76 66 or 992 7017
7 13 ]I c

TWO
bedrm
reference
and
reQutred
Phone

tra ile r
depos r
992 3419
7 13 61p

COUNTRY
Mob1le
Home
Park Rt 3J ten mtl es north
ot Pomeroy Larg e to t s w•th
conc rete pat os s d ewa lk. s
runners and off street
parkt ng P hone 9'i7 7 179
17 J 1 tic

For Sale
YOUNG rabbtt s for sale
Reedsv 1tle Phone 378 6161
1
7tc

e

HAY for sale de ltvered or
ptcked up 1n f1eld Phone
742 3743
7 8 6tc
1971 J50 CL Honda
3529

Phone

9n

1 8 61p

TOMATOES
cucumbers
Cleland Farms
Gerald ne
Cleland
7 6 ffc
F 1SH 1N G license
Canadtan
Nile crawlers 60c doz Du g
worms 3 doz 11 Ottler bat
tackle guns ammo cbs
lnd•lln
Joe s Sp ort s
JOB
Page St Phone 992 3509
7 I 26tc
LARGE grttl w t h rottsserte
new large gll ttar 7 h p 76
cut Huffy rtdtng mower
good cond1l1on Phon e 997
3442
7 10 Stc

REG polled Hereford bulls 2
yearlmgs 1 tour yr Old
Phone 991 5565 or \192 2826
7 13 6tc

&amp; N day old or started
Leghorn pullets Both floor
or cage grown available
Poultry
housmg
and
automat on
Modern
Poultry
399 W
Mam
Pomeroy 992 2164
7 13 He

l'i71 TRUCK camper over c ab
steeper f1tS any 6 ft bed
truck
was carr1ed on a
Datsun ptckup
Excellent
condttton Can be seen at
K tngsbury Home Sales or
call
992 7034
Monday
through Saturday .t..._
--, 13 Jlc

1959 DODGE ptckup
Phone 992 3907

v

8

1 123 Jtp

48 IN PONY S40 btlly goat
$15
Shetland pony
S20
Phone '247 2711
7 13 3tc
garden
1974 SEARS 36 10
tractor and mower electr1c
start
l1ght and
wheel
we1ghts Ltke new Call 992
2257 after 3 p m
7 9 4tC

Walnut Consol e
ste r eo rad•o combmatton J
spee d c hanger
Balance
SlO t JO or termo:. Call 99 7
]965
7 9 t fc

MODEf.o!N

Real Estate For Sale
3

BEDROOM house wtttl 5
a cres of land on Welch town
H II Phone 997 70B4

Business Opportunities
HI C a nafronalty advert i sed
noncarbonated 'Vttam 1n C
enrtched frutt drmk 1s
avarlable for vendrng 1n 12
oz
cans
IndiVIdual s who
are serrously cons1denng a
bUStness of thetr own should
mvesttgate
an
ex
traordtnary
opportuntty
currently available m thts
area
Thts ts a secure.
bustness for those who c an
spare a few hours each week
(no selltngl
restockrng
vendors placed on locatron
by
our
speclalrsts
A
qualtfted tndtvldual may
start part ltme and expand
with company fmancmg •o a
full t1me busmess
CASH
REQUIRED
Plan 1 S3 450 Plan 2 - S6 240 Plan
3
$10 22S
Trammg
provrded No exper i ence
required Tax shelter wtth
wrtte off
Investm ent
secured by new equ1pment
&lt;f1ve year warranty) and
1nventory
Earntngs
guaranteed wtth a wntten
buy back agreement For
1mmed1ate rnformalton or
tntervrew calll collect (301)
345 7300 or wrtle 1nclud ing
ph number to SUNR IPE
INC 6215 Greenbelt Road
College Park
Maryland
20140 I Not a subs1d1ary of
Coca Co la Co )
7 13 ltp

fo r sa te located near
Ches t er 1 acre all el ec tr tc
J bedroom ? baths d sh
wa s her
c arp e t
full
basemenl ? ca r garage all
brt c k. Wee k day s c a ll 985
t) 67 weekends f 304 J ' !J
') 1? 8
7 13 6tc

1 BEDRM

n Chesler
l B 61p

B R C K ho u se o n Secon d St
Pomeroy
downtown
Sudable l or 1 v mg Quar te rs
upsta ~rs
smal
bu s ne ss
down o fft ce or home w lhm
walk•ng d s ta nce of a ll
sto r es Call 997 3&lt;189
7 10 3tc

-

Strout Realty

1 71 ACRE S l and and l ocu s I
posts Also
96 S r ord LTD
Phon e 71 2 3656
S Z3 57t p
5

home

Phon (' 98 ') 35 87

7 II )I C

RUTLAND - Lovely older
home ' or s B R mod_.

RMS
bath
alum num
s dtng r emodel ed kt t ch en
lnqu,re Don Say r e 44 3 St)(th
Avenue
Mtddleport
Oh o
45760
7 9 .:l ip

k1tchen w1th d1sposal &amp;
dtshwasher
all
new
plumbtng and wtrtng fully
m sulated

JOHNSON
REMODELING
V1nyl sidtng alumtnum
sidmg pat1o co vers storm
windows
kitchens
bathrooms and garages
We Carry
Ltabthtv Insurance
Ph
760B
Evenmgs 742 4902
7 7 1 mo

m

home fu l l baseme nt close
to tow n and st ores

MIDDLEPORT -

FA RM and 2 homes year old
tota l etec
Double w tde
trailer
co mp le tely car
peted
3 large bedrooms
wtth l arge closets and 7 f u ll
baths home also has den
I vcng room dtncng room
and k tchen w1fh plenty of
storage space
All large
rooms
A lso pond a bov e
trad e r
Also
on same
property s a 7 story 7 rm
farm
house
r eal g ood
plumb ng
plenty of well
water and newly patnted on
the outstde Huge barn and
garage other bu tl d ngs too
Great g raz1 ng and garden
land All on 20 acres for sale
Call 992 7590
7 7 6tc

4 apl

c omplex
all st reet
parktng wllh!n walking
d1sfance of stores good buy

a l $2S 000 00

I WE DO

Roofing
S1dmg
Complete
Home
Matntenance.

All-WEATHER
ROOFING

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER
" AI CauiJon Light"
Rt 1 Tuppers Ptatns, 0
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
Open 9 5 Wed lhrough Sun
Ph 667 3858
11 1

mo

From the largest l ruck or
B~ltdozer Radiator to tne
srrianes t Heatrr Core

..

N•than B•IJII
R•dl•tar Spectalist

'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,

.,

Ph 992 2174

I
1 327 N

2nd

Middleport
s 30 I mo

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
Small Appliance
Repair

CONTACT

992-3313
6 11 1 mo

CAPTAIN EASY

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSEU.'S
GARAGE

Blown
Insulation Serv1ces

c

Blown •nto Walls &amp; AHtcs 1
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDJNG-SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

2 M1les West
On St Rl 124
Off Rt 7 6y Pass

ALL

MECHANICAL
WORK
Phone 992-5682

LARRY LAVE8DER

or 992 7121

Ph 991.1993

Syracuse Uhto

••

4 10 I mo

7 8 1 mo

Free Eshmates
PH 992 2550

PhonA

Branch Manager

Guaranteed
appliances,
used furn1ture at

Construction
and Plumbmg

307 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy
992 2298
Lots Pauley

CASH ' N CARRY
SAVES U S'son

·r-::::-:---------, ..
Does your home '
requtre any of these
servtces,

POMEROY - 2 BR older

HOU SE •n Portland 5 rms
and bath good well 7 acres
at
9 "" 0und
Take
over
paym en t s Phon e 843 229?
7 9 t 2tc

EXCAVATING
backhoe
dozer
and d •tcher
Gas •..,!.
etectrtc and water line
burta l basements tooters, "'
septJC systems and brush""f
cle anmg Wtll haul fill dirt, .., ,
lop soil ~and and ~ravel
ltmestone f or dnvewavs and
roads
Phone Charles R
Half le1d Backhoe Service
Rt
I Rutland Ohio 7.42 .,..,

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Your He11 Dealer
Thtrd St
R a erne, Ohro
Ph 949 .5961

6091

7 11 901c' "

Emergency
949 2211 or 992 5700
Complete atr con dH ,ontng
sa tes and serv•ce heaftng
pt um b1ng
roof1ng and
gene ral sheet metal work
Free Esttmates
7 II I mo

EXCAVATrNG tlozer •odoer
and backhoe work
septic
tanks
m s talled
dump "'
truck s and lo boys for h•re
w 11 haul ftlt dtrt top soli
limestone and gravel Call ..
Bob or Roger Je ffers dey
phon e 99 2 7089 ntgh l phone
997 352 5 or 9q2 52J2
2 11 tfc .,.
G ENERAL Repatr c lean up
-----"
) LJ
and
haul ng
c uttmg
•
weldtng
carpentry
NEED
A
new
Home
built
on
plumbtng elec masonry
your toP Contact Mitocr B ,
and general remodel•ng
Hutchtson
Rutland
Oh1o
Ca ll Sktl Pool
Phone 9'92
Phone 742 3615
5 126
6 17 tfc
5 B tfc " 1
- - - - - - - - - - - - t ...
ROOF I'H.r
;, pout1ng
a lum mum ar:~d vtnyl 5tding \ 1
co mplete
remodellnq
Phone 742 627] or (30,f) 773 ""'
5684 Free estimates
6 2S 26tp - ...~
.,.,...

___ _______

WILL 1 KIM or cut trees and ,. h
shrubbery and paint roofs ""
Phone 949 3221 or 1-12 4441
6 2&lt;1 26tp "''

--------------- •
WOULD

CLElAND
608 E
MAIN

REALTY

--------- --

-

1 story frame 2 BR
bath basement new steel
s1 d1ng own water and c1ty
water 2112 acres m lawn
some
burld1ng
sttes
$!0 500

Ex

MACHINE
Repe trs serv.ce all makes ,.
992 2284 T he Fabnc Shop , 1
Pom e ro y Alltho riZed Srnoer .,
Sales and Serv1ce
We ~ ~ ...
sharpen Sc tssors
tfc :.
3 29

SEWING

cellent condtf1on and very
comfortable 2 story frame

bath

dtntng R ut!ltty R ntce
k1tchen cab range ref 2nd

r '

floor 2 n1ce BR $15 500
NEW HOME -

DOZER work la nd clearmg .,__..
by the acre
hourly or
co ntract
Farm
ponds ,.. ...
roads elc Large dozer and
ope rator wtth over 10 vears
e:xpertence
Putl•ns Ex
c avatmg
Pomeroy
Oh10
••
Ptlon e 992 1478
12 19 lfc

I level

acre 3 BR large closets
bath
n1ce kitchen and
d1n1ng ut dtfy R garage
your cho1ce of colors tn
carpeting F u ll f1nancmg to

nght party $20 000

t:LWUVu bUWtt&lt; ~ t&lt;EPAIR

Sweepers roasters trOn'$
all small appliances Lawr
mower ne.:t to State H rgh
way Ga ra ge on Route 7
Phone 985 3B25
J 16 ff&lt;

POMEROY- l 'h acres 2
BR. bath large k•lchen
uttltty R garage
or c1ty water

CELLENT

pnvate
IN EX

urn E ORPHAN

CONDITION

ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-T'tEmE

OUOIIT TO BE A

LAW
CARPET tnstaltatton
Sl 25
per yard
Call
R1chard
Wes t phone 843 2667
7 2 26tp

$8 900

THE
SAFEST
IN
VESTMENT THAT YOU
CAN MAKE IS IN A HOME
SEE OR CALL US
TODAY

-

..

(

- -- -

lcaford Realty
Vi1q1 I B
'I

Sr

BELIEVE' '

PLUMB! NG heat1ng repatr
and .nstallatton electrical
...
water pump repatr roofing
_
Mouse and roof painting
uJ
general repair reasonable 1J'
rates
free estimates
15
'
years
exper t ence
Call ...~
Charles Stnclalf 985 4121 or • v
992 2221
7 10 12tc

TUPPERS PLAINS- Rt 7

lsi floor has 1 BR

YOU

Butld an all steel butld1ng ar
P ol e Barn prtces? Golden ,_::
Gtant All $tee1 Buildings ,....Rt
4 Box 148 Waverly ~ w
Oh 10 Phone 947 2296
lu
6 24 26tc ,.

m E PHANTOM

PnMEROY.o

BEANS ptck your own S2 SO
per bushel Phone 843 2353
after 7 p m
7 11 3tc
HONDA CB 750
excellent
condtt1on
Phone 949 2220
7 11 6tc

R EORO O M house for
PF'lon e- '9 R'l 4 101
6 10 76 1c

HOU SE tor sa te near Easlern
H tgh Schoo l n R1 ggsc rest 3
bedrm
l a rg e lt'V ng room
wth
! r ep lac e
Full
b.a semen l 7 baths lam ly
rm and ktt c hen large tot
Phon e 98'&gt; 3R6l
7 13 lip

APPROX 6 fl )( 7 fl new
plu sh
carpe t
r emna nt
neulrat color
SIS
Phone
997 34¥6 alter S J O
7 9 tic

PIGS for sale 6 weeks otd one
mare pony One geldmg 6
years old Phone 378 6152
7 9 4tp
HORSE saddle and nll.. t'
br tdle Phone 742 3842
7 11 3tc

Sc" l('

For Sale

MIDDLEPORT
27 F T prtvate owned travel
trailer ful ly self conla1ned
tandem wheels fully car
peted
atr
condlftoned
awn1ng
See any ftme at
Youngs
Mobtle
H ome
Cour I R I 7 Gall tpOi tS Oh 0
1 ! 3 7tp

fv''JO

HOU S~

ONE
West nghou se roaster
wtth cabtnel and c lock S75
Pho ne 992 2267
7 10 3t c

H

• SHUTEYE PATCHES
• PINk EYE AEROSOL .

7 10 61p
------brown metal

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

KNUSK

p er
Phone

~

------------ 30

-

197Z TOVOTA wagon
m P 9 Phone 991 2082

one letter to eath square, to
form rour ord1nary words

PINKEYE PROBLEMS?

• KORLAN 24 E

1968 vw good runntng con
dtlton ssoo Phone Roger
Karr 985 3538 Chester after
S p m
7 13 ltp

~l]]J.OOID~®""" u.•-"..1 .-4 , _

WINDVANE
FEEDERS

THESE SALT AND
MINERAi FEE-DERS
CAN'T RUSt OUT

1967 DODGE Potara w1th new
set of ttres Ci!!tr Paut Baker
Sy ra cuse 991 2395
7 IJ Jlc

J ROOM fllrntshed and
unfurntshed
apanmenls
Phone 992 5&lt;l34
J 12 tfc

BEDRM
mobde home
12x60 Phone 992 5858
7 11 Jtc

TRI SONIC
188 h p
H er c r utse r 18ft long Ford
30? V8 enQ tne ca th eral haul
ltght brand new \4 500 See
al John Gtbson Moler C ry
1\. lh ens 593 71 58 or 7J 7 J69J
weekends and e11encnqs
1 13 ') I c

19 11

s:n

n•u· large yard bath and
190
South
&lt;' ccond
1
M1ddt e oor-t
adults only
Phone 99 2 S26:7 even nq s,

1971 PINTO 4speed 2000cu
1n
low m tleage Phone 991
7180 or 9Cj12 5271
1 13 3tp

) AND

elec
a c
un turn shed
reasonable
Must
sell
mov•ng tn two weeks Call
qq2 2536 any t1me
7 13 ltc

ON

1 BE CROOM lratiN
week ultltl es patd
991 3324

U RN apt 5 r ooms an d balh

TRA-iLER space all uhltt es
c heap Phone 992 5535
6 29 tfc

i973 MosrLEhOme- gaSSnd

UP
TO

BEDRM
house
Ut1
furn.shed Als o 1 furn tshcd
apt Phon e 991 2780 or 99'1
) 132
6 '19 lfc

4 ROOM unfllrn shed hou se
1650 Ltncoln Hgts
pho ne
992 387.4
7 6 tfc

Auto Sales

1=URNISHEO
apartmer~t
adults only tn Mtddteport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 tfc

1973 - 12 x 70 H1llcrest Mobtle
Home
3 bedroom
total
electnc red shag carpet
t hroughout
underp •nn.ng
and 2 sets of steps tn c luded
Phone 747 3941
7 9 6tc

228 Upper Rtver Road
P.O Box 207, Galhpohs
Clyde B. Walker, Mgr

3

Mar.ne Sal es
196-S
SEA RAY
tnboard
outboard 19ft long 120 h p
Mcrcrurser ne-w C h E"v~ I I 4
cy l c ngme n ew lowc:r un 1t
n ew tnlcr,or d eep vee hol e
\ 2 500 E .:ce ll enl Sk.t bOa I
See at John G1bson Motor
C ty Athe ns 593 U &lt;.J S or 74 ')
J69&lt;l
weekends
and
even ngs
7 13 ?I c

7 6 Tf c

ocated on 143 2m res from
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
7 2 ttc

Mobile Homes For Sale

You ve been thtnktng about that acreage for some ttmet! s good land and offers a great opportuntty to expand
Can you afford that btg step forward? Adequate ftnancmg
could be the keyl
Long-term credtt at compettttve mterest rates through
the Land Bank Assoctatton can spread expanston costs
over extra years for smaller. payments Come by soon
you may be pleasantly surpnsed at
what you can afford

J E\EDRM 65x1 ? mob lc home
for rent
uftlt1 es pa td
loca t ed 10 Burl nqh am Cilll
9q1 775 1
7 1 11 c

J BEDROOM mobtle home

TODAY

3

- ----

7 10 6tp

On
Lmcoln H1ll
Pomeroy and
m Syracuse
Phone 992-2156

The roads and tratls have
been stgned to let vtsttors
know whtch areas are open to
vehtcles In addihon, maps
and brochures are avatlable
both at the Ironton and Lake
Vesuvms Offtces of the U S
Forest Servace

SAVE

-

7 IJ 2tc

YARD SALE l'Jesd8y- i"nd
"'-ednesday mornmg .ua S
Second
M 1ddleport
Sponsored by E ght and
Forty Salon 710
1 13 2tc

WATER tank S1 00
Phone 992 S704

BE A
"SENTINEL
CARRIER"

n

For Rent

etc

1 13 ltp

WE V'.ISH to thank all those
who hcloed 1n any way
durmg l ht: •llness and death
of Edgc!llr Do,~~
Wtfe
Sybil
sons and
tam II es
1 3 lt p

S'ale
"'"'6

to Dr- R ldgway nurses and
staff of
the
Veterans

over or Ignored "
Cooper a !ton from the
Lawrence Count~ Sheraff and
Game Protector, both who
have Jurtsdtc!ton m the
Wayne have aaded the
Ranger's efforts Arrests
have been made lor Jittenng,
dumpmg and am proper use of
the off-roa d vehtcle trailstlut
Wolter satd, "we must have
the cooperatiOn of the public
to effechvely admmaster the
area and prevent further

ltshmg m Southeast Ohao
Hunltng, frog spearmg,
varmtnt calling, berry
packmg and swtrnmmg are
popular acttvtttes of th1s
public area
Spectal trails for dune
buggtes, Jeeps and motor
cycles have been designated

'

•
•

Yard

•

conservatiOn careers

they were domg more than JUSt the
manual labor Set up on a nearby
htllstde was a surveyor s level Each
g~bwn had to be placed exactly on
the same grade and level as the

Card of Thanks

Litterbugs pose forest problems

Attendmg fr om Buck e) e
Htlls Career Center were
IRONTON - The U s
Larr)
Marr
Local
F'orest Servtce contmues to
Agnculture Supervtsor, and
experaence dtlfacul!tes tn
hts wafe, Karen Dwt g ht
managmg the Hangtng Rock
Jenktns
Agriculture
area of the Wayne NatiOnal
Mechamcs, and Ben Roland
Forest
Forestry Others altendmg
Accordmg to Dtslrtct
were Jeff Pope North Galha,
Ranger AI Wolter much of
Tom Pope, Hannan Trace,
David Carter Hannan frace, western and Howard Taylor
J Robert Evans, South- Galha Academy

convention is
being planned

line of Saddles, Bridles, Halters, Saddle

'

"'II

Legion's 57th

Stop by today and see the new TexTan

•

fiNC. SF T
HOY Mc1~s
lounl} Jr Fmr livestock
I« ling "Ill ht• held July 28
29 •I ""' abnounrcd at the
'ounty .Jr Fair Hoard
m cet m~ I hnrsday night at
the Me1gs High School
The annual 4-H stylt•
f&lt;Vte" "'II be Aug 5 al
7 30 p m at Meigs High
and the theme of a parade
to be held fr Fair Night
"'II br Happ} Birthday.
America
The
nexl
meetmg of the board
he Aug 4

.

WESTERN WEAR

I,

r~.~

POM~

Agriculture and

•

........

- ~-

R1ol.:•'t

fREEZE

.-

bedrooms w1th closets
modern kitchen tncludmg
stove
breakfast nook
full
basement and double garage
Excellent locat1on

...,
~

•

c:.O
SEPTIC ,1-&lt;.,~,... .., . . ._.._
R ea sonable RATE S Phone
:IJ6 4782 Ga ll potts
John
Russell own er
4 9 lfc
SEPTIC
TAN KS Cleaneo
Modern San ti at on 992 J95.t
or 992 73 49
q I B tfc

call 992 6 190 or 992 5837
6 15 26tc
•READY MiX. CONLt&lt;tTE
d e ltv ered r ght to your
pro1ect Fa'lt and easy Free
es t1mat es Phone 992 J284
Goeg tem Ready Mt'X Co
M ddl epo rt Ohta
6 30 tf(

D &amp; D TR EE - Trtmm ng

20
years exper.ence Insured
free esf ma1es Call 992 3057
Coo tv li e
Phone ( 1) 667
304 1
4 30 tfc

PINE COUNTRY - Good
hunting plenty of bulldmg
s1tes and elbow room No one
close
1ust prtvacy
and
freedom 97 acres w tth all
minerals

HOUSE

.'

HOU ~I:: ana roor IJdHHtny dn ....
r e pa~rs For free est1mates

f!.,.( h.11111 •) 1

l''·'nf·J lY Ohtrt

SMALL

, ...

,.
••

••

••
&gt;

..'•

..=..- (._ --- --- -- ~~""~ IN ILL do odd tObS patnt1ng

roOitng
mowmg

2

halll1ng
and
Phone 992 7409
7 6 12tc

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

bedrooms bath, natural gas
c1ty water and compact lot

,.ets For Sale

A5k•ng $6 000 00
OUT OF TOWN - 3 bedroom
mobile home and large lot
L C water and natural gas
Want only $9 500 00

••
•

•'•
J

•

RE G temate Beagles 9 weeks
old $40 Phone 992 3717
7 11 3tc

••

7 7 6tc

••
•

LARGE- i'e room older home
1n town !iu dable for apart
ments and enough space to
butld
All ut1l1hes
An ex

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

?EMODELING
Plumbing
heat 1ng and all types of
general
repatr
Work
guaranteed
20 crears ex
per1ence
Phone 992 2409
S 1 tfc

eel lent buy at $9 000 00

•••

•,,••
- - -------- ----....,.... ••'
CAkPENTRY
WORK
••
Cetl mg panel rng floorrng
••
etc Phone 992 2759
6 24 27tc
•
----------- --- -.•

'

I

�..

. '

•'

.

28 - The Sui11lay Times- Sentfflel, SUII u«y, July 13 1975

tFor Fast R~sults Use The Sunday Titnes-Se-Rtinel Classifieds
r~Card
of Thanks
EWI S H 1 to expressourdeep

Notice

~

apprec rat ion f or all lt1c 11cl p
'I an d, k 1ndn ess shown to u s
: dunng our t l n~e of so r row
, T h e Ade l e Wh tlfak er ta mrly
"
1631
-• - - - - -

DEAD s toe k. r f' m ov ('(1
CI1,HQ(' c ~1 11 /I'• •1 1 1:

•

lin MemOfY

I~
LOVING
memory
ol
: Willa rd Ree s . who pa~scd

':, WEE P ER
,lr1CI
S l'WII H I
lll&lt;1 c lrrn e&gt; r e&gt; P"" p.l rt &lt;; (ln c1
su ~plr es
P1 c k
LJ IJ
CJn c1
dl' l t v e&gt;ry
n.l VI ';, Vcl l i i Ui l l
Cl eaner ' rn1 ll' up (,f' OI\1\' &lt;,
(r e t' k. 1-:d Ph 11o 0:' 91

ATTE N T I O N ''
CAREER PEOPLE
1fl [
I 0 t ~ !\! '('('&gt;
t
C: &lt;lrt ' (' r
d• p ul 1t S
fu t
on
f10 111 e
r t' pr P&lt;, f' fl ' c'll ron
I " '· ' v &lt;·n r
tu ll ( Oil1n lr'i.&lt;.r on
•' rlt l\IIH I 'S ,lvt rcl&lt;l C ~ ~ 000 p l' r
I l 1Il l I II \
ln d
yt• .rr d UI O H l( r (' ,l ~ o • I l l
r•,l f i1 11HI '&gt;
Co nq)I P lf'
p t r &lt;;On illrt r• rl
l r d oll•rl tl
Coo d wo rk •rtq COfl(l l lt On.,
(mt ' HI Mr
ld r•y
f,? /.111 0
lh l ;.,

N ew

~

\ Cll f'S (1.
l/&lt;. t' {l (I)' S

n •o n otor s

I)O i t ( ('
l' l (

R (lclfo s

W /\ Y

". NJt(C

llob ~

f~ , l ( l to

a n lenna s

(olr J f'n
l1r11ld
f , f'OrL J f'i

~ qutp

\ r t' PI.. kcl
1 10 I 'J I 7

Q t, ,u

C .ll lt polt ".

!

of s i g ht

But n ever out ot m 1nd
They are
hearts

1n

che r,sh ed

,. I

1l1l'

\'i I I

thr u

I

I •

tl •

r

IQ". (' l!

( • I 0 '•' l ' l

~

I /

url ro

' I

Of those they l eave bet1m d
L ov,n g cl nd kmd ,n &lt;'Ill 1lt S

I

I ', (

) •,

ways .
Upng ht and lUSt to tn e uHI of

h ts d ays
St n ccre and

tr ue

tn

Help Wanted

IH• arl

fr om
1
1 1
1
'-:;
I
''
9
1 ~ % '';,~ 1\ ~ ~~ r l ~ roo~('~~:~ (.s~
On(• , " 1111 n ' rl c
Soultl o f'
clrr Cr~ll 1 1111161 ~ day 446
P o r rl' r O h• o
&lt;; l .:l! e Rt
• ' 1·1 nrqht
°'1·
160
16 3 11
160]
l'f 6H OLD \ , c~rr , roood c ond
.., P h 7"i6
New "r es No rust

ALL

memortes

hr

Sadly rntssed antllov f' d by
wtfe . child r en and or a nct

children

16? I I
W/'I. I TR E C.&lt;; wanted part l •tTH'
.md t ulllrrll!' Mus t tw 7 1 No
expe r .en c l' n ecps&lt;; ,l r',- &lt; .111
tlf• 1010 or ·1•16 ·1'',1

Wanted To Rent
BO AT dock to re nt

J

16 7 JQ!:I
16 ] 1

_ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ notJ mn p ,\ !tl'r We'&gt;l p ~t :-iSt'd t hP
ove r c~d l
E::1st made lttt'
I:!
NOll I'll
brtlli ~mt dec 1s 1o n to doub le
. l09R2
Tht• ~ laught e r .,., a s tc t nit&lt;' 10

• 10 9 54

BL INN BOA RD S
OUTDOOR
ADVERTISING

4J 753
WEST iO&gt;
• AK74
• 72
• J 964

EAST

• ll J
• •\ K .I 8 .I
• IF J

41062

4AQ 8
SOUTH
• J 65

las l cl ub was led and ruffed

• A K 10 8 2

L

f.'F_ ( ] F'IION I ' 1

cleared a wav Sou th had
JU St two tn c'ks

West

1.

North

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

I.
East

,)I

CARR IER NEEDED

Dble

and
2•

~~ ~~rw~~

PttsS

Opemng lead - K •

From

Flo rtda

Mv part ner opens one spade
What should I do w&gt;Jh
"' Q 6 0 • 3 2
• Ai 05

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In general. a free b&gt;d merely ~ J 9 4 :l
says that you would have made Ra&gt;se /urn to two spades If he
lhe same b1d cheerfully 1f th ere ca n t make lwo spades I he hand

l

8

'

Astro-

s p.m .

~~ ~

For Sunday, July 13, 1975
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Yo ur wander l u st is m 1sstng today You 'll be happier a t home
workmg on a hobby or putte r tng around th e ya rd

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You commun icate well w1th
peo pl e t od ay You r spec ta l
lorte 15 crea t1ng u n1que acliltllles fo r soc ta l eve nt s that wtl l
be fun for all

N 1731, BEN FOUIIIDED
FIRST CJRCULATIII/6
Li8RAR.V 1111 AMERICA .
TtiiS EIIIABLED '!liE FOoR
TO BECOME AS WEl.l.
R-EAD A5 TI&lt;E 11/EALTH'r'
BooKS WE RC E.i(Pfi-JSIVE
IN THOSE TIMES.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

W o rk done fo r a rela ltve who
needs help wtll ea rn you thank s
and a w ar m sense ol persona l
pnde when t h e JObs don"e

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Where
yesterday yo u were ove rl y
li beral wtth you r means today
you're su p ercq; ut1ou s You II
have a good b ut tnex pens1ve
ttme vt s1t1n g a shu t- 1n

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1.22) A
day when you II fin ally be able
to rela x and put all 1houg t'lt s o f
work o u t of mind You'll enJOY
soc1aliztng w1th f n ends

ty
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You won 't con std e r 11 an Intru SIOn rf a fnend d rops 1n and
asks you to slla r e tn an ac tiv ity
You II f 1nd harmony m tand em

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Cr ea lt ve met h ods you 'll d iS cover 1n purswng a hobby wtll
rev1taltze your th1nktng and
prav1de con ttnu ed mterest

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. . 23)
You II accept the pra 1s es
heap ed on you to d ay w •th
dignifred reserve bu t you 'll b e
burst1ng with pnd e tnward ly

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You re &lt;l lover not a lighter to
d ay so don 1 res1st th e urge to
be romt=~ntiC w1th your mAte or
spectal Jr1 end

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You re kee n 1n compettt1ve
s p orts to day A h tg h degree o f
luck wil l ad d to yo ur s k1ll to

WANTEQI

-

\/ ' ~'11

pF!p Cr lnq
111t c rror
('XI P rrOI
p ilrnlrn q
r.! f' asonr~l) l(' Pll
116 11 ?] or
I 16 16 I
l .l'i I t
l't.:L OrCIIIIlCj pcl1 111rnq
,111 pcl p r· r rnCI piln ( l rl1(1
r f'P ('S I IIl lili(' S ()7 '1 '!(,f-: '•
'J J , I

! {' f, ; ' f '
y.

I

BABYS I TTI N G Ill m y home
any trmc
H o t mea l s 1n
nt e n ary 446 J5 14
160 3

CHIPWOOD

Poles, moximum dia. 10" on
largest end ...... •7.00 per ton
Bundled Slabs .. !6.00 per ton
DELIVERED TO:

OHIO PALLET CO.
Rt- 2· Pomeroy

SMALL blu e handbag Wtth
ca l cu l a tor keys mise Ca l l
Mr Goodr ich , &lt;1 46 .1012 Ext
65 Rewar d . In v 1cr nr ty of
Rl
718, 7, 588 , Bob Me
Corrn tch Roa d
161 6

For lease or Sale
roR LEJ\ SE or sa l e by land
contrvc t house and servrce
!lardqe
6.1.1
51h
Ave ,
K anauq a
0
formerly
S tewo:~rt 's Ga raq e
148 If

1\UTO S an ct
388 8776

scrll p

446 2747
159 6

21) Th e rec og n tt 1on you ' ve
been seek1ng w 1ll come to you
to d ay, prov1 d ed you ve do ne
the tob to th e bes t o f your a btll -

Ph . 992-2689

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

7

68

PONTIAC Cataltna o-r
Bonnevtlle 7 door for part s
Ca ll ·146 4839, a s k f or Jun ro r
161 3

rrn s
IS

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison, Ohio
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

Ph 4 46 -7572
Biln~ F rna n ctnq

t

For Rent

MODEL OPEN

1'J~ r, CR E pas t ur e . tar111
o t l1 c r· -;, pa c P downtown
mof) II C II Or nC SPtiC C
116
l) llflf\

I

Lo ca ted
mtle w es t of
H o lz er Ho spttal on Rt . 35 .

l

PH. 446-1599

~-------l

EXC Tra•l er Space , Ro dn ey
area Ca l l 446 4766 a lt er 5 30
even rngs
16 1 )

' I EEP IN G Room s
week l y
I rl iP&lt;; P.lrk Cc n lr;\1 H o tel
] 06 If

QUAIL CREEK
MOBilE COMMUNITY
lOTS FOR RENT
L ots for r e nt . Rent 1n c lud es
water ,
sewage.
tra s h
CO I ICC flOO , T V hook -Up, 2
acre r ecrea ttOn area
Rodney - Cora Rd .
Rodney , Oh10
' Ph 245 -5021 Gall1po1ts area
992 -7777 Pom e roy area

. '

4 dr . Sedan . One caref ul lo ca l owner
bra kes

B. R PA IN T Center, In c
Be n 1am1n Moo re parnt s
srn ce 1883
Wa ll pa _per
Q ualified
p ainter
85 3
Seco nd P h J46 9,458
130 t f

DOZ ER work . exca.va l ru g,
la nd
clearing,
p o nd s,
b asements , l a nds capt n g
Ca ll 446 005 1

163

ff

4 Big

SATURDAY, JULY 19 - 12:30 P.M.

1971 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan ..s1995

Including dishes, new bath and hand
towels, good "Sed appliances, fine
u·sed furnitur~;- values.
If you have a need, we have it! First
Come! First Sold!

See: Fred Blaettnar, Darrell Dodrill
or Dan Thompson

•
'
•

•
'

OPEN EVES . TIL 7: 00 , THURS. SAT TIL I 00

'

'' 742-4211

Why pay rent when you c an
bu y t h is n 1ce 3 bedroom
home tn town . has tarQe
l 1v 1ng room , n1ce bath . c1 ly
water and natural gas
Hous e
has
just
b een
re- painted outs1de. loc at ed
at 11 Ga ll1 a on a n1 ce level

lot

JUS T L IKE NEW -- Thi S
love ly home has b ee n
co m p le tely remod eled , has
3 b edroo ms . fami ly room ,
ba th with shower , ntc e
kitchen wdh lo vel y ne w
ca b rn e ts , new wa tts and
ce llmgs , bea ut rfut c arpet
t h roughout. n ew Sid ing on
ou ts ide. located on 3 n1c e
level lot s , all lh1s and on ly
pn c ed at 522 , 500

'

'

'
•

'

•
•
•

'

See Herb. Dave or Mike Grate.
Also Gene Smith

.-

'

.

RCA con sole TV , lot linens , bedding, spreads,

out of old Hearse; salters ; silver plate ; gold

ban~

pitcher ; larg ~gla ss vase ; depress ion , and other pot lery. Yard &amp; hand tools ; bench grinder w -motor ;
wrenches; brice -bits ; round Maytag washer; double
tutl - eexter washer, and many other items Nothing

shown before day of sale.
Clip this ad for time &amp; direct&lt;ons ol sale Sunday, July
13 at 11 o'clock A.M.
·
Refreshm~nts. Positive 10. Terms-Cash day of sale.
Not respon'iible for accidents.
• Mr . John JOnes in charge of sale.

AUCTIONEER- BILL JANE5-Phone962-4377 or 557l4t1
'

'

•

GOOD OLDER H O ME
Has 3 l arge bedrooms ,
bat h , new furna ce. well
rnsulated. garag e. hou se
wa s ju s t repainted outs 1de .
looks very ntce Large leve l
lot P rrce d at $14 , 400 and
owner wtll h elp tmance

$7000

Italian pottery ; 2 small German figurines ; German
figurine on marble : blue glass goblet; Japanese ging"er
box; Rogers silverware ; trivets ; fancy overlay vase

Rutland. 0. :

Middleport, Ohio

LOW DOWN PAYMENT

P71 -97

rocker; 2 ani. dolls w-bisque heads ; gold bracelet; set
Heisey candle sticks ; other candle sticks ; rinse tubs
GLASS, CHINA, AND OTHER ITEMS : Water pitcher ,

•

461 S. Th1rd St.

INIIJUIUI

pots, pans, dishes, silver, etc .;
clothes hamper;
wicker settee &amp; chair ; 2 porch chaise lounges; 2 porch
chair s; elec. refrigerator ; gas range ; ant. c ane bottom

Rutland Furniture

JAY. DRIVE - V ery lovely
ra nc h only 7 years ol d, 3
bedr oom s. 2 baths . ntce
fam ily or d.nmg room wrth
larg e pat ro . fully c a r pet ed ,
cent ral a1r . 1 c ar Qarage
N 1ce locafton with a lovely
tot Good buy tor 530 , 500

...........

fowls, etc.; elec. appliances ; kitchen clock; old tables;

·'

•

FORD

Steve Snowden

bullet; mahogany gate leg table ; round gold eagle

Good used Keller Dining , Room
SrJite, china, table, 4 chairs, cloth
seats and back.
Only 349.95

Ouar Baird
John Fulfer
Doug Wether holt
451 Second Ave .
Gallipolis , o .

NEW LI STI NG love ly
br•ck
hom e
with
3
bedrooms , 2' J baths , n i ce
k.tc h en drnrng area , full
base ment. 2 ca r garage ,
beut 1ful lawn W1th several
fruit trees. l o ca t ed on 2
acres of nice land nca r
Crown C ity

NEED CAR INSURANCE?

several smaller Oriental &amp; throw rugs ; Formica top
dress ing table ; green Mohair chair ; large &amp; small
e lec . fans ; 6 dining room c hairs w -satin seats ; walnut

SPECIAL BUY.!

(B.

160 6

lt. rugs, 12x15 ft . wool rug ; one 9xl2 Oriental rug ;

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

Ford 6 cyl. Maverick : .. ................... 1395
Mercury.2 Dr. HT ......................... '495
Chev. VB Impala Coupe....... ............ 1895
Ford Pickup ............................... ~~95

74 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

63 CHILLICOTHE RD . ·
This older home has 3
bed r ooms , b ath , livi ng
room . klfch en , good sh a p e
1nS •d e need s some work
outsrde . c.ty water and
na t ura l qas . qood buy for

Full power , vinyl top. leather interior, AMFM stereo radio , radial tires and Climate
Control air conditioning.

" .500

6 ACR E S · Country li v ing
and c lo se to town , larg e a
bedroom hom e ha s 2 baths ,
ba seme nt W1lh shower
tovely k1tchen with n rcc
c ab1nets, sewmg roo m ,
fully ca rpeted , fir eplac e in
tam rly r oom 3 ca r bloc k
Qarag e

$6800

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
$5500

122 A CRE S - N1 ce rolltng
land wilh app JO a cres
tr llabl e.
some
t 1mbe r .
tobacco base , has a larg e
- barn and oth er smalle r
bur ldm gs. house is old but
rn a lov e ly p lac e Located
on
N e bo
Rd ,
ask 1ng
$39 900

(3) New 1975

LIS TING S NEEDED
We
have buyers f or all typ es o f
prop er ty L tSf wllh u s tor
actr on on your h ome, farm ,
or bus iness

White, blue vinyl top, blue cloth inL full
power, Climate Control air, T&amp; T wheel ,
AM-FM .stereo &amp; tape , radial tires.

sides; mahogany coffee table , 4 ant. ladder back

mirror;

EALTORS C~NSULTANT

One very. ver y careful local owner . Air conditioned . Like

CO N C RETE wur"' wanteo,
d rtveways , pa t 10S, po r ches,
s teps , walkways , etc, good
jo b
guaranteed
Free
est1ma tes Ca ll 379 2158 .

lamp , tiered table ; wing back arm c hair ; several 9x12

'2488

I

,Cadillacs In Stock

I
I
I
I

WE BUY, SELl, TRADE
E vcnings Call
John Fuller 446 -4327
L ee John son 256 · 6740
Douq Wetherhol1446 4244

2 Sedan DeVilles

For Sale

'Por
p ,- Ql r LE E"l ect n c
lc1blc E l ectrrc f•l terniJi o r
and Powe r Plants Ph .t .t6
)7 16
126 1f

1 Calais Coupe

I

II KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
f

Cad&gt;llac-Oidsmobile -

GMAC Financing Available .

992 _5342

~

Open Eves. Ti16_- Til 5 p .m . Sat .
" YoU'll Like Our Qual tty Way of Do1ng Business"

1

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
·
Lloyd Mclaughlin

1

1

1
1
1
I

L_ -·---~~~:_~e~~~---. ---i
For Sale

For Sale

Would You Believe
'Build an ALL STEEL
Building
Prrces ?

at

Pole

Barn

'

GOLDEN GIANT
All Steel BU&gt;Idmg s
Rl. 4- Box 148. Wave rly, 0

Ph . 614-947-2296

~

350 V-8 automatic tr ans , power s teeri ng and brakes ,
dnrk green .fini sh , vmy l roof , saddle bucket seats,
conso l e. rad1o, ltke new WW tires.

6 Cyl., auto., clean .

1970 Nova V-8 Cpe. ---- --·---··-·:'1295

'1888

,
l

Vinyl roof , grey fini sh , h igh mtlea g e, good tires.
automat ic , power s teenng , radt o, sliver fmish Black

72 MERCURY COMET 2 DR SEDAN

Real Estate For Sale

302 V-8, auto ., P. S., vinyl top .

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1 E R EO system
Me In t osh
MC 2105 A mp M c intosh MX
11 33. tuner , p re amp .• dual
177 9 turntable Bos e 901
spe akers . will se ll as sy ste m
o r by component Ca ll .4.46
514 9 during d a y , 245 9445
a ft er 6
159 6

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

(

20~

6forS1 .00

·: Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave

Ga lhpuhs, 0 .

Blk vi n y l to p , r e d fiish. V 8, automa tic , power steering

72 QiEV. IMPALA 2 DR HARDTOP

V-8, auto ., P. S., P. B., air ~ond .

new,
Trim

4-speed. AM radio.

'1588

• •

Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.
195 Upper River Road-

See One of These Courteous Salesmen :
Bill Grueser , George Harris, Dallas Blevins

PH. 446-9800

••

CO~

OMEROY MOTOR
992-2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves . TiiB

r',j

i\

•••

Pomeroy
':' "

ALIGNMENT
SPECIALISTS

TUNE-UP SPECIAL

TYPE 1
BErnE

Hou se on
69 Gar t te ld
Avenue , Sl 5, 000 , Sl.OOO
down , balance l rk e r ent , 5
room hou se and basement

Plu s TalC .

50 Other models

6

&amp; a1r conditioned
cars shghtly

INCLUDES higher
.Labor
.Adjust Valves
.New Plugs &amp; Points
-New Valve G&lt;1skets

In th e Vrllage of Port e r , 1
and 44 100 o f an acre, 3
bedroom s , ca rpeted , bath ,
modern kitchen , plenty of
c ab in ets , fue l oil furnace .
s torm doors and . st orm
w 1ndow s, r u ral
water .
S'2 6 , SOO

OIL &amp; WBE SERVICE

Pr. ce
redu ce d
on
r es tau r ant
on
Sec ond
Avenu e
d-o 1ng
good
business. new equipment.
~rtce d at S13 ,000 , $10,000
down . owner will ca rry
' balance

TYPE 1 &amp; 3

$715

$990

lype 2. 4.

&amp;

Rabb&lt;l s

Dashers, Scirocco

INCLlJDES

Thr ee and e rght t e n ths
acres, older two story
hou se, some carpet , bath .
storm door s and window s.
rural water , cement block ,
ce llar hous e and other
outbuildmgs , S17,000

·Oil Change

• Servtce W - S Washer

·Clean Strainer
• Lube
&amp;

• Check Battery

Latches

&amp;

T&gt;res

• Check Trans - A:w:le
New filter where

MUffiER SPECIAL
'67 to '74

Evenings
Russell Wood
446-4618
Ronn1e Canaday
446-3636

BEETLES
·New Muffler
·New Cla'mps

$3745

Plu s Ta x
A - C cars

slightly h1gher

Alignment Special

INCLUDES
·New Tailpipes
·New Gaskets

$995

ONLY

PLUS PARTS

For Sales
19 .000 BTU
Fr1Qtda1re air
c ond
L1ke new
379 2184
Sears .s H P
Outboard
engine with fuel lan K Used
once .

163 3

OFFER EXPIRES AUG. 2, 1975

PH.446-3575

If convement1 please call for an appomtment.

THALER FORD SALES

Quality of the Lowest Possible Price!

19 71 CHEVY Pick u p , extra
sharp Ph . 367 73 29
163 3

(1) New, genuine V.W. parts only .
(2) Labor and Parts guaranteed for 6 mo.'s
or 6,000 miles.
(3) V. W . Trained Mechanics
{4) Thurs. evening &amp; Sat. morning shop

USED rrdm g mower Bo len ' s
Whe e l Hor se J acobso n .
M ·elv1n
Li t tle
Trading
Cent er. Chesh i re .
16 3 J
- ~-~~ -- -

WELL KEPT c arpets show
the results of regular Blue
Lustre spot clean fng . Rent
electr ic
shampooer
$1
Cent ral Supply

DON WATTS VW, INC.

163 6

u se d Furniture for sale
BEDROOM suites , tw i n a:,d
full si ze . Cook stoves, rce
box . So m e ant•Ques. tables ,
etc Mr s Emma Oakes. 17lt.t
3rd Ave , H1Jnt1ngton , W
v a ?S703
163 3

Upper River Rd.- Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph . 446-9800
Authorized Dealer

FUNNY BUSINESS

HOME Care Products " 5wr pe
and Somet h1ng Else " 379
??40
163 3

.'

••
&gt;

163 3

74

Cho p per

By Roger Bollen

•

3 PIECE b edroom su •te , good
cond 446 10 / &lt;t.'

.t ?SO

.... .

'"

Th ree bedroom
hom e,
bath , furnace, storm doo r s
and windows , rural waler ,
large cor ner l ot. good
garden
space,
in
tt'1e
Vtllage o f Patr 1o t Pr 1ce d
$9 ,000

HAR L EY

ul

,.,
Authorized
Dealer

J unction of o ld Route 35
and Bulavi!le Road . 3
b e droom dwelling w i th
burtt in ca bin e t s, so me
c arpel , encl-osed por c h ,
recreatton room and larg e
ut il1 ty room , 2 ba ths, and
garage , a lso barn in fair
cond ilion , S26, 500

- -

.WE HAVE THE RIGHT DEAL
mR YOU

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Modern hom e, 3 bed r ooms ,
c arpeted , mo dern k.tch en,
cab it1ets.._ Georges Creek
Road , can assum e FHA
loa n a t 7 14 perc ent , WJih
S3 .000 d ow n and ba l ance of
Sl6.000 al Sill a month

- -

Clean

New '75 Chevrolet 1 ton stake, 2112 ton H.
duty CE-65 , 112 &amp; l/• ton Pickups, Sport Vans,
4 - Wheel Drive Pickups &amp; Suburban in stock.

71 VW SUPER BEEnE

Stx
room s
a nd
b ath
dwelltng wtth 4 acres o f
level land , barn and lhr ee
outbu i ldings , located 7
mr tes from
the Meigs
County m rnes , Sl9 ,500

-

1972 Ford "8" Pickup .......... !2295
XL T Trim , P Steering, Whit ewa ll Tires, Radio. like
W. W Tires , Chrom e Bumpe r s a nd Wheel

•2395
O ne acre vacant lot s ,
Sl.B25 , wdl se ll on la nd
contrac t , would be suitable
lor building or tratier spot,
loc ated on hardtop road
wrltun
s ex
m iles
of
Gall rP011S, Oh10
Three b edroom home on
Te xas
Rd ,
alum i num
S1 d1ng , full ba semen t , :.d
acre lol , stor m w.ndow s
and doors

1968 Chev. Impala Cpe•........... '89!:»
&amp; brak es

'2095

WOOD,
REALTOR

.. 36"x23".11 .009

Pomeroy

I"

1970 Chev. Camaro.................. '2095

72 DODGE DART 4 DR SEDAN

new .

THOMA S Far n E&gt;: ter mtnatmg
Co T erm 1te and pes t con
trol
Wheelersb ur g , Ohio
IJ6 If

well ; good davenport ; end tables, metal based table

8/winga-AIDNIJW.'

446 3434

'

reed bottom chairs need r e pa ir : la r ge naugahide
blanket chest ; ca m e l bac k trunk ; stools; beaded hand
bag ; wooden c h est. ant. luggage ; ant . oak m1rror ;
large wooden chest; marble table lamp ; steamer
trunk ; ant . picture frames; cameras ; wooden tobac c o
box ; 5 umbrella s; lot books , metal umbrella stan,d , 2
c hrome chairs , bra ss ca ndelabra ; i ron figurine door
stop , marble pedestal ; brass table lamp; iron flower
stand; Electrolux sweeper ; 2 utility cabinets; utility
table; lot ov'erstuffed cha1rs ; wooden sewmg box; 2
walnut chairs w-carved backs. beig'e . wtng back
modern sofa ; brass plaque s; bra ss ink-well w -glass

Arrived!

Realty Inc.

Fully equ ipped .

Phone 992-2196

J seat wagon . V-8 au t omat,c. power st eering and
br akes , a tr cond ., tilt wheel, luggage tack , green
ftn• sh , radio . Ni ce

Auto .• P .S. , factory air .

OHIO RIVER

A1r' condittoned , full y equipped . Blue with black vinyl top .

PUBLIC AUCTION

&amp;

Real EsbtP. for Sale

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan........... s1995

THOMP~UN

1970 Chevrolet Estate ...............'1695

lop.

2 Dr Sedan . C lean car

DAN

A-door. l ocal ca r , a•r condlt ton ed , full equi pment.

73 GREMUN '1"

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

1972 Chev. 6 cyl. N&lt;Wa ................. s1995

1970
1966
1968
1965

.1971 Matador ........................ '1495

' 2995

IIUlDSIIIP HOUaS: IIOMII I All · 7 I'll SATUIIIo\lS I All · 5 PI
DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

Powe r s teering &amp;

cyL std trans , radto , li ke n ew w w tires , blue-finish,
m ce car wi th good economy

6 Cyl.. au1o .• P. S., extra clean .

u ~ on M Y ur purdt.oud and delir&gt;ered

M altbu HT Cpe , JSO V-8 engi n e, power s t eering, fa c tor y d tr , t.mt ed gl ass, rad to, wheel covers , good tires,
blk m tenor , s.t l ver grey fini sh Spectal. •

1972
Comet 2 Door:........ ·-······ '1850
6

74 MAVERICK 4 DR SEDAN

SU SIIIUII' MT M5YII£S, ClWMD calVERT OR BUl NWOII

Atr condi tione~ , fully e q ui pped , good s teel belted RadtaJ w -s w t1 res . Sharp tn st de and out Le ss Ihan 112 new price AM -FM
stereo r ad to

· LANDSCAPING
SHRUB S, TREES , . ROC K
GARDENS.
ALL
GUARA NTEED Patio and
poo l l andscapt n g, St one ,
sa n d, . t ool.
shrubbery
tn mmrn g . Dump
tru c k
serv tees 245 91 31
187 ff

Phone 992-7155
Middleport, Ohio

•3695

S10C11. PRICED

SO ACr NOW - HAVE ANEW CAR
AND FREE GASOLINE FOR VACATION.

1973 Ford LTD 4 Dr.................... s3095

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE

Call

Auto .• P .S. , P. B. , a ir cand .• vinyl lop.

- FREE
IN

SALE
Lower Than "City Prices"
1974 Chevelle ....... _.........•........'3095-

74 PLY. VALIANT BROUGHAM

I
Offer doe. not apply to prerJiouo/y oo/sl. ord.en.

1973 Ford Gran Torino .................. s279~

Property sold will sell household furnishing c :;:J S listed:
Ch e rry Empirechestw-glass pulls ; walnut r.u ff ee table
w -wh lte marble top ; small Chinese wooden c h es t w
Chinese coms inl a id ; w1cker maga zi n e r ack , 4 oak
glass front bookc ases; walnut 2 draw er desk; cane
bottom desk chafr , c h est drawers w -doors &amp; pull out
drawerc: &amp; drop pulls ; ant . 4 poster ma.hogany bed ;
stand ; floor -table lamp s, dre sse r w -tilt mirror ;
mahogany chest-drawers; t w in mahogany 4 poster
beds; walnut veneer bedroom su ite w-stencll ( bed ,
dress ing table, high boy chest-draw er s, and dres ser),
ant. bureau w -glass pull s. ladder back r eed cha ir exfra
good : o ld rad1os: dresser lamps; open bookca s es ,
porch table w - metal legs ; larg e wicker b asket w -lid ,
wa lnut stand ; seve ral mode r n stand s; mahogany
dresser ; four ant floo r lamps- arm chair w - reed back

Truckloads

TIME

C

ALL LOCALLY OWNED

from Smidt NoiM&gt;n Moto,.. lhroagla July ill, 1975.

condtt1on

ATHENS, OHIO
SUNDAY, JULY 13 at 11 O'CLOCK A .M.
44 ELMWOOD PLACE, ATHENS, OHIO (Oil Eas1
S1ate S1reet)

AUCTION

ONE

CU S T OM upholst e r rn g and
draper teS Fab r rc by Ca r o l e
The Cotton Grn n y 367 0300
\ 40 30

San d y a ,; d Beaver I ns ur an ce
Co has o ff er ed services f or
Ft r e In surance coverage rn
Gallt a Co un ty for almost a
centu ry F arm s , hom es and
p erson al
prope r ty.
cove rages ar e avaai l able t o
mee t rn d1V1dua l n eeds
C
ontact Harr y P1 t c hfor d ,
you r ne1ghbor and age n t
149 6

A PARTM E NT downtown , a ll
c lcclrr c, ce nt ra l h ea l and ai r
c ondr tr onr ng , wa ll to wa ll
c nrp e t . co m p l ete krt c'h en .
rd ea l for s rn g les or co u p l e MOBILE hom e - pnvate lo t
P hone 4d6 ·1383 days, aft e r 5
overl ook tng r1ver
Ce ntral
p m -11 6 0139
ai r Ph 446 0336
lOB If
92 -tf

1968 CORVETTE
St mg r ay ,
43 ,000 actua l m il es
m tnt
cond
19 74 - 250
Honda
P hone 388 8746
16 1 6

THIS .AD WILL APPEAR
ONLY PLEASE CLIP!

B/\CK HOE and d ozer work
Se ptrc tan ks and l eac h beds
388 8865 or JBB 8230
1JO tf

Tll.u offer

1974 GMC 1500 Pickup .............. s3595

243 If

REF RI GE R ATOR an d arr
co nd repa rr serv . ce Se r
vrce call $8 3() 7 0110
I 59 26

11

•

-

Services Offered

1 11 II

NEW Rc~ency . In c
apart
ment 2 BR . carpeted , t o tal
el ectrrc P h 675 5 104 o r 675
5386 Sand Htll . Rd , Porn!
Pl easant W Va

All : Ford L TDs, Elites. Torino, ' Granada,
Mustang lis, Mavericks, Pintos, &amp; Pickups offered at July Clearance Prices. No gimmicks, no
add-ons , 1ust lower prices, higher trade-ins, less
difference, yet with highest quality, finest serVIce, and honest values. All used cars offered at
clearance prices.

Ph 379 2133

Monday th r u Frtda y 1 to 5
Sa t &amp; Sunday 2 to 5

!="OR your l rr e and Batte ry
n ee d s come to Sea rs T tre
Sh op 1n The Srl ver B rt doe
P l aza
·
33 If

c:

267 tf

2 STORY ho use. bath , on
O hro R rver Lela r t , W Va
Ca ll 895 3376 Frshrng and
boat .ng

'15.0 .00

BEDROOM brrck home.
centra l arr Avat labl e July
15 Cat! 4 ·16 •15 11
167 6

011 liE I'UIIOIASE Of MY USED CAR
Mil Sloooa 11IQJGH MY.

8 ft . body, 6 cyl, w ith f u ll y tin 1shed top cover . L1ke new

TERMITE PEST CONTROL

Or

19 69 FORD Galaxte va Au t o
a 1r co n d P h 367 766 4
161 )

A . C. Bradford, Manager
C.
Bradford , Auctioneer

163 3

J
B R F REE 1nsp ectron Ca ll 446
MOB ILE
Ho me,
12&lt;15 .
Merr 1ll
O' D e ll.
George's Creek Rd 446 935 8
O
p
e
rat
o
r
b
y
Exte
rminal
163 3
T ermrte Se r vtce , 10 Belmont

1973 N OVA 350 VB. 39,000
m r l es
Ve ry goo d co nd
:)1.900 Call 388 8 19 3 after 5
pm
161 3

THE BRADFORD AUCTION CO.

For
th e
best
tn
ar Chit ectu r a l d es 1gn and
plans tor n ew homes . small
co mm erCi al
bulldtng s.
a partm e nts or re mod eling
Call Co ll ec t
B rit W a lk er
Thurman. Oh1o
1-682 -7498

817

BRADBU RY
f urnished eff
. ap t
No
4 wrth shower
A du l t s only ' No
pe t s
A var i able a fter the 19th 7'19
Second A11e Oep req Ph
446 0957
162 1f

50 GALLONS OF GAS

OK USED CARS

'

Oil DE ~ Of MY IIBf lUlCK, I'OIITIM:, OPn
OR GMC TIIUCillalllliH .III.Y

GE ;.,E ; ALCONTR AC11NG

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

For Rent or Sale

The following personal property of Lillian
Stieff wi II be sold at the residence at 570 S.
2nd Ave. in Middleport, Ohio.
Marble top dresser. marble top wash stand,
ch est on chest , 2 ce dar chests , other chests,
glass front china cupboard, hall tree , ladder
back cane rllck er and other rocker s, w"ing
type dresse r , 2 ladder back chairs. 5 din ing
room c hair s, wicker roc·ker , organ stool,
desk. sheet music, books, lamps. buffett,
coffee table. sm oki ng stand and other
stands, davenport. barrel I back chair. rugs,
musi c ca bin et, magazine rack, card tables ,
bedd i ng, some clothing. metal cot. metal
wardrobe. si ng1e Jenny Lind bed ,
refrigerator . gas range - 36in ., old High
oven. Estate gas range. kitchen ca binet ,
cooking utensi ls, Dis hert ·depressi on glass,
ston e jars , and other articles not li sted .
Rob er t J . Lewis
guard ian. Terms : Cash
Not responsible for accidents.

SLEEPI N G r oom
at
Seco nd Ave 446 0550

•

-~-~~

-~~-

Tr • Sl ,l tc Mo bd c H om es
l'.ii.Jf&gt; lh:f,O N ilrlt CO 1 br
1971 17)!60 Cov c nty ') IJr
196'12.:60 Val1an 1 2 br
196 1 l!l it T r ove ! T rarlc-r
197 ~ 2? f1
Roy&lt;1 l Knr qh t
197 1 ?2 11 \ ,d a rr
tl!'l!l 10)( 1/ 1-/oycrat t I b r
1'/:,l:j 8 :o: \'i l1 nv el o ? br
1fl'&gt; 6 8x 15 r arrlan e ? br
1'-1',7 fl x l '&gt; l rav eto 1 br

OLDS Cu t la ss Supr e m e,
P 5, P B, FM AM . Stereo
tap e Ca l l J46 3717
159 6

BR trarler SIOO mo Rro
G r an de , Oh1o Ph 446 0952
or 446 13 97
~ 63 3

JULY

•

:

CHECK OUT THESE
SHARP ONE OWNER CARS

'

a.r 1111 1110 al W.100 GALLONS OF GAS - FREE

-~---;

H OME ' Im provemen t s and
ad d rtrons Roo f 1ng , vrnyl
sid1ng Ca ll 446 0668 or 245
5136
15256•

'

,..S car ._ • ••

cAL-L Roger White t or p lum b
rng and r epa rr s Ph 256 1232
or 256 64 11
53 1f

367-7250

163 J

Auto. - Sales
'

B R unf Mobrle Home '2
m iles of town on UppN R l
7 Call alt er 7, 446 9465
16] 1

VOIJ&lt;SWAGEN

.. ,... ...... ' .... ,...,..,_.
.

If

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY Painting ,
r es rd ent1a l and commer ci al
rnter •or and exter1o r Barns
1~ 3 6
a n d roo f s, a rrl ess sp r ay tng ,
fr ee
estrm at e
Patnl
4 RM S and bath Available
anywhere 256&gt;-1449
soon Call 4A6 0571 a ft er 6
6 1 tf
p m
163 3
CU::. t UIV1 t-&lt;t:J'o' \ ODEL IN G. 20
---- ---::--yea r s exper •e nce . 38 8 -8308
)6 STATE S t n e w and mod er n
New d r y wa l l ce rlrng with
I BR unfurn1 s hed apa rt
s
wrrl or textur e des 1g n !
La r ge LR . carpeted 5. 125
Other d r y wall. r epa ir . vi n y l '
rna
p lu s utrl11l es. deposrt
wal lp a p ermg , new baths .
r eq u rred
416 .2282 a ft er 5.
new k it che n s A nyt h rng 1n
.f,J6 28d0
r emo d elr ng or r epa1 r
138 If
I 1 If
L6-w
weep,,~ and monHi l y
.
.
rates at L tbby Hotel 446
SEPTIC TANK CLEJ ' 4EO
17 4 3
MODERN
S anitation ,
NOW AVAILABLE
108 If
P ome r oy. Qh10 992'1.3954 or
992 7349
APARTM EN 1 tor lea~~, JJ.6 1 .~
96 If
Second Ave . ove r lookrng
the Park
Ltv1 ng room
PR OTECT your mob il e home
per month
kllche n . dmet t e , 1 BR . ba th
wrth TIE DOWN ANCHORS
S.125
mo
Call
4J6
2325
or
R ents a lu~eur y 1 bedroom
Call Ron Skidmore , 446. 17 56
P J' s . .u6 18 19
a ft er J p .m
apar tm e nt locate d around
128 $If
22 1-tf
our b ea uttful lak e ·
1
L 11.1HT housekeeprng r oom
• ALBERT EHMAN
Park Cen t ral Hote l
Water Del1ve rv Serv1ce
78 t f
Patrrot Star , Gal lip o li s

19 /0 M O GILE hom e 11x 65 , arr
co nd Ph ?.t ~ 584·1

YA RD Sa ! e a t 2 173 Easter n
Ave Tu es an d Wed 9 6
163 2

13

up s larrs apartmen1 , )
and balh C!e&gt;an . no
cl dul ts only ,,,,6 1519
1·12 If

f}l'

I 0) I I

YARb SA L E
FURN
h ouse rn Thurman .
3 F AM I L Y Por ch Sa l e Ju l y
Ohro.
fully
cnrpe t e d .
l •ll h lh r u 19th
Bulav dl e
pan eled Adults on l y $85 pe r
Por ter Rd
Cel li 367 7d83
Ph 353 355 0 day s
m on th
Good ch il dr en's and ~eens
353 6978 eve
c lolhes T oys , Avo n bott l es
159 6
163 J
1ss r.c R E ~ vCJCiml pas t ure
l F AM I LY
YA R D
Sale
land 6 m li Ps f rom town .\.16
Monday an d Tu es 9 ? App
0008
1
9 · rn lies f rom I ow n t owurd
151 If
Eu r eka Da rn
Watch l or
srq n s
MOI' I LE 11 ome spa ce for re nt ,
16 3 1
• \.16 0008
152 I t
1 t-=AM ILY Ya r d Sa l e Some
new dem s July l&lt;tth and Of I ICE :')pa c e for ren 1.
I Sth 9 n G r een ho use across
downt own
from Kanauqa D r tve Inn
116 000 8
163 ?
152 t f

•

RM 5 and bath , furnace .
qarage , laundr y r oom and
yard 738 Se r ond Ave
16) If

167 2

Homes For Sale

LARGE Rummage Sal(_• J ul y
16 , 17, 18 7 . 8 5 Mercerville
' 32 If
Grange Hall o ff Rt 718
1
m rle on Co)(" Mercervrl l e Rd
Clolhmq , household goo d s, rUR N IS HED e ff rcren c y $80
Ulrlrlres pd J 46 dJ 16 a ft e r 6
1ewelry
p Ill
163 1
159 6

and decornl1ng .
sp r r~ y br ush and rol l er F r ee
es r rmates . 7·15 566 7.
16 1 6

BIG used desk

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

51 .

B&amp;S M OBI LE HOME S
Pf Ptc.ls .ln t , W Va
1'11 1 1"/~6 ~ / 1\R Con c ord trpout
IW19 1?1( 61 J llR L 1bc rt y
1969 12..: 60 7 U R nuddv
146 '1 1/ )( 60 J fiR 13 1!)dalc Ex
p ,mdo
l'lf&gt;l 1/1'. 60 l R f.&lt;' lhNrllplO I1

RUMMAGE So l e Ju l y IB fr om
t H p m Ju l y 19 fr om 8 am
.t p n1 C lothes . q ames . brkes
and
mrsc
Ep rs c o p a l
Chu r ch
5•11 Second Ave
Sp o n sored by N ew L 1fc
l ul he r L cpque
16 3 I

1 YPI N G SERV I CE S W rll do
all krrid S o f l ypmq on my
home Ca l l .1J6 J999
75,1 If

1'iO 2(.,

help you wtn the cup

M~ile

161 ]

RARYSITl iN G rn my horne
1-lb 65) 1
167 d

JUNK

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

&lt;1

f UR N

,,

FREE GASOLINE!

EAVE S pout Hanging 1n
Gaf ltpoli s and Pt P leasa nt,
P ome r o..v and Mtddl epo r t
area Ph 446 1910
117 78

~OOM S
and bath 6 room s
and b&lt;llh rn c rly , rea sonable
.1.16 ,tQ ?/
167 3

p m

•

2

2

?

.

PA SQUALE
Elec' tr tta l
&amp;
In Sui at tnQ p IOJ Ce ~~~ St '
Gal lr p olrs
h 4.46
f
I 26 I

1

1 AR mo brl e h ome ul rl rlres
!urn
Nrce l_pcatron , must
have&gt; qood ref A46 4170 be
1ween 7 and 9 a m ond 3 6

• J

Services Offered .

FURN apt 3 rms an dbat h,
co rn er of Court and Second
Av&amp; Adults S~25 Ph . 446
16 15 or 1243
157 If
-- ----FUR NI SHED
apartment
Ad ult s only . 446 9523
tf
16 1

162 3

'

:

7 B R n rcely turn ished a parr •
ment Dep req Aduf1S only
D p Martrn &amp; ~ons vv dter
Men preferr ed Ph 446 2852
O elr ... ery serv1ce
Your
a f ter 6 p m
pa lr onage wr11
be
ap
163 If
p r ecrate d Ph 446 0463

TR/\I L ER. &lt;lOO Prkc
Kanauga Aif6 ?699

•

' '

.

[

'

_29 - The Sunday T1mes -Sentinel, Sfmday 1July 13, 1975

1 ROOM hou se , cr ly W&lt;"tler tn
kttcnen On M c Co r mtck Rd
Call .1 116 0?39
167 3

7 If

tRIOAY&amp; Svlurday , 9arn trl
7
Salv1 c f~udoiL F &lt;Hr vtc w
Rd
C.lntp CO nl ey , PI
Plea s an t
Mu s t
s e ll
cvery tt1ri1Q lcuvrnq co untr y

Wanted To Do

Wanted To Buv

You II have d ou b ts about mak mg a maJor e xpendit Ure fo r the
home . You s h oul dn 't Th e
purchase w11 1 save you bot h
la b or an d mon ey

' 306 tf

f 1UL 1 '\ M obrll' Home Se r
v1c e C. k rrtrnq roo t c ooJI1nQ .
P&lt;1l •O S.
,l wnmg ~ .
Anchors ,
ce ment
work
r r e&gt;e
f' &lt;,l rnt,ll e s
C&lt;l ll ,116 7 950
&lt;1 11 fl r l 30 p m

J

1esumc
to I= rrsl Un it ed Presby l crraw
Ch u • ch
51
Stil r e
S1
Gnl l rpolr S. Ot1 r0
159 6

1633

Bemice Bade Osol

1 I Q If

K C r c q 10 m o nlh Sco llr sh
hOU ~ f'
br Ok l' P h
Tcrrrcr
l·16 OA 17

Yard Sale

~ c rrd

FEMALE Dob erman 1
o ld R ewa r d $15 Ph
5 189

GrapM

f0 E f&lt;' CU RY M o nt e qo '
16 emu
m.les. C li C
c ond
( j rJ O Cl
q ?t &lt;; il lll(•,lq f'
wi11 IP
wr l h v•r l y l lOP 711 ', ] A ! o r

\ 'I I )

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPP I ES
K
P Ke nnP IS, ]!:ltl A?f&lt;l Rl
55t . 1. m r c as t of Por t er
305 11

had been no mterfer ence When belongs to yo ur opponents You
the mterference shuts out yo ur may have shut them ou t II he PAINTING

normal action you should slratn has a rea ll y good hand he ca n
to find a bid any t&gt;me your hand btd on and your supporl should
IS unbalanced. but lend to .pass be enough for h&gt; m .
when your hand is balanced
South 's vuln era bl e two •L _ A
diamond ca n ts one of those r~EI'fNJ~
*
· Cl
bids based on a stout heart and
1 .oJL (/
a few high-card pomts. ll is not
recommended and when you FRANKLIN
see what happened to South you ·--:~~---~-:~~
wjll know why .
·With no mterference West
would rebid one spade and the
p~rtnership would bid to thr ee

15! 6

BOBB I S Pood l e B ou lrQU C'
Profess1onal qroom 1nq by
apporntm c nt
Ph
.1\6 19·1·1
60 11

chr l dren Call tor clppt at
Gallra County Cl1 rl dren ' s
Home d.t6 9?37
15 7 6

mad e

king o l trumps

room &lt;;
G cl lt , a H Oill

wee kly

5

P I NE R I DGE CO LLIE S
1\KC Rcq Co ll rcs sable a n d
while ( 611 1 ?56 1767
781 II

$20 per week. Call 446 234 2,

I a a .m . to

There \Va :s JU St nu wa\: the
del ense (.'uult.l shu t out h 1s a ce CHOIR drrcctor

South

!96ll LTD ~ IUI10n waqon . P S
P n
r.,r c ond t tJ m r per
gill Sf!OO Ph 36! 0 103 rlfl er

dut 1(' ') r \'(IUir Cd lfl
IJ U", 11H 1 ')'i /\t\u&lt;,l h,lVI
&lt;r OO d
po •r &lt;;O il i'tlr ly
CJ n C1
I 'i I (-,
lr •lt ph Orll' VOl( (' l 'i h r &lt;; pr r
V.:••r&gt;k
Nrrl P (!IVirl(j &lt;HI P
f,/' C WI111 C G er m an Shf'p twr rl
"' 'l r 1lrl l •, t,rlu c,
'&gt;010 01
or
pupp1t'S Ph 1&lt;16 ifH 8 t
VI.'O I k l' )' p• fr f' ll ! I'
We Will
161 l
lr olll l YOU l Or OUr Oj) l'r,llron
l'o)! t/,tJ C o T r 1burH'
1\ KC
1- Pma l f' Oalnl cl lran
1&gt;0
y e ar
s hot s .
worrnPd
1~
hou sebrok en
Love s krd '&gt;
\ 6 J 119 1
16 ) I

when th e smoke of bdltle had

North -South vul n(' r ab le

l\(_•rnitr d pup
\,1 11 10 •1 1°,fl I Of,f,J
l 'r 'l '",

CNGLI SH sr•ltcr (Brrd doq ,
Pupp1t; &lt;,
Rc asonrlb l f'
No
P•lPf'r S \16 !69 ] a l lf't 6 p 111

Back ca rne a fourth hea rt and WOMA N to lrv e rn and c are fo r

4K 94

1?69 P L YM f.&lt;'oi'ldrunn c r , 313 3 if
~ pd
S IOO Phone 1·16 31 15
161 ]

l OLLit::
clnrl
l:: lilj l r&lt;, h
She&gt;phcrd pup pr es 'i.? S e&gt; a c h
Mok e &lt;t n1 cc DC'I t or c t1rld
'J'i 6 6 / 11 ( ,111 ,1ny 11m e
161 3

Th e
Ga lltp o h s
D ai l y
I Trtbun e
a nd
Sunday
Then he led d cl ub Wesl cashed ' Ttm es - Se nttn e l n ee d s a
carrier for the Vinton
tw o elubs and h 1s last h1gh
spa d e ton w h1 c h E as t th rew hrs are a . If any boy or gtrl in
lc:1sl club ) Then he led a second th e area .ts int er es ted , the
hear t East won. led th e hea rt rout e h as 71 da i ly a nd 78
Jdck and So uth 's e &gt;ghl of Sunday , and pay s approlC

trumps fl.:' II tu Wests mne The

•Q 6

'i. I 'IO

7 'i6 j ,f fi ,f

16 3 3

I '• 1 6

'io l 5,00 0 to $25, 000 m come
All b en e fit s Mr Hank s
(6 14 ) 775 -9414 ct ff e r 6 p . m

dt"cd Wt.'sl shll ted to a hea t t dt
tn c k two E~ast tuuk one h1 gh
h C'tll t rHl d the queen ol , Spil dt'S

• 5

Ph

'&gt; I

1-t'p q

p1 P&lt;.

~drlol l l

Free bid goes to slaughter

l [- l PIN G
r.t lf.'

J(j',6 C J', JE EP nf'w top , roll
h &lt;l r n e w Pil&gt;n 1 Ron Sh eet s.

1\ 0/\ P { JI N (, ol ll d 1\i&lt;C W ••&lt;, ly
pup •. Crr(IJ' I K r' n nt' I S &lt;l tf,
IH ' 1

/1

'I' r• rr

WIN AT BRIDGE

fa crng park ,
I 1g t1 I
. h 0 u Se k e e p 1 n g ,
e l eva t or.
t acllrt•eS
tor
rt:trr ed person Park Central
Hotel
981f

16 3 3'

Pefs

/\f&lt; (

For Rent

l l • ' I ,l ~

l '&gt; l· ) (l

16 ) I

1

IN D • VI[lllf•l W1 l h prrvillt • h'F ( ,
1&lt;• 1111 (':&gt;~(' "
Wollk1nt)
pl1onc TO cJo !J dli C&lt;liiOnoll
! •or~P ~
/\11 &lt;1(/ C':'o
STUD
s ur vPy frorn 1t1 c rr ov.· n
SERV I CE ~'i 6MOH
I o rn P P ir one 1.16 1l6J alter
1 '&gt;V 6
p
111 G,l l lrpo l r&lt;, Ru ':&gt; rn es&lt;;,
Co ii Pqc
/\ KC R e q fi Cr1QI 0 P UPIJ• f'5. I
161 If
wt·ck s o l d Pt1 7S6 IJ 963
16 1 6

111 cl l ' ~ P l' f Cl ll' n eed of l&lt;1dY
10 carP l or rnvnl 1d l&lt;ldy Ry
[J ,ly or Wf'Pk.
Plf&gt;a~P
Cel li
0 Jv•IIC'f\all•nqt•r . J 61 /IUJor
wc.r p l'o x 1 1 . J\dd 1~ 0n Oh10

IC'IT

&lt;: 1 0

For Rent
-~ ARCE room

1 \lq

l\/'v1

and mmd

Beau l tful
behind

An~ q uPs

~ 01 ~ 1n ~ ~ 0 1 ~ 1° 1l~ ~ I y

!I

, rrl I'

Auto Sales

' d\ L [
v r, J-&gt;I I·,IY i o f

Hl\ h. ILNI JI f-.'
• • r\1 .,
p r I' I ('r r c &lt;l , [ • p n C&lt;
I' " :.
1
10 c (l G ttllrp o l 1 ~ TroiH!I' I'
ll, l '•

l WO

pass e d away · J uly t l
191"
Th ose w h om we lov e qo o ut

AN Tf I) u E

17 tf

16 ] 1

I'N- - LOV I N G , mernorv
ot
1 G r ov e r
W
Wauql1
w110
1

No

l~;o l l f

• away July 12, 19 7J Sadly
1 missed by h ts wile liHll ii Y
• and t r1end s

•

Help Wanted

I .

I •

&gt;

,'

446
163 3

·~

1J r T Campe r Se lf cont a i n ed
~650
P h 388 8H l l

•
'~

t6 3 3

'

.

417 SECOND AVE.
For Sale .
NEW Idea pull lype mower
lnt
75
bu
manure
spreade r . Joh n Deere 175
bu
Manure spreader
J
Thacker &amp; So n s Woods Mill
Rd , BidWell, Ohro
163 If
NEW
2
PIECE
EARLY
AMERICAN
LIVING
ROOM S UITE . S249.9S REG
5299. 95. THIS WEEK ONLY .
RICE 'S
NEW &amp;
USED
FURNITURE , 854 SECOND
AVE 446 -95 23.

--

--~~-~-----

~T ' RAW

Sl
bale
Her e f or d
Fa r m ,
Rrver Rd 256 11 13 .

IpS· 1&lt;1&gt;LL.IO'J J ·

..

For Sale

,

~EG

wes l e rn
Pleasure
ho r se , c he s tn ul ge ld• ng , .,
qen ll e 682 7&lt;tq8
13fl II

e

Plum bing &amp; Heating
DEW ITT 'S PLUMB ING

ANO HEA TING

CORBIN&amp; SNYDER
US E D FURNITURE
ADM I RA L
Qe lrt gera t or ,
Early Amer1c an c ou c h ,
ant i que
iron
bed .
Cor!
sprr n gs and m all r ess, end
tab l es.
bookcase
bed ,
Chan nel M~ster r a dio a nd
tape player , wa l n ut dresser ,
drum table, tab l e lamp and
co ff ee tab l e 955 Second Ave
Ph4J6 1171
157 tf

'

v

_

I

Rou t e 160 a t Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
~ '
187 -tf I
-

---

-

~--~- -- -

I

GE N E PL:.ANTS&amp; SON.
I
PLUMB I NG - H eating - Air ;
Co nd1t1on •ng 300 Four th 1
Ave , Ph 446 1637
r
- - -- - - - - - - --;::--48 tf :

162 3

Q'f&lt;t&gt;.) . BoT DQ/.J1T
F~eET, 40lYRE

1'-&gt;TO ME' F"QR

Bu t te r
Lower

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATI N G
Ga ll tpOIIS, 446 4782
STA NDARD
Plumbm g H ea li ng
214 Third Ave, 446 -3782
1
187 -tf t

-

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

CAR TER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEA TING

Cor F ourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446 3888 or 446 -4417 • 1
16S .tf- 1

-

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

�..

. '

•'

.

28 - The Sui11lay Times- Sentfflel, SUII u«y, July 13 1975

tFor Fast R~sults Use The Sunday Titnes-Se-Rtinel Classifieds
r~Card
of Thanks
EWI S H 1 to expressourdeep

Notice

~

apprec rat ion f or all lt1c 11cl p
'I an d, k 1ndn ess shown to u s
: dunng our t l n~e of so r row
, T h e Ade l e Wh tlfak er ta mrly
"
1631
-• - - - - -

DEAD s toe k. r f' m ov ('(1
CI1,HQ(' c ~1 11 /I'• •1 1 1:

•

lin MemOfY

I~
LOVING
memory
ol
: Willa rd Ree s . who pa~scd

':, WEE P ER
,lr1CI
S l'WII H I
lll&lt;1 c lrrn e&gt; r e&gt; P"" p.l rt &lt;; (ln c1
su ~plr es
P1 c k
LJ IJ
CJn c1
dl' l t v e&gt;ry
n.l VI ';, Vcl l i i Ui l l
Cl eaner ' rn1 ll' up (,f' OI\1\' &lt;,
(r e t' k. 1-:d Ph 11o 0:' 91

ATTE N T I O N ''
CAREER PEOPLE
1fl [
I 0 t ~ !\! '('('&gt;
t
C: &lt;lrt ' (' r
d• p ul 1t S
fu t
on
f10 111 e
r t' pr P&lt;, f' fl ' c'll ron
I " '· ' v &lt;·n r
tu ll ( Oil1n lr'i.&lt;.r on
•' rlt l\IIH I 'S ,lvt rcl&lt;l C ~ ~ 000 p l' r
I l 1Il l I II \
ln d
yt• .rr d UI O H l( r (' ,l ~ o • I l l
r•,l f i1 11HI '&gt;
Co nq)I P lf'
p t r &lt;;On illrt r• rl
l r d oll•rl tl
Coo d wo rk •rtq COfl(l l lt On.,
(mt ' HI Mr
ld r•y
f,? /.111 0
lh l ;.,

N ew

~

\ Cll f'S (1.
l/&lt;. t' {l (I)' S

n •o n otor s

I)O i t ( ('
l' l (

R (lclfo s

W /\ Y

". NJt(C

llob ~

f~ , l ( l to

a n lenna s

(olr J f'n
l1r11ld
f , f'OrL J f'i

~ qutp

\ r t' PI.. kcl
1 10 I 'J I 7

Q t, ,u

C .ll lt polt ".

!

of s i g ht

But n ever out ot m 1nd
They are
hearts

1n

che r,sh ed

,. I

1l1l'

\'i I I

thr u

I

I •

tl •

r

IQ". (' l!

( • I 0 '•' l ' l

~

I /

url ro

' I

Of those they l eave bet1m d
L ov,n g cl nd kmd ,n &lt;'Ill 1lt S

I

I ', (

) •,

ways .
Upng ht and lUSt to tn e uHI of

h ts d ays
St n ccre and

tr ue

tn

Help Wanted

IH• arl

fr om
1
1 1
1
'-:;
I
''
9
1 ~ % '';,~ 1\ ~ ~~ r l ~ roo~('~~:~ (.s~
On(• , " 1111 n ' rl c
Soultl o f'
clrr Cr~ll 1 1111161 ~ day 446
P o r rl' r O h• o
&lt;; l .:l! e Rt
• ' 1·1 nrqht
°'1·
160
16 3 11
160]
l'f 6H OLD \ , c~rr , roood c ond
.., P h 7"i6
New "r es No rust

ALL

memortes

hr

Sadly rntssed antllov f' d by
wtfe . child r en and or a nct

children

16? I I
W/'I. I TR E C.&lt;; wanted part l •tTH'
.md t ulllrrll!' Mus t tw 7 1 No
expe r .en c l' n ecps&lt;; ,l r',- &lt; .111
tlf• 1010 or ·1•16 ·1'',1

Wanted To Rent
BO AT dock to re nt

J

16 7 JQ!:I
16 ] 1

_ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ notJ mn p ,\ !tl'r We'&gt;l p ~t :-iSt'd t hP
ove r c~d l
E::1st made lttt'
I:!
NOll I'll
brtlli ~mt dec 1s 1o n to doub le
. l09R2
Tht• ~ laught e r .,., a s tc t nit&lt;' 10

• 10 9 54

BL INN BOA RD S
OUTDOOR
ADVERTISING

4J 753
WEST iO&gt;
• AK74
• 72
• J 964

EAST

• ll J
• •\ K .I 8 .I
• IF J

41062

4AQ 8
SOUTH
• J 65

las l cl ub was led and ruffed

• A K 10 8 2

L

f.'F_ ( ] F'IION I ' 1

cleared a wav Sou th had
JU St two tn c'ks

West

1.

North

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

I.
East

,)I

CARR IER NEEDED

Dble

and
2•

~~ ~~rw~~

PttsS

Opemng lead - K •

From

Flo rtda

Mv part ner opens one spade
What should I do w&gt;Jh
"' Q 6 0 • 3 2
• Ai 05

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In general. a free b&gt;d merely ~ J 9 4 :l
says that you would have made Ra&gt;se /urn to two spades If he
lhe same b1d cheerfully 1f th ere ca n t make lwo spades I he hand

l

8

'

Astro-

s p.m .

~~ ~

For Sunday, July 13, 1975
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Yo ur wander l u st is m 1sstng today You 'll be happier a t home
workmg on a hobby or putte r tng around th e ya rd

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You commun icate well w1th
peo pl e t od ay You r spec ta l
lorte 15 crea t1ng u n1que acliltllles fo r soc ta l eve nt s that wtl l
be fun for all

N 1731, BEN FOUIIIDED
FIRST CJRCULATIII/6
Li8RAR.V 1111 AMERICA .
TtiiS EIIIABLED '!liE FOoR
TO BECOME AS WEl.l.
R-EAD A5 TI&lt;E 11/EALTH'r'
BooKS WE RC E.i(Pfi-JSIVE
IN THOSE TIMES.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

W o rk done fo r a rela ltve who
needs help wtll ea rn you thank s
and a w ar m sense ol persona l
pnde when t h e JObs don"e

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Where
yesterday yo u were ove rl y
li beral wtth you r means today
you're su p ercq; ut1ou s You II
have a good b ut tnex pens1ve
ttme vt s1t1n g a shu t- 1n

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1.22) A
day when you II fin ally be able
to rela x and put all 1houg t'lt s o f
work o u t of mind You'll enJOY
soc1aliztng w1th f n ends

ty
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You won 't con std e r 11 an Intru SIOn rf a fnend d rops 1n and
asks you to slla r e tn an ac tiv ity
You II f 1nd harmony m tand em

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Cr ea lt ve met h ods you 'll d iS cover 1n purswng a hobby wtll
rev1taltze your th1nktng and
prav1de con ttnu ed mterest

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. . 23)
You II accept the pra 1s es
heap ed on you to d ay w •th
dignifred reserve bu t you 'll b e
burst1ng with pnd e tnward ly

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You re &lt;l lover not a lighter to
d ay so don 1 res1st th e urge to
be romt=~ntiC w1th your mAte or
spectal Jr1 end

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You re kee n 1n compettt1ve
s p orts to day A h tg h degree o f
luck wil l ad d to yo ur s k1ll to

WANTEQI

-

\/ ' ~'11

pF!p Cr lnq
111t c rror
('XI P rrOI
p ilrnlrn q
r.! f' asonr~l) l(' Pll
116 11 ?] or
I 16 16 I
l .l'i I t
l't.:L OrCIIIIlCj pcl1 111rnq
,111 pcl p r· r rnCI piln ( l rl1(1
r f'P ('S I IIl lili(' S ()7 '1 '!(,f-: '•
'J J , I

! {' f, ; ' f '
y.

I

BABYS I TTI N G Ill m y home
any trmc
H o t mea l s 1n
nt e n ary 446 J5 14
160 3

CHIPWOOD

Poles, moximum dia. 10" on
largest end ...... •7.00 per ton
Bundled Slabs .. !6.00 per ton
DELIVERED TO:

OHIO PALLET CO.
Rt- 2· Pomeroy

SMALL blu e handbag Wtth
ca l cu l a tor keys mise Ca l l
Mr Goodr ich , &lt;1 46 .1012 Ext
65 Rewar d . In v 1cr nr ty of
Rl
718, 7, 588 , Bob Me
Corrn tch Roa d
161 6

For lease or Sale
roR LEJ\ SE or sa l e by land
contrvc t house and servrce
!lardqe
6.1.1
51h
Ave ,
K anauq a
0
formerly
S tewo:~rt 's Ga raq e
148 If

1\UTO S an ct
388 8776

scrll p

446 2747
159 6

21) Th e rec og n tt 1on you ' ve
been seek1ng w 1ll come to you
to d ay, prov1 d ed you ve do ne
the tob to th e bes t o f your a btll -

Ph . 992-2689

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

7

68

PONTIAC Cataltna o-r
Bonnevtlle 7 door for part s
Ca ll ·146 4839, a s k f or Jun ro r
161 3

rrn s
IS

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison, Ohio
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

Ph 4 46 -7572
Biln~ F rna n ctnq

t

For Rent

MODEL OPEN

1'J~ r, CR E pas t ur e . tar111
o t l1 c r· -;, pa c P downtown
mof) II C II Or nC SPtiC C
116
l) llflf\

I

Lo ca ted
mtle w es t of
H o lz er Ho spttal on Rt . 35 .

l

PH. 446-1599

~-------l

EXC Tra•l er Space , Ro dn ey
area Ca l l 446 4766 a lt er 5 30
even rngs
16 1 )

' I EEP IN G Room s
week l y
I rl iP&lt;; P.lrk Cc n lr;\1 H o tel
] 06 If

QUAIL CREEK
MOBilE COMMUNITY
lOTS FOR RENT
L ots for r e nt . Rent 1n c lud es
water ,
sewage.
tra s h
CO I ICC flOO , T V hook -Up, 2
acre r ecrea ttOn area
Rodney - Cora Rd .
Rodney , Oh10
' Ph 245 -5021 Gall1po1ts area
992 -7777 Pom e roy area

. '

4 dr . Sedan . One caref ul lo ca l owner
bra kes

B. R PA IN T Center, In c
Be n 1am1n Moo re parnt s
srn ce 1883
Wa ll pa _per
Q ualified
p ainter
85 3
Seco nd P h J46 9,458
130 t f

DOZ ER work . exca.va l ru g,
la nd
clearing,
p o nd s,
b asements , l a nds capt n g
Ca ll 446 005 1

163

ff

4 Big

SATURDAY, JULY 19 - 12:30 P.M.

1971 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan ..s1995

Including dishes, new bath and hand
towels, good "Sed appliances, fine
u·sed furnitur~;- values.
If you have a need, we have it! First
Come! First Sold!

See: Fred Blaettnar, Darrell Dodrill
or Dan Thompson

•
'
•

•
'

OPEN EVES . TIL 7: 00 , THURS. SAT TIL I 00

'

'' 742-4211

Why pay rent when you c an
bu y t h is n 1ce 3 bedroom
home tn town . has tarQe
l 1v 1ng room , n1ce bath . c1 ly
water and natural gas
Hous e
has
just
b een
re- painted outs1de. loc at ed
at 11 Ga ll1 a on a n1 ce level

lot

JUS T L IKE NEW -- Thi S
love ly home has b ee n
co m p le tely remod eled , has
3 b edroo ms . fami ly room ,
ba th with shower , ntc e
kitchen wdh lo vel y ne w
ca b rn e ts , new wa tts and
ce llmgs , bea ut rfut c arpet
t h roughout. n ew Sid ing on
ou ts ide. located on 3 n1c e
level lot s , all lh1s and on ly
pn c ed at 522 , 500

'

'

'
•

'

•
•
•

'

See Herb. Dave or Mike Grate.
Also Gene Smith

.-

'

.

RCA con sole TV , lot linens , bedding, spreads,

out of old Hearse; salters ; silver plate ; gold

ban~

pitcher ; larg ~gla ss vase ; depress ion , and other pot lery. Yard &amp; hand tools ; bench grinder w -motor ;
wrenches; brice -bits ; round Maytag washer; double
tutl - eexter washer, and many other items Nothing

shown before day of sale.
Clip this ad for time &amp; direct&lt;ons ol sale Sunday, July
13 at 11 o'clock A.M.
·
Refreshm~nts. Positive 10. Terms-Cash day of sale.
Not respon'iible for accidents.
• Mr . John JOnes in charge of sale.

AUCTIONEER- BILL JANE5-Phone962-4377 or 557l4t1
'

'

•

GOOD OLDER H O ME
Has 3 l arge bedrooms ,
bat h , new furna ce. well
rnsulated. garag e. hou se
wa s ju s t repainted outs 1de .
looks very ntce Large leve l
lot P rrce d at $14 , 400 and
owner wtll h elp tmance

$7000

Italian pottery ; 2 small German figurines ; German
figurine on marble : blue glass goblet; Japanese ging"er
box; Rogers silverware ; trivets ; fancy overlay vase

Rutland. 0. :

Middleport, Ohio

LOW DOWN PAYMENT

P71 -97

rocker; 2 ani. dolls w-bisque heads ; gold bracelet; set
Heisey candle sticks ; other candle sticks ; rinse tubs
GLASS, CHINA, AND OTHER ITEMS : Water pitcher ,

•

461 S. Th1rd St.

INIIJUIUI

pots, pans, dishes, silver, etc .;
clothes hamper;
wicker settee &amp; chair ; 2 porch chaise lounges; 2 porch
chair s; elec. refrigerator ; gas range ; ant. c ane bottom

Rutland Furniture

JAY. DRIVE - V ery lovely
ra nc h only 7 years ol d, 3
bedr oom s. 2 baths . ntce
fam ily or d.nmg room wrth
larg e pat ro . fully c a r pet ed ,
cent ral a1r . 1 c ar Qarage
N 1ce locafton with a lovely
tot Good buy tor 530 , 500

...........

fowls, etc.; elec. appliances ; kitchen clock; old tables;

·'

•

FORD

Steve Snowden

bullet; mahogany gate leg table ; round gold eagle

Good used Keller Dining , Room
SrJite, china, table, 4 chairs, cloth
seats and back.
Only 349.95

Ouar Baird
John Fulfer
Doug Wether holt
451 Second Ave .
Gallipolis , o .

NEW LI STI NG love ly
br•ck
hom e
with
3
bedrooms , 2' J baths , n i ce
k.tc h en drnrng area , full
base ment. 2 ca r garage ,
beut 1ful lawn W1th several
fruit trees. l o ca t ed on 2
acres of nice land nca r
Crown C ity

NEED CAR INSURANCE?

several smaller Oriental &amp; throw rugs ; Formica top
dress ing table ; green Mohair chair ; large &amp; small
e lec . fans ; 6 dining room c hairs w -satin seats ; walnut

SPECIAL BUY.!

(B.

160 6

lt. rugs, 12x15 ft . wool rug ; one 9xl2 Oriental rug ;

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

Ford 6 cyl. Maverick : .. ................... 1395
Mercury.2 Dr. HT ......................... '495
Chev. VB Impala Coupe....... ............ 1895
Ford Pickup ............................... ~~95

74 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

63 CHILLICOTHE RD . ·
This older home has 3
bed r ooms , b ath , livi ng
room . klfch en , good sh a p e
1nS •d e need s some work
outsrde . c.ty water and
na t ura l qas . qood buy for

Full power , vinyl top. leather interior, AMFM stereo radio , radial tires and Climate
Control air conditioning.

" .500

6 ACR E S · Country li v ing
and c lo se to town , larg e a
bedroom hom e ha s 2 baths ,
ba seme nt W1lh shower
tovely k1tchen with n rcc
c ab1nets, sewmg roo m ,
fully ca rpeted , fir eplac e in
tam rly r oom 3 ca r bloc k
Qarag e

$6800

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
$5500

122 A CRE S - N1 ce rolltng
land wilh app JO a cres
tr llabl e.
some
t 1mbe r .
tobacco base , has a larg e
- barn and oth er smalle r
bur ldm gs. house is old but
rn a lov e ly p lac e Located
on
N e bo
Rd ,
ask 1ng
$39 900

(3) New 1975

LIS TING S NEEDED
We
have buyers f or all typ es o f
prop er ty L tSf wllh u s tor
actr on on your h ome, farm ,
or bus iness

White, blue vinyl top, blue cloth inL full
power, Climate Control air, T&amp; T wheel ,
AM-FM .stereo &amp; tape , radial tires.

sides; mahogany coffee table , 4 ant. ladder back

mirror;

EALTORS C~NSULTANT

One very. ver y careful local owner . Air conditioned . Like

CO N C RETE wur"' wanteo,
d rtveways , pa t 10S, po r ches,
s teps , walkways , etc, good
jo b
guaranteed
Free
est1ma tes Ca ll 379 2158 .

lamp , tiered table ; wing back arm c hair ; several 9x12

'2488

I

,Cadillacs In Stock

I
I
I
I

WE BUY, SELl, TRADE
E vcnings Call
John Fuller 446 -4327
L ee John son 256 · 6740
Douq Wetherhol1446 4244

2 Sedan DeVilles

For Sale

'Por
p ,- Ql r LE E"l ect n c
lc1blc E l ectrrc f•l terniJi o r
and Powe r Plants Ph .t .t6
)7 16
126 1f

1 Calais Coupe

I

II KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
f

Cad&gt;llac-Oidsmobile -

GMAC Financing Available .

992 _5342

~

Open Eves. Ti16_- Til 5 p .m . Sat .
" YoU'll Like Our Qual tty Way of Do1ng Business"

1

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
·
Lloyd Mclaughlin

1

1

1
1
1
I

L_ -·---~~~:_~e~~~---. ---i
For Sale

For Sale

Would You Believe
'Build an ALL STEEL
Building
Prrces ?

at

Pole

Barn

'

GOLDEN GIANT
All Steel BU&gt;Idmg s
Rl. 4- Box 148. Wave rly, 0

Ph . 614-947-2296

~

350 V-8 automatic tr ans , power s teeri ng and brakes ,
dnrk green .fini sh , vmy l roof , saddle bucket seats,
conso l e. rad1o, ltke new WW tires.

6 Cyl., auto., clean .

1970 Nova V-8 Cpe. ---- --·---··-·:'1295

'1888

,
l

Vinyl roof , grey fini sh , h igh mtlea g e, good tires.
automat ic , power s teenng , radt o, sliver fmish Black

72 MERCURY COMET 2 DR SEDAN

Real Estate For Sale

302 V-8, auto ., P. S., vinyl top .

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1 E R EO system
Me In t osh
MC 2105 A mp M c intosh MX
11 33. tuner , p re amp .• dual
177 9 turntable Bos e 901
spe akers . will se ll as sy ste m
o r by component Ca ll .4.46
514 9 during d a y , 245 9445
a ft er 6
159 6

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

(

20~

6forS1 .00

·: Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave

Ga lhpuhs, 0 .

Blk vi n y l to p , r e d fiish. V 8, automa tic , power steering

72 QiEV. IMPALA 2 DR HARDTOP

V-8, auto ., P. S., P. B., air ~ond .

new,
Trim

4-speed. AM radio.

'1588

• •

Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.
195 Upper River Road-

See One of These Courteous Salesmen :
Bill Grueser , George Harris, Dallas Blevins

PH. 446-9800

••

CO~

OMEROY MOTOR
992-2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves . TiiB

r',j

i\

•••

Pomeroy
':' "

ALIGNMENT
SPECIALISTS

TUNE-UP SPECIAL

TYPE 1
BErnE

Hou se on
69 Gar t te ld
Avenue , Sl 5, 000 , Sl.OOO
down , balance l rk e r ent , 5
room hou se and basement

Plu s TalC .

50 Other models

6

&amp; a1r conditioned
cars shghtly

INCLUDES higher
.Labor
.Adjust Valves
.New Plugs &amp; Points
-New Valve G&lt;1skets

In th e Vrllage of Port e r , 1
and 44 100 o f an acre, 3
bedroom s , ca rpeted , bath ,
modern kitchen , plenty of
c ab in ets , fue l oil furnace .
s torm doors and . st orm
w 1ndow s, r u ral
water .
S'2 6 , SOO

OIL &amp; WBE SERVICE

Pr. ce
redu ce d
on
r es tau r ant
on
Sec ond
Avenu e
d-o 1ng
good
business. new equipment.
~rtce d at S13 ,000 , $10,000
down . owner will ca rry
' balance

TYPE 1 &amp; 3

$715

$990

lype 2. 4.

&amp;

Rabb&lt;l s

Dashers, Scirocco

INCLlJDES

Thr ee and e rght t e n ths
acres, older two story
hou se, some carpet , bath .
storm door s and window s.
rural water , cement block ,
ce llar hous e and other
outbuildmgs , S17,000

·Oil Change

• Servtce W - S Washer

·Clean Strainer
• Lube
&amp;

• Check Battery

Latches

&amp;

T&gt;res

• Check Trans - A:w:le
New filter where

MUffiER SPECIAL
'67 to '74

Evenings
Russell Wood
446-4618
Ronn1e Canaday
446-3636

BEETLES
·New Muffler
·New Cla'mps

$3745

Plu s Ta x
A - C cars

slightly h1gher

Alignment Special

INCLUDES
·New Tailpipes
·New Gaskets

$995

ONLY

PLUS PARTS

For Sales
19 .000 BTU
Fr1Qtda1re air
c ond
L1ke new
379 2184
Sears .s H P
Outboard
engine with fuel lan K Used
once .

163 3

OFFER EXPIRES AUG. 2, 1975

PH.446-3575

If convement1 please call for an appomtment.

THALER FORD SALES

Quality of the Lowest Possible Price!

19 71 CHEVY Pick u p , extra
sharp Ph . 367 73 29
163 3

(1) New, genuine V.W. parts only .
(2) Labor and Parts guaranteed for 6 mo.'s
or 6,000 miles.
(3) V. W . Trained Mechanics
{4) Thurs. evening &amp; Sat. morning shop

USED rrdm g mower Bo len ' s
Whe e l Hor se J acobso n .
M ·elv1n
Li t tle
Trading
Cent er. Chesh i re .
16 3 J
- ~-~~ -- -

WELL KEPT c arpets show
the results of regular Blue
Lustre spot clean fng . Rent
electr ic
shampooer
$1
Cent ral Supply

DON WATTS VW, INC.

163 6

u se d Furniture for sale
BEDROOM suites , tw i n a:,d
full si ze . Cook stoves, rce
box . So m e ant•Ques. tables ,
etc Mr s Emma Oakes. 17lt.t
3rd Ave , H1Jnt1ngton , W
v a ?S703
163 3

Upper River Rd.- Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph . 446-9800
Authorized Dealer

FUNNY BUSINESS

HOME Care Products " 5wr pe
and Somet h1ng Else " 379
??40
163 3

.'

••
&gt;

163 3

74

Cho p per

By Roger Bollen

•

3 PIECE b edroom su •te , good
cond 446 10 / &lt;t.'

.t ?SO

.... .

'"

Th ree bedroom
hom e,
bath , furnace, storm doo r s
and windows , rural waler ,
large cor ner l ot. good
garden
space,
in
tt'1e
Vtllage o f Patr 1o t Pr 1ce d
$9 ,000

HAR L EY

ul

,.,
Authorized
Dealer

J unction of o ld Route 35
and Bulavi!le Road . 3
b e droom dwelling w i th
burtt in ca bin e t s, so me
c arpel , encl-osed por c h ,
recreatton room and larg e
ut il1 ty room , 2 ba ths, and
garage , a lso barn in fair
cond ilion , S26, 500

- -

.WE HAVE THE RIGHT DEAL
mR YOU

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Modern hom e, 3 bed r ooms ,
c arpeted , mo dern k.tch en,
cab it1ets.._ Georges Creek
Road , can assum e FHA
loa n a t 7 14 perc ent , WJih
S3 .000 d ow n and ba l ance of
Sl6.000 al Sill a month

- -

Clean

New '75 Chevrolet 1 ton stake, 2112 ton H.
duty CE-65 , 112 &amp; l/• ton Pickups, Sport Vans,
4 - Wheel Drive Pickups &amp; Suburban in stock.

71 VW SUPER BEEnE

Stx
room s
a nd
b ath
dwelltng wtth 4 acres o f
level land , barn and lhr ee
outbu i ldings , located 7
mr tes from
the Meigs
County m rnes , Sl9 ,500

-

1972 Ford "8" Pickup .......... !2295
XL T Trim , P Steering, Whit ewa ll Tires, Radio. like
W. W Tires , Chrom e Bumpe r s a nd Wheel

•2395
O ne acre vacant lot s ,
Sl.B25 , wdl se ll on la nd
contrac t , would be suitable
lor building or tratier spot,
loc ated on hardtop road
wrltun
s ex
m iles
of
Gall rP011S, Oh10
Three b edroom home on
Te xas
Rd ,
alum i num
S1 d1ng , full ba semen t , :.d
acre lol , stor m w.ndow s
and doors

1968 Chev. Impala Cpe•........... '89!:»
&amp; brak es

'2095

WOOD,
REALTOR

.. 36"x23".11 .009

Pomeroy

I"

1970 Chev. Camaro.................. '2095

72 DODGE DART 4 DR SEDAN

new .

THOMA S Far n E&gt;: ter mtnatmg
Co T erm 1te and pes t con
trol
Wheelersb ur g , Ohio
IJ6 If

well ; good davenport ; end tables, metal based table

8/winga-AIDNIJW.'

446 3434

'

reed bottom chairs need r e pa ir : la r ge naugahide
blanket chest ; ca m e l bac k trunk ; stools; beaded hand
bag ; wooden c h est. ant. luggage ; ant . oak m1rror ;
large wooden chest; marble table lamp ; steamer
trunk ; ant . picture frames; cameras ; wooden tobac c o
box ; 5 umbrella s; lot books , metal umbrella stan,d , 2
c hrome chairs , bra ss ca ndelabra ; i ron figurine door
stop , marble pedestal ; brass table lamp; iron flower
stand; Electrolux sweeper ; 2 utility cabinets; utility
table; lot ov'erstuffed cha1rs ; wooden sewmg box; 2
walnut chairs w-carved backs. beig'e . wtng back
modern sofa ; brass plaque s; bra ss ink-well w -glass

Arrived!

Realty Inc.

Fully equ ipped .

Phone 992-2196

J seat wagon . V-8 au t omat,c. power st eering and
br akes , a tr cond ., tilt wheel, luggage tack , green
ftn• sh , radio . Ni ce

Auto .• P .S. , factory air .

OHIO RIVER

A1r' condittoned , full y equipped . Blue with black vinyl top .

PUBLIC AUCTION

&amp;

Real EsbtP. for Sale

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan........... s1995

THOMP~UN

1970 Chevrolet Estate ...............'1695

lop.

2 Dr Sedan . C lean car

DAN

A-door. l ocal ca r , a•r condlt ton ed , full equi pment.

73 GREMUN '1"

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

1972 Chev. 6 cyl. N&lt;Wa ................. s1995

1970
1966
1968
1965

.1971 Matador ........................ '1495

' 2995

IIUlDSIIIP HOUaS: IIOMII I All · 7 I'll SATUIIIo\lS I All · 5 PI
DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

Powe r s teering &amp;

cyL std trans , radto , li ke n ew w w tires , blue-finish,
m ce car wi th good economy

6 Cyl.. au1o .• P. S., extra clean .

u ~ on M Y ur purdt.oud and delir&gt;ered

M altbu HT Cpe , JSO V-8 engi n e, power s t eering, fa c tor y d tr , t.mt ed gl ass, rad to, wheel covers , good tires,
blk m tenor , s.t l ver grey fini sh Spectal. •

1972
Comet 2 Door:........ ·-······ '1850
6

74 MAVERICK 4 DR SEDAN

SU SIIIUII' MT M5YII£S, ClWMD calVERT OR BUl NWOII

Atr condi tione~ , fully e q ui pped , good s teel belted RadtaJ w -s w t1 res . Sharp tn st de and out Le ss Ihan 112 new price AM -FM
stereo r ad to

· LANDSCAPING
SHRUB S, TREES , . ROC K
GARDENS.
ALL
GUARA NTEED Patio and
poo l l andscapt n g, St one ,
sa n d, . t ool.
shrubbery
tn mmrn g . Dump
tru c k
serv tees 245 91 31
187 ff

Phone 992-7155
Middleport, Ohio

•3695

S10C11. PRICED

SO ACr NOW - HAVE ANEW CAR
AND FREE GASOLINE FOR VACATION.

1973 Ford LTD 4 Dr.................... s3095

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE

Call

Auto .• P .S. , P. B. , a ir cand .• vinyl lop.

- FREE
IN

SALE
Lower Than "City Prices"
1974 Chevelle ....... _.........•........'3095-

74 PLY. VALIANT BROUGHAM

I
Offer doe. not apply to prerJiouo/y oo/sl. ord.en.

1973 Ford Gran Torino .................. s279~

Property sold will sell household furnishing c :;:J S listed:
Ch e rry Empirechestw-glass pulls ; walnut r.u ff ee table
w -wh lte marble top ; small Chinese wooden c h es t w
Chinese coms inl a id ; w1cker maga zi n e r ack , 4 oak
glass front bookc ases; walnut 2 draw er desk; cane
bottom desk chafr , c h est drawers w -doors &amp; pull out
drawerc: &amp; drop pulls ; ant . 4 poster ma.hogany bed ;
stand ; floor -table lamp s, dre sse r w -tilt mirror ;
mahogany chest-drawers; t w in mahogany 4 poster
beds; walnut veneer bedroom su ite w-stencll ( bed ,
dress ing table, high boy chest-draw er s, and dres ser),
ant. bureau w -glass pull s. ladder back r eed cha ir exfra
good : o ld rad1os: dresser lamps; open bookca s es ,
porch table w - metal legs ; larg e wicker b asket w -lid ,
wa lnut stand ; seve ral mode r n stand s; mahogany
dresser ; four ant floo r lamps- arm chair w - reed back

Truckloads

TIME

C

ALL LOCALLY OWNED

from Smidt NoiM&gt;n Moto,.. lhroagla July ill, 1975.

condtt1on

ATHENS, OHIO
SUNDAY, JULY 13 at 11 O'CLOCK A .M.
44 ELMWOOD PLACE, ATHENS, OHIO (Oil Eas1
S1ate S1reet)

AUCTION

ONE

CU S T OM upholst e r rn g and
draper teS Fab r rc by Ca r o l e
The Cotton Grn n y 367 0300
\ 40 30

San d y a ,; d Beaver I ns ur an ce
Co has o ff er ed services f or
Ft r e In surance coverage rn
Gallt a Co un ty for almost a
centu ry F arm s , hom es and
p erson al
prope r ty.
cove rages ar e avaai l able t o
mee t rn d1V1dua l n eeds
C
ontact Harr y P1 t c hfor d ,
you r ne1ghbor and age n t
149 6

A PARTM E NT downtown , a ll
c lcclrr c, ce nt ra l h ea l and ai r
c ondr tr onr ng , wa ll to wa ll
c nrp e t . co m p l ete krt c'h en .
rd ea l for s rn g les or co u p l e MOBILE hom e - pnvate lo t
P hone 4d6 ·1383 days, aft e r 5
overl ook tng r1ver
Ce ntral
p m -11 6 0139
ai r Ph 446 0336
lOB If
92 -tf

1968 CORVETTE
St mg r ay ,
43 ,000 actua l m il es
m tnt
cond
19 74 - 250
Honda
P hone 388 8746
16 1 6

THIS .AD WILL APPEAR
ONLY PLEASE CLIP!

B/\CK HOE and d ozer work
Se ptrc tan ks and l eac h beds
388 8865 or JBB 8230
1JO tf

Tll.u offer

1974 GMC 1500 Pickup .............. s3595

243 If

REF RI GE R ATOR an d arr
co nd repa rr serv . ce Se r
vrce call $8 3() 7 0110
I 59 26

11

•

-

Services Offered

1 11 II

NEW Rc~ency . In c
apart
ment 2 BR . carpeted , t o tal
el ectrrc P h 675 5 104 o r 675
5386 Sand Htll . Rd , Porn!
Pl easant W Va

All : Ford L TDs, Elites. Torino, ' Granada,
Mustang lis, Mavericks, Pintos, &amp; Pickups offered at July Clearance Prices. No gimmicks, no
add-ons , 1ust lower prices, higher trade-ins, less
difference, yet with highest quality, finest serVIce, and honest values. All used cars offered at
clearance prices.

Ph 379 2133

Monday th r u Frtda y 1 to 5
Sa t &amp; Sunday 2 to 5

!="OR your l rr e and Batte ry
n ee d s come to Sea rs T tre
Sh op 1n The Srl ver B rt doe
P l aza
·
33 If

c:

267 tf

2 STORY ho use. bath , on
O hro R rver Lela r t , W Va
Ca ll 895 3376 Frshrng and
boat .ng

'15.0 .00

BEDROOM brrck home.
centra l arr Avat labl e July
15 Cat! 4 ·16 •15 11
167 6

011 liE I'UIIOIASE Of MY USED CAR
Mil Sloooa 11IQJGH MY.

8 ft . body, 6 cyl, w ith f u ll y tin 1shed top cover . L1ke new

TERMITE PEST CONTROL

Or

19 69 FORD Galaxte va Au t o
a 1r co n d P h 367 766 4
161 )

A . C. Bradford, Manager
C.
Bradford , Auctioneer

163 3

J
B R F REE 1nsp ectron Ca ll 446
MOB ILE
Ho me,
12&lt;15 .
Merr 1ll
O' D e ll.
George's Creek Rd 446 935 8
O
p
e
rat
o
r
b
y
Exte
rminal
163 3
T ermrte Se r vtce , 10 Belmont

1973 N OVA 350 VB. 39,000
m r l es
Ve ry goo d co nd
:)1.900 Call 388 8 19 3 after 5
pm
161 3

THE BRADFORD AUCTION CO.

For
th e
best
tn
ar Chit ectu r a l d es 1gn and
plans tor n ew homes . small
co mm erCi al
bulldtng s.
a partm e nts or re mod eling
Call Co ll ec t
B rit W a lk er
Thurman. Oh1o
1-682 -7498

817

BRADBU RY
f urnished eff
. ap t
No
4 wrth shower
A du l t s only ' No
pe t s
A var i able a fter the 19th 7'19
Second A11e Oep req Ph
446 0957
162 1f

50 GALLONS OF GAS

OK USED CARS

'

Oil DE ~ Of MY IIBf lUlCK, I'OIITIM:, OPn
OR GMC TIIUCillalllliH .III.Y

GE ;.,E ; ALCONTR AC11NG

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

For Rent or Sale

The following personal property of Lillian
Stieff wi II be sold at the residence at 570 S.
2nd Ave. in Middleport, Ohio.
Marble top dresser. marble top wash stand,
ch est on chest , 2 ce dar chests , other chests,
glass front china cupboard, hall tree , ladder
back cane rllck er and other rocker s, w"ing
type dresse r , 2 ladder back chairs. 5 din ing
room c hair s, wicker roc·ker , organ stool,
desk. sheet music, books, lamps. buffett,
coffee table. sm oki ng stand and other
stands, davenport. barrel I back chair. rugs,
musi c ca bin et, magazine rack, card tables ,
bedd i ng, some clothing. metal cot. metal
wardrobe. si ng1e Jenny Lind bed ,
refrigerator . gas range - 36in ., old High
oven. Estate gas range. kitchen ca binet ,
cooking utensi ls, Dis hert ·depressi on glass,
ston e jars , and other articles not li sted .
Rob er t J . Lewis
guard ian. Terms : Cash
Not responsible for accidents.

SLEEPI N G r oom
at
Seco nd Ave 446 0550

•

-~-~~

-~~-

Tr • Sl ,l tc Mo bd c H om es
l'.ii.Jf&gt; lh:f,O N ilrlt CO 1 br
1971 17)!60 Cov c nty ') IJr
196'12.:60 Val1an 1 2 br
196 1 l!l it T r ove ! T rarlc-r
197 ~ 2? f1
Roy&lt;1 l Knr qh t
197 1 ?2 11 \ ,d a rr
tl!'l!l 10)( 1/ 1-/oycrat t I b r
1'/:,l:j 8 :o: \'i l1 nv el o ? br
1fl'&gt; 6 8x 15 r arrlan e ? br
1'-1',7 fl x l '&gt; l rav eto 1 br

OLDS Cu t la ss Supr e m e,
P 5, P B, FM AM . Stereo
tap e Ca l l J46 3717
159 6

BR trarler SIOO mo Rro
G r an de , Oh1o Ph 446 0952
or 446 13 97
~ 63 3

JULY

•

:

CHECK OUT THESE
SHARP ONE OWNER CARS

'

a.r 1111 1110 al W.100 GALLONS OF GAS - FREE

-~---;

H OME ' Im provemen t s and
ad d rtrons Roo f 1ng , vrnyl
sid1ng Ca ll 446 0668 or 245
5136
15256•

'

,..S car ._ • ••

cAL-L Roger White t or p lum b
rng and r epa rr s Ph 256 1232
or 256 64 11
53 1f

367-7250

163 J

Auto. - Sales
'

B R unf Mobrle Home '2
m iles of town on UppN R l
7 Call alt er 7, 446 9465
16] 1

VOIJ&lt;SWAGEN

.. ,... ...... ' .... ,...,..,_.
.

If

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY Painting ,
r es rd ent1a l and commer ci al
rnter •or and exter1o r Barns
1~ 3 6
a n d roo f s, a rrl ess sp r ay tng ,
fr ee
estrm at e
Patnl
4 RM S and bath Available
anywhere 256&gt;-1449
soon Call 4A6 0571 a ft er 6
6 1 tf
p m
163 3
CU::. t UIV1 t-&lt;t:J'o' \ ODEL IN G. 20
---- ---::--yea r s exper •e nce . 38 8 -8308
)6 STATE S t n e w and mod er n
New d r y wa l l ce rlrng with
I BR unfurn1 s hed apa rt
s
wrrl or textur e des 1g n !
La r ge LR . carpeted 5. 125
Other d r y wall. r epa ir . vi n y l '
rna
p lu s utrl11l es. deposrt
wal lp a p ermg , new baths .
r eq u rred
416 .2282 a ft er 5.
new k it che n s A nyt h rng 1n
.f,J6 28d0
r emo d elr ng or r epa1 r
138 If
I 1 If
L6-w
weep,,~ and monHi l y
.
.
rates at L tbby Hotel 446
SEPTIC TANK CLEJ ' 4EO
17 4 3
MODERN
S anitation ,
NOW AVAILABLE
108 If
P ome r oy. Qh10 992'1.3954 or
992 7349
APARTM EN 1 tor lea~~, JJ.6 1 .~
96 If
Second Ave . ove r lookrng
the Park
Ltv1 ng room
PR OTECT your mob il e home
per month
kllche n . dmet t e , 1 BR . ba th
wrth TIE DOWN ANCHORS
S.125
mo
Call
4J6
2325
or
R ents a lu~eur y 1 bedroom
Call Ron Skidmore , 446. 17 56
P J' s . .u6 18 19
a ft er J p .m
apar tm e nt locate d around
128 $If
22 1-tf
our b ea uttful lak e ·
1
L 11.1HT housekeeprng r oom
• ALBERT EHMAN
Park Cen t ral Hote l
Water Del1ve rv Serv1ce
78 t f
Patrrot Star , Gal lip o li s

19 /0 M O GILE hom e 11x 65 , arr
co nd Ph ?.t ~ 584·1

YA RD Sa ! e a t 2 173 Easter n
Ave Tu es an d Wed 9 6
163 2

13

up s larrs apartmen1 , )
and balh C!e&gt;an . no
cl dul ts only ,,,,6 1519
1·12 If

f}l'

I 0) I I

YARb SA L E
FURN
h ouse rn Thurman .
3 F AM I L Y Por ch Sa l e Ju l y
Ohro.
fully
cnrpe t e d .
l •ll h lh r u 19th
Bulav dl e
pan eled Adults on l y $85 pe r
Por ter Rd
Cel li 367 7d83
Ph 353 355 0 day s
m on th
Good ch il dr en's and ~eens
353 6978 eve
c lolhes T oys , Avo n bott l es
159 6
163 J
1ss r.c R E ~ vCJCiml pas t ure
l F AM I LY
YA R D
Sale
land 6 m li Ps f rom town .\.16
Monday an d Tu es 9 ? App
0008
1
9 · rn lies f rom I ow n t owurd
151 If
Eu r eka Da rn
Watch l or
srq n s
MOI' I LE 11 ome spa ce for re nt ,
16 3 1
• \.16 0008
152 I t
1 t-=AM ILY Ya r d Sa l e Some
new dem s July l&lt;tth and Of I ICE :')pa c e for ren 1.
I Sth 9 n G r een ho use across
downt own
from Kanauqa D r tve Inn
116 000 8
163 ?
152 t f

•

RM 5 and bath , furnace .
qarage , laundr y r oom and
yard 738 Se r ond Ave
16) If

167 2

Homes For Sale

LARGE Rummage Sal(_• J ul y
16 , 17, 18 7 . 8 5 Mercerville
' 32 If
Grange Hall o ff Rt 718
1
m rle on Co)(" Mercervrl l e Rd
Clolhmq , household goo d s, rUR N IS HED e ff rcren c y $80
Ulrlrlres pd J 46 dJ 16 a ft e r 6
1ewelry
p Ill
163 1
159 6

and decornl1ng .
sp r r~ y br ush and rol l er F r ee
es r rmates . 7·15 566 7.
16 1 6

BIG used desk

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

51 .

B&amp;S M OBI LE HOME S
Pf Ptc.ls .ln t , W Va
1'11 1 1"/~6 ~ / 1\R Con c ord trpout
IW19 1?1( 61 J llR L 1bc rt y
1969 12..: 60 7 U R nuddv
146 '1 1/ )( 60 J fiR 13 1!)dalc Ex
p ,mdo
l'lf&gt;l 1/1'. 60 l R f.&lt;' lhNrllplO I1

RUMMAGE So l e Ju l y IB fr om
t H p m Ju l y 19 fr om 8 am
.t p n1 C lothes . q ames . brkes
and
mrsc
Ep rs c o p a l
Chu r ch
5•11 Second Ave
Sp o n sored by N ew L 1fc
l ul he r L cpque
16 3 I

1 YPI N G SERV I CE S W rll do
all krrid S o f l ypmq on my
home Ca l l .1J6 J999
75,1 If

1'iO 2(.,

help you wtn the cup

M~ile

161 ]

RARYSITl iN G rn my horne
1-lb 65) 1
167 d

JUNK

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

&lt;1

f UR N

,,

FREE GASOLINE!

EAVE S pout Hanging 1n
Gaf ltpoli s and Pt P leasa nt,
P ome r o..v and Mtddl epo r t
area Ph 446 1910
117 78

~OOM S
and bath 6 room s
and b&lt;llh rn c rly , rea sonable
.1.16 ,tQ ?/
167 3

p m

•

2

2

?

.

PA SQUALE
Elec' tr tta l
&amp;
In Sui at tnQ p IOJ Ce ~~~ St '
Gal lr p olrs
h 4.46
f
I 26 I

1

1 AR mo brl e h ome ul rl rlres
!urn
Nrce l_pcatron , must
have&gt; qood ref A46 4170 be
1ween 7 and 9 a m ond 3 6

• J

Services Offered .

FURN apt 3 rms an dbat h,
co rn er of Court and Second
Av&amp; Adults S~25 Ph . 446
16 15 or 1243
157 If
-- ----FUR NI SHED
apartment
Ad ult s only . 446 9523
tf
16 1

162 3

'

:

7 B R n rcely turn ished a parr •
ment Dep req Aduf1S only
D p Martrn &amp; ~ons vv dter
Men preferr ed Ph 446 2852
O elr ... ery serv1ce
Your
a f ter 6 p m
pa lr onage wr11
be
ap
163 If
p r ecrate d Ph 446 0463

TR/\I L ER. &lt;lOO Prkc
Kanauga Aif6 ?699

•

' '

.

[

'

_29 - The Sunday T1mes -Sentinel, Sfmday 1July 13, 1975

1 ROOM hou se , cr ly W&lt;"tler tn
kttcnen On M c Co r mtck Rd
Call .1 116 0?39
167 3

7 If

tRIOAY&amp; Svlurday , 9arn trl
7
Salv1 c f~udoiL F &lt;Hr vtc w
Rd
C.lntp CO nl ey , PI
Plea s an t
Mu s t
s e ll
cvery tt1ri1Q lcuvrnq co untr y

Wanted To Do

Wanted To Buv

You II have d ou b ts about mak mg a maJor e xpendit Ure fo r the
home . You s h oul dn 't Th e
purchase w11 1 save you bot h
la b or an d mon ey

' 306 tf

f 1UL 1 '\ M obrll' Home Se r
v1c e C. k rrtrnq roo t c ooJI1nQ .
P&lt;1l •O S.
,l wnmg ~ .
Anchors ,
ce ment
work
r r e&gt;e
f' &lt;,l rnt,ll e s
C&lt;l ll ,116 7 950
&lt;1 11 fl r l 30 p m

J

1esumc
to I= rrsl Un it ed Presby l crraw
Ch u • ch
51
Stil r e
S1
Gnl l rpolr S. Ot1 r0
159 6

1633

Bemice Bade Osol

1 I Q If

K C r c q 10 m o nlh Sco llr sh
hOU ~ f'
br Ok l' P h
Tcrrrcr
l·16 OA 17

Yard Sale

~ c rrd

FEMALE Dob erman 1
o ld R ewa r d $15 Ph
5 189

GrapM

f0 E f&lt;' CU RY M o nt e qo '
16 emu
m.les. C li C
c ond
( j rJ O Cl
q ?t &lt;; il lll(•,lq f'
wi11 IP
wr l h v•r l y l lOP 711 ', ] A ! o r

\ 'I I )

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPP I ES
K
P Ke nnP IS, ]!:ltl A?f&lt;l Rl
55t . 1. m r c as t of Por t er
305 11

had been no mterfer ence When belongs to yo ur opponents You
the mterference shuts out yo ur may have shut them ou t II he PAINTING

normal action you should slratn has a rea ll y good hand he ca n
to find a bid any t&gt;me your hand btd on and your supporl should
IS unbalanced. but lend to .pass be enough for h&gt; m .
when your hand is balanced
South 's vuln era bl e two •L _ A
diamond ca n ts one of those r~EI'fNJ~
*
· Cl
bids based on a stout heart and
1 .oJL (/
a few high-card pomts. ll is not
recommended and when you FRANKLIN
see what happened to South you ·--:~~---~-:~~
wjll know why .
·With no mterference West
would rebid one spade and the
p~rtnership would bid to thr ee

15! 6

BOBB I S Pood l e B ou lrQU C'
Profess1onal qroom 1nq by
apporntm c nt
Ph
.1\6 19·1·1
60 11

chr l dren Call tor clppt at
Gallra County Cl1 rl dren ' s
Home d.t6 9?37
15 7 6

mad e

king o l trumps

room &lt;;
G cl lt , a H Oill

wee kly

5

P I NE R I DGE CO LLIE S
1\KC Rcq Co ll rcs sable a n d
while ( 611 1 ?56 1767
781 II

$20 per week. Call 446 234 2,

I a a .m . to

There \Va :s JU St nu wa\: the
del ense (.'uult.l shu t out h 1s a ce CHOIR drrcctor

South

!96ll LTD ~ IUI10n waqon . P S
P n
r.,r c ond t tJ m r per
gill Sf!OO Ph 36! 0 103 rlfl er

dut 1(' ') r \'(IUir Cd lfl
IJ U", 11H 1 ')'i /\t\u&lt;,l h,lVI
&lt;r OO d
po •r &lt;;O il i'tlr ly
CJ n C1
I 'i I (-,
lr •lt ph Orll' VOl( (' l 'i h r &lt;; pr r
V.:••r&gt;k
Nrrl P (!IVirl(j &lt;HI P
f,/' C WI111 C G er m an Shf'p twr rl
"' 'l r 1lrl l •, t,rlu c,
'&gt;010 01
or
pupp1t'S Ph 1&lt;16 ifH 8 t
VI.'O I k l' )' p• fr f' ll ! I'
We Will
161 l
lr olll l YOU l Or OUr Oj) l'r,llron
l'o)! t/,tJ C o T r 1burH'
1\ KC
1- Pma l f' Oalnl cl lran
1&gt;0
y e ar
s hot s .
worrnPd
1~
hou sebrok en
Love s krd '&gt;
\ 6 J 119 1
16 ) I

when th e smoke of bdltle had

North -South vul n(' r ab le

l\(_•rnitr d pup
\,1 11 10 •1 1°,fl I Of,f,J
l 'r 'l '",

CNGLI SH sr•ltcr (Brrd doq ,
Pupp1t; &lt;,
Rc asonrlb l f'
No
P•lPf'r S \16 !69 ] a l lf't 6 p 111

Back ca rne a fourth hea rt and WOMA N to lrv e rn and c are fo r

4K 94

1?69 P L YM f.&lt;'oi'ldrunn c r , 313 3 if
~ pd
S IOO Phone 1·16 31 15
161 ]

l OLLit::
clnrl
l:: lilj l r&lt;, h
She&gt;phcrd pup pr es 'i.? S e&gt; a c h
Mok e &lt;t n1 cc DC'I t or c t1rld
'J'i 6 6 / 11 ( ,111 ,1ny 11m e
161 3

Th e
Ga lltp o h s
D ai l y
I Trtbun e
a nd
Sunday
Then he led d cl ub Wesl cashed ' Ttm es - Se nttn e l n ee d s a
carrier for the Vinton
tw o elubs and h 1s last h1gh
spa d e ton w h1 c h E as t th rew hrs are a . If any boy or gtrl in
lc:1sl club ) Then he led a second th e area .ts int er es ted , the
hear t East won. led th e hea rt rout e h as 71 da i ly a nd 78
Jdck and So uth 's e &gt;ghl of Sunday , and pay s approlC

trumps fl.:' II tu Wests mne The

•Q 6

'i. I 'IO

7 'i6 j ,f fi ,f

16 3 3

I '• 1 6

'io l 5,00 0 to $25, 000 m come
All b en e fit s Mr Hank s
(6 14 ) 775 -9414 ct ff e r 6 p . m

dt"cd Wt.'sl shll ted to a hea t t dt
tn c k two E~ast tuuk one h1 gh
h C'tll t rHl d the queen ol , Spil dt'S

• 5

Ph

'&gt; I

1-t'p q

p1 P&lt;.

~drlol l l

Free bid goes to slaughter

l [- l PIN G
r.t lf.'

J(j',6 C J', JE EP nf'w top , roll
h &lt;l r n e w Pil&gt;n 1 Ron Sh eet s.

1\ 0/\ P { JI N (, ol ll d 1\i&lt;C W ••&lt;, ly
pup •. Crr(IJ' I K r' n nt' I S &lt;l tf,
IH ' 1

/1

'I' r• rr

WIN AT BRIDGE

fa crng park ,
I 1g t1 I
. h 0 u Se k e e p 1 n g ,
e l eva t or.
t acllrt•eS
tor
rt:trr ed person Park Central
Hotel
981f

16 3 3'

Pefs

/\f&lt; (

For Rent

l l • ' I ,l ~

l '&gt; l· ) (l

16 ) I

1

IN D • VI[lllf•l W1 l h prrvillt • h'F ( ,
1&lt;• 1111 (':&gt;~(' "
Wollk1nt)
pl1onc TO cJo !J dli C&lt;liiOnoll
! •or~P ~
/\11 &lt;1(/ C':'o
STUD
s ur vPy frorn 1t1 c rr ov.· n
SERV I CE ~'i 6MOH
I o rn P P ir one 1.16 1l6J alter
1 '&gt;V 6
p
111 G,l l lrpo l r&lt;, Ru ':&gt; rn es&lt;;,
Co ii Pqc
/\ KC R e q fi Cr1QI 0 P UPIJ• f'5. I
161 If
wt·ck s o l d Pt1 7S6 IJ 963
16 1 6

111 cl l ' ~ P l' f Cl ll' n eed of l&lt;1dY
10 carP l or rnvnl 1d l&lt;ldy Ry
[J ,ly or Wf'Pk.
Plf&gt;a~P
Cel li
0 Jv•IIC'f\all•nqt•r . J 61 /IUJor
wc.r p l'o x 1 1 . J\dd 1~ 0n Oh10

IC'IT

&lt;: 1 0

For Rent
-~ ARCE room

1 \lq

l\/'v1

and mmd

Beau l tful
behind

An~ q uPs

~ 01 ~ 1n ~ ~ 0 1 ~ 1° 1l~ ~ I y

!I

, rrl I'

Auto Sales

' d\ L [
v r, J-&gt;I I·,IY i o f

Hl\ h. ILNI JI f-.'
• • r\1 .,
p r I' I ('r r c &lt;l , [ • p n C&lt;
I' " :.
1
10 c (l G ttllrp o l 1 ~ TroiH!I' I'
ll, l '•

l WO

pass e d away · J uly t l
191"
Th ose w h om we lov e qo o ut

AN Tf I) u E

17 tf

16 ] 1

I'N- - LOV I N G , mernorv
ot
1 G r ov e r
W
Wauql1
w110
1

No

l~;o l l f

• away July 12, 19 7J Sadly
1 missed by h ts wile liHll ii Y
• and t r1end s

•

Help Wanted

I .

I •

&gt;

,'

446
163 3

·~

1J r T Campe r Se lf cont a i n ed
~650
P h 388 8H l l

•
'~

t6 3 3

'

.

417 SECOND AVE.
For Sale .
NEW Idea pull lype mower
lnt
75
bu
manure
spreade r . Joh n Deere 175
bu
Manure spreader
J
Thacker &amp; So n s Woods Mill
Rd , BidWell, Ohro
163 If
NEW
2
PIECE
EARLY
AMERICAN
LIVING
ROOM S UITE . S249.9S REG
5299. 95. THIS WEEK ONLY .
RICE 'S
NEW &amp;
USED
FURNITURE , 854 SECOND
AVE 446 -95 23.

--

--~~-~-----

~T ' RAW

Sl
bale
Her e f or d
Fa r m ,
Rrver Rd 256 11 13 .

IpS· 1&lt;1&gt;LL.IO'J J ·

..

For Sale

,

~EG

wes l e rn
Pleasure
ho r se , c he s tn ul ge ld• ng , .,
qen ll e 682 7&lt;tq8
13fl II

e

Plum bing &amp; Heating
DEW ITT 'S PLUMB ING

ANO HEA TING

CORBIN&amp; SNYDER
US E D FURNITURE
ADM I RA L
Qe lrt gera t or ,
Early Amer1c an c ou c h ,
ant i que
iron
bed .
Cor!
sprr n gs and m all r ess, end
tab l es.
bookcase
bed ,
Chan nel M~ster r a dio a nd
tape player , wa l n ut dresser ,
drum table, tab l e lamp and
co ff ee tab l e 955 Second Ave
Ph4J6 1171
157 tf

'

v

_

I

Rou t e 160 a t Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
~ '
187 -tf I
-

---

-

~--~- -- -

I

GE N E PL:.ANTS&amp; SON.
I
PLUMB I NG - H eating - Air ;
Co nd1t1on •ng 300 Four th 1
Ave , Ph 446 1637
r
- - -- - - - - - - --;::--48 tf :

162 3

Q'f&lt;t&gt;.) . BoT DQ/.J1T
F~eET, 40lYRE

1'-&gt;TO ME' F"QR

Bu t te r
Lower

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATI N G
Ga ll tpOIIS, 446 4782
STA NDARD
Plumbm g H ea li ng
214 Third Ave, 446 -3782
1
187 -tf t

-

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

CAR TER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEA TING

Cor F ourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446 3888 or 446 -4417 • 1
16S .tf- 1

-

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

�•

•

j

'I

.,

. '.

•

30 - T'-iSunday Times-Senti~! . Sun day, J uly 1~,1975
31 - The Sun.! ·- 'J'Ilnes -Senllne,\, Su...ay, July 13, 1975

·For Fast Results Use The Sunday ·Tim.e s-Sentinel .Classifieds
Real Estate for Sale

,

Real Estate For Sale .

.'

Ql

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr., Realtor

.

512 Second Ave.,

C$1/lfi/Il10IL

Gallipolis, Ohio

R_EA L TY

"WE SELL
BETTER
LIVING"

..2S L ocust St
Howard Bran non , Broker
Of f1 cc 446 -2674
l uc •ll c Brannon
E vc. 44 6.- 1126 or 446 2674

VA LOANS.
NO DOWN PAYMENTS

A N OT H ER WOR LD
Th at 's 10 acres wooded
land . where lh tS beaur. t ul
ran ch sty l e. 4 BR, '1 bath , '1
f sr epla ces . fam lly R , futt
bsm , del u xe k 1tche n &amp;
d 1n tnq wpw ca rp e t, 7 car
g ar , &amp; b arn
ALL MY C H IL D RE N
Will f 1t w1t h room t o spare
into th• s spac1o us 2 sto r y
brick
h ome
lo c ate d
downt own W W carpet.
large room s, double car
port , f enced lot &amp; an ex tra
4 room apt w1th prtv ate
entrance $.39,500

Thi s Bea utiful New Home

E D GE OF N I GHT
Th1ng s
l ook 1ng
bleak
'c ause yo u c an ' t fmd the
sp ace you n eed at the pr •ce
you ca n a lford ? Cheer up•
Seet h1 S 4 BR , 11 7 8, eat 10
k t t chen D R, f amily R , 21 •
acres S17 000

located on a State Highway -

3 bedrooms, l arge
family room , 21 ,1 baths, loca ted on
acre plot of la nd.
large ma ster bedroom, modern krtchen w •th bu ilt 1n
cabmets Obi s-s smk , large liv •ng room , back pa tt o
porch Hou se fu lly ca rpet ed. All of th1s for on ly
$31, 500 .00
3/4

LAND CO N TRACT
6 rooms 2 !'. tory wood
burnmq ltr e plac~o n larqe
l o t Wil l t ake mobil e home
tr ad e rn on down paym e n t
and $ 1] I 50 per montll

39 2S ACRES VACANT
Level and c tean
J m lie
Off Of R t ]5
6 rllliC'S
f rom

Gal l r po lr s

Good

•nv es tmen r property
LA ND CO NTRACT
Two Ho u ses
one m
Ga l lrpo tr s 3 b edroom arr

c ondrtroned

$18 .900

less

m rle out

than

a

one
of

Gallrpol •s 3 b ed r oom , a• r
cond•l•oned Only 113,900
Bot h hou ses ca n
be
boug h t wlfh a low down
paym ent and mont hly
paym ent s l1 k e r ent
L IKE N E W H O M E
coun tr y Se lt1ng
3
bedroom s . br1ck
and
wood
sid1ng ,
lar ge
modern k i t che n w1th tots
of cab inet s. cent ra l a1 r ,
carpeting , ga r a ge , 2
year s ol d on a n •ce lo t 111
City Sc hool D1str1 Cf
4 B E D ROO M
Ap pr ox
11 ,. acres large
moder,n kitchen , gas fur
nace , basemen t pane l ed ,
lo t s of sh a d e trees , g arden
s pa ce
Ask . ng
on l y
$19 ,900 00
WHAT A BU Y
5 rooms , l arg e to t w1th
p l en ty of garden space
P orc h .
T ot al
P r1ce
,

II I I

A BEA U TIFUL

NEW HO ME

Phone 446-7699

For Sale
SW I MMING POOL S
F I GERG L ASS SAVE
Hol 1d ay
Pools ,
Hunti n gton 429 4788

Ph o n e
157 26

'1 • 10,000 BTU a~r cond. and 1
gas ra n ge , 446 J7 12.
161 3

---

---

~

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

19 72 SUZUK I 750 water coo l ed
cu s t om p a int iob , cus to m
back rest E xc con d $1, 195
? 56 1398
159 6

;;·,; NA-soN.Ic- sA" 2rh - A"m

4 BR hont e ~ea r Ho l zer
Hosp i tal Vaca n t and ready
t o m ov e int o

pi ifie r
equ1pp ed f o r
4
c h anne l so un d , BS R turn .
ta bl e and 2 Pa n ason1c ·
speakers S150 1972 Ch evefle
30 7 en g , good gas mileage
$ 1,800 446 2791

Off 1ce Ph . 44 6-1694
E ve nin gs
Ch arl es M . N ea l446 · 1546
J . M •ch ae t.N eal 446- 1503
S&lt;l m N Pa l 446-735 8

IS9 -5
3 H P Rototlller S50
4426

Ph

446
162 3

10 ,M I XED B r eed
Ph 446 452J

Ch•ckens
l62 3

1974 23FT TERRY Camper
w•th a1r con d 446.4517
162 6
ZUZUKI m otorcyc le 1975 380

Ph . 366 -8152 .

'SWAIN

162 3

K enneth Sw a in, Au c l.
Corh er T h1rd &amp; Oli ve

COL
H tQi ey s Gun '. hop ,
ba rb er sho p
boo k s tore
r e a l e sta t e a n d auc t•o n
scrv •ce Ph -l-16 0002
177 ff
NEW Frank lm F urn ace w1t h
accessories
made
by
A t l an tic Stove Co Sme lt ze r
Ga r der.. · :cent er Phon&amp;:- 446
4846

AUCTION
SE RVICE

DOCTO RS
Why should yo u t hink of a
doctor 1f yo u co uld l 1ve in
lh1 s home full o f sunsh in e.,
Firep lace •n l1v .ng room ,
forma l DR , spacious eat in
k1 l c hen , full basement.
double c arpo rt &amp; sto r age ,
generou s
l a n dscap •ng .
Qu 1c k po ssession S28 .900

l

HOW TO
SURVIVE A MARRI A GE
P r eserve 11 •n th ts river
view home Wtf h f 1n1shed
wa l k in basement &amp; fami l y
room
la r ge
patio
&amp;
garage , d eep lot &amp; ga r den
spot S26,000

SEA R C H FOR

TOM OR.ROW
&amp; butl d a beaut 1fu t future 111
l h1S ch armmg 3 BR hil l
v•ew home , built 1n kllch en
W1lh R ei , washe r &amp; dry er ,
car port &amp; storage, large
lot , Qus c k
possession

s:n.soo

N O T F OR WOM E N ONL Y

WE NEED YOUR
LISTING NOW.

"Call today

VACA NT
LAN D
tn
Ch es hsre Twp 85 A rol li ng
land
m o s tly wooded
2
we ll s &amp; se v era l sp rings
On l y $12,500

FH A ~ P P ROVED •·
A
small down payment wil l
l et you en1oy th1s 3 yr ol d
r anch W1lh b r ick fro nt. 5
r ms &amp; b at h , ga r age &amp; gas
heat $19. 500

It will pay."

BEDROOM S
Lovely b1 leve l near town
has lot s t o offer t o your
grow 1ng
f amily
A
r eason ab le p r~ ce w•ll l e t
you en to y th e l arge fa m1l y
rm , 11 • bath s. eq uipp ed
k llchen , sundeck , attached
garage , gas hea t , ce nt a•r
and large fl at landscaped
lo t Show n by appoin t ment

BUILDIN G WITH LIVING
QU A RT E RS . 2 ga r ages,
off tce. sh owroom &amp; 1 , ba th
down st airS p lus a lov el y 6
r m apt upstatrs Loca t ed
abo u t 2 m il es fro m tow n
LO VE LY
WOOD E D
HOMESIT E
near
R 10
Gran d e tS tu st per l ect for
your d r eam home 5 ac r e
tr ac t off ers lar g e sh a d e
tr ees for yo u r cOm f ort , a
R T rd
l or your con
ven1en ce and restrtclton s
for you r pro t ecllon
B IDWELL
N1ce com
for tab le 7 rm home with l
B Rs, ba th Located •n a
n 1ce Qu •et
reside n t i al
sect1on of tow n $ 15.000
G R E EN ACRES
1 yr ol d
3 BR ranch W1 l h w w
ca rp et , mod er n kitche n .
n 1cc laun d r y r m , cent a1r
an d g ar age B u y With or
without fur n i t ur e

l

CAMPS IT ES
La r ge flat
lot s on the longest creek 111
the wor ld Th e se lo t s h ave
lots of Shade trees a n d
l arqe
ga r den
s p ac es
Located on a priva t e rd

VAC ANT WOODlAND
I dea l f or hu nfing, camp·ing
or b u dd mg A ll d •r ect•ons
r,nanc•ng avatlable on
some
COA L VALLEY · 15 A, 5
A bo tt om, 5 A past ur e
W1th new fences . 5 A
woods .
s ev er al
out
b u1ld•ngs . sol•d r est orab l e
home $ 10,000

BUY &amp;

CO MM E RCI Al

DE VE L OP

6

vaca n t lo t s on Ches tn u t 51
Zon ed r es i dent ial $12,000

ALMO ST NEW 3 BR
r an c h 111 c it y sc h ool d ist
Offers 2 bath s. con¥en ien t
)qlc h en , laun dr y room . w w
ca rp el , gar age &amp; l arge tot

$22,500

WE NEED L I ST IN GS .
T H E SEASO N I S HE RE
liND
O UR
BUYER 'S
O U TN U MBER
OU R
~ ELLER S
D O N 'T SET
TLE F OR LESS T HA N
N ATIO N WI D E
AD
VERT I SI NG
CALL 446
OOOB T ODAY

WORlD'S LARGES T
THE L EA DER -SIN CE 1900
IN
SE RVING
TH E
NATION ' S BUY E R S AND
Ph. 446 -0008

PHONE 446-4922

NEW LISTING
.
Excell ent 3 year old ranch sty le br ick on 2.6
ac r es of level land, 3 bed room , large li vi ng
r oom , modern kitchen includ ing lots of
r oom for dining ar ea. ca rpeted throughout.
2 ca r garage, full basement, centra l heat.
rur al wa ter , very ni ce storage bu ilding ,
sever al yo ung fr uit trees, appl e, cherr y and
pea r . Land idea l for garden or could be used
for r ea l estate development if des ired.
CHAR MIN G SP LIT
LEVEL
N ea rly n ew l
bedroom
hom e off ers a l arge llvsng
room . f ormat d 1111 ng , large
k ttc hen t am.!y room. Jl ,
ba t h , large u ll ltty area ,
na t gas , for c~d as r fu r nace
W1lh cen t ra l i11d , carpe t ed
t hroughou t , plus 2 car
garage and l arge flat lot
E xcell ent
n e•ghborhood ,
C1ty Sc hoo l Oislrtct

Som e o f the n•ccs t un
dev el oped land lett on U s
35 111 c tty sc hool d1 s tr~ct
Sam e wooded to ts Some
lots with f ant a stic v iews
Ca ll Ike W• sem an 1f you
want to qet C)(C if ed about a
place to build
OWN ER MOVIN G
'Area l
h om e bu y - 2000 !&gt; Q ft ot
love l y il v•n g sp ace . Hu ge
hvtng fa mily a nd d1n1ng
areas ,
p lu !&gt;
3
lar g e
b edr oo m s, 2 bath s, 2 car
g ar ;;age Ow ner m ov .n g out
ot sta t e. Mu st se ll now .
Tht !&gt; h om e 1s und er p nce d
a t S35 oon
BEA UTI F Ul { QU A LI TY
BUI LT) BR I CK HO ME
Tht S tS a one of lo..tnd " S yr
ol d l bed room b n ck located
o n lar q e flat
lot
1n
Chest1 1re .
.nc l udes
a
b ea ut 1fut k tl c h en ! range
dishwasher , r e fr •g
but!!
tn ), n tce d tnlllg area , 1t ,
ball1 ,
ca rpe t 1 ng
thr o ughout
Ow n er has
bee n tran sf err ed nnd ha s
bought oth er prope rt y and
w ill Qtv e occ upancy June
1'i Pr1 c e tn m1d fort ies
THROW AWAY
TH E AS PI R IN

Your
house
hu n1 11jl 9
neadaches are over One
gla n ce at th •S properly a~d
yo u ' ll agree and look at
th ese advan t ages · larg e
;:.. pr~rlQ Valley lot. 3 n•ce
SIZ ed bedr o om s , 2 lu l l
b ath s Sup er carp et and
dra p es throughoul built •n
ranqe and d •shwasher ,
f i r e p lace
Ow n e r
has
bouqht other pr o perty .
must se ll 397 2220
2 R EAL BUY S ON
THIRD A V E
Very good ol der 3 B R
homes w1th fam il y room .
11 bat hs . ve r y n 1ce l o t s, I
Wilh la r ge g arag e, 1 wilh
ca rport. 1 unde r $20.000,
th e other un d er $30.000

3 BR b r ick , full basement,
e x cellent location , back of
house faces Gallipolis

Golf

Course .

Newly

decOrated . Price d in the

CO L R E . K NOT TS
&amp; SON , DAVE
Gallipoli s, Oh1o

PUBLIC AUTION

Located at 34 Vl(est Street in Jackson, Ohio.
Just off of South Street from Henry's Super
Market. Watch for Signs.

N AOMl 'S Wig St y li ng
Sell
and sty le a ll fash1o n s W i gs,
wt gle ts , falls
Ph one 38li B308
'286 -tf

. SATURDAY, JULY 19,1975
Starting at 10:30 A.M.

---~

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

GOOD c lean l ump and st oker
c oa l
Car t W •nte r s , R io
Grande . Ph 245 5115
2&lt;5 11

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

bath , large kitchen an d
dining area , dishwash er ,
range
an.d
e lec tric
disposal , fully carpeted ,
family
room ,
garage ,
d
·
1
1
1
centra I a1r, • arge O ' goo
location, 6 miles up Rt. 7 in
Country Aire Estate . Can

Streakless Machine Wall Washing '
Upholstery - Windows - Floors
.
Complete Une of • . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies

Combination, Oak Table 8. 4 Chairs, Knee Hole Desk 8.
Chair. Upholstered Chairs, Twin Beds, End Tables,
Table Lamps, Window Fans, Folding l.Jawn Furfllture.
Collector's Items: Chiffon ier with Beveled Glass•

FOR FRI ENOL Y FREE ESTIMATES

·:

Call. 6'15·$572 After 4 P.M.

I
I

~-- - ---- - - - - --------- ----1
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Stand , Wall Mirror, Captain

TERMS ' CASH
LunchWiJIBeServed
Daryl Alban
- AUCT IONEERsKenny Swain
Qak Hilt, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio
Not Responsible for Accidents

violins , etc . as listed: Cherry Chippendale lo w boy
d es k ; 4 c hina c upboa r d s w -cur v ed glass ( 2 w -mirro r

back s 8. t op - 1 w-rope leg fr ont 8. ca rved mirror at top .
1 w -tripl e c urved glass ) ; carved oak sideboard w-

Pet er so n Chesapeake Bay c ha i r ; walnut marble top
V ictor ian st a nd ; Engli sh rung back roc ke r ; Cherry
Ch i ppendale wall stand ; walnut ebon y arm chair wc law fee t!; Ro sewood arm ch a ir w -6 in . fr ee standing
ca r v ing · car v ed a rms &amp; ball claw feet, J a cobian ver y

unusual ; 5 Burk hart m ahogany. (Old Man of Mt .)
c ha irs ·w-original upholstering ; J pc . V ictorian parlor

w-car ve d back ; 22"x60" top solid mahogan y librar y

dresser w -marble in sert ; 4 walnut can e bottom c ha1rs ;
ant. picture s &amp; f rames ; J pc . walnut bedroom suite
w hite marble &amp; bra ss pulls , dresser w -full

N

all

ED ?

the

marble top, mirror 8. candle holders I over -100-yrs . old
&amp; ver y b ea utiful i che rry settee &amp; c hair set - c hair w .
.cla w feet &amp; picture of Jose phin e's fa ce c a r v ed on arms,
ex t ra nice ; c h erry octogen tur:t le top table ; w alnut
marble top wa sh stand ; walnut wa r drobe , Currier &amp;
lves p ri nt ; Minnesota sewing ma c hine; oak bamboo
st and ; camel back trun k; colle cti on can e bask ets.
11 VIOLINS ' One Maggin i dated 1607; one Sweit zer
Amati ; one Gus Hopf ; One Hart ; One St einer ; o ne
N ickola u s Am ati ; one Mueller ; one Collie r Special ; 3
l esser ones.

Af1 er · rea dmg

r e~}.

es l at e

a.d s.

GLASS, CHINA &amp; OLD ITEMS' Cut 8. pressed gla ss,
ca rniva l ; Millersburg ; Blue Fleurdelis waf er pitcher 8.

Dis c us $ · ' yOU r rea l es t a te
problem s w1th th e pr os . Our
stafl ha s sold r ea l est a t e in
th e Ohto Vall ey tor ov er fifty
ye ar s Wh eth er y ou want a
f ar m , v a c a nt land , an
exe cut1 ve hom e or a cu stom
built hom e on y ou r lot , our
ex p er ie nc e c an !&gt; ave you
mon ey W e hav e t w o offic es
m Ga llia County ,
RANCHO COMPANY

glasses ; Cambridge va ses; gla ss fruit b owls ; berr y

di shes ; footed 8. stemmed di shes; compotes; 3 covered
dishes; c aster set ; pun c h bow l set ; rare patterned

di she&gt; like grape- peacock , etc.; 3 cake stands; Kempel
gla ss sp ooner-sugar· creamer set ; water pitchers;
c r u its ; Ge rman , Austrian, few p es. Haviland, et c.;
coin s ilver sugar-creame r ; coin s ilv er t ablespoon s;

copper ca ndl e stick s; Maielican pitcher ; buttermilk
blue p itcher; large 161n. Blue Delft platte r signed ; old

RE ALTORS- AUCTIONEERS
ADDISON OFFICE 367 -0300

GA l LIPOLI S OFFICE
446 -0001

Ran d,

Cha n ne l

Hedge tr imming tool s. Plumbing too is, Tap 8. Di e se ts,
Drill bit sets, Tool bo xes (all si zes), Air hoses, Tor ch
hoses , Scr ewdrive r set s, Oil _lamps, Tran sistor radios,

TERMSOFSALE : CASHOF APPROVEOCHECKS
No1 Responsible for Accidents or Property after sold .
Due to Strikes and

Shopping Schedules. OWNERS
Quality Surplu s liquidators, Inc.- Boswell Wholesale
Phone (J17l 869-5516
Boswe11.'1na1ana .
Auctiorleer' s Note : T his offer can b e in sp ec t ed on e

, hour before sale fin'l e. Thi s $ale begin s prom ptly on
.
·- -~ :- ..
SWAIN ~UCTtON SERVICE
Kenneth Swain ·- AUCTIONEERs- Daryl Altl.n
t1m e.

Oh'o

·
Qlik Hill Ohio
Not Re._lble for AccNenls
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.

~

3411

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••

".1
"

Ta y lor;

desk ; iron pols; iron kettles &amp; sp iders ; 2 dinner bells ;
blue salt jar w-lid ; old brown stone pitchers ; butter
bow l 8. mold ; c hurns ; pocket watches ; old hat pins;
costume iewelr y i RR lanterns ; sugar buckets ; Flo
Bl ue; Continental pes. 1876 ; blue onion; Chelsea bow l
1700 's; sandw ich glass covered compote (wild flower
patter n 1840) ; several pes. Crooksv i lle ; Sheffield sli ver
1847; other good Ste r ling ; a State coi n silver teaspoons.
GUNS: 29 cal. muzzle loading cap. ball rifl e w-flger
mapl e stock w -powder box; 12 ga . dble. barrel muzzle
loading shotgun w- 34 ln. barrel ; 1890 Winchester
repeating 22 r ifle ; 12 ga . dble. barrel L. C. Smith
shotgun ; 1886 Hopkins-P,.IIen 32 cal. revolver.
OTHER ITEMS: Hillside plow ; ·sausage grinder on
leg s; throws, wooden planes . 2 broad axes; dbfe.
shovel plow ; old garden plow w-c ultlvators, etc.; MTD
71/ &gt; HP riding mower. This is only a partial listing of
lhl s life lime collection . Everything cl ean &amp; In excellent condition . Clip thi s ad tor time 8. directions for
sal e Saturday, July 19 at 10: 30 A .M . Plenty shade so
bring your lawn chair. Lunch on premises . Posi tive I D.
Terms - cash day of sale. Not r es pons ible for acc idents.
Nothing shown before day• of sa te.
OWNER5-MR. AND MRS. C. R. MALCOLM
' AUCTIONEER- BI LL JANES, Phone 962-4377 or 557 ·

Buff~ 'r s . Electri c drills (all si ze s ), Air pow er c hi sel ,

ch a,nges

Zachery

Flor entin e candle sticks; collection small stone bot·
ties. can e m ade from wre~kage of Blue Ridge Boat In
1847; large v ases w -revers e painting ; two 13 ln. ivory
figur in es w -brass bases; Gufus gl ass vases; two large
apothecary jars: t w o Aladdin lamps ; 2 copper jar·
dineres; 5 copper sc~ool bells ; McGuffey readers 8.
other old boo~ s ; 5 pc. Ben Hur ch ina pitcher-bowl set;
old trunk s; lot stone jars &amp; jugs ; coffee grinder ; sc hool

Or bital sand er s. Belt t ype sander s, Disk Grind er s and

lot. cit y sewag e an d wa te r
Ideal
bld g
stfe
No
res t r icti ons $4,500 .

'

157,

1975 BUICKS AND PONTIACS LEFT.
If you intend to buy a 75 model
car. buy now while selection is
good, 76 models wi II be up at least
6 per cent .

CLEAN USED CARS AND TRUCKS
WE WILl GIVE YOU

·•3349

TOP DOLLAR

THALER
FORD

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

FORD

o.

GALLIPOLIS
: CHRYSLERi~ :-: .· PLYMOUTH
.' ;. ·-: -,.
·: -:·

446-3575

For Sale
STAR CRAFT
TRAVEL tr a 11 e r a n d fold
down s 8th anniv er sa r y sale
L ow est p rices in T ri -St ate
Camp Conley Sta r Cr aft
Safes , Rt. 62 N Pt . P le asa nt ,
W . Va .

The wheels are rolling; People ore lluylng cars. And we're going to keep it
that way. Ytiu get up to $300 cash back on almost every car we sell. Cars
that were designed to meet today's demands for reduced 111aintenance ·
!IM greater efficiency, Retail customers only. Come on down to

Packa ge

Pol icy

for

Bu s iness.
We know we

save you money.

Leadingham Agency

'74 FORD PINTO
2 Dr. Sedan. Blk. v!r,y l top and interior.
whit~ t'inish , 2300 cc 4 cyl . engine, auto. w-stires. radio .

w

~: ury , ti300 m ileS,
air, 4 dr , good· con d ition
Sl ,8 95 Pho ne 446 0952 a ft er 5

19 11 PLY

pm

•2695

WOOD MOTOR- SALES
. . 'I '

GALLI POLIS, 0 .

-- - ·-- - - - -

160 4

----

GI.'. S range and electr•c ra n ge ,
Retnge r ator ,
k!lchen
cabinet, bed w t th box
s prmgs an d mattress . chest
of drawers 446 095'2'
16Q .t f
~
- . - ·- - - - ~ ~ -·
NEW Sc uba eQ uipment , tank
an&lt;:l regula t or Price $100
Phone 446 109&lt;1 aft er 5 p m . 7
days w ~ e k
160 6

t

...

1&lt;

t 73 FORD PINTO WAGON .................... :................... 52395 t
!
!
!1&lt; 72 PLY. DUSTER lWISTER .....................................11695 t-«
Auto T ran s

...

J Speed, 3'18 Engine

:;;

4 Dr. Sedan

:

Loaded !

-~

71 VW' SUPER BEAnE. ......................................... 11495 t

1&lt;

2 To Choose From

..

t
! 72 FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT FASTBACK .............. 52295 t
t

! 71 CHRYSLER NEWPORT........................... ............ 11295

For Sale

For Sale

197 3 17 F T Glast r on boat, wlth
1-lO HP Me r cury ou t board
and traile r
Ex ce p l •l')na l
condition CJII 446 4569 .
161 6

-tr

Sharp ! 15,000 M iles .

(Fo ld Dow n Rea r Seat), 6 Cy l , Auto ., P S.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

For Sale

1&lt;

74 PLY. DUSTER .:........ ............ ~ ............................ 12495 t
2 DR .• 6 Cy l. , Std . Sha ft .
,
.
:
74llODGE CHARGER S.E.................................... ;.. 13895 :

il

!1r 73 DART SPOilT.. ................................................. 52495

50 STATE STREET

Ph. 446-7699
512 Second Ave. ualli olis, Ohio

Auto Trans

-t1
...

CARROLL
NORRIS DODGE

Why not compare our rates with your present policy?

1&lt;

t

One

You r

2 Dr . H .T .• Air, P.S.• P. B.

i

Poli cy.

• Low Cost Fire Policy.
Specia l M ulti -Peril

t

t

~ 74 FORD MUSTANG ·11... .... ......... ........... :............... 12895 :

&lt;:"

Modern Mobile Homeo w ner Pol icy

•

• 75 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ..................................... '5395 •
~ Only 2,300 Mil es, Ex tra ' Sharp.
t
t 74 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC .............................. 13895 t

YOU GET UP TO s300 C.ASH BACK ON
CARS AT CARROLl NORRIS DODGE

e Low

eA

!

ON THESE FINE USED CARS

i'

Writes All Types of lnsuranc~ For
Your Auto, Home or Business
RepresentlnA Lightning Rod
Mutual Insurance Compa_
ny
e Low C ost - A u10- Insurance--comp are o ur rates
in

i

SUPER DEALS

i

Leadingham Agency

Cost Homeow ne r s Policy for Re nter.s.
eFarmowner s Poli cy - Compl et e Prote ctt on

,.;.

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161 3

LI M E STO N E f or ·dri veways •
Carl W 10ter s . Ph on e 245
5 11 5.
245 tf

For Sales

i

i ····B,,~~,~~~,~, ,B~,re:,~,, ~,~, £!I~!,',;,r,~m,~.~~~·:, ,~,~f,,,, , , , , , , j

158 If

Any Hr. 446-1'998 .

.· 1

f

.H O N D A200 l ow m lleage 1400
$695 446 3224

EASTERN AVE . ·

•

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

WANTED I

183 .

417 Second Ave.

eA

lamp stand s; oil lamp w-Maiellcan base; 18th century

R emington .

I 67 A.

Ai r cond ., 54,354 miles. extra clean . These ar e har d to find.

Better Deal

lamps; RR oil lamp ; pewter ; glass can e w- mounting

carri a ge c lock ; m irrors; lamp w- art glass shade ;

L ock .

RIO GRANDE -

1968 T. BIRD......................................5l297

YOU PAY ' 3 8 9 7

A Local
Dealls
Always A

• Low Cost Homeow ner Poli cy.

deed s sign ed by John Tyler 8.

Name Bra nds Include : Chi cago Pneu'm a t ic, Roda c,
Bla c k &amp; Decker, F uller , H er Br a n d , B ro w n, M arflow,
Shopmate, McG raw Edi son , Wrigh, , W en , Di am ond ,

1

$2197.00 .

'

COMPARE OUR SERVICE, TOOl OUR GOAL:·NO UNHAPPY OWNERS!

tureen s; H av iland tureen ; Russian Borsch bowl ;
Prussia n fru it bowl ; Lune sv ille pitcher s igned ; se veral
bone handl ed kn i ves &amp; forks ; several ex tra ni ce oil
stand ; Ironston e tu ree n ; depression glas~; land grant

JULY 18, 1975-6:30 P:M .

Ing ersoll

white

YOU PAY

Country -Squir e, 9 pass., air cond. , luggage rack. average miles. Was

Silver Blue
Automatic , Steel Bel ted
Tires , P. Brakes. P. Steer inq , Bumper
Guards, AM- FM radio. Inter . Decor
Group. Vinyl Roof. Prot . Group . Light
Group. STICKER PRICE 4262

STICKER PRICE '3571

SUB - OIV . -

VINTON AREA On~
Jack son Rd , good 6 rm .
h o u se, W1th
b a th and
f urna ce hea t Paneled and
ca rp et ed . 2 A g ood gard en
land F IJII Y fu r ni shed . Buy
and mov e 1n th e day after
c los in g Ch ea p at 515,000

tabl e; wa lnut phonograph ; 6ft. walnut floor lamp wtaffeda sha de ; Seth Thomas a day clock ; high top
waln ut bed w -carved b' r l front (will take regular
srping s &amp; mattr ess) ; c herry .. wa sh stand ; w alnut

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

125.

Yellow
6 Cyl .. Automatic . Steel
Belted nres. Radio .

STATE RT . 141 - 311 mi.
fr om tow n , 1974 m ode l,
12' .:65' A ft elec
mobi l e
ho m e M os t f u r ni shi n gs g o
1, A fl at lot On l y$1 1,000

.1971 FORD St. WAGON ..............~1797

YOU PAY

YOU PAY • 3 9 9 7

75 MAVERICK 2 DR

Air cond ., automatic, 350 eng ., Cr ager wheels, vi nyl top . Ex pect a
ni ce car.

STICKER PRICE'4198'3859

STICKER .PRICE '4369

STATE RT . 160 7 rm
f ra m e home with b at h ,
mos t has been re -do ne
Stor m doo rs an d wi n d ows .
F ur heat I t h as gar . and
lar ge
c h icken
ho u se
L oc ate d on .75 a cr e fla t lot.
10 m1xed fr u 1t trees L ot s of
good coun t ry li vi ng fo r on ly

1972 CAMAR0 ............:..................... -~2997

Radio . Steel Belted Tir es. P. Steering .
Dl x . Bumpers, Dl x. Interi o r , Prot .
Group, Convenience Group.

Green
Automatic , Steel Belted Tires.
P. Steering. Bumper Guards, Radio , Air
Cond ., Dlx. Exterior. Tinted Glass.

N ice 6 rm . hou se, featu r ed
3 bd r m s .. larg e l 1v . rm , b 1g
room kit. an d din . ar ea.
H .W . floor s and ext ra ni ce
family rm . wit h F P .
Hig hest g a s bi ll $38 . Pr'ic e
$24,000

m aple r ocker ; 1 oak Old Man of MI. chair; oa k stand wcla w ball feet ; Rosewood mahogan y side chair ; 2
organ stoo ls w-glass ball f eet ; walnut · Frankl in chair

63

•

YOU PAY ' 3 7 3 9

514,000

TAWNEY

suite - c herry w- whlte caste r s extl'a nice; Country
t u r ned bac k straight c hairs w -c ane bottoms ; slant
back sew ing rocker w -cane bottom ; can e bottom

163

.

CHILLICOTHE RD. 6
rm o ld er h om e, bath and
rurn . h ea t ; b ase m en t and
la rg e lot . Pri ce d at S9 ,000
NEIGHBORHOOD R D . Co zy 4 rm cot t ag e w i th
b at h , t ur n hea t , F P and
ba sem en t; r ur a l w a t er, 8
A
to t
Id ea l f o r
the
new l yw ed
or
re tlf e d
coupl e . Pri ce S14,SOO

Qu een Ann e turtle lop oak st and ; plank bottom c hai r s;

Locahon : Jackson Co.Blivestock Yard

'

J'

mirr or ben c h t op ; set 4 B entwood cal)e b ott om c hatr s,·
fru itwood c hina cupboard ; T exa s st y le anTI cha i r,

We nee d lr sf•ng s We ha ve
27 new l am tir e s m o vm g t o
tow n tht s m onth . Ca ll th e
W• se m an A ge n cy . 44 6·3643 .·
Ga l lla Co.' s L a r ges t R ea l
Es t ate Sa les Age ncy
Off tce &lt;14 6-3643
Ev e nin gs Call
I ke W ise man 44 6-37 '96
E . N, Wji Se m a n 446-4'500
Bud M cG h ee 44 6-125 5

75 MAVERICK
4 DR
Si l ver Blue
Vinyl Roof. Automat ic.

$22, 000

antique furniture , glass china, guns, silver, lamps,

!'rom
RIPLEY, W. VA. FAIR PLAIN EXIT OFF 1-77

G•,lllpotls,

-

the C. R. Malcolm Farm. Signs posted. Coming off St.
Rt . 35 turn ott at Rio Grande east onto St. Rt. 554 twelve
miles to the Eno-Vinton Rd.
Fa r m for sale by owners will sell a lot walnut &amp; cherry

R T 35
1 haven 't seen a better buy
tha n th1 S .1 bedroom frame
on Rl 35 In c l ud es a v er y
tliCC kll c hen . f ~rep lace ,
base m en t 2 ca r Qarage
You should l oo k at lh1 s
be f or e you buy Priced at
$34,000'

75 MAVERICK GRABBER

'

for 10 miles then turn onto Eno· Vinton Rd . for 1 mile to

i ools From Factory to You . Over 400 Items to Choose

for

•'

J5 miles south of Athens, Ohio1on St. Rt. 7 or 11 miles
north of Gallipolis on Sf. Rt . 7. Turn west on St. Rt. 554
at traffic light in Cheshire (towards Por ter I stay on 554

AUCTION

Not responstble

'

&gt;

won 't last long.

182,

Copper
Automat ic, Steel Belled
Tires, Radio, Lux ury Dec ur Group, T.
Glass. Exterior Decor Group, H. D.
Suspension · STICKER PRICE '4 153

Tan
Automatic. Conv. Group. Dl x.
Bumper. AM Rad io. Li ght Group. H. D.
Suspension . STICKER PRICE '4026

VINTON 11 rm f rame
h o m e , pa r t has been
re done , n•ce kitchen , some
ca r pet , cop per p l umb m g,
me t al roof, dug w ell J ca r
ga r , r oo t ce ll ar an d o ffi ce
qu ar ters A cheap h ou se for
a l arge f a m ily
P r1ce

9 Pass., ai r cond .. power seats, windows. new stee l be lled tires. low
mil es. Local industr iali st wi fe's car .

4 Dr . Hd tp ., custom . air cond., vinyl top, 75 trade -in this week. This

YOU PAY ' 3 8 2 9

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

1973 BUICK ESTATE WAGON 53997
1973 BUICK [eSABRE .................~2997

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

166

Ca nar y yell ow, 350 V-8, auto., P. steering, console , 75 LeSabre tra de.
Extra, Extra Sharp. ·
·

FREE
UNDEROOAT

YOU PAY ' 3 5 5 9

525,000

'

·SATURDAY, JULY 19 AT 10:30 A.M.
"
ANTIQUES AND OLD ITEMS

TOOLS- TO.O LS- SURPLUS

Lu fk in .

159 18

JULY 14th THRU 19th ONLY

Dark Blue
Special Value Pkg ., Dl x.
Interior ,
Exter ior
Decor
Group.
Automati c. Steel Belted W. W. Tires.
Radio . STICKER PRICE '3831

RODNEY - Sp lit fo ye r , 8
rm fra me h ome , Jl 1 ba l hs ,
pl ent y sto r age , all ca r pet
W all s a re pa n ele d and
p la ster bo ard ; el ec h eat
and gar . T h 1S i s a stick b u ilt
home and wi ll p r ovide a
l arg e fam i l y w1th tots of
co mf ortab l e living t or

2 HOU SES and 5 to t s On e 6
r ms al l el ec t nc w w c ar pet
Big yard , oth er tS 5 r m . Must
se ll immed ia te l y Calf f rom
3 6 Leaving town 675 3461.

PUBLIC ADCIION

WE T HI NK THIS I S
Whe r e you wil t w an t to be
Very n1ce 3 b edr oom home
wtlh ·I J\ Includes a f ull
basem ent and f ~rep l ace
Tht s · one I S pr 1ce d at
$37 900 Be sure an d see 1t

drill s &amp; sa n d er s, Bench vises (la rg e an d sm al l ).
H y dr a ulic jacks; B en c h gnnders, Large a ssortm ent o f
soc ket sets •(sizes •;4, %, ,h, 3(,. ), · Edens ion cord s,

Beaters, Dish es and Gla ssware, and many, m ,a ny,
. mor~ items too numerous ,to mention . Come see for
yo urself.

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE

Inquire at

Corb in&amp; Snyder Furn ., 446111 1, afler 5 . 446 .257 3.

Loy ,

S A CRE S and 80of gr oun d , 5
rm house 4d6 46 57
155 6

---------""""""--- -

Wllh very qood l1k e new 4
bed r bo rn home . Oeau l i f ul
k.l!c ben , d1n111g ar ea. ba rn
and Se\ler a l outbuildings
tO acr es c rop l and good
fence , g ood water I t 's •n
th e Cily Sch oo l o .str.ct
Pr tce r e du ced to '!.47 .500

-F irestone Round Tub Washer, Radio Record Player

Chair, Pi ctures 8. Frames, T in Types in leather cases,
-·3 .section Wall Frame, Crucifi x ion Wall . Plaque,
Trunk s, Nice High Posted Bed, 48 Star Flags, Oak
Dresser. F ir epla ce Grate. Remington Typewriter,
Comforter~, East l&lt;odlac, McGuffey's Readers, Books,
Roll ing Pins. Glass Footer Egg, Hat Pins, Carpet

H:o'MiMERC

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

WEEK

75· MAVERICK 4 DR

DAVIS RD. - 6 acre baby
farm , t ab . ba se , fru it and
berr ies . Good 6 rm h ouse
W1t h b at h . Goo d b arn and
fe n ces P rice Sl4 ,900

1974 CAMAR0 ................................)3997

$AVE
WITH
THALER
I

NUS SAVING!

GREEN ACRES - One y r
old , 3 bd . r m . frame home ,
wi th attached ga r All e l ec
and al l car pet Own er
trans f err ed and h as p r~ced
th is ho me tor a qu ick sa l e
Only S27 ,500

160 10

The Praven Family l:ampatt

$AVE
WITH
THALER

S3 8.SOO

161 3

20 ACRE F arm 5 r ms an d
bath
Remode l ed
far m
house , barn , tr a i ler sp ace , 5
m il es from Ga lli poli s on R t
218 446 488d
162 3
-·-·--·-- - - -- - - HOUSE on 2 acres of land ,
dr 1ll ed well, o utb uil d in gs,
firep l ace Cl ose to R t 325 on
Mt T abo r Rd . Ca ll 388 8879
162 6

Limited 2 dr . Hdtp ., loaded wi th everything, plus sleel belted t ires.
low mi leage. Expect the Best .'

NEAR
R OONE 1Y
Beaut 1ful 7 rm . home , all
elec , all carpet , 11 ~ baths ,
plen t y storage rm "has a
2 car gar plus sma l l barn
and st or age bld g Loca t ed
on a 2 A f enced lot , p l enty
yo u ng pmes and pond
stocked w it h fish . Pr1ce

3 BR home . basement, R t 35
near hospi t a l , c1ty schools
PROPERTY FOR SALE , Lof
Reduced 446 337 S
42x300 ft wllh 2 trailers 1
159 '16
Marell et e 12x60 w1th 6 r ms ,
l ar ge llvmg rm and bat h, 1
New Moon 12x55, 4 rm an d 9 ROOM Hou se and ga r age
bath Bo t h carpe t ed Good
Approx . 1 ac re i n V i nton
bl ock garage , 7x 10 me t al
386 848 3. No answer , call 1
b u d flng , 4.116 4332
47 1 14 7'1

J ti' ~ AC R ES

Air impact w r enches 3!s-1f2.:1/.t -1", El e ctr ic Im p act
wrench es, Hand powe r saws, 7'12-7,/4"; Sab er Saws,

Anne

16J -6

GOO D OLD ER H OME
On I li lot a bov e CheS h 1r e
Very w e ll bu •ll and n eeds
on ly a litt l e work to be
p erf ec t
S2 3. 500
4
bedroom s,
11
bath ,
ba se m ent

Consisting of Household Furniture, Electr ical Appliances, Antiques and Collector' s Items as follows:
Warm Morning 65,000 B.T . U. automatic contro1 Gas
Heater (new ). Tappan Ga s Range, Automatic Dryer. ·

Mirror , Queen

country property or mobile

hom e. Sl8,500. Ph . 446 -4053.

N EED A N
IN EX P E N SI VE
&lt;I BEDROOM HO ME
H ere II •s l or $26 ,900 J BR ,
tar qe l• v •nq room
ktl c h en and dtntng ro om
t' bath s See d
N E W LI STIN G
Larqe .1 bedro om home on 1
A
country lot on Lower
R tv er Rd Two bath s, hu ge
l 1v1n g room w.th f ir ep lace .
ver y nt ce k 1t chen You'll
l 1ke the fam tl y r oom and
qaraq e
'Very
pretty
loc ati on

~~~.,C

N ew split level home , ju st
completed. 3 large BR, 11!2

help finance.

t

2 ho~;~ses on near 3 A lot ,
No 1 ha! 8 rms , bath ,
enclosed porch and p len t y
s torage r m P lenty good ,
freE" w ater No 1 has &lt;1 rms
Prop has 2 ce ll ars . t opped
w1th st orage b l dgs .• gar
and workshop with storage
overhead and 2 r,o ultry
bldgs . Lan d 1S excel ent for
garden10g
P rice S23 .500
(Mu ch potential ) .

LAI-!Uc loi s for sa l e 15 mi n .
from Ga l lipo li s Su1ta bl e for
houses or m'oblle homes
Ca ll 256 1123

S20' s Ph. 446-952] or 4461443

E L ECTRIC 'Tappan ra n ge,
c ont clea n , 1 vr o ld, Sl70.
446 1741
161 3

·---------- - - ---- --

BEST B U Y
J bed room b1 level. nt ce
k ttc hen p l enty of cl oset s ,
un l .nlshed family room ,
lar ge storage room and
qaraqe , l arg e co rn er lo t
Th e b es t par t a t &lt;~ II d s
p r. ced at '!. 22 .000 Bel•cve
me you can ' t buy more for
less

529 ,500

B Y OWNER, 2 good c att.le
farm s , one
114 acres.
S25,000 One 77 acres on
141 , 10 min utes
Stat e Rt
fro m c •ty , dr~lled w el l. 2 BR
h onle.
bath ,
carpe t ed ,
basement , f urnac e w1th
good pasture , fences, ba r n
Good hunt1ng Ca ll 446 7485
I SS 6

1973 BUICK ELECTRA..................~4297

2

N EIGHBORHOOD RD.

(bed w-high car ved front w -burl inlay, wash stand w-

Ex c e t'l e n t cons tr uct •o n .
wo n de r ful v i ew. p er f ec t
locat ton an d en ough room
to sta.s f y any size family
L ar ge l •ving room , for ma t
dt n •ng room, f am il y room.
3 ,baths, 4 hu ge bed r ooms.
cen t ra l a ir , h ardwood
fl oors . WB f • repl ac~: , 2 car
garage 111 edge of t own
Pr1 ced a t $55,000

661f .----------------------------------------,

ALFALFA, c lover hay, b al eo
Ca ll 245 9'17 B
161 -6

ON E O F TH E B ES T
BU YS ON T H E MA R KET
Exc ett ent 3 bedroom home
wtlh fa m tl y r oom arid large
r ec roo m, 2 f1r ep !ace s . 2
bath s 2 c ar g ara ge Newly
carp e t ed throu ghou t T h1S
home has h ad exc e ll en t
care 1 m 1te from town

WESTWOOD ACR E S -

yrs old , brick &amp; f rame . 6
rms , 11 ~ baths , all carpe t ,
all el ec , porch , 1 car gar
and loca t ed on a f l at lo t .
Walk to th e Shor,plng
Pl aza Owner t rans erred
and has p n ced th is riice
home for a Quick sa l e ar

.n

a cre
Call
152

Tel. 61444~1998

L OT S ro r sate
c.ty and
Country , also
Bus1ness
S1 tes
Robert A
Queen
Phone- 446 0168
8 -tf

2 BR hom e i n Centenar y
woth full ba se ment &amp;
fireplac e. Will trade for

LARG E 4 BEDROOM

OVER l OOKING RIVER

R. E. FOR SALE

House In City

On Muskingum River
above Beverly, OH.
Ext . cond .

3 BR Mobtle Hom e , on
lo t wtth new g ara ge
a ff er 5. 446 3346

SE LL E RS.

HANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGE
CABIN PWS
2 ACRES

floors, modern kitchen and
bath with la r ge f ront r oom ,
carpeted t 2 car garage , l i'll'e
1n one and rent the other
Con t act
Larry
Boyer ,
Admi n istra t or
of
the
estate
P h on e 446 4223 .
Shown by appt only

TH

Realty, 32 State St.

2B ~ F ram e home, enclosed
front porch . 1 1 acre tot ,
Ru ra l
w ater
s v ste m
Loca t ed on Rt 388 3 mtles
from Ga l ltpolts , v ery good
cond• l•on Pr 1ced m •ddle
l eens Ph 446 3968 or 446
3596

must sell w i th the fron l :
GARAG E APARTMENT
2 bedrooms wi th hardwood

Off. 446-3643

L AN 0 F OR SA L E

STROUT
REALTY
Br~ck ~- {;;~

Bl L E V EL
fram e cons truc t ed beauty
f ea tures 3 B R ' s, 11 , baths ,
l .:~rq e fam1ly rm , ga r ag e,
ce n tra l a~r &amp; kitChe n w 1th
butl t tn range , hood , d• sh
wash er &amp; d1 sp $J2 900

REALTOR

BEA UTIFUL ROL LI NG

162 3

USED e l ectric w asher and
d r ye r Ca ll after 5 44 6 1924.

AUCTION SERVICE

$22.000

SE LL OR TRAD E
New
!:oec lio nal home n eeds a
fam•ly that wou ld ap
pre c ta te th e 3 BR 's l ar ge
LJ.l , OR . , k 1tc'hen wtth
st ove &amp; r ef , w w ca r pet &amp;
larg e fl at lo t $ 16,900

Home Phone 446-9539

100ACR E FARM
L oca t ed in Rio G r a nd e
A r ea . H as a f our yea r o ld
a ll e lec tr ic 4 BR home. w i th
3 baths , f ami l y r oom with
fire p la c e . large liv1ng
room , formal d ining room ,
ki tc hen wi th b uil l in app ,
and attached 2 car garage
Also a nea rl y new 26'X36'
concrete b lock build•ng
T his h ome and farm must
be seen to b e app r ec •at ed
Call tod a y for your ap
po int m ent

Wtl l b e br ig ht er•n th1sJ BR
g old color r anc her wllh
beaut i fu l k 1tc hen &amp; DR.. w
w carpet , garage, larqe lot

M O B I LE HO M E L OT S .
located at Kerr St a t. on
Ro u te IJ1 &amp; Grave l H ill Rd
Ut dth es available

Willis T. Leadingham

Neal Realty

TH E GUIDIN G LIGHT
Dire c ts the W1 Se land &amp;
home buyer to t h •s 60 acres
&amp; barn 5 m • from t ow n
Lar ge br •c k r anch sty le 3
BR . 11 , B , fir ep lace 111
t am il y R , w w carpet. full
basem ent . ce ntra l a.r The
home &amp; 1 ~ere can be
bought alone

5 ACF&lt;c :&gt;of rand . pari cl eared
and level. .Part wooded h iff
side wtth creek . W i ll se ll on
land contract for only $5 ,000 .
W 1lh no down payment and
only SIOO per month ' 388 ·
8320
154 12

3 bedroom hom e, f ron t
room with fi r ep lace, t oyer,
balh. built -m kitchen with
l ots o f cab m ets, storm
doors
and
wi nd ows,
ba se ment.
62 1
Third
Ave n ue Be h in d this hom e

For Slle

MASSIE

1

ll . E: FOR SA L E
IN GA L LIPO L IS

The WIS£MAN Agency

Re.r~te

_Rea1 Estata For S.

.leal Estate fO( Sale

AS TH E WO RLD TU R N S
Your wor ld w•ll be pl eased
tndecd in thi s spa c •ou s '1
s tory bnc k &amp; s ton e home
oyer took•ng the river D ee p
pile w w c arpel , all large
open room s , 3 f •r ep l aces.
forma l DR , family R ,
relaxmg eat m kttchen with
all th e extras , f u l l d1vided
basement , wllh p l ay R &amp;
banquet k ll chen . eJt:cel lent
heat.ng &amp; ce n t ra l a1r .
cover e d p at•o . garage ,
sur r ou n ded by outstanding
landscapmg ·

DAYS OF OU R liV ES

Locate d 111 a Res tr.ct ed
Meadowgreen
E s tat e
Buy th is home and get a
$2, 000 income tax cred •t
11 hn s a lamdv room wlf h
wood burn 1ng firep lace ,
7' &lt; bath s, 2 c, ar garage '1
story moder n home with
diShw as her Loc ated on a
l arg e lot Mu st see th 1s
h ome to appreciate
IN GA LLI POLIS
'i room hou se o n a
p eace fu l st re et , Po r c h .
Nat Gas . Furnace. Built
tn c.ab ~n ets , fenced 111
yard , p lenty of gar d en
spac e A r ea l buy for on ly
$15 ,000
BU S. BLD G. WITH
RE NT A L A P T S.
Large
park1 n g
lo t
Bu s1n ess sp ace sh owroom
J 956 sq ft p l us sto c k
room Thr ee ups t airs a ll
e l e ct r •c
apar t ments
bring1 n g 1n $'165 mo For
tnfo r ma t .on
call
1m
med1ate l v
A PT . H O U SE
4 Apts J room s each apt , 2
bedroom s, kitchen , d mmg
room and l1v1 n g room , p lus
bat h and uli11ty r oom Ap t s
rent111 g for $ 150 mo Th ese
apts could pay for the
b uild•ng W1th 1n a f ew
year s
A re la t. vely new
apt
home A rea l good
1nvestmer\l
LOT S
abou t 70 lo ts.
' .
tfl c t ed , some

Real Estate For Sale

.

'

N ew GMC
Tr u ck H eadq ua rters
1972 1 T . Chevv Cab 8. Chassis
1970 1 T GMC W1fh body
197 1 GMC Tandem Ltve A)( l e
Cab and ChaSSIS
1969 GMC I T PU
1966 1 : T GMC
1969 ' ' T GMC Pickup
1971 2 1
T. GMC Cab and
Cha s ts
196 B 1 T GMC P ickup
t9 71 GMC Sub urban
1 ~11 1
1 • GMC P 1c kup
\9f,Q
T GMC P tckup
1970 ' , T ford P• c kup
SOMM ERS G. M . C
T~ U CKS , IN C.
135 Pm e St .
446"'2 532
- .

···-- -

-:; ·.,-1-vE:S Tand s ~t, 1 bronc :.:.. •·
5-l r o rd tril ctO r . Ph
d&lt;16
.t6'n
161 3

SI X acres . h'Qh rol lmdg c1dlear1
bare l and with pan
ea
budd 1 ng sde
SVO l oot
fro n tage on hard paved
road
Two m li es l r'om

Holler Med oca l Cen ter otf

R ~u~e _ 1~0

Phone

OH ,'~ oro • ER . W

m,~;•~3

Va lurn p

cua t , t 1r ewoo d . Blocks, tile,
cement mortar
Gaii •Poi•S

Block Co Ph

:~-, ~ -:,~-~ !:'

446 2783
of

1&lt;

it

! 70 DODGE CORONET..... ., ..................................... 51595 !
!

~

66 f'AI.CQN
_- ,....-../
,.,;
68 FORD 4 DR.
.70 DAJSON 4 DR

il

i&lt;

!

;lt
l"r

29J If ll-

.bu~~n~· :

'f"'"'

2 Dr . H .T .. Sha r p , 49,000 Mil es .

'

SEE:

..,_,

YOUR
CHOICE

it

$299

OVER 50 LATE MODELS' TO CHOOSE FROM

•

~

'i
.

lt

i

POLIS
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
,
.
~~r:~~~!i:~·gud~f~~~r~~: :GALLI
·.. :
mal er ••" · blo ck ._ br&lt; c k . ,..
5 ' 2 ' after

s.

m

- · ---~-----

11 :

1~39 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, 446-3273 ·'

It

*~****t *****··~-~-·····~············~~··-~··

�•

•

j

'I

.,

. '.

•

30 - T'-iSunday Times-Senti~! . Sun day, J uly 1~,1975
31 - The Sun.! ·- 'J'Ilnes -Senllne,\, Su...ay, July 13, 1975

·For Fast Results Use The Sunday ·Tim.e s-Sentinel .Classifieds
Real Estate for Sale

,

Real Estate For Sale .

.'

Ql

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr., Realtor

.

512 Second Ave.,

C$1/lfi/Il10IL

Gallipolis, Ohio

R_EA L TY

"WE SELL
BETTER
LIVING"

..2S L ocust St
Howard Bran non , Broker
Of f1 cc 446 -2674
l uc •ll c Brannon
E vc. 44 6.- 1126 or 446 2674

VA LOANS.
NO DOWN PAYMENTS

A N OT H ER WOR LD
Th at 's 10 acres wooded
land . where lh tS beaur. t ul
ran ch sty l e. 4 BR, '1 bath , '1
f sr epla ces . fam lly R , futt
bsm , del u xe k 1tche n &amp;
d 1n tnq wpw ca rp e t, 7 car
g ar , &amp; b arn
ALL MY C H IL D RE N
Will f 1t w1t h room t o spare
into th• s spac1o us 2 sto r y
brick
h ome
lo c ate d
downt own W W carpet.
large room s, double car
port , f enced lot &amp; an ex tra
4 room apt w1th prtv ate
entrance $.39,500

Thi s Bea utiful New Home

E D GE OF N I GHT
Th1ng s
l ook 1ng
bleak
'c ause yo u c an ' t fmd the
sp ace you n eed at the pr •ce
you ca n a lford ? Cheer up•
Seet h1 S 4 BR , 11 7 8, eat 10
k t t chen D R, f amily R , 21 •
acres S17 000

located on a State Highway -

3 bedrooms, l arge
family room , 21 ,1 baths, loca ted on
acre plot of la nd.
large ma ster bedroom, modern krtchen w •th bu ilt 1n
cabmets Obi s-s smk , large liv •ng room , back pa tt o
porch Hou se fu lly ca rpet ed. All of th1s for on ly
$31, 500 .00
3/4

LAND CO N TRACT
6 rooms 2 !'. tory wood
burnmq ltr e plac~o n larqe
l o t Wil l t ake mobil e home
tr ad e rn on down paym e n t
and $ 1] I 50 per montll

39 2S ACRES VACANT
Level and c tean
J m lie
Off Of R t ]5
6 rllliC'S
f rom

Gal l r po lr s

Good

•nv es tmen r property
LA ND CO NTRACT
Two Ho u ses
one m
Ga l lrpo tr s 3 b edroom arr

c ondrtroned

$18 .900

less

m rle out

than

a

one
of

Gallrpol •s 3 b ed r oom , a• r
cond•l•oned Only 113,900
Bot h hou ses ca n
be
boug h t wlfh a low down
paym ent and mont hly
paym ent s l1 k e r ent
L IKE N E W H O M E
coun tr y Se lt1ng
3
bedroom s . br1ck
and
wood
sid1ng ,
lar ge
modern k i t che n w1th tots
of cab inet s. cent ra l a1 r ,
carpeting , ga r a ge , 2
year s ol d on a n •ce lo t 111
City Sc hool D1str1 Cf
4 B E D ROO M
Ap pr ox
11 ,. acres large
moder,n kitchen , gas fur
nace , basemen t pane l ed ,
lo t s of sh a d e trees , g arden
s pa ce
Ask . ng
on l y
$19 ,900 00
WHAT A BU Y
5 rooms , l arg e to t w1th
p l en ty of garden space
P orc h .
T ot al
P r1ce
,

II I I

A BEA U TIFUL

NEW HO ME

Phone 446-7699

For Sale
SW I MMING POOL S
F I GERG L ASS SAVE
Hol 1d ay
Pools ,
Hunti n gton 429 4788

Ph o n e
157 26

'1 • 10,000 BTU a~r cond. and 1
gas ra n ge , 446 J7 12.
161 3

---

---

~

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

19 72 SUZUK I 750 water coo l ed
cu s t om p a int iob , cus to m
back rest E xc con d $1, 195
? 56 1398
159 6

;;·,; NA-soN.Ic- sA" 2rh - A"m

4 BR hont e ~ea r Ho l zer
Hosp i tal Vaca n t and ready
t o m ov e int o

pi ifie r
equ1pp ed f o r
4
c h anne l so un d , BS R turn .
ta bl e and 2 Pa n ason1c ·
speakers S150 1972 Ch evefle
30 7 en g , good gas mileage
$ 1,800 446 2791

Off 1ce Ph . 44 6-1694
E ve nin gs
Ch arl es M . N ea l446 · 1546
J . M •ch ae t.N eal 446- 1503
S&lt;l m N Pa l 446-735 8

IS9 -5
3 H P Rototlller S50
4426

Ph

446
162 3

10 ,M I XED B r eed
Ph 446 452J

Ch•ckens
l62 3

1974 23FT TERRY Camper
w•th a1r con d 446.4517
162 6
ZUZUKI m otorcyc le 1975 380

Ph . 366 -8152 .

'SWAIN

162 3

K enneth Sw a in, Au c l.
Corh er T h1rd &amp; Oli ve

COL
H tQi ey s Gun '. hop ,
ba rb er sho p
boo k s tore
r e a l e sta t e a n d auc t•o n
scrv •ce Ph -l-16 0002
177 ff
NEW Frank lm F urn ace w1t h
accessories
made
by
A t l an tic Stove Co Sme lt ze r
Ga r der.. · :cent er Phon&amp;:- 446
4846

AUCTION
SE RVICE

DOCTO RS
Why should yo u t hink of a
doctor 1f yo u co uld l 1ve in
lh1 s home full o f sunsh in e.,
Firep lace •n l1v .ng room ,
forma l DR , spacious eat in
k1 l c hen , full basement.
double c arpo rt &amp; sto r age ,
generou s
l a n dscap •ng .
Qu 1c k po ssession S28 .900

l

HOW TO
SURVIVE A MARRI A GE
P r eserve 11 •n th ts river
view home Wtf h f 1n1shed
wa l k in basement &amp; fami l y
room
la r ge
patio
&amp;
garage , d eep lot &amp; ga r den
spot S26,000

SEA R C H FOR

TOM OR.ROW
&amp; butl d a beaut 1fu t future 111
l h1S ch armmg 3 BR hil l
v•ew home , built 1n kllch en
W1lh R ei , washe r &amp; dry er ,
car port &amp; storage, large
lot , Qus c k
possession

s:n.soo

N O T F OR WOM E N ONL Y

WE NEED YOUR
LISTING NOW.

"Call today

VACA NT
LAN D
tn
Ch es hsre Twp 85 A rol li ng
land
m o s tly wooded
2
we ll s &amp; se v era l sp rings
On l y $12,500

FH A ~ P P ROVED •·
A
small down payment wil l
l et you en1oy th1s 3 yr ol d
r anch W1lh b r ick fro nt. 5
r ms &amp; b at h , ga r age &amp; gas
heat $19. 500

It will pay."

BEDROOM S
Lovely b1 leve l near town
has lot s t o offer t o your
grow 1ng
f amily
A
r eason ab le p r~ ce w•ll l e t
you en to y th e l arge fa m1l y
rm , 11 • bath s. eq uipp ed
k llchen , sundeck , attached
garage , gas hea t , ce nt a•r
and large fl at landscaped
lo t Show n by appoin t ment

BUILDIN G WITH LIVING
QU A RT E RS . 2 ga r ages,
off tce. sh owroom &amp; 1 , ba th
down st airS p lus a lov el y 6
r m apt upstatrs Loca t ed
abo u t 2 m il es fro m tow n
LO VE LY
WOOD E D
HOMESIT E
near
R 10
Gran d e tS tu st per l ect for
your d r eam home 5 ac r e
tr ac t off ers lar g e sh a d e
tr ees for yo u r cOm f ort , a
R T rd
l or your con
ven1en ce and restrtclton s
for you r pro t ecllon
B IDWELL
N1ce com
for tab le 7 rm home with l
B Rs, ba th Located •n a
n 1ce Qu •et
reside n t i al
sect1on of tow n $ 15.000
G R E EN ACRES
1 yr ol d
3 BR ranch W1 l h w w
ca rp et , mod er n kitche n .
n 1cc laun d r y r m , cent a1r
an d g ar age B u y With or
without fur n i t ur e

l

CAMPS IT ES
La r ge flat
lot s on the longest creek 111
the wor ld Th e se lo t s h ave
lots of Shade trees a n d
l arqe
ga r den
s p ac es
Located on a priva t e rd

VAC ANT WOODlAND
I dea l f or hu nfing, camp·ing
or b u dd mg A ll d •r ect•ons
r,nanc•ng avatlable on
some
COA L VALLEY · 15 A, 5
A bo tt om, 5 A past ur e
W1th new fences . 5 A
woods .
s ev er al
out
b u1ld•ngs . sol•d r est orab l e
home $ 10,000

BUY &amp;

CO MM E RCI Al

DE VE L OP

6

vaca n t lo t s on Ches tn u t 51
Zon ed r es i dent ial $12,000

ALMO ST NEW 3 BR
r an c h 111 c it y sc h ool d ist
Offers 2 bath s. con¥en ien t
)qlc h en , laun dr y room . w w
ca rp el , gar age &amp; l arge tot

$22,500

WE NEED L I ST IN GS .
T H E SEASO N I S HE RE
liND
O UR
BUYER 'S
O U TN U MBER
OU R
~ ELLER S
D O N 'T SET
TLE F OR LESS T HA N
N ATIO N WI D E
AD
VERT I SI NG
CALL 446
OOOB T ODAY

WORlD'S LARGES T
THE L EA DER -SIN CE 1900
IN
SE RVING
TH E
NATION ' S BUY E R S AND
Ph. 446 -0008

PHONE 446-4922

NEW LISTING
.
Excell ent 3 year old ranch sty le br ick on 2.6
ac r es of level land, 3 bed room , large li vi ng
r oom , modern kitchen includ ing lots of
r oom for dining ar ea. ca rpeted throughout.
2 ca r garage, full basement, centra l heat.
rur al wa ter , very ni ce storage bu ilding ,
sever al yo ung fr uit trees, appl e, cherr y and
pea r . Land idea l for garden or could be used
for r ea l estate development if des ired.
CHAR MIN G SP LIT
LEVEL
N ea rly n ew l
bedroom
hom e off ers a l arge llvsng
room . f ormat d 1111 ng , large
k ttc hen t am.!y room. Jl ,
ba t h , large u ll ltty area ,
na t gas , for c~d as r fu r nace
W1lh cen t ra l i11d , carpe t ed
t hroughou t , plus 2 car
garage and l arge flat lot
E xcell ent
n e•ghborhood ,
C1ty Sc hoo l Oislrtct

Som e o f the n•ccs t un
dev el oped land lett on U s
35 111 c tty sc hool d1 s tr~ct
Sam e wooded to ts Some
lots with f ant a stic v iews
Ca ll Ike W• sem an 1f you
want to qet C)(C if ed about a
place to build
OWN ER MOVIN G
'Area l
h om e bu y - 2000 !&gt; Q ft ot
love l y il v•n g sp ace . Hu ge
hvtng fa mily a nd d1n1ng
areas ,
p lu !&gt;
3
lar g e
b edr oo m s, 2 bath s, 2 car
g ar ;;age Ow ner m ov .n g out
ot sta t e. Mu st se ll now .
Tht !&gt; h om e 1s und er p nce d
a t S35 oon
BEA UTI F Ul { QU A LI TY
BUI LT) BR I CK HO ME
Tht S tS a one of lo..tnd " S yr
ol d l bed room b n ck located
o n lar q e flat
lot
1n
Chest1 1re .
.nc l udes
a
b ea ut 1fut k tl c h en ! range
dishwasher , r e fr •g
but!!
tn ), n tce d tnlllg area , 1t ,
ball1 ,
ca rpe t 1 ng
thr o ughout
Ow n er has
bee n tran sf err ed nnd ha s
bought oth er prope rt y and
w ill Qtv e occ upancy June
1'i Pr1 c e tn m1d fort ies
THROW AWAY
TH E AS PI R IN

Your
house
hu n1 11jl 9
neadaches are over One
gla n ce at th •S properly a~d
yo u ' ll agree and look at
th ese advan t ages · larg e
;:.. pr~rlQ Valley lot. 3 n•ce
SIZ ed bedr o om s , 2 lu l l
b ath s Sup er carp et and
dra p es throughoul built •n
ranqe and d •shwasher ,
f i r e p lace
Ow n e r
has
bouqht other pr o perty .
must se ll 397 2220
2 R EAL BUY S ON
THIRD A V E
Very good ol der 3 B R
homes w1th fam il y room .
11 bat hs . ve r y n 1ce l o t s, I
Wilh la r ge g arag e, 1 wilh
ca rport. 1 unde r $20.000,
th e other un d er $30.000

3 BR b r ick , full basement,
e x cellent location , back of
house faces Gallipolis

Golf

Course .

Newly

decOrated . Price d in the

CO L R E . K NOT TS
&amp; SON , DAVE
Gallipoli s, Oh1o

PUBLIC AUTION

Located at 34 Vl(est Street in Jackson, Ohio.
Just off of South Street from Henry's Super
Market. Watch for Signs.

N AOMl 'S Wig St y li ng
Sell
and sty le a ll fash1o n s W i gs,
wt gle ts , falls
Ph one 38li B308
'286 -tf

. SATURDAY, JULY 19,1975
Starting at 10:30 A.M.

---~

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

GOOD c lean l ump and st oker
c oa l
Car t W •nte r s , R io
Grande . Ph 245 5115
2&lt;5 11

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

bath , large kitchen an d
dining area , dishwash er ,
range
an.d
e lec tric
disposal , fully carpeted ,
family
room ,
garage ,
d
·
1
1
1
centra I a1r, • arge O ' goo
location, 6 miles up Rt. 7 in
Country Aire Estate . Can

Streakless Machine Wall Washing '
Upholstery - Windows - Floors
.
Complete Une of • . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies

Combination, Oak Table 8. 4 Chairs, Knee Hole Desk 8.
Chair. Upholstered Chairs, Twin Beds, End Tables,
Table Lamps, Window Fans, Folding l.Jawn Furfllture.
Collector's Items: Chiffon ier with Beveled Glass•

FOR FRI ENOL Y FREE ESTIMATES

·:

Call. 6'15·$572 After 4 P.M.

I
I

~-- - ---- - - - - --------- ----1
'
. -'

I

'I

'

..

Stand , Wall Mirror, Captain

TERMS ' CASH
LunchWiJIBeServed
Daryl Alban
- AUCT IONEERsKenny Swain
Qak Hilt, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio
Not Responsible for Accidents

violins , etc . as listed: Cherry Chippendale lo w boy
d es k ; 4 c hina c upboa r d s w -cur v ed glass ( 2 w -mirro r

back s 8. t op - 1 w-rope leg fr ont 8. ca rved mirror at top .
1 w -tripl e c urved glass ) ; carved oak sideboard w-

Pet er so n Chesapeake Bay c ha i r ; walnut marble top
V ictor ian st a nd ; Engli sh rung back roc ke r ; Cherry
Ch i ppendale wall stand ; walnut ebon y arm chair wc law fee t!; Ro sewood arm ch a ir w -6 in . fr ee standing
ca r v ing · car v ed a rms &amp; ball claw feet, J a cobian ver y

unusual ; 5 Burk hart m ahogany. (Old Man of Mt .)
c ha irs ·w-original upholstering ; J pc . V ictorian parlor

w-car ve d back ; 22"x60" top solid mahogan y librar y

dresser w -marble in sert ; 4 walnut can e bottom c ha1rs ;
ant. picture s &amp; f rames ; J pc . walnut bedroom suite
w hite marble &amp; bra ss pulls , dresser w -full

N

all

ED ?

the

marble top, mirror 8. candle holders I over -100-yrs . old
&amp; ver y b ea utiful i che rry settee &amp; c hair set - c hair w .
.cla w feet &amp; picture of Jose phin e's fa ce c a r v ed on arms,
ex t ra nice ; c h erry octogen tur:t le top table ; w alnut
marble top wa sh stand ; walnut wa r drobe , Currier &amp;
lves p ri nt ; Minnesota sewing ma c hine; oak bamboo
st and ; camel back trun k; colle cti on can e bask ets.
11 VIOLINS ' One Maggin i dated 1607; one Sweit zer
Amati ; one Gus Hopf ; One Hart ; One St einer ; o ne
N ickola u s Am ati ; one Mueller ; one Collie r Special ; 3
l esser ones.

Af1 er · rea dmg

r e~}.

es l at e

a.d s.

GLASS, CHINA &amp; OLD ITEMS' Cut 8. pressed gla ss,
ca rniva l ; Millersburg ; Blue Fleurdelis waf er pitcher 8.

Dis c us $ · ' yOU r rea l es t a te
problem s w1th th e pr os . Our
stafl ha s sold r ea l est a t e in
th e Ohto Vall ey tor ov er fifty
ye ar s Wh eth er y ou want a
f ar m , v a c a nt land , an
exe cut1 ve hom e or a cu stom
built hom e on y ou r lot , our
ex p er ie nc e c an !&gt; ave you
mon ey W e hav e t w o offic es
m Ga llia County ,
RANCHO COMPANY

glasses ; Cambridge va ses; gla ss fruit b owls ; berr y

di shes ; footed 8. stemmed di shes; compotes; 3 covered
dishes; c aster set ; pun c h bow l set ; rare patterned

di she&gt; like grape- peacock , etc.; 3 cake stands; Kempel
gla ss sp ooner-sugar· creamer set ; water pitchers;
c r u its ; Ge rman , Austrian, few p es. Haviland, et c.;
coin s ilver sugar-creame r ; coin s ilv er t ablespoon s;

copper ca ndl e stick s; Maielican pitcher ; buttermilk
blue p itcher; large 161n. Blue Delft platte r signed ; old

RE ALTORS- AUCTIONEERS
ADDISON OFFICE 367 -0300

GA l LIPOLI S OFFICE
446 -0001

Ran d,

Cha n ne l

Hedge tr imming tool s. Plumbing too is, Tap 8. Di e se ts,
Drill bit sets, Tool bo xes (all si zes), Air hoses, Tor ch
hoses , Scr ewdrive r set s, Oil _lamps, Tran sistor radios,

TERMSOFSALE : CASHOF APPROVEOCHECKS
No1 Responsible for Accidents or Property after sold .
Due to Strikes and

Shopping Schedules. OWNERS
Quality Surplu s liquidators, Inc.- Boswell Wholesale
Phone (J17l 869-5516
Boswe11.'1na1ana .
Auctiorleer' s Note : T his offer can b e in sp ec t ed on e

, hour before sale fin'l e. Thi s $ale begin s prom ptly on
.
·- -~ :- ..
SWAIN ~UCTtON SERVICE
Kenneth Swain ·- AUCTIONEERs- Daryl Altl.n
t1m e.

Oh'o

·
Qlik Hill Ohio
Not Re._lble for AccNenls
'

.

~

3411

'

••

".1
"

Ta y lor;

desk ; iron pols; iron kettles &amp; sp iders ; 2 dinner bells ;
blue salt jar w-lid ; old brown stone pitchers ; butter
bow l 8. mold ; c hurns ; pocket watches ; old hat pins;
costume iewelr y i RR lanterns ; sugar buckets ; Flo
Bl ue; Continental pes. 1876 ; blue onion; Chelsea bow l
1700 's; sandw ich glass covered compote (wild flower
patter n 1840) ; several pes. Crooksv i lle ; Sheffield sli ver
1847; other good Ste r ling ; a State coi n silver teaspoons.
GUNS: 29 cal. muzzle loading cap. ball rifl e w-flger
mapl e stock w -powder box; 12 ga . dble. barrel muzzle
loading shotgun w- 34 ln. barrel ; 1890 Winchester
repeating 22 r ifle ; 12 ga . dble. barrel L. C. Smith
shotgun ; 1886 Hopkins-P,.IIen 32 cal. revolver.
OTHER ITEMS: Hillside plow ; ·sausage grinder on
leg s; throws, wooden planes . 2 broad axes; dbfe.
shovel plow ; old garden plow w-c ultlvators, etc.; MTD
71/ &gt; HP riding mower. This is only a partial listing of
lhl s life lime collection . Everything cl ean &amp; In excellent condition . Clip thi s ad tor time 8. directions for
sal e Saturday, July 19 at 10: 30 A .M . Plenty shade so
bring your lawn chair. Lunch on premises . Posi tive I D.
Terms - cash day of sale. Not r es pons ible for acc idents.
Nothing shown before day• of sa te.
OWNER5-MR. AND MRS. C. R. MALCOLM
' AUCTIONEER- BI LL JANES, Phone 962-4377 or 557 ·

Buff~ 'r s . Electri c drills (all si ze s ), Air pow er c hi sel ,

ch a,nges

Zachery

Flor entin e candle sticks; collection small stone bot·
ties. can e m ade from wre~kage of Blue Ridge Boat In
1847; large v ases w -revers e painting ; two 13 ln. ivory
figur in es w -brass bases; Gufus gl ass vases; two large
apothecary jars: t w o Aladdin lamps ; 2 copper jar·
dineres; 5 copper sc~ool bells ; McGuffey readers 8.
other old boo~ s ; 5 pc. Ben Hur ch ina pitcher-bowl set;
old trunk s; lot stone jars &amp; jugs ; coffee grinder ; sc hool

Or bital sand er s. Belt t ype sander s, Disk Grind er s and

lot. cit y sewag e an d wa te r
Ideal
bld g
stfe
No
res t r icti ons $4,500 .

'

157,

1975 BUICKS AND PONTIACS LEFT.
If you intend to buy a 75 model
car. buy now while selection is
good, 76 models wi II be up at least
6 per cent .

CLEAN USED CARS AND TRUCKS
WE WILl GIVE YOU

·•3349

TOP DOLLAR

THALER
FORD

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

FORD

o.

GALLIPOLIS
: CHRYSLERi~ :-: .· PLYMOUTH
.' ;. ·-: -,.
·: -:·

446-3575

For Sale
STAR CRAFT
TRAVEL tr a 11 e r a n d fold
down s 8th anniv er sa r y sale
L ow est p rices in T ri -St ate
Camp Conley Sta r Cr aft
Safes , Rt. 62 N Pt . P le asa nt ,
W . Va .

The wheels are rolling; People ore lluylng cars. And we're going to keep it
that way. Ytiu get up to $300 cash back on almost every car we sell. Cars
that were designed to meet today's demands for reduced 111aintenance ·
!IM greater efficiency, Retail customers only. Come on down to

Packa ge

Pol icy

for

Bu s iness.
We know we

save you money.

Leadingham Agency

'74 FORD PINTO
2 Dr. Sedan. Blk. v!r,y l top and interior.
whit~ t'inish , 2300 cc 4 cyl . engine, auto. w-stires. radio .

w

~: ury , ti300 m ileS,
air, 4 dr , good· con d ition
Sl ,8 95 Pho ne 446 0952 a ft er 5

19 11 PLY

pm

•2695

WOOD MOTOR- SALES
. . 'I '

GALLI POLIS, 0 .

-- - ·-- - - - -

160 4

----

GI.'. S range and electr•c ra n ge ,
Retnge r ator ,
k!lchen
cabinet, bed w t th box
s prmgs an d mattress . chest
of drawers 446 095'2'
16Q .t f
~
- . - ·- - - - ~ ~ -·
NEW Sc uba eQ uipment , tank
an&lt;:l regula t or Price $100
Phone 446 109&lt;1 aft er 5 p m . 7
days w ~ e k
160 6

t

...

1&lt;

t 73 FORD PINTO WAGON .................... :................... 52395 t
!
!
!1&lt; 72 PLY. DUSTER lWISTER .....................................11695 t-«
Auto T ran s

...

J Speed, 3'18 Engine

:;;

4 Dr. Sedan

:

Loaded !

-~

71 VW' SUPER BEAnE. ......................................... 11495 t

1&lt;

2 To Choose From

..

t
! 72 FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT FASTBACK .............. 52295 t
t

! 71 CHRYSLER NEWPORT........................... ............ 11295

For Sale

For Sale

197 3 17 F T Glast r on boat, wlth
1-lO HP Me r cury ou t board
and traile r
Ex ce p l •l')na l
condition CJII 446 4569 .
161 6

-tr

Sharp ! 15,000 M iles .

(Fo ld Dow n Rea r Seat), 6 Cy l , Auto ., P S.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

For Sale

1&lt;

74 PLY. DUSTER .:........ ............ ~ ............................ 12495 t
2 DR .• 6 Cy l. , Std . Sha ft .
,
.
:
74llODGE CHARGER S.E.................................... ;.. 13895 :

il

!1r 73 DART SPOilT.. ................................................. 52495

50 STATE STREET

Ph. 446-7699
512 Second Ave. ualli olis, Ohio

Auto Trans

-t1
...

CARROLL
NORRIS DODGE

Why not compare our rates with your present policy?

1&lt;

t

One

You r

2 Dr . H .T .• Air, P.S.• P. B.

i

Poli cy.

• Low Cost Fire Policy.
Specia l M ulti -Peril

t

t

~ 74 FORD MUSTANG ·11... .... ......... ........... :............... 12895 :

&lt;:"

Modern Mobile Homeo w ner Pol icy

•

• 75 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ..................................... '5395 •
~ Only 2,300 Mil es, Ex tra ' Sharp.
t
t 74 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC .............................. 13895 t

YOU GET UP TO s300 C.ASH BACK ON
CARS AT CARROLl NORRIS DODGE

e Low

eA

!

ON THESE FINE USED CARS

i'

Writes All Types of lnsuranc~ For
Your Auto, Home or Business
RepresentlnA Lightning Rod
Mutual Insurance Compa_
ny
e Low C ost - A u10- Insurance--comp are o ur rates
in

i

SUPER DEALS

i

Leadingham Agency

Cost Homeow ne r s Policy for Re nter.s.
eFarmowner s Poli cy - Compl et e Prote ctt on

,.;.

..

i

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

-

it

i'

161 3

LI M E STO N E f or ·dri veways •
Carl W 10ter s . Ph on e 245
5 11 5.
245 tf

For Sales

i

i ····B,,~~,~~~,~, ,B~,re:,~,, ~,~, £!I~!,',;,r,~m,~.~~~·:, ,~,~f,,,, , , , , , , j

158 If

Any Hr. 446-1'998 .

.· 1

f

.H O N D A200 l ow m lleage 1400
$695 446 3224

EASTERN AVE . ·

•

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

WANTED I

183 .

417 Second Ave.

eA

lamp stand s; oil lamp w-Maiellcan base; 18th century

R emington .

I 67 A.

Ai r cond ., 54,354 miles. extra clean . These ar e har d to find.

Better Deal

lamps; RR oil lamp ; pewter ; glass can e w- mounting

carri a ge c lock ; m irrors; lamp w- art glass shade ;

L ock .

RIO GRANDE -

1968 T. BIRD......................................5l297

YOU PAY ' 3 8 9 7

A Local
Dealls
Always A

• Low Cost Homeow ner Poli cy.

deed s sign ed by John Tyler 8.

Name Bra nds Include : Chi cago Pneu'm a t ic, Roda c,
Bla c k &amp; Decker, F uller , H er Br a n d , B ro w n, M arflow,
Shopmate, McG raw Edi son , Wrigh, , W en , Di am ond ,

1

$2197.00 .

'

COMPARE OUR SERVICE, TOOl OUR GOAL:·NO UNHAPPY OWNERS!

tureen s; H av iland tureen ; Russian Borsch bowl ;
Prussia n fru it bowl ; Lune sv ille pitcher s igned ; se veral
bone handl ed kn i ves &amp; forks ; several ex tra ni ce oil
stand ; Ironston e tu ree n ; depression glas~; land grant

JULY 18, 1975-6:30 P:M .

Ing ersoll

white

YOU PAY

Country -Squir e, 9 pass., air cond. , luggage rack. average miles. Was

Silver Blue
Automatic , Steel Bel ted
Tires , P. Brakes. P. Steer inq , Bumper
Guards, AM- FM radio. Inter . Decor
Group. Vinyl Roof. Prot . Group . Light
Group. STICKER PRICE 4262

STICKER PRICE '3571

SUB - OIV . -

VINTON AREA On~
Jack son Rd , good 6 rm .
h o u se, W1th
b a th and
f urna ce hea t Paneled and
ca rp et ed . 2 A g ood gard en
land F IJII Y fu r ni shed . Buy
and mov e 1n th e day after
c los in g Ch ea p at 515,000

tabl e; wa lnut phonograph ; 6ft. walnut floor lamp wtaffeda sha de ; Seth Thomas a day clock ; high top
waln ut bed w -carved b' r l front (will take regular
srping s &amp; mattr ess) ; c herry .. wa sh stand ; w alnut

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

125.

Yellow
6 Cyl .. Automatic . Steel
Belted nres. Radio .

STATE RT . 141 - 311 mi.
fr om tow n , 1974 m ode l,
12' .:65' A ft elec
mobi l e
ho m e M os t f u r ni shi n gs g o
1, A fl at lot On l y$1 1,000

.1971 FORD St. WAGON ..............~1797

YOU PAY

YOU PAY • 3 9 9 7

75 MAVERICK 2 DR

Air cond ., automatic, 350 eng ., Cr ager wheels, vi nyl top . Ex pect a
ni ce car.

STICKER PRICE'4198'3859

STICKER .PRICE '4369

STATE RT . 160 7 rm
f ra m e home with b at h ,
mos t has been re -do ne
Stor m doo rs an d wi n d ows .
F ur heat I t h as gar . and
lar ge
c h icken
ho u se
L oc ate d on .75 a cr e fla t lot.
10 m1xed fr u 1t trees L ot s of
good coun t ry li vi ng fo r on ly

1972 CAMAR0 ............:..................... -~2997

Radio . Steel Belted Tir es. P. Steering .
Dl x . Bumpers, Dl x. Interi o r , Prot .
Group, Convenience Group.

Green
Automatic , Steel Belted Tires.
P. Steering. Bumper Guards, Radio , Air
Cond ., Dlx. Exterior. Tinted Glass.

N ice 6 rm . hou se, featu r ed
3 bd r m s .. larg e l 1v . rm , b 1g
room kit. an d din . ar ea.
H .W . floor s and ext ra ni ce
family rm . wit h F P .
Hig hest g a s bi ll $38 . Pr'ic e
$24,000

m aple r ocker ; 1 oak Old Man of MI. chair; oa k stand wcla w ball feet ; Rosewood mahogan y side chair ; 2
organ stoo ls w-glass ball f eet ; walnut · Frankl in chair

63

•

YOU PAY ' 3 7 3 9

514,000

TAWNEY

suite - c herry w- whlte caste r s extl'a nice; Country
t u r ned bac k straight c hairs w -c ane bottoms ; slant
back sew ing rocker w -cane bottom ; can e bottom

163

.

CHILLICOTHE RD. 6
rm o ld er h om e, bath and
rurn . h ea t ; b ase m en t and
la rg e lot . Pri ce d at S9 ,000
NEIGHBORHOOD R D . Co zy 4 rm cot t ag e w i th
b at h , t ur n hea t , F P and
ba sem en t; r ur a l w a t er, 8
A
to t
Id ea l f o r
the
new l yw ed
or
re tlf e d
coupl e . Pri ce S14,SOO

Qu een Ann e turtle lop oak st and ; plank bottom c hai r s;

Locahon : Jackson Co.Blivestock Yard

'

J'

mirr or ben c h t op ; set 4 B entwood cal)e b ott om c hatr s,·
fru itwood c hina cupboard ; T exa s st y le anTI cha i r,

We nee d lr sf•ng s We ha ve
27 new l am tir e s m o vm g t o
tow n tht s m onth . Ca ll th e
W• se m an A ge n cy . 44 6·3643 .·
Ga l lla Co.' s L a r ges t R ea l
Es t ate Sa les Age ncy
Off tce &lt;14 6-3643
Ev e nin gs Call
I ke W ise man 44 6-37 '96
E . N, Wji Se m a n 446-4'500
Bud M cG h ee 44 6-125 5

75 MAVERICK
4 DR
Si l ver Blue
Vinyl Roof. Automat ic.

$22, 000

antique furniture , glass china, guns, silver, lamps,

!'rom
RIPLEY, W. VA. FAIR PLAIN EXIT OFF 1-77

G•,lllpotls,

-

the C. R. Malcolm Farm. Signs posted. Coming off St.
Rt . 35 turn ott at Rio Grande east onto St. Rt. 554 twelve
miles to the Eno-Vinton Rd.
Fa r m for sale by owners will sell a lot walnut &amp; cherry

R T 35
1 haven 't seen a better buy
tha n th1 S .1 bedroom frame
on Rl 35 In c l ud es a v er y
tliCC kll c hen . f ~rep lace ,
base m en t 2 ca r Qarage
You should l oo k at lh1 s
be f or e you buy Priced at
$34,000'

75 MAVERICK GRABBER

'

for 10 miles then turn onto Eno· Vinton Rd . for 1 mile to

i ools From Factory to You . Over 400 Items to Choose

for

•'

J5 miles south of Athens, Ohio1on St. Rt. 7 or 11 miles
north of Gallipolis on Sf. Rt . 7. Turn west on St. Rt. 554
at traffic light in Cheshire (towards Por ter I stay on 554

AUCTION

Not responstble

'

&gt;

won 't last long.

182,

Copper
Automat ic, Steel Belled
Tires, Radio, Lux ury Dec ur Group, T.
Glass. Exterior Decor Group, H. D.
Suspension · STICKER PRICE '4 153

Tan
Automatic. Conv. Group. Dl x.
Bumper. AM Rad io. Li ght Group. H. D.
Suspension . STICKER PRICE '4026

VINTON 11 rm f rame
h o m e , pa r t has been
re done , n•ce kitchen , some
ca r pet , cop per p l umb m g,
me t al roof, dug w ell J ca r
ga r , r oo t ce ll ar an d o ffi ce
qu ar ters A cheap h ou se for
a l arge f a m ily
P r1ce

9 Pass., ai r cond .. power seats, windows. new stee l be lled tires. low
mil es. Local industr iali st wi fe's car .

4 Dr . Hd tp ., custom . air cond., vinyl top, 75 trade -in this week. This

YOU PAY ' 3 8 2 9

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

1973 BUICK ESTATE WAGON 53997
1973 BUICK [eSABRE .................~2997

75 MAVERICK 4 DR

166

Ca nar y yell ow, 350 V-8, auto., P. steering, console , 75 LeSabre tra de.
Extra, Extra Sharp. ·
·

FREE
UNDEROOAT

YOU PAY ' 3 5 5 9

525,000

'

·SATURDAY, JULY 19 AT 10:30 A.M.
"
ANTIQUES AND OLD ITEMS

TOOLS- TO.O LS- SURPLUS

Lu fk in .

159 18

JULY 14th THRU 19th ONLY

Dark Blue
Special Value Pkg ., Dl x.
Interior ,
Exter ior
Decor
Group.
Automati c. Steel Belted W. W. Tires.
Radio . STICKER PRICE '3831

RODNEY - Sp lit fo ye r , 8
rm fra me h ome , Jl 1 ba l hs ,
pl ent y sto r age , all ca r pet
W all s a re pa n ele d and
p la ster bo ard ; el ec h eat
and gar . T h 1S i s a stick b u ilt
home and wi ll p r ovide a
l arg e fam i l y w1th tots of
co mf ortab l e living t or

2 HOU SES and 5 to t s On e 6
r ms al l el ec t nc w w c ar pet
Big yard , oth er tS 5 r m . Must
se ll immed ia te l y Calf f rom
3 6 Leaving town 675 3461.

PUBLIC ADCIION

WE T HI NK THIS I S
Whe r e you wil t w an t to be
Very n1ce 3 b edr oom home
wtlh ·I J\ Includes a f ull
basem ent and f ~rep l ace
Tht s · one I S pr 1ce d at
$37 900 Be sure an d see 1t

drill s &amp; sa n d er s, Bench vises (la rg e an d sm al l ).
H y dr a ulic jacks; B en c h gnnders, Large a ssortm ent o f
soc ket sets •(sizes •;4, %, ,h, 3(,. ), · Edens ion cord s,

Beaters, Dish es and Gla ssware, and many, m ,a ny,
. mor~ items too numerous ,to mention . Come see for
yo urself.

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE

Inquire at

Corb in&amp; Snyder Furn ., 446111 1, afler 5 . 446 .257 3.

Loy ,

S A CRE S and 80of gr oun d , 5
rm house 4d6 46 57
155 6

---------""""""--- -

Wllh very qood l1k e new 4
bed r bo rn home . Oeau l i f ul
k.l!c ben , d1n111g ar ea. ba rn
and Se\ler a l outbuildings
tO acr es c rop l and good
fence , g ood water I t 's •n
th e Cily Sch oo l o .str.ct
Pr tce r e du ced to '!.47 .500

-F irestone Round Tub Washer, Radio Record Player

Chair, Pi ctures 8. Frames, T in Types in leather cases,
-·3 .section Wall Frame, Crucifi x ion Wall . Plaque,
Trunk s, Nice High Posted Bed, 48 Star Flags, Oak
Dresser. F ir epla ce Grate. Remington Typewriter,
Comforter~, East l&lt;odlac, McGuffey's Readers, Books,
Roll ing Pins. Glass Footer Egg, Hat Pins, Carpet

H:o'MiMERC

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

WEEK

75· MAVERICK 4 DR

DAVIS RD. - 6 acre baby
farm , t ab . ba se , fru it and
berr ies . Good 6 rm h ouse
W1t h b at h . Goo d b arn and
fe n ces P rice Sl4 ,900

1974 CAMAR0 ................................)3997

$AVE
WITH
THALER
I

NUS SAVING!

GREEN ACRES - One y r
old , 3 bd . r m . frame home ,
wi th attached ga r All e l ec
and al l car pet Own er
trans f err ed and h as p r~ced
th is ho me tor a qu ick sa l e
Only S27 ,500

160 10

The Praven Family l:ampatt

$AVE
WITH
THALER

S3 8.SOO

161 3

20 ACRE F arm 5 r ms an d
bath
Remode l ed
far m
house , barn , tr a i ler sp ace , 5
m il es from Ga lli poli s on R t
218 446 488d
162 3
-·-·--·-- - - -- - - HOUSE on 2 acres of land ,
dr 1ll ed well, o utb uil d in gs,
firep l ace Cl ose to R t 325 on
Mt T abo r Rd . Ca ll 388 8879
162 6

Limited 2 dr . Hdtp ., loaded wi th everything, plus sleel belted t ires.
low mi leage. Expect the Best .'

NEAR
R OONE 1Y
Beaut 1ful 7 rm . home , all
elec , all carpet , 11 ~ baths ,
plen t y storage rm "has a
2 car gar plus sma l l barn
and st or age bld g Loca t ed
on a 2 A f enced lot , p l enty
yo u ng pmes and pond
stocked w it h fish . Pr1ce

3 BR home . basement, R t 35
near hospi t a l , c1ty schools
PROPERTY FOR SALE , Lof
Reduced 446 337 S
42x300 ft wllh 2 trailers 1
159 '16
Marell et e 12x60 w1th 6 r ms ,
l ar ge llvmg rm and bat h, 1
New Moon 12x55, 4 rm an d 9 ROOM Hou se and ga r age
bath Bo t h carpe t ed Good
Approx . 1 ac re i n V i nton
bl ock garage , 7x 10 me t al
386 848 3. No answer , call 1
b u d flng , 4.116 4332
47 1 14 7'1

J ti' ~ AC R ES

Air impact w r enches 3!s-1f2.:1/.t -1", El e ctr ic Im p act
wrench es, Hand powe r saws, 7'12-7,/4"; Sab er Saws,

Anne

16J -6

GOO D OLD ER H OME
On I li lot a bov e CheS h 1r e
Very w e ll bu •ll and n eeds
on ly a litt l e work to be
p erf ec t
S2 3. 500
4
bedroom s,
11
bath ,
ba se m ent

Consisting of Household Furniture, Electr ical Appliances, Antiques and Collector' s Items as follows:
Warm Morning 65,000 B.T . U. automatic contro1 Gas
Heater (new ). Tappan Ga s Range, Automatic Dryer. ·

Mirror , Queen

country property or mobile

hom e. Sl8,500. Ph . 446 -4053.

N EED A N
IN EX P E N SI VE
&lt;I BEDROOM HO ME
H ere II •s l or $26 ,900 J BR ,
tar qe l• v •nq room
ktl c h en and dtntng ro om
t' bath s See d
N E W LI STIN G
Larqe .1 bedro om home on 1
A
country lot on Lower
R tv er Rd Two bath s, hu ge
l 1v1n g room w.th f ir ep lace .
ver y nt ce k 1t chen You'll
l 1ke the fam tl y r oom and
qaraq e
'Very
pretty
loc ati on

~~~.,C

N ew split level home , ju st
completed. 3 large BR, 11!2

help finance.

t

2 ho~;~ses on near 3 A lot ,
No 1 ha! 8 rms , bath ,
enclosed porch and p len t y
s torage r m P lenty good ,
freE" w ater No 1 has &lt;1 rms
Prop has 2 ce ll ars . t opped
w1th st orage b l dgs .• gar
and workshop with storage
overhead and 2 r,o ultry
bldgs . Lan d 1S excel ent for
garden10g
P rice S23 .500
(Mu ch potential ) .

LAI-!Uc loi s for sa l e 15 mi n .
from Ga l lipo li s Su1ta bl e for
houses or m'oblle homes
Ca ll 256 1123

S20' s Ph. 446-952] or 4461443

E L ECTRIC 'Tappan ra n ge,
c ont clea n , 1 vr o ld, Sl70.
446 1741
161 3

·---------- - - ---- --

BEST B U Y
J bed room b1 level. nt ce
k ttc hen p l enty of cl oset s ,
un l .nlshed family room ,
lar ge storage room and
qaraqe , l arg e co rn er lo t
Th e b es t par t a t &lt;~ II d s
p r. ced at '!. 22 .000 Bel•cve
me you can ' t buy more for
less

529 ,500

B Y OWNER, 2 good c att.le
farm s , one
114 acres.
S25,000 One 77 acres on
141 , 10 min utes
Stat e Rt
fro m c •ty , dr~lled w el l. 2 BR
h onle.
bath ,
carpe t ed ,
basement , f urnac e w1th
good pasture , fences, ba r n
Good hunt1ng Ca ll 446 7485
I SS 6

1973 BUICK ELECTRA..................~4297

2

N EIGHBORHOOD RD.

(bed w-high car ved front w -burl inlay, wash stand w-

Ex c e t'l e n t cons tr uct •o n .
wo n de r ful v i ew. p er f ec t
locat ton an d en ough room
to sta.s f y any size family
L ar ge l •ving room , for ma t
dt n •ng room, f am il y room.
3 ,baths, 4 hu ge bed r ooms.
cen t ra l a ir , h ardwood
fl oors . WB f • repl ac~: , 2 car
garage 111 edge of t own
Pr1 ced a t $55,000

661f .----------------------------------------,

ALFALFA, c lover hay, b al eo
Ca ll 245 9'17 B
161 -6

ON E O F TH E B ES T
BU YS ON T H E MA R KET
Exc ett ent 3 bedroom home
wtlh fa m tl y r oom arid large
r ec roo m, 2 f1r ep !ace s . 2
bath s 2 c ar g ara ge Newly
carp e t ed throu ghou t T h1S
home has h ad exc e ll en t
care 1 m 1te from town

WESTWOOD ACR E S -

yrs old , brick &amp; f rame . 6
rms , 11 ~ baths , all carpe t ,
all el ec , porch , 1 car gar
and loca t ed on a f l at lo t .
Walk to th e Shor,plng
Pl aza Owner t rans erred
and has p n ced th is riice
home for a Quick sa l e ar

.n

a cre
Call
152

Tel. 61444~1998

L OT S ro r sate
c.ty and
Country , also
Bus1ness
S1 tes
Robert A
Queen
Phone- 446 0168
8 -tf

2 BR hom e i n Centenar y
woth full ba se ment &amp;
fireplac e. Will trade for

LARG E 4 BEDROOM

OVER l OOKING RIVER

R. E. FOR SALE

House In City

On Muskingum River
above Beverly, OH.
Ext . cond .

3 BR Mobtle Hom e , on
lo t wtth new g ara ge
a ff er 5. 446 3346

SE LL E RS.

HANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGE
CABIN PWS
2 ACRES

floors, modern kitchen and
bath with la r ge f ront r oom ,
carpeted t 2 car garage , l i'll'e
1n one and rent the other
Con t act
Larry
Boyer ,
Admi n istra t or
of
the
estate
P h on e 446 4223 .
Shown by appt only

TH

Realty, 32 State St.

2B ~ F ram e home, enclosed
front porch . 1 1 acre tot ,
Ru ra l
w ater
s v ste m
Loca t ed on Rt 388 3 mtles
from Ga l ltpolts , v ery good
cond• l•on Pr 1ced m •ddle
l eens Ph 446 3968 or 446
3596

must sell w i th the fron l :
GARAG E APARTMENT
2 bedrooms wi th hardwood

Off. 446-3643

L AN 0 F OR SA L E

STROUT
REALTY
Br~ck ~- {;;~

Bl L E V EL
fram e cons truc t ed beauty
f ea tures 3 B R ' s, 11 , baths ,
l .:~rq e fam1ly rm , ga r ag e,
ce n tra l a~r &amp; kitChe n w 1th
butl t tn range , hood , d• sh
wash er &amp; d1 sp $J2 900

REALTOR

BEA UTIFUL ROL LI NG

162 3

USED e l ectric w asher and
d r ye r Ca ll after 5 44 6 1924.

AUCTION SERVICE

$22.000

SE LL OR TRAD E
New
!:oec lio nal home n eeds a
fam•ly that wou ld ap
pre c ta te th e 3 BR 's l ar ge
LJ.l , OR . , k 1tc'hen wtth
st ove &amp; r ef , w w ca r pet &amp;
larg e fl at lo t $ 16,900

Home Phone 446-9539

100ACR E FARM
L oca t ed in Rio G r a nd e
A r ea . H as a f our yea r o ld
a ll e lec tr ic 4 BR home. w i th
3 baths , f ami l y r oom with
fire p la c e . large liv1ng
room , formal d ining room ,
ki tc hen wi th b uil l in app ,
and attached 2 car garage
Also a nea rl y new 26'X36'
concrete b lock build•ng
T his h ome and farm must
be seen to b e app r ec •at ed
Call tod a y for your ap
po int m ent

Wtl l b e br ig ht er•n th1sJ BR
g old color r anc her wllh
beaut i fu l k 1tc hen &amp; DR.. w
w carpet , garage, larqe lot

M O B I LE HO M E L OT S .
located at Kerr St a t. on
Ro u te IJ1 &amp; Grave l H ill Rd
Ut dth es available

Willis T. Leadingham

Neal Realty

TH E GUIDIN G LIGHT
Dire c ts the W1 Se land &amp;
home buyer to t h •s 60 acres
&amp; barn 5 m • from t ow n
Lar ge br •c k r anch sty le 3
BR . 11 , B , fir ep lace 111
t am il y R , w w carpet. full
basem ent . ce ntra l a.r The
home &amp; 1 ~ere can be
bought alone

5 ACF&lt;c :&gt;of rand . pari cl eared
and level. .Part wooded h iff
side wtth creek . W i ll se ll on
land contract for only $5 ,000 .
W 1lh no down payment and
only SIOO per month ' 388 ·
8320
154 12

3 bedroom hom e, f ron t
room with fi r ep lace, t oyer,
balh. built -m kitchen with
l ots o f cab m ets, storm
doors
and
wi nd ows,
ba se ment.
62 1
Third
Ave n ue Be h in d this hom e

For Slle

MASSIE

1

ll . E: FOR SA L E
IN GA L LIPO L IS

The WIS£MAN Agency

Re.r~te

_Rea1 Estata For S.

.leal Estate fO( Sale

AS TH E WO RLD TU R N S
Your wor ld w•ll be pl eased
tndecd in thi s spa c •ou s '1
s tory bnc k &amp; s ton e home
oyer took•ng the river D ee p
pile w w c arpel , all large
open room s , 3 f •r ep l aces.
forma l DR , family R ,
relaxmg eat m kttchen with
all th e extras , f u l l d1vided
basement , wllh p l ay R &amp;
banquet k ll chen . eJt:cel lent
heat.ng &amp; ce n t ra l a1r .
cover e d p at•o . garage ,
sur r ou n ded by outstanding
landscapmg ·

DAYS OF OU R liV ES

Locate d 111 a Res tr.ct ed
Meadowgreen
E s tat e
Buy th is home and get a
$2, 000 income tax cred •t
11 hn s a lamdv room wlf h
wood burn 1ng firep lace ,
7' &lt; bath s, 2 c, ar garage '1
story moder n home with
diShw as her Loc ated on a
l arg e lot Mu st see th 1s
h ome to appreciate
IN GA LLI POLIS
'i room hou se o n a
p eace fu l st re et , Po r c h .
Nat Gas . Furnace. Built
tn c.ab ~n ets , fenced 111
yard , p lenty of gar d en
spac e A r ea l buy for on ly
$15 ,000
BU S. BLD G. WITH
RE NT A L A P T S.
Large
park1 n g
lo t
Bu s1n ess sp ace sh owroom
J 956 sq ft p l us sto c k
room Thr ee ups t airs a ll
e l e ct r •c
apar t ments
bring1 n g 1n $'165 mo For
tnfo r ma t .on
call
1m
med1ate l v
A PT . H O U SE
4 Apts J room s each apt , 2
bedroom s, kitchen , d mmg
room and l1v1 n g room , p lus
bat h and uli11ty r oom Ap t s
rent111 g for $ 150 mo Th ese
apts could pay for the
b uild•ng W1th 1n a f ew
year s
A re la t. vely new
apt
home A rea l good
1nvestmer\l
LOT S
abou t 70 lo ts.
' .
tfl c t ed , some

Real Estate For Sale

.

'

N ew GMC
Tr u ck H eadq ua rters
1972 1 T . Chevv Cab 8. Chassis
1970 1 T GMC W1fh body
197 1 GMC Tandem Ltve A)( l e
Cab and ChaSSIS
1969 GMC I T PU
1966 1 : T GMC
1969 ' ' T GMC Pickup
1971 2 1
T. GMC Cab and
Cha s ts
196 B 1 T GMC P ickup
t9 71 GMC Sub urban
1 ~11 1
1 • GMC P 1c kup
\9f,Q
T GMC P tckup
1970 ' , T ford P• c kup
SOMM ERS G. M . C
T~ U CKS , IN C.
135 Pm e St .
446"'2 532
- .

···-- -

-:; ·.,-1-vE:S Tand s ~t, 1 bronc :.:.. •·
5-l r o rd tril ctO r . Ph
d&lt;16
.t6'n
161 3

SI X acres . h'Qh rol lmdg c1dlear1
bare l and with pan
ea
budd 1 ng sde
SVO l oot
fro n tage on hard paved
road
Two m li es l r'om

Holler Med oca l Cen ter otf

R ~u~e _ 1~0

Phone

OH ,'~ oro • ER . W

m,~;•~3

Va lurn p

cua t , t 1r ewoo d . Blocks, tile,
cement mortar
Gaii •Poi•S

Block Co Ph

:~-, ~ -:,~-~ !:'

446 2783
of

1&lt;

it

! 70 DODGE CORONET..... ., ..................................... 51595 !
!

~

66 f'AI.CQN
_- ,....-../
,.,;
68 FORD 4 DR.
.70 DAJSON 4 DR

il

i&lt;

!

;lt
l"r

29J If ll-

.bu~~n~· :

'f"'"'

2 Dr . H .T .. Sha r p , 49,000 Mil es .

'

SEE:

..,_,

YOUR
CHOICE

it

$299

OVER 50 LATE MODELS' TO CHOOSE FROM

•

~

'i
.

lt

i

POLIS
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
,
.
~~r:~~~!i:~·gud~f~~~r~~: :GALLI
·.. :
mal er ••" · blo ck ._ br&lt; c k . ,..
5 ' 2 ' after

s.

m

- · ---~-----

11 :

1~39 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, 446-3273 ·'

It

*~****t *****··~-~-·····~············~~··-~··

�.\

·''

•

Jaycees name Phillips
&lt;:ai.LIPOL!S
The
Gallipolis Area Jaycees
announced Sat urday the
winner of the F:. Albert Adler
Jr : Memorial Scholarship for
1975 is Gary Alan Phillips of
Rt . 2. Cr·own City .
Phi llips will be presented a
$500 award at the Gallia
County Junior Fair on Jaycee
Night, July 29. Making the
presentation will be the
chairperson
of
the
Schularship
Committee,
Dennis Fravel.
!
A June graduate of Hannan
Trace High School , Phillips
will be attending Ohio
University in the fail, intending a career in Journalism. He ranked second in'
his graduating class with a
3. 76 average and performed
in ·a host of extra-curricular
activities.
He was president of his
senior class. student body
vice-presi dent, editor of the
school paper, Beta Club vicepresident,
Pep
Club
president , Library Club
secretary, and a member of
the yearbook staff. As a

By Jo Ellen Diehl
POMEROY - The beauty of living beside the Ohio River is
.frequently taken for granted by the thousands who do ... until
something about that big ol' st ream makes them \Sit up and
....·
take notice. ·
Last Wednesday, not one, but two happenings made people
notice, and what a contrast they were.
When young Terry Hannigan floated by the shores of the
Big Bend on his homemade raft, he attracted several spec-.
tators who watched a similar version of the area's forefathers.
Something as folksy as that sets· one's mind to imagining the
hardships and courage of the early settlers, and how well off
we are now in the twentieth century. The river has a reminder
of our history, no longer utilized for such purposes ,
Later the same evening, though, along came the majestic
Delta Queen, cruising toward its dest ination full of fun and
laughter, the calliope puffing out lively tunes, and passengers
enjoying the quiet laziness aboard the luxury boat. And instead
~?f hardships, one's mind jumps to thoughts of leisure and fun .
The many personalities of a beautiful river .
BUT I WONDER HOW beautiful this side of the view looks
to those floatiilg by. Painting the building housing the Green
lantern and Jim O'Brien's law offices a pretty soft green t:olor
trimmed with white improved the aesthetic quality of that
corner immensely. Now that building and the Meigs Inn are
two of the nicest looking structures in town, showing off the
unique architecture with paint jobs. Wouldn't it be great if the
test of the town spruced up to show off some of the originality
of the old time buildings which is so often hidden?

HUNTINGTON - Thomas
I.. Parker, president of. Big

Drum, Inc ., Columbus, has
been elected president of
Area 6, East Centra l Region,
Boy Scouts of America, at the
Regional meeting in Chica go.
He succeeds Penn W. Ziegler
of Cin cin nati.
Parker will preside over
Scouting activities of 18 Boy
Scout Coun cils in South
Centra l Ohio and We s t
Virginia, in cluding the TriState Area Co uncil with
headquarters in Huntington ,

TAMMY EICHINGER, DAUGHTER of Mr ~and Mrs. Paul
Eichinger, Mulberrx Heights, Pomeroy, is pictured this month ·
Iii Drum Major magazine for which she was chosen Little Miss
l'yiajorette of the Month. She is a student of Gloria Buck
Wallace of Gallipolis.

State Farm has economical cov·
erage for tour mobile home a'nd
contents . iability protection for
you. Many optional extras to meet
your specific needs. And of course.
you can depend on the best
sen/ice. Call for details .

Carrol K. Snowden
24 State St.

Gallipolis
446-4290, Home 446-4518
UATI FAIM

tiki I 11Dfl4 n1ighbor,
Still ,,,. il lhlfl.
INSUIANCI

STATE FARM'GENERALINSURANCE COMPANY
Home Of lice:
Bloom mgt on, lllmo1s
p 7408

•

lS

to
existing
stoc khold·
ers
or
their
transferee and an additional 3,500
to new stockholders. The
action raises the Peoples
Bank's capital stock to 40,000
shares .
President Vitus Hartley,
Jr : told stockholders that the
benefits of the stock plan
include rewarding present
stockholders, which munber
over 300 persons, broadening
the bank's capital base and
increasing growth potential.
In other business of the
stockholders meeting
presided over by Chairman of
the Board R. B. Rothgeb, it
was announced that total
assets of the bank increased
$1,986,393.62 during the past
12-month period . The total
assets on June 30, 1975 were
$12,781,713.02 compared to
$10,795,319.40on June 30, 1975.
President Hartley, in his
report, told the stockholders
"we have had a very good
year and we are looking
forward to a better year
ahead.
Hartley
then
gave
stockholders an in-depth
report on the bank's new
customer packaged banking
service called THE CLUB.
"Through this plan we are
able to offer our customer a
complete package of banking
services," Hartley said. He
noted that there has been an

W. Va. Scout membership in
the area exceeds 123,000.
Parker, executive board
.member of Central Ohio Buy
Scout Coun cil , is servin g as
council president. In April he
was awarded the Silver
Beaver, the highest local
award for volunteers for
distinguished service to boyhood .

You'l I

tract it down
much faster
with a

·Peoples' Bank stock split 2-1
POINT PLEASANT - A
series
of
resolutions
authorizing a two-for-one
stock split and the sale of
additional shares were approved during the annual
stockholders meeting of the
Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant last week.
The resolutions, approved
unanimously, ·also gave
bank offici;tls authority
to
sell
7,300
shares

member of the band for 8
years, he was listed in Who's
Who Among Music Students
in American High Schools
and was winner of the John
Philip Sousa Award for
Outstanding Music Ability.
Outside ·school, Phillips
has been in the public

Scout area president

NOT ONLY DOES amiable H. C. Roney of New Haven own
d baby robe of Abe Lincoln's, but he is also the owner of a
'laluable Chinese coin called a " Kai-Yuen Cash."
, It seems that around 850 C.D. King Kai Yuen of China
became a Nestorian Christian and decided to root out Buddhism. So he confiscated all Buddhist property, lands, and
particularly bells. Each province was ordered to make cash
out of the bronze melted down from the bells, and one of th ese
little coins is what Roney owns.

·

GARY PHILLIPS

Parker of Columbus

AS OF TIIE FIRST OF THIS MONTII, it is now an Ohio
$ate law that a driver may turn right at a red stop light if there
is no sign prohibiting that turn. However, the driver must
ciome to a complete stop and check for oncoming traffic before
ffiaking the tum.

spotlight as sports columnist
for Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
He had his own sports column
entitled -" How tHe Basketb;ill
•
Will Bounce" and was heard
as a reporter for the Thomas
Clothiers ~ootball Review.
The scholarsh ip, given in
memory of Adler, a local
Jaycee
member
who
.perished in the Silver Bridge
disaster of December 15,
1967, is awarded to a young
adult of ' high character,
out sta nding
academic
achievement,
st r o ng
leadership abilities, and a
desire to stay in the Gallia
County area to improve it.
The Gallipolis Area Jaycees
are pleased to choose a young
man who more than fulfills
all of the above traits.,

excellent response from bank
customers on the new
pr!lgram .
Re-elected as directors for
the next . year were Russell
Bibbee, Charles L. Brown,
Jr., Forrest Clark, Cecil B.
Dean, John R. Felker, Jack
E. Fruth, Vitus Hartley, Jr.,
Dale Nibert, Vaught Smith,
Paul Somerville, Jr. , Cecil
Williams, R. B. Rothgeb , and
Robert Wingett.

WANT AD

Reedsville
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs . Cha rl es
Hauber, Steve and Mike
visited with Rick Hauber at
Fort Walton, Fla .
Mrs. Gladys Morgan is
spending sometime with her
daughter,
Debbie
in
Columbus.
Mrs. Opal Randolph and
Mrs. Dortha Riebel attended
a ballgame at Cincinnati
recently .
Dennis Reed from Disney
World in Florida recently
visited with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Reed and
family.
Debbie Wilson of Pomeroy
Rt. and Jane Whitehead
visited with Patty Hewitt at
Cincinnati for several days.
Gerral Chevalier, Carrie
and Jeff of Mansfield, spent a
few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier.
Mr_ and Mrs . Grant Smith
are attending a Mail Carriers
Convention at Cincinnati this
\\'eek.
Mr. and Mrs. J . D. Kibble
of Parkersburg, W. Va .
visited with H. E. Kibble and
family and Mr . and Mrs. R.

\

POST CARD PICTURE of a ferry serving Pomeroy and Mason taken many years ago,
was submitted by Mrs. Pearl (Helen) Williams. The ferry service was used until the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge was built and even for a time after the bridge was erected as it was
a toll bridge. The ferry sank in the river, its top visible for a time after the sinking. The
picture shows the ferry on the West Virginia side of the river.

Rio Grande workshop will
.

show open class systems
RIO GRANDE - A four
day workshop at Rio Grande
College - Rio Grande Community College beginning
Monday and ending Friday
will offer teachers a
showcase of an educational
method which guides individuals via non-grading and
multi-age grouping ( 3-4 year
age span}.

Registration
will
be
Monday, July 14, in Allen Hall
on the Rio Grande College
Campus. Linda Bauer , a
native of Oak Hill and
assistant
professor
of
education at Rio Grande, will
be the instructor. She is a
certified Individualized
Guided Education Instructor,

E. Williams and family.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Rose were
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Foutty
of Pomona, Calif., Mr . and
Mrs. Rome Sandy of
Parkersburg, W.Va. and Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Rose of
Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Price
of Long Bottom visited with Mr . and Mrs. Che ste r
Mundry Jr . and Lori.
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Sauer
of Middleport Rd., visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens and other relatives.

Speeial Celebration

this week
mattress and foundation

Tuppers Phillis
(Continued from page 25)
Portsmouth has a reputation
of putting on top-notch horse
shows.

OPEN 24 HOURs~:~

I HAVE NOTICED a few
people in town, such as Herman Black and Win Blake, fly
the American flag the
majority of the time. This
(being the Bicentennial year
of our country) would be a
good time for all ·of us to take
the tirne to display our
national flag more often. I
know we have a flag b1,1t don 't
b~t~er to get it ,out.
I -resolve to do better this
year. Why don't you make the
same resolution, and make
the Bicentennial year •a great

For real home cookin' the
whole family will enjoy anyti~e. come to the Bob Evans
Steak House. Where once
again, 'round the clock
service is a Gallla County
tradlti.on.
. •cto!1edcS~:.mday night at 10:00 p.m.

onP'!

.

'

Here's a terrific bedding
value! You get innerspring· ,
construction, great overall
support with relaxing comfort,
quilted mattress cover. Big features-yet priced for small budgets.
Full size

SET
Open Monday to Thursday 9:30 to 5

·

..

GET

ATTENTION

trained by the Kettering
Foundation.
Participants will explore
functions of multi-age units,
evaluation of the child's instr).lctional program, role of
the principal, unit leader,
unit teacher, intern, and
instructional aide, effective
functioning of a unit, and
advantages of units over selfcontained classes.
Participants will examine
concepts of individually
guided education, view film
media developed on unit
teaching by IDEA Kettering
Foundation, and visit an open
school which is organized
around
multi-age · unit
grouping concepts.
Cost of the four-day
workshop is $26. One credit
hour will be earned. The class
is scheduled from 1-3 p.m.
daily. For more information,
contact the Office of Ad·
missions,
Rio · Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio,
telephone 245-5353.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy turniture Department, 3rd Floor

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Pleasant Vailey
DISCHARGES - Philmore
Hudnall , Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Elza Powell, Ashton;
Viekie Vernon Legue, Evans;
Priscilla Fridley, Leon; Mrs .
Lewis Taylor, Gallipolis, 0.;
Cecil Cotton, Point Pleasant;
Fred Painter, Bidwell, 0. ;
George Roush, Mason;
William Robbins, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Bernard
Goelling, Gallipolis, 0.; !I h.
Clarence
Clay,
Point
Pleasant; Ch.a rles Taylor,
Point Pleasant; Mrs . Dennis
White, Point Pleasant: Mrs.
Russell See, Point Pleasant;
· Mrs.
Andrew
Lemley,
Middleport;
Georgia
Huggings, Lakin; Mrs .
William See, West Columbia;
· Zola Buzzard, Lakin; Terry
Clagg, Glenwood; Edward
Rastclift, Jackson, 0.
Births - July 11, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Potts,
Gallipolis Ferry, and July 12,
a son to Mrs. Alice
· Chapman, Gallipolis Ferry.

•

\

Shop ·Friday and ·Saturday 9:30 to 8 pm

of

when 1
Sa turd
Rabl

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