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•
12 - The DeUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., July 7,1972

Bloc Nations

JNews ••"in Bri;i~ Chess Match .Opens Tuesday

E~joying

·

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·
By Ualled Press Intemalfonal
WIMBLEDoN, ENGLAND - BILUE JEAN'KING of Long
Beach, Calif., today beat Evonne Goolag011g of Atistralia, 6-3, th1,
to regain the Wimbledoo women's singles tennis tltle she last won
in 1968.
Mrs. King needed only 50 minutes to· dethrone Mlss
welcome as well, with the West
German mark taking secol1d Goolagong as champion and reverse the semifinal loss she
place and the pound sterling suffered to the Australian last year. "I've brooded on thatloss for
,third 'in popullrity. But the· 365 days," Mrs. King said before the match and she did not ·give
Miss Goolagong, eight years her junior at20, an inch.
dollar holds the fore.
Sbor~a&amp;e \)1 Hard Curreney ·
The shortage .of hard currenSILVER SPRINGS,
- PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
cy everywhere in the Communist world is the main reason George c: Wallace left Holy Cross Hospital after 53 days of
for this paradoxical situation. treatment for gunshot wounds roday and flew ro Alabama to
Foreign currency Is badly reclaim the governorship before heading for the Democratic
needed for purchases in the National Convention.
The governor was driven from the hospital in this northern
West and on world markets.
The black market flourishes suburb of the nation's capital to Andrews Air Force base for the
almost everywhere. In some flight by military airlift ambulance. plane to Montgomery, the
capitals the bladt market price state capital. "I feel good, I feel great," Wallace said wlth a big
for the dollar Is more than two smile to reporters on the hospital steps a'J.-.he was taken by
or three times the official rate wheelchair from the hospital to a waiting car.
of exchange. But the risks are
"See you in Miami."
high .
Special shops run by the
SAIGON - U. S. 852 BOMBERS struck near Quang Tri City
government are selling other- today ro back a South Vietnamese effort to retake the provincial
wise bard-to-obtain goods for capital. But Communist troops using captured American-built
dollars only.
tanks took the punch out of a 13,000-man government drive
roward the city. Eighteen of the big bombers in six waves
dumped 450 tons of explosives on suspected Communist positions
five to eight miles from the strategic city in the 18 hours ending at
dawn today, the U. S. conunand said.
Sources in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh said today
Brig. Gen . Kong Chhat was killed Thursday while leading
goverrunent troops trying to reinforce the encircled town of
Angtassom, 47 miles south of Phnom Penh. A Communist bullet
hit
Cbhat in the stomach on the eight-mile road between Takeo
Mrs. Mary A. Ohlinger, 64,
Province
and Angtassom.
formerly of Mason County, 317
Old Village Road, Columbus,
SANCLEMENTE, CAUF. -PRESIDENT NIXON called in
was dead on arrival at St.
Marys l!ospital in Huntingron, his economic experts to discuss ways of holding down food prices
today after promising to veto any excessive election-year
W. Va. Thursday morning.
Mrs . Ohlinger an6arently spending by Congress.
suffered a heart atl';;ck while
The President's moves were aimed at curbing inflation visiting friends in Huntington. one of the most persistent problems of his.admlnistralion - and
The daughter of the late Joseph setting the stage for the forthcoming campaign debate over who
and Millie Roush Ohlinger, she is to blame for lt. Treasury Secretary George P. Schultz, Conwas born Sept. 12, 1907 in sumer Adviser Virginia Knauer, Herbert Stein of the Council of
Mason County.
Economic Advisers and other members of the Cost of Living
Mrs. Ohlinger was a member Council were scheduled to report to Nixon on the_ir jawboning
of the Hilltop Lutheran Church sessions with executives in the food industry.
in Columbus. She is survived
by her husband, Fred H. ·
Ohlinger, a son, J. Fred
Ohlinger, ltica, Mich.; three
brothers, Lester, Harold and
A breaking and entering of Hudson's home. One youth has
Donald Ohlinger, all of New
the
home of Mrs. Lonnie been sentenced to the Boys
Haven , and three grandHudson
, Kingsbury Road, lndu ~trial School at Lancaster
children.
Funeral services will be held Pomeroy, Rt. 4, occurred Aug. on similar charges out of
at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the 'll, 1971, Meigs County has been Franklin County.
Warrants have been issued
Foglesong Funeral Home with solved, Sheriff Robert C.
the Rev. John L. Hydinger Hartenbach's departmen t by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. to be used as dela iners
officiating. Burial will be in reported today .
Taken at the time were four when those involved are
Graham Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home guns and other items . On th~ released from custody , at
any time after 2 p.m. Saturday. same night keys were taken which time they will be
from a vehicle owned by Ralph returned to Meigs County to
Carl of the same address. It face the above charge .
was learned later that the
persons who . rook the keys
intended to return and steal a

Unusual Era of Peace
EDITORS: K.C. Thaler,
UPI's chief diplomatic correspondent lo Europe, has jnst
completed a tour of Eastern
European capitals. This Is the
third and last of his dispatches
on the changing face of the
area.
By K. C. THALER

VIENNA (UP!)- East European countries are enjoying
a.rare period of relative peace/
both domesticaUy and with
their neighbors to the east and
west.
With the easing of pressure
from their ruling regimes,
these countries are experiencing a degree of relaxation at
home that has afforded improved living conditions and
has reduced fears of ever
present security forces.
Differences and tensions on
the international scene also
have eased.
Russian pressures have decreased partly because the
ever watchful Soviets apparently see no immediate
danger to their rule from the
regimes of the bloc countries
ljlld partly because they have
been mounting a 'J)eace offens! ve to accompany the
summit with President Nixon
and its decisions.

MEIGS THEATRE

Weekend

THE SECRET
ADVENTURES OF THE
RAILWA·Y CHILDREN
(Technicolorl
Dinah Sheridan

IG!

VILLAIN
&lt;Technicolorl
Richard Burton
Ian McShane

I R)

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.

July 9·10-11
MADE FOR
EACH OTHER
ITechnicolorl
Renee Taylor
Joseph Bologna

IGP)

Cartoons

MASON DRIVE-IN
0

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Tonight, July 7
Double Feature Program

"BEWARE THE BLOB"
- PLUsTHE MEPHISTO
WALTZ
IColor!
Alan Aida
IR)

Saturday Only
July 8
Double Feature
" PURSUIT OF
HAPPINESS"
Mi chael Sarrazin
Barbara Hershey

IGP )

ALSO
"ADIOS SABATHA
Yul Brynner
Dean Reed
IColor!

IGP!

MD:

Mary Ohlinger

Died Thursday

Legion Club
Facing Big

.Tonight &amp; Saturday
July 7-8

Jenny Agutler

With a European Security
Conference assured and prepa·
rations for it ro begin in the fall,
it seems certain Moscow will
want fo avoid any major upset,
either in lts . European
backyard or internationally.
Under Orden ai Belulve
The East European countries, in turn, are under orders
to behave and not ro cause
trouble on this sensitive part of
tile European scene.
· The U.S. dollar, sometimes
derided by America's friends
and allies, rides high in the
Communist world of Eastern
Europe.
It has assumed virtually the
role of the key currency
throughout the Communist
area and is the link in dealings
not only with the outside worl!l,
but within the bloc Itself.
Government and commercial transactions are
negotiated in dollars. Hotel
prices, air fares, travel
arrangements are all listed in
dollars. Even prostitutes in
some East European capitals
are conducting their business
with foreigners on a dollar
basis.
Other hard . currencies are

The Meigs American Legion
baseball team has a big
weekend starting Saturday
with a I :JO double-header at
Syracuse against Marietta.
Sunday, the local Legionnaires
go to Chillicothe for another
double-header starting at 1
p.m.
In earlier meetings with
these two strong teams, Meigs
split with Marietta 1-0 and 0-4
and Chillicothe 2-0 and 0-3.
Coach George Nesselroad's
club, currenUy IU-1 on the
season, ls one game better
than last year's 12-9 pace at
this time. Meigs continued on
into the state tournament that
year.
Reports Indicate Lancaster,
the team Meigs drew in the
first round of the district
rournament In Athens July 22,
is a "pretty fair" team . It split
with Athens , whom Meigs
whipped 4-0 last Wednesday.
Rick Ash, the club's leading
hitter, broke his eight-game
hitting streak Wednesday
against Athens. The Iefthanded
centerfielder, hitting .J97, had
been coming off a great
weekend when he had three
hits in six bats and four runs
batted in.
Tom Cooke will remain out of
action this weekend but may
see action next Wednesday
against New Haven o( the
following weekend. Cooke
racked up his mouth two weeks
ago and was hospitalized three
days.

ARE

Hudson Home B&amp;E Solved

Darrell Badgley
Died Thursday

Darreli E. Badgley , 38,
Racine Route 2, died Thursday
evening at the Holzer Medical
Center following a lingering
lllness.
Mr. Badgley was born on
March 23, 1934, the son of
Ralph R. and Dorthy P. Hysell
Badgley, Racine, who survive
along with his wife, Ella Jean;
three chlldren, Jennlfer Lee ,
Dereck Martin and Dalron D.,
all at horne : three sisters, Mrs.
Brian (Bonnie ) Simpson,
Baltimore; Mrs. Billy (Ruth
Ann) Hlll, Racine; Mrs.
Thomas (Karen) Eckersley,
Hannlbal, N. Y.; two brothers,
Steve of Racine, and Larry of
Fairfax, Va.; several nieces
and nephews, and a step •
grandmother, Mrs. Oma
Hysell of Syracuse.
Mr. Badgley was a farmer
and a member of the Racine
Baptist Church.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Racine
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Charles Norris officiating.
Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may
· call at the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home ln Middleport
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on
saturday and until noon on
Sunday.

SHIRt

~INistiiNG
SAME DAY
SERVItE
In At ~Out At S
Use Our FrH P•rkl~p Lot

Robinm:s aeaner5
Your
you a handy, accurate record of
the money you spend. And what you spend it tor.
Open your own Checking Account soon .. . and lhen 1
even il you do. your checkbook never forgets.

21' t . 1nd, Pomeroy -

Centerville

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (Ufl)
- After' two weeks of behindthHcene diplomacy and '!'uch
talking, 'BQbby Fischer and
BQris Spassky have agreed to
get down to their real business
-playing chess.
The match for the world title
now held by the .:Jti.year-old
Russian will liegin Tuesday in
the . lcehindic capitaL The
winner gets $150,000 and the
loser $100,000.
Spassky , a handsome Leningrad journalist who makes a
~vlng playing chess the year
arolUid, will make the first
move. He won the draw
Thursday night and wiD play
wl1ite, meaning he will make
the first move. The 29-year-old
American will play black in the
first game. In succeeding
games they alternate.
Despite the charges and
countercbarges exchanged between the two camps there was .
no sign of personal animosity
between the two.
Applause Exchanged
When Spassky was introduced at the draw, Fischer

apptaude~ . .Aild when the
challenger, dressed in a green
suit and red Ue, was presented, ·
Spassky gave him a big hand.
As they shook bands at the
end of the ceremony, Spassky
held on to Fischer's hand and
said, "And good luCk."
The ceremony confirmed
that all the problems that
delayed the match for -nine
days finally had been settled.
· It began with Fischer refusing to come to Iceland for the
originally scheduled start ·July
2 because he was oot happy
with the financial terms.
Jim.Slater, a wealthy British
banker, saved the match when
he offered to double the prize
money from $125,000 to
$250,000.
Fischer finally turned up
July 4-but by then, Spaosky
was upset and threatened ro
pull out. He first demanded
that Fischer forfeit th~ first
game, then asked for an
apology from the American
and flpally asked Dr. Max
Euwe, president of the Jn.
ternational Chess Federation

(FIDE), to admit that he
violated the rules when he
postponed the match in FiBcher 's absence instead of
dlsqualll)'ing the . An\erican.
Euwe Adm.ltJ Mlltalte
Euwe, himself a former
world champion and the last
non-Russian to hold the tiUe,
..-omptly penned a declaration
iKlrnltttng that he had made a
mlstake.
Thursday, Fischer lroke the
lee when he wrote a letter 'to
"Dear Boris" apologizing for .
his "disrespectful behavior."
Flacher admitted he had
"offended you and yilur coimtry, the Soviet Union ."
"1 simply became carried
away by my petty dispute over
money wltll the Icelandic chess
organizers," Fischer wrote in
hill letter.
SpaBSky accepted the apology, although lt was not
delivered directly to him by
Fischer.
In the end, the llusslana
appearedtohavedroppedtheir
demand that Fischer forfeit the
first game.

Hopefuls Getting To Miami'
-

votes to win the nomination on '
the first ballot, was scheduled
to arrive Saturday, along with
many of the state delegations
to the convention.
But a major decision, key to
the aspirations of all the
candidates, still was awaiting
action by the Supreme Court in
Washingron .
Chief Justice Warren E.

MIAM BEACH (UP! )
Knowing they have to stop
George S. McGovern or forfeit
their hopes for the Democratic
presidential nomination ,
Hubert H. Humphrey, Edmund
S. Muskie and George C.
Wallace fly here today to press
that effort.
McGovern, claiming enough

Burger was expected to decide
today whet,her to convene the
Supreme Court in emergency
session to decide whether
McGovern can retain all '!11
delegate votes he won in the
California primary or forfeit
153 of them to other candidates,
lncludlng 106 to his chief rival,
Humphrey.

Racine Defeats
Bidwell 13 to 4
RACINE - Racine defeated
Bidwell 13-4 in Little League
play here Thursday.
Mark Sayre was on the
mound for Racine, striking out
six and· walking five. For the
winners, Richard Teaford and
Mike Huddleston each bad a
single, double and a triple ;
Mark Sayre a triple and a
single, Scott Wolfe a double
and a single, and Steve Hill a
single.
For Bidwell, J. Plants had
two singles, Welch a triple, B.
Hash and R. Hash each a single
and Casey and Gardner each a
single.

Labor Solid Wall against McGovern
MIAMI BEACH (UPI ) - Georgt! S.
McGovern's lieutenants, facing a stone
wall of opposition from organized labor,
worked frantically Saturday to find a
compromise on tangled delegate seating
disputes and regain hi,'! claim to a first
ballot presidential nomination.
As the South Dakota ·senator flew down
by chartered jetliner to take personal
command of the battle , the figure
emerging as the kingmaker in the struggle
between McGovern and his foes was Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie of Maine .
So far, Muskie h35 remained personally
oncoiMlittal but bas permitted aides to
ork with stop-McGovern forces . He
Jmmands nearly 200 increasingly
esUess delegates - roughly the number
ofcGovern would need to assure victory

OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) - A
21-year-old AWOL soldier, who
hijacked a Pacific Southwest
Airlines jetliner for $4:&gt;5,000
ransom, surrendered early
today ro a highway patrol
captain he had taken hostage.
"!told him that as soon as he
stepped down the ramp an FBI
agent is going to squeeze one
off and 'your head will disintegrate' "said California highwa y patrol officer Lloyd
Turner, 42.
The hijacker, identified by
the FBI as Francis Goodell,
Manassas, Va., handed over
two guns and the ransom after
two tense hours of waiting in
the Boeing 7'!1 on the runway at
Oakland airport.

ru11and

national

bank

,,.. bankol
t,..ctnturr
nt. ll72
I

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At Forked Run Lake Entrance
Bottom. o.

SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972

Families

Gallipolis-Point Pieasanl

15 CENTS

Resul ts Dept., he was appointed maintenance foreman there in 196J.
Mr. Mulato was transferred to Ohio
Power 's Muskingum River Plant near
Beverly in 1966 as plant performance
engineer, and two years later was trans·
!erred to the AEP Service Corp. in New
York to prepare for his future assignment
at the AEP System's Iirst nuclear power
plant.
In August, 1970, he moved to the Cook
Plant and remained there until his recent
appointment at Gavin Plant.
He was graduated from Catholic
Central High School in Steubenville in 1950.
He later received a bachelor of science
degree in mechanical engineering from
. Case Institute of Technology and a ·
bachelor of science degree in elecctrical
{Conilnuod on Page 3)

'

Friday n·ights and Saturday nights
until 9. A good time for family

POMEROY - Dr. John HQyt, who Hoyt was pastor of the First Baptist
took his B.A. Degree at Rio Grande Church in Middleport, will be the speaker
College when his father, the Rev. Clermont Wednesday evening at the Meigs Inn for
the Charter Dinner of the Meigs County
Humane Society. He ·is president of
Humane Society of the Uni\"d States.
Reservations for the dinner - open to
the public - should be made before
Tuesday by telephoning Mrs. Carl Will or
Mrs. Clinton Fisher or Mrs. William
Woods.
Dr. Hoyt came from New Vork City
last February to assist a steering committee to organize the Meigs chapter. Mrs.
Clinron Fisher, Pomeroy, is president;

shopping on all 3 floors and at
our warehouse on Mechanic Street.
0

0

Improvements
At Fairground
DR. HOYT

POMEROY - Several improvements
are being made at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds in preparation for next
month's annual Meigs County Fair.
A new roof has been placed on the
grandstand and additional bleachers are
ro be constructed for spectators in the
catUe barn. The secretary's office has
been remodeled by board members Dan
Zirkle, Bill Smith and Marvin King.
The Gambill An\usemenl Co. has been
contracted to provide attractions for the
midway at the fair to be held Aug . 15-19.
Entry blanks for a chain saw cutting
contest, an innovation to the fair, are
available from Bill Daniel at the Pomeroy
Home and Auto Store, East Main St.,
Pomeroy. The contest will be held on the
final day of the fair. '
KING ABDUlLAH DIES
AMMAN (UP!) - King Tala! Ben
Abdullah, former ruler of Jordan and
father of the present King Hussein, died
late Friday night in Istanbul, the royal
palace here announced Saturday. He was

63.

Mrs . Carl Will, general chairman. The
official Ohio charter was received recenUy
by the chapter.
Mr. Hoyt has served as senior minister
of the Drayton Avenue Presbyterian
Church in Ferndale, Mich. Among many
offices that he has held, he was President
of the Detroit Pastor's Union, Chairman of
th.e Alumni Fund Committee of Colgate
Rochester Divinity School, member of the
BQard of Directors of the Metropolitan
Detroit Council of Churches, and Chair·
man of the sub-coiMlittee on civil rights of
the standing committee on Church and
Society.
He earned his B.A. degree from Rio
Grande College. He was awarded his
Bachelor of Divinity degree in 1958 and his
Doctor of Divinity degree in 1969.
Dinner time at the Inn is 7:30. Cost per
plate is $3.50.

Buffet
Luncheon

AU YOU

CAN EAT

1.50
Or
Dishes Individually

The New

MEIGS
INN

Priced
CINDY PA1TERSON

SYRACUSE - Cindy Patterson, 11).
year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pat
. Patterson, Syracuse, who was the only
twirler from Meigs County to enter the
Ohlo State Twirling ·Cbamplonshipa in
lntlivldlial compet!Uon, won lour state
t!Ues in the 7·10 year old division.
The conteat was sanctioned by The
National Balon Twirling Alaoclation and
held in Lancaster, last weekend.
In Ohio State Solo she placed sllt:th out
of a field of 30 of the best twirlers in the
state. Also, llhe won third in state lwt&gt;batona; fifth in state flag and fancy best

POMEROY FIRE DEPARTMENT members are
spending their free time each evening clearing this lot on
Butternut Ave., hopefully for a new department headquarters. The proposed building would cost $45,000, according to
estimates. Firemen hope ro secure some kind of grant to
help. Hopefully, construction of the metal building will start
this summer. The structure will be elevated as a protection
against high water and all of the vehicles, including fire
engines and emergency vehicles, would be kept in the one
location. Firemen purchased the lot, formerly the site of the
Hannahs home, from Manning Webste r using their own
funds. The lot was formerly owned by John Sauvage, 91,
Pomeroy, on the left In the picture. With Sauvage are Jim
Neutzling, center, and Bill Ratliff, right, firemen helping
with the clearing. The lot at the comer of Butternut and
Fourth, Is 40 by 140 feet, and at the rear is the village owned
parking lot.

Humphrey Ask'S
......

Unity, Later
MIAMI BEACH (UP!)- ln a
direct challenge to frontrunning George S. McGovern,
Hubert H. Humphrey called on
all the Democratic presidential
candidates to pledge in advance Saturday that they
would support the party's

nominee.

"! will support the nominee
as long as he or she supports
the party's platform and ,
principles," Humphrey told a
news co nference which
launched his hectic pre·
(Continued on page 2)

Two Thefts Reported
GALLIPOLIS - John Weeks,
assis tant division manager for the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
Company , reported theft of a meter ro clty
police Friday. Weeks said someone took an
electric meter from a pole at 108 Pine St.
used for the flashing lights at the C&amp;O
Railroad Crossing.
Gallia sheriff's deputies also investigated a theft complaint Friday. Mrs.
Alice Sprague of Kerr reported someone
entered the Kerr Grange Hall by breaking
a window . Missing were three folding
chairs.
1

KETCHUM STEPS UP

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Michael J.
Ketchum ls the new president of Ohio
Medical Indenmity Inc., the Blue Shield
Plan serving the state of'1llilo, lt was :
announced Saturday. He succeeds Charles
H. Coghlan, president and chief executive
officer of OMI since the pliln's inception in
1945, who retired effective July 1.

4 State .Titles Won

· Monday thru Saturday

Than 11 ,(}()()

THREE SECTIONS

Pomeroy-Middleport

CHESHIRE - Andrew T. Mulato,
veteran of 17 years' service with Ohio
Power Co. and other organizations in the
American Electric Power System, has
been appointed assistant manager of the
General James M. Gavin Plant under
construction at Cheshire.
,.The appointment, which becomes effective Aug. I, was announced by Plant
Manager J. W. Lizon.
Mulato comes to Gavin Plant after
serving two years as maintenan ce
supervisor at the 2.2-million-kilowall
Donald C. Cook Nuclear Plant, being built
by a sister company of Ohio Power in
southwestern Michigan .
A native of Mingo Junction, Mulato
joined Ohio Power in 19:&gt;5 as a test
engineer at Tidd Plant near Brilliant
Ohio. After several years tn the plant'~

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downrown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Friday was 66 degrees under
cloudy skies.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

Reaching More

Mulato Coming
As Gavin No. 2

WE'RE_HERE
TO SERVE YOU-!

11:00 UNTIL 1:30 .

Your Invited Guest

tmes

VOL. Vi I NO. 23

NEW FACJUTJES
Restroom facllltles for men
and ·women visiting the Middleport conununlty park are
avaUable acctrdlng to Mld~Por;l )lllyor John zerkle .
mey are located on the south
side of the swimming pool.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy are open

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

pomeror

for a unified post-convention party ·in lta
fight against President Nixon.
Arriving at the convention stU. less than
two hours apart were McGovern, still the
front runner in delegate strength, and his
77-year-old nemesis, AFL-CIO President
George Meany .
Meany arrived aboard an Amtrak
passenger train to join his c h i e I
political operative, Alexander Barkan,
director of the labor fede ration's Committee on Political Education (COPE).
Already installed at the Americana Hotel,
Barkan has been helping mastermind the
stop-McGovern coalition.
Sen . Henry M. Jackson predicted the
AFL-CIO will formally announce its
rejection of McGovern some time next
week.

+

30 PAGES

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

po""'""

the moment.
. The 1968 nominee's delegate counters
said Humphrey now had more than 700
votes on the first ballot Wednesday night,
subject to a convention decision on the
California seats. But Huniphrey would
make no prediction of the outcome.
Continuing his needling of McGovern for
a threat last week to bolt .the party ,
Humphrey challenged all the candidates to
make an immediate public pledge of
support for whoever gets the nomination,
no matter how · the credentials brawl is
settled.
No Loyalty Oath
The Minnesota senaror, who arrived
Friday a day ahead of McGovern, wouldn't
call the pledge a "loyalty oath" bot said he
was merely seeking to lay the groundwork

HSUS's Hoyt Charter Speaker

SPEAKER NOTED
Dr. Joseph Graham
superintendent of the Athe~
District of United Methodist
Churches , will be guest
speaker at the Pomeroy and
, Chester United Methodist
Churches Sunday due to the
vacation of the Rev. Robert
Card, pastor.

Relax ... Drive in for a Delicious Moo
. Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
m~lt, shake, cone or sundae.
·

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bring party uni!y."
.
Less than 24 hours after the Supreme
Court dealt his hopes a serious setback:
McGovern was headed for a secret
meeting with the Democratic governors to
press the compromise.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey meanwhile
proclaimed that his chances of stopping
McGovern and eventually winning the
nomination were "much better" as a
result of the Supreme Court's decision to
let the convention decide "the Califorhia
and Illinois seating disputes.
With the Supreme Court in effect letting
the Credentials Committee ruling stand in
overturning California's winner-lake-all
primary results, Humphrey-the focal
point of stop-McGovern forces-gained at
least 104 delegate votes from the state for

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

women and children on the
plane and lt could have ruptured the skin of the aircraft,"
Turner said.
Turner sald Goodell told him
he was a Vietnam War veteran
and complained the Army
wouldn'llethim marry a girl in
Southeast Asia.

Dmnped 18·1
RACINE - Racine's Pee
Wee team defeated Centerville
18-1 here Thursday. For
Racine, Kent Wolfe was the
winning pitcher with Jonathan
Rees relieving him in the fifth.
Jay Rees was behind the plate.
Wolfe hit a grand slam
homer, Rees a triple and a
single, Allen Pape a triple,
Jackie Lyons a double and
Dennis Wolfe and Bob Lee each
a single.
'
For Centerville, Adkins had
a double and Arrowood a
single. Bonlee was the pitcher
and Bates the catcher.
Southern Local Bamtam
League Staudlngs
T. L. Tie
Portland
4 0 0
Racine I
J I 0
Letart
2 2 0
Syracuse I
2 2 0
Racine 2
0 3 I
Syracuse 2
0 3 I

0

Arkansas delega lion for their compromise, which calli; for seating the
disputed Daley delegation in exchange for
tile governors' support on McGovern's
claim to the full 271-rnember California
delegation.
Lucey said Gov. Jimmy Carter of
Georgia also had "offered some
promise.''
Carter, who led an abortive slop. McGovern drive at the National Governors
Conference in Housron only a month ago,
confirmed .that an "exploratory effort is
under way" to find a seating compromise,
but said that if it failed "we'll have to fight
it out on the floor ."
Sen. Kenneth Curtis of Maine, a Muskie
supporter, said: "I'd go for any kind of
credentials compromise which would

Partl y cloudy throu gh
Sunday with chance of showers
and thundershowers. Highs in
the lower 80s . Monday clearing
and warm.

"I could have shot him
It was the second hijacking
of a PSA plane in two days. The several times but there were
FBI killed two gunmen in
Wednesday's hijacking at San
Francisco International Airport.
Turner, of Sacramento, had
been a passenger in plainclothes aboard the plane when
it was seized over northern
California.
The'hijacker took command
of the plane while it was flying
from Oakland to Sacrsrnenro
and ordered it to head for San
Diego. The airline turned over
the ransom at San Diego and
the hijacker released all but
two of the fl7 paasengers before
forcing the crew to fly ro
Oakland.

when the bruiSing showdown on seating
the California delegation comes Monday
night.
"Muskie t:auld produce a very dramatic
effect if .he would withdraw and endorse
McGovern before Monday," said Gov.
!':!trick J. LUcey of Wisconsin, who is
McGovern's top strategist among
governors at the Democratic National
Convention.
Meanwhile, LUcey and Gov . John J.
Gilligan of Ohio were lobbying their.fellow
governors for support of a deal that would
involve McGovern's conaent to the seating
of Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and his
59-member, officially uncommitted
delegation from Cook County.
· LUcey told UP! he had "good indications" of some early support in the

Weather

Hijacker Gives Up To Captain

car.

Re cently the Columbus
Police Dept., assisting the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.,
obtained a statement from a
juvenile in Franklin County
that he had taken part in the
breaking and entering of Mrs .

•

appearance. To date she has won over 200
trophies in baton competition and is a
member of the Riggs Royal Cadettes, who
are the Junior State Corps Champions.
Besides her twirling, Cllidy studied
dancing under Mrs. Judy 'Fraser.
Also entering the state competition
was Diana Guthrie ol Athena C,ounty who
placed slxtlfin Slate Hoop in the 11-14 year
old age division. In State Solo, 11·14, Diana
placed 14th in a field of t2 conteslanis. She
is the daughter of Mr. and l!frs, Gerald
Guthrie of Coolville. Both girls are taught
by Mrs. Judy Riggs.

Fair Book Dedicated .

To Stanley L. Evans
GALLIPOLIS - The 1972 Gallia
County Junior Fair premium book is
dedicated to the late Stanley L. Evans, one
of the fair's greatest supporters.
Mr. Evans, who died last winter while
vacationing in Florida, donated land
where lh~ fairground is now Iota ted to the
lairboard in 1956.
B. B. Matthews, president of the Gallla
County Junior Fairboard, remarked,
·"Having had a part in the Gallia County ,
· Junior Fair from its beginning, I fee! I can
well appreciate its progress over the
years.
"Space )l'ould not be available to list
the names of all those who have conSTANLEY EVANS
tributed so faithfully of their support in so
He Donated the Land
many ways to help make our fair the
largest, exclusive junior falr in the state of
Ohio.
"However, we fell It was most ap.
propriate to dedicate the !972 premium
SUIT FILED ON ESTATE
book
ro Stanley L. Evans, who was one of
NEWPHILADELPHIA,O\lio (UP!) the
fair's
greatest.supporters and boosters
The Supreme Temple Pythlan Sisters of
Bloomington, Minn., have !Ued civil suit in not only seeing that our present location
here for $131,466 against the estate of Mary was made avallable, but also in the giving
Keller of nearby Urichsvllle who served as of his lime, effort and leadership. He was
llJ&lt;ecutive secretary of the lodge until her truly in teres ted in the youth of Gallla
dea~ in 1971. The suit alleges Miss Keller, · County."
Gallia County Junior Fairboard of;
as secretary, converted $96,706 of lodge
fl
clals
began distributing the 1972
funds to her own use and also asks interest
premium books thtoughout the community
of $34,760.

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Friday.
The Gallia County fair is scheduled
Aug . I through 5.

~een IJopefuls

Are Revealed
GALLIPOLIS - The 1972 Gallia
County Junior Fair Queen candidates were
revealed Saturday following distribution
of the new fair premium books.
Ten lovely girls representing all llve
high schools in the city and county are
entered in this year's pageant.
The 23rd annual Gallla County Junior
Fair is scheduled Aug. I through 5. The
queencontestls slated Wednesday, Aug. 2,
beginning at 9:30p.m. on Main Stage. .
The queen candidates are : .
Jackie ·Burnett and Diane Polcyn,
Kyger Creek; Unda Jeffers and Kala Slle '
Waugh, Gallipolis ; Kathy Frye and .
Vjrginia SaWlders, Hannan Trace; Diana
Terry and ~bble Trout, Southwestern and
Delores White and Linda Taylor, North
Gallla.

�2- The SUnday Times· Sentinel, Sanday, July 9, 1972

•

Deadline· for

Generation Rap
By -Helen and Sue Bottel
ROBBING PIE'IRA TO PAY PALS

Rip:

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.'52 Class is

3-Tho'SIIIdly~-Sentlnel, Sw!day,JU)y9, 197~

•

In Loss of House
To Fire Friday

.
f
How about, "Thanks, pal - and there's just one thing that
will keep YOU from finishing college: SIXTH GRADE! - SUE

Next Friday

DIVORCE ASKED
POMEROY - One suit for
divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court

by Donna Lee Haley, Mid·
dlepor t, against Mark A.
Haley, chargin g gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty.

pllrey said be was referring to
McGovern , former Sen .
Eugene J. McCarthy, but not
George C. Wallace. "I don 't
believe Gov . Wallace will
bolt," he said.
Asked if his own pledge
would hold if McGovern did not

.,; ...- ··'
---- • ~Atjj.r

"''
....

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Hilferty Plan to

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ONE OF THE MOST attractive new homes being constructed in Meigs
County IS that of Dr. and Mrs. Ray R. Pickens on a point high over the
vtllage, overlooking the Ohio River. The section pictured which is toward the

GALUPOUS - Cindy Cox
was named Junior Beef
Princess and Rulh Wood Miss
Gallia County Beef Princess
during Friday night's third
annual Gallia Coanty Beef
Cattle Roundup held at the
Gallia
Coun ty
Jun ior
Fairgrounds.
Crowning of the two princesses
hig hli ghted
the

POMEROY - Officers and
directors of the Meigs County
Ptoneer and Historical. Society
voted to accept the proposal of
Gerald E. HiUerty, of near
Pomeroy' a former Ohio
University instructor , in
regard to a study on the
development of the Meig s
Pioneer . House at a meeting
here Friday afternoon.
Under the agreement ,
HtUerty will develop concepls,
destgn, content and production
and budget ideas for th e
society in regard to the
direction the group should
follow in operating the Pioneer
House which will be the
organization's museum .
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
Lochary, Mrs. Paul Chapman
and Mrs. Robert Ashley were
named as a committee to work
with HiUerty on his plan.
Hilferty Is to have his

river features numerous large glass sliding doors which will open onto a
patio. The architecture of the modern home is cathedral. The exterior will be
of white brick.

evening 's activities.
Guest speakers during the
two.IJour program were Ray
Stone, Circleville, and Don
Brown of Galli a County.
The roast beef for Friday's
dinner was furnished by the
Ohio Valley livestock Co., and
Archie Meadows of Central
Ohio Breeding Association
provid ed soft drinks.

Two Accidents Investigated
POMEROY - The Me igs
County Sheriff's Dept. reported
Saturday twd single-ear accidents in which no injuries

were reported.
At 7:20 p. m. Friday on
town ship road 19, one.IJalf mile
southeast of Bowman's Run
Road, William Edwin Ma ttner,
Jr., Verona, Pa. , was traveling
downgrade around a curve
when he lost control of his car
in loose gravel. The car went
off the road on the left and into
a ditch.
There was heavy damage to

the vehicle. No citation was
Saturday at 8:45 a. m. on
Sum ner Road in Chester
tow nship Jo Ann Br ooks,
Reedsv ille, Rt. 1, Was travelin g
east on a rain slick surface
when the car skidded to the
left, jumped a ditch and
stopped agamst a fence. There
was heavy damage, but no
arrest 1

. AN ATTRACfiVE .swinuning pool is being buiit near the new home of Or. and Mrs. Ray R.
Pickens on Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy. The new home and pool sit high above much of the town
overlooking the Ohio River .

!

make a similar commitment
1
and then won the nomination,
1
Humphrey said he would wai t
for the South Dakota senator's 1
statement anti "let it go at I
tha t.'~

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service

-- ------------------------~ r----- --- --------·~ . . . . . . ~~w

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Letters of opinion are wclromed. Thev should be less
than 300 words long tor be subject to reduction by the edit or I
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be
withheld upon publication, howc1·er. on reques t. Lett ers
should be in good tasle, addressing issues. not person"lities.

0

;J~tdi/h
au

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Area Deaths.

II

I
I
I Ann Miller
Okey Sayre
funeral
serv1
ces
lor
Ann
I
POMEROY - Okey Sayre,
Miller, 39, Cheshire, Rt. 2, who forme rly of Meigs County,
1I died in a single car accident Bradenton, Fla. , died Thurs·

morning on SR north
II Friday
of Crown City, will be held
1

Monday at 2 p.m. at the

I Rutland Nazarene Church.

day night In Bradenton. He is
survived by a son, Ashton of
Fairborn; a daughter, Mrs. 0 .
C. (J ea n) ·stevens -of Mt .
Gilead ; two grandchildr en,
and three grea t.grandchildren.
The bod y will arrive in
Columbus this afternoon and
will be brought to the Ewing
Funeral Home. Graveside
services will be held at 10:30
a.m. Monday at the Letart
Falls Ce metery with the Rev .
Freeland Norris officiating.

Mrs. Miller was born Oct. 22,
1933, the daughter of Joseph
Minersville, Ohio and Ollie Schuler , Cheshire,
July 3, 1972 Rt. 2, who survj ve.
In addition to her parents she
Dear Mr. Editor:
Valley Hospital for minor inJuries, was
Four accidents, in which there were
Recently,
I
was
very
much
amused
,
to
read
in
your
Daily
is
survived by her husband,
treated and released.
no serious injuries and a total of $550
Sentinel, an advertisement, concerning a particular association, James: one daughter, Terri
Another accident was recorded at
damages were investigated Friday by
Lynn, and a son, Jinuny, both
.th e Triple A.
8:30 a.m. on Rt. 62 at Clifton, involving
the
Mason
(:o!!ll1Y Sheriff's
The advertisement read, and I quote: "Stop by the Auto at home: two brothers, Joe,
two cars, one driven by William C.
Department, and one accident also
Club," in Gallipolis to learn many more reasons why you Jr. , and Gl enn, both of
Nease, of Point Pleasant, the other by
~robed by Point Pleasant Police.
Cheshire , Rt. 2.
should be a member of A.A.A ."
Willim Paul Spears, ~octorsvill e, 0.
An accident at 4:40 p.m. reportedly
I would like to express my personal opinion , re: this
The Rev. Uoyd Grinun will
The report stated Spears started to pass
occurred on U.S. 33, east of New
officiate.
Burial will be in Miles
a truck as the truck went left ol center
organization , and make it public, as to my reason WHY, through
Haven, involving cars driven by Don E.
Cemetery.
Frtends may call at
to miss a bad place in the road.
your newspaper.
Rea, Minersville, Ohio, and Gerald E.
Damages were estimated at $100.
Recently, as I was leaving Holzer Medical Center at 6 a .m. I the Martin Funeral Home,
Lehew, New Haven. Damages were
The fourth accident reportedly
discov ered my car battery was dead , due to personafnegligence. Rutland, after noon today.
estimated at $125. No report was
occurred
at
11:25
p.m.
when
a
car
I had le£1 my parking lights on all night.
received as to the cause of the accident
by
David
Jenkins,
18,
Glenwood,
driven
However, being a member of Triple A, my first thought was Nancy Steele
POMEROY - Three acas both cars had been removed before
met
a
car
on
a
bridge
on
Rt.
2,
Crab
cidents were investigated
call for assistance, which I did. I was told ' their services did not
officers arrived.
.
Mrs . . Nancy McKinn ey
Creek Road, near the Gill Farm.
Frida y evening by Pomeroy
A second accident was investigated
begin until 9 a.m.
Steele, 93, of Diamond, wife of
Jenkins'
auto
hit
the
bridge
rail.
police.
at 5:50 p.m. in Henderson when a car
At 9 a.lfl. I ~alled every service station in Gallipolis the late John Steele and a
REX BAilEY
Damages were estimated at $300.
At 6:23 p.m. on West Main
associated wtth .Trtple A, whose adv~tisements read : "Day or Mason County native, died
driven by George A. Mayes of
Point Pleasant Polj£e investigated !!n
Henderson struck a bicycle on which
St.,
an eastbound car driven by
Night Service," "No job too minor, or major, for assistance! '
Friday at 5:30 a.m. in
accident
at
4:20
p.m
.
at
Eighth
and
two girls were riding. According to
I was told by ALL, either they were too busy, didn't have McMillian
Hospital
in Hobart Raub, Pomeroy, atViand Street in which there were no
tempted to turn into the Dairy
officers, two girls were turning west on
enough help or did not bother with it, at all, anymore.
Charleston.
injuries and damages were estimated
the bicycle at Walnut and Smith Streets
I'm anxiously waiting to hear ONE good reason why I should
Mrs. Steele was born in Valley and struck a motorcycle
at
$700.
One
driver
was
cited.
in Henderson and did not stop at Walnut
continue to be a member of Triple A.
Mason County, a daughter of driven by Thomas Hawley, 20,
According to officers, a car owned by
'
Street.
I would like to take this QPportunity to thank Mr. Roy Hesson, the late Hannah and Lawrence Middleport.
Wanda Hazelwood, Point Pleasant, and
Mayes, traveling north on Walnut
Hawley was taken to .
"Security Guard," Mr . George Moss, "Mailttenance Man," and McKinney and was a sister of
driven by Patricia Hazelwood, 19, Point
Street, reported the bicycle pulled out
one other, whose name I do not know, for their courteous the late Early McKinney of Veterans Memorial Hospital·
Pleasant, was stopped for traffic when
in front of him and when he applied his
by the Pomeroy · emergency·
assistan ce, in helping me obtain assistance from a local Ashland Point Pleasant. She was a
struck in the rear by a truck dri ven by
brakes, th ~ car skidded in the gravel
J . Rex Bailev. Equipment Operator Station attendant.
member of the Witcher Baptist squad where he was admitted
·
Clarence A. Davis, 45, Mason. Davis
and hit the bicycle.
for treatment. Raub was cited
at the Philip Sporn Plant in New Haven,.
Also, for sacrificing their lunch hour, at Holzer Medical Church.
was cited on a charge of failing to have
Cindy Hoffman,. a rider on the
W. Va., was recently promoted to Unit
Funeral services will be held to mayor's court on a charge of
his vehicle under control.
Center, to assist me.
bicycle, was received at Pleasant
failure to yield rlghf'of way.
Foreman.
Also to the courteous, sympathetic telephone operator for al2 p.m. Sunday at the Fidler. There were heavy damages I&amp;
Frame Funeral Home at Belle:
, , .... ....... .... , .....,.. .,.,.,....,.,.,.,.,.,.,.........
Bailey was born in Chester Ohio He
~: .·:&lt;·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·: .·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·,·,·:·:,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.::::::~::::::::::;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~!!: graduated from Chester High Schooi in her assistance in calling long distance for help.
the Raub car and medium to
Mrs. George l:lolter, L.P.N. , Burial will be in the Witcher Hawley's cycle.
Creek Cemetery near Belle .
19
At 6:40p.m. at the corner of
Survivors Include one son,
November of 1952 Bailey was
r.!
: :: employed at Sporn Plant as a laborer . Thank-you note to someone
Elise Steele of Diamond; , Nye and Main Sis., a car driven
daughters, Mrs. Rosie Lawson, by Charles Lytle, Pomeroy,
{o:;
GALLIPOLIS - Two per·
There was moderate damage
:::; He entered the Maintenance
Mrs. Dorothy Brown and Mrs. stopped at the traffic light was
~
sons were cited to Municipal
to the Wiseman and Myers
\ Department in 1953 as a Helper. In Dear Sir :
~
Court following a traffic ac·
vehicles.
:::: February of 1959 • moved to the
This is a thank-you note to someone I do not know and have . Evelyn Surbaugh ol Belle and struck by a car dflve~ by
~
cident at 10:30 p.m. Friday on
Asecond mishap occurred on
) Operations D~P" o.nt as a Utility not met, to my knowledge. Last Saturday, July I, I lost a cheek, Mrs. Mildred Burris of Wiima Siders, Racine~ coming
~
Eastern Ave.
Third Ave. near Neal's In:::: Operator . He wa s promoted to already endorsed, and it was returned to me on July 7 by the Diamond; half-brother, ·Roy onto Mail) from Nye. She was
According to the Gallipolis
suran ce where an auto driven
Auxiliary Equipmen t Operator in the manager of a local supermarket. He told me a customer had McKinney of Leon ; one sister, arrestedpn a charge of driving
·
Pollee Department an auto
by Florence Stephens, 51,
:;:: fall of 1959 and to Equipment Operator found it and turned it in. Since the check was endorsed, that Mrs. Emma Pullins of Bidwell, while inlollcaled, There were
.
driven by Michael L. Myers,
Gallipolis, struck a parked car
\ in 1966. Bailey se.rved as an Equipment person 'could have cashed it but chose' instead to turn il ln. 0. half-sister Mrs. Janet no Injuries, but damages to
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, went left of
owned by James w. Stauffer,
;:;: Operator unttl h1s recent promotion to Perhaps this incident is not news-worthy but I believe it does tell Pickens of Point Pleasant; 16 both vehicles were heavy.
At 10:08 p.m. a Cl!f driven by
grandchildren, 33 greatcenter striking a car operated
Rt. 1, Gallipolis. There was
:;:; Unit Foreman.
something of the nature of the people In our community.
Herman
Hoffner,, Pomeroy,
grandchildren; four• nephews,
~
by Melanie J. Wiseman, 19,
minor damage to both cars.
{
Bailey is a big sport.&lt;; fan. He takes io
Mrs . Barna H. Lasseter, Route I, Box 79-D. Galllpo· Calyton and Rodney Pullins, pulled from Mulberry Ave.,
~
Galli\lolis. Myers told officers
A third mishap occurred a t
as many events as possible. He played
Point Pleasant, and Eddie onto Second St..' into a. car
~
hewasforcedacrossthecenter
the rear of Kroger 's where an
::::: basketball at Chester High School for lis, Ohio 45631.
Pullins, Nitro, and Paul . driven by Michael Johnson, 22,
~
line by an auto driven by Terry
auto driven by Fleta T. Hunt,
!!!!! four years. Bailey is a member of the
THREE
FINED
charges
filed
by
Marshal
Pullins, Gallipolis, Ohio, and of Dunbar, W. Va. Damage was
Uoyd, 18, Gallipolis. Myers
61, Rt.l, Gallipolis, backed into
:;:: Chester Volunteer Fire Depar tment
RACINE - Three defen- Alfred Lyons. They are three nieces, Mrs. William light to Hoffner's car but heavy
~
was charged with driving left
a garbage truck owned by the
,;::: and the Chester United Methodist
dants were fined a total of Michael J . Hill, Racine Route Humphrey of Point Pleasant; to Johnson's. Hoffner was cited
of center. Uoyd was later
City vi Gallipolis. There was
:« Church.
booked for reckless operation.
minor damage to the car.
:::: Chester, Ohio is the present home of $13.70 including costs, each, in 2; Paul Harold Parsons, Mrs. John Oliver, Newark, 0 .,' to mayor's court on a charge of
·
:::; Bailey and his wife, Sina. They have the court of Racine Mayor Racine, and James Lee Atkins, and Mrs. Arthur Cheesebrew of falling to yield right of way,
Charles Pyles on speeding Portland.
Tltere were no Injuries.
U....•....:•.:-:•:O~&lt;:;•:•;o,::::».:«%-.':!•'•:•~·.-8!.-'1)'
!X.-_.:.O:.,-, .,·,··~··· !i,.,.,
........
,., ..,. ,.. . .
•.~ t wo marr ,te d sons.
Columbus, Ohio.
~'""·'·'· ;v.• :--_.;.:..:.:.-..: ..-! ••:."'••!.: .:•..i;onW";~!·!·W...:•:t
..:.:o:&gt;
•.»!·:::&amp;:o::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:;
::;;::s;:;:;:~:::~:::;::::::::::;::::::::::

W;1iting for

Reason.~

MIS
• haps
Reported

Rex Bailey
Promoted At
· Sporn ·Plant

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suggestions outlined by Sept. 1
when the society either will
accept them or proceed in
other directions. Members of
the society have discussed the
possibility of using rotating
exh1b1ts at the new museum in
order to keep up interest rather
than se tting up one group of
exh1b1ts on a permanent basis
Hilferty has done desig~
work for the Ohio Historical
Society.
Friday, the society's officers
also voted to allocate money
for reproducing papers such as
the essays and speeches of the
annual historical con test and
the diary of the late Quar tus
Bridgeman of Syracuse. Other
papers of hi sto rical im·
portance to the county will also
be reproduced.
C. E, Blakeslee, pres·ident,
presided over Friday's
meeting at Pioneer House.

We received a call from the
Rev. Clarence McCloud who
has been recently assigned to
the Methodist Church at
Masoo. Mr. McCloud had read
one of our recent stories and
called to r,enew .acquaintances
with us. We had known Mr .
McCloud while he was pastor of
the Methodist Memorial
Church in Spencer some years
ago and recalled that while
there he was a ~real promoter
of soli and water Conservation . He told me
that Iollowing his stay in
Spencer that he had been at
Hamlin inunediately before
coming to Mason.
We are very happy to have
Mr. McCloud In our · area
because he is a good friend, a
good pastor, and an avid
promoter of soil and water
conservation.
There are many ways of
getting the conservation story
across to people. We are able to
do a small amount of It, by
individual contact and
assistance, but. greater
amounts can be done by the
clergy, Boy Scout l~ders,
newspapers, civic leaders and
others. So when we are able to
enlist the assistance of people
such as Mr. McCloud, we are
very happy to do so.
Earl Colegrove of Apple
Grove reported to us that he
likes purple martins and has
done much to bring them to his
home, but recently his entire
colony died. He took his martin
house down to investigate.
There were twelve nests in it
with 42 dead young birds and
five eggs. All adult martins had

MEIGS THEATRE
ITechnlcolorl
Renee Taylor
Joseph-Bologna
~rtoons

lS MUST GO!

Twelve

PARE

Draw

And You'll. Buy

Fines
POME ROY - · Twelve
defendants were fi ned · and
seven others forleited bonds in
MeigS..C:ounty Court Friday.
Fmed by Judge ~'rank w.
Porter were James H. Walker,
Portland, Rt. I; and Douglas
Johnson, Cheshire, Rt . 1, $5
and costs each, unsafe vehicle·
Gregory H. Boatright, Long
Bo ttom, $10 and costs
.
speedm
g; J ohn M. Hall,'
Ironton , $10 and costs, passing
at Inte rsection ; Ro ber t A.
Tones, Shade, Rt. 1, $50 and
costs. license suspended for 30
days, reckless operation;·Allen
Stage, Athens, Rt. 2, $25 and
costs, $10 suspended. overload;
George S. Whited, Athens, $82
and cos ts, $32 suspended,
overl oad: Lloyd Harm on,
Rutland, Rt. 1, costs only, five
days confinement, assault and
batll!ry; James H. Sellers,
Portland, Rt. 1, $47 and costs,
$17 suspend ed, overloa d;
James E. Ritchie, Portland,
Rt. I, $150 and costs, three days
co nf ineme n t, li ce n se
suspended for six mo nths
driving while intoxicated.'
William Fink, Middleport, and
Carl E. Stewa1·t, no address
recorded, $5 and cost.&lt;; each,
defective exhaust.
Forfeiting bonds were Jerry
L~e Murph y, Belpre, $25,
fa1lure to stop with in assured
clear distance; Walden G.
Roberts, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, Rita
Math ews, Co lumbus, a nd
Homer R. Starcher, Spencer,
W. Va., $34.55 each, fishing
With out a license; Boyd
Hackney, Reedsville, Rt. 1,
$17.50, no slow moving emblem; Gl en A. Brinker,
Cleveland , $27.50 passin g at
intersec ti on; Ray Fitch,
Cheshire , Rt . 11 $27.50, expired
operator's license.

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POMEROY ~ Two defen:
dants forfe ited bonds and four
others were fined by Pomeroy
May or William Ba ronic k
Friday.
Fined were John Thompson,
Rutland , $5 and costs, running
a red light; Carl Hubbard
Syracuse , $10 a nd costs'
squealing tires: Michael
Beach, Middleport, $10 and
costs, improper backing, and
thr ee po sts, trav e led an
Elizabeth Miracle, Syracuse,
additional 75 fee t, and
$10 and costs, fa iling to yield
stopped against a tree. Sedg·
wi ck wa s not injured.
ri ght of way.
Wetzel Phillips of Pomeroy
forfeited bonds totaling $100
posted on char ges of
des tru ctio n of property,
assa ult and batte ry and
disturbing the peace. Howard
PT . PLEASANT - Rev. C. Jeffers, Pomeroy, forfeited his
L. Frum. recruiter for the $25 bond posted for disturbing
Ad ult
Basic
Education the peace.
program in Mason County.
anno unces th at " TV High
School" kits will once again be
available this fa ll.
Deans List
The "TV High Sc hool" which
Gary Fields has been named
is shown on Cable TV is shown
on
the Dean's List at Glenville
at least two limes a week. Upon
State
College with a 3.04
enrollment in the Television
Hi gh School Co urse, eac h averoge . Fields. son of Mr.
students receives a study kit, and Mrs. Gerald F1elds, of
valued at $13.50 per kit, bot H.rtford, will be a senior at
whi ch is furnished to the Glenville State .College in the
student at absolute ly no fa ll and is majonng in
cha rge. This kit contains the Biology.
necessary ma terials to accompany the telev ised course.
EDWARDS REUN ION
Incl uded are condensed text·
books in each study area, along
The John R. and Virginia
With accom panyin g answer Edwards reunion will be held
keys, a Study Guide for the Sunday, July. 16, on Pond Hill
course, a book, High School back of West Columbia. All
ROLL NOW FOR NEW
Cer tification through the GED relatives a nd friends are
• QUARTERTes ts , which explains the test asked to join the Edwards
h£M• it is administered, and descendants a t a bas ket
BEGINS SEPT. 14
what to expect on the tes t. Also dinner at 12:30 noon.
One and Two Year
included is the Webster's New
Courses
World Dictionary.
Business
Ad If one has trouble in making
ASK TOW ED
ministration
arrangements to attend the
POMEROY - Larry Shelton
Executive Secretarial
regular classes at the Learning Patterson, 32, Rac ine and Jr. Accounting
Center, Rev . Fraum urges him Sandra Kay Jones, 22, Leta rt
Secretarial
to call the Cenll!r, 675-3039, and Falls.
Gener~l Office
en roll now for the TV High
College Level Courses
Sc hool Course. He ts now
Approved Jor VA Benefits
taking names for the course so
Job Placement Assistance
Approved by Slate Board of
that the ki t.&lt;; will be available
The
fear
is
that
people
School
&amp;
College
when the course begins.
thmk the enti re Blac k Hills Registration.
was devastated by the floods
visit or call446-4367
,
•
and that's not true. T h c
c11a1og and in·
soft base was observed on ' roads are ope n and the nat- I fo1rma'lion.
which the tile had to be laid. ural b ea~ ty of t he Blac k
The soil was relative ly dry Hills 1s sllll there .
down to a depth of three feet, -Gov. llicllard K n e i p vf
bu t benea th tha t it was
Suuth Dakota , expressing
extremely sloppy and soft.
concem ove r, tile effect of
. .
.
the lloptd C1t11 flood O!l
Close examtnatwn of th1s
tourism ,
'
revealed that the top of the
ground was somewhat sandy in
nature down to the 3 foot depth.
This depth is
where the
original soil began. Top soil
down there showed a normal
soil profile to begin at this
depth. This indica ted that the
hump had bee n caused in
former years by soil deposit
caused werious erosion from a
nearby field . It is hard to tell
how long ago this erosion
occureed because everything
was grassed over now and no
erosion had occurered for some
years.

Named To

Someti imes we obse rve
small things along with our
regular work that make-hie
more int e r e~ tin g. We are
referrin g to a situation on the
Gera)d Rood farm where we
recently assisted with some tile
drainage. We had planned an
interceptor tile draina ge
system at the bottom of a slope
so as to intercept the water at
the base of a hill beforeit came
out onto the bottom.
During the survey work we
noted a hump about midway up
the tile line, but did not pay
much attention to it, and
planned his drain system so
that a continuous grade would
be in the tile line. This caused
the cut to be deeper across this
hump than on each side of it.
During
th e installation
everything went very nicely
until the machine was digging
through the hump. In this slip
of ditch cave-ins occured and a

•

Mayor Baronick

School Planned

disa ppeared. He told me that ·
he had read a story in the
Charleston gazette te lling of
some malady that has befall en
purple martin s in this area.
Since kn owledge of our birds
is not our specia lty, we
contacted Paol Matthews
District Biologist of the West
Virginia Department of
Natural Resources , !orated at
McClintic Wildlife Station. Mr .
Matthews confirmed ·all this
and said that to date the
biologists are not certain what
has caused the death of the
martins. Several th eories
exist, ~ e said , including
starvation of the adult, the
recent cold weather, and some
possible poisoning as a result ol
a pesticide used where the
birds spend th eir winter
months in the southern states.

Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
July 9·10·11

Four Fined by

TV Kits for

Lay Of The Land

issued.

II •••r_rtt..

2 Cited To Court

Campaign Planned

POM EROY
Und er
investigation by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
is a single car accident that
occurred Friday at 5:30a.m.
00
SJ:(
7. · southwest
of county road 30, Forest
Run Road.
Donald Keith Sedgwick,
25 , Tuppers Plains, was
traveling north east on 7
when he came into a right
hand curve. Th e car went to
the left, struck and knocked
out 25 feet of guardrail and

Be Given Chance

..

Five Auto Wrecks
Are Investigated

~

..........

'
'
.,•,•,•,•,•,·.-.··
,.•.•.,...~ •••.:.:.:.····
:·:-:·:·· :-:·:.;.:.:.:.:.:.:::!!!?X.:::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::=::::::

(Continued from page ,I )
POM EROY - The Meigs Band
engineering !t om The College of · .Boosters are plunning a lund raising
Steubenville.
campaign to send a minimum of 100
Mulato, his wife, Mary, and their four
members of the Meigs High School Band
GALUPOUS - Faulty wiring was children, Jame:o, 11 ; Jeanne, 10; Joseph , 7,
to a band camp on July 30 for one week.
blamed In .a fire which destroyed the and Ann, 6, reside in Stevensville, Mich.
The camp will be held at Rio Grande
residence occupied by the Dave Phill.1
The family has purchased a home in the
College. Cost for each student ol th e
family Friday night located on Rt 233 ~ Spring Valley Subdivision in Gallipolis and
band attending is $35. The boosters have
Gr~field Twp., owned by tbe . Gallia will move to the new residence late th is
set up a fund earmarked for a band
Baptist Church . Gallia County sheriff's month.
· camp lor which they will bold a tag day,
deputies and the Oak Hill Fire Departmeni
ask parents to contribute to, also
were called to the scene but were unabl~ to
merchants, and if the amount needed Is
save .the dwelling.
hay, 3,000 feet of lumber, miscellaneous
not received the group will borrow
Damages were estimated at $4,166 in a tools, and ~ rote&gt;tiller. Also damaged were
whatever is needed.
fire at 12:43 a.m. Saturday at the Herman several pteces of machinery parked near
All contributions; big or small, will
G· Brucker Farm located on Friendly the structure, namely, a 1952 Ford tractor
be greatly appreciated by the
Rldg~ Rd., Rt. 2, Crown City.
Galion road grader and a grainery . Ther~
association, Howard Goins is the new "
Af1re of undetermined origiri destroyed was minor damage to a two.car garage.
baod director,
,.
a 4~ foot barn and its contents including
It was the 81st alarm of th e year for
a 1965 Chevrolet pick-up truck, 77 bales of the Gallipolis Fire Department.

Humphrey Cindy Cox, Ruth Wood,
AwardedRoundupHonor

~r lllll:

.

• PIant
··Bad W'r:rmg Blamed Gavm

•

If a child is brought up to think stealing is wrong, how oome a
GALLIPOLIS - Members of
~~ dan do it and It's okay ?
the 1952 graduating class of
My friend gave mea radio that I loved. Mom owed one of her Gallia Academy High School
llrldge club pals some money, and Dad's pretty tight about these were reminded Saturday that
lblngs, so one day when the woman was over here, Mom gave her
the deadline for submitting
MY radio In payment of her debt!
reservations for this year's
91e says she'll get me another, but I've heard that' before ! A class reunion is Friday, July
· lllli collector came and got tough once and I'm pretty sure she 14.
jlenuaded him to wait a couple of months by giving him MY tape
Mrs. Marilene Thivener
deck that I earned by baby.Qtting. She said he just picked it up Settle, chairman of the 1952
111d walked off with it, but when I told her to report him to the GAHS Clas:; Reunion Com·
pollee for stealing, she wouldn't do it - so I know what really mittee, revealed Saturday that
35 reservations have been
bllppened.
received for the 20-ye ar
Dad says she's a spendthrift and keeps her to an allowance bit I'm t~one who suffers. Should I blow the whistle on her ?- reunion thus far.
The event will be held at the
WHEN DOES LOYALTY END ? (PIETRA )
'
Elks
Hall on S;lturday, July 22,
WDIE:
beginning
at Q:30 p.m, Dinner
I think your· mother is more of a thief than the bill collector
she accused of stealing - and if you don't blow the whistle now (ham ) will be served at 1 p.m.
Tickets are $4 per person .
she may be inrealtrouble later on. - SUE
Prior to the reunion, Dr. and
P.S. Hope your father replaces the radio and tape deck, but
Mrs. James L. Dailey will host
not his wife !
a
social hour for members of
+++
the class and their husbands
Dear Pietra :
"Robbing Pietra to pay pals" has got to stop! Loyalty to your and·or wive s . Dr. Dailey
resides at 445 Third Ave.
mother is great but. YOU need consideration, too . Why not
Reservations should be
suggest that she get a job and earn her own spending money? If mailed to Mrs. L.A. Settle, 128
not, a family conference is indicated . It should be a real sizzler! Kineon Drive, Gallipolis, or to
- HELEN
Mrs. Madge Pettus Boggs, in
+++
care of the Ohio Valley Bank ,
Helen and Sue:
Gallipolis.
Ever since I can remember I have shrugged off boys who
actually liked me, but I'll break my neck trying to attract !elias
that seem out ofreach . The relationship goes great until the guy
llhows he really cares . Then I become cold and insulting . After I
(Continued from page I)
ruin everything, I get jealous and feel very depressed.
I'm always friendly and tactful at first but then I blow it. My
convention schedule.
mother says It's immaturity, but I'm afraid I'll always have "I call on every candidate to
ONE FOOT IN MY MOUTH
join
me in a similar commitOFIMM :
You said in your letter, "As soon as he shows he really cares ment, a commitment which
... "Maybe you shy away because all you want is friendship and should be pledged to the conthe boy wants love. So you "cool" him with insults instead of vention before it meets Monday,"· Humphrey said.
bonesty.
Seemingly well-rested and in
Why not let him know you like him, but you're not ready for
high spirits after a week at his
111ything serious, so "let's get to know each other better first ." Waverly, Minn., home, Hum·
SUE
phrey proclaimed he had a
~"much better"· chance to win
Dear OFJMM:
the nomination after the
Maybe these boys unknowingly give you a "queen complex." Supreme Court's credentials
There's always a tendency to take advantage of people who show ruling. Accepting his aides'
they care, especially when the "queen " is inunature and the figures that he had 700 solid
"subject" is a lovestruck boy.
first-ballot votes, Humphrey
U he takes it, you think less of him ; thus become more in· said, "There is going to be no
suiting. If he doesn't, you're covered with regrets, thus the first ballot victory and I'm
depression over losing him. It's partly guilt .because you know going to gain on every ballot
after that."
you've been a stinker.
Humphrey did not mention
Best remedy: stop thinking of boys as conquests, don 't ex·
peel them to be perfect, and don't try them too far ! - HElEN McGovern by name in calling
for a loyalty pledge. But he
+++
said it was prompted by the
Dear Sue :
Please: a put-down for an insufferable dame who never says need for unity and because
a nice word about any of us. She cheated her way through high there "might be some who
school, then calls us dumb! Says we're "stuck" with junior . would bolt and form another
party if things do not go their
oollege because no university would talle us. Next time she gets
way."
going, what'sa good comeback? - HAVEHADIT
Under que stioning, Hum·

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Opening Tuesday, July 11,9:30 AM
St . Paul Lutheran Church
231 E. 2nd St.
NEW class also meeting weekly in

.
Tonight ll&gt;ru Tutsdlly
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1,000 CONVICTS AND
A WOMAN!
!Color I
Alexandra Hay
Sandor Eles ,
IRI
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2:t8 Third li-ve;

�2- The SUnday Times· Sentinel, Sanday, July 9, 1972

•

Deadline· for

Generation Rap
By -Helen and Sue Bottel
ROBBING PIE'IRA TO PAY PALS

Rip:

.

.'

.'52 Class is

3-Tho'SIIIdly~-Sentlnel, Sw!day,JU)y9, 197~

•

In Loss of House
To Fire Friday

.
f
How about, "Thanks, pal - and there's just one thing that
will keep YOU from finishing college: SIXTH GRADE! - SUE

Next Friday

DIVORCE ASKED
POMEROY - One suit for
divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court

by Donna Lee Haley, Mid·
dlepor t, against Mark A.
Haley, chargin g gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty.

pllrey said be was referring to
McGovern , former Sen .
Eugene J. McCarthy, but not
George C. Wallace. "I don 't
believe Gov . Wallace will
bolt," he said.
Asked if his own pledge
would hold if McGovern did not

.,; ...- ··'
---- • ~Atjj.r

"''
....

..-·

-·"

.

~

·~ ~~

...

];

.··-..

Hilferty Plan to

-\.

ONE OF THE MOST attractive new homes being constructed in Meigs
County IS that of Dr. and Mrs. Ray R. Pickens on a point high over the
vtllage, overlooking the Ohio River. The section pictured which is toward the

GALUPOUS - Cindy Cox
was named Junior Beef
Princess and Rulh Wood Miss
Gallia County Beef Princess
during Friday night's third
annual Gallia Coanty Beef
Cattle Roundup held at the
Gallia
Coun ty
Jun ior
Fairgrounds.
Crowning of the two princesses
hig hli ghted
the

POMEROY - Officers and
directors of the Meigs County
Ptoneer and Historical. Society
voted to accept the proposal of
Gerald E. HiUerty, of near
Pomeroy' a former Ohio
University instructor , in
regard to a study on the
development of the Meig s
Pioneer . House at a meeting
here Friday afternoon.
Under the agreement ,
HtUerty will develop concepls,
destgn, content and production
and budget ideas for th e
society in regard to the
direction the group should
follow in operating the Pioneer
House which will be the
organization's museum .
Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
Lochary, Mrs. Paul Chapman
and Mrs. Robert Ashley were
named as a committee to work
with HiUerty on his plan.
Hilferty Is to have his

river features numerous large glass sliding doors which will open onto a
patio. The architecture of the modern home is cathedral. The exterior will be
of white brick.

evening 's activities.
Guest speakers during the
two.IJour program were Ray
Stone, Circleville, and Don
Brown of Galli a County.
The roast beef for Friday's
dinner was furnished by the
Ohio Valley livestock Co., and
Archie Meadows of Central
Ohio Breeding Association
provid ed soft drinks.

Two Accidents Investigated
POMEROY - The Me igs
County Sheriff's Dept. reported
Saturday twd single-ear accidents in which no injuries

were reported.
At 7:20 p. m. Friday on
town ship road 19, one.IJalf mile
southeast of Bowman's Run
Road, William Edwin Ma ttner,
Jr., Verona, Pa. , was traveling
downgrade around a curve
when he lost control of his car
in loose gravel. The car went
off the road on the left and into
a ditch.
There was heavy damage to

the vehicle. No citation was
Saturday at 8:45 a. m. on
Sum ner Road in Chester
tow nship Jo Ann Br ooks,
Reedsv ille, Rt. 1, Was travelin g
east on a rain slick surface
when the car skidded to the
left, jumped a ditch and
stopped agamst a fence. There
was heavy damage, but no
arrest 1

. AN ATTRACfiVE .swinuning pool is being buiit near the new home of Or. and Mrs. Ray R.
Pickens on Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy. The new home and pool sit high above much of the town
overlooking the Ohio River .

!

make a similar commitment
1
and then won the nomination,
1
Humphrey said he would wai t
for the South Dakota senator's 1
statement anti "let it go at I
tha t.'~

BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conservation Service

-- ------------------------~ r----- --- --------·~ . . . . . . ~~w

I

I

Letters of opinion are wclromed. Thev should be less
than 300 words long tor be subject to reduction by the edit or I
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be
withheld upon publication, howc1·er. on reques t. Lett ers
should be in good tasle, addressing issues. not person"lities.

0

;J~tdi/h
au

I

: -..:~

I II
1
1

~ -- ... i·j

Area Deaths.

II

I
I
I Ann Miller
Okey Sayre
funeral
serv1
ces
lor
Ann
I
POMEROY - Okey Sayre,
Miller, 39, Cheshire, Rt. 2, who forme rly of Meigs County,
1I died in a single car accident Bradenton, Fla. , died Thurs·

morning on SR north
II Friday
of Crown City, will be held
1

Monday at 2 p.m. at the

I Rutland Nazarene Church.

day night In Bradenton. He is
survived by a son, Ashton of
Fairborn; a daughter, Mrs. 0 .
C. (J ea n) ·stevens -of Mt .
Gilead ; two grandchildr en,
and three grea t.grandchildren.
The bod y will arrive in
Columbus this afternoon and
will be brought to the Ewing
Funeral Home. Graveside
services will be held at 10:30
a.m. Monday at the Letart
Falls Ce metery with the Rev .
Freeland Norris officiating.

Mrs. Miller was born Oct. 22,
1933, the daughter of Joseph
Minersville, Ohio and Ollie Schuler , Cheshire,
July 3, 1972 Rt. 2, who survj ve.
In addition to her parents she
Dear Mr. Editor:
Valley Hospital for minor inJuries, was
Four accidents, in which there were
Recently,
I
was
very
much
amused
,
to
read
in
your
Daily
is
survived by her husband,
treated and released.
no serious injuries and a total of $550
Sentinel, an advertisement, concerning a particular association, James: one daughter, Terri
Another accident was recorded at
damages were investigated Friday by
Lynn, and a son, Jinuny, both
.th e Triple A.
8:30 a.m. on Rt. 62 at Clifton, involving
the
Mason
(:o!!ll1Y Sheriff's
The advertisement read, and I quote: "Stop by the Auto at home: two brothers, Joe,
two cars, one driven by William C.
Department, and one accident also
Club," in Gallipolis to learn many more reasons why you Jr. , and Gl enn, both of
Nease, of Point Pleasant, the other by
~robed by Point Pleasant Police.
Cheshire , Rt. 2.
should be a member of A.A.A ."
Willim Paul Spears, ~octorsvill e, 0.
An accident at 4:40 p.m. reportedly
I would like to express my personal opinion , re: this
The Rev. Uoyd Grinun will
The report stated Spears started to pass
occurred on U.S. 33, east of New
officiate.
Burial will be in Miles
a truck as the truck went left ol center
organization , and make it public, as to my reason WHY, through
Haven, involving cars driven by Don E.
Cemetery.
Frtends may call at
to miss a bad place in the road.
your newspaper.
Rea, Minersville, Ohio, and Gerald E.
Damages were estimated at $100.
Recently, as I was leaving Holzer Medical Center at 6 a .m. I the Martin Funeral Home,
Lehew, New Haven. Damages were
The fourth accident reportedly
discov ered my car battery was dead , due to personafnegligence. Rutland, after noon today.
estimated at $125. No report was
occurred
at
11:25
p.m.
when
a
car
I had le£1 my parking lights on all night.
received as to the cause of the accident
by
David
Jenkins,
18,
Glenwood,
driven
However, being a member of Triple A, my first thought was Nancy Steele
POMEROY - Three acas both cars had been removed before
met
a
car
on
a
bridge
on
Rt.
2,
Crab
cidents were investigated
call for assistance, which I did. I was told ' their services did not
officers arrived.
.
Mrs . . Nancy McKinn ey
Creek Road, near the Gill Farm.
Frida y evening by Pomeroy
A second accident was investigated
begin until 9 a.m.
Steele, 93, of Diamond, wife of
Jenkins'
auto
hit
the
bridge
rail.
police.
at 5:50 p.m. in Henderson when a car
At 9 a.lfl. I ~alled every service station in Gallipolis the late John Steele and a
REX BAilEY
Damages were estimated at $300.
At 6:23 p.m. on West Main
associated wtth .Trtple A, whose adv~tisements read : "Day or Mason County native, died
driven by George A. Mayes of
Point Pleasant Polj£e investigated !!n
Henderson struck a bicycle on which
St.,
an eastbound car driven by
Night Service," "No job too minor, or major, for assistance! '
Friday at 5:30 a.m. in
accident
at
4:20
p.m
.
at
Eighth
and
two girls were riding. According to
I was told by ALL, either they were too busy, didn't have McMillian
Hospital
in Hobart Raub, Pomeroy, atViand Street in which there were no
tempted to turn into the Dairy
officers, two girls were turning west on
enough help or did not bother with it, at all, anymore.
Charleston.
injuries and damages were estimated
the bicycle at Walnut and Smith Streets
I'm anxiously waiting to hear ONE good reason why I should
Mrs. Steele was born in Valley and struck a motorcycle
at
$700.
One
driver
was
cited.
in Henderson and did not stop at Walnut
continue to be a member of Triple A.
Mason County, a daughter of driven by Thomas Hawley, 20,
According to officers, a car owned by
'
Street.
I would like to take this QPportunity to thank Mr. Roy Hesson, the late Hannah and Lawrence Middleport.
Wanda Hazelwood, Point Pleasant, and
Mayes, traveling north on Walnut
Hawley was taken to .
"Security Guard," Mr . George Moss, "Mailttenance Man," and McKinney and was a sister of
driven by Patricia Hazelwood, 19, Point
Street, reported the bicycle pulled out
one other, whose name I do not know, for their courteous the late Early McKinney of Veterans Memorial Hospital·
Pleasant, was stopped for traffic when
in front of him and when he applied his
by the Pomeroy · emergency·
assistan ce, in helping me obtain assistance from a local Ashland Point Pleasant. She was a
struck in the rear by a truck dri ven by
brakes, th ~ car skidded in the gravel
J . Rex Bailev. Equipment Operator Station attendant.
member of the Witcher Baptist squad where he was admitted
·
Clarence A. Davis, 45, Mason. Davis
and hit the bicycle.
for treatment. Raub was cited
at the Philip Sporn Plant in New Haven,.
Also, for sacrificing their lunch hour, at Holzer Medical Church.
was cited on a charge of failing to have
Cindy Hoffman,. a rider on the
W. Va., was recently promoted to Unit
Funeral services will be held to mayor's court on a charge of
his vehicle under control.
Center, to assist me.
bicycle, was received at Pleasant
failure to yield rlghf'of way.
Foreman.
Also to the courteous, sympathetic telephone operator for al2 p.m. Sunday at the Fidler. There were heavy damages I&amp;
Frame Funeral Home at Belle:
, , .... ....... .... , .....,.. .,.,.,....,.,.,.,.,.,.,.........
Bailey was born in Chester Ohio He
~: .·:&lt;·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·: .·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·,·,·:·:,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.::::::~::::::::::;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~!!: graduated from Chester High Schooi in her assistance in calling long distance for help.
the Raub car and medium to
Mrs. George l:lolter, L.P.N. , Burial will be in the Witcher Hawley's cycle.
Creek Cemetery near Belle .
19
At 6:40p.m. at the corner of
Survivors Include one son,
November of 1952 Bailey was
r.!
: :: employed at Sporn Plant as a laborer . Thank-you note to someone
Elise Steele of Diamond; , Nye and Main Sis., a car driven
daughters, Mrs. Rosie Lawson, by Charles Lytle, Pomeroy,
{o:;
GALLIPOLIS - Two per·
There was moderate damage
:::; He entered the Maintenance
Mrs. Dorothy Brown and Mrs. stopped at the traffic light was
~
sons were cited to Municipal
to the Wiseman and Myers
\ Department in 1953 as a Helper. In Dear Sir :
~
Court following a traffic ac·
vehicles.
:::: February of 1959 • moved to the
This is a thank-you note to someone I do not know and have . Evelyn Surbaugh ol Belle and struck by a car dflve~ by
~
cident at 10:30 p.m. Friday on
Asecond mishap occurred on
) Operations D~P" o.nt as a Utility not met, to my knowledge. Last Saturday, July I, I lost a cheek, Mrs. Mildred Burris of Wiima Siders, Racine~ coming
~
Eastern Ave.
Third Ave. near Neal's In:::: Operator . He wa s promoted to already endorsed, and it was returned to me on July 7 by the Diamond; half-brother, ·Roy onto Mail) from Nye. She was
According to the Gallipolis
suran ce where an auto driven
Auxiliary Equipmen t Operator in the manager of a local supermarket. He told me a customer had McKinney of Leon ; one sister, arrestedpn a charge of driving
·
Pollee Department an auto
by Florence Stephens, 51,
:;:: fall of 1959 and to Equipment Operator found it and turned it in. Since the check was endorsed, that Mrs. Emma Pullins of Bidwell, while inlollcaled, There were
.
driven by Michael L. Myers,
Gallipolis, struck a parked car
\ in 1966. Bailey se.rved as an Equipment person 'could have cashed it but chose' instead to turn il ln. 0. half-sister Mrs. Janet no Injuries, but damages to
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, went left of
owned by James w. Stauffer,
;:;: Operator unttl h1s recent promotion to Perhaps this incident is not news-worthy but I believe it does tell Pickens of Point Pleasant; 16 both vehicles were heavy.
At 10:08 p.m. a Cl!f driven by
grandchildren, 33 greatcenter striking a car operated
Rt. 1, Gallipolis. There was
:;:; Unit Foreman.
something of the nature of the people In our community.
Herman
Hoffner,, Pomeroy,
grandchildren; four• nephews,
~
by Melanie J. Wiseman, 19,
minor damage to both cars.
{
Bailey is a big sport.&lt;; fan. He takes io
Mrs . Barna H. Lasseter, Route I, Box 79-D. Galllpo· Calyton and Rodney Pullins, pulled from Mulberry Ave.,
~
Galli\lolis. Myers told officers
A third mishap occurred a t
as many events as possible. He played
Point Pleasant, and Eddie onto Second St..' into a. car
~
hewasforcedacrossthecenter
the rear of Kroger 's where an
::::: basketball at Chester High School for lis, Ohio 45631.
Pullins, Nitro, and Paul . driven by Michael Johnson, 22,
~
line by an auto driven by Terry
auto driven by Fleta T. Hunt,
!!!!! four years. Bailey is a member of the
THREE
FINED
charges
filed
by
Marshal
Pullins, Gallipolis, Ohio, and of Dunbar, W. Va. Damage was
Uoyd, 18, Gallipolis. Myers
61, Rt.l, Gallipolis, backed into
:;:: Chester Volunteer Fire Depar tment
RACINE - Three defen- Alfred Lyons. They are three nieces, Mrs. William light to Hoffner's car but heavy
~
was charged with driving left
a garbage truck owned by the
,;::: and the Chester United Methodist
dants were fined a total of Michael J . Hill, Racine Route Humphrey of Point Pleasant; to Johnson's. Hoffner was cited
of center. Uoyd was later
City vi Gallipolis. There was
:« Church.
booked for reckless operation.
minor damage to the car.
:::: Chester, Ohio is the present home of $13.70 including costs, each, in 2; Paul Harold Parsons, Mrs. John Oliver, Newark, 0 .,' to mayor's court on a charge of
·
:::; Bailey and his wife, Sina. They have the court of Racine Mayor Racine, and James Lee Atkins, and Mrs. Arthur Cheesebrew of falling to yield right of way,
Charles Pyles on speeding Portland.
Tltere were no Injuries.
U....•....:•.:-:•:O~&lt;:;•:•;o,::::».:«%-.':!•'•:•~·.-8!.-'1)'
!X.-_.:.O:.,-, .,·,··~··· !i,.,.,
........
,., ..,. ,.. . .
•.~ t wo marr ,te d sons.
Columbus, Ohio.
~'""·'·'· ;v.• :--_.;.:..:.:.-..: ..-! ••:."'••!.: .:•..i;onW";~!·!·W...:•:t
..:.:o:&gt;
•.»!·:::&amp;:o::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:;
::;;::s;:;:;:~:::~:::;::::::::::;::::::::::

W;1iting for

Reason.~

MIS
• haps
Reported

Rex Bailey
Promoted At
· Sporn ·Plant

!~ ~~

t

I
4

t:

m

I

..

,

suggestions outlined by Sept. 1
when the society either will
accept them or proceed in
other directions. Members of
the society have discussed the
possibility of using rotating
exh1b1ts at the new museum in
order to keep up interest rather
than se tting up one group of
exh1b1ts on a permanent basis
Hilferty has done desig~
work for the Ohio Historical
Society.
Friday, the society's officers
also voted to allocate money
for reproducing papers such as
the essays and speeches of the
annual historical con test and
the diary of the late Quar tus
Bridgeman of Syracuse. Other
papers of hi sto rical im·
portance to the county will also
be reproduced.
C. E, Blakeslee, pres·ident,
presided over Friday's
meeting at Pioneer House.

We received a call from the
Rev. Clarence McCloud who
has been recently assigned to
the Methodist Church at
Masoo. Mr. McCloud had read
one of our recent stories and
called to r,enew .acquaintances
with us. We had known Mr .
McCloud while he was pastor of
the Methodist Memorial
Church in Spencer some years
ago and recalled that while
there he was a ~real promoter
of soli and water Conservation . He told me
that Iollowing his stay in
Spencer that he had been at
Hamlin inunediately before
coming to Mason.
We are very happy to have
Mr. McCloud In our · area
because he is a good friend, a
good pastor, and an avid
promoter of soil and water
conservation.
There are many ways of
getting the conservation story
across to people. We are able to
do a small amount of It, by
individual contact and
assistance, but. greater
amounts can be done by the
clergy, Boy Scout l~ders,
newspapers, civic leaders and
others. So when we are able to
enlist the assistance of people
such as Mr. McCloud, we are
very happy to do so.
Earl Colegrove of Apple
Grove reported to us that he
likes purple martins and has
done much to bring them to his
home, but recently his entire
colony died. He took his martin
house down to investigate.
There were twelve nests in it
with 42 dead young birds and
five eggs. All adult martins had

MEIGS THEATRE
ITechnlcolorl
Renee Taylor
Joseph-Bologna
~rtoons

lS MUST GO!

Twelve

PARE

Draw

And You'll. Buy

Fines
POME ROY - · Twelve
defendants were fi ned · and
seven others forleited bonds in
MeigS..C:ounty Court Friday.
Fmed by Judge ~'rank w.
Porter were James H. Walker,
Portland, Rt. I; and Douglas
Johnson, Cheshire, Rt . 1, $5
and costs each, unsafe vehicle·
Gregory H. Boatright, Long
Bo ttom, $10 and costs
.
speedm
g; J ohn M. Hall,'
Ironton , $10 and costs, passing
at Inte rsection ; Ro ber t A.
Tones, Shade, Rt. 1, $50 and
costs. license suspended for 30
days, reckless operation;·Allen
Stage, Athens, Rt. 2, $25 and
costs, $10 suspended. overload;
George S. Whited, Athens, $82
and cos ts, $32 suspended,
overl oad: Lloyd Harm on,
Rutland, Rt. 1, costs only, five
days confinement, assault and
batll!ry; James H. Sellers,
Portland, Rt. 1, $47 and costs,
$17 suspend ed, overloa d;
James E. Ritchie, Portland,
Rt. I, $150 and costs, three days
co nf ineme n t, li ce n se
suspended for six mo nths
driving while intoxicated.'
William Fink, Middleport, and
Carl E. Stewa1·t, no address
recorded, $5 and cost.&lt;; each,
defective exhaust.
Forfeiting bonds were Jerry
L~e Murph y, Belpre, $25,
fa1lure to stop with in assured
clear distance; Walden G.
Roberts, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, Rita
Math ews, Co lumbus, a nd
Homer R. Starcher, Spencer,
W. Va., $34.55 each, fishing
With out a license; Boyd
Hackney, Reedsville, Rt. 1,
$17.50, no slow moving emblem; Gl en A. Brinker,
Cleveland , $27.50 passin g at
intersec ti on; Ray Fitch,
Cheshire , Rt . 11 $27.50, expired
operator's license.

JOB. SOONER GO TO BUSINESS
COLLEGE
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POMEROY ~ Two defen:
dants forfe ited bonds and four
others were fined by Pomeroy
May or William Ba ronic k
Friday.
Fined were John Thompson,
Rutland , $5 and costs, running
a red light; Carl Hubbard
Syracuse , $10 a nd costs'
squealing tires: Michael
Beach, Middleport, $10 and
costs, improper backing, and
thr ee po sts, trav e led an
Elizabeth Miracle, Syracuse,
additional 75 fee t, and
$10 and costs, fa iling to yield
stopped against a tree. Sedg·
wi ck wa s not injured.
ri ght of way.
Wetzel Phillips of Pomeroy
forfeited bonds totaling $100
posted on char ges of
des tru ctio n of property,
assa ult and batte ry and
disturbing the peace. Howard
PT . PLEASANT - Rev. C. Jeffers, Pomeroy, forfeited his
L. Frum. recruiter for the $25 bond posted for disturbing
Ad ult
Basic
Education the peace.
program in Mason County.
anno unces th at " TV High
School" kits will once again be
available this fa ll.
Deans List
The "TV High Sc hool" which
Gary Fields has been named
is shown on Cable TV is shown
on
the Dean's List at Glenville
at least two limes a week. Upon
State
College with a 3.04
enrollment in the Television
Hi gh School Co urse, eac h averoge . Fields. son of Mr.
students receives a study kit, and Mrs. Gerald F1elds, of
valued at $13.50 per kit, bot H.rtford, will be a senior at
whi ch is furnished to the Glenville State .College in the
student at absolute ly no fa ll and is majonng in
cha rge. This kit contains the Biology.
necessary ma terials to accompany the telev ised course.
EDWARDS REUN ION
Incl uded are condensed text·
books in each study area, along
The John R. and Virginia
With accom panyin g answer Edwards reunion will be held
keys, a Study Guide for the Sunday, July. 16, on Pond Hill
course, a book, High School back of West Columbia. All
ROLL NOW FOR NEW
Cer tification through the GED relatives a nd friends are
• QUARTERTes ts , which explains the test asked to join the Edwards
h£M• it is administered, and descendants a t a bas ket
BEGINS SEPT. 14
what to expect on the tes t. Also dinner at 12:30 noon.
One and Two Year
included is the Webster's New
Courses
World Dictionary.
Business
Ad If one has trouble in making
ASK TOW ED
ministration
arrangements to attend the
POMEROY - Larry Shelton
Executive Secretarial
regular classes at the Learning Patterson, 32, Rac ine and Jr. Accounting
Center, Rev . Fraum urges him Sandra Kay Jones, 22, Leta rt
Secretarial
to call the Cenll!r, 675-3039, and Falls.
Gener~l Office
en roll now for the TV High
College Level Courses
Sc hool Course. He ts now
Approved Jor VA Benefits
taking names for the course so
Job Placement Assistance
Approved by Slate Board of
that the ki t.&lt;; will be available
The
fear
is
that
people
School
&amp;
College
when the course begins.
thmk the enti re Blac k Hills Registration.
was devastated by the floods
visit or call446-4367
,
•
and that's not true. T h c
c11a1og and in·
soft base was observed on ' roads are ope n and the nat- I fo1rma'lion.
which the tile had to be laid. ural b ea~ ty of t he Blac k
The soil was relative ly dry Hills 1s sllll there .
down to a depth of three feet, -Gov. llicllard K n e i p vf
bu t benea th tha t it was
Suuth Dakota , expressing
extremely sloppy and soft.
concem ove r, tile effect of
. .
.
the lloptd C1t11 flood O!l
Close examtnatwn of th1s
tourism ,
'
revealed that the top of the
ground was somewhat sandy in
nature down to the 3 foot depth.
This depth is
where the
original soil began. Top soil
down there showed a normal
soil profile to begin at this
depth. This indica ted that the
hump had bee n caused in
former years by soil deposit
caused werious erosion from a
nearby field . It is hard to tell
how long ago this erosion
occureed because everything
was grassed over now and no
erosion had occurered for some
years.

Named To

Someti imes we obse rve
small things along with our
regular work that make-hie
more int e r e~ tin g. We are
referrin g to a situation on the
Gera)d Rood farm where we
recently assisted with some tile
drainage. We had planned an
interceptor tile draina ge
system at the bottom of a slope
so as to intercept the water at
the base of a hill beforeit came
out onto the bottom.
During the survey work we
noted a hump about midway up
the tile line, but did not pay
much attention to it, and
planned his drain system so
that a continuous grade would
be in the tile line. This caused
the cut to be deeper across this
hump than on each side of it.
During
th e installation
everything went very nicely
until the machine was digging
through the hump. In this slip
of ditch cave-ins occured and a

•

Mayor Baronick

School Planned

disa ppeared. He told me that ·
he had read a story in the
Charleston gazette te lling of
some malady that has befall en
purple martin s in this area.
Since kn owledge of our birds
is not our specia lty, we
contacted Paol Matthews
District Biologist of the West
Virginia Department of
Natural Resources , !orated at
McClintic Wildlife Station. Mr .
Matthews confirmed ·all this
and said that to date the
biologists are not certain what
has caused the death of the
martins. Several th eories
exist, ~ e said , including
starvation of the adult, the
recent cold weather, and some
possible poisoning as a result ol
a pesticide used where the
birds spend th eir winter
months in the southern states.

Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.
July 9·10·11

Four Fined by

TV Kits for

Lay Of The Land

issued.

II •••r_rtt..

2 Cited To Court

Campaign Planned

POM EROY
Und er
investigation by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
is a single car accident that
occurred Friday at 5:30a.m.
00
SJ:(
7. · southwest
of county road 30, Forest
Run Road.
Donald Keith Sedgwick,
25 , Tuppers Plains, was
traveling north east on 7
when he came into a right
hand curve. Th e car went to
the left, struck and knocked
out 25 feet of guardrail and

Be Given Chance

..

Five Auto Wrecks
Are Investigated

~

..........

'
'
.,•,•,•,•,•,·.-.··
,.•.•.,...~ •••.:.:.:.····
:·:-:·:·· :-:·:.;.:.:.:.:.:.:::!!!?X.:::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::=::::::

(Continued from page ,I )
POM EROY - The Meigs Band
engineering !t om The College of · .Boosters are plunning a lund raising
Steubenville.
campaign to send a minimum of 100
Mulato, his wife, Mary, and their four
members of the Meigs High School Band
GALUPOUS - Faulty wiring was children, Jame:o, 11 ; Jeanne, 10; Joseph , 7,
to a band camp on July 30 for one week.
blamed In .a fire which destroyed the and Ann, 6, reside in Stevensville, Mich.
The camp will be held at Rio Grande
residence occupied by the Dave Phill.1
The family has purchased a home in the
College. Cost for each student ol th e
family Friday night located on Rt 233 ~ Spring Valley Subdivision in Gallipolis and
band attending is $35. The boosters have
Gr~field Twp., owned by tbe . Gallia will move to the new residence late th is
set up a fund earmarked for a band
Baptist Church . Gallia County sheriff's month.
· camp lor which they will bold a tag day,
deputies and the Oak Hill Fire Departmeni
ask parents to contribute to, also
were called to the scene but were unabl~ to
merchants, and if the amount needed Is
save .the dwelling.
hay, 3,000 feet of lumber, miscellaneous
not received the group will borrow
Damages were estimated at $4,166 in a tools, and ~ rote&gt;tiller. Also damaged were
whatever is needed.
fire at 12:43 a.m. Saturday at the Herman several pteces of machinery parked near
All contributions; big or small, will
G· Brucker Farm located on Friendly the structure, namely, a 1952 Ford tractor
be greatly appreciated by the
Rldg~ Rd., Rt. 2, Crown City.
Galion road grader and a grainery . Ther~
association, Howard Goins is the new "
Af1re of undetermined origiri destroyed was minor damage to a two.car garage.
baod director,
,.
a 4~ foot barn and its contents including
It was the 81st alarm of th e year for
a 1965 Chevrolet pick-up truck, 77 bales of the Gallipolis Fire Department.

Humphrey Cindy Cox, Ruth Wood,
AwardedRoundupHonor

~r lllll:

.

• PIant
··Bad W'r:rmg Blamed Gavm

•

If a child is brought up to think stealing is wrong, how oome a
GALLIPOLIS - Members of
~~ dan do it and It's okay ?
the 1952 graduating class of
My friend gave mea radio that I loved. Mom owed one of her Gallia Academy High School
llrldge club pals some money, and Dad's pretty tight about these were reminded Saturday that
lblngs, so one day when the woman was over here, Mom gave her
the deadline for submitting
MY radio In payment of her debt!
reservations for this year's
91e says she'll get me another, but I've heard that' before ! A class reunion is Friday, July
· lllli collector came and got tough once and I'm pretty sure she 14.
jlenuaded him to wait a couple of months by giving him MY tape
Mrs. Marilene Thivener
deck that I earned by baby.Qtting. She said he just picked it up Settle, chairman of the 1952
111d walked off with it, but when I told her to report him to the GAHS Clas:; Reunion Com·
pollee for stealing, she wouldn't do it - so I know what really mittee, revealed Saturday that
35 reservations have been
bllppened.
received for the 20-ye ar
Dad says she's a spendthrift and keeps her to an allowance bit I'm t~one who suffers. Should I blow the whistle on her ?- reunion thus far.
The event will be held at the
WHEN DOES LOYALTY END ? (PIETRA )
'
Elks
Hall on S;lturday, July 22,
WDIE:
beginning
at Q:30 p.m, Dinner
I think your· mother is more of a thief than the bill collector
she accused of stealing - and if you don't blow the whistle now (ham ) will be served at 1 p.m.
Tickets are $4 per person .
she may be inrealtrouble later on. - SUE
Prior to the reunion, Dr. and
P.S. Hope your father replaces the radio and tape deck, but
Mrs. James L. Dailey will host
not his wife !
a
social hour for members of
+++
the class and their husbands
Dear Pietra :
"Robbing Pietra to pay pals" has got to stop! Loyalty to your and·or wive s . Dr. Dailey
resides at 445 Third Ave.
mother is great but. YOU need consideration, too . Why not
Reservations should be
suggest that she get a job and earn her own spending money? If mailed to Mrs. L.A. Settle, 128
not, a family conference is indicated . It should be a real sizzler! Kineon Drive, Gallipolis, or to
- HELEN
Mrs. Madge Pettus Boggs, in
+++
care of the Ohio Valley Bank ,
Helen and Sue:
Gallipolis.
Ever since I can remember I have shrugged off boys who
actually liked me, but I'll break my neck trying to attract !elias
that seem out ofreach . The relationship goes great until the guy
llhows he really cares . Then I become cold and insulting . After I
(Continued from page I)
ruin everything, I get jealous and feel very depressed.
I'm always friendly and tactful at first but then I blow it. My
convention schedule.
mother says It's immaturity, but I'm afraid I'll always have "I call on every candidate to
ONE FOOT IN MY MOUTH
join
me in a similar commitOFIMM :
You said in your letter, "As soon as he shows he really cares ment, a commitment which
... "Maybe you shy away because all you want is friendship and should be pledged to the conthe boy wants love. So you "cool" him with insults instead of vention before it meets Monday,"· Humphrey said.
bonesty.
Seemingly well-rested and in
Why not let him know you like him, but you're not ready for
high spirits after a week at his
111ything serious, so "let's get to know each other better first ." Waverly, Minn., home, Hum·
SUE
phrey proclaimed he had a
~"much better"· chance to win
Dear OFJMM:
the nomination after the
Maybe these boys unknowingly give you a "queen complex." Supreme Court's credentials
There's always a tendency to take advantage of people who show ruling. Accepting his aides'
they care, especially when the "queen " is inunature and the figures that he had 700 solid
"subject" is a lovestruck boy.
first-ballot votes, Humphrey
U he takes it, you think less of him ; thus become more in· said, "There is going to be no
suiting. If he doesn't, you're covered with regrets, thus the first ballot victory and I'm
depression over losing him. It's partly guilt .because you know going to gain on every ballot
after that."
you've been a stinker.
Humphrey did not mention
Best remedy: stop thinking of boys as conquests, don 't ex·
peel them to be perfect, and don't try them too far ! - HElEN McGovern by name in calling
for a loyalty pledge. But he
+++
said it was prompted by the
Dear Sue :
Please: a put-down for an insufferable dame who never says need for unity and because
a nice word about any of us. She cheated her way through high there "might be some who
school, then calls us dumb! Says we're "stuck" with junior . would bolt and form another
party if things do not go their
oollege because no university would talle us. Next time she gets
way."
going, what'sa good comeback? - HAVEHADIT
Under que stioning, Hum·

. .

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NEW class also meeting weekly in

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2:t8 Third li-ve;

�MINERS WALK QUT
CAMBRIDGE, QhioiUPI)United Mine Workers Union
members walked off the jobs
early Saturilay at the Central
Ohio Coal Co, Cwnberland
Mine nea r here in a dispute
with the company. Five hWIdrcd workers walked off the
job which shut down operations
at the mine .
" It w as

a

spontaneous .

walkout," said Bob Rurnmer,
p~es i de n t of UMW Local 1604.
The men were dissa tisfied with
the way management was
handling &lt;l'redu ction in three or
four clas,.;ifications," he said .

&gt;J'tr '•

""~
~ · ·- ..
'

Bosworth~Cox

·

Bosworth-Cox ,
To Be Wed

THE SPOKESMEN Quartet from Roanoke Bible
College, Elizabeth City, N.C., will be appearing at the Little

I '

James Davis Hosts Gatewood Has
·Reunion For Family

'

GALLIPOLiS - Mr. and
Mrs. Bosworth, 5619 29th Ave.,
Tampa, Fla., formerly of
Gallipolis, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Letta, to Glenn Cox, son of Mr.

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Goforth

Mrs. Allan S Rink

·'

and Elizabeth Henry, Worthington, and the bride's
cousin , Becky Gardner,
Worthington. Amy Gardner,
also a cousin of the bride, was a
junior bridesl!l.aid. Melanie
Haskins, junior bridesmaid,
distributed bags of rice.
Gary Wagoner, Dayton, was
best man. Seating guesls were
Allan Boster, brother of the
bride: Rod Sines, Columbus,
and Bruce Warner, Pitlsburgh,
Pa ., fraternity brothers, and
Mark Leopold, Columbus, the
groom's college roommate.
The groomsmen wore dark
grey tuxedos with light blue
ruffled shirls.
Mrs. Miles Epling was soloist
and Kathryn Hayward was
organist. Mrs . Paul Lewis
registered the guesls. Terry
Lewis issued programs.
The bride's ,mother wore a
beige crepe dress with heavy
lace trim and a brown orchid
pinned to her shoulder . The
groom's mother wore a light
green silk faille ensemble with
a yellow orchid corsage.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held in the
church parlor. The lour-tiered
wedding cake was served from
a table decorated in yellow and
gree n with crysta l appointments.
For their trip to the Virgin

BEFORE YOU BUY

CARPETING
CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

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Islands, Puerto Rico and
Miami, the bride changed into
a beige knit dress with purple
accessories.
After they return, the Rinks
will be at hom,e ,at 4~4 Morse
Town Ct., Columbus. This fall
the bride will teach in
Pataskala Elementary School
and the groom will be a senior
at Otterbein College and is
employed by Westerville
School System.
Pre-nuptial parties were
given by Mrs. JoAnne Mauger,
Pataskala; Mrs. Robert E.
Gardner and Mrs. Robert P.
Gardner, Worthington; and
Mrs. John L. Evans, Mrs. Leo
Mossman and Mrs. Harry K.
Mills, Jr., Gallipolis.
The bride's parents . were
hosls to a buffet supper at their
home for relatives and out-oftown guests . The groom's
parenls were hosts to a dinner
at the Riverboat room
following
the
wedding
rehearsal. Guests besides the
clergy and wedding party were
Terry Hall, and Mrs. Rod
Sines, Columbus, and Dr. and
Mrs. Robert P. Gardner,
Worthington.

GALLIPOLIS - On Saturday, May 27, Dottie Priest and
Stephen Goforth were united in
marriage at the First Church
of the Nazarene of .Gallipolis.
Rev. Ronald Justice officiated
at the double· ring ceremony.
Mrs. Goforth is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Priest of
Route I. Mr. Goforth's parents
are Mr. and Mrs. Carlos

M.tSS

GALUPOUS- The Cottage
Prayer Meeting of the Addison
Church was held Monday night
in the home of Emma ,Johnson
on First Avenue. Carroll
Sheets, deacon, led the meeting
with Irwin Viars opening with
prayer. The group had an oldfashioned family prayer and

Goforth of Cincinnati.
For her wedding the bride
wore a white floor-length gown
of cotton voile. The gown was
fashioned with a tucked bodice
and inserts of granny lace . The ·
belle sleeves were edged in
cotton clllng hiee and the dress •
featured a high neckline. The
A-line skirt was edged with a
ruffle hemline. The detachable
chapel length train was edged
in the clung lace. The veil was
made of tiered silk illusion with
a cap of lace and organza
petals accented with seed
pearls. She carried a bouquet
of daisies on a while Bible .
Connie Priest served as her
sister's maid of honor. Linda
Shupe and Rebecca Goforth
were bridesmaids. Their
identical dresses were noor
length of cotton voile that
featured an empire waistline.
The bodice featured rufOed
trim on the front with a high
neckline and puff sleeves. The
skirt was edged with a rufOed
hemline. Each girl wore a wide
brim hat that matched her
dress. Miss Priest, the maid of
honor, was dressed in a pastel
shade of blue. Miss Shupe's
dress was pink and Miss

ellS 1n
summer cast

Prayer Group Met

then sang "Some Day,"

and Mrs. Gene Cox, U~e\'1)001,
·England. The bride-to-be Is
attending college in Atllnta,
Ga. Mr. Cox is employed at Sea
Coast Railroads at Tampa. /III
August wedding Is planned.·

GALLIPOLIS - The family
of the rate Jacob N. M. Davis
and Maggie Sluyter Davis met
July 2 at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. James Davis on Teen's
Run Road for their annua l
reunion. A bountiful basket
OONNIE DAVIS is congratulated by Earl Lambert, president of the Midwestern Horse
dinner was enjoyed by all after
Show, on her winning first place in the Senior Quarter Horse Western Pleasure Horse Show·
William Davis of(ered prayer.
held in Col~busover the July 4th weekend . Connie is a student at Morehead State University
The day was spent in visiting,
and IS spending the swruner showing and giving riding instructions at her home ncar Rio
taking pictures and playing
Grande. She is a member of the Saddle and Sirloin Riding Club.
softball.
The family decided to retain
James Davis as president and
Mrs . Emmett Church as
secretary. The next meeting
will be with Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Davis. In case of rain, it
will be held at the Mercerville
PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs.
Grange.
Those present were Mr. and
John L .i- Shriver. Patriot,
GALLIPOLIS - The family Mrs. Clay Frederick, Dale and
BIDWELL - Mrs. Gracie recently celebrated their 25th
McCormick, Bidwell, had all of wedding anniversary . Alter the of Charles and Minnie While Douglas Sims, Mr. and Mrs.
her children home for the gifts and cards were held a family reunion on July 2 Leland Robinson, Mr . and Mrs.
Fourth of July holidays except acknowledged, a barbecue at the Gallia County Junior
Harold who called home from dinner was held in their honor. fairgrounds . Games were
Present w_ere Mr. and Mrs. played and prizes were
his air force base in Michigan.
Those present were S.Sgt. and Larry Rucker and David, Mrs. awarded .
rs. Ro~I.M;iiprlllii;JJ ~ ~R!m , ~r~veF~an!l Jay, • Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
'" ,. ',.
eorgia,ti'J aiAf,\MW~WMlei-' Howard, Carol, Frank and Loren Taylor and sons, Mrs.
lazer from Florida, Mr. and Marsha, Mrs. Leslie Parsons, Myrtle Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
rs . Eugene Monta and Mr. and Mrs. John s. Smith Charles Grimms and sons, Mr.
and Carl, Debbie Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Drummond
~onica from Gahanna, and
PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs : Wallace Kemper and Mrs. John R. Smith and and family, Mrs. Sandy
Parker
Williams, Patriot, had
Mrs. Ruby
from Kerr and Carol from Angie, Mrs. Mabel Spurlock Woodward,
and Keith , Cinda Martin, Meadows, Mr~ . Garnet Elliott, a dinner Sunday for their
Gallipolis .
Lawrence Parsons, Melvin Archie Meadows, Mr. and Mrs. daughter, Mrs. James Tayler
Parsons, Mr . and Mrs. Tom Charles Meadows and family, of California. Present were Mr.
Kusan , Mr. and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. Leo James and and Mrs. James D. Tayler and
IN HOSPITAL
Woodworth and Jeanetta sons, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bryan, Debbie and Craig; Mr.
James Nelson, son of Mrs. Lambert.
Warren, Mr. and Mrs. Garland and Mrs . Joe Liaverton,
Agnes Nelson of Eastern
Warren and family, Mr. and Wilmington; Mr . and Mrs.
FAWCETT HONORED
Avenue, is in Charleston
Mrs. Ronnie Dovenbarg and Glenn Runyon, Henry Allen
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
General Hospital, Room 166,
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Sheets, Randy Runyon,
Novice
Fawcett,
retiring
Ohio
Charleslon, W.Va., where he Is
Charles Casey and family, Sabina; Jonnie Jackson,
State
University
president,
has
recovering from a mine acMrs . Donna Ellis and Kenneth Williams, Mr. and
been
named
president
cident in Union Carbine
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Jack Quimby and Jackie,
emeritus of the school effective William Russell and family, Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs. Nolan
sever-1 months ago.
Sept. l when he retires.
Larry Casey, Susie Casto, Thornton, Angela, Sabrine and
Donald Casey, Sue Queen, Charlene, Mrs. Ellis Thornton,
Debbie Russell and Terry Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson,
Groves, Mr. and Mrs. James Mr. and Mrs . Golder Dailey,
Banks and son, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy and Barbara, Charlie
Kenneth Feustel and family, Jackson, Patriot: Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. &amp;nd Mrs. Ted Comer and Bill Jackson, and Dallas
family, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sheels, Northup, and Mrs . Bert
Partes and daughters. Guests Miller and Shellia Kay, Donna
were Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Bell, Priscilla and Doug,
Nibert and son and Mrs. Vicki Waterloo. They enjoyed a nice
and visited in the af*Red White &amp; Blue Kingery and son, Springfield; dinner
ternoon
.
Mrs. Carol Fellows and sons
and Buddy Murray, South
Carolina, and Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Gilmore and son,
Defiance.

\

SPAGHETTI SUPPER'
RIO GRANDE - Scout
Troop 230 is sponsoring a
spaghetti supper from ii-7 p.m.
at the Rio Grande Elementary
School cafeteria Friday, July
14. The cost is $1.50 for adults
and $1 for children. The troop
wiU also conduct a car wash
from U p.m., July 14, at Rio
Grande College in back of Yale
Building .
The
charge
is 7~ cents.

Priest-Gojorth Wed
In Nazarene Church HELP WANTED

Susan Boster-Allan Rink
Solemnize Marriage Vows
GALLIPOLIS- Suan Helen
Boster became the bride of
Allan Scott Rink on June 24 at
4:30 p.m . in the First.
Presbyte rian
Church,
L~allipolis. Rev. Glenn Hueholl
&gt;lmd 'R~v. Linson Stebbins ofidated the double ring
' reremony before an altar of
greenery and while and yellow
,flowers backed by a lighted
candelabra. Hurricane lamps
marked the family pews.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bosler,
Gailipolis,and the groom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Glenn
Rink, Radnor, Pa.
Given in marriage by her
lather, the bride was attired in
an ivory organza gown
fashioned with an empire
bodice, long sleeves and rullied
neckline. The shoulderline and
bodice of the dress were
pleated organza overlaid by
lace flowers with seed pearl
· centers. The same lace trim
was scattered in an A-line skirt
that held a detachable
cathedral train. The bride wore
a ruffled lace cap that held a
waist length veil. Her bouquet
was a cascade of white roses
and greenerY,
Mrs . Ron Walker, a girlhood
friend, was matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were sorority
sisters Gini Olsen, New York,

SPECIAL SPEAKER
HUNTINGTON - The Rev.
A. L. Baldridge is the
evangelist at Stella Fuller
Settlement Chapel this week
through Sunday, June 9, at 7
p.m. Special music will be by
Napier
Qu~rtet
and
Chapelaires Community Choir
and Settlement band, Sunday
afternoon at 2 p.m. at the
playground.

TIT
VV

WILKESVILLE - Constance Wells, Wilkesville,
senior at Morehead State
University, has been cast in an
MSU Summer
Theater
production. Miss Wells will
appear in "The Madwoman of
Chaillot" July 17-21 in MSU 's
Little Theater. Curtain time is
8:15p.m.
A member of the Morehead
Players, /he won an award for
best set design last spring. The
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Waller M. Wells, Wilkesville,
she plans to enter graduate
school at MSU this fall.

..

.

FOR THE NEW POMEROY

Goforth's dress was yellow.
Each girl carried a basket of
daisies .
Kimberly Priest was the
flow~r girl. David Pr iest
• &lt;!. I
served as the ring bearer .
Dan Tennyson of Cincinnati
served as best man . The
DISCOUN~
groomsmen were Robert Bray
and Randy Smith. The bride's
brother, Bill Priest, and
Kenneth Bible served as
ushers. Eugene Bible was the
singer.
The reception was held in the
fellowship hall of the church
followmg the wedding. Serving
at the reception were Diana
Parks, Mrs. Lynn Priest, Mrs.
Janet Priest and Mrs. Madge
Neal. Nancy Sparkman
registered the guests.
The bride is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
has finished her junior year at
Olivet Nazarene College in
Kankakee, lllinois where she is
'I
majoring
in
Business
PICK UP YOUR APP CA
Education. The bridegroom
Ll TION TODAY AT THE
has also completed his junior
NEW STORE SITE OR JONES BOYS'S OFFICE
year at Olivet and is majoring
in Music Education. The couple
859 THIRD AVE. GAUl POLIS
is now residing in Kankakee,
lll. and will resume their
lnteJViews Will be COnducted later this month.
studies there in September. . ._ _ _ _..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

25th Anniversary

Get-together

Williams

I

STORE

CASHIERS, CLERKS FOR ALL
DEPARTMENTS EXPERIENCE HELPfUL
BUT NO:r NECESSARY

LADIES SUMMER
SHOE SALE
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For Holidays

KEY

~~I' ll

Testimonies and special
prayer requesls were given
with Carroll Sheets reading a
portion of Matthew 24. Closing
prayer was given by Arnie
Stover.
The next scheduled meeting
w~l be In the home of Vernie
Neal on Third Avenue July 10
at 7:30 p.m. Anyone wishing to
attend those meetings is
welcome.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Arnie Stover, Clifford Kidd,
Ollie Oliver, Eva Gardner,
Irwin Viars, Emma JohllSon,
Mary Blackburn and Carroll
Sheets .

Family Home Shrivers Observe Family Holds

YOUR

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LADIES MEETING
July 12 the Rio Grande
Calvary Baptist Ladies
Auxiliary will entertain the
W.S.C.S, of the Rio Grande
Methodist Church at 8 p.m. The
annual meeting wlll be held
this year at the Rio Grande
Calvary Baptist Church.

Accepted In
Who's Who

KYGER
CREEK
Pollyanna Thompson and Paul
Rainey, Kyger Creek High
School, have been accepted
into the Who's Who In High
Schools Honor Society. Both
hafe demonstrated excellence
in scholarship, character and
extra-curricular activities.
Hypertension afflicts more They are among the top 3 pet.
than 21 million Americans, of the graduating seniors in the
according to the American
nation's public and parochial
Heart Association.
schools and will be featured in
the 1972 editions of ''Who's Who
In Ingh School."

Terrill Davis, Janic e and
Brian , Mr. and Mrs . Wilbert
Church, David, Dawn, Eddie
and Karl , Alliance: Mr. and
Mrs. Elgin Davis , Tay lor
Center, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs.
William M. Davis Jr .,
Columbus: Mr. and Mrs.
William Friel , Beverly ,
Rosanne, Loraine and Billy :
Louisville, Ohio: Mr. and Mrs.
Don Thomas and Ricky,
Quincy, Ill. ; Barbara Thomas,
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. James
Harris, Sabrina, Keith, Tim
and Denise, El Toro, Calif.;
Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Davis,
Mike and Beth, Hebron; Mr .
and Mrs. James Denny, Patty,
Jimmy and Rusty, Bidwell;
Richard Brown, Richmond,
Ind.; Mr. and Mrs . Leo Davis,
Tom and Debbie, Mr . and Mrs.
Roy Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Davis, Mr . and Mrs. William
Davis, Charles Lee Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. James Davis, Amber
Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Church, Gallipolis, and Rena
Davis, lilr. and Mrs. Kenneth
OW:~1 Toliy 'a~~ Kerry, ~nd ¥r.'
and Mnl. No'i'vin Hin'emfm,
Julia, Joe, David, Dean and

Charles, Crown City.

we hove helped w ith the changeover.

No matter what your needs in o home may be, lalk to
us about the financing . You 'l i be glad that you did .
·.

EASONABLE
DOWN
PAYMENT
•
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•
•

FLEXIBL .E
TERMS
•
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•••
•

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp;LOAN CO.

"Opposite The Post Office

446-3832

•

Galipolis
,.

-· c

THURMAN - On Sunday , Gatewood, Washington Court
July 2, Grand Emma House; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Gatewood had leo of her eleven Gatewood and Joannie,
children and their families at Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
her home in Thurman for their (Lucy ) Seeds, Brian and
annual 4th of July picnic. There Katharine, Gahanna; Mrs.
were 62 presen t.
Neil (Louise) La Molt, BarAttending were Mr . and Mrs. bara and Yvonne, Westerville,
Harold (Helen ) Moore, North and guesls, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Lewisburg ; Mro.
Ruth Van Zant, Dayton, and Karen
Williams, Grove City ; Mr. and Tabor, Gallipolis.
Mrs . Paul Weigerig, David,
Robert, Jeannie and Phillip,
Mr . and Mrs . William
Gatewood, Tommy and
Richard, Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Needs, Billy , Charles and
Elizabeth, Mr . and Mrs.
Fredrick Tellings, Theresa and
Freddy, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Hopkins and Larry II and
Roberta . Maureen and Stacey
Gatewood , Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Monroe Gatewood , Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Gatewood,
Tommy and ·wendy and Mr.
and Mrs. James Gilliam,
Randy a~d · Gwen, Galli?olis: ,
Mr. and Mrs. David (Esther )
Alien, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Zenk; Pittsburgh, p~'. ; Mr: and .
Mrs. Bill Tieman, Phoenix,
Ariz .; Mr. and Mrs. Robert

~

·a I

Drummond To Compete
GALLIPOLIS - Katrina
Drummond, Route 1; will be
participating in the Miss Ohio
Teen-ager of 1972 Pageant July
14-15 at the Sheraton-Dayton
Hotel in Dayton. The 14-yearold daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Drummond, she is
sponsored by family and
friends, Carl's Family Shoe
Store and Central Supply

Company.
Katrina attends Kyger Creek
High School where she has won
a letter and two gold bars in
band, a track trophy and five
ribbons, and is a member of the
FHA, GAA and of the Bulaville
Christian Youth Group. Her
ambition is to be either an
airline stewardess or a
cosmetician.

W EO . RING

1~

MAN 'S 100

{7;\~psake·
R [C.I!I![R(tl

~"'Hi5

0 10" 0 ,. 0

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

r-----------Fabric

Today:
·eSewing $}98
Sim le ~Mi~el5%
and
Sp~cials

45" Reg. lo '2.59 yd.

Whipped
Cream Prints

yd.

Prints &amp; Solids

off 1
lg. Group
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Prints 45" 7~ f

L

2

~~~;Clot~ }49
Solids &amp; P1inls

yd.

98¢

Gingham
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yd.

45" Pe1m. Press
'

·TENDER, LOVING CAR'

i:

july Picnic

FRIENDLY
PEOPLE

Over the years 'w e hove furnished trye mon'e~ that has
enabled many famil ies to own o home of the1r own. As
time rolls by and a house become$ too smell or too Io rge,

••
••
••

FREE ESTIMATES

1'

Kyger Christian Church on Tuesday, July l?,at 7:30p .m.

-

CAMP MEETING.
A camp meeting is now in
progress at the White Oak
Baptist Church. Services begin
each night at 7:30p.m. and on
July 15, the Spiritualaires from
Columbus will be there for a
song fest. Everyone Is welcome
to attend these services .

ON DEAN'S LIST
Steve S. Walker, son of Dr.
and Mrs. I. C. Walker, 1 &amp;ind
Hollow, Gallipolis, has been
named to the Dean's Ust for
the spring quarter at Emory
University, AUanta, Ga.

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE
· Open 'TI18 p.m. Mon . &amp; FrL Nfgt'lt s-

2 Complete Floort-ef Fabri cs S. Not ions
Si.;.pli,lly, Mc:C.I!i, 8~~tltlfl(~, V~llt PIHtriU

Wt Do Crntom Drns M.lllll'rf-51rlttt Stitt &amp; Ser llln

Sl Co uri Slreet

•••·t2SS

Gallipolis

g...
a I

�MINERS WALK QUT
CAMBRIDGE, QhioiUPI)United Mine Workers Union
members walked off the jobs
early Saturilay at the Central
Ohio Coal Co, Cwnberland
Mine nea r here in a dispute
with the company. Five hWIdrcd workers walked off the
job which shut down operations
at the mine .
" It w as

a

spontaneous .

walkout," said Bob Rurnmer,
p~es i de n t of UMW Local 1604.
The men were dissa tisfied with
the way management was
handling &lt;l'redu ction in three or
four clas,.;ifications," he said .

&gt;J'tr '•

""~
~ · ·- ..
'

Bosworth~Cox

·

Bosworth-Cox ,
To Be Wed

THE SPOKESMEN Quartet from Roanoke Bible
College, Elizabeth City, N.C., will be appearing at the Little

I '

James Davis Hosts Gatewood Has
·Reunion For Family

'

GALLIPOLiS - Mr. and
Mrs. Bosworth, 5619 29th Ave.,
Tampa, Fla., formerly of
Gallipolis, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Letta, to Glenn Cox, son of Mr.

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Goforth

Mrs. Allan S Rink

·'

and Elizabeth Henry, Worthington, and the bride's
cousin , Becky Gardner,
Worthington. Amy Gardner,
also a cousin of the bride, was a
junior bridesl!l.aid. Melanie
Haskins, junior bridesmaid,
distributed bags of rice.
Gary Wagoner, Dayton, was
best man. Seating guesls were
Allan Boster, brother of the
bride: Rod Sines, Columbus,
and Bruce Warner, Pitlsburgh,
Pa ., fraternity brothers, and
Mark Leopold, Columbus, the
groom's college roommate.
The groomsmen wore dark
grey tuxedos with light blue
ruffled shirls.
Mrs. Miles Epling was soloist
and Kathryn Hayward was
organist. Mrs . Paul Lewis
registered the guesls. Terry
Lewis issued programs.
The bride's ,mother wore a
beige crepe dress with heavy
lace trim and a brown orchid
pinned to her shoulder . The
groom's mother wore a light
green silk faille ensemble with
a yellow orchid corsage.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held in the
church parlor. The lour-tiered
wedding cake was served from
a table decorated in yellow and
gree n with crysta l appointments.
For their trip to the Virgin

BEFORE YOU BUY

CARPETING
CHECK WITH THE
EMPIRE

WE HAVE EVERYTHING TO OFFER

Islands, Puerto Rico and
Miami, the bride changed into
a beige knit dress with purple
accessories.
After they return, the Rinks
will be at hom,e ,at 4~4 Morse
Town Ct., Columbus. This fall
the bride will teach in
Pataskala Elementary School
and the groom will be a senior
at Otterbein College and is
employed by Westerville
School System.
Pre-nuptial parties were
given by Mrs. JoAnne Mauger,
Pataskala; Mrs. Robert E.
Gardner and Mrs. Robert P.
Gardner, Worthington; and
Mrs. John L. Evans, Mrs. Leo
Mossman and Mrs. Harry K.
Mills, Jr., Gallipolis.
The bride's parents . were
hosls to a buffet supper at their
home for relatives and out-oftown guests . The groom's
parenls were hosts to a dinner
at the Riverboat room
following
the
wedding
rehearsal. Guests besides the
clergy and wedding party were
Terry Hall, and Mrs. Rod
Sines, Columbus, and Dr. and
Mrs. Robert P. Gardner,
Worthington.

GALLIPOLIS - On Saturday, May 27, Dottie Priest and
Stephen Goforth were united in
marriage at the First Church
of the Nazarene of .Gallipolis.
Rev. Ronald Justice officiated
at the double· ring ceremony.
Mrs. Goforth is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Priest of
Route I. Mr. Goforth's parents
are Mr. and Mrs. Carlos

M.tSS

GALUPOUS- The Cottage
Prayer Meeting of the Addison
Church was held Monday night
in the home of Emma ,Johnson
on First Avenue. Carroll
Sheets, deacon, led the meeting
with Irwin Viars opening with
prayer. The group had an oldfashioned family prayer and

Goforth of Cincinnati.
For her wedding the bride
wore a white floor-length gown
of cotton voile. The gown was
fashioned with a tucked bodice
and inserts of granny lace . The ·
belle sleeves were edged in
cotton clllng hiee and the dress •
featured a high neckline. The
A-line skirt was edged with a
ruffle hemline. The detachable
chapel length train was edged
in the clung lace. The veil was
made of tiered silk illusion with
a cap of lace and organza
petals accented with seed
pearls. She carried a bouquet
of daisies on a while Bible .
Connie Priest served as her
sister's maid of honor. Linda
Shupe and Rebecca Goforth
were bridesmaids. Their
identical dresses were noor
length of cotton voile that
featured an empire waistline.
The bodice featured rufOed
trim on the front with a high
neckline and puff sleeves. The
skirt was edged with a rufOed
hemline. Each girl wore a wide
brim hat that matched her
dress. Miss Priest, the maid of
honor, was dressed in a pastel
shade of blue. Miss Shupe's
dress was pink and Miss

ellS 1n
summer cast

Prayer Group Met

then sang "Some Day,"

and Mrs. Gene Cox, U~e\'1)001,
·England. The bride-to-be Is
attending college in Atllnta,
Ga. Mr. Cox is employed at Sea
Coast Railroads at Tampa. /III
August wedding Is planned.·

GALLIPOLIS - The family
of the rate Jacob N. M. Davis
and Maggie Sluyter Davis met
July 2 at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. James Davis on Teen's
Run Road for their annua l
reunion. A bountiful basket
OONNIE DAVIS is congratulated by Earl Lambert, president of the Midwestern Horse
dinner was enjoyed by all after
Show, on her winning first place in the Senior Quarter Horse Western Pleasure Horse Show·
William Davis of(ered prayer.
held in Col~busover the July 4th weekend . Connie is a student at Morehead State University
The day was spent in visiting,
and IS spending the swruner showing and giving riding instructions at her home ncar Rio
taking pictures and playing
Grande. She is a member of the Saddle and Sirloin Riding Club.
softball.
The family decided to retain
James Davis as president and
Mrs . Emmett Church as
secretary. The next meeting
will be with Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Davis. In case of rain, it
will be held at the Mercerville
PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs.
Grange.
Those present were Mr. and
John L .i- Shriver. Patriot,
GALLIPOLIS - The family Mrs. Clay Frederick, Dale and
BIDWELL - Mrs. Gracie recently celebrated their 25th
McCormick, Bidwell, had all of wedding anniversary . Alter the of Charles and Minnie While Douglas Sims, Mr. and Mrs.
her children home for the gifts and cards were held a family reunion on July 2 Leland Robinson, Mr . and Mrs.
Fourth of July holidays except acknowledged, a barbecue at the Gallia County Junior
Harold who called home from dinner was held in their honor. fairgrounds . Games were
Present w_ere Mr. and Mrs. played and prizes were
his air force base in Michigan.
Those present were S.Sgt. and Larry Rucker and David, Mrs. awarded .
rs. Ro~I.M;iiprlllii;JJ ~ ~R!m , ~r~veF~an!l Jay, • Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
'" ,. ',.
eorgia,ti'J aiAf,\MW~WMlei-' Howard, Carol, Frank and Loren Taylor and sons, Mrs.
lazer from Florida, Mr. and Marsha, Mrs. Leslie Parsons, Myrtle Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
rs . Eugene Monta and Mr. and Mrs. John s. Smith Charles Grimms and sons, Mr.
and Carl, Debbie Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Drummond
~onica from Gahanna, and
PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs : Wallace Kemper and Mrs. John R. Smith and and family, Mrs. Sandy
Parker
Williams, Patriot, had
Mrs. Ruby
from Kerr and Carol from Angie, Mrs. Mabel Spurlock Woodward,
and Keith , Cinda Martin, Meadows, Mr~ . Garnet Elliott, a dinner Sunday for their
Gallipolis .
Lawrence Parsons, Melvin Archie Meadows, Mr. and Mrs. daughter, Mrs. James Tayler
Parsons, Mr . and Mrs. Tom Charles Meadows and family, of California. Present were Mr.
Kusan , Mr. and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. Leo James and and Mrs. James D. Tayler and
IN HOSPITAL
Woodworth and Jeanetta sons, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bryan, Debbie and Craig; Mr.
James Nelson, son of Mrs. Lambert.
Warren, Mr. and Mrs. Garland and Mrs . Joe Liaverton,
Agnes Nelson of Eastern
Warren and family, Mr. and Wilmington; Mr . and Mrs.
FAWCETT HONORED
Avenue, is in Charleston
Mrs. Ronnie Dovenbarg and Glenn Runyon, Henry Allen
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
General Hospital, Room 166,
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Sheets, Randy Runyon,
Novice
Fawcett,
retiring
Ohio
Charleslon, W.Va., where he Is
Charles Casey and family, Sabina; Jonnie Jackson,
State
University
president,
has
recovering from a mine acMrs . Donna Ellis and Kenneth Williams, Mr. and
been
named
president
cident in Union Carbine
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Jack Quimby and Jackie,
emeritus of the school effective William Russell and family, Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs. Nolan
sever-1 months ago.
Sept. l when he retires.
Larry Casey, Susie Casto, Thornton, Angela, Sabrine and
Donald Casey, Sue Queen, Charlene, Mrs. Ellis Thornton,
Debbie Russell and Terry Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson,
Groves, Mr. and Mrs. James Mr. and Mrs . Golder Dailey,
Banks and son, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy and Barbara, Charlie
Kenneth Feustel and family, Jackson, Patriot: Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. &amp;nd Mrs. Ted Comer and Bill Jackson, and Dallas
family, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sheels, Northup, and Mrs . Bert
Partes and daughters. Guests Miller and Shellia Kay, Donna
were Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Bell, Priscilla and Doug,
Nibert and son and Mrs. Vicki Waterloo. They enjoyed a nice
and visited in the af*Red White &amp; Blue Kingery and son, Springfield; dinner
ternoon
.
Mrs. Carol Fellows and sons
and Buddy Murray, South
Carolina, and Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Gilmore and son,
Defiance.

\

SPAGHETTI SUPPER'
RIO GRANDE - Scout
Troop 230 is sponsoring a
spaghetti supper from ii-7 p.m.
at the Rio Grande Elementary
School cafeteria Friday, July
14. The cost is $1.50 for adults
and $1 for children. The troop
wiU also conduct a car wash
from U p.m., July 14, at Rio
Grande College in back of Yale
Building .
The
charge
is 7~ cents.

Priest-Gojorth Wed
In Nazarene Church HELP WANTED

Susan Boster-Allan Rink
Solemnize Marriage Vows
GALLIPOLIS- Suan Helen
Boster became the bride of
Allan Scott Rink on June 24 at
4:30 p.m . in the First.
Presbyte rian
Church,
L~allipolis. Rev. Glenn Hueholl
&gt;lmd 'R~v. Linson Stebbins ofidated the double ring
' reremony before an altar of
greenery and while and yellow
,flowers backed by a lighted
candelabra. Hurricane lamps
marked the family pews.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bosler,
Gailipolis,and the groom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Glenn
Rink, Radnor, Pa.
Given in marriage by her
lather, the bride was attired in
an ivory organza gown
fashioned with an empire
bodice, long sleeves and rullied
neckline. The shoulderline and
bodice of the dress were
pleated organza overlaid by
lace flowers with seed pearl
· centers. The same lace trim
was scattered in an A-line skirt
that held a detachable
cathedral train. The bride wore
a ruffled lace cap that held a
waist length veil. Her bouquet
was a cascade of white roses
and greenerY,
Mrs . Ron Walker, a girlhood
friend, was matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were sorority
sisters Gini Olsen, New York,

SPECIAL SPEAKER
HUNTINGTON - The Rev.
A. L. Baldridge is the
evangelist at Stella Fuller
Settlement Chapel this week
through Sunday, June 9, at 7
p.m. Special music will be by
Napier
Qu~rtet
and
Chapelaires Community Choir
and Settlement band, Sunday
afternoon at 2 p.m. at the
playground.

TIT
VV

WILKESVILLE - Constance Wells, Wilkesville,
senior at Morehead State
University, has been cast in an
MSU Summer
Theater
production. Miss Wells will
appear in "The Madwoman of
Chaillot" July 17-21 in MSU 's
Little Theater. Curtain time is
8:15p.m.
A member of the Morehead
Players, /he won an award for
best set design last spring. The
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Waller M. Wells, Wilkesville,
she plans to enter graduate
school at MSU this fall.

..

.

FOR THE NEW POMEROY

Goforth's dress was yellow.
Each girl carried a basket of
daisies .
Kimberly Priest was the
flow~r girl. David Pr iest
• &lt;!. I
served as the ring bearer .
Dan Tennyson of Cincinnati
served as best man . The
DISCOUN~
groomsmen were Robert Bray
and Randy Smith. The bride's
brother, Bill Priest, and
Kenneth Bible served as
ushers. Eugene Bible was the
singer.
The reception was held in the
fellowship hall of the church
followmg the wedding. Serving
at the reception were Diana
Parks, Mrs. Lynn Priest, Mrs.
Janet Priest and Mrs. Madge
Neal. Nancy Sparkman
registered the guests.
The bride is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
has finished her junior year at
Olivet Nazarene College in
Kankakee, lllinois where she is
'I
majoring
in
Business
PICK UP YOUR APP CA
Education. The bridegroom
Ll TION TODAY AT THE
has also completed his junior
NEW STORE SITE OR JONES BOYS'S OFFICE
year at Olivet and is majoring
in Music Education. The couple
859 THIRD AVE. GAUl POLIS
is now residing in Kankakee,
lll. and will resume their
lnteJViews Will be COnducted later this month.
studies there in September. . ._ _ _ _..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

25th Anniversary

Get-together

Williams

I

STORE

CASHIERS, CLERKS FOR ALL
DEPARTMENTS EXPERIENCE HELPfUL
BUT NO:r NECESSARY

LADIES SUMMER
SHOE SALE
COLORS

&amp; White
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Spectator
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BY FLORSHEIM
RED CROSS
CALIFORNIA COBBLER
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Him."

.

For Holidays

KEY

~~I' ll

Testimonies and special
prayer requesls were given
with Carroll Sheets reading a
portion of Matthew 24. Closing
prayer was given by Arnie
Stover.
The next scheduled meeting
w~l be In the home of Vernie
Neal on Third Avenue July 10
at 7:30 p.m. Anyone wishing to
attend those meetings is
welcome.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Arnie Stover, Clifford Kidd,
Ollie Oliver, Eva Gardner,
Irwin Viars, Emma JohllSon,
Mary Blackburn and Carroll
Sheets .

Family Home Shrivers Observe Family Holds

YOUR

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LADIES MEETING
July 12 the Rio Grande
Calvary Baptist Ladies
Auxiliary will entertain the
W.S.C.S, of the Rio Grande
Methodist Church at 8 p.m. The
annual meeting wlll be held
this year at the Rio Grande
Calvary Baptist Church.

Accepted In
Who's Who

KYGER
CREEK
Pollyanna Thompson and Paul
Rainey, Kyger Creek High
School, have been accepted
into the Who's Who In High
Schools Honor Society. Both
hafe demonstrated excellence
in scholarship, character and
extra-curricular activities.
Hypertension afflicts more They are among the top 3 pet.
than 21 million Americans, of the graduating seniors in the
according to the American
nation's public and parochial
Heart Association.
schools and will be featured in
the 1972 editions of ''Who's Who
In Ingh School."

Terrill Davis, Janic e and
Brian , Mr. and Mrs . Wilbert
Church, David, Dawn, Eddie
and Karl , Alliance: Mr. and
Mrs. Elgin Davis , Tay lor
Center, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs.
William M. Davis Jr .,
Columbus: Mr. and Mrs.
William Friel , Beverly ,
Rosanne, Loraine and Billy :
Louisville, Ohio: Mr. and Mrs.
Don Thomas and Ricky,
Quincy, Ill. ; Barbara Thomas,
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. James
Harris, Sabrina, Keith, Tim
and Denise, El Toro, Calif.;
Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Davis,
Mike and Beth, Hebron; Mr .
and Mrs. James Denny, Patty,
Jimmy and Rusty, Bidwell;
Richard Brown, Richmond,
Ind.; Mr. and Mrs . Leo Davis,
Tom and Debbie, Mr . and Mrs.
Roy Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Davis, Mr . and Mrs. William
Davis, Charles Lee Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. James Davis, Amber
Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Church, Gallipolis, and Rena
Davis, lilr. and Mrs. Kenneth
OW:~1 Toliy 'a~~ Kerry, ~nd ¥r.'
and Mnl. No'i'vin Hin'emfm,
Julia, Joe, David, Dean and

Charles, Crown City.

we hove helped w ith the changeover.

No matter what your needs in o home may be, lalk to
us about the financing . You 'l i be glad that you did .
·.

EASONABLE
DOWN
PAYMENT
•
••
•
•

FLEXIBL .E
TERMS
•
'
•••
•

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp;LOAN CO.

"Opposite The Post Office

446-3832

•

Galipolis
,.

-· c

THURMAN - On Sunday , Gatewood, Washington Court
July 2, Grand Emma House; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Gatewood had leo of her eleven Gatewood and Joannie,
children and their families at Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
her home in Thurman for their (Lucy ) Seeds, Brian and
annual 4th of July picnic. There Katharine, Gahanna; Mrs.
were 62 presen t.
Neil (Louise) La Molt, BarAttending were Mr . and Mrs. bara and Yvonne, Westerville,
Harold (Helen ) Moore, North and guesls, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Lewisburg ; Mro.
Ruth Van Zant, Dayton, and Karen
Williams, Grove City ; Mr. and Tabor, Gallipolis.
Mrs . Paul Weigerig, David,
Robert, Jeannie and Phillip,
Mr . and Mrs . William
Gatewood, Tommy and
Richard, Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Needs, Billy , Charles and
Elizabeth, Mr . and Mrs.
Fredrick Tellings, Theresa and
Freddy, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Hopkins and Larry II and
Roberta . Maureen and Stacey
Gatewood , Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Monroe Gatewood , Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Gatewood,
Tommy and ·wendy and Mr.
and Mrs. James Gilliam,
Randy a~d · Gwen, Galli?olis: ,
Mr. and Mrs. David (Esther )
Alien, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Zenk; Pittsburgh, p~'. ; Mr: and .
Mrs. Bill Tieman, Phoenix,
Ariz .; Mr. and Mrs. Robert

~

·a I

Drummond To Compete
GALLIPOLIS - Katrina
Drummond, Route 1; will be
participating in the Miss Ohio
Teen-ager of 1972 Pageant July
14-15 at the Sheraton-Dayton
Hotel in Dayton. The 14-yearold daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Drummond, she is
sponsored by family and
friends, Carl's Family Shoe
Store and Central Supply

Company.
Katrina attends Kyger Creek
High School where she has won
a letter and two gold bars in
band, a track trophy and five
ribbons, and is a member of the
FHA, GAA and of the Bulaville
Christian Youth Group. Her
ambition is to be either an
airline stewardess or a
cosmetician.

W EO . RING

1~

MAN 'S 100

{7;\~psake·
R [C.I!I![R(tl

~"'Hi5

0 10" 0 ,. 0

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

r-----------Fabric

Today:
·eSewing $}98
Sim le ~Mi~el5%
and
Sp~cials

45" Reg. lo '2.59 yd.

Whipped
Cream Prints

yd.

Prints &amp; Solids

off 1
lg. Group
O
Perm. Pressl f
Prints 45" 7~ f

L

2

~~~;Clot~ }49
Solids &amp; P1inls

yd.

98¢

Gingham
Checks and
Dotted Swiss

yd.

45" Pe1m. Press
'

·TENDER, LOVING CAR'

i:

july Picnic

FRIENDLY
PEOPLE

Over the years 'w e hove furnished trye mon'e~ that has
enabled many famil ies to own o home of the1r own. As
time rolls by and a house become$ too smell or too Io rge,

••
••
••

FREE ESTIMATES

1'

Kyger Christian Church on Tuesday, July l?,at 7:30p .m.

-

CAMP MEETING.
A camp meeting is now in
progress at the White Oak
Baptist Church. Services begin
each night at 7:30p.m. and on
July 15, the Spiritualaires from
Columbus will be there for a
song fest. Everyone Is welcome
to attend these services .

ON DEAN'S LIST
Steve S. Walker, son of Dr.
and Mrs. I. C. Walker, 1 &amp;ind
Hollow, Gallipolis, has been
named to the Dean's Ust for
the spring quarter at Emory
University, AUanta, Ga.

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE
· Open 'TI18 p.m. Mon . &amp; FrL Nfgt'lt s-

2 Complete Floort-ef Fabri cs S. Not ions
Si.;.pli,lly, Mc:C.I!i, 8~~tltlfl(~, V~llt PIHtriU

Wt Do Crntom Drns M.lllll'rf-51rlttt Stitt &amp; Ser llln

Sl Co uri Slreet

•••·t2SS

Gallipolis

g...
a I

�7- Tbe Somclaf Times· Sentinel, Sw.day, July 9, 1972

Dr. McGoug~ Will Retire Sept. 1st

.

-

COLUMBUS - Dr. J. Wylie
McGough will r.etlre September 1 as Commissioner of
the Division of Mental
Hygiene, ending 36 years of
state service.
.The announeement was
made today by Dr. Kenneth D.
Gaver, Director of the
Department of Mental Hygiene

2 Appointments Announced

anct Correction, who said a
successor would be named
soon. Dr. McGough, 62, Is only
the 12th person to serve as
Ohio's Commlssiooer of Merttal
Hygiene. He was appointed In
April, 1965, and has served
longer than any Commissioner
since the Division was
established In 1938.

•

RIO GRANDE - Two
faculty members have been
appointed in the Division of
Humanities at Rio Grande
College .
Dr. Herman L. Koby, vice
president for ~cademic affairs,
said they are Dr. Joavenell
McNealy and Carol Reynolds.
Dr. McNealy will join the
faculty this summer and will
teach
the reading-skill
development program offered
during the second summer
session. Miss Reynolds, who
will join the fa culty this fall,
will teach in speech and
theatre, and direct the College
Theatre .
Former thea tre director
Edward Roark has ta ken a
leave of absence to complete
his master's degree and begin
work on a doctoral in the
hwnanities.

\

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PIANO
SPECIALS

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Eddys ·Observe
Wed 50th Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Simms

'

•

SAVE

''Changing Thyme '' Trio

K. Hudson
Richard Simms

AS MUCH AS

Changing Thyme Trio Will
Present Concert July 12
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stine

Couple United Two Flames
In One Light For New Life
VINTON - ln a ceremony'
ending with the laking of a
flame from two candles and
lighting a single candle to
symbolize their new lire
together, Permellia Ann Long,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel M. Evans, Vinton, and
the late Charles Mason Long,
and Philip Eugene Stine, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Stine,
New Carlisle, were united in
marriage Saturday, June 3, at
7:30p.m. at the Vinton United
Methodist Church. The Rev.
John D. Davis and Rev. John
Bryant
performed
the
ceremony written by the
couple.
The church was decorated
with green palms behind two
l~andle arches with green
palms behind two l~andle
arches with the back altar
decorated with white carnations, daisies and greenery.
The front altar was ,!lecorated
with one tall white candlewith
orange and white daisies ,
carnations and greenery. One
half hour or music preceded the
weddin g featur ing "Love
Story, " love theme from "The
Godfather," " Bridge Over
Troubled Water" and the more
traditional wedding songs.
Given in marriage by her
step-father, Daniel M. Evans,
the bride wore a gown designed
and made for her by the
California Designer, William
Cahill. It was ivory satin
organza gown with a high rise
waist-line, bishop sleeves and a
Victorian bib accented with
Veni ce lace and tucking. The
full skirt flowed into a chapel
length sweep train. The bride
wore a ivory horsehair hat with

were Mark Karl , Dayton;
Robert Calvert, East Brunswick, N. ;J,, and Philip Ring
and Sol Schaengold, Cincinnati.
For her daughter 's wedding,
Mrs . Evans
wore
a
multicplored silk dress with
long sleeves, a standup collar
and a floor length skirt. Mrs.
Stine wore a lime green
polyester dress with a standup
collar, long sleeves and a floor
length skirt. Both wore white
occessories.
A reception was held im·
mediately alter the ceremony
in the church yard with approximately 125 guests.
Marilyn Long, Cincinnati, was
head-hostess for her sister and
Mrs. George Evans, Granville;

Liz Dolwig, Cincinnati, and
Mrs. Mack Layne, Gallipolis,
assisted.
The couple took a week-long
weddinB trip to Atlanta, Ga.,
and toured Florida. They are
now residing at 561 Sherwood
Forest West No. 9, Columbus .
Mrs. Stine is a 1967 graduate
of North Gallia High School, a
1971 recipient of a Bachelor of
Arl• in Sociology from the
University of Cincinnati and is
presently working on her
masters in city planning at
Ohio State University. She
works in a rental office of the
Lincoln Park West Apartments
in Columbus. Mrs. Stine, a 1966
graduate of Bethel High and a
1971 recipien t of his Bachelor of
Science in Pharmacy from the

Ring making

at its loveliest
in new

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GALLIPOLIS - Kathy &amp;!e
Hudson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Henry E. Hudson, Northup, and Richard M. Simms, son
of Mrs. Donlta Simms, Rio
Grande, and Richard D.
Simms, Crown City, exchanged
wedding vows Friday, May 19,
in an 8:30p.m. ceremony at the
Grace United Methodist
0\urch in Gallipolis.
The Rev. Paul W. Hawks
officiated at the double ring
ceremony following a program
of pre-11uptial music by Mrs.
Merlin Ross and soloist, Merlin
Ross . The church was
decorated with vases of white
and blue daisies and white
gladioli and two seven-branch
candelabras.
Eacorted to the altar by her
brother, Conard Hudson, the
bride was attired in a white
formal length ·gown of organza
over silk: Blue lace complemented the high collar,
empire waist, Juliet sleeves
and edged the chapel length
train. The bride's veil was
elbow length and the headband
was accented with seed pearls
and a blue bow. The bride
carried a bouquet of white
daisies with blue backing and
ribbon.
Kay Woodward, Gallipolis,
served as maid of honor. ~e
was attired in a lavender A-line
gown of dotted swiss and
carried a bouquet of lavender
daisies with white hacking and

BENCH TO MATCH INCLUDED

Recruitment.
Anderson College, an accredited Christian Liberal Arts
College sponsored by the
Church o! God, this year has an
enro llment of over 1,800.
Students come from 45 states
and 17 foreign countries. The
public is invited to this concert.

54 State St., Gallipolis

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CHf;SHIRE - A bridal
shower was given recently In
honor of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Rupe at the home of Mrs. Floyd
Rupe by Elata Everhart and
Jane Rupe. An evening of
games and opening gifts was
followed by refreshments of
cake, lee cream, punch, coffee,
mints and nuts. A color scheme
of yellow, green and white was
used in cakes baked and
decorated by Mrs . Elata
Everhart.
Otbor guest. were Kathryn
Yeauger, Joyce Rayban,
Louise Gilmore, Reva Trent,
Mrs. Arla Ward, Mrs. Paul
Shoemaker and Mike, Mrs.
Paul Martin, Mrs. George
Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. A1'hur

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404 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

FOR EASY PICKUP CALL 446·2682
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PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
Naomla Woodard, former
Teacher-Coordinator at the
Mason County AdUlt Learning
Center, wlU once again be
serving in that capacity on
Thursday evenings, 6 to 9:30
p.m. Mr!. Woodard, who has
been on leave of absence, has
been with the Adult Basic
Education program -in Mason
County since Its Inception . She
was the Teacher-Coordinator
at tha Leai'nlng Center When It
opened In Auguat of last year,
and has made many friends
who wlU be looking forward to
seeing her once again.
The Muqn County Learning
Center, located In the ,_
Vocational Center on Ohio
River
Road,
offers
programmed, self-IJistructlon
- the newest epproach, to
lelrnlng. Teaching IIIIICbines,
like the a~tar and the

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2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.
GAUJPOUS, OHIO
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years before moving to
Albuquerque, N. M., five years
ago.
The Eddys are the parents of
a son, Mac, who resides in
Window Rock, Ariz., with his
wife, Kate. Mac flew to Liberty
Center for the celebration . The
Eddys have two grandchildren,
Mrs. Bruce Folensbee and
Robert Eddy, also of Arizona.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Huron ceived it.
County sheriff John Borgia - Borgia said his office cendoesn't think much of Ohio's sor's both lngoing and outgoing
new policy of not censoring the mail.
"And we are go ing to conmail of inmates at state correctional Institutions and has tinue it but it probably won't be
released a letter he says proves long until we won 't be allowed
his point.
to do thi!i," said Borgia .
Borgia, m the letter to GilliHeJls bell's/' said Borgia
Saturday In a telephone inter- gan, said "I think the fourth
view with UP!, "that's the only pouagraph shoul&lt;\ give some
way we have of protecting our- small Indication as to the rea:
selves. These people can plan sons we In law enforcement
different activities without a feel that the mail should be
person knowing about it."
censored.
"I think the security of the
He said one of those "activities" was included In a letter
from a Inmate at the Mansfield
Reformatory to an inmate at
the county Jail.
Borgia, in a letter to Gov.
John J. Gilligan, told the
governor to note the fourth
paragraph of the ·missive.
It read :
"I know the pigs will read
this bit I don't give &amp;?!%. I
want you to do something for
me if you can. OK? . If Chuck
West comes in there I want you
to do a job on him. O.K. and I
will take care of you as soon as
you come back here."
Killed Stepson
Borgia said the inmate to
whom the letter was written
Rupe of · Zanesville, Mr. and had just been convicted of kill·
OR
Mrs. Maxell Ralph, Jim and ing his three year old ~ep son
Michelle Everhart of Van- and had already been sent back
dalia; Nelia Seyler and to Mansfield . Borgia also said
Mlckey, B~tty Reed, Crystal he did not know the identity of
and Judy. Avanell Bass and the "Chuck West" mentioned
Edith Bar tin, all of Pomeroy; in the letter and did not wish to
Laura Horsley and Debby Identify the man who wrote the
Crouse.
letter and the man who reOthers presenting gifts were
Mrs. Florence Scott and Mr.
and Mrs . Carroll Snyder of 9:30 p.m. Mrs. Ann Harreld
Zanesville, Gladys Ralph of serves as Teacher-Coordinator
Columbus,
Margaret at all times except on Thursday
Coughenour, Lucy Martin, Mr. evenings when Mrs. Woodard
and Mrs. Fred Crouse, Unda will be present.
Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Boss
Casto, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Rupe, Mr. and Mrs . Jim Neal
and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rupe.
11

Two Suits for
•
Divorce Filed
GALLIPOLIS, - Two divorce
petitions were filed in Gallia
County Common Pleas Cour t
Friday. Mary Louella Hennen,
Rt . I, Scottown, charged gross
neg lect of duty and extreme
cruelty in her petition against
Roy Arthur Hennen , Jr., same
address. They were married
May 25, 1955 and have three
children.
Susan E. Berryman, 2020
Chatham Ave., Gallipolis,
charged tl1e same grounds in
her petition against Phillip R.
Berryman , Dickson , Tenn .
They were married March 16.
1970 and have no children.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, July 9, the
191st day of 1972 with 175 to
fo ll ow.
The moon is approaching its ·
new phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury , Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
For the past year the Eddys LUtder the sign of Cancer.
have made their home on
Elias Howe, inventor of the
Lower River Road, Gallipolis,
sewing machine, was born July
where several friends and
neighbors gathered Saturday 9, 1819.
On this day in history :
eve ning, July I, to help
In 1943 American, Canadian .
celebrate the 5oth anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddy were and British forces invaded l'
married June 25, 1922, at Sicily during World War Two.
!n 1960, Soviet Premier Nikita 1
Findlay. She was the former
Khrushchev
threatened the J
Marie Thiesen of Toledo.
United States with rockets if
American forces attempted to
oust the Castro regime in Cuba.

faculty member at Shephard
College, Pikeville College and
Fairmont State, and designed
and implemented a counfy.
wide kindergarten and special
education programs .
She holds a General
Supervisor of Instruction
certificate for grades I through
12 from Marshall University
and the State of West Virginia
Department of Education. She
also holds a Reading Specialist
certification from the State of
West Virginia .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADM !TTED - Raymond
Hartl ey. Racin e: Ches ter
Soutl y, Re edsville; Thomas
Hawley, Middleport ; Alice
Fi nk . Racine.
DI SCHARGED - Jam es
Brewer, Zona Robie, John
Mays, Louise Cundiff, Sarah
Congo. Donald Ohlinger. Avery
Rom ine.

TONI
TODD

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A dress fu II of
tricks 'n treats

I

Ohio Sheriff Proves Point

state institutions and our local
institutions should come before
the so-called rights of the in·
mate," Borgia said.
"I would suggest in closing
that the persons experienced in
prison security be allowed to
operate their institutions in the
most efficient and safe manner

without interference from persons who are inexperienced,''
he said. '
Crimps Parole?
The letter also may have put
a crin)p in the plans of the inmate at Mansfield who feels he

will be paroled shortly.
A portion of one sent ence
said "I only have 4 months to
the (parole) borde (sic) and
my socialer (sic ) worker said I
would make it the first time ... "
"Well, we've sent a copy of
that letter to the parole board,"
said Borgia .
~
The letter also said :
j
"I seen Tom Houghilem
name in the paper tonight and \
he pleaded guilty 'to 38' and E'.s
(breaking and entering). What
the HELL is going on down
there in Norwalk: Can't they
do anything right anymore?"

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j

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SUMMER

l

J
•

Toni Todd tricks the eye with a dr e~s that looks like
three layered pieces. Beneo lh th e demure 5hi rt-ond vest-look is th e new whirl of 5kirt . Double-knit Dacron~
J~olyester, mochjne washabl e/ dryabl e. White with red
ve•t/ black •kirt
8-18. $28.00

WOMENS SUMMER

DRESS SHOES
SANDALS

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SHOES

DIAMOND
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Mrs. Woodard Ret~
To Head Adults' Center

Save

WITH PURcHASE OF

TWO WHOLE CHICKENS

ribbon. Bridesmaids were
Paula Butler and Charlene
Carter, Gallipolis. They wore
blue and yellow A~ine gowns of
dotted swiss, similar to the one
worn by the maid of honor, and
carried bouquets of blue and
yellow daisies accented by
white backing and ribbon.
Michael Carter, Gallipolis,
cousin of tbo groom, served as
best man. Ushers were Jeff
Simms, Rio Grande, brother of
the groom, and Paul Butler,
Jr ., Gallipolis.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Hudson wore a lavender
A~ine dress with white accessories and her corsage was
lavender daisies.
Mrs. Simms wore a white
and Ume dress with white
accessories ·and her corsage
was yellow daisies.
A reception In the church
followed the ceremony. The
table was decorated with
bouquets of daisies and the
four-tiered wedding cake was
trimmed with blue roses and
the traditional bride and
groom. Guests were registered
by Mrs. Becky Halfhill .
The bride changed into a
pink dress with white accessories for their trip to
Charleston . They will reside at
2091'1 Staunton Ave., South
Charleston, W. Va. Mr . Simms
is presently attending United
Electronics in Charleston.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert Eddy celebrated
their golden wedding anniversary last week. An open
house celebration , planned by
their family, was held at me
elementary multi-purpose
room at the Liberty Center
School June 25 at Liberty
Center where they resided 45

Bridal Shower Given
All MENS

WEDDING RINDS

Payne, lwin sisters from

Vinton. All wore orange rayon
seersucker peasant dresses
with ilcoop necklines, tucked
bodices and sleeves, full
flowing skirt., grosgrain belt..
with berry trim, matching
chokera and matching ivory
daisy earrings, gills from the
bride. They carried baskels or
summer daisies, carnations,
baby's breath and greenery
wl th orange ribbons flowing
from the baske~
Phillip Combs, Dayton, was
the bell man arxl the ushers ,.

ON ONE OF THESE
FINE PIANOS THIS WEEK.

University of Cincinnati, is

Venice lace, matching the trim

on her dress, on the brim and a
crown of lace with illusion
veiling poufed on the hat and
falling in to a train that rna tched the length of the dress 's
train. She carried a bouquet of
daisies, carnations, baby's
breath and greenerY. with a
streamer of White satin.
Cornellia Jan Long, Atlanta,
Ga ., was her twin sister's maid
of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Karen Stine, sister
of the groom from New
Carlisle, and Jerri and- Kathy

presently in his second year in
Veterinary Medicine at Ohio
State University in Columbus.
He is a member of the Kappa
Psi, Pharmaceutical
Fraternity, A. Ph . A, A.V.M.A.
Alpha
Psi,
Veterinary
Med icine Fraternity at Ohio
State University and a Mason .
He works part time as a
registered pharmacist at
Riverside Hospital.
Out.()£ -town guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Butts, Mr. and
Mrs. John Miller and Linda
Butts, Tipp City; Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Barnhart, New Carlisle ;
Mr. and Mrs. Gordan Wells,
and Mr. and Mrs. Mark Karl,
Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Shoup, Beavercreek; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ca lvert, New
Jersey ; Mrs. Roger Stickle,
Troy; Mrs. Robert Bewley,
Casstown; Liz Dolwig, Marilyn
Long, Phil Ring, Sol
Schaengold, Ginny ·Scott, Barb

GALLIPOLIS - "Changing largely at their own expense,
Thyme, " one of several An- on six continents in ~rvice­
derson {Ind. 1 College musical educational experiences.
groups scheduled to tour the
"Through their music, these
nation this swnmer, appears in committed young people are
concert at the First Church of choosing to serve the church
God, 109 Garfield Ave., at 7:30 and give expression to their
p.m. Wednesday, July 12.
faith ," states Kenneth Crouch.
The Rev. Paul V. Jones, hos t Anderson College Director of
pastor, said the program will
include a variety of contemporary and familiar hymn,
folk and gospel songs.
Members of the group are
David Reames, Jacksonville,
Fla .; Crystal King, Belle·
fontaine,
and
Mark
Gough, Melbourne, Fla. The
grpup will represent Anderson
College in 14 states from the
Midwest to the East Coast and
South on a 12 week tour under SUNDAY
Student Summer Service 1Tri- HARLEY Lanier reunion at
Gallia
Coun ty
Junior
S).
Each summer , Tri-S, a Fairgrounds with basket
Peace Corps-type program, dinner at noon.
sends 200 Anderson College THE SHAFER Family, acvolunteers around the world. In companied by John Cardwell,
its first eight years Tri-S has will be playing and singing at
placed nearly 1,1100 students, the Mt. Zion Baptist Church at
7:30 p.m. Sharon Waugh will
Frederick, Cincinnati; Mrs. also play the piano and sing.
George Evans and son Wade,
Granville; Phil Combs, TUESDAY
Columbus, and Mrs. Ed Rea, FRENCH City Garden Club to
meet at 5:30 p:m. lor a
Washington Court House.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stine workshop and potluck supper.
Beverage and dessert will be
were the hosts lor a rehearsal.
provided
. Member s, bring
dinner Friday night at Oscar's
table service.
Restaurant in Gallipolis . Included were 23 . guests, inLongest migration of any
cluding the bride's parents,
bird is that of the Arctic
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Evans, tern. It migrates from the
and Rev. John D. Davis and Arctic to Antarctica, a
Rev. John Bryant.
round trip of 22,1100 miles.

Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Eddy

I

A member of the Ohio and
National Edu cation
Association, Miss Re ynolds
received her bachelor's and a
master's degrees fr om Marshall University.
Dr . McNealy has been a

&gt;

speed (Craig) reader are also
available. The Center . Is so
designed to meet almost any
education objective. Student.
may prepare for completion of
.the GED test; or go through
prtH:ollege exams.
It can be a vocational lab
centered around such job skiiis
and blueprint reading, use of
the framing square, health
occupations, secrelarlal occupatlons, and many more.
The racllilies of the Center
· are available to anyone sixteen
years of age or older, and all
courses are offered at abaolutely no charge. You may
attend one. hour a day, or all
day every day the Center Ia
open. The Center, which Ia airconditioned for your ·comfort,
Ia open Monday through Tbursday, 8:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m.
and on Monday, Wednesday
and Thurlday evenin«, 6 until

I

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HILLWOODS

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TODD

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Bright idea • , • ·
the plaid knit I

·childrens
SANDALS
WOMENS SLIP.{)N

CANVAS CASUALS
'195 '

TAWNEY

JEWELiiS
422 Second Ave.
GaUipoli!. Ohio

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Toni Todd •tarh the fo,hion with the brignt' plaid •kirt

88

eased into a waist spanning belt, then touches the

solid tap with a fly-away plaid collar and trim. Dacranllll
polyester · knit 1t&gt; macillne wash and dry. · Orange

8-18. $28.00

Dan Thomas &amp; Son324 Second Ave.

"Serving You Since 1936"

Galipolis

. 412-414 Second Ava.

Gi llipolls, o.

�7- Tbe Somclaf Times· Sentinel, Sw.day, July 9, 1972

Dr. McGoug~ Will Retire Sept. 1st

.

-

COLUMBUS - Dr. J. Wylie
McGough will r.etlre September 1 as Commissioner of
the Division of Mental
Hygiene, ending 36 years of
state service.
.The announeement was
made today by Dr. Kenneth D.
Gaver, Director of the
Department of Mental Hygiene

2 Appointments Announced

anct Correction, who said a
successor would be named
soon. Dr. McGough, 62, Is only
the 12th person to serve as
Ohio's Commlssiooer of Merttal
Hygiene. He was appointed In
April, 1965, and has served
longer than any Commissioner
since the Division was
established In 1938.

•

RIO GRANDE - Two
faculty members have been
appointed in the Division of
Humanities at Rio Grande
College .
Dr. Herman L. Koby, vice
president for ~cademic affairs,
said they are Dr. Joavenell
McNealy and Carol Reynolds.
Dr. McNealy will join the
faculty this summer and will
teach
the reading-skill
development program offered
during the second summer
session. Miss Reynolds, who
will join the fa culty this fall,
will teach in speech and
theatre, and direct the College
Theatre .
Former thea tre director
Edward Roark has ta ken a
leave of absence to complete
his master's degree and begin
work on a doctoral in the
hwnanities.

\

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13 ply lamina.ted pin block, fine Spruce
sound board, full factory warranty.

Eddys ·Observe
Wed 50th Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Simms

'

•

SAVE

''Changing Thyme '' Trio

K. Hudson
Richard Simms

AS MUCH AS

Changing Thyme Trio Will
Present Concert July 12
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stine

Couple United Two Flames
In One Light For New Life
VINTON - ln a ceremony'
ending with the laking of a
flame from two candles and
lighting a single candle to
symbolize their new lire
together, Permellia Ann Long,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel M. Evans, Vinton, and
the late Charles Mason Long,
and Philip Eugene Stine, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Stine,
New Carlisle, were united in
marriage Saturday, June 3, at
7:30p.m. at the Vinton United
Methodist Church. The Rev.
John D. Davis and Rev. John
Bryant
performed
the
ceremony written by the
couple.
The church was decorated
with green palms behind two
l~andle arches with green
palms behind two l~andle
arches with the back altar
decorated with white carnations, daisies and greenery.
The front altar was ,!lecorated
with one tall white candlewith
orange and white daisies ,
carnations and greenery. One
half hour or music preceded the
weddin g featur ing "Love
Story, " love theme from "The
Godfather," " Bridge Over
Troubled Water" and the more
traditional wedding songs.
Given in marriage by her
step-father, Daniel M. Evans,
the bride wore a gown designed
and made for her by the
California Designer, William
Cahill. It was ivory satin
organza gown with a high rise
waist-line, bishop sleeves and a
Victorian bib accented with
Veni ce lace and tucking. The
full skirt flowed into a chapel
length sweep train. The bride
wore a ivory horsehair hat with

were Mark Karl , Dayton;
Robert Calvert, East Brunswick, N. ;J,, and Philip Ring
and Sol Schaengold, Cincinnati.
For her daughter 's wedding,
Mrs . Evans
wore
a
multicplored silk dress with
long sleeves, a standup collar
and a floor length skirt. Mrs.
Stine wore a lime green
polyester dress with a standup
collar, long sleeves and a floor
length skirt. Both wore white
occessories.
A reception was held im·
mediately alter the ceremony
in the church yard with approximately 125 guests.
Marilyn Long, Cincinnati, was
head-hostess for her sister and
Mrs. George Evans, Granville;

Liz Dolwig, Cincinnati, and
Mrs. Mack Layne, Gallipolis,
assisted.
The couple took a week-long
weddinB trip to Atlanta, Ga.,
and toured Florida. They are
now residing at 561 Sherwood
Forest West No. 9, Columbus .
Mrs. Stine is a 1967 graduate
of North Gallia High School, a
1971 recipient of a Bachelor of
Arl• in Sociology from the
University of Cincinnati and is
presently working on her
masters in city planning at
Ohio State University. She
works in a rental office of the
Lincoln Park West Apartments
in Columbus. Mrs. Stine, a 1966
graduate of Bethel High and a
1971 recipien t of his Bachelor of
Science in Pharmacy from the

Ring making

at its loveliest
in new

TEXTURED
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TERMS TO SUIT UP TO

5 YEARS TO PAY

LOWREY
ORGANS
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MUSICAL NEEDS
•BAND INSTRUMENTS
•ACCESSORIES
• SAlES and RENTAL
eMUSIC REPAIR SERVICE

Tl \I E .'·~f:\ Tl\ f:t.
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HOUSE OF MUSIC

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GALLIPOLIS - Kathy &amp;!e
Hudson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Henry E. Hudson, Northup, and Richard M. Simms, son
of Mrs. Donlta Simms, Rio
Grande, and Richard D.
Simms, Crown City, exchanged
wedding vows Friday, May 19,
in an 8:30p.m. ceremony at the
Grace United Methodist
0\urch in Gallipolis.
The Rev. Paul W. Hawks
officiated at the double ring
ceremony following a program
of pre-11uptial music by Mrs.
Merlin Ross and soloist, Merlin
Ross . The church was
decorated with vases of white
and blue daisies and white
gladioli and two seven-branch
candelabras.
Eacorted to the altar by her
brother, Conard Hudson, the
bride was attired in a white
formal length ·gown of organza
over silk: Blue lace complemented the high collar,
empire waist, Juliet sleeves
and edged the chapel length
train. The bride's veil was
elbow length and the headband
was accented with seed pearls
and a blue bow. The bride
carried a bouquet of white
daisies with blue backing and
ribbon.
Kay Woodward, Gallipolis,
served as maid of honor. ~e
was attired in a lavender A-line
gown of dotted swiss and
carried a bouquet of lavender
daisies with white hacking and

BENCH TO MATCH INCLUDED

Recruitment.
Anderson College, an accredited Christian Liberal Arts
College sponsored by the
Church o! God, this year has an
enro llment of over 1,800.
Students come from 45 states
and 17 foreign countries. The
public is invited to this concert.

54 State St., Gallipolis

I
I

446-0687

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

suLMER's BIGGEST BUYS!
$PECTAC0(AR

BAG

CHf;SHIRE - A bridal
shower was given recently In
honor of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Rupe at the home of Mrs. Floyd
Rupe by Elata Everhart and
Jane Rupe. An evening of
games and opening gifts was
followed by refreshments of
cake, lee cream, punch, coffee,
mints and nuts. A color scheme
of yellow, green and white was
used in cakes baked and
decorated by Mrs . Elata
Everhart.
Otbor guest. were Kathryn
Yeauger, Joyce Rayban,
Louise Gilmore, Reva Trent,
Mrs. Arla Ward, Mrs. Paul
Shoemaker and Mike, Mrs.
Paul Martin, Mrs. George
Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. A1'hur

ALL CHilDRENS

Dress Shoes

SANDALS

20%oFF 20%oFF
Sunday - Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday·
and Thursday Only!

~~!FREE!P4

fl\

ll'int POTATO SALAD

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PLUS

1 Pint MACARONI SALAD

by

rt(arvedc;J

'SUMMER PURSES

20%orr
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OFF

Regular Price
All Ladies' Summer

DRESS SHOES
Connie - Jacqueline
Auditions 1 Cobblers
Miss Wonderful &amp;
uralizers

WOMENS

Summer Sandal$

20%

'3.00
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16 PIECE BUCKET OF tHICKEN
"You'll Love The Broasted Supreme Way"
No Substitutes
HAND-FLORENTINEO
DAWN UT
Hl1 ,

145.00

Ye~11r1

$42.50

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

FOR EASY PICKUP CALL 446·2682
~

OFF

Mon. Tues.

W~.

.

Sat 9-5

•'

.'•'

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
Naomla Woodard, former
Teacher-Coordinator at the
Mason County AdUlt Learning
Center, wlU once again be
serving in that capacity on
Thursday evenings, 6 to 9:30
p.m. Mr!. Woodard, who has
been on leave of absence, has
been with the Adult Basic
Education program -in Mason
County since Its Inception . She
was the Teacher-Coordinator
at tha Leai'nlng Center When It
opened In Auguat of last year,
and has made many friends
who wlU be looking forward to
seeing her once again.
The Muqn County Learning
Center, located In the ,_
Vocational Center on Ohio
River
Road,
offers
programmed, self-IJistructlon
- the newest epproach, to
lelrnlng. Teaching IIIIICbines,
like the a~tar and the

•

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•
••
j

Thur. 9-12, Fri 9-8 PM.

i•
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YOUR ORDER. WILL BE WAITING

!~!~~HI~!J!t!.E.
2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.
GAUJPOUS, OHIO
'

~~

'

'

years before moving to
Albuquerque, N. M., five years
ago.
The Eddys are the parents of
a son, Mac, who resides in
Window Rock, Ariz., with his
wife, Kate. Mac flew to Liberty
Center for the celebration . The
Eddys have two grandchildren,
Mrs. Bruce Folensbee and
Robert Eddy, also of Arizona.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Huron ceived it.
County sheriff John Borgia - Borgia said his office cendoesn't think much of Ohio's sor's both lngoing and outgoing
new policy of not censoring the mail.
"And we are go ing to conmail of inmates at state correctional Institutions and has tinue it but it probably won't be
released a letter he says proves long until we won 't be allowed
his point.
to do thi!i," said Borgia .
Borgia, m the letter to GilliHeJls bell's/' said Borgia
Saturday In a telephone inter- gan, said "I think the fourth
view with UP!, "that's the only pouagraph shoul&lt;\ give some
way we have of protecting our- small Indication as to the rea:
selves. These people can plan sons we In law enforcement
different activities without a feel that the mail should be
person knowing about it."
censored.
"I think the security of the
He said one of those "activities" was included In a letter
from a Inmate at the Mansfield
Reformatory to an inmate at
the county Jail.
Borgia, in a letter to Gov.
John J. Gilligan, told the
governor to note the fourth
paragraph of the ·missive.
It read :
"I know the pigs will read
this bit I don't give &amp;?!%. I
want you to do something for
me if you can. OK? . If Chuck
West comes in there I want you
to do a job on him. O.K. and I
will take care of you as soon as
you come back here."
Killed Stepson
Borgia said the inmate to
whom the letter was written
Rupe of · Zanesville, Mr. and had just been convicted of kill·
OR
Mrs. Maxell Ralph, Jim and ing his three year old ~ep son
Michelle Everhart of Van- and had already been sent back
dalia; Nelia Seyler and to Mansfield . Borgia also said
Mlckey, B~tty Reed, Crystal he did not know the identity of
and Judy. Avanell Bass and the "Chuck West" mentioned
Edith Bar tin, all of Pomeroy; in the letter and did not wish to
Laura Horsley and Debby Identify the man who wrote the
Crouse.
letter and the man who reOthers presenting gifts were
Mrs. Florence Scott and Mr.
and Mrs . Carroll Snyder of 9:30 p.m. Mrs. Ann Harreld
Zanesville, Gladys Ralph of serves as Teacher-Coordinator
Columbus,
Margaret at all times except on Thursday
Coughenour, Lucy Martin, Mr. evenings when Mrs. Woodard
and Mrs. Fred Crouse, Unda will be present.
Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Boss
Casto, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Rupe, Mr. and Mrs . Jim Neal
and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rupe.
11

Two Suits for
•
Divorce Filed
GALLIPOLIS, - Two divorce
petitions were filed in Gallia
County Common Pleas Cour t
Friday. Mary Louella Hennen,
Rt . I, Scottown, charged gross
neg lect of duty and extreme
cruelty in her petition against
Roy Arthur Hennen , Jr., same
address. They were married
May 25, 1955 and have three
children.
Susan E. Berryman, 2020
Chatham Ave., Gallipolis,
charged tl1e same grounds in
her petition against Phillip R.
Berryman , Dickson , Tenn .
They were married March 16.
1970 and have no children.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, July 9, the
191st day of 1972 with 175 to
fo ll ow.
The moon is approaching its ·
new phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury , Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
For the past year the Eddys LUtder the sign of Cancer.
have made their home on
Elias Howe, inventor of the
Lower River Road, Gallipolis,
sewing machine, was born July
where several friends and
neighbors gathered Saturday 9, 1819.
On this day in history :
eve ning, July I, to help
In 1943 American, Canadian .
celebrate the 5oth anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddy were and British forces invaded l'
married June 25, 1922, at Sicily during World War Two.
!n 1960, Soviet Premier Nikita 1
Findlay. She was the former
Khrushchev
threatened the J
Marie Thiesen of Toledo.
United States with rockets if
American forces attempted to
oust the Castro regime in Cuba.

faculty member at Shephard
College, Pikeville College and
Fairmont State, and designed
and implemented a counfy.
wide kindergarten and special
education programs .
She holds a General
Supervisor of Instruction
certificate for grades I through
12 from Marshall University
and the State of West Virginia
Department of Education. She
also holds a Reading Specialist
certification from the State of
West Virginia .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADM !TTED - Raymond
Hartl ey. Racin e: Ches ter
Soutl y, Re edsville; Thomas
Hawley, Middleport ; Alice
Fi nk . Racine.
DI SCHARGED - Jam es
Brewer, Zona Robie, John
Mays, Louise Cundiff, Sarah
Congo. Donald Ohlinger. Avery
Rom ine.

TONI
TODD

l

A dress fu II of
tricks 'n treats

I

Ohio Sheriff Proves Point

state institutions and our local
institutions should come before
the so-called rights of the in·
mate," Borgia said.
"I would suggest in closing
that the persons experienced in
prison security be allowed to
operate their institutions in the
most efficient and safe manner

without interference from persons who are inexperienced,''
he said. '
Crimps Parole?
The letter also may have put
a crin)p in the plans of the inmate at Mansfield who feels he

will be paroled shortly.
A portion of one sent ence
said "I only have 4 months to
the (parole) borde (sic) and
my socialer (sic ) worker said I
would make it the first time ... "
"Well, we've sent a copy of
that letter to the parole board,"
said Borgia .
~
The letter also said :
j
"I seen Tom Houghilem
name in the paper tonight and \
he pleaded guilty 'to 38' and E'.s
(breaking and entering). What
the HELL is going on down
there in Norwalk: Can't they
do anything right anymore?"

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J

j

Il

SUMMER

l

J
•

Toni Todd tricks the eye with a dr e~s that looks like
three layered pieces. Beneo lh th e demure 5hi rt-ond vest-look is th e new whirl of 5kirt . Double-knit Dacron~
J~olyester, mochjne washabl e/ dryabl e. White with red
ve•t/ black •kirt
8-18. $28.00

WOMENS SUMMER

DRESS SHOES
SANDALS

I

1
l
j'

MENS &amp; BOYS

l·

.SUMMER
SHOES

DIAMOND
.·VALUES

Mrs. Woodard Ret~
To Head Adults' Center

Save

WITH PURcHASE OF

TWO WHOLE CHICKENS

ribbon. Bridesmaids were
Paula Butler and Charlene
Carter, Gallipolis. They wore
blue and yellow A~ine gowns of
dotted swiss, similar to the one
worn by the maid of honor, and
carried bouquets of blue and
yellow daisies accented by
white backing and ribbon.
Michael Carter, Gallipolis,
cousin of tbo groom, served as
best man. Ushers were Jeff
Simms, Rio Grande, brother of
the groom, and Paul Butler,
Jr ., Gallipolis.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Hudson wore a lavender
A~ine dress with white accessories and her corsage was
lavender daisies.
Mrs. Simms wore a white
and Ume dress with white
accessories ·and her corsage
was yellow daisies.
A reception In the church
followed the ceremony. The
table was decorated with
bouquets of daisies and the
four-tiered wedding cake was
trimmed with blue roses and
the traditional bride and
groom. Guests were registered
by Mrs. Becky Halfhill .
The bride changed into a
pink dress with white accessories for their trip to
Charleston . They will reside at
2091'1 Staunton Ave., South
Charleston, W. Va. Mr . Simms
is presently attending United
Electronics in Charleston.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert Eddy celebrated
their golden wedding anniversary last week. An open
house celebration , planned by
their family, was held at me
elementary multi-purpose
room at the Liberty Center
School June 25 at Liberty
Center where they resided 45

Bridal Shower Given
All MENS

WEDDING RINDS

Payne, lwin sisters from

Vinton. All wore orange rayon
seersucker peasant dresses
with ilcoop necklines, tucked
bodices and sleeves, full
flowing skirt., grosgrain belt..
with berry trim, matching
chokera and matching ivory
daisy earrings, gills from the
bride. They carried baskels or
summer daisies, carnations,
baby's breath and greenery
wl th orange ribbons flowing
from the baske~
Phillip Combs, Dayton, was
the bell man arxl the ushers ,.

ON ONE OF THESE
FINE PIANOS THIS WEEK.

University of Cincinnati, is

Venice lace, matching the trim

on her dress, on the brim and a
crown of lace with illusion
veiling poufed on the hat and
falling in to a train that rna tched the length of the dress 's
train. She carried a bouquet of
daisies, carnations, baby's
breath and greenerY. with a
streamer of White satin.
Cornellia Jan Long, Atlanta,
Ga ., was her twin sister's maid
of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Karen Stine, sister
of the groom from New
Carlisle, and Jerri and- Kathy

presently in his second year in
Veterinary Medicine at Ohio
State University in Columbus.
He is a member of the Kappa
Psi, Pharmaceutical
Fraternity, A. Ph . A, A.V.M.A.
Alpha
Psi,
Veterinary
Med icine Fraternity at Ohio
State University and a Mason .
He works part time as a
registered pharmacist at
Riverside Hospital.
Out.()£ -town guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Butts, Mr. and
Mrs. John Miller and Linda
Butts, Tipp City; Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Barnhart, New Carlisle ;
Mr. and Mrs. Gordan Wells,
and Mr. and Mrs. Mark Karl,
Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Shoup, Beavercreek; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ca lvert, New
Jersey ; Mrs. Roger Stickle,
Troy; Mrs. Robert Bewley,
Casstown; Liz Dolwig, Marilyn
Long, Phil Ring, Sol
Schaengold, Ginny ·Scott, Barb

GALLIPOLIS - "Changing largely at their own expense,
Thyme, " one of several An- on six continents in ~rvice­
derson {Ind. 1 College musical educational experiences.
groups scheduled to tour the
"Through their music, these
nation this swnmer, appears in committed young people are
concert at the First Church of choosing to serve the church
God, 109 Garfield Ave., at 7:30 and give expression to their
p.m. Wednesday, July 12.
faith ," states Kenneth Crouch.
The Rev. Paul V. Jones, hos t Anderson College Director of
pastor, said the program will
include a variety of contemporary and familiar hymn,
folk and gospel songs.
Members of the group are
David Reames, Jacksonville,
Fla .; Crystal King, Belle·
fontaine,
and
Mark
Gough, Melbourne, Fla. The
grpup will represent Anderson
College in 14 states from the
Midwest to the East Coast and
South on a 12 week tour under SUNDAY
Student Summer Service 1Tri- HARLEY Lanier reunion at
Gallia
Coun ty
Junior
S).
Each summer , Tri-S, a Fairgrounds with basket
Peace Corps-type program, dinner at noon.
sends 200 Anderson College THE SHAFER Family, acvolunteers around the world. In companied by John Cardwell,
its first eight years Tri-S has will be playing and singing at
placed nearly 1,1100 students, the Mt. Zion Baptist Church at
7:30 p.m. Sharon Waugh will
Frederick, Cincinnati; Mrs. also play the piano and sing.
George Evans and son Wade,
Granville; Phil Combs, TUESDAY
Columbus, and Mrs. Ed Rea, FRENCH City Garden Club to
meet at 5:30 p:m. lor a
Washington Court House.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stine workshop and potluck supper.
Beverage and dessert will be
were the hosts lor a rehearsal.
provided
. Member s, bring
dinner Friday night at Oscar's
table service.
Restaurant in Gallipolis . Included were 23 . guests, inLongest migration of any
cluding the bride's parents,
bird is that of the Arctic
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Evans, tern. It migrates from the
and Rev. John D. Davis and Arctic to Antarctica, a
Rev. John Bryant.
round trip of 22,1100 miles.

Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Eddy

I

A member of the Ohio and
National Edu cation
Association, Miss Re ynolds
received her bachelor's and a
master's degrees fr om Marshall University.
Dr . McNealy has been a

&gt;

speed (Craig) reader are also
available. The Center . Is so
designed to meet almost any
education objective. Student.
may prepare for completion of
.the GED test; or go through
prtH:ollege exams.
It can be a vocational lab
centered around such job skiiis
and blueprint reading, use of
the framing square, health
occupations, secrelarlal occupatlons, and many more.
The racllilies of the Center
· are available to anyone sixteen
years of age or older, and all
courses are offered at abaolutely no charge. You may
attend one. hour a day, or all
day every day the Center Ia
open. The Center, which Ia airconditioned for your ·comfort,
Ia open Monday through Tbursday, 8:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m.
and on Monday, Wednesday
and Thurlday evenin«, 6 until

I

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ALL MENS

1

AND BOYS

HILLWOODS

I\

•••

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l

2 PRICE

l•

TONI
TODD

l•
i

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Bright idea • , • ·
the plaid knit I

·childrens
SANDALS
WOMENS SLIP.{)N

CANVAS CASUALS
'195 '

TAWNEY

JEWELiiS
422 Second Ave.
GaUipoli!. Ohio

"

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s

Toni Todd •tarh the fo,hion with the brignt' plaid •kirt

88

eased into a waist spanning belt, then touches the

solid tap with a fly-away plaid collar and trim. Dacranllll
polyester · knit 1t&gt; macillne wash and dry. · Orange

8-18. $28.00

Dan Thomas &amp; Son324 Second Ave.

"Serving You Since 1936"

Galipolis

. 412-414 Second Ava.

Gi llipolls, o.

�9- The Sunday Timea- Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 1972

Fitzpatrick Has Top Post at ·F ·H·

Times- Sentinel, SUnday. Julv 9. 1972

JACKSON - Willard Fitzpatrick, veteran member of the
Jrckson City Schools faculty
and admlQistration, and dean
of the Southeastern Ohio
Athleti~ ·. League
Radio
Broadcasters, haa been named
superintendent of the Federal
Hocking Local School District
in Athellll County.
Fitzpatrick succeeds Charles
W. Montgomery III, who
resigned recently ro accept a
similar position with the
London, Ohio School District.
Fitzpatrick is known around
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League as "Voice of the
lronmen," having broadcast
all Jackson football and
ballkelball games during the
past 20 years . .He is a past
president af the SEOAL Radio
Broadcasters and Sportswriters Association.
Fitzpatrick, selected from a
field af 35 applicants for the
position, has had a wide and

252 THIRD AVENUE,.
GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM

CHECKERBOARD .FARMS-U.S. Govt. Inspected
•
·-·
LARGE
SIZE

on July 3and in Gallipolis July 4. Left to right are Becky call,
Oleryl Robinson, Penny Profitt, alternate ; Ann McMahon,
Renee Smith, Pam McMahon, Terry Raike, alternate;
BoMie Tackett, alternate and Patty Patrick. Absent for the
picture were Karen and Charlene Roy.

THE GLO-ETTES "Junior Dance and Twirl Team" took
the N.B .T.A. state championship in Lancaster Saturday, July
I. This is the first time anyone from this area has taken first
place in the competition. The girls are also a part of the Gloette Parade Corps that won first place trophies at McArthur

CORNISH H s
KEEL BONE REMOVED

1-lb. 8-oz. Size

3 for S 1.99-SAVE

each ·

a•

': ,:
'.

.J

• :

The Federal Hocking
District comprises a large
geographical area , extending
!tom just east of Athens, to the
Ohio River. The districl has
several elementary schools,
including a middle school, and
a new ultra-modern high school
constructed in 19611.

SOUND
RIPE

Gallbladder Stones
Cause Difficulties

Willard Filzpatrlck
diversified experience in the
educational field. He has been
a teacher in the Jackson City
Schools, has served as building
principal, as Title I Director,
and as Elemen tary Coordinator of the city schools for
the past several years. He
holds a Bachelor of Science in
Education Degree from Rio
Grande College and a Master

1!,1·

t•

WEE GLO-ETTES Juvenile Dance and Twirl Team who
also took first place at the state championship and then were
disqualified because they had too many twirlers in the tine
were (left to right), Mary Beth Holley, Lena Phalin, Jody

lb.

\ .

Hanna Deal

q·

on GEM Best Possible

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said Friday he
felt the state's agreement with
the Hanna Coal Co . to move the
GEM of Egypt across Interstate 70 was the best possible, but said there would
always be those who would

belittle the deal.
Extensive negotiations between the state and the coal '
company led to an agreement
where Hanna would move the
GEM (Giant Earth Mover)
across the superhigpway ten
times during the next 40 years,
each time with special approval from the Highways
Dispute Settled
Department.
"I think we got the best deal
In Construction
we could have on the movement of the GEM," the goverCOLUMBUS (UP!) - The nor said at a news conference.
Ohio Labor Council and the
Hanna, in return for moving
Ohio Contractors Association
announced a settlement Friday
in the contract dispute that,
~~
either partially or completely
stopped work on $650 million in
Ohio highway projects for 10
days.
Charles Rinehart, industrial
relations manager for the OCA
said details of the agreement
would not be released, but that
the major obstacle, job transfers, had been settled.
Rinehart said the agreement
was "satisfactory to th e
con tracU&gt;rs and fair U&gt; the
laborers ."
Rinehart said it had been
agreed that an employer could
transfer workers, but that after
any such transfer other ·
laborers needed for a job would
be hired locally .

l

.J""I'

\

'

sarily listen.
The group also said the state,
under the administration of
former Gov. James A. Rhodes,
already paid $226,000 for special road-&lt;!rossing structures for
Hanna - hiking the cost of the
agreement.
"It's a lot better than $5
million or $6 million ," the governor retorted. "Some people
think they are entitled to ask
for the moon wrapped up in
pink ribbon. If they think they
can come up with a better deal,
I'd be happy to hear about it."

the 14-million pound machine
across the interstate, promised
to sell the land under a stretch
of highway in Beimont County
to the state for $160,000, mine
800acres south of l-70under the
new stri p mine law with
stricter reclamation requirements and consult citizens of
- Barnesville about mining in
that area.
The Barnesville citizens
group earlier this week complained that HalUla was only
obliged to talk about the
village's problems, not neces-

I

Gallon

GRADE "A"

STATE FARE
' SLICED

LARGE WHITE

WHITE

THOROFARE

BROUGHTON

EGGS

Pkg~

WASHER VAWE
WON1l.AST

FLEISCHMAIII'S

PURINA

Margarine'Features

LIVER FLAVORED

F.OREV£R
for the day :
German philosopher Friederich
Wi lhelm Nietzsche said, "Distr ust all those in whom the
impulse to punish is powerful."

A thought

1·1b. Otu.

1r• • lll*l•tiY flatur.t 11101111. MtJ

--

PERMANENT PRESS. I...W ,_,.,. • ..,_

CMI-IIIIWII fi&amp;hll wrinkla ..... clolhaiiD lnlll
- the dryer. 11'111' IUIIIILATH" qllltor ICNbl

clothtl cleln......... Mill' tnpallnt. ,._
ptsltlon Wltlr IMI 1111111 and flw ...., llmpel'llture atlectiOM tor Mlhlnt fledblllty.. . .
Mttina for thole exlrHirty walhllbltl. ~ IIMt
bu~- tlpecl•llr I!OWI
.,.

SPECIAL TIME
TO BUY!

$159

25·1b. $ 3 0 9
Bag

President is Hit

01~22

95_

GOOBER GRAPE
PEIIUT BUnER
AID JELLY
1·1b. 2-oz. 65~

II

' ·lb. 10-oz. l

o~

Ballard Owen Ready Bisc~its ............ . 6.:;~ 59c
~Y~!~.BuHermilk Biscuits .... . . .. ...... &amp;.:;~ 59e
,.,. Butter Tasten' Cinnamon Rolls ...... .'~~:'45c

scon
FAMILY

BATHROOM TISSUE
sso.sh.

36e

DILL PICKLES

%-Gal.

POLISH

Ot.
Jar

BO PEEP
AMMONIA
43~

BLUE BOIIIIET
SOH
IARGIRIIIE
Family
Siza
l ·lb. Bowl

47~

WALNUT .• : • • ••••• •S·az. Jar
BUnERSCOTCH •.•• 12·az. Jar
CARAMEL • ·••.••••• 12·az . Jar
CHOCOLATE FUDGE .12·a•.Jar

GRAPE JELLY
· 69~ ·

From now through August 31st, you can buy a new 1972
Volkswagen and for $150 more, that VW will be delivered
with air conditioning. That's air conditioning at less than
half the usual price! And the price includes installation
Your new VW will also carry Volkswagen 's famous
24-month 1 24,000 mile warranty, 8' warranty you won't find
on any other car except a Rolls Royce: "If an owner
maintains and services his vehicle in accordance with the
Volkswagen maintenance schedule, any factory part found
to be defective in material or workmanship within 24 months
or 24,000 miles, whichever comes first (except normal
wear and tear and service items), will be r,epaired or replaced
by any u.s. or Canadian Volkswagen Dealer. And this
will be done free of charge."

SMUCKER ICE CREAl TOPPIIIGS

WARSAW

.

MORTON
SALT
PLAIN &amp; IOOIZED

Extra Ught Buttermilk Biscuits .. ... .. .... 4};~. 45c

SMUCKER
2·1b.
Jar

~ ·

REFRIGERATED FEA

4 Roll Pack

SLENDERELLA -LOW SUGAR
BLACKBERRY JELLY 9·oz. Jar 43c
CHERRY JELLY •.•.. 9·az. Jar 39c
GRAPE JELLY ... ! . • • 9·oz. Jar 39c
STRAWBERRY JELLY 9·az. Jar 39c

Jar

t'

lO·Ib.
Bag

11'1 bound to Ill fall It IIIII low price; I .
. .,..... 3 tJIIM- NORMAL, GElm£ lnd .

NOW'$ A

.

45e

REGULAR

COME IN-

The electric eel is a
South American freshwater
fish which is the largest
and most potent of the electric fishes. The World Almanac notes that it can
discharge more than 600
volts of electricity, enough
shocldng flOWer, according
to authorities, lo stun or
even kill a large.sized animal or a man.

51~

SOFT

1·1b. Pkg.

DQGCHOW

63~

MAQIC
BLEACH
Gal.

49$

53c
35c
35c
35~

Special air conditioning oltar by your Volkswagen distributor expir9s .
August 31, 1972. Availabl9 only at participating Volkswagen dealers. Bus and
Campniobilt models not included.

CAMPBELL'S

PORK I BEAlS

·DON WAnS
VOLK.SWAGEN, IN_C.

CUT RITE.'F
WAX PAPER

17$

~~:;P;k;g;.:;;:::::::!!=:;:Bo:t:.::::;;::::~W:::;;Ba;;t.;;;;::::::~~;::R:•;u:·==~~:::dLI '

DETROIT (UP!) - Roy
Wilkins, executive director of
the NAACP, has charged that
President Nixon issued a
"declaration of war against
black children " by opposing
busing as • tool to achieve
racial balance in the nation's
schools.
" I'll never forgive Mr. Nixon
for his declaration of war
against black children,"
Wilkins rold a news conference
Friday at the end of a weeklong NAACP National' Convention that seethed with antiNixon sentiment. "The only
thing that . would satisfy us
would be for the President to
withdraw his stand agaln~t
busing. And I would be a
hopeless optimist if I thought
he would do that."
RALLY TODAY
MIDDLEPORT
The
monthly youth rally of the
Middleport Church of Christ·
will be held today at 2p.m. with
memben of the Church · of
Christ and Christian Churches
laldng part. In charge of the
program are the Master Few, a
group of 35 yoiDig people of
Zanesville. There will be
special llinglng and contest
chall~lng. Refreslunents will
be ser:ved. The pubHc Is cordially invited.

Preoldeallal ProlediuD

~~· 18~

75-tt

Bulk
Sliced

Busing Policy of

•

Whi~lpool

~kg.

baolclef.

for
0 &amp;C
6·Pack
49~
POTATO STICKS s-oz. Box

3-lb.

in care ot tltis newspaper, P.O. Bo~e
1551, Radio City Slotion , New Yorlc,
N.Y. 10019. Aslc for "Cholesteror"

\Vhirlpoollaundry appliances

~.

&gt;!&lt;

a nswers rout questions about this
subiect. Send 50 cents to Dr. lamb,

MAKE WASH DAYS EASIER WITH •••

this special

.Super
Right!

12-oz.
pkg.

Does all the tolk about clto/uterol
disturb you? II so, you'll want to .
read Dr. lomb's booklet in which fte

1-lb. Loaves.

WHY WAIT! BUY AWHIRLPOOL
WASHER &amp; DRYER NCM!

Gallipolis, Ohio

Prices Good Thru Tues. July 11th.

(HEWSPAPU ENTERPRISE A.SSN .I

BREAD

Dozen

~

735 Second Ave.

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

You may hav e a de:lla l
problem after a rea r.end
aula collision. When Ihe head
snaps back , the moulh flies
open then snaps shut abrupt ·
ly. This can cause stretching or tearing of musc les and
ligaments that control the
lower paw. When this occurs
there is pain on chewing
- ...·and limitation In opening the
' .mQuth o.r ip .the m,'l~~~~ll~:~\
of the jaw. 'i"he p
treated much
any ather
sprained joint. The muscles
must be treated with specia l
exe rcises designed to regain
normal range of function .

G:~r. Linda Eason, Angie Abshire, Cathy Baylor, Tammy

Etchmger, Ellen Chambers; Sherry Belville, Joy Henderson,
Nancy Wallace, Melonie Dillard and Becky Eichinger. Absent was Vicki Broyles, alternate.

EVERY DAY
YOU SAVE
ATWEO

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Lawr.·m·t• Lamb. M.ll. eased too bad ly, the bile will
llrar llr. Lamb-Mv wife flow on out th rough th e bile
s p~nt seve ral davs in the dud into the in testines and
hospital having multiple there won't be any storage ·
"
All . t
X .. . of bile in the gallbladder.
X I a:!:i
.
e1 wo , ~ ~~s. When this occurs sim:e Ito
they sa1d they cu u!dnl hnd dye 1·eaches I he ga llbl adder
he. gallbladdeL Ihat 11 was . it can't be seen on the X ray.
clogged 11p w1lh stones. l
tho ugh! Jhat the X ray would
lf the reason lhe. gallblad·
sl10w bones, stones or solid der IS ~ot funcllonmg ~ s b_ematerials . What is your opin- ca use . 11 has stones m 1t,
ion or this'~ Please advise if somet1mes lhe_
se stones can
there
is
any
mt&gt;ditine
for
be
seen,
but
1l
depends on
13th CELEBRATED
DINNER GIVEN
. gallstones .
what kind of stones they are.
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
• R .
. . ..
If they are stones that con·
11ear
Harry L. Bailey entertained Robert Crow entertained with
eader- lt IS lau ly lain minera ls in them like
.
,
common fo r a " nonfun ctiOn · d · b
h
Wednesday with a surprise adinnerat
CrowsSteakHouse 1·11g ,a
" llbl a dd er .. no t 1o s1lOW that
loun
1n ones. thten
,
th
,
'II
b,
X
party honoring their son, followmg the rehearsal for the
x la. ys. The. way
.
, 11
e) WI
e seen on e
.
.
.
on
a
pa
·
ray
.
Some
stones,
however.
Keith, on his 13th birthday Wedding of thetr son.• Jlffi , lo bladder X ray IS done IS to are made of cholesterol and
anniversary . Games were Mtss Pam Neutzhng last have the person take so me contain no minerals . These
played and refreshments of Saturday .GuestswereMr.and ptlls winch have a dy e Ill do not ca use any shadows by
up .on X ray These slones
·
pizza, soft drinks, cake and Mrs. Rl.chard Neutz1·mg, Mr . them
th e X wh1ch
Thw111
. dshow
look
hke·
1
ray
.
ts
ye
malena
h
,
·
·
,
·
candy were served. Guests· an d Mrs. Da nny Thompson, is absorbed by lhe b!ood· c 1ea1 spols or o es. 111 the
were Bruce Bumgardner, M~s. Isabelle Wtnebrenner, slrea m and fillered oul by gallbladde1 filled w1t11 .. the
Duane McLaughlin, Mark Mtss Marla . Neutzlmg, MlSs the liver , eve ntually bein~ dye Ihal ts,?pa~ue loX I ".Y~ ·
Casto, Ricky Sey lor, Jimmy Darla Neutzlmg, Mrs. Robert carried by the bile al!d But tl Ihe gall~ladd~1 doe~? I
Hawley, and Scott and Todd Kuhn, and the Rev . Charles slored in the gallbladder. ftll and It has _II Ullslllttn~
Si
Now if th e ga llbladder is dis· stones 111 11. 11 Will nul shol'
Hysell.
mons.
up on Ihe X ra y.
There a re really no good ·
medicines thai wi ll di ssolve
slones in the gallbladder.
There are some rece nt stud·
ies on Ibis problem that sug·
gesl that some stones may
be dissolved but Ibi s needs
fur th er sludy before general
use. Most medicines given
for gallbladde r disease are
for relief of symptoms . If
there are a numbe r of st one s
in the gallbladder. surge ry
is
usua lly indicated .
•

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

SUPER MARKETS

.;i
· ' &lt;

of Education Degree from Ohio
University and has had extensive college training beyond
the Masters' Degree.
Fitzpatrick is married and
~s a family of three married
daughters. The new superinIA!ndent will assume his new·
duties on Aug. 1.

AUTIIOIIIZE D
DIALIII

•

..

195 Upper River Rd. 1Olllo Rt. 7), G4111ipolls, Olllo
Phone (614) 446-9100
()pin: S.!H, Mon.-Frl.ltol; S.t.l-5
S.rvlcl, P1m&amp; OlflcoMon.-Frl.l-5, S.l. l-12

Secret Service agents were
f I r s t 8.6signed to protect
President Theodore Roosevelt follo'fllig Prestden.t McKinley 's assassination I n
lllOl, a protection which was
extended ln 1913 to the president-elect, ln 1917 to mem·
bers of the president's im·
mediate family, and to the
vice-president in 1951 . ac·
cording to Ency,·! li' fi~G · a
• Britannica.

pkg.
of

8

Jane
Parker

3-lb.
can

�9- The Sunday Timea- Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 1972

Fitzpatrick Has Top Post at ·F ·H·

Times- Sentinel, SUnday. Julv 9. 1972

JACKSON - Willard Fitzpatrick, veteran member of the
Jrckson City Schools faculty
and admlQistration, and dean
of the Southeastern Ohio
Athleti~ ·. League
Radio
Broadcasters, haa been named
superintendent of the Federal
Hocking Local School District
in Athellll County.
Fitzpatrick succeeds Charles
W. Montgomery III, who
resigned recently ro accept a
similar position with the
London, Ohio School District.
Fitzpatrick is known around
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League as "Voice of the
lronmen," having broadcast
all Jackson football and
ballkelball games during the
past 20 years . .He is a past
president af the SEOAL Radio
Broadcasters and Sportswriters Association.
Fitzpatrick, selected from a
field af 35 applicants for the
position, has had a wide and

252 THIRD AVENUE,.
GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM

CHECKERBOARD .FARMS-U.S. Govt. Inspected
•
·-·
LARGE
SIZE

on July 3and in Gallipolis July 4. Left to right are Becky call,
Oleryl Robinson, Penny Profitt, alternate ; Ann McMahon,
Renee Smith, Pam McMahon, Terry Raike, alternate;
BoMie Tackett, alternate and Patty Patrick. Absent for the
picture were Karen and Charlene Roy.

THE GLO-ETTES "Junior Dance and Twirl Team" took
the N.B .T.A. state championship in Lancaster Saturday, July
I. This is the first time anyone from this area has taken first
place in the competition. The girls are also a part of the Gloette Parade Corps that won first place trophies at McArthur

CORNISH H s
KEEL BONE REMOVED

1-lb. 8-oz. Size

3 for S 1.99-SAVE

each ·

a•

': ,:
'.

.J

• :

The Federal Hocking
District comprises a large
geographical area , extending
!tom just east of Athens, to the
Ohio River. The districl has
several elementary schools,
including a middle school, and
a new ultra-modern high school
constructed in 19611.

SOUND
RIPE

Gallbladder Stones
Cause Difficulties

Willard Filzpatrlck
diversified experience in the
educational field. He has been
a teacher in the Jackson City
Schools, has served as building
principal, as Title I Director,
and as Elemen tary Coordinator of the city schools for
the past several years. He
holds a Bachelor of Science in
Education Degree from Rio
Grande College and a Master

1!,1·

t•

WEE GLO-ETTES Juvenile Dance and Twirl Team who
also took first place at the state championship and then were
disqualified because they had too many twirlers in the tine
were (left to right), Mary Beth Holley, Lena Phalin, Jody

lb.

\ .

Hanna Deal

q·

on GEM Best Possible

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said Friday he
felt the state's agreement with
the Hanna Coal Co . to move the
GEM of Egypt across Interstate 70 was the best possible, but said there would
always be those who would

belittle the deal.
Extensive negotiations between the state and the coal '
company led to an agreement
where Hanna would move the
GEM (Giant Earth Mover)
across the superhigpway ten
times during the next 40 years,
each time with special approval from the Highways
Dispute Settled
Department.
"I think we got the best deal
In Construction
we could have on the movement of the GEM," the goverCOLUMBUS (UP!) - The nor said at a news conference.
Ohio Labor Council and the
Hanna, in return for moving
Ohio Contractors Association
announced a settlement Friday
in the contract dispute that,
~~
either partially or completely
stopped work on $650 million in
Ohio highway projects for 10
days.
Charles Rinehart, industrial
relations manager for the OCA
said details of the agreement
would not be released, but that
the major obstacle, job transfers, had been settled.
Rinehart said the agreement
was "satisfactory to th e
con tracU&gt;rs and fair U&gt; the
laborers ."
Rinehart said it had been
agreed that an employer could
transfer workers, but that after
any such transfer other ·
laborers needed for a job would
be hired locally .

l

.J""I'

\

'

sarily listen.
The group also said the state,
under the administration of
former Gov. James A. Rhodes,
already paid $226,000 for special road-&lt;!rossing structures for
Hanna - hiking the cost of the
agreement.
"It's a lot better than $5
million or $6 million ," the governor retorted. "Some people
think they are entitled to ask
for the moon wrapped up in
pink ribbon. If they think they
can come up with a better deal,
I'd be happy to hear about it."

the 14-million pound machine
across the interstate, promised
to sell the land under a stretch
of highway in Beimont County
to the state for $160,000, mine
800acres south of l-70under the
new stri p mine law with
stricter reclamation requirements and consult citizens of
- Barnesville about mining in
that area.
The Barnesville citizens
group earlier this week complained that HalUla was only
obliged to talk about the
village's problems, not neces-

I

Gallon

GRADE "A"

STATE FARE
' SLICED

LARGE WHITE

WHITE

THOROFARE

BROUGHTON

EGGS

Pkg~

WASHER VAWE
WON1l.AST

FLEISCHMAIII'S

PURINA

Margarine'Features

LIVER FLAVORED

F.OREV£R
for the day :
German philosopher Friederich
Wi lhelm Nietzsche said, "Distr ust all those in whom the
impulse to punish is powerful."

A thought

1·1b. Otu.

1r• • lll*l•tiY flatur.t 11101111. MtJ

--

PERMANENT PRESS. I...W ,_,.,. • ..,_

CMI-IIIIWII fi&amp;hll wrinkla ..... clolhaiiD lnlll
- the dryer. 11'111' IUIIIILATH" qllltor ICNbl

clothtl cleln......... Mill' tnpallnt. ,._
ptsltlon Wltlr IMI 1111111 and flw ...., llmpel'llture atlectiOM tor Mlhlnt fledblllty.. . .
Mttina for thole exlrHirty walhllbltl. ~ IIMt
bu~- tlpecl•llr I!OWI
.,.

SPECIAL TIME
TO BUY!

$159

25·1b. $ 3 0 9
Bag

President is Hit

01~22

95_

GOOBER GRAPE
PEIIUT BUnER
AID JELLY
1·1b. 2-oz. 65~

II

' ·lb. 10-oz. l

o~

Ballard Owen Ready Bisc~its ............ . 6.:;~ 59c
~Y~!~.BuHermilk Biscuits .... . . .. ...... &amp;.:;~ 59e
,.,. Butter Tasten' Cinnamon Rolls ...... .'~~:'45c

scon
FAMILY

BATHROOM TISSUE
sso.sh.

36e

DILL PICKLES

%-Gal.

POLISH

Ot.
Jar

BO PEEP
AMMONIA
43~

BLUE BOIIIIET
SOH
IARGIRIIIE
Family
Siza
l ·lb. Bowl

47~

WALNUT .• : • • ••••• •S·az. Jar
BUnERSCOTCH •.•• 12·az. Jar
CARAMEL • ·••.••••• 12·az . Jar
CHOCOLATE FUDGE .12·a•.Jar

GRAPE JELLY
· 69~ ·

From now through August 31st, you can buy a new 1972
Volkswagen and for $150 more, that VW will be delivered
with air conditioning. That's air conditioning at less than
half the usual price! And the price includes installation
Your new VW will also carry Volkswagen 's famous
24-month 1 24,000 mile warranty, 8' warranty you won't find
on any other car except a Rolls Royce: "If an owner
maintains and services his vehicle in accordance with the
Volkswagen maintenance schedule, any factory part found
to be defective in material or workmanship within 24 months
or 24,000 miles, whichever comes first (except normal
wear and tear and service items), will be r,epaired or replaced
by any u.s. or Canadian Volkswagen Dealer. And this
will be done free of charge."

SMUCKER ICE CREAl TOPPIIIGS

WARSAW

.

MORTON
SALT
PLAIN &amp; IOOIZED

Extra Ught Buttermilk Biscuits .. ... .. .... 4};~. 45c

SMUCKER
2·1b.
Jar

~ ·

REFRIGERATED FEA

4 Roll Pack

SLENDERELLA -LOW SUGAR
BLACKBERRY JELLY 9·oz. Jar 43c
CHERRY JELLY •.•.. 9·az. Jar 39c
GRAPE JELLY ... ! . • • 9·oz. Jar 39c
STRAWBERRY JELLY 9·az. Jar 39c

Jar

t'

lO·Ib.
Bag

11'1 bound to Ill fall It IIIII low price; I .
. .,..... 3 tJIIM- NORMAL, GElm£ lnd .

NOW'$ A

.

45e

REGULAR

COME IN-

The electric eel is a
South American freshwater
fish which is the largest
and most potent of the electric fishes. The World Almanac notes that it can
discharge more than 600
volts of electricity, enough
shocldng flOWer, according
to authorities, lo stun or
even kill a large.sized animal or a man.

51~

SOFT

1·1b. Pkg.

DQGCHOW

63~

MAQIC
BLEACH
Gal.

49$

53c
35c
35c
35~

Special air conditioning oltar by your Volkswagen distributor expir9s .
August 31, 1972. Availabl9 only at participating Volkswagen dealers. Bus and
Campniobilt models not included.

CAMPBELL'S

PORK I BEAlS

·DON WAnS
VOLK.SWAGEN, IN_C.

CUT RITE.'F
WAX PAPER

17$

~~:;P;k;g;.:;;:::::::!!=:;:Bo:t:.::::;;::::~W:::;;Ba;;t.;;;;::::::~~;::R:•;u:·==~~:::dLI '

DETROIT (UP!) - Roy
Wilkins, executive director of
the NAACP, has charged that
President Nixon issued a
"declaration of war against
black children " by opposing
busing as • tool to achieve
racial balance in the nation's
schools.
" I'll never forgive Mr. Nixon
for his declaration of war
against black children,"
Wilkins rold a news conference
Friday at the end of a weeklong NAACP National' Convention that seethed with antiNixon sentiment. "The only
thing that . would satisfy us
would be for the President to
withdraw his stand agaln~t
busing. And I would be a
hopeless optimist if I thought
he would do that."
RALLY TODAY
MIDDLEPORT
The
monthly youth rally of the
Middleport Church of Christ·
will be held today at 2p.m. with
memben of the Church · of
Christ and Christian Churches
laldng part. In charge of the
program are the Master Few, a
group of 35 yoiDig people of
Zanesville. There will be
special llinglng and contest
chall~lng. Refreslunents will
be ser:ved. The pubHc Is cordially invited.

Preoldeallal ProlediuD

~~· 18~

75-tt

Bulk
Sliced

Busing Policy of

•

Whi~lpool

~kg.

baolclef.

for
0 &amp;C
6·Pack
49~
POTATO STICKS s-oz. Box

3-lb.

in care ot tltis newspaper, P.O. Bo~e
1551, Radio City Slotion , New Yorlc,
N.Y. 10019. Aslc for "Cholesteror"

\Vhirlpoollaundry appliances

~.

&gt;!&lt;

a nswers rout questions about this
subiect. Send 50 cents to Dr. lamb,

MAKE WASH DAYS EASIER WITH •••

this special

.Super
Right!

12-oz.
pkg.

Does all the tolk about clto/uterol
disturb you? II so, you'll want to .
read Dr. lomb's booklet in which fte

1-lb. Loaves.

WHY WAIT! BUY AWHIRLPOOL
WASHER &amp; DRYER NCM!

Gallipolis, Ohio

Prices Good Thru Tues. July 11th.

(HEWSPAPU ENTERPRISE A.SSN .I

BREAD

Dozen

~

735 Second Ave.

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

You may hav e a de:lla l
problem after a rea r.end
aula collision. When Ihe head
snaps back , the moulh flies
open then snaps shut abrupt ·
ly. This can cause stretching or tearing of musc les and
ligaments that control the
lower paw. When this occurs
there is pain on chewing
- ...·and limitation In opening the
' .mQuth o.r ip .the m,'l~~~~ll~:~\
of the jaw. 'i"he p
treated much
any ather
sprained joint. The muscles
must be treated with specia l
exe rcises designed to regain
normal range of function .

G:~r. Linda Eason, Angie Abshire, Cathy Baylor, Tammy

Etchmger, Ellen Chambers; Sherry Belville, Joy Henderson,
Nancy Wallace, Melonie Dillard and Becky Eichinger. Absent was Vicki Broyles, alternate.

EVERY DAY
YOU SAVE
ATWEO

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Lawr.·m·t• Lamb. M.ll. eased too bad ly, the bile will
llrar llr. Lamb-Mv wife flow on out th rough th e bile
s p~nt seve ral davs in the dud into the in testines and
hospital having multiple there won't be any storage ·
"
All . t
X .. . of bile in the gallbladder.
X I a:!:i
.
e1 wo , ~ ~~s. When this occurs sim:e Ito
they sa1d they cu u!dnl hnd dye 1·eaches I he ga llbl adder
he. gallbladdeL Ihat 11 was . it can't be seen on the X ray.
clogged 11p w1lh stones. l
tho ugh! Jhat the X ray would
lf the reason lhe. gallblad·
sl10w bones, stones or solid der IS ~ot funcllonmg ~ s b_ematerials . What is your opin- ca use . 11 has stones m 1t,
ion or this'~ Please advise if somet1mes lhe_
se stones can
there
is
any
mt&gt;ditine
for
be
seen,
but
1l
depends on
13th CELEBRATED
DINNER GIVEN
. gallstones .
what kind of stones they are.
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
• R .
. . ..
If they are stones that con·
11ear
Harry L. Bailey entertained Robert Crow entertained with
eader- lt IS lau ly lain minera ls in them like
.
,
common fo r a " nonfun ctiOn · d · b
h
Wednesday with a surprise adinnerat
CrowsSteakHouse 1·11g ,a
" llbl a dd er .. no t 1o s1lOW that
loun
1n ones. thten
,
th
,
'II
b,
X
party honoring their son, followmg the rehearsal for the
x la. ys. The. way
.
, 11
e) WI
e seen on e
.
.
.
on
a
pa
·
ray
.
Some
stones,
however.
Keith, on his 13th birthday Wedding of thetr son.• Jlffi , lo bladder X ray IS done IS to are made of cholesterol and
anniversary . Games were Mtss Pam Neutzhng last have the person take so me contain no minerals . These
played and refreshments of Saturday .GuestswereMr.and ptlls winch have a dy e Ill do not ca use any shadows by
up .on X ray These slones
·
pizza, soft drinks, cake and Mrs. Rl.chard Neutz1·mg, Mr . them
th e X wh1ch
Thw111
. dshow
look
hke·
1
ray
.
ts
ye
malena
h
,
·
·
,
·
candy were served. Guests· an d Mrs. Da nny Thompson, is absorbed by lhe b!ood· c 1ea1 spols or o es. 111 the
were Bruce Bumgardner, M~s. Isabelle Wtnebrenner, slrea m and fillered oul by gallbladde1 filled w1t11 .. the
Duane McLaughlin, Mark Mtss Marla . Neutzlmg, MlSs the liver , eve ntually bein~ dye Ihal ts,?pa~ue loX I ".Y~ ·
Casto, Ricky Sey lor, Jimmy Darla Neutzlmg, Mrs. Robert carried by the bile al!d But tl Ihe gall~ladd~1 doe~? I
Hawley, and Scott and Todd Kuhn, and the Rev . Charles slored in the gallbladder. ftll and It has _II Ullslllttn~
Si
Now if th e ga llbladder is dis· stones 111 11. 11 Will nul shol'
Hysell.
mons.
up on Ihe X ra y.
There a re really no good ·
medicines thai wi ll di ssolve
slones in the gallbladder.
There are some rece nt stud·
ies on Ibis problem that sug·
gesl that some stones may
be dissolved but Ibi s needs
fur th er sludy before general
use. Most medicines given
for gallbladde r disease are
for relief of symptoms . If
there are a numbe r of st one s
in the gallbladder. surge ry
is
usua lly indicated .
•

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

SUPER MARKETS

.;i
· ' &lt;

of Education Degree from Ohio
University and has had extensive college training beyond
the Masters' Degree.
Fitzpatrick is married and
~s a family of three married
daughters. The new superinIA!ndent will assume his new·
duties on Aug. 1.

AUTIIOIIIZE D
DIALIII

•

..

195 Upper River Rd. 1Olllo Rt. 7), G4111ipolls, Olllo
Phone (614) 446-9100
()pin: S.!H, Mon.-Frl.ltol; S.t.l-5
S.rvlcl, P1m&amp; OlflcoMon.-Frl.l-5, S.l. l-12

Secret Service agents were
f I r s t 8.6signed to protect
President Theodore Roosevelt follo'fllig Prestden.t McKinley 's assassination I n
lllOl, a protection which was
extended ln 1913 to the president-elect, ln 1917 to mem·
bers of the president's im·
mediate family, and to the
vice-president in 1951 . ac·
cording to Ency,·! li' fi~G · a
• Britannica.

pkg.
of

8

Jane
Parker

3-lb.
can

�•

,

11-The Si8tday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 1972
"

10-The Sunday ,Times- Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 11172

Terrell-Spaun
Marriage-41ows
Taken june 2nd
. POMEROY - The First
Baptist Church here was the .
setting for the wedding of Miss
Ruth Ann Terrell, daughter of
Mrs. Anna Mae Terrell,"
Pomeroy, and Mr. Walter
Terrell, Pataskala, and Mr.
Bill Eugene Spaun, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Juni or Spaun ,
Racine .
The Rev . Robert Kuhn officiated at the double ring
ceremony at 7:30p.m. on Jun e
2 following a program of organ
music by Mrs. Robert Kuhn ,
Potted plants were used to
decorate the altar and white
bows marked the pews.
Given in marriage by her

Donna Marie Theiss to Wed 0
Terri Lynn Ash Betrothed

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Theiss of Racine
are announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter,
Donna Marie, to Mr. Daniel Bruce Sayre, son of Mrs. Doris
Rogers of Columbus and the late Mr. Derrell B. Sayre.
Miss Theiss is a graduate of Southern High School and
Ohio University where she majored in elementary education.
Mr. Sayre is a graduate of Columbus Eastmoor High School,
Columbus Technica l Institute and Ohio University where he
majored in business admin istration. An August 12 wedding is
being planned.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ash, Route I, Minersville, are an·
nouncing the engagement' of their daughter, Terri Lynn, to
Mr. William R, Wllliams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Williams,
Route 4, Pomeroy.
Miss Ash is a 1972 graduate of Southern High SchooL Mr.
Williams graduated from Meigs High School in 19fi9 and is
employed as a boiler maker at the Amos Plant, Winfield, w.
Va. A September wedding is being planned .

father, the bride wore a white
polyester crepe gown, fl oor
length, fashioned with an
empire waistline . Her veil of
illusion was floor length and
she carried a cascade
arrangement of carnations
from which fell white
sl!eamers tied in lovers knots.
Miss Kathy Ya tes of Middleport served as the bride's
maid of honor. She was tn a
yellow polyester dress, floor
length, with a matching headpiece and veil and carried

f'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::.·::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:::::::.:·:::::.;:;::::::::;:;:::&lt;::::;;:::;:;:::;::::::: white ca rn ations tipped in

yellow.
Mr . Lynnie Tennant se rved

:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: ~: :;:;:;.:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::~~

I

Social Calendar

iii

SUNDAY
REVIVAL starting July 6,
7:30 p. m. each evening at
Faith Tabernacle Church on
Bailey Run Road at Cross
Roads with Stella Carlyle as
evangelist. Rev . Emme tt
Rawson, pastor, extends invitation to public.
BASKET DINNER and
afternoon of fellowship at
games for United Methodist
Church in Northeast Cluster
Sunday at Forked Run State
Park. Reservations have been
made. Bring own table service.
Serving time, 1 p. m. Public
!Jelcome .
'l, ANNUAL PICNIC Modern
lfoodmen, Burlingham Camp
7230, Sunday at state park on
route 33 on left going south.
Potluck dinner at 1 ~:30 , prizes
for adults and juniors, 50 and 2S
year pins will be presented,
games for · all. Members ,
families and friends cordially
invited . Ethel Howard, Jun ior
Director .
MONDAY
WEEK-LONG rev iva l
beginning Sunday, Old Dexter

I
'@

MONDAY
ANNUAL
PICN IC of
Pomeroy Garden Club, 6:30
p.m. Monday, home of Mrs.
Walter Grueser.
MEIGS SALON 710, 8 and 40,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Racine
American Legion Hall: installation of officers, members
take housewares order.
TUESDAY
PINS TO 25 year members
when Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, meets at 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at temple. Master
Masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Committee meeting 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, with .Roger
Hooker speaking on "Today's
Drug Scene" and a film will be
shown,
GO[pEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Christ
picnic 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Route 33 Roadside Park .
WEDNESDAY
· PAST PRESIDENTS ,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, 6:30
Church, services, 8 p.m. each p.m. annual picnic at the Ohio
evening, Rev, Willard Dutcher, River campsite on the Owen
evangelist, special singing. Watson farm at Racine.
Public we leo me .
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DAV,
Monday, 7:30 at hall on ButVISIT BACHTELS
ternut Ave., with oflicers for
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
1972-73 to be installed. Refresh- Mrs. George Dallas and family
ments : members urged to of St. Paris were Thursday
attend .
overnight guests of Mr . and
WOME N'S SOCIETY of Mrs. Bill Matlack, Chester
Christian Service, Heath Road, and Mrs . Juanita
United Methodist Church . Bachtel and daughter, Carol,
Meeting will be held at 7:30 Middleport. Friday morning
Monday night in the par. they left for Ocean City, Md.
sonage. Mrs. Beulah Hayes for a vacation. Other recent
will give devotions with Mrs. visitors of the Bachtels were
Nan Moore to present the Mrs. Naiicy Anderson and
lesson. Hostesses will be Mrs . children, Shellle, Lori and Jeff,
L. W. McComas, Mrs. Alma of Buffalo, N. Y., and Mrs.
Miller, Mrs. Mary Reinhart, Thelma Howard of Gainesville,
and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy.
Fla .
GAMES COMM ITTEE,
Middl epor t Feeney Bennett
VISIT lN POMEROY
Post 128, will meet Monday
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
7:30 p.m. at post home. All . Leonard Russ of Cleveland are
interested members urged to spe nding the weekend in
attend .
Pomeroy.
They
came
POMEROY CHAMBER of especially to attend the wed- ·
Commerce Monday at noon at ding reception of Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs Inn .
Hobart Yowtg.

II you're flghling a
losing battle agai~sl
heal and humidity In
your Mobile Home ...

1Community • •
:~ C .
.
t82ndBirthday
t Orner By Charlene Hoefl1ch :,: .
::

. '1s Celebrated

POMEROY - Lt. Cmdr. and Mrs . Gene Crooks are home
after three .years in Japan.
The couple and their I \2-year old son, John Gregory, arrived
in Colwnbus on the Fourth of July, exactly three years from the
day they arrived in Japan.
This week they will be visiting in Middleport with Gene's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks, and then next week will
join Nanc)''S folks at their cabin on Lake Erie. From there they
will go to Washington D.C. on Aug. I, where Gene will begin a
year of post graduate training in the Dental School at the
Bethesda Naval Hospital, The family has taken a town house in
Rockville, Md. for the year.
Nancy and Gene, delighted to be home, admit however, that
they were heartsick to leave their Japanese friends . Most of their
American friends had returned to the States earlier this year.
They feel it was a real opportunity living in another culture and
they have nothing but praise for the Japanese people, describing
them as polite, industrious, and friendly. Another thing, Nancy
tells us, is that in Japan everyone works at some job. They are
such industrious people that where there seems to be no job, they
cr~te one.
The couple's experiences were varied during their three
years in Japan. They traveled extensively there and in India and
Malaysia prior to the birth of John Gregory . Nancy taught at the
Department of Defense School.
It was a good three years, but now they 're happy to be home .
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY at the Meigs County Fair is Thursday , Aug. 17, but Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, must know about two weeks before that
- about Aug . I - who in the over sixty group will be attending.
This is essential so that badges can either be mailed or
delivered to each senior citillen. It is necessary that these badges
be displayed at the fair gate entrance in order to get admitted for
half-price.
Now what Mrs. Thomas would like is for every senior citizen
planning to attend the fair that day to either contact her office
which is located over the Quality Print Shop in Middleport, 257 \2
Mill St., or telephone 992-7400, Pomeroy exchange, or 985-3542,
Chester excbange. Purpose of the call will be simply to indicate
that.you plan to attend and will need a badge, and to arrange
transportation If you need it.
Another thing - a senior citizens tent is being provided by
the Meigs County Fair Board, and Mrs. Thomas is anxious that
crafts be displayed there. Seating will be available in the tent
which will remain in place all five days of the fair. Anyone with
crafts to display or persons who might want to provide some kind
of entertainment are urged to contact Mrs. Thomas so that she
can really get moving on this first Senior Citizens Day at the
Meigs County Fair.
MAKING ASURPRISE visit in town Thursday was Clarence
Ruppelt, lather of the late Rev. Howard Ruppelt. He came
especially to visit the graves of his late wife and son and to call on
a lew of the many friends be made while living in Middleport
with his Presbyteri1111 minister son.
One of the things he did was to visit the church, a time, we're
. sure, ftir hilppy recollections. The overnight guest of Jean and
Vincent Dabo, he left early Friday morning for Missouri .
B1IJ. ZERKLE, with just one year to complete in law school
at Ohio State University, is spending the slimmer at Cape Cod.
No, he's not vacationing there. He's serving hash in a classy
restaurant and hoping for big tips to belp see him through that
final year at State.
DOOE PIERCE WILL be arriving any day now from
Belgium where she teaches at \be Supreme Allied Headquarters,
a part of NATO. Dixie has taught there for tbe past two years and
plans to return after a several weeks' visit here with her mother,
Dorothy. Mrs. Pierce spent two months in Belgium with her
daughter last fall.

FOR THE FIRST TIME since the Portland School was
closed a bantam baseball team has been formed. Mrs. Don
(Shirley) Johnson, manager of the team, reports that parents of
the Portland area donated money for suits and equipment.
Coaches are Greg Middleswart and Buttons Allen. The Portland team, after five games, remains undefeated having downed
Syracuse 15-11 Thursday night at POrtland. Congratulations boys
and keep up the good work .
THE HIGH WATER certainly ruined the baseball fie ld at
Upper Monkey (near Minersville) and to think of all the hard
work in getting it ready . Quite unusual to have high water in the
monlll of June.

nations.

The reception was held in the
church socia l room immediately following the
ceremony. The tiered wedding
cake was topped with . the
traditional miniature bride and
groom. A small bride doll
ce ntered the gift table .
Miss Kathy Durst of
Pomeroy , registered the
gues ts . The registr y table
included a bouquet of yellow
and white fl owers and yellow
net rice bags were given to the
guests.
Presiding at the reception
table were Mrs. John Dean and
Mrs. Donna Terrell, Miss
Bronwyn Dailey, Miss Joyce
Kerns and Miss Debbie
Wise cup.
For a wedding trip through
Ohio, the bride changed into an
orchid dress with white accessories and wore the carnation corsage from her bridal
bouquet.
Mr. and Mrs. Spaun reside at
Oak St. in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Spaun is a 1972 graduate of
Metgs High SchooL Mr. Spaun
is self-employed.

Tom Wolfes
t Reunton
'
1105

Daughter Bon:

On july Second

their first child , a nine pound,

Haynes, Watertown, Ohio.

POMEROY - It seems as though Meigs County may be a
harbor for many B!limals. Several tunes recently a black panther
)las been reported in a wooded area around and near Racine.
The fast moving animal is jet black, approximately five feet
long and weighs between 100 to 150 lbs. The animal has been see n
by several people on different occasions, so' this is not a fish tale.
It would be wise to take precaution if you're camping in
wooded areas,

as best man for the
bridegroom.
The mother of the bride was
hospitalized at the time of the
wedding and following the•
reception the bride and her
party visited th e Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. Kenneth ·
Markins, grandmother of the
bride, was attired in a blue
costume with white accessories and had a white
carnation corsage. Mrs. Spaun
was in a fl oral pink and blue
dress with white accessories
and also wore white car-

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Carl Moore entertained last
Surday with a dinner party
hon ori ng Mrs. Ernest Carpenter of Bidwell, their
weekend guest, on her 82nd
birthday anniversa ry.
Mrs. John Smith was a guest
for Ute dinner, Arriving that
evenin g with ice cream and
cake were Mrs. Carpenter's U
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul (Betty) Salllf"-•
ders and Paula of Bidwell, Mr .
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Loren Neal and Tom Wolfe of Letart Falls were
Kenny of Porter, and Mr. and hosts for a reunion of the
Mrs. Jeff Wi lson, Kelly and children and grandchildren of
Terri Jo of Pomeroy. The Mr. and Mrs. Wilson M. Wolfe.
Saunders and Neal families are
Attending were Mrs. Juanita
camping at Royal Oak Park. Justis and children, Pomeroy;
On Saturday evening Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur (Drusilla )
Carpenter and Mr. and Mrs. Harland children, New Haven,
Moore were guests of Mrs. W. Va .; Mr . and Mrs. George
John Smith . Mrs. Moore and Wolfe and children of MemMrs . Carpe nter also visited phis, Tenn .: Mrs . Joan Ranwith Mrs. Mildred Hayes and dolph and son. Reedsville; Mr.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy and Mrs. and Mrs. Wilson Wolf and sons,
Ca rpenter retu rned home Champayne, Ill ., Mr and Mrs.
Tuesday evening. Visiting last Frank (Sharon ) Steele and
Saturday at the Moore home daughters, Jacksonville, N.C.;
was Mrs. Mildred Spencer of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolfe and
Antiquity .
children, Letart Falls ; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Wolfe of Chester. Mr.
and Mrs. Davey Wolfe and
children of Antiquity were
unable to attend .
Others attending the family
reunion were Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Wolfe and grandsons,
Racine , Route 2; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jeffers and gra nddaughter, Syrac use; Miss
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Kathy Curry and Miss Kim
Har old G. Haynes, Parkers- Knight of New Haven, W. Va .,
burg, the former Karen Sayre, and Mr. and Mrs. Basil Casey
are announcing the birth of of Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
two ounce daughter, Angela
Fawn on July 2 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Sayre
of Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Willard L. Haynes of Parkersburg are the paternal grandparents . Maternal great grandpa,rents are Mr . and Mrs.
Okey Paynter of Portland and
paternal great - grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Archie T.

, Baskets
• Sprays
• Vases

Dudley's Aorist
Pomerov , Ga IIi polis
Mason Co .1 W. Va.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Mora, Route 3,
Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their daughter,
Rhea Jeannette, to Mr. Harry David Slawter, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hiram Slawter, Route 11 Middleport.
Miss Mora is a 1971 graduate of Eastern High School and
is currently enrolled as a sophomore at Ohio State University
in the College of Home Economics.
Her fiance is a 19fi9 graduate of Meigs High School and
will be a senior at Ohio State University in the College ·of
Agriculture. He is employed this summer with the Soil
Conservation Service in Delaware County. No date has been
set for the wedding.

Wedding Plans Complete
precede the ceremony. Mrs.
Otis McClintock of Racine will
be the soloist.
Mrs . Larry Wiles of Racine
will serve as mal!on of honor
for the bride, and the bridesmaids will be Mrs. Marty
Morarity, Co lumbus; Miss
Jane Johnson, Racine, and
Miss Annette Warner, Minersville .
Mr. Keith Van Inwagen will
serve as best man for his
brother, and the ushers will be
Mr. Mick Menchini of Cross
Lanes,
W. Va.; Mr. Jerry
ON DEAN'S LIST
Davis,
Gallipolis,
and Mr. John
POMEROY
Seven
students of Meigs County were Jotuuoon, Rio Goande, .,
named to the Ohio State
University spring quar ter
CHILDREN VISITED
honor roll qualify ing with an
LONG
BOTTOM - Mrs.
average of at least 3.5. They
Paul Andrews and daughter,
are Hazel Lea Kiser, Dexter
Barbara, of Long Bottom,
Route I ; Harry David Slawter,
spent several days visiting
Middleport Route I; Don Mrs. Andrews' children, Paul
Mitchell Anderson, Deborah
and Jill of Westerville, and
Ann Crow, John Bradford Rosemary and Michael of
Lohse, Margaret Lynn Story Columbus. They also visited
and Richard Paul Werner, all
with Mrs. Andrews' sister
of Pomeroy .
Mrs. Nora McCrery.
'

POMEROY - Wedding
plans have been completed for
the open church wedding or
Miss Linda Grindstaff and Mr . .
Jerry Van lnwagen.
.
The wedding will be an event
of July 16, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Wesleya n United Methodist
Church of Racine. The Rev.
Dale McClurg will officiate. A
half-hour of music by Mrs .
Garrett Circle, Racine, will

Kentuckian Celebrates
105th Birthday at

&amp;
&amp;

a~o~g

BY .JACK O'BRIAN
THEY'RE THEIR OWN ·
WORST EMMYS
NEW YORK (KFS) - O'Brian At Large :
There's something rotten in Television and it's
not only "All in the Family" or the slanting
news nor tbe length or taste of the commercia Is :
it's the Emmys.
This annual flat imitation of the Oscars
award shows, in turn a pale vulgarization of the
smartly accomplished Tony Awards, manages
to extend its insulting stupidities year into year.
Each season-end the Emmys appear on TV and
the annual accurate essential criticism is of its
endless categories. Each •post-Emmy orgy of
critical immolation results in .a yearly
reevaluation ·of categories, and annually
somehow, the next Emmy Awards include more
categories.
But even that multi-irritation isn't what
affects TV. The Tony Awards, culled from the
more important art form of the thea ter but
which still affects smaller Broadway audiences
than films, which in tur n haul in fewer fans than
television, is · perfectly able intelligently to
reflect Ute limited legitimate stage and all its
works and romps. No TV viewer can be satisried
with the Emmys. Nor impressed .
• There was plenty to be depressed about:
The !tightening fact is that the Emmy Awards
propose to emphasize the telecasting influentials who in all communicative - ways
serve the public - 24 hours a day! Tbe day-today banalities are one thing; the Emmy
Awards, a year in preparation, cannot even

collect talents and creators into the allotted
time of the annua l program: make that annual
silliness.

Daughter's Home

Television is the medium in which the best
movies are butchered to fit around the far more
delicately treated commercials. The 90-minute
movies, for instance, end right on the clock's
dot: in fact, several minutes before the dot to

MASON - Clabe Mullins, a
native of Breathitt, Ky., who is
now making his home here
with a son-in-law and daughter,
Marion and Eleanor Reynolds,
Friday celebrated his 105th
birthday .
Although bedfast the past
two years, Mr. Mullins is alert
and interested in those around
him . He was born July 7, 1867 in
Brea th itt County, in the City of

network station's movie handler told us, our
oath, he managed to make his late-late commuter train after midnight, when the movie
being shown was longer than his suburban
conductor would wait, simply by lifting out one
or two entire reels of the film, always with
savage injury to its. continuity and credibility;
but he always made his train; and never once
was called on the network station's carpet to
answer for the disg raceful mutilation 1 The
viewers went to bed mystified and mad ; the
executives slept on, but stay up for the Emmys.

Noble.
He was a veterinarian
specializing in cattle but also
served eigh t yea rs as Htgh
Sheriff of Breathitt County . He
also in his lifetime has been a
farme r, having owned two
farms in Kentucky and one in
Ohio.
He has made his home with
his daughter, Mrs.' Reynolds
for the past 20 years. Asked his
secret for longevity , Mr .
Mullins smiled and remarked,
"lots of cornmeal and milk, fat
around beef, hard work and
plenty of rest."
Mr. Mullins has two other
daughters, in addi tion to Mrs.
Reynolds; Isabella Boling and
Nellie Jones of Willard, Ohio,
and a son, Pierce Mullins, of
Hazard , Ky., 35 grandchildren,
and about 75 great - gra ndchlldren.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
MIDDLEPORT - Mr . and
Mrs . Harold Stewart, Middleport, are announcing the
birth of a daughter on July 1, at
the Holzer Medical Center. The
six pound, eight ounce infant
has been named Kelly Irene.
Grandparents are Mrs.
Charles Radford, Jr., Pomeroy
and Mrs. Ellen Stewart,
Middleport. Mr.oand l Mrs .•.
Stewart
have
another
daughter, Kimberly AM, age
three.

PICNIC PLANNED
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association wlll hold its a!Ulual
picnic Saturday, July 15 at 5:30
p.m. at the state park on U.S.
Route 33. All newly retired
teachers and their husbands or
wives are invited. All those
attend ing are to bring a
covered dish and table service.

PARENTS VISITED
LONG
BOTTOM
Rosema ry Andrews spent
several days visi tin g her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Andrews and sister, Barbara,
of, Long Bottom. Also visiting
the Andrews' were their so n,
Paul, and wife Jill, of
Westerville.

'

make room for the fi nal commercials. One

Hymn Sing Held
POMEROY
The
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church held a religious and
patriotic hymn sing Sunda y
night.
Participating were Mr.
and Mrs. David Stauffer,
Athens; Mike Hazelton,
Kenneth Eberts, Rog er
Watson, Shirley Bumgardner, Peggy Brlckles, Mrs.
Betty Kern, Ray Alkire, Paul
McElroy, Gladys Cumings,
Charlotte Lambert and Ann
Lambert.
The Zion Youth Group
sa ng "He's Everything to
Me," and "Lel There be

Peace on Earth." Several
patriotic hymns and "God
Bless America" by the
congregation concluded the
program.

(Bahr Clothiers)
DAUGHTER BORN
MIDDLEPORT ~ Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Fox, Marysville,
Ohio, are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Teri Brook on
June 21 at Union County
Memorial Hospital. The infant
weighed seven pounds and
three ounces. Maternal
grandfather Is Hubert Taylor,
Middleport, paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Leroy Rausch and greatgrandfather Is Ted Gabriel, all
of Marysville. They also have a
son, Timmy age 3.

Semi-Annual

ClEIIKAKCE
SALE CONTINUES

OF
20% to 50%oFF
SAVINGS

Name Brands of Men's and
Women's Wearing Apparel.

l

Middleport

Rhea jeannette Mora Engaged

PETE SIM PSON, who served as chairman of the a!Ulual4th
of July parade at Racine, extends his thanks to all those who
assisted and participated. Pete says the cooperation given was
great and certainly appreciated.

Excellent Selection of Famous

Sympathy
Flowers

Serving :

Voice

Katie's Korner
. By Katie Crow

JS ..

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

Bacteria culture~? Rust on aa
aglog auto? Sunrise through log,
above, and, bombs away, below? Good questions, but
not even close . Camera exposures lakea Ia far ultraviolet light oa the Apollo 16 moon mlssloa produced
these surrealistic NASA photos of, above, the geoeoronoa, a halo of low-densfty hydrogea surrounding lhe
earth, and, below, the Magellaolc Cloud, a oelgbborlng
galaxy to our own but visible only from southern latf.
tudes. Reglslered are eml11iooa of very bot stars aDd
patches of hydrogen In the 1110 blllloa-tlar galaxy.

Wh Gt IS It?

NIECE HONORED
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
John McDermitt of near New
Raven , W. Va. entertained
recently with a party honoring
their niece, Jackie zerkle, on
her eighth birthday. A hayride
was a feature of the par!y.
Guests were Margaret Rizer,
Lucl Esola, David Esola, Mary
Ann Elias, Teresa Holstein.
Mary Zerkle , Clara and
Tonuny Zerkle, Bill and Opal
Zerkle, Dale, Carolyn and
Timothy Sayre, Oris Zerkle,
and JohMie, Janet and Scott
McDermitt.
The ea rth is the orlly
planet not named for a
Greek or Roman deity .

Br'Way

1.1 :,.~,tte:. ~s:~o~. ~~~ ~~f~~~~"

Did 24 writers really have to !ramp onstage
to honor Ute Carol Burnett Show• Ego is ego, but
why not just the head writer• Carol is a fine
comic lady - and now 50 million viewers are
convinced she can;! arise and say good morning
without a gagwriter.
The truly important winners of TV news
awards were voted ea rly and a phalanx of
previously announced winners flown to
Hollywood to stand in a row to be named best in
their assorted news categories. One spoke for
aiL In this most important of TV categories, the
wi!Ulers just stood there ; meanwhile 24 pieces of
Carol Burnett's sense of humor trailed onstage
and stopped the show just when it was going
bad ..Why not simply let one head writer - or
Carol - explain a variety show with multiplegoes! stars needs that small army to activate
Carol's clowning.
And did it really take the "governors" or the
TV Academy all year, all those years, to differentiate between a 26-week se ries and a
dramatic series imported from Britain. The
braided ca!tgories are no different today from
early TV when Bishop Fulton J. Sheen competed for an Emmy with Min;; Berle.
Now to another essential TV trauma : in that
class wherein English drama competed with
wildly disparate domestic shows, it's pertinent
to note that nothing American TV did in its thenpast season compared; nothing! U.S. TV has its
triumphs: we insist the Mary Tyler Moore Show
is a marvelously partic ular . American series
which can't be topped in any way: why
therefore hasn't Mary Tyler Moore herself won
one single Emmy over the several seasons of
this recognized splendid series' As for ArchEmmy Arch ie Bunker, who has walked off with
a couple of seasons of Emmy Awards, did
anyone there note it is an oulright imitation of
another English series' Shouldn't it have
received an award fo r Best Foreign Larceny
i.nstead•
It's a scary notion - the TV "experts" who
put on the an nual Emmy Awards show, a nd the
recipients of the awards as we watched them in
all their tasteless dullness and cheap pretensions -

are precisely the same

"creative ~~

characters who in one way or another, day in
and week out and month over and year after
year, pour their inanities into your living rooms
in the most powerful medium devised in the
history of communications. They have turned
television in most areas into the huge weakling
it is, the dinosaur of the arts and sciences of

members of Bethel 62, In- Sebo, Kim Sebo, Liz Blaettnar,
ternation,~l Order of Jobs Mary Blaettnar, l:.isa !homas,
Daughters were in Columbus · Becky Thom~s. Brenda
last weekend for the Grand Taylor, Debbie Taylor, and
Session of the Grand Council of Kathy Harris. They were
Ohio . The meeting was held at accompanied by Mrs. Debbie
the Neil House.
Finlaw, guardian, Mrs. Wanda
Going from here were Milisa Rizer, Mrs. Peggy Taylor , and
Mrs. Roseanne Sebo.
Announced at Grand Session
was the selection of Leanne

Temple tons
at Picnic

Sebo as grand representative

POMEROY - The family of
Lawton Templeton or Jackson
held a family
picnic
at
Hannerstown
La ke
last
Sunday .
Attendin g were, Edward Templeton and Betty of Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben ·(Da isy)
Batey and children, Marshall,
Bennie , Kathy , and Timmy o(
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs . Victor
(Lelia) Marchinconna of
Dayton: Mr. and Mrs. James
(Sarah) Conway and children,
Mickey, Pataric, and Joey of
Columbus, and Mr . Lawton
Templeton of Jackson.
The two children of Mr.
Templeton unable to attend

to the sta te of New Mexico and
Patti Well as "Jobie" of the
year for Bethel 62.
In the opening of Grand
Session~

Miss Rizer served as

Artificial
Arrangements
30% to
50%
011
Buy Today &amp; Save

Dudley's Aorist
Servi ng : Gallipolis,
POmeroy, Middleport, 0.
&amp; Mason Co ., W. Va .

BAKER'S

were Mrs . Oma Lee Martin and

daughters of Palymara, Pa.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Templeton ·and children of
Columbus.
The afternoon was spent in
fishing and playing softball and
badminton.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Lee Howell
and children, Dannie, Sherrie
and Eddie of Comfor t, W. Va.
stopped at the home of Edward
Templeton , Bailey Run to visit
his mother, Betty. The Howells
were enroute to Elyria to see
his sister and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Lee and daughters,
Patty, Linda and Gerrie. On
their way home they visited
Mr. Howell's father, Edward
Howell, Jr. of Pomeroy and his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Johnson of Racine.

JULY SPECIALS
FROM OUR BUDGET SHOP
s Pc. Dinette

$44.00
$78.00
$99.00
$ 4.88
$18.98
$58.00
$19.88

7 Pc . Dinette
9 Pc. Dinette
9xl2 Linoleum Rugs
22" Meta I Utility Cabinet
Sofa Beds
Book Case
Sliding Glass Door
Maple or walnut
Vinyl Recliners
Table Lamps
4 Drawer Chest
Springs-Mattress
( Fu II size per setl
2 Pc. Living Room Suite
3 Pc. Bedroom Suite
Baby Beds-with mattress
and bumper pad

CARSON IS HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Adrian
Carson has been discharged

POMEROY - A birthday A red, wh ite , and blue color from Veterans Memorial
party was given for Kelly th eme was used in table Hospital.
Wisecup, 6, on July 6 by his decorations. 1'ne cake was
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James de cora ted as a baseball
Wisecup , 109 Union Ave ., diamond with baseball ligures.
THIS WEEK'S
Pomeroy.
Favo rs
were
balloons,
Oames were played and miniature frogs, and baseballs.
SPECIAL
prizes awarded to winners.
After opening his gifts,
Each child received a prize . refreshm ents of cake, ice
cream, nuts, candy, and punch
;~:::::::::~~,:..;:~~::;::::~~::::;:::~.;:.::::=::::::::::::
were served to KeJJy, Jan
Betzing, Andy Riggs, Nicky
Riggs, Chris Shank, Cindy
So ul sby, Allen Spaulding,
Bryan Betzing, and Lorra
Miss Sandy zerkie spent the Wisecup.
Assisting with the party were
Fourth of July weekend in
SHEET MUSIC &amp;
Debbie
and Joe Wisecup and J.
Delroi t, Michigan visiting Mr.
and Mrs . Leonard Carol and D. Story.
USICAL INSTRU
Denny. Miss zerkle, who will
be a senior at Ohio State this
fall,. is curren tly employed in
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
the office of Dr . Harold Brown. Mrs. Richard E. Rathburn , 777
to! ow
William R. Zerkle of Oliver St., Middleport, are
Available
Sy racuse flew recently to announcing the birth of a nine
Eric
Paducah, Ky .-to board the M. pound, 11 ounce son, Richat-if
Chambers
S. Foremost, the boat which he Eugene II, on July 4 at the
pilots.
&amp;
Holzer Medical Center .
Mrs . Wilma Stobart is
Welfare Blues
Maternal grandparents are
recuperating at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Gilkey,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dixon Middleport, and the paternal
since her release from the grandparen ts a re
Mrs.
Holzer Medical Center.
Dorothy Rathburn, Columbus,
Lori Ann Pullins, daughter of and Francis Rathburn, MidMr. and Mrs. Bill Pullins, has dleport. Mr. and Mrs. Hurley
been in Children's Hospital, Gilkey, Middleport, and Mrs.
992-3680
Columbus, for medical Garnet Wise, Columbus; are
116 E. Main
l!eatment. She expected to great-grandparents. Mr. and
Pomeroy,
Ohio
return home this weekend.
Mrs . Rathburn ha ve a
Mr . and Mrs. John Weeks, daughter, Rhonda Renee, 21'..
Tom and Beth Ann, Gallipolis,
and Mr. and Mrs . Eldon Weeks
spent the Fourth of July at
Lake Alma near Wellston.
Mrs. Eldon Weeks, Mrs.
John Weeks and daughter,
Mary Beth, were at Louisville,
Ky. recently to visit Albert
Burkhart, brother-in-law of
Mrs . Eldon Weeks, who
recently underwent his second
surgery at St. Anthony's
Hospital there . His room
number is 306.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kelley,
Joe, Sharon and Sarah, Mrs.
Helen Wetzel, and Don Wetzel,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Crow, New
Philadelphia, were guests last
weekend of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Crow. They came
especially for the wedding of
Jim Crow and Pam Neiltzling.

3 ROOMS ALL NEW
FURNITURE

$48.00
$ 3.99
$33.75
$58.00
$119.00
$119.00
$39.00

'595

I ' I

I p:~~;(~.; .I

Son Born on 4th

Beautiful

DINNER Co-HOSTESS
CHESTER - Mrs. Reid
Young was c&lt;Htostess for the
dinner and meeting of the
Chester Garden Club Wednesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell. Also at
the meeting Mrs. Earl Ingels,
Jr. thanked members for the 14
table arrangements provided
lor. 'the Eastern Alumni
Associa lion in June.

communication.

Sixth Birthday Celebrated

associate grand guardian of
the Grand Council. L,iz
Blaettnar and Debbte Taylor
participated in the flag
ceremony, and Leanne Sebo
and Liz Blaettnar took part in
the Grand Council installation
along with other honored
queens and senior princesses of
Ohio.
Features of the four day
meeting included a swimming
party at the Aqua Marine Club,
a midnight movie at the Palace
Theatre, a day at Kings Island,
and a banquet.

Some call it wholesale
Some
it discount

call

We named it oru Budget Shop
Come see----Compare-

10% OFF

You 11 find the best values
at Baker's

BILL &amp; LEE'S

BAKER 0·;:,~
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TO SERVE YOU!

tJ··

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
OPEN FOR BUSINESS

SEMI-ANNUAL
• It's a GENUINE Mobile • A fl exible duct kit Ihat hooks
up eas ily to your existing
Home Central Air ·condiduct work.
tioner.
• A bigger blower motor for • Fast. easy installation, cOmbeltf;lr air circulation .

pletely out-of-doors.

• Amana Elec tro-coating fin· • Engineered for ouiet oper~
l ion, indoors and out.
ish for maximum rust protection.

•

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heritage house

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MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

AT

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•

Relax ... Drive in for a Delicious •••••u
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
ma It, shake, cone or sundae.

At Forked Run ·Lake Entrance
Long Bottom,

o.

Buffet
Luncheon
11:00 UNTIL 1:30

Monday thru Saturday

The New
AU. YOU
CAN EAT

1.50
Or
Dishes Individually
Priced

MEIGS
INN
Pomeroy

992-3629

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

'

'

,,
f

lt

•

••

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,

11-The Si8tday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 1972
"

10-The Sunday ,Times- Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 11172

Terrell-Spaun
Marriage-41ows
Taken june 2nd
. POMEROY - The First
Baptist Church here was the .
setting for the wedding of Miss
Ruth Ann Terrell, daughter of
Mrs. Anna Mae Terrell,"
Pomeroy, and Mr. Walter
Terrell, Pataskala, and Mr.
Bill Eugene Spaun, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Juni or Spaun ,
Racine .
The Rev . Robert Kuhn officiated at the double ring
ceremony at 7:30p.m. on Jun e
2 following a program of organ
music by Mrs. Robert Kuhn ,
Potted plants were used to
decorate the altar and white
bows marked the pews.
Given in marriage by her

Donna Marie Theiss to Wed 0
Terri Lynn Ash Betrothed

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Theiss of Racine
are announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter,
Donna Marie, to Mr. Daniel Bruce Sayre, son of Mrs. Doris
Rogers of Columbus and the late Mr. Derrell B. Sayre.
Miss Theiss is a graduate of Southern High School and
Ohio University where she majored in elementary education.
Mr. Sayre is a graduate of Columbus Eastmoor High School,
Columbus Technica l Institute and Ohio University where he
majored in business admin istration. An August 12 wedding is
being planned.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ash, Route I, Minersville, are an·
nouncing the engagement' of their daughter, Terri Lynn, to
Mr. William R, Wllliams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Williams,
Route 4, Pomeroy.
Miss Ash is a 1972 graduate of Southern High SchooL Mr.
Williams graduated from Meigs High School in 19fi9 and is
employed as a boiler maker at the Amos Plant, Winfield, w.
Va. A September wedding is being planned .

father, the bride wore a white
polyester crepe gown, fl oor
length, fashioned with an
empire waistline . Her veil of
illusion was floor length and
she carried a cascade
arrangement of carnations
from which fell white
sl!eamers tied in lovers knots.
Miss Kathy Ya tes of Middleport served as the bride's
maid of honor. She was tn a
yellow polyester dress, floor
length, with a matching headpiece and veil and carried

f'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::.·::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:::::::.:·:::::.;:;::::::::;:;:::&lt;::::;;:::;:;:::;::::::: white ca rn ations tipped in

yellow.
Mr . Lynnie Tennant se rved

:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: ~: :;:;:;.:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::~~

I

Social Calendar

iii

SUNDAY
REVIVAL starting July 6,
7:30 p. m. each evening at
Faith Tabernacle Church on
Bailey Run Road at Cross
Roads with Stella Carlyle as
evangelist. Rev . Emme tt
Rawson, pastor, extends invitation to public.
BASKET DINNER and
afternoon of fellowship at
games for United Methodist
Church in Northeast Cluster
Sunday at Forked Run State
Park. Reservations have been
made. Bring own table service.
Serving time, 1 p. m. Public
!Jelcome .
'l, ANNUAL PICNIC Modern
lfoodmen, Burlingham Camp
7230, Sunday at state park on
route 33 on left going south.
Potluck dinner at 1 ~:30 , prizes
for adults and juniors, 50 and 2S
year pins will be presented,
games for · all. Members ,
families and friends cordially
invited . Ethel Howard, Jun ior
Director .
MONDAY
WEEK-LONG rev iva l
beginning Sunday, Old Dexter

I
'@

MONDAY
ANNUAL
PICN IC of
Pomeroy Garden Club, 6:30
p.m. Monday, home of Mrs.
Walter Grueser.
MEIGS SALON 710, 8 and 40,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Racine
American Legion Hall: installation of officers, members
take housewares order.
TUESDAY
PINS TO 25 year members
when Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, meets at 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at temple. Master
Masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Committee meeting 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, with .Roger
Hooker speaking on "Today's
Drug Scene" and a film will be
shown,
GO[pEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Christ
picnic 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Route 33 Roadside Park .
WEDNESDAY
· PAST PRESIDENTS ,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, 6:30
Church, services, 8 p.m. each p.m. annual picnic at the Ohio
evening, Rev, Willard Dutcher, River campsite on the Owen
evangelist, special singing. Watson farm at Racine.
Public we leo me .
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DAV,
Monday, 7:30 at hall on ButVISIT BACHTELS
ternut Ave., with oflicers for
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
1972-73 to be installed. Refresh- Mrs. George Dallas and family
ments : members urged to of St. Paris were Thursday
attend .
overnight guests of Mr . and
WOME N'S SOCIETY of Mrs. Bill Matlack, Chester
Christian Service, Heath Road, and Mrs . Juanita
United Methodist Church . Bachtel and daughter, Carol,
Meeting will be held at 7:30 Middleport. Friday morning
Monday night in the par. they left for Ocean City, Md.
sonage. Mrs. Beulah Hayes for a vacation. Other recent
will give devotions with Mrs. visitors of the Bachtels were
Nan Moore to present the Mrs. Naiicy Anderson and
lesson. Hostesses will be Mrs . children, Shellle, Lori and Jeff,
L. W. McComas, Mrs. Alma of Buffalo, N. Y., and Mrs.
Miller, Mrs. Mary Reinhart, Thelma Howard of Gainesville,
and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy.
Fla .
GAMES COMM ITTEE,
Middl epor t Feeney Bennett
VISIT lN POMEROY
Post 128, will meet Monday
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
7:30 p.m. at post home. All . Leonard Russ of Cleveland are
interested members urged to spe nding the weekend in
attend .
Pomeroy.
They
came
POMEROY CHAMBER of especially to attend the wed- ·
Commerce Monday at noon at ding reception of Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs Inn .
Hobart Yowtg.

II you're flghling a
losing battle agai~sl
heal and humidity In
your Mobile Home ...

1Community • •
:~ C .
.
t82ndBirthday
t Orner By Charlene Hoefl1ch :,: .
::

. '1s Celebrated

POMEROY - Lt. Cmdr. and Mrs . Gene Crooks are home
after three .years in Japan.
The couple and their I \2-year old son, John Gregory, arrived
in Colwnbus on the Fourth of July, exactly three years from the
day they arrived in Japan.
This week they will be visiting in Middleport with Gene's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks, and then next week will
join Nanc)''S folks at their cabin on Lake Erie. From there they
will go to Washington D.C. on Aug. I, where Gene will begin a
year of post graduate training in the Dental School at the
Bethesda Naval Hospital, The family has taken a town house in
Rockville, Md. for the year.
Nancy and Gene, delighted to be home, admit however, that
they were heartsick to leave their Japanese friends . Most of their
American friends had returned to the States earlier this year.
They feel it was a real opportunity living in another culture and
they have nothing but praise for the Japanese people, describing
them as polite, industrious, and friendly. Another thing, Nancy
tells us, is that in Japan everyone works at some job. They are
such industrious people that where there seems to be no job, they
cr~te one.
The couple's experiences were varied during their three
years in Japan. They traveled extensively there and in India and
Malaysia prior to the birth of John Gregory . Nancy taught at the
Department of Defense School.
It was a good three years, but now they 're happy to be home .
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY at the Meigs County Fair is Thursday , Aug. 17, but Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, must know about two weeks before that
- about Aug . I - who in the over sixty group will be attending.
This is essential so that badges can either be mailed or
delivered to each senior citillen. It is necessary that these badges
be displayed at the fair gate entrance in order to get admitted for
half-price.
Now what Mrs. Thomas would like is for every senior citizen
planning to attend the fair that day to either contact her office
which is located over the Quality Print Shop in Middleport, 257 \2
Mill St., or telephone 992-7400, Pomeroy exchange, or 985-3542,
Chester excbange. Purpose of the call will be simply to indicate
that.you plan to attend and will need a badge, and to arrange
transportation If you need it.
Another thing - a senior citizens tent is being provided by
the Meigs County Fair Board, and Mrs. Thomas is anxious that
crafts be displayed there. Seating will be available in the tent
which will remain in place all five days of the fair. Anyone with
crafts to display or persons who might want to provide some kind
of entertainment are urged to contact Mrs. Thomas so that she
can really get moving on this first Senior Citizens Day at the
Meigs County Fair.
MAKING ASURPRISE visit in town Thursday was Clarence
Ruppelt, lather of the late Rev. Howard Ruppelt. He came
especially to visit the graves of his late wife and son and to call on
a lew of the many friends be made while living in Middleport
with his Presbyteri1111 minister son.
One of the things he did was to visit the church, a time, we're
. sure, ftir hilppy recollections. The overnight guest of Jean and
Vincent Dabo, he left early Friday morning for Missouri .
B1IJ. ZERKLE, with just one year to complete in law school
at Ohio State University, is spending the slimmer at Cape Cod.
No, he's not vacationing there. He's serving hash in a classy
restaurant and hoping for big tips to belp see him through that
final year at State.
DOOE PIERCE WILL be arriving any day now from
Belgium where she teaches at \be Supreme Allied Headquarters,
a part of NATO. Dixie has taught there for tbe past two years and
plans to return after a several weeks' visit here with her mother,
Dorothy. Mrs. Pierce spent two months in Belgium with her
daughter last fall.

FOR THE FIRST TIME since the Portland School was
closed a bantam baseball team has been formed. Mrs. Don
(Shirley) Johnson, manager of the team, reports that parents of
the Portland area donated money for suits and equipment.
Coaches are Greg Middleswart and Buttons Allen. The Portland team, after five games, remains undefeated having downed
Syracuse 15-11 Thursday night at POrtland. Congratulations boys
and keep up the good work .
THE HIGH WATER certainly ruined the baseball fie ld at
Upper Monkey (near Minersville) and to think of all the hard
work in getting it ready . Quite unusual to have high water in the
monlll of June.

nations.

The reception was held in the
church socia l room immediately following the
ceremony. The tiered wedding
cake was topped with . the
traditional miniature bride and
groom. A small bride doll
ce ntered the gift table .
Miss Kathy Durst of
Pomeroy , registered the
gues ts . The registr y table
included a bouquet of yellow
and white fl owers and yellow
net rice bags were given to the
guests.
Presiding at the reception
table were Mrs. John Dean and
Mrs. Donna Terrell, Miss
Bronwyn Dailey, Miss Joyce
Kerns and Miss Debbie
Wise cup.
For a wedding trip through
Ohio, the bride changed into an
orchid dress with white accessories and wore the carnation corsage from her bridal
bouquet.
Mr. and Mrs. Spaun reside at
Oak St. in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Spaun is a 1972 graduate of
Metgs High SchooL Mr. Spaun
is self-employed.

Tom Wolfes
t Reunton
'
1105

Daughter Bon:

On july Second

their first child , a nine pound,

Haynes, Watertown, Ohio.

POMEROY - It seems as though Meigs County may be a
harbor for many B!limals. Several tunes recently a black panther
)las been reported in a wooded area around and near Racine.
The fast moving animal is jet black, approximately five feet
long and weighs between 100 to 150 lbs. The animal has been see n
by several people on different occasions, so' this is not a fish tale.
It would be wise to take precaution if you're camping in
wooded areas,

as best man for the
bridegroom.
The mother of the bride was
hospitalized at the time of the
wedding and following the•
reception the bride and her
party visited th e Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. Kenneth ·
Markins, grandmother of the
bride, was attired in a blue
costume with white accessories and had a white
carnation corsage. Mrs. Spaun
was in a fl oral pink and blue
dress with white accessories
and also wore white car-

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Carl Moore entertained last
Surday with a dinner party
hon ori ng Mrs. Ernest Carpenter of Bidwell, their
weekend guest, on her 82nd
birthday anniversa ry.
Mrs. John Smith was a guest
for Ute dinner, Arriving that
evenin g with ice cream and
cake were Mrs. Carpenter's U
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul (Betty) Salllf"-•
ders and Paula of Bidwell, Mr .
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Loren Neal and Tom Wolfe of Letart Falls were
Kenny of Porter, and Mr. and hosts for a reunion of the
Mrs. Jeff Wi lson, Kelly and children and grandchildren of
Terri Jo of Pomeroy. The Mr. and Mrs. Wilson M. Wolfe.
Saunders and Neal families are
Attending were Mrs. Juanita
camping at Royal Oak Park. Justis and children, Pomeroy;
On Saturday evening Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur (Drusilla )
Carpenter and Mr. and Mrs. Harland children, New Haven,
Moore were guests of Mrs. W. Va .; Mr . and Mrs. George
John Smith . Mrs. Moore and Wolfe and children of MemMrs . Carpe nter also visited phis, Tenn .: Mrs . Joan Ranwith Mrs. Mildred Hayes and dolph and son. Reedsville; Mr.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy and Mrs. and Mrs. Wilson Wolf and sons,
Ca rpenter retu rned home Champayne, Ill ., Mr and Mrs.
Tuesday evening. Visiting last Frank (Sharon ) Steele and
Saturday at the Moore home daughters, Jacksonville, N.C.;
was Mrs. Mildred Spencer of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolfe and
Antiquity .
children, Letart Falls ; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Wolfe of Chester. Mr.
and Mrs. Davey Wolfe and
children of Antiquity were
unable to attend .
Others attending the family
reunion were Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Wolfe and grandsons,
Racine , Route 2; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jeffers and gra nddaughter, Syrac use; Miss
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Kathy Curry and Miss Kim
Har old G. Haynes, Parkers- Knight of New Haven, W. Va .,
burg, the former Karen Sayre, and Mr. and Mrs. Basil Casey
are announcing the birth of of Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
two ounce daughter, Angela
Fawn on July 2 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Sayre
of Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Willard L. Haynes of Parkersburg are the paternal grandparents . Maternal great grandpa,rents are Mr . and Mrs.
Okey Paynter of Portland and
paternal great - grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Archie T.

, Baskets
• Sprays
• Vases

Dudley's Aorist
Pomerov , Ga IIi polis
Mason Co .1 W. Va.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Mora, Route 3,
Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their daughter,
Rhea Jeannette, to Mr. Harry David Slawter, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hiram Slawter, Route 11 Middleport.
Miss Mora is a 1971 graduate of Eastern High School and
is currently enrolled as a sophomore at Ohio State University
in the College of Home Economics.
Her fiance is a 19fi9 graduate of Meigs High School and
will be a senior at Ohio State University in the College ·of
Agriculture. He is employed this summer with the Soil
Conservation Service in Delaware County. No date has been
set for the wedding.

Wedding Plans Complete
precede the ceremony. Mrs.
Otis McClintock of Racine will
be the soloist.
Mrs . Larry Wiles of Racine
will serve as mal!on of honor
for the bride, and the bridesmaids will be Mrs. Marty
Morarity, Co lumbus; Miss
Jane Johnson, Racine, and
Miss Annette Warner, Minersville .
Mr. Keith Van Inwagen will
serve as best man for his
brother, and the ushers will be
Mr. Mick Menchini of Cross
Lanes,
W. Va.; Mr. Jerry
ON DEAN'S LIST
Davis,
Gallipolis,
and Mr. John
POMEROY
Seven
students of Meigs County were Jotuuoon, Rio Goande, .,
named to the Ohio State
University spring quar ter
CHILDREN VISITED
honor roll qualify ing with an
LONG
BOTTOM - Mrs.
average of at least 3.5. They
Paul Andrews and daughter,
are Hazel Lea Kiser, Dexter
Barbara, of Long Bottom,
Route I ; Harry David Slawter,
spent several days visiting
Middleport Route I; Don Mrs. Andrews' children, Paul
Mitchell Anderson, Deborah
and Jill of Westerville, and
Ann Crow, John Bradford Rosemary and Michael of
Lohse, Margaret Lynn Story Columbus. They also visited
and Richard Paul Werner, all
with Mrs. Andrews' sister
of Pomeroy .
Mrs. Nora McCrery.
'

POMEROY - Wedding
plans have been completed for
the open church wedding or
Miss Linda Grindstaff and Mr . .
Jerry Van lnwagen.
.
The wedding will be an event
of July 16, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Wesleya n United Methodist
Church of Racine. The Rev.
Dale McClurg will officiate. A
half-hour of music by Mrs .
Garrett Circle, Racine, will

Kentuckian Celebrates
105th Birthday at

&amp;
&amp;

a~o~g

BY .JACK O'BRIAN
THEY'RE THEIR OWN ·
WORST EMMYS
NEW YORK (KFS) - O'Brian At Large :
There's something rotten in Television and it's
not only "All in the Family" or the slanting
news nor tbe length or taste of the commercia Is :
it's the Emmys.
This annual flat imitation of the Oscars
award shows, in turn a pale vulgarization of the
smartly accomplished Tony Awards, manages
to extend its insulting stupidities year into year.
Each season-end the Emmys appear on TV and
the annual accurate essential criticism is of its
endless categories. Each •post-Emmy orgy of
critical immolation results in .a yearly
reevaluation ·of categories, and annually
somehow, the next Emmy Awards include more
categories.
But even that multi-irritation isn't what
affects TV. The Tony Awards, culled from the
more important art form of the thea ter but
which still affects smaller Broadway audiences
than films, which in tur n haul in fewer fans than
television, is · perfectly able intelligently to
reflect Ute limited legitimate stage and all its
works and romps. No TV viewer can be satisried
with the Emmys. Nor impressed .
• There was plenty to be depressed about:
The !tightening fact is that the Emmy Awards
propose to emphasize the telecasting influentials who in all communicative - ways
serve the public - 24 hours a day! Tbe day-today banalities are one thing; the Emmy
Awards, a year in preparation, cannot even

collect talents and creators into the allotted
time of the annua l program: make that annual
silliness.

Daughter's Home

Television is the medium in which the best
movies are butchered to fit around the far more
delicately treated commercials. The 90-minute
movies, for instance, end right on the clock's
dot: in fact, several minutes before the dot to

MASON - Clabe Mullins, a
native of Breathitt, Ky., who is
now making his home here
with a son-in-law and daughter,
Marion and Eleanor Reynolds,
Friday celebrated his 105th
birthday .
Although bedfast the past
two years, Mr. Mullins is alert
and interested in those around
him . He was born July 7, 1867 in
Brea th itt County, in the City of

network station's movie handler told us, our
oath, he managed to make his late-late commuter train after midnight, when the movie
being shown was longer than his suburban
conductor would wait, simply by lifting out one
or two entire reels of the film, always with
savage injury to its. continuity and credibility;
but he always made his train; and never once
was called on the network station's carpet to
answer for the disg raceful mutilation 1 The
viewers went to bed mystified and mad ; the
executives slept on, but stay up for the Emmys.

Noble.
He was a veterinarian
specializing in cattle but also
served eigh t yea rs as Htgh
Sheriff of Breathitt County . He
also in his lifetime has been a
farme r, having owned two
farms in Kentucky and one in
Ohio.
He has made his home with
his daughter, Mrs.' Reynolds
for the past 20 years. Asked his
secret for longevity , Mr .
Mullins smiled and remarked,
"lots of cornmeal and milk, fat
around beef, hard work and
plenty of rest."
Mr. Mullins has two other
daughters, in addi tion to Mrs.
Reynolds; Isabella Boling and
Nellie Jones of Willard, Ohio,
and a son, Pierce Mullins, of
Hazard , Ky., 35 grandchildren,
and about 75 great - gra ndchlldren.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
MIDDLEPORT - Mr . and
Mrs . Harold Stewart, Middleport, are announcing the
birth of a daughter on July 1, at
the Holzer Medical Center. The
six pound, eight ounce infant
has been named Kelly Irene.
Grandparents are Mrs.
Charles Radford, Jr., Pomeroy
and Mrs. Ellen Stewart,
Middleport. Mr.oand l Mrs .•.
Stewart
have
another
daughter, Kimberly AM, age
three.

PICNIC PLANNED
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association wlll hold its a!Ulual
picnic Saturday, July 15 at 5:30
p.m. at the state park on U.S.
Route 33. All newly retired
teachers and their husbands or
wives are invited. All those
attend ing are to bring a
covered dish and table service.

PARENTS VISITED
LONG
BOTTOM
Rosema ry Andrews spent
several days visi tin g her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Andrews and sister, Barbara,
of, Long Bottom. Also visiting
the Andrews' were their so n,
Paul, and wife Jill, of
Westerville.

'

make room for the fi nal commercials. One

Hymn Sing Held
POMEROY
The
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church held a religious and
patriotic hymn sing Sunda y
night.
Participating were Mr.
and Mrs. David Stauffer,
Athens; Mike Hazelton,
Kenneth Eberts, Rog er
Watson, Shirley Bumgardner, Peggy Brlckles, Mrs.
Betty Kern, Ray Alkire, Paul
McElroy, Gladys Cumings,
Charlotte Lambert and Ann
Lambert.
The Zion Youth Group
sa ng "He's Everything to
Me," and "Lel There be

Peace on Earth." Several
patriotic hymns and "God
Bless America" by the
congregation concluded the
program.

(Bahr Clothiers)
DAUGHTER BORN
MIDDLEPORT ~ Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Fox, Marysville,
Ohio, are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Teri Brook on
June 21 at Union County
Memorial Hospital. The infant
weighed seven pounds and
three ounces. Maternal
grandfather Is Hubert Taylor,
Middleport, paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Leroy Rausch and greatgrandfather Is Ted Gabriel, all
of Marysville. They also have a
son, Timmy age 3.

Semi-Annual

ClEIIKAKCE
SALE CONTINUES

OF
20% to 50%oFF
SAVINGS

Name Brands of Men's and
Women's Wearing Apparel.

l

Middleport

Rhea jeannette Mora Engaged

PETE SIM PSON, who served as chairman of the a!Ulual4th
of July parade at Racine, extends his thanks to all those who
assisted and participated. Pete says the cooperation given was
great and certainly appreciated.

Excellent Selection of Famous

Sympathy
Flowers

Serving :

Voice

Katie's Korner
. By Katie Crow

JS ..

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

Bacteria culture~? Rust on aa
aglog auto? Sunrise through log,
above, and, bombs away, below? Good questions, but
not even close . Camera exposures lakea Ia far ultraviolet light oa the Apollo 16 moon mlssloa produced
these surrealistic NASA photos of, above, the geoeoronoa, a halo of low-densfty hydrogea surrounding lhe
earth, and, below, the Magellaolc Cloud, a oelgbborlng
galaxy to our own but visible only from southern latf.
tudes. Reglslered are eml11iooa of very bot stars aDd
patches of hydrogen In the 1110 blllloa-tlar galaxy.

Wh Gt IS It?

NIECE HONORED
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
John McDermitt of near New
Raven , W. Va. entertained
recently with a party honoring
their niece, Jackie zerkle, on
her eighth birthday. A hayride
was a feature of the par!y.
Guests were Margaret Rizer,
Lucl Esola, David Esola, Mary
Ann Elias, Teresa Holstein.
Mary Zerkle , Clara and
Tonuny Zerkle, Bill and Opal
Zerkle, Dale, Carolyn and
Timothy Sayre, Oris Zerkle,
and JohMie, Janet and Scott
McDermitt.
The ea rth is the orlly
planet not named for a
Greek or Roman deity .

Br'Way

1.1 :,.~,tte:. ~s:~o~. ~~~ ~~f~~~~"

Did 24 writers really have to !ramp onstage
to honor Ute Carol Burnett Show• Ego is ego, but
why not just the head writer• Carol is a fine
comic lady - and now 50 million viewers are
convinced she can;! arise and say good morning
without a gagwriter.
The truly important winners of TV news
awards were voted ea rly and a phalanx of
previously announced winners flown to
Hollywood to stand in a row to be named best in
their assorted news categories. One spoke for
aiL In this most important of TV categories, the
wi!Ulers just stood there ; meanwhile 24 pieces of
Carol Burnett's sense of humor trailed onstage
and stopped the show just when it was going
bad ..Why not simply let one head writer - or
Carol - explain a variety show with multiplegoes! stars needs that small army to activate
Carol's clowning.
And did it really take the "governors" or the
TV Academy all year, all those years, to differentiate between a 26-week se ries and a
dramatic series imported from Britain. The
braided ca!tgories are no different today from
early TV when Bishop Fulton J. Sheen competed for an Emmy with Min;; Berle.
Now to another essential TV trauma : in that
class wherein English drama competed with
wildly disparate domestic shows, it's pertinent
to note that nothing American TV did in its thenpast season compared; nothing! U.S. TV has its
triumphs: we insist the Mary Tyler Moore Show
is a marvelously partic ular . American series
which can't be topped in any way: why
therefore hasn't Mary Tyler Moore herself won
one single Emmy over the several seasons of
this recognized splendid series' As for ArchEmmy Arch ie Bunker, who has walked off with
a couple of seasons of Emmy Awards, did
anyone there note it is an oulright imitation of
another English series' Shouldn't it have
received an award fo r Best Foreign Larceny
i.nstead•
It's a scary notion - the TV "experts" who
put on the an nual Emmy Awards show, a nd the
recipients of the awards as we watched them in
all their tasteless dullness and cheap pretensions -

are precisely the same

"creative ~~

characters who in one way or another, day in
and week out and month over and year after
year, pour their inanities into your living rooms
in the most powerful medium devised in the
history of communications. They have turned
television in most areas into the huge weakling
it is, the dinosaur of the arts and sciences of

members of Bethel 62, In- Sebo, Kim Sebo, Liz Blaettnar,
ternation,~l Order of Jobs Mary Blaettnar, l:.isa !homas,
Daughters were in Columbus · Becky Thom~s. Brenda
last weekend for the Grand Taylor, Debbie Taylor, and
Session of the Grand Council of Kathy Harris. They were
Ohio . The meeting was held at accompanied by Mrs. Debbie
the Neil House.
Finlaw, guardian, Mrs. Wanda
Going from here were Milisa Rizer, Mrs. Peggy Taylor , and
Mrs. Roseanne Sebo.
Announced at Grand Session
was the selection of Leanne

Temple tons
at Picnic

Sebo as grand representative

POMEROY - The family of
Lawton Templeton or Jackson
held a family
picnic
at
Hannerstown
La ke
last
Sunday .
Attendin g were, Edward Templeton and Betty of Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben ·(Da isy)
Batey and children, Marshall,
Bennie , Kathy , and Timmy o(
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs . Victor
(Lelia) Marchinconna of
Dayton: Mr. and Mrs. James
(Sarah) Conway and children,
Mickey, Pataric, and Joey of
Columbus, and Mr . Lawton
Templeton of Jackson.
The two children of Mr.
Templeton unable to attend

to the sta te of New Mexico and
Patti Well as "Jobie" of the
year for Bethel 62.
In the opening of Grand
Session~

Miss Rizer served as

Artificial
Arrangements
30% to
50%
011
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Dudley's Aorist
Servi ng : Gallipolis,
POmeroy, Middleport, 0.
&amp; Mason Co ., W. Va .

BAKER'S

were Mrs . Oma Lee Martin and

daughters of Palymara, Pa.,
and Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Templeton ·and children of
Columbus.
The afternoon was spent in
fishing and playing softball and
badminton.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Lee Howell
and children, Dannie, Sherrie
and Eddie of Comfor t, W. Va.
stopped at the home of Edward
Templeton , Bailey Run to visit
his mother, Betty. The Howells
were enroute to Elyria to see
his sister and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Lee and daughters,
Patty, Linda and Gerrie. On
their way home they visited
Mr. Howell's father, Edward
Howell, Jr. of Pomeroy and his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Johnson of Racine.

JULY SPECIALS
FROM OUR BUDGET SHOP
s Pc. Dinette

$44.00
$78.00
$99.00
$ 4.88
$18.98
$58.00
$19.88

7 Pc . Dinette
9 Pc. Dinette
9xl2 Linoleum Rugs
22" Meta I Utility Cabinet
Sofa Beds
Book Case
Sliding Glass Door
Maple or walnut
Vinyl Recliners
Table Lamps
4 Drawer Chest
Springs-Mattress
( Fu II size per setl
2 Pc. Living Room Suite
3 Pc. Bedroom Suite
Baby Beds-with mattress
and bumper pad

CARSON IS HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Adrian
Carson has been discharged

POMEROY - A birthday A red, wh ite , and blue color from Veterans Memorial
party was given for Kelly th eme was used in table Hospital.
Wisecup, 6, on July 6 by his decorations. 1'ne cake was
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James de cora ted as a baseball
Wisecup , 109 Union Ave ., diamond with baseball ligures.
THIS WEEK'S
Pomeroy.
Favo rs
were
balloons,
Oames were played and miniature frogs, and baseballs.
SPECIAL
prizes awarded to winners.
After opening his gifts,
Each child received a prize . refreshm ents of cake, ice
cream, nuts, candy, and punch
;~:::::::::~~,:..;:~~::;::::~~::::;:::~.;:.::::=::::::::::::
were served to KeJJy, Jan
Betzing, Andy Riggs, Nicky
Riggs, Chris Shank, Cindy
So ul sby, Allen Spaulding,
Bryan Betzing, and Lorra
Miss Sandy zerkie spent the Wisecup.
Assisting with the party were
Fourth of July weekend in
SHEET MUSIC &amp;
Debbie
and Joe Wisecup and J.
Delroi t, Michigan visiting Mr.
and Mrs . Leonard Carol and D. Story.
USICAL INSTRU
Denny. Miss zerkle, who will
be a senior at Ohio State this
fall,. is curren tly employed in
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
the office of Dr . Harold Brown. Mrs. Richard E. Rathburn , 777
to! ow
William R. Zerkle of Oliver St., Middleport, are
Available
Sy racuse flew recently to announcing the birth of a nine
Eric
Paducah, Ky .-to board the M. pound, 11 ounce son, Richat-if
Chambers
S. Foremost, the boat which he Eugene II, on July 4 at the
pilots.
&amp;
Holzer Medical Center .
Mrs . Wilma Stobart is
Welfare Blues
Maternal grandparents are
recuperating at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Gilkey,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dixon Middleport, and the paternal
since her release from the grandparen ts a re
Mrs.
Holzer Medical Center.
Dorothy Rathburn, Columbus,
Lori Ann Pullins, daughter of and Francis Rathburn, MidMr. and Mrs. Bill Pullins, has dleport. Mr. and Mrs. Hurley
been in Children's Hospital, Gilkey, Middleport, and Mrs.
992-3680
Columbus, for medical Garnet Wise, Columbus; are
116 E. Main
l!eatment. She expected to great-grandparents. Mr. and
Pomeroy,
Ohio
return home this weekend.
Mrs . Rathburn ha ve a
Mr . and Mrs. John Weeks, daughter, Rhonda Renee, 21'..
Tom and Beth Ann, Gallipolis,
and Mr. and Mrs . Eldon Weeks
spent the Fourth of July at
Lake Alma near Wellston.
Mrs. Eldon Weeks, Mrs.
John Weeks and daughter,
Mary Beth, were at Louisville,
Ky. recently to visit Albert
Burkhart, brother-in-law of
Mrs . Eldon Weeks, who
recently underwent his second
surgery at St. Anthony's
Hospital there . His room
number is 306.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kelley,
Joe, Sharon and Sarah, Mrs.
Helen Wetzel, and Don Wetzel,
Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Crow, New
Philadelphia, were guests last
weekend of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Crow. They came
especially for the wedding of
Jim Crow and Pam Neiltzling.

3 ROOMS ALL NEW
FURNITURE

$48.00
$ 3.99
$33.75
$58.00
$119.00
$119.00
$39.00

'595

I ' I

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Son Born on 4th

Beautiful

DINNER Co-HOSTESS
CHESTER - Mrs. Reid
Young was c&lt;Htostess for the
dinner and meeting of the
Chester Garden Club Wednesday evening at the home of
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell. Also at
the meeting Mrs. Earl Ingels,
Jr. thanked members for the 14
table arrangements provided
lor. 'the Eastern Alumni
Associa lion in June.

communication.

Sixth Birthday Celebrated

associate grand guardian of
the Grand Council. L,iz
Blaettnar and Debbte Taylor
participated in the flag
ceremony, and Leanne Sebo
and Liz Blaettnar took part in
the Grand Council installation
along with other honored
queens and senior princesses of
Ohio.
Features of the four day
meeting included a swimming
party at the Aqua Marine Club,
a midnight movie at the Palace
Theatre, a day at Kings Island,
and a banquet.

Some call it wholesale
Some
it discount

call

We named it oru Budget Shop
Come see----Compare-

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You 11 find the best values
at Baker's

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�,_ _____..____________________
_,
!Beat. ..

HAZEL Swanson, 41 Grape St., Gallipolis, recently received
a picture (below) from her son, Jim Swanson, Dayton.

&amp;f!s.

. '

•

.. :

I

I

II Of the. Bend
I
I By Bob Hoeflich

II
I

!

POMEROY- Would you believe an Ohio American Eskimo
Association?
Nenie B. Rose,' 2~08 County Road &gt;7, Hunlsville 'Route 2,
hopes to form such an IIJ!SOciation at her home July 23, at 1:30
p.m. Mrs. Rose wants to bear !tom anyone who would like to
attend the orgauizational meeting and who will be accompanying
them since a picnic lunch is to be served. Mrs. Rose writes that
she is a member of the National American Eskimo Assn.

'·

MEMBERS OF THE GLO-ETTES of Mrs. Gloria Buck
Wallace must be weary travelel'll .
Last Sunday, they were in Lancaster where they took f~rst
place in state com{JeJ.i.~oo. On Monday, they took a first place in
McArthur and on Tuesday tbey were in Gallipolis where they
also took a first place.
MR. AND MRS. HERMAN BARKER, former residents of
North Third Ave., Middleport, are now living in Cottondale, Fla.,
and loving it.
The Barkers attempted to make their home here upon their
retirement but didn't fare too well, due to the weather (who
does?). They had always lived in the South and didn't ~djust. In
fact, Herman had to be hospitalized with flu in two different
hospitals while enroute South!
WHAT A NICE, PLEASANT informal atmosphere Mrs.
Patrick Lochary creates for the annual recital of her piano
students. The idea, of course, is to put the students - a bit concerned over their approaching appearances - at ease.
Attending one of the Lochary recitals, one hopes that the
Locbary warmth.·a'ria graciousness has rubbed off on the many
piano students over tbe years. Mr. Lochary, of course, is always
on hand to record tbe recitals.

I ami

VALUE' PLUS

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT
PLASTIC
ASPHALT
ROOF
CEMENT

2 GALLON
CAN

MIAMI BEACH (U P!)Both frontnmner George S.
McGovern · and challenger
Hubert H. Humphrey ruled out
Saturday any chance of
compromise on the California
delegate seating fight, ensuring a bitter floor fight when
the convention opens Monday.
After a closed meeting with
Democratic governors at the
Fontainebleau Hotel, Hum·
phrey said that the dispute
over 271 California delegates
crucial to Mc-Govern's hopes
must go to the convention floor
Monday night.
He rejected McGovern's attempts to arrange a compromise that would permit him to
claim the full delegation. and

88
GALLON

++++

c

VOL VII NO. 23

++++
RALPH Kunze, president of the Ohio Society for the
Prevention of Blindness, Inc., Columbus, announced recently
that.Herman Dillon, third vice president of tbe Galltpolis Uons
Club, has been reelected a voting member of the Ohio Society for
the calendar year 1972. Dillon is past treasurer of the Uons Club.

++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of tbe Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Dr. Thomas Morgan, specialist in
general surgery, joins Holzer Hospital staff here ... Bob Vesner,
ex-Blue Devil football player and marine, dies of head and neck
injuries received in swimming accident in California ... Kiwanis
Club announces plans to build youth camp in Rio Grande area ...
Post office operations to cease in Mercerville ... Bob Shertzer
named head football coach at Pt. Pleasant High School .. . Dwight
Williams tosses no-hitter as Queen Bees dump Ravenswood, 10-3,
in OVA baseball contest.
.

BEVERLY PRICE OF PORTLAND and her cousin, Bonnie
Goede, Winchester, Va., have returned from a two week tour of
Europe. They visited 10 countries, including Spain, Italy,
Austria, Germany, Switzerland, LAixembow-g, Belgiwn, France
and England.
,
They saw the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace,
visited many famous musewns, took boat rides on the Rhine,
visited tbe Vatican and other poinls of interest.
Putting a bit of a damper on the trip, however, was flying
from Heathrow Airport in London two days after the tragic plane
crash that kille~ over 100 people. A temporary morgue had been
set up at the airport and It wasn't the most pleasant situation to
come down the pike.
Miss Price is a teacher at the Syracuse Elementary School.

Ferguson Keeps . Bargain Boatmg
. Gm'de
MIAMI BEACH (UP! ) - The
Democratic National Convention is not yet under way
but its first souvenir is enroute
to the man who didn't make
it-Ohio's No. I citizen.'
State Auditor Joseph T. Fer-·
guson, a delegate for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, has sent
Gov. John J. Gilligan a crate of
Florida oranges as a memento
of the convention in tbe Sunshine State.
Gilligan, who favored Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie for the
Democratic presidential
nomination, was not elected as
a delegate and is not attending
the convention as a delegate.
"We made an agreement
when we were on the same

platform together earlier this
year that whichever one of us
went to the convention would
send the other a box of
oranges," Ferguson said. "I
had them sent to his office."

R ••

eVISIOD

R d
ea

_

Y

COLUMBUS - A revised
publication, "Boating
Facilities and Information
Guide for the State of Ohio," is
now available from the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources.
END LOSING STREAK
The guide, prepared by the
NEW YORK (UP!) - John division of watercraft,
Milner scored the decisive run provides boaters with locations
on a wild pitch in the seventh of public launching facilities,
inning and the New York Mels public lakes and reservoirs,
went on to score two insurance dam and lock locations on the
runs in the e1ghth Satw-day to Ohio and Muskingwn rivers,
defeat the Los Angeles boating safety tips and buoy
Dodgers, 4-1, and snap a three- marker identifications. Special
game losing streak.
facilities and regulations at

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!) - An intense search
developed this weekend in the
state's rugged mountains of the
Northern Panhandle for a
missing plane with a family of
three aboard.
Radio contact was last made
with the Mooney Marc-10
shor tly after it left Colwnbus.
Ohio, early last Sunday on ils
destination to Law-el, Md .,
from Junction City, Kan.
AbOard 1!Jf !!Iii!• w!l"e pUot
Robert Vincellf of Junction
City, his wife and infant child.
A night plan wasn't filed.

REG. PRICE

rather than the small portion in
the vicinity of the Chagrin
River as planned.
Droeske said he would have
lost all of his bees if a neighbor
had not phoned him to say the
plane was spraying the neigh·
horhood. He said his bees were
returning in droves to the hives
when the Malathion was
dropped from the plane.
The mosquito spraying took
place after an unsuccessful attempt by environmentalists to
stop it. They went to federal
court in Cleveland for a restraining order, but Judge Ben
C. Green ruled his court had no
jurisdiction.
Lake County Health Director
Fred Kluth said tbe spraying
was necessary to fight reported
cases of California sleeping
sickness, animal diseases and
the nuisance factor of mosquitoes.

11

We 've got a orettv heavv

NOW

LONG PON D, Pa . (UP!) An estimated 200,000 youths
jammed the highways and
filled a huge auto race track in
this tiny Pocono resort town·
Saturday for a peaceful rock
festival
reminiscent of
, Woodstock.
Rock fans climbed fences at
the Pocono International Race·
way, abandoned their cars on
the sides of clogged roadways
and created headaches for
squads of state police who tried
to untangle massive traffic
jams that tied up roadways for
six miles in all directions.
Promoters who originally
planned only a one-day concert, said the festival could last
over the weekend. Rock
groups, led by "Three Dog
Night" were airlifted by
helicopters onto the field as
makeshift Ienis sprung up and
a $200,000 public add,ess
system crackled with the
sounds of music.
State police said some fans,
caught in the traffic, pulled
their cars to the side of the road
and walked as many as eight
miles to the track. Leaves were
cancelled and troopers,
already hard pressed because
of a devastating flood in the
area, were called to the scene.
"There are at least 200,000
people here, at least,'' said a
state police lieutenant Oil the
scene. "I was looking down the
road, trying to see the end of
the line but I couldn't see lt."
No dldurbances were reported, and the nearby Monroe
County General Hospital reported it treated only 15 persons for minor cuts and
txvises.
There were reports of sales
of drugs and marijuana at the
festival grounds, but there
were only a few patients ~ a
drug treatment center set up at
the track. Two helicopters
stood by, along with five
ambulances, for emergency

public lakes and reservoirs are
also included.
The 19-page booklet is
illustrated with full-color
pictures and is available
without charge from the
Publications Center, Department of Natural Resources,
1500 Dublin Road, Colwnbus,
Ohio 43215.

in Paris for the talks and left
open the possibility that he also
would go to the French capital
for secret negotiations.
Kissinger met with newsmen
following a week-long review of
the Vietnam situation with
President Nixon at the Western
White House. He said his chief
deputy, Maj . Gen. Alexander
Haig, had found during a factfinding trip to South Vietnam
last week that' the Communist

" Happy Days Are Here
Again," as McGovern arrived
for the climax of his "people's
campaign" for the presidency.
which began in January , 1971.
"TI1is is the beginning of the
most important mission, filled
with high adventure," he told a
welcoming crowd standing in a
light rain. "In at! probability it
wit! be a typical Democratic
convention-hard fought and
slighUy turbulent."
McGovern said he was
confident not only that he'd win
the nomination but will "retire
Richard Nixon in November."
Asked after his brief speech
whether he could win the
nomination without all of
California's votes, the senator

PAGE 13

effort underway," said Col.
Earl Hammack, deputy
commander here of the West
Virginia wing of the Civil Air
Patrol.
"There are people searching
all over the northern part of the
state . Some in the air and some
on the ground, and some people.
are in terrogating residents of
the area ," he said .
All efforts to date have
produced no trace of the air·
craft . ltammack said the
search was being focused along
a line from Clarksburg to
Elkins to Martinsburg .

offensive there had passed its
pea k and that the North
Vietnamese do not not now
appear to have the capability
to launch another such massive
attack.
Kissinger said the period
since President Nixon's
Moscow summit had been one
of intense diplomatic activity
during which the United States
had conveyed to Hanoi through
direct and indirect contact that
the time for serious negotiations has long been overdue.
Systematic Discussions
He said the United States
was approaching the talks,
which were broken off May 4th
after North Vietnam launched
a massive offensive in the
south, with the idea of holding
systematic discussions to find
a just solution to the war.
He added: "We bave some
reason to believe that perhaps
,they will approach these
negotiations in something like
the same spirit, at least we
have some reason to believe
they have a new approach."
He said that while the U.S.
side was prepared to discuss a
comprehensive settlement of
the Vietnam problem, the

80,000 persons for the festival,
but that fans from as far away
as Colorado began arriving
Thw-sday night.
Early arrivals, unable to find
parking spaces, ringed their
cars around the track, virtually sealing it off. They set up
ca mps in the surrounding
woods aod a ring of small
bonfires glowed throughout the
night as cars packed the roads.
More than 100,000 were inside the track by 1 p.m., the
starting time of the concert,
while thousands more made
their way to the festival.
"It looks like a pretty clean
cut crowd," said one eyewitness. "I don't see many beards
or blue jeans. Their hair is
fairly short and some are
dressed in contemporary

replied: "I don't know. I am
convinced that all Zll delegates
fr om Ealifornia will lH!
seated ."
McGovern forces in the
credentials floor fight will be
directed by Mrs. Jeanne
Westwood, a national committeewoman from Utah whom
McGovern previousl¥ had
mentioned as a possible new
Democratic National Chairman to succeed Lawrence F .
O'Brien.
As .McGovern took personal
command of his battle, the
figure emerging as the
kingmaker in the struggle
between the senator and his
foes was Sen. Edmund S.
Muskie of Maine.

fr

President thought the best
approach would be to concentrate the negotiations on ending military hostilities and
leave a political solution on the
future of Vietnam to the North
and South Vietnamese .
"We are prepared to discuss
with them means of giving the
people of Vietnam an opportunity to determine their
own future," Kissinger said.
"However, our experience has
been that the political issue is
an extremely complex one and
in the light of ow- experience
we believe it would be better to
have it discussed by the people
of Vietnam themselves."
MIDDLEPORT - Gene
U.S. Rejects Coalition
Riggs, insurance agent and
He said the United States still housing deve loper of Chester
rejected Hanoi's insistence on township, said here Friday
a coa lition government in the night the presidency of the
south . as "simply a thinly Middlepor t-Pomeroy Rotary
veiled device to bring about a Club is an honor and a
Communist controlled govern- challenge.
ment."
Installed by Paul Smart,
President Nixon, in a speech Riggs began his "Rotary year"
May 8, offered to pull out all with appropriate inaugural
American troops from South remarks in which he said
Vietnam within low- months members' :wives - Rotary
after an Indochina-wide cease- Allni .:.. 'whl be guestS each
fire and a retw-n of all month there is a fifth Friday,
American priSoners of war.
and that a year-around atKissinger appeared guar- tendance contest will be
dedly optimistic about chances arranged.
for suc"7ss at Par1s and left ~ Two chairmen will be ap,
unpress1_on that both Moscow pointed at the next meeting
and Pekmg have had a role m when fitting penalties for
urgmg Hanoi to take a more losers each month also will be
reasonable approach.
established .
Asked about a repo_rt·by UPI
Riggs received from Mr.
European Diplomatic Carre- Smart, president of the
spondent K.C. Thaler from Citizens National Bank of
London that Hanoi's two chief Middleport, the Bob Coats
clothes."
alhes had _urged Hanoi to be Rotating Pin commemorating
There were indications that m~re flexible , Kissinger re- the late Middleport Rotarian,
some of the traffic jams which phed :
Bob Coats.
hit the two major highways"It seems conceivable to us
Ladies of Heath United
Interstate 80 and 81- were that just as we brief our allies Methodist Church served
slowly clearing up. State police about the content of high-level dinner~6 p.m. in the social
said they planned to tow some disc~s10ns . so perhaps the room of · church. A guest of
of the cars parked off the high- Sov1et Un10n and Peoples the ne president was William
way in an effort to get traffic Republic of China have in- Hoyer of the John Hancock Ins.
moving again.
formed Hanoi of the co., of Colwnbus.
State police in New Jersey discussions they have been
said most of the traffic prol&gt;- having with us."
lems on roadways in the state
KARACHI TORN
leading into Pennsylvania
KARACHI,
Pakistan (UPI)
were over, but that one highTRIAL TO OPEN
way Rte. 46, was still packed
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The - Thousands of Pakistanis
with cars.
long delayed trial of Daniel barricaded streets, ransacked
The security inside the Ellsberg for theft of the Pen- stores and fought with police
festival grounds was being tagon Papers gets underway Saturday after learning that
handled by some 30 guards Monday, more than a year the Sind provincial assembly
hired by the track, plus sheriffs after the publication of the had voted to make Sindhi the
deputies brought in from sur- docwnenls dealing with the only official language in the
rounding counties.
origins of the Vietnam War .
area.

Riggs

()

,.

FOIL
OPEN SUNDAY 12:00 'TIL 6:00

M&amp;R SHOPPING
CENTER OHIO
MIDD~EPORT,

"The President also feels
that the agreement is a tribute
to tbe immense productivity of
America's farme(s which
makes possible export sales of
this magnitude.
"Finally, in terms of foreign
policy the Prl!!lident considers
this agreement a very importaot concrete forward step in
the commercial relations between the United States and the
Soviet Uhion w~ch benefits
both countries. As such, it
builda on the accomplishments

~

GAVEL RECEIVED - The two men passing the gavel are Paul Smart, left, and Gene
Riggs, new president of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club. Left to right, participating in
the ceremony are Charles Blakeslee, retiring president; the Rev. Bob Kuhn, treasw-er; John
Werner, secretary ; John Will , retiring vice-president, and Harold E. Hubbard (almost
masked) the new vice-president.

IS

Installed

Soviets Buy Record Pile of Grain
from dates of deliveries. Total
amount of credit oulstanding is
not to exceed $500 million.
Boost For Farmers
"It will provide grain farmers with a hoost in income,"
said Ziegler. "It will also
provide jobs for Americans
involved in shipping the grain,
including longshoremen, sea·
men, expo_rters, railroad and
barge line workers. It will
reduce the cost to taxpayers of
storage, handling and other
charges associated with maintalnlng commodity stocks.

y ..1

"'-

•

$750,000 Worth to be Delivered over Three Years

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif . .
(UP!)-The Soviet Union and
the United States Saturday
signed an agreement under
which the Russians agreed to
buy $7ii0 million worth of U.S.
brown grain over a three-year
period - the
largest
agricultural commodities
transaction ever made lietween two nations.
During the first year of the
agreement, beginning Aug . 1,
the Soviet Union will purcbase
at least $200 million of U.S
'grain--a inix of wheat, corn,
sorghum, rye, barley and oats
at the option of the Russians.
Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler said President
Nixon was pleased to amounce
the agreement which he said
· will give fil)ancial belp to
American grain farmers and to
other~ such as longshoremen
and shippers.
U.S. prlvate'commerclal exporters will negotiate sales
cases.
with the Soviet Union at 6'4 per
David Alley, production co- cent Interest through the
ordinator of the event, said the Commodity Credit Corporation
promoters had expected some for repaymenl in three years

ALUMINUM

St., as final touches are made to the large structure. The
store is shooting for an early Augnst op!'lling.

to stick with the rules."
McGovern declared there
·was no legal basis for un,
seating any of the delegates he
won in the primaries. He said
the attempt was only "part of a
stop-McGovern movement by
other ca ndidates."
Gov. John J. Gilligan of Ohio,
one of McGoverit's agents
among the governors, warned
that "they're going to have a
bloody fight" unless the candidates agree to give a little. The
result, he said, might be to
"shatter the party 's chances in
November."
McGovern is confident
At the airport, a small ba nd
struck up a tinny version of the
Democratic theme song,

,;}I

"
',
1

of the swnmit meeting in
Moscow last month."
Henry Kissinger, Nixon's
chief national security adviser,
told newsmen negotiations
leading to the agreement on a
long term basis were started
by Maurice Stans, then
secretary of commerce, during
a visit last November and
December to the Soviet Union.
President Nixon touched on the
subject at the swnmit meeting
in May.
Signed iu Washington
Russia sent M,. R. Kuzrnin,
first deputy foreign trade
minister, to Washington two
weeks ago and he signed the
agreement along with Peter G.
Peterson, present commerce
secretary, and Earl Butz,
secretary -of agriculture,
Saturday morning .
Peterson will visit the Soviet
Union iii the latter part of Ibis
month to discuss what Kissln•
ger described as a comprebensive new approach to U.S.·
:. Soviet economic relations
which would Include a possible
maritime agreement, set-

tlement of old Lend-Lease
debts, and a possible extension
of more credit.
Kissinger said one of the
problems connected with the
grain agreement was the attitude of U.S. lahar unions
about working Soviet ships. He
said he believed this problem
was solved or very near to
solution and details would be
announced when it was fully
worked out.
He said it was his understanding that some ships other
than those flying the Soviet flag
would be used to carry the
grain lo Russia.
Kissinger said the 11\ree-year
agreement was the largest
grain deal ever concluded
between two countries and he
also believed it was for the
longest term. The deal will
make the Soviet Union the
se'cond largest foreign consumer of U.S grain. Japan is
currently the largest by virtue
of $437 million in average
purchases per year over the
last three years.

~

I

\
1

Pocono Resort Jammed
By 200,000 Rock Fans

I.G.A. 18"x25'

DEa&gt;RATIVE SIIINGLES are going up alQ!Ig the roof
section of the new Jones Boys Store on Pomeroy's West Main

SUNDA!t', JULY 9, 1972

Search Pressed

Beekeepers Hurt
EASTLAKE, Ohio (UPI) Aerial spraying for mosquitoes
in Lake County caught beekeepers in here unprepared
and Saturday they were
protesting the loss of bees.
One beekeeper, Gordon
Droeske said iiO percent of his
bees were lying dead in his
back yard and he intends to
consult his attorney.
The spray plane allegedly
sprayed all of tasUake Friday

drizzle. he ,declared that "the.
American people are hungry
for some idealism," blunt talk
and change in the political
system, and tl1at he was offering all three to the convention.
McGovern once briefly
threatened to bolt the party
when his winner-take-all
triumph in California was
overturned. But Saturday he
said "we intend to conduct
ourselves with dignity and
honor and with respect for our
competitors,"
·
He said he would compromise on th e Daley
delegation, but "as far as I'm
ccncerned the rule is clear on
California ... and we will have

Mellow Hanoi Expected
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI) - President Nixon's
chief diplomatic strategist said
Saturday it appeared Hanoi
would take a new and more
reasonable approach to
negotiating an end to the
Vietnam War when peace talks
resume next Thursday.
Dr . Henry A. Kissinger told
newsmen he ex pected Le Due
Tho and Xuan Thuy, Hanoi's
two top negotiators, would be

AS USUAL, SOME excellent stage presentations are being
featured at tbe Ohio Valley Summer Theater at Ohio Univessity.
Upcoming presentations include "Fiddler on the Roof," which
holds the record for Broadway runs; "Play It Again, Sam" and
11
The American Dream."
For reservations or information you can write the theater at
P. 0 . Box 303, Athens.
·

regain the full 271-vote delegation he won in the June 6
primary, only to lose between
1&gt;1 and 133 of them in the party
Credentials Committee's decision last week.lle lost his court
fight for the full delegation
Friday night when the
Supreme Court ruled that the
convention must decide the
issue.
McGovern, to whom the
California votes are crucial for
a first ballot nomination ,
arrived an hour late aboard a
chartered airliner after a
storm-tossed flight from Washington.
Gilligan urges flexibility
Standing under a candystriped awn ing in a light

(

Meigs Local School District was $3,074.21 - to be paid by the
district, of course. There were 1,997 voters who turned out at the
polls. That's an avera~e cost of $1.54 per vote.

LOOSE !lOTES- Larry Snowden, 1972 GAHS graduate, and
a standout on the football, basketball aod track squads, is headed
for Ohio Wesleyan University this fall. Larry hopes to give
athletics a whirl in college. Understand the Bishops need a
punter, kickoff man and quarterback on the football team.
Snowden can do all three ... Four members of the Greene County
Sky Diving Club made that second jump and landed right on
target during last Tuesday's River Recreation Festival. We
stated only two made the second jump after strong winds carried
all four way off target on the first try. Somehow, we missed two
jumpers while trying to get some pictures ... Don Warehime, Jr.,
chairman of the 1972 River Recreation Festival parade, sponsored by the Jaycees, is to be commended for an outstanding job
in putting this year's event together. We bad the parade starting
10 minutes late, but Don assured us tbat it began right on
schedule. One thing for sure. It was the highlight of this year's
festival.

'thus regain a power base for a Hwnphrey's adamant stand.
McGovern arrives late
first ballot presidential
nomination.
Asked if any compromise ori
McGovern's lieutenants California was possible, the
were lobbying the governors to party's unsuccessful 1968
sup_port a deal under which the nominee said: "I think a good
South Dakotan would consent compromise in Calilornia is 120
to seating the ousted &gt;9· votes for McGcvern and 106 for
member Chicago delegation Hwnphrey ." .
led by Mayor Richard J. Daley
Equally as adamant was
in excbange for the governors' McGovern. "Tbere is no room
backing of McGovern's claim for any compromise at all," he
to the full California .said as he arrived in the convention city to take personal
delegation.
Several of the governors said command of his campaign
they hoped a compromise fight.
"As far as I'm concerned the
could be reached to avoid a
bloodbath at the Democratic rule is clear on California ...
convention's opening session and we will have to stick with
only two days away, but their the rules.''
McGovern is fighting to
doubts were underscored by

_..ertain

ar

e

•

•

•

cosr of the recent special election on the tax levy in the

Swanso'rr said it was taken by some of Jim's friends. If you look
real close, it appears the figure of Christ is standing atop the
dark cloud in this unusual photo.

•

'I

'

'

.(

,/
&lt;/

,

'

,
'

OFFICERS AND DIRECI'ORS - New officers and directors of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club are, seated, John Werner, secretary; Gene Riggs, president; standing, Dennis
Keney, John Will, Charles Blakeslee, directors; the Rev. Bob Kuhn, treasurer, and llarold E.
Hubbard, vice-president.

Wallace also., May .Bolt
MIAMI BEACH (UPI )Gov . George C. Wallace's
campaign manager has raised
the possibility the crippled
Alabaman might become a
third-party candidate this fall
unless the Democrats challj)e
their platform .
"How can he make any kind
of compromise with McGovern's plaiform?" asked
Charles Snider, making very
clear that the party must
revise ils platform if it expects
Wallace to support the nominee.
Noting that George S. McGovern, Hubert H. Humphrey
and Edmund S. Muskie have
agreed on a platform written in
Washington before the conven·
tion, Snider told United Press
International that President
Nixon would "ride a bulldozer"
over the Democrats if they ran
on that set of party principles.
l'm not Ulreatening anyone," Snider said, but "the
possibility looms in the background of a third-party that
will be there until November."
No Wallace Balk
But Snider assured the party
that Wallace "under no circumstances" would walk out of
the convention.
11

~'It's

all the way, win or

lose," Snider said of Wallace's
determination to . change the
platform. "We're not going to
walk away from a fight.
"The platform they bave Is
showing a complete distrust of
the people," he added. "Here's
a Democratic Party not trusting the people."
On Friday, when he arrived

for the convention in a
wheelchair, Wallace took
sharp issue with the compromise campaign document
that a 15().member Platform
Committee drew up in advance
of Monday's opening session.
" Workingman Overlooked"
He
objected
most
strenuously to its pro-busing
stand and a call for reduced
military spending . Wallace
also claimed tbal the document
overlooked the average
working man in its preoccupation with noisy minorities.
Wallace's campaign director
said the governor would
support any floor move to strip
McGovern of up to 153
California Jlelegates and
"We'll go with Mayor (Richard
J.) Daley , stand shoulder-to-

shoulder with him" in the
Dlinois credentials challenge.
While insisting Wallace still
was a candidate for the
nomination, Snider conceded
that the platform was his
overriding concern now. Asked
whether McGovern was the
candidate Wallace was most
interested in stopping, Snider
said: "I would say be is the
man most closely 180 degrees_
opposite to the governor's
philosophy ."
Snider noted that Hwnphrey
lost tbe 1968 election by 350,000
votes and said Wallace could
swing that many in any election. Wallace, be added, Is the
"only one capable of drawing
off Republican votes. So you
better have him on the ticket."

~~=~:!:::!:~:~:•:•::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;::::::::...-.::::::::::::::&gt;.:::::::::~::::::::.-:::::::~:::~::::::..::::::::::::~

·-:-

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UltiTTUJ.tum Given on Busing ~~

::::

MIAMI BEACH (UP!) -Leaving open the possibfllty
of a third-party campaign this fall, Gov. George C.
Wallace's campaign manager called OQ George S.
McGovern Saturday to Insist that the Democratic coo·
ventlon adopt a platform more ''respo111ive to the people."
Charles Solder told a news conference thai he
specifically wanted the frontrunner lor the Democratic
presidential nomlnalloo to wort for an anllbaslog plaolt In
the party's campaign document.
"I want Sen. McGovern to call on bill delegates to adopl
a platform respo01ive to the people," Solder told reperten.
The party Wtll have to loot to Wallace If it ill to put
tugetber a wiuolng Ucket iu November, be said. Making
clear that Wallace's support of the nominee this fall bloged
on the platform, Solder asked: ''How can be malte aay ldod
of com(lfomlse with McGovern's platform?"

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!Beat. ..

HAZEL Swanson, 41 Grape St., Gallipolis, recently received
a picture (below) from her son, Jim Swanson, Dayton.

&amp;f!s.

. '

•

.. :

I

I

II Of the. Bend
I
I By Bob Hoeflich

II
I

!

POMEROY- Would you believe an Ohio American Eskimo
Association?
Nenie B. Rose,' 2~08 County Road &gt;7, Hunlsville 'Route 2,
hopes to form such an IIJ!SOciation at her home July 23, at 1:30
p.m. Mrs. Rose wants to bear !tom anyone who would like to
attend the orgauizational meeting and who will be accompanying
them since a picnic lunch is to be served. Mrs. Rose writes that
she is a member of the National American Eskimo Assn.

'·

MEMBERS OF THE GLO-ETTES of Mrs. Gloria Buck
Wallace must be weary travelel'll .
Last Sunday, they were in Lancaster where they took f~rst
place in state com{JeJ.i.~oo. On Monday, they took a first place in
McArthur and on Tuesday tbey were in Gallipolis where they
also took a first place.
MR. AND MRS. HERMAN BARKER, former residents of
North Third Ave., Middleport, are now living in Cottondale, Fla.,
and loving it.
The Barkers attempted to make their home here upon their
retirement but didn't fare too well, due to the weather (who
does?). They had always lived in the South and didn't ~djust. In
fact, Herman had to be hospitalized with flu in two different
hospitals while enroute South!
WHAT A NICE, PLEASANT informal atmosphere Mrs.
Patrick Lochary creates for the annual recital of her piano
students. The idea, of course, is to put the students - a bit concerned over their approaching appearances - at ease.
Attending one of the Lochary recitals, one hopes that the
Locbary warmth.·a'ria graciousness has rubbed off on the many
piano students over tbe years. Mr. Lochary, of course, is always
on hand to record tbe recitals.

I ami

VALUE' PLUS

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT
PLASTIC
ASPHALT
ROOF
CEMENT

2 GALLON
CAN

MIAMI BEACH (U P!)Both frontnmner George S.
McGovern · and challenger
Hubert H. Humphrey ruled out
Saturday any chance of
compromise on the California
delegate seating fight, ensuring a bitter floor fight when
the convention opens Monday.
After a closed meeting with
Democratic governors at the
Fontainebleau Hotel, Hum·
phrey said that the dispute
over 271 California delegates
crucial to Mc-Govern's hopes
must go to the convention floor
Monday night.
He rejected McGovern's attempts to arrange a compromise that would permit him to
claim the full delegation. and

88
GALLON

++++

c

VOL VII NO. 23

++++
RALPH Kunze, president of the Ohio Society for the
Prevention of Blindness, Inc., Columbus, announced recently
that.Herman Dillon, third vice president of tbe Galltpolis Uons
Club, has been reelected a voting member of the Ohio Society for
the calendar year 1972. Dillon is past treasurer of the Uons Club.

++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of tbe Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Dr. Thomas Morgan, specialist in
general surgery, joins Holzer Hospital staff here ... Bob Vesner,
ex-Blue Devil football player and marine, dies of head and neck
injuries received in swimming accident in California ... Kiwanis
Club announces plans to build youth camp in Rio Grande area ...
Post office operations to cease in Mercerville ... Bob Shertzer
named head football coach at Pt. Pleasant High School .. . Dwight
Williams tosses no-hitter as Queen Bees dump Ravenswood, 10-3,
in OVA baseball contest.
.

BEVERLY PRICE OF PORTLAND and her cousin, Bonnie
Goede, Winchester, Va., have returned from a two week tour of
Europe. They visited 10 countries, including Spain, Italy,
Austria, Germany, Switzerland, LAixembow-g, Belgiwn, France
and England.
,
They saw the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace,
visited many famous musewns, took boat rides on the Rhine,
visited tbe Vatican and other poinls of interest.
Putting a bit of a damper on the trip, however, was flying
from Heathrow Airport in London two days after the tragic plane
crash that kille~ over 100 people. A temporary morgue had been
set up at the airport and It wasn't the most pleasant situation to
come down the pike.
Miss Price is a teacher at the Syracuse Elementary School.

Ferguson Keeps . Bargain Boatmg
. Gm'de
MIAMI BEACH (UP! ) - The
Democratic National Convention is not yet under way
but its first souvenir is enroute
to the man who didn't make
it-Ohio's No. I citizen.'
State Auditor Joseph T. Fer-·
guson, a delegate for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, has sent
Gov. John J. Gilligan a crate of
Florida oranges as a memento
of the convention in tbe Sunshine State.
Gilligan, who favored Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie for the
Democratic presidential
nomination, was not elected as
a delegate and is not attending
the convention as a delegate.
"We made an agreement
when we were on the same

platform together earlier this
year that whichever one of us
went to the convention would
send the other a box of
oranges," Ferguson said. "I
had them sent to his office."

R ••

eVISIOD

R d
ea

_

Y

COLUMBUS - A revised
publication, "Boating
Facilities and Information
Guide for the State of Ohio," is
now available from the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources.
END LOSING STREAK
The guide, prepared by the
NEW YORK (UP!) - John division of watercraft,
Milner scored the decisive run provides boaters with locations
on a wild pitch in the seventh of public launching facilities,
inning and the New York Mels public lakes and reservoirs,
went on to score two insurance dam and lock locations on the
runs in the e1ghth Satw-day to Ohio and Muskingwn rivers,
defeat the Los Angeles boating safety tips and buoy
Dodgers, 4-1, and snap a three- marker identifications. Special
game losing streak.
facilities and regulations at

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!) - An intense search
developed this weekend in the
state's rugged mountains of the
Northern Panhandle for a
missing plane with a family of
three aboard.
Radio contact was last made
with the Mooney Marc-10
shor tly after it left Colwnbus.
Ohio, early last Sunday on ils
destination to Law-el, Md .,
from Junction City, Kan.
AbOard 1!Jf !!Iii!• w!l"e pUot
Robert Vincellf of Junction
City, his wife and infant child.
A night plan wasn't filed.

REG. PRICE

rather than the small portion in
the vicinity of the Chagrin
River as planned.
Droeske said he would have
lost all of his bees if a neighbor
had not phoned him to say the
plane was spraying the neigh·
horhood. He said his bees were
returning in droves to the hives
when the Malathion was
dropped from the plane.
The mosquito spraying took
place after an unsuccessful attempt by environmentalists to
stop it. They went to federal
court in Cleveland for a restraining order, but Judge Ben
C. Green ruled his court had no
jurisdiction.
Lake County Health Director
Fred Kluth said tbe spraying
was necessary to fight reported
cases of California sleeping
sickness, animal diseases and
the nuisance factor of mosquitoes.

11

We 've got a orettv heavv

NOW

LONG PON D, Pa . (UP!) An estimated 200,000 youths
jammed the highways and
filled a huge auto race track in
this tiny Pocono resort town·
Saturday for a peaceful rock
festival
reminiscent of
, Woodstock.
Rock fans climbed fences at
the Pocono International Race·
way, abandoned their cars on
the sides of clogged roadways
and created headaches for
squads of state police who tried
to untangle massive traffic
jams that tied up roadways for
six miles in all directions.
Promoters who originally
planned only a one-day concert, said the festival could last
over the weekend. Rock
groups, led by "Three Dog
Night" were airlifted by
helicopters onto the field as
makeshift Ienis sprung up and
a $200,000 public add,ess
system crackled with the
sounds of music.
State police said some fans,
caught in the traffic, pulled
their cars to the side of the road
and walked as many as eight
miles to the track. Leaves were
cancelled and troopers,
already hard pressed because
of a devastating flood in the
area, were called to the scene.
"There are at least 200,000
people here, at least,'' said a
state police lieutenant Oil the
scene. "I was looking down the
road, trying to see the end of
the line but I couldn't see lt."
No dldurbances were reported, and the nearby Monroe
County General Hospital reported it treated only 15 persons for minor cuts and
txvises.
There were reports of sales
of drugs and marijuana at the
festival grounds, but there
were only a few patients ~ a
drug treatment center set up at
the track. Two helicopters
stood by, along with five
ambulances, for emergency

public lakes and reservoirs are
also included.
The 19-page booklet is
illustrated with full-color
pictures and is available
without charge from the
Publications Center, Department of Natural Resources,
1500 Dublin Road, Colwnbus,
Ohio 43215.

in Paris for the talks and left
open the possibility that he also
would go to the French capital
for secret negotiations.
Kissinger met with newsmen
following a week-long review of
the Vietnam situation with
President Nixon at the Western
White House. He said his chief
deputy, Maj . Gen. Alexander
Haig, had found during a factfinding trip to South Vietnam
last week that' the Communist

" Happy Days Are Here
Again," as McGovern arrived
for the climax of his "people's
campaign" for the presidency.
which began in January , 1971.
"TI1is is the beginning of the
most important mission, filled
with high adventure," he told a
welcoming crowd standing in a
light rain. "In at! probability it
wit! be a typical Democratic
convention-hard fought and
slighUy turbulent."
McGovern said he was
confident not only that he'd win
the nomination but will "retire
Richard Nixon in November."
Asked after his brief speech
whether he could win the
nomination without all of
California's votes, the senator

PAGE 13

effort underway," said Col.
Earl Hammack, deputy
commander here of the West
Virginia wing of the Civil Air
Patrol.
"There are people searching
all over the northern part of the
state . Some in the air and some
on the ground, and some people.
are in terrogating residents of
the area ," he said .
All efforts to date have
produced no trace of the air·
craft . ltammack said the
search was being focused along
a line from Clarksburg to
Elkins to Martinsburg .

offensive there had passed its
pea k and that the North
Vietnamese do not not now
appear to have the capability
to launch another such massive
attack.
Kissinger said the period
since President Nixon's
Moscow summit had been one
of intense diplomatic activity
during which the United States
had conveyed to Hanoi through
direct and indirect contact that
the time for serious negotiations has long been overdue.
Systematic Discussions
He said the United States
was approaching the talks,
which were broken off May 4th
after North Vietnam launched
a massive offensive in the
south, with the idea of holding
systematic discussions to find
a just solution to the war.
He added: "We bave some
reason to believe that perhaps
,they will approach these
negotiations in something like
the same spirit, at least we
have some reason to believe
they have a new approach."
He said that while the U.S.
side was prepared to discuss a
comprehensive settlement of
the Vietnam problem, the

80,000 persons for the festival,
but that fans from as far away
as Colorado began arriving
Thw-sday night.
Early arrivals, unable to find
parking spaces, ringed their
cars around the track, virtually sealing it off. They set up
ca mps in the surrounding
woods aod a ring of small
bonfires glowed throughout the
night as cars packed the roads.
More than 100,000 were inside the track by 1 p.m., the
starting time of the concert,
while thousands more made
their way to the festival.
"It looks like a pretty clean
cut crowd," said one eyewitness. "I don't see many beards
or blue jeans. Their hair is
fairly short and some are
dressed in contemporary

replied: "I don't know. I am
convinced that all Zll delegates
fr om Ealifornia will lH!
seated ."
McGovern forces in the
credentials floor fight will be
directed by Mrs. Jeanne
Westwood, a national committeewoman from Utah whom
McGovern previousl¥ had
mentioned as a possible new
Democratic National Chairman to succeed Lawrence F .
O'Brien.
As .McGovern took personal
command of his battle, the
figure emerging as the
kingmaker in the struggle
between the senator and his
foes was Sen. Edmund S.
Muskie of Maine.

fr

President thought the best
approach would be to concentrate the negotiations on ending military hostilities and
leave a political solution on the
future of Vietnam to the North
and South Vietnamese .
"We are prepared to discuss
with them means of giving the
people of Vietnam an opportunity to determine their
own future," Kissinger said.
"However, our experience has
been that the political issue is
an extremely complex one and
in the light of ow- experience
we believe it would be better to
have it discussed by the people
of Vietnam themselves."
MIDDLEPORT - Gene
U.S. Rejects Coalition
Riggs, insurance agent and
He said the United States still housing deve loper of Chester
rejected Hanoi's insistence on township, said here Friday
a coa lition government in the night the presidency of the
south . as "simply a thinly Middlepor t-Pomeroy Rotary
veiled device to bring about a Club is an honor and a
Communist controlled govern- challenge.
ment."
Installed by Paul Smart,
President Nixon, in a speech Riggs began his "Rotary year"
May 8, offered to pull out all with appropriate inaugural
American troops from South remarks in which he said
Vietnam within low- months members' :wives - Rotary
after an Indochina-wide cease- Allni .:.. 'whl be guestS each
fire and a retw-n of all month there is a fifth Friday,
American priSoners of war.
and that a year-around atKissinger appeared guar- tendance contest will be
dedly optimistic about chances arranged.
for suc"7ss at Par1s and left ~ Two chairmen will be ap,
unpress1_on that both Moscow pointed at the next meeting
and Pekmg have had a role m when fitting penalties for
urgmg Hanoi to take a more losers each month also will be
reasonable approach.
established .
Asked about a repo_rt·by UPI
Riggs received from Mr.
European Diplomatic Carre- Smart, president of the
spondent K.C. Thaler from Citizens National Bank of
London that Hanoi's two chief Middleport, the Bob Coats
clothes."
alhes had _urged Hanoi to be Rotating Pin commemorating
There were indications that m~re flexible , Kissinger re- the late Middleport Rotarian,
some of the traffic jams which phed :
Bob Coats.
hit the two major highways"It seems conceivable to us
Ladies of Heath United
Interstate 80 and 81- were that just as we brief our allies Methodist Church served
slowly clearing up. State police about the content of high-level dinner~6 p.m. in the social
said they planned to tow some disc~s10ns . so perhaps the room of · church. A guest of
of the cars parked off the high- Sov1et Un10n and Peoples the ne president was William
way in an effort to get traffic Republic of China have in- Hoyer of the John Hancock Ins.
moving again.
formed Hanoi of the co., of Colwnbus.
State police in New Jersey discussions they have been
said most of the traffic prol&gt;- having with us."
lems on roadways in the state
KARACHI TORN
leading into Pennsylvania
KARACHI,
Pakistan (UPI)
were over, but that one highTRIAL TO OPEN
way Rte. 46, was still packed
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The - Thousands of Pakistanis
with cars.
long delayed trial of Daniel barricaded streets, ransacked
The security inside the Ellsberg for theft of the Pen- stores and fought with police
festival grounds was being tagon Papers gets underway Saturday after learning that
handled by some 30 guards Monday, more than a year the Sind provincial assembly
hired by the track, plus sheriffs after the publication of the had voted to make Sindhi the
deputies brought in from sur- docwnenls dealing with the only official language in the
rounding counties.
origins of the Vietnam War .
area.

Riggs

()

,.

FOIL
OPEN SUNDAY 12:00 'TIL 6:00

M&amp;R SHOPPING
CENTER OHIO
MIDD~EPORT,

"The President also feels
that the agreement is a tribute
to tbe immense productivity of
America's farme(s which
makes possible export sales of
this magnitude.
"Finally, in terms of foreign
policy the Prl!!lident considers
this agreement a very importaot concrete forward step in
the commercial relations between the United States and the
Soviet Uhion w~ch benefits
both countries. As such, it
builda on the accomplishments

~

GAVEL RECEIVED - The two men passing the gavel are Paul Smart, left, and Gene
Riggs, new president of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club. Left to right, participating in
the ceremony are Charles Blakeslee, retiring president; the Rev. Bob Kuhn, treasw-er; John
Werner, secretary ; John Will , retiring vice-president, and Harold E. Hubbard (almost
masked) the new vice-president.

IS

Installed

Soviets Buy Record Pile of Grain
from dates of deliveries. Total
amount of credit oulstanding is
not to exceed $500 million.
Boost For Farmers
"It will provide grain farmers with a hoost in income,"
said Ziegler. "It will also
provide jobs for Americans
involved in shipping the grain,
including longshoremen, sea·
men, expo_rters, railroad and
barge line workers. It will
reduce the cost to taxpayers of
storage, handling and other
charges associated with maintalnlng commodity stocks.

y ..1

"'-

•

$750,000 Worth to be Delivered over Three Years

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif . .
(UP!)-The Soviet Union and
the United States Saturday
signed an agreement under
which the Russians agreed to
buy $7ii0 million worth of U.S.
brown grain over a three-year
period - the
largest
agricultural commodities
transaction ever made lietween two nations.
During the first year of the
agreement, beginning Aug . 1,
the Soviet Union will purcbase
at least $200 million of U.S
'grain--a inix of wheat, corn,
sorghum, rye, barley and oats
at the option of the Russians.
Presidential Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler said President
Nixon was pleased to amounce
the agreement which he said
· will give fil)ancial belp to
American grain farmers and to
other~ such as longshoremen
and shippers.
U.S. prlvate'commerclal exporters will negotiate sales
cases.
with the Soviet Union at 6'4 per
David Alley, production co- cent Interest through the
ordinator of the event, said the Commodity Credit Corporation
promoters had expected some for repaymenl in three years

ALUMINUM

St., as final touches are made to the large structure. The
store is shooting for an early Augnst op!'lling.

to stick with the rules."
McGovern declared there
·was no legal basis for un,
seating any of the delegates he
won in the primaries. He said
the attempt was only "part of a
stop-McGovern movement by
other ca ndidates."
Gov. John J. Gilligan of Ohio,
one of McGoverit's agents
among the governors, warned
that "they're going to have a
bloody fight" unless the candidates agree to give a little. The
result, he said, might be to
"shatter the party 's chances in
November."
McGovern is confident
At the airport, a small ba nd
struck up a tinny version of the
Democratic theme song,

,;}I

"
',
1

of the swnmit meeting in
Moscow last month."
Henry Kissinger, Nixon's
chief national security adviser,
told newsmen negotiations
leading to the agreement on a
long term basis were started
by Maurice Stans, then
secretary of commerce, during
a visit last November and
December to the Soviet Union.
President Nixon touched on the
subject at the swnmit meeting
in May.
Signed iu Washington
Russia sent M,. R. Kuzrnin,
first deputy foreign trade
minister, to Washington two
weeks ago and he signed the
agreement along with Peter G.
Peterson, present commerce
secretary, and Earl Butz,
secretary -of agriculture,
Saturday morning .
Peterson will visit the Soviet
Union iii the latter part of Ibis
month to discuss what Kissln•
ger described as a comprebensive new approach to U.S.·
:. Soviet economic relations
which would Include a possible
maritime agreement, set-

tlement of old Lend-Lease
debts, and a possible extension
of more credit.
Kissinger said one of the
problems connected with the
grain agreement was the attitude of U.S. lahar unions
about working Soviet ships. He
said he believed this problem
was solved or very near to
solution and details would be
announced when it was fully
worked out.
He said it was his understanding that some ships other
than those flying the Soviet flag
would be used to carry the
grain lo Russia.
Kissinger said the 11\ree-year
agreement was the largest
grain deal ever concluded
between two countries and he
also believed it was for the
longest term. The deal will
make the Soviet Union the
se'cond largest foreign consumer of U.S grain. Japan is
currently the largest by virtue
of $437 million in average
purchases per year over the
last three years.

~

I

\
1

Pocono Resort Jammed
By 200,000 Rock Fans

I.G.A. 18"x25'

DEa&gt;RATIVE SIIINGLES are going up alQ!Ig the roof
section of the new Jones Boys Store on Pomeroy's West Main

SUNDA!t', JULY 9, 1972

Search Pressed

Beekeepers Hurt
EASTLAKE, Ohio (UPI) Aerial spraying for mosquitoes
in Lake County caught beekeepers in here unprepared
and Saturday they were
protesting the loss of bees.
One beekeeper, Gordon
Droeske said iiO percent of his
bees were lying dead in his
back yard and he intends to
consult his attorney.
The spray plane allegedly
sprayed all of tasUake Friday

drizzle. he ,declared that "the.
American people are hungry
for some idealism," blunt talk
and change in the political
system, and tl1at he was offering all three to the convention.
McGovern once briefly
threatened to bolt the party
when his winner-take-all
triumph in California was
overturned. But Saturday he
said "we intend to conduct
ourselves with dignity and
honor and with respect for our
competitors,"
·
He said he would compromise on th e Daley
delegation, but "as far as I'm
ccncerned the rule is clear on
California ... and we will have

Mellow Hanoi Expected
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI) - President Nixon's
chief diplomatic strategist said
Saturday it appeared Hanoi
would take a new and more
reasonable approach to
negotiating an end to the
Vietnam War when peace talks
resume next Thursday.
Dr . Henry A. Kissinger told
newsmen he ex pected Le Due
Tho and Xuan Thuy, Hanoi's
two top negotiators, would be

AS USUAL, SOME excellent stage presentations are being
featured at tbe Ohio Valley Summer Theater at Ohio Univessity.
Upcoming presentations include "Fiddler on the Roof," which
holds the record for Broadway runs; "Play It Again, Sam" and
11
The American Dream."
For reservations or information you can write the theater at
P. 0 . Box 303, Athens.
·

regain the full 271-vote delegation he won in the June 6
primary, only to lose between
1&gt;1 and 133 of them in the party
Credentials Committee's decision last week.lle lost his court
fight for the full delegation
Friday night when the
Supreme Court ruled that the
convention must decide the
issue.
McGovern, to whom the
California votes are crucial for
a first ballot nomination ,
arrived an hour late aboard a
chartered airliner after a
storm-tossed flight from Washington.
Gilligan urges flexibility
Standing under a candystriped awn ing in a light

(

Meigs Local School District was $3,074.21 - to be paid by the
district, of course. There were 1,997 voters who turned out at the
polls. That's an avera~e cost of $1.54 per vote.

LOOSE !lOTES- Larry Snowden, 1972 GAHS graduate, and
a standout on the football, basketball aod track squads, is headed
for Ohio Wesleyan University this fall. Larry hopes to give
athletics a whirl in college. Understand the Bishops need a
punter, kickoff man and quarterback on the football team.
Snowden can do all three ... Four members of the Greene County
Sky Diving Club made that second jump and landed right on
target during last Tuesday's River Recreation Festival. We
stated only two made the second jump after strong winds carried
all four way off target on the first try. Somehow, we missed two
jumpers while trying to get some pictures ... Don Warehime, Jr.,
chairman of the 1972 River Recreation Festival parade, sponsored by the Jaycees, is to be commended for an outstanding job
in putting this year's event together. We bad the parade starting
10 minutes late, but Don assured us tbat it began right on
schedule. One thing for sure. It was the highlight of this year's
festival.

'thus regain a power base for a Hwnphrey's adamant stand.
McGovern arrives late
first ballot presidential
nomination.
Asked if any compromise ori
McGovern's lieutenants California was possible, the
were lobbying the governors to party's unsuccessful 1968
sup_port a deal under which the nominee said: "I think a good
South Dakotan would consent compromise in Calilornia is 120
to seating the ousted &gt;9· votes for McGcvern and 106 for
member Chicago delegation Hwnphrey ." .
led by Mayor Richard J. Daley
Equally as adamant was
in excbange for the governors' McGovern. "Tbere is no room
backing of McGovern's claim for any compromise at all," he
to the full California .said as he arrived in the convention city to take personal
delegation.
Several of the governors said command of his campaign
they hoped a compromise fight.
"As far as I'm concerned the
could be reached to avoid a
bloodbath at the Democratic rule is clear on California ...
convention's opening session and we will have to stick with
only two days away, but their the rules.''
McGovern is fighting to
doubts were underscored by

_..ertain

ar

e

•

•

•

cosr of the recent special election on the tax levy in the

Swanso'rr said it was taken by some of Jim's friends. If you look
real close, it appears the figure of Christ is standing atop the
dark cloud in this unusual photo.

•

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,

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OFFICERS AND DIRECI'ORS - New officers and directors of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club are, seated, John Werner, secretary; Gene Riggs, president; standing, Dennis
Keney, John Will, Charles Blakeslee, directors; the Rev. Bob Kuhn, treasurer, and llarold E.
Hubbard, vice-president.

Wallace also., May .Bolt
MIAMI BEACH (UPI )Gov . George C. Wallace's
campaign manager has raised
the possibility the crippled
Alabaman might become a
third-party candidate this fall
unless the Democrats challj)e
their platform .
"How can he make any kind
of compromise with McGovern's plaiform?" asked
Charles Snider, making very
clear that the party must
revise ils platform if it expects
Wallace to support the nominee.
Noting that George S. McGovern, Hubert H. Humphrey
and Edmund S. Muskie have
agreed on a platform written in
Washington before the conven·
tion, Snider told United Press
International that President
Nixon would "ride a bulldozer"
over the Democrats if they ran
on that set of party principles.
l'm not Ulreatening anyone," Snider said, but "the
possibility looms in the background of a third-party that
will be there until November."
No Wallace Balk
But Snider assured the party
that Wallace "under no circumstances" would walk out of
the convention.
11

~'It's

all the way, win or

lose," Snider said of Wallace's
determination to . change the
platform. "We're not going to
walk away from a fight.
"The platform they bave Is
showing a complete distrust of
the people," he added. "Here's
a Democratic Party not trusting the people."
On Friday, when he arrived

for the convention in a
wheelchair, Wallace took
sharp issue with the compromise campaign document
that a 15().member Platform
Committee drew up in advance
of Monday's opening session.
" Workingman Overlooked"
He
objected
most
strenuously to its pro-busing
stand and a call for reduced
military spending . Wallace
also claimed tbal the document
overlooked the average
working man in its preoccupation with noisy minorities.
Wallace's campaign director
said the governor would
support any floor move to strip
McGovern of up to 153
California Jlelegates and
"We'll go with Mayor (Richard
J.) Daley , stand shoulder-to-

shoulder with him" in the
Dlinois credentials challenge.
While insisting Wallace still
was a candidate for the
nomination, Snider conceded
that the platform was his
overriding concern now. Asked
whether McGovern was the
candidate Wallace was most
interested in stopping, Snider
said: "I would say be is the
man most closely 180 degrees_
opposite to the governor's
philosophy ."
Snider noted that Hwnphrey
lost tbe 1968 election by 350,000
votes and said Wallace could
swing that many in any election. Wallace, be added, Is the
"only one capable of drawing
off Republican votes. So you
better have him on the ticket."

~~=~:!:::!:~:~:•:•::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;::::::::...-.::::::::::::::&gt;.:::::::::~::::::::.-:::::::~:::~::::::..::::::::::::~

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UltiTTUJ.tum Given on Busing ~~

::::

MIAMI BEACH (UP!) -Leaving open the possibfllty
of a third-party campaign this fall, Gov. George C.
Wallace's campaign manager called OQ George S.
McGovern Saturday to Insist that the Democratic coo·
ventlon adopt a platform more ''respo111ive to the people."
Charles Solder told a news conference thai he
specifically wanted the frontrunner lor the Democratic
presidential nomlnalloo to wort for an anllbaslog plaolt In
the party's campaign document.
"I want Sen. McGovern to call on bill delegates to adopl
a platform respo01ive to the people," Solder told reperten.
The party Wtll have to loot to Wallace If it ill to put
tugetber a wiuolng Ucket iu November, be said. Making
clear that Wallace's support of the nominee this fall bloged
on the platform, Solder asked: ''How can be malte aay ldod
of com(lfomlse with McGovern's platform?"

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14- The S11ulay Times. Sentinel, SIUlday, July 9,

.

(This Is another In a series
of orticles In which we are
bonoriog young people who
have chosen farming as their
career and wbo are
cooperators of the Western
SoU Conservation District.
Full-lime farmers, up to age
36 wbo own or share In the
farm business were chosen
for 'these wrlteups. The
youn1 farmer whom we are
fealurlng in Ibis story is
William Gill of Gallipolis
Ferry.!
PT. PLEASANT - .This just
might be the record .
Five generations on the same
farm! Twenty -seven year old
William Gill represents the
fifth generation . William and
his wife, Garnett, have a little
daughter, Kimberly Dawn, two
years old, who represents the
sixth generation.
The Gill farm is located at
the junction of the Crab Creek
Road and Route 2.
The Gill family owns 156
acres, but William Is renting
and operating 390 additional
acres, 300 acres of which are in
crop land and 90 acres in
pasture.

.

Their cropping systems
include corn, alfalfa hay, and
one hundred acres of land on
which they raise soybeans, 'l.'he
soybeans are thrashed for
grain .
They also have a tobacco
allotment of 1,800 lbs. They
have been raising this allotment on .78 acres. The
soybeans generally produce a
yield of 35 bushels per acre.
Land in corn can be expected to
produce about 100 bushels ,of
grain or 18 to 20 tons of ensilage. One 20-acre field of
alfalfa produced 5 tons per
acre last year.
They became cooperators of
the Western Soil Conservation
District in 1961. Lionel ~th,
of Soil Conservation Service,
helped them develop their land
management plan. The main
accomplishments toward
completion of their plan are
pasture fertiliza lion ,
management and following a
sound rotation on their cropland . All of their cropland Is
level so there are few conservation practices needed.
The livestock enterprise
consists of a dairy herd of 40
cows and 38 dairy heifers. They
also raise some beef animals
which are slaughtered for their
own meat supply.

SHOVELING FEED - William Gill shoveling feed into his grinder and preparing It for livestock coocenlrale.
William graduated from
Point Pleasant High School in
1962 and attended Glenville
State Teachers College 21&gt;
years before deciding to go
back to the farm on a lull-time
basis.
His wife, Garnett, graduated
from Winfield High School and
attended a business college in
Charleston. She is presently a
key punch operator at Kaiser
Alwninum Plant at Ravenswood and has worked there
since 1964. She commutes from
her home at Crab Creek to
Ravenswood each day ,
The Gills are members of
Bruce Chapel Episcopalian
Church near their home . This

GALLIPOLI~p:.~~~!~!ter~~BI!:c':!~~-

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.:_.:_:

Thelma
Shaver, said Gallia CoiUlty will conduct a special Bloodmobtle visit Thursday,
July 13, from 12:30 to 5:30p.m. at Grace United Methodist Church, 2nd Ave. and
Cedar St.
GalUa County has been asked to help supply blood lemporartly to the areas
lhal were seriously flooded . Many of these areas have had to ~top ali blood
collection until flood damage can be repaired.
u 0ur chaphteborrtrealColzes ~e sendrlo usn ess,ofhthis ~dituTahelioni ~ nd wonuldrelipkleaclo
e
ass 151our ne1g
og uu ..es a 81 a1es, s e sa• ,
v " w111 01
lhe reggiulablr Atoug. 31vJis 1t. A11 persons who have not given blood within 56 days
1 uy
1 13 .
aree11 e gve

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15 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 1972

SAIGON (UP! ) - South
Vietnamese paratroopers tried
to probe Quang Tri city 's
walled citadel Saturday, but
were driven back by Commun is t snip ers barricaded
inside.
To the south, the North
Vietnamese stepped up their
attacks around Hue, blowing
up the largest Allied ammunition dump in the area.
Saigon command ers said
their troops had recaptured
two-th irds of Quang Tri city,
South Vietnam 's northernmost
provincial capital 432 miles
north of Saigon. But they
maintained the city would not
be theirs until the Communisls
were routed from the 19th
century citadeL
The U. S. command said lhe
paratroopers in Quang Tri City
got help from eight waves of
B52 heavy bombers and 1110 jet
fighter-bombers that pounded
Communist positions outside
the city. T~e command said
B52s had dropped a tota l of
9,075 tons of explosives on
Co mmun is t
s uspe c ted
position's near Quang Tri City
in the past 10 days.

·

===~::::::!:-"!:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; :: :;:;::: ::;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :;:; : ; :::::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::: ::~:

~-~

;.

Citadel
Standing

•

BY JOHN COOPER
SoU Conservation Service

.

1m

William Gill
5th in Line
On the Farm
.

. ..

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

is one of the oldest churches in
the county. ll is made of brick
and was built in 1842. William
is a member of the Artificial
Breeders Cooperative, Dairy
He rd !mprovem ~ nt
Association and was formerly
a president of the Southern
States
Poinl
Pleasant
Cooperative.
In 1969 he received a Young
Fa rmer Leadership Award
which was presented by the
Southern States Cooperative.
For this award he was chosen
fr om among other young
farmers in West Virg inia and
part of Kentucky. In high
school he was active in FFA
and
took
Vocati onal
Ag ric ul ture 4 years . In FFA he
was chosen as Chapter Star
Crop Farmer, Chapler Star
Farmer, and was awarded the
State Farmer Degree in 1962.
William has a brother, John
Harold, 42, who operates a
farm in Ohio but also works at
a full-time JOb. His sister, Eva ·
Ann Musgrave, 25, lives in ·
Chicago but comes back home
as often as possible and is still
interested in the farm.
Wil liam 's mo ther said,
"When she comes home, she

::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~=~:::=:::;:;~:;::::::::m:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~;.~:~:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Nolan "Gets
12th Win
C~NCI~NA·TI. W PI) - Johnny Bench's tiebrea~mg smgle m the seventh inning gave the
CmcmnatJ Reds and pitcher Gary Nolan a 3-2 victory Saturday over the Chicago Cubs before a
turnout of 47 ,310.
JACK SIGMAN
MIDDLEPORT - Jack A.
Sigman, son of Mrs. Leora R.
Sigman and the late Hobart
A. Sigman, Middleport,
recently graduated from
Ohio University with a B.S.
Degree
in · Industrial
technology. He has accepted
a p01llion as manulacluriog
Wilh
the
e ngineer
Remington-Rand Corp. of
Marietta , Sigman is a 1966
graduate of Middleport High
School and served two years
in the U. S. Army: He and his
wile, Linda Owens Sigman,
reside at Coolville Route I.

Eclipse Due On Monday
A total eclipse of the sun will
spread darkn ess across a
narrow strip of Alaska and
Canada Monday and cast its
shadow on parts of the United
States. The blackout will range
fr om about 14 per cen t in San
Francisco to 90 per cent in
Boston, the UP! said.
Scient is ts an d amateur
astrologers will be watching
from land , sea and air as the
moon's shadow blots out the
sun . Ex per ts wa rn ed th at
viewing should be done only

STUDY PLAN - William Gm and his mother, Eleanor
B Gill , study their conservation farm plan as William 's twoyear old daughte r, Kimberly Dawn , eagerly looks on.
(USDA.SCS Photo )
drives every traclor on the
farm and wan ts to see every
cow. She plows the garden and
does things just like she did
when she lived at home ."
We asked William why he
decided to become a farmer.

He said, "I never had any
desire to do anything else." His
mother said, "He has farming
in his blood ." Five gener atio ns
on the same fa rm!
These sta tements have to be
true.
RACE TO CREW
AGANA, Guam I UPI) - A
Japanese frei ghter and a U.S.
Coast Guard cutter raced tw o
tropical storms Saturday to
rescue the six-man crew or a
down ed U.S. 8 52 bomber
clinging to life rafts in rough
seas off Guam.

ALL TIME LOWS
Tw elve states fr om
Wisconsin
to
Florida
reported all-lime lows
Salurday in th e fourth
consecutive day of record
cold lo the eastern half of the
nation.
Jacksonville's 61 was the
lowest July reading e\.&amp; lor
Florida, and morning
temperatures to most of the
Atlantic and Gulf coast
stales were about 10 degrees
below normal for this lime of
year.
·:

:::: :::~:·::::::::: · :::::::::·:::::·:::·:·: ·: ·:·:· :::::~:·:·: :;.;.;:;.;. ;;

indirectly to avoid permanent
eye damage.
Slarting at sunrise near
Sakhalin Island north of Japan,
the eclipse will travel eastward
in a 11 3-mile-wide arc across
the Sea of Okhotsk and the .
Peninsula of Kamchatka in
eastern Siberia, the Bering
Strai t, northern Alaska and
Canada. Hudson Bay and the ·
Canadian Marillme Provinces
to lade away before dusk in the
North Atlantic at 5:03 p.m.
EDT.
PEKING CONCERNED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
House De moc ra tic and
Re publica n leaders said
Saturday after a visi t to China
tha t Peki ng was conce rned
about a Soviet arms buildup
and a possible U.S. withdrawal
fr om the Pacific and other
regions.

The seventh-inning single by
Bench was one of two hits for
the Reds' catcher, who also
drove home the Reds' first rWI
of the game while running his
league - leading RBI total to 63. (
Nolan, getting help from .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Tom Hall and Clay Ca rroll
gained his 12th victory of th~
season againsl two losses.
A solo homer by Jim Hick·
man, his ninlh of the season,
accounted for one of two runs
off Nolan, who departed afler
~on _!(~ssinger' s leadoff single
m the eighth inning .
Hall retired Billy Williams
an d th en gave way to Carroll
who blanked the Cubs the final
I 2-3 innings to pickup his l?th
sa ve of the season ,
··
Bench's game-winning hil
came off Cub relief pitcher
Nolan, who led off the seventh
with his second single of the
game . The loss, however, went
to rookie Rick Reuschel. It was
Reuschel 's

firs t loss against

three victories.

32

48

N ~w Yor k 4 Los Angeles 1

Pittsburgh at Atl anta lnighll
San

F ra nci sco at

(nig hll
San Diego at
Ini ght)
Ho uston

Ba ltimore !McNa ll y 9-71.

19,000 POWERFUL
ADHESIVE DOTS
WELD WIND
SEALS DOWN
PERMANENTLY.
' BASED ON ROOF
AREA AVERAGE HOME .

pet.
Shblm. KC 58 191 27 65 .340
Pnella, KC 70 269 41 116 .320
Rud i.Oak 69 281 46 87 .310
Fisk, Bos 54 182 37 56 .308
Ma y, Chi
71 254 44 77 .303
Mabery, KC
71 233 24 70 .300
Otis. KC
69 262 27 78 .298
Bllngs, Tex 62 .207 24 61 295
Epstn, Oak 71 233 36 68 .292
Carew, Min 71 265 26 77 .291
r . h.

Home Runs
National League : Ben ch, Cin

21 ; Kingman, SF 20; Aa ron, All
17 ; Williams, Chi , Stargell , Pill
and Colbert, SD 16.
American Leogue: Allen, Ch i
16; Jackson. Oak 15; Cash, Del
14; Epstein. Oak 13; Kill ebrew,
Mlnn 12.
Runs Balled In
National League: Bench, Cln
61 ; Stargell , Pitt and Kingman,
SF 53 ; Oliver, Pill 52 ; Rader
and Watson . Hou SO .
American League: All en, Chi
SS ; Madberry KC 46 ; Oli ver,
Cal an May, Ch i 44; Banda.
Oak 43.
Pitching

$JO. 95so.
/

~ROVEN

BETTY CANARY

BIRD

$HINGLES

By BETTY CANARY
It's ha ppened again. A sum mer cold . And I know what
to expect. ,
No sympathy, no compass ion, absolutel y no interest in
my conditi on from friends or family.

MAKES THE BIRD WIND SEAL
SHINGLE YOUR SAFEST, SUREST INVESTMENT

FREE ESTIMATE
Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply (o.
312 6TH ST.

God S~mmer Code
Ad Nobody Cares

-wln71 "Setil

PERFORMANCE

POINT PLEASANT

PHONE 675-1160

..

·o

League :

Lolich,

II only it were F'ebruary! They would be solicitous.
They would offer me cups of hot tea and murm ur words
of solace. I co uld put on my old bathrobe and sigh and
sniffle and cough and settle back and enj oy il .
But, havi ng or curing a summ er cold is an exercise
in fulili ty . The most di ff icult part of it is even gelling
so mebody t? notice you have one.
Chances are. if you sneeze often enough in the summer·
time, the most somebody will say is, " For .heaven's sake,
if you'd chop down· th ose weeds in the backya rd, yo u'd
spare us this distaste ful display!"
Sympathy fo r a winter cold isn't hard to come by ,
"'riends offer you l!·ied and tr ue re medi es . Acquaintances
drop by with worn lil lie books filled with folklo re a nd
quaint n•dpes.

Get 1 Pair

·FRE~-

BIG YANK'S
BEST VALUES

Yes, th e choi ce of the store is on sale arid
th is is the larges t stock of pants and
jeans In the area .
AU SIZES - ALL KINDS
Stock consists of mod styles and the
regular conventional models. Plains,
stripes. patch, mod, colors. Come In and
see these July price-smashing values .

"

.
J

J eck W, Can t~ , M1r.
M11an' COIIntl tt

.

Optn Mon .•S.t. Until• p.m.,

HECK'S
REG. ·

26" CUT
HECK'S REG.

22.99

1

SJJ9.88

8 HORSEPOWER

$260°

108 25.2

J . M or r i s, Adolph's

102 17.0
100 16.7

HECK'S REG.

$222

ET SET

GOLF
CART

HECK'S REG.
1
17.99

HECK'S
REG.

17.99

1

W L
6 0

4 2
4 2

2 4
2 4
D 6

TO MEET TUESI)AY

CHESTER - The Eastern
7- 12.

CHAISE

GYM SET

Rd. Fer gu son, D . Se nt . 8·1 14.0
M onday' s games: 6- Mar k V
vs . Pom eroy National Bank ; 7
Fr iend l y Tav ern v s.
Adolph 's; 8 - Daily Sent inel

HARRELSON QUALIFIES
Q- From what two direc·
MUIRFIELD, Scotland tio ns do t he trade wmds
(UP!) - Former Major olow?
A _ Southeast and north·
League baseball star Ken
Harrelson was among those east.
golfers Saturday who qualified
for next .week's British Open
Golf Tournament.
Rarrelson, who quit baseball
last year to pursue a pro golf
career, shot rounds of 68-70138 at Gullane, which was only
two strokes less -than the top
qualifier, South Africa's Tlenie
Britz. Britz led the way for the
second year in a row .

Athletic Booatent wll1 meet alB
p:m. Tuesday at Eastern Hie~
School.

3.99

1

FISHING ROD

Jy . Hubba rd , Fr. Tav . 93 18.6
C. Haggerty, Ado lph's 84 14.0
8~ 14.0
S. Dunfee, Adol ph's

Team
Sent inel

HECK'S REG.

114 19.0

A. Cla rk. Mid. Dept.
D. Walters, M ar k V

ANGLER 2 PIECE

18.88

1

R. Bai ley. 0 . Sen I.
11 8 19.4
D. Eichinge r. D. Sent. 116 23.2
B. Ri tch ie, D. Sent.

0

FISHING
VEST

HECK'S REG.

M iddl ep or t
I ndep ende n t
Basketbal l
Leagu e
Top
Scor er s:
Player
T P Avg .
Rn . Ferguson , Mar k V 129 21.5

POMEROY
Slrv lnl Mt lu, Gt llllt ft o

3 ONLY TO SELL

ZEBCO 909 REEL

Cage Results

QUICK QUIZ

the

and

88

San Diego (C aldwe ll 3·4) at
Philadelphia ( Champion 4-8).
Pittsburgh ( Bril es 6-3) at
Atlanta (Mc l ain 0-0).
Houston ( Dierker 8·4) at St.
Louis (Wise 9-71 .
Chica go (J enkl os 10-7 and
Pi za rr o 4-4 ) a t Cincinn at i
\ Gul le tt 3·4 and Gr im sley 6-7) ,
2.

HESLER HEADS FIELD
THEY 'LL BREAK
PERRYSBURG, Ohio (UPI )
BELFAST
( UPI ) - A
- Defending champion Jack
Hesler ·of Columbus heads a militant Protestant leader said
field of 150 of the state's top Saturday Northern Ireland 's
amateur golfers who tee off Protestant majority will break
Tuesday in the 66th Ohio Ulster's ties with Britain , if
Amateur Golf Tournament at necessary, to prese rve its
British herita ge and way of
the Belmont Country Club.
Hesler, 43, of the Scioto life.
Country Club in Columbus, wi)l
be among the favorites in the
72-hole medal play event~ over
par 72, 6,650-yard well- ·
Q- What &gt;S fume d oak '
trapped Belmont Course.
AOak given a wea thered
The field, which will be cut in appearance
by exposure )o
half after the second round, fumes of ammoni a from un ·
also includes former Cham· corked ca ns, being fi rst givpions Gary,-Ariz of Cuyahoga en a coat of fill el'.
Falls, Lalu Sabotin of Wa~ren,
Q- How many eyys does
Dan Carmichael of Columbus
an alligator tay at a tt?ne?
and Ed Fpreis!er of Cleveland.
A- Alligato rs grow to 19
fee l. li ve about 50 yea rs and
lay as many as 80 eggs at a
time.

Buy 2 Pairs

HECK'S REG. $12

88

twil ight .

Porn . Nat.
Fr. Tav .

FOR BIG PEOPLE, LITTLE PEOPLE MEN'S, WOMEN'S, YOUNG MEN'S,
BOYS' AND GIRLS' - ALL SIZES

LAWN MOWER

WINDOW SCREEN FAN

Bo st on (Sie ber t 7 .1) a t
By United Prus International
Ca lif or ni a
( Ryan
10 5),
Leading Baners
twilig ht.
National League
K anscts Cit y (Spl iltorff 8-4
g . ab r . h. pet.
Cdeno, Hou 70 279 54 95 .341 and Hed lu nd 1-5) a t Clevel and
Snguiln , P1t 69 .266 31 90 .338 \Col ber t 1 Sand Fa rmer 1-0), 2.
Oliver, Pil 72 296 46 96 .324 Detr oi t ( Lo li ch 13-6 a nd
Garr, Al l 74 303 48 97 .320 See lbach 3-41 a t Chicago t Woo d
Mota, LA 56 175 28 56 320 12 9 and Bradley 12-·1 or
Brock, SI.L 73 313 37 99 .31 6 Gossage 1-01, 2.
(National League )
Lee, SD
64 238 31 75 .315
Wilms, Chl 74 .294 46 91 .313 San Franci sco ( Barr 2-2) at
Mon treal ( Moore 0 3) .
Clme nte , Pit
Los Ange les (Osteen 8-6) at
60 243 46 76 .313
Al ou, SI L 66 253 29 79 .312 New York I ~av er 11-4)

Del 13-6; Perry, Clev 1 3~ 7 ;
Adol ph's
Chi 12-9; Palmer , Ba ll M
ark V
11 ~ 4 ; Holtzman , Oak I H .
Mid. Dept.

Pants and Jeans For All!

MARVIN PORTABLE

at St. Louis (n ight)

Wood,

UBERTY FLOAT - Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company's Liberty float will be appearing at
numerous events in the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio areas
this year The float has its own music system and is available
withoul charge for parades and festivals from now through
November. The newly redecorated float maintains the
patriotic theme, with eagles, nags and a life sized statue of
George Washington. Tbe other life sized model shown here is
pretty Tomsy Rossetter, Colwnbus' winner in the 1971 Miss
World contest. For additional scheduling information,
'
conta ct the local Columbus and Southern office.

Mon treal

New York ( Kl i nf&gt; 7 3} at
M innesota {Cor bin 4 1) .
Texa s (Gogo lews k i J 7) at

American

Re-Roofing? Building? Buying?

RIDING

Ph il ad elp hi a

11 -2; Seaver, NY 11 ~ 4 ; Carlton,
Phil 11 -6; Sutton, LA 10-4; vs. Mid. De pt .
Standings
Jenkins, Chi 10-7.

SINCE 1506 when they were formed by Pope Julius II , these Swiss Guards and
their prede~essors have been the personal guard of the Pope at the Vatican. Rome.
These present-day guards stand at attention lor a ceremony.

H 1055

Sunday 's Probabl e Pitcher s
By United Press Int ernation al
{ Am eri c.a n Leagu e)
Milwaukee { Lon bo r g 7 3) at

National League : Nol an, Cin

..

.400 10

San Diego
27 48 .360 18'' '
Saturday' s Results

HUFFY

Oa kland tOdom 6-21.

g. ab

Casey and slx others were
killed in a helicopter crash.
Casey was the seve nth American general to be' killed in
Vietnam .

San Fra n.

- 1 P.M. TO 7 P.M. ONLY

SUNDAY, JULY 9th

Tom Phoebu s and score d Cin cinnat i 3 Chi cago 2

American League

In 1970, Maj. Gen, .Geo,;s l(

National League Standings
United Press International
I Night games not included)
Ewa.stL. Pel. G.B.
Pitt sburgh 46 · 21 .630
New York
44 30 .595 2'12
St. Lo uis
39 34 .534 7
Chi cago
39 36 .520 8
Montreal
32 41 .438 IS
Philadelphia 26 48 .351 2D'h
West
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Ci ncinnati 49 29 .608
Houston
44 32 .579 2
Los Angeles 39 36 .520 6' ,
All anta
36 40 .474 10

LOUNGE

"BACKYARD F UN"

HECK'S REG.

1 GALLON

39.99

1

GAS CAN

HECK'S REG.

·11.611

'599

$2a••

HECK'S REG.

11J9

3Pc. MIXING BOWL SET
PLASTIC
HECK'S REG.

1.09

1

GOLF SHOES
HECK'S REG. 115.99

LAWN MOWER

HECK'S
REG.

MUFFLERS

BUCKET OF
SPONGES

88¢

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

sug

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

11 OZ. AEROSOL

PALMOLIVE
RAPID SHAVE
CREAM
HECK'S REG.

88'

39e

$109

'J&amp;J

20 PIECE
DINNERWARE SET

COlTON SWABS
175 CT.
HECK'S REG.

87'

49¢

HECK'S
REG.

9.88

1

$5''

�. .

.' . . . ...

•

14- The S11ulay Times. Sentinel, SIUlday, July 9,

.

(This Is another In a series
of orticles In which we are
bonoriog young people who
have chosen farming as their
career and wbo are
cooperators of the Western
SoU Conservation District.
Full-lime farmers, up to age
36 wbo own or share In the
farm business were chosen
for 'these wrlteups. The
youn1 farmer whom we are
fealurlng in Ibis story is
William Gill of Gallipolis
Ferry.!
PT. PLEASANT - .This just
might be the record .
Five generations on the same
farm! Twenty -seven year old
William Gill represents the
fifth generation . William and
his wife, Garnett, have a little
daughter, Kimberly Dawn, two
years old, who represents the
sixth generation.
The Gill farm is located at
the junction of the Crab Creek
Road and Route 2.
The Gill family owns 156
acres, but William Is renting
and operating 390 additional
acres, 300 acres of which are in
crop land and 90 acres in
pasture.

.

Their cropping systems
include corn, alfalfa hay, and
one hundred acres of land on
which they raise soybeans, 'l.'he
soybeans are thrashed for
grain .
They also have a tobacco
allotment of 1,800 lbs. They
have been raising this allotment on .78 acres. The
soybeans generally produce a
yield of 35 bushels per acre.
Land in corn can be expected to
produce about 100 bushels ,of
grain or 18 to 20 tons of ensilage. One 20-acre field of
alfalfa produced 5 tons per
acre last year.
They became cooperators of
the Western Soil Conservation
District in 1961. Lionel ~th,
of Soil Conservation Service,
helped them develop their land
management plan. The main
accomplishments toward
completion of their plan are
pasture fertiliza lion ,
management and following a
sound rotation on their cropland . All of their cropland Is
level so there are few conservation practices needed.
The livestock enterprise
consists of a dairy herd of 40
cows and 38 dairy heifers. They
also raise some beef animals
which are slaughtered for their
own meat supply.

SHOVELING FEED - William Gill shoveling feed into his grinder and preparing It for livestock coocenlrale.
William graduated from
Point Pleasant High School in
1962 and attended Glenville
State Teachers College 21&gt;
years before deciding to go
back to the farm on a lull-time
basis.
His wife, Garnett, graduated
from Winfield High School and
attended a business college in
Charleston. She is presently a
key punch operator at Kaiser
Alwninum Plant at Ravenswood and has worked there
since 1964. She commutes from
her home at Crab Creek to
Ravenswood each day ,
The Gills are members of
Bruce Chapel Episcopalian
Church near their home . This

GALLIPOLI~p:.~~~!~!ter~~BI!:c':!~~-

!Iii
}
;::
.::_
:
.:_.:_:

Thelma
Shaver, said Gallia CoiUlty will conduct a special Bloodmobtle visit Thursday,
July 13, from 12:30 to 5:30p.m. at Grace United Methodist Church, 2nd Ave. and
Cedar St.
GalUa County has been asked to help supply blood lemporartly to the areas
lhal were seriously flooded . Many of these areas have had to ~top ali blood
collection until flood damage can be repaired.
u 0ur chaphteborrtrealColzes ~e sendrlo usn ess,ofhthis ~dituTahelioni ~ nd wonuldrelipkleaclo
e
ass 151our ne1g
og uu ..es a 81 a1es, s e sa• ,
v " w111 01
lhe reggiulablr Atoug. 31vJis 1t. A11 persons who have not given blood within 56 days
1 uy
1 13 .
aree11 e gve

!:::
;:;:

~;:

:-:.
::::
::;

~

-:::
.',: _,:

1

::.,
:•:·
··s
~;

ff

...

'

. .. . .
15 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, July 9, 1972

SAIGON (UP! ) - South
Vietnamese paratroopers tried
to probe Quang Tri city 's
walled citadel Saturday, but
were driven back by Commun is t snip ers barricaded
inside.
To the south, the North
Vietnamese stepped up their
attacks around Hue, blowing
up the largest Allied ammunition dump in the area.
Saigon command ers said
their troops had recaptured
two-th irds of Quang Tri city,
South Vietnam 's northernmost
provincial capital 432 miles
north of Saigon. But they
maintained the city would not
be theirs until the Communisls
were routed from the 19th
century citadeL
The U. S. command said lhe
paratroopers in Quang Tri City
got help from eight waves of
B52 heavy bombers and 1110 jet
fighter-bombers that pounded
Communist positions outside
the city. T~e command said
B52s had dropped a tota l of
9,075 tons of explosives on
Co mmun is t
s uspe c ted
position's near Quang Tri City
in the past 10 days.

·

===~::::::!:-"!:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; :: :;:;::: ::;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :;:; : ; :::::::::::::::::: ::::::: :::::::: ::~:

~-~

;.

Citadel
Standing

•

BY JOHN COOPER
SoU Conservation Service

.

1m

William Gill
5th in Line
On the Farm
.

. ..

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

is one of the oldest churches in
the county. ll is made of brick
and was built in 1842. William
is a member of the Artificial
Breeders Cooperative, Dairy
He rd !mprovem ~ nt
Association and was formerly
a president of the Southern
States
Poinl
Pleasant
Cooperative.
In 1969 he received a Young
Fa rmer Leadership Award
which was presented by the
Southern States Cooperative.
For this award he was chosen
fr om among other young
farmers in West Virg inia and
part of Kentucky. In high
school he was active in FFA
and
took
Vocati onal
Ag ric ul ture 4 years . In FFA he
was chosen as Chapter Star
Crop Farmer, Chapler Star
Farmer, and was awarded the
State Farmer Degree in 1962.
William has a brother, John
Harold, 42, who operates a
farm in Ohio but also works at
a full-time JOb. His sister, Eva ·
Ann Musgrave, 25, lives in ·
Chicago but comes back home
as often as possible and is still
interested in the farm.
Wil liam 's mo ther said,
"When she comes home, she

::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~=~:::=:::;:;~:;::::::::m:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~;.~:~:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Nolan "Gets
12th Win
C~NCI~NA·TI. W PI) - Johnny Bench's tiebrea~mg smgle m the seventh inning gave the
CmcmnatJ Reds and pitcher Gary Nolan a 3-2 victory Saturday over the Chicago Cubs before a
turnout of 47 ,310.
JACK SIGMAN
MIDDLEPORT - Jack A.
Sigman, son of Mrs. Leora R.
Sigman and the late Hobart
A. Sigman, Middleport,
recently graduated from
Ohio University with a B.S.
Degree
in · Industrial
technology. He has accepted
a p01llion as manulacluriog
Wilh
the
e ngineer
Remington-Rand Corp. of
Marietta , Sigman is a 1966
graduate of Middleport High
School and served two years
in the U. S. Army: He and his
wile, Linda Owens Sigman,
reside at Coolville Route I.

Eclipse Due On Monday
A total eclipse of the sun will
spread darkn ess across a
narrow strip of Alaska and
Canada Monday and cast its
shadow on parts of the United
States. The blackout will range
fr om about 14 per cen t in San
Francisco to 90 per cent in
Boston, the UP! said.
Scient is ts an d amateur
astrologers will be watching
from land , sea and air as the
moon's shadow blots out the
sun . Ex per ts wa rn ed th at
viewing should be done only

STUDY PLAN - William Gm and his mother, Eleanor
B Gill , study their conservation farm plan as William 's twoyear old daughte r, Kimberly Dawn , eagerly looks on.
(USDA.SCS Photo )
drives every traclor on the
farm and wan ts to see every
cow. She plows the garden and
does things just like she did
when she lived at home ."
We asked William why he
decided to become a farmer.

He said, "I never had any
desire to do anything else." His
mother said, "He has farming
in his blood ." Five gener atio ns
on the same fa rm!
These sta tements have to be
true.
RACE TO CREW
AGANA, Guam I UPI) - A
Japanese frei ghter and a U.S.
Coast Guard cutter raced tw o
tropical storms Saturday to
rescue the six-man crew or a
down ed U.S. 8 52 bomber
clinging to life rafts in rough
seas off Guam.

ALL TIME LOWS
Tw elve states fr om
Wisconsin
to
Florida
reported all-lime lows
Salurday in th e fourth
consecutive day of record
cold lo the eastern half of the
nation.
Jacksonville's 61 was the
lowest July reading e\.&amp; lor
Florida, and morning
temperatures to most of the
Atlantic and Gulf coast
stales were about 10 degrees
below normal for this lime of
year.
·:

:::: :::~:·::::::::: · :::::::::·:::::·:::·:·: ·: ·:·:· :::::~:·:·: :;.;.;:;.;. ;;

indirectly to avoid permanent
eye damage.
Slarting at sunrise near
Sakhalin Island north of Japan,
the eclipse will travel eastward
in a 11 3-mile-wide arc across
the Sea of Okhotsk and the .
Peninsula of Kamchatka in
eastern Siberia, the Bering
Strai t, northern Alaska and
Canada. Hudson Bay and the ·
Canadian Marillme Provinces
to lade away before dusk in the
North Atlantic at 5:03 p.m.
EDT.
PEKING CONCERNED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
House De moc ra tic and
Re publica n leaders said
Saturday after a visi t to China
tha t Peki ng was conce rned
about a Soviet arms buildup
and a possible U.S. withdrawal
fr om the Pacific and other
regions.

The seventh-inning single by
Bench was one of two hits for
the Reds' catcher, who also
drove home the Reds' first rWI
of the game while running his
league - leading RBI total to 63. (
Nolan, getting help from .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Tom Hall and Clay Ca rroll
gained his 12th victory of th~
season againsl two losses.
A solo homer by Jim Hick·
man, his ninlh of the season,
accounted for one of two runs
off Nolan, who departed afler
~on _!(~ssinger' s leadoff single
m the eighth inning .
Hall retired Billy Williams
an d th en gave way to Carroll
who blanked the Cubs the final
I 2-3 innings to pickup his l?th
sa ve of the season ,
··
Bench's game-winning hil
came off Cub relief pitcher
Nolan, who led off the seventh
with his second single of the
game . The loss, however, went
to rookie Rick Reuschel. It was
Reuschel 's

firs t loss against

three victories.

32

48

N ~w Yor k 4 Los Angeles 1

Pittsburgh at Atl anta lnighll
San

F ra nci sco at

(nig hll
San Diego at
Ini ght)
Ho uston

Ba ltimore !McNa ll y 9-71.

19,000 POWERFUL
ADHESIVE DOTS
WELD WIND
SEALS DOWN
PERMANENTLY.
' BASED ON ROOF
AREA AVERAGE HOME .

pet.
Shblm. KC 58 191 27 65 .340
Pnella, KC 70 269 41 116 .320
Rud i.Oak 69 281 46 87 .310
Fisk, Bos 54 182 37 56 .308
Ma y, Chi
71 254 44 77 .303
Mabery, KC
71 233 24 70 .300
Otis. KC
69 262 27 78 .298
Bllngs, Tex 62 .207 24 61 295
Epstn, Oak 71 233 36 68 .292
Carew, Min 71 265 26 77 .291
r . h.

Home Runs
National League : Ben ch, Cin

21 ; Kingman, SF 20; Aa ron, All
17 ; Williams, Chi , Stargell , Pill
and Colbert, SD 16.
American Leogue: Allen, Ch i
16; Jackson. Oak 15; Cash, Del
14; Epstein. Oak 13; Kill ebrew,
Mlnn 12.
Runs Balled In
National League: Bench, Cln
61 ; Stargell , Pitt and Kingman,
SF 53 ; Oliver, Pill 52 ; Rader
and Watson . Hou SO .
American League: All en, Chi
SS ; Madberry KC 46 ; Oli ver,
Cal an May, Ch i 44; Banda.
Oak 43.
Pitching

$JO. 95so.
/

~ROVEN

BETTY CANARY

BIRD

$HINGLES

By BETTY CANARY
It's ha ppened again. A sum mer cold . And I know what
to expect. ,
No sympathy, no compass ion, absolutel y no interest in
my conditi on from friends or family.

MAKES THE BIRD WIND SEAL
SHINGLE YOUR SAFEST, SUREST INVESTMENT

FREE ESTIMATE
Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply (o.
312 6TH ST.

God S~mmer Code
Ad Nobody Cares

-wln71 "Setil

PERFORMANCE

POINT PLEASANT

PHONE 675-1160

..

·o

League :

Lolich,

II only it were F'ebruary! They would be solicitous.
They would offer me cups of hot tea and murm ur words
of solace. I co uld put on my old bathrobe and sigh and
sniffle and cough and settle back and enj oy il .
But, havi ng or curing a summ er cold is an exercise
in fulili ty . The most di ff icult part of it is even gelling
so mebody t? notice you have one.
Chances are. if you sneeze often enough in the summer·
time, the most somebody will say is, " For .heaven's sake,
if you'd chop down· th ose weeds in the backya rd, yo u'd
spare us this distaste ful display!"
Sympathy fo r a winter cold isn't hard to come by ,
"'riends offer you l!·ied and tr ue re medi es . Acquaintances
drop by with worn lil lie books filled with folklo re a nd
quaint n•dpes.

Get 1 Pair

·FRE~-

BIG YANK'S
BEST VALUES

Yes, th e choi ce of the store is on sale arid
th is is the larges t stock of pants and
jeans In the area .
AU SIZES - ALL KINDS
Stock consists of mod styles and the
regular conventional models. Plains,
stripes. patch, mod, colors. Come In and
see these July price-smashing values .

"

.
J

J eck W, Can t~ , M1r.
M11an' COIIntl tt

.

Optn Mon .•S.t. Until• p.m.,

HECK'S
REG. ·

26" CUT
HECK'S REG.

22.99

1

SJJ9.88

8 HORSEPOWER

$260°

108 25.2

J . M or r i s, Adolph's

102 17.0
100 16.7

HECK'S REG.

$222

ET SET

GOLF
CART

HECK'S REG.
1
17.99

HECK'S
REG.

17.99

1

W L
6 0

4 2
4 2

2 4
2 4
D 6

TO MEET TUESI)AY

CHESTER - The Eastern
7- 12.

CHAISE

GYM SET

Rd. Fer gu son, D . Se nt . 8·1 14.0
M onday' s games: 6- Mar k V
vs . Pom eroy National Bank ; 7
Fr iend l y Tav ern v s.
Adolph 's; 8 - Daily Sent inel

HARRELSON QUALIFIES
Q- From what two direc·
MUIRFIELD, Scotland tio ns do t he trade wmds
(UP!) - Former Major olow?
A _ Southeast and north·
League baseball star Ken
Harrelson was among those east.
golfers Saturday who qualified
for next .week's British Open
Golf Tournament.
Rarrelson, who quit baseball
last year to pursue a pro golf
career, shot rounds of 68-70138 at Gullane, which was only
two strokes less -than the top
qualifier, South Africa's Tlenie
Britz. Britz led the way for the
second year in a row .

Athletic Booatent wll1 meet alB
p:m. Tuesday at Eastern Hie~
School.

3.99

1

FISHING ROD

Jy . Hubba rd , Fr. Tav . 93 18.6
C. Haggerty, Ado lph's 84 14.0
8~ 14.0
S. Dunfee, Adol ph's

Team
Sent inel

HECK'S REG.

114 19.0

A. Cla rk. Mid. Dept.
D. Walters, M ar k V

ANGLER 2 PIECE

18.88

1

R. Bai ley. 0 . Sen I.
11 8 19.4
D. Eichinge r. D. Sent. 116 23.2
B. Ri tch ie, D. Sent.

0

FISHING
VEST

HECK'S REG.

M iddl ep or t
I ndep ende n t
Basketbal l
Leagu e
Top
Scor er s:
Player
T P Avg .
Rn . Ferguson , Mar k V 129 21.5

POMEROY
Slrv lnl Mt lu, Gt llllt ft o

3 ONLY TO SELL

ZEBCO 909 REEL

Cage Results

QUICK QUIZ

the

and

88

San Diego (C aldwe ll 3·4) at
Philadelphia ( Champion 4-8).
Pittsburgh ( Bril es 6-3) at
Atlanta (Mc l ain 0-0).
Houston ( Dierker 8·4) at St.
Louis (Wise 9-71 .
Chica go (J enkl os 10-7 and
Pi za rr o 4-4 ) a t Cincinn at i
\ Gul le tt 3·4 and Gr im sley 6-7) ,
2.

HESLER HEADS FIELD
THEY 'LL BREAK
PERRYSBURG, Ohio (UPI )
BELFAST
( UPI ) - A
- Defending champion Jack
Hesler ·of Columbus heads a militant Protestant leader said
field of 150 of the state's top Saturday Northern Ireland 's
amateur golfers who tee off Protestant majority will break
Tuesday in the 66th Ohio Ulster's ties with Britain , if
Amateur Golf Tournament at necessary, to prese rve its
British herita ge and way of
the Belmont Country Club.
Hesler, 43, of the Scioto life.
Country Club in Columbus, wi)l
be among the favorites in the
72-hole medal play event~ over
par 72, 6,650-yard well- ·
Q- What &gt;S fume d oak '
trapped Belmont Course.
AOak given a wea thered
The field, which will be cut in appearance
by exposure )o
half after the second round, fumes of ammoni a from un ·
also includes former Cham· corked ca ns, being fi rst givpions Gary,-Ariz of Cuyahoga en a coat of fill el'.
Falls, Lalu Sabotin of Wa~ren,
Q- How many eyys does
Dan Carmichael of Columbus
an alligator tay at a tt?ne?
and Ed Fpreis!er of Cleveland.
A- Alligato rs grow to 19
fee l. li ve about 50 yea rs and
lay as many as 80 eggs at a
time.

Buy 2 Pairs

HECK'S REG. $12

88

twil ight .

Porn . Nat.
Fr. Tav .

FOR BIG PEOPLE, LITTLE PEOPLE MEN'S, WOMEN'S, YOUNG MEN'S,
BOYS' AND GIRLS' - ALL SIZES

LAWN MOWER

WINDOW SCREEN FAN

Bo st on (Sie ber t 7 .1) a t
By United Prus International
Ca lif or ni a
( Ryan
10 5),
Leading Baners
twilig ht.
National League
K anscts Cit y (Spl iltorff 8-4
g . ab r . h. pet.
Cdeno, Hou 70 279 54 95 .341 and Hed lu nd 1-5) a t Clevel and
Snguiln , P1t 69 .266 31 90 .338 \Col ber t 1 Sand Fa rmer 1-0), 2.
Oliver, Pil 72 296 46 96 .324 Detr oi t ( Lo li ch 13-6 a nd
Garr, Al l 74 303 48 97 .320 See lbach 3-41 a t Chicago t Woo d
Mota, LA 56 175 28 56 320 12 9 and Bradley 12-·1 or
Brock, SI.L 73 313 37 99 .31 6 Gossage 1-01, 2.
(National League )
Lee, SD
64 238 31 75 .315
Wilms, Chl 74 .294 46 91 .313 San Franci sco ( Barr 2-2) at
Mon treal ( Moore 0 3) .
Clme nte , Pit
Los Ange les (Osteen 8-6) at
60 243 46 76 .313
Al ou, SI L 66 253 29 79 .312 New York I ~av er 11-4)

Del 13-6; Perry, Clev 1 3~ 7 ;
Adol ph's
Chi 12-9; Palmer , Ba ll M
ark V
11 ~ 4 ; Holtzman , Oak I H .
Mid. Dept.

Pants and Jeans For All!

MARVIN PORTABLE

at St. Louis (n ight)

Wood,

UBERTY FLOAT - Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company's Liberty float will be appearing at
numerous events in the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio areas
this year The float has its own music system and is available
withoul charge for parades and festivals from now through
November. The newly redecorated float maintains the
patriotic theme, with eagles, nags and a life sized statue of
George Washington. Tbe other life sized model shown here is
pretty Tomsy Rossetter, Colwnbus' winner in the 1971 Miss
World contest. For additional scheduling information,
'
conta ct the local Columbus and Southern office.

Mon treal

New York ( Kl i nf&gt; 7 3} at
M innesota {Cor bin 4 1) .
Texa s (Gogo lews k i J 7) at

American

Re-Roofing? Building? Buying?

RIDING

Ph il ad elp hi a

11 -2; Seaver, NY 11 ~ 4 ; Carlton,
Phil 11 -6; Sutton, LA 10-4; vs. Mid. De pt .
Standings
Jenkins, Chi 10-7.

SINCE 1506 when they were formed by Pope Julius II , these Swiss Guards and
their prede~essors have been the personal guard of the Pope at the Vatican. Rome.
These present-day guards stand at attention lor a ceremony.

H 1055

Sunday 's Probabl e Pitcher s
By United Press Int ernation al
{ Am eri c.a n Leagu e)
Milwaukee { Lon bo r g 7 3) at

National League : Nol an, Cin

..

.400 10

San Diego
27 48 .360 18'' '
Saturday' s Results

HUFFY

Oa kland tOdom 6-21.

g. ab

Casey and slx others were
killed in a helicopter crash.
Casey was the seve nth American general to be' killed in
Vietnam .

San Fra n.

- 1 P.M. TO 7 P.M. ONLY

SUNDAY, JULY 9th

Tom Phoebu s and score d Cin cinnat i 3 Chi cago 2

American League

In 1970, Maj. Gen, .Geo,;s l(

National League Standings
United Press International
I Night games not included)
Ewa.stL. Pel. G.B.
Pitt sburgh 46 · 21 .630
New York
44 30 .595 2'12
St. Lo uis
39 34 .534 7
Chi cago
39 36 .520 8
Montreal
32 41 .438 IS
Philadelphia 26 48 .351 2D'h
West
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Ci ncinnati 49 29 .608
Houston
44 32 .579 2
Los Angeles 39 36 .520 6' ,
All anta
36 40 .474 10

LOUNGE

"BACKYARD F UN"

HECK'S REG.

1 GALLON

39.99

1

GAS CAN

HECK'S REG.

·11.611

'599

$2a••

HECK'S REG.

11J9

3Pc. MIXING BOWL SET
PLASTIC
HECK'S REG.

1.09

1

GOLF SHOES
HECK'S REG. 115.99

LAWN MOWER

HECK'S
REG.

MUFFLERS

BUCKET OF
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88¢

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

sug

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

11 OZ. AEROSOL

PALMOLIVE
RAPID SHAVE
CREAM
HECK'S REG.

88'

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$109

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DINNERWARE SET

COlTON SWABS
175 CT.
HECK'S REG.

87'

49¢

HECK'S
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9.88

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$5''

�.

~·

..

..
16 - The SWiday Times· Sentinel, SWiday, July 9, 1972

34 Teams Entered In 14th KC LL To·urliamenty
New Haven Cubs And Gallipolis .
Yanks Play First Tilt Monday

~ OWA Action To

FOUR'l'EENTI! ANNUAL
KYGER CREEK TOURilAMEIIT

FOR LI!TLE LEAGUERS

MON,

7/17

FRI. 7/21

MON.

THUR. 7/20 6100

TUES. 7/18

TUES. 7/18 7115

THUR. 7/20 7115

TUES. 7/18 8:~nf------"

rRI. 7/21 8115

. WED. 7/19 6:00

JJl Games D.S.T. (PJ4.)

lhpiree: Art Stobart
larrv Wolfe

~

New . Haven. ~ Cops

7-5 Decision

MASON - Randy Clark runs .
single by Miller, an error, and
blasted a two-out two rWI home
Mason Co: jumped out to a singles by Thomas and
run over the centerfield fence seemingly comfortable four
Simmons.
giving New Haven a 7.f&gt; eleven r\UI lead with two runs in both
New Haven plated five runs
inning victory over Mason Co. the second and third inning.
in the fifth inning with
Friday night. Rob Lambert Doubles by Simmons and
Lambert"s circuit clout the bi~
powered a grand slam home Moore combined with a single factor . ·After one out Wh ite
the fifth inning 3C• by Halland accoWited for a a walk, Brei Hart lined a
emmti1no for four New Haven
· of runs. In the · a single, Mike Lewis jammed fo r
the second out, and Randy
Clark drew a walk loading the
bases hefore Lambert's
heroiCs. Following Lambert's
blast, Gardner singled, Curtis
Roush singled and Chester
Roush doubled plating another
rWI.
Mason Co. tied the game if,
their half of the inning on
singles by Thomas and
Simmons combined with a
stolen base. Brilliant pitching
by both Kevin camp and Steve
Miller extended a regular
seven inning ~allgame into no
less that eleven innings.
Clark's winning blast came
in the eleventh after one out
following Brei Hart's third

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Monday Thru Friday- 7 A.M. loS P.M.
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pHONE 446-4905

87 OLIVE

· GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

..................iiiiiiiio.-.::.

Tourney
Delayed
By Rain

7/17

'

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Gallipolis, Ohio

•
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liED. 7/19 81301----,

~~anti
says .

Avo,caclo , Autumn

• ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio press to~~ 0~~:et 5~
(UP!) -:- Lida Fee Mathews of ~~~·O:club course.
Portsmouth, commg off a . M'
Mathews'
top
broken leg, ~ies to defend he ~ cha!::nger' could well he
Oh10 Wo~en s .Amateur Go
Medina •s Roberta Albefs,. 1965
Championship starting women's collegiate champion
Monday.,\l'hen play opens m the while at the University of
49th annual state event. .
Florida and a member of ·the
Miss Mathews, a three-lime 1968 American Curtis Cup
winner of the top amateur go~ Team Miss Albers just
ttst for women, may be hard· rtcenily moved into the

7/17

THUR. 7/20 81

~

MIDDLEPORT - Jerry
Cremeens had a no-hitter for
six and tw o-thirds inn ings
before Jerry Gl eason of
Middleport " B" broke the
hitless string with a bloop
single as Pomeroy kept pace
with Southwestern for second

Begin Monday
MON.

base hit of the evening. Clark 's
homer came off of loosing
pitcher Rody Harden.
Home runs accounted for 6 of
New Haven 7 runs in the

outing. Their record is now 36 with . a single game with
Athens Saturday and a double
header with Ravenswood
Sunday . All are home games.

WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - While favored Stan
Smith hurried off downtown to
hire himself a tuxedo, !lie
Nas tase headed for the
practice court Saturday so he
could maintain his hair-trigger
form for their pos tponed Men's
Singles final at the Wimbledon
Tennis Championships.
Saturday 's program was
ca lled off because of day-long
rain and rescheduled for today
- only the fourth time in the
history of the 86-year old
championship that the 12-&lt;lay
tournament has failed to finish
on schedule.
The 6-foot-4 Smith , of
Pasedena, Calif. , needed a
tuxedo so he could arrive
"properly dressed" for the
Wimbledon Ball where the
male and female champions
opert the dancing.
'" I guess we'll let Larry open
the dancing with Billie Jean,"
Smith said in reference to Mrs.
King 's husband who watched
her
demolish
Evo nne
Goolagong of Australia in
straight sets in the Women's
Final on Friday. Nastase said
he would not attend the ball.
'The last time the tournament
fail ed to finish on schedule was
in 1963. At that time the
Women's Final was played on
the last day and Australia's
Margaret Court had to wait
until the third Monday to beat
the then Billie Jean Moffitt.
Earlier postponements came
in 1927 and 1922.
Tournament referee, Capt.
Mike Gibson, said simply:
'" It's a divine act, what else is
there to say."
Gibson added: "'Of course,
it's frustrating - the final day
and all that. We've been expecting ra in all through so it is
disappointing."

e

It llln A
Row, 17-0

Buckeye State .
Three other past champions
will he among the field of 80
which will play a qualifying
roWid Monday and lhen Into
four days of match play
starting Tuesday with the 36hole finals Friday.
Mrs. Pauline Whitacre of
Canton won the Amateljl" ,in
1962 and 1966; Kathleen
Newton of Cleveland took the
1963 title, and Mrs. Sharon
Klwnp Kiel of Toledo was the
1970 champion.
A. darkhorse contender may
he Helen Kirkland of nel!l"bY
Cadiz, 1!169 nmnerup to 1\flss
Mathews, who Is probably
more famlliar with the
Belmont course than any of the
other challengers.

CHESHIRE - Behind the
combined one-hit pitching of
Kelley Winebrenner and Steve
Baird, the Wldefeated Cheshire
Tigers won their 11th straight
game of the season as they shut
out Rio Grande 17.0 Thursday
night at Cheshire, to remain in
sole possession of fir st place in
the Ohio Valley Little League .
It was the 5eventh shut out of
the year for the Tigers' pitching slilff.
Kelley Winebrenner pitched
the first three innings and won
his third game of the year as he
allo-iled one hit to Rio Grande's
McCoY, while striking out five
and walking none. Steve Baird
hurled the last three innings,
allowing no hits while striking
out all nine men that he faced.
S. Bjlirey was the losing hurler
for Rio 'Grande.
The Ti~ers jwnped off to an
ear!y1firs! inning lead as the
two lead-of! men walked and
Steve Baird followed with his
sixtll home run of the season to
give the Tigers a ~lead which
they held the en tire game.
Leading the Tigers in hdttlng
were Steve Baird witll a home
rWI and two singles, Dallas
Sayre with a home rWI and
single, and Claude Cornelius
with a double and single.
Coach Dale Allenswo'l th's
lads next outing comes in the
Kyger Creek Tournament
Wednesday at 8:30 p.m.
against Harrisonville.

By
TERRY
JOHNSON
It you wanted to be real
technicaL you could truth ·

tully say that the ttrst home
on wheels, trailer or mobile
home, was the conestoga
wagon , which was used to

cross

the

co untry

Hooten Stops Big. Red Machine, 2-1

Middleport Team

1972 SCHEDUU:

Evonne Best
Player Despite
Loss-Mirror

Make the greatest
cooking
since fire.

P~meroy Wallops

.

'

CHESHIRE - The Hth SOX' 196~ - Middleport
Annual Kyger Creek Tour- Yankees . 1966 - Middleport
nament for Little Leaguers will Senator~ ; 1967 - Point
hegin Monday, July 10, at 6 Pleasant Peoples Bank; )966p.m. on the James B. Harreld Mci\,rthur Merchants; .1!169 Memorial Field opposite the Pt. Pleasant Fruth's Phar·
macy; 1970 - Pt. Pleasant City
KC Power Plant.
Thirt y-four team s will Ice and Fuel and 1971 - New
compe te durin g the even t Haven Cubs.
The 1972 KC Utile League
which run s through Saturday ,
Julv 22. Four new teams, Tournament schedule appears
Ripley
Daniel
Boone, elsewhere on today's sports
Harrisonville , Ripl ey Jack page .
Myers and Hometown, W. Va ._,
have entered this ye ar' s
tournament.
Opening night action
fea tures the New Haven Cubs
battling the Gallipolis Yankees
at 6 p.m. Monday while Green
play s the Point Pleasan t
Kiwanis team in the second
game. In the fina le, Pomeroy's ·
Yankees will play the
SYDNEY, Australia (0PI)
Galli polis Athletics.
- The Sunday Mirror said
Three games will be played Saturday that although she lost
each night through Sa turday, her Wimbledon Crown Friday
July 15.
Evonne Coolagong is still the
The tournament is played at best female tennis player in the
the expense of !he Kyger Creek world .
·
Employees Club. It is solely for
"She may have lost her
the benefi t or the area little Wimbledon Crown, but she's
leaguers . The only means of still the queen of tennis," the
financial support is the con· Mirror said.
cession stand.
"Like all royalty, she was as
Eac h year, improvements gracious and charming in
have been made to make the defeat this week as she was in
event one of !he finest in victory last year - one might
Southeastern Ohi o. The have excused her if she were
tourney gives its participants a not.
chance to play under the lights
'"Evonne was subjected to
before a large crowd with the one of the most vitriolic and
use of paid licensed umpires bitchy smear campaigns ever
and in addition, the first four waged against a woman
teams are presented trophies player.
for their efforls.
"Not the least of her critics
. Art Stobart of Middleport was
Billie-Jean
King,
and Larry Wolfe of fulci ne will America's 'Miss Petulance,'
serve as umpires. New who woq the title back on
Haven's Cubs are the 1971 Friday.
defending champions . .
"Evonne took it all with a
Previous winners are: 1909 smile and when she lost
- Pt. Pleasant's Doc's Fine co ngratulated Mrs . King
Foods ; 1960 - Pt. Pleasant simply· and sincerely .
Sommerville ; 1961 - Pomeroy
"Billie.Jean said she apRedlegs ; 1962 - Pomeroy preciated Evonne's attitude Piraies ; 1963 - Gallipolis we hope she makes a study of
Tigers; 1964 - Gallipolis Red il.

17 -The,SundayTimes -Sentinel,SWI9ay, J~y 9, 1972

by

pioneer settlers .
Only ne cessa ry l i ving
gear was stowed Into the
waQqn leaving_,
enoUgh room to
about, however , the
tiers managed to eat, sleep.
r ide and l ive In thes.e
wagons for long stretches

CINCINNATI (UP!) ' - If
Burt Hooten winds up a 20game : winner this sel;JsOn, it
won 't surprise Billy Williams.
"I predicted this spring that
Hooten would win I~ to 20
games, " said the veteran
ChiCago Cub outfielder.
This was Friday night after
the 22-year-old Hooten, with a
ninth-inning assist from Jack
Aker, pitched the Chicago Cubs
to a 2·1 victory over the -Cincin nati Reds in the opener of a
four-game series.
The loss, witnessed by a

place in the Calha-Meigs Pony
League by whippi n ~ their
neighbor riva ls 24-0 here
Friday.
Cremeens fanned 17 batters
in the sevcn.inni ng stint and

walked seven. He also had
three· home runs and a single,
with one of the round-trippe1·s
bare ly missing the Peewee
·fence in deep leltfield.
Gleason started for Mid·
dleport "' B" and gave way to
Jeff Miller in the sixth. Coach
Tony May 's cha rges now are
winless in ten starts.
Coach
Woody
Ca ll 's
Pomeroy hitters were Charles
Marshall with three triples an d
a single, Jerf McKinney had a
home run and triple, Barry
Marshall had two singles, Stan
Moon a double, and Mike
Nesselro&lt;td, Woody Call, Jr .,
John Blake, Fred Burney, and
Larry Fridley all had a single.
The win moves Pomeroy to 62, tied for second place with
Southwestern behind Bidwell,
now 7..0. Pomeroy is home
against Middleport "' A" and
Middleport " B" is home
a gainst Cheshire next Monday.
By innings:
Pom.
057 037 2-24 19
M1d. " B'"
000 000 II- 0 1
Cremeens and Ca ll . Gleason
1LPI . Miller 16) and Thomas.

Johnny Baird

ar e no cram ped one room
affairs, cra mm ed with
necessities only , but have
bright airy ,
spac ious
rooms , livable ~nd com .

OaveWolfe

Chuck Per roud

Mlck A•h
Jon Bu ck

Bitt Chaney

lortabte. equl pped with all

Steve Lee
hnny Roush

the necess ities and also
every
appliance
and

fcomlp Johnson
Cooke

gadget that modern
technology c_~n _ produce ..

'lck A•h
Rick Von Matre
Dave Boyd
Roger Dl&lt;on
Kevin Sheets
Lou Me Kinney
Stan Perry
Howle Tay lor
Sieve Dunfee
Brett Hart. X
Mark Ktesttng .x
TOTALS

HOME SALES

2110 Eutorn Avenue
Golllpotis, Ohio 4U31
PHONE 614-446-3547

THURMAN- The cinderella
ttam of the Callia-Meigs Pony
League , Southwestern, won its
sixth game in eight decisions
and remained in a tie with
Pomeroy for second place by
defeating Vinton 15-9 here
Friday.
Coach Richard Hamil ton 's
Southwestern nine and VInton
were all even, 9-9, when the
winners came up with six rWIS
in the bottom of the eighth.
Terry Ca rter started on the
hill for Southwestern and was
relieved by Jim Nida in the
fourth. Nida was credited with

STEER THIS WAY
International
League Standings
By United Press International

Char leston
Louisville

Pet. GB
44 31 .587
43 36 .544 3

Tid ewa ter

41

39

.513

Richmond
Rochester
Syracuse
Toledo

39
39
39
37

38
40
40
40

.506 6
.494 7

.494 7
.481 8

Inn ing s)

Sy r acuse 15 Toledo 1

STEWART
HARDWARE
••••

ANNOUNCES
Douglas Raike, Jr. with over 20 years
experience in air conditioning and
refrigeration now associated with us.
We can now service commercial,
industrial, residential and automotive
refrigeration and air c;onditioning.

Phone 388-8377
4461321 OR
-367-7878

BILL NELSON

5112

Peninsula
30 48 .385 151!'2
Friday ' s Re sults
Rochester 9 Lou isvi lle 6
Charleston 5 Richmond 4
Tidewater 1 Pen insu la 0 (1st, 7
innings)
Tidewater 3 Peninsula 1 (2nd , 7

AFTER 5 P.M.

By

W, L.

First indications are that the new
buzzer and indicator light warning
systems are proving effective in
getting drivers to buckle their seat
belts.

I

GALLIPOLIS - The Little
League Tigers climbed back
into a first place tie with the
Yankees on Memorial Field
Friday evening by turning
back the Athletics, 11-2.
The Tigers and Yankees are
deadlocked for first place with
identical
6·0
records.
Something must give Tuesday
when these two clubs collide at
8 p.m., under the lights on

STATISTICS K
JB HR RBI
0 0 2 4
3

7
I

9

0
0
0

2
)
1

2

7

7

0

2
1

0

0

0

0

0
0

0
0
0
0

2

0
0

I
2
0
1
5
8

0
0
0

0

0
1
2
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

W SAC SB

7

4
14
4

3
2
0
3
0
2

4
3
3
8
4

0

1

1
1
1
1

II
5

I

0
0
0
9
7

2

0

0

2

15
4
8
14

4

2
5
3
3 1
0
8 6
0
2 0
0
3
0
0 68 128" 67
0
0
0

4

0
0
I

15

I
0

2

3

0

I

0

3

0

0

0

0

12

so

Service on Sat. Till

)2

noon.

7

·22

3
6

22

3

9 2·3
19 2·3
1 29 2-3
4 41 2-3
13 1S9
I
2

ERA
6.00

0

9

8
4

2

2

4.65

0
0

IS
5

s

8

6

11
13

6
7

70

38

5

0.84
6.00
2.89
1.84
l.S t

2.15

2 .000
0 1.000

0 .000
I .000

1

1

1

3

6

13

I

8

IS
IJ

10 . II
38 77

5

13
23
.250 18
.843 26
.638 112

.soo

1
S
6

3
8

14
13 28
14 51
87 192

TRI COUNTY MOBILE HOMES
. JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES
FRENCH CITY MOBILE HOMES

'I
J

I

CARROLL'S MOBILE HOMES
YOUNG'S MOBILE
HOMES
.
.
REG -GEM MOBILE HOMES
7-35 MOBILE HOMES

Stalling when braking to a sudden stop
could be due to a too-rich or too-lean
carburetor idling· mixture.
•

Open Evenings Till 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till 5 p.m.'

~

0
1
4

0

ER

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A specially-built emergency training
car is equipped with a "blowoutsimulating" device, which deflates a
tire as quickly as an actual blowout,
, then re-inflates it in 20 seconds .

Quit stalling! Come in and let us put
your car in proper running order at
Sm.ith Nelson Motors, Inc.

2
2

W L Pet. H W K ·K

R

Beginning Sunday, June 18th
The Following Mobile Home Dealers
Will Be CLOSED ALL DAY
Every Sunday! ·

;I

If your engine isn't attuned to it, lead.
free gasoline can bring on a pin~, or
two.

i

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2
0 12
5 42 2-3
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QUAIL CREEK MOBILE HOMES

,,

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.; KEITH GOBLE MOBILE HOMES
1

;; we A~p;eciate Your Patronage and Extend An Invitation To
·~vi~i Our Lots Monday Thru Saturday.

.

'

I •

1'~-

4 11

r r

~e OPEN

Memorial Field.
In other games Friday, the
Senators outlasted the White
Sox 13·11 in a ma keup game,
and in a regularly-scheduled
contest, the Padres bumped off
the Orioles, 11-4.
In the Tigers victory over the
Athletics, Dobson and Slone
shared mound duties. Kev
Sims and Dick Buis each had
homers for the w·inners. J .
Lewis was· charged with the
loss. Scott Betz paced the
losers at the plate.
In the Padres victory, Na te
Thomas and Alva Johnson
allowed only two hits, singles
by Bennett and Keith Jackson ,
as the Padres evened their
season mark at 3-~. The Padres
collecttd eight hits off Jackson

year .

In the makeup game, Bucky
Qualls was credited with the
win over the White Sox . Qualls
fanned 11 and walked II. T.
Johnson was charged with the
loss. The Senators were paced
by Mike Fife's four hits in five
trips. Paul Finnicum was two·
for-l]l'o, ana Chris Withee had
one 'flit in one trip.
Saul McGuire, Jo hnson and
Sayre each had two singles for
the losers. The Senators are
now 3-3, the White Sox Hi in
league play .

Friday's Linescores
Major League Results

Peter son (7 ·10). HR ~ Killeb rew

By United Press Internationa l
National league

(12th) .

t lsi game I
San Otego 000 110 ODO- 2 9 0 Detroit
Phil a
000 003 01&lt;- 4 7 I Chicago
Cork ins , Schaeffer (8)
Corrales ; Carlton (11 .6)

and
and

Ba te man . LP- Corkins (0·51:
HR- Luzinski l?thl .
(2nd gamel
San Otego 3lt 001 ooo- 6 8 0
Ph ita
000 000 1.00- 1 8 3
Kirby (6-7) and Kendall ;
Nash, Twitchell (2). Selma (7)
and Ryan. LP- Na sh (l .s) . HR
- Kendall 2 (2nd &amp; Jrdl. ·

Jansen was referring to Red
pitcher Wayne Sunpson 's hot
smash back to the mound in the
third inning .
Williams will tell you that
Hooten doesn't lack &gt;tuff or
confidence.
"They talk big in Texas and

Roberts in the fourth who was that's where he' s from ," said
charged with the loss.
Williams . "That young man
Hitte rs for Vinton were helieves he could go out there
Molholand with three hits, 'on the mound and ge t the
Roberts had two. and Justus batter out. "
And this is exac tly what
and Norma n each had a base
knock.
Hoown has been doing.
The victory Friday nig ht was
Next Tuesday Southwes tern
travels to fulcine and Vinton the se v en th again st seven
defea ts. More impressive is the
goes to Bidwell.
2.65 earned run average he
By innings:
Vinton
204 201 00- 9 7 0 carried into the game. One of
sw
402 201 06-15 20 2 Hooten's seven victories was a
Justus, Roberts (LP) (4), no-hitter against the Phillies.
Ironically, Hooten wound up
and Tacket t. Carter , Nida
(WP ) (4), and Crouse.
a loser on the night he had what
.Jansen rated "his best stuff of

and Saul McGuire. For the
winners, Glen Vinson had a
double and triple Neal Prendergast had a single and triple.
Kent Shawver had a triple. The
Orioles dropped to 1-4 on the

000 011 022- 6 12 0
000 200 01 1- 4 12 0

Timmer man , Seelbach {4),
Scherman ( 9) and Freehan ;
Lemonds, Ramo (6), Forster

171. Aocsta (9) and Herrmann ,
Bri nkman (91. WP.Seetbach (4.
4) . LP- Forster 11 ·2) . HRs- 1.
Brown (2nd) , Ka line (4th).

Mi tw
201 002 4DO- 9 9 2
Oakland
110 000 ll ll- 4 11 t
Brett , Sanders (8 ) and
Rodriguez: Blue, Locker. (7) ,
Knowles (8) and Duncan . WP(lSI game)
Brett (S-81. LP- Btue (2·51.,
Pittsbrgh 032 001 3IIl-l0 20 HRs- May (6th I. Scott 18th I.
Atlanta
000000002- 2 9 1
dl D
(11th )
Walker (3-4) and May ; Brown 12 n · uncan
·
Kelley, McQueen 13), Hoerner . 110 innings)
19) and Williams, Casanova (81. Boston
010 011 000 2- s 8 2
LP- Ketley (5·6) . HR-Atley Calif
001 000 Ollll- 3 12 2
(2nd).
Curtis, Tiant (8) and Fisk:
(2nd game)
May Dukes (6). Fisher (8).
100 001 ooo- 2 97 0 'Barber (10) and Torborg.
Ptttsbrgh
Atlanta
000200l0x- 3 3 Stephenson(IO) . WP-Tiant(4Klson (3·21 and Ma y: Hardin 21. LP- Barber (l -1) . HRs(2:0&gt;. and Casanova. HR- Fisk (lOth) , · .
W1ll 1ams (lOth).
Berry (4th) Ogilvie (Sth)
Los Ang
000 122 lDO- 6 13 t
New York
100 000 ooo- 1 3 I
Sutton (10·4) and Cannizzaro:
Matlack. Capra (7) and Grote.
LP- Mattack (8-5). HR-Pa rker
(2nd ).
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
San Fran
000 010 1110- 2 7 1
Montreat
023 020 00&lt;- 7 10 0 Quickstar won his third con·
McDowett, Reberger (3), secutive race at Scioto Downs,
Carrithers (5), McMahon (S), going the mile in 2:01 3-5
Molfttt (7) and Rader : Stone- Friday night to capture the
man t8-~ and Humph rey . LPfeatured $7,000 trot. Hassie
McDowett t8·61 .
Blaze finished second , %
Chicago
000 100 Olll- 2 5 0 length behind Quickstar,
Cincinnati 000 000 001- 1 s 0
Hooton, Aker (9) and Hund - driven by Dick Williams.
ley ; Simpson, Halt (9 ) and Bengal Time won the first
Bench . WP- Hooton (7.7) . LP- race and Pathmaker the
Stmpson (4-31. HR- Pepttone
second, returning $186.20 in the
(lsi).
daily double on the comHouslon
000 100 ooo- 1 4 0 bination of ~ and 4.
St. Louis
000 030 OOx- 3 10 0 The crowd of 7 340 wagered
Roberts (7-4) and Edwards:
'
Gibson (8·5) and .Simmons. H ~l,677.
- Wynn (13th) .. .

°

.

EVENINGS

Thank You/

. .. .

American League
Kan City
010 020 211l- 6 10 o
Cleveland 010 010 1110- J 7 1
Drago (7-7) •nd Kirkpatrick ;
Wilcox, Hennigan (6), Riddle·
MEET ENDS FRIDAY
berger (7), Colbert (7), Mtngorl
CINCINNATI (UP!) - l'he
(9) and Fosse. LP- Witcox (6·
101. HRs- Kirkpatrlck (6th) , Queen City Turf Club meet
Nettles (6th), Fosse (4th), Otis ended at River Downs here
(4th).
Friday with Bolt From Blue
'
recording
the fastest time of
.. Texas
130 010 ooo- s 91
Bat llf11ore 002 2110 ooo- 4 9 2 the meet over one mile and 711Bosman, Panther IS) and yards, a 1:43 win to take the
King ; Palmer, Harrison 12), featured $3,7110 claiming race.
Watt (8) and ~tes . WPA dally double 7-4 com·
Panther (4-J). LP- Harrlson (O.
2) . HR- Robln•on (4th!.
binatlon of Ooh Baby and
·Rebels Babbette paid $54.20.
Now York 011 oooooo- 2' 7 o
tl Turf Cl b 511Mtnn
000 100 22x- 5 16 1
The Cincinna
u
Peterson, McDaniel (7) and day meet opened Saturdaf.
Munson: Woodson, Strickland
Attendance was 4,970 with a
(6). Granger' (7) and Miller- handle of ~,728. 1].
watd. WP~ranger 13-0), LP-

the night off Simpson: The
homer was one of two hits {or
Pepitone, who went mto the
game Hor-25 Since commg out
of hi~ temporary retirement
June 30.
.Ron Santo ~oubled ~orne
R•ck Monday m the eighth
inning for the Cubs' second
run ., Withams, also trymg to
score on the h1 t, was out at the
plate.

bit."

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It was last Monday against

Pittsburgh. He had a 2·1 vic·
tory virtually tucked away
when he made the mistake of
giving Wi llie Stargell a pit&gt;h
which was a little too good. The
result was a two..run homer in
the ninth that gave the Pirates
a 3-2 victory.
Perez Gets RBI
Friday night Hooten had a
two-hit shutout going when
three singles, the last by Tony
Perez. sc ored Pete Rose and
gave the Reds their only run .
It was then Aker ambled to

Gibson Beats

·u

Roberts, 3-1
ST. LOUIS iUP! i - Bob
Gibson pitched a four-hitter
against Houston Friday night
for his eighth straight victory
and the St. Louis Cardinals
held on to third place in the NL
East with a 3·1 victory ove t· th e
Houston Astros.
The Ca rdinals scored all
their runs in the fifth innin g off
lefty Dave Roberts. Donn
Clendenon and Luis Melendez
singled and Clendenon scored
on Dal Maxvill 's single. Gibson
was safe on a fielder's choice
and, wi th two out, back-to-back
singles by Ted Sizemore and
Matty Alou produced two more
runs.
Roberts, now 7-4, allowed 10
hits in going the distance.
NAMED MU COACH
HUNT INGTON W. Va .
•
iUPI) - Former Columbus
Eastmoor High
School
wrestling Coach Bob Barnett,
29, was named Friday to
succeed Mike Sager as head
wrestling coach at Marshall
University.
Sager resigned to accept a
··
t th
similar pos1hon a
e
University of Cincinnati.
Barn ett will rec eive his
doctorate in physical education
at Ohio State University this
swnmer.

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the win.
Bob Haislop came up with
the game-winning hit in the
eig~ with a bases loaded
triple with two outs.
Top hitters for Southwestern
were Mike Crouse with five hi ts
in five at bats including a
double and two triples, Rick
Crouse and Donnie Bush each
with three singles, Carter a
single and double, Jack W,aler
and Nida each two singles,
Haislop a single and triple , and
Sammy Fairchild had a single.
Mike Justus started on the
hill for Vinton and gave way to

First Place Tie, Win ll-2

ANNOUNCING!

I

A ~an Francisco auto wrecker has
become the first to put his operation
under cover, so to speak, by purchasing four huge warehouses.

G

'

Hooten didn't realize pitc hers the mound, sfruc k out George
used th eir fi ngerti ps in Fo'ster and got Denis Menke on
a forced play to gain his save.
throwing their knu cklers.
The 32-year-old Aker hasn' t
But by that time, too, Hoo ten
was having too mut:h suef.'ess given up an earned run in .l7
with his pitch he wasn' t about innings, wh ile making 14 rehef
to make any changes.
appea rant·es
since · ht s
acquisition
from
the
New York
Hooten, in the midst of his
fir st full season in the maj ors, Yankees May 13.
Joe Pep1tone's fir st homer of
is, as Jansen puts it, "one cool
the
season, leading off the fifth
cook ie out there on th e
inniu g, also was the fi rst h1 t of
ffiOWld ."

"It's everything you hear
about it," said Larry . "He
throws·it hard, too. And I melln
it really explodes - ~reaks
down like a spitter ."
Stumbled Upon It
As Hoou,n tells the story, he
stumbled upon the freak pitch
as a 14-year-old while at·
"You saw him on that one
temping
to
throw
a ball hit back to the mound ,"
knuckleball. At that time . pointed out Larry. " He took his
time and very calmly thew out
the batter . He didn'l fluster one

LL .Tigers _Climb Back Into

X·nO longer with team .

PITCHING :
PLAYER
Johnny Bolrd
Stan Perrv
Rick A•h
Bill Chaney
Skip Johnson
Steve Lee
Rick VanMatre
TOTALS

curve.

Sixth G-M Win, 15 To 9

METHODIST GIRLS ROMP
GALLIPOLIS - The Crace
United Methodist Girls Red
Team defeated the First
Baptist Whiws 25-1on the Fifth
Ave . field on Thursday af.
u,rnoon . M. Tawney and G.
Ellcess or pitched for the
winners . L. Janey 4·5, D.
Chestnut 3-4. S. Hamilton 3·5,
C. Ellcessor 3-5, S. Blackburn
2-4, M. Tawney 1-4, and C.
Bowling, S. Tawney and C.
Bradshaw with one hit each
paced the Reds. D. Chestnut
had a grandslam home run . R.
Layne, C. Fellure and Haner
had one hit each for the white
team . C. Fellure wa s the losing
pitcher .

MElGS AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
G AB R H Avg . 28
11
24
3 3 .120 0
B
9
2
I
.111
0
9 12
2
2
.167
0
13 28 5 4 .143 I
16 34 5 9
265 2
11 17 3 4 .236
0
8 15 1 5
333 0
8 11 0 0
000
0
8 9
1 0
.000
0
16 30 10 13 .3B6
1
21 58 15 23 .397 2
17 42
5 10
.238
3
17 50
2 9 .180 0
21 61 13 20 .330 2
18 33 5 7
.2 12 I
19 3B
5
6 .158
2
14 29
4 6 .207
0
11 21
2 1 .048
0
18 45 6 8 .178
0
2 4 0 0 .000
0
4
13 0 3 .230 2
22 61 0 89 135
.221 16

PLAYER

he can also throw that ball ."
.Jansen , however , wasn't
knocking Hoot en'·s knuckle

Southwestern Captures

breigs Legion Statistics

of JJ,me. •
The mobile homes today,

Riverfront Stadium turnout of
40,042, left the Reds II&gt; games
ahead of the Houston Astros in
the National League West. The
Astros lost 3-1 to St. Louis.
"What amazes me about
Hooten .is the guy's fast ball, "
said Larry Jansen, who
hecame the Cubs' pitching
coach this season .
"All I'd heard about the kid
when I came here," explai11ed
Larry, "was that he had a
great knuckle curve then, after
I joined the club, I learned that

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..
16 - The SWiday Times· Sentinel, SWiday, July 9, 1972

34 Teams Entered In 14th KC LL To·urliamenty
New Haven Cubs And Gallipolis .
Yanks Play First Tilt Monday

~ OWA Action To

FOUR'l'EENTI! ANNUAL
KYGER CREEK TOURilAMEIIT

FOR LI!TLE LEAGUERS

MON,

7/17

FRI. 7/21

MON.

THUR. 7/20 6100

TUES. 7/18

TUES. 7/18 7115

THUR. 7/20 7115

TUES. 7/18 8:~nf------"

rRI. 7/21 8115

. WED. 7/19 6:00

JJl Games D.S.T. (PJ4.)

lhpiree: Art Stobart
larrv Wolfe

~

New . Haven. ~ Cops

7-5 Decision

MASON - Randy Clark runs .
single by Miller, an error, and
blasted a two-out two rWI home
Mason Co: jumped out to a singles by Thomas and
run over the centerfield fence seemingly comfortable four
Simmons.
giving New Haven a 7.f&gt; eleven r\UI lead with two runs in both
New Haven plated five runs
inning victory over Mason Co. the second and third inning.
in the fifth inning with
Friday night. Rob Lambert Doubles by Simmons and
Lambert"s circuit clout the bi~
powered a grand slam home Moore combined with a single factor . ·After one out Wh ite
the fifth inning 3C• by Halland accoWited for a a walk, Brei Hart lined a
emmti1no for four New Haven
· of runs. In the · a single, Mike Lewis jammed fo r
the second out, and Randy
Clark drew a walk loading the
bases hefore Lambert's
heroiCs. Following Lambert's
blast, Gardner singled, Curtis
Roush singled and Chester
Roush doubled plating another
rWI.
Mason Co. tied the game if,
their half of the inning on
singles by Thomas and
Simmons combined with a
stolen base. Brilliant pitching
by both Kevin camp and Steve
Miller extended a regular
seven inning ~allgame into no
less that eleven innings.
Clark's winning blast came
in the eleventh after one out
following Brei Hart's third

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Tourney
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7/17

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Avo,caclo , Autumn

• ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio press to~~ 0~~:et 5~
(UP!) -:- Lida Fee Mathews of ~~~·O:club course.
Portsmouth, commg off a . M'
Mathews'
top
broken leg, ~ies to defend he ~ cha!::nger' could well he
Oh10 Wo~en s .Amateur Go
Medina •s Roberta Albefs,. 1965
Championship starting women's collegiate champion
Monday.,\l'hen play opens m the while at the University of
49th annual state event. .
Florida and a member of ·the
Miss Mathews, a three-lime 1968 American Curtis Cup
winner of the top amateur go~ Team Miss Albers just
ttst for women, may be hard· rtcenily moved into the

7/17

THUR. 7/20 81

~

MIDDLEPORT - Jerry
Cremeens had a no-hitter for
six and tw o-thirds inn ings
before Jerry Gl eason of
Middleport " B" broke the
hitless string with a bloop
single as Pomeroy kept pace
with Southwestern for second

Begin Monday
MON.

base hit of the evening. Clark 's
homer came off of loosing
pitcher Rody Harden.
Home runs accounted for 6 of
New Haven 7 runs in the

outing. Their record is now 36 with . a single game with
Athens Saturday and a double
header with Ravenswood
Sunday . All are home games.

WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - While favored Stan
Smith hurried off downtown to
hire himself a tuxedo, !lie
Nas tase headed for the
practice court Saturday so he
could maintain his hair-trigger
form for their pos tponed Men's
Singles final at the Wimbledon
Tennis Championships.
Saturday 's program was
ca lled off because of day-long
rain and rescheduled for today
- only the fourth time in the
history of the 86-year old
championship that the 12-&lt;lay
tournament has failed to finish
on schedule.
The 6-foot-4 Smith , of
Pasedena, Calif. , needed a
tuxedo so he could arrive
"properly dressed" for the
Wimbledon Ball where the
male and female champions
opert the dancing.
'" I guess we'll let Larry open
the dancing with Billie Jean,"
Smith said in reference to Mrs.
King 's husband who watched
her
demolish
Evo nne
Goolagong of Australia in
straight sets in the Women's
Final on Friday. Nastase said
he would not attend the ball.
'The last time the tournament
fail ed to finish on schedule was
in 1963. At that time the
Women's Final was played on
the last day and Australia's
Margaret Court had to wait
until the third Monday to beat
the then Billie Jean Moffitt.
Earlier postponements came
in 1927 and 1922.
Tournament referee, Capt.
Mike Gibson, said simply:
'" It's a divine act, what else is
there to say."
Gibson added: "'Of course,
it's frustrating - the final day
and all that. We've been expecting ra in all through so it is
disappointing."

e

It llln A
Row, 17-0

Buckeye State .
Three other past champions
will he among the field of 80
which will play a qualifying
roWid Monday and lhen Into
four days of match play
starting Tuesday with the 36hole finals Friday.
Mrs. Pauline Whitacre of
Canton won the Amateljl" ,in
1962 and 1966; Kathleen
Newton of Cleveland took the
1963 title, and Mrs. Sharon
Klwnp Kiel of Toledo was the
1970 champion.
A. darkhorse contender may
he Helen Kirkland of nel!l"bY
Cadiz, 1!169 nmnerup to 1\flss
Mathews, who Is probably
more famlliar with the
Belmont course than any of the
other challengers.

CHESHIRE - Behind the
combined one-hit pitching of
Kelley Winebrenner and Steve
Baird, the Wldefeated Cheshire
Tigers won their 11th straight
game of the season as they shut
out Rio Grande 17.0 Thursday
night at Cheshire, to remain in
sole possession of fir st place in
the Ohio Valley Little League .
It was the 5eventh shut out of
the year for the Tigers' pitching slilff.
Kelley Winebrenner pitched
the first three innings and won
his third game of the year as he
allo-iled one hit to Rio Grande's
McCoY, while striking out five
and walking none. Steve Baird
hurled the last three innings,
allowing no hits while striking
out all nine men that he faced.
S. Bjlirey was the losing hurler
for Rio 'Grande.
The Ti~ers jwnped off to an
ear!y1firs! inning lead as the
two lead-of! men walked and
Steve Baird followed with his
sixtll home run of the season to
give the Tigers a ~lead which
they held the en tire game.
Leading the Tigers in hdttlng
were Steve Baird witll a home
rWI and two singles, Dallas
Sayre with a home rWI and
single, and Claude Cornelius
with a double and single.
Coach Dale Allenswo'l th's
lads next outing comes in the
Kyger Creek Tournament
Wednesday at 8:30 p.m.
against Harrisonville.

By
TERRY
JOHNSON
It you wanted to be real
technicaL you could truth ·

tully say that the ttrst home
on wheels, trailer or mobile
home, was the conestoga
wagon , which was used to

cross

the

co untry

Hooten Stops Big. Red Machine, 2-1

Middleport Team

1972 SCHEDUU:

Evonne Best
Player Despite
Loss-Mirror

Make the greatest
cooking
since fire.

P~meroy Wallops

.

'

CHESHIRE - The Hth SOX' 196~ - Middleport
Annual Kyger Creek Tour- Yankees . 1966 - Middleport
nament for Little Leaguers will Senator~ ; 1967 - Point
hegin Monday, July 10, at 6 Pleasant Peoples Bank; )966p.m. on the James B. Harreld Mci\,rthur Merchants; .1!169 Memorial Field opposite the Pt. Pleasant Fruth's Phar·
macy; 1970 - Pt. Pleasant City
KC Power Plant.
Thirt y-four team s will Ice and Fuel and 1971 - New
compe te durin g the even t Haven Cubs.
The 1972 KC Utile League
which run s through Saturday ,
Julv 22. Four new teams, Tournament schedule appears
Ripley
Daniel
Boone, elsewhere on today's sports
Harrisonville , Ripl ey Jack page .
Myers and Hometown, W. Va ._,
have entered this ye ar' s
tournament.
Opening night action
fea tures the New Haven Cubs
battling the Gallipolis Yankees
at 6 p.m. Monday while Green
play s the Point Pleasan t
Kiwanis team in the second
game. In the fina le, Pomeroy's ·
Yankees will play the
SYDNEY, Australia (0PI)
Galli polis Athletics.
- The Sunday Mirror said
Three games will be played Saturday that although she lost
each night through Sa turday, her Wimbledon Crown Friday
July 15.
Evonne Coolagong is still the
The tournament is played at best female tennis player in the
the expense of !he Kyger Creek world .
·
Employees Club. It is solely for
"She may have lost her
the benefi t or the area little Wimbledon Crown, but she's
leaguers . The only means of still the queen of tennis," the
financial support is the con· Mirror said.
cession stand.
"Like all royalty, she was as
Eac h year, improvements gracious and charming in
have been made to make the defeat this week as she was in
event one of !he finest in victory last year - one might
Southeastern Ohi o. The have excused her if she were
tourney gives its participants a not.
chance to play under the lights
'"Evonne was subjected to
before a large crowd with the one of the most vitriolic and
use of paid licensed umpires bitchy smear campaigns ever
and in addition, the first four waged against a woman
teams are presented trophies player.
for their efforls.
"Not the least of her critics
. Art Stobart of Middleport was
Billie-Jean
King,
and Larry Wolfe of fulci ne will America's 'Miss Petulance,'
serve as umpires. New who woq the title back on
Haven's Cubs are the 1971 Friday.
defending champions . .
"Evonne took it all with a
Previous winners are: 1909 smile and when she lost
- Pt. Pleasant's Doc's Fine co ngratulated Mrs . King
Foods ; 1960 - Pt. Pleasant simply· and sincerely .
Sommerville ; 1961 - Pomeroy
"Billie.Jean said she apRedlegs ; 1962 - Pomeroy preciated Evonne's attitude Piraies ; 1963 - Gallipolis we hope she makes a study of
Tigers; 1964 - Gallipolis Red il.

17 -The,SundayTimes -Sentinel,SWI9ay, J~y 9, 1972

by

pioneer settlers .
Only ne cessa ry l i ving
gear was stowed Into the
waQqn leaving_,
enoUgh room to
about, however , the
tiers managed to eat, sleep.
r ide and l ive In thes.e
wagons for long stretches

CINCINNATI (UP!) ' - If
Burt Hooten winds up a 20game : winner this sel;JsOn, it
won 't surprise Billy Williams.
"I predicted this spring that
Hooten would win I~ to 20
games, " said the veteran
ChiCago Cub outfielder.
This was Friday night after
the 22-year-old Hooten, with a
ninth-inning assist from Jack
Aker, pitched the Chicago Cubs
to a 2·1 victory over the -Cincin nati Reds in the opener of a
four-game series.
The loss, witnessed by a

place in the Calha-Meigs Pony
League by whippi n ~ their
neighbor riva ls 24-0 here
Friday.
Cremeens fanned 17 batters
in the sevcn.inni ng stint and

walked seven. He also had
three· home runs and a single,
with one of the round-trippe1·s
bare ly missing the Peewee
·fence in deep leltfield.
Gleason started for Mid·
dleport "' B" and gave way to
Jeff Miller in the sixth. Coach
Tony May 's cha rges now are
winless in ten starts.
Coach
Woody
Ca ll 's
Pomeroy hitters were Charles
Marshall with three triples an d
a single, Jerf McKinney had a
home run and triple, Barry
Marshall had two singles, Stan
Moon a double, and Mike
Nesselro&lt;td, Woody Call, Jr .,
John Blake, Fred Burney, and
Larry Fridley all had a single.
The win moves Pomeroy to 62, tied for second place with
Southwestern behind Bidwell,
now 7..0. Pomeroy is home
against Middleport "' A" and
Middleport " B" is home
a gainst Cheshire next Monday.
By innings:
Pom.
057 037 2-24 19
M1d. " B'"
000 000 II- 0 1
Cremeens and Ca ll . Gleason
1LPI . Miller 16) and Thomas.

Johnny Baird

ar e no cram ped one room
affairs, cra mm ed with
necessities only , but have
bright airy ,
spac ious
rooms , livable ~nd com .

OaveWolfe

Chuck Per roud

Mlck A•h
Jon Bu ck

Bitt Chaney

lortabte. equl pped with all

Steve Lee
hnny Roush

the necess ities and also
every
appliance
and

fcomlp Johnson
Cooke

gadget that modern
technology c_~n _ produce ..

'lck A•h
Rick Von Matre
Dave Boyd
Roger Dl&lt;on
Kevin Sheets
Lou Me Kinney
Stan Perry
Howle Tay lor
Sieve Dunfee
Brett Hart. X
Mark Ktesttng .x
TOTALS

HOME SALES

2110 Eutorn Avenue
Golllpotis, Ohio 4U31
PHONE 614-446-3547

THURMAN- The cinderella
ttam of the Callia-Meigs Pony
League , Southwestern, won its
sixth game in eight decisions
and remained in a tie with
Pomeroy for second place by
defeating Vinton 15-9 here
Friday.
Coach Richard Hamil ton 's
Southwestern nine and VInton
were all even, 9-9, when the
winners came up with six rWIS
in the bottom of the eighth.
Terry Ca rter started on the
hill for Southwestern and was
relieved by Jim Nida in the
fourth. Nida was credited with

STEER THIS WAY
International
League Standings
By United Press International

Char leston
Louisville

Pet. GB
44 31 .587
43 36 .544 3

Tid ewa ter

41

39

.513

Richmond
Rochester
Syracuse
Toledo

39
39
39
37

38
40
40
40

.506 6
.494 7

.494 7
.481 8

Inn ing s)

Sy r acuse 15 Toledo 1

STEWART
HARDWARE
••••

ANNOUNCES
Douglas Raike, Jr. with over 20 years
experience in air conditioning and
refrigeration now associated with us.
We can now service commercial,
industrial, residential and automotive
refrigeration and air c;onditioning.

Phone 388-8377
4461321 OR
-367-7878

BILL NELSON

5112

Peninsula
30 48 .385 151!'2
Friday ' s Re sults
Rochester 9 Lou isvi lle 6
Charleston 5 Richmond 4
Tidewater 1 Pen insu la 0 (1st, 7
innings)
Tidewater 3 Peninsula 1 (2nd , 7

AFTER 5 P.M.

By

W, L.

First indications are that the new
buzzer and indicator light warning
systems are proving effective in
getting drivers to buckle their seat
belts.

I

GALLIPOLIS - The Little
League Tigers climbed back
into a first place tie with the
Yankees on Memorial Field
Friday evening by turning
back the Athletics, 11-2.
The Tigers and Yankees are
deadlocked for first place with
identical
6·0
records.
Something must give Tuesday
when these two clubs collide at
8 p.m., under the lights on

STATISTICS K
JB HR RBI
0 0 2 4
3

7
I

9

0
0
0

2
)
1

2

7

7

0

2
1

0

0

0

0

0
0

0
0
0
0

2

0
0

I
2
0
1
5
8

0
0
0

0

0
1
2
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

W SAC SB

7

4
14
4

3
2
0
3
0
2

4
3
3
8
4

0

1

1
1
1
1

II
5

I

0
0
0
9
7

2

0

0

2

15
4
8
14

4

2
5
3
3 1
0
8 6
0
2 0
0
3
0
0 68 128" 67
0
0
0

4

0
0
I

15

I
0

2

3

0

I

0

3

0

0

0

0

12

so

Service on Sat. Till

)2

noon.

7

·22

3
6

22

3

9 2·3
19 2·3
1 29 2-3
4 41 2-3
13 1S9
I
2

ERA
6.00

0

9

8
4

2

2

4.65

0
0

IS
5

s

8

6

11
13

6
7

70

38

5

0.84
6.00
2.89
1.84
l.S t

2.15

2 .000
0 1.000

0 .000
I .000

1

1

1

3

6

13

I

8

IS
IJ

10 . II
38 77

5

13
23
.250 18
.843 26
.638 112

.soo

1
S
6

3
8

14
13 28
14 51
87 192

TRI COUNTY MOBILE HOMES
. JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES
FRENCH CITY MOBILE HOMES

'I
J

I

CARROLL'S MOBILE HOMES
YOUNG'S MOBILE
HOMES
.
.
REG -GEM MOBILE HOMES
7-35 MOBILE HOMES

Stalling when braking to a sudden stop
could be due to a too-rich or too-lean
carburetor idling· mixture.
•

Open Evenings Till 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till 5 p.m.'

~

0
1
4

0

ER

'I

A specially-built emergency training
car is equipped with a "blowoutsimulating" device, which deflates a
tire as quickly as an actual blowout,
, then re-inflates it in 20 seconds .

Quit stalling! Come in and let us put
your car in proper running order at
Sm.ith Nelson Motors, Inc.

2
2

W L Pet. H W K ·K

R

Beginning Sunday, June 18th
The Following Mobile Home Dealers
Will Be CLOSED ALL DAY
Every Sunday! ·

;I

If your engine isn't attuned to it, lead.
free gasoline can bring on a pin~, or
two.

i

GS CG IP
2
0 12
5 42 2-3
6

•

'

'

'(
•

:

I
l

i

QUAIL CREEK MOBILE HOMES

,,

lr'
'

.; KEITH GOBLE MOBILE HOMES
1

;; we A~p;eciate Your Patronage and Extend An Invitation To
·~vi~i Our Lots Monday Thru Saturday.

.

'

I •

1'~-

4 11

r r

~e OPEN

Memorial Field.
In other games Friday, the
Senators outlasted the White
Sox 13·11 in a ma keup game,
and in a regularly-scheduled
contest, the Padres bumped off
the Orioles, 11-4.
In the Tigers victory over the
Athletics, Dobson and Slone
shared mound duties. Kev
Sims and Dick Buis each had
homers for the w·inners. J .
Lewis was· charged with the
loss. Scott Betz paced the
losers at the plate.
In the Padres victory, Na te
Thomas and Alva Johnson
allowed only two hits, singles
by Bennett and Keith Jackson ,
as the Padres evened their
season mark at 3-~. The Padres
collecttd eight hits off Jackson

year .

In the makeup game, Bucky
Qualls was credited with the
win over the White Sox . Qualls
fanned 11 and walked II. T.
Johnson was charged with the
loss. The Senators were paced
by Mike Fife's four hits in five
trips. Paul Finnicum was two·
for-l]l'o, ana Chris Withee had
one 'flit in one trip.
Saul McGuire, Jo hnson and
Sayre each had two singles for
the losers. The Senators are
now 3-3, the White Sox Hi in
league play .

Friday's Linescores
Major League Results

Peter son (7 ·10). HR ~ Killeb rew

By United Press Internationa l
National league

(12th) .

t lsi game I
San Otego 000 110 ODO- 2 9 0 Detroit
Phil a
000 003 01&lt;- 4 7 I Chicago
Cork ins , Schaeffer (8)
Corrales ; Carlton (11 .6)

and
and

Ba te man . LP- Corkins (0·51:
HR- Luzinski l?thl .
(2nd gamel
San Otego 3lt 001 ooo- 6 8 0
Ph ita
000 000 1.00- 1 8 3
Kirby (6-7) and Kendall ;
Nash, Twitchell (2). Selma (7)
and Ryan. LP- Na sh (l .s) . HR
- Kendall 2 (2nd &amp; Jrdl. ·

Jansen was referring to Red
pitcher Wayne Sunpson 's hot
smash back to the mound in the
third inning .
Williams will tell you that
Hooten doesn't lack &gt;tuff or
confidence.
"They talk big in Texas and

Roberts in the fourth who was that's where he' s from ," said
charged with the loss.
Williams . "That young man
Hitte rs for Vinton were helieves he could go out there
Molholand with three hits, 'on the mound and ge t the
Roberts had two. and Justus batter out. "
And this is exac tly what
and Norma n each had a base
knock.
Hoown has been doing.
The victory Friday nig ht was
Next Tuesday Southwes tern
travels to fulcine and Vinton the se v en th again st seven
defea ts. More impressive is the
goes to Bidwell.
2.65 earned run average he
By innings:
Vinton
204 201 00- 9 7 0 carried into the game. One of
sw
402 201 06-15 20 2 Hooten's seven victories was a
Justus, Roberts (LP) (4), no-hitter against the Phillies.
Ironically, Hooten wound up
and Tacket t. Carter , Nida
(WP ) (4), and Crouse.
a loser on the night he had what
.Jansen rated "his best stuff of

and Saul McGuire. For the
winners, Glen Vinson had a
double and triple Neal Prendergast had a single and triple.
Kent Shawver had a triple. The
Orioles dropped to 1-4 on the

000 011 022- 6 12 0
000 200 01 1- 4 12 0

Timmer man , Seelbach {4),
Scherman ( 9) and Freehan ;
Lemonds, Ramo (6), Forster

171. Aocsta (9) and Herrmann ,
Bri nkman (91. WP.Seetbach (4.
4) . LP- Forster 11 ·2) . HRs- 1.
Brown (2nd) , Ka line (4th).

Mi tw
201 002 4DO- 9 9 2
Oakland
110 000 ll ll- 4 11 t
Brett , Sanders (8 ) and
Rodriguez: Blue, Locker. (7) ,
Knowles (8) and Duncan . WP(lSI game)
Brett (S-81. LP- Btue (2·51.,
Pittsbrgh 032 001 3IIl-l0 20 HRs- May (6th I. Scott 18th I.
Atlanta
000000002- 2 9 1
dl D
(11th )
Walker (3-4) and May ; Brown 12 n · uncan
·
Kelley, McQueen 13), Hoerner . 110 innings)
19) and Williams, Casanova (81. Boston
010 011 000 2- s 8 2
LP- Ketley (5·6) . HR-Atley Calif
001 000 Ollll- 3 12 2
(2nd).
Curtis, Tiant (8) and Fisk:
(2nd game)
May Dukes (6). Fisher (8).
100 001 ooo- 2 97 0 'Barber (10) and Torborg.
Ptttsbrgh
Atlanta
000200l0x- 3 3 Stephenson(IO) . WP-Tiant(4Klson (3·21 and Ma y: Hardin 21. LP- Barber (l -1) . HRs(2:0&gt;. and Casanova. HR- Fisk (lOth) , · .
W1ll 1ams (lOth).
Berry (4th) Ogilvie (Sth)
Los Ang
000 122 lDO- 6 13 t
New York
100 000 ooo- 1 3 I
Sutton (10·4) and Cannizzaro:
Matlack. Capra (7) and Grote.
LP- Mattack (8-5). HR-Pa rker
(2nd ).
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
San Fran
000 010 1110- 2 7 1
Montreat
023 020 00&lt;- 7 10 0 Quickstar won his third con·
McDowett, Reberger (3), secutive race at Scioto Downs,
Carrithers (5), McMahon (S), going the mile in 2:01 3-5
Molfttt (7) and Rader : Stone- Friday night to capture the
man t8-~ and Humph rey . LPfeatured $7,000 trot. Hassie
McDowett t8·61 .
Blaze finished second , %
Chicago
000 100 Olll- 2 5 0 length behind Quickstar,
Cincinnati 000 000 001- 1 s 0
Hooton, Aker (9) and Hund - driven by Dick Williams.
ley ; Simpson, Halt (9 ) and Bengal Time won the first
Bench . WP- Hooton (7.7) . LP- race and Pathmaker the
Stmpson (4-31. HR- Pepttone
second, returning $186.20 in the
(lsi).
daily double on the comHouslon
000 100 ooo- 1 4 0 bination of ~ and 4.
St. Louis
000 030 OOx- 3 10 0 The crowd of 7 340 wagered
Roberts (7-4) and Edwards:
'
Gibson (8·5) and .Simmons. H ~l,677.
- Wynn (13th) .. .

°

.

EVENINGS

Thank You/

. .. .

American League
Kan City
010 020 211l- 6 10 o
Cleveland 010 010 1110- J 7 1
Drago (7-7) •nd Kirkpatrick ;
Wilcox, Hennigan (6), Riddle·
MEET ENDS FRIDAY
berger (7), Colbert (7), Mtngorl
CINCINNATI (UP!) - l'he
(9) and Fosse. LP- Witcox (6·
101. HRs- Kirkpatrlck (6th) , Queen City Turf Club meet
Nettles (6th), Fosse (4th), Otis ended at River Downs here
(4th).
Friday with Bolt From Blue
'
recording
the fastest time of
.. Texas
130 010 ooo- s 91
Bat llf11ore 002 2110 ooo- 4 9 2 the meet over one mile and 711Bosman, Panther IS) and yards, a 1:43 win to take the
King ; Palmer, Harrison 12), featured $3,7110 claiming race.
Watt (8) and ~tes . WPA dally double 7-4 com·
Panther (4-J). LP- Harrlson (O.
2) . HR- Robln•on (4th!.
binatlon of Ooh Baby and
·Rebels Babbette paid $54.20.
Now York 011 oooooo- 2' 7 o
tl Turf Cl b 511Mtnn
000 100 22x- 5 16 1
The Cincinna
u
Peterson, McDaniel (7) and day meet opened Saturdaf.
Munson: Woodson, Strickland
Attendance was 4,970 with a
(6). Granger' (7) and Miller- handle of ~,728. 1].
watd. WP~ranger 13-0), LP-

the night off Simpson: The
homer was one of two hits {or
Pepitone, who went mto the
game Hor-25 Since commg out
of hi~ temporary retirement
June 30.
.Ron Santo ~oubled ~orne
R•ck Monday m the eighth
inning for the Cubs' second
run ., Withams, also trymg to
score on the h1 t, was out at the
plate.

bit."

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H.eavy -bodied, high
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Excellent protection

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the season.'·
It was last Monday against

Pittsburgh. He had a 2·1 vic·
tory virtually tucked away
when he made the mistake of
giving Wi llie Stargell a pit&gt;h
which was a little too good. The
result was a two..run homer in
the ninth that gave the Pirates
a 3-2 victory.
Perez Gets RBI
Friday night Hooten had a
two-hit shutout going when
three singles, the last by Tony
Perez. sc ored Pete Rose and
gave the Reds their only run .
It was then Aker ambled to

Gibson Beats

·u

Roberts, 3-1
ST. LOUIS iUP! i - Bob
Gibson pitched a four-hitter
against Houston Friday night
for his eighth straight victory
and the St. Louis Cardinals
held on to third place in the NL
East with a 3·1 victory ove t· th e
Houston Astros.
The Ca rdinals scored all
their runs in the fifth innin g off
lefty Dave Roberts. Donn
Clendenon and Luis Melendez
singled and Clendenon scored
on Dal Maxvill 's single. Gibson
was safe on a fielder's choice
and, wi th two out, back-to-back
singles by Ted Sizemore and
Matty Alou produced two more
runs.
Roberts, now 7-4, allowed 10
hits in going the distance.
NAMED MU COACH
HUNT INGTON W. Va .
•
iUPI) - Former Columbus
Eastmoor High
School
wrestling Coach Bob Barnett,
29, was named Friday to
succeed Mike Sager as head
wrestling coach at Marshall
University.
Sager resigned to accept a
··
t th
similar pos1hon a
e
University of Cincinnati.
Barn ett will rec eive his
doctorate in physical education
at Ohio State University this
swnmer.

0

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AS DIRECTED
• Goes on faster, eas ier
o No need to be a weather prophet
• Soapy waier cleans tools
• Excellent color retention and durability
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"Plenty of Free Parking"

GOT A DAMP, LEAKY,
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•
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the win.
Bob Haislop came up with
the game-winning hit in the
eig~ with a bases loaded
triple with two outs.
Top hitters for Southwestern
were Mike Crouse with five hi ts
in five at bats including a
double and two triples, Rick
Crouse and Donnie Bush each
with three singles, Carter a
single and double, Jack W,aler
and Nida each two singles,
Haislop a single and triple , and
Sammy Fairchild had a single.
Mike Justus started on the
hill for Vinton and gave way to

First Place Tie, Win ll-2

ANNOUNCING!

I

A ~an Francisco auto wrecker has
become the first to put his operation
under cover, so to speak, by purchasing four huge warehouses.

G

'

Hooten didn't realize pitc hers the mound, sfruc k out George
used th eir fi ngerti ps in Fo'ster and got Denis Menke on
a forced play to gain his save.
throwing their knu cklers.
The 32-year-old Aker hasn' t
But by that time, too, Hoo ten
was having too mut:h suef.'ess given up an earned run in .l7
with his pitch he wasn' t about innings, wh ile making 14 rehef
to make any changes.
appea rant·es
since · ht s
acquisition
from
the
New York
Hooten, in the midst of his
fir st full season in the maj ors, Yankees May 13.
Joe Pep1tone's fir st homer of
is, as Jansen puts it, "one cool
the
season, leading off the fifth
cook ie out there on th e
inniu g, also was the fi rst h1 t of
ffiOWld ."

"It's everything you hear
about it," said Larry . "He
throws·it hard, too. And I melln
it really explodes - ~reaks
down like a spitter ."
Stumbled Upon It
As Hoou,n tells the story, he
stumbled upon the freak pitch
as a 14-year-old while at·
"You saw him on that one
temping
to
throw
a ball hit back to the mound ,"
knuckleball. At that time . pointed out Larry. " He took his
time and very calmly thew out
the batter . He didn'l fluster one

LL .Tigers _Climb Back Into

X·nO longer with team .

PITCHING :
PLAYER
Johnny Bolrd
Stan Perrv
Rick A•h
Bill Chaney
Skip Johnson
Steve Lee
Rick VanMatre
TOTALS

curve.

Sixth G-M Win, 15 To 9

METHODIST GIRLS ROMP
GALLIPOLIS - The Crace
United Methodist Girls Red
Team defeated the First
Baptist Whiws 25-1on the Fifth
Ave . field on Thursday af.
u,rnoon . M. Tawney and G.
Ellcess or pitched for the
winners . L. Janey 4·5, D.
Chestnut 3-4. S. Hamilton 3·5,
C. Ellcessor 3-5, S. Blackburn
2-4, M. Tawney 1-4, and C.
Bowling, S. Tawney and C.
Bradshaw with one hit each
paced the Reds. D. Chestnut
had a grandslam home run . R.
Layne, C. Fellure and Haner
had one hit each for the white
team . C. Fellure wa s the losing
pitcher .

MElGS AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
G AB R H Avg . 28
11
24
3 3 .120 0
B
9
2
I
.111
0
9 12
2
2
.167
0
13 28 5 4 .143 I
16 34 5 9
265 2
11 17 3 4 .236
0
8 15 1 5
333 0
8 11 0 0
000
0
8 9
1 0
.000
0
16 30 10 13 .3B6
1
21 58 15 23 .397 2
17 42
5 10
.238
3
17 50
2 9 .180 0
21 61 13 20 .330 2
18 33 5 7
.2 12 I
19 3B
5
6 .158
2
14 29
4 6 .207
0
11 21
2 1 .048
0
18 45 6 8 .178
0
2 4 0 0 .000
0
4
13 0 3 .230 2
22 61 0 89 135
.221 16

PLAYER

he can also throw that ball ."
.Jansen , however , wasn't
knocking Hoot en'·s knuckle

Southwestern Captures

breigs Legion Statistics

of JJ,me. •
The mobile homes today,

Riverfront Stadium turnout of
40,042, left the Reds II&gt; games
ahead of the Houston Astros in
the National League West. The
Astros lost 3-1 to St. Louis.
"What amazes me about
Hooten .is the guy's fast ball, "
said Larry Jansen, who
hecame the Cubs' pitching
coach this season .
"All I'd heard about the kid
when I came here," explai11ed
Larry, "was that he had a
great knuckle curve then, after
I joined the club, I learned that

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PERMANENT RESULTS
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24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE - SERVING ALL AREAS
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~

IB - The Sunday Tunes· Sent mel, Sunday, July 9, 1972

CHESHIRE- Southpaw Jeff
Blazer hurled a one httter here
Frtday night m leading the
Cheshtre Redlegs to a 4-3
vtctory over Middleport m the
Gallia-Metgs Pony League.
In going the route, Blazer
fanned six whtle walking etght.
He started the wmning seventh
inning rally wtth a lead-off
double to leftfield. A looptng
double to left by shortstop Ttm
Lucas plated Blazer wt th the
winning run. It was Lucas'
third hit of the evening
Middleport had tted the score
at 3-3 wtth two outs m its half of
the seventh. A w\!ik to Terry
Whitlatch, two stolen bases and
an error pushed across the
tymg run .
Cheshire took a !.() lead in the
fourth tnning on a single by
catcher Jerry Bias, a stolen

Reds Remain Unbeaten
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
The Pomeroy Reds
remained undefea ted in three
games wtth a 19-1 win over
previous • undefeated Mid·
dl epor ted Mustangs
at
Pomeroy and the Mtddleport
Cubs won their first game
nippin g wmless Pomeroy
Angels 10·9 at Middleport
FrH!ay.
Ltttle Steve Ohhnger hurled
for the Reds and fanned ten
and walked seven. Terry
Wayland and Rod Gleason
combmed to fan ftve and issue
20 walks for the Mustangs
Har vey Whttlatch and
Ohlinger each had a home run
and a single for the Reds whtle
Tony Jewell had two singles,
and J. R. Wamsley , Greg
Thomas, and Matt Van Rank en

each had a stngle. Lance
Herman and Tim Justus each
' had smgles for the Mustangs.
Jeff Wayland hurled the
distance fo r the Cubs fanning
17 and wal king nine. Todd Fife
pitched for the Angels strt kmg
out mne and walking 11
Httters for the Cubs were
Kenny MeHaffey and Todd
Eades with tw o singles each,
Greg Bush had a double, and
Davtd Reute r and Oan ny
Hysell each had a single.
Eisenhower and Smith led the
Angels with three singles each,
Jerry Ftelds had a double, and
Fife and Gilmore each had a
single
In games Monday the Reds
arc at the Angels and the
Mustangs arc at the Cubs.
Standings
Team
W. L.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;.; ;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::: Reds
3 0
Mustangs
2 I
GAMES CANCELLED
Cubs
1 2
SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Ange ls
0 3
Legion baseball team's
doubleheader with Marietta
here Saturday was can·
celled when Marlelta had to
play a championship game
with Lowell for th e
Washington County crown.
The game will nut be made
CLEVELAND (U P!) - Ray
up. Meigs plays loday at 1
Fosse singled home Graig
p.m. al Scioto Valley Field In
Nettles and Alex Johnson
Chillico the.
scored on a throwmg error by
::::::::: :::::::::::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Amos Olts Saturday to gtve the

Indians Nip
Royals 2-1

Gallipolis
Reds Post
12-5 Win
GALLIPOLIS - The Pony
League Reds snapped a twogame losmg streak by bouncing the Phillies, 12-a on
Memonal Fteld here Friday
evening.
Both teams are now tied for
third place tn league play with
identical 2,3 records.
Ftrst-yea r hurler Chuck
Lane we.Jit all the way for the
winners, gtvmg up only seven
hits. He fanned 10 and walked
six.
Larry S'anders was charged
with the loss. The Reds banged
out 15 htts, including four by
Roger 'Dailey. Lane, John
Taylor, Gary Swain, Mike
Evans and Nick Smith each
had twq safeties for the winners.
Burris and Giles had a
double and triple for the losers.
Sanders and Wagstaff each had
two hits for the losers.
Saturday, the unbeaten
Giants were to meet the second
place ~•ves in a key P,pny
Leagu~ game.

1

Cleveland lndtans a 2·1 vtctory
over the Kan sas City Royals
With one out in the second,
Nettles wa lked and raced to
thtrd on a single by Johnson.
Fosse followed with a single to
center scorin g Nettles and
Johnso n scored when Otts'
throw to th trd went tn to the
Royals dugout.
Mtke Kilkenny , who tore a
ftnge rnatl on the mdex finge r of
his throwmg hand whtle pttchmg Tuesday night, slfuggled
th rough the first stx innings for
the htdtans belore leavmg with
two on and two out in the
seventh. Kilkenny retired the
Royals in order on ly once 111 the
ftrst stx tn nmgs and Lou
Ptntella tagged the lefthander
for hts sixth homer of the
season in the third mning with
the lone Kansas Ctty run
After two out in the seventh
Fred Patek walked. Ktlkenny
threw two quick strtkes past
Otis then walked him on four
pitches Phil Hennigan came in
and got Plniella to fly out to end
the inning and blanked the
Royals over the final two tn·
nings . Kilkenny struck out
seven, walked two and allowed
seven hfls in picking up his
second v i~tory agamst one
loss, while Kansas City starrer
Roger Nelson went all the way
in dropping his third in five
decisions.

Potential of 'Recreation Industry Very High

Director of
Therapy Dept.

Coach If Di.c k Adams Survives CFL Cut

Carl McM tll an and Greg
James each had t"o htts, and
Jeff Hollenbaugh, Gene Payne,
and Ttm Stout each had a hit
Bass started for Racine and
was reheved by Rtffle in the
fourth Togetlter th ey fanned
four and walked four. Racine
now is 2·3 tn the loop.
In Monday's action Racine
hosts Southwestern and Bid·
wellts at home against· Vmton.
By mnmgs ·
Racine
000 100- I 0 2
Bidwell
661 OJX- 16 Ia o

base and smgle by Ben Arnett.
Tvm more runs came across in
the fifth mmng on a walk,
stolen base and smgles by
Lucas and Bruce Arnett.
Middleport plated a run in
the ftfth on an error and three
walks. Another run came m the
ft!th on two walks and two
mfield outs. Middleport's on ly
htt was a two out single by
Whi llatch m first mmn g.
Lucas led the Redleg attack
wtth tl1ree hi ts m four tnps.
Ben Arnett had two singles in
three at bat.
Cheshire 3-3 on the year wtll
play at Mtddleport " B".
Mtddleport also 3-3 travels to
Pomeroy
By mmngs:
Mid.
000 011 1- 3 I 1
Cheshtre
000 120 1-4 8 2
Ault, Whttlatch (L) and
Stobart Blazer ( \V ) and Bias.

Barton Named

•

Adams was employed after
un successful footbalf tryouts
with the Houston Oilers and
Cmcmnatt Bengals. Adams,
twice the Most Valuable Player
of the Mid American Conference and twice a member of
th~ ftrsl team j\II·MAC Conference as a cornerback wtth
Miami University, was given
the opportunity to tryout wtth
the Rough Rtders this summer
and decided to take his ~hances
in Canada
He apparently has "caught
the eye" of several Ottawa
officials, havmg survived 3
squad cuts. He pla~d Thursday mght in the team's first
exhtbttwn game at Toronto.
Adams, a punter at Miami
University, was used on the
kickoff return and puntmg
learns and on defense. The
zngSRoughRtdercoachingstaff has
also switched him to offense as
Wednesday - Padres vs a runmng back a posttion
Tr gers
•.
(8 p m.l
Adams played tn hts ftrst

BY DALE ROTHGEB
CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
High School, once th e
powerhousejn Southern Valley
Athletic Conference footba ll,
may be searchmg for a new
football coach tomorrow
Richard (Dtck) Adams, 24,
formerly of Alhany m Athens
County, who coached the
Bobcats last fall, is trying out
in the game he loves for the
Ottawa Rough Rtders of the
Canadian Football League.
Adams JOined the Bobcat
staff on Aug. 16, 1971, following
the resignation of Howard Lee
Miller.
An all Southeastern OhtQ
gridder at Athens High School,

16-1 Triumph

Cheshire Edges
Middleport, 4-3

lt-The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sun\lay, July 9, 1172

Kyger Creek May Be Looking For Grid

Bidwell Still
Unbeaten After
Bidwell
BIDWELL
remained undefeated in seven
games and matntatned tts
game and a half lead in the
Gall ia-Metgs Pony League
with a convincmg lfi..l wm over
rlacine here Friday
Gene Welch hurled a nohittl&gt;r for the league-leaders as
he fanned 13 and walked six.
Welch was also one of BtdweU 's
top hitters with three safeties.
Other httters for Bidwell
were Fred Logan and Bruce
Runyun wtth three hits aptece,

.

.

DICK ADAMS -

S ummerL eague Stan d •
GALLIPOLIS
PONY LEAGUE
TEAM
W L R OR
G•an ts
Braves

4

o

43

Reds

Ph• lites

9

So

17

2 3 37

33

4 I

2 3 19 JB

o s 6 •a

Do~ers

T~a~IL~eek's Re~~~:;. ISS Ill
Dodgers Phil li es ?

·

Braves 11 Reds 10
Br aves 9 Reds 6
Grants 13 Dodgers 1
Reds 12 Ph• lites 5
Th•s Week' s Games·
Monday Dodgers

Monday -

Athl e t•cs vs

Tuesday -

vs

Padres

'
Yankees

Tigers

Wednesday - Cubs vs
Or/~~~-. up games. and open
dates for Kyger Creek Tour

season a t Miami
Duri ng h1s sophomore year
S I b kl
under Coach Bo c tern ec er,

Adams was a starling offenstve
wingback He was the Redsk ins' third lea dm g pass

nament make up r em amder of
th •s week's sc ~edu le)

PEE WEE SCHEDULE
vs

Braves

( Amencan League )
Monday J Hawk s
Angels .

vs

Tuesday - Onoles vs Larks

Tuesday - Gtants vs Reds
Wednesday - Phillies vs

~raves

Wednes day Ange ls vs
Wrens
Thursda y - Larks vs J
Hawks.
Fnday - Wren s vs. Orioles .
tNal1onal League

Portl~d

Edges

Syracuse, 15-11
•

PORTLAND - Portland
defeated the Syracuse I team
15 to II m bantam play ThursFnday - Phd lies vs G1an ts
GALLIPOLIS
Monday
Hawks vs day at Portland . On the mound
LITTLE LEAGUE
Eagles
TEAM
W L R OR
Tuesday - Falcon s vs for Portland was Steve Fttch.
Pitching for Syracuse was B.
Yankees
6 0 70 27 Ca rds
T1gers
6 0 60 25
Wedne sday Eagles vs. K Armes
Cubs
4 1 87 B Robms
Btg bats for Portland were
Red Sox
3 1 51 29
Thu rsday Cards vs
Bryan
Lawrence , Bryan
Padres
3 3 46 38.. Hawks
Rob1ns vs
Senator s
3 3 54 65
Fnday
Johnson, Paul Evans, Sam
Orioles
1 4 27 57 Falcons
Person , Duke Datley, Joe
While So&lt;
I 6 42 118
Johnson
and Steve Fttch .
lnd1ans
0 4 10 50
Athleti cs
o 5 10 so
Collectmg htts for Syracuse
GALLtA-MEIGS
TOTALS .
27 21 467 467
PONY
LEAGUE
were Cogar, Armes and T.
Last Week's Res ults·
STANDINGS
Salser.
Senators 14 ~adres 5
Tea m
W L R OR
Wh ile So&lt; 9 Athletics 5
Portland , who rem at ns
B1dwell
7 0 86 25
T1gers 11 lnd1ans 4
Pomeroy
6 2 98 21 undefeated, will play Letart
Red Sol&lt;. 9 Onoles 2
6 2 62 54 Thursday at Letart.
Southwestern
Cubs 25 Wh1te Sox 4
M&gt;
ddleport
"A"
3 3 63 31
Yankees 18 Sena tor s 6
Thursday
Reds

-

Dodgers vs

Cheshire
Rac 1ne

Senators 13 Wh 1te Sox 11

Padres ll Or1oles 4

Vrnton
Mid. " B"
TOTALS

Tigers 11 Athlet1cs 2
Th1s Week 's Games :
(6

Monday -

p.m.)

Yankees

vs

While So&lt;
Tuesday -

Red Sox vs. Cubs .

This Week's

3 3 48

43

2 3 31

55

2 6 43 102
0 10 31 130
33 33 462 462

Last Week ' s Results

Bidwell 16. Racine 1

Pomeroy 24, Middleport " B" 0
Sout hwester n IS, Vmton 9
Cheshtre 4, M 1ddleport " A" J
July 11 Games:

Southwestern at Rac1ne ,

Midd leport "A" at Pomeroy.
Vinton

Rec Schedule

at

Bidwe l l.

and

Cheshire at Middleport " B".

CHISOX TRIP TIGERS
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Relief
spectalist Terry Forster ptcked
up his 11th save of the season
by snuffing out a Detroit threa t
in the top of the etghth tnmng
Saturday to preserve a 5-2
decision for Stan Bahnsen and
the Chicago White Sox.

recetver wtth 14 catches for 174
yards. Durmg his jumor year
Coach Bill Mallory switched
Adams from a running back
to defenstv e cornerback
where he qutckly became a
defenstve standout known for
hts hard·ht ttmg, aggress ive
play.
Team Leader
In 1969, Adams led his team
m four categones. pass interceptions, punting , punt
returns and ktckoff returns. He
holds Mtanu's career puntmg
records.
After assumin g command of
the Bobcats, he bega n moldmg
new offenstve and detenstve
patterns. The Bobcals fimshed
4-4-1 m 1971, but were "in " aU
but two of their games
His own aggresstve style of
play began to show tn his
coaching. Adams played to
wm. He coached the same way .
In hts first year, like all
rookie coaches, he learned a
lot Playmg under Don Eskey
and Charles McAfee at Athens
Htgh School had taught Adams
the importa nce of havmg a
team m good phystcal condillOn He ran his trammg
camp wtth strict discipline
under hard workmg condi \tons.
Perhaps hts biggest moment
came m the Bobcats' openmg
game of the 1971 campatgn.
Kyger Creek outplayed the
bigger Wahama While Falcons
but sltll had to settle for a !Hi
lte m a brutsmg game at
Mason It was the conditioning
program which patd off that
mght. The Bobcals were sttll
going strong m the fourth
quarter on that warm Sep·
!ember mght
Two weeks later, the Bobcats
battled from-behtnd to edge the
ftre-up Southern Tornadoes, 14·
12at Racine, then the following
week, Kyger Creek mpped
North Gallia , Jl.&lt;j m one of the
best and most brutstng games
played between the two schools
m over a decade. The Ptrates
won the contest everywhere
but on the scoreboard.
Coach Adams had benched
two of hiS regular offens tve
players tha t week for
disciplinary reasons
The Bobcats ran out of gas m
the tr headon clas h with
Eastl&gt;rn . The Eagles romped to
an easy 4~ victory, crushing
all hopes of a Bobca t champwnsh tp The team never fully
recovered foll.owmg that loss.

Adams also served as the
Bobcats' head baseball coach.
His !972 team played more
games than any Kyger Creek
baseball squad in the school's
htstory. The Bobcals fimshed
m a second place tie with
Southern m the loop standings
behmd Symmes Valley , with a
9·3 record. Overall, KC had an
11-1().1 record
Canadian Game
Canadtan fbotball IS almost
like the game in the United
States but the fteld in Canada ts
larger and teams are bigger by
one. The length of the field in
the CFL ts 110 yards and the
width is just slightly larger
than the typtcal NFL surface .
There are, however, 12 men
who play at the same time for a
Canadian team, one more than
you see m the Unt ied States .
The total roster of a club m
the CFL ts only 32 There are no
taxi squads, as none of the mne
teams operating can afford
such a luxury. Another basic

GALJ.IPOLIS
Gary
Barton, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Bill M. Barton, Pt. Pleasant
has been named director of th~
Activity Therapy Depar tment
at Orient Sta te Hospital,
Orient, Ohio.
Barton, since graduattng
from Marshall University in
June, 1910, has served as a
traimng consultant for the
Gallla County Board of Mental
Retardation .
At Orten\, be will coordmate
GARY BARTON
the industria l, recreational,
occupational trammg, and
mustc therapy programs at the Grove Ctty area in the near
3,25().pattent hospttal.
fut ure.
Barton and his wife, Claudta ,
The Galha County Board of
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mental Retardatwn is now tn
William L. Wtlso n, Pt. the process of searching for a
Pleasant, wtll be moving to the successor for Barton. ·

rule established agamst imporls (th ose players who were
born in the U.S.) ts that each
team is restricted to 17 imports
and Ia Canadtans.
The extra man on the 12 man
Ca nadian team lines up in the
backfield and helps to move the
ball the required mmimum of
10 yards in only three downs.
In Canada, the rules agamst
downfleld blockmg are limtted.
In most cases no blocking is
permitted 10 yards beyond the
line of scrimmage and, except
on kickoffs, there is no blockmg
on punt returns.
Whether Adams returns to
coach the Bobcats or remains
with Ottawa will soon be answered since Monday, July 10,
is the deadhne for teacher
resignations in Ohio.
The Bobcats, while awattmg
word on thetr coach, have
begun the arduous task of •
summer condttionmg in an
effort to dethrone the proud
Eastern Eagles.

July Workshops

1 SUPER SHEF,"

Fam•lv Pack
iftcludes tnese
4 san dwiches
and 4 orders
of french fnes.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Co llege, loo ktng towa rd
posstble programs in Spectal
Education in the future, will
offer two Spectal Education
Workshops this summer in
coope ra liOn
wtth
the
Southeastern
Ohto
In stru ctiona l Resource and
Materials Center (IRMC).
The two workshops will be
"Curnculum Development for
the Hamca pped Child" and
"Mathematics for the Mentally
Retarcfoo." The two workshop
courses will sta rt July 18, the
same day as the second session
of Summer '12 Regtstralton
for the two wtll be July 17, the
sa me as for the regular
Summer '72 session.
Both courses wtll be ta ught
by Eugema Gardner, super·
vtsor for teachers of educable
men tally reta rded Emphasts
will be placed on unit teaching
and prac ltcal experiences
The special educatton
classes, which may become
• part •or Rio 'Gtande College's
regular offerings in the future,
can be taken for college credit,
transferrable
to
Ohto
University as part of OU's
Special Education program
On reason fo r bringing
cou rses under the Spectal
Educatwn program to Rio
Grande College, according to
IRMC coordinator Linda
Bauer, is the college's central
location.
uwe hope," she said, llthat
the central location wlll give a
great many more teachers
interested in Special Education
the opportunity to attend
classes .
"As our program expands,
the need for more teachers to
work with those who have
special
problems
will
increase." She added that she
was hopeful a Special
Education program could be
offered at Rio Grande College.
Special Education includes
working with educable mentally retarded, trainable
mentally retarded, those wtth
learning
or
physical
disabilities and those with
multiple handicaps .
Currently, the Southeastern
Ohio IRMC covers Athens,
Hocking, Perry, Gallia, Vinton,
Jackson, Meigs, and Morgan
counties. Beginning in September, the program will be
extended to Washington, Noble
and Monroe counties. .
Future plans for the IRMC

1 CHEESEBURGER

onlY

EverY SundaY
(ALL DAY)

I!'

~

1

1503 EASTFRN AVEMJE

Fomllr Roo tour onto

GALLIPOLJS.

GA LLIPOLI S - Here's thi s
MONDAY

11 11 am -

Pocket b11l1ards,
(Bob's Recreat1on
Cente r), 1 - 4 p m - G1rls'
so f t ball , 4f h. J2 th grades ,
( Memona l Field) ; 8 - 11 p.m

-

aqes,

G~rl s'

basketball. 11 years

up ,

and

Blacktop)

(Washin gton

TUESDAY

9 11 a m - Pnvate t en n1s
mstruct1on , a l l aqes (Memonal
Field) , conta ct Rob1n Niday or
Tom Mea dows ; 1 . 4 p.m Privat e tenn1s Ins t ruction,

(Memonal Field!
WEDNESDAY

9
11 30 p m - Archery,
( Memona l Fie ld), 1 - 4 p m -

Gori s' softb al l, dl h · 12th
grades. IMemonal Field ); 8 .
1t p m. - Grrls' basketba ll.
Washrngtor Blacktop
THURSDAY

9 11 am . - P.rivale ten niS
i nstruc ti on ,
all
ages ,
(Memo rial Fie ld ), co ntact

Tom Meadows or Robin Niday;
l

4 p.m . -

Pr~vate

tenni s

instruc ti on , co nt ac t Tom
M eadows or Robm Niday
9

!I

FRIDAY
a m. - Volleybal l, all

ages, (Memonal Field); 1 - 4
p m. - Archery, 12yrs and up,
(Memor ial Fie ld ); 8 . !1 :30
p m - Teen dance , ( Parkf ront)

QSSC Captures
Two Triumphs
GALLIP OLIS
Bob
Saunders' Quaker State Service Center Oilers posted 16-5
and lhl slo-pitch league wins
last week to start second half
play.
On Tuesday, QSSC downed
People's Bank, 16-5. On Thursday, the Oilers smashed Union
Workmen, 11-3.
In Thursday's victory,
manager Mickey Morgan had
three hits as did Gary
Hamson. Lou Lutton was the
winning hurler, Ralph Jones
the loser. L. Cremeens, R.
Myers and Howell each had .
two hlts for the losers. Wise
homered for the losers.
RENAMED CHAIRMAN
DAYTON, Ohio (\}PI ) Jack Reeder, president of the
Dayton Coca-Cola Bottlmg Co.
has been re-elected chairman
of the board of directors of the
Daytoo Gems hockey team, it
was announced Saturday.
Jack Walker, a ca~ dealer,
was named president of the
hockey team.

Here's a man that has a plan to help you build a quality home , on your
property, that's low in cost.

-

UYING

This is Mr. Bill Smith, manager of Jim Walter Homes in Birmingham, Ala. If you live near Birmingham, just
call Bill on the phone or stop by to see him. But tf you don 't ltve ncarhy, it doesn't really matter, because
there is another Jim Walter Homes manager near you. And, just l!ke Bill Smith, he also has a plan to help
you build a quality home on your property and keep your cost low You see, all Jtm Walter managers are
pretty much the same. That is, each one is selected becauSe he is fri endly . . easy to talk to ... he "understands." And, he has been trained ... trained to work for :12!!. his customer, and to explain to you all the
advantages of building the Jim Walter way. He'll show you more than twenty models from which you may
select your new home, and then, if you are willing to do some of your ow n inside finishing ... he'll show
you how.to. cut your c~sts, down to the bare mi_nimum ... he'll explain how we will stop at almost ANY
stage of mstde completiOn and allow you to fimsh the rest yourself .. to save you money. You can do just
about as much or as little as you want. He'll tell you about construclton of your new home . . . go into all the
details of the quality inspections he'll make all the way from the time the foundation is set, until the entire
outside is completely finished. He'll inspect the ftoor joists, the framing, the roof rafters, roofing siding win·
dows and painting. He'll see to it that you do get QUALITY CONSTRUCTION from the botto:U to th~ top.

MA111t

"""""'

program mvolve opening
classrooms for educa ble
mentally retarded and those
wtth learning dtsabiltties and
multiple disabthltes. Also m
th e plann ing stages is a
program that would mcrease
reg10n-to-regwn cooperation m
offenng services .
The two classes are being
offered"' thts summer as
workshops to give the greatest
amount of flextbthty. A
number of other courses are
being offered on an expenmental basts this summer,
in cl udtn g a readmg-sktlls
development progr~m and tw o
courses in Early Chtldhood
Education
Registralton for the second
sesston of Summer '72 will be
Monday , July 17

Youths Certified
By State Agency
PT. PLEASANT - The local
office of the West Virgin·
ia Department of Em·
ployment Security in June
com pleted recruitment, certification, referral of eligtble
youth to vanous NYC work
stations in Mason and Jackson
Counties and cer tification of
youth selected by the local
Community Action Group.
Work stations included
faclhUes of the Department of
Natural Resources, Department of Highways, Department of Employment Security,
Department of Welfare,
Farmers
Home
Ad·
mintstration,
W.
Va .
University Extension Servtce,
Department of Men tal Heal th,
and various municipaltttes.
Eligibility was determined
upon parental consent certification of need questionnaire, information supplied by
parents or guardian.
Opemngs were filled by
youths 16 through 21 years of
age, th ose 15 years of age next
and those of the 14 age group
reqwred to fill the remaining
openings in accordance with
per family number income.

FLIES
Gel complete facts and the cost of buiklfne on
your property. Srop by your nearest dispfiJ pork

--------:1I
or send I he coupon tor our new caiJiof of homes.

JIM WALTER HOMES

to quolifiotl pt&lt;)tJMy -

!Mail to near•sr offitel
I would li~e lo have

more
Information and the co1t of

I

bu1ldlng on my prQJMrty , I

understand tlltrt would be
no obligation to buy and
that you would give me rhese
facta lrtt of charge.

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
Old Hwy. 52

o.

P.
Box 248
PH : 867-3153

SO. CHARL£STON, W. VA. 25303
P.O. Box 8367
608 1st Ave. South
.
U.S. Hwy. 25 !Nitro, W. Va.J
PH: 727·2296

' f

,I
•'

1
I

t own ,......., In

"!!..;•

I

I
I

L---------4~

Purina Rang• Caitl• Spray ,contains

two
killere-Toxaphene and Lindane-to knock
off he&gt;m flies Cut. Geta ticks, lice and man1e,
too. CoJD8 il&lt; ooon and eee· how little it costs.

,

J. D. North ·Produce Co.

ADDIISS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......:..

Ctn - - -- - - - -- STATI_...,.._ _:
Tolophono (or nolghbort) _ _ _ _-,-'----tl rural reuto plta" glwt dlroctlono _~----'

worry pounds and dollars
oH caHit and hogs

Or call on til. phoJUI,

1

I ~·-~--------------~--~ I
I

accelerated participation on outdoor recrea tion will place even
greal\r pressure upon the extsting facthttes.
T~eOhto Valley Region has the lowest population density but
the largest supply of available recreational space, and further
provtdes land wtth both extensive an(j intenstve potenltal for
recreation . Lakeshore Uplands Regton contammg nearly half of
the state's population has only 22 pet. of Ohio's recrea ttonal
space .
In Meigs County, with the expected mcrease in populatwn,
recreation facilities wtll be needed to a greater extent than ever
before.
Popular trends toward outdoor recrealton, m recent years,
have encouraged an unequaled activtty in developtng family
campgrounds, trailer ' courts, amusement centers and parks,
says John M Pierce, Extenston spectalist tn resource
development at The Ohio State University
New dimenswns were added to thts trend earlier this year
when new health codes were issued. These codes greatly affected

the location, layout, construction, drainage, sarutatton, safety
and operattons of these pubhc facthttes in Ohio, the spectalisl
adds.
·
The stale of Ohto, through its Department of Health, has
legtslattve control of all developments servmg the public, and of
many pnvate butldings as well. The health codes are rules that
regulate many needs assOCiated wtth public servtce, such as
sewage trea tment system, water lines, plumbing and dtsposal of
waste water.
Although health codes, have been tn extstence in Ohto for a
long ttme, they were revised i~ January 1972 to co•lrol
recreattonal development, specifically campgrounds and cot·
tages.
One requtreme nt for anyone settmg up a campground or
farm vacation cottage ts that he must submtt to the Board of
Health a set of plans and speciftcations showmg and descnbmg
completely the proposed new camp. The law says that a person
must recetve wntten permission before he begi!TS to butld or
make extenstve changes or addttions.
The plans and specifications include a sertes of
requirements: (A) A contour map showing the general layout of
the entire camp. This means hiring a surveyor or engmee r to
take field elevations at critcal pomts in the proposed constructiOn
area. This informatiOn is used to determine the adequacy of
sewage and water lme construction .•
(ll) Maps wtth access and extt roads, tratls, camp buildings,
servtce buildings, stzes of ca mpsttes and lots, and the location,
number and types of plumbmg fixtures.
(C) Also crittcal to approval of the plans is a plan outlimng
storage, collection and dtsposal of solid wastes, such as g~rbage,
htter a~d foodstuffs. Of course, swirnmtng facil ittes, includmg
swtrnmmg pools and bathmg beaches plus provtswns for plans on

· Vine Str(!et
•

L

proposed food servtce operations, are also necessary
All of these plans take engmeermg and-drafting abth ty
Although the Board of Health engmeers wtll accept good plans
for mdivtdual operators, "homemade" plans usually take longer
to secW'e acceptance The reason may be that the engmeers can
cornmunicatl&gt; better tf engmeenng standards are used tn layout
and planning.
If you are constdermg constructtng a campground or cottage,~ fi rst stl&gt;p, says Pierce, ts to become acquamted wtth the
Health Commission at your local Board of Health Ha vm~ the
commisston members Involved from the beguuung ts tmportant
. Your development plans must be submtlted to the disl11ct
off tee, where the staff engmeers revtew them Dtstr)ct offt ccs are
located in Cuyahoga Falls, llowhng Green , Nelsonvtlle and
Day~
•
Pierce suggests submtllmg these plans tor approval well
ahead of the expected opcnmg The dtstnct offices usually ha ve a
heavy work schedule, so response ts often slow. One suggestiOn ts
to wait two weeks after submttting the plans to the Health
Department, then, tf you have not heard anytlung, make a phone
call. In case your plans should not meet the new health standards, allow enough time to rework the plans if necessary
A copy of the new regulattons and an associated gutde to
using them is avatl able from the reg ional offices or parttcular
interest to your engineer, planner· or architect ts a booklet entitled, "Water, Supply , Sewerage and Sewage Trea tment for
Public Buildings m Ohto."

Horn Flies aProblem?
USE

T. ALLAN WOLTER
District Ranger
Who ow ns Ohio's forests' The
Federal Government owns 2 pet., most
of tl Wayne Naltonal Forest land ; local
governments and the Sta te own 4 pet.;
and fores t industry owns 2 pet Farmers own 42 pet. , and other pnva te
owners own aO pet. So the use rs of
Ohw's forests - limber -based mdustry.
water users , recreatiomsts, ~ nd
wtldhfe depend heavily on the farmers
and other pmate owners.
It ts encoura gmg to know that the
foresood land area of Ohto has been
increasing smce the 1930s. A recent
survey reveals that alm os t one-fourth
of Ohio, over 6 mtlhon acres, ts fo rested
(up 17 pet since 1952); 94 pet. of Ohio
forest land ts prtvately owned and the
rest ts owned by loca l, state, or federal
agencies; stands of sawtimber · size
trees - trees btg enough to saw lumber
from - occupy about one-thtrd of
Ohto's forest land ; the output of ttmber
products fr om Ohio's forests has
doubled since 1952, yet the timber
growth far exceeds the timber harvest,
and the volume of limber has mcreased
by about one-third in the last Ia years.
Wllen the pioneers ftrst came to
what is now Oh10, they found a landscape much dtfferent from today's .
Most of Ohio was covered with forests
Stands of maple and beech covered
much of the northern and western parts
of Ohw. Stands of oa k, chestnut, and
hickory prevatled in most of
southeastern Ohio. Elm, ash, and soft
maple occupted lowlands. Old stands
containing. large trees were common.
One observer told of a walnut tree
seven feet in diameter and described a
sta nd of whi te oa ks in the hills near
Chilhcothe m whtch straight stems rose

Evan~

wtthout a branch to 75 or 80 feet.
When the se ttlers ca me they
needed farmland; so they cleared the
forests to make room for crops and to
provide material for bmlding thetr
houses and barns.
Southern Ohw, because tt was close to
nver transportalton and because of
Indian treaties, was cleared and settled
fir st Even many of the steep htllstdes
were clea red for ftelds and pastures.
Much of thts hillstde la nd was not
suttable fo r cropland , and many settlers found that the land could not
suppor t thetr families. So, starting in
tl1e ea rly 1900s and continuing unit!
today, farms were abandoned as far·
mers were forced to move off, and
fo rests began to reclatm these lands.
Left alone and given time , nature ts
effective in reforest tn g land . Un·
for tunately man has not always
coopera ted wtth nature. In the early
1900s, frequent forest fires! slowed
nature's m1sswn of reclatmmg the
abandoned helds.
In 1922. forest fire protectiOn was
started m southern Ohio by the State's
Division of Forestry . Thts fledgling
pr og ram was several years In
becoming effecttve, but eventually was
successful in curbmg large forest losses
from fire.
The se ttlement of nor thwestern
Ohto started later, but there the land ts
nch and we ll suited for farmm g; so
land is still bemg cleared m that part of
the State .
The low potnt in Ohio's forest
acreage was reached about 1930. By
this ttme, most land smted for farmmg
had been cleare d. But eco nomt c
changes, along wtth ftre protection and
the conservation movement of that
decade starood an upward trend m the

State's forest acreage . Now about
14,000 acres of la nd are planted wtth
trees each year m Ohw Increased
forest acreage has promoted the return
of deer, beaver, and wtld turkey to
OhiO In the early 1900s these animals
had almost dtsappeared fr om Ohto.
What does the fu ture hold for Ohto's
forests' It takes many many years to
grow a tree. Because of thts, foresters
must plan well mto the future Many'
twentieth. century foresters are actmg
to , meet problems ex pec ted in the
twe nty-ftrst ce ntury.
In some areas, such as urban areas
and "estern Ohto where the lack of
trees detracts from envtronmental
quality , more trees have to be planted
In other areas, steps must be ta ken to
see that a proper balance between large
and small trees ts established and
mamtained.
Many of the private owners own
forest land for reasons other than for
producing ttmber. They own fo t·ests for
huntin g, land speculation, or stmply
because tl came With the place. Such
forests are usually producing below
what could be obtained through good
forest management.
A major problem fa ced by agencies
concerned wtth forest management is
how to get the pnvate owner interested
in the long-range benefits provided by a
healthy and productive forest.
The foresters who conducted the
latest survey-of Ohio's forests expec't
that increases m foresred areas through
planting and natural regeneration will
be offset by land clearing for
agriculture, housing, highways, etc.
The net effect of this over the next 30
years or so will be a relatively stable
forest acreage.

MARLATE-50
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50% Methoxychlor
DUST ON CATTLE
WILL LAST FOR WEEKS

NOW ONLY

48

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MANY OTHER USES

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CENTRAL SOYA

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"Your Farm Supply Supermarket"

Ph. 446-2463

Plans Special Weekend
gltders, rubber -powered
duration models, rubber·
powered scale models, old·
Itme 1pre-1941) fre ~ fhght
models, and an ormthopter (a
flapping wmg model atrcrafl )
Howard Kelley of Lynch·
burg, Ohto, will be in the
Wickline Rifle Cabin , Saturday
behind the
Homestead ,
demonstrating the making of
percussion, cap and ball, and
flintlock rifles. He will take
orders for custom made rifles .
Mrs. Gloria Snodgrass and

Audin Turner of Ctrclev ille wtll
exhibtt and sell pastel and
water color painlings and hex
signs . They will also demonstrate their art techniques on
Saturday and Sunday.
Admtsston to the farm ts
free. Other attractions at the
farm include a hand of wtld
Spamsh Mustangs, the Old
Welsh Windmill, The Homestead, the Farm Museum, the
original sign from the Chicago
Stockyards, and small friendly
farm anunals.

•

3rd &amp; Srcamore Sis.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Now handle extreme
variations
.
in twine without missing a tie

Tri-State Chairman Annowtced

OVER ~0 LOW COST MODELS e .- BUILT ON YOUR PROPERTY

MORTGAGE FINANCING

the NEW in FARMING

RIO GRANDE - A special
weekend, wtth model aircraft
flying, riflemaking and pastel,
water color and hex sign
pamting, will be held at Bob
Evans Farms, Rto Grande,
Ohio on July Ia and 16.
The Central Ohio Free Flight
Club is sending 10 model aircrofters to the farm on Sunday
to demonstrate various free
!llght atrcraft. The classes of
model aircraft include gaspowered free flight models,
The first U.S. shoe factory hand-launch shders, towline
was established in Lynn ,
Mass., by John Adams Dagyr
m 1760, according to Ency·
clopaedta Britannica.

..."

It'll cost you nothing to get Cj)Jllp!ete information and the cost of building on your property. We would like
t&lt;o~!J;.'~y:~ou this information absolutely FREE and without obligation. We think you'll agree we do have the
_.
deal for you, but if you don't think so, we'll part ps fnendly as we met. Find out for yourself. Contact
your -=~ Jim Walter Homes manager right away.

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Extension Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - With the summer recrealton pertod reachmg
the hall-way mark, let us consider some of the recrea twn needs
and possibilities of this area.
The 1971-i977 Outdoor Recreation Report of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources points out that Ohio, already
the sixth most populous state in the natton, IS expected to ex·
pertence a 23 pet. mcrease m populatton by 1985. Demands for
outdoor recreatioo are expected to increase at rates nearly twtce
that of the population. Thus, contmued populatton growth and

In Special Ed

week' s summer recreation
sc hedul e

all

•

Gallipolis, 0.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. The chairman of the 1973
national Scout jamboree
committee for the Tri.Stare
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
America, was named today by
R. A. Monk, Connell President.
Scheduled for August 1973,
the National Scout Jamboree
will be held at two sites Farragut State Park, Idaho,
and Moraine Stare Park, Pa.and troops from this area may
attend at l!ither location.
Jim Wagers, executive board
member, and night superin·
lendent at Inca, has • been
named jamboree chainnan.
Wagers announced that
every registered Scout will be
eligible to attend a jamboree
either In a regular charrered
troop or in a troop made up
provisionally ' with members
coming from many chartered
troops,
"The Tri-State Area Council
of the Boy Scouts of America
wants to make Scouting's
attractions available to ·all
boys," Wagers said, "so this
means that II· and 12-year-olda
wiU be able to attend the
national jamboree."
In accepting the cha!rll\tlllShlp of the jamboree

r

commtttee, Wagers poinred out
that national jamborees are
not merely icing on the cake of
Scouting but to tens of
thousands of Scouts a jam·
boree is the high point of

boyhood. "They are an im·
pressive, tangible fulfillment
of the ideal of brotherhood and
an opportunity to demonstrare
the values of the Scouting
program," he said.

rJJWJroiD~;u.J "''G-'IJ ,_, ,_
UIIICramble th- four Jumbleo,
one letter to ea&lt;h "'UAN, to
form four ordlnarr. wonlo.

•
IH.

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Handle different slzes .and types of twine without knotter adjustment.
Handle heavy crops, heaviest bales without knotter adj ustment.
Handle light, fluffy, and slick dry crops without knotter adjustment.
Make only three infrequent adjuslments to compensate for wear.
Tie exclusive double- diameter knols that tests up lo 17% slronger.

I rJ I I [ ] :..ro:ledu.:,-:::r::::o~ Meigs Equipment
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New Lok-Twist Balers, too.

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•

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~

IB - The Sunday Tunes· Sent mel, Sunday, July 9, 1972

CHESHIRE- Southpaw Jeff
Blazer hurled a one httter here
Frtday night m leading the
Cheshtre Redlegs to a 4-3
vtctory over Middleport m the
Gallia-Metgs Pony League.
In going the route, Blazer
fanned six whtle walking etght.
He started the wmning seventh
inning rally wtth a lead-off
double to leftfield. A looptng
double to left by shortstop Ttm
Lucas plated Blazer wt th the
winning run. It was Lucas'
third hit of the evening
Middleport had tted the score
at 3-3 wtth two outs m its half of
the seventh. A w\!ik to Terry
Whitlatch, two stolen bases and
an error pushed across the
tymg run .
Cheshire took a !.() lead in the
fourth tnning on a single by
catcher Jerry Bias, a stolen

Reds Remain Unbeaten
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
The Pomeroy Reds
remained undefea ted in three
games wtth a 19-1 win over
previous • undefeated Mid·
dl epor ted Mustangs
at
Pomeroy and the Mtddleport
Cubs won their first game
nippin g wmless Pomeroy
Angels 10·9 at Middleport
FrH!ay.
Ltttle Steve Ohhnger hurled
for the Reds and fanned ten
and walked seven. Terry
Wayland and Rod Gleason
combmed to fan ftve and issue
20 walks for the Mustangs
Har vey Whttlatch and
Ohlinger each had a home run
and a single for the Reds whtle
Tony Jewell had two singles,
and J. R. Wamsley , Greg
Thomas, and Matt Van Rank en

each had a stngle. Lance
Herman and Tim Justus each
' had smgles for the Mustangs.
Jeff Wayland hurled the
distance fo r the Cubs fanning
17 and wal king nine. Todd Fife
pitched for the Angels strt kmg
out mne and walking 11
Httters for the Cubs were
Kenny MeHaffey and Todd
Eades with tw o singles each,
Greg Bush had a double, and
Davtd Reute r and Oan ny
Hysell each had a single.
Eisenhower and Smith led the
Angels with three singles each,
Jerry Ftelds had a double, and
Fife and Gilmore each had a
single
In games Monday the Reds
arc at the Angels and the
Mustangs arc at the Cubs.
Standings
Team
W. L.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;.; ;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::: Reds
3 0
Mustangs
2 I
GAMES CANCELLED
Cubs
1 2
SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Ange ls
0 3
Legion baseball team's
doubleheader with Marietta
here Saturday was can·
celled when Marlelta had to
play a championship game
with Lowell for th e
Washington County crown.
The game will nut be made
CLEVELAND (U P!) - Ray
up. Meigs plays loday at 1
Fosse singled home Graig
p.m. al Scioto Valley Field In
Nettles and Alex Johnson
Chillico the.
scored on a throwmg error by
::::::::: :::::::::::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Amos Olts Saturday to gtve the

Indians Nip
Royals 2-1

Gallipolis
Reds Post
12-5 Win
GALLIPOLIS - The Pony
League Reds snapped a twogame losmg streak by bouncing the Phillies, 12-a on
Memonal Fteld here Friday
evening.
Both teams are now tied for
third place tn league play with
identical 2,3 records.
Ftrst-yea r hurler Chuck
Lane we.Jit all the way for the
winners, gtvmg up only seven
hits. He fanned 10 and walked
six.
Larry S'anders was charged
with the loss. The Reds banged
out 15 htts, including four by
Roger 'Dailey. Lane, John
Taylor, Gary Swain, Mike
Evans and Nick Smith each
had twq safeties for the winners.
Burris and Giles had a
double and triple for the losers.
Sanders and Wagstaff each had
two hits for the losers.
Saturday, the unbeaten
Giants were to meet the second
place ~•ves in a key P,pny
Leagu~ game.

1

Cleveland lndtans a 2·1 vtctory
over the Kan sas City Royals
With one out in the second,
Nettles wa lked and raced to
thtrd on a single by Johnson.
Fosse followed with a single to
center scorin g Nettles and
Johnso n scored when Otts'
throw to th trd went tn to the
Royals dugout.
Mtke Kilkenny , who tore a
ftnge rnatl on the mdex finge r of
his throwmg hand whtle pttchmg Tuesday night, slfuggled
th rough the first stx innings for
the htdtans belore leavmg with
two on and two out in the
seventh. Kilkenny retired the
Royals in order on ly once 111 the
ftrst stx tn nmgs and Lou
Ptntella tagged the lefthander
for hts sixth homer of the
season in the third mning with
the lone Kansas Ctty run
After two out in the seventh
Fred Patek walked. Ktlkenny
threw two quick strtkes past
Otis then walked him on four
pitches Phil Hennigan came in
and got Plniella to fly out to end
the inning and blanked the
Royals over the final two tn·
nings . Kilkenny struck out
seven, walked two and allowed
seven hfls in picking up his
second v i~tory agamst one
loss, while Kansas City starrer
Roger Nelson went all the way
in dropping his third in five
decisions.

Potential of 'Recreation Industry Very High

Director of
Therapy Dept.

Coach If Di.c k Adams Survives CFL Cut

Carl McM tll an and Greg
James each had t"o htts, and
Jeff Hollenbaugh, Gene Payne,
and Ttm Stout each had a hit
Bass started for Racine and
was reheved by Rtffle in the
fourth Togetlter th ey fanned
four and walked four. Racine
now is 2·3 tn the loop.
In Monday's action Racine
hosts Southwestern and Bid·
wellts at home against· Vmton.
By mnmgs ·
Racine
000 100- I 0 2
Bidwell
661 OJX- 16 Ia o

base and smgle by Ben Arnett.
Tvm more runs came across in
the fifth mmng on a walk,
stolen base and smgles by
Lucas and Bruce Arnett.
Middleport plated a run in
the ftfth on an error and three
walks. Another run came m the
ft!th on two walks and two
mfield outs. Middleport's on ly
htt was a two out single by
Whi llatch m first mmn g.
Lucas led the Redleg attack
wtth tl1ree hi ts m four tnps.
Ben Arnett had two singles in
three at bat.
Cheshire 3-3 on the year wtll
play at Mtddleport " B".
Mtddleport also 3-3 travels to
Pomeroy
By mmngs:
Mid.
000 011 1- 3 I 1
Cheshtre
000 120 1-4 8 2
Ault, Whttlatch (L) and
Stobart Blazer ( \V ) and Bias.

Barton Named

•

Adams was employed after
un successful footbalf tryouts
with the Houston Oilers and
Cmcmnatt Bengals. Adams,
twice the Most Valuable Player
of the Mid American Conference and twice a member of
th~ ftrsl team j\II·MAC Conference as a cornerback wtth
Miami University, was given
the opportunity to tryout wtth
the Rough Rtders this summer
and decided to take his ~hances
in Canada
He apparently has "caught
the eye" of several Ottawa
officials, havmg survived 3
squad cuts. He pla~d Thursday mght in the team's first
exhtbttwn game at Toronto.
Adams, a punter at Miami
University, was used on the
kickoff return and puntmg
learns and on defense. The
zngSRoughRtdercoachingstaff has
also switched him to offense as
Wednesday - Padres vs a runmng back a posttion
Tr gers
•.
(8 p m.l
Adams played tn hts ftrst

BY DALE ROTHGEB
CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
High School, once th e
powerhousejn Southern Valley
Athletic Conference footba ll,
may be searchmg for a new
football coach tomorrow
Richard (Dtck) Adams, 24,
formerly of Alhany m Athens
County, who coached the
Bobcats last fall, is trying out
in the game he loves for the
Ottawa Rough Rtders of the
Canadian Football League.
Adams JOined the Bobcat
staff on Aug. 16, 1971, following
the resignation of Howard Lee
Miller.
An all Southeastern OhtQ
gridder at Athens High School,

16-1 Triumph

Cheshire Edges
Middleport, 4-3

lt-The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sun\lay, July 9, 1172

Kyger Creek May Be Looking For Grid

Bidwell Still
Unbeaten After
Bidwell
BIDWELL
remained undefeated in seven
games and matntatned tts
game and a half lead in the
Gall ia-Metgs Pony League
with a convincmg lfi..l wm over
rlacine here Friday
Gene Welch hurled a nohittl&gt;r for the league-leaders as
he fanned 13 and walked six.
Welch was also one of BtdweU 's
top hitters with three safeties.
Other httters for Bidwell
were Fred Logan and Bruce
Runyun wtth three hits aptece,

.

.

DICK ADAMS -

S ummerL eague Stan d •
GALLIPOLIS
PONY LEAGUE
TEAM
W L R OR
G•an ts
Braves

4

o

43

Reds

Ph• lites

9

So

17

2 3 37

33

4 I

2 3 19 JB

o s 6 •a

Do~ers

T~a~IL~eek's Re~~~:;. ISS Ill
Dodgers Phil li es ?

·

Braves 11 Reds 10
Br aves 9 Reds 6
Grants 13 Dodgers 1
Reds 12 Ph• lites 5
Th•s Week' s Games·
Monday Dodgers

Monday -

Athl e t•cs vs

Tuesday -

vs

Padres

'
Yankees

Tigers

Wednesday - Cubs vs
Or/~~~-. up games. and open
dates for Kyger Creek Tour

season a t Miami
Duri ng h1s sophomore year
S I b kl
under Coach Bo c tern ec er,

Adams was a starling offenstve
wingback He was the Redsk ins' third lea dm g pass

nament make up r em amder of
th •s week's sc ~edu le)

PEE WEE SCHEDULE
vs

Braves

( Amencan League )
Monday J Hawk s
Angels .

vs

Tuesday - Onoles vs Larks

Tuesday - Gtants vs Reds
Wednesday - Phillies vs

~raves

Wednes day Ange ls vs
Wrens
Thursda y - Larks vs J
Hawks.
Fnday - Wren s vs. Orioles .
tNal1onal League

Portl~d

Edges

Syracuse, 15-11
•

PORTLAND - Portland
defeated the Syracuse I team
15 to II m bantam play ThursFnday - Phd lies vs G1an ts
GALLIPOLIS
Monday
Hawks vs day at Portland . On the mound
LITTLE LEAGUE
Eagles
TEAM
W L R OR
Tuesday - Falcon s vs for Portland was Steve Fttch.
Pitching for Syracuse was B.
Yankees
6 0 70 27 Ca rds
T1gers
6 0 60 25
Wedne sday Eagles vs. K Armes
Cubs
4 1 87 B Robms
Btg bats for Portland were
Red Sox
3 1 51 29
Thu rsday Cards vs
Bryan
Lawrence , Bryan
Padres
3 3 46 38.. Hawks
Rob1ns vs
Senator s
3 3 54 65
Fnday
Johnson, Paul Evans, Sam
Orioles
1 4 27 57 Falcons
Person , Duke Datley, Joe
While So&lt;
I 6 42 118
Johnson
and Steve Fttch .
lnd1ans
0 4 10 50
Athleti cs
o 5 10 so
Collectmg htts for Syracuse
GALLtA-MEIGS
TOTALS .
27 21 467 467
PONY
LEAGUE
were Cogar, Armes and T.
Last Week's Res ults·
STANDINGS
Salser.
Senators 14 ~adres 5
Tea m
W L R OR
Wh ile So&lt; 9 Athletics 5
Portland , who rem at ns
B1dwell
7 0 86 25
T1gers 11 lnd1ans 4
Pomeroy
6 2 98 21 undefeated, will play Letart
Red Sol&lt;. 9 Onoles 2
6 2 62 54 Thursday at Letart.
Southwestern
Cubs 25 Wh1te Sox 4
M&gt;
ddleport
"A"
3 3 63 31
Yankees 18 Sena tor s 6
Thursday
Reds

-

Dodgers vs

Cheshire
Rac 1ne

Senators 13 Wh 1te Sox 11

Padres ll Or1oles 4

Vrnton
Mid. " B"
TOTALS

Tigers 11 Athlet1cs 2
Th1s Week 's Games :
(6

Monday -

p.m.)

Yankees

vs

While So&lt;
Tuesday -

Red Sox vs. Cubs .

This Week's

3 3 48

43

2 3 31

55

2 6 43 102
0 10 31 130
33 33 462 462

Last Week ' s Results

Bidwell 16. Racine 1

Pomeroy 24, Middleport " B" 0
Sout hwester n IS, Vmton 9
Cheshtre 4, M 1ddleport " A" J
July 11 Games:

Southwestern at Rac1ne ,

Midd leport "A" at Pomeroy.
Vinton

Rec Schedule

at

Bidwe l l.

and

Cheshire at Middleport " B".

CHISOX TRIP TIGERS
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Relief
spectalist Terry Forster ptcked
up his 11th save of the season
by snuffing out a Detroit threa t
in the top of the etghth tnmng
Saturday to preserve a 5-2
decision for Stan Bahnsen and
the Chicago White Sox.

recetver wtth 14 catches for 174
yards. Durmg his jumor year
Coach Bill Mallory switched
Adams from a running back
to defenstv e cornerback
where he qutckly became a
defenstve standout known for
hts hard·ht ttmg, aggress ive
play.
Team Leader
In 1969, Adams led his team
m four categones. pass interceptions, punting , punt
returns and ktckoff returns. He
holds Mtanu's career puntmg
records.
After assumin g command of
the Bobcats, he bega n moldmg
new offenstve and detenstve
patterns. The Bobcals fimshed
4-4-1 m 1971, but were "in " aU
but two of their games
His own aggresstve style of
play began to show tn his
coaching. Adams played to
wm. He coached the same way .
In hts first year, like all
rookie coaches, he learned a
lot Playmg under Don Eskey
and Charles McAfee at Athens
Htgh School had taught Adams
the importa nce of havmg a
team m good phystcal condillOn He ran his trammg
camp wtth strict discipline
under hard workmg condi \tons.
Perhaps hts biggest moment
came m the Bobcats' openmg
game of the 1971 campatgn.
Kyger Creek outplayed the
bigger Wahama While Falcons
but sltll had to settle for a !Hi
lte m a brutsmg game at
Mason It was the conditioning
program which patd off that
mght. The Bobcals were sttll
going strong m the fourth
quarter on that warm Sep·
!ember mght
Two weeks later, the Bobcats
battled from-behtnd to edge the
ftre-up Southern Tornadoes, 14·
12at Racine, then the following
week, Kyger Creek mpped
North Gallia , Jl.&lt;j m one of the
best and most brutstng games
played between the two schools
m over a decade. The Ptrates
won the contest everywhere
but on the scoreboard.
Coach Adams had benched
two of hiS regular offens tve
players tha t week for
disciplinary reasons
The Bobcats ran out of gas m
the tr headon clas h with
Eastl&gt;rn . The Eagles romped to
an easy 4~ victory, crushing
all hopes of a Bobca t champwnsh tp The team never fully
recovered foll.owmg that loss.

Adams also served as the
Bobcats' head baseball coach.
His !972 team played more
games than any Kyger Creek
baseball squad in the school's
htstory. The Bobcals fimshed
m a second place tie with
Southern m the loop standings
behmd Symmes Valley , with a
9·3 record. Overall, KC had an
11-1().1 record
Canadian Game
Canadtan fbotball IS almost
like the game in the United
States but the fteld in Canada ts
larger and teams are bigger by
one. The length of the field in
the CFL ts 110 yards and the
width is just slightly larger
than the typtcal NFL surface .
There are, however, 12 men
who play at the same time for a
Canadian team, one more than
you see m the Unt ied States .
The total roster of a club m
the CFL ts only 32 There are no
taxi squads, as none of the mne
teams operating can afford
such a luxury. Another basic

GALJ.IPOLIS
Gary
Barton, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Bill M. Barton, Pt. Pleasant
has been named director of th~
Activity Therapy Depar tment
at Orient Sta te Hospital,
Orient, Ohio.
Barton, since graduattng
from Marshall University in
June, 1910, has served as a
traimng consultant for the
Gallla County Board of Mental
Retardation .
At Orten\, be will coordmate
GARY BARTON
the industria l, recreational,
occupational trammg, and
mustc therapy programs at the Grove Ctty area in the near
3,25().pattent hospttal.
fut ure.
Barton and his wife, Claudta ,
The Galha County Board of
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mental Retardatwn is now tn
William L. Wtlso n, Pt. the process of searching for a
Pleasant, wtll be moving to the successor for Barton. ·

rule established agamst imporls (th ose players who were
born in the U.S.) ts that each
team is restricted to 17 imports
and Ia Canadtans.
The extra man on the 12 man
Ca nadian team lines up in the
backfield and helps to move the
ball the required mmimum of
10 yards in only three downs.
In Canada, the rules agamst
downfleld blockmg are limtted.
In most cases no blocking is
permitted 10 yards beyond the
line of scrimmage and, except
on kickoffs, there is no blockmg
on punt returns.
Whether Adams returns to
coach the Bobcats or remains
with Ottawa will soon be answered since Monday, July 10,
is the deadhne for teacher
resignations in Ohio.
The Bobcats, while awattmg
word on thetr coach, have
begun the arduous task of •
summer condttionmg in an
effort to dethrone the proud
Eastern Eagles.

July Workshops

1 SUPER SHEF,"

Fam•lv Pack
iftcludes tnese
4 san dwiches
and 4 orders
of french fnes.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Co llege, loo ktng towa rd
posstble programs in Spectal
Education in the future, will
offer two Spectal Education
Workshops this summer in
coope ra liOn
wtth
the
Southeastern
Ohto
In stru ctiona l Resource and
Materials Center (IRMC).
The two workshops will be
"Curnculum Development for
the Hamca pped Child" and
"Mathematics for the Mentally
Retarcfoo." The two workshop
courses will sta rt July 18, the
same day as the second session
of Summer '12 Regtstralton
for the two wtll be July 17, the
sa me as for the regular
Summer '72 session.
Both courses wtll be ta ught
by Eugema Gardner, super·
vtsor for teachers of educable
men tally reta rded Emphasts
will be placed on unit teaching
and prac ltcal experiences
The special educatton
classes, which may become
• part •or Rio 'Gtande College's
regular offerings in the future,
can be taken for college credit,
transferrable
to
Ohto
University as part of OU's
Special Education program
On reason fo r bringing
cou rses under the Spectal
Educatwn program to Rio
Grande College, according to
IRMC coordinator Linda
Bauer, is the college's central
location.
uwe hope," she said, llthat
the central location wlll give a
great many more teachers
interested in Special Education
the opportunity to attend
classes .
"As our program expands,
the need for more teachers to
work with those who have
special
problems
will
increase." She added that she
was hopeful a Special
Education program could be
offered at Rio Grande College.
Special Education includes
working with educable mentally retarded, trainable
mentally retarded, those wtth
learning
or
physical
disabilities and those with
multiple handicaps .
Currently, the Southeastern
Ohio IRMC covers Athens,
Hocking, Perry, Gallia, Vinton,
Jackson, Meigs, and Morgan
counties. Beginning in September, the program will be
extended to Washington, Noble
and Monroe counties. .
Future plans for the IRMC

1 CHEESEBURGER

onlY

EverY SundaY
(ALL DAY)

I!'

~

1

1503 EASTFRN AVEMJE

Fomllr Roo tour onto

GALLIPOLJS.

GA LLIPOLI S - Here's thi s
MONDAY

11 11 am -

Pocket b11l1ards,
(Bob's Recreat1on
Cente r), 1 - 4 p m - G1rls'
so f t ball , 4f h. J2 th grades ,
( Memona l Field) ; 8 - 11 p.m

-

aqes,

G~rl s'

basketball. 11 years

up ,

and

Blacktop)

(Washin gton

TUESDAY

9 11 a m - Pnvate t en n1s
mstruct1on , a l l aqes (Memonal
Field) , conta ct Rob1n Niday or
Tom Mea dows ; 1 . 4 p.m Privat e tenn1s Ins t ruction,

(Memonal Field!
WEDNESDAY

9
11 30 p m - Archery,
( Memona l Fie ld), 1 - 4 p m -

Gori s' softb al l, dl h · 12th
grades. IMemonal Field ); 8 .
1t p m. - Grrls' basketba ll.
Washrngtor Blacktop
THURSDAY

9 11 am . - P.rivale ten niS
i nstruc ti on ,
all
ages ,
(Memo rial Fie ld ), co ntact

Tom Meadows or Robin Niday;
l

4 p.m . -

Pr~vate

tenni s

instruc ti on , co nt ac t Tom
M eadows or Robm Niday
9

!I

FRIDAY
a m. - Volleybal l, all

ages, (Memonal Field); 1 - 4
p m. - Archery, 12yrs and up,
(Memor ial Fie ld ); 8 . !1 :30
p m - Teen dance , ( Parkf ront)

QSSC Captures
Two Triumphs
GALLIP OLIS
Bob
Saunders' Quaker State Service Center Oilers posted 16-5
and lhl slo-pitch league wins
last week to start second half
play.
On Tuesday, QSSC downed
People's Bank, 16-5. On Thursday, the Oilers smashed Union
Workmen, 11-3.
In Thursday's victory,
manager Mickey Morgan had
three hits as did Gary
Hamson. Lou Lutton was the
winning hurler, Ralph Jones
the loser. L. Cremeens, R.
Myers and Howell each had .
two hlts for the losers. Wise
homered for the losers.
RENAMED CHAIRMAN
DAYTON, Ohio (\}PI ) Jack Reeder, president of the
Dayton Coca-Cola Bottlmg Co.
has been re-elected chairman
of the board of directors of the
Daytoo Gems hockey team, it
was announced Saturday.
Jack Walker, a ca~ dealer,
was named president of the
hockey team.

Here's a man that has a plan to help you build a quality home , on your
property, that's low in cost.

-

UYING

This is Mr. Bill Smith, manager of Jim Walter Homes in Birmingham, Ala. If you live near Birmingham, just
call Bill on the phone or stop by to see him. But tf you don 't ltve ncarhy, it doesn't really matter, because
there is another Jim Walter Homes manager near you. And, just l!ke Bill Smith, he also has a plan to help
you build a quality home on your property and keep your cost low You see, all Jtm Walter managers are
pretty much the same. That is, each one is selected becauSe he is fri endly . . easy to talk to ... he "understands." And, he has been trained ... trained to work for :12!!. his customer, and to explain to you all the
advantages of building the Jim Walter way. He'll show you more than twenty models from which you may
select your new home, and then, if you are willing to do some of your ow n inside finishing ... he'll show
you how.to. cut your c~sts, down to the bare mi_nimum ... he'll explain how we will stop at almost ANY
stage of mstde completiOn and allow you to fimsh the rest yourself .. to save you money. You can do just
about as much or as little as you want. He'll tell you about construclton of your new home . . . go into all the
details of the quality inspections he'll make all the way from the time the foundation is set, until the entire
outside is completely finished. He'll inspect the ftoor joists, the framing, the roof rafters, roofing siding win·
dows and painting. He'll see to it that you do get QUALITY CONSTRUCTION from the botto:U to th~ top.

MA111t

"""""'

program mvolve opening
classrooms for educa ble
mentally retarded and those
wtth learning dtsabiltties and
multiple disabthltes. Also m
th e plann ing stages is a
program that would mcrease
reg10n-to-regwn cooperation m
offenng services .
The two classes are being
offered"' thts summer as
workshops to give the greatest
amount of flextbthty. A
number of other courses are
being offered on an expenmental basts this summer,
in cl udtn g a readmg-sktlls
development progr~m and tw o
courses in Early Chtldhood
Education
Registralton for the second
sesston of Summer '72 will be
Monday , July 17

Youths Certified
By State Agency
PT. PLEASANT - The local
office of the West Virgin·
ia Department of Em·
ployment Security in June
com pleted recruitment, certification, referral of eligtble
youth to vanous NYC work
stations in Mason and Jackson
Counties and cer tification of
youth selected by the local
Community Action Group.
Work stations included
faclhUes of the Department of
Natural Resources, Department of Highways, Department of Employment Security,
Department of Welfare,
Farmers
Home
Ad·
mintstration,
W.
Va .
University Extension Servtce,
Department of Men tal Heal th,
and various municipaltttes.
Eligibility was determined
upon parental consent certification of need questionnaire, information supplied by
parents or guardian.
Opemngs were filled by
youths 16 through 21 years of
age, th ose 15 years of age next
and those of the 14 age group
reqwred to fill the remaining
openings in accordance with
per family number income.

FLIES
Gel complete facts and the cost of buiklfne on
your property. Srop by your nearest dispfiJ pork

--------:1I
or send I he coupon tor our new caiJiof of homes.

JIM WALTER HOMES

to quolifiotl pt&lt;)tJMy -

!Mail to near•sr offitel
I would li~e lo have

more
Information and the co1t of

I

bu1ldlng on my prQJMrty , I

understand tlltrt would be
no obligation to buy and
that you would give me rhese
facta lrtt of charge.

CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
Old Hwy. 52

o.

P.
Box 248
PH : 867-3153

SO. CHARL£STON, W. VA. 25303
P.O. Box 8367
608 1st Ave. South
.
U.S. Hwy. 25 !Nitro, W. Va.J
PH: 727·2296

' f

,I
•'

1
I

t own ,......., In

"!!..;•

I

I
I

L---------4~

Purina Rang• Caitl• Spray ,contains

two
killere-Toxaphene and Lindane-to knock
off he&gt;m flies Cut. Geta ticks, lice and man1e,
too. CoJD8 il&lt; ooon and eee· how little it costs.

,

J. D. North ·Produce Co.

ADDIISS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......:..

Ctn - - -- - - - -- STATI_...,.._ _:
Tolophono (or nolghbort) _ _ _ _-,-'----tl rural reuto plta" glwt dlroctlono _~----'

worry pounds and dollars
oH caHit and hogs

Or call on til. phoJUI,

1

I ~·-~--------------~--~ I
I

accelerated participation on outdoor recrea tion will place even
greal\r pressure upon the extsting facthttes.
T~eOhto Valley Region has the lowest population density but
the largest supply of available recreational space, and further
provtdes land wtth both extensive an(j intenstve potenltal for
recreation . Lakeshore Uplands Regton contammg nearly half of
the state's population has only 22 pet. of Ohio's recrea ttonal
space .
In Meigs County, with the expected mcrease in populatwn,
recreation facilities wtll be needed to a greater extent than ever
before.
Popular trends toward outdoor recrealton, m recent years,
have encouraged an unequaled activtty in developtng family
campgrounds, trailer ' courts, amusement centers and parks,
says John M Pierce, Extenston spectalist tn resource
development at The Ohio State University
New dimenswns were added to thts trend earlier this year
when new health codes were issued. These codes greatly affected

the location, layout, construction, drainage, sarutatton, safety
and operattons of these pubhc facthttes in Ohio, the spectalisl
adds.
·
The stale of Ohto, through its Department of Health, has
legtslattve control of all developments servmg the public, and of
many pnvate butldings as well. The health codes are rules that
regulate many needs assOCiated wtth public servtce, such as
sewage trea tment system, water lines, plumbing and dtsposal of
waste water.
Although health codes, have been tn extstence in Ohto for a
long ttme, they were revised i~ January 1972 to co•lrol
recreattonal development, specifically campgrounds and cot·
tages.
One requtreme nt for anyone settmg up a campground or
farm vacation cottage ts that he must submtt to the Board of
Health a set of plans and speciftcations showmg and descnbmg
completely the proposed new camp. The law says that a person
must recetve wntten permission before he begi!TS to butld or
make extenstve changes or addttions.
The plans and specifications include a sertes of
requirements: (A) A contour map showing the general layout of
the entire camp. This means hiring a surveyor or engmee r to
take field elevations at critcal pomts in the proposed constructiOn
area. This informatiOn is used to determine the adequacy of
sewage and water lme construction .•
(ll) Maps wtth access and extt roads, tratls, camp buildings,
servtce buildings, stzes of ca mpsttes and lots, and the location,
number and types of plumbmg fixtures.
(C) Also crittcal to approval of the plans is a plan outlimng
storage, collection and dtsposal of solid wastes, such as g~rbage,
htter a~d foodstuffs. Of course, swirnmtng facil ittes, includmg
swtrnmmg pools and bathmg beaches plus provtswns for plans on

· Vine Str(!et
•

L

proposed food servtce operations, are also necessary
All of these plans take engmeermg and-drafting abth ty
Although the Board of Health engmeers wtll accept good plans
for mdivtdual operators, "homemade" plans usually take longer
to secW'e acceptance The reason may be that the engmeers can
cornmunicatl&gt; better tf engmeenng standards are used tn layout
and planning.
If you are constdermg constructtng a campground or cottage,~ fi rst stl&gt;p, says Pierce, ts to become acquamted wtth the
Health Commission at your local Board of Health Ha vm~ the
commisston members Involved from the beguuung ts tmportant
. Your development plans must be submtlted to the disl11ct
off tee, where the staff engmeers revtew them Dtstr)ct offt ccs are
located in Cuyahoga Falls, llowhng Green , Nelsonvtlle and
Day~
•
Pierce suggests submtllmg these plans tor approval well
ahead of the expected opcnmg The dtstnct offices usually ha ve a
heavy work schedule, so response ts often slow. One suggestiOn ts
to wait two weeks after submttting the plans to the Health
Department, then, tf you have not heard anytlung, make a phone
call. In case your plans should not meet the new health standards, allow enough time to rework the plans if necessary
A copy of the new regulattons and an associated gutde to
using them is avatl able from the reg ional offices or parttcular
interest to your engineer, planner· or architect ts a booklet entitled, "Water, Supply , Sewerage and Sewage Trea tment for
Public Buildings m Ohto."

Horn Flies aProblem?
USE

T. ALLAN WOLTER
District Ranger
Who ow ns Ohio's forests' The
Federal Government owns 2 pet., most
of tl Wayne Naltonal Forest land ; local
governments and the Sta te own 4 pet.;
and fores t industry owns 2 pet Farmers own 42 pet. , and other pnva te
owners own aO pet. So the use rs of
Ohw's forests - limber -based mdustry.
water users , recreatiomsts, ~ nd
wtldhfe depend heavily on the farmers
and other pmate owners.
It ts encoura gmg to know that the
foresood land area of Ohto has been
increasing smce the 1930s. A recent
survey reveals that alm os t one-fourth
of Ohio, over 6 mtlhon acres, ts fo rested
(up 17 pet since 1952); 94 pet. of Ohio
forest land ts prtvately owned and the
rest ts owned by loca l, state, or federal
agencies; stands of sawtimber · size
trees - trees btg enough to saw lumber
from - occupy about one-thtrd of
Ohto's forest land ; the output of ttmber
products fr om Ohio's forests has
doubled since 1952, yet the timber
growth far exceeds the timber harvest,
and the volume of limber has mcreased
by about one-third in the last Ia years.
Wllen the pioneers ftrst came to
what is now Oh10, they found a landscape much dtfferent from today's .
Most of Ohio was covered with forests
Stands of maple and beech covered
much of the northern and western parts
of Ohw. Stands of oa k, chestnut, and
hickory prevatled in most of
southeastern Ohio. Elm, ash, and soft
maple occupted lowlands. Old stands
containing. large trees were common.
One observer told of a walnut tree
seven feet in diameter and described a
sta nd of whi te oa ks in the hills near
Chilhcothe m whtch straight stems rose

Evan~

wtthout a branch to 75 or 80 feet.
When the se ttlers ca me they
needed farmland; so they cleared the
forests to make room for crops and to
provide material for bmlding thetr
houses and barns.
Southern Ohw, because tt was close to
nver transportalton and because of
Indian treaties, was cleared and settled
fir st Even many of the steep htllstdes
were clea red for ftelds and pastures.
Much of thts hillstde la nd was not
suttable fo r cropland , and many settlers found that the land could not
suppor t thetr families. So, starting in
tl1e ea rly 1900s and continuing unit!
today, farms were abandoned as far·
mers were forced to move off, and
fo rests began to reclatm these lands.
Left alone and given time , nature ts
effective in reforest tn g land . Un·
for tunately man has not always
coopera ted wtth nature. In the early
1900s, frequent forest fires! slowed
nature's m1sswn of reclatmmg the
abandoned helds.
In 1922. forest fire protectiOn was
started m southern Ohio by the State's
Division of Forestry . Thts fledgling
pr og ram was several years In
becoming effecttve, but eventually was
successful in curbmg large forest losses
from fire.
The se ttlement of nor thwestern
Ohto started later, but there the land ts
nch and we ll suited for farmm g; so
land is still bemg cleared m that part of
the State .
The low potnt in Ohio's forest
acreage was reached about 1930. By
this ttme, most land smted for farmmg
had been cleare d. But eco nomt c
changes, along wtth ftre protection and
the conservation movement of that
decade starood an upward trend m the

State's forest acreage . Now about
14,000 acres of la nd are planted wtth
trees each year m Ohw Increased
forest acreage has promoted the return
of deer, beaver, and wtld turkey to
OhiO In the early 1900s these animals
had almost dtsappeared fr om Ohto.
What does the fu ture hold for Ohto's
forests' It takes many many years to
grow a tree. Because of thts, foresters
must plan well mto the future Many'
twentieth. century foresters are actmg
to , meet problems ex pec ted in the
twe nty-ftrst ce ntury.
In some areas, such as urban areas
and "estern Ohto where the lack of
trees detracts from envtronmental
quality , more trees have to be planted
In other areas, steps must be ta ken to
see that a proper balance between large
and small trees ts established and
mamtained.
Many of the private owners own
forest land for reasons other than for
producing ttmber. They own fo t·ests for
huntin g, land speculation, or stmply
because tl came With the place. Such
forests are usually producing below
what could be obtained through good
forest management.
A major problem fa ced by agencies
concerned wtth forest management is
how to get the pnvate owner interested
in the long-range benefits provided by a
healthy and productive forest.
The foresters who conducted the
latest survey-of Ohio's forests expec't
that increases m foresred areas through
planting and natural regeneration will
be offset by land clearing for
agriculture, housing, highways, etc.
The net effect of this over the next 30
years or so will be a relatively stable
forest acreage.

MARLATE-50
Made by DUPONT
50% Methoxychlor
DUST ON CATTLE
WILL LAST FOR WEEKS

NOW ONLY

48

$

PER 4 lB. BAG
MANY OTHER USES

YOU ALWAYS SAVE

MONEY AT ...
Your Farm Service Center
CENTRAL SOYA

OF OHIO
"Your Farm Supply Supermarket"

Ph. 446-2463

Plans Special Weekend
gltders, rubber -powered
duration models, rubber·
powered scale models, old·
Itme 1pre-1941) fre ~ fhght
models, and an ormthopter (a
flapping wmg model atrcrafl )
Howard Kelley of Lynch·
burg, Ohto, will be in the
Wickline Rifle Cabin , Saturday
behind the
Homestead ,
demonstrating the making of
percussion, cap and ball, and
flintlock rifles. He will take
orders for custom made rifles .
Mrs. Gloria Snodgrass and

Audin Turner of Ctrclev ille wtll
exhibtt and sell pastel and
water color painlings and hex
signs . They will also demonstrate their art techniques on
Saturday and Sunday.
Admtsston to the farm ts
free. Other attractions at the
farm include a hand of wtld
Spamsh Mustangs, the Old
Welsh Windmill, The Homestead, the Farm Museum, the
original sign from the Chicago
Stockyards, and small friendly
farm anunals.

•

3rd &amp; Srcamore Sis.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Now handle extreme
variations
.
in twine without missing a tie

Tri-State Chairman Annowtced

OVER ~0 LOW COST MODELS e .- BUILT ON YOUR PROPERTY

MORTGAGE FINANCING

the NEW in FARMING

RIO GRANDE - A special
weekend, wtth model aircraft
flying, riflemaking and pastel,
water color and hex sign
pamting, will be held at Bob
Evans Farms, Rto Grande,
Ohio on July Ia and 16.
The Central Ohio Free Flight
Club is sending 10 model aircrofters to the farm on Sunday
to demonstrate various free
!llght atrcraft. The classes of
model aircraft include gaspowered free flight models,
The first U.S. shoe factory hand-launch shders, towline
was established in Lynn ,
Mass., by John Adams Dagyr
m 1760, according to Ency·
clopaedta Britannica.

..."

It'll cost you nothing to get Cj)Jllp!ete information and the cost of building on your property. We would like
t&lt;o~!J;.'~y:~ou this information absolutely FREE and without obligation. We think you'll agree we do have the
_.
deal for you, but if you don't think so, we'll part ps fnendly as we met. Find out for yourself. Contact
your -=~ Jim Walter Homes manager right away.

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Extension Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - With the summer recrealton pertod reachmg
the hall-way mark, let us consider some of the recrea twn needs
and possibilities of this area.
The 1971-i977 Outdoor Recreation Report of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources points out that Ohio, already
the sixth most populous state in the natton, IS expected to ex·
pertence a 23 pet. mcrease m populatton by 1985. Demands for
outdoor recreatioo are expected to increase at rates nearly twtce
that of the population. Thus, contmued populatton growth and

In Special Ed

week' s summer recreation
sc hedul e

all

•

Gallipolis, 0.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. The chairman of the 1973
national Scout jamboree
committee for the Tri.Stare
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
America, was named today by
R. A. Monk, Connell President.
Scheduled for August 1973,
the National Scout Jamboree
will be held at two sites Farragut State Park, Idaho,
and Moraine Stare Park, Pa.and troops from this area may
attend at l!ither location.
Jim Wagers, executive board
member, and night superin·
lendent at Inca, has • been
named jamboree chainnan.
Wagers announced that
every registered Scout will be
eligible to attend a jamboree
either In a regular charrered
troop or in a troop made up
provisionally ' with members
coming from many chartered
troops,
"The Tri-State Area Council
of the Boy Scouts of America
wants to make Scouting's
attractions available to ·all
boys," Wagers said, "so this
means that II· and 12-year-olda
wiU be able to attend the
national jamboree."
In accepting the cha!rll\tlllShlp of the jamboree

r

commtttee, Wagers poinred out
that national jamborees are
not merely icing on the cake of
Scouting but to tens of
thousands of Scouts a jam·
boree is the high point of

boyhood. "They are an im·
pressive, tangible fulfillment
of the ideal of brotherhood and
an opportunity to demonstrare
the values of the Scouting
program," he said.

rJJWJroiD~;u.J "''G-'IJ ,_, ,_
UIIICramble th- four Jumbleo,
one letter to ea&lt;h "'UAN, to
form four ordlnarr. wonlo.

•
IH.

TREHB

NEW ALL-TWINE BALERS:

MIN IN~
ARE CON5PICUOU5.

•
•
\
•
•

Handle different slzes .and types of twine without knotter adjustment.
Handle heavy crops, heaviest bales without knotter adj ustment.
Handle light, fluffy, and slick dry crops without knotter adjustment.
Make only three infrequent adjuslments to compensate for wear.
Tie exclusive double- diameter knols that tests up lo 17% slronger.

I rJ I I [ ] :..ro:ledu.:,-:::r::::o~ Meigs Equipment
CLUMON

N o w - lhe elrelellletten

IPriii~==··IUIII"(

I I l I I I I I Y'

(.Uirin Me!Miaf

I

J_..Jn, IIIAND JIOZI IOUCI AIIWAT

'Yellerfty'•

•

"-•" o.. us~:D,...,IIoUIIIoro~~"""•""

......_,WOliN

\

PH. 992-2176

Co.

POMEROY, 0.

New Lok-Twist Balers, too.

�:n .. TIIe~Ttmea

Senllnei,SUnday Julv9 1972

for Rent
•

20- The Sunday Times

Sentmel

Sunday July 9

1972

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Memory

In
IN LOVING memory of our
dear father and grandfat ler
Paul P Swa n who dted on
J uly 9 196a
My heart s heav y but papa

Real

Card

nf

___

Thanks

I W SH to thank my many
fr ends and relat •ves for the
many beaut ful ca rd s I
re ce ved on m y b rthd ay

Margaret Ca rpenter
160 1

-----1 WISH to thank my ne ghbors

and a ll my fr ends for the r
he p and sympathy they
showed me dunng the death
of my husband John Wh eeler
who passed 8\Vay Jvne 20 for
the beaut 1fu l flowers cards
and food A so a special
thanks to the McCoy &amp; Moore
Fune ra l home and to the Rev
and Mr s Malo y for thei r VIS t
and prayers and to Nu rse
Spears thoughtfulness and
Dale
k ndness
and
to
Gmger ch
H s w1fe Sara Wheeler
160 1

- -- - - - Nol1ce

•

YARD SALE MONDAY Baby
clothes and toys 9 am 5p m
495 Oak Dr Spr ng Va l ley
Estates
159 3

-------

MR ROY LOWE of Crown C1ty
s now barber ng w1th Den ver
I Red} H gley at Reds Bar&gt;,
Shop Located on Upper Rt 7
I ~ m iles above the S1lver
Memonal 8 a m 8 p m 6
days a week
160 6

- -- - - -

1 WILL NOT be r espons ble for
any debts other than m y own
Lena B Williams
159 3

ATTENTION VETERANS The
Army has I m ted openings
for pr or serv cemen Recent
pay r aises and numerous
fr 1nge benef ts make the
Modern Volunteer Army the
Career for you Call your
neares t Army recru fer at
446 3343
155 26

- - - - - --

YOUNG MEN The fam ed lOl st
A1r Mobile Olv1s on s lookmg
for good men who have what
t takes Ent st n the Army
now and spend a mm mum of
16 months with the Scream ng
Eagles at Fort Campbell Ky
Go all the way - l Olst A r
Mobile D1v Slon Ph 446 3343
155 26

-- - - RALPH S Carpet &amp; Uphol stery

Clean1ng
Serv ce
Free
es t mates Ph 446 0294 Ralph
A Dav s owner
9 If

------

DOUBLE w1de mob1 e home
c1ty water and gas $175 mo
Ph 446 1066 or 446 46la
102 tt

------

DAY CARE
SUN VALLEY Nursery School
I censed by State of Oh o 1 '
miles wes t of new hospital
577 Sun Valley Dr Ph 446
3657 Day care t hat says we
car e
Madge Hauldren
Owner
Lored1lh &amp; John
Hauldren Operators
114 I f

- - -- - -

TWO WAY Rad1 os Sales &amp;
Serv ce New and used CB s
pol ce mon1tors antennas
etc Bobs C t1 ze ns Band
Rad o Equip Georges Creek
Rd Gall pol s Oh o 446 4517
16 If

-----Wanted To Do

REMODELING building new
rooms
ceme nt
roofmg
s d ng furnace ns J H
Queen &amp; Son 446 9271
68 tf

ART EADS
MACHINE SHOP
GENERAL MACHINE
SHOP SERVICE
Weldmg
Elect nc and Gas
223 Mam St
Ph 675 5749
DOES your home need painting
s1d1ng roof ng remodel mg
pa neling
ce ment work
barbecue pat as or garage
carport etc' You name 1t
we I do 1t Reasonable ates
Ca I 446 0126 or 446 1753
19 tf

ROOF ING and gutter work
W l l1am M tchell 3aa aso7
"'

..._

67 II

TOOL
sha rp en ng
saws
sc ssors and shears mower
blades dr II b t s barber
cl ppers and cu t ery Sharp
~ hop alle y rea r 147 Second

Ave

139 tt
-----~

ALTERATIO~S ON all types of

cloth ng in my home Call
Mrs Ross Northup 446 2543
21 If

-=-=-:-:--,----,PAINT lob on houses barns
outbuildings and roofs
379 2205

Ph
149 12

~-----

•

Real btate

Real Es!d!e

AGENCY

REALTY
25 Locust St
Howa rd Brannon Broker
Off 446 2674
LUCille Brannon
Eve 446 1226

Galha Co's Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Offtce 446 3643
Evemngs Ca II
E M Ike 'Wtseman 446 3796
E N Wi&lt;eman 446 4500

Just Ltsted
Near new one fll oor pl an 3 BR
f 1le bath n ce all bu1 lt n
k tch en
laundry
ro om
fm shed ga r age pat o con
crete dr ve and s dewalk
Pr ce n low twnt es Shown
by appomtment

New Ltsfmg
2J~ acres of level land near
Tycoon lake 3 BR one story
home good well corn cr b
located on a good road a good
buy In tooay s market
New Ltshng
No 156 Portsmouth Rd 2 BR
n ce k tchen d n ng room
large I ving room ca rpe ted
Full basement fr ont porch 2
ca r garage w th storag e
conc rete dr ve :z ac re lot
Beauttful Bnck

New

$22,000
3 BR - 2 full baths carpe t
throughout beauti ful k tchen
basement porch w th stone
f owe planter pat1o carport
and storage concrete dr ve

$24,000
One story redwood 2 BR f1le
bath ca rpet throughou t
beau t fu l k tc hen
2 ca r
ca rport and storage J ~ acre
tot

2 Story
$9,000

Loca ted on 3rd Ave 4 B R and
bath good level lot home
needs some repa1 r A good
buy for mvestment

$12,500

Prtce Reduced

BR comforta ble klfchen
carpet thr oughout fireplace
n LR laundr y room located
n c ty c.oncrete stree t

large Two Story

VERY
P RICE

Four Bedroom
1!2 M1le Out

NICE F OR THE
N EAR LY NEW J

BEDROOM

HOM E

W TH

B U LTINKIT C H EN

N

TOWN SU 900 WAS I 6 000
F NANCING

AVA LA BLE

AN DLOOKA TTHE PR CE
$10 500 00
FOUR
BEDROOMS
LAR GE
L VIN G ROOM W TO W
CARPET IN G

$21,000
Located on Second Ave 3 BR
banquet s1ze k tchen forma l
dintng room par t basemen t
garage and storage room
rarge deep lot

4 Bedrooms
$15,000
Located on II"' acre lot One
sto r y home covered w 1th
a!um num s d ng carpeted
floors
attac he d garage
workshop
Ideal co untr y
1111 ng

2 Acres
$18,500

Brand Spankmg
New
F YOU LIKE CO UNTRY
l V IN G W TH THE CON
VE NI E N CE OF BE N G

CLO SE TO TOWN LOOK
AT TH S NEW CARPETED
J BEDROOM HOME WITH
BEAUT F UL K TCHEN
GARAGE AND LARGE LOT
(G ARDEN
SPO T }
LOCATED 5 MIL E S OUT N
CITY SCHOO L DI STR CT
12 1 000 BUYS IT

RUSSELL

Just outs dec ty I m ts central
a1r luxury k 'chen 3 large
BR
att garage
Qu ck
possession

3 Acres
$14,750
Two story home m ext ra good
cond I on 3 BR large ealln
, k tchen d nlng room garage
and ce ll ar house

Ltstmgs Wanted t t t
Anyt m e 1s i! good t me to I 1st
your home for sale 1f t s
pri ced right We need I st ngs
- We ha ve all the loots of the
trade exper~en c ed sta ff
advertls ng p1cture wmdaw
d1splay and w1ll ng to work
Call the BRANNON REALTY
now
158 tf

Neal Realty
BUSINE SS bu ld ng at 4a P ne
Street Full pr ce 15 500
THI S IS a bu y you ca nt alford to
m ss 2 BR home w 1th wal l to
wa I carpet n I vmg room and
bottl bedroom s Can now be
bought tor SlO 000 Ca ll tooay
tor your appo ntment

WE ALSO have some ots on
Raccoon Creek

3 ACRES w lh we I and sept c
tank $4 500 or 2 8 acres for
$3 000 Both near Raccoon
Creek
Off1 ce Phone 446 1694
Evemng s
Charles M Nea l 446 1546
J MIChael Nea t 446 1503

HG US ES for sale by contractor
Barr
Constr uct on
3
bedrooms I vmg room k1t
chen ut I ty room bath with
garage w to w carpet on 2
acre lot Paved dnveway plus
shrubbe ry
135 tf

WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

THROUGHOU T

HOV S E

VERY
N CE
B U lL T N
K T C HEN
UT L TY
ROOM
CAR PORT A ND
LARGE
LOT
O WNER
M OV I NG TO CLE VELAND

We Need
Ltsltngs Now
S AT

SFY

WERE

MASSIE
Realty, 32 State Sl
Tel 446-1998

- -- - FINISHED apt ground floor

Four rooms and a bath
Excellent locaf1on No pets
Adults only Ph 446 18~
160 tf

- -- - 60X12 TRAILER with expando

Three bedrooms ai r con
dltlon l ng
Ut i liti es
pd
Loc~ted In Cheshire Cali 367
7420
160 3

-----SIX rooms and bath 104 Third

_('~oms 2 porches

VV..l_l'l 11rner lo t

v

Ave

s_,

WE HAVE several homes under
constru ct on between 520 000
and S35 000 It mteresl ed ca ll
for appo ntment

ISa 3

TWENTY FIVE ACRE FARM - 4 ' miles from the
Med cal Center Three bedrooms I v ng room kitchen
and bath Rural water Tobacco base Pond Good fences
Only 116 900

CI T Y 3 f ('{) lh ut1 ty rm
n ce k tel''
port a r
cond w I se t .... trade

APARTMENT l or construction
men Ph 446 0756

OHIO RIVER

Rtalty

$ '

POMEROY Comp lete l y
remodeled 2 stones plus full
basement new stor m w n
dows and al um num s dmg
formal d n ng room 2 baths
k tchen ncludes refr g w t h
ce mak er dou ble ove n
cook top and hood dish
washer gar d1sp and bar

OVER LOOK
GALLIPOLIS
LOCKS
N1 ce three
bedroom home wi th fu l l bath
on Ia ge lot w th thr ee car
metal garage Gooo local on
on S R 7 easy access to
town

AUCTION
SERVICE

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444

PUBLIC
NOTICE

------

FOR SALE
BY OWNER

HENDERSON
TRAILER COURT
Route 2 and 35
Duplex Apt House- One furnished one un
furnished twenty umls rent space one sleeper
cabtn $1,000 Month Income Concrete pal1os &amp;
walkways ctly water and sewer system
End of New Silver Memorial Bridge
For lmmechate Possesston
Call 675 2946 Pf Pleasant Exchange

ber 7$25
rm000house 2 barns and
only
163 A S ml from C hesh~re on
Ward Rd no bldgs underlaid
w1th coa I $20 000
23 A Lmcoln P ke 7 rm house
barn an d l ob base
ANY HR 446 1998
E W1nlers - 446 3878
AI Arnold - 446 0756
Eve J Berry - 446 3466
Eve J Fuller - 2459311
Seven room house Mills
V II age next to new hospital
3 bedrooms carpal In LR
formal d1n1ng rm and hall
and bath Full bosemenf
w1th large fam1ly room 2
fireplaces all curlatns and
drapery stay In house Extra
large screened porch slorm
doors and wtndows nice
large lol Prtctd 1n upper
20 s Ou1ck occupancy Ph
446 4195

1

NEW
2 BEDRM
TOWNHOUSE APTS
BE WITH the first to choose
yov r resi den ce
n lhe-se
beautiful suburban apts
Contemporary
In style
l u)(urious car p e ting
In
SMA L L eff c ency apt SUitable
dlvldually controliecl heating
for work ng g r ls or work ing
color coordinated appliances
men Ph 446 4923
private patios many other
158 3
features Lease $135 mo Coil
446 3772 lor appointment to
FURNISH ED apt All ut 1111 es
see modern unit 526 Jackson
pd Adu lts on l y Ph 446 9523
Pike Near Holzer Med
158 tt
Center
THIRTY FIVE WEST
THREE
room
furniShed
APARTMENTS
apartmen t bat h upsla rs
51 tf
Adults preferred all ut ill es
pa d 626 Th1rd Ave Ph 446
1405 Alter 5 p m 446 0322 or SLEEPING rooms for rent
Gall a Hotel
2506413
150 26
158 tf

For Rent

- -- - - -

PAY ONtYNONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furniSh Water Sewage Garbage Collection Ample
Parking
TV Antenna
Wall to Wall Carpeltng
Draper1es
Refrtgerators A1r Conditioning
Garbaga
0Jshwi15hers Heat Lamps Private
Pool Clubhouse

HOM E PL US IN COM E - N ce
three bedroom home w1th fvll
bath c ty water c1ty sc hools
nco me of over $200 per mon th
fr om two mob le homes on lot
A good nvestment w th good
return
Evemngs
Oscar D Ba 1rd 446 4632
D J Welherhofl 446 4244
Steven R Betz 446 9583

NEAR K C H SC - Co lon 1al 2
ATTENTION
stor y 8 b1g rm s base 3
DUE to the present cons tru ct mn
ba ths 3 A ISO 000
n Ga I a Co we ha ve severa l
ou t of town bu yer s n need of
EUREKA - 7 rms ba t h nver
HOBART DILLON
homes n th1 s area If you
MAYBE the ol dt me l nd ans
v ew 2 ca r carport 2 lots
Real Estate Broker
have
property
for
sale
don
t
were not so bad after all as
new alum s d ng $\6 000
se
tt
e
lor
less
than
nationw
ide
PO Box516
one old chef sad
ln d ans
ad vert s ng CAL L STROUT EXCLUS I VE agenl for Raccoon
scalp enem es wh1 le man PAT RIOT 2 story older
Valley cam ps tes w shes to
sk 1n fr ends
home sound wa ter I me 2 A
announce h s off 1ce In the
163 A - M ONEY MAKER 56
f at lot pr ce Sl 3 000
Valley area w II be open da lly
A bottom 00 A pa sture 2
NEW LISTING
from
12 noon til 8 p m Ph
large
barns
ext
ra
good
set
of
IN the C ty 8 room house be ng RIO - All br ck al l elec 5
446 2730
bu ld ngs n1 ce farm home
r emodel ed on large lot 94 ft
rm s bath and ulll 1ly rm
47 If
w th 7 rooms and bath large
on Portsmouth Road and
$2 1 000 (Id ea l Ret rem en }
shady lawn Ideal beef hog ::-.:-:-:=~=----entran ce to garag e from
25 ACRE S on Br1 ck Road $3 000
and gram set up
Burkhar t Lane Pr ce $15 800 GREEN ACRES - 4 yrs old 5
Wi ll frade for good mobile
rm frame H W fir s at
homes Call collect 9a7 4561
AD DI SON - 6 A next to Tara
ON Ne1ghborhood Road l arg e
I ached gar Pr ce $23 000
deve lopment 4 r m s a nd
146 26
tot w fh 2 bedroom home
bath large meta l comm erc al
bath furnace c1ty water KA NAUGA - S rm f rame
s1ze garage .1
plenty r oom fo r a fra ler and
H W firs fur heat qUi et st
garden Ga l pol s Sc hool
11 1000
25 ACRES 1 m1 from Tycoon
D sir ct 110 500
ADD ISON N ce frame 4 Lake 4 r ms &amp; bath cellar
rm s bath base extra lot
house deal for ret~r emen t or
FARM SALE
and on ly 12 yr s old s16000
vacallon $6 300
257 A IN Harmon Twp w th a
room house 4 bedroom s and
NEW L ISTING - A large shady
bath 45 A bottom land CHATHAM AVE 5 rm
1
tobacco base and corn ba se
fram e storm drs and wm lot 2 m from c ty s a lovely
and 2 lar ge barns good fence
fur hear cheap hous ng setlmg for th1s 2 story 4 BR
home Needs m nor repa rs but
on bla c ktop road Pr ced
Pr ce reduced Sll 000
featu r es basement large for
$38 000
mal d nlng r m LR and k t
KERR - Ail bnck HW an d
chen It won t be on the mark et
IN WALNUT Twp we have 350
carpet fi rs 7 r m s plus fu l l long for $15 900
A farm with good I ne fen ce s
base 1 A lot It has 3 baths
and a large barn on State Rl
and 2 car garage
Pr ce
1 A IN KC DIS I
most ly
775 10 miles from Cour
educed 135 000
remooeled 4 BR 1 , baths
thouse Pr ced $100 per acre
blacktop rd co wa ter 116 500
w lh half of m neral r ghts ST RT 21a - New all elec 5
rm s 2 ca r gar v my l s1d on
LOTS OF LOTS
IN GREE N Twp 104 A Farm
7 A lot 51a 000
WE HAVE lots In all directions
no bu pfings 4 m1les from
Some can be bought with a
Courthouse 112 500
CIT Y - Real n1 ce 6 b1g rms
very sma ll down payment
bath part car pet fur heat
Whether bu1ldmg or buymg a
OffiCe 446 1066
cheap at $15 aoo
mobile
home call today
Evenmg Call
Ron Canaday 446 3636
We sell anylhtng lor
CITY - S rms bath and base
LISTINGS WANTED
Russ~ll D Wood 446 461a
anybody
Bring your
H W firs flat lot ~17 000
Ranny Blackburn
John I Richards 446 0280
FARMS
1tems to Knotts Com
Branch Mgr
75 A moder n 5 rm home 5
munUy Auction Barn
barns 15 A development
NEW 3 bedroom home w th
Corner Third &amp; Olivo
land one of Ga ll a Co s best
Sale
Trade
bnck Iron! 1 car garage 120
For appotnlmenl ••II
A on St Rt 325 100 A
tt frontage 1 h mile fr om new 160tractor
446
2917
Sale t!very
land good bldgs and CAMPER full faciliti es also
hospllal on Rt 160 Ca ll 367
Saturday Evening at
plen t y water
camper on pickup lru~ k Call
7846 or 367 748 1
70 Clock
before noon 446 0168 or 1026
147 If 204 A near Lecta lois ot hm

For

267 If

Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Denver K H1gley 446 0002
Wanda S Eshenaur 446 0003

452 Second AH
446~4 446 4775
TWO M IL ES FROM PARK Brand new t hree b&amp;lroom al l
BARCAIN
30 A good
e ec tr c wlfh centra l a r
tarm gro {)l{) woods 2
home on good road C1 ty
barns log ca to
ton area
schools county water 501
sa aoo
Ny on carpet through ou t
Tappan
equ pped k ! chen an
5() A Har r son t wp tab
exc ellen t buy for under
base mostly woods $4 900
$25 000
2 A - N ce bu ldmg or mob le
home lot 200 ft f on tag e on 44 ACRE FARM HOME Near Me gs m ne house ha s
sta e r ou te 32 5 be twee n
lu I bath plenty of ropm
V nton and R o Grande
large barn pond good stock
50 A - Va cant M organ
farm

THREE room home on State Rt
160 f lat lot coun ty water
ava !abl e $5 000

SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
rates Park Central Hotel
~tf

':/.-IJ

6 A - Development land Clay
Twp

MOBILE HOME 12x60 located
In Rlo Grande Call 245 5267
156 If

-:-=-:-::-::-----

ATTEN T ION' We hav e 2 dea l
rental proper ty mvestments
NO 1 - 4 houses and 5 mob1 e
homes on upper r oute 7
.... Owner w II f nance fo S pet
NO 2 - 15 ren tal un 1ts n c1ty
plenty of road frontag e and
wa er fron tage Pr ced to sell

Kanouga Ph 4461Al22 '
160 3

HOU SE In c l y Adults only
Mu st give reference
100 per month Ph 446 0599

RIPE FOR D EVELOP M ENT
- J8 acres m c1t y school d1 st
Beaut ful roll ng wood land
over l ook ng Oh o R ver
coun ty water ava labl e

HAVE BUYERS WE CANT
SELL NG THEM FAS TER
THAN WE CA N REP LACE
THEM

TWO bedroom mob1le home
Ph 367 7329
160 tt

10m out 330
state rd 3'1•
acre ~ 3
V~l ~ ly bu1lt m
k tchen l ar~ "&lt;·{) &amp; fa m ly
rm garage b... ment and
large m ap e shaded lawn
$19000

Owner Leavmg Area-Fabulous Buy

Brand spa nk ng new 3 bedroom hom e w th beaut1ful built
n k1tchen carp et throughout ce am1c bath ga r age and
wonderful v ew It s attract ve conven ent and very wei
bu It

FOUR rooms and bath house
Bula v llle Add ison Rd Ph
446 3879 or 367 7438
160 3

NEW LIST ' "
ft f on t

F ve bedroom spl t evel w 1th fam ly room (f ireplace ) 2
baths 2 car garage located on 1 A lot overlookmg and
runn ng to the Oh1o R ver Very pleasant hom e and
su rround ng s Owner mov ng out of state

Neat As Can Be
2

No 2 ce lar
S4 200

Want Lot of Room wtth R1ver Frontage

New Ltsttng at Edge of Town

Largest

BAR GA IN S n B dwell No 17 rms
bath
ga rag e
wor kshop large lot $5 500

Near new hasp tal - The owner has moved out of area and
wants an mmed ate sale Very very n ce 3 bedroom home
w th beamed ce11 ng s m I v ng and k tchen area Air
cond I on ng large lot on U S 35 - Equ pped k tchen
(range dishwasher etc)

Large

DOWNSTAIRS unfurnished
apartment • rooms and bath
mooern puill In kitchen and
la~e yard Call 446 0322 or
446 1405 or 256 6413
58 If

S.n

Move In Tomorrow Excellent Locatton

For the money you cant beat th s 3 (large ) bedrooms
br ck home mclud ng fam ly room wtth f replace 1 full
2- 2 baths completely carpeted throughout 2 car
garage large fen ced lot n c ty school d str ct 11 m1les
out c t y water an d sewer

159 3

NOW und• onstruct on 3 BR
bath r
I r hen
paneled
L R ga • -x-~&gt; arpet all
electnc br V Jnt large
corn er lot S l6 !)v J

Beauty lns1de

Ro

TWU bedroom trailer
Grande Ph 446 4153

V INTON 2 story
com pletely remodeled 3 BR
LR w th WB f rep lace formal
d ntng rm
new modern
k tc hen
full
ba sement
severa l shade tr ees w II sell
or trade 10 pet down

Th s home s like new ns1de (very well kept) brand new
kif chen new wall to wall ca rpet large bedrooms formal
dm ng and full basement garage and not muc h grass to
mow Th s IS an exceptionally c lean home close to both
schools and block fr om park Pr ced reduced S3 000 was
$27 500

Ranch Style

289 H

RANCHO COMPANY

or

,.:se:c~o:n:d~A~v=e~---~~:..~::::::::::~
87 If

PUBLIC AUCTION
Located at 1042 Second Avenue rn Galhpolts.
Ohto Walch for Stgn
THURSDAY JULY 13, 1972
Startmg at 12 oo Noon
Cons sting In part of a Complete line of Household Fur
nlfure Electrical Appliances of all kinds Antiques and
Collectables Hand Tool s of all kinds Horse Drawn Single
and Double Shove l Plows Drag Harrow Fod&lt;ler Chopper
Lots of Miscellaneous Items etc etc

THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
Earl and Gerfte Gordon
Voughenda McGinnis Commissioner
OaryiAiban-AUCTfONEERS - Kenneth Sw1in
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

UNFUil.NtSHED apt S rooms 1957 CHEVROLET Ph 3aa
-nd bath first floor com
a6a7
pletely private No pet s
15a 3
Adults preferred Ph 446 2543
or .u.~ 1304
1960 FO RD 1 lon truck new
15a 3
rubber QJ!'Oerator cl utch 12
foot bed
heavy
du ty
Bustne$s
throughou t o 000 on eng ne
11
Will trade for p ckup Ph 446
3533 aft er 5
WE nAve a wholesale
business All cash accounts
158 3
growing by leaps and
Dounds Wt need a depen
1966 MERCURY + run s good
dable assoc iate in your area
good t res S3SO Ph 3aa 9969
w ltl1 $900 00 m nlmum 10
158 3
Invest in equ 1pment and
lrwentory wh ch w 1 turn
REFR IGE RATOR w th freezer
over about two t me s
mon thly Incom e potent a
n top wr ng er type wa sher
exceptionally h gh
AI
S25 each 29 Edgemont Dnve
rep les str ctly conf dent al
Galll pol s
CONSOLIDATED
158 3
CHEMICAL CORP
Freeze Oned Products
FOUR ROOM house w1th f1 ve
Divlston
acres of ground near Thur
3115 Montrose Su te 120
man Ph 245 5561
Houston Texas 77006
15a 3

0pportun t es

SLEE PING ROOMS weekly
rates free garage parking
L1bby Hotel

Help Wanted
1970 PONTIAC GTO
4217
BARTENDER over 35 Grande
Cafe
160 3

.

SerVICes

1

•

For Rent

EstatE

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

A large rus t c log cons tructed home nestled on a tree
shaded h ll s1de overlookmg a oeau t1ful water falls m a
large stream 1us t below Enter the spac1ous fully ca rpeted
I v ng room and en tOY the huge f1replace and wood
paneled wal ls K tchen ts complet e w th new bu It m cab
ra nge d shwasher etc 3 bedrooms (could bed 4 or S) w1th
more than ample room 2 baths full basement w1th
f rep lace and 2 car garage - 7 acres for the k1ds horses or
pones 5 mil es out m ci ty sc hool d stnct Pnced 1n the
fortes ( Ca ll Ike W se man for an appo ntm ent)

$26 900

3 BR 1 ' bath all ga age a
woman s dream kitchen and
laundry concrete street
Loca ed In Kyger School D st

World's

Picture Thts In Your Mmd

In Town Great Location

Real

STROUT
REALTY

IJ}hJUIIIIJIL THE WISEMAN

I see h s face that I tiftld so dear
Oh how can we forget one that
wa s so k nd
For such lov mg pat ence
Our happ ness to f nd
No matter what hour of the
ntght we wou ld call he was
always there to help lest we
shou d fal l
How I loved htm noone can

__

1
I

seems so near

know
And th ought I cou d not I ve
wnen he had to go
Very sadly m ssed by
daughter
Mr s
Steven
Ph I li ps and grandch ldren
160 1
..__

Estate f

For Sah

SlNGER Sewing Machme Sales
&amp; Serv1ce All models In
stock Free delivery Service
guaranteed Models pnced
from $69 95 French C1ty
Fabri c Shoppe Singer ap
proved dealer 58 Court St
Ph 446 9255
JOB If

TARA

1112 BATHS

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

For lnformahon Call Shtrley Adkllls.,-367 7250

THURSDAY, JULY 20
STARTING AT 10 A.M.
Northup Ohto ' • mile soulh of Northup Br1dge on Ltn
coin Ptke
Selling lhe follow1ng 1tems from the Estate of Roy
Th1vener (deceased)
15\ewelladles pendant Elgin watch Coal range wooden
1ce box copper wash bo ler p1e safe 2 wash stands
cream can wooden table &amp; chairs churns old Irons old
fru1t Iars wllh glass Ids Ida teo } pols pans &amp; mise kit
chen utlnsets wicker rocker Oak di ning room table &amp; 6
cha rs old cast ron boot jack coal heating stove slm liar
to Ben Franklin Stove round oak stand fa i;! le coal
buck ets ut1llty cablnel I old hand gun 1- 22 r ifle
I maga zi ne l~dmgl 1 very old and most unusual 22 r~fle
almost new Estate Heatrola 3 old oval picture frames old
organ In excellent condition with stool old oil lamps 1
Alladen oil tamp several wooden rockers 1 old couch
carpet new linoleum rug old Viclrola type record player
stand tables handmade quilts and others oak china
cabinet glass metal bed lcomplelel oak dresser bed
ding metal stool round oak table old w icke r rocker lawn
chalfS treadlesewl"9 machine army cot mirrors metal
bed old mantel c lock old bottles Iron kettles coffee
grinder bbltle capper old glass and dishes Including
some carnival cut and depression glass cupboard
Ironing board old woooen bowl nall kegs old hall tree
battery rad10 old pocket knives dresser books flower
stand old ~ron door stop half size metal bed plllowo
feather tick straw tick clocks slone (ars fence power
lawn mower cross cut saw mechani c garden and car
penfer fools Ice tongs lanterns chains organ stool old
lunch pall shoe last powder horn shovels picks and
other hand fools old bicycle bin of coal approximately
200 bushels steel traps old mllk bottles skin boards top
for old washing machine wheel b,rcow 2 Model T
wheels double shovel plough cistern pump hand lawn
mower chicken coop set of extens ion ladders fence
stretchers block &amp; line sausage mjll fruit 1ors sl~ pie
sale and other mise Items too numerous1o list
Lunch will be served on the grounds by Senior Girl Scout
Troop 1181 under the supervision of Mrs John Groth
Mrs 8111 Shaffer and Mrs Eldon Wuerch
Terms of Sale CASH
Albert Thlvener Admlnlslrator of the estate of Roy
ThiYener, deceased
R E KNOTTS AUCTIONEER
AuctlonMr • Rem1rlt1 This fs another sale which you
cannot afford lo miss Many antlqun and collectors Items
Including an old rifle beyond our ablllly to describe

5 P

ALL TYPES of build i ng
mater als block br ick sewer
P pes windows lintels etc
Claude W nters R lo Grande
0 Phone 245 512 1 after 5

==-----~123 It

Ca r.ce Ia on - Co re ef o ns
unl 9 a m for
Da y of Publ ca t on

REGULATIONS
T h.O Pub I 51le r eserves t ne
r Qh o ed or n•1ec any ids
de eme d
ob ect onal
Tile

Pub s~ w I no be espons b le

lo n or"e
nser on

DEAD STOCK
s~oo Serv1ce Charg e
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Cal l Jackson 286 453 1

ads an 9 ads pa d w h n 0 da ;s
CA RD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
S 50 for 50 wo Cl m n mum
Each aeldJt ana

OFF ICE

d JO

a m
Sa urda

Card

- -----

_ _____

- - -- - No! tee

-------

''HEll"

- - -- - -

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

a.

------

Wtndow

A1r Cond11toners

For

Hot Water Hea ters
Plumbmg
Electncal Work

------

ARNOLD

-------

•

BROTHERS
YY2 2448

Pom eroy 0

'I•

OLD F ASH IONED Trad ng Day
every Sunday on the 8 II
Cl onch farm approx mately 2
m les up Hyse I Run off Rou te
124 Horses guns dogs or
what have vou Come one and
al l
7 S61p

Plumbmg &amp;

--------

ANN OUNC IN G
an
Old
Fash oned Rev va l July 6
thru Jul y 16 at the Pom eroy
Lower L1ghl Ct urch Rt 143 1
m 1le from Route 7 By Pass
Rev
Dewey
K ng
Evangel sf Spectal s ng ng
Starts each even ng at 7 30 p
m
Everyone welcome
Pastor Rev Roy Taylor
7 6 5tc

-------

------

--------

GUN SHOOT 5un day July 9 I
p m Fa ctory choked guns
only Second place shooters
get free shot n nex t match
Assorted meats Rae ne Gun
Cl ub
7 6 3tc

- - - - --

For Sale

WH Y not try LOS nel cs that are
t ruly
diff ere nt
and
refresh ng' The fam ous m nk
011ba se and now we have the
lem on grove Just thmk 14
spec als th1 s month some for
men as well as women Its
KOSCOT of course Phone
991 SllJ

- - - -- -

-------

,---------------7~9

tfc
RE DUCE sa te anc ta st w1tn
Go Sese Tab ets &amp; E Vap
water p lis
Ne son On,;g
6 29 30tp

------

------

Sets Hand,
Unlucky
Anyhow

1•

m

Wanteo To Buy

_____

I'
•

I

LLIFF S
dl eporl
noon to
not ce

Shoe Repa r
M cl
will be open from 12
5 p m unt I fu r ther
Closed on M onday s
7 7 6tc

::-:-:=:=:::-- - - - -

WANTE:t Cus tomers at
Showalter s Wet Pet Shop
Chester Oh o No ex penence
necessar y
7 9 20tp

.A

Rice's

s

•

of Thanks

THE FAM ILY of Harold Sm th
extends Is deep apprec at on
l o tho se who ex tended
sy mpa hy m any way those
who sent fl owers cards and
con tr buted to he Heart
Fund We espec al y extend
our grat tude to the members
of the Syrac use Emergen cy
Squad for the r fas t and ef .
f cent effor t n the r attempt
to do everythmg pass bl e far
our l oved one
Mr s Harold Sm th and
fam ly Syr acuse
7 9 lie

--,--- - - -

------

HOltR~

5 0{] p n . Da y
to
1 00
Noon

Young w shes to thank Dr
Thomas Mc Gowan and the
nu ses
espec ally
Mrs
V van Johnson M s M ldred
Hud so n and Mr s Emma
Adams of the Veterans
Memor a Hosp tal for the
k nd ness and care dur ng he
hosp al zat on
Also the
Ewmg Funeral Home Rev
Robert Kuhn of the F rst
Bapt sl Church oi Pome oy
for h s consol ng words the
relat ves
ne ghbors and
fr ends for the beaut fu I oral
offer ngs
The fam y of Mr s Sylva
Young
7 9 lip

------

__

o

pe

TH E FAMILY ot M s Sy v a

SPECIAL TALENTS

Mob1le

a n

8 JO

------

--,------

wo d Ol e

BLIND ADS
Add I on a
15c Cha ge
Ad ,.er en ent

-------

-------

ncorrec t

5 cen s per Word one nsert on
M n mum Cha ge 75c
2 cents per word
tHee
consecut ve nser ons
1B cen s per w o d s K con
secul ve nserr ons
25 Per Cent D scoun on pa d

----~-----------~14911 BOB
LANE S
Complete

Corb1n &amp; Snyder
IF YOU are bu ldmg a new
Bookkeepmg and Tax Ser
USED 3-40
While gas
home or remodelmg see us
v1ce 424 1 2 Fou r th Ave
Tak•ng apphcat1on for
ranges 3 r ecliners 1 30 gal
We are builders 01stnbutor
Kanauga Off ce hrs 9 a m 1
Yltolady for full lime work.
hot water tank
for Hotpo1nt Appliances
p m Ph 446 1049
Prefer age 21 or over Apply
NEW - lmoleum rugs 9x1 2
Al l1son Elecfnc
as If
l2x 12 12x15 Rooms ze rug s
m person 9 a m to 1 p m:
154tt
va r ous c. olor s lawn fur --------------~
Milstead Bakery 244 Th1rd
HOLLEY BRO CONST
nlture
1972
COMPLETE water line In
Avenue
Pl en ty of free park1ng Open EIGHT track tape stereo In
stallat1on backhoe bulldozer
Fr day unt I 8 95 5 Second
love ly hand rubbed walnut
and boring ma ch ne ser v1ces
LADY tO' answer tel ephone m
Ave 446 117
console Pay bal of $101 21 or
J P Holley 245 S01a or D R
her home tor larg e appl ance
15a tf
$5 55 mon Ph 446 0921
Holley 245 5006
company Wnte Mr Nutter
105 tf
11 1 11
Rt 1 Cool v ille Ohio
~
G
~
o
=
o
o~
C~
L~
E_
A_
N
__
L_
U_
M
_P
~
and
159 tf NEW 1972 Z1g Zag Sew 1ng
C&amp;S E lecfr ca l Serv ce &amp;
M ach ne m or g ma l factory
stoker coa l Carl W nters R1o
Repa r s
House Wlrtng
ca rton Z g Zag to mak e
Grande Phone 145 5115
electr c heat motor co.ntrols
buttonholes sew on button s
6 tf
Free est mates Ph 446 4561
M onograms and make fanc y =:-:~:-:-::-::-c-,---or 675 336 1
des gns w1th 1ust the tw st of a 1971 NEW MOON mob le home
22 tt
Tur;htng 1ales superv1s1on
smgl e d1al Left m lay away
12 x 60 w1th 7x 12 expando
or
public
relations
an d never been used Wil l sel l
l1vmg r oom Ph 446 4716 after
BANKS TREE SERVICE
background?
Leading
for on ly S47 00 cash or cred t
2 30
FREE estimates I ab11ily n
terms ava able Phone 4.46
servtce
organ1zat1on
154 If
surance Prun ng tnmm ng
457a
and
cav ty work tree and
requtres attractive per=~-,---­
15a 6 MUST SELL 1972 delu xe Zig zag
stump remova l Ph 446 4953
sonable woman for loca I
sew ng ma ch ne Ph 446 0921
73 If
public speakmg asSign
ELECTRO LUX
Vacuum
105
If
ments
Extf'emely
In Cleaner complete w th at =~--~
GILLENWATER S sept1c tank
teresting work Prepared
tachments cord w nder and MUST SE LL 1972 deluxe Zig zag
cleanmg and repa r also
mater~al furmshed
One
pa nt spr ay Used bvt n like
sew1ng mach ne Ph 446 0921
house wreckrng Ph 446 9499
evening per week Salary .
new cond t 1on
Pay $34 45
10511 Establ shed 1n 1940
cash or budget plan ava I abl e ~------------~
lnlertsled?
Send
1n
169 tf
Phone 446 4S7a
ALUMINUM bu idmg s wh te
formation
on
your
15a 6
ce ment all s1zes of f1le m D P MARTIN &amp; Son Water
__;_
bilckground to Mrs Lou1se
stock
co ncrete
bl oc ks
Del very
Serv 1ce
Your
Ztmmerman
5520
Red
1972 HONDA 350 Ph 446 262
GALLIPOLIS
BLOC"
CO
patronage
w1H
be
ap
Cooch Road , Dayton, Oh1o.
123 ~ P ne Str eet
160 3
prwateo Ph 446 0463
7 ff
148 If
1970 V W sedan good con d t on - - c - - - - - - - - Wanted
tow m leage Cal l 146 4271
T ERMITE PEST CONTROL
GOOD used 1'.\ob te Home Ph
CORBIN &amp; SNYD~R
after 5 30
REE mspecl on Call 446 3245
446 9383
Merr II 0 Dell Operator for
160 3 SERTA &amp; Bemco Mattresses &amp;
box spr ngs $29 up 955 Second
Exterm nal Term te Serv ice
==,.,.------~160 2 -::-:-- - -Ave 446 1171
19 Belmont Dr
SECRETARY and book keeper ONE bassinet one d a per pa I
10 tf
and one baby sw ng Ph 446
267 If
loca l auto dea lership ex
27
41
per le nc:e d or bu si ness or
Central A1r Cond11tontng
160 4 MAGNETIC car and truck
college graduate gooo pay
signs Available 6 ' x 1a to
&amp; Healtng
and fr inge benefits Present
20 x 24 $1 250 to SJO par
Free Esllmates
glrl leavi ng after four years PAINT DAMAG E - 1972 Z g
446 1397 Simmons Ptg
Zag Sew ng Machmes Stil t 10
Stewarts Hardware
husband trans fer red Wr te
Off1ce
Equ p
original ca r tons
No at
Vmton Oh1o
Box 229 co Galli pol s
140 tf
tachm ents needed as our
144 tf
Tribune
contra s are bu It n Sews
159 6
New GMC
w th 1 or 2 needles makes
ALBERT EHMAN
----"'---Truck Headquarters
Water Delivery Ser v ce
buttonholes sew on buttons
Sale
Pa tr ot Star Rt Gall 1pol s
monograms and bt nd hem 196a ', Ton GMC Pi ckup
YUKON Delta Camper Ike
Ph 379 2133
st tch Ful l cash pnce 138 so 1966 Jf• Ton P ckup
new vsed 10 days on G M C
243 tf
or budget plan ava1lable 1970 International Dump Truck
Extra clean
pick up truck barga n at
Phone 446 4578
Sl 795 Phone 446 2906 al
UNIVERSAL
160 6 1969 2 T GM C
1967 Jeep Station wagon
ternoons
Watch Repa1r 1818 Eastern
160 6 VACUUM Cleaner new 1972 1964 ' T GMC PU
Ave
Str~ctly
wholesale
r epa ring Ph 446 9234
-1iil'--~-~-=a7
,~..,.~.~·T·~·~,,, jl a p Model ' Gornpl~·
lth all J 967 Jeepster
BA:SSE T
puppieS
A"C
cleaning tools Small pant 1967 ;, ton Chevrolet pickup
103 If
___reg istered Ph 446 9836
damage In shipping W II take 1967 '• T Chev PU
THOMAS FAIN
- - - - - - - - -160 3
$27 cash or budge! plan 1963 ' T Chev PU
196a h T GM PU
EXTERMINATING CO
avai lable Phone 446 4578
Term te &amp; Pest Control
TON Dodge P1ckup truck
160 6 196a h T GMC PU
New 11 ft camper
flat bed Ph 446 4846
Wheelersburg Oh o
160 3
1966 '• T GMC
FARM SALE
196a h T GMC PU
Thursday July 27 Thursday
Healin~
1966 , T GMC PU
19~ CORVETTE Stmgray both
Slart1ng at 10 30 a m
STANDAR
D
1967
h
T
GMC
PU
tops and extras would take
Mr and Mrs
Plumbmg &amp; Heating
1963 F600 Ford Truck
pickup on lrade Also 289 Ford
George Stewart Owners
215Th rd Ave 446 37a2
Molor and standard setup 167 LOCATED - From Gall pots 1966 Dooge Sportsman Wagon
la7 If
Ford Heavy duty 3 speed 2650
take Rt 141 App 17 m to 1964 ' T Ford PU
x 16 6 ply tires tubes and
Cadmus turn nght on Cad 1966 :If, T GMC PU
RUSSELLS
rl mS$25 Ph 388 9906 Vet can
mus Cross Roads Rd go app 1967 / 2 T Ford PU
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
~liver
66
Tracto r
w1th
be seen 11 College Hill Motel
4 m I Watch for sale s gns
21 Galha Ave 446 47a2
cult vators
160 3
Ford 8N Tra ctor 11 us I
297ft
SOMMERS FMC
overhauled}
Farmall H
TRUCKS INC
DINETTE set 6 chairs good
I Good} J D 3 pt Plows 12
DEWITT S PLUMBING
133 P1ne Sf
coodltlon sso Ph 446 3375
12 I 2 12 drag plows 7 ft
AND HEATIN G
446 2532
160 tf
160 3
Case dlsc New Idea hay r ake
Route
160 at Evergreen
N H 270 hayl1ne Ferguson
Phone 446 2735
PLYMOUTH Fury 3 stat10n
mower
J poi nt 2 row 1971 SL 350 Kl Honda with 21
front wheel exce llent con
187 1
wa9on 3 seal Fully equ p
cult va t or
3 pt
1 raw
-dillon 1700 Ph 446 054a
ped Ph 446 4313
cult valor 3 pt Rota ry hoe 3
15a 3
160 3
pi I H corn planter Woods
GENE PLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
Brother s corn p1cker gravity
SEARS~ hp mini bike two old
Condit on1ng 300 Fourth Ave
bed on new runn ng gears WASHER drrer t w n bed
d1nette Cal 446 9564 after
antique trunks and 1957
Ph
446 1637
I F ormer ly
Boom pol e 32 fl hay elevator
5 30
Oldsmobi le Ph 256 6569
Bramm er s Pl umbmg &amp;
portable 16 gran elevator
156 6
160 2
Heating I
Ferguson manure loader flat
bed wagon 2 wheel trailer
48 If
6 CYLINDER pickup fru~k
Massie Harris 2 row self 1961 CHEVROLET Im pala - : - - - -- - hardtop S300 Ph 256 6074
Utility bed $200 14 cresfl l n~r
propelled corn picker I H
Homes
157 3
boat .j() hp John son motor
grain drill ion rubber} 7 ff
trailer and ~u l pment $600
Oliver grain drill tractor
RECONDITIONED
Ph 446-4602
spray l new pump} portable ADORAB).E AKC register ed
MOBILE HOMES
160 3
loading chute 2 , a hole hog Basset puppies $40 160 Ph 446 1966 Conestoga 5Sx l2 2 bdrm
9a36
1965 Frontier 60x12 2 bdrm
feeders 1 6 hole hog feeder
1968 C AMA~0327 3 speed w1th
drill press Hoffco brush saw _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 1546 1965 Frontier 60x12 3 bdrm
wide track t res $1 000 Ph
1964 Baron 56x 12 2 bdrm
Other tool s and Items too
COMPLETE line of men s pipes 1962 Gibraltar 55xl0 2 bdrm
256 6244
numerous to mention
G B D Charatan B B B
160 3
196a Apollo Travel Trailer
L1vlng room suite (new) 3
Joby and Savtneli1 speCial
lllf, self contained
piece bedroom su1te chest of
sefl now ani
IOX50 AWNING for mobi le
B&amp;S Mob1fe tlomes
drawers wardrobe wa sh
156 If
Second &amp; V1and Sl
home Ph 245 5267
stand wrln?er washer 3 d1 sh
Pt Pleasant ( Nexllo Heck sJ
•
160 3
cab1nels d nette set tables
~--_:__
149 If
lamps cha1rs plano record
players mang le other Items ONE OLD icebox and 15 ga l
FOR SALE by builder New
stone (ar Ethel Russell Ph
too numerous to mention
three bedroom sunken family
WIN AT BRIDGE
388 a293
Antiques Hall sec
room double rock fireplace
159 3
secretary and book case
electric heat other extras
comb ned. several 1 10 gal
Located on large rivervi ew lot
milk cans Columbia Gran
on Rt 2 10 miles south of PI
USED FURNITURE
fonda Record Player sev
Pleasant Contact Lyle Austin
LIKE NEW electric Tappan
antique bottles
or call 576-2026
range liv ing room suite tw n
158 6
bed with springs and mat
Terms Cash
Lunch Served
tress
Ke! vlnator
Tommy Joe Stewart
RUGS 12xl2 and throw rug s 73a
refrigerator
gas range
Auctioneer
Second Ave Raymond Jones
Admiral
TV
wringer
160
1
158 3
washer six piece wood
dropleaf din ette set coli
FURNISHED or unfurn shed
1970 YAMAHA Enduro 175 21
spr ings wood cablnel with
two bedroom house Ph 446
NORTH
8
.., knobbr. lire 350 rear Good
glass
doors platform rocker
0274
condlt oo $450 Ph 742 5980
.QJ96
riving room chair four piece
158 5 _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _155 6
.10
matching living room suite 2
tAKQJ10
sola
beds
vinyl
couch
Early
LOT and frailer Jackson Ohio 71 GMC :t;, ton pick up w th 1967
.KJ2
American
couch
Early
32 x 8 Great Lakes Lot 43 x
Kamp King camper Ph 245
Amer ican chair six piece
WEST (D)
EAST
1~ S1 800 Ph 596 .1485
sa04
dl
nette set 2 lamps and
• K75
155 5
159 3
• Yo1d
dresser 854 Second Ave 446
• AK Q 8 64
• J 5 32
~------9S23
• 843
MAHOGAINY cabinet floor FROM wall lo wall no soli at
• 96 5 2
all on carpets cleaned with
model color TV Ph 446 0013
.10 9764
Blue Lustre Rent electric
SOUTH
--~-----159 5 shampooer $1 (Central NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
.Al084 32
Supply Co }
AIR conditioner 6 000, BTU
.97
155 6
purcHase Aug 1971 S75 Ph
t7
GOOD USED MOBILE HOMES
----~675 5517
.Q8 53
1970 Skyline 12xSO 2 Br
159 3 1971 PONTIAC Grandville
Fully equipped Inc luding a1r 1967 Hor izon 12xSO 2 Br
---.----,----East West vulnerable
Richardson 12x65 3 Br
$100 A MONTH EXTRA cash ~~r,~lv on l ng Ph 446 9282 11970
We•t
North East South
965 Vlndale lOxSO 2 Br
would If solve your buclgef
155
Dble
1960 Van Dyke 10x40 2 Br
Pass Pass
PaS.!!
problems?
Many
Avon
1960 Van Dyke lOxSO 2 Br
Representatives actually 7 ROOM house - 4 bedrooms
Trt County Mobile Homes
Opemng lead- • A
2013 Eastern Ave
earn an estimated UJ weekly
and two baths 1 block from
Galltpolio Ohio
spare lime selllno our fam"' •
city park Ph 446 3521
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
products Why can t you I For
3
446 0175
detai l s calf now
Helen ...,.-------~
We were watchmg our old
Yeager Box 172 Jackson SOUPS on the rug that Is
(nend
the unlucky expert
Ohto, Ph 286 ~8
clean with Blue Lustre Rent
play m a t eam match when
_ _ _ _1_ _ _ _ _ _156 6
electri c shampooer
$1
he p1cked up the West hand
(Lower G C Murphy)
The b1ddmg started out
NEED 1 copy machine? Ex
155 6 INDIAN relics arrow heads
axes speers etc by piece or tamely but all of a sudden
lremely convenient for office - - " - - , - - - -collection Top prices paid South Jumped to four spade '
use S95 Wiseman Agency Ph
1?11 HONDA CB 450 Ph 367
Phone .u6-9442
.u6-~
and he was faced w1th a
141~
___::
159 If 7750
1556 ________________
real problem Should he btd

one

han

RATES
For Wan1 Ad Serv ce

------

------

DEAOI.IHES
Dav Befor e Publ cat on

w ll be accepted

-------.1"

-------

M

MondAy Dead I ne 9 a m

Backhoe and Dozer Serv1ce
Sopl1c tanks far m d1tch1ng
ponds
Free Est1mates
Phone 367 757'1 or J67 7706
146 If

EXCELLENT eff c1ent and
econom ca l
th at s Blue c'--'--lu stre carpet and upholstery
Arab Extermmarmg \.u
clea ner
Rent
el ect n c TER MITE PEST control Free
shampooer S1
(Central
mspection Call Russells
Supply Co }
Plumbing 446 47a2 Gall polls
Oh o
14911
107 52
~::-:-:-:-:---HANNAH
Hector
hates har work sa he cleans
SEPTIC TANKS
Ph 446
the rugs
th Blue Lustre
Cleaned and In stalled
Rent electr
ooer $1
Russell s Plumbmg 446 4782
15a 3
I Lower G C M phy s)
297 If

------

PUBLIC SALE

INFORMATION

-:------.--:.

-------

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

WANT ADS

Offered

•

2• 4•

fiv e hearts and nsk t he prob
able pe nalty or should he
pass and t r y to beat four
spades'
He decided on the lattet
course and passed as did
North and East Then he
pla~ed hiS ace of clubs and
positively beamed when he
saw dummy hit the tabl e
With one heart and no ace
ot spades
At tnck two he carefull y
underled h1 s ace kmg queen
of hearts East produced the
)ack and l ed bac k a club fo1
our fnend to ruff
He st11l was sure of the
kmg of t r umps and gl ee
fully chalked up 5IJ pmnt s on

I he plu s s de
Ptetty good wa sn t 1t
he ask ed, I would be do''"
at li ve hea11s
B rii!Janl hu t probably un
successful
was our com
men! We lUI ned out t o be
ri ght
The b1ddmg star l ed the
sam e way at lhe other tabl e
but West btd a cheery live
heart s ovet South s f om
spades North ca u ght m t he
swm g or t hm gs went n ~ht
to f1v e spades and Wesl
doubled when the b1ddmg got
back lo h1m
Wes t also opened the ace
of clubs but d1d not nsk t he
underlead tn hearts and onlv
•et live spades one L11c k but

d1d scor e
of 50

100 pomts mstead

(NEWSPAPER ENlUPRISE ASSN )

Th e b tdd ng has beer
West
North
East
1•
Pass

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

24
3N T
4t

Pass
Pass
Pass

You South hold

134...

South

'

We talk to JOU
hke a. pe1S0r1.

.AI543 .K876J tVotd .Ql07
What do yol c.lo now ?
A-Youc partner 1s ~ how mg
the dtamond ace as some sort o[
club slam lry B1d f1ve clu bs to
show no slam •nterest

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

�:n .. TIIe~Ttmea

Senllnei,SUnday Julv9 1972

for Rent
•

20- The Sunday Times

Sentmel

Sunday July 9

1972

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Memory

In
IN LOVING memory of our
dear father and grandfat ler
Paul P Swa n who dted on
J uly 9 196a
My heart s heav y but papa

Real

Card

nf

___

Thanks

I W SH to thank my many
fr ends and relat •ves for the
many beaut ful ca rd s I
re ce ved on m y b rthd ay

Margaret Ca rpenter
160 1

-----1 WISH to thank my ne ghbors

and a ll my fr ends for the r
he p and sympathy they
showed me dunng the death
of my husband John Wh eeler
who passed 8\Vay Jvne 20 for
the beaut 1fu l flowers cards
and food A so a special
thanks to the McCoy &amp; Moore
Fune ra l home and to the Rev
and Mr s Malo y for thei r VIS t
and prayers and to Nu rse
Spears thoughtfulness and
Dale
k ndness
and
to
Gmger ch
H s w1fe Sara Wheeler
160 1

- -- - - - Nol1ce

•

YARD SALE MONDAY Baby
clothes and toys 9 am 5p m
495 Oak Dr Spr ng Va l ley
Estates
159 3

-------

MR ROY LOWE of Crown C1ty
s now barber ng w1th Den ver
I Red} H gley at Reds Bar&gt;,
Shop Located on Upper Rt 7
I ~ m iles above the S1lver
Memonal 8 a m 8 p m 6
days a week
160 6

- -- - - -

1 WILL NOT be r espons ble for
any debts other than m y own
Lena B Williams
159 3

ATTENTION VETERANS The
Army has I m ted openings
for pr or serv cemen Recent
pay r aises and numerous
fr 1nge benef ts make the
Modern Volunteer Army the
Career for you Call your
neares t Army recru fer at
446 3343
155 26

- - - - - --

YOUNG MEN The fam ed lOl st
A1r Mobile Olv1s on s lookmg
for good men who have what
t takes Ent st n the Army
now and spend a mm mum of
16 months with the Scream ng
Eagles at Fort Campbell Ky
Go all the way - l Olst A r
Mobile D1v Slon Ph 446 3343
155 26

-- - - RALPH S Carpet &amp; Uphol stery

Clean1ng
Serv ce
Free
es t mates Ph 446 0294 Ralph
A Dav s owner
9 If

------

DOUBLE w1de mob1 e home
c1ty water and gas $175 mo
Ph 446 1066 or 446 46la
102 tt

------

DAY CARE
SUN VALLEY Nursery School
I censed by State of Oh o 1 '
miles wes t of new hospital
577 Sun Valley Dr Ph 446
3657 Day care t hat says we
car e
Madge Hauldren
Owner
Lored1lh &amp; John
Hauldren Operators
114 I f

- - -- - -

TWO WAY Rad1 os Sales &amp;
Serv ce New and used CB s
pol ce mon1tors antennas
etc Bobs C t1 ze ns Band
Rad o Equip Georges Creek
Rd Gall pol s Oh o 446 4517
16 If

-----Wanted To Do

REMODELING building new
rooms
ceme nt
roofmg
s d ng furnace ns J H
Queen &amp; Son 446 9271
68 tf

ART EADS
MACHINE SHOP
GENERAL MACHINE
SHOP SERVICE
Weldmg
Elect nc and Gas
223 Mam St
Ph 675 5749
DOES your home need painting
s1d1ng roof ng remodel mg
pa neling
ce ment work
barbecue pat as or garage
carport etc' You name 1t
we I do 1t Reasonable ates
Ca I 446 0126 or 446 1753
19 tf

ROOF ING and gutter work
W l l1am M tchell 3aa aso7
"'

..._

67 II

TOOL
sha rp en ng
saws
sc ssors and shears mower
blades dr II b t s barber
cl ppers and cu t ery Sharp
~ hop alle y rea r 147 Second

Ave

139 tt
-----~

ALTERATIO~S ON all types of

cloth ng in my home Call
Mrs Ross Northup 446 2543
21 If

-=-=-:-:--,----,PAINT lob on houses barns
outbuildings and roofs
379 2205

Ph
149 12

~-----

•

Real btate

Real Es!d!e

AGENCY

REALTY
25 Locust St
Howa rd Brannon Broker
Off 446 2674
LUCille Brannon
Eve 446 1226

Galha Co's Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Offtce 446 3643
Evemngs Ca II
E M Ike 'Wtseman 446 3796
E N Wi&lt;eman 446 4500

Just Ltsted
Near new one fll oor pl an 3 BR
f 1le bath n ce all bu1 lt n
k tch en
laundry
ro om
fm shed ga r age pat o con
crete dr ve and s dewalk
Pr ce n low twnt es Shown
by appomtment

New Ltsfmg
2J~ acres of level land near
Tycoon lake 3 BR one story
home good well corn cr b
located on a good road a good
buy In tooay s market
New Ltshng
No 156 Portsmouth Rd 2 BR
n ce k tchen d n ng room
large I ving room ca rpe ted
Full basement fr ont porch 2
ca r garage w th storag e
conc rete dr ve :z ac re lot
Beauttful Bnck

New

$22,000
3 BR - 2 full baths carpe t
throughout beauti ful k tchen
basement porch w th stone
f owe planter pat1o carport
and storage concrete dr ve

$24,000
One story redwood 2 BR f1le
bath ca rpet throughou t
beau t fu l k tc hen
2 ca r
ca rport and storage J ~ acre
tot

2 Story
$9,000

Loca ted on 3rd Ave 4 B R and
bath good level lot home
needs some repa1 r A good
buy for mvestment

$12,500

Prtce Reduced

BR comforta ble klfchen
carpet thr oughout fireplace
n LR laundr y room located
n c ty c.oncrete stree t

large Two Story

VERY
P RICE

Four Bedroom
1!2 M1le Out

NICE F OR THE
N EAR LY NEW J

BEDROOM

HOM E

W TH

B U LTINKIT C H EN

N

TOWN SU 900 WAS I 6 000
F NANCING

AVA LA BLE

AN DLOOKA TTHE PR CE
$10 500 00
FOUR
BEDROOMS
LAR GE
L VIN G ROOM W TO W
CARPET IN G

$21,000
Located on Second Ave 3 BR
banquet s1ze k tchen forma l
dintng room par t basemen t
garage and storage room
rarge deep lot

4 Bedrooms
$15,000
Located on II"' acre lot One
sto r y home covered w 1th
a!um num s d ng carpeted
floors
attac he d garage
workshop
Ideal co untr y
1111 ng

2 Acres
$18,500

Brand Spankmg
New
F YOU LIKE CO UNTRY
l V IN G W TH THE CON
VE NI E N CE OF BE N G

CLO SE TO TOWN LOOK
AT TH S NEW CARPETED
J BEDROOM HOME WITH
BEAUT F UL K TCHEN
GARAGE AND LARGE LOT
(G ARDEN
SPO T }
LOCATED 5 MIL E S OUT N
CITY SCHOO L DI STR CT
12 1 000 BUYS IT

RUSSELL

Just outs dec ty I m ts central
a1r luxury k 'chen 3 large
BR
att garage
Qu ck
possession

3 Acres
$14,750
Two story home m ext ra good
cond I on 3 BR large ealln
, k tchen d nlng room garage
and ce ll ar house

Ltstmgs Wanted t t t
Anyt m e 1s i! good t me to I 1st
your home for sale 1f t s
pri ced right We need I st ngs
- We ha ve all the loots of the
trade exper~en c ed sta ff
advertls ng p1cture wmdaw
d1splay and w1ll ng to work
Call the BRANNON REALTY
now
158 tf

Neal Realty
BUSINE SS bu ld ng at 4a P ne
Street Full pr ce 15 500
THI S IS a bu y you ca nt alford to
m ss 2 BR home w 1th wal l to
wa I carpet n I vmg room and
bottl bedroom s Can now be
bought tor SlO 000 Ca ll tooay
tor your appo ntment

WE ALSO have some ots on
Raccoon Creek

3 ACRES w lh we I and sept c
tank $4 500 or 2 8 acres for
$3 000 Both near Raccoon
Creek
Off1 ce Phone 446 1694
Evemng s
Charles M Nea l 446 1546
J MIChael Nea t 446 1503

HG US ES for sale by contractor
Barr
Constr uct on
3
bedrooms I vmg room k1t
chen ut I ty room bath with
garage w to w carpet on 2
acre lot Paved dnveway plus
shrubbe ry
135 tf

WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

THROUGHOU T

HOV S E

VERY
N CE
B U lL T N
K T C HEN
UT L TY
ROOM
CAR PORT A ND
LARGE
LOT
O WNER
M OV I NG TO CLE VELAND

We Need
Ltsltngs Now
S AT

SFY

WERE

MASSIE
Realty, 32 State Sl
Tel 446-1998

- -- - FINISHED apt ground floor

Four rooms and a bath
Excellent locaf1on No pets
Adults only Ph 446 18~
160 tf

- -- - 60X12 TRAILER with expando

Three bedrooms ai r con
dltlon l ng
Ut i liti es
pd
Loc~ted In Cheshire Cali 367
7420
160 3

-----SIX rooms and bath 104 Third

_('~oms 2 porches

VV..l_l'l 11rner lo t

v

Ave

s_,

WE HAVE several homes under
constru ct on between 520 000
and S35 000 It mteresl ed ca ll
for appo ntment

ISa 3

TWENTY FIVE ACRE FARM - 4 ' miles from the
Med cal Center Three bedrooms I v ng room kitchen
and bath Rural water Tobacco base Pond Good fences
Only 116 900

CI T Y 3 f ('{) lh ut1 ty rm
n ce k tel''
port a r
cond w I se t .... trade

APARTMENT l or construction
men Ph 446 0756

OHIO RIVER

Rtalty

$ '

POMEROY Comp lete l y
remodeled 2 stones plus full
basement new stor m w n
dows and al um num s dmg
formal d n ng room 2 baths
k tchen ncludes refr g w t h
ce mak er dou ble ove n
cook top and hood dish
washer gar d1sp and bar

OVER LOOK
GALLIPOLIS
LOCKS
N1 ce three
bedroom home wi th fu l l bath
on Ia ge lot w th thr ee car
metal garage Gooo local on
on S R 7 easy access to
town

AUCTION
SERVICE

"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444

PUBLIC
NOTICE

------

FOR SALE
BY OWNER

HENDERSON
TRAILER COURT
Route 2 and 35
Duplex Apt House- One furnished one un
furnished twenty umls rent space one sleeper
cabtn $1,000 Month Income Concrete pal1os &amp;
walkways ctly water and sewer system
End of New Silver Memorial Bridge
For lmmechate Possesston
Call 675 2946 Pf Pleasant Exchange

ber 7$25
rm000house 2 barns and
only
163 A S ml from C hesh~re on
Ward Rd no bldgs underlaid
w1th coa I $20 000
23 A Lmcoln P ke 7 rm house
barn an d l ob base
ANY HR 446 1998
E W1nlers - 446 3878
AI Arnold - 446 0756
Eve J Berry - 446 3466
Eve J Fuller - 2459311
Seven room house Mills
V II age next to new hospital
3 bedrooms carpal In LR
formal d1n1ng rm and hall
and bath Full bosemenf
w1th large fam1ly room 2
fireplaces all curlatns and
drapery stay In house Extra
large screened porch slorm
doors and wtndows nice
large lol Prtctd 1n upper
20 s Ou1ck occupancy Ph
446 4195

1

NEW
2 BEDRM
TOWNHOUSE APTS
BE WITH the first to choose
yov r resi den ce
n lhe-se
beautiful suburban apts
Contemporary
In style
l u)(urious car p e ting
In
SMA L L eff c ency apt SUitable
dlvldually controliecl heating
for work ng g r ls or work ing
color coordinated appliances
men Ph 446 4923
private patios many other
158 3
features Lease $135 mo Coil
446 3772 lor appointment to
FURNISH ED apt All ut 1111 es
see modern unit 526 Jackson
pd Adu lts on l y Ph 446 9523
Pike Near Holzer Med
158 tt
Center
THIRTY FIVE WEST
THREE
room
furniShed
APARTMENTS
apartmen t bat h upsla rs
51 tf
Adults preferred all ut ill es
pa d 626 Th1rd Ave Ph 446
1405 Alter 5 p m 446 0322 or SLEEPING rooms for rent
Gall a Hotel
2506413
150 26
158 tf

For Rent

- -- - - -

PAY ONtYNONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furniSh Water Sewage Garbage Collection Ample
Parking
TV Antenna
Wall to Wall Carpeltng
Draper1es
Refrtgerators A1r Conditioning
Garbaga
0Jshwi15hers Heat Lamps Private
Pool Clubhouse

HOM E PL US IN COM E - N ce
three bedroom home w1th fvll
bath c ty water c1ty sc hools
nco me of over $200 per mon th
fr om two mob le homes on lot
A good nvestment w th good
return
Evemngs
Oscar D Ba 1rd 446 4632
D J Welherhofl 446 4244
Steven R Betz 446 9583

NEAR K C H SC - Co lon 1al 2
ATTENTION
stor y 8 b1g rm s base 3
DUE to the present cons tru ct mn
ba ths 3 A ISO 000
n Ga I a Co we ha ve severa l
ou t of town bu yer s n need of
EUREKA - 7 rms ba t h nver
HOBART DILLON
homes n th1 s area If you
MAYBE the ol dt me l nd ans
v ew 2 ca r carport 2 lots
Real Estate Broker
have
property
for
sale
don
t
were not so bad after all as
new alum s d ng $\6 000
se
tt
e
lor
less
than
nationw
ide
PO Box516
one old chef sad
ln d ans
ad vert s ng CAL L STROUT EXCLUS I VE agenl for Raccoon
scalp enem es wh1 le man PAT RIOT 2 story older
Valley cam ps tes w shes to
sk 1n fr ends
home sound wa ter I me 2 A
announce h s off 1ce In the
163 A - M ONEY MAKER 56
f at lot pr ce Sl 3 000
Valley area w II be open da lly
A bottom 00 A pa sture 2
NEW LISTING
from
12 noon til 8 p m Ph
large
barns
ext
ra
good
set
of
IN the C ty 8 room house be ng RIO - All br ck al l elec 5
446 2730
bu ld ngs n1 ce farm home
r emodel ed on large lot 94 ft
rm s bath and ulll 1ly rm
47 If
w th 7 rooms and bath large
on Portsmouth Road and
$2 1 000 (Id ea l Ret rem en }
shady lawn Ideal beef hog ::-.:-:-:=~=----entran ce to garag e from
25 ACRE S on Br1 ck Road $3 000
and gram set up
Burkhar t Lane Pr ce $15 800 GREEN ACRES - 4 yrs old 5
Wi ll frade for good mobile
rm frame H W fir s at
homes Call collect 9a7 4561
AD DI SON - 6 A next to Tara
ON Ne1ghborhood Road l arg e
I ached gar Pr ce $23 000
deve lopment 4 r m s a nd
146 26
tot w fh 2 bedroom home
bath large meta l comm erc al
bath furnace c1ty water KA NAUGA - S rm f rame
s1ze garage .1
plenty r oom fo r a fra ler and
H W firs fur heat qUi et st
garden Ga l pol s Sc hool
11 1000
25 ACRES 1 m1 from Tycoon
D sir ct 110 500
ADD ISON N ce frame 4 Lake 4 r ms &amp; bath cellar
rm s bath base extra lot
house deal for ret~r emen t or
FARM SALE
and on ly 12 yr s old s16000
vacallon $6 300
257 A IN Harmon Twp w th a
room house 4 bedroom s and
NEW L ISTING - A large shady
bath 45 A bottom land CHATHAM AVE 5 rm
1
tobacco base and corn ba se
fram e storm drs and wm lot 2 m from c ty s a lovely
and 2 lar ge barns good fence
fur hear cheap hous ng setlmg for th1s 2 story 4 BR
home Needs m nor repa rs but
on bla c ktop road Pr ced
Pr ce reduced Sll 000
featu r es basement large for
$38 000
mal d nlng r m LR and k t
KERR - Ail bnck HW an d
chen It won t be on the mark et
IN WALNUT Twp we have 350
carpet fi rs 7 r m s plus fu l l long for $15 900
A farm with good I ne fen ce s
base 1 A lot It has 3 baths
and a large barn on State Rl
and 2 car garage
Pr ce
1 A IN KC DIS I
most ly
775 10 miles from Cour
educed 135 000
remooeled 4 BR 1 , baths
thouse Pr ced $100 per acre
blacktop rd co wa ter 116 500
w lh half of m neral r ghts ST RT 21a - New all elec 5
rm s 2 ca r gar v my l s1d on
LOTS OF LOTS
IN GREE N Twp 104 A Farm
7 A lot 51a 000
WE HAVE lots In all directions
no bu pfings 4 m1les from
Some can be bought with a
Courthouse 112 500
CIT Y - Real n1 ce 6 b1g rms
very sma ll down payment
bath part car pet fur heat
Whether bu1ldmg or buymg a
OffiCe 446 1066
cheap at $15 aoo
mobile
home call today
Evenmg Call
Ron Canaday 446 3636
We sell anylhtng lor
CITY - S rms bath and base
LISTINGS WANTED
Russ~ll D Wood 446 461a
anybody
Bring your
H W firs flat lot ~17 000
Ranny Blackburn
John I Richards 446 0280
FARMS
1tems to Knotts Com
Branch Mgr
75 A moder n 5 rm home 5
munUy Auction Barn
barns 15 A development
NEW 3 bedroom home w th
Corner Third &amp; Olivo
land one of Ga ll a Co s best
Sale
Trade
bnck Iron! 1 car garage 120
For appotnlmenl ••II
A on St Rt 325 100 A
tt frontage 1 h mile fr om new 160tractor
446
2917
Sale t!very
land good bldgs and CAMPER full faciliti es also
hospllal on Rt 160 Ca ll 367
Saturday Evening at
plen t y water
camper on pickup lru~ k Call
7846 or 367 748 1
70 Clock
before noon 446 0168 or 1026
147 If 204 A near Lecta lois ot hm

For

267 If

Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Denver K H1gley 446 0002
Wanda S Eshenaur 446 0003

452 Second AH
446~4 446 4775
TWO M IL ES FROM PARK Brand new t hree b&amp;lroom al l
BARCAIN
30 A good
e ec tr c wlfh centra l a r
tarm gro {)l{) woods 2
home on good road C1 ty
barns log ca to
ton area
schools county water 501
sa aoo
Ny on carpet through ou t
Tappan
equ pped k ! chen an
5() A Har r son t wp tab
exc ellen t buy for under
base mostly woods $4 900
$25 000
2 A - N ce bu ldmg or mob le
home lot 200 ft f on tag e on 44 ACRE FARM HOME Near Me gs m ne house ha s
sta e r ou te 32 5 be twee n
lu I bath plenty of ropm
V nton and R o Grande
large barn pond good stock
50 A - Va cant M organ
farm

THREE room home on State Rt
160 f lat lot coun ty water
ava !abl e $5 000

SLEEPING ROOMS weekly
rates Park Central Hotel
~tf

':/.-IJ

6 A - Development land Clay
Twp

MOBILE HOME 12x60 located
In Rlo Grande Call 245 5267
156 If

-:-=-:-::-::-----

ATTEN T ION' We hav e 2 dea l
rental proper ty mvestments
NO 1 - 4 houses and 5 mob1 e
homes on upper r oute 7
.... Owner w II f nance fo S pet
NO 2 - 15 ren tal un 1ts n c1ty
plenty of road frontag e and
wa er fron tage Pr ced to sell

Kanouga Ph 4461Al22 '
160 3

HOU SE In c l y Adults only
Mu st give reference
100 per month Ph 446 0599

RIPE FOR D EVELOP M ENT
- J8 acres m c1t y school d1 st
Beaut ful roll ng wood land
over l ook ng Oh o R ver
coun ty water ava labl e

HAVE BUYERS WE CANT
SELL NG THEM FAS TER
THAN WE CA N REP LACE
THEM

TWO bedroom mob1le home
Ph 367 7329
160 tt

10m out 330
state rd 3'1•
acre ~ 3
V~l ~ ly bu1lt m
k tchen l ar~ "&lt;·{) &amp; fa m ly
rm garage b... ment and
large m ap e shaded lawn
$19000

Owner Leavmg Area-Fabulous Buy

Brand spa nk ng new 3 bedroom hom e w th beaut1ful built
n k1tchen carp et throughout ce am1c bath ga r age and
wonderful v ew It s attract ve conven ent and very wei
bu It

FOUR rooms and bath house
Bula v llle Add ison Rd Ph
446 3879 or 367 7438
160 3

NEW LIST ' "
ft f on t

F ve bedroom spl t evel w 1th fam ly room (f ireplace ) 2
baths 2 car garage located on 1 A lot overlookmg and
runn ng to the Oh1o R ver Very pleasant hom e and
su rround ng s Owner mov ng out of state

Neat As Can Be
2

No 2 ce lar
S4 200

Want Lot of Room wtth R1ver Frontage

New Ltsttng at Edge of Town

Largest

BAR GA IN S n B dwell No 17 rms
bath
ga rag e
wor kshop large lot $5 500

Near new hasp tal - The owner has moved out of area and
wants an mmed ate sale Very very n ce 3 bedroom home
w th beamed ce11 ng s m I v ng and k tchen area Air
cond I on ng large lot on U S 35 - Equ pped k tchen
(range dishwasher etc)

Large

DOWNSTAIRS unfurnished
apartment • rooms and bath
mooern puill In kitchen and
la~e yard Call 446 0322 or
446 1405 or 256 6413
58 If

S.n

Move In Tomorrow Excellent Locatton

For the money you cant beat th s 3 (large ) bedrooms
br ck home mclud ng fam ly room wtth f replace 1 full
2- 2 baths completely carpeted throughout 2 car
garage large fen ced lot n c ty school d str ct 11 m1les
out c t y water an d sewer

159 3

NOW und• onstruct on 3 BR
bath r
I r hen
paneled
L R ga • -x-~&gt; arpet all
electnc br V Jnt large
corn er lot S l6 !)v J

Beauty lns1de

Ro

TWU bedroom trailer
Grande Ph 446 4153

V INTON 2 story
com pletely remodeled 3 BR
LR w th WB f rep lace formal
d ntng rm
new modern
k tc hen
full
ba sement
severa l shade tr ees w II sell
or trade 10 pet down

Th s home s like new ns1de (very well kept) brand new
kif chen new wall to wall ca rpet large bedrooms formal
dm ng and full basement garage and not muc h grass to
mow Th s IS an exceptionally c lean home close to both
schools and block fr om park Pr ced reduced S3 000 was
$27 500

Ranch Style

289 H

RANCHO COMPANY

or

,.:se:c~o:n:d~A~v=e~---~~:..~::::::::::~
87 If

PUBLIC AUCTION
Located at 1042 Second Avenue rn Galhpolts.
Ohto Walch for Stgn
THURSDAY JULY 13, 1972
Startmg at 12 oo Noon
Cons sting In part of a Complete line of Household Fur
nlfure Electrical Appliances of all kinds Antiques and
Collectables Hand Tool s of all kinds Horse Drawn Single
and Double Shove l Plows Drag Harrow Fod&lt;ler Chopper
Lots of Miscellaneous Items etc etc

THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
Earl and Gerfte Gordon
Voughenda McGinnis Commissioner
OaryiAiban-AUCTfONEERS - Kenneth Sw1in
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

UNFUil.NtSHED apt S rooms 1957 CHEVROLET Ph 3aa
-nd bath first floor com
a6a7
pletely private No pet s
15a 3
Adults preferred Ph 446 2543
or .u.~ 1304
1960 FO RD 1 lon truck new
15a 3
rubber QJ!'Oerator cl utch 12
foot bed
heavy
du ty
Bustne$s
throughou t o 000 on eng ne
11
Will trade for p ckup Ph 446
3533 aft er 5
WE nAve a wholesale
business All cash accounts
158 3
growing by leaps and
Dounds Wt need a depen
1966 MERCURY + run s good
dable assoc iate in your area
good t res S3SO Ph 3aa 9969
w ltl1 $900 00 m nlmum 10
158 3
Invest in equ 1pment and
lrwentory wh ch w 1 turn
REFR IGE RATOR w th freezer
over about two t me s
mon thly Incom e potent a
n top wr ng er type wa sher
exceptionally h gh
AI
S25 each 29 Edgemont Dnve
rep les str ctly conf dent al
Galll pol s
CONSOLIDATED
158 3
CHEMICAL CORP
Freeze Oned Products
FOUR ROOM house w1th f1 ve
Divlston
acres of ground near Thur
3115 Montrose Su te 120
man Ph 245 5561
Houston Texas 77006
15a 3

0pportun t es

SLEE PING ROOMS weekly
rates free garage parking
L1bby Hotel

Help Wanted
1970 PONTIAC GTO
4217
BARTENDER over 35 Grande
Cafe
160 3

.

SerVICes

1

•

For Rent

EstatE

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

A large rus t c log cons tructed home nestled on a tree
shaded h ll s1de overlookmg a oeau t1ful water falls m a
large stream 1us t below Enter the spac1ous fully ca rpeted
I v ng room and en tOY the huge f1replace and wood
paneled wal ls K tchen ts complet e w th new bu It m cab
ra nge d shwasher etc 3 bedrooms (could bed 4 or S) w1th
more than ample room 2 baths full basement w1th
f rep lace and 2 car garage - 7 acres for the k1ds horses or
pones 5 mil es out m ci ty sc hool d stnct Pnced 1n the
fortes ( Ca ll Ike W se man for an appo ntm ent)

$26 900

3 BR 1 ' bath all ga age a
woman s dream kitchen and
laundry concrete street
Loca ed In Kyger School D st

World's

Picture Thts In Your Mmd

In Town Great Location

Real

STROUT
REALTY

IJ}hJUIIIIJIL THE WISEMAN

I see h s face that I tiftld so dear
Oh how can we forget one that
wa s so k nd
For such lov mg pat ence
Our happ ness to f nd
No matter what hour of the
ntght we wou ld call he was
always there to help lest we
shou d fal l
How I loved htm noone can

__

1
I

seems so near

know
And th ought I cou d not I ve
wnen he had to go
Very sadly m ssed by
daughter
Mr s
Steven
Ph I li ps and grandch ldren
160 1
..__

Estate f

For Sah

SlNGER Sewing Machme Sales
&amp; Serv1ce All models In
stock Free delivery Service
guaranteed Models pnced
from $69 95 French C1ty
Fabri c Shoppe Singer ap
proved dealer 58 Court St
Ph 446 9255
JOB If

TARA

1112 BATHS

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

For lnformahon Call Shtrley Adkllls.,-367 7250

THURSDAY, JULY 20
STARTING AT 10 A.M.
Northup Ohto ' • mile soulh of Northup Br1dge on Ltn
coin Ptke
Selling lhe follow1ng 1tems from the Estate of Roy
Th1vener (deceased)
15\ewelladles pendant Elgin watch Coal range wooden
1ce box copper wash bo ler p1e safe 2 wash stands
cream can wooden table &amp; chairs churns old Irons old
fru1t Iars wllh glass Ids Ida teo } pols pans &amp; mise kit
chen utlnsets wicker rocker Oak di ning room table &amp; 6
cha rs old cast ron boot jack coal heating stove slm liar
to Ben Franklin Stove round oak stand fa i;! le coal
buck ets ut1llty cablnel I old hand gun 1- 22 r ifle
I maga zi ne l~dmgl 1 very old and most unusual 22 r~fle
almost new Estate Heatrola 3 old oval picture frames old
organ In excellent condition with stool old oil lamps 1
Alladen oil tamp several wooden rockers 1 old couch
carpet new linoleum rug old Viclrola type record player
stand tables handmade quilts and others oak china
cabinet glass metal bed lcomplelel oak dresser bed
ding metal stool round oak table old w icke r rocker lawn
chalfS treadlesewl"9 machine army cot mirrors metal
bed old mantel c lock old bottles Iron kettles coffee
grinder bbltle capper old glass and dishes Including
some carnival cut and depression glass cupboard
Ironing board old woooen bowl nall kegs old hall tree
battery rad10 old pocket knives dresser books flower
stand old ~ron door stop half size metal bed plllowo
feather tick straw tick clocks slone (ars fence power
lawn mower cross cut saw mechani c garden and car
penfer fools Ice tongs lanterns chains organ stool old
lunch pall shoe last powder horn shovels picks and
other hand fools old bicycle bin of coal approximately
200 bushels steel traps old mllk bottles skin boards top
for old washing machine wheel b,rcow 2 Model T
wheels double shovel plough cistern pump hand lawn
mower chicken coop set of extens ion ladders fence
stretchers block &amp; line sausage mjll fruit 1ors sl~ pie
sale and other mise Items too numerous1o list
Lunch will be served on the grounds by Senior Girl Scout
Troop 1181 under the supervision of Mrs John Groth
Mrs 8111 Shaffer and Mrs Eldon Wuerch
Terms of Sale CASH
Albert Thlvener Admlnlslrator of the estate of Roy
ThiYener, deceased
R E KNOTTS AUCTIONEER
AuctlonMr • Rem1rlt1 This fs another sale which you
cannot afford lo miss Many antlqun and collectors Items
Including an old rifle beyond our ablllly to describe

5 P

ALL TYPES of build i ng
mater als block br ick sewer
P pes windows lintels etc
Claude W nters R lo Grande
0 Phone 245 512 1 after 5

==-----~123 It

Ca r.ce Ia on - Co re ef o ns
unl 9 a m for
Da y of Publ ca t on

REGULATIONS
T h.O Pub I 51le r eserves t ne
r Qh o ed or n•1ec any ids
de eme d
ob ect onal
Tile

Pub s~ w I no be espons b le

lo n or"e
nser on

DEAD STOCK
s~oo Serv1ce Charg e
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Cal l Jackson 286 453 1

ads an 9 ads pa d w h n 0 da ;s
CA RD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
S 50 for 50 wo Cl m n mum
Each aeldJt ana

OFF ICE

d JO

a m
Sa urda

Card

- -----

_ _____

- - -- - No! tee

-------

''HEll"

- - -- - -

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

a.

------

Wtndow

A1r Cond11toners

For

Hot Water Hea ters
Plumbmg
Electncal Work

------

ARNOLD

-------

•

BROTHERS
YY2 2448

Pom eroy 0

'I•

OLD F ASH IONED Trad ng Day
every Sunday on the 8 II
Cl onch farm approx mately 2
m les up Hyse I Run off Rou te
124 Horses guns dogs or
what have vou Come one and
al l
7 S61p

Plumbmg &amp;

--------

ANN OUNC IN G
an
Old
Fash oned Rev va l July 6
thru Jul y 16 at the Pom eroy
Lower L1ghl Ct urch Rt 143 1
m 1le from Route 7 By Pass
Rev
Dewey
K ng
Evangel sf Spectal s ng ng
Starts each even ng at 7 30 p
m
Everyone welcome
Pastor Rev Roy Taylor
7 6 5tc

-------

------

--------

GUN SHOOT 5un day July 9 I
p m Fa ctory choked guns
only Second place shooters
get free shot n nex t match
Assorted meats Rae ne Gun
Cl ub
7 6 3tc

- - - - --

For Sale

WH Y not try LOS nel cs that are
t ruly
diff ere nt
and
refresh ng' The fam ous m nk
011ba se and now we have the
lem on grove Just thmk 14
spec als th1 s month some for
men as well as women Its
KOSCOT of course Phone
991 SllJ

- - - -- -

-------

,---------------7~9

tfc
RE DUCE sa te anc ta st w1tn
Go Sese Tab ets &amp; E Vap
water p lis
Ne son On,;g
6 29 30tp

------

------

Sets Hand,
Unlucky
Anyhow

1•

m

Wanteo To Buy

_____

I'
•

I

LLIFF S
dl eporl
noon to
not ce

Shoe Repa r
M cl
will be open from 12
5 p m unt I fu r ther
Closed on M onday s
7 7 6tc

::-:-:=:=:::-- - - - -

WANTE:t Cus tomers at
Showalter s Wet Pet Shop
Chester Oh o No ex penence
necessar y
7 9 20tp

.A

Rice's

s

•

of Thanks

THE FAM ILY of Harold Sm th
extends Is deep apprec at on
l o tho se who ex tended
sy mpa hy m any way those
who sent fl owers cards and
con tr buted to he Heart
Fund We espec al y extend
our grat tude to the members
of the Syrac use Emergen cy
Squad for the r fas t and ef .
f cent effor t n the r attempt
to do everythmg pass bl e far
our l oved one
Mr s Harold Sm th and
fam ly Syr acuse
7 9 lie

--,--- - - -

------

HOltR~

5 0{] p n . Da y
to
1 00
Noon

Young w shes to thank Dr
Thomas Mc Gowan and the
nu ses
espec ally
Mrs
V van Johnson M s M ldred
Hud so n and Mr s Emma
Adams of the Veterans
Memor a Hosp tal for the
k nd ness and care dur ng he
hosp al zat on
Also the
Ewmg Funeral Home Rev
Robert Kuhn of the F rst
Bapt sl Church oi Pome oy
for h s consol ng words the
relat ves
ne ghbors and
fr ends for the beaut fu I oral
offer ngs
The fam y of Mr s Sylva
Young
7 9 lip

------

__

o

pe

TH E FAMILY ot M s Sy v a

SPECIAL TALENTS

Mob1le

a n

8 JO

------

--,------

wo d Ol e

BLIND ADS
Add I on a
15c Cha ge
Ad ,.er en ent

-------

-------

ncorrec t

5 cen s per Word one nsert on
M n mum Cha ge 75c
2 cents per word
tHee
consecut ve nser ons
1B cen s per w o d s K con
secul ve nserr ons
25 Per Cent D scoun on pa d

----~-----------~14911 BOB
LANE S
Complete

Corb1n &amp; Snyder
IF YOU are bu ldmg a new
Bookkeepmg and Tax Ser
USED 3-40
While gas
home or remodelmg see us
v1ce 424 1 2 Fou r th Ave
Tak•ng apphcat1on for
ranges 3 r ecliners 1 30 gal
We are builders 01stnbutor
Kanauga Off ce hrs 9 a m 1
Yltolady for full lime work.
hot water tank
for Hotpo1nt Appliances
p m Ph 446 1049
Prefer age 21 or over Apply
NEW - lmoleum rugs 9x1 2
Al l1son Elecfnc
as If
l2x 12 12x15 Rooms ze rug s
m person 9 a m to 1 p m:
154tt
va r ous c. olor s lawn fur --------------~
Milstead Bakery 244 Th1rd
HOLLEY BRO CONST
nlture
1972
COMPLETE water line In
Avenue
Pl en ty of free park1ng Open EIGHT track tape stereo In
stallat1on backhoe bulldozer
Fr day unt I 8 95 5 Second
love ly hand rubbed walnut
and boring ma ch ne ser v1ces
LADY tO' answer tel ephone m
Ave 446 117
console Pay bal of $101 21 or
J P Holley 245 S01a or D R
her home tor larg e appl ance
15a tf
$5 55 mon Ph 446 0921
Holley 245 5006
company Wnte Mr Nutter
105 tf
11 1 11
Rt 1 Cool v ille Ohio
~
G
~
o
=
o
o~
C~
L~
E_
A_
N
__
L_
U_
M
_P
~
and
159 tf NEW 1972 Z1g Zag Sew 1ng
C&amp;S E lecfr ca l Serv ce &amp;
M ach ne m or g ma l factory
stoker coa l Carl W nters R1o
Repa r s
House Wlrtng
ca rton Z g Zag to mak e
Grande Phone 145 5115
electr c heat motor co.ntrols
buttonholes sew on button s
6 tf
Free est mates Ph 446 4561
M onograms and make fanc y =:-:~:-:-::-::-c-,---or 675 336 1
des gns w1th 1ust the tw st of a 1971 NEW MOON mob le home
22 tt
Tur;htng 1ales superv1s1on
smgl e d1al Left m lay away
12 x 60 w1th 7x 12 expando
or
public
relations
an d never been used Wil l sel l
l1vmg r oom Ph 446 4716 after
BANKS TREE SERVICE
background?
Leading
for on ly S47 00 cash or cred t
2 30
FREE estimates I ab11ily n
terms ava able Phone 4.46
servtce
organ1zat1on
154 If
surance Prun ng tnmm ng
457a
and
cav ty work tree and
requtres attractive per=~-,---­
15a 6 MUST SELL 1972 delu xe Zig zag
stump remova l Ph 446 4953
sonable woman for loca I
sew ng ma ch ne Ph 446 0921
73 If
public speakmg asSign
ELECTRO LUX
Vacuum
105
If
ments
Extf'emely
In Cleaner complete w th at =~--~
GILLENWATER S sept1c tank
teresting work Prepared
tachments cord w nder and MUST SE LL 1972 deluxe Zig zag
cleanmg and repa r also
mater~al furmshed
One
pa nt spr ay Used bvt n like
sew1ng mach ne Ph 446 0921
house wreckrng Ph 446 9499
evening per week Salary .
new cond t 1on
Pay $34 45
10511 Establ shed 1n 1940
cash or budget plan ava I abl e ~------------~
lnlertsled?
Send
1n
169 tf
Phone 446 4S7a
ALUMINUM bu idmg s wh te
formation
on
your
15a 6
ce ment all s1zes of f1le m D P MARTIN &amp; Son Water
__;_
bilckground to Mrs Lou1se
stock
co ncrete
bl oc ks
Del very
Serv 1ce
Your
Ztmmerman
5520
Red
1972 HONDA 350 Ph 446 262
GALLIPOLIS
BLOC"
CO
patronage
w1H
be
ap
Cooch Road , Dayton, Oh1o.
123 ~ P ne Str eet
160 3
prwateo Ph 446 0463
7 ff
148 If
1970 V W sedan good con d t on - - c - - - - - - - - Wanted
tow m leage Cal l 146 4271
T ERMITE PEST CONTROL
GOOD used 1'.\ob te Home Ph
CORBIN &amp; SNYD~R
after 5 30
REE mspecl on Call 446 3245
446 9383
Merr II 0 Dell Operator for
160 3 SERTA &amp; Bemco Mattresses &amp;
box spr ngs $29 up 955 Second
Exterm nal Term te Serv ice
==,.,.------~160 2 -::-:-- - -Ave 446 1171
19 Belmont Dr
SECRETARY and book keeper ONE bassinet one d a per pa I
10 tf
and one baby sw ng Ph 446
267 If
loca l auto dea lership ex
27
41
per le nc:e d or bu si ness or
Central A1r Cond11tontng
160 4 MAGNETIC car and truck
college graduate gooo pay
signs Available 6 ' x 1a to
&amp; Healtng
and fr inge benefits Present
20 x 24 $1 250 to SJO par
Free Esllmates
glrl leavi ng after four years PAINT DAMAG E - 1972 Z g
446 1397 Simmons Ptg
Zag Sew ng Machmes Stil t 10
Stewarts Hardware
husband trans fer red Wr te
Off1ce
Equ p
original ca r tons
No at
Vmton Oh1o
Box 229 co Galli pol s
140 tf
tachm ents needed as our
144 tf
Tribune
contra s are bu It n Sews
159 6
New GMC
w th 1 or 2 needles makes
ALBERT EHMAN
----"'---Truck Headquarters
Water Delivery Ser v ce
buttonholes sew on buttons
Sale
Pa tr ot Star Rt Gall 1pol s
monograms and bt nd hem 196a ', Ton GMC Pi ckup
YUKON Delta Camper Ike
Ph 379 2133
st tch Ful l cash pnce 138 so 1966 Jf• Ton P ckup
new vsed 10 days on G M C
243 tf
or budget plan ava1lable 1970 International Dump Truck
Extra clean
pick up truck barga n at
Phone 446 4578
Sl 795 Phone 446 2906 al
UNIVERSAL
160 6 1969 2 T GM C
1967 Jeep Station wagon
ternoons
Watch Repa1r 1818 Eastern
160 6 VACUUM Cleaner new 1972 1964 ' T GMC PU
Ave
Str~ctly
wholesale
r epa ring Ph 446 9234
-1iil'--~-~-=a7
,~..,.~.~·T·~·~,,, jl a p Model ' Gornpl~·
lth all J 967 Jeepster
BA:SSE T
puppieS
A"C
cleaning tools Small pant 1967 ;, ton Chevrolet pickup
103 If
___reg istered Ph 446 9836
damage In shipping W II take 1967 '• T Chev PU
THOMAS FAIN
- - - - - - - - -160 3
$27 cash or budge! plan 1963 ' T Chev PU
196a h T GM PU
EXTERMINATING CO
avai lable Phone 446 4578
Term te &amp; Pest Control
TON Dodge P1ckup truck
160 6 196a h T GMC PU
New 11 ft camper
flat bed Ph 446 4846
Wheelersburg Oh o
160 3
1966 '• T GMC
FARM SALE
196a h T GMC PU
Thursday July 27 Thursday
Healin~
1966 , T GMC PU
19~ CORVETTE Stmgray both
Slart1ng at 10 30 a m
STANDAR
D
1967
h
T
GMC
PU
tops and extras would take
Mr and Mrs
Plumbmg &amp; Heating
1963 F600 Ford Truck
pickup on lrade Also 289 Ford
George Stewart Owners
215Th rd Ave 446 37a2
Molor and standard setup 167 LOCATED - From Gall pots 1966 Dooge Sportsman Wagon
la7 If
Ford Heavy duty 3 speed 2650
take Rt 141 App 17 m to 1964 ' T Ford PU
x 16 6 ply tires tubes and
Cadmus turn nght on Cad 1966 :If, T GMC PU
RUSSELLS
rl mS$25 Ph 388 9906 Vet can
mus Cross Roads Rd go app 1967 / 2 T Ford PU
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
~liver
66
Tracto r
w1th
be seen 11 College Hill Motel
4 m I Watch for sale s gns
21 Galha Ave 446 47a2
cult vators
160 3
Ford 8N Tra ctor 11 us I
297ft
SOMMERS FMC
overhauled}
Farmall H
TRUCKS INC
DINETTE set 6 chairs good
I Good} J D 3 pt Plows 12
DEWITT S PLUMBING
133 P1ne Sf
coodltlon sso Ph 446 3375
12 I 2 12 drag plows 7 ft
AND HEATIN G
446 2532
160 tf
160 3
Case dlsc New Idea hay r ake
Route
160 at Evergreen
N H 270 hayl1ne Ferguson
Phone 446 2735
PLYMOUTH Fury 3 stat10n
mower
J poi nt 2 row 1971 SL 350 Kl Honda with 21
front wheel exce llent con
187 1
wa9on 3 seal Fully equ p
cult va t or
3 pt
1 raw
-dillon 1700 Ph 446 054a
ped Ph 446 4313
cult valor 3 pt Rota ry hoe 3
15a 3
160 3
pi I H corn planter Woods
GENE PLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
Brother s corn p1cker gravity
SEARS~ hp mini bike two old
Condit on1ng 300 Fourth Ave
bed on new runn ng gears WASHER drrer t w n bed
d1nette Cal 446 9564 after
antique trunks and 1957
Ph
446 1637
I F ormer ly
Boom pol e 32 fl hay elevator
5 30
Oldsmobi le Ph 256 6569
Bramm er s Pl umbmg &amp;
portable 16 gran elevator
156 6
160 2
Heating I
Ferguson manure loader flat
bed wagon 2 wheel trailer
48 If
6 CYLINDER pickup fru~k
Massie Harris 2 row self 1961 CHEVROLET Im pala - : - - - -- - hardtop S300 Ph 256 6074
Utility bed $200 14 cresfl l n~r
propelled corn picker I H
Homes
157 3
boat .j() hp John son motor
grain drill ion rubber} 7 ff
trailer and ~u l pment $600
Oliver grain drill tractor
RECONDITIONED
Ph 446-4602
spray l new pump} portable ADORAB).E AKC register ed
MOBILE HOMES
160 3
loading chute 2 , a hole hog Basset puppies $40 160 Ph 446 1966 Conestoga 5Sx l2 2 bdrm
9a36
1965 Frontier 60x12 2 bdrm
feeders 1 6 hole hog feeder
1968 C AMA~0327 3 speed w1th
drill press Hoffco brush saw _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 1546 1965 Frontier 60x12 3 bdrm
wide track t res $1 000 Ph
1964 Baron 56x 12 2 bdrm
Other tool s and Items too
COMPLETE line of men s pipes 1962 Gibraltar 55xl0 2 bdrm
256 6244
numerous to mention
G B D Charatan B B B
160 3
196a Apollo Travel Trailer
L1vlng room suite (new) 3
Joby and Savtneli1 speCial
lllf, self contained
piece bedroom su1te chest of
sefl now ani
IOX50 AWNING for mobi le
B&amp;S Mob1fe tlomes
drawers wardrobe wa sh
156 If
Second &amp; V1and Sl
home Ph 245 5267
stand wrln?er washer 3 d1 sh
Pt Pleasant ( Nexllo Heck sJ
•
160 3
cab1nels d nette set tables
~--_:__
149 If
lamps cha1rs plano record
players mang le other Items ONE OLD icebox and 15 ga l
FOR SALE by builder New
stone (ar Ethel Russell Ph
too numerous to mention
three bedroom sunken family
WIN AT BRIDGE
388 a293
Antiques Hall sec
room double rock fireplace
159 3
secretary and book case
electric heat other extras
comb ned. several 1 10 gal
Located on large rivervi ew lot
milk cans Columbia Gran
on Rt 2 10 miles south of PI
USED FURNITURE
fonda Record Player sev
Pleasant Contact Lyle Austin
LIKE NEW electric Tappan
antique bottles
or call 576-2026
range liv ing room suite tw n
158 6
bed with springs and mat
Terms Cash
Lunch Served
tress
Ke! vlnator
Tommy Joe Stewart
RUGS 12xl2 and throw rug s 73a
refrigerator
gas range
Auctioneer
Second Ave Raymond Jones
Admiral
TV
wringer
160
1
158 3
washer six piece wood
dropleaf din ette set coli
FURNISHED or unfurn shed
1970 YAMAHA Enduro 175 21
spr ings wood cablnel with
two bedroom house Ph 446
NORTH
8
.., knobbr. lire 350 rear Good
glass
doors platform rocker
0274
condlt oo $450 Ph 742 5980
.QJ96
riving room chair four piece
158 5 _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _155 6
.10
matching living room suite 2
tAKQJ10
sola
beds
vinyl
couch
Early
LOT and frailer Jackson Ohio 71 GMC :t;, ton pick up w th 1967
.KJ2
American
couch
Early
32 x 8 Great Lakes Lot 43 x
Kamp King camper Ph 245
Amer ican chair six piece
WEST (D)
EAST
1~ S1 800 Ph 596 .1485
sa04
dl
nette set 2 lamps and
• K75
155 5
159 3
• Yo1d
dresser 854 Second Ave 446
• AK Q 8 64
• J 5 32
~------9S23
• 843
MAHOGAINY cabinet floor FROM wall lo wall no soli at
• 96 5 2
all on carpets cleaned with
model color TV Ph 446 0013
.10 9764
Blue Lustre Rent electric
SOUTH
--~-----159 5 shampooer $1 (Central NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
.Al084 32
Supply Co }
AIR conditioner 6 000, BTU
.97
155 6
purcHase Aug 1971 S75 Ph
t7
GOOD USED MOBILE HOMES
----~675 5517
.Q8 53
1970 Skyline 12xSO 2 Br
159 3 1971 PONTIAC Grandville
Fully equipped Inc luding a1r 1967 Hor izon 12xSO 2 Br
---.----,----East West vulnerable
Richardson 12x65 3 Br
$100 A MONTH EXTRA cash ~~r,~lv on l ng Ph 446 9282 11970
We•t
North East South
965 Vlndale lOxSO 2 Br
would If solve your buclgef
155
Dble
1960 Van Dyke 10x40 2 Br
Pass Pass
PaS.!!
problems?
Many
Avon
1960 Van Dyke lOxSO 2 Br
Representatives actually 7 ROOM house - 4 bedrooms
Trt County Mobile Homes
Opemng lead- • A
2013 Eastern Ave
earn an estimated UJ weekly
and two baths 1 block from
Galltpolio Ohio
spare lime selllno our fam"' •
city park Ph 446 3521
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
products Why can t you I For
3
446 0175
detai l s calf now
Helen ...,.-------~
We were watchmg our old
Yeager Box 172 Jackson SOUPS on the rug that Is
(nend
the unlucky expert
Ohto, Ph 286 ~8
clean with Blue Lustre Rent
play m a t eam match when
_ _ _ _1_ _ _ _ _ _156 6
electri c shampooer
$1
he p1cked up the West hand
(Lower G C Murphy)
The b1ddmg started out
NEED 1 copy machine? Ex
155 6 INDIAN relics arrow heads
axes speers etc by piece or tamely but all of a sudden
lremely convenient for office - - " - - , - - - -collection Top prices paid South Jumped to four spade '
use S95 Wiseman Agency Ph
1?11 HONDA CB 450 Ph 367
Phone .u6-9442
.u6-~
and he was faced w1th a
141~
___::
159 If 7750
1556 ________________
real problem Should he btd

one

han

RATES
For Wan1 Ad Serv ce

------

------

DEAOI.IHES
Dav Befor e Publ cat on

w ll be accepted

-------.1"

-------

M

MondAy Dead I ne 9 a m

Backhoe and Dozer Serv1ce
Sopl1c tanks far m d1tch1ng
ponds
Free Est1mates
Phone 367 757'1 or J67 7706
146 If

EXCELLENT eff c1ent and
econom ca l
th at s Blue c'--'--lu stre carpet and upholstery
Arab Extermmarmg \.u
clea ner
Rent
el ect n c TER MITE PEST control Free
shampooer S1
(Central
mspection Call Russells
Supply Co }
Plumbing 446 47a2 Gall polls
Oh o
14911
107 52
~::-:-:-:-:---HANNAH
Hector
hates har work sa he cleans
SEPTIC TANKS
Ph 446
the rugs
th Blue Lustre
Cleaned and In stalled
Rent electr
ooer $1
Russell s Plumbmg 446 4782
15a 3
I Lower G C M phy s)
297 If

------

PUBLIC SALE

INFORMATION

-:------.--:.

-------

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

WANT ADS

Offered

•

2• 4•

fiv e hearts and nsk t he prob
able pe nalty or should he
pass and t r y to beat four
spades'
He decided on the lattet
course and passed as did
North and East Then he
pla~ed hiS ace of clubs and
positively beamed when he
saw dummy hit the tabl e
With one heart and no ace
ot spades
At tnck two he carefull y
underled h1 s ace kmg queen
of hearts East produced the
)ack and l ed bac k a club fo1
our fnend to ruff
He st11l was sure of the
kmg of t r umps and gl ee
fully chalked up 5IJ pmnt s on

I he plu s s de
Ptetty good wa sn t 1t
he ask ed, I would be do''"
at li ve hea11s
B rii!Janl hu t probably un
successful
was our com
men! We lUI ned out t o be
ri ght
The b1ddmg star l ed the
sam e way at lhe other tabl e
but West btd a cheery live
heart s ovet South s f om
spades North ca u ght m t he
swm g or t hm gs went n ~ht
to f1v e spades and Wesl
doubled when the b1ddmg got
back lo h1m
Wes t also opened the ace
of clubs but d1d not nsk t he
underlead tn hearts and onlv
•et live spades one L11c k but

d1d scor e
of 50

100 pomts mstead

(NEWSPAPER ENlUPRISE ASSN )

Th e b tdd ng has beer
West
North
East
1•
Pass

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

24
3N T
4t

Pass
Pass
Pass

You South hold

134...

South

'

We talk to JOU
hke a. pe1S0r1.

.AI543 .K876J tVotd .Ql07
What do yol c.lo now ?
A-Youc partner 1s ~ how mg
the dtamond ace as some sort o[
club slam lry B1d f1ve clu bs to
show no slam •nterest

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

�•

..

&gt;

.;·.-"" · - · Jo • •'" ...

~

.. . .

':··

.
2S- The &amp;mday Tlmes • Sentlnei, Sunday, July G, 1972

. ;!2 - The SW!day Tlmes - Sentlnel,

,o•.,
..
,'~1·
...

1972

',

The COLTS have came

invite you
:to compare

,,,~,,'/..,_

to Meigs ·County

Always A

'•

and Rawlings Dependable

Don't Forget

Dr . H. T., loaded with
eKtras. Blue with white
vi nyl top . Loca ll y owned.

'l

·:· 4 •Dr .Galaxie
500
sedan , V-8, auto.,
P. B.,

P.S. ,

fa ctor y air,
white with black interior .

,

69 Oldsmobile :·:
Delta 88
Dr., factory air, P.S.,

71 Chi}Sier 300
.4

P. B.. white
vi nyl top.

with

July Is
New Car
Sale Month

l

) '4

We Want To Sell

· Color red. blk . v inyl top, vlk . vinyl interior; less than

40 New Cars

20,000 miles by local careful lady owner . 307 engine with
Turbo Hydramatic, power steering , P. B., radio, w-w trres,
spare never used, rally wheels, Pumper guards. Your
Inspection of this car will tell you If ' s the nicest .

·.,: .. 1970 PONTIAC ........................ $2995

1970 Dodge Polara ................... 2295

1969 PLYMOUTH..................... $1395
1969 FORD FAIRLANE ..............$1595

'

4 speed. Beautiful dr . blue.

factory air, P.S., P. B. Real n ice car, one owner .

1966 Buick Special 4 Door.......... 1895

Lemans 4 dr. H.T., fa ctor y air . Th is is on e of the clea nes t
cars In the Ohio Val ley.
··

v.w............................... }995
1960 v.w......;., .. ,................... }395
1967

Light tan . One owner.

v.a engine, auto. trans.,

P. S., vinyl inter ior. dark green
f in ish, good fir st l ine w ·S ·W tires and radio .

DODGE COLT FOUR·DOOR SEDAN

::::

Thi~ is the one to choose if you're look ing for lots of
room. More standard features' You want more standard
features? How about a radio antenna built righ t in to the
tru nk l1d? Or four headl ights' Or vanable rat1o steering?
Or a fu lly synchronized four-speed gea r box'

1965 Impala HT Cpe. ................. $395
V-B, automatic, P.S.,

~
USED CARS

Open Evenings Till7 p. m ." &amp; Sat . Till 5 P. M.
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat .

CADILLA~ ""
Of Course You Can"

E

TRUCKS

:·

j.,urquoi-se, black top, turquoise interior, fu ll power
equipm ent, Climate Control a i r conditioning.

'··

'•'•'•

DEMONSTRATOR
Dark brown finish. beige viny l top. brown leather
interior , lilt.telescope steering wheel. AM-FM
radio, tint ed glass, W·S·W tire s, Clima te Con trol air
conditioning.

.. •.•

2 - NEW 72 CAOILLACS IN STOCK
Both Sedan De Vi lles . One green with green .,.inyl top,
gr een inter ior . One dark bl ue, blue v in yl top , blue interior,
both ha ve power equipm en t, l il t . telescope stee r ing wheel,
AM ·FM radio, tinted glass, w-s-w tires, Cl im ate Control
ai r cond it ioning .

Party Plan m the Country

lnm and cu t trees, cl ean

-

a1t ics ;

25th year ! Com missions up to JO pet . Fan ta stl c Hostess Awards . Call or
write " SANTA's PARTIES"
Avon , Conn . 0600 1. Telephone
1 t2o3l 673 -3455. AL so
BOOKING PAR T IE S.
7-2-30tc

OVER 25 NEW OLDS IN STOCK!

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

our

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

Pomeroy .

IN

Open Eves . Til 6- Til 5 P.M . Sar.

MIDDLEPORT

"You'l l Li ke 0 11 " Qua lity Way of Doing Bu siness"

Phone Faye Manley
992·5592
In
Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

.

Help
Wanted
.

WILL CARE for pre-school BEAUTICIAN , mu st hav e
chi ld ren in my hom e, $3 a
manager's license ; Helen's
day ; phone 992 -6187.
Beauty Shop ; phone 992-289() .
7-2·6fc
7-9-6tc

l -S ho ws so i1C1 tude
6- tnd lvldu .. l's
,1 rnunal
gua rd i an spi nt
11 - Subllety
I8- W1II ow

19-Piilcll lor
comb at
20- Ai n.'e
71-Sco ui sh pla1d
ZJ- Oanl!.h
rtlea-.ure
24- Eve rybody's

uncle
76~ 0ne

of

Co hm1b u:o's

sl11ps

27-Fr&lt;ench artic le
29- A month
JO-Son oJ.. Adam
31 - Norse monarch

32-SIIkworm
33- Cooling devic e
34-Mas t
35-War god
36-Fi!s of illness
38- Pa c ks away
40-Hindu cymbals

41 -Dart
42-Ursine animal
43-Suffix forming
nouns
45-Long fOI
46-Teu tonic deity
4 7-Go by water

48-Beve rage
49- Swi mmer
51-Girl's name
52- N.otB o f s ca le

53-Emmet

54-Peruu
55-landina: He ld
57-Celtic Nej)tune
58-Strikes
60-Microbe
~1-Sklll

62-Salll ni' vessel
64--Complts point

G7-lanjuage
peculiarity
69-S atety device
7 1- Nove lty

73-h hJ
74 - 0ill~eed

76--Sea·going
vesse l s
79- Pi ace in line
81-Mohammedan
name
82-Du tch measure
84-Givtl up
!lS-Back down
(COl loq.)
B{- Hera ldry :

grafted
90-0ne·uason
pla nb
92- Ri\ler In
Scotla nd
93-Pro l its

95-Cha llenges.
97-Cudgel
98-Exist

124-Eiectrlfied

particles
125-l dent lcai
126--Pm pos ition
127-Retreat
129-Take s from
131-Weary
132- Unit of

104-Quarrel
l 05--C hatlenaed

91-Measure of
weilht (abbr.)

basements,

6· 1001c

Wanteo To Buy
Furniture , oak tables,
organs , dishes, clocks, brass
bed s, or complete hou seholds.
Wr ite M. 0 . Mill er , Rt . 4,
Pomer oy, Ohio. Cal l 992-627 1.
6·28 -tl c

OLD

For Rent

Except Saturday &amp; Sunday

For Rent

FUR N ISHE D slee p i ng room
with refrigerator and sto ve.
3 AND 4 ROuM furnished and Phone 992-27.80 or 992 -3432.
unfurni s hed
apartments.
6-30-lf c
Phone 992 -5434.
4- 12-lft
- , - - - - - - -UN FURNIS H ED apartment,
13&lt;1 Mu lberry Ave .. phone 9'&gt;23962.
6· 11 tfc

character

trai ler apartm ent s, ideal for coup les.
Con tact McClur e's Dairy Isle.
992-5248 or 992-3436.
7 9-6tc

4 ROOM unfurn ished uPstairs
apartment ; adults on l y ;
phone 992-3056.
7-2-6lc

-------

APARTMENTS, close Ia Me igs
High Sc hool ; cal l 773-5268
aft er S p.m .
7-2·6fc

ONE DUPL EX apartment. 5
rooms and bath , small yard,
exce ll en t location. Phone 9922780 or 992 -3432 .
7-9-lfc

---------- -

13&amp;-Seines
137- Was Dorn11

136-Feellna:
139-0e l i rlum

tremens (abbr.)
140-So be it !
141- Sic k
142-Title
l 43.....:...Sels in around
144- Undaun te d
1~ &amp;-Encomium

148-0in
149-Hurl in lil

150-Takes on e's
part

151- Snake
DOWN

1- En c losu re
2-Movi na
3-Unlt of Irani an
cu rrency

I I ) -Preposition

6-S torin

114- Babylcni an

7-City In Au nla
8-Number
9-Prin t er 's

4-Even lni (poe t.)

me•sure

118-Youna boy5
119--Wan

to-Expert
11- lntlma te
12-Preposition

-----------

120-Hockey

13-Buebe ll team

pos ition {abbr.)
121- lmprove

14-Arabian
chieftains

123-Mudow

l&amp;-H11Ith of mind

---------- -

i968

----------1971 Y EL LOWSTONE truc k

ELCUN/-1,

12

X

55,

2

72-Beveraae
73- Aru
75-Sia:n of zodiac

106-Wei rdut

107- Trlfles

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .

-.-1--1

126-flll
128-Turn insld•

""

OUI

130-lampray
volumes
132-Ph!IIUt
135-0ne appoud

1-+-1--t

-1-·+-+-+--1

142-Baw

(abbr.)

•

::-:--=-::=-----~7..:.·7-6tc
. ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Cleaner complete wlfh at ·
tachments, cordwlnder and
paint spray . Used but In like
new condlflon . Pay $3.4 .45
cash or budget plan available .
Phone 992-56-41.

7·7·61c

40' x 10' MOBILE home wlthalr

conditioning. Call for ·, p.
- -+-+-+--1 pointment
992·5986 or· 992· 2126.

137- Rant
138-Skldded
U O-The wa lla ba

148--A eon tintn l

CAStj paid for aft makes ana
models of mobile homes .
PhOJle area code 61~·~23-9531.
~-13-ffc

131-Huvy

88-Candie

machine In original factory
ca rton . Zfg .zag to · make
buttonholes , sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just tho twist of a
single-dial. Left in lay-away
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit
term s available. Phone 992·
5641.
.

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

125--Take one't part

86-GQ In

:N:-;E:-;W
;-:
. -:-:
19:::
7-:2 -:ZI-g-.z-a-g -se- wIng

'c omplete mobile hom•
·s erv ice ~ plu s gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at ...

109--Food proar•ms

80--Tidy .,..
8 .3-Girl'l name

r~Jff

78-compess point

stere o, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 •peed automatic
changer . Use our budget
terms. Balan ce $69 .15 . Use
our time payment plan . Call
992-7085 .
7-7-6tc

'Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinninq

105-Apportlon

143-Sted co ntainer
144-A state (abb r.)
l.fS-Indel lni U!
article
147--cfllnfl st mite

7-7-6tc
--------BEAUTIFUL Walnut f i nish

50 X 10, 2 bedroom , pri ced
reasonably , phone Chester
985-3379.
7-9-6tp

(pl.)

59-Helplnl
GO-Festive
61 - Pald noti ce
63-Sheet of alan
66-Comp111 point
67- Cyprlnold llsfl
68-Wandert
almlenly
70--More Inflamed
71 - 0 istant

style, AM -FM rad io combination , • speed automatic
changer , 4 speaker sound
system . Balance $78 .69 . Use
our tim e payment plan . Call
992·7085 .

bedroom , com plete with
underpinning ; pri ced very
reasonab le; phone 992-3863 or
992 5844 after 3 p.m.
7-7-2tc

104-Noiieltles

medicinal

Price $3,000, Vlncenf Knlg~t .
6·30-6tp

1971 MOBILE home,' fi x-60, i
bedroom ; must sell, leaving
area ; phone 742-5825 for fn .
format ion .
6·29-9tc ·

I

NEW CAR SALE
DDII\Pft
I
1\1\IL._}

$1995

~I ftl"llr~'

"'...,". n;.u

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Ga ltipolis, Ohio

:::------

G . E. REFRIGERATOR:
wrlnger - tyr,e
Mayta
washer, excelent c&lt;indltlon; ~
porcelain top cabinets; gas
cook stove ; metal table and
four. chairs; Bissell handsweeper; lull-size. mefal bed ,
Free Westinghouse sewlnQ
machine In cabln•t · phone
992-62~7 .
' '

BAIRD
BROS.
AUTO
PARTS

IDEAL 5-ACRE RAN CHO.
La ke Conchas , New Mexico.
$2,875. No Down . No inter est.
$25 mo. Vacati on Parad ise.
Money
Mak er .
Free
B ro chure. Ra nc.hos : Box
200100, Alameda, California
94501.
6-7 30tp
I

. '

.p~'

Your Datsu n d eal er is the Small Car Expert.
Let him show you what mak es the 510 4-Door Sedan
such a perfectly great economical family car .
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Tinted glass
R eclining front bucket seats
Whit..watls
Overhead cam engine
Vinyl upholstery
Safety front disc brakes
Independent rear suspension

R A-C-1N
- --,
E--:6 -r o_o_m-;ho:-u:::se:-,-:::
bath '
uti lity r oom, garage , SlO,OOO;
~hone 949-4195.
_ _ c
3 31 11

GUARANTEED

USED &amp;
REBUILT

HOUSE. in Long Bottom . phone
985 -3529 .
6-i1 -lfc

1 ACRE land , ne w 2 room
cab in ; 9 acr es pa sture land ,
barn and outbuildings ; can be
bought on lan d contra ct .
Phone 949 -3073 .
7-5-6tc

PH. 446-4060
CLOSED All DAY
THURS. &amp; SUN.

Is this the perfect Datsun for you? Try it.

CLELAND
JIEALTY

Drive a Datsun , •• then decide.

DATSUN
PRODUCT OF

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OH 10

For

For Sale

S~l "

NEW TOTAL electric
apartment, 2 bedroom, walk in closets , large living room,
kitchen and dining area .
5443 .
8-15-lfc
Phone 992-7384 or 992 -7133.
7-9-3tc
TOMATOES, Cucumbers,
green peppers ; Geraldine FABRIC
INN ,
Polyester
. Cleland , Ra cine , Oh io.
Doubleknits for less . Hun7-6-lfc
dreds of Yards. From Tuppers Plains. pass school , go 4
YARb SALE, Saturday, July
miles , turn left onto County
8th, 9 a . m. at Archie Ellis
Rd.
50 ,
sign .
Between
residence ; dishes~ curtains,
Hockingport and Reedsville,
draperies, good used rugs,
turn onto County Rd . 50 near
about anything you want,
Eden Church , sign . Phone 378·
chairs, some old things; ra in
6276 .
or shine , it will be in a room or
7-9-6tp
porch If it rains. Phone 992·
6695 .
'71 CONSOLE model , 23" black
7-6-2lp
and white TV, $75, New 3-pc.
bedroom suite, $75 . Phone 9926021.
7-9-Jic
ZENITH color TV, 5 years old $100; phone 992.7087 after 5: 30 H&amp;N DAY OLD or started
p. m .
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
7-6-31c
cage
grown
available.
Poultry
housing
&amp;
YARD SALE - 22 Inch lawn automation. Modern Poultry ,
mower, $15; G. E. hair dryer,
399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992·
$3 ; G. 'E. Canister Vac, $5 ;
,2164 .
toys, tools, fishing supplies
and many misc. Items, cheap
.all day Saturday and 1 3414 INTERNATIONAL
Sunday, July 8th &amp; 9fh , 339
Tractor with front end loader
Lasley Street, Pomeroy , (off
and 312C backhoe ; Earl R.
Mulberry, 5th house on right.)
Werner, Mlddleporf ; phone
7-6-Jtc
992·2769 at Bradbury .
7-9-6tp
PONTIAC Bonneville, 2 door
hardtop, factory air , blue with COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works, E: Main St .,
black vinyl top, 26,000 actual
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
miTes . Call after 5 p.m . 992·
4-12-tfc
593-4 .
7-2·6tt
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy ,
ParkY iew Kennels, Phone 'W2-

---------=--:--

----------

Real Estate For Sale '

60 ALL CROP harvester, Allis·
Chalmers ; phone 7~2· 3656.
' TUPPERS PLAINS - 6 rooms
7·9-6tp
and bath all -electric home, 2
---=~~--=----::::
closed -In porches, garage, a
lot 200 x 200. for further In ·
1.72 ACRE lot; 5 guns ; phone
formation, phone 667·362~.
7~2·3656.
7..
6 3tc
7-9-2tp

RT. 7 NEXT TO

608 E. Main St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

NISSAN

OLD SILVER BRIDGE
KANAUGA, OHIO

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY

Close i n, 30 a cres, good
drainag e, Chester wat er ,
good .roads , I DEAL for
homesiles . $26.800 .00.
WHAT A KITCHEN!
If your Mr5. likes to cook,
then her Mr. ought to see thi s
new moderni zed kit chen. 3
large bedroom s, walk · in
closets , W7 baths, utility
room, full basement, gre~t
rec . room, 1 acre ground , tn
town . 528,500.00.
S1.000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF THE RIVER, 3
bedrooms , bath , porches.
part ba se ment. metal roof ,
storage build i ng, garage .
$6,900.00.
BATTLE OF THE
BULGE?
If you are fighting to provide
enough room for a growing
family ..• Here's a place
Ideally suited. 4 bedrooms,
l'h baths , call for parti culars. $12,800 .00 .
LET US SELL YOUR
3 BEOROOM HOME
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
REAL TO~
PHON-E 992·2259

This is the place to lind the 1972
Mercury line-up of outslanding
values. Check our prices at the
sign of the cat and test drive your
choice ol 1972 Mercurys!

THE CATSARE
HERE
One Acre of New Cars, Trucks and Late
Models to Choose From .

SEE CHARLIE, JACK &amp; BILL

~IIH

Real Estate

;'.(li o

Your Authorized Ford-Mercury Dealer

.

1972 PLYMOUTH GRAN CPE. 2 Dr. HT.

71
3
$4060

Loaded with air con·
•
ditioniiia and all the
~
extras.Sticker · Price S47Sl.8S
' OU-R--PRICE ·.. " · · · · · ·

.

'

1972 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN

fr~~.s ~~:d~~nd~;t~ni~~:

etc. Sticker Price $4896.75
OUR PRICE

1972 GOLD DUSTER
225 engine, 3 speed, floor
shift.
Sticker Price $2642.85
OUR PRICE

$2515

1

225 engine, auromall
transmission package .
Sticker Price 53103.75

30 MORE IN STOCK!

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

Business Services

-----------

BEDRO OM home.
full
basement, gas furnace, 200ft.
river frontage .. Also 5 room
house with bath, basement,
gas furnace on adjoining lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracu se, Ohio ;
phone 992·2360 .
7-7-6tc

EARTH MOVING

Oo i:er &amp; End loader work ,
pond s, basement, land TWO homes for sale.; 1 m ile ·
scaping . We have 2 size
Nort h at Eastern
H igh
doters
, 2 size loaders. Work
School; both have bath and a
d9ne
by
hour or contract .
half; 4 bedrooms; bu ilt -in
Free · Estimates. We also'I
kitchen s and wall -to -wall
haul fill dirt, top ,soil. Dump
carpet; call 985-3598.
6-28-12tc
trucks and low -boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
88 ACRES, low $20' s, farmhouse
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3525
and other buildings, Over 200
aiter 7 p.m. or phone 992 ft. frontage . Must see to
5232.
appreciate .
Rosemary
Withem , 239-0647, . GRANDSTAFF, INC ., REALTOR ,
471 -2112.
7·9-tfc

Pomfroy, Ohio 45769
COUNTRY HOME ,
NEAR POMEROY - One tloor , 3 bedroom s, bath , fur ·
nace . Nice built -in kitchen with cook units, and bar .
Recreation room and carport. $17,500 .00 .
NEW
3 bedrooms. 2 baths . nice ·kitchen with stove and
refrigerator-freezer . full basement with garage, All
electric. Less than $25 ,000.00.
LOT
SYRACUSE tevel corner lot with small frame
building .
COMMERCIAL ,
CHESHIRE - Business lof with block building on Rf. 7.
BUILDING LOTS
WE have several locations. All sizes and prices .
COUNTRY lfOME
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms. Iilith, Pl ains water . Ni ce
klfchen with stove. Some paneling . 4 acr es of land . Only
$9,500 .00. .
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325

Real Estate For Sal e
JOHN

WHITE
REALTY¥

Contact AspdN
VERA EBLEH
Yfz.J021
16G Coal St,

Mkldloperl

129 Acre stock farm, 3 barns,
tool 'Shed, garage, 6 room
modern
home
with
basement , 2 m i les from
Langsville on State Route
124. Will be sold with or
wltllouf mineral rights .
Price
reduced ;
owner
moving South, 3 bedroom
modern home with basement'
and carport, South Second
Ave., Mlddlepor,l ..

' 7·7·3tp

'.I

$4392.25

Gallipolis

446·3273

Business Services

LOTS in Mei gs School Di strict ;
phone 992 -6329.
7-7-6tp
4

Sticker Price
OUR PRICE

$3670

,1.

110 Mechanic Street

I

PU AS6H f • P h &lt;&gt;'" OH 1-IQO

Bill

1972 FURY.Ill 4 DR. SEDAN
~; e~~~~~t.ioning &amp; all

TWO RIVER L_£OR D I MOTOR co.
WE'RE WHEE LIN&amp; DEALIN

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

moo.oo.

LOOK ·FOR OUR
SIGN

..•.

10 room house,
• R'ACINE 510 4·Door Sedan I
bath, basement, garage , t wo
lots . Phone 949 -4313.
4·5-tfp

- - - -- - -

. Mobile Homes For Sale

:H -Cutt
111 - Becominl
39-Above (poel. )
1were of
41-Coo llnl dtvlctt 112-Prohi blh
42-Ray of ll&amp;ht
113-Re nown
44- Brltlsh prisons 116--Soutflern
47- Weakens
blackbi rd
48- Chutlsl na
118- Parcels oll and
49- Radon
119-Peel
50-Drivel (Ilana)
122-Slaie
54- Fust
productions
55-Solo
124- Fiber plant

77- Female

Bx35
TRAILER ,
co untry
location. Phone 992 -3954 .
1971 TOYOTA Corolla, 2 dr .
7-7-61c
sedan , low mileage, excellent
conditi on ; phone 992 -7 02~ .
·
7-9-6tc
PA STORE, phone 992-6329 .
7-7 61p
1968 FORD Falrlane ; air COUNTRY home , close t o
condit ioning ; phone 742-5361.
Forked Run Lake ; free gas,
7-9-3tc
partl y furnished . Reasonable
rent ; prefer retired couple ; 1965 FORD Th underbird con ref erences ; phone 378·6298.
vertible with 1968 428 motor ,
7-7-lfc
excellent motor . Asking $350 ,
phone 992 -6433.
HOUSE, ideal for couple or
7-Htp
gentleman ; bath and shower,
complete pri vacy; gas heat,
close to Middleport ; completely furnished ; phone 992·
5 FT. BU SH Hog . Phone 949·
7791 after 5 p.m .
2783 .
7-7-3tc
7-5-6tc

ca mper. like new ; ca ll 949BAY riding horse, $ 175 or tra de,
5424 after 7 p.m .
ph one 992-6793 .
7-7-2tp
6-29 -7tc
~S;-::T;-::E::-:R::-:E:-0:-,-E
=-a-r_l_
y _ A_m_e-rlca n
·- - - - - - --

{a bbr.)

56-B racing

Auto Sales

For Sale or Trade

98-Reveal
99- He e rtentd
lOo-lnflrmlty
102-Scatter

28-Trap
30-Seed coati nl
31-Three·banded
armadillo
33-Fraalte
35--La ndtd
JI&gt;-Sow

F EMAL E eyeg lass es above
Racine Pl aning Mill along
hi ghway. Ph one 992 ·2480 .
7-6-31p

2 Dr . hardtop, 350 cu. in . V-8 engine, au to .,
radio , p. ste ering , p. bra kes. fa c. air cond .,
Dover white finish with blu e vi nyl interior, w s-w tires . Exira Clean .'

Real Estate ! ·· ·

- - -- - - For Sale

ONE bedroom

For Rent

Pomeroy

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT
OPEN UNTIL8:00 P.M. each evening

et c.

Phone 949-322 1.

"Your Chevy Deater"
Open Eves. TillS

992-2126

96--Fo r examp le

25- Everyone

Is this the perfect
Datsun?
·

Ask the expert.

DEPENDABLE CITY

brlstltt

23-Aid

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

you'll like our
--- ·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

94-Pertalning: to

22- Ciothini

cu rrency
133-Abstract being
134-Gi rl 's na me

5- Senl or {abbr.)

name
117-More unu1ual

17-Collea e de1ree
(1b br.)
21-Food tuters

27-$hiktspearlan

108-Cancealed
110-l rr ita l es
112- Prolllblts

deity
115-Lamb's pen

89-Sflleld
90-Conjunctlon

Chinese

99-Sym bol for
ca lcium
10 1-CartiU
103-Hog

16-Music: as
written

We are here to please you Appraisal &amp; Trading Policy!

RAWLINGS

SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972
65-Exisl s
66-H1n du
mendicant

446.0842

See Emerson Jones. Pe·a rl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

'69 CHEV. IMPALA

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.

Help Wanted

Employment

REDUCED PRICE!

Found

'

Plenty Of New Chevrolets With Air
Conditioning In Stock

Our wagon comes with all the great standa rd items you
have read about on thiS page except the trunk lid
antenna. I n addilion, you can also get extra -cost options
such as air conditionmg, au toma tiC transmission and
rad io on all models. See your Dodge Colt Deafer now'

MEN . WANTED - Immediate HANDY MAN l or grocer y store.
Good position for rel iabl e
openings
availabl e
for
person . Apply at Rac ine Food
qualified applicants in one of
Mark et.
over 67 fields in the U. S.
7-9-31c
Navy . Starting salary $268 per
month - plus fr ee medi cal and
dental ca re , hous i ng. food,
Wa nt~(;
trave l and 30 days pa i d
vaca tion per year . Phone WIL L DO da ytime bab ysitt ing
Petty Ofticer Peters at 593in my home for l or 2 children .
3566 col lect or ca l l toll free 1Rate s r easonable. Can give
800-282-1288 .
r efer.ences. Phone 992 -39 60
7-6 3tc
after 5 p.m.
7-9·61c
ACT
NOW
Join the - - - - - - - - ,: - oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gi ft WI LL pa 1nt r oofs ; r houses,

l - 72 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

GMAC Financing,Available

·.::

•,•,·•

Help Wanted

'3500

Notice

'

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
UP TO 36 MONTHS

Newport 4 dr . sedan, ai r cond.

'1469
DODGE COLT STATION WAGON

Pontiac

.

67 CHRYSLER ............. ~1295

8 ft. Step Side , heavy duty tires , V -8 eng ine, solid
cab, local 1 owner tru ck , was Sl595.

::::

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

.

.

1968 DiEVROLET 34 TON

992-2174
Buick

Custom 4dr. hdtp., air con d. , white, black
Sharp.

GALLIPOLIS

Eastern Ave.

ITH NELSON MOTORS, INC. (

1969 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE

992 -5342

Sol id body, good tires , 6 cyl ., std . tra ns.

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

•

"OWN A

radio.

1963 Dodge 4 Door ...................$199

Runs real good.

--

~. B .,

UPPER RT. 7

Parklane 4 dr . sedan.

440 H.T. Coupe. Loca ll owner. viny l interior, sharp blue
fi nish, good tires, v.a engi ne, au to. tran s., P.S. and radio .

1967 PONTIAC .................. on~ $1495

·1967 Buick Skylark

With air condition · .power steering, automatic trans., V-B eng., white
walls, tinted windshield, dlx. steering wheel, carpet lrl . &amp; rear, dl x. wheel
covers, protective bumper stripes, radio. Plus many more extras.
.
..

SMITH BUICK, INC.

68 MERCURY...............s1595

v.s

1968 Dodge Coronet ................11395

Newport 2 dr. H. T., light tan in color , fac tory air &amp; makes
a nice family car . Pr iced to sell.

lop. new LeSabre trade.

Skylark 2-dr. Sedan .

Capri ce 4 dr . hardtop, air con d.

L TO Coupe, 390 v.a engine, 3-speed , automatic, power
steering , power brak es, fa ctor y air, grey f inish. Good
white wall tires, radio.

1968 DiRYSLER ............... only $1595

'

68 CHEVROLET.. ..........~1795

1969 Ford............................ }1995

1968 DODGE POLARA .........only $1495

Buick
leSabre
4 Dr., air cond. , gold, dark brown vinyl

One local owner , 26,000 miles . Sharp.

Bi scayne 2 dr . sedan.

engine. automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white f inish, t;.la ck vinyl top,
vinyl Interior. White wall tire:s , like new , radio.

Local one owner . Priced to sell.

69 Datsun
..
.:'
Station Wagon .: '

71 Ford Pinto

Hardtop coupe,

Air cond ., one owner , 25,000 mile s. Like
new cond .

1970 Maverick Tudor

69 CHEVROLET. ........... 51495

trans-

'·

196? T. Bird

Dart 4 dr . sedan.

1970 Ford Galaxie 500...............$1995

500 Wagon, V·B. auto., real nice wagon for summer fun.

4 Dr . sed.,

condl~lonlng, V -8 ertglne, automatic

2 Dr . hdtp., all Buick extras, 60-40 seat.
New Limited trade.

WE BEAT ALL BIG
CITY DEALER PRICES!

70 DODGE ....................51895

mission , power steering , power brakes, good whltl side
wall s, many more extras. White fin ish, black vln)ft roof.
Prlced to move!

Many people thin k this sporty Colt hardtop is o,ur best·
lookmg num ber. And like all Cplts offered, it's. loaded
w1 l h a long l1st of standard feat ures people really dig.
Such things as fron t disc brakes ... ad1ustable steeri ng
column .. . and flow -th rough ven tilation-cool, man .

Fu ry 2 dr . sed ., 21,761 miles on th is car . One owner pri ced
to sel l.

69 Volkswagen
Bug

68 Volkswagen
Camper

Factory air

1970 Buick Limited

1972 BUICK SKYLARK
TUDOR SALE

Coronet 4 dr, sedan.

5

DODGE COLT TWO-DOOR HARDTOP

HUGE DISCOUNTS, LIBERAL TRADES.

•

70 DODGE ....................s2295

brakes, radio, red vinyl interior. black finish. White wall
tires , llke new .

Bonneville 2 dr . H.T., white with bl ack vinyl top . This car
has factory air . Loca I one owner . A rea I buy

Ton, V-8, auto . trans.

DOC SMITH SAYS:

4 Dr . sedan . air cond.

1970 Olevrolet Impala Spt Cpe. •. !2395

·:

Real ni ce - real clea n.

v .s standard.

1971 Chevelle Malibu H.T. Cpe. .. J2995

350.cu . ln. V-8 engine. turbo·hydramat ic, power steering &amp;

64 Ford camper

Pickup

.

Following are some great buys on one-owner
used cars traded in on new Buicks &amp; Pontiacs.

.,

PR\C£tl
10 SEll

40 NEW BUICKS &amp; OPElS IN STOCK.

ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT
HAS ARRIVED

70 .AMBASSADOR.........$2395

factory sticker. 241.

'·

USED
CARS

1972 Chewelle Malibu .................$3795
steering, power brakes, gulf green color, with green vln.yl
roof , vinyl Interior trim, radio, white wall tires. full wheel ·
covers, bumper guards, and all the extras. Low mileage,

::'

70 Ford
Pickup

V-8, standard.

I

Repeat·-of A Sellout

j;:_~---- COME! SEE!

Better Deal
At Your
Chevy Dealer!

• On display now at Dodge Dependable City in Middleport.
See the sharpest little car in the import market ... from
Dodge .... and brought to you by Dick Rawling s and his
Gang of Good Guys ...

Smith Nelson ·

Galaxie 500

70 Dodge
Pickup

I

·········
.

SUMMER
VALUES I

4-door, 350 V-8, factory alr," turbo hydramatlc, power

AT

gree.n

2 Dr . H.T., V-8, auto ., P.S ,
P B, tactory air. white
with blue vinyl fop .

City has caught them.

·-@
~

•

EXPERT
Wheel Ali&amp;J:uilent'
Ji;55
On Most Ameris an

cw

-GUARANTEE[)-;
Pho'ne 992-2094

Pomeroy HQIIIf ·&amp;· Auto
OpeniTiiS
Monday fhrli Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomtroy,Q
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rateo. Ph. 446·
4782, Galll~olls, John Russell.
Owner &amp; Dperalor.
5-12-ff•
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complefe Service
Phone 9~9-3821
Racine, Ohio
'C rltt Bradford
5·1·tfc

o
=•~D~E~L~L~W~H~E~E~L~a711~
g~
nm
~ent

·s EWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes . 992-22~.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Author ized Singer Sales an~
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfC'

3 Bed~oqm home, with ·
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750
We specl8llze Jn aluminum,
vinyl and steel sldlog ;
fiberglas, brick and stone i
complefe line of resrt:leii'lra t
and commercial ·roofing;
remodeling,
build i ng ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and e~terior painting :
complete line of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd . 992 ·
3916 .
•
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO,

. ....
ilL \ ·.-·
~

. ..

~ I •. ~

~-

"'1. -

.,=::::;;:;;;;;;;~;;:;;;;==;:'

_R_E_A_
D_Y--M
-IX----:CO
~N-:-C:-R~ETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy . Free
estimates. Phone 992· 32U.
Goegleln Ready -Mix !=o ..
Middleport, Ohio .
6-30-tft

E-·us

SE
FOR : Awnmgs, sform
doors and windows, carports, 1
marquees, alum inum siding
and railing . "A . Jacob, sales
representative. For free
· estimates, phone Charles;
Lisle, Syracuse, V . V.Johnson and Son, Inc .
J.2.tfo
SEWING MAI.:HINE serv1ce,
clean , oil , set tension S4.99.
Special
Electro - Grande '
Company . Phone 992-6517 .
5-21 -tf.c
OOZE R and back hoe war.,
ponds and sepllclanks; B &amp; K
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr. Jr.
5·2i -lfc
~--~::~ -

---

located at Crossroads, Rf. 124,
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
elec - ,
Wheels . balanced
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable From the largest
Bulldozer Radl~jor to fhe
rates. Phone 742-3232.
7-27 -tfc Smallest Heater Core .
Natllan Biggs
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller·
~odiatOI' Specialist
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.
:-:•
2-12-tfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been ,
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6-15-tfc

· CJQ1. Guy Nelgler for Building ·
Pfl . "2-217&lt;
Houses.
6-28-tfc

USED building supplies &amp;
safyage yartf; will wrKk
houses, buildings, etc . Covert
&amp; Martin Wreckage &amp;
Salvage Co., Laurel Cliff
across
from
Highland
Church ; phone 992-59.16.
7·9-i2tc

~=..,--:-:-:-=-;::-;;::;-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

· Pomeroy

HARRISON'S TV Service ,' open : PLASTERING &amp; refinishing old
9 a. ill. to 9 p.m .; free pickup
chimneys ; phone 992· 2368,
and delivery ; phone 992-2522 .
Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
6-13-tfc
7-S.6fp

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

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

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanksi.ISialled. George
~ Bitll Pullins. Phone 991·2478,_
~25- ffc

�•

..

&gt;

.;·.-"" · - · Jo • •'" ...

~

.. . .

':··

.
2S- The &amp;mday Tlmes • Sentlnei, Sunday, July G, 1972

. ;!2 - The SW!day Tlmes - Sentlnel,

,o•.,
..
,'~1·
...

1972

',

The COLTS have came

invite you
:to compare

,,,~,,'/..,_

to Meigs ·County

Always A

'•

and Rawlings Dependable

Don't Forget

Dr . H. T., loaded with
eKtras. Blue with white
vi nyl top . Loca ll y owned.

'l

·:· 4 •Dr .Galaxie
500
sedan , V-8, auto.,
P. B.,

P.S. ,

fa ctor y air,
white with black interior .

,

69 Oldsmobile :·:
Delta 88
Dr., factory air, P.S.,

71 Chi}Sier 300
.4

P. B.. white
vi nyl top.

with

July Is
New Car
Sale Month

l

) '4

We Want To Sell

· Color red. blk . v inyl top, vlk . vinyl interior; less than

40 New Cars

20,000 miles by local careful lady owner . 307 engine with
Turbo Hydramatic, power steering , P. B., radio, w-w trres,
spare never used, rally wheels, Pumper guards. Your
Inspection of this car will tell you If ' s the nicest .

·.,: .. 1970 PONTIAC ........................ $2995

1970 Dodge Polara ................... 2295

1969 PLYMOUTH..................... $1395
1969 FORD FAIRLANE ..............$1595

'

4 speed. Beautiful dr . blue.

factory air, P.S., P. B. Real n ice car, one owner .

1966 Buick Special 4 Door.......... 1895

Lemans 4 dr. H.T., fa ctor y air . Th is is on e of the clea nes t
cars In the Ohio Val ley.
··

v.w............................... }995
1960 v.w......;., .. ,................... }395
1967

Light tan . One owner.

v.a engine, auto. trans.,

P. S., vinyl inter ior. dark green
f in ish, good fir st l ine w ·S ·W tires and radio .

DODGE COLT FOUR·DOOR SEDAN

::::

Thi~ is the one to choose if you're look ing for lots of
room. More standard features' You want more standard
features? How about a radio antenna built righ t in to the
tru nk l1d? Or four headl ights' Or vanable rat1o steering?
Or a fu lly synchronized four-speed gea r box'

1965 Impala HT Cpe. ................. $395
V-B, automatic, P.S.,

~
USED CARS

Open Evenings Till7 p. m ." &amp; Sat . Till 5 P. M.
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat .

CADILLA~ ""
Of Course You Can"

E

TRUCKS

:·

j.,urquoi-se, black top, turquoise interior, fu ll power
equipm ent, Climate Control a i r conditioning.

'··

'•'•'•

DEMONSTRATOR
Dark brown finish. beige viny l top. brown leather
interior , lilt.telescope steering wheel. AM-FM
radio, tint ed glass, W·S·W tire s, Clima te Con trol air
conditioning.

.. •.•

2 - NEW 72 CAOILLACS IN STOCK
Both Sedan De Vi lles . One green with green .,.inyl top,
gr een inter ior . One dark bl ue, blue v in yl top , blue interior,
both ha ve power equipm en t, l il t . telescope stee r ing wheel,
AM ·FM radio, tinted glass, w-s-w tires, Cl im ate Control
ai r cond it ioning .

Party Plan m the Country

lnm and cu t trees, cl ean

-

a1t ics ;

25th year ! Com missions up to JO pet . Fan ta stl c Hostess Awards . Call or
write " SANTA's PARTIES"
Avon , Conn . 0600 1. Telephone
1 t2o3l 673 -3455. AL so
BOOKING PAR T IE S.
7-2-30tc

OVER 25 NEW OLDS IN STOCK!

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

our

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

Pomeroy .

IN

Open Eves . Til 6- Til 5 P.M . Sar.

MIDDLEPORT

"You'l l Li ke 0 11 " Qua lity Way of Doing Bu siness"

Phone Faye Manley
992·5592
In
Pomeroy
Phone 992-2156

.

Help
Wanted
.

WILL CARE for pre-school BEAUTICIAN , mu st hav e
chi ld ren in my hom e, $3 a
manager's license ; Helen's
day ; phone 992 -6187.
Beauty Shop ; phone 992-289() .
7-2·6fc
7-9-6tc

l -S ho ws so i1C1 tude
6- tnd lvldu .. l's
,1 rnunal
gua rd i an spi nt
11 - Subllety
I8- W1II ow

19-Piilcll lor
comb at
20- Ai n.'e
71-Sco ui sh pla1d
ZJ- Oanl!.h
rtlea-.ure
24- Eve rybody's

uncle
76~ 0ne

of

Co hm1b u:o's

sl11ps

27-Fr&lt;ench artic le
29- A month
JO-Son oJ.. Adam
31 - Norse monarch

32-SIIkworm
33- Cooling devic e
34-Mas t
35-War god
36-Fi!s of illness
38- Pa c ks away
40-Hindu cymbals

41 -Dart
42-Ursine animal
43-Suffix forming
nouns
45-Long fOI
46-Teu tonic deity
4 7-Go by water

48-Beve rage
49- Swi mmer
51-Girl's name
52- N.otB o f s ca le

53-Emmet

54-Peruu
55-landina: He ld
57-Celtic Nej)tune
58-Strikes
60-Microbe
~1-Sklll

62-Salll ni' vessel
64--Complts point

G7-lanjuage
peculiarity
69-S atety device
7 1- Nove lty

73-h hJ
74 - 0ill~eed

76--Sea·going
vesse l s
79- Pi ace in line
81-Mohammedan
name
82-Du tch measure
84-Givtl up
!lS-Back down
(COl loq.)
B{- Hera ldry :

grafted
90-0ne·uason
pla nb
92- Ri\ler In
Scotla nd
93-Pro l its

95-Cha llenges.
97-Cudgel
98-Exist

124-Eiectrlfied

particles
125-l dent lcai
126--Pm pos ition
127-Retreat
129-Take s from
131-Weary
132- Unit of

104-Quarrel
l 05--C hatlenaed

91-Measure of
weilht (abbr.)

basements,

6· 1001c

Wanteo To Buy
Furniture , oak tables,
organs , dishes, clocks, brass
bed s, or complete hou seholds.
Wr ite M. 0 . Mill er , Rt . 4,
Pomer oy, Ohio. Cal l 992-627 1.
6·28 -tl c

OLD

For Rent

Except Saturday &amp; Sunday

For Rent

FUR N ISHE D slee p i ng room
with refrigerator and sto ve.
3 AND 4 ROuM furnished and Phone 992-27.80 or 992 -3432.
unfurni s hed
apartments.
6-30-lf c
Phone 992 -5434.
4- 12-lft
- , - - - - - - -UN FURNIS H ED apartment,
13&lt;1 Mu lberry Ave .. phone 9'&gt;23962.
6· 11 tfc

character

trai ler apartm ent s, ideal for coup les.
Con tact McClur e's Dairy Isle.
992-5248 or 992-3436.
7 9-6tc

4 ROOM unfurn ished uPstairs
apartment ; adults on l y ;
phone 992-3056.
7-2-6lc

-------

APARTMENTS, close Ia Me igs
High Sc hool ; cal l 773-5268
aft er S p.m .
7-2·6fc

ONE DUPL EX apartment. 5
rooms and bath , small yard,
exce ll en t location. Phone 9922780 or 992 -3432 .
7-9-lfc

---------- -

13&amp;-Seines
137- Was Dorn11

136-Feellna:
139-0e l i rlum

tremens (abbr.)
140-So be it !
141- Sic k
142-Title
l 43.....:...Sels in around
144- Undaun te d
1~ &amp;-Encomium

148-0in
149-Hurl in lil

150-Takes on e's
part

151- Snake
DOWN

1- En c losu re
2-Movi na
3-Unlt of Irani an
cu rrency

I I ) -Preposition

6-S torin

114- Babylcni an

7-City In Au nla
8-Number
9-Prin t er 's

4-Even lni (poe t.)

me•sure

118-Youna boy5
119--Wan

to-Expert
11- lntlma te
12-Preposition

-----------

120-Hockey

13-Buebe ll team

pos ition {abbr.)
121- lmprove

14-Arabian
chieftains

123-Mudow

l&amp;-H11Ith of mind

---------- -

i968

----------1971 Y EL LOWSTONE truc k

ELCUN/-1,

12

X

55,

2

72-Beveraae
73- Aru
75-Sia:n of zodiac

106-Wei rdut

107- Trlfles

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .

-.-1--1

126-flll
128-Turn insld•

""

OUI

130-lampray
volumes
132-Ph!IIUt
135-0ne appoud

1-+-1--t

-1-·+-+-+--1

142-Baw

(abbr.)

•

::-:--=-::=-----~7..:.·7-6tc
. ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Cleaner complete wlfh at ·
tachments, cordwlnder and
paint spray . Used but In like
new condlflon . Pay $3.4 .45
cash or budget plan available .
Phone 992-56-41.

7·7·61c

40' x 10' MOBILE home wlthalr

conditioning. Call for ·, p.
- -+-+-+--1 pointment
992·5986 or· 992· 2126.

137- Rant
138-Skldded
U O-The wa lla ba

148--A eon tintn l

CAStj paid for aft makes ana
models of mobile homes .
PhOJle area code 61~·~23-9531.
~-13-ffc

131-Huvy

88-Candie

machine In original factory
ca rton . Zfg .zag to · make
buttonholes , sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just tho twist of a
single-dial. Left in lay-away
and never been used. Will sell
for only $47 cash, or credit
term s available. Phone 992·
5641.
.

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

125--Take one't part

86-GQ In

:N:-;E:-;W
;-:
. -:-:
19:::
7-:2 -:ZI-g-.z-a-g -se- wIng

'c omplete mobile hom•
·s erv ice ~ plu s gigantic
'display of mobile homes
always available at ...

109--Food proar•ms

80--Tidy .,..
8 .3-Girl'l name

r~Jff

78-compess point

stere o, 4 speaker sound
system, 4 •peed automatic
changer . Use our budget
terms. Balan ce $69 .15 . Use
our time payment plan . Call
992-7085 .
7-7-6tc

'Air Conditioners
•Awnings
• Underpinninq

105-Apportlon

143-Sted co ntainer
144-A state (abb r.)
l.fS-Indel lni U!
article
147--cfllnfl st mite

7-7-6tc
--------BEAUTIFUL Walnut f i nish

50 X 10, 2 bedroom , pri ced
reasonably , phone Chester
985-3379.
7-9-6tp

(pl.)

59-Helplnl
GO-Festive
61 - Pald noti ce
63-Sheet of alan
66-Comp111 point
67- Cyprlnold llsfl
68-Wandert
almlenly
70--More Inflamed
71 - 0 istant

style, AM -FM rad io combination , • speed automatic
changer , 4 speaker sound
system . Balance $78 .69 . Use
our tim e payment plan . Call
992·7085 .

bedroom , com plete with
underpinning ; pri ced very
reasonab le; phone 992-3863 or
992 5844 after 3 p.m.
7-7-2tc

104-Noiieltles

medicinal

Price $3,000, Vlncenf Knlg~t .
6·30-6tp

1971 MOBILE home,' fi x-60, i
bedroom ; must sell, leaving
area ; phone 742-5825 for fn .
format ion .
6·29-9tc ·

I

NEW CAR SALE
DDII\Pft
I
1\1\IL._}

$1995

~I ftl"llr~'

"'...,". n;.u

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Ga ltipolis, Ohio

:::------

G . E. REFRIGERATOR:
wrlnger - tyr,e
Mayta
washer, excelent c&lt;indltlon; ~
porcelain top cabinets; gas
cook stove ; metal table and
four. chairs; Bissell handsweeper; lull-size. mefal bed ,
Free Westinghouse sewlnQ
machine In cabln•t · phone
992-62~7 .
' '

BAIRD
BROS.
AUTO
PARTS

IDEAL 5-ACRE RAN CHO.
La ke Conchas , New Mexico.
$2,875. No Down . No inter est.
$25 mo. Vacati on Parad ise.
Money
Mak er .
Free
B ro chure. Ra nc.hos : Box
200100, Alameda, California
94501.
6-7 30tp
I

. '

.p~'

Your Datsu n d eal er is the Small Car Expert.
Let him show you what mak es the 510 4-Door Sedan
such a perfectly great economical family car .
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Tinted glass
R eclining front bucket seats
Whit..watls
Overhead cam engine
Vinyl upholstery
Safety front disc brakes
Independent rear suspension

R A-C-1N
- --,
E--:6 -r o_o_m-;ho:-u:::se:-,-:::
bath '
uti lity r oom, garage , SlO,OOO;
~hone 949-4195.
_ _ c
3 31 11

GUARANTEED

USED &amp;
REBUILT

HOUSE. in Long Bottom . phone
985 -3529 .
6-i1 -lfc

1 ACRE land , ne w 2 room
cab in ; 9 acr es pa sture land ,
barn and outbuildings ; can be
bought on lan d contra ct .
Phone 949 -3073 .
7-5-6tc

PH. 446-4060
CLOSED All DAY
THURS. &amp; SUN.

Is this the perfect Datsun for you? Try it.

CLELAND
JIEALTY

Drive a Datsun , •• then decide.

DATSUN
PRODUCT OF

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OH 10

For

For Sale

S~l "

NEW TOTAL electric
apartment, 2 bedroom, walk in closets , large living room,
kitchen and dining area .
5443 .
8-15-lfc
Phone 992-7384 or 992 -7133.
7-9-3tc
TOMATOES, Cucumbers,
green peppers ; Geraldine FABRIC
INN ,
Polyester
. Cleland , Ra cine , Oh io.
Doubleknits for less . Hun7-6-lfc
dreds of Yards. From Tuppers Plains. pass school , go 4
YARb SALE, Saturday, July
miles , turn left onto County
8th, 9 a . m. at Archie Ellis
Rd.
50 ,
sign .
Between
residence ; dishes~ curtains,
Hockingport and Reedsville,
draperies, good used rugs,
turn onto County Rd . 50 near
about anything you want,
Eden Church , sign . Phone 378·
chairs, some old things; ra in
6276 .
or shine , it will be in a room or
7-9-6tp
porch If it rains. Phone 992·
6695 .
'71 CONSOLE model , 23" black
7-6-2lp
and white TV, $75, New 3-pc.
bedroom suite, $75 . Phone 9926021.
7-9-Jic
ZENITH color TV, 5 years old $100; phone 992.7087 after 5: 30 H&amp;N DAY OLD or started
p. m .
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
7-6-31c
cage
grown
available.
Poultry
housing
&amp;
YARD SALE - 22 Inch lawn automation. Modern Poultry ,
mower, $15; G. E. hair dryer,
399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992·
$3 ; G. 'E. Canister Vac, $5 ;
,2164 .
toys, tools, fishing supplies
and many misc. Items, cheap
.all day Saturday and 1 3414 INTERNATIONAL
Sunday, July 8th &amp; 9fh , 339
Tractor with front end loader
Lasley Street, Pomeroy , (off
and 312C backhoe ; Earl R.
Mulberry, 5th house on right.)
Werner, Mlddleporf ; phone
7-6-Jtc
992·2769 at Bradbury .
7-9-6tp
PONTIAC Bonneville, 2 door
hardtop, factory air , blue with COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works, E: Main St .,
black vinyl top, 26,000 actual
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891.
miTes . Call after 5 p.m . 992·
4-12-tfc
593-4 .
7-2·6tt
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy ,
ParkY iew Kennels, Phone 'W2-

---------=--:--

----------

Real Estate For Sale '

60 ALL CROP harvester, Allis·
Chalmers ; phone 7~2· 3656.
' TUPPERS PLAINS - 6 rooms
7·9-6tp
and bath all -electric home, 2
---=~~--=----::::
closed -In porches, garage, a
lot 200 x 200. for further In ·
1.72 ACRE lot; 5 guns ; phone
formation, phone 667·362~.
7~2·3656.
7..
6 3tc
7-9-2tp

RT. 7 NEXT TO

608 E. Main St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

NISSAN

OLD SILVER BRIDGE
KANAUGA, OHIO

BUILDERS
OPPORTUNITY

Close i n, 30 a cres, good
drainag e, Chester wat er ,
good .roads , I DEAL for
homesiles . $26.800 .00.
WHAT A KITCHEN!
If your Mr5. likes to cook,
then her Mr. ought to see thi s
new moderni zed kit chen. 3
large bedroom s, walk · in
closets , W7 baths, utility
room, full basement, gre~t
rec . room, 1 acre ground , tn
town . 528,500.00.
S1.000.00 DOWN
VIEW OF THE RIVER, 3
bedrooms , bath , porches.
part ba se ment. metal roof ,
storage build i ng, garage .
$6,900.00.
BATTLE OF THE
BULGE?
If you are fighting to provide
enough room for a growing
family ..• Here's a place
Ideally suited. 4 bedrooms,
l'h baths , call for parti culars. $12,800 .00 .
LET US SELL YOUR
3 BEOROOM HOME
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
REAL TO~
PHON-E 992·2259

This is the place to lind the 1972
Mercury line-up of outslanding
values. Check our prices at the
sign of the cat and test drive your
choice ol 1972 Mercurys!

THE CATSARE
HERE
One Acre of New Cars, Trucks and Late
Models to Choose From .

SEE CHARLIE, JACK &amp; BILL

~IIH

Real Estate

;'.(li o

Your Authorized Ford-Mercury Dealer

.

1972 PLYMOUTH GRAN CPE. 2 Dr. HT.

71
3
$4060

Loaded with air con·
•
ditioniiia and all the
~
extras.Sticker · Price S47Sl.8S
' OU-R--PRICE ·.. " · · · · · ·

.

'

1972 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN

fr~~.s ~~:d~~nd~;t~ni~~:

etc. Sticker Price $4896.75
OUR PRICE

1972 GOLD DUSTER
225 engine, 3 speed, floor
shift.
Sticker Price $2642.85
OUR PRICE

$2515

1

225 engine, auromall
transmission package .
Sticker Price 53103.75

30 MORE IN STOCK!

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

Business Services

-----------

BEDRO OM home.
full
basement, gas furnace, 200ft.
river frontage .. Also 5 room
house with bath, basement,
gas furnace on adjoining lot.
Sam Arnold, Syracu se, Ohio ;
phone 992·2360 .
7-7-6tc

EARTH MOVING

Oo i:er &amp; End loader work ,
pond s, basement, land TWO homes for sale.; 1 m ile ·
scaping . We have 2 size
Nort h at Eastern
H igh
doters
, 2 size loaders. Work
School; both have bath and a
d9ne
by
hour or contract .
half; 4 bedrooms; bu ilt -in
Free · Estimates. We also'I
kitchen s and wall -to -wall
haul fill dirt, top ,soil. Dump
carpet; call 985-3598.
6-28-12tc
trucks and low -boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
88 ACRES, low $20' s, farmhouse
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3525
and other buildings, Over 200
aiter 7 p.m. or phone 992 ft. frontage . Must see to
5232.
appreciate .
Rosemary
Withem , 239-0647, . GRANDSTAFF, INC ., REALTOR ,
471 -2112.
7·9-tfc

Pomfroy, Ohio 45769
COUNTRY HOME ,
NEAR POMEROY - One tloor , 3 bedroom s, bath , fur ·
nace . Nice built -in kitchen with cook units, and bar .
Recreation room and carport. $17,500 .00 .
NEW
3 bedrooms. 2 baths . nice ·kitchen with stove and
refrigerator-freezer . full basement with garage, All
electric. Less than $25 ,000.00.
LOT
SYRACUSE tevel corner lot with small frame
building .
COMMERCIAL ,
CHESHIRE - Business lof with block building on Rf. 7.
BUILDING LOTS
WE have several locations. All sizes and prices .
COUNTRY lfOME
ON ROUTE 7 - 2 bedrooms. Iilith, Pl ains water . Ni ce
klfchen with stove. Some paneling . 4 acr es of land . Only
$9,500 .00. .
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325

Real Estate For Sal e
JOHN

WHITE
REALTY¥

Contact AspdN
VERA EBLEH
Yfz.J021
16G Coal St,

Mkldloperl

129 Acre stock farm, 3 barns,
tool 'Shed, garage, 6 room
modern
home
with
basement , 2 m i les from
Langsville on State Route
124. Will be sold with or
wltllouf mineral rights .
Price
reduced ;
owner
moving South, 3 bedroom
modern home with basement'
and carport, South Second
Ave., Mlddlepor,l ..

' 7·7·3tp

'.I

$4392.25

Gallipolis

446·3273

Business Services

LOTS in Mei gs School Di strict ;
phone 992 -6329.
7-7-6tp
4

Sticker Price
OUR PRICE

$3670

,1.

110 Mechanic Street

I

PU AS6H f • P h &lt;&gt;'" OH 1-IQO

Bill

1972 FURY.Ill 4 DR. SEDAN
~; e~~~~~t.ioning &amp; all

TWO RIVER L_£OR D I MOTOR co.
WE'RE WHEE LIN&amp; DEALIN

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

moo.oo.

LOOK ·FOR OUR
SIGN

..•.

10 room house,
• R'ACINE 510 4·Door Sedan I
bath, basement, garage , t wo
lots . Phone 949 -4313.
4·5-tfp

- - - -- - -

. Mobile Homes For Sale

:H -Cutt
111 - Becominl
39-Above (poel. )
1were of
41-Coo llnl dtvlctt 112-Prohi blh
42-Ray of ll&amp;ht
113-Re nown
44- Brltlsh prisons 116--Soutflern
47- Weakens
blackbi rd
48- Chutlsl na
118- Parcels oll and
49- Radon
119-Peel
50-Drivel (Ilana)
122-Slaie
54- Fust
productions
55-Solo
124- Fiber plant

77- Female

Bx35
TRAILER ,
co untry
location. Phone 992 -3954 .
1971 TOYOTA Corolla, 2 dr .
7-7-61c
sedan , low mileage, excellent
conditi on ; phone 992 -7 02~ .
·
7-9-6tc
PA STORE, phone 992-6329 .
7-7 61p
1968 FORD Falrlane ; air COUNTRY home , close t o
condit ioning ; phone 742-5361.
Forked Run Lake ; free gas,
7-9-3tc
partl y furnished . Reasonable
rent ; prefer retired couple ; 1965 FORD Th underbird con ref erences ; phone 378·6298.
vertible with 1968 428 motor ,
7-7-lfc
excellent motor . Asking $350 ,
phone 992 -6433.
HOUSE, ideal for couple or
7-Htp
gentleman ; bath and shower,
complete pri vacy; gas heat,
close to Middleport ; completely furnished ; phone 992·
5 FT. BU SH Hog . Phone 949·
7791 after 5 p.m .
2783 .
7-7-3tc
7-5-6tc

ca mper. like new ; ca ll 949BAY riding horse, $ 175 or tra de,
5424 after 7 p.m .
ph one 992-6793 .
7-7-2tp
6-29 -7tc
~S;-::T;-::E::-:R::-:E:-0:-,-E
=-a-r_l_
y _ A_m_e-rlca n
·- - - - - - --

{a bbr.)

56-B racing

Auto Sales

For Sale or Trade

98-Reveal
99- He e rtentd
lOo-lnflrmlty
102-Scatter

28-Trap
30-Seed coati nl
31-Three·banded
armadillo
33-Fraalte
35--La ndtd
JI&gt;-Sow

F EMAL E eyeg lass es above
Racine Pl aning Mill along
hi ghway. Ph one 992 ·2480 .
7-6-31p

2 Dr . hardtop, 350 cu. in . V-8 engine, au to .,
radio , p. ste ering , p. bra kes. fa c. air cond .,
Dover white finish with blu e vi nyl interior, w s-w tires . Exira Clean .'

Real Estate ! ·· ·

- - -- - - For Sale

ONE bedroom

For Rent

Pomeroy

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT
OPEN UNTIL8:00 P.M. each evening

et c.

Phone 949-322 1.

"Your Chevy Deater"
Open Eves. TillS

992-2126

96--Fo r examp le

25- Everyone

Is this the perfect
Datsun?
·

Ask the expert.

DEPENDABLE CITY

brlstltt

23-Aid

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

you'll like our
--- ·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

94-Pertalning: to

22- Ciothini

cu rrency
133-Abstract being
134-Gi rl 's na me

5- Senl or {abbr.)

name
117-More unu1ual

17-Collea e de1ree
(1b br.)
21-Food tuters

27-$hiktspearlan

108-Cancealed
110-l rr ita l es
112- Prolllblts

deity
115-Lamb's pen

89-Sflleld
90-Conjunctlon

Chinese

99-Sym bol for
ca lcium
10 1-CartiU
103-Hog

16-Music: as
written

We are here to please you Appraisal &amp; Trading Policy!

RAWLINGS

SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972
65-Exisl s
66-H1n du
mendicant

446.0842

See Emerson Jones. Pe·a rl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS

'69 CHEV. IMPALA

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.

Help Wanted

Employment

REDUCED PRICE!

Found

'

Plenty Of New Chevrolets With Air
Conditioning In Stock

Our wagon comes with all the great standa rd items you
have read about on thiS page except the trunk lid
antenna. I n addilion, you can also get extra -cost options
such as air conditionmg, au toma tiC transmission and
rad io on all models. See your Dodge Colt Deafer now'

MEN . WANTED - Immediate HANDY MAN l or grocer y store.
Good position for rel iabl e
openings
availabl e
for
person . Apply at Rac ine Food
qualified applicants in one of
Mark et.
over 67 fields in the U. S.
7-9-31c
Navy . Starting salary $268 per
month - plus fr ee medi cal and
dental ca re , hous i ng. food,
Wa nt~(;
trave l and 30 days pa i d
vaca tion per year . Phone WIL L DO da ytime bab ysitt ing
Petty Ofticer Peters at 593in my home for l or 2 children .
3566 col lect or ca l l toll free 1Rate s r easonable. Can give
800-282-1288 .
r efer.ences. Phone 992 -39 60
7-6 3tc
after 5 p.m.
7-9·61c
ACT
NOW
Join the - - - - - - - - ,: - oldest
Toy
&amp;
Gi ft WI LL pa 1nt r oofs ; r houses,

l - 72 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

GMAC Financing,Available

·.::

•,•,·•

Help Wanted

'3500

Notice

'

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
UP TO 36 MONTHS

Newport 4 dr . sedan, ai r cond.

'1469
DODGE COLT STATION WAGON

Pontiac

.

67 CHRYSLER ............. ~1295

8 ft. Step Side , heavy duty tires , V -8 eng ine, solid
cab, local 1 owner tru ck , was Sl595.

::::

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

.

.

1968 DiEVROLET 34 TON

992-2174
Buick

Custom 4dr. hdtp., air con d. , white, black
Sharp.

GALLIPOLIS

Eastern Ave.

ITH NELSON MOTORS, INC. (

1969 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE

992 -5342

Sol id body, good tires , 6 cyl ., std . tra ns.

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond

•

"OWN A

radio.

1963 Dodge 4 Door ...................$199

Runs real good.

--

~. B .,

UPPER RT. 7

Parklane 4 dr . sedan.

440 H.T. Coupe. Loca ll owner. viny l interior, sharp blue
fi nish, good tires, v.a engi ne, au to. tran s., P.S. and radio .

1967 PONTIAC .................. on~ $1495

·1967 Buick Skylark

With air condition · .power steering, automatic trans., V-B eng., white
walls, tinted windshield, dlx. steering wheel, carpet lrl . &amp; rear, dl x. wheel
covers, protective bumper stripes, radio. Plus many more extras.
.
..

SMITH BUICK, INC.

68 MERCURY...............s1595

v.s

1968 Dodge Coronet ................11395

Newport 2 dr. H. T., light tan in color , fac tory air &amp; makes
a nice family car . Pr iced to sell.

lop. new LeSabre trade.

Skylark 2-dr. Sedan .

Capri ce 4 dr . hardtop, air con d.

L TO Coupe, 390 v.a engine, 3-speed , automatic, power
steering , power brak es, fa ctor y air, grey f inish. Good
white wall tires, radio.

1968 DiRYSLER ............... only $1595

'

68 CHEVROLET.. ..........~1795

1969 Ford............................ }1995

1968 DODGE POLARA .........only $1495

Buick
leSabre
4 Dr., air cond. , gold, dark brown vinyl

One local owner , 26,000 miles . Sharp.

Bi scayne 2 dr . sedan.

engine. automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white f inish, t;.la ck vinyl top,
vinyl Interior. White wall tire:s , like new , radio.

Local one owner . Priced to sell.

69 Datsun
..
.:'
Station Wagon .: '

71 Ford Pinto

Hardtop coupe,

Air cond ., one owner , 25,000 mile s. Like
new cond .

1970 Maverick Tudor

69 CHEVROLET. ........... 51495

trans-

'·

196? T. Bird

Dart 4 dr . sedan.

1970 Ford Galaxie 500...............$1995

500 Wagon, V·B. auto., real nice wagon for summer fun.

4 Dr . sed.,

condl~lonlng, V -8 ertglne, automatic

2 Dr . hdtp., all Buick extras, 60-40 seat.
New Limited trade.

WE BEAT ALL BIG
CITY DEALER PRICES!

70 DODGE ....................51895

mission , power steering , power brakes, good whltl side
wall s, many more extras. White fin ish, black vln)ft roof.
Prlced to move!

Many people thin k this sporty Colt hardtop is o,ur best·
lookmg num ber. And like all Cplts offered, it's. loaded
w1 l h a long l1st of standard feat ures people really dig.
Such things as fron t disc brakes ... ad1ustable steeri ng
column .. . and flow -th rough ven tilation-cool, man .

Fu ry 2 dr . sed ., 21,761 miles on th is car . One owner pri ced
to sel l.

69 Volkswagen
Bug

68 Volkswagen
Camper

Factory air

1970 Buick Limited

1972 BUICK SKYLARK
TUDOR SALE

Coronet 4 dr, sedan.

5

DODGE COLT TWO-DOOR HARDTOP

HUGE DISCOUNTS, LIBERAL TRADES.

•

70 DODGE ....................s2295

brakes, radio, red vinyl interior. black finish. White wall
tires , llke new .

Bonneville 2 dr . H.T., white with bl ack vinyl top . This car
has factory air . Loca I one owner . A rea I buy

Ton, V-8, auto . trans.

DOC SMITH SAYS:

4 Dr . sedan . air cond.

1970 Olevrolet Impala Spt Cpe. •. !2395

·:

Real ni ce - real clea n.

v .s standard.

1971 Chevelle Malibu H.T. Cpe. .. J2995

350.cu . ln. V-8 engine. turbo·hydramat ic, power steering &amp;

64 Ford camper

Pickup

.

Following are some great buys on one-owner
used cars traded in on new Buicks &amp; Pontiacs.

.,

PR\C£tl
10 SEll

40 NEW BUICKS &amp; OPElS IN STOCK.

ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT
HAS ARRIVED

70 .AMBASSADOR.........$2395

factory sticker. 241.

'·

USED
CARS

1972 Chewelle Malibu .................$3795
steering, power brakes, gulf green color, with green vln.yl
roof , vinyl Interior trim, radio, white wall tires. full wheel ·
covers, bumper guards, and all the extras. Low mileage,

::'

70 Ford
Pickup

V-8, standard.

I

Repeat·-of A Sellout

j;:_~---- COME! SEE!

Better Deal
At Your
Chevy Dealer!

• On display now at Dodge Dependable City in Middleport.
See the sharpest little car in the import market ... from
Dodge .... and brought to you by Dick Rawling s and his
Gang of Good Guys ...

Smith Nelson ·

Galaxie 500

70 Dodge
Pickup

I

·········
.

SUMMER
VALUES I

4-door, 350 V-8, factory alr," turbo hydramatlc, power

AT

gree.n

2 Dr . H.T., V-8, auto ., P.S ,
P B, tactory air. white
with blue vinyl fop .

City has caught them.

·-@
~

•

EXPERT
Wheel Ali&amp;J:uilent'
Ji;55
On Most Ameris an

cw

-GUARANTEE[)-;
Pho'ne 992-2094

Pomeroy HQIIIf ·&amp;· Auto
OpeniTiiS
Monday fhrli Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomtroy,Q
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rateo. Ph. 446·
4782, Galll~olls, John Russell.
Owner &amp; Dperalor.
5-12-ff•
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complefe Service
Phone 9~9-3821
Racine, Ohio
'C rltt Bradford
5·1·tfc

o
=•~D~E~L~L~W~H~E~E~L~a711~
g~
nm
~ent

·s EWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes . 992-22~.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Author ized Singer Sales an~
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfC'

3 Bed~oqm home, with ·
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..
ONLY $13,750
We specl8llze Jn aluminum,
vinyl and steel sldlog ;
fiberglas, brick and stone i
complefe line of resrt:leii'lra t
and commercial ·roofing;
remodeling,
build i ng ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and e~terior painting :
complete line of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd . 992 ·
3916 .
•
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO,

. ....
ilL \ ·.-·
~

. ..

~ I •. ~

~-

"'1. -

.,=::::;;:;;;;;;;~;;:;;;;==;:'

_R_E_A_
D_Y--M
-IX----:CO
~N-:-C:-R~ETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy . Free
estimates. Phone 992· 32U.
Goegleln Ready -Mix !=o ..
Middleport, Ohio .
6-30-tft

E-·us

SE
FOR : Awnmgs, sform
doors and windows, carports, 1
marquees, alum inum siding
and railing . "A . Jacob, sales
representative. For free
· estimates, phone Charles;
Lisle, Syracuse, V . V.Johnson and Son, Inc .
J.2.tfo
SEWING MAI.:HINE serv1ce,
clean , oil , set tension S4.99.
Special
Electro - Grande '
Company . Phone 992-6517 .
5-21 -tf.c
OOZE R and back hoe war.,
ponds and sepllclanks; B &amp; K
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr. Jr.
5·2i -lfc
~--~::~ -

---

located at Crossroads, Rf. 124,
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
elec - ,
Wheels . balanced
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable From the largest
Bulldozer Radl~jor to fhe
rates. Phone 742-3232.
7-27 -tfc Smallest Heater Core .
Natllan Biggs
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller·
~odiatOI' Specialist
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
662-3035.
:-:•
2-12-tfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been ,
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6-15-tfc

· CJQ1. Guy Nelgler for Building ·
Pfl . "2-217&lt;
Houses.
6-28-tfc

USED building supplies &amp;
safyage yartf; will wrKk
houses, buildings, etc . Covert
&amp; Martin Wreckage &amp;
Salvage Co., Laurel Cliff
across
from
Highland
Church ; phone 992-59.16.
7·9-i2tc

~=..,--:-:-:-=-;::-;;::;-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

· Pomeroy

HARRISON'S TV Service ,' open : PLASTERING &amp; refinishing old
9 a. ill. to 9 p.m .; free pickup
chimneys ; phone 992· 2368,
and delivery ; phone 992-2522 .
Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
6-13-tfc
7-S.6fp

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

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

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanksi.ISialled. George
~ Bitll Pullins. Phone 991·2478,_
~25- ffc

�,,

.

.• •

• ••

• ·'

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_,

24 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, July 9,1972

Gilligan Dips into Convention Fights
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) liov. John H. Gilligan was
scheduled to make a whirlwind
visit Saturday to discuss the
role of Democratic governors
at the party 's upcoming
national convention.
Gilligan's visit at the invitation of Gov. Dale Bumpers of
Arkansas, chairman of the
Democratic governors'
caucus, added to speculation
he might be advanced as a
possible vice presidential
candidate should Sen. George
S. McGovern win the
presidential nomination this
week.
Gilligan has steadfastly denied any interest in seeking national office this year. He recently said he would not run
with McGovern, even iJ asked.
But the governor was interested enough in the role of
state executives in party affairs that he consented to participate in the caucus, although
he said he had no specific input
to offer.
And political observers speculated the Democratic governors would like nothing better
than to land one of their own in
.the second spot on the national
ticket.
Governors of both parties
have often expressed complaints they occupy second-row
seats when it comes to national
party affairs.
Four years ago, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, in ascending from governor of
Maryland, broke a quartercentury tradition that the top
two spots in national government went to members of the
Washington incrowd.
Not since the days of Franklin D. Roosevelt had a governor
moved anywhere near the
White House.
So Gilligan, in the eyes of his
feUow Democratic governors,
has to be considered potential
timber for the second spot,
along with Gov. Marvin
Mandel of Maryland and Gov.
Patrick J . Lucey of Wisconsin.
In insisting he is not interested, Gilligan has said he would
not want to leave Ohio to Republican Lt. Gov. John W.
Brown.
'
The governor also is not unmindful of his own relatively
low popularity rating within his
own state, despite the fact his
image is shinier in foreign ter-

ritory .
Gilligan, an early backer of
Sen. EdmundS. Muskie for the
presidential nomination, said
he would "praise Muskie or
condemn him, whichever
would help most."
There are 'factors which
work against a McGovernGilligan coalition. The two are
similar in ideology, and both
come from a heartland staie.
This would not be good for a
balanced ticket.
Gilligan told a news confer-

ence last week that he was not
part of a "stop McGovern"
movement, that he did not plan
lo attend the conventioo in person or by proxy, and that he
would try to help reassemble
the party after the convention. ·
Healsowouldnotrule put the
possib!Hty of an appearance
here after the nominations are
sealed to work ror solidarity on
the Democratic platform.
Ohio's delegation, expected
in Sur.dal', will examine Itself
on \ile first two critical issues

GALLIPOLIS
B.I.G.
Associates have brought to
Gallipolis a "better idea" that
is grow ing: "Reading for
Successful Living."
Evidence of this "better
idea'' is seen in several stores
and business places in '!he city.
Attractive racks of books exciting; inspiring, up-to-date
books
from
Christian

'

.

publishers - are seen in the
general market place.
While some.folks talk about
the need for good literature and
others compbiin about smut,
B.l.G. says, "these folks, these
concerned business people of
Gallipolis, are doing something

following business places:
Price &amp; Sons Pharmacy,
Gillingham Drugs, Johnson
Grocery Co., Barr's Supermarket, G. C. Murphy Co., and
the Blue Fountain Motel.
Successful Living, Inc .,
started in Minneapolis, Minn.,
about it!"
in 1970. David Thornberg,
Reading for a successful president, and severa l
living racks can be found at the Christian businessmen were
determined to put their con. cern into action, believing that
people "tend to become what
they read." Thus they formed
the company to supply nondenominational; inspirational
paperback books to the general
public.
The books are marketed by
an open and ever-expanding
group of distributors, whose
goal is to saturate America
wfth good Christian literature
within the shortest possible
time.

Besides placing racks in
every business they can, these
dedicated distributors exhibit
books at book fairs, church
meetings, schools, and civic
and service clubs.
They sell direct to the public,
at the door and by mail.
Enthusiastic response from
many businesses, reslauranls,
stores and motels, as well as
the clergy and other individuals all across the
country, support the B.! .G.
view. The program has been
well received locally, as well,
according to reports from the
participan Is.
"We are proud to have this in
our own store, " declared one
local businessman.
"We are glad to include
Reading for Successful Living
among our endeavors," says
B.I.G. "It is, indeed, a better
idea that is growing!"

•

Meigs
_Property

'

·.

JOANN BarUey, Vinton, an employee of Price &amp; Sons
Pharmacy, Gallipolis, scans new book rack which contains
Reading lor Successful Living.

REGUlAR PASS BOOK
SAVINGS
EARN
(Compounded Quarterly) _ __
Golden Passbook Savings•
(Compounded Quarterly)

and 90 Day Certificates
of Deposit* Eam--12 MONTHS

CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT~ EARN--

24 MONTHS

CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT*
.

.

-¥-Minimum Initial Depotlf$1,000.00 or More

OhigY~!~evl!~l~!&lt;
· "the now bank that appreclatet vour bualn..a-

'

. LAW UPHELD
ALBANY, N. Y. (UPI ) ·New York State's liberal
abortion law was declared
openings for trainees to fill constitutional Friday by the
available slots in Clerical, state's highest court. The Court
Food Service, Maintenance, of Appeals voted :0.2 to uphol~
and Building occupations.
the 1970 law, which is the
In order to meet part of the nation's most liberal. It perselection criteria for these mils abortion for any reason
Manpower Development during the first 24 weeks of
Training Program (M.D.T.A. ), pregnancy for both residenls
an individual must meet and nonresidents of the state.
certain qualifications. If you
are a Vietnam era veteran this Training Center should contact
is a gre~t opportunity to learn a the closest office of the Ohio
trade .
Bureau of Employment SerAnyone interested in going to vices. Ask for further inth e Jackson Manpower formation.

Openings At MTC

Elberfelds Warehouse Sale
onMechanic ·
Pomeroy

Goldie Lowther Bobo ,
Wesle y C. Bobo, Beulah
Lowther, George J. Lowther,
Amy Lowther to Buckeye
Rural Elec. Co., Right of Way
Ease., Columbia.
Franklin Real Estate C?· to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Co., Right
of Way Ease., Salem.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Co., Right
of Way Ease., Salem.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Co., Right
of Way Ease., Salem-Rutland.
George J. Lowther, Amy
Lowther to Buckeye Rural
Elec. Co., Colwnbia.
Luther G. Harvey, Alma
Harvey to Buckeye Rural Elec.
Co., Right of Way Ease.,
Columbia.
Helen Catherine Goett to
Mark Anthony Grueser, Nancy
Sue Grueser, 6.08 Acres, Bedford.
Leo C. Kennedy, Jr., Julia A.
Kennedy to Elmer Ewing,
Anna Mae Ewing, 3.95 Acres,
Salisbury.
Ernest L. Jones, Lila Raye
Jones to Franklin Real Estate
Co., 40 Acres, Salem.
Raymond F. Hatfield,
Bertha Eileen Hatfield to
Bradford Lewis, Hazel I.
Lewis, 40 Acres, Rutland.
Edith Greer to James C.
Reed, Dora M. Reed, 2.5 Acres,
Columbia.
Mary B. Laughead, dec. to
Mary Eliza beth Morris aka
Mary Elizabeth Anderson,
Cert. or Trans ., Middleport.

We feature

,.~ :: o ·

THE'{ WERE ?TANDING B'c' A LAKE AS !JE

I 5AIJ A MOVIE
RECENTL'l AfkJUT A

ARE, ANO THE 80'( l'lCKED UP A .q[ICK AND
THREW IT INTO THE WATER, AND TI-lE DOG
5WAM OUT AFTER IT AND BROUGHT IT BACK ..

BO'( AND HI~ DOG

a fine selection

~ 'l

.• '
'

••

,...,,,,

~~ ~···

.

' ..

...

in floor coverings
for your home!

.,
.. ·.

· ~

I'M GOING TO I-lAVE TO STOP
WATCHING• TI10SE MOVIE~

·" '(.__/
Beautiful nylon pile
carpets in 12 and 15 foot
widths.
Famous
Mohawk quality and
expert installation.

- - ...
---

Also a fine selection of foam backed bathroom and kitchen carpet in many styles at fantastic warehouse
savings.

'

..._

~. -

· ~­

JUST ARRIVED - MOHAWK MULTICOLORED FIGURED AXMINSTfR RUGS. BEAUTIFUl
PATTERNS IN 9xl2 FT. SIZES.

Lloyd · Slag le, · Nellie Nadine
Slagle to James H. Rickman.
Patricia A. Rickman , Lots,
Behan's Add., Middleport .
Clarence Arland
King ,
Martha L. King to Donald L.
Frymyer, Jane Frymyer, Lot,
Middleport .
Willie G. Frecker, Theodosia
A. Frecker, Donna Mae lhle,
Charles lhle, Sharon• Kay
Mi chae l, Gary Micha el to
Charles W. F reeker, Pa reels,
Chester.
Charles W. Frecker to Willie
G. Frecker, 141 Acres, Life
Estate, Chester.
Charles W. Fre cker to
Theodosia Frecker , Life
Estate. Chester.
John W. Arbaugh. Ethel
Arbaugh lo Cecil V. Dillon.
Flossie N. Dillon, Lot 10. Ar·
baugh's 4th Sub Dlv., Olive.
Elizabeth Harriett La Rue,
dec'd ., to Estelle Smith, aka
Estell Sm ith , All . Trans .,
Middleport.
Estell Smith to Lionel Boggs.
Mary Lu Boggs, Lot, Mid·
dleport.
Leo C. Hill, Helen M. Hill to
Kathy Sue Hill McDaniel, 160
Acre Lot 1197, 9.69 Acres.
Sutton .
Union National Bank of
Clarksburg, Trus., Alfred W.
Schroath, dec.. to Roger L.
Hawk . Shir ley A. Hawk.
Minerals, Orange.
Manning D. Webster. Anc.
Adm .. Alfred W. Schroath, dec.
to Roger L. Hawk, Shirley A.
Hawk, 30 A. Orange .

Warehouse Sale

linoleum by the Yard

SGT. STRIPBS... FORBVBB
'

.

You WQNT~T

!5-A/Z~e, Y~Ve CAPT~ MOI('IZIE .

.• sSt: IF
.THE: ~!
' ..

HELL TALJ(.

; ·ANY1l·UNb

'

OUT Of !ME ' !.
I

Armstrong and Gold Seal in 9 foot and 12 foot widths
and all at special sale prices right now.

'-

I .

'.

.

,

by Bill Bowrilla

·~~-----

We bAYE HIM THE RJLL lla=AIMEN~

Th!.K:, WHBN
FINISHED

·'OPMF:IXJ SHa1fS, WATER Dlii:'IFPIN&amp;,

WITH
YOU!..
..

S"{Re:rtH RA::K, EVEN L.A'v'/RENCE

~- We:Lq-1 la::coeos' .•• Hs

•

----~

-L

This is Cushioned Vinyl floor covering -exce llent
pattern selection.

A

Bring in your measurements. Select the pattern and
color that's right for you and save.
·
•

Also at Elberfelds Warehouse- Sale price's O!l Toro and Lawn-Boy
Lawn Mowers -oval braided rugs in a good selection of sizes and
colors- Chrome trim for carpet or linoleum installation and a good
selection of reconditioned used T.V. sets.

WAREHOUSE OPEN 9:30 TO 5 P.M. MONDAY lliROUGH lliURSDAY
fRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Whence Its Name
· Bedstraw, a plant of the.
madder family, traditionally
received its name from the
belief that the m an g e r
where Christ was born was
.filled with t~ese plants.

·

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET :

..
•

...,

. '

THE FLOWERS FAMILY will be appearing at the Meigs County Fair ior the second
consecutive year as a part of the grandstand attractions for the evening on August 17. The
grandstand entertainment is free.

JACKSON - The Ohio
Bw·eau of Employment Services have openings at the
Southern Ohio Manpower
Training Center here located 75
miles south of Colum bus.
There are training sessions
in Clerical, Central Heating
and Air Conditioning, Auto
Mechanics , Aut o Body
Repairs, Die sel Me chani c,
Production
Machine Operator,
Au s tralia has displaced
Maintenance
Man Building
Argentina as the world's
larges t exporter of red Welding, Drafts ma~ . and Food
mea ts.
Service. There also are

Transfers

•Where they real~ Appreciate ~r Business!

&lt;1""7-.,..L

Ohio's
61
McGovern
delegatel! are expected to vote
the other way, along with eight ·
"black caucus" delegates
headed by Rep. Louis Stokes
and pledged to McGovern.
The breakdown is expected
to be the same on tbe committee's recommendation to
supplant 59 Illinois delegates
headed by' Chicago Mayor
Richard J . Daley , except
McGovern forces will support
it and Humphrey delegates will
oppose it.

Christian Books Brought to -Area

•he your money earns men lntnst!
•Where you have the liMit Security - Bank Security!
•Where your interest is Paid Every 90 Days!

•

of the convention - the S}lating
of the large CaliRtrnia and
lllinois delegations.
Ohio's 79- member Humphrey faction is expected to
stand firm in support of the
recommendation · of the
credentials commitlee $o
replace
153
McGovern
delegates from California,
despite a U.S. Court of Appeals
decision restoring them. Five
delegates committed to U.S.
Rep. Wayne L. Hays, O.Ohio,
are expected to follow suit.

'

I

·i ·
.~ ~·
I

:' I' , '.

..

'

'

'

bQL.P. ~.1HE

I \.

L.AsT MI~J..
1 ' '~

'

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.

.• •

• ••

• ·'

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&gt;

_,

24 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, July 9,1972

Gilligan Dips into Convention Fights
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) liov. John H. Gilligan was
scheduled to make a whirlwind
visit Saturday to discuss the
role of Democratic governors
at the party 's upcoming
national convention.
Gilligan's visit at the invitation of Gov. Dale Bumpers of
Arkansas, chairman of the
Democratic governors'
caucus, added to speculation
he might be advanced as a
possible vice presidential
candidate should Sen. George
S. McGovern win the
presidential nomination this
week.
Gilligan has steadfastly denied any interest in seeking national office this year. He recently said he would not run
with McGovern, even iJ asked.
But the governor was interested enough in the role of
state executives in party affairs that he consented to participate in the caucus, although
he said he had no specific input
to offer.
And political observers speculated the Democratic governors would like nothing better
than to land one of their own in
.the second spot on the national
ticket.
Governors of both parties
have often expressed complaints they occupy second-row
seats when it comes to national
party affairs.
Four years ago, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, in ascending from governor of
Maryland, broke a quartercentury tradition that the top
two spots in national government went to members of the
Washington incrowd.
Not since the days of Franklin D. Roosevelt had a governor
moved anywhere near the
White House.
So Gilligan, in the eyes of his
feUow Democratic governors,
has to be considered potential
timber for the second spot,
along with Gov. Marvin
Mandel of Maryland and Gov.
Patrick J . Lucey of Wisconsin.
In insisting he is not interested, Gilligan has said he would
not want to leave Ohio to Republican Lt. Gov. John W.
Brown.
'
The governor also is not unmindful of his own relatively
low popularity rating within his
own state, despite the fact his
image is shinier in foreign ter-

ritory .
Gilligan, an early backer of
Sen. EdmundS. Muskie for the
presidential nomination, said
he would "praise Muskie or
condemn him, whichever
would help most."
There are 'factors which
work against a McGovernGilligan coalition. The two are
similar in ideology, and both
come from a heartland staie.
This would not be good for a
balanced ticket.
Gilligan told a news confer-

ence last week that he was not
part of a "stop McGovern"
movement, that he did not plan
lo attend the conventioo in person or by proxy, and that he
would try to help reassemble
the party after the convention. ·
Healsowouldnotrule put the
possib!Hty of an appearance
here after the nominations are
sealed to work ror solidarity on
the Democratic platform.
Ohio's delegation, expected
in Sur.dal', will examine Itself
on \ile first two critical issues

GALLIPOLIS
B.I.G.
Associates have brought to
Gallipolis a "better idea" that
is grow ing: "Reading for
Successful Living."
Evidence of this "better
idea'' is seen in several stores
and business places in '!he city.
Attractive racks of books exciting; inspiring, up-to-date
books
from
Christian

'

.

publishers - are seen in the
general market place.
While some.folks talk about
the need for good literature and
others compbiin about smut,
B.l.G. says, "these folks, these
concerned business people of
Gallipolis, are doing something

following business places:
Price &amp; Sons Pharmacy,
Gillingham Drugs, Johnson
Grocery Co., Barr's Supermarket, G. C. Murphy Co., and
the Blue Fountain Motel.
Successful Living, Inc .,
started in Minneapolis, Minn.,
about it!"
in 1970. David Thornberg,
Reading for a successful president, and severa l
living racks can be found at the Christian businessmen were
determined to put their con. cern into action, believing that
people "tend to become what
they read." Thus they formed
the company to supply nondenominational; inspirational
paperback books to the general
public.
The books are marketed by
an open and ever-expanding
group of distributors, whose
goal is to saturate America
wfth good Christian literature
within the shortest possible
time.

Besides placing racks in
every business they can, these
dedicated distributors exhibit
books at book fairs, church
meetings, schools, and civic
and service clubs.
They sell direct to the public,
at the door and by mail.
Enthusiastic response from
many businesses, reslauranls,
stores and motels, as well as
the clergy and other individuals all across the
country, support the B.! .G.
view. The program has been
well received locally, as well,
according to reports from the
participan Is.
"We are proud to have this in
our own store, " declared one
local businessman.
"We are glad to include
Reading for Successful Living
among our endeavors," says
B.I.G. "It is, indeed, a better
idea that is growing!"

•

Meigs
_Property

'

·.

JOANN BarUey, Vinton, an employee of Price &amp; Sons
Pharmacy, Gallipolis, scans new book rack which contains
Reading lor Successful Living.

REGUlAR PASS BOOK
SAVINGS
EARN
(Compounded Quarterly) _ __
Golden Passbook Savings•
(Compounded Quarterly)

and 90 Day Certificates
of Deposit* Eam--12 MONTHS

CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT~ EARN--

24 MONTHS

CERTIFICATES OF
DEPOSIT*
.

.

-¥-Minimum Initial Depotlf$1,000.00 or More

OhigY~!~evl!~l~!&lt;
· "the now bank that appreclatet vour bualn..a-

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. LAW UPHELD
ALBANY, N. Y. (UPI ) ·New York State's liberal
abortion law was declared
openings for trainees to fill constitutional Friday by the
available slots in Clerical, state's highest court. The Court
Food Service, Maintenance, of Appeals voted :0.2 to uphol~
and Building occupations.
the 1970 law, which is the
In order to meet part of the nation's most liberal. It perselection criteria for these mils abortion for any reason
Manpower Development during the first 24 weeks of
Training Program (M.D.T.A. ), pregnancy for both residenls
an individual must meet and nonresidents of the state.
certain qualifications. If you
are a Vietnam era veteran this Training Center should contact
is a gre~t opportunity to learn a the closest office of the Ohio
trade .
Bureau of Employment SerAnyone interested in going to vices. Ask for further inth e Jackson Manpower formation.

Openings At MTC

Elberfelds Warehouse Sale
onMechanic ·
Pomeroy

Goldie Lowther Bobo ,
Wesle y C. Bobo, Beulah
Lowther, George J. Lowther,
Amy Lowther to Buckeye
Rural Elec. Co., Right of Way
Ease., Columbia.
Franklin Real Estate C?· to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Co., Right
of Way Ease., Salem.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Co., Right
of Way Ease., Salem.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Co., Right
of Way Ease., Salem-Rutland.
George J. Lowther, Amy
Lowther to Buckeye Rural
Elec. Co., Colwnbia.
Luther G. Harvey, Alma
Harvey to Buckeye Rural Elec.
Co., Right of Way Ease.,
Columbia.
Helen Catherine Goett to
Mark Anthony Grueser, Nancy
Sue Grueser, 6.08 Acres, Bedford.
Leo C. Kennedy, Jr., Julia A.
Kennedy to Elmer Ewing,
Anna Mae Ewing, 3.95 Acres,
Salisbury.
Ernest L. Jones, Lila Raye
Jones to Franklin Real Estate
Co., 40 Acres, Salem.
Raymond F. Hatfield,
Bertha Eileen Hatfield to
Bradford Lewis, Hazel I.
Lewis, 40 Acres, Rutland.
Edith Greer to James C.
Reed, Dora M. Reed, 2.5 Acres,
Columbia.
Mary B. Laughead, dec. to
Mary Eliza beth Morris aka
Mary Elizabeth Anderson,
Cert. or Trans ., Middleport.

We feature

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THE'{ WERE ?TANDING B'c' A LAKE AS !JE

I 5AIJ A MOVIE
RECENTL'l AfkJUT A

ARE, ANO THE 80'( l'lCKED UP A .q[ICK AND
THREW IT INTO THE WATER, AND TI-lE DOG
5WAM OUT AFTER IT AND BROUGHT IT BACK ..

BO'( AND HI~ DOG

a fine selection

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in floor coverings
for your home!

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I'M GOING TO I-lAVE TO STOP
WATCHING• TI10SE MOVIE~

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Beautiful nylon pile
carpets in 12 and 15 foot
widths.
Famous
Mohawk quality and
expert installation.

- - ...
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Also a fine selection of foam backed bathroom and kitchen carpet in many styles at fantastic warehouse
savings.

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JUST ARRIVED - MOHAWK MULTICOLORED FIGURED AXMINSTfR RUGS. BEAUTIFUl
PATTERNS IN 9xl2 FT. SIZES.

Lloyd · Slag le, · Nellie Nadine
Slagle to James H. Rickman.
Patricia A. Rickman , Lots,
Behan's Add., Middleport .
Clarence Arland
King ,
Martha L. King to Donald L.
Frymyer, Jane Frymyer, Lot,
Middleport .
Willie G. Frecker, Theodosia
A. Frecker, Donna Mae lhle,
Charles lhle, Sharon• Kay
Mi chae l, Gary Micha el to
Charles W. F reeker, Pa reels,
Chester.
Charles W. Frecker to Willie
G. Frecker, 141 Acres, Life
Estate, Chester.
Charles W. Fre cker to
Theodosia Frecker , Life
Estate. Chester.
John W. Arbaugh. Ethel
Arbaugh lo Cecil V. Dillon.
Flossie N. Dillon, Lot 10. Ar·
baugh's 4th Sub Dlv., Olive.
Elizabeth Harriett La Rue,
dec'd ., to Estelle Smith, aka
Estell Sm ith , All . Trans .,
Middleport.
Estell Smith to Lionel Boggs.
Mary Lu Boggs, Lot, Mid·
dleport.
Leo C. Hill, Helen M. Hill to
Kathy Sue Hill McDaniel, 160
Acre Lot 1197, 9.69 Acres.
Sutton .
Union National Bank of
Clarksburg, Trus., Alfred W.
Schroath, dec.. to Roger L.
Hawk . Shir ley A. Hawk.
Minerals, Orange.
Manning D. Webster. Anc.
Adm .. Alfred W. Schroath, dec.
to Roger L. Hawk, Shirley A.
Hawk, 30 A. Orange .

Warehouse Sale

linoleum by the Yard

SGT. STRIPBS... FORBVBB
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You WQNT~T

!5-A/Z~e, Y~Ve CAPT~ MOI('IZIE .

.• sSt: IF
.THE: ~!
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HELL TALJ(.

; ·ANY1l·UNb

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OUT Of !ME ' !.
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Armstrong and Gold Seal in 9 foot and 12 foot widths
and all at special sale prices right now.

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by Bill Bowrilla

·~~-----

We bAYE HIM THE RJLL lla=AIMEN~

Th!.K:, WHBN
FINISHED

·'OPMF:IXJ SHa1fS, WATER Dlii:'IFPIN&amp;,

WITH
YOU!..
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S"{Re:rtH RA::K, EVEN L.A'v'/RENCE

~- We:Lq-1 la::coeos' .•• Hs

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This is Cushioned Vinyl floor covering -exce llent
pattern selection.

A

Bring in your measurements. Select the pattern and
color that's right for you and save.
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Also at Elberfelds Warehouse- Sale price's O!l Toro and Lawn-Boy
Lawn Mowers -oval braided rugs in a good selection of sizes and
colors- Chrome trim for carpet or linoleum installation and a good
selection of reconditioned used T.V. sets.

WAREHOUSE OPEN 9:30 TO 5 P.M. MONDAY lliROUGH lliURSDAY
fRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Whence Its Name
· Bedstraw, a plant of the.
madder family, traditionally
received its name from the
belief that the m an g e r
where Christ was born was
.filled with t~ese plants.

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WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET :

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THE FLOWERS FAMILY will be appearing at the Meigs County Fair ior the second
consecutive year as a part of the grandstand attractions for the evening on August 17. The
grandstand entertainment is free.

JACKSON - The Ohio
Bw·eau of Employment Services have openings at the
Southern Ohio Manpower
Training Center here located 75
miles south of Colum bus.
There are training sessions
in Clerical, Central Heating
and Air Conditioning, Auto
Mechanics , Aut o Body
Repairs, Die sel Me chani c,
Production
Machine Operator,
Au s tralia has displaced
Maintenance
Man Building
Argentina as the world's
larges t exporter of red Welding, Drafts ma~ . and Food
mea ts.
Service. There also are

Transfers

•Where they real~ Appreciate ~r Business!

&lt;1""7-.,..L

Ohio's
61
McGovern
delegatel! are expected to vote
the other way, along with eight ·
"black caucus" delegates
headed by Rep. Louis Stokes
and pledged to McGovern.
The breakdown is expected
to be the same on tbe committee's recommendation to
supplant 59 Illinois delegates
headed by' Chicago Mayor
Richard J . Daley , except
McGovern forces will support
it and Humphrey delegates will
oppose it.

Christian Books Brought to -Area

•he your money earns men lntnst!
•Where you have the liMit Security - Bank Security!
•Where your interest is Paid Every 90 Days!

•

of the convention - the S}lating
of the large CaliRtrnia and
lllinois delegations.
Ohio's 79- member Humphrey faction is expected to
stand firm in support of the
recommendation · of the
credentials commitlee $o
replace
153
McGovern
delegates from California,
despite a U.S. Court of Appeals
decision restoring them. Five
delegates committed to U.S.
Rep. Wayne L. Hays, O.Ohio,
are expected to follow suit.

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SA'l5 .
(p$'.~;

MIAMI BEACH IUPI) George S. McGovern invaded
the camps of his enemies
today, seeking a kel: victory at
tomght's opening session of the
Democratic National Convention which could make his
nomination almost certa in and
almost bloodless.
His rivals stilt lacked - and
still sought - the cohesio n
necessary for an effective stopMcGovern coalition in Wednesday's
presidential
balloting.
They also lacked a unity
candidate all could agree upon,
and no new name surfaced.
Edward M. Kennedy's wife
Joan . here to help raise money

for the party, said Kennedy's
decision neither to seek nor
accep t the nomination was
''final." From Hyannis Port,
Mass ., ' where he went
yachting, Kennedy said there
WllS "no way" he could be
convinced to take second place
on the ~icket. ·
Maine's EdmundS. Muskie,
once the fron t-runner, took on
kingmaker powers at this least
orthodox 36th quadrennial
assembly of disar rayed
Democrats. But Muskie was
undecided whether to use those
powers to coronate McGovern
or to keep alive his own hopes
of becoming a compromise
choice .

Aides promised a quick
decision after Muskie 's
" sol idari ty
sc hed uled
meeting" thi~ morning with his
esti.ru.ted 2()()-plus delegates .
In the same flat , dry prairie
voice with which he announced
his candidacy 18 montjls ago when he was unknown to most
Americans - McGovern expressed boundless confidence
of reac hing his goal. He
reflected none of the tensions
swirlin g around him in this
steamy resort strip, trapped in
its own traffic.
He claimed enoug h support
in tOnight's voting to reverse'
the Credentials1 Committee
vote which took from him 151 bf

ARE
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VOL. XXV NO. 59

ARE

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SEEDS.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Claimed Possible

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8usAbout?
AN' SOME GLASS FO'

D-\' WINDOWS.'.'

AFRAID

HERE-READ
TI-lE
CONDITIOI-!ING ·
CLAUSE

TRIVIA-•·

·&amp;ETTER

THE MILLION Mt..l5T &amp; SPENT TO
Pf&gt;,OVIDE. 'lOUR CHILDREN WITH A

WE WILL.

PARIS (UPI)- Norlh Vietnam's chief peace negotiator,
Xuan Thuy, flew in today to
resume the Vietnam peace
talks and said a quick settlement could be reached if the
United States showed goodwill.
Thuy told newsmen at I.e
Bourget airfield that' North
Vietnam stands by its past
negotiating proposals, but was

pledges of a serious attitude,
Thuy said he had no precise
new peace plan to submit to
conl&lt;!fence whi ch resumes
Thursday after a two-month
break .
"We come to the negotiating
table with a serious attitude
and goodwill. We are sure that
if the American side shows the
same attitude we can rapidly
ready to examine any " new" reach a peaceful sehlement,"
offers by the United States.
he said .
Mixing tough talk and
Thuy returned after both

f&gt;LuSH!-GULP !-

NONEO'USON
TH'SO-\OOL
BOARD BRUNG
OUP. GLASSES---

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NONEO'US
KIN
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EDUCATIONAL EXPE.Rl!':NCE-

Ord Employed
As Head Coach

RJ:AD-

soME

MEANINGFUL, RE..WARDII-.JG

RACINE - Robert Ord,
principal
and
reserve
basketball
coach
at
Eastern
SOUNDINGS FROM SOUTHEASTERN OHIO - The response to Rt presentative Clarence
High
School,
has
been
hired
as
E. Miller's district-wide public opinion survey has been exceptionally heavy. The survey was
head basketball coach at
directed to individual residences throughout the 13 co unties of the lOth District, and th e
Southern High School here by
Congressman's daily incoming mail consistently includes a large volume of completed
the board or education.
questionnaires. To date, about 15,000 replies have been received in Washington. Assisting
Ralph Sayre, superintendent
Representative Miller with the unpa cking is staff secretary, Trisha DeGroot. Miller said
said Ord fills the post vacated
Soulbeaslern Ohio residents returning the questiormaire would receive the results of the poll
by Asa Bradbury who resigned
just as soon as the tabulations have been completed. Any person not receiving a copy of the poll
to accept a reserve coaching
and desiring same, can write to Representative Miller at 128 Cannon Bldg ., Washington, D. C.
position at Logan Elm High
20515 lor th eir copy.
School in Pickaway County.
In other business, the board
hired Ralph Wigal as athletic
director for the 72-73 school
year. Wigal who was the junior
high basketball
coach,
resigned that post to accept the
athletic directorship. He wlll
continue as assistant football
By United Press International
coach, Sayre said.
Applications for future
MIAMI BEACH -SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN spent 25
teaching positions w.ere
minutes today at a breakfast meeting with Ohio's !53-member
MIAMI BEACH (UP!) received from Marlys K.
delegation of the Democratic National Convention in hopes of
persuading some of the delegates to join him in his fight to seat Gov. John J. Gilligan coun- Pearson and William L. Buck·
his entire 271-member California delegation when the convention seled Sen. Edmund Muskie ley.
Sunday to defect as a tacit
Sayre said the painting of the
opens tonight.
member
of
the
stop-McGovern
interior
of the Syracuse
McGovern won a prolonged standing round of applause as he
coalition
to
avoid
a
Democratic
Elemental')'
building has been
entered the room for the breakfast, despite the fact that a
par ty bloodlettin g, sour ces
majority of the Ohio delegates - 79 - are pledged to his major
reported.
opponent, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey. McGovern told the
Gilligan met Muskie, who he
delegates he respected the views of those who favor Humphrey, still nominally supports for the
MR. FRENCH DIES
but be urged them to support him on the credentials issue, ap- presidential nomination, at
Morgan French, Nye Ave.,
pealing to their "sense offairness and rule of law."
breakfast. Sources said he told Pom~roy, died Sunday afthe Maine senator he stood no ternoon at the Arcadia Nursing
BANGKOK -TWO U. S. PILOTS WERE KIIJ..ED when chance of wmnmg the Home in Coolville. Funeral
their F4 Phantom jet crasbed last Friday at Ubon Ratchalhani nomination for himself, no services will be held WedRoyal Thai Air Force base about 200 miles northeast of Bangkok, matter what the outcome of nesday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
a U. S. embassy spokesman said today.
Funeral Home. Burial will be
tonight's credentials battle.
The two pilots were Maj. Harland M. Davis Jr., 37, of BridgeIn
Beech Grove Cemetel')'.
In a mid-day television inton, N. J., and lsi Lt. Frederick Koss , 26, of Bridgeport, Ohio.
terview, Muskie said, he still Friends may call at the funeral
had the question "under ad- home Tuesday afternoon.
STILLWATER, MINN. - TEN INMATES engineered the visement" and, "I'm trying to
two largest escapes in the histol')' of 511-yearoOld Stillwater State find some way of acPrison during the weeken'd, and Acting Warden Donald Tomsche commodating both sides ."
blamed it on inadequate staffing and poor facilities. Seven - e Gilligan was here for a
ten, all considered dangerous, still were at large today. Three Democratic governors caucus
and was scheduled to depart
The Meigs County Sheriff's
had been apprehended.
for
Ohio
Saturday,
but
was
Dept.
investigated two acSix of the Inmates sawed their way out of the maximwn
asked
to
stay
over
until
Sunday
cidents Sunday .
security area Saturday night - an act which Tomsche said "is
with
several
other
governors
to
At 12:55 a.m. on SR 7,
IUlheard of until now" at Stillwater. Three of them were picked
try
to
work
out
a
compromise
Salisbury Township, Harold
up by SWJday afternoon. Four others cut through the bal'li of a
on
the
credentials
issues.
Eugene Hood, Pomeroy,
window and fled Sunday night, sometime during a dinner In·
Gilligan
told
reporters
little
traveling south on 7, slowed
volvtng 75 members of an Inmate ecology group and 75 gUests
·
had
been
accomplisbed
by
him
down to make a left turn into a
from outside.
and the four other governors. driveway . However, Jack
"But we got some of the Edward Lowe, 21, Middleport,
BELFAST- IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY (IRA) gunmen
principals talking about a
returned to the attack today, tbeir !3-day cease-fire abandoned.
compromise and improved the
GunbaiUes SjD'ead across BeUast and Londonderl')' and 10
atmosphere,'' Gilligan said.
persons died in the fighting or through "execlitions." In the first "As a group we've gone about
Asa
Bradbury,
head
bours after tile IRA Provisional wing called off their truce as far as we can go."
basketball
coach
the
past
year
Sunday night, six civilians died In Bejflist, Including a 14-yearoOid
4
for Southern Local High
girl and a Roman Catholic priest shot as he administered last
School, has accepted the
rllea to another victim.
·
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reserve coach job at Logan
Earlier SWiday, while the cease-fire still was in effect, police
Clear and warm .tonight. Elm High Sc:hool In Plckaway
foWid the bodies or lour men who apparently had been executed.
Lows
in the mid 60s northeast County, nol the head coach job
The deaths raised the toll for Northern Ireland's three years of
to
low
70s in the south. Sunny
bloodshed to 418. "We are vel')' cloee to civU war," a spokesman
at Circleville High School, as
and quite warm Tuesday, highs
for the Proteltant Va~ Movement said.
was reported earlier.
in the mid 80s to low 90s.

Party Harmony

CAPTAIN EASY

bF Crooks &amp; Lawrence

AH, AT LA?n A ?LJITA13LE; ?POT'TO

JETTI50N

THE: ll'IJI'Eli:=;~AL. DSVIC~!

TEN CENTS

TERRY OHLINGER

What's All The
YOU OOt-J'T UNDERSTAND
THE PORPOSEOF THE
GRANT. IT'S NOT FOR

PHONE 992·2156

THA~J&lt;.

HSAVfiiJ?
rrHA711J'i

J:li.PL.OPEP

· Yen.

completed by Oris Hubbard,
work on the Racine Elementary is being done by Dwayne
Wolfe, and Lindley Hart was
awarded a contract to put a
new roof on the Letart
Elementary building. Septic
tanks at Syracuse Elementary
also are being thoroughly
checked , and Bill Hoback was
awarded a contract to work on
the furnaces at Syracuse and
Racine elementary ~nd the
junior high buildings.
Board members have been
viewing classroom seats
placed on exhibit by several
companies.
Mrs. Erma McClurg was
given permission to supervise
adult education classes in
sewing this fall. Cost of the
class will be partially paid by
the State Department of
Education, Sayre said.

Hanoi and Washington late last
month agreed to restart the
31h-year-&lt;J ld talks, suspended
May 4 by the United Stales.
Thuy said Nixon was forced
to resume the conference
under pressure of American
and world public opinion.
"We consider that the sevenpoint plan of the (VietCong's)
Revol utionary Provisional
Government is the correct
basis for a settlement
"But we will gladly examine
any new American proposals
that may be made to us in a few
days", he said.
Thuy , in his airport statement, served notice the Vietnamese Communists still want
the United States to pull out
their
remaining
troops
quickly.
He was less explicit,
however, when he commented
on the second Communist
requirement co ncerning his
side's standing demand for the
overthrow of South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu.
"President Nixon, in his
June 29 news conference, made
it clear he obalinately sticks to
his warmongering policies.
Such action is not likely to
favor negotiations," Thuy said.
Speaking before a battery of
microphones, he shook his
finger and said "The Vietnamese people are determined
not to give in to any threat and
to face up to co ntinued
American aggression.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Wednesday through Friday :
A ehance of showers
Wednesday and Thursday.
Partly cloudy Friday. Warm
with highs In the mid to
upper 80s. Lows In the mld
60s to low 70..

ONG OFFICER KILLED
BATAVIA, Ohio (UP!) - A
jeep in an Ohi o National Guard
convoy plunged off a rural road
LOCAL TEMPS
about two miles east of here
Temperature in downtown
Saturday, killing ONG Sgt. Pomeroy Monday at II a. m.
Carleton Rice, 23, Hamilton, was 80 degrees under partly
and injuring two other men.
cloudy skies.
NOW YOU KNOW
The Democrats held the
longest American political
convention in 1924 when they
took 14 days and 103 ballots to
nominate John W. Davis . The
Whigs held the shortest convention in 1844, nominating
Henl')' Clay in one day .

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R unit an swered a call to the Roy Curtis
home near Pomeroy at 3:58 a.
m. Monday . Mrs . Curtis,
believed to be suffering a heart
ailment, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

3 Cars, Truck Damaged

UH-ER-T.::;K, T::;K~ , A
TH·TH·THQUGHTLE~~ OVER"
?16HT. OFFICfR~ I A77URE

YOI.ll WE:'LL GLAD)-'/ p.p. PAY!
•

to Hood's rear, was unable to
stop when he realized Hood
was making the lurn, and
attempting to pass, struck, ..
Hood's car in the left front end,
continued leftward to hit a
parked car owned by George
Franklin Stewart, Middleport.
The Stewart car, in turn,
rammed a parked pickup

Bradbury Going To Logan Ehn

~H!:JT Uf' AND
GET MOVIt\J£3!
THE'I'RE PUTTING

ALL 'THRE~ OF U:7 ·
11\J ~Ol:JTARY!

issue. Later he dangled the
vice presidential nomination
before Muskie as a lure , but
Muskie said he wasn't vel')'
in!J!rested .
Adding to McGovern's optimism was latent support
from delegates who would vole
for him on a second or third
ballot but were bound by slate
law or state convention to vote
for others on earlier ballots.
Such commitments did not
bind them on proced ural issue,
such as the California
credentials fi ght.
Obstacles
still
faced
McGovern . One of them was an
attempt by b1acks to UJ)ite all ·
[Continued on page 8)

Major
"Fight
Near

Quick Settlement

' I

,

WE KIN GIT A NEW

win his party's gubernatorial
nomination, was thought to be
leaning toward Humphrey. "!
came here uncommitted," he
said, "and I'm still uncommitted ."
McGovern made a "fair
· play"• pitch , arguing that
takin g Ca lifor nia delegates
away from him after- all
candidates had agreed to the
· winner-take-all rules would be
unjust.
Muskle for Veep?
Ohio Gov . John Gilligan, a
red-haired liberal, bre.akfasted
Sunday with Muskie, whom he
had supported ori ginally, and
urged him to support
McGovern in the Califomia

enttne

MONDAy, JULY 10, 1972

I

II

The UPI tabulation gave
Humphrey a3l.aa, plus 58
leaning. The umcommitted
bloc numbered 311 .4.
McGovern, well aware that
victory on tonigh t's procedural
votes over the ground rules of
the convention could yield
victory Wednesday, wooed
delegates for support in that
crucial rolt call.
He sc heduled visits to the big
and largely unfriendl y
delegations from Ohio, where
Humphrey is strongest; and
Texas, where George C.
Wallace held the lion's share of
delegates .
Texas rancher Dolph
Briscoe, who beat a liberal to

Devoted To The Inter(!jfs Of The Meigs-Mason Area

·. '

•
'•
•

delegates except those whose
right to vote is under challenge
could ballot on whether to seal
a challenged delegation .
Even if he loges all
challenges, they said, he would
have a bare minimum of 1,331.5
votes and would pick up the
•·est toward the 1,509 needed as
'the roll was called. He claimed
well over twice as many
delegates as his nearest rival,
l:lubert H. Hwnphrey.
UPI 's co unt, reflecting
McGovern's loss of 151
California votes and his Illinois
loss, showed him with 1,31a.95
votes plus 42 leaning his way,
putting him 152.05 short of the
nomination.

•

at y
..

LEAVES~

the 271delegates won June 6 in
Ca lifor nia's winner-take-all
primary. He also sought an
Illinois compromise which
would . put Chicago Mayor
Richa rd J . Daley in a
delegate's seat with one half a
vote - and a inore kindly
feeling toward McGovern.
With that accomplished ,
McGovern's delegates counters said, he would have 1,541.5
votes Wednesday night at the
nominating session - 32.5
more than necessary.
A parliamentary ruling
Sunday from Lawrence F.
O'Brien, the party chairman,
strengthened McGovern's
hand. O'Brien decreed that all

Weather

I,

Coach BradbUI')' had a 9-10
record with the Tornadoes last
year, his first coaching job.
BradbuO', ex-Middleport High
School aU-&amp;ll!theastern Ohio
eager and starting quarterback on the Yellow Jacket
grid squad, was e starter in his
senior year at Marietta College
on the hardwoods.

truck.
Lowe was cited to court on
charges of assured clear
distance. There were no injuries.
At 6:20p.m. on COWity road
13, Rutland Township, Frank
Jr. Gilkey, 26, Langsville, was
traveling north aroWJd a blind
curve when his car collided
almost headon with a car
driven by Edwin Keith Cleland,
Langsville, Rl. I.
Passengers In the Gilkey car,
Connie Sue Gilkey, 25, Wendy
Ann Gilkey, four months, and
Jeffrey T. Gilkey, age 6, suf·
fered apparent minor injuries.
They were not immediately
treated.
..
There was damage to the
Iron I end 9f both vehicles.
There was no arrest.

Ohlinger is
Philo High

Principal
Terry Wayne Ohlinger has
bee n employed as principal of
Philo High School for the
coming school year.
Agraduate of Pomeroy High
School, Ohlinger received his
B. S. degree in 1966 and his
master's degree in 1970, both
from Ohio University .
Ohlinger had three years of
teac hin g and coaching experience and one year as
feder.al coo rdinator in the
Meigs Local School District.
Last year he was assistant
principal at Philo High School
. which has an enrollment of 750
in grades nine through twelve.
He is a member of the Ohio
Education Assocla.Uon, the
Ohio Association of Secondary
School Principals , the Franklin
Local Teachers Association,
and the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.
Mr . and Mrs. Ohlinger are
the parents of two sons·, Jay
and Jon. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Herman Ohlinger, 112
Condor St., Pomeroy.

Swimming
Classes at
Pool Open
Registrations for new
swimming classes which began
today at the Middleport
Community Pool, are still
being accepted, Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan , park manager, said
today.
A com plete course of
swi mmin g
lessons
for
Beginners 1 through 4, Advanced
Beginners~
Intermediates and Swimmers is
being given at the pool and
registrations will be accepted
until classes are filled. Classes
start al9 :45 a.m. and conclude
at 12:45. Those interested in
registering may do so at the
pool or at the Vaughan home on
South Third Ave.
Tenni ~ lessons are also
starting at the Middleport
park. Lessons of one hour each
will be conducted (rom 8 a.m.
to 1p.m. each Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by Bill
Vaughan. The maximum
number in each class will be
lour persons. Racquets and
balls will be provided.
Organized girls' softball
teams are also playing at the
park. Betty Smith and Patty
Carson are coaching older girls
of Group I, Mrs. Vaughan is
coaching the older girls or
Group II. Karen Johnson and
Mary Boggs are in charge of
girls under II in Group I and
Beth Vaughan and Kathy
Harris have charge of girls
under 11 In Group II. Girls
wishing to take part may
contact one of the above
coacbes .
MEtriNG CAlLED
Directors of the Ken Am.bary Chapter of the Izaak
Walton League of Amerioa wlU
meet at 7 p. m. tonight at the
clubhouae near Chesler.

SAIGON ( UP! )-A 1,000man South Vietnamese task
force that moved into battered
Quang Tri city last week withdrew to the edge of town today
and allied officers said they
expect a major fight before
recapturing the provincial
capital from· th e Communists.
The South Vietnamese said
last Friday that goverruunent
troops had occupied two-thirds
of the city and the only major
obstacle was the capture of the
walled, 19th century citadel
near the center of the. city .
However, allied officers said
today the North Vietnamese
defenders have received reinforcements and are prepared
to fight for the city
"Quang Tri is going to be
vel')' hard to take. The bll11/&lt;er
complexes are unbelieveable, "
a U.S. adviser told UP!
correspondent Barney Seibert.
"They are detennined to hold
Quang Tri. There Is at least a
battalion (about 500 men) in
there.''
Far ·to the ear U.8. Brl&amp;.
Gen. Richard J . Tallman and
three otber Americans were
killed by a North Vletamese
artillery shell. near An !.«:, a
provincial capital 6o miles
north of Saigon that has been
under siege since soon after the
current Communist offensive
started on March 30. Two other
Americans were injured.
Tallman, 47, of Honesdale,
Pa ., and his party had just
stepped out of their helicopter
when a shell hit nearby. They
jumped Into a bunker, · then
climbed out again and were
running for a command post
100 yards away when a second
shell exploded in their midst.
President Nguyen Van Thieu
landed in the same spot two
days ago during an•lnspection
tour but no artillel')' shells
came within 400 yards of the
Thieu party .
Tallman was deputy commander of the 3rd Regional
Assistance Command
operating in the An !.«: area.
He was the father of seven
children and had been
stationed in Vietnam for one
year.
At least nine U. S. generals,
one admiral and five SouthVietnamese generals have
been killed in the Vietnam war.

Biggest
Was Best
LONG POND, Pa . (UP! ) It was the biggest and most

peaceful rock festival since
Woodstock. More than 200,000
people braved the rains, mud,
lack of toilet facilities and
chea p wine at Pocono International Raceway over the
weekend .
Despite massive traffic jams
and several minor accidents,
state police reported the rock
fans were well controlled.
Marijuana and hard drugs
were available, but pollee said
use was not extensive.
By SWiday afternoon, only a
few stragglers remained to
pick up broken glass and r&amp;Q._
up garbage on the 600-acre
track. The festival was to Jut
only, one day, but waa expanded when rain forced
performers from the open
stage Saturday night.
"On a scale of .10, I'd hive to
give them a 9.9," said racew17
manager Bill Marvel. "A lot of
·people hear about other cailcerts, but this wu the flnt I've
been involved with and we'ft
vel')' happy about It."

•

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