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I

10 - The Daily Sentinel ~.tiddleporl-:'• neroy,.O., June I, 1973

Mike Vylonis bridges. gap
Song evangelist for the Meigs
Men's ~'e ll owship's June 3-8
Area Crusade at the Middleport Junior High St:·hool will
be recording artist Mike
Vylonis.
One of the few gospel singers
said to have the ability to
bridge the so called generation
gap, Vylonis sings in a style
that has been likened to Pal
Boone and Johnny l\1alhis.
Born in New Mexico and
brought up in Michigan, Mike

scn•cd m th~ Air~ Fon:e and
developed a stron~ desire to
~om~ a professionLtl \·ocalis1 .
Arter his discharge, he launched a successful career as a
night rlub smger. One evening

°CQuntermand or interfere"

with the decisions of special
Water gate

Ar~

pr osec utor

chiba ld Cox.
In a three-page directive
issued to all Justice Department personnel , Richardson
reiterated his pledge that Cox
"will have the greatest degree

on

radio

and

television

a good frkzd invited Mike lo

smg at a small church and this

Records .

berame the turning point in his

Married and living with his
life and his career: as a singer . family in South Bend, Ind.,
Fr·o n1 lhat time J Mike shortly after the Meigs
Vylonis has become one of the Crusade he will enter the HHis
rinest singers in the field of
Gospel music and au di~nces of

with the special prosecutor's
dec isions or actionS,'' Richard·
son's orde r said.
Richardson also dire cted
that :all reports on "possible
o£fenses within the special
prosecutor 's

jurisdiction "

Place " ministry which is

establishing contact centers
across the United States.
Featured evangelist of the
Crusade will be Dr. David
Stauffer of St. Louis, Mo., and
the special music will be by
Meigs County's own singing
King Family . The Crusade will
begin at 8 p.m. nighUy and a
nursery will be provided.

Mary Brickles
died Thursday

MEIGS THEATRE

MASON DRIVE-IN

C. H. Wise

---

munities.

Toledo

l7 29 .370
National Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Char les ton
JO 15 .667
Peninsula
24 2·1 .533 6
2.4 21 .533 6
Tidewater
Richmond
13 30 .302 16
Thursday's Results
Roches ter 12 PawtU cket 4
Syracuse 5 Peninsula 0
Tidewilf er 5 Richmond 1
CharlestOn 8 Toledo i

!Ill

A great vacation _College for the k1ds .·
A retiremen t house. Irs yours if you savt::l for 11.
Put aff ord in your future .
Start a hiQh·interest Savings Ac c9 un t today

pomeroy
national
bank

the bank ol
the centu r-p
. establi shed 1872

Member

FDIC

"Going one step further'"

MIKE VYLONIS

Mrs. Fred Cadle
died on Thursday

Calendad

SUNDAY
VA CATION BIBLE School at
Mt . Union Baptis t Church
starting Monday running
through June 8. Closing
program, 7:30p. m. on June 10.
School ~egins at 9:30 a. m·.;
ends at 12 noon each day.
Church bus will s top at•
Harrisonville School, 8:30 each
mornin g ; Hobbs Grocery,
Dexter , 8:50 a. m. and si.ore
building at Ca rpenter, 9:10 a.
m. All children welcome.
MONDAY ·
RACINE Chapter 134 ,
O.E.S., Masonic Temple, 8
p .m. Initiatory work ~or two
candidates will be exemplified.
Officers are to wear formals.
Annual inspection of Racine
Chapter will be held on June 13
at the Temple, 8 p.m .
MEIGS County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, home of Mrs.
Harry Davis, 7:30 p .m.
Members to take bottle caps.
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club directors, special
mee tin g, 7 p.m. at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
RACINE BAPTIST Church
Daily Vacation Bible School
June 4-a, 6 to 8 p. m. each
evening . Commencemen·t
program on Sunday, June 10, at ·
7:30 p. m.

( Lenora ) Davis, and Mrs .

Mrs. Fred Cadle, widow of
the late Fred Cadle, died
Thursday at her home in

Junior fHilda) Hunt, all of
Long Bottom; 13 grandchildren,
II
greatgrandchildren , and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Sunday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Clifford Smith officiating. Burial will be in
Chester cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home

Jefferson, Wise.

She is surviv ed by two
daughters, Mrs. · George
Strobush, Jefferson, and Mrs.
Ted Martsch, in Tennessee;
two

so ns ,

01iver

Calde ,.

Ca lifornia, and Harold at
home ; two brothers, Claudie
Lathey, Ripley, W. Va., and
Albert Lathey, Lancaster,
any time after noon on
Ohio; three sisters, Mrs. Saturday.
Elmer Proffitt, Racine; Faye
Woltz , Breman, Ohio, and
LODGE TO MEET
Amanda Tucker, Lancaster;
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge
three grandchildren, and No. 411 will meet Saturday at
several nieces and nephews. 7:30 p.m. in the lodge hail.
FunerJI services will be at Fellowship craft work and
Jefferson with burial in Letart work in the E. A. Degree will
Falls
Cemete r y. be done . Refreshments will be
Arrangements are incomplete served. All master masons are
at this time. Graveside ser- invited .
vices will be Saturday at 6 p.m.
at Letart Falls . Ewing Funeral
Home is in charge here. There /

will be no visiting at the funerai
home.

Big Brother plan
shoe g to Ervin
WASHINGTON ( UPI I President Nixon's 1970 intelligence plan was designed to spy
on any Americans who did not
agree with the administration,
Sen. Sam Ervin, chairman of
the Senate Watergate committee, said Thursday night.
Ervin, whose committee has
seen a copy of the plan;
described it in a news con-

ference in Winston.S.Iem, N.C.
"It would be a great shock to
the people if it were released,"
the North Carolina Democrat
said.
Ervin is under increasing

press ure from Republicans to
hasten public testimony before
his committee of former
presidential aides H. R. Haldeman , John Ehrlichman and
others close to the President.
Their statements so far have

been in conflict with other

witnesses .
Haldema n acknowledged in
a four-page statement Thursday that the White House last
summer sought to limit one
aspect of the FBI investigation
into the Watergate affair "in
th e interest of national security ." But he denied he participated in a plot to cover up
the facts behind the break-in
last June 17 at the Watergate
of
th e
headquarters

Democratic National Committee.
In other developments :
- Robert E . Cushman,
former depoty director of the
CIA and now commandant of .
the

Marine

Cor ps,

said

Thursday he had CIA records
to back up his statement that
Ehriichman asked him to
provide
assistance
to
Watergate conspirator E .
Howard Hunt in a covert White
House investigation of newspaper leaks. That assistance,
Hunt said, led to a burglary of
the office of Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist. Ehrlichrnan said
Wednesday that he did not
recall making such a request.
- Postmaster General E. T.
Klassen, answering a letter
from a House subcommittee,
denied charges that postal
workers opened or tampered
with political mail during the
1972 presidential campaign.
Ervin said the 1970 intelligence scheme was "a plan to
set up an operation to spy on
Americans generally, at least
any that didn 't agree with the
administration ." The plan was
removed from the While House
by former presidential counsel
John W. Dean when he was
fired by Nixon last April 30. A
federa l judge gave it to the

.?.~:?«:?~:s:::::::::::::m~:;:"'-::--&amp;?;:;~:?.?.::

WASHINGTON !UP!) The government's new
special proseeutor In the
Watergate case, Archibald
Cox, sought and faDed this
week to get the Senate's
hearings on the scandal
called off, It was reported .
today.
Cox was said to have made
the request out of concern
that the publlo hearings
would
Inhibit
future
prosecution of persons ac..
cused .In tbe case. Citing ·
Senate sources as the origin
ofthe report, the Washington
Post said Cox apparently
passed on the request to the
chief counsel of the special
Senate Watergate committee, Samuel Dash, and
Dasb rejeeted it.

Senate Watergate
mittee .
"I don 't think it's the function of the American government to spy on Americans,"
Ervin said. He said he would
determine, what portions of the
plan should ~ withheld for
national security reasons, but
be believed the rest of the information should be released to
the public.
Nixon first acknowledged the
existence of sueh a plan in his
May 22 statement. He said the
plan-which called for "breaking and entering" - was approved by .the White H;ouse in
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A long Yellow Ca b franchieses in Los troller said the bank had ex- July 1970, but was abandoned
time friend and key financial Angeles, San Francisco and ceeded legal limits in making five days later on the advice of
backer of Presiden t Nixon , C. Phoenix, hotels and office loans to Westgate-California, the late FBI director, J . Edgar
Arnholt Smith, was accused by buildings, tuna canneries here and ordered the bank to get the Hoover.
Three Republicans - Vice
the Securities and Exchange and in Puerto Rico, an airline, excess loans back.
Presid~nt
Spiro T. Agnew, Sen.
Commission Thursday of a Air Ca lifornia , produce, real
Robert Dole and Sen. Edward
multimillion dollar fraud .
estate and insurance firms.
J. ·Gurney, a member of the
The SEC suit charged that
Smith was named in a civil
Ervin
committee-called for a
suit by the SEC, along with two his Westgate-California Corp.
'
associates and six of th e, include in its earnings HO~PITAL \'EWS speedup in the Senate Watergate probe.
companies in his far f1ung s tatements
manufactured
In a letter tQ the other
business empire,, Smith · has earnings of over $17.5 million
Holzer Medical Center
committee
members, Gurney ·
been a co nfidante of. the from 1969 through 1972.
(Discharged)
President since Nixon was a
The SEC suit contended the
Carolyn Roush, Clarence advocated calling the key .
co ngressman . He · reportedly . defendants uSed their positions Roach, Martha Erd, Valerie witnesses as soon as possible.
raised more than $1 million fot at Westgate and U. S. Natio,nal Austin, Shirley McCarty, Amy Ervin said this would be imNixon's 1972 reelection cam- Bank to wrongfully ap- Gillespie, Mrs. Roger Emmert possible' because two key
paign, including $250,000 of propriate th~ assets of those and daughter, Joan Campbell, figures-former White House
two firms for the benefit of the Willard Anderson, Ruth White, counsel John Deari and Jeb S.
Smith's own money .
Just last weekend it was defendants, to the detriment of Robert Waugh, Jr., Dana Magruder, Nixon's one-time
revealed that Smith had the other shareholders.
Turner, Sr., Tina Floter, Maria deputy campaign manageragreed to sell the San Diego
The complaint asked the Romaine, Bruce Rodgers, John will not be granted immunity
Padres baseball team, of which court to order Westgate into Myers, Donnie McCoy, Russell by the court until about mid·
he is the majority owner, to a receivership, and bar Smith, Little, Anna Fulks, Virginia June.
Washington, D.C. group for $12 the firm 's chairman, or Philip Blazer, Harry Baldwin and
million , the highest price for a A. Toft, its president,. .from Francis Arledge.
team in the history of acting as officers of the firm.
(Births)
In a separate federal action,
Mrs . Robert Hanson, a
professional baseball.
LOCAL TEMPS
Smith, 74, rose from bank the comptroller of thecurrency . daughter , Jackson, Mrs .
The temperature in downteller to ths director ·of a moved against U. S. National Jeffrey Snedaker, a son, town Pomeroy at II a.m.
fina ncial empire that includes Bank, th e cornerstone of Gallipolis and Mrs. Ronald Friday was 69 degrees Iinder
th e U. S. Na tional Bank , Smith's empire. T)le corilp- Sexton , a son, Kerr .
sunny skies .

COOLVILLE - Funeral
services for Paul A. Watkins ,
54, Coolville Route 2, were held
Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home here with the Rev . Roy
Deeter officiating.
Mr. Watkins was the son of
the late Harlow and Carrie
Newland Watkins. Born. in
Meigs Collnty, he had been .
employed as a welder and
crane operator for the Walker
Textron Corp., Parkersburg,
for over 25 years.
S urvivin g are his wife,

Shop at Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy
Friday and Saturday Nights Until 9
BARGAINS ALL OVER THE STORE-WEARING

DAYTON , Ohio (UPI ) - A business
conglomerate with direct links to
organized crime figures has established a
secret and powerful hold on the horse
raclrig industry and large segments of
professional sports in Ohio and many other
parts of the nation, the Dayton Daily News
reported in its Sunday editions.
The Dally News, in the first of a series of
copyrighted articles written and
researched over a 10 month period by reporters GeneGoltzandJay Smith, said the
conglomerate consisted of the holding

company, Emprise 'Corp., its principal
subsidiary, Sportservice Corp. and hundreds of smaller subsidiaries and affiliated companies. Emprise is based in
Buffalo, N.Y.
The Daily News said more attention has
been focused on Emprise since. it was
convicted last year, along with several
Mafia figures , of conspiring to conceal the
ownership of a Las Vegas gambling
Casino, the Frontier Club.
The conviction threatened to unhinge

that need beer or liquor licenses because
state laws prohibit convi~ted felons from
holding the licenses the newspaper said.
In Ohio alone, there have been numerous
examples of Emprise.Sportservice's
power, influence, questionable practices
and dealings with organized crime figures ,
the newspaper said.
Syndicate Connection
The Daily News said EmpriseSportservice was the concessionaire and
unofficial banker for the Cleveland
many of Emprise's concession operations organized erime syndicate at River Downs

lndians Owner

f.mprise-Sportservice President Louis
M.•lacobs in 1945 arranged for Bill Veeck
to borrow $150,000 from Haas so that Veeck
could buy lhe Cleveland Indians. Haas told
Veeck to deposit and withdraw the money
through several banks so it could not be
traced, the newspaper said. _
When Haas died in 1959, EmpriseSportservice took over a large portion of
his real estate holdings, later selling. one

block of the holdings to Dayton Attorney
Sam Levin, the newspaper said.
The Daily News said Levin d"'&gt;lined to
disc uss his connections with EmpriseSportservice, but did say he borrowed
$2i0,500 from the firm in 1968 and that it is
the concessionaire at drive-.in theaters he
owns in Dayton, Troy, Springfield and
Cincinnati.
Emprise-Service and Sam W. Klein
whom state officials say has had connections with organized crime, have been
!Continued on page 2)

· Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

70s.

30 PAGES

THREE SECTIONS
Pomeroy-Middleport

VOL. E NO. 18

SUNDAY. JUNE 3. 19]J

Two hurt

Gallipohs-Polnl Pleasa nt

20 CENTS

-.

in Duti's
explosion

FROG ART CONTEST judged Friday by local artist William (Bill ) Mayer
covered 123 written entries and 90 drawings. The contest, for tbe first time this
year,, was conducted in conjunction with the annual Frog Jump held &lt;luring Big
Bend Regatta·weekend,June 15, 16, 17. Winners in the,contest will be _announced at
the Frog Jump on Saturday, June 16. All entries were to be on display followin g
Friday's judging at local banltS': Mrs .'ftb1'tPlit)·Holte~ is chairman of the c~ntest.
The contest and Frog Jump is sponsored by the Ohw Society for PromotiOn of
Bullfrogs, Jim Clatworthy, Grand Croaker.

GALLIPOLIS - Four members of a
Rio Grande family esca ped serious injury
.and possible death when their $10,01)() ca bin
cruiser, the "Duti,'' exploded at the
Gallipolis Boat Club on Chickamauga
Creek near the Garfield Ave. bridge
around. 4:35p.m. Saturday.
Rushed to the Holzer Medical Center
by a SEOEMS ambulance were Mrs.
Oliver W. ·Adkins, 38, and her son, Randall,
17. A spokesman at the medical center's
emergency room .said the two victims
wal)ted in under their own power, and were
being treated for cuts, bruises and burns.
Another son, Ron, Ia, and Mr. Adkins
apparently escaped unhurt. A gas leak
may have caused the explosion according
to one officer.

Both the Gallia County Volunteer
Emergency Service and SEOEMS units
were called to the scene, along with the
Volunteer Gallipolis Fire Department.
City Police Chief John Taylor and Sl
the Gallipolis Boat Club. Two of the cruiser's four occupants
AN EXP.LOSION LATE Saturday afternO!Jn all but
Hamilton, along with other city police
were
treated nt Holzer Medicai ·Center and released .
destroyed "Duli," a '10,000 ca bin cruiser owned by Oliver W.
offi cers and one Gallia. County Deputy
Adkins, Rio Grande . The blast occw-red about 4:35 p.m. at
Moonlighting off his ABC work, Diles Sheriff were still investigating the incident
i ~ reported to be engaged in writing two at 6 p.m. Saturday.
One volunteer fireman reported th e
books, one abqut Duffy Daugherty, a
former head football coach at Michigan Adkins family was preparing i.o "gas up "
State University, and the other about Joe when one of the cruiser's engines stopped .
When Mr. Adkins prepared to res tart the
Schmidt, of the Detroit Lions.
He i$ reported engaged for next season engine, the cruiser exploded, throwing
to do the color of ABC's top rated Monday Randall and Mrs. Adkins from the craft.
· Investigating officers said the cruiser
night football game of the week shows. He
GALLIPOLIS - Ronald Roger
POMEROY ~ Dale E. Smith , 100
was
"almost a total loss," but it did nor
continues as one of the networks' top
Dowdy, 32, Front Royal, Va ., has been
Spring Ave., has been selected to run for
sink .
producers of documentaries.
moved
from a local hospital by Gallipolis
Mr. Adkins is former manager of mayor of Pomeroy in th e Nov. 6 general
City Police officers to the county jail
Mason County Chrysler-Plymouth in Pt. election .
foll owing his arrest on charges of .breaking
Pleasant.
A distri ct committee consisting of
and entering and grand larceny in the
.,
.
members
of
the
Meigs
Republican
Central
burglary Wednesday morning at
139 NEW CARS SOLD
Committee who represented preci ncts in
Gillingham Drug Store.
GALLIPOLIS - According to the Title
Pomeroy nominated Smith who will run
Dowdy, according Jo polic ~, is
Division of the Gallia County Clerk of
for
the
unexpired
term
which
ends
Dec
.
31,
believed
to have cut his left arm when the
Cour ts Offi ce, 139 new cars were pur·
ACCIDENT WAS MINOR
plate glass window on the building's east
chased in the county during May. Dealers
GALLIPOLIS - Ci ty police in - 1975. The vacancy was created by the
death
of
Mayor
William
Baronick.
Don
side
was broken out. He was in Pleasant
sold 28 new trucks, 165 used cars, 25 used ves tigated a minor accident Friday night
Valley Hospital three days.
trucks, 33 new trailers, 11 used trailers, 43 on the parking Jot at the Burger Chef. Collins is presently serving as Mayor.
A second suspect in the· drug store
motorcyCles, nine used motorcycle.s and Officers said an auto driven by Diana'
Smith,
who
recently
retired
from
.caper, David McKinley Lafon, 43, Norfolk,
one new motor home . Deputy clerks Issued Bailey, 16, Rt. I, Thurman, backed into an
Foote
Mineral
after
20
years,
served
on
Va ., pleaded not guilty Friday in Gallipolis
1,376 titles, made 332 notation of liens •. 236 auto operated by Michael P. Mitchell, 2018
Municipal Court. He demanded a
ca ncellations of liens, 13 duplicate titles Chatham Ave, There was minor damage Pomeroy Council eight yea rs, 1950-'58
·when
he
was
chairman
of
the
finance
preliminary hearing which was set for
and no citation was issued.
and five replacement titles.
committee and served on the utilities
Friday, June 8. Bond was set at $5,000 on
commi t_tee.
the breaking and entering charge and
DALE SMITII
$2,500 on the grand larceny charge.
He is a member of Pomeroy Masonic
Lafon was arrested in the parking lot at
Lodge 164 and Knight of the York Cross of
the Holiday Inn. His blood-stained car was
SQUAD CALLED
Honor, a member of Pomeroy Trinity
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport impounded at the City Building as
Church , and Order of Eastern Stars of Emergency Squad took Arthur Mills, 47, evidence.
whi ch he is Worthy Patron.
Wa tches and non-prescription drugS
Rutland, to the Holzer Medical Center at
12:48 a.m. Saturday. Mills, believed to were taken in the break in. Also arrested
Mr . and Mrs. Smith have two children, have suffered a heart attack, was taken to Friday was Ferrill A. Lamm, 19, 125 State
Ron, of Pomeroy, RD, and Cha rlene, of Middleport Village Hail via private car St., Gallipolis, for intoxication and
fContlntied on page 2)
!.1arion, and four s randchildren .
and the squad called there .

Diles to frog jumps
POMEROY ~ Dave Diles, one time
society notes and sports stringer in Middleport for the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
today one Of ·ABC's top sports commentators, will participate in the annual
Frog Jwnps here Saturday, June 16.
Grand Croaker Jim Clatworthy of
Middleport, himself a sports buff of considerable repute, "knew Diles when ... "
Clatworthy said Saturday his signing
Diles apprently to tape and film the
jumps has to rank as the crowning croak of
his reign this year as the Big Frog of the
Ohio Society for the Promotion of the Bull
Frog.
Diles began work for the Tribune in
Middleport in 1947 as a Middlep.oq_High
School freshman covering Busy Bee Circle
meetings, football, basketball, and
anybody else who moved. He displayed an
early sense of the unusual, that makes
news. But he wasn't bored either, by the
most ordinary events. He is the son of the
late Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Diles who resided
on Beech St., Middleport.
· Diles' exact role at the jumps here
remains a secret.

•
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Golden Jubilee festivities set
I

•

'
'

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•

Don't forget to visit Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street-

lj / -'
'

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I

I

MEM.BERS OF THE 1937 GRADUATING class of the
Holzer Hospital School of Nursing we re, first row, 1-r, Maude
Smith Miller, Helen Fry Wood, Margaret Lloyd Porter and

--

-

"Suspect is
behind bars

Smith will
make race

Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Saleslips From

'-

members of the Cleveland crime syndi cate, Sanuny Haas.

~

.tmts

Eighty per cent chance of
showers today an d this
evening . Partial clearing,
cooler Monday. Lows tonight
low 50s. High Monday in the

AND FURNISHINGS 'FOR YOUR HOME

Open 9:30 AM to 9 PM on Fridays and Saturdays-Week Days 9:30 to 5

race track in Cincinnati and Thistle Downs
(then spelled as two words ) racetrack at
Cleveland in the late 1930s and 19408,
Emprise~Sport se rvice
became a
stockholder at River Downs shortly after
known members of the Cleveland crime
syndicate relinquished control of the track
in the early 1950's and then later sold it
when the Ohio Racing Commission began
raising questions, the Daily News said.
The newspaper said EmpriseSportservice and its owners did con·
siderable business with an attorney for

Bengals, fleds, I
I
Royals, horses ·1
tied with loans

+

Weather

APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMILY

omero

:·:·

Emprise cOnplomerate, underw()rld III
~:~:
grips Ohio's, nation's pro sports · I

Presidential crony charged

'

.

::::::::::::-.x:::~·::::m-.m-..«:::0;·:·:-:;:-.f.::::-;-;;:~;:;::::--:::;::::~:::'-:::::::::::~~::::::»-A"A"~;:!'a

.~.

Paul Watkins
huried T UeSday .

Thelma Pullins Watkins; two
daughter s, ESther Jean
Hughes and Paula Eileen
Brewer, both of Coolville ; five
brothers, Argyle, of Ravenna;
Garrett, Columbus; Gerald, of
Grove City; Marion, of Bay
City, Mich., and Robert,
Philadelphia, Pa .; a siste"r,
Mrs. Mary Duvall, Reedsville;
an aWJt, two grandchildren,
and several nieces and
neph ews . A half-brother,
11112 Clyde, preceded him in death.

lir~;:&gt;,::&gt;,s~~:,i:~:r:~:,:,:,: ,::~'

•utlond

I.ONG BOTTOM - Murl
Taylor, 83, Long Bottom Route
I, died Thursday evening at his
home following an extended
illness. Mr. Taylor was born in
Ross County, the son of the Ia te
James and Eliza Waterman
Taylor. He was also preceded
in death by his wife, Elizabeth,
in 1964 ; a son, Willard , in 1970 ;
two sisters, and t!No grandchildren.
A resident of Meigs County
for the greater part of his life,
Mr. Taylor was a member of
the Keno Christian Church. He
had been a farmer and a
grange member many years .
He is survived by three
daughters , Mrs . Russell
(Leona) Cline, Mrs. Kenneth

have been stirred as he
presents the Gospel in his own
S(Jeda l way. He has appeared

should be " delivered directly"
to Cox. He said Cox would have
to be consulted before any
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Mary
"s ign ifi ca nt deci sions " arc
Emma Brickles died Thursday
made.
morning
at Arcadia Nursing
of independence'' in his inThe Office of the Wa tergate
vestigation and prosecution of Special Prosecution Force , the Home, Coolville, at the age of
the Watergate case and •·all name given to Cox's staff, has 81. She was the daughter of the
offenses arising out of the 1972 been working temporarily at late Robert and Mary . Jane
preSidential election ... "
offices in the Justice Depart- Holcomb Adkins . She was
"Allegations involving the ment. Next week, however, preceded in death by her
President, mernbers of the Cox and his staff will move in to husband, John W. Brickies, in
1964, and a daughter and a
White House staff or presiden- a downtown office building.
brother.
tial appointees" come under
James Vorenberg, one of
Survivors include one
the order, Richardson said in Cox's assistants, sai d the new
daughter
, Mrs. Gale (Bertha
his directive.
offi&lt;..:e has undergO ne a special
No Interference
security check to guard against Mae 1 Hysell, Colwnbus; a son,
"The attorney general will break-i ns, bugging and tapping William Robert Brickles ,
Middleport ; two sisters, Mrs.
not countermand or interfere of telephones.
M. D. (Alice) Brickles, Middleport, and Mrs. Glen (Cora)
Vance, Middleport ; a brother,
William Adkins, Middleport ;
REVEREND SPEAKS
several nieces and nephews;
Tonight, Sat., Sun.
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) seven
grandchilqren, and four
June 1·2·3
Rev . Leon H. Sullivan, grea !-grandchildren.
THE LAST
minister of the Zion Baptist
The funeral will be at 2 p.m.
PICTURE SHOW
in Philadelphia and a Saturday at the Rawlings•
Church
Timothy- Bottom s
black enterprise leader, will Coats Funeral Home with the
Jeff Bridges
deli ver th e main comIRJ
Rev . Dwight Zavitz officiating.
Cartoon :
mencement address at Ohio
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Pluto and th e Goph.e r
Wesley.an University here June
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
10.
may call at the funeral home
Sullivan, founder of the Op- any time.
portunities
Ind ust ri alization
Center which has train ed more
PLEASANT VALLEY
than 75,000 persons in 100
DISCHARGES
Paul
M1onWV,1
fl. C , 11 toon N1qhtly
American cities and several Tickle, Pt. Pleasant; Edna
African natio ns, will receive an Wilcoxe n, Mrs. Fred Long,
Tonight, June 1
honorary doctor of- huma!'Jities Apple Grove: Kenneth Jeffers,
Double Feature Program
degre e ouring the ceremonies. South Side; Robert Harper, Pt.
"LAST OF TH E
Pleasant; Glenna Patterson
RED HOT LOVER S"
.
Gal
lipolis Ferry;
Mark'
{ CoiQr)
Alan Arkin
Blankenship, Letart ; Matt
Sa ll y Kellerman
Blankenship, Letart; Mrs .
l PG I
Howard Patterson and son,
&lt;Continued fi-um Page 1)
- Plusthose
at
Kyg
er
Creek
Plant,
the
Point
Pleasant; George Selrell ,
" PLAY IT
AGAIN, SAM "
Clifty Creek Plant at Madison, So uth Side ; Dottie Pierce,
(Color}
Ind., and the headquarters Mason; J e tson Austin , Pt.
Woody Al len
di vision near the Atomic Plant Pleasant; Mrs. Perry Finley
i.f'G J
and so n, Gallipolis.
in Pike County .
Wise, with his wife, Kathryn,
SATURDAY
make their home at 209
. International .
June 2
t..eague Standings
GrandVi ew Avenue in:Waverly,
Double Feature
By United Press International
BAMPIRE CIRCUS
and for the immediate future
American Division
and
W. L. Pel. GB
will be dividing their time beCOUNTESS DRACULA
Roc hester
28 17 .622
tween
the
Wa
verly
a
nd
MidAdrien ne Corr i
Syracu se
20 21 .488 6
dleport . Pomeroy com - Pawtucket
Ingrid Pitt
18 20 .474 61!2

pomemy

died Thursday

all .ages and denominations

frequenUy and has released a
new album on Imperial

Cox has it all
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Attorney General Elliot Richardson said Thursday he will not

Murl Taylor

Unda Beryl Reuter Drumheller ; Second row, direCtor Ha zel
Richard Ruth Freshcorn DeMars, Margaret McCormick
Blazer, ~ho submitted the name for the -celebration ; Andrea
Kiser Rees, Sarah Spurlock and Bernice Templeton Lyon.

GALLIPOLIS - The Golden Jubilee of
Holzer Nurses will lake place here June 8,
9 and 10 beginning Friday evening with a
hospitality session and registration at 7
p.m. at the Holiday Inn.
,
Margaret Blazer, Gallipolis, Class of
1937, submitted the theme for the
celebration which marks 5n years of
graduates from the Holzer School of
Nursing founded by Dr. and Mrs. Charles
E. (Alma V.) Holzer, Sr., in 1920 ..
Over 210 Holzer graduates are expected to return for the celebration which
the Registered Nurses Association and the
Hol~er Medi cal Center physicians will
host.
The formal program wi ll gel underway al 8 a.m. Salurday when guests

will take· a spe~ial bus from the Holiday
Inn for a light breakfast at the Holzer
Medical Center cafeteria and a tour of the
new facilities .
The Jubilee Lunche on, served al 12:3Q
at the Elks Club , wi ll be highlighted by a
style show. of Holzer Student Uniforms.
Bri gadier General Lillian Dunlap, U. S.
Army Nurses Corps, will be the guest
speaker.
Following lunch, the celebran ts will
tour the School of Nursing at Davis · Hall
and the Frenc h Art Colony, Riverby,
which is the fo rme r home of Dr . and Mrs.
Holzer, Sr. At 4 p.m. the bus will return to
the Holiday Inn .
Rio Grande College will host the

banquet Saturday evening at 7 which will
be followed by a dance at the Wharf Room
of the Holiday Inn at 9.
Services in the Medical Center Chapel
at 10:30 a.m., Sunday, will include the
dedication of the chapel.
Gentlemen accompanying the nurses
are invited to participate ina tour of Ohio
River industry which will leave the Park
Front at 9:30 a .m. Saturday, and enjoy
either an afternoon of golf or a tour of Bob
Eva ns Farms at I p.m. The two tours for
the nurses at 3 p.m. are also open to the
men.
Approximately 367 persons are ex·pected for th&lt; Saturday evening dinner
session .

�2- The SIUlday TLme:- Sentlnel, S~o .ay,June 3,1973

Tax relief proposals up for
vote in Ohio House, Senate

•

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A prur use'' rat~r than 1ts worth as
of tax rehef proposals are an mvestment.
scheduled to reach the floor of
A Senate subcommittee
the House and Senate this week which has been studymg the
as the llOth session of the House·passed proposal smce
General Assembly enters 1ts last February recommended
SIXth month
last week that a Similar tax
The House IS lo vote Wednes· break for recreational land be
day on a Senate-passed resolu. the subject of a separate bill
tion removmg the $3.000 ce1hng
The constJtutwnal amendon exemptions from the state ment was held off the May
mcome tax for each fam1ly
pnmary ballot because of
The Senate has scheduled a controversy over whether
vote for the same day on a recreatiOnal land should be
House-passed resolutiOn gJVmg mcluded
farmers tax breaks on the val.
ue of the1r land.
Still another constitutional
Both proposals are const1tu- amendment - authonzmg the
tiona! amendments and will legislature to wnte a "shield"
head for the November ballot 1f law to protect newsmen from
cleared this week
bemg reqlllied lo reveal their
Exemptions from the state sources - wlll get a vote in the
mcome tax are now limited to House Tuesday
six per fam•ly at $500 ap1ece.
The Senate has set a vole
The proposed conshluhonal Tuesday on legislatiOn makmg
amendment would perm1t ex· "Irreconcilable dlfferences"
tra exemptions, benefitting grounds for divorce m Ohio
larger farmhes lt would cost
Under the measure sponthe stale an esllmated $2 sored by Sen. Paul E G1llmor,
m1lhon per year m lost R·Port Clmton, a divorce could
revenues
be granted on those terms 1f the
The resolutwn m the Senate spouses hve apart for one
would authonze agncultural year.
land to be valued for taxatiOn
The
House
Jud1c1ary
on the basts of 1ts ''current Comm1ttee IS cons1dermg a

" no -fault"
d1vorce
b11l
authored by Rep Alan E
Norns, R·Westervllle
legislation
1, House-passed
author1zmg townships to
regulate parkmg at pnvate
shoppmg centers to msure
access for pubhc safely
vehicles IS set for a Wednesday
vote 111 the Senate
The state's $9 9 b1ll10n budg.
et, cleared by the House, 1s due
for a revampmg m a Senate
Fin a nee subcomm•tlee which
continues work lhls week
Controllmg Republicans
have mthcated they will come
up w1th plans this week to tnm
some ~15 m11l1on from the
House verston and reallocate
other funds.
Hearmgs will contmue Tuesday and Wednesday m the
flouse F1nance Committee on
the $.155 milhon sundry cla1ms
bill
A vote as antac1pated Thursday mormng m the flouse Judi·
Clary Cmmmttee on legislation
lowermg the age of adulthood
from 21 to 18
The corrumttee last week a~
proved an amendment mcludmg a reduction m the drmkmg
age. That proposal Is expected

to get another test on the House
noor. The Senate passed the
..arne bill without lowermg the
dnnkmg age.
The JUdiCiary Committee
also w11l conUnue hearmgs
Thursday
on
leg1slat10n perm1lt1ng care.
fully performed abortiOns
pnor to 20 weeks of pregnancy
Rep Arthur R Wilkowski,
D·Toledo, committee cha1r
man and ch1ef sporfsor of tht:
measure, sa1d he antiCipates a
vote next week

Ohio politics
Assembly
convened
10
January, 1971, and that after
the budget IS adopted, there IS
little that can 't wait unttl next
year.
Unemployment
com·
pens a llon and workmen 's
compensation reform bills sllll
must be dealt with, the leaders
agree, and Democrats say \bey
would hke to see the Senate
follow the House's lead and
approve an ethics bdl
But after that, the road to
home Is open
This means, barrmg a SW'prtse return m the autumn , the
lawmakers will have plenty of
maJOr b1lls left over for them
next year
For many of these bdls, the
chances for passage w1ll be

better next year when the pressures of an tmpending election
are brought to bear
Tax Relief
Take, for example, tax relief.
The admlmstrahon of Gov.
John J Gilligan ca n JUSllflably
hold back on bills returnmg
money to groups of taxpayers
unlll actual receipts from the
f1rst year's collectwn of the
state mcome tax are tallied up
By next year, revenues w11l
he a known quanllty and 1f
there are any left over, their
distnbutwn will be most welcome m an electwn year
House Republicans ha ve proposed a nme-pomt tax rehef
package, which they w1ll probably have to turn mto campalgQ fodder, smce the1r
mmority posttLOn precludes 1ts
passage w1thout help
However, Democrats have
JOined m making nmses for
1deas hke a hd on the mcome
tax and a tax brea k for workmg
marrted couples, as well as a
sales tax exempllon on clothmg
Repubhcans seem more Intent on making tax rehef a
campa1gn 1ssue than the G1lli-

gan admamstratwn, and per.
haps they w1ll be makmg
agreements to go along w1th
other adimmstratwn programs
m return for some tax rehef
b1lls.
Whatever happens, 1t ts certam that both parlles will take
credit for any removal of lax
burde n.
Hopes Dim
Two maJOr prmnt1es of the
G1lhgan admtmstratwn electi&lt;m reform and governmental reorgaruzabon - seem
to stand httle chance, even
next year
Republicans w1ll probably
avmd gomg along w1th any
Democratic electaon reform
proposals, especially III an
election year. And only a very
llmi ted
governmental
reorgaruzabon authortty would
be giVen the governor by the
GOP-dommated Senate.
The third maJor 1tem on the
governor's hst of pnorttJes IS
an ethics b1ll for pubhc offi cials
and employes. It has already
passed th e
Democraticcontrolled House
Ltke tax rehef, an ethics code
would be welcome m an

~

W~:§~

~~1!

Dl~
D "'L ME

'*

IN, too

Examination for
carrier is set
V

~

;.
'
i

election year, especially at a
t1me when pubhc confidence m
goverrunent needs a shot an the
arm
Other b1lls, now on the back
burne1 s, which can be expected to pop forth next year
are collechve bargammg for
publiC emplo yes, landlord.
tenant reform, no-fault auto
msurance, antt-pollutwn and
stnp rome reform, JOb safety
and t1ghlemng drug abuse and
consumer protection laws
Gubernatonal task forces on
higher educalwn and health
ca re systems also may have
some recommendatwns whtch
could prompt v1gorous debate
and help cram the electwn
year agenda still t1ghl&lt;lr

PARK SURVEY SET
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohw Departl!lenl of Natural
Resources a nnounced Fnday 1t
Will survey more than 10,000
public and pnvate recreatiOn
areas m the state this summer
lo determine what type of
facihLJes are ava1la ble

BELLSETILES
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Oh1o Bell Telephone Co. and
several major c1t1es have
agreed to settle Ohio Bell's $166
m1llion rata mcrease request at
a compromiSe S9ll rmlhon, c1ty
Pubhc Utilities Director
Robert Newlon said Friday
Nearly two years ago, Ohio
Bell asked the Public Utilities
CommissiOn of Ohio ( PUCO)
for perm1ss1on to earn $166
mallJOn a year more 1n grass
revenue.

LONG BOTTOM An
exam1nat10n for substitute
rural carrier or record w1ll be
held H M Lawrence, post~
X
N
~
«
« master at Long Bottom , an~
~ nounces
Accordwg to the anPOMEROY - Mr. and Mrs F. M Rizer and M1hsa are
nouncement,
subslltute rural
VISlhng their son and brother, Franklm, this week at lbe Air
earners of recor,d starting
Force Academy III Colorado, where Franklin IS fmlshing up his
salanes range from $28 to $32
second year there They went especially for June Week
festavttaes
per day dependmg on the
length and character of the
They w1ll be commg back home June 7 along With Franklin
who w1ll have a month's stay at home
route The apphcatwn for the
pos1t10n 1s available at the
FOUR NEW KITI'ENS have arr1ved on the S('Cne at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Braun, Pomeroy. Monday, the
Long Bottom Post Office
family cat gave b1rth to four htUe bundles offur.
Applications must be sub· BIG FIRE
TIJUANA, Mextco (UP!) l().year-&lt;Jid Kenda officially converted the garage when she
milled before June 20
Federal officials satd Thursput up a s1gn on the door reading, " Matermty Ward''
day
they burned 33,000 pounds
OVER 1,000 INVITATIONS to the Me1gs High School Alumni
of mariJuana, 44 pounds of coNowYouKoow
Dance are now m the mall with only a few more to be sent.
came
and a m1lhon ptlls con~
Motmsts m Los Angeles last
Please, if we rniSsed your name, buy a Ucket anyway With that
year drove 18 5 b1lhon miles- flscated m narcotics arrests
many names and addresses to get ahold of there m1ghl be some
enough to go to the moon and durmg the past five months m
people who were unmtentionally left out or under the wrong
thiS border c1ty
back 37,000 hmes.
add ress Beheve me, tl was a tough JOb locating so many
graduates'
BOB COUCH OF POMEROY wtll leave Monday after a
month's leave from the Air Force to visit the family here. He w1ll
be gone a year on duty m Thailand.
Also home from the Air Force this past month and leavmg
this week are Jon Kloes, Middleport, and Paul Card, Pomeroy
All three are 1971 graduates of Meigs H1gh School.
DONNA FRANCIS, EDITOR of the Marauder yearbook, IS
busy famshmg it up alone smce Mrs. Bernice Hoffman, advisor,
suffered a cardiac arrestdurmg the last six weeks of school Best
Wishes to Mrs Hoffman for a speedy recovery
I HEAR INDIANS are trymg to reclaim a part of Manetta
that was deeded to them years ago. Wonder 1f there w1ll be a
reservatiOn for us there when I go back to school this fall!
~
~
~

~
~
~

'

A House ElectiOns s ub.
comm1ttee Is expected to vote
Wednesday on an electwn
reform bill reducmg the state
resadency reqULrement from
SIX months to 30 days and
reqwrmg recounts m races
decided by less than one-half
per cent of the total vote.
A Senate Commerce and La.
bor subcorrumltee Will continue work Wednesday on
legislation prov1dmg for
collective bargammg for pubhc
employes
The House returns at 10 30
am Tuesday, and the Senate f(".:!···: :::::::·:·.::·:::::·:::·:::::- : .•. ·:-:·. • ··:· •••:; : •.. -::-: :·:·•• ;.;., .·:· •.·.·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:ow...:·:·:~..:·:·:·:::·:-:;:;
h
~
atl30pm

Lawmakers prepare to adjourn
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Oh10
leglSlallve leaders, sensmg the
mood of thear troops, a re prepared to adjourn for the year
shortly after enactment of the
budget next month
They pomt out there has been
no real resp•te from pohtlckmg
smce the 109th General

;:.:::::::;-:.::;.;.;:-.;.:::-:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.•:·:;;.;.;.:.:::-:-:-:=:·:·:-: ,;.r..'$J%Y..'«-::~ o••

:;!

Generation Rap

·!i!

Gy Ht'll•n ami Sue Hottel

Television Log

·li
'ij

Wanted : Hero's POW Bracelets
Dear Readers
For over a year, I wore a POW bracelet engraved With the
name "Captam Anthony Andrews" (of Chico, Califorma) He's
home now, after five and one-half years as a prisoner of war, and
he wants everyone to know bow grateful he and other released
men are to those milhons of people who never forgot - and
backed up their prayers w1th letters to Hanm, and support of
VlVA POW·MIA campaign efforts
The Chico K1wams Club plans a lasting memorial for V1et·
nam serviCemen, centered around Captam Andrews' bracelets
Ball Hethermgton, chatrman of the Kiwams proJect, ts
collectmg as many of these POW bracelets as posstble (mme
among them) wh1ch will be displayed m a large plastiC capsule
as part of a pubb c tr~bute to all Vtetnam veterans, hvmg or dead.
Because thousands of our readers bought POW·MlA
bracelets, B1ll has asked that we prmt hiS request for the return
of those carrymg Captam Anthony Andrews ' name.
If you'd hke to be a part of this special memonal, please send
your Andrews bracelet, together With your full name and address
(which w1ll be mcluded m the display ) to
CHICO KIWANIS CLUB,
P 0 BOX 780,
Ch1co, California, 95926.
What of Tony h1mself? The 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld Arr Force Captam's
f1rst stateside assignment 1s at Randolph Air Force Base, San
Anlomo, Texas Thereafter, because of his electnca1 engmeermg
degree, he wtll be stationed at the Atr Force procurement center
adJacent to the Los Angeles International Airport. Future plans,
Wlder the auspaces or the Atr Force,' may mclude attendance at
the Umvers1ty of Southern Callforma to obtam h1s Masters
Degree in Aeronautical Engmeermg
Thanks m advance 1 you "Andrews people, '' for contr1buting
to the bracelets memorial You may return them, tissuewrapped m ordinary envelopes, marked "hand-stamp"- SUE

Youth injured in
motorcycle accident

Suspect

i

ending
long career as educator

CANAL WINCfiESTER M1lton G Will , 56, athlellc
d1rector of Canal Wmchester
fl1gh School and Math teacher
In the Jun1or H1 gh School, a
native of Chester Jo\l.nstup m
Me1gs County, won 't answer
h1s classroom bell next Sep·
!ember
W11l , a son, brother and
father of educators, IS retmng
th1s month endmg a 3l·year
ass•gnment m local schools
"" M11ton W1ll IS one of the
seven sons of the late W1lham
A and Edna Garen W1ll, who
also had four daughters, all
born at the family home m the
Texas Community
near
Chester. The senwr Will's
other progeny - he was a
farmer and teacher h1mself for
30 years - and thear careers m
bnef
Dr Roland G W1ll , retired ,
taught 50 years, graduate of
R10 Grande College, masters
and Ph D at Ohw Stale
Umvers1ty ,
resides
Massachusetts
John M Will, retired, lives
on family farm , taught one
year, was associated with the
OhiO Dept of Liquor Control
Lomse Will Fischer, prac·
heal nurse, Greenfield, retired.
Montgomeroy Wtll, retired,
taught and admtmstered
schools for 40 years, B S and
Masters at Ohw State
V1ctor L. Will, rellred, taught
and actm•o•stered sc hools 36
years, graduate of Oh10
Umvers1ty, Masters at OSU
Ph11lp F W1ll, Columbus
bea uty salon ow ner
Florence W1ll Ferrell ,
housewife.
Mary Will Kilpatnck, public
schools 23 years, presently
employed as psychologiSt m
the Colwnbus school system,
graduate of Ohw Umversity
and Ohw Stale Umvers1ty
Betty Will Louc ks, R. N ,
graduate of Holzer, 33 years
employed
in
Columbus
hospitals
W1lham L W1ll, fa rmer and
br1ck mason, Chester Twp
Total years of professiOnal
teacbmg above 1s 225 In ad·
dillon, the w1ves of three Wills,
Mrs R G , Mrs Mont, and Mrs
Vtctor are retired teachers
M1lton Will 1s keepmg the
educator thmg ahve Two of his

'"

f,tl , t111

W

Four hospitalized

IS

W11l 's first teach10g job was
ch1ldren, James and Jamce,
at
Fornof School m Colwnbus
are teachers at canal Wm·
He coached JW110r and semor
chester.
There w1ll be more than his h1gh basketball and track , as
as taught Math when he
two children keepmg the name
JOined
the Canal Wmchester
well known at Canill Wmfaculty m 1942 He also became
chester
F1fteen years ago lVIII assistant football coach when
football was started there m
conceived the then new 1dea for h1gh schools - of the In· 1947
He hasn't coached for SIX
vftahonal track meet The
Canal Wmchester Jnvttat10nal years but he has contmued as
Track Tournament , wh1ch the school d1stnct 's f~rst
became the farst m ce ntral athletic director
There have been great
Ohio, today 1s one of the most
changes '" :n years Two
preshguous m 1ts class
Because W1ll found•d 1t, and elementary wmgs have been
managed 11 through to h1s added to the school plant, and
retirement, the meet from now the facul ty has gro wn fr om ll
on Will be known as the "M1lton to 53
Ch1ldren rernam about the
Will lnvilataonal '' He was
presented a plaque m ap· same, W1ll beheves
"They still need gu1dance
propnate ceremomes rece ntly
at the h1gh school 1n ap· and love and bemg stnct wtth
precmtaon of his past serv1ces them ts appreCii:tted late1 on,
I
really
don 't
to the athletic program and and
see
a
g•
eat
deal
of
d1f·
fiXIng the future name of the
fcrem:e m them except they
mv1tatwnal tournament
are
w1ser, have much w1der
A pubhc tnbute to W1ll at the
and btoader knowledge ," he
presentahon saad
"W1ll has been synonymous sa•d
Durmg h1s retirement years,
w1th athlel!cs at Canal WmW1ll expects to be self·
chester H1gh School for years
employed
as a pamter , both
He has been a p10neer
the
field , making Wmchester farst mdo01 s and out
There wtll t~lso be more l!Ine
m the area to have an mfor Will and Ius w1fe, Ruth, to
vatatiOnal track tournament
spend
at thear house m Mcags
There are hundreds, even
th ousands, of Canal Wm- County , near h1s birthplace ,
chester H1 gh School graduates, and for the 01 gamzat1ons m
some of whom are now old by wh1ch he ts mteres ted He ts a
youth standards who have h1gh member of the Canal Wmchestel L10ns Club, Potter
school students of the~r own
Many of them have been af. Masomc Lodge and Aladdm
fected by M1lton W1ll 's career Temple and the Canal Wmm sports at Canal Wmchester chestcr MethodiSt Church,
H1 gh School Many have been presadent of the F'ranklm
helped to appl wate the value CoWlty Athletic Assoc1atwn,
of the at hle llc program and a membe1 or the Mid-State
through Wall's contnbutwns " At hletic Assoc1atwn

ROCK SPRINGS - Four
persons were hospltallzcd
followmg a smgle car aCCident
Fr~day at 10 14 p m on the
race track at Me1gs County
Fairgrounds, the Me1gs County

"'II

'n

Rotary backing up health fair
Mid·
MIDDLEPORT
dleport-Pomeroy Rotanans
agreed mformally to co.
sponsor the appearance here 1n
ea rly August of the proposed
" Hea lth Fa1r" wh1ch IS
designed to mform people of
md1v1dual health needs and
ser v1ces available to them
The fair 1s bemg sponsored
here by the local Presbyterian
Church through 1ts OhiO
presbytery, whach as mv1tlng
support from the cou nty,s
soc 1al
and
fraternal
orga mzahons

The Rev Bob Bumgarner,
pastor of Heath Um ted
MethodiSt Churc h, and a
Rotanan, presented the case
for the fa1r to the club
Gene Riggs, pres1d ent,
presided over the br1ef open
meetmg at Heath Church
followmg a dmner of fned
ch1 cken seJ ved by ladles of the
churc h t'he rncetmg on June 15
w11l begm at 5 30 p m and
conclude by 6 p m so as not lo
co nfhct w1lh the Regatta
Parade

Dillon begins
damage action

Mil .TON Wll .I., retmng as teacher and atlllcllc director

Uus month at Canal Wmchc.ster Schools, holds the plaque
presented to h1m 1ecently m apprec1at10n of lus yea1s of
se1 v1ce to the school a nd 1L~ athlet1c p1 ogram C-W's dnn ual
mv1t.atwnal track meet hencefoa th w1ll be known .Js tr .~
M1lton Wall Inv1tat10nal

(:()l,.{)~l

Addie Cross of

•

Langsville i:lit''s

• .

.

Tho•t~tr. ·

GALLIPOLIS - Herman L
Dillon, 505 Pecan St , Saturday
filed a smt m Gallla County
Common Pleas Court seekmg
$44,530 22 m damages agamst
Lew1s Edwem Lee, 505 Burnell
Rd , Kanauga The acllon
stems from an accident June
18, 1971 at the mterseclion of
Pme St and Second Ave
D1llonJs petition to the court
alleges the defendant Lee
negligently drov e a car mto
Dallon's ctuto PlamtJH seeks
the damages for InJUries, loss
of mcome and expenses mcurred He says he suffered
neck InJUries whach have
caused permanent damage
In other court actaon , Nancy
Hunt, 484 Kathy St , Gallipolis,
Fnday hied a pet1t10n seckmg
a d1vorce from S...Sgt Franklyn
Hunt, APO San FranCISCO
They y,ere marned Oct 18,
1961 and have two children She
charged gross neglect of duty
and ext1erne cruelty

A Rolool" 0 ft•uln&gt;h M•rllfl IIIII f'llm

2Q 1"ct Nll1!1

JO~

Cartoon

FRENCH
CONNECTION
Plus

M.A.S.H.

by the Pmneroy and Mid·
dleporl ER umts Gilkey was
arrested on charges of reckless
OperatiOn on properly other
than streets and h1ghways
The car Gilkey was dr1vmg
was demoltshed
" The shenff's department
also mveshgated a smgle car
accident Saturday at 8 am on
SR 143 Lee E. Ramey ,
Pomeroy, Rt 3, was travehng
on 143 when h1s car turned over
several t1mes
Ramey was not InJured He
was Cited to court on charges of
reckless operat1on There was
heavy damage to the car

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES

CLOGS
WHITE BLUE &amp;

BROWN
SIZES 6 TO 10
N &amp;M

NOW
Sunday· Monday
and Tuesday

"SOU..eDER"

Shenfl's Department reported
Kenneth M Gilkey, 24, New
Ha ve n, dr1ver , Wi:J S traveling
on the track at a h1gh rate of
speed when the car went
through a fence , down a sleep
embank.nlent, landmg ups1de
down tn a creek Gilkey was
pmned m the car
Passengers m the car,
Russell Sargent, 21, The
Pla1ns, sustamed severe
lacerations to h1s head and
fa ce, Lucille Tayl or and
Brenda W1se, both of Athens,
also sustamed InJUries
All four were tak en to
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal

REG. 114.99

Tomghl Th ru
Wednesday

LANGSVILLE Adrlie
C1 oss, 70, Rt. l, Langsville,
d1ed F'raday afternoon at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
She was preceded 111 death b;
her husband, Waller Cross, m
t963
"
SurvJVtng are a d~:~ughter,
Mrs Audt ea Pm ks , Columbus, three sons, Amos C1oss,
Rut land,
Arthur
Cross.
Athens, and Ancil Cross,
Mlddlcporl , lhree stste rs, M1s
Caroh ne Barton and Mrs .losiC
Brady, both of Shock, W Va,
a nd Mrs 81na Perk1n s,
Rosedale, W. Va , and tl
grandchi ldren
f'uncral sc rvtccs w1ll be held
Monday 2 p m at Rutland
Nazarene Church w1Lh Rev
Lloyd Gnmm off•clatmg
Bunal w1ll be '" Coy H11l
Ce metm y, Danville F1 JCnds
may call anyt1me a l Martan
Fune1al Home

$ 00

SUNDAY 1 P.M. TIL 6 P.M.

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY

In Th e SILver B1 odge Shopp111q Plaza
Open Mon thru Sal. 10 o•l o, Sun 1 f1l6

Second Avenu1

VI

Sun , Man , &amp; Tu es
" PLAY IT AS
IT LAYS"
Tuesday Weld
Anthony Perk 1ns

Rap

SUNDAY

•

(\ ( ,ttl uoll Ntqhtly

Emprise grips sports over Ohio
(Contmued from page I)
~ OhiO racetracks and has had apparent
accused of fraud m connection With the hfe-or-death control over some
The Ascto Park rac etrac k at Akron
1970 closmg of the Dayton Speedway after
the firm flied court cla1ms for $185,000 closed m 1967 after a 12-year h1story m
based on a $100,000 loan by the con· which the track contmually owed more
cesstonatre m 1960, the newspaper smd money to Empnse.Sport.service than 11
Klem was a stockholder m the speedway. could pay back. The Cranwood racetrack
Jacobs and Klem were partners m the m Cleveland also closed after a h1story of
Kentucky Raceway, Florence, Ky, and m staggenng debts to Emprlse.Sportserv~ee,
the Lion Manufacturmg Corp., m the 1960's the Dayton newspaper sa ad.
which later became the Bally Manufac. The tracks where the company had
turmg Corp , the world 's largest maker of concessions, made loans or had part
ownership, sometunes htdden, mclude
slot machmes, the Da1ly News sa1d.
Empnse-Sportserv1ce, at the reque st of Raver Downs, Thastledown , Ascot Park,
part owner and track manager, John Fort Mtama, Northfield, Pamesvtlle,
Cctrlo, turned over Its concess10n at the Lebanon, Hamilton Cranwood, Randall
Lebanon Racetrack to Corwm NIXon m the Park, Grandview, and Aurora Downs.
The only two racetracks Emprtse1950s. Nixon 1s now a Republican member
Sportservtce has not had connections wtth
of the Ohio General Assembly.
are Beulah Park and Sc1oto Downs m Col·
Controlled Tracks
The newspaper sa1d Empnse· wnbus
Emprtse~portservJce
also
gamed
Sportserv1ce has loaned m•lhons of dollars
control of the Cmcmnall Royals m 1963
&lt;
through 1ts ownership of the Cmcmnatl
Gardens because w1thout the Gardens the
Royals would have had no place lo play
horne games, the Daaly News said
Allegations Denied
GALLIPOLIS- M1ke Camden, 16, Rt
The
Jacobs
fa m1ly has demed all
I, Bidwell, suffered leg, arm and possible
back InJUries m a motorcycle accadent allegatiOns of cnmmal activity
Jeremy Jacobs;Mn of the late Empnse·
Saturday mormng on Rt 325~ The Galha ,
County sheriff's department sa1d Ca mden Sportserv1ce pres1dent, testifled before a
lost control of hiS motor cycle wh1ch struck congress10nal comm1ttee that hiS frumly
a large d1tch Camden was rushed to the had been "vactimized by unsubstantaa ted
charges of miSconduct and un.arranted
Holzer Med1cal Center by the Galha
rwnors of 1mpropraety "
County Volunteer Emergency Squad
Followmg the Las Vegas conV1ct10n
Squadmen Fnday transferred four
persons to the hospital. Admitted were Empnse.SportserVIce has been the sub·
Ladle Buncll, 91, Bidwell, PaulE Watson, JCCt to mvest1gat1on by a number of states
but "OhiO IS conspicuous m 1ts absence,"
73, AddlSO'•, Marcella Ph1lhps, 48; Rt 1,
Crown C1 ty. and D1ana Parsons, 28, 86 the paper said
"Other than a state L1quor Control
Slate St., Galhpohs.
department mvesllgatwn that resulted m
the llftmg of two old liquor hcenses that
had been held by Empnse-SportserVIce
subs1d1anes and had lain idle smce the
Dayton speedway closed m 1970 and the
!Contmued from page I)
Ascot Park racetrack closed m 1968, Ohio
disorderly conduct.
authonhes have taken no steps to mvestl·
In another act10n, Gallla Coun ty gate the concessiOnmre's actlV!tles and
s henff 's deputies Fnday mght In· mterests m thas state, the Dmly News sa ad
vestlgated the theft of four hubcabs off a
1972 Plymouth owned by Wayne Wolfe of
Rl 1, Bidwell on the parkmg lot at lhe
DAYTON, Oh10 I UP!) - The followmg
Federal-Mogul Plant, Eastern Ave
IS a hst of Emprac:~,•-SportservJ ce con-

.Milton Will

MASON DRIVE-IN

+++

Fmdmg myself one day m a slightly "off" mood , l began to
thmk about certam thmgs m hfe and came up w1th thiS bit of
ph1losophy I'd hke to share w1th you and your readers ·
ll's dedica ted to young people who may wonder why they
nect10ns as comp1led by the Dayton Dally must go through parts of the1r hves m sadness, pain and dlsapNews m the ftrst of a senes of articles on pomtment There really IS a reason
the f1rm wh1ch has been hnked to the
REFLECTIONS
Maf•a
To be able to see beauty mall thmgs,
You must once have seen how ugly things can be
In cases where Empnse-Sporlservtce
owns parlor a rac1hty or has loaned money
To be able to love, you must once have hated
to 11, the ex tent of ownership (when 11 IS
To have happmess m your hie, you must once have had
sadness
known ) or a notatiOn of the loan IS m
To be able to smile, you must once have cried
parentheses after the facility's name on
th e
list
Otherwise,
EmpnseTo be able to fe el JOY, you must once have felt pain.
Sportservace's relatwnsh1p IS as conYou cannot have Just one of Ulese things without exrrosstonaare
pellencmg th e other, for If you do, the real beauty of ll allis left
- Ascot Park racetrack (Loans, for. unsee n - G.C P
merly part owner , track now closed )
- R1ver Downs Racetrack . (loa ns,
PERSONAL TO "DISAPPOINTED"· Don't expect your
fo rmerly part owner)
parents to know all the answers Who does?
- Toledo raceway. (loans )
It's a lucky teen whose parents understand most of his
-Cranwood race track (loans, formerly qu estwns Yours ev1denUy do. Consider yourself blessed.
part owner, now closed).
HELEN AND SUE
- Northfield
- Randall Park (Now closed)
- Fort M1am1 Raceway (now closed)
HANSON GRADUATES
Yasunan Kawabata of Ja
- Leb3non raceway
MIDDLEPORT - Airman pan was the f•rst OnentaJ to
-SIX of the 18 Holida y House Harold W Hanson, son of Mr. wm the Nobel Pme for Lit·
restaurants that Emprtse..Sportservtee
and Mrs Harold W Hanson of erature, m 1968
owned were located a lon g the Ohio Turn689 N Second St , has
pike
graduated at Lowry AFB ,
-Cmcmnati Reds . (smce 1936
Colo , from the U S A1r Force
-Cleveland lnd1ans (from 1947 through
sup
pl y mv entory specaallst
1970)
T.IME~SENTINEL
course conduc ted by the A1r
- Cleveland Browns (until 1910)
Publ tShed every Sunday
Traamng Command, He ts a
by
The
OhtO
Val l ey
-Cincmnatt Bengals
1972 graduate of Me1gs H1gh
PubltshtnQ Co
- Cleveland Caval1ers
GALLI POLI S
School HIS w1fe, Vtck1, IS the
DAILY TRIBUNE
- Cmcmnatl Swords
daughter of Mr and Mrs
825 Th trd Ave Ga ll tpo!ts,
-Canton , Oh10, aud1tornun; CmcmnatJ
Oh
'o
45631
Harry E Clark of Rt 2,
Publ tShed every weekday
Gardens (owns 80 7 per cent); Cleveland
evenmg except Saturday
Pomeroy
arena, (loans), Columbus Zoo; Dayton
Second Class Postage Patd
at GalltpoltS, OhtO 45631
Speedway (loans, not operating) Manon,
THE DA I LY SE N TINEL
Oh10, cohseum !loans ); Toledo, arena;
111 Courl St Pomeroy, 0
Veterans Memorial Hospital
45769
Purchased eve r y
Troy, Ohto, arena
weekday event ng e~l
ADMISSIONS '- R L lm·
Satur day Ente r ed as second
- Dayton, Ohto, airport, newstand and boden, Rutland;
Robert
c l ass mallmg matter at
parkmg (only newstand st1ll m effect).
Pom eroy , Ohto Post Off1ce
Ca rl ey,
Indiana ,
Pa ;
By carrter dally and
- Youngstown, Ohio, Muruc1pal Airport
Sunday, sse oer week
Rhonda Smith, Rac1ne ,
- Clevela nd flopkms Au port I drugstore
MAIL
Claude Randolp~, ReedsSUBSCR IPTION RATES
and parking. No longer 10 effect )
The Gall 1polts Tnbune •n
VIlle, Inez Pooler 1 PomMost atrport co ntracts are made eroy ,
and Wes t Vtrgmta on e
Lucille
Taylor , Ohto
yea r
$15, stx monlhs $8
through a subs1d1ary known as Air Ter.
three mon th s ss . . elsew here
Athens,
Brenda
WISe,
Athens
;
S17 per yea r si)C months $9
minal Services Inc , the Daily News sa1d
three mon lh s $5 50
- Dayton-salem dnve·m (owns 50 per Ke nn eth Gilke y, Chesh~re;
The Da ly Se ntmel, one
year S16 DO stx mon th s sa 50
cent) Dayton D1x1e dnve-m, Dayton Russell Sargent, The Plams
DISCHARGES
Rub y lhree months 55 00
Sherwood 'North and South dnve·m
The Untied Press In
ternat.onal 1s exclus tvety
- Dayton East End dqve·m, Spnngheld Gibbs, Raymond Bragg; Helen
entllled to the use t or
New Moon dnve.m, Sprmgfleld Stardust Knotts, Mane Waldmg, Nellie
pub I tea t ton of all news
dtspatches credtled to fh ts
drt ve'-m, Troy D1x1e drJVe-m , Cmcmnatl Ohhnger, Frank Clark, James
newspaper and also the local
Reeves,
Betsy
Nutter,
Ida
news pubhshed he r em
Ferguson Hills dnve-m and Cmcmnat1
Shoemaker, L1lhan Welker
Jolly Roger dr1ve m

3- The SlUlday TUlles -Sent mel, Sunday, June 3, 1973

Monday, June 4, 1973
Sunnse Semmar 4, Sacred Heart 10
Farmttme 10
Farm Report 13
Pau I Harvey 13
JO ~ Columbus Toda y 4 Btble Answers a Schoo l Scene 10
45 - Corncob Report 3
55 - Take Ftve for Ltfe 15
00 - Today 3, 4,15 News, Weather Sports 6 CBS News 8 10
Jeff 's Co llt e 13
7 30 - RomP&amp;r Room 6 Popeye 10 Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13
8 oo - Capt Kangaroo10, La ss te6, Sesa m e Sf J3. New Zoo
Rev ue 13
8 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Jack La lanne 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 , Fnendly Junctton 10,
A M 3, let's Make A Deal 6, Ben Casey 13, Merv Gnftm 8
9 25 - Chuck Wh tte Reports 10
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, Jeopardy 6, Hollywood's Talk1ng
10 , Electnc Co 33
10 00 - Columbus S1x Catltng 6 , Dtck Van Dyke 13. Dtnah Shore
3, 15, Joker's Wrld 8, 10 Maggte &amp; The Beaut iful Machtne 33
10 30 - Spl tt Second 13. Baffle 3 4 15 , $10,000 Pyramtd 8 10
legacy 33
1I 00- Pa ssword 13, Sale of th e Cen tury 3, 4, 15 Love Amertcan
Style 6 Gamb1t 8, 10 Elec Co 20
11 $0 - Bewrtched6, 13, Holly wood Squares 3, 4 15, l ove of Ltfe
a, 10 Mile stones of Progress 33
11 55- Password 6 , Bob Braun 50 so Club 4 , Jeopardy 3, 15 ,
News a. 10
12 30 - Spirt Second 6, 3 W's 3, 15, Search for Tomorrow a. 10
12 55 - NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - All M y Children 6, 13 It's Your Bet 8, Green Acres 10.
Not For Women Only 15, F rench Che f 33
1 30 - Fash•ons m Sewt ng 3
1 30 ~ 3 On A Match 3, 4. 15. Let's Mak e A Deal 13, As The
Wor ld Tu rn s 8, 10 , Am ertcan Odyssey 33
2 00 - Days of Our L 1ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13, M1ke
Douglass 6 , Gutdtng L1ght 8, 10
2 30 - Doctors3. 4 15 Datmg Game 13 Edge of N1ght 8, 10 . Off
the Record 33
3 00 - Ano t he r World 3 4 15, General Hospttal6, 13, Pnce Is
Rtght 8 10 , Dtabetes 20. Olea nna Trail 33
3 30 - Return of Peyton Place 3, 15, One Ltfe 10 Ltve 6 13
Secre t Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Fr ench Chef 20 ; Hollywood
Talktng 8 Jt me fo r Ttmothy 33
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 Secre t Storm 8 , Sesame 20,
33, Love, Amerrc:an Style 13 . Hu ck &amp; Yogi 6, M ovte "A1r
Ca det" 10
4 30 - PeHtcoat Junchon 3 Merv Gnfftn 4 F Troop 6 Wtld,
Wtld West 13 , Abbott &amp; Costello B. My L1tt1eMarg te 15
5 00 - Bonanza 3. HazelS , Mr Rogers 20, 33 , Andy Gnff tlh 15,
Here Comes the Bndes 6
5 30- Beverly Hl llb tlltes 8, Electnc Co 33 , Gomer Pyle. USMC
13 , Death Va ll ey Days 15 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
5 55- Earl Ntghtmgale 15
6 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10 15, ABC News 13, Sesame St 20 Around
the Bend 33
6 30 - ABC News 6 CBS News 8 , 10. I Dream of Jeanme 13
News 3. 4, 15, How Do You r Chtldren Grow" 33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 6, 10. Ctrcus
13 , What's My Lt ne 8 , Elec Co 20 , M artm Ag ronsky
Evenmg Edtfton 33 Satnt 15 Tak e Ftve 5
7 $0 - To Tell the Truth 6 , Young Dr Ktldare 8, Hollywood
Squares 4, Trafftc Court 10 . Do You Read Me 20 , Movie
" J ungle Man Eaters" 13, Eptsode Achon 33 Bobby Go lds
bora 3
8 00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10 , Baseball Pre Game Show J, 4, 15 .
Rooktes 6 Two Arc t •c Tates 20 33
9 00 - Here's lucy B. 10. Movte " Maroc 7" 6, 13
9 30 - Dons Day B, 10 , Book Beat20 33
10 00 - Med1cat Cen ter 8, 10 , News 20 . Paul Nu chrms 33
11 oo.:... News J, 4 6 8, 10, 13, 15
ll 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 Jack Paar Ton1te 6, 13 , CBS
Reports 8. Mov te ' Captam Ltghtfoot" 10
1 00 - Perry Mason 4, News 13
2 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
3 00 - News 4
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
7

00 15 ,_
20 25 -

iRI
Also
Sl X, SONGS &amp; SA TlR E
Can He tr onymus Merk tn
ever forget Mercy Humppe
and fmd true happtness?

I Rl

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

COUPO r~

COURSE COMPLETED
GALLIPOLIS - M Harold
Brown, actmg Ga llipolis City
Healt h Comm1sswner, announced S&lt;tturday Mrs Carlton
(Barbara) Null , R N , has
completed "The Bas1c Pnn·
c1ples and Prachces of Commumty Health Nurs ing"
course sponsored by the OhiO
Department of Health The,
Instructor was Mrs Inez

~

10% OfT ( W!J'f I

COUPON) ON AU LONG
SLU.:. VLD 51-JIJ('J:)
Mond,tv, [un e 4

Gallipolts,

Suhre, R N

MEIGS THEATRE

9: 30-8: ()()
Tuesday, lune 5
9' 00-5:00

Oh10....-..-..--.....rt~

Tomght, June J
THE LAST

PICTURE SHOW
Ttmothy Botfoms
Jeff Brtdges
(RI

Cartoon
Pluto a nd the Gopher
Show Starts 7 p m

Mon , lues , Wed , Thurs

·CHICKEN

June 4-S 6 7
NOT OPEN

IT'S THE FINEST!
Since 1859

SNACK BOX
~

SLICED
BACON
lb.

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Beans. - For Easy P1ckup Phone 446·2682.

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LOIN
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�2- The SIUlday TLme:- Sentlnel, S~o .ay,June 3,1973

Tax relief proposals up for
vote in Ohio House, Senate

•

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A prur use'' rat~r than 1ts worth as
of tax rehef proposals are an mvestment.
scheduled to reach the floor of
A Senate subcommittee
the House and Senate this week which has been studymg the
as the llOth session of the House·passed proposal smce
General Assembly enters 1ts last February recommended
SIXth month
last week that a Similar tax
The House IS lo vote Wednes· break for recreational land be
day on a Senate-passed resolu. the subject of a separate bill
tion removmg the $3.000 ce1hng
The constJtutwnal amendon exemptions from the state ment was held off the May
mcome tax for each fam1ly
pnmary ballot because of
The Senate has scheduled a controversy over whether
vote for the same day on a recreatiOnal land should be
House-passed resolutiOn gJVmg mcluded
farmers tax breaks on the val.
ue of the1r land.
Still another constitutional
Both proposals are const1tu- amendment - authonzmg the
tiona! amendments and will legislature to wnte a "shield"
head for the November ballot 1f law to protect newsmen from
cleared this week
bemg reqlllied lo reveal their
Exemptions from the state sources - wlll get a vote in the
mcome tax are now limited to House Tuesday
six per fam•ly at $500 ap1ece.
The Senate has set a vole
The proposed conshluhonal Tuesday on legislatiOn makmg
amendment would perm1t ex· "Irreconcilable dlfferences"
tra exemptions, benefitting grounds for divorce m Ohio
larger farmhes lt would cost
Under the measure sponthe stale an esllmated $2 sored by Sen. Paul E G1llmor,
m1lhon per year m lost R·Port Clmton, a divorce could
revenues
be granted on those terms 1f the
The resolutwn m the Senate spouses hve apart for one
would authonze agncultural year.
land to be valued for taxatiOn
The
House
Jud1c1ary
on the basts of 1ts ''current Comm1ttee IS cons1dermg a

" no -fault"
d1vorce
b11l
authored by Rep Alan E
Norns, R·Westervllle
legislation
1, House-passed
author1zmg townships to
regulate parkmg at pnvate
shoppmg centers to msure
access for pubhc safely
vehicles IS set for a Wednesday
vote 111 the Senate
The state's $9 9 b1ll10n budg.
et, cleared by the House, 1s due
for a revampmg m a Senate
Fin a nee subcomm•tlee which
continues work lhls week
Controllmg Republicans
have mthcated they will come
up w1th plans this week to tnm
some ~15 m11l1on from the
House verston and reallocate
other funds.
Hearmgs will contmue Tuesday and Wednesday m the
flouse F1nance Committee on
the $.155 milhon sundry cla1ms
bill
A vote as antac1pated Thursday mormng m the flouse Judi·
Clary Cmmmttee on legislation
lowermg the age of adulthood
from 21 to 18
The corrumttee last week a~
proved an amendment mcludmg a reduction m the drmkmg
age. That proposal Is expected

to get another test on the House
noor. The Senate passed the
..arne bill without lowermg the
dnnkmg age.
The JUdiCiary Committee
also w11l conUnue hearmgs
Thursday
on
leg1slat10n perm1lt1ng care.
fully performed abortiOns
pnor to 20 weeks of pregnancy
Rep Arthur R Wilkowski,
D·Toledo, committee cha1r
man and ch1ef sporfsor of tht:
measure, sa1d he antiCipates a
vote next week

Ohio politics
Assembly
convened
10
January, 1971, and that after
the budget IS adopted, there IS
little that can 't wait unttl next
year.
Unemployment
com·
pens a llon and workmen 's
compensation reform bills sllll
must be dealt with, the leaders
agree, and Democrats say \bey
would hke to see the Senate
follow the House's lead and
approve an ethics bdl
But after that, the road to
home Is open
This means, barrmg a SW'prtse return m the autumn , the
lawmakers will have plenty of
maJOr b1lls left over for them
next year
For many of these bdls, the
chances for passage w1ll be

better next year when the pressures of an tmpending election
are brought to bear
Tax Relief
Take, for example, tax relief.
The admlmstrahon of Gov.
John J Gilligan ca n JUSllflably
hold back on bills returnmg
money to groups of taxpayers
unlll actual receipts from the
f1rst year's collectwn of the
state mcome tax are tallied up
By next year, revenues w11l
he a known quanllty and 1f
there are any left over, their
distnbutwn will be most welcome m an electwn year
House Republicans ha ve proposed a nme-pomt tax rehef
package, which they w1ll probably have to turn mto campalgQ fodder, smce the1r
mmority posttLOn precludes 1ts
passage w1thout help
However, Democrats have
JOined m making nmses for
1deas hke a hd on the mcome
tax and a tax brea k for workmg
marrted couples, as well as a
sales tax exempllon on clothmg
Repubhcans seem more Intent on making tax rehef a
campa1gn 1ssue than the G1lli-

gan admamstratwn, and per.
haps they w1ll be makmg
agreements to go along w1th
other adimmstratwn programs
m return for some tax rehef
b1lls.
Whatever happens, 1t ts certam that both parlles will take
credit for any removal of lax
burde n.
Hopes Dim
Two maJOr prmnt1es of the
G1lhgan admtmstratwn electi&lt;m reform and governmental reorgaruzabon - seem
to stand httle chance, even
next year
Republicans w1ll probably
avmd gomg along w1th any
Democratic electaon reform
proposals, especially III an
election year. And only a very
llmi ted
governmental
reorgaruzabon authortty would
be giVen the governor by the
GOP-dommated Senate.
The third maJor 1tem on the
governor's hst of pnorttJes IS
an ethics b1ll for pubhc offi cials
and employes. It has already
passed th e
Democraticcontrolled House
Ltke tax rehef, an ethics code
would be welcome m an

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Dl~
D "'L ME

'*

IN, too

Examination for
carrier is set
V

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election year, especially at a
t1me when pubhc confidence m
goverrunent needs a shot an the
arm
Other b1lls, now on the back
burne1 s, which can be expected to pop forth next year
are collechve bargammg for
publiC emplo yes, landlord.
tenant reform, no-fault auto
msurance, antt-pollutwn and
stnp rome reform, JOb safety
and t1ghlemng drug abuse and
consumer protection laws
Gubernatonal task forces on
higher educalwn and health
ca re systems also may have
some recommendatwns whtch
could prompt v1gorous debate
and help cram the electwn
year agenda still t1ghl&lt;lr

PARK SURVEY SET
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohw Departl!lenl of Natural
Resources a nnounced Fnday 1t
Will survey more than 10,000
public and pnvate recreatiOn
areas m the state this summer
lo determine what type of
facihLJes are ava1la ble

BELLSETILES
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Oh1o Bell Telephone Co. and
several major c1t1es have
agreed to settle Ohio Bell's $166
m1llion rata mcrease request at
a compromiSe S9ll rmlhon, c1ty
Pubhc Utilities Director
Robert Newlon said Friday
Nearly two years ago, Ohio
Bell asked the Public Utilities
CommissiOn of Ohio ( PUCO)
for perm1ss1on to earn $166
mallJOn a year more 1n grass
revenue.

LONG BOTTOM An
exam1nat10n for substitute
rural carrier or record w1ll be
held H M Lawrence, post~
X
N
~
«
« master at Long Bottom , an~
~ nounces
Accordwg to the anPOMEROY - Mr. and Mrs F. M Rizer and M1hsa are
nouncement,
subslltute rural
VISlhng their son and brother, Franklm, this week at lbe Air
earners of recor,d starting
Force Academy III Colorado, where Franklin IS fmlshing up his
salanes range from $28 to $32
second year there They went especially for June Week
festavttaes
per day dependmg on the
length and character of the
They w1ll be commg back home June 7 along With Franklin
who w1ll have a month's stay at home
route The apphcatwn for the
pos1t10n 1s available at the
FOUR NEW KITI'ENS have arr1ved on the S('Cne at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Braun, Pomeroy. Monday, the
Long Bottom Post Office
family cat gave b1rth to four htUe bundles offur.
Applications must be sub· BIG FIRE
TIJUANA, Mextco (UP!) l().year-&lt;Jid Kenda officially converted the garage when she
milled before June 20
Federal officials satd Thursput up a s1gn on the door reading, " Matermty Ward''
day
they burned 33,000 pounds
OVER 1,000 INVITATIONS to the Me1gs High School Alumni
of mariJuana, 44 pounds of coNowYouKoow
Dance are now m the mall with only a few more to be sent.
came
and a m1lhon ptlls con~
Motmsts m Los Angeles last
Please, if we rniSsed your name, buy a Ucket anyway With that
year drove 18 5 b1lhon miles- flscated m narcotics arrests
many names and addresses to get ahold of there m1ghl be some
enough to go to the moon and durmg the past five months m
people who were unmtentionally left out or under the wrong
thiS border c1ty
back 37,000 hmes.
add ress Beheve me, tl was a tough JOb locating so many
graduates'
BOB COUCH OF POMEROY wtll leave Monday after a
month's leave from the Air Force to visit the family here. He w1ll
be gone a year on duty m Thailand.
Also home from the Air Force this past month and leavmg
this week are Jon Kloes, Middleport, and Paul Card, Pomeroy
All three are 1971 graduates of Meigs H1gh School.
DONNA FRANCIS, EDITOR of the Marauder yearbook, IS
busy famshmg it up alone smce Mrs. Bernice Hoffman, advisor,
suffered a cardiac arrestdurmg the last six weeks of school Best
Wishes to Mrs Hoffman for a speedy recovery
I HEAR INDIANS are trymg to reclaim a part of Manetta
that was deeded to them years ago. Wonder 1f there w1ll be a
reservatiOn for us there when I go back to school this fall!
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A House ElectiOns s ub.
comm1ttee Is expected to vote
Wednesday on an electwn
reform bill reducmg the state
resadency reqULrement from
SIX months to 30 days and
reqwrmg recounts m races
decided by less than one-half
per cent of the total vote.
A Senate Commerce and La.
bor subcorrumltee Will continue work Wednesday on
legislation prov1dmg for
collective bargammg for pubhc
employes
The House returns at 10 30
am Tuesday, and the Senate f(".:!···: :::::::·:·.::·:::::·:::·:::::- : .•. ·:-:·. • ··:· •••:; : •.. -::-: :·:·•• ;.;., .·:· •.·.·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:ow...:·:·:~..:·:·:·:::·:-:;:;
h
~
atl30pm

Lawmakers prepare to adjourn
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Oh10
leglSlallve leaders, sensmg the
mood of thear troops, a re prepared to adjourn for the year
shortly after enactment of the
budget next month
They pomt out there has been
no real resp•te from pohtlckmg
smce the 109th General

;:.:::::::;-:.::;.;.;:-.;.:::-:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.•:·:;;.;.;.:.:::-:-:-:=:·:·:-: ,;.r..'$J%Y..'«-::~ o••

:;!

Generation Rap

·!i!

Gy Ht'll•n ami Sue Hottel

Television Log

·li
'ij

Wanted : Hero's POW Bracelets
Dear Readers
For over a year, I wore a POW bracelet engraved With the
name "Captam Anthony Andrews" (of Chico, Califorma) He's
home now, after five and one-half years as a prisoner of war, and
he wants everyone to know bow grateful he and other released
men are to those milhons of people who never forgot - and
backed up their prayers w1th letters to Hanm, and support of
VlVA POW·MIA campaign efforts
The Chico K1wams Club plans a lasting memorial for V1et·
nam serviCemen, centered around Captam Andrews' bracelets
Ball Hethermgton, chatrman of the Kiwams proJect, ts
collectmg as many of these POW bracelets as posstble (mme
among them) wh1ch will be displayed m a large plastiC capsule
as part of a pubb c tr~bute to all Vtetnam veterans, hvmg or dead.
Because thousands of our readers bought POW·MlA
bracelets, B1ll has asked that we prmt hiS request for the return
of those carrymg Captam Anthony Andrews ' name.
If you'd hke to be a part of this special memonal, please send
your Andrews bracelet, together With your full name and address
(which w1ll be mcluded m the display ) to
CHICO KIWANIS CLUB,
P 0 BOX 780,
Ch1co, California, 95926.
What of Tony h1mself? The 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld Arr Force Captam's
f1rst stateside assignment 1s at Randolph Air Force Base, San
Anlomo, Texas Thereafter, because of his electnca1 engmeermg
degree, he wtll be stationed at the Atr Force procurement center
adJacent to the Los Angeles International Airport. Future plans,
Wlder the auspaces or the Atr Force,' may mclude attendance at
the Umvers1ty of Southern Callforma to obtam h1s Masters
Degree in Aeronautical Engmeermg
Thanks m advance 1 you "Andrews people, '' for contr1buting
to the bracelets memorial You may return them, tissuewrapped m ordinary envelopes, marked "hand-stamp"- SUE

Youth injured in
motorcycle accident

Suspect

i

ending
long career as educator

CANAL WINCfiESTER M1lton G Will , 56, athlellc
d1rector of Canal Wmchester
fl1gh School and Math teacher
In the Jun1or H1 gh School, a
native of Chester Jo\l.nstup m
Me1gs County, won 't answer
h1s classroom bell next Sep·
!ember
W11l , a son, brother and
father of educators, IS retmng
th1s month endmg a 3l·year
ass•gnment m local schools
"" M11ton W1ll IS one of the
seven sons of the late W1lham
A and Edna Garen W1ll, who
also had four daughters, all
born at the family home m the
Texas Community
near
Chester. The senwr Will's
other progeny - he was a
farmer and teacher h1mself for
30 years - and thear careers m
bnef
Dr Roland G W1ll , retired ,
taught 50 years, graduate of
R10 Grande College, masters
and Ph D at Ohw Stale
Umvers1ty ,
resides
Massachusetts
John M Will, retired, lives
on family farm , taught one
year, was associated with the
OhiO Dept of Liquor Control
Lomse Will Fischer, prac·
heal nurse, Greenfield, retired.
Montgomeroy Wtll, retired,
taught and admtmstered
schools for 40 years, B S and
Masters at Ohw State
V1ctor L. Will, rellred, taught
and actm•o•stered sc hools 36
years, graduate of Oh10
Umvers1ty, Masters at OSU
Ph11lp F W1ll, Columbus
bea uty salon ow ner
Florence W1ll Ferrell ,
housewife.
Mary Will Kilpatnck, public
schools 23 years, presently
employed as psychologiSt m
the Colwnbus school system,
graduate of Ohw Umversity
and Ohw Stale Umvers1ty
Betty Will Louc ks, R. N ,
graduate of Holzer, 33 years
employed
in
Columbus
hospitals
W1lham L W1ll, fa rmer and
br1ck mason, Chester Twp
Total years of professiOnal
teacbmg above 1s 225 In ad·
dillon, the w1ves of three Wills,
Mrs R G , Mrs Mont, and Mrs
Vtctor are retired teachers
M1lton Will 1s keepmg the
educator thmg ahve Two of his

'"

f,tl , t111

W

Four hospitalized

IS

W11l 's first teach10g job was
ch1ldren, James and Jamce,
at
Fornof School m Colwnbus
are teachers at canal Wm·
He coached JW110r and semor
chester.
There w1ll be more than his h1gh basketball and track , as
as taught Math when he
two children keepmg the name
JOined
the Canal Wmchester
well known at Canill Wmfaculty m 1942 He also became
chester
F1fteen years ago lVIII assistant football coach when
football was started there m
conceived the then new 1dea for h1gh schools - of the In· 1947
He hasn't coached for SIX
vftahonal track meet The
Canal Wmchester Jnvttat10nal years but he has contmued as
Track Tournament , wh1ch the school d1stnct 's f~rst
became the farst m ce ntral athletic director
There have been great
Ohio, today 1s one of the most
changes '" :n years Two
preshguous m 1ts class
Because W1ll found•d 1t, and elementary wmgs have been
managed 11 through to h1s added to the school plant, and
retirement, the meet from now the facul ty has gro wn fr om ll
on Will be known as the "M1lton to 53
Ch1ldren rernam about the
Will lnvilataonal '' He was
presented a plaque m ap· same, W1ll beheves
"They still need gu1dance
propnate ceremomes rece ntly
at the h1gh school 1n ap· and love and bemg stnct wtth
precmtaon of his past serv1ces them ts appreCii:tted late1 on,
I
really
don 't
to the athletic program and and
see
a
g•
eat
deal
of
d1f·
fiXIng the future name of the
fcrem:e m them except they
mv1tatwnal tournament
are
w1ser, have much w1der
A pubhc tnbute to W1ll at the
and btoader knowledge ," he
presentahon saad
"W1ll has been synonymous sa•d
Durmg h1s retirement years,
w1th athlel!cs at Canal WmW1ll expects to be self·
chester H1gh School for years
employed
as a pamter , both
He has been a p10neer
the
field , making Wmchester farst mdo01 s and out
There wtll t~lso be more l!Ine
m the area to have an mfor Will and Ius w1fe, Ruth, to
vatatiOnal track tournament
spend
at thear house m Mcags
There are hundreds, even
th ousands, of Canal Wm- County , near h1s birthplace ,
chester H1 gh School graduates, and for the 01 gamzat1ons m
some of whom are now old by wh1ch he ts mteres ted He ts a
youth standards who have h1gh member of the Canal Wmchestel L10ns Club, Potter
school students of the~r own
Many of them have been af. Masomc Lodge and Aladdm
fected by M1lton W1ll 's career Temple and the Canal Wmm sports at Canal Wmchester chestcr MethodiSt Church,
H1 gh School Many have been presadent of the F'ranklm
helped to appl wate the value CoWlty Athletic Assoc1atwn,
of the at hle llc program and a membe1 or the Mid-State
through Wall's contnbutwns " At hletic Assoc1atwn

ROCK SPRINGS - Four
persons were hospltallzcd
followmg a smgle car aCCident
Fr~day at 10 14 p m on the
race track at Me1gs County
Fairgrounds, the Me1gs County

"'II

'n

Rotary backing up health fair
Mid·
MIDDLEPORT
dleport-Pomeroy Rotanans
agreed mformally to co.
sponsor the appearance here 1n
ea rly August of the proposed
" Hea lth Fa1r" wh1ch IS
designed to mform people of
md1v1dual health needs and
ser v1ces available to them
The fair 1s bemg sponsored
here by the local Presbyterian
Church through 1ts OhiO
presbytery, whach as mv1tlng
support from the cou nty,s
soc 1al
and
fraternal
orga mzahons

The Rev Bob Bumgarner,
pastor of Heath Um ted
MethodiSt Churc h, and a
Rotanan, presented the case
for the fa1r to the club
Gene Riggs, pres1d ent,
presided over the br1ef open
meetmg at Heath Church
followmg a dmner of fned
ch1 cken seJ ved by ladles of the
churc h t'he rncetmg on June 15
w11l begm at 5 30 p m and
conclude by 6 p m so as not lo
co nfhct w1lh the Regatta
Parade

Dillon begins
damage action

Mil .TON Wll .I., retmng as teacher and atlllcllc director

Uus month at Canal Wmchc.ster Schools, holds the plaque
presented to h1m 1ecently m apprec1at10n of lus yea1s of
se1 v1ce to the school a nd 1L~ athlet1c p1 ogram C-W's dnn ual
mv1t.atwnal track meet hencefoa th w1ll be known .Js tr .~
M1lton Wall Inv1tat10nal

(:()l,.{)~l

Addie Cross of

•

Langsville i:lit''s

• .

.

Tho•t~tr. ·

GALLIPOLIS - Herman L
Dillon, 505 Pecan St , Saturday
filed a smt m Gallla County
Common Pleas Court seekmg
$44,530 22 m damages agamst
Lew1s Edwem Lee, 505 Burnell
Rd , Kanauga The acllon
stems from an accident June
18, 1971 at the mterseclion of
Pme St and Second Ave
D1llonJs petition to the court
alleges the defendant Lee
negligently drov e a car mto
Dallon's ctuto PlamtJH seeks
the damages for InJUries, loss
of mcome and expenses mcurred He says he suffered
neck InJUries whach have
caused permanent damage
In other court actaon , Nancy
Hunt, 484 Kathy St , Gallipolis,
Fnday hied a pet1t10n seckmg
a d1vorce from S...Sgt Franklyn
Hunt, APO San FranCISCO
They y,ere marned Oct 18,
1961 and have two children She
charged gross neglect of duty
and ext1erne cruelty

A Rolool" 0 ft•uln&gt;h M•rllfl IIIII f'llm

2Q 1"ct Nll1!1

JO~

Cartoon

FRENCH
CONNECTION
Plus

M.A.S.H.

by the Pmneroy and Mid·
dleporl ER umts Gilkey was
arrested on charges of reckless
OperatiOn on properly other
than streets and h1ghways
The car Gilkey was dr1vmg
was demoltshed
" The shenff's department
also mveshgated a smgle car
accident Saturday at 8 am on
SR 143 Lee E. Ramey ,
Pomeroy, Rt 3, was travehng
on 143 when h1s car turned over
several t1mes
Ramey was not InJured He
was Cited to court on charges of
reckless operat1on There was
heavy damage to the car

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES

CLOGS
WHITE BLUE &amp;

BROWN
SIZES 6 TO 10
N &amp;M

NOW
Sunday· Monday
and Tuesday

"SOU..eDER"

Shenfl's Department reported
Kenneth M Gilkey, 24, New
Ha ve n, dr1ver , Wi:J S traveling
on the track at a h1gh rate of
speed when the car went
through a fence , down a sleep
embank.nlent, landmg ups1de
down tn a creek Gilkey was
pmned m the car
Passengers m the car,
Russell Sargent, 21, The
Pla1ns, sustamed severe
lacerations to h1s head and
fa ce, Lucille Tayl or and
Brenda W1se, both of Athens,
also sustamed InJUries
All four were tak en to
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal

REG. 114.99

Tomghl Th ru
Wednesday

LANGSVILLE Adrlie
C1 oss, 70, Rt. l, Langsville,
d1ed F'raday afternoon at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
She was preceded 111 death b;
her husband, Waller Cross, m
t963
"
SurvJVtng are a d~:~ughter,
Mrs Audt ea Pm ks , Columbus, three sons, Amos C1oss,
Rut land,
Arthur
Cross.
Athens, and Ancil Cross,
Mlddlcporl , lhree stste rs, M1s
Caroh ne Barton and Mrs .losiC
Brady, both of Shock, W Va,
a nd Mrs 81na Perk1n s,
Rosedale, W. Va , and tl
grandchi ldren
f'uncral sc rvtccs w1ll be held
Monday 2 p m at Rutland
Nazarene Church w1Lh Rev
Lloyd Gnmm off•clatmg
Bunal w1ll be '" Coy H11l
Ce metm y, Danville F1 JCnds
may call anyt1me a l Martan
Fune1al Home

$ 00

SUNDAY 1 P.M. TIL 6 P.M.

BETTER FOOTWEAR FOR THE FAMILY

In Th e SILver B1 odge Shopp111q Plaza
Open Mon thru Sal. 10 o•l o, Sun 1 f1l6

Second Avenu1

VI

Sun , Man , &amp; Tu es
" PLAY IT AS
IT LAYS"
Tuesday Weld
Anthony Perk 1ns

Rap

SUNDAY

•

(\ ( ,ttl uoll Ntqhtly

Emprise grips sports over Ohio
(Contmued from page I)
~ OhiO racetracks and has had apparent
accused of fraud m connection With the hfe-or-death control over some
The Ascto Park rac etrac k at Akron
1970 closmg of the Dayton Speedway after
the firm flied court cla1ms for $185,000 closed m 1967 after a 12-year h1story m
based on a $100,000 loan by the con· which the track contmually owed more
cesstonatre m 1960, the newspaper smd money to Empnse.Sport.service than 11
Klem was a stockholder m the speedway. could pay back. The Cranwood racetrack
Jacobs and Klem were partners m the m Cleveland also closed after a h1story of
Kentucky Raceway, Florence, Ky, and m staggenng debts to Emprlse.Sportserv~ee,
the Lion Manufacturmg Corp., m the 1960's the Dayton newspaper sa ad.
which later became the Bally Manufac. The tracks where the company had
turmg Corp , the world 's largest maker of concessions, made loans or had part
ownership, sometunes htdden, mclude
slot machmes, the Da1ly News sa1d.
Empnse-Sportserv1ce, at the reque st of Raver Downs, Thastledown , Ascot Park,
part owner and track manager, John Fort Mtama, Northfield, Pamesvtlle,
Cctrlo, turned over Its concess10n at the Lebanon, Hamilton Cranwood, Randall
Lebanon Racetrack to Corwm NIXon m the Park, Grandview, and Aurora Downs.
The only two racetracks Emprtse1950s. Nixon 1s now a Republican member
Sportservtce has not had connections wtth
of the Ohio General Assembly.
are Beulah Park and Sc1oto Downs m Col·
Controlled Tracks
The newspaper sa1d Empnse· wnbus
Emprtse~portservJce
also
gamed
Sportserv1ce has loaned m•lhons of dollars
control of the Cmcmnall Royals m 1963
&lt;
through 1ts ownership of the Cmcmnatl
Gardens because w1thout the Gardens the
Royals would have had no place lo play
horne games, the Daaly News said
Allegations Denied
GALLIPOLIS- M1ke Camden, 16, Rt
The
Jacobs
fa m1ly has demed all
I, Bidwell, suffered leg, arm and possible
back InJUries m a motorcycle accadent allegatiOns of cnmmal activity
Jeremy Jacobs;Mn of the late Empnse·
Saturday mormng on Rt 325~ The Galha ,
County sheriff's department sa1d Ca mden Sportserv1ce pres1dent, testifled before a
lost control of hiS motor cycle wh1ch struck congress10nal comm1ttee that hiS frumly
a large d1tch Camden was rushed to the had been "vactimized by unsubstantaa ted
charges of miSconduct and un.arranted
Holzer Med1cal Center by the Galha
rwnors of 1mpropraety "
County Volunteer Emergency Squad
Followmg the Las Vegas conV1ct10n
Squadmen Fnday transferred four
persons to the hospital. Admitted were Empnse.SportserVIce has been the sub·
Ladle Buncll, 91, Bidwell, PaulE Watson, JCCt to mvest1gat1on by a number of states
but "OhiO IS conspicuous m 1ts absence,"
73, AddlSO'•, Marcella Ph1lhps, 48; Rt 1,
Crown C1 ty. and D1ana Parsons, 28, 86 the paper said
"Other than a state L1quor Control
Slate St., Galhpohs.
department mvesllgatwn that resulted m
the llftmg of two old liquor hcenses that
had been held by Empnse-SportserVIce
subs1d1anes and had lain idle smce the
Dayton speedway closed m 1970 and the
!Contmued from page I)
Ascot Park racetrack closed m 1968, Ohio
disorderly conduct.
authonhes have taken no steps to mvestl·
In another act10n, Gallla Coun ty gate the concessiOnmre's actlV!tles and
s henff 's deputies Fnday mght In· mterests m thas state, the Dmly News sa ad
vestlgated the theft of four hubcabs off a
1972 Plymouth owned by Wayne Wolfe of
Rl 1, Bidwell on the parkmg lot at lhe
DAYTON, Oh10 I UP!) - The followmg
Federal-Mogul Plant, Eastern Ave
IS a hst of Emprac:~,•-SportservJ ce con-

.Milton Will

MASON DRIVE-IN

+++

Fmdmg myself one day m a slightly "off" mood , l began to
thmk about certam thmgs m hfe and came up w1th thiS bit of
ph1losophy I'd hke to share w1th you and your readers ·
ll's dedica ted to young people who may wonder why they
nect10ns as comp1led by the Dayton Dally must go through parts of the1r hves m sadness, pain and dlsapNews m the ftrst of a senes of articles on pomtment There really IS a reason
the f1rm wh1ch has been hnked to the
REFLECTIONS
Maf•a
To be able to see beauty mall thmgs,
You must once have seen how ugly things can be
In cases where Empnse-Sporlservtce
owns parlor a rac1hty or has loaned money
To be able to love, you must once have hated
to 11, the ex tent of ownership (when 11 IS
To have happmess m your hie, you must once have had
sadness
known ) or a notatiOn of the loan IS m
To be able to smile, you must once have cried
parentheses after the facility's name on
th e
list
Otherwise,
EmpnseTo be able to fe el JOY, you must once have felt pain.
Sportservace's relatwnsh1p IS as conYou cannot have Just one of Ulese things without exrrosstonaare
pellencmg th e other, for If you do, the real beauty of ll allis left
- Ascot Park racetrack (Loans, for. unsee n - G.C P
merly part owner , track now closed )
- R1ver Downs Racetrack . (loa ns,
PERSONAL TO "DISAPPOINTED"· Don't expect your
fo rmerly part owner)
parents to know all the answers Who does?
- Toledo raceway. (loans )
It's a lucky teen whose parents understand most of his
-Cranwood race track (loans, formerly qu estwns Yours ev1denUy do. Consider yourself blessed.
part owner, now closed).
HELEN AND SUE
- Northfield
- Randall Park (Now closed)
- Fort M1am1 Raceway (now closed)
HANSON GRADUATES
Yasunan Kawabata of Ja
- Leb3non raceway
MIDDLEPORT - Airman pan was the f•rst OnentaJ to
-SIX of the 18 Holida y House Harold W Hanson, son of Mr. wm the Nobel Pme for Lit·
restaurants that Emprtse..Sportservtee
and Mrs Harold W Hanson of erature, m 1968
owned were located a lon g the Ohio Turn689 N Second St , has
pike
graduated at Lowry AFB ,
-Cmcmnati Reds . (smce 1936
Colo , from the U S A1r Force
-Cleveland lnd1ans (from 1947 through
sup
pl y mv entory specaallst
1970)
T.IME~SENTINEL
course conduc ted by the A1r
- Cleveland Browns (until 1910)
Publ tShed every Sunday
Traamng Command, He ts a
by
The
OhtO
Val l ey
-Cincmnatt Bengals
1972 graduate of Me1gs H1gh
PubltshtnQ Co
- Cleveland Caval1ers
GALLI POLI S
School HIS w1fe, Vtck1, IS the
DAILY TRIBUNE
- Cmcmnatl Swords
daughter of Mr and Mrs
825 Th trd Ave Ga ll tpo!ts,
-Canton , Oh10, aud1tornun; CmcmnatJ
Oh
'o
45631
Harry E Clark of Rt 2,
Publ tShed every weekday
Gardens (owns 80 7 per cent); Cleveland
evenmg except Saturday
Pomeroy
arena, (loans), Columbus Zoo; Dayton
Second Class Postage Patd
at GalltpoltS, OhtO 45631
Speedway (loans, not operating) Manon,
THE DA I LY SE N TINEL
Oh10, cohseum !loans ); Toledo, arena;
111 Courl St Pomeroy, 0
Veterans Memorial Hospital
45769
Purchased eve r y
Troy, Ohto, arena
weekday event ng e~l
ADMISSIONS '- R L lm·
Satur day Ente r ed as second
- Dayton, Ohto, airport, newstand and boden, Rutland;
Robert
c l ass mallmg matter at
parkmg (only newstand st1ll m effect).
Pom eroy , Ohto Post Off1ce
Ca rl ey,
Indiana ,
Pa ;
By carrter dally and
- Youngstown, Ohio, Muruc1pal Airport
Sunday, sse oer week
Rhonda Smith, Rac1ne ,
- Clevela nd flopkms Au port I drugstore
MAIL
Claude Randolp~, ReedsSUBSCR IPTION RATES
and parking. No longer 10 effect )
The Gall 1polts Tnbune •n
VIlle, Inez Pooler 1 PomMost atrport co ntracts are made eroy ,
and Wes t Vtrgmta on e
Lucille
Taylor , Ohto
yea r
$15, stx monlhs $8
through a subs1d1ary known as Air Ter.
three mon th s ss . . elsew here
Athens,
Brenda
WISe,
Athens
;
S17 per yea r si)C months $9
minal Services Inc , the Daily News sa1d
three mon lh s $5 50
- Dayton-salem dnve·m (owns 50 per Ke nn eth Gilke y, Chesh~re;
The Da ly Se ntmel, one
year S16 DO stx mon th s sa 50
cent) Dayton D1x1e dnve-m, Dayton Russell Sargent, The Plams
DISCHARGES
Rub y lhree months 55 00
Sherwood 'North and South dnve·m
The Untied Press In
ternat.onal 1s exclus tvety
- Dayton East End dqve·m, Spnngheld Gibbs, Raymond Bragg; Helen
entllled to the use t or
New Moon dnve.m, Sprmgfleld Stardust Knotts, Mane Waldmg, Nellie
pub I tea t ton of all news
dtspatches credtled to fh ts
drt ve'-m, Troy D1x1e drJVe-m , Cmcmnatl Ohhnger, Frank Clark, James
newspaper and also the local
Reeves,
Betsy
Nutter,
Ida
news pubhshed he r em
Ferguson Hills dnve-m and Cmcmnat1
Shoemaker, L1lhan Welker
Jolly Roger dr1ve m

3- The SlUlday TUlles -Sent mel, Sunday, June 3, 1973

Monday, June 4, 1973
Sunnse Semmar 4, Sacred Heart 10
Farmttme 10
Farm Report 13
Pau I Harvey 13
JO ~ Columbus Toda y 4 Btble Answers a Schoo l Scene 10
45 - Corncob Report 3
55 - Take Ftve for Ltfe 15
00 - Today 3, 4,15 News, Weather Sports 6 CBS News 8 10
Jeff 's Co llt e 13
7 30 - RomP&amp;r Room 6 Popeye 10 Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13
8 oo - Capt Kangaroo10, La ss te6, Sesa m e Sf J3. New Zoo
Rev ue 13
8 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Jack La lanne 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 , Fnendly Junctton 10,
A M 3, let's Make A Deal 6, Ben Casey 13, Merv Gnftm 8
9 25 - Chuck Wh tte Reports 10
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, Jeopardy 6, Hollywood's Talk1ng
10 , Electnc Co 33
10 00 - Columbus S1x Catltng 6 , Dtck Van Dyke 13. Dtnah Shore
3, 15, Joker's Wrld 8, 10 Maggte &amp; The Beaut iful Machtne 33
10 30 - Spl tt Second 13. Baffle 3 4 15 , $10,000 Pyramtd 8 10
legacy 33
1I 00- Pa ssword 13, Sale of th e Cen tury 3, 4, 15 Love Amertcan
Style 6 Gamb1t 8, 10 Elec Co 20
11 $0 - Bewrtched6, 13, Holly wood Squares 3, 4 15, l ove of Ltfe
a, 10 Mile stones of Progress 33
11 55- Password 6 , Bob Braun 50 so Club 4 , Jeopardy 3, 15 ,
News a. 10
12 30 - Spirt Second 6, 3 W's 3, 15, Search for Tomorrow a. 10
12 55 - NBC News 3, 15
1 00 - All M y Children 6, 13 It's Your Bet 8, Green Acres 10.
Not For Women Only 15, F rench Che f 33
1 30 - Fash•ons m Sewt ng 3
1 30 ~ 3 On A Match 3, 4. 15. Let's Mak e A Deal 13, As The
Wor ld Tu rn s 8, 10 , Am ertcan Odyssey 33
2 00 - Days of Our L 1ves 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13, M1ke
Douglass 6 , Gutdtng L1ght 8, 10
2 30 - Doctors3. 4 15 Datmg Game 13 Edge of N1ght 8, 10 . Off
the Record 33
3 00 - Ano t he r World 3 4 15, General Hospttal6, 13, Pnce Is
Rtght 8 10 , Dtabetes 20. Olea nna Trail 33
3 30 - Return of Peyton Place 3, 15, One Ltfe 10 Ltve 6 13
Secre t Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Fr ench Chef 20 ; Hollywood
Talktng 8 Jt me fo r Ttmothy 33
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 Secre t Storm 8 , Sesame 20,
33, Love, Amerrc:an Style 13 . Hu ck &amp; Yogi 6, M ovte "A1r
Ca det" 10
4 30 - PeHtcoat Junchon 3 Merv Gnfftn 4 F Troop 6 Wtld,
Wtld West 13 , Abbott &amp; Costello B. My L1tt1eMarg te 15
5 00 - Bonanza 3. HazelS , Mr Rogers 20, 33 , Andy Gnff tlh 15,
Here Comes the Bndes 6
5 30- Beverly Hl llb tlltes 8, Electnc Co 33 , Gomer Pyle. USMC
13 , Death Va ll ey Days 15 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
5 55- Earl Ntghtmgale 15
6 00- News 3, 4, 8, 10 15, ABC News 13, Sesame St 20 Around
the Bend 33
6 30 - ABC News 6 CBS News 8 , 10. I Dream of Jeanme 13
News 3. 4, 15, How Do You r Chtldren Grow" 33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 6, 10. Ctrcus
13 , What's My Lt ne 8 , Elec Co 20 , M artm Ag ronsky
Evenmg Edtfton 33 Satnt 15 Tak e Ftve 5
7 $0 - To Tell the Truth 6 , Young Dr Ktldare 8, Hollywood
Squares 4, Trafftc Court 10 . Do You Read Me 20 , Movie
" J ungle Man Eaters" 13, Eptsode Achon 33 Bobby Go lds
bora 3
8 00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10 , Baseball Pre Game Show J, 4, 15 .
Rooktes 6 Two Arc t •c Tates 20 33
9 00 - Here's lucy B. 10. Movte " Maroc 7" 6, 13
9 30 - Dons Day B, 10 , Book Beat20 33
10 00 - Med1cat Cen ter 8, 10 , News 20 . Paul Nu chrms 33
11 oo.:... News J, 4 6 8, 10, 13, 15
ll 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 Jack Paar Ton1te 6, 13 , CBS
Reports 8. Mov te ' Captam Ltghtfoot" 10
1 00 - Perry Mason 4, News 13
2 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
3 00 - News 4
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
7

00 15 ,_
20 25 -

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Also
Sl X, SONGS &amp; SA TlR E
Can He tr onymus Merk tn
ever forget Mercy Humppe
and fmd true happtness?

I Rl

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COUPO r~

COURSE COMPLETED
GALLIPOLIS - M Harold
Brown, actmg Ga llipolis City
Healt h Comm1sswner, announced S&lt;tturday Mrs Carlton
(Barbara) Null , R N , has
completed "The Bas1c Pnn·
c1ples and Prachces of Commumty Health Nurs ing"
course sponsored by the OhiO
Department of Health The,
Instructor was Mrs Inez

~

10% OfT ( W!J'f I

COUPON) ON AU LONG
SLU.:. VLD 51-JIJ('J:)
Mond,tv, [un e 4

Gallipolts,

Suhre, R N

MEIGS THEATRE

9: 30-8: ()()
Tuesday, lune 5
9' 00-5:00

Oh10....-..-..--.....rt~

Tomght, June J
THE LAST

PICTURE SHOW
Ttmothy Botfoms
Jeff Brtdges
(RI

Cartoon
Pluto a nd the Gopher
Show Starts 7 p m

Mon , lues , Wed , Thurs

·CHICKEN

June 4-S 6 7
NOT OPEN

IT'S THE FINEST!
Since 1859

SNACK BOX
~

SLICED
BACON
lb.

99~

·---------%PORK

.

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DINNER BOX
BULK

2 Pc~ CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES
ROLL

9 PCS.
CHICKEN
.

)

15 PCS.
BUCKET
CHICKEN

3 Pe s. CHICK EN
FRENCH FRIES
SLAW &amp; ROLl

21 PCS.
BARREL
CHICKEN

Try Our Delicious Macaron i Salad, Potato Sa lad, Baked
Beans. - For Easy P1ckup Phone 446·2682.

"Home of That Old F11shion Goodne,~.~"

LOIN
lb.

99e

Corner Second &amp; Olive

Gallipolis. Ohto

Sin cere\)'

�4 - TheSUndayTi.mes ilentinei.SW•.' .y,June3,!973

College News
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. Among the 4,200 students
receiving degrees May 20 at
West Virginia University were
Charles M. Hufford, Master of
Arts, Rt. 2, Bidwell, and James
E . Baughman, Master of Arts,

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Gallip~is .

MOREHEAD , Ky. - James
D. Walker , Rt. 2, Vinton ,
Michael E . Elliott, Rt. 2, and
Stephen _ C. Snowden , 410
Hedgewood Dr., Gallipolis, and
Joan M. Darst, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
received a bachelor of science
degrees at the
recent
Morehead University commencement. Charles
L.
Bradbury, Cheshire, Rebecca
S. Gibson, Rt . 2, Thomas M.
Meadows, lo Portsmouth Rd .,
and Pamela S. Saunders ,
Lower River Rd., Gallipolis,
were awarded the AB degree.

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Miss judith Ann Rayburn

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Miss Mary Lee Middkton

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ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. James Lee
Middleton, Ironton, announce the engagement of their daughter
Mary Lee, to Bob Kennedy , son of Mr. and Mrs. James Kennedy,
Ironton. Miss Middleton is a senior at the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing and a member of the Gallipolis Christian
Church. Kennedy is a senior at Scioto Technical College. A
September wedding is being planned.

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Stork shower held

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GALUPOUS A stork
shower in honor of Louise
Caldwell was given by Mary
Lou and Florence Clay. Games
were played, witlt prizes being
won by Frances Rile and
Carolyn Cardwell. Door prize
was won by Shirley Clay.
Refreshments of cakes,
chips, nuts, mints, coffee, and
Kool-Aid were served to Maude
Brookins, Hazel Sc;ott, Lenora
Mooney, Joyce Rumley, Karen
and Melissa Tucker, Marjorie
French, Ora Elliott, Frances
and Debbie Rile, Helen Crabtree, Vivian Benson, Maxine,
Dawene, Connie, Rodney
Jones, Carolyn Caldwell , Mary
Ann Clay, Wilma , Janie,
Karen, and Salley Caldwell,
Louise, Robie , and Debbie
Caldwell and Shirley Clay.
Those sending gilts were
•
Virgie Rifl;!, Sara Summers,
Nancy Moeller, Lena Day,
~uth Clay, Pauline Taylor ,

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Opan and Estel Mink, Mrs.
Dennis Spires, Mrs. Howard
Caldwell, Cheryl Bell, Julie
and Michael Eurell, Florence,
Lisa, and Brenda Caldwell.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES :
Paul
Crabtree, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Ronald Johnson, Letart;

Steven Pearson, Henderson;
Earl Barton, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. James -Knapp , Point
P leasant; Sam Nichols, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Joseph Roush
and daughter, Mason; Mrs.
John Fowlers, Pliny ; Bernard
Wallace II, Pomeroy; Ron
Dowdy, Front Rural, Va · l
Norman Foss, Point Pleasant;
Beulah Oliver, Point P leasant;
William Newell, South Side;
Dalas Wright, Ga llipolis

Fer·ry ; Joe Spark, Point
Pleasant ; BryQnt Ha.rmon,
Gallipolis .

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Rayburn, ZB07 Chandler Dr., Point Pleasant, are announcing the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter , Judith
Ann, to Steven Kalinowski, Bidwell. Miss Rayburn is a graduate
of Point Pleasant High School and is attending Gallipolis
Business College . Kalinowski attended Kyger Creek schools and
is employed in Richmond, Va. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Vows repeated
GALLIPOLIS - Jonnie Lou
Northup and Alfred J . Gabrielli

were united in marriage during
a double ring ceremony at the
Grace United Methodist
Church Chapel, Sunday, May
Tl, at 2:30 p.m. Rev. Paul
Hawks officiated.
Mrs . Roseanne Lepport,
Gahanna, served as matron of
honor for her sister and Bill
Vance, Columbus, was the best

and Mrs. Herman Johnson .
Many out-of-town relatives

PRIOR to the 10:30 a.m. Mass
at St. Louis Church, members
of the Catholic Woman 's Club
and the parish will say rosary
for the late Mrs. Mary Thomas
at 10 :1&gt; a.m .
MEMORIAL services at White
Cemetery at 11 a.m .
MONDAY
GALLIA and Kyger Councils,
Daughters of America, joint
inspection with potluck dinner
at 6 p,m . Meat and rolls furnished . Bring covered dish and
table service .
SALEM Baptist Church near
Gage annual Vaca tion Bible
School through the 8th from
6:30 to 8:30 p.m . All children

JU'/111

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ceremony.

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tll

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' JII(Jt;NJJ·

MO .. -

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WHAT THe KANISA='s
MATE WAS.

DAN THOMAS
AND SON
"Serving yo~ 5inc~ 19l6"
GaUipol1s. Oh1o

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COUPON .

KENNETH E. COLE

10% OFF (WITJ--1
COUPON) ON ALL SLACKS.
MONDAY , JUNE 4
9:30-8:00
TUESDAY, JUNE 5
9:00-5:00

Gallipolis, Ohio...,.....:_~..:;...:..:._.. .~

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Sizes S-M-l -Xl ....... $8.00

IIC aaid a/U.. VQI

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rEus route set

1

STORE HOURS

9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY, 252 THIRD AVE.
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

·F ily Pak Chicken Parts
~&gt;.-

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B4 L

~e c ond A v ~ .

Ph 0nt •46- 1
Go ll i p('li~o

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BIG SAVINGS
ON RECLINERS
FOR FATHER'S
DAY

.

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2 ONLY ..,. BASSETT
CONTEMPORARY P.ECAN
9 PC. DINING ROOM SUITES
REG.
1549.98

NOW

EARLY AMERICAN LIVING ROOM SUITES
OVER 30 IN STOCK. AS MUCH AS % OFF

:f

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs . Jack H.
Heuser, 273 East 27lst St., Euclid, announce the engagement of
tlleir daughter, Bronwvn Noreene. to David Barricklow, son of
Mr. and Mrs. carlos J . Barricklow , Jr. , Adrian , Mich. Miss
Heuser is niece of Mrs. S. L. Evans and Mrs. E . E . Evans,
Gallipolis, and the granddaughter of Alma Evans L,ong Hutchinson, Daytona Beach, Fla., formerly of Gallipolis. She atten!b
Ohio University . Barricklow is a graduate of Adrian College and
is employed in Ypsilanti, Mich. The wedding will be an even! of
August 11 .

dJunior, Mrs . Francis 0 1 0on •

Associat~

nell; Teens,
Pastor
Harry Cole,
Church. Mrs. Wilson Wahl is
The Baptist VBS commences
this year's Bible School Monday evening and continues
director and will be assisted by through Friday night a nd
the following departmenta l. Monday through Wednesday
superintendents : Pre-School, evenings of next week 6:30 to
Mrs. Arthur Rupe; Kin- 8:30. Children in grades kindergarten, Mrs. Adrian Haner; dergarten through teens are
Primary, Mrs. Jerry McDivitt ; invited to attend.

One of our
dumber numbers.

Mrs. Essie B . Russell is a
patient at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Room 114.
Mr. and Mrs . Myron Miller
and their son and daughter.in·
law, Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Miller and daughter Ange la ,
Waverly , visited over the
Memorial Day weekend in
Grafton, W. Va . at the home of
Mrs. Grace Proudfoot. They
also visite~ other relatives and
friends there.
Mr and Mrs . Asa Bradbury
and 'd aughter Nic hol, of Circleville spent Memorial Day
weekend he·re with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradbury.
Mr and Mrs. John Mayer and
; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Skinner of
... Gahanna were weekend guesls
,' of Mr . and Mr s. George
· Meinhart.
: Mr. and Mrs. Earl Daven~ port and son, Mi ck~Y: and Mrs.
~ B. B. Zeigler v1s 1ted last
( weekend in Beckley, W. Va.
~ with relatives. The Davenport
:· famiiy were guesis of Mrs .
} Harry Davenport and Mr. and
~ Mm James Dale. Mrs. Zeigler
~ was lhe guest of her grand~ daughters , Mrs . C. C. Lilly a~d
~ Mrs. Charles Cline, and their
r. familie s. This past week she
:: .visitcd.in Belpre with her three
~ sons and their families, R. L.
~ Zeigler, William Zeigler, and
~ R Zeigler.
. . .
N ·Here for 3 weekend v1s1t with
~ his parents, Mr: and_ Mrs.
.~ William Slater is their son ,
Bill, of Columbus . Bill works on
the Penn Central Railroad
pending re-entrance at OhiO
l University for his fmal quarter
f for his degree .
• M s Gertrude Cabeen has
retu~n~d from a two we:~k visit
Columbus with M~. and Mrs .
1 Joe Cabeen and famlly and Mr.
! and Mrs. Hanley Cone.

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eLAMPS AT LEAST 1A OFF
eOCCASIONAL TABLES. 1A TO lh OFF
eSPANISH BEDROOM AND DINING ROOM SUITES - .SAVE!

.-

eSPANISH &amp; TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITES ·- SAVE!
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eOPEN STOCK BEDROOM, MAPLE &amp; WHITE FRENCH

EARLY AMERICAN DINING ROOM
MAPLE, PINE AND OAK FINISHES.
GIGANTIC SAVINGS

BUY THE WHOLE SUITE OR JUST A
TABLE &amp;CHAIRS .
HOWEVER YO U WANT
EXCELLENT SELECTION

BEMCO
SACROP.EDIC &amp; SACROPEDIC IMPERIAL

DESKS AND GUN
CABINETS FOR DAD

MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
IN

FUL~

QUEEN &amp; KING SIZES

ARMSTRONG. VINYL .LINOLEUM
.

SAVE UP TO $6000 A SET
Whirlpool Air Conditioners
Buy .Now - Beat The Rush

QUAKERTONE &amp; CUSHION FLOOR
.'

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ALSO:

i

CARPETS .BY ARMSTRONG

t

fin

FREE ESTIMATES

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From 1965 to :HJ70 the
number of cigare tte s mok ~
crs in th e adult population
! 17 yea r s or olden declined
from 41.6 per · cent to 36.7
pe r c ent . The World Alma nac say s. The drop was
particu la rly s harp among
men - from .5 1 per ·cent to
43·. 2 per ce nt in J970 The
number of women smokers
declined from 33.2 per cent
to 30 .9 per ce nt of the adult
female 'popu lation .
1' " I' ~ r i ~-! II t ,;.
I :• 'i :1
\"• •\ l.''l':t('• I" 1·:111 • l"l• t'll" o' . \ ~ :-1 1.

I

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10-lb.
Yoo pul your Ii iii,. fool down, nml
l'\~ry time }{}U do til&lt;! air

whoos hes

in. How dumb loYdy.

TOO SOON
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The
arra·nged marriage between
Ling-Ling and Hsing-Hsing,
two giant pandas given by
China to the United States last
year. is making slow progress.
" The male is too young, but I
promise you that within six
months it will be a great
romance," says Dr. Theodore
Reed, director of the National
Zoo. His remark, .,made to a
visiting Chinese journalist, was
reported Thursday at a State
Department reception for
visiting newsmen.

BROUGHTON .

%-Gal. Pkg.

[50rfPIII

STATE FARE

CHIPS or
ECORN Q'

BETTER FOOT.WEAR FOR THE FAMIL '(

In The Silv er Bridge Sh opping Pla~a
Open Mon . thru Sat . 10 t'l9, Sun. 1 til 6

l·lb.

WE'VE JUST RECEIVED A
TRUCK ·LOAD OF PIANOS!

'

412

Second Ave .

Gallipolis . OhiO

Beautiful Pianos
SALE STARTS FRIDAY

1 tt

'295
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

BET

5

At Our Large Selection of

13 dlas

$ 29

Bag

Th1s shoe slnry i!llu/1 of holes .

Come In and Enjoy A Free
Cup of Coffee As You Look

D_423

POTATOES
SELECTED TABLE STOCK

SALE·

DIAMONDS

Ia Long White

VI STA

DAN DEE

APPLE BASE JELLIES
FIVE VARIETIES

AND THEY'Rf
ALL ON

s.

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FACTS

Cal

U.S. No. 1
Grade

WORLD ALMANAC

Middleport . m
: \!i Personal Notes :!ji

eBUNK BEDS - GOOD SELECTION. SAVE!
eLANE CEDAR CHESTS

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GET END TABLES, COFFEE TABLES &amp; LAMPS TO M.ATCH
AS MUCH AS 1f2 OFF

$39998

1 SPANISH LIVING ROOM
GROUP NOW 1fz PRICE

~ 1\{:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::~::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Ii

Includes: 3 Breast with wings &amp;
backs, 3 leg with backs, 2 Pkgs .
Giblets &amp; 2 Neck$.

' ,

Miss Bronwyn N Heuser

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VBUI('th eme announce

turn again on Vinton Ave .,
GALLIPOLIS - The First
through toRt. 160. The bus will Baptist Church will have as its
the following bus route for its travel into Plantz Subdivision theme for this year 's Vacation
Vacation Bible School. The on Bulaville Rd. Then back Bible School, "Jesus ... the Son
summer Bible school for again to Rt. 160 toRt. 35. It will of God."
grades kindergarten through stop at Mills Village, then
The "Director's Guidebook,"
teens will commence Monday, proceed out Rt. 35 to Spring written by Dr. Merle Hall,
June 4, and continue through Valley. It will turn around at executive editor of Regular
· Wednesday, June 13, from 6:30 Spring Valley and proceed on Baptist Press is being used this
to 8:30 p.m. This eight day Rt. 35 a nd Rt. 160 back to the · summer by the Vacation Bible
VcatiOn Bible School course city, picking up anyone along School staff of the First Baptist
will close with a demonstration the way; then south on Fourth
program
on
Wednesday Ave. to the church on the
BUll.DERS CLUB MEET
corner of Third and Locust.
evening, June 13.
REEDSVILLE
The ·
The Baptist Church bus will
The Baptist Church bus will
Reedsville Community
make the route each night. The make stops anywhere along the Builders' Club met in May at
A¢ bus
will
leave
the route to pick up those who are the home of Mr. and Mrs.
out along side the road and"wiU
~~ church a!. 5 :30p.m. and go up
Walter Brown. A letter was
signal
the dt·i ver .
• . Second Ave., to Sycamore St.,
.
read from Mrs. Meritt
The bus will return its
thanking the cl ub for co•• out to Eastern Ave., to the Blue passengers
after the evening sponsoring Jane Whitehead to
~ Fountain Motel where the bus
~ will turn around and proceed VBS classes are over. The Buckeye Gir ls State. P lans
' south ~n Eastern Ave. It will passengers wh"o were picked up were made for a picnic to be
stop arid pick up any child or first will be brought back to held JUne 16 at Forked Run
adult on its way south on · their home first.
State Park at 6:30 p.m.
Tt.1s year 's Ch ur ch bus
Ei:lstern Ave.
Refreshments were s~rved .
,.' It will turn at Mill Creek St. dri\lers will be Emerson Attending were Mr. &lt;tild Mrs.
• and go to Second Ave. down 19 Corbin, Ronnie Keenan and Donald Myers, Mr. and Mrs.
Sycamore , turn rig ht on Larry Marr .
Ronald Osborne and Mr. and
:: Sycamore to Fourth Ave;., then
Mrs. Warren Pickens.

.'•'

•

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth E .
Cole, son of Rev . and Mrs.
Harry E. Cole, I Vine St., will
graduate from the Ohio State
University
College
of
Medicine Thursday, June 7.
Those who will be attending
the graduation besides his
parents will be his brother,
Daavid, and his sister Judy .
Also attending will be his
maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert K. Balmer,
Hollywood , Fla.; his paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry A. Cole, Washington,
111.; a great aunt, Mrs. Elsa
lngals, Satellite Beach, Fla. ;
Dr. Ralph Haynes Columbus;
Miss Denise Lanier, Bidwell, ,
and Miss Beverly Rusk,
Gallipolis. Beginning July 1,
Dr . Cole will begin his internship in pediatrics and
internal medicine at the
University
Hospital
of
Virginia in Charlottsville, Va.

GALLIPOLIS - The First
Baptist Church has announced

412-414 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TIL 8 PM

•
file acli11g game I-CHARADES

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Donald K.
Evans, 232 Le Grande Blvd., Gallipolis, are announcing the
engagement of her daughter, Miss Jeanette D. Slone, toR , Keith
Bragg, son of Mr and Mrs. Robert Lee Bragg, 2109 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant. Her father was the late Shelley Dale Slone. The
bride-elect is a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy High School and
is employed by H. W. and W. P . Cherrington, attorneys at law.
Bragg is a 1970 graduate of Point Pleasant High School and attended Marshall University. He Is employed at Lakin Hospital.
An August wedding is being planned.

t.

I [I II III]( I I]
MondaJ')

Miss jeanette D. Slone

'

Now arrange the circled !etten
t o form the Surprise anawer, BJJ
augge1te.d by the abo.ve cartoon.

(Amw~n

'
An~wcr:

•
•

munsingpJear

· Junol&gt;!.,, APART DUCHY GYPSUM FILUT '
V"uterday'•

•

Setond~

the tailored collar knitshirt that goes
everywhere in great shape. The total
look is neat , thetatal feel is comfort,
in the fam·ous Penguin sty le. Easy
core , too - permqnent press ForIre! ® polyester and cotton. As
you like it ... KNIT .

~.,

t

••
••

UP FRONT .••

ll

man. Mrs. Anne Fischer

•••

,., DAD

and guests attended.
The couple is at home at 740
Fairfield • Centenary Rd.,
Porterfield Subdivision.

......,................
...,f_
,...

JWt:IN

•

•
•

greatgih

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to
form four ordinary words.

I

::_::The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday. June 3, 1973

ar~e~~~~--------------------------~-----,i:i

~l]JMffiJ1rn® lki lct-~tJ .-J , _

'provided organ music for the
Ushers were Michael Northup, Columbus, and Larry
Northup, Gallipolis. Mrs.
Michael Northup registered
the guests .
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the
church parlor. R,osalee Porter
served punch and Mrs. Larry
North served the cake. The
bride's table was centered by a
five tier, yell ow and white .
wedding cake, baked by her
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.

ADA - David T. Evans,
Gallipolis, has been elected
Master of the rolls of Ohio
Northern University's chapter
of Delta Theta Phi, legal
fraternity .

SUNDAY
SANDERS family will be
singing at the Valley Freewill
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.

TUESDAY
WAYSIDE Garden
meet at 3p .m . with Mrs. Hortie
Roush .
HAPPY Days Club will m~t at
Camp Francis Asbury at 6 p .m
Bring covered dish and table
service.
PATRIOT Grange will host
Cora Grange at 8 p.m . Mem·
bers, bring potluck.
BIDWELL United Methodist
WSCS at the church at 7:30
p .m .

BRUNICA.RDI
GALLIPOLIS

54 STATE ST.
PHONE ,446-0687

1-lb. 2-oz. Jars
SUNSHINE MIX OR MATCH SALE
Cheez-1ts. . . . . . . . ,.,.
Chiperoos . . . . . . . . 91h-ot.
,.,.
Vienna fingers . . . . '~;:·
for
·

•

3 $1

lV!-DI •

PURINA VARIETY MENU CAT FOODS
Sardin~

liver
Kidney
Chicken &amp;Fish

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
14-&lt;&gt;z.
Jar

$229

Turkey &amp; Giblets •·:;:•· 20c
Chef Delight
•·:;~· 20c
Chicken &amp; Liver ··~;:' 20c

HEINZ

Strained Baby Foods

4-oz., o~

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH
Fruit Juicy Red
1-Qt. 14"(JZ.
Can

·. MAGIC
BLEACH
ll.gal.
Bot.

37~

BO BEEP
AMMONIA

Jar

Juices

4-oz.
Can

12e

39~

11&gt;-Gal.
Bot.

45~

.

�4 - TheSUndayTi.mes ilentinei.SW•.' .y,June3,!973

College News
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. Among the 4,200 students
receiving degrees May 20 at
West Virginia University were
Charles M. Hufford, Master of
Arts, Rt. 2, Bidwell, and James
E . Baughman, Master of Arts,

•
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Gallip~is .

MOREHEAD , Ky. - James
D. Walker , Rt. 2, Vinton ,
Michael E . Elliott, Rt. 2, and
Stephen _ C. Snowden , 410
Hedgewood Dr., Gallipolis, and
Joan M. Darst, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
received a bachelor of science
degrees at the
recent
Morehead University commencement. Charles
L.
Bradbury, Cheshire, Rebecca
S. Gibson, Rt . 2, Thomas M.
Meadows, lo Portsmouth Rd .,
and Pamela S. Saunders ,
Lower River Rd., Gallipolis,
were awarded the AB degree.

.•
.••
••

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.

Miss judith Ann Rayburn

'

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Miss Mary Lee Middkton

.•

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. James Lee
Middleton, Ironton, announce the engagement of their daughter
Mary Lee, to Bob Kennedy , son of Mr. and Mrs. James Kennedy,
Ironton. Miss Middleton is a senior at the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing and a member of the Gallipolis Christian
Church. Kennedy is a senior at Scioto Technical College. A
September wedding is being planned.

•
•

.••
.'•

Stork shower held

•

'•

GALUPOUS A stork
shower in honor of Louise
Caldwell was given by Mary
Lou and Florence Clay. Games
were played, witlt prizes being
won by Frances Rile and
Carolyn Cardwell. Door prize
was won by Shirley Clay.
Refreshments of cakes,
chips, nuts, mints, coffee, and
Kool-Aid were served to Maude
Brookins, Hazel Sc;ott, Lenora
Mooney, Joyce Rumley, Karen
and Melissa Tucker, Marjorie
French, Ora Elliott, Frances
and Debbie Rile, Helen Crabtree, Vivian Benson, Maxine,
Dawene, Connie, Rodney
Jones, Carolyn Caldwell , Mary
Ann Clay, Wilma , Janie,
Karen, and Salley Caldwell,
Louise, Robie , and Debbie
Caldwell and Shirley Clay.
Those sending gilts were
•
Virgie Rifl;!, Sara Summers,
Nancy Moeller, Lena Day,
~uth Clay, Pauline Taylor ,

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•'

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Opan and Estel Mink, Mrs.
Dennis Spires, Mrs. Howard
Caldwell, Cheryl Bell, Julie
and Michael Eurell, Florence,
Lisa, and Brenda Caldwell.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES :
Paul
Crabtree, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Ronald Johnson, Letart;

Steven Pearson, Henderson;
Earl Barton, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. James -Knapp , Point
P leasant; Sam Nichols, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Joseph Roush
and daughter, Mason; Mrs.
John Fowlers, Pliny ; Bernard
Wallace II, Pomeroy; Ron
Dowdy, Front Rural, Va · l
Norman Foss, Point Pleasant;
Beulah Oliver, Point P leasant;
William Newell, South Side;
Dalas Wright, Ga llipolis

Fer·ry ; Joe Spark, Point
Pleasant ; BryQnt Ha.rmon,
Gallipolis .

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Rayburn, ZB07 Chandler Dr., Point Pleasant, are announcing the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter , Judith
Ann, to Steven Kalinowski, Bidwell. Miss Rayburn is a graduate
of Point Pleasant High School and is attending Gallipolis
Business College . Kalinowski attended Kyger Creek schools and
is employed in Richmond, Va. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Vows repeated
GALLIPOLIS - Jonnie Lou
Northup and Alfred J . Gabrielli

were united in marriage during
a double ring ceremony at the
Grace United Methodist
Church Chapel, Sunday, May
Tl, at 2:30 p.m. Rev. Paul
Hawks officiated.
Mrs . Roseanne Lepport,
Gahanna, served as matron of
honor for her sister and Bill
Vance, Columbus, was the best

and Mrs. Herman Johnson .
Many out-of-town relatives

PRIOR to the 10:30 a.m. Mass
at St. Louis Church, members
of the Catholic Woman 's Club
and the parish will say rosary
for the late Mrs. Mary Thomas
at 10 :1&gt; a.m .
MEMORIAL services at White
Cemetery at 11 a.m .
MONDAY
GALLIA and Kyger Councils,
Daughters of America, joint
inspection with potluck dinner
at 6 p,m . Meat and rolls furnished . Bring covered dish and
table service .
SALEM Baptist Church near
Gage annual Vaca tion Bible
School through the 8th from
6:30 to 8:30 p.m . All children

JU'/111

[]

ceremony.

~·~'-R'

Dl
•••

tll

IJ
l

r

·aJ o

' JII(Jt;NJJ·

MO .. -

........

1

-

WHAT THe KANISA='s
MATE WAS.

DAN THOMAS
AND SON
"Serving yo~ 5inc~ 19l6"
GaUipol1s. Oh1o

~,,_

~

COUPON .

KENNETH E. COLE

10% OFF (WITJ--1
COUPON) ON ALL SLACKS.
MONDAY , JUNE 4
9:30-8:00
TUESDAY, JUNE 5
9:00-5:00

Gallipolis, Ohio...,.....:_~..:;...:..:._.. .~

~
'

Sizes S-M-l -Xl ....... $8.00

IIC aaid a/U.. VQI

:

[
1
•

'
·'

rEus route set

1

STORE HOURS

9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY, 252 THIRD AVE.
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

·F ily Pak Chicken Parts
~&gt;.-

',
'

B4 L

~e c ond A v ~ .

Ph 0nt •46- 1
Go ll i p('li~o

••

BIG SAVINGS
ON RECLINERS
FOR FATHER'S
DAY

.

''

2 ONLY ..,. BASSETT
CONTEMPORARY P.ECAN
9 PC. DINING ROOM SUITES
REG.
1549.98

NOW

EARLY AMERICAN LIVING ROOM SUITES
OVER 30 IN STOCK. AS MUCH AS % OFF

:f

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs . Jack H.
Heuser, 273 East 27lst St., Euclid, announce the engagement of
tlleir daughter, Bronwvn Noreene. to David Barricklow, son of
Mr. and Mrs. carlos J . Barricklow , Jr. , Adrian , Mich. Miss
Heuser is niece of Mrs. S. L. Evans and Mrs. E . E . Evans,
Gallipolis, and the granddaughter of Alma Evans L,ong Hutchinson, Daytona Beach, Fla., formerly of Gallipolis. She atten!b
Ohio University . Barricklow is a graduate of Adrian College and
is employed in Ypsilanti, Mich. The wedding will be an even! of
August 11 .

dJunior, Mrs . Francis 0 1 0on •

Associat~

nell; Teens,
Pastor
Harry Cole,
Church. Mrs. Wilson Wahl is
The Baptist VBS commences
this year's Bible School Monday evening and continues
director and will be assisted by through Friday night a nd
the following departmenta l. Monday through Wednesday
superintendents : Pre-School, evenings of next week 6:30 to
Mrs. Arthur Rupe; Kin- 8:30. Children in grades kindergarten, Mrs. Adrian Haner; dergarten through teens are
Primary, Mrs. Jerry McDivitt ; invited to attend.

One of our
dumber numbers.

Mrs. Essie B . Russell is a
patient at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Room 114.
Mr. and Mrs . Myron Miller
and their son and daughter.in·
law, Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Miller and daughter Ange la ,
Waverly , visited over the
Memorial Day weekend in
Grafton, W. Va . at the home of
Mrs. Grace Proudfoot. They
also visite~ other relatives and
friends there.
Mr and Mrs . Asa Bradbury
and 'd aughter Nic hol, of Circleville spent Memorial Day
weekend he·re with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradbury.
Mr and Mrs. John Mayer and
; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Skinner of
... Gahanna were weekend guesls
,' of Mr . and Mr s. George
· Meinhart.
: Mr. and Mrs. Earl Daven~ port and son, Mi ck~Y: and Mrs.
~ B. B. Zeigler v1s 1ted last
( weekend in Beckley, W. Va.
~ with relatives. The Davenport
:· famiiy were guesis of Mrs .
} Harry Davenport and Mr. and
~ Mm James Dale. Mrs. Zeigler
~ was lhe guest of her grand~ daughters , Mrs . C. C. Lilly a~d
~ Mrs. Charles Cline, and their
r. familie s. This past week she
:: .visitcd.in Belpre with her three
~ sons and their families, R. L.
~ Zeigler, William Zeigler, and
~ R Zeigler.
. . .
N ·Here for 3 weekend v1s1t with
~ his parents, Mr: and_ Mrs.
.~ William Slater is their son ,
Bill, of Columbus . Bill works on
the Penn Central Railroad
pending re-entrance at OhiO
l University for his fmal quarter
f for his degree .
• M s Gertrude Cabeen has
retu~n~d from a two we:~k visit
Columbus with M~. and Mrs .
1 Joe Cabeen and famlly and Mr.
! and Mrs. Hanley Cone.

'•

eLAMPS AT LEAST 1A OFF
eOCCASIONAL TABLES. 1A TO lh OFF
eSPANISH BEDROOM AND DINING ROOM SUITES - .SAVE!

.-

eSPANISH &amp; TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITES ·- SAVE!
'

'

•
•

•
•

•'

..• •
.. '
." .'
.

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eOPEN STOCK BEDROOM, MAPLE &amp; WHITE FRENCH

EARLY AMERICAN DINING ROOM
MAPLE, PINE AND OAK FINISHES.
GIGANTIC SAVINGS

BUY THE WHOLE SUITE OR JUST A
TABLE &amp;CHAIRS .
HOWEVER YO U WANT
EXCELLENT SELECTION

BEMCO
SACROP.EDIC &amp; SACROPEDIC IMPERIAL

DESKS AND GUN
CABINETS FOR DAD

MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
IN

FUL~

QUEEN &amp; KING SIZES

ARMSTRONG. VINYL .LINOLEUM
.

SAVE UP TO $6000 A SET
Whirlpool Air Conditioners
Buy .Now - Beat The Rush

QUAKERTONE &amp; CUSHION FLOOR
.'

l
j

ALSO:

i

CARPETS .BY ARMSTRONG

t

fin

FREE ESTIMATES

•

I

From 1965 to :HJ70 the
number of cigare tte s mok ~
crs in th e adult population
! 17 yea r s or olden declined
from 41.6 per · cent to 36.7
pe r c ent . The World Alma nac say s. The drop was
particu la rly s harp among
men - from .5 1 per ·cent to
43·. 2 per ce nt in J970 The
number of women smokers
declined from 33.2 per cent
to 30 .9 per ce nt of the adult
female 'popu lation .
1' " I' ~ r i ~-! II t ,;.
I :• 'i :1
\"• •\ l.''l':t('• I" 1·:111 • l"l• t'll" o' . \ ~ :-1 1.

I

•

10-lb.
Yoo pul your Ii iii,. fool down, nml
l'\~ry time }{}U do til&lt;! air

whoos hes

in. How dumb loYdy.

TOO SOON
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The
arra·nged marriage between
Ling-Ling and Hsing-Hsing,
two giant pandas given by
China to the United States last
year. is making slow progress.
" The male is too young, but I
promise you that within six
months it will be a great
romance," says Dr. Theodore
Reed, director of the National
Zoo. His remark, .,made to a
visiting Chinese journalist, was
reported Thursday at a State
Department reception for
visiting newsmen.

BROUGHTON .

%-Gal. Pkg.

[50rfPIII

STATE FARE

CHIPS or
ECORN Q'

BETTER FOOT.WEAR FOR THE FAMIL '(

In The Silv er Bridge Sh opping Pla~a
Open Mon . thru Sat . 10 t'l9, Sun. 1 til 6

l·lb.

WE'VE JUST RECEIVED A
TRUCK ·LOAD OF PIANOS!

'

412

Second Ave .

Gallipolis . OhiO

Beautiful Pianos
SALE STARTS FRIDAY

1 tt

'295
TAWNEY
JEWELERS

BET

5

At Our Large Selection of

13 dlas

$ 29

Bag

Th1s shoe slnry i!llu/1 of holes .

Come In and Enjoy A Free
Cup of Coffee As You Look

D_423

POTATOES
SELECTED TABLE STOCK

SALE·

DIAMONDS

Ia Long White

VI STA

DAN DEE

APPLE BASE JELLIES
FIVE VARIETIES

AND THEY'Rf
ALL ON

s.

.

.

FACTS

Cal

U.S. No. 1
Grade

WORLD ALMANAC

Middleport . m
: \!i Personal Notes :!ji

eBUNK BEDS - GOOD SELECTION. SAVE!
eLANE CEDAR CHESTS

•

....

. •.•.

GET END TABLES, COFFEE TABLES &amp; LAMPS TO M.ATCH
AS MUCH AS 1f2 OFF

$39998

1 SPANISH LIVING ROOM
GROUP NOW 1fz PRICE

~ 1\{:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::~::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Ii

Includes: 3 Breast with wings &amp;
backs, 3 leg with backs, 2 Pkgs .
Giblets &amp; 2 Neck$.

' ,

Miss Bronwyn N Heuser

.

,I

·

!;

VBUI('th eme announce

turn again on Vinton Ave .,
GALLIPOLIS - The First
through toRt. 160. The bus will Baptist Church will have as its
the following bus route for its travel into Plantz Subdivision theme for this year 's Vacation
Vacation Bible School. The on Bulaville Rd. Then back Bible School, "Jesus ... the Son
summer Bible school for again to Rt. 160 toRt. 35. It will of God."
grades kindergarten through stop at Mills Village, then
The "Director's Guidebook,"
teens will commence Monday, proceed out Rt. 35 to Spring written by Dr. Merle Hall,
June 4, and continue through Valley. It will turn around at executive editor of Regular
· Wednesday, June 13, from 6:30 Spring Valley and proceed on Baptist Press is being used this
to 8:30 p.m. This eight day Rt. 35 a nd Rt. 160 back to the · summer by the Vacation Bible
VcatiOn Bible School course city, picking up anyone along School staff of the First Baptist
will close with a demonstration the way; then south on Fourth
program
on
Wednesday Ave. to the church on the
BUll.DERS CLUB MEET
corner of Third and Locust.
evening, June 13.
REEDSVILLE
The ·
The Baptist Church bus will
The Baptist Church bus will
Reedsville Community
make the route each night. The make stops anywhere along the Builders' Club met in May at
A¢ bus
will
leave
the route to pick up those who are the home of Mr. and Mrs.
out along side the road and"wiU
~~ church a!. 5 :30p.m. and go up
Walter Brown. A letter was
signal
the dt·i ver .
• . Second Ave., to Sycamore St.,
.
read from Mrs. Meritt
The bus will return its
thanking the cl ub for co•• out to Eastern Ave., to the Blue passengers
after the evening sponsoring Jane Whitehead to
~ Fountain Motel where the bus
~ will turn around and proceed VBS classes are over. The Buckeye Gir ls State. P lans
' south ~n Eastern Ave. It will passengers wh"o were picked up were made for a picnic to be
stop arid pick up any child or first will be brought back to held JUne 16 at Forked Run
adult on its way south on · their home first.
State Park at 6:30 p.m.
Tt.1s year 's Ch ur ch bus
Ei:lstern Ave.
Refreshments were s~rved .
,.' It will turn at Mill Creek St. dri\lers will be Emerson Attending were Mr. &lt;tild Mrs.
• and go to Second Ave. down 19 Corbin, Ronnie Keenan and Donald Myers, Mr. and Mrs.
Sycamore , turn rig ht on Larry Marr .
Ronald Osborne and Mr. and
:: Sycamore to Fourth Ave;., then
Mrs. Warren Pickens.

.'•'

•

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth E .
Cole, son of Rev . and Mrs.
Harry E. Cole, I Vine St., will
graduate from the Ohio State
University
College
of
Medicine Thursday, June 7.
Those who will be attending
the graduation besides his
parents will be his brother,
Daavid, and his sister Judy .
Also attending will be his
maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert K. Balmer,
Hollywood , Fla.; his paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry A. Cole, Washington,
111.; a great aunt, Mrs. Elsa
lngals, Satellite Beach, Fla. ;
Dr. Ralph Haynes Columbus;
Miss Denise Lanier, Bidwell, ,
and Miss Beverly Rusk,
Gallipolis. Beginning July 1,
Dr . Cole will begin his internship in pediatrics and
internal medicine at the
University
Hospital
of
Virginia in Charlottsville, Va.

GALLIPOLIS - The First
Baptist Church has announced

412-414 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TIL 8 PM

•
file acli11g game I-CHARADES

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Donald K.
Evans, 232 Le Grande Blvd., Gallipolis, are announcing the
engagement of her daughter, Miss Jeanette D. Slone, toR , Keith
Bragg, son of Mr and Mrs. Robert Lee Bragg, 2109 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant. Her father was the late Shelley Dale Slone. The
bride-elect is a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy High School and
is employed by H. W. and W. P . Cherrington, attorneys at law.
Bragg is a 1970 graduate of Point Pleasant High School and attended Marshall University. He Is employed at Lakin Hospital.
An August wedding is being planned.

t.

I [I II III]( I I]
MondaJ')

Miss jeanette D. Slone

'

Now arrange the circled !etten
t o form the Surprise anawer, BJJ
augge1te.d by the abo.ve cartoon.

(Amw~n

'
An~wcr:

•
•

munsingpJear

· Junol&gt;!.,, APART DUCHY GYPSUM FILUT '
V"uterday'•

•

Setond~

the tailored collar knitshirt that goes
everywhere in great shape. The total
look is neat , thetatal feel is comfort,
in the fam·ous Penguin sty le. Easy
core , too - permqnent press ForIre! ® polyester and cotton. As
you like it ... KNIT .

~.,

t

••
••

UP FRONT .••

ll

man. Mrs. Anne Fischer

•••

,., DAD

and guests attended.
The couple is at home at 740
Fairfield • Centenary Rd.,
Porterfield Subdivision.

......,................
...,f_
,...

JWt:IN

•

•
•

greatgih

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to
form four ordinary words.

I

::_::The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday. June 3, 1973

ar~e~~~~--------------------------~-----,i:i

~l]JMffiJ1rn® lki lct-~tJ .-J , _

'provided organ music for the
Ushers were Michael Northup, Columbus, and Larry
Northup, Gallipolis. Mrs.
Michael Northup registered
the guests .
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the
church parlor. R,osalee Porter
served punch and Mrs. Larry
North served the cake. The
bride's table was centered by a
five tier, yell ow and white .
wedding cake, baked by her
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.

ADA - David T. Evans,
Gallipolis, has been elected
Master of the rolls of Ohio
Northern University's chapter
of Delta Theta Phi, legal
fraternity .

SUNDAY
SANDERS family will be
singing at the Valley Freewill
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.

TUESDAY
WAYSIDE Garden
meet at 3p .m . with Mrs. Hortie
Roush .
HAPPY Days Club will m~t at
Camp Francis Asbury at 6 p .m
Bring covered dish and table
service.
PATRIOT Grange will host
Cora Grange at 8 p.m . Mem·
bers, bring potluck.
BIDWELL United Methodist
WSCS at the church at 7:30
p .m .

BRUNICA.RDI
GALLIPOLIS

54 STATE ST.
PHONE ,446-0687

1-lb. 2-oz. Jars
SUNSHINE MIX OR MATCH SALE
Cheez-1ts. . . . . . . . ,.,.
Chiperoos . . . . . . . . 91h-ot.
,.,.
Vienna fingers . . . . '~;:·
for
·

•

3 $1

lV!-DI •

PURINA VARIETY MENU CAT FOODS
Sardin~

liver
Kidney
Chicken &amp;Fish

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
14-&lt;&gt;z.
Jar

$229

Turkey &amp; Giblets •·:;:•· 20c
Chef Delight
•·:;~· 20c
Chicken &amp; Liver ··~;:' 20c

HEINZ

Strained Baby Foods

4-oz., o~

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH
Fruit Juicy Red
1-Qt. 14"(JZ.
Can

·. MAGIC
BLEACH
ll.gal.
Bot.

37~

BO BEEP
AMMONIA

Jar

Juices

4-oz.
Can

12e

39~

11&gt;-Gal.
Bot.

45~

.

�•
7- The Sunrla\' Tim,... ·f.entine: . SI•nri,.v.~June 3. 197l

6 - The Sunday Times -Sentinei, Sunudy ,June 3 1973

Newcomers enjoy luncheon
'
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Mr. and Mrs. Oliver A. Unroe
'

To celebrate 50 years
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Oli ver A. Unroe, Lower
River Rd ., Gallipo lis, will
celebrate their Golden Wed·
ding Anniversary on Sunday,
June 10, fr om 2-4 p.m. with a
rece ption in the fellowship
room of the firs t Baptist
Chu rc h, Thi rd Ave nue at
Locust St ., Gallipo lis.
The couple are both native
Gallia countians. Unroe is the
son of the late Rev . John R. P.
and Minerva Brammer Unroe.
Mrs. Unroe is the former Clara
Haffell, daughter of the late
Charles Henry and Rowena'
Patterson Haffel t.
They were married at the
home of Unroe's sister and
brother-in-law, Mr . and Mrs. L.
D. Bruce, Russell, Ky., by the

Rev. Tim carey, June 6, 1923.
The Unroes are the parents
of one daughter, Mrs. George
(Donna June ) Adams, and the
of
Oliver
grandparents
Brantley 1Brant ) and Claire
Lynne Adams, also of Lower
Rive r Rd., Gallipolis.
All friend s and loved ones
are invited to call during the
aftern oon.

SET REUNION
GALLIPOLIS - The 54th
annual Clark fami ly reunion
will be held Sunday, June 10, at
the Ga llia County Junior
Fairgrounds. All relatives and
fr iends are invited . Alfred
Clark is president.

Shown above is a sample of the handiwork of Kati Meek,
currently on display at Riverby.

New show at Riverby
uALLIPOLIS - The current
show at the French Art Colony
is weaving and pottery by Kati
Meek. The exhibit will run
throughout June and is open to
the public Tuesdays, 10 a .m. to
3 p.m. and Saturday and
Sunday I to 5 p.m.
The exhibit includes 35 works
done by the artist over the past
four years . One of the major

'· '
efll&lt;latn.es
326 SECOND AV[

GALLIPOLIS

DELICIOUS
·DREAM PUFFS

I •
0

GALI..IPOLIS- Members of Ut terer, Mrs. William Smith
the' Gallipolis area Newcomers and Mrs. Jerry Wade.
Club enjoyed a bullet luncheon
Mrs. Will iam Todd was
Th ursday in the Wharf Room of appointed secretary of the club
the Holiday Inn .
for the remainder of the year.
New members welcomed by
Mrs. Adkins announced the
the club and in troduced by organiza lion of an evening
President Mrs. Charl es Adkins bridge group with the next
were Mrs. David Ca rma n, Mrs . mee ting to be June 14 at the
Thomas Hardman , Mrs . home of Mrs. Michael DonWilliam TOdd, Mrs. Da\•id ne llan. For more information
Wir th, Mrs. Mic hae l Don- call Mrs Donnellan at 245-5204.
nellan, Mrs. J ohn White, Mrs.
In September, a husband and
l:lert Bardendorf, Mrs. Lou wife picnic is being planned.
Mrs. William Yoimg is chair·
person.
Mrs. Michael Donnellan will
be cha irperson of the annual
Style Show in Oetober. There
will be no mee tings duri ng the
swnmer months.
Following the luncheon and
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Arthur Rupe , Jr., left, is the
business
meetin
g,
lhe
women
present president of the South Central Child Conservation
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs . Mary
listened
to
a
delightful
talk
by
League. Mr.s. Lloyd Danner is the incoming president. The
E. Russell celebrated her 99th
Toddlers to Tassles Mother's League hosted the annual
birthday during the past week. Mrs. Coell Wetherholt who told
the
history
of
the
old
French
district
C&lt;l~vention at the Holiday lnn, Saturday.
Among those helping her
celebrate were Mr, and Mrs. City. Gallipolis is the third
Roy Huntley , Mr. and Mrs. oldest settlement in Ohio, being
Dale Gleason, Mrs. Stanley settled by the French, October facilities of Riverby, she gave at Holzer Medical Center,
Davis , Mrs. Arnol Weaver and 17, 1790.
each one present a packet of spoke and indicated the need
Mrs George Gra ce interested brochures, and outlines which for many additional volunteer
son, Ricky, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester White and Mrs. Lucy all those present with her in- covered many of the summer workers. Many vacancies still
Hartsook, all of the Vinton formation about The French activities available to families exist in pedialrics, admitting,
area ; Mr. and Mrs. James Art Colony , the cultural center in the Gallipolis area .
the emergency room and other
Clark , Ri o Grande ; Mrs . of Gallipolis. After reviewing
Mrs . Mary Jean Walker, areas. If interested call Mrs.
Florence Wickline, Mrs. Ethel the history and present Director of Volunteer Services Walker at 446-5215.
Robins on , Miss Gertrude
Davis, Mrs. Lena Myers, Mrs.
Wayne Folden, Mrs. Fred
Koopman , Mr . and Mrs. Clark
Caldwell, Armit Gee, John
Fulks, Mrs. Miriam Allison
and daughter, Judy Fellure,
Mr . and Mrs. John I. Richards,
Mr. and Mrs. L. Paul Haskins,
Mrs . Zelia Elliott and
daughter, Shirley , all of
Gallipolis;
Mrs .
Annie
Shadrach, St. James, Mo:;
Mrs.' Mabel Shadrach and
William Shadrach, Oak Hill;
and Mrs. Harris Wellman,
Columbus.
Wednesday, her 101 year-old
friend, Mrs . Ollie Straight,
Northup , called, and sang
Save on these great Playtex Styles
UYESU I
"Happy Birthday" to her. Her
Now Z for Sl .49
Slyle 113 C ROSS YOUR HEA RT" Sllll&gt;!TLY PAODEO STRETCH EI RA
granddaughter, Mrs. Robert
-IK e CuJlS 3 2/36A , 32/10 8 . 32/ I OC R e &lt;;~ 2 l o-r $1 0 00
M. Evans, St. Albans, also
S AVE 11 .~1
Now21orS 8.&lt;41
called.
·
t 187 CROSS YOUR H EART" STRETCH BI'IA ll t 9 CUll S J2/ J6A , .)2 { &lt;109 .
32/ji2C Reg 2 1or S 10 00 32 ! 4 20 Aeg 56 00/ e mNow 21or 110 .49
Mrs.
Russe ll '~
older
SAVE 11.01
Now onlr 14.9!1
da ughter and husband, Mr. and
Sl ~le 186 CROSi YOU R ... EART"" fiBERF ILl lrotOI Cups, strel ch" slraps
321 36.-. , 32140 8 , 3 V &lt;I! OC F~eo 16 OO! e1 No• oilly U .tt
Mrs. Hollis WoOd, brought her
. . SAVE 11.01
din ner at the nOon hour
NOw21orU.t9
S&lt;lle 13!&gt; GRO SS YOUR HEART" COTT ON ORA
Wednesday.
3 / J6A. 32 / 408, 32142C lileg i J 00 321 120
flll \1 H 00 No• ~101' $6.99
Mrs. Russe ll wis hes to thank
34/ 44D0A eg $4", 501eaNo•2 1orl1.18
( NOw rn ODC \Jp S}
eve ryo ne for t he many
6AII E 51.01
Style 137 C ~ OSSYOU R ME ART' liG MTWEIG HY
greeti ngs, cards, (50 of them
COTl O N PA.DDEO liRA. 32 1 31!~ . J2138Q
Reg t.39!i/ eaNow:?: lorll.l t
arrived in one mail ) and gifts
UYEf 1.01
she received.
5 1yle J38 C ROSS YOu R ME ART' LIGMI ·

.'

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•'

•

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·.
,.

Celebrates
birthday

works, " Homage to Icarus"
was done during the past year
while she served as artist-in·
residence in the local schools.
This piece was inspired by her
impressions of a red fog that
she saw early one morning . She
later learned that the red fog
was really limestone dust and
sunlight.
Since most persons use cloth
for functional purposes, such
as clothing and table linens, it
is sometimes dif£icult to grasp
the concept of looking at it
purely for its beauty. Kati
Meek uses cloth as others
:night use oils or watercolors.
"Appalachian Snows" a twelve
foot wa ll ha ngi ng, whi ch is
elega ntly disp layed in the
hallway at Riverby , shows ·
icicles, snow and at least three
season .
Kati invites anyone to judge
he r weaving, but potte ry is a
new ·means of expression for
· her. H appears that she is very
much at home with day as we ll
as wools, linens and othe r
fibers.
Mrs. Meek is a graduate .of
Western Mic hi gan University
and was born in Sangamon
County, Ill. She is the wife of
John Meek and mother of two.
Kati came here from Athens.
She is primarily a self-taug ht
from books. She has bee n
Brtist ahd has been weaving
thorough in laying the groundsi nce 1968. Most of her
tec hnica l kn owledge has been work of basic know lege even to
learning how to shear sheep.
This is a show for all to
enjoy bo th for its craftsma nship and the artistry
shown. During the month that
the work is on display Mrs.
Meek will conduct a paren tchild workshop on weaving .
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia This event will be Sunday, June
. County Chapter of the Pioneers 24, from 2 to 4 p.m . with the
of America will sponsor a public invited .
•
garage sale at 540 Th ird Ave.,
on June 29 and 30.
Proceeds wi ll go towa rd the
Gallia Coun ty v ·olunteer
Emergency Ambulance· service.
Marie Saunders is preSident
of the Ga llia County chapter.
Items are bei ng sought for the
sale. Persons wishing to donate
items should contact the
president at 446.0330, or Xy lpha
Saun ders , 446.0399, or John
Houck, 446-2222.
The sa le will be he ld from 11
a.m. until 7 p.m. on June 29 and
30.

Garage sale
dates set in June

0

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MARSHALLON

-·~J

DWELL

NO. 920

lAP TRAYS

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60 ONLY
HEC~'S

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SAVEI1 .0 1

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60.75·100
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.BULBS

SALE ENDS JUNE 30 . 1973

l3 ONLY
HECK'S REG. '16.96

JOHNSON'S
BABY
SHAMPOO

'

Fashion is a cinch

I

-with these Johnny Carson belts to to p o ff
trousers and cas ual wear for a finishin g
touch lo your wardrobe . Gen ui ne steerhi d e
in a HHnch width:
Two-tones of brown accented by contrast stitc h ing, and fini s hed off wit h a bo ld,
square brass buckle.
$5.00
The total look of leather includes th e
buck le and is set off by co n trast sti tc h ing.
.
$8.00
Blue and while reve rsible leathe r hig h lighted by blue and re d ename l inse ts in a
bold brass buckle .
$6.00
Richly grained black lea t her, smartly
highlighted by a brushed-b rass fin ish
buck le .
$7.50

7 01.

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74 ONLY

'•
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HECK'S

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.

REG. 99'

,.'
i

LIMIT 1

68¢

HECK'S REG. 59'
100 ONLY

33¢

BAYER
ASPIRIN
HECK'S REG. 58'

"

HECK'S REG. 28'
192 ONLY . LIMIT 2

'

McGRAW
EDISON
20/ 360
20"

.l

McMILLIAN
10W40 ·

VENTILATED
ZEBCO
~

$1099

J

WIRE
CUSHIONS

1500 ONLY

69¢

. OIL

HECK'S REG. '1.44
124 ONLY LIMIT 1

Thomas Clothiers

I .

29C

10¢

;~

HECK'S

made·to·match
rings of le~tured 14 karat
i and yellow p;ojd. Pich a

GIANT SIZE

COMET

CREST
TOOTHPASTE

ROD &amp; REEL COMBO

J

j

HECK'S REG. '12.96 ·
14 ONLY . LIMIT 1

50's

342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohi o

'

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2f oz.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY

9: 30ti1Sp. m .

I

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pair from our collecuon.

Tues. Wed. Thur. &amp; Sat.

'I

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$899

$899

, ...... '

STORE HOURS
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til8 p .m .

'

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(varyin g by silho ue tte an d colo r).
90°/o Da c ro n ~ po lyester, 10°/ll
l ycra411 spande x.
waislrider, $22 .00
sheath, $24.00

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and sunn y ye ll ow. Si)~:es 8 to 22

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'')nntz{'n swim knit s .1 re all softness
and tex ture ;md wonde rfu l fig ure
flattery. Nine colo rs: w hite, wa lnetto.
green 'g low, navy, turq uo ise, royal
purple, ra,spbe rry, poinician a red

-

FRY
. P.AN
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·G. E.
8 CUP
PERK

"

$1 ~?'

9¢

I

WESTBEND
HI·OOME

JACK
STANDS

PER
SYLVAN!.'
Soft White 1(')(")
BULB
HECK'S REG. 28' PER BULB

.'

Jantie~i
---

99

~1

.....

' XL- SI OOm.ore

HECK'S REG. '4.99 $

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Style 12884 - shorti€- XS, S . M . L XL' Ae9 S8 00 Now only 11.99
Style ~ 2 86 6- A ~erage leg ..... s , M . L. XL' Reg se !&gt;0 N ow ont r $7 .-49
S t~le • 2868 -Long Leg -S . M . L. XL' Reg S9 00 Now ontr 17.99

LANTERN WITH
BATTERY

HECK'S

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FRE E SPi i'IIT" G IRDL ES hghtw 8 1Qhl, ll€ r1ec1 IO&lt; summer la~hlilll S
S !~lt! ~ 2 862 B11e! XS, S. M . l . XL' ( 286 3] Reg S7 00 Now onl~ S5,.99

EVEREADY

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1

HECK'S REG. 55'

$799

REG. 99'

40 ONLY

10 · 20 GAL

LIMIT 1

·":!·•

FREE SP1 F11 1"' TRICOT AA.O.S l or l oday 's ~Bturalk)O k Style ~80- solt
cu o J 2/ 36A . ~2t •oa . 32/ 40C R611 S5 00 Now ont, 53.99.
Slyle '!11 - flberf•II32136A, 321388 , 32138C Reg t-600 Now on.., 14.!1t
Slyl$ •8 2- f,. lly oadaell 32136A. 321388 Reg SHOO No• oniJ J•.lt

TRASH BAGS

TACH

I::~

WEIG HI COTTON PADDED BRA Stre lc rl
SI I.J PS. padded t&lt;ice cuo.J U31!A , 32/JBB
Reg 14!&gt;0 No.-21orST .I9

FESCO

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RING FREE
~· ~
OIL
McMIUIAN
- ~~ ..... .

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5QT~~
LIMIT 5 QTS.
HECK'S REG. 49'

�•
7- The Sunrla\' Tim,... ·f.entine: . SI•nri,.v.~June 3. 197l

6 - The Sunday Times -Sentinei, Sunudy ,June 3 1973

Newcomers enjoy luncheon
'
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Mr. and Mrs. Oliver A. Unroe
'

To celebrate 50 years
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Oli ver A. Unroe, Lower
River Rd ., Gallipo lis, will
celebrate their Golden Wed·
ding Anniversary on Sunday,
June 10, fr om 2-4 p.m. with a
rece ption in the fellowship
room of the firs t Baptist
Chu rc h, Thi rd Ave nue at
Locust St ., Gallipo lis.
The couple are both native
Gallia countians. Unroe is the
son of the late Rev . John R. P.
and Minerva Brammer Unroe.
Mrs. Unroe is the former Clara
Haffell, daughter of the late
Charles Henry and Rowena'
Patterson Haffel t.
They were married at the
home of Unroe's sister and
brother-in-law, Mr . and Mrs. L.
D. Bruce, Russell, Ky., by the

Rev. Tim carey, June 6, 1923.
The Unroes are the parents
of one daughter, Mrs. George
(Donna June ) Adams, and the
of
Oliver
grandparents
Brantley 1Brant ) and Claire
Lynne Adams, also of Lower
Rive r Rd., Gallipolis.
All friend s and loved ones
are invited to call during the
aftern oon.

SET REUNION
GALLIPOLIS - The 54th
annual Clark fami ly reunion
will be held Sunday, June 10, at
the Ga llia County Junior
Fairgrounds. All relatives and
fr iends are invited . Alfred
Clark is president.

Shown above is a sample of the handiwork of Kati Meek,
currently on display at Riverby.

New show at Riverby
uALLIPOLIS - The current
show at the French Art Colony
is weaving and pottery by Kati
Meek. The exhibit will run
throughout June and is open to
the public Tuesdays, 10 a .m. to
3 p.m. and Saturday and
Sunday I to 5 p.m.
The exhibit includes 35 works
done by the artist over the past
four years . One of the major

'· '
efll&lt;latn.es
326 SECOND AV[

GALLIPOLIS

DELICIOUS
·DREAM PUFFS

I •
0

GALI..IPOLIS- Members of Ut terer, Mrs. William Smith
the' Gallipolis area Newcomers and Mrs. Jerry Wade.
Club enjoyed a bullet luncheon
Mrs. Will iam Todd was
Th ursday in the Wharf Room of appointed secretary of the club
the Holiday Inn .
for the remainder of the year.
New members welcomed by
Mrs. Adkins announced the
the club and in troduced by organiza lion of an evening
President Mrs. Charl es Adkins bridge group with the next
were Mrs. David Ca rma n, Mrs . mee ting to be June 14 at the
Thomas Hardman , Mrs . home of Mrs. Michael DonWilliam TOdd, Mrs. Da\•id ne llan. For more information
Wir th, Mrs. Mic hae l Don- call Mrs Donnellan at 245-5204.
nellan, Mrs. J ohn White, Mrs.
In September, a husband and
l:lert Bardendorf, Mrs. Lou wife picnic is being planned.
Mrs. William Yoimg is chair·
person.
Mrs. Michael Donnellan will
be cha irperson of the annual
Style Show in Oetober. There
will be no mee tings duri ng the
swnmer months.
Following the luncheon and
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Arthur Rupe , Jr., left, is the
business
meetin
g,
lhe
women
present president of the South Central Child Conservation
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs . Mary
listened
to
a
delightful
talk
by
League. Mr.s. Lloyd Danner is the incoming president. The
E. Russell celebrated her 99th
Toddlers to Tassles Mother's League hosted the annual
birthday during the past week. Mrs. Coell Wetherholt who told
the
history
of
the
old
French
district
C&lt;l~vention at the Holiday lnn, Saturday.
Among those helping her
celebrate were Mr, and Mrs. City. Gallipolis is the third
Roy Huntley , Mr. and Mrs. oldest settlement in Ohio, being
Dale Gleason, Mrs. Stanley settled by the French, October facilities of Riverby, she gave at Holzer Medical Center,
Davis , Mrs. Arnol Weaver and 17, 1790.
each one present a packet of spoke and indicated the need
Mrs George Gra ce interested brochures, and outlines which for many additional volunteer
son, Ricky, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester White and Mrs. Lucy all those present with her in- covered many of the summer workers. Many vacancies still
Hartsook, all of the Vinton formation about The French activities available to families exist in pedialrics, admitting,
area ; Mr. and Mrs. James Art Colony , the cultural center in the Gallipolis area .
the emergency room and other
Clark , Ri o Grande ; Mrs . of Gallipolis. After reviewing
Mrs . Mary Jean Walker, areas. If interested call Mrs.
Florence Wickline, Mrs. Ethel the history and present Director of Volunteer Services Walker at 446-5215.
Robins on , Miss Gertrude
Davis, Mrs. Lena Myers, Mrs.
Wayne Folden, Mrs. Fred
Koopman , Mr . and Mrs. Clark
Caldwell, Armit Gee, John
Fulks, Mrs. Miriam Allison
and daughter, Judy Fellure,
Mr . and Mrs. John I. Richards,
Mr. and Mrs. L. Paul Haskins,
Mrs . Zelia Elliott and
daughter, Shirley , all of
Gallipolis;
Mrs .
Annie
Shadrach, St. James, Mo:;
Mrs.' Mabel Shadrach and
William Shadrach, Oak Hill;
and Mrs. Harris Wellman,
Columbus.
Wednesday, her 101 year-old
friend, Mrs . Ollie Straight,
Northup , called, and sang
Save on these great Playtex Styles
UYESU I
"Happy Birthday" to her. Her
Now Z for Sl .49
Slyle 113 C ROSS YOUR HEA RT" Sllll&gt;!TLY PAODEO STRETCH EI RA
granddaughter, Mrs. Robert
-IK e CuJlS 3 2/36A , 32/10 8 . 32/ I OC R e &lt;;~ 2 l o-r $1 0 00
M. Evans, St. Albans, also
S AVE 11 .~1
Now21orS 8.&lt;41
called.
·
t 187 CROSS YOUR H EART" STRETCH BI'IA ll t 9 CUll S J2/ J6A , .)2 { &lt;109 .
32/ji2C Reg 2 1or S 10 00 32 ! 4 20 Aeg 56 00/ e mNow 21or 110 .49
Mrs.
Russe ll '~
older
SAVE 11.01
Now onlr 14.9!1
da ughter and husband, Mr. and
Sl ~le 186 CROSi YOU R ... EART"" fiBERF ILl lrotOI Cups, strel ch" slraps
321 36.-. , 32140 8 , 3 V &lt;I! OC F~eo 16 OO! e1 No• oilly U .tt
Mrs. Hollis WoOd, brought her
. . SAVE 11.01
din ner at the nOon hour
NOw21orU.t9
S&lt;lle 13!&gt; GRO SS YOUR HEART" COTT ON ORA
Wednesday.
3 / J6A. 32 / 408, 32142C lileg i J 00 321 120
flll \1 H 00 No• ~101' $6.99
Mrs. Russe ll wis hes to thank
34/ 44D0A eg $4", 501eaNo•2 1orl1.18
( NOw rn ODC \Jp S}
eve ryo ne for t he many
6AII E 51.01
Style 137 C ~ OSSYOU R ME ART' liG MTWEIG HY
greeti ngs, cards, (50 of them
COTl O N PA.DDEO liRA. 32 1 31!~ . J2138Q
Reg t.39!i/ eaNow:?: lorll.l t
arrived in one mail ) and gifts
UYEf 1.01
she received.
5 1yle J38 C ROSS YOu R ME ART' LIGMI ·

.'

-.

•'

•

•'

·.
,.

Celebrates
birthday

works, " Homage to Icarus"
was done during the past year
while she served as artist-in·
residence in the local schools.
This piece was inspired by her
impressions of a red fog that
she saw early one morning . She
later learned that the red fog
was really limestone dust and
sunlight.
Since most persons use cloth
for functional purposes, such
as clothing and table linens, it
is sometimes dif£icult to grasp
the concept of looking at it
purely for its beauty. Kati
Meek uses cloth as others
:night use oils or watercolors.
"Appalachian Snows" a twelve
foot wa ll ha ngi ng, whi ch is
elega ntly disp layed in the
hallway at Riverby , shows ·
icicles, snow and at least three
season .
Kati invites anyone to judge
he r weaving, but potte ry is a
new ·means of expression for
· her. H appears that she is very
much at home with day as we ll
as wools, linens and othe r
fibers.
Mrs. Meek is a graduate .of
Western Mic hi gan University
and was born in Sangamon
County, Ill. She is the wife of
John Meek and mother of two.
Kati came here from Athens.
She is primarily a self-taug ht
from books. She has bee n
Brtist ahd has been weaving
thorough in laying the groundsi nce 1968. Most of her
tec hnica l kn owledge has been work of basic know lege even to
learning how to shear sheep.
This is a show for all to
enjoy bo th for its craftsma nship and the artistry
shown. During the month that
the work is on display Mrs.
Meek will conduct a paren tchild workshop on weaving .
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia This event will be Sunday, June
. County Chapter of the Pioneers 24, from 2 to 4 p.m . with the
of America will sponsor a public invited .
•
garage sale at 540 Th ird Ave.,
on June 29 and 30.
Proceeds wi ll go towa rd the
Gallia Coun ty v ·olunteer
Emergency Ambulance· service.
Marie Saunders is preSident
of the Ga llia County chapter.
Items are bei ng sought for the
sale. Persons wishing to donate
items should contact the
president at 446.0330, or Xy lpha
Saun ders , 446.0399, or John
Houck, 446-2222.
The sa le will be he ld from 11
a.m. until 7 p.m. on June 29 and
30.

Garage sale
dates set in June

0

.

·.

•,

.•

·.
.,

"'

..
·•

_,

Ti

----------~--------------~
~~
J.

l

.J
_,:
'1
.1J
..,
JJ

-

MARSHALLON

-·~J

DWELL

NO. 920

lAP TRAYS

~
]
]

60 ONLY
HEC~'S

"'1

SAVEI1 .0 1

·'

I

·~~

'''
'0

·r.J

...ti.,,

60.75·100
'
WAll

.•l
.t;:'·

.BULBS

SALE ENDS JUNE 30 . 1973

l3 ONLY
HECK'S REG. '16.96

JOHNSON'S
BABY
SHAMPOO

'

Fashion is a cinch

I

-with these Johnny Carson belts to to p o ff
trousers and cas ual wear for a finishin g
touch lo your wardrobe . Gen ui ne steerhi d e
in a HHnch width:
Two-tones of brown accented by contrast stitc h ing, and fini s hed off wit h a bo ld,
square brass buckle.
$5.00
The total look of leather includes th e
buck le and is set off by co n trast sti tc h ing.
.
$8.00
Blue and while reve rsible leathe r hig h lighted by blue and re d ename l inse ts in a
bold brass buckle .
$6.00
Richly grained black lea t her, smartly
highlighted by a brushed-b rass fin ish
buck le .
$7.50

7 01.

.,''

74 ONLY

'•
'
•,•

HECK'S

r

•r~

.

REG. 99'

,.'
i

LIMIT 1

68¢

HECK'S REG. 59'
100 ONLY

33¢

BAYER
ASPIRIN
HECK'S REG. 58'

"

HECK'S REG. 28'
192 ONLY . LIMIT 2

'

McGRAW
EDISON
20/ 360
20"

.l

McMILLIAN
10W40 ·

VENTILATED
ZEBCO
~

$1099

J

WIRE
CUSHIONS

1500 ONLY

69¢

. OIL

HECK'S REG. '1.44
124 ONLY LIMIT 1

Thomas Clothiers

I .

29C

10¢

;~

HECK'S

made·to·match
rings of le~tured 14 karat
i and yellow p;ojd. Pich a

GIANT SIZE

COMET

CREST
TOOTHPASTE

ROD &amp; REEL COMBO

J

j

HECK'S REG. '12.96 ·
14 ONLY . LIMIT 1

50's

342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohi o

'

J

2f oz.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY

9: 30ti1Sp. m .

I

·.

pair from our collecuon.

Tues. Wed. Thur. &amp; Sat.

'I

I

$899

$899

, ...... '

STORE HOURS
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til8 p .m .

'

I'

.·';

(varyin g by silho ue tte an d colo r).
90°/o Da c ro n ~ po lyester, 10°/ll
l ycra411 spande x.
waislrider, $22 .00
sheath, $24.00

I

'

I

.•.

and sunn y ye ll ow. Si)~:es 8 to 22

,.

I

;

•'0

'')nntz{'n swim knit s .1 re all softness
and tex ture ;md wonde rfu l fig ure
flattery. Nine colo rs: w hite, wa lnetto.
green 'g low, navy, turq uo ise, royal
purple, ra,spbe rry, poinician a red

-

FRY
. P.AN
,I
I
I
I
I

•r

·G. E.
8 CUP
PERK

"

$1 ~?'

9¢

I

WESTBEND
HI·OOME

JACK
STANDS

PER
SYLVAN!.'
Soft White 1(')(")
BULB
HECK'S REG. 28' PER BULB

.'

Jantie~i
---

99

~1

.....

' XL- SI OOm.ore

HECK'S REG. '4.99 $

~

·'
;:

Style 12884 - shorti€- XS, S . M . L XL' Ae9 S8 00 Now only 11.99
Style ~ 2 86 6- A ~erage leg ..... s , M . L. XL' Reg se !&gt;0 N ow ont r $7 .-49
S t~le • 2868 -Long Leg -S . M . L. XL' Reg S9 00 Now ontr 17.99

LANTERN WITH
BATTERY

HECK'S

':{

.•:'

FRE E SPi i'IIT" G IRDL ES hghtw 8 1Qhl, ll€ r1ec1 IO&lt; summer la~hlilll S
S !~lt! ~ 2 862 B11e! XS, S. M . l . XL' ( 286 3] Reg S7 00 Now onl~ S5,.99

EVEREADY

.~

''•1

••

S AVE 11.0 1

1

HECK'S REG. 55'

$799

REG. 99'

40 ONLY

10 · 20 GAL

LIMIT 1

·":!·•

FREE SP1 F11 1"' TRICOT AA.O.S l or l oday 's ~Bturalk)O k Style ~80- solt
cu o J 2/ 36A . ~2t •oa . 32/ 40C R611 S5 00 Now ont, 53.99.
Slyle '!11 - flberf•II32136A, 321388 , 32138C Reg t-600 Now on.., 14.!1t
Slyl$ •8 2- f,. lly oadaell 32136A. 321388 Reg SHOO No• oniJ J•.lt

TRASH BAGS

TACH

I::~

WEIG HI COTTON PADDED BRA Stre lc rl
SI I.J PS. padded t&lt;ice cuo.J U31!A , 32/JBB
Reg 14!&gt;0 No.-21orST .I9

FESCO

I

'

RING FREE
~· ~
OIL
McMIUIAN
- ~~ ..... .

i .. iJ!IIi

5QT~~
LIMIT 5 QTS.
HECK'S REG. 49'

�-

•
8- The Sunday Times ;;entinel, Sun~ .y, June 3,1973

9-TheSundayTirnes-Sentinei,Sunday, June 3, 1973

Holzer Nurses Jubilee Year-1923-1973. ~~~:.!:~~~:!.?..~~,

OLD SCHOOL LOUNGE

"'

OLD STUDENT ROOMS

DAVIS STUDENT ROOM

By Jan Countryman
t955, it was obvious that more
GALLlPOLIS - Fifty years room was needed. So, the flats
seems like a long time, and were torn down a nd con ..
indeed it is, but in the tradition
struction began on Davis Hall.
of nursing, it's merely a niche. Dan A. Carmichael was the
Back in 1873 the first diploma architect and C.· H. Jinitsen
schools of nursing were and Sons, Huntington , the
founded on the eastern coast of general contractors. Dedicated
the United Slates In New York Aprit14, t957, it was built with
City, New Haven, Conn. and funds from the Davis FounBoston, Mass. The diploma dation of Oak Hill. The new
school is a three year program facility accommodated 82
involving on-the-job training. students.
Sixteen Directors
The first programs graduated
15 students, all told, in t875 .
Over the years there have
Since then, over half a been at least 16directorsofthe
million nurses have come school of nursing , ~g~Ming
through the training, based on with Josephine Reilly, who
the Florence Nightengale took up the reins from Mrs.
traditions and techniques. Holzer in 1920; Pauline Mar·
Nearly half the nurses .in the tigoni, 1921; Alma B. Van Pelt,•
United States today are 1921·25; Isabella Wilson. White,
diploma school graduates. t926-30; Martha Elliott Smith,
While some of the st udent.'l 193()..3t; V. · Mildred Miller
referred to the courses ·as t93t-35 ; Ida Howalt Murdock,
''prison," the 1973 February 1935-36; Hazel Richard, 193646,
issue of "RN Magazine" notes, who served the lOngest tenure,
"The nurses these sc hools and one of two Holzer
turned outhada unique bond in grad uates to hold ad·
pride, skill and compassion. No ministrative positions with the
other system of schooling has nurses' school; Christine
yet duplicated that ."
Harner, t946-48 ; Martha
In September, 1920, Dr. and McMaster, 1948-5t; Mary H.
Mrs. Charles E. Holzer, Sr., set Cutler 195t-54 and Ethel B.
out to make their own niche in Armstrong, 1954, to ap.;
time when they opened the proximately 1960.
Holzer Hospital School of
Florence Brogan held the
Nursing just 10 years after the position one year in the early
foundation of the hospital it· 60s, followed by her sister, Ann
self. Mrs. Holzer organized the Brogan, who had it for three.
program and was the first She was followed by Loretta
Ford.
director of the school.
· The school's purpose is to,
Beulah Ward, R.N., is the
"Maintain a standard in present director of nursing
keeping with the ideals services and, along with Miss
established by the hospital and Richard, is the other Holzer
to assist in meeting the graduate to hold an addemand of the public for a ministrative position. Four of
more complete and well the t7 full-time faculty
rounded e&lt;;lucation for nurses," members currently employed
according to the 192; edition of by the school are Holzer
the school's bulletin.
graduates.
Things have changed a great · Current director of the school
del since Hazel Richard, oldest is Miss Berenice Skehan who
surviving graduate of the took the reins in 1966.
school, and Kate Alexander
Holzer graduates in the area
were capped in 1923. Fees have recall their training with
gone from $35 to slightly over mixed emotions. They laugh
$3,000 for !lie instruction and about how they -on occasions
improvements in classrooms, - were able to infringe on the
living quarters and equipment strict regimen, and speak
over the years have been vast, almost · reverently . of Dr.
as shown bythe accompanying · Holzer, Sr., whom they say
photographs.
they called "Papa" behind his
First School
back. They don 't think he knew
Like the hospital, the nurses ' it. Some of them still have their
school started out in a house on caps; they keep copie~ of their
First Ave. During World War!, school bulletins and, wrapped
Dr. and Mrs. Holzer purchased in the web of their memories,
Needham F1at.'l, next door to there is a great deal of devotion
Riverby, for the nurses ' home. and affection and a lot of hard
By 1945 the flats overflowed work.
As of June B, 727 ·young
with 65 cadet students who
were paid by government women will have been capped
funds and were eligible to be by the Holzer School of Nordrafted when the nurses were . s in g.
ll has
been
a
distinguished niche.
called in World War I!.
The school kepi growing. By

II ' !'

.II

I • '

•

to the south, where they will be
making their home In Forest
Park , Ga ., following the
wedding.
Fosler was a 1972graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and
is employed by the Reardon
Electric Co., Atlanta, Ga. The
new Mrs. Foster was a 1973
graduate of Hannan Trace.

Lester McGuire, Northup,
announce the marriage of their
daughter, Marilyn Joan, to
Mark Stephen Foster, grand·
son of Mr. and Mrs. Noel
Moore, Crown City.
The wedding was an event of
May 18 at ths home of the
Reverend Earl Cremeens,
Northup, who performed the
double ring ceremony .

\L~\

Ill Sll
\l.\\

Jlt:SII

DAVIS HALL LOUNGE
.

REUNION PLANNED
GALLIPOLIS - The Lemley
and Ralph reWJion will be held
at the Popular Ridge Church
Sunday, June 10. Friends and
relatives are we1come.

~[ , [\~.

Father's Day

JJttSil

So easy to Q1ve with
a N unn-Bush Qlftlflcate

BROWN &amp;WHITE
$

$31 99

Ring making
at its loveNest

in new

Court took fines

TEXTURED
GOLD

off 26 defendants

WECCING RINGS
by

'.

rtCarved"

HAZEL RICHARD
Hazel Richard , was one of
two Holzer Hospital School of
Nursing graduates back in
t923 . She served as director
of the sc hool for ten years
and later worked at the
Holzer Hospilal. She will be
returning for the Jubilee
ce lebration next weekend .

The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency reminds
Ohioans that ,they _can enhance
the beauty of Ohio by picking
up litter even if it isn't theirs.
Get involved for .a better en·
vironmerit!

9 :30til5

HANO-FLORENTINEO
DAWN SET

Thursday9: 30 til noon

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS·
404 Second

Avenue

Gollipolii, 0.

Gallipolis, Ohio

au

/

GALLIPOLIS - (Editor's
Note - The following is an

Dr . Holzer was a dedica~ed
man and we· all owe him and
excerpt fr~m a letter written Mrs . Holzer a debt of gratitude
by Verna Kaufman 1 Lon- for providing the training
donderry, Class of 1942, on
facilities, teachers and strict
the subject of the theme for
Directors of Nursing. In my
the celebration. Although
case it was Miss Hazel
her theine was not chosen,
Richard, who ran a pretty tight
members of the Registered
ship. Both she and Dr. Holzer
Nurses Association felt the
were hard to please at times
letter expressed the feelings
but looking back now l can
of most Holzer graduates
appreciate the almost im·
OLD SCHOOL UBRARY
and wished that it be printed
possible task they would un·
for the celebration.)
dertake each year with each
"My entry would be new group of 16 and 17 year old,
dedicated "To 'Papa' Holzer, homesick, unskilled, girls who
Vacation Bible School will be Ralph; treasurer, ·Geraldine
had high hopes oi becoming the held . at Silver Run Baptist
With Love.''
Halley; teachers and helpers,
Many of us referred to Dr. world's most efficient nurses. Church June 4 through June 15
primary , Pear.l Remey,
Charles E. Holzer, Sr., af· Many times they m·ust" have . each evening from 6 to 8:30 Delores Miller, Evelyn Matfectionately as "Papa," behind almost give n up in despair ... p.m. with a closing program thews; Middler, Letha Davis,
The grad uate nurse from Sunday,June 17andapicnicin Judy McHaffie, Delma Halley,
his back, of course.
How proud and pleased he Holzer Hospital has always the church yard Monday, June Geraldine Halley; junior,
would be today to know the new receivedagQOdreceplionwhen 18 sta rting ,a t 6 o'clock. Geprge McHaffie, Kathryn
hospilal has been built and was she applies for a job. One Everyone is welcome.
Russell , Eileen Halley, and
Workers in this year's school youth student.'l, Steve Little,
serving to such a large area. employer told me one time 'If
I'm sorry it could not have . you are a Holzer graduate you will be : director , Delila Rita Little, Henry Davis and
been aC&lt;'omplished during his are a good nurse .' I felt 10 feet Mulford ; pianist, Maxine Bob Sigman.
t11ll."
·
Little ; sec retary , Estelle
lifetime.

'

Bible school starts Monday

GROUND BEEF

YE BlJILDIN~ &amp; LOAN

Three
· weeks ago John Cooper of the
. Soil Conservation Service in
Mason County made public
that a search was on in West
Virginia for the old-fashioned
.. American Che_stnut'' tree
here
have
had
three
respOnses. They were from
Paul Johnson
at
Ma·
son, Forrest Nibert at
Ashton and Mrs. Minnie
Conner from Williamson.
The tree at the Johnson place
at Mason has been checked and
found to be truly the Artlerican
chestnut. Mrs. Johnson said
Ule original tree was planted in
her yard 88 years ago by a
relative. The original tree had
died and the trees there now
are two sprouts six to eight
inches in diameter and one or
two smaller sprouts from the
old stump. When Cooper saw
the tree, it was in bloom. Mrs.
Johnson said last year it had
produced nearly 100 edible
nuts. There were many blight
cankers on the free, but it was
1- persisting.
The other trees have not been
[ checked. JohnS. Pirie, District
C Conservationist for SCS in
· ~ Wayn~, W.Va ., who worked in
• Mason County about five years
~ ago, has beeri notified of Mrs.
[ Johnson 's tree.

...••]

Outgrown Your
Home?
Looking for a new home or
inlending to remodel y'our
present one? Why not take
advantage, of one of our
home loan plans. Stop in and
have a chat with one of our
hoiT)e loan o.fficers . With
many years behind us in the
home loan field, we will be
most happy to give you the
most complete home loan
service available today!
Ample parking provided for
your convenience.

Grate, Langsville, Rl. t, $25
and costs, $10 su spe nded ,
overload: Matthew E. Long,
Reedsville, $5 and costs, no
muffler; Teddy A. Warner,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25 and costs,
$15 suspended, stream lit·
tering; Gary M . Johnson ,
Racine, $15 and costs, fishing
without a lice nse; Kenneth D.
Mohler, Middleport, $15 and
costs, fishing without a license;
Dale R. Herman, Middleport,
St50 and cost.'l, three days
co nfinement , license
sUspended for six months,
driving while intoxicated;
Rockford H. Meadows, Ironton, $t50 and costs, three days
co nfinement , license
suspended for Six month s,
restricted driving privileges,
drivin g while intoxicated;
Terry Jarrell , Pomeroy, $25

and costs, license suspended
for 30 days, reckless operation,
$5 and costs, no motorcycle
endorsement; Robin Mills ,
Pomeroy, $t5 and cost.'l, fishing
without a license; Charles F.
Pyles, Jr., Racine, $25 and
costs, licenses suspended for 30
days , reckless operation.
Forfeiting b onds were
George S. Wloihed , Stewart,
Michael L. Little, Cheshire,
William J . Hellyer, Glouster,
and William A. Lee, Catlettsburg, Ky ., $27 .50 each,
speeding: James Walton,
Middleport, $50, assault and
bat.tery; James H.. Ste~art,
Pomeroy, Rt . 3, $357.50,
driving while intoxi cated ;
Robert C. Baker, Syracuse,
$t7.50, no motorcycle en·
dorsement; · Larry M. Bess,
Alliance, $25, left of center.

MASON _ The Mason
!' Chapter
No. 157, Order of the

i Eastern Star, will hold its
t Mother • Daughter banquet

I
r

~

t.

THE BUCKEYE BUILDING
AND LOAN COMPANY
Third and Locust

,.

. Gallipolis, Ohio

Saturday night, June t6, at 6:30
p.m., at the Masonic Lodge
Hall in Mason. This banquet is
for the Mason Eastern Star
members and their daughters.
Reservations for the dinner
must be made in orde! to at..
tend and the deadhne for
maklng these has been set for
June ll. For resenat1ons,
please call the following
conunittee members:
Nellie Casto, phone 882-2707;
Betty Rickard, phone 882·22t2;
Janet McDermitt, phone 882-

Ph. 446-0315

~

I
!

r

!
l
:

l,

rr

LB.

7" SIZE

DEBBIE

PAINT PAN
AND ROLLER SET

DISH DETERGENT
lEMON

32

oz.

BOTilES
PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY
JUNE 3rd THRU
SUNDAY, JUNE lOth
WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST

JONES BOYS

10 OZ. SIZE

BREAD
5oz.
¢

RALLY

CREAM WAX

¢

16

EA.

lOAVES
WE
RESERVE THE
RIGHT TO liMIT
QUANTITIES

SOFT TOUCH

SHEll

BATHROOM
TISSUE

NO PEST
STRIPS

A golf
is one thing ...
but a home handicap?

2 ROLL
PKG.
(8 ROLlS)

'•

ft.Animal. banquet
..

t date is set

FRESH, LEAN

3 POUND OR MORE

PT. PLEASANT -

I

Holzer, with love

$6 and cost.'l, resisting ; Roger
S. Sloan, West Jefferson, $25
and costs, overload; Leland R.
Haley, Middleport, $10 and
costs, failure to yield stop sign;
Roger Roush, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
$10 and costs, improper
passing; Richard A. Carter,
Middleport, Rt. I, $5 and costs,
faulty exhaust ; Harrison Rood,
Jr., Long Bottom, Rt.l, $25 and
costs, no operators license ;
Larry Fields, Syracuse, $ll
and cost.'l, speeding; Harley

137 PINE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

IO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

Otestnut
tree formd
in Mason

i

A note for 'Papa '

POMEROY Twenty-six
defendan t.'l were fined ~nd nine
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Steven K. Lane,
Middleport, and Joseph H.
Archer, Sistersville, W. Va .•
$15 and costs each, speeding;
Robert L. Rowland, Mid·
dleport, Edward Phillips,
Crown City, and Edward R.
Turner, Newark, $10 and costs
each, speeding; William H.
Knutsen, Coolville, Jack
Garrett, New Albany, Indiana,
and David W. Gabriel, Racine,
Rt. 2, $5 and costs each,
speeding; Glen D. Mayes,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and costs,
u~safe
vehicle;
N ormari
Wilfong, no address recorded,

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30til8 PM
Tues.; Wed., Sat.

""1

DAVISHAU.UBRARY

MID LLEWEJ.,LYN AND her daughler, Diane Rice,
above, found that straw hat.'l were one way of keeping the hot
sun away while they cruised along the river . They are from
New Marshfield, Ohio, where Mrs. Rice is an advisor to the
Hill and Gully 4-H Club.
AT RIGHT, LITTLE KEITH ERIC MORRIS from
Vienna, W. Va., made sure that he wasn't going to drown on a
boat trip Friday afternoon. His life jacket went on and stayed
on for the whole three hours ! Over 500 people boarded the.
excursion boat, Chaperon, Friday afternoon for a three hour
ride which took them from tbe Middleport levee to a point
above New Haven, W. Va. and back . The ride was sponsored
bY Meigs County 4-H Clubs for all interested youths and
adults from Meigs, Gallia and Athens Counties.
·

~~

ll~ I

Dr. Charles E. Holzer, Sr.

j l~

A perfect gift for a great
Dad . The free spi rited
look

~i-

I

9 to 9 DAILY eNOON TO 8 SUNDAY

22"x44"

PRINT VELOUR
BATH TOWELS

Not when you can get all the cash you need with an
OVB home improvement loan. We may hesitate to finance your
golf lessons, but we do have a finance plan to fit any
handicap affecting your home improvement.

• FLORAlS &amp; STRIPES
'·

Ohio~~~Y Ba~
NO SERVICE CHARGE ON CHECKING ACCOUNTS.

..QUEEN

OF SCOT

All SIZES

19 oz .

CAKE MIX
White. Yellow · Devils
13'h ' oz.

FROSTING

$

Ml~

Expandable
Window Screens
• VALUES TO '1.99

Whit e . Chocolate

MIX OR MATCH
BOXES

$

2321 .

,,

"

�-

•
8- The Sunday Times ;;entinel, Sun~ .y, June 3,1973

9-TheSundayTirnes-Sentinei,Sunday, June 3, 1973

Holzer Nurses Jubilee Year-1923-1973. ~~~:.!:~~~:!.?..~~,

OLD SCHOOL LOUNGE

"'

OLD STUDENT ROOMS

DAVIS STUDENT ROOM

By Jan Countryman
t955, it was obvious that more
GALLlPOLIS - Fifty years room was needed. So, the flats
seems like a long time, and were torn down a nd con ..
indeed it is, but in the tradition
struction began on Davis Hall.
of nursing, it's merely a niche. Dan A. Carmichael was the
Back in 1873 the first diploma architect and C.· H. Jinitsen
schools of nursing were and Sons, Huntington , the
founded on the eastern coast of general contractors. Dedicated
the United Slates In New York Aprit14, t957, it was built with
City, New Haven, Conn. and funds from the Davis FounBoston, Mass. The diploma dation of Oak Hill. The new
school is a three year program facility accommodated 82
involving on-the-job training. students.
Sixteen Directors
The first programs graduated
15 students, all told, in t875 .
Over the years there have
Since then, over half a been at least 16directorsofthe
million nurses have come school of nursing , ~g~Ming
through the training, based on with Josephine Reilly, who
the Florence Nightengale took up the reins from Mrs.
traditions and techniques. Holzer in 1920; Pauline Mar·
Nearly half the nurses .in the tigoni, 1921; Alma B. Van Pelt,•
United States today are 1921·25; Isabella Wilson. White,
diploma school graduates. t926-30; Martha Elliott Smith,
While some of the st udent.'l 193()..3t; V. · Mildred Miller
referred to the courses ·as t93t-35 ; Ida Howalt Murdock,
''prison," the 1973 February 1935-36; Hazel Richard, 193646,
issue of "RN Magazine" notes, who served the lOngest tenure,
"The nurses these sc hools and one of two Holzer
turned outhada unique bond in grad uates to hold ad·
pride, skill and compassion. No ministrative positions with the
other system of schooling has nurses' school; Christine
yet duplicated that ."
Harner, t946-48 ; Martha
In September, 1920, Dr. and McMaster, 1948-5t; Mary H.
Mrs. Charles E. Holzer, Sr., set Cutler 195t-54 and Ethel B.
out to make their own niche in Armstrong, 1954, to ap.;
time when they opened the proximately 1960.
Holzer Hospital School of
Florence Brogan held the
Nursing just 10 years after the position one year in the early
foundation of the hospital it· 60s, followed by her sister, Ann
self. Mrs. Holzer organized the Brogan, who had it for three.
program and was the first She was followed by Loretta
Ford.
director of the school.
· The school's purpose is to,
Beulah Ward, R.N., is the
"Maintain a standard in present director of nursing
keeping with the ideals services and, along with Miss
established by the hospital and Richard, is the other Holzer
to assist in meeting the graduate to hold an addemand of the public for a ministrative position. Four of
more complete and well the t7 full-time faculty
rounded e&lt;;lucation for nurses," members currently employed
according to the 192; edition of by the school are Holzer
the school's bulletin.
graduates.
Things have changed a great · Current director of the school
del since Hazel Richard, oldest is Miss Berenice Skehan who
surviving graduate of the took the reins in 1966.
school, and Kate Alexander
Holzer graduates in the area
were capped in 1923. Fees have recall their training with
gone from $35 to slightly over mixed emotions. They laugh
$3,000 for !lie instruction and about how they -on occasions
improvements in classrooms, - were able to infringe on the
living quarters and equipment strict regimen, and speak
over the years have been vast, almost · reverently . of Dr.
as shown bythe accompanying · Holzer, Sr., whom they say
photographs.
they called "Papa" behind his
First School
back. They don 't think he knew
Like the hospital, the nurses ' it. Some of them still have their
school started out in a house on caps; they keep copie~ of their
First Ave. During World War!, school bulletins and, wrapped
Dr. and Mrs. Holzer purchased in the web of their memories,
Needham F1at.'l, next door to there is a great deal of devotion
Riverby, for the nurses ' home. and affection and a lot of hard
By 1945 the flats overflowed work.
As of June B, 727 ·young
with 65 cadet students who
were paid by government women will have been capped
funds and were eligible to be by the Holzer School of Nordrafted when the nurses were . s in g.
ll has
been
a
distinguished niche.
called in World War I!.
The school kepi growing. By

II ' !'

.II

I • '

•

to the south, where they will be
making their home In Forest
Park , Ga ., following the
wedding.
Fosler was a 1972graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and
is employed by the Reardon
Electric Co., Atlanta, Ga. The
new Mrs. Foster was a 1973
graduate of Hannan Trace.

Lester McGuire, Northup,
announce the marriage of their
daughter, Marilyn Joan, to
Mark Stephen Foster, grand·
son of Mr. and Mrs. Noel
Moore, Crown City.
The wedding was an event of
May 18 at ths home of the
Reverend Earl Cremeens,
Northup, who performed the
double ring ceremony .

\L~\

Ill Sll
\l.\\

Jlt:SII

DAVIS HALL LOUNGE
.

REUNION PLANNED
GALLIPOLIS - The Lemley
and Ralph reWJion will be held
at the Popular Ridge Church
Sunday, June 10. Friends and
relatives are we1come.

~[ , [\~.

Father's Day

JJttSil

So easy to Q1ve with
a N unn-Bush Qlftlflcate

BROWN &amp;WHITE
$

$31 99

Ring making
at its loveNest

in new

Court took fines

TEXTURED
GOLD

off 26 defendants

WECCING RINGS
by

'.

rtCarved"

HAZEL RICHARD
Hazel Richard , was one of
two Holzer Hospital School of
Nursing graduates back in
t923 . She served as director
of the sc hool for ten years
and later worked at the
Holzer Hospilal. She will be
returning for the Jubilee
ce lebration next weekend .

The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency reminds
Ohioans that ,they _can enhance
the beauty of Ohio by picking
up litter even if it isn't theirs.
Get involved for .a better en·
vironmerit!

9 :30til5

HANO-FLORENTINEO
DAWN SET

Thursday9: 30 til noon

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS·
404 Second

Avenue

Gollipolii, 0.

Gallipolis, Ohio

au

/

GALLIPOLIS - (Editor's
Note - The following is an

Dr . Holzer was a dedica~ed
man and we· all owe him and
excerpt fr~m a letter written Mrs . Holzer a debt of gratitude
by Verna Kaufman 1 Lon- for providing the training
donderry, Class of 1942, on
facilities, teachers and strict
the subject of the theme for
Directors of Nursing. In my
the celebration. Although
case it was Miss Hazel
her theine was not chosen,
Richard, who ran a pretty tight
members of the Registered
ship. Both she and Dr. Holzer
Nurses Association felt the
were hard to please at times
letter expressed the feelings
but looking back now l can
of most Holzer graduates
appreciate the almost im·
OLD SCHOOL UBRARY
and wished that it be printed
possible task they would un·
for the celebration.)
dertake each year with each
"My entry would be new group of 16 and 17 year old,
dedicated "To 'Papa' Holzer, homesick, unskilled, girls who
Vacation Bible School will be Ralph; treasurer, ·Geraldine
had high hopes oi becoming the held . at Silver Run Baptist
With Love.''
Halley; teachers and helpers,
Many of us referred to Dr. world's most efficient nurses. Church June 4 through June 15
primary , Pear.l Remey,
Charles E. Holzer, Sr., af· Many times they m·ust" have . each evening from 6 to 8:30 Delores Miller, Evelyn Matfectionately as "Papa," behind almost give n up in despair ... p.m. with a closing program thews; Middler, Letha Davis,
The grad uate nurse from Sunday,June 17andapicnicin Judy McHaffie, Delma Halley,
his back, of course.
How proud and pleased he Holzer Hospital has always the church yard Monday, June Geraldine Halley; junior,
would be today to know the new receivedagQOdreceplionwhen 18 sta rting ,a t 6 o'clock. Geprge McHaffie, Kathryn
hospilal has been built and was she applies for a job. One Everyone is welcome.
Russell , Eileen Halley, and
Workers in this year's school youth student.'l, Steve Little,
serving to such a large area. employer told me one time 'If
I'm sorry it could not have . you are a Holzer graduate you will be : director , Delila Rita Little, Henry Davis and
been aC&lt;'omplished during his are a good nurse .' I felt 10 feet Mulford ; pianist, Maxine Bob Sigman.
t11ll."
·
Little ; sec retary , Estelle
lifetime.

'

Bible school starts Monday

GROUND BEEF

YE BlJILDIN~ &amp; LOAN

Three
· weeks ago John Cooper of the
. Soil Conservation Service in
Mason County made public
that a search was on in West
Virginia for the old-fashioned
.. American Che_stnut'' tree
here
have
had
three
respOnses. They were from
Paul Johnson
at
Ma·
son, Forrest Nibert at
Ashton and Mrs. Minnie
Conner from Williamson.
The tree at the Johnson place
at Mason has been checked and
found to be truly the Artlerican
chestnut. Mrs. Johnson said
Ule original tree was planted in
her yard 88 years ago by a
relative. The original tree had
died and the trees there now
are two sprouts six to eight
inches in diameter and one or
two smaller sprouts from the
old stump. When Cooper saw
the tree, it was in bloom. Mrs.
Johnson said last year it had
produced nearly 100 edible
nuts. There were many blight
cankers on the free, but it was
1- persisting.
The other trees have not been
[ checked. JohnS. Pirie, District
C Conservationist for SCS in
· ~ Wayn~, W.Va ., who worked in
• Mason County about five years
~ ago, has beeri notified of Mrs.
[ Johnson 's tree.

...••]

Outgrown Your
Home?
Looking for a new home or
inlending to remodel y'our
present one? Why not take
advantage, of one of our
home loan plans. Stop in and
have a chat with one of our
hoiT)e loan o.fficers . With
many years behind us in the
home loan field, we will be
most happy to give you the
most complete home loan
service available today!
Ample parking provided for
your convenience.

Grate, Langsville, Rl. t, $25
and costs, $10 su spe nded ,
overload: Matthew E. Long,
Reedsville, $5 and costs, no
muffler; Teddy A. Warner,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25 and costs,
$15 suspended, stream lit·
tering; Gary M . Johnson ,
Racine, $15 and costs, fishing
without a lice nse; Kenneth D.
Mohler, Middleport, $15 and
costs, fishing without a license;
Dale R. Herman, Middleport,
St50 and cost.'l, three days
co nfinement , license
sUspended for six months,
driving while intoxicated;
Rockford H. Meadows, Ironton, $t50 and costs, three days
co nfinement , license
suspended for Six month s,
restricted driving privileges,
drivin g while intoxicated;
Terry Jarrell , Pomeroy, $25

and costs, license suspended
for 30 days, reckless operation,
$5 and costs, no motorcycle
endorsement; Robin Mills ,
Pomeroy, $t5 and cost.'l, fishing
without a license; Charles F.
Pyles, Jr., Racine, $25 and
costs, licenses suspended for 30
days , reckless operation.
Forfeiting b onds were
George S. Wloihed , Stewart,
Michael L. Little, Cheshire,
William J . Hellyer, Glouster,
and William A. Lee, Catlettsburg, Ky ., $27 .50 each,
speeding: James Walton,
Middleport, $50, assault and
bat.tery; James H.. Ste~art,
Pomeroy, Rt . 3, $357.50,
driving while intoxi cated ;
Robert C. Baker, Syracuse,
$t7.50, no motorcycle en·
dorsement; · Larry M. Bess,
Alliance, $25, left of center.

MASON _ The Mason
!' Chapter
No. 157, Order of the

i Eastern Star, will hold its
t Mother • Daughter banquet

I
r

~

t.

THE BUCKEYE BUILDING
AND LOAN COMPANY
Third and Locust

,.

. Gallipolis, Ohio

Saturday night, June t6, at 6:30
p.m., at the Masonic Lodge
Hall in Mason. This banquet is
for the Mason Eastern Star
members and their daughters.
Reservations for the dinner
must be made in orde! to at..
tend and the deadhne for
maklng these has been set for
June ll. For resenat1ons,
please call the following
conunittee members:
Nellie Casto, phone 882-2707;
Betty Rickard, phone 882·22t2;
Janet McDermitt, phone 882-

Ph. 446-0315

~

I
!

r

!
l
:

l,

rr

LB.

7" SIZE

DEBBIE

PAINT PAN
AND ROLLER SET

DISH DETERGENT
lEMON

32

oz.

BOTilES
PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY
JUNE 3rd THRU
SUNDAY, JUNE lOth
WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST

JONES BOYS

10 OZ. SIZE

BREAD
5oz.
¢

RALLY

CREAM WAX

¢

16

EA.

lOAVES
WE
RESERVE THE
RIGHT TO liMIT
QUANTITIES

SOFT TOUCH

SHEll

BATHROOM
TISSUE

NO PEST
STRIPS

A golf
is one thing ...
but a home handicap?

2 ROLL
PKG.
(8 ROLlS)

'•

ft.Animal. banquet
..

t date is set

FRESH, LEAN

3 POUND OR MORE

PT. PLEASANT -

I

Holzer, with love

$6 and cost.'l, resisting ; Roger
S. Sloan, West Jefferson, $25
and costs, overload; Leland R.
Haley, Middleport, $10 and
costs, failure to yield stop sign;
Roger Roush, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
$10 and costs, improper
passing; Richard A. Carter,
Middleport, Rt. I, $5 and costs,
faulty exhaust ; Harrison Rood,
Jr., Long Bottom, Rt.l, $25 and
costs, no operators license ;
Larry Fields, Syracuse, $ll
and cost.'l, speeding; Harley

137 PINE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

IO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

Otestnut
tree formd
in Mason

i

A note for 'Papa '

POMEROY Twenty-six
defendan t.'l were fined ~nd nine
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Steven K. Lane,
Middleport, and Joseph H.
Archer, Sistersville, W. Va .•
$15 and costs each, speeding;
Robert L. Rowland, Mid·
dleport, Edward Phillips,
Crown City, and Edward R.
Turner, Newark, $10 and costs
each, speeding; William H.
Knutsen, Coolville, Jack
Garrett, New Albany, Indiana,
and David W. Gabriel, Racine,
Rt. 2, $5 and costs each,
speeding; Glen D. Mayes,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $5 and costs,
u~safe
vehicle;
N ormari
Wilfong, no address recorded,

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30til8 PM
Tues.; Wed., Sat.

""1

DAVISHAU.UBRARY

MID LLEWEJ.,LYN AND her daughler, Diane Rice,
above, found that straw hat.'l were one way of keeping the hot
sun away while they cruised along the river . They are from
New Marshfield, Ohio, where Mrs. Rice is an advisor to the
Hill and Gully 4-H Club.
AT RIGHT, LITTLE KEITH ERIC MORRIS from
Vienna, W. Va., made sure that he wasn't going to drown on a
boat trip Friday afternoon. His life jacket went on and stayed
on for the whole three hours ! Over 500 people boarded the.
excursion boat, Chaperon, Friday afternoon for a three hour
ride which took them from tbe Middleport levee to a point
above New Haven, W. Va. and back . The ride was sponsored
bY Meigs County 4-H Clubs for all interested youths and
adults from Meigs, Gallia and Athens Counties.
·

~~

ll~ I

Dr. Charles E. Holzer, Sr.

j l~

A perfect gift for a great
Dad . The free spi rited
look

~i-

I

9 to 9 DAILY eNOON TO 8 SUNDAY

22"x44"

PRINT VELOUR
BATH TOWELS

Not when you can get all the cash you need with an
OVB home improvement loan. We may hesitate to finance your
golf lessons, but we do have a finance plan to fit any
handicap affecting your home improvement.

• FLORAlS &amp; STRIPES
'·

Ohio~~~Y Ba~
NO SERVICE CHARGE ON CHECKING ACCOUNTS.

..QUEEN

OF SCOT

All SIZES

19 oz .

CAKE MIX
White. Yellow · Devils
13'h ' oz.

FROSTING

$

Ml~

Expandable
Window Screens
• VALUES TO '1.99

Whit e . Chocolate

MIX OR MATCH
BOXES

$

2321 .

,,

"

�10-The SwldayTimes-oentlnel. Suno.,, June 3,1973

Layne-Rizer vows!
taken May 26 in
Lutheran church
NEW HAVEN Miss
Harriett Ona Layne and Danny
Eugene Rizer exchanged
nuptial vows on May 26, in a
double-ring ceremony , in the
St. Paul Lutheran Church here.
The Rev . Johr. Haeberle
performed the 2:30 p.m
ceremony for the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Robert

Layne, New Haven, and the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rizer
of Hartford .
Two vases of white gladioli
were used for altar flowers ,
and · two baskets of white
gladioli and white mums were
placed in front on either side of
the chancel. Seven-branched
candelabras holding white
tapers were on both sides of the
altar.
Mrs. William Russell served
as organist and Mr. John
Layne as soloist. Mrs. Russell
played " Jean," "Theme From
Love Story ," " For All We
Know, " " Speak Softly, Love"

and

a

" Time

For

Us "

preceding the ceremony. Mr.
Layne Sarig "0, Perfect Love,"
and also " The Greatest of
These Is Love" during the

ceremony.
Miss Layne was given in
marriage by her father. She
wore an Empire A-line wedding gown of silk organza,
styled wiL~ a portrait neckline,
Empire bodice, and Bishop
sleeves with .French cu ffs.
Dainty daisies or white venise
lace detailed the neckline,
sleeves and gown, bordering
ihe hemline . She wore
a
chapel
length
veil
of silk
illusion
edged
in venise lace. Her flowers
were white rosebuds and
stephanotis .
Attending \he bride as maidof.honor was her sister, Holly
Marie Layne, who was dressed
in yellow ll,lld white lace over
yellow taffeta. The dress was
styled with an Empire waist
and bell sleeves. She wore a

white hat and gloves, and
carried a ljasket of yellow
daisies.
Flower girl was litue Miss
Diane Yantis of Columbus, who
was dressed in yellow and
white lace over yellow taffeta,
and carried a basket of yellow
rose petals.
Miss Gail Miller, bridesmaid, wa s dressed in blue and
white lace over blue taffeta,
with white hat and gloves and
carried a basket of blue
daisies. Miss Becky Gilmore,
also a bridesmaid, was dressed
in pink and white lace over
pink taffeta. She also wore
white hat· and gloves, and
carried a basket of pink
daisies . The dresses styled like
that of the maid-of-honor.
Vernon L. Rizer of Columbus, Ohio, was best man for his
brother . Seating guests were
Dale Sayre of Huntington and
Ray VanMeter of West
Columbia .
Miss Sue Howard, cousin of
the bride, from Culloden, W.
Va ., registered guests.
The bride.'s mother wore a
pink polyester eyelet dress,
with pink accessorie~ . and
wore a white orchid corsa ge,~
Th groom's mother wa dressed
in a lilac polyester and silk
e nsembl e, with white accessories, and also wore a
white orchid corsage.
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the sdcial
room of the church. Those
assisting with the reception
were the members of the
Lutheran Church Women. The
bride's table was covered with
a white cloth trimmed in wide
lace, and centered with a threetiered wedding cake, topped
with the traditional bride and
groom . A blue, yellow and pink
color sc.heme was carried out
in the decorations. At one end
of the tabl e a
paste l
arraf!,gement of mums was
placed · wilh. crystal ca n-

J~::::~:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;;;:;:;::~i;;:i::;:;:;:;:;:;~:~:::;::;::;::::::;:;:::;;;.;;:;:;:;:;:;:::::&gt;*~!:!:~:~f:

.ICommunity Ill
iJCorner By Charlene Hoeflich li1
1

~

~

see,

POMEROY - Ever
or even he ar, of an albino snake.
Neither had we . But Elma RUssell has seen one. She and her .
husband Truman were in Wadsworth visiting their son, J. C.,
recently' when in ' marched a neighborhood youngster with a
perfectly white snake about 15 inches long with flashy red eyes.
J . C. discussed the snake with a naturalist friend and the two
decided that it was an albino 'g arden variety. After displaying it
at school and showing it around the neighborhood, the youngster
gave the snake its freedom.
Since that time J. C. attended a wildlife workshop at Zaleski
where he found out that albino snakes are extremely rare and the
one the child had was probably . quite valuable. A naturalist
~dvised that t~ere are albinos in every creature .
MORE AND MORE FOLKS seem to be tiring of the city and
returning to the country. Just recently Mr. and Mrs. John Jacobs
purchased a farm near Rutland and plan to move here some time
this summer. Since John was in service and married a Brooklyn
girl, he and his ·wife have resided there. The p"ace, the insecurity
and impersonality of city life seem to have caught up with them,
and they eagerly anticipate their move to the country .
· John and his wife have two children, 12 and 13. He, of course,
is the son of Mt . and Mrs. Dale Jacobs of Middleport.
The Dale Jacobs' family continues to spread around the
wor ld, how.ever.
Friday, their son, Steven, with his wife and two children, left
from the West Coast for the Philippines where he will be
stationed for the next two years. In early July, their son-in-law,
Timothy" Priddy 1 will leave from Lockbourne for England and a
tour of duty there. His wife, the former Linda Jacobs, and their
children, Brian and Vicky , will join him there as soon as suitable
housing is located.
Meanwhile, Tim and Linda have sold their mobile homes and
are temporarily making their home with the Dale Jacobs .
Incidentally, Carol Jacobs intends to remain in New York
although her brother will be returning here. Carol has a good job
as a legal sectetary and loves city life .
\
. U.S. NAVY CHIEF AND Mrs, DaTe E cHart and th~ir three. year..,ld Gina spent the Memorial Day weekend here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edison ,Brace of Racine .
The Harts then returned toFt. Meade, Md. Chief Hact will be
stationed there for the next month and then the family will be
home on a 3(kiay leave.
·
However, in early August they will be going to Spain for a four
year tour of duty. Dale has 16 years in the service and the duty in
Spain will wrap up his retirement years. The family has spent the
past two years in Maryland, but before that had two tours of duty
in Japan and one in Cyprus. In fact, Gina was born in Japan .
Four years is a long time and the Braces will miss their
daughter ~nd son-in-law, but especially their young granddaughter.
OUR CONGRATULATIONS to Mary Bradbury. An almostsenior Student at the Holzer School of Nursing , Mary was
recently elected student government president. Before that she
was an Officer of her class.
Capable in so many ways Mary is sure to make a dandy
president for the student nurses: She was student council
president at Meigs High Sehool durmg her semor year there and
displayed good leadership qualities at a time when the dress code
and hair length were high on the totem pole of concerns.

I •

I

II- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, June 3,1973

95th birthday celebrated recentlj1
G11ESTER - The ninetyfirth birthday of Gurney
Lafayette Michael was ot&gt;.
served at his home by a lamily
basket dinner, Sunday, May '%/.
His children, all his grandchildren except Eric Parker,
Plano,
and one of his two
great~grandsons were present.
The group included besides the

m..

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: .. !.
. .... , ,,

Officers n.amed

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. ..~ \ '

..

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~

POMEROY - Shari Mitch
was elected president of • the
Winding Trail Junior Garden
Club at a
recent re.
organizational meeting held at
the Naylor's Run Playground .
Other officers elected were
Elaine
Barnhart,
vice
pr esident;
Lori
Wood,
secretary; Linqa Rosenbaum,
treasurer; and Maria Legar,
new s reporter. Mrs. Robert
Thompson is advisor of the
club and th~ next meeting will
he held on Tuesday a t her
home, t p.m . A workshop will
be held in preparation for the
Regatta flower show.

Washington State where he
taught and took up a
homestead about 100 miles
south of the present Gra nd
Coulee Dam.
While
teaching
in
Washington State, he met his
wife the former Florence
Atkinson . Florence describes
him as " the tallest, thinnest
man I ever saw". Gurney says
he fell in love at first sight.
They have been rna rried 64
years.
Mr. Michael has farmed in
Washington, We st Virginia,
and Ohio. In Washington he
raised hogs on alfalfa pasture.
In 1913 he returned to West
Gumey Lafayette Michael
Virginia to assist his aging
parents on their big farm north
of Ravenswood, where he the farm is owned and
AWARDS MADE
raised hogs and sheep on managed by his son and
HARRISONVILLE
bluegrass pasture.
grandson, Samuel and Gary
Perfect attendance aw~rds for
ln t919 he worked on the Michael.
the past school year at the construction of Lock 21, and in
Although he had a serious
Ha rri sonville
Elementary 1920 came to' his present home fall three years ago, fracturing
School were presented to Lewis in the Texas community near
his right arm and leg, Mr.
Harper , David Ri~gs, six th Chester. Here he a nd Mrs.
Michael has made a good
graders; Richard Lee Hill, Michael became one of the first
recovery and gets around well
fifth grade, and J eff Lambert, producers of hens on a large · with the aid of a walker. He is
third g rade .
sca le in the county . At present confident of living to be 100.
honoree, Mrs. Michael, their ·
son, Samuel Michael; Lenora
and IJluise Michael, Mr. and
Mrs. Gar): Michael , their
daughter, Mrs. Nellie Parker ;
Wilber Parker, Ed Parker,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Joseph • Poole and Will , San
Antonio, Texas, and Shirley
Chapman. ,
Mr. Michael 's friends and
neighbors gave him a card
shower on his birthday, May
18.
Mr. Michael was born near
Morgantown, W.Va. He served
in the Spanish-American War.
After teaching in the schools of
West Virginia, he went to

Miss Beat

~:·:·:s-oc''i'~'I'*"'·::·:~,·

to marry

Calendar~l

June 30

SUNDAY
VACATION BIBLE Sehool at
it . Union Baptist Church
tarting Monda)' run~ing
nrough June 8. Closing
rogram, 7:30p.m. on June 10.
.chool begins at 9:30 a . m.;
·nd s at 12 noon each day.
; hurch bus will stop at1
larrisonville School, 8:30 each
norning ; Hobbs Grocery ,
Dexter. · 8:50 a. m. and store
building at Carpcnt~r , 9:10 a.
111 . All children welcome.

I

POMEROY ~ Mr. and Mrs.

Wayne Beal, Pomeroy, Route
4, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Karla Kay, to
Kirk Chevalier, son of Mrs.
Betty Chevalier and the late
Gordon Chevalier of Tuppers
Plains. The bride-elect, a 1973
graduate of Meigs High Sehool,
is employed at Best Photo of
Coolville. Her fiance graduated
from Eastern Hlgh Sehool and
Nelsonville Technical Sehool
and is employed by the
Southeastern Phone Company.
The open church wedding
will be an event of June 30 at
2:30 p.m . at the ·carleton
Church with a reception to
follow at the American Legion ·
Hall in Pomeroy.

Ava Darrellene Sayre betrothed
POMEROY - ·Mr. and Mrs. Layton Sayre of Route :1,
Pomeroy, are announcing the e n~agement of their daughter,
Ava Darrellene, to Mr . Bobby Joe Werry , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Werry , 218 Rock St., Pomeroy. Miss Sayt·e is a
1973 graduate of Meigs High School and plans to attend
Mountain State Business College beginning thi::; month.
Her fiance, a 1971 graduate of Meigs High Sehool, is a
student at Glenville State COllege where he is majOring in
physical education . Weddin g plans arc incomplete nt_thi s
time .

Wedding plans
RUTLAND FURNITURE SELLS MAYTAG BECAUSE
WE KNOW THAT NO ONE BUILDS
,..
WA lER-USING APPLIANCES BEnER

are completed
:MIDDLEPORT Plans
have been completed for the
open church wedding of Miss
peggy
Ann
McKinney ,
d;tughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell McKinney , Middleport, and Mr. Earie Wood,
sQn of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Wood, Pomeroy, Route 4.
•t The wedding will be an event
&lt;f Sunday, June 10 at 2:30p.m.
f(t the Zion Church of Christ.
r,tr. Kenneth. Eberts will
~erform
the
ceremony
fbllowing a half-hour of nuptial
rilusic by Mrs. Ann Lambert,
~Qmeroy , pianist; and Mrs.
Ann Schuler, Racine , organist.
The bride-elect has selected
!pr her maid of honor, Miss
~ith Wood. Her sister, Miss·
Cretta McKinney , will be the
llridesmaid. Best man for the
Ilridegroom will be Mr . . Earl
Wood of Harrisonville,. and the
Ushers will be Mr. Lewis
rj!cKintiey, Middleport ; and
l!lr. Tim King, Bradbury .
(luests ·will be registered by
l'l.iss Patti Well, Pomeroy.

OR MORE DEPENDABLE THAN MAYTAG.
••• AND THAT'S THE TRUTH I

Mrs. Danny Eugene Rizer
delabras on either side, holding
blue, pink and yellow tapers.
Punch served at the other
end of the table was pink, and
the cake was decorated in the
three colors. The ca ke was
served by Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr. and Mrs. Lloyd Roush,
while Mrs . David Roush
presided at the punch bowl.
The bride chose a pale blue
polyeste r, Princess • style
dress, with white accessories
for her traveling costume,
accented with a corsage of
white rosebuds. Following the
trip they will .reside in New
Haven.
The bride is a 1971
gra duate of Wahama High·
School and a 1973 graduate of
Marshall University with
honors, where she received
an Associate Degree in
S~cretarial Science. The
g room graduated from
Wahama High School in 1969
and attended Glenville State
College one year. He is
presently employed by the
Stauffer Chemical Company
at Gallipolis Ferry.
Out.of-town guests were

Connie Gilland of Mason; Mr.
and Mrs . John Layne of
Manheim, Pa.; Mr. and ·Mrs.
Dale Sayre and Timothy of
Huntington; Mrs. Mary Zerkle,
and Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rizer
of Hartford; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Yantis, Diane and
David, ahd Mr. and Mrs
Vernon Rizer and Andrea of
Columbus.
Mrs. Clinton Hunt and Cathy
of Belpre; Ott Shirley of Cottageville; Mr , and Mrs James
Howard, Sue and Scott Howard
of Culloden ;· Mrs, Johnnie F.
McDermitt and Scott of Letart;
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Karr,
Debbie, Diane and Sandi, of
Owens boro , Ky ., and Mr.
Raymond Layne of Parkersburg,
Mrs. Jerry Scott and Lisa of
Letart; Mrs . Earl Clark and
Barbara of West Columbia;
Rev . and Mrs. Jack Welch and
fa mily of Marietta; Carol
Price, Sandi Follrod, Joe
Follrod and Ada Wallace, all of
Ripley; Mr. and Mrs . John ·
Dyer, Hank, Chris and Bill, of
Cincinnati, and Ray VanMeter
of West Columbia.

Senior citizens ' weekly schedule
POMEROY
Senior
Citizens' Center Acitivities :
Monday, June 4 - 9:3G-12,
crafts for Craft Fair; quilting
all day .
Tuesday, June 5 - 9:3G.I2,
crafts for Craft Fair; 1-4, cards
and games; quilting.
Wednesday, June 6 - 9:3G.
II, Knitting with Anna Blackwood; )2-4, crafts for Craft
Fair; quilting all day .
Thursday, June 7 ~ 9:3G.
II :30, crafts for Craft Fair; 1-3,
cards and games; quilting all
day ; Rutland Silver Circle
Club meets. in afternoo~ .
~'riday, June 8 -c Quilting all
day; !hera is a lovely quilt
don,a ted by the Charles Hiltons

and ·marked by Wilhelmina ·
Thoma , set up and ready to
quilt for· the Rega tta . Help
needed. The coff~e · pot's
always on.

I'm piping a lonely tune The way
they build 'em, what chance has a
Maytag Repairman got ?

!

One week only!

We're having a

HIGHLANDER FLING

on the Thrifty.;. New

MAYTAG HIGHLANDERS®
Save~

~~

'40

Come dance away with this bonnie value!
Maytag s new H1Qhtancler' Fabr1 c·Ma l 1c unc ompl 1cates today s washmg
problems Wash all fabncs. 1n CILJd1ng woo lens . kntts and l1ngene . th e right
way S• mpl e con trols lor perman ent press. regular and delica te cyc les

Look for our "Old Maclonely " display
and alt. th e new Maytag Highland er washers and dryers. They are al l
bull ! to make your waShday less
Available now ·at (lew low
HighiHnd er prioing .

Election held
POMEROY - Officers were
elected at a meeting of the
Pomeroy 'w omen 's Bowling
Association held Wednesday
night at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes.
The new officers are Mrs.
Ann Th~ma s, president; Mrs.
Maxine Dugan, fir s t vice
president; Mrs . Jean Warner,
second vice president; Mrs.
Dian e Hawley, third vi ce
president;
Mrs . Marlyn
Wilcox, secretary-treasurer ;
and Mrs . Patty Ca rson,
sergeant of arms. The new
director.s arc Mrs. Carolyn
Bachner,. Mrs. Betty Smith,
Mrs. Peggy Houdashelt, Mrs.
Patty Williams, and Mrs. April
Smith.

•

Miss A nita Fultz
Montevide o, Ur ugu a y.
the southernrnotit capital
the we s tern hemi s phere.

MODEL A107

H,:::.~h·:-~iOi;L--::J

Th e
lander Fabri C-Mali c w • t'~ 3
temp wate' control , 3 watef
levels oo werhn ag•tato• w•th
bu•ll ·m lint foUe r und fab,c
so llen er d•spenser. Heavy
duty ac r)lhc· f i n•shed c ab•net
w ith porcela1n enamel top
and tub

Fits a most

anywhere.

(Only 2feet wide)

MAYTAG AT LOWER
PRICES,
BETTER TERMS
OR GIVES FASTER
DELIVERY AND

Home baked good s, donuts, cookies , " Pies and Cakes
made to order incl uding Wedding and Specjal Occasion
Cakes."

SERVICE, THAN •••

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

5

PH. 742-4211

388

BAKER FURNITURE

Open 10 T rl6 Da ily
.··

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

IIFTSFDRDID

MIDDLEPORT

Neckerchiefs and
pocket scarves.

It's little thing s
thot really make
o wardrobe work

Men 's · umbrellas,
assorted handles.

Wallets, jewelry,
and cufflinks .

for him. The
elements are
here .... put
them all
log~ther.
0

m

Ill••·

ARNOLD GRATE

S &amp; J SWEET SHOPPE

Farewell given

EVERYDAY IS
BARGAIN
DAY

Fri daire

· Automat iC dr'f ·
mg con trols at p~nny pm c h •ng H1ghlarider rmces Oual•1)1 features inc I ude aut omati C
permanent press .and regular
fa b n c·cycles • a1r flulf and
d arno dry Its a Ma y tag H aloof·Heat dryer w •lh ·automati C
dryi[1g contr¢1s

Parents honored at party

CERTAIN-TO-PLEASE

lOLA'S

FREE REFRESHMENTS

JrdS I

MIDDLEPORT Miss
. Anita Fultz, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. J ohn Fultz of Middleport, has been selected the
"Girl of the Year" for Paterson
Hall at Ohio State .University .
Miss Fultz was selected for
the honor over seven other
nominees. She was presented
an engraved neckh.t ce by the
social chairman or the dormitory. Anita has served as
vice president, orientation
ass istant, and chairma n of the
standards committee for the
dormitory the past academic
year.
She is enrolled in the School
of Home Econ!)mics majoring
in family and child developmen t. A graduate of 'Meigs
High Sehool, she will be a
jun ior at Ohio State in the £all.

~elanie of Racine .
MR . AND MRS. ROBERT BUCK and daughter, Jennie, are
.; Bryan Weaver, son of Mr. quite happy in their relatively new residence, the former large .
~nd Mrs . Roger Weaver, has and spacious home of the la te Dr. and Mrs. L . G. Gribble. The
Se lected groups ladi es
~een a pattent ·at the Holzer brick home on Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, has undergone exfa s hion s alw&lt;1ys at
~edical Center,
tensive remodeling over many months and the job is still not
reduced prices.
·; Mr. and Mrs . Harold
lete
dMr
comp
·
· ·
·
.Blackt
son an dM r . an . · s.
Th e Bucks have used a great deal of panehng tn vartous
.yYilliam Gruese~ retu:ned shades in their remodeling. 'They have some beautiful antiques
¥onday from Berrten Sprtngs,
which are to be refinished and reupholstered for use in the guest
POMEROY , 0.
Mich. where they vtstted Mr . •: :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:~::::::::::::~;-;:-;;;-;;,
_J
qnd Mrs . Leo Smith a nd room .
~hildren, Sam, Betty and
,
Barbara . Mr. Smith took Mr.
~lackston and Mr. Grueser on
~ tour of the Cook Nuclear
¢enter where he is emp loyed.
:• Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kane
~ent the weekend in Cleveland
jisiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Jane.
.
{ Mr. and Mrs. John Burnell
~nd '· Mr . and Mrs. Earl Lynch
~nd family spent the Memortal
e Install it whert the wash iskitchen, b1th, nurtery · : : 1nywhere.
bay weekend here with Mrs.
YO\J c1 n get adequat• w1rtns. plumb·
i'reda Duffy and Mr. and Mrs.
int end 'l'entlna.
·
iltark Duerr. They also visited
• Washer and dryer eKh do • 11~ ·
11)'-sih toed et tht same time or tn ·
J.lrs. Kathleen Francis and
4o,.rt-1- . . .
.
· ~mily .
• t·&amp;poed WMller. fteautOt plus
;.
QoU..et Mltln11 fw tllo fleXi~Hrty 0
•
fomiiJ- must
~
• AulOIWIIIC Dry c,clo eliminates
r;·•
.,.....ott. 111111 ,ust rl&amp;ht
·
::
CLUB TO MEET
; POMEROY - The Catholic
::Women's Club of the Sacred
••
·:Heart
Church will meet on
·;l.June 7 at 6:30 p.m . for a
::Potluck dinner at the home of
::or. and Mrs. R. R. Pickens ..
:'rable service and beverage
:jwill be furnished but each one
;!attending is asked to take a
:!'covered dish. '

NO ONE SELLS

Closed Thursday &amp; Sunday
949 .5491
RACINE ,O.
SARA H&amp; JOAN TUTTLE . OWNERS

special.

~: Personal Notes : :

The new Mayt ag H1yh1ander A 10 7 • all
I abrie was h•n g ab11ity with perf or man c e
c omparable to ou r J'l rt;!v•ous Model A206 .
but at new lo w pr1 c es

,BAKERY GOODS
Stop in and Register .
Door prize and gift
cert ifi cates to be given
away.
No purchase
necessary .

POMEROY - Members of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will be pitching in any day now to create a
float suitable for the eight queen contestants in the Big Bend
Regatta Weekend parade on June 15.
The sorority is handling the' details of the queen se lection and
has been named to provide the float for the queen contestants in
the parade. Formerly, a flo3t for these contestants was " im~
ported'' for lhe parade but not this year. The sorority has a 'lot of
talented members so the float crea tion will probably be pretty

~ Pomeroy . . . Ill

ANNOUNCING ·
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6 , 10 Til6 P.M.

Anita Fultz girl of year

PAUL CASC!, ACT!VE with fudd raising of the Meigs County
Cancer Society, reports that $374 for the driv~ . was realized
through crusade buckboards placed in business houses. Casci
extends much thanks to tavern operators who permitted the
buckboards in their establishments.
DON'T LOOK FOR YOUR Meigs County Fair premium book
to arrive in the mail this year. There were many duplications in
the sa me families for the books so the lair board has decided that
r.:~::::::~:::=::::::::~z::-.::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::~=:~=:=:.:;:.
residents can pick up a copy of the premiUm book at the various
business houses when they purchase their membership tickets to
go on sale soon.
POMEROY'S CLEAN-UP WEEK went over so big that
em1=~vyes were not able to get around to e~eryone in th ~ week
designated and so extended the pick up penod a lew days. And
everyone was able to get rid of all that winter clutter. A good
: Louise Conde has returned to
· · 1
·
gesture on the part of employes and village offtcta s.
her home at Pittsburgh, Pa.
.
THE M.C-M SCOUTING DISTRICT roundtables will be held
&amp;Iter spendtng three w~eks at 7:30p.m. on June l4 at the Kyger Creek High School. Topic for
~ere with her stster, Be tha .. the month will be planning of swnmer activities so that scoutmg
Conde.
can be carried out on a year-round basis .
THE RAWLINGS-COATS, Ewing and Martln Funeral
: Miss Sue Weaver of
lacksonvtlle, Fla. spent the ' Homes of Meigs County are continuing limited ambulance
¥emonal Day weekend here
,·ce until the new emergency medical service goes mto ac~
·
't
'
h
th
M
serv
ytst rng er mo er,
rs. ti
The funeral homes had announced for weeks that t he serfl,ichard Weaver and her
?n . would Qe disc ontinued on June 1. However, when the
brother, Phil Weaver, of :~:rgency medical setvice hit 8 snag or two on: getting started
Syracuse .. On Monday . af- by June I, Friday, the personnel of the funeral homes ~eld a
·~rnoon Mtss Weaver and her quick. conference and agreed without any delay on contmumg
J}'lOther were the guests of Mrs. serviCe in order to serve· the public ..
R,eva Vaughan, Pomeroy. She
WE KNOW THERE ARE a number of coin coUectors about,
also visited her brother and but how about medaUion _collectors? More and more these
Sister.in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
dallions in honor ()[ special occasions or people are bemg
Roger Weaver and son, Bryan, ~etributed. One of the latest is by Van Brook of Lexington , Inc.,
~Pomeroy and her brother-in- N~rth Branch 5044 , Lexington, Ky. , and it is a mystic medallion
l!Jw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. based on the magic squares of ancient Egypt and the 12 Signs of
l!oy Van Meter, Becky and the Zodiac.

CLASSES SCHEDULED
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
community vacation Bible
school will be held from 9:30
a.m. to ll :30 a.m. each day
Monday through Friday, June
4-8. There will be le~son s,
crafts a nd re£reshments with a
picnic on Thursday and the
closing program on Friday.

OPEN HOUSE

Kari&lt;J Kay Beat

Couple will·be honored

MONDAY
RACINE Chapter
1:14,
POMEROY' - Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Nease will he
O.E.S., Masonic Temple, 8
honored
by their children on their &gt;Oth wedding anniversary
p.m. ln iliatory work for two
on Sunday, June 17. An open house will be held from 2 to 4
candidates will be exemplified .
p.m . at the family home in the Nease Settlement. Mr. and
·Officers are to wen1· fonnals .
Mrs. Nease were married on June 18, 1923 at the Pomeroy
Annual inspection of Racine
Methodist
parsonage by the Rev . Fred 0. Weed. They are the
Cha pter will be held on J une 1:1
• parents of lour children, Arthur, Pomeroy, Route 3; Ruth,
at the Temp le, 8 p.m.
Grove City; Carl, Columbus; and Stanley, at home . They
MEIG S County Salon 710,
have seven grandchildren and two great.grandchildren.
Eig ht Hnd Forty , home of Mr::;.
Belatives friends and neighbors are invited to can during
Harry Davi s. 7::10 p.m.
the open house hours.
'
Members to take bottle caps.
POMEROY - Middleport
I.ion.s Club directors, special
meeting, 7 p .m. at the
Columbus and Sou thern Ohio
Electric Co.
HACINI': - Mrs. Dale E. surprise party for their 30th
HACINF: BAJYfiST Church Hart of Fort Meade, Md.,
wedding anniversary.
D£~ily V&lt;.~ cation Bible Sdwol, honored her parents, Mr. and
Gifts were presented to the
.June 4-8, 6 to g p. m . each Mrs . 8dison Brace of Racine,
couple and cake, ice cream and
c veuin~. Commencement on Sunda y', May 27, with a
corfee were served throughout
prognun on Sunday, .J une 10, Hl
the afternoon .
7:30 p. Ill.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
POMilROY Chamber or
Dale E . Hart and their threeComtnerce Monday at no'On at
yea r-old daughter, GilUI; Mrs.
Meigs Inn .
Pearl .(\dams, Miss V~ra
REEDSVILLE - Reedsv ille
VACATION Bible School
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs . Elza
beginnin g Monday through Girl Scout Troop 67 gave a Birch, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Saturday, June 9, from 9· a.m. far ewell party recently lor Roush , Mr. and Mrs. Titus
Oebr&lt;.t Lc·wis who is moving to
lo 11 a.m . Ht Entcrpri:le United
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Games
were
Ke
ntu
cky
.
Me lhodis t Ch urc h. Clos in g
Hayman, and Keith, Mrs.
prog ram on S.Jtu n.l ay at 7 p.m . dircctetl by Susan H&lt;.tnnuni and Bertha Robinson , Mrs. Holton
All children fronl prc-::;ch_ool Kay Balderson on which all U1e Wolfe, Jr . and sons, Mr. and
age through junior high Hre seoul'S n .'&lt;.'c ived prizeS. Mrs. Mrs. Blythe Theiss, Mr. and
Barbara Hannum taught the
wel come .
Mrs. Linley Hart, and Mr. and
~-:iris a new game which was
MEIGS Chapter , Order o£
Mrs. Ronald Hart.
greatl y en joyed.
OcM olay wi ll meet at 7::10 p.m :
The girls presented Debbie a
Monday at Middleport Metsoni c
gir l scout atitog1·a ph book and
Temp le. Initiatory work to be
bt·aeelel. l':a ch girl signed the
exemp lified. Ma ster Mi:i suns
book . He fres hme nts of ice
and OcMulay invited .
cream, brown~es a nd punch
The Ohio Environmental
were
served
to
the
above
and
SCIIOO!. llA YS SET
rrotection Agency reminds
HOCK SPR I NC:S .:... Th e Theresa Dttilcy, Dinnc Eva ns, Ohioans that they can ge.t help
11m.: k Spri n~s Unitetl Methodist Judy Holter, Bonnie Dailey, with environmental problems
Chu rch' will hold Bible sci10ul Sheila Buchanan, Candy by calling the Ohio EPA
Daihiy, ·K im Reed, Lori Ombudsman's toll -free
i fl for two weeks slc;trtin"t&gt; Monw
in dt:ty , June 4, through June 15. Mas-ters, Ca rla Cowdery, number 1-S00-262-0270. Get .
I·lours of the school will be from Teresa Hannum , Brenda involved for a better enHucker a nd Kellie Powell.
vironment!
9c:!O to 1UO a.111. each doy.

RUTLAND, 0.

MIDOLE PORT, 0.

I

,,

Windbreaker• und '

other

outerwear .

�10-The SwldayTimes-oentlnel. Suno.,, June 3,1973

Layne-Rizer vows!
taken May 26 in
Lutheran church
NEW HAVEN Miss
Harriett Ona Layne and Danny
Eugene Rizer exchanged
nuptial vows on May 26, in a
double-ring ceremony , in the
St. Paul Lutheran Church here.
The Rev . Johr. Haeberle
performed the 2:30 p.m
ceremony for the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Robert

Layne, New Haven, and the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rizer
of Hartford .
Two vases of white gladioli
were used for altar flowers ,
and · two baskets of white
gladioli and white mums were
placed in front on either side of
the chancel. Seven-branched
candelabras holding white
tapers were on both sides of the
altar.
Mrs. William Russell served
as organist and Mr. John
Layne as soloist. Mrs. Russell
played " Jean," "Theme From
Love Story ," " For All We
Know, " " Speak Softly, Love"

and

a

" Time

For

Us "

preceding the ceremony. Mr.
Layne Sarig "0, Perfect Love,"
and also " The Greatest of
These Is Love" during the

ceremony.
Miss Layne was given in
marriage by her father. She
wore an Empire A-line wedding gown of silk organza,
styled wiL~ a portrait neckline,
Empire bodice, and Bishop
sleeves with .French cu ffs.
Dainty daisies or white venise
lace detailed the neckline,
sleeves and gown, bordering
ihe hemline . She wore
a
chapel
length
veil
of silk
illusion
edged
in venise lace. Her flowers
were white rosebuds and
stephanotis .
Attending \he bride as maidof.honor was her sister, Holly
Marie Layne, who was dressed
in yellow ll,lld white lace over
yellow taffeta. The dress was
styled with an Empire waist
and bell sleeves. She wore a

white hat and gloves, and
carried a ljasket of yellow
daisies.
Flower girl was litue Miss
Diane Yantis of Columbus, who
was dressed in yellow and
white lace over yellow taffeta,
and carried a basket of yellow
rose petals.
Miss Gail Miller, bridesmaid, wa s dressed in blue and
white lace over blue taffeta,
with white hat and gloves and
carried a basket of blue
daisies. Miss Becky Gilmore,
also a bridesmaid, was dressed
in pink and white lace over
pink taffeta. She also wore
white hat· and gloves, and
carried a basket of pink
daisies . The dresses styled like
that of the maid-of-honor.
Vernon L. Rizer of Columbus, Ohio, was best man for his
brother . Seating guests were
Dale Sayre of Huntington and
Ray VanMeter of West
Columbia .
Miss Sue Howard, cousin of
the bride, from Culloden, W.
Va ., registered guests.
The bride.'s mother wore a
pink polyester eyelet dress,
with pink accessorie~ . and
wore a white orchid corsa ge,~
Th groom's mother wa dressed
in a lilac polyester and silk
e nsembl e, with white accessories, and also wore a
white orchid corsage.
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the sdcial
room of the church. Those
assisting with the reception
were the members of the
Lutheran Church Women. The
bride's table was covered with
a white cloth trimmed in wide
lace, and centered with a threetiered wedding cake, topped
with the traditional bride and
groom . A blue, yellow and pink
color sc.heme was carried out
in the decorations. At one end
of the tabl e a
paste l
arraf!,gement of mums was
placed · wilh. crystal ca n-

J~::::~:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;;;:;:;::~i;;:i::;:;:;:;:;:;~:~:::;::;::;::::::;:;:::;;;.;;:;:;:;:;:;:::::&gt;*~!:!:~:~f:

.ICommunity Ill
iJCorner By Charlene Hoeflich li1
1

~

~

see,

POMEROY - Ever
or even he ar, of an albino snake.
Neither had we . But Elma RUssell has seen one. She and her .
husband Truman were in Wadsworth visiting their son, J. C.,
recently' when in ' marched a neighborhood youngster with a
perfectly white snake about 15 inches long with flashy red eyes.
J . C. discussed the snake with a naturalist friend and the two
decided that it was an albino 'g arden variety. After displaying it
at school and showing it around the neighborhood, the youngster
gave the snake its freedom.
Since that time J. C. attended a wildlife workshop at Zaleski
where he found out that albino snakes are extremely rare and the
one the child had was probably . quite valuable. A naturalist
~dvised that t~ere are albinos in every creature .
MORE AND MORE FOLKS seem to be tiring of the city and
returning to the country. Just recently Mr. and Mrs. John Jacobs
purchased a farm near Rutland and plan to move here some time
this summer. Since John was in service and married a Brooklyn
girl, he and his ·wife have resided there. The p"ace, the insecurity
and impersonality of city life seem to have caught up with them,
and they eagerly anticipate their move to the country .
· John and his wife have two children, 12 and 13. He, of course,
is the son of Mt . and Mrs. Dale Jacobs of Middleport.
The Dale Jacobs' family continues to spread around the
wor ld, how.ever.
Friday, their son, Steven, with his wife and two children, left
from the West Coast for the Philippines where he will be
stationed for the next two years. In early July, their son-in-law,
Timothy" Priddy 1 will leave from Lockbourne for England and a
tour of duty there. His wife, the former Linda Jacobs, and their
children, Brian and Vicky , will join him there as soon as suitable
housing is located.
Meanwhile, Tim and Linda have sold their mobile homes and
are temporarily making their home with the Dale Jacobs .
Incidentally, Carol Jacobs intends to remain in New York
although her brother will be returning here. Carol has a good job
as a legal sectetary and loves city life .
\
. U.S. NAVY CHIEF AND Mrs, DaTe E cHart and th~ir three. year..,ld Gina spent the Memorial Day weekend here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edison ,Brace of Racine .
The Harts then returned toFt. Meade, Md. Chief Hact will be
stationed there for the next month and then the family will be
home on a 3(kiay leave.
·
However, in early August they will be going to Spain for a four
year tour of duty. Dale has 16 years in the service and the duty in
Spain will wrap up his retirement years. The family has spent the
past two years in Maryland, but before that had two tours of duty
in Japan and one in Cyprus. In fact, Gina was born in Japan .
Four years is a long time and the Braces will miss their
daughter ~nd son-in-law, but especially their young granddaughter.
OUR CONGRATULATIONS to Mary Bradbury. An almostsenior Student at the Holzer School of Nursing , Mary was
recently elected student government president. Before that she
was an Officer of her class.
Capable in so many ways Mary is sure to make a dandy
president for the student nurses: She was student council
president at Meigs High Sehool durmg her semor year there and
displayed good leadership qualities at a time when the dress code
and hair length were high on the totem pole of concerns.

I •

I

II- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, June 3,1973

95th birthday celebrated recentlj1
G11ESTER - The ninetyfirth birthday of Gurney
Lafayette Michael was ot&gt;.
served at his home by a lamily
basket dinner, Sunday, May '%/.
His children, all his grandchildren except Eric Parker,
Plano,
and one of his two
great~grandsons were present.
The group included besides the

m..

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

Officers n.amed

~·

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. ..~ \ '

..

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'\

,.

~

..

~

POMEROY - Shari Mitch
was elected president of • the
Winding Trail Junior Garden
Club at a
recent re.
organizational meeting held at
the Naylor's Run Playground .
Other officers elected were
Elaine
Barnhart,
vice
pr esident;
Lori
Wood,
secretary; Linqa Rosenbaum,
treasurer; and Maria Legar,
new s reporter. Mrs. Robert
Thompson is advisor of the
club and th~ next meeting will
he held on Tuesday a t her
home, t p.m . A workshop will
be held in preparation for the
Regatta flower show.

Washington State where he
taught and took up a
homestead about 100 miles
south of the present Gra nd
Coulee Dam.
While
teaching
in
Washington State, he met his
wife the former Florence
Atkinson . Florence describes
him as " the tallest, thinnest
man I ever saw". Gurney says
he fell in love at first sight.
They have been rna rried 64
years.
Mr. Michael has farmed in
Washington, We st Virginia,
and Ohio. In Washington he
raised hogs on alfalfa pasture.
In 1913 he returned to West
Gumey Lafayette Michael
Virginia to assist his aging
parents on their big farm north
of Ravenswood, where he the farm is owned and
AWARDS MADE
raised hogs and sheep on managed by his son and
HARRISONVILLE
bluegrass pasture.
grandson, Samuel and Gary
Perfect attendance aw~rds for
ln t919 he worked on the Michael.
the past school year at the construction of Lock 21, and in
Although he had a serious
Ha rri sonville
Elementary 1920 came to' his present home fall three years ago, fracturing
School were presented to Lewis in the Texas community near
his right arm and leg, Mr.
Harper , David Ri~gs, six th Chester. Here he a nd Mrs.
Michael has made a good
graders; Richard Lee Hill, Michael became one of the first
recovery and gets around well
fifth grade, and J eff Lambert, producers of hens on a large · with the aid of a walker. He is
third g rade .
sca le in the county . At present confident of living to be 100.
honoree, Mrs. Michael, their ·
son, Samuel Michael; Lenora
and IJluise Michael, Mr. and
Mrs. Gar): Michael , their
daughter, Mrs. Nellie Parker ;
Wilber Parker, Ed Parker,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Joseph • Poole and Will , San
Antonio, Texas, and Shirley
Chapman. ,
Mr. Michael 's friends and
neighbors gave him a card
shower on his birthday, May
18.
Mr. Michael was born near
Morgantown, W.Va. He served
in the Spanish-American War.
After teaching in the schools of
West Virginia, he went to

Miss Beat

~:·:·:s-oc''i'~'I'*"'·::·:~,·

to marry

Calendar~l

June 30

SUNDAY
VACATION BIBLE Sehool at
it . Union Baptist Church
tarting Monda)' run~ing
nrough June 8. Closing
rogram, 7:30p.m. on June 10.
.chool begins at 9:30 a . m.;
·nd s at 12 noon each day.
; hurch bus will stop at1
larrisonville School, 8:30 each
norning ; Hobbs Grocery ,
Dexter. · 8:50 a. m. and store
building at Carpcnt~r , 9:10 a.
111 . All children welcome.

I

POMEROY ~ Mr. and Mrs.

Wayne Beal, Pomeroy, Route
4, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Karla Kay, to
Kirk Chevalier, son of Mrs.
Betty Chevalier and the late
Gordon Chevalier of Tuppers
Plains. The bride-elect, a 1973
graduate of Meigs High Sehool,
is employed at Best Photo of
Coolville. Her fiance graduated
from Eastern Hlgh Sehool and
Nelsonville Technical Sehool
and is employed by the
Southeastern Phone Company.
The open church wedding
will be an event of June 30 at
2:30 p.m . at the ·carleton
Church with a reception to
follow at the American Legion ·
Hall in Pomeroy.

Ava Darrellene Sayre betrothed
POMEROY - ·Mr. and Mrs. Layton Sayre of Route :1,
Pomeroy, are announcing the e n~agement of their daughter,
Ava Darrellene, to Mr . Bobby Joe Werry , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Werry , 218 Rock St., Pomeroy. Miss Sayt·e is a
1973 graduate of Meigs High School and plans to attend
Mountain State Business College beginning thi::; month.
Her fiance, a 1971 graduate of Meigs High Sehool, is a
student at Glenville State COllege where he is majOring in
physical education . Weddin g plans arc incomplete nt_thi s
time .

Wedding plans
RUTLAND FURNITURE SELLS MAYTAG BECAUSE
WE KNOW THAT NO ONE BUILDS
,..
WA lER-USING APPLIANCES BEnER

are completed
:MIDDLEPORT Plans
have been completed for the
open church wedding of Miss
peggy
Ann
McKinney ,
d;tughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell McKinney , Middleport, and Mr. Earie Wood,
sQn of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Wood, Pomeroy, Route 4.
•t The wedding will be an event
&lt;f Sunday, June 10 at 2:30p.m.
f(t the Zion Church of Christ.
r,tr. Kenneth. Eberts will
~erform
the
ceremony
fbllowing a half-hour of nuptial
rilusic by Mrs. Ann Lambert,
~Qmeroy , pianist; and Mrs.
Ann Schuler, Racine , organist.
The bride-elect has selected
!pr her maid of honor, Miss
~ith Wood. Her sister, Miss·
Cretta McKinney , will be the
llridesmaid. Best man for the
Ilridegroom will be Mr . . Earl
Wood of Harrisonville,. and the
Ushers will be Mr. Lewis
rj!cKintiey, Middleport ; and
l!lr. Tim King, Bradbury .
(luests ·will be registered by
l'l.iss Patti Well, Pomeroy.

OR MORE DEPENDABLE THAN MAYTAG.
••• AND THAT'S THE TRUTH I

Mrs. Danny Eugene Rizer
delabras on either side, holding
blue, pink and yellow tapers.
Punch served at the other
end of the table was pink, and
the cake was decorated in the
three colors. The ca ke was
served by Mrs. Carroll Adams,
Jr. and Mrs. Lloyd Roush,
while Mrs . David Roush
presided at the punch bowl.
The bride chose a pale blue
polyeste r, Princess • style
dress, with white accessories
for her traveling costume,
accented with a corsage of
white rosebuds. Following the
trip they will .reside in New
Haven.
The bride is a 1971
gra duate of Wahama High·
School and a 1973 graduate of
Marshall University with
honors, where she received
an Associate Degree in
S~cretarial Science. The
g room graduated from
Wahama High School in 1969
and attended Glenville State
College one year. He is
presently employed by the
Stauffer Chemical Company
at Gallipolis Ferry.
Out.of-town guests were

Connie Gilland of Mason; Mr.
and Mrs . John Layne of
Manheim, Pa.; Mr. and ·Mrs.
Dale Sayre and Timothy of
Huntington; Mrs. Mary Zerkle,
and Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rizer
of Hartford; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Yantis, Diane and
David, ahd Mr. and Mrs
Vernon Rizer and Andrea of
Columbus.
Mrs. Clinton Hunt and Cathy
of Belpre; Ott Shirley of Cottageville; Mr , and Mrs James
Howard, Sue and Scott Howard
of Culloden ;· Mrs, Johnnie F.
McDermitt and Scott of Letart;
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Karr,
Debbie, Diane and Sandi, of
Owens boro , Ky ., and Mr.
Raymond Layne of Parkersburg,
Mrs. Jerry Scott and Lisa of
Letart; Mrs . Earl Clark and
Barbara of West Columbia;
Rev . and Mrs. Jack Welch and
fa mily of Marietta; Carol
Price, Sandi Follrod, Joe
Follrod and Ada Wallace, all of
Ripley; Mr. and Mrs . John ·
Dyer, Hank, Chris and Bill, of
Cincinnati, and Ray VanMeter
of West Columbia.

Senior citizens ' weekly schedule
POMEROY
Senior
Citizens' Center Acitivities :
Monday, June 4 - 9:3G-12,
crafts for Craft Fair; quilting
all day .
Tuesday, June 5 - 9:3G.I2,
crafts for Craft Fair; 1-4, cards
and games; quilting.
Wednesday, June 6 - 9:3G.
II, Knitting with Anna Blackwood; )2-4, crafts for Craft
Fair; quilting all day .
Thursday, June 7 ~ 9:3G.
II :30, crafts for Craft Fair; 1-3,
cards and games; quilting all
day ; Rutland Silver Circle
Club meets. in afternoo~ .
~'riday, June 8 -c Quilting all
day; !hera is a lovely quilt
don,a ted by the Charles Hiltons

and ·marked by Wilhelmina ·
Thoma , set up and ready to
quilt for· the Rega tta . Help
needed. The coff~e · pot's
always on.

I'm piping a lonely tune The way
they build 'em, what chance has a
Maytag Repairman got ?

!

One week only!

We're having a

HIGHLANDER FLING

on the Thrifty.;. New

MAYTAG HIGHLANDERS®
Save~

~~

'40

Come dance away with this bonnie value!
Maytag s new H1Qhtancler' Fabr1 c·Ma l 1c unc ompl 1cates today s washmg
problems Wash all fabncs. 1n CILJd1ng woo lens . kntts and l1ngene . th e right
way S• mpl e con trols lor perman ent press. regular and delica te cyc les

Look for our "Old Maclonely " display
and alt. th e new Maytag Highland er washers and dryers. They are al l
bull ! to make your waShday less
Available now ·at (lew low
HighiHnd er prioing .

Election held
POMEROY - Officers were
elected at a meeting of the
Pomeroy 'w omen 's Bowling
Association held Wednesday
night at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes.
The new officers are Mrs.
Ann Th~ma s, president; Mrs.
Maxine Dugan, fir s t vice
president; Mrs . Jean Warner,
second vice president; Mrs.
Dian e Hawley, third vi ce
president;
Mrs . Marlyn
Wilcox, secretary-treasurer ;
and Mrs . Patty Ca rson,
sergeant of arms. The new
director.s arc Mrs. Carolyn
Bachner,. Mrs. Betty Smith,
Mrs. Peggy Houdashelt, Mrs.
Patty Williams, and Mrs. April
Smith.

•

Miss A nita Fultz
Montevide o, Ur ugu a y.
the southernrnotit capital
the we s tern hemi s phere.

MODEL A107

H,:::.~h·:-~iOi;L--::J

Th e
lander Fabri C-Mali c w • t'~ 3
temp wate' control , 3 watef
levels oo werhn ag•tato• w•th
bu•ll ·m lint foUe r und fab,c
so llen er d•spenser. Heavy
duty ac r)lhc· f i n•shed c ab•net
w ith porcela1n enamel top
and tub

Fits a most

anywhere.

(Only 2feet wide)

MAYTAG AT LOWER
PRICES,
BETTER TERMS
OR GIVES FASTER
DELIVERY AND

Home baked good s, donuts, cookies , " Pies and Cakes
made to order incl uding Wedding and Specjal Occasion
Cakes."

SERVICE, THAN •••

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

5

PH. 742-4211

388

BAKER FURNITURE

Open 10 T rl6 Da ily
.··

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

IIFTSFDRDID

MIDDLEPORT

Neckerchiefs and
pocket scarves.

It's little thing s
thot really make
o wardrobe work

Men 's · umbrellas,
assorted handles.

Wallets, jewelry,
and cufflinks .

for him. The
elements are
here .... put
them all
log~ther.
0

m

Ill••·

ARNOLD GRATE

S &amp; J SWEET SHOPPE

Farewell given

EVERYDAY IS
BARGAIN
DAY

Fri daire

· Automat iC dr'f ·
mg con trols at p~nny pm c h •ng H1ghlarider rmces Oual•1)1 features inc I ude aut omati C
permanent press .and regular
fa b n c·cycles • a1r flulf and
d arno dry Its a Ma y tag H aloof·Heat dryer w •lh ·automati C
dryi[1g contr¢1s

Parents honored at party

CERTAIN-TO-PLEASE

lOLA'S

FREE REFRESHMENTS

JrdS I

MIDDLEPORT Miss
. Anita Fultz, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. J ohn Fultz of Middleport, has been selected the
"Girl of the Year" for Paterson
Hall at Ohio State .University .
Miss Fultz was selected for
the honor over seven other
nominees. She was presented
an engraved neckh.t ce by the
social chairman or the dormitory. Anita has served as
vice president, orientation
ass istant, and chairma n of the
standards committee for the
dormitory the past academic
year.
She is enrolled in the School
of Home Econ!)mics majoring
in family and child developmen t. A graduate of 'Meigs
High Sehool, she will be a
jun ior at Ohio State in the £all.

~elanie of Racine .
MR . AND MRS. ROBERT BUCK and daughter, Jennie, are
.; Bryan Weaver, son of Mr. quite happy in their relatively new residence, the former large .
~nd Mrs . Roger Weaver, has and spacious home of the la te Dr. and Mrs. L . G. Gribble. The
Se lected groups ladi es
~een a pattent ·at the Holzer brick home on Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, has undergone exfa s hion s alw&lt;1ys at
~edical Center,
tensive remodeling over many months and the job is still not
reduced prices.
·; Mr. and Mrs . Harold
lete
dMr
comp
·
· ·
·
.Blackt
son an dM r . an . · s.
Th e Bucks have used a great deal of panehng tn vartous
.yYilliam Gruese~ retu:ned shades in their remodeling. 'They have some beautiful antiques
¥onday from Berrten Sprtngs,
which are to be refinished and reupholstered for use in the guest
POMEROY , 0.
Mich. where they vtstted Mr . •: :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:~::::::::::::~;-;:-;;;-;;,
_J
qnd Mrs . Leo Smith a nd room .
~hildren, Sam, Betty and
,
Barbara . Mr. Smith took Mr.
~lackston and Mr. Grueser on
~ tour of the Cook Nuclear
¢enter where he is emp loyed.
:• Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kane
~ent the weekend in Cleveland
jisiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Jane.
.
{ Mr. and Mrs. John Burnell
~nd '· Mr . and Mrs. Earl Lynch
~nd family spent the Memortal
e Install it whert the wash iskitchen, b1th, nurtery · : : 1nywhere.
bay weekend here with Mrs.
YO\J c1 n get adequat• w1rtns. plumb·
i'reda Duffy and Mr. and Mrs.
int end 'l'entlna.
·
iltark Duerr. They also visited
• Washer and dryer eKh do • 11~ ·
11)'-sih toed et tht same time or tn ·
J.lrs. Kathleen Francis and
4o,.rt-1- . . .
.
· ~mily .
• t·&amp;poed WMller. fteautOt plus
;.
QoU..et Mltln11 fw tllo fleXi~Hrty 0
•
fomiiJ- must
~
• AulOIWIIIC Dry c,clo eliminates
r;·•
.,.....ott. 111111 ,ust rl&amp;ht
·
::
CLUB TO MEET
; POMEROY - The Catholic
::Women's Club of the Sacred
••
·:Heart
Church will meet on
·;l.June 7 at 6:30 p.m . for a
::Potluck dinner at the home of
::or. and Mrs. R. R. Pickens ..
:'rable service and beverage
:jwill be furnished but each one
;!attending is asked to take a
:!'covered dish. '

NO ONE SELLS

Closed Thursday &amp; Sunday
949 .5491
RACINE ,O.
SARA H&amp; JOAN TUTTLE . OWNERS

special.

~: Personal Notes : :

The new Mayt ag H1yh1ander A 10 7 • all
I abrie was h•n g ab11ity with perf or man c e
c omparable to ou r J'l rt;!v•ous Model A206 .
but at new lo w pr1 c es

,BAKERY GOODS
Stop in and Register .
Door prize and gift
cert ifi cates to be given
away.
No purchase
necessary .

POMEROY - Members of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will be pitching in any day now to create a
float suitable for the eight queen contestants in the Big Bend
Regatta Weekend parade on June 15.
The sorority is handling the' details of the queen se lection and
has been named to provide the float for the queen contestants in
the parade. Formerly, a flo3t for these contestants was " im~
ported'' for lhe parade but not this year. The sorority has a 'lot of
talented members so the float crea tion will probably be pretty

~ Pomeroy . . . Ill

ANNOUNCING ·
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6 , 10 Til6 P.M.

Anita Fultz girl of year

PAUL CASC!, ACT!VE with fudd raising of the Meigs County
Cancer Society, reports that $374 for the driv~ . was realized
through crusade buckboards placed in business houses. Casci
extends much thanks to tavern operators who permitted the
buckboards in their establishments.
DON'T LOOK FOR YOUR Meigs County Fair premium book
to arrive in the mail this year. There were many duplications in
the sa me families for the books so the lair board has decided that
r.:~::::::~:::=::::::::~z::-.::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::~=:~=:=:.:;:.
residents can pick up a copy of the premiUm book at the various
business houses when they purchase their membership tickets to
go on sale soon.
POMEROY'S CLEAN-UP WEEK went over so big that
em1=~vyes were not able to get around to e~eryone in th ~ week
designated and so extended the pick up penod a lew days. And
everyone was able to get rid of all that winter clutter. A good
: Louise Conde has returned to
· · 1
·
gesture on the part of employes and village offtcta s.
her home at Pittsburgh, Pa.
.
THE M.C-M SCOUTING DISTRICT roundtables will be held
&amp;Iter spendtng three w~eks at 7:30p.m. on June l4 at the Kyger Creek High School. Topic for
~ere with her stster, Be tha .. the month will be planning of swnmer activities so that scoutmg
Conde.
can be carried out on a year-round basis .
THE RAWLINGS-COATS, Ewing and Martln Funeral
: Miss Sue Weaver of
lacksonvtlle, Fla. spent the ' Homes of Meigs County are continuing limited ambulance
¥emonal Day weekend here
,·ce until the new emergency medical service goes mto ac~
·
't
'
h
th
M
serv
ytst rng er mo er,
rs. ti
The funeral homes had announced for weeks that t he serfl,ichard Weaver and her
?n . would Qe disc ontinued on June 1. However, when the
brother, Phil Weaver, of :~:rgency medical setvice hit 8 snag or two on: getting started
Syracuse .. On Monday . af- by June I, Friday, the personnel of the funeral homes ~eld a
·~rnoon Mtss Weaver and her quick. conference and agreed without any delay on contmumg
J}'lOther were the guests of Mrs. serviCe in order to serve· the public ..
R,eva Vaughan, Pomeroy. She
WE KNOW THERE ARE a number of coin coUectors about,
also visited her brother and but how about medaUion _collectors? More and more these
Sister.in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
dallions in honor ()[ special occasions or people are bemg
Roger Weaver and son, Bryan, ~etributed. One of the latest is by Van Brook of Lexington , Inc.,
~Pomeroy and her brother-in- N~rth Branch 5044 , Lexington, Ky. , and it is a mystic medallion
l!Jw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. based on the magic squares of ancient Egypt and the 12 Signs of
l!oy Van Meter, Becky and the Zodiac.

CLASSES SCHEDULED
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
community vacation Bible
school will be held from 9:30
a.m. to ll :30 a.m. each day
Monday through Friday, June
4-8. There will be le~son s,
crafts a nd re£reshments with a
picnic on Thursday and the
closing program on Friday.

OPEN HOUSE

Kari&lt;J Kay Beat

Couple will·be honored

MONDAY
RACINE Chapter
1:14,
POMEROY' - Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Nease will he
O.E.S., Masonic Temple, 8
honored
by their children on their &gt;Oth wedding anniversary
p.m. ln iliatory work for two
on Sunday, June 17. An open house will be held from 2 to 4
candidates will be exemplified .
p.m . at the family home in the Nease Settlement. Mr. and
·Officers are to wen1· fonnals .
Mrs. Nease were married on June 18, 1923 at the Pomeroy
Annual inspection of Racine
Methodist
parsonage by the Rev . Fred 0. Weed. They are the
Cha pter will be held on J une 1:1
• parents of lour children, Arthur, Pomeroy, Route 3; Ruth,
at the Temp le, 8 p.m.
Grove City; Carl, Columbus; and Stanley, at home . They
MEIG S County Salon 710,
have seven grandchildren and two great.grandchildren.
Eig ht Hnd Forty , home of Mr::;.
Belatives friends and neighbors are invited to can during
Harry Davi s. 7::10 p.m.
the open house hours.
'
Members to take bottle caps.
POMEROY - Middleport
I.ion.s Club directors, special
meeting, 7 p .m. at the
Columbus and Sou thern Ohio
Electric Co.
HACINI': - Mrs. Dale E. surprise party for their 30th
HACINF: BAJYfiST Church Hart of Fort Meade, Md.,
wedding anniversary.
D£~ily V&lt;.~ cation Bible Sdwol, honored her parents, Mr. and
Gifts were presented to the
.June 4-8, 6 to g p. m . each Mrs . 8dison Brace of Racine,
couple and cake, ice cream and
c veuin~. Commencement on Sunda y', May 27, with a
corfee were served throughout
prognun on Sunday, .J une 10, Hl
the afternoon .
7:30 p. Ill.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
POMilROY Chamber or
Dale E . Hart and their threeComtnerce Monday at no'On at
yea r-old daughter, GilUI; Mrs.
Meigs Inn .
Pearl .(\dams, Miss V~ra
REEDSVILLE - Reedsv ille
VACATION Bible School
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs . Elza
beginnin g Monday through Girl Scout Troop 67 gave a Birch, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Saturday, June 9, from 9· a.m. far ewell party recently lor Roush , Mr. and Mrs. Titus
Oebr&lt;.t Lc·wis who is moving to
lo 11 a.m . Ht Entcrpri:le United
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Games
were
Ke
ntu
cky
.
Me lhodis t Ch urc h. Clos in g
Hayman, and Keith, Mrs.
prog ram on S.Jtu n.l ay at 7 p.m . dircctetl by Susan H&lt;.tnnuni and Bertha Robinson , Mrs. Holton
All children fronl prc-::;ch_ool Kay Balderson on which all U1e Wolfe, Jr . and sons, Mr. and
age through junior high Hre seoul'S n .'&lt;.'c ived prizeS. Mrs. Mrs. Blythe Theiss, Mr. and
Barbara Hannum taught the
wel come .
Mrs. Linley Hart, and Mr. and
~-:iris a new game which was
MEIGS Chapter , Order o£
Mrs. Ronald Hart.
greatl y en joyed.
OcM olay wi ll meet at 7::10 p.m :
The girls presented Debbie a
Monday at Middleport Metsoni c
gir l scout atitog1·a ph book and
Temp le. Initiatory work to be
bt·aeelel. l':a ch girl signed the
exemp lified. Ma ster Mi:i suns
book . He fres hme nts of ice
and OcMulay invited .
cream, brown~es a nd punch
The Ohio Environmental
were
served
to
the
above
and
SCIIOO!. llA YS SET
rrotection Agency reminds
HOCK SPR I NC:S .:... Th e Theresa Dttilcy, Dinnc Eva ns, Ohioans that they can ge.t help
11m.: k Spri n~s Unitetl Methodist Judy Holter, Bonnie Dailey, with environmental problems
Chu rch' will hold Bible sci10ul Sheila Buchanan, Candy by calling the Ohio EPA
Daihiy, ·K im Reed, Lori Ombudsman's toll -free
i fl for two weeks slc;trtin"t&gt; Monw
in dt:ty , June 4, through June 15. Mas-ters, Ca rla Cowdery, number 1-S00-262-0270. Get .
I·lours of the school will be from Teresa Hannum , Brenda involved for a better enHucker a nd Kellie Powell.
vironment!
9c:!O to 1UO a.111. each doy.

RUTLAND, 0.

MIDOLE PORT, 0.

I

,,

Windbreaker• und '

other

outerwear .

�12-The Sunday TinK• -Sentinel, s..: Jay, June 3, 1973
::=::!::::::;;:~::==:~::::!&gt;:·=·=·=·:...............:·:·:·:·=·:·.·.·.?·

HOPE the recently formed t6-member Gallia County
Commumty Center Board has more suceess in lbe future than
previous individuals or groups who tried to get programs off lbe
ground and moving around here.

+++
SIX years ago, community leaders 1Chamber of Commerce
Jay"""s and others) began a strong campaign for additionai
recreation facilities(both indoor and out) in tbe Gallia County
area. for more lban two years, committeemen worked diligently
on several projecr,;. Today, many plans, dreams and ideas
prepared a half decade ago remain on the drawing board .

+++

't
TRELL SCHOENLEB Of St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, and Miss Lenora Michael
of St. John's Lulberan Church, Minersville, have played active roles in compiling a Mei~s
County Hclpmg ScrV&gt;ces Directory hstmg helping service organizations and agencies in the
county. The book will be distributed this week.

Directory is completed
POMEROY - Two local
churches, St. John 's Lutheran
Ch urch , MinerSville, and St.
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy, have combined their

efrorts on a comm unity
ministeries project.
Togell1er they have compiled
an extensive directory of all
the
helping
services
organizations and agencies in
Meigs County. The directory
contains over 300 listings including addresses, phone
numbers and services offered
of each organization or agency.

The directory is broken down

MEANWHILE, neighboring Athens County began a similar
project around 1968 or 1969. Today, Athens boasts a new $360,0110
temperature controlled olympic size swinuning pool, Lake
Snowden, numerous softball fields, a new baseball diamond , and
one of the finest organized recreation prog~ams (more than 30
activities to choose from) in the state. Athens has something to
offer for everybody, young or old, male or female.

+++
MONEY, or the lack of it has been the big drawback in this
neck of the woods despite all the federal handouts in the late
1960s. The state is currently receiving approximately $10 million
annually in federal aid for recreation development. It appears,
however, those who have it are the ones receiving more flUlds to
improve existing facilities. Apparently those who have little or
nothing to offer need to do a little more screaming, from the local
level all the way to Washington.

two congregations took part in
in to numerous categories such a self-study along with several
as agricultural services, other Lutheran churches
churches, emergency squads, located in southeastern Ohio. It
fire departments, government became apparent that no such
+++
offices, medical assistance, directory really existed for
THE Ohio Department of Natural Resources announced
physicians and all the various Meigs county and that one was Friday it will inventory more than 10,0110 public and private
social services.
definitely needed. It is hoped recreation areas in the state this swnmer to determine the
Ea c h service is listed lha t the directory will help the quantity, quality and potential of Ohio's outdoor recreation
alphabetically under its various helping agencies and facilities .
category and can be easily grou ps deliver ll1eir services to
+++
located on a table of contenr,; those who are in need .of them
"THE inventory is being conducted in cooperation with the
Ohio
Agricultural Research and Development Center and the U.
page.
and to cooperate in referring
The ide~ for such a com- persons to eac.h other when S. Soil Conservation Service . Results of the inventory (type of
management and ownership, size, location and characteristics
munity ministeries project different help is needed.
first was mentioned when the
In order to get the directory fees, and types of facilities for aged anci handicapped) will b~
·
out to those who will need it a released tiy the state department in December.
+++
special mailing will be done
FOR the outdoorsmen, Gallia has Tycoon Lake for fishing,
during this first week in June to
several
private fishing lakes, a small camping area and fishing
a bout 200 agencies and
pond at the junior fairgrounds, the Upstream Public Use Area
industrial .arts, David Cur- organizations .
and
Gallipolis Boat Club for boaters, a nine hole golf course
Three persons who have done
nutte;
french,
Shirley .
which is becoming overcrowded as more and more take up the
Skaggs; socia l studies, Tom most of the work on the special
game,
a 34-year-old out-dated swimming pool, a baseball
Withrow; home economics, ministeries project are Miss
diamond, two tennis courts and Little League diamond on
Nina Dillard; English, Vinton Lenora Michael of St. John's
Memorial Field plus several "make shift" softball diamonds
Rankin; Latin, Jackie Burnett; Lutheran Church and Trell
throughout the county and the Gallia County Gun Club. For the
speech, Shirley Skaggs; Schoenleb and Mrs . Ann
insiders, there's the French Art Colony, intramural basketball,
science, Vinton Rankin; Ryther of St. Paul Lutheran
District
Library, movies, baton twirling and dance st udios.
mathematics, Diane Polcyn; Church . If someone should
+++
vocal music, Tom Withrow ; want an extra copy of the
TWENTY
YEARS
AGO,
from
the·files of the Daily Tribune
in s trumental music, Jeanie directory they may receive one
. and weekly Gallia Times ... Elliott Appliances leaves location at
Clay and Marshall french; by calling Schoenleb al992-2074
Third and Court St., relocates at Third and Pine ... Gallipolis
typing, Terry Hall ; com- or Miss Michael at 985-2331.
Kiwanis Club stages musical variety show to help raise funds for
mercial, Nina Dillard; newsyouth camp near Rio Grande ... Army Pvt. Gary T. Bane home
paper, Pam McCarty and Nina
on 21-day leave, will report to Spain for next assignment,,, Carl
Dillard; bookkeeping, Kathy
Nibert named business membership chairman of arumal Boy
/ •
Gardner; sho rthand , Terry
Scout fund·raising campaign .. . Steve McKean. 18, to enter U. R ·
Ha ll ; editor-in-chief, 'l'erry
Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md., alter completing freshman
Hall and co-editor , Shirley
year of college at University of Tennessee. ·
Skaggs.

Students honored
CHESHIRE - Miss Diane
Polcyn, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald C. Polcyn, Rl. 1,
Gallipolis, and Vinton Rankin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Rankin, Rt. 1, Cheshire, were
the top students honore d
recently at lbe annual Awards
Assembly at Kyger Creek High
School.
Miss Polcyn was the
valedictorian of the 1973
graduating class, Rankin ir,;
salutatorian.
Orland Cremeans, a four
year Ieiterman in football,
basketball, baseball and track
was presented the athletic key.

Cremeans was awarded afl
athletic scholarship to Glenville State College earlier this
year. He is lbe son of Mrs. Lee
Cremeans of Cheshire and the
late Bill Cremeans.
Other awards and 'their
recipients were: Chess Club,
Bert Moshier; art , D.iane
Polcyn and David Freeman;

..

Gold more. than
•
ever precwus
in world marts

Hughes has
new kind of
wrist watch

Shirley Skaggs

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.
(UP! ) - Top executives of the
Hughes Aircraft Corp. are
Wearing new wri'st watches
which have no d~als, no hands,
CHESHIRE
Shirley no moving parts, but will tell
Skaggs, a senior at Kyger . tifne electronically when a
Creek Higl] School , placed 15th button is pushed .
in the statewide individual
The company has announced
competition in the English 12 lbe new watch will be on the
test of the · Ohio Tests of market by August and
Scholastic
Achievement projected that by 1980, 300
second annual individual and million of them would be sold
each year .
team awards program .
The watch, powered by two
Miss Skaggs was second in
the District Division Ill tiny batteries, has a plain black
competition, eighth in the face. But when buttons on the
side arC pressed, the · time in
district regardless of class.
Linda Jenkins placed third in hours, minutes and seconds,
ll1e district in french II ; Terry . and the date of the month, flash
Luca s, a junior, placed-second on the face as lighted digits.
in the district in French 11 and
The company said that in·
George
Thompson,
a stea d of moving parts, the
sophomore, placed sixth in the watch employes a tiny quartz
district in biology. Students crysta l which vibrates to tick
may pic'k-up their certificates off minutes and seconds with a
of achievement at the office of pulse of more than 5,000 times
Principal John C. Wickline.
per second. The watch has
1,500 transistors, compared

15th in state

!I you're fighting a losing battle
. agarnst heat and humidity in your
Mobile Home , . ,

r---------------------..
Graduating Seniors

IN HOSPITAL
POMEROY - Mrs. Robert
Kuhn is a patient at the Holzer
Medical Center for medical
treatment. Her room number
is 507.

DIPLOMA COURSES
Secretarial

12 Months

Executive Secretarial
18 Months

Business Administration
18 Months

General Office .

.

9 Months

Forked Run ready

Mc3ke somethin g real of your future. Give yourself the
5kills which bring in a worthwhile paycheck . And give you
a ch;;mce to advance! Attend a school where the sole
purpose is solid business training and career placement.
All courses are VA Approved . Wr ite, visit, or call446 -4367
for free bulletin.
·

By BOB HOEFLICH
REEDSVILLE - ts camping
slipping as the " thing" of so
many people? Is it too early in
the season? Or, has the cold,
rainy spring weather been the
discouragi ng factor to those
who like to take to the great

Gallipolis Business College
36 Locust

Str~et

Gallipoli5o

Approved by State Board of
School and College Registration
Reg. Nn 11 ·02·00328

Townhouse
Apartments

By United Press luternatlonal
PARIS - THE NEEDLENOSED supersonic ·jetliner was the
pride of Russian aviation, jewel of its exhibition at the Paris Air
Show and lbe plane designed to prove Soviet superiority in
civilian air travel. While 300,0110people watched Sunday, the first
production model of the Tupolev 144 plunged 500 feet to ground in
a fireball as it began a swee ping turn at the end of a flight over
Bourget Airfield.
Fourteen people were killed ~ all six crew members aboard
the plane and eight persons on the ground as flaming chunks of
the aircraft fell on Goussainville, a town of 15,000, and smashed
into 15 houses. Another 28 persons were injW'ed. Aviation experts
said the crash was a heavy blow to Soviet hopes of corner in g a
major share of the future market for supersonic carriers. Its
designers had predicted the TU144 c9uld fly from Paris to New
York in about three hours and would revolutionize commercial
travel.

Pays You •••
'23.96 per month

Pays You •••
'50.00 per month
(Minimum Deposit, $10,000)

,,...

-------

367-7250

INTRODUCING 2 NEW
MEMBERS OF OUR
TEACHING STAFF:
ROBERT SHAVER

A-C-M-1-A
ATHENS COUNTY
MONTHLY INCOME
ACCOUNT

LONDON - THE PRICE Of GOLD, al ready at record
highs, jumped to a new peak, for London , of $121.50 an ou nce in
early trading today. The dollar rode the other end of a financial
see-saw and dropped to a new low in West Germany .
Some dealers linked the flight from the dollar into gold to the
latest reports about lbe Watergate affair . "The longer Watergate
drags on and the more revelations crop up, the more the dollar is
likely to come under pressure ," said a spokesman for the London
merchant bank of N. M. Rothschild and Son~. Ltd .

INTEREST CHECKS MAILED
MONTHLY
OR QUARTERLY.

ATLANTA -,- DISSIDENT PRESBYTERIANS have voted to
remain independent of all national church organhations. An
organizing committee for churches which withdrew from the
parent Presbyterian Church of the U. S. issued policy recommendations in a weekend meelin~ and scheduled a full advisory
convention for Aug. 7-9 in Asheville, N. C. The 38-memher
committee, represe nting churches in 11 states, proposed -th at '•no
(Continued on Page 8)
All deposits are insured to $20,000. 00 by the
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.

COLUMBUS (UP I) - Bill
Moyers, National Ertucational
Television commentator and
press aide to former President
Lyndon B. Johnson, said Sunday one of the most dangerous
effects of Watergate may be
the feeling among many Americans "there's nothing we can
do to solve it."
Moyers , addressing the Capital University graduating
class, said President Nixon
formed ••a goverrunent within
a government, run by seryants
whose loyally is not to country,
party, or even self, but unto the
rhan who hired them."

Call 992 .5321 For Free Estimate

Foreman &amp; Abbott

•..

BRUNICARD I
The Flemish giant. which
averages 14 pounds a n d
sometimes .gets as heavy as
22 pounds . is the largest
bn•ed of rabbit.

54 S1a1e Sl.

Galllpolis
Phone 446-0687
Headquarters for CONN
World's Most Preferred Musical Instruments.

Offices Also At 12 Mill St., Athens, 0.
.tours: Mon .- Wed .~ 9 to 3- Thurs. 9to Noon-Friday 9to 6-Sat., 9to noon

•&lt;

.~

MONDAY. JUNE 4, 1973

PHONE 992 2156

TEN CENTS

Increased · debt
•
limit IS asked
WASHINGTON I UP! ) - The
administration asked Congres::;
today to raise by $20 billion the
limit on the amount of in·
debtedness the government
can legally incur.
Treasury Secretary George
P. Shultz asked for a new debt
ceili ng of $486 billion in
.testimony before the House
Ways a;nd Means Committee.
He also:
- ' Proposed that
. a 51fz pet.
limitation on the amount of
interes t that can be' paid to
holders of U.S. savings bonds
be removed, making possible a
better yield for future bonds.
The public now holds more
than $58 billion worth of
savings bonds.
- Propos~d elimination of a

..

~

pet. interest rate ceiling ceili.rig. The permanent ceiling
which applies to all but $10 ceiling . The p,crmanenh ccilinv
billion worth of other Treasury is $400 billi vn but the tembOnds, which are usually sold porary ceiling supersedes it.
to big institutions.
A $485 billion ce iling would
This would cost more taX leave the government with an
money but Shultz said it would anticipated cash balance of $6
lead to better management of billion and a $3 billion margih
the enormous government for unexpected contingencies
debt.
and a debt of $472 billion by
. - Asked for a law to give lbe Juhc 30, t974, Shultz said.
Treasury authority to issue
income tax refuhds in the fot'IH
of a .Check whiCh 1 if uncashed
-by the recipient, would become
an interest-bear ing bond . The
need to borrow billions of
dollars every spring to pay out
income ta x refunds com~
plicates the Treasury 's handA sui t for money, one for
cancellation of a land in~
ling of the national debt.
h 1
k d f
st:Ji hncnl con~ract and two
S u tz as c or a on:·year · divorcc.s have been filed in

414

Actions for
money filed

Letter faked
WASHINGTON !UP! ) Convi c t ed
Water~ate
mastermind G. Gordon Liddy
and his secretary - Sally
J ackson Harmony - prepared
a fake letter authorizing entry
to the headquarters of
Democratic preside nti al
candidate George McGovern,
it was learned today .
Sources close to lhe
Watergate probe sa id the letter
carr ied the phony signature of
McGovern's
campaign
director Gary Hart and
authorized the bearer to make
repairs at the campaign office.
Mrs. Harmony is the leadoff
. witness Tuesday when lbe
Senate Watergate Committee
resumes its televised hearings
on the bugging s.c andal. She
has also acknowledged typing
swnmaries of conversatio ns
from the bugged telephones at
Democratic
national
headquarters. She .is a native of
Nelsonville, Ohio.
Watergate
In
other
developments:
- Bolh the Washington Pos t
and The New · York Times
·' reported - in their Sunday
editions that former White·
House Counsel John W. Dean

The Nixon administration
" f.emoved from our society
those
things
whic h
distinguished us from all other
forrris of govetrunent," he said.
Watergate has caused a dangerous shift in the mood of the
people, Moyers said, from
optimism and pride in the
"Great American Dream" to
pessimism and a feelin g that
"we shall not.overcome.''
" We have the feeling we
have somehow lost control of
our destiny," he said. "All the
virtues and verities we
believed in as Americans have

III has told investigators that
President Nixon was involved
in ths first four months of ti)is
year in more than 30
discussions of cover~up aspects
of the scandal. The White House
issued a catcgot·ical denial of
the report, saying it appeared
to be part or a cam paign
against Nixon " using innuendo, distortion of fact anf
outright falsehood. "
- 111e New York Times
reported today that a se ries of
hi g h-level
CIA
memos
revealed that fBI , CIA and
White House officials viewed
the Watergate investigation as
(Continued on Page 8)

Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.,
Pomeroy, s ued Frank E. and
Donna Young, Pomeroy, for
$1,720.05 , and Hoy Brown,
Pomeroy ... filed &lt;.~n action
agains t J. E. Gluenscamp,
Coshocton , City ~xtcrminating
Co. , ~nd Hobert L. McGuail,
both of Zanesvi lle, for cance llilti.on of a land insta llment
contract . The plaintiff, Brown,
is seeking $8,000 from Gl uem ~
camp and $10,000 from Ci ty
Exterminating and McGuail.
Filing for divorce were J!a G.
O"borne, Long Bottom, Rl. 1,
against Harry Osborne,
Middleport, and Gerald D.
Wilkinson, Long Bottom ,
&lt;Jgainst Edna G. Wilkin'Kln,
Akron, each chHr~inJ!: gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

Child injured

David L. Lynch, age five , of
Columbus, was tr eated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for injur ies sustained when
str uck by an auto Saturday
afternoon on Rt. 71 north ~f the
Gallia-Meigs County line.
According to the Gallia •
Meigs Post Stale Highway
Patrol, the child ran into ths
path of an auto driven by
Donald B. Spires , Jr., 19, Rl . 1,
Gallipolis. Spires was not held.
The hospital said today David
was in s~tisfactory condition.
been torn down."
Merrill L. Ewing, 73, Rio
"The real sickness of lhis
Grande: was charged with'
society is not that we have
£ailure t_o stop within the
problems, but that we think
assured
clear
distance
there's nothing we can do to
following an accident Saturday
solve them, " Moyers said .
aftern oon at the junction of Rt.
Moyers said there are two 35 and Mitchell Rd. in Gallia
steps to resurrecting the County.
The patrol said Ewing 's ca1·
American faith and optimism
s
truck
the rear uf an auto
- "C. realistic appraisal' ' of the
sit uation and a belief that prob- · ope rated by Cheryl J . Sands,
lems can be corrected.
19, Rt. 1, Patriot. There was
·'On ly t\\~O things can ruin moderate da1m1 ge; no one was
injured .
this country," he said . "O ne is
Richard E. Cremeans, 25,
a blindness to reality, the other
Gallipoli!;i , wa s cited to
tho altitude that nothing ca n be
Municipal Court for insCc:ure
done .".

National ills diagnosed

JOHN MEEK

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Uoner.
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better air circulation.
•
Engine~red for quiet opera• Amana Electro-coating fintion . indoors and out.
ish for maximum rust pro~
tection .

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXV NO. 35

J•

WASHINGTON - THE SENATE IS EXPECTED to adopt
legislation this Week intended to assure that the burden caused
by gasoline shortages is shared by all sectio ns oi the nation - not
chiefly the Midwest. A vote on the measure, expected Tuesday,
comes on the heels of charges by Sen. James Abourezk, D..S.D.,
lbalthe big oil firms have "artificially contrived " the oil and gas
shortage by deliberately wilbholding crude oil supplies from
Midwest independent refineries .
Abourezk , in a letter to President Nixon released Sunday,
called for immediate investigation by the Justice Depart merit for
antitrust violations. " l am convinced that the present shortage of
fuel supply for the Midwest is artificially contrived to force the
independent sector of the industry out of business and to get a
.price increase," he said.
The Senate bill would establish a mandatory system of
gasoline allocation to assure an equitable distribution of any
fuels in short supply and ~ould prohibit majo~ refiners t'rom
charging independent sellers more than lhey charge their own
outlets. So far, 1,020 independent gasoline stations have been
forced out of business because of the gasoline scarcity.

DORIS HENSLER, fULL-TIME secretary at Forked
Run State Park, is ready to help campers mak e reservations 1
all of which arc marked on a map behind her . A part-time
. ofrice employe is Miss Bertha Archer.

lkt:oted To The lnlf're.&lt;l.&lt; OJ The Meig.&lt;-Ma.&lt;on Area

WASH!NGTPN - A fACTION IN THE Pentagon io
prepared to sabotage the all-volunteer military system and Ioree
a return to the draft, the official who directed the change to the
volunteer concept charged Sunday. Roger T. Kelley, who has
resigned as the Defense Department's assistant secretary for
manpower, made the charge as he completed preparations to
return to his old job as personnel director for the Caterpillar
Tractor Co.
'
"As I leave I am very sensitive that some are· reacting to my
departure and the adversaries of the draft-free military are
bolder and more frequent in lb eir acts of sabotage against the
system," Kelley told UP!.
foes of tbe all-volunteer concept "can demonstrate a need
for the draft by letting failures occur," Kelley said. He sa id
opponents could set health or intelligence standards that were
unrealistically high or set recruiting goals that had never before
been r·e ached "and then observe that once agaih the services
have missed their goals·."

2 Bedroom
Townhouses
11fz Baths

year' s $2.25 a day . Park
manager this year is Doyle
Smales .
The park offers swimming,
rree to anyone wi shing to
partake; free picnic grounds,
play e:~rea s for children,
fishing, and a concession sta nd
for food . bait, and renta l boats.
There are heuted showers and
laundramats on the grounds.

enttne

INews
..
in
Briefs!
:
•
•

Accounts.-.~

Automatical ly
Ren ewa ble

%

for ll1e anticipated deluge of
business. In fact , Memorial
Day weekend, despite bad
weather , campers were turned
away .
The park ha s 1~8 camp sites,
each of which can accommodate 10 persons. The fee
for cam psites has been
reduced to $1.50 a day from last

•

'1=""""~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::.·:·:::::::::::::::::·:;.;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;:::::::::::-::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::.

(Minimum Deposit, $5,000)

TWO-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

outdoors?
Whatever
the
reason ,
beautiful forked Run State
Park resembled a ghost town
Thursday afternoon. Swimmers, cam pers and rishermen
were sca rce but maintenance
personnel were busy about the

794 acres getting them in shape

TED LEHEW, SON Of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lehew of
Pomeroy and a student at Heidelberg College, on his job as
one of several lifeguards employed in the swimming area at
forked Run Lake. Ted had only four people on the beach
Thursday afternoon, but expects more action iJS Lhe tem ~
peratures rise. A Meigs High football and wrestling sta r,
Lehew is a sophomore member of the Student Prince varsity
grid squad.

1

c

•

"·

NEW QUARTER BEGINS JUNE 12

Monthly Income

%%

In Accounting '

12 Months

c:;;;;~.....;·_,)

ONE-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSIT

WHETHER THE PARKS IS CROWDED or not, maintcnan&lt;'C personnel such as !IIi&gt; l 'a&gt;l·
go about their perpetual duties of keeping t'orked Run Park attractive.

CAREER TRAINING
FOR A REWARDED FUTURE

TARA

LONDON (UP!) -The price
of gold rocketed to an all-lime
high for the London market
Friday as the dollar plunged to
LINDA ROUSH
a 31).year low in West Germany
and bullion dealers Satilrday
predicted gold would go even
higher this week.
Market dealers attributed
gold's soaring price, which
progressed from $90 an ounce a
month ago to Friday's brief
tecord
London high of $120
MASON - Linda Lou Roush,
1973 graduate of Wahama High before closing at $117.75, to
School. has been chosen lor a nagging doubr,; about currency
stability and President Nixon's
~4,000 coolarship at West
Pay Only One
Virginia -wesleyan College in meeting with french President
George
Pompidou.
Utility
Buckhannon.
The spokesman at a Swiss
Miss Roush, daughter of Mr.
bank,
forecasting further
Addison, Ohio
and Mrs. James Roush of New
Haven plans to enter the problems for the dollar, said
nursing· career. She was .a gold "could go even higher
For Information
member of the National Honor next week." The official buying
Call Shirley .... ··;ns
Society,
Choral
Group, price of gold, set by the United
States,
is
still
$42
an
ounce.
Wahama Band and was also a
The price of gold hit $128 on
member of the West Virginia
the Paris market at one point
All..State Band this year.
last monll1.
..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
She was active in the future
Homemakers of America and
was awarded the F .H.A. Girl of
the Year in the Wahaina
Chapter for 1972.
This year, Linda received the
commercial typing award. She
is a member of the United
Methodist Church where she is
active in the choir and Youth
Fellowship.
A graduate of OSU with a. BME, he was a
member ofOSU Marching Band lor 4 years &amp; is a
member of Phi Mu Alpha Symphonia honorary
with the average 20 transistors
fraternity. He has 8 years of public school exof electroncc watches, and the
perience
&amp; has had consistent successes with
firm claims the watch is acstudents in marching &amp; concert band contesr,; &amp;
curate within one minute per
solo &amp; ensemble contests.
year.
He will teach Trombone, Trunipet; Euphonium,
The watch will not be
B·flal Clarinet, all Saxophones &amp; beginning
marketed by Hughes itself, but
Plano. He will leach on Mondays.
ir,; parts sold to franchised
companies for installation in
casing of the customers'
is presently working on his doctorate in music.
choice, the company said. First
He is a qualified banjo teacher &amp; wlll be teaching
production models are exbanjo here on Fridays.
pected to sell at $175 but go
~
· Come ln.&amp; Choose From Our Larbe Selections of
down to less than $50, once
Banjos In Stock.
mass production is under way .

Miss Roush has
won scholarship
valued at $4, 000

TICKETS AVAILABLE
I'O~IEROY -Tickets are
on sale for tbe first annual
Meigs High Sehool A!UIIlni
Danee to be held June 30 at
the Meigs High School
gymnasium rrom 9 p.m. unlll
I a.m. Tickets for the dance
are f2 and membership dues
for the association are $1.
The dance is open to all
alumni and tbeir guests
Including the graduating
classes or 1968 through 1973.
All resen·allons must be
made by June 22.
Tickets are on advance
sale at The Quality Print
Shop, Middleport; Miller
Brothers, Rutland; New
York Clothing, Pomeroy,
and VIllage Pharmacy,
Middleport. Tickets may
also he purchased by sending
the money to Jo Ellen Diehl,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

Tf!E ATTRACTIVE, spacious home of Mr. and Mrs. James Ricknwn, r;oo c:r,lnl St. ,
Middleport, was the scene for the Sunday af.ternoon tea given by the Meigs County fltulliHII '
SOciety . Above. Mrs. Roscoe Fowler, who ptcsidcd ~:1t the tea service 1:; st·r ving, l ~r., Mr.'&gt;.
Clinton F'ishcr, Mrs . Car l Will, Mrs. F'r;mk Lewi s Hnd Mrs. Ri(!lun&lt;.lll.

Murder in second
charged to wo~nan
A second deg1·ee murder
charge was filed this morning
itgainst motorcycle stunt rider
Wanda Lee McGraw , 20,
Stuart, F'l1:1.., in the shootin g
death at 2:49 a . m . today of
Steve Landin, 22, also of Stuart, ·
flo .
The shootin g occurr·t~.d in the
couples' trailer home which is
parked on the Deggeller's Fun
festival lot at the Silver Bridge
Shoppin g Plaza. Ga ll ia County
Sheriff James W. Saunders
said Miss McGraw apparently
s hot Landin followin g a
domestic quarrel. OHicers said
they had lived together for
some Ume and were believed to
be planning to be married.
Landin was hit twice..Y.·ith .22
ca liber pistol slugs, once just
below the breast and once in
the abdOmen.
Dr . Donald R. Warehime.

load fo ll owi ng an accident at
4:15 p .m . Saturday on Rt. :r5,
one and eight tenths of a mile
west of Rl. 588.
Officers reported a bale of
h8y fell from Crerneans'
tractor trailer into the path of
an auto operated by Thomas
M. Sain , 65, Rt. 1, Wh~elcrs­
burg.
James W. Settle,' &gt;8, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, was , cited to ny United Press International
Meigs County Co.u rl for , exSpeakers told graduating
cessive speed for conditions college seniors at ca mpuses
following an accident at 10 :30 across the country Sunday that
a .m . Sunday in Meigs County t h~ Watergate scanda l wa., an
near township road 31. Settles ass &lt;.~ult on the Constitution and
car collided in a curve with an has shaken public confidence
~uto driv~n by Lawrence G. in the le8dership and stability
Johnston, 19, Rl. 1, Portland, of the United Slates.
There was moderate damage
to both vehicles.
" The Watergate plot appears
A final accident occurred at to have heen ser iously subver6:05 p.m . .on Rt. 7, one and .sive of our electoral processes
three tenths miles south of Rt. and potenticllly very dangerous
218 where William E. Griffith, for a free society" sa id
32, Rt. 2, Crown City , lost Col umbia University President
control of his car which was ' William ,J. McGill .
pulling a camper trailer. Th~
Becatl•e of this, McGill told
car struck a guardrail and graduates of PaCe College in
f{.!nce , ca usin g the trailer to f'ew Vorl( City. " there is a
C(lpSize .
wilkspre('l(\ J;~ck .of confidence

GalliH County Coroner declined Crimin1::1l Inves ti gation.
In other court action, Horiald
to rule on the exact cH usc or
Rnger
Dowdy, :12, Front Royal,
death until ali autopsy i:-;
pcrfonncd . Both were em~ Va., entered a not guilty plea to
ployed at the Deggeller Car- charges of breaking (Jnd enniv;.ll which is completing a two l.ering and grand larceny at
week engagemen t at the Gillingham Drug Store .
A preliminary hearing was
shopping center.
Miss McGraw entered a not set for F riday, June Hth . Bond
guilty plea this morning in was sel at $5,000 on the B&amp;E
charge 1::1nd $2,500 on the gr;md
G:.~Jiipolis Municipal Court.
Her court-appointed attorney, larceny charge.
Hawlin C. King, requested a
HIKER DIF.S
preliminary hearing .• Judge
Mrs.
Emma 1Grandma )
Robert S. Betz will conduct it
Tuesday, June 12 beginning at Gatewood,_ Ga llipolis, national
9:30 a. m. Bmid was set at hiking figure in her 80s, died
ea rly this morning .
$50,000.
Conducting the investigation
we,re
Sheriff
Sau nd ers,
LOCAL TEMPS
Deputies Richard Kuhn and
TemperatUre in dOwntOwn
Bill Wells, Dr .· Warehime ,
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a . m.
Prosecuting Attorney Gene
was 83 degrees under partly
Wetherholt and Agent Herman
cloudy skies.'
Henry of the Bureau of

Seniors told nation shaken
in the leadership and stability
of the United States ."
Sen. Sam J . Ervin, D-N.C. ,
dwirman of the Senate panel
investigating the bugg ing "Snd
covcrup, said he was anxious to
ge t to the hea rt of the matter .
" The people should not have
to wait three to s ix to eight
months," Ervin told the graduating dass at Wilkes College
in Wilkes-Barre , Pa . "I- would
hope thatlbe he•rings could be
com pleted this month and that
key White House perso nnel
would lake the stand during
that time."
Sen. Hubert Humphrey, DMinn., told graduates at the
Georgetown Uriiversity Law
School in Washington, " The

events of Waterg&lt;Jte and the
related assaUlt on the constit u~
tiona ! perogatives of Congress
~how the dirferem:e between
strong representative gove rn·mcnt and oppressive go vern ~
rnenl dedicated to ,preserving
power for its own , rather than
ror the people 's, sake ..,

.

"

Humphr.ey said, " There is no
mention whatever of the steps
government might have to take
to protect itself .aga inst the
people or to prese1·ve its own
pcrogatives. The sin1ple, directt
langwge of our founders offers
the. most reliable guide in
recapturing one's bearings and
in deciding what has to be
done ."

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~ T~ SWlday Times -:&gt;entinel,SWlaay. June 3. JJI7.&gt;.'- --::=

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mitchell for plots

Father's Day will soon be here. Come to the Furniture
Department on ·the 3rd floor and pick out a nice Berkline
or Kroehler Recliner to be delivered for that special day.

WASHINGTON ( UP! ) President Nixon's two fonner
top aides have testified they
learned in March that John N.
Mitchell and other key officials
met secretly in the months
before the Watergate bugging
to discuss campaign intelligence gathering and possibly
Watergate itself, authoritative
sources said Saturday.
The aides, H. R. Haldeman
and John D. Ehrlichman,
derued they themselves knew
in advance about the
Watergate break-in, but
refused to answer any
questions about an alleged
coverup attempt aiter the JWle
17 incident, according to the
sources, who are in a position
to know.
Mitchell has acknowledged
he told the federal grand jury
in April that, wi)lle attorney
general, he attended about
three meetings in early 1972 at
which bugging was discussed.
He · said he rejected all
eavesdropping proposals.
'Ibe sources said Haldeman
and Ehrlichman testified they
did not learn of the meetings
Wltil late March, when Nixon
ordered a new White Hoose
investigation into the affair.
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
were said to have testified that
their information about the
meetings came in conversations this year with three
of the persons they contended
were involved-Mitchell; Jeb
Stuart Magruder, former
White House aide and deputy
manager of the Nixon re·
election campaign, and ousted
White House counsel John W.
Dean III.

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DElMAR BAUM, right, sta rted the beautification
project at the Chester United Methodist Church by offering to
donate paint. With Baum are, Melanie Dean, left, and Pat
Wolf on the ladder.

.

NEW DRAPERIES BECAME a part of an improvement project at the Chester United
Methodist Church. Here Mrs. Betty Dean sews while Mrs. Jemy Machir and Jane Ann Karr fit
a pair of the finished drapes at a window.

Idea got wings, grew
•.

to big church project
Someone got the idea that
BY BOB HOEFLICH
CHESTER - When Delmar new drapes would be nice so,
Bawn, Chester building con- · through .donations_, brocade
tractor, offered to donate paint material was purchased and
to redecorate the Chester the drapes were made. New
United Methodist Church banners were made, a new
before the wedding today of his altar cloth and back curtain at
daughter, Nancy, he started a the altar and a new organ was
project which snowballed into purchased even though the
a ge neral beautification money to pay for it just isn 't
available at the moment.
program.
Someone else decided that
The painting project became
shrubbery
should be trimmed
a community project that got
Wlderway on Memorial Day and flowers planted so part of
when most everyone was . the group of workers got busy
having a holiday. Many pitched on that phase of the
in to paint. the exterior of the beautification.
It's been said that many
attractive church and others
redecoratect the kitchen, a hands make light work.
Sunday school room and the Whether that be true or not, at
rear portion of the sanctuary . least the many hands taking

NO REASON

OFFER REFUSED

part in the project - most of
them under 25 years of age made it possible to complete
the beautification before
today 's wedding. .
Of course, people of the
community who saw the work
progressing were thoughtful of
the workers. Refreshments
just sort of materialized .as
work continued each evening
during the past week.
Workers included Mr. and
Mrs. Delmar Bauin, Bill and
Twila Buckley, Dale and
Jenny Machir; Dorothy,
Tom
and
Jane
Ann
Karr; Earl, Betty, Melanie and Denise Dean;
Patrick, Nancy and Tommy
Morrissey; Pat, Susan and
fie len Wolf; Roger Karr, Linda
King, Debbie Windon , George
alid Mary Genheimer; Sina
Mae Murphy and Sheila Toney.
Dona ling to the project were
Gaul's Shake Haven, Gaul's
l'ol ark e t, L o d w i c.k 's
Restaurant,
Ridenour's
Supply, Baum Lumber Co. and
the Karr Construction Co.
· YoWlg people of the church
are taking quite an· active role
in the church improvements.
Two of the young people, Pat
Wolf and Twila Karr Buckley,
r ecen tly took over ~the
janitorial duties of the church
when the .custodian resigned .
So far , they 've put all of their
wages back into the church and
they have big plans for the
.future.
The teenage class of the
church, the sCene of numerous
weddings over . the summer
months each year, will stage a
c hicken barbecue and ice
cream social near July 4 at
Royal Oak Park and plan a
horse show on the Bar 30
Horse man grounds near
Tuppers Plains in the near
future . All proceeds will go to
the church. Meantime, anyone

DALE MACHffi, left, plants flowers at the Chester
United Methodist Church while Bill Buckley trims a tree to
complete a week-long Peautification project.

"'"'"'

BUICKS
1968 Buick LeSabre 2 dr . hardtop. ·sharp.
1968 Buick 4 dr . sedan , f iJI I power. ·
1964 Buick Skylark 2 Seat sta t ion wagon .

FORDS
1970
real
1969
car,

Ford Galaxie '500' V -8, 2 Dr. Hardtop , maroon ,
clean· car .
Ford XL 2 Dr . Hardtop, A-C , full power , sharp
yellow with black vinyl top.

OTHERS
1968 Dodge Coronet 440 Sta1ion Wagon , runs good
and looks solid, clean car .
2- 1966 OJds Custom Vista cru is er wagon , 2 seats.
1965 Plyniouth 2 dr . ha rdtop. Runs good.

DALLAS ( UP!) - A former
•
POW,whospentfjveyearsina
Communist prison, says he is
. willing to testify against other
American prisoners charged
with collaborating with the
North Vietnamese.
Michael D. Benge, a 37-year-

Under Nt•w Managt•ment
Corner Third &amp; Court Sf. Phone 446-1513
Gallipolis. Ohio

y,

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1B unchecked;

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Sale Prices

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All Otairs at

for this

L---.,-.--~~~~ ·Day Special.-~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

old employe of lhe U.S. Agency . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
for Intcrnatiqnal Development,
said Friday a small group of
POWs worked with their
captors causing the eventual .
torture, solitary confinement
and discomfort of other
prisoners.
"I have knowledge on about
four of them," Benge said. "I

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NEW-YORK (UPI)- James
W. McCord Jr., one of the men
caught
bugging
and
·burglarizing Democratic
National Headquarters in the
Watergate complex, said
Friday he is writing a book
called "Watergate Sanction"
and h&lt;is made tentative
arrangements with a New
York firm to publish it.
McCord declined to reveal
any details of the upcoming
'
manuscript.
Reached by telephone at his
office in Baltimore, McCord
told UP! he had been
discussing details of the
publication with Edward
Uhlan, president of Exposition
Press Inc .• . a New York
publishing company, and
would "most likely'' go ahead
with the book.

I

Like a
good
State Farm
is there.-..........,...----,

MONROESTATION ,Fla. (UP!)- A fire that has spread

@ . VOL. 8 NO. 17

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:~~·' across 11,000 acres iil the last three days raged unchecked ~~~;

Nixon sunning with Abplanalp

through the Big Cypress Swamp Saturday and rangers said :;:; · GRAND CAY, Bahamas
The White Houlie disclosed
i:;:: the only hope of stopping it soon was heavy rain or a wind- :;~ (UP!) - President Nixon and fi'riday, after months of ques:::: shl.ft'
:;:: his family Saturday new to the tions by reporters, that Ab~
is land estate of his frietld and planalp was the source of a
~ More than 75men battled the fire,_70miles w~st of Miami,
benefactor, Robert H. Ab- $625,000personalloan to Presi:~· with shovels and axes, but bulldozers and other heavy · ....
«
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:~: equipment they needed were useless in the heavy under- :;::: planalp, for some fishing and
dent and Mrs. Nixon with
:;:; growth and mushy terrain.
:;:; relaxing in the sun.
which they were able to pur~
..
Accompanied
by
Nixon's
:;:;
A B26 was brought in to bombard the fire with chemicals. :::;
chase La Casa Pacifica, their
close friend , C. G. ( Bebe) $1.4 million San Clemente,
!;!;
"That's
a
no.man's-land
out
there
really
mean
coun·
:
;:;
%
::::
try," said forester Mike Keel. "Trying to get through that M:::: Rebozo, the First Family Calif., estate. The loan was at 8
%
::::
Hatrack cypress and coral swamp is something else.
:~~
;:;: departod early in the afternoon per cent interest.
~
:;::
" About our only hope right now is for rain or a wind :·:·: for the 75 minute helicopter
Ablanalp also form ed a
ride
to
this
private,
200-acre
~
corporation
which purchased
:::; ~hange," Keel said. " If the wind would come out of the ~:~;
island
rimmed
by
·
pabn-lined
:·:· north Instead of the west like it is now, that would stop it. ,,~
..~t.=[ But as long as it's coming out of the west, that fire 's going to ~--~~ beaches.
Abplanalp, the multimilkeep on going."
l~~ Keel said the Memorial Day holiday weekend meant ~1: lionaire owner of Precision
.:~;. ntore trouble for firefighters .
.~::
.... Valve Corp., also was spending
::::
" We know we're going to have all sorts of tourists and ;~; the weekend on the island.
BANGKOK, Thailand ( UP! )
Before departing the Florida
:::: dune buggy people out here this weekend," Keel said. :;§
- Henry A. Kissinger's top
~~ "There are going to be more fires set; too. We might as well ~~ White House, Nixon conferred assistant in negotiations with
:::- face it and it'S goin g to add to our problems."
~~ with Gen . Alexander M. Haig
the North Vietnamese said
:·~ Foresters said that because of the dry winter this year, :~ Jr ., his acting chief of staff. He Saturday
last week's talks
hunters are deliberately burning off the Everglades to :f.j also talked to Henry A. between Kissinger and Le Due
speed the growth of s ummer vegetation.
:·:&lt; Kissinger , his national security Tho were a disappointment, but
~ ''A lot of these are set deliberately - we know that, '' Keel ~~~: affairs adviser , who is in said he hoped a cease-fire
Washington; and to other
~ said. "Some of them may be accidents, but there are a 'lot of '·
would come to Cambodia
staffers who accompanied him
''soon .''
to Florida, including Press
Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
' ' l9Q"h~,.._.-....-.QXIO:It...,Q:&gt;.•;Q;•:0-..:..:-~-~~..:.:;.:-:-:-~-~·:·=·y ...•,.......•'.'• •••••-. ·-·.-••••.o;.•,o,o,o;.........o;..
State William H. Sullivan
accused North Vietnam . of
wanting to rule all of Indochina, an ambition Sullivan
I
I
, '
said was tha major obstacle to
peaee in the region .
Sullivan met Saturday with
!~.
Cambodian government leaders
before flying to Vientiane, Laos
II
and to Bangkok for discussions
· with Deputy Foreign Minister
Chartchai Chunhawan. Earlier
he conferred with South Vietnamese leaders on the Kissinger and Tho talks, which are
scheduled to reswne in about
two weeks.
Sullivan was asked about the
talks in Paris between Kissinger and Tho .
" It was not as satisfa ctory as
we hoped ," he said. "That's
why we have to renegotiate
again. We expected the fighting
w\11 stop. We expected North
Vietnam to go out of Cambodia
and Laos. We are going back to
make them do what they have

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Our message to everyone who want to buy
a boat. .See us for low-cost fimmcing.

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"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"·

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central

NO BUGS?
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Second Ave .
Gallipolis , Ohio
Smithsonian
was scheduled to
Phone 446 -4290
open an insect zoo Friday, but
Home 446 -4518
, - - - - . . - - - - - - - ' the event suddenly was postu ... H ,,...,..,
State Farm
poned. Because of recent
Ji:l..
Insurance Companies heavy rains, a spokesman said,
G'IQll
Home Ollites:
the museum was unable to
.
f'lnoming!DII , Illinois collect enough bugs .
Ho1el Bldg.

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IN~UUI\I(I

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~~110

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YEARS OF SERVICE;'

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20.1 acres of the 26-acreestate
back from the Nixon'l for
$1,249,000 and agreed to limit
U.'ieS of the property to protect
the security and privacy of the
President.
The net effect of the tmn·
saction wa s tlwt the President
acquired 5.9 ocean-front acres
with a Spanish,style villa for a
total of $374,000, according to
the White House.

Talks went poorly

Snowden
PrtrK

PAGE 13
SUNDAY. MAY 27._1
:__.9___7___3____ ___ _ .....,..-- ---,---

UJV/lrR.
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rangers ·hoping
~~ for rain, or shift of wind

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Caroll K.

BULLFIGIIT IN POMEROY? - Well,, maybe! Come the
Frog Jwnps on Saturday, June 16 at Meigs Football Field in
Pomeroy, Meigs County will be honored by the presence of
" Elchico," reputedly a profess ional bull fighter from
Valencia,' Spain, who wUJ give an exhbition at the Frog Ball
thnt night. Elchico is said to be well known for his performances in Madrid, BarcCiona and s outhern France, but he
always wanted to appear in North America. Even the largest
bull fighting arena in Mexico which hold' a capacity of 47,000
persQns didn 't satisfy him. He will bring his own picadors.
Elchico wanL"i to fight in the U. S. because h~ wants to
visit River J&lt;"'ront Stadium in Cincinnati and see the Heds
play . Shown with the ferociou' bull tlwt F.lchico will encounter &lt;m~ . front row , 1-r, David Burt, Dale Warner, past
grand croaker, and Eddie Holter; back row, Jim Clatworthy,
grand croaker of the Ohio Society of the Promotion of.the Bull
}l'"'rog; Rodney Downing, grcmd croi:lkcr in charge of vice and
Boy Holter , past grand croaker. Following the bull fight a
beef bnrhecue will b~&gt; held.

itntintl

~\

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wishing to donate to help with
the organ purchase may do ,;o
by contacting Harry Holter,
Kathryn Baum, Jennifer
Machir or Dorothy Karr.

.

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Use Our Sensible Credit • Free Prompt Delivery

do not have definite proof on all
of them, but I do know that a
certain number of them did
willingly collaborate and that
led to tortures, solitary conlinemen! and discomlort of
other prisondrs."

to write book

For help with allyour
family insurance needs,
see:

about national security matters.
The President added, however, that executive privilege
would not be invoked in any
testimony about possible
criminal conduct in the
Watergate affair and an
alleged coverup.
CBS · News reported that
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
had put "much of the blame"
for Watergate on Mitchell and
Dean. The ·network also said
Frederick LaRue, former special assistant to Mitchell, and
Gordon Strachan, who recently
resigned as genera} counsel of
the U.S. Information Agency
and was a former special aide
to Haldeman, attended the
meetings at which intelligence
gathering was discussed.
Hearings in Rtcess
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
have been summoned by the
select Senate Watergate committee to testify probably in
June. The hearings 3re in
recess until June 5.
During the first five days of
hearings, there was no direct
testimony to implicate either
Nixon, Mitchell, H;aldeman,
Ehrlichman or Magruder .
One witness, former White
House aide John J . Caulfield,
testified that Dean asked him
lo relay an offer o£ executive
clemency to McCord during the
Watergate trial in January.
Caulfield testified that Dean ·
said only that the offer came
"from the highest levels in the
White House," which Caulfield
said he asswned meant Ehrlichman.

~~

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COME SEE US AT . ..

BOB REES
PONTIAC, INC.

l

Ex-POW confirms collaborations

car. Fu ll power A-C.

&gt;

lawyers, said the two former
presidential 'aides answered
only some of the questions put
to them .
At first, the ·attorneys said,
Ehrllchman and Haldeman
invoked executive privllege.
But after Nixon last Tuesctay
broadened the guidelines governing such testimony, they
answered questions they had
refused to answer .initially .
Dunie said the two continued
to refuse to answer ouestions
about events after the June 17
break-in--&lt;;uch as what they
knew about an alleged coverup
-on the ground that the
Democrats' suit related only to
the Watergate operation itself.
1972 Presidential Campaign
Dunie sa id the two also
refused on similar groWldS to
answer questions about an
alleged general pattern of
espionage during the 1972
presidential campaign. The
attorney said the Democrats
would go to court to seek to
compel Ehrlichman and
Haldeman to answer all
questions put to them.
Strickler told reporters Friday that " f.rom where l stand, l
hope and expect that they
(Haldeman and Ehrlichman)
will not be indicted by the
grand jury ."
Nixon acknowledged in his
4,000-word statement Tuesday
that he had instructed Haldeman and Ehrlichman not to let
the Watergate investigation
expose either covert operations
of the CIA or a White House
&gt;~ plumbers"
operation
designed to plug news leaks

~l Big Cypress Swamp burning ~l

If you have a space problem, the new Wallaway
eliminates that problem. It only needs to be 3 inches from
the wall for full reel ining. Come and try it out.

19 71 C~talina, 4 dr. hardtop, air condition , sharp.
1971 Pontiac GTO 2 dr . hardtop, beautiful wh ite with
black viny l top .
..
1969 POntiac GTO 2 Or . Hardtop, J.speed floor shift,
beau t iful jet bla ck finish .
1967 Pontiac Bonneville 4 dr . hardtop , one loca l
·owner . Sharp. Has a ir conditioning.
1966 Pontiac Bonneville 2 dr . hardtop. Real sharp
1966 Pontiac Bonneville 4 dr . hardtop. Another .
sharp car .
1966 Pontiac Executive 4 Dr . Sedan, real sharp b lu e
car.
1966 Pontiac Starchief, air, full power . Real soli d
car.
1965 Pontiac Bonneville Col;lvertible, black .

Nixon's Campaign Manager
Mitchell resigned as attorney
general March 1, 1972, to
become Nixon's campaign
manager, and quit that post
last July I, two weeks after the
Watergate break-in . Magruder
and Dean lost their administration jobs last month as
a result of Watergate.
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
made their stateme nts during
31 '2 days ofpre.trial depositions
taken this week in the
Democrats' $6.4 million civil
damage suit against the Committee for the Re-election of
the President.
Haldeman testified he was
told that one of the meetings
was held by Mitchell in
December, 1971 , the sources
said.
Ehrlichman said he was told
of a similar meeting held by
Mitchell last year in Key
Biscayne, Fla ., where Nixon
has a vacation retreat, at
which final approval was given
to an intelligence gathering
operation.
Ehrlichman also was said to
have testified t.h;:;( Nixon asked
him late last March to conduct
inquiries into the Watergate
affair. Nixon has said "ttJajor
developments" came to his
attent~on about that time, ·
presumably after convicted
conspirator James W. McCord
Jr . wrote the Watergate trial
judge there had been perjury
during the January trial and
political pressure on the original defendants to keep quiet.
Frank Strickler, an attorney
for
Ehrlichman
and
Haldeman, and Maurice R.
Dm1ie, one of the Democrats'

~~::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;-:;::::::~:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::~::

IPONTIACS ]

u

-·

•

ON STRIKE - Eleven employes of Richards &amp; sons Inc., Sand &amp; Gravel Co., Utart Fa lis, ·
members of llitemational Union of Operating Engineers, Local 18, went on strike Tue~day
morning. The men Who began negotiating five weeks ago, are represented by Homer Hysell,
District Representative of l.U.O.E., who has claimed the company failed to bargain "in good
faith." Hysell said the l.U.O.£. is willing to negotiate any time or any place with company
officials. After five weeks of negotiating the men still have no contra ct. The men said they are
seeking a fair wage, a fai_r contract' and bette~ working conditions . Some of the men have been
with the company 15 to 20 years, work night and day, and still have to rely on foot stamps to
exist, Hysell said. Friday at the picket line above are, front row, 1-r, Orval Jarrell, Huck
Wagner and Charles Findley; back row, Homer Hysell, Danny Shain, Walter Laudermilt and
Vernon Donahue.
·

EXPRESSES COMPLAINT
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Presidential adviser Henry A.
KiSsinger expressed a com·
plaint about the Wh.ite House
gala for the POWs. "Luay,
Dear,'' he said Friday to White
HoUse social secr~tary Lucy
Winchester 1 "don't ever seat
me next to an engaged girl
again ... at least not when her
fiance is here ."

agreed to do when they signed
the agreement. "
.
He did not ·say how the
United States would "make"
North Vietnam adhere to the
Jan . 28 Paris peace agreement.
Ground fightin g in Cambodia
and U.S. a ir strikes have
continued since the agreement
went into effect. North Viet•
namese officials have con·
firmed that •n end to the
conflict here was among the
subjects disc·ussed by Kiss in ger
and Tho.
Kissinger said in Paris the
negotiations had mape pro-.
gress, but Sullivan sa id Satur·
day North Vietnamese ambition
to rule Indochina was the
principal obstacle to peace in
the regiori.
" North Vietnam wanL'i to
take over lndochina, that's the
obslcicle," he said.
Asked about prospects for a
Cambodian ccasc·fire, Sullivan
said : " I don ' t know, hut we
hope it will happen soon ." 1

· whit e Ho use s pokes me n
were not ava !'!able .to say how
much of a rnortg;1ge was
outstandin g or who, if anybody,
was involved wjth Abplanalp in
the corporati on which now
owns the surroundin g land .
Newsrr.fn h&lt;.~d reQuested the
additional information after
The HeKistcr, of Santa Ana,
Ca lif., repo rted that Sennte
inves tigators suspected left*
ove r fund!i from Nixon 's 1968
cam pai gn had been used to
finan ce the p urchase .. The
White Ho11'le termed this report
- a dtotal fabrication ."
Mrs. Nixon, daughtl!rs Tricia
and Julie and their husbaridc;;,
F.dward Cox and David Eisen*
huwer , accompanied the Pres ident for the overni (;:ht stay
here.

CALl.. ANSWERED
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport Emergency Squad
llnswcred a call to .Jack's Dairy
Bar at 8:45 p.rn . Friday when a
cus tom er, Mar ga r et V&lt;;~n ·
Cooney became ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorittl
Hospital where s he was treated
rmd released .
MAN HECAME ILL
POMEROY - At UO p.m.
Fr iday
th e
Pomeroy
Emergency Sq uad answ,ered a
ca ll to the Gravely Tractor
Sales on East Main St. where
Willis Gregory, Baltlmore, had
b~come Ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
wluke he wa s treated and
released .

Dmid and m;mgled number

grow.~

steadily through Saturcl11y 11.~
million.~ of driver.~ hurry hurry
By United Press Jnten~ational

·The toll of roadway deaths mounted steadily Saturday as
motorist.~

crowded expressways and highways over the t~ree­
day Memorial Day weekend despite warnings ·that gasoline
shortages might occur, in some resort areas.
The National Safety Council had estimated that between 550
and 650 persons would b~ ki11ed In traffic aceldent.'i and another
26,000 to 30,000 would sustain disabling injuries duriog th e 73hour period from 6 p.m . local time Friday through midnight
Monday.
A United Press International count at 2 p.m. EDT showed ~8
persons had been .killed in traffic accidents.
A breakdown of accidental deaths showed: Traffic 98,
Drownings 8, Planes 1, Other 9, Total 116.
Near Hull, Mass., the . coast guard searched for four ·
teenagers _,resumed drowned when a ca nue carrying seven
young persons capsized in a hay orf the Atlantic Ocean. Two of
the Lcenagers swam to shvre and a third was rescued hy a boat.

.,

Space crew
•
In Skylab
HOUSTON 1UPl ) - AmeriThe docking problem almost
ca's first space station pilots cost Co nrad , Kerwin and Weitz
found Skyl&lt;;~b 's atmosphere free their chanee to occupy Skylab
of any poison gas Saturday and at all. The astrOn&lt;;~uts overcame
entered the earth-orbiting, heat- it by donning their spacesuits,
sea red spaceship on a repair opening the nose hatch of their
miss ion to save the nation 's $2.6 Apollo command ship and
billion sp~ ce research prograin. " hotwiring" the craft's docking
Mission commander Charles probe to make it latch firmly
" Pete'' . C01irad, Joseph P. with an air lock on the 3pace
Kerwin and Paul J . Weitz sta tion.
hoped to shelter Skylab under
Ritter Frustration
the cooling shmle of a lopsided
oralige-and*silver parasol. The
It was alm ost 3 a .m . before
big urnbrclln wns designed to the spncemen. got to bed. replnce Skylab's main heat almost 24 hours after they had
shield and render the space awakened to prepare for laWlch
station habitable for the first !rom Cape Kennedy .
time since it was launched _May
Concern about the docking
14.
completely overshadowed the
If th¢ parasol works, cooling bitter frustration of trying, and
Sky lab 's Jiving quarters to 60 or· faili ng, in a long*shot attempt
70 degrees, the ·astronauts will to free a jammed solar celf
setllc in for up tu 28 days of wing and double Sky lab 's .
c:cientific experimentation in limited electrical power supply.
orbit. If it fails, they must Any second try by this c r~w to
perform a spa cewalk Sunday to fr ee the wing was virtually
~ pread a big awning and block ruled out.
off the solar heat.
But Skylab program managSulvage Operation
f;!rs repor·ted early Saturday'
The 22 by 24 foot parasol- they were already at work
.hastily constructed after Sky lab designing · new tmd stronger
lost the heat shie ld in a launch tools to try sp reading the wing
mishap, rmd completed 'mere later when three more as·
hours before the as tronauts tronauts visit Skylab.
blasted off Friday- wns the
Both the e lectrical problems
first repair choice beca use it and the overheatin,g were
co uld be erected through an ,caused by the loss of the heat ·
iJirlock from i11side the slation .... shield, which had originally
Conrad and his. crew, who surrounded Skylab's 118-foot
labored long into the night long mnin workshop and living
overcoming a potentially ser i· section. TemperatW'es in the .
ous docking problem, slept 1 ~ living quarters soared to an
hours late. They ctwoke at 10 oven.Jik e
125
degrees
(J .m . EDT, chipper and ready Fahrenheit.
to begin their salvage opera·
The high temperatures had
cauSed doctors tO worry that
tion.
" We slept pretty good," foam plas'tic insulation in
Conrad reported . "We really Skylab might have given off
did . n
two different kinds
of
And then, in a joking potentially letha l gas, car·
reference to the frustrations bon monixide and a lun g
•nd troubles of the crew's first irritant called "TD!." But
day in space, he asked mission the
astronauts
foun'd
contro l: "What friendly worries the docking adapter secdid you all think about over the tion of the station, which
they entered first , safe.
night '?''

Miller concerned
WASHINGTON !UP!)
United Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller said. Saturday he
was disturbed by strong union
rank·and-rile support of Presi.·
dent Nixon 's administration,
whi ch he called , ' •One of the
most anti-labor" m many
years.
Miller speculated that . Nixon
gets Support from blue collar
whites who fear union gains
will go mainly to blacks at
'their expense .
Speaking at a convention of
the Coalition of . Black Trade
Unionists, Miller said the uriion
movement must resolve internal racial strife before it can
"get back to the mairistream ."
"One of the most anti·labbr
administrations in recent his·
tOry holds •power today ," he
said . " But what is rriore disturb·
ing is that it has enjoyed the
•up port of a sizable segment of
rank·and-file trade unionists ."
"One reason labor faces such
a h ostil~ administration is that
w.orkers have beCome divided
beca use o( race, " Miller said.

"The ancient snake oil of racial
division that has crippled labor
so many times in the past .has
worked· it.s poison orice again.
"So white worker:s have come
to fear that the gains of black
workers will be won at their
expense ... divided by fears
and mistrust, we watch our
liberties eroded and justice
perverted from the highest lev·
els of government.
"Today we quarrel among
ourselves and all of us are im·
poverished by bu~get cutbacks
in housing, medical care, vocational rehabilitation and educa·
tion, " Miller Said.
" The challenge facing labor
today is to rid our movement
of the racial division that
blinds us ·to the fact that the
words 'brother and sister' are
not the jargon· of the labor
movt'ment, but expression of
our shared humanity ," he said.
"While any worker is denied
membership in a union or ad·
vancernent to a better job beca·1se of race, labor is not
free ,"

�•

14- The SunGay Times- Sentinel.SUnaay.June 3. 1973
·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·;·;·,·,·,·,·~.-

••
•

•

Gunmen
1Contin.ued from page 13 \
under control of the hija ckers.
The hijackers were identified
by SAM officials, who checked
off the names of the other 85
passengers as they were
released . Only Rivera and
Howards remained. Rh·era
ooarded the plane Wednesday
in Cali; they said, and Howards
boarded at Pereira . The
hijacking of the domestic flight
occurred between Pereira and Medellin .
The plane first flew to Aruba,
a Dutch island in the Caribbean
.off Venezuela 's coast, and on
Thursday it fle1,1,· over the
Central American countries of
Panama , Costa Rica and Ei
Sah·ador seeking without suc.
cess a pla~ to land. It returned
to Aruba. where SAM officials
gave the hijac kers $50,000 in
cash and brought in Molina and
a new crew to replace the
original one .
On fr ida y the hijackers took
the plane to Guayaquil, Ecuador, then to Lima, Peru , and
then oVer Olile to Meildoza,
Argentina, and on to Resis·
tenria and then to As Wl cion,
Para guay, fr om whe re it
returned ear ly Saturday to
Resistencia when the hijackers
fled .
The hijackers. originally had
demanded. $150,000 in ransom
and !he release or 140 prisoners
in Colombia . The Colombian
gove i-nmet:tt refused to .release
any prisoners .

TinS IS ONE Of TWO AMBULANCES of the new
emergency medital service cSEOEMS) to go into operation
soon in Meigs County . The whicle arrived friday morning
from the Ohio Valle\· Health Sen•ices in Athens and is parked
in a garage located ~n the Ben Ewing property, Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy. Personnel for the new service has not been appointed yet, and the day lhe senrice will be in operation is
unknown. Meantime. county funeral homes have agreed to
pro\.ide limited ambulance service until the new emergency
medical ser.ice begins.
TWO CON\"I CTED
COFFERS fiLLED
Calif.
SACRAME:\TO.
CLEVEL.A:-ID 1UPIJ - The
1UPli Two women have Ohio Republican Party ·s fund
been
com·icted
in raising dinner and cocktail
Sacramento's ·'hot peppers ·· party here Thursday featuring
brothel case. Hazel H. Sanford, Vic-e President Spiro Agnew
31, was found guilty of residing netted the GOP coffers about
.in a house of ill fame, and Pat $400,000 . The $150-a·plate
Patterson, 46, pleaded guilty to dinner attracted 1.410 persons,
keeping a house or ill fame . while some 200 couples paid
They will be sentenced next Sl ,OOO to raise a toast with
week.
Agnew at the cocktail party .
Sheriff ' s in\·e stigat ors The money will be used to run a
testified that "when the girls slate of Republican candidates
were working, there would be a in !his fall 's election.
string of colored peppers
hanging fr om a mailbox.··
They said •·peppers" was also
Bulle Rock was the first
the code word allowing · thoroug hLred horse imported
custome rs to ente r and pa y from England to Ame rica, in
fees ranging from SIO to $20. Jl:W.

................•.·.•.·:·;·:·::

ELDER WINS AAA
COI.UM Bt;S (l;P I) - A
se\'t&gt;n·run uprisi ng in tbe
lilth inning po" ered Cio·
cinnati Elder to a 7·1 " ·in
o'er Cle,·eland Glenville aod
ga••• Elder the slate Class
AAA baseball title Saturda)'.
E lder's ~A in ga \•e th e
sc hool two state cham·
pionships. The Panthers won
th e sta te Cl ass
AAA
basketball cro"-n in March.
Elder sent II men to the
plate iu the lifth luning, ,.·ith
th ird
baseman
Paul
Neimeyf'r pounding out t wo
sin gles and driving home h,·o
run s.
Enduring Or a,.i ngs
Leonardo da Vinci so accurate!)• observed and drew
plants that his insights the sun·seeking twists of
fl owers. the thrust of roots.
the gro wth of bark - e,ndure

•
_,

1

WILl. f'OLJ.,OW ADVICE
WASHINGTON I UJ'I 1- The
U.S. Postal Service says it wdl
follow the advice of Slime
leading gasoline suppliers by
instructing 1ts drivers to dnve
at speeds less than :;o miles an
hour, avoid jack rabbi! sUlrls,
keep engines properly "'ned
and cut their engines when
making pickups and deliveries.

frank A, Sommerkarnp, asSistant p&lt;;Stmaster general for
delivery services, said Thurs..
db y the actions would save
gasoline. He said a reduction of
1 per cent In !he amount of
gasoline used by Postal Service
vehicles would cut aMual fuel
tilnsumption by 857,018 gallons
for the service's fleet of 100,000
veh1cles.

has
K~~~~;~r or a
centur} . thumbs for anotht"r ride on a
Cit y,
Kan .. stopo\•er . The- Pennsylva nian is as king for letters
of recomme nd a tio n from pubUc officials a s a mea ns of

p:sl

. .a1y1.............1go1oct
. .w1i1111 1
to1u1r 1in1g11
c1h1in1a.. .......................................................................
1in. .b1a1ta1n1;1, 1toct

Giants rally,
defeat Phils

TART

SAN fRANCISCO (UP! ) -

when the Giants scored three
. Bobby Bonds harnrnered a runs to take an 3-7 lead.
home rWl and a pair of singles
Jim Lonborg, who gave up
Saturday to lead !he San hits to all four ba tters he faced
Francisco Giants to a come· in the sixth, was the loser, and
from-behind 11·7 victory over his record fell to ~ the Philadelp hia Phillies.
The victory went to Cha rlie ·
The victory was !he sixth in Williams, 1-0, who look over for
11le last seven games for the Juan Marichal in the sixth
Giants and assures !hem of inning'. Marichal was pounded
retaining first place in the Jor nine hits and six runs in the
National Leag ue West for !he five innings he pitched.
day.
Greg Luzinski drove in four
Bonds hi t his 12th homer of runs for Philadelphia with a
the season as t he Giants three-run horne r and single.
wrapped up the victory with Denny Doyle had three si ngles
three runs in the eig hth inni ng and drove in two r uns for the
and si ngled in the sixth inning Phils.

-

•

CHICAGO (UP!) - Rick
Reuschel, tagged for 10 hits,
survived several shaky innings
Saturday to pick up his sixth
victory of the year in pitching
the Chicago Cubs to a 4-3
decisio n over the Atlanta
Braves.
Reusc hel, who walked two
and struck out four, was in
trouble in five of !he innings he
wor ked, and finally needed
ni nth-inning relief help from
Dave Laroc he.
The Cubs took adva ntage or
the wildness of Ron Schueler,
who re lieved BraveS starter
Carl Morton, in the sixth inning . The Cubs scored two runs
when Glenn Becker t led off
with an infield hit and raced to
third on Billy Williams' single.
Beckert scored as J ose Cardena! forced Williams a t

NatiOnal league Standings

Dr. DaVid Stauffer

DON WATTS V.W.

Space begins where the
~ air) is
too thin to affect objects
moving through i! . It is
usually· sa·id to begin abo.ut
100 mil es a bove the earth.

195 Upper Riv er Rd .
Gallipolis , Oh io, P h. 446 ·9800

EVANGELIST

.
GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.

THE
SIGN
OF
SAFE

•

,_

Held Crusades in ~.27 States
Former Sports Announcer
Memory Expert

By United Press International
( Ni ght games not incl uded )
Ea ~t

30 20

Pitt sbur gh
New Yor k
M ontrea l
St. Louis
Philadelphia

23 20 .535 3'h
21 23 .477 6
19 23
20 25
19 29
West

.600

.452 7
.444 71/2
.396 10

San F r ancisco 34 20 .630
Los Ange les
31 19 .620 1
Houst on
29 23 .558 4
Ci ncin nat i
27 23 .540 5
Atl an ta
18 31 .367 13V2
San Di ego
18 23 .353 14112
Satu rday 's Res ults
Chicag o 4 Atlan ta 3
PittsbUrgh 4 Cincinnati 3
Sa n Francisco 11 Philadelp hia
7
Houston at St. Lou is ( nigh t)
New Yor k at San Diego I nig ht)
M ont r ea l at Los Ange l es

lnig htl

Sunday 's Games
! All Times EDT)

I

I

at St . Louis

(2: 15

p.m./

GUARANTEED SAVIIGS

"Mon treal at Los Angeles

p.m .}

..

New York at San

(5

Di ego (4

Phi la delph ia at San Fra nci sco
(3: 1S p.m.)
Monday's Games
San Fran ci sco at Pi ttsburgh

I

(nightl

New Yor k at Cin cinnati (nig ht)
Phi l adelphia
at
Houston

2 Year, Savings
Certificates
mm1mum

5%%

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

Save Any Amount Any Time

Converted Night Club Entertainer

li} Ilw Wth of th !' 111o 111h and t•arn fm m th t·
llHH tth l}

o n aPt'o unt• of~ l.OOfl or

fir~ t .

lll OI'lc'

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

GALLIPOLIS, 01-'

Songwriter and Re~ording Star
NURSERY AVAILABLE

PLENTY OF PARKING

SPECIAL MUSIC
Featuring Meigs County's own Singing King Family

PHONE 446-38 37

•,

SAVARD SIGNED
HINGHAM, Ma ss. (UP! ) ~
The Boston Bruins annoWlced
friday the signing of Andre
Sava rd , their fir st-round
choice in the rece nt ~umor
amateur draft, to a multi-year
contract.
Terms of the contract were
not disclosed but it is believed
that Savard, a 6-foot, 185 pou.nd
. r who led the Quetiec
cen!e '
.
d84
Ramparts with 67 g~a ls ~n
assists for 151 pmnts
67
reg ular season ga mes m the
Quebec Junior Hockey t.eague,
.= ed a three-year
pact for an
Sl o•·
•
estim ated $450,000.

:m

Appeared in America'a Largest Churches

J..nt l'r .. ~t paid quartt·rl} on all ,.,,rtifil'ale•
Inlt'n·•l aHtilahlt ·

(On ly game s scheduled)

MIKE VYLONIS, Song Evangelist

Passbook Savings Accounts

Dt'po~ il

lnigh tl

0 p.m.

'

Pet. GB
.S42
.510
.477
.476
.447
.41 7

l !h
3
3
41/2
6

26 20 .565 2
28 23 .549 2'h

Kansa s Ci ty
Ca l itorn i a
25 21 .543 3
Oak I and
24 25 .490 5112
Texa s
16 28 .. 364 11
Saturday 's Res ults
New Yor k 2 Califor n ia 0
M innesota 3 Detroit 2 I 10 inning s)
M il waukee 3 Chi cago 2 ( 13
inning s)
Oakland at Boston (nig ht)
Baltimore at Texa s (nig ht )
Cl e ve la n d at Kan sas Cit y
Sunday 's Games

(All Times EDTI

Balt imor e at Texas. (8 : 30p.m . )
Clevela nd at Kan sas City ( 2: 30
p .m . )
Detr oi t at Minneso ta (3 p.m . )
Ch icago at Mi lwa ukee ( 2:30
p .m . )
Californ ia at New Yor k (2

p.m.l

Oa\k land at Boston (2 p.m .)

Monda y's Gam es
Mi lwa ukee at Oak land (n igh t)
Kan sa s City at Bos ton (n i91i t)
(On ly games scheduled )

BENNETT HIRED
ATLANTA (UPI) - Richard
"Buddy" Bennett,. defensive
seconda ry coach at Arkansas,
was hired by Georgia Tech
Friday to take over the same
job with the Yellow .Jackets.
Benn e tt , 35, replaced Bill
Lewis who had resigned to go
to Arkansas to coach the defeni;ive backs , Tech Coach Bill
F ulcher said . Benne tt 's
secondary at the Uni ve r·sity of
Tenn essee led the nati on in
in terceptions in 1969 wi th 40.

,

BLOOMI NG TON,
Min n.
(UP() ~ J oe Lis, who entered
the game in the ninth inning as
a defensive replacement for
Harm on Killebrew, hit his
second home run of the season
in the bottom of the lOth inmng
Sa turday to give the Minnesota
Twi ns a 3-2 victory ove ~ the
Detroit Tigers.
The victory went to reliever
K en Sanders, wh o pitched the
lOth inning in relief of sta rter
Bert · Blylcven, who was
seeking his fifth slraight win
and third straig ht shu tout.
Blyleven all owed 11 hits in the
nine innings he worked.
Woody Fryman went the
distance for Detroit, his record
dr opping to 2oo5.
The Twins took a Z.O lead in
th e fourth ih ning agains t
Woody Fryma n when J erry
Terrell bunted with the bases
loaded and t.wo out for one run ,
and third baseman Aure lio
Rodri guez, in trying for a play
at the plate, threw the ball past
catcher Duke Sims.
The Tigers tied it in the fifth
against Ber t Blyleven. Wi th
one out , J im Northrup sin gled

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP
" For That Personal &amp; Professio na l Touch "

FEATURING
TOU R RESCHEDULED
NEW YO RK I UPI )
Muha mm ad Ali has re~• ul d his tour to. lndo.nesta
sch~ e
d the Far Eastl Jt was an ~
an
d Friday because of the
nounce
•
. hi
broken jaw he received . m s
fight with Ken Norton m San
Diego last March Jl.
.
Ali was ;cheduled to . tour
.
·d engage...
m a
Jndonesw 8·• ·
.
f boxing exhiblllOns
serr es a
b
. the month of June, u1
dunn g
1 . healing
cause of the ong .
~ocess for his broken J3W ' the'
P
will not take place betour S I 27 through the
twe en ep ·
.
.
.end or o ctober of !hts year.

tli:l.ndez and Dave Giusti, while
Billingham, who had to leave
the game in the rirst irming
when he was hit on the left heel
by a ground ball, suffered his
seco nd loss against seven
victories.
The Reds look a t-0 lead in
the first inning on a single by
Pete Rose, followed by Bobby
Tolan 's sacrifice fly . The
Pirates came back with three
rWls in their half of tiH' inning

on si ngles by Dave Cash and
Manny Sanguillen, Ri ch
Hebner 's run-scoring double
and two grOWldouts.
The Pirates made it 4-1 in the
fourth on AI Oliver's single, a
walk mu.l May's single.
Cinci nnati picked up two
unearned runs in the seventh
on a hit batsman. nose's third
si ngle, an erro r by 13ob
Robertson and a groundout.

pull out of his scheduled June
18 bout with Earnie Shavers aL
Madison Square Garden
because ol a case of the flu.
Replacing Quarry will be
Jimmy Ellis, former World
Boxing
As s ociation
heavyweight clktm pion, who
has a record of 38-H.

Yankees
slip by
Angels

NEW VORK I UP!) - Ron
Blomberg and Horace Clarke
eaCh drove in a run and ~· r itz ­
Peterson, with eigh th · irmin g
relief help from Spark y Ly le,
outdue led
Nola n
Rya n
Saturday to help the New York
Yank ees beat !he Californi a
Angels, 2-0.
Peterson had control trouble,
walking fi ve men and throwing
two wild pitches, but !he only
confident, " said Weiskopf, a
Still had four birdies and hits he all owed through seven
ta ll Ohi o ni:ttive tied for fifth in three bogeys but sa id he inn ings Wer·~ a third inning
money winnin gswith"$81,822on considered himse lf to be si ngle by Rudy Meoli and a
lhis yee~r's tour.
playing very we ll. Wadkins, fifth inn ing sin gle by Bob
" I'm looking for ward to whO wCJs Lied with Still for Oliver. The Ya nkees pulled ofl
tornorrow,11 he S&lt;:lid. ''I'm not second plac.:e be hind Thompson U~rce double plays in the first
g"oing to play conse rvative golf. iu the second round , said '' [ hi t fo ur innings to erase Angel
" I'm playing as well as I've it good today, but not as good baserunners .
eve r played - I'm very as yesterday .
Peterson, raising his ·r·ecord
re laxed," Weis kopf said.
" I 'm de ri nite ly within to 5-6, had his toughest moment
Still also ha d praise for shooting nmgc, •· said W:1dkins, . in the ::;ixth when the Angels
Weiskopf. ''Tom played a good fulir th on the mo ney lis t thps loaded the bases wi th two oul'; .
solid round," he said. "The year and just ahcud of on two Widks and an error by
way he1s playing he just mig ht Weis kopf.
Blomberg, but Pcter·son got
wi n the U. S. Open.''
Weiskopf, :30, has one win to Oli ver to hit into an inningWeiskopf started off slow his credit th is year - the ending (oreceout. Lyle held the
Saturda y, shoo ti ng par on the Collm ia l Nat)ona l lnvil.i.tti unal Angels hitless over th e fin ~ l
first four holes before hi tti ng a three weeks ago - and uu~ee two frames to pick up his
three wood to wi thin 25 feel of •, secOnd place finishes. His 6H eighth ::;ave of Lhc season.
the cup, then two-putting for a S;;~tutday was his 17th round in
The Yanks reached Ryan for
bi rdie on the 565-yard No. 5 the 60s this year . He hHd a 65 Lheir first run in the fourth
hole, He fi nished out the fr ont Thursday in the Kemper that inning. With two out Bobby
ni ne with par go lf and tun1el1 tletl the. course record. He won Murcer sin gled, stole second
and scored on a sin gle by
the corner one under.
the· Kemper in J 971.
At No . 10, Weiskopf wedged
The golfers grouped al 210, Rlombcrg. MwTer's steal was
to within two fee t of the cup and six under par, were J . C. se t up by· when ca tcher Art
pu tted in for a.birdie. On 14 and Snea d·, Bob Payne, J ohn Kusnye r ha d trquble holding on
15, he wedged to within 1~ feet Sch lee , M ex i ~. : an Vic tor to one of Rya n's fastba lls.
New York mad e it 2-0 in the
both times and one-pu tted_ for Regalado, Ju an "Chi Chi"
fifth
when Thurma n Munson
birdies. On No. 16, he .l11 t a Rod l'i guez, Lee Trevi no, Bob
wedge shot to within two feet Sha w, J im l)c nt un d · Lou wa lked, moved to third on a hitand added another bird.ic, But Gra hHm .
:lnd-run s i n~ le by Gene
on No. 18, a 448-yard pw· fo ur
Mi cha el a ri d scored on a
hole, -his drive la nded to tile
sac rifice fl y by Clm·kc.
r ight and he over-drove the
NORFOLK WINS TITL E
Ryan, who pitched a llO·
green on his second shot, then
C RAW~'ORD S VILLE,
Ind. hitter last month, suffered his
pitched to within fi ve fee t and · (UP! I - Speeds ter Steve sixt h Joss against as many wins
two-putted fo r a bogey .
Reddick, with three firsl&lt;.i, ::md his thi rd setba ck in a r·ow.
Saturday led favored Nor folk He was touched for seven hi ts
Sl&lt;! le to i)., fi rst NCAA College and struck out six to raise his
Div ision Tr uck a nd F'iel d Maj or
l,c Hg ue . te a d in g
strikeo ut tota l to 123.
champ ionship.
The Sparta ns, runnersup to
E&lt;:~ste rn Mi~ h iga n last year,
totaled 54 poin ts in t"he threcd&lt;.~y m eet to s h &lt;.~dc J.in c.ol n
Uni v.e rsity, in se~on d p l&lt;:.~ ce
with 48, an d third pla ce
and took third When Terre ll Eastern Ul inois with 45.
Re dd ic k , who repea led
boo ted Mi ckey Sta nley 's
Friuay
as 100-yard das h
ground er. Gates Brown singled
off Harm on Kill ebrew's glove ch.;~. m p i o n , w.on th e 220
fo r one run and Willi"c Horton's Sa tur day in 20.6 second s,
infi eld sin gle scor ed the missing the meet record IJy one
tenth of a second . He then
second.
Those
runs
stopped anchored Norfolk Sl&gt;l te's 440Blyleven's strea k of scoreless yard relay whi ch won in 40
second s flat.
·innings at 2:1.

.e24 New AMF Lanes
•Snack Bar and
Captain's l.oun~e .
Spec ializ ing in AMF &amp;
Co lumbia Bowling Ba ll s.

the Color- Key Coordinates by Arrow
They' re great I These co·mlnglers that delmitel'f lmpro11e by
close ass ocr atlon. To you - and eech ottlttrl They "re a dOublft
helpi ng o f wash and wear fashion: the double kM slacks In
solids, see rs uckers, and mlnl-checka- plus the knlllopa In
cl&amp;ar solids or s tripes. Mix "em. Match 'em. Bu t remember, the
hl-hl shiQ n ke y rathe coupling ol color : red /novy or blue /
yellow or br own /go ld. What a deuce I Buy more than tw oand live o lot.

•Arrow~

SHIRTS
SLACKS.-

from '8.00
from '18.00

Twins nip Tigers
3-2 in 10 rungs

27 17 .614

(nigh t)

p.m.l
Atl anta at Ch icago (2 : 1S p.m.J
Houston

5,000

Mi nn P~ ota

Ci ncin nati at Pittsburgh ( 1: 30

---

1

Ch icago

W. L.
26 22
25 24
21 23
20 22
21 26
20 28

Wes t
W. L. Pet. GB

W. L. Pet. GB

p.m.J
I

Detro it
New Yo r k
Boston
Bal t imor e
M ilwaukee
Cleve land

Dock Ellis. who gave up nine
hits ~nd fanned seven while
walking one, evened his record
at S-5, but needed ninth-mning
relief help from Ramon Her-

CHARLOTTE, N. C. (UPI)
- Tom Weiskopf zi pped
through the third round of the
Ke mper Ope n Golf Tou rnament with a four-und er par
68 Saturday a nd claimed a twostroke lead al J:l.under-par 203
after 54 holes of the $200,000
event.
Vete ran Ken Stili, who haS
been on the PGA Tour since
1960 bu t hasn' t won a tourna ment since 1970, and La nny
Wadk ins both shot 71s to tiefor
the runnerup spot at 205, 11under-par on the 7,219-yard
Quail Holl ow Country Club
course.
Four players were tied at 10und er 20G, including secondr ound
leader · Leona rd
Thompson, who shot a fa t 74
wi th two bogeys Saturday.
Others at 206 were Cesar
Sa nud o, a four-yea r tou r
veteran confin ed to the also·
ran ranks so far this yea r '!'o'ho
shot a six-1-mder 66, Da ve Hill
with a third round G7 and
Cha rl es Cood y wit h a 10
Saturday.
Art W~ ll Jr. was next in line
&lt;~t eighL-under 208 arter a round
or 70. Rod Funse th carded a 70,
Wa yne Yale$ a 70 and George
J ohnson a 68 to tie at 209 . Nine
golfers were clustered at 210.
&lt;~ J 'm pla ying rea ll y well,
pu tted very well and fee l very

Ameri can League Standings
BY United Press International
( Night games not incl uded)

W. L,. Pet. GB

Chicago

PITTSBURGH (UP() - The
Pittsburgh l'lrates jumped on
Cincinnati's Jack Billingham
for three first-inning runs as
the Pirates went on to win their
sixth
straight
decision
Saturday afternoon, 4-3.

I UP I J

H eavywei~ht fi~hter Jerry
Q.Jarry ~'riday wa.&lt; fort'ed to

2 in Kemper tourney

seco nd . Ron Sa nto th en
grounded to Marty Perez and
Cardenal raced all the way to
third . Schueler follo wed by
un corking a wild pi tch,
allowing Cardenal to score !he
go-ahead run.
A trip le by Sonny Ja ckson
and an infield out gave Atlanl&lt;l
a run in the fir st inning, but
Chicago tied the score in the
second inning when Morton hit
Cardenal to open llie inning.
Cardenal then stole second and
scored on Santo's single up the
middle.
The Cubs added another r un
in the third on a single by
Kessi nger, an infield out a nd
Beckert's single up the midd le.
Dave Johnson 's tw o.run
sing le in th e fo ur th gave
Atlanta a 3-2 lead un til ·the
sixth.

Ea st

Billingham is injured

IIUAHR V OUT
NEW YORK

Weiskopf on top by

We Don't HelVe Any! ·
· Our Bus iness is help in g you save you r money. Che-ck Ihe
price on a new V.W. &amp; our gasoline m ileage . You c an
become a banker rather than a .s pender , too .

NEW POST
NEW YORK fUPl) - AJ&gt;pointment of Howard Berk to
fill the newly created post of
Director of Special Projects in
the Office of 111e Baseball
Commissioner was ;mnowlCed
F'riday by Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
Berk, until recently vice
president ol the New York
Yankees, will assume his new
post Monday, June i.

Reds lose another, 4-3;

Reuschel, Cubs
slip past Braves

Have Gas Pains?

earth 's atmosp here

SAVINGS

15-The Stmday Times. Sentinel, SWlday, June 3,1973

~\\1;/ 7'
:::::;

~': -:Jil !\

PRO FESS IONA L BALL F ITTIN G,
DRIL LI NG&amp; IN·
STRUCTION AV AI LABLE

SPECIA L RATES TO :
CHUR CH GROU PS ,
PAR TI ES, STUDENTS.

~

PHONE
446-3362

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TODAY'S
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I.

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Pa ® ~

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WHERE THE UVING IS EASY

cY~~t?f

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While That Slays Whrle
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50

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• Guarllflleed to gNe complele satisfaction.
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rem&amp;lmler to our S &amp; T Store lor relund
of the lull ~ rice you ~aid.

5V Metal Roofing
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i

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�•

14- The SunGay Times- Sentinel.SUnaay.June 3. 1973
·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·;·;·,·,·,·,·~.-

••
•

•

Gunmen
1Contin.ued from page 13 \
under control of the hija ckers.
The hijackers were identified
by SAM officials, who checked
off the names of the other 85
passengers as they were
released . Only Rivera and
Howards remained. Rh·era
ooarded the plane Wednesday
in Cali; they said, and Howards
boarded at Pereira . The
hijacking of the domestic flight
occurred between Pereira and Medellin .
The plane first flew to Aruba,
a Dutch island in the Caribbean
.off Venezuela 's coast, and on
Thursday it fle1,1,· over the
Central American countries of
Panama , Costa Rica and Ei
Sah·ador seeking without suc.
cess a pla~ to land. It returned
to Aruba. where SAM officials
gave the hijac kers $50,000 in
cash and brought in Molina and
a new crew to replace the
original one .
On fr ida y the hijackers took
the plane to Guayaquil, Ecuador, then to Lima, Peru , and
then oVer Olile to Meildoza,
Argentina, and on to Resis·
tenria and then to As Wl cion,
Para guay, fr om whe re it
returned ear ly Saturday to
Resistencia when the hijackers
fled .
The hijackers. originally had
demanded. $150,000 in ransom
and !he release or 140 prisoners
in Colombia . The Colombian
gove i-nmet:tt refused to .release
any prisoners .

TinS IS ONE Of TWO AMBULANCES of the new
emergency medital service cSEOEMS) to go into operation
soon in Meigs County . The whicle arrived friday morning
from the Ohio Valle\· Health Sen•ices in Athens and is parked
in a garage located ~n the Ben Ewing property, Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy. Personnel for the new service has not been appointed yet, and the day lhe senrice will be in operation is
unknown. Meantime. county funeral homes have agreed to
pro\.ide limited ambulance service until the new emergency
medical ser.ice begins.
TWO CON\"I CTED
COFFERS fiLLED
Calif.
SACRAME:\TO.
CLEVEL.A:-ID 1UPIJ - The
1UPli Two women have Ohio Republican Party ·s fund
been
com·icted
in raising dinner and cocktail
Sacramento's ·'hot peppers ·· party here Thursday featuring
brothel case. Hazel H. Sanford, Vic-e President Spiro Agnew
31, was found guilty of residing netted the GOP coffers about
.in a house of ill fame, and Pat $400,000 . The $150-a·plate
Patterson, 46, pleaded guilty to dinner attracted 1.410 persons,
keeping a house or ill fame . while some 200 couples paid
They will be sentenced next Sl ,OOO to raise a toast with
week.
Agnew at the cocktail party .
Sheriff ' s in\·e stigat ors The money will be used to run a
testified that "when the girls slate of Republican candidates
were working, there would be a in !his fall 's election.
string of colored peppers
hanging fr om a mailbox.··
They said •·peppers" was also
Bulle Rock was the first
the code word allowing · thoroug hLred horse imported
custome rs to ente r and pa y from England to Ame rica, in
fees ranging from SIO to $20. Jl:W.

................•.·.•.·:·;·:·::

ELDER WINS AAA
COI.UM Bt;S (l;P I) - A
se\'t&gt;n·run uprisi ng in tbe
lilth inning po" ered Cio·
cinnati Elder to a 7·1 " ·in
o'er Cle,·eland Glenville aod
ga••• Elder the slate Class
AAA baseball title Saturda)'.
E lder's ~A in ga \•e th e
sc hool two state cham·
pionships. The Panthers won
th e sta te Cl ass
AAA
basketball cro"-n in March.
Elder sent II men to the
plate iu the lifth luning, ,.·ith
th ird
baseman
Paul
Neimeyf'r pounding out t wo
sin gles and driving home h,·o
run s.
Enduring Or a,.i ngs
Leonardo da Vinci so accurate!)• observed and drew
plants that his insights the sun·seeking twists of
fl owers. the thrust of roots.
the gro wth of bark - e,ndure

•
_,

1

WILl. f'OLJ.,OW ADVICE
WASHINGTON I UJ'I 1- The
U.S. Postal Service says it wdl
follow the advice of Slime
leading gasoline suppliers by
instructing 1ts drivers to dnve
at speeds less than :;o miles an
hour, avoid jack rabbi! sUlrls,
keep engines properly "'ned
and cut their engines when
making pickups and deliveries.

frank A, Sommerkarnp, asSistant p&lt;;Stmaster general for
delivery services, said Thurs..
db y the actions would save
gasoline. He said a reduction of
1 per cent In !he amount of
gasoline used by Postal Service
vehicles would cut aMual fuel
tilnsumption by 857,018 gallons
for the service's fleet of 100,000
veh1cles.

has
K~~~~;~r or a
centur} . thumbs for anotht"r ride on a
Cit y,
Kan .. stopo\•er . The- Pennsylva nian is as king for letters
of recomme nd a tio n from pubUc officials a s a mea ns of

p:sl

. .a1y1.............1go1oct
. .w1i1111 1
to1u1r 1in1g11
c1h1in1a.. .......................................................................
1in. .b1a1ta1n1;1, 1toct

Giants rally,
defeat Phils

TART

SAN fRANCISCO (UP! ) -

when the Giants scored three
. Bobby Bonds harnrnered a runs to take an 3-7 lead.
home rWl and a pair of singles
Jim Lonborg, who gave up
Saturday to lead !he San hits to all four ba tters he faced
Francisco Giants to a come· in the sixth, was the loser, and
from-behind 11·7 victory over his record fell to ~ the Philadelp hia Phillies.
The victory went to Cha rlie ·
The victory was !he sixth in Williams, 1-0, who look over for
11le last seven games for the Juan Marichal in the sixth
Giants and assures !hem of inning'. Marichal was pounded
retaining first place in the Jor nine hits and six runs in the
National Leag ue West for !he five innings he pitched.
day.
Greg Luzinski drove in four
Bonds hi t his 12th homer of runs for Philadelphia with a
the season as t he Giants three-run horne r and single.
wrapped up the victory with Denny Doyle had three si ngles
three runs in the eig hth inni ng and drove in two r uns for the
and si ngled in the sixth inning Phils.

-

•

CHICAGO (UP!) - Rick
Reuschel, tagged for 10 hits,
survived several shaky innings
Saturday to pick up his sixth
victory of the year in pitching
the Chicago Cubs to a 4-3
decisio n over the Atlanta
Braves.
Reusc hel, who walked two
and struck out four, was in
trouble in five of !he innings he
wor ked, and finally needed
ni nth-inning relief help from
Dave Laroc he.
The Cubs took adva ntage or
the wildness of Ron Schueler,
who re lieved BraveS starter
Carl Morton, in the sixth inning . The Cubs scored two runs
when Glenn Becker t led off
with an infield hit and raced to
third on Billy Williams' single.
Beckert scored as J ose Cardena! forced Williams a t

NatiOnal league Standings

Dr. DaVid Stauffer

DON WATTS V.W.

Space begins where the
~ air) is
too thin to affect objects
moving through i! . It is
usually· sa·id to begin abo.ut
100 mil es a bove the earth.

195 Upper Riv er Rd .
Gallipolis , Oh io, P h. 446 ·9800

EVANGELIST

.
GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AND LOAN co.

THE
SIGN
OF
SAFE

•

,_

Held Crusades in ~.27 States
Former Sports Announcer
Memory Expert

By United Press International
( Ni ght games not incl uded )
Ea ~t

30 20

Pitt sbur gh
New Yor k
M ontrea l
St. Louis
Philadelphia

23 20 .535 3'h
21 23 .477 6
19 23
20 25
19 29
West

.600

.452 7
.444 71/2
.396 10

San F r ancisco 34 20 .630
Los Ange les
31 19 .620 1
Houst on
29 23 .558 4
Ci ncin nat i
27 23 .540 5
Atl an ta
18 31 .367 13V2
San Di ego
18 23 .353 14112
Satu rday 's Res ults
Chicag o 4 Atlan ta 3
PittsbUrgh 4 Cincinnati 3
Sa n Francisco 11 Philadelp hia
7
Houston at St. Lou is ( nigh t)
New Yor k at San Diego I nig ht)
M ont r ea l at Los Ange l es

lnig htl

Sunday 's Games
! All Times EDT)

I

I

at St . Louis

(2: 15

p.m./

GUARANTEED SAVIIGS

"Mon treal at Los Angeles

p.m .}

..

New York at San

(5

Di ego (4

Phi la delph ia at San Fra nci sco
(3: 1S p.m.)
Monday's Games
San Fran ci sco at Pi ttsburgh

I

(nightl

New Yor k at Cin cinnati (nig ht)
Phi l adelphia
at
Houston

2 Year, Savings
Certificates
mm1mum

5%%

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$1,000 minimum
1 Year

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Converted Night Club Entertainer

li} Ilw Wth of th !' 111o 111h and t•arn fm m th t·
llHH tth l}

o n aPt'o unt• of~ l.OOfl or

fir~ t .

lll OI'lc'

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

GALLIPOLIS, 01-'

Songwriter and Re~ording Star
NURSERY AVAILABLE

PLENTY OF PARKING

SPECIAL MUSIC
Featuring Meigs County's own Singing King Family

PHONE 446-38 37

•,

SAVARD SIGNED
HINGHAM, Ma ss. (UP! ) ~
The Boston Bruins annoWlced
friday the signing of Andre
Sava rd , their fir st-round
choice in the rece nt ~umor
amateur draft, to a multi-year
contract.
Terms of the contract were
not disclosed but it is believed
that Savard, a 6-foot, 185 pou.nd
. r who led the Quetiec
cen!e '
.
d84
Ramparts with 67 g~a ls ~n
assists for 151 pmnts
67
reg ular season ga mes m the
Quebec Junior Hockey t.eague,
.= ed a three-year
pact for an
Sl o•·
•
estim ated $450,000.

:m

Appeared in America'a Largest Churches

J..nt l'r .. ~t paid quartt·rl} on all ,.,,rtifil'ale•
Inlt'n·•l aHtilahlt ·

(On ly game s scheduled)

MIKE VYLONIS, Song Evangelist

Passbook Savings Accounts

Dt'po~ il

lnigh tl

0 p.m.

'

Pet. GB
.S42
.510
.477
.476
.447
.41 7

l !h
3
3
41/2
6

26 20 .565 2
28 23 .549 2'h

Kansa s Ci ty
Ca l itorn i a
25 21 .543 3
Oak I and
24 25 .490 5112
Texa s
16 28 .. 364 11
Saturday 's Res ults
New Yor k 2 Califor n ia 0
M innesota 3 Detroit 2 I 10 inning s)
M il waukee 3 Chi cago 2 ( 13
inning s)
Oakland at Boston (nig ht)
Baltimore at Texa s (nig ht )
Cl e ve la n d at Kan sas Cit y
Sunday 's Games

(All Times EDTI

Balt imor e at Texas. (8 : 30p.m . )
Clevela nd at Kan sas City ( 2: 30
p .m . )
Detr oi t at Minneso ta (3 p.m . )
Ch icago at Mi lwa ukee ( 2:30
p .m . )
Californ ia at New Yor k (2

p.m.l

Oa\k land at Boston (2 p.m .)

Monda y's Gam es
Mi lwa ukee at Oak land (n igh t)
Kan sa s City at Bos ton (n i91i t)
(On ly games scheduled )

BENNETT HIRED
ATLANTA (UPI) - Richard
"Buddy" Bennett,. defensive
seconda ry coach at Arkansas,
was hired by Georgia Tech
Friday to take over the same
job with the Yellow .Jackets.
Benn e tt , 35, replaced Bill
Lewis who had resigned to go
to Arkansas to coach the defeni;ive backs , Tech Coach Bill
F ulcher said . Benne tt 's
secondary at the Uni ve r·sity of
Tenn essee led the nati on in
in terceptions in 1969 wi th 40.

,

BLOOMI NG TON,
Min n.
(UP() ~ J oe Lis, who entered
the game in the ninth inning as
a defensive replacement for
Harm on Killebrew, hit his
second home run of the season
in the bottom of the lOth inmng
Sa turday to give the Minnesota
Twi ns a 3-2 victory ove ~ the
Detroit Tigers.
The victory went to reliever
K en Sanders, wh o pitched the
lOth inning in relief of sta rter
Bert · Blylcven, who was
seeking his fifth slraight win
and third straig ht shu tout.
Blyleven all owed 11 hits in the
nine innings he worked.
Woody Fryman went the
distance for Detroit, his record
dr opping to 2oo5.
The Twins took a Z.O lead in
th e fourth ih ning agains t
Woody Fryma n when J erry
Terrell bunted with the bases
loaded and t.wo out for one run ,
and third baseman Aure lio
Rodri guez, in trying for a play
at the plate, threw the ball past
catcher Duke Sims.
The Tigers tied it in the fifth
against Ber t Blyleven. Wi th
one out , J im Northrup sin gled

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TOU R RESCHEDULED
NEW YO RK I UPI )
Muha mm ad Ali has re~• ul d his tour to. lndo.nesta
sch~ e
d the Far Eastl Jt was an ~
an
d Friday because of the
nounce
•
. hi
broken jaw he received . m s
fight with Ken Norton m San
Diego last March Jl.
.
Ali was ;cheduled to . tour
.
·d engage...
m a
Jndonesw 8·• ·
.
f boxing exhiblllOns
serr es a
b
. the month of June, u1
dunn g
1 . healing
cause of the ong .
~ocess for his broken J3W ' the'
P
will not take place betour S I 27 through the
twe en ep ·
.
.
.end or o ctober of !hts year.

tli:l.ndez and Dave Giusti, while
Billingham, who had to leave
the game in the rirst irming
when he was hit on the left heel
by a ground ball, suffered his
seco nd loss against seven
victories.
The Reds look a t-0 lead in
the first inning on a single by
Pete Rose, followed by Bobby
Tolan 's sacrifice fly . The
Pirates came back with three
rWls in their half of tiH' inning

on si ngles by Dave Cash and
Manny Sanguillen, Ri ch
Hebner 's run-scoring double
and two grOWldouts.
The Pirates made it 4-1 in the
fourth on AI Oliver's single, a
walk mu.l May's single.
Cinci nnati picked up two
unearned runs in the seventh
on a hit batsman. nose's third
si ngle, an erro r by 13ob
Robertson and a groundout.

pull out of his scheduled June
18 bout with Earnie Shavers aL
Madison Square Garden
because ol a case of the flu.
Replacing Quarry will be
Jimmy Ellis, former World
Boxing
As s ociation
heavyweight clktm pion, who
has a record of 38-H.

Yankees
slip by
Angels

NEW VORK I UP!) - Ron
Blomberg and Horace Clarke
eaCh drove in a run and ~· r itz ­
Peterson, with eigh th · irmin g
relief help from Spark y Ly le,
outdue led
Nola n
Rya n
Saturday to help the New York
Yank ees beat !he Californi a
Angels, 2-0.
Peterson had control trouble,
walking fi ve men and throwing
two wild pitches, but !he only
confident, " said Weiskopf, a
Still had four birdies and hits he all owed through seven
ta ll Ohi o ni:ttive tied for fifth in three bogeys but sa id he inn ings Wer·~ a third inning
money winnin gswith"$81,822on considered himse lf to be si ngle by Rudy Meoli and a
lhis yee~r's tour.
playing very we ll. Wadkins, fifth inn ing sin gle by Bob
" I'm looking for ward to whO wCJs Lied with Still for Oliver. The Ya nkees pulled ofl
tornorrow,11 he S&lt;:lid. ''I'm not second plac.:e be hind Thompson U~rce double plays in the first
g"oing to play conse rvative golf. iu the second round , said '' [ hi t fo ur innings to erase Angel
" I'm playing as well as I've it good today, but not as good baserunners .
eve r played - I'm very as yesterday .
Peterson, raising his ·r·ecord
re laxed," Weis kopf said.
" I 'm de ri nite ly within to 5-6, had his toughest moment
Still also ha d praise for shooting nmgc, •· said W:1dkins, . in the ::;ixth when the Angels
Weiskopf. ''Tom played a good fulir th on the mo ney lis t thps loaded the bases wi th two oul'; .
solid round," he said. "The year and just ahcud of on two Widks and an error by
way he1s playing he just mig ht Weis kopf.
Blomberg, but Pcter·son got
wi n the U. S. Open.''
Weiskopf, :30, has one win to Oli ver to hit into an inningWeiskopf started off slow his credit th is year - the ending (oreceout. Lyle held the
Saturda y, shoo ti ng par on the Collm ia l Nat)ona l lnvil.i.tti unal Angels hitless over th e fin ~ l
first four holes before hi tti ng a three weeks ago - and uu~ee two frames to pick up his
three wood to wi thin 25 feel of •, secOnd place finishes. His 6H eighth ::;ave of Lhc season.
the cup, then two-putting for a S;;~tutday was his 17th round in
The Yanks reached Ryan for
bi rdie on the 565-yard No. 5 the 60s this year . He hHd a 65 Lheir first run in the fourth
hole, He fi nished out the fr ont Thursday in the Kemper that inning. With two out Bobby
ni ne with par go lf and tun1el1 tletl the. course record. He won Murcer sin gled, stole second
and scored on a sin gle by
the corner one under.
the· Kemper in J 971.
At No . 10, Weiskopf wedged
The golfers grouped al 210, Rlombcrg. MwTer's steal was
to within two fee t of the cup and six under par, were J . C. se t up by· when ca tcher Art
pu tted in for a.birdie. On 14 and Snea d·, Bob Payne, J ohn Kusnye r ha d trquble holding on
15, he wedged to within 1~ feet Sch lee , M ex i ~. : an Vic tor to one of Rya n's fastba lls.
New York mad e it 2-0 in the
both times and one-pu tted_ for Regalado, Ju an "Chi Chi"
fifth
when Thurma n Munson
birdies. On No. 16, he .l11 t a Rod l'i guez, Lee Trevi no, Bob
wedge shot to within two feet Sha w, J im l)c nt un d · Lou wa lked, moved to third on a hitand added another bird.ic, But Gra hHm .
:lnd-run s i n~ le by Gene
on No. 18, a 448-yard pw· fo ur
Mi cha el a ri d scored on a
hole, -his drive la nded to tile
sac rifice fl y by Clm·kc.
r ight and he over-drove the
NORFOLK WINS TITL E
Ryan, who pitched a llO·
green on his second shot, then
C RAW~'ORD S VILLE,
Ind. hitter last month, suffered his
pitched to within fi ve fee t and · (UP! I - Speeds ter Steve sixt h Joss against as many wins
two-putted fo r a bogey .
Reddick, with three firsl&lt;.i, ::md his thi rd setba ck in a r·ow.
Saturday led favored Nor folk He was touched for seven hi ts
Sl&lt;! le to i)., fi rst NCAA College and struck out six to raise his
Div ision Tr uck a nd F'iel d Maj or
l,c Hg ue . te a d in g
strikeo ut tota l to 123.
champ ionship.
The Sparta ns, runnersup to
E&lt;:~ste rn Mi~ h iga n last year,
totaled 54 poin ts in t"he threcd&lt;.~y m eet to s h &lt;.~dc J.in c.ol n
Uni v.e rsity, in se~on d p l&lt;:.~ ce
with 48, an d third pla ce
and took third When Terre ll Eastern Ul inois with 45.
Re dd ic k , who repea led
boo ted Mi ckey Sta nley 's
Friuay
as 100-yard das h
ground er. Gates Brown singled
off Harm on Kill ebrew's glove ch.;~. m p i o n , w.on th e 220
fo r one run and Willi"c Horton's Sa tur day in 20.6 second s,
infi eld sin gle scor ed the missing the meet record IJy one
tenth of a second . He then
second.
Those
runs
stopped anchored Norfolk Sl&gt;l te's 440Blyleven's strea k of scoreless yard relay whi ch won in 40
second s flat.
·innings at 2:1.

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Spec ializ ing in AMF &amp;
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the Color- Key Coordinates by Arrow
They' re great I These co·mlnglers that delmitel'f lmpro11e by
close ass ocr atlon. To you - and eech ottlttrl They "re a dOublft
helpi ng o f wash and wear fashion: the double kM slacks In
solids, see rs uckers, and mlnl-checka- plus the knlllopa In
cl&amp;ar solids or s tripes. Mix "em. Match 'em. Bu t remember, the
hl-hl shiQ n ke y rathe coupling ol color : red /novy or blue /
yellow or br own /go ld. What a deuce I Buy more than tw oand live o lot.

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SHIRTS
SLACKS.-

from '8.00
from '18.00

Twins nip Tigers
3-2 in 10 rungs

27 17 .614

(nigh t)

p.m.l
Atl anta at Ch icago (2 : 1S p.m.J
Houston

5,000

Mi nn P~ ota

Ci ncin nati at Pittsburgh ( 1: 30

---

1

Ch icago

W. L.
26 22
25 24
21 23
20 22
21 26
20 28

Wes t
W. L. Pet. GB

W. L. Pet. GB

p.m.J
I

Detro it
New Yo r k
Boston
Bal t imor e
M ilwaukee
Cleve land

Dock Ellis. who gave up nine
hits ~nd fanned seven while
walking one, evened his record
at S-5, but needed ninth-mning
relief help from Ramon Her-

CHARLOTTE, N. C. (UPI)
- Tom Weiskopf zi pped
through the third round of the
Ke mper Ope n Golf Tou rnament with a four-und er par
68 Saturday a nd claimed a twostroke lead al J:l.under-par 203
after 54 holes of the $200,000
event.
Vete ran Ken Stili, who haS
been on the PGA Tour since
1960 bu t hasn' t won a tourna ment since 1970, and La nny
Wadk ins both shot 71s to tiefor
the runnerup spot at 205, 11under-par on the 7,219-yard
Quail Holl ow Country Club
course.
Four players were tied at 10und er 20G, including secondr ound
leader · Leona rd
Thompson, who shot a fa t 74
wi th two bogeys Saturday.
Others at 206 were Cesar
Sa nud o, a four-yea r tou r
veteran confin ed to the also·
ran ranks so far this yea r '!'o'ho
shot a six-1-mder 66, Da ve Hill
with a third round G7 and
Cha rl es Cood y wit h a 10
Saturday.
Art W~ ll Jr. was next in line
&lt;~t eighL-under 208 arter a round
or 70. Rod Funse th carded a 70,
Wa yne Yale$ a 70 and George
J ohnson a 68 to tie at 209 . Nine
golfers were clustered at 210.
&lt;~ J 'm pla ying rea ll y well,
pu tted very well and fee l very

Ameri can League Standings
BY United Press International
( Night games not incl uded)

W. L,. Pet. GB

Chicago

PITTSBURGH (UP() - The
Pittsburgh l'lrates jumped on
Cincinnati's Jack Billingham
for three first-inning runs as
the Pirates went on to win their
sixth
straight
decision
Saturday afternoon, 4-3.

I UP I J

H eavywei~ht fi~hter Jerry
Q.Jarry ~'riday wa.&lt; fort'ed to

2 in Kemper tourney

seco nd . Ron Sa nto th en
grounded to Marty Perez and
Cardenal raced all the way to
third . Schueler follo wed by
un corking a wild pi tch,
allowing Cardenal to score !he
go-ahead run.
A trip le by Sonny Ja ckson
and an infield out gave Atlanl&lt;l
a run in the fir st inning, but
Chicago tied the score in the
second inning when Morton hit
Cardenal to open llie inning.
Cardenal then stole second and
scored on Santo's single up the
middle.
The Cubs added another r un
in the third on a single by
Kessi nger, an infield out a nd
Beckert's single up the midd le.
Dave Johnson 's tw o.run
sing le in th e fo ur th gave
Atlanta a 3-2 lead un til ·the
sixth.

Ea st

Billingham is injured

IIUAHR V OUT
NEW YORK

Weiskopf on top by

We Don't HelVe Any! ·
· Our Bus iness is help in g you save you r money. Che-ck Ihe
price on a new V.W. &amp; our gasoline m ileage . You c an
become a banker rather than a .s pender , too .

NEW POST
NEW YORK fUPl) - AJ&gt;pointment of Howard Berk to
fill the newly created post of
Director of Special Projects in
the Office of 111e Baseball
Commissioner was ;mnowlCed
F'riday by Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
Berk, until recently vice
president ol the New York
Yankees, will assume his new
post Monday, June i.

Reds lose another, 4-3;

Reuschel, Cubs
slip past Braves

Have Gas Pains?

earth 's atmosp here

SAVINGS

15-The Stmday Times. Sentinel, SWlday, June 3,1973

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16 - The SWldayTimeo. Sentinel, Sib. ' ay , June 3,1973

•

.•
•

Portsmouth
West claims

•

•

-:·

..
.:.•..
.

Class A title
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Steve
. Sturgill pitdled a three hitter
and he and his brother Scott

accounted for four runs as
Portsmouth East defeated
Adena Buckeye West S.J to win
the Class A high school
baseball championship and
complete an 1~ season.
Steve Sturgill, who had a n1&gt;-

,

••

Drummond
Brothers
top loop

hitter until the sixth inning
when Adena catcher John Fig•
urski singled to break the
streak, scored once and drove
in two runs. Brother Scott
scored once.
steve grounded out in the
third to score Gary Corill and
give Portsmouth a 1.0 lead, but
Adena tied it in the fourth.
Portsmouth scored its win.
ning runs in the filth inning
when Scott SturgiU led off with .
a single and was bunted ·to
third.
Steve singled iri his brother:
catcher Mike Stapleton scored
on a wild pitch: and Steve
Sturgill scored on a passed
baU.
Buckeye West wound up the
season with a 17~ record.
SturgiU, Portsmouth's No. 2
pi tcher, wound up 3-owhile losing pitcher Gary ZBmski finished a t :i-1.

•

St. Paris Graham cops AA crown
.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - St.
Paris Graham, behind the tw&lt;&gt;hit pitching of Tim West, defeated Beloit West Branch :i-1
Saturday and won its first
Class AA state baseball cham:
pionship.
West gave up only two sin-

.

pitcher. He finished the season
with a 1-4 record .
St. Paris jwnped out in front
with two runs in the first on a
throwing error by Rohaley . St.
Paris picked up another run in
the third when Gary Kites
tripled and scored on a sacrifice fiy, and two more runs in

the fifth .
Kite was thrown out of the
game
for
unnecessary

Smyth Makes Statement
" We plan to discuss and
considef several
recommenda lions
(or
r u les
modifications made in the past
week by drivers, car owne1.st
track operators and public
members," William J. Smyth,
USAC exec utive director, said
Friday evening.
Smyth
said
recornrnenda lions resulting from the
special meeting today would be
an nounced later.
Norma lly, rule changes are
first recommended by USAC's
r ul es committee, t hen appr oved by th e boa rd of
directors.
USAC officials were also
reportedly trying to convince
its technical committee head,
Frank Del Roy, who resigned
fo llowing the race, to reconsider .
In a dd ition to the two .
fata lities. several per sons wer e
injW'ed seve r ely, includig r ace
driver s Salt Wa lther , burned in
a crash in an a bortive a ttempt
to run the race Monday, and
Swed e
Sa v age,
burn e d
critically in a crash We dnesday. A number of fans were

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

8111 Oal1as 1 who graduated last week, son of G:raham
Local Supt. of Schools Supt. and Mrs. George Dalins, is a .
regular on the new AA state champion baseball team. His
brother Steve, a sophomore, also on the squad, was used
mainly throughout lhe season as a pinch Nnner.
The boys are grandsons of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Matlack,
Chester Road and Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, Middleport, who
witnessed both of the team•s victories in the state finals
Friday and Saturday.
George Dallas, a graduate of Pomeroy High School, ~as
band director of Midd leport High School and later execuuve
head of the Northwestern Local School District IRutlaod ).

Newspaper Suggests Chaoge
The Indianapolls News
suggested that "a change in the
method of starting the race
also is needed since tbe cars
are much wider now than when
the three-car rows were
established."
The I ndianapolis Star,
however, said, "it's charac~
teristic of the 500 that when
drivers are finish ed with
whatever m ileage they make
in one year's r ace, they start
th ink ing about next year . This .
ti me officials a nd oth er
decision.ffiakers should start
doing some very hard thinking
about next year: They should
be thinking about the ' disintegration of ca r s in accid ents,
about flaming fu el gushing
from ruptured tanks, a bout the
vulnerability of spectator s at
the edge of the tl'ack .
" To s wn it up , there is need
lor some deep a ttention to the
safety of the race. It 's essential, we think., to maintaining
the standing ·of th e '500' as the
big one in ra cing.''

HOUlE

St. Paris
201 020 fh5 6 3
Beloit West 001 000 1&gt;-1 2 1
West and Moore: Rohaley,
Grinun (6) and McNeeley.
WP- West (8-1).
LP- Rohaley ( 1-4).

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Marshall,

Don Watts Volkswagen Inc.

J ona th a n Day ton , at the
age of 26, was the youn gest
signer of the U.S. Co nstitu t ion. Dayton , Ohio , is na m ed
for him .

FORK &amp; K

VINDALE SECTIONAL-60xl4'

I •••••••••••••

-

This week's
local games

.

\

} Friday's Linescores

At Oak Hill, the Oaks
defeated Vinton , :i-1 behind the
one-hit
pitching
of
righthander J erry Boggs .
·. Johnny Oiler's single was the
-lon e hit ror the Dodgers. Red
Justus was the losing pitcher.
He wa.s relieved by Issac in the
filth .

will begin

LOOK

EXTERIOR
WHITE
.
LATEX HOUSE PAINT .
TWO GALLONS FOR.

PITTSBURGH !UP!) - The nine runs every time and J'll
Pittsburgh Pirates got help
GALLIPOLIS - Cheshire, Green, 1:i.:1 and O•k Hill topped respectively .
show you how to win."
£rom the Lone Ranger and
Bidwell
and Oak HiU captured Vinton S..l.
He got help in the third inMetzner belted a single,
Ulree home rWls in overpower.·
opening
nigh
t
victories
Friday
In the Cheshire-Addaville double and home run . Blazer
nin g from Richie Hebner's twoing the Cii]Cinnati Reds !Hi
in the Gallia County Pony game, Baird fanned 15 while tripled , doubled and singled
run
double and a two-run
Friday nighl
League. Cheshire, behind the walking four . Bill Metzner, Jeff and Kern slashed a triple.
homer by Willie Stargell, who
Winning pitcher Steve Blass, leads the National League in
no-hit pitching ·of righthander Blazer, Torn Kern and Rick Fraley was the losing pitcher.
who yielded three runs before home runs with 15.
Steve Baird, defeated Ad- Winebrenner paced the win- He was relieved by Mollohan
retiring a batter. showed
daville,
19.0; Bidwell overran ners with three and two hits and Westfall.
Reds' Manager Sparky Andreporters the silver bullet
e rson ca lled Hebner's double
Greg James slammed a
which he said got him out of the turning point.
l.;;:::::::::.:.:.:..~:::::::~:~::::;;:::~}..::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~;~ home run, two triples and a
trouble.
" It was a good low pitch but
single in pa cing Bidwell to its
''It was given to me by' a man when that guy's hitting, he'll
\ili lopsided 13·1 victory over
just yesterday, " he said. " I hit any pitch from his ankles to N
~
Green . Ji'red Lo~an had four
((
~
didn 't catch his name but he
Major League Resut1s
the top of his hat ," Anderson
Los Ang
200 001 OOx- 3 4 1 hits, a double and three s ingles
was a masked man on a white said.
By United Press International
Moore, Walker (8) and and Mike Casey had two
Na1ional League
Boccabella ; Sutton (7-3) and singled .
horse and he had an Indian
The Reds had taken a 3-o lead
003
000
500- a 13 0 Ferguson . LP- Moore (3.-4).
All.:mta
with him .
Chicago
301 300 ()()(}..,- 7 11 2
before the blast by Hebner,
Gene Welch was the winning
Harrison , House (4), Dobson NewYork
0000000()0-0 80 pitcher while Evans took the
"Seriously, though, give me who finished the night with four
(6), Niekro (7) and Oates ; San Diego
400 000 OOx- 4 9 0
RBis .
Hooton , Gura (6), Aker (7) and
Koosman , McGraw (8) and loss . Anderson and Brown a lso
Hundley. WP- Dpbson fJ.7) . LP Dyer ; &lt;lr ief (4·51 and Kendall. saw action for Green .
Back-to-back homers by
0
- Aker (1·4) , HRs~Sanfo (6th) LP- Koosm~n (5-4).
Welch siruck out ll while
Wl.lllleS S 0 f iSManny Sanguillen and Hebner
Williams 2 17th and 8th). Gar;
(2nd) .
produced two more P1rate runs
issuing
four free passes. Rose
Phila
100 000 000- 1 .40
San
Fran
000
100
01x2
50
in the fifth, and Sanguillen's
had the lone hit off Welch, a
Cincinnati 300 000 21o- 6 10 o
Twitchell , Scarce (8) and
triple ignited a tw~&gt;-run rally in
firth
inning single.
Pitlsbgh
005 020 20x- 9 10 2 Boone ; Bryant (8-3) and Rader .
McGlothlin
,
Sprague
(2L
Hall
the seventh, climaxed by
LP - Twitchell 13·21 . HR · {4) , Borbon (6). Gullett (8), and ~c:Covey (11 th ).
Hebner's sacrifice fly and Bob
Bench ; Blass, Johnson (7),
GALL l A COUN TY PON Y
Roberson 's run-scoring single.
Rooker (7), Giusti (8) and M.ay.
LE AGUE ST ANDIN GS
American
Leag
ue
The Reds added two more WP- Biass (3-31. LP- Sprague {14 inn ings)
Tea m
W L R OR
10·21.
H Rs- Siargell
I 15th I , Baltimore
1 o 19 o
Cheshire
runs in the seventh on singles
Sanguillenn (6th). Hebner (4th).
Bidwell
1 0 13 1
000
002
010
000
oo3
9
1
by Joe Morgan and Johnny
Texas
·
Oak Hi ll
I 0 5
I
Houston
011 000 000-- 1 8 0
GALLIPOLIS - Swimming Bench, sandwiched around a
Southwestern
0 0 0 o
100
011
000
000
01
"'4
14
0
Louis
200 020 OOx- .4 8 o
o 1 1 s
lessons will begin at the walk and an error. Pete RosE!'s St.Reuss.
Alexander,
Reynolds (7). Vinton
York (7) and Ed · Jackson ( 1.4) and Etchebarren, Green
0
1 1 13
Gallipolis pool on Monday, triple and a wild pitch ac- wards ; Cleve land, Segui (8)
0 l 0 19
Hendricks (7); Merritt, Dun - Addavilte
and Simmons. WP- Cieveland ning (6) , Hudson (7), Foucau lt Tota ls
June 11, according to Manager counted for a run in the eighth
3 3 39 39
15·41. LP- Reuss 16·3) .
Th
is
week's
ga
mes:
(8},
Paul
(
121
and
Billings.
WP
John Milhoan.
inning.
T ues d ay Green at
- Paul (4-3). LP- Reynotds ( 1Milhoan said all individuals
000 000 101- 2 50 3) .
Cincinnati's Ed Sprague took Montreal
Cheshire ; Addavi ll e at Vinton ;
Southwestern af BidWel l. Oak
must register for both sessions the loss after relieving Jim
Cleveland
010 030 000-.4 6 1 Hill Bye.
( June ll-21 and July 9-19 ) in McGlothlin, who left the game
Kan City
200100 11x- 5 9 2
Frida y - Vinton at Green ;
order to participate this with a pinched nerve in his
Tidrow
,
Hi
lgendorf
(7) and Cheshire at Southwestern ; Oak
Ma jor League Le~ d ers
Duncan ; Drago (5·4) and Hill at AddaVille. Bidwell bye.
summer.
I ndividua l s, back after one inning .
By Un it ed Press lntern011tion a I
Healy
, Taylor (8). LP--. Hilgen.
however, will be required to
Lead ing Batters
dorf f2· 1J . HRs- Spikes (lOth) ,
Na1iona
I
League
take part in on ly one of the two
Bevacqua (lst) .
g. ab · r . h. pet.
lnterna1 ional
sessions.
Watsn. Hou 52 185 36 66 .357
l
eague
Standings
401 002 OlD- 8 12 0
Mad dox. SF 40 149 16 51 .;142 Detroit
Applications for lessons are
Press
lnternation~l
By
United
000 200 100--3 7 3
Fair ly, Mti 37 111 14 38 .342 Minn
American Division
now bei ng accepted at the pool.
Coleman,
Hiller
(7)
and
Cash, Pit
34 1.41 24 48 .340
W. L. Pel . GB
Cutoff figure for beg in ners is
Grubb. so · 43 146 23 49 .JJ6 Freehan ; Kaa t, Corbi n (1)', Roches ler
29 17 .630
Goltz
(5),
Decker
{8)
a
nd
34 119 15 40 .336
Syracuse
21 21 .500 6
GALLIPOLIS ...;_ Here 's this Mota, LA
100. Twenty-two will be the
Lopes , LA 39 135 21 45 .333 Mifterwa ld . WP- Co leman ( JQ. Pawtucke l
18 21" .462 6'h
week
's
summer
recreation
J) . LP- Kaal (6·31. HRscutoff fi gures fo r advanced
18 29 .383 1111,
program sched ule for baseball Torre , St.L 37 130 16 43 .331 Stanley (6th), Hol t (JrdL Toledo
Rbnsn, Phil 36 120 19 39 .325 Mitterwwald l51h1, W alton
beginners, inte rmediates and and basketball teams:
National Divi s ion
Wms .. Ch i 48 177 29 57 .322 (3rd ).
W. L. Pet . GB·
(Bas eball )
swimmers.
Am er ican Leagu e
Charleston
30 16 .652
PE E WEE LEAGUE
Intermediates and swimg . ab r . h. pet . Chicago
26 21 .553 41f:o&gt;
Monday Organizational
000 010 Oil - 3 10 o Ti dewater
Peninsu la
24 22 .522 6
mers classes will star\ at 9 meeting, 10 a.m. on Memorial Blmbrg , NYJJ 99 16 39 .394 Mi lw
001
.121
OOx·s
14
0
Krkp lk, KC 41 152 29 53 .349
Richmond
13 32 .289 16 1b
Fie
ld.
Wood , Johnson {6) a'nd
a.m. Advanced beginners will
Kelly,
Chi
J2
123
24
41
.333
Friday
's
Res ults
LITTLE LEAGU E
Herrmann ; Shor t, Lockwood
be held at 10 a.m. ·and beg inMonday - YankeeS vs . Red D.Alle n, Chi 43 159 . 29 51 .321 17). l,..lnzy {9) and Rodr iguez. Toledo 7 Char leston 6
42 154 21 49 .JIB
Sox, 6 p.m . AfhleticS vs. In - Fisk, Bos
ners sta rt a t 11 a.m.
WP- Shor t 12·11. LP- Wood I l l · Roches ter 7 Pawtucket 5
Bra un , Min 40 137 25 43 .314 4)
dia
ns,
8:
20p
.m.
. HRs- Scott (S ihl. Her rman n_ Syracuse 3 Peninsul a 2
Jun ior a n d Se ni or Li fe
Tidewater 6 Richmond · 4, lsi
Tuesday - Cubs vs. -Orioles, · Hart, NY 31 109 12 · 34 · .312 l&lt;lh).
Tidewater 2 Richmond o, 2nt;:t
Saving courses will be offe re~ 6 p .m. Senators 1/s. Tigers, 8:20 Hndrsn, Chi 36 135 21 42 .311
. p.m.
.
. Carew, Min 44 164 18 50 .305 Ca lifornia
eit her at noon or 6 p.m .
003 010 ooo- 5 9 0
51 207 34 63 .304
Wednesday - White Sox vs . Ol is, K C
New
York
100 001 000-- 2 8 1
If enough pe.r sons show in- Sen~tors. 6 p.m. Orioles vs .
Home Runs
Singer, Barber {9). Sells (9)
National
_League
:
Stargel
l,
terest, adult lessons will be Padres, 8:20 p.m.
and Kusnyer; Kekic h, Beene
Thursday - Pa dr e.s vs. Pi tt 15; Aaron, Atl 13; Evans, (4) and Munson . WP- Singer
given the latter part of July.
Athlet ics. 6 p.m. Cubs vs . Atl, Monday, Chi, Bench, Cin, {9·2l. LP- Kekich (J . l). HRWynn, Hou, Ferguson, LA, Berry ! 1st) .
Mil hOan sa id atte nda nce Yankees. 8:20 p.m .
Bonds an d McCovey., SF l l.
Friday
Tigers
vs.
Indians
,
began to pick up at the pool .
American League: Mayberry,
6
p.m.
Red
Sox
'vs
.
White
Sox,
110 000 ooo- 2 7 0
with the fi r st r ea l good 8:20 p.m .
KC 13; D. Allen, Chi 11 ; Oakland
Bos ton
301 000 02x- 6 12 0
Mel
ton
,
Chi,
Duncan
and
sw imming wea!her Friday and
PONY LEAGUE
Hami lt on, Fingers {8) and
Monda y Dod gers vs . Spikes, Clev, May, Mit, Murc;er , Fosse ; Pa tt in (4.7) and Fisk.
Salurday .
NY
and
Bando,
Oak
10.
Ph lilie-s.
LP- Hami lton (Q. JJ. HR sSince the pool opened on May
Runs Batted In
Tuesday - Reds vs . Braves .
Bando
I. Fisk (9th).
National LeagUe : Ferguson, Mangua l I(2lOth
Wednesday - DOdgers vs·,
27, Milhoan sai&lt;l. the pool has
nd).
Petro c e I I I
LA 43; Bench, Cin ·J9; Stargel 1, (lith) .
.
sold 53 student tickets and 42 Giants
Thursday - Phit li es vs . Pit1 36; Williams, Chi and
Watson , Hou 34.
family tickets.
ReC:s.
Ame rican League: Mayberry.
Fr iday - Gian ts vs . Braves.
KC
49 ; Melton, Chi 39; Jackson,
All games start at 6 p.m. on
· Oak 36; Murcer, NY .34; D.
Memorial Field.
Allen, Chi 30.
BASKETBALL
Pitching
!Se nior Loop )_
Na1iona
I
Leagu
e: Bryant, SF
. Monda y - One vs. Two;
,
Cin
7-l; Sutton,
8-3;
Billing
ham
Three vs. Four; Five vs. Six on
Court 1. Seven vs . Eight ; Nine LA 7·3; Wise, St. L 6·-2; Jenkins,
vs . Ten ; Eleven vs . Twelve, Chi, Reuss, Hou and Seaver,
NY 6-3; Ma r ic hal, SF 6-4.
Cour t 2. Game times - 7: 15,
American League: Wood, Ch i
8: 15 and 9: 15p.m.
13·4;
Ho lt zman, Oak 10-2;
Tuesday - Seven vs. Four;
Five vs. Two ; Three vs. One on · Coleman. Det 10-3; Singer, .car .
By
Court 1. Twelve vs. Ten; 9-2; Sp lillorff, K.C ] .J; Stoff.
eliminated
Ereven vs. Eight and "Nine vs . Iemyre, NY 7·5.
Six, Court 1. ·
TERRY
CARBONDALE, ill . (UP!) Wedn esda y - .One vs. Five;
IOHNSON
• • Miami of Ohio was eliminated Seven vs . Three ; Nine vs . Two Glass improving,
fr om the NCAA District 4 on Court 1. Eleven vs . Four ;
Twelve vs . Six an d Ten vs.
ma jor college b~se ball tour- Eight, Court 2.
,.
At one time th e house on
r, nament Friday , losi ng to
(Jun ior High )
is satisfactory
whee
ls was referred to as a
Monday
Organ
izational
; : '; Southern Illinois 8-1.
trailer . This lead many
meeting with Ken Turner in
'
The defeat was Miami's Washington gym , beginnin·g at
peop le to believe that they
CLEVELAND (UP! )
8 p.m.
were just a lit tl e con.
second
in
the
do
uble
Clevela nd Br owns reserve
••
venient apparat us fo r
•
elimination tourney .
tight end Chip Glass was in
transien ts, circus people
•
So uthe rn ll li nois played
and
thea ter road com ·
DE MI NG PROMOTED
satisfactory condition an d
panies.
For t he true
Minnesota Saturday for the
HAM ILTON, N.Y. ( UPI J- showing "signs of im.
~ ~ · j' District 4 title a nd the r ight to
fneaning of a trai ler Is, . a
Robert C. Demi ng has been
provement" from emergency
tar, wagon . sled. house on
play in the College World promoted to athletic director of surgery to remove a blood cl ot
whee ls or any veh icle
••- Series later th is mo n ~ h .
pul led by a mo tor ca r , So
Colgate University from his from his groin, doctors a t Mt.
·you can see where lhls
•
Southern Illinois pinc h- presen't pos t as ,ch ief assistant Sian i Hospi ta l said Sa tur day.
definifion of a house on
runner Ken Kral stole home in football coach.
The doctors indicated Glass
wheels · mighl mis lead the
the seventh inning to break a lpubli c.
The appointment, announced will probably be taken out of
1 tie and give the Saiukis a 2-1 Sa turday night by Dr; Thomas the intensive ca r e unit
The mobi le home Is what
lead .
A.
Bartlett,
University sometime Sunday.
people now lovingly ca ll
SIU ~ot two more runs in the President, fills the job vacated
Glass, a five·yea r veteran
their house on wheel.s . For
eighth on a two-run h ~rne r by by the recent resignation of from Florida State, was
it is truly that ... a mobile
home . All the conveniences
Joe wallis . Southern 1ced the Harold W. Lahar , who ac· operated on Friday afternoon
living enioyments of a
and
game in the ninth inning with cepted a post as assistant when comp lications developed .
stationary house with the
four more runs on three hits executive secretary of the
extra convenience of
He entered the hospita l 12
mobi lity.
and two stolen bases.
Southwest Athletic Conference . days ago for surgery to correct
Miami managed only five
a r uptured s pinal disc.
JOHN SOW S
hits. · Early Friday, Miami
Browns' orficia ls said ' ther e
MOBILE HOME SAL ES
defea ted Marshall 5·2 to ' CASH APPOINTED
21 10 Easte rn Avenue
was a &lt;~goOO" chance Glass
ST . LOUIS (UP! ) - Jim
Ga IIi poli s, Ohio
eliminate west.. Virginia team
would be a ble to play this
Phone
614 -446·3547
Cash
has
been
app
ointed
·
from the tourney .
season .
Miami pitcher Steve Imphoff comptroller of the St. Louis
tossed a four·hltter in the Fcotball Cardinals. William V.
Marshall game, while Art Bidwill, managing general
Grzeskowiak slammed a three- partner of the Cardinals, said
Cash would be promoted from
run homer .
Miami 's first loss in the his current post as . ticket
tourney came Thursday, a 3-2 manager. He joined the dub in
AFTE R
BE FORE
1969.
defeat by Minnesota.

S

lhe /port/ Bug.

Eastern, Syracuse triumphhad two s ing les, and Bob
Burlow singled . For Rutland
Jim Anderson doubled a nd
Floy d Fitzpatrick and Randy
George singled.
Rutland
300 000 1&gt;-3 3
Eas tern
103 500 X-9 ·5
Jim Anderson, Buddy Dugan
(3), Bob Williamson (5) and
Dugan , Anderson, (3 ). Mike
ilall a nd Phil Bowen.
Syracuse Wins
Sy ra cuse, playing at Racine,
got jus t one. hit, a single by
Gregg Cundiff, but rolled up
. seven runs . Racine had two
hits, singles by Gregg Dunning
a nd Jack Young .
Stewart for Syracuse fanned
14. Racine pitchers , Riffle and
Hoffman , fanned 6. No line
score was kept.

St. Paris advanced to the fi.
nals by whipping Columbus
Watterson 8-4 in semi.finals
play Friday. Graham rallied
lor six runs in the last inning
and a come-from~ind win.
Beloit de fell ted Philo in semifinals play. West Branch
jumped to a 7.0 lead and then
coasted to an 8-2 win.

•

also burned by fire from
Walther's crash .

Pomeroy Phils romp; A's,
· (3), E bersbach (5) and R .
Ba r ry.
Mc K(nn ey
a nd
Nesse lroad .
Athletics·Win
A fine throw by ca tcher
Brian Ha milton m ay . have
·saved the 8-7 victory of the
Athle tics over the Americans.
In the Middleport seventh , with
the tying run on second base,
Hamilton's throw to third· cut
down the runner trying to s teal.
For Middleport, Mike May
homer ed and ·hit two d oubles,
a nd Steve Bac hne r, Mick
Dave nport and _Dave Smith
ea ch ha d a hit.
Fo r
P omeroy,
Br ia n
Hamilton had two hits and
Doug
Brownin g,
Dale
Browning, Ron Snyder and
Duane While each one hit.
Dal e Brownin g , win.ning
pitc he r, fanned nine and
walked one in four innings.
Da venport fanned five, walked
s ix for Middleport. ·
Eastern Wins
Easte rn,
returnin g
to
organized Pony League play
a fter several years absence,
pushed across five runs in the
fourth inning to put the game
out of Rutland's reach .
F or E a stern· Dave Hannwn
tripled, Phil Bowen tripled and

roughness
ag.a inst
West
Branch catcher Ron McNeeley
when he scored from third .

·:o:.:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:-:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;::~::::::::::::~::-.:-;:::::::::.
·-~~······~···-~--~

possible rule changes
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!)
Officials of the U. S. Auto Club
and other key members of the
racing fr aternity gathered
here Saturday to study possible
rule changes to make next
year's Indianapolis "500" safer
than the tragedy-marred 1973
holiday race .
ln the wake of criticism from
both within and without the
racing fraternity, USAC of.
ficials announced they would
stage a meeting Saturday
while the issue was still fresh.
Racing activity dur ing May
resulted in the dea th of veteran
driver Art Pollard, Meford,
Ore., and Ar inand Duran, a pit
cr ewma n , struck by a 1fire
truck during the r unnin g of the
ra in-delayed
and
ra inshortened race Wed nesday.
Poll ard was killed in a practice
crash May 12.
Even "500" winn er Gordon J ohncock and his sponsQr ,
Andy Granatelli, have asked
USAC and other racin g of.
fic ia ls to take action to curtail
the speeds of the cars. J ohncock eve nt ually won the r ace
which was called by rain after
332.5 miles.

Pirates rally,
Cheshire, Bidwell, Oak Hill
edge Reds 9-6 post wins in league openers

.

gles, and neither figured in
West Branch's lone run. He
struck out six batters. The win
was West 's eighth of the year
against one loss and St. Paris'
18th victory against three defrats .
Mark Rohaley was the lostng

Race officials study

GALLIPOLIS - Drummond
Brothers Beer took over sole
possession of first place in the
Gallipolis Slow Pitch League
Friday night with a narrow 1211 win over G&amp;J on the Elk's
Field.
Qrwnmond Brothers banged
000 102 1&gt;-~ 3 2
out 17 hi ts with seven players Adena
getti ng two each. The winning Por tsm outh 001 031 &lt;-1 2 1
Zamski, Childers (6) and
run scored in the bottom of the
Figurs ki;
St urgill
and
eighth on a double by Ron
Stapleton.
Halley. Del Bloomer got the
WP--sturgill (3-o).
win while Nance was cha rged
LP-Zamski (:i-1) .
with the defeat.
Drummond Brothers will
SKINS SIGN DENSON
now play the J. C.'s Tuesday
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
night on the J .C. Field while Was hin gton Redskins anG&amp;J will play Price &amp; Sons.
noun ced Saturday the signing
of Moses Denson , a star run·
ning back with the Montreal
RACE DRIV ER F INED
Aloue ttes in the Ca na dia n
BELLEVILLE, Ind. (UP! ) Football League for the pas t
- Bill Vuk ov ich , Fres no,
three years.
Calif., won $97,512 and lost $30
Den son , 29, was coac h
this week in two incidents of George Allen's top pick in the
speeding.
· 1971 draft when he was selected
Vukovich won second place
in the eighth round.
in the 50().Mile India napolis
At the time, Denson had two
Speedwa y Race Wednesday.
year s to go on a contract with
Then on Friday he went to Montreal. He became a free
the peace court of Justice Keith agent Friday .
Pu rce ll in thi s Hendri cks
The former University of
Coun ty town and pleaded guilty Maryland a t Eastern Shore
to a charge of dri ving too fa s t pla yer ma de the Ca nadian All:
on U. S. 40 east of Plainfield , Pro team in his 1970 rookie
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Ind. on May 22.
year when he carried 116 times Phillies lun ged out in front of
Purcell levied a Eine of $30 for 820 yards and caught 25 the Meigs County Pony League
inCluding costs.
looking like strong cand idate to
passes for 327 yards.
repea t as cha mpi on in the
opening round of action F r iday
eveni ng by defea tin g the
Middleport A club 18-1.
Th e brilliant pitch in g of
ri ghthande r J e ff Mc Kinney
and Mike Nesselroad's bi g bat
whic h produced six runs batted
in , - rna:rked th e Contes t .
McKinney in seven innings of
work got 20 of the 21 outs by
strikeouts. He wa lked tw o. The
only hit off him was a bloop
single by Rick Bar ry in the
fifth sc oring the run .
In other contests Friday
Syracuse dwnpe d Ra cine 74 ,
Eastern took Rutland 9 to 3 and
the P omeroy Athletics (13-year
olds 1 upset the Middleport
Americans (14-year olds ) 8·7.
Phillie s Gam e
Phillies '
hitter s
wer e
Charley Ma rshall, two triples,
a double and single for two
RB!s , Nesseiroad two doubles,
two homers a nd a s ingle;
McKinney two homers and a
single and five RBis , Rick
Taylor, three s ingles and two
RB!s, Greg Browning a three
run homer, and Pat Soulsby
and David Cole each a single.
McKinney 's pitching feat of
20 KOs is regarded as a league
record extending back to 1956.
Middleport A 000 010 1&gt;- 1 I
Phillies
336 420 &lt;- 18 18
Magnotta ( LP ), Raggerty

-

17 - The Sunday Tin1es ·Sentinel, Sunday, June 3, 1973

..
'

'

KARR'S BARBER SHOP ~gJnw
ijarbers ,Local 400 AFL·CIO

so State St.

Gallipolis1 Ohio
,,

�I

16 - The SWldayTimeo. Sentinel, Sib. ' ay , June 3,1973

•

.•
•

Portsmouth
West claims

•

•

-:·

..
.:.•..
.

Class A title
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Steve
. Sturgill pitdled a three hitter
and he and his brother Scott

accounted for four runs as
Portsmouth East defeated
Adena Buckeye West S.J to win
the Class A high school
baseball championship and
complete an 1~ season.
Steve Sturgill, who had a n1&gt;-

,

••

Drummond
Brothers
top loop

hitter until the sixth inning
when Adena catcher John Fig•
urski singled to break the
streak, scored once and drove
in two runs. Brother Scott
scored once.
steve grounded out in the
third to score Gary Corill and
give Portsmouth a 1.0 lead, but
Adena tied it in the fourth.
Portsmouth scored its win.
ning runs in the filth inning
when Scott SturgiU led off with .
a single and was bunted ·to
third.
Steve singled iri his brother:
catcher Mike Stapleton scored
on a wild pitch: and Steve
Sturgill scored on a passed
baU.
Buckeye West wound up the
season with a 17~ record.
SturgiU, Portsmouth's No. 2
pi tcher, wound up 3-owhile losing pitcher Gary ZBmski finished a t :i-1.

•

St. Paris Graham cops AA crown
.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - St.
Paris Graham, behind the tw&lt;&gt;hit pitching of Tim West, defeated Beloit West Branch :i-1
Saturday and won its first
Class AA state baseball cham:
pionship.
West gave up only two sin-

.

pitcher. He finished the season
with a 1-4 record .
St. Paris jwnped out in front
with two runs in the first on a
throwing error by Rohaley . St.
Paris picked up another run in
the third when Gary Kites
tripled and scored on a sacrifice fiy, and two more runs in

the fifth .
Kite was thrown out of the
game
for
unnecessary

Smyth Makes Statement
" We plan to discuss and
considef several
recommenda lions
(or
r u les
modifications made in the past
week by drivers, car owne1.st
track operators and public
members," William J. Smyth,
USAC exec utive director, said
Friday evening.
Smyth
said
recornrnenda lions resulting from the
special meeting today would be
an nounced later.
Norma lly, rule changes are
first recommended by USAC's
r ul es committee, t hen appr oved by th e boa rd of
directors.
USAC officials were also
reportedly trying to convince
its technical committee head,
Frank Del Roy, who resigned
fo llowing the race, to reconsider .
In a dd ition to the two .
fata lities. several per sons wer e
injW'ed seve r ely, includig r ace
driver s Salt Wa lther , burned in
a crash in an a bortive a ttempt
to run the race Monday, and
Swed e
Sa v age,
burn e d
critically in a crash We dnesday. A number of fans were

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

8111 Oal1as 1 who graduated last week, son of G:raham
Local Supt. of Schools Supt. and Mrs. George Dalins, is a .
regular on the new AA state champion baseball team. His
brother Steve, a sophomore, also on the squad, was used
mainly throughout lhe season as a pinch Nnner.
The boys are grandsons of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Matlack,
Chester Road and Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, Middleport, who
witnessed both of the team•s victories in the state finals
Friday and Saturday.
George Dallas, a graduate of Pomeroy High School, ~as
band director of Midd leport High School and later execuuve
head of the Northwestern Local School District IRutlaod ).

Newspaper Suggests Chaoge
The Indianapolls News
suggested that "a change in the
method of starting the race
also is needed since tbe cars
are much wider now than when
the three-car rows were
established."
The I ndianapolis Star,
however, said, "it's charac~
teristic of the 500 that when
drivers are finish ed with
whatever m ileage they make
in one year's r ace, they start
th ink ing about next year . This .
ti me officials a nd oth er
decision.ffiakers should start
doing some very hard thinking
about next year: They should
be thinking about the ' disintegration of ca r s in accid ents,
about flaming fu el gushing
from ruptured tanks, a bout the
vulnerability of spectator s at
the edge of the tl'ack .
" To s wn it up , there is need
lor some deep a ttention to the
safety of the race. It 's essential, we think., to maintaining
the standing ·of th e '500' as the
big one in ra cing.''

HOUlE

St. Paris
201 020 fh5 6 3
Beloit West 001 000 1&gt;-1 2 1
West and Moore: Rohaley,
Grinun (6) and McNeeley.
WP- West (8-1).
LP- Rohaley ( 1-4).

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on Jwte 11

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FORK &amp; K

VINDALE SECTIONAL-60xl4'

I •••••••••••••

-

This week's
local games

.

\

} Friday's Linescores

At Oak Hill, the Oaks
defeated Vinton , :i-1 behind the
one-hit
pitching
of
righthander J erry Boggs .
·. Johnny Oiler's single was the
-lon e hit ror the Dodgers. Red
Justus was the losing pitcher.
He wa.s relieved by Issac in the
filth .

will begin

LOOK

EXTERIOR
WHITE
.
LATEX HOUSE PAINT .
TWO GALLONS FOR.

PITTSBURGH !UP!) - The nine runs every time and J'll
Pittsburgh Pirates got help
GALLIPOLIS - Cheshire, Green, 1:i.:1 and O•k Hill topped respectively .
show you how to win."
£rom the Lone Ranger and
Bidwell
and Oak HiU captured Vinton S..l.
He got help in the third inMetzner belted a single,
Ulree home rWls in overpower.·
opening
nigh
t
victories
Friday
In the Cheshire-Addaville double and home run . Blazer
nin g from Richie Hebner's twoing the Cii]Cinnati Reds !Hi
in the Gallia County Pony game, Baird fanned 15 while tripled , doubled and singled
run
double and a two-run
Friday nighl
League. Cheshire, behind the walking four . Bill Metzner, Jeff and Kern slashed a triple.
homer by Willie Stargell, who
Winning pitcher Steve Blass, leads the National League in
no-hit pitching ·of righthander Blazer, Torn Kern and Rick Fraley was the losing pitcher.
who yielded three runs before home runs with 15.
Steve Baird, defeated Ad- Winebrenner paced the win- He was relieved by Mollohan
retiring a batter. showed
daville,
19.0; Bidwell overran ners with three and two hits and Westfall.
Reds' Manager Sparky Andreporters the silver bullet
e rson ca lled Hebner's double
Greg James slammed a
which he said got him out of the turning point.
l.;;:::::::::.:.:.:..~:::::::~:~::::;;:::~}..::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~;~ home run, two triples and a
trouble.
" It was a good low pitch but
single in pa cing Bidwell to its
''It was given to me by' a man when that guy's hitting, he'll
\ili lopsided 13·1 victory over
just yesterday, " he said. " I hit any pitch from his ankles to N
~
Green . Ji'red Lo~an had four
((
~
didn 't catch his name but he
Major League Resut1s
the top of his hat ," Anderson
Los Ang
200 001 OOx- 3 4 1 hits, a double and three s ingles
was a masked man on a white said.
By United Press International
Moore, Walker (8) and and Mike Casey had two
Na1ional League
Boccabella ; Sutton (7-3) and singled .
horse and he had an Indian
The Reds had taken a 3-o lead
003
000
500- a 13 0 Ferguson . LP- Moore (3.-4).
All.:mta
with him .
Chicago
301 300 ()()(}..,- 7 11 2
before the blast by Hebner,
Gene Welch was the winning
Harrison , House (4), Dobson NewYork
0000000()0-0 80 pitcher while Evans took the
"Seriously, though, give me who finished the night with four
(6), Niekro (7) and Oates ; San Diego
400 000 OOx- 4 9 0
RBis .
Hooton , Gura (6), Aker (7) and
Koosman , McGraw (8) and loss . Anderson and Brown a lso
Hundley. WP- Dpbson fJ.7) . LP Dyer ; &lt;lr ief (4·51 and Kendall. saw action for Green .
Back-to-back homers by
0
- Aker (1·4) , HRs~Sanfo (6th) LP- Koosm~n (5-4).
Welch siruck out ll while
Wl.lllleS S 0 f iSManny Sanguillen and Hebner
Williams 2 17th and 8th). Gar;
(2nd) .
produced two more P1rate runs
issuing
four free passes. Rose
Phila
100 000 000- 1 .40
San
Fran
000
100
01x2
50
in the fifth, and Sanguillen's
had the lone hit off Welch, a
Cincinnati 300 000 21o- 6 10 o
Twitchell , Scarce (8) and
triple ignited a tw~&gt;-run rally in
firth
inning single.
Pitlsbgh
005 020 20x- 9 10 2 Boone ; Bryant (8-3) and Rader .
McGlothlin
,
Sprague
(2L
Hall
the seventh, climaxed by
LP - Twitchell 13·21 . HR · {4) , Borbon (6). Gullett (8), and ~c:Covey (11 th ).
Hebner's sacrifice fly and Bob
Bench ; Blass, Johnson (7),
GALL l A COUN TY PON Y
Roberson 's run-scoring single.
Rooker (7), Giusti (8) and M.ay.
LE AGUE ST ANDIN GS
American
Leag
ue
The Reds added two more WP- Biass (3-31. LP- Sprague {14 inn ings)
Tea m
W L R OR
10·21.
H Rs- Siargell
I 15th I , Baltimore
1 o 19 o
Cheshire
runs in the seventh on singles
Sanguillenn (6th). Hebner (4th).
Bidwell
1 0 13 1
000
002
010
000
oo3
9
1
by Joe Morgan and Johnny
Texas
·
Oak Hi ll
I 0 5
I
Houston
011 000 000-- 1 8 0
GALLIPOLIS - Swimming Bench, sandwiched around a
Southwestern
0 0 0 o
100
011
000
000
01
"'4
14
0
Louis
200 020 OOx- .4 8 o
o 1 1 s
lessons will begin at the walk and an error. Pete RosE!'s St.Reuss.
Alexander,
Reynolds (7). Vinton
York (7) and Ed · Jackson ( 1.4) and Etchebarren, Green
0
1 1 13
Gallipolis pool on Monday, triple and a wild pitch ac- wards ; Cleve land, Segui (8)
0 l 0 19
Hendricks (7); Merritt, Dun - Addavilte
and Simmons. WP- Cieveland ning (6) , Hudson (7), Foucau lt Tota ls
June 11, according to Manager counted for a run in the eighth
3 3 39 39
15·41. LP- Reuss 16·3) .
Th
is
week's
ga
mes:
(8},
Paul
(
121
and
Billings.
WP
John Milhoan.
inning.
T ues d ay Green at
- Paul (4-3). LP- Reynotds ( 1Milhoan said all individuals
000 000 101- 2 50 3) .
Cincinnati's Ed Sprague took Montreal
Cheshire ; Addavi ll e at Vinton ;
Southwestern af BidWel l. Oak
must register for both sessions the loss after relieving Jim
Cleveland
010 030 000-.4 6 1 Hill Bye.
( June ll-21 and July 9-19 ) in McGlothlin, who left the game
Kan City
200100 11x- 5 9 2
Frida y - Vinton at Green ;
order to participate this with a pinched nerve in his
Tidrow
,
Hi
lgendorf
(7) and Cheshire at Southwestern ; Oak
Ma jor League Le~ d ers
Duncan ; Drago (5·4) and Hill at AddaVille. Bidwell bye.
summer.
I ndividua l s, back after one inning .
By Un it ed Press lntern011tion a I
Healy
, Taylor (8). LP--. Hilgen.
however, will be required to
Lead ing Batters
dorf f2· 1J . HRs- Spikes (lOth) ,
Na1iona
I
League
take part in on ly one of the two
Bevacqua (lst) .
g. ab · r . h. pet.
lnterna1 ional
sessions.
Watsn. Hou 52 185 36 66 .357
l
eague
Standings
401 002 OlD- 8 12 0
Mad dox. SF 40 149 16 51 .;142 Detroit
Applications for lessons are
Press
lnternation~l
By
United
000 200 100--3 7 3
Fair ly, Mti 37 111 14 38 .342 Minn
American Division
now bei ng accepted at the pool.
Coleman,
Hiller
(7)
and
Cash, Pit
34 1.41 24 48 .340
W. L. Pel . GB
Cutoff figure for beg in ners is
Grubb. so · 43 146 23 49 .JJ6 Freehan ; Kaa t, Corbi n (1)', Roches ler
29 17 .630
Goltz
(5),
Decker
{8)
a
nd
34 119 15 40 .336
Syracuse
21 21 .500 6
GALLIPOLIS ...;_ Here 's this Mota, LA
100. Twenty-two will be the
Lopes , LA 39 135 21 45 .333 Mifterwa ld . WP- Co leman ( JQ. Pawtucke l
18 21" .462 6'h
week
's
summer
recreation
J) . LP- Kaal (6·31. HRscutoff fi gures fo r advanced
18 29 .383 1111,
program sched ule for baseball Torre , St.L 37 130 16 43 .331 Stanley (6th), Hol t (JrdL Toledo
Rbnsn, Phil 36 120 19 39 .325 Mitterwwald l51h1, W alton
beginners, inte rmediates and and basketball teams:
National Divi s ion
Wms .. Ch i 48 177 29 57 .322 (3rd ).
W. L. Pet . GB·
(Bas eball )
swimmers.
Am er ican Leagu e
Charleston
30 16 .652
PE E WEE LEAGUE
Intermediates and swimg . ab r . h. pet . Chicago
26 21 .553 41f:o&gt;
Monday Organizational
000 010 Oil - 3 10 o Ti dewater
Peninsu la
24 22 .522 6
mers classes will star\ at 9 meeting, 10 a.m. on Memorial Blmbrg , NYJJ 99 16 39 .394 Mi lw
001
.121
OOx·s
14
0
Krkp lk, KC 41 152 29 53 .349
Richmond
13 32 .289 16 1b
Fie
ld.
Wood , Johnson {6) a'nd
a.m. Advanced beginners will
Kelly,
Chi
J2
123
24
41
.333
Friday
's
Res ults
LITTLE LEAGU E
Herrmann ; Shor t, Lockwood
be held at 10 a.m. ·and beg inMonday - YankeeS vs . Red D.Alle n, Chi 43 159 . 29 51 .321 17). l,..lnzy {9) and Rodr iguez. Toledo 7 Char leston 6
42 154 21 49 .JIB
Sox, 6 p.m . AfhleticS vs. In - Fisk, Bos
ners sta rt a t 11 a.m.
WP- Shor t 12·11. LP- Wood I l l · Roches ter 7 Pawtucket 5
Bra un , Min 40 137 25 43 .314 4)
dia
ns,
8:
20p
.m.
. HRs- Scott (S ihl. Her rman n_ Syracuse 3 Peninsul a 2
Jun ior a n d Se ni or Li fe
Tidewater 6 Richmond · 4, lsi
Tuesday - Cubs vs. -Orioles, · Hart, NY 31 109 12 · 34 · .312 l&lt;lh).
Tidewater 2 Richmond o, 2nt;:t
Saving courses will be offe re~ 6 p .m. Senators 1/s. Tigers, 8:20 Hndrsn, Chi 36 135 21 42 .311
. p.m.
.
. Carew, Min 44 164 18 50 .305 Ca lifornia
eit her at noon or 6 p.m .
003 010 ooo- 5 9 0
51 207 34 63 .304
Wednesday - White Sox vs . Ol is, K C
New
York
100 001 000-- 2 8 1
If enough pe.r sons show in- Sen~tors. 6 p.m. Orioles vs .
Home Runs
Singer, Barber {9). Sells (9)
National
_League
:
Stargel
l,
terest, adult lessons will be Padres, 8:20 p.m.
and Kusnyer; Kekic h, Beene
Thursday - Pa dr e.s vs. Pi tt 15; Aaron, Atl 13; Evans, (4) and Munson . WP- Singer
given the latter part of July.
Athlet ics. 6 p.m. Cubs vs . Atl, Monday, Chi, Bench, Cin, {9·2l. LP- Kekich (J . l). HRWynn, Hou, Ferguson, LA, Berry ! 1st) .
Mil hOan sa id atte nda nce Yankees. 8:20 p.m .
Bonds an d McCovey., SF l l.
Friday
Tigers
vs.
Indians
,
began to pick up at the pool .
American League: Mayberry,
6
p.m.
Red
Sox
'vs
.
White
Sox,
110 000 ooo- 2 7 0
with the fi r st r ea l good 8:20 p.m .
KC 13; D. Allen, Chi 11 ; Oakland
Bos ton
301 000 02x- 6 12 0
Mel
ton
,
Chi,
Duncan
and
sw imming wea!her Friday and
PONY LEAGUE
Hami lt on, Fingers {8) and
Monda y Dod gers vs . Spikes, Clev, May, Mit, Murc;er , Fosse ; Pa tt in (4.7) and Fisk.
Salurday .
NY
and
Bando,
Oak
10.
Ph lilie-s.
LP- Hami lton (Q. JJ. HR sSince the pool opened on May
Runs Batted In
Tuesday - Reds vs . Braves .
Bando
I. Fisk (9th).
National LeagUe : Ferguson, Mangua l I(2lOth
Wednesday - DOdgers vs·,
27, Milhoan sai&lt;l. the pool has
nd).
Petro c e I I I
LA 43; Bench, Cin ·J9; Stargel 1, (lith) .
.
sold 53 student tickets and 42 Giants
Thursday - Phit li es vs . Pit1 36; Williams, Chi and
Watson , Hou 34.
family tickets.
ReC:s.
Ame rican League: Mayberry.
Fr iday - Gian ts vs . Braves.
KC
49 ; Melton, Chi 39; Jackson,
All games start at 6 p.m. on
· Oak 36; Murcer, NY .34; D.
Memorial Field.
Allen, Chi 30.
BASKETBALL
Pitching
!Se nior Loop )_
Na1iona
I
Leagu
e: Bryant, SF
. Monda y - One vs. Two;
,
Cin
7-l; Sutton,
8-3;
Billing
ham
Three vs. Four; Five vs. Six on
Court 1. Seven vs . Eight ; Nine LA 7·3; Wise, St. L 6·-2; Jenkins,
vs . Ten ; Eleven vs . Twelve, Chi, Reuss, Hou and Seaver,
NY 6-3; Ma r ic hal, SF 6-4.
Cour t 2. Game times - 7: 15,
American League: Wood, Ch i
8: 15 and 9: 15p.m.
13·4;
Ho lt zman, Oak 10-2;
Tuesday - Seven vs. Four;
Five vs. Two ; Three vs. One on · Coleman. Det 10-3; Singer, .car .
By
Court 1. Twelve vs. Ten; 9-2; Sp lillorff, K.C ] .J; Stoff.
eliminated
Ereven vs. Eight and "Nine vs . Iemyre, NY 7·5.
Six, Court 1. ·
TERRY
CARBONDALE, ill . (UP!) Wedn esda y - .One vs. Five;
IOHNSON
• • Miami of Ohio was eliminated Seven vs . Three ; Nine vs . Two Glass improving,
fr om the NCAA District 4 on Court 1. Eleven vs . Four ;
Twelve vs . Six an d Ten vs.
ma jor college b~se ball tour- Eight, Court 2.
,.
At one time th e house on
r, nament Friday , losi ng to
(Jun ior High )
is satisfactory
whee
ls was referred to as a
Monday
Organ
izational
; : '; Southern Illinois 8-1.
trailer . This lead many
meeting with Ken Turner in
'
The defeat was Miami's Washington gym , beginnin·g at
peop le to believe that they
CLEVELAND (UP! )
8 p.m.
were just a lit tl e con.
second
in
the
do
uble
Clevela nd Br owns reserve
••
venient apparat us fo r
•
elimination tourney .
tight end Chip Glass was in
transien ts, circus people
•
So uthe rn ll li nois played
and
thea ter road com ·
DE MI NG PROMOTED
satisfactory condition an d
panies.
For t he true
Minnesota Saturday for the
HAM ILTON, N.Y. ( UPI J- showing "signs of im.
~ ~ · j' District 4 title a nd the r ight to
fneaning of a trai ler Is, . a
Robert C. Demi ng has been
provement" from emergency
tar, wagon . sled. house on
play in the College World promoted to athletic director of surgery to remove a blood cl ot
whee ls or any veh icle
••- Series later th is mo n ~ h .
pul led by a mo tor ca r , So
Colgate University from his from his groin, doctors a t Mt.
·you can see where lhls
•
Southern Illinois pinc h- presen't pos t as ,ch ief assistant Sian i Hospi ta l said Sa tur day.
definifion of a house on
runner Ken Kral stole home in football coach.
The doctors indicated Glass
wheels · mighl mis lead the
the seventh inning to break a lpubli c.
The appointment, announced will probably be taken out of
1 tie and give the Saiukis a 2-1 Sa turday night by Dr; Thomas the intensive ca r e unit
The mobi le home Is what
lead .
A.
Bartlett,
University sometime Sunday.
people now lovingly ca ll
SIU ~ot two more runs in the President, fills the job vacated
Glass, a five·yea r veteran
their house on wheel.s . For
eighth on a two-run h ~rne r by by the recent resignation of from Florida State, was
it is truly that ... a mobile
home . All the conveniences
Joe wallis . Southern 1ced the Harold W. Lahar , who ac· operated on Friday afternoon
living enioyments of a
and
game in the ninth inning with cepted a post as assistant when comp lications developed .
stationary house with the
four more runs on three hits executive secretary of the
extra convenience of
He entered the hospita l 12
mobi lity.
and two stolen bases.
Southwest Athletic Conference . days ago for surgery to correct
Miami managed only five
a r uptured s pinal disc.
JOHN SOW S
hits. · Early Friday, Miami
Browns' orficia ls said ' ther e
MOBILE HOME SAL ES
defea ted Marshall 5·2 to ' CASH APPOINTED
21 10 Easte rn Avenue
was a &lt;~goOO" chance Glass
ST . LOUIS (UP! ) - Jim
Ga IIi poli s, Ohio
eliminate west.. Virginia team
would be a ble to play this
Phone
614 -446·3547
Cash
has
been
app
ointed
·
from the tourney .
season .
Miami pitcher Steve Imphoff comptroller of the St. Louis
tossed a four·hltter in the Fcotball Cardinals. William V.
Marshall game, while Art Bidwill, managing general
Grzeskowiak slammed a three- partner of the Cardinals, said
Cash would be promoted from
run homer .
Miami 's first loss in the his current post as . ticket
tourney came Thursday, a 3-2 manager. He joined the dub in
AFTE R
BE FORE
1969.
defeat by Minnesota.

S

lhe /port/ Bug.

Eastern, Syracuse triumphhad two s ing les, and Bob
Burlow singled . For Rutland
Jim Anderson doubled a nd
Floy d Fitzpatrick and Randy
George singled.
Rutland
300 000 1&gt;-3 3
Eas tern
103 500 X-9 ·5
Jim Anderson, Buddy Dugan
(3), Bob Williamson (5) and
Dugan , Anderson, (3 ). Mike
ilall a nd Phil Bowen.
Syracuse Wins
Sy ra cuse, playing at Racine,
got jus t one. hit, a single by
Gregg Cundiff, but rolled up
. seven runs . Racine had two
hits, singles by Gregg Dunning
a nd Jack Young .
Stewart for Syracuse fanned
14. Racine pitchers , Riffle and
Hoffman , fanned 6. No line
score was kept.

St. Paris advanced to the fi.
nals by whipping Columbus
Watterson 8-4 in semi.finals
play Friday. Graham rallied
lor six runs in the last inning
and a come-from~ind win.
Beloit de fell ted Philo in semifinals play. West Branch
jumped to a 7.0 lead and then
coasted to an 8-2 win.

•

also burned by fire from
Walther's crash .

Pomeroy Phils romp; A's,
· (3), E bersbach (5) and R .
Ba r ry.
Mc K(nn ey
a nd
Nesse lroad .
Athletics·Win
A fine throw by ca tcher
Brian Ha milton m ay . have
·saved the 8-7 victory of the
Athle tics over the Americans.
In the Middleport seventh , with
the tying run on second base,
Hamilton's throw to third· cut
down the runner trying to s teal.
For Middleport, Mike May
homer ed and ·hit two d oubles,
a nd Steve Bac hne r, Mick
Dave nport and _Dave Smith
ea ch ha d a hit.
Fo r
P omeroy,
Br ia n
Hamilton had two hits and
Doug
Brownin g,
Dale
Browning, Ron Snyder and
Duane While each one hit.
Dal e Brownin g , win.ning
pitc he r, fanned nine and
walked one in four innings.
Da venport fanned five, walked
s ix for Middleport. ·
Eastern Wins
Easte rn,
returnin g
to
organized Pony League play
a fter several years absence,
pushed across five runs in the
fourth inning to put the game
out of Rutland's reach .
F or E a stern· Dave Hannwn
tripled, Phil Bowen tripled and

roughness
ag.a inst
West
Branch catcher Ron McNeeley
when he scored from third .

·:o:.:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:-:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;::~::::::::::::~::-.:-;:::::::::.
·-~~······~···-~--~

possible rule changes
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!)
Officials of the U. S. Auto Club
and other key members of the
racing fr aternity gathered
here Saturday to study possible
rule changes to make next
year's Indianapolis "500" safer
than the tragedy-marred 1973
holiday race .
ln the wake of criticism from
both within and without the
racing fraternity, USAC of.
ficials announced they would
stage a meeting Saturday
while the issue was still fresh.
Racing activity dur ing May
resulted in the dea th of veteran
driver Art Pollard, Meford,
Ore., and Ar inand Duran, a pit
cr ewma n , struck by a 1fire
truck during the r unnin g of the
ra in-delayed
and
ra inshortened race Wed nesday.
Poll ard was killed in a practice
crash May 12.
Even "500" winn er Gordon J ohncock and his sponsQr ,
Andy Granatelli, have asked
USAC and other racin g of.
fic ia ls to take action to curtail
the speeds of the cars. J ohncock eve nt ually won the r ace
which was called by rain after
332.5 miles.

Pirates rally,
Cheshire, Bidwell, Oak Hill
edge Reds 9-6 post wins in league openers

.

gles, and neither figured in
West Branch's lone run. He
struck out six batters. The win
was West 's eighth of the year
against one loss and St. Paris'
18th victory against three defrats .
Mark Rohaley was the lostng

Race officials study

GALLIPOLIS - Drummond
Brothers Beer took over sole
possession of first place in the
Gallipolis Slow Pitch League
Friday night with a narrow 1211 win over G&amp;J on the Elk's
Field.
Qrwnmond Brothers banged
000 102 1&gt;-~ 3 2
out 17 hi ts with seven players Adena
getti ng two each. The winning Por tsm outh 001 031 &lt;-1 2 1
Zamski, Childers (6) and
run scored in the bottom of the
Figurs ki;
St urgill
and
eighth on a double by Ron
Stapleton.
Halley. Del Bloomer got the
WP--sturgill (3-o).
win while Nance was cha rged
LP-Zamski (:i-1) .
with the defeat.
Drummond Brothers will
SKINS SIGN DENSON
now play the J. C.'s Tuesday
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
night on the J .C. Field while Was hin gton Redskins anG&amp;J will play Price &amp; Sons.
noun ced Saturday the signing
of Moses Denson , a star run·
ning back with the Montreal
RACE DRIV ER F INED
Aloue ttes in the Ca na dia n
BELLEVILLE, Ind. (UP! ) Football League for the pas t
- Bill Vuk ov ich , Fres no,
three years.
Calif., won $97,512 and lost $30
Den son , 29, was coac h
this week in two incidents of George Allen's top pick in the
speeding.
· 1971 draft when he was selected
Vukovich won second place
in the eighth round.
in the 50().Mile India napolis
At the time, Denson had two
Speedwa y Race Wednesday.
year s to go on a contract with
Then on Friday he went to Montreal. He became a free
the peace court of Justice Keith agent Friday .
Pu rce ll in thi s Hendri cks
The former University of
Coun ty town and pleaded guilty Maryland a t Eastern Shore
to a charge of dri ving too fa s t pla yer ma de the Ca nadian All:
on U. S. 40 east of Plainfield , Pro team in his 1970 rookie
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Ind. on May 22.
year when he carried 116 times Phillies lun ged out in front of
Purcell levied a Eine of $30 for 820 yards and caught 25 the Meigs County Pony League
inCluding costs.
looking like strong cand idate to
passes for 327 yards.
repea t as cha mpi on in the
opening round of action F r iday
eveni ng by defea tin g the
Middleport A club 18-1.
Th e brilliant pitch in g of
ri ghthande r J e ff Mc Kinney
and Mike Nesselroad's bi g bat
whic h produced six runs batted
in , - rna:rked th e Contes t .
McKinney in seven innings of
work got 20 of the 21 outs by
strikeouts. He wa lked tw o. The
only hit off him was a bloop
single by Rick Bar ry in the
fifth sc oring the run .
In other contests Friday
Syracuse dwnpe d Ra cine 74 ,
Eastern took Rutland 9 to 3 and
the P omeroy Athletics (13-year
olds 1 upset the Middleport
Americans (14-year olds ) 8·7.
Phillie s Gam e
Phillies '
hitter s
wer e
Charley Ma rshall, two triples,
a double and single for two
RB!s , Nesseiroad two doubles,
two homers a nd a s ingle;
McKinney two homers and a
single and five RBis , Rick
Taylor, three s ingles and two
RB!s, Greg Browning a three
run homer, and Pat Soulsby
and David Cole each a single.
McKinney 's pitching feat of
20 KOs is regarded as a league
record extending back to 1956.
Middleport A 000 010 1&gt;- 1 I
Phillies
336 420 &lt;- 18 18
Magnotta ( LP ), Raggerty

-

17 - The Sunday Tin1es ·Sentinel, Sunday, June 3, 1973

..
'

'

KARR'S BARBER SHOP ~gJnw
ijarbers ,Local 400 AFL·CIO

so State St.

Gallipolis1 Ohio
,,

�'
19 - The SUnday Times- Sentinel,Sunday,June3,1913

18 - The SUnday Timet: · Sentinel, s... ' n .lnnP ·' 1Q7l

Pond Water will support fish
By C. E. Blakeslee
Ext. Ageol, Agriculture
POMEROY - Fishing season is here so the new
Ohio Pond Management bulletin, written by Thomas
M. SIDckdale, Extension Wildlde Specialist, Sl;hool of
Natural Resources of Ohio State University, is
tL11ely .
"Bulletins" on Ohio pond management from
their beginning have been popular. Copies always are
avallab1e without charge to everyone interested in
ponds.
()l]e of the first questions pon&lt;l owners ask is,
"How fast should my fish grow?" Several factors will
affect the rate of growth, such as fertility of water ..
availability of food chain organisms and density of
fish population .
Another frequently asked question is, "When

the NEW in FARMING

ALL ABOARD - Twenty-one members of Boy Scout 'l'roop 249left Friday for the weekend
for the Ohio Power Rec reation Area near Bever1y, Troop members leaving Friday were, front

should my fish spawn ?" Large mouth bass are
sexually mature when about 9-10 inches in length. It
usually takes two full years after sto&lt;;king as
fingerling s to C~.ttain thiS size . Usually in May, when
the water tcm~rature reaches 60 degrees F., bass
will be observed fanning out shallow depressions,
called nests, in water from one to several feet deep .
The female deposits from 2,000 to 20,000 eggs which
the male guards and cares for during the 7 to 14 days

row, 1-r, David DiUard, Todd Smith, Scott McKinney, Steve Williams, David Burt, Danny
Norman, Jeff Daniels, John Stewart, Tim Adams , Todd Grinstead; second row , Jim Rose nbaum, Kenny Byer, Tom Reed, Rick Blaettnar, Keith Krautter, Scott Williams, Doug
Rosenbaum, Mark Gasto, Dan Thomas, Joe Wisecup and Paul Reed ; on top of the truck is
Frank Casto who also went on the trip. Others going were Hank Cleland, scoutmaste r , Bob

Armes, Ray Southerland and Eric Chambers.

similar bill last year, said tht"

public schools from administering group intelligence

IQ tests are "too valuable to
eliminate" and that the right to
utilize.them should be left up to
local school boards.

Park has new
official name
COLUMBUS

where it goes if it flows from the pond .
Water temperature, as it affects the spawning of
fish , has already been discussed . It also may affect
the· survival of some species. For example, trout will
not normally reproduce in water wanner than 60 to 65
degrees F. and they wiU not survive water tem-

perature exceeding 70 to 60 degrees F. more than a
few days . This is why few Ohio ponds can support
trout.
The temperature of water also must be con·
si dered when us ing c hemicals in the management of
a pond. Some fish toxicants and herbicides are more

effective when the water temperature is 60 degrees F.
or warmer. Some herbicides applied at recommended r;des are safe for fish ; however , they may

kiH fish eggs or fry (newly hatched fish ). Therefore,
temperature provides a clue as ·to when fish are

Some bluegilis wi11 be sexua11y mature the first

spawning and may influence the timihg of chemical
appli ca tions.

season after stocking a s fingerlings . Within a few

THE AMOUNT of dissolved oxygen in water wiU

days to a couple of weeks after the bass have
spawned and when the water temperature reaches 70
degrees F., bluegill nests will be seen in shallow

determine whether fish will s urvive .• Pond fish

required to hatch .

tests. Reagan, who vetoed a

BILL VETOED
SACRAMENTO, Ca lif.
(UP! ) - Gov. Ronald Reagan
vetoed Friday a bill prohibiting

management. Some of these · properties include
temperature, pH , hardness, dissolved oxygen 1 the
source of the water in the pond, uses made of it, and

Natural
Res ources Director William B.
Nye announced Friday that
Portsmouth State Park has
been officia11y renamed
SPRINGFIELD , Ohio Shawnee Slate Park. Nye said Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc ., an·
the name change, which has nounced it has completed the·
the support of the Portsmouth acquisition of Alling-Lander .
Chamber of Commer&lt;l'e and
CD., a division of GarlQCk Inc.,
many Portsmouth area con·
Rochester, N.Y. at the close of

require at least 4 parts per million of dissolved
oxygen . Other organisms in your pond also require

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE -AS-EASY
EXCLUSIVE TWIN-TRIGGERrM
DUAL CONTROL SYSTEM

I

FRONT
TRIGGER

,.REAR
TRIGGER

A

'

For easier control in
·close quarters and
tricky angles.

Makes faster work
of cuttl ng firewood
or lumber.

servation and nature clubs 1

will reflect the Ohioans the rich
Indian history of the Scioto
County area where the park is

and for this reason we feel that
the Shawnee name i~ most
appropriate for the park /: Nye
said. 41 This he~ritage was
earlier recognized in the
selection of the name Shawnee
for the park 's new lodge ."

an R&amp;M official said.
Ailing - Lander, headquartered in Sodus, N. Y. is a

leading m·ariufacturer of
custom gea ring and speed
Fred G. Wa11, president of reducers.
Robbins &amp; Myers, the . The new product line gives a
agreement includes all the

located.
major assets of Alling-Lander,
Shawnee State Park is 12 except for building and land.

miles west of Portsmouth on
State Route 125 near the Ohio
River .
" South-central Ohio is
renow ned for its Indian hist'ory

and experience of our Springfield Electric Motor Division , 11

business , June 1. According to

An undisclosed amount of cash
was involved. ·
" The acquisition of Alling -

Lander directly compliments
the gearmqtor product· line of
our New . England Gear
Division. Further, the acQuired
gea r
drive
units
were
marketed without a propiet.ary
eleetric motor and now we can
utilize , in tandem with speed
reducers , the products , s kills

MASON - Land grading and
snaping of the . Mason
Recreation Area and ball park
is nearing comp1etion according to Soil Conservation

Service

personnel who

are

helping establish the correct
grades so that proper drainage
may be brought about. This
park is being spcmsored by ·the
Mason County Court.

L. W. Getty,

Cler~

of the

Court, has been keeping very
FIRESTONE DIES
AKRON (UP!) - Harvey S. close check on its progress as

SWISHER
IMPLEMENT CO.
UPPER RT. 7

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

For Sale

For Sale

for Sale

sewing

machine .
Th1s
4 GRAVE lot in Mei9S. Memor ial
machine darns, embroiders, COAL. Limestone, E•cel~ior ·
Gardens . Cheap. Call 949
Salt Work,s, E. Main St..
makes but1onholes. all
-1962 .
Pomeroy. Phone 992 3891.
without attachments. Just
5-20tfc
4-12-tf
d ial and sew. Pay balance of
S38.50 or pay S5 per month .
Phone 992-5331 .

arHER PROPERTIES are also Important,
though not usually as Important as temperature and
dissolved oxygen. Most Ohio ponds have a PH
(acidity-alkaline balance) of from 7 to 9.5. Most fresh
water fish are able to survive and reproduce where
the PH is not less than 5 (acid side) or greater than 10
(alkaline side). This should explain why strip-pit
ponds with a PH below 5 will not support fish . The
total alkalinity may influence the effectiveness of
some herbicides. This is discussed later in this
buHetin.
FinaUy, management of the watershed which
drains into your pond is important. Pesticides applied
!D crops in the watershed may be detrimental to the
fish and other org~nisms in the pond as well as to the
quality of the water . Land uses which leave the soil
s urface unprotected and the concentration of
Jivestock in feedlots within the watershed may also be
detrimental.
Another item discussed in tile bulletin is fertility .
Suggestions on making the " elbow test" are con. tained in the bu11etin. Most run-orr fed ponds in Ohio
do not need additional fertilizer.
Other major sections in the bulletin include
maintaining good fishing, population reduction,
contro11ing weeds, warnings, in regard !D herbicides,
and enjoying wildlife ·around your pond.

:-::::C:-==-:-~-,---•...:..:·20 ·tfc
-LEGHOR N hens for sale. 80c 1973 STEREO 8 track.

UROCERY business for sale.
Building for sale or lea~ .
Phone 773-5618 from 8: 30p.m .
per month . Phone 992-.5331 ,
lo 10 p.m . tor appointment .
4·20-tfc
3-20·tfc

A small
balance of 588.64 or pay S6 . .SO

each. Call 843·2145.
S-22-lOtc

... NON, Buzz Off!

CAPI'AIN EASY

Firestone, Jr ., former board has Red Tucker of Mason . The
chairman of Firestone Tire .&amp; eartlunoving has been done by

Rubber Co. founded by his
father, died Friday at his home

Ray Beegle of Route 87.

here at the age of 75. Firestone,

a major figure in the U. S.
rubber industry for more than

four decades, was with the
company 50 years, Funeral
arrangements

were

~omplete .

in-

machine equipment, overhead
door operation, commercial
food equipment, car wash
service and many others.
Robbins &amp; Myers is a
multimarket corpora lion

First, previously served by either
the firm has increased output AUing-Lander or New England
torque by a factor of 10, adding Gear. And, third, with its
heavy duty transmission established distribution system
capability to the product line. and new rang~ of gearmotor
serving users of eguipment and
Second, by combining design applications R&amp;M can seek
three-fold advantage:

characteristics from both lines
the company can broaden gear
drive·selection with customers

markets
unavailable.

previously

products in

comfort

con-

handling

James

Alan Duvall, son of Mr. and

Mrs. James iv. Duvall, Reeds·
ville, has been accepted as

cadet in the U. S. Coast Guard
Academy .
James was selected on the
basis
of
compe titive
examination taken by 5,300

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AS-EASY

candidates with from 400 to 500
being selected.

INNS WARNED
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Complaints of sub-standard
food and service has prompted

the state Department of

face contract revOcation .

students of the ,s enior class. He
wi11 leave June 23 for New
Londofl, Conn., where he will
attenq school for four years to
· become an e nsign. He r eceives
$31100
plus
su bsistence
allowances
du .. ing
his
schoolin g.

REGISTERED poll ed Hereford
bull , 2 year s old. Phond 247·
2196.
5·30-Jic

FRONT .
'TRIGGER

BLACK female Poodle, 9 mos .
old. $35. Call 949.5741 atfer S
p.m .
S-3Q.Jfc

,.REAR
. . TRIGGER

For easier control in
close Ql!arters and
•&lt;cky angles.

JAMES DUVALL

Coke over £inns face EPA action

-------

Makes faster work
of cutting firewood
or lumber.

Hamilton and Middletown; and
st ate
E' nvironm~ntal Youngstown Sheet and Tube
P~otecti o n Agency announced ·
Co., Campb~ll and Briar Hill.

HAN GIN G baskets, wh ite, jlin'k
a nd r ed geraniums, mums
and begoni as ; Ins tant co lor
for you r ga rden - pans ies,
pe tunias, mar igolds, Ph lox,
Coleus. Salvia. Zinnias,
Dianthu s, Ally ss um , Snap dragon s. Ageraliu m and
Portulacca . Vegetable plants
~
Cabbage.
br occoli,
cauliflower , lettu ce. eg gp lant.
ma ngoes. ho t peppers and 1&lt;1
k in d s of toma to p la nl s.
Clela'nd
Fnr m
and
Greenhouse, E. Main , Racine.
Ger&lt;~l d i n e Clclan Q.
5 18 lf c

IT 'S~ AAALLUS

it plans to refuse ·to issue air·
pollution variances to six coke
oven plants because the firms
have not even tried to meet

DOt-If. FO'LI'LA~ER.
AN' I-IONEST ABE.,eEFO'

Al-l &lt;501' LIBEAAT.=,P -

PENTAGON WILL OBEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - If
Congress

passes

a

law

prohibiting the bombing of
Cambodia, the Pentagon will

obey. That was· the response of
a

Handles all sizes and types of twines
without knotter adjustment

Penta gon

only

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~

TM Trademark of Homet ite , a dill ision of Textr!)n Inc.

Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; MaSon Counties

tween the House and Senate
versions s till must be ironed

out. Until then, the bombing

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JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

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• Economy-pri ced 420 ba les up to 15 tons an hour; 430 - up to 17
•
tons; 440 - up to 19 tons.
.
~

II

Come in today and compare features. The 400 is the
® best baler buy around.
.
..

• Gr~vely's bip;g-e~t, strongest tractor with power to
handle .the really tough jobs.
• New 8- ~peed all -gear transmisaion combines with
cotrstant-~peed power tak.eotf to give pof!i ti ve Control,
mo~t effie rent operating
speed.
' No fluid power lo~lie~. no
belts (o s lip or break .
GREAT
PL US hydrauli c &amp;tt..achment
GRAVELY
lift .. : rear· mouflted
DURABILITY ,
eng ine for extra traction
110W .
and .stability ... i nAtant
forward·neu tral -'reverse
action for man euverability
. .. fnmou!ol Gravely
durability.

accessories

out todav!'

Meigs Equipment Co.
POMEROY

PH. 992-2176
'

•

•

East- West vu l nerabl~·
:"'lorth
t:ast Suuth
It
Pass I •
P~:~ss
24
Pass 4 •
Pa ss
P.as~
Pass
Opening )£:ad - ¥ J
W c.~t

rn ·

.,.

- -- - - - -

Lp&lt;Gc:- \1'•'11. help you match the
se lection of tractors
in and talk it over, trY 'em

GRAVELY T.RACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy, Ohio

992 -2~75

Open Ba.m . til5 : 30 Mon . thru Thurs

Check our many Dairy
Specials and get valuable
ti~kets for a drawirig
on June 23rd.

CENTRAL SOYA
.OF OHIO

B~· Oswald

." Your Farm Supply Super Mkt."

&amp; Jam es Jacoby

Garr ulou s Gus looked :Jt
dumm y a nd promppy sa id.
·' Mav be
we didn 't hid

enough."
Pes sim ist ic Pet e. sitting
North , winced. He
had
li ste ned to G u s before.
East took th e ace of
hearts a nd re turned th e·
suit. Gus ruffed hl s kin g in

lI

'•

dumm y so as to be able lo
take ·a ·trump fines se . It lost
t o the si n g le ton kin g a nd

the jack of dubs was led .
Gu s · lost th a t fine sse. also
and eventually lost t he dia ·
mond fin~ sse and his contrac t.

lrd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis, Ohio

8 a.m. Til8 p.m. Frj. and Saturday '
WE SERVICE WH,4T WE 5Ell • WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

OHIO
PALLET CO.

Wanted

"H&amp;It"

.,--------

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

(2)
E lec tr olux
Vacuum
1 ~ 81i1ek
Cleaners complete with af . 6._ S aa
ta ch ment s, cordwinder and 1 1- Pro ton g
paint s pr,;y. Used bvt in like ~ 6 - 5~ 1hHIII h Qm
Ha ns11n' s
new condition . Pay $34.45
d i86UU
cash or budg (! t plan available. 19 -'- Ccsmelle
Elec tr o Hygi ene Co .. Phone 20 - Ma in diahus
992-7755.
2 1Tolle d
5-31 6tc 23 - Ruat ic

For

TWO trailer lots in Mlddfeporf ;
112 dupl ex in Bradbury ; phone
before 6 p.m. 992-569J.
6-4·5tc
un fu rnished
apartmen t s.
Ph one 992 5434.
_,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

4·-"-"_c

2 BEDROOM mobile home, air
co ndilioned, Racine · area .
Phone 992·6329.
5 23· tfc
TRA IL .ER in Brown's Trailer
Park , Minersvil le . Ph one 9923324.

.

''

If Gus had followed our
precept of ·kee pin g the
mouth shu t and the mind
would have made

open~be

t NEW ~P APEil. ENTER~Rt S E

ASS tU

Ti d iest

Wln1er

~ll h i Ci e

we igh t

re -

Ventlt&amp;IU

?Q -

27 -

lnl tl&amp;ts ol:!!l th
l' tes tdent

81 ~
82 - Cond~tnsell

:&lt;'Q -

S w ill

ot

Oye
W in ged
lhrOU\Ih

33 -

Pt&amp; ! i~

3 ~ ---

a. r;:t uat b eon g

Tall

93 -

40 -

~6 -

Bake• ·•
producl
Milt~ long 100m
Stora g(t
c omparlmenta
N~t ll•'lt metal
Be eau.•e
D ip hthon g

•7 -

Oopaflad

46 -

Spar

49 -

41 .&lt;4

2-

43~

45 -

Tr oplc 11 t lrul r
~p i )
Q5- Foil !I pro gram•
97 - Vss i sgu

t42 -C ~tud8t
appflndR{III

t 43 144 -

14 6 -

·t s t -

Hubtn g&amp;r

60 -

Hs rvea t

61-

• •m~

112 -

Le•n ·to

113 -

11 4 -

M'•n ·a
nic kname
Pro n oun

78-

1 t 5-

~nile

Oani;ter

61 -

Once ar oun d
·!la c k

At w~ilt tim,?
Conquered
49 - Pt~ r t a i nmg to
tne P ooe
50- Pu ll up

47 46 -

59 -

6-

jliOflO~n

9-

10-

1'\lrt {l o t Bn h an

l&lt;tng ol birds
So w
t 19- ShorB bild
120 - P&amp; re nl tcolloa t

11 12 -

P(lt l ! o l llo wtt r
L&amp; w m&amp;kers
W or ld

121 -Storlu

1J

01 ganitallon
l inil )
H &amp;so~enly body

1I7-

he ro

lna l illl llon o f

Corlt mOn•n

-

propertiBI
Sw8B ien tn g

FlnOJnc iat

56 -

t 10 -

102 -

4 ~-

.•
lnstilution
4 4 "'- B ab, ton illll

taorninO

IO OOI I

5-

t i)O...,... Lilnd1d
I O ~ -I nter] 8 CIIO I\

Unlockod

Worm

96- SpllBrOid
99 - Occldenl•l

lOS -

J-

Mtr l!&amp;f

9~ - Brllltatl~8

9e- Symbo l tor
tantalum

Wipe out

Large l ub l

105 -

EJ11a u

lnl&amp; l
L1S IIl!n to

5 4 ~ C a tillo gu~&lt;J

10 6 -

(abbr.)

9t -

39 41 -

55 -

no e knamo
Pe riod o lt im&amp;
(&amp;tl b&lt; )
0&lt;iv61 !S IMg)
Top o f h Ol! SII
Posaosslve

co tton

3 7-

P1118 by

Ta tk 1d1 1

116 -

shiila
35- Suspen d
J6 - D11 nger

M lsreprllllln l

w rlt tll ~

a~ o mat

QQ .-- Poalacrlpt

I-

103- Mu sic 111

red

n\onfty
~ S tu rc hln~

2-

.51- Sot1r dl!ll
52 - Rup8ea tabbr.l
53- Ugly . ol d

60 -

Ot•t ot date
DOWN

~m on g

compoun d

Nt{l!i'g en l
Sat uro l od
Sharp nails
Punte
Balc ony

14 6 I ~ g ....,..
t 5b ...._ Dom lc, le

10• -

w o m11n
St11nllor
S&amp;t\f&amp;nts
Sk1ll

!l9-Permlta

inquiries
26 '-- Mot hi lUS
30- Stop
3 1- Dlspaleh ed
33- One o l
Colum bus s

136 -

Sa- HB rd · tw l•t8d

A n gt o · sa~on

P ine r.
Bo und

Du tch
6J- St aff
68- Wl lrd

.

13 4 13 6 -

labbr I

{IOd&amp;

25-

77-Man ·•
nickn ame
. 78 - 88fOtR
80 - · South African

Wl 181

'27

Qa- Colle ge d'e gru
99 - Prono1.m
101- Hous&amp;IIOt d

Eag t&amp;a ' nuts
Plural ending
17 - Not sp&amp;clrt&amp;d
(obbr )
2 1- Mak fl tttlld~
'22-Si mOIIIII
:13- C oo k In hOJ

Crim ,on

VIISII

Conti nu&amp;d

AH~mpt a·

14 15 16 -

133 -

141 -

38 -

!IOI Y

1 ~~~ - Lilnos
131 - Forav
, 132 - Ch &amp;lle ngtt

140 -

QO- Pre llomln&amp;tll
92 - Su l!l- : 1ottow or
ol

35 -C ~t. ll

n1Ck nam11
127- Co lton labile

ptill!
Pretllr\ IIOU I
hlHI'le
Se c luded

•alloy

belo ra

12!l ~ Ma n ·s

139 -

6:&gt;

67 -

eurr&amp;ney
Son o t Noa t1
C1 ly ill
S w itl elltHid

m oiaturtt

J2 -

~

12 4 1 25 ~

Unit o1 La tvl•l'l

J,. atin fo r
"mQtllOI "
Nov a ScoiiB
lllb bo I
P ltasttt•

64 -- H oll~ w Oa tl

Unotol
Port vgune
curr&amp;ncy

'? ~ -

I JJ....., ~ c ne

::10 - Horae 's loo t
J 1 - ' Gi1l '1 n•me

56- Ctlemlcat

Sunposc Wes t held the

IIIII

73 74-

26 ~

57 -

gua rd ed kin g of trumps. In
that case So ut h W&lt;~ s doomed
to defeat fr om the start.

7 I - Lon g, s lendR t

M tt;u ~ re

55 -

hi &lt;; cOnt ra ct.
All he had UJ do was to
note thitt as long as · trumps
i&gt;roke 2· l that th e play of
t he ace of . trumps co uld not
hurt him . Th is tunc it wou ld
have pic k e d up th e si nglet o n kin ~. But just. suppose
East had .started with kin g
and on~ trum p .
After winn ing th at fir st
trump trick. Gu s W( Juld cash
his l ast hLgh heart. Th en he
wou ld th row East i n with
the king of trum ps a nd ~: ast
would be caug ht in a n early
e n rl-p lay. and forced to lead
away from one of his kin gs .

62- M•~ll \n iQ tow
a • - Stssm ahl p
!abbr)
115 - P&lt;inte r 's
mes,urtt
66 - Fo t !oa r trtll
6 7 - Euunce
69 - One of Three

24 -

' 36 ~

3 AND 4 ROOM furn is hed and

Misses the One Way to Win

Pomeroy Landmark

noted that the differences be-

will continue.

Mounted 10•

400All-

$7.00 Per Ton

WIN AT BRIDGE
S~gsested

" Yes, now and always ." But he

POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER
10" ON
LARGEST END

Wanted

- -- - - --

6• -

House and Senate antibombing
Asked if such a law would be
followed, Beecher replied:

THE DAILY

PHONE 992·2156

spokesman

votes. ·

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

SENTINEL

6-1-tfc

he was asked about the recent

Gravely Model
816 Riding
Tractor with
Center

CARRIERS IN
POMEROY

------

William Beecher Friday when

18.5 HP MUSCLE FOR
LAWN
GARDEN JO.BS

WANTED

- -- - - - -

KNAPP shoes, lo pet. to 28 pe t.
Rent
off on 16 s tyLes. Order now .
Supp ly lim ited . Ph one 992- NEW tra i ler in Syracuse .
532 4.
Adult s only. Ca ll 992·3525.
5·30-lf c
5·27-61c

The

mouth; Armco Steel Corp.,

____

- - -- - - -

5.27-61p

state and federal standards.
Natural Resources to warn
Officials said the plants are
Ohio Inns, Inc., operators of the Semel Solvay Division of
the Salt Fork State Lodge, to Alli~d Chemical, Ironton ;
improve service by June 10 or Empire Detroit Steel, Ports-

Wanted

A

Duvall was in the top 10

·cOLUMBUS .(UP!) -

------

77] .51'19 .

I

Notice

Wanted

XL2

a

Help Wanled

For Rent

TWO trailer lots in Middleport;
lNG and Heating Repall';
FURNISHED apartment, STREET Commissioner for the ROOF
1h du.,leK in Bradbury ; phone
e.ll
types
; Special - Cleaning
village of Pome,.oy: Must be
dean, all electric, SBS mo . be·
before 6 p.rn . 992-5693.
&lt;lnd
oiling
of blower, complete
able to operate light equip.
tween Pomeroy and Athens .
5-19-4tc
check
on
furnaces
; Phone 8-43·
ment. Apply City Hall ,
Call Mason 773-5580.
2341
.
H • N d
old or staffed
Pomeroy. Ohio.
6-3·61p
&lt;~&gt;
ay
S·2·30ft:
1· 31 )fc
Leghorn pullets. Both IJoor or
cage
grown
avrulable .
Poultry
hous ing
and PRIVATE meeting room for WANTED: Man el':pert with
sickle for hillside . Trim SOMEONE to take over my
automation . Modern Poultry ,
any organizalio~; phone 992bushes also. Call 992-5233.
~975 .
mowing in Middlepot by J\Kit
399 W. Main 1 Pomeroy. 992l -31 -31p
IS. Should be able to do
3-lJ .ffc
2164 ·
trimming
around walks. etc .•/
~
6--3-1
tc
_.-__:
ALL ELECTRIC - like new 3
please phone 992·3911 .
6· 1·31C
rooms with large b1th .
LUDWIG drums, 4 piece set,
El~ctric wall oven, tablE lop
While . Phone 992-7096.
range, large closet located on
6-1-Jtp
E . Main St.. Pomerov . St&gt;P tn
appreciale . Ph . Gallipo l is
STARCRAFT - New 1973 fold
446·9539.
down campers - sleeps 6 or 8
5·29-lfc
- 110.12 volt, 3 burner stoves.
2 water sys tems, raised
kltc hen, School out special SLEEPING room , Call 992·7244.
$1,325 . Same low prices on
5.JJ .6Ic
travel trailers . Use Star
master 8, $999. Closed for TRAILER space, free ga5 and
vacation June 10 lhru 21st.
water . Phone Reedsv ille 378CAMP CONLEY STAR .
6278.
CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 Nort h
S·Jl ·Jtc
of Poin t Plea san t, behind Red
Car pet Inn, Ph one 675-5384. SMALL 3 rooms and bath
furnished apartment, utillties
6-1·6tc
To Buy
furnished, men pre ferred .
RIDING horses - 2 sorrels, I
Id eal for wotk ing men . WANTED - Used merchan dise
Palamino, $150 and up . All
Comple t ely pr iva te from
- For .t'udion . We buy , we
gentle .
Arnold
Grate ,
residence . Phone 992 -3881
se ll , whole houselul or sin gle
Rutland . Phone 742-421 1 day
fr om 4-6 p . m . After 6 p. m .
pieces, consi gnment or
DELIVERED
or 742-5501 nigh t.
cal l 992.J134 .
percentage. We· will haul.
TO
S-31 -6t c
Phone 992·2792 after 5: 30 p.m .
6·1·3tc
Hayman 's. ,
3 WAGON wheels $25, breakfast
5-25-30tc
To Buy
set, 4 chairs, S25. 8 gall on
stone jars, $1 a gallon. Ph one TOMATO stdke·s . Will give top
667-3624.
dollars for 5.000 . Dallas
6·1-3tc
Open Monday
throuth
Cleland, Racine, Phone 949·
Friday 7 a .m. to 8:30 p.m .
4121.
PA CE MAKER trailer. all
5.27.7tc
TERMS
-'
Cash .
Not
On Old Rl. 33
aluminum,
8 x 35. Also boat .
respons ible for accidents . Phone 949·4401.
WANT
ED
OLD
UPRIGHT
Phone 992-2689
Bradford Aucti on Co., A. C.
6· 1 Jtc
PIANOS . Any co nd it io n.
Bradford , Mgr ., C. C.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Paying SlO eac h. First floor
Bradford , Auctioneer. P. S. ~-=----­
'T pump your s lugg ish
only . Wr ite giving direct ions.
One.hundred and frtty acre DON
WOULD LIKE twO E"lderly
se pt ic tank - Gel Klean . Em ·
P i ano~, P. 0 . Box 188, Sardis,
farrn for sale, ctJnlact owner,
persons. male or female, who
All
Septic
Tank
Cleaner.
Furnace
Controls
Ohio. 43946.
Mrs . Hasel M . Edgell, 486
would
prefer a private home
Landmark Farm Bureau,
5·27-6fp
Highland Ave .. Wadsworth ,
instead of a rest home . No
Pomeroy.
Oh io, 44281 , c-o Clara Bridgambulatory. Call 992-7l35 or
6·1-lt c NO. 1 Copper , SOc ; radiators,
man . Phone 3JS.0272.
Hoi
Water
Healers
inquire at 7 Liberty Ave.,
~c:-::----­
78c ; brass, 18c ; ba tt eries, asc
Pomeroy.
Plumbing
c:-:----:-:---- - - - -7·21C . BEAGLE pups. 3 mos ." , Full
e.1c h ; clean ·dry roots , Gi n6·3· 3tc
se ng , 5601 yel low root, $4 ;
BEAUT! FUL walnut s tereo .
blooded,, $25. Ph one 742·3656.
EleCtrical Work
maYapple, 45c per lb.; M. A.
radio tap co mbinati on, AM6-1-2tp
HaiL Reedsville. Ohio. 378FM radio, 8 tra ck tape deck . HOOD'S AQUARIUM S: !ish
6?•19.
Balance $116.98 or use our
and supplies. new loca lion.
S·6·1fC
budget terms . Call 992-3965.
As h Street, Middleport. near
6-J-6fc
p'a rk; Phone 992 544].
--,-.,----- l -7. tt c OLD Furniture, oa k . tabl es.
Wooden ice bO)C eS, bra ss beds,
HONDA 150. Phone 742 -6878.
992-2448
dishe
s
or
com plet e
6-3-Jip NEW 2 pc. Ear ly Am e rican
Pomeroy, o.
household s; Wr ite M . D.
::-:---:------liv ing r(om suite, 100 pel .
Mill
er.
Rt
.
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
,
ENGLISH POINTER Pup. 6
nylon with Scotchgard and
call 992 627 1.
weeks old. $25. Phone 696maple wood tt lm . This week
Notice
1001.
only $189.95. Cash and Carry ,
6-3· lt&lt;;:
Pomeroy Recove ry , 622 E.
$50.00 REWARD lor in Ma in St., Phone 992·7554.
:-::::-~~~c-=-formation lead ing to a rrest ,
1971 JAVELIN AMX . Take over
5-J l ·61 c Help
and conv iction of persons who
payments . Call 992·6858.
COOK, w&lt;ii tr ess and ca rhop;
s tole a 32 automatic pistol
6·3·11c
!3) 197 3 ZIG ·ZAG Sewing
apply in PN?On , Crow's Stea k
from me. Bud Bartimus,
::-c-::'C':':-:--::-::---..,-Ma chines lett in la Yaway .
Reed svil le . Phone J7 8.6J04.
House .
5·10.tt c
FARMALL B Tractor with belly
Beautiful pas tel color, fu.ll
5·30·6tc
~ou.. :nos
mower , exce llent . cond ition.
Size model. All built -In to
See Gary Smith, Chester .
butfonhole, d(• s tretch se wing
6 ·3· 31p
and fa n cy s titching. Pay ius!
S&lt;1B .57
cash
or
terms
CASE 310 !rant end loader, 1967
availab le . Trade .ins ac Dodge D-500, 2 ton truck and
ce pted . Electro Hygiene Co.
1964 ca b over engine , 2 ton
Phone 992 -7755.
SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1973
International truck . Phone
S-3 I ·6tc

ARtroLD
BROTHERS

drive motors, fluid tra·n sport,

Duvall going as cadet
REEDSVILLE -

MASSEY -Ferguson 10 horse
power law n and garden
tractor , mower and dozer
blade - Appaloosa gelding ,
nice for 4. H or a beginner.
Phone 992-2343.
s.Jt Jtc
---------UCTION - Saturday, June 9,
o~9~~E a1c2~~rft·~ ·the death of
my husband, I will sell the
follow ing personal property
at the home located 8 miles
Northeast of Racine , leave
State Rt . 124 one mile e~st of
Raci ne on County road 28 to
Bashan and eas on County
road 32 one mile, Watch for
sale arrows .
2 PC. BEDROOM suite, 8 pc.
dining room suite, wood
wardrobe, wood bed, ches t of
drawers , work table, utility
ca binet, davenport, 2 rockers,
three pc. set of cabinets,
treadle sew ing machine ,
cooking utensils, silverware,
d ishes. s pool leg stand, other
stand , antique wood ice-box , 6
plank
bottom
chairs.
Kelvinator
no . frost
refrigerator. 30" Admiral
Electric Range, Seigler Bott le
Gas Heater, May tag Wr inger,
Washer and Rinse Tub,
Maytag Elect ri c Dryer .
Porch Glider and Chair,
clothes rack , hand tools, lawn
mower (ga s), wheelbarrow,
platf orm sca les, stone iars
horse drawn cultivators and
plows , hand garden plows.
small lot of 1 x 10 cedar
lumber , other arti cles not
listed . Hazel Edgell , O....ner.

HUMIDIFIERS

ditioning, electric and gear

He added that new markets
material
could include heavier duty and
equipment.

for Sale

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

applications such as material
handling conveyors, laundry

School on May 20, this spring,

Land grading near complete

TM Trademark o f Hom8li te , a divi1 ion or TeMtron tnc .

sell 1973 deluxe Zig -Z.g

-

A graduate of Eastern High

only suueslell Reta il Pri ce

MUST

teristics.

Robbins &amp; Myers acquires New York gear firm

XL2

For Sale

dissolved oxygen. Therefore, it 19 Important to
consider this property in the management of your
pond. Inexpensive test kits are available which
enable you !D measure the amount &lt;X dissolved
oxygen in water as well as other chemical charac-

areas where the water ranges from 6 inches to 3 feet

deep. from 10,000 to 60,000 eggs laid in the nest hatch
in about two weeks. Although bass spawning aU oc·
curs within a few days, bluegills may be observed on
spawning beds much of the swnmer.
Physical and chemieal properties of pond water
must be considered in the program of pond

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

ollicer
! Bbbr.)
63 - Hut I
f r&amp;nctt erlt ct &amp;
87 - . Noar
66 - Rou i;t ht back
Me dil enannn
le t8nd

ee -

ro-

71 -

Open in g

72- A a ta te (abbr t
7 3 - Dr ink o t the
go !Is
75 - Dj!:l l hule

106 -

Prollt
AUin'll

107-

Sc hoo lboolli

109 -

Dtnn8r co11rH

111 112 113 -

HBIQill
0 baarvaa
0 iff!Cult
Preciou• 11one

1 t6 -

118 - Food liBh
, 19 - Cttack
122- Tran agre ..or

12 4 - Fo ul odor
125- S8curtly
128 - S8rcnm
128- P o tuatum

nt trl\8
130 ..._ VenUI•t•
131 -L'i h
132 -

Till• o t rUp8ct

135 -

tpt )
Parent (colloQ. I

137- An lmal'll. . t
; 38- Army meal
140 - D8110Ur8d
t 4 2 - Gre8k lei!Br
1 ~ J - Brown kiwi
1H. - 5Bint !abbr.l
14 5 - Prell• · o~t ol
147 - Btthotd
1 4 8 - Page a (abbr:)

�'
19 - The SUnday Times- Sentinel,Sunday,June3,1913

18 - The SUnday Timet: · Sentinel, s... ' n .lnnP ·' 1Q7l

Pond Water will support fish
By C. E. Blakeslee
Ext. Ageol, Agriculture
POMEROY - Fishing season is here so the new
Ohio Pond Management bulletin, written by Thomas
M. SIDckdale, Extension Wildlde Specialist, Sl;hool of
Natural Resources of Ohio State University, is
tL11ely .
"Bulletins" on Ohio pond management from
their beginning have been popular. Copies always are
avallab1e without charge to everyone interested in
ponds.
()l]e of the first questions pon&lt;l owners ask is,
"How fast should my fish grow?" Several factors will
affect the rate of growth, such as fertility of water ..
availability of food chain organisms and density of
fish population .
Another frequently asked question is, "When

the NEW in FARMING

ALL ABOARD - Twenty-one members of Boy Scout 'l'roop 249left Friday for the weekend
for the Ohio Power Rec reation Area near Bever1y, Troop members leaving Friday were, front

should my fish spawn ?" Large mouth bass are
sexually mature when about 9-10 inches in length. It
usually takes two full years after sto&lt;;king as
fingerling s to C~.ttain thiS size . Usually in May, when
the water tcm~rature reaches 60 degrees F., bass
will be observed fanning out shallow depressions,
called nests, in water from one to several feet deep .
The female deposits from 2,000 to 20,000 eggs which
the male guards and cares for during the 7 to 14 days

row, 1-r, David DiUard, Todd Smith, Scott McKinney, Steve Williams, David Burt, Danny
Norman, Jeff Daniels, John Stewart, Tim Adams , Todd Grinstead; second row , Jim Rose nbaum, Kenny Byer, Tom Reed, Rick Blaettnar, Keith Krautter, Scott Williams, Doug
Rosenbaum, Mark Gasto, Dan Thomas, Joe Wisecup and Paul Reed ; on top of the truck is
Frank Casto who also went on the trip. Others going were Hank Cleland, scoutmaste r , Bob

Armes, Ray Southerland and Eric Chambers.

similar bill last year, said tht"

public schools from administering group intelligence

IQ tests are "too valuable to
eliminate" and that the right to
utilize.them should be left up to
local school boards.

Park has new
official name
COLUMBUS

where it goes if it flows from the pond .
Water temperature, as it affects the spawning of
fish , has already been discussed . It also may affect
the· survival of some species. For example, trout will
not normally reproduce in water wanner than 60 to 65
degrees F. and they wiU not survive water tem-

perature exceeding 70 to 60 degrees F. more than a
few days . This is why few Ohio ponds can support
trout.
The temperature of water also must be con·
si dered when us ing c hemicals in the management of
a pond. Some fish toxicants and herbicides are more

effective when the water temperature is 60 degrees F.
or warmer. Some herbicides applied at recommended r;des are safe for fish ; however , they may

kiH fish eggs or fry (newly hatched fish ). Therefore,
temperature provides a clue as ·to when fish are

Some bluegilis wi11 be sexua11y mature the first

spawning and may influence the timihg of chemical
appli ca tions.

season after stocking a s fingerlings . Within a few

THE AMOUNT of dissolved oxygen in water wiU

days to a couple of weeks after the bass have
spawned and when the water temperature reaches 70
degrees F., bluegill nests will be seen in shallow

determine whether fish will s urvive .• Pond fish

required to hatch .

tests. Reagan, who vetoed a

BILL VETOED
SACRAMENTO, Ca lif.
(UP! ) - Gov. Ronald Reagan
vetoed Friday a bill prohibiting

management. Some of these · properties include
temperature, pH , hardness, dissolved oxygen 1 the
source of the water in the pond, uses made of it, and

Natural
Res ources Director William B.
Nye announced Friday that
Portsmouth State Park has
been officia11y renamed
SPRINGFIELD , Ohio Shawnee Slate Park. Nye said Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc ., an·
the name change, which has nounced it has completed the·
the support of the Portsmouth acquisition of Alling-Lander .
Chamber of Commer&lt;l'e and
CD., a division of GarlQCk Inc.,
many Portsmouth area con·
Rochester, N.Y. at the close of

require at least 4 parts per million of dissolved
oxygen . Other organisms in your pond also require

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE -AS-EASY
EXCLUSIVE TWIN-TRIGGERrM
DUAL CONTROL SYSTEM

I

FRONT
TRIGGER

,.REAR
TRIGGER

A

'

For easier control in
·close quarters and
tricky angles.

Makes faster work
of cuttl ng firewood
or lumber.

servation and nature clubs 1

will reflect the Ohioans the rich
Indian history of the Scioto
County area where the park is

and for this reason we feel that
the Shawnee name i~ most
appropriate for the park /: Nye
said. 41 This he~ritage was
earlier recognized in the
selection of the name Shawnee
for the park 's new lodge ."

an R&amp;M official said.
Ailing - Lander, headquartered in Sodus, N. Y. is a

leading m·ariufacturer of
custom gea ring and speed
Fred G. Wa11, president of reducers.
Robbins &amp; Myers, the . The new product line gives a
agreement includes all the

located.
major assets of Alling-Lander,
Shawnee State Park is 12 except for building and land.

miles west of Portsmouth on
State Route 125 near the Ohio
River .
" South-central Ohio is
renow ned for its Indian hist'ory

and experience of our Springfield Electric Motor Division , 11

business , June 1. According to

An undisclosed amount of cash
was involved. ·
" The acquisition of Alling -

Lander directly compliments
the gearmqtor product· line of
our New . England Gear
Division. Further, the acQuired
gea r
drive
units
were
marketed without a propiet.ary
eleetric motor and now we can
utilize , in tandem with speed
reducers , the products , s kills

MASON - Land grading and
snaping of the . Mason
Recreation Area and ball park
is nearing comp1etion according to Soil Conservation

Service

personnel who

are

helping establish the correct
grades so that proper drainage
may be brought about. This
park is being spcmsored by ·the
Mason County Court.

L. W. Getty,

Cler~

of the

Court, has been keeping very
FIRESTONE DIES
AKRON (UP!) - Harvey S. close check on its progress as

SWISHER
IMPLEMENT CO.
UPPER RT. 7

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

For Sale

For Sale

for Sale

sewing

machine .
Th1s
4 GRAVE lot in Mei9S. Memor ial
machine darns, embroiders, COAL. Limestone, E•cel~ior ·
Gardens . Cheap. Call 949
Salt Work,s, E. Main St..
makes but1onholes. all
-1962 .
Pomeroy. Phone 992 3891.
without attachments. Just
5-20tfc
4-12-tf
d ial and sew. Pay balance of
S38.50 or pay S5 per month .
Phone 992-5331 .

arHER PROPERTIES are also Important,
though not usually as Important as temperature and
dissolved oxygen. Most Ohio ponds have a PH
(acidity-alkaline balance) of from 7 to 9.5. Most fresh
water fish are able to survive and reproduce where
the PH is not less than 5 (acid side) or greater than 10
(alkaline side). This should explain why strip-pit
ponds with a PH below 5 will not support fish . The
total alkalinity may influence the effectiveness of
some herbicides. This is discussed later in this
buHetin.
FinaUy, management of the watershed which
drains into your pond is important. Pesticides applied
!D crops in the watershed may be detrimental to the
fish and other org~nisms in the pond as well as to the
quality of the water . Land uses which leave the soil
s urface unprotected and the concentration of
Jivestock in feedlots within the watershed may also be
detrimental.
Another item discussed in tile bulletin is fertility .
Suggestions on making the " elbow test" are con. tained in the bu11etin. Most run-orr fed ponds in Ohio
do not need additional fertilizer.
Other major sections in the bulletin include
maintaining good fishing, population reduction,
contro11ing weeds, warnings, in regard !D herbicides,
and enjoying wildlife ·around your pond.

:-::::C:-==-:-~-,---•...:..:·20 ·tfc
-LEGHOR N hens for sale. 80c 1973 STEREO 8 track.

UROCERY business for sale.
Building for sale or lea~ .
Phone 773-5618 from 8: 30p.m .
per month . Phone 992-.5331 ,
lo 10 p.m . tor appointment .
4·20-tfc
3-20·tfc

A small
balance of 588.64 or pay S6 . .SO

each. Call 843·2145.
S-22-lOtc

... NON, Buzz Off!

CAPI'AIN EASY

Firestone, Jr ., former board has Red Tucker of Mason . The
chairman of Firestone Tire .&amp; eartlunoving has been done by

Rubber Co. founded by his
father, died Friday at his home

Ray Beegle of Route 87.

here at the age of 75. Firestone,

a major figure in the U. S.
rubber industry for more than

four decades, was with the
company 50 years, Funeral
arrangements

were

~omplete .

in-

machine equipment, overhead
door operation, commercial
food equipment, car wash
service and many others.
Robbins &amp; Myers is a
multimarket corpora lion

First, previously served by either
the firm has increased output AUing-Lander or New England
torque by a factor of 10, adding Gear. And, third, with its
heavy duty transmission established distribution system
capability to the product line. and new rang~ of gearmotor
serving users of eguipment and
Second, by combining design applications R&amp;M can seek
three-fold advantage:

characteristics from both lines
the company can broaden gear
drive·selection with customers

markets
unavailable.

previously

products in

comfort

con-

handling

James

Alan Duvall, son of Mr. and

Mrs. James iv. Duvall, Reeds·
ville, has been accepted as

cadet in the U. S. Coast Guard
Academy .
James was selected on the
basis
of
compe titive
examination taken by 5,300

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AS-EASY

candidates with from 400 to 500
being selected.

INNS WARNED
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Complaints of sub-standard
food and service has prompted

the state Department of

face contract revOcation .

students of the ,s enior class. He
wi11 leave June 23 for New
Londofl, Conn., where he will
attenq school for four years to
· become an e nsign. He r eceives
$31100
plus
su bsistence
allowances
du .. ing
his
schoolin g.

REGISTERED poll ed Hereford
bull , 2 year s old. Phond 247·
2196.
5·30-Jic

FRONT .
'TRIGGER

BLACK female Poodle, 9 mos .
old. $35. Call 949.5741 atfer S
p.m .
S-3Q.Jfc

,.REAR
. . TRIGGER

For easier control in
close Ql!arters and
•&lt;cky angles.

JAMES DUVALL

Coke over £inns face EPA action

-------

Makes faster work
of cutting firewood
or lumber.

Hamilton and Middletown; and
st ate
E' nvironm~ntal Youngstown Sheet and Tube
P~otecti o n Agency announced ·
Co., Campb~ll and Briar Hill.

HAN GIN G baskets, wh ite, jlin'k
a nd r ed geraniums, mums
and begoni as ; Ins tant co lor
for you r ga rden - pans ies,
pe tunias, mar igolds, Ph lox,
Coleus. Salvia. Zinnias,
Dianthu s, Ally ss um , Snap dragon s. Ageraliu m and
Portulacca . Vegetable plants
~
Cabbage.
br occoli,
cauliflower , lettu ce. eg gp lant.
ma ngoes. ho t peppers and 1&lt;1
k in d s of toma to p la nl s.
Clela'nd
Fnr m
and
Greenhouse, E. Main , Racine.
Ger&lt;~l d i n e Clclan Q.
5 18 lf c

IT 'S~ AAALLUS

it plans to refuse ·to issue air·
pollution variances to six coke
oven plants because the firms
have not even tried to meet

DOt-If. FO'LI'LA~ER.
AN' I-IONEST ABE.,eEFO'

Al-l &lt;501' LIBEAAT.=,P -

PENTAGON WILL OBEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - If
Congress

passes

a

law

prohibiting the bombing of
Cambodia, the Pentagon will

obey. That was· the response of
a

Handles all sizes and types of twines
without knotter adjustment

Penta gon

only

-

Retell

~

TM Trademark of Homet ite , a dill ision of Textr!)n Inc.

Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; MaSon Counties

tween the House and Senate
versions s till must be ironed

out. Until then, the bombing

XotlTII ( 0 )
. 10952

¥2

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

.l;,&amp;.J.,
-

992 ·2181

2

. t AQ86
... A Q53

Open Mon .-Sat. 8 to 6
Pomeroy, Ohio

. ........................... 1

Mower

WI-:ST

~,\ S'r

. K

. li3

¥.11 097 4 :~

¥ A65

+ IOH

+ KJ93

... JlOJ

... K9 R2

SOUTII
. AQJ874

¥ K QH
• 72
... 64

BAlERS

Forget about costly down time and missed bales with the International®
All· Twine Balers .. , with the knotter that ties a u'nique bow-type. double
diameter knot that test up to 17 percent stronger than ordinary single di·
ameter. knots ... and does
. it with all types and diameters of baler twine. with·
.
out adjustment.
• Heav:y·duty power trai n w1th extra la rg e main drive clutch and
precision sp1rai bevel and pinion gears.
• Optional deluxe pickup with up to 126 rubb er mollnted tee th picks
up short hay and hard to feed crops.
• Economy-pri ced 420 ba les up to 15 tons an hour; 430 - up to 17
•
tons; 440 - up to 19 tons.
.
~

II

Come in today and compare features. The 400 is the
® best baler buy around.
.
..

• Gr~vely's bip;g-e~t, strongest tractor with power to
handle .the really tough jobs.
• New 8- ~peed all -gear transmisaion combines with
cotrstant-~peed power tak.eotf to give pof!i ti ve Control,
mo~t effie rent operating
speed.
' No fluid power lo~lie~. no
belts (o s lip or break .
GREAT
PL US hydrauli c &amp;tt..achment
GRAVELY
lift .. : rear· mouflted
DURABILITY ,
eng ine for extra traction
110W .
and .stability ... i nAtant
forward·neu tral -'reverse
action for man euverability
. .. fnmou!ol Gravely
durability.

accessories

out todav!'

Meigs Equipment Co.
POMEROY

PH. 992-2176
'

•

•

East- West vu l nerabl~·
:"'lorth
t:ast Suuth
It
Pass I •
P~:~ss
24
Pass 4 •
Pa ss
P.as~
Pass
Opening )£:ad - ¥ J
W c.~t

rn ·

.,.

- -- - - - -

Lp&lt;Gc:- \1'•'11. help you match the
se lection of tractors
in and talk it over, trY 'em

GRAVELY T.RACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy, Ohio

992 -2~75

Open Ba.m . til5 : 30 Mon . thru Thurs

Check our many Dairy
Specials and get valuable
ti~kets for a drawirig
on June 23rd.

CENTRAL SOYA
.OF OHIO

B~· Oswald

." Your Farm Supply Super Mkt."

&amp; Jam es Jacoby

Garr ulou s Gus looked :Jt
dumm y a nd promppy sa id.
·' Mav be
we didn 't hid

enough."
Pes sim ist ic Pet e. sitting
North , winced. He
had
li ste ned to G u s before.
East took th e ace of
hearts a nd re turned th e·
suit. Gus ruffed hl s kin g in

lI

'•

dumm y so as to be able lo
take ·a ·trump fines se . It lost
t o the si n g le ton kin g a nd

the jack of dubs was led .
Gu s · lost th a t fine sse. also
and eventually lost t he dia ·
mond fin~ sse and his contrac t.

lrd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Gallipolis, Ohio

8 a.m. Til8 p.m. Frj. and Saturday '
WE SERVICE WH,4T WE 5Ell • WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

OHIO
PALLET CO.

Wanted

"H&amp;It"

.,--------

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

(2)
E lec tr olux
Vacuum
1 ~ 81i1ek
Cleaners complete with af . 6._ S aa
ta ch ment s, cordwinder and 1 1- Pro ton g
paint s pr,;y. Used bvt in like ~ 6 - 5~ 1hHIII h Qm
Ha ns11n' s
new condition . Pay $34.45
d i86UU
cash or budg (! t plan available. 19 -'- Ccsmelle
Elec tr o Hygi ene Co .. Phone 20 - Ma in diahus
992-7755.
2 1Tolle d
5-31 6tc 23 - Ruat ic

For

TWO trailer lots in Mlddfeporf ;
112 dupl ex in Bradbury ; phone
before 6 p.m. 992-569J.
6-4·5tc
un fu rnished
apartmen t s.
Ph one 992 5434.
_,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

4·-"-"_c

2 BEDROOM mobile home, air
co ndilioned, Racine · area .
Phone 992·6329.
5 23· tfc
TRA IL .ER in Brown's Trailer
Park , Minersvil le . Ph one 9923324.

.

''

If Gus had followed our
precept of ·kee pin g the
mouth shu t and the mind
would have made

open~be

t NEW ~P APEil. ENTER~Rt S E

ASS tU

Ti d iest

Wln1er

~ll h i Ci e

we igh t

re -

Ventlt&amp;IU

?Q -

27 -

lnl tl&amp;ts ol:!!l th
l' tes tdent

81 ~
82 - Cond~tnsell

:&lt;'Q -

S w ill

ot

Oye
W in ged
lhrOU\Ih

33 -

Pt&amp; ! i~

3 ~ ---

a. r;:t uat b eon g

Tall

93 -

40 -

~6 -

Bake• ·•
producl
Milt~ long 100m
Stora g(t
c omparlmenta
N~t ll•'lt metal
Be eau.•e
D ip hthon g

•7 -

Oopaflad

46 -

Spar

49 -

41 .&lt;4

2-

43~

45 -

Tr oplc 11 t lrul r
~p i )
Q5- Foil !I pro gram•
97 - Vss i sgu

t42 -C ~tud8t
appflndR{III

t 43 144 -

14 6 -

·t s t -

Hubtn g&amp;r

60 -

Hs rvea t

61-

• •m~

112 -

Le•n ·to

113 -

11 4 -

M'•n ·a
nic kname
Pro n oun

78-

1 t 5-

~nile

Oani;ter

61 -

Once ar oun d
·!la c k

At w~ilt tim,?
Conquered
49 - Pt~ r t a i nmg to
tne P ooe
50- Pu ll up

47 46 -

59 -

6-

jliOflO~n

9-

10-

1'\lrt {l o t Bn h an

l&lt;tng ol birds
So w
t 19- ShorB bild
120 - P&amp; re nl tcolloa t

11 12 -

P(lt l ! o l llo wtt r
L&amp; w m&amp;kers
W or ld

121 -Storlu

1J

01 ganitallon
l inil )
H &amp;so~enly body

1I7-

he ro

lna l illl llon o f

Corlt mOn•n

-

propertiBI
Sw8B ien tn g

FlnOJnc iat

56 -

t 10 -

102 -

4 ~-

.•
lnstilution
4 4 "'- B ab, ton illll

taorninO

IO OOI I

5-

t i)O...,... Lilnd1d
I O ~ -I nter] 8 CIIO I\

Unlockod

Worm

96- SpllBrOid
99 - Occldenl•l

lOS -

J-

Mtr l!&amp;f

9~ - Brllltatl~8

9e- Symbo l tor
tantalum

Wipe out

Large l ub l

105 -

EJ11a u

lnl&amp; l
L1S IIl!n to

5 4 ~ C a tillo gu~&lt;J

10 6 -

(abbr.)

9t -

39 41 -

55 -

no e knamo
Pe riod o lt im&amp;
(&amp;tl b&lt; )
0&lt;iv61 !S IMg)
Top o f h Ol! SII
Posaosslve

co tton

3 7-

P1118 by

Ta tk 1d1 1

116 -

shiila
35- Suspen d
J6 - D11 nger

M lsreprllllln l

w rlt tll ~

a~ o mat

QQ .-- Poalacrlpt

I-

103- Mu sic 111

red

n\onfty
~ S tu rc hln~

2-

.51- Sot1r dl!ll
52 - Rup8ea tabbr.l
53- Ugly . ol d

60 -

Ot•t ot date
DOWN

~m on g

compoun d

Nt{l!i'g en l
Sat uro l od
Sharp nails
Punte
Balc ony

14 6 I ~ g ....,..
t 5b ...._ Dom lc, le

10• -

w o m11n
St11nllor
S&amp;t\f&amp;nts
Sk1ll

!l9-Permlta

inquiries
26 '-- Mot hi lUS
30- Stop
3 1- Dlspaleh ed
33- One o l
Colum bus s

136 -

Sa- HB rd · tw l•t8d

A n gt o · sa~on

P ine r.
Bo und

Du tch
6J- St aff
68- Wl lrd

.

13 4 13 6 -

labbr I

{IOd&amp;

25-

77-Man ·•
nickn ame
. 78 - 88fOtR
80 - · South African

Wl 181

'27

Qa- Colle ge d'e gru
99 - Prono1.m
101- Hous&amp;IIOt d

Eag t&amp;a ' nuts
Plural ending
17 - Not sp&amp;clrt&amp;d
(obbr )
2 1- Mak fl tttlld~
'22-Si mOIIIII
:13- C oo k In hOJ

Crim ,on

VIISII

Conti nu&amp;d

AH~mpt a·

14 15 16 -

133 -

141 -

38 -

!IOI Y

1 ~~~ - Lilnos
131 - Forav
, 132 - Ch &amp;lle ngtt

140 -

QO- Pre llomln&amp;tll
92 - Su l!l- : 1ottow or
ol

35 -C ~t. ll

n1Ck nam11
127- Co lton labile

ptill!
Pretllr\ IIOU I
hlHI'le
Se c luded

•alloy

belo ra

12!l ~ Ma n ·s

139 -

6:&gt;

67 -

eurr&amp;ney
Son o t Noa t1
C1 ly ill
S w itl elltHid

m oiaturtt

J2 -

~

12 4 1 25 ~

Unit o1 La tvl•l'l

J,. atin fo r
"mQtllOI "
Nov a ScoiiB
lllb bo I
P ltasttt•

64 -- H oll~ w Oa tl

Unotol
Port vgune
curr&amp;ncy

'? ~ -

I JJ....., ~ c ne

::10 - Horae 's loo t
J 1 - ' Gi1l '1 n•me

56- Ctlemlcat

Sunposc Wes t held the

IIIII

73 74-

26 ~

57 -

gua rd ed kin g of trumps. In
that case So ut h W&lt;~ s doomed
to defeat fr om the start.

7 I - Lon g, s lendR t

M tt;u ~ re

55 -

hi &lt;; cOnt ra ct.
All he had UJ do was to
note thitt as long as · trumps
i&gt;roke 2· l that th e play of
t he ace of . trumps co uld not
hurt him . Th is tunc it wou ld
have pic k e d up th e si nglet o n kin ~. But just. suppose
East had .started with kin g
and on~ trum p .
After winn ing th at fir st
trump trick. Gu s W( Juld cash
his l ast hLgh heart. Th en he
wou ld th row East i n with
the king of trum ps a nd ~: ast
would be caug ht in a n early
e n rl-p lay. and forced to lead
away from one of his kin gs .

62- M•~ll \n iQ tow
a • - Stssm ahl p
!abbr)
115 - P&lt;inte r 's
mes,urtt
66 - Fo t !oa r trtll
6 7 - Euunce
69 - One of Three

24 -

' 36 ~

3 AND 4 ROOM furn is hed and

Misses the One Way to Win

Pomeroy Landmark

noted that the differences be-

will continue.

Mounted 10•

400All-

$7.00 Per Ton

WIN AT BRIDGE
S~gsested

" Yes, now and always ." But he

POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER
10" ON
LARGEST END

Wanted

- -- - - --

6• -

House and Senate antibombing
Asked if such a law would be
followed, Beecher replied:

THE DAILY

PHONE 992·2156

spokesman

votes. ·

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

SENTINEL

6-1-tfc

he was asked about the recent

Gravely Model
816 Riding
Tractor with
Center

CARRIERS IN
POMEROY

------

William Beecher Friday when

18.5 HP MUSCLE FOR
LAWN
GARDEN JO.BS

WANTED

- -- - - - -

KNAPP shoes, lo pet. to 28 pe t.
Rent
off on 16 s tyLes. Order now .
Supp ly lim ited . Ph one 992- NEW tra i ler in Syracuse .
532 4.
Adult s only. Ca ll 992·3525.
5·30-lf c
5·27-61c

The

mouth; Armco Steel Corp.,

____

- - -- - - -

5.27-61p

state and federal standards.
Natural Resources to warn
Officials said the plants are
Ohio Inns, Inc., operators of the Semel Solvay Division of
the Salt Fork State Lodge, to Alli~d Chemical, Ironton ;
improve service by June 10 or Empire Detroit Steel, Ports-

Wanted

A

Duvall was in the top 10

·cOLUMBUS .(UP!) -

------

77] .51'19 .

I

Notice

Wanted

XL2

a

Help Wanled

For Rent

TWO trailer lots in Middleport;
lNG and Heating Repall';
FURNISHED apartment, STREET Commissioner for the ROOF
1h du.,leK in Bradbury ; phone
e.ll
types
; Special - Cleaning
village of Pome,.oy: Must be
dean, all electric, SBS mo . be·
before 6 p.rn . 992-5693.
&lt;lnd
oiling
of blower, complete
able to operate light equip.
tween Pomeroy and Athens .
5-19-4tc
check
on
furnaces
; Phone 8-43·
ment. Apply City Hall ,
Call Mason 773-5580.
2341
.
H • N d
old or staffed
Pomeroy. Ohio.
6-3·61p
&lt;~&gt;
ay
S·2·30ft:
1· 31 )fc
Leghorn pullets. Both IJoor or
cage
grown
avrulable .
Poultry
hous ing
and PRIVATE meeting room for WANTED: Man el':pert with
sickle for hillside . Trim SOMEONE to take over my
automation . Modern Poultry ,
any organizalio~; phone 992bushes also. Call 992-5233.
~975 .
mowing in Middlepot by J\Kit
399 W. Main 1 Pomeroy. 992l -31 -31p
IS. Should be able to do
3-lJ .ffc
2164 ·
trimming
around walks. etc .•/
~
6--3-1
tc
_.-__:
ALL ELECTRIC - like new 3
please phone 992·3911 .
6· 1·31C
rooms with large b1th .
LUDWIG drums, 4 piece set,
El~ctric wall oven, tablE lop
While . Phone 992-7096.
range, large closet located on
6-1-Jtp
E . Main St.. Pomerov . St&gt;P tn
appreciale . Ph . Gallipo l is
STARCRAFT - New 1973 fold
446·9539.
down campers - sleeps 6 or 8
5·29-lfc
- 110.12 volt, 3 burner stoves.
2 water sys tems, raised
kltc hen, School out special SLEEPING room , Call 992·7244.
$1,325 . Same low prices on
5.JJ .6Ic
travel trailers . Use Star
master 8, $999. Closed for TRAILER space, free ga5 and
vacation June 10 lhru 21st.
water . Phone Reedsv ille 378CAMP CONLEY STAR .
6278.
CRAFT SALES, Rt . 62 Nort h
S·Jl ·Jtc
of Poin t Plea san t, behind Red
Car pet Inn, Ph one 675-5384. SMALL 3 rooms and bath
furnished apartment, utillties
6-1·6tc
To Buy
furnished, men pre ferred .
RIDING horses - 2 sorrels, I
Id eal for wotk ing men . WANTED - Used merchan dise
Palamino, $150 and up . All
Comple t ely pr iva te from
- For .t'udion . We buy , we
gentle .
Arnold
Grate ,
residence . Phone 992 -3881
se ll , whole houselul or sin gle
Rutland . Phone 742-421 1 day
fr om 4-6 p . m . After 6 p. m .
pieces, consi gnment or
DELIVERED
or 742-5501 nigh t.
cal l 992.J134 .
percentage. We· will haul.
TO
S-31 -6t c
Phone 992·2792 after 5: 30 p.m .
6·1·3tc
Hayman 's. ,
3 WAGON wheels $25, breakfast
5-25-30tc
To Buy
set, 4 chairs, S25. 8 gall on
stone jars, $1 a gallon. Ph one TOMATO stdke·s . Will give top
667-3624.
dollars for 5.000 . Dallas
6·1-3tc
Open Monday
throuth
Cleland, Racine, Phone 949·
Friday 7 a .m. to 8:30 p.m .
4121.
PA CE MAKER trailer. all
5.27.7tc
TERMS
-'
Cash .
Not
On Old Rl. 33
aluminum,
8 x 35. Also boat .
respons ible for accidents . Phone 949·4401.
WANT
ED
OLD
UPRIGHT
Phone 992-2689
Bradford Aucti on Co., A. C.
6· 1 Jtc
PIANOS . Any co nd it io n.
Bradford , Mgr ., C. C.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Paying SlO eac h. First floor
Bradford , Auctioneer. P. S. ~-=----­
'T pump your s lugg ish
only . Wr ite giving direct ions.
One.hundred and frtty acre DON
WOULD LIKE twO E"lderly
se pt ic tank - Gel Klean . Em ·
P i ano~, P. 0 . Box 188, Sardis,
farrn for sale, ctJnlact owner,
persons. male or female, who
All
Septic
Tank
Cleaner.
Furnace
Controls
Ohio. 43946.
Mrs . Hasel M . Edgell, 486
would
prefer a private home
Landmark Farm Bureau,
5·27-6fp
Highland Ave .. Wadsworth ,
instead of a rest home . No
Pomeroy.
Oh io, 44281 , c-o Clara Bridgambulatory. Call 992-7l35 or
6·1-lt c NO. 1 Copper , SOc ; radiators,
man . Phone 3JS.0272.
Hoi
Water
Healers
inquire at 7 Liberty Ave.,
~c:-::----­
78c ; brass, 18c ; ba tt eries, asc
Pomeroy.
Plumbing
c:-:----:-:---- - - - -7·21C . BEAGLE pups. 3 mos ." , Full
e.1c h ; clean ·dry roots , Gi n6·3· 3tc
se ng , 5601 yel low root, $4 ;
BEAUT! FUL walnut s tereo .
blooded,, $25. Ph one 742·3656.
EleCtrical Work
maYapple, 45c per lb.; M. A.
radio tap co mbinati on, AM6-1-2tp
HaiL Reedsville. Ohio. 378FM radio, 8 tra ck tape deck . HOOD'S AQUARIUM S: !ish
6?•19.
Balance $116.98 or use our
and supplies. new loca lion.
S·6·1fC
budget terms . Call 992-3965.
As h Street, Middleport. near
6-J-6fc
p'a rk; Phone 992 544].
--,-.,----- l -7. tt c OLD Furniture, oa k . tabl es.
Wooden ice bO)C eS, bra ss beds,
HONDA 150. Phone 742 -6878.
992-2448
dishe
s
or
com plet e
6-3-Jip NEW 2 pc. Ear ly Am e rican
Pomeroy, o.
household s; Wr ite M . D.
::-:---:------liv ing r(om suite, 100 pel .
Mill
er.
Rt
.
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
,
ENGLISH POINTER Pup. 6
nylon with Scotchgard and
call 992 627 1.
weeks old. $25. Phone 696maple wood tt lm . This week
Notice
1001.
only $189.95. Cash and Carry ,
6-3· lt&lt;;:
Pomeroy Recove ry , 622 E.
$50.00 REWARD lor in Ma in St., Phone 992·7554.
:-::::-~~~c-=-formation lead ing to a rrest ,
1971 JAVELIN AMX . Take over
5-J l ·61 c Help
and conv iction of persons who
payments . Call 992·6858.
COOK, w&lt;ii tr ess and ca rhop;
s tole a 32 automatic pistol
6·3·11c
!3) 197 3 ZIG ·ZAG Sewing
apply in PN?On , Crow's Stea k
from me. Bud Bartimus,
::-c-::'C':':-:--::-::---..,-Ma chines lett in la Yaway .
Reed svil le . Phone J7 8.6J04.
House .
5·10.tt c
FARMALL B Tractor with belly
Beautiful pas tel color, fu.ll
5·30·6tc
~ou.. :nos
mower , exce llent . cond ition.
Size model. All built -In to
See Gary Smith, Chester .
butfonhole, d(• s tretch se wing
6 ·3· 31p
and fa n cy s titching. Pay ius!
S&lt;1B .57
cash
or
terms
CASE 310 !rant end loader, 1967
availab le . Trade .ins ac Dodge D-500, 2 ton truck and
ce pted . Electro Hygiene Co.
1964 ca b over engine , 2 ton
Phone 992 -7755.
SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1973
International truck . Phone
S-3 I ·6tc

ARtroLD
BROTHERS

drive motors, fluid tra·n sport,

Duvall going as cadet
REEDSVILLE -

MASSEY -Ferguson 10 horse
power law n and garden
tractor , mower and dozer
blade - Appaloosa gelding ,
nice for 4. H or a beginner.
Phone 992-2343.
s.Jt Jtc
---------UCTION - Saturday, June 9,
o~9~~E a1c2~~rft·~ ·the death of
my husband, I will sell the
follow ing personal property
at the home located 8 miles
Northeast of Racine , leave
State Rt . 124 one mile e~st of
Raci ne on County road 28 to
Bashan and eas on County
road 32 one mile, Watch for
sale arrows .
2 PC. BEDROOM suite, 8 pc.
dining room suite, wood
wardrobe, wood bed, ches t of
drawers , work table, utility
ca binet, davenport, 2 rockers,
three pc. set of cabinets,
treadle sew ing machine ,
cooking utensils, silverware,
d ishes. s pool leg stand, other
stand , antique wood ice-box , 6
plank
bottom
chairs.
Kelvinator
no . frost
refrigerator. 30" Admiral
Electric Range, Seigler Bott le
Gas Heater, May tag Wr inger,
Washer and Rinse Tub,
Maytag Elect ri c Dryer .
Porch Glider and Chair,
clothes rack , hand tools, lawn
mower (ga s), wheelbarrow,
platf orm sca les, stone iars
horse drawn cultivators and
plows , hand garden plows.
small lot of 1 x 10 cedar
lumber , other arti cles not
listed . Hazel Edgell , O....ner.

HUMIDIFIERS

ditioning, electric and gear

He added that new markets
material
could include heavier duty and
equipment.

for Sale

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

applications such as material
handling conveyors, laundry

School on May 20, this spring,

Land grading near complete

TM Trademark o f Hom8li te , a divi1 ion or TeMtron tnc .

sell 1973 deluxe Zig -Z.g

-

A graduate of Eastern High

only suueslell Reta il Pri ce

MUST

teristics.

Robbins &amp; Myers acquires New York gear firm

XL2

For Sale

dissolved oxygen. Therefore, it 19 Important to
consider this property in the management of your
pond. Inexpensive test kits are available which
enable you !D measure the amount &lt;X dissolved
oxygen in water as well as other chemical charac-

areas where the water ranges from 6 inches to 3 feet

deep. from 10,000 to 60,000 eggs laid in the nest hatch
in about two weeks. Although bass spawning aU oc·
curs within a few days, bluegills may be observed on
spawning beds much of the swnmer.
Physical and chemieal properties of pond water
must be considered in the program of pond

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

ollicer
! Bbbr.)
63 - Hut I
f r&amp;nctt erlt ct &amp;
87 - . Noar
66 - Rou i;t ht back
Me dil enannn
le t8nd

ee -

ro-

71 -

Open in g

72- A a ta te (abbr t
7 3 - Dr ink o t the
go !Is
75 - Dj!:l l hule

106 -

Prollt
AUin'll

107-

Sc hoo lboolli

109 -

Dtnn8r co11rH

111 112 113 -

HBIQill
0 baarvaa
0 iff!Cult
Preciou• 11one

1 t6 -

118 - Food liBh
, 19 - Cttack
122- Tran agre ..or

12 4 - Fo ul odor
125- S8curtly
128 - S8rcnm
128- P o tuatum

nt trl\8
130 ..._ VenUI•t•
131 -L'i h
132 -

Till• o t rUp8ct

135 -

tpt )
Parent (colloQ. I

137- An lmal'll. . t
; 38- Army meal
140 - D8110Ur8d
t 4 2 - Gre8k lei!Br
1 ~ J - Brown kiwi
1H. - 5Bint !abbr.l
14 5 - Prell• · o~t ol
147 - Btthotd
1 4 8 - Page a (abbr:)

�The Sunda) Tm es $-nt nel Sw ~,) June 3 1973

20

U- The Sunday Times Sentinel Sunday June 3 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Notice

WANT ADS
NFORMAT ON

OEADLlNES
5 P M Dav Before- Pub ca on
Monday Dead ne 9 a m
Cance a on
Co ec o s
W beaccep ed un
9a m o
OO;y o Pub ca on
REGULAT ONS
The Pub she
ese ves he
gh o ed o
e ec any ads
deemed
ob ec ona
The
pub she w no be espons be

fo

nse

mo e

on

han one

nco

e

GUN SHOOT
Sunday, June 3
100 PM

secu ve nse ons
25 Pe Cen 0 scoun on pa d
ads and ads pa d w h n 0 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; 08 TUARY
1 so o so wo d m n mum
E a h add on a wo d 2

pe

OFF CE HOURS

B JO a m o 5 00 p m Da v
8 30 a
m
o
2 00 Noon
Sa u day

On New lima Road

fa thful
When he Maste says
We i
done
Yes - he tr ed and he abo ed

NOTICE
Ou~

lo
c cums1ances
beyond ou conr ol h e e w
be no fu the c ed 1 ss ued to
anyone at Kapp!e s Pennzo
A outsland ng b Is MUST
be pad by JUNE s

•'
IN LOV NG memo y of Con n e
Ph ps One yea ha s passed
and gone s nee you ef us
Days of sadness s I a e w h
us Tea s of s lence o en f ow
But you memo y keeps you
nea
us Sad y m ssed by
grandma he and mo her da
K ng and My ti e Rob nson

63

p

~~---~

KAPPLE'S
PENNZOIL
EManS

s 20

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Pom e oy 0

e c mob e home
e
p us g gan c
d spay o mob e home s
a ways a a abe a
Camp

P ANO TUN NG

423 52

5535

REDUCE excess fuds w th
F u dex
Lose we ght w th
Dex A 0 e
capsu es
at
Ne son Drugs

KITTEN S o g ve away
992 524

Ca
636

c

KOSCOT SPEC ALS o June
nc ude Fam y Sun tan 0
Sp ay and
Fac a l Mask
A so w h a pu chase of e he
A e Shave o E ec c P e
Sha e by Kosco you ece e a
K eans ng K earn ee Phone
He e n Jan e B ow n 992 51 3
6
lc

he

---,--,--~~-

c

5 20 2 p

NEW 3 bed oom
Mason b ck on
00

n automa c N o ust $500
John l h e R
Rae ne Oh o
Phone 949 2632

s gas hea

Phone

3 5554

home n
ha dwood
a ge o

5 22 6 c
3 BEDROOM mob e home 2 x
60 a pe d n ng a ea c ean
S4 000 Ca
Mason 773 5580
636p

- -- - JSA 4bedoombck

Rea l Estate For Sale

6 ROOM house w h
fnq

ROOM house w h ba t h n
Rut and a
cond on ed
ca pe ed gas f u na e d sh
washe daub e oven
ange
daub e ga age a ge ca po t
4 ac es clea ed and fenced
sma
ba n
and
o he
bu ld ngs Ph one 6 4 74.2 6834
5 30

s 31 2tc

n e

ng
3764
DON T
o
emove
A fpa pe
can do h s ob
as fe han mos Ca I 992 7405
5 fo8p mony

6 6c

-----K TTENS lo g ve away
992 5247

Ca

52 6 c

Co ne of La ge home ha s
be d ooms
baths o e y
k chen
ot s o ca pe ng
g assed un po h A o on
he g o nd sa Ox 0 bu d ng
n ex e fen
and t on ALL

OF TH S FOR JUST $2 SOO
BUS NESS OPPORTUNITY
Es ab shed 5 yea s dong
an
exce en
bus ne ss
pay ng a n e p o
No
phone ca s p ease Come to
he o
e

RACINE
85 ac eo n ce ay ng and 2
s o y ame Wonde f u new
k hen Range o en d sh
washe
d sposa
Loads o
cab ne s
ba h 2 a ge
ng cams 5 bed ooms
ga age and o he bu d ngs
s 000 00

RUTLAND

5 a e o g ound N ce fl ame
as 3 bed ooms ba h k t
h en w h re
and ange
ha dwood
oo s
Basemen '1 wate sys ems
and ap pa d o new wa l e
sys em S18500

REAL
ESTATE
S A
BUS NESS W TH US NOT
A S DE N E L ST NOW
FOR QU CK SALE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROK ER

24 2

DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
Be In Bustness
For Yourself
Full or Part T me

Sou hea ster n Oh o s fastest
g ow ng compan es w th 8
estab shed branches s now
a cce p ng app ca ens for
oca offi ce Th s career
po s on n o ur Ga I po s
off ce w I p oduce an ncome
o exceed $12 000 the f sf 2
man h s a so w th f nge
benef s The man we se lect
fo
h s past on mus be
amb t ous w th a goa n I fe
also gene a sa les ex per ence
bu t no
w I be tretpful
necessa y
Conf dent a
n
e v ew w I be he d Tues
June 5 by appo ntment onl y
Oh ly hose n erested n a
bet e way of 1 fe fa
her
fam es ca a ea code 6 4
446 0090 fo M
Love
3

9 I
=-~~----

1UOL
sha pen ng
saws
s sso s shea s home and
garde:n oo s Sha p Shop
A ley rea
47 Second
2 6 f
__:_

Nolice

_____

Lane Dan e s
M dd epa
992 2082
12S 2 REMODELING bu d ng new
ooms
ce men
oof ng
LAMBERT S la wn mowe
s d nq
u nace ns J H
Coiueen &amp; Son 446 9271
epa
2.56 6349

P ANO un ng

259 Broadway
Refe ence G S

-.,----------

EXCAVAT NG

ACRE
3 LARGE BEDROOMS
N e
ba h
y oom s de po ch
daub

soo 00

e

ga age

Jus

oade

and backhoe wo k
se pt
tanks ns a ed dump ucks
and o boys o h e w hau
dr
op so
mes one
and g a e Ca Bob o Roge
e e s day phone 992 089
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
5231

NV ESTME NT
LARG o
APARTME N T
HOUSE
Has 3 apa m en
a
en ed One u n shed
As k ng On y s 0 000 00 o a
q ck sa e

LARGE HOME
COR N ER LOT - 4bed ooms 2
ba hs gas u na e basemen
and
a ge
on
po h

900 00
REST AU RANT
And
EQ U PMEN T

SEE US FOR Awn nqs sto m
doc s and w ndows a po s
ma q uees a um num s d ng
and a ng A Ja ob sa es
ep ese n a
e
Fo
ee
es n a es phone Cha l es
L se
Sy acuse
V
V
ohn son and Son Inc

READY M X

c

you
F ee
3284
Co

6 30

4782 Ga po s John Russe
Ovme and Ope a o
5 2 c

See us o h s buy o he yea
Lo e y k chens bea
u
bC'I hs Th s house we ghs o e
6 on s Com e see o ca
po n men I

Pa I s

3 3

-----

Supp es Phon e 36
36
Da s Va uum C eane So e
0 a m 5 p m Add son Oh o

DR VER needed for
ac o
a e
pa d by percen tage

So on th s her b hd ay
Fo g ve us Lord we pray

Ca I 446 2420 o 446 OSS8 af e 6

--------------- 4

P m

29

31 t

4 FAM LV Ga age and Ya d
Sa e
Jvgs
ots of good
c o h ng so me Avon bo es
odds and ends ve~y good sa le
Sa urdy June 2 Monday and
Tuesday June 4 and 5 f om
hou s 0 o 3 44 0 ve s eet

----

She was so p ec ous
Why cou dn t she have stayed?

s

Sad y m ssed by

Card of Thanks

C

THE FAMIL Y of God a Scot!

W1th a Phenomenal Tax Sheltered Income
To Qual fled People

GARAGE SALE

Call or Writi

A
7 3 Jack son
Street
V n on Oh o June 5 &amp; 6 Gas
stov e so me modern fu
n tu e
an d
ant qu es
m see aneous terns

,.$'pirit or l61nn-.tnr.

;:.____ _ __

125 N Co umbus St
Gal on Oh o 44833 (4 19)468 2400

N COURT

ATHENS

Boots

WE HAVE a camp e e I ne o
w a ches and
d amends
Campa e
ou
p
es
anywhe e Ta wne y s Jewe y
i

PROFESS IONAL REAL
ESTATE APPRAISER

CAMPING
gal

Coleman Stove $12
}9 95 up
HARDWARE

~LOTHING

Lantern

88 -

HOUSE

H GH o ume se ce sta on
pa d
t a n ng
exce l en
oca on Ca 992 522 8 a m
oSpm
5 25 6 c

973 campe s s eep&amp;- 6 o
10 and 12 vo
3 bu ne
s ove 2wa e sys ems a sed
k tchen Schoo ou spec a
s 325 same ow p c ng on
trave
a e s One used

a

Largest
ARTHUR

A. NIBERT
ASA.

80

Lrncoln Welders $92

-

SO

Slacks

Latest Releases

8 Track

95

frrst
pr

all krnds $1 98 each

OPEN9 005 300AILY
EXCEPT MONDAY&amp; FRIDAY TIL9

OPEN SUNDAY 12 'TIL 5:30

67S 5384

1 ~---~--=-~30
1.

18

MOBILE HOME

N ce

wo bedroom count y home
w th 13 5 acres o c ea red and
w th Ia m pond two ba ns
p ent y of water full ba h on y
20 m nu es out f om town

LOVELY

BAR GA IN

Th s

frame an ch s toea ed on 77
ac e of n ce ay ng g ound
forced a r fu nace
ange
oven waf to wa l carpe ng
hardwood
floo s
f hree
bed ooms s orm w ndows
and doo s ca port w ndow
20 m nutes
a r cond one
from town

LOTS OF HOUSE - 11 you have
a good s ze fam y h s s he
house
for
you
Fou
bed ooms ful ba h two ca
carpor t loca ed n V nton
on y 0 m nufes f om Me gs
M ne a stea l fa ess han
$ 3 000

TOP DA RY FARM

Owne

must se ll due o hea fh Farm
of 222 ac es Ia ge ba n S29
on s Ia new G ade Am l k ng
parlor he d can be pu cha sed
w h the farm f des ed
Home s ve ·y vable w h ots
of room Plenty of wate
pasture crop and

ELECTR C

ALL

DOWN

RIVER
N ce new home
nea C ay School fu y ca
pete~
bu t n cab ne s n
k chen ceram c bath ofs of
c osets f n shed ga age and
storage oom n ce evel o

NElGHBORHQQD

ROAD

Fou yea old home on h d
of an acre w th c y water
c ty sc hool s fo ced a
fur
nace ca peted v ng oom
dovb le van ty n bath owne
w I se fu ly furn shed
you
want ns tant hous ng

ADELAIDE DRIVE BEAUTY
N ce ran c h home w th a
hardwood f oo s ca · pe ng
a I app ances nc uding a
washe and d yer d apes
on y f ve m nutes from the

C y Pa k

Evemngs Call446 4244
Steven Betz 446 9583
John Fufler 446 4327

REALTORS

woods

Add son

n

soo

August compete pr ma y
nsurance prov ded Rates as
ow as $2 50 pe day on
week y bass 140 Easte n
Ave Ph 446 142S
128 tf

f_________
•
Pets For

FOUR bed r oom home new
k tchen ca pe J ca ga age
and6ac esnex ttoC y m s
Buy fo ess hen new home
and of
4 ACRES vacan
an d 2
m esf om Baden Oh o Twp
Lo1s of ees dea
e ea

wooded

and

n

Mogan Twp
3 ACRE S vacan and n Pe y
Twp
no
fa
r om R o
G ande
acan t and n Ad
d so n Twp Some ences
Wa e ee pad

J ACRES

Th

ee

apa

ment s

don I want see Seve Roa ch
at Rancho the f end y ea
estate peop e

~~6-0001
Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Denver K H gley 446 0002

IN CITY 3

Nel Ave

Jus

com p e ed new 3 bed oom
home a e ec c w lh wa l o
wa
ca pet
he mo pane
w ndows p enty of cab ne s
e eel c ange d sposa
2
ba hs al ce am c
e n
ba hroom s o age oom n
ba ck n ce cone ete dr veway
eady o move nto ca n
f nan ce lnqu e a Corb n &amp;
Snyde
F u n lure Co 446

126

ou 5
qua
Adm
on y
w h
P og ams

w h ots

0

AGENCY

~------~--~05

$ 6 900

N ~W

ST RT 775
ba h 254 sq

YEAR OLD

0

c

y

e C'
c home ose a new
hosp at of e s 3 BR ba h
WW a pe ga age b ck
on and 00 I
on age

d

Ca

OPEN HOUSE
SU NDA Y
UNE 3
2new alae eel c
homes n a new subd s on
m e wcs o s a e out e 60 on
s a e ou e 554 nex to g ade
s hoo Ope o 11 p m to t1
p rn The p ce and qua y of
ese ames can ompa e
w h o bea ;:Jny h ng on he
11
ke oda y P ces s a a
s 9 500 E xc en f nanc ng o
o e who qua y

v a ea p us
ca po t F ee wa e and
loca ted on I
A lo $2 000
ST RT 3S
A B ck 5 ms
and ba h a ached garage
fu and d y base Lo app ox
00 x 0 Th s s an ex ef en
buy
or ask ng p
e of

CLOSE NORTH GA LL A H GH
SCHOOL
N ce y emode ed
ca pe c d

m home on
a ge
Owne anx ous o se

PR CE REDUCED TO$ 7 SOO
Owne s anx ous o se
hs7
m a
e ec c home w h
basenien Jnd 2 ba hs o a ed
4

BEAUT FUL
CO O N AL
P US ACREAGE You may
b y h s o c y
BR home

RUSSELL

w h
ac e o 67 Th s a
e ec
beau yo c s 2 ba hs
a ge am y m d n n9 m

WOOD
REALTOR

4461066

ST RT
5
BOA 10m
om
own Good 8 m house Ba n
36 x 60 w h on e c
and
sheds added Con e e S o 6
F YOU h nk peep c don
sen
D X 50 H T N ea
new
o wha yeu s:ty
s
Badge Loade Mos o 80 A
epea ng a okc you od
s T ac o and 2 A bo om
hem a man h ogo
25 A
a and 20 A s gen e
ope ASC ~PP o ed Pond OF COURSE a mode n hu sband
and W a e
ough Th s a m
e:o; pec s h s w e o ump when
zed and
has been med e
he ho e s
g.h down h
s n a h gh p oduc e sage
h oa
p cc $43 000
MARY
sad he
mo he
VACANT LAND
e e y me you a e naugh y
63 A Wa d Rd F nanc ng
ge a g ay ha
Gee
a a abe $ 8 000
Mom you mus ha e been
e o when you we e a
e
5 A nea R a G ande $.5 500
~
us oak a G andma

u a

om Sh ne
wa e
ne

cp aces a ac o y k chen
.;~ a
women d eam o and
pa o f you shou d dec de o
buy
a you wou d a so ge
bou am co cad r on age
ew pond
ob base cor n
base
ba n and abou
75
ab e ac es Buy now and
hoose
he
o o o you

a pe

6

BEDROOM house k hen
ba h and n ce on po h
Chesh e Oh o p ce educed

OS2SOO

MODER N
oo pan on Ad
d son Bu a
e Rd 6 com::.
ha d wood
oo s mode n
LOOK La s Lo s Lo s oc a ed
k hen u a wa e s ua ed
on Raccoon Road
m Sou h
ce $2 000
of Sla e R No 2 8 Roads
$200 pe
wa e
e ec
c ty
and
Ga l po s 446 Be
e ephone
Ready f o new homes mob e
ARGE ode home has been
homes o camp s es boa
emode ed mode n k hen
amp and pa k ng o
We
new a pet ng
wo pa os
have good New Moon 0 x 55
p u e a a e pad on o
2 BR mob e home o sa e
p e59500
ocated a 44 Rea 2nd Ave

K k
Rae
h o
on &amp;
446

0 a m lo 8 p m
30 I

LOCA ED A(R05
STREE
TRA CE

NEW L ST NG

Th s n e 7
m hom e s abou 2 y s a d
and cealed n a qu e sub
d s on on US 35 HW 00 s 3
BRs a ge d n ng m u
y
m and a po t a e on y a
ew o t he spec a fea u es

mooo

WE HAVE LOTS &amp; VACANT
N
ALL
WOODLAND
D RECT ONS
F NAN
C NG AVA LABLE
ON
MOST PAR CEL S
L ST NGS
NEEDED
ESP E C ALLY FAR M S
NAT ONW DE
AD
VERTS NG PAY S
Ranny B ackburn
S anch Manag er

J BEDROOM

a

ba hs
y wa e
S250 pe mo

e

.....----- - - - ;

Call Collect
Tom Staley
Farm Spec1al st

w h

en s o

OFF CE446 066
Even ngs
Russe 0 Wood A46 46 8
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John I R chards 446 0280

MARK IV REAlTY CO
Dayton Oh o
513 298 0161 513 433
4176

278
BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE es m a es
ab l y n
su ance P un ng t mm ng
and cav y work
ee a d
s ump emo a Ph 446 495J
3

Y CARPETED

UDES

OME
A

ERSEY
HURRY

K TC HEN

N

Hot Shot Spray Wash
CALL us o w.;~sh wax and
deg eas ng o you
u ks
mob l e homes a urr n um
s d ng o rmy h ng washab e
446 444
19

VERY

BE T

-~~~~~

ER

McGRAW COMPA NY
BULLDOZER back oc a
and c cu ng and de c op
nen 4116 02 388 8230

V er y Allraclov e
4 Bedroom Hom e

VERY N CE L OCA
ON
ON J
0 S
O N E HA S
PAD FOR MOB
E H OME
RE N A
PURPO SES
YOU
LOVE
T E
BA H
OW NER
W
HE P F N A N CE

AS

PRETTY

MODERN

A

00

A NI;J

2

S TORY

COLO N ALAS H ERE S
HE M ARKET A l
ON
HAROWOOQ F OOR S 1
REP ACE S
2

F ULL

BASEME NT
ATTRACT VE

Perfect for Your
Fam1ly

AL

ARGE
K T(HEN
HE
AP

A NCES

OR MAL

D N NC
AND
ANOSCAPED
CAR
A

ACRE
O T PLU S
AC H ED

W

H

P
N EAR
NEW FU
CARPE ED
BE D DOM
HOME W
H
OVE Y
K
CHE N A N D 0 N NG

SEPT IC TANKS
C eancd an d sa ed

GA~AGE

LA

GILLE NWAT ER S sept

dpa
a so
house w eck ng Ph 446 9499
Es ab shed n 940

69

N

Centra I A r Cond I on ng
&amp; Hea t ng
Free Est mates
Stewarts Hardware
V nton Oh o

H S ONE

We Need L1slmq
We 5e ll More Properly than Anyone Else m
So utheas t ern Oh o

CA

LOOK
AT IT
THIS WAY
EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND
PEST CONTROL SERVICE

SO D

U

Galha Co s Largest
Real Estate Sales Ag e ncy
Offoce 446 3643
Evenmgs Call
Ike
W1seman 446 379/J
M
E N W1seman 446 4500

FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Pract catty new7 room brick
ranch s1y e home totAl
elec1r c &amp; • r cond tlonlng
1 2 t e ba1h &amp; shawer 6
roomy c osets plus w•lt. n
cedu closet Will to wAif
carpet 1he \rery bt&gt;st in
panel ng a dre•m kitchen
w th 30 ft of be1vt fut
cab nets
111rge
stone
f replace n I v ng room
bu It n vacuum system 2
car garage plus many ex1ra
featu M. 0 tside cookout &amp;
par o One 2 bedroom fur
n shed apt and new trai .. r
Bofh rented Two large
~rns large pond 30 acrts In
a 11 w th new fences OM
large c stern and rural
water Wtll accept small
place on trade n gr nNr
Gall pal s Located on St Rt
60 f ve mtles from new
hosPttal One of the bttter
bu It homes in the county
Reason for sell ng II hNtth
Phone a~6 4170

BR CK Hou se Feu ooms and
ba h Ga age Ut y oom
6 3 F f h Avenue 446 826

13 2
N EW BR CK home fUS com
p e ed 3 BR
baths u
ciJ pet 2 ca r ga age w t h
e cc c doo opener cen a
a cond oned natura ga s
hea p enry of ca b nets di sh
was her di sposa f Tappan
se f c ean ng range N ce
a ge of ocated n Coun ry
Are E states 5 m es up Rt 7
nqu re at Corb n and Snyder
Fu n ure Co 446 7 afte

spm

446 2573

78 ACRE fa m

30 botom

6

oo m h ouse and bath good
au bu ld ng obacco base 4
m es f om Wa e oo 643

2S35

w
CALL TOOAV FOR AFREE ESTIMATE

0 Dell

Termite Serv1ce

b1
1 o••••••••••...

TARA
DEVELOPMENT
CORP

Serv1ces Offered
IN STAL L NG
a um num
s d ng gu er s and down
spou s Fo f ee es ma ed
ca co lect 367 0 28

30 26
-~-~=----,--

0

ank

c ean ng and

ll.EDROOM
OWN
N CE
K T C H E N AND BATH
US
R G HT
FOR
AM
Y START NG OU
F H A M GH APPROVE

P YOU W A N T

4~2

297

H REE

OME

s P umb g 446

Russe

Pnce Red u ced
W as $15 900
Now $ 14 900

0
MAL S REAM
AND CAR GARAGE
S
A
YO R S
FOR
$ 8 900 00
A ND
M
BE
NG
A
YOU
WON
F NO O N E
0
COMPARE
AT
TH S
PR CE
$
00
DOWN
OUY S
T
P
YOU
QUA
Y

250 ACRES
Bas c da y o m
oba co base o e gh s no
g an ed
eab e bu d ngs

liE

F-RO M
A NN AN
G H SC 00

PRET Y
K
CHE N
N CE OATH A TACHED
GARAGE
ARGE r AT
ANDSCAPED 0
C Y
SC HOO S
WAT ER
&amp;
SE WER
OWNER
MOV N G
0
N EW

VERY A T RAC
VE 2
BEDROOM HOME W
PLU S H
CAR PE
NG

ARGE

BOB
LANE S
comp e e
Bookkeep ng and Tax Se
v ce 424
F au h A e
Kanauga Bus ness by ap
po n men t
Ph
446 049
Pease ca al e 6 p m

V ery N ce 3 Bedroom
Near ly N e w $19 500 00

THE

Exce llent Rural
Ne1ghborhood

ARE

24J

T ~A DANDY

C

BEAUT FUL

Ph 379 2 33

BARN S 2 CAR GARAGE
A ND
CARPOR

H S (U

E

29 3

2 xS5

W T

ALBERT E.ll1.1AN

Wa e De ve y Serv ce
Pa o S a R G!l I po s

BA SE MENT
ACRE
F AT
GROUND
2

3 BEDROOM

Tw p - abou 20 ac es
abe
w h he ba ance n woods

ADD SON TOWNS H P
LOTS - ASK NG $40 000

2 am y dwe ng aca ed a 63
Th rd Ave Ren both o
e n 4 GARF ELD A e
e y n e
one and en he o he
Bo h
home w h new ca pe and
.have new u naces Ha s 3
d apes cen a l a
on
oom apa m en and a 5 aom
d on ng
on oom 22 x
apa men t Ca
oday a an
w h wood b
ng
appo n men
mode n
k chen
u
basemen and nE;?w a po
Off ce Phon e 446 694
has \IC
ew p ~ $22 500
Even ngs
Cha es M Nea 446 1546
COTiAGE on E an s He gh 5
J M chae Nea 446 503
o 45 x 25 mode n k hen
he who e hou se
exce en
and on a so ga age p ce
5 5 000
TOTAL e ec
c 3 bed oom
home a
co nd on w w
ca pe
n
v ng oam and 7 ROOM b k home on Lowe
R e Road o e oak ng Oh o
mas e bed oom k tchen
R e
mode n
k chen
app an ces fu n shed ocated
a pe ed a
con d on ng
o n one h d ac e o on
u
basemen
wo ca
Fa f ed Cen ena y
Road
ga age has e en y been
owne
be ng
ansfe ed
ede o a ed
Pr ce S26 SOO 446 9380

967

N

HE P
N C NG

WE NEED AN OFF ER - 60
ac es a an an d n Add ~o n

ANY HR 446 998

Neal Realty

TH 55 BEDROOM HOME
W
PR VATE- MA STER
QUAR ERS
A
ARGE
FAM LV
ROOM
F
EP ACE
D N NG
ROOM
'2
BA H S
BASEME N
N EW
FUR N ACE CARPET NG
'2 CAR GARAGE
ARGE
OT W H C
Y WATER
AND
EWER
N R 0
GRA N DE OWNER VERY
A N X OUS TO SE LL A ND

BATHS

FARMS

Cub On
$ 000

E SURE AND SEE

o

y

Beau u
b ck and a me a I e ec and
a ca pe
ba hs and 2 a
ga age Loca cd on a f a o
00 x 25 P ce$2 000

Roto Rooter
SEWER and Dan Ceanng
Na ona
Se v ce
now
ava fable oca y Fo
an y
kndo soppedupd an ca
675 s 95 24 hou Se v

VERY N CE 3 BEDROOM
HOME
W TH
FULL
BASEMENT
ARGE
BEAUT FU L
K TCHEN
WOOD
BURN NG
F REP ACE
FULl

$22 500

HOMES
S b g ms

9 A ac ass hwy

F SO

W

5

267 I

Bea uloful Bnck
4 Acr es $3 0 000

Need Lot s
Of Room&gt;

h s ce 6 m
home w h a 2 x 20 lam y m
and mode
bu
n k chen

ERMITE PEST CONTROL

FREE nspect on Ca 446 3245
Me
0 De Ope ala by
Ex e m na Te m te Se v ce
0 Be man Dr

Th s abso u e y mus be one of he p e es t homes ns de
and ou n the a ea P ush ca pe ng h oughou beau u
k hen ab net s w h ang e and d shwashe 2 ba hs
o e y o rna d n ng oom arge am y and e
oom 2
ca ga age iln d Ccn a A
Ovvne mo ng o he w sc
wou d no pa t w h
s brand new and he on y one kc
w h a Sp ng Va ley Estates add ess

$ 6 900 buys

OVER AN ACRE o

I

e downs fa rs s ca pe ed
com v ng oom pa o
hs fu basement 5 ca
om poo and h gh schoo
a and cool you home a
000 00 Make us an o e

On e of the Areas N ce st New Homes

FHA WOULD PROBABLY
F NAN CE THIS ONE

$27 500

2730 Ca
da ly

f

bed ooms cou d be 5 ent
n udes a a ge o ma d n ng
o den n ce k chen 3 fu l ba
ga age and a m pond
m e
Low ax a ea Pu n gas cen a
absolu e y no cos P ce a $47
Fa

NEARLY

and p us a o e y 6 m
co n y ho e La s ol good
ng can be ad o on y

Spou ng

S5 00 Se v ce Cha ge
W I remove your dead
ho se and cows
Ca Jackson 286 453

Owner Transferred Must Sell Th1s
- Beauhfut Country Estate-

NEW
Res au an
a nd
a y ou ood ser v ce Rea
e a e and a equ pmen goes
vv h sa e Loca ed ea Gav n

ENO

and

DEAD STOCK

S.OL

ome pane ng and a pe rJQ
p s a um num s d ng s o m
w ndaws and a po

water

62

NEAR
" - 5 ACRES
Lo e
home has
e en yo
/) ed and s
e dy o move
S 0 500

Nea

nes etc

8 4

Pa

KANAUGA - 2 good hones
No
s .a 2 s o y 6 b g ms
ba h and s o age b dg No 2
sony Oyeaso d Jbdm
m k chen ba h and a
a ge s o age
oom
Bo h
houses a e n good epa
on
u a wa e
n gooa oca on
and wov d make someone a
good home o
n es men
P
e o No
s $ 2 900 and
No 2 s $ 4 900

ROOF NG

acres

EASTER N AVE $ 4 500 1DEAL FOR HOME OR B Z
N e 6 n home ea u es

A so a I

Sh ng es
and
Bu dup
+io oafs 'f ee Est ma e 26 y
exp.;:: ence Jam e~
Ma cum Vin on Oh o 388

hen fo ma d n ng m
ng m w h WB f epface
3 BR
u basemen
and
sh r~dy awn $ 5 900

new
ms
4 bd n
a
a pe
ba hs K chen has
pen y cab ne s d shwashe
d spo a s o e and o en Th s
house has a ge ooms mu h
s o ag spa e ce a a
pa o a d s o a ed on a a Qe
o and qu e s eel Ovme
anx ous o se l Pr ce reduced

A so good

n

I

k

garage p us
bldg 4 A o
ontage P ce
500 mmed ate

ec

ench ng

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

P nes Th 3 rm
5 5

NVESTMENT -

t

282

89 f

LOW DOWN PAYMENT Th s
e y emode ed 2 s o y
I one nc udes a new ac o y

L ke he
R ve ? 5 rm on ma n
A
ca pe
full 1 n shed base

0

ol

nes gas

GARF ELD AVE

P EASA NT VALLEY

foo e 5

ypes

oca ed n one of ou f ner
a eas and needs a new owne
you e look ng o fa s of
oom see h s one

soo

Large b ock
0 x 2 me a
I
w th r ve
educed o $7
Pass

anks

MAKE US AN OFFER - Th s
e eoan 2 s o v home s

COME

446

Jttckson 286 4S2.4
AI
types of backhoe ng set&gt;i c

and ba h home has a fu ll
basemen and s oca ed on th
Woods M I Rd
mmed a e
possess on S 4 700

ook ng fo
oca on qua ty
and p ce don pass h s one
by 6 ms bath aund y and
a ached ga age
P ce

wood M ob e Home r.
coon Val ey WI se ll w
w th ou o 0 e by 0
Ba ey owne s Phone

Ma e and Fema e S75 up Cal

31 3

Ph , 0008
44
NEW LIST NG ~

you a e

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

FOR real estate you want o

pupp es

446 0548

Eve 446 226o 44 6'267 4

con

BA~~~~~H~~ZER

CALL

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN

ca pet ave H W firs Cen
A r nsta led 2 y s ago a
!ached ga Owne ha s p ans
and hasp ced th s one to se ll
P ce of S2 000 In cudes he
d apes d shwashe and cook
stove

$23

WISEMAN

SERVING THE NATIONs
BUYERS&amp; SELLE RS

a ge v m and k chen new

CE NTE NARY

THE

Largest

:.

o~rv~~L~'!!~~ce by
4~~~~ w lad Bos•y

Sale

Real £state For

NCOME Pope y on Fou h

Sale

YORKSHlR E terre

4 bd ms

Twp

oneandl ve no her Buybo h
homes fa
ess money fhan
new home Bes buy be ween
town and he Med ca Cen e

World '-

C TY
82 Second Ave 6 b g
ms and ba h 2 sfo y arne
on a a ge c y ol 1 has a t e
bock garage and s orage
b dg Th s house s sound
S uc u a ly w h IUS I a I e
pa n wou d make some one a
n ce om to ab le home n a
good es den a a ea P ce
on y s20 000

HANER SV IL LE Love y sma
26a c es 4
Span sh home F ant po ch WOODS MILL RD
com house and ou bu d ngs
and t le oof Ga a9e
3 BR
$8 200
Double w de fu n shed Ren

0 ACRES

15 Locust Sl
Howa r d B annon Broker
011 446 267 4
Luc 1 e Brannon

$3 500

GREEN ACRES

STROUT
REALJY

Real Estate For Scile

REALTy

111 e off Rt 7
beau tul
amb ng 7 rm
fame Ranch on A o 1 has
everytllng al ca pel over
HW
s cen a
F P n
ec m N Gas heat 2 ba hs
v m S x 26 and a k chen
he Mrs w
ove Low axes
and good schoo s A I of h s
0
2

MODERN 3 BR hom e ou
bu ld ng 5 acres g ass and
$18

~~

N -

Garage C stern Ru al wa e
Fe ed deal for bu ld ng and
room for your ho se

• FOR REN T now to June July

~

Sl

Real Estate For Sale

$24 000
WEST 35 Sub D v

AUCTIONEERS
4 ACRES 900 F on age on R
141 3 m es f r om
own

111 Afte 5 446 2S73

(Youdrvetl

----~

•

fo

P1 Pleasant beh nd
Red Carpet Inn

'
..
,..

Tapes

Close d

CAMP CONLEY
STARCRAFT SAlES
Rt62Nof

~

Selectron of

S999

vaca on June 0 thru June 2

,J

qua lrty double kmt men s $6
women s $6 95

For lease

STARCRAFT

Y NEW

Sleeprng Bags

Wrangler

CITY DUDES FARM

tj' _ __ _ __ 3 tf

0

$5 00 off

$11

HUNTERS

DREAM
A elect c home
w th b ck fran 18 feet of
cab nets n the k tchen yea
round c mate con1 o fu y
carpeted ceram c bath ots
of storage space coun y
v ng w th c ty conven ences

~

Lamp and Stove Fuel 89c

Coleman

BARGAIN

LOTS a Tycoon Lake w th we i

BUY a new Apache so do soft
~ state camper by June 10 get
"" $100 merchand se f ee We
need used campe s br ng
yours n now fo best dea
Amsbar y s Tra e s
63
Fourth Ave
nea
C ty
""'
Schoo s 446 0239 open II 9
"' weekdays

ST M8

3 3

ovelyhome narura set ng
C ty schoo s county wale
one and ha f ba1hs ec ea on
oom beaut fu k tchen w th
ots of bu It n cab nets

A ve

Camptng Equipment

SHOES &amp; BOOTS Man made ztppered
dress boots $2 49 pr all Johnson
P1oneer and Ranger
Reg L1sted Pnce

BEAUT FULSPLlTLEVEL Lots or I v ng space n h s

$ 0 000

BILL'S ARMY-NAVY
DEPARTMENT STORE
85

E L NA and
Sew ng
Mach nes
Se ce on a
makes Reasonab e a es
The Sew ng Cen e
M d
depo
Oho

31 1

FREE FREE FREE

censed by Sta e of Oh o
m es wes t of new hasp a
577 Svn Va ey Dr Ph 44u
3657 Day ca e that says we
a e
Madge Ha u d en
Owne
Lo ed th &amp; John
Hauld en Ope ~ o s

B ad o d

3232

wou ld ke to hank he Rev
Lem ey
caske
beare s
s ng e s f ends and ne gh
bo s n he Addav I e Com
mun y and Tu key Run
Commun ty fo he food sent
to
he home
A so
he
Raw ng s Co a Is
Fune af
Home Your though fu ness
w I neve be fo gotten

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITY

Camp e e Se v ce
Phone 949 382
Ra ne Oh o

Robert

Ross and daughters mother
father fam y and f ends
3 1

OFFERS

s 2 30 p
HELEN L TEAFORD
992 332l
GORDON B TEAFORD
99? J6 5
ASSOCIATES
NO SUNDAYS PLEASE

We cannot send a b thday ca d
Your hand we cannot touch
Today the e w I be no g fts or
cake
For the one we lov e so much
For n a graves de soft y
sleep ng
Where the flowe s gen ly wave
L es 1he one we love so dea l y
But whom we cou d not save
God alone knows how much we
m ss her
As He counts the ea s we shed
For He wh spered She s on y
sleep ng
Your oved one s not dead

------

C BRADFOR 0 Auc onee

ba hs wa
o wa ca pe ng
Beau u k chen and d n ng
a ea One ac e on ha d oad
Ga age o 2 ca s Now on y 0 DE L WHEEL A gnmen
5300000
oca ed a C ass oads R
24
comp e e
on end se v ce
LOOK AT TH S
une p and b ake se v ce
2 bed com TREN
NEW
Whee s
ba an ed
0 HOM E w h ba h
u
on
ca
y A
wo k
basemen
o on y S 8 000 00
gua an ee d
Rea sonab e
Yo
n
0 days
a es Ph one 42 3232

PERM TT NG

Lou se Ross on her b thday
June 2

ADD 1SO

46 3434

IN LOVING memo y of Anna

on

32 State
TeI 446 1908
~

Realty

llrokers
4

In Memory

USED G ave y
actor w h
mowe
a achmen t Phone CONTRACTING pa nt ng o by
446 45 18
he hou
Work guaran eed.
Waf s 446 463 or 446 0391
a te 6 p m

DAY CARE
c SUN VALLEY Nu se y Schoo

SEPT IC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE a es Ph 446

u

3 LARGE BEDROOMS

CO NCRE TE

de
e ed
gh
o
p o et F as a d easy
es ma es Ph one 992
Goeg e n Ready M x
Mddepo
Oho

s

n u e A good go ng bus ness
n a h
ng sma
I age
Ask ng s $5 000 DO
1 YEARS OLD

s

13

Bula v e Rd must have own
anspo a on Ca l 446 3797
lJl 6

Wanted To Buy

that

Beyond he gate ou loved one
F nds happ ness and est
And there s a comfort n the
thought
That a ov ng God knows best

- - - - - - - -- - c - - - - - - - - - . c : 30 2

32

J 33 ACRES
On Rou e
be ow own 9 2 mob e home
on d oned ba h and
ee ed pa a D ed we
and ex a spa ce

WEAT HER

Ma

e

all

There s an open gate
At he end of the oad
Th ough wh ch each must go
a one
And he e s a ght
We cannot see
Our Father cia ms H s own

- - -- -Wan ted
babys

and

Ch s an ty stood for When
f ends v s ted Gold a and
Hen y s home there was
always a deeper fa h n the
old fash oned way of I fe and
n Jesus Ch sf Ou Savor
upon eav ng he home
She w I be sad y m ssed by
he
lo v ng husband
her
n eces and nephews to whom
she was devoted s ste s n
law M rs Ina R fe Mrs Ada
P er ce M s Maude Scott
Mrs All e Scott Carman and
Mrs Lou se Scott R fe

,.-------

SWEEPER Repa
5 30 30tc

mun ty

To

---~-~-

RVER FRONTAGE

ASK NG $20 000
ACRE

992 2ZS9
o a !lwer 992 2S68

w

$

e n one ent
h e o he s
On e has 3
bed ooms h e o he s have
one A
ha e ba hs Gas
hea ed
A l ways
en e d

Take pr de n serv ng qual tv
food
good
pay
pa d
vaca t on
ho sp tal zat on
p an
pl easa nt work ng
cond 1 on s Apply n person
a Bob Evans Steak House

02 0032 B

SE PT C TANK S
DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
SE WAG E
SYS TEMS
NO EXP nee Economy does
CLEA NED
'REPA I RED OFFICE space fo ease 2nd
no affec ou bu s ness Prof
M L LER SAN TAT ON
A e ac oss f om C ty Pa k
po en t a s un l m ed $90 fa
STEWART OH lO PH 662
Avt:J abe af e Ju y 31 Ca l
eac h day wo ked s a con
3035
446 819 o 446 26 or see
se va l ve es ma e A $2 940
John Ecke
nves lm enf puts you
n
31 f
bus ness WRITE TODAY
MACH NES Repa
AUTOMOTIVE
e ce a makes 992 2284
MARKETING INC 600 N
The Fab c Shop Pome oy
Wanted
Oo
Jackson St Medta Pa 19063
Au ho zed S nge Sa es and
31 3
WALLPAPER
NG
and
pan
Se v e We Sha pen S sso s
ng
Phone
446
9865
o
3
9
3 29 tfc
BYF RSTREQUEST
One of
24

Mon ey o
any pu pose
Con de n a
Con en en t
e ms
R,obe s Loan Box
607 P Whee ng W Va
83 f

ACRES
Fawoodsaea
b ack op oad Some
we d a ned
hes e
abe On y$5 000 00
c

and

3

come o you
beg n June 2 Ca
w te o
v s
o
nfo ma on
Ga po s Bus ness Co ege

DOWNTOWN bus ness space
for ease 2nd Ave
ac ass
f om C y Pa k Approx 2 800
Sq Ft ava able af e Ju y
31 Ca 446 8 9 o 446 26 or
see John Eck e
AROB C
3 f

BORROW by

GOOD NEWS
A NOT HER
TR ENDHO M E
56 30 c HAS US ARR VED YOURS
COULD BE THE NEX T ONE

NCOM E PROPERTY
k bu d ng w h

WAITRESSES
AND GRILL COOK

wI

RELIABLE

Pomeroy, Ohlo

POMEROY

24 f

c

110 Mechamc Street

CLELAND
08
REALTY
E MAIN.__ __ .

446

- -- - - -

Teaford, Sr
Broker

Gold a and Henry we e the
most fa thfu membe s of
the r church and only m ssed
when II and when she took
care of her aged mother and
her brother ll za whom she
tender y ca r ed fo n the r las
I ness
They also attended other
churches n the a ea
he
yea y and qua 1e ly con
ferences of the d str ct and
have many f ends n a w de
a ea of Southeastern Oh o
P eced ng her n dea th
were her parents
four
b othe s Ira lza E za and
Bed Scott one s s fer M s
Vesta Sw nehart
Gold a as she was af
feet onate y ca l ed by her
re lat ves and f ends was of a
qu et d spas ton but had a
deep nterest n he com

- - ----

Doze s a ge
and sma
Ba khoes and
I NTER OR and ex e o ca
oa de s on
ack and
es
pen e wo k Phone 446 34 9
2966
Dump
u k
L o boy
122 2
6
15
c
se
ce Sep
anks n
s a ed Geo ge B I Pu ns
J&amp;WMOUNT
BODY wo k
pa n obs done
phone 992 24 8 o 992 402
CLEA
NING SERVICE
easonab
e
F
o
me
s
29 c
Ga age 992 7597
second GE NERA L hou se clean ng We
supp ly a
he c ea n ng su p
HAR R SO N S TV se
ce and hovse on Bu de e Rd Lau el
pes
388
8875a
e 6p m al
jf
se ce a s Phone 992 2522
388
8865
Week
l
y
o man h y
5
27
6
c
29 I c
c ean ng by appo n men t

Vzrgzl B

member of the Old Kyge
Free Will Bapf st Church

30 8

A UTOMOB t LE nsu a nee been
can ce ed
Los
you
ope a o s cense Ca 992

u
O~
A~I~
Rc~
on~d=o~n~n
g Se
basemen
at ached 2 ca Au·=T~
ga age k che n has bu
n
ce and epa Ca 992 3802
oven and
ange
o s of
5 24 30 p
Sc he
k b onze G ow b ch
ca b ne s
bed ooms w h
wa k n c ose s ceda I ned
f ee ga s p en y of wa l e
s oc k ed pond 8 m
N of
Pome oy Ca l 992 384 o
e ec
appo n men o see
o a
6050
633c

LAND

s

24 a mcchan wo k
n
d ng a oma
ans
n ss ons
Monday
h u
Sauday830am o5pm
Ph one 992 7 2 o 992 5682
s 3 30

S R

God a took Chr st as he

Sav or May 7 1905 was
bapt zed and became a

GALLIPOLIS 446 3343

lN

For Rent or lease

NOW OPEN
l.C;! age nea

ncome o

ee

mechan cs
nfant y a mo
or a
ey
Lm led tme
on y
Call
you
A my
recuea

PHONE 992 2550

DOZER and back hoe wo k
ponds and sep c anks d cl:1
ng se v ce op so
d
mes one B&amp;K Excava
Phone 992 536 o 992 386
9 I c

78 years 10 months and 23
davs
She was united n marr age
to Henry Scott on October 14
1914 and they have been
devoted companions fo S9
years

COLLECT $2 500 cash bonus
Tra n n e ec on cs m ss es

SURANCE
One
sop
p o ec on o Au o Home
Bu s ness and L te Ray Hawk
Ag en 446 2300 541 4 h Ave

Sate No

Townsh p and derarted this

I fe May 25 1973 a the age of

30 tf

24 2
MUTUAL

Scoff July 2 1894 n Chesh re

--:-:
H ::
IG:-:H-:-S
~C::H::O:-:O::L-G
~R
::-A
:-,0
::-:S

OIJT OF SCHOOL
ob Go o G B C

Roof ng
Root Pa nt ng
Spou t ng
Plumb ng
Re made ng
Comple1e
Bu d ng V nyl &amp; Alum num
S d ng

c

------,-~

of you own m nd Exp o e he
my ste ous wo d w lh n you
The f ee book The M ys e y
L fe
ex pi a ns how
0
h ough fasc na ng s udy
you
can
mas e
you
p ob ems and f nd happ ness
Add ess
Sc r be
I I
Ros cruc an 0 de AMORC
San Jose Ca l f 95 4
6 3 lp

June

LET US HELP YOU

ans e mus se
home
3 bed oom
o a
e ec c
a ge o FHA
app o ed Sy acuse Phond

emendous poss b t es

The Annua I Mee1 ng of the
Su t on Cheste
Fa mer s
Mutua F e Insurance Co
w I be he d at the Forest
Run
Un ted
M eth od sf
Chu ch
Monday June 4
9A M

AREA DEALER

s

001

DUE o ob

55
Townsh p $300 p e ac e
Phone New Haven 882 2984
6 6 p

- - - - -- - -F UR Y I 66 P ymouth 383 cu

NOTICE'

you

A gnmen1

Phone 992 3764

e

Choose you own hom e from

smg pr ces As an AVON
representat ve you ca n ea n
the ext a cas h you need fo
1ha1 new d shwa sher
tho se
new c lothes colo TV 11 san
easy way to make money n
you spare 1 me Just call
He l en Yeage
Box
72
Jackson Oh o 286 41128

MOTORIST

Un verse
pres i des
Our
Heaven y Father has c a med
Gold a ScoH who was born to
El sha V and Rena Jacobs

PARTTIME de very
et red
rna e or m dd e aged woman
needed fo
ght de ve y
Approx mately 3 or 4 hours
da y Apply n pe son a
Dud ey s F o s
46 Cour

24 2

T

Real Estate For Sale

966 FORD Coun y Squ e
S at onwagon good cond on

u n

Qual fy Today Call

FARM

BELPRE 0

6 36

For Your Mobile HomeLand- No Oown Payment

304-485-3809

Pome oy

Oh o 286 4028

MASSIE

Doug Wetherholt

DEATH s a messenger sen1
by the Great Masfer to ead us
to that all pe feet glo ous
and Ce est a Home where
the Supreme Arch teet of the

sma ch d en and new home
on R 588 Must be ma ure
e qb e and ave ch d en
T anspo a on a mus Send
esume and refe ences o Box
27 c o Da y T bune

Sale

Real Estate For

C52 Second Ave
Oscor 8a rd

t leaves a

As fovelt as can be

HOUSEKEEPER o ca e fo 2

AVON TO THE RESCUE Save
your budget from the p nch of

BANK FINANCING
12 Y ears 10 75 A P R
for Your

--~--~

MU ST se
Cheap
Pa ul P ce

-~---~~

WE W SH to hank al of of ou

PAIR of Lady s glasses ost at
Rae ne A umnl May 27
f
faun ca I 949 3.47
6 6 c

Ph 992 2 74

Auto Sales

GARAGE SAL E

Lost

Monday fh u Saturday

CASH pad o al makes and
mode s of mob e homes
Ph o e r~ ea ode 6 4 423 953
4 3I c

5 27 6 c

Ma son W Va

n

Ensh ined

an
ndependen
AVON
ep esen a ve and ea 11
money n you spa e
me
nea
home
Ca
He en
Yeage
Box 72 Jackson

&amp; ZUSPAN

773 SSS4

5 ROOM house ba h ba emen
gashca 2 o s S D Busk k
34
Page S
M dd epa
Phone 992 548

120 Wa sh ngton 8 vd

Va

Be

MATERIALS CO

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

606 E Ma n Pomeroy 0

5 25

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

WE- W SH o exp ess ou s n
h u June 6 h 504 E Ma nS
cere thanks o au ne ghbo s
Pone oy nea Sm th Ne son
f ends and re at l(es fo he
Mo o s Typew er b ke
k ndness and
sympa t hy
d o h ng
ewe y fu n u e
shown us at he t me o t he
d shes amps awn mowe s
death of ou be oved husband
mas y o pa s
o d bo
and fa her M V rg I A k ns
es
a s
Avons
kn ck
Spec a
hanks t o those
knacks
oys We w
have
send ng owe s f ood ca ds
some h ng o eve yone n
and dona ons o the hear
c ud ng many
o ec o s
fund n V rg s m emo y
ems Come see
A so a
who he ped
n
any way You k ndness w I
neve be fo go ten M s V g I
RUMMAGE SALE F day and
Atk ns and fam ly
Sa u day om 9 o 5 p m
6 31p
Hughes Bu d ng ac ass f om
-----~
he M dd epa t L b a y

63 tc

F om he araes T ck o
Bu dozer Rad a o
to the
:&gt;ma es Hea e Lo e
Nathan 8 gg s
Rad a tor Spec al s1

992 836

se

AVON WANTS YOU

VETERANS

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8T 15

A r Cond11Joner s
Awnongs
Underponmng

o ma on

many f ends and ne ghbo s
for th e
l ove y ca ds
beaut fu
f owe s
and
p esents on the occas on o
our
50th
wedd ng
an
n versary You
k ndness
sha neve be forg o en M
and Mrs
Eve ett
Peg

c

3

Bu ttto Your Specs

o Roue

It&gt; pages tel

For us o keep n our hearts

------.-:----

Del vered to JobS te
HOGG

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1 splay

- GUARANTEEDPhon e 992 2094

SPACE HUNGRY&gt; VEMCO
ADD A ROOMS
ARE
EAS L Y IN STALLED TO
ANY MOBILE HOME
N
LESS THAN 6 HRS 6 STD
PLANS
BDRM S DENS
FAM LY RMS
OFFICES
SEE THEM ALL AT Youngs

GUN SHOOT Fac o y choked
and hand cho ke d guns
Fo ked Run Spar sman Cub
Sun day June 3 2 noon
53 3 c

W

FURNITURE

EXPERT
Wheel A11gnment
•5.55

2

AKC Toy Pood e pupp es S75
and $8S A so S amese k ens
$ 0 Phone 2S6 6247 Kenne s
o Ca houn

6

Ma son

and

On Most Arn e can Ca s

WE WISH o hank eve yone fo
the
k ndness ~hown o us
du ng ou be eavement o
Gene Yost P es
au Daddy and Pappy S
Ca H
Spec a thank s o
Rev
Sh ve ey
Denn a SHOOT NG MATCH
Co n
Manue Ma y Lou se Shu e
Hoi ow Gun Club u n f sf
Pau Beeg e Ernes Shv e
ght af e M es Ceme e y
Jack Ables 0 den Thax on
Ru and
Fac o y choked
V g 1 Roush and Bob Ash ey
guns
on
y
Sunday
June 3 p
and to he ones that b ough
m
food to he Commun y Hal
53 3 c
and served h e de c ous
d nner also hanks o those
CHE SH RE Ca fe e a Open
who sen f owe s o
had
Monday h ough F day 5 30
shown the r lov e and
end
am o8JOp m Cased
sh p n any way May God
Sa u day Open Sunday 0 a
bess each of you Don Lo s
m o 7 p m
and Lo na Dawn Be

Daley

POODLES AKC Pupp es sma
m n a u e b ack o wh e
wo med
pe manen
sho s
s 5 Phone Coo v e 667 62 4

... ~ ..

Oh

Bob s C t zen Band Rad o
Equ p Geo ges C eek Rd
Ga po s Oho44645 7
2 2

Ea1hcouh 9chh1

For Sale

OHIROeaRityiVER

of Lies bock are

~:'.!'~atapfer

LPN o el red RN,..
TWO WAY Rados Sales &amp; .fJEED~
wo k n nv s ng home
an
Se v ce New and \Jsed CBs
1
ve n Wr le BoxJ 3 ron on
pol ce man o s antennas

ec

Real Estate

One
loved so well
But k ndly ta es of years well

~-

WOOD TRUSSES

OFFICE SUPPLIES

John Tucker Rl 4
Pom eroy 0
Ph 992 395q

c

M H S s R 7 and 35 be ow
S ve r M emo a
8 dge
Ga I po s

Card of Thanks
I WANT to han k

eve yon e
connected n any way ha
helped dur ng my stay n he
hasp tal Those who p ayed
and sen ca ds The Docto s
Nurses and staff a Ho ze
Med ca Cen er A spec a
thank you fa
he many
prayers hat wen up to me
Nelle Eb n

y

S20l0c

H s hands a e sea ed f om he
wo k he ha s done
He oak up h s c ass and wen
s ent y o meet H m
he EX P LO R E
you
Secuenh s a h o
D sea e
you
nne
Maste s We Done
esou ces and o e co me
63 P
--:--=-------~
pe sana
m at ons Lea n

In MemO"'

Show qua

Phone 992 5443

1973
He was un ted n marr age
w th Pa u ne Hal day on June
3 934 t o th s un on was born
one da ugh e Sharon A k ns
Jewe
He accep ed Ch s as h s
Savor and un ed w th he
Ha sonv e
Presbyte an
Chu ch Easte Sunday 924
and ha s kep ha a th and
has exp essed o h s am ly
and fr ends hat he was ready
o meet h s Sav o when h s
days we e fu f ed
He se ved he Chu ch o 5
yea s as Sunday Schoo
Supe ntendent and as an
o da ned E de l or 39 yea s
and C e k of he Sess on to 25
yea s
He spent h s
e I ng the
so he loved and was ac ve n
a phases of ag bus ness
V rg
I k ed peop e and
en oyed wo k ng w th them
He served h s commun y and
County n many ways h ough
hrough
the
ar ovs
agr cu u a and soc a and
fraterna o gan za ons
Hop ng to make h s Coun y a
better place n wh ch o ve
Th ougtiov h s I ness he
bo e h s c oss un comp a n ng
w th pat ence and o tude
He wa s c eceded n death
by h s father and mo her
Ear and A ma
w n A k ns
and h s only b o he Eugene
Atk ns He s su v ved by h s
w fe Pau ne Ha day Atk ns
a daugh e
Sha on Atk ns
Jewell a son n aw Robe
L Jewell h s mother n aw
M s Frank Hal day ass e
n aw Ste lla Atk n s a n ece
M s Dav d R gg s a nephew
Gordon Atk ns of Che sea
M ch gan 2g ea n eces and 6
grea nephews a so a has of
f · ends
Now h s I e o abo s ended
And he rewa d of he ace he
has un
Is he swee es ha awa s he

~

Thc~.,;,:'ders
For
we

- -----

PRE FABRICATED

992 2094
606 E Main Pomeroy

MODERN
SANITATION

AK c
5 23

Obituary
VIRG l I w n A k ns son o he
ate Ea
and A ma
wn
Atk ns was bo n Septembe
sonv le and
fe May 20

(hoc a a e

EVERYONE WELCOME'

Obituary

446 2823

130 6

ASK US ABOUT

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

2q Hour
Dally Serv ce

Rutland Gun Club

2
ens pe
wod
hee
consecu ve n se ons
8 en s per wo d s M: con

BL NO ADS
Add ona
2Sc Cha ge
Adve semen

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

s 27 5 p

Pets For Sale
PQQO!.E pupp es Toy

Ca

Help Wanted

YARD SALE a
S mons
es dence 443 S 6 h M d
d epa on Sa u day June 2
f om 8 to 8

on

WANTED tog ve aw&lt;~Jy k ten!.

Business Services

DRESSMAK NG a so croche
and kn
ng Ass s ance or
nst uc
ons
fast
easonable Phone 773 SAlT
5 JO 3 c

H1gh Powered R1He

RATES

Fo W,an1 Ad Se v ce
5 cen s pe Wo d one nse
M n mum Cha ge 5

22 9 2 a Ha
departed th s

Not1ce

Notice

For Fast Results Use TIJ.e Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

NotiCe

P MART N &amp; Son Wa e
De
e y
Se v cc
You
pa r onage w
be
ap
p ec a ed Ph 446 0463
2

PUBLIC
NOTICE

AUCTION
3ERVICE

anyth ng tor
Br ng your
tems to Knotts Com
mun ty Aud on Barn
Corne Th d &amp; 01 ve
For appo ntment calt
446 29 7 Sale every
Saturday even ng at 7

SELl THE AUCTION
WAY

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE
Buldng
Ste s
Ava lable K ngsberry
Hom es bu It to f I any
spec1f cat ons
All
Underground Ut I t es
Prov (led

1~·----------For lnformat1on
Or Appomtment

IIMME SAYRE

PHONE

AUCTIONEER

367-7250

PH. 446-3444

Add1son 0

�The Sunda) Tm es $-nt nel Sw ~,) June 3 1973

20

U- The Sunday Times Sentinel Sunday June 3 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Notice

WANT ADS
NFORMAT ON

OEADLlNES
5 P M Dav Before- Pub ca on
Monday Dead ne 9 a m
Cance a on
Co ec o s
W beaccep ed un
9a m o
OO;y o Pub ca on
REGULAT ONS
The Pub she
ese ves he
gh o ed o
e ec any ads
deemed
ob ec ona
The
pub she w no be espons be

fo

nse

mo e

on

han one

nco

e

GUN SHOOT
Sunday, June 3
100 PM

secu ve nse ons
25 Pe Cen 0 scoun on pa d
ads and ads pa d w h n 0 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; 08 TUARY
1 so o so wo d m n mum
E a h add on a wo d 2

pe

OFF CE HOURS

B JO a m o 5 00 p m Da v
8 30 a
m
o
2 00 Noon
Sa u day

On New lima Road

fa thful
When he Maste says
We i
done
Yes - he tr ed and he abo ed

NOTICE
Ou~

lo
c cums1ances
beyond ou conr ol h e e w
be no fu the c ed 1 ss ued to
anyone at Kapp!e s Pennzo
A outsland ng b Is MUST
be pad by JUNE s

•'
IN LOV NG memo y of Con n e
Ph ps One yea ha s passed
and gone s nee you ef us
Days of sadness s I a e w h
us Tea s of s lence o en f ow
But you memo y keeps you
nea
us Sad y m ssed by
grandma he and mo her da
K ng and My ti e Rob nson

63

p

~~---~

KAPPLE'S
PENNZOIL
EManS

s 20

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Pom e oy 0

e c mob e home
e
p us g gan c
d spay o mob e home s
a ways a a abe a
Camp

P ANO TUN NG

423 52

5535

REDUCE excess fuds w th
F u dex
Lose we ght w th
Dex A 0 e
capsu es
at
Ne son Drugs

KITTEN S o g ve away
992 524

Ca
636

c

KOSCOT SPEC ALS o June
nc ude Fam y Sun tan 0
Sp ay and
Fac a l Mask
A so w h a pu chase of e he
A e Shave o E ec c P e
Sha e by Kosco you ece e a
K eans ng K earn ee Phone
He e n Jan e B ow n 992 51 3
6
lc

he

---,--,--~~-

c

5 20 2 p

NEW 3 bed oom
Mason b ck on
00

n automa c N o ust $500
John l h e R
Rae ne Oh o
Phone 949 2632

s gas hea

Phone

3 5554

home n
ha dwood
a ge o

5 22 6 c
3 BEDROOM mob e home 2 x
60 a pe d n ng a ea c ean
S4 000 Ca
Mason 773 5580
636p

- -- - JSA 4bedoombck

Rea l Estate For Sale

6 ROOM house w h
fnq

ROOM house w h ba t h n
Rut and a
cond on ed
ca pe ed gas f u na e d sh
washe daub e oven
ange
daub e ga age a ge ca po t
4 ac es clea ed and fenced
sma
ba n
and
o he
bu ld ngs Ph one 6 4 74.2 6834
5 30

s 31 2tc

n e

ng
3764
DON T
o
emove
A fpa pe
can do h s ob
as fe han mos Ca I 992 7405
5 fo8p mony

6 6c

-----K TTENS lo g ve away
992 5247

Ca

52 6 c

Co ne of La ge home ha s
be d ooms
baths o e y
k chen
ot s o ca pe ng
g assed un po h A o on
he g o nd sa Ox 0 bu d ng
n ex e fen
and t on ALL

OF TH S FOR JUST $2 SOO
BUS NESS OPPORTUNITY
Es ab shed 5 yea s dong
an
exce en
bus ne ss
pay ng a n e p o
No
phone ca s p ease Come to
he o
e

RACINE
85 ac eo n ce ay ng and 2
s o y ame Wonde f u new
k hen Range o en d sh
washe
d sposa
Loads o
cab ne s
ba h 2 a ge
ng cams 5 bed ooms
ga age and o he bu d ngs
s 000 00

RUTLAND

5 a e o g ound N ce fl ame
as 3 bed ooms ba h k t
h en w h re
and ange
ha dwood
oo s
Basemen '1 wate sys ems
and ap pa d o new wa l e
sys em S18500

REAL
ESTATE
S A
BUS NESS W TH US NOT
A S DE N E L ST NOW
FOR QU CK SALE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROK ER

24 2

DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
Be In Bustness
For Yourself
Full or Part T me

Sou hea ster n Oh o s fastest
g ow ng compan es w th 8
estab shed branches s now
a cce p ng app ca ens for
oca offi ce Th s career
po s on n o ur Ga I po s
off ce w I p oduce an ncome
o exceed $12 000 the f sf 2
man h s a so w th f nge
benef s The man we se lect
fo
h s past on mus be
amb t ous w th a goa n I fe
also gene a sa les ex per ence
bu t no
w I be tretpful
necessa y
Conf dent a
n
e v ew w I be he d Tues
June 5 by appo ntment onl y
Oh ly hose n erested n a
bet e way of 1 fe fa
her
fam es ca a ea code 6 4
446 0090 fo M
Love
3

9 I
=-~~----

1UOL
sha pen ng
saws
s sso s shea s home and
garde:n oo s Sha p Shop
A ley rea
47 Second
2 6 f
__:_

Nolice

_____

Lane Dan e s
M dd epa
992 2082
12S 2 REMODELING bu d ng new
ooms
ce men
oof ng
LAMBERT S la wn mowe
s d nq
u nace ns J H
Coiueen &amp; Son 446 9271
epa
2.56 6349

P ANO un ng

259 Broadway
Refe ence G S

-.,----------

EXCAVAT NG

ACRE
3 LARGE BEDROOMS
N e
ba h
y oom s de po ch
daub

soo 00

e

ga age

Jus

oade

and backhoe wo k
se pt
tanks ns a ed dump ucks
and o boys o h e w hau
dr
op so
mes one
and g a e Ca Bob o Roge
e e s day phone 992 089
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
5231

NV ESTME NT
LARG o
APARTME N T
HOUSE
Has 3 apa m en
a
en ed One u n shed
As k ng On y s 0 000 00 o a
q ck sa e

LARGE HOME
COR N ER LOT - 4bed ooms 2
ba hs gas u na e basemen
and
a ge
on
po h

900 00
REST AU RANT
And
EQ U PMEN T

SEE US FOR Awn nqs sto m
doc s and w ndows a po s
ma q uees a um num s d ng
and a ng A Ja ob sa es
ep ese n a
e
Fo
ee
es n a es phone Cha l es
L se
Sy acuse
V
V
ohn son and Son Inc

READY M X

c

you
F ee
3284
Co

6 30

4782 Ga po s John Russe
Ovme and Ope a o
5 2 c

See us o h s buy o he yea
Lo e y k chens bea
u
bC'I hs Th s house we ghs o e
6 on s Com e see o ca
po n men I

Pa I s

3 3

-----

Supp es Phon e 36
36
Da s Va uum C eane So e
0 a m 5 p m Add son Oh o

DR VER needed for
ac o
a e
pa d by percen tage

So on th s her b hd ay
Fo g ve us Lord we pray

Ca I 446 2420 o 446 OSS8 af e 6

--------------- 4

P m

29

31 t

4 FAM LV Ga age and Ya d
Sa e
Jvgs
ots of good
c o h ng so me Avon bo es
odds and ends ve~y good sa le
Sa urdy June 2 Monday and
Tuesday June 4 and 5 f om
hou s 0 o 3 44 0 ve s eet

----

She was so p ec ous
Why cou dn t she have stayed?

s

Sad y m ssed by

Card of Thanks

C

THE FAMIL Y of God a Scot!

W1th a Phenomenal Tax Sheltered Income
To Qual fled People

GARAGE SALE

Call or Writi

A
7 3 Jack son
Street
V n on Oh o June 5 &amp; 6 Gas
stov e so me modern fu
n tu e
an d
ant qu es
m see aneous terns

,.$'pirit or l61nn-.tnr.

;:.____ _ __

125 N Co umbus St
Gal on Oh o 44833 (4 19)468 2400

N COURT

ATHENS

Boots

WE HAVE a camp e e I ne o
w a ches and
d amends
Campa e
ou
p
es
anywhe e Ta wne y s Jewe y
i

PROFESS IONAL REAL
ESTATE APPRAISER

CAMPING
gal

Coleman Stove $12
}9 95 up
HARDWARE

~LOTHING

Lantern

88 -

HOUSE

H GH o ume se ce sta on
pa d
t a n ng
exce l en
oca on Ca 992 522 8 a m
oSpm
5 25 6 c

973 campe s s eep&amp;- 6 o
10 and 12 vo
3 bu ne
s ove 2wa e sys ems a sed
k tchen Schoo ou spec a
s 325 same ow p c ng on
trave
a e s One used

a

Largest
ARTHUR

A. NIBERT
ASA.

80

Lrncoln Welders $92

-

SO

Slacks

Latest Releases

8 Track

95

frrst
pr

all krnds $1 98 each

OPEN9 005 300AILY
EXCEPT MONDAY&amp; FRIDAY TIL9

OPEN SUNDAY 12 'TIL 5:30

67S 5384

1 ~---~--=-~30
1.

18

MOBILE HOME

N ce

wo bedroom count y home
w th 13 5 acres o c ea red and
w th Ia m pond two ba ns
p ent y of water full ba h on y
20 m nu es out f om town

LOVELY

BAR GA IN

Th s

frame an ch s toea ed on 77
ac e of n ce ay ng g ound
forced a r fu nace
ange
oven waf to wa l carpe ng
hardwood
floo s
f hree
bed ooms s orm w ndows
and doo s ca port w ndow
20 m nutes
a r cond one
from town

LOTS OF HOUSE - 11 you have
a good s ze fam y h s s he
house
for
you
Fou
bed ooms ful ba h two ca
carpor t loca ed n V nton
on y 0 m nufes f om Me gs
M ne a stea l fa ess han
$ 3 000

TOP DA RY FARM

Owne

must se ll due o hea fh Farm
of 222 ac es Ia ge ba n S29
on s Ia new G ade Am l k ng
parlor he d can be pu cha sed
w h the farm f des ed
Home s ve ·y vable w h ots
of room Plenty of wate
pasture crop and

ELECTR C

ALL

DOWN

RIVER
N ce new home
nea C ay School fu y ca
pete~
bu t n cab ne s n
k chen ceram c bath ofs of
c osets f n shed ga age and
storage oom n ce evel o

NElGHBORHQQD

ROAD

Fou yea old home on h d
of an acre w th c y water
c ty sc hool s fo ced a
fur
nace ca peted v ng oom
dovb le van ty n bath owne
w I se fu ly furn shed
you
want ns tant hous ng

ADELAIDE DRIVE BEAUTY
N ce ran c h home w th a
hardwood f oo s ca · pe ng
a I app ances nc uding a
washe and d yer d apes
on y f ve m nutes from the

C y Pa k

Evemngs Call446 4244
Steven Betz 446 9583
John Fufler 446 4327

REALTORS

woods

Add son

n

soo

August compete pr ma y
nsurance prov ded Rates as
ow as $2 50 pe day on
week y bass 140 Easte n
Ave Ph 446 142S
128 tf

f_________
•
Pets For

FOUR bed r oom home new
k tchen ca pe J ca ga age
and6ac esnex ttoC y m s
Buy fo ess hen new home
and of
4 ACRES vacan
an d 2
m esf om Baden Oh o Twp
Lo1s of ees dea
e ea

wooded

and

n

Mogan Twp
3 ACRE S vacan and n Pe y
Twp
no
fa
r om R o
G ande
acan t and n Ad
d so n Twp Some ences
Wa e ee pad

J ACRES

Th

ee

apa

ment s

don I want see Seve Roa ch
at Rancho the f end y ea
estate peop e

~~6-0001
Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Denver K H gley 446 0002

IN CITY 3

Nel Ave

Jus

com p e ed new 3 bed oom
home a e ec c w lh wa l o
wa
ca pet
he mo pane
w ndows p enty of cab ne s
e eel c ange d sposa
2
ba hs al ce am c
e n
ba hroom s o age oom n
ba ck n ce cone ete dr veway
eady o move nto ca n
f nan ce lnqu e a Corb n &amp;
Snyde
F u n lure Co 446

126

ou 5
qua
Adm
on y
w h
P og ams

w h ots

0

AGENCY

~------~--~05

$ 6 900

N ~W

ST RT 775
ba h 254 sq

YEAR OLD

0

c

y

e C'
c home ose a new
hosp at of e s 3 BR ba h
WW a pe ga age b ck
on and 00 I
on age

d

Ca

OPEN HOUSE
SU NDA Y
UNE 3
2new alae eel c
homes n a new subd s on
m e wcs o s a e out e 60 on
s a e ou e 554 nex to g ade
s hoo Ope o 11 p m to t1
p rn The p ce and qua y of
ese ames can ompa e
w h o bea ;:Jny h ng on he
11
ke oda y P ces s a a
s 9 500 E xc en f nanc ng o
o e who qua y

v a ea p us
ca po t F ee wa e and
loca ted on I
A lo $2 000
ST RT 3S
A B ck 5 ms
and ba h a ached garage
fu and d y base Lo app ox
00 x 0 Th s s an ex ef en
buy
or ask ng p
e of

CLOSE NORTH GA LL A H GH
SCHOOL
N ce y emode ed
ca pe c d

m home on
a ge
Owne anx ous o se

PR CE REDUCED TO$ 7 SOO
Owne s anx ous o se
hs7
m a
e ec c home w h
basenien Jnd 2 ba hs o a ed
4

BEAUT FUL
CO O N AL
P US ACREAGE You may
b y h s o c y
BR home

RUSSELL

w h
ac e o 67 Th s a
e ec
beau yo c s 2 ba hs
a ge am y m d n n9 m

WOOD
REALTOR

4461066

ST RT
5
BOA 10m
om
own Good 8 m house Ba n
36 x 60 w h on e c
and
sheds added Con e e S o 6
F YOU h nk peep c don
sen
D X 50 H T N ea
new
o wha yeu s:ty
s
Badge Loade Mos o 80 A
epea ng a okc you od
s T ac o and 2 A bo om
hem a man h ogo
25 A
a and 20 A s gen e
ope ASC ~PP o ed Pond OF COURSE a mode n hu sband
and W a e
ough Th s a m
e:o; pec s h s w e o ump when
zed and
has been med e
he ho e s
g.h down h
s n a h gh p oduc e sage
h oa
p cc $43 000
MARY
sad he
mo he
VACANT LAND
e e y me you a e naugh y
63 A Wa d Rd F nanc ng
ge a g ay ha
Gee
a a abe $ 8 000
Mom you mus ha e been
e o when you we e a
e
5 A nea R a G ande $.5 500
~
us oak a G andma

u a

om Sh ne
wa e
ne

cp aces a ac o y k chen
.;~ a
women d eam o and
pa o f you shou d dec de o
buy
a you wou d a so ge
bou am co cad r on age
ew pond
ob base cor n
base
ba n and abou
75
ab e ac es Buy now and
hoose
he
o o o you

a pe

6

BEDROOM house k hen
ba h and n ce on po h
Chesh e Oh o p ce educed

OS2SOO

MODER N
oo pan on Ad
d son Bu a
e Rd 6 com::.
ha d wood
oo s mode n
LOOK La s Lo s Lo s oc a ed
k hen u a wa e s ua ed
on Raccoon Road
m Sou h
ce $2 000
of Sla e R No 2 8 Roads
$200 pe
wa e
e ec
c ty
and
Ga l po s 446 Be
e ephone
Ready f o new homes mob e
ARGE ode home has been
homes o camp s es boa
emode ed mode n k hen
amp and pa k ng o
We
new a pet ng
wo pa os
have good New Moon 0 x 55
p u e a a e pad on o
2 BR mob e home o sa e
p e59500
ocated a 44 Rea 2nd Ave

K k
Rae
h o
on &amp;
446

0 a m lo 8 p m
30 I

LOCA ED A(R05
STREE
TRA CE

NEW L ST NG

Th s n e 7
m hom e s abou 2 y s a d
and cealed n a qu e sub
d s on on US 35 HW 00 s 3
BRs a ge d n ng m u
y
m and a po t a e on y a
ew o t he spec a fea u es

mooo

WE HAVE LOTS &amp; VACANT
N
ALL
WOODLAND
D RECT ONS
F NAN
C NG AVA LABLE
ON
MOST PAR CEL S
L ST NGS
NEEDED
ESP E C ALLY FAR M S
NAT ONW DE
AD
VERTS NG PAY S
Ranny B ackburn
S anch Manag er

J BEDROOM

a

ba hs
y wa e
S250 pe mo

e

.....----- - - - ;

Call Collect
Tom Staley
Farm Spec1al st

w h

en s o

OFF CE446 066
Even ngs
Russe 0 Wood A46 46 8
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John I R chards 446 0280

MARK IV REAlTY CO
Dayton Oh o
513 298 0161 513 433
4176

278
BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE es m a es
ab l y n
su ance P un ng t mm ng
and cav y work
ee a d
s ump emo a Ph 446 495J
3

Y CARPETED

UDES

OME
A

ERSEY
HURRY

K TC HEN

N

Hot Shot Spray Wash
CALL us o w.;~sh wax and
deg eas ng o you
u ks
mob l e homes a urr n um
s d ng o rmy h ng washab e
446 444
19

VERY

BE T

-~~~~~

ER

McGRAW COMPA NY
BULLDOZER back oc a
and c cu ng and de c op
nen 4116 02 388 8230

V er y Allraclov e
4 Bedroom Hom e

VERY N CE L OCA
ON
ON J
0 S
O N E HA S
PAD FOR MOB
E H OME
RE N A
PURPO SES
YOU
LOVE
T E
BA H
OW NER
W
HE P F N A N CE

AS

PRETTY

MODERN

A

00

A NI;J

2

S TORY

COLO N ALAS H ERE S
HE M ARKET A l
ON
HAROWOOQ F OOR S 1
REP ACE S
2

F ULL

BASEME NT
ATTRACT VE

Perfect for Your
Fam1ly

AL

ARGE
K T(HEN
HE
AP

A NCES

OR MAL

D N NC
AND
ANOSCAPED
CAR
A

ACRE
O T PLU S
AC H ED

W

H

P
N EAR
NEW FU
CARPE ED
BE D DOM
HOME W
H
OVE Y
K
CHE N A N D 0 N NG

SEPT IC TANKS
C eancd an d sa ed

GA~AGE

LA

GILLE NWAT ER S sept

dpa
a so
house w eck ng Ph 446 9499
Es ab shed n 940

69

N

Centra I A r Cond I on ng
&amp; Hea t ng
Free Est mates
Stewarts Hardware
V nton Oh o

H S ONE

We Need L1slmq
We 5e ll More Properly than Anyone Else m
So utheas t ern Oh o

CA

LOOK
AT IT
THIS WAY
EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND
PEST CONTROL SERVICE

SO D

U

Galha Co s Largest
Real Estate Sales Ag e ncy
Offoce 446 3643
Evenmgs Call
Ike
W1seman 446 379/J
M
E N W1seman 446 4500

FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Pract catty new7 room brick
ranch s1y e home totAl
elec1r c &amp; • r cond tlonlng
1 2 t e ba1h &amp; shawer 6
roomy c osets plus w•lt. n
cedu closet Will to wAif
carpet 1he \rery bt&gt;st in
panel ng a dre•m kitchen
w th 30 ft of be1vt fut
cab nets
111rge
stone
f replace n I v ng room
bu It n vacuum system 2
car garage plus many ex1ra
featu M. 0 tside cookout &amp;
par o One 2 bedroom fur
n shed apt and new trai .. r
Bofh rented Two large
~rns large pond 30 acrts In
a 11 w th new fences OM
large c stern and rural
water Wtll accept small
place on trade n gr nNr
Gall pal s Located on St Rt
60 f ve mtles from new
hosPttal One of the bttter
bu It homes in the county
Reason for sell ng II hNtth
Phone a~6 4170

BR CK Hou se Feu ooms and
ba h Ga age Ut y oom
6 3 F f h Avenue 446 826

13 2
N EW BR CK home fUS com
p e ed 3 BR
baths u
ciJ pet 2 ca r ga age w t h
e cc c doo opener cen a
a cond oned natura ga s
hea p enry of ca b nets di sh
was her di sposa f Tappan
se f c ean ng range N ce
a ge of ocated n Coun ry
Are E states 5 m es up Rt 7
nqu re at Corb n and Snyder
Fu n ure Co 446 7 afte

spm

446 2573

78 ACRE fa m

30 botom

6

oo m h ouse and bath good
au bu ld ng obacco base 4
m es f om Wa e oo 643

2S35

w
CALL TOOAV FOR AFREE ESTIMATE

0 Dell

Termite Serv1ce

b1
1 o••••••••••...

TARA
DEVELOPMENT
CORP

Serv1ces Offered
IN STAL L NG
a um num
s d ng gu er s and down
spou s Fo f ee es ma ed
ca co lect 367 0 28

30 26
-~-~=----,--

0

ank

c ean ng and

ll.EDROOM
OWN
N CE
K T C H E N AND BATH
US
R G HT
FOR
AM
Y START NG OU
F H A M GH APPROVE

P YOU W A N T

4~2

297

H REE

OME

s P umb g 446

Russe

Pnce Red u ced
W as $15 900
Now $ 14 900

0
MAL S REAM
AND CAR GARAGE
S
A
YO R S
FOR
$ 8 900 00
A ND
M
BE
NG
A
YOU
WON
F NO O N E
0
COMPARE
AT
TH S
PR CE
$
00
DOWN
OUY S
T
P
YOU
QUA
Y

250 ACRES
Bas c da y o m
oba co base o e gh s no
g an ed
eab e bu d ngs

liE

F-RO M
A NN AN
G H SC 00

PRET Y
K
CHE N
N CE OATH A TACHED
GARAGE
ARGE r AT
ANDSCAPED 0
C Y
SC HOO S
WAT ER
&amp;
SE WER
OWNER
MOV N G
0
N EW

VERY A T RAC
VE 2
BEDROOM HOME W
PLU S H
CAR PE
NG

ARGE

BOB
LANE S
comp e e
Bookkeep ng and Tax Se
v ce 424
F au h A e
Kanauga Bus ness by ap
po n men t
Ph
446 049
Pease ca al e 6 p m

V ery N ce 3 Bedroom
Near ly N e w $19 500 00

THE

Exce llent Rural
Ne1ghborhood

ARE

24J

T ~A DANDY

C

BEAUT FUL

Ph 379 2 33

BARN S 2 CAR GARAGE
A ND
CARPOR

H S (U

E

29 3

2 xS5

W T

ALBERT E.ll1.1AN

Wa e De ve y Serv ce
Pa o S a R G!l I po s

BA SE MENT
ACRE
F AT
GROUND
2

3 BEDROOM

Tw p - abou 20 ac es
abe
w h he ba ance n woods

ADD SON TOWNS H P
LOTS - ASK NG $40 000

2 am y dwe ng aca ed a 63
Th rd Ave Ren both o
e n 4 GARF ELD A e
e y n e
one and en he o he
Bo h
home w h new ca pe and
.have new u naces Ha s 3
d apes cen a l a
on
oom apa m en and a 5 aom
d on ng
on oom 22 x
apa men t Ca
oday a an
w h wood b
ng
appo n men
mode n
k chen
u
basemen and nE;?w a po
Off ce Phon e 446 694
has \IC
ew p ~ $22 500
Even ngs
Cha es M Nea 446 1546
COTiAGE on E an s He gh 5
J M chae Nea 446 503
o 45 x 25 mode n k hen
he who e hou se
exce en
and on a so ga age p ce
5 5 000
TOTAL e ec
c 3 bed oom
home a
co nd on w w
ca pe
n
v ng oam and 7 ROOM b k home on Lowe
R e Road o e oak ng Oh o
mas e bed oom k tchen
R e
mode n
k chen
app an ces fu n shed ocated
a pe ed a
con d on ng
o n one h d ac e o on
u
basemen
wo ca
Fa f ed Cen ena y
Road
ga age has e en y been
owne
be ng
ansfe ed
ede o a ed
Pr ce S26 SOO 446 9380

967

N

HE P
N C NG

WE NEED AN OFF ER - 60
ac es a an an d n Add ~o n

ANY HR 446 998

Neal Realty

TH 55 BEDROOM HOME
W
PR VATE- MA STER
QUAR ERS
A
ARGE
FAM LV
ROOM
F
EP ACE
D N NG
ROOM
'2
BA H S
BASEME N
N EW
FUR N ACE CARPET NG
'2 CAR GARAGE
ARGE
OT W H C
Y WATER
AND
EWER
N R 0
GRA N DE OWNER VERY
A N X OUS TO SE LL A ND

BATHS

FARMS

Cub On
$ 000

E SURE AND SEE

o

y

Beau u
b ck and a me a I e ec and
a ca pe
ba hs and 2 a
ga age Loca cd on a f a o
00 x 25 P ce$2 000

Roto Rooter
SEWER and Dan Ceanng
Na ona
Se v ce
now
ava fable oca y Fo
an y
kndo soppedupd an ca
675 s 95 24 hou Se v

VERY N CE 3 BEDROOM
HOME
W TH
FULL
BASEMENT
ARGE
BEAUT FU L
K TCHEN
WOOD
BURN NG
F REP ACE
FULl

$22 500

HOMES
S b g ms

9 A ac ass hwy

F SO

W

5

267 I

Bea uloful Bnck
4 Acr es $3 0 000

Need Lot s
Of Room&gt;

h s ce 6 m
home w h a 2 x 20 lam y m
and mode
bu
n k chen

ERMITE PEST CONTROL

FREE nspect on Ca 446 3245
Me
0 De Ope ala by
Ex e m na Te m te Se v ce
0 Be man Dr

Th s abso u e y mus be one of he p e es t homes ns de
and ou n the a ea P ush ca pe ng h oughou beau u
k hen ab net s w h ang e and d shwashe 2 ba hs
o e y o rna d n ng oom arge am y and e
oom 2
ca ga age iln d Ccn a A
Ovvne mo ng o he w sc
wou d no pa t w h
s brand new and he on y one kc
w h a Sp ng Va ley Estates add ess

$ 6 900 buys

OVER AN ACRE o

I

e downs fa rs s ca pe ed
com v ng oom pa o
hs fu basement 5 ca
om poo and h gh schoo
a and cool you home a
000 00 Make us an o e

On e of the Areas N ce st New Homes

FHA WOULD PROBABLY
F NAN CE THIS ONE

$27 500

2730 Ca
da ly

f

bed ooms cou d be 5 ent
n udes a a ge o ma d n ng
o den n ce k chen 3 fu l ba
ga age and a m pond
m e
Low ax a ea Pu n gas cen a
absolu e y no cos P ce a $47
Fa

NEARLY

and p us a o e y 6 m
co n y ho e La s ol good
ng can be ad o on y

Spou ng

S5 00 Se v ce Cha ge
W I remove your dead
ho se and cows
Ca Jackson 286 453

Owner Transferred Must Sell Th1s
- Beauhfut Country Estate-

NEW
Res au an
a nd
a y ou ood ser v ce Rea
e a e and a equ pmen goes
vv h sa e Loca ed ea Gav n

ENO

and

DEAD STOCK

S.OL

ome pane ng and a pe rJQ
p s a um num s d ng s o m
w ndaws and a po

water

62

NEAR
" - 5 ACRES
Lo e
home has
e en yo
/) ed and s
e dy o move
S 0 500

Nea

nes etc

8 4

Pa

KANAUGA - 2 good hones
No
s .a 2 s o y 6 b g ms
ba h and s o age b dg No 2
sony Oyeaso d Jbdm
m k chen ba h and a
a ge s o age
oom
Bo h
houses a e n good epa
on
u a wa e
n gooa oca on
and wov d make someone a
good home o
n es men
P
e o No
s $ 2 900 and
No 2 s $ 4 900

ROOF NG

acres

EASTER N AVE $ 4 500 1DEAL FOR HOME OR B Z
N e 6 n home ea u es

A so a I

Sh ng es
and
Bu dup
+io oafs 'f ee Est ma e 26 y
exp.;:: ence Jam e~
Ma cum Vin on Oh o 388

hen fo ma d n ng m
ng m w h WB f epface
3 BR
u basemen
and
sh r~dy awn $ 5 900

new
ms
4 bd n
a
a pe
ba hs K chen has
pen y cab ne s d shwashe
d spo a s o e and o en Th s
house has a ge ooms mu h
s o ag spa e ce a a
pa o a d s o a ed on a a Qe
o and qu e s eel Ovme
anx ous o se l Pr ce reduced

A so good

n

I

k

garage p us
bldg 4 A o
ontage P ce
500 mmed ate

ec

ench ng

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

P nes Th 3 rm
5 5

NVESTMENT -

t

282

89 f

LOW DOWN PAYMENT Th s
e y emode ed 2 s o y
I one nc udes a new ac o y

L ke he
R ve ? 5 rm on ma n
A
ca pe
full 1 n shed base

0

ol

nes gas

GARF ELD AVE

P EASA NT VALLEY

foo e 5

ypes

oca ed n one of ou f ner
a eas and needs a new owne
you e look ng o fa s of
oom see h s one

soo

Large b ock
0 x 2 me a
I
w th r ve
educed o $7
Pass

anks

MAKE US AN OFFER - Th s
e eoan 2 s o v home s

COME

446

Jttckson 286 4S2.4
AI
types of backhoe ng set&gt;i c

and ba h home has a fu ll
basemen and s oca ed on th
Woods M I Rd
mmed a e
possess on S 4 700

ook ng fo
oca on qua ty
and p ce don pass h s one
by 6 ms bath aund y and
a ached ga age
P ce

wood M ob e Home r.
coon Val ey WI se ll w
w th ou o 0 e by 0
Ba ey owne s Phone

Ma e and Fema e S75 up Cal

31 3

Ph , 0008
44
NEW LIST NG ~

you a e

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

FOR real estate you want o

pupp es

446 0548

Eve 446 226o 44 6'267 4

con

BA~~~~~H~~ZER

CALL

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN

ca pet ave H W firs Cen
A r nsta led 2 y s ago a
!ached ga Owne ha s p ans
and hasp ced th s one to se ll
P ce of S2 000 In cudes he
d apes d shwashe and cook
stove

$23

WISEMAN

SERVING THE NATIONs
BUYERS&amp; SELLE RS

a ge v m and k chen new

CE NTE NARY

THE

Largest

:.

o~rv~~L~'!!~~ce by
4~~~~ w lad Bos•y

Sale

Real £state For

NCOME Pope y on Fou h

Sale

YORKSHlR E terre

4 bd ms

Twp

oneandl ve no her Buybo h
homes fa
ess money fhan
new home Bes buy be ween
town and he Med ca Cen e

World '-

C TY
82 Second Ave 6 b g
ms and ba h 2 sfo y arne
on a a ge c y ol 1 has a t e
bock garage and s orage
b dg Th s house s sound
S uc u a ly w h IUS I a I e
pa n wou d make some one a
n ce om to ab le home n a
good es den a a ea P ce
on y s20 000

HANER SV IL LE Love y sma
26a c es 4
Span sh home F ant po ch WOODS MILL RD
com house and ou bu d ngs
and t le oof Ga a9e
3 BR
$8 200
Double w de fu n shed Ren

0 ACRES

15 Locust Sl
Howa r d B annon Broker
011 446 267 4
Luc 1 e Brannon

$3 500

GREEN ACRES

STROUT
REALJY

Real Estate For Scile

REALTy

111 e off Rt 7
beau tul
amb ng 7 rm
fame Ranch on A o 1 has
everytllng al ca pel over
HW
s cen a
F P n
ec m N Gas heat 2 ba hs
v m S x 26 and a k chen
he Mrs w
ove Low axes
and good schoo s A I of h s
0
2

MODERN 3 BR hom e ou
bu ld ng 5 acres g ass and
$18

~~

N -

Garage C stern Ru al wa e
Fe ed deal for bu ld ng and
room for your ho se

• FOR REN T now to June July

~

Sl

Real Estate For Sale

$24 000
WEST 35 Sub D v

AUCTIONEERS
4 ACRES 900 F on age on R
141 3 m es f r om
own

111 Afte 5 446 2S73

(Youdrvetl

----~

•

fo

P1 Pleasant beh nd
Red Carpet Inn

'
..
,..

Tapes

Close d

CAMP CONLEY
STARCRAFT SAlES
Rt62Nof

~

Selectron of

S999

vaca on June 0 thru June 2

,J

qua lrty double kmt men s $6
women s $6 95

For lease

STARCRAFT

Y NEW

Sleeprng Bags

Wrangler

CITY DUDES FARM

tj' _ __ _ __ 3 tf

0

$5 00 off

$11

HUNTERS

DREAM
A elect c home
w th b ck fran 18 feet of
cab nets n the k tchen yea
round c mate con1 o fu y
carpeted ceram c bath ots
of storage space coun y
v ng w th c ty conven ences

~

Lamp and Stove Fuel 89c

Coleman

BARGAIN

LOTS a Tycoon Lake w th we i

BUY a new Apache so do soft
~ state camper by June 10 get
"" $100 merchand se f ee We
need used campe s br ng
yours n now fo best dea
Amsbar y s Tra e s
63
Fourth Ave
nea
C ty
""'
Schoo s 446 0239 open II 9
"' weekdays

ST M8

3 3

ovelyhome narura set ng
C ty schoo s county wale
one and ha f ba1hs ec ea on
oom beaut fu k tchen w th
ots of bu It n cab nets

A ve

Camptng Equipment

SHOES &amp; BOOTS Man made ztppered
dress boots $2 49 pr all Johnson
P1oneer and Ranger
Reg L1sted Pnce

BEAUT FULSPLlTLEVEL Lots or I v ng space n h s

$ 0 000

BILL'S ARMY-NAVY
DEPARTMENT STORE
85

E L NA and
Sew ng
Mach nes
Se ce on a
makes Reasonab e a es
The Sew ng Cen e
M d
depo
Oho

31 1

FREE FREE FREE

censed by Sta e of Oh o
m es wes t of new hasp a
577 Svn Va ey Dr Ph 44u
3657 Day ca e that says we
a e
Madge Ha u d en
Owne
Lo ed th &amp; John
Hauld en Ope ~ o s

B ad o d

3232

wou ld ke to hank he Rev
Lem ey
caske
beare s
s ng e s f ends and ne gh
bo s n he Addav I e Com
mun y and Tu key Run
Commun ty fo he food sent
to
he home
A so
he
Raw ng s Co a Is
Fune af
Home Your though fu ness
w I neve be fo gotten

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITY

Camp e e Se v ce
Phone 949 382
Ra ne Oh o

Robert

Ross and daughters mother
father fam y and f ends
3 1

OFFERS

s 2 30 p
HELEN L TEAFORD
992 332l
GORDON B TEAFORD
99? J6 5
ASSOCIATES
NO SUNDAYS PLEASE

We cannot send a b thday ca d
Your hand we cannot touch
Today the e w I be no g fts or
cake
For the one we lov e so much
For n a graves de soft y
sleep ng
Where the flowe s gen ly wave
L es 1he one we love so dea l y
But whom we cou d not save
God alone knows how much we
m ss her
As He counts the ea s we shed
For He wh spered She s on y
sleep ng
Your oved one s not dead

------

C BRADFOR 0 Auc onee

ba hs wa
o wa ca pe ng
Beau u k chen and d n ng
a ea One ac e on ha d oad
Ga age o 2 ca s Now on y 0 DE L WHEEL A gnmen
5300000
oca ed a C ass oads R
24
comp e e
on end se v ce
LOOK AT TH S
une p and b ake se v ce
2 bed com TREN
NEW
Whee s
ba an ed
0 HOM E w h ba h
u
on
ca
y A
wo k
basemen
o on y S 8 000 00
gua an ee d
Rea sonab e
Yo
n
0 days
a es Ph one 42 3232

PERM TT NG

Lou se Ross on her b thday
June 2

ADD 1SO

46 3434

IN LOVING memo y of Anna

on

32 State
TeI 446 1908
~

Realty

llrokers
4

In Memory

USED G ave y
actor w h
mowe
a achmen t Phone CONTRACTING pa nt ng o by
446 45 18
he hou
Work guaran eed.
Waf s 446 463 or 446 0391
a te 6 p m

DAY CARE
c SUN VALLEY Nu se y Schoo

SEPT IC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE a es Ph 446

u

3 LARGE BEDROOMS

CO NCRE TE

de
e ed
gh
o
p o et F as a d easy
es ma es Ph one 992
Goeg e n Ready M x
Mddepo
Oho

s

n u e A good go ng bus ness
n a h
ng sma
I age
Ask ng s $5 000 DO
1 YEARS OLD

s

13

Bula v e Rd must have own
anspo a on Ca l 446 3797
lJl 6

Wanted To Buy

that

Beyond he gate ou loved one
F nds happ ness and est
And there s a comfort n the
thought
That a ov ng God knows best

- - - - - - - -- - c - - - - - - - - - . c : 30 2

32

J 33 ACRES
On Rou e
be ow own 9 2 mob e home
on d oned ba h and
ee ed pa a D ed we
and ex a spa ce

WEAT HER

Ma

e

all

There s an open gate
At he end of the oad
Th ough wh ch each must go
a one
And he e s a ght
We cannot see
Our Father cia ms H s own

- - -- -Wan ted
babys

and

Ch s an ty stood for When
f ends v s ted Gold a and
Hen y s home there was
always a deeper fa h n the
old fash oned way of I fe and
n Jesus Ch sf Ou Savor
upon eav ng he home
She w I be sad y m ssed by
he
lo v ng husband
her
n eces and nephews to whom
she was devoted s ste s n
law M rs Ina R fe Mrs Ada
P er ce M s Maude Scott
Mrs All e Scott Carman and
Mrs Lou se Scott R fe

,.-------

SWEEPER Repa
5 30 30tc

mun ty

To

---~-~-

RVER FRONTAGE

ASK NG $20 000
ACRE

992 2ZS9
o a !lwer 992 2S68

w

$

e n one ent
h e o he s
On e has 3
bed ooms h e o he s have
one A
ha e ba hs Gas
hea ed
A l ways
en e d

Take pr de n serv ng qual tv
food
good
pay
pa d
vaca t on
ho sp tal zat on
p an
pl easa nt work ng
cond 1 on s Apply n person
a Bob Evans Steak House

02 0032 B

SE PT C TANK S
DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
SE WAG E
SYS TEMS
NO EXP nee Economy does
CLEA NED
'REPA I RED OFFICE space fo ease 2nd
no affec ou bu s ness Prof
M L LER SAN TAT ON
A e ac oss f om C ty Pa k
po en t a s un l m ed $90 fa
STEWART OH lO PH 662
Avt:J abe af e Ju y 31 Ca l
eac h day wo ked s a con
3035
446 819 o 446 26 or see
se va l ve es ma e A $2 940
John Ecke
nves lm enf puts you
n
31 f
bus ness WRITE TODAY
MACH NES Repa
AUTOMOTIVE
e ce a makes 992 2284
MARKETING INC 600 N
The Fab c Shop Pome oy
Wanted
Oo
Jackson St Medta Pa 19063
Au ho zed S nge Sa es and
31 3
WALLPAPER
NG
and
pan
Se v e We Sha pen S sso s
ng
Phone
446
9865
o
3
9
3 29 tfc
BYF RSTREQUEST
One of
24

Mon ey o
any pu pose
Con de n a
Con en en t
e ms
R,obe s Loan Box
607 P Whee ng W Va
83 f

ACRES
Fawoodsaea
b ack op oad Some
we d a ned
hes e
abe On y$5 000 00
c

and

3

come o you
beg n June 2 Ca
w te o
v s
o
nfo ma on
Ga po s Bus ness Co ege

DOWNTOWN bus ness space
for ease 2nd Ave
ac ass
f om C y Pa k Approx 2 800
Sq Ft ava able af e Ju y
31 Ca 446 8 9 o 446 26 or
see John Eck e
AROB C
3 f

BORROW by

GOOD NEWS
A NOT HER
TR ENDHO M E
56 30 c HAS US ARR VED YOURS
COULD BE THE NEX T ONE

NCOM E PROPERTY
k bu d ng w h

WAITRESSES
AND GRILL COOK

wI

RELIABLE

Pomeroy, Ohlo

POMEROY

24 f

c

110 Mechamc Street

CLELAND
08
REALTY
E MAIN.__ __ .

446

- -- - - -

Teaford, Sr
Broker

Gold a and Henry we e the
most fa thfu membe s of
the r church and only m ssed
when II and when she took
care of her aged mother and
her brother ll za whom she
tender y ca r ed fo n the r las
I ness
They also attended other
churches n the a ea
he
yea y and qua 1e ly con
ferences of the d str ct and
have many f ends n a w de
a ea of Southeastern Oh o
P eced ng her n dea th
were her parents
four
b othe s Ira lza E za and
Bed Scott one s s fer M s
Vesta Sw nehart
Gold a as she was af
feet onate y ca l ed by her
re lat ves and f ends was of a
qu et d spas ton but had a
deep nterest n he com

- - ----

Doze s a ge
and sma
Ba khoes and
I NTER OR and ex e o ca
oa de s on
ack and
es
pen e wo k Phone 446 34 9
2966
Dump
u k
L o boy
122 2
6
15
c
se
ce Sep
anks n
s a ed Geo ge B I Pu ns
J&amp;WMOUNT
BODY wo k
pa n obs done
phone 992 24 8 o 992 402
CLEA
NING SERVICE
easonab
e
F
o
me
s
29 c
Ga age 992 7597
second GE NERA L hou se clean ng We
supp ly a
he c ea n ng su p
HAR R SO N S TV se
ce and hovse on Bu de e Rd Lau el
pes
388
8875a
e 6p m al
jf
se ce a s Phone 992 2522
388
8865
Week
l
y
o man h y
5
27
6
c
29 I c
c ean ng by appo n men t

Vzrgzl B

member of the Old Kyge
Free Will Bapf st Church

30 8

A UTOMOB t LE nsu a nee been
can ce ed
Los
you
ope a o s cense Ca 992

u
O~
A~I~
Rc~
on~d=o~n~n
g Se
basemen
at ached 2 ca Au·=T~
ga age k che n has bu
n
ce and epa Ca 992 3802
oven and
ange
o s of
5 24 30 p
Sc he
k b onze G ow b ch
ca b ne s
bed ooms w h
wa k n c ose s ceda I ned
f ee ga s p en y of wa l e
s oc k ed pond 8 m
N of
Pome oy Ca l 992 384 o
e ec
appo n men o see
o a
6050
633c

LAND

s

24 a mcchan wo k
n
d ng a oma
ans
n ss ons
Monday
h u
Sauday830am o5pm
Ph one 992 7 2 o 992 5682
s 3 30

S R

God a took Chr st as he

Sav or May 7 1905 was
bapt zed and became a

GALLIPOLIS 446 3343

lN

For Rent or lease

NOW OPEN
l.C;! age nea

ncome o

ee

mechan cs
nfant y a mo
or a
ey
Lm led tme
on y
Call
you
A my
recuea

PHONE 992 2550

DOZER and back hoe wo k
ponds and sep c anks d cl:1
ng se v ce op so
d
mes one B&amp;K Excava
Phone 992 536 o 992 386
9 I c

78 years 10 months and 23
davs
She was united n marr age
to Henry Scott on October 14
1914 and they have been
devoted companions fo S9
years

COLLECT $2 500 cash bonus
Tra n n e ec on cs m ss es

SURANCE
One
sop
p o ec on o Au o Home
Bu s ness and L te Ray Hawk
Ag en 446 2300 541 4 h Ave

Sate No

Townsh p and derarted this

I fe May 25 1973 a the age of

30 tf

24 2
MUTUAL

Scoff July 2 1894 n Chesh re

--:-:
H ::
IG:-:H-:-S
~C::H::O:-:O::L-G
~R
::-A
:-,0
::-:S

OIJT OF SCHOOL
ob Go o G B C

Roof ng
Root Pa nt ng
Spou t ng
Plumb ng
Re made ng
Comple1e
Bu d ng V nyl &amp; Alum num
S d ng

c

------,-~

of you own m nd Exp o e he
my ste ous wo d w lh n you
The f ee book The M ys e y
L fe
ex pi a ns how
0
h ough fasc na ng s udy
you
can
mas e
you
p ob ems and f nd happ ness
Add ess
Sc r be
I I
Ros cruc an 0 de AMORC
San Jose Ca l f 95 4
6 3 lp

June

LET US HELP YOU

ans e mus se
home
3 bed oom
o a
e ec c
a ge o FHA
app o ed Sy acuse Phond

emendous poss b t es

The Annua I Mee1 ng of the
Su t on Cheste
Fa mer s
Mutua F e Insurance Co
w I be he d at the Forest
Run
Un ted
M eth od sf
Chu ch
Monday June 4
9A M

AREA DEALER

s

001

DUE o ob

55
Townsh p $300 p e ac e
Phone New Haven 882 2984
6 6 p

- - - - -- - -F UR Y I 66 P ymouth 383 cu

NOTICE'

you

A gnmen1

Phone 992 3764

e

Choose you own hom e from

smg pr ces As an AVON
representat ve you ca n ea n
the ext a cas h you need fo
1ha1 new d shwa sher
tho se
new c lothes colo TV 11 san
easy way to make money n
you spare 1 me Just call
He l en Yeage
Box
72
Jackson Oh o 286 41128

MOTORIST

Un verse
pres i des
Our
Heaven y Father has c a med
Gold a ScoH who was born to
El sha V and Rena Jacobs

PARTTIME de very
et red
rna e or m dd e aged woman
needed fo
ght de ve y
Approx mately 3 or 4 hours
da y Apply n pe son a
Dud ey s F o s
46 Cour

24 2

T

Real Estate For Sale

966 FORD Coun y Squ e
S at onwagon good cond on

u n

Qual fy Today Call

FARM

BELPRE 0

6 36

For Your Mobile HomeLand- No Oown Payment

304-485-3809

Pome oy

Oh o 286 4028

MASSIE

Doug Wetherholt

DEATH s a messenger sen1
by the Great Masfer to ead us
to that all pe feet glo ous
and Ce est a Home where
the Supreme Arch teet of the

sma ch d en and new home
on R 588 Must be ma ure
e qb e and ave ch d en
T anspo a on a mus Send
esume and refe ences o Box
27 c o Da y T bune

Sale

Real Estate For

C52 Second Ave
Oscor 8a rd

t leaves a

As fovelt as can be

HOUSEKEEPER o ca e fo 2

AVON TO THE RESCUE Save
your budget from the p nch of

BANK FINANCING
12 Y ears 10 75 A P R
for Your

--~--~

MU ST se
Cheap
Pa ul P ce

-~---~~

WE W SH to hank al of of ou

PAIR of Lady s glasses ost at
Rae ne A umnl May 27
f
faun ca I 949 3.47
6 6 c

Ph 992 2 74

Auto Sales

GARAGE SAL E

Lost

Monday fh u Saturday

CASH pad o al makes and
mode s of mob e homes
Ph o e r~ ea ode 6 4 423 953
4 3I c

5 27 6 c

Ma son W Va

n

Ensh ined

an
ndependen
AVON
ep esen a ve and ea 11
money n you spa e
me
nea
home
Ca
He en
Yeage
Box 72 Jackson

&amp; ZUSPAN

773 SSS4

5 ROOM house ba h ba emen
gashca 2 o s S D Busk k
34
Page S
M dd epa
Phone 992 548

120 Wa sh ngton 8 vd

Va

Be

MATERIALS CO

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

606 E Ma n Pomeroy 0

5 25

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

WE- W SH o exp ess ou s n
h u June 6 h 504 E Ma nS
cere thanks o au ne ghbo s
Pone oy nea Sm th Ne son
f ends and re at l(es fo he
Mo o s Typew er b ke
k ndness and
sympa t hy
d o h ng
ewe y fu n u e
shown us at he t me o t he
d shes amps awn mowe s
death of ou be oved husband
mas y o pa s
o d bo
and fa her M V rg I A k ns
es
a s
Avons
kn ck
Spec a
hanks t o those
knacks
oys We w
have
send ng owe s f ood ca ds
some h ng o eve yone n
and dona ons o the hear
c ud ng many
o ec o s
fund n V rg s m emo y
ems Come see
A so a
who he ped
n
any way You k ndness w I
neve be fo go ten M s V g I
RUMMAGE SALE F day and
Atk ns and fam ly
Sa u day om 9 o 5 p m
6 31p
Hughes Bu d ng ac ass f om
-----~
he M dd epa t L b a y

63 tc

F om he araes T ck o
Bu dozer Rad a o
to the
:&gt;ma es Hea e Lo e
Nathan 8 gg s
Rad a tor Spec al s1

992 836

se

AVON WANTS YOU

VETERANS

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8T 15

A r Cond11Joner s
Awnongs
Underponmng

o ma on

many f ends and ne ghbo s
for th e
l ove y ca ds
beaut fu
f owe s
and
p esents on the occas on o
our
50th
wedd ng
an
n versary You
k ndness
sha neve be forg o en M
and Mrs
Eve ett
Peg

c

3

Bu ttto Your Specs

o Roue

It&gt; pages tel

For us o keep n our hearts

------.-:----

Del vered to JobS te
HOGG

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1 splay

- GUARANTEEDPhon e 992 2094

SPACE HUNGRY&gt; VEMCO
ADD A ROOMS
ARE
EAS L Y IN STALLED TO
ANY MOBILE HOME
N
LESS THAN 6 HRS 6 STD
PLANS
BDRM S DENS
FAM LY RMS
OFFICES
SEE THEM ALL AT Youngs

GUN SHOOT Fac o y choked
and hand cho ke d guns
Fo ked Run Spar sman Cub
Sun day June 3 2 noon
53 3 c

W

FURNITURE

EXPERT
Wheel A11gnment
•5.55

2

AKC Toy Pood e pupp es S75
and $8S A so S amese k ens
$ 0 Phone 2S6 6247 Kenne s
o Ca houn

6

Ma son

and

On Most Arn e can Ca s

WE WISH o hank eve yone fo
the
k ndness ~hown o us
du ng ou be eavement o
Gene Yost P es
au Daddy and Pappy S
Ca H
Spec a thank s o
Rev
Sh ve ey
Denn a SHOOT NG MATCH
Co n
Manue Ma y Lou se Shu e
Hoi ow Gun Club u n f sf
Pau Beeg e Ernes Shv e
ght af e M es Ceme e y
Jack Ables 0 den Thax on
Ru and
Fac o y choked
V g 1 Roush and Bob Ash ey
guns
on
y
Sunday
June 3 p
and to he ones that b ough
m
food to he Commun y Hal
53 3 c
and served h e de c ous
d nner also hanks o those
CHE SH RE Ca fe e a Open
who sen f owe s o
had
Monday h ough F day 5 30
shown the r lov e and
end
am o8JOp m Cased
sh p n any way May God
Sa u day Open Sunday 0 a
bess each of you Don Lo s
m o 7 p m
and Lo na Dawn Be

Daley

POODLES AKC Pupp es sma
m n a u e b ack o wh e
wo med
pe manen
sho s
s 5 Phone Coo v e 667 62 4

... ~ ..

Oh

Bob s C t zen Band Rad o
Equ p Geo ges C eek Rd
Ga po s Oho44645 7
2 2

Ea1hcouh 9chh1

For Sale

OHIROeaRityiVER

of Lies bock are

~:'.!'~atapfer

LPN o el red RN,..
TWO WAY Rados Sales &amp; .fJEED~
wo k n nv s ng home
an
Se v ce New and \Jsed CBs
1
ve n Wr le BoxJ 3 ron on
pol ce man o s antennas

ec

Real Estate

One
loved so well
But k ndly ta es of years well

~-

WOOD TRUSSES

OFFICE SUPPLIES

John Tucker Rl 4
Pom eroy 0
Ph 992 395q

c

M H S s R 7 and 35 be ow
S ve r M emo a
8 dge
Ga I po s

Card of Thanks
I WANT to han k

eve yon e
connected n any way ha
helped dur ng my stay n he
hasp tal Those who p ayed
and sen ca ds The Docto s
Nurses and staff a Ho ze
Med ca Cen er A spec a
thank you fa
he many
prayers hat wen up to me
Nelle Eb n

y

S20l0c

H s hands a e sea ed f om he
wo k he ha s done
He oak up h s c ass and wen
s ent y o meet H m
he EX P LO R E
you
Secuenh s a h o
D sea e
you
nne
Maste s We Done
esou ces and o e co me
63 P
--:--=-------~
pe sana
m at ons Lea n

In MemO"'

Show qua

Phone 992 5443

1973
He was un ted n marr age
w th Pa u ne Hal day on June
3 934 t o th s un on was born
one da ugh e Sharon A k ns
Jewe
He accep ed Ch s as h s
Savor and un ed w th he
Ha sonv e
Presbyte an
Chu ch Easte Sunday 924
and ha s kep ha a th and
has exp essed o h s am ly
and fr ends hat he was ready
o meet h s Sav o when h s
days we e fu f ed
He se ved he Chu ch o 5
yea s as Sunday Schoo
Supe ntendent and as an
o da ned E de l or 39 yea s
and C e k of he Sess on to 25
yea s
He spent h s
e I ng the
so he loved and was ac ve n
a phases of ag bus ness
V rg
I k ed peop e and
en oyed wo k ng w th them
He served h s commun y and
County n many ways h ough
hrough
the
ar ovs
agr cu u a and soc a and
fraterna o gan za ons
Hop ng to make h s Coun y a
better place n wh ch o ve
Th ougtiov h s I ness he
bo e h s c oss un comp a n ng
w th pat ence and o tude
He wa s c eceded n death
by h s father and mo her
Ear and A ma
w n A k ns
and h s only b o he Eugene
Atk ns He s su v ved by h s
w fe Pau ne Ha day Atk ns
a daugh e
Sha on Atk ns
Jewell a son n aw Robe
L Jewell h s mother n aw
M s Frank Hal day ass e
n aw Ste lla Atk n s a n ece
M s Dav d R gg s a nephew
Gordon Atk ns of Che sea
M ch gan 2g ea n eces and 6
grea nephews a so a has of
f · ends
Now h s I e o abo s ended
And he rewa d of he ace he
has un
Is he swee es ha awa s he

~

Thc~.,;,:'ders
For
we

- -----

PRE FABRICATED

992 2094
606 E Main Pomeroy

MODERN
SANITATION

AK c
5 23

Obituary
VIRG l I w n A k ns son o he
ate Ea
and A ma
wn
Atk ns was bo n Septembe
sonv le and
fe May 20

(hoc a a e

EVERYONE WELCOME'

Obituary

446 2823

130 6

ASK US ABOUT

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

2q Hour
Dally Serv ce

Rutland Gun Club

2
ens pe
wod
hee
consecu ve n se ons
8 en s per wo d s M: con

BL NO ADS
Add ona
2Sc Cha ge
Adve semen

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

s 27 5 p

Pets For Sale
PQQO!.E pupp es Toy

Ca

Help Wanted

YARD SALE a
S mons
es dence 443 S 6 h M d
d epa on Sa u day June 2
f om 8 to 8

on

WANTED tog ve aw&lt;~Jy k ten!.

Business Services

DRESSMAK NG a so croche
and kn
ng Ass s ance or
nst uc
ons
fast
easonable Phone 773 SAlT
5 JO 3 c

H1gh Powered R1He

RATES

Fo W,an1 Ad Se v ce
5 cen s pe Wo d one nse
M n mum Cha ge 5

22 9 2 a Ha
departed th s

Not1ce

Notice

For Fast Results Use TIJ.e Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

NotiCe

P MART N &amp; Son Wa e
De
e y
Se v cc
You
pa r onage w
be
ap
p ec a ed Ph 446 0463
2

PUBLIC
NOTICE

AUCTION
3ERVICE

anyth ng tor
Br ng your
tems to Knotts Com
mun ty Aud on Barn
Corne Th d &amp; 01 ve
For appo ntment calt
446 29 7 Sale every
Saturday even ng at 7

SELl THE AUCTION
WAY

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE
Buldng
Ste s
Ava lable K ngsberry
Hom es bu It to f I any
spec1f cat ons
All
Underground Ut I t es
Prov (led

1~·----------For lnformat1on
Or Appomtment

IIMME SAYRE

PHONE

AUCTIONEER

367-7250

PH. 446-3444

Add1son 0

�23-The SundayTlmes ·S.ntlnel, Sunday,Ju"" 3,1973

For Sale

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 E. MAIN '

QUAUTr AND
SAVINDS!!

1972 OPEL
197.1 PONTIAC
1971 PONTIAC
1970 PONTIAC
1970 DODGE
1971 PLY MOUTH
1969 PONTIAC
1969 CHEVELLE
1967 BUICK
1966 OLDS

Van Dyke
68x14

DELIVERED &amp; SET

I

1972 CHEVROLEt ____ .!3995;

!· . 1· I

F i rebird . 2 dl'". H.T.

Caprice 4-door , new ca r titl e &amp; bill of warranty , covert
with brown vinyl roof , tinted glass, fa ctory air , front &amp;
r ea r guards, radio &amp; r ea r speaker , while -watt t ires, nice

, ~ I on. Pickup. V 8, long bed .

and clean. Refail s etl S4860. Pri ced to move .

1972 BUICK \~ci~~~~---s3195

u~7995

II

•

4 door , factory air, automatic transmission , power
steeri ng , cust om interior, dark green f ini sh, ~ire s l i ke new
and spar e never used . Deluxe bumper , radto, .;1nd many
other ext ra s. Less than 13,000 m iles, tr-uly sha rp .

I

1971 CHEV. BLAZER __!2995

2 Dr . H. T, r ed &amp; black, vinyl top

4-wheel drive, auxilia ry top, locking fron~ hubs, V 8,
automatic transmi ss ion, power steering &amp; brakes, loca l
low mil eage , 1 car owner , radio , spa r e never used .

98 , ; dr

1964 BUICK

1970 BU ICK.:.:.:.c2~~::.:!2695
1970 DODGE POLARA.~1695

REMEMBER

1967 BUICK SKYLARK __$895

SLEE PING• ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel .

308·11

128-4

-----

Bus1 ness Opportunities

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

1967 DODGE COR. 440 $895
4-0oor , local ow ner, fpctory
automa t ic, P. steering, rad io.

ai r ,

good

tires,

v .a,

APARTMENT for constr uction
men. Ph . 446 ·0756 .

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
" Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Ti I 8

7. Call 446·0008.

Plumb ing &amp; Heating
214 Third Ave., 446-3782

297-tf
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Ph one 446-2735

187.tf

1

(;ENE PLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning . 300 Fou rth ~ve.

Ph . 446·1637.

48·1f

CARTER' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourt h &amp; Pin e
Phone 446 -3888 or 446-4477

.

165·11

For Rent
' 12 x 60 MOBILE home locat ed in
Rio Grande. Call 245 -5267.
.
130·1f

HOUSE, 7 rooms and bath. on
St. Rt. 160, prefer adult s. 446 0861.

129-3

Own A

114. tr

SLEE PING

rooms .

Hotel.

Galli a

94·11

·T RAILER spaces on Butaville
Rd . Call 446·3879 or 367 -7438.
104·tf
~---::-:­

TOBACCO base, 2,450 lbs. 256·
6247 .

128 6

FURN ISHED

2

apartment 446·0952 .

bedroom
128·tl

-----~-

•

•

NEW&amp; USED FURNITURE
854 S ECON 0·446·9523

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

R EOUCED TO

fl ew 1973 Buicks

in stuck.

Now's the

• ·--·-·---- ----~--------- ---

71 MERCURY COUGAR

time to trade!

\

tz

4 Or . hardtop, vinyl root , 400 eng ine . P .
biakes , P. steering. l ac . air co nd ., 4
new w -s-w lires .

Station wagon, 4 sp. trans .. lac . air
cond ., 4 new w -s-w tires . A real cream

LeSabre Custom 4 Dr . Sed .• air
cond ., gree~ w -viny l lop, one
local owner. low mi leage, like

·-·-·--------------·-·--·-·--·----··

new .

70 MAVERICK

1ST 10 DAYS .IN JUNE!

SPECIAL

KAWASAKI

Torino Brougham 2 Dr. H. T. ;
AT. , P . S.. 302
g r een W· vinyl
top . Excellent cond.
·

70 TORINO 2 DR. HARDTOP

12 TO
v.a;

aut o. trans ., P . steering, lac : a ir
cond .• tinted gla ss, &lt;I new w -s-w l 1res .
Very sharp .

CHOOSE FROM

v.e.

REDU CED TO

cellent

condition,

call

.-:oR D.

ion truck. 4 sp .
trans ., VS, phone 256-6080.
J..,_.

- - -- 1 GAS heating stove, 1 Kenmore
gas· range . Ca ll 446· 1020 after
2 p.m .

130·3

CADILLAC$
IN STOCK

1966
1969

FULLY
EQUIPPED

KARR

&amp;VAN ZANDT

GMAC Financing A-vailable.

1!2

$

T. GMC PU
T. GMC PU

1969
1967
1967
1966
1969

GMC 112 ton PU
Ford 112 ton PU
112 ton Chev.
GMC 1!2 ton PU
1!2 T . . Ford PU

1969
1971
1970
1969
1969
1966

Dodge Station Wagon
3 T. Chev. Truck
112 T. Chev. PU
112 T . Chev. PU
112 T . GMC PU
lf:z T . GMC P U
'I• T. GMC PU
J;" T . Ford PU
112 T . GMC PU
lf:z T . GMC PU ·
1f2 T . GMC PU
'I• T. GMC PU
lh ton GMC PU

1969 Olds 88

1966

Cadillac . Old smobile
992 -S342

'I•

Pomeroy

1967
1968
1967
1967

1968

Open Eves. Tii6-Til 5 P . M. Sat .

1969

" You'll Lik~ Our 11uality Wa y of Doing Bu si ness"

DISCOUNT

THAfS RIGHT - All FORD LTDs IN STOCK
We have too many Torinos in stock and must sell to' alleviate
our storag e problems. These cars are all late arrivals- 90
Pet. have Fac. Air Cond. This special Discount Sale is for the
First 10 Days of June Only!

1972 DETROITER 60

x

12. lul l

267·11
SETT IN G EGGS lor 8 dillerent

&amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE CO.

CO RBl~

1970
1970
1970
1966
1968
1964
1963
1966
i969

12
12
12
10
12
10
10
10
12

x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x

60 American

60 Raycra ft

60 Challenger
50 Skyline
60 Baron
55 Princess
50 American
50 Monarch
x 60 Richardson

B&amp;SMOBILE HOME
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pt. Pleasant
( Nex t to Heck 's l

_ _ __ _ _ _ _·:..126·11

ONE nice ma le rabbit. Call 388-

8609.

Ph. 4·16·9255.

NEW HOLLAND hay baler ,

130· 2

gpod condi tion. 446 -n88.
•
129·3

GOOD fa mil y mi l k cow and
you ng laying hen s. Phone 388 ·

3 YEAR OLD RCA color TV,

8631.

---------------------71 FORD Y2 TON PICKUP

DISCOUNT

.

floor model $200. 446-2867.

130·3 _ 1_29_·5--:--:--:::--::--:-

308·1
- . -----,-----,-

1972 HON OA 500 l:C, 4 cy linder,
low mileage, lots of extra,
show room condition . 4460548 )
123-11

We have too many Tori nos in stock and must sell to alleviate
our storage problems. These cars are ~II late arriv.als - 90
Pet. have Fac. Air Cond. This special Discount Sale IS for the
First 10 Days of June Only!

---~---

· -- - -- - - AKC re gi stered St. Bernard NEW EUR E.KA upriQht model
.2012A. S59.95. Phone 367-7736.
1940 FARM tractor,
1965
puppies , ready to go June 5.
Davi s Vacuum Cleaner Store,
Mustang convertible , runs
Call Oak Hill 682 ·681 1.
good, good cond ition, 446·9430
51.
Rt . 7 at Addison . 0 .
"
129-3
after 5 p.m .

--------

- -·----:::-::--:~

~- ~

-

130·6 1968 TRUCK CAMPER, Contact GOO D CLEAN LUMP and
Fulks Marke t, Crown City. ' sloker' coaL Ca r l Wftlters , Ri o
12 FT. ALUM INU M boat and Ohip
Grande. Phone 245 -5115.
256-1177 .
trai ler, 446-1060.
129·3
6-ft
1303

Since-Smith
V11tsun,

;my

sha~p

we will be hii/IJIY to

DlltSI!IIS 11t our

sv(gs

417 Second Ave.

HOME In town , 446·2225 .

G.ALLI POLIS
CHRYSLER,PLYM.OUTH

.

tlf'illt·t·HI!ip.

~~~ER ................~2630
Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

-,....----~.:..._

Gallipolis

For SaiP.

131 -3

G~ll1poh;,

For Sale

11

1969 DELTA 88 Oldsmobile air
cond., ~ l ereo tape player , PS,
PB , ver y good condition. Ph .
256-6816 .

131 ·3

PALOMIN O mare, 3 yrs . ,
trained for trai l, genlle, $400,
446-0391 or 446 -1312 .

1965 CHEVELLE Malibu SS

0.

with 1967 327,325 hp . eng . New
Hurst Camp . plus shifte r 68
Mun cie -1 s"pecd 2:.56 to 1 low
gear . 446-2676.

For Sale

131·3

APACHE
camper,
stove. i'IPES, Pipeo:,, Pipes. GBO,
62 FORD Fairlane, Sid . Good
Chera~an, BBB, Jobey,' Hil~on , ' J) 1973 ZIG -ZAG Se wing
heater , d inette, sleeps 6, S600,
transportation $75 . 675 · 1119
and others . Tawney s P•pe
Machines left in layaway.
can be seen after 6 p.m . at l11
evenings.
and Tr ophy House, 422 Second
Beautiful pastel color, full
Kineon Dr. , Gallipolis .
13 1-3
Ave .
size modeL All built .in . to
131 -3
~~----------~199 -t- buttonho le", do stret ch se w_•nSf 1972 PLYMOUTH Fury: grand
and fancy sti tching . Pay tust
coupe, 2 door, vinyl top,. AM2 SORREL mares. 25 acres of
$48 .75
cash
or
terms
land with free ga.s, county AL L TYPI::.S ol 1 building
FM radio; Fac!Qry air, P .S
matef"ials. block , b_n ck, sewer
available . Trade -i ns ac P .B. Mu st sell 38"B·9991 or 367water, Fa rm all tractor,
pipes , windows, l1~te l s, eoc .
·cepted . Electro Hygi ene Co .
7481 . .
mow ing machine and plows.
Claude Winters . RIO Grande,
Phone 446·4312.
131 -7
disc, with new t ires, runs
128-6
0 Phone 245-5121 after 5.
goo~ . 367·7533.

446· 3273

-==~==:::==~129-3 .

Need Another Bldg. ?
ou r aluminum bldgs ,
Heavy duty, with floor ing,
wir.ed for electric. Also West
Virginia chunk coaL dr'ain
tile, bell tile, cemen t and
mortar . Gallipolis Block &amp;
Coa l Co., 1231!2 Pine, 446·2783.

r-

-see

207-tf
----~~

'

h

-

•

l'fl't'l til'l'

g

!•

131 -11

ONE YEAR OLD MOBILE

Auto lw .~ di.~ t·lmlitl.lll'd ·

ff
If

Delux e cab. )07 V B engine, auto . trans .,
radio , rear step bumpe r , ful l w.covers ,
western mirrors, in beautiful cond .
70,000 mileS .

For Sale

'

DATSON Phone 592 ·4463

ld

11
in

UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY

MARTIN FORD SALES, INC.

•CAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eMARK IV

IC

70 CHEVROLET lfz TON PICKUP

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

•MERCURY MONTEGO • COMET

18

1-· -- .•.•• ---- ,_,__ ----------- --·-·-1

baby dol l.

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • COUGAR

&gt;I

d

6 .c vl. eng in e, P. steering . A rea l

L&amp;M Phone 592.4491

·e
II
ly

Long Bed , 8 cy!., radio, ni ce.

For Sale

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

IS

0
995°

$

69 .FORD RANCHERO 500
·
RE OU CED TO

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.

lg

In

71 FORD 34 TON PICKUP

----------------·-··-·--·-·-•

.y

·---------------------------

446-2532

breeds of domestic duck, $3
kitchen, liv ing r oom , 1 bath , 2
USED
per dozen, T . Bre~ch , 446-43 14 100 HONDA, · excellen t con BR , 245-9326. Rio Grande.
40 IN. elec tric range, 2 fu ll size
after 5 p . m.
120-6
coil springs, 2 pc . liv ing room
dition, $350 . Phone 379 -2673
129·5
·
suite, re frigerator, 3 pc . end
after 4 p . m .
1 R IDING horse and 1 Shetland · tables, full size mattress, - - -- - - - , - : :- 129.3
pony , 446-4149 .
!aWn chair, r ecliner.
THREE registered Tennessee'
130-3
NEW
Walkers hor ses, 2 ge ldings, a
bus iness for sale,
- - ' -- - - - - - - BEDRQOM suites starting at
years old, midnight su n GROCERY
bu ilding for sale· or lease,
$119.00
breeding, 1 stallion, 7 years
ANTIQUE pool table $300. 446·
phone 773 ·5618 from 8:30 p.rn.
95S Second Ave .
old by Go Boy's Shadow, all
to 10 p.m. for appo(nlment.
0008.
446· 1171
sound and no scars, R. B . .
128-11
.
67·11
Open Friday Evening s
Anderson , Rt. 1, Circlevil le,
Ohio 474-5440. Trained by J im 'sI NGE~ Sewin"g Machine Sale~ ­
Tills p.m .
COACHMAN Travel Trailer.s, - -- - - - ' - - - - Single ton f or 11h years .
&amp; Service. All mode ls i1
Motor Homes. 5th Wheel. , 1970 JEEP, 8,000 mi les , ex 129-3
stock. Free del ivery . Serv ic€.
Truck Campers, ·App le City
ce llen t condi tion, like new,
gua1 "lnteed. Models price
Au l a Sales, Rt . 35 N, Jackson ,
AN EAR LY American H i-Fi
Ohio. Phone '28 6_5700.
snow plow, roll bar'. Phone
froiri $69.95. French Cli"
radio conso le, plus records.
446 -3371.
Fabri c Shoppe, Singer ap
118-lf
256
-1360.
130.3
pro·te
d dealer, sa Court ·st.
129·3

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDiTIONED
MOBILE HOMES

v a, Auto . tr-an s. Prelly Ni ce Ca r .

THAfS RIGHT- ALL GRAN TORINOS IN STOCK

SOMMERS G.M.C.
TRUCKS, lNC.

For Sale

-~ 6

Bonne vi lie 4 Or . H. T., air cond .,
a ll power, blue w· v in y l top.
lu xury ca r , new Prem ium tires.
Sa le Priced.

II

133 Pine St.

For Sale

y,

Equipped wit h auto matic tran s mi ssion, po,wer steering, power disc
bra kes. while· wa ll tires. ai 'r conditioner, custom seat belts, tinted
g lass, bumper protective strips, bumper guards, door . guards,
remo te mirror, car pet sa ve r s, deluxe wheel covers, protective body
sid e moiding s. Other Mode ls Priced Accordingly .

360 v ,a eng ine, 4 speed, rear step
bumper , Western mirrors. 750x16
rubber radio . Exce llent cond.

$

ot
11
"s

1973 Buick LeSabre 4 dr. Sedans

65 FORD GALAXIE 500

FOR THE FIRST TEN DAYS IN JUNE
MARTIN FORD WILL DISCOUNT ANY
1973 GRAN TORINO IN STOCK •• •

Truck Headquarters
Ford :% ton camper specia l
1h T. Chev . P U
J;" T. GMC P U

lg
le
ld

S·

1-·- ··- --------------------GRAN TORINO

:h

•2495

2 Dr . Hardtop, ·v .e. au to .. power
stee r ing .
·
·

FOR THE FIRST TEN DAYS IN JUNE
MARTIN FORD WILL DISCOUNT ANf
1973 FORD LTD IN STQCK •••

ld

•2995
1970 PONTIAC

66 FORD FAIRLANE

130-J

1969
1966
1967

1-Coupe DeVille
2-Sedan DeVilles

FORD
L.T.D.

·e

Le Sabre Custom 4 Dr. Sed., air
cond., burnt cor a l w·vinyl lop ,
Radial tires, new LeSa br e
trade .

446 --~---

:e

•2395
1971 BUICK

'2495
1970 FORD

1-·-'-·-·--·-·----------·-··-·-·--·-·--··

ld
lg
ly

Ton, v .8, s tand. tran s., one
local owner. gold. Sharp .

1970 BUICK

70 TOYOTA CORONA

'ir.·

11,

''3495

·-·-·-------:-.-----------·--·--··

PH.
. 446-9800
.

b
le

1971 CHEV. PICKUP

LeSa bre Cus t om 4 Dr. H. T., air
cond " blue w ·black vinyl top .
ll's a bea uty .

71 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

putt .

12 TO

II

351 v .a engine, auto . trans , P . steering.
P . brakes , vinyl roof. e:.ccellen~ cond .

.•

130-3

0563.

AKC REG. toy poodle pup $75,

RICE'S

We h11ve 40

1970 CHEVELLE SS 396, e• ·

I F YOU are building a r\ew
home or remode\in~, s~e us:
We are bui lders . D•s!nbutor
f or Hotpoinl Appl1~nces.
Allison Electric.
154-tt

On All New Lamps

4 Dr . sedan,a ut o. trans .. P . steering , P .
brakes , fa c. air cond ., vinyl roof. P .
seats , P . windows , one ownPr . E)(
ce llent r ubber ,. beaut ifu l cond

----~--

For Sale

LAMP SALE
20% OFF

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

50 STATE ST.

__________________
131 - 10 ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Don Watts Volkswagen Inc.

350, CC
motorcycle. Phone 379-2469.

P h. 245-9374- 245 -5021

126·6

fully equipped, low mileage,
cal l weekdays after 4. 675·
1514.

2 Dr . 6 cyl ., auto .. rad io. Shar p,

New (;MC

7492.

1971 CHEVELLE Super Sporl,

1972 BUICK

446-1407.

3 NEW 1973.

1970. SUSUK I. 250 Savage, 367·

-------,-

Dwight N. Stevers
Sales Man ager
Don Watt s V .W., Inc.

- -- - - - - -

Rodney . Cora Rd .
Rodney , Ohio
H our ·~ 9 a . .n . to 9 p.m.
Mondily lhru Sa turday

241·11

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE:

DUNE
BUGGY, excellent
condition, Must see to appreciate . Ph . 388.8327 .
13 1-3

If you are in the market for a good Use d Car be sure you stop in. Look &amp; Drive any of
these Used Cars you like. You will see that we not .onl y have the sharpest used cars in the
va lley , weetso have them "in top m ec hanical condition . Ready tor yo u t o enjoy, many happv ,
ca refree months of driving. On the 1968 models up, I will give you a 30 day - 1,000 mile
warranty, 100 pet , NOT 50 pet -SO pct. like most dealers. This means that for 30 days or 1,000
miles anything that happens to your car we will fix it at no expense to you.

ANTIQUE brass bed', $150. Call
1973

SEE THEM NOW AT . • •

'

131·3

71 MERCURY MARQUIS

~-,-=---~­

Of Course You Can!

276-lf

condition . Ph . 367 ·7462 ,

•'

130·3

1951

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture

1971 HONDA trail 70, Good

Wa te rl oo, 643 -2437.

QUAIL CREEK
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp;SALES

APAR TMENT and new mobi le
horne. Central air and heat. NEW : Ser ta and Bemco mdl tress and box spri ng s. La rge
Ex ce ll ent · location. 446-0338.
se lection in stock- twin , fu ll.
116-tf
. queen size. Save up to $40 a
SLEE PIN G. r"ooms, weeklY' " set .
955 Second Avenue
rates, free garage parking,
446·1111
Libby Hotel.

2 TRAILER Spaces. 446 -3805 .

1965 V. W. Bug , 4 speed. Body rough but runs fine . ,, .................... SJ95
1965 V. W. Bus, 4speed . Excellent me chanical cond . .............. ; .... $795
1961 V. W. Bug , 4 speed, body rough but runs out good .. ..... - ........... $395

CHOOSE FROM

130·3

129·3

130·6

.•

130·6

UN F URNISHED apartment, 3
bedroom s, 103 Court Street,
$135 per month, 446 -2572.

2 BEDROOM tra iler, adults
on ly , ' Chesh ire 367 -75 12.

1966 Ply ._Sport Fury, auto., P. s., P. B........... ... .................... $395

:·,.'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SPECIAL·.

----MANURE spreader and loader.

131 11

NICE downtown apartment. 3
128·26
rooms, carpeted, refrigerator
and stove furnished , $130
in cl udes utilities. Phone 446- 1957 CHEVY 2 dr . Stat ion
2840.
.
wagon. Min t condition . 270
130·3
H.P. Balanced, positrac lion
5:38, 4 speed. Many extras
7 ROOM modern house, central
$850 . 446-4999.
air. 1 year lease. Call after 5
78·11
p.m. 446-0004.

131·3

~------

1966 Olds Cutlass 4 dr ., H. T., auto., P. S., P. B. Runs out good ... ........ $795

:·•'
~

CHI NCHIL LA tor pel s, $10

130·3

$85, Siamese l; it1ens, $10 ea.
Kenne ls of Calhoun. 256-6247 .

126·6

-::--:c-~--­

---:-~-~--

L()O king lor a mobile hom e
lo l or .1 quallf·Y mobile hom e?
1 W.e h&lt;~v e bolh at

Gallipolis, 446·4782

.,

·'

1ST 10 DAYS .IN JUNE!

130·3

130·3

. 187·1f

RUSSELL' S
PLUMBING &amp; HE/ITlN(;

197 1 f-.!t:MBRA NT 3 bedroom.
tra-il er , 12 x 60. Call388 -8825 or
742-4454".

65 VW, good shape, ~.000 actual
m iles on engine, 367 -7623.

-------=2 BR mobile hom e. Upper Route

. STA NDARD

AKC reg . female Doverman
Pinscher, 446 -3640.

UPPER RIVER ROAD

each . 446-2655 .

Pomeroy

131 -6

1.967 V. W. Sq . Back Sta. Wgn ., red, 4 speed , engine was rebt~ill ....... $888

For Sale

A RE ·you looking for a
Lifetime Career Opportunity 5 ROOM f urnished house, adults
with" a nationa l ly k nown
on ly , 10 Edgemont Dr
446company. If so Ork in Ex 0469 .
term inat ing Co. · In c. offers :
131 ·3
A. $5,000 per year , Plus e~&lt; ­
tras; B . Comp l ete Pa i d TREAT rugs right, they'll b!=' a
Tra in\ ng Program ; . C. ~~~
delight if clea ned with Blue
Ma jor Fringe Benefits w1th
Lu st r e.
Ren t . elec tr ic
Free Retirement ; D. Ex sh ampooer $1 at Cent~a l
~~l!ent Opporfun ities For
Supp-ly Co.
~vancement ; E . No Ex 131 -6
peri ence Necessary . For
more information call Da~ BE GENTLE, be kind, to thai
Coal!, 614-354 -3-281 befwe9
expensive carpet, clean with
lO:JOa. m .-12:30 p.m. Monday
Blue Lustre . Rent electric
thru Friday.
sha mpooer $1 at G. C
Mur .
130·5
phy's Lower Store .
13 1-6

131 -3

~&lt; 68 MOBILE home, 3
bedroom, on acre lot in
Rodney , 446-4799.

1967 Mustang , 6 cyl·.~ auto .••••••••••••••• ~ ................................ $595

·'·:

Some of the "standard extras" on the
Dodge Colt that represent " optional
eqOipmenl"
on
some
other
· domestically available su bcompacts
include adjustable steering column,
front wheel disc brakes, flow-through
ventilation. and full synchromesh four·
speed transmission .
A radio antenna that Is part of the
deck lid ; flow through ,ventilation and
fully·reclinlng front seats :that are
standard (except In coupe) are
exam ples of the innovation and extra
value of the Dodge Colt.

72 14

1969 V. W. SQ. Back Sta . Wgn ., red, 4· speed, radio, good condition . ••• $1495
1969 T. Bird , white with black top, loaded with extras . ................ $2195
1969 V. W. .sq. Back Sta. Wgn., beige, automatic, radio, ... ... . ... $1595
1968 Chev. II 4 dr. Sed., blue, while top. 6 cyl., 3 speed . ............ ; ... $1088
1968 Chev. 1 Ton. stake bed with cattle rack , v .8, 4 speed. good cond . S1695
1968 Pont. Catalina, 2 dr. H. T. , V·8, auto., P. S. , P. B., very sharp.car. s1288
1967 Caprice 2 dr . H. T., vinyltop, V·8, auto., P. S., air cona ........... 11 09 5

Remember We Service What We Sell.

267·11

Plumbing &amp; Heating

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy , Oh10

5873.

1969 Ford LTD4dr . sed.,green,V.8,auto., P.S.,air .................. $1688
1969 Chev . Greenbriar Sta . Wgn .• V· 8, auto., P. S., air, 9 passenger ... $1588
1969 Camaro Conv., orange w-white top , V-B, automatic. (Sharp) .... . $1995 ,
19~9 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr., white. black top , auto ., P. S., P. B. , air .... $1588

Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
Noon on Saturday

992-2174

131 -H

1969 Chev . Caprice 2 dr. H. T., silver·black. auto., V.8, P. S., P. B., air. 51995

.;•'

DODGE COLT!

1966 MUSTANG conv . auto.,
trans ., 289 V8, good cond .
excellent top . $550. Phone. 245-

1969Montego2dr. H. T. , v .8,auto., P .S., (0nly27,000 miles )." '"" S1695

••

MONEY ••••

Gl RL 'S 26" Huffy bike, brand
new, $35 . Call 446-1491.
131 ·2

1970 Pontiac Lemans 2 dr . H.T., auto., v .8, P. s ................... 52188
1970 Chevelle 2 dr . H. T., red w· black top, v .a, auto ., P. s., ............ 52295
1970 Maverick 2 dr. sed., ye llow w. b.lack top , 6 cyl., auto., radio ...... $1695
1970 V. W. Bug , 4 sp., beige color, ra dio. Runs &amp; looks new . . .......... $1595
1969 Olds 442, 2 dr . H. T., silver, 4 speed. Excellent condition .......... $1895
1969 Mustang Fastback, V·8, 4 speed , green .......................... $1395

•

MORE FOR THE

USED bedroom suites.
starting af S59 .95 and up.
Several used li ving room
suites, dinette sets, and other
i tems . New furniture special
in living room suites . $88 and

up.

1971 Gal. 500,2 dr. H. T., v . a, auto ., P. s.: vinyl top, air cond ...... s269S

Open Evenings
7il 7 p.m. &amp;

We- Service
.
What We Sell

Hardtop Coupe, V -8, automatic , power steering &amp; brakes .
Like new whi te wa ll tires, radio, blue ·f in ish wi th matching
vinyl interior .

LOTS in Rio Grande, owner
w il l finance. 245-532.0.

Wildca l. air , like new.

7

1972 Pontiac Ventura,
4 dr
..
. ..,.. Sed., 6 cyl., auto. , 13,000 ................. 52488
1971 R!'nchero500 Pi ckup. v . a.auto .• P.S., topper . Excellent cond. $2695
1911 F1at 850 2 dr. sed., 4 sp., runs out perfecf . 1,~ 40 mile per gallon sn
88
1971 Chev., Nova ,6 cy!., auto. , radio. Sharp car ... .......... ; ........ 52195

CEWARD CALVERT, SALESMAN

4-door , factory air , V -8 engine, a~tomatic transmiss ion,
power . steering &amp; brakes.. gooO white-wall -tires. whit e
finish, vinyl top, radio, clean ins ide.

For Rent

H. T ., low mileage, a i r .

We are still making some great deals on new Buicks,
Pontiacs. So before you buy any car new or used
check with us.

4.door. loca l ] .owner car with Jess than 32 ,000 miles.
climate control air tonditionif!g, 40-60 power seat , radio,
gold fini sh. Loaded with many ext ras .

Open All Day Thursdays . Closed on Sunday.

.

Elec . 225, 4 dr. H.T.. air, vi nyl top.

F ireb ird Esprit , local 1-owne r car . 350 V 8 engine, pOwer
steering &amp; automatic transmiss ion, AM -FM radi o, like
new white lettered tires , 307 V -8, power steer 1ng &amp; brakes .
radio, clean interio r .

· 586 Locust St .
992·7004
Middleport
Open 8to 6 Mon , thru Sat.

Satelli te. 2 dr H.T, low mileage

Cat.. 2 dr . H .T ., ai r , vinyl top .

1970 PONTIAC·------~2295

UP TO 12 YEAR FINANC ING
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

For Sale or Trade

G r an Ville, 2 Dr- . H.T.

Pars~

USED CARS

$1995.
$3695
$2999
$2395
$1895
$2295 :
$1595
$1595
$1095
$995
$695

Wagon . auto ., one owne r .

Ca talina , 4 dr H. T., Brougham .

L,arge 19 1 2' living room . all
deluxe furnishings, house type
doors &amp; windows. double in
sv lat ion and Iota~ electr ic.
Best buy in town . Check the
1
plan.

SPECIAL PRICE

PH. 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

REGATTA SPECIALS

.,

3 Bedroom Home

VOLKSWAGEN

'

.

12J.tl

NEW and used in strum~n ts,
Brunicard i House of Mus1c. 54
State Street. Phone 446·0687.
·
33-tf
1973 8 TRACK . A small balance
of· 588 .64_ or pay $6.50 per
month . Phone 446·0255 .

(21 ELECTROLUX · Vacuum
Cleaner s complete wit h a·t tachments , cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in l _ike
new condition. Pay $34 . 4~
cash or budge t plan ava il abl ~ .
Electro Hygiene Co . Phone
446 -4312 .

128 6

12 x 60 VINDALE
I·

MOBILE HOME
Tp Vi ew
Phon e 446·023 1

&gt;r

69 CHEV. IMPALA

IS
1.

le

2 Dr . hardtop, 350 cu . in. v.s engine, P .
st eering, auto., W·S-w .tire~, b.lue
metallic finish with matchmg mtenor .
Excellent cond.

·k
ir
'S

.

$1595
WOOD MOTOR SALES .
Gallipolis, Ohio

Ea stern Ave.

For Sale
PORTER
Antiques
Junkaliques, bott l es , dep .
gl ass Open Sa turday only .

129·3

USED GE electric· stove, $45,
used Hot Point refrigerator,
$125 . 8oth In ex.cellent con dition. 446-41 89 .
129-6

g
I·

.s
I·

I·

,
II
II

e
e

For Sale
129·3

r
,f
I.

REGISTERED Arabian colt,
and Appaloosa mare. Phone

d
I·

446.1809.
129-3

I!

AKC registered Pomeran ian.
ti ne pet for kids, 379-2673 after
4

p. m .

�23-The SundayTlmes ·S.ntlnel, Sunday,Ju"" 3,1973

For Sale

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 E. MAIN '

QUAUTr AND
SAVINDS!!

1972 OPEL
197.1 PONTIAC
1971 PONTIAC
1970 PONTIAC
1970 DODGE
1971 PLY MOUTH
1969 PONTIAC
1969 CHEVELLE
1967 BUICK
1966 OLDS

Van Dyke
68x14

DELIVERED &amp; SET

I

1972 CHEVROLEt ____ .!3995;

!· . 1· I

F i rebird . 2 dl'". H.T.

Caprice 4-door , new ca r titl e &amp; bill of warranty , covert
with brown vinyl roof , tinted glass, fa ctory air , front &amp;
r ea r guards, radio &amp; r ea r speaker , while -watt t ires, nice

, ~ I on. Pickup. V 8, long bed .

and clean. Refail s etl S4860. Pri ced to move .

1972 BUICK \~ci~~~~---s3195

u~7995

II

•

4 door , factory air, automatic transmission , power
steeri ng , cust om interior, dark green f ini sh, ~ire s l i ke new
and spar e never used . Deluxe bumper , radto, .;1nd many
other ext ra s. Less than 13,000 m iles, tr-uly sha rp .

I

1971 CHEV. BLAZER __!2995

2 Dr . H. T, r ed &amp; black, vinyl top

4-wheel drive, auxilia ry top, locking fron~ hubs, V 8,
automatic transmi ss ion, power steering &amp; brakes, loca l
low mil eage , 1 car owner , radio , spa r e never used .

98 , ; dr

1964 BUICK

1970 BU ICK.:.:.:.c2~~::.:!2695
1970 DODGE POLARA.~1695

REMEMBER

1967 BUICK SKYLARK __$895

SLEE PING• ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel .

308·11

128-4

-----

Bus1 ness Opportunities

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

1967 DODGE COR. 440 $895
4-0oor , local ow ner, fpctory
automa t ic, P. steering, rad io.

ai r ,

good

tires,

v .a,

APARTMENT for constr uction
men. Ph . 446 ·0756 .

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
" Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Ti I 8

7. Call 446·0008.

Plumb ing &amp; Heating
214 Third Ave., 446-3782

297-tf
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Ph one 446-2735

187.tf

1

(;ENE PLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning . 300 Fou rth ~ve.

Ph . 446·1637.

48·1f

CARTER' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourt h &amp; Pin e
Phone 446 -3888 or 446-4477

.

165·11

For Rent
' 12 x 60 MOBILE home locat ed in
Rio Grande. Call 245 -5267.
.
130·1f

HOUSE, 7 rooms and bath. on
St. Rt. 160, prefer adult s. 446 0861.

129-3

Own A

114. tr

SLEE PING

rooms .

Hotel.

Galli a

94·11

·T RAILER spaces on Butaville
Rd . Call 446·3879 or 367 -7438.
104·tf
~---::-:­

TOBACCO base, 2,450 lbs. 256·
6247 .

128 6

FURN ISHED

2

apartment 446·0952 .

bedroom
128·tl

-----~-

•

•

NEW&amp; USED FURNITURE
854 S ECON 0·446·9523

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

R EOUCED TO

fl ew 1973 Buicks

in stuck.

Now's the

• ·--·-·---- ----~--------- ---

71 MERCURY COUGAR

time to trade!

\

tz

4 Or . hardtop, vinyl root , 400 eng ine . P .
biakes , P. steering. l ac . air co nd ., 4
new w -s-w lires .

Station wagon, 4 sp. trans .. lac . air
cond ., 4 new w -s-w tires . A real cream

LeSabre Custom 4 Dr . Sed .• air
cond ., gree~ w -viny l lop, one
local owner. low mi leage, like

·-·-·--------------·-·--·-·--·----··

new .

70 MAVERICK

1ST 10 DAYS .IN JUNE!

SPECIAL

KAWASAKI

Torino Brougham 2 Dr. H. T. ;
AT. , P . S.. 302
g r een W· vinyl
top . Excellent cond.
·

70 TORINO 2 DR. HARDTOP

12 TO
v.a;

aut o. trans ., P . steering, lac : a ir
cond .• tinted gla ss, &lt;I new w -s-w l 1res .
Very sharp .

CHOOSE FROM

v.e.

REDU CED TO

cellent

condition,

call

.-:oR D.

ion truck. 4 sp .
trans ., VS, phone 256-6080.
J..,_.

- - -- 1 GAS heating stove, 1 Kenmore
gas· range . Ca ll 446· 1020 after
2 p.m .

130·3

CADILLAC$
IN STOCK

1966
1969

FULLY
EQUIPPED

KARR

&amp;VAN ZANDT

GMAC Financing A-vailable.

1!2

$

T. GMC PU
T. GMC PU

1969
1967
1967
1966
1969

GMC 112 ton PU
Ford 112 ton PU
112 ton Chev.
GMC 1!2 ton PU
1!2 T . . Ford PU

1969
1971
1970
1969
1969
1966

Dodge Station Wagon
3 T. Chev. Truck
112 T. Chev. PU
112 T . Chev. PU
112 T . GMC PU
lf:z T . GMC P U
'I• T. GMC PU
J;" T . Ford PU
112 T . GMC PU
lf:z T . GMC PU ·
1f2 T . GMC PU
'I• T. GMC PU
lh ton GMC PU

1969 Olds 88

1966

Cadillac . Old smobile
992 -S342

'I•

Pomeroy

1967
1968
1967
1967

1968

Open Eves. Tii6-Til 5 P . M. Sat .

1969

" You'll Lik~ Our 11uality Wa y of Doing Bu si ness"

DISCOUNT

THAfS RIGHT - All FORD LTDs IN STOCK
We have too many Torinos in stock and must sell to' alleviate
our storag e problems. These cars are all late arrivals- 90
Pet. have Fac. Air Cond. This special Discount Sale is for the
First 10 Days of June Only!

1972 DETROITER 60

x

12. lul l

267·11
SETT IN G EGGS lor 8 dillerent

&amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE CO.

CO RBl~

1970
1970
1970
1966
1968
1964
1963
1966
i969

12
12
12
10
12
10
10
10
12

x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x

60 American

60 Raycra ft

60 Challenger
50 Skyline
60 Baron
55 Princess
50 American
50 Monarch
x 60 Richardson

B&amp;SMOBILE HOME
Second &amp; Viand St.
Pt. Pleasant
( Nex t to Heck 's l

_ _ __ _ _ _ _·:..126·11

ONE nice ma le rabbit. Call 388-

8609.

Ph. 4·16·9255.

NEW HOLLAND hay baler ,

130· 2

gpod condi tion. 446 -n88.
•
129·3

GOOD fa mil y mi l k cow and
you ng laying hen s. Phone 388 ·

3 YEAR OLD RCA color TV,

8631.

---------------------71 FORD Y2 TON PICKUP

DISCOUNT

.

floor model $200. 446-2867.

130·3 _ 1_29_·5--:--:--:::--::--:-

308·1
- . -----,-----,-

1972 HON OA 500 l:C, 4 cy linder,
low mileage, lots of extra,
show room condition . 4460548 )
123-11

We have too many Tori nos in stock and must sell to alleviate
our storage problems. These cars are ~II late arriv.als - 90
Pet. have Fac. Air Cond. This special Discount Sale IS for the
First 10 Days of June Only!

---~---

· -- - -- - - AKC re gi stered St. Bernard NEW EUR E.KA upriQht model
.2012A. S59.95. Phone 367-7736.
1940 FARM tractor,
1965
puppies , ready to go June 5.
Davi s Vacuum Cleaner Store,
Mustang convertible , runs
Call Oak Hill 682 ·681 1.
good, good cond ition, 446·9430
51.
Rt . 7 at Addison . 0 .
"
129-3
after 5 p.m .

--------

- -·----:::-::--:~

~- ~

-

130·6 1968 TRUCK CAMPER, Contact GOO D CLEAN LUMP and
Fulks Marke t, Crown City. ' sloker' coaL Ca r l Wftlters , Ri o
12 FT. ALUM INU M boat and Ohip
Grande. Phone 245 -5115.
256-1177 .
trai ler, 446-1060.
129·3
6-ft
1303

Since-Smith
V11tsun,

;my

sha~p

we will be hii/IJIY to

DlltSI!IIS 11t our

sv(gs

417 Second Ave.

HOME In town , 446·2225 .

G.ALLI POLIS
CHRYSLER,PLYM.OUTH

.

tlf'illt·t·HI!ip.

~~~ER ................~2630
Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

-,....----~.:..._

Gallipolis

For SaiP.

131 -3

G~ll1poh;,

For Sale

11

1969 DELTA 88 Oldsmobile air
cond., ~ l ereo tape player , PS,
PB , ver y good condition. Ph .
256-6816 .

131 ·3

PALOMIN O mare, 3 yrs . ,
trained for trai l, genlle, $400,
446-0391 or 446 -1312 .

1965 CHEVELLE Malibu SS

0.

with 1967 327,325 hp . eng . New
Hurst Camp . plus shifte r 68
Mun cie -1 s"pecd 2:.56 to 1 low
gear . 446-2676.

For Sale

131·3

APACHE
camper,
stove. i'IPES, Pipeo:,, Pipes. GBO,
62 FORD Fairlane, Sid . Good
Chera~an, BBB, Jobey,' Hil~on , ' J) 1973 ZIG -ZAG Se wing
heater , d inette, sleeps 6, S600,
transportation $75 . 675 · 1119
and others . Tawney s P•pe
Machines left in layaway.
can be seen after 6 p.m . at l11
evenings.
and Tr ophy House, 422 Second
Beautiful pastel color, full
Kineon Dr. , Gallipolis .
13 1-3
Ave .
size modeL All built .in . to
131 -3
~~----------~199 -t- buttonho le", do stret ch se w_•nSf 1972 PLYMOUTH Fury: grand
and fancy sti tching . Pay tust
coupe, 2 door, vinyl top,. AM2 SORREL mares. 25 acres of
$48 .75
cash
or
terms
land with free ga.s, county AL L TYPI::.S ol 1 building
FM radio; Fac!Qry air, P .S
matef"ials. block , b_n ck, sewer
available . Trade -i ns ac P .B. Mu st sell 38"B·9991 or 367water, Fa rm all tractor,
pipes , windows, l1~te l s, eoc .
·cepted . Electro Hygi ene Co .
7481 . .
mow ing machine and plows.
Claude Winters . RIO Grande,
Phone 446·4312.
131 -7
disc, with new t ires, runs
128-6
0 Phone 245-5121 after 5.
goo~ . 367·7533.

446· 3273

-==~==:::==~129-3 .

Need Another Bldg. ?
ou r aluminum bldgs ,
Heavy duty, with floor ing,
wir.ed for electric. Also West
Virginia chunk coaL dr'ain
tile, bell tile, cemen t and
mortar . Gallipolis Block &amp;
Coa l Co., 1231!2 Pine, 446·2783.

r-

-see

207-tf
----~~

'

h

-

•

l'fl't'l til'l'

g

!•

131 -11

ONE YEAR OLD MOBILE

Auto lw .~ di.~ t·lmlitl.lll'd ·

ff
If

Delux e cab. )07 V B engine, auto . trans .,
radio , rear step bumpe r , ful l w.covers ,
western mirrors, in beautiful cond .
70,000 mileS .

For Sale

'

DATSON Phone 592 ·4463

ld

11
in

UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY

MARTIN FORD SALES, INC.

•CAPRI eDATSUN eSUBARU eMARK IV

IC

70 CHEVROLET lfz TON PICKUP

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

•MERCURY MONTEGO • COMET

18

1-· -- .•.•• ---- ,_,__ ----------- --·-·-1

baby dol l.

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • COUGAR

&gt;I

d

6 .c vl. eng in e, P. steering . A rea l

L&amp;M Phone 592.4491

·e
II
ly

Long Bed , 8 cy!., radio, ni ce.

For Sale

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

IS

0
995°

$

69 .FORD RANCHERO 500
·
RE OU CED TO

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.

lg

In

71 FORD 34 TON PICKUP

----------------·-··-·--·-·-•

.y

·---------------------------

446-2532

breeds of domestic duck, $3
kitchen, liv ing r oom , 1 bath , 2
USED
per dozen, T . Bre~ch , 446-43 14 100 HONDA, · excellen t con BR , 245-9326. Rio Grande.
40 IN. elec tric range, 2 fu ll size
after 5 p . m.
120-6
coil springs, 2 pc . liv ing room
dition, $350 . Phone 379 -2673
129·5
·
suite, re frigerator, 3 pc . end
after 4 p . m .
1 R IDING horse and 1 Shetland · tables, full size mattress, - - -- - - - , - : :- 129.3
pony , 446-4149 .
!aWn chair, r ecliner.
THREE registered Tennessee'
130-3
NEW
Walkers hor ses, 2 ge ldings, a
bus iness for sale,
- - ' -- - - - - - - BEDRQOM suites starting at
years old, midnight su n GROCERY
bu ilding for sale· or lease,
$119.00
breeding, 1 stallion, 7 years
ANTIQUE pool table $300. 446·
phone 773 ·5618 from 8:30 p.rn.
95S Second Ave .
old by Go Boy's Shadow, all
to 10 p.m. for appo(nlment.
0008.
446· 1171
sound and no scars, R. B . .
128-11
.
67·11
Open Friday Evening s
Anderson , Rt. 1, Circlevil le,
Ohio 474-5440. Trained by J im 'sI NGE~ Sewin"g Machine Sale~ ­
Tills p.m .
COACHMAN Travel Trailer.s, - -- - - - ' - - - - Single ton f or 11h years .
&amp; Service. All mode ls i1
Motor Homes. 5th Wheel. , 1970 JEEP, 8,000 mi les , ex 129-3
stock. Free del ivery . Serv ic€.
Truck Campers, ·App le City
ce llen t condi tion, like new,
gua1 "lnteed. Models price
Au l a Sales, Rt . 35 N, Jackson ,
AN EAR LY American H i-Fi
Ohio. Phone '28 6_5700.
snow plow, roll bar'. Phone
froiri $69.95. French Cli"
radio conso le, plus records.
446 -3371.
Fabri c Shoppe, Singer ap
118-lf
256
-1360.
130.3
pro·te
d dealer, sa Court ·st.
129·3

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDiTIONED
MOBILE HOMES

v a, Auto . tr-an s. Prelly Ni ce Ca r .

THAfS RIGHT- ALL GRAN TORINOS IN STOCK

SOMMERS G.M.C.
TRUCKS, lNC.

For Sale

-~ 6

Bonne vi lie 4 Or . H. T., air cond .,
a ll power, blue w· v in y l top.
lu xury ca r , new Prem ium tires.
Sa le Priced.

II

133 Pine St.

For Sale

y,

Equipped wit h auto matic tran s mi ssion, po,wer steering, power disc
bra kes. while· wa ll tires. ai 'r conditioner, custom seat belts, tinted
g lass, bumper protective strips, bumper guards, door . guards,
remo te mirror, car pet sa ve r s, deluxe wheel covers, protective body
sid e moiding s. Other Mode ls Priced Accordingly .

360 v ,a eng ine, 4 speed, rear step
bumper , Western mirrors. 750x16
rubber radio . Exce llent cond.

$

ot
11
"s

1973 Buick LeSabre 4 dr. Sedans

65 FORD GALAXIE 500

FOR THE FIRST TEN DAYS IN JUNE
MARTIN FORD WILL DISCOUNT ANY
1973 GRAN TORINO IN STOCK •• •

Truck Headquarters
Ford :% ton camper specia l
1h T. Chev . P U
J;" T. GMC P U

lg
le
ld

S·

1-·- ··- --------------------GRAN TORINO

:h

•2495

2 Dr . Hardtop, ·v .e. au to .. power
stee r ing .
·
·

FOR THE FIRST TEN DAYS IN JUNE
MARTIN FORD WILL DISCOUNT ANf
1973 FORD LTD IN STQCK •••

ld

•2995
1970 PONTIAC

66 FORD FAIRLANE

130-J

1969
1966
1967

1-Coupe DeVille
2-Sedan DeVilles

FORD
L.T.D.

·e

Le Sabre Custom 4 Dr. Sed., air
cond., burnt cor a l w·vinyl lop ,
Radial tires, new LeSa br e
trade .

446 --~---

:e

•2395
1971 BUICK

'2495
1970 FORD

1-·-'-·-·--·-·----------·-··-·-·--·-·--··

ld
lg
ly

Ton, v .8, s tand. tran s., one
local owner. gold. Sharp .

1970 BUICK

70 TOYOTA CORONA

'ir.·

11,

''3495

·-·-·-------:-.-----------·--·--··

PH.
. 446-9800
.

b
le

1971 CHEV. PICKUP

LeSa bre Cus t om 4 Dr. H. T., air
cond " blue w ·black vinyl top .
ll's a bea uty .

71 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

putt .

12 TO

II

351 v .a engine, auto . trans , P . steering.
P . brakes , vinyl roof. e:.ccellen~ cond .

.•

130-3

0563.

AKC REG. toy poodle pup $75,

RICE'S

We h11ve 40

1970 CHEVELLE SS 396, e• ·

I F YOU are building a r\ew
home or remode\in~, s~e us:
We are bui lders . D•s!nbutor
f or Hotpoinl Appl1~nces.
Allison Electric.
154-tt

On All New Lamps

4 Dr . sedan,a ut o. trans .. P . steering , P .
brakes , fa c. air cond ., vinyl roof. P .
seats , P . windows , one ownPr . E)(
ce llent r ubber ,. beaut ifu l cond

----~--

For Sale

LAMP SALE
20% OFF

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

50 STATE ST.

__________________
131 - 10 ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Don Watts Volkswagen Inc.

350, CC
motorcycle. Phone 379-2469.

P h. 245-9374- 245 -5021

126·6

fully equipped, low mileage,
cal l weekdays after 4. 675·
1514.

2 Dr . 6 cyl ., auto .. rad io. Shar p,

New (;MC

7492.

1971 CHEVELLE Super Sporl,

1972 BUICK

446-1407.

3 NEW 1973.

1970. SUSUK I. 250 Savage, 367·

-------,-

Dwight N. Stevers
Sales Man ager
Don Watt s V .W., Inc.

- -- - - - - -

Rodney . Cora Rd .
Rodney , Ohio
H our ·~ 9 a . .n . to 9 p.m.
Mondily lhru Sa turday

241·11

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE:

DUNE
BUGGY, excellent
condition, Must see to appreciate . Ph . 388.8327 .
13 1-3

If you are in the market for a good Use d Car be sure you stop in. Look &amp; Drive any of
these Used Cars you like. You will see that we not .onl y have the sharpest used cars in the
va lley , weetso have them "in top m ec hanical condition . Ready tor yo u t o enjoy, many happv ,
ca refree months of driving. On the 1968 models up, I will give you a 30 day - 1,000 mile
warranty, 100 pet , NOT 50 pet -SO pct. like most dealers. This means that for 30 days or 1,000
miles anything that happens to your car we will fix it at no expense to you.

ANTIQUE brass bed', $150. Call
1973

SEE THEM NOW AT . • •

'

131·3

71 MERCURY MARQUIS

~-,-=---~­

Of Course You Can!

276-lf

condition . Ph . 367 ·7462 ,

•'

130·3

1951

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture

1971 HONDA trail 70, Good

Wa te rl oo, 643 -2437.

QUAIL CREEK
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp;SALES

APAR TMENT and new mobi le
horne. Central air and heat. NEW : Ser ta and Bemco mdl tress and box spri ng s. La rge
Ex ce ll ent · location. 446-0338.
se lection in stock- twin , fu ll.
116-tf
. queen size. Save up to $40 a
SLEE PIN G. r"ooms, weeklY' " set .
955 Second Avenue
rates, free garage parking,
446·1111
Libby Hotel.

2 TRAILER Spaces. 446 -3805 .

1965 V. W. Bug , 4 speed. Body rough but runs fine . ,, .................... SJ95
1965 V. W. Bus, 4speed . Excellent me chanical cond . .............. ; .... $795
1961 V. W. Bug , 4 speed, body rough but runs out good .. ..... - ........... $395

CHOOSE FROM

130·3

129·3

130·6

.•

130·6

UN F URNISHED apartment, 3
bedroom s, 103 Court Street,
$135 per month, 446 -2572.

2 BEDROOM tra iler, adults
on ly , ' Chesh ire 367 -75 12.

1966 Ply ._Sport Fury, auto., P. s., P. B........... ... .................... $395

:·,.'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SPECIAL·.

----MANURE spreader and loader.

131 11

NICE downtown apartment. 3
128·26
rooms, carpeted, refrigerator
and stove furnished , $130
in cl udes utilities. Phone 446- 1957 CHEVY 2 dr . Stat ion
2840.
.
wagon. Min t condition . 270
130·3
H.P. Balanced, positrac lion
5:38, 4 speed. Many extras
7 ROOM modern house, central
$850 . 446-4999.
air. 1 year lease. Call after 5
78·11
p.m. 446-0004.

131·3

~------

1966 Olds Cutlass 4 dr ., H. T., auto., P. S., P. B. Runs out good ... ........ $795

:·•'
~

CHI NCHIL LA tor pel s, $10

130·3

$85, Siamese l; it1ens, $10 ea.
Kenne ls of Calhoun. 256-6247 .

126·6

-::--:c-~--­

---:-~-~--

L()O king lor a mobile hom e
lo l or .1 quallf·Y mobile hom e?
1 W.e h&lt;~v e bolh at

Gallipolis, 446·4782

.,

·'

1ST 10 DAYS .IN JUNE!

130·3

130·3

. 187·1f

RUSSELL' S
PLUMBING &amp; HE/ITlN(;

197 1 f-.!t:MBRA NT 3 bedroom.
tra-il er , 12 x 60. Call388 -8825 or
742-4454".

65 VW, good shape, ~.000 actual
m iles on engine, 367 -7623.

-------=2 BR mobile hom e. Upper Route

. STA NDARD

AKC reg . female Doverman
Pinscher, 446 -3640.

UPPER RIVER ROAD

each . 446-2655 .

Pomeroy

131 -6

1.967 V. W. Sq . Back Sta. Wgn ., red, 4 speed , engine was rebt~ill ....... $888

For Sale

A RE ·you looking for a
Lifetime Career Opportunity 5 ROOM f urnished house, adults
with" a nationa l ly k nown
on ly , 10 Edgemont Dr
446company. If so Ork in Ex 0469 .
term inat ing Co. · In c. offers :
131 ·3
A. $5,000 per year , Plus e~&lt; ­
tras; B . Comp l ete Pa i d TREAT rugs right, they'll b!=' a
Tra in\ ng Program ; . C. ~~~
delight if clea ned with Blue
Ma jor Fringe Benefits w1th
Lu st r e.
Ren t . elec tr ic
Free Retirement ; D. Ex sh ampooer $1 at Cent~a l
~~l!ent Opporfun ities For
Supp-ly Co.
~vancement ; E . No Ex 131 -6
peri ence Necessary . For
more information call Da~ BE GENTLE, be kind, to thai
Coal!, 614-354 -3-281 befwe9
expensive carpet, clean with
lO:JOa. m .-12:30 p.m. Monday
Blue Lustre . Rent electric
thru Friday.
sha mpooer $1 at G. C
Mur .
130·5
phy's Lower Store .
13 1-6

131 -3

~&lt; 68 MOBILE home, 3
bedroom, on acre lot in
Rodney , 446-4799.

1967 Mustang , 6 cyl·.~ auto .••••••••••••••• ~ ................................ $595

·'·:

Some of the "standard extras" on the
Dodge Colt that represent " optional
eqOipmenl"
on
some
other
· domestically available su bcompacts
include adjustable steering column,
front wheel disc brakes, flow-through
ventilation. and full synchromesh four·
speed transmission .
A radio antenna that Is part of the
deck lid ; flow through ,ventilation and
fully·reclinlng front seats :that are
standard (except In coupe) are
exam ples of the innovation and extra
value of the Dodge Colt.

72 14

1969 V. W. SQ. Back Sta . Wgn ., red, 4· speed, radio, good condition . ••• $1495
1969 T. Bird , white with black top, loaded with extras . ................ $2195
1969 V. W. .sq. Back Sta. Wgn., beige, automatic, radio, ... ... . ... $1595
1968 Chev. II 4 dr. Sed., blue, while top. 6 cyl., 3 speed . ............ ; ... $1088
1968 Chev. 1 Ton. stake bed with cattle rack , v .8, 4 speed. good cond . S1695
1968 Pont. Catalina, 2 dr. H. T. , V·8, auto., P. S. , P. B., very sharp.car. s1288
1967 Caprice 2 dr . H. T., vinyltop, V·8, auto., P. S., air cona ........... 11 09 5

Remember We Service What We Sell.

267·11

Plumbing &amp; Heating

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy , Oh10

5873.

1969 Ford LTD4dr . sed.,green,V.8,auto., P.S.,air .................. $1688
1969 Chev . Greenbriar Sta . Wgn .• V· 8, auto., P. S., air, 9 passenger ... $1588
1969 Camaro Conv., orange w-white top , V-B, automatic. (Sharp) .... . $1995 ,
19~9 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr., white. black top , auto ., P. S., P. B. , air .... $1588

Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
Noon on Saturday

992-2174

131 -H

1969 Chev . Caprice 2 dr. H. T., silver·black. auto., V.8, P. S., P. B., air. 51995

.;•'

DODGE COLT!

1966 MUSTANG conv . auto.,
trans ., 289 V8, good cond .
excellent top . $550. Phone. 245-

1969Montego2dr. H. T. , v .8,auto., P .S., (0nly27,000 miles )." '"" S1695

••

MONEY ••••

Gl RL 'S 26" Huffy bike, brand
new, $35 . Call 446-1491.
131 ·2

1970 Pontiac Lemans 2 dr . H.T., auto., v .8, P. s ................... 52188
1970 Chevelle 2 dr . H. T., red w· black top, v .a, auto ., P. s., ............ 52295
1970 Maverick 2 dr. sed., ye llow w. b.lack top , 6 cyl., auto., radio ...... $1695
1970 V. W. Bug , 4 sp., beige color, ra dio. Runs &amp; looks new . . .......... $1595
1969 Olds 442, 2 dr . H. T., silver, 4 speed. Excellent condition .......... $1895
1969 Mustang Fastback, V·8, 4 speed , green .......................... $1395

•

MORE FOR THE

USED bedroom suites.
starting af S59 .95 and up.
Several used li ving room
suites, dinette sets, and other
i tems . New furniture special
in living room suites . $88 and

up.

1971 Gal. 500,2 dr. H. T., v . a, auto ., P. s.: vinyl top, air cond ...... s269S

Open Evenings
7il 7 p.m. &amp;

We- Service
.
What We Sell

Hardtop Coupe, V -8, automatic , power steering &amp; brakes .
Like new whi te wa ll tires, radio, blue ·f in ish wi th matching
vinyl interior .

LOTS in Rio Grande, owner
w il l finance. 245-532.0.

Wildca l. air , like new.

7

1972 Pontiac Ventura,
4 dr
..
. ..,.. Sed., 6 cyl., auto. , 13,000 ................. 52488
1971 R!'nchero500 Pi ckup. v . a.auto .• P.S., topper . Excellent cond. $2695
1911 F1at 850 2 dr. sed., 4 sp., runs out perfecf . 1,~ 40 mile per gallon sn
88
1971 Chev., Nova ,6 cy!., auto. , radio. Sharp car ... .......... ; ........ 52195

CEWARD CALVERT, SALESMAN

4-door , factory air , V -8 engine, a~tomatic transmiss ion,
power . steering &amp; brakes.. gooO white-wall -tires. whit e
finish, vinyl top, radio, clean ins ide.

For Rent

H. T ., low mileage, a i r .

We are still making some great deals on new Buicks,
Pontiacs. So before you buy any car new or used
check with us.

4.door. loca l ] .owner car with Jess than 32 ,000 miles.
climate control air tonditionif!g, 40-60 power seat , radio,
gold fini sh. Loaded with many ext ras .

Open All Day Thursdays . Closed on Sunday.

.

Elec . 225, 4 dr. H.T.. air, vi nyl top.

F ireb ird Esprit , local 1-owne r car . 350 V 8 engine, pOwer
steering &amp; automatic transmiss ion, AM -FM radi o, like
new white lettered tires , 307 V -8, power steer 1ng &amp; brakes .
radio, clean interio r .

· 586 Locust St .
992·7004
Middleport
Open 8to 6 Mon , thru Sat.

Satelli te. 2 dr H.T, low mileage

Cat.. 2 dr . H .T ., ai r , vinyl top .

1970 PONTIAC·------~2295

UP TO 12 YEAR FINANC ING
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

For Sale or Trade

G r an Ville, 2 Dr- . H.T.

Pars~

USED CARS

$1995.
$3695
$2999
$2395
$1895
$2295 :
$1595
$1595
$1095
$995
$695

Wagon . auto ., one owne r .

Ca talina , 4 dr H. T., Brougham .

L,arge 19 1 2' living room . all
deluxe furnishings, house type
doors &amp; windows. double in
sv lat ion and Iota~ electr ic.
Best buy in town . Check the
1
plan.

SPECIAL PRICE

PH. 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

REGATTA SPECIALS

.,

3 Bedroom Home

VOLKSWAGEN

'

.

12J.tl

NEW and used in strum~n ts,
Brunicard i House of Mus1c. 54
State Street. Phone 446·0687.
·
33-tf
1973 8 TRACK . A small balance
of· 588 .64_ or pay $6.50 per
month . Phone 446·0255 .

(21 ELECTROLUX · Vacuum
Cleaner s complete wit h a·t tachments , cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in l _ike
new condition. Pay $34 . 4~
cash or budge t plan ava il abl ~ .
Electro Hygiene Co . Phone
446 -4312 .

128 6

12 x 60 VINDALE
I·

MOBILE HOME
Tp Vi ew
Phon e 446·023 1

&gt;r

69 CHEV. IMPALA

IS
1.

le

2 Dr . hardtop, 350 cu . in. v.s engine, P .
st eering, auto., W·S-w .tire~, b.lue
metallic finish with matchmg mtenor .
Excellent cond.

·k
ir
'S

.

$1595
WOOD MOTOR SALES .
Gallipolis, Ohio

Ea stern Ave.

For Sale
PORTER
Antiques
Junkaliques, bott l es , dep .
gl ass Open Sa turday only .

129·3

USED GE electric· stove, $45,
used Hot Point refrigerator,
$125 . 8oth In ex.cellent con dition. 446-41 89 .
129-6

g
I·

.s
I·

I·

,
II
II

e
e

For Sale
129·3

r
,f
I.

REGISTERED Arabian colt,
and Appaloosa mare. Phone

d
I·

446.1809.
129-3

I!

AKC registered Pomeran ian.
ti ne pet for kids, 379-2673 after
4

p. m .

�•

~ T~ SWlday Times -:&gt;entinel,SWlaay. June 3. JJI7.&gt;.'- --::=

--

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mitchell for plots

Father's Day will soon be here. Come to the Furniture
Department on ·the 3rd floor and pick out a nice Berkline
or Kroehler Recliner to be delivered for that special day.

WASHINGTON ( UP! ) President Nixon's two fonner
top aides have testified they
learned in March that John N.
Mitchell and other key officials
met secretly in the months
before the Watergate bugging
to discuss campaign intelligence gathering and possibly
Watergate itself, authoritative
sources said Saturday.
The aides, H. R. Haldeman
and John D. Ehrlichman,
derued they themselves knew
in advance about the
Watergate break-in, but
refused to answer any
questions about an alleged
coverup attempt aiter the JWle
17 incident, according to the
sources, who are in a position
to know.
Mitchell has acknowledged
he told the federal grand jury
in April that, wi)lle attorney
general, he attended about
three meetings in early 1972 at
which bugging was discussed.
He · said he rejected all
eavesdropping proposals.
'Ibe sources said Haldeman
and Ehrlichman testified they
did not learn of the meetings
Wltil late March, when Nixon
ordered a new White Hoose
investigation into the affair.
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
were said to have testified that
their information about the
meetings came in conversations this year with three
of the persons they contended
were involved-Mitchell; Jeb
Stuart Magruder, former
White House aide and deputy
manager of the Nixon re·
election campaign, and ousted
White House counsel John W.
Dean III.

•.

~-----=---·
'

.tt

t

\\'allawqy_

.

BER!p&lt;.LINE.

~~

'

DElMAR BAUM, right, sta rted the beautification
project at the Chester United Methodist Church by offering to
donate paint. With Baum are, Melanie Dean, left, and Pat
Wolf on the ladder.

.

NEW DRAPERIES BECAME a part of an improvement project at the Chester United
Methodist Church. Here Mrs. Betty Dean sews while Mrs. Jemy Machir and Jane Ann Karr fit
a pair of the finished drapes at a window.

Idea got wings, grew
•.

to big church project
Someone got the idea that
BY BOB HOEFLICH
CHESTER - When Delmar new drapes would be nice so,
Bawn, Chester building con- · through .donations_, brocade
tractor, offered to donate paint material was purchased and
to redecorate the Chester the drapes were made. New
United Methodist Church banners were made, a new
before the wedding today of his altar cloth and back curtain at
daughter, Nancy, he started a the altar and a new organ was
project which snowballed into purchased even though the
a ge neral beautification money to pay for it just isn 't
available at the moment.
program.
Someone else decided that
The painting project became
shrubbery
should be trimmed
a community project that got
Wlderway on Memorial Day and flowers planted so part of
when most everyone was . the group of workers got busy
having a holiday. Many pitched on that phase of the
in to paint. the exterior of the beautification.
It's been said that many
attractive church and others
redecoratect the kitchen, a hands make light work.
Sunday school room and the Whether that be true or not, at
rear portion of the sanctuary . least the many hands taking

NO REASON

OFFER REFUSED

part in the project - most of
them under 25 years of age made it possible to complete
the beautification before
today 's wedding. .
Of course, people of the
community who saw the work
progressing were thoughtful of
the workers. Refreshments
just sort of materialized .as
work continued each evening
during the past week.
Workers included Mr. and
Mrs. Delmar Bauin, Bill and
Twila Buckley, Dale and
Jenny Machir; Dorothy,
Tom
and
Jane
Ann
Karr; Earl, Betty, Melanie and Denise Dean;
Patrick, Nancy and Tommy
Morrissey; Pat, Susan and
fie len Wolf; Roger Karr, Linda
King, Debbie Windon , George
alid Mary Genheimer; Sina
Mae Murphy and Sheila Toney.
Dona ling to the project were
Gaul's Shake Haven, Gaul's
l'ol ark e t, L o d w i c.k 's
Restaurant,
Ridenour's
Supply, Baum Lumber Co. and
the Karr Construction Co.
· YoWlg people of the church
are taking quite an· active role
in the church improvements.
Two of the young people, Pat
Wolf and Twila Karr Buckley,
r ecen tly took over ~the
janitorial duties of the church
when the .custodian resigned .
So far , they 've put all of their
wages back into the church and
they have big plans for the
.future.
The teenage class of the
church, the sCene of numerous
weddings over . the summer
months each year, will stage a
c hicken barbecue and ice
cream social near July 4 at
Royal Oak Park and plan a
horse show on the Bar 30
Horse man grounds near
Tuppers Plains in the near
future . All proceeds will go to
the church. Meantime, anyone

DALE MACHffi, left, plants flowers at the Chester
United Methodist Church while Bill Buckley trims a tree to
complete a week-long Peautification project.

"'"'"'

BUICKS
1968 Buick LeSabre 2 dr . hardtop. ·sharp.
1968 Buick 4 dr . sedan , f iJI I power. ·
1964 Buick Skylark 2 Seat sta t ion wagon .

FORDS
1970
real
1969
car,

Ford Galaxie '500' V -8, 2 Dr. Hardtop , maroon ,
clean· car .
Ford XL 2 Dr . Hardtop, A-C , full power , sharp
yellow with black vinyl top.

OTHERS
1968 Dodge Coronet 440 Sta1ion Wagon , runs good
and looks solid, clean car .
2- 1966 OJds Custom Vista cru is er wagon , 2 seats.
1965 Plyniouth 2 dr . ha rdtop. Runs good.

DALLAS ( UP!) - A former
•
POW,whospentfjveyearsina
Communist prison, says he is
. willing to testify against other
American prisoners charged
with collaborating with the
North Vietnamese.
Michael D. Benge, a 37-year-

Under Nt•w Managt•ment
Corner Third &amp; Court Sf. Phone 446-1513
Gallipolis. Ohio

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Sale Prices

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All Otairs at

for this

L---.,-.--~~~~ ·Day Special.-~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

old employe of lhe U.S. Agency . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
for Intcrnatiqnal Development,
said Friday a small group of
POWs worked with their
captors causing the eventual .
torture, solitary confinement
and discomfort of other
prisoners.
"I have knowledge on about
four of them," Benge said. "I

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NEW-YORK (UPI)- James
W. McCord Jr., one of the men
caught
bugging
and
·burglarizing Democratic
National Headquarters in the
Watergate complex, said
Friday he is writing a book
called "Watergate Sanction"
and h&lt;is made tentative
arrangements with a New
York firm to publish it.
McCord declined to reveal
any details of the upcoming
'
manuscript.
Reached by telephone at his
office in Baltimore, McCord
told UP! he had been
discussing details of the
publication with Edward
Uhlan, president of Exposition
Press Inc .• . a New York
publishing company, and
would "most likely'' go ahead
with the book.

I

Like a
good
State Farm
is there.-..........,...----,

MONROESTATION ,Fla. (UP!)- A fire that has spread

@ . VOL. 8 NO. 17

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:~~·' across 11,000 acres iil the last three days raged unchecked ~~~;

Nixon sunning with Abplanalp

through the Big Cypress Swamp Saturday and rangers said :;:; · GRAND CAY, Bahamas
The White Houlie disclosed
i:;:: the only hope of stopping it soon was heavy rain or a wind- :;~ (UP!) - President Nixon and fi'riday, after months of ques:::: shl.ft'
:;:: his family Saturday new to the tions by reporters, that Ab~
is land estate of his frietld and planalp was the source of a
~ More than 75men battled the fire,_70miles w~st of Miami,
benefactor, Robert H. Ab- $625,000personalloan to Presi:~· with shovels and axes, but bulldozers and other heavy · ....
«
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:~: equipment they needed were useless in the heavy under- :;::: planalp, for some fishing and
dent and Mrs. Nixon with
:;:; growth and mushy terrain.
:;:; relaxing in the sun.
which they were able to pur~
..
Accompanied
by
Nixon's
:;:;
A B26 was brought in to bombard the fire with chemicals. :::;
chase La Casa Pacifica, their
close friend , C. G. ( Bebe) $1.4 million San Clemente,
!;!;
"That's
a
no.man's-land
out
there
really
mean
coun·
:
;:;
%
::::
try," said forester Mike Keel. "Trying to get through that M:::: Rebozo, the First Family Calif., estate. The loan was at 8
%
::::
Hatrack cypress and coral swamp is something else.
:~~
;:;: departod early in the afternoon per cent interest.
~
:;::
" About our only hope right now is for rain or a wind :·:·: for the 75 minute helicopter
Ablanalp also form ed a
ride
to
this
private,
200-acre
~
corporation
which purchased
:::; ~hange," Keel said. " If the wind would come out of the ~:~;
island
rimmed
by
·
pabn-lined
:·:· north Instead of the west like it is now, that would stop it. ,,~
..~t.=[ But as long as it's coming out of the west, that fire 's going to ~--~~ beaches.
Abplanalp, the multimilkeep on going."
l~~ Keel said the Memorial Day holiday weekend meant ~1: lionaire owner of Precision
.:~;. ntore trouble for firefighters .
.~::
.... Valve Corp., also was spending
::::
" We know we're going to have all sorts of tourists and ;~; the weekend on the island.
BANGKOK, Thailand ( UP! )
Before departing the Florida
:::: dune buggy people out here this weekend," Keel said. :;§
- Henry A. Kissinger's top
~~ "There are going to be more fires set; too. We might as well ~~ White House, Nixon conferred assistant in negotiations with
:::- face it and it'S goin g to add to our problems."
~~ with Gen . Alexander M. Haig
the North Vietnamese said
:·~ Foresters said that because of the dry winter this year, :~ Jr ., his acting chief of staff. He Saturday
last week's talks
hunters are deliberately burning off the Everglades to :f.j also talked to Henry A. between Kissinger and Le Due
speed the growth of s ummer vegetation.
:·:&lt; Kissinger , his national security Tho were a disappointment, but
~ ''A lot of these are set deliberately - we know that, '' Keel ~~~: affairs adviser , who is in said he hoped a cease-fire
Washington; and to other
~ said. "Some of them may be accidents, but there are a 'lot of '·
would come to Cambodia
staffers who accompanied him
''soon .''
to Florida, including Press
Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
' ' l9Q"h~,.._.-....-.QXIO:It...,Q:&gt;.•;Q;•:0-..:..:-~-~~..:.:;.:-:-:-~-~·:·=·y ...•,.......•'.'• •••••-. ·-·.-••••.o;.•,o,o,o;.........o;..
State William H. Sullivan
accused North Vietnam . of
wanting to rule all of Indochina, an ambition Sullivan
I
I
, '
said was tha major obstacle to
peaee in the region .
Sullivan met Saturday with
!~.
Cambodian government leaders
before flying to Vientiane, Laos
II
and to Bangkok for discussions
· with Deputy Foreign Minister
Chartchai Chunhawan. Earlier
he conferred with South Vietnamese leaders on the Kissinger and Tho talks, which are
scheduled to reswne in about
two weeks.
Sullivan was asked about the
talks in Paris between Kissinger and Tho .
" It was not as satisfa ctory as
we hoped ," he said. "That's
why we have to renegotiate
again. We expected the fighting
w\11 stop. We expected North
Vietnam to go out of Cambodia
and Laos. We are going back to
make them do what they have

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Our message to everyone who want to buy
a boat. .See us for low-cost fimmcing.

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"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"·

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central

NO BUGS?
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Second Ave .
Gallipolis , Ohio
Smithsonian
was scheduled to
Phone 446 -4290
open an insect zoo Friday, but
Home 446 -4518
, - - - - . . - - - - - - - ' the event suddenly was postu ... H ,,...,..,
State Farm
poned. Because of recent
Ji:l..
Insurance Companies heavy rains, a spokesman said,
G'IQll
Home Ollites:
the museum was unable to
.
f'lnoming!DII , Illinois collect enough bugs .
Ho1el Bldg.

.

IN~UUI\I(I

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~~110

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YEARS OF SERVICE;'

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20.1 acres of the 26-acreestate
back from the Nixon'l for
$1,249,000 and agreed to limit
U.'ieS of the property to protect
the security and privacy of the
President.
The net effect of the tmn·
saction wa s tlwt the President
acquired 5.9 ocean-front acres
with a Spanish,style villa for a
total of $374,000, according to
the White House.

Talks went poorly

Snowden
PrtrK

PAGE 13
SUNDAY. MAY 27._1
:__.9___7___3____ ___ _ .....,..-- ---,---

UJV/lrR.
,:
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rangers ·hoping
~~ for rain, or shift of wind

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Caroll K.

BULLFIGIIT IN POMEROY? - Well,, maybe! Come the
Frog Jwnps on Saturday, June 16 at Meigs Football Field in
Pomeroy, Meigs County will be honored by the presence of
" Elchico," reputedly a profess ional bull fighter from
Valencia,' Spain, who wUJ give an exhbition at the Frog Ball
thnt night. Elchico is said to be well known for his performances in Madrid, BarcCiona and s outhern France, but he
always wanted to appear in North America. Even the largest
bull fighting arena in Mexico which hold' a capacity of 47,000
persQns didn 't satisfy him. He will bring his own picadors.
Elchico wanL"i to fight in the U. S. because h~ wants to
visit River J&lt;"'ront Stadium in Cincinnati and see the Heds
play . Shown with the ferociou' bull tlwt F.lchico will encounter &lt;m~ . front row , 1-r, David Burt, Dale Warner, past
grand croaker, and Eddie Holter; back row, Jim Clatworthy,
grand croaker of the Ohio Society of the Promotion of.the Bull
}l'"'rog; Rodney Downing, grcmd croi:lkcr in charge of vice and
Boy Holter , past grand croaker. Following the bull fight a
beef bnrhecue will b~&gt; held.

itntintl

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wishing to donate to help with
the organ purchase may do ,;o
by contacting Harry Holter,
Kathryn Baum, Jennifer
Machir or Dorothy Karr.

.

* .

Use Our Sensible Credit • Free Prompt Delivery

do not have definite proof on all
of them, but I do know that a
certain number of them did
willingly collaborate and that
led to tortures, solitary conlinemen! and discomlort of
other prisondrs."

to write book

For help with allyour
family insurance needs,
see:

about national security matters.
The President added, however, that executive privilege
would not be invoked in any
testimony about possible
criminal conduct in the
Watergate affair and an
alleged coverup.
CBS · News reported that
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
had put "much of the blame"
for Watergate on Mitchell and
Dean. The ·network also said
Frederick LaRue, former special assistant to Mitchell, and
Gordon Strachan, who recently
resigned as genera} counsel of
the U.S. Information Agency
and was a former special aide
to Haldeman, attended the
meetings at which intelligence
gathering was discussed.
Hearings in Rtcess
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
have been summoned by the
select Senate Watergate committee to testify probably in
June. The hearings 3re in
recess until June 5.
During the first five days of
hearings, there was no direct
testimony to implicate either
Nixon, Mitchell, H;aldeman,
Ehrlichman or Magruder .
One witness, former White
House aide John J . Caulfield,
testified that Dean asked him
lo relay an offer o£ executive
clemency to McCord during the
Watergate trial in January.
Caulfield testified that Dean ·
said only that the offer came
"from the highest levels in the
White House," which Caulfield
said he asswned meant Ehrlichman.

~~

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•

COME SEE US AT . ..

BOB REES
PONTIAC, INC.

l

Ex-POW confirms collaborations

car. Fu ll power A-C.

&gt;

lawyers, said the two former
presidential 'aides answered
only some of the questions put
to them .
At first, the ·attorneys said,
Ehrllchman and Haldeman
invoked executive privllege.
But after Nixon last Tuesctay
broadened the guidelines governing such testimony, they
answered questions they had
refused to answer .initially .
Dunie said the two continued
to refuse to answer ouestions
about events after the June 17
break-in--&lt;;uch as what they
knew about an alleged coverup
-on the ground that the
Democrats' suit related only to
the Watergate operation itself.
1972 Presidential Campaign
Dunie sa id the two also
refused on similar groWldS to
answer questions about an
alleged general pattern of
espionage during the 1972
presidential campaign. The
attorney said the Democrats
would go to court to seek to
compel Ehrlichman and
Haldeman to answer all
questions put to them.
Strickler told reporters Friday that " f.rom where l stand, l
hope and expect that they
(Haldeman and Ehrlichman)
will not be indicted by the
grand jury ."
Nixon acknowledged in his
4,000-word statement Tuesday
that he had instructed Haldeman and Ehrlichman not to let
the Watergate investigation
expose either covert operations
of the CIA or a White House
&gt;~ plumbers"
operation
designed to plug news leaks

~l Big Cypress Swamp burning ~l

If you have a space problem, the new Wallaway
eliminates that problem. It only needs to be 3 inches from
the wall for full reel ining. Come and try it out.

19 71 C~talina, 4 dr. hardtop, air condition , sharp.
1971 Pontiac GTO 2 dr . hardtop, beautiful wh ite with
black viny l top .
..
1969 POntiac GTO 2 Or . Hardtop, J.speed floor shift,
beau t iful jet bla ck finish .
1967 Pontiac Bonneville 4 dr . hardtop , one loca l
·owner . Sharp. Has a ir conditioning.
1966 Pontiac Bonneville 2 dr . hardtop. Real sharp
1966 Pontiac Bonneville 4 dr . hardtop. Another .
sharp car .
1966 Pontiac Executive 4 Dr . Sedan, real sharp b lu e
car.
1966 Pontiac Starchief, air, full power . Real soli d
car.
1965 Pontiac Bonneville Col;lvertible, black .

Nixon's Campaign Manager
Mitchell resigned as attorney
general March 1, 1972, to
become Nixon's campaign
manager, and quit that post
last July I, two weeks after the
Watergate break-in . Magruder
and Dean lost their administration jobs last month as
a result of Watergate.
Haldeman and Ehrlichman
made their stateme nts during
31 '2 days ofpre.trial depositions
taken this week in the
Democrats' $6.4 million civil
damage suit against the Committee for the Re-election of
the President.
Haldeman testified he was
told that one of the meetings
was held by Mitchell in
December, 1971 , the sources
said.
Ehrlichman said he was told
of a similar meeting held by
Mitchell last year in Key
Biscayne, Fla ., where Nixon
has a vacation retreat, at
which final approval was given
to an intelligence gathering
operation.
Ehrlichman also was said to
have testified t.h;:;( Nixon asked
him late last March to conduct
inquiries into the Watergate
affair. Nixon has said "ttJajor
developments" came to his
attent~on about that time, ·
presumably after convicted
conspirator James W. McCord
Jr . wrote the Watergate trial
judge there had been perjury
during the January trial and
political pressure on the original defendants to keep quiet.
Frank Strickler, an attorney
for
Ehrlichman
and
Haldeman, and Maurice R.
Dm1ie, one of the Democrats'

~~::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;-:;::::::~:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::~::

IPONTIACS ]

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ON STRIKE - Eleven employes of Richards &amp; sons Inc., Sand &amp; Gravel Co., Utart Fa lis, ·
members of llitemational Union of Operating Engineers, Local 18, went on strike Tue~day
morning. The men Who began negotiating five weeks ago, are represented by Homer Hysell,
District Representative of l.U.O.E., who has claimed the company failed to bargain "in good
faith." Hysell said the l.U.O.£. is willing to negotiate any time or any place with company
officials. After five weeks of negotiating the men still have no contra ct. The men said they are
seeking a fair wage, a fai_r contract' and bette~ working conditions . Some of the men have been
with the company 15 to 20 years, work night and day, and still have to rely on foot stamps to
exist, Hysell said. Friday at the picket line above are, front row, 1-r, Orval Jarrell, Huck
Wagner and Charles Findley; back row, Homer Hysell, Danny Shain, Walter Laudermilt and
Vernon Donahue.
·

EXPRESSES COMPLAINT
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Presidential adviser Henry A.
KiSsinger expressed a com·
plaint about the Wh.ite House
gala for the POWs. "Luay,
Dear,'' he said Friday to White
HoUse social secr~tary Lucy
Winchester 1 "don't ever seat
me next to an engaged girl
again ... at least not when her
fiance is here ."

agreed to do when they signed
the agreement. "
.
He did not ·say how the
United States would "make"
North Vietnam adhere to the
Jan . 28 Paris peace agreement.
Ground fightin g in Cambodia
and U.S. a ir strikes have
continued since the agreement
went into effect. North Viet•
namese officials have con·
firmed that •n end to the
conflict here was among the
subjects disc·ussed by Kiss in ger
and Tho.
Kissinger said in Paris the
negotiations had mape pro-.
gress, but Sullivan sa id Satur·
day North Vietnamese ambition
to rule Indochina was the
principal obstacle to peace in
the regiori.
" North Vietnam wanL'i to
take over lndochina, that's the
obslcicle," he said.
Asked about prospects for a
Cambodian ccasc·fire, Sullivan
said : " I don ' t know, hut we
hope it will happen soon ." 1

· whit e Ho use s pokes me n
were not ava !'!able .to say how
much of a rnortg;1ge was
outstandin g or who, if anybody,
was involved wjth Abplanalp in
the corporati on which now
owns the surroundin g land .
Newsrr.fn h&lt;.~d reQuested the
additional information after
The HeKistcr, of Santa Ana,
Ca lif., repo rted that Sennte
inves tigators suspected left*
ove r fund!i from Nixon 's 1968
cam pai gn had been used to
finan ce the p urchase .. The
White Ho11'le termed this report
- a dtotal fabrication ."
Mrs. Nixon, daughtl!rs Tricia
and Julie and their husbaridc;;,
F.dward Cox and David Eisen*
huwer , accompanied the Pres ident for the overni (;:ht stay
here.

CALl.. ANSWERED
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport Emergency Squad
llnswcred a call to .Jack's Dairy
Bar at 8:45 p.rn . Friday when a
cus tom er, Mar ga r et V&lt;;~n ·
Cooney became ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorittl
Hospital where s he was treated
rmd released .
MAN HECAME ILL
POMEROY - At UO p.m.
Fr iday
th e
Pomeroy
Emergency Sq uad answ,ered a
ca ll to the Gravely Tractor
Sales on East Main St. where
Willis Gregory, Baltlmore, had
b~come Ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
wluke he wa s treated and
released .

Dmid and m;mgled number

grow.~

steadily through Saturcl11y 11.~
million.~ of driver.~ hurry hurry
By United Press Jnten~ational

·The toll of roadway deaths mounted steadily Saturday as
motorist.~

crowded expressways and highways over the t~ree­
day Memorial Day weekend despite warnings ·that gasoline
shortages might occur, in some resort areas.
The National Safety Council had estimated that between 550
and 650 persons would b~ ki11ed In traffic aceldent.'i and another
26,000 to 30,000 would sustain disabling injuries duriog th e 73hour period from 6 p.m . local time Friday through midnight
Monday.
A United Press International count at 2 p.m. EDT showed ~8
persons had been .killed in traffic accidents.
A breakdown of accidental deaths showed: Traffic 98,
Drownings 8, Planes 1, Other 9, Total 116.
Near Hull, Mass., the . coast guard searched for four ·
teenagers _,resumed drowned when a ca nue carrying seven
young persons capsized in a hay orf the Atlantic Ocean. Two of
the Lcenagers swam to shvre and a third was rescued hy a boat.

.,

Space crew
•
In Skylab
HOUSTON 1UPl ) - AmeriThe docking problem almost
ca's first space station pilots cost Co nrad , Kerwin and Weitz
found Skyl&lt;;~b 's atmosphere free their chanee to occupy Skylab
of any poison gas Saturday and at all. The astrOn&lt;;~uts overcame
entered the earth-orbiting, heat- it by donning their spacesuits,
sea red spaceship on a repair opening the nose hatch of their
miss ion to save the nation 's $2.6 Apollo command ship and
billion sp~ ce research prograin. " hotwiring" the craft's docking
Mission commander Charles probe to make it latch firmly
" Pete'' . C01irad, Joseph P. with an air lock on the 3pace
Kerwin and Paul J . Weitz sta tion.
hoped to shelter Skylab under
Ritter Frustration
the cooling shmle of a lopsided
oralige-and*silver parasol. The
It was alm ost 3 a .m . before
big urnbrclln wns designed to the spncemen. got to bed. replnce Skylab's main heat almost 24 hours after they had
shield and render the space awakened to prepare for laWlch
station habitable for the first !rom Cape Kennedy .
time since it was launched _May
Concern about the docking
14.
completely overshadowed the
If th¢ parasol works, cooling bitter frustration of trying, and
Sky lab 's Jiving quarters to 60 or· faili ng, in a long*shot attempt
70 degrees, the ·astronauts will to free a jammed solar celf
setllc in for up tu 28 days of wing and double Sky lab 's .
c:cientific experimentation in limited electrical power supply.
orbit. If it fails, they must Any second try by this c r~w to
perform a spa cewalk Sunday to fr ee the wing was virtually
~ pread a big awning and block ruled out.
off the solar heat.
But Skylab program managSulvage Operation
f;!rs repor·ted early Saturday'
The 22 by 24 foot parasol- they were already at work
.hastily constructed after Sky lab designing · new tmd stronger
lost the heat shie ld in a launch tools to try sp reading the wing
mishap, rmd completed 'mere later when three more as·
hours before the as tronauts tronauts visit Skylab.
blasted off Friday- wns the
Both the e lectrical problems
first repair choice beca use it and the overheatin,g were
co uld be erected through an ,caused by the loss of the heat ·
iJirlock from i11side the slation .... shield, which had originally
Conrad and his. crew, who surrounded Skylab's 118-foot
labored long into the night long mnin workshop and living
overcoming a potentially ser i· section. TemperatW'es in the .
ous docking problem, slept 1 ~ living quarters soared to an
hours late. They ctwoke at 10 oven.Jik e
125
degrees
(J .m . EDT, chipper and ready Fahrenheit.
to begin their salvage opera·
The high temperatures had
cauSed doctors tO worry that
tion.
" We slept pretty good," foam plas'tic insulation in
Conrad reported . "We really Skylab might have given off
did . n
two different kinds
of
And then, in a joking potentially letha l gas, car·
reference to the frustrations bon monixide and a lun g
•nd troubles of the crew's first irritant called "TD!." But
day in space, he asked mission the
astronauts
foun'd
contro l: "What friendly worries the docking adapter secdid you all think about over the tion of the station, which
they entered first , safe.
night '?''

Miller concerned
WASHINGTON !UP!)
United Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller said. Saturday he
was disturbed by strong union
rank·and-rile support of Presi.·
dent Nixon 's administration,
whi ch he called , ' •One of the
most anti-labor" m many
years.
Miller speculated that . Nixon
gets Support from blue collar
whites who fear union gains
will go mainly to blacks at
'their expense .
Speaking at a convention of
the Coalition of . Black Trade
Unionists, Miller said the uriion
movement must resolve internal racial strife before it can
"get back to the mairistream ."
"One of the most anti·labbr
administrations in recent his·
tOry holds •power today ," he
said . " But what is rriore disturb·
ing is that it has enjoyed the
•up port of a sizable segment of
rank·and-file trade unionists ."
"One reason labor faces such
a h ostil~ administration is that
w.orkers have beCome divided
beca use o( race, " Miller said.

"The ancient snake oil of racial
division that has crippled labor
so many times in the past .has
worked· it.s poison orice again.
"So white worker:s have come
to fear that the gains of black
workers will be won at their
expense ... divided by fears
and mistrust, we watch our
liberties eroded and justice
perverted from the highest lev·
els of government.
"Today we quarrel among
ourselves and all of us are im·
poverished by bu~get cutbacks
in housing, medical care, vocational rehabilitation and educa·
tion, " Miller Said.
" The challenge facing labor
today is to rid our movement
of the racial division that
blinds us ·to the fact that the
words 'brother and sister' are
not the jargon· of the labor
movt'ment, but expression of
our shared humanity ," he said.
"While any worker is denied
membership in a union or ad·
vancernent to a better job beca·1se of race, labor is not
free ,"

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