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I

•
Ill - Tilt' Daily Sentinel . MiddleportyomerO)', o:, rrj"-\5, 1974

Vehicle
1Continued

Kidnaper

from page 1)

llr on hand soon .

Me:mtime, it was reportt•d
!t1day that workers have begun
soliciti ng for the department in
lhl) western part of the countv .
They are Mrs. C~rl Hysell a~d
~ Irs .

llarold Hy se ll in Rutland

a11 d Mrs. Rich~mi Fetty in
: :mgsvi lle.
' F'irPmen are hoping to reach
l11 r go&lt;~l of $15,000 soon. Contributions can be left at the
depa rtment's station in Mid-

'rl leport or mailed to it PO Box
l H, Middleport.

( Con linued from pagf' 1)
working on a cow1terproposal.
Captor's Mt~ssagr
In a taped report sent to
one of Miss Hearst's captor s
g~ve this message:

"My name is Cinque and to
my comrades, I am known as
Cin. I am a black man."

.

( Tcchmcolor)
1--\

msoi rcd

m o viP

exploi ts

ot

forn ~er

N ew

bv

Eddie

t he

Egcm ,

Yo r k

C ity

Dete c t ive .
Shew starts 7 p.rn .

assured clear distance charge,

and Ernest Williamson and
William Elliott, no addresses
recorded, $20 and costs each
fo r intoxication,

'

.. .

on intoxication charges, two of

BADGE 373

(except for the soybean episode, which only symbolized to
Europeans a U.S. thoughtlessness which has irritated them
increasingly over the past
decade) . It is against this testy
background that the damage
which the Middle East war did
to European-American
relations must be seen.
ITo Be Continued)

Three defendants were fined

and a ' fourth forfeited five

$25 for disturbing the peace,
and one of $50 for assault and
battery. Fined were Paul
Knapp, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,

Feb 15 - 1~17

Mrs. Edith Rice

I

PRESENTING CASH, CHECKS, PLEDTES - Homer Smith, center, presents cash,
checks and pledge cards totaling over $3,000 from Mason County businesses and business
leaders to Richard M. Larimer, Tri-State Area Boy Scouts of America Council Executive
Richard M. Larimer during Tuesday night's Leadership Dinner. The fund s presented by Mr.
Smith, Mason County drive chairman, represents donations from about 40 businesses and
individuals of the county. Looking on at right is Bill Chiapetta. M.C-M District Srout
Executive, who resides in Pomeroy.

Scout drive topping $6,500
PT. PLEASANT - Over Leadership Dinner Thursday
$6,500 in donations from the night at the Holiday Inn in
Meigs.Callia-Mason District Kanauga .
was received by the Tri-State
Miles T. Epling, master of
Area Council Boy Scouts of ceremonies and one of the
a · dinner's sponsors, said the
America
following
contributions by tri-county

See us for your Auto Loan.
Rates are reasonable.
Service is courteous
And speedy.
It makes sense
to get your
horsepower
through us.

nome,oy
&lt;etlond

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
the ce ntury
esta bli shed 1872

Member

FDIC
MAIN OFFICE
Mon .. Tues ., Wed., Thurs . 9 a . m .- 3 p .m

Thursday 9 a.m. to 12 Noon
F r id ay 9 a .m . to 7 p m

A hometown friend.

dividuals represents over half
Announcement was also
of the goa l for lhe M.C-M
made
that William Childs,
District for 1974.
Mason
County
drive chairman,
Epling, who sponsored the
dinner along with Emerson E . has collected $795 to date .
Scout Executive Larimer
Evans of Gallipolis, also
described
the costs of scouting
praised the efforts Tri-State
Area Council Boy Scouts of following a brief talk by Frank
America Executive Richard E. Hanshaw, Sr ., Council
M . Larimer in "bringing Leadership Gifts chairman, on
scoutin g to the front in Meigs, "Scouting Today ."
Also introduced were Robert
Gallia and Mason Counties."
Molt,
Tri-State Council cornThe
Mason
County
delegation at the dinner, missioner: Robert Myers,
headed by civic leader Homer Council president and Dr.
Smith, announced the largest Bernard Niehm, M-G-M

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES: Willie Lane,
Point Pleasant; Florence
Kinder, Point Pleasant; Owen
Queen, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
George Rhodes, Ripley; Mrs.
Raymond DeLong, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Kenneth Kale , Middleport; James Ball, Apple
Grove; Wilson Litchfield ,
Henderson; Mrs. Evva Miller,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. George
Vaughn, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
John Albright, West Columbia;
Teresa
Hu ghes.
Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Charles
Stanley, Mason.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - Orley Rife,
Pomeroy; Oscar Patterson,
Rutland; Pearl Hoffman,
Middleport;
Charles
Kessinger, Pomeroy; Mary
Rathburn, Rutland.
Discharges - Earl Wright,
John . Russell, Albert Keeton,
Pauline Perry.

and . in-

amount raised in the sustaining

Bessie Jones
died Thursday

Ohio to
(Continued from page 1)
who said they should not
discriminate

in

favor

of

regular customers.
"We are just tired of being
the goal in playing this
voluntary game," Imes said..
Imes said he and members of
his association "are not going
to listen to Mr. Simon when he

tells us that we cannot help our
regular customers.
"We intended to do that. We
don't intend to break laws but if
the IRS or anybody else cites
any of our dealers because they
made an honest effort lo take
care of their customers we
intend to back them up with
every ounce of money and
energy we've got if it means
going to court or if it means
locking up our stations,
because the customers mean
that much to us, 11 he said.
"! think gasoline dealers

has about 500 members.

Back
Again

Pickup on Sunday

"Temperance"

Performance

5 PIECE

Here
In
December.

GROUP
WITH VOCALIST

District chairman .
The invocation was given by

membership drive in the tricoun ties. Smith turned in over Rev. AI MacKenzie, Rector , St.
$3,000. Assisting Smith in the Peter's Episco pal Church,
Mason County drive were Gallipolis.

said Imes. Imes association

Smash

collections of $2,775 to date.
with a significant contribution
pending from one group.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Feb. 14)
Alica Arbaugh , Lenna
Brinker, Hulda Brown, Mary
Bush, Donna Carman, Frank
Connor, Mary Connor, Emil
Corbin, Charlayne Crisp, John
Douglas, Kimberly Hammond ,
Rosemarie Lish, Polly Little,
Ross McPherson, Marian
Murphy, Lena Null, Jacob
Poor , James Proffitt, Eliza
Reynolds, Lillie Rivers, Dixie
Roush. Henry Roush, John
Sexton, Betty Stout, Ernest
Walker, Mrs. Thomas Walker
and
daughter,
Robert
Williams.
IBirths!
Mr. and Mrs. John Hudson, a
daughter, Gallipolis.

businesses

ought to tell the FEO (Federal
Energy Office) to forget it,"

After A

membership drive, reported

area

Fridayva.m to7p .m .

RUTLAND BRANCH

James Lewis, Bob Winge tt,
James Farley, and Harley
Hartley.
Epling, who wa~ in cha rge of
the Gallia County sustaimng

HOSPIT ~L NEWS

Sa t urday 9 a.m . to 12 Noon

Man ,Tues .. Wed .,Sa t. , 9a .m .- 3p .m

Meigs County Jaycees will
meet Sunday at 1 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Junior High Srhool
for a paper pickup in Pomeroy,
Middleport, Syracuse, Racine,

Mrs. Bess ie N . Jones, 89,
died Thur sday at her residence
on Wyllis Hill. Pomeroy,
following a lingering illness.
Mrs. Jones was born March
29, 1884 in Vinton County, tne
daughter of the late Bert and
Lavina Dorton Napper . She
was also preceded in death by
her husband, E liiah .
Surviving are se'veral nieces
and neph ews and seve ral
great. n ieces and nephews .
Mrs. Jon es at tended the
Rutland Baptist Church.
Funeral servi ces wi ll be held
at 2 p.m . Sunday at t he Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland with
the Rev. Amos T illi s of ficiating. Burial wi ll be in the
Mi les Ceme tery. Friends may
call at the f uneral home from 2
p.m. Sa turda y until time of
se rvice s Sunday .

lANCASTER

and Rutland.
Residents are asked to put
old papers on porches or in the
partial insurance coverage.
front yards and Jaycees will
Chief Legar said that the
pick them up. People in rural
exact cause of the fire has not
areas are asked to call Vince
been determined bul that he
Knight at 992-5986.
feels it was electrical in nature,
and could have been even a
result of lightning .

KINGLEY

TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to Rutland ai
10:14 p.m. Thursday for Mary
Rathburn who was ill. She was
Your Thom MeAn .
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was ad..,_.M.id•d•l•e;.po•r•t•,0_._ _. J?illed.
for
Men-Women -Children

10 til 2

THE

MEIGS
INN .
POMEROY, OHIO

cut off the flow of White House tapes and documents to spec1al
pro~eculor Leon Jaworski and launched a new campaign for
public support, But the immediate impactor both steps remamed
unclear today and the President's main concern was the condition of his younger daughter, Julie Eisenhower, who underwent
surgery Thursday evening in Indianapolis.
Nixon opened his latest drive against Watergate pressures
early Thursday afternoon by laking part in dedication
ceremonies for a new hospital facility in downtown Miami. It was
his first political appearance outside Washington in ahnost three
months and the President got a genera lly warm reception from
the crowd of about 3,000 that heard him plug his new nation..:
health insurance program.
'

A donation of $tOO was made
to the Middleport Fire Dept.
for the purchase of a new
emergency ambulance when
Feeney-Bennett Post 128
'
American Legion, met in
regular session Wednesday

night with 25 members present.
Post everlasting ceremonies

Letters advise
stickers late
RACINE - Letters from
Racine's E-R squad have been
mailed to all boxholders in the
Racine, Portland and Long
Bottom areas in which
residents are asked, even

though they have donated
towa rd the purchase of a new
ambulance for the squad, to
"please read" them as they
contain
"important
information."
The letters were to contain

were held for six World War II
veterans, eight World War I
veterans , and one Vietnam
veteran who
members.

were

post

They are David 0. Jenkins
(II), Charles Clark (!),
William R. Reynolds, (Vietnam ), William Ohlinger ( II),
William Foley (I), Herman B.
Bailey (I) , Charles Diehl (II),
Robert Craig (II), Floyd Boyer
(!), Don Manley ( II) , Harry
McGuffin (II), William Lynch
(II, Harry Cross (!), Charles
Cochran (I) and John Kauff(l).
It was voted to co-sponsor
with Pomeroy Post 39, the
baseball team again this spring
and plans were made to send ·
two representatives to -the
Buckeye Boys Stale at Ashland
College June 13-21.
Roast beef, prepared by Chef
Tony Fowler, was served .
following the meeting,

slicke rs
bearing
the
emergency squad's phone
number; however, the stickers
did not arrive.
When they do, they will be
distributed to all residents.
'f.he squad thanks Early
Roush, Mrs. Laura Byers and
Mrs. Eugia Johnson of

DRIVERS TO MEET
A meeting of all Meigs Local
School District bus drivers both regular and substitute will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in the Junior High
School cafeteria at Middleport.
Racine's senior citizens who Mrs. Alice Globokar, president
assisted the squad in preparing of the Meigs Local OAPSE
the letters for mailing Thurs- Chapter, asks that all drivers
attend.
day.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Open Friday and Saturday Nights Until 9 PM

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

Middleport, 0.

Stop in and see the new selection of mens double knit dress slacks- sizes
29 to 50 waist - solid colors- and smart new patterns . Recwlar flare leg
style - easy to wear. easy to wash .

and 12-1 conference marks.
The coolest was billed as •• ninnt•r

lakes all the marbles. " Coach Oshornt,.s
fired-up crew, after having finished
seeond In the loop during the past two
years (behind the Hawbeemcnl wen·
not to be denied lhe coveted t'rophJ' tht·
third time around .
More than 1,100 fans packed the GAHS
gym to witness the big show. After U1e
final horn sounded, Gallipolis had earned
its seventh conference title in the 49-yearold circuit. Previous GAHS titles were won
in 1939, 1949, 1954, 1955, 1956, and 1959.
It was total bed tarn following the final
gun. Blue Devil fans swarmed onto Ule
floor chanting "We're Number One" while
searching for a player to hoist onto their
shoulder.&gt; for a championship victory ride
around the court. Both nets were cut down.
one er11'1 by Tom Valentine, Gall ia's top
scorer of the night, and Jim Singer, and by
senior veteran Gil Price who completed
his four.year career at home, hoisted up at
the other end of the court bv Jim Nidav

Houseboat shot up with
BB gun at club landing
C. Mac McGinness reported the incident Saturday morning to the Gallipolis
Police Dept.
Officers said someone using a BB gun
shot holes in boat's windshield and sliding
glass panes, breaking three small venUlator windows and a large deck light

GALLIPOLIS - Vandals using a BB
gun and wrecking tools ·caused an
estimated $2,000 damage to a houseboat
owned by Eugene Hesbitt of Hillsboro
which was moored at the Gallipolis Boat
Club.
1Contin ued on page 2

and Mike Sickles.
The Blue Ut'vils "seroOd ~ason"
was harely over when fans began

Waverly 's Tony Swindler ended the
visitors' cold spe!J with a long jumper at

the 2:28 mark .

thinking ahead for the Gallians' "third

Gil Price, 6-5senior center, tallied on a

season" which startS at Coal Grove

layup wi!h 1:117 rcmamiog in the first
period to give GAHS a 9-2 bulge at the first
whistle break .
In lhe first period, Waverly hit only
one of 16 field goal attempts against the

Saturday night against the Meigs
Maraudt:rs in the Class i\A Sectional
Tournamrut.
' 'Tonight's win should put· us in a good
frame of min e for the tournament," said a

jubilan t Coach Osborne following the
championship victory.

Osborne, during a special boosters
club meeting at Oscar's Restaurant after
lhe game, thanked all individuals who
have helped make the program a success.
The Blue Devil mentor, now 65-37 overall

and 46-24 inside the SEOAL during the past
five years, praised all members of the

team , his assistants and trainers for job

well done dunng the "first two phases of
ttu~

season. ··

The game ball was auctioned off to
raise funds to help pay for the t974 AllSoutheastern Ohio League banquet which
will be held in Gallipolis the first week of
April. Vance Johnson was top bidder,
paying $385 for the champs' autographed
sphere . The game nets were not auctioned
off. They will be displayed in the GAHS
trophy case .
Tom Valentine, 6-3 junior Blue Devil
forward, broke the ice in tll.is championship battle with a three·point play at
the 6:55 mark. Jim Niday, 6-2 junior
guard , made it 5-0 ( 4:26) and Mike Sickles,
6-3 junior forward 7-0 (2: 42 ) before

Devils' match-up zone. GAHS canned

four of 13.
Price hit two short jumpers and .
Valentine a long jumper during the first
minute uf play in the second period as
GAHS upped its lead to 15-2.
At this. point, John Shoemaker, 6-2
senior Tiger playmaker, finally "warmed
up" and began scor ing ori his £amous long

jumpers from approximately 20 feet out or
on driving layups usually resulting in
three-point plays. The Tigers, however,
trailed anywhere from nine to 13 points
throughout the second stanza. GAHS led
29-16 at intermission .
Tom Valentine's layup opening the
tl1ird sta nza gave GAHS a 15 point advantage, 31-16. At this point, Waverly
made its only serious threat of the game.
Shoemaker had back-to-back three-poiiit
plays within a minute. Tony Swindler and
Joe Holland popped in long jumpers within
the next 45 seconds and 10-consecutive
Tiger points reduced Gallia's lead to five,
31-26, with 4:07 left in the third stanza.
That was as close as the Tigers could
throws (4: 17) and two buckets by Price
(Continued on page 17

+

Weather

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

30 PAGES

VOL. 9

NO.3

3 SECTION S
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Meigs has
1st merit
finalist

Blood also is

Sale Prices

Your Invited Gw!.~l
Reaching More ·:;,
Tlwn 12,000
F;m1 i lie.~

tmts

Mostly sunny, warmer
today. Highs in low 50s.
Tonight cloudy, possible
showers. Low high 30s. Monday
clearing, colder.

GALLIPOLIS- Gaida County's Local
Board' of Education Saturday afternoon
retained George E. Walter, a native of
Gallla County and partner in the LagdorstWalter Architect finn from Dayton, Ohio,
for architectural consulting Services in
future building programs in the new Gallia
County Local School District.
Walter was retained at the sum of $100
payable upon voter approval of a possible
bond issue, or from regular collections, if
sufficient.
It was further agreed that Waller be
the architect of any program under this
contract at a fee of seven ,pel. of construction costs for new building and additions to existing buildings, and nine pet. ·
of construction costs for remodeling
existing buildings or loose equipment and
furniture for any building .

Try on a pair of these fancy new knit slacks for
men and select what you need from this new group.

NETS COME DOWN - Jubilant Gallipolis basketball fans hoisted junior
forward Tom Valentine for traditional net cutting chores after Friday's win over
Waverly. The Blue Devils had just clinched their first undisputed SEOAL cage
championship in 15 years. Valentine led the Devils attack with 19 points. !Steve
Wilson photo ).

come, however, as Jim Niday 's two free

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1974

PRICE 20 CENTS

Pon1eroy -Middleport

stu
POMEROY - The first step to get
moving a long.range multi-year program
to satisfy the transportation needs or this
area, including the major overhaul of
Route 124 from Pomeroy - Middleport to
the Vinton County line, was taken here last
week.
It came . Thursday when Ohio
Department of Transportation District 10
Planner Burien Henline and assistant Don
Johnson met with Meigs County
representatives to the "Action Plan
Process" at the Meigs County Courthouse.

EZRA KISER
and parochial high schools of the country
are recognized for their leadership in

academics, athletics, activities or community service. Less than one percent of
the junior and senior class students
nationwide are awarded this. recognition.
Kiser's plans are to enter Ohio State
University next fall to study engineering.

considered the public 's interest in such
activities and the decisions based upon
such considerations will have ac-

complished the involvement of the public
in securing the objective of highway transportation in the best overall public interest.
The study of the Pomeroy lo lhe Meigs
-Vinton County line proposal is conceived
in relation to the needs of this area in view
of present and anticipated economic

growth.
The study includes a new roadway
They reviewed socia l, economic and en- connecting US·33 in Pomeroy to the Stale
vironmeniJII (SEE) factors in relation to Route 7 by-pass ; the relocation and imthe development of alternative locations provement of State Route 124 between
for the improvement of State Route 124 be- Stale Route 7 and Rutland ; a southerly by·
tween Pomeroy and lhe Meigs-Vinton pass of Rutland continuing westerly in the
County line.
vicinity of the Penn-Central. Railroad to
Henline expla ined the purpose of Langsville; a new location. in the vicinity
lhe Action Plan is to assure the p1·ocess of of Langsville ; an improvement near the
planning, designing and construction of existing location between Langsville and
highway projects with Federal financial Hanesville (junction of Stale Route 325); a
assistance has adequately identified and major relocation between Hanesvllle and

Consultant retained
in building program

egun

the Southern Ohio Coal Comp:my's new
mine at Parker Run; an improvement
near the ex isting roadway from Parker

located on State Route 124 1.38 miles east
of Syracuse involving a minor re location of
approximately ¥, mile of Stale Route 124
which Included details concerning
initiation of the study, general features
and SEE factors as well as alternative
location possibilities and high water
concerns.
Meigs-- County Commissioners' appointees to the Action Plan Citizens Group
present at the meeting were James Roush,
Orion Roush, Robert Bowen. Also ·in attendance at the inviiJI tion of James Roush
was Earl Ingles, president of the Pomeroy

Run to Salem Center with a short section of
major relocation possible in the vicinity of
Salem Center; thence. continuing
we, terly, an improvem ent near th e
exi~ting roadway to the Meigs-Vinton
County line.
The study will continue in to Vinton
County and terminate at Appalachian
Corridor D near Radcliff.
The discussion on the subject of the
Route 124 improvement included the
status of development as well as the need Chamber of Commerce.
_
to hold a public meeting to present
Henline announced that additiona(
alternatives and rece ive public comments. meetings will be scheduled as plans
Also discussed was the replacement of develop and as the need arises to conform
a stune arch cu lvert, in poor condition, to Action Plan Procedures.

Chamber to
hear Crater
GALLIPOLIS - Harold C. Crater,
manager, legislative · political (North
Central Division) of the United States
Chamber of Commerce, will be the
principal speaker during the 37th annual
Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce
dinner meeting.
Mrs. Thelma Elliott, loca l chamber
executive sec refJlry, said the 1974 annual
dinner meeting will be Monday, March 4,
beginning at 6:30p .m. in the Rio Grande
College Cafeteria .
Mr. Crater, of Lonbard, Ill., entered
the organization management field in 1963

'Waller will compile information on
school needs, anticipated growth areas,
types of buildings, what is needed lo update the existing buildings, costs of new
elemenfJlry buildings and data on local
taxes. He will make periodical reports to
the local board.
In other major businesses, the board,
following a long discussion with William
Bahr, president of the newly organized
Gallia County Local
Teachers'
Association, officially voted to recognize
the GCLTA as the sole and exclusive
bargaining agent for members of the
certificated instructional staff.
The Gallia County Local Teachers'
Assn. is an affiliate of the Ohio Education
Association and the National Education
·Association.
t Continued on page 2

and served in local chamber of commerce

management at Benton Harbor · St.
Joseph, Michigan, and Van Wert, Ohio. He
moved to Chi cago in 1969 to manage the
Community Development Department of
lhe Illinois Stale Chamber of Commerce.
He joined the United States Chamber staff
in 1972 as a manager of legislative political affairs.
Crater graduated from Franklin
College of Indiana and has completed 10

Man, woman charged

HAROLD C. CRATER
years in the institutes. for organization
management.

Tickets for the dinner may be purchased at the Commercial and Savings
Bank, Ohio Valley Bank or First National
Bank, or from m~mbers of the chamber's
board of directors. Deadline for ticket
reservations is Feb . 26.

)?;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;::~:!:~~~=~=~:!::::::::::::::!·

MENS DOUBLE KNIT

short in supply

SPORT COATS

GALIJPOIJS- Mrs. Thelma Shaver,
Gallia County Red Cross blood chairman,
announced Saturday the Huntington
Regional Bloodmobile will visit Gallipolis
from ooon to 6 p.m. Thursdar at the Grace
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Shaver said, "It has been said
that there is a fuel shortage, the Gallia
County Chapter American Red Cross
would like you to know \bat unless
volunteer blood donors respond to the need
there will be a blood shortage during the
remaining winter months".
In order to avoid this, the Huntington
Regional Bloodmobile will visit Gallia
County Thursday, Feb. 21.
"If you are sharing your car with
someone to conserve fuel, why don't you
share your blood with someone to savll a
life. Be a life saver as well as a fuel saver,
let giving life be important enough for you
to i!lve of yourself on Feb. 21," M...
Shaver said.

Size 36 to 46 in regular and longs solid colors - plaids and .stripes and
oatterns . Coordinate a new double knit
sport coat with Slacks to mix or
match.

Sale '39110
Sale •19

90

Open Friday and Saturday Nights Until9 p.m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEJIOY
"'•

I

\

By Hobart Wilson Jr.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy High
School's Blue Devils ended Waverly 's
three-year domination as Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League hardwood kings here
Friday night with a convincing 00..'0
triumph over the Tigers.
Coach Jim Osborne's quintet not only
captured the school's first SEOAL cage
tiUe in t5 years, but also prevented the
lads of Coach C. D. Hawhee from capluring a lOth straight basketball. championship. Prior to joining the SEOAL in
1970, Waverly had won six straight
Southern Ohio Conference titles.
After switching leagues, the Tigers
added three straight SEOAL crowns to
their already overflowing case of trophies,
and were gunning for their fourth in four
years here Friday night.
It wasn't to be. The Blue Devils
jumped off to a commanding 15-2 leiil and
were never in real trouble.
Both teams entered the championship
battle with identical 14-3 overall records

Ezra Kiser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra
Kiser of.Dexter, a senior at Meigs High
School, has been named a finalist in the
competition for Merit S&lt;iholarships by the
National Merit &amp;holal'llhip Corporation.
This honor is sbared by less than half
of one percent of the nation's graduating
secondary school seniors. Kiser is the first
Meigs High School student to become a
Merit Scholarship finalist. As such, he is
eligible to compete for one of approximately 3,100 Merit Scholarships at
schools throughout the United Stales.
In addition, he has been notified that
he is to be featured in the eighth annual
edition of Who's Who among American
Hlgh School Students, 1973-'74, the largest
student award publication in the nation.
Students from over 20,000 public, private

Mens Department, 1st Floor

~ens 29.95 Double Knit Sport Coals

59" N. Second St.

i

$100 given to firemen

FLOWER ARRANGEMENT
FOLIAGE GARDEN
BLOOMING PLANTS

'

nation "one year of Watergate is enough," President Nixon h.as

Mens 49.95 Double Knit Sport Coals

A Gill That's Always Appreciated
'

TO HOSPITAL
RACINE - Th~ Racine E-R
squad was called Thursday at 2
p.m. for Mary Kearns, 63,
Portland , who suffered a
possible heart attack. She was
transported to Holzer Medical
Center.

KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. - TWO WEEKS AFTER telling the

BIRTHDAYS and ANNIVERSARIES
ARE SPECIAL DAYS
Send A

· Or

PHONE 992-3629

Mr s. Ed ith Ri ce. 87, formerly
of Pom eroy, di ed Thursday at
th e Elmwood Vil l age Con valescent Center in Ports .
mouth .
Mrs. Ri ce was born Aug . 19,
1886 in Meigs County, th e
daughter of the late Jacob and
Jennie Leftridge Stu ckey . She
was preceded in death by her
husband , William Ri ce. who
di ed in 1937, and a son .
Surviving are a daughter ,
Mr s. Mar sha ll f Margare t)
Miller, and a so n, William I
Rice. both of Mineral Well s,
~.r· x .; a sister, Mrs. Leora
Zwilling of Grove City : eight
grandch ild ren, and several
nieces and nephews:Funeral servi ces wi ll be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at tile
Rawlings .(oats Funeral home
in Middleport with the Rev .
Rober t
Bumgardner
of ·
flci ating . Buria l will be in
Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any t ime after 10 a.m .
Saturday .

GAHS dethrones Waverly

two navies.

Losses have been set at
$20,000 as the result of the fire
that damaged the Bowers
Restaurant on East Main St.
late Wednesday night, Fire
Chief Charles Legar reported
today.
While the fire was confined
primarily lo the kitchen, there
were smoke and heat damages
to the dining room. Chief Legar
said losses had been set at
$10,000 to the contents and
$10,000 lo lhe building . There is

heritage house

SAT.

died Thursday

,

I)

Losses set at
$20,000 in fire

RUBBER BOOTS

FROM

NIGHT

man said South Korean warships rushed to the scene after the
attack , but there were no reports of armed clashes between the

·Basic Issues
These are all basic iss ues

Mayor Dale Srni til Thursday
night.
Daniel J effers . PomerOJ' .
forfeited two $25 bonds posted

Fr i., Sat., S_yn

!Continued from page 9)
these troops, has passed a law
now saying some of them will
be brought home if European
the $1.5 billion deficit which the
soldiers add annually to the
U.S. balance of payments.

bonds in the court of Pomeroy

MEIGS Tl:fEATRE

News.

governments do not make up

Berkeley radio station KPFA,

in Briefs
•
•
(Continued from page

Western

J

POMEROY - The Meigs County .
Sheriff's Department reported the arrest
of three persons Friday, two in a
delinquency law violation.
James Priddy, Pomeroy, and Sue
Holley, Middleport, were arrested on a
warrant from juvenile court for contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
They will appear for hearing in Juvenile
eourt. Kenneth Mohler, Middleport, was
arrested and was in jail Saturday on
charges of unlawful trespassing on land of
another with intent lo corrunit a felony.
JAYCEES TO REPORT
POMEROY ~ All Meigs County
Jaycees should report to the Pomeroy
Motors parking lol at 1 p.m. today to
assist In tbe pal"'r drive pick-up. ·
'
Also; the Jaycees ask that all per·
sons In Pomeroy-Middleport leave any
newspapers they wish lo donate to the
drive on !heir porch or curb by lhe street
for easy pickup.
::".:."%:0::!:=:~:::::::::::.~:~~:::::::::::::?-i::&amp;:::·~:~:;:~:w::~:·:i:i:::::~~::~::::·
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( ...,

,.

CENTENARIAN HONORED- Ab~ut everybody in tbe bend area appeared to
have turned out Saturday afternoon lo honor Andrew B. (Andy) Hume, one of its
oldest and most respeeted citizens, at an open house in Mason town hall on his tOOth
birthday. Above, Mr. Hume stands beside a lovely birthday cake vrepared for the
occasion. To his right is his daughter, Mrs. Raymond Greathouse, Huntington, W.
Va . The open house is being continued today, I to3 p.m., also in the town hall. Andy
Hume Day is sponsored by lh~ local Mothers' Club.

i Going to visit grandma I
~
»

POMEROY - Meigs County Deputy
Sheriff Robert Beegle of Racine, on his
way home from work at the sheriff's office
Friday at 11:30 p.m. noticed three very
small children walking along SR 124 near
Racine.
Beegle stopped, discovered they were
clad in pajamas, and inquired where they
'

Look who's .in dog house
GALIJPOLIS - Children playing
around a house that burned Friday
evening here may have landed right in the
dog house.
City Fire Chief.James A. Northup said
loss was estimated at $53 to a dog house
damaged in a fire at 6:51p.m. at the rear
of 105 Cedar St. Occupant of the house,

BIG NEW INCOME
SEATTLE, Wash . (UP!) - The
Seattle City Council is looking into the
unidentified by name or breed, was not possibility of earning about $300,000 a year
by collecting old newspapers and selling
home at the time.
The house was located behind lh~ them to a Californi a company . lor
residence of Earl Leslie Faudree. Firemen recycling. The plan woijld Involve asking
said the blaze apparently was caused by city residents to bundle their waste
children playing with matches. The house newspapers separately from regular
contained rags and gasoline . Seven m~n garbage and placing the bundles at the
curb or alley for easy pickup.
responded to the 24th run of the year.
,\

'h
were going. They replied, "We are going to
our grandmother's place" (in Syracuse).
The youngsters, age 6, 5 and 4, had
with them a small suitcase and bananas,
and the youngest had a plate on which he
had the wrappings of an ice cream bar, lhe
ice cream apparently having been eaten as
there were bits of chocolate on the plate.
Beegle returned the children lo their
borne. They had slipped out of the hou~e
while the parents were asleep.
·

CLOSING ON HOLIDAY
G,\LLIPOLIS - City Postmaster Dick .
Bane announced Saturdav that the local
post office will be closed. Monday in observance of President's Day. There will be
locked box service. Mail will be dispatched
at' 4:45 and 6 p.m.

�'.

••

I I' t

.

'

'·. ' ·, ·~,

...

~.,

I

0 :

3- The ~unday Times - Sentine l, Sunday, ~'&lt;·b . 17, 1~74

·-------------------------,
21 cases settled
l Beat... .
.! Of the Bend ~ ~ ','' !

Houseboat
bulk . Also torn up was the sliding compartment p-.rtitwn , a sliding bathroom mirror,
dashboard and the . boat's mstrwnent
panel
Police officers al..so mvestigated the
theft of a gun taken from the back seat of a
parked car owned by Ernie Belnap of Rio
Grande . The car was parked on Fourth
Ave
Another act of vandalism was i.fi.
vestigated at the Duds and Suds Laundromat on Third Ave. where someone
smashed the chewing gum machine,
spilling gwn onto the noor
One arrest was of Jesse P. Lawson, 47,
Rt 1, Gallipolis, charged with parole
vwlatton.

Consultant
!C&lt;&gt;ntinued from page 1I
In addilton to Bahr, the group was
represented by Clay Baker, Howard
Neekamp and Henry Dillon
The board approved its bills totaling
$41 812 and voted to make an advance
witMrawal of $200,000 in tax monies from
the Gallia County Auditor's Office .
Resignations accepted included those
of assistant clerks, Mrs. Anne Belville and
Mrs. Esther Gordon .
Mrs . Judy Saunders of the Hannan

Costello~s

WRECKED 'ilY FIRE - Mr . and Mrs. Elwood B&lt;&gt;wers
survey the heavy damages which occurred at the1r
restau rant on Pomeroy's East Main St. as the result of a fi re

Labor Bigs meet to plan for 1974
"

.

By DON FINLEY
MIAMI BEACH I UPI 1
Organized labor's top hierarchy
ga thers here Monday for 1ts
annual wmter meettng , with
spiraling pri ces, rising unemployment and impeachment of
President Nixon the top 1tems
on the agenda .
The AFL-CIO Executive
Council headed by 79-year-old
George Meany, will meet for·
more than a week makmg plans
for this year a nd Issuing broadsides agamst the administration
and the White Hou se.

Meany and the other 34
members at the labor counc.·tl
have, in eff ect, given up hope
of getting a ny help for the1r
causes and programs from the
Nixon admmislrahon and in stead are appealing to Congress.
F1rst off, they're urging
Congress to impeach N1xon for
his part in the Watergate
sca ndal and its coverup. The
AFL-C IO launched 1ts impeach·
ment dnvc last November and
expects to put it mto high gear
if and when the House

)

SS helpless to end
• WOman illJUre
• • d
eS
h
Ire
Ch
Agnew guard

·~

WASHI NGTON !UP! I - The
Secret Service sa id Saturday it
cannot obey a demand by the
comptroller general to stop
providing protection for former Vi ce President Spiro T.
Agnew unless it recetves
authority from President
Nixon.
Comptroller General Elmer
B. Staats told the Treasury
Department Friday any fur·
ther Secret Servtce protection
of Agnew would be illega l, and
that he would cut off federal
funds for that purpose as of
Monday .
A Secret Service spokesman
said the protective agency
could not remove the
Agnew detail "u ntil th e
President orders the secretary
of the Treasury to order the
Secret Service to stop. We have
not received any such orders."
A spokesman fo r President
Nixon, vacationing tn Key
Biscayne, Fla., refused commenton the situation Sa turday,
and referred queries to the
Treasury Department and the
Secret Service.
A Treasury spokesman said
only that the Agnew matter
was under discussion.
A spokesman for Staats:
General Accounting Office sa id
the administration could force
a showdown in court if it
wished simply by continuing to
use federal funds to pay for

early Saturday mommg

Agnew's protection , although
the cerltfying off1cer for such
an expenditure would be held
GALLIPOL!S - Robin D.
personally liable for paying the
Sheline, 19, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
bills
Agnew has had full Secret was admitted to the Holzer
Servtce protection si nce he Medica l Center with a frac resigned from office Oct. 10 lured collarbone and multiple
before pleading no con,test to a scalp lacerattons follow mg a
federal "income tax evaston traffic accident at 2:20 a.m.
charge. The GAO estima ted Saturday on Rt. 554 at the
the detail cost taxpayers junction to the White Oak Rd .
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
nearly $90,000 for a two-month
Hi
ghway Patrol sa id Miss
period alone.
Sheline lost control of her car
Staats is an official of Con- which ran off the highway and
gress, not the executtve struck an embankment She
branch, but has authority to was taken to the hospital by the
ha lt use of fed eral funds for Gallia Cou nty Emergency
any purpose he determines is Squad.
Illegal.
·::::~::!».:P."W.«&gt;.».&gt;;:::::::~.~~•'IC'IC&amp;'t\'&amp;'11&amp;'"
Whi te House Press Secretary s;
... 1~~,·
Ronald L. Ziegler was ques- =·=·
tioned at length about Agnew's
protection at a briefing m ~.·:.·:.'
Florida Fnday, but declined to
say why the servtce was not
POM EROY ·- Meigs Sr
ended .
C1 !1 zens Center Ac 1flv lf 1es
Feb 18 Cen ter closed.
"!can't point to any specific
element, and if I could, I Pres1de nt s Bir th day Hol1day
Feb 19 Rug M ak1ng,
wouldn 't, obviously," Ziegler Chorus Practice. 1-2.30 p.m .·
told reporte rs.
cards and games.
Feb . 20 - Qui lting , Cra ft s
The Treasury has noted that
Nurse ' s Day, blood press ure
Sen. Hubert H Humphrey, D- read 12 .30 2 30
Minn ., ha d Secret Service
Feb 71 - Cr oche t ,ng , 10 . 12,
cards
n nd g.•mes J. J p.m
protection for six months after
Fe b. 2'l - Socia l Secunt y
he left the vice presidency m represen lal 1ves at Cen ter to
t969. Presumably that would help Sen1or Citizens f il l out
mean that Agnew's protection applications to r SSI (Sup
plemental Sec ur 1ty Income)
would continue until about starting
at~ a.m ; bow l mg 1 3
April !0 .
pm

Cz'tr'zens
r. Sr.Calendar

Billy L. Petrie, 48, Rt. 2,
Vinton, wa s treated and
released at the Holzer Medical
Center for a broken collarbone
suffered in a truck collision at
4:30 p m. on Rt. 160 at the
junctton of Rt. 554.
Officers sa1d Petrie's truck
was s tru ck by a pick-up
operated by Yvonne M. Byrd,
40,ofBidwell.Therewasheavy
damage to both vehicles. Mrs.
Byrd was charged with failure
to yield the nght of way.
James E. McGuire, 17, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, was cited to Juvenile
Court for failing to stop within
the assured clear distance
followin g an accident on Rt. 160
near the 0. J. White Rd .
Officers said McGuire's car
struck the rear of an auto
dri ven by James E. Kemper,
18, of Kerr.

•
Ml mventor
Gerand dies

SPRINGFIELD, Mas s.
(UP!) - John C. Garand,
inventor of the .30 caliber M1
riOeofWorldWarllfame,died
Saturday at Wesson Memorial
Hospital. He was 86.
Garand was admitted to the
hospital Thursday suffering
from chronic pulmonary
edema, according to Dr.
Samuel Antiles, hls physician.
The inventor was in "guarded
condition" in Wesson WJtil he
succumbed at 8:50 a.m.
Garand, born in 1888 in the
village of St. Remi near
Montrhealh, dlaesignedula machine
gun w 1c
ter res ted in his
appointment as master gauge
and gun experimenter at the
Federal Bureau of Standards
NINE CARS DERAILED
until 19i9.
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) He then went to work as
Nine cars of Penn Central
Ordinance Design
General
freight train hea ded from
at the Springfield
Engineer
Detroit to Cincinnalt derailed
here Satutday. Authorities said Armory and began working on
at least four of the cars rolled his M1 in the early 1920s.
The now famous 11Garand"
over completely and the others
went off the tracks. The cars was accepted by the Army in
were loaded with new Fords 1936and by the Marine Corps in
and some Chrysler and 1940, after meeting the Army's
General
Motors
Corp . standards of a light, simple and
strong firearm.
products.

moves," Eckley added, " we
w1ll have added only 145,000
phones to our telephone network in Ohio. For every eight
phones we put in, we show a
rea l mcrease (Of only one
because seven others are being
taken out.
"These figures are simply
sy mbolic of the times we ·live
in," he explained. "Ours is a
mobile society, with people and
busmess moving frequently.
Just tnsta llt ng these phones,"
Eckley said, "is the equivalent
of start1ng from scratch and
providihg service to all our
customers in Akron , Dayton
"nd Toledo over a 12-month

periOd."
thmgs necessary to give
The remaining $200-million customers the quality of serin the 1974 construction budget vice they expect. He added,
will go for such facilities 'as however, that continuing innew electro nic switching flation and rising costs could
equipment to get ca lls through make it necessary for the
as quickly as customers want; company to ask the Public
for the cable a nd poles, and for Utilities Commission of Ohio
new buildings or for building for permission to . increase
add itions to assure tha t service rates again .
is there when the customer
Eckley noted that people
picks up h1s phone.
continued to make more calls
and talk longer in 1973. He said
Eckley said that the ad- the number of local calls inditional dollars customers are creased by nearly !.3 million
paying, most of it stemming per day, bringing the total
from the rate increase granted nu"'lber of local calls placed by
last August, has permitted the Ohio Bell customers to more
company to do the kinds of than 25-milli on in each 24-hour

perind. In addition, more than
886,000 long distance calls were
completed during the average
business day, an increase of
89,000 calls per day over the
previous year.
In the Gallipolis area, according to Richard Rnderick ,
commercial manager, Ohio
Bell plans to Invest about
$511,000 for construction and
service improvement
programs during 1974. Major
· expenditures wlll ' go to complete the building addition and
add more local call' switching
equipment in the "446" exchange. The public business
office will be remndeled this

I

Wrecks mar
Daytona race

'is'

RECEIVES AWARD - Elmer E. Wood, a foote Mineral maintenance
de}lllrtment employe~. center, IS shown receivmg a !1110 check from the ' Foote
Mineral Company for an 1dea resulting m a cost savmgs a~ the .Graham plant Mr
Wood who resides on Fourth St m New Haven w1th his wife, Genevieve and
daughter, Molide, devised a method that resulk' 1n a longer lasttng furnace electrode Band. Makmg the presentatton is Willtam Walker, a Foote Mmeral foreman ,
nght , wh1le Gil Corliss, superintendent of main tenance, 1oo&lt;s on at left. Wo od has
been employed at Foote Mineral stnce June of !952

Trace area was transferred from Hannan
Trace Elementary School to serve as
payroll and office secretary to board clerk,
Mrs. Naonu Beman . Mrs . Saunders formerly .'ICrved as payroll clerk tor Evans

Grocery
The board also dec1ded to conltnue the
policies adopted by the var ious high school
pnnc1pals which have been tn effect stncc
the start of the 1973-74 school term.

finally dead

smiled Costello as he moved Engli sh and Australian
among the crowds. "I hope it'll journalists. And 1t was a bit of a
jolt early Saturday to hear
be just the same.
The huge Tlrurber cartoons their vo1ces so clearly
depicting man's constant war- d omi,nating the song and
fare with woman were gone- chatter of an Irish bar m New
to be remounted in the new York.
At midmght Costello ordered
spot. But over the bar still hung
the broken shillelagh that the bar officiallv "closed," but
Hemingway , Hfter a drinking that just meant the drinks were
partner claimed it was un- free those final hours, and the
breakable, neatly cracked it in crowd caught a second wind
(or maybe a thtrd ) and plunged
two over his own head.
" Had Some Characters"
ahead with round upon round of
The dark oaked bar had been extra drinks.
polished by elbows belonging to
About one o'clock, jovial
F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald,
boos
a nd hisses greeted the
John O'Hara, A.J . Leibling and
first
of
the "last calls."
Brendan Behan- whose freeFinally
, around 3 a.m., the
wheeling drinking style got
him thrown out more ·than crowd began thiiUl ing out, and
then near 4 a .m the last of them
once.
left
and there was nothmg but
"Mainly, we 've wanted people to enjoy themselves," the bare, Thurber less walls,
Costello said above the roar. the glass, beer and napkin"And we've had some charac- littered fl oor, and the
unkillabl e memo ries of 50
ters, let me tell you."
In the past few years yea r s of drinking-hterary
Costello's has attracted style.

Bobcats in first place
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (UP!) Weste rn Michigan scored
- Ohio University took undisputed possession of first
place in the Mid-American
C&lt;&gt;nference Saturday with a 71176winoverWesternMichigan,
the Brorlcos' second loss in 11
home games .
The &amp;beats are 13-9 overall
and 7-3 m the MAC, a haHgame ahead of Toledo, whose
Saturday game with Eastern
Mlchl.gan will not count tn the
standings. . .
.
Western Michigan IS now 129, 4-5 1~ the MAC.
Ohio s Bill Brown broke a 7474tte w1th two free throws With
1:53 remauung, and George
Green added two more free
th.rows 54 seconds later to
clinch the game.
Ohlo I~ 40-37 at the haH, and
70-58 With 7:42 to go before

TIMES COSTLIER
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
New York Times announced
Saturday higher newsstand
prices of the newspaper are
expected to go into effect later
this month to meet rising
production costs. Arthur Ochs
Sulzberger, publisher of The
Times and chairman and
president of The New York
Times Co., said the. price of the
Sunday New York Times will
rise from 50 to 60 cents in the
city and suburban areas on
Feb. 24 and from 75 to 90 cents
outside a 50-mile radius of the
city except eastern Long Island
where it will sell for 60 cents.
The price will go up proportionately in certain U. S. cities
served by air.

Ohio· Bell now has more than 4 million phones in service
Ohio Bell has more than 4·
million telephones in serv ice
throughout the sta te. During
1974, the eqmvalent of nearly
half those phones will be
moved to different places
within homes or businesses, or
to other parts of town.L{)
The putting in and tiik1ng(9ut
of more than 2-millio n
telephones in a year's time will
eat up around $1!6-million of
Ohio Bell's 1974 construction
budget of $286-milhon, a budget
ol more than $1-mlllion for
every workmg day, according
to
company
President
Frederick R. Eckley. "And
after handlmg those 2-milllon

• .
~

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1Continued from page 11

By RONAW G. BURNS
NEW YORK (UP!) - It took
three hours , a dozen "last
calls" and 20 quarts of booze to
do 1t.
But Costello's, a newspaper
late Wednesday night. Damages will run at least $20,000 and
saloon and literary landmark
the restaura nt w1ll be closed for at least six weeks while
where James Thurber drew his
repairs are being made None of the expensive ki tchen
cartoons on the wall and Erequipment was insured .
nest Hemingway proved his
he ad was tougher than a
shillelagh, has finally been
forced off 3rd Avenue.
The old spot stond at 599 3rd
Avenue for 50 years, just a
• block from Grand Central
.
Sta t'1on, where a rna n could
Judicia ry Committee returns a with. 1mport quotas . They are
'd
bill of impeachment against the urgtng Congress to overrt e grab one last drink and still
any. preSidential vetoes of such rnake th e 1as t tram
· horne.
President.
While planning to lobby legtslatton .
. .
A Rousing Wake
Thirdly,
the
labor
officials
A
victtm
of New York 's
members of the House to
.
mak1ng
plans
to
elect
what
all
are
impeach Nixon, a spokesman
"
f enve 1opmg w
of glass and
for the AFL-CIO said 1t would Meany ~ails a
ve to-proo steel skyscrapers, the dingy,
Congress
1n
the
1974
electtons. smoky tavern that hosted the
keep hands off the Sena te whe n
The
AFL-CIO
and
1t considers whether to convict
.
.11 b
. aff1hated
.11.
ar t'ISts , the hac ks and the
1
Nixon . To lobby se nator s would untons wl e pounng ml . ."ns hangers-on of the writing world
be like try ing to tamper with a of dollars of their polttlcal since Prohibition days got a
action funds into efforts to elect rousing wake into the early
jury , he said.
Secondly, AFL-CIO leaders ltberal members to the House hours Saturday morning.
are askmg Congress to approve and Senate.
But if the customers grew
In addition , the labor council misty-eyed at their loss as they
legis lation tncreasing the minimum wage, adopting national will be calhng for an end to finally straggled into the
hea lth insurance, appropna ting government controls on wages, street, young Tim C&lt;&gt;stello Jr.,
more funds for pubhc works, which last year lost ground to son of the man who started
and passmg trade legislation price mcreases of 8.8 per cent. the tavern as a speakeasy
in 1923, showed only the steelyeyed glint of a man still very
much in business :
C&lt;&gt;stello's, he said, will be
back in business Tuesday just
.
around the corner.
0
"C&lt;&gt;me and see us then,"

POMEROY - Thirteen
defendants wc1 c fined and
1 eight others forfeited bonds tn
Me1gs County. Court Friday
~
I
- •
, Fined by Judge Frank W.
1 By Bob Hoeflic·h
Porte r were Delbert W.
POMEROY - Roses to Eileen and Elwood Bowers for the Fr1dley, Pome roy, Rt . 4.
courage they are showing fo llowmg a fire wh1ch ruuwd tlwir Janice Couch, Pomeroy, Rt. 2.
East Main St. restaurant and drive-in.
·
Walter Burgess. Middleport,
The life's work of the couple is in the establishment. A fire Rt. 1. William 0. Self, Beverly,
late Wednesday night caused heavy damage not only to the and Thomas W. Shaffer,
kitchen rooms but the dirdng room as well. They've had the new Vienna, W. Va. , $10 and cost:;
building only about 12 years and both Eileen and Elwood have each, speedtng; James D.
slaved over the years , working long hours in the establtshment.
As a result of the fire, it probably will be some six weeks to
two months before they are able to reopen. TI1e really sad part is
lhat none of the equipment - and is this ever expensive' - was
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
insured. Eileen and Elwood really are n't what you would ca ll
young people, so getting the whole mess- and I do mean mess- ( UPI J - Bill Dennis of Glen
Allen, Va ., outduelled Lennie
straighteneq up going to be a real challenge, but one which
Pond of Pe tersbu rg, Va .,
they are faCing well. More of us should have such fortitude to
hang in there .
Saturday to win the acciden tEileen commented Friday that everyone has been wonderful
marred Permatex 300 late
to them. Even the help showed up at once to do their bit in gett mg model sportsmen race at
the restaurant ready to reopen.
Daytona In ternational
The Bowers have always been such ni ce people - seems like Speedway .
there 1S no justice, sometimes.
Dennis reached an average
speed of 140.406 miles an hour
MARGARET FOILROD HAS embarked on a one-woman
over the 270-mile race, shor·
clean up Pomeroy campaign but Margaret won't be going it
tened 30 miles because of the
alone for long.
gasoline shortage , to finish
Already Thursday night, Margaret got, the backing of her
about 10 car lengths in front of
sorority group. Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Pond and wi n his third straight
and that group will contact other organizations which will urge
Perrmatex 300.
village officials to Lake actions in cleaning up the town. They
Dennis had qualified his 1969
particularly will stress cleanup around catch basins and the
Mercury at 17!.576 m.p.h. over
streets which are ladened with cinders put out in the recent snow.
the 2.&gt; mile hi gh-banked
Margaret urges each resident - young and old - to police Daytona course to sta rt eighth
their own behavior when it comes to littering . This, she says, will
in the 41J..ca r f1e ld .
go a long way in making Pomeroy a better place to live . She
Bobby Allison, the early
urges merchants who are sweeping their sidewalks to invest in a
leader, suffered brake trouble
dust pan and sweep the dirt into the dustpan and place it in a
with his red 1966 Chevrolet and
container rather than sweeping into the street. Margaret urges
could not regain command.
the village to use calcium instead of cinders in fighting snow and
Wayne Andrews of Siler City,
ice. Calcium, she contends, costs very little more and parN. C., finished third in a 1970
ticularly when workers have to be dispatched after the snows to
Chevrol et ahead of Jack
clean up the cinders.
Ingram of Asheville, N.C., in a
Margaret further contends that cleaning up the town can't be
1968 Chevrolet.
a one or two day temporary deal. Everyone has got to work at it
The race was marred by four
every day .
wrecks that resulted in caution
"Let's all pitch in and make Pomeroy a clean and lovely
flags over 18laps of the 1011-lap
place to live /' Margaret urges.
race. No one was hurt on the
Go to it, Margaret - we're with you 1
track where wind gusts up to 30
m.p.h. made driving difficult.
AT A RECENT OPEN HOUSE honoring C. E. Blakeslee on
his retirement after 33 years as Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty's Agriculture
Agent, a picture of a gift presentation was not suitable for
•
•
Tlwulto
publication. The gift was a projector, presented by Bill Carr,
George Holter of the Farm Bureau and Landmark, and Rex
Tonight thru
Shenefield of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.
Tuesday
The presentation was one of several made during the observFeb. 26th
ance.

year to meet present day
building code requirements .
Last year , about 1,200 phones
were added to the Gallipolis
area
telephone system,
bringing the number of
telephones in service at the end
of the year to more than 14,300.
Roderick estimates that approximately 1,000 phones will
be added to the system during
1974.
Local calling increased here
Last year by more than 9,400
calls a day, while long distan ~e
calling jwnped to 3,800 a day ,
about 600 a day higher than the
1972 average.

14 straight poin ts to take a 72-70
lead and force the Bobcats to
rally for the victory.
Brown led Ohio with 25
poin ts, and league-lead ing
scorer Walter Lockett, who
was held scoreless for the first
19 minutes of the game, scored
20.
Forwards Mike Steele and
Jeff Tyson scored 18 and 16
points, respectively, for Western. Steele also cleared 13 rebounds and moved mto lith
place on the all-ttme Broncos'
scoring list with 1,016 points.

to ad inviting
marriage bond
CHESTNUT MOUND, Tenn.
(UP! ) - Edgar Fields, a 311year-old bachelor, says his
newspaper advertisemtnt for
11
lad ies
interested
tn
marriagep ha s already
produced a good lead .
Fields, a farmer who has
never been married, said he
has gotten about six phon e
calls since he placed the ad in
the Carthage Courier Thursday.
The good lead, he said, was a
woman who "ain't never been
married and we might get
together.
' ~She's

Donations coming in for vehicle
'

'

'
'
RACINE - Donations arc
-eha rles H. Bryson , Apple
Mugrage, Manetta, $5 and
GALLI POLIS - Two minor still corning in to pu~chase a Emerson McDole, Long BotGrove, Dorothy Parsons, Mr.
costs, no slq,w moving em~~em; lrafftc ar.cident.s were rcportN.l new ambulance for the vi llage tom , Mr. and Mrs . Orville
and Mrs. Tom White, Long
Holter,
Long
Bottom,
John
and
James A. Cremeans ; · Little f1'riday in downtown Ga llipolis, of Racme.
Leora Young, Mrs. L Simpson, Bottom , Pomeroy Flower
Hock in g, and 'George W. ftrst on the parkmg lot at
Rec-ent co ntributor s arc Mr. and Mr:;. Paul Smith, Dale Shop, Ethel Wheeler, Mr and
McHaffie, .Jr., Bryon, Olno, He iner's Bakery. An auto Thelma Walton, Lawrence
Boyd, Racine Lodge 461, Mr. Mrs. F.dgar Taylor, Mr. and
$150 and costs each, three days driven by Brady A. Tul'ley, 27, Bush, Gladys Croy; Chester,
Mrs. Kenneth McCleod, Portcon £in erne nt , li cense Rt. 1. Leon , W Va. backed in to Oh10, Phyllis Rowan , Tuppers and Mrs. William Fox. Mr. and land, Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Mrs. Larry Spencer, Patricia
suspended for six month~, a car operated by William D Plains, Ross Cleland, Chester,
Shain,
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph R. Watson 1 Metgs Tire Center,
restricted driving privileges, Davi&gt;, 28, Ht. 2, Galhpo!is,
Mable Elizabeth Johnson , Henderson, Leona M. Ebers- Ernest Gnmm, Mr and Mrs
drtving while intoxicated;
The other occurred on State Long Bottom, Thelma Orr
bach, Manlyn L. Wolfe, Mrs Ralph D. Shain.
Rodney F . Leedy. Jr , St. where 10-year old Michael Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.'
Eldon Gaul, Chester, Mr. and
Pomeroy, Rt . 4, and Horace R. G. House opened the back door Arthur Orr, Chester, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wagner, Mrs .
Abbott, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $15 and on a car operated by Charles C. Mrs
Royal-cUes tops
John
Wickham
costs, speeding ; Charles Black, 32, of Waverly, mto the Chester, Mr . and Mrs:
Walker, Jr., Crysta l La ke, Ill., path of a car driven by Mamie Roy Chnsty, Chester , Mr.
Lancaster field
ASHE TRIUMPHS
$5 and cos ts, defective N. Robinson, 68. of Ga llioohs.
BOLOGNA, Italy !UP!)
REEDSVILLE - Members
exhaust; Paul E. Fraley,
Amenca
's
Arthur
Ashe
beat
of the Riggs Royal.;,ttes Senior
Ga llipolis, $10 and costs, imBritain's
Roger
Taylor
1 6·0, 4..(i,
Bato n Twirling team, in·
proper tags; Terry D. Napper,
6-2,
Saturday
mght
and
will
structed
by Mrs. Judy R1ggs,
Langsv ille, Rt. 1,$10 and costs,
HASTINGS • ON-HUDSON, meet Britain's Mark Cox in
traveled to Lancaster last
left of center.
HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON
today's final of the World Sunday a ftern oon to take part
REDSKINS SIGN
Forfeiting bonds were James
N.Y. IUPI) - Virginia, M:nn.
WASHINGTON (UPI J - The led by skip Mrs. Newton G. Champi onship Tennis Astor m the N.B.T.A. sanctioned
Ritchie, Racine, $25 bond
baton twirling contest held
posted, intoxication ; Raymond Washin gton Redsk ins have Hahney, beat Chicago Exmoor Cup tournament .
there . The team won first place
Windl and, Little Hockmg, signed draft chmces Darwin 11-6 Saturday tn the finals of
hon ors, and second place was
REACHES
FINALS
Francis M. Sees, Withams- Robinson and Nate Anderson the 26th U.S. Women's Curling
won by a team from Philo,
BOLOGNA,
Italy
iUP!J
tow n, W. Va. , Virgil McDunald, plus six free age nts, Coach Bonsp1el at the St. Andrew's
Britain's Mark Cox beat Ohto.
Jr., Belpre, Willi am F. George All e n an nounced Golf Club .
Members of the team are
Romania
's Ion Tiriac 6-3, 6-4
McHugh, Clairton, Pa., and Saturday.
Virgime~ was presented the
Louann
Newell, Jo Aline Fick,
today
to
reach
the
fmals
of
the
Robmson, a running back Wauwatosa Trophy by Mrs.
John A. Smith, Gallipol is,
Carr
, Betsey Amsbary
Teresia
A.stor Cup World Tenms
$27.50 each, speedihg; Garcia from Dakota State, was the George Marsh of Gree nwich
and Susie Goebel.
Workman, Athe ns, $357.50, Redskins' eighth-round 1974 Conn., the president of the U.s: Championship .
Cox,
corltinuin
g
his
spurt
of
Mrs. Carr and Mrs. Goebel
drivmg wh1le intoXIcated; draft choice and Anderson of Wo?"'en 's Curling Association,
near~flawless
tennis,
coasted
to
accompanied
the team to
Illin ois
was wh1le the Exmoor team got the
Charles F . Ca ldwell, Jr .. Eastern
victory with superior passing Lancaster with its mstructor.
Gallipolis, $32.50, left of center. Washington's 16th-round pick . runnerup Appleton Trophy .
shots and smashes.

CASH, CHARGE,
LAY-AWAY
SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

&lt;:OLO\Y · ·

ROBERT KINCAID
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Robert L. Kincaid, main·
tenance engineer at the
Philip Sporn Plant ha s been
to
rece ntly
promoted
maintenance foreman. A
native of Faye ttevill e, W.
Va., Kincaid graduated from
West Virginia Institute of
Technology
with
an
Associate of Science Degree
in Mechanical Engineering.
He
was
honorably
discharged from the West
Virginia National Guard In
1973. Kincaid was employed
at Sporn Plant in !969 as an
Eng in eer B. He was
promoted to Maintenance
Engineer in May of 1913 a.!!!!_
served in th at position until
his recent promotion to
Maintenance
Foreman.
Kincaid, his wife, Susan. and
their two sons, live in Mason.

Col. Otambers
wins his third
service award

Ladies respond

'1\w :tn·idt·uh iu
l'il} ,... ,., . m iuor

MlDDLEPORT - Ar my
Colone l Robert M. Chambers,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Marcus R.
Chambers, 243 N. Fourth St ..
Middlepor t, has reoeived his
third award of the Legion of
·
Merit at Ft. Dix, N. J.
The legion of Merit is the
nation's second highest awatd
for outstand ing service while, a
member of the armed fo rces.
Col. Chambers ea rn ed th e
award during his last
assignment as secre tary, joiht
staff, headquarters, Un ited
Na tions Command, U.S.
Forces , Korea from June 1971
to June 1973 . The colonel is
presen tly assigned as cmn·
manding
officer
of
Headquarters, Basic Combat
Train ing Committee Group at
the fort. H1s w1fe, Troy, is with
him at the Fort.

supposed to call me

back. The others didn't sound

SCHOOL COSTLIER
OXFORD, Ohio ( tl PI ) - The
Fields' ad said :
Miam i University Board of
"I would like to find a lady in Trustees Saturday approved a
her 30s who would like to get $20 rate increase in the sc hool's
married. I am 38 years old and room and board charges, to
never been married. I don't take effect in September . Dr.
drink and have never been Phillip
Shriver,
Miami
arrested. I own a farm and can president1 sa id the room and
provide a good home for a good board rates increase was
woman. I am a citizen of recommended
"regretfully,
Putnam County and well but as an unavoidable conknown through that county. sequence of inflation and costs
You may call me at 858-4608 of food and fuel ."
and I will be glad to meet with
you."
· Fields, who lives with his
TEXACO THREATENED
brother and sister, said his
COLUMBUS (U P I) ' future wife would "have to
cook, sew and wash and clean Texaco could be held in conhouse and everything like tempt of court 1f 1t continues to
ration gasoline at four service
that. "
And when asked what his stations along the Ohio TurnsiSter would do with another pike, the chairman of the Ohio
woman in the jlouse, he said:
Turnpike Commis~on said
"She woufdn 1t do nothing." Saturday.

too good."

'·'

SIZES
SMAll

MEDIUM

THURSDAY NIGHT AT 7:30 P.M. the annual three hour
defensive driving course, open to the public, will be held at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport.
There are 56,000 highway deaths every year and such
programs are held to try to reduce that figure . This particular
program is done through a film and speakers who this year are
Ralph Sandine of the Ohio Department of Highway Safety and a
representative from the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State Patrol.
The Middleport Business and Professional Women 's Club is
sponsoring Thursday's school and light refreshments will be
served at the close of the session.

are

GALLIPOLIS Gallla
County sheriff's deputies investigated the theft of four
sheets of wood paneling trom a
house owned by Elma Trainer
on Frank Shaffer Rd.
In anothe~ r,eport, Wllliam
Phillips of Cottrell's Grocery in
Porter, Saturday found a large
green oxygen tank in the front
of his store. An oxygen tank
was taken Friday from the
Dravo Corp. at the James M.
Gavin Power Plant.

REGUlAR s2.98

standing

:.

$ 27

appla~dng•••

WALKING

\

TALL

MRS. GARNET W!LilAMSON, 82, who is r ecovering f.rom
an accident several months ago was able to prepare a chicken
dinner and "all the trirnmins' " Tuesday in celebration of the
birthday of a long ttme friend, Mrs. Olive Weber. Mrs.
Williamson is working each.day in the Allis-Chatmers shop which
she owns and manages in Rutland.

Paneling stolen

LARGE - XL

Audiences

Ladies All Cotton

&lt;

6TJ /}/}

MEIGS THEATRE

PERMANENT PRESS COTTON/
AVRIL ' SLEEVELESS SHIFTS

®

fRUlam Pak-nit

TONIGHT ONLY

Fe b. 17

REG. 12.37

BADGE 373
( Technicolor)
Verna Bloom
Eddi e Egan

A BCP Product ion
" ••._ ,C. o! Coo

Henry Dar row

8tOI~ C IIhnll

CARTOON

Mon . lhru Thurs.

NOW
ONLY

CL p

I~I ~ROM GFI,I,MA ~[L£,1,S!NG

&amp;

Disney Cartoon
Show starts 1 p.m.

REGULAR •2.97

COMFY SOFT KNIT

MEN'S UNDERWEAR

Robert Duva ll

Feb. 18-19·20·21
NOT OPEN

PKG. of 2
TEE SHIRTS
or

Feel reloxed in these ro omy
cotto n,' Avrd · ~ leevele ~s pnnl
~ ~ ~~ ~~ ~ Pe rky yokes, k l1nes or
~c oop nec ks. Most w1th pock·
et 5, bu tton or s nr.q~ trim ~ S·

BRIEFS
White crew neck tee shirl wit h taped
shoulder and sport collar . 5. M, l ,
XL. Double panel seat, full su ppo rt
briefs . 28 to 42 .

'.,, .

$ 94

M·t· Xt
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"

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ONE SIZE FITS

s·. •· s·7

SNACK

SLIM CUT
GIRLS

BOX

SIZES 7 to 14

SUNDAY THRU .SATURDAY FEB. 17-23

Regular '6.59

,e 2 Pieces Chicken

·''

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.....,.

• French Fries
eRoll
No Substitutions

NOW ONLY

MISSES

Try Our New "Hot Apple"
Sundde. It's Delicious
Also We've Added 3 More Sundaes '
Cherry Nut · Marshmallow· Peanut Cream

BUST-OUT BLOUSES
LONG &amp; SHORT SLEEVE

GUARANTEED
If

fh1 s garment should

prove defecttve in any
way return il dtrectly to

us for replacement or
refund al our opf1on.
Wrangler, Greens boro,
North Carolina.

Stretch nylon me5h gi ... es fl a ttering wrinkle
iree fit. Nude heel. Run Bon toe for lasting
wear. Navy, mist and ton shodes.

j~akr· ~~nppr
2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

FOR QUICK PICI\l il' SERVICE PHONE 446-2682

•
.

MEN'S
SLEEVELESS
SWEATER VEST

I

.

SHOP ALL MURPHY STORES

Silver Bridge Plaza · -Both Gallipolis Store$ .· Pt. Pleasant Store

�'.

••

I I' t

.

'

'·. ' ·, ·~,

...

~.,

I

0 :

3- The ~unday Times - Sentine l, Sunday, ~'&lt;·b . 17, 1~74

·-------------------------,
21 cases settled
l Beat... .
.! Of the Bend ~ ~ ','' !

Houseboat
bulk . Also torn up was the sliding compartment p-.rtitwn , a sliding bathroom mirror,
dashboard and the . boat's mstrwnent
panel
Police officers al..so mvestigated the
theft of a gun taken from the back seat of a
parked car owned by Ernie Belnap of Rio
Grande . The car was parked on Fourth
Ave
Another act of vandalism was i.fi.
vestigated at the Duds and Suds Laundromat on Third Ave. where someone
smashed the chewing gum machine,
spilling gwn onto the noor
One arrest was of Jesse P. Lawson, 47,
Rt 1, Gallipolis, charged with parole
vwlatton.

Consultant
!C&lt;&gt;ntinued from page 1I
In addilton to Bahr, the group was
represented by Clay Baker, Howard
Neekamp and Henry Dillon
The board approved its bills totaling
$41 812 and voted to make an advance
witMrawal of $200,000 in tax monies from
the Gallia County Auditor's Office .
Resignations accepted included those
of assistant clerks, Mrs. Anne Belville and
Mrs. Esther Gordon .
Mrs . Judy Saunders of the Hannan

Costello~s

WRECKED 'ilY FIRE - Mr . and Mrs. Elwood B&lt;&gt;wers
survey the heavy damages which occurred at the1r
restau rant on Pomeroy's East Main St. as the result of a fi re

Labor Bigs meet to plan for 1974
"

.

By DON FINLEY
MIAMI BEACH I UPI 1
Organized labor's top hierarchy
ga thers here Monday for 1ts
annual wmter meettng , with
spiraling pri ces, rising unemployment and impeachment of
President Nixon the top 1tems
on the agenda .
The AFL-CIO Executive
Council headed by 79-year-old
George Meany, will meet for·
more than a week makmg plans
for this year a nd Issuing broadsides agamst the administration
and the White Hou se.

Meany and the other 34
members at the labor counc.·tl
have, in eff ect, given up hope
of getting a ny help for the1r
causes and programs from the
Nixon admmislrahon and in stead are appealing to Congress.
F1rst off, they're urging
Congress to impeach N1xon for
his part in the Watergate
sca ndal and its coverup. The
AFL-C IO launched 1ts impeach·
ment dnvc last November and
expects to put it mto high gear
if and when the House

)

SS helpless to end
• WOman illJUre
• • d
eS
h
Ire
Ch
Agnew guard

·~

WASHI NGTON !UP! I - The
Secret Service sa id Saturday it
cannot obey a demand by the
comptroller general to stop
providing protection for former Vi ce President Spiro T.
Agnew unless it recetves
authority from President
Nixon.
Comptroller General Elmer
B. Staats told the Treasury
Department Friday any fur·
ther Secret Servtce protection
of Agnew would be illega l, and
that he would cut off federal
funds for that purpose as of
Monday .
A Secret Service spokesman
said the protective agency
could not remove the
Agnew detail "u ntil th e
President orders the secretary
of the Treasury to order the
Secret Service to stop. We have
not received any such orders."
A spokesman fo r President
Nixon, vacationing tn Key
Biscayne, Fla., refused commenton the situation Sa turday,
and referred queries to the
Treasury Department and the
Secret Service.
A Treasury spokesman said
only that the Agnew matter
was under discussion.
A spokesman for Staats:
General Accounting Office sa id
the administration could force
a showdown in court if it
wished simply by continuing to
use federal funds to pay for

early Saturday mommg

Agnew's protection , although
the cerltfying off1cer for such
an expenditure would be held
GALLIPOL!S - Robin D.
personally liable for paying the
Sheline, 19, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
bills
Agnew has had full Secret was admitted to the Holzer
Servtce protection si nce he Medica l Center with a frac resigned from office Oct. 10 lured collarbone and multiple
before pleading no con,test to a scalp lacerattons follow mg a
federal "income tax evaston traffic accident at 2:20 a.m.
charge. The GAO estima ted Saturday on Rt. 554 at the
the detail cost taxpayers junction to the White Oak Rd .
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
nearly $90,000 for a two-month
Hi
ghway Patrol sa id Miss
period alone.
Sheline lost control of her car
Staats is an official of Con- which ran off the highway and
gress, not the executtve struck an embankment She
branch, but has authority to was taken to the hospital by the
ha lt use of fed eral funds for Gallia Cou nty Emergency
any purpose he determines is Squad.
Illegal.
·::::~::!».:P."W.«&gt;.».&gt;;:::::::~.~~•'IC'IC&amp;'t\'&amp;'11&amp;'"
Whi te House Press Secretary s;
... 1~~,·
Ronald L. Ziegler was ques- =·=·
tioned at length about Agnew's
protection at a briefing m ~.·:.·:.'
Florida Fnday, but declined to
say why the servtce was not
POM EROY ·- Meigs Sr
ended .
C1 !1 zens Center Ac 1flv lf 1es
Feb 18 Cen ter closed.
"!can't point to any specific
element, and if I could, I Pres1de nt s Bir th day Hol1day
Feb 19 Rug M ak1ng,
wouldn 't, obviously," Ziegler Chorus Practice. 1-2.30 p.m .·
told reporte rs.
cards and games.
Feb . 20 - Qui lting , Cra ft s
The Treasury has noted that
Nurse ' s Day, blood press ure
Sen. Hubert H Humphrey, D- read 12 .30 2 30
Minn ., ha d Secret Service
Feb 71 - Cr oche t ,ng , 10 . 12,
cards
n nd g.•mes J. J p.m
protection for six months after
Fe b. 2'l - Socia l Secunt y
he left the vice presidency m represen lal 1ves at Cen ter to
t969. Presumably that would help Sen1or Citizens f il l out
mean that Agnew's protection applications to r SSI (Sup
plemental Sec ur 1ty Income)
would continue until about starting
at~ a.m ; bow l mg 1 3
April !0 .
pm

Cz'tr'zens
r. Sr.Calendar

Billy L. Petrie, 48, Rt. 2,
Vinton, wa s treated and
released at the Holzer Medical
Center for a broken collarbone
suffered in a truck collision at
4:30 p m. on Rt. 160 at the
junctton of Rt. 554.
Officers sa1d Petrie's truck
was s tru ck by a pick-up
operated by Yvonne M. Byrd,
40,ofBidwell.Therewasheavy
damage to both vehicles. Mrs.
Byrd was charged with failure
to yield the nght of way.
James E. McGuire, 17, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, was cited to Juvenile
Court for failing to stop within
the assured clear distance
followin g an accident on Rt. 160
near the 0. J. White Rd .
Officers said McGuire's car
struck the rear of an auto
dri ven by James E. Kemper,
18, of Kerr.

•
Ml mventor
Gerand dies

SPRINGFIELD, Mas s.
(UP!) - John C. Garand,
inventor of the .30 caliber M1
riOeofWorldWarllfame,died
Saturday at Wesson Memorial
Hospital. He was 86.
Garand was admitted to the
hospital Thursday suffering
from chronic pulmonary
edema, according to Dr.
Samuel Antiles, hls physician.
The inventor was in "guarded
condition" in Wesson WJtil he
succumbed at 8:50 a.m.
Garand, born in 1888 in the
village of St. Remi near
Montrhealh, dlaesignedula machine
gun w 1c
ter res ted in his
appointment as master gauge
and gun experimenter at the
Federal Bureau of Standards
NINE CARS DERAILED
until 19i9.
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) He then went to work as
Nine cars of Penn Central
Ordinance Design
General
freight train hea ded from
at the Springfield
Engineer
Detroit to Cincinnalt derailed
here Satutday. Authorities said Armory and began working on
at least four of the cars rolled his M1 in the early 1920s.
The now famous 11Garand"
over completely and the others
went off the tracks. The cars was accepted by the Army in
were loaded with new Fords 1936and by the Marine Corps in
and some Chrysler and 1940, after meeting the Army's
General
Motors
Corp . standards of a light, simple and
strong firearm.
products.

moves," Eckley added, " we
w1ll have added only 145,000
phones to our telephone network in Ohio. For every eight
phones we put in, we show a
rea l mcrease (Of only one
because seven others are being
taken out.
"These figures are simply
sy mbolic of the times we ·live
in," he explained. "Ours is a
mobile society, with people and
busmess moving frequently.
Just tnsta llt ng these phones,"
Eckley said, "is the equivalent
of start1ng from scratch and
providihg service to all our
customers in Akron , Dayton
"nd Toledo over a 12-month

periOd."
thmgs necessary to give
The remaining $200-million customers the quality of serin the 1974 construction budget vice they expect. He added,
will go for such facilities 'as however, that continuing innew electro nic switching flation and rising costs could
equipment to get ca lls through make it necessary for the
as quickly as customers want; company to ask the Public
for the cable a nd poles, and for Utilities Commission of Ohio
new buildings or for building for permission to . increase
add itions to assure tha t service rates again .
is there when the customer
Eckley noted that people
picks up h1s phone.
continued to make more calls
and talk longer in 1973. He said
Eckley said that the ad- the number of local calls inditional dollars customers are creased by nearly !.3 million
paying, most of it stemming per day, bringing the total
from the rate increase granted nu"'lber of local calls placed by
last August, has permitted the Ohio Bell customers to more
company to do the kinds of than 25-milli on in each 24-hour

perind. In addition, more than
886,000 long distance calls were
completed during the average
business day, an increase of
89,000 calls per day over the
previous year.
In the Gallipolis area, according to Richard Rnderick ,
commercial manager, Ohio
Bell plans to Invest about
$511,000 for construction and
service improvement
programs during 1974. Major
· expenditures wlll ' go to complete the building addition and
add more local call' switching
equipment in the "446" exchange. The public business
office will be remndeled this

I

Wrecks mar
Daytona race

'is'

RECEIVES AWARD - Elmer E. Wood, a foote Mineral maintenance
de}lllrtment employe~. center, IS shown receivmg a !1110 check from the ' Foote
Mineral Company for an 1dea resulting m a cost savmgs a~ the .Graham plant Mr
Wood who resides on Fourth St m New Haven w1th his wife, Genevieve and
daughter, Molide, devised a method that resulk' 1n a longer lasttng furnace electrode Band. Makmg the presentatton is Willtam Walker, a Foote Mmeral foreman ,
nght , wh1le Gil Corliss, superintendent of main tenance, 1oo&lt;s on at left. Wo od has
been employed at Foote Mineral stnce June of !952

Trace area was transferred from Hannan
Trace Elementary School to serve as
payroll and office secretary to board clerk,
Mrs. Naonu Beman . Mrs . Saunders formerly .'ICrved as payroll clerk tor Evans

Grocery
The board also dec1ded to conltnue the
policies adopted by the var ious high school
pnnc1pals which have been tn effect stncc
the start of the 1973-74 school term.

finally dead

smiled Costello as he moved Engli sh and Australian
among the crowds. "I hope it'll journalists. And 1t was a bit of a
jolt early Saturday to hear
be just the same.
The huge Tlrurber cartoons their vo1ces so clearly
depicting man's constant war- d omi,nating the song and
fare with woman were gone- chatter of an Irish bar m New
to be remounted in the new York.
At midmght Costello ordered
spot. But over the bar still hung
the broken shillelagh that the bar officiallv "closed," but
Hemingway , Hfter a drinking that just meant the drinks were
partner claimed it was un- free those final hours, and the
breakable, neatly cracked it in crowd caught a second wind
(or maybe a thtrd ) and plunged
two over his own head.
" Had Some Characters"
ahead with round upon round of
The dark oaked bar had been extra drinks.
polished by elbows belonging to
About one o'clock, jovial
F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald,
boos
a nd hisses greeted the
John O'Hara, A.J . Leibling and
first
of
the "last calls."
Brendan Behan- whose freeFinally
, around 3 a.m., the
wheeling drinking style got
him thrown out more ·than crowd began thiiUl ing out, and
then near 4 a .m the last of them
once.
left
and there was nothmg but
"Mainly, we 've wanted people to enjoy themselves," the bare, Thurber less walls,
Costello said above the roar. the glass, beer and napkin"And we've had some charac- littered fl oor, and the
unkillabl e memo ries of 50
ters, let me tell you."
In the past few years yea r s of drinking-hterary
Costello's has attracted style.

Bobcats in first place
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (UP!) Weste rn Michigan scored
- Ohio University took undisputed possession of first
place in the Mid-American
C&lt;&gt;nference Saturday with a 71176winoverWesternMichigan,
the Brorlcos' second loss in 11
home games .
The &amp;beats are 13-9 overall
and 7-3 m the MAC, a haHgame ahead of Toledo, whose
Saturday game with Eastern
Mlchl.gan will not count tn the
standings. . .
.
Western Michigan IS now 129, 4-5 1~ the MAC.
Ohio s Bill Brown broke a 7474tte w1th two free throws With
1:53 remauung, and George
Green added two more free
th.rows 54 seconds later to
clinch the game.
Ohlo I~ 40-37 at the haH, and
70-58 With 7:42 to go before

TIMES COSTLIER
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
New York Times announced
Saturday higher newsstand
prices of the newspaper are
expected to go into effect later
this month to meet rising
production costs. Arthur Ochs
Sulzberger, publisher of The
Times and chairman and
president of The New York
Times Co., said the. price of the
Sunday New York Times will
rise from 50 to 60 cents in the
city and suburban areas on
Feb. 24 and from 75 to 90 cents
outside a 50-mile radius of the
city except eastern Long Island
where it will sell for 60 cents.
The price will go up proportionately in certain U. S. cities
served by air.

Ohio· Bell now has more than 4 million phones in service
Ohio Bell has more than 4·
million telephones in serv ice
throughout the sta te. During
1974, the eqmvalent of nearly
half those phones will be
moved to different places
within homes or businesses, or
to other parts of town.L{)
The putting in and tiik1ng(9ut
of more than 2-millio n
telephones in a year's time will
eat up around $1!6-million of
Ohio Bell's 1974 construction
budget of $286-milhon, a budget
ol more than $1-mlllion for
every workmg day, according
to
company
President
Frederick R. Eckley. "And
after handlmg those 2-milllon

• .
~

l

1Continued from page 11

By RONAW G. BURNS
NEW YORK (UP!) - It took
three hours , a dozen "last
calls" and 20 quarts of booze to
do 1t.
But Costello's, a newspaper
late Wednesday night. Damages will run at least $20,000 and
saloon and literary landmark
the restaura nt w1ll be closed for at least six weeks while
where James Thurber drew his
repairs are being made None of the expensive ki tchen
cartoons on the wall and Erequipment was insured .
nest Hemingway proved his
he ad was tougher than a
shillelagh, has finally been
forced off 3rd Avenue.
The old spot stond at 599 3rd
Avenue for 50 years, just a
• block from Grand Central
.
Sta t'1on, where a rna n could
Judicia ry Committee returns a with. 1mport quotas . They are
'd
bill of impeachment against the urgtng Congress to overrt e grab one last drink and still
any. preSidential vetoes of such rnake th e 1as t tram
· horne.
President.
While planning to lobby legtslatton .
. .
A Rousing Wake
Thirdly,
the
labor
officials
A
victtm
of New York 's
members of the House to
.
mak1ng
plans
to
elect
what
all
are
impeach Nixon, a spokesman
"
f enve 1opmg w
of glass and
for the AFL-CIO said 1t would Meany ~ails a
ve to-proo steel skyscrapers, the dingy,
Congress
1n
the
1974
electtons. smoky tavern that hosted the
keep hands off the Sena te whe n
The
AFL-CIO
and
1t considers whether to convict
.
.11 b
. aff1hated
.11.
ar t'ISts , the hac ks and the
1
Nixon . To lobby se nator s would untons wl e pounng ml . ."ns hangers-on of the writing world
be like try ing to tamper with a of dollars of their polttlcal since Prohibition days got a
action funds into efforts to elect rousing wake into the early
jury , he said.
Secondly, AFL-CIO leaders ltberal members to the House hours Saturday morning.
are askmg Congress to approve and Senate.
But if the customers grew
In addition , the labor council misty-eyed at their loss as they
legis lation tncreasing the minimum wage, adopting national will be calhng for an end to finally straggled into the
hea lth insurance, appropna ting government controls on wages, street, young Tim C&lt;&gt;stello Jr.,
more funds for pubhc works, which last year lost ground to son of the man who started
and passmg trade legislation price mcreases of 8.8 per cent. the tavern as a speakeasy
in 1923, showed only the steelyeyed glint of a man still very
much in business :
C&lt;&gt;stello's, he said, will be
back in business Tuesday just
.
around the corner.
0
"C&lt;&gt;me and see us then,"

POMEROY - Thirteen
defendants wc1 c fined and
1 eight others forfeited bonds tn
Me1gs County. Court Friday
~
I
- •
, Fined by Judge Frank W.
1 By Bob Hoeflic·h
Porte r were Delbert W.
POMEROY - Roses to Eileen and Elwood Bowers for the Fr1dley, Pome roy, Rt . 4.
courage they are showing fo llowmg a fire wh1ch ruuwd tlwir Janice Couch, Pomeroy, Rt. 2.
East Main St. restaurant and drive-in.
·
Walter Burgess. Middleport,
The life's work of the couple is in the establishment. A fire Rt. 1. William 0. Self, Beverly,
late Wednesday night caused heavy damage not only to the and Thomas W. Shaffer,
kitchen rooms but the dirdng room as well. They've had the new Vienna, W. Va. , $10 and cost:;
building only about 12 years and both Eileen and Elwood have each, speedtng; James D.
slaved over the years , working long hours in the establtshment.
As a result of the fire, it probably will be some six weeks to
two months before they are able to reopen. TI1e really sad part is
lhat none of the equipment - and is this ever expensive' - was
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
insured. Eileen and Elwood really are n't what you would ca ll
young people, so getting the whole mess- and I do mean mess- ( UPI J - Bill Dennis of Glen
Allen, Va ., outduelled Lennie
straighteneq up going to be a real challenge, but one which
Pond of Pe tersbu rg, Va .,
they are faCing well. More of us should have such fortitude to
hang in there .
Saturday to win the acciden tEileen commented Friday that everyone has been wonderful
marred Permatex 300 late
to them. Even the help showed up at once to do their bit in gett mg model sportsmen race at
the restaurant ready to reopen.
Daytona In ternational
The Bowers have always been such ni ce people - seems like Speedway .
there 1S no justice, sometimes.
Dennis reached an average
speed of 140.406 miles an hour
MARGARET FOILROD HAS embarked on a one-woman
over the 270-mile race, shor·
clean up Pomeroy campaign but Margaret won't be going it
tened 30 miles because of the
alone for long.
gasoline shortage , to finish
Already Thursday night, Margaret got, the backing of her
about 10 car lengths in front of
sorority group. Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Pond and wi n his third straight
and that group will contact other organizations which will urge
Perrmatex 300.
village officials to Lake actions in cleaning up the town. They
Dennis had qualified his 1969
particularly will stress cleanup around catch basins and the
Mercury at 17!.576 m.p.h. over
streets which are ladened with cinders put out in the recent snow.
the 2.&gt; mile hi gh-banked
Margaret urges each resident - young and old - to police Daytona course to sta rt eighth
their own behavior when it comes to littering . This, she says, will
in the 41J..ca r f1e ld .
go a long way in making Pomeroy a better place to live . She
Bobby Allison, the early
urges merchants who are sweeping their sidewalks to invest in a
leader, suffered brake trouble
dust pan and sweep the dirt into the dustpan and place it in a
with his red 1966 Chevrolet and
container rather than sweeping into the street. Margaret urges
could not regain command.
the village to use calcium instead of cinders in fighting snow and
Wayne Andrews of Siler City,
ice. Calcium, she contends, costs very little more and parN. C., finished third in a 1970
ticularly when workers have to be dispatched after the snows to
Chevrol et ahead of Jack
clean up the cinders.
Ingram of Asheville, N.C., in a
Margaret further contends that cleaning up the town can't be
1968 Chevrolet.
a one or two day temporary deal. Everyone has got to work at it
The race was marred by four
every day .
wrecks that resulted in caution
"Let's all pitch in and make Pomeroy a clean and lovely
flags over 18laps of the 1011-lap
place to live /' Margaret urges.
race. No one was hurt on the
Go to it, Margaret - we're with you 1
track where wind gusts up to 30
m.p.h. made driving difficult.
AT A RECENT OPEN HOUSE honoring C. E. Blakeslee on
his retirement after 33 years as Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty's Agriculture
Agent, a picture of a gift presentation was not suitable for
•
•
Tlwulto
publication. The gift was a projector, presented by Bill Carr,
George Holter of the Farm Bureau and Landmark, and Rex
Tonight thru
Shenefield of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.
Tuesday
The presentation was one of several made during the observFeb. 26th
ance.

year to meet present day
building code requirements .
Last year , about 1,200 phones
were added to the Gallipolis
area
telephone system,
bringing the number of
telephones in service at the end
of the year to more than 14,300.
Roderick estimates that approximately 1,000 phones will
be added to the system during
1974.
Local calling increased here
Last year by more than 9,400
calls a day, while long distan ~e
calling jwnped to 3,800 a day ,
about 600 a day higher than the
1972 average.

14 straight poin ts to take a 72-70
lead and force the Bobcats to
rally for the victory.
Brown led Ohio with 25
poin ts, and league-lead ing
scorer Walter Lockett, who
was held scoreless for the first
19 minutes of the game, scored
20.
Forwards Mike Steele and
Jeff Tyson scored 18 and 16
points, respectively, for Western. Steele also cleared 13 rebounds and moved mto lith
place on the all-ttme Broncos'
scoring list with 1,016 points.

to ad inviting
marriage bond
CHESTNUT MOUND, Tenn.
(UP! ) - Edgar Fields, a 311year-old bachelor, says his
newspaper advertisemtnt for
11
lad ies
interested
tn
marriagep ha s already
produced a good lead .
Fields, a farmer who has
never been married, said he
has gotten about six phon e
calls since he placed the ad in
the Carthage Courier Thursday.
The good lead, he said, was a
woman who "ain't never been
married and we might get
together.
' ~She's

Donations coming in for vehicle
'

'

'
'
RACINE - Donations arc
-eha rles H. Bryson , Apple
Mugrage, Manetta, $5 and
GALLI POLIS - Two minor still corning in to pu~chase a Emerson McDole, Long BotGrove, Dorothy Parsons, Mr.
costs, no slq,w moving em~~em; lrafftc ar.cident.s were rcportN.l new ambulance for the vi llage tom , Mr. and Mrs . Orville
and Mrs. Tom White, Long
Holter,
Long
Bottom,
John
and
James A. Cremeans ; · Little f1'riday in downtown Ga llipolis, of Racme.
Leora Young, Mrs. L Simpson, Bottom , Pomeroy Flower
Hock in g, and 'George W. ftrst on the parkmg lot at
Rec-ent co ntributor s arc Mr. and Mr:;. Paul Smith, Dale Shop, Ethel Wheeler, Mr and
McHaffie, .Jr., Bryon, Olno, He iner's Bakery. An auto Thelma Walton, Lawrence
Boyd, Racine Lodge 461, Mr. Mrs. F.dgar Taylor, Mr. and
$150 and costs each, three days driven by Brady A. Tul'ley, 27, Bush, Gladys Croy; Chester,
Mrs. Kenneth McCleod, Portcon £in erne nt , li cense Rt. 1. Leon , W Va. backed in to Oh10, Phyllis Rowan , Tuppers and Mrs. William Fox. Mr. and land, Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Mrs. Larry Spencer, Patricia
suspended for six month~, a car operated by William D Plains, Ross Cleland, Chester,
Shain,
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph R. Watson 1 Metgs Tire Center,
restricted driving privileges, Davi&gt;, 28, Ht. 2, Galhpo!is,
Mable Elizabeth Johnson , Henderson, Leona M. Ebers- Ernest Gnmm, Mr and Mrs
drtving while intoxicated;
The other occurred on State Long Bottom, Thelma Orr
bach, Manlyn L. Wolfe, Mrs Ralph D. Shain.
Rodney F . Leedy. Jr , St. where 10-year old Michael Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.'
Eldon Gaul, Chester, Mr. and
Pomeroy, Rt . 4, and Horace R. G. House opened the back door Arthur Orr, Chester, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wagner, Mrs .
Abbott, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $15 and on a car operated by Charles C. Mrs
Royal-cUes tops
John
Wickham
costs, speeding ; Charles Black, 32, of Waverly, mto the Chester, Mr . and Mrs:
Walker, Jr., Crysta l La ke, Ill., path of a car driven by Mamie Roy Chnsty, Chester , Mr.
Lancaster field
ASHE TRIUMPHS
$5 and cos ts, defective N. Robinson, 68. of Ga llioohs.
BOLOGNA, Italy !UP!)
REEDSVILLE - Members
exhaust; Paul E. Fraley,
Amenca
's
Arthur
Ashe
beat
of the Riggs Royal.;,ttes Senior
Ga llipolis, $10 and costs, imBritain's
Roger
Taylor
1 6·0, 4..(i,
Bato n Twirling team, in·
proper tags; Terry D. Napper,
6-2,
Saturday
mght
and
will
structed
by Mrs. Judy R1ggs,
Langsv ille, Rt. 1,$10 and costs,
HASTINGS • ON-HUDSON, meet Britain's Mark Cox in
traveled to Lancaster last
left of center.
HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON
today's final of the World Sunday a ftern oon to take part
REDSKINS SIGN
Forfeiting bonds were James
N.Y. IUPI) - Virginia, M:nn.
WASHINGTON (UPI J - The led by skip Mrs. Newton G. Champi onship Tennis Astor m the N.B.T.A. sanctioned
Ritchie, Racine, $25 bond
baton twirling contest held
posted, intoxication ; Raymond Washin gton Redsk ins have Hahney, beat Chicago Exmoor Cup tournament .
there . The team won first place
Windl and, Little Hockmg, signed draft chmces Darwin 11-6 Saturday tn the finals of
hon ors, and second place was
REACHES
FINALS
Francis M. Sees, Withams- Robinson and Nate Anderson the 26th U.S. Women's Curling
won by a team from Philo,
BOLOGNA,
Italy
iUP!J
tow n, W. Va. , Virgil McDunald, plus six free age nts, Coach Bonsp1el at the St. Andrew's
Britain's Mark Cox beat Ohto.
Jr., Belpre, Willi am F. George All e n an nounced Golf Club .
Members of the team are
Romania
's Ion Tiriac 6-3, 6-4
McHugh, Clairton, Pa., and Saturday.
Virgime~ was presented the
Louann
Newell, Jo Aline Fick,
today
to
reach
the
fmals
of
the
Robmson, a running back Wauwatosa Trophy by Mrs.
John A. Smith, Gallipol is,
Carr
, Betsey Amsbary
Teresia
A.stor Cup World Tenms
$27.50 each, speedihg; Garcia from Dakota State, was the George Marsh of Gree nwich
and Susie Goebel.
Workman, Athe ns, $357.50, Redskins' eighth-round 1974 Conn., the president of the U.s: Championship .
Cox,
corltinuin
g
his
spurt
of
Mrs. Carr and Mrs. Goebel
drivmg wh1le intoXIcated; draft choice and Anderson of Wo?"'en 's Curling Association,
near~flawless
tennis,
coasted
to
accompanied
the team to
Illin ois
was wh1le the Exmoor team got the
Charles F . Ca ldwell, Jr .. Eastern
victory with superior passing Lancaster with its mstructor.
Gallipolis, $32.50, left of center. Washington's 16th-round pick . runnerup Appleton Trophy .
shots and smashes.

CASH, CHARGE,
LAY-AWAY
SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

&lt;:OLO\Y · ·

ROBERT KINCAID
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Robert L. Kincaid, main·
tenance engineer at the
Philip Sporn Plant ha s been
to
rece ntly
promoted
maintenance foreman. A
native of Faye ttevill e, W.
Va., Kincaid graduated from
West Virginia Institute of
Technology
with
an
Associate of Science Degree
in Mechanical Engineering.
He
was
honorably
discharged from the West
Virginia National Guard In
1973. Kincaid was employed
at Sporn Plant in !969 as an
Eng in eer B. He was
promoted to Maintenance
Engineer in May of 1913 a.!!!!_
served in th at position until
his recent promotion to
Maintenance
Foreman.
Kincaid, his wife, Susan. and
their two sons, live in Mason.

Col. Otambers
wins his third
service award

Ladies respond

'1\w :tn·idt·uh iu
l'il} ,... ,., . m iuor

MlDDLEPORT - Ar my
Colone l Robert M. Chambers,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Marcus R.
Chambers, 243 N. Fourth St ..
Middlepor t, has reoeived his
third award of the Legion of
·
Merit at Ft. Dix, N. J.
The legion of Merit is the
nation's second highest awatd
for outstand ing service while, a
member of the armed fo rces.
Col. Chambers ea rn ed th e
award during his last
assignment as secre tary, joiht
staff, headquarters, Un ited
Na tions Command, U.S.
Forces , Korea from June 1971
to June 1973 . The colonel is
presen tly assigned as cmn·
manding
officer
of
Headquarters, Basic Combat
Train ing Committee Group at
the fort. H1s w1fe, Troy, is with
him at the Fort.

supposed to call me

back. The others didn't sound

SCHOOL COSTLIER
OXFORD, Ohio ( tl PI ) - The
Fields' ad said :
Miam i University Board of
"I would like to find a lady in Trustees Saturday approved a
her 30s who would like to get $20 rate increase in the sc hool's
married. I am 38 years old and room and board charges, to
never been married. I don't take effect in September . Dr.
drink and have never been Phillip
Shriver,
Miami
arrested. I own a farm and can president1 sa id the room and
provide a good home for a good board rates increase was
woman. I am a citizen of recommended
"regretfully,
Putnam County and well but as an unavoidable conknown through that county. sequence of inflation and costs
You may call me at 858-4608 of food and fuel ."
and I will be glad to meet with
you."
· Fields, who lives with his
TEXACO THREATENED
brother and sister, said his
COLUMBUS (U P I) ' future wife would "have to
cook, sew and wash and clean Texaco could be held in conhouse and everything like tempt of court 1f 1t continues to
ration gasoline at four service
that. "
And when asked what his stations along the Ohio TurnsiSter would do with another pike, the chairman of the Ohio
woman in the jlouse, he said:
Turnpike Commis~on said
"She woufdn 1t do nothing." Saturday.

too good."

'·'

SIZES
SMAll

MEDIUM

THURSDAY NIGHT AT 7:30 P.M. the annual three hour
defensive driving course, open to the public, will be held at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport.
There are 56,000 highway deaths every year and such
programs are held to try to reduce that figure . This particular
program is done through a film and speakers who this year are
Ralph Sandine of the Ohio Department of Highway Safety and a
representative from the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State Patrol.
The Middleport Business and Professional Women 's Club is
sponsoring Thursday's school and light refreshments will be
served at the close of the session.

are

GALLIPOLIS Gallla
County sheriff's deputies investigated the theft of four
sheets of wood paneling trom a
house owned by Elma Trainer
on Frank Shaffer Rd.
In anothe~ r,eport, Wllliam
Phillips of Cottrell's Grocery in
Porter, Saturday found a large
green oxygen tank in the front
of his store. An oxygen tank
was taken Friday from the
Dravo Corp. at the James M.
Gavin Power Plant.

REGUlAR s2.98

standing

:.

$ 27

appla~dng•••

WALKING

\

TALL

MRS. GARNET W!LilAMSON, 82, who is r ecovering f.rom
an accident several months ago was able to prepare a chicken
dinner and "all the trirnmins' " Tuesday in celebration of the
birthday of a long ttme friend, Mrs. Olive Weber. Mrs.
Williamson is working each.day in the Allis-Chatmers shop which
she owns and manages in Rutland.

Paneling stolen

LARGE - XL

Audiences

Ladies All Cotton

&lt;

6TJ /}/}

MEIGS THEATRE

PERMANENT PRESS COTTON/
AVRIL ' SLEEVELESS SHIFTS

®

fRUlam Pak-nit

TONIGHT ONLY

Fe b. 17

REG. 12.37

BADGE 373
( Technicolor)
Verna Bloom
Eddi e Egan

A BCP Product ion
" ••._ ,C. o! Coo

Henry Dar row

8tOI~ C IIhnll

CARTOON

Mon . lhru Thurs.

NOW
ONLY

CL p

I~I ~ROM GFI,I,MA ~[L£,1,S!NG

&amp;

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Show starts 1 p.m.

REGULAR •2.97

COMFY SOFT KNIT

MEN'S UNDERWEAR

Robert Duva ll

Feb. 18-19·20·21
NOT OPEN

PKG. of 2
TEE SHIRTS
or

Feel reloxed in these ro omy
cotto n,' Avrd · ~ leevele ~s pnnl
~ ~ ~~ ~~ ~ Pe rky yokes, k l1nes or
~c oop nec ks. Most w1th pock·
et 5, bu tton or s nr.q~ trim ~ S·

BRIEFS
White crew neck tee shirl wit h taped
shoulder and sport collar . 5. M, l ,
XL. Double panel seat, full su ppo rt
briefs . 28 to 42 .

'.,, .

$ 94

M·t· Xt
~. '

"

....

ONE SIZE FITS

s·. •· s·7

SNACK

SLIM CUT
GIRLS

BOX

SIZES 7 to 14

SUNDAY THRU .SATURDAY FEB. 17-23

Regular '6.59

,e 2 Pieces Chicken

·''

&lt; '

.....,.

• French Fries
eRoll
No Substitutions

NOW ONLY

MISSES

Try Our New "Hot Apple"
Sundde. It's Delicious
Also We've Added 3 More Sundaes '
Cherry Nut · Marshmallow· Peanut Cream

BUST-OUT BLOUSES
LONG &amp; SHORT SLEEVE

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MEN'S
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Silver Bridge Plaza · -Both Gallipolis Store$ .· Pt. Pleasant Store

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5- The Sundav Times-Sentin\!l,Sunday,

Assembly hot on energy
•

I'OI.UMRUS (UP!) - Energyrelated lcgislatiun continues to
be lhe lop priorily item in the

TOP DISTR!Cf CHAPTER - The Gallipolis FFA was
cho'*&gt;n "District Gold Emblem Chapter" at the evalnaion
meeting held Feb. 13 at Alexander High School. The gold
rating was earned by three chapters in District 14 which is

__________________________ ,
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Lellen of apilllou are welcomed. They lhoald be lea
111an 30t wordaiCJDll (or be subject lo reducUou by lbe
edl1or) md mut be liped with the a!pee's lddnu.
N.mea may be whbheld upoa publleatiCIII. However, Clll
nqueat,umeawWbecllaclolled.LettensboulclbeiDiooc!
lane, addreiiiDI luuea, uol penouaUUea.

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How a bill becomes a law
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Feb. 9, 1974
Dear Sir:
As legislative chairman of American Legion Auxiliary, Post
No. 39, I became interested in how a bill becomes a law in the
United States. This is what I gleaned:
Most bills can be Introduced in either house. The procedure
by which a bill becomes a law is much the same regardless of
where the bill originates.
A subcommittee holds public hearings on the bill.
A full conunittee meets in executive (closed) session to
consider testimony taken by the sullcommittee. It may kill the
bill, approve it with or without amendments, or draft a new bill.
The committee recommends the bill for passage. It is then
listed on the calendar.
The bill comes up for debate. Dep~nding on the degree of
controversy, debate may last from a few hours to several weeks.
Amendments may nor may not be added. The bill is then voted
on.
If it passes, it goes to the House of Representatives for action. It is referred to the proper committee.
Hearings may be held. The House Committee rejects or .
accepts with or without recommendation.
The committee recommends the bill for passage. It is listed
on the calendar and is sent to the rules conunittee.
The rules committee is one of the most powerful committees
in the House of Representatives because its primary function is
to determine the order of consideration of a bill by the House. It
also establishes tbe rules under which the bill will be considered.
It goes before the entire body, is debated and voted on.
If the bill is passed by the second body, but contains differences, either house may request a conference committee. The
conferees meet and try to reconcile their differences.
Generally they reach an agreement. They report back to
their respective houses. The report is accepted or rejected.
If the report is accepted by both houses, the bill is signed by
the Speaker.of the House, the President of the Senate and is sent
to the President of the United States.
The President may sign or veto the bill within 10 days. If he
doesn 'I sign within 10 days and Congress is still in session, the bill
automatically becomes law but if Congress has adjourned before
the 10 days have lapsed, and the President has not signed the bill,
it does not become law. This is known as "pocket veto." If the
President returns the bill with a veto message, it may still
become law if passed by a two-thirds majority in each house.
Mrs. Edith M. Fox, Legislative Conunitiee Chairman,
American Legion Auxiliary, Post No. 39.

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s0 1zh en1tsyn
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I nyet ' nyet mood
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Ohio General Assembly this
week . .
The House Select Committee
on Energy will take more tes·timony Wednesday on an
energy conservation bill
drafted by Gov. John J .
Gilligan.
The proposal was criticized
in hearings last week for dele,
gating too much legislative
power to the executive
branch and for implementing
stringent, mandatory controls
on the use of ener!ly by
businesses.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee will also tangle
with the administration's bill,
introduced in that chambery
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, Dcomposed of 28 chapters. The chapter will now compete with
Akron , and a Republican
winners of the other 13 districts in the state for the Ohio FFA
version offered in a surp~.
Association top awards. The Gallipolis chapter has 47
move last week by President
members and has Mr. Larry Marr as its vocational
Pro Tempore Theodore M.
agriculture"instructor and FFA advisor.
Gray, R-Columbus.
The GOP energy bill calls for
a seven-member board consisting of six legislators and the
governor as chairman to set
policy during an energy crisis.
The Democratic· version gives
the governor sweeping powers
to set policy, in cooperation
with a board that has no proStruve, asked whether he VISIOns
By ERIK VAN EES
for
legislative
and
Solzhenitsyn discussed a representations.
ZURICH (UPIJ- Alexander
L Solzhenitsyn, looking grim new book, said, "No, but he is
The Senate Ways and Means
and weary, left the seclusion of always working on manua suburban Zurich apartment scripts."
Solzhenitsyn's German-lanSaturday for a meeting with his
guage
publisher , Rudolph
publisher and the lawyer
Streit-scherz,
said earlier the
handling his royalties. He
writer
wants
to
make sure that
angrily refused to answer
questions by shouting, "Nyet, his family can join him in the
West before making definite
nyet."
By WilLIAM F. WRIGHT
The dissident writer, in his plans for the future.
LONDON
( UP!)
In Moscow, Soviet Premier
fourth day of exile from the
Soviet Union, conferred in Alexei N. Kosygin was quoting Disclosure that Britain has
downtown Zurich with Nikita as saying he is not interested in suffered its worst year of inflation since the Korean War
Struve of the YMCA publishing the Solzhenitsyn case.
"You believe I am only sent the Conservative party on
house of Paris and lawyer Fritz
thinking
of Solzhenitsyn and the defensive Saturday in the
Heeb.
occupied
only
with him. I am campaign for the Feb. 28
Solzehitsyn, wearing a thick
·
overcoat in the gloomy wea- not interested in the case," a general election.
Prime Minister Edward
ther, said, 'Nyet, nyet," when reporter for the Scandinavian
came under a barrage of
Heath
news
agencies
said
Kosygin
reporters tried to question him
questioning
at his daily camupon leaving Heeb's apariment told him while waiting for the
arrival of Finnish President paign news conference followin mid-morning .
ing the release Friday of
"No questions, no answers," Urho Kekkonen.
government figures showing a
Soviet
newspapers
again
he said on returning to the
apartment in suburban published columns of letters 12 per cent increase in the cost
Oerlikon almost 3'C. hours from readers condemning of living over the past 12
Solzhenitsyn and praising the months.
later.
Heath, blamed the rising cost
Heeb has acted since 1970 as government for its action in
custodian of Solzhenitsyn's deporting him to West Ger- of world food prices, oil and
other commodities and said
Western royalties, believed to many Wednesday.
both his adininisttation and a
amount to ~everal million
Labor government would he
dollars.
powerless
to deal with the
1w
problem. "Labor leaders are
now being forced to agree that
the major cause of increases in
prices is world prices over
16 NAMES OMITTED
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The which we have no control,"
POMEROY
Sixteen
Heath said. "They are being
persons assisting at the recent United Mine Workers of forced to agree that they
America
has
asked
British
BloOdmobile here were not
themselves could do nothing at
listed in the report that ap- dockworkers to boycott all about it."
peared in Tuesday's Daily shipments of U.S. coal the
He refused to acknowledge
union said is being exported to
Sentinel. They were Mrs. Paul
the Labor party's contention
England
to
break
the
British
Casci, Mary Kunzelman,
that inflation has now become
Maureen Hennessy, Sonya miners' strike.
Harry Patrick, UMWA the major issue in the camOhlinger, Loretta Beegle,
secretary-treasurer, said paign. Heath said the ConBarbara Mullen, Pat White, Friday, "We have information servatives-with a nationwide
Elsie Roush, Marcia Dennison, which leads us to believe that coal miners strille now in its
Neva Seyfried, Eva Dessauer, coal is now being diverted to second week-wouid continue
Teresa Byers, Rose McDade, England in increasing quan- to fight the election on "who
Kermit McElroy, Dayton
ti ties via trans-shipment governs Britain-the governMcElroy and Lenavul Johnson. through continental European ment or the unions?".
Labor party leader Harold
ports."
Wilson
assailed Heath's expla·
He acknowledged that U.S.
for
the jump in the cost
nation
Bureau of Mines statistics
show no dramatic coal export of living as "lame excuses"
and said if Labor wins the
increases.
"We have no direct control election his government would
name the entire seven-member over American coal once it introduce stare food subsidies
commission.
leaves the mines," said Pa- to check rising grocery prices.
11
People want to know more
Burch, a native of '!'Ireson, trick, "but we stand shoulderAriz., was an administrative to-shoulder with brother than the flood of lame excuses
assistant to Sen. Barry M. miners iil England, and we pouring out of Tory party
Goldwater, R-Arlz., in the late regard any attempt to break headquarters," Wilson said at
1950s, his deputy campaign their strike as a direct attack his regular campaign news
manager during Goldwater's on us .... But we can and do urge conference. "They want to
unsuccessful bld for the presi- the dockworkers of England to know what Mr. Heath is going
dency in 1964 and Republican refuse to unload these ship- to do about the appalling facts
he is now admitting."
national chairman in 1~5.
ment.s."

Heath on
defensive

j

Miners vo

to

support strike

Committee has scheduled a
tentative Tuesday session .with
the Agriculture, Conservation
and Environment Committee
to discuss the energy
legislation.
The Senate Transportation
Committee Wednesday will
consider House -pa ssed
legislation allowing the Ohio
transportation director to
lower speed limits to conform
to federal directives.
The measure must pass both
chambers by March 3 or Ohio
will lose federal highway monies. Some legislators have
termed the ultimatum "blackmail."
Three bills relating to oil and
gas drilling under Lake Erie
will be studied' in the House Interstate Cooperation Committee Wednesday morning.
A measure introduced by
Rep. John McCormack, D-Euclid, proposes a permanent ban
on drilling, while Rep. Ethel

Swanbeck, R-Huron, ,is calling
for a two-year extension of the
current ban until July I, 1976.
A bill by Rep. Ronald Weyandt, D-Akron, would allow
drilling to resume without restrictions.
Officials in the state Department of Natural Resources
have said oil companies have
expressed little interest in drilling under Lake Erie because it
is too expensive at a time when
plenty of off-shore acreage is
still available.
The Senate Finance Committee will hold a second hearing
Tuesday on • measure by Sen.
Anthony Calabrese, D-Cleveland, which would appropriate
$40 million to subsidize a comprehensive mass transit sys·
tern . Calabrese's proposal
would attract $95 million in
federal matching funds.
Last week, Rep. Patrick

Sweeney, D.Cievelanil 1 jptroduced a measure which would
provide $5 million to set up an
Amtrak passenger rail service
between Ohio's major cities.
In the House Judiciary Committee Tuesday evening, tesiimony will be taken in f~vor of
1egislation
that would amend
1
the constitution to prohibit the
manufacture, sale, use or pos- ,
session of handguns.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee is expected tohrecommend for passage .Tuesday
House-approved legislation
providing the educational
bonus for Vietnam veterans.
No-fault automobile insurance will be considered
again in the Senate Insurance
Committee. Testimony by
insurance companies last week
favored the no-fault plan with a
$1,500 lawsuit threshhol.d higher than that adopted by
any other state.

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in state race

Miss Maggied weds.
Just Know Where The Best" Buys" Are, Right
Here At Tawney's!

GALLIPOLIS
Miss
Pamela Nan Maggied became
the bride of Charles Allen
Barth, Dec. 22 at 2 p.m. at the
First Unitarian Church,
Columbus. Rev. George C.
Whitney officiated at the
double ring ceremony.
The new Mrs. Barth is the
daughter of . Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Maggied, 434 Hedgewood Dr., Gallipolis. The
groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Barth, 3372 Avon
Lake Rd., Li'tchfield.
For her l)'edding the bride
chose a white velvet gown with
attached train. The v-neckline
waist and long sleeves were
trimmed W\th rose braid. Her
elbow length silk illusion veil
was held by,a velvet juliet cap.
A small diainond pendant that
belonged to her maternal
grandmother was the bride's
only jewelry. She carried a
single white hybrid orchid. ·
Attending the bride as maid
of honor was Miss Usa Brink,
Gallipolis. Bridesmaids were
Miss Sandy Maggied, sister of
the bride, and Miss Janet
Barth, sister of the groom.
They wore light blue velvet
gowns and carried lace

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Tawney Jewelers. have served Gallipolis for over 40 years.
Our name is synonymous with tremendous values and
excel~ent service. Our diamonds are carefully graded to
give you the very best available, and we guarantee each

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~hiiiiQ/1.;"

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HOUSE OF DIAMONDS

econd Ave.

Nicholas Johnson last summer,
but the Senate has yet to
confirm him. H.. Hell:. Lee
resigned later in the year and
Nixon has nominated a successor.
The only FCC Democrat is
Benjamin L. Hooks, who was
appointed by Nixon. When the
term of Republican H. Rex Lee
expires in June, Nixon will
have had the unusual chance to

DUE BY APRIL 30
COLUMBUS - Ohio Tax
Commissioner Robert J.
Kosydar said Saturday personal property tax returns for
1974 must be filed between
February 15 and April 30.
Personal property taxes are
levied on all individuals,
partnerships, associations and
corporations engaged in
business in Ohio and on all '
· individuals owning intangible
property such as stocks, bonds
and notes.

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

CLOSED ON SUNDAYS

OPEN
MON. • FRI. 10 AM TIL 9 PM
SATURDAYS 10 AM TIL 6 PM
Shop Cox's • You'll !J,, (,/;,d
Dill!

ON ALL FABRICS
STORE~lDE -

NO, THIS IS NOT WiNTER FABRICS!
MISSION OPEN
ENO - Due tu bad weather,
the Morgan Center Home
Mission here was not open
Monday, Feb. II, but will be
open Monday, Feb. IB instead.

nosegays of purple statice.
Terry Mowery, Utchfield,
was the best man . Ushers were
Kenneth Barth, brother of the
groom, "!'fl.Larry Wolfe, both
of Litchfie-ld.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held at the
Bistra Lounge, Uncoln Park
West.
Mr. and Mrs, Barth are both
graduates of Ohio University.
Mrs. Barth plans to continue
her education at Ohio Stare
University and Barth is employed as an accountant for
Columbus . Air Conditioning
Corp.
The newlyweds are living at
299 Nationwide Blvd., Apt. II,
Columbus.
CARNIVAL PLANNED
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville PTA will sponsor
a spring Carnival Friday, Feb.
22 at 6:30 p.m. in the school
gym, A prince and princess
and king and queen will be
named. There also will be a
variety of games. There will be
a child and adult door prize.
Admission is adults 25 cents
and students 10 cents.

Refreshments of ice cream,
cup cakes and Kooi-Ald were
served following the opening of
gifts.
Attending the . prty were
Steve Lifland, Joe Valee, Alex
Wallen, Kelly Rusk, Bruce
O'Rourke, Sherry Rhodes and
Tracy Stewart.
Sending gifts were Michelle
Holley and Terry Adams.
The occasion also marked
the 14th birthday of Todd's
sister, Melody.

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YES! IT IS SPRING FABRICS

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOP
58 COURT

SINGER APPROVED DEALER
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

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Mr. and Mrs. Terry Varney

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar

Faith Smith weds

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
RACINE - Sat ur da y, De c.
The new Mrs. Varney is a
Citizens Center, loca~dr· in .. 15, at 2 p.m., Miss Faith Smith senior at Southern Local High
the Holzer Hospital Building, became the bride of Terry School and . the groom is a
Cedar St. entrance, is open Varney at the Carmel United graduate of Southern and atMonday .throughFridayfrom 9 Methodist Church. The Rev. tends the Ohio Technical
a.m. to 3 p.m. and One night a Frank Cheesebrew performed School in Columbus.
week. The schedule for this the double ring ceremony.
Attending the reception were
week is as follows:
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Varney and
Monday, Feb. 18, Center is Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith and Greg, Ironton; Mr. and Mrs.
closed. Presidents' Day; Varney is the son of Mr. and Tom Comer, Tami and Matt,
Tuesday, Feb. 19, Physical Mrs. Winston Varney, Long Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
fitness, 10-11 a.m.; Deboupage Bottom.
Tawney and Kari, Gallipolis;
class, 1-3 p.m.; Wednesday.
Following the wedding a Mr. and Mrs. Jim Skidmore
Feb. 20 • VIM session, l-3 p.m., reception was held at the hume and Michelle, Gallipolis; Mr.
concerning "Foods, Facts and of the bride's parents. The and Mrs. Winston Varney,
Frauds," Resource person, Pat table was centered with a three Kent and Todd, Long sottom,
Glass, area extension agent; tiered wedding cake topped the Rev. and Mrs. Cheese brew,
Thursday, Feb. 21 • Paper clip with the traditional miniature New Straitsville; the Rev.
necklace class, 1"3 p.m., bride and groom flanked with Steve Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
council meeting, 2 p.m.; tapers, poinsettias and natural Don Smith and Jerry, Mr. and
Friday, Feb. 22, Hobo Day, II pine.
Mrs. Paul Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
a.m. to 7 p;in,
M'lS,S Bon me
. Sm1. th presided
.
Dan Smith , Bonnie, Tjm,
at the punch bowL Serving the Tammy and Ted';' all of Racine,
cake was Mrs . Frances RD.
Skidmore.
CALLED BY DEATH
POMEROY -,.- Mrs. Molly =========~~===============================================~===~=======
Hill, Pomeroy, left Saturday
via plane out of Columbus for
Medford, Mass., where she was
called by the unexpected death
of her brother, Joe Watson, on
Friday night. Funeral services
will be held at the Gaffey
Funeral Home in Medford.

Gallipolis, Ohio

·New Cream OJ The Crop Fashions by
Mori Lee . ..
Advertised
in Spring Forecast Issue of
..
·
Bride's Magazine
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GALLIPOLIS - February
exhibit, Ink wash drawings by
Marrano Thaker. Riverby is
open Saturday and Sunday 1-5
p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday
10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 27, Crewel
embroidery workshop, 2-4
p.m.; Tuesday, Feb. 19, FAC
Interdepartmental meeting, 8
p.m.; Friday, Feb. 22,
Deadline for annual dinner,
Meeting reservations. Call 671;5453; Sunday, Feb. 24, ParentChild workshop 2-4 p.m.; '
Tuesday, Feb. 26, FAC trustees
meeting, 8 p.m.; Thursday,
Feb. 28, FAC annual dinner
meeting, 6:30 p.m., Oscar's;
&amp;unday, March 3, Kick-up
reception for membership, 2-4
,.m. Everyone interested in
joining FAC is invited; Monday, March 4, Membership
ilrive begins.

Burch moves to Whl.te House
KEY
BISCAYNE,
Fla.
(UP!) - Federal Communications Commission
chairman Dean Burch, a
stalwart conservative who
once headed the Republican
National Conunittee, has a
new assignment in the White
House.
President Nixon named
Burch as a presidential
counselor Friday. Burch, 46,
will move to the White House in
March, leaving a third seat on
the FCC vacant. Nixon is expe~ted to name a Republican to
the commission.
By Jaw, the FCC cannot have
more than four members of
one political party. .But
because of two vacancies that
have gone unfilled, the commission has functioned for
seve~al months with a 4-1
Republican majority.
Nixon has named Democrat
·James Quello to fill the seat
vacated by the controversial

SAVE 20%

given to the winners.

Mr. and Mrs. Charks A. Barth

TAWNEY JEWELERS

MIDDLEPORT
The Jo Ellen King and Debbie Demonstrations wHI be given
at the next meeting by Jeff
Middleport Hill Toppers 4-H Smith.
club met at the home of Mr .
Refreshments were served Dilcher and Debbie Lawrence .
and Mrs . .Jimmie King, ad. by
Debbie
Lawrence. - Fran Williams, reporter .
visors Feb. 6 with eight
members present. A Valentine
party was planned and lhe
LIMITED TIME ONLY
members wrote a letter lo
Tommy King, who is in the
Veterans Hospital in Pomeroy .
Nancy La wrence gave a
demonstration on the anatomy
of a dog. Recreation was led by

GALLIPOLIS - A birthday
party was given Sunday, Feb.
10, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Wiseman, 3!15 Jackson
Pike, honoring the sixth birthday· of their son, Todd.
After the guests arrived,
party hats were distributed
and a variety of games were
played under the supervision of
Todd's brother, Keith, and
sister, Melody. Prizes were

Zollinger bows
out to Keslar
LANCASTER
Rex
Zollinger, former chairman of
the Republican Executive
Committee of Fairfield County,
and Fairfield County Recorder, Friday withdrew his
candidacy for Tenth District
Republican State Central
Committeeman in favor of the
chairman of the Tenth District
Republican
Committee,
William (Dutch) Keslar, also
executive committee chairman
of the Muskhgum County
GOP.
In endorsing Keslar, he
pointed to Keslar's many years
of service to the Republican
Part: over 12 years as
secretary and ch;!irman of the
Muskingum County Executive
Committee; over 20 years as
member of the G.O.P. Policy
Committee; past president of
Zanesville City Council, and
presently a member of the
Board of Elections and. the
Muskingum County Board of
Health.
In addition to his political
activity, Keslar has been a
Rotarian 30 years; president of
the Ohio Jaycees 1949'1950;
active in the Masonic
organization, having been
president of the Zava Shrine
Club, and was vice commander
of the American Legion.

Middleport Hilltoppers 4-H club meets

Birt/;Jday
observed

Co-ordi na ted-Gift Registry • Co mpk te Selecl ion of China,
Stalwg, Crys tal • Attendant' s Gifts • Soci:11ly Coml l

lnvita lions • Regislt'ted Bridal Consultant at yDur ~e rvice
without charge • Recep tion Sen-ice loa ned without dl&lt;lti!;C

~oor brwa[ store

PAUL DAVIES
-JEWELERS
404 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

"So m ~ Thing!! Au Forever"
MEMBER NATIONAL HRIOAl SJ;RV ICE

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Fl ELDCREST
TOWELS I

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Terry &amp; Velour. Clear bright colors
of Rose, Blue, Green &amp; Gold.

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fi'.4UL

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BEAUTIFUL NEW

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We Are Also Celebrating
40th Year In The Construction Of
Mobile Homes, In Cooperation With
SCHULT MOBILE HOMES
We.Are Featuring Special
On All Schult Models During The
Rest Of February.

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a ,MAIQGIE NOftTHUP

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TOWELS .......................•2 &amp; '2"
WASHCLOTHS ....................... 89~
HAND .TOWELS ......~l 59 &amp; '1"
59

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til 8 p.m.

RIGHT
Organza and peau
d'ange. Scoop neckline. Mutton
sleeves . Detachable train.

Make your selection soon from our beautiful Bridal Department located on the
mezzanme m the Fashion Center at

-:-:

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HOME SALES '

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LEFT
Organza and peau
d'ange. High neckline. Long 'straiqht
sleeves.
Yoked waist. Matching
mantilla for the Total Look. White or
Ivory.

master

ch~ rge

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· Open Monday
Til8p.m.

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300 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Lafayette Mall

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5- The Sundav Times-Sentin\!l,Sunday,

Assembly hot on energy
•

I'OI.UMRUS (UP!) - Energyrelated lcgislatiun continues to
be lhe lop priorily item in the

TOP DISTR!Cf CHAPTER - The Gallipolis FFA was
cho'*&gt;n "District Gold Emblem Chapter" at the evalnaion
meeting held Feb. 13 at Alexander High School. The gold
rating was earned by three chapters in District 14 which is

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Lellen of apilllou are welcomed. They lhoald be lea
111an 30t wordaiCJDll (or be subject lo reducUou by lbe
edl1or) md mut be liped with the a!pee's lddnu.
N.mea may be whbheld upoa publleatiCIII. However, Clll
nqueat,umeawWbecllaclolled.LettensboulclbeiDiooc!
lane, addreiiiDI luuea, uol penouaUUea.

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How a bill becomes a law
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Feb. 9, 1974
Dear Sir:
As legislative chairman of American Legion Auxiliary, Post
No. 39, I became interested in how a bill becomes a law in the
United States. This is what I gleaned:
Most bills can be Introduced in either house. The procedure
by which a bill becomes a law is much the same regardless of
where the bill originates.
A subcommittee holds public hearings on the bill.
A full conunittee meets in executive (closed) session to
consider testimony taken by the sullcommittee. It may kill the
bill, approve it with or without amendments, or draft a new bill.
The committee recommends the bill for passage. It is then
listed on the calendar.
The bill comes up for debate. Dep~nding on the degree of
controversy, debate may last from a few hours to several weeks.
Amendments may nor may not be added. The bill is then voted
on.
If it passes, it goes to the House of Representatives for action. It is referred to the proper committee.
Hearings may be held. The House Committee rejects or .
accepts with or without recommendation.
The committee recommends the bill for passage. It is listed
on the calendar and is sent to the rules conunittee.
The rules committee is one of the most powerful committees
in the House of Representatives because its primary function is
to determine the order of consideration of a bill by the House. It
also establishes tbe rules under which the bill will be considered.
It goes before the entire body, is debated and voted on.
If the bill is passed by the second body, but contains differences, either house may request a conference committee. The
conferees meet and try to reconcile their differences.
Generally they reach an agreement. They report back to
their respective houses. The report is accepted or rejected.
If the report is accepted by both houses, the bill is signed by
the Speaker.of the House, the President of the Senate and is sent
to the President of the United States.
The President may sign or veto the bill within 10 days. If he
doesn 'I sign within 10 days and Congress is still in session, the bill
automatically becomes law but if Congress has adjourned before
the 10 days have lapsed, and the President has not signed the bill,
it does not become law. This is known as "pocket veto." If the
President returns the bill with a veto message, it may still
become law if passed by a two-thirds majority in each house.
Mrs. Edith M. Fox, Legislative Conunitiee Chairman,
American Legion Auxiliary, Post No. 39.

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s0 1zh en1tsyn
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Ohio General Assembly this
week . .
The House Select Committee
on Energy will take more tes·timony Wednesday on an
energy conservation bill
drafted by Gov. John J .
Gilligan.
The proposal was criticized
in hearings last week for dele,
gating too much legislative
power to the executive
branch and for implementing
stringent, mandatory controls
on the use of ener!ly by
businesses.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee will also tangle
with the administration's bill,
introduced in that chambery
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, Dcomposed of 28 chapters. The chapter will now compete with
Akron , and a Republican
winners of the other 13 districts in the state for the Ohio FFA
version offered in a surp~.
Association top awards. The Gallipolis chapter has 47
move last week by President
members and has Mr. Larry Marr as its vocational
Pro Tempore Theodore M.
agriculture"instructor and FFA advisor.
Gray, R-Columbus.
The GOP energy bill calls for
a seven-member board consisting of six legislators and the
governor as chairman to set
policy during an energy crisis.
The Democratic· version gives
the governor sweeping powers
to set policy, in cooperation
with a board that has no proStruve, asked whether he VISIOns
By ERIK VAN EES
for
legislative
and
Solzhenitsyn discussed a representations.
ZURICH (UPIJ- Alexander
L Solzhenitsyn, looking grim new book, said, "No, but he is
The Senate Ways and Means
and weary, left the seclusion of always working on manua suburban Zurich apartment scripts."
Solzhenitsyn's German-lanSaturday for a meeting with his
guage
publisher , Rudolph
publisher and the lawyer
Streit-scherz,
said earlier the
handling his royalties. He
writer
wants
to
make sure that
angrily refused to answer
questions by shouting, "Nyet, his family can join him in the
West before making definite
nyet."
By WilLIAM F. WRIGHT
The dissident writer, in his plans for the future.
LONDON
( UP!)
In Moscow, Soviet Premier
fourth day of exile from the
Soviet Union, conferred in Alexei N. Kosygin was quoting Disclosure that Britain has
downtown Zurich with Nikita as saying he is not interested in suffered its worst year of inflation since the Korean War
Struve of the YMCA publishing the Solzhenitsyn case.
"You believe I am only sent the Conservative party on
house of Paris and lawyer Fritz
thinking
of Solzhenitsyn and the defensive Saturday in the
Heeb.
occupied
only
with him. I am campaign for the Feb. 28
Solzehitsyn, wearing a thick
·
overcoat in the gloomy wea- not interested in the case," a general election.
Prime Minister Edward
ther, said, 'Nyet, nyet," when reporter for the Scandinavian
came under a barrage of
Heath
news
agencies
said
Kosygin
reporters tried to question him
questioning
at his daily camupon leaving Heeb's apariment told him while waiting for the
arrival of Finnish President paign news conference followin mid-morning .
ing the release Friday of
"No questions, no answers," Urho Kekkonen.
government figures showing a
Soviet
newspapers
again
he said on returning to the
apartment in suburban published columns of letters 12 per cent increase in the cost
Oerlikon almost 3'C. hours from readers condemning of living over the past 12
Solzhenitsyn and praising the months.
later.
Heath, blamed the rising cost
Heeb has acted since 1970 as government for its action in
custodian of Solzhenitsyn's deporting him to West Ger- of world food prices, oil and
other commodities and said
Western royalties, believed to many Wednesday.
both his adininisttation and a
amount to ~everal million
Labor government would he
dollars.
powerless
to deal with the
1w
problem. "Labor leaders are
now being forced to agree that
the major cause of increases in
prices is world prices over
16 NAMES OMITTED
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The which we have no control,"
POMEROY
Sixteen
Heath said. "They are being
persons assisting at the recent United Mine Workers of forced to agree that they
America
has
asked
British
BloOdmobile here were not
themselves could do nothing at
listed in the report that ap- dockworkers to boycott all about it."
peared in Tuesday's Daily shipments of U.S. coal the
He refused to acknowledge
union said is being exported to
Sentinel. They were Mrs. Paul
the Labor party's contention
England
to
break
the
British
Casci, Mary Kunzelman,
that inflation has now become
Maureen Hennessy, Sonya miners' strike.
Harry Patrick, UMWA the major issue in the camOhlinger, Loretta Beegle,
secretary-treasurer, said paign. Heath said the ConBarbara Mullen, Pat White, Friday, "We have information servatives-with a nationwide
Elsie Roush, Marcia Dennison, which leads us to believe that coal miners strille now in its
Neva Seyfried, Eva Dessauer, coal is now being diverted to second week-wouid continue
Teresa Byers, Rose McDade, England in increasing quan- to fight the election on "who
Kermit McElroy, Dayton
ti ties via trans-shipment governs Britain-the governMcElroy and Lenavul Johnson. through continental European ment or the unions?".
Labor party leader Harold
ports."
Wilson
assailed Heath's expla·
He acknowledged that U.S.
for
the jump in the cost
nation
Bureau of Mines statistics
show no dramatic coal export of living as "lame excuses"
and said if Labor wins the
increases.
"We have no direct control election his government would
name the entire seven-member over American coal once it introduce stare food subsidies
commission.
leaves the mines," said Pa- to check rising grocery prices.
11
People want to know more
Burch, a native of '!'Ireson, trick, "but we stand shoulderAriz., was an administrative to-shoulder with brother than the flood of lame excuses
assistant to Sen. Barry M. miners iil England, and we pouring out of Tory party
Goldwater, R-Arlz., in the late regard any attempt to break headquarters," Wilson said at
1950s, his deputy campaign their strike as a direct attack his regular campaign news
manager during Goldwater's on us .... But we can and do urge conference. "They want to
unsuccessful bld for the presi- the dockworkers of England to know what Mr. Heath is going
dency in 1964 and Republican refuse to unload these ship- to do about the appalling facts
he is now admitting."
national chairman in 1~5.
ment.s."

Heath on
defensive

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Miners vo

to

support strike

Committee has scheduled a
tentative Tuesday session .with
the Agriculture, Conservation
and Environment Committee
to discuss the energy
legislation.
The Senate Transportation
Committee Wednesday will
consider House -pa ssed
legislation allowing the Ohio
transportation director to
lower speed limits to conform
to federal directives.
The measure must pass both
chambers by March 3 or Ohio
will lose federal highway monies. Some legislators have
termed the ultimatum "blackmail."
Three bills relating to oil and
gas drilling under Lake Erie
will be studied' in the House Interstate Cooperation Committee Wednesday morning.
A measure introduced by
Rep. John McCormack, D-Euclid, proposes a permanent ban
on drilling, while Rep. Ethel

Swanbeck, R-Huron, ,is calling
for a two-year extension of the
current ban until July I, 1976.
A bill by Rep. Ronald Weyandt, D-Akron, would allow
drilling to resume without restrictions.
Officials in the state Department of Natural Resources
have said oil companies have
expressed little interest in drilling under Lake Erie because it
is too expensive at a time when
plenty of off-shore acreage is
still available.
The Senate Finance Committee will hold a second hearing
Tuesday on • measure by Sen.
Anthony Calabrese, D-Cleveland, which would appropriate
$40 million to subsidize a comprehensive mass transit sys·
tern . Calabrese's proposal
would attract $95 million in
federal matching funds.
Last week, Rep. Patrick

Sweeney, D.Cievelanil 1 jptroduced a measure which would
provide $5 million to set up an
Amtrak passenger rail service
between Ohio's major cities.
In the House Judiciary Committee Tuesday evening, tesiimony will be taken in f~vor of
1egislation
that would amend
1
the constitution to prohibit the
manufacture, sale, use or pos- ,
session of handguns.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee is expected tohrecommend for passage .Tuesday
House-approved legislation
providing the educational
bonus for Vietnam veterans.
No-fault automobile insurance will be considered
again in the Senate Insurance
Committee. Testimony by
insurance companies last week
favored the no-fault plan with a
$1,500 lawsuit threshhol.d higher than that adopted by
any other state.

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in state race

Miss Maggied weds.
Just Know Where The Best" Buys" Are, Right
Here At Tawney's!

GALLIPOLIS
Miss
Pamela Nan Maggied became
the bride of Charles Allen
Barth, Dec. 22 at 2 p.m. at the
First Unitarian Church,
Columbus. Rev. George C.
Whitney officiated at the
double ring ceremony.
The new Mrs. Barth is the
daughter of . Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Maggied, 434 Hedgewood Dr., Gallipolis. The
groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Barth, 3372 Avon
Lake Rd., Li'tchfield.
For her l)'edding the bride
chose a white velvet gown with
attached train. The v-neckline
waist and long sleeves were
trimmed W\th rose braid. Her
elbow length silk illusion veil
was held by,a velvet juliet cap.
A small diainond pendant that
belonged to her maternal
grandmother was the bride's
only jewelry. She carried a
single white hybrid orchid. ·
Attending the bride as maid
of honor was Miss Usa Brink,
Gallipolis. Bridesmaids were
Miss Sandy Maggied, sister of
the bride, and Miss Janet
Barth, sister of the groom.
They wore light blue velvet
gowns and carried lace

TRY THESE ON FOR
SIGHS &amp; SAVINGS

From st()().S500(}
Tawney Jewelers. have served Gallipolis for over 40 years.
Our name is synonymous with tremendous values and
excel~ent service. Our diamonds are carefully graded to
give you the very best available, and we guarantee each

gem we sell as. to cut, clarity, color and carat weight.See what you save at Tawney Jewelers.

~hiiiiQ/1.;"

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HOUSE OF DIAMONDS

econd Ave.

Nicholas Johnson last summer,
but the Senate has yet to
confirm him. H.. Hell:. Lee
resigned later in the year and
Nixon has nominated a successor.
The only FCC Democrat is
Benjamin L. Hooks, who was
appointed by Nixon. When the
term of Republican H. Rex Lee
expires in June, Nixon will
have had the unusual chance to

DUE BY APRIL 30
COLUMBUS - Ohio Tax
Commissioner Robert J.
Kosydar said Saturday personal property tax returns for
1974 must be filed between
February 15 and April 30.
Personal property taxes are
levied on all individuals,
partnerships, associations and
corporations engaged in
business in Ohio and on all '
· individuals owning intangible
property such as stocks, bonds
and notes.

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

CLOSED ON SUNDAYS

OPEN
MON. • FRI. 10 AM TIL 9 PM
SATURDAYS 10 AM TIL 6 PM
Shop Cox's • You'll !J,, (,/;,d
Dill!

ON ALL FABRICS
STORE~lDE -

NO, THIS IS NOT WiNTER FABRICS!
MISSION OPEN
ENO - Due tu bad weather,
the Morgan Center Home
Mission here was not open
Monday, Feb. II, but will be
open Monday, Feb. IB instead.

nosegays of purple statice.
Terry Mowery, Utchfield,
was the best man . Ushers were
Kenneth Barth, brother of the
groom, "!'fl.Larry Wolfe, both
of Litchfie-ld.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held at the
Bistra Lounge, Uncoln Park
West.
Mr. and Mrs, Barth are both
graduates of Ohio University.
Mrs. Barth plans to continue
her education at Ohio Stare
University and Barth is employed as an accountant for
Columbus . Air Conditioning
Corp.
The newlyweds are living at
299 Nationwide Blvd., Apt. II,
Columbus.
CARNIVAL PLANNED
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville PTA will sponsor
a spring Carnival Friday, Feb.
22 at 6:30 p.m. in the school
gym, A prince and princess
and king and queen will be
named. There also will be a
variety of games. There will be
a child and adult door prize.
Admission is adults 25 cents
and students 10 cents.

Refreshments of ice cream,
cup cakes and Kooi-Ald were
served following the opening of
gifts.
Attending the . prty were
Steve Lifland, Joe Valee, Alex
Wallen, Kelly Rusk, Bruce
O'Rourke, Sherry Rhodes and
Tracy Stewart.
Sending gifts were Michelle
Holley and Terry Adams.
The occasion also marked
the 14th birthday of Todd's
sister, Melody.

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YES! IT IS SPRING FABRICS

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOP
58 COURT

SINGER APPROVED DEALER
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

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Mr. and Mrs. Terry Varney

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar

Faith Smith weds

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
RACINE - Sat ur da y, De c.
The new Mrs. Varney is a
Citizens Center, loca~dr· in .. 15, at 2 p.m., Miss Faith Smith senior at Southern Local High
the Holzer Hospital Building, became the bride of Terry School and . the groom is a
Cedar St. entrance, is open Varney at the Carmel United graduate of Southern and atMonday .throughFridayfrom 9 Methodist Church. The Rev. tends the Ohio Technical
a.m. to 3 p.m. and One night a Frank Cheesebrew performed School in Columbus.
week. The schedule for this the double ring ceremony.
Attending the reception were
week is as follows:
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Varney and
Monday, Feb. 18, Center is Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith and Greg, Ironton; Mr. and Mrs.
closed. Presidents' Day; Varney is the son of Mr. and Tom Comer, Tami and Matt,
Tuesday, Feb. 19, Physical Mrs. Winston Varney, Long Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
fitness, 10-11 a.m.; Deboupage Bottom.
Tawney and Kari, Gallipolis;
class, 1-3 p.m.; Wednesday.
Following the wedding a Mr. and Mrs. Jim Skidmore
Feb. 20 • VIM session, l-3 p.m., reception was held at the hume and Michelle, Gallipolis; Mr.
concerning "Foods, Facts and of the bride's parents. The and Mrs. Winston Varney,
Frauds," Resource person, Pat table was centered with a three Kent and Todd, Long sottom,
Glass, area extension agent; tiered wedding cake topped the Rev. and Mrs. Cheese brew,
Thursday, Feb. 21 • Paper clip with the traditional miniature New Straitsville; the Rev.
necklace class, 1"3 p.m., bride and groom flanked with Steve Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
council meeting, 2 p.m.; tapers, poinsettias and natural Don Smith and Jerry, Mr. and
Friday, Feb. 22, Hobo Day, II pine.
Mrs. Paul Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
a.m. to 7 p;in,
M'lS,S Bon me
. Sm1. th presided
.
Dan Smith , Bonnie, Tjm,
at the punch bowL Serving the Tammy and Ted';' all of Racine,
cake was Mrs . Frances RD.
Skidmore.
CALLED BY DEATH
POMEROY -,.- Mrs. Molly =========~~===============================================~===~=======
Hill, Pomeroy, left Saturday
via plane out of Columbus for
Medford, Mass., where she was
called by the unexpected death
of her brother, Joe Watson, on
Friday night. Funeral services
will be held at the Gaffey
Funeral Home in Medford.

Gallipolis, Ohio

·New Cream OJ The Crop Fashions by
Mori Lee . ..
Advertised
in Spring Forecast Issue of
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Bride's Magazine
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GALLIPOLIS - February
exhibit, Ink wash drawings by
Marrano Thaker. Riverby is
open Saturday and Sunday 1-5
p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday
10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 27, Crewel
embroidery workshop, 2-4
p.m.; Tuesday, Feb. 19, FAC
Interdepartmental meeting, 8
p.m.; Friday, Feb. 22,
Deadline for annual dinner,
Meeting reservations. Call 671;5453; Sunday, Feb. 24, ParentChild workshop 2-4 p.m.; '
Tuesday, Feb. 26, FAC trustees
meeting, 8 p.m.; Thursday,
Feb. 28, FAC annual dinner
meeting, 6:30 p.m., Oscar's;
&amp;unday, March 3, Kick-up
reception for membership, 2-4
,.m. Everyone interested in
joining FAC is invited; Monday, March 4, Membership
ilrive begins.

Burch moves to Whl.te House
KEY
BISCAYNE,
Fla.
(UP!) - Federal Communications Commission
chairman Dean Burch, a
stalwart conservative who
once headed the Republican
National Conunittee, has a
new assignment in the White
House.
President Nixon named
Burch as a presidential
counselor Friday. Burch, 46,
will move to the White House in
March, leaving a third seat on
the FCC vacant. Nixon is expe~ted to name a Republican to
the commission.
By Jaw, the FCC cannot have
more than four members of
one political party. .But
because of two vacancies that
have gone unfilled, the commission has functioned for
seve~al months with a 4-1
Republican majority.
Nixon has named Democrat
·James Quello to fill the seat
vacated by the controversial

SAVE 20%

given to the winners.

Mr. and Mrs. Charks A. Barth

TAWNEY JEWELERS

MIDDLEPORT
The Jo Ellen King and Debbie Demonstrations wHI be given
at the next meeting by Jeff
Middleport Hill Toppers 4-H Smith.
club met at the home of Mr .
Refreshments were served Dilcher and Debbie Lawrence .
and Mrs . .Jimmie King, ad. by
Debbie
Lawrence. - Fran Williams, reporter .
visors Feb. 6 with eight
members present. A Valentine
party was planned and lhe
LIMITED TIME ONLY
members wrote a letter lo
Tommy King, who is in the
Veterans Hospital in Pomeroy .
Nancy La wrence gave a
demonstration on the anatomy
of a dog. Recreation was led by

GALLIPOLIS - A birthday
party was given Sunday, Feb.
10, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Wiseman, 3!15 Jackson
Pike, honoring the sixth birthday· of their son, Todd.
After the guests arrived,
party hats were distributed
and a variety of games were
played under the supervision of
Todd's brother, Keith, and
sister, Melody. Prizes were

Zollinger bows
out to Keslar
LANCASTER
Rex
Zollinger, former chairman of
the Republican Executive
Committee of Fairfield County,
and Fairfield County Recorder, Friday withdrew his
candidacy for Tenth District
Republican State Central
Committeeman in favor of the
chairman of the Tenth District
Republican
Committee,
William (Dutch) Keslar, also
executive committee chairman
of the Muskhgum County
GOP.
In endorsing Keslar, he
pointed to Keslar's many years
of service to the Republican
Part: over 12 years as
secretary and ch;!irman of the
Muskingum County Executive
Committee; over 20 years as
member of the G.O.P. Policy
Committee; past president of
Zanesville City Council, and
presently a member of the
Board of Elections and. the
Muskingum County Board of
Health.
In addition to his political
activity, Keslar has been a
Rotarian 30 years; president of
the Ohio Jaycees 1949'1950;
active in the Masonic
organization, having been
president of the Zava Shrine
Club, and was vice commander
of the American Legion.

Middleport Hilltoppers 4-H club meets

Birt/;Jday
observed

Co-ordi na ted-Gift Registry • Co mpk te Selecl ion of China,
Stalwg, Crys tal • Attendant' s Gifts • Soci:11ly Coml l

lnvita lions • Regislt'ted Bridal Consultant at yDur ~e rvice
without charge • Recep tion Sen-ice loa ned without dl&lt;lti!;C

~oor brwa[ store

PAUL DAVIES
-JEWELERS
404 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

"So m ~ Thing!! Au Forever"
MEMBER NATIONAL HRIOAl SJ;RV ICE

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f~

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• Hoi~ Park

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•••_.,.,•,• • '•'l'l'~l'h'Y.

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Fl ELDCREST
TOWELS I

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Terry &amp; Velour. Clear bright colors
of Rose, Blue, Green &amp; Gold.

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K-..K.081t.E
fi'.4UL

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BEAUTIFUL NEW

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We Are Also Celebrating
40th Year In The Construction Of
Mobile Homes, In Cooperation With
SCHULT MOBILE HOMES
We.Are Featuring Special
On All Schult Models During The
Rest Of February.

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a ,MAIQGIE NOftTHUP

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TOWELS .......................•2 &amp; '2"
WASHCLOTHS ....................... 89~
HAND .TOWELS ......~l 59 &amp; '1"
59

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tw.~~~~;.:/;~::n~~,:~~~-"~.~-~'~:= . ~~~-~:~day

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til 8 p.m.

RIGHT
Organza and peau
d'ange. Scoop neckline. Mutton
sleeves . Detachable train.

Make your selection soon from our beautiful Bridal Department located on the
mezzanme m the Fashion Center at

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HOME SALES '

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LEFT
Organza and peau
d'ange. High neckline. Long 'straiqht
sleeves.
Yoked waist. Matching
mantilla for the Total Look. White or
Ivory.

master

ch~ rge

.,., " " ' " " " " r '"~

· Open Monday
Til8p.m.

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300 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Lafayette Mall

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61-,- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday. ~·,·b . t ~. 1 ~;;

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"

'* Exhibit·opens at Huntington

'&gt;*l&lt;,,&lt;,,,,,,,,,.&lt;·;:;$l
· --~-..

I Persorzality Profile
MIDDLEPORT - "It's more like two in her home. One of her honle classes
;:~ goi ng to a party than to work ."
deals with men 's clothing, construl'lion
;:;:
This was Ruth Bumga rn er's com- problems and fitting. This is the first
.~?, ment about her tri&lt;ounty sewing classes yea r since coming to the Bend area that
:;:;: and the pleasure ·she derives from Ruth has not had vocational classes at
· ;j;j wachi ng others to be creative with yard Wahama High School. Her classes at the
!;l goods.
Knit Mill will finish law this month, and
i;l
She calls it her "fund thing."
in earl y March she will begin a special
~~
Since. she was 10-years old ~ sewing course in fi tting. Her equipm ent includes
;::: has been a chief interesl and challenge in six sewing machines .
(~ Ruth's life.
A native of West Virginia, Mrs.
~~
As a teenager she made most of her Bumgarner was the daughter of a
~own clothing; as a mother, she sewed all country miniswr. Both · she and her
·~ kinds of garme nts for the four children ; husband are graduates of Wahama High
~ and as a wife, she used her ability to School. They have two sons, Dallas in
~ assist financially with famil y needs while
Toledo and Bob nea r Dayton, and two
~ her husband, Robert, prepared for the daughters, Barbara Geuy; Sidney,
j ministry. It was during the lime that her and Ruth Ann Chrisman in Pana ma ; and
!! husband was in college that Mrs. seve n gra ndchildren.
~~ Bumgarner began sewing professionally.
As a wife of a minister, Mrs.
§~ . Her training has been extensive, as Bumgarner lists among her many
:~ through the years she has availed herself
rewards, the lasting friends she has
of every opportunity to learn the skills of made through the years in pastorates
j:j construction , alte ration , fittin g, and ac•oss the state. The · Rev . Mr.
tailoring of both men's and women '• Bwngarner for the past three years has
;!;~ clothing. She has studied the Bishop been pastor of Heath Uniwd Methodist
:j;j method, taken several courses on the Church in Middleport and now also
ij! Singer Method, and more recently has serves as coordinator of the Meigs
:;;; completed special training on the Cooperative Parish.
;j;j techniques of working with the new knits.
Ruth, whose talents are many, also
j;j;
Currently she is waching five sewing does part-time office work in the Meigs
:;:; classes - two adult vocational classes at Cooperative Parish, although she con.
( Meigs High School, one at the Knit Mill at cedes that she is more comfortable and
:;:; Spring Mills Plaza near Gallipolis. and compewntat the sewing machine than at
:!!'

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~;

RUTH BUMGARNER

f,

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·:·:

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the typewriwr.
.
. j:j:
For the professional sewmg In· ;!;!
struction which Mrs. Bwngarner gives, ;!;!
her fees are minimaL Her feeling is thai i!!
by using her talent to help homemakers ~
make clothing for themselves and their i~!
famihes, and perhaps live better for it, j~j
she 1s performmg a commumty serv1ce. ~

'•'•

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:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:;:;:::::::::~::;:::::::;:;:;::::::::::::~::::::::::~:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::~=~::::;:;:;:;:~:=:~:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~h'?.'l.·w.:?!W&gt;··%:V.

Nuptial plans set

VIM programs enjoyed
GALUPOUS - Sessions one
and two of VIM (Vigor in
Maturity) have been highly
informative and education to
those attending these meetings
a~ the Senior Citizen Cenwr.
This program is being sponsored by the Retired Teachers
Association of Gallia County
under the direction of Mrs.
Aldeth Robinson. Information
is provided by the use of excellent films, literature, and a
qualified resource person.

from 1·3 p.m. Mrs. Margueriw
Hineman was program leader.
This session enlightened the
audience with much in·
formation concerning chronic
diseases, especially heart and
cancer diseases. Films shown
were " Better Odds for a
Longer Life" stressing causes
of hea rt disease; "Candidate
for Stroke," "The Doctor

Examines Your Heart, "
showing the steps taken by a
doctor in examining a patient's
Session one, ~~ safety in heart, and "Inside Magoo"
Everyday Living" was divided which showed the seven cancer
into three parts, dealing with danger signals.
"Pedestrian Safety at Night,"
Girmy Killin, city health
~~Sa rety in the Home~~ and
nurse, was present to answer
" Fire Prevention." An in- questions that were asked.
formal question and answer
Refreshments are served al
period with John Taylor, chief each session. Film projecof police, followed the viewing tionist for the sessions is Norris
of films on the above subjects. Carter, Gallia County Council
Thirty-five persons attended on Aging chairperson.
Session Two Tuesday, Feb. 12,

IN THE YEAR 2010
Your Story &amp; Clark Piano

POMEROY - Plans have p.m. at the Middleport First
been complel&lt;;d for the open Baptist Church. Nuptial music
church wedding of Miss Darla beginning at 2 p.m., will be by
Neutzling, daughwr of Mr . and Mrs. Gerald Anthony, organist,
Mrs . Richard Neutzling, and
Danny
Thompson,
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, and Pomeroy, uncle of the bride·
James B. Thomas, Jr., son of elect. The Rev. Swve Skaggs
Mr. and Mrs. James B. will officiate at the double ring
Thomas,
Lincoln
Hill
ceremony.
Pomeroy.
'
Miss Marla Neutzling wiU
The wedding will be an event serve as maid of honor for her
of Saturday, Feb. 23, at 2:30 twin sisrer. Mrs . Pamela Crow,
Syracuse, also a siswr of the
brid&lt;H!lect will be the matron
of honor, and Mrs. Corky
Werry, Hemlock Grove, will be
the atrendanl.
Serving as best man for his
brother will be John Thomas,
Pomeroy, and the ushers will
GALLIPOLIS - The Thurs· be James Crow, Syracuse , and
day Club held its regular Jeff Werry, Hemlock Grove.
meeting Feb. 14 at the home of
Mrs. Charles E. Holzer, Jr.
The program was in charge
of Mrs. G. B. Gillingham who
discussed the life and works of
Eugene O'Neil.
COTIAGEVILL)!:, W. Va. Special emphasis was given
Mr.
and Mrs . Dermis Kerwood,
to his autobiographical play.
Cottageville,
W. Va., will
"Long Journey into the Night"
celebrate
their
golden
wedding
and its sequel, "The Moon of
anniversary Feb. 24 from 2 to 4
the Misbegotren."
"The
Moon
of
the p.m. with an open house at the
Misbegotten" opened on Cottageville Fire Station.
Kerwood is a member of the
Broadway in January this year
IOOF
Lodge and has been
and has been acclaimed by
engaged
in farmwork. The
critics as the play of the year.
Mrs. Gillingham presided at couple has two daughwrs, Mrs.
• the .. refreshment table, which Velma Sayre, Cottageville, and
was decorated in a valentine Mrs. Genevieve Hill, Albany,
and a son, Clifford Kerwood,
motif.
The next meeting will be at Cottageville; II grandchildren,
the home of Mrs. Neal Pren- · and three great-grandchildren.
Area friends and relatives
dergast, with Mrs. James M.
inviwd to atrend the open
are
Orr in charge of the program.
house celebration .

Mrs. Holzer
hosts club

Open house set

Still Have This Extra Insurance!

Gallia senior citizens enjoy meeting.

~

TlH' So undi ng Board is th&lt;• heart of yo ur piano.
~ Jl.s lif(' ·a nd quali ty determ me you r piano 's
TO ;-.JE nnd it.r;; TRADE -I N VALUE.
If lhl' Lnminatt·d Mahogan ~ Sound ing Board in
.v!Ju r Stu r~..,. &amp; Clar k p i&lt;Jno split!" or c racks , within
:;o _, . , .Hr.~. thc- fa ctory will rcplact• it fr ee, including

GALLIPOUS - The Rio
Grande • Rodney Happy Days
Club presenW&lt;l the program to
wer 100 persons present at the
Senior Cenwr, Thursday, Feb.
14, for the monthly potluck
supper.
Mrs. Frank Denney,
program chairperson, called
the "class" together by ringing
the old-fashioned school beD.
This helped to bring back
memories of the one-room
school of the early 1900s. The
group sang "School Days" and
llswned to Fimnie Jones reciw
"The Village Blacksmith."
Mrs. Clara Mae Mossbarger
read a humorous story from

1

!ra n ... p&lt;J rl a l ion a n d f&gt;\ll' r y ol~w r enst.

Nu

otJwr fllano

offr'n:; y ou su ch a guara nt ee

a~oin.'it

'-ra ck in g or Hpli ll ir!g. Yet this 5Q.year guar·
fH lkt• i ~ on ly Ont' of many Story &amp; Clark reatures.
Let Uf'. g-iw you t he com plete fa cts!

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
54 State St.,

Gallipoli~

446-{1687

GRAND OPENING
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 24th
OF

the McGuffey Reader, "Mrs.
Caudill's Lecture." Garnet
Wood read "Forty Years Ago"
also taken from the McGuffey
Reader. The program was
concluded with a Valentine
thought, "A Heart-Shaped
Wish" and the singing of "Let
Me Call You Sweetheart;~ ·
The
FHA
(Future
Homemakers of Americ·a)
clubs in Gallia County Schools
are involved in projects this
year to work with the elderly.
Janet Srewart and Carolyn
Baker, members of South·
western PTA, acted as
hosresses.
Gallia Academy FHA invires
Senior Citizens to meet with
them Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 7
p.m. at the high school . to
discuss projects.
Hannan
Trace
FHA
ls sponsoring the MS. Senior
Citizen or Gallia County conlest. Any lady 55 years or older
can be in the conrest. She must
be recommended by another
person. This recommendation
must be 1a wri tren one of 150
, ~ords or less and sent to the
Senior Citizens Cenrer, P. 0 .
Jlox 441, Gallipolis .
Mrs. Mary Kennedy won

EXCITING NEW EXCLUSIVE FACILITIES •.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - ·
The Huntin gton Galleries,
Huntington, W. Va . aMounces
its major exhibition of 1974.
Selections from one of th~
nation 's outstanding privare
collections of pre.Colwnbian
art objects will be displayed
Feb. 17 (today) to June 9.
Keynoting the public opening
of the exhibition will be Jay c.
I..eff, Uniontown, Pa ., o\vner of
the collection which will be
exhibited here as "Ancient Art
of Middle America." Le!f will
speak at 3 p.m. today .
The exhibition originally was
to be displayed only through
April. Due to the fuel shortage,
however, the exhibition date
has been exrended to June 9 in
order to aUow more people especiaDy school children - to
see it in accordance with
available fuel.
This important collection of
indigenous art of the Americas
covers the entire span of arlistie creation in Mesoamerica
from the Tlatilco figurines of
1500 B.C. to the art of the Maya
and Aztec cultures before the
Spanish conquest in 1520 A.D.
Leff's collection is especially
outstanding for the quality and
extent of the art of the Olmec,
only recently recognized as
seminal to all subsequent
Indian culture.
Military and religious
figures , deities, animals and
genre scenes were all por!rayed by artists utilizing a
variety of materials. Exam·
pies of stone work range from a
five-inch jadeite figure to a
forty -five -inch long tenoned
serpent head, an architectural
unit of volcanic stone .

RIO GRANDE - The
American Baptist Women of
Calvary Baptist ChurCh met in
the feDowship room at the
church, Tuesday, Feb. 12, at
7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Katherine Jones was
the discussion leader for the
evening. The topic, "Courage
to be a Person." She mentioned
that there were three things
involved when a person is left
alone, whether middle..aged or
older. They are facing up to
death,
insecurity
and
loneliness.
Some of the activities
mentioned that are now being
used in this county are the
grandparent plan at the GSI,
Senior Citizens Cenrers (there
are nine), retired groups from
various professions, and Grey
Ladies at the hospitaL
The group was given a list of

Grange discusses projects
POMEROY :- Projects of
the national and slaw granges
were discussed by Mrs. Amos
Leonard at the Thursday night
meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange at the Leonard home.
A communication was read

Personnel people
hear professor
RIO GRANDE - John
Reynolds, associate professor
of bu. . . administration at
Rio Grande College, was the
guest speaker for the monthly
meeting of the Mid.Ohlo VaDey
Chapter of the American
Society of Personnel Administrators Monday at lhe
lifeigs Inn in Pomeroy.
Reynolds : til!lic . was Rio
Grande , College's ' Business
·{\dmlnistratlon Program, the
proposed Rio Grande Com·
munity
College,
and
Cooperative Education. Nearly
every industry in the Mid-Ohio
Valley is represented in this
group, and 16 members at.
Wnded Monday's session to
hear Reynolds.

of the West Virginia Arts and
Humanities Coun ~ il; the
Galleries furth er
acknowledges the generous
cooperation of Arre Primitivo,
Inc., The Brooklyn MuseWll,
The Metropolitan Muse um,
The National Museum of
Natural History, Dumbarton
Oaks Research Library and
Collection and the Mexican
National Tourist Council.
In conjunction with the
exhibition, the Galleries is
sponsoring a special llklay
educational tour of major
archaeological sites in Middle
America , including those near
Mexico City, Merida and
Cozumel. The tour begins
Tuesday, Aprill6, and features
of
guided
exploration
Teotihuacan, Tula,_ Uxmal,
Chichen ltza and Tulum. First
class and deluxe ac·
co mmodations have been
arranged throughout th e tour .
Pre-tour lectures, slide
presentations and films will
complement reading materials
provided for prospective tour
partici'pants. For further in·
formation, please contact the
Huntin gton Galleries, Park

~ Dorotl~y I
,.~~

Now In
Progress

SAVE

50%

eJEWELRY
eWATCHES
eGIFTS
eETC.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

C011tro1

your
budget
and your .

Tl9'"·

too:

VINTON The Past
Matrons' Club of Vinton OES
375 met at the home of
Elizabeth Cloud with nine
The
. members
present.
.secretary and treasurer's
;reports were given by VIckie
·Powell.
• Laura Brown thanked the
club for the flower sent to her
when she was hospitalized.
Several mell)bers were fined

New

libbed

conttbl· top
pantghoft

at Just $1.75.
tlr~ verY tiring''"

for not wearing their past
matron's pin.
The program consisred of
scripture by Laura Brown and
readings by the other members
in keeping with Valentine's
Day. Games were played for
entertainment. The house was
decorated in keeping with the
Valentine's Day theme .'
Those attending were
Margaret Simms, Mary

I

I

r. . -,
..

~·

'

...
•

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Griffith

·Observe anniversary
Charlotte Griffi th, RL 1.
Gallipo li s; Mrs . M&lt;Jrvin
(Marguerite) Robie, Ridwell ;
and daughtcr.in -law , Mrs.
William 1Ruth Ann 1 Griffith,
Crown Ci 1y.
They s har ed ann iver sary
ca ke with t!Jt.• nurses and
nur ses aides of four lh floor ee1st
and received many cards, gifts
and phone calls.
SEEN AND HEARD
F:ven ing vi s it ors included
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and sons, Edga r. Jr. , Gal lipolis;
Mrs. Ferrell Niday, Gallipolis, William. Crown Ci ty; and
re turned home Friday after a Dorothy Gordon, Ga llipoli s.
month in Richmond, Va. ,
where they visited their son -inlaw and daug hter. Mr. and
Mrs. David M. Warner and two
children, David Micha el II and
Natalie. They were accompanied to the Gallipolis .
Point Pleasant area by ..the
Warners who will return to
Richmond this Wednesday.
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Edga r Griffith celebrated
their 35th wedding anniversary
Jan. 14 , at the Holzer Medical
Center . Mrs. Griffith has been
hospitalized si nce Jan . 9.
Present for the occasion
were her mother, Mrs.
Charlo tte Little; daughter.

WEO

WHIRIH O ~Oioll

Walker, Haze l Harmon , Vennie
Casto, Laura Brown, Ruth
Evans, Vickie Powell, Verna
Gleason and th e hostess.
Refreshments were served to
close the session.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Margaret Simms,
April 2.
·

'

GA!.Ll POI.IS - The French
Art Colony will host its annua l
dinner antl lmsi fwss meet ing
Thursday , r'e~ . 28, at6 ::!0 p.m.
in OscHr's Restaurant.
Reservations cue due by !J'eb .
22 and should be made by
ca lling Riverby, 446-3834, from
10 a.m. to :l p.m. Tuesdays, or
by calling Shirley J·Iorstman ,
rescrvHtiuns chairperson , at
675-545:l.
The cost for the ~.:vcni n g is
$5.50 per person. This meeting
prov ides an oppo~'lun ity for
members and friends to ga th er
and see what all t11~ depart·
rnen ts of the 1\rt Colony are
doin g.
Special guest speaker for the
even ing will be Hen ry A.
Young, busine&amp;ii manager or
the Cincinna ti Ballet Compa ny.
His topic for the evening will be
' 'Dance is Getting to
America ."

Jane Parker

Hot Cross

BUNS
" Serving you since 1936"
. , Gallipolis, Ohio

,.

FOI~

from Mrs . Pauline Atkins
concerning the nomination of
delegates lo the Ohio State
Grange meeting. It was .vored
to raise the rent on the Grange
HaD to $10. ReporWd ill were
Lydia Weyersmiller and Ar·
nold Snowden.
Mrs. Gladys Morgan, lee·
turer, presenled the program
which included several
readings, "Old Fashioned" by
Melinda Bradbury, a guest;
"An Old House" by Mrs.
Homer Radford; "To George
Washington"
by
Fred
Goeglein; "The Commanderin-Chi!" by Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit; "I Love Old Things"
by
William
Grueser;
"Abraham Lincoln" by Mrs.
Fred Goeglein, and "Valentines'' by Mrs. James Conkle.
Refreshments were served
by Mr. and Mrs. Leonard.

TI-lt

N!/IJ' N11rrc
Ua1.1 v Clerk

WHITE SWAN
UNIFORMS

w

Uoun cy /Jeautician
fl urried 11ou.\'ewife
11nd
h 1r Yuu, Foo l

From '6.00 up
Yo11r W!Jite Swan
Distributor

~:j

OPEN 12:00 NOON TIL 5:00 P.M.

ENJOY SUNDAY LUNCH WITH US!

We Want To Serve

Yo~

--SUNDAY SPECIALS==
FEBRUARY 17th ONLY
"YOU'L L ENJOY TilE QUJCI\, POUTE SERVICE HERE"

BAKED
CHOPPED
SIRLOIN
STEAK
DINNER
.tl oz. chopped sirloin st eak ,
ba k ed in ri ch br own gravy,

m as he d pota toes, bu tte red
v egetabl e, warm r ol l and
bull e r .

DAN THOMAS
'AND SON

SMOCKS &amp; TOPS

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

OR! G!IU1! 5

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Mone Balk

...

CHICKEN
LIVERS
PLATTER
Chi cken li ve r s sauted in
butter , cr anber r y sauce .

ma s he d

po tat oes.

ri c h

chick en gra vy , butt er ed
vegetabl e. w arm roll and
butter .

$1.39

VEAL
CUTLET
DINNER
Qua r ter po und b re aded
v ea l
c u ll e1,
c reamy
mashed potatoes, brown
gra vy , cr eam y cole slaw ,
wa rm roll and butt er

GRILLED
HAM
STEAK
DINNER
Ham steak topped w ith
cherry sauce , mashed
pot a t oes ,
rich
brown
gravy, buttered vege ta b le,
warm roll and butt er .

$}.45 $1.69
•
mertca

by

IV\O~UD~
If you've priced control-lop pantyhose - lhP.n you
know Ihis is sensational! Sheer stretchy pantyhose with ribbed control-lop that works to smooth you out.
And we durd have to tell you ahoul gmat Moiud
rmd fit. In your favorite color . Hurry!
Paradise Tumbleweed

"

"'

Mon. &amp; Fri.
9:30tit8p.m.

Tues. Wed. Sal. ·
9:30til5 p.m:

Thursday

328 8!CONO AVENUE / eALLlPOUS, OHIO

9:30 til12 noon

330 SECOND AVENUE
.,

BEDROOM SUITES
~--/\
LIVING ROOM SUITES
DINING ROOM SUITES
.. .
by: •BASSETT •CLAYTON MARCUS •KINCAID
eBURLINGTON HOUSE •VIRGINIA HOUSE
· eand Others

..

SOLID
MAPLE
TAB[E
and

4 CHAIRS
NOW

$199

95

EARLY
AMERICAN
5 PIECE

FINAL

7000.

Stoneware

BEDROOM
SUITE

by

REG. '1099.95

---·-- -

I

Ii

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f

'

Ofl LIPOLI S, OHIO -1

Effective Fri., Sat.
•· and Monday Only

L_.

eCHAIRS
•SOF.A S

-

~ •LOVE

GALLIPOliS, OHIO '

..

Wlnt HUTDi

TS

MIRROR
. '

••

I

0

I

,

~·:~-~~~::_..::::.:...:.....:.:.:.:.:....:..:;;::.:.;,;.;;;;:;,;;;;;:.;;:;;........,,;,;,;;o,;;,;~...............;,;;;,;;;,o,;,,.;.,.,;;;,;;=~=-...;.......:..;._~;.....,.;.......t....

. . . =· .

HAVE A nice week.

OES Past Matrons meet

•

'

Countryman

CONGRESS will hate me, but it just isn't George
"Washington's birthday, Feb. 18. It was bad enough that the
calendar chaqged and moved George from the lith to the 2:&gt;nd,
but this business of moving him back again is horrendous.
And poor old Abe. The calendar still has him marked at Feb.
12 but we 're celebrating them both together on the 18th.
Programs for school children on these two memorable dates
are slammed together and we have had, unfortunately, instances
'when the poor kids involved had George at Gettysburg and Abe
,chopping cherry trees in Virginia. And if they were alive, how
would they feel about receiving their birthday cards on the third
Monday of February just so the Congress and the state employes
(How many of the rest of you, like newspaper people, have to
work anyway?) could have the day off.
The convenience of this move really escapes me anyway.
Birthdays happen on the day of birth and even America's two
most famous presidents have a right to that.

the country's
leading magazines...

'I

Spring VaUey Plaza j;·Just Arrived A/mzisfree
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis' ~ l Peddler's Pantry
-.

by

GALUPOUS - Although some persons in the Old French
City laugh at me when I mention ii, about once every so often I
get a tremendous yearning to go somewhere and plant corn, or
build fen ce, or something similarly agricultural.
Adding to genuine yearning for the feel of soil between my
hands, their is a certain feeling of peace that descends over me
each time I get out of town and into the fields.
There is, in fact, a favorite pl~ce for me that I find singularly
refreshing and it isn't even mine. Jusl below Piketon on SR 124
there's a level stretch of road that is bordered by what looks to be
about 10 acres of field. There's something about that corn field
that !find reassuring and for the last year, I've been watching it.
It's the best thing about my trips to HiUsboro, because that field
gets me all cahned down before I have to present myself in the
company of other people.
I watched them plow, and plant, and weed that fi eld and
watched through the brief months of summer as the corn grew.
The tiny shoots were changing each time I passed them and
gradually they became tall and straight and filled with the
bounty of GOO's creations.
Then, come fall, I watched as the corn came down before the
red machine that snatched the ea rs up and carried them away to
barns and trucks where they would be hauled away and ground
Into a meal that would feed the mouths of hungry children
somewhere.
Just now the corn field stands empty. This year it may be
soybeans or pasture, but it will stiU be "my;' cornfield in many
ways for for me, that 's one good ivay of calming down.
Everybody ought to have a cornfield in their life.

UPTO

-·--·- ·-·--------------.

EAC slates
dinner meet

Jan's Side

.From the pages of

the handmade afghan.
Mrs. Anne While gave a
· report of the plans for Hobo
Day, Feb. 22, at the cenwr
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. The meal
will consist of beans, ham,
cornbread, pie and coffee.
Tickets are being sold at $2 for
adults and
for children.
Anyone lvlshing to help with
this project, please call the
Senior Citizens Center, 446-

New ShifJment

' slATE &amp; THIRD

shut-ins in the community and
each person wrote down three
or four things they did particularly well. These are things
that each one can do for those
who are lonely or shut-in. A
discussion period followed.
Mrs. Jones closed with the
reading of Psalms 68: 5 and II
Corinthians 4:14-16.
Communications were read
from Special Interest Missionries , Miss Isabelle Jarvis and
Rev. and Mrs. T. Bennett
Dickerson thanking the group
for money sent to them.
Plans were · made for the
Annual Silver Tea Sunday
April 21. The hoswsses, Jennie
Myers and Doris Lanham,
served a dessert course to the
14 members, Beth and Michael
Lynch and Bruce and Marcia
Wilkins.

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Baptists have meeting

Zaros

,.___________________________,.. l-

Ceramics are present in a
variety of rare as well as
tr aditional
form s.
The
ceremonial ball game .is
. illustrated not only with an
elaborately costumed ceramic
ball player from pre-Classic
times, but also with hachas,
palmas and yokes associated
with the games.
A
special
auxiliary
exhibition entitled "Hecho en
Mexico" will become a focal
point for
participatory
educational programs for
school-age children, emphasizing the Maya and Aztec
cultures with their highly
a~vanced
systems
of
mathematics, astronomy and
religion as well as pottery,
music, architecture and
agriculture.
Films and public lectures by
nationally prominent
authorities covering various
facets of these cultures will be
progranuned for adults and
children. Guided tours by
trained docents may be
arranged by calling the tour c&lt;&gt;ordinator at the Galleries, Mrs.
Mahlon Brown, at 304-&lt;i:&gt;.l).2701.
Groups of any size may
arrange for tours Tuesday
through Saturday between 9
a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Evening
tours at 7:30 Tuesday through
Thursday, may be arranged,
bot only if the tour group
numbers 20 or more. Tour
requests will be accepted at
any time, but should be made
at least two weeks in advance
and will be confinned by mail.
There will be no exhibition
admission fees.
The exhibition is being made
possible through the assistance

,i -::- The Sunday Time•. Sentinel, Sunday .'~·cb. 17, 1974

Hills, Huntington, W. Va., at
304-&lt;i29·2701as soon as pos!lible.

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61-,- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday. ~·,·b . t ~. 1 ~;;

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'* Exhibit·opens at Huntington

'&gt;*l&lt;,,&lt;,,,,,,,,,.&lt;·;:;$l
· --~-..

I Persorzality Profile
MIDDLEPORT - "It's more like two in her home. One of her honle classes
;:~ goi ng to a party than to work ."
deals with men 's clothing, construl'lion
;:;:
This was Ruth Bumga rn er's com- problems and fitting. This is the first
.~?, ment about her tri&lt;ounty sewing classes yea r since coming to the Bend area that
:;:;: and the pleasure ·she derives from Ruth has not had vocational classes at
· ;j;j wachi ng others to be creative with yard Wahama High School. Her classes at the
!;l goods.
Knit Mill will finish law this month, and
i;l
She calls it her "fund thing."
in earl y March she will begin a special
~~
Since. she was 10-years old ~ sewing course in fi tting. Her equipm ent includes
;::: has been a chief interesl and challenge in six sewing machines .
(~ Ruth's life.
A native of West Virginia, Mrs.
~~
As a teenager she made most of her Bumgarner was the daughter of a
~own clothing; as a mother, she sewed all country miniswr. Both · she and her
·~ kinds of garme nts for the four children ; husband are graduates of Wahama High
~ and as a wife, she used her ability to School. They have two sons, Dallas in
~ assist financially with famil y needs while
Toledo and Bob nea r Dayton, and two
~ her husband, Robert, prepared for the daughters, Barbara Geuy; Sidney,
j ministry. It was during the lime that her and Ruth Ann Chrisman in Pana ma ; and
!! husband was in college that Mrs. seve n gra ndchildren.
~~ Bumgarner began sewing professionally.
As a wife of a minister, Mrs.
§~ . Her training has been extensive, as Bumgarner lists among her many
:~ through the years she has availed herself
rewards, the lasting friends she has
of every opportunity to learn the skills of made through the years in pastorates
j:j construction , alte ration , fittin g, and ac•oss the state. The · Rev . Mr.
tailoring of both men's and women '• Bwngarner for the past three years has
;!;~ clothing. She has studied the Bishop been pastor of Heath Uniwd Methodist
:j;j method, taken several courses on the Church in Middleport and now also
ij! Singer Method, and more recently has serves as coordinator of the Meigs
:;;; completed special training on the Cooperative Parish.
;j;j techniques of working with the new knits.
Ruth, whose talents are many, also
j;j;
Currently she is waching five sewing does part-time office work in the Meigs
:;:; classes - two adult vocational classes at Cooperative Parish, although she con.
( Meigs High School, one at the Knit Mill at cedes that she is more comfortable and
:;:; Spring Mills Plaza near Gallipolis. and compewntat the sewing machine than at
:!!'

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;:=:

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RUTH BUMGARNER

f,

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·:·:

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the typewriwr.
.
. j:j:
For the professional sewmg In· ;!;!
struction which Mrs. Bwngarner gives, ;!;!
her fees are minimaL Her feeling is thai i!!
by using her talent to help homemakers ~
make clothing for themselves and their i~!
famihes, and perhaps live better for it, j~j
she 1s performmg a commumty serv1ce. ~

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Nuptial plans set

VIM programs enjoyed
GALUPOUS - Sessions one
and two of VIM (Vigor in
Maturity) have been highly
informative and education to
those attending these meetings
a~ the Senior Citizen Cenwr.
This program is being sponsored by the Retired Teachers
Association of Gallia County
under the direction of Mrs.
Aldeth Robinson. Information
is provided by the use of excellent films, literature, and a
qualified resource person.

from 1·3 p.m. Mrs. Margueriw
Hineman was program leader.
This session enlightened the
audience with much in·
formation concerning chronic
diseases, especially heart and
cancer diseases. Films shown
were " Better Odds for a
Longer Life" stressing causes
of hea rt disease; "Candidate
for Stroke," "The Doctor

Examines Your Heart, "
showing the steps taken by a
doctor in examining a patient's
Session one, ~~ safety in heart, and "Inside Magoo"
Everyday Living" was divided which showed the seven cancer
into three parts, dealing with danger signals.
"Pedestrian Safety at Night,"
Girmy Killin, city health
~~Sa rety in the Home~~ and
nurse, was present to answer
" Fire Prevention." An in- questions that were asked.
formal question and answer
Refreshments are served al
period with John Taylor, chief each session. Film projecof police, followed the viewing tionist for the sessions is Norris
of films on the above subjects. Carter, Gallia County Council
Thirty-five persons attended on Aging chairperson.
Session Two Tuesday, Feb. 12,

IN THE YEAR 2010
Your Story &amp; Clark Piano

POMEROY - Plans have p.m. at the Middleport First
been complel&lt;;d for the open Baptist Church. Nuptial music
church wedding of Miss Darla beginning at 2 p.m., will be by
Neutzling, daughwr of Mr . and Mrs. Gerald Anthony, organist,
Mrs . Richard Neutzling, and
Danny
Thompson,
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, and Pomeroy, uncle of the bride·
James B. Thomas, Jr., son of elect. The Rev. Swve Skaggs
Mr. and Mrs. James B. will officiate at the double ring
Thomas,
Lincoln
Hill
ceremony.
Pomeroy.
'
Miss Marla Neutzling wiU
The wedding will be an event serve as maid of honor for her
of Saturday, Feb. 23, at 2:30 twin sisrer. Mrs . Pamela Crow,
Syracuse, also a siswr of the
brid&lt;H!lect will be the matron
of honor, and Mrs. Corky
Werry, Hemlock Grove, will be
the atrendanl.
Serving as best man for his
brother will be John Thomas,
Pomeroy, and the ushers will
GALLIPOLIS - The Thurs· be James Crow, Syracuse , and
day Club held its regular Jeff Werry, Hemlock Grove.
meeting Feb. 14 at the home of
Mrs. Charles E. Holzer, Jr.
The program was in charge
of Mrs. G. B. Gillingham who
discussed the life and works of
Eugene O'Neil.
COTIAGEVILL)!:, W. Va. Special emphasis was given
Mr.
and Mrs . Dermis Kerwood,
to his autobiographical play.
Cottageville,
W. Va., will
"Long Journey into the Night"
celebrate
their
golden
wedding
and its sequel, "The Moon of
anniversary Feb. 24 from 2 to 4
the Misbegotren."
"The
Moon
of
the p.m. with an open house at the
Misbegotten" opened on Cottageville Fire Station.
Kerwood is a member of the
Broadway in January this year
IOOF
Lodge and has been
and has been acclaimed by
engaged
in farmwork. The
critics as the play of the year.
Mrs. Gillingham presided at couple has two daughwrs, Mrs.
• the .. refreshment table, which Velma Sayre, Cottageville, and
was decorated in a valentine Mrs. Genevieve Hill, Albany,
and a son, Clifford Kerwood,
motif.
The next meeting will be at Cottageville; II grandchildren,
the home of Mrs. Neal Pren- · and three great-grandchildren.
Area friends and relatives
dergast, with Mrs. James M.
inviwd to atrend the open
are
Orr in charge of the program.
house celebration .

Mrs. Holzer
hosts club

Open house set

Still Have This Extra Insurance!

Gallia senior citizens enjoy meeting.

~

TlH' So undi ng Board is th&lt;• heart of yo ur piano.
~ Jl.s lif(' ·a nd quali ty determ me you r piano 's
TO ;-.JE nnd it.r;; TRADE -I N VALUE.
If lhl' Lnminatt·d Mahogan ~ Sound ing Board in
.v!Ju r Stu r~..,. &amp; Clar k p i&lt;Jno split!" or c racks , within
:;o _, . , .Hr.~. thc- fa ctory will rcplact• it fr ee, including

GALLIPOUS - The Rio
Grande • Rodney Happy Days
Club presenW&lt;l the program to
wer 100 persons present at the
Senior Cenwr, Thursday, Feb.
14, for the monthly potluck
supper.
Mrs. Frank Denney,
program chairperson, called
the "class" together by ringing
the old-fashioned school beD.
This helped to bring back
memories of the one-room
school of the early 1900s. The
group sang "School Days" and
llswned to Fimnie Jones reciw
"The Village Blacksmith."
Mrs. Clara Mae Mossbarger
read a humorous story from

1

!ra n ... p&lt;J rl a l ion a n d f&gt;\ll' r y ol~w r enst.

Nu

otJwr fllano

offr'n:; y ou su ch a guara nt ee

a~oin.'it

'-ra ck in g or Hpli ll ir!g. Yet this 5Q.year guar·
fH lkt• i ~ on ly Ont' of many Story &amp; Clark reatures.
Let Uf'. g-iw you t he com plete fa cts!

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
54 State St.,

Gallipoli~

446-{1687

GRAND OPENING
SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 24th
OF

the McGuffey Reader, "Mrs.
Caudill's Lecture." Garnet
Wood read "Forty Years Ago"
also taken from the McGuffey
Reader. The program was
concluded with a Valentine
thought, "A Heart-Shaped
Wish" and the singing of "Let
Me Call You Sweetheart;~ ·
The
FHA
(Future
Homemakers of Americ·a)
clubs in Gallia County Schools
are involved in projects this
year to work with the elderly.
Janet Srewart and Carolyn
Baker, members of South·
western PTA, acted as
hosresses.
Gallia Academy FHA invires
Senior Citizens to meet with
them Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 7
p.m. at the high school . to
discuss projects.
Hannan
Trace
FHA
ls sponsoring the MS. Senior
Citizen or Gallia County conlest. Any lady 55 years or older
can be in the conrest. She must
be recommended by another
person. This recommendation
must be 1a wri tren one of 150
, ~ords or less and sent to the
Senior Citizens Cenrer, P. 0 .
Jlox 441, Gallipolis .
Mrs. Mary Kennedy won

EXCITING NEW EXCLUSIVE FACILITIES •.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - ·
The Huntin gton Galleries,
Huntington, W. Va . aMounces
its major exhibition of 1974.
Selections from one of th~
nation 's outstanding privare
collections of pre.Colwnbian
art objects will be displayed
Feb. 17 (today) to June 9.
Keynoting the public opening
of the exhibition will be Jay c.
I..eff, Uniontown, Pa ., o\vner of
the collection which will be
exhibited here as "Ancient Art
of Middle America." Le!f will
speak at 3 p.m. today .
The exhibition originally was
to be displayed only through
April. Due to the fuel shortage,
however, the exhibition date
has been exrended to June 9 in
order to aUow more people especiaDy school children - to
see it in accordance with
available fuel.
This important collection of
indigenous art of the Americas
covers the entire span of arlistie creation in Mesoamerica
from the Tlatilco figurines of
1500 B.C. to the art of the Maya
and Aztec cultures before the
Spanish conquest in 1520 A.D.
Leff's collection is especially
outstanding for the quality and
extent of the art of the Olmec,
only recently recognized as
seminal to all subsequent
Indian culture.
Military and religious
figures , deities, animals and
genre scenes were all por!rayed by artists utilizing a
variety of materials. Exam·
pies of stone work range from a
five-inch jadeite figure to a
forty -five -inch long tenoned
serpent head, an architectural
unit of volcanic stone .

RIO GRANDE - The
American Baptist Women of
Calvary Baptist ChurCh met in
the feDowship room at the
church, Tuesday, Feb. 12, at
7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Katherine Jones was
the discussion leader for the
evening. The topic, "Courage
to be a Person." She mentioned
that there were three things
involved when a person is left
alone, whether middle..aged or
older. They are facing up to
death,
insecurity
and
loneliness.
Some of the activities
mentioned that are now being
used in this county are the
grandparent plan at the GSI,
Senior Citizens Cenrers (there
are nine), retired groups from
various professions, and Grey
Ladies at the hospitaL
The group was given a list of

Grange discusses projects
POMEROY :- Projects of
the national and slaw granges
were discussed by Mrs. Amos
Leonard at the Thursday night
meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange at the Leonard home.
A communication was read

Personnel people
hear professor
RIO GRANDE - John
Reynolds, associate professor
of bu. . . administration at
Rio Grande College, was the
guest speaker for the monthly
meeting of the Mid.Ohlo VaDey
Chapter of the American
Society of Personnel Administrators Monday at lhe
lifeigs Inn in Pomeroy.
Reynolds : til!lic . was Rio
Grande , College's ' Business
·{\dmlnistratlon Program, the
proposed Rio Grande Com·
munity
College,
and
Cooperative Education. Nearly
every industry in the Mid-Ohio
Valley is represented in this
group, and 16 members at.
Wnded Monday's session to
hear Reynolds.

of the West Virginia Arts and
Humanities Coun ~ il; the
Galleries furth er
acknowledges the generous
cooperation of Arre Primitivo,
Inc., The Brooklyn MuseWll,
The Metropolitan Muse um,
The National Museum of
Natural History, Dumbarton
Oaks Research Library and
Collection and the Mexican
National Tourist Council.
In conjunction with the
exhibition, the Galleries is
sponsoring a special llklay
educational tour of major
archaeological sites in Middle
America , including those near
Mexico City, Merida and
Cozumel. The tour begins
Tuesday, Aprill6, and features
of
guided
exploration
Teotihuacan, Tula,_ Uxmal,
Chichen ltza and Tulum. First
class and deluxe ac·
co mmodations have been
arranged throughout th e tour .
Pre-tour lectures, slide
presentations and films will
complement reading materials
provided for prospective tour
partici'pants. For further in·
formation, please contact the
Huntin gton Galleries, Park

~ Dorotl~y I
,.~~

Now In
Progress

SAVE

50%

eJEWELRY
eWATCHES
eGIFTS
eETC.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

C011tro1

your
budget
and your .

Tl9'"·

too:

VINTON The Past
Matrons' Club of Vinton OES
375 met at the home of
Elizabeth Cloud with nine
The
. members
present.
.secretary and treasurer's
;reports were given by VIckie
·Powell.
• Laura Brown thanked the
club for the flower sent to her
when she was hospitalized.
Several mell)bers were fined

New

libbed

conttbl· top
pantghoft

at Just $1.75.
tlr~ verY tiring''"

for not wearing their past
matron's pin.
The program consisred of
scripture by Laura Brown and
readings by the other members
in keeping with Valentine's
Day. Games were played for
entertainment. The house was
decorated in keeping with the
Valentine's Day theme .'
Those attending were
Margaret Simms, Mary

I

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Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Griffith

·Observe anniversary
Charlotte Griffi th, RL 1.
Gallipo li s; Mrs . M&lt;Jrvin
(Marguerite) Robie, Ridwell ;
and daughtcr.in -law , Mrs.
William 1Ruth Ann 1 Griffith,
Crown Ci 1y.
They s har ed ann iver sary
ca ke with t!Jt.• nurses and
nur ses aides of four lh floor ee1st
and received many cards, gifts
and phone calls.
SEEN AND HEARD
F:ven ing vi s it ors included
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and sons, Edga r. Jr. , Gal lipolis;
Mrs. Ferrell Niday, Gallipolis, William. Crown Ci ty; and
re turned home Friday after a Dorothy Gordon, Ga llipoli s.
month in Richmond, Va. ,
where they visited their son -inlaw and daug hter. Mr. and
Mrs. David M. Warner and two
children, David Micha el II and
Natalie. They were accompanied to the Gallipolis .
Point Pleasant area by ..the
Warners who will return to
Richmond this Wednesday.
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Edga r Griffith celebrated
their 35th wedding anniversary
Jan. 14 , at the Holzer Medical
Center . Mrs. Griffith has been
hospitalized si nce Jan . 9.
Present for the occasion
were her mother, Mrs.
Charlo tte Little; daughter.

WEO

WHIRIH O ~Oioll

Walker, Haze l Harmon , Vennie
Casto, Laura Brown, Ruth
Evans, Vickie Powell, Verna
Gleason and th e hostess.
Refreshments were served to
close the session.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Margaret Simms,
April 2.
·

'

GA!.Ll POI.IS - The French
Art Colony will host its annua l
dinner antl lmsi fwss meet ing
Thursday , r'e~ . 28, at6 ::!0 p.m.
in OscHr's Restaurant.
Reservations cue due by !J'eb .
22 and should be made by
ca lling Riverby, 446-3834, from
10 a.m. to :l p.m. Tuesdays, or
by calling Shirley J·Iorstman ,
rescrvHtiuns chairperson , at
675-545:l.
The cost for the ~.:vcni n g is
$5.50 per person. This meeting
prov ides an oppo~'lun ity for
members and friends to ga th er
and see what all t11~ depart·
rnen ts of the 1\rt Colony are
doin g.
Special guest speaker for the
even ing will be Hen ry A.
Young, busine&amp;ii manager or
the Cincinna ti Ballet Compa ny.
His topic for the evening will be
' 'Dance is Getting to
America ."

Jane Parker

Hot Cross

BUNS
" Serving you since 1936"
. , Gallipolis, Ohio

,.

FOI~

from Mrs . Pauline Atkins
concerning the nomination of
delegates lo the Ohio State
Grange meeting. It was .vored
to raise the rent on the Grange
HaD to $10. ReporWd ill were
Lydia Weyersmiller and Ar·
nold Snowden.
Mrs. Gladys Morgan, lee·
turer, presenled the program
which included several
readings, "Old Fashioned" by
Melinda Bradbury, a guest;
"An Old House" by Mrs.
Homer Radford; "To George
Washington"
by
Fred
Goeglein; "The Commanderin-Chi!" by Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit; "I Love Old Things"
by
William
Grueser;
"Abraham Lincoln" by Mrs.
Fred Goeglein, and "Valentines'' by Mrs. James Conkle.
Refreshments were served
by Mr. and Mrs. Leonard.

TI-lt

N!/IJ' N11rrc
Ua1.1 v Clerk

WHITE SWAN
UNIFORMS

w

Uoun cy /Jeautician
fl urried 11ou.\'ewife
11nd
h 1r Yuu, Foo l

From '6.00 up
Yo11r W!Jite Swan
Distributor

~:j

OPEN 12:00 NOON TIL 5:00 P.M.

ENJOY SUNDAY LUNCH WITH US!

We Want To Serve

Yo~

--SUNDAY SPECIALS==
FEBRUARY 17th ONLY
"YOU'L L ENJOY TilE QUJCI\, POUTE SERVICE HERE"

BAKED
CHOPPED
SIRLOIN
STEAK
DINNER
.tl oz. chopped sirloin st eak ,
ba k ed in ri ch br own gravy,

m as he d pota toes, bu tte red
v egetabl e, warm r ol l and
bull e r .

DAN THOMAS
'AND SON

SMOCKS &amp; TOPS

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

OR! G!IU1! 5

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Mone Balk

...

CHICKEN
LIVERS
PLATTER
Chi cken li ve r s sauted in
butter , cr anber r y sauce .

ma s he d

po tat oes.

ri c h

chick en gra vy , butt er ed
vegetabl e. w arm roll and
butter .

$1.39

VEAL
CUTLET
DINNER
Qua r ter po und b re aded
v ea l
c u ll e1,
c reamy
mashed potatoes, brown
gra vy , cr eam y cole slaw ,
wa rm roll and butt er

GRILLED
HAM
STEAK
DINNER
Ham steak topped w ith
cherry sauce , mashed
pot a t oes ,
rich
brown
gravy, buttered vege ta b le,
warm roll and butt er .

$}.45 $1.69
•
mertca

by

IV\O~UD~
If you've priced control-lop pantyhose - lhP.n you
know Ihis is sensational! Sheer stretchy pantyhose with ribbed control-lop that works to smooth you out.
And we durd have to tell you ahoul gmat Moiud
rmd fit. In your favorite color . Hurry!
Paradise Tumbleweed

"

"'

Mon. &amp; Fri.
9:30tit8p.m.

Tues. Wed. Sal. ·
9:30til5 p.m:

Thursday

328 8!CONO AVENUE / eALLlPOUS, OHIO

9:30 til12 noon

330 SECOND AVENUE
.,

BEDROOM SUITES
~--/\
LIVING ROOM SUITES
DINING ROOM SUITES
.. .
by: •BASSETT •CLAYTON MARCUS •KINCAID
eBURLINGTON HOUSE •VIRGINIA HOUSE
· eand Others

..

SOLID
MAPLE
TAB[E
and

4 CHAIRS
NOW

$199

95

EARLY
AMERICAN
5 PIECE

FINAL

7000.

Stoneware

BEDROOM
SUITE

by

REG. '1099.95

---·-- -

I

Ii

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f

'

Ofl LIPOLI S, OHIO -1

Effective Fri., Sat.
•· and Monday Only

L_.

eCHAIRS
•SOF.A S

-

~ •LOVE

GALLIPOliS, OHIO '

..

Wlnt HUTDi

TS

MIRROR
. '

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~·:~-~~~::_..::::.:...:.....:.:.:.:.:....:..:;;::.:.;,;.;;;;:;,;;;;;:.;;:;;........,,;,;,;;o,;;,;~...............;,;;;,;;;,o,;,,.;.,.,;;;,;;=~=-...;.......:..;._~;.....,.;.......t....

. . . =· .

HAVE A nice week.

OES Past Matrons meet

•

'

Countryman

CONGRESS will hate me, but it just isn't George
"Washington's birthday, Feb. 18. It was bad enough that the
calendar chaqged and moved George from the lith to the 2:&gt;nd,
but this business of moving him back again is horrendous.
And poor old Abe. The calendar still has him marked at Feb.
12 but we 're celebrating them both together on the 18th.
Programs for school children on these two memorable dates
are slammed together and we have had, unfortunately, instances
'when the poor kids involved had George at Gettysburg and Abe
,chopping cherry trees in Virginia. And if they were alive, how
would they feel about receiving their birthday cards on the third
Monday of February just so the Congress and the state employes
(How many of the rest of you, like newspaper people, have to
work anyway?) could have the day off.
The convenience of this move really escapes me anyway.
Birthdays happen on the day of birth and even America's two
most famous presidents have a right to that.

the country's
leading magazines...

'I

Spring VaUey Plaza j;·Just Arrived A/mzisfree
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis' ~ l Peddler's Pantry
-.

by

GALUPOUS - Although some persons in the Old French
City laugh at me when I mention ii, about once every so often I
get a tremendous yearning to go somewhere and plant corn, or
build fen ce, or something similarly agricultural.
Adding to genuine yearning for the feel of soil between my
hands, their is a certain feeling of peace that descends over me
each time I get out of town and into the fields.
There is, in fact, a favorite pl~ce for me that I find singularly
refreshing and it isn't even mine. Jusl below Piketon on SR 124
there's a level stretch of road that is bordered by what looks to be
about 10 acres of field. There's something about that corn field
that !find reassuring and for the last year, I've been watching it.
It's the best thing about my trips to HiUsboro, because that field
gets me all cahned down before I have to present myself in the
company of other people.
I watched them plow, and plant, and weed that fi eld and
watched through the brief months of summer as the corn grew.
The tiny shoots were changing each time I passed them and
gradually they became tall and straight and filled with the
bounty of GOO's creations.
Then, come fall, I watched as the corn came down before the
red machine that snatched the ea rs up and carried them away to
barns and trucks where they would be hauled away and ground
Into a meal that would feed the mouths of hungry children
somewhere.
Just now the corn field stands empty. This year it may be
soybeans or pasture, but it will stiU be "my;' cornfield in many
ways for for me, that 's one good ivay of calming down.
Everybody ought to have a cornfield in their life.

UPTO

-·--·- ·-·--------------.

EAC slates
dinner meet

Jan's Side

.From the pages of

the handmade afghan.
Mrs. Anne While gave a
· report of the plans for Hobo
Day, Feb. 22, at the cenwr
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. The meal
will consist of beans, ham,
cornbread, pie and coffee.
Tickets are being sold at $2 for
adults and
for children.
Anyone lvlshing to help with
this project, please call the
Senior Citizens Center, 446-

New ShifJment

' slATE &amp; THIRD

shut-ins in the community and
each person wrote down three
or four things they did particularly well. These are things
that each one can do for those
who are lonely or shut-in. A
discussion period followed.
Mrs. Jones closed with the
reading of Psalms 68: 5 and II
Corinthians 4:14-16.
Communications were read
from Special Interest Missionries , Miss Isabelle Jarvis and
Rev. and Mrs. T. Bennett
Dickerson thanking the group
for money sent to them.
Plans were · made for the
Annual Silver Tea Sunday
April 21. The hoswsses, Jennie
Myers and Doris Lanham,
served a dessert course to the
14 members, Beth and Michael
Lynch and Bruce and Marcia
Wilkins.

'

'

Baptists have meeting

Zaros

,.___________________________,.. l-

Ceramics are present in a
variety of rare as well as
tr aditional
form s.
The
ceremonial ball game .is
. illustrated not only with an
elaborately costumed ceramic
ball player from pre-Classic
times, but also with hachas,
palmas and yokes associated
with the games.
A
special
auxiliary
exhibition entitled "Hecho en
Mexico" will become a focal
point for
participatory
educational programs for
school-age children, emphasizing the Maya and Aztec
cultures with their highly
a~vanced
systems
of
mathematics, astronomy and
religion as well as pottery,
music, architecture and
agriculture.
Films and public lectures by
nationally prominent
authorities covering various
facets of these cultures will be
progranuned for adults and
children. Guided tours by
trained docents may be
arranged by calling the tour c&lt;&gt;ordinator at the Galleries, Mrs.
Mahlon Brown, at 304-&lt;i:&gt;.l).2701.
Groups of any size may
arrange for tours Tuesday
through Saturday between 9
a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Evening
tours at 7:30 Tuesday through
Thursday, may be arranged,
bot only if the tour group
numbers 20 or more. Tour
requests will be accepted at
any time, but should be made
at least two weeks in advance
and will be confinned by mail.
There will be no exhibition
admission fees.
The exhibition is being made
possible through the assistance

,i -::- The Sunday Time•. Sentinel, Sunday .'~·cb. 17, 1974

Hills, Huntington, W. Va., at
304-&lt;i29·2701as soon as pos!lible.

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_ _~~~....:.:.._...--'--"-'---'-~
............................
__...........,:,;,..,;,_.:.;.._....;__-----__;J_--...:_:.............,____:,._""-..............._;__-'---'-.......- - _ . _ - - " -_____~-~~-~~....;.:,;,_;~

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;:::~::::::::::::::::::~:;;;;;::::::::=&gt;::::::;:;;;;~::::::::::::~:·.·t

~~

·coming ~
I Events I
:~

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:&lt;::

ATTENTION' ALL CUSTOMERS:

"J

PLEASE BRING BAGS

••

•
•

to ·Pennyfare to pack yo.ur groceries ..Transportation difficulties have curtailed receipt and
delivery of bags to our stores.

•

u

••

ALL SPECIALS SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY OF PRODUCT
DUE TO DELIVERY PROBUMS BEYOND OUR CONTROL •.

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]i.m.

SYRACUSE - In an afternoon ceremony at the
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, Miss
Roberta Jean Ord and Paul
Steven Miller excha nged
wedding vows.
The wedding was an event of
Dec. 20 with the Rev. Richard
Jarvis officiating .at the dooble
ring ceremony. The bride is the
daught&lt;!r of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
J. Ord, Syracuse, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald H. Miller,
Tempe, Ariz.
Organist was Jocylyn Baer,
with the sisrers of the bride,
SU.phanie, Rebecca and Leslie
Ord, singing "More." Whit&lt;!,
green and yellow flowers with
candelabra decorated the
church.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a formal gown of empire
styling with ·a whit&lt;! satin
bottom and a satin top with an
overlay of lace and lace
sleeves. She carried a bouquet
of whit&lt;! carnations and yellow
rosebuds and her only jewelry
was a white gold chain
necklace with a rhinestone
ornament.
The bride's only attendant
was Mrs. Rhonda Folmer,
Cincinnati. She wore a pink
dress and a rosebud corsage.
Max Folmer, Cincinnati, was
best man for the bridegroom,
and the ushers were Verne

Ord, Syracuse; Robert Bailey,
Pomeroy; and
Michael
Walker, Rutland.
For her daught&lt;!r's wedding,
Mrs. Ord wore a knit gown in
eggshell and had a whit&lt;!
carnation corsage. Mrs. Miller
was in a blue and whit&lt;! knit
dress and also wore carnations.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the bride's
home in Syracuse following the
wedding. The table was
covered in yellow and green
· flowers. Aunts of the bride,
Mrs. Shirley Hinerman and
Mrs. Tene Barcroft, prtsided
at the table. Guests were
regist&lt;!red by Sandra Walker.
For a trip to Cincinnati, the
bride changed into a pink,
white and blue slack ensemble.
The couple resides at Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Miller waches
in t: Zaswrn Local School
Di.&lt; · ;t, and Miller is employed in the Logan City
Schools. Both have bachelor of
science in education degrees in
math.
Out-of-town guests attending
the wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Todd Hinerman and family,
Logan; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Barcroft . and
fam ily,
Hurricane, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs.
Donald
Napper,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Miller, Jerry Mtller
and Mark Miller, Tempe, Ariz.

Homemakers meet

I

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Bernice Wood will serve on the
Co u n t y E x tens i o n committee.
Homemakers Council met at
The hobby table was furGrace United Methodist nished by Mary Jo Shaver,
Church, FeQ, 13. The meeting Thelmf!..- Shaver and Gladys
was opened by'g~~~!ing ~-wlitts' and fe~tured several
"America" and "Amencif'tfie homemade artwles.
Beautiful," led by Ethel
Nancy Ramey, SEOEMS
Robinson. Mrs. Paul Ward representative, discussed the
accompanied.
work of that group In the seven
Devotions were given by county area, noting their wellMary Jo Shaver on love and equipped emergency vehicles
charity with scripture from I and trained personnel. She
Corinthians \3.
pointed out the importance of
Mrs. Helena Lear was in waching children how to obtain
charge of the business meeting emergency aid.
and Mrs. Betty Lou Moore read
A potluck lunch was enjoyed
the secretary's report. Mrs. at the 'noon hour. During the
Roberta Fisher gave the afwrnoon, Miss Alma Saddem,
treasurer's report.
Ohio State University ExMrs. Betty Clark gave shop tension Service, gave the
talk and distributed pamphlets program on diet and heart
on weaving along with several disease .
inwresting articles. She gave
She named importantfactors
hints on conserving energy, oil, in heart disease such as, high
heat and food dollars.
blood pressure, diabews, high
Mrs. Lear appoinwd the cholesterol, obesity, ennominating committee, of vironmental factors, smoking,
which Mrs. Wayne Amsbary lack of activity and emotional
will be chairwoman. Mrs. stress, several of which can be
Maxine Stutes and ·Mrs. avoided or treate~.

TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club, 8 p.m. with
Mrs. Shane.
LAF AVETTE Shrine 44 honors
charter members; 25th birthday celebration; program and
covered dish dinner follow the
meeting; 7:30 p.m. Members
and oflicers urged to atwnd.
RIO GRANDE Mothers
League with Mrs. Margaret
Bryant, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Pat
Houck, speaker.
VINTON Friendship Garden
Club with Eleanor While, 10

OPEN DAILY 9 71L 9-CLOSED SUNDAYS

252 SECOND AVENUE-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
w e reserve ttlc riqht to limitquanht•es on 1111 ite m~ in tl'li~ ad. Pri(e'&gt; effective thru Sat ., Fe-b_13. 1914. None sold to dealers .

.Miss Marsha G. Cox
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Hanford
Cox, Rt. I, Northup, announce the marriage of their
daughter, Marsha G., to Marvin L. Wickline, Jr. , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Wickline, Lower River Rd., Gallipolis. The
bride-elect is a senior at Hannan Trace High School and is
employed at the Jones Boys, Gallipolis. Wickline, a senior at
Gallia Academy, is also employed at The Jones Boys. The
wedding will be an event of Feb. 'n at the home of the
groom's parents.

a.m.

OPEN Gate Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Dcris Lanham.
Mrs. Susie Vanco guest
speaker, 7:30p.m.
CHILI Supper sponsored by the
Addison UMW and United
Methodist Youth Fellowship in
the Addison Town House from
4:30 to 9 p.m. The menu in·
eludes homemade chili,
vegetable soup, cole slaw, pies
and coffee.
ADDAVILLE PTO meets at
the school, 7:30p.m. A. Keith
Sheets, DDS, guest speaker,
discussing "Your Child's
Teeth." Also presentation by
Cub Scout Pack 209.

ON SCHOLAR LIST
POMEROY ·- Among 50
high school seniors enrolling at
Ohio State University who have
been appointed freshman
scholars in recognition of

outstanding academic records,
is William D. Hayes, Long
Bn'tom Route I, of Easwrn
High School. Those selecwd
are
accorded
certain
privileges.

ARMOUR

t.,\ BEEF

U.S.D.A. CHOICE U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

CHUCK ·ROASTS
BLADE CUTS

6 OZ. BOX

·'

ELECTRIC

SUNDAY ONLY
LITTLE
GIRLS
&amp;
BOYS

ATIEND FUNERAL
BRADBURY
Alice
Johnston, Bradbury, att&lt;!nded
the recent funeral of Marie
Beach Wilkinson, born Oct. 22,
1898 in Bradbury, and a former
resident here. Mrs. Wilkinson
died February 10 at the Kinley
Nursing Home in Canton.
Burial was in Union Cemetery
in Louisville, Ohio. Bernice
Jeffers and Sharon Doss of
Bradbury sent flowers.

•.•

..,. .

CHUCK STEAKS CENTER CUTS •• • • • • • • • lb. '1 29

..",,

COSMETIC DEPT.

'

!TUllier at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.

VALUES TO sg,gg

8y carrier daily and Sunday 60c per
week. Motor route 12.60 per month.
MAlL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The Gallipolis Tribune in Ohio and West
VIrginia one month $2.50; one year $18.00:
six months t~t.~; three mont.h.s $6.00
Elsewhere $22 per year ; six months Sll.50;
three months $6.50; motor route $2.00
month])·.
The Daily Sentinel, one month 52.50; one
year $18.00; six months 19.~; three
months 16.00. Elsewhere 122 per year; six
mooths UUO; three months $6.SO; motor

$ 00

r
•=

In The SiiYer Bridge Plaz•

.I

.&gt;

•"·

,.

•
·""
•
••
••

.

•
,.•
,,•

LIMIT 2
47'

COFFEE RICH
NON-DAIRY

CREAMER
Pint Carton

·MH-30 HAND CLEANER

(USE IT.)

1-LB. CAN

••••
•••

Master Charge, the card used to help manage yc
money arid keep track of purchases with c
itemized monthly statement. If you've got it, you
probably got Master Charge, too. So . . . use it!

KEEBLER FEATURES
Pecan Sondles ......... , 14-oz. Pkg . 76c
C.C. Biggs .............. .14 v,..,•. Pkg . 76c
Fudge Stripes . . ..... , . , .12%-oz. Pkg . 76c
Deluxe Grahams ........ 13 %-oz. Pkg. 76c
OSCAR MAYER-U.S. GOVT. INSP.

The Commercial
&amp; Savin e ,Bank

Court St:
Gallipolis

All Meat Boloqna . .. .. . ................ 8. 01 . Pkg. 79c
Be•f ~ologna ........ .. ..... . ...... .... a-o1. Pkg_ 79c
Pickle &amp; Pimento .... , , .. . , ... , . ,1, • • • • a-or. Pkg . 79c
All MeGt Bologna . .. . -: . ....• .... .. ... u -ot . Pk; . $1.19

S.eflolag'na ...... .................. , ........ $1,19

Silver Bridg..' Shopping Plaz•··

10-oz.
Jar

$199

FESCO

HOIJSEHOLD
PLASTICS

'

~

$1· 57

,
'
''

~~

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1

,'

.

JOAN
.OF ARC
LIGHT RID .
KIDNEY BEA"S

~

'

I'll

..

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&amp;

1

NO. 3858

NYLON WATER HOSE
5/8"x50'

RE~~S'7.99 '4 22

22 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

22(
HECK'S REG.

$1.99
JEWElRY DEPT.

SYLVANIA

FLASHCUBES

CK-4~

REGULAR

&amp;Iii;'

. 48 ONLY PER STORE ·

LIMIT 1

12 2 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

22(
HECK'S REG. 99'

318" Labelmaker

TAPE
144

42!.

Per Store

Lim ill

JEWElRY DEPT.

Hecks ••o" Size

BATTERIES
444 On~ Per S!Qre
lim~

HECK'S REG. TO 99'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

DIAMOND
CASE FOR INSTAMATIC

CAMERA

Limit One of Each Item
A. UTILITY TUB
B. LAUNDRY BASKET
C. 10 QT. DISH PAN
D. CUTLERY TRAY
E. 10 QT. PAIL
F. TULIP WASTEBASKET
Ci. MEMO MINDER

22(

$17.88
HARDWARE
DEPT.

On~

'

HECK'S REG. 69' QT.

. AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

HECK'S REG.

CHOICE

•

52e Qr.

Frome made o f strong tvbulor stee l_Four point hook up hammock mode of weather resista nt canvas.

'

'·

ALCOA WRAP
A.LUMINUM fOIL.
12"X150-ft.
Rail

LIMIT 1

•..
.. ,
..,
.,
.,
..,••• ••
...• •
..

FOLGER'S
INSTA"T COFFEE

•22

60 ONLY PER_$TORE

••
•••
•n
•
••

Pillsbury"~:~'Buttermilk Biscuits 4 :~~;59 cr:- --------.

Can

HECK'S REG. 5r

••
•

5

FOLGER'S COFFEE
3-lb. $337 2-lb.$229
Can
·

ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

144 OF EACH ITEM
ONLY PER STORE

POTATO

1200 OTS. ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT 5 OTS.

HAMMOCK
20

t

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

you've got it.

MOTOR OIL

COSMETIC DEPT.

$AEUX JU'i

HECK'S

MULTI"G" 10W40

HECK'S REG. 38'

50 ONLY PER STORE

Gallon Pkg.

newspaper and also the local news
publiBhed herein . _ __ _...J

22(

FUSEES
1 5 MINUTE SAFETY FLARE

•••

ICE CREAM

SHOES

22

GULF

liM/TONI

- 5...................-.y· -.-....-·~~

')

THOROFARE
VANILLA

C

LIMIT 1

i

Bake-am, Boil-em,
Mash-em, Fry-em

ALCOHOL

122 ONLY PER STORE

100 PER STORE ONLY ,

'i.

POTATOES

J?onP/u

HECK'S
REG. 4r

oz.

HECK'S

-HANDY PAINT PAIL

OPEN SUNDAY 1 PM TO 5 PM

route $2.1Wl monthly.
The United Press International is exclusively entitled to the use for publication
ol. all news dispatches credited tu this

6

5 QUART

RUSSET BAKING

THE DAILY SENTINEL

HECK'S REG. 49'

"

U.S. NO. 1 GRADE

111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . 45169.
Published every weekday evening el!cept
Saturday. Entered as second cla8S mail!ne

22c

..

SIZES
10&gt;1ci 3

Published every Sunday by The Ohio
Valley Publlilhing Co.
GAlJ.JPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
ll2!i Third Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio~~
Published every weekday evening except Saturday. Second Class Po:-~tage Paid
at GalllpolL'I, Ohio 45G.'ll .

122 ONLY PER STORE-LIMIT ONE

$2922

OXFORDS &amp; LOAFERS
SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

CHERRIES

10 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

•

DRESS SHOES

Choir elects officers
was decided that the choir will
meet on the last Wednesday of
each month. The Rev. swve
Skaggs had prayer and
rPfreshments of sandwiches,
cake and coffee were served by
Mrs. Barton, Miss Jerry Pullin
and Mrs. Whit&lt;!.
Others atwnding were Miss
Barbara Anthony, Mrs .
Dorothy 'Anthony, l'l!rs.
Frances Bearhs, Tom Darst,
Mrs . Janice Gibbs, Miss
AT CHERRY POINT
Venida Gibbs, Mrs . Pearl
MIDDLEPORT - Marine Hoffman, Darrell Skaggs, Mr.
PFC. Stanley R. Lemley, and Mrs. Danny Thompson and
whose wife Alice is the Mrs. Texanna Well.
daughwr of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Darst of 456 Beech St.,
has reported for duty at the
Marine Corps Air Station ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Cherry Point, S. C~ A 1973
ADMITTED - James Allen,
graduate of Hocking Technical . Portland: Sheila Elkins,
College, Nelsonvi,lle, he joined Aibany .
the Marine Corps in January
DISCHARGED
Roland
1974.
Morris.

The Electric Chor-8-Que gi&gt;'es you o lot of quality wit~out costing
you o lot of money. You get the great charcoal taste without ho&gt;'ing
to use messy chorcool. There ore no ashes to dean. No dangerous
starting fluid . Tht! Electric (hor-8·Que come, wit~ permanent briqveh.
It plugs tn anywhere. Outdoors, on your oporlmenl tfttroce or in your
ga ra ge It hen or~ o l~,~minum hovsing gvoronleed fo r 5 years against
rv~l ir1 g and burn ·ovt.

•
"'-·

BRACH'S
CHOCOLATE COVERED

BAR-B-QUE GRILL

·"

..

9-oz. Twin Pack
MIDDLEPORT - Officers
w•re elecwd during a recent
meeting of the choir of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Elected were Mrs. Nadine
Barton, president; Mrs. Louise
Skaggs, treasurer; Mrs.
Beulah
White,
librarian;
and Mrs . Marilyn Fultz, secretary. It

.I

N

MONDAY
CHESHIRE-Kyge r
PTA
Founders Day meeting, 7:30

Miller-Ord vows read

9-TheSundayT!mea -Sentinel, SUnday, Feb. 17, 19·, ,

-

SUNDAY
R~~ V . BRUCE Unroe will
preach at Bailey Chapel, 7 p.m.
The public is invited.
TRIEDSTONE Baptist Church
youth service, 6:45p.m. Guest
speaker is Mrs . Elizabeth
Cornell.
REVIVAL at Clark Chapel
Church, 7:30p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. PaulS. Miller

•'

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Heck's Reg.

3

FOR

3

22e

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:!·· 27;;

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;:::~::::::::::::::::::~:;;;;;::::::::=&gt;::::::;:;;;;~::::::::::::~:·.·t

~~

·coming ~
I Events I
:~

•

:&lt;::

ATTENTION' ALL CUSTOMERS:

"J

PLEASE BRING BAGS

••

•
•

to ·Pennyfare to pack yo.ur groceries ..Transportation difficulties have curtailed receipt and
delivery of bags to our stores.

•

u

••

ALL SPECIALS SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY OF PRODUCT
DUE TO DELIVERY PROBUMS BEYOND OUR CONTROL •.

•••
•••
•n
••
•••
w

1

.•
~

•••
•
•

,•
•

]i.m.

SYRACUSE - In an afternoon ceremony at the
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, Miss
Roberta Jean Ord and Paul
Steven Miller excha nged
wedding vows.
The wedding was an event of
Dec. 20 with the Rev. Richard
Jarvis officiating .at the dooble
ring ceremony. The bride is the
daught&lt;!r of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
J. Ord, Syracuse, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald H. Miller,
Tempe, Ariz.
Organist was Jocylyn Baer,
with the sisrers of the bride,
SU.phanie, Rebecca and Leslie
Ord, singing "More." Whit&lt;!,
green and yellow flowers with
candelabra decorated the
church.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a formal gown of empire
styling with ·a whit&lt;! satin
bottom and a satin top with an
overlay of lace and lace
sleeves. She carried a bouquet
of whit&lt;! carnations and yellow
rosebuds and her only jewelry
was a white gold chain
necklace with a rhinestone
ornament.
The bride's only attendant
was Mrs. Rhonda Folmer,
Cincinnati. She wore a pink
dress and a rosebud corsage.
Max Folmer, Cincinnati, was
best man for the bridegroom,
and the ushers were Verne

Ord, Syracuse; Robert Bailey,
Pomeroy; and
Michael
Walker, Rutland.
For her daught&lt;!r's wedding,
Mrs. Ord wore a knit gown in
eggshell and had a whit&lt;!
carnation corsage. Mrs. Miller
was in a blue and whit&lt;! knit
dress and also wore carnations.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the bride's
home in Syracuse following the
wedding. The table was
covered in yellow and green
· flowers. Aunts of the bride,
Mrs. Shirley Hinerman and
Mrs. Tene Barcroft, prtsided
at the table. Guests were
regist&lt;!red by Sandra Walker.
For a trip to Cincinnati, the
bride changed into a pink,
white and blue slack ensemble.
The couple resides at Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Miller waches
in t: Zaswrn Local School
Di.&lt; · ;t, and Miller is employed in the Logan City
Schools. Both have bachelor of
science in education degrees in
math.
Out-of-town guests attending
the wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Todd Hinerman and family,
Logan; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Barcroft . and
fam ily,
Hurricane, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs.
Donald
Napper,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Miller, Jerry Mtller
and Mark Miller, Tempe, Ariz.

Homemakers meet

I

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Bernice Wood will serve on the
Co u n t y E x tens i o n committee.
Homemakers Council met at
The hobby table was furGrace United Methodist nished by Mary Jo Shaver,
Church, FeQ, 13. The meeting Thelmf!..- Shaver and Gladys
was opened by'g~~~!ing ~-wlitts' and fe~tured several
"America" and "Amencif'tfie homemade artwles.
Beautiful," led by Ethel
Nancy Ramey, SEOEMS
Robinson. Mrs. Paul Ward representative, discussed the
accompanied.
work of that group In the seven
Devotions were given by county area, noting their wellMary Jo Shaver on love and equipped emergency vehicles
charity with scripture from I and trained personnel. She
Corinthians \3.
pointed out the importance of
Mrs. Helena Lear was in waching children how to obtain
charge of the business meeting emergency aid.
and Mrs. Betty Lou Moore read
A potluck lunch was enjoyed
the secretary's report. Mrs. at the 'noon hour. During the
Roberta Fisher gave the afwrnoon, Miss Alma Saddem,
treasurer's report.
Ohio State University ExMrs. Betty Clark gave shop tension Service, gave the
talk and distributed pamphlets program on diet and heart
on weaving along with several disease .
inwresting articles. She gave
She named importantfactors
hints on conserving energy, oil, in heart disease such as, high
heat and food dollars.
blood pressure, diabews, high
Mrs. Lear appoinwd the cholesterol, obesity, ennominating committee, of vironmental factors, smoking,
which Mrs. Wayne Amsbary lack of activity and emotional
will be chairwoman. Mrs. stress, several of which can be
Maxine Stutes and ·Mrs. avoided or treate~.

TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club, 8 p.m. with
Mrs. Shane.
LAF AVETTE Shrine 44 honors
charter members; 25th birthday celebration; program and
covered dish dinner follow the
meeting; 7:30 p.m. Members
and oflicers urged to atwnd.
RIO GRANDE Mothers
League with Mrs. Margaret
Bryant, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Pat
Houck, speaker.
VINTON Friendship Garden
Club with Eleanor While, 10

OPEN DAILY 9 71L 9-CLOSED SUNDAYS

252 SECOND AVENUE-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
w e reserve ttlc riqht to limitquanht•es on 1111 ite m~ in tl'li~ ad. Pri(e'&gt; effective thru Sat ., Fe-b_13. 1914. None sold to dealers .

.Miss Marsha G. Cox
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Hanford
Cox, Rt. I, Northup, announce the marriage of their
daughter, Marsha G., to Marvin L. Wickline, Jr. , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Wickline, Lower River Rd., Gallipolis. The
bride-elect is a senior at Hannan Trace High School and is
employed at the Jones Boys, Gallipolis. Wickline, a senior at
Gallia Academy, is also employed at The Jones Boys. The
wedding will be an event of Feb. 'n at the home of the
groom's parents.

a.m.

OPEN Gate Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Dcris Lanham.
Mrs. Susie Vanco guest
speaker, 7:30p.m.
CHILI Supper sponsored by the
Addison UMW and United
Methodist Youth Fellowship in
the Addison Town House from
4:30 to 9 p.m. The menu in·
eludes homemade chili,
vegetable soup, cole slaw, pies
and coffee.
ADDAVILLE PTO meets at
the school, 7:30p.m. A. Keith
Sheets, DDS, guest speaker,
discussing "Your Child's
Teeth." Also presentation by
Cub Scout Pack 209.

ON SCHOLAR LIST
POMEROY ·- Among 50
high school seniors enrolling at
Ohio State University who have
been appointed freshman
scholars in recognition of

outstanding academic records,
is William D. Hayes, Long
Bn'tom Route I, of Easwrn
High School. Those selecwd
are
accorded
certain
privileges.

ARMOUR

t.,\ BEEF

U.S.D.A. CHOICE U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

CHUCK ·ROASTS
BLADE CUTS

6 OZ. BOX

·'

ELECTRIC

SUNDAY ONLY
LITTLE
GIRLS
&amp;
BOYS

ATIEND FUNERAL
BRADBURY
Alice
Johnston, Bradbury, att&lt;!nded
the recent funeral of Marie
Beach Wilkinson, born Oct. 22,
1898 in Bradbury, and a former
resident here. Mrs. Wilkinson
died February 10 at the Kinley
Nursing Home in Canton.
Burial was in Union Cemetery
in Louisville, Ohio. Bernice
Jeffers and Sharon Doss of
Bradbury sent flowers.

•.•

..,. .

CHUCK STEAKS CENTER CUTS •• • • • • • • • lb. '1 29

..",,

COSMETIC DEPT.

'

!TUllier at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.

VALUES TO sg,gg

8y carrier daily and Sunday 60c per
week. Motor route 12.60 per month.
MAlL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The Gallipolis Tribune in Ohio and West
VIrginia one month $2.50; one year $18.00:
six months t~t.~; three mont.h.s $6.00
Elsewhere $22 per year ; six months Sll.50;
three months $6.50; motor route $2.00
month])·.
The Daily Sentinel, one month 52.50; one
year $18.00; six months 19.~; three
months 16.00. Elsewhere 122 per year; six
mooths UUO; three months $6.SO; motor

$ 00

r
•=

In The SiiYer Bridge Plaz•

.I

.&gt;

•"·

,.

•
·""
•
••
••

.

•
,.•
,,•

LIMIT 2
47'

COFFEE RICH
NON-DAIRY

CREAMER
Pint Carton

·MH-30 HAND CLEANER

(USE IT.)

1-LB. CAN

••••
•••

Master Charge, the card used to help manage yc
money arid keep track of purchases with c
itemized monthly statement. If you've got it, you
probably got Master Charge, too. So . . . use it!

KEEBLER FEATURES
Pecan Sondles ......... , 14-oz. Pkg . 76c
C.C. Biggs .............. .14 v,..,•. Pkg . 76c
Fudge Stripes . . ..... , . , .12%-oz. Pkg . 76c
Deluxe Grahams ........ 13 %-oz. Pkg. 76c
OSCAR MAYER-U.S. GOVT. INSP.

The Commercial
&amp; Savin e ,Bank

Court St:
Gallipolis

All Meat Boloqna . .. .. . ................ 8. 01 . Pkg. 79c
Be•f ~ologna ........ .. ..... . ...... .... a-o1. Pkg_ 79c
Pickle &amp; Pimento .... , , .. . , ... , . ,1, • • • • a-or. Pkg . 79c
All MeGt Bologna . .. . -: . ....• .... .. ... u -ot . Pk; . $1.19

S.eflolag'na ...... .................. , ........ $1,19

Silver Bridg..' Shopping Plaz•··

10-oz.
Jar

$199

FESCO

HOIJSEHOLD
PLASTICS

'

~

$1· 57

,
'
''

~~

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1

,'

.

JOAN
.OF ARC
LIGHT RID .
KIDNEY BEA"S

~

'

I'll

..

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&amp;

1

NO. 3858

NYLON WATER HOSE
5/8"x50'

RE~~S'7.99 '4 22

22 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

22(
HECK'S REG.

$1.99
JEWElRY DEPT.

SYLVANIA

FLASHCUBES

CK-4~

REGULAR

&amp;Iii;'

. 48 ONLY PER STORE ·

LIMIT 1

12 2 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

22(
HECK'S REG. 99'

318" Labelmaker

TAPE
144

42!.

Per Store

Lim ill

JEWElRY DEPT.

Hecks ••o" Size

BATTERIES
444 On~ Per S!Qre
lim~

HECK'S REG. TO 99'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

DIAMOND
CASE FOR INSTAMATIC

CAMERA

Limit One of Each Item
A. UTILITY TUB
B. LAUNDRY BASKET
C. 10 QT. DISH PAN
D. CUTLERY TRAY
E. 10 QT. PAIL
F. TULIP WASTEBASKET
Ci. MEMO MINDER

22(

$17.88
HARDWARE
DEPT.

On~

'

HECK'S REG. 69' QT.

. AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

HECK'S REG.

CHOICE

•

52e Qr.

Frome made o f strong tvbulor stee l_Four point hook up hammock mode of weather resista nt canvas.

'

'·

ALCOA WRAP
A.LUMINUM fOIL.
12"X150-ft.
Rail

LIMIT 1

•..
.. ,
..,
.,
.,
..,••• ••
...• •
..

FOLGER'S
INSTA"T COFFEE

•22

60 ONLY PER_$TORE

••
•••
•n
•
••

Pillsbury"~:~'Buttermilk Biscuits 4 :~~;59 cr:- --------.

Can

HECK'S REG. 5r

••
•

5

FOLGER'S COFFEE
3-lb. $337 2-lb.$229
Can
·

ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

144 OF EACH ITEM
ONLY PER STORE

POTATO

1200 OTS. ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT 5 OTS.

HAMMOCK
20

t

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

you've got it.

MOTOR OIL

COSMETIC DEPT.

$AEUX JU'i

HECK'S

MULTI"G" 10W40

HECK'S REG. 38'

50 ONLY PER STORE

Gallon Pkg.

newspaper and also the local news
publiBhed herein . _ __ _...J

22(

FUSEES
1 5 MINUTE SAFETY FLARE

•••

ICE CREAM

SHOES

22

GULF

liM/TONI

- 5...................-.y· -.-....-·~~

')

THOROFARE
VANILLA

C

LIMIT 1

i

Bake-am, Boil-em,
Mash-em, Fry-em

ALCOHOL

122 ONLY PER STORE

100 PER STORE ONLY ,

'i.

POTATOES

J?onP/u

HECK'S
REG. 4r

oz.

HECK'S

-HANDY PAINT PAIL

OPEN SUNDAY 1 PM TO 5 PM

route $2.1Wl monthly.
The United Press International is exclusively entitled to the use for publication
ol. all news dispatches credited tu this

6

5 QUART

RUSSET BAKING

THE DAILY SENTINEL

HECK'S REG. 49'

"

U.S. NO. 1 GRADE

111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . 45169.
Published every weekday evening el!cept
Saturday. Entered as second cla8S mail!ne

22c

..

SIZES
10&gt;1ci 3

Published every Sunday by The Ohio
Valley Publlilhing Co.
GAlJ.JPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
ll2!i Third Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio~~
Published every weekday evening except Saturday. Second Class Po:-~tage Paid
at GalllpolL'I, Ohio 45G.'ll .

122 ONLY PER STORE-LIMIT ONE

$2922

OXFORDS &amp; LOAFERS
SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

CHERRIES

10 ONLY PER STORE
LIMIT ONE

•

DRESS SHOES

Choir elects officers
was decided that the choir will
meet on the last Wednesday of
each month. The Rev. swve
Skaggs had prayer and
rPfreshments of sandwiches,
cake and coffee were served by
Mrs. Barton, Miss Jerry Pullin
and Mrs. Whit&lt;!.
Others atwnding were Miss
Barbara Anthony, Mrs .
Dorothy 'Anthony, l'l!rs.
Frances Bearhs, Tom Darst,
Mrs . Janice Gibbs, Miss
AT CHERRY POINT
Venida Gibbs, Mrs . Pearl
MIDDLEPORT - Marine Hoffman, Darrell Skaggs, Mr.
PFC. Stanley R. Lemley, and Mrs. Danny Thompson and
whose wife Alice is the Mrs. Texanna Well.
daughwr of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Darst of 456 Beech St.,
has reported for duty at the
Marine Corps Air Station ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Cherry Point, S. C~ A 1973
ADMITTED - James Allen,
graduate of Hocking Technical . Portland: Sheila Elkins,
College, Nelsonvi,lle, he joined Aibany .
the Marine Corps in January
DISCHARGED
Roland
1974.
Morris.

The Electric Chor-8-Que gi&gt;'es you o lot of quality wit~out costing
you o lot of money. You get the great charcoal taste without ho&gt;'ing
to use messy chorcool. There ore no ashes to dean. No dangerous
starting fluid . Tht! Electric (hor-8·Que come, wit~ permanent briqveh.
It plugs tn anywhere. Outdoors, on your oporlmenl tfttroce or in your
ga ra ge It hen or~ o l~,~minum hovsing gvoronleed fo r 5 years against
rv~l ir1 g and burn ·ovt.

•
"'-·

BRACH'S
CHOCOLATE COVERED

BAR-B-QUE GRILL

·"

..

9-oz. Twin Pack
MIDDLEPORT - Officers
w•re elecwd during a recent
meeting of the choir of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Elected were Mrs. Nadine
Barton, president; Mrs. Louise
Skaggs, treasurer; Mrs.
Beulah
White,
librarian;
and Mrs . Marilyn Fultz, secretary. It

.I

N

MONDAY
CHESHIRE-Kyge r
PTA
Founders Day meeting, 7:30

Miller-Ord vows read

9-TheSundayT!mea -Sentinel, SUnday, Feb. 17, 19·, ,

-

SUNDAY
R~~ V . BRUCE Unroe will
preach at Bailey Chapel, 7 p.m.
The public is invited.
TRIEDSTONE Baptist Church
youth service, 6:45p.m. Guest
speaker is Mrs . Elizabeth
Cornell.
REVIVAL at Clark Chapel
Church, 7:30p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. PaulS. Miller

•'

.•

Heck's Reg.

3

FOR

3

22e

•

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-11 - 'l;br Sunday Tintes -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 17, 1974

-"-10 - The Stmd ay Times -Senlinel .'SWJday, Fe b. 17, 19H

·:::::::::::·:::::::::;:;:;.;::::·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:; :;.;.;:; .;-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;;.;.;.;::.:·:·:=::::;:::;:t;:;:;:~~~~

.

....

.~?-:;~~·:~;.:-; :-;.;.;.:._..;:::::~:::: :::::: :::).::::~:::~:~~~

-·. t"'·r

·'

• ----

II

I

l'OMF:IlOY - Nobody, but nobody, is working any harder to
make a KO of someU1ing than is Iva Stewart Sisson whose goal is
to revive the Middleport Alumni Association reunion after two
years of nothing.
BUT she needs help.
In the shuffle mailing lists have lieen lost and Iva is now
desperately tryin g to compile new ones . She needs people who
graduated in U1c classes of the 50s to assist her by making lists
with current addresses.
Iva is hopeful that she will have all the up-tiH!ate address
information before March 2 so that letters ca n be in the mail
before the postage rates increase.
More money is needed and a bake sale is being planned for
some time around Easter. Iva is open to suggestions and ideas on
what ca n be don e to make the reunion a real success.
To avoid the usual conflict with the Pomeroy and Rutland
alumni reunions- and they both have terrific support !rom local
and returning alumni - the Middleport reunion will be held
Friday, May 25.
AND the speaker - probably Dave Diles. He has been in\1ted and is working toward clearing his schedule so that he ca n
be here.
U you can help Iva (Mrs. Robert Sisson , Rutland) in any
way. let her know .

~ ··'

Miss Patricia Ann Gingerich
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Gingerich, 628 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, annoWJce the
l•ngagement of their daughter, Pa tricia Ann, to Charles
Wesley Hodimer III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
llodimer, Eureka. Miss Gingerich is a 1971 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and att ended Ohio Sta te University.
She is employed by My Sister's Closet. At the univ ersity she
was a member of Delta Zeta Sorority. Bodimer graduated
from Gallia Academy High School, 197 1and is attending Ohio
University. He is employed by Bob Evans Steak House. A
July weddin g is planned.

Philathea meets

'

MIDDI.El'ORT- Philathea
Women of th e Middleport
Chu rch of Christ voted to
con tribute $100 to the Middleport firemen's fund for a
new emergency vehicle at a
mee ting Thursday night at the
church.
Presided over by Mrs. Cathy
Erwin, the group also agreed to
serve the Kentucky Christian •
Choir when it appea rs here in

concert during ApriL Plans
were also discussed for a
n·cc ption honoring Mr . and

Mrs. George Glaze , th e
(.'!lurch 's new pastor and his
w1 fe, Feb. 22.
Named to the nominating
committee, which will report
at the March meeting, were
Mrs. Mabel Walburn, Mrs .
Nora Rice and Mrs. Frances
lloush. Mrs. Pearl Reynolds
m~nounced the WRAP program
to be presented at the . Meigs
Jun ior High School Feb. 21 and
invited members to partic ipate . WRAP (Women 's
llesponsibili ty for Accident
Prevention) is sponsored by
U1e Middleport Business and
Professional Women.
It was noted that Mrs .
Martha Childs has flavorings
and condiments for sale as a
money making project o[ the
Philathea, Women. Reported ill

were Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Lorena
Rice , Mrs . Kathryn Ervin,
Mrs. Vona McKnight, and Mrs.
Ella Reuter. A thank you ..ute
was read from Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds 'for -a remembrance
during her recent hospitalization .
Mrs. Mary Meinhart used
"Love" as her devotional topic.
Reading scripture from I
Corinthians 13 was Mrs. Betty
Cline. Mrs. Childs had prayer,
Mrs. Meinhart read a poem,
and Mrs . Grace Hawley gave
the legend of the valentine.
The love theme was carried
out in the program by Mrs.
Reynolds who used selected
scriptures
with
interpretations, and concluded
with a poem . The birthday of
Mrs . Lea~ McKinley was
observed. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Meinhart, Mrs.
Cline, Mrs. Hawley and Mrs.
Lena Wolfe, with Mrs. Lorena
Rice as a contributing hostess .
Amy Erwin was a guest.

, DINNER PLANNED
POMEROY - A Mardi Gras
dinner will be held for the
public from 5 to 7 p.m. TIJUrsday at the Sacred Heart
Church auditorium.

White Enameled ALUMINUM GUTTER·
lNG . . . WON'T CRACK, CHIP OR PEEL.
NEVER NEEDS PAINTING.

PE ARL LEIFHEIT, R.N. , !rom 12:30 to 2:30p.m. will be
voiWJteering her service at the Senior Citizens Center Wednesday. Pearl will be taking blood pressures and it's a good time
for a check. There's no charge, of course .
WHILE WE'RE not hearing so much about the drug problem
these days, what with the energy crisis, inflation and Watergate,
it is, nevertheless, still with us.
Being informed about drugs, aware o! the effects, and alert
to the signs of usage, is certainly vital inforrruttion for parents.
Handed to us recently was a magazine titled "Don't Guess
About Drugs." It's the most informative thing on the overall
picture of drugs we've read. ·The magazine is published by the
National Drug Abuse Education Program, Inc., and is sold to
organizations and business firms at low prices in large quantities
for distribution .
The copy we have was one distributed by the Monarch
Machine Tool Co. at Sidney, and was sent to us by Hobart and
Evelyn Fick Young, formerly of here. Hobart is employed by
Monarch.
FOR MONTHS and months, Pat and Ear! Thoma have been
living between two houses, on Wolle Drive, Pomeroy, but are
ready this weekend to get it all together in one place. The
energetic couple purchased a larger home next door to where
they have lived lor several years and have spent every spare
minute renovating the place.
Belpre; John Bradford Lohse,
100 Wolfe Dr ., Pomeroy;
Richard Paul Werner, 142
Uncoln Rd., Pomeroy.

Colkge
News
GALLIPOLIS - The 1974
Spring Quarter at the
Gallipolis Business College will
open March 14. The college,
located at 36 Locust St., offers
one and two-year diploma
courses in general office,
secretarial, jWJior accounting,
business administration and
executive secretarial studies.
Any prospective students
who have not already
registered should do so immediately.
MOREHEAD, Ky. - Eleven
students from Gallia County
were among those named to
the fall semester dean's list at
Morehead State University.
Students must achieve at least
a 3.0 on a 4.0 scale to receive
this honor.
Gallians named were Connie
S. Bradbury, Cheshire, with a
perfect 4.0; Linda K. Craft,
Gallipolis; Constance J . Davis,
Thurman; Jill A. Gatewood,
Crown City; Nancy J. Mills,
Gallipolis; William M. Pegg,
Gallipolis; Dale H. SaWJders,
Gallipolis ; Larry E. Snowden,
Gallipolis; Debra K. Stout,
Thurman; Thomas S. Weaver,

Gallipolis;
Melanie
Wiseman , Gallipolis.

LIGH TWEIGHT ... easy to ha ndle and in stall.

RUST -PROO F
Tough,

each section precision machined to wit hsta nd all

kinds of wea the r.
wea th er -resis tan t ac ry lic ename l

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act uall y bonded to the me tal by a spec ia l
Desi_g ned to meet FH A requirements.

' KINHEAD TUB ENCLOSURES...
an inexpensive way to add glamour to your bathroom.
-JJ.-· ---;H Smooth, silent
opeu1tion . •. no
wheels, bearings or
rollers. Anodiud
aluminum fuming
and pluti' panel,
glido smoothly and
!ilently on rail
runners .

I

2 panel design
Clear Amber
Avocado
in stock .

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
31261h S! .

I

Ph&lt;~.,ne

675-1160

Point Pleasant

J.

RIO GRANDE- Edward R.
Sofranko, Rio Grande, has
been appointed liason officer
for the United States Air Force
A~ademy in Gallia, Jackson,
Vinton and Lawrence coWJties.
A captain in the air Ioree
reserves, Sofranko wiU soon be
attending a brief orientation at
the a~ademy in Colorado to
help him assist prospective
students better. Anyone
wishing to attend the academy
(maximum age is 22) should
contact Sofranko at 245-5074,
anytime.
ATHENS - Betty Waller,
health, physical education and
recreation, and Clara Wilkes in
speech, have been promoted to
assistant professorships at the
Portsmouth campus of Ohio
University, according to Dr.
Beaumont Davison, vice
president for regional higher
education in Athens . Both
promotions become e!!ective
with the beginning of the 197475 academic year.
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
University :will honor 407 highranking seniors 'at the 17th
Annu a l
Presidenti a l
Scholarship Recognition
Dinner, Monday, F~b. 25.
Students to be honored include Delbert Haney, Rt. 2,
.Pa triot ; Robert Spencer
Chambers, 707 Franklin Ave.,

I

SUNDAY
WEEKF.NDREVIVALat the
Rutland Church of God Feb. 1517, 7:30 p.m. Rev . Chester
Estep, speaker. The public is
invited.
MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters, at
7:30 p.m. in the band room at
the high school.
CHESTER PTA, 7:30p.m. at
the school.
RACINE PTA meets at 7:30
p.m. at the grade school.
Founder's Day program with
past presiden ts to be honored,
POMEROY PTA meets 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Mrs .
Cecelia Hart, Spanish teacher,
to p:esent the program. Past
prestdents wtll be honored.
February refreshment committee to serve.
VFW POST 61165, Racine, will
meet at 8 p.m. at the Racine
American Legion Hall.
ALL BUS drivers - regular
and substitute - of the Meigs
Local School District meet in
special session at 7:30p.m. at
the junior high school
cafeteria, Middleport.
RUTLAND PTA meets at
7:30 p.m. in the elementary
school gym. Program by
second grade.
,
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women 's
Club, 7:30p.m. Columbia Gas
Co. office. Mrs. Farie Kennedy
and Mrs. Wilma Sargent, civic
participation conunittee, will
have charge of the program .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Candystripers, 7 p.m. in the
hospital cafeteria .
TUESDAY
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
James Buchanan . Mrs. Helen
Shuler, co-hostess; Mrs. Carl
Horky to have the program.
POMEROY PASTOR Parish
Relations Committee , 7:30
p.m. in the social room of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church,
OYSTER STEW dinner 7:30
p.m. at Drew Webster Post 39
followed by initiation o! new
members and post everlasting

NASHVILLE, Tenn .
Robert Earl Saunders, grandson of Mrs. Mary Lorena
Saunders, Route 1, Northup,
has been accepted lor ad· servicesWEDNESDAY
mission to David Lipscomb
WEEKEND REVIVAL at
College, Nashville, Tenn ., for Freedom Gospel Mission, Bald
the 1974 fall quarter.
Knobs, beginning Feb. 22
A ser-ior in Hannan Trace through Feb. 24, 7:30 nightly,
High School, Crown City, The Rev . Bernard Thrash,
Saunders ·expects to graduate
Parkersburg guest speaker.
in 1974 and his acceptance is Special
singing nightly. The
contingent on satisfactory Choralaires will be featured
completion o! his senior Saturday. Public is invited to
studies. He plans to follow a attend.
major program in commercial
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
art at Lipscomb.
Webster
Post 39, American
Upscomb began its 83rd year
Legion
Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. at
this !all with more than 2,100
students enrolled in freshman, the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
sophomore, jwtior and senior
Club,
2 p.m. with Mrs. Nan
classes . All of these students
are enrolled in a daily Bible Moore. Mrs. 0. B. Stout to
class along with their review, "White House China"
by Marian Klamkin; and Mrs.
academic studies.
M. L. French to give "The
Optimist's Daughter" by
FIRST CHILD BORN
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr; Eudora Welby. Roll call will be
and Mrs. Deryl E. Well, are a conunent on the program.
announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter who has
been named Amy Lea Ann . The
infant was born Feb. 12 at
PTA TO MEET
Camden Clark Memorial
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Hospital and weighed 7lbs. and PTA will meet at 7:30 p.m.
7 ozs. Maternal grandparents Monday in the elementary
are Mr. and Mrs. J . S. Davis, school gymnasimn with the
Tuppers Plains, and the prograni' to be presented by the
paternal grandmother is Mrs. second grade.
Evelyn Well.

-

Eva Gardner
observes day
ADDISON - A surprise
valentine birthday party was
given !or Eva Gardner, Feb.
14, at Tara.
Cake, ice cream and other
goodies were served to Mrs.
James (Maria ) McQuaid, Mrs.
Clarence (Berdina) Shriver,
Mrs .
Frank
(Linda )
Shoemaker, Mrs . William
(Virginia ) Gardner , Mrs.
Worthy (Sady) Bright, Mrs.
Johnny (Edna) Kerwood, Mrs.
James (Tulica) Cremeans and
son, Joey, Mrs. Jackie (Freda)
Little, Middleport, Mrs .
Michael (Teresa) Little ,
Middleport, Michael Watts,
Michelle Watts, Mrs. Delmar
(Betty) Clark and Miss Julia
Gardner.

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THE "NORRIS QUARTET" MAY BE HEARD over chaMel
POMEROY - A bake sale and there is the possibility of a 13 on the "Christ is the Answer" program which features the
will be held at the former public dance at some time in Rev. Charles Norris, formerly o! Racine. They will appear
Pomeroy Junior High School the near future. At the next Sunday, Feb. 24 and SWJday, March 3.
auditorium March 2 beginning meeting the chapter will h,ve a
Making up the group are Marilyn Powell, Freeland Norris,
at 9 a.m. by the Preceptor Beta silent auction of homemade Florence Adams and Demis Manuel. Mrs. Delores Wolle is the
Bel;! Chapter of Beta Sigma articles and Mrs . Clarice
pianist.
Phi Sorority for the benefit of Krautter will take a traveling
the Pomeroy Firemen's prize .
Association.
Mrs. Norma Amsbary and
Final plans lor the bake sale Mrs . Custer presented the
were made during a meeting program. Mrs. Custer talked
Thursday night at the home of on the topic "Acquiring
POMEROY - A supply of opened the meeting. Mrs. Iva
Mrs. Lucille Williamson, New Wisdom Using Farmers'
Haven. Mrs. Shirley Custer, Almanac," and Mrs. Amsbary instant oats for a Haiti mission Powell presented the program
project will be provided by the with Mrs . Bertha Parker, Mrs.
service chairwoman, asked used a game, "Who Am I?"
that all members contribute to
Next meeting will be held at Missionary Society of the Della Curtis, Mrs.·Marguerite
the sale and have their baked the home of Mrs. Eleanor Laurel Cli!f Free Methodist Leifheit, Mrs. Doris Buckley,
goods there at 9 a.m.
ThOmas with Rose Sisson as co- Church and the junior Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
Wright, Mrs. Sharon Folmer,
It was voted during the hostess. The program will be missionary members.
Meeting Thursday night in Mrs. Bernice Jeffers and Mrs .
meeting to send a letter of give,n l!Y Mrs. Clarice Krautter
the
parsonage basement, Mrs. Miidred Jacobs taking part.
commendation to the Jaycees and Mrs. Pearl Welker and the
Mrs . Buckley
served
Jean
Wright read a letter from
for cleaning the wall at the guest speaker will be Cay
Pomeroy Motor Co. of obscene Cross o! the Southeastern Ohio Mrs. Viola Walton, president of refreshments.
language and clearing away Emergency Medical Service. the executive conunittee WMS
the litter there.
A covered dish dinner regarding mission projects.
Reading of I Corinthians 12
Ways and means chair· preceded the meeting with 23
woman, Ann Rupe, reported members answering roll call. by Mrs. Wright and prayer by conductor in the history o! the
that again this year the chapter Officers reports were given. At the Re v. Robert Buckley Met.
The symphony is the fifth
will be selling tickets for the the conclusion of the meeting a
oldest in the country and an.
carnival on Regatta weekend. dessert course was served by
CLUB TO MEET
nually performs more than 250
She asked members to save Mrs. Williamson and Mrs.
POMEROY
The
Wildwood
concerts to half a million
bottle caps and the young son Tana Simonton. A recipe sale
of the hostess contributed those was held with several being Garden Club will meet at 7:30 people. The concert program
he had saved .
held over until the Feb. 28 p.m. Wednesday at the home of at Ohio University will consist
Mrs. Vernon Nease.
of : Wagner, Overture to "The
· · A discussion was held on meeting.
Flying Dutchman"; Mozart,
future money making pro.teotq
Symphony 41 in C Major
(Jupiter); Brahms, Symphony
2 in D Major op. 73.
Tickets are available at the
Memorial
Auditorium Box
ATHENS - The Ohio and symphony at La Scala, Berlin Philharmonic. In J~&gt;;,
University Artist Series will Bayreuth , London Philhar- he made his debut at the Office , Monday through
present the Cincinnati Sym- monic, Boston Symphony, Metropolitan Opera at the age Friday, I-I p.m. or by calling,
phony Orchestra, in concert, Israel Philharmonic and the o! 25, the second youngest 594-3471.
conducted
by
Thomas
Schippers, Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. in
Memorial Auditorium.
From January o! 1893 to the
present day, the "Queen City"
has been founder and host o!
one of America's great . orchestras, .The Cincinnati
Symphony. Its list o! con·
ductors has included Leopold
Stokowski, Fritz Reiner, Max
Rudolph and its present
director, Thomas Schippers.
Schippers Is a versatile conductor whose previous ex·
perience includes both opera
1 Lot Boys'
1 Group
WOMEN'S
Women's
&amp;
Girls'

Sale Starts Monday, Feb. 18

1piece FISH ... .. ~ .. .. .. .. .. .. . .60
1 piece FISH &amp;CHIPS . .. .. .. .. . .90 J::
2pieces FISH &amp;CHIPS .... .. ... 1.45
6pieces FISH &amp;CHIPS .......... 4.20
10 pieces BUCK£T OF FISH ~· .•... 5.55
10 pieces FISH &amp;CHIPS ......... 6.35 •

Order

MRS. HOWARD (BETTY) ROUSH, Mansfield, writes that
she and her husband are happy to repo~t that their daughter,
Faye Roush Lampen, is much improved"~fter suffering a heart
attack. The family formerly lived in the Racine area. Faye sends
her "thanks" to the many friends who remembered her with
cards.

Presidents' Week Sale

!
!.......................................;

RIVERSIDE PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
444 W. UNION ST.
ATHENS, 0 . 45701

Limit

EAT IN or TAKE HOME

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
I

Clarks host
Tri-Advisory
RIO GRANDE - TriAdvisory Council met at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James
Clark, Feb. 15. The meeting
was called to order by chairperson, Clarence Davis, and
devotions were given by Mrs.
. Denver Yoho who used,
"Honesty of the Slave. "
Theprogram was by Mrs.
Clark, who used George
Washington as her topic, noting
that he was a man of God whowas guarded by God each day
of his !He.
The discussion, "Income
Tax : The Internal Revenue
Service and Me," was led by
Denver Yoho.
Refreshments of cherry pie,
ice cream, candy .and nuts
were served to 14 members and

two 1!\lCSts.

POMEROY, OH.IO
'"

-The nexl meeting will be
March 15 at the hom.e 'of Mr.
8ll(j Mrs. Maurice Forgey.

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

Y2 PRICE
WORK SHOES

lf2

Reg. Price

84 ·Pairs

Black- Brown ~White

y2

Reg. Price

Birthday marked
POMEROY - A surprise
visit to the Lew Johnston home
al Keno was made Sunday lor
an observance of the birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Johnston.
A cake decorated with roses
and inscribed '"Happy Birthday, Erma" was served with
ice crea m. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jurnigen,
Pam and Christy, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes, and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Weber .

Starts Monday, Feb. 18

27 MEN'S CORDUROY

RACINE - Angella Lynn
Bostick, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bostick, Rt. 2,
Racine,

was

honored

recently with a party on her
fourth birthday anniversary
by her great-aunt, Laura
Circle. Cake and Ice cream
were served to those at~
tending and gifts were
presented to Angelia. Attending the party were
Angelia 's

JUANITA FREDERICK
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Milford Frederick, Jr.,
Racine, entertained with a
party recently honoring their
daughter, Juanita, on her
fifth birthday. Guests were
JuanJta's grandmother, Mrs.

Lizzie Wood, Mrs. Laura
Circle, and Scott and Tony
Frederick.

grandmother,

Mrs. Lizzie Wood, Walde
Johnson, Romaoloe
Frederick, Scott, Tony,

Juanita Frederick, Chris,
Nick and Jay Bostick, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Roy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Bostic.

- Sale All Week long

~

Reg. Price

1 Group

1

$}888

SPORTS COATS

LADIES CAR COATS

REDUCED 30%

REDUCED 20%

MEN'S JACKETS

LADIES
DRESSES
Missy - Juniors - 112 Sizes

HIKING BOOTS

1 LOT MEN'S COLORED

LADIES SWEATERS

DRESS SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

1f2 PRICE
1 Lot Men!s Sport Coats
Sizes 36 to 50

RACK LADIES'

SKIRTS· BLOUSES • BODY SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

VALUES TO 145

MEN 'S SUITS

~ools &amp; Knits
Stzes 35 to 50

Lady Manhattan - Catalina

REDUCED 30%
SALE

$350

LADIES PANT SUITS
Catalina - Jantzen - Betty Ro se · Coddington

REDUCED 30%

1 LOT LADIES JEANS

1 Lot Young Men's Pants
Corduroy &amp; Permanent Press

VALUES TO 13.00
1

SALE

Reg . $15.99 ..
Sale Price •

800

Jantzen

REDUCED 30%

1 Lot Men's White Shirts
VAWES TO $7.00

LADIES BLOUSES

$500

$500

VALUES TO 113.00
LADIES' FLEXNIT

MEN'S HEAVY WEIGHT WORK

CORDUROY PANTS

GIRDLES &amp; BRAS

REDUCED 20%

REDUCED 40%

1 LOT

LADIES SLACKS

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Dacron -Cottons- Polyester Knits

Wool - Polyester Knits - Blends

REDUCED 40%

REDUCED 40%

1 LOT

1 LOT

BOYS' SPORT COATS
Sizes 14 to 20
$}250
VALUES TO 27.50

LADIES LONG DRESSES AND SKIRTS

l LOT

llOT

Y2 PRICE

BOYS' LEVI DENIMS

LADIES CAPES - SLACKS - KNIT TOPS

1f2 PRICE

VALUES TO 15.50

FINAL CLEARANCE
WINTER MERCHANDISE

Many Other Bargains
Throughout The Store

heritage .house

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Reg . Price

"Your Thom MeAn Store" ·
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

...

f

Excellent
Selection

REDUCED 30%

Sizes 7-8-9

14 Pairs

Y2 ~~i?eR

Y2 PRICE

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS

A Steal At

MISSES' CANVAS

Winter-All Weather-car Coats

1

so~

LADIES DRESS COATS

LOT

REG. 125.00

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

SLIPPERS
38 Pairs

MEN'S SHOES

1f2

SERVICE SHOES

Women &amp; Children's

17 Pairs

repor t an d t he treas'urer 's
report. Both were approved.
· The altar was draped for
past worthy gra nd patron
Frank Miller.
Deputy Grand Matron of
District 24, B. Louise Mitchell,
who was mak.i ng a pre ~
inspection visit, was presented,
welcomed and escorted to a
seat in the east.
Visiting worthy matron and
patron of Gallipolis Chapter
were presented and escorted to
the East for a welcome as were
Vinton chapter's past matrons
and patrons.
Thank·you cards were read
from Desta Swich and Ruth
Love, who have been ill. The
worthy matron announced that
Vinton Chapter will have a
grand inspection May 2.
The chapter room and social
area were decorated in a
Valentine's motif. Favors were
old fashioned pot-bellied stoves
stand in g on hearts wi th
greetings inscribed on them .
Chapter close&lt;) in regular
form . The group adjourned to
the social room for a potluck
dinner and friendship hour .

SEEN ON THE TUBE last Saturday participating in the pro
bowlers tournament was Sam Flanagan, Parkersburg, ·formerly
of Syracuse. Sam won the first game but lost the second game.
Sam has worked very hard to get on the pro circuit.

Symphony orchestra will play

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

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

:

.,

the· COQ'Ifort .of our· restau_tant.

For Information Call or Write :

50' OFF LIST PRICE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

quantity you desire. Take them home or enjoy them in

·ii

MR. AND MRS. PETER J . VANICA and son, Jonathan
Richard , Geneva, Switzerland, are visiting with Mrs. Vanica's
mother, Mrs. Olan Genheimer, Minersville.

VINTON - Vinton Chap tcf"OES- :!75 met recently at tile
Ma so ni c Temple with 2U
members and three guests
present. "'
Chapter opened in ritualistic
form with Worthy Matron Ruth
Evans and Worthy Patron
Daniel Evans presiding.
The American !lag was
presented by marshall Connie
Barn es. Th e sec retary,
Margaret Slmms, read her

Missionary group meets

the finest IDAHO potatoes. Enjoy our fish &amp; chips in any

if you're just plain skeptical - you can rent a
prop,erly fitted " in -tfle -eor", "be·
1-tind:the-eor ", "eyeg lass " or " power body "
afd for a month or longer . Then , if you ore
completely satisfied, you can apply the entire
rental against the purchase price. If you ore
"P0.-t:R BODY AID" not ~ just return the a id without obligation. ·
Write today for free information.

jl

Sorority plans sale

clean waters of ICELAND. Chips are golden fries from

RENTAL-PURCHASE
PLAN

Spe~ial Hearing Aid Battery Offer

Photo by Lilly Studio
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Eugene King, Hanunond, amounce the engagement and
approaching marriage o! their daughter, Kathy Gene, to
Kenneth Alfred Jones, son of Mrs. Violet May Jones, and the
late Donald Eugene Jones, Albany . The w~ding will be an
event of April 13 at 3 p.m. in the HWJgarian Presbyterian
Church, Albany, with the reception inunediately following at
St. Margaret's Catholic Hall. All relatives and friends are
invited. Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Beaver, are the grandparents of
the groom.

BAKER FURNITURE

CROWS FISH AND CHIPS

FRANKIE MUMAW, SYRACUSE, is a very devoted
Christian lady. Frankie, who will be 85 years old June 6, has
never slackened her devotion to the Syracuse Umted
Presbyterian Church. She will soon receive her 14 year perfect
atrendance pin !rom the Sunday School.
Not only is she a faithful member, she is president of the Star
Class, and ca rd secretary lor the class. She takes care of or·
dering religious greeting cards and selling them. She also
manages to send cards to those who have birthdays, those who
are ill, or have sorrow on the behall o! the Deaconesses.
Congratulations for all your accomplishments.

Miss Kathy Gene King

I

you ore not sure you really need on aid ... or

1

DOUG HUSTON, 13-YEAR OLD son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Huston, Syracuse, will enter Holzer Medical Center March 19 to
WJdergo surgery to remove cataracts on his right eye.
He will undergo the first surgery following admission. Seven
to 10 days later a second operation will be performed . When able,
he will be sent home for approximately three weeks, then will
return to the hospital for a third operation.
We wish the youngster the best.

Our fish are tender golden while fish fillets from 1he cold

" BEHI~DTllE~II"If you're one of those "difficult" cases ... if ·

I'

SPEAKING OF anniversaries, Mr. and Mrs. William Cecil
Johnson, Peach Fork Road, Pomeroy, celebrated their 37th
wedding anniversary on Valentine's Day. Congratulations.

Fish &amp; Chips

•:

By Katie Crow

POMEROY - My apologies to Sylvia and Troy Zwilling,
Syracuse. When reporting ~heir wedding anntver!¥lry somehow ,
someway, it appeared in this column that the couple celebrated
their 19th wedding aMiversary. It should have read 39th anniversa ry . This was all due to a typographi cal error. Sn sorry.

I CROW'S I Introducing
l

OES' 375 meets-- .-

@

EADQUARTER
FOR
FRIGIDAIRE

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NOW ... ANO-RISK HEARING AID

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:
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extra cash
f 0r
shopping sprees

NERVE DEAFNESS?

"11\1 THE EAR"

:

b r i n g you

t

pots , m the bottom of your
planter !or drainage. Be sure to
follow directions for plant food,
as too much may burn the
plant. There should be light
feeding every two or thre.e
months, except during the
winter when one s~ould feed
less frequently . If a plant is
.sickly, the soil may be too hard
and nitrogen may be needtoJ.
Experiment with plant food,
but be sure to keep it off the
foliage. Don't kill "the plant
with kindness. Watering is
more essential in the winter,
when the house is dry. When
the soil is dry to the touch, then
water. If using a wi ck,
fiberglas is good as it won 't rot.
Be sure to repot older house
plants to stimulate growth and
only use a pot about an inch
larger. Be sure the pot is clean.
Steel wool is good to use for
cleaning. Leave the distance of
your thumb betwee n the pot
and soil.
Excellent flowering plants
are Alrican violets, begonias,
geraniums and amaryllis.
Foliage plants include ferns ,
palms, rubber plant and
Good vining
die(fenbachia.
formation on flowering ,
foliage, vining and cinch·to- plants are English ivy. Cinchto-grow plants are coleus ,
grow plants.
She stated that light, soil and jadeplant, aspidistra and
water are Important to plants spiderplants . Members were
and that houses are too dark, able to view many of Mrs.
too hot and too dry for plants. A Hand's houseplants, which are
good idea is to install overhead identified with their botanical
lights, preferably fluorescent, names.
Refreshments were served
to replace daylight. Foliage
by
Mrs. Brown. Mrs . Mel
plants will survive with less
tight than those which produce Simon won the qoor prize. The
next meeting will be a dinner at
flowers .
Oscar's
March 14 , when
Put a layer of coarse
material, such as broken clay spouses will be entertained.

Drew Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion will serve an
oyster dinner Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the post home .
Following the dinner initiation
o! new members and post
everlasting services will be
held.

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daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Smith,
as a guest.
Mrs . Gloss , civic chairperson, annoWJced . that the
dogwood sale closed Friday,
Feb. 15. At the time of the
mee ling 75 to 100 trees had ·
been planted in civic areas.
Jan . 19 the holly tree was stolen
from in front of the Haskins
building, and she replaced it.
Plans were made to replace
a · flowering carb tree at
Washin gton School and to
possibly plant a tree, other
than a dogwood in the city
Park. Mrs. John Allison stated
that she had cleaned the
planter at the junior !airgroWJd
and it is ready lor spring.
Mrs. W. D. Galloway gave
the radio program , " The
Organic Gardener," for
January. Mrs. Hand announced that a geranium sale
will be held. A plant sale within
the club is planned for the May
meeting and plans are underway for a public sale in the
fall.
Mrs . Allison gave an informative program on house
plants and distributed in-

DINNER SET

"

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:;~

IKatie's Korner

Social
*! MrS, Hartd hosts gard¢n club
JCommunity · I
Ill Corner By Charlene Hoeflich J. Calendar
:!:.

GALLIPOLIS - A valentine's therrie was carried out
throughout the home of Mrs.
Randolph Hand, Thursday
evening, Feb. 14, when Mrs.
Hand and Mrs. E. H. Gloss
"entertained the Gallipolis
Garden Club.
Mrs. John Morgan gave the
devotions using Psalm 107 for
her theme. Mrs. Keith Brown,
club president, welcomed Mrs.
Robert Fanning, D. E. O'Rourk
and Gerald Vallee as new
members and presented each
o! them an angel wing begonia
in a hand-decorated flower pot.
Twenty.two members an·
swered roll call giving the
botanical name o! a favorite
house plant . Mrs. Clyde
Saunders introduced her

'

J'.o Approvals

N. Second St.

BankAmericard
Master Charge

'Middleport, 0.

No Lay·A·Ways
All Sales Final
AU Sales Cash

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-11 - 'l;br Sunday Tintes -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 17, 1974

-"-10 - The Stmd ay Times -Senlinel .'SWJday, Fe b. 17, 19H

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-·. t"'·r

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l'OMF:IlOY - Nobody, but nobody, is working any harder to
make a KO of someU1ing than is Iva Stewart Sisson whose goal is
to revive the Middleport Alumni Association reunion after two
years of nothing.
BUT she needs help.
In the shuffle mailing lists have lieen lost and Iva is now
desperately tryin g to compile new ones . She needs people who
graduated in U1c classes of the 50s to assist her by making lists
with current addresses.
Iva is hopeful that she will have all the up-tiH!ate address
information before March 2 so that letters ca n be in the mail
before the postage rates increase.
More money is needed and a bake sale is being planned for
some time around Easter. Iva is open to suggestions and ideas on
what ca n be don e to make the reunion a real success.
To avoid the usual conflict with the Pomeroy and Rutland
alumni reunions- and they both have terrific support !rom local
and returning alumni - the Middleport reunion will be held
Friday, May 25.
AND the speaker - probably Dave Diles. He has been in\1ted and is working toward clearing his schedule so that he ca n
be here.
U you can help Iva (Mrs. Robert Sisson , Rutland) in any
way. let her know .

~ ··'

Miss Patricia Ann Gingerich
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Gingerich, 628 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, annoWJce the
l•ngagement of their daughter, Pa tricia Ann, to Charles
Wesley Hodimer III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
llodimer, Eureka. Miss Gingerich is a 1971 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and att ended Ohio Sta te University.
She is employed by My Sister's Closet. At the univ ersity she
was a member of Delta Zeta Sorority. Bodimer graduated
from Gallia Academy High School, 197 1and is attending Ohio
University. He is employed by Bob Evans Steak House. A
July weddin g is planned.

Philathea meets

'

MIDDI.El'ORT- Philathea
Women of th e Middleport
Chu rch of Christ voted to
con tribute $100 to the Middleport firemen's fund for a
new emergency vehicle at a
mee ting Thursday night at the
church.
Presided over by Mrs. Cathy
Erwin, the group also agreed to
serve the Kentucky Christian •
Choir when it appea rs here in

concert during ApriL Plans
were also discussed for a
n·cc ption honoring Mr . and

Mrs. George Glaze , th e
(.'!lurch 's new pastor and his
w1 fe, Feb. 22.
Named to the nominating
committee, which will report
at the March meeting, were
Mrs. Mabel Walburn, Mrs .
Nora Rice and Mrs. Frances
lloush. Mrs. Pearl Reynolds
m~nounced the WRAP program
to be presented at the . Meigs
Jun ior High School Feb. 21 and
invited members to partic ipate . WRAP (Women 's
llesponsibili ty for Accident
Prevention) is sponsored by
U1e Middleport Business and
Professional Women.
It was noted that Mrs .
Martha Childs has flavorings
and condiments for sale as a
money making project o[ the
Philathea, Women. Reported ill

were Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Lorena
Rice , Mrs . Kathryn Ervin,
Mrs. Vona McKnight, and Mrs.
Ella Reuter. A thank you ..ute
was read from Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds 'for -a remembrance
during her recent hospitalization .
Mrs. Mary Meinhart used
"Love" as her devotional topic.
Reading scripture from I
Corinthians 13 was Mrs. Betty
Cline. Mrs. Childs had prayer,
Mrs. Meinhart read a poem,
and Mrs . Grace Hawley gave
the legend of the valentine.
The love theme was carried
out in the program by Mrs.
Reynolds who used selected
scriptures
with
interpretations, and concluded
with a poem . The birthday of
Mrs . Lea~ McKinley was
observed. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Meinhart, Mrs.
Cline, Mrs. Hawley and Mrs.
Lena Wolfe, with Mrs. Lorena
Rice as a contributing hostess .
Amy Erwin was a guest.

, DINNER PLANNED
POMEROY - A Mardi Gras
dinner will be held for the
public from 5 to 7 p.m. TIJUrsday at the Sacred Heart
Church auditorium.

White Enameled ALUMINUM GUTTER·
lNG . . . WON'T CRACK, CHIP OR PEEL.
NEVER NEEDS PAINTING.

PE ARL LEIFHEIT, R.N. , !rom 12:30 to 2:30p.m. will be
voiWJteering her service at the Senior Citizens Center Wednesday. Pearl will be taking blood pressures and it's a good time
for a check. There's no charge, of course .
WHILE WE'RE not hearing so much about the drug problem
these days, what with the energy crisis, inflation and Watergate,
it is, nevertheless, still with us.
Being informed about drugs, aware o! the effects, and alert
to the signs of usage, is certainly vital inforrruttion for parents.
Handed to us recently was a magazine titled "Don't Guess
About Drugs." It's the most informative thing on the overall
picture of drugs we've read. ·The magazine is published by the
National Drug Abuse Education Program, Inc., and is sold to
organizations and business firms at low prices in large quantities
for distribution .
The copy we have was one distributed by the Monarch
Machine Tool Co. at Sidney, and was sent to us by Hobart and
Evelyn Fick Young, formerly of here. Hobart is employed by
Monarch.
FOR MONTHS and months, Pat and Ear! Thoma have been
living between two houses, on Wolle Drive, Pomeroy, but are
ready this weekend to get it all together in one place. The
energetic couple purchased a larger home next door to where
they have lived lor several years and have spent every spare
minute renovating the place.
Belpre; John Bradford Lohse,
100 Wolfe Dr ., Pomeroy;
Richard Paul Werner, 142
Uncoln Rd., Pomeroy.

Colkge
News
GALLIPOLIS - The 1974
Spring Quarter at the
Gallipolis Business College will
open March 14. The college,
located at 36 Locust St., offers
one and two-year diploma
courses in general office,
secretarial, jWJior accounting,
business administration and
executive secretarial studies.
Any prospective students
who have not already
registered should do so immediately.
MOREHEAD, Ky. - Eleven
students from Gallia County
were among those named to
the fall semester dean's list at
Morehead State University.
Students must achieve at least
a 3.0 on a 4.0 scale to receive
this honor.
Gallians named were Connie
S. Bradbury, Cheshire, with a
perfect 4.0; Linda K. Craft,
Gallipolis; Constance J . Davis,
Thurman; Jill A. Gatewood,
Crown City; Nancy J. Mills,
Gallipolis; William M. Pegg,
Gallipolis; Dale H. SaWJders,
Gallipolis ; Larry E. Snowden,
Gallipolis; Debra K. Stout,
Thurman; Thomas S. Weaver,

Gallipolis;
Melanie
Wiseman , Gallipolis.

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J.

RIO GRANDE- Edward R.
Sofranko, Rio Grande, has
been appointed liason officer
for the United States Air Force
A~ademy in Gallia, Jackson,
Vinton and Lawrence coWJties.
A captain in the air Ioree
reserves, Sofranko wiU soon be
attending a brief orientation at
the a~ademy in Colorado to
help him assist prospective
students better. Anyone
wishing to attend the academy
(maximum age is 22) should
contact Sofranko at 245-5074,
anytime.
ATHENS - Betty Waller,
health, physical education and
recreation, and Clara Wilkes in
speech, have been promoted to
assistant professorships at the
Portsmouth campus of Ohio
University, according to Dr.
Beaumont Davison, vice
president for regional higher
education in Athens . Both
promotions become e!!ective
with the beginning of the 197475 academic year.
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
University :will honor 407 highranking seniors 'at the 17th
Annu a l
Presidenti a l
Scholarship Recognition
Dinner, Monday, F~b. 25.
Students to be honored include Delbert Haney, Rt. 2,
.Pa triot ; Robert Spencer
Chambers, 707 Franklin Ave.,

I

SUNDAY
WEEKF.NDREVIVALat the
Rutland Church of God Feb. 1517, 7:30 p.m. Rev . Chester
Estep, speaker. The public is
invited.
MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters, at
7:30 p.m. in the band room at
the high school.
CHESTER PTA, 7:30p.m. at
the school.
RACINE PTA meets at 7:30
p.m. at the grade school.
Founder's Day program with
past presiden ts to be honored,
POMEROY PTA meets 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Mrs .
Cecelia Hart, Spanish teacher,
to p:esent the program. Past
prestdents wtll be honored.
February refreshment committee to serve.
VFW POST 61165, Racine, will
meet at 8 p.m. at the Racine
American Legion Hall.
ALL BUS drivers - regular
and substitute - of the Meigs
Local School District meet in
special session at 7:30p.m. at
the junior high school
cafeteria, Middleport.
RUTLAND PTA meets at
7:30 p.m. in the elementary
school gym. Program by
second grade.
,
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women 's
Club, 7:30p.m. Columbia Gas
Co. office. Mrs. Farie Kennedy
and Mrs. Wilma Sargent, civic
participation conunittee, will
have charge of the program .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Candystripers, 7 p.m. in the
hospital cafeteria .
TUESDAY
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
James Buchanan . Mrs. Helen
Shuler, co-hostess; Mrs. Carl
Horky to have the program.
POMEROY PASTOR Parish
Relations Committee , 7:30
p.m. in the social room of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church,
OYSTER STEW dinner 7:30
p.m. at Drew Webster Post 39
followed by initiation o! new
members and post everlasting

NASHVILLE, Tenn .
Robert Earl Saunders, grandson of Mrs. Mary Lorena
Saunders, Route 1, Northup,
has been accepted lor ad· servicesWEDNESDAY
mission to David Lipscomb
WEEKEND REVIVAL at
College, Nashville, Tenn ., for Freedom Gospel Mission, Bald
the 1974 fall quarter.
Knobs, beginning Feb. 22
A ser-ior in Hannan Trace through Feb. 24, 7:30 nightly,
High School, Crown City, The Rev . Bernard Thrash,
Saunders ·expects to graduate
Parkersburg guest speaker.
in 1974 and his acceptance is Special
singing nightly. The
contingent on satisfactory Choralaires will be featured
completion o! his senior Saturday. Public is invited to
studies. He plans to follow a attend.
major program in commercial
PAST PRESIDENTS, Drew
art at Lipscomb.
Webster
Post 39, American
Upscomb began its 83rd year
Legion
Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. at
this !all with more than 2,100
students enrolled in freshman, the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
sophomore, jwtior and senior
Club,
2 p.m. with Mrs. Nan
classes . All of these students
are enrolled in a daily Bible Moore. Mrs. 0. B. Stout to
class along with their review, "White House China"
by Marian Klamkin; and Mrs.
academic studies.
M. L. French to give "The
Optimist's Daughter" by
FIRST CHILD BORN
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr; Eudora Welby. Roll call will be
and Mrs. Deryl E. Well, are a conunent on the program.
announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter who has
been named Amy Lea Ann . The
infant was born Feb. 12 at
PTA TO MEET
Camden Clark Memorial
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Hospital and weighed 7lbs. and PTA will meet at 7:30 p.m.
7 ozs. Maternal grandparents Monday in the elementary
are Mr. and Mrs. J . S. Davis, school gymnasimn with the
Tuppers Plains, and the prograni' to be presented by the
paternal grandmother is Mrs. second grade.
Evelyn Well.

-

Eva Gardner
observes day
ADDISON - A surprise
valentine birthday party was
given !or Eva Gardner, Feb.
14, at Tara.
Cake, ice cream and other
goodies were served to Mrs.
James (Maria ) McQuaid, Mrs.
Clarence (Berdina) Shriver,
Mrs .
Frank
(Linda )
Shoemaker, Mrs . William
(Virginia ) Gardner , Mrs.
Worthy (Sady) Bright, Mrs.
Johnny (Edna) Kerwood, Mrs.
James (Tulica) Cremeans and
son, Joey, Mrs. Jackie (Freda)
Little, Middleport, Mrs .
Michael (Teresa) Little ,
Middleport, Michael Watts,
Michelle Watts, Mrs. Delmar
(Betty) Clark and Miss Julia
Gardner.

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- ----·-·- -·- -·-

THE "NORRIS QUARTET" MAY BE HEARD over chaMel
POMEROY - A bake sale and there is the possibility of a 13 on the "Christ is the Answer" program which features the
will be held at the former public dance at some time in Rev. Charles Norris, formerly o! Racine. They will appear
Pomeroy Junior High School the near future. At the next Sunday, Feb. 24 and SWJday, March 3.
auditorium March 2 beginning meeting the chapter will h,ve a
Making up the group are Marilyn Powell, Freeland Norris,
at 9 a.m. by the Preceptor Beta silent auction of homemade Florence Adams and Demis Manuel. Mrs. Delores Wolle is the
Bel;! Chapter of Beta Sigma articles and Mrs . Clarice
pianist.
Phi Sorority for the benefit of Krautter will take a traveling
the Pomeroy Firemen's prize .
Association.
Mrs. Norma Amsbary and
Final plans lor the bake sale Mrs . Custer presented the
were made during a meeting program. Mrs. Custer talked
Thursday night at the home of on the topic "Acquiring
POMEROY - A supply of opened the meeting. Mrs. Iva
Mrs. Lucille Williamson, New Wisdom Using Farmers'
Haven. Mrs. Shirley Custer, Almanac," and Mrs. Amsbary instant oats for a Haiti mission Powell presented the program
project will be provided by the with Mrs . Bertha Parker, Mrs.
service chairwoman, asked used a game, "Who Am I?"
that all members contribute to
Next meeting will be held at Missionary Society of the Della Curtis, Mrs.·Marguerite
the sale and have their baked the home of Mrs. Eleanor Laurel Cli!f Free Methodist Leifheit, Mrs. Doris Buckley,
goods there at 9 a.m.
ThOmas with Rose Sisson as co- Church and the junior Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
Wright, Mrs. Sharon Folmer,
It was voted during the hostess. The program will be missionary members.
Meeting Thursday night in Mrs. Bernice Jeffers and Mrs .
meeting to send a letter of give,n l!Y Mrs. Clarice Krautter
the
parsonage basement, Mrs. Miidred Jacobs taking part.
commendation to the Jaycees and Mrs. Pearl Welker and the
Mrs . Buckley
served
Jean
Wright read a letter from
for cleaning the wall at the guest speaker will be Cay
Pomeroy Motor Co. of obscene Cross o! the Southeastern Ohio Mrs. Viola Walton, president of refreshments.
language and clearing away Emergency Medical Service. the executive conunittee WMS
the litter there.
A covered dish dinner regarding mission projects.
Reading of I Corinthians 12
Ways and means chair· preceded the meeting with 23
woman, Ann Rupe, reported members answering roll call. by Mrs. Wright and prayer by conductor in the history o! the
that again this year the chapter Officers reports were given. At the Re v. Robert Buckley Met.
The symphony is the fifth
will be selling tickets for the the conclusion of the meeting a
oldest in the country and an.
carnival on Regatta weekend. dessert course was served by
CLUB TO MEET
nually performs more than 250
She asked members to save Mrs. Williamson and Mrs.
POMEROY
The
Wildwood
concerts to half a million
bottle caps and the young son Tana Simonton. A recipe sale
of the hostess contributed those was held with several being Garden Club will meet at 7:30 people. The concert program
he had saved .
held over until the Feb. 28 p.m. Wednesday at the home of at Ohio University will consist
Mrs. Vernon Nease.
of : Wagner, Overture to "The
· · A discussion was held on meeting.
Flying Dutchman"; Mozart,
future money making pro.teotq
Symphony 41 in C Major
(Jupiter); Brahms, Symphony
2 in D Major op. 73.
Tickets are available at the
Memorial
Auditorium Box
ATHENS - The Ohio and symphony at La Scala, Berlin Philharmonic. In J~&gt;;,
University Artist Series will Bayreuth , London Philhar- he made his debut at the Office , Monday through
present the Cincinnati Sym- monic, Boston Symphony, Metropolitan Opera at the age Friday, I-I p.m. or by calling,
phony Orchestra, in concert, Israel Philharmonic and the o! 25, the second youngest 594-3471.
conducted
by
Thomas
Schippers, Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. in
Memorial Auditorium.
From January o! 1893 to the
present day, the "Queen City"
has been founder and host o!
one of America's great . orchestras, .The Cincinnati
Symphony. Its list o! con·
ductors has included Leopold
Stokowski, Fritz Reiner, Max
Rudolph and its present
director, Thomas Schippers.
Schippers Is a versatile conductor whose previous ex·
perience includes both opera
1 Lot Boys'
1 Group
WOMEN'S
Women's
&amp;
Girls'

Sale Starts Monday, Feb. 18

1piece FISH ... .. ~ .. .. .. .. .. .. . .60
1 piece FISH &amp;CHIPS . .. .. .. .. . .90 J::
2pieces FISH &amp;CHIPS .... .. ... 1.45
6pieces FISH &amp;CHIPS .......... 4.20
10 pieces BUCK£T OF FISH ~· .•... 5.55
10 pieces FISH &amp;CHIPS ......... 6.35 •

Order

MRS. HOWARD (BETTY) ROUSH, Mansfield, writes that
she and her husband are happy to repo~t that their daughter,
Faye Roush Lampen, is much improved"~fter suffering a heart
attack. The family formerly lived in the Racine area. Faye sends
her "thanks" to the many friends who remembered her with
cards.

Presidents' Week Sale

!
!.......................................;

RIVERSIDE PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
444 W. UNION ST.
ATHENS, 0 . 45701

Limit

EAT IN or TAKE HOME

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
I

Clarks host
Tri-Advisory
RIO GRANDE - TriAdvisory Council met at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James
Clark, Feb. 15. The meeting
was called to order by chairperson, Clarence Davis, and
devotions were given by Mrs.
. Denver Yoho who used,
"Honesty of the Slave. "
Theprogram was by Mrs.
Clark, who used George
Washington as her topic, noting
that he was a man of God whowas guarded by God each day
of his !He.
The discussion, "Income
Tax : The Internal Revenue
Service and Me," was led by
Denver Yoho.
Refreshments of cherry pie,
ice cream, candy .and nuts
were served to 14 members and

two 1!\lCSts.

POMEROY, OH.IO
'"

-The nexl meeting will be
March 15 at the hom.e 'of Mr.
8ll(j Mrs. Maurice Forgey.

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

Y2 PRICE
WORK SHOES

lf2

Reg. Price

84 ·Pairs

Black- Brown ~White

y2

Reg. Price

Birthday marked
POMEROY - A surprise
visit to the Lew Johnston home
al Keno was made Sunday lor
an observance of the birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Johnston.
A cake decorated with roses
and inscribed '"Happy Birthday, Erma" was served with
ice crea m. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jurnigen,
Pam and Christy, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes, and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Weber .

Starts Monday, Feb. 18

27 MEN'S CORDUROY

RACINE - Angella Lynn
Bostick, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bostick, Rt. 2,
Racine,

was

honored

recently with a party on her
fourth birthday anniversary
by her great-aunt, Laura
Circle. Cake and Ice cream
were served to those at~
tending and gifts were
presented to Angelia. Attending the party were
Angelia 's

JUANITA FREDERICK
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Milford Frederick, Jr.,
Racine, entertained with a
party recently honoring their
daughter, Juanita, on her
fifth birthday. Guests were
JuanJta's grandmother, Mrs.

Lizzie Wood, Mrs. Laura
Circle, and Scott and Tony
Frederick.

grandmother,

Mrs. Lizzie Wood, Walde
Johnson, Romaoloe
Frederick, Scott, Tony,

Juanita Frederick, Chris,
Nick and Jay Bostick, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Roy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Bostic.

- Sale All Week long

~

Reg. Price

1 Group

1

$}888

SPORTS COATS

LADIES CAR COATS

REDUCED 30%

REDUCED 20%

MEN'S JACKETS

LADIES
DRESSES
Missy - Juniors - 112 Sizes

HIKING BOOTS

1 LOT MEN'S COLORED

LADIES SWEATERS

DRESS SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

1f2 PRICE
1 Lot Men!s Sport Coats
Sizes 36 to 50

RACK LADIES'

SKIRTS· BLOUSES • BODY SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

VALUES TO 145

MEN 'S SUITS

~ools &amp; Knits
Stzes 35 to 50

Lady Manhattan - Catalina

REDUCED 30%
SALE

$350

LADIES PANT SUITS
Catalina - Jantzen - Betty Ro se · Coddington

REDUCED 30%

1 LOT LADIES JEANS

1 Lot Young Men's Pants
Corduroy &amp; Permanent Press

VALUES TO 13.00
1

SALE

Reg . $15.99 ..
Sale Price •

800

Jantzen

REDUCED 30%

1 Lot Men's White Shirts
VAWES TO $7.00

LADIES BLOUSES

$500

$500

VALUES TO 113.00
LADIES' FLEXNIT

MEN'S HEAVY WEIGHT WORK

CORDUROY PANTS

GIRDLES &amp; BRAS

REDUCED 20%

REDUCED 40%

1 LOT

LADIES SLACKS

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Dacron -Cottons- Polyester Knits

Wool - Polyester Knits - Blends

REDUCED 40%

REDUCED 40%

1 LOT

1 LOT

BOYS' SPORT COATS
Sizes 14 to 20
$}250
VALUES TO 27.50

LADIES LONG DRESSES AND SKIRTS

l LOT

llOT

Y2 PRICE

BOYS' LEVI DENIMS

LADIES CAPES - SLACKS - KNIT TOPS

1f2 PRICE

VALUES TO 15.50

FINAL CLEARANCE
WINTER MERCHANDISE

Many Other Bargains
Throughout The Store

heritage .house

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Reg . Price

"Your Thom MeAn Store" ·
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

...

f

Excellent
Selection

REDUCED 30%

Sizes 7-8-9

14 Pairs

Y2 ~~i?eR

Y2 PRICE

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS

A Steal At

MISSES' CANVAS

Winter-All Weather-car Coats

1

so~

LADIES DRESS COATS

LOT

REG. 125.00

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

SLIPPERS
38 Pairs

MEN'S SHOES

1f2

SERVICE SHOES

Women &amp; Children's

17 Pairs

repor t an d t he treas'urer 's
report. Both were approved.
· The altar was draped for
past worthy gra nd patron
Frank Miller.
Deputy Grand Matron of
District 24, B. Louise Mitchell,
who was mak.i ng a pre ~
inspection visit, was presented,
welcomed and escorted to a
seat in the east.
Visiting worthy matron and
patron of Gallipolis Chapter
were presented and escorted to
the East for a welcome as were
Vinton chapter's past matrons
and patrons.
Thank·you cards were read
from Desta Swich and Ruth
Love, who have been ill. The
worthy matron announced that
Vinton Chapter will have a
grand inspection May 2.
The chapter room and social
area were decorated in a
Valentine's motif. Favors were
old fashioned pot-bellied stoves
stand in g on hearts wi th
greetings inscribed on them .
Chapter close&lt;) in regular
form . The group adjourned to
the social room for a potluck
dinner and friendship hour .

SEEN ON THE TUBE last Saturday participating in the pro
bowlers tournament was Sam Flanagan, Parkersburg, ·formerly
of Syracuse. Sam won the first game but lost the second game.
Sam has worked very hard to get on the pro circuit.

Symphony orchestra will play

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

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

:

.,

the· COQ'Ifort .of our· restau_tant.

For Information Call or Write :

50' OFF LIST PRICE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

quantity you desire. Take them home or enjoy them in

·ii

MR. AND MRS. PETER J . VANICA and son, Jonathan
Richard , Geneva, Switzerland, are visiting with Mrs. Vanica's
mother, Mrs. Olan Genheimer, Minersville.

VINTON - Vinton Chap tcf"OES- :!75 met recently at tile
Ma so ni c Temple with 2U
members and three guests
present. "'
Chapter opened in ritualistic
form with Worthy Matron Ruth
Evans and Worthy Patron
Daniel Evans presiding.
The American !lag was
presented by marshall Connie
Barn es. Th e sec retary,
Margaret Slmms, read her

Missionary group meets

the finest IDAHO potatoes. Enjoy our fish &amp; chips in any

if you're just plain skeptical - you can rent a
prop,erly fitted " in -tfle -eor", "be·
1-tind:the-eor ", "eyeg lass " or " power body "
afd for a month or longer . Then , if you ore
completely satisfied, you can apply the entire
rental against the purchase price. If you ore
"P0.-t:R BODY AID" not ~ just return the a id without obligation. ·
Write today for free information.

jl

Sorority plans sale

clean waters of ICELAND. Chips are golden fries from

RENTAL-PURCHASE
PLAN

Spe~ial Hearing Aid Battery Offer

Photo by Lilly Studio
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Eugene King, Hanunond, amounce the engagement and
approaching marriage o! their daughter, Kathy Gene, to
Kenneth Alfred Jones, son of Mrs. Violet May Jones, and the
late Donald Eugene Jones, Albany . The w~ding will be an
event of April 13 at 3 p.m. in the HWJgarian Presbyterian
Church, Albany, with the reception inunediately following at
St. Margaret's Catholic Hall. All relatives and friends are
invited. Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Beaver, are the grandparents of
the groom.

BAKER FURNITURE

CROWS FISH AND CHIPS

FRANKIE MUMAW, SYRACUSE, is a very devoted
Christian lady. Frankie, who will be 85 years old June 6, has
never slackened her devotion to the Syracuse Umted
Presbyterian Church. She will soon receive her 14 year perfect
atrendance pin !rom the Sunday School.
Not only is she a faithful member, she is president of the Star
Class, and ca rd secretary lor the class. She takes care of or·
dering religious greeting cards and selling them. She also
manages to send cards to those who have birthdays, those who
are ill, or have sorrow on the behall o! the Deaconesses.
Congratulations for all your accomplishments.

Miss Kathy Gene King

I

you ore not sure you really need on aid ... or

1

DOUG HUSTON, 13-YEAR OLD son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Huston, Syracuse, will enter Holzer Medical Center March 19 to
WJdergo surgery to remove cataracts on his right eye.
He will undergo the first surgery following admission. Seven
to 10 days later a second operation will be performed . When able,
he will be sent home for approximately three weeks, then will
return to the hospital for a third operation.
We wish the youngster the best.

Our fish are tender golden while fish fillets from 1he cold

" BEHI~DTllE~II"If you're one of those "difficult" cases ... if ·

I'

SPEAKING OF anniversaries, Mr. and Mrs. William Cecil
Johnson, Peach Fork Road, Pomeroy, celebrated their 37th
wedding anniversary on Valentine's Day. Congratulations.

Fish &amp; Chips

•:

By Katie Crow

POMEROY - My apologies to Sylvia and Troy Zwilling,
Syracuse. When reporting ~heir wedding anntver!¥lry somehow ,
someway, it appeared in this column that the couple celebrated
their 19th wedding aMiversary. It should have read 39th anniversa ry . This was all due to a typographi cal error. Sn sorry.

I CROW'S I Introducing
l

OES' 375 meets-- .-

@

EADQUARTER
FOR
FRIGIDAIRE

I
--------------

NOW ... ANO-RISK HEARING AID

I

:
1
1
1
I
1

extra cash
f 0r
shopping sprees

NERVE DEAFNESS?

"11\1 THE EAR"

:

b r i n g you

t

pots , m the bottom of your
planter !or drainage. Be sure to
follow directions for plant food,
as too much may burn the
plant. There should be light
feeding every two or thre.e
months, except during the
winter when one s~ould feed
less frequently . If a plant is
.sickly, the soil may be too hard
and nitrogen may be needtoJ.
Experiment with plant food,
but be sure to keep it off the
foliage. Don't kill "the plant
with kindness. Watering is
more essential in the winter,
when the house is dry. When
the soil is dry to the touch, then
water. If using a wi ck,
fiberglas is good as it won 't rot.
Be sure to repot older house
plants to stimulate growth and
only use a pot about an inch
larger. Be sure the pot is clean.
Steel wool is good to use for
cleaning. Leave the distance of
your thumb betwee n the pot
and soil.
Excellent flowering plants
are Alrican violets, begonias,
geraniums and amaryllis.
Foliage plants include ferns ,
palms, rubber plant and
Good vining
die(fenbachia.
formation on flowering ,
foliage, vining and cinch·to- plants are English ivy. Cinchto-grow plants are coleus ,
grow plants.
She stated that light, soil and jadeplant, aspidistra and
water are Important to plants spiderplants . Members were
and that houses are too dark, able to view many of Mrs.
too hot and too dry for plants. A Hand's houseplants, which are
good idea is to install overhead identified with their botanical
lights, preferably fluorescent, names.
Refreshments were served
to replace daylight. Foliage
by
Mrs. Brown. Mrs . Mel
plants will survive with less
tight than those which produce Simon won the qoor prize. The
next meeting will be a dinner at
flowers .
Oscar's
March 14 , when
Put a layer of coarse
material, such as broken clay spouses will be entertained.

Drew Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion will serve an
oyster dinner Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the post home .
Following the dinner initiation
o! new members and post
everlasting services will be
held.

I
:
I
I
I
I

:~:

daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Smith,
as a guest.
Mrs . Gloss , civic chairperson, annoWJced . that the
dogwood sale closed Friday,
Feb. 15. At the time of the
mee ling 75 to 100 trees had ·
been planted in civic areas.
Jan . 19 the holly tree was stolen
from in front of the Haskins
building, and she replaced it.
Plans were made to replace
a · flowering carb tree at
Washin gton School and to
possibly plant a tree, other
than a dogwood in the city
Park. Mrs. John Allison stated
that she had cleaned the
planter at the junior !airgroWJd
and it is ready lor spring.
Mrs. W. D. Galloway gave
the radio program , " The
Organic Gardener," for
January. Mrs. Hand announced that a geranium sale
will be held. A plant sale within
the club is planned for the May
meeting and plans are underway for a public sale in the
fall.
Mrs . Allison gave an informative program on house
plants and distributed in-

DINNER SET

"

;:;~:·:·::::.;;::::·: :·:::::::~:::·:::;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;::::~=~·:=::;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::-;;::--:.::.:
:;~

IKatie's Korner

Social
*! MrS, Hartd hosts gard¢n club
JCommunity · I
Ill Corner By Charlene Hoeflich J. Calendar
:!:.

GALLIPOLIS - A valentine's therrie was carried out
throughout the home of Mrs.
Randolph Hand, Thursday
evening, Feb. 14, when Mrs.
Hand and Mrs. E. H. Gloss
"entertained the Gallipolis
Garden Club.
Mrs. John Morgan gave the
devotions using Psalm 107 for
her theme. Mrs. Keith Brown,
club president, welcomed Mrs.
Robert Fanning, D. E. O'Rourk
and Gerald Vallee as new
members and presented each
o! them an angel wing begonia
in a hand-decorated flower pot.
Twenty.two members an·
swered roll call giving the
botanical name o! a favorite
house plant . Mrs. Clyde
Saunders introduced her

'

J'.o Approvals

N. Second St.

BankAmericard
Master Charge

'Middleport, 0.

No Lay·A·Ways
All Sales Final
AU Sales Cash

•

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12-

·rho

Sunday Times. Sentinel. Sundav. Feb. 17. 1q74

. . ·· n:

·· ·- ~"
····Hi~ .,..

Sweetheart named

.l"'"l~\

' i '

'

Mrs. Mary Kalherlne
Smalley,
director
of
Jackson-VInlo.&gt;.Gallla RSVP
office, spoke briefly during
lhe Wednesday luncheon and
presenled lhree- monlh

I
)

Some of those attending the RSVP potluck and meeting Wednesday are pictured here . A
good-sized crowd attended as award pins were presented and RSVP members introduced .

award pins to nine senJor
citizens.

'

RSVP members feted
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County RSVP (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program) members
were guests at a luncheon
served at the Senior Citizens
Center Wednesday noon.
Rev . Timothy Hea ton
provided entertainment after
the meal by singing several
selections including, "I Believe
in Music" and "The Preacher
and the Bear."

'Mrs. Maye Roush , RSVP
coordinator, introduced the
volunteers and told where they
work. Those present were
Lucille Mulford, George Bush,
Elizabeth Evans, Elva Huss,
Florence McDaniel, Elizabeth
Hill, Edith Gilkey, Everett
Callicoat, Lawrence McQuaid,
Glenn Roush, Minnie Peters,
Bill Menshouse, Marie Van
Guilder, Florence Wickline,
Thelma Hamilton, Ella ConRev . Tim Heaton, associate pastor of the Grace United
Methodist Church, entertained by singing some contemporary selections and accompanying himself , on the
guitar . His offerings included " I Believe in Music'' when the
audience joined him for the chorus.

Thrift shop to
open in April
MIDDLEPORT - A thrift held at Ohio State University ,
shop will be opened two days a Fawcett Center, March 9.
week beginning in April Anyone interested in attending
operated by the Meigs County can contact Mrs. Dorothea
Humane Society as a long- Fisher.
range project to raise funds for
Mrs. Barbara Roback, who is
a modern animal shelter.
interested in getting a humane
Plans for the project were society started In Gallia
made Thursday evening at a County was a guest.
regular meeting of the society
in village hall here with
Dorothea Fisher, president,
presiding. Mrs. Mary Seaman
is general chairman of the
BY HALUE MURRAY
thrift shop.
Mrs. Bessie Couden of
Carolyn Smith announced Columbus and Mrs. Ellen
that new educational material Thomas visited recently with
has been ordered. It will be Olive Reynolds.
available to all schools and
Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Chevalier
organizations in the com- of Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs.
munity.
William Fraley, Mr. and Mrs.
She pointed out that as far Tom Davis and Mr. and Mrs.
back as 1933 the National Donald Palmer visited Sunday
Congress of PTA challenged with Mr .. and Mrs. Charles
educators to introduce humane Murray and children.
education into the curriculum
Mrs. Randy Callihan and
of the nation's schools. daughter, Stacy, visited
"H umane
education
is Sunday with her !)Orents, Mr.
teaching in the schools the and Mrs . Robert Atha and
principles of justice, goodwill, family .
and humanity toward all life.
Mr . and Mrs. William
The cultivation of the spirit of Reynolds visited an evening
. kindness to animals is but the with Olive Reynolds.
starting point tow11rds that
Floyd
Chambers
of
bigger humanity which in- Williamsport visited
an
clud es one's fellowman of evening with Mr. and Mrs.
every race and clime. A Anthony Murray.
generation of people trained in
A surprise open house birth. these principles will solve their day was observed Sunday at
international difficulties as the home of Mrs . Elizabeth
neighbors and not as enemies,' ' Donnell. Many relatives and
the PTA said at that time.
friends slopped to wish Mrs.
A seminar on Ohio laws Don nett "Happy Birthday."
concerning trapping will be Sbe received many beautiful
giits. Cake and punch were
served to her many friends.
Mr . and Mrs. George Hunt of
Addison visited Sunday with
Olive Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. John
Brunicardi and children were
dinner guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Murray and
MIDDLEPORT - Dwight children.
Goi ns gave hi s award- Raymond Walls is now
winning speech Friday night at staying with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Heath United Methodist' Phillips.
Church following the dinner
Mrs . Wanda Atha and
meeting of the Middleport . daughter, Peggy Callihan,
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
were Sunday callers at the
. Goins, who placed in the top home of Olive Reynolds.
fove recently in the southern
Mr. and Mrs. Blakely Stout
Ohio Jaycee Speakup contest, and son, Roger , of Harrisburg
used as his topic the Jaycee were recent callers of Miss
creed, "Service to humanity is Olive Reynolds.
the best work of life. " He was
introduced by Lee McComas.
NARROW WIN
Goins is instrumental musk
COLUMBIA, Mo . (UP!)
and band director for the Meigs Steve Erwin sank both fouls in
L.oca l School District.
a one-and-one situation twice in
Birthdays of Carl Horky, 'the final minute of play
Gene Grate and Dale Dutton Saturd"y as Nebraska nipped
were noted. Vice President Bob Mi.souri, 118-87, in a comeback
Bumgarner presided.
Big Eight basketball victory.

Bidwell

Goins gives
Speakup entry
to Rotarians

nounced the winner, who was ...
crowned with a tiara by Judith
Marcum , Keyettes Advisor.
In addition the honoree wa s
presented with a corsage
pinned on by Rita Ryan,
Keyettes president, and a gift.
drew several area teenagers. Ja ck O'Shea, Huntington,
Karla, daughter of Mr. and provided music for the dance
Mrs. Herbert Richards, New and presented three record
Haven, was escorted by John albums. Recipients were J an
Michael Stevens, also qn eighth Swartz, Tammy Lieving and
grader, who is the son of Mr. Sharon Casto.
and Mrs. Howard Stevens, New
Haven. •
John Zell , principal , anJOBS AVAILABLE
POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Administrative
Services, Division of Stale
Personnel, has informed the
CALLED TO CHESTER
Meigs County Auditor's office
POMEROY - The Pomeroy that it is receiving applications
Emergency Squad was called for Highway Workers I, II, III,
to Chester at 9:43p.m. Friday IV. Anyone interested should
for June Marshall who was write to James E. Roush,
suffering from a possible Meigs
County
Auditor,
broken leg . She was taken to Pomeroy, Ohio, or call 992the Holzer Medical Center.
2698,

MASON. W, Va . - Karla
Richards, an eighU1 grader,
was named Miss Sweetheart of
a Valentine Dance held at
Wahama Hi gh School Thurs.
day ni ght. The event, sponsored by the WHS Keyettes;'

dee, Frances

to those who have been
volunteers for three months.
They are Reva Evans, Edith
Gilkey, Eliwbeth Hill, Lucille
Mulford , Bill Menshouse,
Florence 'McDaniel, Maye
Roush, Elias Sisson and Rose
McQuaid.
John
Allen, assistant
director of Areawide Project
on Aging, commended all those
involved in the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program.
Others present were Eleanor
Benedict, Jackson-VintonGallia secretary-bookkeeper,
Jan Countryman, Mrs. Marvel
Haney, Mrs. Sarah Yaggi, and
the Center staff, Helen
Spriegel, Maxine Northup,
Gordon Wooten and Juanita
Starcher.

Scouts meet

UMW
·meets
.

REEDSVILLE
The
Reedsville United Methodist
Women met with Mrs . Teddy
Mundry for their February
meeting, the program topic
being " Purpose of Home and
Church," led by Mrs. Mamie
Buckley , Readings were given
by several members.
During the business mee ling
dues were paid and thank-you
letter was rece ived from the
children's home. Round robin
cards were signed for Mrs.
Gladys Mor gan and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel. Six shut-in
calls were made.

. Refreshments were served to
the above and Mrs. Zeddie
Hudson, Mrs. Sandy Powell
and Mrs . Jean Starcher
(guests) , Mrs . Rose Thomas,
Mrs. Nell Wilson , Mrs. Alberta
Edwards , Mrs. Vivian Hum·
phrey, Mrs. Ruth Dillon and
Mrs. Lillian Pickens. Door

t:l - The Stmdny Times · S.ontinel, Swod"y, F't'b: 17,

REEDSVILLE - Girl Scout
Troop 67 of Reedsville met at
Stewart Hall when the girls
work ed on their "sports
badge". Each participated iri
playing a game of badminton.
The meeting was opened with
an exercise song and flag
ceremony. Plans were also
made to work on their "good
grooming" badge.
Refreshments were served
by Susan Hannum and Kay
Balderson. Attending were
Kim Reed, Cathy Barringer,
Sheila Buchanan, Teresa
Hannum, Judy Holter, Angel
Blake, Deedee Smith, Cathy
Cowdery, Pebbles Blake, Jodi
Smith,
Carla Cowdery,
Carol
Darlene
Barton,
O'Conner, Teresa Dailey,
Mary Masters and Rhonda
Holsinger. The next · meeting
Will be Feb. 18.

Point Ho,cl'-

Social Nole~ ·
By Wanetta Radokin

Guests at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. Lawrence Chapman
were Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Bolin and daughte r. Lisa .
Mrs. ErneSt Jones and Mrs .
El'ma Nelson were shoppi ng in ·

Pomeroy Tuesday.
. Mrs. Thelma Campbell has
re turned home from Holzer
Hospital and is improving.
Mrs. Gay Harvey is caring
for Mrs . Hilah Westfall while
her husband , Mr. Dale Harvev
and Mrs. Luther Harvey mak~
daily visits to Holzer Hospital
to see Mr . Frank Westfall , who
ha s peen a patient there for the
pa st two weeks.

prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Thomas and Mrs. Dillon. The
next meeting will be with Mrs.
Mamie Buckley .

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bush,
Mr. John Paul Hensler an1
Nany and Katy Hill, were
Sunday visitors at the home of
. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen and
• family and Mrs. Grace Hen,sler.
' Mr. and Mrs. George J .
., Lowther who lost their horne
: recently by ·fire have moved
: into a new mobile home.
~- Mrs. Cora Moore spent a few

MORE BARGAINS - SECOND BIG WEEK
•

lOLA'S QUITS IN POMEROY
SELLING ALL TO THE BARE WALLS
LEASE IS UP- NOTHING HELD BACK!

1974
days rtoecntly ar her home ;.tl
PI . Rtx-k.
Mr. and Mrs. Rober t
Holliday were shopping in
Gallipolis Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Turner
and family of Elgin, Ill . has
been visiting his parents, Mr.

Boat registering
-·
plac~s announced

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Departm ent of Natural
and Mrs. Henry Turner .
of
Reso urc es '
divi sion
Mrs. Erm~ Nelson and Mrs. Watercr aft has announced
Grace Hensler attended Senior locations where 1974 Ohio boat
Citizens Meeting at Wilkes- and
outboard
motor
ville .
registrations can be obtained.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmont BosThe division also announced
worth visited Mrs. Blanche plans for the sale of 21-&lt;lav
Nelson at the Kimes Con- temporary registrations ro'r
valescent Center, Athens.
boats and motors. Paul
Simon's Pick-a-Pair Store, 104
W. Main, Pomeroy, is the
PANHANDLE SHAKEN
location for registrations in
PERRYTON, Tex. (UP!) Meigs County. It is expected
A brief earthquake rattled the department will announce
windows and scared residents soon where registrations may
of the Texas Panhandle be obtained ,in Gallia Countv .
Friday, but no damage or
Boaters are reminded th~t
injuries were reported. The 1973 re gistra tions expire
National Earthquake In- March 1 and are urged to ob·
formation Center at Boulder, lain their 1974 registrations
Colo., said the quake about 100 early to avoid ihe summer
miles northeast of Amarillo rush.
measured 4.5 on the richter
In April, for the first time,
scale.
boaters will be able to pur·
chase 21-day temporary
A thought for the day : registrations costing $1 each
American philosopher William for newly purchased boats an~
James said, "Man lives by motors. The registration wfll
habit, indeed, but what he lives enable a boater to use his new
for is thrills and excitement." craft almost immediately.

'

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

' """""'' '

to three week s until ;1 permanen t registra ti on was

issued .
All watt:rcraft opc ra t in ~ in
Ohio waters must have an Ohio
idcnt ifi ca ti nn
numbe r
displayed on each side of the
bow of th e w&lt;-~lercrafl .
Registration papers must be
available on boa rd at all times
when the watercraft is in use.
The watercraft registraHon
number is different than
outboard motor numbers
which are issued to each owner
' .
at the time of registration. The
tag show in g the ou tbo ard
motor number must be on the
motor in a place where it can
be easily see n.
Annual fees for watercraft
VALENTINE KING AND QUEEN - Crowned Valentine
and
outboard
motor
King
and Queen at a Valentine Dance Friday night held at
regisb·ation are : outboarri hull ,
Southern High School were Randy Warner and Jill Warner.
rowboat, ca noe, barge or raft ,
Shown
wiU1 the King and Queen are tl1e other caJldid&lt;.ttes:
$1 ; sa il boat, $3; inboard with
motor umJer 100 hoursepower,
$7.50; inboard with motor 100 additional 50-cent fee for each
prese nt their title to ge t
horsepower and abov.e, $10 ; registration issued .
boaLr.:
1
4
Boaters
registering
registration. Starting this year,
outboard motor , $3 and
duplicate registration, $1. feet or longer and motors 10 watercraft titles will be
Licensing agents recei ve an horsepower and more must stamped annually at the time

,,
.,

MONDAY, FEB. 18
'

... ... _

Before. boaters had to w ~ !t two

Starts
omorrow

"'·

,.

Iron row, 1-&lt; , Carol Theiss, Queen Jill, and Trina FerreU;
back row, Rocky Hupp, King Randy, and Gene Shiveley. The
students were chosen by the student body . Southern's senior
class sponsored the event. The dance was ~ eld in the gy m at
the high school in Racine.
of regis lration , .iust as
au tomob il e to ties are, Smith
said .
The only people not required

to prese nt a title when
registering their watercraft
are those who acquired the
boat before January 1, 1964.

SEALY HEALTH GUARD'" MATIRESS SALE

and

Lenoir, John

Houck, Nelle Ford, Elias
Sisson, Alvalee Cook, Florence
Trainer, Clara Fisher, Reva
Evans and Marie Wagner.
Mrs. Roush also introduced
Carol Davis, representing the
Red Cross, Mary Jeanne
Walker from the Holzer
Medical Center, and Jean
Niday, director of the Senior
Citizens Center. Each expressed her appreciation to the
volunteers for their service and
indicated that more volunteers
are needed.
Volunteers unable to attend
the luncheon were Sadie Jones,
Rose McQuaid, Anne White,
Alma Caudill, Edna Cook,
Kate Dobbins, Mr. Fish and
George Lngan.
Volunteer stations in Gallia
County now being served are
the Holzer Medical Center,
Guiding Hand School, Red
Cross office, RSVP office,
Gallia County District Library,
Bidwell-Porter School, and the
Senior Citizens Center.
Mrs. Mary Katherine
Smalley, director of JacksonVinton-Gallia RSVP, praised
the volunteers for the time they
give to others. Special
recogni tion was given to
Lawrence McQuaid, who was
coordinator of the program in
Gallia County when it was
organized.
Mrs. Smalley presented pins

Flu epidemic
expected to
cQver Ohio

Lasts
All Week

Save 20% - 40%
50% - Even 75%

BELOW FORMER NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PRICES!

OR WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

AND MORE

ENTIRE STOCK NOW SACRIFICED ALL OF lOLA'S FAMOUS FASHIONS
DAVIS BOSTER
RIO GRANDE - Career
diplomat Davis E. Boster,
born here In I920 but who
graduated from Beloit High
School and In 1942 from Mt.
Union College, Is the son of
the late Ernest Gordon
Boster and Mrs. Nelle Bosler
Berridge who now lives In
Clearwater, Fla. Since I949
he has served In a number of.
assignments growing In
Importance In the diplomatic
service. His most recent was
appointment by Secretary of
Slate Kissinger to head the
U . S. delegation to the
Conference on Security and
Cooperation In Europe which
Is In session In Geneva.

Eddy's schedule
POMEROY -

Mr . Eddy

Educator's Schedule in Meigs
County for the week of
February 18-22 .
MONDAY .- Headq4arters
closed for the holidav. ,

I'

I

Weiskopf equals
course record

95
$

LOTS OF
STYLES

$

DRESSES

lf2

.'·

PRICE

Many new items added this week
gloves. panties. bras, . hose, pant tops.
purses, etc. VALUES TO 6.95.

Misses Sizes

·'

-- ··-

---

SAVE 112 NOW!

VALUES TO $7.95

Large Group Items
Gowns, body shirts,
purses. etc. Values to 7.95 .
Out they go.

$2

'

"

.'

Shorts, lops, bathing
suits, etc. Out they
go.

lf2

--VALUES TO $20.00

HATS • HATS • HATS
Winter and spring styles.
Values to $20.00. Out they·
go.

$395

---

Check This Bargain
YOUR CHOICE

SAVE 150

$

95
I ''--.........- -

.. . . ......

lf2 PRICE

REGULAR $269.95

Regular •349.95 QUEEN SIZE
n'

WIGS • HAIR PIECES
PRICE

299.95

1

BY THE MAKERS OF SEALY POSTUREPEDIC'- FROM $99~ "

"'No morning back ache from sleeping on a too -so ft mattress." Designed ir1 coope~at1on with leading orthoped ic surgeons tor f1rm SlJ pport.

. , .. w.&gt;~.·~~ ~u ... .-... -~-- "·•···~N

VALUES TO $25.00

SPORTSWEAR

CLEANING
T ilt forwar d
to vtlc uu m.

Redi Beds
REGULAR

SUMMER ITEMS

-

SAVE 112 NOW

-~·-·

. ' ' ' '' ' , . , ~ I Q," ''

EASY

SEALY

.,

Choice '1.00

First tim e savings on eac h
of this qua lity Sealy' Hun·
dreds of specia lly tempered coils
ouiid in f ~rmn ess th at stays. Added
fi rmness and durab ility in the patented
torsi on bar loundation . Plus elegant
da mask cover deep ly qui lted through
puffy Sea ly foam' '. Li m ited ti me sale'

FULL SIZE

'

----·------------'1 BARGAIN GROUP

VALUES TO $32.00 .

All slacks, blouses.
pant lops and body
shirts. Out they go.

REGULAR $89.95

% PRICE SALE!
COCKTAIL DRESSES

Misses Sizes

I

$

Misses and
Women's Sizes

Jr., Misses. Ha lf Sizes

DRESSES

9-11 : 30 a .m.

THURSDAY - Pomeroy
COLUMBUS - State health Ele., 10 a .m. · 1:30 p.m .;
officials warned Friday that Mu lberry Hgts., 2-2: 15 ; Rt. 143
Ohio currently may be facing a Jet., 2: 30-3: Die hl, Atkins,
Riggs, 3: 30-4; Harrisonvil le, 5 flu epidemic.
5: 30; Hysell Run, 6: 30 · 7;
Dr. John H. Ackerman, Laurel Cliff, 7: 15 . 7: 45; Hiland
deputy director and chief, Church 6-6: 30.
FRIDAY - Pearl St. Ele.,
division of communicable 9:30
a .m.. 12:30 p.m. : Mid·
disease said outbreaks of in- dlepod Library, 1· 1:30 ;
fluenza have been reported in Hobson, 2 . 2: 30; Meigs.Ga lli a
Line, 2: 45-3: 15; Si l ver Run,
Clermont, Logan, Montgomery 3:
30-4; Gravel Hi ll , 4:15 - 4: 45;
and Butler counties . Most WMPO, 5-5:30; Bradbury, 6,
cases have occurred in 6: 30 ; Jet. 124, 6:45 . 7: 15:
Enterprise, 7:30 ·6: 7-33
children, resulting in a high Market,
6: 05 · 6: 35.
absentee rate in schools. He
said he expects the epidemic to
spread statewide within the
nexl few weeks.
According to Dr. Ackerman,
the virus is not the one
responsible for epidemics . in
recent years. The virus was
isolated and identified by officials at the State Health
Department laboratory as
being Type B influenza. Type . LOS ANGELES (UP!) A, commonly referred to as Tom Weiskopf equalled the
Hong Kong or London flu, is not course record with a sizzling
responsible for the recent six-under-par 65 Saturday to
finish in a.four-way tie for first
outbreak.
Although not the same- virus, place after three rounds of the
both types have similar $150,000 Glen Campbell • Los
symptoms: cough, fever, Angeles Open.
Weiskopf, the No. 3 money·
runny nose and eyes and
winner
on the tour last year but
general listlessness . Treatstill
seeking
his first official
ment should consist of bedrest,
plenty of fluids and aspirin for money in 1974, is tied at 'JJJ7, six
aches and fever . In case of under par, with baUway leader
prolonged illness or unusually Dave Stockton, 61-year-old
h1gh fever, a physician should Sam Snead and young John
Mahaffey.
be consulted immediately.

DRESSES

VALUES TO $22.00

TUESDAY - Salem Center,

SEALY
HEALTH GUARD

VALUES TO $52.00

DRESSES

,.._

SAVE •20.00

- ,_,__ -----------..

VALUES TO $20.00

L~nior &amp;

".,

.."A
•

$795

ttl

SAVE

'lt$27995

•'

"
'

"

••

New Spring Merchandise

'

'
•
''
,

has arrived that we contracted for dresses, suits and pants suits. Prices will
be reduced on these items. Save 20 Pet.
and more.

"'

1

~

Elegan t ly
fa s hion e d
with wing
bock and
po lyester
cushions .

Don't delay , come in today!

"''
.~

''
,

All Ungerie Sets, SweaterS &amp; Vests - 1h Price

..

'

v

,'

Urgent!

",

••••

Please pick up
all · lay-aways
and d,ue bi lis
by March 1,
1974.

'•

•

$233

Coloma!

J

Each Sealy Redi-Bed Available With Chair
At Exti'CI Cost•

Choo se fro m nylon. herculon
or heavy vinyl cover. Sturdy

s lee t fr am e,
Neva -Sag
spring s and wooden storag'e
com p a rt ment.
Stripes ,
pla ins, florals.

'

'

Sealy Mattress Special
QUILTED COVER, 312 COIL

$
REGULAR $59.95

95

�.
12-

·rho

Sunday Times. Sentinel. Sundav. Feb. 17. 1q74

. . ·· n:

·· ·- ~"
····Hi~ .,..

Sweetheart named

.l"'"l~\

' i '

'

Mrs. Mary Kalherlne
Smalley,
director
of
Jackson-VInlo.&gt;.Gallla RSVP
office, spoke briefly during
lhe Wednesday luncheon and
presenled lhree- monlh

I
)

Some of those attending the RSVP potluck and meeting Wednesday are pictured here . A
good-sized crowd attended as award pins were presented and RSVP members introduced .

award pins to nine senJor
citizens.

'

RSVP members feted
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County RSVP (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program) members
were guests at a luncheon
served at the Senior Citizens
Center Wednesday noon.
Rev . Timothy Hea ton
provided entertainment after
the meal by singing several
selections including, "I Believe
in Music" and "The Preacher
and the Bear."

'Mrs. Maye Roush , RSVP
coordinator, introduced the
volunteers and told where they
work. Those present were
Lucille Mulford, George Bush,
Elizabeth Evans, Elva Huss,
Florence McDaniel, Elizabeth
Hill, Edith Gilkey, Everett
Callicoat, Lawrence McQuaid,
Glenn Roush, Minnie Peters,
Bill Menshouse, Marie Van
Guilder, Florence Wickline,
Thelma Hamilton, Ella ConRev . Tim Heaton, associate pastor of the Grace United
Methodist Church, entertained by singing some contemporary selections and accompanying himself , on the
guitar . His offerings included " I Believe in Music'' when the
audience joined him for the chorus.

Thrift shop to
open in April
MIDDLEPORT - A thrift held at Ohio State University ,
shop will be opened two days a Fawcett Center, March 9.
week beginning in April Anyone interested in attending
operated by the Meigs County can contact Mrs. Dorothea
Humane Society as a long- Fisher.
range project to raise funds for
Mrs. Barbara Roback, who is
a modern animal shelter.
interested in getting a humane
Plans for the project were society started In Gallia
made Thursday evening at a County was a guest.
regular meeting of the society
in village hall here with
Dorothea Fisher, president,
presiding. Mrs. Mary Seaman
is general chairman of the
BY HALUE MURRAY
thrift shop.
Mrs. Bessie Couden of
Carolyn Smith announced Columbus and Mrs. Ellen
that new educational material Thomas visited recently with
has been ordered. It will be Olive Reynolds.
available to all schools and
Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Chevalier
organizations in the com- of Gallipolis, Mr. and Mrs.
munity.
William Fraley, Mr. and Mrs.
She pointed out that as far Tom Davis and Mr. and Mrs.
back as 1933 the National Donald Palmer visited Sunday
Congress of PTA challenged with Mr .. and Mrs. Charles
educators to introduce humane Murray and children.
education into the curriculum
Mrs. Randy Callihan and
of the nation's schools. daughter, Stacy, visited
"H umane
education
is Sunday with her !)Orents, Mr.
teaching in the schools the and Mrs . Robert Atha and
principles of justice, goodwill, family .
and humanity toward all life.
Mr . and Mrs. William
The cultivation of the spirit of Reynolds visited an evening
. kindness to animals is but the with Olive Reynolds.
starting point tow11rds that
Floyd
Chambers
of
bigger humanity which in- Williamsport visited
an
clud es one's fellowman of evening with Mr. and Mrs.
every race and clime. A Anthony Murray.
generation of people trained in
A surprise open house birth. these principles will solve their day was observed Sunday at
international difficulties as the home of Mrs . Elizabeth
neighbors and not as enemies,' ' Donnell. Many relatives and
the PTA said at that time.
friends slopped to wish Mrs.
A seminar on Ohio laws Don nett "Happy Birthday."
concerning trapping will be Sbe received many beautiful
giits. Cake and punch were
served to her many friends.
Mr . and Mrs. George Hunt of
Addison visited Sunday with
Olive Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. John
Brunicardi and children were
dinner guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Murray and
MIDDLEPORT - Dwight children.
Goi ns gave hi s award- Raymond Walls is now
winning speech Friday night at staying with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Heath United Methodist' Phillips.
Church following the dinner
Mrs . Wanda Atha and
meeting of the Middleport . daughter, Peggy Callihan,
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
were Sunday callers at the
. Goins, who placed in the top home of Olive Reynolds.
fove recently in the southern
Mr. and Mrs. Blakely Stout
Ohio Jaycee Speakup contest, and son, Roger , of Harrisburg
used as his topic the Jaycee were recent callers of Miss
creed, "Service to humanity is Olive Reynolds.
the best work of life. " He was
introduced by Lee McComas.
NARROW WIN
Goins is instrumental musk
COLUMBIA, Mo . (UP!)
and band director for the Meigs Steve Erwin sank both fouls in
L.oca l School District.
a one-and-one situation twice in
Birthdays of Carl Horky, 'the final minute of play
Gene Grate and Dale Dutton Saturd"y as Nebraska nipped
were noted. Vice President Bob Mi.souri, 118-87, in a comeback
Bumgarner presided.
Big Eight basketball victory.

Bidwell

Goins gives
Speakup entry
to Rotarians

nounced the winner, who was ...
crowned with a tiara by Judith
Marcum , Keyettes Advisor.
In addition the honoree wa s
presented with a corsage
pinned on by Rita Ryan,
Keyettes president, and a gift.
drew several area teenagers. Ja ck O'Shea, Huntington,
Karla, daughter of Mr. and provided music for the dance
Mrs. Herbert Richards, New and presented three record
Haven, was escorted by John albums. Recipients were J an
Michael Stevens, also qn eighth Swartz, Tammy Lieving and
grader, who is the son of Mr. Sharon Casto.
and Mrs. Howard Stevens, New
Haven. •
John Zell , principal , anJOBS AVAILABLE
POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Administrative
Services, Division of Stale
Personnel, has informed the
CALLED TO CHESTER
Meigs County Auditor's office
POMEROY - The Pomeroy that it is receiving applications
Emergency Squad was called for Highway Workers I, II, III,
to Chester at 9:43p.m. Friday IV. Anyone interested should
for June Marshall who was write to James E. Roush,
suffering from a possible Meigs
County
Auditor,
broken leg . She was taken to Pomeroy, Ohio, or call 992the Holzer Medical Center.
2698,

MASON. W, Va . - Karla
Richards, an eighU1 grader,
was named Miss Sweetheart of
a Valentine Dance held at
Wahama Hi gh School Thurs.
day ni ght. The event, sponsored by the WHS Keyettes;'

dee, Frances

to those who have been
volunteers for three months.
They are Reva Evans, Edith
Gilkey, Eliwbeth Hill, Lucille
Mulford , Bill Menshouse,
Florence 'McDaniel, Maye
Roush, Elias Sisson and Rose
McQuaid.
John
Allen, assistant
director of Areawide Project
on Aging, commended all those
involved in the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program.
Others present were Eleanor
Benedict, Jackson-VintonGallia secretary-bookkeeper,
Jan Countryman, Mrs. Marvel
Haney, Mrs. Sarah Yaggi, and
the Center staff, Helen
Spriegel, Maxine Northup,
Gordon Wooten and Juanita
Starcher.

Scouts meet

UMW
·meets
.

REEDSVILLE
The
Reedsville United Methodist
Women met with Mrs . Teddy
Mundry for their February
meeting, the program topic
being " Purpose of Home and
Church," led by Mrs. Mamie
Buckley , Readings were given
by several members.
During the business mee ling
dues were paid and thank-you
letter was rece ived from the
children's home. Round robin
cards were signed for Mrs.
Gladys Mor gan and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel. Six shut-in
calls were made.

. Refreshments were served to
the above and Mrs. Zeddie
Hudson, Mrs. Sandy Powell
and Mrs . Jean Starcher
(guests) , Mrs . Rose Thomas,
Mrs. Nell Wilson , Mrs. Alberta
Edwards , Mrs. Vivian Hum·
phrey, Mrs. Ruth Dillon and
Mrs. Lillian Pickens. Door

t:l - The Stmdny Times · S.ontinel, Swod"y, F't'b: 17,

REEDSVILLE - Girl Scout
Troop 67 of Reedsville met at
Stewart Hall when the girls
work ed on their "sports
badge". Each participated iri
playing a game of badminton.
The meeting was opened with
an exercise song and flag
ceremony. Plans were also
made to work on their "good
grooming" badge.
Refreshments were served
by Susan Hannum and Kay
Balderson. Attending were
Kim Reed, Cathy Barringer,
Sheila Buchanan, Teresa
Hannum, Judy Holter, Angel
Blake, Deedee Smith, Cathy
Cowdery, Pebbles Blake, Jodi
Smith,
Carla Cowdery,
Carol
Darlene
Barton,
O'Conner, Teresa Dailey,
Mary Masters and Rhonda
Holsinger. The next · meeting
Will be Feb. 18.

Point Ho,cl'-

Social Nole~ ·
By Wanetta Radokin

Guests at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. Lawrence Chapman
were Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Bolin and daughte r. Lisa .
Mrs. ErneSt Jones and Mrs .
El'ma Nelson were shoppi ng in ·

Pomeroy Tuesday.
. Mrs. Thelma Campbell has
re turned home from Holzer
Hospital and is improving.
Mrs. Gay Harvey is caring
for Mrs . Hilah Westfall while
her husband , Mr. Dale Harvev
and Mrs. Luther Harvey mak~
daily visits to Holzer Hospital
to see Mr . Frank Westfall , who
ha s peen a patient there for the
pa st two weeks.

prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Thomas and Mrs. Dillon. The
next meeting will be with Mrs.
Mamie Buckley .

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bush,
Mr. John Paul Hensler an1
Nany and Katy Hill, were
Sunday visitors at the home of
. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen and
• family and Mrs. Grace Hen,sler.
' Mr. and Mrs. George J .
., Lowther who lost their horne
: recently by ·fire have moved
: into a new mobile home.
~- Mrs. Cora Moore spent a few

MORE BARGAINS - SECOND BIG WEEK
•

lOLA'S QUITS IN POMEROY
SELLING ALL TO THE BARE WALLS
LEASE IS UP- NOTHING HELD BACK!

1974
days rtoecntly ar her home ;.tl
PI . Rtx-k.
Mr. and Mrs. Rober t
Holliday were shopping in
Gallipolis Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Turner
and family of Elgin, Ill . has
been visiting his parents, Mr.

Boat registering
-·
plac~s announced

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Departm ent of Natural
and Mrs. Henry Turner .
of
Reso urc es '
divi sion
Mrs. Erm~ Nelson and Mrs. Watercr aft has announced
Grace Hensler attended Senior locations where 1974 Ohio boat
Citizens Meeting at Wilkes- and
outboard
motor
ville .
registrations can be obtained.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmont BosThe division also announced
worth visited Mrs. Blanche plans for the sale of 21-&lt;lav
Nelson at the Kimes Con- temporary registrations ro'r
valescent Center, Athens.
boats and motors. Paul
Simon's Pick-a-Pair Store, 104
W. Main, Pomeroy, is the
PANHANDLE SHAKEN
location for registrations in
PERRYTON, Tex. (UP!) Meigs County. It is expected
A brief earthquake rattled the department will announce
windows and scared residents soon where registrations may
of the Texas Panhandle be obtained ,in Gallia Countv .
Friday, but no damage or
Boaters are reminded th~t
injuries were reported. The 1973 re gistra tions expire
National Earthquake In- March 1 and are urged to ob·
formation Center at Boulder, lain their 1974 registrations
Colo., said the quake about 100 early to avoid ihe summer
miles northeast of Amarillo rush.
measured 4.5 on the richter
In April, for the first time,
scale.
boaters will be able to pur·
chase 21-day temporary
A thought for the day : registrations costing $1 each
American philosopher William for newly purchased boats an~
James said, "Man lives by motors. The registration wfll
habit, indeed, but what he lives enable a boater to use his new
for is thrills and excitement." craft almost immediately.

'

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

' """""'' '

to three week s until ;1 permanen t registra ti on was

issued .
All watt:rcraft opc ra t in ~ in
Ohio waters must have an Ohio
idcnt ifi ca ti nn
numbe r
displayed on each side of the
bow of th e w&lt;-~lercrafl .
Registration papers must be
available on boa rd at all times
when the watercraft is in use.
The watercraft registraHon
number is different than
outboard motor numbers
which are issued to each owner
' .
at the time of registration. The
tag show in g the ou tbo ard
motor number must be on the
motor in a place where it can
be easily see n.
Annual fees for watercraft
VALENTINE KING AND QUEEN - Crowned Valentine
and
outboard
motor
King
and Queen at a Valentine Dance Friday night held at
regisb·ation are : outboarri hull ,
Southern High School were Randy Warner and Jill Warner.
rowboat, ca noe, barge or raft ,
Shown
wiU1 the King and Queen are tl1e other caJldid&lt;.ttes:
$1 ; sa il boat, $3; inboard with
motor umJer 100 hoursepower,
$7.50; inboard with motor 100 additional 50-cent fee for each
prese nt their title to ge t
horsepower and abov.e, $10 ; registration issued .
boaLr.:
1
4
Boaters
registering
registration. Starting this year,
outboard motor , $3 and
duplicate registration, $1. feet or longer and motors 10 watercraft titles will be
Licensing agents recei ve an horsepower and more must stamped annually at the time

,,
.,

MONDAY, FEB. 18
'

... ... _

Before. boaters had to w ~ !t two

Starts
omorrow

"'·

,.

Iron row, 1-&lt; , Carol Theiss, Queen Jill, and Trina FerreU;
back row, Rocky Hupp, King Randy, and Gene Shiveley. The
students were chosen by the student body . Southern's senior
class sponsored the event. The dance was ~ eld in the gy m at
the high school in Racine.
of regis lration , .iust as
au tomob il e to ties are, Smith
said .
The only people not required

to prese nt a title when
registering their watercraft
are those who acquired the
boat before January 1, 1964.

SEALY HEALTH GUARD'" MATIRESS SALE

and

Lenoir, John

Houck, Nelle Ford, Elias
Sisson, Alvalee Cook, Florence
Trainer, Clara Fisher, Reva
Evans and Marie Wagner.
Mrs. Roush also introduced
Carol Davis, representing the
Red Cross, Mary Jeanne
Walker from the Holzer
Medical Center, and Jean
Niday, director of the Senior
Citizens Center. Each expressed her appreciation to the
volunteers for their service and
indicated that more volunteers
are needed.
Volunteers unable to attend
the luncheon were Sadie Jones,
Rose McQuaid, Anne White,
Alma Caudill, Edna Cook,
Kate Dobbins, Mr. Fish and
George Lngan.
Volunteer stations in Gallia
County now being served are
the Holzer Medical Center,
Guiding Hand School, Red
Cross office, RSVP office,
Gallia County District Library,
Bidwell-Porter School, and the
Senior Citizens Center.
Mrs. Mary Katherine
Smalley, director of JacksonVinton-Gallia RSVP, praised
the volunteers for the time they
give to others. Special
recogni tion was given to
Lawrence McQuaid, who was
coordinator of the program in
Gallia County when it was
organized.
Mrs. Smalley presented pins

Flu epidemic
expected to
cQver Ohio

Lasts
All Week

Save 20% - 40%
50% - Even 75%

BELOW FORMER NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PRICES!

OR WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

AND MORE

ENTIRE STOCK NOW SACRIFICED ALL OF lOLA'S FAMOUS FASHIONS
DAVIS BOSTER
RIO GRANDE - Career
diplomat Davis E. Boster,
born here In I920 but who
graduated from Beloit High
School and In 1942 from Mt.
Union College, Is the son of
the late Ernest Gordon
Boster and Mrs. Nelle Bosler
Berridge who now lives In
Clearwater, Fla. Since I949
he has served In a number of.
assignments growing In
Importance In the diplomatic
service. His most recent was
appointment by Secretary of
Slate Kissinger to head the
U . S. delegation to the
Conference on Security and
Cooperation In Europe which
Is In session In Geneva.

Eddy's schedule
POMEROY -

Mr . Eddy

Educator's Schedule in Meigs
County for the week of
February 18-22 .
MONDAY .- Headq4arters
closed for the holidav. ,

I'

I

Weiskopf equals
course record

95
$

LOTS OF
STYLES

$

DRESSES

lf2

.'·

PRICE

Many new items added this week
gloves. panties. bras, . hose, pant tops.
purses, etc. VALUES TO 6.95.

Misses Sizes

·'

-- ··-

---

SAVE 112 NOW!

VALUES TO $7.95

Large Group Items
Gowns, body shirts,
purses. etc. Values to 7.95 .
Out they go.

$2

'

"

.'

Shorts, lops, bathing
suits, etc. Out they
go.

lf2

--VALUES TO $20.00

HATS • HATS • HATS
Winter and spring styles.
Values to $20.00. Out they·
go.

$395

---

Check This Bargain
YOUR CHOICE

SAVE 150

$

95
I ''--.........- -

.. . . ......

lf2 PRICE

REGULAR $269.95

Regular •349.95 QUEEN SIZE
n'

WIGS • HAIR PIECES
PRICE

299.95

1

BY THE MAKERS OF SEALY POSTUREPEDIC'- FROM $99~ "

"'No morning back ache from sleeping on a too -so ft mattress." Designed ir1 coope~at1on with leading orthoped ic surgeons tor f1rm SlJ pport.

. , .. w.&gt;~.·~~ ~u ... .-... -~-- "·•···~N

VALUES TO $25.00

SPORTSWEAR

CLEANING
T ilt forwar d
to vtlc uu m.

Redi Beds
REGULAR

SUMMER ITEMS

-

SAVE 112 NOW

-~·-·

. ' ' ' '' ' , . , ~ I Q," ''

EASY

SEALY

.,

Choice '1.00

First tim e savings on eac h
of this qua lity Sealy' Hun·
dreds of specia lly tempered coils
ouiid in f ~rmn ess th at stays. Added
fi rmness and durab ility in the patented
torsi on bar loundation . Plus elegant
da mask cover deep ly qui lted through
puffy Sea ly foam' '. Li m ited ti me sale'

FULL SIZE

'

----·------------'1 BARGAIN GROUP

VALUES TO $32.00 .

All slacks, blouses.
pant lops and body
shirts. Out they go.

REGULAR $89.95

% PRICE SALE!
COCKTAIL DRESSES

Misses Sizes

I

$

Misses and
Women's Sizes

Jr., Misses. Ha lf Sizes

DRESSES

9-11 : 30 a .m.

THURSDAY - Pomeroy
COLUMBUS - State health Ele., 10 a .m. · 1:30 p.m .;
officials warned Friday that Mu lberry Hgts., 2-2: 15 ; Rt. 143
Ohio currently may be facing a Jet., 2: 30-3: Die hl, Atkins,
Riggs, 3: 30-4; Harrisonvil le, 5 flu epidemic.
5: 30; Hysell Run, 6: 30 · 7;
Dr. John H. Ackerman, Laurel Cliff, 7: 15 . 7: 45; Hiland
deputy director and chief, Church 6-6: 30.
FRIDAY - Pearl St. Ele.,
division of communicable 9:30
a .m.. 12:30 p.m. : Mid·
disease said outbreaks of in- dlepod Library, 1· 1:30 ;
fluenza have been reported in Hobson, 2 . 2: 30; Meigs.Ga lli a
Line, 2: 45-3: 15; Si l ver Run,
Clermont, Logan, Montgomery 3:
30-4; Gravel Hi ll , 4:15 - 4: 45;
and Butler counties . Most WMPO, 5-5:30; Bradbury, 6,
cases have occurred in 6: 30 ; Jet. 124, 6:45 . 7: 15:
Enterprise, 7:30 ·6: 7-33
children, resulting in a high Market,
6: 05 · 6: 35.
absentee rate in schools. He
said he expects the epidemic to
spread statewide within the
nexl few weeks.
According to Dr. Ackerman,
the virus is not the one
responsible for epidemics . in
recent years. The virus was
isolated and identified by officials at the State Health
Department laboratory as
being Type B influenza. Type . LOS ANGELES (UP!) A, commonly referred to as Tom Weiskopf equalled the
Hong Kong or London flu, is not course record with a sizzling
responsible for the recent six-under-par 65 Saturday to
finish in a.four-way tie for first
outbreak.
Although not the same- virus, place after three rounds of the
both types have similar $150,000 Glen Campbell • Los
symptoms: cough, fever, Angeles Open.
Weiskopf, the No. 3 money·
runny nose and eyes and
winner
on the tour last year but
general listlessness . Treatstill
seeking
his first official
ment should consist of bedrest,
plenty of fluids and aspirin for money in 1974, is tied at 'JJJ7, six
aches and fever . In case of under par, with baUway leader
prolonged illness or unusually Dave Stockton, 61-year-old
h1gh fever, a physician should Sam Snead and young John
Mahaffey.
be consulted immediately.

DRESSES

VALUES TO $22.00

TUESDAY - Salem Center,

SEALY
HEALTH GUARD

VALUES TO $52.00

DRESSES

,.._

SAVE •20.00

- ,_,__ -----------..

VALUES TO $20.00

L~nior &amp;

".,

.."A
•

$795

ttl

SAVE

'lt$27995

•'

"
'

"

••

New Spring Merchandise

'

'
•
''
,

has arrived that we contracted for dresses, suits and pants suits. Prices will
be reduced on these items. Save 20 Pet.
and more.

"'

1

~

Elegan t ly
fa s hion e d
with wing
bock and
po lyester
cushions .

Don't delay , come in today!

"''
.~

''
,

All Ungerie Sets, SweaterS &amp; Vests - 1h Price

..

'

v

,'

Urgent!

",

••••

Please pick up
all · lay-aways
and d,ue bi lis
by March 1,
1974.

'•

•

$233

Coloma!

J

Each Sealy Redi-Bed Available With Chair
At Exti'CI Cost•

Choo se fro m nylon. herculon
or heavy vinyl cover. Sturdy

s lee t fr am e,
Neva -Sag
spring s and wooden storag'e
com p a rt ment.
Stripes ,
pla ins, florals.

'

'

Sealy Mattress Special
QUILTED COVER, 312 COIL

$
REGULAR $59.95

95

�•
14 - The SWlday Tunes. &amp;ntlll(' l, S·u1&lt;1 &lt;1y, F~b 1~.

.•.'

'&lt;t

'

'

Mitchell, Stans go
to trial on Tuesday

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - John
N. Mitchell and Maurice H.
~. the first former cabinet
officers indicled in 50 years, go
on trial Tuesday on conspiracy,
obstructing justice and perjury
charges. President Nixon's
chief Watergate accuser, John
W. Dean Ill, is expected to
testify against tllem.
.
Final defense motions for
another delay or a change of
location were denied Friday by
trial U.S. District Judge Lee
Gagliardi.
Barring an unforseen development, the trial of the two
men who headed Nixon's
reelection campaign in 1972
will begin in a small court
room on the nlntli floor of the
gray, granite building on Foley
SQuare.
Influence Investigation
Mitchell, 60, a former attorney general in the Nixon administration, and Stans, 65,
former commerce secretary,
are accused of trying to influence a. major federal investigation of millionaire financier Robert L. Vesco. The
indictment filed last May
alleged the defendants attempted to get favorable
treatment for Vesco in exchange for his secret $200,000

,"f,9 I,

. ·•

.,

··'it
'

.

"

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'

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'

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"l

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cu::c
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Vesco, 38, was cited as a

CQ.o

defendant in the case, but has
been a fugitive since last
spring, living in Costa Rica and
the Bahamas and successfully
defying all extradition attempts.
The fourth defendant, Harry
L. Sears, a 53-year old lawyer
from Mountain Lakes, N. J .,

and

a

prominent

New

Jersey
Republican
who
headed
the
President's
reelection . campaign in that state, will be tried
later. He is expected to testify
for the government against

Mitchet~~~~c~;~~itness

H~~\o~:seior~~r awh~~;
Watergate figure, is a coconspirator in the case and is
considered a crucial prosecution witness. The defense thus
far has tried unsuccessfully to

.... ''lit_

_

0
I

z

_ _ _ _ _ _ __

.: Ll.l

- Edward C. Nixon, the
President's younger brother
who purportedly verified that
!lie Vesco contribution was to
be delivered in cash.
- F. Donald Nixon, the

I

supply big coal need I

i

'l.

::::»
(I)

®

.••' .

i

:*

"

..-

·'
.r
·I

'

L---------~----------j ·
I

••
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'

counsel and later chairman of
the SEC who resigned a few
days after the Mitchell..Stans
mdictment was filed.
The jury selection is expe cted to take at least two days
and the trial is expected to last
at l~ast one morlth .
If convicted, Mitchell and
Slans could be sentenced to a
maximum prison term of five
years on each charge-one
count of conspiracy. three of
obstructing justice and six
counts of perjury.

...
RESTORING ANTl\IUE CAR - Charles Nease , left, and
Randy Hill, students in the auto mechanics class of Meigs
High School under the direction of Richard Coleman, right,
are working on this 1939 LaSalle that belonged to John
Bril:ker when he was governor or Ohio. The stud e n t~ are

t•
1
Early end to
~~ ,..,. ~tn tnt
b

i'i:'r'l•mnn:

~

~Unv&amp;J! - ~
-../

VOL. 9 NO.3

rebuilding the engine and the brake system of the former
governor's car . Present owner of the car is David Reeves of
Harrisonville who purchased it from Ernest Carr, also of
Harri sonville. Reeves plans to reupholster the interior of the
car and to have the exterior repainted .

~

•

PAGE~ 5

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1974

0l

•
1 oycott lS

uet penny boost Kissinger hope

WASHINGTON (UP!) _ The
Federal Energy Office acted
Saturday to end service station
shutdowns by giving most
dealers a penny per gallon
markup in the price of gasoline.
An FEO official said the
action should end shutdown
tllreats scattered from North
Carolina to Washington State by
giving owners higher profits.
The penny markup in the
retail pri ce of gasoline will

.apply to all stations receiving
less than 85 per cent of their
1972 fuel supplies, according to
deputy energy chief John C..
Sawhill. He said these stations
numbered ·well over half of all
dealers.
The markup, effective March
1, will be in addition to 11 pass
throughs'' to consumers of the
higher wholesale coslo;; of
gasoline .
"This penny increase for
retail dealers is dr~ i r'ned tn

·
offset increa sed dealer operating costs caused by reduced
supplies," Sawhi ll said. "These~
operators have not only had to
CQntend with reduced volumes,
but also with corollary decreases in sales of nonpe·
troleum products such as tires,
batteries and other items."

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla . !UP!)
Foreign mini s ter s Is mail
The last allowable markup
Presiden t Nixon met Fahmy of Egypt and · Omar
for dealers was effective Jan. I. Secretary of Si&lt;Ite Henry A. Sakkaf of Saudi Arabia were
As Sawhill announced the Kissinger Saturday for talks on said to be bringing with them
markup, service stations were the Middle East aimed at proposals for disengagement of
closed in Winton, N.C. and in bringing an early end to the Arab and Israeli forces on the
much of the Tidewater area of Arab oil boycott .
Syrian front, a precondition the
Virginia . The operators said
The early aftern oon session Arabs have set for ending their
they wanted higher profits per was to review the United States embargo.
gallon of gas and pe rmiss i~n to position
in
neg oti ations
Kissinger, who acted as a gopump gas for regular cu s'tofu- Kissinger will conduct durmg th between m arranging the
Sawhill said " people just ers first.
weekend w1 th visi ting foreign disengagement of Israeli and
don't buy those accessories
Dea ler ass_ociations in Penn- ministers of l~gypt and Saudi Egyptian force s in the Sinai, is
after they've been watting in sylvania and Washing ton State Arabia.
expected to transmit the Arab
line for 45 minutes or an hour.'' threatened to shut down next
It came as Kissin ger ex- proposals to Israel. He also
week if their demands were not pressed hope that the flow of scheduled a meeting wtth
met by the n,o.
Arab oil, cut off almos t four Syrian representative Sabbak
, Sawhill said a new advisory months ago when the United Kabani Saturday evening in
group· of 12 service s tation States began sending $2 billion Washington
operators from across the in military aid to Israel during
Nixon ha s launched diplomatcountry agreed to the markup . the October War , would soon be ic efforts to end the embargo
San Francisco Examiner. re- They met in Washington la st resumed .
and halt the soaring cost of
ported that at least three
Thursday and were polled
A While House spokesman Mideast oil . He initialed a
witnesses have idelitified a again by telephone Friday .
said the meeting at Nixon's meeting of oil-consuming naphotograph of DeFreeze as one
Another meeting was set for bays ide c ompound was to lions in Washington to develop
of the the two men who kidFeb . 28 to discuss further the review "all a spects of the areas of corporation for dealing
naped Miss Hearst from her
problems of small operator s , Middle Ea s t" s ituation , in- with the producers, and plans
apartment in Berkeley.
whom Sawhill called " the men eluding the 13-nation confer~nce to follow this up with a joint
The Redding, Calif., Recordin the tren che s bearing tl1e of oil consuming countries session of producing and
Searchlight reported FBI
brunt of the sh ortage ;p; much condu cted in Washington last consuming nations in the near
agents and local police were
as anyone.''
week .
future.
seeking Mary Alice Siem, 24, a
former Redding woman who is
a "known acquaintance" of
De Freeze and Wheeler.
Oates said she was &lt;~ one of
the many names that have
been thrown to us," but would
not describe her as a suspect.
At his last meeting Friday
with newsmen in front or the 22room Hillsborough estate,
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - 11JC lines.
" Their desperation was
Hearst sa id he was going to be
administration failed to act
McFall said "neither of these really no different from the
"honest" with the kidnapers
quickly to solve the truckers'
two proposals represents any- desperation felt by many other
and go ahead with a food
strike because the President thing tHat could be described Americans ... caught in today's
distribution program within his
and his aides did not realize as a massive, broad-based squeeze created by the
means and power.
how serious the situation was, assau:t on our nation's basic inability of the Nixon ad"I think when they say Patty
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J.
transportation problem ."
ministration to deal with
is well, I believe she is well,"
Shapp said Saturday.
Shupp,
who
took
part
in
the
various economic crisis that
he said."! think if I do what I
"Not once prior to the strike
talks between truckers and are causing the rampant incan to distribute some food to
or during my stay in Washing- federal offtcials in Washington , flation now sweeping the
poor people I think that .. .I
ton was it apparent to me that said
the administration nation."
hope, at least...that they will
either the President or his top " dragged its feet" even after it
Shapp said Nixon should not
believe I'm honest with them."
aides were fully aware of U1e reached an agreeme,lt with Ole handle these problems by
true dimension s uf the tru ckers.
"withdrawing further into the
truckers' strike ," Shapp, a
It took a week for federal isolation of the White House.
Democrat, said.
energy chief William Simon to
'·The only way to handle
"Nor
was
it
apparent
that
order the oil companies to these problems is for the
COLUMBUS iUPl) - John
"Jack" Fallon. deputy director they were willing to take bold comply with an agreement President and his aides to get
.of . the Ohio Department of action needed to bring the guaranteeing the truckers all out and listen to the people , to
the fuel they needed, Shapp find out what is on their minds
Transportation, Saturday was strike to an end."
Shapp
and
Rep
.
John
J
.
said.
asked to serve as acting
and to take positive at !: p;·, to
Shapp objected to Nixon alleviate their problems."·
Executive Director of the state McFall, D.Celi f., were given
Democratic party 1 said equal air tim e to reply to calling the independent truckMcFall said Nixon's proposal
a
" handful
of to spend federal money fo r
William A. Lavelle, s tate party President Nixon 's Feb . 9 radio ers
speech on transportation and de speradoes ."
chairman .
mass transit subsidies "will be
"Desperate they were-hut i[ welcome news to our hard Also Saturday, Lavelle the truckers' ·s trike which
named
Wtlliam
Boy le, proposed a $19.9 billion, six- the President had taken the pressed cities and states. Tn the
chairman of the Lucas County year program for urban and time to talk to them he would past the administration has
Democratic party, special rural transit, a program to have found they were only flatly opposed such tegislation,
assistant to the state chairman ease regulation of the railroads desperate to earn a decent including the operating assistfor primary campaign ac- and $2 billion in loan . living for themselves and their ance bill now pending in
guarantees to moderni1.e rail families," Shapp said.
House-Senate conference.' '
tivities.

Hearst facing deadline

Wallace could
capture party

Shapp believes Nixon erred
on intentions of truckers

Fallon named

U. S. force ·close to army of junkies, victims

j

&gt;c
c
z:

~

Sec retary of Stale for
Economic Affairs.
- G . Bradford Cook, general

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) "really not a great deal of new
Newspaper publisher Ran- information."
dolph A. Hearst worked
After meeting with the
Saturday against a three-day family , Bates said the FBI was
deadline to make a mult- "making headway " in the
rnillion dollar food handout as search for the heiress, but had
the down payment demanded no definite information on her
by a radi cal terrorist group whereabouts.
holding his 1\idnaped daughter.
He said the agency was
H~arst was "working very checking with persons who
hard to show a gesture of good knew Donald D. DeFreeze, 301
will" in meeting the demands an escaped California convict
of the Symbionese Liberation identified by newspapei's and
Army that kidnaped his ·television swtions as one of the
daughter, Patricia, 19, two kidnapers.
weeks ago, the family said .
Bates said the ~·m didn't
Family spokesman Jay Bos- have " anything specific at all
worth said he did not know linking " DeFreeze or Thero M.
whether the publisher could Wheeler, 29, another black
meet the Tuesday deadline of prison escapee named by the
giving away $70 worth of press, with the Feb. 4 abgroceries to each of Califor- duction.
nia's poor and elderly that
Hearst's own newspaper, the
could cost as much as $400
million.
Tre deadline set by the SLA
falls the day before Patricia's
20th birthday.
"We can't give a specific
date," said Bosworth, married
MONTGOMERY, Ala . ( UP! )
to Patricia's sister, Virginia,
A member of the
23. "I can just say as soon as
Democratic Party's Charter
possible .
14
He's working ver-y hard to Commission said Saturday
show a gesture of good will and Gov . George Wallace could end
go some way in meeting the up controlli ng the party's
miniconvention
next
demands of the SLA."
December
because
liberals
Hearst himself did not meet
with newsmen for the first time likely will stay home.
The mioicQnvention, to be
in a week. A spokesmwn said
he spent a sleepless night and held in Kansa~ City, is for the
purpose of aaoP'ting a party
was tense and tired.
Bosworth said the family and charter. but Wallace aides
the FBI believed a third pur- already arc predicting that it
purled letter from the SLA was could turn into a ''dry run" for
phony. It threatened to kill the 1976 convention . Hodding
Patricia on her birthday Carter Ill, a leading party
Wednesday unless blacks were liberal , said that only Wallace
given control of Pepperdine supporters and some labor
College
in Los Angeles.
factions wi ll show enough
:::::
:;:;:
Charles Bates, in charge of interest to turn out large slates
~
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!) -Democratic leaders ·:&lt;
of the otate legislature sold Saturday West Virginia can .•.:.:.:.• the FBI investigation, told the · of delegates for the Kansas
family Friday night there is City session.
,. supply enough low-f!ulfur coal to meet the electrical power
~ needs of tlie eastern United Slates.
:;:;
~
In a statement to a national emergency conference in ::::
Wa.ohlngton, Senate Preoident William Brotherton, D- :il
•· Kanawha, and House Speaker Lewis McManus, -D - :;:;
Raleigh, also said misinformation on the part of govern- · ::::
ment and IDcluslry has prevenled the state from providing :!!!
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The affidavit filed just before the
this coal.
-:-: 190,0IJO.rnan U.S. fighting force · close of business Friday.
·"West Virginia coal needs a fuller understanding by ® in Germany had become
"I am deeply concerned with
public groups, unlimited by past traditions, mlsln- :;:; something close to an the problem of drug and
formation and false Impressions, and coal broker eon- ~; army of junkies, crim- alcohol abuse," Davison said.
tracts," their statement said.
~!~ inals
and
their
vic- "USAEUR (The U.S. Army in
" West Virginia has the pote'l'iallo become the energy ,W, tims before a stiff new drug Europe) missions are based on
center of the eastern United States," they said.
;~: suppression program was in- the national policy of our
The leaders said by. using low sulfur West VIrginia ~ stituted last September ac- country as an essential
coal, badly needed oil and oatural gas supplies would be
cording to Gen . Michael S. element of NATO . The
freed for other purposes. They said estimated coal :~ Davison,
the
American rPadiness requirements of
reserves In lbe slate are more than l02liilllon tons.
:;:; commander there.
these misswris cannot be
More thao 20 billion lias a sulfur content of '.7 per cent
Davison said in 1972 and 1973 degraded without irreparable
or less, and another %7 billion tons has a sulfur content of ~~ drug abuse was "the single harm to the nation.
between. 7per cent and lper cent,lbey said.
greatest threat to the discipline
"Successful execution of this
By usiJig washillg and cleaning along with slack-gas :;~ and professionalism'' of the ·mission requires a high degree
cleaning processes, they said coal with higher suHur ~~ Army in Europe. Without of individual alertness, wellmnteDis can be reflued lo the point where It can meet ll' saying so, he strongly implied being and discipline . These
almoot. all air poUutlou regulallons.
:~ that, for a time at least, U. S.
considerations were foremost
The two leaden said by opening up more deep Mines ~ forces along the Iron Curtain in my mind when f developed
In West Vlrglola, there would be less reliance on strip ~- were not ready for combat.
and implemented a . highly
mine coal.
:.
Davison, fighting to save the structured and daily program
'
Brotherton and McManus
said lo encourage the use of
;:~:' program despite a court order
to reduce drug and alcohol
West Virglllla coal, long-term contracts and proper prices
:!~ declaring it unconstitutional, abuse to the lowest pos.&lt;ible
are Deeded so tbe coal industry can linance new and ex:;:~ painted an astonishingly bleak
panded mlDlng operatlons.
·
i!! picture of. the narcotics prob- level."
D~ vison sa id drug-related
L~jjlllll•ll88!11lillill
.. &amp;:,~Sii:8®·ill:~~~~:::~=:::=:::;:::=:::=:=:;:::=:=:::!:::=:::=:=:::;:=:::.:;:;::::::::8:=~=~:~=:=:==~:· lem of Gls in Euro pe in a eourt crimes had quadrupl ed over

,~w.~w;:;~~v~;;:=:======;:=~~d·=·=·=-==1

~rE

Pres ident 's older brolher, who
accordin g to the indictment,
received a note from Vesco in
which Vesco threatened to
disclose the secret campaign
mntribution unless the SEC
dropped its investigation.
- Donald Nixon, the President's nephew, who worked as
a personal aide to Vesco and
who was hire9 by Vesco soon
after the SEC investigation
began .
- William J. Casey, who was
chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commissiop during
the time covered by the indictment and who now is Under

:~~:;:s~:~~E%~f;~~~inDealer~
~ e

By HOWARD FIELDS
Doar said there was no
WASHINGTON (UP!) .:... The discussion- and he would not
White House, which has natty speculate-about how St. Clair
refu!lid to give any more would react to a request or
Watergate materials to special subpoena for materials if he
prosecutor Leon Jaworski, may~ere not satisfied committee
be heading toward a confronta- procedures for maintaining
tlon with the House Judiciary their secrecy.
Committee over how to main- After the Doar-Jenner brief·
tain 'tlie secrecy of documents ing, committee members did
requested for its impeachment not express alarm but acknowlinquiry.
edged that the divergent
Rep. J'e~r W•.. Rodino, D· pbsltions of !lie White House
N.J., the Judiciary chairman, and the committee could lead
has made clear his committee to a Conf,rontation.
would not seek approval nor
Moreover, there could be an
even consult the White House internal committee conflict
about any procedures the over access to White House
committee adopts for handling documents, similar to the
infighting over which members
the documents.
The potenllal for a conflict could see FBI files on Gerald
emerged from a meeting L. Ford during consideration of
between James St. Clair, his vice presidential nominaPresident Nixon's chief Water- tion.
gate lawyer, and John M. Doar,
The compromise reached in
special counsel for the commit- the Ford case might serve in
tee investigatioo into possible the impeachment inquiry. Th~t
grounds for impeaching Nix9n, would have only Rodino and
and Albert E. Jenner, the chief Rep. Edward Hutchinson,
Mich., the ranking GOP mem Republican counsel.
Doar and Jenner told com- ber, Doar, Jenner and staffers
mittee niember$ this week that with "top secret" clearance see
St. Clair wanled to protect the all the material, and decide
confidentiality of all tapes, logs, which was relevant for the rest
documents and other records of the panel to cons ider.
provided by the White House.
Jenner said St. Clair's concern
LODGE REOPENED
was 11all-pervasive and overCAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UP!) riding," and tl'oat he wanted to
know what steps the commi tree Salt Fork Lodge at Salt Fork
State Park east of here was
would take.
Rndlno responded the com- reopened Saturday afternoon
mittee would not ''present our after being evacuated for about
rules to Mr. St. Clair for two hours because of a bomb
threat.
approval."

,.1
.

reelection campaign.

Rodino will
forge ahead

!

,.

cash conlribullon to the Nixon

the last 18 months . He said an
''atmosphere of terror'' existed
in Army barracks due to drugs,
and there had been a 170 per
cent rise In hepatitis.
RISE IN HEPATITIS.
Davison's 5,000·word af.
fidavit was sworn out in
Heidelberg last Wednesday
and flown to Washington as
part of an appeal to U.S .
District Judge Gerhard A.
Gesell's order calling aspects
of the drug enforcement
program unconstitutional.
Whether the situation was
actually as black as Davison
made it seem may be open to
question. The document conflicted with earlier Army
estimates fi led during the trial.
The American Civil Liberties
Union IACLU) claimed soldiers' rights were being violated in such practice.c; as stripdown searches of ''soldier body
ca vities," ummnou'nced day

and night "health and welfare"
inspection for drugs, the use of
dogs in no-knock searches of
soldiers ·rooms, bans on antiestablishment posters and
songs, and persecution and
harassment not only of drug
users but all who associated
with them .
Gesell ordered the program
stopped and told the Army to
withdraw a general circu lar
that ordered it established.
Davison pleaded for stay of·
execution pending a decision
by the Justice Department
whetller to appeal.
Gesell rejected the plea as
"offensive" less tllan an hour
after receiving it.
DaVison's description of the
situation in Europe was termed
"astonishing!! by one source
connected,with the case. ACLU
lawyer David Addleston said if
the statements were true " they
have ~ot a worse drug problem

than we had in Vietnam ."
fiscal 1972 and then doubled in
Davison said in the 12 months fiscal 1973 to 5,939. Davison
before his drug program said they appeared to be
started in September, 9,575 Gls doubling again with 5,233 ofwere positively identified as fenses reported in six months
users of heroin or other opiwn- of fiscal t974.
based drugs through urine
Davison said he thinks he has
tests. That was about 5 per cent achieved "a delicate balance
o[ the entire force . The figures ... between enforcement, drugs
also showed that in the last and viofence" . that would be
three montlls of ·1973 urinanal- upset by Gesell's order.
ysis identifications dropped to
Revoking the program, he
1,206, about 40 per cent of the
said,
would cause !jan immedi·
previous rate.
ate
and
dramatic increase of
Those figures didn't include
men caught with drugs or those drug availability " an added
who turned themselves in. that "this could produce an
Comparable figures were re- atmosphere of terror in !lie
porled in Vietnam in height of barracks, adversely affecting
the drug problem there in mid- law .abiding soldiers. Such conditions existed previously."
197 1.
Davison sa id since la."t M&lt;1:,
Cr ime s tatis ti cs Dav1son
alone,
3,888 men have been
gave did not seem nearly as
dismissed
from , the Army in
hopeful .
Drug - relatEurope for unfitness or uned offenses in his command
suitability
and 1,337, or 34 per
jumped from 2,284 in the year
drug users.
cent,
were
ending June 30, 1971lo 2,962 m

'

•"

..

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�•
14 - The SWlday Tunes. &amp;ntlll(' l, S·u1&lt;1 &lt;1y, F~b 1~.

.•.'

'&lt;t

'

'

Mitchell, Stans go
to trial on Tuesday

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - John
N. Mitchell and Maurice H.
~. the first former cabinet
officers indicled in 50 years, go
on trial Tuesday on conspiracy,
obstructing justice and perjury
charges. President Nixon's
chief Watergate accuser, John
W. Dean Ill, is expected to
testify against tllem.
.
Final defense motions for
another delay or a change of
location were denied Friday by
trial U.S. District Judge Lee
Gagliardi.
Barring an unforseen development, the trial of the two
men who headed Nixon's
reelection campaign in 1972
will begin in a small court
room on the nlntli floor of the
gray, granite building on Foley
SQuare.
Influence Investigation
Mitchell, 60, a former attorney general in the Nixon administration, and Stans, 65,
former commerce secretary,
are accused of trying to influence a. major federal investigation of millionaire financier Robert L. Vesco. The
indictment filed last May
alleged the defendants attempted to get favorable
treatment for Vesco in exchange for his secret $200,000

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Vesco, 38, was cited as a

CQ.o

defendant in the case, but has
been a fugitive since last
spring, living in Costa Rica and
the Bahamas and successfully
defying all extradition attempts.
The fourth defendant, Harry
L. Sears, a 53-year old lawyer
from Mountain Lakes, N. J .,

and

a

prominent

New

Jersey
Republican
who
headed
the
President's
reelection . campaign in that state, will be tried
later. He is expected to testify
for the government against

Mitchet~~~~c~;~~itness

H~~\o~:seior~~r awh~~;
Watergate figure, is a coconspirator in the case and is
considered a crucial prosecution witness. The defense thus
far has tried unsuccessfully to

.... ''lit_

_

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_ _ _ _ _ _ __

.: Ll.l

- Edward C. Nixon, the
President's younger brother
who purportedly verified that
!lie Vesco contribution was to
be delivered in cash.
- F. Donald Nixon, the

I

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counsel and later chairman of
the SEC who resigned a few
days after the Mitchell..Stans
mdictment was filed.
The jury selection is expe cted to take at least two days
and the trial is expected to last
at l~ast one morlth .
If convicted, Mitchell and
Slans could be sentenced to a
maximum prison term of five
years on each charge-one
count of conspiracy. three of
obstructing justice and six
counts of perjury.

...
RESTORING ANTl\IUE CAR - Charles Nease , left, and
Randy Hill, students in the auto mechanics class of Meigs
High School under the direction of Richard Coleman, right,
are working on this 1939 LaSalle that belonged to John
Bril:ker when he was governor or Ohio. The stud e n t~ are

t•
1
Early end to
~~ ,..,. ~tn tnt
b

i'i:'r'l•mnn:

~

~Unv&amp;J! - ~
-../

VOL. 9 NO.3

rebuilding the engine and the brake system of the former
governor's car . Present owner of the car is David Reeves of
Harrisonville who purchased it from Ernest Carr, also of
Harri sonville. Reeves plans to reupholster the interior of the
car and to have the exterior repainted .

~

•

PAGE~ 5

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1974

0l

•
1 oycott lS

uet penny boost Kissinger hope

WASHINGTON (UP!) _ The
Federal Energy Office acted
Saturday to end service station
shutdowns by giving most
dealers a penny per gallon
markup in the price of gasoline.
An FEO official said the
action should end shutdown
tllreats scattered from North
Carolina to Washington State by
giving owners higher profits.
The penny markup in the
retail pri ce of gasoline will

.apply to all stations receiving
less than 85 per cent of their
1972 fuel supplies, according to
deputy energy chief John C..
Sawhill. He said these stations
numbered ·well over half of all
dealers.
The markup, effective March
1, will be in addition to 11 pass
throughs'' to consumers of the
higher wholesale coslo;; of
gasoline .
"This penny increase for
retail dealers is dr~ i r'ned tn

·
offset increa sed dealer operating costs caused by reduced
supplies," Sawhi ll said. "These~
operators have not only had to
CQntend with reduced volumes,
but also with corollary decreases in sales of nonpe·
troleum products such as tires,
batteries and other items."

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla . !UP!)
Foreign mini s ter s Is mail
The last allowable markup
Presiden t Nixon met Fahmy of Egypt and · Omar
for dealers was effective Jan. I. Secretary of Si&lt;Ite Henry A. Sakkaf of Saudi Arabia were
As Sawhill announced the Kissinger Saturday for talks on said to be bringing with them
markup, service stations were the Middle East aimed at proposals for disengagement of
closed in Winton, N.C. and in bringing an early end to the Arab and Israeli forces on the
much of the Tidewater area of Arab oil boycott .
Syrian front, a precondition the
Virginia . The operators said
The early aftern oon session Arabs have set for ending their
they wanted higher profits per was to review the United States embargo.
gallon of gas and pe rmiss i~n to position
in
neg oti ations
Kissinger, who acted as a gopump gas for regular cu s'tofu- Kissinger will conduct durmg th between m arranging the
Sawhill said " people just ers first.
weekend w1 th visi ting foreign disengagement of Israeli and
don't buy those accessories
Dea ler ass_ociations in Penn- ministers of l~gypt and Saudi Egyptian force s in the Sinai, is
after they've been watting in sylvania and Washing ton State Arabia.
expected to transmit the Arab
line for 45 minutes or an hour.'' threatened to shut down next
It came as Kissin ger ex- proposals to Israel. He also
week if their demands were not pressed hope that the flow of scheduled a meeting wtth
met by the n,o.
Arab oil, cut off almos t four Syrian representative Sabbak
, Sawhill said a new advisory months ago when the United Kabani Saturday evening in
group· of 12 service s tation States began sending $2 billion Washington
operators from across the in military aid to Israel during
Nixon ha s launched diplomatcountry agreed to the markup . the October War , would soon be ic efforts to end the embargo
San Francisco Examiner. re- They met in Washington la st resumed .
and halt the soaring cost of
ported that at least three
Thursday and were polled
A While House spokesman Mideast oil . He initialed a
witnesses have idelitified a again by telephone Friday .
said the meeting at Nixon's meeting of oil-consuming naphotograph of DeFreeze as one
Another meeting was set for bays ide c ompound was to lions in Washington to develop
of the the two men who kidFeb . 28 to discuss further the review "all a spects of the areas of corporation for dealing
naped Miss Hearst from her
problems of small operator s , Middle Ea s t" s ituation , in- with the producers, and plans
apartment in Berkeley.
whom Sawhill called " the men eluding the 13-nation confer~nce to follow this up with a joint
The Redding, Calif., Recordin the tren che s bearing tl1e of oil consuming countries session of producing and
Searchlight reported FBI
brunt of the sh ortage ;p; much condu cted in Washington last consuming nations in the near
agents and local police were
as anyone.''
week .
future.
seeking Mary Alice Siem, 24, a
former Redding woman who is
a "known acquaintance" of
De Freeze and Wheeler.
Oates said she was &lt;~ one of
the many names that have
been thrown to us," but would
not describe her as a suspect.
At his last meeting Friday
with newsmen in front or the 22room Hillsborough estate,
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - 11JC lines.
" Their desperation was
Hearst sa id he was going to be
administration failed to act
McFall said "neither of these really no different from the
"honest" with the kidnapers
quickly to solve the truckers'
two proposals represents any- desperation felt by many other
and go ahead with a food
strike because the President thing tHat could be described Americans ... caught in today's
distribution program within his
and his aides did not realize as a massive, broad-based squeeze created by the
means and power.
how serious the situation was, assau:t on our nation's basic inability of the Nixon ad"I think when they say Patty
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J.
transportation problem ."
ministration to deal with
is well, I believe she is well,"
Shapp said Saturday.
Shupp,
who
took
part
in
the
various economic crisis that
he said."! think if I do what I
"Not once prior to the strike
talks between truckers and are causing the rampant incan to distribute some food to
or during my stay in Washing- federal offtcials in Washington , flation now sweeping the
poor people I think that .. .I
ton was it apparent to me that said
the administration nation."
hope, at least...that they will
either the President or his top " dragged its feet" even after it
Shapp said Nixon should not
believe I'm honest with them."
aides were fully aware of U1e reached an agreeme,lt with Ole handle these problems by
true dimension s uf the tru ckers.
"withdrawing further into the
truckers' strike ," Shapp, a
It took a week for federal isolation of the White House.
Democrat, said.
energy chief William Simon to
'·The only way to handle
"Nor
was
it
apparent
that
order the oil companies to these problems is for the
COLUMBUS iUPl) - John
"Jack" Fallon. deputy director they were willing to take bold comply with an agreement President and his aides to get
.of . the Ohio Department of action needed to bring the guaranteeing the truckers all out and listen to the people , to
the fuel they needed, Shapp find out what is on their minds
Transportation, Saturday was strike to an end."
Shapp
and
Rep
.
John
J
.
said.
asked to serve as acting
and to take positive at !: p;·, to
Shapp objected to Nixon alleviate their problems."·
Executive Director of the state McFall, D.Celi f., were given
Democratic party 1 said equal air tim e to reply to calling the independent truckMcFall said Nixon's proposal
a
" handful
of to spend federal money fo r
William A. Lavelle, s tate party President Nixon 's Feb . 9 radio ers
speech on transportation and de speradoes ."
chairman .
mass transit subsidies "will be
"Desperate they were-hut i[ welcome news to our hard Also Saturday, Lavelle the truckers' ·s trike which
named
Wtlliam
Boy le, proposed a $19.9 billion, six- the President had taken the pressed cities and states. Tn the
chairman of the Lucas County year program for urban and time to talk to them he would past the administration has
Democratic party, special rural transit, a program to have found they were only flatly opposed such tegislation,
assistant to the state chairman ease regulation of the railroads desperate to earn a decent including the operating assistfor primary campaign ac- and $2 billion in loan . living for themselves and their ance bill now pending in
guarantees to moderni1.e rail families," Shapp said.
House-Senate conference.' '
tivities.

Hearst facing deadline

Wallace could
capture party

Shapp believes Nixon erred
on intentions of truckers

Fallon named

U. S. force ·close to army of junkies, victims

j

&gt;c
c
z:

~

Sec retary of Stale for
Economic Affairs.
- G . Bradford Cook, general

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) "really not a great deal of new
Newspaper publisher Ran- information."
dolph A. Hearst worked
After meeting with the
Saturday against a three-day family , Bates said the FBI was
deadline to make a mult- "making headway " in the
rnillion dollar food handout as search for the heiress, but had
the down payment demanded no definite information on her
by a radi cal terrorist group whereabouts.
holding his 1\idnaped daughter.
He said the agency was
H~arst was "working very checking with persons who
hard to show a gesture of good knew Donald D. DeFreeze, 301
will" in meeting the demands an escaped California convict
of the Symbionese Liberation identified by newspapei's and
Army that kidnaped his ·television swtions as one of the
daughter, Patricia, 19, two kidnapers.
weeks ago, the family said .
Bates said the ~·m didn't
Family spokesman Jay Bos- have " anything specific at all
worth said he did not know linking " DeFreeze or Thero M.
whether the publisher could Wheeler, 29, another black
meet the Tuesday deadline of prison escapee named by the
giving away $70 worth of press, with the Feb. 4 abgroceries to each of Califor- duction.
nia's poor and elderly that
Hearst's own newspaper, the
could cost as much as $400
million.
Tre deadline set by the SLA
falls the day before Patricia's
20th birthday.
"We can't give a specific
date," said Bosworth, married
MONTGOMERY, Ala . ( UP! )
to Patricia's sister, Virginia,
A member of the
23. "I can just say as soon as
Democratic Party's Charter
possible .
14
He's working ver-y hard to Commission said Saturday
show a gesture of good will and Gov . George Wallace could end
go some way in meeting the up controlli ng the party's
miniconvention
next
demands of the SLA."
December
because
liberals
Hearst himself did not meet
with newsmen for the first time likely will stay home.
The mioicQnvention, to be
in a week. A spokesmwn said
he spent a sleepless night and held in Kansa~ City, is for the
purpose of aaoP'ting a party
was tense and tired.
Bosworth said the family and charter. but Wallace aides
the FBI believed a third pur- already arc predicting that it
purled letter from the SLA was could turn into a ''dry run" for
phony. It threatened to kill the 1976 convention . Hodding
Patricia on her birthday Carter Ill, a leading party
Wednesday unless blacks were liberal , said that only Wallace
given control of Pepperdine supporters and some labor
College
in Los Angeles.
factions wi ll show enough
:::::
:;:;:
Charles Bates, in charge of interest to turn out large slates
~
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!) -Democratic leaders ·:&lt;
of the otate legislature sold Saturday West Virginia can .•.:.:.:.• the FBI investigation, told the · of delegates for the Kansas
family Friday night there is City session.
,. supply enough low-f!ulfur coal to meet the electrical power
~ needs of tlie eastern United Slates.
:;:;
~
In a statement to a national emergency conference in ::::
Wa.ohlngton, Senate Preoident William Brotherton, D- :il
•· Kanawha, and House Speaker Lewis McManus, -D - :;:;
Raleigh, also said misinformation on the part of govern- · ::::
ment and IDcluslry has prevenled the state from providing :!!!
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The affidavit filed just before the
this coal.
-:-: 190,0IJO.rnan U.S. fighting force · close of business Friday.
·"West Virginia coal needs a fuller understanding by ® in Germany had become
"I am deeply concerned with
public groups, unlimited by past traditions, mlsln- :;:; something close to an the problem of drug and
formation and false Impressions, and coal broker eon- ~; army of junkies, crim- alcohol abuse," Davison said.
tracts," their statement said.
~!~ inals
and
their
vic- "USAEUR (The U.S. Army in
" West Virginia has the pote'l'iallo become the energy ,W, tims before a stiff new drug Europe) missions are based on
center of the eastern United States," they said.
;~: suppression program was in- the national policy of our
The leaders said by. using low sulfur West VIrginia ~ stituted last September ac- country as an essential
coal, badly needed oil and oatural gas supplies would be
cording to Gen . Michael S. element of NATO . The
freed for other purposes. They said estimated coal :~ Davison,
the
American rPadiness requirements of
reserves In lbe slate are more than l02liilllon tons.
:;:; commander there.
these misswris cannot be
More thao 20 billion lias a sulfur content of '.7 per cent
Davison said in 1972 and 1973 degraded without irreparable
or less, and another %7 billion tons has a sulfur content of ~~ drug abuse was "the single harm to the nation.
between. 7per cent and lper cent,lbey said.
greatest threat to the discipline
"Successful execution of this
By usiJig washillg and cleaning along with slack-gas :;~ and professionalism'' of the ·mission requires a high degree
cleaning processes, they said coal with higher suHur ~~ Army in Europe. Without of individual alertness, wellmnteDis can be reflued lo the point where It can meet ll' saying so, he strongly implied being and discipline . These
almoot. all air poUutlou regulallons.
:~ that, for a time at least, U. S.
considerations were foremost
The two leaden said by opening up more deep Mines ~ forces along the Iron Curtain in my mind when f developed
In West Vlrglola, there would be less reliance on strip ~- were not ready for combat.
and implemented a . highly
mine coal.
:.
Davison, fighting to save the structured and daily program
'
Brotherton and McManus
said lo encourage the use of
;:~:' program despite a court order
to reduce drug and alcohol
West Virglllla coal, long-term contracts and proper prices
:!~ declaring it unconstitutional, abuse to the lowest pos.&lt;ible
are Deeded so tbe coal industry can linance new and ex:;:~ painted an astonishingly bleak
panded mlDlng operatlons.
·
i!! picture of. the narcotics prob- level."
D~ vison sa id drug-related
L~jjlllll•ll88!11lillill
.. &amp;:,~Sii:8®·ill:~~~~:::~=:::=:::;:::=:::=:=:;:::=:=:::!:::=:::=:=:::;:=:::.:;:;::::::::8:=~=~:~=:=:==~:· lem of Gls in Euro pe in a eourt crimes had quadrupl ed over

,~w.~w;:;~~v~;;:=:======;:=~~d·=·=·=-==1

~rE

Pres ident 's older brolher, who
accordin g to the indictment,
received a note from Vesco in
which Vesco threatened to
disclose the secret campaign
mntribution unless the SEC
dropped its investigation.
- Donald Nixon, the President's nephew, who worked as
a personal aide to Vesco and
who was hire9 by Vesco soon
after the SEC investigation
began .
- William J. Casey, who was
chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commissiop during
the time covered by the indictment and who now is Under

:~~:;:s~:~~E%~f;~~~inDealer~
~ e

By HOWARD FIELDS
Doar said there was no
WASHINGTON (UP!) .:... The discussion- and he would not
White House, which has natty speculate-about how St. Clair
refu!lid to give any more would react to a request or
Watergate materials to special subpoena for materials if he
prosecutor Leon Jaworski, may~ere not satisfied committee
be heading toward a confronta- procedures for maintaining
tlon with the House Judiciary their secrecy.
Committee over how to main- After the Doar-Jenner brief·
tain 'tlie secrecy of documents ing, committee members did
requested for its impeachment not express alarm but acknowlinquiry.
edged that the divergent
Rep. J'e~r W•.. Rodino, D· pbsltions of !lie White House
N.J., the Judiciary chairman, and the committee could lead
has made clear his committee to a Conf,rontation.
would not seek approval nor
Moreover, there could be an
even consult the White House internal committee conflict
about any procedures the over access to White House
committee adopts for handling documents, similar to the
infighting over which members
the documents.
The potenllal for a conflict could see FBI files on Gerald
emerged from a meeting L. Ford during consideration of
between James St. Clair, his vice presidential nominaPresident Nixon's chief Water- tion.
gate lawyer, and John M. Doar,
The compromise reached in
special counsel for the commit- the Ford case might serve in
tee investigatioo into possible the impeachment inquiry. Th~t
grounds for impeaching Nix9n, would have only Rodino and
and Albert E. Jenner, the chief Rep. Edward Hutchinson,
Mich., the ranking GOP mem Republican counsel.
Doar and Jenner told com- ber, Doar, Jenner and staffers
mittee niember$ this week that with "top secret" clearance see
St. Clair wanled to protect the all the material, and decide
confidentiality of all tapes, logs, which was relevant for the rest
documents and other records of the panel to cons ider.
provided by the White House.
Jenner said St. Clair's concern
LODGE REOPENED
was 11all-pervasive and overCAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UP!) riding," and tl'oat he wanted to
know what steps the commi tree Salt Fork Lodge at Salt Fork
State Park east of here was
would take.
Rndlno responded the com- reopened Saturday afternoon
mittee would not ''present our after being evacuated for about
rules to Mr. St. Clair for two hours because of a bomb
threat.
approval."

,.1
.

reelection campaign.

Rodino will
forge ahead

!

,.

cash conlribullon to the Nixon

the last 18 months . He said an
''atmosphere of terror'' existed
in Army barracks due to drugs,
and there had been a 170 per
cent rise In hepatitis.
RISE IN HEPATITIS.
Davison's 5,000·word af.
fidavit was sworn out in
Heidelberg last Wednesday
and flown to Washington as
part of an appeal to U.S .
District Judge Gerhard A.
Gesell's order calling aspects
of the drug enforcement
program unconstitutional.
Whether the situation was
actually as black as Davison
made it seem may be open to
question. The document conflicted with earlier Army
estimates fi led during the trial.
The American Civil Liberties
Union IACLU) claimed soldiers' rights were being violated in such practice.c; as stripdown searches of ''soldier body
ca vities," ummnou'nced day

and night "health and welfare"
inspection for drugs, the use of
dogs in no-knock searches of
soldiers ·rooms, bans on antiestablishment posters and
songs, and persecution and
harassment not only of drug
users but all who associated
with them .
Gesell ordered the program
stopped and told the Army to
withdraw a general circu lar
that ordered it established.
Davison pleaded for stay of·
execution pending a decision
by the Justice Department
whetller to appeal.
Gesell rejected the plea as
"offensive" less tllan an hour
after receiving it.
DaVison's description of the
situation in Europe was termed
"astonishing!! by one source
connected,with the case. ACLU
lawyer David Addleston said if
the statements were true " they
have ~ot a worse drug problem

than we had in Vietnam ."
fiscal 1972 and then doubled in
Davison said in the 12 months fiscal 1973 to 5,939. Davison
before his drug program said they appeared to be
started in September, 9,575 Gls doubling again with 5,233 ofwere positively identified as fenses reported in six months
users of heroin or other opiwn- of fiscal t974.
based drugs through urine
Davison said he thinks he has
tests. That was about 5 per cent achieved "a delicate balance
o[ the entire force . The figures ... between enforcement, drugs
also showed that in the last and viofence" . that would be
three montlls of ·1973 urinanal- upset by Gesell's order.
ysis identifications dropped to
Revoking the program, he
1,206, about 40 per cent of the
said,
would cause !jan immedi·
previous rate.
ate
and
dramatic increase of
Those figures didn't include
men caught with drugs or those drug availability " an added
who turned themselves in. that "this could produce an
Comparable figures were re- atmosphere of terror in !lie
porled in Vietnam in height of barracks, adversely affecting
the drug problem there in mid- law .abiding soldiers. Such conditions existed previously."
197 1.
Davison sa id since la."t M&lt;1:,
Cr ime s tatis ti cs Dav1son
alone,
3,888 men have been
gave did not seem nearly as
dismissed
from , the Army in
hopeful .
Drug - relatEurope for unfitness or uned offenses in his command
suitability
and 1,337, or 34 per
jumped from 2,284 in the year
drug users.
cent,
were
ending June 30, 1971lo 2,962 m

'

•"

..

.'

�y

Jl

I
17 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel.,Sunda~ . Feb. 17. 1974

'

"'

\ ·:11

'

,. nl
.

,.
••

"

Devils reign as SEO cage champions
(Continued from page I)
pushed the Devils back on top by 11 poin ts,
37-26, with 3:03left in the period. GAHS led
39-30 after three periods.
With Sickles, Price and Niday leading
the way , GAHS maintained anywhere
from an eight to 15 point spread in the las t
stanza. WHS closed the gap to eight, 44-36,
on a long jumper by Tom Pfeiffer with 6:25
showing on the clock. During the next two
minutes, the Blue Devils scorched the nets
with nine points, limiting Waverly to two,
and that was the ball game.
Valentine's three-point play (4: 15 )
put GAHS on top by 15 points (53-381 and
the Tigers championship string was all

but broken at that point.
GAHS outscored Waverly 21-20 in the
fi nal canto. With 30 seconds left, GAHS
fans chanted "We're Number One ." With
three seconds left , Waverly Coach Hawhce
walked over to Coach Osborne, shook his
hand and gave him a big bear hu g in a fine
act of true sportsmanship .
GAHS placed three men in double
figures in scoring. Valentine led the way
with 19 points. Price addc'li 16 and picked
off 15 of the Gallians 36 rebounds. Niday
follow ed with 14 point.&lt;; and Sickles eight.
Sickles snagged 10 rebounds for the
champs, and -played an excellen t floor
game.

Senior guard Jim Singer assumc(l
control of the ball-handling chores late in
the fourth period and finished the nigh t
with three points. Gary Snowden, 6- 1
sophomore, saw action in the second and
fOurth quarters.
Shoemaker, after a slow star t, ca me
on strong to pace·Waverly's attack with 2:1
points. Joe Holland, 5-11 junior, was the
only other Tiger in double figures with 10
points .
Gallipolis shot a blistering 50 pet. from
the field, sinking 22 of 40 al\empls. The
Gallians even were hotter at the cha rity
line, converting 16 of 20atlempts for 80 pet.
The winners had 12 personals, 36 caroms,

How it went

9-2 - Price

MUSICAL ALARM CLOCKS hal'e been around
ENGUSH SHELF clock in the Grate collec tion
has a lmost a regal look. with crown-like designs a long tim('. This antiqu e features a music box
whieh plays 15 minutes . The roses a nd leaves
across the top .
decora tin g the clocks· '":ere repa inted by a local
artist. ~rs. Ruth Gosney.

THIS WAS THE 30TH CLOCK to enter the Grate
collection . ll was purchased because of Grate's
admiration for fine woods with inlays. An exa mple

THIS TRIM clock with clean lines dates back to
1799. It is the oldest of the 75 clocks in the Grate

collection.

of fine craftsmansh ip.

THE FIRST CLOCK Gene Grate made , th e
obvious success of whi ch inf luenced him undoubtedly u determm mg factoF to become a
collector.

Rare, beautiful antique clocks
•
fill Grate home zn Middleport
with time lies not in the 24-hour

day but in his unusual and
extensive collection of clocks.
The 75 cl ocks ma king up hi s
collec tton, begun actually less
than seven years ago, are
sca ttered throughout Grate's
attractive home at 32 Cole St.
Many are massive and
naturally such a collection
requires a co nsiderabl e

amount of space. G r ate is
planning a special display area
soon fo r many of them
Apparently endowed w1th
ta lent whi ch knows few
boundaries, Gra te has found a
satisfying outlet in securing
antique clocks ~ many of
which are lost in dirt, grime,
grease a nd what-have -y ou
when he gets them ~ and

""

'

..

Catastrophe bill
co-sponsored by Collins

Foote's sales, earnings up

Texan returned to Amarillo

I

Tim e
6:55
6: 55
4: 26

Shor t

2:42

Long

2: 28

( rip

1:07

G-W-Who

11-2- Price
13-2- Pr ice

•
'

I

•

15-2- Valentine

15-4- Shoemaker

7:52
7: 29
6: 59
6: 1 ~ ·

16, 4- Sickles
17. 4.:.:.. Sickles

Free 6 : 05
Free 6:05

17-6-----Shoemaker

l ong 5:46

Cubs rally, top

5: 30
5: 1.4
5:0 1
.4:4 1

Blue Imps, 34-31

4:12

GALLIPOLIS ~ Waverly 's
reserves ral lied from an 18-15
halftime deficit to defeat the
Gallipolis Blue Imps 34-31 in
Frida y's pr e lim ina ry
basketball game here .
The loss left Coach Willard
(Buddy ) Moore's lads with a
l!l-8 season mark. Inside the
SEOAL, the Blue Imps finished
in a tie for fourth place with
Logan with a 7-7 record.
Waverly finished fifth with a fl.
8 mark. Two of the Cubs six
wins were at the expense of the
Blue Imps.
J. Whaley had 12 and S.
Thoma&amp; 10 to,1pace )he Cubs
attack . Brent Saunders had
nine and Brett Wilson and Tony
Folden eight apiece for the
bnps.
Waverly led 9-6 after on e

3: 4~

2: 00
2: 00
1:43

2S - 16 ~ Ho l land

Crip 1:31

26. 16-Val ent ine
27 -1,- Valen t ine
29-16-Valen t ine

Free
Free
Crip

1:21
1: 21
0:09

THIRD PERIOD
G-W- Who
31 -16-Valentine
31 -18- Shoemaker
31 -19- Shoemaker
31 -21 - Shoemaker
31 -22- Shoemaker
31 -24- Swindler

How Time
Crip 7: 41
Crip 7:24
Free 7: 24
Crip 6:51
Free 6: 51
LonQ 5: 36

3l -2b--Holland

Short 4: 27l

32 ·26- Niday
33 -26- Niday

3S-2b--Price

37 -26- Price
37 -28- Tracy

Free
Free

4:1 7
4: 17

3:03
2:1 7

_37 -3G-Shoemaker Long 0:23
39-3G- Niday
Short o, OS
FOURTH PERIOD
G-W-Who

How Time

42 -JQ--Price
43 -JQ--Price
43 -32- Pfeifer
43 .3 4-Shoemaker
44 -34-Va lentine
44 -36-- Pfeifer
46 -36-Price
48-36-Sickles

Fr ee
Free
Long
Crip
Free
Long
Crip
Crip

7JJ9
7:09
6:56
6:36
6: 36
6: 25
6: OJ
5: 04

52-38- Vaten tine
53-38-Valentine
53-4()-Pfeifer
's 4-.4o-Singer
54·42- Shoemaker
54-44- Shoemaker
54-45--Shoemaker
55-45- Niday

(rip
Free
Long
Free
(rip
Cr ip
Free

.4 : 15

56-47- Shoemaker
57-47- Niday

Crip

41 -3G-Sickles

50-3b--Niday

S0- 3B~Holland

56-45-Niday

-.

Crip 3:32

Short
Long

Crip 7, 29

•

WITH Wl':&gt;ot spare wne on tnetr hands, the IDue Devil Disciples (GAHS pep
) read
newspapers prior to Friday's championship game with visiting Waverly. At least that's what
one faithful Disciple said when asked ahout what was going on. Many fans showed up three
hours prior to the game's opening tipoff.

4: 15
4: 06
3: 32
2: 58
2: 29
2: 29
2:23

CHAMPIONSHIP FORM - Despite being closely
guarded by two Waverly players (Joe Holland and Forrest
Cox) Gallia's Gil Price (241 pops in short jumper for two of
his 16 points in Friday's title victory over Waverly .

Free 2:23

Free

1:55
1· 05

SB- 47~ Niday

Free 1: OS

60-47- Singer
60-48--T racy
60-So--Thomas

Crip 0: 43
Free 0: 42
Lonq 0:24

Championship game briefs.

period. GAHS led 18-15 at
halftime. A cold third penod
cost the bnps the game. WHS
led 28-23 after three periods.
The Imps hit 12 of 41 field
goal attempts for 29 pet. The
Imps were seven of II at the
foul circles. GAHS had 17
rebounds, five each by Brent
Saunders and Tony Folden.
Waverly hit 15 of 37 field goal
attempts and picked off 30
rebounds. Hoskins and Jackson
each had eight snags.
Box score:
WAVERLY CUBS (3 4J

S

Thoma s, 4 2 10; Sca gg s, 0 o o.
Whaley . 6-0-12 : Jackson , .J 1 7;
Dyke, 0-0 0; Ha ~ kin s , '1 1 5
TOTALS 15·4·34 .
GAHS BLUE IMP S (31)
Wilson , 4 0-B· ... Folden , 1 6 8 ;
Saunder s, 4-1 ~ . Joh nson, 2 0 4 .
Owens , J.Q 2 ; Bran deberr y, 0 0
0. TOTALS 12 -1-31.
Score bv Qu arter's :

Waverly
GAHS

9 6 13 6 Jd
6 125EI3 1

Cage standings

Long 4:46
Tip 4:30

Free

'

Scor e by quarters:
Waverly Tiger s
2 14 14 20 - 50
GA HS Blue Devils
9 20 10 2I - 60
Offici aIs -- Lowe ll Shope and Di ck Hyland . Portsmou th
Cha pter

How Time

Short
Short
Long
Short

•

' '
'' '
'

SECOND PERIOD

19-6-- Val entine
Long
19-8- Holland
Tip
'21 -8- Nida y
l.:ong
· 21 -lQ-- Hol land
Short
23-lQ--Valen tine
(r i p
23-12- Swindler
Long
23-13- Shoemaker Free
23 -14-Shoem aker Fr ee
25-14- Pr ice
L ong

re sto rin g them to bea uty.
Repairing them is no problem
ei ther . Many times, in a matter
of minutes , he is able to get a
clock running which hasn' t
squeaked out a tick in many
yea rs. This he does with only a
few, small basic tools and he
has had no instruction in clock
repa1r .
Grate , who approaches the
repair of a cloc k a challenge,
REARING HORSES add dimension and
AN EXQUISITE TIMEPIECE ma.de of marble this clock is en hanced by
gains satisfaction in solving the appeal to this antique clock housed in slate. in the
matching marble candelabra . Grate has several heavy marble clocks.
' ' I
~problems in vo lved. Many Grate collection.
times, he find s, a mere matter
like the la ck of oil has ca used a shop in Vienna.
Front Sts. in Middleport
clock to s top running.
The instrument is called a overlooking the Ohio River
Naturally, havin g the desire to repeater because after striking some years back. Few without
repair, plus the ability, makes the hour , the clock repeats the some experience would attack
Grate a pretty consistent striking a minute and a half such a project. Working in the
target for people who want him Ia ter so that one hearing the evenings and on weekends he
to take a look at their clocks. cloc k fr om an other room can built the home inside the old
However, he prefers to spend recheck the count to make sure Purity Ice Cream Co. building ,
what time he has keeping his he is aware of what time it is . owned by the Grate family.
own collection in running orAn ultimate in the collection When the home was done he
is a modern clock ~ a tore down the ice cream
der .
Mrs. Kay Cecil, an antique beautiful, perpetual motion company building . Grate
deal er in Middlepor t, has been timepiece - given to Grate moved into his beautiful home
I
a good source of supply for several years ago by Dr . and in 1955.
.,:.
Grate . He·is in touch with her Mrs . Martin Essex as a
Well known in the comfrequ enlly to pi ck up clocks hospitality gift after Dr. Essex munity for his culinary art,
~
which she may have have had spoken at a high school Grate is a fabulous cook. Each
-. r·
purchased on a buying trip . commencement in· Middleport. year during the Chrisimas
0
G
Frequentl y, the cloc ks he Grate had entertained Dr. and season, his kitchen bulges with
~.
?'
receives are in poor condition Mrs: Essex with a reception his fruitcakes and hand-dipped
1ft It.
but under the Grate hands they following the commencement. chocolates
which
are
turn into timepieces of beauty. Grate , of course, was distributed to friends and
Sometimes, even tiny parts associated with Dr. Essex, relatives. The quantity and
may be missing from the clock Stale Superintendent of In- quality of this tradition is
case . This, too, is no problem. struction in Ohio, when he was overwhebning.
He creates a matching piece in superintendent of schools in
Almost anything can come
his workshop, located in his Middleport some years ago. out of his woodworking shop.
garage, and the clock is made
Another friend, who had Grate maintains a greenhouse
as good as new.
made his own striking clock on his property to preserve
Grate also has found shops in some six years ago, detected beautiful plants through the
Poland, Ohio, and Vienna. W. Grate's interest in the project winter months . Adding to his
Va., as good supply sources. He and gave Grate, as a gift, the accomplishments is his ability
has never attended a public works of a clock so that Grate at the piano and organ. He
sale to buy a clock, but friends could try his hand at creating steers away from the more
are always on the lookout for his own. Grate did and came difficult heavy classics
some addition, or some shop out with an expertly finished because he doesn 't have the
THIS FRENCH CLOC K features an alabaster face and ·
which might have something product. This was probably Ute time for the every day practice
porcelain numerals, The brass inlay around the face is glass
for Grate's collection.
final push in setting Grate into that is required for mastery .
covered. This clock is one of th e favor ites in the Grate
Grate becoming a collector.
Naturally,
the
However, just set any othe;
collection.
assemblage, which began in
The oldest clock in the piece of music in front of him,
1967 , covers a wide range of collection dates back to 1799; and you've got it.
beautiful clocks of just about others are 100 years or older.
Quite capable, Grate has
every description . They run Marble clocks, many Seth been with the Citizens National
from basic straight lines to Thomas pieces, an antique Bank since 1941. He has been
extremely ornate pieces.
calendar clock, musical alarm treasurer or clerk of MidJean McMaster, "originally clocks , carriage clocks, a dleport Village for many years
COLUMBUS ~ State Rep. and treatment, and severe
GENE GRATE WAITED five years before purchasing this beautiful brass antique French
from Middleport who has been miniature wag ~ English, and is now holding the comOakiey
C. Collins I R-Ironton ) stroke, are among many highly
clock. The massive timepiece is called a "repeater" because after the hour chimes, about a
in numerous foreign lands in Dutch, Swiss, French ~ you bined post of clerk-treasurer.
is
·co-sponsoring
legislation to ex pe ns iv e catastro phi c
minute and a hall later, the chimes of the hour just past are repeated . It is believed the clock
her work with the United States name it and it seems to be in Anyone associated with
provide
catastrophic
health illnesses which will be covered
came fr om Amsterdam to the shop in Vienna, W.Va. , where Grate has found other attractive
Diplomatic Corps, was partly the Grate assemblage.
government these days can tell
by the , plan. "Today, many
insurance for Ohioans.
additions to his collection.
responsible for
Grate 's
Not only does Grate probably you that times have changed
worki ng families must make
"A
catastrophic
illness
in
"
relatively new hobby . At have the most unusual and handling records involved
working
Ohioan
's
famil
y
can
th e difficult choice between
Gene 's request she se nt a collection of clocks in Meigs has become big business.
fina ncial ruin or failin g to
cuckoo clock to him and later County ~ he may have the only However, Grate manages this bankrupt that family ," Rep
Collins
said.
"Many
are
left
provide li(esaving treatme~t,' "
an anniversary clock. These extensive one. He belongs to a well also and &amp;till has time for a
with
debts
they
can
ne
ver'
Collins
said. "This choice is not
clocks started the ball rolling. national group of clock and number of hobbies and acpay. "
tolerable."
EXTON, Pa .
Foote Convertible Preferred Stock ~ in Wenatc hee, Wa shin gton
Probably the most elaborate watch collectors.
tivities.
Kidney
di
sease
re
quirin
g
Unde r the proposal Ohi oans
$2.20
·Cumulative
if
Earned,
Mineral Company reported
which will be disposed of in clock of the collection ~ the
Grate 's ability to restore and
When building his own home,
transplant
or
dialysis
,
ex·
would
be able to pay premium s
resultin
g
in
totall973
dividends
that net sales for the year 1973
1974 . Earnin gs from these most showy at least ~ is a big repair antique clocks is Grate using· inlaid tile, inwhen
they pay their state infrom continuing operations of $1 ,011 ,813 on the 459,915 discontinued operations were French
repeater
brass probably no great · shock to scribed in the noor just inside tended cancer hosp italizations
co
me
tax. The modes t
preferred
shares
outstanding
$213,983 in 1973 compared with timepiece which hangs in the anyone because over the years the front entrance , these words
were $86 ,430,556 compared
Vaughans
attend
premiums
would in crease with
1
equivalent
to
$2.20
per
share
1.
with $71,448,700 in 1972. Ne t
$49,602 in 1972 .
Grate living room . The large, he has proven himsell a man of of wisdom :
The
re
fore,
the
am
ount
the
size
of
the family to be
earnings for 1973 were
Sales fr om continuing wide
pendulum
moves many talents .
"With God, all things are western seminar
covered. Th is technique of
$2,811,847 compared to a loss of available for retained earn ings oper ations in the fourth gracefully from the wall clock.
With never having had any possible."
was
$1
,800,034,
equivalent
to
91
collection of premiums would
$6,492,538 reported for 1972
quarter we re $20,867,799 Grate wanted such a clock for background in construction,
He not only believes it, he
cents
per
common
share.
An
eliminate
a great deal of cost in
POMEROY ~ M r. and Mrs.
resulting from an ex·
compared with $19,177,084 in fi ve years before taking the Grate built one of the fine st seems to be proving it.
Leo L. Vaughan, manager of providing the covera ge. The
lraordinary
charge
of alte rnativ e calculation of 1972. Earnings from both plunge_to purchase one from a homes in the county at Cole and
Loga n Monument Co . of state would then contract with
'$6,737,669. The firm operates a earnings per common share for conti nuing and discontinued
the
year
1973,
after
deducting
Pomeroy, have returned frdm private insurance carriers to
plapl at New Haven , W. Va.
operations for the fourth
the
portion
of
earnings
which
Las Vegas where they spent a provide the actual insurance
1973 net earnings consist of
quarter were $1,237,029 (inweek attending meetings of the coverage and benefits.
$2,597 ,864 from con tin ui ng could be considered as at- cluding a net after lax gain of
"Many are proposing one
Monument Builders of North
operations and $213,983 fr om tributable to the 803,349 -$55 2,538 relating to the
distance
;
Jerry
A.
Church,
21,
preferred
shares
I
outstanding
GALLIPOLIS
~
David
Sheff
$23
speed
;
Robert
M.
Bethel,
form
or another of social'ized
America , and stud ied the
discontinued operations. In·
liquidation and write-down of
Rt.
1,
Crown
City,
$28
passing
newest types and designs in medicine . Thi s alt er na tive
eluded in the earnings from 7.7 months of the year ) pur- fore ign in vestments ) com- Wills. 34, Amarillo, Texas, 18, Jackson, $23 speed ; Donald
continuing operations is a net chased by the company pur- pared to a loss in the 1972 formerly of here , waived ex- Ray Perry, 29, Chapmanville, at an intersection; Sidney M. memorials being produced in avoids the creation of a vast
after tax gain of $478,218 suant to a Tender Offer, would quarter. Sales from discon- tradition Friday to Texas $28 speed,; Arthur Perkins, 36, Whitt, 56, Mocksville, N.C., $18 America today. They were in a new expensiv e bureaucracy. 1t
relating to the liquidation. of result in earnings of 34 cents tinued
operations
were . where he had been convicted of Wheelersburg , $23 speed; speed; Jack Howard Davis, 33, delegation of 14 people from will permit our catas$7,732,353 in the 1973 fourth a burglary charge. Wills was Robert Lee Stambaugh, Tl, Rt. Gallipolis, $18 speed, and the Logan Monument Company trophica ll y ill the dignity
Rhodesian Vanadium Cor- per common share .
Sales fr om discontinu ed quarter compar ed
of se lecting their own doctors
poration (a wholly owned
with returned to the Lone Star State 2, Lucasville, $23 speed; Louis Shelia L. Springer, 19, Rt . I, who attended the semi~ar .
Gallipolis,
$23
speed.
oper
a
ti
ons
in
1973
were
M.
by
Deputy
Troy
Powell.
Pasquale,
36,
Gallipolis,
$18
and
hospitals . It will provide a
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J .
subsidiary) and a write-down
$7,198,5 18 in the 1972 period.
Forfeiting bonds in Judge ·speed; Ernest R. Cox, 49,
Ellinger, Mr. and Mrs. Paul E . means whereby the ill party
of notes due from Chrome $30,395 ,606 compare d with
Wayne T. Barrett, President,
Ellinger, Mr. and Mrs. Donald may pay for the service lie
Resources, S. A., both in the $2Pfl5,217 in 1972. These sa les noted that sales in the fourth Robert S. Betz's court were Marysville, $23 speed; Alvin
LADY BIRD ON TUBE
rela
te
to
products
from
the
Janice
M.
Smith,
26,
Rt.
2;
M.
Stump,
Copper
Hill,
W.
Va.,
fourth quarter, and the sale of
quar ter were at near capacity
AUSTIN , Tex. (UP! ) ~ An Ellinger, Mr. and Mrs . receives and maintain his se lf
the company's 50 pel. interest lime plants in Asbury, Ten- levels in virtually all product Gallipolis, $23 speed; Fred W. $18 speed ; John Ralph Sloop, aide to Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson Washington Bowers Jr., Mr. respect."
House Minor it y Leader
in Foote Allevard Fr•nce, S. A. nessee and Kimballton, lines . The o'Utlook for at least Staley , 26, Chauncey , $33 41, Wilkesboro, N. C., $18 said Friday the former and Mrs. George c. Sha IV ' all of
Charles
F. Kurfess said this
Virgi
nia
an
d
the
ferrochrome
reckle
ss
operation;
Rick
speed
;
Frances
L.
Shaffer,
24,
Mr.,and
Mrs.
John
Logan,
and
in the third quar ter. ·
President's wife will appear on
the first half of 1974 indicates a
leg
plant
in
Steubenville,
Ohio,
all
islati
on
represents the
The Board of Directors on
co ntinuati on of such sa les Mosley , Gallipolis, $108 assault Gallipolis , $308, DWI; Marilyn Ute Today Show Wednesday to T. Larimer of Circleville, made
February 6, 1974 declared , " uf wl dch were sold in leve ls su bject, of course, to the and battery ; Alice Will, 46, Pt. K. Hall, 18, Rt . I, Crown City, talk about plans for a up the largest group from any fulfillment of a pledge made 'in
final 1973 dividend of 55 cents IJt&gt;cem her , 1973, and from the Wlcerta in tie:; of the energy Pleasant. $308 DWI ; Bennie $18 speed; Jack C. Sparks, 41, Washington memorial to her single company in Ohio that the Republican Party platform .
'
attended the ·convention,
Van Horn , 38. Flatwoods. Ky .. South Point, $28 assured clear husband.
per share on the compan y\ r · l•nl p~ ~~y· s si licon metal plant cr isis.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
MIDDL EPORT ~ Gene
Grate, the busy assist&lt;mt vic&lt;;,
preside nt of the Citizens
National Bank and long-time
clerk-treasurer of M1ddleport
Village, is one of the few people
around these da ys who has
mor e time than he knows wha t
to do with.
However, Grate's problem

How
Tip
Fr ee
L ong

GAHS- Waverly box.

'

FIRST PERIOD
G· W- Who
2·Q-Va len tine
J.Q-Va len t ine
5-Q-- Niday
] .Q-Si ckl es
7-2- Sw ind ler

Class AA Sectional game at Lucasville on
and 20 turnovers.
Feb. 2:1. The Tigers finished 14-4 on the
Waverly, averaging neMrly 70 points a
year.
game, entered the con tes t with. a 50 oct.
learn shooting average from the field . The
rugged GAHSdefense limited the Tigers to
22 field goa ls in 67 attempts for a cool :12.8
•
pe t. WHS hit 75 pet. of its free -throws. six
SEOAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
of eight. The Tigers had 17 personals, 26
WAVERLY TIGERS ISO)
rebounds, and only fi ve turnovers.
PLAY E·R- Pos
FG -A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Tony Swindler, Joe Holland and Wade Thomil s, I
I2
00
I
2 1
Pfei fer , g
36
00
I 0 6
John Shoemaker eac h had six rebounds Tom
Dou g Tra cy, g
I I
I 3
I
l
3
for the Tigers.
Joe Ho l land. c
58
00
I
6
I
10
Ti
m
Ouduit
,
c
Gallipolis, now 15-3 on the year. wi ll
0 0 0-0 2
I
I
0
Forrest Co)(, I
06
0-0
0
face Meigs at Coal Grove in a Class AA John
0
Shocm&lt;J ker, g
9 27
55
6
I
?3
Sectional Tournament game on Feb. 23. Tony Sw ind ler, g
] . 11 00
6 0 6
Waverly will play Portsmouth West in a TOTALS
22 -67
6-8 17 26 5 50
GAHS BLUE DEVILS t60I
PLAYER- Pos .
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Mik e Sickl es , f
3-7 2 2 3 10
2
8
Tom Va lentine. f
78
56
I
5
19
Gary Snowden , g
0-2 0-0 0
I
0
Gil Pri ce, c
7.10 2 2
3 ll
5 16
Jim Niday , g
66
2 3
6
14
' ll
Jim Si nger. g
1·2
I 4
3
1 5
3
TOTALS
21 -40 16-20 12
36
20 60

'

• •

GALUPOUS ~Rodney Tolliver's GAHS pep band played
"Celebrate" shortly before 9:30p.m. Friday, and celebrate they
did as Blue Devil fans swarmed all over the Gallipolis hardwood
to congratulate the 1974 Southeastern Ohio League champion
Blue Devils.
For tbe older generation, it was a long time coming - 15
yelll'!i to be exact. Last GAHS team to win a basketbaU title was
Mark WyUe's 1958-59 quintet (Ken Bostic, Gary Lane, Dick
Roderick, Joe Dunean, Hank Thompson, Jack MIUs Jay and
Gary Caldwell and Bob Coder). That was the year the present
gym was dedicated .
Coach Jim Osborne's 1974 quintet did it the hard way by
beating defending champion Waverly twice in one season. No
other hardwood team in southern Ohio has been able to accomplish that trick during the past 10 years. Friday's loss left
Coach C. D. Hawhee's Tigers with a four year mark of 53-3 inside
the SEOAL. Gallia Academy's league mark the past four years is
39-17. GAHS is now 2-li against Waverly in league competition.
Could be, if GAHS and .Waverly win their respective Class AA
Sectional Tournaments, the two SEOAL powerhouses will meet a
third time this season in the AA District at Rio Grande. Both,
however, must get through tough sectional play before that
happens.
Earl James, editor of the Waverly News &amp; Watchman, said
he couldn't remember when Waverly had gone five minutes and
thirty-two seconds at the start of a game without scoring a point.
That's what happened here Friday night as the Gallians built up
a 7-0advantage with 2:281efi In the first period. The Tigers were
limited to two points in the fourth quarter by Meigs two years ago
at waverly, but those two points were big ones as Ute Tigers
nudged the Marauders, 51-50. WHS scored only two points In the
first canto Friday.
Gallipolis' 15-3 record equaled last year's record in regular
season play. The Gallians' 13-1 conference mark is the school's
best sine~ John Milhoan and company posted a perfect 14-11
record 18 years ago.
The GaUlpoUs victory increased the Blue Devils league
winning streak to 11 straight. For the se,cond time within live
weeks, Gallipolis snapped a Waverly winning streak. On Jan. 11,
The Blue Devils wrecked the Tigers 4-year, 45-game winning
string. Waverly had won six straight loop games going into
Friday's battle.
Gil Price, 6-5 senior center, ended his four-year varsity
career on Ute home planks in a blaze of glory. Not only did Price
block seven or eight Tiger shots, he was cr-edited with at least
seven assists, picked off 15 rebounds and tallied 16 points. Price
also played a naw!ess defensive game. Waverly, however, forced
Price into committing five turnovers.
·
. 11 should be pointed out, however, that Friday's vletory was
. not a one-man effort. Mike Sickles was outstanding on the
boards. Tom Valentine enjoyed the best night of his ca~eer
scoring-wise. Alid guards Jim Singer and Jim Niday, along with
Gary Snowden had little difficulty with the Waverly p~s.
· ·_ The Devils defensive play was near-perfect. Waverly was
averaging nearly 70 points a game prior to Friday 's game. The
Tigers had been held to less than 60 points only three times all
,year ~47by Athens and 58 by Portsmouth and Gallipolis.
Doors to Friday's championship tilt were opened at 5:30p.m.
The crowd was lin~ up clear back to Fourth Ave. By 5:~5 p.m .,
·the gym was all but filled .
waverly entered Friday's contest with a perfect 8-0 road
mark. GAHS owned an 8-0 record at home. The Tigers finished 63athome.GAHSfinished lhlon the road . 11•e 1974 9.0 home mark
~mpiled by GAHS is the firs~ tim~ the Bl ue Devils have won all
tJ:teir home games 10 one year on the present g)m .
.

CHANT UNDERWAY~ I:llue Devil cage fans chanted
11 We're Number One" after Friday's victory pver Waverly
for Ute .1974 SEOAL tiUe was assured.

OWNERS TO MEET
CHICAGO t UPI) ~ World
Football League owners will
meet Monday for a " nuts and
bolts" business sesson , owner
Tom Origer of the Chicago Fire
revealed Saturday.

AlL GAMES
Team
W L
P OP
Gall ipol is
15 3 11 26 910
Waver l y
u &lt;1 1238 1018
Wheelersburg 13 S 1150 941
Solllh Po int
13 s 1199 992
l ogan
11 7 1180 1142
Portsmou t h
10 7 114 2 1063
Athens
10 7 1017 909
Chesaoea k e
10 7 1022 1011
Ironton
B 10 1068 11 37
Jackso n
5 12 10&lt;17 ll51
3 14 1015 1164
Meig s
Wells ton
1 14 591 1121
Non· League Results :
Clay 58 Whee lersburg 57
Chtsapeake 71 Oak Hill 57
SOutt1 Point 6J Rock Hill 53
SEOAL VARSITY

(Final)

Tea m
W. l
P OP
Gall ipol is
13 1 919 704
Waver l y
12 2 996 778
Athens
8 5 806 685
Logan
7 7 973 89 1
Ironton
7 7 889 865
Jack son
4 9 809 870
Meigs
2 11 784 91 5
Wel lst on
0 11 406 874
Totals
Sl SJ 6S82 6S82
Friday's Results :
Gall·ipolis 60 Waverly SO
Ironton BO Jackson 67
M eig s 72 logan 65
Athens -Weliston. ppnd, st rik e
SEOAL RESERVES

Team

Jackson
Ironton
Athens
Ga llipoli s
Logan
Waverly
Meigs
We ll ston

TOTALS

(Final!
W l
P OP
12 1 676 542
9

5

703

8

5

7
7

7
7

854 SJ 1
575 5JJ

6

70.4

631
629

8 550 517
A 9 548 586
0 11 307 678
SJ SJ 4'47 U47 ·

Friday' s Results:
Waverly 3&lt;1 Gall ipol is 3 1
Ja ckson 59 l r onlor. &lt;19
Logan 42 Meigs 41
Att1 en s -Wel lston , ~p d n . st rike

SEOAL FROSH
Team
W L P OP
Gallipolis
12 1 S48 421
Logan
Athen s

2 730
6 454
6 7 524
5 7 426

12
7

Meigs
Jackson
Waverly
Ironton

Wellston
TOTALS

9

481

52 52 3924 3924

Thursday's Results :

Gallipolis 42 Waverly 31
Jackson 39 Ironton 36
Logan 55 Meig s 49
Athen s-Well ston , ppna , strik e
Saturday's Result :
Logan 31 Athens 19
Feb. 21 Game :
A then s vs . L ogan at R io
Gr and e, AAA Sectional .
Feb . 22 Games:
So uth Po int vs . Chesapeake , at
Coal Grove, AA Sect ion al .
Piketon v s. Wheeler sburg , at
Lucasv ille. AA Sec tion al.
Jackson vs Oa k Hil l, at
Unio to . AA Sectional.
Feb. 23 Games :
Waverly vs
Portsmouth
We st , a t Lucasvil le, AA Sec
ti ona I.
Greenf ield. vs Wel lston , at
Un ioto. AA Sectional.
Gallipolis vs . Me igs, at Coal
Gro ve, AA Sect ional
All tournament games star t
at 7:30p .m .

Sign Up Now!

NIDAY PUMPS ~ Blue
Devil guard Jim Niday tossed
in 14 points during Friday's 6650 title victory over Waverly.
(Sieve Wilson photos).

LYNECENTERSCHEOULE
DATE- GYMNASIUM
.

POOL

SETI'LEMENT HOPED
NEW ORLEANS (UPI )
Officials hoped Saiurday a long
CLOSE D weekend would bring setFeb. 2G-CLOSED
6: 00 JV's vs. Urbana
tlement in the latest labor
8: Cio Red men 'lS. Urbana
dispute
blocking construction
CLOSED
Feb. 2 1~ CLO SE D ,
AAA Sectiona l U.S. Tournc'lrnent
on the $163 million Louisiana
7: 30 Athens vs . Logan
Superdome .
9. 11 a .m . G SI Sw im
Feb. i 2- CL0S ED
Pickets went up outside the
CLOSED
AAA Sect ional H.S. Tou r namen t
7: 30 Lancaster "JS. Chill.icothe
downtown stadium site Friday
Feb. 23- CLOSED
in a con troversy over which of
8: 00 Red men vs . Ohio Dom in ican
CLO SE 0
two unions would be granted
NOTE : Lyne Cente r Gymnas ium and Pool will be c losed
from Wed nesday. Fehruar y 20 unt il Sunda y. Mar ch 10 due t o
righ ts t o handl e certain
~Col lege bac,ket balt games, hi gh sc hool tour namen ts and the
assignmen
ts on the project.
Spri nq Break a t Rio Grande Coll ege.
Feb . 18- 8-10 College Recreat ion
Feb . 1?- 6: 30 Rio Redwomen vs. Xavier
8-10 College Recreation

8-9 Co ll ege Swim
8·9 Open Swim

Redskins turn
back foe, 86· 79
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)
Miami came back from a 42-41
halftime deficit to chalk an 8679 win over Central Michigan
in a Mid:American Conference
basketball game here S;lturday
afternoon.
The victorious Redskins,
powered by the 19-point scoring
efforts of Phil Lumpkin arid
Steve Fields, left the game
with an 11-10 overall record
and a 5-!i mark in the league.
The Chippewas, paced by
George Kubiak 's 18 points, are
now 12-10 in all games and 4-5
again~ t MAC opponents.

S06

481
523
4 10 52 1 563
I 10 240 559

5

Dl.-ner

VALENTINE DRIVES ~ GAHS forward Tom Valentine drives for bucket while Waverly's
Doug Tra cy ( 41) and Joe Hollaud (45) look on . Blue Devil on left is Mike Sickles.

4J(jl
432

Hey kids' Colonel Sanders has a specoal treat
for you and wants to buy your bt rthday d1nner.

Stop by today and sign our birthday book.
When the big day is here, come in and get
your free finger lick in' good Kentucky Fned
Chicken dinner. Tell your f11ends about lh1s
birthday special.

Visit the Colonel

K...,Er;;;d Ckiek•®
BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

�y

Jl

I
17 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel.,Sunda~ . Feb. 17. 1974

'

"'

\ ·:11

'

,. nl
.

,.
••

"

Devils reign as SEO cage champions
(Continued from page I)
pushed the Devils back on top by 11 poin ts,
37-26, with 3:03left in the period. GAHS led
39-30 after three periods.
With Sickles, Price and Niday leading
the way , GAHS maintained anywhere
from an eight to 15 point spread in the las t
stanza. WHS closed the gap to eight, 44-36,
on a long jumper by Tom Pfeiffer with 6:25
showing on the clock. During the next two
minutes, the Blue Devils scorched the nets
with nine points, limiting Waverly to two,
and that was the ball game.
Valentine's three-point play (4: 15 )
put GAHS on top by 15 points (53-381 and
the Tigers championship string was all

but broken at that point.
GAHS outscored Waverly 21-20 in the
fi nal canto. With 30 seconds left, GAHS
fans chanted "We're Number One ." With
three seconds left , Waverly Coach Hawhce
walked over to Coach Osborne, shook his
hand and gave him a big bear hu g in a fine
act of true sportsmanship .
GAHS placed three men in double
figures in scoring. Valentine led the way
with 19 points. Price addc'li 16 and picked
off 15 of the Gallians 36 rebounds. Niday
follow ed with 14 point.&lt;; and Sickles eight.
Sickles snagged 10 rebounds for the
champs, and -played an excellen t floor
game.

Senior guard Jim Singer assumc(l
control of the ball-handling chores late in
the fourth period and finished the nigh t
with three points. Gary Snowden, 6- 1
sophomore, saw action in the second and
fOurth quarters.
Shoemaker, after a slow star t, ca me
on strong to pace·Waverly's attack with 2:1
points. Joe Holland, 5-11 junior, was the
only other Tiger in double figures with 10
points .
Gallipolis shot a blistering 50 pet. from
the field, sinking 22 of 40 al\empls. The
Gallians even were hotter at the cha rity
line, converting 16 of 20atlempts for 80 pet.
The winners had 12 personals, 36 caroms,

How it went

9-2 - Price

MUSICAL ALARM CLOCKS hal'e been around
ENGUSH SHELF clock in the Grate collec tion
has a lmost a regal look. with crown-like designs a long tim('. This antiqu e features a music box
whieh plays 15 minutes . The roses a nd leaves
across the top .
decora tin g the clocks· '":ere repa inted by a local
artist. ~rs. Ruth Gosney.

THIS WAS THE 30TH CLOCK to enter the Grate
collection . ll was purchased because of Grate's
admiration for fine woods with inlays. An exa mple

THIS TRIM clock with clean lines dates back to
1799. It is the oldest of the 75 clocks in the Grate

collection.

of fine craftsmansh ip.

THE FIRST CLOCK Gene Grate made , th e
obvious success of whi ch inf luenced him undoubtedly u determm mg factoF to become a
collector.

Rare, beautiful antique clocks
•
fill Grate home zn Middleport
with time lies not in the 24-hour

day but in his unusual and
extensive collection of clocks.
The 75 cl ocks ma king up hi s
collec tton, begun actually less
than seven years ago, are
sca ttered throughout Grate's
attractive home at 32 Cole St.
Many are massive and
naturally such a collection
requires a co nsiderabl e

amount of space. G r ate is
planning a special display area
soon fo r many of them
Apparently endowed w1th
ta lent whi ch knows few
boundaries, Gra te has found a
satisfying outlet in securing
antique clocks ~ many of
which are lost in dirt, grime,
grease a nd what-have -y ou
when he gets them ~ and

""

'

..

Catastrophe bill
co-sponsored by Collins

Foote's sales, earnings up

Texan returned to Amarillo

I

Tim e
6:55
6: 55
4: 26

Shor t

2:42

Long

2: 28

( rip

1:07

G-W-Who

11-2- Price
13-2- Pr ice

•
'

I

•

15-2- Valentine

15-4- Shoemaker

7:52
7: 29
6: 59
6: 1 ~ ·

16, 4- Sickles
17. 4.:.:.. Sickles

Free 6 : 05
Free 6:05

17-6-----Shoemaker

l ong 5:46

Cubs rally, top

5: 30
5: 1.4
5:0 1
.4:4 1

Blue Imps, 34-31

4:12

GALLIPOLIS ~ Waverly 's
reserves ral lied from an 18-15
halftime deficit to defeat the
Gallipolis Blue Imps 34-31 in
Frida y's pr e lim ina ry
basketball game here .
The loss left Coach Willard
(Buddy ) Moore's lads with a
l!l-8 season mark. Inside the
SEOAL, the Blue Imps finished
in a tie for fourth place with
Logan with a 7-7 record.
Waverly finished fifth with a fl.
8 mark. Two of the Cubs six
wins were at the expense of the
Blue Imps.
J. Whaley had 12 and S.
Thoma&amp; 10 to,1pace )he Cubs
attack . Brent Saunders had
nine and Brett Wilson and Tony
Folden eight apiece for the
bnps.
Waverly led 9-6 after on e

3: 4~

2: 00
2: 00
1:43

2S - 16 ~ Ho l land

Crip 1:31

26. 16-Val ent ine
27 -1,- Valen t ine
29-16-Valen t ine

Free
Free
Crip

1:21
1: 21
0:09

THIRD PERIOD
G-W- Who
31 -16-Valentine
31 -18- Shoemaker
31 -19- Shoemaker
31 -21 - Shoemaker
31 -22- Shoemaker
31 -24- Swindler

How Time
Crip 7: 41
Crip 7:24
Free 7: 24
Crip 6:51
Free 6: 51
LonQ 5: 36

3l -2b--Holland

Short 4: 27l

32 ·26- Niday
33 -26- Niday

3S-2b--Price

37 -26- Price
37 -28- Tracy

Free
Free

4:1 7
4: 17

3:03
2:1 7

_37 -3G-Shoemaker Long 0:23
39-3G- Niday
Short o, OS
FOURTH PERIOD
G-W-Who

How Time

42 -JQ--Price
43 -JQ--Price
43 -32- Pfeifer
43 .3 4-Shoemaker
44 -34-Va lentine
44 -36-- Pfeifer
46 -36-Price
48-36-Sickles

Fr ee
Free
Long
Crip
Free
Long
Crip
Crip

7JJ9
7:09
6:56
6:36
6: 36
6: 25
6: OJ
5: 04

52-38- Vaten tine
53-38-Valentine
53-4()-Pfeifer
's 4-.4o-Singer
54·42- Shoemaker
54-44- Shoemaker
54-45--Shoemaker
55-45- Niday

(rip
Free
Long
Free
(rip
Cr ip
Free

.4 : 15

56-47- Shoemaker
57-47- Niday

Crip

41 -3G-Sickles

50-3b--Niday

S0- 3B~Holland

56-45-Niday

-.

Crip 3:32

Short
Long

Crip 7, 29

•

WITH Wl':&gt;ot spare wne on tnetr hands, the IDue Devil Disciples (GAHS pep
) read
newspapers prior to Friday's championship game with visiting Waverly. At least that's what
one faithful Disciple said when asked ahout what was going on. Many fans showed up three
hours prior to the game's opening tipoff.

4: 15
4: 06
3: 32
2: 58
2: 29
2: 29
2:23

CHAMPIONSHIP FORM - Despite being closely
guarded by two Waverly players (Joe Holland and Forrest
Cox) Gallia's Gil Price (241 pops in short jumper for two of
his 16 points in Friday's title victory over Waverly .

Free 2:23

Free

1:55
1· 05

SB- 47~ Niday

Free 1: OS

60-47- Singer
60-48--T racy
60-So--Thomas

Crip 0: 43
Free 0: 42
Lonq 0:24

Championship game briefs.

period. GAHS led 18-15 at
halftime. A cold third penod
cost the bnps the game. WHS
led 28-23 after three periods.
The Imps hit 12 of 41 field
goal attempts for 29 pet. The
Imps were seven of II at the
foul circles. GAHS had 17
rebounds, five each by Brent
Saunders and Tony Folden.
Waverly hit 15 of 37 field goal
attempts and picked off 30
rebounds. Hoskins and Jackson
each had eight snags.
Box score:
WAVERLY CUBS (3 4J

S

Thoma s, 4 2 10; Sca gg s, 0 o o.
Whaley . 6-0-12 : Jackson , .J 1 7;
Dyke, 0-0 0; Ha ~ kin s , '1 1 5
TOTALS 15·4·34 .
GAHS BLUE IMP S (31)
Wilson , 4 0-B· ... Folden , 1 6 8 ;
Saunder s, 4-1 ~ . Joh nson, 2 0 4 .
Owens , J.Q 2 ; Bran deberr y, 0 0
0. TOTALS 12 -1-31.
Score bv Qu arter's :

Waverly
GAHS

9 6 13 6 Jd
6 125EI3 1

Cage standings

Long 4:46
Tip 4:30

Free

'

Scor e by quarters:
Waverly Tiger s
2 14 14 20 - 50
GA HS Blue Devils
9 20 10 2I - 60
Offici aIs -- Lowe ll Shope and Di ck Hyland . Portsmou th
Cha pter

How Time

Short
Short
Long
Short

•

' '
'' '
'

SECOND PERIOD

19-6-- Val entine
Long
19-8- Holland
Tip
'21 -8- Nida y
l.:ong
· 21 -lQ-- Hol land
Short
23-lQ--Valen tine
(r i p
23-12- Swindler
Long
23-13- Shoemaker Free
23 -14-Shoem aker Fr ee
25-14- Pr ice
L ong

re sto rin g them to bea uty.
Repairing them is no problem
ei ther . Many times, in a matter
of minutes , he is able to get a
clock running which hasn' t
squeaked out a tick in many
yea rs. This he does with only a
few, small basic tools and he
has had no instruction in clock
repa1r .
Grate , who approaches the
repair of a cloc k a challenge,
REARING HORSES add dimension and
AN EXQUISITE TIMEPIECE ma.de of marble this clock is en hanced by
gains satisfaction in solving the appeal to this antique clock housed in slate. in the
matching marble candelabra . Grate has several heavy marble clocks.
' ' I
~problems in vo lved. Many Grate collection.
times, he find s, a mere matter
like the la ck of oil has ca used a shop in Vienna.
Front Sts. in Middleport
clock to s top running.
The instrument is called a overlooking the Ohio River
Naturally, havin g the desire to repeater because after striking some years back. Few without
repair, plus the ability, makes the hour , the clock repeats the some experience would attack
Grate a pretty consistent striking a minute and a half such a project. Working in the
target for people who want him Ia ter so that one hearing the evenings and on weekends he
to take a look at their clocks. cloc k fr om an other room can built the home inside the old
However, he prefers to spend recheck the count to make sure Purity Ice Cream Co. building ,
what time he has keeping his he is aware of what time it is . owned by the Grate family.
own collection in running orAn ultimate in the collection When the home was done he
is a modern clock ~ a tore down the ice cream
der .
Mrs. Kay Cecil, an antique beautiful, perpetual motion company building . Grate
deal er in Middlepor t, has been timepiece - given to Grate moved into his beautiful home
I
a good source of supply for several years ago by Dr . and in 1955.
.,:.
Grate . He·is in touch with her Mrs . Martin Essex as a
Well known in the comfrequ enlly to pi ck up clocks hospitality gift after Dr. Essex munity for his culinary art,
~
which she may have have had spoken at a high school Grate is a fabulous cook. Each
-. r·
purchased on a buying trip . commencement in· Middleport. year during the Chrisimas
0
G
Frequentl y, the cloc ks he Grate had entertained Dr. and season, his kitchen bulges with
~.
?'
receives are in poor condition Mrs: Essex with a reception his fruitcakes and hand-dipped
1ft It.
but under the Grate hands they following the commencement. chocolates
which
are
turn into timepieces of beauty. Grate , of course, was distributed to friends and
Sometimes, even tiny parts associated with Dr. Essex, relatives. The quantity and
may be missing from the clock Stale Superintendent of In- quality of this tradition is
case . This, too, is no problem. struction in Ohio, when he was overwhebning.
He creates a matching piece in superintendent of schools in
Almost anything can come
his workshop, located in his Middleport some years ago. out of his woodworking shop.
garage, and the clock is made
Another friend, who had Grate maintains a greenhouse
as good as new.
made his own striking clock on his property to preserve
Grate also has found shops in some six years ago, detected beautiful plants through the
Poland, Ohio, and Vienna. W. Grate's interest in the project winter months . Adding to his
Va., as good supply sources. He and gave Grate, as a gift, the accomplishments is his ability
has never attended a public works of a clock so that Grate at the piano and organ. He
sale to buy a clock, but friends could try his hand at creating steers away from the more
are always on the lookout for his own. Grate did and came difficult heavy classics
some addition, or some shop out with an expertly finished because he doesn 't have the
THIS FRENCH CLOC K features an alabaster face and ·
which might have something product. This was probably Ute time for the every day practice
porcelain numerals, The brass inlay around the face is glass
for Grate's collection.
final push in setting Grate into that is required for mastery .
covered. This clock is one of th e favor ites in the Grate
Grate becoming a collector.
Naturally,
the
However, just set any othe;
collection.
assemblage, which began in
The oldest clock in the piece of music in front of him,
1967 , covers a wide range of collection dates back to 1799; and you've got it.
beautiful clocks of just about others are 100 years or older.
Quite capable, Grate has
every description . They run Marble clocks, many Seth been with the Citizens National
from basic straight lines to Thomas pieces, an antique Bank since 1941. He has been
extremely ornate pieces.
calendar clock, musical alarm treasurer or clerk of MidJean McMaster, "originally clocks , carriage clocks, a dleport Village for many years
COLUMBUS ~ State Rep. and treatment, and severe
GENE GRATE WAITED five years before purchasing this beautiful brass antique French
from Middleport who has been miniature wag ~ English, and is now holding the comOakiey
C. Collins I R-Ironton ) stroke, are among many highly
clock. The massive timepiece is called a "repeater" because after the hour chimes, about a
in numerous foreign lands in Dutch, Swiss, French ~ you bined post of clerk-treasurer.
is
·co-sponsoring
legislation to ex pe ns iv e catastro phi c
minute and a hall later, the chimes of the hour just past are repeated . It is believed the clock
her work with the United States name it and it seems to be in Anyone associated with
provide
catastrophic
health illnesses which will be covered
came fr om Amsterdam to the shop in Vienna, W.Va. , where Grate has found other attractive
Diplomatic Corps, was partly the Grate assemblage.
government these days can tell
by the , plan. "Today, many
insurance for Ohioans.
additions to his collection.
responsible for
Grate 's
Not only does Grate probably you that times have changed
worki ng families must make
"A
catastrophic
illness
in
"
relatively new hobby . At have the most unusual and handling records involved
working
Ohioan
's
famil
y
can
th e difficult choice between
Gene 's request she se nt a collection of clocks in Meigs has become big business.
fina ncial ruin or failin g to
cuckoo clock to him and later County ~ he may have the only However, Grate manages this bankrupt that family ," Rep
Collins
said.
"Many
are
left
provide li(esaving treatme~t,' "
an anniversary clock. These extensive one. He belongs to a well also and &amp;till has time for a
with
debts
they
can
ne
ver'
Collins
said. "This choice is not
clocks started the ball rolling. national group of clock and number of hobbies and acpay. "
tolerable."
EXTON, Pa .
Foote Convertible Preferred Stock ~ in Wenatc hee, Wa shin gton
Probably the most elaborate watch collectors.
tivities.
Kidney
di
sease
re
quirin
g
Unde r the proposal Ohi oans
$2.20
·Cumulative
if
Earned,
Mineral Company reported
which will be disposed of in clock of the collection ~ the
Grate 's ability to restore and
When building his own home,
transplant
or
dialysis
,
ex·
would
be able to pay premium s
resultin
g
in
totall973
dividends
that net sales for the year 1973
1974 . Earnin gs from these most showy at least ~ is a big repair antique clocks is Grate using· inlaid tile, inwhen
they pay their state infrom continuing operations of $1 ,011 ,813 on the 459,915 discontinued operations were French
repeater
brass probably no great · shock to scribed in the noor just inside tended cancer hosp italizations
co
me
tax. The modes t
preferred
shares
outstanding
$213,983 in 1973 compared with timepiece which hangs in the anyone because over the years the front entrance , these words
were $86 ,430,556 compared
Vaughans
attend
premiums
would in crease with
1
equivalent
to
$2.20
per
share
1.
with $71,448,700 in 1972. Ne t
$49,602 in 1972 .
Grate living room . The large, he has proven himsell a man of of wisdom :
The
re
fore,
the
am
ount
the
size
of
the family to be
earnings for 1973 were
Sales fr om continuing wide
pendulum
moves many talents .
"With God, all things are western seminar
covered. Th is technique of
$2,811,847 compared to a loss of available for retained earn ings oper ations in the fourth gracefully from the wall clock.
With never having had any possible."
was
$1
,800,034,
equivalent
to
91
collection of premiums would
$6,492,538 reported for 1972
quarter we re $20,867,799 Grate wanted such a clock for background in construction,
He not only believes it, he
cents
per
common
share.
An
eliminate
a great deal of cost in
POMEROY ~ M r. and Mrs.
resulting from an ex·
compared with $19,177,084 in fi ve years before taking the Grate built one of the fine st seems to be proving it.
Leo L. Vaughan, manager of providing the covera ge. The
lraordinary
charge
of alte rnativ e calculation of 1972. Earnings from both plunge_to purchase one from a homes in the county at Cole and
Loga n Monument Co . of state would then contract with
'$6,737,669. The firm operates a earnings per common share for conti nuing and discontinued
the
year
1973,
after
deducting
Pomeroy, have returned frdm private insurance carriers to
plapl at New Haven , W. Va.
operations for the fourth
the
portion
of
earnings
which
Las Vegas where they spent a provide the actual insurance
1973 net earnings consist of
quarter were $1,237,029 (inweek attending meetings of the coverage and benefits.
$2,597 ,864 from con tin ui ng could be considered as at- cluding a net after lax gain of
"Many are proposing one
Monument Builders of North
operations and $213,983 fr om tributable to the 803,349 -$55 2,538 relating to the
distance
;
Jerry
A.
Church,
21,
preferred
shares
I
outstanding
GALLIPOLIS
~
David
Sheff
$23
speed
;
Robert
M.
Bethel,
form
or another of social'ized
America , and stud ied the
discontinued operations. In·
liquidation and write-down of
Rt.
1,
Crown
City,
$28
passing
newest types and designs in medicine . Thi s alt er na tive
eluded in the earnings from 7.7 months of the year ) pur- fore ign in vestments ) com- Wills. 34, Amarillo, Texas, 18, Jackson, $23 speed ; Donald
continuing operations is a net chased by the company pur- pared to a loss in the 1972 formerly of here , waived ex- Ray Perry, 29, Chapmanville, at an intersection; Sidney M. memorials being produced in avoids the creation of a vast
after tax gain of $478,218 suant to a Tender Offer, would quarter. Sales from discon- tradition Friday to Texas $28 speed,; Arthur Perkins, 36, Whitt, 56, Mocksville, N.C., $18 America today. They were in a new expensiv e bureaucracy. 1t
relating to the liquidation. of result in earnings of 34 cents tinued
operations
were . where he had been convicted of Wheelersburg , $23 speed; speed; Jack Howard Davis, 33, delegation of 14 people from will permit our catas$7,732,353 in the 1973 fourth a burglary charge. Wills was Robert Lee Stambaugh, Tl, Rt. Gallipolis, $18 speed, and the Logan Monument Company trophica ll y ill the dignity
Rhodesian Vanadium Cor- per common share .
Sales fr om discontinu ed quarter compar ed
of se lecting their own doctors
poration (a wholly owned
with returned to the Lone Star State 2, Lucasville, $23 speed; Louis Shelia L. Springer, 19, Rt . I, who attended the semi~ar .
Gallipolis,
$23
speed.
oper
a
ti
ons
in
1973
were
M.
by
Deputy
Troy
Powell.
Pasquale,
36,
Gallipolis,
$18
and
hospitals . It will provide a
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J .
subsidiary) and a write-down
$7,198,5 18 in the 1972 period.
Forfeiting bonds in Judge ·speed; Ernest R. Cox, 49,
Ellinger, Mr. and Mrs. Paul E . means whereby the ill party
of notes due from Chrome $30,395 ,606 compare d with
Wayne T. Barrett, President,
Ellinger, Mr. and Mrs. Donald may pay for the service lie
Resources, S. A., both in the $2Pfl5,217 in 1972. These sa les noted that sales in the fourth Robert S. Betz's court were Marysville, $23 speed; Alvin
LADY BIRD ON TUBE
rela
te
to
products
from
the
Janice
M.
Smith,
26,
Rt.
2;
M.
Stump,
Copper
Hill,
W.
Va.,
fourth quarter, and the sale of
quar ter were at near capacity
AUSTIN , Tex. (UP! ) ~ An Ellinger, Mr. and Mrs . receives and maintain his se lf
the company's 50 pel. interest lime plants in Asbury, Ten- levels in virtually all product Gallipolis, $23 speed; Fred W. $18 speed ; John Ralph Sloop, aide to Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson Washington Bowers Jr., Mr. respect."
House Minor it y Leader
in Foote Allevard Fr•nce, S. A. nessee and Kimballton, lines . The o'Utlook for at least Staley , 26, Chauncey , $33 41, Wilkesboro, N. C., $18 said Friday the former and Mrs. George c. Sha IV ' all of
Charles
F. Kurfess said this
Virgi
nia
an
d
the
ferrochrome
reckle
ss
operation;
Rick
speed
;
Frances
L.
Shaffer,
24,
Mr.,and
Mrs.
John
Logan,
and
in the third quar ter. ·
President's wife will appear on
the first half of 1974 indicates a
leg
plant
in
Steubenville,
Ohio,
all
islati
on
represents the
The Board of Directors on
co ntinuati on of such sa les Mosley , Gallipolis, $108 assault Gallipolis , $308, DWI; Marilyn Ute Today Show Wednesday to T. Larimer of Circleville, made
February 6, 1974 declared , " uf wl dch were sold in leve ls su bject, of course, to the and battery ; Alice Will, 46, Pt. K. Hall, 18, Rt . I, Crown City, talk about plans for a up the largest group from any fulfillment of a pledge made 'in
final 1973 dividend of 55 cents IJt&gt;cem her , 1973, and from the Wlcerta in tie:; of the energy Pleasant. $308 DWI ; Bennie $18 speed; Jack C. Sparks, 41, Washington memorial to her single company in Ohio that the Republican Party platform .
'
attended the ·convention,
Van Horn , 38. Flatwoods. Ky .. South Point, $28 assured clear husband.
per share on the compan y\ r · l•nl p~ ~~y· s si licon metal plant cr isis.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
MIDDL EPORT ~ Gene
Grate, the busy assist&lt;mt vic&lt;;,
preside nt of the Citizens
National Bank and long-time
clerk-treasurer of M1ddleport
Village, is one of the few people
around these da ys who has
mor e time than he knows wha t
to do with.
However, Grate's problem

How
Tip
Fr ee
L ong

GAHS- Waverly box.

'

FIRST PERIOD
G· W- Who
2·Q-Va len tine
J.Q-Va len t ine
5-Q-- Niday
] .Q-Si ckl es
7-2- Sw ind ler

Class AA Sectional game at Lucasville on
and 20 turnovers.
Feb. 2:1. The Tigers finished 14-4 on the
Waverly, averaging neMrly 70 points a
year.
game, entered the con tes t with. a 50 oct.
learn shooting average from the field . The
rugged GAHSdefense limited the Tigers to
22 field goa ls in 67 attempts for a cool :12.8
•
pe t. WHS hit 75 pet. of its free -throws. six
SEOAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
of eight. The Tigers had 17 personals, 26
WAVERLY TIGERS ISO)
rebounds, and only fi ve turnovers.
PLAY E·R- Pos
FG -A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Tony Swindler, Joe Holland and Wade Thomil s, I
I2
00
I
2 1
Pfei fer , g
36
00
I 0 6
John Shoemaker eac h had six rebounds Tom
Dou g Tra cy, g
I I
I 3
I
l
3
for the Tigers.
Joe Ho l land. c
58
00
I
6
I
10
Ti
m
Ouduit
,
c
Gallipolis, now 15-3 on the year. wi ll
0 0 0-0 2
I
I
0
Forrest Co)(, I
06
0-0
0
face Meigs at Coal Grove in a Class AA John
0
Shocm&lt;J ker, g
9 27
55
6
I
?3
Sectional Tournament game on Feb. 23. Tony Sw ind ler, g
] . 11 00
6 0 6
Waverly will play Portsmouth West in a TOTALS
22 -67
6-8 17 26 5 50
GAHS BLUE DEVILS t60I
PLAYER- Pos .
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Mik e Sickl es , f
3-7 2 2 3 10
2
8
Tom Va lentine. f
78
56
I
5
19
Gary Snowden , g
0-2 0-0 0
I
0
Gil Pri ce, c
7.10 2 2
3 ll
5 16
Jim Niday , g
66
2 3
6
14
' ll
Jim Si nger. g
1·2
I 4
3
1 5
3
TOTALS
21 -40 16-20 12
36
20 60

'

• •

GALUPOUS ~Rodney Tolliver's GAHS pep band played
"Celebrate" shortly before 9:30p.m. Friday, and celebrate they
did as Blue Devil fans swarmed all over the Gallipolis hardwood
to congratulate the 1974 Southeastern Ohio League champion
Blue Devils.
For tbe older generation, it was a long time coming - 15
yelll'!i to be exact. Last GAHS team to win a basketbaU title was
Mark WyUe's 1958-59 quintet (Ken Bostic, Gary Lane, Dick
Roderick, Joe Dunean, Hank Thompson, Jack MIUs Jay and
Gary Caldwell and Bob Coder). That was the year the present
gym was dedicated .
Coach Jim Osborne's 1974 quintet did it the hard way by
beating defending champion Waverly twice in one season. No
other hardwood team in southern Ohio has been able to accomplish that trick during the past 10 years. Friday's loss left
Coach C. D. Hawhee's Tigers with a four year mark of 53-3 inside
the SEOAL. Gallia Academy's league mark the past four years is
39-17. GAHS is now 2-li against Waverly in league competition.
Could be, if GAHS and .Waverly win their respective Class AA
Sectional Tournaments, the two SEOAL powerhouses will meet a
third time this season in the AA District at Rio Grande. Both,
however, must get through tough sectional play before that
happens.
Earl James, editor of the Waverly News &amp; Watchman, said
he couldn't remember when Waverly had gone five minutes and
thirty-two seconds at the start of a game without scoring a point.
That's what happened here Friday night as the Gallians built up
a 7-0advantage with 2:281efi In the first period. The Tigers were
limited to two points in the fourth quarter by Meigs two years ago
at waverly, but those two points were big ones as Ute Tigers
nudged the Marauders, 51-50. WHS scored only two points In the
first canto Friday.
Gallipolis' 15-3 record equaled last year's record in regular
season play. The Gallians' 13-1 conference mark is the school's
best sine~ John Milhoan and company posted a perfect 14-11
record 18 years ago.
The GaUlpoUs victory increased the Blue Devils league
winning streak to 11 straight. For the se,cond time within live
weeks, Gallipolis snapped a Waverly winning streak. On Jan. 11,
The Blue Devils wrecked the Tigers 4-year, 45-game winning
string. Waverly had won six straight loop games going into
Friday's battle.
Gil Price, 6-5 senior center, ended his four-year varsity
career on Ute home planks in a blaze of glory. Not only did Price
block seven or eight Tiger shots, he was cr-edited with at least
seven assists, picked off 15 rebounds and tallied 16 points. Price
also played a naw!ess defensive game. Waverly, however, forced
Price into committing five turnovers.
·
. 11 should be pointed out, however, that Friday's vletory was
. not a one-man effort. Mike Sickles was outstanding on the
boards. Tom Valentine enjoyed the best night of his ca~eer
scoring-wise. Alid guards Jim Singer and Jim Niday, along with
Gary Snowden had little difficulty with the Waverly p~s.
· ·_ The Devils defensive play was near-perfect. Waverly was
averaging nearly 70 points a game prior to Friday 's game. The
Tigers had been held to less than 60 points only three times all
,year ~47by Athens and 58 by Portsmouth and Gallipolis.
Doors to Friday's championship tilt were opened at 5:30p.m.
The crowd was lin~ up clear back to Fourth Ave. By 5:~5 p.m .,
·the gym was all but filled .
waverly entered Friday's contest with a perfect 8-0 road
mark. GAHS owned an 8-0 record at home. The Tigers finished 63athome.GAHSfinished lhlon the road . 11•e 1974 9.0 home mark
~mpiled by GAHS is the firs~ tim~ the Bl ue Devils have won all
tJ:teir home games 10 one year on the present g)m .
.

CHANT UNDERWAY~ I:llue Devil cage fans chanted
11 We're Number One" after Friday's victory pver Waverly
for Ute .1974 SEOAL tiUe was assured.

OWNERS TO MEET
CHICAGO t UPI) ~ World
Football League owners will
meet Monday for a " nuts and
bolts" business sesson , owner
Tom Origer of the Chicago Fire
revealed Saturday.

AlL GAMES
Team
W L
P OP
Gall ipol is
15 3 11 26 910
Waver l y
u &lt;1 1238 1018
Wheelersburg 13 S 1150 941
Solllh Po int
13 s 1199 992
l ogan
11 7 1180 1142
Portsmou t h
10 7 114 2 1063
Athens
10 7 1017 909
Chesaoea k e
10 7 1022 1011
Ironton
B 10 1068 11 37
Jackso n
5 12 10&lt;17 ll51
3 14 1015 1164
Meig s
Wells ton
1 14 591 1121
Non· League Results :
Clay 58 Whee lersburg 57
Chtsapeake 71 Oak Hill 57
SOutt1 Point 6J Rock Hill 53
SEOAL VARSITY

(Final)

Tea m
W. l
P OP
Gall ipol is
13 1 919 704
Waver l y
12 2 996 778
Athens
8 5 806 685
Logan
7 7 973 89 1
Ironton
7 7 889 865
Jack son
4 9 809 870
Meigs
2 11 784 91 5
Wel lst on
0 11 406 874
Totals
Sl SJ 6S82 6S82
Friday's Results :
Gall·ipolis 60 Waverly SO
Ironton BO Jackson 67
M eig s 72 logan 65
Athens -Weliston. ppnd, st rik e
SEOAL RESERVES

Team

Jackson
Ironton
Athens
Ga llipoli s
Logan
Waverly
Meigs
We ll ston

TOTALS

(Final!
W l
P OP
12 1 676 542
9

5

703

8

5

7
7

7
7

854 SJ 1
575 5JJ

6

70.4

631
629

8 550 517
A 9 548 586
0 11 307 678
SJ SJ 4'47 U47 ·

Friday' s Results:
Waverly 3&lt;1 Gall ipol is 3 1
Ja ckson 59 l r onlor. &lt;19
Logan 42 Meigs 41
Att1 en s -Wel lston , ~p d n . st rike

SEOAL FROSH
Team
W L P OP
Gallipolis
12 1 S48 421
Logan
Athen s

2 730
6 454
6 7 524
5 7 426

12
7

Meigs
Jackson
Waverly
Ironton

Wellston
TOTALS

9

481

52 52 3924 3924

Thursday's Results :

Gallipolis 42 Waverly 31
Jackson 39 Ironton 36
Logan 55 Meig s 49
Athen s-Well ston , ppna , strik e
Saturday's Result :
Logan 31 Athens 19
Feb. 21 Game :
A then s vs . L ogan at R io
Gr and e, AAA Sectional .
Feb . 22 Games:
So uth Po int vs . Chesapeake , at
Coal Grove, AA Sect ion al .
Piketon v s. Wheeler sburg , at
Lucasv ille. AA Sec tion al.
Jackson vs Oa k Hil l, at
Unio to . AA Sectional.
Feb. 23 Games :
Waverly vs
Portsmouth
We st , a t Lucasvil le, AA Sec
ti ona I.
Greenf ield. vs Wel lston , at
Un ioto. AA Sectional.
Gallipolis vs . Me igs, at Coal
Gro ve, AA Sect ional
All tournament games star t
at 7:30p .m .

Sign Up Now!

NIDAY PUMPS ~ Blue
Devil guard Jim Niday tossed
in 14 points during Friday's 6650 title victory over Waverly.
(Sieve Wilson photos).

LYNECENTERSCHEOULE
DATE- GYMNASIUM
.

POOL

SETI'LEMENT HOPED
NEW ORLEANS (UPI )
Officials hoped Saiurday a long
CLOSE D weekend would bring setFeb. 2G-CLOSED
6: 00 JV's vs. Urbana
tlement in the latest labor
8: Cio Red men 'lS. Urbana
dispute
blocking construction
CLOSED
Feb. 2 1~ CLO SE D ,
AAA Sectiona l U.S. Tournc'lrnent
on the $163 million Louisiana
7: 30 Athens vs . Logan
Superdome .
9. 11 a .m . G SI Sw im
Feb. i 2- CL0S ED
Pickets went up outside the
CLOSED
AAA Sect ional H.S. Tou r namen t
7: 30 Lancaster "JS. Chill.icothe
downtown stadium site Friday
Feb. 23- CLOSED
in a con troversy over which of
8: 00 Red men vs . Ohio Dom in ican
CLO SE 0
two unions would be granted
NOTE : Lyne Cente r Gymnas ium and Pool will be c losed
from Wed nesday. Fehruar y 20 unt il Sunda y. Mar ch 10 due t o
righ ts t o handl e certain
~Col lege bac,ket balt games, hi gh sc hool tour namen ts and the
assignmen
ts on the project.
Spri nq Break a t Rio Grande Coll ege.
Feb . 18- 8-10 College Recreat ion
Feb . 1?- 6: 30 Rio Redwomen vs. Xavier
8-10 College Recreation

8-9 Co ll ege Swim
8·9 Open Swim

Redskins turn
back foe, 86· 79
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)
Miami came back from a 42-41
halftime deficit to chalk an 8679 win over Central Michigan
in a Mid:American Conference
basketball game here S;lturday
afternoon.
The victorious Redskins,
powered by the 19-point scoring
efforts of Phil Lumpkin arid
Steve Fields, left the game
with an 11-10 overall record
and a 5-!i mark in the league.
The Chippewas, paced by
George Kubiak 's 18 points, are
now 12-10 in all games and 4-5
again~ t MAC opponents.

S06

481
523
4 10 52 1 563
I 10 240 559

5

Dl.-ner

VALENTINE DRIVES ~ GAHS forward Tom Valentine drives for bucket while Waverly's
Doug Tra cy ( 41) and Joe Hollaud (45) look on . Blue Devil on left is Mike Sickles.

4J(jl
432

Hey kids' Colonel Sanders has a specoal treat
for you and wants to buy your bt rthday d1nner.

Stop by today and sign our birthday book.
When the big day is here, come in and get
your free finger lick in' good Kentucky Fned
Chicken dinner. Tell your f11ends about lh1s
birthday special.

Visit the Colonel

K...,Er;;;d Ckiek•®
BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

�'.

•
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. '·"

,.

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I

18 y- The Stmda)· Tin~.s. &amp;·ntinl\l, Su~da~' , F l't' . l i .·1!11~

Aaron

won~t

.

'

Divorce in wa·y
of preparation

be ·in lineup for

'

•

first three games In Cincy
ATLANT-\ (UP!) - The
Allanta Braves, anticipating
flak from several different
directions, finally decided
Saturday that Hank Aaron,
nudging Babe Ruth for the alltime home run mark, wiU not
start any of the team's first
three games in Cincinnati at
the start of the 1974 season.
The Braves announ ced
Saturday he will start his first
game of the 1974 season when
the Braves open at home
against Los Angeles Monday,
April 8. NBC-TV had already
announced the April 8th game
will be nationally-televised.
But Aaron will be ava ilable
fo r pinch.Jritting duties in the
three road games at Cincinnati
which precede the 11-game
homestand.
The Braves' action is expected to cause some controversy around the league
since the Reds are expected to
be in a tight pennant race with
Los Angeles, Houston and San
Francisco in the NL Western
Division.
With Aaron out of the lineup
- except fo r pinch-hitting
duties - Cincinnati should
presumably have an edge in
the first three games. Aaron
US.l_llllly hits well in Cincinnati's
Riverfront Stadiutn.
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
was traveling tor ¥ lorida
Saturday and was unavailable
for comment.

A spokesman for the commissioner said, 'Any official
4

comment will have to come
from the Commissioner. I
know how I feel personally
about it but the Commissioner
has to make any official

comment."
Baseball has always been
proud of the integrity of the
pennant race coming above
any individual records.
But Manager Eddie Mathews
insisted that winning the
games in Cincinnati is more
important than when or where
the Hammer breaks Ruth's
r~rd.

Mathews said he would not
save Aaron for the Atlanta fans
if he felt the Mobile, Ala. native
could mean the difference in
one of the Cincinnati games.
He said he wouldn't hesitate
to call on the 40-year-old
slugger after the seventh in-

nicg 1f H wm hung ln the
balance.
But Mathews said , " I think

one thing that a lot of people
have overlooked is that Hank
silting on the bench tas a
possibl e pinch-hitler) slops
managers from making moves
they might want to make."
Braves'

c ha irma n

Bill

Barllolomay , who made the

fctn~

announcement Saturday after

plans," he said.
Aaron is one home r un shy of

Manager Eddie Robinson and
Mathews, cautioned that

lying Rulli's career mark of 714
and "Will be available as a
nin &lt;'h Hi!rr rnr the road games
in Cincinnati and part-time
play if required by Manager
Eddi e Mathews, "
Bartholomay said .
Mathews said he expects
Aaron to topple the mark in
Atlanta, but he does not think ·
Aaron will play all 11 games in
the home stand.
"I think he ·more or less
belongs to the people of the
southeast," he sa id .
The Braves host Los Angeles
for four night games, then play

training could force a change.
" ll is unprecede nted to
speculate on an opening lineup

at this early da le, but Braves'

Notre Dame holds
off late SC rally
play , but that was as close as
the Gamecocks were to get.
Notre Dame hit six foul shots
within the la•l min ute and a
half to clinch the victory.
. It was U1e 20th win of the
victory over South Car olina
season for the Irish.
Saturday.
Shuniate was able to move
South Ca rolina, down by as
much as 13 points midway almost at will underneath the
through the last half, battled basket despite double coverage
hack to within lour, 66-1i2, with by South Carolina, which saw
about a minute and a half to its · 34 game home winning
streak broken. South Carolina
is now 17-4 for the season.
Notre Dame went into the
halftime with a 31-2ti lead and
gradually built it up, primarily
on the strength of Shumate, to
a 54-41 bulge . But forward Alex
English hit all six of the
LAKE PLACID, N. Y. (UP!) Gamecocks' next baskets to
- World Champion Wolfgang pull South Car olina within
Zimmerer, with the fastest range.
time of the day, went on to win
English finished the game
the two-man Diamond Trophy with a total of 30 points.
International Bobsled Races at
The game saw the return of
Mt. Van Hoevenburg Saturday. Frank McGuire to the
Zimmerer, with brakeman Gamecocks' helm. McGuire
Peter Utzschneider, compiled was recently hospilalized for
a total time of 4 minutes 34.39 abdominal trouble and there
seconds for the four runs down was doubt up to game time
the mile-long chute of ice. The whether he would be able to
West Germans had the best direct the Gamecock activity .
time of the day for any of the 15
Adrian Dantley had 17 points
sleds in competition, with a for Notre Dame, making 11 out
clocking of a I minute 8.01 of II free throws, all in the
seconds.
. second half . Gary Brokaw also
In second place, more than a contributed 15 points to the
full second behind Zimmerer, Irish scoring. Gamecock capwas the Austrian sled piloted lain Brian Winters scored 16
by Werner Della-Karth.
points before foulin g out near
The Diamond Trophy Races, the end ol the game, while
run under good conditions in 2ll- scrappy guard Mike Dunleavy
degree temperature, marked had 13.
Zimmerer'~ first competition
The win raises Notre Dame's
since winning his third world record to 2ll-l with the only loss
two-man title at St. Moritz last coming to top ranked UCLA.
COI..UMBIA, S.C. (UP!) Clutch lou! shooting and a 26poinl performance by center
J ohn Shumate gave thir d·
ranked Notre Dame a 72-SII

Zinunerer takes

bobsled crown

month.

HOUSTON
IUP! l
Heavyw eig ht
champion
George
Foreman
sa id
Saturday he would be ready for
his March 26 title bout against

rl&lt;'serv£' to know our

consulting \~ith A11ron, General
player injuries during sprin g

Ken

in

Caracas,

11

1t's more than just this one

light," he said. "I have to be a
man for a long time."

"COME BACK OOWN HERE" - could be the words of
Highlander Phil Lewis, as he attempts to stop this shot by
Easter~'s Larry Atherton in action during the Eagles' 54-33
wm Fnday mght. The Win assured Eastern of at least a
second place tie in the final SVAC standings. Pboto by Katie
Crow.

Foreman said the courts
have a history of taking advantage of boxers . He said it
would be better to finish the
proceeding quickly .
"! would prefer to stay
here," he said. "! don't want to
take a chance of having to

Watson big story
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A
halfway leader Dave Stockton
shot a birdie and a double
bogey on his first two holes or
the third round of the $150,000
Glen Campbell-Los Ange les
Open Saturday, but the big
story was young Tom Watson.
Watson, a 25-year-old former
Stanford University golfer,
carded a hole-in-one on the par
three, 234-yard fourth hole
using a four wood. He started
the day fou r strokes behind
Stockton, who had a 36-hole
total of 68-68-136.
It was the second tour ace in
1\fo weeks. In last week 's Bob
Hope Desert Classic, Clive
Clark had a hole-in-one but
didn't make the cut at Palm
Springs, Calif.
After his first seven holes,
Watson went three under for
the tournament, gaining one
stroke on par Saturday, a
sunny day with temperatures

tinues.
The champion said he would
prepare for the Norton fight no
matter where he is.
"I'm staying in \)le best
shape I caD," he said. " I'm .1 •
training in earnest now ."

Venezuela , despite a prolonged
"!feel I could beat justa bout
divorce proceeding that has
anybody
in the country right
interrupted his trainin g
now . l just have to cut down on
schedule.
a
couple of those steaks a day,"
''I 'm just preparing to box,' '
he
said .
Foreman said. "I have to boi&lt;
whether I go to court or not.
"But I'm not worried. I'll get
in shape lor the light."
During a special Saturday
session, Domestic Rela.tions
Court Judge Wells Stewart
offered to delay the proceeding
until alter the fight but
By
Foreman refused.
"I would rather fight it out
TERRY
now and go through the agony
JOHNSON
of it and possibly lose the
:.I
light," Foreman told the court.

Cincinnati in a three-game
weekend series and wind up the

&lt;homestand with four night
games against San Diego.
Bartholomay also noted that
"The city of Atlanta and the
Chamber of Commerce have
designated opening night as a
salute to Hank Aaron which
will properly dignify and
recognize his outstanding
accomplishments ."

Norton

in the 60s and little wind as in
the first two roUI)ds.
Stockton had a birdie on the
par five , Sill-yard first hole, but
took a six on number two, a 469-

Royals' Patek
ends holdout

share my earnings."

yarder.
After three holes Stockton
was five under for the tournament over the demanding
Riviera Coun1ry Club 'course.
Johnny Miller, who started
the day one shot behind
Stockton, also was five under
after three holes, bogeying the
first hole and getting a birdie
on the scond. He was playing in
the same threesome as
Stockton.
Jim Wiechers , tied with
Miller starting the day, had
lost a stroke to par through
four holes.

Judge Stewart granted the
divorce Wednesday, but
Foreman and his ex-wife,
Adrienne, have failed to reach
an agrement on the division of
property.
Foreman 's attorneys con.

tend their client is almost
broke. They said it would be at
least Monday before they could
secure copies of necessary

financial records to present to
the court.
Because or a crowded court
docket, Judge Stewart appointed a substitute to hear
evidence on the property
settlement.
Attorney Robert Lord said
Foreman possibly could return
to his California training camp
while the proceeding con-

Knick win

:e~~:arr~~:;:~po~no~~~~~Gophers

tapered of! tn the fourth .
quarter when be was held to
·
just lo~r poinls.
.
Frazter sc~ed 31 pomts and
EAST LANSING, Mich.
Monroe tallied 23 for New (UP! )
Minnesota's
York. Bill Bradley chipped in streaking Gophers upset Big
wtth 19.
Ten tltle-minde.d Michigan

Favorite holds on in handicap
BOWIE , Md. (UOI)
Euonymus, the odds-on
favorite, held on gamely in the
stretch Saturday at Bowie to
win the $23,450 Conniver
Handicap for Maryland-bred
fillies and mares.
Settling into the stretch with
a 1\iz.Jength lead, the :&gt;-year-old
daughter of F.urastian-Billy's
Pet lasted to score by a head in
the I !-16th mile race.
Sarah Percy rallied from last
place in the field or five sta rters to finish second withNaleesa five lengths f ;u·th~ · r

hack in third.

Native Go Go and Marinade
completed the field.
Euonymus, ridden by Herb
Hinojosa, and carrying top
weight of 115 pounds, paid
$3.80, $3.00 and $2.20 in posting
her first win this year in three
· starts.

•
The winner sped the dis lance
in 1:47 to ea rn first money of
$13,942.
Sarah ' Percy, at !5-'1 the
lon ~cst shot in the field , paid
$6.40 and $2.80, with Naleesa
Po)•mg $2.40 to show.

.

nz·p M.S·U

...

State. Saturday afternoon, 56SO, wtth a 29-pomt performance
by jumor forward Phil Filer.
H was Minnesota 's fifth
victory m Its last six conference game and moved its
league re~ord to 5-5 and 11-9
overall. Mtchtgan State slipped
to 7-3 in the Big Ten and 12-8 on
the ~ea~on.
,
M~chtgan
State s Mike
Robtnson was held to eight
points, the lowest output of his
collegiate car~.er . Minnesota's
conference scoring leader,
Dennis Shaffer, was limited to
six points.
Both teams started out
sluggishly in the first half.
Nearly three !llinutes elapsed
before the first points were
scored. The Gophers suecessfully
s~ ow e d
down
Mtchigan Stat~ s run-and-shoot
game and held onto a 211-26
halftime lead.
.
Mtnnesota contmued its
deliberate, slow-poke offense

.
in the second half and built up
its largest margin of the game,
38-30 with J3:45left.
Th~ rattled , Spartans,
however, put a full-&lt;:ourt press
on the Gophers and battled'
hack to knot the score, 38-38.
Filer hit his 11th consecutive
shot from the floor with less
than two minutes left to give
Minnesola a 48-46 edge.
Filer put Minnesota up by
five, 55-liO, by hitting two free
throws with 32 seconds left and
another with 17 seconds
remaining. · Saunders sealed
Michigan State's' doom with
two additional charity tosses in
the waning seconds.
Filer's output. was a career
high. He was averaging only
6.9 Big Ten points prior to the
game. His IS rebounds was also
well above his 4.6 average. ·
Minnesota , outrebounded
Michigan State 39-18. The
Spartans pulled off only four
rebounds in the se~ond half.

,,

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·-

~

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a

success.

The Meigs Legion team has averaged 25 games a season over
• the past 8 years, compiling a record of 12il-82-2, while competing
against 30different Legion teams from Ohio, Kentucky and West
Virginia.
Mel Clark, former major league with the Phillies, coached
the ftrst three teams, assisted by Russ Moore, now the principal
at Meigs Junior High School.
George "Nessie" Nesselroad has coached the team since
with the help of assistants Mike Werry, Dick Werryand Rod
Karr.
Nessie's record over the past five years is 84~2-1.
Boys from the old Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland High
Schools, along with the new Meigs High, Eastern, Southern,
Wahama, Pt. Pleasant, Kyger Creek, Southwestern and Gallia
Academy have participated in the Meigs Legion baseball
program. One Meigs Legion product, Tommy Spencer of
Gallipolis, is playing professional hall with the Three Rivers
Aigles of the Cincinnati Reds organization.

BOIL OUT

MAIN OFFICE •
SECOND AVE.

RECORE
REPAIRS
OPEN
9:00 a .m.to6:00 p.m .
Closed
Thurs. &amp; Sun .

Rt. 7 next to
Old Silver Bridge

us easy

to assemb le

AUTO' BANK··
THIRD AVE~
VINTON BRANal.
''110 YEARS OF. SERVICE'' VINTON, OHIO ;
·.·

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are to
OS

~AMPS AUTOGRAPH GAME

BALL - Members of the 1974 SEOAL championship Blue
Devils basketball team autographed the game hall after it was auctioned of! to Vance Johnson
(right) during Friday's ·post-game booster club meeting at Oscar's Restaurant. Johnson
purchased the ball for $385. Proceeds will help finance the 1974 All-Southea stern Ohio League
cage banquet, to be held in Gallipolis during the first week in April. Congratulating Johnson on
left is GAHS coach Jim Osborne.

7l I
l '~

.
THANK YOU ...
Many thousands of men and women give countless hour s of
voj unt eer effort to make boys' baseball possible.
The mother who takes time from a bu sy diry of homemaking
to wash or mend a boy 's uniform, the tired father who takes time
after working hours to help supervise practice. or build a
baseball fi eld, the merchants and civic groups who give their
share to provide good equipment. tho se without children who
give freely of the ir time and money. those who labor late hours
over financial and administrat ive problems , those who ma intain
the playing area, operate the concess ion stands and repair
equipment and those who can· only sit in the stands and cheer ...
all are a vital part of boy s' baseball.
WITHOUT THESE PEOPLE. MOST OF WHOM SERVE
WITHOUT RECOGNITION. Ameri ca n Leg ion Baseball could
not ex ist to help develop better boys today .. and better men
tomorrow .
The America n Legion

Southern will
host tourney
sponsored by the Southern
Athletic Boosters, is scheduled
for March 4, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 13
and 14.
The competition will be
divided into two divisions division A, which will consist of
teams contal!iing players with
college · experience; and
division B; which will be
•
comprised of teams with no
''
college
players.
Falcons trip
Trophies will be awarded to
'
the champion and runner-up in
Kent, 80-69
each
division, along with in• ;' KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Bowl- dividual · trophles to the
ll!g Green's Cornelius Cash champions of each division.
fCored 21 points and teammate
In addition, an AllMark Cartwright 18 as the Fal- Tournament Team will be
ions downed Mid-American selected along with a Most
Conference rival Kent State, Valu.able Player from each
~9, here San;rday,
division .
• The win left Bowling Green
The en1ry lee is $30 and the
with a 14-11 overall record and a tournament drawing will ' be
i-4 mark in the league.
held at South~rn High School
: The Golden Flashes, now 8-13 on Sunday, Feb. 24, at 4 p.m.
all games and I-ll in the
Anyone wishing further
~AC, were led in the scoring information should contart
;&lt;&gt;Iumn by Dennis Odie with 22 Wolfe during the day at ·949points.
4H71, or in the ·evening at 992The t.lro teams were lied, 3:&gt;- i~ Z:t
3!&gt;, at halftime .•
RACINE - An Independent
J;!asketball Tournament to be
held at Southern High School in
early March has been announced by Southern Athletic
Director and head basketball
&lt;:each Carl Wolle.
' The tourney, open to all area
'
kldependent
cage teams,

3 LOCATIONS
TO sERVE YOU! ·

Score at half :
Rio 56 Wil ber-f orce 46.

::::::::,
.
:·:·::::
The Metgs County American Legion baseball team enters its
ninth consecutive season of summer base hall this year, again
sponsored by Drew Webster Post No. 39 of Pomeroy and FeeneyBennett Post No. 128 in Middleport.
The baseball commission governing the program consists of
Norman VanMatre, Clyde "Doc" Ingels and Art Stobart from the
Middleport post, with Don Hunnel, Rod Karr and George
Nesselroad representing the Pomeroy post.
Over $7,000 has been put into t'his program down through the
years, plus many volunteer hours, travel and other
miscellaneous donations. all of which have made this program

Note: The f6\ lowing me ssage has been printed on the back of
the State Ru le Book for Am erican Leg ion baseball. I th ink it te ll s
the story of the excellent summer program available to our area
youth.

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The Meigs Legion baseball program has no connection with
the Meigs Babe Ruth team now being formed, although both
programs are for boys in the same age group.
Any boys having questions concerning the Legion baseball
team should contact any of the commission members listed
above .
In mentioning the success of the Meigs American Legion
baseball program, Hunnel does not mention himself. For eight
years, going on nine, Don Hunnel has done an excellent job as
business manager of the Legion teams, and it's about time he
gets some recognition himself.
Besides scheduling, making sure there are enough balls,
hats, pine tar rags, etc., Hunnel is in charge or making sure
everything runs smoothly. He has done a great job serving the
boys of Meigs, Gallia, and Mason Counties for eight years.
I'm sure everyone connected with the Legion baseball
program feels the same way, and join me in saluting him for his
outstanding performance, and hope he continues for at least
eight more years as Legion baseball business manager.

Phone 614 -446-3547

..
r

By Denny
Fobvs
-

General Manager Cedric
Tallis said after a meeting with
Patek, "I am very happy.
Everything has been resolved
to our satisfaction and to the

Gallipolis, Ohio

I

Mitchell. 7 2 16 ; Jones, 'l 1 5 ;

M c Hc th , ~· 1-11 ; t;o yktns, 10 -0?0 ; Gr een. -t 1-9. Boddi e, 1-0 -2;
Per due, 4 2 10 : Hunter, 5-2-12 ;
Bea ve r s, 55 15. TOTALS 4.3- 14·

'

""'~

vice versa.

..

2110 Eastern Avenue

got what I think was fair,"

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Bob Martin poured in a game- ,
high 38 Defiance points here
Saturday afternoon to lead the
Yellow Jackets to a 116-112
Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
win over Anderson (Ind.).
Bruce Baer chipped in with
29 Defiance points to help lift
the Yellow Jackets to an 18-4
overall record and a 1:1-3 mark
in. the league.
The Ravens, paced by Art
Larson and Ed Jenness with 32
points apiece, are now 11-15 in
all games and :&gt;-JOin the HBC. ,

·

,:·:·:·:·:
::::::

..

Jackets outlast
Anderson 116-112

FLYING EAGLE- Eastern guard Greg Bailey (22) is on the way down alter he vaulted
high in the air in an attempt to force a had pass by Southwestern's Mike Crouse (with hall) as
fellow Eagle Steve Goebel moves in to help out. Eastern won the Friday night battle :;o?J3
Photo by Katie Crow.
'
·

!B~l lt

...

Patek batted .234 in 135
games last year and had five
home runs and 45 RB!s.
The Royals also signed
rookie pitcher Randy Hammon
Saturday, leaving the team
with four unsigned players,
including Cookie Rojas, who
with Patek forms the team 's
double-play combination.
Hammon is a 22-year-old
right bander who had an 11·10
record with Jacksonville in the
Southern League last year,
including two one-hitters and a
2.15 earned run a~erage.

Alb•1nese. -13 11 ; Har f, 1 o 11.

Ill

I'm ready to go."

~~ r

Monroe pace

norts
:I-:·[:-~:: S~:I:'

said Patek, who has led major
league shotstops in double
plays the last three years. "I'm
happy, the club's happy and

ference~ .

Bo ll inger, 3-0-6 ; Lam ber t, / 2 1
Wedn esday in a Mid-Ohi o 35
; No e. 9-6 -2&lt;1 ; Stewart. 411 17.
Conference gam e. Ohi o Smi t h, 3 0 6 ; Sa nd er s, 1-0 2,
Dominican is at Rio Saturday . F.1usnaugh, 3-0-6; Swinehart,
I 1 4. TOTALS 37-36-110.
RIO GRANOE (110)
WILBERFORCE I 100) -

~~fi~!=;m;mm~~~~r~~;~~;r~~;l;~;l;l;~l;~;;~~~~~l~~~?:~;~~~;1~i~l~i1~ii~1~~;~~f.i;~m;mmm;m~~~~i~ml~;m;~~fili~~~

In 1920 , the Pic Pic, an
imported automobile. from
France,
with
special
custom -built body. special
engine, pointed radiator,
wire wheels with clincher
ti res and a spare tire
mounted on the side, was
fascinating many of the
we ll -to-do people . who
wanted something dif ·
ferent than the run -of-the·
mill t ype American cars.
Thi s distinctive automobile
was chauffeur driven and
featured a speaking tube
for co mmunica tion · be tween passenger and ·
chauffeur.
If . you Want something
different in a home today,
you must visit us to get a
l ir st hand look and detailed
,.
information about mobile
,.
homes . These custom -built,
~ual l ty constructed homes
come completely fu r "'
nished, are designed end
built fo r pract ic al but
"
., .
pleasa nt living, with extra
tou ches of modern conveniences and luxury
comfort. as a bonus.

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES

Albanese, wiU1 11 and Jim and !.amberll 2. Rio hi t :17 of 71
field goal allempl' for 52 pel.
Stewart with 12.
Tournament.
Allhe charily line, the Redmen
Rio
led
56-46
during
the
Wilberforce is now 7-12 on the
cashed
in on 36 of 46 attempts
ha lftime intermission .
year.
The Redmen picked oil 54 for 78.3 pet.
Also finishing in double
Rio Grande will host Urbana
figures for Ri o was Paul rebounds. Noe pulled down 20
post-season NAJA District 22

COLUMBUS - Ron Lambert
Lambert pumped in 3S
and Jimmy Noe combined for poi nts. hitting 21 of 23 free
59 points here Friday night as throw attempts. Noe added 24.
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
It was Rio's 12th victory
Grande College Redmen aga inst 10 setbacks and the
outlasted host Wilberforce 110- lriumph gave the Redmen an
100.
inside track for a berth in the

Nessie will be the coach again this year, for the sixth consecutive year, and Rod karr will again be his assistant. A sign-up
will be held in mid-April lor all boys wishing to participate in the
program this summer.
All boys born on or since August I, 1955, are eligible and must
turn in a certified birth certificate.
The season begins the first weekend in June .
Nesselroad and business manager Don Hunnell attended the
state baseball commission meeting in Columbus, Feb. 9, for rules
interpretation and clarification of playing regulations .
New rules adopted at that meeting include the addition of
metal hats in Legion baseball and a rule stating that out of state
residents will not be permitted to play on Ohio Legion teams and

KANSAS CITY, Mo. I UP! )Shortstop Fred Patek and the
Kansas City Royals came to a
contractual agr e ement
Saturday, bringing an end to
the arbitration of their dif-

Frazier and

Redmen outlast Bulldogs; Lamb'ert has 35

.

player's.''

NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York Knicks guards Walt
Frazier and Earl Monroe got
on the scoring track Saturday
with a 54-point total to derail
the Golden State Warriors 117107 in a National Basketball
Association game.
New York's offensive tandem punch prevailed as Rick
Barry scored 38 points for the
Warriors, who fell into a virtual tie with Los Angeles in the
torrid battle for the Pacillc
Division lead.
A 16-5 sUrge was the telling
blow for New York as the
Knicks boosted a . 7&amp;-7S advantage to 94-110 over a fiveminute span covering the last
half of the third period and the
early part of the fourth
quarter. A !:&gt;-foot jumper and
two foul shots by Frazier
triggered the rally.
Cazzie Russell, who scored 19
points, and Barry kept Golden
State in the game with some
third quarter sharpshooting as
they accounted for all but two

'

19 - ThcSundayTimes- &amp;•nlincl,Sunday, Feb. J7,1974 ·

look al ..
EFFORTLESS ASSEMBLY

l
ar and edges Clemson
Y

CLEMSON, S. C. (UP!) Sophomore John Lucas
collected three points in the
closing 'l1 seconds to give sixthranked Maryland a narrow 5654 Atlantic Coast Conference
win over Clemson here
Saturday.
Lucas, the Terps' leading

scorer coming into the contest,

on lop 55-54, then hit the first of of the contest.
Wayne Croft, the Tigers'
a one·and-one with three
scorer with 18 points,
leading
seconds to play to give the
collected
six of those points in
Terps' their 17th victory in 21
the
last
rew minutes of the
outings.
game, givin g Clemson the lead.
Bu t Clemson 's lead wa s

RALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) All-America David Thompson
scored 31 points as secondranked North Carolina State,
eager to move up to No. I in the
college basketball ratings,
blasted Wake Forest lll-96
Saturday.
The Wolfpack built a quick
15-point lead, allowed the
Deacons to move within live at
the half, then cruised to its 20th
victory of the season. Only
UCLA has defeated North
Carolina State, the Allantic
Coast conference leader.
The loss sent Wake Forest to
11-10 overall and 3-7 in the ACC.

Joining Thompson in double
figures for the Wolfpack were
Tommy Burleson with 26
points, Moe Rivers with 19 and
Tim Stoddard and Monte Towe
with II each. Skip Brown paced
the Deacons with 23 points.
State jumped to a nine-point
lead at 11-ll in th e first five
minutes, then advanced the
margin to 15 roints at 23-8.
Wake Forest came back and
was down only 511-53 al in-

SOCCER CUP WIN
LONDON (UP!)- Wrexham
carry the third division banner
proudly into the quarter-finals
of the Football Association
(FA) Soccer Cup with a 1-0 win
at Southampton Saturday in
the fifth round.
Hero of the match was David
Smallman who headed in a
corner kick from Brian Tinnion
in the 55th minute .

COACH RESIGNS
ST. LOUIS !UP!) - The St.
Louis Blues Saturday announced that Jean Gu Talbot
has resigned as coach and that
center I..Ou Angotti has been
appointed to take his place.
Sid Salomon, president of the
club, said, "I want lp emphasize that Talbot has
resigned from his position as
coach and not !rom the team ."

termission.

But North Carolina State
went up by 18 points, 87~9.
midway through the second
hall to put the game away.

Pionite

The Tigers, 12-19 overall and

hit a 13-foot jumper with 27 2-7 in the conference, h~d the
seconds to go to put Maryland Terps down in the final minute

Thompson nets
31 in victory

"""""' t

Every Custnm I lu ll " KD' ' Vani ty. tho uijh inJi viJtL&lt;Ll in .J u s i ~ n . h n ~ tlu! s;ml&lt;!
hnRk en ~ Ll ·H f- n .q semhl y dulr t tc! L J r i ~ t it:. llni tjliH, f m:l tlry i n stul lL! d t.li ps Jl&lt;'l'·
11111 l lw U t.: mnpo nun l Jl!Ut.:Ub tu lm sn &lt;tp pt!d t u~o:w ti LU I" in mi nu1 tJN. T h•· n , l&gt;v
si111 p ly i n ~o!rl inlj the _lor.k ing ~~ re w~. thoJ CliST ClM l li\1.1 . ' Kil" \'HnttY
illJI:IJ ITWS 1! 1' 1!11 !lll!rt ! fl l! id I ha n l hi! IIVI'ntgt! [ ; IC : II Jr~ . l~ !il' l ll h il' d 1! 11 11.

short-lived as Lucas pumped in
his go-a head jumper and
Maryland riever trailed again.
Len Elmore scored 15 points
to lead the Maryland attack
and Owen Brown added 13.

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'

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,.

.

I

18 y- The Stmda)· Tin~.s. &amp;·ntinl\l, Su~da~' , F l't' . l i .·1!11~

Aaron

won~t

.

'

Divorce in wa·y
of preparation

be ·in lineup for

'

•

first three games In Cincy
ATLANT-\ (UP!) - The
Allanta Braves, anticipating
flak from several different
directions, finally decided
Saturday that Hank Aaron,
nudging Babe Ruth for the alltime home run mark, wiU not
start any of the team's first
three games in Cincinnati at
the start of the 1974 season.
The Braves announ ced
Saturday he will start his first
game of the 1974 season when
the Braves open at home
against Los Angeles Monday,
April 8. NBC-TV had already
announced the April 8th game
will be nationally-televised.
But Aaron will be ava ilable
fo r pinch.Jritting duties in the
three road games at Cincinnati
which precede the 11-game
homestand.
The Braves' action is expected to cause some controversy around the league
since the Reds are expected to
be in a tight pennant race with
Los Angeles, Houston and San
Francisco in the NL Western
Division.
With Aaron out of the lineup
- except fo r pinch-hitting
duties - Cincinnati should
presumably have an edge in
the first three games. Aaron
US.l_llllly hits well in Cincinnati's
Riverfront Stadiutn.
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
was traveling tor ¥ lorida
Saturday and was unavailable
for comment.

A spokesman for the commissioner said, 'Any official
4

comment will have to come
from the Commissioner. I
know how I feel personally
about it but the Commissioner
has to make any official

comment."
Baseball has always been
proud of the integrity of the
pennant race coming above
any individual records.
But Manager Eddie Mathews
insisted that winning the
games in Cincinnati is more
important than when or where
the Hammer breaks Ruth's
r~rd.

Mathews said he would not
save Aaron for the Atlanta fans
if he felt the Mobile, Ala. native
could mean the difference in
one of the Cincinnati games.
He said he wouldn't hesitate
to call on the 40-year-old
slugger after the seventh in-

nicg 1f H wm hung ln the
balance.
But Mathews said , " I think

one thing that a lot of people
have overlooked is that Hank
silting on the bench tas a
possibl e pinch-hitler) slops
managers from making moves
they might want to make."
Braves'

c ha irma n

Bill

Barllolomay , who made the

fctn~

announcement Saturday after

plans," he said.
Aaron is one home r un shy of

Manager Eddie Robinson and
Mathews, cautioned that

lying Rulli's career mark of 714
and "Will be available as a
nin &lt;'h Hi!rr rnr the road games
in Cincinnati and part-time
play if required by Manager
Eddi e Mathews, "
Bartholomay said .
Mathews said he expects
Aaron to topple the mark in
Atlanta, but he does not think ·
Aaron will play all 11 games in
the home stand.
"I think he ·more or less
belongs to the people of the
southeast," he sa id .
The Braves host Los Angeles
for four night games, then play

training could force a change.
" ll is unprecede nted to
speculate on an opening lineup

at this early da le, but Braves'

Notre Dame holds
off late SC rally
play , but that was as close as
the Gamecocks were to get.
Notre Dame hit six foul shots
within the la•l min ute and a
half to clinch the victory.
. It was U1e 20th win of the
victory over South Car olina
season for the Irish.
Saturday.
Shuniate was able to move
South Ca rolina, down by as
much as 13 points midway almost at will underneath the
through the last half, battled basket despite double coverage
hack to within lour, 66-1i2, with by South Carolina, which saw
about a minute and a half to its · 34 game home winning
streak broken. South Carolina
is now 17-4 for the season.
Notre Dame went into the
halftime with a 31-2ti lead and
gradually built it up, primarily
on the strength of Shumate, to
a 54-41 bulge . But forward Alex
English hit all six of the
LAKE PLACID, N. Y. (UP!) Gamecocks' next baskets to
- World Champion Wolfgang pull South Car olina within
Zimmerer, with the fastest range.
time of the day, went on to win
English finished the game
the two-man Diamond Trophy with a total of 30 points.
International Bobsled Races at
The game saw the return of
Mt. Van Hoevenburg Saturday. Frank McGuire to the
Zimmerer, with brakeman Gamecocks' helm. McGuire
Peter Utzschneider, compiled was recently hospilalized for
a total time of 4 minutes 34.39 abdominal trouble and there
seconds for the four runs down was doubt up to game time
the mile-long chute of ice. The whether he would be able to
West Germans had the best direct the Gamecock activity .
time of the day for any of the 15
Adrian Dantley had 17 points
sleds in competition, with a for Notre Dame, making 11 out
clocking of a I minute 8.01 of II free throws, all in the
seconds.
. second half . Gary Brokaw also
In second place, more than a contributed 15 points to the
full second behind Zimmerer, Irish scoring. Gamecock capwas the Austrian sled piloted lain Brian Winters scored 16
by Werner Della-Karth.
points before foulin g out near
The Diamond Trophy Races, the end ol the game, while
run under good conditions in 2ll- scrappy guard Mike Dunleavy
degree temperature, marked had 13.
Zimmerer'~ first competition
The win raises Notre Dame's
since winning his third world record to 2ll-l with the only loss
two-man title at St. Moritz last coming to top ranked UCLA.
COI..UMBIA, S.C. (UP!) Clutch lou! shooting and a 26poinl performance by center
J ohn Shumate gave thir d·
ranked Notre Dame a 72-SII

Zinunerer takes

bobsled crown

month.

HOUSTON
IUP! l
Heavyw eig ht
champion
George
Foreman
sa id
Saturday he would be ready for
his March 26 title bout against

rl&lt;'serv£' to know our

consulting \~ith A11ron, General
player injuries during sprin g

Ken

in

Caracas,

11

1t's more than just this one

light," he said. "I have to be a
man for a long time."

"COME BACK OOWN HERE" - could be the words of
Highlander Phil Lewis, as he attempts to stop this shot by
Easter~'s Larry Atherton in action during the Eagles' 54-33
wm Fnday mght. The Win assured Eastern of at least a
second place tie in the final SVAC standings. Pboto by Katie
Crow.

Foreman said the courts
have a history of taking advantage of boxers . He said it
would be better to finish the
proceeding quickly .
"! would prefer to stay
here," he said. "! don't want to
take a chance of having to

Watson big story
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A
halfway leader Dave Stockton
shot a birdie and a double
bogey on his first two holes or
the third round of the $150,000
Glen Campbell-Los Ange les
Open Saturday, but the big
story was young Tom Watson.
Watson, a 25-year-old former
Stanford University golfer,
carded a hole-in-one on the par
three, 234-yard fourth hole
using a four wood. He started
the day fou r strokes behind
Stockton, who had a 36-hole
total of 68-68-136.
It was the second tour ace in
1\fo weeks. In last week 's Bob
Hope Desert Classic, Clive
Clark had a hole-in-one but
didn't make the cut at Palm
Springs, Calif.
After his first seven holes,
Watson went three under for
the tournament, gaining one
stroke on par Saturday, a
sunny day with temperatures

tinues.
The champion said he would
prepare for the Norton fight no
matter where he is.
"I'm staying in \)le best
shape I caD," he said. " I'm .1 •
training in earnest now ."

Venezuela , despite a prolonged
"!feel I could beat justa bout
divorce proceeding that has
anybody
in the country right
interrupted his trainin g
now . l just have to cut down on
schedule.
a
couple of those steaks a day,"
''I 'm just preparing to box,' '
he
said .
Foreman said. "I have to boi&lt;
whether I go to court or not.
"But I'm not worried. I'll get
in shape lor the light."
During a special Saturday
session, Domestic Rela.tions
Court Judge Wells Stewart
offered to delay the proceeding
until alter the fight but
By
Foreman refused.
"I would rather fight it out
TERRY
now and go through the agony
JOHNSON
of it and possibly lose the
:.I
light," Foreman told the court.

Cincinnati in a three-game
weekend series and wind up the

&lt;homestand with four night
games against San Diego.
Bartholomay also noted that
"The city of Atlanta and the
Chamber of Commerce have
designated opening night as a
salute to Hank Aaron which
will properly dignify and
recognize his outstanding
accomplishments ."

Norton

in the 60s and little wind as in
the first two roUI)ds.
Stockton had a birdie on the
par five , Sill-yard first hole, but
took a six on number two, a 469-

Royals' Patek
ends holdout

share my earnings."

yarder.
After three holes Stockton
was five under for the tournament over the demanding
Riviera Coun1ry Club 'course.
Johnny Miller, who started
the day one shot behind
Stockton, also was five under
after three holes, bogeying the
first hole and getting a birdie
on the scond. He was playing in
the same threesome as
Stockton.
Jim Wiechers , tied with
Miller starting the day, had
lost a stroke to par through
four holes.

Judge Stewart granted the
divorce Wednesday, but
Foreman and his ex-wife,
Adrienne, have failed to reach
an agrement on the division of
property.
Foreman 's attorneys con.

tend their client is almost
broke. They said it would be at
least Monday before they could
secure copies of necessary

financial records to present to
the court.
Because or a crowded court
docket, Judge Stewart appointed a substitute to hear
evidence on the property
settlement.
Attorney Robert Lord said
Foreman possibly could return
to his California training camp
while the proceeding con-

Knick win

:e~~:arr~~:;:~po~no~~~~~Gophers

tapered of! tn the fourth .
quarter when be was held to
·
just lo~r poinls.
.
Frazter sc~ed 31 pomts and
EAST LANSING, Mich.
Monroe tallied 23 for New (UP! )
Minnesota's
York. Bill Bradley chipped in streaking Gophers upset Big
wtth 19.
Ten tltle-minde.d Michigan

Favorite holds on in handicap
BOWIE , Md. (UOI)
Euonymus, the odds-on
favorite, held on gamely in the
stretch Saturday at Bowie to
win the $23,450 Conniver
Handicap for Maryland-bred
fillies and mares.
Settling into the stretch with
a 1\iz.Jength lead, the :&gt;-year-old
daughter of F.urastian-Billy's
Pet lasted to score by a head in
the I !-16th mile race.
Sarah Percy rallied from last
place in the field or five sta rters to finish second withNaleesa five lengths f ;u·th~ · r

hack in third.

Native Go Go and Marinade
completed the field.
Euonymus, ridden by Herb
Hinojosa, and carrying top
weight of 115 pounds, paid
$3.80, $3.00 and $2.20 in posting
her first win this year in three
· starts.

•
The winner sped the dis lance
in 1:47 to ea rn first money of
$13,942.
Sarah ' Percy, at !5-'1 the
lon ~cst shot in the field , paid
$6.40 and $2.80, with Naleesa
Po)•mg $2.40 to show.

.

nz·p M.S·U

...

State. Saturday afternoon, 56SO, wtth a 29-pomt performance
by jumor forward Phil Filer.
H was Minnesota 's fifth
victory m Its last six conference game and moved its
league re~ord to 5-5 and 11-9
overall. Mtchtgan State slipped
to 7-3 in the Big Ten and 12-8 on
the ~ea~on.
,
M~chtgan
State s Mike
Robtnson was held to eight
points, the lowest output of his
collegiate car~.er . Minnesota's
conference scoring leader,
Dennis Shaffer, was limited to
six points.
Both teams started out
sluggishly in the first half.
Nearly three !llinutes elapsed
before the first points were
scored. The Gophers suecessfully
s~ ow e d
down
Mtchigan Stat~ s run-and-shoot
game and held onto a 211-26
halftime lead.
.
Mtnnesota contmued its
deliberate, slow-poke offense

.
in the second half and built up
its largest margin of the game,
38-30 with J3:45left.
Th~ rattled , Spartans,
however, put a full-&lt;:ourt press
on the Gophers and battled'
hack to knot the score, 38-38.
Filer hit his 11th consecutive
shot from the floor with less
than two minutes left to give
Minnesola a 48-46 edge.
Filer put Minnesota up by
five, 55-liO, by hitting two free
throws with 32 seconds left and
another with 17 seconds
remaining. · Saunders sealed
Michigan State's' doom with
two additional charity tosses in
the waning seconds.
Filer's output. was a career
high. He was averaging only
6.9 Big Ten points prior to the
game. His IS rebounds was also
well above his 4.6 average. ·
Minnesota , outrebounded
Michigan State 39-18. The
Spartans pulled off only four
rebounds in the se~ond half.

,,

'

''

·-

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a

success.

The Meigs Legion team has averaged 25 games a season over
• the past 8 years, compiling a record of 12il-82-2, while competing
against 30different Legion teams from Ohio, Kentucky and West
Virginia.
Mel Clark, former major league with the Phillies, coached
the ftrst three teams, assisted by Russ Moore, now the principal
at Meigs Junior High School.
George "Nessie" Nesselroad has coached the team since
with the help of assistants Mike Werry, Dick Werryand Rod
Karr.
Nessie's record over the past five years is 84~2-1.
Boys from the old Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland High
Schools, along with the new Meigs High, Eastern, Southern,
Wahama, Pt. Pleasant, Kyger Creek, Southwestern and Gallia
Academy have participated in the Meigs Legion baseball
program. One Meigs Legion product, Tommy Spencer of
Gallipolis, is playing professional hall with the Three Rivers
Aigles of the Cincinnati Reds organization.

BOIL OUT

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OS

~AMPS AUTOGRAPH GAME

BALL - Members of the 1974 SEOAL championship Blue
Devils basketball team autographed the game hall after it was auctioned of! to Vance Johnson
(right) during Friday's ·post-game booster club meeting at Oscar's Restaurant. Johnson
purchased the ball for $385. Proceeds will help finance the 1974 All-Southea stern Ohio League
cage banquet, to be held in Gallipolis during the first week in April. Congratulating Johnson on
left is GAHS coach Jim Osborne.

7l I
l '~

.
THANK YOU ...
Many thousands of men and women give countless hour s of
voj unt eer effort to make boys' baseball possible.
The mother who takes time from a bu sy diry of homemaking
to wash or mend a boy 's uniform, the tired father who takes time
after working hours to help supervise practice. or build a
baseball fi eld, the merchants and civic groups who give their
share to provide good equipment. tho se without children who
give freely of the ir time and money. those who labor late hours
over financial and administrat ive problems , those who ma intain
the playing area, operate the concess ion stands and repair
equipment and those who can· only sit in the stands and cheer ...
all are a vital part of boy s' baseball.
WITHOUT THESE PEOPLE. MOST OF WHOM SERVE
WITHOUT RECOGNITION. Ameri ca n Leg ion Baseball could
not ex ist to help develop better boys today .. and better men
tomorrow .
The America n Legion

Southern will
host tourney
sponsored by the Southern
Athletic Boosters, is scheduled
for March 4, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 13
and 14.
The competition will be
divided into two divisions division A, which will consist of
teams contal!iing players with
college · experience; and
division B; which will be
•
comprised of teams with no
''
college
players.
Falcons trip
Trophies will be awarded to
'
the champion and runner-up in
Kent, 80-69
each
division, along with in• ;' KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Bowl- dividual · trophles to the
ll!g Green's Cornelius Cash champions of each division.
fCored 21 points and teammate
In addition, an AllMark Cartwright 18 as the Fal- Tournament Team will be
ions downed Mid-American selected along with a Most
Conference rival Kent State, Valu.able Player from each
~9, here San;rday,
division .
• The win left Bowling Green
The en1ry lee is $30 and the
with a 14-11 overall record and a tournament drawing will ' be
i-4 mark in the league.
held at South~rn High School
: The Golden Flashes, now 8-13 on Sunday, Feb. 24, at 4 p.m.
all games and I-ll in the
Anyone wishing further
~AC, were led in the scoring information should contart
;&lt;&gt;Iumn by Dennis Odie with 22 Wolfe during the day at ·949points.
4H71, or in the ·evening at 992The t.lro teams were lied, 3:&gt;- i~ Z:t
3!&gt;, at halftime .•
RACINE - An Independent
J;!asketball Tournament to be
held at Southern High School in
early March has been announced by Southern Athletic
Director and head basketball
&lt;:each Carl Wolle.
' The tourney, open to all area
'
kldependent
cage teams,

3 LOCATIONS
TO sERVE YOU! ·

Score at half :
Rio 56 Wil ber-f orce 46.

::::::::,
.
:·:·::::
The Metgs County American Legion baseball team enters its
ninth consecutive season of summer base hall this year, again
sponsored by Drew Webster Post No. 39 of Pomeroy and FeeneyBennett Post No. 128 in Middleport.
The baseball commission governing the program consists of
Norman VanMatre, Clyde "Doc" Ingels and Art Stobart from the
Middleport post, with Don Hunnel, Rod Karr and George
Nesselroad representing the Pomeroy post.
Over $7,000 has been put into t'his program down through the
years, plus many volunteer hours, travel and other
miscellaneous donations. all of which have made this program

Note: The f6\ lowing me ssage has been printed on the back of
the State Ru le Book for Am erican Leg ion baseball. I th ink it te ll s
the story of the excellent summer program available to our area
youth.

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The Meigs Legion baseball program has no connection with
the Meigs Babe Ruth team now being formed, although both
programs are for boys in the same age group.
Any boys having questions concerning the Legion baseball
team should contact any of the commission members listed
above .
In mentioning the success of the Meigs American Legion
baseball program, Hunnel does not mention himself. For eight
years, going on nine, Don Hunnel has done an excellent job as
business manager of the Legion teams, and it's about time he
gets some recognition himself.
Besides scheduling, making sure there are enough balls,
hats, pine tar rags, etc., Hunnel is in charge or making sure
everything runs smoothly. He has done a great job serving the
boys of Meigs, Gallia, and Mason Counties for eight years.
I'm sure everyone connected with the Legion baseball
program feels the same way, and join me in saluting him for his
outstanding performance, and hope he continues for at least
eight more years as Legion baseball business manager.

Phone 614 -446-3547

..
r

By Denny
Fobvs
-

General Manager Cedric
Tallis said after a meeting with
Patek, "I am very happy.
Everything has been resolved
to our satisfaction and to the

Gallipolis, Ohio

I

Mitchell. 7 2 16 ; Jones, 'l 1 5 ;

M c Hc th , ~· 1-11 ; t;o yktns, 10 -0?0 ; Gr een. -t 1-9. Boddi e, 1-0 -2;
Per due, 4 2 10 : Hunter, 5-2-12 ;
Bea ve r s, 55 15. TOTALS 4.3- 14·

'

""'~

vice versa.

..

2110 Eastern Avenue

got what I think was fair,"

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Bob Martin poured in a game- ,
high 38 Defiance points here
Saturday afternoon to lead the
Yellow Jackets to a 116-112
Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
win over Anderson (Ind.).
Bruce Baer chipped in with
29 Defiance points to help lift
the Yellow Jackets to an 18-4
overall record and a 1:1-3 mark
in. the league.
The Ravens, paced by Art
Larson and Ed Jenness with 32
points apiece, are now 11-15 in
all games and :&gt;-JOin the HBC. ,

·

,:·:·:·:·:
::::::

..

Jackets outlast
Anderson 116-112

FLYING EAGLE- Eastern guard Greg Bailey (22) is on the way down alter he vaulted
high in the air in an attempt to force a had pass by Southwestern's Mike Crouse (with hall) as
fellow Eagle Steve Goebel moves in to help out. Eastern won the Friday night battle :;o?J3
Photo by Katie Crow.
'
·

!B~l lt

...

Patek batted .234 in 135
games last year and had five
home runs and 45 RB!s.
The Royals also signed
rookie pitcher Randy Hammon
Saturday, leaving the team
with four unsigned players,
including Cookie Rojas, who
with Patek forms the team 's
double-play combination.
Hammon is a 22-year-old
right bander who had an 11·10
record with Jacksonville in the
Southern League last year,
including two one-hitters and a
2.15 earned run a~erage.

Alb•1nese. -13 11 ; Har f, 1 o 11.

Ill

I'm ready to go."

~~ r

Monroe pace

norts
:I-:·[:-~:: S~:I:'

said Patek, who has led major
league shotstops in double
plays the last three years. "I'm
happy, the club's happy and

ference~ .

Bo ll inger, 3-0-6 ; Lam ber t, / 2 1
Wedn esday in a Mid-Ohi o 35
; No e. 9-6 -2&lt;1 ; Stewart. 411 17.
Conference gam e. Ohi o Smi t h, 3 0 6 ; Sa nd er s, 1-0 2,
Dominican is at Rio Saturday . F.1usnaugh, 3-0-6; Swinehart,
I 1 4. TOTALS 37-36-110.
RIO GRANOE (110)
WILBERFORCE I 100) -

~~fi~!=;m;mm~~~~r~~;~~;r~~;l;~;l;l;~l;~;;~~~~~l~~~?:~;~~~;1~i~l~i1~ii~1~~;~~f.i;~m;mmm;m~~~~i~ml~;m;~~fili~~~

In 1920 , the Pic Pic, an
imported automobile. from
France,
with
special
custom -built body. special
engine, pointed radiator,
wire wheels with clincher
ti res and a spare tire
mounted on the side, was
fascinating many of the
we ll -to-do people . who
wanted something dif ·
ferent than the run -of-the·
mill t ype American cars.
Thi s distinctive automobile
was chauffeur driven and
featured a speaking tube
for co mmunica tion · be tween passenger and ·
chauffeur.
If . you Want something
different in a home today,
you must visit us to get a
l ir st hand look and detailed
,.
information about mobile
,.
homes . These custom -built,
~ual l ty constructed homes
come completely fu r "'
nished, are designed end
built fo r pract ic al but
"
., .
pleasa nt living, with extra
tou ches of modern conveniences and luxury
comfort. as a bonus.

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES

Albanese, wiU1 11 and Jim and !.amberll 2. Rio hi t :17 of 71
field goal allempl' for 52 pel.
Stewart with 12.
Tournament.
Allhe charily line, the Redmen
Rio
led
56-46
during
the
Wilberforce is now 7-12 on the
cashed
in on 36 of 46 attempts
ha lftime intermission .
year.
The Redmen picked oil 54 for 78.3 pet.
Also finishing in double
Rio Grande will host Urbana
figures for Ri o was Paul rebounds. Noe pulled down 20
post-season NAJA District 22

COLUMBUS - Ron Lambert
Lambert pumped in 3S
and Jimmy Noe combined for poi nts. hitting 21 of 23 free
59 points here Friday night as throw attempts. Noe added 24.
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
It was Rio's 12th victory
Grande College Redmen aga inst 10 setbacks and the
outlasted host Wilberforce 110- lriumph gave the Redmen an
100.
inside track for a berth in the

Nessie will be the coach again this year, for the sixth consecutive year, and Rod karr will again be his assistant. A sign-up
will be held in mid-April lor all boys wishing to participate in the
program this summer.
All boys born on or since August I, 1955, are eligible and must
turn in a certified birth certificate.
The season begins the first weekend in June .
Nesselroad and business manager Don Hunnell attended the
state baseball commission meeting in Columbus, Feb. 9, for rules
interpretation and clarification of playing regulations .
New rules adopted at that meeting include the addition of
metal hats in Legion baseball and a rule stating that out of state
residents will not be permitted to play on Ohio Legion teams and

KANSAS CITY, Mo. I UP! )Shortstop Fred Patek and the
Kansas City Royals came to a
contractual agr e ement
Saturday, bringing an end to
the arbitration of their dif-

Frazier and

Redmen outlast Bulldogs; Lamb'ert has 35

.

player's.''

NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York Knicks guards Walt
Frazier and Earl Monroe got
on the scoring track Saturday
with a 54-point total to derail
the Golden State Warriors 117107 in a National Basketball
Association game.
New York's offensive tandem punch prevailed as Rick
Barry scored 38 points for the
Warriors, who fell into a virtual tie with Los Angeles in the
torrid battle for the Pacillc
Division lead.
A 16-5 sUrge was the telling
blow for New York as the
Knicks boosted a . 7&amp;-7S advantage to 94-110 over a fiveminute span covering the last
half of the third period and the
early part of the fourth
quarter. A !:&gt;-foot jumper and
two foul shots by Frazier
triggered the rally.
Cazzie Russell, who scored 19
points, and Barry kept Golden
State in the game with some
third quarter sharpshooting as
they accounted for all but two

'

19 - ThcSundayTimes- &amp;•nlincl,Sunday, Feb. J7,1974 ·

look al ..
EFFORTLESS ASSEMBLY

l
ar and edges Clemson
Y

CLEMSON, S. C. (UP!) Sophomore John Lucas
collected three points in the
closing 'l1 seconds to give sixthranked Maryland a narrow 5654 Atlantic Coast Conference
win over Clemson here
Saturday.
Lucas, the Terps' leading

scorer coming into the contest,

on lop 55-54, then hit the first of of the contest.
Wayne Croft, the Tigers'
a one·and-one with three
scorer with 18 points,
leading
seconds to play to give the
collected
six of those points in
Terps' their 17th victory in 21
the
last
rew minutes of the
outings.
game, givin g Clemson the lead.
Bu t Clemson 's lead wa s

RALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) All-America David Thompson
scored 31 points as secondranked North Carolina State,
eager to move up to No. I in the
college basketball ratings,
blasted Wake Forest lll-96
Saturday.
The Wolfpack built a quick
15-point lead, allowed the
Deacons to move within live at
the half, then cruised to its 20th
victory of the season. Only
UCLA has defeated North
Carolina State, the Allantic
Coast conference leader.
The loss sent Wake Forest to
11-10 overall and 3-7 in the ACC.

Joining Thompson in double
figures for the Wolfpack were
Tommy Burleson with 26
points, Moe Rivers with 19 and
Tim Stoddard and Monte Towe
with II each. Skip Brown paced
the Deacons with 23 points.
State jumped to a nine-point
lead at 11-ll in th e first five
minutes, then advanced the
margin to 15 roints at 23-8.
Wake Forest came back and
was down only 511-53 al in-

SOCCER CUP WIN
LONDON (UP!)- Wrexham
carry the third division banner
proudly into the quarter-finals
of the Football Association
(FA) Soccer Cup with a 1-0 win
at Southampton Saturday in
the fifth round.
Hero of the match was David
Smallman who headed in a
corner kick from Brian Tinnion
in the 55th minute .

COACH RESIGNS
ST. LOUIS !UP!) - The St.
Louis Blues Saturday announced that Jean Gu Talbot
has resigned as coach and that
center I..Ou Angotti has been
appointed to take his place.
Sid Salomon, president of the
club, said, "I want lp emphasize that Talbot has
resigned from his position as
coach and not !rom the team ."

termission.

But North Carolina State
went up by 18 points, 87~9.
midway through the second
hall to put the game away.

Pionite

The Tigers, 12-19 overall and

hit a 13-foot jumper with 27 2-7 in the conference, h~d the
seconds to go to put Maryland Terps down in the final minute

Thompson nets
31 in victory

"""""' t

Every Custnm I lu ll " KD' ' Vani ty. tho uijh inJi viJtL&lt;Ll in .J u s i ~ n . h n ~ tlu! s;ml&lt;!
hnRk en ~ Ll ·H f- n .q semhl y dulr t tc! L J r i ~ t it:. llni tjliH, f m:l tlry i n stul lL! d t.li ps Jl&lt;'l'·
11111 l lw U t.: mnpo nun l Jl!Ut.:Ub tu lm sn &lt;tp pt!d t u~o:w ti LU I" in mi nu1 tJN. T h•· n , l&gt;v
si111 p ly i n ~o!rl inlj the _lor.k ing ~~ re w~. thoJ CliST ClM l li\1.1 . ' Kil" \'HnttY
illJI:IJ ITWS 1! 1' 1!11 !lll!rt ! fl l! id I ha n l hi! IIVI'ntgt! [ ; IC : II Jr~ . l~ !il' l ll h il' d 1! 11 11.

short-lived as Lucas pumped in
his go-a head jumper and
Maryland riever trailed again.
Len Elmore scored 15 points
to lead the Maryland attack
and Owen Brown added 13.

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'

2~ - The

Eastern , meanwhile, hlt four
of six cha rity cha nges for 66

SIUlday Times- Sentinel , Sunday ,Feb . 17, 1974

Eastern clinche~ second place

pet.

Turn about's air play ·or Eagles
as Eagle mentor Bill Phillips just I :35left in the third frame. Highlander final period ')'it~
REEDSVILLE - The South- the loop basement.
The only other basket South- seven points.
\.
The low-scor ing affai r began Southwestern's Kevm Walker sent his squad into a four-.
western Highlanders used a
western
got
that
quarter
was
a
corner
offense,
and
inserted
Dill
was
joined
in
double
four..corner slow-down defense almost as du ll as the spanking at the 4:45 mark .
Elfs tern 's Torn Spence r junior guard Randy Blake to 25 foot bomb by Walker at the figures by Goebel with 12 and
to stay within three points of new Eastern uniforms were
buzzer.
drlv e the wlde-open lane.
Bawn with 10.
the lead at intermission, before sharp, with the Highlanders responded with a pair of foul ·
The
final
frame
was
all
Blake
responded
with
what
Wood was the only
the Eastern Eagles countered holdin g th e ball. hoping shots a minut e later to tie the Phillips termed the " key Easter n, with th e Eag les Highlander in twin figures .
with four-corners of their own Eas tern would come out and score at 2-all. The fi rst half
basket of the second hall," on a outscoring the Highlanders 17-5
A pleased Bill Phillips,
in the third quarter enroute to a leave somebody alone under continued that way, with the layup at the 5:05 mark to give in the first four and a half commenting after the game,
game
tied,
and-or
the
lead
!i&lt;l-33 win here Friday evening . the bucket.
minutes. Fiiur Eagles led that said, "We regrouped at half·
It worked successfully for changing hands 15 times in the Eastern a five point bulge at 23The triwnph, the Eagles'
fin
a l period charge, with time and the kids did a real
18.
eighth in llloop starts. assures the fir st half. with the count fir s t 14 minutes until the
Steve Dill, hi gh point man on seniors Steve Goebel, Tim good job."
them of at least a share of knotted at 8-8 after the first Eagles took the lead for good at the night with 14 points, Bawn and junior Greg Bailey
"We had that three point
second place in the fina l league period, and the Eagles clinging 17-16 on a John Sheets layup followed a minute later with a each getting six points, while
halftime
lead and went into a
to a slim 21-18 halftime margin. with I :53 remaining in the
standings.
five footer to up the lead to Dill addect five.
four -eorner offenSe of our own
Three minutes elapsed in second period.
Southwestern , at 1-11 in the
Sou1hwe
s
tern
pivotman
seven,
before
Southwestern
got
to open the middle for Blake to
Th e third period spell ed
league, winds up the SVAC that ini tial frame before any
Uoyd
Wood,
the
second
leading
its
first
points
of
the
second
drive/
' the fourth .year mentor
season with at least a share of scoring occurr ed. with the first disaster for the Highlanders, hall on a Walker layup with scorer with 13 points, led the
added.
bucket coming on a layup IJy

Wildcats blast Wahama
MERCERVILLE - Southern Valley Athletic Conference
champi on Hannan Trace
romped to its 17th victory in 18
outings here Friday night with
a 94-57 win over non-league
opponent Wahama.
Mark Swain, 6-0 junior
guard, led the way with 44
points, his second best offensive performance of the
year. Don Wells, 6-5 senior
·center was the only other
Wildcat in double figures with
16. Wells grabbed 15 of the
tea111's 52 rebounds.
Wahama ,s top scorer was

Bill Keefer with 16 foll owed by losers.
Hannan Trace will pla y
Mark Harmon with 14. Harmon
led the White Falcon Fairland in the Class A Sec·
tiona! Tournament Friday at
rebounders with 33.
Wahama is 6-10 on the year. Ironton .
Wahama (57 ) - Buzzard, I·
The Wildcats shot 55 pet.
0-2;
Keefer, 6-4-16; Lewis, 1-0fr om the floor hitting 43 of 78
2:
Harmon,
7-0-14; Russell, 4-0attempts. HT also sank eight of
12 free throws. Wahama hit 26
of 67 floor attempts for 36 pet.
and five of eight from the foul
line.
Wahama
won
the
preliminary game, 47-46.
REEDSVILLE
The
Holbrook and Tucker paced the
Eastern
Eagle
reserves,
winners with 11 points each.
th e
little
Shaffer had 11 points for the outscorin g
Highlanders in each quarter,
rolled to a 51-29 triumph over

8· Johnson 4-0-8·, Gilland , 3·1·
'
7.' Totals Z&amp;-5-57.
Hannan Trace 194) Lusher, 3-(Hi; Montgomery, I·
0-2; Hesson , 4·1·9; Wells, IHI16; Hall, 3-0-6; Halley, 3-2-3;
Swain, 20-4-44 ; and Sanders, I·
1-3. Totals 43-11-94.

the Sou thw estern reserves

Vikes edge
Kyger Creek

here Friday night.
The win, the little birds'
eighth in II league starts,
keeps Eastern at the same
pace as the other three SVAC
teams tied for the league's top

sp~e Hannan Trace reserves
have concluded their season

Na tionat8at.Kt t DIII

Assoc ialion Stt~ndings
Eastern Conference
Atlanlic Division
W L Pet.

g .b .

Boston

41 16 .719

New York
Buffalo
Ph iladelphia

36 24 .600 6 1h
32 31 .508 12
19 41 .317 2Jih

Central Division

W l Pet . G . B .

capita l
At ian fa
Hou ston
Cle..,eland

33
27
23
20

26
35
39
43

.559
A36 11!2
. 371 1Ph
.317 15

western con terence
Midwest Division
W L Pet . G . B.
Milwaukee
44 16 .?33
Ch icag o
44 20 .668 2
Detroit
40 21 .656 4117
KC -Omaha
23 41 .359 23
Pacific Division

western hit 7 of 16 for 44 pet.
Reserves by quarters:
16 10 13 12---51
Eastern
Southwestern 7 8 6 8-29
Eastern - Harris &amp;-2-14,
Conde 2-0-4, Blake 3-0-6, Bowen
3-1-7, Good 3-5-11, Nelson 1-0-2,
Holter 1+2, Reed 1-0-2, Barber
1-0-2, Larkins 1-0-2, Hannwn 01-1.
Southwestern - Grate 0-1-1,
Haislop 0·0'0, Lewis 2-0-4,
Miller 1·0·2, Fallon 0-2-2,
Walker 0-2-2, Fortner 0+0,
Banks 2-1-5, D. Miller 3-1-7,
Crouse 3-0-6.

By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
cats' leading scorer with '!/
WILLOW WOOD - Rod points on 10 baskets and seven
Bennett's 15 foot jwnper with of seven foul shots . He scored
just one second remaining tied 11 poin ts in the Bobcats'
the score at 74-74 in regulation, . comeback in the fourth
then the Vikings ouls!:ored the quarter.
visiting Kyger Creek Bobcats,
Other Bobcats helping in the
10-4 in overtime, to win a hotly- drive were Tabor with six '
contested Southern Valley points, and Dave Wise, 5-10
Athletic Conference game here junior who had 13 points on the
Friday night.
~ight, four in the last quarter.
picked up his fourth foul Kyger Creek led 36-29 at the
Myers led the Vikings with 27
CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPl) - game (when UCLA edged though he stayed in . Walton
Oregon
State
80-7&gt;
in
Los
half but fell behind 51-48 going points, Jones with W, Bennett John Wooden says he wouldn't
into the final period.
added 18 and Burcham finished rate his UCLA Bruins the top Angeles ). We haven't been as also made two costly turnovers.
In the, fourth quarter, the with 11 .
·collegiate basketball team sharp as we had been. I don 't
"We ma'de mistakes,"
know the reasons. Maybe we 're
lead see-sawed back and forth
In the frantic fourth quarter, now.
Wooden
said. "Some of our
as each team matched basket Burcham had seven points,
"I think I would vote for just not hungry."
seniors
made
key mistakes.
It was the first PAC-t! loss for
per basket.
Myers six and Paul Jones North Carolina State," he said.
Youdonotexpectilfrom them.
With 30 seconds remaining eight. Symmes Valley's third
Wooden's remark came after UCLA since March of 1970.
They
have been through the
the score was tied at 71-71. Paul period uprising was paced by Oregon State, which started
mill
before."
Th e hero for Oregon State
Jones was fouled with 27 Myers and Bennett. Myers had three freshmen, ended UCLA's
was
one of those three freshMiller had praise for Doug
seconds left. He ~nned one of eight points while Bennett long Pacific 8 winning streak
Oxsen, ,who guarded Walton.
two free throws giving the scored six points.
with a 61-57 victory Friday men-kuard George Tucker.
"George
is
the
worst
free
"Doug did a marvelous job, "
Yikings a one point lead.
Kyger Creek had built its night.
throw
shooter
on
the
team
"
he
said. "He stayed on the right
Kyger's David Clay, 6-4 lead on a joint team scoring
Earlier this season Notre
senior center, put the Bobcats effort provided by Hudson, Dame halted the Bruins' 88- said a beaming OSU coa~h side of Walton and I thought
Ralph Miller. "But, my, he hit our other people did a good job
ahead with a two pointer at the Rwnley, Tabor, Wise, and game win streak.
four
big ones there at the end." of sagging back, getting a hand
10 second mark.
Stidham.
UCLA now finds itself
It
was Tucker's four free · in, but still not giving up the
Symmes Valley. went down
It was the second time this fighting to stay in first place in
the floor fired, but the ball season, Symmes Valley had the PAC-II and gaining an throws in the late going that outdoor play to them."
Miller said, "I think UCLA is
rebounded into the hands of a trailed the Bobcats at the half NCAA Playoff berth . The allowed Oregon Stale to. win
after
the
Bruins
had
closed
a
still
No. I. But I think we made
Bobcat.
only to come back and win in defending national champions
a little progress."
Clay Hudson, 6-0 senior the final minutes of the game. were to meet tough Oregon at 57-50 deficit lo 57-.16.
"I consider myself a good
Paul Miller (no relation to
guard, began moving up the
Earlier this year, Kyger Eugene Saturday while Southfoul
shooter,"
Tucker
said.
the
coach), one of Oregon
floor, but was "tied up" ac- Creek led by 10 points at the ern California, only a game
cording to one official and half, seven points going into the back, was to play Oregon State "But my statistics just don 't State's sharpshooters who
show it."
wound up with 8 field goals for
"fouled," according 'to the final quarter but lost by seven here Saturday night.
The Bruins were hurt in the 16 points, said, "I just can't
other officiaL A scuffle be- points at Cheshire.
HJ'm concerned," Wooden
late
going when Bill Walton believe it. I can't say how it
tween Hudson and the Vikings'
According to the charts, said. "Very much so. I didn't
Mike Burcham, 5-11 senior, Symmes Valley connected on feel that way after last week's who wound up with 15 points: feels. Fantastic. Those people
up here have waited a long
followed. Both benches spilled · 34 of 67 floor attempts for 50.7
time for this. I'm glad we gave
onto the floor , but were quickly, pet. and 16 of 25 at the free
it
to them. ',
restrained by their coaches throw stripe. Kyger Creek hit By Un i ted Press International
Minnesota 3U 26 1 61 227 202
Oxsen
called it "A dream
Winnipeg
27
26
5
59
195
208
Nalloul Hockey
and school officials . When 28of 61 shots for 45.9 pet. and 22
Edmonton 27 29 o 54 193 205 come true .,.
Leagu e Standings
order was restored by referees of 30 free thiows. Both teams
Vanc ouv er 22 32 0 44 207 226
(East&gt;
LOS Ang .
20 37 0 40 169 229
w I t ph gf ga
Jack Dawson and Dale Hall, grabbed 34 rebounds.
Friday ' s Results
Boston
39 9 6 84 244 146
both Hudson and Burcham
Symmes Valley took the M ontreal 33 15 6 72 19~ 149 Jersey 6 Cle\l'eland 2
7 Winnipeg 1
were ejected from the game reserve game, 40-31. Mille~ led NY Rangers27 16 . 12 66 202 167 Minnesota
Houston 6 Los Angeles 4
and both teams were assessed the VIkings with 10 points while Toronto
New England ~ E~~~nto n J
25 18 11 61 195 157
24 25 6 54 178 185
with a double technical foul. Doug Cottrell topped the · Buffalo
International Hockey
19 28 8 46 182 23()
League Standings
Kyger Creek's John Rumley Bobkittens with 13 markers. Detroit
NY l s'l ndrs 14 26 14 42 130 174
f North I
converted one of two of the
Kyger Creek will travel to V ancouver 15 31 9 39 152 207
w 1 t pfs gt ga
fWestJ
Muskegon 34 20 5 73 204 174
technical foul shots giving the North Gallia Tuesday in a
w I t pts gf ga
Saginaw
29 27 2 60 236 215
34 12 8 76 190 115
Bobcats a two poinllead. Jaye make-up game. Eastern was at Phila.
Toledo
24 31 1 49 190 21?
27
11
15
69
181
109
Chicago
Flint
22 32 3 47 190 214
Myers, 6-1 junior ce nter, Symmes Valley Saturday.
22 25 8 52 152 1SO
St. Louis
Port Huron 20 32 3 43 161 186
21 25 10 52 142 161
missed both ends of the
Kyger Creek (78) ...., Hudson, Atlanta
1( South)
L os Ang .
21 26 8 50 ~51 171
w t t pts gf ga
Vikings' technical fouls.
10-7-27; Rumley, 2-3-7; Tabor; Minnesota
16 26 13 ~5 162 196
D es M oi nes 34 19 4 7'1. 243 190
16
33
5
37
152
200
With four seconds left, 6-5-17; Clay, 3-2-3; Roush, I).(). Pitts .
Columbus 30 28 2 62 227 225
11 38 7 29 147 242
Dayton
21 11 4 sa 201 186
Symmes Valley controlled the O; Wise, 4-5-13; Stidham, 3-0-6. Ca lif . Friday
' s Results
Fort Wayne27 31 0 54 190 223
Monrreal 9 Detro i t 4
tip, passed it around until Totals 28-22-78.
Friday's Results
Boston 4 vancou..,er 2
Des Moines 4 fort Wayne 3 (o fl
Bennett flipped it in just prior
Symmes Valley (84) let an AAA club gi~e you a
World Hockey
Saginaw 4 Flint 2
A ssotiation Standings
to the buzzer.
Burcham, 5-1-11 ; Jaye Myers,
(Only gam es scheduled)
lift. SillltJIY call the AAA Emer·
(East
North American Hockey
gency Road Service. There are
During the three minute 11-5-'!1; Beimett, !J4.1!; Brown,
w 1 t pfs gf ga
League Standings
more
than 24,000 locations . . .
overtime, Myers who had four 0-2-2; Jim Myers, 0-2-2 ; Jones, New Engl. 31 24 2 64 211 19:5
w 1 t pts gf. ga
29 26 4 62 231 207
Toronto
more
than 100,000 se rvicemen.
Syracuse
47
13
3
97
301
186
personal fouls during most of 8·4·20; Quesenberry, 1-2-4. Quebec
29 25 3 61 210 188
Maine
41 21 J 85 354 259
Uch
locat ion strive s to give
25 25 5 55 168 179 Long ISland 30 31 2 62. 259 240
Cleve .
the second half, scored six Totals 34-16-84.
members
top-rate ser~ ice. It's
25 24 J 53 1?0 177
Chicago
Blnghmtn 26 37 5 57 254 325
points, Jones had two and
By Quarters
Jersey
24 32 2 50 173 215 J.ohnstown 26 34 4 56 220 260
just one of the many benefits
(West)
Bennett added a basket.
KC
19 17 10 28 4-78
Cape Cod
27 35 1 55 284 283
you gel with an AAA Club mem·
ga
Mohawk
Kyger Creek's four points SV
17 12 22 23 11)_84 Houston 34w 171 t5 73pts·225gt 148
bership.
Call today for more
Val.
18 44 2 38 210 329
inrormation.
were added. by David Clay.
Three Bobcat starters, Hudson, Lawre nce Tabor, 5·8
senior guard, and Joe Stidham,
The Pleasure
Eating Is Good Fla vor
•
6-2 jiUlior center, had to watch .
A great idea
Good Flavor Comes Only From Quality Food
the overtime from the bench.
Tabor; playing his best game
for over 70 years
of his high school career,
scored 17 points and caused
several Viking turnovers
Is a Foot Long Hotdog from Bob Evans Drive-In served
before fouling out toward· the
end of the fourth quarter. '
with our special meat sauce- served daily at
Stidham finished with six
Phone : Pomeroy 992-2590
points, but was rugged ~n the
Gallipoli• 446-0699
boards before he was forced to
leave. Hudson was the \ Bob-

longer top cage team

I

CAR BOT

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Ol

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BOB EVANS DRIVE~IN

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It's a 60x24' TOTAL ELECTRIC

W l Pet . G. B.

Golden St.
31 25 554
los Angeles
32 27 .542
,h
Seattle
28 37 .431 1111
Phoeni K
23 37 .383 10
Portland
21 38 .356 111h
Friday 's Result s
Buffa lo 118 Detroit 116
Ph i ladelphia 92 KC -Omaha 89
Chicago 92 M ilw au k ee 90
Los A ngeles 112 Sea ftle 96
Boston 106 Portland 104
(on l y games sc h edu l ed J

Wooden says Bruins no

'

.

Scoring by ,quarters:
Eastern
8 13 10 23- 54
Southwestern 8 10 4 11- 33
Eastern - Dill 6-2-14,
Spencer 0-2-2, Sheets ~.
·Baum 5-0-10, Goebel_ 6+12,
Bailey 4-0-8, Atherton ().().(),
Sardine 0-0-0, Weber 0-0-0,
Blake 1-0-2.
Southwestern - Walker 4-().
8, Lewis 1-0-2, Wood 6-1-13,
Crouse 4·0·8, Ca rter 1·0·2,
Frasher 0+0.
, I

Pro Standings

Little Eagles triumph
with a 9-3 record, with Eastern ,
Southern and North Gallia all a
half-game back at 8-3.
The little Eagles, led by Mike
Harris with 14 points, jumped
out to a 16-7 fi rst quarter lead,
increasing it to 26-15 at intermission and 3~21 after three
whistles.
Sophomore Dan Good was
the only other Eagle in double
figures, chipping in 11 points.
Doug Miller paced the
Highlanders with 7 points.
Eastern hit 60 pet. of its free
throws on 9 of 15, while South-

Southwestern got only five
attempts at the foul line, and
didn 't take very good advantage of the oppor tuniti es,
sinking just one.

American Basketball
Association Standings
East
W L Pet . G.B .
New York
40 22 .645
Kentucky
36 23 .610 2112
39 27 .591 1 J
Carolina
Virginia
20 38 .345 18
15 47 . 242 25
Memphis
West
VJ l Pet. G . B.
Utah
42 19 . 689
San Antonio
32 32 .500 11'12
Ind ia na
30 32 .484 12112
Denver
28 31 ,4?5 13
San D iego
26 37 . 41 3 11
Fr i day' s Re sults
New York 115 Kenfucky 101
Carol ina 103 San Antonio 97
Memphis 102 Den\l'er 98
(Only games scheduled)

American Hockey
L ea gue Standings
(North)
w I t pts gf ga
Rochester 30 15 10 70 · 220 1114
New Haven 31 l7 8 70 21 9 175
Pro\l'idence 30 22 7 67 260 190
Nova Sco fia 25 21 10 60 18 8 161
Boston
17 33 8 42 177 226
Sprngfld .
12 28 l3 37 165 220
( South)
w 1 t pt s gf ga
Hershey
31 17 9 71 239 180
Balt imore 31 19 5 67 214 172
Cincinnati 30 19 6 66 200 172
Virgin ia
19 30 8 46 163 214 .
J cksnvlle 19 34 1 45 178 250
Ri c hmond 14 34 7 35 156 235 1
Friday's Results
Baltimore 6 Roche ster 3
Cincinnati 8 Jackson\l'ille 3
Hershey 8 Springfield 4
Virginia 4 Boston 1 ,
(Only games scheduled l

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MORR!SON GYM - While
all eyes were on the GallipolisWaverly clash Friday night
the Meigs Marauder played
some basketball themselves, to
the tune of their best game of
the y~ar and a 72~5 thumping
of VlSlhng Logan .
For Meigs it was just its third
win of the year, second in
SEOAL plav. but enough to
assure the Maroon and Gold of
a seventh place finish in the
league standings,
The Chieftains, on the other
hand, suffered their seventh
loop loss against seven wins
dropping them to a fourth plac~
tie with the Ironton Tigers.
The game, a see-saw affair
the entire way until the
Marauders went on top for
good at 60-59 in the final period,
was tied, and-or the lead
changed hands 32 times.
Meigs was paced by four
players who hit double figures,
led by junior center Dan
Dodson's 22 points. He was
followed by senior Steve Price
with 14, and juniors Lonnie
Coats and Orrion Blanchard
with 13 and 10 respectively.
The Chieftains, who were led
by Don Young and Mikh ·
Wright with 17 points each, led
at all the whistle stops, 17-14
after one period, 40-32 at intermission and 52-50 going into
the final frame.
The Chieftains spurted in
that second period to build that
eight point halftime margin,
but the Marauders came right
back at the beginning of the
third . stanza, ripping off six
straight points, eventually
knotting the count at 42-all in
the third period.
The Marauders, spurred by
the work of Coats and Blanchard who came off the bench
to play their best games of the
year, moved out to a 62-59lead
with just two minutes and 37
seconds remaining in the
fourth frame .
· Mler that, the Marauders
slowed the tempo down ,
holding the ball for one minute
and 52 seconds, although Logan
did steal the ball twice , only to
turn it over both times .
The Marauders then built up
that winning margin in the
final minute , mainly behind the

inside scoring of Blanchard.

The 6-1 junior hit for six final

rebounds before fouling out
midway in the tl)ird period on &lt;l

period markers.
For Price and se nior forw ard

questionable call.

Bill Myers, it was a good nigh t
to conclude their scholastic
careers in front of the home
folks. Myers played what could
be termed ·an inspired game '
hi tting four of six field .at:
tempts and hauling in 10

ten fie ld goal attempts and four

Pric&lt;', 11H'j l nwhi lr . l1i l fiY r of

of five at the charity stripe.
While Yuung and Wright led

the Chieftain offensive attack.
they got excellent double fogurc
help from Jeff Campbell who
pumped in 16 points.

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MORRISON GYM - The
clock showed 10 seconds
remaining in the game when
Marauder reserve guard Greg
Browning walked to the line
and sank his seventh and
eighth consecutive £ree throws

of the game to give Meigs a 41- with just two seconds left to
give the Chieftain reserves a
40 lead.

But the Logan Papooses
stormed. down court, and 6-3
Dennis Fuller pumped in a
jumper from the,top of the lane

42-41 triumph ove r the lads of
Ron Logan here Friday noght .
The li ttle Marauders had
trailed much of the way after
jumping to a 12-11 lead after
the first quarter.
The Papooses ca me back in

Ironton clobbers
Jackson, 80-67

the second per·ioct to take a 2016 in termi ssion lea d ,

in -

creasing it by a point, 30-25,
after three periods.
The Marauders, who hit 15 of
44 fi eld goal attempts for 34
pet., were led by Brownin~ who
ca nned six from the fie ld and

IRONTON - Big Ed Howard Tigers.
J ackson's attack was those eigh t of eight from the
rammed in 31 points Friday
by
Art ie line for 20 points.
night in leading Ironton to an spearheaded
Meigs as a team ho t 11 of 13
m7 thwnping of the visi ling DeStephen with 18 markers
char
ity tosses.
and
Paul
White
with
16
as
the
Jackson Ironrnen .
Loga
n, led by Mu lholland
The Ironton victory coupled Ironm en wound up league
with
10
points, hi t 50 pet. from
with the Logan defeat at the action with a 4-9 mark.
The Tigers con nected on 36 of the floor on 17 of 34, while
hands of Meigs tied the teams
hitting eight of 12 fr ee throw
for fourth place in the final 78 from the floor for 46.2 pet.
SEOAL standings with iden- and eight of 14 at the charity tries.
The loss drops the Ma rauder
stripe.
tical 7-7 records.
reserves
to 4-9 in league play,
Jackson's charts showed 27
The Tigers jwnped off to a
while
the
Chieftains
finish their
21·15 first period lead which of 55 fielders for 49.I pet. and 13
season at 7-7 in the SEOAL
swelled to 36-24 at the in- of 24 free throws.
The taller Tigers dominated reserve race.
termission, and after three
Reserves by quarters:
the boards with a rebounding
stanzas it was 62-44.
Logan
II 9 10 12--42
With Howard controllinJ the edge of 40-22.
Meigs
12
4 9 16--41
The
box
score:
boards (I~ rebounds ) . the
Loga
n
Robinette
2-11-4,.
( 67) - White 7 2 shorter Ironmen were simply 16 JACKSON
; Buc h an an 3 -0 6 ; M c Donald Fuller 4-1-9, Mara 3-1-7,
overpowered.
4-0-8 ; De St ephen6 6-18. Fann in
Ridge 3-1-7: Conroy 2.4 8. Meadows 2-2~. Mul holland 3-4Dave Rann dropped in 21 1-0·4;
TOTALS 27- 13· 67.
10, Flowers 2-0-4, Unge r 0-0-0,
IRONTON ( 80) - Ferguson
points to join Howard in
Cu
nnin g 1-0-2, Clark 0-0-0, '
4-0 -8 ; Gree n 2-2-6; H oward 14 3
double-&lt;iigit scoring for the 31;
Neal 1-l -3; F i tzpa tr ic k 3 o Harden 0-0-0.
b ; Rann 10 -1-21; Croc kr ell 2-l -5.
Meigs - Walbu rn 2-3-7,
TOTALS 36 ·8-8 0.
Score by qua r ters :
Browning 6-8-20, Meadows :1-0Jackson
15 9 20 23 - 67
Friday's R esu lt s
lr onfon
21 15 26 18 -- 80 6, Marshall 3-0-li, Magnotta 1-0Johnsfon 5 Long Island 4
Jackson
59 ,
R eser-ves:
2, Martm 0-0-0.
Binghamton 2 Sy ra cuse 2 (ot l
(Only games sc h edu l ed)

LOG MARK

Meigs-Logan box
Plilycr
Jim Pie rce
J1rn Kemp er
Don Young
Je ll Cam pbel l
Mil ch Wr iqht
J t: lf J~1 mcS
Del ber t L indsey
Sco tt Gos nel l

LOGAN 65
FG ~ A

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16
II

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0

0

3

0

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00
00
00

0
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0
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28 ·64

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34

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46

10 20
5 10
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75

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12-22

0

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7

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10
10

4 5
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30 -54

3

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39 16

The Home of the Future
Built to Last Until The Future

13
10

' ,

17 23 1? 1)
14 18 18 22 -

72

House lype siding. windows, doors, washerdryer area. total electric, 52 gallon electric
water heater . linen storage in hallway, carpet
in living room . curtai.n s &amp; drapes throughout .
Shutters. PI• baths, 14 Cu . Ft. refrigerator,
front gable. Othe r options available. This
mod e l ha s aluminum horizontal
siding .

65

"

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP
.
\ToUt.'' "

(6) Floor Plans (6)

For Th at Personal &amp; Profes ;1ooa
FEATURING

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e24 New AMF Lanes
1
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--v

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· ~,~~ ~

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a~~~

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See Jom Staats or Joe Giles

"A ll New AMF Equipment"
Upper Rt.7

Kcinauga, Ohio

l 1r\ l "-ou rh r,l r,I.,. Pr Br~dge· Sh oopmq PI010

Phone 446-9340

SPECIAL ~

De Witts

Home Owners
Only

Plumbing &amp;Heating
STATE RT. 160 446-2735

2.:~fo~ti~::~ 1

Russell's

.3. Promotion Starts
4 First Come First
• Served Limited
Supply
Models That
• Qualify Are:

-5

cu. 329 • cu 336 . cu 342 •
cu 348 cu 355

CONTACT YOUR LOCAL

C?UR WEEKLY SPECIAL
Call : Dwight Sievers, John Sang, Larry Daugherty , Jeff Schenerlein
.
AT
.

DON WAITS V.W. INC.
RIVERSIDE -AMC JEEP'
Gallipoli$, Ohio

Plumbing &amp; Heating

March 1st to
May 15th

Q

SPECIAL

225 BULAVILLE-PORTER RD.

THIS 5249.95 PANASONIC MIC-ROWAVE OVEN
FOR BUYING HEll CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING.
Thai's nghl. you rec e1ve I111 s !Jea ul,fu l Pana ·
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All you pay lor the Panasonic
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bill and he lps co nserve ene rg y And tl1e Hell
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Distributed By :

•

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''

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Iro n ton 49 .

1ft

··~~------~·a~a~a~oo~-------· "· ~~

l

FG-A FT ·A RB PF Pts .
0 J

Scor ing by quarte r s:
Log.=tn
M eigs

': 4
I I
I I

I

?

00

TOTALS

17

'IRAVElA»

Pt s.
B

1

I 2

Terry Qu,lll s
Bi ll Myer s
Diln Dodson
Si e v e P r i ce
Mi c key Davcnporl
lonni e Co~1t s
Orr ion Blan chMd
Chip Arauer

7

7

3

I

69

MElGS 72

Plt~y c r

'0 ,,0

3' 7
II

Dil vC' Kr eb s
Ri II Har we l l

TOTALS

FT ·A RB PF,,

•

WATCH FOR OUR •••
eNEW MARLETTE SECTIONAL
DISPLAY COMING SOON!

In team totals, Meigs h;u-

Reserves nipped

~

195 Upper River Road

Chieft&lt;oins hit just 28 of fo4 tries
for 43 pet.

ne~ !":it'd :m missed sho l.,, white due tu the dir£\cult tead1ers'
. Loga n grabbed ]4, and the strik e situation in that city
Meigs wi ll now prepme for
Chie£Utin s com mit ted fi ve
the openi ng round of the secmore persona l fou ls , 21-16.
For lhc Mcu·;mdcrs . if was tion al tournament, when tile
mos t iike l}' thrir fi 11al game of Marauders blc(• the Ga ll ipolis
the 19./3-74 se.ason, since lhe Blue Devils, SEOAL champostponed date w1th We llston pions, S;:~ turday r1ight at Coa l
~vill mos t likely not be m:1de up ( ~ r ove.

Qu~lifies

1973 V. W. Sta. Wgn. (Bus type) 7 pass. auto. trans., 10,000 miles
1973 V. W. Bug. Red. 4 speed, radio, new tires, lealherette seats
1973 Ghia Coupe (V. W.l sports car, yellow, radio, new tires, 15,000
1972 Duster 2 Dr., blue, 6 cyt., auto. A real beauty.
1972 V. W. Conv. Orange with white top, loaded with extras, 15,000

SPECIAL

Meig~ had three pl aye rs with
10 reboun ds ecu.: h; Myers,
Dodson and Bland 1ard. while
Young leU Chieft;lin boardrnen
wilh 12 c:u·om ~ .
The Marauders hit a bl;u ing
55 pe t. £rom the nom· on :lO of 54
field goa t" attempts; whHe the

JEEP

Dwight Sievers
Sales Manager
Don Watts V. W.
Riverside AMC-Jeep

Ill

ogan

'

AMC

"If you are looking for an economy car, what are you waiting
for? This is the best selection of Economy Cars we have ever
had."

U

arau ers. t ump

"WE ARE THE OLDEST MOBILE HOME DEALER

(/fJ ECONOMY CAR HEADQUARTERS

...~

21 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Swoday . Feb \7, 1974

\

992-5321

�... . '

- ,.

~

•
'

2~ - The

Eastern , meanwhile, hlt four
of six cha rity cha nges for 66

SIUlday Times- Sentinel , Sunday ,Feb . 17, 1974

Eastern clinche~ second place

pet.

Turn about's air play ·or Eagles
as Eagle mentor Bill Phillips just I :35left in the third frame. Highlander final period ')'it~
REEDSVILLE - The South- the loop basement.
The only other basket South- seven points.
\.
The low-scor ing affai r began Southwestern's Kevm Walker sent his squad into a four-.
western Highlanders used a
western
got
that
quarter
was
a
corner
offense,
and
inserted
Dill
was
joined
in
double
four..corner slow-down defense almost as du ll as the spanking at the 4:45 mark .
Elfs tern 's Torn Spence r junior guard Randy Blake to 25 foot bomb by Walker at the figures by Goebel with 12 and
to stay within three points of new Eastern uniforms were
buzzer.
drlv e the wlde-open lane.
Bawn with 10.
the lead at intermission, before sharp, with the Highlanders responded with a pair of foul ·
The
final
frame
was
all
Blake
responded
with
what
Wood was the only
the Eastern Eagles countered holdin g th e ball. hoping shots a minut e later to tie the Phillips termed the " key Easter n, with th e Eag les Highlander in twin figures .
with four-corners of their own Eas tern would come out and score at 2-all. The fi rst half
basket of the second hall," on a outscoring the Highlanders 17-5
A pleased Bill Phillips,
in the third quarter enroute to a leave somebody alone under continued that way, with the layup at the 5:05 mark to give in the first four and a half commenting after the game,
game
tied,
and-or
the
lead
!i&lt;l-33 win here Friday evening . the bucket.
minutes. Fiiur Eagles led that said, "We regrouped at half·
It worked successfully for changing hands 15 times in the Eastern a five point bulge at 23The triwnph, the Eagles'
fin
a l period charge, with time and the kids did a real
18.
eighth in llloop starts. assures the fir st half. with the count fir s t 14 minutes until the
Steve Dill, hi gh point man on seniors Steve Goebel, Tim good job."
them of at least a share of knotted at 8-8 after the first Eagles took the lead for good at the night with 14 points, Bawn and junior Greg Bailey
"We had that three point
second place in the fina l league period, and the Eagles clinging 17-16 on a John Sheets layup followed a minute later with a each getting six points, while
halftime
lead and went into a
to a slim 21-18 halftime margin. with I :53 remaining in the
standings.
five footer to up the lead to Dill addect five.
four -eorner offenSe of our own
Three minutes elapsed in second period.
Southwestern , at 1-11 in the
Sou1hwe
s
tern
pivotman
seven,
before
Southwestern
got
to open the middle for Blake to
Th e third period spell ed
league, winds up the SVAC that ini tial frame before any
Uoyd
Wood,
the
second
leading
its
first
points
of
the
second
drive/
' the fourth .year mentor
season with at least a share of scoring occurr ed. with the first disaster for the Highlanders, hall on a Walker layup with scorer with 13 points, led the
added.
bucket coming on a layup IJy

Wildcats blast Wahama
MERCERVILLE - Southern Valley Athletic Conference
champi on Hannan Trace
romped to its 17th victory in 18
outings here Friday night with
a 94-57 win over non-league
opponent Wahama.
Mark Swain, 6-0 junior
guard, led the way with 44
points, his second best offensive performance of the
year. Don Wells, 6-5 senior
·center was the only other
Wildcat in double figures with
16. Wells grabbed 15 of the
tea111's 52 rebounds.
Wahama ,s top scorer was

Bill Keefer with 16 foll owed by losers.
Hannan Trace will pla y
Mark Harmon with 14. Harmon
led the White Falcon Fairland in the Class A Sec·
tiona! Tournament Friday at
rebounders with 33.
Wahama is 6-10 on the year. Ironton .
Wahama (57 ) - Buzzard, I·
The Wildcats shot 55 pet.
0-2;
Keefer, 6-4-16; Lewis, 1-0fr om the floor hitting 43 of 78
2:
Harmon,
7-0-14; Russell, 4-0attempts. HT also sank eight of
12 free throws. Wahama hit 26
of 67 floor attempts for 36 pet.
and five of eight from the foul
line.
Wahama
won
the
preliminary game, 47-46.
REEDSVILLE
The
Holbrook and Tucker paced the
Eastern
Eagle
reserves,
winners with 11 points each.
th e
little
Shaffer had 11 points for the outscorin g
Highlanders in each quarter,
rolled to a 51-29 triumph over

8· Johnson 4-0-8·, Gilland , 3·1·
'
7.' Totals Z&amp;-5-57.
Hannan Trace 194) Lusher, 3-(Hi; Montgomery, I·
0-2; Hesson , 4·1·9; Wells, IHI16; Hall, 3-0-6; Halley, 3-2-3;
Swain, 20-4-44 ; and Sanders, I·
1-3. Totals 43-11-94.

the Sou thw estern reserves

Vikes edge
Kyger Creek

here Friday night.
The win, the little birds'
eighth in II league starts,
keeps Eastern at the same
pace as the other three SVAC
teams tied for the league's top

sp~e Hannan Trace reserves
have concluded their season

Na tionat8at.Kt t DIII

Assoc ialion Stt~ndings
Eastern Conference
Atlanlic Division
W L Pet.

g .b .

Boston

41 16 .719

New York
Buffalo
Ph iladelphia

36 24 .600 6 1h
32 31 .508 12
19 41 .317 2Jih

Central Division

W l Pet . G . B .

capita l
At ian fa
Hou ston
Cle..,eland

33
27
23
20

26
35
39
43

.559
A36 11!2
. 371 1Ph
.317 15

western con terence
Midwest Division
W L Pet . G . B.
Milwaukee
44 16 .?33
Ch icag o
44 20 .668 2
Detroit
40 21 .656 4117
KC -Omaha
23 41 .359 23
Pacific Division

western hit 7 of 16 for 44 pet.
Reserves by quarters:
16 10 13 12---51
Eastern
Southwestern 7 8 6 8-29
Eastern - Harris &amp;-2-14,
Conde 2-0-4, Blake 3-0-6, Bowen
3-1-7, Good 3-5-11, Nelson 1-0-2,
Holter 1+2, Reed 1-0-2, Barber
1-0-2, Larkins 1-0-2, Hannwn 01-1.
Southwestern - Grate 0-1-1,
Haislop 0·0'0, Lewis 2-0-4,
Miller 1·0·2, Fallon 0-2-2,
Walker 0-2-2, Fortner 0+0,
Banks 2-1-5, D. Miller 3-1-7,
Crouse 3-0-6.

By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
cats' leading scorer with '!/
WILLOW WOOD - Rod points on 10 baskets and seven
Bennett's 15 foot jwnper with of seven foul shots . He scored
just one second remaining tied 11 poin ts in the Bobcats'
the score at 74-74 in regulation, . comeback in the fourth
then the Vikings ouls!:ored the quarter.
visiting Kyger Creek Bobcats,
Other Bobcats helping in the
10-4 in overtime, to win a hotly- drive were Tabor with six '
contested Southern Valley points, and Dave Wise, 5-10
Athletic Conference game here junior who had 13 points on the
Friday night.
~ight, four in the last quarter.
picked up his fourth foul Kyger Creek led 36-29 at the
Myers led the Vikings with 27
CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPl) - game (when UCLA edged though he stayed in . Walton
Oregon
State
80-7&gt;
in
Los
half but fell behind 51-48 going points, Jones with W, Bennett John Wooden says he wouldn't
into the final period.
added 18 and Burcham finished rate his UCLA Bruins the top Angeles ). We haven't been as also made two costly turnovers.
In the, fourth quarter, the with 11 .
·collegiate basketball team sharp as we had been. I don 't
"We ma'de mistakes,"
know the reasons. Maybe we 're
lead see-sawed back and forth
In the frantic fourth quarter, now.
Wooden
said. "Some of our
as each team matched basket Burcham had seven points,
"I think I would vote for just not hungry."
seniors
made
key mistakes.
It was the first PAC-t! loss for
per basket.
Myers six and Paul Jones North Carolina State," he said.
Youdonotexpectilfrom them.
With 30 seconds remaining eight. Symmes Valley's third
Wooden's remark came after UCLA since March of 1970.
They
have been through the
the score was tied at 71-71. Paul period uprising was paced by Oregon State, which started
mill
before."
Th e hero for Oregon State
Jones was fouled with 27 Myers and Bennett. Myers had three freshmen, ended UCLA's
was
one of those three freshMiller had praise for Doug
seconds left. He ~nned one of eight points while Bennett long Pacific 8 winning streak
Oxsen, ,who guarded Walton.
two free throws giving the scored six points.
with a 61-57 victory Friday men-kuard George Tucker.
"George
is
the
worst
free
"Doug did a marvelous job, "
Yikings a one point lead.
Kyger Creek had built its night.
throw
shooter
on
the
team
"
he
said. "He stayed on the right
Kyger's David Clay, 6-4 lead on a joint team scoring
Earlier this season Notre
senior center, put the Bobcats effort provided by Hudson, Dame halted the Bruins' 88- said a beaming OSU coa~h side of Walton and I thought
Ralph Miller. "But, my, he hit our other people did a good job
ahead with a two pointer at the Rwnley, Tabor, Wise, and game win streak.
four
big ones there at the end." of sagging back, getting a hand
10 second mark.
Stidham.
UCLA now finds itself
It
was Tucker's four free · in, but still not giving up the
Symmes Valley. went down
It was the second time this fighting to stay in first place in
the floor fired, but the ball season, Symmes Valley had the PAC-II and gaining an throws in the late going that outdoor play to them."
Miller said, "I think UCLA is
rebounded into the hands of a trailed the Bobcats at the half NCAA Playoff berth . The allowed Oregon Stale to. win
after
the
Bruins
had
closed
a
still
No. I. But I think we made
Bobcat.
only to come back and win in defending national champions
a little progress."
Clay Hudson, 6-0 senior the final minutes of the game. were to meet tough Oregon at 57-50 deficit lo 57-.16.
"I consider myself a good
Paul Miller (no relation to
guard, began moving up the
Earlier this year, Kyger Eugene Saturday while Southfoul
shooter,"
Tucker
said.
the
coach), one of Oregon
floor, but was "tied up" ac- Creek led by 10 points at the ern California, only a game
cording to one official and half, seven points going into the back, was to play Oregon State "But my statistics just don 't State's sharpshooters who
show it."
wound up with 8 field goals for
"fouled," according 'to the final quarter but lost by seven here Saturday night.
The Bruins were hurt in the 16 points, said, "I just can't
other officiaL A scuffle be- points at Cheshire.
HJ'm concerned," Wooden
late
going when Bill Walton believe it. I can't say how it
tween Hudson and the Vikings'
According to the charts, said. "Very much so. I didn't
Mike Burcham, 5-11 senior, Symmes Valley connected on feel that way after last week's who wound up with 15 points: feels. Fantastic. Those people
up here have waited a long
followed. Both benches spilled · 34 of 67 floor attempts for 50.7
time for this. I'm glad we gave
onto the floor , but were quickly, pet. and 16 of 25 at the free
it
to them. ',
restrained by their coaches throw stripe. Kyger Creek hit By Un i ted Press International
Minnesota 3U 26 1 61 227 202
Oxsen
called it "A dream
Winnipeg
27
26
5
59
195
208
Nalloul Hockey
and school officials . When 28of 61 shots for 45.9 pet. and 22
Edmonton 27 29 o 54 193 205 come true .,.
Leagu e Standings
order was restored by referees of 30 free thiows. Both teams
Vanc ouv er 22 32 0 44 207 226
(East&gt;
LOS Ang .
20 37 0 40 169 229
w I t ph gf ga
Jack Dawson and Dale Hall, grabbed 34 rebounds.
Friday ' s Results
Boston
39 9 6 84 244 146
both Hudson and Burcham
Symmes Valley took the M ontreal 33 15 6 72 19~ 149 Jersey 6 Cle\l'eland 2
7 Winnipeg 1
were ejected from the game reserve game, 40-31. Mille~ led NY Rangers27 16 . 12 66 202 167 Minnesota
Houston 6 Los Angeles 4
and both teams were assessed the VIkings with 10 points while Toronto
New England ~ E~~~nto n J
25 18 11 61 195 157
24 25 6 54 178 185
with a double technical foul. Doug Cottrell topped the · Buffalo
International Hockey
19 28 8 46 182 23()
League Standings
Kyger Creek's John Rumley Bobkittens with 13 markers. Detroit
NY l s'l ndrs 14 26 14 42 130 174
f North I
converted one of two of the
Kyger Creek will travel to V ancouver 15 31 9 39 152 207
w 1 t pfs gt ga
fWestJ
Muskegon 34 20 5 73 204 174
technical foul shots giving the North Gallia Tuesday in a
w I t pts gf ga
Saginaw
29 27 2 60 236 215
34 12 8 76 190 115
Bobcats a two poinllead. Jaye make-up game. Eastern was at Phila.
Toledo
24 31 1 49 190 21?
27
11
15
69
181
109
Chicago
Flint
22 32 3 47 190 214
Myers, 6-1 junior ce nter, Symmes Valley Saturday.
22 25 8 52 152 1SO
St. Louis
Port Huron 20 32 3 43 161 186
21 25 10 52 142 161
missed both ends of the
Kyger Creek (78) ...., Hudson, Atlanta
1( South)
L os Ang .
21 26 8 50 ~51 171
w t t pts gf ga
Vikings' technical fouls.
10-7-27; Rumley, 2-3-7; Tabor; Minnesota
16 26 13 ~5 162 196
D es M oi nes 34 19 4 7'1. 243 190
16
33
5
37
152
200
With four seconds left, 6-5-17; Clay, 3-2-3; Roush, I).(). Pitts .
Columbus 30 28 2 62 227 225
11 38 7 29 147 242
Dayton
21 11 4 sa 201 186
Symmes Valley controlled the O; Wise, 4-5-13; Stidham, 3-0-6. Ca lif . Friday
' s Results
Fort Wayne27 31 0 54 190 223
Monrreal 9 Detro i t 4
tip, passed it around until Totals 28-22-78.
Friday's Results
Boston 4 vancou..,er 2
Des Moines 4 fort Wayne 3 (o fl
Bennett flipped it in just prior
Symmes Valley (84) let an AAA club gi~e you a
World Hockey
Saginaw 4 Flint 2
A ssotiation Standings
to the buzzer.
Burcham, 5-1-11 ; Jaye Myers,
(Only gam es scheduled)
lift. SillltJIY call the AAA Emer·
(East
North American Hockey
gency Road Service. There are
During the three minute 11-5-'!1; Beimett, !J4.1!; Brown,
w 1 t pfs gf ga
League Standings
more
than 24,000 locations . . .
overtime, Myers who had four 0-2-2; Jim Myers, 0-2-2 ; Jones, New Engl. 31 24 2 64 211 19:5
w 1 t pts gf. ga
29 26 4 62 231 207
Toronto
more
than 100,000 se rvicemen.
Syracuse
47
13
3
97
301
186
personal fouls during most of 8·4·20; Quesenberry, 1-2-4. Quebec
29 25 3 61 210 188
Maine
41 21 J 85 354 259
Uch
locat ion strive s to give
25 25 5 55 168 179 Long ISland 30 31 2 62. 259 240
Cleve .
the second half, scored six Totals 34-16-84.
members
top-rate ser~ ice. It's
25 24 J 53 1?0 177
Chicago
Blnghmtn 26 37 5 57 254 325
points, Jones had two and
By Quarters
Jersey
24 32 2 50 173 215 J.ohnstown 26 34 4 56 220 260
just one of the many benefits
(West)
Bennett added a basket.
KC
19 17 10 28 4-78
Cape Cod
27 35 1 55 284 283
you gel with an AAA Club mem·
ga
Mohawk
Kyger Creek's four points SV
17 12 22 23 11)_84 Houston 34w 171 t5 73pts·225gt 148
bership.
Call today for more
Val.
18 44 2 38 210 329
inrormation.
were added. by David Clay.
Three Bobcat starters, Hudson, Lawre nce Tabor, 5·8
senior guard, and Joe Stidham,
The Pleasure
Eating Is Good Fla vor
•
6-2 jiUlior center, had to watch .
A great idea
Good Flavor Comes Only From Quality Food
the overtime from the bench.
Tabor; playing his best game
for over 70 years
of his high school career,
scored 17 points and caused
several Viking turnovers
Is a Foot Long Hotdog from Bob Evans Drive-In served
before fouling out toward· the
end of the fourth quarter. '
with our special meat sauce- served daily at
Stidham finished with six
Phone : Pomeroy 992-2590
points, but was rugged ~n the
Gallipoli• 446-0699
boards before he was forced to
leave. Hudson was the \ Bob-

longer top cage team

I

CAR BOT

YOU DOWN

Ol

Quality

BOB EVANS DRIVE~IN

.,,

AUTO Q.UB Of
SOUTHERN OHIO

-------

It's a 60x24' TOTAL ELECTRIC

W l Pet . G. B.

Golden St.
31 25 554
los Angeles
32 27 .542
,h
Seattle
28 37 .431 1111
Phoeni K
23 37 .383 10
Portland
21 38 .356 111h
Friday 's Result s
Buffa lo 118 Detroit 116
Ph i ladelphia 92 KC -Omaha 89
Chicago 92 M ilw au k ee 90
Los A ngeles 112 Sea ftle 96
Boston 106 Portland 104
(on l y games sc h edu l ed J

Wooden says Bruins no

'

.

Scoring by ,quarters:
Eastern
8 13 10 23- 54
Southwestern 8 10 4 11- 33
Eastern - Dill 6-2-14,
Spencer 0-2-2, Sheets ~.
·Baum 5-0-10, Goebel_ 6+12,
Bailey 4-0-8, Atherton ().().(),
Sardine 0-0-0, Weber 0-0-0,
Blake 1-0-2.
Southwestern - Walker 4-().
8, Lewis 1-0-2, Wood 6-1-13,
Crouse 4·0·8, Ca rter 1·0·2,
Frasher 0+0.
, I

Pro Standings

Little Eagles triumph
with a 9-3 record, with Eastern ,
Southern and North Gallia all a
half-game back at 8-3.
The little Eagles, led by Mike
Harris with 14 points, jumped
out to a 16-7 fi rst quarter lead,
increasing it to 26-15 at intermission and 3~21 after three
whistles.
Sophomore Dan Good was
the only other Eagle in double
figures, chipping in 11 points.
Doug Miller paced the
Highlanders with 7 points.
Eastern hit 60 pet. of its free
throws on 9 of 15, while South-

Southwestern got only five
attempts at the foul line, and
didn 't take very good advantage of the oppor tuniti es,
sinking just one.

American Basketball
Association Standings
East
W L Pet . G.B .
New York
40 22 .645
Kentucky
36 23 .610 2112
39 27 .591 1 J
Carolina
Virginia
20 38 .345 18
15 47 . 242 25
Memphis
West
VJ l Pet. G . B.
Utah
42 19 . 689
San Antonio
32 32 .500 11'12
Ind ia na
30 32 .484 12112
Denver
28 31 ,4?5 13
San D iego
26 37 . 41 3 11
Fr i day' s Re sults
New York 115 Kenfucky 101
Carol ina 103 San Antonio 97
Memphis 102 Den\l'er 98
(Only games scheduled)

American Hockey
L ea gue Standings
(North)
w I t pts gf ga
Rochester 30 15 10 70 · 220 1114
New Haven 31 l7 8 70 21 9 175
Pro\l'idence 30 22 7 67 260 190
Nova Sco fia 25 21 10 60 18 8 161
Boston
17 33 8 42 177 226
Sprngfld .
12 28 l3 37 165 220
( South)
w 1 t pt s gf ga
Hershey
31 17 9 71 239 180
Balt imore 31 19 5 67 214 172
Cincinnati 30 19 6 66 200 172
Virgin ia
19 30 8 46 163 214 .
J cksnvlle 19 34 1 45 178 250
Ri c hmond 14 34 7 35 156 235 1
Friday's Results
Baltimore 6 Roche ster 3
Cincinnati 8 Jackson\l'ille 3
Hershey 8 Springfield 4
Virginia 4 Boston 1 ,
(Only games scheduled l

BROADMORE
UNFURNISHED

•14,900

8" lap siding . Pi.tched shingle roof. 40 gal. hot
water tank , '14' paneling throughllut, eye-level
oven , 2-door refrigerator, recessed entry,
double lavatories, deluxe bath &amp; 31/s, carpeted
throughout. walk -in closet adjacent to
bathroom with double mirrored doors . Wait'/ I
I
you see it .

IT'S A BEAUTY
We have a full line of VINDALE MOBILES,
60x24' - as well as 12' &amp; 14' wides . Wide
selection and price range with many floor
plans to choose from .

SEE OUR TAURUS &amp; TERRY
TRAILERS

MORR!SON GYM - While
all eyes were on the GallipolisWaverly clash Friday night
the Meigs Marauder played
some basketball themselves, to
the tune of their best game of
the y~ar and a 72~5 thumping
of VlSlhng Logan .
For Meigs it was just its third
win of the year, second in
SEOAL plav. but enough to
assure the Maroon and Gold of
a seventh place finish in the
league standings,
The Chieftains, on the other
hand, suffered their seventh
loop loss against seven wins
dropping them to a fourth plac~
tie with the Ironton Tigers.
The game, a see-saw affair
the entire way until the
Marauders went on top for
good at 60-59 in the final period,
was tied, and-or the lead
changed hands 32 times.
Meigs was paced by four
players who hit double figures,
led by junior center Dan
Dodson's 22 points. He was
followed by senior Steve Price
with 14, and juniors Lonnie
Coats and Orrion Blanchard
with 13 and 10 respectively.
The Chieftains, who were led
by Don Young and Mikh ·
Wright with 17 points each, led
at all the whistle stops, 17-14
after one period, 40-32 at intermission and 52-50 going into
the final frame.
The Chieftains spurted in
that second period to build that
eight point halftime margin,
but the Marauders came right
back at the beginning of the
third . stanza, ripping off six
straight points, eventually
knotting the count at 42-all in
the third period.
The Marauders, spurred by
the work of Coats and Blanchard who came off the bench
to play their best games of the
year, moved out to a 62-59lead
with just two minutes and 37
seconds remaining in the
fourth frame .
· Mler that, the Marauders
slowed the tempo down ,
holding the ball for one minute
and 52 seconds, although Logan
did steal the ball twice , only to
turn it over both times .
The Marauders then built up
that winning margin in the
final minute , mainly behind the

inside scoring of Blanchard.

The 6-1 junior hit for six final

rebounds before fouling out
midway in the tl)ird period on &lt;l

period markers.
For Price and se nior forw ard

questionable call.

Bill Myers, it was a good nigh t
to conclude their scholastic
careers in front of the home
folks. Myers played what could
be termed ·an inspired game '
hi tting four of six field .at:
tempts and hauling in 10

ten fie ld goal attempts and four

Pric&lt;', 11H'j l nwhi lr . l1i l fiY r of

of five at the charity stripe.
While Yuung and Wright led

the Chieftain offensive attack.
they got excellent double fogurc
help from Jeff Campbell who
pumped in 16 points.

SAVE
$2495
$2995
$2495
$2788

1972 Nova 2 Dr. Coupe, green &amp; white, 6 cyl ., auto., radio, whitetires.$2488
1972 V. W. Bug, dark green, 4 speed, radi'~, leatherette, new tires.
$2288
1971 Dodge Demon, 2 dr., yellow, 6 cyl., auto. Radio, wire wheel cov $2095
1971 V. W. Sta . Wgn. (Bus&gt;. 7 pass., 4 speed, radio, leatherette.
52395
1971 V.W. Sq . Back sta . wgn., red, auto. trans., radio, white tires s2695
1970 Maverick 2 Dr., blue w-black vinyl top, 6 cyt ., automatic. Sharp.$1788
1970 Ply. Duster 2 dr., 6 cyl., 3 speed, radio. A real gas saver.
$1395
1969 Ghia Conv . ( V. W. ), black, 4 sp ., radio, tape player, sharp car . $1495
1969 V. W. Sq. Back Sta. Wgn ., beige, 4 speed, leatherette, radio.
$1395
1969 Ford Fairlane2 dr., small V-8, auto ., radio. Runs out like new. $1095
1968 V. W. Fast Back, dark blue, 4 speed, engine completely rebuilt. $1195
1968 Mustang 2 dr . H. T. Smaii,V-8, auto. trans. Radio .
$1288
1968 Ply. Fury Ill, 4 dr . sed •• small V-8, auto. trans., radio. Nice con d . $895
1967 Ply. Barracuda, small V-8, 3 speed, radio.
5895
1966 Chev . Van, 6 cyt., 3 speed, body a 'tittle rough but good mech
$695

.OUR WEEKLY SPECIAL
SPECIAL
SPECIAL

SPECIAL

!Q

1969 PONTIAC
Catalina 4 Dr. Sed. auto P S p B ' . . 1
·
nice family car. '
·• · · ., · . '' vmy top, a1r cond. A

~

MORRISON GYM - The
clock showed 10 seconds
remaining in the game when
Marauder reserve guard Greg
Browning walked to the line
and sank his seventh and
eighth consecutive £ree throws

of the game to give Meigs a 41- with just two seconds left to
give the Chieftain reserves a
40 lead.

But the Logan Papooses
stormed. down court, and 6-3
Dennis Fuller pumped in a
jumper from the,top of the lane

42-41 triumph ove r the lads of
Ron Logan here Friday noght .
The li ttle Marauders had
trailed much of the way after
jumping to a 12-11 lead after
the first quarter.
The Papooses ca me back in

Ironton clobbers
Jackson, 80-67

the second per·ioct to take a 2016 in termi ssion lea d ,

in -

creasing it by a point, 30-25,
after three periods.
The Marauders, who hit 15 of
44 fi eld goal attempts for 34
pet., were led by Brownin~ who
ca nned six from the fie ld and

IRONTON - Big Ed Howard Tigers.
J ackson's attack was those eigh t of eight from the
rammed in 31 points Friday
by
Art ie line for 20 points.
night in leading Ironton to an spearheaded
Meigs as a team ho t 11 of 13
m7 thwnping of the visi ling DeStephen with 18 markers
char
ity tosses.
and
Paul
White
with
16
as
the
Jackson Ironrnen .
Loga
n, led by Mu lholland
The Ironton victory coupled Ironm en wound up league
with
10
points, hi t 50 pet. from
with the Logan defeat at the action with a 4-9 mark.
The Tigers con nected on 36 of the floor on 17 of 34, while
hands of Meigs tied the teams
hitting eight of 12 fr ee throw
for fourth place in the final 78 from the floor for 46.2 pet.
SEOAL standings with iden- and eight of 14 at the charity tries.
The loss drops the Ma rauder
stripe.
tical 7-7 records.
reserves
to 4-9 in league play,
Jackson's charts showed 27
The Tigers jwnped off to a
while
the
Chieftains
finish their
21·15 first period lead which of 55 fielders for 49.I pet. and 13
season at 7-7 in the SEOAL
swelled to 36-24 at the in- of 24 free throws.
The taller Tigers dominated reserve race.
termission, and after three
Reserves by quarters:
the boards with a rebounding
stanzas it was 62-44.
Logan
II 9 10 12--42
With Howard controllinJ the edge of 40-22.
Meigs
12
4 9 16--41
The
box
score:
boards (I~ rebounds ) . the
Loga
n
Robinette
2-11-4,.
( 67) - White 7 2 shorter Ironmen were simply 16 JACKSON
; Buc h an an 3 -0 6 ; M c Donald Fuller 4-1-9, Mara 3-1-7,
overpowered.
4-0-8 ; De St ephen6 6-18. Fann in
Ridge 3-1-7: Conroy 2.4 8. Meadows 2-2~. Mul holland 3-4Dave Rann dropped in 21 1-0·4;
TOTALS 27- 13· 67.
10, Flowers 2-0-4, Unge r 0-0-0,
IRONTON ( 80) - Ferguson
points to join Howard in
Cu
nnin g 1-0-2, Clark 0-0-0, '
4-0 -8 ; Gree n 2-2-6; H oward 14 3
double-&lt;iigit scoring for the 31;
Neal 1-l -3; F i tzpa tr ic k 3 o Harden 0-0-0.
b ; Rann 10 -1-21; Croc kr ell 2-l -5.
Meigs - Walbu rn 2-3-7,
TOTALS 36 ·8-8 0.
Score by qua r ters :
Browning 6-8-20, Meadows :1-0Jackson
15 9 20 23 - 67
Friday's R esu lt s
lr onfon
21 15 26 18 -- 80 6, Marshall 3-0-li, Magnotta 1-0Johnsfon 5 Long Island 4
Jackson
59 ,
R eser-ves:
2, Martm 0-0-0.
Binghamton 2 Sy ra cuse 2 (ot l
(Only games sc h edu l ed)

LOG MARK

Meigs-Logan box
Plilycr
Jim Pie rce
J1rn Kemp er
Don Young
Je ll Cam pbel l
Mil ch Wr iqht
J t: lf J~1 mcS
Del ber t L indsey
Sco tt Gos nel l

LOGAN 65
FG ~ A

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0

0

3

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9· 17

34

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46

10 20
5 10
11

75

0

21 65

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0

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10
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4 5
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30 -54

3

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39 16

The Home of the Future
Built to Last Until The Future

13
10

' ,

17 23 1? 1)
14 18 18 22 -

72

House lype siding. windows, doors, washerdryer area. total electric, 52 gallon electric
water heater . linen storage in hallway, carpet
in living room . curtai.n s &amp; drapes throughout .
Shutters. PI• baths, 14 Cu . Ft. refrigerator,
front gable. Othe r options available. This
mod e l ha s aluminum horizontal
siding .

65

"

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP
.
\ToUt.'' "

(6) Floor Plans (6)

For Th at Personal &amp; Profes ;1ooa
FEATURING

All expertly desi gned , superbly built,
economically priced. - Farmers Home Approval.

e24 New AMF Lanes
1
•Snack Bar and
~\11/1 r;
Captain's Lounge ::::: ~
Spec 1illizin g in AMF &amp;

--v

SECTIONAL HOMES
eMARLETTE e TRAVELO e ELCONA

MOBILE HOMES

· ~,~~ ~

MAR LETT E e E LCONA eGRANV ILL E
ARL INGTONeMI DDLEBU R Y eSHAMROCK

'~,~/1~...._n.\\

Col umbi &lt;~ Bowling Billls.

'""-..'-........
........._

PROFESSIONAL BALL F1TT1NG,
DRILLING&amp; IN ST RUCTION
AVAlLABLE
SPEC lAL RATES TO:
CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIE S, ST UD ENTS.

a~~~

446-3362

MOBrLE HOME SALES
See Jom Staats or Joe Giles

"A ll New AMF Equipment"
Upper Rt.7

Kcinauga, Ohio

l 1r\ l "-ou rh r,l r,I.,. Pr Br~dge· Sh oopmq PI010

Phone 446-9340

SPECIAL ~

De Witts

Home Owners
Only

Plumbing &amp;Heating
STATE RT. 160 446-2735

2.:~fo~ti~::~ 1

Russell's

.3. Promotion Starts
4 First Come First
• Served Limited
Supply
Models That
• Qualify Are:

-5

cu. 329 • cu 336 . cu 342 •
cu 348 cu 355

CONTACT YOUR LOCAL

C?UR WEEKLY SPECIAL
Call : Dwight Sievers, John Sang, Larry Daugherty , Jeff Schenerlein
.
AT
.

DON WAITS V.W. INC.
RIVERSIDE -AMC JEEP'
Gallipoli$, Ohio

Plumbing &amp; Heating

March 1st to
May 15th

Q

SPECIAL

225 BULAVILLE-PORTER RD.

THIS 5249.95 PANASONIC MIC-ROWAVE OVEN
FOR BUYING HEll CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING.
Thai's nghl. you rec e1ve I111 s !Jea ul,fu l Pana ·
soniC Microwa ve Oven Wllh the ln Siallaii On of a
He11 Hermotage II Central A~r Con rJ1too ni ng Syste m
l;letweeC\ now and May 15th . II yo u've ever co nSidered adding ce nt ral a1r co nd 1t1on
ing. now 's the ti me to d o 11
All you pay lor the Panasonic
Microwave Oven is a $30 00
shippmgand handlmg c harge.
The best pari 15 the He11
Hermitage II a1r cond ltio nmg system Th1 s new Heildeveloped sys1emprov1 des
up Io 15% or more efficiency
than many brands.That saves
you money o n yo ur elect nc

POMEROY 992·2448

bill and he lps co nserve ene rg y And tl1e Hell
He rm11age II sys te m 1s qu1et th a nk s to He1ls
e xc lu s1ve sol 1d sta te vanable s pee d ia n con lrol
wh 1ch adju sts th e fan s peed lo th e te mpera tu re
load It s good look1ng too . an d beca use
it s a to p disc ha rge sys te m you
ca n pl~nt shrubs c lose lo 1t
Cal llod ay lor a free estima te
lns la ll by May 15th and get the
Panaso nic Mic rowav e Ove n lo r
ju st a $30.00 sh1pp1ng and han dling charge"

Foreman
&amp;Abbott

~e UJJ~Ql!~

Heil .Dealer

MIDDLEPORT

Distributed By :

•

•

446-4782

Arnold Brothers

''

(

Gallipolis, Ohio

Iro n ton 49 .

1ft

··~~------~·a~a~a~oo~-------· "· ~~

l

FG-A FT ·A RB PF Pts .
0 J

Scor ing by quarte r s:
Log.=tn
M eigs

': 4
I I
I I

I

?

00

TOTALS

17

'IRAVElA»

Pt s.
B

1

I 2

Terry Qu,lll s
Bi ll Myer s
Diln Dodson
Si e v e P r i ce
Mi c key Davcnporl
lonni e Co~1t s
Orr ion Blan chMd
Chip Arauer

7

7

3

I

69

MElGS 72

Plt~y c r

'0 ,,0

3' 7
II

Dil vC' Kr eb s
Ri II Har we l l

TOTALS

FT ·A RB PF,,

•

WATCH FOR OUR •••
eNEW MARLETTE SECTIONAL
DISPLAY COMING SOON!

In team totals, Meigs h;u-

Reserves nipped

~

195 Upper River Road

Chieft&lt;oins hit just 28 of fo4 tries
for 43 pet.

ne~ !":it'd :m missed sho l.,, white due tu the dir£\cult tead1ers'
. Loga n grabbed ]4, and the strik e situation in that city
Meigs wi ll now prepme for
Chie£Utin s com mit ted fi ve
the openi ng round of the secmore persona l fou ls , 21-16.
For lhc Mcu·;mdcrs . if was tion al tournament, when tile
mos t iike l}' thrir fi 11al game of Marauders blc(• the Ga ll ipolis
the 19./3-74 se.ason, since lhe Blue Devils, SEOAL champostponed date w1th We llston pions, S;:~ turday r1ight at Coa l
~vill mos t likely not be m:1de up ( ~ r ove.

Qu~lifies

1973 V. W. Sta. Wgn. (Bus type) 7 pass. auto. trans., 10,000 miles
1973 V. W. Bug. Red. 4 speed, radio, new tires, lealherette seats
1973 Ghia Coupe (V. W.l sports car, yellow, radio, new tires, 15,000
1972 Duster 2 Dr., blue, 6 cyt., auto. A real beauty.
1972 V. W. Conv. Orange with white top, loaded with extras, 15,000

SPECIAL

Meig~ had three pl aye rs with
10 reboun ds ecu.: h; Myers,
Dodson and Bland 1ard. while
Young leU Chieft;lin boardrnen
wilh 12 c:u·om ~ .
The Marauders hit a bl;u ing
55 pe t. £rom the nom· on :lO of 54
field goa t" attempts; whHe the

JEEP

Dwight Sievers
Sales Manager
Don Watts V. W.
Riverside AMC-Jeep

Ill

ogan

'

AMC

"If you are looking for an economy car, what are you waiting
for? This is the best selection of Economy Cars we have ever
had."

U

arau ers. t ump

"WE ARE THE OLDEST MOBILE HOME DEALER

(/fJ ECONOMY CAR HEADQUARTERS

...~

21 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Swoday . Feb \7, 1974

\

992-5321

�r

l.! - The Stmrl&lt;l\ Tmws ·Sent uwl. Sttn(tl\

rl'b

I

-

.

'

11 1q1 ~

Land Use committee active in late forties
·•P

the NE\\ ih h\HMlNt.

\

tht• dt•&lt;~th of Dr l "ISh{"r
'fhcr cun .JoluJ:-;un s('f\ ,•tl ,Js t. llllfllv ,1gcnt 1n tlu sp1 Ulg of 1941\
wtnl(.) tllf' dgt•nl was u11 I••,JVt' ftlf o,;( udv Mm h nf llns lllllt' \\.I S

spent m gt•ltmg the 1 t•t.tl t It ut k ( ,, fl\\ •·rs As:-;ut ~.tlltm m J_;d11 11t
sa le~ p1 og1 .un t•sl&lt;lbhshL&gt;tl
Jfi4R sa w Lur\ .Jo D)t' , onll' ~•s

,]

and thf?

4·11

A~~ Jstant

In 11149 HtJ\.

Holter .md Jt•an I.e'-' served :1s 4·H /\ss1st.anl~

The 194!Trep011 hsts the' onstruct10n of the Ph1hp Sporn PIHut
the dechnt• of nulk prtces, and lh{' shlft rrom beef' dttlc tu ci&lt;-Ur}
rattle as r.H iors mnuencmg thE." county s &lt;Jcll vttJ es In 1'148 lh"
Crow Rrothers esta blished thetr battery brmler production and
dresstng plant at Letart F&gt;lls In 1947 the Manetta Tt uck
Growers packmg shed was establtshed at Portland, largely due
tn the leadership of Hubert Prtce, preStdent and other members
of the Portland Commumty Club
The pertod 1950 to 1%4 saw a contmued effort to get more
farm productiOn from the soil through the TV A dcmonst ra tJOn
program whrch contmued until 1954 Sot! conservatiOn, mcreased
ferltllzalJOn, and attempts to estabhsh better quahly legumes
and grasses dommated the crops area In 1959 t he Sou th eas tern
OhJO Regwnal CoWlcJl sponsored the Greenbacks from Green
Pastures program Count) wmners mduded Harold Saxton,
Hockmg, Ed Wagner, Athens , Edson Roush Metgs and T J
Mullms &amp; Son, Jackson carl Brhkam and Lee Jackson, conservatwmsl and aide, assisted m startmg band seeding on the
farms of Norman Rose and Hobert Shrelds Pearl H and Donald
Mora apphed 500 pounds of 111-10-10 fertilizer as a top d ressmg on
pasture According to the report, results were outstandmg
Through the cooperatiOn of the Production and Marketmg
Admrmstration,l27farmersapphed I,OOOpounds of fertlhzerper
acre to each acre of hve acres of pasture
ed
100 b h ls f
r
In 1952 Andrew Cross averag over
us e o corn pe
acre on 100 acres ol cropland 1953 saw the hrst mention of apphcatwn of starter solution wtth vegetables on the farms or
Thereon Johnson, C D. Adams, and Harold Grunm The same
year TCA was used by one or more farmers to attempt to control

s lum·~ on usc uf fertilizers, secd mg nuxtures , ctnd olh ct crop
r e1 on tmen&lt;l ..l ttolltl
~I Om 1'150 (O }954 "brotler prodttCIJOn COn\tnUed lo tncreaSC

1herc wt·t c 1,000,000 brotlers m the co unty m 1951 By 195.! Me1gs
( vunty IL·d u.~ ~l&lt;.~lt! m brmler production wtth over 2,000,000
btrd s In thut yc,u the first Mc1gs County Br otlerr Feslt va l wa.-;
h• l•l w1 tl 1r.uvC'rnor Jo'rank ~.a usc he as the prm( 1pal speaker
Young people mcrea sed thetr tnlerest tn brmler growmg with

the "Chicken of Tomorrow ' contest 1951 saw Fred Stanley,
Gary Lee, Duane Jordan, and Robert Searles placmg tn the top
ten tn the d1stnct Mergs County's entrtes placmg m 1953 tncluded
Fred Stanley , Dwight Nelson, Albert Qurvey, Cectl Nelson,
Donna Holter, Albert Qurvey, Edward Evans, Ronald Evans,
DJ.\ td Pterce, Duanf' Rarr, Larry Morns and Donald Nelson In
1954 Fred Stanley was the state wmner m the "JuniOr Chtcken of
ronJU 1 1 u .,
• ~. "innmg :1 ...,r tn thP Amertcan Poultry
Industnes Conference Sharon Atkins placed htgh m the conte:;t
Brotler marketmg was becommg a problem m 1954 as a
poultry auctiOn started and rotated between Pomt Pleasant and
Parkersburg but was later moved 200 miles away
Veterans Farm Trammg Programs had expanded to erght
schools in 1950, seven m 1951, and four In 1952
The Home CoWlCII group sponsored a legal affarrs meetmg
wtth attorneys Cednc Clark and Manmng Webster as the
resource people
1950 was the second year for Mergs Safety servrces wrth

bl hed I t
Johnson, George A Perry and Fred Goeglem esta
d c ISE H JO
weather legume tests m 1945 Harold Cat nahan an
um
phrey Installed barn ha) dryers the same )ear Wtlh mcrease of
livestock on farms, 35 farm ponds were estabhshed
d p odm 1946
ti
through work of the Soli Conservatton Service an
r uc on
and Marketmg Adrmmstratton rhe followmg year 70 fann
ponds were butlt and m 1949 400 people attended a Fatm Pond
Day
U 1
1947 saw the orgamzatton of the Meigs Datry Servrce m
With Claude Montgomery as the DHIA tester and Walter Brown
as the techructan for the arl1ftc1al msemmat10n program
R
w The
lte
orgamzmg group mcluded Zrba MICII&lt;Iff, Norma" ose, a r
Brown, Granvrlle Stout, Clarence Prtce, Ralph Badgely, Dana
Hoffman, Wilbur Parker, James Titus, John Colwell, Joe
Weyersmrller' Grafton Stout' Clark Ihle, Charles Therss, Wrlham
L Woods, Claude Montgomery and James Clark
1947 a nd 1948 saw the Metgs Chapter of the Izzak walton
League sponsonng the Sheep Dog tnals at the Carpenter experunent farm The league had been orgamzed two ;ears e~r~~
w1th Or Kenneth Amsbary as presrdent The coun Y agen
secretary for two years
By John Cooper
hased rts farm 1\hich 1s JOhnsongrass
In 1948 the Izzak Wa Iton League pure
f
That year the traveling hay drrer cl1mc w1th Joe Bhckle,
Soil
Conservation
Service
Is headquarters The Dr G H Lasher tree arm was
fJ
Tit
now 1
Veterans Farm ExtensiOn Engmeer, m charge, was on the farms o ames us,
PT PLEASANT - Readers
dedicated that year. The followmg year \be PMA
d E
Clark !hie u s Nease and sons and Ami Holter Throughout of thiS column may remember
Trairung Program, Soil ConservatiOn :vrce, the an af:~ thiS penod all agriCultural agen~Jes attempted to tell the same about a year ago we wrote a
tenston
people planted 2200 forest tree se mgs on
arm . .. .. . ..
. :.OT-".if...-.-:.·; oY::o:.Q;.•:·~···.v·.····x·-.···.-.·.·.·~··················:·:·.."iY.:·:&lt;·:·:x:·:·:·.·:·:::r..·g.·z.~··
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senes of reports m the local
• • • • • • • • • • • •.-...,. • • • • • • • •
papers about young farmers m
Mason County who were
cooperators of the Western Soli
ConservatiOn D1str1ct Those
who read thooe stones realized

Young farmers'
show progress

i

._.,-..;.r,•,o,','•'•'•'•v.'.'.''~ •

Your Wayne National Forest i

_J
By T. Allan Wolter, District Ranger
IRONTON :... Two years ago when thiS column began I
had some real rmsgmngs about havmg enough mtereslmg
thmgs to wr1te about to sustam a weekly sertes Smce then I
have concluded that subJects to wr1te about m the outdoor
world are unlun1ted; the llffiltmg factor 1s the sk1ll of the
wr1ter to make thmgs come al1ve for the reader Earthshattermg 1sn't rt'
1 don 't know how many people put stock m Sighting and
observmg wildlife but I consider 1\ a real highlight of a day m
the held 1! some anunal1s spotted Of special mterest to me is
the ammals ability to eXISt by wrls, mstmct, skrll and
camoflage
Survival of man IS assrsted by machmery, crops, compulers, secure shelter and a bram that allows h1m to think
and plan ahead most of the tune Anunalsmust go rt alone. In
most parts of the world thelf surv1val1S completely dependant on the whun of man
One day last week I had the pleasure of seemg four
spec1es of wildlife m some rather unexpected places.
The ftrst encounter was w1th a flock of eleven wild
turkeys They were feedmg m corn stubble near a small
stream which formed one boundary of the held. They were
already alerted by the sound of my truck commg around a
bend m the road, and some were already moving towards the
creek
Others took the Wllversal ammal defense and froze like
black statues against the lighter corn stubble So unexpected
was thiS Sight that m the space of a second my mmd ticked off
ALLAN WOLTER, OUTDOOR COLUMNIST and
a dozen spec1es of animals and b1rds before 11 reg~stered District Ranger lor the Wayne Nalional Forest, has been
turkey. Keep m nund thls was my f1rst Slghtmg of a wild JUdged the top weekly columniSt m Oh10 by the Outdoor
turkey flock - ever' Tbe btrds were roughly 200 yards away Writers' Association of Otuo, Inc Wolter's colwnn, "Your
The !1rst bird to reach the creek decided I was too close
Wayne Nallonal Forest," appears weekly m the Ironton
Wtth what seemed like very bttle effort for such a large b1rd TrlbWle, Oak Hill Press and Sunday Times-Sentmel Other
he sunply spread his wmgs and flew across the creek. ThiS award wmners honored at the Outdoor Wnter of Oh10 Contr1ggered an mstant reaction from the remamder of the flock. venllon, held m Columbus February ~10 were Dave
In a second the air was full of huge wmgs as each turkey Bowermg, Dayton Dally News, best column m a da1ly newsseemed to triple m s1ze as the whole flock became airborne paper; Jim Daube!, Fremont, best magazme arllcle, Allan
together After alightmg on a hillSide across the creek they King, CmciJJilall, best color photo; Karl Maslowski, CmunmedJately froze m the defenSive position agam. Even a cmnatl, best black and wh1le photo; Steve Pollick, Toledo,
toot on the horn would not move them from this position. and Hank Andrews, Cleveland, special awards
After glancmg away briefly 11 was very diffiCult to s.ght them
agam so perfect was thelf camouflage They would appear to
be merely stumps to the casual passerby The day was last way. No doubt he came out to eat some gravel and greenery
unproving lor me
along the road and decided to stay awhile. As m most cases,
Somewhat farther down the road I mel a trapper who the vehicle disturbed hun very little even when withm a few
was displaying a !me 42-p&lt;Jund heaver to a frtend After feet of the bumper. The normally flat top noteh on his head
striking up a conversatiOn, the topic turned to trappmg and began to raise slowly- a sure sign of alarm -and suddenly
the value thrs and other outdoor acllvlltes have for
do, he was gone
youngsters Thrs man, Jumor Jenkms, was convmced h1s two as grouse
It was only a short distance from the ParkiilS' res1dence
sons were learmng somethmg of unmeasurable value m to the proJ)erty I had to check As I approached a wooden
accompanymg hun on h1s outdoor acttv1ties I agreed His bridge near the old homestead, a skunk trotted out onto the
eyes sparkled and pnde was evrdent when he spoke of thelf bridge. As far as 1 was concerned he had the r1ght-of-way for
developmg prowess as ouldoorsmen.
as long as he wanted 11 While Mf. Le Pew was mm~.tely
One of my JObs that day was to check on the disposal of mspecting every plank in the bndge I thought to myself, you
some old bmldmgs located on some recently acquired silly skunk what are you domg out at this tiitle of year'"
property m Gall1a County It had been several weeks smce I There aren\ any dangerous animals in Ohio but everyone,
had been m that part of tbe District so I stopped m to see an man and beast alike, g1ve this fellow all the tune he needs He
old fnend Ed Parkins, to get brought up to date m that neck !mally ambled oflto the s1de of the road and "allowed" me to
of the w;,.ds The road traverses a steep hill before
descendmg mto the hollow where Ed and his w1fe live At the passAlthough all of these encounters took less than f1ve
edge of the road on top of that hrll sat a ruffed grouse puffed mmutes combmed, I do feel a pang of gu1lt about gettmg paid
up to tw1ce his normal s1ze agamst the cold
It's qu1te rare to see thiS wary brrd expose hrmselllhis lor such an enJoyable day

Farm income will

hit $2.5 billion
WASHINGTON (UP!) Farm mcome will hit $24-25
billion thiS year--some $2-5
bilhon more than had been
earlier predrcted, accordmg to
the Agriculture Department
If bad weather or other
factors keep farmers from
reachmg the new productron
records forecast for thiS year,
however, experts sa•d a new
round of pr1ce mcreases for
farm commodities could send
the net Income figure skyrocketing to a record $30 b1l110n
The ntw forecast followed by
a day a department announcement that reta1llood priCes m
recent months have rtsen
faster than expected, and that
1974 food pnces are hkely to
average 12 per cent above last
year 1f record crops are harvested
Friday's report sard net farm

mcome would probably dip
below the 1973 record of $26
b1lhon, mamly because
goverrunent subsrdy payments
to farmers thiS year will be
reduced by more than $2
b11lion.
"However, the range of
t~~~certai!Utles can hardly be
mmunized," lmd th1s year's
net mcome could range well
above or below the $24-25
brlhon
bas1c
forecast,
economists said

$12,500 RECEIVED
POMEROY - State Auditor
Joseph T Ferguson announced
the drslnbulton of $4,027,243 44
m Oint• m local government
money lor January Metgs
C'o1mty recerved $12,500

lay of the land
that these young farmers were
carrymg out htgh-level farmmg programs
It has come to our attention

that the three da1ry farms m
the county wr th the h1ghest
average m11k production are
among those about whom we
wrote These are the Fowble
dairy at Apple Grove, the
Double B Dairy near West
Columbia and the Hoffman
da1ry at Letart These three
farms have see-sawed back
and forth at vanous times w1lh
each bemg able to claim top
production m Mason County at
vanous times wtthm the last
two years

At present the Fowble da1ry
IS tops, havmg attamed an
average production of 17,411
pounds of milk per cow from 80
cows durmg the past year
These lrgures were furnished
by Emrmtt Mrtehell, offiCial
rester lor the Mason County
Da1ry Herd Improvement
Association
The Fowble darry IS
presently managed by Robert
and C. C. Jr. Robert graduated
from Marshall Umvers1ty two
years ago w1th a degree m
engmeering and C C Jr wrll
graduate this year from
Marshall with a degree m
accounting.
We discussed lh1s production
w1th Carl Cook, Mason County
Extenswn Agent, and he noted
that there had been a great
mcrease m average production
among dames m Mason
County m the last 10 years. He
recalled that 10 years ago his
plan of work had as a goal to
help dames mcrease average
production to 9,000 pounds,
even frve years ago production
of 12 to 13,000 pounds was
considered high. According to
the latest figures from DlliA,
the average productionts 12,915
from 27 dalfY herds totaling
2400 cows.
Cook sa1d that these yoWJg
farmers were among the faithful group of farmers who
made lull use of a dairy short
course wh1ch has been held In

other observances were held

In 1954 Dale Dye was servrng as Metgs County's representative on the State Extension AdvtSory Com1Tl1ttee That year ·~e
County Extenston Advtsory Co1T11mllee made a request or
money for a 4-H olub agent Twenty years later thrs IS still an
Wla ccompltshed program and one of the cntrcal needs of Mergs
County
=·=·=·=·=·=·=··:···:. :···.·=·=·::: :-:::::::·:::.:·::::.,:::::::·::.:::::·:·::::::::.=·:·::·:::::·=

TOPIC ANNOUNCED
POMEROY - Monday,
Feb. 18 at 1:30 p m. tile
•econd of three meetings of
an Area Beef School wrll be
conduete d In the Vo-Ag
Room of Meigs Hrgh School
Forage specres and nutrrtron
of a beef cow herd will be
discussed.

ONE
APPROACH TO ASQUARE
MEAL _.• FROM PURINA

The last meeting on
Monday, Feb. 25 at Meigs
High School will cover
nutnhon and

beef cow

productiVIty.
·::·.·· .·:·.·!· ·:·:·:·: :·: :·:·:·:·:-:-=-:·:···:-:·:·:·: .•.·:·:···:·.·
and we noted that m the lasliO
years 1t had pul on about 3'~
tnches or about one-third inch
rad1us per year If th1s tree had
been allowed to grow lor the
next 10 years Jl would have had
about 400 board feet m 1\. That
mcrease m growth would have
amounted to about 30 percent
per year
When we observe thmgs hke
th1s, we point them out to the
landowner so that he IS better
able to determtne what trees to
cut on hiS land.

Mason County each year for
the past several years and he
announced that the short
course this year wtll be on
March 5, 6 and 7
The average age of these
young farmers managing these
three datry farms IS perhaps 26
or 27 years Who says that the
young people of today are
gomg to the dogs I
WE WERE WITH Donald
Nowlin, owner of Jernes Run
Campground recently helpmg
him m conservatiOn planmng
As we were walkmg aroWJd
over the land we saw some
trees that he had harvested
The stumps of two trees were
Qlllte mteresting One was a 17mch Vrr)gima pme and the
other a 12-mch yellow poplar.
CoWJting the rmgs on the
V1rg1rua Pme we noted that m
the last 10 years 1\ had put on
seven-e1ghths of an mch of _
growth According to the
woodland mformatlon shck
which we use to g1ve woodland
mformatwn to landowners, and
by checkmg this w1th Johnny
Looney, Service Forester of
Department of Natural
Resources, we find that a 17mch tree would have 206 board
feet m 1\, and the same tree
bemg only 15 mches ten years
ago, would have had !56 board
feet By usmg our anthmetic in
figuring percent of growth, we
foWld this tree IS putting on
board feet at the rate of 3 2 pet
per year
The 12-mch yellow poplar
had about 100 board feet m 11

~~;l"C~oB GC k ~

A
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uij~" J
I
II
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~&gt;tl &gt;r ~~"tt M
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f' •n
&gt; J&lt;M• U
o""aa &lt; l U~d\ OU · ~ oln•Lh &lt; ~Hlf&gt;!~

J . 0 NORTH
PRODUCE CO.
V1ne Street

Galhpol1s, Oh•o

~

CUSTOM-CUT
HYDRAULIC HOSE
Slash downttme to an absolu te mtmmum w1th
custom cut hydraulic hose fro m our parts de
partment We can furmsh a no lea k hose of any
length-and we can make 1t m one ptece up to
60 feet long We have both one w1re bratd and
two wtre bratd ho se and a t:omple te l tne of
couplings and adapters Try our qu1ck serv1c e

"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt-"

(

POMEROY

PH. 992-2176

• Compact . Only 18Y." Wrde
e 66 Lbs Ltght
• 15 Mtnute Trmer
• Counter Balanced Door

$

POMEROY
SeiYing

Meigs,
Gallia

WE
SERVICE!
WE
FINANCE!

I r d U I OQ IJ ('

6 30

I lu&lt;; Wl ( k I

I

N .Nc. m

.....
• ............
. ...
. . . . . ••••••••••
. . . . . ........
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. . . . ,,. 'llj""l&lt;!~l&lt;!'«f!
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... •• •••••••••••·
·········"·'·
,~~~?&gt;ill'l&gt;ill"&gt;ill"llj'

1•'1 Q! OG ~N
.'

i'V

Generation Rap

,.,

By Helen and Sue Bottel

,

Wh} Marry an "Old Man"?

Dear flap
I'm 16, datmg a guy of 27 He says I'm unmatUI e beccmse I
Yo ant to sta) a vtrgm Then he started talkmg about mdt rtagc
DISPLAYING AWARDS IN TilE 1974 Ohro Department of Highway Safety Traffic Slogan'smce that was th e only way I'd have It "
Essay Contest, are from left, Fredenck A V1erow, actmg director , Oluo Opt of Htgh
No\\ he's changed lus mmd He says there's 11 } ears bet\\ een
way Safety , Frank Lochner\, Jr, treasurer, Ohio Assn. of Insurance Agents, and Frank
us, and he d be an old man when I \\as m my 30s So I d !eave hu'1
Laderer, chatrman, Governor 's Traffic Safety Committee Top adult pnze, the l e a~e uf rt
for someone cbe He thinkSwe shou ld JUSt shac k up , so I can qutt
luxury compact car for a year, plus full msurance coverage, ts betng awm ded by Lhe OhiO
wheneve r I want, but I ftgure he's really saymg, 'I love you, but
Assoc1aUon of Insurance Agents Top adult wmner w11l also recerve the No 1 Olno hccnse
not enough to tte myself do\\n " He's already told me that the
plates usually reserved for Governor J Gtlhgan. Adult wmncrs m each county wtll rccm c
very thought of marnage g1ves hrm the shakes I satd, ·No go "
tranststor radtos
Last mght he showed up stoned drunk and sa 1d I'd have to
run away and marry htm r1ght away ,or he'd lca\e me for good I
had ttll the weekend to dectde I called today and was !old he
Deadhne lor the contest, from Deputy Regrstt a&lt; s of the gave up hts apartment th1s n1ormng He didn'tshow up on h1s JOb
Weldon of Baltrmore took adult
honors w1th her slogan, "Slow whrch IS open to all Ohto Bureau of Motor Vehtcles
What do you thmk I - ALMOST MARRIED
throughout the sta te, and ft om
Up Today,
Show
Up residents, IS April I, 1974
Entry blanks are available members or the Ohro Dear AM
Tomorrow" Brtan Walter of
Utrea was youth d1v1s10n from the Ohto Department of Assoc1atwn of Insurance
I lhtnk hJS cold feel took hun on a long 1\alk - rrghl out of
Agents
Conte
st
rul
es
ai
e
Hrghway
Safety,
240
Parsons
wtnner wtth his phrase,
your ltfe - SUE
Ave., Columbus, Ohto 43205, pnnted on the enb) forms
"Buckle Up, Buckeyes "
+++
Dear A
And aren't you lucky 1 As he sa1d, who wants to marr) an old
man wtlh the shakes' - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue
TI1e JUntor hrgh school gtrl who wrote 'What rs Alone 1 ' tsn 't
the only one' About half the kid s tn thJS age group fcellltat way'
-and the other half go all out to make t\ worse'
Junwt In JS full of mlanllle snobs, and the left-&lt;Juts ate the
biggest snobs of all because they hate themsehes as well as
everybody who 1sn 't super-cool And, of cowse, th e super-cools
can t even see them Thmgs change m hrgh sehoul People grow
up - A NOW HAPPY JUNIOR

1

...-

•

1

~1

Rap

When I was m )Untor hr , I felt JUSl hke "S B " who was all
SAM ROUSH
WAYNE DAVIS CLIFFORD PAULEY alone I \\ant to hang around wtth the cool k1ds That was my ftrst
DON GREATHOUSE CHARLES COOK
mistake I went from friends to fnends, and ended up wrlh the
one On my btr\hday I got a note from a bunch of show-offy grrls
It sard, "We were gomg to g1ve you a party , but no one would
come because 1t was for you "
REWARDED FOR SERVICE- Seven employees at The Goodyear Trre
I was so alone for two years that I wanted to kill myself I felt
&amp; Rubber Company's Poml Pleasant chenucal plant recently recmved
good-for""othmg and kne\\ everyone haled me Unltl one day litiS
awards for completmg 15 years of serv1ce ReceiVIng awards were Mrs Bill
kid stuck up for me After that, tn the mnth gt a de, thmgs got
G1bnour, Pomt Pleasant, secretary to Plant Manager Mrchael T Buccr,
beltet
Donald Greathouse, Poml Pleasant, production department operator , Sam
You see, I was trymg to be someone I'm not I was overRoush, Pomt Pleasant, productiOn supervrsor, Charles Cook, Pmnt
anxious about how I looked and acted, and always warned that
Pleasant, productiOn department shtlt foreman, Wayne (Bud) Dav1s of
people didn't hke me
Galltpohs, productron superv1sor, Robert (Bob ) Baxter, Gallipolis,
Now I reahze that everyone can 't hke you, JUSt as you aren't
productiOn superviSor, and CWford (Cliff ) Pauley , Galhpohs Fe rry
able to hke everybody you..meet I was lrymg to make friends
produrt1oo supervisor
With ktds who weren't my type at all, JUS! because they were
popular, and I wanted to be somebody too
ROBERT BAXTER
The boy who fmally notrced me taught me a lot about values
I learned stncere fnendsh1p IS the best cure for the "downs " It
sure beats socral-clunbmg that makes a 13-year-old fall on her
face - F W C

Meigs
Equipment Co.

MOD EL RE91 0

JJ7E
DELIVER!

1

V1e roy. satd top pnze 111 the
&lt;1dult dtv1s10n IS a years lease

\ ·6 ·.
BERNIE GILMOUR

Microwave
Oven

WITH PURCHASE OF $50 OR MORE
OF OUR ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS!

CENTRAL SOY A
OF OHIO

Acting Dtrector Fredenck A

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This
was to be the year Ohio's Iongsuffermg Democrats took the
full measure of control over
~epubllcans who dommated
them m state government for
most of the past
: All the mgredienls of success
were at hand
- An amb1l10us governor,
~eadmg the ticket, who had

FREE PLUMB HAMMER

fl Ill)

l \o.l r 7 1 I I L lnrp Urdu Mt I '• I tl)
I DO
1ri! H tm T orn ut hr 1 J(rry f-,l l ...vr l l I J Co nHl'lUI11[.1U ( 6
tool&lt; U p &amp; L r v~.: IIJ
I 10
F rr tlr fur fo d.rv R ~~ v rvrll Frrp:, 0 HerCJ id of l r ullr J
(_ lrl"llrl lhro t IU (lrur ch By Th~ ') dcollh L Ro rd I
H 00
Coc. p( I lrl r lv rrr 6 Chu r c h Serv rce IJ 1:3 rll t J,l rn L'.,
Hnrq r~ &amp; Hr&lt;&gt; A ll Am1 r 1crrn l&lt;or 1\ 10 Morman ChOi r I 0dy '&gt; ot
Or JLuvor y l r ev Leon,ud f./ep.l',~ tl
R 1\J
Or,l l Roher Is. J Your Hccli Hr l Kc1thry n Kuh l m .ln 6 Day
ol DlscovL ry H Ge t fogel her tO Re)( Humbn rd I J f&lt;t v lv ,l l
Frt es l J
8 55
~lntk Cameo 1
9 00
S1nqrnq J ublicl' 3 C rdll Chnprcl 11 Ordl Ro brcrl s 10 Ro
Humbn d 6 15 H,11r Bear Bunch B
Q JO
Chr1st 15 lh ~,.: An ::. wcr 13 Church ~erv1 ces 10 Your ~ tor tll1
11 1-.rng 1
f.1 l kr1q H .lnd ~ R•
10 00
t hurdl SLrv 10 ~ l l hi' 1 llr'" L it e 3 F1 1i h tor Todcl~ lJ
K1d Power 6 I J Th1nk ng 1n t he Bl ack B Mov1o The Str.1ng c
One 10
10 30
V1 S10n On 6 l ns 1qhl 1 C.oaptn n Noah J Tt r ~ h Th e L t ~
l'l V rewpo rnt 8 Wh at the Brblc Plu n ly Says 13
II 00
TV Chape l 3 Focus On Co l umbus 1 Acros s the Fcnn
15 H R Pulns tuf 13 Po1nt ot V1ew6 Enerqy 8
II JO l hiS IS th e Alo Swer 3 Make A W1':.h 6 lJ ln srq ht 15 Fcl ( (
the N.1 11on 8
1? 00
A t Iss ue 3 Bowlrng 6 Re v C&lt;1 lv 1n Ev.lm 13 Fre d
Tay lor l ReJ( Humba rcl 8 Co l umbus Tow n M~:: 1.0l 1rrg tO

1

)\)

CUSTOMER CARE
. . . . . EVERYWHERE

•2.00. Stop in Soon at

SUNDAY FEB ' 7 1974

COLUMBUS - The Oluo
Departme nt of Htghway
S&lt;l feh. s mnU1 annual search
for a wmnmg safe ty sloga n
opened Fnday and closes A:prrl

~

11.!!1

Health Products The Plumb Hammer is Only

Television Log

Winning safety slogan wanted

of a luxury compact car plus
free msurance CO\ erage, both
prOVIded b)
the Ohro
Assoctat10n of Insurance
Agents , and the No 1 Ohto
license plate usually reserved
for Governor John J Gtlhgan
Adult wmners tn each of Ohro's
88 counttes wtll receiVe tran
s1stor radios
The Governor s Traffic
Safety Comm1 ttee \\Ill provrde
l!H;peed bicycles for each of
the top three wmners m the
unde r-18 age group, and
awards of $5 to ) outh wtnners
m each coun I)
fhe top award wmner m the
adult category, and the frrst,
second and th1rd place wmners
m the under-18 category, along
w1th the1r nnmed1ate famrhes,
111 ll be dnven to and
from \herr homes for presentalion of their awards
by the Governor After
the award presentalton, they
WJll be g1ven a tour of the
SU.tehouse and other state
ta prtal lac1hbes.
"The purpose of the contest
rs to get people thinktng about
traffrc safety," Vrerow said
'Even those who don't enter
the contest, but hear about t\,
are tnchned to giVe a few
mmules thought lo sa fe
dnvmg
Last year, Mrs Howard

&lt;., ICr! tl HeM I I J

1++

NOW
ONLY

With Purchase of •25 or More of Our Animal

:l3 - Thl' Sunda\ lnntls St•ntull'l, Smui~l\ Feb 17. 197'1

Democrats racing in hari -kari

SPECIAL OFFEJl!

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Galhpo!is. Ohto

of the
H Ec,starkey ' chairman
dM George
Educ•ttona l Committee, and Mrs Vtr~Jl Atktns a; e ;:aver was
Paulsen responsrble for the safety lean_et Donn~ ~951 T d Reed
the Winner or the 4-H Safety Speakmg Contest n
e
•
Jr was cha trman of th e Safely Services He represented Meigs
Co~nty at the stale meetmg at Xema, OhiO
h ld t the
1952 saw theState-Wrde Loggmg Equrpment show e a
Southeast Test Farm H 1 C"rpenter
th
1901 saw the ~ olk Uance r esnval ftrst held under e
&lt;eadershlp of Joe Hardy This contmued for several years 195~
also marked the Ohw SesquiCentenmal Day when a parade an

Ca rroll C hn stophe ra s&lt;ha ~rman ,

•

By c. E. Blakes}rt•, County Extrnsum Agt•nt. F.mer1lus
POMEROY _ In the agncultural area from 1945 to 1949 the
Mt&gt;tgs Count y l ..md Use Conmnttee recommended that better
than one-fourth of the count~ sho uld be plat.:cd m ~lllMIWTll
oods The SUite Forestry DeparUnent seemed the ht&gt;l
;roprlatiDn for purchasmg land fot State Fm e:sl Pure ht~se Atl'd
The land was apprarsed et $5 to $10 for abandoned or Cl oded
land. $1&gt;-$25 for pasture land , $25-$40 lor ttllable lulll,md, $7 50$50 brush or tunber and $35-$0 sma ll stream bottom
The umt test demonstratiOn farm program conttnued m
unportance Tours were held to the farms of Dana Hoffman and
Wilbur Parker m 1946 The f£trms of .J M Guthnc Thereon

' I

and
Mason

Counties
Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

Demo crats
have
every party
capability this year for snal·
Then Metzenbaum's past mchmg defeat from the Jaws of come tax payments became an
VICtory
1ssue, and \his was the last
It started last fall, when thmg the DemocraL&lt; needed word leaked out that Gllhgan a mtlhonaire, m a day of pubhc
and the state party were trymg apprehenston about candidates
to engmeer a ticket by pushmg "buytng" electtons, accused of
former astronaut John Glenn avmdmg me orne tax payments
around Glenn pushed back,
Next, the governor and the
party attempted to put the
and the hght was on.
Next Gilligan took s1des m sk1ds to an uncooperative Sen·
the U S Senate contest be- ate Mmonty Leader Anthony
tween Glenn and Howard M 0 Calabrese m h1s brd for the
Ohio politics
Metzenbaum He appomted Democrahc nommatwn for
moved Oh10 further along the Metzenbaum to an mterun lieutenant governor
The result' Calabrese has
track than atJY m recent his- term m the Senate when a
tory and who InsiSted on open- neutral "caretaker'' appomtee emerged the heavy favonte m
a mne-cand1date freld
Jjess and candor m a lime of would have sufficed
Then the orgamza t10n , m a
AroWld the lrrst of the year,
publtc diStrust of government
last-rnmute
sw1lch which left
the
appomtment
appeared
to
- Money and orgamzahon m
some
unhappy
faces, endorsed
unprecedented amounts for be workmg out anyway,
stale
Sen
Tony
P Hall of
despite the faet Gilligan had
Oh10 Democrats
- A Republican party shll always been represented as Dayton for the Democratic
reehng from a drubbmg in favormg open, "let-the-people- nommat10n for secretary or
1970, dazed by developments m dectde" electtons within the sta te They rmghl as well have
Washrngton and unable to
come up wrth any candidate
who hadn't already held OffiCe
for a quarter of a century
Simple Plan
• The Democratrc battle plan
was sunple Gov John J Gilligan, usmg the money and orgamzatiOn, would lead them to
PT PLEASANT - Edgar
Charles •'Putty ~lusg1ave
a posrtion of complete com"Hike"
Hetskell,
Secretary
of
IS
seekmg nomrnallon for
RJand.
Gllhgan would wm re- State, wtll be here as the Justice of Peace m Lewis
election, the Democrats would keynote speaker at a Lincoln DIStrtcl on the GOP ticket
RAlph Shannon, labeled as
hold onto the auditor, attorney Day dmner on Feb. 23.
John
Musgrave,
chairman
of
"The
Wayne County Whipgeneral and treasurer's posts,
capture the state Senate and a the Mason County Republican poorwrll " wrll provide entJ S Senate seal, and sweep Execullve Committee, sa1d tertamment
Tickets are bemg sold by
mlo the lieutenant governor's several other state d1gmtartes
are
expected
to
attend
the
committee
members lor $2 50
and secretary of stale's OfficeS
for the f1rst tune m recerit event begmmng at 6 30 p m m each, wh1ch covers the dmner
the Moose Hall In addition to and entertamment
memory
HeiSkell , a native of
The governor would then be the state officials, Candidates
seekmg
election
on
the
Morgantown,
recerved hrs
free , m a year or so, to enter
jhe national political sweep- Republican hcket w11l also. be Bachelor's degree from West
Vrrgmra Umversrty and hJS law
stakes as a candidate for pres- mtrodueed
ident vice presrdent or a cabrFor CoWJty Com1T11ssJOners degree from tl'Je Umvers1ty of
'
these are meum bent Basil Vrrgmta Law School
net post
, That was how the scnpt was Robertson and V1rg11 Siders
He prachced law m
WrJtlen But as gold leaves turn Jr; L. W Getty, County Clerk; Morgantown unhl1967 when he
to brown , so have DemocratiC Howard Schultz, Crrcurl Clerk, took a leave of absence to serve
fortWJes, pa_r9cularly over the and Mtehu el Shaw, Mason as a frghter p1Iot m the US Air
Counlv'&lt; Representative m the Force and Air Nalwnal Guard
last few ~s.
, Events have left many party House •If flelegates, all _em"---~,In November 1972, Mr
'
regulars wrth a forceftilthough cumhents
Hetskell became the frrsl
hme-worn message- Ohi o
Republican rn 44 years to be

kiSsed the office goodbye Hall
ts ftmshm g vtrtually last m a
stx -cand tdate fte ld m early
polhng
A federal report told of trregulanties m campa 1gn fmancmg by the Democrats tn 1972
and accused the G1lltgan admmtstratlon of htrmg on the
baSIS of pollllcs More bad
publicity for an hon est and
open admmtstratwn
Even worse, there were reports that the adrmmstr &lt;:~liOn
had lned to send n ank W
Kmg, head of the si,jlte Aflr
CIO, out to pasture
Wtdemng the split wtth Kmg
could only cause more headaches for the Democrats than
they already have
Fmally, la st week , Dfrnocratlc headquarters began to
crumble w1th the d1sm1ssal of
1ls execu ti ve dtrector and
restgnatwn of three ~udes

Heiskell keynote speaker
Feb. 23 for Lincoln dinner

It's too bad we can't proclaim, "Age 13 has been cancelled,
due to lack of happmess "After all, they ehmmale tlrc 13th floor
tn aparUnent buildings - LIVED l'HROUGH IT TOO

Watergate will provide

many positive results
DETROIT iUPI) - Former
Attorney General ElliOtt L
Richardson has predicted the
Watergate scandal wrll have a
number of posrlrve effects and
wtll prove the US constt tutwn
ha s " the strength to endure
and overcome goverrunental
excesses "
Rtchardson also sa1d he
hoped Presrdent N1xon had
'learned enough from the past
lesson" to avOid a con
frontatwn wrth Watergate
prosecutor Leon Jaworski
"I don't see where Mr
Jaworski has much chotce but
to subpoena the tapes, although
he mrght tr.r once more to
persuade th e PreSident \\hat IS
best for him and the country,"
he sa1d
Speakmg at the Umvers1ty of
Detroit annual Law School
banquet
Frtday
mghl,
Richardson sard, however, the
scandal has hurt the legal
profession as a whole
"Watergate has hurt the Ia\\
professiOn, although what has
happened tn Washmglon

sho uld not be atlnbuted to
law) ers m general any more
than to the Repubhcan Party m
general ,' he said
He satd he was telhng
lawyers throughout th e
country they must learn to
temper thetr ltadttlunal chent
relatwnshJps w1th a wider
concern for JUSllce and thetr
country
R1chardson, who restgned as
attorney general last year
rather than carry out a
presldcntral order to ftre
Watergate spectal prosecutor
Archibald Cox, satd the Watergate scandal wtll 'demonstrate to the people that the
US Consl tlu tron sttll ts
workmg and has the strength to

endure

and

ove r come

goverrunental excesses
1 expe ct the Watergate
mvesttgatwn to have several
postttve results, such as new
restrictions on campa tgn
fmanc mg, greater protectiOns
of privacy and an mcreased
candor m poltttcs," he satd

~~~. dOlit dte:~\ solA£

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~~~t\lrs;Y
;:;

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p~lc

~

l'1

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lO

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00

Bob Dan c is 3
F ren ch Che f JJ Arnold Pa lmer 3
t1 JO
C&lt;J ncer L1 f c or De.::r th JJ Other PPop le Other Pla ce513
Lrmll s of M.:tn 15 W1de Wol'ld o l Spor t' 6 Pr obe Con ference
Wrt h lhro M ttyor 4
S 00
CBS Eye on Sport s 8 Umbr ella 33 G len Campbel l Los
Angc lc'&gt; Open 3 10 L.::r wrencf' Wclk 4 Mov1e Sta ge Coac h
13 Eternal L tght 15
.., 11
M&lt;1kmq Th1ng s Work 33
S 30
T A1c h1 Chua rt J] Vrrg1l Ward F r,hrng Show 8
6 00
60 Mtnul cs B L tl liJ _, Yogn &amp; You 33 World .AI Wa r 6
NP•.'IS 1 TBA 15
f&gt; \U
NR C Ncw&lt;iJ 11 5 Et t n lngA I Pops33
I 00
Zoom ?0 W lei K rngdom IS C r cu '&gt; 1 L as s1e 8 In Thr
Know 10 U n l am~"'d Wor l d l ) S&lt;.~ l aro to A d venture 3 L et s
Mrt ke A Df'rll 6
I 30
Wo rld of Dr snf'y 3 &lt;1 IS Mounl c1 1n Sce nl JJ Fre nch Chf' l
20 App l es Nay fl 10
e 00 Ca ptl ol Bea t 33 Interla ce 1'0 33
B 30
Milnn 1x 8 10 Relig iou s Am en ca 20 JJ Mov1e The Ten
Command ments 6 13 M cMrllnn and Wile 3 4 I S
9 00
Masterpiece T heaiPr 20 33
9 30
Barnaby Jones 8 10
10 00
F 1r ng Lr ne 70 33
10 30
News 4 6 8 H1gh Road to Adven ture 10 Newsmake r ?&lt;1
13 Pollee Surgeon 15 We Th1nk You Should Know 3
11 00
News) 10 15 ABC News6 I J Bonilnza 4 CBS News
ll 15
Polr ce Su rgeon 6 CBS News 10 News 13 Move The
Ret urn of Frank Jon es 8
11 JO
Johnny Ca r so n 15 Face th e Nahan 10 Don K r shn er s
Ro ck Concer t 13 Mov1 e She G( ts Her Man 3
II 15
Good News 6
17 00
Urban League 10 Johnny Car son t
17 30
M ov 1e Wh o 5 M nd1 nq th e Store 10
t 00
Nev'JS 13

a

I 30

Nev', S 4

MONDAY FEB 18 1974
Su nr1 se Sem rn ar 4 Sac r ed Heil rt 10
6 15
Schoo l Scene I IJ Fo lk L rt era turc 3
6 75
Farm Report lJ
6 30 - F1ve Mmutes to L 1ve By &lt;1 News 6 B1ble A n5wers 8
Good News 13
6 35
Co l umbu s Today 1
6 15
Farmf1me 10 M or nr ng Report 3
7 00
Today 3 d 15 CBS News 8 10 P1xanne 6 D1ck Van
Dyke 13
7 30
Rocky &amp; Bul lw nkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
R 00 - Capt Ka nga roo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame 51 33
Jells Coll1e 6
B 75 - Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunc h 0
8 55
Ne""s 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon &lt;1 Fnend l y Jun cl1on 10 AM 3 Phrl Don a hue
15 Abbott &amp; Coste lloe W1ld Wild Wes l 6 M ov 1e El Greco
13
9 30 - To Te ll th e T ruth 3 Secr et Storm 8
9 55 - Chu ck Wh te Repor l 5 10
10 00 - Drnah Sh ore 3 15 Jo ker s Wild
10 Company 6
10 JO - $ 10 000 Pyram1d 8 10 Jeo pardy 3 4 15
11 00 - Gamb I 8 10 Passwor d 13 M 1ke Douglas 6 Unto th e
H1ll s 33 W1zard o f Odd s 3 1 15
II 30 - Holl ywood Squares 3 l 15 Love of Life 8 tO Brad y
Bunch 13 Sesame 51 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan l mf'l s World 10
11 00 - Bob Brilun s 50 so Club 1 Password 6 News 8 10 13
Jackpot 3 15
11 30 - Spli t Second 6 Seil r ch l or Tom or r ow B 10 Baffle 3 I S
1/ 55 - News 3 15
I 00 - News 3 Al l My Children 6 13 Not For Wom en Only 15
Concen lralion 8 Secret Storm 10
1 30 - 3 On A M a t ch 3 1 15 The World T urn s 8 10 L e t 5 Mak e
A Deal 6 13
7 00 - Day s of Our L vcs l t 15 G u rdmg L1 gh t 8 10 Newlywed
Ga m e 6 13
2 30 - Edge ofNighl 8 10 G1rlm MyL1t e6 13 Doctor s) 4 15
J 00 - General Ha sp tal 6 13 Ant1ques 20 A noth er Worl d 3 4
I S Pr1ce Is R1ghl B 10 One L1fe to L rve 6 13 Phi l Donahue
4 F r enchChef 20 How t oSu r v1veA Marrag eJ 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerse t 15 Sesame 51 20 33 Love
Amencan Style lJ Speed Racer 6 Mov 1e Bru sh F1re 10
J 30 - Green Ac r es 3 G11l 1gan s Is 6, 13 Bonanza I S Ja ckpot
4 Hazel B
5 00 - Mr Ro gers 20 33 Bonan za 3 M erv Gr1ff1n 4 Andy
Grilhn S MI SSI On ImpoSsible 6 Gomer Pyle 13
5 30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8 E lec Co 33 H od gepodge Lodge :w
Trails West 15 Hogan s Heroe s 13
5 SS - Ear l N•ghl1nga le 15
6 00 - New s 3 4 8 10 15 Sesa m e St 10 ABC New s 13 Per
sonaltly Beh av ioral Deve lopment 33
Truth or Con
sequences 6
6 30
NB C New s 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Roo m 2'22 13 ABC
New s 6
7 00 ~ T ruth or Con seq 3 Wh a t s My L tne
E tec Co 20 Bea l
the Clock 4 News6 10 Crr cus 13 Read tng f or t he Class room
- eacher 33 Wild Krngdom I S
7 30 - Bobby Gold sboro 3 Buck Owens 8 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel
20 Mun1c1pal Court 10 Wa cky World ol Jonat han Wmters 15,
To Tell the Truth 6 Beat the Clock 13 Hollywood Squa res 4
E p1 sode Ac! Jon 33
B 00 - RookH~s lJ Theater rn Amer1ca 20 Nat1onal Geog r aph1d
6 Mag1 c1a n 3 4 I S Gunsmoke 8 10 Poet Game 33
9 00 - Mov1e s' It It s Tuesday Th rs M ust !1e 1:3el_olum 3 4 15
The Ten Commandm ents 6 13 Her es Lucy 8 10
9 30 - D1 ck Van Dyke 8 tO
10 00 - Paul Nuchtm s 33 Med1 cul Center 8 10
10 30 - News 20
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak I 33
11 30 - Johnny Car son 3 .\ IS T ghl A s A Drum 6 13 Mov1es
Adam s R1b B The Upper Hand 10
11 45 - News 6 13
12 15 - Only A Scream Away 6 13
1 00 - Tomorrow J 1
1 45 - News 13
7 00 - News 4
6 00 -

a

a

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

RODNEY VILLAGE II
HOMES FOR SALE!
MANY HOMES ARE NOW
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

APPLICATIONS NOW
BEING TAKEN

SEE ONE OF THESE
BEAUTIFUL HOMES!
RANCHERS

$20,000
*DOWN PAYMENT
*MONTHLY PAYMENT

I

: ~~:~:~)~~:~;;:;i;;~~~j~:,~::' .~a, ~~·
... ::
:~i~\~ffi~Y~j~~;~(n:R~~

.

•

Rap

Of)l"n 8 1ble I~
Mfrllhe P r es'&gt;J .t 15 I~CJ I Vt! I Frc"J IJ
1 00
L ower I g ht hou ".rc 13 W&lt;:~lly '&gt; Wor kc, hop 1 ( BS Sport •,
Spc( l dLu l t~r !:1 IQ Per r y M 'lc.o n &gt;1 I ')p f 15
1 J O l &lt;;•,ucs&amp; An o:.w er '&gt;6 13 Perry Ma•,on 3
? 00
NHLHocl&lt;e y&lt;t 15 Champ1on&lt;,h1pAtJi oR,JC rnq6 1J
/3 0 N BABdskethtrll B 10 I I Tok Psa Thlc i J
l 30
Arm: ncan Sport m'"ln 6 ll MM str a ll Un JPrSilf ')port s

I)

~~~~ ~ ~~~

. . ..". ...

*Farmers Home Administration
Loans
81/ 2 Per Cent Interest Rate
PHONE 245-5303

RODNEY VILLAGE II
EDGAR HEISKELL
elec ted Secrelar) of SUite
West Vrrgtma

tn

RT. 35
RODNEY, OHIO
-

'

�r

l.! - The Stmrl&lt;l\ Tmws ·Sent uwl. Sttn(tl\

rl'b

I

-

.

'

11 1q1 ~

Land Use committee active in late forties
·•P

the NE\\ ih h\HMlNt.

\

tht• dt•&lt;~th of Dr l "ISh{"r
'fhcr cun .JoluJ:-;un s('f\ ,•tl ,Js t. llllfllv ,1gcnt 1n tlu sp1 Ulg of 1941\
wtnl(.) tllf' dgt•nl was u11 I••,JVt' ftlf o,;( udv Mm h nf llns lllllt' \\.I S

spent m gt•ltmg the 1 t•t.tl t It ut k ( ,, fl\\ •·rs As:-;ut ~.tlltm m J_;d11 11t
sa le~ p1 og1 .un t•sl&lt;lbhshL&gt;tl
Jfi4R sa w Lur\ .Jo D)t' , onll' ~•s

,]

and thf?

4·11

A~~ Jstant

In 11149 HtJ\.

Holter .md Jt•an I.e'-' served :1s 4·H /\ss1st.anl~

The 194!Trep011 hsts the' onstruct10n of the Ph1hp Sporn PIHut
the dechnt• of nulk prtces, and lh{' shlft rrom beef' dttlc tu ci&lt;-Ur}
rattle as r.H iors mnuencmg thE." county s &lt;Jcll vttJ es In 1'148 lh"
Crow Rrothers esta blished thetr battery brmler production and
dresstng plant at Letart F&gt;lls In 1947 the Manetta Tt uck
Growers packmg shed was establtshed at Portland, largely due
tn the leadership of Hubert Prtce, preStdent and other members
of the Portland Commumty Club
The pertod 1950 to 1%4 saw a contmued effort to get more
farm productiOn from the soil through the TV A dcmonst ra tJOn
program whrch contmued until 1954 Sot! conservatiOn, mcreased
ferltllzalJOn, and attempts to estabhsh better quahly legumes
and grasses dommated the crops area In 1959 t he Sou th eas tern
OhJO Regwnal CoWlcJl sponsored the Greenbacks from Green
Pastures program Count) wmners mduded Harold Saxton,
Hockmg, Ed Wagner, Athens , Edson Roush Metgs and T J
Mullms &amp; Son, Jackson carl Brhkam and Lee Jackson, conservatwmsl and aide, assisted m startmg band seeding on the
farms of Norman Rose and Hobert Shrelds Pearl H and Donald
Mora apphed 500 pounds of 111-10-10 fertilizer as a top d ressmg on
pasture According to the report, results were outstandmg
Through the cooperatiOn of the Production and Marketmg
Admrmstration,l27farmersapphed I,OOOpounds of fertlhzerper
acre to each acre of hve acres of pasture
ed
100 b h ls f
r
In 1952 Andrew Cross averag over
us e o corn pe
acre on 100 acres ol cropland 1953 saw the hrst mention of apphcatwn of starter solution wtth vegetables on the farms or
Thereon Johnson, C D. Adams, and Harold Grunm The same
year TCA was used by one or more farmers to attempt to control

s lum·~ on usc uf fertilizers, secd mg nuxtures , ctnd olh ct crop
r e1 on tmen&lt;l ..l ttolltl
~I Om 1'150 (O }954 "brotler prodttCIJOn COn\tnUed lo tncreaSC

1herc wt·t c 1,000,000 brotlers m the co unty m 1951 By 195.! Me1gs
( vunty IL·d u.~ ~l&lt;.~lt! m brmler production wtth over 2,000,000
btrd s In thut yc,u the first Mc1gs County Br otlerr Feslt va l wa.-;
h• l•l w1 tl 1r.uvC'rnor Jo'rank ~.a usc he as the prm( 1pal speaker
Young people mcrea sed thetr tnlerest tn brmler growmg with

the "Chicken of Tomorrow ' contest 1951 saw Fred Stanley,
Gary Lee, Duane Jordan, and Robert Searles placmg tn the top
ten tn the d1stnct Mergs County's entrtes placmg m 1953 tncluded
Fred Stanley , Dwight Nelson, Albert Qurvey, Cectl Nelson,
Donna Holter, Albert Qurvey, Edward Evans, Ronald Evans,
DJ.\ td Pterce, Duanf' Rarr, Larry Morns and Donald Nelson In
1954 Fred Stanley was the state wmner m the "JuniOr Chtcken of
ronJU 1 1 u .,
• ~. "innmg :1 ...,r tn thP Amertcan Poultry
Industnes Conference Sharon Atkins placed htgh m the conte:;t
Brotler marketmg was becommg a problem m 1954 as a
poultry auctiOn started and rotated between Pomt Pleasant and
Parkersburg but was later moved 200 miles away
Veterans Farm Trammg Programs had expanded to erght
schools in 1950, seven m 1951, and four In 1952
The Home CoWlCII group sponsored a legal affarrs meetmg
wtth attorneys Cednc Clark and Manmng Webster as the
resource people
1950 was the second year for Mergs Safety servrces wrth

bl hed I t
Johnson, George A Perry and Fred Goeglem esta
d c ISE H JO
weather legume tests m 1945 Harold Cat nahan an
um
phrey Installed barn ha) dryers the same )ear Wtlh mcrease of
livestock on farms, 35 farm ponds were estabhshed
d p odm 1946
ti
through work of the Soli Conservatton Service an
r uc on
and Marketmg Adrmmstratton rhe followmg year 70 fann
ponds were butlt and m 1949 400 people attended a Fatm Pond
Day
U 1
1947 saw the orgamzatton of the Meigs Datry Servrce m
With Claude Montgomery as the DHIA tester and Walter Brown
as the techructan for the arl1ftc1al msemmat10n program
R
w The
lte
orgamzmg group mcluded Zrba MICII&lt;Iff, Norma" ose, a r
Brown, Granvrlle Stout, Clarence Prtce, Ralph Badgely, Dana
Hoffman, Wilbur Parker, James Titus, John Colwell, Joe
Weyersmrller' Grafton Stout' Clark Ihle, Charles Therss, Wrlham
L Woods, Claude Montgomery and James Clark
1947 a nd 1948 saw the Metgs Chapter of the Izzak walton
League sponsonng the Sheep Dog tnals at the Carpenter experunent farm The league had been orgamzed two ;ears e~r~~
w1th Or Kenneth Amsbary as presrdent The coun Y agen
secretary for two years
By John Cooper
hased rts farm 1\hich 1s JOhnsongrass
In 1948 the Izzak Wa Iton League pure
f
That year the traveling hay drrer cl1mc w1th Joe Bhckle,
Soil
Conservation
Service
Is headquarters The Dr G H Lasher tree arm was
fJ
Tit
now 1
Veterans Farm ExtensiOn Engmeer, m charge, was on the farms o ames us,
PT PLEASANT - Readers
dedicated that year. The followmg year \be PMA
d E
Clark !hie u s Nease and sons and Ami Holter Throughout of thiS column may remember
Trairung Program, Soil ConservatiOn :vrce, the an af:~ thiS penod all agriCultural agen~Jes attempted to tell the same about a year ago we wrote a
tenston
people planted 2200 forest tree se mgs on
arm . .. .. . ..
. :.OT-".if...-.-:.·; oY::o:.Q;.•:·~···.v·.····x·-.···.-.·.·.·~··················:·:·.."iY.:·:&lt;·:·:x:·:·:·.·:·:::r..·g.·z.~··
~.::,......_..,.,,,, .._,,..._.-»:•,•,•,•,•,•,•,•;-,•,•,•ol'.!oi'•'•'::-;';-.-,.·X""-.'-:O:•:•:•:•:'.-~·:&lt;::•:•:O'•;.:•:•:•:•:•:•:•,•:•,•,•:•:O;.;.;-.-.;=:::-.&lt;;.;.~~:!:!.-..;.;.-,...:.:.:.:&gt;.~~...··&gt;!oi;•'•' '• ,.;.-;.'' '-' •".o ,.._,' '•' '•'• • "· • • •'' ''' '''
senes of reports m the local
• • • • • • • • • • • •.-...,. • • • • • • • •
papers about young farmers m
Mason County who were
cooperators of the Western Soli
ConservatiOn D1str1ct Those
who read thooe stones realized

Young farmers'
show progress

i

._.,-..;.r,•,o,','•'•'•'•v.'.'.''~ •

Your Wayne National Forest i

_J
By T. Allan Wolter, District Ranger
IRONTON :... Two years ago when thiS column began I
had some real rmsgmngs about havmg enough mtereslmg
thmgs to wr1te about to sustam a weekly sertes Smce then I
have concluded that subJects to wr1te about m the outdoor
world are unlun1ted; the llffiltmg factor 1s the sk1ll of the
wr1ter to make thmgs come al1ve for the reader Earthshattermg 1sn't rt'
1 don 't know how many people put stock m Sighting and
observmg wildlife but I consider 1\ a real highlight of a day m
the held 1! some anunal1s spotted Of special mterest to me is
the ammals ability to eXISt by wrls, mstmct, skrll and
camoflage
Survival of man IS assrsted by machmery, crops, compulers, secure shelter and a bram that allows h1m to think
and plan ahead most of the tune Anunalsmust go rt alone. In
most parts of the world thelf surv1val1S completely dependant on the whun of man
One day last week I had the pleasure of seemg four
spec1es of wildlife m some rather unexpected places.
The ftrst encounter was w1th a flock of eleven wild
turkeys They were feedmg m corn stubble near a small
stream which formed one boundary of the held. They were
already alerted by the sound of my truck commg around a
bend m the road, and some were already moving towards the
creek
Others took the Wllversal ammal defense and froze like
black statues against the lighter corn stubble So unexpected
was thiS Sight that m the space of a second my mmd ticked off
ALLAN WOLTER, OUTDOOR COLUMNIST and
a dozen spec1es of animals and b1rds before 11 reg~stered District Ranger lor the Wayne Nalional Forest, has been
turkey. Keep m nund thls was my f1rst Slghtmg of a wild JUdged the top weekly columniSt m Oh10 by the Outdoor
turkey flock - ever' Tbe btrds were roughly 200 yards away Writers' Association of Otuo, Inc Wolter's colwnn, "Your
The !1rst bird to reach the creek decided I was too close
Wayne Nallonal Forest," appears weekly m the Ironton
Wtth what seemed like very bttle effort for such a large b1rd TrlbWle, Oak Hill Press and Sunday Times-Sentmel Other
he sunply spread his wmgs and flew across the creek. ThiS award wmners honored at the Outdoor Wnter of Oh10 Contr1ggered an mstant reaction from the remamder of the flock. venllon, held m Columbus February ~10 were Dave
In a second the air was full of huge wmgs as each turkey Bowermg, Dayton Dally News, best column m a da1ly newsseemed to triple m s1ze as the whole flock became airborne paper; Jim Daube!, Fremont, best magazme arllcle, Allan
together After alightmg on a hillSide across the creek they King, CmciJJilall, best color photo; Karl Maslowski, CmunmedJately froze m the defenSive position agam. Even a cmnatl, best black and wh1le photo; Steve Pollick, Toledo,
toot on the horn would not move them from this position. and Hank Andrews, Cleveland, special awards
After glancmg away briefly 11 was very diffiCult to s.ght them
agam so perfect was thelf camouflage They would appear to
be merely stumps to the casual passerby The day was last way. No doubt he came out to eat some gravel and greenery
unproving lor me
along the road and decided to stay awhile. As m most cases,
Somewhat farther down the road I mel a trapper who the vehicle disturbed hun very little even when withm a few
was displaying a !me 42-p&lt;Jund heaver to a frtend After feet of the bumper. The normally flat top noteh on his head
striking up a conversatiOn, the topic turned to trappmg and began to raise slowly- a sure sign of alarm -and suddenly
the value thrs and other outdoor acllvlltes have for
do, he was gone
youngsters Thrs man, Jumor Jenkms, was convmced h1s two as grouse
It was only a short distance from the ParkiilS' res1dence
sons were learmng somethmg of unmeasurable value m to the proJ)erty I had to check As I approached a wooden
accompanymg hun on h1s outdoor acttv1ties I agreed His bridge near the old homestead, a skunk trotted out onto the
eyes sparkled and pnde was evrdent when he spoke of thelf bridge. As far as 1 was concerned he had the r1ght-of-way for
developmg prowess as ouldoorsmen.
as long as he wanted 11 While Mf. Le Pew was mm~.tely
One of my JObs that day was to check on the disposal of mspecting every plank in the bndge I thought to myself, you
some old bmldmgs located on some recently acquired silly skunk what are you domg out at this tiitle of year'"
property m Gall1a County It had been several weeks smce I There aren\ any dangerous animals in Ohio but everyone,
had been m that part of tbe District so I stopped m to see an man and beast alike, g1ve this fellow all the tune he needs He
old fnend Ed Parkins, to get brought up to date m that neck !mally ambled oflto the s1de of the road and "allowed" me to
of the w;,.ds The road traverses a steep hill before
descendmg mto the hollow where Ed and his w1fe live At the passAlthough all of these encounters took less than f1ve
edge of the road on top of that hrll sat a ruffed grouse puffed mmutes combmed, I do feel a pang of gu1lt about gettmg paid
up to tw1ce his normal s1ze agamst the cold
It's qu1te rare to see thiS wary brrd expose hrmselllhis lor such an enJoyable day

Farm income will

hit $2.5 billion
WASHINGTON (UP!) Farm mcome will hit $24-25
billion thiS year--some $2-5
bilhon more than had been
earlier predrcted, accordmg to
the Agriculture Department
If bad weather or other
factors keep farmers from
reachmg the new productron
records forecast for thiS year,
however, experts sa•d a new
round of pr1ce mcreases for
farm commodities could send
the net Income figure skyrocketing to a record $30 b1l110n
The ntw forecast followed by
a day a department announcement that reta1llood priCes m
recent months have rtsen
faster than expected, and that
1974 food pnces are hkely to
average 12 per cent above last
year 1f record crops are harvested
Friday's report sard net farm

mcome would probably dip
below the 1973 record of $26
b1lhon, mamly because
goverrunent subsrdy payments
to farmers thiS year will be
reduced by more than $2
b11lion.
"However, the range of
t~~~certai!Utles can hardly be
mmunized," lmd th1s year's
net mcome could range well
above or below the $24-25
brlhon
bas1c
forecast,
economists said

$12,500 RECEIVED
POMEROY - State Auditor
Joseph T Ferguson announced
the drslnbulton of $4,027,243 44
m Oint• m local government
money lor January Metgs
C'o1mty recerved $12,500

lay of the land
that these young farmers were
carrymg out htgh-level farmmg programs
It has come to our attention

that the three da1ry farms m
the county wr th the h1ghest
average m11k production are
among those about whom we
wrote These are the Fowble
dairy at Apple Grove, the
Double B Dairy near West
Columbia and the Hoffman
da1ry at Letart These three
farms have see-sawed back
and forth at vanous times w1lh
each bemg able to claim top
production m Mason County at
vanous times wtthm the last
two years

At present the Fowble da1ry
IS tops, havmg attamed an
average production of 17,411
pounds of milk per cow from 80
cows durmg the past year
These lrgures were furnished
by Emrmtt Mrtehell, offiCial
rester lor the Mason County
Da1ry Herd Improvement
Association
The Fowble darry IS
presently managed by Robert
and C. C. Jr. Robert graduated
from Marshall Umvers1ty two
years ago w1th a degree m
engmeering and C C Jr wrll
graduate this year from
Marshall with a degree m
accounting.
We discussed lh1s production
w1th Carl Cook, Mason County
Extenswn Agent, and he noted
that there had been a great
mcrease m average production
among dames m Mason
County m the last 10 years. He
recalled that 10 years ago his
plan of work had as a goal to
help dames mcrease average
production to 9,000 pounds,
even frve years ago production
of 12 to 13,000 pounds was
considered high. According to
the latest figures from DlliA,
the average productionts 12,915
from 27 dalfY herds totaling
2400 cows.
Cook sa1d that these yoWJg
farmers were among the faithful group of farmers who
made lull use of a dairy short
course wh1ch has been held In

other observances were held

In 1954 Dale Dye was servrng as Metgs County's representative on the State Extension AdvtSory Com1Tl1ttee That year ·~e
County Extenston Advtsory Co1T11mllee made a request or
money for a 4-H olub agent Twenty years later thrs IS still an
Wla ccompltshed program and one of the cntrcal needs of Mergs
County
=·=·=·=·=·=·=··:···:. :···.·=·=·::: :-:::::::·:::.:·::::.,:::::::·::.:::::·:·::::::::.=·:·::·:::::·=

TOPIC ANNOUNCED
POMEROY - Monday,
Feb. 18 at 1:30 p m. tile
•econd of three meetings of
an Area Beef School wrll be
conduete d In the Vo-Ag
Room of Meigs Hrgh School
Forage specres and nutrrtron
of a beef cow herd will be
discussed.

ONE
APPROACH TO ASQUARE
MEAL _.• FROM PURINA

The last meeting on
Monday, Feb. 25 at Meigs
High School will cover
nutnhon and

beef cow

productiVIty.
·::·.·· .·:·.·!· ·:·:·:·: :·: :·:·:·:·:-:-=-:·:···:-:·:·:·: .•.·:·:···:·.·
and we noted that m the lasliO
years 1t had pul on about 3'~
tnches or about one-third inch
rad1us per year If th1s tree had
been allowed to grow lor the
next 10 years Jl would have had
about 400 board feet m 1\. That
mcrease m growth would have
amounted to about 30 percent
per year
When we observe thmgs hke
th1s, we point them out to the
landowner so that he IS better
able to determtne what trees to
cut on hiS land.

Mason County each year for
the past several years and he
announced that the short
course this year wtll be on
March 5, 6 and 7
The average age of these
young farmers managing these
three datry farms IS perhaps 26
or 27 years Who says that the
young people of today are
gomg to the dogs I
WE WERE WITH Donald
Nowlin, owner of Jernes Run
Campground recently helpmg
him m conservatiOn planmng
As we were walkmg aroWJd
over the land we saw some
trees that he had harvested
The stumps of two trees were
Qlllte mteresting One was a 17mch Vrr)gima pme and the
other a 12-mch yellow poplar.
CoWJting the rmgs on the
V1rg1rua Pme we noted that m
the last 10 years 1\ had put on
seven-e1ghths of an mch of _
growth According to the
woodland mformatlon shck
which we use to g1ve woodland
mformatwn to landowners, and
by checkmg this w1th Johnny
Looney, Service Forester of
Department of Natural
Resources, we find that a 17mch tree would have 206 board
feet m 1\, and the same tree
bemg only 15 mches ten years
ago, would have had !56 board
feet By usmg our anthmetic in
figuring percent of growth, we
foWld this tree IS putting on
board feet at the rate of 3 2 pet
per year
The 12-mch yellow poplar
had about 100 board feet m 11

~~;l"C~oB GC k ~

A
•

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uij~" J
I
II
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~&gt;tl &gt;r ~~"tt M
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f' •n
&gt; J&lt;M• U
o""aa &lt; l U~d\ OU · ~ oln•Lh &lt; ~Hlf&gt;!~

J . 0 NORTH
PRODUCE CO.
V1ne Street

Galhpol1s, Oh•o

~

CUSTOM-CUT
HYDRAULIC HOSE
Slash downttme to an absolu te mtmmum w1th
custom cut hydraulic hose fro m our parts de
partment We can furmsh a no lea k hose of any
length-and we can make 1t m one ptece up to
60 feet long We have both one w1re bratd and
two wtre bratd ho se and a t:omple te l tne of
couplings and adapters Try our qu1ck serv1c e

"Your Farm Supply Super Mkt-"

(

POMEROY

PH. 992-2176

• Compact . Only 18Y." Wrde
e 66 Lbs Ltght
• 15 Mtnute Trmer
• Counter Balanced Door

$

POMEROY
SeiYing

Meigs,
Gallia

WE
SERVICE!
WE
FINANCE!

I r d U I OQ IJ ('

6 30

I lu&lt;; Wl ( k I

I

N .Nc. m

.....
• ............
. ...
. . . . . ••••••••••
. . . . . ........
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. . . . ,,. 'llj""l&lt;!~l&lt;!'«f!
·~~ &gt;&lt;:.»
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... •• •••••••••••·
·········"·'·
,~~~?&gt;ill'l&gt;ill"&gt;ill"llj'

1•'1 Q! OG ~N
.'

i'V

Generation Rap

,.,

By Helen and Sue Bottel

,

Wh} Marry an "Old Man"?

Dear flap
I'm 16, datmg a guy of 27 He says I'm unmatUI e beccmse I
Yo ant to sta) a vtrgm Then he started talkmg about mdt rtagc
DISPLAYING AWARDS IN TilE 1974 Ohro Department of Highway Safety Traffic Slogan'smce that was th e only way I'd have It "
Essay Contest, are from left, Fredenck A V1erow, actmg director , Oluo Opt of Htgh
No\\ he's changed lus mmd He says there's 11 } ears bet\\ een
way Safety , Frank Lochner\, Jr, treasurer, Ohio Assn. of Insurance Agents, and Frank
us, and he d be an old man when I \\as m my 30s So I d !eave hu'1
Laderer, chatrman, Governor 's Traffic Safety Committee Top adult pnze, the l e a~e uf rt
for someone cbe He thinkSwe shou ld JUSt shac k up , so I can qutt
luxury compact car for a year, plus full msurance coverage, ts betng awm ded by Lhe OhiO
wheneve r I want, but I ftgure he's really saymg, 'I love you, but
Assoc1aUon of Insurance Agents Top adult wmner w11l also recerve the No 1 Olno hccnse
not enough to tte myself do\\n " He's already told me that the
plates usually reserved for Governor J Gtlhgan. Adult wmncrs m each county wtll rccm c
very thought of marnage g1ves hrm the shakes I satd, ·No go "
tranststor radtos
Last mght he showed up stoned drunk and sa 1d I'd have to
run away and marry htm r1ght away ,or he'd lca\e me for good I
had ttll the weekend to dectde I called today and was !old he
Deadhne lor the contest, from Deputy Regrstt a&lt; s of the gave up hts apartment th1s n1ormng He didn'tshow up on h1s JOb
Weldon of Baltrmore took adult
honors w1th her slogan, "Slow whrch IS open to all Ohto Bureau of Motor Vehtcles
What do you thmk I - ALMOST MARRIED
throughout the sta te, and ft om
Up Today,
Show
Up residents, IS April I, 1974
Entry blanks are available members or the Ohro Dear AM
Tomorrow" Brtan Walter of
Utrea was youth d1v1s10n from the Ohto Department of Assoc1atwn of Insurance
I lhtnk hJS cold feel took hun on a long 1\alk - rrghl out of
Agents
Conte
st
rul
es
ai
e
Hrghway
Safety,
240
Parsons
wtnner wtth his phrase,
your ltfe - SUE
Ave., Columbus, Ohto 43205, pnnted on the enb) forms
"Buckle Up, Buckeyes "
+++
Dear A
And aren't you lucky 1 As he sa1d, who wants to marr) an old
man wtlh the shakes' - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue
TI1e JUntor hrgh school gtrl who wrote 'What rs Alone 1 ' tsn 't
the only one' About half the kid s tn thJS age group fcellltat way'
-and the other half go all out to make t\ worse'
Junwt In JS full of mlanllle snobs, and the left-&lt;Juts ate the
biggest snobs of all because they hate themsehes as well as
everybody who 1sn 't super-cool And, of cowse, th e super-cools
can t even see them Thmgs change m hrgh sehoul People grow
up - A NOW HAPPY JUNIOR

1

...-

•

1

~1

Rap

When I was m )Untor hr , I felt JUSl hke "S B " who was all
SAM ROUSH
WAYNE DAVIS CLIFFORD PAULEY alone I \\ant to hang around wtth the cool k1ds That was my ftrst
DON GREATHOUSE CHARLES COOK
mistake I went from friends to fnends, and ended up wrlh the
one On my btr\hday I got a note from a bunch of show-offy grrls
It sard, "We were gomg to g1ve you a party , but no one would
come because 1t was for you "
REWARDED FOR SERVICE- Seven employees at The Goodyear Trre
I was so alone for two years that I wanted to kill myself I felt
&amp; Rubber Company's Poml Pleasant chenucal plant recently recmved
good-for""othmg and kne\\ everyone haled me Unltl one day litiS
awards for completmg 15 years of serv1ce ReceiVIng awards were Mrs Bill
kid stuck up for me After that, tn the mnth gt a de, thmgs got
G1bnour, Pomt Pleasant, secretary to Plant Manager Mrchael T Buccr,
beltet
Donald Greathouse, Poml Pleasant, production department operator , Sam
You see, I was trymg to be someone I'm not I was overRoush, Pomt Pleasant, productiOn supervrsor, Charles Cook, Pmnt
anxious about how I looked and acted, and always warned that
Pleasant, productiOn department shtlt foreman, Wayne (Bud) Dav1s of
people didn't hke me
Galltpohs, productron superv1sor, Robert (Bob ) Baxter, Gallipolis,
Now I reahze that everyone can 't hke you, JUSt as you aren't
productiOn superviSor, and CWford (Cliff ) Pauley , Galhpohs Fe rry
able to hke everybody you..meet I was lrymg to make friends
produrt1oo supervisor
With ktds who weren't my type at all, JUS! because they were
popular, and I wanted to be somebody too
ROBERT BAXTER
The boy who fmally notrced me taught me a lot about values
I learned stncere fnendsh1p IS the best cure for the "downs " It
sure beats socral-clunbmg that makes a 13-year-old fall on her
face - F W C

Meigs
Equipment Co.

MOD EL RE91 0

JJ7E
DELIVER!

1

V1e roy. satd top pnze 111 the
&lt;1dult dtv1s10n IS a years lease

\ ·6 ·.
BERNIE GILMOUR

Microwave
Oven

WITH PURCHASE OF $50 OR MORE
OF OUR ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS!

CENTRAL SOY A
OF OHIO

Acting Dtrector Fredenck A

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This
was to be the year Ohio's Iongsuffermg Democrats took the
full measure of control over
~epubllcans who dommated
them m state government for
most of the past
: All the mgredienls of success
were at hand
- An amb1l10us governor,
~eadmg the ticket, who had

FREE PLUMB HAMMER

fl Ill)

l \o.l r 7 1 I I L lnrp Urdu Mt I '• I tl)
I DO
1ri! H tm T orn ut hr 1 J(rry f-,l l ...vr l l I J Co nHl'lUI11[.1U ( 6
tool&lt; U p &amp; L r v~.: IIJ
I 10
F rr tlr fur fo d.rv R ~~ v rvrll Frrp:, 0 HerCJ id of l r ullr J
(_ lrl"llrl lhro t IU (lrur ch By Th~ ') dcollh L Ro rd I
H 00
Coc. p( I lrl r lv rrr 6 Chu r c h Serv rce IJ 1:3 rll t J,l rn L'.,
Hnrq r~ &amp; Hr&lt;&gt; A ll Am1 r 1crrn l&lt;or 1\ 10 Morman ChOi r I 0dy '&gt; ot
Or JLuvor y l r ev Leon,ud f./ep.l',~ tl
R 1\J
Or,l l Roher Is. J Your Hccli Hr l Kc1thry n Kuh l m .ln 6 Day
ol DlscovL ry H Ge t fogel her tO Re)( Humbn rd I J f&lt;t v lv ,l l
Frt es l J
8 55
~lntk Cameo 1
9 00
S1nqrnq J ublicl' 3 C rdll Chnprcl 11 Ordl Ro brcrl s 10 Ro
Humbn d 6 15 H,11r Bear Bunch B
Q JO
Chr1st 15 lh ~,.: An ::. wcr 13 Church ~erv1 ces 10 Your ~ tor tll1
11 1-.rng 1
f.1 l kr1q H .lnd ~ R•
10 00
t hurdl SLrv 10 ~ l l hi' 1 llr'" L it e 3 F1 1i h tor Todcl~ lJ
K1d Power 6 I J Th1nk ng 1n t he Bl ack B Mov1o The Str.1ng c
One 10
10 30
V1 S10n On 6 l ns 1qhl 1 C.oaptn n Noah J Tt r ~ h Th e L t ~
l'l V rewpo rnt 8 Wh at the Brblc Plu n ly Says 13
II 00
TV Chape l 3 Focus On Co l umbus 1 Acros s the Fcnn
15 H R Pulns tuf 13 Po1nt ot V1ew6 Enerqy 8
II JO l hiS IS th e Alo Swer 3 Make A W1':.h 6 lJ ln srq ht 15 Fcl ( (
the N.1 11on 8
1? 00
A t Iss ue 3 Bowlrng 6 Re v C&lt;1 lv 1n Ev.lm 13 Fre d
Tay lor l ReJ( Humba rcl 8 Co l umbus Tow n M~:: 1.0l 1rrg tO

1

)\)

CUSTOMER CARE
. . . . . EVERYWHERE

•2.00. Stop in Soon at

SUNDAY FEB ' 7 1974

COLUMBUS - The Oluo
Departme nt of Htghway
S&lt;l feh. s mnU1 annual search
for a wmnmg safe ty sloga n
opened Fnday and closes A:prrl

~

11.!!1

Health Products The Plumb Hammer is Only

Television Log

Winning safety slogan wanted

of a luxury compact car plus
free msurance CO\ erage, both
prOVIded b)
the Ohro
Assoctat10n of Insurance
Agents , and the No 1 Ohto
license plate usually reserved
for Governor John J Gtlhgan
Adult wmners tn each of Ohro's
88 counttes wtll receiVe tran
s1stor radios
The Governor s Traffic
Safety Comm1 ttee \\Ill provrde
l!H;peed bicycles for each of
the top three wmners m the
unde r-18 age group, and
awards of $5 to ) outh wtnners
m each coun I)
fhe top award wmner m the
adult category, and the frrst,
second and th1rd place wmners
m the under-18 category, along
w1th the1r nnmed1ate famrhes,
111 ll be dnven to and
from \herr homes for presentalion of their awards
by the Governor After
the award presentalton, they
WJll be g1ven a tour of the
SU.tehouse and other state
ta prtal lac1hbes.
"The purpose of the contest
rs to get people thinktng about
traffrc safety," Vrerow said
'Even those who don't enter
the contest, but hear about t\,
are tnchned to giVe a few
mmules thought lo sa fe
dnvmg
Last year, Mrs Howard

&lt;., ICr! tl HeM I I J

1++

NOW
ONLY

With Purchase of •25 or More of Our Animal

:l3 - Thl' Sunda\ lnntls St•ntull'l, Smui~l\ Feb 17. 197'1

Democrats racing in hari -kari

SPECIAL OFFEJl!

3rd &amp; Sycamore Streets
Galhpo!is. Ohto

of the
H Ec,starkey ' chairman
dM George
Educ•ttona l Committee, and Mrs Vtr~Jl Atktns a; e ;:aver was
Paulsen responsrble for the safety lean_et Donn~ ~951 T d Reed
the Winner or the 4-H Safety Speakmg Contest n
e
•
Jr was cha trman of th e Safely Services He represented Meigs
Co~nty at the stale meetmg at Xema, OhiO
h ld t the
1952 saw theState-Wrde Loggmg Equrpment show e a
Southeast Test Farm H 1 C"rpenter
th
1901 saw the ~ olk Uance r esnval ftrst held under e
&lt;eadershlp of Joe Hardy This contmued for several years 195~
also marked the Ohw SesquiCentenmal Day when a parade an

Ca rroll C hn stophe ra s&lt;ha ~rman ,

•

By c. E. Blakes}rt•, County Extrnsum Agt•nt. F.mer1lus
POMEROY _ In the agncultural area from 1945 to 1949 the
Mt&gt;tgs Count y l ..md Use Conmnttee recommended that better
than one-fourth of the count~ sho uld be plat.:cd m ~lllMIWTll
oods The SUite Forestry DeparUnent seemed the ht&gt;l
;roprlatiDn for purchasmg land fot State Fm e:sl Pure ht~se Atl'd
The land was apprarsed et $5 to $10 for abandoned or Cl oded
land. $1&gt;-$25 for pasture land , $25-$40 lor ttllable lulll,md, $7 50$50 brush or tunber and $35-$0 sma ll stream bottom
The umt test demonstratiOn farm program conttnued m
unportance Tours were held to the farms of Dana Hoffman and
Wilbur Parker m 1946 The f£trms of .J M Guthnc Thereon

' I

and
Mason

Counties
Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

Demo crats
have
every party
capability this year for snal·
Then Metzenbaum's past mchmg defeat from the Jaws of come tax payments became an
VICtory
1ssue, and \his was the last
It started last fall, when thmg the DemocraL&lt; needed word leaked out that Gllhgan a mtlhonaire, m a day of pubhc
and the state party were trymg apprehenston about candidates
to engmeer a ticket by pushmg "buytng" electtons, accused of
former astronaut John Glenn avmdmg me orne tax payments
around Glenn pushed back,
Next, the governor and the
party attempted to put the
and the hght was on.
Next Gilligan took s1des m sk1ds to an uncooperative Sen·
the U S Senate contest be- ate Mmonty Leader Anthony
tween Glenn and Howard M 0 Calabrese m h1s brd for the
Ohio politics
Metzenbaum He appomted Democrahc nommatwn for
moved Oh10 further along the Metzenbaum to an mterun lieutenant governor
The result' Calabrese has
track than atJY m recent his- term m the Senate when a
tory and who InsiSted on open- neutral "caretaker'' appomtee emerged the heavy favonte m
a mne-cand1date freld
Jjess and candor m a lime of would have sufficed
Then the orgamza t10n , m a
AroWld the lrrst of the year,
publtc diStrust of government
last-rnmute
sw1lch which left
the
appomtment
appeared
to
- Money and orgamzahon m
some
unhappy
faces, endorsed
unprecedented amounts for be workmg out anyway,
stale
Sen
Tony
P Hall of
despite the faet Gilligan had
Oh10 Democrats
- A Republican party shll always been represented as Dayton for the Democratic
reehng from a drubbmg in favormg open, "let-the-people- nommat10n for secretary or
1970, dazed by developments m dectde" electtons within the sta te They rmghl as well have
Washrngton and unable to
come up wrth any candidate
who hadn't already held OffiCe
for a quarter of a century
Simple Plan
• The Democratrc battle plan
was sunple Gov John J Gilligan, usmg the money and orgamzatiOn, would lead them to
PT PLEASANT - Edgar
Charles •'Putty ~lusg1ave
a posrtion of complete com"Hike"
Hetskell,
Secretary
of
IS
seekmg nomrnallon for
RJand.
Gllhgan would wm re- State, wtll be here as the Justice of Peace m Lewis
election, the Democrats would keynote speaker at a Lincoln DIStrtcl on the GOP ticket
RAlph Shannon, labeled as
hold onto the auditor, attorney Day dmner on Feb. 23.
John
Musgrave,
chairman
of
"The
Wayne County Whipgeneral and treasurer's posts,
capture the state Senate and a the Mason County Republican poorwrll " wrll provide entJ S Senate seal, and sweep Execullve Committee, sa1d tertamment
Tickets are bemg sold by
mlo the lieutenant governor's several other state d1gmtartes
are
expected
to
attend
the
committee
members lor $2 50
and secretary of stale's OfficeS
for the f1rst tune m recerit event begmmng at 6 30 p m m each, wh1ch covers the dmner
the Moose Hall In addition to and entertamment
memory
HeiSkell , a native of
The governor would then be the state officials, Candidates
seekmg
election
on
the
Morgantown,
recerved hrs
free , m a year or so, to enter
jhe national political sweep- Republican hcket w11l also. be Bachelor's degree from West
Vrrgmra Umversrty and hJS law
stakes as a candidate for pres- mtrodueed
ident vice presrdent or a cabrFor CoWJty Com1T11ssJOners degree from tl'Je Umvers1ty of
'
these are meum bent Basil Vrrgmta Law School
net post
, That was how the scnpt was Robertson and V1rg11 Siders
He prachced law m
WrJtlen But as gold leaves turn Jr; L. W Getty, County Clerk; Morgantown unhl1967 when he
to brown , so have DemocratiC Howard Schultz, Crrcurl Clerk, took a leave of absence to serve
fortWJes, pa_r9cularly over the and Mtehu el Shaw, Mason as a frghter p1Iot m the US Air
Counlv'&lt; Representative m the Force and Air Nalwnal Guard
last few ~s.
, Events have left many party House •If flelegates, all _em"---~,In November 1972, Mr
'
regulars wrth a forceftilthough cumhents
Hetskell became the frrsl
hme-worn message- Ohi o
Republican rn 44 years to be

kiSsed the office goodbye Hall
ts ftmshm g vtrtually last m a
stx -cand tdate fte ld m early
polhng
A federal report told of trregulanties m campa 1gn fmancmg by the Democrats tn 1972
and accused the G1lltgan admmtstratlon of htrmg on the
baSIS of pollllcs More bad
publicity for an hon est and
open admmtstratwn
Even worse, there were reports that the adrmmstr &lt;:~liOn
had lned to send n ank W
Kmg, head of the si,jlte Aflr
CIO, out to pasture
Wtdemng the split wtth Kmg
could only cause more headaches for the Democrats than
they already have
Fmally, la st week , Dfrnocratlc headquarters began to
crumble w1th the d1sm1ssal of
1ls execu ti ve dtrector and
restgnatwn of three ~udes

Heiskell keynote speaker
Feb. 23 for Lincoln dinner

It's too bad we can't proclaim, "Age 13 has been cancelled,
due to lack of happmess "After all, they ehmmale tlrc 13th floor
tn aparUnent buildings - LIVED l'HROUGH IT TOO

Watergate will provide

many positive results
DETROIT iUPI) - Former
Attorney General ElliOtt L
Richardson has predicted the
Watergate scandal wrll have a
number of posrlrve effects and
wtll prove the US constt tutwn
ha s " the strength to endure
and overcome goverrunental
excesses "
Rtchardson also sa1d he
hoped Presrdent N1xon had
'learned enough from the past
lesson" to avOid a con
frontatwn wrth Watergate
prosecutor Leon Jaworski
"I don't see where Mr
Jaworski has much chotce but
to subpoena the tapes, although
he mrght tr.r once more to
persuade th e PreSident \\hat IS
best for him and the country,"
he sa1d
Speakmg at the Umvers1ty of
Detroit annual Law School
banquet
Frtday
mghl,
Richardson sard, however, the
scandal has hurt the legal
profession as a whole
"Watergate has hurt the Ia\\
professiOn, although what has
happened tn Washmglon

sho uld not be atlnbuted to
law) ers m general any more
than to the Repubhcan Party m
general ,' he said
He satd he was telhng
lawyers throughout th e
country they must learn to
temper thetr ltadttlunal chent
relatwnshJps w1th a wider
concern for JUSllce and thetr
country
R1chardson, who restgned as
attorney general last year
rather than carry out a
presldcntral order to ftre
Watergate spectal prosecutor
Archibald Cox, satd the Watergate scandal wtll 'demonstrate to the people that the
US Consl tlu tron sttll ts
workmg and has the strength to

endure

and

ove r come

goverrunental excesses
1 expe ct the Watergate
mvesttgatwn to have several
postttve results, such as new
restrictions on campa tgn
fmanc mg, greater protectiOns
of privacy and an mcreased
candor m poltttcs," he satd

~~~. dOlit dte:~\ solA£

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Bob Dan c is 3
F ren ch Che f JJ Arnold Pa lmer 3
t1 JO
C&lt;J ncer L1 f c or De.::r th JJ Other PPop le Other Pla ce513
Lrmll s of M.:tn 15 W1de Wol'ld o l Spor t' 6 Pr obe Con ference
Wrt h lhro M ttyor 4
S 00
CBS Eye on Sport s 8 Umbr ella 33 G len Campbel l Los
Angc lc'&gt; Open 3 10 L.::r wrencf' Wclk 4 Mov1e Sta ge Coac h
13 Eternal L tght 15
.., 11
M&lt;1kmq Th1ng s Work 33
S 30
T A1c h1 Chua rt J] Vrrg1l Ward F r,hrng Show 8
6 00
60 Mtnul cs B L tl liJ _, Yogn &amp; You 33 World .AI Wa r 6
NP•.'IS 1 TBA 15
f&gt; \U
NR C Ncw&lt;iJ 11 5 Et t n lngA I Pops33
I 00
Zoom ?0 W lei K rngdom IS C r cu '&gt; 1 L as s1e 8 In Thr
Know 10 U n l am~"'d Wor l d l ) S&lt;.~ l aro to A d venture 3 L et s
Mrt ke A Df'rll 6
I 30
Wo rld of Dr snf'y 3 &lt;1 IS Mounl c1 1n Sce nl JJ Fre nch Chf' l
20 App l es Nay fl 10
e 00 Ca ptl ol Bea t 33 Interla ce 1'0 33
B 30
Milnn 1x 8 10 Relig iou s Am en ca 20 JJ Mov1e The Ten
Command ments 6 13 M cMrllnn and Wile 3 4 I S
9 00
Masterpiece T heaiPr 20 33
9 30
Barnaby Jones 8 10
10 00
F 1r ng Lr ne 70 33
10 30
News 4 6 8 H1gh Road to Adven ture 10 Newsmake r ?&lt;1
13 Pollee Surgeon 15 We Th1nk You Should Know 3
11 00
News) 10 15 ABC News6 I J Bonilnza 4 CBS News
ll 15
Polr ce Su rgeon 6 CBS News 10 News 13 Move The
Ret urn of Frank Jon es 8
11 JO
Johnny Ca r so n 15 Face th e Nahan 10 Don K r shn er s
Ro ck Concer t 13 Mov1 e She G( ts Her Man 3
II 15
Good News 6
17 00
Urban League 10 Johnny Car son t
17 30
M ov 1e Wh o 5 M nd1 nq th e Store 10
t 00
Nev'JS 13

a

I 30

Nev', S 4

MONDAY FEB 18 1974
Su nr1 se Sem rn ar 4 Sac r ed Heil rt 10
6 15
Schoo l Scene I IJ Fo lk L rt era turc 3
6 75
Farm Report lJ
6 30 - F1ve Mmutes to L 1ve By &lt;1 News 6 B1ble A n5wers 8
Good News 13
6 35
Co l umbu s Today 1
6 15
Farmf1me 10 M or nr ng Report 3
7 00
Today 3 d 15 CBS News 8 10 P1xanne 6 D1ck Van
Dyke 13
7 30
Rocky &amp; Bul lw nkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
R 00 - Capt Ka nga roo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame 51 33
Jells Coll1e 6
B 75 - Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunc h 0
8 55
Ne""s 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon &lt;1 Fnend l y Jun cl1on 10 AM 3 Phrl Don a hue
15 Abbott &amp; Coste lloe W1ld Wild Wes l 6 M ov 1e El Greco
13
9 30 - To Te ll th e T ruth 3 Secr et Storm 8
9 55 - Chu ck Wh te Repor l 5 10
10 00 - Drnah Sh ore 3 15 Jo ker s Wild
10 Company 6
10 JO - $ 10 000 Pyram1d 8 10 Jeo pardy 3 4 15
11 00 - Gamb I 8 10 Passwor d 13 M 1ke Douglas 6 Unto th e
H1ll s 33 W1zard o f Odd s 3 1 15
II 30 - Holl ywood Squares 3 l 15 Love of Life 8 tO Brad y
Bunch 13 Sesame 51 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan l mf'l s World 10
11 00 - Bob Brilun s 50 so Club 1 Password 6 News 8 10 13
Jackpot 3 15
11 30 - Spli t Second 6 Seil r ch l or Tom or r ow B 10 Baffle 3 I S
1/ 55 - News 3 15
I 00 - News 3 Al l My Children 6 13 Not For Wom en Only 15
Concen lralion 8 Secret Storm 10
1 30 - 3 On A M a t ch 3 1 15 The World T urn s 8 10 L e t 5 Mak e
A Deal 6 13
7 00 - Day s of Our L vcs l t 15 G u rdmg L1 gh t 8 10 Newlywed
Ga m e 6 13
2 30 - Edge ofNighl 8 10 G1rlm MyL1t e6 13 Doctor s) 4 15
J 00 - General Ha sp tal 6 13 Ant1ques 20 A noth er Worl d 3 4
I S Pr1ce Is R1ghl B 10 One L1fe to L rve 6 13 Phi l Donahue
4 F r enchChef 20 How t oSu r v1veA Marrag eJ 15
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerse t 15 Sesame 51 20 33 Love
Amencan Style lJ Speed Racer 6 Mov 1e Bru sh F1re 10
J 30 - Green Ac r es 3 G11l 1gan s Is 6, 13 Bonanza I S Ja ckpot
4 Hazel B
5 00 - Mr Ro gers 20 33 Bonan za 3 M erv Gr1ff1n 4 Andy
Grilhn S MI SSI On ImpoSsible 6 Gomer Pyle 13
5 30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8 E lec Co 33 H od gepodge Lodge :w
Trails West 15 Hogan s Heroe s 13
5 SS - Ear l N•ghl1nga le 15
6 00 - New s 3 4 8 10 15 Sesa m e St 10 ABC New s 13 Per
sonaltly Beh av ioral Deve lopment 33
Truth or Con
sequences 6
6 30
NB C New s 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Roo m 2'22 13 ABC
New s 6
7 00 ~ T ruth or Con seq 3 Wh a t s My L tne
E tec Co 20 Bea l
the Clock 4 News6 10 Crr cus 13 Read tng f or t he Class room
- eacher 33 Wild Krngdom I S
7 30 - Bobby Gold sboro 3 Buck Owens 8 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel
20 Mun1c1pal Court 10 Wa cky World ol Jonat han Wmters 15,
To Tell the Truth 6 Beat the Clock 13 Hollywood Squa res 4
E p1 sode Ac! Jon 33
B 00 - RookH~s lJ Theater rn Amer1ca 20 Nat1onal Geog r aph1d
6 Mag1 c1a n 3 4 I S Gunsmoke 8 10 Poet Game 33
9 00 - Mov1e s' It It s Tuesday Th rs M ust !1e 1:3el_olum 3 4 15
The Ten Commandm ents 6 13 Her es Lucy 8 10
9 30 - D1 ck Van Dyke 8 tO
10 00 - Paul Nuchtm s 33 Med1 cul Center 8 10
10 30 - News 20
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak I 33
11 30 - Johnny Car son 3 .\ IS T ghl A s A Drum 6 13 Mov1es
Adam s R1b B The Upper Hand 10
11 45 - News 6 13
12 15 - Only A Scream Away 6 13
1 00 - Tomorrow J 1
1 45 - News 13
7 00 - News 4
6 00 -

a

a

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

RODNEY VILLAGE II
HOMES FOR SALE!
MANY HOMES ARE NOW
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

APPLICATIONS NOW
BEING TAKEN

SEE ONE OF THESE
BEAUTIFUL HOMES!
RANCHERS

$20,000
*DOWN PAYMENT
*MONTHLY PAYMENT

I

: ~~:~:~)~~:~;;:;i;;~~~j~:,~::' .~a, ~~·
... ::
:~i~\~ffi~Y~j~~;~(n:R~~

.

•

Rap

Of)l"n 8 1ble I~
Mfrllhe P r es'&gt;J .t 15 I~CJ I Vt! I Frc"J IJ
1 00
L ower I g ht hou ".rc 13 W&lt;:~lly '&gt; Wor kc, hop 1 ( BS Sport •,
Spc( l dLu l t~r !:1 IQ Per r y M 'lc.o n &gt;1 I ')p f 15
1 J O l &lt;;•,ucs&amp; An o:.w er '&gt;6 13 Perry Ma•,on 3
? 00
NHLHocl&lt;e y&lt;t 15 Champ1on&lt;,h1pAtJi oR,JC rnq6 1J
/3 0 N BABdskethtrll B 10 I I Tok Psa Thlc i J
l 30
Arm: ncan Sport m'"ln 6 ll MM str a ll Un JPrSilf ')port s

I)

~~~~ ~ ~~~

. . ..". ...

*Farmers Home Administration
Loans
81/ 2 Per Cent Interest Rate
PHONE 245-5303

RODNEY VILLAGE II
EDGAR HEISKELL
elec ted Secrelar) of SUite
West Vrrgtma

tn

RT. 35
RODNEY, OHIO
-

'

�j

25 - The Sun~ay Thnes Sentmcl Sunda' Feb 17 )974

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
w
:ta~~F~Pd~;J,\~ NF:~rEu:~hR~: ~;6~~o~e :w~y :\::~:,t:~~985~:~:aso ~;~2; c~so: ~:~\~:~\~}~~f ~n"
Business Servi·ces
I
In

WANT ADS
INFoRMATioN

5
w

M emory

ante d To B uy

Wanted To Buy

..

39

be a cep ed un
9 a m to
Day o P41b c a on

REGuLATIONs

TON o
on ruck flatbed
4 o
o ft Late f f es o
06
s )( es Phone 99'}
2 17 5 p

on
ee

•

'"

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OB TUARY

o

n

Ea

50 wo d
add o a

~

m n

Not1ce

wo d

pa
e
ihfp and one y e a
o d
u Bo de ne Co e F e o
g ood home Phone 742 5 2
2 5 3c

6 WEEK

BLNDADS
ona 25c Cha g e pe

Add
1\d e

y

sen en

OFF CE HOURS
!l 30 a m
o 5 00 p m Oa y
8 0 a
o
2 00 No o

0

0

day

In Memory
em o y o
A ud

o
F o

2

ea s ago
9 '

he

ca es o

•

casu c
You

s

s

fa ce we

e

OH 0

s

sed

Gon e

2

oved so

de

e
he a
Too
a

sp

vo
away

h

But no

oo

ea cn

a

e we o ed o
o

to

s

Qht

0

hough

0

s d ea

Sad

he M
Fa

e
1

-----·--- - - ------ -=2 .:.:7 6 p
NOUNC NG new hou s t o
ncome aK se v ce Open on y
on Monday Wednesday and
F day
9
a m
o
5
P m
Even ngs by app
Wanda Eb n Co Rd 22 o
bypass Phone 99 2
Rou e
2 2

p

DELIVERY
DRIVER
SALES

Meigs

Property

$3 50 PER HOUR

Transfers

I

Full or Parttlme

Raymond A Zirkle Sarah E
Z rkle Dav d Ashle) Doana
Ashley lo Osby A Marl n
Mary A Marl n 204 Acres 100
Acre Lot Pon eroy
Rolland Dale Colburn Anna
M ColbW'n to Comm ssooners
of Me gs Co 6 42 Acres
:sal sbW')
Rolland Dale Colburn Anna
M Colbm n lo Commossooners
of Meogs Co Ease Sahsbury
Alv n A Haggy Martha D
Haggy to Roger L Mowery
t erald ne Ann Mowery
Parcels Sahsbury
Dale Barr Pauline Bao r lo
Dale Barr Pauhne Baro
Parcels Ohve
Myron A Ba ley Ann C
Baley lo Marvm L Kelly
Parcel Salisbury
Jane Hunter to Davod R
Wells Mary E Wells Lol 16
11eedsv lle-Ohve
Pearl C Jacobs Tma K
Jacobs Cl fford G Jacobs
Mildred Jacobs to Com
russ oners of Meogs Co Ease
Salisbury
Molo B Hulchonson Belly A
Hulchmson to Arnold E
Wolson Shorley M Wolson Lot
I Hulch nson Sub Rutland
Sylvoa C C-arman to Ivan
Carman Pa ee ls Bectfoo d
Sahsbwy

"I

I!!

Phone 10 a m 8 p m
446 0677

1
I

Employment

Wa~td

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

NEW
HOMES

FOR SALE
Bu ld ng
S1tes
Avaolable Kongsberry
Homes buolt to f t any
spec focal ons
All
Underground Uti/ t es
Prov ded

------------·
For Information
Or Apporntment

PHONE
367-7250
Addison 0

c

2

- - - - - - --

BACKHOE Serv ce CHARLES
R HATF ELO
Roue
Rutland Oh o 45775 phone
742 6092 Wa er I nes footers
and trenches 24 hou s 7
days a week

For Sale

PRE SPR NG SALE a Berry
M le
Mob e Homes
705 NEW Sw ve ocke s n pr n s
11eves nyons and vnys
Fa son S eel Be p e Oh o
You
cho ce of coo s and
phone 423 953
Buy now
s Yes wh e they las Some
ake de ve y n spr ng
take
S69 95 olhers 579 95 cash - - - - - - - advantage of w nt e
me
and
Carry
Pome oy
p ces on some ou stand ng
Recovery
622 E
Ma n
used Mob es Homes
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
9 1
2 bedroom
60 x. 2
2 36 c
.
,_:._.:.:
P n ess was $6 49S 00 sa e
pr ce S5 295 00
h s mob e
home new cos $8 000 00
STEREU
Wa nut
AM FM
97
65x. 2 Champ on supe
Rad o 8 I ack tape com
sa e pr ce on y U 995 00
bina on Balance $ 10 73 or
9
60x 12 Buddy c ass c
te ms ava abl e Phone 992 For 5ale
was S5 495 00 now on y
3965
S4 95 00
2 4 tfc
SALT FOR CE AND SNO\
9
two 60x 2 Champ on
Roc:k sa
fo
townsh ps
were $4 495 00
now on y EXCELSIOR Sat Works E
S3 995 00
owns end bus nesses n
Man St Pomeroy A 1 kinds
9
60x 2 E con a Custom
bu ks and bags for ce and
of sa t water pelle s wale
snow Exce l s o Sa t Works
new pr ce $7 295 00 sa e p.- e
nuggets block sa
and own
Phone 992 389
ss 795 00
Oh o R ver Sal
Phone 992
11 1 tfc
9 4
h ee Detro e s - up o
3891
s1 ooo oo off
WE HAVE many o he s zes
and var et es of Mob le
Homes on sa le Ou
p ces
de ve y and
n ude you
comp e e se up don t wa
shop now you I be g ad you

YOUNGSTOWN k tchen s nk
w h faucets sso gas ange
UO refr gera or 540 A 1 n
good cond t on See at 256 so
Four h Ave M ddlepo t

c

fc

"d

2 15 12

---,-------~---2~2

GROCERY bus ness for sa e
ease
Bu ld ng fo sa e o
Phone 773 56 8 from 8 JO p m
o 0 p m for appo ntment
3 20 tfc

Used Furniture
Buys. • •
24 New Recliners take them
With )IOU
$50 00

Offer Good hi Feb 23 1974

J S@fs Bunk Beds
$6995and up
Tw n and Full Sue Beds:
complete w th spr ngs and
mat $29 95
S25 00 and

up
Gas &amp; Electnc Ranges $39 95

and up

··-·.

Rutland Fumiture
742 4211
~e

Herb
Grate

Rutland 0 .
M ke

Dave or

For Rent or Sale

BEAUTIC AN P a s c. auty
Salon M ddlepor Phone 992
3 03 0 992 375

----·- ·---- -------.:2 .:.:7 6 c

HELP WANTED
Centrally
located
lumber
yard
has
openmgs for m111 men
and sales personnel
Send resume slatmg
des1r!! to learn &amp; ex
penence Box 307 c 0
Gallopolos
Dally
Tnbunl!

HOME FOR SALE on Grave
H I n M ddleport 1 carport 2
closed n po ches 2 sto y w h
4 rooms upsta rs and 5 rooms
down Phone 992 3160
2 14 4 p
29 ACRES mos ly wooded place
for arge lake so ated but
has road frontage
,. m e
from Rae ne S4 800
1 992
2369 after 6 p rn
2 2 stc

STEREO
92.1 FM

ca

WMPO

0 E S R ABLE
wo bedroom
house n M dd eport ready to
occupy Ca 992·5310
1 31 26tc

Middleport Pomeroy
HAY

----

,.

0

Painting A Specially

DeliVered Ia Job Sole

Areas Most
Reasonable Pnces

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN

All work guaranteed

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason W Va

·---~~~-·-

PR CE
CONSTRUCTION
Roof ng
spout ng
k tchens
and balt1 ooms
Complete
emode ng Phon e 42 6273
2 3 tfc

992 3861

tfc:

SLEEP NG room over w ne
store n Pomeroy Reference
requ red ca 1 992 5293
1 10 tfc
3 A ND 4 ROOM furnlshe'd and
unfurn Shed
apartmen s
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tfc
PR VATE meeting
oom for
any organ zat on phone 992

3975

3 11 tfc

ROOMING house
turn sned
canst uctlon
workers
we come Phone 772 5975
2 15 lfc:
TRA LER
bedroom n c:e for
coupe Phone 992 7479
2:_:s lfc

_____

ROOM S and bath
us
edeco.-a ed and new y fur
n shed u
es pa d S 40 00
pe month No ch d.-en and no
pets Ava lable March 1
Wr te P 0
Box 122 M d
d epo t Oh o
2 4 3tc

OFFICE SUPPLIES

tc

2I

·,-----------------

DOZER wo k land c ear ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads e c Large
dozer And operator w h over
20 years exper ence Pu ns
Ex.tavatlng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
12 19 fc

--·--·-----

NE GLERS
HOUSES
or
bu
s pec: f ca
Bu ld ng
Oh o Ca

Ut&lt;
BUILDING
We
draw p n s
d
to
your
ons
Ne gle s
Supply
Rae e
949 3604

Real

Estate

For

Sale

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THE best nsurance at the best
Fo
auto
home
p ce
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agent 446 2300 541 4th Ave

so If

--·--

Notice
FREE home demonst at ons of
E ectroluK p oducts Call 675
3490 be ween q and 0 a m we
a so
have
E ec ro UK
Cleaners $69 75 and up Ful
gua an ee
1 f

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

TWO WAY RadOS Sa es &amp;
Serv ce New and used DB s
pol ce monitors antennas
e c Bobs C zen Band Rad o
Equ p
Georges Creek Rd
Ga po s Oh o 446 45 1

2 2

OEAD STOCK

WILL emove at a reasonable
charge Ca I 245 5514
212 If

BABY FARM-11acres JUSt
off Rt 33 close In ~year o d
home 3 BR co ored bath w
shower

lovel y k tchen

range &amp; ref

Ut I ty

garage &amp; storage

Barn

fence $22 ~ 00
BUY OF THE YEAR- Just
3 yrs old 3 BR colored bath
Ulllly modern k !chen and
d n ng Carpeted Carport
About 2 acre $16 000 00
A BARGAIN 2 sto y
frame 2 BR
new bath
furnace &amp; hot water tank
Some carpet ng panel ln_g &amp;

SUN VALLEY Nursery Schools
I censed by State of Oh o 1
m les west of new hospl al
577 Sun Valley Dr Pt1 446
3657 Day c:are that says we
care
Madge Hauldren
Owner
Loredith emd John
Hau l dren Opera ors
114 If
C and E Poodle G oom ng Fo
appo ntment Ph 446 25 5

38 6
GET you lawn mowe s and
ota Y I ers checked now
562 Fourth Avenue
28 27
COL DENVER H GLEY
AUCT ONEER
Ph 446 0002

DELIVERY
DRIVER

Approved for sept c tank
Ideal for mobile or home
$4 soo 00

S3.50 PER HOUR

If no answer 992 2568

WASHER
dryer
and
efr gera or
.-epa
No
charge for se v ce cal f we
can t f x your appl ance Ph
675 4242
254 11
PROTECT you mob le home
w h TIE DOWN ANCHORS
Ca I Ron Sk dmore 446 756
af e 3 p m
221 f
THOMAS Fan Exterm na ng
Co Te m e and Pest Control
Wheete sburg Oh o
233 f

M &amp; 5 CONSTRUCTION
EXCAVAT ON and genera
emodel ng
Backhoe doter
and trench ng Sept c tanks
and too e s A 1 phases of
plumb ng w r ng
new
n
sta at on Cal 388 9986
217 If

AND

SPOUTING

Sh ngles s d ng and bu ldup
hotroofs Free Est ma es 26
yea s exper ence
James
Marcum V non Ohio 388

9940

247 If

M&amp;M
ROOFING &amp; Spout ng Sh ngle
&amp; Bu dup roof Hot &amp; Cold
process Home mp ovemen
n
general
For
free
est ma es
phone Robert
Meade 388 8 114 B dwel

a e
wo k nd s o
hcmanwhow
do
no h ng h e s o d a d
e
man who w
do no h ng e sc V NTON 4 ms and bah A
pane ed and a pe d
I ha
/\RGE o a 32Ga edA e
a um s d g and n ew oo
Th s h ee bedroom hom e has
Th s house has been com
ha dwood
oo s
u
P e e y em ode ed
a gc- o
ba se men
k
h en
w
Bough o S 4 00
ab ne s and b eak as a c a
8
5 on
oom EK e en
UNC T ON
60 &amp; Rl 554
bya$SOOO
Bus ness now ope ated as
gas con cess ons and bee
bu ness P ope y on s s so
a 3 A o ne o p esen
bus ness ooms and a 36 x 90
pa
a y
omp e ed bock
b dg P en y po en a he e
Come n and d sc uss

THERE
c
a

AGENCY
Exctltng
New Home

2 17 31p

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1 TO 5 P M
MEADOWGREEN ESTATES
This love y new home s the f rst to be offered n a
beaut ful eKclus ve new area 4 m les west ol Holze.Hosp tal oH Rt 35 at Watson Rd Wh te br ck Colonial
tu y ca peted 8 spac ou!l rooms 3 Bedrooms 2 2 baths
sunkenllv ngroom dmlngroom 15 ~20 fam ly room w th
woodburn ng t replace large kitchen cab net!l forced a r
electr cheat and a r cond lion ng rura water system 3
!lets of pal o doors Double car garage w th automat c
door large landscaped lot Constructed of only the f nest
malet"ials EKqul!llte home tor exclus ve family n select
area Buy this one Price reduced for Quick sale

ONF. YEAR OLD dwe ng w h
b ck f ont
Ba ance has
aumnum
sdng
3
y oom a ge
bed oom s u
f ont oom a ge k chen w h
beau fu
cab ne s
Pr ce
$19 900 Can assume FHS oan
to 3 yea sa $
a mon h f
bi.Jye qua f es
OFFICE 446 066
EVENINGS
Russet Wood 446 46 a
Ron Canaday 446 3630
John R chards 446 0280

s

QUALITY timothy and cover
hay Phone 992 2820 or (6 4)
985 3542 n ghts
2 17 3 c
·-,--·---~~
9 WEEK old back pood e pup
phone 992 5098
2 17 Stp
H&amp;N DAY old or started
Leghorn pullets Both f oor or
cage
grown
ava tab e
Poultry
hous ng
&amp;
automat on Modern Poultry
399 W Man Pomeroy 992

2164
2 7 lie

----------·-,- -REDUCE excess flu d
Fluidex
Lose we ght
De~t A 0 et
capsules
Ne son Drugs

w th

w th

,----,-----------~2~.:.:17

at

31c

YOU

WONT

BEL EVE

YOUR ~YES WHEN YOU
STEP INSIDE TH S NEW
SPL T
LEVEL
HUGE
LV NG ROOM W TH A
LOVELY BALCONY EF
FECT GOING TO THE 3
LARGE
BEDROOMS
BEAUT FUL
BUILT IN
OAK CAB NETS WITH
QUALITY
APPLIANCES
B~ILT IN
COMPLETELY
CARPETED FOR OAD - A
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
WITH WORKSHOP PLUS 2
ACRES
TO
PUTTER
AROUND ON LOCATED IN
RUTLAND
YOU MUST
SEE THE NS DE OF THIS
ONE TO APPRECIATE IT
Gallla Co s largest Real
Estate Sales Agency

Office 44' 3'43
Evenings C1ll
E M
Ike Wiseman

446 37"
M XED hay 60c per bate and
firewood Phone n2 '2826
2 17 3tc

E N Wiseman 446 4500
Bud M(Ghee 4U 1255

OUT RT 7

2 bedrooms bath

large I v ng
T P
water
garage and other bu d ngs
One acre

RANCH TYPE HOME -

3

bedrooms bath n ce kitchen
nat gas furnace City water
and garage

BUSINESS BUILDING-Wih
over 3 2 acres Can be useful to
builder~ equipment overhauts
truckers
storage
or

church or school Chain link
fence Above all floods
316 ACRES
In 01 ve
Tawnsh p W ld and wooly at
$ 25 00 per acre
24 ACRES - n Pomeroy Good
fa

NE:'W 5 rm
ba hs
u
base
pe
and oca1ed on
Th s house has
v a ea and an
o S'JS 000
k

TYCOON LAKE
Bus ness
w h v Qua e s p us 3 m
house and ounda on lo h rd
house 3 ac e o The bund e
or S2 000
S

0

R
35
NEW 5 ms
ba hs fu base 2 a ga
a g e a o Th s house s no
n shed
bough as s to
$2 500 F nanc ng a a abe

J WHITERD 1y od 5
ms
bath a br ck al
a pe
e ec oca ed on a
arge
P ce $30 000

CROWN C TY
a y s od
H W
oors 5 ms and bah
a ge so age b dg
and
oca ed on
A
o
On y
$

2

soo

ROUTE

ms 2
F Ps
Wanted To

Do

CONCRETE bock roo ng and
pa nl ng by con t ac o hou
A wo k gua an eed
ee
es ma e Ph 36 0295

33 '

CROUSE BECK RD
Lev e 6 ms
ba hs 2
yrs o d H w t oo s
A o
Th s sa good house and cou d
not be bu
to
he ask ng
pr e oday $32 000
BUHL MORTON RD
1 y
o d I a me b k
m 5 ms
baths a ca pe a e ec
pa o cove ed
Th s s a
beau y On y !26-.,900
9

DOWN R VER
2 s to y
br k base a
arpe
"
rm
S x 36
w h F P A so
has2ndhousew h4 ms 2A
R ve v ew o
$45 000

EVERGREEN
ba h u hea
wn$4000

5 ms and
s lo m d s and

COUNTRY A RESTATES
Y o d br ck and a um 3 b g
bdrms
ba hs a ca pe
hug e 2 ca ga
and a a ge
at o SJ6 900
WOODLAND DR
6 rm
amellysod H W f s
equ pped k I hen A ba
at $20 000
GARF I ELD AVE
5 m
frame w h base
A um
s d ng s o m d s and w n
Nea
new gas fur
P ce
$
500

ST RT

75

SM TH R D
s 0 000

50 A 15 500
4 A

I

a

___ -· _A_ •_:v _h~~ 446

YOU

Here Are
Brand New Homes
For Your
lnspecl1on
BEDROOM

P

T

2
BATHS
ROOM
'l CAR
GAf.IAGE
PR VATE
WOODED
A
0
C y
SC HO O S
4
BEDROOM W TH
0 N NG
F AM l Y A ND
ROOM 2 FUL
BAT H S 2
CAR GARAGE
LARGE
F LAT COUN RY
OT A
ROONEY
T SA BEAUTY
BEDROOM BR CK
CAPE COD W T H 2 CAR
GARAGE
F REP ACE
FA M LY
ROOM
F ULL
BA SEMENT
C TY
SC
D ST UST PERFECT ON 2
A
COUNTRY LOT AT
RODNEY
BEDROOM
STORY
W TH LARGE FA M
Y
ROOM
BATH S N CE
K
CHEN 0 N NG
CAR
GARAGE CE NTRAL A R
SJ 800 DOWN
8
BEAUT FUL
B
LEVEL
3 BEDROOMS
FAM LY
ROOM
BATHS
CA R GARAGE
RANGE
D SHWASHER
CENTRAL
A R
C TY
WA ER
SEWER
AND
SC H OO S
LEVE L

F AM L Y

L KE NEW 4 BEDROOM
COMP ETELY MODERN
3 BEDROOM HOME THE
HOU SE W LL DEL GHT
YOU AND THE LAND S
JU ST R GHT F OR PART
T ME FARM N G
N C TY
D STR CT

lots Of
Bu1Idmg Lots
BUT HERE S THE BE ST
O'IC 80 N
OF ~t;: R J\J H
pOR
ER
BROOK
ESTA TE S
EXCE LLENT
NE GH BORHOOD
AL
N EW
HOMES
N
PLEA SANT
COUNTRY
ATMOSP H ERE

5 Acre
Wooded lot

$/li}/UWIL

SEE TH 5 SPAC OUS 3 OR 4
BEDROOM HOME F ULLY
CARPETED W TH THE
APP
ANCE BU
T
N
PLUS
WASHER
AND
DRYER KG CK SC D ST
T SA DOUBLE W DE N A.
DA N DY LOCAT ON 0~
M L L CK

F YOU WANT
YOUR
PROPERTY
SOL O
QU CKLY AT THE BES T
PR CE PO SS BL E CALL
US WE A READY HAV E A
RECOR D
BREAK N G
SE L NG YEAR STARTED
AND NEED PROPERTY
OF EVERY OESCR PT ON
R GH
NOW TO SAT SFY
WA T NG BUYERS L ST
T W TH THE LARGEST
REAL ESTATE SA LE S CO
N THE AREA
N TOWN
10
ROOM
HOME LOCATED BEST
PART OF
C TY
BATHS N CE LOT W TO
W CARPET
OWNER
W LL
NOT
REFUSE
EXCELLENT OFFER
GaIa Co s largest Rea
Estate Sa es Agency
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Cal
Bud McGhee 446 1255

Help Wanted

SEPTIC TANKS
C eaned and lnsta led
Ru&amp;se s Plumb ng 446 .t7a2

Phone 10 A M 8 p M
446 0677

23 FOUR H AVE
LOs of
v ng space
n th s tou
bedroom home N ce o a on
P ced a
w h a a ge o

LOGUE Dozer Serv ce Ph 388

8659

2&lt;1 26
ROOFING a a gutter work
Also bu 1 uP roof ng 388 8507

l20 If

AN nterest ng book cal ed The:
Ma!ltery of L few I be sent to
you w thout obi gat on Th s
book w I tel you how you
may rece ve the un que
Ros cruc an Method fo se f
unto dment in the privacy of
your home Address Scribe
I
Ros cruc an Order
AMORC
San Jose
Ca f

P Mart n &amp; Son Water
Delivery
Serv ce
Your
patronage
w 1 be
op
prec: ated Ph 446 0463
2tf

Plum

b11g &amp; Heating

GENE PLANT$ &amp; SON
PLUMBING
Heat ng
A r
CoRd ton ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 631

• 5000
33 ACRES vacant s ound Good
p ace fo bu d ng hunt ng o
nves men I

1

ACRES
Vacant g ound
oca ed on P pe Rd one half
m e o f R
325 n V nton
Co p
m ts

WE HAVE o her p ope y for
Oh 0 R ve
saeseeoca
ea estate
Rea ty to you
needs
Even ngs Ca 440 4244
Steven Betz446 9583
John M Fut er 446 4327

CARTERS PLUMBING

393
K OF P and Pythlan S sters
monthly d nner Saturday
February 23 6 30 p m Br ng
covered d sh meat furn shtcl

39 1

--c-----

39

6

LAD ESneeded fo good pay ng
empo ary off ce
ke work
No expe ence necessa y
About J days work
A so
seve a
ad es needed w h
car or ght de very work
Gas a owance
nc uded
App ly
n person
o Mrs
Carter a Ve e.-anS" Ha
ups a rs n Mun c pa B dg 9
to 0 am Tuesday Feb 9

OH 0 R ver ot w h qua ty
mob e home A so you own
p va e boa dock

----

39 3

BABYS TTER wanted pa
me w h gh housekeep ng
Pn 24S 932
39 6

AUCTION
SERVICE

AND HEAT NG

Cor Fourth &amp; p ne
Phone 44t 3888 or 446 4471

- --

------

165tf

COUNTRY L VtNG
3 BR HW f oo s br ck and
f ame cons uc on garage
and sto age bu ld ng deep o
00 x 85 qu k possess on
P ce $22 000
FAMILY ROOM
F REPLACE n lam y oom
banquets ze k tchen aundry
ga age
wo k s hop and
sto age a ge o S24 000
S ACRES
Large 2 s to y home 4 BR 1
de ached
ba h W W ca pe
carpo I and wo kshop 400

'

000

on

r ve

WANTED
PARTS MANAGER

Gallipolis 446 4712

AUCTION WAY"

FULL TIME HONEST, WILLING TO GET AHEAD
IN A GROWING ORGANIZATION

JIMME SAYRE

APPLY IN PERSON AT

297 tf

DEWITT S PLUMBING

AND HEAT NG
Route 60 at Everg een
Phone 446 2735
187 f

STANDARD
PlUmb ng &amp; Heating
214 Th rd Ave 446 3782
187 tf

•

AUCTIONEER

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
50 STATE STREET

For Rent
6 ROOM S and h&lt;~
e e en es
equ ed Ph 11 6 900
35 f

U N FUR N SHED
house
1
rooms and ba h
29 Ne 1
Avenue $ 50 pe mon h 446
44 6 a e
p m

2 BEDROOM r a e
n c v
Adu s on y No pes Ph d46
0893

39 3
SHED apa men
4
oom and bath Adu s onlf
S 20 pe mon h Ca l dd6 44 6
af e
p m

SLEEP

week y
pa k ng
241 f

ROOM 3 bed oom hou se
comp e e y edecora ed New
urn ace $ 25 per mon h pus
depos. and t.JI
es S~ e a 81
G ape St ee

- - - - - ---·--------" 39 3
BRADBURY fu n shed cf
en y apar mens
729
Second Avenue One ava abe
Feb ua y
6 and one on
Ma h
Ph 446 09 5
39 I

- - --

2 BDRM house
04 F ou h
Avenue
Adults on y
ca
Ma I n Ke ns 446 295

39 •

----·-----------·-- 39 3

Rt

218

wa e

ap

SWAIN
SERVICE

Pri!M n

••pec:t

01

h• fJI'O~rty o Am•rtc•

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
llfz Baths
Pay Only One
Ut1hly

A OR

Addoson Oh10
Buy d ect from owner lots
n the c ty or country or
acreage
Compare
anywhere look at the rest
then buy the best 2 large
houses for sale 10 the c ty
Robert A
Queen
1026
Second Ave 446 0168

For InformatiOn
Ca II Shorley Adkms

367-7250

Pr ce , , . • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

ANYT ME IS
A GOOD TIME
TO L ST you prope y o se
We need good p ope t es n a I
s zes and ac eage OUR FEE
SFREEuness wese
Cal
today
TWILL PAY

"SEU THE

- -- -

0 ACRES near Langs
e n
Me gs County m ne area Two
en ed mob le homes o of
t on age S ate R 325

IN TOWN
3 BR and bah eat n k chen
fu
basement gas tu nace
P ceS10000

RUSSELLS
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

·----

5 ACRES
pad

Beaut fu a I b ck nea own 3
modern as
BR
ba 11
omo row k tc:h en n colo W
L R REMODELED home n V non
W ca pet spec acula
6 room s and ba h
n ce
a ge d v ded basemen
coppe
p umb ng gas tu
ocal on
nace c:en ala r sound proo
2 car ga age one ete pa o LOTS &amp; ACREAGE Some w th
and d ve near ac e we
wale
some w h
obacco
andscaped lawn mag ne a
base
ea u es
o
on y
h ese
S35 000
THREE acres south of R o
G ande
F ron age on two
H LL V EW
oads D
ed wet Cone ete
Deep p e carpet hroughou th s
ce a Sept c
beau
ul
3
BR
home
s eam ned k chen and 200A Raccoon C ee k a m new
d n ng
a tach ed ga age
ba n o d ba n and equ p
es ab shed awn 24 500
b dg Three o fou BR home
a ge
v ng
oom
and
NEW BRICK
rep ace A f ne farm and
p ced ght
Fou
BR
2 balh
aund y
mode n k 1 hen w h a
the
ex as 2 car garage w h LARGE b ck home on Second
Ave
Fo1.1r een rooms pus
e ec c doo cone e e dr ve
cen al a
a e eel c home
h ee
bath s
Taste u v
fo on y $34 000
d eco ated
w 111
qua y
wa I paper wood pane ng and
QU CK POSSESSION
carpe ng Large ot uns o
3 8 R a e ec r c anche b ck
a ey
Col Jay Sheppard 446 0001
and a me cons I ucl on W W
Co Red H gtey 440 0002
ca pe po h ga age S22 000

f ontage

BY OWNER
b ck home Hard wood f oo s
n e awn and ga den 3m e!l
om Ga po so n R 2 8 Ph
" 6 2538
39 6

REALTORS

2S Locus St
Howard Brannon B oke
Off 446 2674
Luc le Brannon
Eve 446 1220 or 446 2il74

•a tt

39 I

21TH ANNUAL Hereford Sale
24 bulls and 15 females
Southeastern Oh o Hereford
Assoc atlon
All
clean
ped grees both Horned and
Polled Saturday March 16
1974 Show 10 a m sa e 1 p m
Rock Springs Fa rgrounds
Rt 33 three m les north of
Pomeroy
Ohio
For
cat a ogues wr te to L oyd
Backwood Sales Mgr Rt 3
Pomeroy Oh o 45769

WALLPAPER hangers needed
n Ga po s Co umbus and
Parkersbu g W Va Rae of
pay $2 50 o SB pe hour f yov
know how or are w
ng o
ea n w te mmed alely to
Box 4043
M
D eh
P 0
Pa ke sbu g w va 26 01
Se nd name
add ess and
phOne numbe

3

AUCTIONEERS
446 0001
2d ACRES n Oho Town shp
Tobacco base

WE SELL

HOUSE 3 a r es bes de Pan z
Subd v son 446 3350
35 6

WOOD AND DR VE
N ce
fh ee bedroom, anch fu y
ca peled cen a a r ga age
w h a good workshop oca ed
on wo n ce o s mmed a e
wI
possess on and owne
he p nance

n ves tm ent Property
FAM LY dwe ng ocatedon a
a ge o on Sec ond Ave
P ope 'I s n good cond on
Ca
oday
fo
an
ap
po n m en
Ole Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Cha es M Neat 446 IS46
J M chae Nea 446 SOl
Sam Nea 446 7358

RANCHO

REALTY

BETTER LIVING

Excellent Buy

Oscar Ba rd
Doug Weihe holt
B okers
Off ce 446 3434
NG VAL EY

"

and

998

Central A r Cond ton ng
&amp; Heating
Free Est mates
Stewarts Hardware
V nton Oh o
144 If

271 I

, --~-----

WE HA VE A PLEN
F UL
SUPP Y 0
MORT GAGE
MONEY
3
BA NK S
2
SAV NG S
BU LD NG &amp;
LOAN
P US 3 0
THE
AR GES MOR TG AGECO
N THE
WOR D FO R
F H A
AN D VA
THE
W SEMA N
AGENCY
WOU D L KE THE OP
PORTUN TY
TO HELP

STATE ROUTE 60
yr od
o a e e
b
k s s ua ed
THE LEADER SINCE 900 IN
on Jr. ac ~s o o ng and
SERVING THE NATION I
and ofle s you
t am y
ea u es
ke
34 sq
o
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
11 ng
a ea plus a
u
Ph 446 0008
basemen w h am y m
wo kshop and ga age Shown
N EW
ST N G
FA RV EW
by appo n men
SUBDVSO N
hs
ke
new b c:k and edwood an h BEL EVE TOR NOT We have
one of a k nd and
oca ed
a mode n 5 y o d 3 BR home
on a a ge o ne o n one o
w h a fu basemen
5 K 20
ou I ner a eas The k ell en s
L R 2 x 20 ~
hen and d n ng
omp e e w h
ang e
eye
m and HW f oo s o on y
eve o en d sllwashe and
S23 000 Loc:a ed on SR 554 an
d sp The L R and dean ea
easy dr ve o own o he new
ep aces
ha e wood b n ng
m nes
Other ea u e a e J BRs
ba hs fo ma d n ng m par
FARMS
basemen pa o and a por
CLOSE TO R 0
63 ac es of
Don wa
oo o g o see h s
beau u I a and o ng and
one
w h
ontage on 3 ds 80
a r es
ab ew h he ba ance
LOVELY COUNTRY HOME
tea u e
n pas u e 0 he
Th s 4 B R b ck anch of e s
nc ude a good
m home
o
of go~d v ng or some
a ge da ry ba n s o pond
u cky am y Spe a ea u es
and se e a o he
sma e
a e a 5 x 23 L R w h a w B
bu d ng s
ep ace HW
oo
kno y
p ne
ab n e s and a
u
WOU D
YOU
BE
N
ba semen nes ed on a
A
TERESTEO N A MODERN
wooded o 0 m
om own
DA R Y w lh a m k pa o
p pe ne m ke s s o w h
BABY
FARM
W TH
A
vn oade au om a c feeders
MODERN BR CK HOME
ee s a ba n
o n c b
Th s beau y s oca ed 2 m
equ pm en shed pond an"d a
om HMC and con a n s BR
em ode ed home
f so s op
mode n
k
h en
u
n and see u s We have 2
basement ga age 1 s one
f ep aces and
a es
NEAR V NTON
83 A pas u e
he
a m has new fences a
Owhe s have J'u has.ed a
a m an a e anx o s
way pond a ge ba n and 7
a ge
o se a or par Don m ss
ms and bath Ask ng S32 000
h s one
VACANT LAND
STAT E ROU E 60
3 a es
C TV
TH S BARGA N
w lh
95
rontage
Co
PRCED
soyhome
wa e
ap pa d Pa k you
va ani and needs an owne A
mob e
hone
bu d
o
sma l down payment w
e
deve op
you en oy he 4 BR s a peed
LR and DR
u
basemen
AND CONTRAC T
30 A w h
w h tam ly m
aund y r:m
25 A bo om and
000
and wo kshop
eek fron age and sp ng
deve opmen
m off s a e
NEW BR CK &amp; FRAME
Th s
a e eel c: beau y s o a ed
m o I U S 35 and o e s a MAKE US AN OFFER
d5 A
comp ete k chen
o ma
at and
o ng
and
n
d n ng rm
u
y
m
2
G&amp; pol S SChOO d st w lh a
baths ww a pe ga age 4
ale model 4 x 70 mob e
x 23 LR snd 25
ontage on
home
a BT rd Move n any me
PR CE REDUCED TO S 0000
EDGE OF TOWN
MODERN
28 Ac es
Pa
o hs
SPL T FOYER w h features
and s n Ga a Co and pa
su h as a arge d n ng a ea
n ackson Co Don m ss an
w th pa o doo s
modern
nves men
ke h s one
k tc h en car pe ed LR 3 BR 2
ba h s a ge fam y m w th NEAR ADD SON
25 A w h
W 8 f ep a e aund y rm
co wa er ava ab e T h s and
ga age and cen a r Owner
s mos y wooded and se s or
w
ade o
a a m o
on y \4 000
cheaper p ece o p ope y
NEAR V NTON
8 A
ELDERLY BEAUTY W TH
$20 000
mos y ra e or and
R: VER V EW
You w
hav e o see he ns de of h s EXCELLENT o
hun ng or
camp ete y remod eled 2 sto y
recrea on 42 A wood land n
home to app ec ate t Th e
Ha
son Twp o $6 DO
arge foye opens o a w nd ng
HE P
The
upsta r s OWNER
W LL
s a rway
30A n Racoon
F NANCE
on a ns a ba h and 4 ca r
peted BRs The k t c hen s
ant
Twp w h 2 600 fl rd
mode n and you
tam y
age
would lov e he
ep ace n he
LR and
he a ge fo mal HO COMB H LL
Lo e y 2
d n ng rm There s also a fu
so y
hom e
w h
fu
basemen and ga age located
basement has oom o spa e
on a a ge a o on Rou e
The mode n k c hen ncludes
ad sp d shwashe eye eve
South
oven and o s of cab ne s
POMEROY
PR CE
Othe lea u es a e 4 BRs 2
REDUCED
TH S MONEY
baths b eakfasl rrn forma
MAKER can make you
d n ng rm
fam y m
ec
m
2 WB f eplaces hot
et ement a c n h w h 2
wa e heat pa o and ga age
bus ness enta s and 2 arge
apa tmen s
Loca ed
Ranny B ackburA
down own on a o ne lo
Branch Manager

Sold Sold Sold

80 A 5 1 OCto.. Fa m on S
R
75 40 A
I ab e ba
n
pas u e
Ba n 60 x 74
Cone e e S o 6 )( 50 w h
vnloade
Good a m house
and o her outb dgs Th s fa m
s c ean ha s good
ences
pond and has been med and
fe t zed A good buy fo
S43 000

OHIO RIVER
Realty

learn

951 '

Fmancong
Ava !able

38 Acres
Near lake

HOLLEY Bros Construct on
bulldoz ng back l:!oe work
d tch ng unde roa'JII bor ng
Phone 245 5018 or 2.45 5006
18 tf

No expertence necessary
Mus1 have car be w1ll ng to

hous ng or small farm

ARE YOU TIRED OF LIVING
IN YOUR OLD HOUSE? GO
MODERN AND LET US SELL
IT WITH LITTLE WORRY TO
YOU NO SALE NO CHARGE

ooo

Full or Partt1me

FREE BOOK TELLS
STORY

storm

o $
5

230 tf

D
bedrooms
chen hot water heat
w ndows and 9arage

Bough
RT

s n I&lt;
a ge

Oh o

39 6

CITY

Uppe 4h Ave 6 ms

P en y new cab n
hen ga r1ge and

297 If

WISEMAN

RT

ba hs

D F

Neal Realty

World s Larg.!st

REALTOR

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE Inspect on ca 4463245
Merr II 0 Dell Operator by
Exferm na~ Term te Serv ce
10 Be mont Dr

SALES

WOO LD I ke lo correspond w tt1
person hav ng know edge o.f
and nterested n Dillvld s der
born 814 Ob d ah s ders bo n
857
or anyone w th
n
form at on
on
s ders
genea ogy
wr te
W bur
S ders 42 E Th rd Ave Apt
214 Bloom ngton nd 47401

THE

State St

160
N ew 5 rms
2
aund y m and b g
il
ga
Th s hou se s a
ec
a
a pe
R us c
s a ned wood s d n g and
o a ed on a
A
o Good
house good o a on and a
good buy

ST
E

32

446 1998

Tel

87 f

34

I le Basement S6 500 00
BETWEEN POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLE PORT on new Rl 7
I 2 acre 2 we I s &amp; electric

DELAY
MAY
MEAN
DISAPPOINTMENT
SE~
THESE UNUSUAL OF
FERS TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 22S9

CAB NET Shop at
ypes of
wood work 101 Court St ee
Ph 446 7745

ROOF NG

w

All new

TOOL
Sha pening
saws
sc ssors shears home and
garden
ools
Sharp Shop
AI ey ea
147 Second
216 f

446-1066

25 ACRES 2m es
om Ro
G ande on 32 5
h s baby
an h
flornod e n J bed com
home
\J..I1 o1 w h pen y of
ab nels V'{_J\ k hen a d
basem "C/ '-las a ge
u
ban sma
and sm a
pond
and s ea
e e and
omp e e y fenced
P ce
$32 000

G LLENWATER S SEPT C
TANK
CLEAN NG AND
REPA R
ALSO
HOUS E
WRECKNG Ph 4469499
Estab sht&gt;d n 9.40

BANKS TREE SERVICE

MASSIE Agency
Realty

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALTY

The WISEMAN

TW O so y I am e home w h
new a um num s d ng
u
basemen
u a wa e P ce
$
00 $2 000 down Own c
w
I nan e

37 6

FREE estmaes tablty n
surance Prun ng trimm ng
and cav y wo k tree and
s ump emoval Ph 446 4953
73 If

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

RPal Estate For Sale

a ge bah and aundry room

v

ALBERT EHMAN
Water De very Serv ce
Patr o S ar Rt Ga lpo s
Ph 379 2 33
243 tf

Real Estate For Sale

C TY

SAN" DY &amp; BEAVER Insurance
Co has offered serv ce fo
F re nsu ance coverage n
Gal a Coun
tor almost a
Century Farms Homes and
personal p operty coverages
are ava able to meet n
d 11 dual
needs
Con ac
F nley Dav s you ne ghbo
and agen

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay

DAY CARE

REALTY

Wanted To Buy

FURNITURE

kUSS S GLASS Se v ce glass
fo a needs spec al z nq n
w ndshe d!)
m
ro s
p ex g lass escreen 704 P ne
R o Grande 245 5048
00 If

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY 0

of

Phone 446 2476

and

EXCAVATING dozer
o&amp;de
and backhoe work
sep1 c
anks nstalled dump t ucks
'tnd o boys for h re wll hau
d rt top so
mestone
nd gravel Cal Bob o Roge
Jeffers day phone 992 7069
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992

5232

CE NT RALLY loa ed umbe
ya d h"s open ngs for m 1
Card
Thanks
men and sa es pe son nel
THEFAM LYotRasonM e
Send esume sa ng des e o
w shes
o exp ess ou
earn and exper ence
Box
gral tude and o ex end ov
30
c 0 Ga
po s D a y
s ncere and hea lfe t thank s
T bune
and app ec at on to a k nd
35 6
ness the many e~~;p ess ons 0
sympa hy
a ds
beau u
WOOD WORK NG
flower offer ngs and
ood
MILL OPERATORS
rece ved f om t ends du ng Expe ence nope a on ol 2
the
ecent
oss of ou
ab e saws
ou
8
husband tathe and grand
shapers dove a s
enon
father Spec a hanks o Rev
mach nes Pa d vacat on
Vance Wason o h s con
nsu ance hosp
aza on and
so ng words To he McCoy
a
f nge benet ts Con a
Moore Funera Hom e and the
Ken on F ash
Co umbus
pallbea e s
Show ase 850 W 5 h Ave
M S
G adys
M 1e
Columbus Oh o Ph
6 A
daughter
g anddaugh e
294 5 3
and tam y

House Calis Made

69

C BRADFORD Auct onear
Com p ete Serv ce
Phone 9-49 362
Rae ne Oh o
C t B adford
5
fc

21726tc

BABY bed h gh char hard
wood f oor polisher
John
L yens
nea
Chesler
E ementary School

Rent

992 2094
606 E Matn
Pomeroy

DOZER and back hoe wo k
ponds and sept c tanks d t
ch ng serv ce top so
1 1
d rt
mes one
B&amp;K Ex
cava ng Phone 992 5367 or

Help Wanted

Services Offered

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

:::-_-=,.-·--------·-

- - - - · - - - - - 39

WH
TE
s p ec k
e "
parakeet Gene ous
ewa a
Ph 446 1037

GOLD do ars and s ve co ns
Se e Max Tawney Tawney
ewelers
36 If

Bu1ltto Your Specs

W LL
m o cu
rees and
sh ubbe y A so c ean ou
basemen s a cs e c Cal
9d9 322 0 742 4441
2 2 26 c

N MEMORY o Fos e
M
e Who passed
Lee
Februa Y 7 9 3 Gon awbay
not forgo en
e u
Sad Y m ssed by h s
ends

lost

W lson Rusk
280 Slate Street

Phone 992 7306

NEW 3 bedroom a I e ectr c
hOme garage carpet ng with
acre of g.-ound on F atwoods
Road Phone 992 2735
2 17 3tc

for

WOOD TRUSSES

Ph 992 5271

9

INCOME TAX
SERVICE

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Gene's
Body Shop

c

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

ton
cab

-·- -·-·-----------~2.~07tc

3

12 30 fc

Open 8 To Is
Monday thru Saturdar
606 E Matn Pomeroy 0

L ncoln Hill Pome.-oy

BOARDING stud se v c:e AKC
pupp es K&amp;P Kenne s 388
B274

Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Ntghl 992 3525
or 992 5232

15 261C

INFORMATION ABOUT

1967 OLDS V sta Cruse sma 1
v 8 new pa nt ob and new
carpet Ca I 742 4101

Wanted

Horne &amp; Aulo

Pomeroy

NOW YOU CAN En I sf n the
army for two yea s w lh a
wr tten gua an tee The A
my s new rave or ran ng
opt on a ows you to en st tor
on y two years and take your
cho c:e of ob
a n ng o a
gua anteed ass gnmen
n
Eu ope Ta k to you nearbY
A mv e p esen at ve Ca
co ec 6 4 .446 l343
38 29

See or Call

.;;wEEPER Repa rs parts
upplles 446 0294 10 a m
5
p m Dav s vacuum C eaner
s ore Georges Creek Road
next to Bobs c B Rad o Sales
293 If

SINGER sew ng mach nes 1972
mode
n beaut ful wa nut
cab net Makes design stll
Estate For Sale
ches z g zag but onho es
b nd hems etc L ke new
Only $89 95 Cal Ravenswood NEW 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbu d nos
273 952 or 273 9893 after 5 00
and ce ar Off Meigs c:oun y
12 7 rtc
on W
am Sm lh Road 3 h
m les from sa em center
UPHOLSTERY tab cs by he
1 27 26 p
yard 5.4 nches w de as ow as
51 95 per yard Velve s as ow
bah
as S3 45 I m po ted ve vets NEW3bedroomhome
garage basement on Grave
$9 95 we also have nylon
H
M dd epo 1 Natura gas
hercu on
cotton
p nts
already
n
Phone Dale
v nyl s emnants by the yare!
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
o by the p ece Pomeroy
992 2534
Recovery 622 E Man s
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
1 29 26tc
'PAC ous bi Leve and sp t
FOAM of II your o d couch and
eve homes a.-e now under
cha
cush ons as low as
ruct on on c ty water
s o 95 Upho ste y books on y cons
and sewer
Many de uxe
SOc
4 nc:h covered foam
features n c lud ng a
c:on
ma esses tor standard s ze
d ton ng
Best 1 nanc ng
bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
ava table Other ype homes
Recovery 622 E Ma n St ee
n d ffe ent areas on F H
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Adm f nanc ng w th no down
12926 C payment Ca I co e&lt;:l
837
6540
o wr e to ME GS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box.
3J M dd eport Oh o 45760
I 9 tfc

Auto Sales

uu r s UE: wo "'a cund homes
Lawn s
wa s and
ences
Done w lh mo or arm m
plemen s A so have p c:kup
truck fo
haul ng
Free
est ma es Phone 992 37 li
2 14 litp

Help

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

uvv N p ano exce en
cond ton
Prac cal y new
graduate
student
needs
money for spr ng and sum
mer tu on a Oh o Un ve
s ty Phone 949 5792 after 4

CONCORD Trave Tra er n ce
fo coup e Call 992 7479
J tfc

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

stalled

b~

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

969 FORD Pckup
automa c
Custom
S 050 Phone 992 3829

HAY fo sale Cal 985 3809 af er
5 p m

Water l nes and Power
l1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sephc tanks n

Real

Special

11 Refngerators

fc

2

2 IS 6

Rutland
Bargam Center

309

2 25 p

pm

Shop The

ANT QUE Round oak table
chars and buffe 70 000 BTU
Gas c cu a ng heate 30 ooo
BTU Gas heater 2 meta beds
w h sp ngs wood k chen
abe and cha s wood k
chen cupboa d Phone 992

DITCHING SERVICE

On Most Amer1can Cars

__ ___________

~-------------'

t::.XPER ENCED pa nter
n
ter o and ex. e o ca 1 Don
Van Me e
Phone 985 3951
2 3 29 p

From the a gest Truck or
Bulldoze
Rad ato
to the
sma est Heater Core
Nathan B1ggs
Rad a tor Spec al st

c

610

PUBLIC NOT CES

AUCT ON Sa u day Feb 23
0 30 a m we have sod ou
home located n Le art Fa s
Oh o on Sta e Rou e 339 6
m es f om Rae ne Oh o and
w
set the oll ow ng pe
sona
proper y
No Frost
G bson ef ge ato
W zard
E ec r c Range 30 nch No ge
washe
Un co Orver 2 f ve
p ece D ne e se s Form ca
table top 4 ma ch ng stoo s
tv cab ne s d shes of at
u
k nds 2 hree p ece bedroom
su tes 2 s ng e beds 2 van ty
d essers lamps set of tab es
2 c hests of d awe s 2 metal
wardrobes
2 wood ward
robes Ch ffo obe c l otheS".
c hes t desk 2 t unks ceda.chest buf e g ass doo Ch na
Cab ne
reco d cab ne
2
p i a fo m
eocke s
odd
cha s s ands p c ures and
p c u e f ames set o Sam
son e
uggage 0 y goods
conta ner d apes and bed
e l ect c
b ankels
d ng
Ch s mas deco a ons
old
wash s and p e safe Ch na
and c:lock Por abe washer
o
s oves e eel c heate s
Lazy Susan E ec
M x.e
flowe s and f lowe pols o 1
d ums w th pump
step
adde
on ng boa d many
art cles not I sled M
and
M s
Ed M
er
Owner
Te ms cash Not respons be
fo ace den s The Bradford
Auct on Company
A
C
B adford C C Bradfo d
Ave: onee lunch se ved by
Oh o Va lev G ange
2 7 1 c:

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

l••n• of other unu . . d but I R El ABLE babys I
o come
lu .. ful ltema
I
o my home 4 _j ys a week
from 8 a m ;t'o. 4 30 p m
References equ red Phone
q97 5626 af e 5 p m
2 12 5tc

TARA

NO

For Sale

whenJ
lant I
ture
do

UNLESS you mean bus ness
we a.-e now cons der ng
qua f ed app cants n you
a ea to become a wo k ng
Ho
pa t of our Na onal
Sys tem
Food
D s bv o
You a e no app y ng to a
ob You are app y ng to a
ve y h gh p of bus ness of
your own NO EXPERIENCE

SELL NG NVOLVEO Th s
bus ness can be s a ted pa 1
me
no need to qu t your
ob Can be expanded ful me
w th company f nanc ng We
need people we can depend
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2174
on
Our
products
a e
na ona y
famous
Ho
Food
tems We have ove 36
var et es of Ho Soups and Ho FOR you new home 0 co m
En ees such as Beef Stew
P ete emodel ng Con act
2 261
Ch cken &amp; Dump ngs Ch
&amp;
G eg Roush
Roush Con
Beans and on and on we
st uc on Phone 992 5039
have
all
of
Ame cas
2
ltc
favo tes A
hese del c ous
p oducts are sold f om he READY MIX
CONCRETE
a est n au om a c vend ng
delivered
gh
o you
equ pment Your roue w I be
P Otec Fas and easy Free
estabt shed and ns a led by
es mates Phone 992 3284
us Your aQe s not a facto
f
Goeg en Ready M x Co
you qual fy Perfec for a n ce
M dd epo t Oh o
coup le o ope a e as a fam tv
6 30 fc:
bus ness
CASH NVESTMENT
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
NO
REQU RED
REASONABLE a es Ph 446
2c ed brass 35c
PART TIME
4782 Ga po s
ohn R usse
S 20 M A Ha
Reedsv e PLAN ONE
S2 28\ QO
Owner and Operate
Oh o Pho e 3 a 6249
PLAN TWO
3 861 00
5 2 tfc
27 lfc PLAN THREE
7 7 9 00
FULL TIME
SE PT C TANKS
AROBIC
COLORED TV an enna Phone PLAN FOUR
$ 1 279 00
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
992 50
PLAN F VE
a 99a 00
CLEA NED
REPA RED
2 3 4 p PLAN SIX
36 79a 00
M LLER
SAN TA T ON
- cc- -cc-cFOR fu ther nformat on o a
ST EWART OHIO PH 662
persona
n erv ew
send
3035
MObiie Homes For Sale
Naml:! Add ess and Phone
10 4 tfc
Number to North Ame ca n
2K60 T RA LER w h pu ou
D s r but ng Cp o
Ho Food SE PT C
se up n P neg ove w
TANKS
cleaned
0 v s on 88'2a N Cen a
nance
D
R chardson
Mode n San a on 992 3954 or
Avenue Phoen x A zona
Gene a Oe ve y Mann W
992 7349
85020
Va 25635 o phone 304 583
0 23 tfc
2 7

No E~per ence Necessary
Must have car and be w II ng
lo le rn

~-------------,

I your phon~ w 11
I cash I!!IUht
too
I YGU place an act on
Ad You can aell furn
I appl ance1 clothe.

6

SPR NG
FABR CS
New
sh pmen
us a
vcd w de
se e on coo d na ed olo s
one o po yes er e sey kn
$2 29 pe
yd
Ca o na
Fab cs Roue
Ches er
Oh o 9 am o p m Monday
h ovgh Sa
day Henry and
Ma y Hun e owne s
1\

Swec
o em~&gt;mber h m wh o
o e wa s 1 e e
And w ho hOug abse
us
he

PR N G SPEC AL
COTTON
FABR CS 98 CEN S PER
YARD
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KN TS $2 86 PER
YARD NEW CRAFT
EMS
NO VEL Y
ABR C SHOP
230 WEST BLVD BE PRE

emo

e n

we ga

3 4

EXPERIENCED

Bustness Opportunities

NECESSARY

"0
\2 00

2~

2

2 43c

CAS H pad fo al makes and
nod es of mob e homes
Phone a ea code 6 4 423 953
4 3 fc

In Memory

Not1te

0

0::

h e Pub sh e
ese ves he
h o Eld o
e e any ads
ed
ob eel on a
The
he w
no be es pon
mo e han o e

1

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

n e S md ' 1omes Sent nel Slllldav Feb 17 1974

24

GALLIPOLIS OHIO

PUBLIC SALE

OWNER The late Bermce M1lls
Adm -Tom Mills
Dale March 9 1974- T1me 11 oo A M
Localoon 107 Kmeon Drove Ga lhpohs Oh10
ITEMS 2 bedroom house w th k tchen d n ng room
I v ng room laundry oom and 1 car garage 972 Dodge
Dart
J 000 actua m les
Hotpo nt e edric stove
West nghouse Qyen Fr g da e refr ge ato
breakfast
set cook pg ut ns Is d1shes pots pans I v ng oom su te 2
lamps RCA V sta color TV General Electr c washe
Sears dryer Hoover sweeper ped 2 shovels ax hoe
spade 3 akes mops brooms
on ng board saw
ANTIQUES marb e top wash stand cane bcHom stra ght
cha
te ephone sta nd amp tab e bookstand dresser
c:hest bed n ght stand smokes tand sea es Other tems
too nume ous to menton

AUCTIONEER

J A FRENCH

Hamhn Ktng Attorney of Estate
Auct1oneer s Note Th s s good c ean turn ture look fh s
house over because t w II se I the day of sa e

�j

25 - The Sun~ay Thnes Sentmcl Sunda' Feb 17 )974

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
w
:ta~~F~Pd~;J,\~ NF:~rEu:~hR~: ~;6~~o~e :w~y :\::~:,t:~~985~:~:aso ~;~2; c~so: ~:~\~:~\~}~~f ~n"
Business Servi·ces
I
In

WANT ADS
INFoRMATioN

5
w

M emory

ante d To B uy

Wanted To Buy

..

39

be a cep ed un
9 a m to
Day o P41b c a on

REGuLATIONs

TON o
on ruck flatbed
4 o
o ft Late f f es o
06
s )( es Phone 99'}
2 17 5 p

on
ee

•

'"

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OB TUARY

o

n

Ea

50 wo d
add o a

~

m n

Not1ce

wo d

pa
e
ihfp and one y e a
o d
u Bo de ne Co e F e o
g ood home Phone 742 5 2
2 5 3c

6 WEEK

BLNDADS
ona 25c Cha g e pe

Add
1\d e

y

sen en

OFF CE HOURS
!l 30 a m
o 5 00 p m Oa y
8 0 a
o
2 00 No o

0

0

day

In Memory
em o y o
A ud

o
F o

2

ea s ago
9 '

he

ca es o

•

casu c
You

s

s

fa ce we

e

OH 0

s

sed

Gon e

2

oved so

de

e
he a
Too
a

sp

vo
away

h

But no

oo

ea cn

a

e we o ed o
o

to

s

Qht

0

hough

0

s d ea

Sad

he M
Fa

e
1

-----·--- - - ------ -=2 .:.:7 6 p
NOUNC NG new hou s t o
ncome aK se v ce Open on y
on Monday Wednesday and
F day
9
a m
o
5
P m
Even ngs by app
Wanda Eb n Co Rd 22 o
bypass Phone 99 2
Rou e
2 2

p

DELIVERY
DRIVER
SALES

Meigs

Property

$3 50 PER HOUR

Transfers

I

Full or Parttlme

Raymond A Zirkle Sarah E
Z rkle Dav d Ashle) Doana
Ashley lo Osby A Marl n
Mary A Marl n 204 Acres 100
Acre Lot Pon eroy
Rolland Dale Colburn Anna
M ColbW'n to Comm ssooners
of Me gs Co 6 42 Acres
:sal sbW')
Rolland Dale Colburn Anna
M Colbm n lo Commossooners
of Meogs Co Ease Sahsbury
Alv n A Haggy Martha D
Haggy to Roger L Mowery
t erald ne Ann Mowery
Parcels Sahsbury
Dale Barr Pauline Bao r lo
Dale Barr Pauhne Baro
Parcels Ohve
Myron A Ba ley Ann C
Baley lo Marvm L Kelly
Parcel Salisbury
Jane Hunter to Davod R
Wells Mary E Wells Lol 16
11eedsv lle-Ohve
Pearl C Jacobs Tma K
Jacobs Cl fford G Jacobs
Mildred Jacobs to Com
russ oners of Meogs Co Ease
Salisbury
Molo B Hulchonson Belly A
Hulchmson to Arnold E
Wolson Shorley M Wolson Lot
I Hulch nson Sub Rutland
Sylvoa C C-arman to Ivan
Carman Pa ee ls Bectfoo d
Sahsbwy

"I

I!!

Phone 10 a m 8 p m
446 0677

1
I

Employment

Wa~td

DEVELOPMENT
CORP.

NEW
HOMES

FOR SALE
Bu ld ng
S1tes
Avaolable Kongsberry
Homes buolt to f t any
spec focal ons
All
Underground Uti/ t es
Prov ded

------------·
For Information
Or Apporntment

PHONE
367-7250
Addison 0

c

2

- - - - - - --

BACKHOE Serv ce CHARLES
R HATF ELO
Roue
Rutland Oh o 45775 phone
742 6092 Wa er I nes footers
and trenches 24 hou s 7
days a week

For Sale

PRE SPR NG SALE a Berry
M le
Mob e Homes
705 NEW Sw ve ocke s n pr n s
11eves nyons and vnys
Fa son S eel Be p e Oh o
You
cho ce of coo s and
phone 423 953
Buy now
s Yes wh e they las Some
ake de ve y n spr ng
take
S69 95 olhers 579 95 cash - - - - - - - advantage of w nt e
me
and
Carry
Pome oy
p ces on some ou stand ng
Recovery
622 E
Ma n
used Mob es Homes
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
9 1
2 bedroom
60 x. 2
2 36 c
.
,_:._.:.:
P n ess was $6 49S 00 sa e
pr ce S5 295 00
h s mob e
home new cos $8 000 00
STEREU
Wa nut
AM FM
97
65x. 2 Champ on supe
Rad o 8 I ack tape com
sa e pr ce on y U 995 00
bina on Balance $ 10 73 or
9
60x 12 Buddy c ass c
te ms ava abl e Phone 992 For 5ale
was S5 495 00 now on y
3965
S4 95 00
2 4 tfc
SALT FOR CE AND SNO\
9
two 60x 2 Champ on
Roc:k sa
fo
townsh ps
were $4 495 00
now on y EXCELSIOR Sat Works E
S3 995 00
owns end bus nesses n
Man St Pomeroy A 1 kinds
9
60x 2 E con a Custom
bu ks and bags for ce and
of sa t water pelle s wale
snow Exce l s o Sa t Works
new pr ce $7 295 00 sa e p.- e
nuggets block sa
and own
Phone 992 389
ss 795 00
Oh o R ver Sal
Phone 992
11 1 tfc
9 4
h ee Detro e s - up o
3891
s1 ooo oo off
WE HAVE many o he s zes
and var et es of Mob le
Homes on sa le Ou
p ces
de ve y and
n ude you
comp e e se up don t wa
shop now you I be g ad you

YOUNGSTOWN k tchen s nk
w h faucets sso gas ange
UO refr gera or 540 A 1 n
good cond t on See at 256 so
Four h Ave M ddlepo t

c

fc

"d

2 15 12

---,-------~---2~2

GROCERY bus ness for sa e
ease
Bu ld ng fo sa e o
Phone 773 56 8 from 8 JO p m
o 0 p m for appo ntment
3 20 tfc

Used Furniture
Buys. • •
24 New Recliners take them
With )IOU
$50 00

Offer Good hi Feb 23 1974

J S@fs Bunk Beds
$6995and up
Tw n and Full Sue Beds:
complete w th spr ngs and
mat $29 95
S25 00 and

up
Gas &amp; Electnc Ranges $39 95

and up

··-·.

Rutland Fumiture
742 4211
~e

Herb
Grate

Rutland 0 .
M ke

Dave or

For Rent or Sale

BEAUTIC AN P a s c. auty
Salon M ddlepor Phone 992
3 03 0 992 375

----·- ·---- -------.:2 .:.:7 6 c

HELP WANTED
Centrally
located
lumber
yard
has
openmgs for m111 men
and sales personnel
Send resume slatmg
des1r!! to learn &amp; ex
penence Box 307 c 0
Gallopolos
Dally
Tnbunl!

HOME FOR SALE on Grave
H I n M ddleport 1 carport 2
closed n po ches 2 sto y w h
4 rooms upsta rs and 5 rooms
down Phone 992 3160
2 14 4 p
29 ACRES mos ly wooded place
for arge lake so ated but
has road frontage
,. m e
from Rae ne S4 800
1 992
2369 after 6 p rn
2 2 stc

STEREO
92.1 FM

ca

WMPO

0 E S R ABLE
wo bedroom
house n M dd eport ready to
occupy Ca 992·5310
1 31 26tc

Middleport Pomeroy
HAY

----

,.

0

Painting A Specially

DeliVered Ia Job Sole

Areas Most
Reasonable Pnces

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN

All work guaranteed

MATERIALS CO
773 5554
Mason W Va

·---~~~-·-

PR CE
CONSTRUCTION
Roof ng
spout ng
k tchens
and balt1 ooms
Complete
emode ng Phon e 42 6273
2 3 tfc

992 3861

tfc:

SLEEP NG room over w ne
store n Pomeroy Reference
requ red ca 1 992 5293
1 10 tfc
3 A ND 4 ROOM furnlshe'd and
unfurn Shed
apartmen s
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tfc
PR VATE meeting
oom for
any organ zat on phone 992

3975

3 11 tfc

ROOMING house
turn sned
canst uctlon
workers
we come Phone 772 5975
2 15 lfc:
TRA LER
bedroom n c:e for
coupe Phone 992 7479
2:_:s lfc

_____

ROOM S and bath
us
edeco.-a ed and new y fur
n shed u
es pa d S 40 00
pe month No ch d.-en and no
pets Ava lable March 1
Wr te P 0
Box 122 M d
d epo t Oh o
2 4 3tc

OFFICE SUPPLIES

tc

2I

·,-----------------

DOZER wo k land c ear ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads e c Large
dozer And operator w h over
20 years exper ence Pu ns
Ex.tavatlng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
12 19 fc

--·--·-----

NE GLERS
HOUSES
or
bu
s pec: f ca
Bu ld ng
Oh o Ca

Ut&lt;
BUILDING
We
draw p n s
d
to
your
ons
Ne gle s
Supply
Rae e
949 3604

Real

Estate

For

Sale

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THE best nsurance at the best
Fo
auto
home
p ce
bus ness and fe Ray Hawk
agent 446 2300 541 4th Ave

so If

--·--

Notice
FREE home demonst at ons of
E ectroluK p oducts Call 675
3490 be ween q and 0 a m we
a so
have
E ec ro UK
Cleaners $69 75 and up Ful
gua an ee
1 f

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

TWO WAY RadOS Sa es &amp;
Serv ce New and used DB s
pol ce monitors antennas
e c Bobs C zen Band Rad o
Equ p
Georges Creek Rd
Ga po s Oh o 446 45 1

2 2

OEAD STOCK

WILL emove at a reasonable
charge Ca I 245 5514
212 If

BABY FARM-11acres JUSt
off Rt 33 close In ~year o d
home 3 BR co ored bath w
shower

lovel y k tchen

range &amp; ref

Ut I ty

garage &amp; storage

Barn

fence $22 ~ 00
BUY OF THE YEAR- Just
3 yrs old 3 BR colored bath
Ulllly modern k !chen and
d n ng Carpeted Carport
About 2 acre $16 000 00
A BARGAIN 2 sto y
frame 2 BR
new bath
furnace &amp; hot water tank
Some carpet ng panel ln_g &amp;

SUN VALLEY Nursery Schools
I censed by State of Oh o 1
m les west of new hospl al
577 Sun Valley Dr Pt1 446
3657 Day c:are that says we
care
Madge Hauldren
Owner
Loredith emd John
Hau l dren Opera ors
114 If
C and E Poodle G oom ng Fo
appo ntment Ph 446 25 5

38 6
GET you lawn mowe s and
ota Y I ers checked now
562 Fourth Avenue
28 27
COL DENVER H GLEY
AUCT ONEER
Ph 446 0002

DELIVERY
DRIVER

Approved for sept c tank
Ideal for mobile or home
$4 soo 00

S3.50 PER HOUR

If no answer 992 2568

WASHER
dryer
and
efr gera or
.-epa
No
charge for se v ce cal f we
can t f x your appl ance Ph
675 4242
254 11
PROTECT you mob le home
w h TIE DOWN ANCHORS
Ca I Ron Sk dmore 446 756
af e 3 p m
221 f
THOMAS Fan Exterm na ng
Co Te m e and Pest Control
Wheete sburg Oh o
233 f

M &amp; 5 CONSTRUCTION
EXCAVAT ON and genera
emodel ng
Backhoe doter
and trench ng Sept c tanks
and too e s A 1 phases of
plumb ng w r ng
new
n
sta at on Cal 388 9986
217 If

AND

SPOUTING

Sh ngles s d ng and bu ldup
hotroofs Free Est ma es 26
yea s exper ence
James
Marcum V non Ohio 388

9940

247 If

M&amp;M
ROOFING &amp; Spout ng Sh ngle
&amp; Bu dup roof Hot &amp; Cold
process Home mp ovemen
n
general
For
free
est ma es
phone Robert
Meade 388 8 114 B dwel

a e
wo k nd s o
hcmanwhow
do
no h ng h e s o d a d
e
man who w
do no h ng e sc V NTON 4 ms and bah A
pane ed and a pe d
I ha
/\RGE o a 32Ga edA e
a um s d g and n ew oo
Th s h ee bedroom hom e has
Th s house has been com
ha dwood
oo s
u
P e e y em ode ed
a gc- o
ba se men
k
h en
w
Bough o S 4 00
ab ne s and b eak as a c a
8
5 on
oom EK e en
UNC T ON
60 &amp; Rl 554
bya$SOOO
Bus ness now ope ated as
gas con cess ons and bee
bu ness P ope y on s s so
a 3 A o ne o p esen
bus ness ooms and a 36 x 90
pa
a y
omp e ed bock
b dg P en y po en a he e
Come n and d sc uss

THERE
c
a

AGENCY
Exctltng
New Home

2 17 31p

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1 TO 5 P M
MEADOWGREEN ESTATES
This love y new home s the f rst to be offered n a
beaut ful eKclus ve new area 4 m les west ol Holze.Hosp tal oH Rt 35 at Watson Rd Wh te br ck Colonial
tu y ca peted 8 spac ou!l rooms 3 Bedrooms 2 2 baths
sunkenllv ngroom dmlngroom 15 ~20 fam ly room w th
woodburn ng t replace large kitchen cab net!l forced a r
electr cheat and a r cond lion ng rura water system 3
!lets of pal o doors Double car garage w th automat c
door large landscaped lot Constructed of only the f nest
malet"ials EKqul!llte home tor exclus ve family n select
area Buy this one Price reduced for Quick sale

ONF. YEAR OLD dwe ng w h
b ck f ont
Ba ance has
aumnum
sdng
3
y oom a ge
bed oom s u
f ont oom a ge k chen w h
beau fu
cab ne s
Pr ce
$19 900 Can assume FHS oan
to 3 yea sa $
a mon h f
bi.Jye qua f es
OFFICE 446 066
EVENINGS
Russet Wood 446 46 a
Ron Canaday 446 3630
John R chards 446 0280

s

QUALITY timothy and cover
hay Phone 992 2820 or (6 4)
985 3542 n ghts
2 17 3 c
·-,--·---~~
9 WEEK old back pood e pup
phone 992 5098
2 17 Stp
H&amp;N DAY old or started
Leghorn pullets Both f oor or
cage
grown
ava tab e
Poultry
hous ng
&amp;
automat on Modern Poultry
399 W Man Pomeroy 992

2164
2 7 lie

----------·-,- -REDUCE excess flu d
Fluidex
Lose we ght
De~t A 0 et
capsules
Ne son Drugs

w th

w th

,----,-----------~2~.:.:17

at

31c

YOU

WONT

BEL EVE

YOUR ~YES WHEN YOU
STEP INSIDE TH S NEW
SPL T
LEVEL
HUGE
LV NG ROOM W TH A
LOVELY BALCONY EF
FECT GOING TO THE 3
LARGE
BEDROOMS
BEAUT FUL
BUILT IN
OAK CAB NETS WITH
QUALITY
APPLIANCES
B~ILT IN
COMPLETELY
CARPETED FOR OAD - A
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
WITH WORKSHOP PLUS 2
ACRES
TO
PUTTER
AROUND ON LOCATED IN
RUTLAND
YOU MUST
SEE THE NS DE OF THIS
ONE TO APPRECIATE IT
Gallla Co s largest Real
Estate Sales Agency

Office 44' 3'43
Evenings C1ll
E M
Ike Wiseman

446 37"
M XED hay 60c per bate and
firewood Phone n2 '2826
2 17 3tc

E N Wiseman 446 4500
Bud M(Ghee 4U 1255

OUT RT 7

2 bedrooms bath

large I v ng
T P
water
garage and other bu d ngs
One acre

RANCH TYPE HOME -

3

bedrooms bath n ce kitchen
nat gas furnace City water
and garage

BUSINESS BUILDING-Wih
over 3 2 acres Can be useful to
builder~ equipment overhauts
truckers
storage
or

church or school Chain link
fence Above all floods
316 ACRES
In 01 ve
Tawnsh p W ld and wooly at
$ 25 00 per acre
24 ACRES - n Pomeroy Good
fa

NE:'W 5 rm
ba hs
u
base
pe
and oca1ed on
Th s house has
v a ea and an
o S'JS 000
k

TYCOON LAKE
Bus ness
w h v Qua e s p us 3 m
house and ounda on lo h rd
house 3 ac e o The bund e
or S2 000
S

0

R
35
NEW 5 ms
ba hs fu base 2 a ga
a g e a o Th s house s no
n shed
bough as s to
$2 500 F nanc ng a a abe

J WHITERD 1y od 5
ms
bath a br ck al
a pe
e ec oca ed on a
arge
P ce $30 000

CROWN C TY
a y s od
H W
oors 5 ms and bah
a ge so age b dg
and
oca ed on
A
o
On y
$

2

soo

ROUTE

ms 2
F Ps
Wanted To

Do

CONCRETE bock roo ng and
pa nl ng by con t ac o hou
A wo k gua an eed
ee
es ma e Ph 36 0295

33 '

CROUSE BECK RD
Lev e 6 ms
ba hs 2
yrs o d H w t oo s
A o
Th s sa good house and cou d
not be bu
to
he ask ng
pr e oday $32 000
BUHL MORTON RD
1 y
o d I a me b k
m 5 ms
baths a ca pe a e ec
pa o cove ed
Th s s a
beau y On y !26-.,900
9

DOWN R VER
2 s to y
br k base a
arpe
"
rm
S x 36
w h F P A so
has2ndhousew h4 ms 2A
R ve v ew o
$45 000

EVERGREEN
ba h u hea
wn$4000

5 ms and
s lo m d s and

COUNTRY A RESTATES
Y o d br ck and a um 3 b g
bdrms
ba hs a ca pe
hug e 2 ca ga
and a a ge
at o SJ6 900
WOODLAND DR
6 rm
amellysod H W f s
equ pped k I hen A ba
at $20 000
GARF I ELD AVE
5 m
frame w h base
A um
s d ng s o m d s and w n
Nea
new gas fur
P ce
$
500

ST RT

75

SM TH R D
s 0 000

50 A 15 500
4 A

I

a

___ -· _A_ •_:v _h~~ 446

YOU

Here Are
Brand New Homes
For Your
lnspecl1on
BEDROOM

P

T

2
BATHS
ROOM
'l CAR
GAf.IAGE
PR VATE
WOODED
A
0
C y
SC HO O S
4
BEDROOM W TH
0 N NG
F AM l Y A ND
ROOM 2 FUL
BAT H S 2
CAR GARAGE
LARGE
F LAT COUN RY
OT A
ROONEY
T SA BEAUTY
BEDROOM BR CK
CAPE COD W T H 2 CAR
GARAGE
F REP ACE
FA M LY
ROOM
F ULL
BA SEMENT
C TY
SC
D ST UST PERFECT ON 2
A
COUNTRY LOT AT
RODNEY
BEDROOM
STORY
W TH LARGE FA M
Y
ROOM
BATH S N CE
K
CHEN 0 N NG
CAR
GARAGE CE NTRAL A R
SJ 800 DOWN
8
BEAUT FUL
B
LEVEL
3 BEDROOMS
FAM LY
ROOM
BATHS
CA R GARAGE
RANGE
D SHWASHER
CENTRAL
A R
C TY
WA ER
SEWER
AND
SC H OO S
LEVE L

F AM L Y

L KE NEW 4 BEDROOM
COMP ETELY MODERN
3 BEDROOM HOME THE
HOU SE W LL DEL GHT
YOU AND THE LAND S
JU ST R GHT F OR PART
T ME FARM N G
N C TY
D STR CT

lots Of
Bu1Idmg Lots
BUT HERE S THE BE ST
O'IC 80 N
OF ~t;: R J\J H
pOR
ER
BROOK
ESTA TE S
EXCE LLENT
NE GH BORHOOD
AL
N EW
HOMES
N
PLEA SANT
COUNTRY
ATMOSP H ERE

5 Acre
Wooded lot

$/li}/UWIL

SEE TH 5 SPAC OUS 3 OR 4
BEDROOM HOME F ULLY
CARPETED W TH THE
APP
ANCE BU
T
N
PLUS
WASHER
AND
DRYER KG CK SC D ST
T SA DOUBLE W DE N A.
DA N DY LOCAT ON 0~
M L L CK

F YOU WANT
YOUR
PROPERTY
SOL O
QU CKLY AT THE BES T
PR CE PO SS BL E CALL
US WE A READY HAV E A
RECOR D
BREAK N G
SE L NG YEAR STARTED
AND NEED PROPERTY
OF EVERY OESCR PT ON
R GH
NOW TO SAT SFY
WA T NG BUYERS L ST
T W TH THE LARGEST
REAL ESTATE SA LE S CO
N THE AREA
N TOWN
10
ROOM
HOME LOCATED BEST
PART OF
C TY
BATHS N CE LOT W TO
W CARPET
OWNER
W LL
NOT
REFUSE
EXCELLENT OFFER
GaIa Co s largest Rea
Estate Sa es Agency
Off ce 446 3643
Even ngs Cal
Bud McGhee 446 1255

Help Wanted

SEPTIC TANKS
C eaned and lnsta led
Ru&amp;se s Plumb ng 446 .t7a2

Phone 10 A M 8 p M
446 0677

23 FOUR H AVE
LOs of
v ng space
n th s tou
bedroom home N ce o a on
P ced a
w h a a ge o

LOGUE Dozer Serv ce Ph 388

8659

2&lt;1 26
ROOFING a a gutter work
Also bu 1 uP roof ng 388 8507

l20 If

AN nterest ng book cal ed The:
Ma!ltery of L few I be sent to
you w thout obi gat on Th s
book w I tel you how you
may rece ve the un que
Ros cruc an Method fo se f
unto dment in the privacy of
your home Address Scribe
I
Ros cruc an Order
AMORC
San Jose
Ca f

P Mart n &amp; Son Water
Delivery
Serv ce
Your
patronage
w 1 be
op
prec: ated Ph 446 0463
2tf

Plum

b11g &amp; Heating

GENE PLANT$ &amp; SON
PLUMBING
Heat ng
A r
CoRd ton ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 631

• 5000
33 ACRES vacant s ound Good
p ace fo bu d ng hunt ng o
nves men I

1

ACRES
Vacant g ound
oca ed on P pe Rd one half
m e o f R
325 n V nton
Co p
m ts

WE HAVE o her p ope y for
Oh 0 R ve
saeseeoca
ea estate
Rea ty to you
needs
Even ngs Ca 440 4244
Steven Betz446 9583
John M Fut er 446 4327

CARTERS PLUMBING

393
K OF P and Pythlan S sters
monthly d nner Saturday
February 23 6 30 p m Br ng
covered d sh meat furn shtcl

39 1

--c-----

39

6

LAD ESneeded fo good pay ng
empo ary off ce
ke work
No expe ence necessa y
About J days work
A so
seve a
ad es needed w h
car or ght de very work
Gas a owance
nc uded
App ly
n person
o Mrs
Carter a Ve e.-anS" Ha
ups a rs n Mun c pa B dg 9
to 0 am Tuesday Feb 9

OH 0 R ver ot w h qua ty
mob e home A so you own
p va e boa dock

----

39 3

BABYS TTER wanted pa
me w h gh housekeep ng
Pn 24S 932
39 6

AUCTION
SERVICE

AND HEAT NG

Cor Fourth &amp; p ne
Phone 44t 3888 or 446 4471

- --

------

165tf

COUNTRY L VtNG
3 BR HW f oo s br ck and
f ame cons uc on garage
and sto age bu ld ng deep o
00 x 85 qu k possess on
P ce $22 000
FAMILY ROOM
F REPLACE n lam y oom
banquets ze k tchen aundry
ga age
wo k s hop and
sto age a ge o S24 000
S ACRES
Large 2 s to y home 4 BR 1
de ached
ba h W W ca pe
carpo I and wo kshop 400

'

000

on

r ve

WANTED
PARTS MANAGER

Gallipolis 446 4712

AUCTION WAY"

FULL TIME HONEST, WILLING TO GET AHEAD
IN A GROWING ORGANIZATION

JIMME SAYRE

APPLY IN PERSON AT

297 tf

DEWITT S PLUMBING

AND HEAT NG
Route 60 at Everg een
Phone 446 2735
187 f

STANDARD
PlUmb ng &amp; Heating
214 Th rd Ave 446 3782
187 tf

•

AUCTIONEER

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
50 STATE STREET

For Rent
6 ROOM S and h&lt;~
e e en es
equ ed Ph 11 6 900
35 f

U N FUR N SHED
house
1
rooms and ba h
29 Ne 1
Avenue $ 50 pe mon h 446
44 6 a e
p m

2 BEDROOM r a e
n c v
Adu s on y No pes Ph d46
0893

39 3
SHED apa men
4
oom and bath Adu s onlf
S 20 pe mon h Ca l dd6 44 6
af e
p m

SLEEP

week y
pa k ng
241 f

ROOM 3 bed oom hou se
comp e e y edecora ed New
urn ace $ 25 per mon h pus
depos. and t.JI
es S~ e a 81
G ape St ee

- - - - - ---·--------" 39 3
BRADBURY fu n shed cf
en y apar mens
729
Second Avenue One ava abe
Feb ua y
6 and one on
Ma h
Ph 446 09 5
39 I

- - --

2 BDRM house
04 F ou h
Avenue
Adults on y
ca
Ma I n Ke ns 446 295

39 •

----·-----------·-- 39 3

Rt

218

wa e

ap

SWAIN
SERVICE

Pri!M n

••pec:t

01

h• fJI'O~rty o Am•rtc•

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
llfz Baths
Pay Only One
Ut1hly

A OR

Addoson Oh10
Buy d ect from owner lots
n the c ty or country or
acreage
Compare
anywhere look at the rest
then buy the best 2 large
houses for sale 10 the c ty
Robert A
Queen
1026
Second Ave 446 0168

For InformatiOn
Ca II Shorley Adkms

367-7250

Pr ce , , . • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

ANYT ME IS
A GOOD TIME
TO L ST you prope y o se
We need good p ope t es n a I
s zes and ac eage OUR FEE
SFREEuness wese
Cal
today
TWILL PAY

"SEU THE

- -- -

0 ACRES near Langs
e n
Me gs County m ne area Two
en ed mob le homes o of
t on age S ate R 325

IN TOWN
3 BR and bah eat n k chen
fu
basement gas tu nace
P ceS10000

RUSSELLS
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

·----

5 ACRES
pad

Beaut fu a I b ck nea own 3
modern as
BR
ba 11
omo row k tc:h en n colo W
L R REMODELED home n V non
W ca pet spec acula
6 room s and ba h
n ce
a ge d v ded basemen
coppe
p umb ng gas tu
ocal on
nace c:en ala r sound proo
2 car ga age one ete pa o LOTS &amp; ACREAGE Some w th
and d ve near ac e we
wale
some w h
obacco
andscaped lawn mag ne a
base
ea u es
o
on y
h ese
S35 000
THREE acres south of R o
G ande
F ron age on two
H LL V EW
oads D
ed wet Cone ete
Deep p e carpet hroughou th s
ce a Sept c
beau
ul
3
BR
home
s eam ned k chen and 200A Raccoon C ee k a m new
d n ng
a tach ed ga age
ba n o d ba n and equ p
es ab shed awn 24 500
b dg Three o fou BR home
a ge
v ng
oom
and
NEW BRICK
rep ace A f ne farm and
p ced ght
Fou
BR
2 balh
aund y
mode n k 1 hen w h a
the
ex as 2 car garage w h LARGE b ck home on Second
Ave
Fo1.1r een rooms pus
e ec c doo cone e e dr ve
cen al a
a e eel c home
h ee
bath s
Taste u v
fo on y $34 000
d eco ated
w 111
qua y
wa I paper wood pane ng and
QU CK POSSESSION
carpe ng Large ot uns o
3 8 R a e ec r c anche b ck
a ey
Col Jay Sheppard 446 0001
and a me cons I ucl on W W
Co Red H gtey 440 0002
ca pe po h ga age S22 000

f ontage

BY OWNER
b ck home Hard wood f oo s
n e awn and ga den 3m e!l
om Ga po so n R 2 8 Ph
" 6 2538
39 6

REALTORS

2S Locus St
Howard Brannon B oke
Off 446 2674
Luc le Brannon
Eve 446 1220 or 446 2il74

•a tt

39 I

21TH ANNUAL Hereford Sale
24 bulls and 15 females
Southeastern Oh o Hereford
Assoc atlon
All
clean
ped grees both Horned and
Polled Saturday March 16
1974 Show 10 a m sa e 1 p m
Rock Springs Fa rgrounds
Rt 33 three m les north of
Pomeroy
Ohio
For
cat a ogues wr te to L oyd
Backwood Sales Mgr Rt 3
Pomeroy Oh o 45769

WALLPAPER hangers needed
n Ga po s Co umbus and
Parkersbu g W Va Rae of
pay $2 50 o SB pe hour f yov
know how or are w
ng o
ea n w te mmed alely to
Box 4043
M
D eh
P 0
Pa ke sbu g w va 26 01
Se nd name
add ess and
phOne numbe

3

AUCTIONEERS
446 0001
2d ACRES n Oho Town shp
Tobacco base

WE SELL

HOUSE 3 a r es bes de Pan z
Subd v son 446 3350
35 6

WOOD AND DR VE
N ce
fh ee bedroom, anch fu y
ca peled cen a a r ga age
w h a good workshop oca ed
on wo n ce o s mmed a e
wI
possess on and owne
he p nance

n ves tm ent Property
FAM LY dwe ng ocatedon a
a ge o on Sec ond Ave
P ope 'I s n good cond on
Ca
oday
fo
an
ap
po n m en
Ole Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Cha es M Neat 446 IS46
J M chae Nea 446 SOl
Sam Nea 446 7358

RANCHO

REALTY

BETTER LIVING

Excellent Buy

Oscar Ba rd
Doug Weihe holt
B okers
Off ce 446 3434
NG VAL EY

"

and

998

Central A r Cond ton ng
&amp; Heating
Free Est mates
Stewarts Hardware
V nton Oh o
144 If

271 I

, --~-----

WE HA VE A PLEN
F UL
SUPP Y 0
MORT GAGE
MONEY
3
BA NK S
2
SAV NG S
BU LD NG &amp;
LOAN
P US 3 0
THE
AR GES MOR TG AGECO
N THE
WOR D FO R
F H A
AN D VA
THE
W SEMA N
AGENCY
WOU D L KE THE OP
PORTUN TY
TO HELP

STATE ROUTE 60
yr od
o a e e
b
k s s ua ed
THE LEADER SINCE 900 IN
on Jr. ac ~s o o ng and
SERVING THE NATION I
and ofle s you
t am y
ea u es
ke
34 sq
o
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
11 ng
a ea plus a
u
Ph 446 0008
basemen w h am y m
wo kshop and ga age Shown
N EW
ST N G
FA RV EW
by appo n men
SUBDVSO N
hs
ke
new b c:k and edwood an h BEL EVE TOR NOT We have
one of a k nd and
oca ed
a mode n 5 y o d 3 BR home
on a a ge o ne o n one o
w h a fu basemen
5 K 20
ou I ner a eas The k ell en s
L R 2 x 20 ~
hen and d n ng
omp e e w h
ang e
eye
m and HW f oo s o on y
eve o en d sllwashe and
S23 000 Loc:a ed on SR 554 an
d sp The L R and dean ea
easy dr ve o own o he new
ep aces
ha e wood b n ng
m nes
Other ea u e a e J BRs
ba hs fo ma d n ng m par
FARMS
basemen pa o and a por
CLOSE TO R 0
63 ac es of
Don wa
oo o g o see h s
beau u I a and o ng and
one
w h
ontage on 3 ds 80
a r es
ab ew h he ba ance
LOVELY COUNTRY HOME
tea u e
n pas u e 0 he
Th s 4 B R b ck anch of e s
nc ude a good
m home
o
of go~d v ng or some
a ge da ry ba n s o pond
u cky am y Spe a ea u es
and se e a o he
sma e
a e a 5 x 23 L R w h a w B
bu d ng s
ep ace HW
oo
kno y
p ne
ab n e s and a
u
WOU D
YOU
BE
N
ba semen nes ed on a
A
TERESTEO N A MODERN
wooded o 0 m
om own
DA R Y w lh a m k pa o
p pe ne m ke s s o w h
BABY
FARM
W TH
A
vn oade au om a c feeders
MODERN BR CK HOME
ee s a ba n
o n c b
Th s beau y s oca ed 2 m
equ pm en shed pond an"d a
om HMC and con a n s BR
em ode ed home
f so s op
mode n
k
h en
u
n and see u s We have 2
basement ga age 1 s one
f ep aces and
a es
NEAR V NTON
83 A pas u e
he
a m has new fences a
Owhe s have J'u has.ed a
a m an a e anx o s
way pond a ge ba n and 7
a ge
o se a or par Don m ss
ms and bath Ask ng S32 000
h s one
VACANT LAND
STAT E ROU E 60
3 a es
C TV
TH S BARGA N
w lh
95
rontage
Co
PRCED
soyhome
wa e
ap pa d Pa k you
va ani and needs an owne A
mob e
hone
bu d
o
sma l down payment w
e
deve op
you en oy he 4 BR s a peed
LR and DR
u
basemen
AND CONTRAC T
30 A w h
w h tam ly m
aund y r:m
25 A bo om and
000
and wo kshop
eek fron age and sp ng
deve opmen
m off s a e
NEW BR CK &amp; FRAME
Th s
a e eel c: beau y s o a ed
m o I U S 35 and o e s a MAKE US AN OFFER
d5 A
comp ete k chen
o ma
at and
o ng
and
n
d n ng rm
u
y
m
2
G&amp; pol S SChOO d st w lh a
baths ww a pe ga age 4
ale model 4 x 70 mob e
x 23 LR snd 25
ontage on
home
a BT rd Move n any me
PR CE REDUCED TO S 0000
EDGE OF TOWN
MODERN
28 Ac es
Pa
o hs
SPL T FOYER w h features
and s n Ga a Co and pa
su h as a arge d n ng a ea
n ackson Co Don m ss an
w th pa o doo s
modern
nves men
ke h s one
k tc h en car pe ed LR 3 BR 2
ba h s a ge fam y m w th NEAR ADD SON
25 A w h
W 8 f ep a e aund y rm
co wa er ava ab e T h s and
ga age and cen a r Owner
s mos y wooded and se s or
w
ade o
a a m o
on y \4 000
cheaper p ece o p ope y
NEAR V NTON
8 A
ELDERLY BEAUTY W TH
$20 000
mos y ra e or and
R: VER V EW
You w
hav e o see he ns de of h s EXCELLENT o
hun ng or
camp ete y remod eled 2 sto y
recrea on 42 A wood land n
home to app ec ate t Th e
Ha
son Twp o $6 DO
arge foye opens o a w nd ng
HE P
The
upsta r s OWNER
W LL
s a rway
30A n Racoon
F NANCE
on a ns a ba h and 4 ca r
peted BRs The k t c hen s
ant
Twp w h 2 600 fl rd
mode n and you
tam y
age
would lov e he
ep ace n he
LR and
he a ge fo mal HO COMB H LL
Lo e y 2
d n ng rm There s also a fu
so y
hom e
w h
fu
basemen and ga age located
basement has oom o spa e
on a a ge a o on Rou e
The mode n k c hen ncludes
ad sp d shwashe eye eve
South
oven and o s of cab ne s
POMEROY
PR CE
Othe lea u es a e 4 BRs 2
REDUCED
TH S MONEY
baths b eakfasl rrn forma
MAKER can make you
d n ng rm
fam y m
ec
m
2 WB f eplaces hot
et ement a c n h w h 2
wa e heat pa o and ga age
bus ness enta s and 2 arge
apa tmen s
Loca ed
Ranny B ackburA
down own on a o ne lo
Branch Manager

Sold Sold Sold

80 A 5 1 OCto.. Fa m on S
R
75 40 A
I ab e ba
n
pas u e
Ba n 60 x 74
Cone e e S o 6 )( 50 w h
vnloade
Good a m house
and o her outb dgs Th s fa m
s c ean ha s good
ences
pond and has been med and
fe t zed A good buy fo
S43 000

OHIO RIVER
Realty

learn

951 '

Fmancong
Ava !able

38 Acres
Near lake

HOLLEY Bros Construct on
bulldoz ng back l:!oe work
d tch ng unde roa'JII bor ng
Phone 245 5018 or 2.45 5006
18 tf

No expertence necessary
Mus1 have car be w1ll ng to

hous ng or small farm

ARE YOU TIRED OF LIVING
IN YOUR OLD HOUSE? GO
MODERN AND LET US SELL
IT WITH LITTLE WORRY TO
YOU NO SALE NO CHARGE

ooo

Full or Partt1me

FREE BOOK TELLS
STORY

storm

o $
5

230 tf

D
bedrooms
chen hot water heat
w ndows and 9arage

Bough
RT

s n I&lt;
a ge

Oh o

39 6

CITY

Uppe 4h Ave 6 ms

P en y new cab n
hen ga r1ge and

297 If

WISEMAN

RT

ba hs

D F

Neal Realty

World s Larg.!st

REALTOR

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE Inspect on ca 4463245
Merr II 0 Dell Operator by
Exferm na~ Term te Serv ce
10 Be mont Dr

SALES

WOO LD I ke lo correspond w tt1
person hav ng know edge o.f
and nterested n Dillvld s der
born 814 Ob d ah s ders bo n
857
or anyone w th
n
form at on
on
s ders
genea ogy
wr te
W bur
S ders 42 E Th rd Ave Apt
214 Bloom ngton nd 47401

THE

State St

160
N ew 5 rms
2
aund y m and b g
il
ga
Th s hou se s a
ec
a
a pe
R us c
s a ned wood s d n g and
o a ed on a
A
o Good
house good o a on and a
good buy

ST
E

32

446 1998

Tel

87 f

34

I le Basement S6 500 00
BETWEEN POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLE PORT on new Rl 7
I 2 acre 2 we I s &amp; electric

DELAY
MAY
MEAN
DISAPPOINTMENT
SE~
THESE UNUSUAL OF
FERS TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 22S9

CAB NET Shop at
ypes of
wood work 101 Court St ee
Ph 446 7745

ROOF NG

w

All new

TOOL
Sha pening
saws
sc ssors shears home and
garden
ools
Sharp Shop
AI ey ea
147 Second
216 f

446-1066

25 ACRES 2m es
om Ro
G ande on 32 5
h s baby
an h
flornod e n J bed com
home
\J..I1 o1 w h pen y of
ab nels V'{_J\ k hen a d
basem "C/ '-las a ge
u
ban sma
and sm a
pond
and s ea
e e and
omp e e y fenced
P ce
$32 000

G LLENWATER S SEPT C
TANK
CLEAN NG AND
REPA R
ALSO
HOUS E
WRECKNG Ph 4469499
Estab sht&gt;d n 9.40

BANKS TREE SERVICE

MASSIE Agency
Realty

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALTY

The WISEMAN

TW O so y I am e home w h
new a um num s d ng
u
basemen
u a wa e P ce
$
00 $2 000 down Own c
w
I nan e

37 6

FREE estmaes tablty n
surance Prun ng trimm ng
and cav y wo k tree and
s ump emoval Ph 446 4953
73 If

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

RPal Estate For Sale

a ge bah and aundry room

v

ALBERT EHMAN
Water De very Serv ce
Patr o S ar Rt Ga lpo s
Ph 379 2 33
243 tf

Real Estate For Sale

C TY

SAN" DY &amp; BEAVER Insurance
Co has offered serv ce fo
F re nsu ance coverage n
Gal a Coun
tor almost a
Century Farms Homes and
personal p operty coverages
are ava able to meet n
d 11 dual
needs
Con ac
F nley Dav s you ne ghbo
and agen

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay

DAY CARE

REALTY

Wanted To Buy

FURNITURE

kUSS S GLASS Se v ce glass
fo a needs spec al z nq n
w ndshe d!)
m
ro s
p ex g lass escreen 704 P ne
R o Grande 245 5048
00 If

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY 0

of

Phone 446 2476

and

EXCAVATING dozer
o&amp;de
and backhoe work
sep1 c
anks nstalled dump t ucks
'tnd o boys for h re wll hau
d rt top so
mestone
nd gravel Cal Bob o Roge
Jeffers day phone 992 7069
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992

5232

CE NT RALLY loa ed umbe
ya d h"s open ngs for m 1
Card
Thanks
men and sa es pe son nel
THEFAM LYotRasonM e
Send esume sa ng des e o
w shes
o exp ess ou
earn and exper ence
Box
gral tude and o ex end ov
30
c 0 Ga
po s D a y
s ncere and hea lfe t thank s
T bune
and app ec at on to a k nd
35 6
ness the many e~~;p ess ons 0
sympa hy
a ds
beau u
WOOD WORK NG
flower offer ngs and
ood
MILL OPERATORS
rece ved f om t ends du ng Expe ence nope a on ol 2
the
ecent
oss of ou
ab e saws
ou
8
husband tathe and grand
shapers dove a s
enon
father Spec a hanks o Rev
mach nes Pa d vacat on
Vance Wason o h s con
nsu ance hosp
aza on and
so ng words To he McCoy
a
f nge benet ts Con a
Moore Funera Hom e and the
Ken on F ash
Co umbus
pallbea e s
Show ase 850 W 5 h Ave
M S
G adys
M 1e
Columbus Oh o Ph
6 A
daughter
g anddaugh e
294 5 3
and tam y

House Calis Made

69

C BRADFORD Auct onear
Com p ete Serv ce
Phone 9-49 362
Rae ne Oh o
C t B adford
5
fc

21726tc

BABY bed h gh char hard
wood f oor polisher
John
L yens
nea
Chesler
E ementary School

Rent

992 2094
606 E Matn
Pomeroy

DOZER and back hoe wo k
ponds and sept c tanks d t
ch ng serv ce top so
1 1
d rt
mes one
B&amp;K Ex
cava ng Phone 992 5367 or

Help Wanted

Services Offered

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

:::-_-=,.-·--------·-

- - - - · - - - - - 39

WH
TE
s p ec k
e "
parakeet Gene ous
ewa a
Ph 446 1037

GOLD do ars and s ve co ns
Se e Max Tawney Tawney
ewelers
36 If

Bu1ltto Your Specs

W LL
m o cu
rees and
sh ubbe y A so c ean ou
basemen s a cs e c Cal
9d9 322 0 742 4441
2 2 26 c

N MEMORY o Fos e
M
e Who passed
Lee
Februa Y 7 9 3 Gon awbay
not forgo en
e u
Sad Y m ssed by h s
ends

lost

W lson Rusk
280 Slate Street

Phone 992 7306

NEW 3 bedroom a I e ectr c
hOme garage carpet ng with
acre of g.-ound on F atwoods
Road Phone 992 2735
2 17 3tc

for

WOOD TRUSSES

Ph 992 5271

9

INCOME TAX
SERVICE

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Gene's
Body Shop

c

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

ton
cab

-·- -·-·-----------~2.~07tc

3

12 30 fc

Open 8 To Is
Monday thru Saturdar
606 E Matn Pomeroy 0

L ncoln Hill Pome.-oy

BOARDING stud se v c:e AKC
pupp es K&amp;P Kenne s 388
B274

Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Ntghl 992 3525
or 992 5232

15 261C

INFORMATION ABOUT

1967 OLDS V sta Cruse sma 1
v 8 new pa nt ob and new
carpet Ca I 742 4101

Wanted

Horne &amp; Aulo

Pomeroy

NOW YOU CAN En I sf n the
army for two yea s w lh a
wr tten gua an tee The A
my s new rave or ran ng
opt on a ows you to en st tor
on y two years and take your
cho c:e of ob
a n ng o a
gua anteed ass gnmen
n
Eu ope Ta k to you nearbY
A mv e p esen at ve Ca
co ec 6 4 .446 l343
38 29

See or Call

.;;wEEPER Repa rs parts
upplles 446 0294 10 a m
5
p m Dav s vacuum C eaner
s ore Georges Creek Road
next to Bobs c B Rad o Sales
293 If

SINGER sew ng mach nes 1972
mode
n beaut ful wa nut
cab net Makes design stll
Estate For Sale
ches z g zag but onho es
b nd hems etc L ke new
Only $89 95 Cal Ravenswood NEW 3 bedroom home good
water 6 acres 3 outbu d nos
273 952 or 273 9893 after 5 00
and ce ar Off Meigs c:oun y
12 7 rtc
on W
am Sm lh Road 3 h
m les from sa em center
UPHOLSTERY tab cs by he
1 27 26 p
yard 5.4 nches w de as ow as
51 95 per yard Velve s as ow
bah
as S3 45 I m po ted ve vets NEW3bedroomhome
garage basement on Grave
$9 95 we also have nylon
H
M dd epo 1 Natura gas
hercu on
cotton
p nts
already
n
Phone Dale
v nyl s emnants by the yare!
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
o by the p ece Pomeroy
992 2534
Recovery 622 E Man s
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
1 29 26tc
'PAC ous bi Leve and sp t
FOAM of II your o d couch and
eve homes a.-e now under
cha
cush ons as low as
ruct on on c ty water
s o 95 Upho ste y books on y cons
and sewer
Many de uxe
SOc
4 nc:h covered foam
features n c lud ng a
c:on
ma esses tor standard s ze
d ton ng
Best 1 nanc ng
bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
ava table Other ype homes
Recovery 622 E Ma n St ee
n d ffe ent areas on F H
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Adm f nanc ng w th no down
12926 C payment Ca I co e&lt;:l
837
6540
o wr e to ME GS
DEVELOPMENT P 0 Box.
3J M dd eport Oh o 45760
I 9 tfc

Auto Sales

uu r s UE: wo "'a cund homes
Lawn s
wa s and
ences
Done w lh mo or arm m
plemen s A so have p c:kup
truck fo
haul ng
Free
est ma es Phone 992 37 li
2 14 litp

Help

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

uvv N p ano exce en
cond ton
Prac cal y new
graduate
student
needs
money for spr ng and sum
mer tu on a Oh o Un ve
s ty Phone 949 5792 after 4

CONCORD Trave Tra er n ce
fo coup e Call 992 7479
J tfc

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

stalled

b~

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

969 FORD Pckup
automa c
Custom
S 050 Phone 992 3829

HAY fo sale Cal 985 3809 af er
5 p m

Water l nes and Power
l1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sephc tanks n

Real

Special

11 Refngerators

fc

2

2 IS 6

Rutland
Bargam Center

309

2 25 p

pm

Shop The

ANT QUE Round oak table
chars and buffe 70 000 BTU
Gas c cu a ng heate 30 ooo
BTU Gas heater 2 meta beds
w h sp ngs wood k chen
abe and cha s wood k
chen cupboa d Phone 992

DITCHING SERVICE

On Most Amer1can Cars

__ ___________

~-------------'

t::.XPER ENCED pa nter
n
ter o and ex. e o ca 1 Don
Van Me e
Phone 985 3951
2 3 29 p

From the a gest Truck or
Bulldoze
Rad ato
to the
sma est Heater Core
Nathan B1ggs
Rad a tor Spec al st

c

610

PUBLIC NOT CES

AUCT ON Sa u day Feb 23
0 30 a m we have sod ou
home located n Le art Fa s
Oh o on Sta e Rou e 339 6
m es f om Rae ne Oh o and
w
set the oll ow ng pe
sona
proper y
No Frost
G bson ef ge ato
W zard
E ec r c Range 30 nch No ge
washe
Un co Orver 2 f ve
p ece D ne e se s Form ca
table top 4 ma ch ng stoo s
tv cab ne s d shes of at
u
k nds 2 hree p ece bedroom
su tes 2 s ng e beds 2 van ty
d essers lamps set of tab es
2 c hests of d awe s 2 metal
wardrobes
2 wood ward
robes Ch ffo obe c l otheS".
c hes t desk 2 t unks ceda.chest buf e g ass doo Ch na
Cab ne
reco d cab ne
2
p i a fo m
eocke s
odd
cha s s ands p c ures and
p c u e f ames set o Sam
son e
uggage 0 y goods
conta ner d apes and bed
e l ect c
b ankels
d ng
Ch s mas deco a ons
old
wash s and p e safe Ch na
and c:lock Por abe washer
o
s oves e eel c heate s
Lazy Susan E ec
M x.e
flowe s and f lowe pols o 1
d ums w th pump
step
adde
on ng boa d many
art cles not I sled M
and
M s
Ed M
er
Owner
Te ms cash Not respons be
fo ace den s The Bradford
Auct on Company
A
C
B adford C C Bradfo d
Ave: onee lunch se ved by
Oh o Va lev G ange
2 7 1 c:

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

l••n• of other unu . . d but I R El ABLE babys I
o come
lu .. ful ltema
I
o my home 4 _j ys a week
from 8 a m ;t'o. 4 30 p m
References equ red Phone
q97 5626 af e 5 p m
2 12 5tc

TARA

NO

For Sale

whenJ
lant I
ture
do

UNLESS you mean bus ness
we a.-e now cons der ng
qua f ed app cants n you
a ea to become a wo k ng
Ho
pa t of our Na onal
Sys tem
Food
D s bv o
You a e no app y ng to a
ob You are app y ng to a
ve y h gh p of bus ness of
your own NO EXPERIENCE

SELL NG NVOLVEO Th s
bus ness can be s a ted pa 1
me
no need to qu t your
ob Can be expanded ful me
w th company f nanc ng We
need people we can depend
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2174
on
Our
products
a e
na ona y
famous
Ho
Food
tems We have ove 36
var et es of Ho Soups and Ho FOR you new home 0 co m
En ees such as Beef Stew
P ete emodel ng Con act
2 261
Ch cken &amp; Dump ngs Ch
&amp;
G eg Roush
Roush Con
Beans and on and on we
st uc on Phone 992 5039
have
all
of
Ame cas
2
ltc
favo tes A
hese del c ous
p oducts are sold f om he READY MIX
CONCRETE
a est n au om a c vend ng
delivered
gh
o you
equ pment Your roue w I be
P Otec Fas and easy Free
estabt shed and ns a led by
es mates Phone 992 3284
us Your aQe s not a facto
f
Goeg en Ready M x Co
you qual fy Perfec for a n ce
M dd epo t Oh o
coup le o ope a e as a fam tv
6 30 fc:
bus ness
CASH NVESTMENT
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
NO
REQU RED
REASONABLE a es Ph 446
2c ed brass 35c
PART TIME
4782 Ga po s
ohn R usse
S 20 M A Ha
Reedsv e PLAN ONE
S2 28\ QO
Owner and Operate
Oh o Pho e 3 a 6249
PLAN TWO
3 861 00
5 2 tfc
27 lfc PLAN THREE
7 7 9 00
FULL TIME
SE PT C TANKS
AROBIC
COLORED TV an enna Phone PLAN FOUR
$ 1 279 00
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
992 50
PLAN F VE
a 99a 00
CLEA NED
REPA RED
2 3 4 p PLAN SIX
36 79a 00
M LLER
SAN TA T ON
- cc- -cc-cFOR fu ther nformat on o a
ST EWART OHIO PH 662
persona
n erv ew
send
3035
MObiie Homes For Sale
Naml:! Add ess and Phone
10 4 tfc
Number to North Ame ca n
2K60 T RA LER w h pu ou
D s r but ng Cp o
Ho Food SE PT C
se up n P neg ove w
TANKS
cleaned
0 v s on 88'2a N Cen a
nance
D
R chardson
Mode n San a on 992 3954 or
Avenue Phoen x A zona
Gene a Oe ve y Mann W
992 7349
85020
Va 25635 o phone 304 583
0 23 tfc
2 7

No E~per ence Necessary
Must have car and be w II ng
lo le rn

~-------------,

I your phon~ w 11
I cash I!!IUht
too
I YGU place an act on
Ad You can aell furn
I appl ance1 clothe.

6

SPR NG
FABR CS
New
sh pmen
us a
vcd w de
se e on coo d na ed olo s
one o po yes er e sey kn
$2 29 pe
yd
Ca o na
Fab cs Roue
Ches er
Oh o 9 am o p m Monday
h ovgh Sa
day Henry and
Ma y Hun e owne s
1\

Swec
o em~&gt;mber h m wh o
o e wa s 1 e e
And w ho hOug abse
us
he

PR N G SPEC AL
COTTON
FABR CS 98 CEN S PER
YARD
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KN TS $2 86 PER
YARD NEW CRAFT
EMS
NO VEL Y
ABR C SHOP
230 WEST BLVD BE PRE

emo

e n

we ga

3 4

EXPERIENCED

Bustness Opportunities

NECESSARY

"0
\2 00

2~

2

2 43c

CAS H pad fo al makes and
nod es of mob e homes
Phone a ea code 6 4 423 953
4 3 fc

In Memory

Not1te

0

0::

h e Pub sh e
ese ves he
h o Eld o
e e any ads
ed
ob eel on a
The
he w
no be es pon
mo e han o e

1

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

n e S md ' 1omes Sent nel Slllldav Feb 17 1974

24

GALLIPOLIS OHIO

PUBLIC SALE

OWNER The late Bermce M1lls
Adm -Tom Mills
Dale March 9 1974- T1me 11 oo A M
Localoon 107 Kmeon Drove Ga lhpohs Oh10
ITEMS 2 bedroom house w th k tchen d n ng room
I v ng room laundry oom and 1 car garage 972 Dodge
Dart
J 000 actua m les
Hotpo nt e edric stove
West nghouse Qyen Fr g da e refr ge ato
breakfast
set cook pg ut ns Is d1shes pots pans I v ng oom su te 2
lamps RCA V sta color TV General Electr c washe
Sears dryer Hoover sweeper ped 2 shovels ax hoe
spade 3 akes mops brooms
on ng board saw
ANTIQUES marb e top wash stand cane bcHom stra ght
cha
te ephone sta nd amp tab e bookstand dresser
c:hest bed n ght stand smokes tand sea es Other tems
too nume ous to menton

AUCTIONEER

J A FRENCH

Hamhn Ktng Attorney of Estate
Auct1oneer s Note Th s s good c ean turn ture look fh s
house over because t w II se I the day of sa e

�..• .

'

-'

'f

I

''"

'

.. ~- . .

..·.

..

•

..........

. .,· .

.,..,.,", "• ""·

-~

·~

. . ..

'"

. ., ·-

.

,

.

.. . .

. - ..

·~

I
'

!6 '-- Th S\lllday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 17,1974

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
'

500 E. MAIN

·-

GALLI POLls·
CHRYSLER_PLYMOUTH

PH. 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

OPERATION SAVINGS
1973 OiEV. NOVA ................... $2695

'73 Cadillacs

2

YOUR CHOICE
FOR
I

$5900

1972 OiEVROLET BELAIR .......... '2495
4-door . local 1-owner ca r with le ss than 15.000 miles, beige
fini sh black viny l top , good white wall tires. st andard V-6
engine, automa ti c. power st eer ing &amp; brak es. rad io,
spotless interior . Want a sharpie a t t h e right price ..
Slop in!

$4900
All 4 sold and serviced by us

'71 Cadillac
$4100

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill ·...... $1295

All 5 have factory air conditioning and were
s"lrl ;md serviced by us.
'
'

4 Dr . Sed., blue fini sh, auto., P.S ., P . B., 8 cy l ., radio. A

KARR &amp;VANZANDT

ni ce family ca.r at the righ t pric e.

Pomeroy

" You' ll Like Our Qual i ty Way of Doing Business'

Body little rough . Good rubber . Low mil eage.

FABULOUS
FEBRUARY VALUES
Our Loss • • Your Gain

~

.

992-2126

$2295
owner. Auto .

BD R M . hom e, air con d!fioning, completely fur nished , I mile from city
limits . Ph. 446 -4209.
37 - 10

MODERN offi ce or commercia l
building for rent. 4,000 square

Auto. trans .

feet . Excellent locaflan . For

mor e informatio n ca ll Th e
W ise man Agency. Phone -446 -

See Fred Blaettnar, Danny. Thompson,
or Keith Goble

3644 .
21 -tf

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
&amp; Sales

Middleport Ohio
For Rent
ON RT. 5138, 3 brm, all elec t ric
home. wall to wall carpet.
$ 11 5 per month , deposit
required . Ph . ~46-0761.
38 -3
'SLEE PING ROOM wi t h k itchen
privileges . Ph . 446-9244 .

Contact New1 Jones
Rodney-Cora Rd.
Rodney, Ohio
Ph. 245-9374-245-5021
We rent mobile home lots,
not iu5t a place to park your
home. We have more to offer
than any mobile community
in Southeastern Ohio.

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

You Must See These New Arrivals

For Sale

Auction

306 -tf

$1095

1968 PLYMOUTH 4 DR. SEDAN- $395

94 -tf

MOBILE HOMES

j

''

UPPER RIVER RD. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-9800

For Sale

140
141
14 2
143

Evergreen tree
Crony {co lloQ)
Chinese mile
Note ol scale

144 Bactef lolog 1sl' s
wtre
145 By w ay ol
1,47 Horses
149 Transfix
150 Babylonian hero
152 Dormouse
154 Got up
156 By onesett
158 Re .. otut ionar y
159 Satiates
160 Bisl1 op·s
headdress
161 Fasn ions
DOWN
1 Hurry
2 More competen!'
3 Beam
4 Mountatin latbbr.)
5 Place
6 Figure ot speech
7 Go
8 Poetic word
9 Preposition
tO Conducled
I 1 Pertai ning to ihe
cheek
12 Tile sweetsop
13 Spanish plural
art1cle
14 Prtnlersmeasure
15 Occupying a
chair
16 Pack away
17 lilt with le .. er
18 Three-toed slotl1
19 Rejec l
20 App orti ons
27 Employ
29 Wing l ike

..b,.e__,..;;;;...,.;.;;;.3,.,1..,.c"_'

DELIVE~ED

AND SET UP

J

!,

h . ...,.

" """"~

"'

~

" '""'""'

[!]

fj

'9295
~
,... ,.
" "'""'"

'''""··""·
"'

.,_ t+• ..........
"
\ D"
!
·-" ..... ... 86 (l
'
lll -lh 14 3 PFD 30 31EDROOII-PRIYATE FROIIT OIIIETTE-W/3RO DOOR
TI'

.I

"""'' .......

~

DELIVERED AND SET Up

•8995

Beautifu l describes these_ all new total -electric 3 bedroom homes. Fully carpeted all deluxe
features and deluxe furn1ture, 7112' ceilings, smoke detector system , egress wind~ws, and 30
ga I. wate r heaters. U L approved. Truly beautiful, truly priced to please.

ATTENTIO I&gt;I

VETERANS

G I Loans availab le, no
down payment with approve d c red it.

r

Up to 12 Year Financing-:We Service What We Sell.

Goble Mobile Homes
586 Locust S.t .
992-.7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon. thru Sat.
Open. D•lly 8 to 6, (Closed Sundays). Open Anytime by
. Aooomtmenl. Contact Dan ThompsoQ or Tom LavPnder .

36
37
39
40

Pari ol lireplace
Young salmon
Kill
EI(JJi res
4 1 Apolhecary·s
weight
42 Taci ile org an of
animal
43 Warbled
44 Re jecl
46 For examp le
labbr.J
48 Rom an road
49 Part ol aye
50 Cnapeaus
51 Sharp en
52 AI that place
53 Spirited horse S
55 Tore
56 Projec ling toolh
57 Wideawake
58 Martinique
volcano
6 1 Vedic lire god
63 Cauda l
app endage
64 Sem i-precious
slone
68 St rollers
70 Quieled
7 1 Vital org ans
73 Chord s ol three
tones
74 Pedal d1g1IS
75 Rants
77 Sedate
78 Procedure
80 Mental image
8 1 Man·s nickname
83 Man·s n1ckname
84 lmitBI Or
87 Req uire
89 Represe ntalives
90 Souih American
Ind ian
91 Macaw
92 Uncou\11 persons

CB-360-CB-360G. Meet two brand-new bikes
from Honda - the CB-360 and the front disc
brake model CB-360G. Identical except tor
color options and the "G's" hydraulically
actua ted front disc brake. the CB-J60's are
new road bikes that once again underscore
Honda's engineering leadership in the world of
motor cycling.

93 Unaspirated
95 Suffix : fol lowers

ol

96 River bank
97 Long lor
99 Separate
10 1 In the direction

ol
Fall short
Repair
Unusual
Norse god
112 Paper measure
113 Falsehoods
115 Period of lime
116 Merganser
118 Metal lastner
119 Tree trunk
121 Fatty
123 Symbol lor silver
125 Repulses
126 City in
Switzerland
127 More vapid
129 More secure
130 Piece of
dinnerware ,
131 Pronoun
132 Disturbances
134 In music, t1 igh
136 Place in line
137 Eals
139 Toll
140 Mass of fl oating
ice
144 Number
145 Sk ll ~
146 School ot w11ales
14 7 Temporary bed
148 Everybody's
uncle
149 Seed container
15 1 Hebrew month
153 Babylonian deity
155 A state (abbr.)
157 Behold1

Upper Rt. 7

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

'

BUICKS:

eELECTRA 225 eRIVIERA eLeSABRE eREGAL
eCENTURY eAPOLLO eOPEL
eGRAN PRIX eLeMANS eVENTURA

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

e1 SPORT

eCAPRI •DATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

e12 DARTS

L&amp; M Phone 592-4491

•

+ A8 7

Gallipolis

Eastern Ave .

For Sale
FARM EQUIPMENT
PRE FE~ to se l l AS A GROUP
the following equipmen t , in
very good condition :
I - 1966 B.414 Int . tractor . w ide
f rt ., three p-1. hitc.h. 8 speed,
d isc: brakes. twin 14", Int . mtd
plows , 3 'pt. hitch .

For Sale
we
HAVE
an
of
vour
upholstery needs . Burlap ,
denim , cambr ic , foam glue,
tacking
str i p .
• l pr,ers ,
S'pr ngs and clips , c.hlpboard ,
bullon twine , sewing th rea d ,
legs.
upholstery
books ,
d,ac-ron , webbing , spring
twine, tacks , w elt cord
cotton , swivel bases , and
foam , foam , foam . ·Pomeroy
Recoyery, 622 E . Main Street ,
,omeroy, Ohio. phone 992 -

DRAG -type D isc
WOOD S - Cadet mt' d brush hog 3 pt . hitch
LARGE triple -Hopper gra in ·
755~.
dr i ll , r ubber mt'd.
2~ - 26
1NT . Rubber m t 'd side de~ivery =--=---=----==-;:--.l._ __ _
Rake, ground dr iven .
ALL
TYPES of
bUilding
1NT. All steeL rubber t ired
material~ . btpck, brick, sewer
wago'n w-tactory solid ton'bue
pipH , wmdows. lintels, etc
and grove . Hay rack 1~ ' x 8' .
Cl1ude Winters, R ro Grande ·
Ph . 381-1.,8
0 . Phone 245 -5121 after 5.
39 -6
.
123 -'

TIIUCKS, INC ,
133 Pine St •

NOI.l ll:IOS

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

..

--- --.---------

- =----..- .- - - - - - - - -

Cor~in

&amp;Snyder
Furniture

I
NEW : ~erra ana ~emco mat tress and boy spri ngs . Large
selection 111 stock fi r m
mattresses starting at $39 .00 .
955 Secon~ Avenue
446·1171
176 -ff

CONSERVE FUEL
U SE your fireplace for extra
heat . We have good West
VIrgin ia chunk and egg coal.
Hig h in BTU. !ow ash, also
LOCUST fence posts Ca l l after
stoke r
an d
Oh io
lump .
Si)( 246 -5690.
Gall ipolis Block and Coal co .
39 -6
Ph . ~46 - 27 8 3
-,..- -----------36-11

blood
39 -3

39 -tf
--r-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

·.

., 10 9

Q tO 54
"' Q872
SOU TH

.r../94

+

+.196"

• A R54

¥

1

AQ732

+K 2

"'K 6
Norlh -South vulncn1 ble
W c~ t

North
l 'iJ ~'j

Pass
Pa ss

JN .T
4+

5.
54

Pass

East

South

1-'il SS

41!•

l'&lt;ts.-.

I

: ~~; ;.:._j

Pass

9774

14 ·1f

THE'PRlfVE N carp et cleaner.
Blue Lustre is easv on rne
budget. Restores forgorten
colors . Renl electric sham pooer Sl. G . C. Murphy .
39 -6

so he h idS l our· cluh s. f\l rot'l h

Corb.ln ·&amp; Snyder

COMPLE:TE b edroom Sui te
with
mattress and box
springs , G .E ref r igerator, se t
of table lamps , dou bl e dre sser
with mo rror , 2 automat ic
dr iers .
SPECIAL
Close ou t ot l ino l eum rugs and
r oom si ze c. arpe ts.
955 Second Av en ue
446 -1171
,

If you decide lo us.' th e
J ac oby tWo notrump it i!:i im portant t o bear in m i nd the
re stri ctions we ha ve fo und
necessary i n usin g it.
The. !;irst is thai you only
u se 1t m r e spon se t o a fir st or
~cond hand major-suit o pen·

9~ 8

Plen Y of fre e parking 25 tf
---------~- - - -

1965 CHEVY lmP.~ Ia, black 2
door hardtop , wtfh extras . Ph .
446 -0922 .
39 -6

MI XE D hay , phone 388 -9991 or
367 -7&lt;181.

J9.1f
APACHE'S GOT IT ALL
4 NEW l uxur-y solid state
mode l s, plus 4 new tent
c ampers . Pri ced f ro m 5825 to
S2.195. Big t rade now . Am ·
sba r y Apache Trai ler Sales ,
63 1.Fourth Avenu e, Gallipolis ,
Oh 10.
39 -ff

u:en i~ ~~&amp;NUl
!o\: EW!:i i' ,\ PI::H 1-:N T t.:lll'HI SE

T he

bi dd in~

t\~Sili 1

16

h.:..s hecn

W es t

North

East

Pa ss

I+

!'as.&lt;.;

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

A .K .C. Registered A ustra l ian
Terr i er pup . $75. Ph . 446-4314 ,
39 -3
·1

What do you do nuw'!
,\-Bid one heart. You wan t to
tr)' to g:el to a major · suit con-

197 1 DATS UN , 510 Sedan , -146 1502.
39 -6

.f97JCHAiiPl0N-Mob~-Home.

12xil5 3 bdrm . Ph 367 -7106 .
39-6

tract.

JJlYMrniblE®lk.J kt-~1./ .-J,......
Unscramble th ese four Jumbles,
on e .letter to each square. to
rorm four ordinary words .

mg,
T he reason yo u don ' t use it

KEI'OD

You put the three notrumo
bid to work here. Toda v··,
hand wa s ma\Je up to illust r·
ate th is bid at tls best. W e
ca n ' t claim that it eve r

II

[J

rEsHECI

J

I

b
D

worked that well in actual
.
.
.
practic e. but 1t m1ght.
North 's h and b ecomes
ve r y, very good when Sou th
o p ens n n e h eart. H e bid s

three not rum p

BL UE Lustre not only rids
carpets of soil bu? lea ves pile
soft and lofty . Rent el ectric
sham pooe r
Sl
Cen tral
Supply .
39 -6

Sr, ulh 's fiv e diamO nds.
1\'orth m1gh l well just pump
to six hear ts. but we ha ve
made t hi s hand up a nd No rth
d eci des to show his :;cC'ond
round spade co ntml and suggest a gra nd s la m. Soulh
obliges and there they are .
Bea utiful bidd ing even if we
d1d make it up.

•AK76.AK76+ 3 2.Kl0 3

By Oswald &amp; James .Jacoby

a ft er p ass ing is that there is a
TYPEWR I TE R S and add ing
use fo r two notru mp by
good
mach ines ; new , used and B&amp;S Mobile Homes
a
passed
hand. It shows a bal·
re built . Simmons Printing
anced hand with II good
and Office Supply . .446 -1397 . 1953 Peerless
20 -tf
h1gh·card points or may be
Westbrook
----------------'--- 1971
Shultz - l2x60 2 bdrm .
even 12.
FILE
CABINETS,
F ili ng 1967
1965 10x50 Nationa l 2 bdrm
What do yo u do when you
supplies in stock . Sim mons
8&amp; S Mboile Hom e Sales
Printi ng and Office Supply
are
a passed hand and wa nt
Pt. Pleasant
446 -1397.
36-tf to give your pa r t ne r a forcing
20 -tf - - - - - - - - - - - - - raise'~

or·· Frldov

44~

You , South. hold:

A K.C

T ri -State Mobile
Home Sales
Ph. 446·7572
12x50 1966 Libe r ty
12x50 1963 Lakewood
12x52 1970 Flee twood
8x35 1957 Marlette
10x54 1959 Elcar
10x50 1965 St.!!lr All El ec tr ic
8)(4 5 195-l Vagabon d
10x45 1960 M agnolia
8x 27 1953 Trotwood
1958 Style Ma'ster
1955 El car
1955 Wes twOod
1955 Starline
19~2 W i ndsor lOx 55 3 bdrm.

Da i l y . Ph

Opt'ning le;ul- •.J

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

1415 Eastern Ave .
USED FURNITURE
BABY beds . stoves , electric and
gas, refrigerators. cabinets
chairs , upr i ght
freezer '
bedroom su_ites , beds . 7 pc :
and 5 p c . dtnett e se ts, living
room suites. and lots ot small
Items .
27 -If

l or 4 bedroom on vo ur lot .
Clark Ridg e H om es . 1 lo 5

r ather

• K Q7 :1

¥ .!

Pa s."
l'ass
Pass

(

'2595
WOOD MOTOR SALES
'.

1971 OAKBROOK mobi l e home,
12w.60, 2 bdrm . Good con dition , st ep s, porch and underpinning in c luded . $300
down . and
take
over
payments. Ph. 44lS -2589.
39·6

·39 -J

---- ---· ------ ----

N orth 's f 1vc cl ub bid comes
na l ur &lt;.Jl l v a s d oes

EAST

. J 10U6

~~------------------~
For Sale
For Sale
For Sale
rl1ne
_e gi .ster
exce
Ph ed.
. 446 -404
5. lten t

S.IOC UUWN

1909 .

bids four spades.

"' A I0 5 3
WEST

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Te r r i er ,

2 H OLSTE IN H eifers to freshen
soon . Cal l after 6 p .m . 446-

h td s four diamond s ctu it e
) na tu ra lly and now So uth is
w illing to go pas t game. He

, KR£ ;,4

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
SC OTT I SH

I

16

• 2

EVERETT SAUNDERS - TOM NORRIS - DON HARDEN

,
·
a
rson
s
P

GOOD CLE A N LU MP and
stok er coal. Ca rl Winte r s, Rio
Gra n de . Phon e 245 -5 115.
.
8 tf

WIN AT BRIDGE

~UIITH (I)J

8200 VAN
B 200 SPORTSMAN
B 300 SPORTSMAN
CB 3QO KARY VAN

50 STATE ST.

For Sale

Jacoby 2NT has its limits

e2 D 200 PICKUPS
e1 0 200 CLUB CAB PICKUP
e1 D 600 CAB &amp; CHASSIS

e8 CORONETS

new w·s-w tires, low mileage. Extra Nice!

CARROLL NORRIS

e2 D 100 PICKUPS
.S D 100 CLUB CAB PICKUPS

e4 CHARGERS

DATSON Phone 592-4463

'

CO PP ER _T O N E rang e and
f r o sl fre e refrigerafor for
sa l e Exce ll en t con diti on .
S200 . Ph . 446 -74411 .
37 -5
1967 VA LI ANT , 6 c y l i nd er
automatic. 19 1!.., miles p er
gal lo n . Ph . d46 · 1615, a ft er 5.
446 · 12 44 .
37 If

•1
e1
e1
e1

e3 COLTS

eMERCURY MONTEGO •COMET

For Sale

For Sale

NEW CARS &amp;TRUCKS IN STOCK!

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV

P. brakes ; gulf green, metallic finish with
matching vinyl roof &amp; interior. Fac. air cond .,

~

WHERE SERVICE IS A TRADITION,
ST A

in the Area.
All priced to Sell
and Ready to Go. . .
SEE ONE SOON!

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 12QO E. STATE ST.

2 Dr . hardtop, radio, auto. trans ., P. steering,

.I

'

MODELS IN STOCK

PONTIAC$: eGRANVILLE eBONNEVILLE eCATALINA .

in Southeastern Ohio.
We also have over
30 of the sharpest used cars

72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

SOMMERS G ,M.C,

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

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

e5 MONACOS

1971 J/4 T. Ford PU
1967 112 Ton GMC pickup
· 1968 'h ton GMC pickup
19613 •t:z T-on Chevy P i cku~
1966 '12 T . GMC
1969 1/:z ton GMC Pickup ·
.1972 Y:z ton Ford Pickup
1963 Ph T . -GMC
1971 G-MC Suburban
NEW tires Winter tread : Sizes
7.75xl4, a:2sxu , 8.55x l4 , Sl8
ea ch . Cash and carry while
supply lAsts .

254-lf

- We hav e the largest selection of new Buicks and Pontiacs ever offered
in this area!
- By trading now you can have the best selection and lowest price!

The Nicest Selection of
New Cars &amp; Trucks

SMITH HONDA .SALES

105
106
107
111

velvets, nylons and vinyls':'·' 17 EIGHT week old pigs , 3 brip
Your choice of colors and
sow hogs . Ph . 88 -8531 or 388 ·
styles while they last. Some
8180.
38 -3
$69.95 , others 579.95, cash and
carry, Pomeroy Recovery, - - - - - - - - - -- - - - 622 E . Main Street, Pomeroy .
SEVER·AL old antiques. ,Old
Ohio, 992 -7554 .
large iron kettle , one good
wagon tongue , wood for
wagon or tractor . Also other
New GMC
small antiques. Very old . See
Truck Headquarters
Charles Rice, Gallipolis , Ohio
1tMI\ 1;., ton GMC PiCkUP
R . R . 1. , 45631.
1963 1/:z T . GMC
38 -3
196-s 1h T . GMC Pickup
1969 l!:z T . GMC PU
1970 FORD FALCON, 6 cyl.
1969 Chevrolet 'l:z ton p ickup
automatic., Production Credi t
1967 1/:z ton Chev .
co. Car . Ph . 4.46-3391 .
• 1969 'l:z T . Ford PU
39-3
19fl9 Ondae Station Wagon
------ --~-------197 3 VOLKSWAGEN , $2.495 , sun
1.967 lf2 ton Chevy pickup
roof . Call after 4: 30p.m . 245·
1971 V:z T . Ford Pi ck up'
9390 .
____________ !/._
313 -6
1968 V:z T . GMC PickuD
1969 112 T . GMC PU
1968 l!:z T . GMC PU
1967 lf2 T . GMC PU
1967 1/:z T. GMC PU
1969 'l:z Ton GMC PU

44j ~ 1532

YOUR TRADE-IN WILL NEVER BE WORTH MORE!

w
c ( ' LI

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1974

STARCRAFT
POLLY 'S AUC T ION HOUSE ,
72 Wortll less
Rt . 7, Addison , Ohio, every WINTER sale on new an~ used
ACROSS
traller s and folddowns . we
Thursday at 7 p m Let us sel l
leaving
sell service and quality .
it for you. Call M iddleport ,
1 Damages
74 S1ng ing vo 1ce
Camp
Conley
Star
c
raft
Sales,
992 -3509 after 5 p.m . or stop at
76 Tear
Rt . 62 north of Pt . P leasant, 6 Ree l
Auction House.
11 Men
77 Antlemd animal
behind
Red
Carpet
Inn
.
Ph
.
38 -tf
675 -5384 .
16 Muscular
78 Frencn priest
31 -ff
79 Publici.tl ion
coniracti on
21 Lessen
62 Edible seed
FOR a good investment in 22 Girrs name
84 Winged
diamonds see Max Tawney, 23 Make amen ds
65 Roman date
422 Second .
24 Worihless tt1ir14;1
86 Ma!Ured
16-tf
(slang)
88 Tran Sac tion
1972 HONDA , C. B . IUO. SJOG,
89 Tnree -banded
good condition . 1965 Pont iac SEE our comp lete l ine of Sony 25 Cratty
Convertible , Bonnev il le, SJSO,
armadillo
Radio and co lor T .V . Tawney 26 Swollen part
run s good .. Ph . 446 ·0781.
2S Small \lalleys
90 Walk ing slicks
Jewel er s, 422 Second .
16-tf 30 Sai lor's call
92' Worsled yarn
311-3 · - - - - - -- -- - - -·
32 Guido's tow note
94 ~c t i ve l y
98 Region
1968 BUICK Wildcat. low 60x1 2 HOLLY Park. 1 ac re OT 33 Symbol for
land. city· water , and a ll
tellurium
99 Strokes
mi leage. Ph . 4~6 - 1187 .
underground ut ilities. Ph . 388- 34 Tllu s
100 Encounle red
38-3
9976 or 388 -8597 .
35 Spanish plural
102 Hinder
36-6
article
103 Bisnopric
·IF YOU are build ing Cl new
104 Ethiopian l!lle
home or remodeling , see us , VACUUM Cleaners. brand new 36 Cook sl ow ly
We are builders . D istributor
105 Novelti es
tank type models, with 5 37 Prelix : before
for Hotpolnt Appliances,
106 Landed esta te
attachments . Only S24 .20 cash 38 Biller vetcl1
All ison Electric .
or terms available . New 40 Erased (printing)
10a Lair
154-tf
upright models $29.90 cash or 42 Distant
109 A state \abbrl
terms available. Trade -ins 43 Pour torth
110 Negal i\le prefix
accepred. Phone Pt . Pleasant 44 Large !rucks
AKC L HA SA Apso puppies ,
11 1 Paddle s
675-2225.
Car i n T errier puppies, K&amp; P
45 Hawa iian wrealh
11 2 Revival
35-6
Kennels, 388 -8274.
47
Weirder
11 4 Pigpen
11 -tf
1t6 Wei gll t ol lndia
1973 Z IG -ZAG Sew ing M achin es 49 Deposited
left In layaway . All built -In to 50 Pronoun
1t7 Thiel
3,000 BALES mixed hay for
buttonhole , do stretch sew ing 51 Ptatl orms
119 Twist
sale . Phone 388 ·9991 or 367 and fancy stitching . Pay tu st 54 Trop ical frui l
120 Solo
748 1.
$48 . 75
cash
or
t er ms 55 Lease
17 -t f
122
Sailors
available. Trade -Ins a c 124 Be ill
c epted. Phone Pt . Pleasant , 56 Peny ru ler
59 Old pronoun
125 Highway
LIMESTONE for driveways.
675 -2225 .
Carl Winters. Ph . 2~5 - 5115.
35 ,6 60 Music: as written
126 ·Propagates
10 -lf
62 Li quefying
128 Mature
129 Twirl
9 ACRES level ground on Roush 64 Preposilion
13 1 Till er
AKC Registered Si lver Toy
Lane at Cheshire, Phone 367 · 65 French arl icle
Poodle puppies . Al l male. 675 7242 .
66 Note of scale
132 Communis!
1087.
38 -3 67 urge on
133 Hindu guitar
35 -6
69 Harvests
135 Small lump
TAKEFORBALANCEOUE
70 Resorts
138 Everyone
stereo with AM -FM radio ,
73 CHEVY pickup . $2,600 . 8,600 New
~ speed re cord player plus 9
,;_N,o~"::.•;g~od::d~eiss:0,~'~39~M e l;,al_lu
m i le s. 446-4101 .
track tape deck . Th is was left
0
35 ·6
in our Christmas layaway .
Balance due S139 .60 or S7 .DO
LUMP Coa l. Jaym ar coa l Co.,
per
month .
Sommers
Meigs and Gallia line, St . Rt. 7
Discount City, 2 miles nor at Cheshire , 7 a.m . to 6:30
thwest of Wellston on State
p. m . 5 day s a week. 992 -5693 .
Rt. 327 . Open 9 :00 to S: 30 p . m .
272-11
Ph . 380948 .

(We Received Them Before The Price Increase)

DON WATTS V.W., INC.

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
On Saturday .

--------------38-5
NEW swivel rocker s in prints, - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -

388 - !0 &gt;14 3 CK Z F&amp;R Zl 31EOROOM-CEirTERKITCHU-ZFRDIIT IAUR IEDRD..... IATHlo

i

Good things happen on a HOI Ida.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

71

!BY SKYLINE)

HONDA

MOST CARS IN STOCK HAVE THE LOWER PRICE

THE NEW LOOK-NOW ON DJSPLA Y

@e

992-2174

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

POMEROY

Open Eves Till 8

SLEEPIN G ROOMS . weekly
rates. Park Cent ral Hot el.

Long body . Looks and runs good.

Ga ll ia

446-3273

or Bill Nelson

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

What We Sell

For Rent

3

r oo m s,

$1495

~-----~------------~-------------·--------~
We Built Our Business on Service and Now

'1695

tran s.• 302 V-8.

SL EEPING
Hote l.

Sale Price

REMEMBER
We Service

"Your Chevy Dealer"

2 Dr. H. T. Very low mileage. Like new cond ition.
Le ss than 112 price .

COAC HMAN T rave l Trai ler,
Motor Homes , 5th Wh ee l,
Tr uck Campers , Apple City
A ut o Sa les, Rt . 35 N . Jac kson.
Ohio . Phone 286 -5700.
110-tf

For Only

• Front Wheel Drive
• Quality-The Best
• Economy-Even Better Than The Beetle
• Standard Equipment- Radial Tires, Power
Front Disc Brakes, and the Items You Would Expect
On APremium Quality Car
• Guarantee- "V. W. Security Blanket"

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
Ga IIi polis

SEDAN

• Front Engine (75 H.P.)

Se~ice Is Building Our Business.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1971 LINCOLN MARK 111- -$4995

For Rent

2 Dr., 4 Dr. and Station Wagon

WITH STOCK BEDS
NOW IN STOCK

1639 Eastern Ave.

4~ DOOR

Auto . tr ans , tinted glass, radio. power steering, power brake s. two -tone
pa int, window mo ldings, floor mat s, custom sea l belts. front &amp; rear
bumper quards, decor. aroup, 8.78x 15 Fiberglass white-wall t ires, remote
control m1rror, window sill moldings, custom air conditioning. re ar floor
mal s, bttmper strip s -- plus all standard equ ipment.

'THE DASHER'

2 - 1974 ONE TON TRUCKS

Factory air, vinyl top. This is
one sharp car.

a new Buick, Pontiac

CATAL INA

'

Factory air, local one owner.
Sharp!

best time lor you torbuv

1974 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR SEDAN

·--·
10 Dusters In Stock

top,

69 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Dr. HT

the comer February is the

To A Gallon Of Gasoline In A
1974 Plymouth Duster

.

See Ceward Calvert, Pat

4 Dr . H.T., air, P.S. , P.B. , A.T.

1968 FORD PICKUP

20 +Miles

With Spring just around

or Opel!

WE SEll &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS &amp; TRUCKS.

1971 FORD LTD _ _ _ _$1695

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO
4 Dr ., power steering. One local

$1595

70 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr.

"we MID averv simole busm~

4 cyl. One owner ,

Sta. Wagon. Air cond . One local owner.

We Guarantee

$2695
~--------~~---------~·----

.

1971 PINTO 2 DR. _ __ $1595

1970 FORD TORINO 4 DR.

This Week Only

A Steal At

~1495

"V.W. INTRODUCES A NEW CAR
THArS PERFECT FOR IrS TIME"

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S lARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

nice car .

White with white vinyl
factory air, one owner .

I

H . T . Cpe., std . V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power
steering, factor y air, bucket sea ts. A sharp clean car tha\
would please you. Dark green f inish. radio .

1965 OiEVROLET '-h TON ........ :.,$595

l

72 Mercury Cougar XR7 2 Dr. HT

Yours For Only

1969 OiEVELLE............... ...... $1645

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
· Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh .

Low mileage, real
Priced to sell.

Long wheel base, wide side,
auto., P.S., P. B., air.

4-door , 6 cy linder automatic transm ission, good tires,
clea n inter ior. beige fi ni sh . radio &amp; heater , real economy
&amp; a popular model .

Open EvPs. Til 6-Ti l 5 P.M. Sat.

1971 Dodge PeW 2 Dr. HT

1972 GMC 1f2 Ton

1967 OiEVELLE ..................... '995

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

GMAC Financing Available

USED CARS

~-----_.----------~----

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER ......... J2895
4-w heel drive, V-8, l ock ing front hubs, automa ti c Trans mi ssion, power steering &amp; brakes , radio , good tires,
vehicle o f many uses , custom tr im, white top over bl ue. A
sharp 1-owner trade.

V' V'

rI

This car has everything that
Pontiac sells on it. Sold last year
for $7400. Only 9,300 miles.
Sale Price

340 V -8 engine, automat ic trans ., power st eer ing , rad io,
li ke new w -w t i res. blk. v iny l interior . red fin ish .

YOUR CHOICE FOR

992 ·5342

1973 Pontiac G.P.

1972 DODGE DEMON .............. $2295

'72 Cadillacs

2

ON SMITH-NELSON

Custom Hatchback Cpe.• dark green fini sh, like new
white-wall t ire s, ful l wheel covers. protective side mldg s..
P.B .• rad io. 6 cy l . eng ine, sta nd . trans. A ver y popular
model &amp; pr iced to go.

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

GURCL
(}H

Now arran,e the circled letters
to form the surprise

:=~====::::::=~:::=--~s~u~n~e':st~ed by the above cartoon.
...,.-.:.::l'ril ::.:llie=.,SU=
RPillS(
= AJGWIII
= Illlt
=-___J'

to s h0\'-1' a

L.l

for h earts. · Thi s
bid leaves South With a p rob·
lem. He can't 3how lhe spa de
arr&gt; 1.\!ithout goi ng past game

max1mum

....

...

answer, as

J""'"'''' FAUNA
l ru ••rot a\~

\

I \n"• " r'

BOUND

r x xr r J

RARELY

(Amwe" Motld•1l
CAVIAR

.

Tht· bo.t:er only fighi iiiiiiC ala: lime- .A ROUND

'

�..• .

'

-'

'f

I

''"

'

.. ~- . .

..·.

..

•

..........

. .,· .

.,..,.,", "• ""·

-~

·~

. . ..

'"

. ., ·-

.

,

.

.. . .

. - ..

·~

I
'

!6 '-- Th S\lllday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 17,1974

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
'

500 E. MAIN

·-

GALLI POLls·
CHRYSLER_PLYMOUTH

PH. 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

OPERATION SAVINGS
1973 OiEV. NOVA ................... $2695

'73 Cadillacs

2

YOUR CHOICE
FOR
I

$5900

1972 OiEVROLET BELAIR .......... '2495
4-door . local 1-owner ca r with le ss than 15.000 miles, beige
fini sh black viny l top , good white wall tires. st andard V-6
engine, automa ti c. power st eer ing &amp; brak es. rad io,
spotless interior . Want a sharpie a t t h e right price ..
Slop in!

$4900
All 4 sold and serviced by us

'71 Cadillac
$4100

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill ·...... $1295

All 5 have factory air conditioning and were
s"lrl ;md serviced by us.
'
'

4 Dr . Sed., blue fini sh, auto., P.S ., P . B., 8 cy l ., radio. A

KARR &amp;VANZANDT

ni ce family ca.r at the righ t pric e.

Pomeroy

" You' ll Like Our Qual i ty Way of Doing Business'

Body little rough . Good rubber . Low mil eage.

FABULOUS
FEBRUARY VALUES
Our Loss • • Your Gain

~

.

992-2126

$2295
owner. Auto .

BD R M . hom e, air con d!fioning, completely fur nished , I mile from city
limits . Ph. 446 -4209.
37 - 10

MODERN offi ce or commercia l
building for rent. 4,000 square

Auto. trans .

feet . Excellent locaflan . For

mor e informatio n ca ll Th e
W ise man Agency. Phone -446 -

See Fred Blaettnar, Danny. Thompson,
or Keith Goble

3644 .
21 -tf

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
&amp; Sales

Middleport Ohio
For Rent
ON RT. 5138, 3 brm, all elec t ric
home. wall to wall carpet.
$ 11 5 per month , deposit
required . Ph . ~46-0761.
38 -3
'SLEE PING ROOM wi t h k itchen
privileges . Ph . 446-9244 .

Contact New1 Jones
Rodney-Cora Rd.
Rodney, Ohio
Ph. 245-9374-245-5021
We rent mobile home lots,
not iu5t a place to park your
home. We have more to offer
than any mobile community
in Southeastern Ohio.

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

You Must See These New Arrivals

For Sale

Auction

306 -tf

$1095

1968 PLYMOUTH 4 DR. SEDAN- $395

94 -tf

MOBILE HOMES

j

''

UPPER RIVER RD. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-9800

For Sale

140
141
14 2
143

Evergreen tree
Crony {co lloQ)
Chinese mile
Note ol scale

144 Bactef lolog 1sl' s
wtre
145 By w ay ol
1,47 Horses
149 Transfix
150 Babylonian hero
152 Dormouse
154 Got up
156 By onesett
158 Re .. otut ionar y
159 Satiates
160 Bisl1 op·s
headdress
161 Fasn ions
DOWN
1 Hurry
2 More competen!'
3 Beam
4 Mountatin latbbr.)
5 Place
6 Figure ot speech
7 Go
8 Poetic word
9 Preposition
tO Conducled
I 1 Pertai ning to ihe
cheek
12 Tile sweetsop
13 Spanish plural
art1cle
14 Prtnlersmeasure
15 Occupying a
chair
16 Pack away
17 lilt with le .. er
18 Three-toed slotl1
19 Rejec l
20 App orti ons
27 Employ
29 Wing l ike

..b,.e__,..;;;;...,.;.;;;.3,.,1..,.c"_'

DELIVE~ED

AND SET UP

J

!,

h . ...,.

" """"~

"'

~

" '""'""'

[!]

fj

'9295
~
,... ,.
" "'""'"

'''""··""·
"'

.,_ t+• ..........
"
\ D"
!
·-" ..... ... 86 (l
'
lll -lh 14 3 PFD 30 31EDROOII-PRIYATE FROIIT OIIIETTE-W/3RO DOOR
TI'

.I

"""'' .......

~

DELIVERED AND SET Up

•8995

Beautifu l describes these_ all new total -electric 3 bedroom homes. Fully carpeted all deluxe
features and deluxe furn1ture, 7112' ceilings, smoke detector system , egress wind~ws, and 30
ga I. wate r heaters. U L approved. Truly beautiful, truly priced to please.

ATTENTIO I&gt;I

VETERANS

G I Loans availab le, no
down payment with approve d c red it.

r

Up to 12 Year Financing-:We Service What We Sell.

Goble Mobile Homes
586 Locust S.t .
992-.7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon. thru Sat.
Open. D•lly 8 to 6, (Closed Sundays). Open Anytime by
. Aooomtmenl. Contact Dan ThompsoQ or Tom LavPnder .

36
37
39
40

Pari ol lireplace
Young salmon
Kill
EI(JJi res
4 1 Apolhecary·s
weight
42 Taci ile org an of
animal
43 Warbled
44 Re jecl
46 For examp le
labbr.J
48 Rom an road
49 Part ol aye
50 Cnapeaus
51 Sharp en
52 AI that place
53 Spirited horse S
55 Tore
56 Projec ling toolh
57 Wideawake
58 Martinique
volcano
6 1 Vedic lire god
63 Cauda l
app endage
64 Sem i-precious
slone
68 St rollers
70 Quieled
7 1 Vital org ans
73 Chord s ol three
tones
74 Pedal d1g1IS
75 Rants
77 Sedate
78 Procedure
80 Mental image
8 1 Man·s nickname
83 Man·s n1ckname
84 lmitBI Or
87 Req uire
89 Represe ntalives
90 Souih American
Ind ian
91 Macaw
92 Uncou\11 persons

CB-360-CB-360G. Meet two brand-new bikes
from Honda - the CB-360 and the front disc
brake model CB-360G. Identical except tor
color options and the "G's" hydraulically
actua ted front disc brake. the CB-J60's are
new road bikes that once again underscore
Honda's engineering leadership in the world of
motor cycling.

93 Unaspirated
95 Suffix : fol lowers

ol

96 River bank
97 Long lor
99 Separate
10 1 In the direction

ol
Fall short
Repair
Unusual
Norse god
112 Paper measure
113 Falsehoods
115 Period of lime
116 Merganser
118 Metal lastner
119 Tree trunk
121 Fatty
123 Symbol lor silver
125 Repulses
126 City in
Switzerland
127 More vapid
129 More secure
130 Piece of
dinnerware ,
131 Pronoun
132 Disturbances
134 In music, t1 igh
136 Place in line
137 Eals
139 Toll
140 Mass of fl oating
ice
144 Number
145 Sk ll ~
146 School ot w11ales
14 7 Temporary bed
148 Everybody's
uncle
149 Seed container
15 1 Hebrew month
153 Babylonian deity
155 A state (abbr.)
157 Behold1

Upper Rt. 7

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

'

BUICKS:

eELECTRA 225 eRIVIERA eLeSABRE eREGAL
eCENTURY eAPOLLO eOPEL
eGRAN PRIX eLeMANS eVENTURA

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

e1 SPORT

eCAPRI •DATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

e12 DARTS

L&amp; M Phone 592-4491

•

+ A8 7

Gallipolis

Eastern Ave .

For Sale
FARM EQUIPMENT
PRE FE~ to se l l AS A GROUP
the following equipmen t , in
very good condition :
I - 1966 B.414 Int . tractor . w ide
f rt ., three p-1. hitc.h. 8 speed,
d isc: brakes. twin 14", Int . mtd
plows , 3 'pt. hitch .

For Sale
we
HAVE
an
of
vour
upholstery needs . Burlap ,
denim , cambr ic , foam glue,
tacking
str i p .
• l pr,ers ,
S'pr ngs and clips , c.hlpboard ,
bullon twine , sewing th rea d ,
legs.
upholstery
books ,
d,ac-ron , webbing , spring
twine, tacks , w elt cord
cotton , swivel bases , and
foam , foam , foam . ·Pomeroy
Recoyery, 622 E . Main Street ,
,omeroy, Ohio. phone 992 -

DRAG -type D isc
WOOD S - Cadet mt' d brush hog 3 pt . hitch
LARGE triple -Hopper gra in ·
755~.
dr i ll , r ubber mt'd.
2~ - 26
1NT . Rubber m t 'd side de~ivery =--=---=----==-;:--.l._ __ _
Rake, ground dr iven .
ALL
TYPES of
bUilding
1NT. All steeL rubber t ired
material~ . btpck, brick, sewer
wago'n w-tactory solid ton'bue
pipH , wmdows. lintels, etc
and grove . Hay rack 1~ ' x 8' .
Cl1ude Winters, R ro Grande ·
Ph . 381-1.,8
0 . Phone 245 -5121 after 5.
39 -6
.
123 -'

TIIUCKS, INC ,
133 Pine St •

NOI.l ll:IOS

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

..

--- --.---------

- =----..- .- - - - - - - - -

Cor~in

&amp;Snyder
Furniture

I
NEW : ~erra ana ~emco mat tress and boy spri ngs . Large
selection 111 stock fi r m
mattresses starting at $39 .00 .
955 Secon~ Avenue
446·1171
176 -ff

CONSERVE FUEL
U SE your fireplace for extra
heat . We have good West
VIrgin ia chunk and egg coal.
Hig h in BTU. !ow ash, also
LOCUST fence posts Ca l l after
stoke r
an d
Oh io
lump .
Si)( 246 -5690.
Gall ipolis Block and Coal co .
39 -6
Ph . ~46 - 27 8 3
-,..- -----------36-11

blood
39 -3

39 -tf
--r-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

·.

., 10 9

Q tO 54
"' Q872
SOU TH

.r../94

+

+.196"

• A R54

¥

1

AQ732

+K 2

"'K 6
Norlh -South vulncn1 ble
W c~ t

North
l 'iJ ~'j

Pass
Pa ss

JN .T
4+

5.
54

Pass

East

South

1-'il SS

41!•

l'&lt;ts.-.

I

: ~~; ;.:._j

Pass

9774

14 ·1f

THE'PRlfVE N carp et cleaner.
Blue Lustre is easv on rne
budget. Restores forgorten
colors . Renl electric sham pooer Sl. G . C. Murphy .
39 -6

so he h idS l our· cluh s. f\l rot'l h

Corb.ln ·&amp; Snyder

COMPLE:TE b edroom Sui te
with
mattress and box
springs , G .E ref r igerator, se t
of table lamps , dou bl e dre sser
with mo rror , 2 automat ic
dr iers .
SPECIAL
Close ou t ot l ino l eum rugs and
r oom si ze c. arpe ts.
955 Second Av en ue
446 -1171
,

If you decide lo us.' th e
J ac oby tWo notrump it i!:i im portant t o bear in m i nd the
re stri ctions we ha ve fo und
necessary i n usin g it.
The. !;irst is thai you only
u se 1t m r e spon se t o a fir st or
~cond hand major-suit o pen·

9~ 8

Plen Y of fre e parking 25 tf
---------~- - - -

1965 CHEVY lmP.~ Ia, black 2
door hardtop , wtfh extras . Ph .
446 -0922 .
39 -6

MI XE D hay , phone 388 -9991 or
367 -7&lt;181.

J9.1f
APACHE'S GOT IT ALL
4 NEW l uxur-y solid state
mode l s, plus 4 new tent
c ampers . Pri ced f ro m 5825 to
S2.195. Big t rade now . Am ·
sba r y Apache Trai ler Sales ,
63 1.Fourth Avenu e, Gallipolis ,
Oh 10.
39 -ff

u:en i~ ~~&amp;NUl
!o\: EW!:i i' ,\ PI::H 1-:N T t.:lll'HI SE

T he

bi dd in~

t\~Sili 1

16

h.:..s hecn

W es t

North

East

Pa ss

I+

!'as.&lt;.;

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

A .K .C. Registered A ustra l ian
Terr i er pup . $75. Ph . 446-4314 ,
39 -3
·1

What do you do nuw'!
,\-Bid one heart. You wan t to
tr)' to g:el to a major · suit con-

197 1 DATS UN , 510 Sedan , -146 1502.
39 -6

.f97JCHAiiPl0N-Mob~-Home.

12xil5 3 bdrm . Ph 367 -7106 .
39-6

tract.

JJlYMrniblE®lk.J kt-~1./ .-J,......
Unscramble th ese four Jumbles,
on e .letter to each square. to
rorm four ordinary words .

mg,
T he reason yo u don ' t use it

KEI'OD

You put the three notrumo
bid to work here. Toda v··,
hand wa s ma\Je up to illust r·
ate th is bid at tls best. W e
ca n ' t claim that it eve r

II

[J

rEsHECI

J

I

b
D

worked that well in actual
.
.
.
practic e. but 1t m1ght.
North 's h and b ecomes
ve r y, very good when Sou th
o p ens n n e h eart. H e bid s

three not rum p

BL UE Lustre not only rids
carpets of soil bu? lea ves pile
soft and lofty . Rent el ectric
sham pooe r
Sl
Cen tral
Supply .
39 -6

Sr, ulh 's fiv e diamO nds.
1\'orth m1gh l well just pump
to six hear ts. but we ha ve
made t hi s hand up a nd No rth
d eci des to show his :;cC'ond
round spade co ntml and suggest a gra nd s la m. Soulh
obliges and there they are .
Bea utiful bidd ing even if we
d1d make it up.

•AK76.AK76+ 3 2.Kl0 3

By Oswald &amp; James .Jacoby

a ft er p ass ing is that there is a
TYPEWR I TE R S and add ing
use fo r two notru mp by
good
mach ines ; new , used and B&amp;S Mobile Homes
a
passed
hand. It shows a bal·
re built . Simmons Printing
anced hand with II good
and Office Supply . .446 -1397 . 1953 Peerless
20 -tf
h1gh·card points or may be
Westbrook
----------------'--- 1971
Shultz - l2x60 2 bdrm .
even 12.
FILE
CABINETS,
F ili ng 1967
1965 10x50 Nationa l 2 bdrm
What do yo u do when you
supplies in stock . Sim mons
8&amp; S Mboile Hom e Sales
Printi ng and Office Supply
are
a passed hand and wa nt
Pt. Pleasant
446 -1397.
36-tf to give your pa r t ne r a forcing
20 -tf - - - - - - - - - - - - - raise'~

or·· Frldov

44~

You , South. hold:

A K.C

T ri -State Mobile
Home Sales
Ph. 446·7572
12x50 1966 Libe r ty
12x50 1963 Lakewood
12x52 1970 Flee twood
8x35 1957 Marlette
10x54 1959 Elcar
10x50 1965 St.!!lr All El ec tr ic
8)(4 5 195-l Vagabon d
10x45 1960 M agnolia
8x 27 1953 Trotwood
1958 Style Ma'ster
1955 El car
1955 Wes twOod
1955 Starline
19~2 W i ndsor lOx 55 3 bdrm.

Da i l y . Ph

Opt'ning le;ul- •.J

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

1415 Eastern Ave .
USED FURNITURE
BABY beds . stoves , electric and
gas, refrigerators. cabinets
chairs , upr i ght
freezer '
bedroom su_ites , beds . 7 pc :
and 5 p c . dtnett e se ts, living
room suites. and lots ot small
Items .
27 -If

l or 4 bedroom on vo ur lot .
Clark Ridg e H om es . 1 lo 5

r ather

• K Q7 :1

¥ .!

Pa s."
l'ass
Pass

(

'2595
WOOD MOTOR SALES
'.

1971 OAKBROOK mobi l e home,
12w.60, 2 bdrm . Good con dition , st ep s, porch and underpinning in c luded . $300
down . and
take
over
payments. Ph. 44lS -2589.
39·6

·39 -J

---- ---· ------ ----

N orth 's f 1vc cl ub bid comes
na l ur &lt;.Jl l v a s d oes

EAST

. J 10U6

~~------------------~
For Sale
For Sale
For Sale
rl1ne
_e gi .ster
exce
Ph ed.
. 446 -404
5. lten t

S.IOC UUWN

1909 .

bids four spades.

"' A I0 5 3
WEST

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Te r r i er ,

2 H OLSTE IN H eifers to freshen
soon . Cal l after 6 p .m . 446-

h td s four diamond s ctu it e
) na tu ra lly and now So uth is
w illing to go pas t game. He

, KR£ ;,4

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
SC OTT I SH

I

16

• 2

EVERETT SAUNDERS - TOM NORRIS - DON HARDEN

,
·
a
rson
s
P

GOOD CLE A N LU MP and
stok er coal. Ca rl Winte r s, Rio
Gra n de . Phon e 245 -5 115.
.
8 tf

WIN AT BRIDGE

~UIITH (I)J

8200 VAN
B 200 SPORTSMAN
B 300 SPORTSMAN
CB 3QO KARY VAN

50 STATE ST.

For Sale

Jacoby 2NT has its limits

e2 D 200 PICKUPS
e1 0 200 CLUB CAB PICKUP
e1 D 600 CAB &amp; CHASSIS

e8 CORONETS

new w·s-w tires, low mileage. Extra Nice!

CARROLL NORRIS

e2 D 100 PICKUPS
.S D 100 CLUB CAB PICKUPS

e4 CHARGERS

DATSON Phone 592-4463

'

CO PP ER _T O N E rang e and
f r o sl fre e refrigerafor for
sa l e Exce ll en t con diti on .
S200 . Ph . 446 -74411 .
37 -5
1967 VA LI ANT , 6 c y l i nd er
automatic. 19 1!.., miles p er
gal lo n . Ph . d46 · 1615, a ft er 5.
446 · 12 44 .
37 If

•1
e1
e1
e1

e3 COLTS

eMERCURY MONTEGO •COMET

For Sale

For Sale

NEW CARS &amp;TRUCKS IN STOCK!

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL eMARK IV

P. brakes ; gulf green, metallic finish with
matching vinyl roof &amp; interior. Fac. air cond .,

~

WHERE SERVICE IS A TRADITION,
ST A

in the Area.
All priced to Sell
and Ready to Go. . .
SEE ONE SOON!

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 12QO E. STATE ST.

2 Dr . hardtop, radio, auto. trans ., P. steering,

.I

'

MODELS IN STOCK

PONTIAC$: eGRANVILLE eBONNEVILLE eCATALINA .

in Southeastern Ohio.
We also have over
30 of the sharpest used cars

72 CHEVROLET IMPALA

SOMMERS G ,M.C,

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

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

e5 MONACOS

1971 J/4 T. Ford PU
1967 112 Ton GMC pickup
· 1968 'h ton GMC pickup
19613 •t:z T-on Chevy P i cku~
1966 '12 T . GMC
1969 1/:z ton GMC Pickup ·
.1972 Y:z ton Ford Pickup
1963 Ph T . -GMC
1971 G-MC Suburban
NEW tires Winter tread : Sizes
7.75xl4, a:2sxu , 8.55x l4 , Sl8
ea ch . Cash and carry while
supply lAsts .

254-lf

- We hav e the largest selection of new Buicks and Pontiacs ever offered
in this area!
- By trading now you can have the best selection and lowest price!

The Nicest Selection of
New Cars &amp; Trucks

SMITH HONDA .SALES

105
106
107
111

velvets, nylons and vinyls':'·' 17 EIGHT week old pigs , 3 brip
Your choice of colors and
sow hogs . Ph . 88 -8531 or 388 ·
styles while they last. Some
8180.
38 -3
$69.95 , others 579.95, cash and
carry, Pomeroy Recovery, - - - - - - - - - -- - - - 622 E . Main Street, Pomeroy .
SEVER·AL old antiques. ,Old
Ohio, 992 -7554 .
large iron kettle , one good
wagon tongue , wood for
wagon or tractor . Also other
New GMC
small antiques. Very old . See
Truck Headquarters
Charles Rice, Gallipolis , Ohio
1tMI\ 1;., ton GMC PiCkUP
R . R . 1. , 45631.
1963 1/:z T . GMC
38 -3
196-s 1h T . GMC Pickup
1969 l!:z T . GMC PU
1970 FORD FALCON, 6 cyl.
1969 Chevrolet 'l:z ton p ickup
automatic., Production Credi t
1967 1/:z ton Chev .
co. Car . Ph . 4.46-3391 .
• 1969 'l:z T . Ford PU
39-3
19fl9 Ondae Station Wagon
------ --~-------197 3 VOLKSWAGEN , $2.495 , sun
1.967 lf2 ton Chevy pickup
roof . Call after 4: 30p.m . 245·
1971 V:z T . Ford Pi ck up'
9390 .
____________ !/._
313 -6
1968 V:z T . GMC PickuD
1969 112 T . GMC PU
1968 l!:z T . GMC PU
1967 lf2 T . GMC PU
1967 1/:z T. GMC PU
1969 'l:z Ton GMC PU

44j ~ 1532

YOUR TRADE-IN WILL NEVER BE WORTH MORE!

w
c ( ' LI

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1974

STARCRAFT
POLLY 'S AUC T ION HOUSE ,
72 Wortll less
Rt . 7, Addison , Ohio, every WINTER sale on new an~ used
ACROSS
traller s and folddowns . we
Thursday at 7 p m Let us sel l
leaving
sell service and quality .
it for you. Call M iddleport ,
1 Damages
74 S1ng ing vo 1ce
Camp
Conley
Star
c
raft
Sales,
992 -3509 after 5 p.m . or stop at
76 Tear
Rt . 62 north of Pt . P leasant, 6 Ree l
Auction House.
11 Men
77 Antlemd animal
behind
Red
Carpet
Inn
.
Ph
.
38 -tf
675 -5384 .
16 Muscular
78 Frencn priest
31 -ff
79 Publici.tl ion
coniracti on
21 Lessen
62 Edible seed
FOR a good investment in 22 Girrs name
84 Winged
diamonds see Max Tawney, 23 Make amen ds
65 Roman date
422 Second .
24 Worihless tt1ir14;1
86 Ma!Ured
16-tf
(slang)
88 Tran Sac tion
1972 HONDA , C. B . IUO. SJOG,
89 Tnree -banded
good condition . 1965 Pont iac SEE our comp lete l ine of Sony 25 Cratty
Convertible , Bonnev il le, SJSO,
armadillo
Radio and co lor T .V . Tawney 26 Swollen part
run s good .. Ph . 446 ·0781.
2S Small \lalleys
90 Walk ing slicks
Jewel er s, 422 Second .
16-tf 30 Sai lor's call
92' Worsled yarn
311-3 · - - - - - -- -- - - -·
32 Guido's tow note
94 ~c t i ve l y
98 Region
1968 BUICK Wildcat. low 60x1 2 HOLLY Park. 1 ac re OT 33 Symbol for
land. city· water , and a ll
tellurium
99 Strokes
mi leage. Ph . 4~6 - 1187 .
underground ut ilities. Ph . 388- 34 Tllu s
100 Encounle red
38-3
9976 or 388 -8597 .
35 Spanish plural
102 Hinder
36-6
article
103 Bisnopric
·IF YOU are build ing Cl new
104 Ethiopian l!lle
home or remodeling , see us , VACUUM Cleaners. brand new 36 Cook sl ow ly
We are builders . D istributor
105 Novelti es
tank type models, with 5 37 Prelix : before
for Hotpolnt Appliances,
106 Landed esta te
attachments . Only S24 .20 cash 38 Biller vetcl1
All ison Electric .
or terms available . New 40 Erased (printing)
10a Lair
154-tf
upright models $29.90 cash or 42 Distant
109 A state \abbrl
terms available. Trade -ins 43 Pour torth
110 Negal i\le prefix
accepred. Phone Pt . Pleasant 44 Large !rucks
AKC L HA SA Apso puppies ,
11 1 Paddle s
675-2225.
Car i n T errier puppies, K&amp; P
45 Hawa iian wrealh
11 2 Revival
35-6
Kennels, 388 -8274.
47
Weirder
11 4 Pigpen
11 -tf
1t6 Wei gll t ol lndia
1973 Z IG -ZAG Sew ing M achin es 49 Deposited
left In layaway . All built -In to 50 Pronoun
1t7 Thiel
3,000 BALES mixed hay for
buttonhole , do stretch sew ing 51 Ptatl orms
119 Twist
sale . Phone 388 ·9991 or 367 and fancy stitching . Pay tu st 54 Trop ical frui l
120 Solo
748 1.
$48 . 75
cash
or
t er ms 55 Lease
17 -t f
122
Sailors
available. Trade -Ins a c 124 Be ill
c epted. Phone Pt . Pleasant , 56 Peny ru ler
59 Old pronoun
125 Highway
LIMESTONE for driveways.
675 -2225 .
Carl Winters. Ph . 2~5 - 5115.
35 ,6 60 Music: as written
126 ·Propagates
10 -lf
62 Li quefying
128 Mature
129 Twirl
9 ACRES level ground on Roush 64 Preposilion
13 1 Till er
AKC Registered Si lver Toy
Lane at Cheshire, Phone 367 · 65 French arl icle
Poodle puppies . Al l male. 675 7242 .
66 Note of scale
132 Communis!
1087.
38 -3 67 urge on
133 Hindu guitar
35 -6
69 Harvests
135 Small lump
TAKEFORBALANCEOUE
70 Resorts
138 Everyone
stereo with AM -FM radio ,
73 CHEVY pickup . $2,600 . 8,600 New
~ speed re cord player plus 9
,;_N,o~"::.•;g~od::d~eiss:0,~'~39~M e l;,al_lu
m i le s. 446-4101 .
track tape deck . Th is was left
0
35 ·6
in our Christmas layaway .
Balance due S139 .60 or S7 .DO
LUMP Coa l. Jaym ar coa l Co.,
per
month .
Sommers
Meigs and Gallia line, St . Rt. 7
Discount City, 2 miles nor at Cheshire , 7 a.m . to 6:30
thwest of Wellston on State
p. m . 5 day s a week. 992 -5693 .
Rt. 327 . Open 9 :00 to S: 30 p . m .
272-11
Ph . 380948 .

(We Received Them Before The Price Increase)

DON WATTS V.W., INC.

Open Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Sat. 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
On Saturday .

--------------38-5
NEW swivel rocker s in prints, - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -

388 - !0 &gt;14 3 CK Z F&amp;R Zl 31EOROOM-CEirTERKITCHU-ZFRDIIT IAUR IEDRD..... IATHlo

i

Good things happen on a HOI Ida.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

71

!BY SKYLINE)

HONDA

MOST CARS IN STOCK HAVE THE LOWER PRICE

THE NEW LOOK-NOW ON DJSPLA Y

@e

992-2174

OUR WORD IS
OUR BOND

POMEROY

Open Eves Till 8

SLEEPIN G ROOMS . weekly
rates. Park Cent ral Hot el.

Long body . Looks and runs good.

Ga ll ia

446-3273

or Bill Nelson

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

What We Sell

For Rent

3

r oo m s,

$1495

~-----~------------~-------------·--------~
We Built Our Business on Service and Now

'1695

tran s.• 302 V-8.

SL EEPING
Hote l.

Sale Price

REMEMBER
We Service

"Your Chevy Dealer"

2 Dr. H. T. Very low mileage. Like new cond ition.
Le ss than 112 price .

COAC HMAN T rave l Trai ler,
Motor Homes , 5th Wh ee l,
Tr uck Campers , Apple City
A ut o Sa les, Rt . 35 N . Jac kson.
Ohio . Phone 286 -5700.
110-tf

For Only

• Front Wheel Drive
• Quality-The Best
• Economy-Even Better Than The Beetle
• Standard Equipment- Radial Tires, Power
Front Disc Brakes, and the Items You Would Expect
On APremium Quality Car
• Guarantee- "V. W. Security Blanket"

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
Ga IIi polis

SEDAN

• Front Engine (75 H.P.)

Se~ice Is Building Our Business.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1971 LINCOLN MARK 111- -$4995

For Rent

2 Dr., 4 Dr. and Station Wagon

WITH STOCK BEDS
NOW IN STOCK

1639 Eastern Ave.

4~ DOOR

Auto . tr ans , tinted glass, radio. power steering, power brake s. two -tone
pa int, window mo ldings, floor mat s, custom sea l belts. front &amp; rear
bumper quards, decor. aroup, 8.78x 15 Fiberglass white-wall t ires, remote
control m1rror, window sill moldings, custom air conditioning. re ar floor
mal s, bttmper strip s -- plus all standard equ ipment.

'THE DASHER'

2 - 1974 ONE TON TRUCKS

Factory air, vinyl top. This is
one sharp car.

a new Buick, Pontiac

CATAL INA

'

Factory air, local one owner.
Sharp!

best time lor you torbuv

1974 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR SEDAN

·--·
10 Dusters In Stock

top,

69 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Dr. HT

the comer February is the

To A Gallon Of Gasoline In A
1974 Plymouth Duster

.

See Ceward Calvert, Pat

4 Dr . H.T., air, P.S. , P.B. , A.T.

1968 FORD PICKUP

20 +Miles

With Spring just around

or Opel!

WE SEll &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS &amp; TRUCKS.

1971 FORD LTD _ _ _ _$1695

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO
4 Dr ., power steering. One local

$1595

70 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr.

"we MID averv simole busm~

4 cyl. One owner ,

Sta. Wagon. Air cond . One local owner.

We Guarantee

$2695
~--------~~---------~·----

.

1971 PINTO 2 DR. _ __ $1595

1970 FORD TORINO 4 DR.

This Week Only

A Steal At

~1495

"V.W. INTRODUCES A NEW CAR
THArS PERFECT FOR IrS TIME"

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S lARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

nice car .

White with white vinyl
factory air, one owner .

I

H . T . Cpe., std . V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power
steering, factor y air, bucket sea ts. A sharp clean car tha\
would please you. Dark green f inish. radio .

1965 OiEVROLET '-h TON ........ :.,$595

l

72 Mercury Cougar XR7 2 Dr. HT

Yours For Only

1969 OiEVELLE............... ...... $1645

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris
· Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh .

Low mileage, real
Priced to sell.

Long wheel base, wide side,
auto., P.S., P. B., air.

4-door , 6 cy linder automatic transm ission, good tires,
clea n inter ior. beige fi ni sh . radio &amp; heater , real economy
&amp; a popular model .

Open EvPs. Til 6-Ti l 5 P.M. Sat.

1971 Dodge PeW 2 Dr. HT

1972 GMC 1f2 Ton

1967 OiEVELLE ..................... '995

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

GMAC Financing Available

USED CARS

~-----_.----------~----

1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER ......... J2895
4-w heel drive, V-8, l ock ing front hubs, automa ti c Trans mi ssion, power steering &amp; brakes , radio , good tires,
vehicle o f many uses , custom tr im, white top over bl ue. A
sharp 1-owner trade.

V' V'

rI

This car has everything that
Pontiac sells on it. Sold last year
for $7400. Only 9,300 miles.
Sale Price

340 V -8 engine, automat ic trans ., power st eer ing , rad io,
li ke new w -w t i res. blk. v iny l interior . red fin ish .

YOUR CHOICE FOR

992 ·5342

1973 Pontiac G.P.

1972 DODGE DEMON .............. $2295

'72 Cadillacs

2

ON SMITH-NELSON

Custom Hatchback Cpe.• dark green fini sh, like new
white-wall t ire s, ful l wheel covers. protective side mldg s..
P.B .• rad io. 6 cy l . eng ine, sta nd . trans. A ver y popular
model &amp; pr iced to go.

DOC
SMITH
SAYS

GURCL
(}H

Now arran,e the circled letters
to form the surprise

:=~====::::::=~:::=--~s~u~n~e':st~ed by the above cartoon.
...,.-.:.::l'ril ::.:llie=.,SU=
RPillS(
= AJGWIII
= Illlt
=-___J'

to s h0\'-1' a

L.l

for h earts. · Thi s
bid leaves South With a p rob·
lem. He can't 3how lhe spa de
arr&gt; 1.\!ithout goi ng past game

max1mum

....

...

answer, as

J""'"'''' FAUNA
l ru ••rot a\~

\

I \n"• " r'

BOUND

r x xr r J

RARELY

(Amwe" Motld•1l
CAVIAR

.

Tht· bo.t:er only fighi iiiiiiC ala: lime- .A ROUND

'

�'

'
;

.,,,
•

u

·"•

I

GSI Min.i
GALLIPOLIS - .'\ "''".
program at the Go llipoli s Sinh'
Institute has been inittul l'd
whi £' 11 involves th e la t l· s t
concepts for the tJ·rcJtnwrlt a nd
care
of t he SC'\'t'r t·l) .
profound ly retarded Jl'sid l'lll
with multiple ha ndicaps .
This is a co-oprratiYe df11rt
bet\vee n the Gnllip olis St;tl l'
Institu te, Nisong:rr Cent r r, :1
unh~ ersity affiliaterl fa c ilit~ ,of
the OhiO Sla te Unh· e r~i t .v .· Tl 1t&gt;
Departmpnt
of
Me n!rd
Relardation, State of Ohi o. Hll d
the United Cerebral Pab~
Association. The program h;J:been entitled "Mini-1\·arn"

I

111,· 11

II

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,

zn Ohio

•

1' ·'

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I' • ·

t '\l)l.d\\111 •I

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Jn.-d 1tute

.. , ... •,•It · lrJJ fulur (' Mllll 1 ,, .

1 ,

and tomrn unity based tea ms
Within the Stale or Ohio.

, H lf'l

ir " -(' '' 111 . l iS

Th ere 1~ CJ potenti al for the
prese nt two s t te~ to become a
Umted
Cereb ral
Pal sy
Association reg 1onal training
center .

Sll [ U l t • Tt ' i l'

\'!'I' J.!.H, I •I
111l'fl';l 'i t

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H11 lllgarrwr on planning staff

It•\ t' 1" l I
prr'( 'llt Hlh

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MIDDLEPORT - The big
push is on to put the pm~ n~ t- nr)
ambulance fund drive 11f tlll'
Middlepor t Fire Departm ent
"over the top" thts week "
Already, the toea! of the
drive , given a big send off by
the depa rtment whi ch h&lt;I d
$3,000 on hand for a starter. has
reached 113 ,000 wit~ the i!C :I
set for 115 ,000.
Not on ly hundred s of
residents of this ar:ea servrd by
the sq uad h:we gi\'£' 11
generously to the fund but
people from other parts of
Meigs County, and 1n ot11er
localities, have sent in contributions to make the driv e
one of the most successful e\·cr
conducted by the departm ent.
The f1rst contribu lion to the
drive was received Jan . 2~ .
Fire dep artment offieial s
expect to reach the goal before
Feb. 24 because if the current
rate of contributions continue.
it'll be a shoo-in to wrap up lite
drive in one month or less.
Contributors may leave their
donations at the depar tment's
headquarters in Middleport or

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ATHENS - A large crowd of
Democrats heard district wide
candidates at the February
meeting of the lOth District
Democratic Action Club in
Athens last week.
Congressional Candidate H.
Kent Bumpass announced his
plans for a campaign based on
issues and his opponent 's
record, not using personal
attacks. He vowed intelligent,
sincere, and honest service to
the people of southeast Ohio.
Also
addressing
the
Democratic group was Beverly
Ann Bingle, a Democratic
candidate for Secretary of
State. Miss Bingle criticized
the present Secretary and
called for "A plan to clean up
the bureaucratic mess in the
Secretary of State's office and
open the vote to all the people
of Ohio ."
Other speakers at the D.A.C.
meeting were 17th Senatorial
candidate "Grant McDonald,
and Ohio House Candidates;
Jane Smith, (91st), Ronald
James (92nd), Dewerance
Skatzes (95th) , and Paul
Coffee (94th). The next
Democratic Action Club
meeting will be in :Vinton
County April 19th.

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jumor and community college
graduates , and sophomores at
four -year universities can
qualify for Army ROTC by
attending li six-week program
this summer .
A spokesman for the ROTC
headquarters here said junior
college students and others
who· have not taken basic
ROTC in their freshman and
sophomore years can qualify
for advance( ROTC. by attending the six -week course
gtven here commencing June
14 and 21. Those who complete
advan ced ROTC are commiss ioned
as
second
lieutenants in the US Army.

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SWEETHEART QUEEN - Jermifer Chapman was
crowned Sweetheart Queen at the Meigs High Schoof junior
class sweetheart dance Friday night. She received an arm
bouquet of roses. Other candidates were Babs Witte, Diane
Smith, Cathy Osborne, and Regina Harrison. Jermifer is the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Paul Chapman, High St., Pomeroy.

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one day alter the Federal
Energy Office annoWJced that
h'lll the nation's 216,000 serviee
stations will be allowed to raise
their price by I cent a gallon.
Z. D. Bonner, the preSident of
Gulf Oil , however, attacked the
penny hike as too httle and
predicted the gasoline shortage
- now estimated by the FEO at
between. 15 and 20 per centwould rise to 2.'i to 30 per cent
by April I.
Bonner also said he regretted
consumers were preoccupied

with the penoy a ga llon gas
increa se "when four months
have gone by since the Arab
intervention and really not one
thing has been done about IJJe
energy crisis."
Bonner was intervi ewed on
CBS"'~'ace the Nation."
Sawhill, however , refuterl
Bonner 's prediction of a 25-30
per cent oil shortfall.
An end to embargo, U$.
officials said Sunday, appears
to hinge on what Kissinger can
do to solve the current dispu te
between I srae l and Syria,
whi ch m parl involves whether
Syna will re lease Isra eli
prisoner::; taken during last
Oc tober's Arab"Israeli war.
~·roup Disengagement
The officials said Kissinger
(Continued on page 8)

•

ent1ne

By United Press International
WASIDNGTON - A SOURCE CLOSE TO the House
Judiciary Committee's impeachment inquiry has said the
Inquiry staff is expected to give the full panel an "academic
exercise" report later this week concluding President Nixon can
be Impeached lor offenses other than criminal violations. That
means, the source said, Nixon could be impreached for orders to
subordinates to commit illegal acts or a bose of power in addition
to any criminal offenses.
But he called the staff's month-long research an "academic
exercise." The report is basically a rehash of what has been
pubUshed previously, he said. The committee's 38 members will
make their own individual determination of what constitutes an
impeachable offense.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. - VOTERS TURN OUT today in
the first post-Watergate election in Michigan, but with a
Republican favored to retain GOP control of the 5th
Congressional seat the party has held since 1912. Vice Pt&gt;esident
Gerald R. Ford held the rat for 25 years, :winning 13 landslide
elections by margin! o 60 pet. or higher. He resigned in
December when he succeeded Spiro T. Agnew.
lt's a horserace race,'' said Republican Candidate Robert
Vander Laan, "but I think we'll win it." His Democratic op.
ponent, Robert Vander Veen, said he believed Watergate, the
energy crisis, inflation and unemployment would tip the race in
his favor .
So strong was Ford's apJ;l,al - the district is still called
"Ford Country" - that both Vander Veen and Vander Laan
emphasized their support of the vice president. VanderLaan, 43,
is a fanner high school civics teacher who has been in the state
senate since 1963 and during his political career has run for office
15 times and won each time.
Vander Veen, 53, is president of a prominent Grand Rapids
law firm and has contested three elections. He has never won
one.
11

ATLANTA- A PORTRAIT OF TilE LATE Dr. Martin
I.AJther King Jr. was nung in the Georgia Capitol Sunday, the first .
black ever to receive such recognition. A small group of Ku Klux
Klansmen,paraded on a sidewalk outside during the ceremony. '
Mayor Maynard Jackson, Atlanta's first black mayor, referred
to the marchers during his remarks :
"Dr. King fought lor the rights of protests, and Ironically, I
come to protect the rights of the Ku Klux Klan to march around
this capitoL" There were no incidents involving the 15-20 klansmen and the many blacks attendiug the ceremony.
ZURICH - TilE GOVERNMENT HAS GIVEN exiled
Solzhenltsyn permission to stay In Switzerland "as long as he
wishes." Swiss authorities said the Nobel Prize-wirming author
would be allowed to write what he wants, but would have to
refrain from making public statements damaging the tiny
nation's traditional neutrality.
"Solzheuit.yn has been given a permanent visa and can stay
In Switzerland as long as he wishes," Justice Minister Kurt
Furgfer said Sunday In a radio interview. The decision to let the
55-year-&lt;&gt;ld writer stay permanently was an exception to Switzerland's normal immigration procedures, which usually limit
new arrivals to three-month visas.
WASHINGTON - IN AN EFFORT TO MAKE sure
President Nixon's last three years in office do not result in the
(Continued' on page 8)

l

By United Press International
The U.S. peace initiative in
the Middle East appeared
today to be rurming into !rouble
because of Arab refusal to lift
the oil embargo.
The well-informed Israeli
newspaper Davar, which often
reflects the views of the
government, quoted
diplomatic
sources
in
Jerusalem as saying Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger
was fonnulating a "package
deal"
to
get
troop
disengagement talks started
between Israel and Syria.
But Arab Middle East
sources in London told UP!
diplomatic correspondentKC.
Thaler their governments have
been given to Wlderstand that
the Kissinger peace initiative
may be put temporarily on ice
unless the oil embargo is eased
soon.
Kissinger was meeting in
Washington again today with
Saudi
Arabian
Foreign
Minister Omar Sakkaf and
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ismail Fahmy_. U$. oHicals
said they believed the Arab

the basic Kissmger proposal
involved linking a time table
for th e release of Israeli
prisoners in Syria with specific
proposals for the disengagement of th eir armies on the
Golan Heights front.
Israel has sa id it will not
ne gotiate di se ngagemen t
term s with Syria , either
directly or indirectly, until it
gets a list of its pnsoners of
war in Syria and the Red Cross
is allowed to visit IJJem.
With the U.S. initiative
sta lled lor the moment, Israel
pushed ahead with dismantling
it."i ground and air links to the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of showers
Wednesday and Friday and
lair Thursday. High tern"
peratures in the 40s and
lower 50s . l.ows at night In
the 30s.
LOCAL. TEMPS
The ~mperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
Monday wa s 35 degrees under
cloudy skies.

Nary a drop in Harrisburg
By United Press International
Not a single service station in
Harrisburg, Pa ., was open over
the weekend.
Organizers said the shutdown at stations in Virginia's
Tidewater area was 50 to 80 per
cent effective .
And Los Angeles, where
heavy buying Saturday
depleted gasoline supplies in

CAffiO iUPli - A panicky stampede that followed
collapse of an iron fence surrounding a Cairo soccer field
killed 48 soceer fans and injured 47 others Sunday. Pollee
said the dead fans were trampled underfoot or suffoca ted in
what cairo newspapers called the worst disaster in the
history oi Cairo soccer. Ironically it was the first major
spo rts event in Cairo since the October War with Israel.
P.drt uf the blame lay with a last..ftl inute decision by the
organizers o( an international soccer game to tra nsfer the
game from the 100,000 capacity Nasser Stadium to the
45,000 ca pacity Zamalck Stadium. More than 80,000 fans
had jammed into the smaller stadium whea the tragedy
happened just before the scheduled 3 p.m. start of a mat ch
between Cairo's Zamalek soccer team and Dukla nf
Prague.
Thousands of fans were standing in a narrow passage
between the regular spectator area and a five-foot high iron
rail fence designed to stop fans invading the playing field.
As the two teams ran onto the field about 15 minutes before
the kickoff, the crowd on one-side of the stadium surged
forward. Under the pressure th e iron railings broke at three
separate sections.
To escape the pressure, the fans close to the fence rled
onto the field, followed by thousand s of others. The mat ch
was canceled immedialely ,while rescue workers picked up
th e casualties and police cleared the stadium.
·:-:-:-:·:~..-x:~~:=::m:;:--.;m!&gt;."»".-~:.:.:.:-t.~~*·:.:-:.:-:-::(.:..•:::--:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:-:·:-:·:-:

many stati ons, reported the weekends for motorists in need
"driest Sunday ever," with less of gasoline since President
than one per cent of its stations Nixon asked dealers to limit
open.
sales on Saturday and SunThe prospect of widespread days.
slation shutd owns, called to
The government's permy.;~­
prote s t g overnment gallon gasoline price increase,
regulations of fuel, prices and which affects more than half
customer services, made the the dealers in the country, was
lon g Washington 's birthday received poorly by most serholiday one of the worst vice station orgainzations.

west bank of the Suez Canal,
rushin g to meel this week's
deadline for abandoning all
territory seized from Egypt in
October.
Israeli army sappers laid
detonating charges today at a
freshly abandoned Egyptian
ai rfield in advance of lsraels
withdrawal Thursday from the
west bank of the Suez Ca nal,
military sources said.
The dynamiting operation at
Fayid began, they said,
shortly after the last U.S. built
Hercules C\30 transport plane
took off on an eastward course.

Aid sqlllld

has $13,500
for new vehicle
The $15,000 fund drive of the
Middleport Fire Dept. lor the
purchase of a new emergency
ambulance reached $13,500
over the weekend, Pete Kloes,
Ways and Means Commiltee
chairman, said today
Among the fates contributions received over llie
weekend wa s $60 from IJJe first
aid squad of Pomeroy.
" That was a wonderful
ges ture," Kloes satd .
Middleport firemen have
high hopes of wrapping up the
$15,000 drive before Feb. 24.
Contributions may be left at
the
fire
department
headquarters or mailed to the
department at P. 0. Box 144,
Middleport.

HILLSBOROUGH, Calif.
1UPI ) - Newspaper publisher
Randolph A. Hearst says he'll
offer a food plan today involving "substantial amounts
of money " in order to satisfy
ransom demands by his daughte r's kidnapers that $400
million in free food be
distributed to Califor ni a's
poor.
Syrp.bionese Liberation
Army terrorists, who abducted
19~y ear-o ld Patri r ia Hea r st
from her Berkeley apar tment
exac tly two wee ks ago,
demanded in a letter last wee k
that the fo od givea way
program start Tuesday.
Jay Bosworth , a spokesman
for the Hearst family, said
Sunday night that details of the
publisher 's co WJteroffer to the
SLA would be an noun ced
"probably before" 3 p.m. PDT
(6 p.m. EDT) today.
Bosworth said Hearst encountered "some delay" in
working on the "details and
mechanics" of the proposal
because of the long holiday
weekend.
Well Treated
Hearst and his wife, Catherine, were heartened by a
tape recording from Patricia

received during the weekend in
which she said she was being
well treated and her abductors
wer e willi ng to accept
"whatever you can come up
with."
"~'iel d Marshal Cmque" of
th e SLA sa id m .the same
recording that th e SLA would
"accept a sincere effort on
your pat·t."
Members of three of the
leftist activist groups selected
by the SLA to oversee the food
distributiOn program met at
Glide Memorial Method ist
Church in San Francisco
Sunday to discu ss a proposal
for her release.
Dennis Banks of the Amencan Indian Movement told
newsmen he had a "five-point
plan" to propose to the Hearsts
awl SLA, but Rev. Cecil A.
Williams of Glide insisted there
was no plan and even i( there
were, "we couldn't reveal it to
the press at this lime. He said
the groups "see our role as
liaison" between th e family
and SLA. Alsa represented at
the session was th e Black
Teachers Union.
New · Left activisl Jerry
Rubin warned the SLA in a
!Con ti nued on page 8)

Work ethic safe
WASHINGTON I UP! ) - The
"bulk of evidence" shoW's poor
falhers generally continue to
work when they reeeive income supplements, according
to Rep . Martha Griffiths, DMich.
Mrs. Griffiths, chairman ·of
the joint economic s ubcommittee on fiscal affa1rs,
released several studies of
income supplement programs
Sunday and said the papers
showed the American "work
ethi c" would not be harmed by

Weather
Cloudy and not so cold
tonight with chance of rain.
Low in 30s and low 40s . .
Tuesday cloudy and occasional
rain likely. High mostly in the
40s.

FIRE DOUSED
The PomerOY Fire Dept. was
called to Route 143 at 3:56 p. m.
Satu.·day to extinguish a brush
lire.

a carefully destgned income
su ppleme nt program tha t
rewards work.
"A key obstacle to ex tending
cash supplements to poor
families headed by able-bodied
men has been the . lear that
many will leave their jops, "
she said. "The bulk of the
ev idence shows that such fears
are unfounded."
The studies were released in
a subcommittee report.
"The studies are in sub·
sta ntlal agreement: a broad
income supplement plan would
add to , the incomes of poor
fathers wilhout caustng such
men to lea ve work," Mrs .
Griffiths said .
Some results of the studies
were mixed, but Mrs. Griffiths
said it was determined that the
studies predicting large work
redu ctions were based on less
reliable methods than the other
studies.
INSURANCE CALL
The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called to the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Don Wilson, Lincoln
St. , Middleport, about 4:30 p.
m. Sunday when grease on top
of a cook stove caught fire .
Although the Wilsons pul out
the fire before ftremen left
their station, the firemen came
to !he Wilson home to insure
that everything was under
controL

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FRACTURE TREATED - The scene as Mi&lt;jdleport Cadettes, enrolled in the multi-media
Red Cross tlrst aid course, learn what to do for a person suffering a fractured leg.
I

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_ _ _ _ _ _TE_N_C_EN- TS

sta s peace
nations will not end their
embargo until Kissinger helps
solv e th e Sy rian-Israe li
dispute.
Saudi Arabia ha s shown
indications of lifting the oil
embargo but the chief opposi"
tion came from Kuwait,
Algeria a nd Syria despite
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat's urgings they ease up.
Complicating the situation
was Russia's failure to get
Syria to ease its stand on troop
di se ngageme nt talks with
Israel and its apparent
reluctanee to bring pressure on
Syria to do so.
The Beirut newspaper An
Nahar reported another snag
today . It said a crisis has
developed in relations between
Jordan and the United States
involving the handlin g of King
Husse in's scheduled meeting
willi President Nixon on Feb. 8
and Jordanian belief that U.S.
intelligence knew in advance of
a Jordanian army muliny that
broke out at that time. The
Hussein-Nixon visit was postponed until later.
The Israeli newspaper said

47 hurt in stampede

1·~

Food plan
promised

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ELBERFELD$ IN .POMER0Y
.

,.., ~ I

week.''
Sawhill was interviewed on
ABC 's "Issues and Answers."
The reallocation move came

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•
eWS.• in Briefs~

'

.

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a1 y

Sawhill pred ictep the effe ct
of the reallocatiOn move would
be reltat servicestations "very
quickly .. .(m) no more th!in a

48 soccer tans die,

~.

MUSIC DEPARTMENT, 3RD FLOOR

v•c tnd y of M i ll s
• :,,Jr.; &lt;: "nd C.pr.ng Va ll e y ,
, , ··k ' ,..,d &lt;• ~' d w hil e ~1 n swe r s
' •' "·1" '' ,11 '\o1n1 , hd" co ll ar
111

: f.

tweeters.

-

f1 111r '&gt; h C.o,:v 11e l Bird

'

• Studiomatic changer plays all record
sizes automatically. 11 'I• " turntable.
Feather Action tone arm. 45 rpm
adaptor.
• RCA 's Rec ord Protectio.n System
helps prevent audible scratches and
gouges.
'
• Automatic system shut-off at end of
last record .
• Solid stale stereo amplifier.
• Two 9" oval woofers and two 3V&gt;"

•

so me
of
th e
lar ger
m etrop olitHn a reas where
we're see ing lines forming that
are in tolerable."
Ending Boycott
Secretary of State Henry
Kissmger, after Sunday meetin gs with lhree Arab
diplomats , said ''we won't have
anything to announce for some
time" on ending the boycott.
Kissinger set a late morning
meeting todayil 1:30a.m. EDT J
with Egyptian foreign minister
Ismail Fahm y and Saudi
Arabian fore1gn minister Omar
Sakkal.
Sunday's meet ing, he. said,
involved the "whole range of
Mtddl e East problems" and the
otl emtargo "was not the
principal pu rpo se uf these
meetings.' '

-V-OL-.-XX_V_N-0.-2-15____P_OM_E_R_OY-"M_I_DD-L-EP-O

1,1 11 r1'.: u r
1 "· 1• .J,

WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The
administrati on, press,ing on
both the domestic and international fronts lor a solution to
Ute energy situation, is preparing changes in gasoline allocations at home but doesn't expect an immediate end to IJJe
Arab oil embargo.
Deputy energy chief John
Sawhill said Sunday the
government, in an effort to end
"intolerable" waiting lines at
gaso line sta tions , will an nounce on Tuesday a 1 to 2 per
cent shift in allocations so
1
those areas of the country
that are really experiencing
acute shortages" will have
more fuel.
But he did not say where IJJe
increased allocations would go,
only that "IJJey are going to

e

,.,_

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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~

"

HUNTINGTON, W. Va . --;
One of the unique features
offered to members cif the Tri:
State Area Council, Boy ScoutS:
of America is the merit badge'
program which covers over 100
vocational and hobby fields:·
Scouts in 100 troops In the·•
Tri-State area earn more than'
2,400 merit badges every year,
according to Dr. Bernard:
Niehm, M·G-M District;
Chainnan.
"Even the Scouts who earn·
the Tenderfoot progress award.
must earn one merit badge,"·
Niehm said, "and this beginsthem on a program of ex;
ploring a wide variety of
subjects including Scout skillS
and vocational, avocational;
cultural, and service fields.''
Niehm pointed out that · the
merit badge method is unu.Uai
because it is based on
counselor working closely wit~
the Scout. "This acquaints a
boy with a new adult, an expert
in one or more fields, who
introduces the Scout to subjects thnt are· often of future
vocational or avocatlonal

!

· • 1 •! I : t11, : ](I

Energy . czars vow relief Ill

100 fields

• ";

• · ~,. t •: . • J J~&gt;I wrutc:
D1·,,·, 1d •· lh1fl.: ·TJJ(' people
d d •·r l·.t ' ~~n d S('cur ity : bu t
• .· ..,i uiJ 11r l,;. mdgu ns sha ll

g.~:::::::::::::::::::-.:;:::;::x::-.w.«·:;:::::::::::::::::::;--m:;:;:-w.,..;::=::::::::;;;:.:·:-:::::::::::::--:::=:::: ::;::;:::;:-(.:::;;;t

.•

The Tri.State Area CotiQci!
helps administer the" merit
badge program. The ad~
ministration of the program iJ
I r ' ; 1/1 , / f
a part of the council operating
budget which is raised from:
Almanac
· ' , • \ •t 1 1;1 l l:r,..,tJl tr·r·l·s, lli \'lsiun nf
By United Press International United Way funds and from the
' ' li 'II :ipp]i( Cit lOIJS fur \Viid
Today is Sunday, Feb.17, the annual sustaining membersllip
1
\
'· I . 1 lht· d 1VIS (J II' S head48th day of 1974 with 317 to enrollment, Niehm said.
The most popular merit
1·· "'· ' ' • l' l : ;f, · ~ ,ffi i'('S
follow.
badges
in the Tri..State Area
The moon is approaching its
Council
are First Aid;
new phase .
The morning stars are Venus Citizenship in the Community£
Personal Fitness, Cooking~
and Jupiter.
Camping,
Sports, Swimming;
1" 11 111 ',\ i!d lt fP , reporLc;
The evening stars are MerFishing, Citizenship In the.
'·• ~ · , t 1·n ;mrl must be ::tecury, Mars ~nd Saturn.
'· : . ~ '" ·,o f.1r t'rtr h lurk ey'
Those born on tJlis date are Nation, and Safety.
(
.
Men who are experts In these
1 :·, l ll lll l ills O\VIl a punder the sign of Aquarius.
1
. .'
•. ;1 ! )1' i.-i sr H.·d ! 1,009
American novelist Dorothy fields, as well as In Hiking;
' .. " 1 1 .1'· 1" ·\pp lt c~d ions
Englneerinh
Canfield Fishet· was born Feb. Pets,
Firernanship,
Photography,
' ' ., II' ' 'rl
17, 1878.
Public
Speaking,
Scholarship,
On this date in history:
and
Wildlife
dl"l" . District
In 1801, the U.S. House of Nature,
2,000 LAID OFF
! .. I
llhtf'lf'l Two, 952
Representatives
named Management, may become
BROOK PARK, Ohio (UP I)
hrt't' , 81~ PnrtJge
Thomas Jefferson as the third merit badge counselors by
Over
2,000
Ford
Motor
Co
.
· 1·, .1: .HP E.1st Sta te
president of the United States. informing the council service
employes at lw o engine plants
.. ]117,11 1lr! Spn ngfi eld
Aaron Burr, who tied with center, 1122 Third Avenue,
he re are part of a mass
Jefferson in the electoral Huntington, phooe 523-3408.·
na tionwide layoff. The weekIn addition to his technical
college,
became
vice
i on~ layoff , whi ch begins
knowledge,
the
only
, • ,· J 1" .'; . \l lwt L~ . I ; ;J.]Jia,
president.
Monday, is ·due to production
to
take
part
In
requirements
· " ... i · n). Pikt'. Hoss.
In 1817, Baltimore became
ad
ju
stments
from
lagging
car
,.
•·q , 1111 ·· .11&lt;: lun i1C'd to
the first American city to have the merit badge program are
sales, according to a Ford vice
that the counselor have :an
gas-burning street lights.
prestdent. The 2,025 employes
understanding
of boys, ;be
In 1972, President Nixon left
at the Brook Park plants join
,1
ih 1-- '\ ;,(icmal Rifle
on his historic trip to Peking, sympathetic with their in14 ,000
other
workers
· , Ti " lnlll'r~ ;md t•lubs in
the long-isolated Communist terests and abilities, and be a
throughout the couniJ'y.
1 .... . ' li1 11f!T1 al amendment to
capital of mainland China.
person of unquestiona61e
·'' .•:_·.': v.-i 11 bt: ht- ld Tuesda y,
~
character.
;·· ., r."11l1. thtrd floor of the
.r d · ll•.Ju·.l', H1gh Street,

\

''

Jc ,'l] i\\ ,, ,.1
1110 f.'.t
J01n Dr 1' 1 p ,.

for ass1stmg the district and
loca l uniLc; of government in the
reg ion with a wide r~nge or
p l ;~nn 1 ng and de velopment
prob lems . Among th e key
area s that Bumga rner will be
mvolved in will be public
fa ciliti es
plann in g
and
assistmg local governments
wtlh subdivision, zoning and
cod e enforcem ent issues .
Bum ga rner will also have
primary responsibility on the
BH-HVRDD sta ll lor providing
increased stall assistance to
local planning commissions in
the Buckeye HillscHocking
Valley Region .

I
I
I offered ·students
I
FORT KNOX, Ky. - Male

~"~,~~ tH"
/.,•,

Merit hadg~ ·

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: ,,,. ( ,,, llq.tXh

\ ~ P' · ·

T 1 Hllllt J~

I !tlt•lt\.

I il l ' tl '- 11 \

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l'llv t LlPI',l
!'\tir·..:,.

I '

Bumpass vows

MULTI·MEDIA FIRST AID COURSE was completed
Saturday by the C~ dettes of Middleport Girl Scout Troop Jil5 . .
Miss Charlotte LaTourette of Athens, a Red Cross instructor,
taught the etght-hour standard first aid course. Here she
demonstrated splinting and wrapping a knee fracture. T~c

"patient" is Carin Bailey, Trina Gibbs looks on, and others
en rolled were Kim Payne, Jennifer Wise, Kathy Manley,
Virginia Burchett, Julie Kitchen and Jul.ie Byer. Mrs . Iris
PayAe was an assistant to the instructo r. Jo McKinney was
unable to complete the program due to illness.

AUTOS COLLIDE
Slight to moderate property
damages were reported in a
tw&lt;H:ar accident Sunday at
1:&amp;0 a.m. on Bailey Run Road ,
according to lhe Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. Robert S.
Shaffer, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
driving north uphill in a curve
was sfighUy Jeff of center when
his car collided with one driven
by Ralph Leroy VanCboney,
Pomeroy . Rt. 4. ·coming over
the crest. There were no
personal injuries and no
citation issued .

•

'

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