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.•

10 - 'llle Daily Sentinel , Middleport·Pomeroy;O., Thursday, Ju 24, 1976

Private services planned for

Mr. Jacobs on Saturday at 2
Private funeral services Jr., and Charles Edward
for RoiJert Lee Jacobs. Sr., Jacobs, both of Pomeroy;
'/0, 127 Lincoln Hill Rond, five brothers and a sister, all
Pomeroy, who died unex- of Mt. Sterling, Ohio.
p&lt;.&gt;&lt;tedly at hi~ PoJOeroy Ben
Mr. Jacobs was a member
~·ranklin Store Thursday
of the St. Paul Lutheran
morning, will IJe held at 2 Church, the Pomeroy Champ.m. Saturday at the Ewing ber of Conunerce and the
F'w1eral Home.
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Officiating will be the Rev. Club. He had owned and
William
Middlcswarth. operated the Ben Franklin
Burial will be in Beech Grove Store in Pomeroy since 1937.
Cemetery.
There will be no visitation;
Mr. Jacobs was the son of friends, in lieu of flowers, are
the late Edwanl and Ell a invited to contribute to the St.
Sl1epurd .Jncolll!. He i• sur- Puul Lutheran Church
vived.by his wile, Katberine; buil&lt;ling fund .
two sons, Hubert Lee Jucobs,

Dickson in froni
at Western Open

By ED ,SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
OAK BROOK. Ill. (UP!) Bob Dickson wants to play
golf "a day at a time" to hold
on to his first-round lead in
the $200,000 Western Open.
Dickson. 32, put together a
four-under-par 67 in a steady
drizzle at Butler National
Golf Club Thursday for a twostroke lead over t971 Western
champion Bruce Crampton
and a thnoe ...troke lead on
Gecrge Burns and Charles
O:&gt;ody.
But he said, "I've had
tournaments with two good
rounds and two bad ones, or
three good rounds and one
bad one. Now I've got to put
four good rounds together, so
Holzer Medical Center
I'll take it a day at a time. "
}Discharges, June 24)
Dickson, keeping the ball in
Mrs. Jackie Adkins and
play and putting expertly,
duughter, Roy Arthur, Verna
Barker, Frances Blackburn, said he "capitalized on a few
Mary Byer, Patricia Call, good breaks" In seizing the
lead.
Jeffrey
Carper, Basil
" I putted well, but I
l'l€wccse, Bill Dowler, Ira
actually could have made a
Elkins, Elijah Estep, Sr., lot more putts, Still I'm
John Faulkner, Terry pleased
with
a
67,
Greene, Mrs. William particularly here ."
Jamison and son, Cal Colby
Crampton, an Australian
Philip Leonard, Jr., Willla~ who is one of golf's $1 million
Malone, Carla Moore, Mrs. winners, said he had a "good
U&gt;uise Mueller and daughter, solid round"·in which he went
Lmda Newman, Brent over par only twice .
Nickels, Charles Price,
"f was in the rough a few
Chester Rickman, Darin
times, but it was a pretty
Roach, Emerson Scott, good round," he said.
Nancy Sheets, John Smith,
Thursday, the drizzle
Sr.
lasted until midafternoon and
IBirths, June 24)
the first portion of the field, 72
Mr. and Mrs. James players, kept their wnbrellas
Adkins, daughter, Wellston; open most of the day. The
Mr. and Mrs. William Moore,
afternoon lield had less
son,' Point Pleasant, W. Va. moisture and Crampton said,
"We played only eight or nine
holes in rain, but it was light
CARWASHSET
rain ."
SYRACUSE - A car wash
Defending champion Hale
and bake sale will be held at Irwin, one of nine players
the Syracuse municipal locked in a fifthi&gt;lace tie at
building Saturday from 9 par 71, said he played "about
a.m. to 3 p.m. and will be six holes" in the rain. Irwin
sponsored by the young adult said he had wanted "18.pars
class of the Asbury United for a par round, which is
Methodist Church.
pretty good," so he was not
complaining . Yet he was

HOSPITAL NEWS
VetemriH Meorurtallloopltal
ADM ISSIONS - Crmg
Durst, Shade; Mury CmToll,
Hurtford; Arthur De Tray,
Chester; IIerman Midracl,
Middlcpurt; .Jomr Edwurds,
Parkersburg ;
Burd ell
,MdCirrru)y, Middleport; Marvin Durst, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Hoy Pierce, John Wolfe, Marie Watson, Norman Sinclair,
Catherine Cross, Carol Hall ,
Louise Matlad1, Betty !Iamrnins.
PLEASANT VAI.J..EY
DISCil AHGES --- Mrs. l•:Jza
Ball, !Ish ton; Mr~ . Robert
Peopltos, Leon; Walter Hyatt,
Point Pleasmtt; Jimmy
Tucker. Buffa lo ; .leff
Hughes, !l:;hton; Mrs. Juhn
Hoschar, Sou ths ide ; Mrs .
Billy Smith, Letart; Blanche
J ones, Mason; Steve n
Wirrtrrs, Hobertsburg ; and
Jamrs Lewis, Letart.

SK IUS INTO DI'I'CII
No one was injured or cit" !
ill a single cnr traffil:

I

11ccidcrrt lhursd!ly at 12: 30
p.m. on SR 7 two ;1nd two
tenths mil es north of
PlJmcroy .
Joe
Les lie
Anthony , lU, Mi ddleport,
drivin1~ nurth, tumed right
ilnd lust (:ontrol ur his car,

BAPTISMS OFFERED
whk h !-iltiddt1:1 i11 lo1)se gravel
SYHACUSE - The Church
inlo a dikh . Dm u:.~w~ was u[ God of Syracuse will hold
minor .
boptismal services at the
Racine levee across from the
TWO !:JVEN IIELP
Philip Sporn Plant with the
·The Middleport E-R S&lt;tuad Rev. George Oiler in charge
was called to Jack's Dairy Sunday at 2:30p.m.
Bar atn :41 p.m. Thursday for
Burdell McKinney, Mid&lt;llcport, who was ill. He was
t1kcn to Veterans Mcmorinl
TAKEN TO HOLZER
llospil&gt;il where he was a~­
The Pomeroy E-R squad
mitted. At 2:18 a.m. Friday answered a call to Kerr's
the :;quad went to ;119 Rutl~nd Ktrn at 3:46 a.m. Friday for
· fi t. for Nora Ball who w:ts Joan Milliron, a maternity
taken to Holw·e Medical pa ticnt, who was taken to
Center.
Holzer Medical Center.

•

WICe
as
•

rllESIDENT ELECfED
SAN DIEGO I UPI )
Stanley E. Schneider,
Crestline , Ohio, was elected
presid ent of the Kiwani s
· International Wednesday.
Schneider , an 18-year
member, is ar1 automotive
retail and investment
executive . He has bee n
treasurer, trustee and vice
president of the organi1.ation.
He succeeds Ted R. Osborn,
Lexington , Ky .

Pilot coal
(Continued from page 1)
federal approval ol the three
other Ohio coal gasification
projects. "
The plant will use 3,9110 tons
of coal to produce 60 million
cubic feet of synthetic natural
gas each day .
The federal government
will pay 50 per cent of the
plant construction costs and
the nine-industry goup will
fund the rest.
East Ohio Gas Co . is
expected to purchase the
entire output of the plant.
The initial phase will
include test programs with
specific coals and the
detailed design and cost
estimate of the plant -..- all of
which is expected to be
com pleted in about 20
months.
The ERDA grant of $20
million will pay for the entire
first phase.
The 'second and final phase
will
involve
plant
construction
and
the
operational test program expected io take 38 and 42
months respectively.
Cost of this part of the
program will be shared equally by ERDA and
the industnal group.

Alva Haning of Polling places
Albany is dead
(Continuer\ hun page U

On June 7, the Five-Point
Star Stitchers mel at the
home of Becky Eichinger
with one advisor and seven
members in attendance .
First-aid kits 1!J1d sewing
were discussed a~d the
project lessons were making

OUT THREE TIMES
RACINE - Three rans
were reported today by the
Racine emergency squad. At
8:30 p.m. Thursday, the
squad took George Cununins,
Racine, to Holzer Medical
Center. AI 11 :18 a.m. Thursday the squad took Ted Pat·
terson, Rt. 1, Racine, who
was ill, to Holzer Medical
Center. At 7 p.m. Wednesday
Mrs. Luther Barlowe, U&gt;ng
Bottom, was taken to
Veterans Memorral Hospital.

MEIGS THEATRE
Fri.-Sat.-Sun .
June 2S-26-27
Watt Disney 's
Susanne Pleshe tte , Elsa
Lanchester . Joby Baker,

Ell iott Reid.
(Gl
Show Slarts 7 P.m.

SEARCH CONTINUES
MASSILLON, Ohio I UP!)
- The Stark County sheriff's
office and the FBI continued
their search for a second
suspect in Wednesday 's
robbery of the Harter Bank
and Trust Co. Branch in
Jackson Twp. near North
Canton.
On Thursday one suspect,
Joseph Hipp , 55, · was
arraigned before U.S.
Magistrate John Ergazos on
bank robbery charges. He
was arrested shortly after the
mid-morning robbery.
Hipp
requested
a
preliminary hearing, which ·
SUBSIDIES ARRIVE
the magistrate scheduled for
After deductions for
July 2, and bond was set at retirement, Meigs County's
$100,000.
three local school districts
received a total of $193,276.11
for their Jlltle State School
Foundation Subsidy Payments; Amounts received by each
district following deductions
tops and making Banana- are Eastern Local ,
·Peach Ambrosia and jiffy $39,530.77; Meigs weal,
punch. Mrs ..Eichinger gave a $112,792.85, and Southern
report on making tops for the Local, $4(),952.49. The county
4-H style revue, cooking, and board of education received a
g,iving firs t -aid . direct allotment of $13,567.26.
Refreshments of banana
peach ambrosia and jiffy
punch were served. - Pam
PRIZE NOTED
Riebel.
Austin
Newsome,
The Alfred Angels met
recently at Ute· home of Syracuse, was awarded a
Derothy Calaway with one large stuffed dog, a prize
advisor and eight members given by the Meigs County ·
attending. A bake sale was Chapter of the American
discussed and a project Cancer Society in conlesson on garden seed junction with the chapter's
identification was presented. Big Bend Regatta Weekend
Refreshments were served activities.
by Dorothy Calaway. The
next meeting will be June 28
at Dorothy Calaway's home .
CALL ANSWERED
- Lori Robinson .
SYRACUSE
The
Junior members ·Of the Syracuse E-R squad anMerry Makers met recently swered a caD at 5:55 p.m.
at the home of Angie Spencer, Thursduy for George Cooper,
with two advisors and 10 iU at his Syracuse home. He
members in attendance . was l!lken to Pleasant Valley
Beginners' Camp, the 4-H Hospital.
steer raffle, the selling of
County Museum tickets, and
projects were discussed.
Demonstrations were given
The Inn
by Brenda Bentz, Terri
Woods, Robyn Pitzer, and
Angie Spencer on projects,
how to remove a tick, parts of
a camera, and how to clean a
window. Refreshments were
served by Angie and Mrs.
Jean Spencer. - Tammy
Pitzer.

SUNDAY, JUNE 27, 1976

Refrigerators.

circumstances."

·

Th~

projecl,engineer, Phillip Roberts, a
1!8tiVe of nearby Racine ,. said, ''at least"
four more weeks of welding work will be
required on the center section of the
bridge, and another week will be needed to
allow concrete poured in the center section
time to cure. Concrete placement on the
Ohio side of the bridge is to be completed
this week.
Roberts said the top superstructure of

"1776" Kroehler Living Room and Family _
Room Specials in the Third .Floor Furniture
Department

SAVE UP TO '5r'O

Piece

Good labrlcs. coil spring

S~ITES

and

••zER.PHA BLUE''

SATURDAY

Featuring Darrell Sheppard

TONIGHT

ADDED STRENGTH- Steel stiffeners have been added to the bottoms of the
!-beams on the Pomeroy Mason Bridge to lend ·greater strength to the bridge
structure. Invisible to the camera's eye, the "stiffeners" meant an additional cost
nf 1100,1100.

Regional council to
.review tax appraisal

:::::::::::::·: ::::·:·::~::: :: ::: :;:;: ;: ;:: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::!:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::

Speakers
announced
. Gallipolis- John M. Pierce, Extension
·Specialist, Outdoor Recreation, Ohio State
:university and Dr. John Stitzlein, Area
:Extension Agent, Community Resource
·(&gt;evelopment, will be guest speakers
:during the Thursday, July 1 session for
·concerned conununity leaders.
: : The public meeting will be held at the
'Production Credit Association Bldg., Up·per River Rd., Gallipolis.
: · The Cooperative Extension Service and
Comrmmity Resource Development Study
-!;orrunittee will co-host the meeting.
The topic will be, "What concerns
residents most about our region?" ·
- · This and a series of questions pertaining
.to development were asked 1,500
Households in Southern Ohio (300 in Gallia
County). Jobs and industrial expansion
was named the No. I concern in this study
conducted by Ohio State University
researcher, John Pierce. Drug abuse,
education, highways, recreation and
crime-related concerns were also high on
the llst.
This is the most recent and most com·
plete study available of how people in
Gallia County and Southern Ohio are
thinking on pertinent issues.
Bryson (Bud) Carter, County Agent,
said Saturday, "I urge elected officials,
recrealion and development groups, farm,
· business and industry leaders plus in·
terested citizens to attend this meeting.
"Please feel free to invite your
business associates, fellow club members
and the general public."

Dateline 1776

McARTHUR - The Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council will meet here Thursday,
July 8, in the new air-conditioned Vinton
County Civic Building located just north on
State Route 93.

NEW YORK, Jane 28 - Thomas
Hickey, a member of Gen .
Washington's personal bodyguard, was
courtmartlaDed and sentenced to deallr
by hanging on charges he participated
In a plot to polson the American
commander-In-chief. Hickey pleaded
not guilty and claimed he had become
Involved because of the money and to
protect hlmseU In event of capture by
the British Inasmuch as he was a
deserter from their army.

-Old fashioned tug
of war scheduled
RUTLAND - An old-fashioned tug of
war teams of 12 persons will be held at the
Rutland Conununity Park beginning at 4
p.m. on July 4 as a part of the town's three
day celebration.
The winning team will receive a large
trophy with each team member also
receiving a small trophy. Registration
may be made with Warren Hart, 742-2370
or Roger Black, 742-2891. Deadline for
registration is 3 p.m. on the date of the contest.

,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

Innocent
plea made
.

.
POMEROY - Mary Virginia Hendricks, 51, Minersville, entered a plea of
Innocent Saturday morning when she was
arraigned before Judge C. Bacon in the
Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court on a
murder charge in. the June I shotgun
slaying of her husband, Floyd.
Mrs. Hendricks has been confined to
county jail since her husband was shot ln
. RIO GRANDE - J . Lark Napier;
the kitchen of the couple's horne on Welsh55, Rio Grande, considered himself a
!awn Hill. She was indicted by a grand jury
lucky man Friday afternoon.
on June 18 for murder in the death of her
The Gallia Counlian was struck
husband, Floyd Eugene Hendricks, who
by lightning around 2:45p.m. and surdied of a .12gaugeshotgun wound.
vives the bolt without any serious inJudge John C. Bacon set bond for Mrs.
jury.
·
Hendricks at $10,000 and she wsa remanAccording Ia one witness, Mrs.
ded to the custody of Sheriff Robert Har- ·:·: Mary Harris, a store clerk and the
ten bach when it was not furnished . Attorney James Bennett of Ga!Upolia was ~p­
pointed by the court to serve as her defen·
se lawyer. The trial date will be fixed
Mr. Napier was sitting on a
later, Judge Bacon said.

992-3629

POMEROY

'1'11./1" 12' ()()()
f'11mi/ieN

"

PRICE 25 CENTS

:!:':!:·',.

:Goodness, what next?
GALUPOUS - Kenneth Johnson,
'Second Ave., reported Friday night that
·someone took four funeral signs which had
been ·placed in front of his residence. The
:Signs were owned by the McCoy.Wetherholt-Moore Funeral Home.

i·
'I

•

Bob Evans, SEORC president, said the
· principal speaker will be Edwin Ducey,
fonner Chief of County Mfairs with the
Board of Tax Appeals, who will discuss
recent tax appraisals in Southea:ilern Ohio
imd their effect on property owners,
especially owners of agricultural land.
Glenn Peters, fanner auditor of Vinton
County, will introduce the speaker.
In recent weeks, the Regional Council
has held a series of infonnal discussions
concerning high appraisals of agricultural
land and is exploring possible solutions to .
grievances held by many land owners,
MemberS of the Vinton County community will host the dinner meeting. C&lt;;chainnen are Gene Engle, James Blower,
and Dave Booth. The dinner wiD be
catered. A hospitality hour begins at 6:30
p.m. Tickets for the meetin~ may be Pur·
chased from the Gallipolis Chamber of
Conunerce, Bob Evans and Roger Barron
in Gallipolis and Bernard Fultz tn
Pomeroy-Middleport.

MAKING IT SECURE- Awelder fastens the new bridge floor to the steel curb
that has been installed to Increase the strength of the structure. Concrete will be
poured into the meshed grid.

Bahr sues to get
teaching job _hack
COLUMBUS - Bill Bahr, a teacher In
the Gallia Local School District and the
Gallla County Local Teachers Association
have filed suit here In the U. S. District's
Court Southern District of the Eastern
Division against the Gallla County Board
of Education as a result of the board not
renewing Bahr's contract for the 1976-77
teaching year.
Bahr, a graduate of Rio Grande
College, had taught science at Kyger
Creek HighSchool, for three years.
Named as defendants in the suit were:
J . E. Cremeens, J. C. Mitchell, Bruce S.
Stout, James V. Blevins, and William E.
Carter, each one Individually and as mem~rs of the board; C. Comer Bradbury, lndivrdually and as superintendent of
schools; Robert L. Lanning, as principal at
Kyger Creek and Naomi Beman, as clerk
of the board.
The suit alleges that Bahr was
dismissed as a result of his activities in the
local teachers' association and that this is
a violation of freedom of speech and
freedom of association, as guaranteed by
the first amendment of the U. S. Con-

stitution.
The suit further claiJrur that the board
had violated the "Sunshine Law" by
discussing the empl~yment sllltus of Bahr
In executive session without a waiver from
Bahr.
The suit also claims that the
association members have been Intimidated by the action taken by the defendants against Bahr, the association
president, and this action has had a
chilling effect on the association mernbera
in the exercise of their co118tltutional
rights.
On April23, the board voted ~2 · not to
renew Bahr's contract. Bahr, a teacher
with a Bachelor's Degree with over 150
hours, was at the end of a two-year limited
contract. Six documented 'reasons were
given for the non-renewal.
According to the Ohio Revised Code
Section 3319.11, teachers who have limited
or supplemental contracts which expire In
the current school year, must be notified In
writing no later than April 30, If they are
not to be reemployed. Failure to notify
means a teacher is automatically reeJDo
· pl,oyed for one year.
There Is no specific statutory
requirement which obligates a boilrd of
education to supply reasons for the nattrenewal of a limited contract. However,
boards may grant normal due process.
tor, and after a checkup, I returned
On May 12, the Gallia Local Board of
home."
Education conducted Bahr's due praceas
Although somewhat sore from the
hearing in the cafeteria at Kyger Creek
episode, Mr. Napier returned to work
High School. Approximately 225 persons
Saturday.
attended. Three witnesses, fellow teache!l
Meanwl!lle, only one report of
Uoyd Danner, Willeen Edwarda and Deryl
damagewassubmittedtolocallawof·
Well, testified at that meeting to sub:lclals resulting from Friday af·
stantiate parts of his testimony.
ternoon's heavy thunderslonn.
·:·:
Following the public hearing, the
board, during a special meeting May 17,
for the second time within a month, voted
:,.:,::.:: 3-2 not to renew Bahr1s contract. MltcheU
the area at the time, said small black
and lllevins voted for Bahr.
Six reasons were read intQ the record
then
for the board's action. they were: The·
recommendation of the princi~l at Kyget
Approximately
Inch pushing
of rain ':.:··.~.::.:·'..:~.' Creek; recommendation of the Supe~
fell Friday
in Galllaone
County,
tendent of the Gallia County Local Sch&lt;fJI. ,
District; Bahr's refusal to choose a member of the administration staff for ~
servation of his teaching ; failure to obtain
(Continued on page 'z)

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

:

i:i,,i:l

MEIGS INN

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

the bridge was in good shape. However,
the bridge floor has corrosion problems
caused by accumulation of moisture and
salt. He said that no serious structural
flaws existed on the bridge, "Just work we
thought needed to be done." This was In
reference to the addition of braces to the
steell-beams underneath the bridge.
"We will check the results of magnetic
testing that will be done on these welds
underneath the bridge," he added.
Besides the steel work, much remains
to be done in painting the steel curb
stringers and the supporting steel to the
bridge floor. Work on lighting to the bridge
approaches and and il1e bridge span Is
underway, according to Roberts. A new
sidewalk has just been Installed.
Bill Branscome, Vke President of Conn
Constraction, one of the main contractors
on the project, said "Things are going
super, we are making good progress, and
(Continued on page 2)

BvBobTitus
POMEROY -\ne grand old lady of the
Ohio River,the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, is
receiving a facellft which should eliminate
all her telltale signs of advancing age for
years to come.
The work on the bridge, which ·began
last surmner, i.s scheduled to be completed
by Sept. lth. Glen Smith, District Deputy
Director of the Ohio Dept. of
Transportation, said, "We think we can
get it open on time, barring any unforseen

and Dryers, Magic Chef Ranges and Whirlpool

Place Is Proud To Present The Return Of This Popular Group

Re11ching More

righ.t on schedule

Lloyd Console Stereos, Whirlpool Washers

ELBERFELDS IN·POMEROY

row· In vited Guest

Bridge renovation

Special Sale Prices on RCA Color Televisions,

·

10--2

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT
•,

Mechanic Street Warehouse'.

'250
SOfA BEDS
BEDROOM

Mf'tnber FDIC

VO. 11 NO. 22

Jim Northup
Parade mm·shal

Devoted To The Greater Micldle Ohio VJ~Jley

Porch, Lawn and Patio Furniture at the

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

and Kitchen I.iand will perform at 1:30
p.m. in the Public Square.
Too, while the parade is in movement,
residents will join the natloowide bell
ringing event at 2 P·T ·
Following the parade.the GAHS band,
under the direcU~n of llodney Tolliver,
will play the St~r Spangled Banner in the
Public Square.
Rev. James Frazier will give the
invocation following the pledge to the flag .
John EPilll.l! will serve as master of
l'eremonies during the Independence Oily
prograin on the park front.
Becky Lane, Voice of Democracy
contest winner , will present her winning
essay.
Guest speaker for the July Fourth
celebration will be Commander Carl
Wilgus, (ret) U. S. Navy. This event Is
sponsored by the Gallipolis Area Chamber
of Commerce, in cooperation with the Full
Gospel Business Men's Fellowship.
The annual air show ,by t4e Greene
County Parachute Club will start at 4::10
p.m.
At 4:45p.m. selections from "Gallla
Country" will be presented by Greg Miller,
director; A. K. (Red) Suiter, music. director and Nian Cadman, choreographer .
(Continued on page 2)

tntint

Partly cloudy Sunday with
highs in the low and mid 80s.
Cloudy with a chance of
showers Sunday night' and
Monday. I..Alws Sunday night
in the 60s and highs Monday
in the 80s . .

Save This Weekend During Our Big Sale of

LIVING ROOM SUITE

9xl2 LINOLEUM RUGS
•9.95

SUNDAY PROGRAM
Sunday's t6-hour program ll,egins at 7
a.m. with the annual community pray~:r
breBkfast at the Holiday Inn.
"Our House" museum will be open for
tours from 9:30a.m. until 5 p.m. between
1 and 4 an afternoon tea will be sponsored
by the Gallipolis Busin~ss and
Professional Women's Club at the Our
House.
Another chicken barbecue dinner
begins at 11 a.m. Sunday.
The French Art Colony's annual art
show will commence at 11 a.m. in the
Public Square.
The llilr annual River Recreation
Parade will begin forming atl%:30 p.m. at
the Gallipolis State lostltote. Only vehicle
units will form at the GSI. Marching units
will form at 1 p.m. at the corner of Second
Ave., and Spruce St. Equestrian unllli wiD
lorm at 1 p.m. at tile corner of Fourth
Ave., and Spruce St. The parade Is slated ·
to arrive downtown around 3 p.m.
The parade is sponsored by the
Gallipolis Area Jaycees. Trophies will be
awarded about 4:30p.m. Jim Northup wiD
serve as parade marshal this summer.
Theme is, "Freedom's Trail."
While the parade Is forming, the Gallla
County Senior Citizens Olde Tyn1e Chorus

Weather

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM

Nylon frie ze fabr_ic , Coil spring Construcf ion . Compare

'""'""'~

Skip Meadows Ill
General Chairman

GALUPOUS
A gigantic Amy 's Style Center and My Sister's Closet.
bicentennial parade and fireworks display Bill Miller, WJEH general manager, will
.on the Nation's 200th birthday will serve as master of ceremonies.
highlight Gallla 's 12th Annual River
Ycuth Day will be ollserved on
Recreatioo Festival the July 2-4 weekend Saturday, July 3.
here .
Activities will start at II a.m. with a
Casby (Skip) Meadows Ill, general chicken ljarbecue dinner sponsored by the
chairman of the 1976 Independence Day Southwestern Athletic Boosters Club.
celebration, Saturday announced the
At noon, a wheelbarrow race ,
complete ,program for the three-4ay sponsored by the FOCUS Club, will be held
event, .
·
on the park front. AI 12:30 p.m. a rope
Activities will begin 7 p.m. Friday oo skipping ·contest, sponsored by the
the park front. Richard E. Carter, Kiwanis Club, will keep things moving.
president of the Gallipolis Area Chamber
The French Art Colony will sponsor a
of Commerce, and Richard T. (Dick) paint-in in the Public Square between I
Mills, city manager will welcome visitors and 3 p.m.
and deliver ooenin~ remarks.
The Gallipolis Lions Club will sponsor
At 7: IS p. m. Friday, Mrs. Anne sack races beginning at I p.m. in the
Fischer's Gallia Academy High School Public Square. The Lions annual turtle
Madrigals will perform on the park front races will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the city
stage.
.
park.
The annual River Recreation Festival · . Tex Harrison will be In charge of a
Queen Contest, sponsored by the GallipoDs country and western music program
Business and Professional Women's Club, starting at 6:30p.m.
will begin at 8 p.m. Thl$ yea,'s contestants
The annual teenage dance is scheduled
include Vanessa R. Pleasant, Lynnlta from 8:30 until1lp.m. on ~e. park front.
Newberry, Sharon Faye Waugh, Mary The b~d .thts yea, is Htgh Bottom
Jones and Leesa McGuire.
..Wedge. Trckets are $1 for srngles and
The 1976 queen's crown will be $Uilper couple. The ~nee Is sponsored by
sponsored by Clark 's Jewelry; floral gifts members of the Galhpohs Volunteer Ftre
by Ruth's Floral Shop, and trophies by Department.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Delu Ke 2 Piece

3

River Recreation Festival promises
huge Bicentennial parade, fireworks

Judges get :·

Budget Shop
SPECIALS
at $350 .00

~

Neither was critical of Goins but felt the two ·areas are too
ALBANY - Alva Glen much for ·one individual.
_
•
Haning, 78, Rt. 2, Albany,
Dowler said that the Meigs High School Ia "
died Friday morning at comprehensive high school rather than an acaden\lc one and
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. as a result, it is difficult to schedule classes to include vocal
He was preceded in death music. Mrs. Sheets and Snowden both indicated Utey believe.
by his parents, Howard and that scheduling can be worked out.
Capitola Hicks Haning, and
Dowler dillcussed with the board early entrance testing
three brothers.
conducted by the county board of education office. Six Meigs
Surviving are his wife, Local children took Ute early entrance to kindergarten teut and
Elizabeth Wyatt Haning; a all six failoo to pass. Dowler said that he had a request from ,
son, Dale W., Rt. 2, Athens; a the mother of one of the six who asked that her child be •
grandson, Edward, Rt. 2, pennitted to enter kindergarten anyway. The board agreed to ,
Athen s; three step- follow stale policy which is that a child must pass the test in·
grandchildren, Billy order to be allowed early entrance to kindergarten.
Easterling, serving with the
Board members were asked to be at the Coal Port School;
anned forces in Gennany; ·in lowef Pomeroy at 10 a.m. Saturday when bids wiD be .
Catherine and Jacqueline opened. This is one of several attempts by Meigs I..Alcal Boards.
Easterling, Rt. 2, Athens, and to sell the structure which has been unused many years .
a sister, Mrs. Allee Welch,
Dowler reminded members of the Ohio State Board of
Rt. 2, Albany.
Education Assn. meeting in Athens on June 30. A request from
Funeral services will be 2 Mildred Bailey to attend a vocational home economics
p.m. Sunday at the Bigony- conference in Columbus Aug. 16-18 was approved. Mrs. Sheets
Jordan Funeral Home in spoke on evaluation, particularly in the board's.
Albany with the Rev. Howard recommendations on the duties of the administration. She also
Mayne officiating. Burial will commented that the board should meet in executive session
be in the Wells Cemetery at and fut sev.eral goals for the next year. She was asked to
Pagetown. Friends may caD prepare copies of evaluation and other related material for
at the funeral home Satur- advance study by board members before they meet on the
day, 2 to ': and 7to 9p.m.
matter.
An executive session was held last night to discuS~~,.
JCr!«lnnel and the meetings for the next two months were setior July 9 and Aug . 2. Several vacancies in the district were.
Music planned
reviewed by Dowler.
·
'
Attending
were
Supt.
Dewier,
Dan
Morris,
assistant·
Special music is planned
for the outdoor revival of the superintendent; board members, Wendell Hoover, Mrs.
Racine Baptist Church which Sheets, Snowden, King and Dr. Riggs, and Robert MorTis,
is beittg held in the Southern principal at Pomeroy and Middleport Elementary School,s. '
High School stadium at 8
each evening weather per·
~: : :::::::::::::::::;:;:: :::;:::::::::::::::::::: :;:: :;:;: ::: :;:;:::::::;:;::
milling.
Tonight the Gospel Tones
will be featured. On SaturEXTENDED OUTLOOK
day, Denny Manuel and the
Sunday through
(Continued froo1 page 1)
Norris Quartet will be
Tuesday, a chance of
singing, and. on Sunday, the
was
arrested April 15 in a
showers Sunday, Monday
closing evening, John Jl!le . and Tuesday. Highs will be Southfield apartment and·
and Janice Salser will
charged with keeping a bouse
in Ute upper "ffls to the lower
present vocal duets. Speaker
of prostitution , accepting:
80s and lows will be In the
is the pastor, Don Walker and
earnings
of a prostitute and
upper 50s to the lower IIOs.
Earl Shuler is song leader.
procuring a grossly indecent
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::: act between a male and
female.
!'

Meigs 4-H Club News

BLACK BEARD'S GHOST
Dean Jones, Peter Ustinav,

Wliat 's better than one
idea?
Two.
A Sa·.-irrgs Account builds your fortune .
A Checking Account controls it.
One is nice. But ...

unhappy that he dropped out
of a chance to tie 'Crampton
for the. runnerup spot when
his drive.on the 18th hole hit a
tree and dropped into the
water to set up a double
bogey six.
The afternoon players, with
less rain, scored better and
Dickson, Crampton, Coody
and seven of the par shooters
were in that group. Starling
times today will turn the
groups around, but the
weather foreca st was
favorable.
The field will be cut to tbe
low 70 scorers and ties after
today's round.

JUUGt; APPOINTED
COLUMBUS IUP I)
Cuyahoga Common Pleas
Judge Sa ul G. Stillman wa s
appointed Wednesday by
Gov . James A. Rhodes as
judge vf the 8th District Court
of Appea ls effe ctive July 1.
Sti llman , 66, succe eds
Judge John M. Manos, who
re"igned April 8 to become a
federal court judge.
Stillman is a form er
member of ·the Cuyahoga
County Board of E lectio~s
and graduated with Phi Beta
Kappa honors from Harvard
University and the Harvard
Law School.

•

BUDGE'I; HEARING SET .
TUPPERS PLAINS- Ahearing on the
Orange Township budget will be held at 7
p.m. at the residence of NIM Robinson,
township clerk, Route 2, Coolville, on July
5.
.

.:

stool, and turned him around.
Seconds after the incident,
anolher bolt of lightning hit a utility
pole In front of the store. Electric
company workers had been repairing
damage to that pole shortly before the
~tore was struck. No one was injured
in that incident.
Mr. Napier told the Times-

. ,l

~~~f~~~l~~~s~~f ~l!a~~i~~~t~ ~E.~b~~~!f~~~~=r~~~~~ r~.ti~~~~~~,r:;:~;:~f~~~~
the window before striking him.

:;!~~ ~~~~~:~.~~~~~~~;: ~~ som~:~~;'~a~~ o~"m~e~k wk~~e~ ~::/edc!~~~~~~~! R~~~ugh
wlhdrtness,
the front
w
ow ofshot
the through
store, struck
Mr . ..

cameHeout,"
Napier
said.five red marks
added,
"It left

~:

L:::~:~,:~~::::.:. . .:~:!~2~~~~~~.:=kU:.:,:::::.:,~,:,~
.,

�2- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 27, 1976

Cake show slated

Coal Port
School sold

NEARLY OOE- This picture shows nearly all of the road deck and painting work on the
West Virginia side of the Pomeroy Mason bridge has been com pleted Work still remains to
be done on the Ohio side.

POMEROY - Away, away back, sometime in the 19th
Century, probably close to the Civil War Years, the "Coa l Port
Sehool" was built on Liberty Ave. in lower Pomeroy. No one
offband knows when the Coal Port School stopped being a
school.
For many years local business firms of one kind or another
leased it in succession as a war~honse .
Readers often bring in clippings or old photographs of
classes 50, 60, 75 yea rs old at rural schools, or from Racine,
Dexter , Pomeroy, Middle part and other schools.
Strangely, however, in the last 30 years no one has
presented a picture of any class at "Coal Por.t School. "
It is enough to make one wonder whether or not Coal Port
School really had any students at all.
In any case, the Meigs boca! School Board determined to
sell its property on Liberty Ave., which obviously never can be
refurbished into a school.
The results were photographed Saturday by Bob Titus of
Ponieroy, senior sun)lller intern in journalism at Ohio State
University.

the project were "exce llent."
The estimated cost of renovation to the
bridge is set at $1.3 million. When
completed, the bridge will be able to carry
the full legal load instead of the 60 per cent
authorized in recent years.

.Base teacher pay
mandated at $7900
GALlJPOlJS
Due to salary
requirements mandated by Senate Bill 170,
the· Gallipolis City Board of Education
Friday night in special session, adopted
new salary schedules effective July I for
ce.iified and classified employees.
The. base salary was increased to
$7,900 for a beginning teacher with a
Bachelor's Degree. It goes to $1:1,130 fat· a
teacher holding a Master's Degree with 11
yem·s ex:peri enl'e.
The salaries of non-teaching pet·sonnel
were adjusted by 3.1 pd. to meet the
t'equircments of Sena te Bill 170. Tltosc
raises are alsoeffective July 1.
The board employed two supmv isors
and three teachers and accepted the
resignation of another instructor.
Paul Bauer, New Boston. a gcaduate
of Xavier University at 'Cincinnati , was
employed on a three-year contract as
Director of Instruction and Curriculum on
a 12 month basis. He wil l receive a salary
ratio of 1.45. He holds certification as a
supervisor and principal. He has held a
similar position at New Boston. Bauer
holds a Master's Degree from Xavier and
is currently doing post master's work.
Kenton Adkins, former school psychologist, who resigned that position
last w.eck, was na med Director of Non·
Ce rtificated Persomiel and Com-

River recreation
(Continued from page I )
11te annua l ski show, to be sponsorea
by the French City Ski Club, is slated to
be gin at 5: 15 p.m. Myron (Bud ) McG hee
will serve as master of ceremonies for this
event.
Patriotic music and a gospel sing is
scheduled from 7::l0 until 9 in the Public
Square. '111e Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce's annual fund-raising project
will be climaxed at 9 p.m.
The $2,000 , 45-minute fir eworks
display, sponsored by the Volunteer
Gallipolis Fire Department and Ga llipolis
Retail Merchants will begin at 10 p.m.
This yea r's display includes a huge
colorful American flag which will be
mounted on three 4~foot poles along the
riverbank.

mwucations. In his new duties, Adkins will
have charge of transpotialion, ct«todians,
maintenance and all classifie d employees.
He was given a three-year contract with a
sa lary ratio of 1.45 on a 12 month basis.
Teachers employed were: Martha Jane
Stowers White as Business Education
teacher at Gallia Academy. She replaced
the retired Elsie Lusk.
Elemenwry instructors hired were
Sherry Simon Kauff and Judy D.
Wa rehime. Mrs. Warehime taug ht last
year at Hannan Trace Elementary Sc hool.
The resignation of Paula Bartos, a
teacher at Green Elementary was ac·
cepted. She is moving to Miamisburg.
The salary of Millard Cassidy, prin·
cipal at Rio Grande Elementary who has
been serving as federal coordinator was
also adjusted from the present 1.15 ratio to
1.25.

.

.

.

Pr_eSident Dean R. Circle appolllted a
conumttee composed of hunself and board '
member Robert Marcht , two tea~het ·s, a
classtfted employee and an admuustrator
to consider proposals on hospitalization,
surgtcal and maJOr medtcallns urance.. ,
It was announced that the dtStnct s
pi'Oposed budget for 1977 will be available
for public scrutiny at the regular board
meeting July 11.

Bahr sues
(Continued from page 1)
permission from the beard to attend
profe&gt;&lt;&lt;ional meeting; combined classes of
chemistry and general science without approval of principal which causes loss of
clock hours •·equired by Swtc Department
of Education and use of preparation period
fo r teacher asSoc iation business.

Replacement' of
locks is needed
first of all
COLUMBUS I UP!) - The Gallipolis
Lock on the Ohio River should be replaced
immediately says Ohio Transportation

SPECIAL SESSION CALLED
GALLIPOlJS - Mrs. Naomi Beman,
clerk of the Gallia County Local Board of
Education, announced Saturday the board
will meet -in special session at 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Main item on the agenda will be
the fire damage at Hannan Trace High
School, the board 's policy cover ing the
damage and renovation project.

STATE STORE TO CLOSE
COLUMBUS - Director Clifford E.
Reich of the Ohio Department of Liquor
, Control has announced all state liquor
stores, agencies and departmental offices
• will be closed Monday, July 5, in
observance of Independence Day .

TRUSTEES TO MEET
GALIJPOLIS - The Gallia County
District Library Boa rd of Trustees will
hold a special meeting on Tuesda~ . June
29, at 5 p.m. m the librarian's office at the
Ubrary on the corner of Third Ave. and
State St.
; HERRING CONVICTED
, ' • MACON, Ga. (UP!) - John
'; ""'Scooter" Herring, former
:, road manager for rock star
~, Gregg Allman, was convicted
Friday of drug charges after
•· a twCKlay tria l in which
., Allman . testified as a

f

ALSO PRESENT - Members of the Board of Education were present Saturday at the
bidding. Shown here with Superintendent of Meigs Local Schools Charles Dowler (left) are
school board members Virgil King, Robert Snowden, and Wendell Hoover.
·

Med insurance premiums
on Medicare going up soon

Bridge on schedule
(Continued from page I)
things are on schedule. We will meet the
Sept. 4deadline , despite extra work we ran
into."
He said relati ons with state people on

million

HIGHEST BIDDER- Charles Dowler (left) is shown
here with the highest bidder for the Coal Port' School
Pomeroy attorney Rick Crow 1right ).

GALLIPOLIS - Monthly
premiums on the medical in·
surance part of Medicare will
go upstarting July 1.
The basic premium rate
will go from $6.70 to $7.20 a
month, according to Trische
Danesi, social security
branch
manager
in
Gallipolis.
Medicare medical in·
surance helps pay doctor
bills and other medical ex·
penses and is funded by individual premiums and
Federal general revenues.
The protection is of£ered to
people reaching 65 and over
who are eli~ible for social
security or railroad retiremertt benefits, to disabled

Winning attitude vital says coach
MIDDLEPORT .• The
coach who 1ed the Meigs
Marauder baseball team to
the state semi-finals early
this month believes winnitlg
attitude is important and is
not come by overnight.
Dale Harrison, who has
competed himself eight times
at the state level in fa st-pitch
softball, told the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday
evening at Heath United
Methodist Church the 1976
Marauder baseball team had
good talent, good pitching,
and a fine, winning attitude
at the beginning and at the
end of the season.
"We were tied for first in
the Southeastern Conference
when we ran into Wellston
and our main spark plug outfielder Mike Magnotta
was injured. "The team
seemed to lose faith it could
win without him, it kind of
was waiting for Mike to get
back," said Harrison.
Magnotta, at the time he
was injured was batting .428
and had stolen I I bases in six

where just four Class AA
teams remained.
He praised righthander
Jeff McKinney for his desire
to win and talent.
Columbus Wehrle , the
team Meigs defeated in the
regionals, was favored to win
the state championship,
Harrison said. ·
Team and individual
trophies won by the 1976
squad were displayed and
questions answered.
In general comments,

mainly about winning attitude, Harrison questioned
the conectness of a
prevalent approach to Little
League and Pony League
level baseball. He said the ac·
cepted idea is for the players
to have fun at that level and

Reckless clrivuJgl'harg-c~d

Saturda y.

POMEROY - Donald E.
Stobart.

:17,

Route

3,

Pomeroy ,. was charged with
reckless operation of a motor
On May 28 Magnotta's dOC· vehicle by Sheriff Robert C.
tor sa id no way would Hartenbach's department
Magnotta play again this Saturday after Stobart ran
year.
·
· his truck off CR 26 at 4:35
" l think the bovs decided p.m.
then it had to, and· could win ,
Stobart, deputies said, was
without Mike, if they weren't removed to Veteran s
to get knocked out of the tour- Memorial Hospital by the
nament at once. They respon· Pomeroy E·R sq uad after he
ded that same day .. May 28- lost control of his vehicle at
by defeating Ironton, league the entrance to Royal Oak
champions.
Park. Stobart's truck went
Harrison recalled several off the right of CR 26 and riptense moments in the trail of ped out 66 feet of fence owned
victories into Columbus by Horace Karr.
games.

not to be concerned about school sports. The problem.is
to motivate young people.
winning.
"! don't think competitive The good athlete finds other
spm·ts can be built that way," ·activities of interest too
he said. " We can 't start at easily.''
President Vern Weber
the high school level to teach
presided.
Ladies of the
the desire to win.''
church
served
dinner,. and
He went on :
Judge
Bob
Buck
introduced
"This is a whole new ball
the
speaker.
game these days in hi~h
'

Heritage Sunday
termed 'success'
POMEROY- The Meigs
Co unty Pioneer and
Historical Society trustees
meeting . at the Meigs
Museum Tuesday evening
heard success reports on
Heritage Sunday. The society
expressed pleasure at the interest shown by the many
visitors in the displays,
demonstrations and the new
history wall .
Hostesses who helped to
make the day successful
were Mrs. Leo Story, Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, Mrs.
Leland Parker, Mrs. Seth•
Nicholson, Mrs. Gerard
Hilfert y, Mrs. Er nest
Win get t, Mrs . Luc ille
Leifheit, Mrs. Nonna Curtis,
Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, Mrs.
Michael Gerlach, Mrs. Ted
Reed, Mrs. Francis Roberts
and Mrs. Paul Chapman.
Presentations were made
to the museum by Mrs. Dollie
Hayes on behalf of Mrs. Alice
Thomspon, an 1883 Har·

~;;l~:n:~!~~r~~£~~!~f:~.:r~~:·:~ Summer program gives

described the old lock as a bottleneck that
endangers shipping during times of high
water and WJnecessarily boosts utility bills
for state electricity users .
Jackson said testimony before the
Senate Subcommittee on water Resources
in Washington this week showed that the
lock, built during the steam-powered
towboat era, is no longer safe for river
traffic in high water time.
DOT officials said the lock located on
the inside bend of the river, c'ould sweep
tows through the dam or even into the lock .
itself in high water. They said such an
accident could have "a disastrous impact
on power production and water supply
along the Ohio."
Cost of replacement is calculated at
$137 million.
~~!STANCE GIVEN
COLUMBUS - State Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson's office reported public
assistance in the amount of $7,637,785.93
was distribcted to Ohio 's 88 coWJties in
May. Meigs CoWJty received $7,239.77 of
the total.

under

prosecution witness.
Herring was convicted of
conspiracy and dreg distribulion by a U.S. District Court
, jury.
Allman , married
to
ente rtainer Clt er, tes tified

CJ

g11.a11t uf immunity.

He said he was furnished
dregs in 1973 and 1974 by
Herring and Joe Fuchs, a
former Macon pharmaCist,
now serving a !!).year prison
sentence on a drug
cor.wk ti on.

. people under 65 who have
been entitled to social
security or similar railroad
retirement disability benefits
for 24 consecutive months or
more,andtomanypeopleWJ·
der 65 with permanent kidney
failure.
Th~ Medicare law requires
an annual. review of the cost
of the medical insurance
program. Based on this
review, an estimate is made
of the cost of this coverage
for the following year. Under
that provision the Medicare
beneficiaries' basic premium
rate wouid have been in·
creased by over 40 percent to
$10.70 a month because of
rising costs of medical ser·

.
CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
Metgs Community Action
Agency's Summer Program
for Economically Disad·
vantaged Youth (SPEOY ), is
proyiding Summer Work Ex·
penence for !58 youths from
Metgs and Gallia Counties,
ages 14-21, who meet the CSA
Povetty Guidelines.
This annual project is fun·
ded under Title Ill of the
Comprehensive Employment

and Training Act (CETA),
and is administered by the
Manpower Division of the
Ohio Department of Ad·
ministration Services.
The Gal li a County
Program is funded for $57,593
a~d provides 90 economically
disadvantaged youth with
work experience. Work sites
in Gallia County are as
follows: Gallipolis State In•
sti!ttte , Buckeye Hills Career

r-------- - ~--------t

.liTH ANNUAL RIV ER
RECREATION FESTIVAL PARADE
Ga llipolis, Ohio
Official En try Bl ank
1

19/6 them e, " Freedom '-; Trait' '
Jld y J. 1976 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __

_

.1 p .m .
Organ izn tion
( Or i ndi v id ua;il-;;e;;-n;t;;
e;:;ri;;;ng::i)- - - - - - - - -

Name o l lnd iv td ttld _ ___,_ _ _ __

_ _ __

Add re "" - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - -

w_

desty's History and an Early
History and War Record of
Wilkesville and Salem. Also,
Mrs. Hayes presented on
behalf of Rodney Downing a
late 1800s picture of the Ex·
celsior Salt Worl:s. · Mrs.
Blakeslee presented on
bebalf of Alpha Delta Kappa
Sorority, a large col·
feemaker.
Announcement was made
that on July 27, alB p. m. at
the museum, Laszlo G. Koe
Krompecher will make a
presentation on historical
buildings and human values.
A slide show of local
buildings will be a part ofthis
program. It will be open to
the public, and anyone in·
terested is invited.
Hours were set for the
museum to be open during
the months of July and .
August, Tuesday, Friday and
Sunday- from 2 to 4 p. m. •
Other times by appointment.
Exhibits will be the "Town·
ships" and the history wall.

vices covered by Medicare's
medical insurance.
But the law also limits any
increase in the basic
premium rate to the per·
centage that social security
benefit payments increased
in the previous year. Social
security payments increased
8 percent in 1975, so the
Medicare medical insurance
basic premium rate was
limited to 8 percent starting
July 1- to $7.20 a month. The
premium is less than half the
cost of this protection. The
Federal Government pays
the remainder from general
revenues.
The basic premium rate
could not be increased last
year because of a technical
flaw in the law that has since
been corrected.
Some people 65 or over pay
a monthly premium for the
other part of Medicare, the
hospital insurance, because
they didn't work long enough
under social security. Starting July 1, the basic
premium rate for these
people will go from $40 to $45
a month.
Hospital insurance protec·
lion is erlended without
premium charge to people
reaching 65 who are eligible
for social security or railroad
retirement benefits, to
disabled people under 65 who
have been entitled to social
security or similar railroad
retirement disability benefits
for 24 consecutive months or
more, and to many people un·
der65with permanenlkidney
failure.
People 65 and over. who
aren't eligible for social
security or railroad
retirement benefits can get
Medicare hospital insurance
by paying a monthly
premium if they also sign up
for the medical insurance.
The hospital insurance
premium rate is based on the
average monthly cost of this
protection. ·
Over 24 million people have
one or both parts of
Medicare. In 1975, the
hospital insurance program
paid $11.3 billion in benefits
and the medical insurance
programpaid$4.3billion.
Medicare is administered
by the Social Security Ad·
mioistration. People ca n get
information about signing up
for MediCare by calling,
writing,_ or . visiting the
Gall!pohs Soctal Secunty Of.
ftce at 49 Olive St. The phone
number is 446-7600.

PLAINS, Ga. (UP! )..Jim·
my Carter said Saturday he
will help the Democratic Par·
ty raise up to $10 million
dollars for congressional and
· gubernatorial candidates this
election year. Carter,
rela~g at horne with the
Democratic presidential
nomination virtually wrapped up, carne to town from
his peanut farn1 to check the
cleaning of catfish for a
family fish fry later in the af·
temoon.
He told trailing reporters
he hopes to pay off his nwn
campaign debt through fund
raising receptions like one
hosted for him in Atlanta by
Georgia Sens. Herman
Talmadge and Sam NWJn
Saturday night.
The former Georgia gevernor also said he has talked
with nationa l Democratic
Chairman Robert Strauss
about fund raising plans for
Democrats running for
governor and Congress in
various states.
"We'll raise between $5
million and $10 million
dollars--the party will ,
maybe with J telethon or
some other. d fort-none of
which would be spent for my
campaign, except an indirect
benefit from registration and
getting out the vote," said
Carter.

MEIGS THEATRE
TO NIGHT
IUNE 271h
Wa II Di sney 's

Blackbea rds Ghost
Dean Jones. Peter Ustinov ,
Suia nr1e Pleshette , Elsa
Lan ches ter , Joby Ba k er.

Ell iot! Re id.

COLO~Y
*

*

firmary, Meigs County Court
House, Community Action
Agency Office, Meigs County
. Tuberculosis Clinic, and
Meigs County Extension Of·
fice.
Each participant is em·
ployed for 24 hours per week
for 10 weeks, from June 14 to
August 20, 1976. The partici(lants are paid $2.30 per
hour, and each receive a
physical examination prior to
being enrolled. Counseling
servtces are provided by the
Program to assist the
enroll ee
in
money
management and job respon·
sibility .

The Community Action
Agency and the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services Of.
lice are undertaking a joint
venture utilizing SPEDY
enrollees to develop a Rent·
A-Youth Program for Gallia
and Meigs Counties. This
prograni is designed to create
private employment for other
youth seeking Summer Jobs.
Anyone interested
in
obtaining summer help
through the Rent-A-Youth
Program should contact tbe
ORES Office In Gallipolis at
446-1683, or the Meigs County
Community Action Agency
Office at 992-6605.

a

'

Dear Big Mac :
I am in love with a gorilla and would like to marry him. He
is a nice gorilla and wears pink bedroom slippers and a red
ribbon around his neck. However, most of my friends would
frown on my marrying a gorilla. Although we do not have a
common language we un.det;lltand each other per&lt;· ~t!y . He
grunts at me when he wants fed. My mother and father are
threatening to disinherit me if I continue my love aff;~ir with
the gorilla. Can you straighten this matter out for me. Signed: Hortense

Dear Readers :
The results from Oshkosh were as follows :
Zuella Smith, 6904, Clara Lochary , 5280, Mildred McDaniel
5260, Elizabeth Arnold Cutler 5280, Norma Goodwin 5000, Ann
Watson 4999, Goldie Clendenin. 4200, Nancy Chapman, 4195,
Kathryn Philson 3950, Vera Beegle 3900 and Katie Crow,
2150k
J. Pierpont Ebert reports that Miss Z. Smith really carried
all precincts in Upper Oshkosh because of her charming smile.
1'hey compared her to Jimmy Carter and we suggest that he
consider her as a Vice Presidential running mate. It is unusual
when three candida tes have the exact number of votes and
Ebert doesn 't know how to explain this.
The remaining candidates aU had a la te start and very
little was known about them by the voters. Ebert believes that
Alice Nease and Katie Crow will improve tremendouslv when
the 'fioflywood vote comes in. - Big Mac.

IIIMI \1 1 ~

!lollll
tii i&gt;IJI JI. IIot..,..,

111111111"'

•I• •'~"•

beginner is described as
anyone who has decorated
cakes for one year or les.s,
are novelty , such as Raggedy
Ann or Winnie, the Pooh,
made in any way, and special
occasion, such as btrthday or

ft!JI)

ll•n t' ' '

'"~''&gt;1~1.\ 1 1&lt;'!'

G

A'O,t,H,_I~ II \ Ill -·

0

CARTOON

,

WINTERHAWK &amp;
TRAP ON
COUGAR MOUNTAIN

S11nday.Times-Sentinel
Pub I ished every
by
The
OhiO .
Publ ishing Co .

Rutland Saturday

in the Rutland gynlllasiwn
and cakes are to be tnkcn
there bet ween 8:30 and 10
a.m. Saturday. They must be
made of cake anti not a dwn·
my base.
While there will be no entry
fee, each cake exl1ibited will
· automatically become the
property of the Rutland
Emergency Medical Service.
The cakes at the conclusion
of the show will be sold or
auctioned off with the
proc eeds goi ng to the
Rutland EMS.
The judging will begin at

10:30 a.m. by Mrs. Qetty Car·
penter, cake decorating
teacher at Rio Grande Com·
munity Colle~e and owner of
Betty 's Cake Creations at
Rodney .
.
Ribbons will be awarded to
the first , second and third
places in each class, and cannot be removed until 4 p.m.
The rules specify tluit Ute
cake must be the work of the
person entering the show.
Any novelty iten\ placed on
the cake will also be donated
with the cake.
A Mayor's tt·ophy will be

Sunda 'r
Va l l ey

JOBLESS FEWER
COLUMBUS I UPI)
Unemployment in Ohio ha s
declined from 7.4 per cent of
the civilian labor force in
April to 6.9 per cent in May,
according to the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services. The
Bureau said Friday 324,000
Ohioans were without jobs in
May compared to 344,000 in
April.

DA ILY TR I BUNE
82S Third Ave ., Gallipo lis,
Ohio ~56 31 . ·
Published every weekda y
eve n ing e:~~~c. ept Saturday .
Sec ond Class Post.!ge Po~~td '
at Gallipolis , Ohio .45631 .
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court -SL PtJmeroy, 0 .
4576 9. Publisl1ed every week .
day even ing eKcept Salur
day . Entered as secon d class
mailing matter at Pomeroy ,
Ohio Post Off ice .
BY. cafrier dal ly and
Sunday 75c pl&gt;r week . Motor
route $3 .75 per mon th
MAIL
SUB SCRI PTION RATES
The
Gct'llipo li s
Dally
Tr ibune in Ohio and We st
V irginia on~ year S22 .00 ; six
mon ths 511 ,50 ; three months
S7.00. ElseWhere $26 .00 per
vear ; SIK months $13 .50 ,•
three months S7 .50 ; ntotor
. route SJ .15 month l y.
The Daily Senti nel. one

PRICES SO LOW IT HARDLY
PAYS TO COOK AT HOME! !
OPEN DAILY 9 AM-8 PM

SUNDAYS

12 -S PM

Silver Bridge Plaza

EVERY THURSDAY IS "FAMILY NIGHT!"
Sach dinner includes : Appetizer · salad · ent ree ·
rOll · bufler · dessert • beverage. 4 tO 8 p;m.
Dinner
·

UP,nPit"'h&gt;IP •

=='--

"ALL YOU CAN EAr' Fillet with Fries · cole slaw · roll butter

year $22 .00 ; SiK "lOnths
$11.50 ; three months $7 .00 .
E I sew here
$26 .00;
six
months $13 .50 ; three month s

$7.50 .

awarded along with a ~1ft
certificate to t~e " best of
show." No person who has
tnught cake decora ting,
working In a bakery, or sold
over S400 worth of cakes ean
enter the competition ,
although cakes will be ac·
cepted for display .
During the day , Mrs. Car·
penter will demonstrate cake
decorating in two sessions.
After each of the s •ssiotLI the
decorated novelty ca~e will
be given uway . Only
requirement is Uta! the per·
son must be present to win.

MURPHY'S MART RESTAURANT!

GALLI POL I·S

EVERY SATURDAY IS SPAGHETTI DAY! !

.

~~ALL

The United Press ..1n..
ternationa l Is cKclus l ve ly
. en titled to the use. for
pub l icatio n of all n ews
dispa t ches credited to th e
newspaper an d also the loca l
news pub l ished herein .

Italian Style
$159
YOU CAN EAr' Spaghetti
with meat sauce · salad ·
roll . butter .

G. C. MURPHY COMPANY -

THE FRIENDLY STORE

JU

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

MilliS' 2 PC.
SHORISIIS

10 LB. BAG

'

GREAT LAKES

76

TliPalrr ·

NOW YOU KNOW
Thomas Carlyle had to
complete rewrite his great
history of the French
Revolution after his cook
inadvertently used the
original manuscript for a pie
crust.

the classes in th e in·
termediate division. In·
tennediates are described as
those who hav e been
dt.'Corating t'akes for over one
year.
There is also an open
division for both _beginners
and intermediates. It is entitled ''Bicentennial" and is a
class for patriotic themed
cakes .
The cake show will be held

beginners division , and a

Dear Hortense:
ESKEW RECOVERING
I do not write advice to the lovelorn columns. This is a
POMEROY
Gene
matter strictly for Dear Abby, Ann Landers, Sue and Helen
Eskew,
Lincoln
Hill,
is
Bolle!. It appears to me that you need a little psychiatric
recovering
sa
tisfactorily
treaiment. - Signed : Big Mac
from brain surgery Monday
follo~ing
a cerebral
Dear Big Mac :
homorrhage
at
St. Marys
I desperately need a woman with the following
Hospital;
Parkersburg.
His
qualifications: very wealthy, kind, considerate, aged between room is 6010.
45 and ~o. white, caucasian, a good cook and conversationalist,
and one without false teeth and speaks English. Would you
please place this in your column so I may find this woman. Signed: Ambrose.
Dear Readers:
If you know of such a woman, please write to me for
Ambrose's address. - Signed: Big Mac

Sunday -Monday
and Tuesday

96e~~~fs

"BRIQUETS

SET

__

18" FOLDING

LSAVE $3,22

.,.......,.,.'

;;~·. :.:..

CHARCOAL

SAVE s2

CHARCOAL
GRILL

Cool, core lrea ond pretty!
\00% polyester pique pull
on shorts ond matd1ing
sleeveless luni c. AssOrted necklines. Zip
ba ck or pu II on
~tyles . Solid col
01s w/ con llost
tr im. 8- 16.

EXTRA HEAVY STEEL
BOWL

REG. 18.80
"

TROPIC
TORCHES

WOMEN'S SPORT
O.R STRAW HATS

In 1972, President Nixon
announced tha t no more
draftees would be sent to
Vietnam
unl ess
they
volunteered.

. ... --

99e

(l -

~

C •lton sport hat s · stitched and
._, 0 ppy brim styles . Peanut straw
hats w-wide brims.

$ 99
PAIR

~RETTY

•

WAY TO LIGHT
UP YOUR PATIO PARTY.

REGULAR s2.37

TORCH FUEL
SAVE
soc

SUNDAY thru SA 'fUI~DA y '
JUNE 27 THRU JULY 3rd

Gai ly decorated viny l wall with jumbo, infl aiable safely ring on
lop. Durably constructed lo last through many seasons of summer

.FOOTLONG HOT DOGS

· fttn

$~~~ON

Easy Lighting and Clean
Burning

SP if-o; tirk rPI'Vlirki• inrl11nE&gt;d

BASE-LOAD DESIGN
CB ANTENNA

64C
MODE L

"Fixed 1'1te W"y
You Like 'Em"

KCB-1300

REG . 519.94

Sundav thru Thursday

IOA.M. IillDP.M.
Friday and Saturdav
10A.M. 1il II P.M.

Printing contract made
GALlJPOlJS - Simms
Printing, 460 Second Ave.
Friday was awarded con·
tract to print 12,000 ballots
for the special school bond
issue election in the Gallla
County Local School District
Aug. IO.
According to the Gallia
County Board of Elections,
the low bid tota led .$237.11.
French City Press was the

·

Dear Grandpa Jones :
Although it appears that the DAR is discriminating
against you, I do not feel that this discrimination is important
since you are not a woman or a member of women's lib. I can
understand why the SAR turned you down because of Benedit1.
I doubt whether you could get into tbe DAR even if you were to
change your sex. What you need is a new head. I would suggest
that you write to the Regional Director of tbe DAR in Meigs
County, Ohio. I do not know their names. - Signed : Big Mac

Dear Big Mac:
.
I
think
the
men
's
votes
in Oshkosh last week were rigged.
Tonight thru Tues.
George Carper should have been first. Anyone who deals with
Show Begins 8 : DO p.m.
plants as he does belongs at the top - I protest.- Helen.
, - - - - - - - -- --, Dear Helen:
· ·
George will get his chance when his new discovery is
announced soon, This election is on the square. - Big Mac.

ork to 158 area youth~

Center, Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, City of Gallipolis, GaUia
County. Fairgrounds, Guidi_ng
Hand School, Galhpohs Ctty
Schools, Ga llia County
Schools, Chamber of Com·
merce, Army Recruite r,
Village of Vinton, Township
Trustees, Ohio · sure~u of
Emp loyment S~rvices,
Seni?r Citi zens' Cente r,
Public Ltbrary, Community
Action Agency Offices, and
the Soil and. Water ConservatwnSemceO!ftce.
The Meigs County
Program_isfundedfor$42,476
and provtdes 68 econonucally
disadvantaged youth with
work experience. Work sites
in Meigs County are as
follow s: So"thern Local
School District, Eas tern
Local School District, Meigs
Local School District ,
Pomeroy Village, Middleport
Village, Syracuse Village,
Raci ne Village, County High·
way Department, Forked
Run State Park, Township
Trustees, Agricultural
Stabilization a nd Con·
serva tion Service Office
(ASCS), Soil Conservation
Service Office ' [SCS), , In-

' G"

Sh ow start s 7 p.m .

Dear Big Mac :
I am writing to you again although under protest. It seems
that I have been turned down for the SAR. 'Now I want to join
the DAR. I have been advised by someone who knows tbat I
ca nnot get in the DAR. I believe this is discrimination . can you
give me any information as to how I can go about getting into
the DAR? My ancestor was Benedict Arnold. Do you think that
the DAR would discriminate against me. Kindly advise as to
w~m I write. -Signed: Grandpa Jones

auniverSCjry . Tht:re arc also

'RUTI.AND - II cake show
with classes for ~beginnc r s
and intennediates will be a
feahn·e of the July 4 weekend
t'elebralion to take place
here.
The show to be held on
Saturday will have divisions
for both beginners and in·
termetliates in cake
decorating. Classes in the

•
ID

Solid State, 23·CIIannel

only other bidder at$273.
Two separate ballots wiU
be printed, one a two mill
bond issue for construction of
th~e ~ new elementa ry
bwldings and the renovation
of existing elementary
buildings and the other a 2.4
mill levy for a new high
school and refurbishing of
existing high school
buildings.
.,

MOBILE CB RAD'IO

rorULu.

u.nu

2nd &amp;Olive

'l

Gallipolis, 0.

---

' BUY NOW AND BE READY
FOR THE HOliDAYS - INSTALL IT
YOURSELF.

large illum inated vu-meler. Squelch
conlrol. PA sw ilch. Bui ll in ou lornoti c noise-l1miting ci rcuil . MoKimum
4-watt outpul. Wired-in microphone.

.c.

99
.

IUH \AI

"(HARGill"
AI

It

'

MUIIP~Y\,

94
REG.

$1 09 .94
US(
IANUIIUICAII
OIIIIASll• tiiUSE

�2- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 27, 1976

Cake show slated

Coal Port
School sold

NEARLY OOE- This picture shows nearly all of the road deck and painting work on the
West Virginia side of the Pomeroy Mason bridge has been com pleted Work still remains to
be done on the Ohio side.

POMEROY - Away, away back, sometime in the 19th
Century, probably close to the Civil War Years, the "Coa l Port
Sehool" was built on Liberty Ave. in lower Pomeroy. No one
offband knows when the Coal Port School stopped being a
school.
For many years local business firms of one kind or another
leased it in succession as a war~honse .
Readers often bring in clippings or old photographs of
classes 50, 60, 75 yea rs old at rural schools, or from Racine,
Dexter , Pomeroy, Middle part and other schools.
Strangely, however, in the last 30 years no one has
presented a picture of any class at "Coal Por.t School. "
It is enough to make one wonder whether or not Coal Port
School really had any students at all.
In any case, the Meigs boca! School Board determined to
sell its property on Liberty Ave., which obviously never can be
refurbished into a school.
The results were photographed Saturday by Bob Titus of
Ponieroy, senior sun)lller intern in journalism at Ohio State
University.

the project were "exce llent."
The estimated cost of renovation to the
bridge is set at $1.3 million. When
completed, the bridge will be able to carry
the full legal load instead of the 60 per cent
authorized in recent years.

.Base teacher pay
mandated at $7900
GALlJPOlJS
Due to salary
requirements mandated by Senate Bill 170,
the· Gallipolis City Board of Education
Friday night in special session, adopted
new salary schedules effective July I for
ce.iified and classified employees.
The. base salary was increased to
$7,900 for a beginning teacher with a
Bachelor's Degree. It goes to $1:1,130 fat· a
teacher holding a Master's Degree with 11
yem·s ex:peri enl'e.
The salaries of non-teaching pet·sonnel
were adjusted by 3.1 pd. to meet the
t'equircments of Sena te Bill 170. Tltosc
raises are alsoeffective July 1.
The board employed two supmv isors
and three teachers and accepted the
resignation of another instructor.
Paul Bauer, New Boston. a gcaduate
of Xavier University at 'Cincinnati , was
employed on a three-year contract as
Director of Instruction and Curriculum on
a 12 month basis. He wil l receive a salary
ratio of 1.45. He holds certification as a
supervisor and principal. He has held a
similar position at New Boston. Bauer
holds a Master's Degree from Xavier and
is currently doing post master's work.
Kenton Adkins, former school psychologist, who resigned that position
last w.eck, was na med Director of Non·
Ce rtificated Persomiel and Com-

River recreation
(Continued from page I )
11te annua l ski show, to be sponsorea
by the French City Ski Club, is slated to
be gin at 5: 15 p.m. Myron (Bud ) McG hee
will serve as master of ceremonies for this
event.
Patriotic music and a gospel sing is
scheduled from 7::l0 until 9 in the Public
Square. '111e Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce's annual fund-raising project
will be climaxed at 9 p.m.
The $2,000 , 45-minute fir eworks
display, sponsored by the Volunteer
Gallipolis Fire Department and Ga llipolis
Retail Merchants will begin at 10 p.m.
This yea r's display includes a huge
colorful American flag which will be
mounted on three 4~foot poles along the
riverbank.

mwucations. In his new duties, Adkins will
have charge of transpotialion, ct«todians,
maintenance and all classifie d employees.
He was given a three-year contract with a
sa lary ratio of 1.45 on a 12 month basis.
Teachers employed were: Martha Jane
Stowers White as Business Education
teacher at Gallia Academy. She replaced
the retired Elsie Lusk.
Elemenwry instructors hired were
Sherry Simon Kauff and Judy D.
Wa rehime. Mrs. Warehime taug ht last
year at Hannan Trace Elementary Sc hool.
The resignation of Paula Bartos, a
teacher at Green Elementary was ac·
cepted. She is moving to Miamisburg.
The salary of Millard Cassidy, prin·
cipal at Rio Grande Elementary who has
been serving as federal coordinator was
also adjusted from the present 1.15 ratio to
1.25.

.

.

.

Pr_eSident Dean R. Circle appolllted a
conumttee composed of hunself and board '
member Robert Marcht , two tea~het ·s, a
classtfted employee and an admuustrator
to consider proposals on hospitalization,
surgtcal and maJOr medtcallns urance.. ,
It was announced that the dtStnct s
pi'Oposed budget for 1977 will be available
for public scrutiny at the regular board
meeting July 11.

Bahr sues
(Continued from page 1)
permission from the beard to attend
profe&gt;&lt;&lt;ional meeting; combined classes of
chemistry and general science without approval of principal which causes loss of
clock hours •·equired by Swtc Department
of Education and use of preparation period
fo r teacher asSoc iation business.

Replacement' of
locks is needed
first of all
COLUMBUS I UP!) - The Gallipolis
Lock on the Ohio River should be replaced
immediately says Ohio Transportation

SPECIAL SESSION CALLED
GALLIPOlJS - Mrs. Naomi Beman,
clerk of the Gallia County Local Board of
Education, announced Saturday the board
will meet -in special session at 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Main item on the agenda will be
the fire damage at Hannan Trace High
School, the board 's policy cover ing the
damage and renovation project.

STATE STORE TO CLOSE
COLUMBUS - Director Clifford E.
Reich of the Ohio Department of Liquor
, Control has announced all state liquor
stores, agencies and departmental offices
• will be closed Monday, July 5, in
observance of Independence Day .

TRUSTEES TO MEET
GALIJPOLIS - The Gallia County
District Library Boa rd of Trustees will
hold a special meeting on Tuesda~ . June
29, at 5 p.m. m the librarian's office at the
Ubrary on the corner of Third Ave. and
State St.
; HERRING CONVICTED
, ' • MACON, Ga. (UP!) - John
'; ""'Scooter" Herring, former
:, road manager for rock star
~, Gregg Allman, was convicted
Friday of drug charges after
•· a twCKlay tria l in which
., Allman . testified as a

f

ALSO PRESENT - Members of the Board of Education were present Saturday at the
bidding. Shown here with Superintendent of Meigs Local Schools Charles Dowler (left) are
school board members Virgil King, Robert Snowden, and Wendell Hoover.
·

Med insurance premiums
on Medicare going up soon

Bridge on schedule
(Continued from page I)
things are on schedule. We will meet the
Sept. 4deadline , despite extra work we ran
into."
He said relati ons with state people on

million

HIGHEST BIDDER- Charles Dowler (left) is shown
here with the highest bidder for the Coal Port' School
Pomeroy attorney Rick Crow 1right ).

GALLIPOLIS - Monthly
premiums on the medical in·
surance part of Medicare will
go upstarting July 1.
The basic premium rate
will go from $6.70 to $7.20 a
month, according to Trische
Danesi, social security
branch
manager
in
Gallipolis.
Medicare medical in·
surance helps pay doctor
bills and other medical ex·
penses and is funded by individual premiums and
Federal general revenues.
The protection is of£ered to
people reaching 65 and over
who are eli~ible for social
security or railroad retiremertt benefits, to disabled

Winning attitude vital says coach
MIDDLEPORT .• The
coach who 1ed the Meigs
Marauder baseball team to
the state semi-finals early
this month believes winnitlg
attitude is important and is
not come by overnight.
Dale Harrison, who has
competed himself eight times
at the state level in fa st-pitch
softball, told the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday
evening at Heath United
Methodist Church the 1976
Marauder baseball team had
good talent, good pitching,
and a fine, winning attitude
at the beginning and at the
end of the season.
"We were tied for first in
the Southeastern Conference
when we ran into Wellston
and our main spark plug outfielder Mike Magnotta
was injured. "The team
seemed to lose faith it could
win without him, it kind of
was waiting for Mike to get
back," said Harrison.
Magnotta, at the time he
was injured was batting .428
and had stolen I I bases in six

where just four Class AA
teams remained.
He praised righthander
Jeff McKinney for his desire
to win and talent.
Columbus Wehrle , the
team Meigs defeated in the
regionals, was favored to win
the state championship,
Harrison said. ·
Team and individual
trophies won by the 1976
squad were displayed and
questions answered.
In general comments,

mainly about winning attitude, Harrison questioned
the conectness of a
prevalent approach to Little
League and Pony League
level baseball. He said the ac·
cepted idea is for the players
to have fun at that level and

Reckless clrivuJgl'harg-c~d

Saturda y.

POMEROY - Donald E.
Stobart.

:17,

Route

3,

Pomeroy ,. was charged with
reckless operation of a motor
On May 28 Magnotta's dOC· vehicle by Sheriff Robert C.
tor sa id no way would Hartenbach's department
Magnotta play again this Saturday after Stobart ran
year.
·
· his truck off CR 26 at 4:35
" l think the bovs decided p.m.
then it had to, and· could win ,
Stobart, deputies said, was
without Mike, if they weren't removed to Veteran s
to get knocked out of the tour- Memorial Hospital by the
nament at once. They respon· Pomeroy E·R sq uad after he
ded that same day .. May 28- lost control of his vehicle at
by defeating Ironton, league the entrance to Royal Oak
champions.
Park. Stobart's truck went
Harrison recalled several off the right of CR 26 and riptense moments in the trail of ped out 66 feet of fence owned
victories into Columbus by Horace Karr.
games.

not to be concerned about school sports. The problem.is
to motivate young people.
winning.
"! don't think competitive The good athlete finds other
spm·ts can be built that way," ·activities of interest too
he said. " We can 't start at easily.''
President Vern Weber
the high school level to teach
presided.
Ladies of the
the desire to win.''
church
served
dinner,. and
He went on :
Judge
Bob
Buck
introduced
"This is a whole new ball
the
speaker.
game these days in hi~h
'

Heritage Sunday
termed 'success'
POMEROY- The Meigs
Co unty Pioneer and
Historical Society trustees
meeting . at the Meigs
Museum Tuesday evening
heard success reports on
Heritage Sunday. The society
expressed pleasure at the interest shown by the many
visitors in the displays,
demonstrations and the new
history wall .
Hostesses who helped to
make the day successful
were Mrs. Leo Story, Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, Mrs.
Leland Parker, Mrs. Seth•
Nicholson, Mrs. Gerard
Hilfert y, Mrs. Er nest
Win get t, Mrs . Luc ille
Leifheit, Mrs. Nonna Curtis,
Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, Mrs.
Michael Gerlach, Mrs. Ted
Reed, Mrs. Francis Roberts
and Mrs. Paul Chapman.
Presentations were made
to the museum by Mrs. Dollie
Hayes on behalf of Mrs. Alice
Thomspon, an 1883 Har·

~;;l~:n:~!~~r~~£~~!~f:~.:r~~:·:~ Summer program gives

described the old lock as a bottleneck that
endangers shipping during times of high
water and WJnecessarily boosts utility bills
for state electricity users .
Jackson said testimony before the
Senate Subcommittee on water Resources
in Washington this week showed that the
lock, built during the steam-powered
towboat era, is no longer safe for river
traffic in high water time.
DOT officials said the lock located on
the inside bend of the river, c'ould sweep
tows through the dam or even into the lock .
itself in high water. They said such an
accident could have "a disastrous impact
on power production and water supply
along the Ohio."
Cost of replacement is calculated at
$137 million.
~~!STANCE GIVEN
COLUMBUS - State Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson's office reported public
assistance in the amount of $7,637,785.93
was distribcted to Ohio 's 88 coWJties in
May. Meigs CoWJty received $7,239.77 of
the total.

under

prosecution witness.
Herring was convicted of
conspiracy and dreg distribulion by a U.S. District Court
, jury.
Allman , married
to
ente rtainer Clt er, tes tified

CJ

g11.a11t uf immunity.

He said he was furnished
dregs in 1973 and 1974 by
Herring and Joe Fuchs, a
former Macon pharmaCist,
now serving a !!).year prison
sentence on a drug
cor.wk ti on.

. people under 65 who have
been entitled to social
security or similar railroad
retirement disability benefits
for 24 consecutive months or
more,andtomanypeopleWJ·
der 65 with permanent kidney
failure.
Th~ Medicare law requires
an annual. review of the cost
of the medical insurance
program. Based on this
review, an estimate is made
of the cost of this coverage
for the following year. Under
that provision the Medicare
beneficiaries' basic premium
rate wouid have been in·
creased by over 40 percent to
$10.70 a month because of
rising costs of medical ser·

.
CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
Metgs Community Action
Agency's Summer Program
for Economically Disad·
vantaged Youth (SPEOY ), is
proyiding Summer Work Ex·
penence for !58 youths from
Metgs and Gallia Counties,
ages 14-21, who meet the CSA
Povetty Guidelines.
This annual project is fun·
ded under Title Ill of the
Comprehensive Employment

and Training Act (CETA),
and is administered by the
Manpower Division of the
Ohio Department of Ad·
ministration Services.
The Gal li a County
Program is funded for $57,593
a~d provides 90 economically
disadvantaged youth with
work experience. Work sites
in Gallia County are as
follows: Gallipolis State In•
sti!ttte , Buckeye Hills Career

r-------- - ~--------t

.liTH ANNUAL RIV ER
RECREATION FESTIVAL PARADE
Ga llipolis, Ohio
Official En try Bl ank
1

19/6 them e, " Freedom '-; Trait' '
Jld y J. 1976 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __

_

.1 p .m .
Organ izn tion
( Or i ndi v id ua;il-;;e;;-n;t;;
e;:;ri;;;ng::i)- - - - - - - - -

Name o l lnd iv td ttld _ ___,_ _ _ __

_ _ __

Add re "" - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - -

w_

desty's History and an Early
History and War Record of
Wilkesville and Salem. Also,
Mrs. Hayes presented on
behalf of Rodney Downing a
late 1800s picture of the Ex·
celsior Salt Worl:s. · Mrs.
Blakeslee presented on
bebalf of Alpha Delta Kappa
Sorority, a large col·
feemaker.
Announcement was made
that on July 27, alB p. m. at
the museum, Laszlo G. Koe
Krompecher will make a
presentation on historical
buildings and human values.
A slide show of local
buildings will be a part ofthis
program. It will be open to
the public, and anyone in·
terested is invited.
Hours were set for the
museum to be open during
the months of July and .
August, Tuesday, Friday and
Sunday- from 2 to 4 p. m. •
Other times by appointment.
Exhibits will be the "Town·
ships" and the history wall.

vices covered by Medicare's
medical insurance.
But the law also limits any
increase in the basic
premium rate to the per·
centage that social security
benefit payments increased
in the previous year. Social
security payments increased
8 percent in 1975, so the
Medicare medical insurance
basic premium rate was
limited to 8 percent starting
July 1- to $7.20 a month. The
premium is less than half the
cost of this protection. The
Federal Government pays
the remainder from general
revenues.
The basic premium rate
could not be increased last
year because of a technical
flaw in the law that has since
been corrected.
Some people 65 or over pay
a monthly premium for the
other part of Medicare, the
hospital insurance, because
they didn't work long enough
under social security. Starting July 1, the basic
premium rate for these
people will go from $40 to $45
a month.
Hospital insurance protec·
lion is erlended without
premium charge to people
reaching 65 who are eligible
for social security or railroad
retirement benefits, to
disabled people under 65 who
have been entitled to social
security or similar railroad
retirement disability benefits
for 24 consecutive months or
more, and to many people un·
der65with permanenlkidney
failure.
People 65 and over. who
aren't eligible for social
security or railroad
retirement benefits can get
Medicare hospital insurance
by paying a monthly
premium if they also sign up
for the medical insurance.
The hospital insurance
premium rate is based on the
average monthly cost of this
protection. ·
Over 24 million people have
one or both parts of
Medicare. In 1975, the
hospital insurance program
paid $11.3 billion in benefits
and the medical insurance
programpaid$4.3billion.
Medicare is administered
by the Social Security Ad·
mioistration. People ca n get
information about signing up
for MediCare by calling,
writing,_ or . visiting the
Gall!pohs Soctal Secunty Of.
ftce at 49 Olive St. The phone
number is 446-7600.

PLAINS, Ga. (UP! )..Jim·
my Carter said Saturday he
will help the Democratic Par·
ty raise up to $10 million
dollars for congressional and
· gubernatorial candidates this
election year. Carter,
rela~g at horne with the
Democratic presidential
nomination virtually wrapped up, carne to town from
his peanut farn1 to check the
cleaning of catfish for a
family fish fry later in the af·
temoon.
He told trailing reporters
he hopes to pay off his nwn
campaign debt through fund
raising receptions like one
hosted for him in Atlanta by
Georgia Sens. Herman
Talmadge and Sam NWJn
Saturday night.
The former Georgia gevernor also said he has talked
with nationa l Democratic
Chairman Robert Strauss
about fund raising plans for
Democrats running for
governor and Congress in
various states.
"We'll raise between $5
million and $10 million
dollars--the party will ,
maybe with J telethon or
some other. d fort-none of
which would be spent for my
campaign, except an indirect
benefit from registration and
getting out the vote," said
Carter.

MEIGS THEATRE
TO NIGHT
IUNE 271h
Wa II Di sney 's

Blackbea rds Ghost
Dean Jones. Peter Ustinov ,
Suia nr1e Pleshette , Elsa
Lan ches ter , Joby Ba k er.

Ell iot! Re id.

COLO~Y
*

*

firmary, Meigs County Court
House, Community Action
Agency Office, Meigs County
. Tuberculosis Clinic, and
Meigs County Extension Of·
fice.
Each participant is em·
ployed for 24 hours per week
for 10 weeks, from June 14 to
August 20, 1976. The partici(lants are paid $2.30 per
hour, and each receive a
physical examination prior to
being enrolled. Counseling
servtces are provided by the
Program to assist the
enroll ee
in
money
management and job respon·
sibility .

The Community Action
Agency and the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services Of.
lice are undertaking a joint
venture utilizing SPEDY
enrollees to develop a Rent·
A-Youth Program for Gallia
and Meigs Counties. This
prograni is designed to create
private employment for other
youth seeking Summer Jobs.
Anyone interested
in
obtaining summer help
through the Rent-A-Youth
Program should contact tbe
ORES Office In Gallipolis at
446-1683, or the Meigs County
Community Action Agency
Office at 992-6605.

a

'

Dear Big Mac :
I am in love with a gorilla and would like to marry him. He
is a nice gorilla and wears pink bedroom slippers and a red
ribbon around his neck. However, most of my friends would
frown on my marrying a gorilla. Although we do not have a
common language we un.det;lltand each other per&lt;· ~t!y . He
grunts at me when he wants fed. My mother and father are
threatening to disinherit me if I continue my love aff;~ir with
the gorilla. Can you straighten this matter out for me. Signed: Hortense

Dear Readers :
The results from Oshkosh were as follows :
Zuella Smith, 6904, Clara Lochary , 5280, Mildred McDaniel
5260, Elizabeth Arnold Cutler 5280, Norma Goodwin 5000, Ann
Watson 4999, Goldie Clendenin. 4200, Nancy Chapman, 4195,
Kathryn Philson 3950, Vera Beegle 3900 and Katie Crow,
2150k
J. Pierpont Ebert reports that Miss Z. Smith really carried
all precincts in Upper Oshkosh because of her charming smile.
1'hey compared her to Jimmy Carter and we suggest that he
consider her as a Vice Presidential running mate. It is unusual
when three candida tes have the exact number of votes and
Ebert doesn 't know how to explain this.
The remaining candidates aU had a la te start and very
little was known about them by the voters. Ebert believes that
Alice Nease and Katie Crow will improve tremendouslv when
the 'fioflywood vote comes in. - Big Mac.

IIIMI \1 1 ~

!lollll
tii i&gt;IJI JI. IIot..,..,

111111111"'

•I• •'~"•

beginner is described as
anyone who has decorated
cakes for one year or les.s,
are novelty , such as Raggedy
Ann or Winnie, the Pooh,
made in any way, and special
occasion, such as btrthday or

ft!JI)

ll•n t' ' '

'"~''&gt;1~1.\ 1 1&lt;'!'

G

A'O,t,H,_I~ II \ Ill -·

0

CARTOON

,

WINTERHAWK &amp;
TRAP ON
COUGAR MOUNTAIN

S11nday.Times-Sentinel
Pub I ished every
by
The
OhiO .
Publ ishing Co .

Rutland Saturday

in the Rutland gynlllasiwn
and cakes are to be tnkcn
there bet ween 8:30 and 10
a.m. Saturday. They must be
made of cake anti not a dwn·
my base.
While there will be no entry
fee, each cake exl1ibited will
· automatically become the
property of the Rutland
Emergency Medical Service.
The cakes at the conclusion
of the show will be sold or
auctioned off with the
proc eeds goi ng to the
Rutland EMS.
The judging will begin at

10:30 a.m. by Mrs. Qetty Car·
penter, cake decorating
teacher at Rio Grande Com·
munity Colle~e and owner of
Betty 's Cake Creations at
Rodney .
.
Ribbons will be awarded to
the first , second and third
places in each class, and cannot be removed until 4 p.m.
The rules specify tluit Ute
cake must be the work of the
person entering the show.
Any novelty iten\ placed on
the cake will also be donated
with the cake.
A Mayor's tt·ophy will be

Sunda 'r
Va l l ey

JOBLESS FEWER
COLUMBUS I UPI)
Unemployment in Ohio ha s
declined from 7.4 per cent of
the civilian labor force in
April to 6.9 per cent in May,
according to the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services. The
Bureau said Friday 324,000
Ohioans were without jobs in
May compared to 344,000 in
April.

DA ILY TR I BUNE
82S Third Ave ., Gallipo lis,
Ohio ~56 31 . ·
Published every weekda y
eve n ing e:~~~c. ept Saturday .
Sec ond Class Post.!ge Po~~td '
at Gallipolis , Ohio .45631 .
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court -SL PtJmeroy, 0 .
4576 9. Publisl1ed every week .
day even ing eKcept Salur
day . Entered as secon d class
mailing matter at Pomeroy ,
Ohio Post Off ice .
BY. cafrier dal ly and
Sunday 75c pl&gt;r week . Motor
route $3 .75 per mon th
MAIL
SUB SCRI PTION RATES
The
Gct'llipo li s
Dally
Tr ibune in Ohio and We st
V irginia on~ year S22 .00 ; six
mon ths 511 ,50 ; three months
S7.00. ElseWhere $26 .00 per
vear ; SIK months $13 .50 ,•
three months S7 .50 ; ntotor
. route SJ .15 month l y.
The Daily Senti nel. one

PRICES SO LOW IT HARDLY
PAYS TO COOK AT HOME! !
OPEN DAILY 9 AM-8 PM

SUNDAYS

12 -S PM

Silver Bridge Plaza

EVERY THURSDAY IS "FAMILY NIGHT!"
Sach dinner includes : Appetizer · salad · ent ree ·
rOll · bufler · dessert • beverage. 4 tO 8 p;m.
Dinner
·

UP,nPit"'h&gt;IP •

=='--

"ALL YOU CAN EAr' Fillet with Fries · cole slaw · roll butter

year $22 .00 ; SiK "lOnths
$11.50 ; three months $7 .00 .
E I sew here
$26 .00;
six
months $13 .50 ; three month s

$7.50 .

awarded along with a ~1ft
certificate to t~e " best of
show." No person who has
tnught cake decora ting,
working In a bakery, or sold
over S400 worth of cakes ean
enter the competition ,
although cakes will be ac·
cepted for display .
During the day , Mrs. Car·
penter will demonstrate cake
decorating in two sessions.
After each of the s •ssiotLI the
decorated novelty ca~e will
be given uway . Only
requirement is Uta! the per·
son must be present to win.

MURPHY'S MART RESTAURANT!

GALLI POL I·S

EVERY SATURDAY IS SPAGHETTI DAY! !

.

~~ALL

The United Press ..1n..
ternationa l Is cKclus l ve ly
. en titled to the use. for
pub l icatio n of all n ews
dispa t ches credited to th e
newspaper an d also the loca l
news pub l ished herein .

Italian Style
$159
YOU CAN EAr' Spaghetti
with meat sauce · salad ·
roll . butter .

G. C. MURPHY COMPANY -

THE FRIENDLY STORE

JU

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

MilliS' 2 PC.
SHORISIIS

10 LB. BAG

'

GREAT LAKES

76

TliPalrr ·

NOW YOU KNOW
Thomas Carlyle had to
complete rewrite his great
history of the French
Revolution after his cook
inadvertently used the
original manuscript for a pie
crust.

the classes in th e in·
termediate division. In·
tennediates are described as
those who hav e been
dt.'Corating t'akes for over one
year.
There is also an open
division for both _beginners
and intermediates. It is entitled ''Bicentennial" and is a
class for patriotic themed
cakes .
The cake show will be held

beginners division , and a

Dear Hortense:
ESKEW RECOVERING
I do not write advice to the lovelorn columns. This is a
POMEROY
Gene
matter strictly for Dear Abby, Ann Landers, Sue and Helen
Eskew,
Lincoln
Hill,
is
Bolle!. It appears to me that you need a little psychiatric
recovering
sa
tisfactorily
treaiment. - Signed : Big Mac
from brain surgery Monday
follo~ing
a cerebral
Dear Big Mac :
homorrhage
at
St. Marys
I desperately need a woman with the following
Hospital;
Parkersburg.
His
qualifications: very wealthy, kind, considerate, aged between room is 6010.
45 and ~o. white, caucasian, a good cook and conversationalist,
and one without false teeth and speaks English. Would you
please place this in your column so I may find this woman. Signed: Ambrose.
Dear Readers:
If you know of such a woman, please write to me for
Ambrose's address. - Signed: Big Mac

Sunday -Monday
and Tuesday

96e~~~fs

"BRIQUETS

SET

__

18" FOLDING

LSAVE $3,22

.,.......,.,.'

;;~·. :.:..

CHARCOAL

SAVE s2

CHARCOAL
GRILL

Cool, core lrea ond pretty!
\00% polyester pique pull
on shorts ond matd1ing
sleeveless luni c. AssOrted necklines. Zip
ba ck or pu II on
~tyles . Solid col
01s w/ con llost
tr im. 8- 16.

EXTRA HEAVY STEEL
BOWL

REG. 18.80
"

TROPIC
TORCHES

WOMEN'S SPORT
O.R STRAW HATS

In 1972, President Nixon
announced tha t no more
draftees would be sent to
Vietnam
unl ess
they
volunteered.

. ... --

99e

(l -

~

C •lton sport hat s · stitched and
._, 0 ppy brim styles . Peanut straw
hats w-wide brims.

$ 99
PAIR

~RETTY

•

WAY TO LIGHT
UP YOUR PATIO PARTY.

REGULAR s2.37

TORCH FUEL
SAVE
soc

SUNDAY thru SA 'fUI~DA y '
JUNE 27 THRU JULY 3rd

Gai ly decorated viny l wall with jumbo, infl aiable safely ring on
lop. Durably constructed lo last through many seasons of summer

.FOOTLONG HOT DOGS

· fttn

$~~~ON

Easy Lighting and Clean
Burning

SP if-o; tirk rPI'Vlirki• inrl11nE&gt;d

BASE-LOAD DESIGN
CB ANTENNA

64C
MODE L

"Fixed 1'1te W"y
You Like 'Em"

KCB-1300

REG . 519.94

Sundav thru Thursday

IOA.M. IillDP.M.
Friday and Saturdav
10A.M. 1il II P.M.

Printing contract made
GALlJPOlJS - Simms
Printing, 460 Second Ave.
Friday was awarded con·
tract to print 12,000 ballots
for the special school bond
issue election in the Gallla
County Local School District
Aug. IO.
According to the Gallia
County Board of Elections,
the low bid tota led .$237.11.
French City Press was the

·

Dear Grandpa Jones :
Although it appears that the DAR is discriminating
against you, I do not feel that this discrimination is important
since you are not a woman or a member of women's lib. I can
understand why the SAR turned you down because of Benedit1.
I doubt whether you could get into tbe DAR even if you were to
change your sex. What you need is a new head. I would suggest
that you write to the Regional Director of tbe DAR in Meigs
County, Ohio. I do not know their names. - Signed : Big Mac

Dear Big Mac:
.
I
think
the
men
's
votes
in Oshkosh last week were rigged.
Tonight thru Tues.
George Carper should have been first. Anyone who deals with
Show Begins 8 : DO p.m.
plants as he does belongs at the top - I protest.- Helen.
, - - - - - - - -- --, Dear Helen:
· ·
George will get his chance when his new discovery is
announced soon, This election is on the square. - Big Mac.

ork to 158 area youth~

Center, Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, City of Gallipolis, GaUia
County. Fairgrounds, Guidi_ng
Hand School, Galhpohs Ctty
Schools, Ga llia County
Schools, Chamber of Com·
merce, Army Recruite r,
Village of Vinton, Township
Trustees, Ohio · sure~u of
Emp loyment S~rvices,
Seni?r Citi zens' Cente r,
Public Ltbrary, Community
Action Agency Offices, and
the Soil and. Water ConservatwnSemceO!ftce.
The Meigs County
Program_isfundedfor$42,476
and provtdes 68 econonucally
disadvantaged youth with
work experience. Work sites
in Meigs County are as
follow s: So"thern Local
School District, Eas tern
Local School District, Meigs
Local School District ,
Pomeroy Village, Middleport
Village, Syracuse Village,
Raci ne Village, County High·
way Department, Forked
Run State Park, Township
Trustees, Agricultural
Stabilization a nd Con·
serva tion Service Office
(ASCS), Soil Conservation
Service Office ' [SCS), , In-

' G"

Sh ow start s 7 p.m .

Dear Big Mac :
I am writing to you again although under protest. It seems
that I have been turned down for the SAR. 'Now I want to join
the DAR. I have been advised by someone who knows tbat I
ca nnot get in the DAR. I believe this is discrimination . can you
give me any information as to how I can go about getting into
the DAR? My ancestor was Benedict Arnold. Do you think that
the DAR would discriminate against me. Kindly advise as to
w~m I write. -Signed: Grandpa Jones

auniverSCjry . Tht:re arc also

'RUTI.AND - II cake show
with classes for ~beginnc r s
and intennediates will be a
feahn·e of the July 4 weekend
t'elebralion to take place
here.
The show to be held on
Saturday will have divisions
for both beginners and in·
termetliates in cake
decorating. Classes in the

•
ID

Solid State, 23·CIIannel

only other bidder at$273.
Two separate ballots wiU
be printed, one a two mill
bond issue for construction of
th~e ~ new elementa ry
bwldings and the renovation
of existing elementary
buildings and the other a 2.4
mill levy for a new high
school and refurbishing of
existing high school
buildings.
.,

MOBILE CB RAD'IO

rorULu.

u.nu

2nd &amp;Olive

'l

Gallipolis, 0.

---

' BUY NOW AND BE READY
FOR THE HOliDAYS - INSTALL IT
YOURSELF.

large illum inated vu-meler. Squelch
conlrol. PA sw ilch. Bui ll in ou lornoti c noise-l1miting ci rcuil . MoKimum
4-watt outpul. Wired-in microphone.

.c.

99
.

IUH \AI

"(HARGill"
AI

It

'

MUIIP~Y\,

94
REG.

$1 09 .94
US(
IANUIIUICAII
OIIIIASll• tiiUSE

�4- The Sunday Tim~- Sentinel, Sunday, J~ne '!1,1976

Entries from three states are

..............................................................
•
•

Woman 's World
•

participating in festival exhibit
GALLIPOLIS - Fifty·liOur
artists from ·three states
Ohio, Kentucky and wesi
Virginia, are participating
WI til 205 entries in the River
Recreation Festival Exhibit
sponsored by U!e French Art
Colony on SWiday, July 4
from t1 a.m. Willi S p.m. in
the Gallipolis City Park.
Judging of these entries
will be on Wednesday June
30 at Riverby by well-known
artist Harriet Anderson who
is with the Trissolini Gallery
10 AU!ens. In addition 20
children's paintings, ' not
bemg judged, will be on
display at the July 4th
exhibit. These paintings were
created by the students of the
. French Art Colony.
Five purchase prizes will
be awarded as a result of the
judging. They are being
presented by the Fi rst
National Bank of Gallipolis
Robbins and Myers, Inc., th~
Commercial and Savings
Bank, the Gallipolis Savings
and Loan and the Holzer
Medical Center Clinic.
Ribbons will be awarded in
each category: professional,

amateur, high school and
elementary level. Mtists
have submitted entries in all
media
including
oil,
watercolor , mixed media .
charc oa l,
sculptur e ,
gra phics, ceramics and
creative photography.
Many of the artists entries
will be for sale. Original note
paper, (!esigned by the prize
winning
artist
Polly
Trumbore of Ashland ,
Kentucky, will be available at
$3 a box.
Chairing this annual event
is Mrs. Jan Thaler, assisted
by Mrs. Bonnie Stutes.
Other French Art Colony
activities during the gala
weekend include a Pet Rock
Paint-In
on
Saturday
afternoon from I until 3 p.m.
for children of all ages . Mrs.

PeiUly MO&lt;Jre IS cna1rman of
this event. All materials will
be furnished and there will be
no charge.
Saturday afternoon from 4
p.m. unt1J dark and again
Sunday afternoon from 12 :30
p.m. until dark, the annual
Photo-Fair Booth will be open
on the First Avenue upriver
site of the city park. Don and
Ca rolyn Hippensteel are
chair ing this activity .
Pictures taken are just $1
each. A large variety of
decorative flats should
attract adults and children
alike to have a special
holiday picture taken to
remember
the
River
Recreation Festival during
the bk-entennial celebration
in Gallipolis.

THE STORY
OF YOUR

992-2156

:•

'Women '76' to highlight
concerns of women today
GALLIPOUS - "Women
'76" ll'ill be the bicentennial
rallying point for concerned
women from all over Ohio.
The place will be Mershon
Auditorium on The Ohio State
University Campus and
kick-off time will be io a.m.
July20.
Sponsored by the Ohio EK·
tension Homemakers CoWJcil
and the OSU Cooperative Extension Service, the event
will highlight the role of
women in today' s society.
Five Ohio women will be
recognized for their outstanding contributions to
their fields of interest and
their communities. They are
Judge Olive Holmes Cincinnati; Gertrude Do~ahey
Columbus, state treasurer.'
Ellen Walker Craig, fonne~

mayor of Urbancrest ;
Marion Renick, Columbus,
writer of children's books,
and Dorothy Dennison,
Youngstown, artist.
Keynote speaker, reports
Naurine McConnick, State
Leader of Home Economics
for the Extension Service,
will be Dr. Betty Siegel, Dean
of Academic Alfairs for Continuing Education at the
University of Florida .
Thomas Wetzel ll, Division of
Public Relations and
Development of the Salvation
Army of Greater Cleveland,
will talk on the topic, "Silent
Eyes," for which he received
the George Washington
Medal of Honor of the
Freedom FoWJdation, Valley
Forge,Pa.

Chairing the day's activities will be Jean Rhodes,
Salem, representing the Ohio
EKtension Homemakers
Cound. She will be assisted
by J ea~e Rum burg, area
Extenswn Agent, home
et"Onomics, Canfield, and
Hannah Beisch, area EK·
tension agent, home
economics, Wooster.
Both men and women are
invited to attend the Women
'76 program, says Mrs, McCormick; however, there will
be a fee for the lWJcheon to be
held at the Ohio Union. Preregistration . will be
necessary for persons plan·
rung to attend. Registration
sheets are available from the
Gallia County Extension Of.
lice, telephone 446-4612 extension 32.
'

1

CAPTURED
WITH
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
GROVERS
COMPLETE
WITH
ALBUM. STARTING
~T ...

$7995
GROVER'S
STUDIO

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
Walter E . Baker, . Rt. 2 Coolville are announcing the
':Jproachmg mamage of. their daughter, Deanna, to
uane Knapp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Olin Knapp, Syracuse.
An open church wedding will be held Saturday, July 10, at
the Church of Christ m Christian Union at Point Pleasant
The Rev . Willis Tomlin will officiate at the 2:30 p.m:
ceremony. Miss Baker is a senior at Meigs High School
enrolled 10 cosmetology. Her fiance is a 197:; graduate of
Galha Academy High School employed at the Southern
Oh10 Coal Co. A r~eption will be held following the
weddmg at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.

PROFESSIONAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plcua
Gallipolis, Ohio

Phone 446-7494
Opon Tue5. -Sal. 10-5
' TillS On Thurs.

•

BRIDAL POLICY
We-dding and engagement
notices for the Sunday Times
Sentinel must be in our hands
by 12 noon on the Thursday
pr eceding publication.
Information may be tunJed In
or mailed tu the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune or Pomeroy
Dally Sentinel. Engagement
ru1d wedding forms are also
available 011 request.

tu 1c'n !lla 1l~ling •~ • olui &gt;Gr~ n( '" Fr•t clo"' irorn
no ,j, ~p• . no body, nc . ec ~h(JI h-·• Fro"' w lli"9 i!
n:9hl •lt•r •1qllt weel: •!itt wu~ UnrPe rm . ~ rl l
no f•••l &lt; a Hclrho~etl • ith o1 1 il\ i ~1 11 1hiM Automoll·
•c• lly l o ~t&lt;ote y o ~r h• ir ! ' I
·

... .

Otter

$16:~.~ ,,.~;.~ 6
&amp; )!yl,.

POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, Sr.
hosted a gathering of the
family of Walter Vaughan at
their home on Prospect Hts.
on Father'S Day.
Present besides the hosts
were Mrs. Florence Windon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, Jr., Bill Vaughan,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Vaughan
Beth and Zandra Vaughan:
Jun Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Teddy Warner, Miss Patty
Warner, Terry Sayre, Scott
Warner, Kim Warner, Mrs.
Judy Pocklington and Andy,

Descendants
hold reunion
ADOISUN
Several
descendants of the late John
Austin and Helena C. Will
met at Fortification Hill for a
coo kout this past weekend.
Attending the reunion were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill (Mary)
Barcus, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
(Mickey ) Smith and children,
Nancy, Mark, Matt and Jay ,
Mr. and Mrs. Max (Lucy )
Martin; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Roach an'd children, Tammy
and Trisha, Mr. and Mrs.
Jean )
Gilbert
[Mona
Hamilton and children
Shirley, Cathy and Joe, Mr:
and Mrs. Tom (Rene)
Broyles and son Mike, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Broyles, Roger
Broyles and son Adam, Mr.
and Mrs. Christ Artus were
special guests.
After refreshments of hot
dogs·, hamburgers and soft
drinks,
the
group
participated in various
games and sports.

FRUIT SALAD WEDGES
EMBROIDERED VAMP
IN ASSORTED COLORS
REG. 13.97
SALE PRICES

$

i
Pomeroy-Middleport :

00

BY RENE BROYLES
ADDISON - President
Effie Martin presided at the
Wednesday meeting of the
Addison Free-wlll Baptist
Church Ladi.es' Aid.
Reports of the secretary
Mary Barcus I and th~
treasurer, Jewell Russell
were read ~nd accepted by
motion. . Twenty-three
members responded to roll
call. Twenty-six cards were
sent and 31 calls made to
absent or ill members. No
sympatl!y cards were mailed
Conunittee
reports · ...:.
telephone, visitation, ways
and means, were accepted as
given.
Charlene and Brenda
Prescott, granddaughters of
Rev. and Mrs . Walter
Patterson, and Matthew
Goody, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Goody were guests of
the group.

Sarah Carsey . 1Charletie Hoeflich
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant~
446-2342
:

Marty Vaughan, Miss Sue
Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Vaughan, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Vaughan, L.oring Vaughan,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Vaughan, · Charles and
Thomas Vaughan, Fred
Rayburn, Crystal Erwin,
Cathy Rayburn, Bob Workman, Mr. and Mrs. Louis B.
·vaughan.
Mr. and Mrs. Billie Jo
Spencer, Bikki Spencer, Greg
Spencer, Melissa Spencer
and ,Vaughan Spencer, Bellview; Mrs. Debbie Cofnand,
Matt and Paul, Cadiz; Frank
Vaughan, Andy Vaug)um,
Miss Julie Hutchinson, 'Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Williams and
Pat and Pam Vaughan,

f It

Pomeroy.
Unable to attend were Miss
Anna Vaughan and Mrs. Mae
Bird of Cedarville, sisters of
Walter Vaughan, both over
8S, who are confined to a nursing home in Xenia. Also
unable to attend were Mr.
and Mrs. George Vaughan
and sons of Chillicothe; Mr.
and Mrs. Pat Vaughan and
sons, Michigan; Tony
Vaughan, Gallipolis; Miss
Therma Vaughan, New
York; Mr. and. Mrs. Bob
Layne and twin daughters of
Virginia; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Tripp and sons of near
Chesler, and Miss Belinda
Spencer of Bellview.

Council inspected
POMEROY
Annual
inspection of Theodorus
Council 17, Daughters of
America, was held Monday
night at the IOOF hall. Mrs.
Faye Hoselton, Belle Prairie
Council 269, district deputy,
was the inspecting officer.
Mrs. Caddie Wickham, in
the absence of Mrs. Eva
Dessauer, a patient at Holzer
Medical Center, served as
t"Ouncllor . State and national
officers seated were Mrs.
Hoselton, di strict deputy ;
Mrs. Edna Re~bel, deputy of
Theodorus Cou ncil; Miss
Jean Hall, deputy of Guiding
Star Council 124, and Mrs.
Essie Varner, deputy of Belle
Prairie. Mrs. Ha5eltan was
presented a gift on behalf of
tl!e Council.
Acommunication was read
from Shirley Kerr, state
councilor, thanking the
Council for courtesies shown
at district rallies and
announcing the 82nd Annual
State Session to be held Aug .
16, 17 and 18 at the
Netherland Hilton Hotel
Cincinnati.
The
good
fellowship banquet will be
held on Aug. 17 in the
Continental Ballroom at 6
p.m.
The District 13 Deputies
Club annual picnic was
announced for Sunday at 2
p.m. Donations were made to
the State Council for
expenses-and to the home and
orphans fund.

Following the inspection
the
district
deputt
commended both Mrs.
Wickham and Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling, pianist.
A bicentennial theme was
carried
out
in
the
refreshment
table
decorations. The centerpiece
was blue flanked by red
tapers in white holders .
Sandwiches, cookies, coffee
and chips were served.
Guests were Mr&amp;. Edith
Berry, Mrs. Essie Varner,
Mrs. Hoselton, Belle Prairie,
and Miss Hall , Pauline
Morarity and Janice Lawson,
Guiding Star, Syracuse.
It was announced that the
books will be audited at the
home of Mrs. Reibel Monday
night. The death of Martha
Jesse was noted and it was
reported that Mrs. Betty
Reibel is still undergoing
treatment.

RACINE - .Mrs. Louise
Stewart installed the 1976-77
officers at the Tuesday night
meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of Racine
Post602.
Installed were Mrs. Julia
Norris, president; Mrs.
Leora Young, first vice
president; Mrs . . Beulah
Neigler, second vice
president; Mrs. Mary Roush,
secretary; Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, treasurer; Mrs.
Frances Roberts, chaplain;
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, sergeant
at arms, and Mrs. RoUSh
historian.
'
Awards received at the
recent district convention
held in Athens were noted.
The Wlit received citations
for rehabilitation programs,
for bemg a goal unit, for
making the birthday roll call, .
and Department and
National citation for
meritorious service. Mrs.
Walker, Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
Norris also received

A'ITENDS SHOWER
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs
Marian Van Meter attended~
layette shower honoring Mrs.
Kenney Wheeler. Her name
was omitted from an earlier
listing of guests.

Homes
make
happy
peopfe

Hosted by Miss Margaret Ferrell

TENNIS OXFORD

Fr~an cl ng available.

~-u···~oatK

AUGUST 20-28 1976

Air Fare · Motorcoach to Columbus '
Extensive Sightseeing . First
Class Hotels · TipS • Transfers .
Continental Breakfast Dai~

ONLY

·v
Ihem

K&amp;K MOBILE
HOME PARK
&amp; SALES .

'51QOO

BOOKING DEADLINE JULY I
446-0699
'\

See

Point Pleasant
I'

~rrnilfff'llW
~ruw§

Cooling 20" fan with thermolly
protected motor . fine -mesh
grille .

REGULAR
24.95

9" 2·SPEED

OSCILLATING FAN

Ultro·quiet , 90' oscillation provides
toto! room coveroge. Smort deco rator
styl ing.

2188

REGULAR
26.95

The evening diMer began
at 7 p.m. with 132 alwru1i and
guests attending. Bob Evans
Drive-In catered the meal
consisting of ham, ctticken,
baked beans, cole slaw,
potato salad, roll, iced tea
and coffee. The association
expressed thanks to them f01'
such an excellent job for the
dirmer and catering service.

SEVERAL CHANGES are ~derway at the Bob Evans Farms amphitheatre in Rio
Grande where the histoncal, mus1cal pageant, "Galli a Country," will open its fourth season
July 9. The constructiOn of a log cabm, new bandstand and a replica of a house of the 17901890 era IS part of the new atmosphere.
·

for fourth 'Gallia Country '

3 SPEED FAN

If1-"i~O

CHESHIRE
The
Cheshire • Kyger Creek
AlwiUii Association held a
successful annual alun11u
banquet and dance on May
29.

Scenery changes underway

AN Q:rif!~,BICENTENNIAL

w~o

HELP PREVENT
DAMP BASEMENTS
DEHUMIDIFIER
Removes up lo 14 pinls of woter per
day . AutomatiC .

REGULAR
168.95

HARDMAN'S
HOME
CENTER

Many changes are taking
place in the amphitheatre at
Rio Grande, scene of the
~storical musical-pageant,
Galha Country ," being
presented for the fourth
consecutive year by the
Gallla Dramatic Arts
Society.
Under U!e direction of Greg
Miller and his assistant
Mega'n Riegel, Jame~
Beverly, president of the
society, and many volunteers
have been working daily on

:-

~~ ~/
'

byS'peuk£
E.~ch of t.hcsc solid sterling
nn ~-:l ets :;;p.uklcs wit h the
d c~-:an cc .uul beau ty of 01

.t;crllline diamond . One of ,~.
th em is stt rc to put .1 sparkle in .;.
the eye of the one yo u love . :
Ei ~ht fun styles from Speidel .!
AII at a heartwarming price.

Only $12.95 ;
'
·~
Clark's .

GALLIPOLIS - Harriet
Anderson, well known artist
now residing in Athens, will
be the judge for the River
Recreation Festival Exhibit
sponsored by the French Art
Colony. Judging will take
place Wednesday, June 30 at
Riverby. The eKhibit will be
in the city park on Sunday,
July 4 from II a.m. until 5
p.m.
A graduate in Fine Arts
from Ohio University, Ms.
Anderson was one of U!e first
art teachers in Athens
County. She did additional
study at Ohio State
University and lived in
Columbus for several years.
Three years ago she returned
to Athens, and now lives on
U!e family farm where she
resided as a .child.
As an artist specializing in
acrylic painting, she . has
created several large
contemporary works. One is
included in . the David
Rockefeller . collection. She
also has works in 20
additional · collections

·~

·'

Jewelry Store ~:..
:

'324 Second Ave.
Gallipoli.s.

o.

JU 81!COND AVI!N\,1 ~ / 3ALUPOU5. O&gt;f iO

45631

WOMEN'S SUMMER SPECIALS

N••u••t~&gt;~SAVE 20 ~.~~~~
Auditions
Connies
All From
Miss Wonderfuls
Reg . Stock
Footnotes
.
Red Hats
Sihicia

ONE

SPRING &amp; SUMMER

·SAVE GROUP
WOMEN'S SHOES

HANDBAGS
NOW

the construction of a log the end result of all the many
ca bin, new bandstand and a - hours
spent
in
the
replica of a house or the 179(). cons tru ction of the new
1890 era , all to be a scenery.
permanent part of the · Th~. beauty of the
production.
amphitheatre and overall
According to Miller, ·•As effects will not have been
the director, I feel that there cha n ge d,
rather
should be more visible complimen ted by the new
presentation of backgrounds additions. Natural acoustics
for the various scenes, thus will still be utilized, thus
creating more believable giving a realistic effect to the
for
the dialogue and singing."
atmosphere
performers. We hope a more
The house will serve as
rea listic production will be dressing rooms as well as
storage space for props.and
scenery in addition to its use
in man y of U!e play's scenes.
Performance dates fo1·
"Gallia Country" are July 911, 16-IB, 23-20 and July 30Aug.
1, starting
at
throughout the country.
approximately 9 p.m. Tiokets
For U1e past 10 years Ms. may be obtained at the
Anderson has been seriously Gallipolis Area Chamber of
involved in creating tapestry. Commerce, 16 State St., or
She uses wool designs on any of the area chambers of
canvas. In April, 1977 she will commerce. Prices are: $3 for
have a tapestry eKhibit in the adults tin advance) or $4 at
Columbus Gallery. She has the gate; $2 for children
just completed a commission under 18 years of age. Special
for the City National Bank of prices for groups of 20 or
Columbus in tapestry.
more. For information, call
A member of the Board of (614) 446-2200.
the Trissolini Gallery in
Athens, Ms. Anderson
organized the Gallery 's
TO SPEAK
volunteer program, their
ADDISO!'f
- Rev. Carl
craft shop and docent
(Max) Martin, of Richwood,
program. The French Art
Colony feels most fortWJate to Ohio, will be a guest minister
for the Sunday evening
have such an outstanding
services at U!e Addison Freeartist as the Judge for their
will Baptist Church. Rev.
River Recreation Festival
Martin
is the husband of the
Exhibit.
former Lucy Will. Rev .
Walter Patterson, pastor,
invites the public to attend
any or all church services.

Athens artist to judge
river festival exhibit

Genuine
Diamond .·
Ringlets at a ::
bcautiiul price~ :

~~ ::

m at your conve nience and
l~ok 'em over at no obligation.

The group sponsored a pie
supper Saturday evening at 6
at the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.
Door prizes were won by
Ollie Oliver, Mickey Smitl!,
Eva Gardner, Loretta and
Pebbles Clark, Velva Casey
and Effie Martin.
Jewell Russell, Ollie
Oliver, Shirley Dovenbarger
and Trilba Patterson will
furnish door prizes for the
July meeting. Refreshments
will be furnished by Trilba
Patterson, Effie Martin
Donna Davis and · Ev~
Gardner.
After adjournment, the
group
was
served
refreshments by Mary
Barcus, Mickey Smitl! and
Rene Broyles. Faye Goody's
name was unintentionally
omitted as having helped
served refreshments during
tl!e May meeting.

SELL·EBRATION

~~ej~

floor plans, one or two baths
~wo or three bedrooms. StoP

I

'I

recognition for securing
members. Going to the
district meeting were Mrs.
Walker, Mrs. Norris, Mrs.
Brinker, Mrs. Roush. Mrs.
YoWJg and Mrs. Stewart.
A report on junior activities was given by Mrs.
Walker. It was noted that a
hox of eyeglasses for the
needy is being prepared for
mailing to New Jersey. Mem·
bers were urged to write
their legi slators in
Washington concerning the
minimum wage law and how
it applies to hospitalized
veterans who make poppies
for sale by Auxiliary Units. ~
Mrs. Stewart and Mrs.
young were appointed to
audit the books. II was noted
that a bronze marker has
been placed on the. grave of
Mrs. Marne Mallm-y at the
Letart Cemetery. This was
the 29th marker put on the
graves of Auxiliary members.
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle,
Mrs. Margaret Yost and Mrs.
Eula Wolfe 51'rved cake, ice
cream, coffee and mints.

..t

five attractive. decors, many

$ 77

''
.'
~

.'

new auxiliary officers

Newlyweds , retirees, or " young
~~ hear!" people of any age live
rn gracrous style and comfort in
Holly Park Homes . . . and save

"OLDE LON DON TOWNE"

'

Mr.J, Stewart installs

money alt lhe way. Choice 01

MEN AND BOYS
BlACK OR WHITE

'''

BETROTHED - Announcement is being made of the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of Eliza bell! Ann
Martin, 1111 Adrian :\ ve., Gallipolis and Gary Lee Altizer
Rt. 2, Patriot. The open cl)urch ceremony will be an event
of July 17 at 4:30 p.m. at St. Louis Catholic Church
Gallipolis. The Rev. A. J . Golubiewski will officiate. A
reception at the Gallia County GWI Club will immediately
follo:w the ceremony. Miss Martin, a 1973 graduate of
Ga!lia Academy High School, is employed at the dental
off1ce of Dr. John R. Sheets. Her fiance, a 1970 graduate of
Southwestern High School, received a bachelor's degree
10 Ag-busmess from Morehead State University. The
couple will reside at Rt. 2, Patriot.

STUDENTS HONORED
NELSONVILLE- Several
area students have been
named to the dean's list at
Hocking Technical Colleg~
far the spring quarter, 1976.
Included on the list are
Bonnie Blackmon, Antl!ony
P. Reese, Margaret Leedy,
all Gallipolis, will! a 4.0
average; Marceline Kerns,
Gallipolis and Gwyn A.
Gilliland, Thurman.

WOMEN 'S
SIZES TO 10

.''

Elizabeth Ann Martin

···people who live
better for Jess 1

REG.
'2.97

Cheshire-KC alumni stage_
successful banquet and dance

Effie Martin presides
at Wednesday meeting

i•'

,
a.at
e
IJ"ttn:g
Vaughans host family 6 h

WEDDING!

Cwf

5- The SWiday Tin)es- Sentinel, Sunday, Jane '!1,1976

20

0/'

OFF
/OREG. PRICE

Mon. &amp; Fri.9:301itBp.m.
Tues .. Wed .. Sat. 9:30 lil5 p.m.
Thursd~v 9: 30 til12 noon

King-Mees
to wed

POMEROY - Wedding
p~ns have been completed
for the marriage of Miss
Edith Ann Mees, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Mees,
Pomeroy, and Timothy Jay
King, son of Mr: and Mrs.
Robert King, Rl. I, Mid·
dleport.
The ceremony will take
place at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
on Sunday, July 4, at 3:30 in
the afternoon. A red, white
and blue bicentennial theme
will be folloived. One-half
hour of pre-nuptial music will
be presented by John An·
derson, organist. Pastor
William Middleswarth will
perform the ceremony. The
gracious custom of open
church will. be observed and
an open reception will follow
immediately in the church
social room.
Miss Wendy Ming,
Clawson, Mich., will serve as
maid of honor. Bridesmaids
will be Miss Joan Wagstaff,
Portage, Mich.; Miss Carol
King, Middleport, and Miss
Lori Winans, Garland,
Texas. Miss Judi Mees, sister
of the bride, will be junior
bridesmaid, and Miss
Mechelle Halstead, Madison,
W. Va ., will serve as flower
girl.
Jim Boggs, Middleport,
will serve as best man for the
groom. Ushers include Jim
Schmoll, Middleport, Larry
Mees and Ed · Abbott,
Pomeroy, and Robert
Winans, Garland, Texas .
Guests will be registered
by Miss Beth Fultz, Middleport , and , Mi ss Jan
Galste1·, Toledo.

INVITATION GIVEN
GALLIPOLIS - The Class
of 19S6 cordially invites the
alumni of Gallia Academy
High School to a dance
following their class reunion
(approximately 9:30 p.m.) on
Saturday, July 3, at the Elks'
Lodge. There will be $1 per
couple donation.

NAMED TO LIST
WOOSTER - Shirlene A.
Ward, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, has
been named to the Dean's
List r3.3-1.0) for the spring
quarter at The College of
Wooster according to Dean F.
W. Cropp.

The old Cheshire High
School colors of purple and
gold were used for the
decorations .
Floral
arrangements donated by the
Cheshire Garden Club und
The Wayside Garden Club accented every table. A lot of
time and talent went into the
Oower arrangements and the
association appreciated each
club for their outstanding efforts.
James Neal, class of 1959,
was toastmaster for the
evening and also welcomed
the Senior Class of 1976. Fred
Westfell~ class of 1976, gave
the semor class response.
Special recognition was
given to the oldest alumnus
present, William J . Van Zant.

Waynesboro, 0 . Classes
recognized were 1926 wiU1
three present ; 1951, four
present and 1966, two
present. Travelin~ the farthest was Ronnie and Pattie
Sl!e from Niceville, Fla. The
largest fainily in attendance
was the Mulford family wiUJ
four persons.
The business meeting was
conducted by the president,
Mike Swisher . Alter 8
discussion Of yearly dues uf
$! per member, it was voted
to be on volunta1·y basis only.
Everyone paying their dues
will be mailed an invitation .
Otherwise inviU.tions will not
bemailed.
Special thanks from the
president went to the other
officers and volunteers who
worked hard to make the
oonquet successful.
New officers for the year
are president, Gary Fisher ;
vice president, Ava lee
Stanley;
col'rcsponding
secretary, Joy Rife; rccm·ding sec retary, Lois Snyder
and treasurer, Jon Rothgeb .
The remainder of the
eventng was spent enjoying
the variety of music by Johnny Lynch and the Lynch Mob
fl·om Point Pleasant. Door
prize drawings were held .
throughout the dance.
'!'he Alumni Association
would like to eKpress shwere
gratitude to the following
area businesses who sup-

ported the 47th Annual
Banquet: Bob Cox C.B.
Radio, City ke and Fuel,
Cremeans Concrete, John
~'uller, Realtor, Gallipolis
Savings and Loan, Jay-Mar
Coat Co., McGiMcss.Stanley
Insurance Co., Pantasote
Co., Robbins-Myers, Scott's
Grocery, Skyline Lanes,
Swishe r 's Dniryland,
Swisher's Implement Co.,
Tnru Townhouse Apts., Uptown Pt. Pleasant AutO&gt; Parts, The Wiseman Ageucy.
Prizes were donHted by the
following businesses: The
Alcove Record Shop, Central
Supply Co., Paul Davies
Jewelers, Dudley's Florist,
Jones Boys, G. C. Murphy's
Stiffler's Stores, Tawney
Jewelers and Wagon Wheel
Antiques. Thanks went to all
of these businesses and
especially to Burnell's '
Hoofing and Heating for
donating the air-conditioning
unit. Pr og rams were
p1·epared and printed by
volw1tem·s M1·s. Elaine Hoes
and Mrs. Dorothy Broyles.
The association was so enUJUsed about the fw1 at the
(lanquct and dance that they
!ire now mnking plans for
neKt year. Interested persons
arc u1·gcd to mark U1eir
calendar now and reserve
May 28, 1977 for a fun-filled
evening of renewing
acquaintances and enjoyment.

Paul Davies .Jewelers
proucl(y
presents .

AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL
For a limited time only, in
conjunction with our
Na I ion's 200t h Bi rt hda y,
Paul Davies Jewelers is
offering !h e Hamilton
Mint 's pure silver ingol
Co llec tion America the
Beautiful. This matched
set coni a ins 50 ingot
depicting
scenes
throughout our beautiful
country .
'

Each ingot contains 1 oz. of .999 fin e pur e s ilver and is
protected by your own ser ial number that no other
person can claim . This collection is no long er available .
The collection offers you a valuable momenta of this our
Bicentennial year.
To compliment and preserve this
fabulous collection is a handsome
display case, attractively designed
and constructed of wood grain
plastic and plexiglas. The display
revolves on its base to display the
collection in its full beauty .
Ame~ica the Beautiful Set
(SO ingots with display!

$850.00

J..,.,.,.
o4l).4

SECOND AVENUE • .... ,...r

=·MEMbEft AMERICAN QEW SOCiETY

JUNE

SAVE. ON SUCH NAME BRANDS
•Bassett •Singer •Lane •Crom Craft •Whirlpool
.•Kincade •Liberty •Manor House •Hoover
•International •Clayton Marcus

�4- The Sunday Tim~- Sentinel, Sunday, J~ne '!1,1976

Entries from three states are

..............................................................
•
•

Woman 's World
•

participating in festival exhibit
GALLIPOLIS - Fifty·liOur
artists from ·three states
Ohio, Kentucky and wesi
Virginia, are participating
WI til 205 entries in the River
Recreation Festival Exhibit
sponsored by U!e French Art
Colony on SWiday, July 4
from t1 a.m. Willi S p.m. in
the Gallipolis City Park.
Judging of these entries
will be on Wednesday June
30 at Riverby by well-known
artist Harriet Anderson who
is with the Trissolini Gallery
10 AU!ens. In addition 20
children's paintings, ' not
bemg judged, will be on
display at the July 4th
exhibit. These paintings were
created by the students of the
. French Art Colony.
Five purchase prizes will
be awarded as a result of the
judging. They are being
presented by the Fi rst
National Bank of Gallipolis
Robbins and Myers, Inc., th~
Commercial and Savings
Bank, the Gallipolis Savings
and Loan and the Holzer
Medical Center Clinic.
Ribbons will be awarded in
each category: professional,

amateur, high school and
elementary level. Mtists
have submitted entries in all
media
including
oil,
watercolor , mixed media .
charc oa l,
sculptur e ,
gra phics, ceramics and
creative photography.
Many of the artists entries
will be for sale. Original note
paper, (!esigned by the prize
winning
artist
Polly
Trumbore of Ashland ,
Kentucky, will be available at
$3 a box.
Chairing this annual event
is Mrs. Jan Thaler, assisted
by Mrs. Bonnie Stutes.
Other French Art Colony
activities during the gala
weekend include a Pet Rock
Paint-In
on
Saturday
afternoon from I until 3 p.m.
for children of all ages . Mrs.

PeiUly MO&lt;Jre IS cna1rman of
this event. All materials will
be furnished and there will be
no charge.
Saturday afternoon from 4
p.m. unt1J dark and again
Sunday afternoon from 12 :30
p.m. until dark, the annual
Photo-Fair Booth will be open
on the First Avenue upriver
site of the city park. Don and
Ca rolyn Hippensteel are
chair ing this activity .
Pictures taken are just $1
each. A large variety of
decorative flats should
attract adults and children
alike to have a special
holiday picture taken to
remember
the
River
Recreation Festival during
the bk-entennial celebration
in Gallipolis.

THE STORY
OF YOUR

992-2156

:•

'Women '76' to highlight
concerns of women today
GALLIPOUS - "Women
'76" ll'ill be the bicentennial
rallying point for concerned
women from all over Ohio.
The place will be Mershon
Auditorium on The Ohio State
University Campus and
kick-off time will be io a.m.
July20.
Sponsored by the Ohio EK·
tension Homemakers CoWJcil
and the OSU Cooperative Extension Service, the event
will highlight the role of
women in today' s society.
Five Ohio women will be
recognized for their outstanding contributions to
their fields of interest and
their communities. They are
Judge Olive Holmes Cincinnati; Gertrude Do~ahey
Columbus, state treasurer.'
Ellen Walker Craig, fonne~

mayor of Urbancrest ;
Marion Renick, Columbus,
writer of children's books,
and Dorothy Dennison,
Youngstown, artist.
Keynote speaker, reports
Naurine McConnick, State
Leader of Home Economics
for the Extension Service,
will be Dr. Betty Siegel, Dean
of Academic Alfairs for Continuing Education at the
University of Florida .
Thomas Wetzel ll, Division of
Public Relations and
Development of the Salvation
Army of Greater Cleveland,
will talk on the topic, "Silent
Eyes," for which he received
the George Washington
Medal of Honor of the
Freedom FoWJdation, Valley
Forge,Pa.

Chairing the day's activities will be Jean Rhodes,
Salem, representing the Ohio
EKtension Homemakers
Cound. She will be assisted
by J ea~e Rum burg, area
Extenswn Agent, home
et"Onomics, Canfield, and
Hannah Beisch, area EK·
tension agent, home
economics, Wooster.
Both men and women are
invited to attend the Women
'76 program, says Mrs, McCormick; however, there will
be a fee for the lWJcheon to be
held at the Ohio Union. Preregistration . will be
necessary for persons plan·
rung to attend. Registration
sheets are available from the
Gallia County Extension Of.
lice, telephone 446-4612 extension 32.
'

1

CAPTURED
WITH
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
GROVERS
COMPLETE
WITH
ALBUM. STARTING
~T ...

$7995
GROVER'S
STUDIO

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
Walter E . Baker, . Rt. 2 Coolville are announcing the
':Jproachmg mamage of. their daughter, Deanna, to
uane Knapp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Olin Knapp, Syracuse.
An open church wedding will be held Saturday, July 10, at
the Church of Christ m Christian Union at Point Pleasant
The Rev . Willis Tomlin will officiate at the 2:30 p.m:
ceremony. Miss Baker is a senior at Meigs High School
enrolled 10 cosmetology. Her fiance is a 197:; graduate of
Galha Academy High School employed at the Southern
Oh10 Coal Co. A r~eption will be held following the
weddmg at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.

PROFESSIONAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plcua
Gallipolis, Ohio

Phone 446-7494
Opon Tue5. -Sal. 10-5
' TillS On Thurs.

•

BRIDAL POLICY
We-dding and engagement
notices for the Sunday Times
Sentinel must be in our hands
by 12 noon on the Thursday
pr eceding publication.
Information may be tunJed In
or mailed tu the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune or Pomeroy
Dally Sentinel. Engagement
ru1d wedding forms are also
available 011 request.

tu 1c'n !lla 1l~ling •~ • olui &gt;Gr~ n( '" Fr•t clo"' irorn
no ,j, ~p• . no body, nc . ec ~h(JI h-·• Fro"' w lli"9 i!
n:9hl •lt•r •1qllt weel: •!itt wu~ UnrPe rm . ~ rl l
no f•••l &lt; a Hclrho~etl • ith o1 1 il\ i ~1 11 1hiM Automoll·
•c• lly l o ~t&lt;ote y o ~r h• ir ! ' I
·

... .

Otter

$16:~.~ ,,.~;.~ 6
&amp; )!yl,.

POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, Sr.
hosted a gathering of the
family of Walter Vaughan at
their home on Prospect Hts.
on Father'S Day.
Present besides the hosts
were Mrs. Florence Windon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, Jr., Bill Vaughan,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Vaughan
Beth and Zandra Vaughan:
Jun Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Teddy Warner, Miss Patty
Warner, Terry Sayre, Scott
Warner, Kim Warner, Mrs.
Judy Pocklington and Andy,

Descendants
hold reunion
ADOISUN
Several
descendants of the late John
Austin and Helena C. Will
met at Fortification Hill for a
coo kout this past weekend.
Attending the reunion were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill (Mary)
Barcus, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
(Mickey ) Smith and children,
Nancy, Mark, Matt and Jay ,
Mr. and Mrs. Max (Lucy )
Martin; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Roach an'd children, Tammy
and Trisha, Mr. and Mrs.
Jean )
Gilbert
[Mona
Hamilton and children
Shirley, Cathy and Joe, Mr:
and Mrs. Tom (Rene)
Broyles and son Mike, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Broyles, Roger
Broyles and son Adam, Mr.
and Mrs. Christ Artus were
special guests.
After refreshments of hot
dogs·, hamburgers and soft
drinks,
the
group
participated in various
games and sports.

FRUIT SALAD WEDGES
EMBROIDERED VAMP
IN ASSORTED COLORS
REG. 13.97
SALE PRICES

$

i
Pomeroy-Middleport :

00

BY RENE BROYLES
ADDISON - President
Effie Martin presided at the
Wednesday meeting of the
Addison Free-wlll Baptist
Church Ladi.es' Aid.
Reports of the secretary
Mary Barcus I and th~
treasurer, Jewell Russell
were read ~nd accepted by
motion. . Twenty-three
members responded to roll
call. Twenty-six cards were
sent and 31 calls made to
absent or ill members. No
sympatl!y cards were mailed
Conunittee
reports · ...:.
telephone, visitation, ways
and means, were accepted as
given.
Charlene and Brenda
Prescott, granddaughters of
Rev. and Mrs . Walter
Patterson, and Matthew
Goody, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Goody were guests of
the group.

Sarah Carsey . 1Charletie Hoeflich
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant~
446-2342
:

Marty Vaughan, Miss Sue
Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Vaughan, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Vaughan, L.oring Vaughan,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Vaughan, · Charles and
Thomas Vaughan, Fred
Rayburn, Crystal Erwin,
Cathy Rayburn, Bob Workman, Mr. and Mrs. Louis B.
·vaughan.
Mr. and Mrs. Billie Jo
Spencer, Bikki Spencer, Greg
Spencer, Melissa Spencer
and ,Vaughan Spencer, Bellview; Mrs. Debbie Cofnand,
Matt and Paul, Cadiz; Frank
Vaughan, Andy Vaug)um,
Miss Julie Hutchinson, 'Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Williams and
Pat and Pam Vaughan,

f It

Pomeroy.
Unable to attend were Miss
Anna Vaughan and Mrs. Mae
Bird of Cedarville, sisters of
Walter Vaughan, both over
8S, who are confined to a nursing home in Xenia. Also
unable to attend were Mr.
and Mrs. George Vaughan
and sons of Chillicothe; Mr.
and Mrs. Pat Vaughan and
sons, Michigan; Tony
Vaughan, Gallipolis; Miss
Therma Vaughan, New
York; Mr. and. Mrs. Bob
Layne and twin daughters of
Virginia; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Tripp and sons of near
Chesler, and Miss Belinda
Spencer of Bellview.

Council inspected
POMEROY
Annual
inspection of Theodorus
Council 17, Daughters of
America, was held Monday
night at the IOOF hall. Mrs.
Faye Hoselton, Belle Prairie
Council 269, district deputy,
was the inspecting officer.
Mrs. Caddie Wickham, in
the absence of Mrs. Eva
Dessauer, a patient at Holzer
Medical Center, served as
t"Ouncllor . State and national
officers seated were Mrs.
Hoselton, di strict deputy ;
Mrs. Edna Re~bel, deputy of
Theodorus Cou ncil; Miss
Jean Hall, deputy of Guiding
Star Council 124, and Mrs.
Essie Varner, deputy of Belle
Prairie. Mrs. Ha5eltan was
presented a gift on behalf of
tl!e Council.
Acommunication was read
from Shirley Kerr, state
councilor, thanking the
Council for courtesies shown
at district rallies and
announcing the 82nd Annual
State Session to be held Aug .
16, 17 and 18 at the
Netherland Hilton Hotel
Cincinnati.
The
good
fellowship banquet will be
held on Aug. 17 in the
Continental Ballroom at 6
p.m.
The District 13 Deputies
Club annual picnic was
announced for Sunday at 2
p.m. Donations were made to
the State Council for
expenses-and to the home and
orphans fund.

Following the inspection
the
district
deputt
commended both Mrs.
Wickham and Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling, pianist.
A bicentennial theme was
carried
out
in
the
refreshment
table
decorations. The centerpiece
was blue flanked by red
tapers in white holders .
Sandwiches, cookies, coffee
and chips were served.
Guests were Mr&amp;. Edith
Berry, Mrs. Essie Varner,
Mrs. Hoselton, Belle Prairie,
and Miss Hall , Pauline
Morarity and Janice Lawson,
Guiding Star, Syracuse.
It was announced that the
books will be audited at the
home of Mrs. Reibel Monday
night. The death of Martha
Jesse was noted and it was
reported that Mrs. Betty
Reibel is still undergoing
treatment.

RACINE - .Mrs. Louise
Stewart installed the 1976-77
officers at the Tuesday night
meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of Racine
Post602.
Installed were Mrs. Julia
Norris, president; Mrs.
Leora Young, first vice
president; Mrs . . Beulah
Neigler, second vice
president; Mrs. Mary Roush,
secretary; Mrs. Myrtle
Walker, treasurer; Mrs.
Frances Roberts, chaplain;
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, sergeant
at arms, and Mrs. RoUSh
historian.
'
Awards received at the
recent district convention
held in Athens were noted.
The Wlit received citations
for rehabilitation programs,
for bemg a goal unit, for
making the birthday roll call, .
and Department and
National citation for
meritorious service. Mrs.
Walker, Mrs. Roush and Mrs.
Norris also received

A'ITENDS SHOWER
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs
Marian Van Meter attended~
layette shower honoring Mrs.
Kenney Wheeler. Her name
was omitted from an earlier
listing of guests.

Homes
make
happy
peopfe

Hosted by Miss Margaret Ferrell

TENNIS OXFORD

Fr~an cl ng available.

~-u···~oatK

AUGUST 20-28 1976

Air Fare · Motorcoach to Columbus '
Extensive Sightseeing . First
Class Hotels · TipS • Transfers .
Continental Breakfast Dai~

ONLY

·v
Ihem

K&amp;K MOBILE
HOME PARK
&amp; SALES .

'51QOO

BOOKING DEADLINE JULY I
446-0699
'\

See

Point Pleasant
I'

~rrnilfff'llW
~ruw§

Cooling 20" fan with thermolly
protected motor . fine -mesh
grille .

REGULAR
24.95

9" 2·SPEED

OSCILLATING FAN

Ultro·quiet , 90' oscillation provides
toto! room coveroge. Smort deco rator
styl ing.

2188

REGULAR
26.95

The evening diMer began
at 7 p.m. with 132 alwru1i and
guests attending. Bob Evans
Drive-In catered the meal
consisting of ham, ctticken,
baked beans, cole slaw,
potato salad, roll, iced tea
and coffee. The association
expressed thanks to them f01'
such an excellent job for the
dirmer and catering service.

SEVERAL CHANGES are ~derway at the Bob Evans Farms amphitheatre in Rio
Grande where the histoncal, mus1cal pageant, "Galli a Country," will open its fourth season
July 9. The constructiOn of a log cabm, new bandstand and a replica of a house of the 17901890 era IS part of the new atmosphere.
·

for fourth 'Gallia Country '

3 SPEED FAN

If1-"i~O

CHESHIRE
The
Cheshire • Kyger Creek
AlwiUii Association held a
successful annual alun11u
banquet and dance on May
29.

Scenery changes underway

AN Q:rif!~,BICENTENNIAL

w~o

HELP PREVENT
DAMP BASEMENTS
DEHUMIDIFIER
Removes up lo 14 pinls of woter per
day . AutomatiC .

REGULAR
168.95

HARDMAN'S
HOME
CENTER

Many changes are taking
place in the amphitheatre at
Rio Grande, scene of the
~storical musical-pageant,
Galha Country ," being
presented for the fourth
consecutive year by the
Gallla Dramatic Arts
Society.
Under U!e direction of Greg
Miller and his assistant
Mega'n Riegel, Jame~
Beverly, president of the
society, and many volunteers
have been working daily on

:-

~~ ~/
'

byS'peuk£
E.~ch of t.hcsc solid sterling
nn ~-:l ets :;;p.uklcs wit h the
d c~-:an cc .uul beau ty of 01

.t;crllline diamond . One of ,~.
th em is stt rc to put .1 sparkle in .;.
the eye of the one yo u love . :
Ei ~ht fun styles from Speidel .!
AII at a heartwarming price.

Only $12.95 ;
'
·~
Clark's .

GALLIPOLIS - Harriet
Anderson, well known artist
now residing in Athens, will
be the judge for the River
Recreation Festival Exhibit
sponsored by the French Art
Colony. Judging will take
place Wednesday, June 30 at
Riverby. The eKhibit will be
in the city park on Sunday,
July 4 from II a.m. until 5
p.m.
A graduate in Fine Arts
from Ohio University, Ms.
Anderson was one of U!e first
art teachers in Athens
County. She did additional
study at Ohio State
University and lived in
Columbus for several years.
Three years ago she returned
to Athens, and now lives on
U!e family farm where she
resided as a .child.
As an artist specializing in
acrylic painting, she . has
created several large
contemporary works. One is
included in . the David
Rockefeller . collection. She
also has works in 20
additional · collections

·~

·'

Jewelry Store ~:..
:

'324 Second Ave.
Gallipoli.s.

o.

JU 81!COND AVI!N\,1 ~ / 3ALUPOU5. O&gt;f iO

45631

WOMEN'S SUMMER SPECIALS

N••u••t~&gt;~SAVE 20 ~.~~~~
Auditions
Connies
All From
Miss Wonderfuls
Reg . Stock
Footnotes
.
Red Hats
Sihicia

ONE

SPRING &amp; SUMMER

·SAVE GROUP
WOMEN'S SHOES

HANDBAGS
NOW

the construction of a log the end result of all the many
ca bin, new bandstand and a - hours
spent
in
the
replica of a house or the 179(). cons tru ction of the new
1890 era , all to be a scenery.
permanent part of the · Th~. beauty of the
production.
amphitheatre and overall
According to Miller, ·•As effects will not have been
the director, I feel that there cha n ge d,
rather
should be more visible complimen ted by the new
presentation of backgrounds additions. Natural acoustics
for the various scenes, thus will still be utilized, thus
creating more believable giving a realistic effect to the
for
the dialogue and singing."
atmosphere
performers. We hope a more
The house will serve as
rea listic production will be dressing rooms as well as
storage space for props.and
scenery in addition to its use
in man y of U!e play's scenes.
Performance dates fo1·
"Gallia Country" are July 911, 16-IB, 23-20 and July 30Aug.
1, starting
at
throughout the country.
approximately 9 p.m. Tiokets
For U1e past 10 years Ms. may be obtained at the
Anderson has been seriously Gallipolis Area Chamber of
involved in creating tapestry. Commerce, 16 State St., or
She uses wool designs on any of the area chambers of
canvas. In April, 1977 she will commerce. Prices are: $3 for
have a tapestry eKhibit in the adults tin advance) or $4 at
Columbus Gallery. She has the gate; $2 for children
just completed a commission under 18 years of age. Special
for the City National Bank of prices for groups of 20 or
Columbus in tapestry.
more. For information, call
A member of the Board of (614) 446-2200.
the Trissolini Gallery in
Athens, Ms. Anderson
organized the Gallery 's
TO SPEAK
volunteer program, their
ADDISO!'f
- Rev. Carl
craft shop and docent
(Max) Martin, of Richwood,
program. The French Art
Colony feels most fortWJate to Ohio, will be a guest minister
for the Sunday evening
have such an outstanding
services at U!e Addison Freeartist as the Judge for their
will Baptist Church. Rev.
River Recreation Festival
Martin
is the husband of the
Exhibit.
former Lucy Will. Rev .
Walter Patterson, pastor,
invites the public to attend
any or all church services.

Athens artist to judge
river festival exhibit

Genuine
Diamond .·
Ringlets at a ::
bcautiiul price~ :

~~ ::

m at your conve nience and
l~ok 'em over at no obligation.

The group sponsored a pie
supper Saturday evening at 6
at the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.
Door prizes were won by
Ollie Oliver, Mickey Smitl!,
Eva Gardner, Loretta and
Pebbles Clark, Velva Casey
and Effie Martin.
Jewell Russell, Ollie
Oliver, Shirley Dovenbarger
and Trilba Patterson will
furnish door prizes for the
July meeting. Refreshments
will be furnished by Trilba
Patterson, Effie Martin
Donna Davis and · Ev~
Gardner.
After adjournment, the
group
was
served
refreshments by Mary
Barcus, Mickey Smitl! and
Rene Broyles. Faye Goody's
name was unintentionally
omitted as having helped
served refreshments during
tl!e May meeting.

SELL·EBRATION

~~ej~

floor plans, one or two baths
~wo or three bedrooms. StoP

I

'I

recognition for securing
members. Going to the
district meeting were Mrs.
Walker, Mrs. Norris, Mrs.
Brinker, Mrs. Roush. Mrs.
YoWJg and Mrs. Stewart.
A report on junior activities was given by Mrs.
Walker. It was noted that a
hox of eyeglasses for the
needy is being prepared for
mailing to New Jersey. Mem·
bers were urged to write
their legi slators in
Washington concerning the
minimum wage law and how
it applies to hospitalized
veterans who make poppies
for sale by Auxiliary Units. ~
Mrs. Stewart and Mrs.
young were appointed to
audit the books. II was noted
that a bronze marker has
been placed on the. grave of
Mrs. Marne Mallm-y at the
Letart Cemetery. This was
the 29th marker put on the
graves of Auxiliary members.
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle,
Mrs. Margaret Yost and Mrs.
Eula Wolfe 51'rved cake, ice
cream, coffee and mints.

..t

five attractive. decors, many

$ 77

''
.'
~

.'

new auxiliary officers

Newlyweds , retirees, or " young
~~ hear!" people of any age live
rn gracrous style and comfort in
Holly Park Homes . . . and save

"OLDE LON DON TOWNE"

'

Mr.J, Stewart installs

money alt lhe way. Choice 01

MEN AND BOYS
BlACK OR WHITE

'''

BETROTHED - Announcement is being made of the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of Eliza bell! Ann
Martin, 1111 Adrian :\ ve., Gallipolis and Gary Lee Altizer
Rt. 2, Patriot. The open cl)urch ceremony will be an event
of July 17 at 4:30 p.m. at St. Louis Catholic Church
Gallipolis. The Rev. A. J . Golubiewski will officiate. A
reception at the Gallia County GWI Club will immediately
follo:w the ceremony. Miss Martin, a 1973 graduate of
Ga!lia Academy High School, is employed at the dental
off1ce of Dr. John R. Sheets. Her fiance, a 1970 graduate of
Southwestern High School, received a bachelor's degree
10 Ag-busmess from Morehead State University. The
couple will reside at Rt. 2, Patriot.

STUDENTS HONORED
NELSONVILLE- Several
area students have been
named to the dean's list at
Hocking Technical Colleg~
far the spring quarter, 1976.
Included on the list are
Bonnie Blackmon, Antl!ony
P. Reese, Margaret Leedy,
all Gallipolis, will! a 4.0
average; Marceline Kerns,
Gallipolis and Gwyn A.
Gilliland, Thurman.

WOMEN 'S
SIZES TO 10

.''

Elizabeth Ann Martin

···people who live
better for Jess 1

REG.
'2.97

Cheshire-KC alumni stage_
successful banquet and dance

Effie Martin presides
at Wednesday meeting

i•'

,
a.at
e
IJ"ttn:g
Vaughans host family 6 h

WEDDING!

Cwf

5- The SWiday Tin)es- Sentinel, Sunday, Jane '!1,1976

20

0/'

OFF
/OREG. PRICE

Mon. &amp; Fri.9:301itBp.m.
Tues .. Wed .. Sat. 9:30 lil5 p.m.
Thursd~v 9: 30 til12 noon

King-Mees
to wed

POMEROY - Wedding
p~ns have been completed
for the marriage of Miss
Edith Ann Mees, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Mees,
Pomeroy, and Timothy Jay
King, son of Mr: and Mrs.
Robert King, Rl. I, Mid·
dleport.
The ceremony will take
place at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
on Sunday, July 4, at 3:30 in
the afternoon. A red, white
and blue bicentennial theme
will be folloived. One-half
hour of pre-nuptial music will
be presented by John An·
derson, organist. Pastor
William Middleswarth will
perform the ceremony. The
gracious custom of open
church will. be observed and
an open reception will follow
immediately in the church
social room.
Miss Wendy Ming,
Clawson, Mich., will serve as
maid of honor. Bridesmaids
will be Miss Joan Wagstaff,
Portage, Mich.; Miss Carol
King, Middleport, and Miss
Lori Winans, Garland,
Texas. Miss Judi Mees, sister
of the bride, will be junior
bridesmaid, and Miss
Mechelle Halstead, Madison,
W. Va ., will serve as flower
girl.
Jim Boggs, Middleport,
will serve as best man for the
groom. Ushers include Jim
Schmoll, Middleport, Larry
Mees and Ed · Abbott,
Pomeroy, and Robert
Winans, Garland, Texas .
Guests will be registered
by Miss Beth Fultz, Middleport , and , Mi ss Jan
Galste1·, Toledo.

INVITATION GIVEN
GALLIPOLIS - The Class
of 19S6 cordially invites the
alumni of Gallia Academy
High School to a dance
following their class reunion
(approximately 9:30 p.m.) on
Saturday, July 3, at the Elks'
Lodge. There will be $1 per
couple donation.

NAMED TO LIST
WOOSTER - Shirlene A.
Ward, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, has
been named to the Dean's
List r3.3-1.0) for the spring
quarter at The College of
Wooster according to Dean F.
W. Cropp.

The old Cheshire High
School colors of purple and
gold were used for the
decorations .
Floral
arrangements donated by the
Cheshire Garden Club und
The Wayside Garden Club accented every table. A lot of
time and talent went into the
Oower arrangements and the
association appreciated each
club for their outstanding efforts.
James Neal, class of 1959,
was toastmaster for the
evening and also welcomed
the Senior Class of 1976. Fred
Westfell~ class of 1976, gave
the semor class response.
Special recognition was
given to the oldest alumnus
present, William J . Van Zant.

Waynesboro, 0 . Classes
recognized were 1926 wiU1
three present ; 1951, four
present and 1966, two
present. Travelin~ the farthest was Ronnie and Pattie
Sl!e from Niceville, Fla. The
largest fainily in attendance
was the Mulford family wiUJ
four persons.
The business meeting was
conducted by the president,
Mike Swisher . Alter 8
discussion Of yearly dues uf
$! per member, it was voted
to be on volunta1·y basis only.
Everyone paying their dues
will be mailed an invitation .
Otherwise inviU.tions will not
bemailed.
Special thanks from the
president went to the other
officers and volunteers who
worked hard to make the
oonquet successful.
New officers for the year
are president, Gary Fisher ;
vice president, Ava lee
Stanley;
col'rcsponding
secretary, Joy Rife; rccm·ding sec retary, Lois Snyder
and treasurer, Jon Rothgeb .
The remainder of the
eventng was spent enjoying
the variety of music by Johnny Lynch and the Lynch Mob
fl·om Point Pleasant. Door
prize drawings were held .
throughout the dance.
'!'he Alumni Association
would like to eKpress shwere
gratitude to the following
area businesses who sup-

ported the 47th Annual
Banquet: Bob Cox C.B.
Radio, City ke and Fuel,
Cremeans Concrete, John
~'uller, Realtor, Gallipolis
Savings and Loan, Jay-Mar
Coat Co., McGiMcss.Stanley
Insurance Co., Pantasote
Co., Robbins-Myers, Scott's
Grocery, Skyline Lanes,
Swishe r 's Dniryland,
Swisher's Implement Co.,
Tnru Townhouse Apts., Uptown Pt. Pleasant AutO&gt; Parts, The Wiseman Ageucy.
Prizes were donHted by the
following businesses: The
Alcove Record Shop, Central
Supply Co., Paul Davies
Jewelers, Dudley's Florist,
Jones Boys, G. C. Murphy's
Stiffler's Stores, Tawney
Jewelers and Wagon Wheel
Antiques. Thanks went to all
of these businesses and
especially to Burnell's '
Hoofing and Heating for
donating the air-conditioning
unit. Pr og rams were
p1·epared and printed by
volw1tem·s M1·s. Elaine Hoes
and Mrs. Dorothy Broyles.
The association was so enUJUsed about the fw1 at the
(lanquct and dance that they
!ire now mnking plans for
neKt year. Interested persons
arc u1·gcd to mark U1eir
calendar now and reserve
May 28, 1977 for a fun-filled
evening of renewing
acquaintances and enjoyment.

Paul Davies .Jewelers
proucl(y
presents .

AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL
For a limited time only, in
conjunction with our
Na I ion's 200t h Bi rt hda y,
Paul Davies Jewelers is
offering !h e Hamilton
Mint 's pure silver ingol
Co llec tion America the
Beautiful. This matched
set coni a ins 50 ingot
depicting
scenes
throughout our beautiful
country .
'

Each ingot contains 1 oz. of .999 fin e pur e s ilver and is
protected by your own ser ial number that no other
person can claim . This collection is no long er available .
The collection offers you a valuable momenta of this our
Bicentennial year.
To compliment and preserve this
fabulous collection is a handsome
display case, attractively designed
and constructed of wood grain
plastic and plexiglas. The display
revolves on its base to display the
collection in its full beauty .
Ame~ica the Beautiful Set
(SO ingots with display!

$850.00

J..,.,.,.
o4l).4

SECOND AVENUE • .... ,...r

=·MEMbEft AMERICAN QEW SOCiETY

JUNE

SAVE. ON SUCH NAME BRANDS
•Bassett •Singer •Lane •Crom Craft •Whirlpool
.•Kincade •Liberty •Manor House •Hoover
•International •Clayton Marcus

�7-The Sunday Times -Sentinel, SWJday,June T/,1976

~~~~~:W~::X~~:;:::~::::;:::::::;:::::::::;.:-:·:·:·:·:,:i~

~l~

~

Generation Rap

!!.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

!!!

Which Parentis Best'!
RAP :
My mother and father have been separated for five years .
I've lived with my mother , but would like to spend the summer
with my Dad as I miss him very rrruch.
I'm afraid to ask Mom, as she thinks Dad's girlfriend is a
"slut ." (! think she's nice. )-Besides, Mom can't say anything
good about Dad, so I know she wouldn 't let me go.
Why do parents take it out on the kids when THEY are the
ones who separate. I don't want to be separated from Dad, but
it seems I don 't have a choice. ~ confused (age 12)
DEAR CON:
You haven't asked your Mother yet, so how can you
"know" she won't let you visit your Dad ? t'aint heart never
won fair vacation .
Could be yolir Mom might enjoy a "vacation" too . So gu
ahead and ask. We 're belting on a "Yes." - SUE AND
HELEN
+++
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm not surprised that half the childless couples who
answered your "Doyouwant children?"questionsaid, "No ."
Thisisaboutthewayitaddsup in our youngcrowd ofmmicd
couples, or hve-togethers.
We're in the "no" group, not only because we both have
careers, but also because we don 't want the tremendous
responsibility that goes with raising a famil y.
We won 't have a so-&lt;:alled lonely old age - we'll be too
busy for that. Also , we have plenty of nieces, nephews,
brothers and sisters, etc. whom we love.
Now that young people have definite choices, I think we'll
see less child abuse, and probably a better crop of kids , for
those who know they aren't suited for parenthood won't
indulge._ "NO"
P.S. Did you notice a difference in responses from the
college~ducated and noncollege people?
DEAR "NO: " ·
The college~duca ted were more likely to be careerminded , therefore they were a little heayier on the vote against
having children.
But not as heavy as one might suppose. Many of these
women insisted that they could pursue a career and manage a
family - and still have time for husband, hobbies and fun . HELEN
+++
AWORD FROM SUE : You're so right: people who know they
aren't geared for parenthood should leave that job to others. A
full-time career doesn't leave much time for mothering unless you're superwoman.
++ +
DEAR RAP :
I'm a Olristian girl in )ove with a Jewish guy who is
actually terrified to bring me home to see his folks. Hi s mother
is unbelievably prejudiced. She'll brainwash her son into
marrying "one of his own " no matter how unhappy the match.
Must we break up just because our religions (which neither of
us are fanatic about) are different ? - K.A.
DEAR K .:
That depends on how strong are your boyfriend's family
ties and how weak he is in resisting them . Mixed-religion
marriages work - if they 're allowed a chance. Good luck' HELEN AND SUE

GALLIPOLIS Pam
Bryan and Steve Brown, both
1976 graduates of Gallia
Academy High School, will be
touring Europe July :&gt;-22 with
the All Ohio State Fair Youth
Oloir.
Miss Bryan is the daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. David Bryan,
Patriot
Star
Route,
Gallipolis, and Brown is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brown, 934 First Ave .,
Gallipolis.
This year's Ohio Youth
Choir will be the 13th for its
director , Glenville Thomas of
zanesville. The group will
· tour and sing in six European
INSTALLED - New officers were installed recently by the International Order of Jobs
countries: England, France,
Daughters, Bethel 73. From the left are Lori Withee, junior princess; Teresa Sheline,
Wales , Belgium, The
Sm 1
·
Netherlands and Switzerland.
honored queen, and Carolyn e tzer, senior prmcess .
The choir will be performing
benefit concerts throughout
J
tif.uropefor cancer research.
Members of this select
.
group were chosen last
swnmer from applications
GALLIPOLIS
Miss Ada Couch and acting treasurer Cindy Crews, sent in by choir directors all
Teresa Sheline, daughter of associate guardian w~s musician Mae Kemp, recor- over the state.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sheline, Lawrence McQuaid.
der Connie Knighting, first
Pam and Steve, along with
Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis, was
Teresa's theme for the messenger, Jayne Simpkins, Steffi Ross and Alan
installed as Honored Queen ce remony was "Peace second messenger Patty Saunders, also of Gallia
of Jobs Daughters Bethel 73. throughout the world ." Matheny, third messenger Academy, were chosen to
The event was held June 7 Margi Elunan sang "You'll Denise Canterbury , fourth
with a potluck supper and NeverWalkAione."
messenger Lori Knighting,
refre shments after the
Mr. and Mrs. Sheline fifth messenger Annette
ceremony .
presented their daughter (af- Snowden, librarian Jayne
Her installing officer was ter being asked to sit in the Ann Wade, senior custodian,
Jayne Ann Wade. New of- Eastwithabouquetofye)low Tammy Guinther, junior
ficers are guide, Marlene roses and her own personal custodian Dianne CanREEDSVILLE
The
Harrison ; marshal, Teresa gavel. Ushers were Teresa's terbury, inner guard Lynn Riverview Comm unity
Barcus; chaplains, Lois brother, Mike and P. J. Gauze, outer guard Tandi
vacation Bible schoo l
Stapleton; recorder, Becky Gauze.
Scott, choir Marlene concluded Friday with a
Scott ; junior custodian,
Other girls taking new of- Harrison, Patty Graham,
program at the Riverview
Margi Ehman, se nior fices were senior princess Donna Pasquale, Julia School.
c us todian, Stephanie Carolyn Smeltzer, junior Pasquale, Teresa Barcus,
The boys and girls marched
Crossen; musician , Mrs. princess Lori Withee, guide Shari Bennett, Teresa
into the gym to the theme
Margaret Elunan.
Crystal Jones, marshal Heidi Steger, Jamie McQuaid and . song, "God's Love is Jesus. 1'
Acting guardian was Mrs. Jones, chaplain Beth La)ne, Susan Lemley.
The pledges were ~iven with

O)jfileer tns
• tal'ltat'ton hetu
1
recen

TEN WIN HONORS
POMEROY - Ten Meigs
County students are on the
spring quarter Dean's List at
Hocking Technical College in
Nelsonville . Re ce iving a
perfect 4.0 grade average
was William Amberger of
Cheshire. Others named (3.0
or higher) were Louise A.
Newell, Chester; Charles L.
Newhouse, Opal M. Grueser,
and Janet L. Stivers, all of
Pomeroy; Nichola !hie, Elisa
F. McMillan, and David L.
Shuler, all of Racine; steven
Boston, Reedsville, and Paul
E. LIUDbert, Rutland.

Women·
gather

Homemakers'
Circle
featuring
Annie Anybody

El:ten~too

GALUPOLIS - To help you to have a safer canning
season, you should rea lly have the ga uge checked on your
pressure canner each year. We have our "tester" checked at
the University every year so that it will be as accurate as
possible for checking your gauges when you bring them into
our office . If your pressure canner has a weight that jiggles
when the correct pressure Is reached , it does not need to be
checked, however, if it has a dial to indicate the pressure, then
it should definitely be checked every year, just to be sure it 's
accurate.
Even if you are buying a new pressure canner, the gauge
should be checked before you use it, chances are it will be
accurate, they usually are, but we have checked brand new
gauges that needed replacement. Of course, the store where
you buy the ca nner will replace the gauge at no additional cost
to you.
We've had enough rain now, that if you have any garden at
all it will soon begin to produce lots of nice vegetables, and if
you plan to can them, you will want to be ready well ahead of
canning day, so bring your gauge in and have it tested before
the day you need it.
Another item you may want to take care of before canning
day is to get a supply of the citric acid that is recommended for
canning tomatoes in a hot water bath. (Crystalline citric acid
.monohydrate is ihe full chemical name of the acid). Tomatoes
can be safely canned in a pressure canner, but if you don't
want to can your tomatoes in your pressure canner, you 'd best
get some of the acid tablets to be sure the acidity of the
tomatoes will be high enough to be sa fely canned in a hot water
bath .

.Couple attend recent meet

,.
l

Mrs. Field, State President

Not exactly
as pictured .

CREPE SOLE SANDALS
SCUFF OR STRAP
SUNDAY ONLY
Mon . thrD"
Sat.
10 ti I 9
Sunday
1 til5

·~

PRICE
REG. '16.99

II
~~"'

A.:ent,

Home E&lt;oaomia

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . Rev. and Mrs. David Fields,
Jr. attended the 87th International Convention of the
Church of God held in Anderson, Indiana . The theme
of the conven tion was
"Remember Jesus Christ!"
The service for the co:r.
missioning of Mtssionaries
was held on Wednesday
evening featuring the Rev .
Franco Santonocito of Astia,
Italy as the guest speaker.

WOMEN'S

I

QUEENONTRL\I.S
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)
- Ohio River trials were to
· get under way Saturday for
the $21 million dollar new
Mississippi
Queen
steambo~t. sister boat of the
Cincinnati - based Delta
Queen. The Mississippi
Queen, owned by the Jelta
Queen Steamboat Co., will go
into service July '1:1. Her
maiden voyage will be from
Cincinnati to New Orleans.

of the WCG, attended the
National WCG board meeting
and the annual assembly
meeting of the WCG, held at
lhe Park Place Church of
God .

DENISE LANIER COLE
graduated from Riverside
Methodist Schbol of Nursing, Columbus, on June 11.
While al Riverside, she
received honors in
pediatric and psychiatric
nursing. Sbe was recently
selected for inclusion ln the
1976 Who's Who Among
Vocatlunal and Technical
Students In America. She is
working in pediatrics at
Children ' s
Hospital,
Columbus.

Wendy Davis
honors birthday
NEW HAVEN - Wendy
Davis celebrated her third
birthday on Monday, June 21,
with a party at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wyllis DaVis , Jr .
After the honoree opened
her gifts, refreshments oL
ca ke and ice cream were
served to her parents, Mr .
and Mrs . Davis, Tim, Lisa,
Nathan and Bart Davis; Mrs.
Lufema
Weaver,
grandmother, Mrs. Sue
Erwin and Mrs. Orpha
Fields, /aunts, Birdie Roush,
great-uncle, and Mrs. Hazel
Capehart.
Others sending gifts were
Wyllis
Da vis,
Sr.,
grandfather, Miss Marilyn
Davis, aunt, Mr . and Mrs .
Lester Dodson, WJcle and
aunt.

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The New Haven Women of
the Church of God held their
June meeting in the
missionary building with
Roberta Maynard and Patty
Maynard hostesses. Delores
Taylor was in charge of
devotions with scripture
from Math. 25: 14-30 and
prayer was by Fay Carpenter.
Delores Taylor reported
that $23had been received for
the Spiritual Birthday
offering.
Th·e prilgram was presented by Becky Reed on the
theme, "The Power of Persons." She gave a SelfPotential Quiz which emphasized the potential of a
person, the power we have in
Christ; and the potential we
have for service. The
program closed with a
reading given by Delores
Taylor and circle prayer led
by Rena Johnson.
Attending were Rena Johnson, Pansy Fry, Fay Car·penter, Lucille Powell ,
Roberta Maynard,
Patty
Maynard, Sue Erwin, Orpha
Fields, Margaret Dodson,
Sar~h Gibbs, Becky Reed,
Delores Taylor, and Bonnie
Fields.

STEVE BROWN

PAM BRYAN
sing with the choir at the Ohio '
State Fair last summer.
Those in the choir who wished
to make the · trip to Europe
notified the director of their
intentions . .
While in high school, both
Pam and Steve were active in

the symphonic choir and the
Madrigals. The two were in ·
rehearsal preparing for the
tOur with the youth cboir June
26-26 at Musklngum College.
Records of the choir may be
obl!lined by calling 446-4036
or 446-0025.
'

•'

Jerry Larkins leading the
American flag pledge, Mike
Jones, the pledge to the
Christian flag, and Ann
Jones, the pledge to the Bible.
Pastor John Douglas of the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church had prayer and the
welcome was extended by
Dale Lee Connolly.
The spring project was
explained by Jeff Jones.
During the two week.s the
children had given $100. This
wsa used to buy bath towels,
and washcloths for the Meigs
County Infirmary, games and
books for the children at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
with the balance going to
Leonard Smith who lost his
home and alilts contents in a
fire . The collection of $61 at
the program will be used on
expenses of the Bible school.
Sue Reed, one of the music

teachers, sang a solo. Delores
Frank, director, presented .
each of the classes and they ·
sang songs and shared · ··
memory verses and stories . ·
they had learned. Each child .
was given a ceriificate and a
gift. The teachers and helpers
were recognized and given
certificates and gifts.
Corsages from the teachers
and helpers were presented
to Delores Frank and·
Marlene Putman , craft
directors. Four boys and one
girl who accepted Christ
during the Bible school were
presented Bibles . Eloise
Connolly led in prayer to
close the meeting and a
fellowship hour with cookies
and punch was held. The gym
was decorated with posters · ·
and pictures the boys and
girls had made and all of the ·
craft work was on display. ·

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.

FOPrPfiT
~,~HOES
Silver Brid e Plaza

MEETING CALLED
POMEROY
Past
commanders and trustees of
Drew Webster Post 39
American Legion, will. meei
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdayfor a
dinner tO be followed by a
business session .

.f!S:t E. MAIN • POMEROY, OHIO

Peddler's Pantry wou ld lik e to
help every· bride and groom enjoy
choosing , !rom our contemporary

collect ion of masterpieces. the

china ,

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs . John Jeffers, 35 Evans
Heights, Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter , Jill to Danny R. Roush, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Richard P. Roush , Letart, W. Va. Miss Jeffers Is a
1975 graduate from Gallla Academy High School. She Is
currenUy employed at the Uniform Center of Gallipolis.
Mr. Roush, a graduate of Wahama High School in 1973, is
self-employed on his family's farm in Letart. A fall ·
wedding is being planned.

ston eware,

We invite you to come ln and let

us add your ncune to ou r bri da l

reg istr y.

AT

Peddler's Pantry
State &amp; Third ------GIIIipolls, u~'o•-•

·Danny CrowS Fabulous
Family-Style Restaurant!

-··I

·-F-RE•EZ-ER•S-!
REFRIGERATORS!

It's th e gra nd opening of th e new Belpre restaurant
everyone's buzzi ng about. And our friends in the
Po me rov-Galli a area are especiall y welcome!

'428
Big 14 cu. ft. Family Size

Danny Crow's Famil y-S tyle Re staurant is beautiful ly
designed for fam ily-sty le dinin g in a relaxed atmo sph ere .
Order a sandwich , or fu ll-co urse meal, a nd enjoy th e
de"liciou s flavors of dinn er th e wa y you lik e it.

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
Frost Clear Combination

'308
EXTRA SPECIAL
15cu. ft.

Homes ~ill be open for your inspection and
there wtll be a drawing for a valuable
antique. Register when you visit . Winner
need not be present to win.

FROST FREE FREEZER

'318
WE NOW HAVE THESE
FREEZERS IN STOCK.

Hrs. will be 1:30 p.m. to 8:30p.m. Saturday
and Sunday.

CH E"ST TYP-E
10-1S-20-2S cu. fl.

UPRIGHT

SPECIALS GOOD AT BOTH STORES!

RIDENOUR. TV&amp;APPLIANC_
E
GAS SERVICE
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPUA~CE
.. ""-G'AS SERVICE
,

Just because you'Je on your feet
all day doesn't mean they have to
suffer. Natufalizer's Nature Sole~,
sets you back on your heels ..
distributing your weight where
it belongs. Helps you stand
119.00
straighter. taller. too.

Planning a shop pin g tr ip to th e Parkersburg area ? Why no t
visit Da nny Cra w's for a refresh in g snack?
Thanks, Po meroy-Ga ll ipolis. Remember, next time you're
travelin g upr iver, c' mon over - fa mily -sty le !

.

RACINE, OHIO
949-2020

Bring yo ur f,nni ly and fri e nds. Treat the m to a mea l
th cy'lll ong remem ber. At a price yo u wo n't mincl , eit her.

\

THE
UNIFORM CENTER
366 Second Ave.

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3307

.

Gallipolis, Ohio

1207 Washington Blvd .
Belpre
423-9011

cr ys tal.

sta inless , l inens and cookware
that th ey will tr easur e tor years .

•'

CHEST FREEZER

.

jill jeffers

Mrs . Parker ; "Hello,
Remember Me1 I'm Your ·
Flag," Mrs. Marjorie Goett,
and "God Bless America,"
Mrs. Parker. Robin Campbell had a riddle. A donation
was made by Mrs. Goett for
use of a walker for her grandmother. Others present were
Mrs. Iva Powell and Mrs.
Georgia Diehl. A family picnic will be held in September.

Big 25 cu. ft. Family size

'

tomor row .

.•

"s

blending

beautifull y wit h any period or
style - yesterday. today and

en 1n

C14t_,

choose

lines ot contemporary

des1gn ar e timeless -

YOUR EXTRA 1Ul.JCH PWIUST

to be held on our lot
June 19th &amp; 20th.

·"

e l ~ant

Reserve Your Date Today

OPEN HOUSE AND ANTIQUE
AUCTION

Ohio

brides

contemporary ,dlnlng and kitchen
accessories . Th e gracetul ,

COMPLETE
WEDDING
SERVICE

Kingsbury Home Sales
,
wou ld l'kI e to InVite
everyone to a combination

Pomeroy
992-7034
Peart Ash 91'2-2323, Roger Davi s, 992-7671

smart

•

Wiener roast to be held
POMEROY - A wiener
Roast at the Route 33 roadside park was planned for
July when the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club met
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Donna Gilmore
opened the meeting with
prayer. Readings included
"Never Borrow Sorrow from
Tomorrow" by Mrs. Ann
Mash; "Teenage Driving,"

Tl mes ch ange ..,..... ta stes
change. th at's why so mftny

AOA.IJ/4.-J FLORIST

, t ---:-::---------------...;..,

"QUALlTY ALWAYS"

Baby contest posters
distributed in county

Times Changer astes Change

611 -'f'l:l.- 26o44

•

13-t4-1S-1i.-18·21 cu. ft.

.

would say more so to the
By GAY PAULEY
c;~mpus and for football
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - The weekends, but whatever, the
fashion message for the designer is talented in an
Calenaar
I· sportswear-minded
woman area where others don't quite
for
fall
and
winter
is
one of make everything jell. Miss
June 30, Wednesday + on t 'trst Avenue upriver side
Anderson, product of New
country
clothes
gone
citified.
Judging of River Recreation of the City Park. $1 per
York
University and the
ponchos
(and
some
Blanket
Festival Exhibit by Harriet picture. Don and Cafolyn
Parsons
School of Design also
are
the
size
of
a
stadium
Anderson of the Trissolini Hippensteel, eo-chairmen.
showed
hick.gonecity-slicker
big
plaids,
IWTlberblanket),
July 4, Sunday, II a.m.-&lt;i
GaUery, Athens, Riverby.
in
her
duffel coats, big
Exhibit for the month of p.m. + River Recreation jackets, jumpsuits and
sweater
jackets, boot-top
July : Washington ~uare Festival Art Exhibit. Jan knickers in tartan, and sturdy
rolled
pants,
walking shorts
Outdoor Art ·Exhibit, prize Thaler, chairman, assisted deep tan boots · "countrytmust
be
..
above
the knee In
dominated
the
winning paintings, multi- by Bonnie Stutes, City Park. style"
length)
,
triangular
shaws,
media from world's largest 12:30 p.m. until dark, Photo- ,collection Lois Anderson for
turtlenecks,
blazers
and
Tannerway
showed
Thur$day
and most famous outdoor art Fair Booth on First Avenue
ves.
t
s.
afternoon
·
during
the
semishow in Greenwich Village, upriver side of the city park.
She opened her show with a
annual "press week" for
River by.
$1 per p(cture.
combination
guaranteed to
visiting
fashion
editors.
The
July 20, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Gallery Hours : Saturdays
keep
a
coed
.
warm in any
·
shows
end
tnday.
and Sundays, 1 WJtil 5 p.m.; + F .A. C. Interdepartmenl!ll
north
country
' football
Designer
Anderson
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 Meeting . 8:30 p.m. + F.A. C.
stadiuma
deep
blue
corrunented
that
"the
deep
Trustees Meeting.
a.m. until 3 p.m.
stadium
blanket
cut
Into
a
country
has
made
its
way
to
July 22, Thursday, I). II a.m.
July 3, Saturday,l-J p.m.+
free-swinging
poncho,
the
big
the
city."
This
observer
Pet Rock Paint,In for + Christmas Committee.
boots, and big skirt. You
Exhibit for the month of
children of all ages. All
could
get it through a
materials furnished, no Aug ust : Watercolors by
SALE PLANNED
turnstile,
but don't try it on a
charge. Penny Moore , Audta Clark of Catlettsburg,
POMEROY - To raise
subway
or
bus.
chairman, city park. 4 p.m. Ky. and Margo Adams of fWJds for the expenses of
Among
the
prettiest, and
attending the American
WJtil dark, Photo-Fair Booth Russell, Ky .
more
really
citified,
were
Legion Auxiliary,
moderate
checks
or
plaids.
Department
of
Ohio,
convention, at Columbus, the She played sizes of checks
juniors of Feeney-Bennett against each other and
Post 128 will hold a rummage checks against plaids for an
sale at the home of Mr. aild WJusual approach. And like
Mrs. Albert Roush, Bailey most other sportswear
Run Road on Monday, designers, Miss Anderson beTuesday, Wednesday, Friday lieves in the tunic long to
CHESTER - The bicen- Rutland parade on July 3. and Saturday. In addition to stand alone as a dress but
tennial baby contest posters Mrs. Karen YoWJg gave the good used clothing, the sale worn more completely with
have been distributed aroWJd secretary's report, Mrs . will include appliances and trousers, usually of solid
shade.
the county, it was reported at Spencer the treasurer's miscellaneous items.
report.
Refreshments
were
a meeting of the Young Wives
Club of Chester held recently served. Others attending
at the home of Mrs. Avice were Mrs. Unda Well, Susie
Beeler , Mrs . Norma
Spencer..
Mrs. Sara Bailey presided Hawthorne, Mrs. Marilyn
during which time the club Spencer, Mrs . Brenda
members discussed the LaDeaux, Mrs. Jane Coates
Regatta parade float and the and Mrs. Kathy Stone.

Dllffie, Ind. in the college's
!29th commencement
exercises Saturday, May 15.
She received a bachelor of
arts degree In English
Uterature.

I

Riverview VBS concludes

Walburns enjoy visitors
is spending the summer in
Charleston with Mr . and Mrs.
Shepard and Clarke. Aturkey
dinner wsa served.
Joining Mrs. Dale Walburn
Saturday for a celebration of
her 38th birthday were Mr.
and Mrs. William Lambert,
Mr . and Mrs . John Sebo and
Kim,
Pomeroy;
Mrs .
Erewanna Plants and
children, Point Pleasant; Mr.
a nd Mrs. Ralph Rife ,
Cheshire, and Steven and
Dale Walburn.
Following the dinner a
bicentennial cake baked by
Mrs. Lambert was served. A
patriotic theme was carried
out In the decorations.

I makes the scene for fall

'(

BV BE'M'IE CLARK

MIDDLEPORT - Recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Walburn and son were Mrs.
Walburn's sister-in-law, Mrs.
Robert G. Clarke, Jr. and
son, Gregory of Columbus,
Ind.
They were joined here by
Robert G. Clarke, Jr .,
attorney at law, who returned
home with the family.
Gregory Clarke graduated
from Columbus High School
on June I with honors. He was
awarded a National Merit
Scholarship and will enter a
university in Chicago this fall
in pre-med.
Also visiting with the
Walburns have been Martha
and Kaye Waters of Austin,
Texas. They are the nieces of
Mrs . Walburn and were
making their first trip to Ohio
and West Virginia in eight
years. They visited in New
Haven with Mr . and Mrs.
Pete Roush and Mr. and Mrs.
Elroy Kaylor, aunts and
uncles of the girls.
Sunday the Walburns,
Martha and Kaye Waters and
Kim Sebo, Pomeroy, joined
relallves at a picnic at the
swnmer home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Forbes in
Sissonville, W. Va. Others
there were Mr. and Mrs.
Leigh Shepard and Clarke,
Bill Forbes, Diana Voss, Amy
Humphrey, Tim and Dave
Dudley, and Jill Walburn who

ACHIEVES DEGREE
GALU POUS- Jullanna
Johnson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Vance Johrulon, 5lf
Third Ave., GalUpolls, was
one of 332 graduating seniors
at St. Mary's College •.Notre

Citified country clothes
,...------...:·
·
--·
·
-----,
Gallipolis youth in choir
·I

6- The Sunday Tunes- Sentinel, .Sund~v ..June 27, 197ti

O pe n 7 AM - I 0 PM dai ly

�7-The Sunday Times -Sentinel, SWJday,June T/,1976

~~~~~:W~::X~~:;:::~::::;:::::::;:::::::::;.:-:·:·:·:·:,:i~

~l~

~

Generation Rap

!!.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

!!!

Which Parentis Best'!
RAP :
My mother and father have been separated for five years .
I've lived with my mother , but would like to spend the summer
with my Dad as I miss him very rrruch.
I'm afraid to ask Mom, as she thinks Dad's girlfriend is a
"slut ." (! think she's nice. )-Besides, Mom can't say anything
good about Dad, so I know she wouldn 't let me go.
Why do parents take it out on the kids when THEY are the
ones who separate. I don't want to be separated from Dad, but
it seems I don 't have a choice. ~ confused (age 12)
DEAR CON:
You haven't asked your Mother yet, so how can you
"know" she won't let you visit your Dad ? t'aint heart never
won fair vacation .
Could be yolir Mom might enjoy a "vacation" too . So gu
ahead and ask. We 're belting on a "Yes." - SUE AND
HELEN
+++
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm not surprised that half the childless couples who
answered your "Doyouwant children?"questionsaid, "No ."
Thisisaboutthewayitaddsup in our youngcrowd ofmmicd
couples, or hve-togethers.
We're in the "no" group, not only because we both have
careers, but also because we don 't want the tremendous
responsibility that goes with raising a famil y.
We won 't have a so-&lt;:alled lonely old age - we'll be too
busy for that. Also , we have plenty of nieces, nephews,
brothers and sisters, etc. whom we love.
Now that young people have definite choices, I think we'll
see less child abuse, and probably a better crop of kids , for
those who know they aren't suited for parenthood won't
indulge._ "NO"
P.S. Did you notice a difference in responses from the
college~ducated and noncollege people?
DEAR "NO: " ·
The college~duca ted were more likely to be careerminded , therefore they were a little heayier on the vote against
having children.
But not as heavy as one might suppose. Many of these
women insisted that they could pursue a career and manage a
family - and still have time for husband, hobbies and fun . HELEN
+++
AWORD FROM SUE : You're so right: people who know they
aren't geared for parenthood should leave that job to others. A
full-time career doesn't leave much time for mothering unless you're superwoman.
++ +
DEAR RAP :
I'm a Olristian girl in )ove with a Jewish guy who is
actually terrified to bring me home to see his folks. Hi s mother
is unbelievably prejudiced. She'll brainwash her son into
marrying "one of his own " no matter how unhappy the match.
Must we break up just because our religions (which neither of
us are fanatic about) are different ? - K.A.
DEAR K .:
That depends on how strong are your boyfriend's family
ties and how weak he is in resisting them . Mixed-religion
marriages work - if they 're allowed a chance. Good luck' HELEN AND SUE

GALLIPOLIS Pam
Bryan and Steve Brown, both
1976 graduates of Gallia
Academy High School, will be
touring Europe July :&gt;-22 with
the All Ohio State Fair Youth
Oloir.
Miss Bryan is the daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. David Bryan,
Patriot
Star
Route,
Gallipolis, and Brown is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brown, 934 First Ave .,
Gallipolis.
This year's Ohio Youth
Choir will be the 13th for its
director , Glenville Thomas of
zanesville. The group will
· tour and sing in six European
INSTALLED - New officers were installed recently by the International Order of Jobs
countries: England, France,
Daughters, Bethel 73. From the left are Lori Withee, junior princess; Teresa Sheline,
Wales , Belgium, The
Sm 1
·
Netherlands and Switzerland.
honored queen, and Carolyn e tzer, senior prmcess .
The choir will be performing
benefit concerts throughout
J
tif.uropefor cancer research.
Members of this select
.
group were chosen last
swnmer from applications
GALLIPOLIS
Miss Ada Couch and acting treasurer Cindy Crews, sent in by choir directors all
Teresa Sheline, daughter of associate guardian w~s musician Mae Kemp, recor- over the state.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sheline, Lawrence McQuaid.
der Connie Knighting, first
Pam and Steve, along with
Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis, was
Teresa's theme for the messenger, Jayne Simpkins, Steffi Ross and Alan
installed as Honored Queen ce remony was "Peace second messenger Patty Saunders, also of Gallia
of Jobs Daughters Bethel 73. throughout the world ." Matheny, third messenger Academy, were chosen to
The event was held June 7 Margi Elunan sang "You'll Denise Canterbury , fourth
with a potluck supper and NeverWalkAione."
messenger Lori Knighting,
refre shments after the
Mr. and Mrs. Sheline fifth messenger Annette
ceremony .
presented their daughter (af- Snowden, librarian Jayne
Her installing officer was ter being asked to sit in the Ann Wade, senior custodian,
Jayne Ann Wade. New of- Eastwithabouquetofye)low Tammy Guinther, junior
ficers are guide, Marlene roses and her own personal custodian Dianne CanREEDSVILLE
The
Harrison ; marshal, Teresa gavel. Ushers were Teresa's terbury, inner guard Lynn Riverview Comm unity
Barcus; chaplains, Lois brother, Mike and P. J. Gauze, outer guard Tandi
vacation Bible schoo l
Stapleton; recorder, Becky Gauze.
Scott, choir Marlene concluded Friday with a
Scott ; junior custodian,
Other girls taking new of- Harrison, Patty Graham,
program at the Riverview
Margi Ehman, se nior fices were senior princess Donna Pasquale, Julia School.
c us todian, Stephanie Carolyn Smeltzer, junior Pasquale, Teresa Barcus,
The boys and girls marched
Crossen; musician , Mrs. princess Lori Withee, guide Shari Bennett, Teresa
into the gym to the theme
Margaret Elunan.
Crystal Jones, marshal Heidi Steger, Jamie McQuaid and . song, "God's Love is Jesus. 1'
Acting guardian was Mrs. Jones, chaplain Beth La)ne, Susan Lemley.
The pledges were ~iven with

O)jfileer tns
• tal'ltat'ton hetu
1
recen

TEN WIN HONORS
POMEROY - Ten Meigs
County students are on the
spring quarter Dean's List at
Hocking Technical College in
Nelsonville . Re ce iving a
perfect 4.0 grade average
was William Amberger of
Cheshire. Others named (3.0
or higher) were Louise A.
Newell, Chester; Charles L.
Newhouse, Opal M. Grueser,
and Janet L. Stivers, all of
Pomeroy; Nichola !hie, Elisa
F. McMillan, and David L.
Shuler, all of Racine; steven
Boston, Reedsville, and Paul
E. LIUDbert, Rutland.

Women·
gather

Homemakers'
Circle
featuring
Annie Anybody

El:ten~too

GALUPOLIS - To help you to have a safer canning
season, you should rea lly have the ga uge checked on your
pressure canner each year. We have our "tester" checked at
the University every year so that it will be as accurate as
possible for checking your gauges when you bring them into
our office . If your pressure canner has a weight that jiggles
when the correct pressure Is reached , it does not need to be
checked, however, if it has a dial to indicate the pressure, then
it should definitely be checked every year, just to be sure it 's
accurate.
Even if you are buying a new pressure canner, the gauge
should be checked before you use it, chances are it will be
accurate, they usually are, but we have checked brand new
gauges that needed replacement. Of course, the store where
you buy the ca nner will replace the gauge at no additional cost
to you.
We've had enough rain now, that if you have any garden at
all it will soon begin to produce lots of nice vegetables, and if
you plan to can them, you will want to be ready well ahead of
canning day, so bring your gauge in and have it tested before
the day you need it.
Another item you may want to take care of before canning
day is to get a supply of the citric acid that is recommended for
canning tomatoes in a hot water bath. (Crystalline citric acid
.monohydrate is ihe full chemical name of the acid). Tomatoes
can be safely canned in a pressure canner, but if you don't
want to can your tomatoes in your pressure canner, you 'd best
get some of the acid tablets to be sure the acidity of the
tomatoes will be high enough to be sa fely canned in a hot water
bath .

.Couple attend recent meet

,.
l

Mrs. Field, State President

Not exactly
as pictured .

CREPE SOLE SANDALS
SCUFF OR STRAP
SUNDAY ONLY
Mon . thrD"
Sat.
10 ti I 9
Sunday
1 til5

·~

PRICE
REG. '16.99

II
~~"'

A.:ent,

Home E&lt;oaomia

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . Rev. and Mrs. David Fields,
Jr. attended the 87th International Convention of the
Church of God held in Anderson, Indiana . The theme
of the conven tion was
"Remember Jesus Christ!"
The service for the co:r.
missioning of Mtssionaries
was held on Wednesday
evening featuring the Rev .
Franco Santonocito of Astia,
Italy as the guest speaker.

WOMEN'S

I

QUEENONTRL\I.S
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)
- Ohio River trials were to
· get under way Saturday for
the $21 million dollar new
Mississippi
Queen
steambo~t. sister boat of the
Cincinnati - based Delta
Queen. The Mississippi
Queen, owned by the Jelta
Queen Steamboat Co., will go
into service July '1:1. Her
maiden voyage will be from
Cincinnati to New Orleans.

of the WCG, attended the
National WCG board meeting
and the annual assembly
meeting of the WCG, held at
lhe Park Place Church of
God .

DENISE LANIER COLE
graduated from Riverside
Methodist Schbol of Nursing, Columbus, on June 11.
While al Riverside, she
received honors in
pediatric and psychiatric
nursing. Sbe was recently
selected for inclusion ln the
1976 Who's Who Among
Vocatlunal and Technical
Students In America. She is
working in pediatrics at
Children ' s
Hospital,
Columbus.

Wendy Davis
honors birthday
NEW HAVEN - Wendy
Davis celebrated her third
birthday on Monday, June 21,
with a party at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wyllis DaVis , Jr .
After the honoree opened
her gifts, refreshments oL
ca ke and ice cream were
served to her parents, Mr .
and Mrs . Davis, Tim, Lisa,
Nathan and Bart Davis; Mrs.
Lufema
Weaver,
grandmother, Mrs. Sue
Erwin and Mrs. Orpha
Fields, /aunts, Birdie Roush,
great-uncle, and Mrs. Hazel
Capehart.
Others sending gifts were
Wyllis
Da vis,
Sr.,
grandfather, Miss Marilyn
Davis, aunt, Mr . and Mrs .
Lester Dodson, WJcle and
aunt.

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The New Haven Women of
the Church of God held their
June meeting in the
missionary building with
Roberta Maynard and Patty
Maynard hostesses. Delores
Taylor was in charge of
devotions with scripture
from Math. 25: 14-30 and
prayer was by Fay Carpenter.
Delores Taylor reported
that $23had been received for
the Spiritual Birthday
offering.
Th·e prilgram was presented by Becky Reed on the
theme, "The Power of Persons." She gave a SelfPotential Quiz which emphasized the potential of a
person, the power we have in
Christ; and the potential we
have for service. The
program closed with a
reading given by Delores
Taylor and circle prayer led
by Rena Johnson.
Attending were Rena Johnson, Pansy Fry, Fay Car·penter, Lucille Powell ,
Roberta Maynard,
Patty
Maynard, Sue Erwin, Orpha
Fields, Margaret Dodson,
Sar~h Gibbs, Becky Reed,
Delores Taylor, and Bonnie
Fields.

STEVE BROWN

PAM BRYAN
sing with the choir at the Ohio '
State Fair last summer.
Those in the choir who wished
to make the · trip to Europe
notified the director of their
intentions . .
While in high school, both
Pam and Steve were active in

the symphonic choir and the
Madrigals. The two were in ·
rehearsal preparing for the
tOur with the youth cboir June
26-26 at Musklngum College.
Records of the choir may be
obl!lined by calling 446-4036
or 446-0025.
'

•'

Jerry Larkins leading the
American flag pledge, Mike
Jones, the pledge to the
Christian flag, and Ann
Jones, the pledge to the Bible.
Pastor John Douglas of the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church had prayer and the
welcome was extended by
Dale Lee Connolly.
The spring project was
explained by Jeff Jones.
During the two week.s the
children had given $100. This
wsa used to buy bath towels,
and washcloths for the Meigs
County Infirmary, games and
books for the children at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
with the balance going to
Leonard Smith who lost his
home and alilts contents in a
fire . The collection of $61 at
the program will be used on
expenses of the Bible school.
Sue Reed, one of the music

teachers, sang a solo. Delores
Frank, director, presented .
each of the classes and they ·
sang songs and shared · ··
memory verses and stories . ·
they had learned. Each child .
was given a ceriificate and a
gift. The teachers and helpers
were recognized and given
certificates and gifts.
Corsages from the teachers
and helpers were presented
to Delores Frank and·
Marlene Putman , craft
directors. Four boys and one
girl who accepted Christ
during the Bible school were
presented Bibles . Eloise
Connolly led in prayer to
close the meeting and a
fellowship hour with cookies
and punch was held. The gym
was decorated with posters · ·
and pictures the boys and
girls had made and all of the ·
craft work was on display. ·

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.

FOPrPfiT
~,~HOES
Silver Brid e Plaza

MEETING CALLED
POMEROY
Past
commanders and trustees of
Drew Webster Post 39
American Legion, will. meei
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdayfor a
dinner tO be followed by a
business session .

.f!S:t E. MAIN • POMEROY, OHIO

Peddler's Pantry wou ld lik e to
help every· bride and groom enjoy
choosing , !rom our contemporary

collect ion of masterpieces. the

china ,

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs . John Jeffers, 35 Evans
Heights, Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement of
their daughter , Jill to Danny R. Roush, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Richard P. Roush , Letart, W. Va. Miss Jeffers Is a
1975 graduate from Gallla Academy High School. She Is
currenUy employed at the Uniform Center of Gallipolis.
Mr. Roush, a graduate of Wahama High School in 1973, is
self-employed on his family's farm in Letart. A fall ·
wedding is being planned.

ston eware,

We invite you to come ln and let

us add your ncune to ou r bri da l

reg istr y.

AT

Peddler's Pantry
State &amp; Third ------GIIIipolls, u~'o•-•

·Danny CrowS Fabulous
Family-Style Restaurant!

-··I

·-F-RE•EZ-ER•S-!
REFRIGERATORS!

It's th e gra nd opening of th e new Belpre restaurant
everyone's buzzi ng about. And our friends in the
Po me rov-Galli a area are especiall y welcome!

'428
Big 14 cu. ft. Family Size

Danny Crow's Famil y-S tyle Re staurant is beautiful ly
designed for fam ily-sty le dinin g in a relaxed atmo sph ere .
Order a sandwich , or fu ll-co urse meal, a nd enjoy th e
de"liciou s flavors of dinn er th e wa y you lik e it.

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
Frost Clear Combination

'308
EXTRA SPECIAL
15cu. ft.

Homes ~ill be open for your inspection and
there wtll be a drawing for a valuable
antique. Register when you visit . Winner
need not be present to win.

FROST FREE FREEZER

'318
WE NOW HAVE THESE
FREEZERS IN STOCK.

Hrs. will be 1:30 p.m. to 8:30p.m. Saturday
and Sunday.

CH E"ST TYP-E
10-1S-20-2S cu. fl.

UPRIGHT

SPECIALS GOOD AT BOTH STORES!

RIDENOUR. TV&amp;APPLIANC_
E
GAS SERVICE
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPUA~CE
.. ""-G'AS SERVICE
,

Just because you'Je on your feet
all day doesn't mean they have to
suffer. Natufalizer's Nature Sole~,
sets you back on your heels ..
distributing your weight where
it belongs. Helps you stand
119.00
straighter. taller. too.

Planning a shop pin g tr ip to th e Parkersburg area ? Why no t
visit Da nny Cra w's for a refresh in g snack?
Thanks, Po meroy-Ga ll ipolis. Remember, next time you're
travelin g upr iver, c' mon over - fa mily -sty le !

.

RACINE, OHIO
949-2020

Bring yo ur f,nni ly and fri e nds. Treat the m to a mea l
th cy'lll ong remem ber. At a price yo u wo n't mincl , eit her.

\

THE
UNIFORM CENTER
366 Second Ave.

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3307

.

Gallipolis, Ohio

1207 Washington Blvd .
Belpre
423-9011

cr ys tal.

sta inless , l inens and cookware
that th ey will tr easur e tor years .

•'

CHEST FREEZER

.

jill jeffers

Mrs . Parker ; "Hello,
Remember Me1 I'm Your ·
Flag," Mrs. Marjorie Goett,
and "God Bless America,"
Mrs. Parker. Robin Campbell had a riddle. A donation
was made by Mrs. Goett for
use of a walker for her grandmother. Others present were
Mrs. Iva Powell and Mrs.
Georgia Diehl. A family picnic will be held in September.

Big 25 cu. ft. Family size

'

tomor row .

.•

"s

blending

beautifull y wit h any period or
style - yesterday. today and

en 1n

C14t_,

choose

lines ot contemporary

des1gn ar e timeless -

YOUR EXTRA 1Ul.JCH PWIUST

to be held on our lot
June 19th &amp; 20th.

·"

e l ~ant

Reserve Your Date Today

OPEN HOUSE AND ANTIQUE
AUCTION

Ohio

brides

contemporary ,dlnlng and kitchen
accessories . Th e gracetul ,

COMPLETE
WEDDING
SERVICE

Kingsbury Home Sales
,
wou ld l'kI e to InVite
everyone to a combination

Pomeroy
992-7034
Peart Ash 91'2-2323, Roger Davi s, 992-7671

smart

•

Wiener roast to be held
POMEROY - A wiener
Roast at the Route 33 roadside park was planned for
July when the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club met
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Donna Gilmore
opened the meeting with
prayer. Readings included
"Never Borrow Sorrow from
Tomorrow" by Mrs. Ann
Mash; "Teenage Driving,"

Tl mes ch ange ..,..... ta stes
change. th at's why so mftny

AOA.IJ/4.-J FLORIST

, t ---:-::---------------...;..,

"QUALlTY ALWAYS"

Baby contest posters
distributed in county

Times Changer astes Change

611 -'f'l:l.- 26o44

•

13-t4-1S-1i.-18·21 cu. ft.

.

would say more so to the
By GAY PAULEY
c;~mpus and for football
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - The weekends, but whatever, the
fashion message for the designer is talented in an
Calenaar
I· sportswear-minded
woman area where others don't quite
for
fall
and
winter
is
one of make everything jell. Miss
June 30, Wednesday + on t 'trst Avenue upriver side
Anderson, product of New
country
clothes
gone
citified.
Judging of River Recreation of the City Park. $1 per
York
University and the
ponchos
(and
some
Blanket
Festival Exhibit by Harriet picture. Don and Cafolyn
Parsons
School of Design also
are
the
size
of
a
stadium
Anderson of the Trissolini Hippensteel, eo-chairmen.
showed
hick.gonecity-slicker
big
plaids,
IWTlberblanket),
July 4, Sunday, II a.m.-&lt;i
GaUery, Athens, Riverby.
in
her
duffel coats, big
Exhibit for the month of p.m. + River Recreation jackets, jumpsuits and
sweater
jackets, boot-top
July : Washington ~uare Festival Art Exhibit. Jan knickers in tartan, and sturdy
rolled
pants,
walking shorts
Outdoor Art ·Exhibit, prize Thaler, chairman, assisted deep tan boots · "countrytmust
be
..
above
the knee In
dominated
the
winning paintings, multi- by Bonnie Stutes, City Park. style"
length)
,
triangular
shaws,
media from world's largest 12:30 p.m. until dark, Photo- ,collection Lois Anderson for
turtlenecks,
blazers
and
Tannerway
showed
Thur$day
and most famous outdoor art Fair Booth on First Avenue
ves.
t
s.
afternoon
·
during
the
semishow in Greenwich Village, upriver side of the city park.
She opened her show with a
annual "press week" for
River by.
$1 per p(cture.
combination
guaranteed to
visiting
fashion
editors.
The
July 20, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Gallery Hours : Saturdays
keep
a
coed
.
warm in any
·
shows
end
tnday.
and Sundays, 1 WJtil 5 p.m.; + F .A. C. Interdepartmenl!ll
north
country
' football
Designer
Anderson
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 Meeting . 8:30 p.m. + F.A. C.
stadiuma
deep
blue
corrunented
that
"the
deep
Trustees Meeting.
a.m. until 3 p.m.
stadium
blanket
cut
Into
a
country
has
made
its
way
to
July 22, Thursday, I). II a.m.
July 3, Saturday,l-J p.m.+
free-swinging
poncho,
the
big
the
city."
This
observer
Pet Rock Paint,In for + Christmas Committee.
boots, and big skirt. You
Exhibit for the month of
children of all ages. All
could
get it through a
materials furnished, no Aug ust : Watercolors by
SALE PLANNED
turnstile,
but don't try it on a
charge. Penny Moore , Audta Clark of Catlettsburg,
POMEROY - To raise
subway
or
bus.
chairman, city park. 4 p.m. Ky. and Margo Adams of fWJds for the expenses of
Among
the
prettiest, and
attending the American
WJtil dark, Photo-Fair Booth Russell, Ky .
more
really
citified,
were
Legion Auxiliary,
moderate
checks
or
plaids.
Department
of
Ohio,
convention, at Columbus, the She played sizes of checks
juniors of Feeney-Bennett against each other and
Post 128 will hold a rummage checks against plaids for an
sale at the home of Mr. aild WJusual approach. And like
Mrs. Albert Roush, Bailey most other sportswear
Run Road on Monday, designers, Miss Anderson beTuesday, Wednesday, Friday lieves in the tunic long to
CHESTER - The bicen- Rutland parade on July 3. and Saturday. In addition to stand alone as a dress but
tennial baby contest posters Mrs. Karen YoWJg gave the good used clothing, the sale worn more completely with
have been distributed aroWJd secretary's report, Mrs . will include appliances and trousers, usually of solid
shade.
the county, it was reported at Spencer the treasurer's miscellaneous items.
report.
Refreshments
were
a meeting of the Young Wives
Club of Chester held recently served. Others attending
at the home of Mrs. Avice were Mrs. Unda Well, Susie
Beeler , Mrs . Norma
Spencer..
Mrs. Sara Bailey presided Hawthorne, Mrs. Marilyn
during which time the club Spencer, Mrs . Brenda
members discussed the LaDeaux, Mrs. Jane Coates
Regatta parade float and the and Mrs. Kathy Stone.

Dllffie, Ind. in the college's
!29th commencement
exercises Saturday, May 15.
She received a bachelor of
arts degree In English
Uterature.

I

Riverview VBS concludes

Walburns enjoy visitors
is spending the summer in
Charleston with Mr . and Mrs.
Shepard and Clarke. Aturkey
dinner wsa served.
Joining Mrs. Dale Walburn
Saturday for a celebration of
her 38th birthday were Mr.
and Mrs. William Lambert,
Mr . and Mrs . John Sebo and
Kim,
Pomeroy;
Mrs .
Erewanna Plants and
children, Point Pleasant; Mr.
a nd Mrs. Ralph Rife ,
Cheshire, and Steven and
Dale Walburn.
Following the dinner a
bicentennial cake baked by
Mrs. Lambert was served. A
patriotic theme was carried
out In the decorations.

I makes the scene for fall

'(

BV BE'M'IE CLARK

MIDDLEPORT - Recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Walburn and son were Mrs.
Walburn's sister-in-law, Mrs.
Robert G. Clarke, Jr. and
son, Gregory of Columbus,
Ind.
They were joined here by
Robert G. Clarke, Jr .,
attorney at law, who returned
home with the family.
Gregory Clarke graduated
from Columbus High School
on June I with honors. He was
awarded a National Merit
Scholarship and will enter a
university in Chicago this fall
in pre-med.
Also visiting with the
Walburns have been Martha
and Kaye Waters of Austin,
Texas. They are the nieces of
Mrs . Walburn and were
making their first trip to Ohio
and West Virginia in eight
years. They visited in New
Haven with Mr . and Mrs.
Pete Roush and Mr. and Mrs.
Elroy Kaylor, aunts and
uncles of the girls.
Sunday the Walburns,
Martha and Kaye Waters and
Kim Sebo, Pomeroy, joined
relallves at a picnic at the
swnmer home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Forbes in
Sissonville, W. Va. Others
there were Mr. and Mrs.
Leigh Shepard and Clarke,
Bill Forbes, Diana Voss, Amy
Humphrey, Tim and Dave
Dudley, and Jill Walburn who

ACHIEVES DEGREE
GALU POUS- Jullanna
Johnson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Vance Johrulon, 5lf
Third Ave., GalUpolls, was
one of 332 graduating seniors
at St. Mary's College •.Notre

Citified country clothes
,...------...:·
·
--·
·
-----,
Gallipolis youth in choir
·I

6- The Sunday Tunes- Sentinel, .Sund~v ..June 27, 197ti

O pe n 7 AM - I 0 PM dai ly

�9- TheSundayTlmes -Senllnel.&amp;mdar. June 27, 1976

june meeting held at library

Social
Calendar ·
SUNDAY

SUNDAY
BRADBURY
Reunion
Sunday at the Kyger Lodge
Hal l.
THE SARGENT Family will
sing at Clark Chapel Church
Sw1day, 7:30p.m.
IIOME('OM INC ill the Silver
Men11•rial Free Will Baptist
C'hurl'h, K cm~ uga , 10 cun.
c:uest speaker · will be the
Hev . John Sh unw te of
Cleveland. Special singing
wi ll he presented by Sister
l;: lesti ne McDan iel, Man·n, W.
Vu . Everyone welcome .
'1'111-: GA I\H ISON Family will

SOUTHERN OHIO Garden

THESE RSVP MEMBERS traveled to the Veterans Administration Facility at
Chillicothe recently. Pictured are, (seated, 1-r), Mabel Brown, Ethel Layne, Shirley Boster,
va n driver Rene Broyles. (Standing), Nella Taylor, Leo King , Nellie Stanley, Da Artus. and
Lawrence McQuaid. Bill Menshouse photo.

pr ovide special singi ng ~t !he

Vi nton . Ril pli st Church
Suntwy, 7:30 fUll . Everyone
'1.\ 'Cicome.

park for picnics and recrea tion. Shown here from left to
right, are Naomi Bumgarner, a membe r of the club;
Harold Bumgarner, who made the sign, and Mrs. Mel
Clark, daughter of the late Hallie A. Roush.

SIGN MARKS SPOT FOR PARK - A sign was
recently installed at the sight of the Hallie A. Roush
Memorial Gardens, in West Coiun1bia. W. Va . where the
Nehaclima Garden Club is in the process of building a

Club working on memorial park
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . The Nehaclima Garden Club
is in the process of building a
park for pi cni cs · and
recreation.
The sight of the park will be
on Route 62 in West Col umbia. The gardens, which is
named and dedicated to
Hallie A. Roush, were planted by her. Mrs. Roush was a

member of the New Haven
Ga rden Club and was the
mother of Mrs. Sally Clark.
A beautiful sight for a picnic, this land already has
many trees, roses,
various flowers.

and

This. is the third year of
work on the park by the Garden Club and is only """ of

the many projects they take
on to beautify the roadside.
Harold Bumgarner recently erected a sign which
reads "Hallie A. Roush
Ge~r d e n s,
Me morial
Neha clima Garden Club."
The land used to build this
park was leased to the dub
by the power company.

Many people wonder just
what Nehaclima mea ns.
Well, " Ne" stands for New
Haven, ·' ha" for Hartford,
''d i" ror Clifton, and "ma"
fur Mason .

The d ub hopes through
donations and diligent work ,
they can have the park
finished in the neai· future.

VIIS TO START
RUTLAND - The Hysell
Run Free Methodist, the
Rutland Community
Church, and the Danville
We sleyan Church will
combine for a vacation
Bible school to be held at
the Mi ssions Church in
Rutland. The school will be
conducted from June 28
through July 2, 9:30a.m. to
11 :30 a.m. with the closing
program to take plac e on .
July 4 at 2 p.m. with "Let
Freedom Ring" as the
theme. More information

Observance sppnsored
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . The annual spiritual birthday
observance held at the New
Haven First Church of God
was sponsored by women of
the Church of God . Delores
Taylor, Spiritual Life Director of WCG, was the leader.
The theme was "We Live by
Hope."
Reading scriptures were
Bonnie Fi elds, Norma
Greene and Delores Taylor.
A reading was given by Or-

pha Fields and a poem,
"Wonder," was read by J ulia
Leifheit.
The Spiritual Birthday Of.
Cering is one of the five
national projects which undergird the Missions Budget
of Women of the Church of
God.
After the service, all
gathered in the Fellowship
Hall for refreslunents. The
color scheme of red, white
and blue wa s used for the
decorations.

can

be

ubtain ed

by

telephoning 142-2460 or 142-

Celebrates
birthdaJ

First birthday observed
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs . Jerry Lee Rowe
entertained recently with a
party
honoring
their
daughter, Jennifer Ruth , on
her first birthday.
Featured in the ta ble
decorations were birthday
scenes alon g with a large
colonial doll cake made by
Mrs. Bunny Kuhl. Balloons
were used about the room and
given as fa vors to the
children.
Those attending were her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred E. Smith and Mrs.
VIrginia Rowe, James Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Shaffer,
Mrs. Betty Wagner , Ronnie,
Stephen and Rick, Jay,
Becky, Donna Rowe, and
Mrs. Judy Farley, Angel,
Andy and Traci Rowe and
Cindy Demoskey .
Sending gift s were her
great-grandmoth ers, Mrs.
Ruby Meadows of Crown City
and her great uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Meadows of Crown City .

E. L. VANMATRE

MASON, W. Va . - The
fourth birthday of 8. L. Van
Matrc, son of Eddie and
Annie Van Matre, Mason,
was celebrated June 17 with a
party.
A Charlie Brown cake was
served with red, white and
blue ice cream . Attending
were Mrs. David Van Matre,
Mrs. Margaret West, Melody,
John and Rhonda West, Mary
Fry and Mela nie Fry,
Rhonda and Rusto Wood,
Ryan Wood, Susan Kincaid ,
Bobby, Jason and Christy
Kincaid, Donnie and Sandy
Van Matre, Valerie and
Edina Van Matre. Gifts were
presented to the honOJ·ed
guest.

MONDA Y
VACAT ION Bible School
be~ in s Monday at the Chape l
Hill Church of Clll'ist and will
continue through Ju ly 2 from,
7 to H: j0 eac h evenin g.
Clllsscs
for
everyone
including adults. Attend ed
oursery will be provided.
OCSEA will hold its regular
monthly meeting Monday, 7
p.m. at the Grande Squares
building.
ADDI SO N U N ITED
MethQIIist Women will meet
at the home of Mrs. Ray
Hughes Monday, 7;30 p.m.
TUESDAY
SEW AND W Club Tuesday ,
7p.m. at the home of Dorothy

THURSDAY
SPEC IAL Services beg in
Thursday at Faith Chapel,
7:30 p.m. Pastor · is Densil
Roberts. Speakers wtll be
Web Swain and Ben D~la rd.

Party honors
annzversary

2005.

PO RTLAND - The Rev .
.....·... . Gt nd
Mrs.
Lawrence
Gluesencamp were surprised
on their annive rsary with a
party at the home of their
son-in-la w and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Theiss,
Vinton.
Attending were Mr. and
PORTLAN D - Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey and children,
Mrs. Thomas D. Sayre, Port- Patriot ; NiCki VanMeter,
l"nd , celebrated their 40th Portland ; Mr. and Mrs. Ra y
wedding anniversary on June Hall, Coolville; Mr . and Mrs.
20 with a surprise chicken Otis Bailey and daughter,
barbecue hosted by their Racine. Mr . and Mrs. Steve
children, Mr. and Mrs. T. Need of Reedsville sent a gift.
Dwain Sayre and Mr. and Numerous gifts
were
Mrs. Roland Sayre.
received by the couple. A
Others attending were Mr. decorated anniversary cake,
and Mrs. Robert Schaefer, homemade ice cream, and a
Susan and G reg~, Kettering; cookout were enjoyed by the
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond group.
Furbee and Richard, Mr . and
Mrs. Joe Bidwell and Michell ,
Co lumbus ; Mr s. Ma ry
J. urbee, and Mr. and Mrs ..
Paul W. Sayre and Paula.

Surprise parti
fetes couple

GLENN AMENDMENT
WASHI NGTON (UP! )
The Senate Thursday passed
an amendment, offered bv
Sen. John Glenn , D-Ohio,
bolstering the Office of
Revenue Sharing's civil
rights compliance staff. The
vote was 54-30.
Th e meas ur e call s for

adding 21 new compliance
seclion personnel and raises
the staff appropri"tion from
$3.5 million to $3.81 million in
the fisca l year beginning Oct.
I.

Primary function of the
additional staff will be to
enforce antirace and sex
discrimination
provisions.

TO HOST TEA
POMEROY - The Five
Point Star Stitchers 4-H Club
will entertain their mothers
with a tea in the Trinity
Chw·ch social room Monday,
7:30 p.m. A program on
sewing will be presented.

Brown, Jla Artus, Shirley
Boster and Eunice Keffer
were transported to the
Veterans Admini stration
Facility at Chillicothe June
18 by Rene Broyles, van

Mason OES has
officer installation
MASON, W. Va . - Mason . pa tron ; Mrs. Charles
Chapter 157, Order of the i Max in e)
Aldri dge,
Eastern Sta r, held its regular secreta ry; Mrs.
Richard
meeting Wednesday .
i Phyllis ) Gilkey, treasurer ;
Officers for the coming Mrs. Oscar (Nellie) Casto,
year were installed.
chaplain; Mrs. Jack (Betty)
Ja net! Ca pe hart , Past Fox, marshal; Mrs. Herman
Matron and Secreta ry of (Josephihe) Kirby, organist.
Point Pleasant Chapter 75,
Mrs. · James
(Jo)
acted as installing office r. MacKnight , conductr ess;
She was assisted by Jean Mrs . Willi am R. (Sue)
Ca rtwright , marshal; Louise H u sse i l , a s s oc i a t e
Crow, chaplain ; Ivai Wams- conductress; Mrs. Charles
ley, or gan ist;
Garnet (Margie) Cartwright, Ruth ;
Burdette, warder and Verlie Mrs.
John
(Janet )
Workman, sentineL
McDermitt , Esth er; Mrs .
Office rs installed were: Lester ·( J oy) Foreman ,
Mrs. James 1Barbara ) Dunn, Martha; Mrs. Denver IAnn )
worthy matron; Marion Lee Blake, Eiecta; Mrs. Larry
Litchfield , worthy patron ; (Elaine ) Grogan, Warder;
Mrs. J ohn I Ca rol J .) Mrs. Bliss (Virginia) Wilson,
Workman, associate matron ; Sentinel.
William R. Russell. associate
Mrs. Eddie (Jac kie)
Anderson will be installed as
Adah on July 28.

CALLED 3 TIMES
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was called at 10 :34
a.m. Friday to the home of
Cl arence Wickline, near
Racine , for Laura Sayre, 89,
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 2: 30 p.m.
Mrs. Sayre was returned to
her home. At 7: 40 p.m. ,
Jeremy Roush, 26 months, of
near Racine, who was ill, was
taken from his home to VMH.

driver.
Upon arrival at the
hospital, the group was
divided with some of the
voiw1teers assisting in the
recreation department and
others working in the newly
renovated medical buildings.
After lunch, the group met at
the Rec Hall and enjoyed a
pleasant afternoon with the
ambulatory residents of the
facility.
The Ga llia County RSVP
travels to Chillicothe the
third Friday of each month
with the gasoline being furnished by our local veterans
organizations.
Maye Roush, coordinator
of the RSVP inGallia County,
is pr es ently making
arrangements to visit the
Good Shepherd Manor in
Wakefield in the near future .
The home is for the
physically and mentally handicapped males of all
denominations.
Tho se intere sted in
becoming a· member of the
RSVP, should contact Mrs.
.Roush at 446-3361. The only ·
· requirements are that you be
at least 60 years old and be
willing to donate four hours a
week in volunteer services at
the many work stations
throughout the area. There
are no dues and transportation is furnished free of
charge.

liidiMMMI

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Complete Line of . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies

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Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.

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L--------------------------1

GIANT NAME BRAND SUMMER

STARTS JUNE 28 AT 9 A.M.

EARLV SHOPPERS SPECIALS
100 Prs . Mis~ America 8. Connie

&lt;Tuner &amp; Technician)
INVITES YOU TO SEE THE ...

~IONDAY

WEDNESDAY
WEEKEND Meeting at
· Ash St. Free Will Baptist
Church, Middleport, begins
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. with
Paul Taylor from Utah as
evangelist. Public invited.
CHALLENGE SET UP
CLEVELAND (UPI ) The Republican majority on
the five-member state
Apportiorunent Board Friday
set In motion a legal
challenge to the current
apportionment of the state
with an inch-thick legal brief
filed In U. S. District Court.
Officials said, however, that
no court action could be
finall2ed in lime waffect the
November general election in
which al199 Ohio House seats
and 16 of the 33 Ohio Senate
seats will be filled.

ADDISON - RSVP members, Bill Menshouse, Nella
Taylor, Ethel Layne, Leo
Kin g, Nelli e Sta nley,
Lawrence McQuaid, Mabel

JENNIFER ROWE

BILL WARD
MEETING
OF
all
Interested people for the
bicentennial observance and
ox roast, Monday, 8 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Department
headquarters.

RSVP members visit facility

Beaver.
WEDNESDAY
WEEKEND mee ting at Ash
St. Free Will Baptist Church,
Middleport, begins Wednesday, with Paul Taylor
from Utah as evangelist.
Public invited.

• World - Re nown
KAWAI

KOHLER &amp; CAMPBELL

Mos 1 Pe r f ~c t Sca le

R1ch Tone Qua l•ty

True st H;umon 1c s

Superb Sty lon g

BUY AND SAVE NOW AT PRE -O PE NING SPECIAL PRICES !
After purchase . your p1ano wil l recetve an addJt tonal tunin t and personal
serv tce for s i x months at no cost to you .

WARD'S KEYBOARD
251 Jackson Pike· Phone 446 -4372

Miss America, Connie
and Life Stride

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!DRESS &amp; SANDALS!
~

Reg . S10.991o $23.99

I

GRASSHOPPERS

As:;r~e:~:lors

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ACME BOOTS,

CHIPPEWA AND ·
THOROGOOD WORK OX

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Values $20 .00 to $32.00

POMEROY, OHIO

)

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R unit ws
summoned at 12 :55 a .m.
Saturday to 200 Spring Ave. to
assist Orville Graham, who
was taken io Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The squad later
returned him home at 2:43

Capehart, Fay Carpenter,
Roberta Maynard, Margaret
Dodson, Vera Dodson ,
Sharon Cunningham, Bonnie
Fields, Patty Maynard,
Becky Reed, Grace Cunningham, Loretta Stewart, Pansy
Fry, Rena Johnson, Orpha
Fields, Lucille Powell ,
Lufema Weaver, Sarah
Gibbs,
Mary
Kelly,
Golda
Lerner ,
Mr.
and Mrs. Myron BesS,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Leifheit , and Ma rtha
Grueser.

__..
ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED- Mr . and Mrs. Gerald
J. Overturf of Bradbury c-elebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary on June 4. Miss Fanchon Overturf of
Columbus, sister of Mr. Overturf , hosted a surprise
anniversary dinner for the ·couple at the home of their
sister, Mrs. Elisha E. Vitatoe on Leading Creek Road . The
cake was baked by U1eir niece, Mrs. Ralph Durst, the
former Naomi Overturf, Gallipolis. Several members of
the family were present for the observa nce and presented
the couple wiU1 cards and gifts.

a.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Wade B. Morgan

What a beauti ful th ing Jo
do to a shoe: Ad d bits of bri gh t,
shiny brass to accent a high·front

iii

So~~ ~0:0~:.

@

ASK TO WED
POMEROY - Marriage
Ucenses have been issued to
Henry Paul Price, 26, Rt. 1
Long Bottom and Naomi
Ruth Price, 24, Rt. I LDng
Bottom, and to Michael
Joseph Magnotta, 18, 584
Lincoln St., Middleport, and
Linda Diane Williams, 18, Rt.
1 Langsville.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center
activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School,
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, June 28 - Cards
and Games ; Square Dance,
·12:3().3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 29 -Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Chorus 12 : 3~2 p.m.
Wednesday, June 30 Cards,l~ll : 30 a.m.; Games,
12 :30-2 p.m.
Thursday, July I · Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Horseshoes, 12:30 p.m.; Craft
Demonstration, l~ll a.m.;
Sing-A-Long, 12:30 p.m.
Friday, July 2- Art Class,
l~ll : JO) a.m.; Horseshoes,
10:30 a.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, l1 :30 a.m.-12:30
p.m., Monday through
Friday.
Monday - Barbecue beef
on bun, buttered green lima
beans, coleslaw, fruit
cocktail, milk .
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, applesauce, parsley
buttered potatoes, buttered
green beans, ice cream,
biscuit, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Beef pattie,
macaroni and cheese,
buttered brussel sprouts,
chocolate pudding, bread,
butter, milk.
Thursday - Glazed ham
loaf, au gratin potatoes,
buttered peas , pineapple

t:;p is open
from 12:3~1 : 30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves meals at 12
noon. The menu for this is as
follows :
Monday - Barbecue beef
on bun, buttered green lima
beans, coleslaw, butter, fruit
cocktail, milk.
Tuesday ~Baked pork
chop, apple sauce, parsley buttered · potatoes, buttered
green beans, biscuit, butter,
ice cram, milk.
Wednesday- Baked beef
patty, macaroni and cheese,
buttered cabbage, bread,
butter, strawberry jello with
bananas, milk .
Thursday
Glazed
hamloaf, Au Gratin potatoes,
cauliflower, bread, butter,
pineapple upside down cake,
milk.
Friday - Chicken and
noodle casserole, buttered
frozen mixed vegetables,
tossed salad with dressing,
roll, butter, c81Uled apricots
and ginger cookie, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

OH,
THOSE
GOLDEN
TOUCHES!

MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Leach of Rt. I, Lake Toxaway, N.C., are announcing the
marriage of their daughter, Kathleen Jo, to Wade Blane
Morgan, son of Mrs. Eunice Rice of Lake Toxaway and
Otis Morgan of Rosman, N. C. The bride is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leach, Rt. I,
Cheshire. The new Mrs. Morgan is a student at Rosman
High School. Mr. Morgan is employed by the American
Thread Co. of Rosman. The wedding was an event of
Friday, May 7 in Pickens, S. C. The couple resides at Lake
Toxaway, N. C.

p.m.; Art Class, 1-3 p.m.; i~i~

Calendar

'

'

j(!

upside down cake. bread,
butter, milk .
Friday - Chicken and
noodle casserole, buttered
beets, to,ssed salad with
dressing, canned apricots
and ginger cookie (I ), roll,
butter, milk.
·
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
served daily.

"fla p on a most sophis ti cated

(Slumbia

mid ·heeled sandal .. , to skirl
or pant as you ple ase.

Columbia diamonds frorn

125.99

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30tlt8p .m.
Tues. Wed. Sal. 9:30 lit S p.m
Thursday 9: JO fl. m.•12 noort

In soft suede uppers of grey

1200

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
,.~ , ,J,.•.• uwd ,, ,\'f'IN/If'f'/1

~ Pomeroy

Landmark

Pomeroy
LANDMARK.

APPLIANCE DEPARTMENT

JUNE
FREEZER
SALE -::••

Hotpoint's

20 c;u. II. URICO

Cheet. ·hOldl
710tbl. lr018n

fOOd. (NH·20S)

This sale is
limited to supply
on hand. Act
quickly!!

.

-Hutp.oin±

Vacation Time?

~

II

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Model CTAI4CR

USE THIS__

See ourHead Wraps
Inddor /Outdoor Slippers
Shorts
Tops
Swim Suits
Coverups
Tote Bags

•

BQIIJI COUPON

PRESENT THIS COUPON AND GET
ON ANY
REFRIGERATORFREEZER
OFFER EXPIRES JUN£ 30, 1976

WE DELI.VER•••
WE SERVICE•••
WE FINANCE

---etc.
J

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Choice of
20 cu. ft. Chest
(Holds 710 lbs.J
or 16 cu. ft. Upright
Holds 558 lbs.)

TWO - DOOR 13 .7 CU . FT.
REFRIGERATOR -FREEZER
30 '12'' WIDE!

asks-

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•

c::::;;;sont.u1~eet~ng, ~ :\f'''''''s;'' '~[j~j;~'~;,:, , ,,~

PAIRS

In

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The annual fellowship dinner
of Women of the Church of
God of New Haven was held
at Mar-Van 's Cafeteria . The
welcome was given . by the
president, Orpha Fields, the
invocation by Fay Carpenter.
Ashort business meeting was
held and door prizes awarded
to Sarah Gibbs and Fay Ca rpenter.
Attendin g wer e Iv a

I

GALLIPOLIS- The Senior
Citizens Center,located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Home Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follows:
Monday, June 28 - ·
Physical Fitness, U:30 a.m.;
Olde Tyme Chorus Practice
wear your old tyme clothes, 13p,m.
Tuesday, June ~tlng
and Visiting; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.;
Blood Pressure Check, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday, June 30 Physical Fitness, ll:30 a.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 1
Quilting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

r--~;~~~;-;~,~--r:~:E:~------~---;:~:;~~~--l
I

Annual dinner enjoyed

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar

3 '1 0

Chapman's Shoes

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
Hours : Eve ning s 5:30 ' ti ll 9:30
Saturdays 10:00 A.M. 'till 10:00 P.M.

Tractor Club, ·J:30 p.m.
Sunday at Sale Kautz
residence, Chester Road .
Members am! interested
persons invited.
DESCENDANTS OF Albert
and Lisa Hill will hold family
reunion, Sunday at Portland
Park with dinner at noon; at
Letart Falls Community Hall
in qase of rain. All relatives
and friends invited; persons
attending to take picnic
basket.
WOMEN'S AUXIUARY of
Middleport Fire Department
Sunday, 7 p.m. at fire station .
MEMBERS OF Racine
Chapter 134 OES will observe ·
"Go to Church Sunday" at
Racine Methodist Church
Sunday. All members urged
to attend .
MONDAY
SPECIAL MEETING
Racine Chapter 134 Monday
at Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.
for purpose of initiation.

clima Garden Club and
the New Haven Garden Club
are sponsoring the MiniFlower Show, and the Horticulture Division is open to
the public.
It was announced that the
July meeting will be held on
.the second Monday, which is
July 12, Instead of the regular
meeting da te. It will be a
" Workshop" and will be at
the Hallie Roush Memorial
Garden at 6:30 p.m. The door
prize was won by Joyce
Moxley.
Others attending were M..S.
Jones, Mrs. Hoffman, and
Mrs. llatey, Mrs. Carroll
Adams , Jr., Mrs. Michael
Merritt, · Mrs. Dona ld
Bumga rdner, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. William C.
Gibbs, Mrs. John Campbell,
Mrs. David Russell, Mrs.
Harry Miller, Mrs. Howard
Moxley, Mrs. Mel Clark,
members; a nd guests , Mrs.
Harry Layne, Mrs. Hennan
Layne, and Mrs. Mike J ones.

SPORT, DRESS, SANDAL SlYLES

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Over 200 Prs . Miss America &amp; Connie
Brand Name Shoes

SANDALS &amp; DRESS SHOES

• He irloom - Quality

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . the BicoenteJmial Mini-Flower
Mrs. Roy Jones. Mrs. Tom Show Tuesday, June 29, from
Hof£man and Mrs. Marion 2~ p.m. in the social room in
Batey were hostesses at the the Lutheran Church. Mem·
J une mee t ing of th e bers also voted to have a float
Nehaclima Garden Club held enter ed in the parade. Joyce
at the New Haven Public Moxley w.as appointed to
Library.
.
serve
on
this
comFinal plans were made for mittee.
The
Nab•-

Get Cool Savings Now At

POMEROY
LANDMARK
SERVING MEIGS, GALLI A
&amp; MASON COUNTIES
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.-PH. 992-2181
Store Hours: Store
lO.
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�9- TheSundayTlmes -Senllnel.&amp;mdar. June 27, 1976

june meeting held at library

Social
Calendar ·
SUNDAY

SUNDAY
BRADBURY
Reunion
Sunday at the Kyger Lodge
Hal l.
THE SARGENT Family will
sing at Clark Chapel Church
Sw1day, 7:30p.m.
IIOME('OM INC ill the Silver
Men11•rial Free Will Baptist
C'hurl'h, K cm~ uga , 10 cun.
c:uest speaker · will be the
Hev . John Sh unw te of
Cleveland. Special singing
wi ll he presented by Sister
l;: lesti ne McDan iel, Man·n, W.
Vu . Everyone welcome .
'1'111-: GA I\H ISON Family will

SOUTHERN OHIO Garden

THESE RSVP MEMBERS traveled to the Veterans Administration Facility at
Chillicothe recently. Pictured are, (seated, 1-r), Mabel Brown, Ethel Layne, Shirley Boster,
va n driver Rene Broyles. (Standing), Nella Taylor, Leo King , Nellie Stanley, Da Artus. and
Lawrence McQuaid. Bill Menshouse photo.

pr ovide special singi ng ~t !he

Vi nton . Ril pli st Church
Suntwy, 7:30 fUll . Everyone
'1.\ 'Cicome.

park for picnics and recrea tion. Shown here from left to
right, are Naomi Bumgarner, a membe r of the club;
Harold Bumgarner, who made the sign, and Mrs. Mel
Clark, daughter of the late Hallie A. Roush.

SIGN MARKS SPOT FOR PARK - A sign was
recently installed at the sight of the Hallie A. Roush
Memorial Gardens, in West Coiun1bia. W. Va . where the
Nehaclima Garden Club is in the process of building a

Club working on memorial park
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . The Nehaclima Garden Club
is in the process of building a
park for pi cni cs · and
recreation.
The sight of the park will be
on Route 62 in West Col umbia. The gardens, which is
named and dedicated to
Hallie A. Roush, were planted by her. Mrs. Roush was a

member of the New Haven
Ga rden Club and was the
mother of Mrs. Sally Clark.
A beautiful sight for a picnic, this land already has
many trees, roses,
various flowers.

and

This. is the third year of
work on the park by the Garden Club and is only """ of

the many projects they take
on to beautify the roadside.
Harold Bumgarner recently erected a sign which
reads "Hallie A. Roush
Ge~r d e n s,
Me morial
Neha clima Garden Club."
The land used to build this
park was leased to the dub
by the power company.

Many people wonder just
what Nehaclima mea ns.
Well, " Ne" stands for New
Haven, ·' ha" for Hartford,
''d i" ror Clifton, and "ma"
fur Mason .

The d ub hopes through
donations and diligent work ,
they can have the park
finished in the neai· future.

VIIS TO START
RUTLAND - The Hysell
Run Free Methodist, the
Rutland Community
Church, and the Danville
We sleyan Church will
combine for a vacation
Bible school to be held at
the Mi ssions Church in
Rutland. The school will be
conducted from June 28
through July 2, 9:30a.m. to
11 :30 a.m. with the closing
program to take plac e on .
July 4 at 2 p.m. with "Let
Freedom Ring" as the
theme. More information

Observance sppnsored
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . The annual spiritual birthday
observance held at the New
Haven First Church of God
was sponsored by women of
the Church of God . Delores
Taylor, Spiritual Life Director of WCG, was the leader.
The theme was "We Live by
Hope."
Reading scriptures were
Bonnie Fi elds, Norma
Greene and Delores Taylor.
A reading was given by Or-

pha Fields and a poem,
"Wonder," was read by J ulia
Leifheit.
The Spiritual Birthday Of.
Cering is one of the five
national projects which undergird the Missions Budget
of Women of the Church of
God.
After the service, all
gathered in the Fellowship
Hall for refreslunents. The
color scheme of red, white
and blue wa s used for the
decorations.

can

be

ubtain ed

by

telephoning 142-2460 or 142-

Celebrates
birthdaJ

First birthday observed
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs . Jerry Lee Rowe
entertained recently with a
party
honoring
their
daughter, Jennifer Ruth , on
her first birthday.
Featured in the ta ble
decorations were birthday
scenes alon g with a large
colonial doll cake made by
Mrs. Bunny Kuhl. Balloons
were used about the room and
given as fa vors to the
children.
Those attending were her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred E. Smith and Mrs.
VIrginia Rowe, James Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Shaffer,
Mrs. Betty Wagner , Ronnie,
Stephen and Rick, Jay,
Becky, Donna Rowe, and
Mrs. Judy Farley, Angel,
Andy and Traci Rowe and
Cindy Demoskey .
Sending gift s were her
great-grandmoth ers, Mrs.
Ruby Meadows of Crown City
and her great uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Meadows of Crown City .

E. L. VANMATRE

MASON, W. Va . - The
fourth birthday of 8. L. Van
Matrc, son of Eddie and
Annie Van Matre, Mason,
was celebrated June 17 with a
party.
A Charlie Brown cake was
served with red, white and
blue ice cream . Attending
were Mrs. David Van Matre,
Mrs. Margaret West, Melody,
John and Rhonda West, Mary
Fry and Mela nie Fry,
Rhonda and Rusto Wood,
Ryan Wood, Susan Kincaid ,
Bobby, Jason and Christy
Kincaid, Donnie and Sandy
Van Matre, Valerie and
Edina Van Matre. Gifts were
presented to the honOJ·ed
guest.

MONDA Y
VACAT ION Bible School
be~ in s Monday at the Chape l
Hill Church of Clll'ist and will
continue through Ju ly 2 from,
7 to H: j0 eac h evenin g.
Clllsscs
for
everyone
including adults. Attend ed
oursery will be provided.
OCSEA will hold its regular
monthly meeting Monday, 7
p.m. at the Grande Squares
building.
ADDI SO N U N ITED
MethQIIist Women will meet
at the home of Mrs. Ray
Hughes Monday, 7;30 p.m.
TUESDAY
SEW AND W Club Tuesday ,
7p.m. at the home of Dorothy

THURSDAY
SPEC IAL Services beg in
Thursday at Faith Chapel,
7:30 p.m. Pastor · is Densil
Roberts. Speakers wtll be
Web Swain and Ben D~la rd.

Party honors
annzversary

2005.

PO RTLAND - The Rev .
.....·... . Gt nd
Mrs.
Lawrence
Gluesencamp were surprised
on their annive rsary with a
party at the home of their
son-in-la w and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Theiss,
Vinton.
Attending were Mr. and
PORTLAN D - Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey and children,
Mrs. Thomas D. Sayre, Port- Patriot ; NiCki VanMeter,
l"nd , celebrated their 40th Portland ; Mr. and Mrs. Ra y
wedding anniversary on June Hall, Coolville; Mr . and Mrs.
20 with a surprise chicken Otis Bailey and daughter,
barbecue hosted by their Racine. Mr . and Mrs. Steve
children, Mr. and Mrs. T. Need of Reedsville sent a gift.
Dwain Sayre and Mr. and Numerous gifts
were
Mrs. Roland Sayre.
received by the couple. A
Others attending were Mr. decorated anniversary cake,
and Mrs. Robert Schaefer, homemade ice cream, and a
Susan and G reg~, Kettering; cookout were enjoyed by the
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond group.
Furbee and Richard, Mr . and
Mrs. Joe Bidwell and Michell ,
Co lumbus ; Mr s. Ma ry
J. urbee, and Mr. and Mrs ..
Paul W. Sayre and Paula.

Surprise parti
fetes couple

GLENN AMENDMENT
WASHI NGTON (UP! )
The Senate Thursday passed
an amendment, offered bv
Sen. John Glenn , D-Ohio,
bolstering the Office of
Revenue Sharing's civil
rights compliance staff. The
vote was 54-30.
Th e meas ur e call s for

adding 21 new compliance
seclion personnel and raises
the staff appropri"tion from
$3.5 million to $3.81 million in
the fisca l year beginning Oct.
I.

Primary function of the
additional staff will be to
enforce antirace and sex
discrimination
provisions.

TO HOST TEA
POMEROY - The Five
Point Star Stitchers 4-H Club
will entertain their mothers
with a tea in the Trinity
Chw·ch social room Monday,
7:30 p.m. A program on
sewing will be presented.

Brown, Jla Artus, Shirley
Boster and Eunice Keffer
were transported to the
Veterans Admini stration
Facility at Chillicothe June
18 by Rene Broyles, van

Mason OES has
officer installation
MASON, W. Va . - Mason . pa tron ; Mrs. Charles
Chapter 157, Order of the i Max in e)
Aldri dge,
Eastern Sta r, held its regular secreta ry; Mrs.
Richard
meeting Wednesday .
i Phyllis ) Gilkey, treasurer ;
Officers for the coming Mrs. Oscar (Nellie) Casto,
year were installed.
chaplain; Mrs. Jack (Betty)
Ja net! Ca pe hart , Past Fox, marshal; Mrs. Herman
Matron and Secreta ry of (Josephihe) Kirby, organist.
Point Pleasant Chapter 75,
Mrs. · James
(Jo)
acted as installing office r. MacKnight , conductr ess;
She was assisted by Jean Mrs . Willi am R. (Sue)
Ca rtwright , marshal; Louise H u sse i l , a s s oc i a t e
Crow, chaplain ; Ivai Wams- conductress; Mrs. Charles
ley, or gan ist;
Garnet (Margie) Cartwright, Ruth ;
Burdette, warder and Verlie Mrs.
John
(Janet )
Workman, sentineL
McDermitt , Esth er; Mrs .
Office rs installed were: Lester ·( J oy) Foreman ,
Mrs. James 1Barbara ) Dunn, Martha; Mrs. Denver IAnn )
worthy matron; Marion Lee Blake, Eiecta; Mrs. Larry
Litchfield , worthy patron ; (Elaine ) Grogan, Warder;
Mrs. J ohn I Ca rol J .) Mrs. Bliss (Virginia) Wilson,
Workman, associate matron ; Sentinel.
William R. Russell. associate
Mrs. Eddie (Jac kie)
Anderson will be installed as
Adah on July 28.

CALLED 3 TIMES
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was called at 10 :34
a.m. Friday to the home of
Cl arence Wickline, near
Racine , for Laura Sayre, 89,
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 2: 30 p.m.
Mrs. Sayre was returned to
her home. At 7: 40 p.m. ,
Jeremy Roush, 26 months, of
near Racine, who was ill, was
taken from his home to VMH.

driver.
Upon arrival at the
hospital, the group was
divided with some of the
voiw1teers assisting in the
recreation department and
others working in the newly
renovated medical buildings.
After lunch, the group met at
the Rec Hall and enjoyed a
pleasant afternoon with the
ambulatory residents of the
facility.
The Ga llia County RSVP
travels to Chillicothe the
third Friday of each month
with the gasoline being furnished by our local veterans
organizations.
Maye Roush, coordinator
of the RSVP inGallia County,
is pr es ently making
arrangements to visit the
Good Shepherd Manor in
Wakefield in the near future .
The home is for the
physically and mentally handicapped males of all
denominations.
Tho se intere sted in
becoming a· member of the
RSVP, should contact Mrs.
.Roush at 446-3361. The only ·
· requirements are that you be
at least 60 years old and be
willing to donate four hours a
week in volunteer services at
the many work stations
throughout the area. There
are no dues and transportation is furnished free of
charge.

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GIANT NAME BRAND SUMMER

STARTS JUNE 28 AT 9 A.M.

EARLV SHOPPERS SPECIALS
100 Prs . Mis~ America 8. Connie

&lt;Tuner &amp; Technician)
INVITES YOU TO SEE THE ...

~IONDAY

WEDNESDAY
WEEKEND Meeting at
· Ash St. Free Will Baptist
Church, Middleport, begins
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. with
Paul Taylor from Utah as
evangelist. Public invited.
CHALLENGE SET UP
CLEVELAND (UPI ) The Republican majority on
the five-member state
Apportiorunent Board Friday
set In motion a legal
challenge to the current
apportionment of the state
with an inch-thick legal brief
filed In U. S. District Court.
Officials said, however, that
no court action could be
finall2ed in lime waffect the
November general election in
which al199 Ohio House seats
and 16 of the 33 Ohio Senate
seats will be filled.

ADDISON - RSVP members, Bill Menshouse, Nella
Taylor, Ethel Layne, Leo
Kin g, Nelli e Sta nley,
Lawrence McQuaid, Mabel

JENNIFER ROWE

BILL WARD
MEETING
OF
all
Interested people for the
bicentennial observance and
ox roast, Monday, 8 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Department
headquarters.

RSVP members visit facility

Beaver.
WEDNESDAY
WEEKEND mee ting at Ash
St. Free Will Baptist Church,
Middleport, begins Wednesday, with Paul Taylor
from Utah as evangelist.
Public invited.

• World - Re nown
KAWAI

KOHLER &amp; CAMPBELL

Mos 1 Pe r f ~c t Sca le

R1ch Tone Qua l•ty

True st H;umon 1c s

Superb Sty lon g

BUY AND SAVE NOW AT PRE -O PE NING SPECIAL PRICES !
After purchase . your p1ano wil l recetve an addJt tonal tunin t and personal
serv tce for s i x months at no cost to you .

WARD'S KEYBOARD
251 Jackson Pike· Phone 446 -4372

Miss America, Connie
and Life Stride

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~

Reg . S10.991o $23.99

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GRASSHOPPERS

As:;r~e:~:lors

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ACME BOOTS,

CHIPPEWA AND ·
THOROGOOD WORK OX

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Values $20 .00 to $32.00

POMEROY, OHIO

)

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R unit ws
summoned at 12 :55 a .m.
Saturday to 200 Spring Ave. to
assist Orville Graham, who
was taken io Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The squad later
returned him home at 2:43

Capehart, Fay Carpenter,
Roberta Maynard, Margaret
Dodson, Vera Dodson ,
Sharon Cunningham, Bonnie
Fields, Patty Maynard,
Becky Reed, Grace Cunningham, Loretta Stewart, Pansy
Fry, Rena Johnson, Orpha
Fields, Lucille Powell ,
Lufema Weaver, Sarah
Gibbs,
Mary
Kelly,
Golda
Lerner ,
Mr.
and Mrs. Myron BesS,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Leifheit , and Ma rtha
Grueser.

__..
ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED- Mr . and Mrs. Gerald
J. Overturf of Bradbury c-elebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary on June 4. Miss Fanchon Overturf of
Columbus, sister of Mr. Overturf , hosted a surprise
anniversary dinner for the ·couple at the home of their
sister, Mrs. Elisha E. Vitatoe on Leading Creek Road . The
cake was baked by U1eir niece, Mrs. Ralph Durst, the
former Naomi Overturf, Gallipolis. Several members of
the family were present for the observa nce and presented
the couple wiU1 cards and gifts.

a.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Wade B. Morgan

What a beauti ful th ing Jo
do to a shoe: Ad d bits of bri gh t,
shiny brass to accent a high·front

iii

So~~ ~0:0~:.

@

ASK TO WED
POMEROY - Marriage
Ucenses have been issued to
Henry Paul Price, 26, Rt. 1
Long Bottom and Naomi
Ruth Price, 24, Rt. I LDng
Bottom, and to Michael
Joseph Magnotta, 18, 584
Lincoln St., Middleport, and
Linda Diane Williams, 18, Rt.
1 Langsville.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center
activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School,
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, June 28 - Cards
and Games ; Square Dance,
·12:3().3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 29 -Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Chorus 12 : 3~2 p.m.
Wednesday, June 30 Cards,l~ll : 30 a.m.; Games,
12 :30-2 p.m.
Thursday, July I · Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Horseshoes, 12:30 p.m.; Craft
Demonstration, l~ll a.m.;
Sing-A-Long, 12:30 p.m.
Friday, July 2- Art Class,
l~ll : JO) a.m.; Horseshoes,
10:30 a.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, l1 :30 a.m.-12:30
p.m., Monday through
Friday.
Monday - Barbecue beef
on bun, buttered green lima
beans, coleslaw, fruit
cocktail, milk .
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, applesauce, parsley
buttered potatoes, buttered
green beans, ice cream,
biscuit, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Beef pattie,
macaroni and cheese,
buttered brussel sprouts,
chocolate pudding, bread,
butter, milk.
Thursday - Glazed ham
loaf, au gratin potatoes,
buttered peas , pineapple

t:;p is open
from 12:3~1 : 30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves meals at 12
noon. The menu for this is as
follows :
Monday - Barbecue beef
on bun, buttered green lima
beans, coleslaw, butter, fruit
cocktail, milk.
Tuesday ~Baked pork
chop, apple sauce, parsley buttered · potatoes, buttered
green beans, biscuit, butter,
ice cram, milk.
Wednesday- Baked beef
patty, macaroni and cheese,
buttered cabbage, bread,
butter, strawberry jello with
bananas, milk .
Thursday
Glazed
hamloaf, Au Gratin potatoes,
cauliflower, bread, butter,
pineapple upside down cake,
milk.
Friday - Chicken and
noodle casserole, buttered
frozen mixed vegetables,
tossed salad with dressing,
roll, butter, c81Uled apricots
and ginger cookie, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

OH,
THOSE
GOLDEN
TOUCHES!

MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Leach of Rt. I, Lake Toxaway, N.C., are announcing the
marriage of their daughter, Kathleen Jo, to Wade Blane
Morgan, son of Mrs. Eunice Rice of Lake Toxaway and
Otis Morgan of Rosman, N. C. The bride is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leach, Rt. I,
Cheshire. The new Mrs. Morgan is a student at Rosman
High School. Mr. Morgan is employed by the American
Thread Co. of Rosman. The wedding was an event of
Friday, May 7 in Pickens, S. C. The couple resides at Lake
Toxaway, N. C.

p.m.; Art Class, 1-3 p.m.; i~i~

Calendar

'

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upside down cake. bread,
butter, milk .
Friday - Chicken and
noodle casserole, buttered
beets, to,ssed salad with
dressing, canned apricots
and ginger cookie (I ), roll,
butter, milk.
·
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
served daily.

"fla p on a most sophis ti cated

(Slumbia

mid ·heeled sandal .. , to skirl
or pant as you ple ase.

Columbia diamonds frorn

125.99

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30tlt8p .m.
Tues. Wed. Sal. 9:30 lit S p.m
Thursday 9: JO fl. m.•12 noort

In soft suede uppers of grey

1200

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
,.~ , ,J,.•.• uwd ,, ,\'f'IN/If'f'/1

~ Pomeroy

Landmark

Pomeroy
LANDMARK.

APPLIANCE DEPARTMENT

JUNE
FREEZER
SALE -::••

Hotpoint's

20 c;u. II. URICO

Cheet. ·hOldl
710tbl. lr018n

fOOd. (NH·20S)

This sale is
limited to supply
on hand. Act
quickly!!

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-Hutp.oin±

Vacation Time?

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Model CTAI4CR

USE THIS__

See ourHead Wraps
Inddor /Outdoor Slippers
Shorts
Tops
Swim Suits
Coverups
Tote Bags

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BQIIJI COUPON

PRESENT THIS COUPON AND GET
ON ANY
REFRIGERATORFREEZER
OFFER EXPIRES JUN£ 30, 1976

WE DELI.VER•••
WE SERVICE•••
WE FINANCE

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Choice of
20 cu. ft. Chest
(Holds 710 lbs.J
or 16 cu. ft. Upright
Holds 558 lbs.)

TWO - DOOR 13 .7 CU . FT.
REFRIGERATOR -FREEZER
30 '12'' WIDE!

asks-

l.-~:!!_!~-~~~9~L~~:-~~~~~:_._L__~~~~~~::_J
MAIN STREET

"BUY FIOI THE TUNER AND SAVE"

•

c::::;;;sont.u1~eet~ng, ~ :\f'''''''s;'' '~[j~j;~'~;,:, , ,,~

PAIRS

In

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The annual fellowship dinner
of Women of the Church of
God of New Haven was held
at Mar-Van 's Cafeteria . The
welcome was given . by the
president, Orpha Fields, the
invocation by Fay Carpenter.
Ashort business meeting was
held and door prizes awarded
to Sarah Gibbs and Fay Ca rpenter.
Attendin g wer e Iv a

I

GALLIPOLIS- The Senior
Citizens Center,located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Home Building, is open
Monday through Friday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follows:
Monday, June 28 - ·
Physical Fitness, U:30 a.m.;
Olde Tyme Chorus Practice
wear your old tyme clothes, 13p,m.
Tuesday, June ~tlng
and Visiting; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.;
Blood Pressure Check, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday, June 30 Physical Fitness, ll:30 a.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, July 1
Quilting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

r--~;~~~;-;~,~--r:~:E:~------~---;:~:;~~~--l
I

Annual dinner enjoyed

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar

3 '1 0

Chapman's Shoes

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
Hours : Eve ning s 5:30 ' ti ll 9:30
Saturdays 10:00 A.M. 'till 10:00 P.M.

Tractor Club, ·J:30 p.m.
Sunday at Sale Kautz
residence, Chester Road .
Members am! interested
persons invited.
DESCENDANTS OF Albert
and Lisa Hill will hold family
reunion, Sunday at Portland
Park with dinner at noon; at
Letart Falls Community Hall
in qase of rain. All relatives
and friends invited; persons
attending to take picnic
basket.
WOMEN'S AUXIUARY of
Middleport Fire Department
Sunday, 7 p.m. at fire station .
MEMBERS OF Racine
Chapter 134 OES will observe ·
"Go to Church Sunday" at
Racine Methodist Church
Sunday. All members urged
to attend .
MONDAY
SPECIAL MEETING
Racine Chapter 134 Monday
at Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.
for purpose of initiation.

clima Garden Club and
the New Haven Garden Club
are sponsoring the MiniFlower Show, and the Horticulture Division is open to
the public.
It was announced that the
July meeting will be held on
.the second Monday, which is
July 12, Instead of the regular
meeting da te. It will be a
" Workshop" and will be at
the Hallie Roush Memorial
Garden at 6:30 p.m. The door
prize was won by Joyce
Moxley.
Others attending were M..S.
Jones, Mrs. Hoffman, and
Mrs. llatey, Mrs. Carroll
Adams , Jr., Mrs. Michael
Merritt, · Mrs. Dona ld
Bumga rdner, Mrs. David
Fields, Jr., Mrs. William C.
Gibbs, Mrs. John Campbell,
Mrs. David Russell, Mrs.
Harry Miller, Mrs. Howard
Moxley, Mrs. Mel Clark,
members; a nd guests , Mrs.
Harry Layne, Mrs. Hennan
Layne, and Mrs. Mike J ones.

SPORT, DRESS, SANDAL SlYLES

'l.QQPAIR

I .

·'

Over 200 Prs . Miss America &amp; Connie
Brand Name Shoes

SANDALS &amp; DRESS SHOES

• He irloom - Quality

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . the BicoenteJmial Mini-Flower
Mrs. Roy Jones. Mrs. Tom Show Tuesday, June 29, from
Hof£man and Mrs. Marion 2~ p.m. in the social room in
Batey were hostesses at the the Lutheran Church. Mem·
J une mee t ing of th e bers also voted to have a float
Nehaclima Garden Club held enter ed in the parade. Joyce
at the New Haven Public Moxley w.as appointed to
Library.
.
serve
on
this
comFinal plans were made for mittee.
The
Nab•-

Get Cool Savings Now At

POMEROY
LANDMARK
SERVING MEIGS, GALLI A
&amp; MASON COUNTIES
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.-PH. 992-2181
Store Hours: Store
lO.
.

v

"

�10::-TheSWidayTimes · Sentinel, Sunday, June '1.7,1976

Nuptial vows read

J

TO PERFORM AT RfVEH llECHicATIONFESTIVAl , The Waymark Gospel Sin gers
. will appear on tJJe 1976 Gallipolis Hiver llrcreation F c~ t1 val prugn1111 on Sunday, J uly 4, betw een 7:30 and 9 p.m. on the park front. Made up of individuals from nearby West Yllw ma,
tJJe Waymark singers have appeared tluuughuut the m ra '"' nu111crous occasions. They
have prepa red a specie I bicentcnnw l progr,un fu r the Gal hpults fe sl1' .II
·
.

Families on HUD .will receive larger
COLUMBUS - A number
of people in Ohio who are ·
receiving rental supplements
through the federa l Housing
and Urban Development
1HUDI program are due for
an eKtra benefi t in food
stamps, according to the Ohio
Department of Publi c
Welfare.

In compl iance wiU1 a U. S.
Court of Appeals ruling, the
United States Dep&lt;JrtnJen l of
Ag ri c ul t ur e , which
administers the food st:unp
program, has notified all
sta te welfare depa rtmenls
that HUD supplements me
not to be considered as
" income1 ' i·n c:i:llcula ting food

_.,. ._ 330 Second Avenue

~

· IJas

1leru1is l)resscs

~

f

and

'

MiddlcP?rt , who wore a blue
goJI'O w1th a whtte hat and
had ~ co rsage of blue
carna tiUnS. Also regtsten ng
guests
wa s
Tammy
Mossman, Pomeroy, . m a
yellow gown wtth wh1te hat
·and
yellow
car nation
corsage. . ,
f lower gtrls were Donna
Kay .Hysell , Pomeroy, and
_Va lene Blake, Letart,_W. Va .
l'hey were atttrcd m long
pmk dresses with wh tt e
button accent and butterfly
sleeves, and ca rried baskets
of carnation petals.
Timmy Bla ke • Poin t
Pleasa nt, was the ringbearer.
Tom Soulsby, Pomeroy, was
best man and the ushers were
Don Hysell of Pomeroy '
Houtc 4, and Keith Wood, Rt.
1, Long Bottom.
h
For
her
daug ter 's
wedding, Mrs. Hysell wore a
long purple dress with a
purple corsage. Mrs . Blake
was in a ye llow gown and had
a matching corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the
Bradford Church of Christ
base ment imm ediate ly
following the ceremony. The
bride's cake··carried out the

Golf Skirts and 1lops

~ - - c_r.c.:
IGallipolis, Ohio--.

eHOME IMPROVEMENT
LOANS

'

.1

-~

stamp
eli gibi lity and
IJ&lt;ne!ils. The USDAdirective
is retroa ctive to Octobe r 8,
1975.
As H result of this ruling,
Ohio fam ilies getting HUD
benefits may receive higher
foo d sta mp bonu ses, the
Welfare
Depa rtm e nt
I'Cporletl.
Und er
th e
retroactive effect, some may
receive extra food stamp

Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Blake
rainbow color scheme of the
wedding. Serving were Ellen
Tucker, Mrs. Sandy Blake
and Dorothy Blake .
The couple resides at Route
4, Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Blake is a
graduate of Meigs High
School. Mr . Blake, a graduate
of Waham.a High School and
the Gallipolis Business

College, . is ~mployed as
manager of the meat depart·
ment at Powell's Super.valu.
Out-of-town-· guests
attending the wedding were
Mrs. Gladys Bowers, Jackie
Bowers, Guysville; Margie
England, Rita Stover,
Stewart; Dorothy Blake and
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Blake,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

rebales, cmd some may get

cash reba tes, according to
the Department.
Tom McDowell , Chief of the
Bureau of f oo d Sta mps in the
Sta te Welfare Department,
said all co unty welfare
departme nts have been
notified of the changes and
have been instructed how to
ca lculate
food stamp
retroactive benefits as well
as the new fo od stamp
eligibili ty requirements and
benefit1 for those receiving
HUD supplements.

officers
installed
MIDDLEPORT - The 14th
annual installation of offi ce1·s
of the Meigs Chapter, Order
or DeMolay , was held Friday
night at the Masonic Temple
in Middleport.
Elected officers installed
during the ceremonies were

Carl Myers, master cow1·
cilor ; Mike Sibley, senior
councilor, and Dick Owen,
jLmior councilor.
Appointed offi cers installed were Steve Harrison,
scribe· treasurer ; Dennis
Wolfe, senior deacon; Eric
Scites, junior deacon ; Scott
Reuter , marshal ; Dallas
Sayre, senior stewart; Shawn
Layne, jw1ior steward; Randy Keller, chaplain; . Pave
White, sentinel and alffioner ;
Keith Kraueter, standard
bearer ; George Knighting,
fi rst preceptor ; Randy
Taylor, second preceptor ;
Oliver Taylor. third precet&gt;lor; Mike Hendrickson, four·
. tJJ preceptor; ,!&gt;teve Rou.&lt;;h,
fifth preceptor; Ed Haycraft,
sixth preceptor, and Paul
Gauze, seventh preceptor.
Bill Quickel, Cheshire,
"Dad' ' of the local chapter,
gave the welcome and in·
stalling officers included Bob
Kutschbach, Columbus, in·
stalling offi cer; Charlie
Baker, Ironton, senior coun~
cilor; Calvin Smith, Sidney,

I

Force."
INSTALLATION - Pictured at friday Jlight's 14th semi-annual installation of the
Meigs Chapter of the Order of DcMolay at the Middleport Masonic ')'emple are, 1to r, Mike
Sibley, Gallipolis, senior councilor; Merri Ault, Middleport, 11th District DeMo lay Sweet·
heart; Carl Myers, Cheshire, master councilor; Mary Sue Zemities, Ohio DcMolay sweet·
heart, and Dick Owen, Middlcpart, junior councilor.
junior councilor;
Scott
Reuter, Middleport , mar·
shal; Bill Richards, Colurn·
bus, chaplain ; Don Vaughan,
Middleport, senior deacon.
Introduced were Mary Sue
Zen1ities, Ohio State
DeMolay sweetheart; Merri
Ault, lith district. sweet·
heart; Kathy Miller, organist
and Pomeroy Bethel62, Job's
Daughters, guardian; Angie
Sisson, Pomeroy, Ohio State
Bethel librarian; Kricket
Kutschback , Columbus,
Buckeye Priory sweetheart ;
John Kerr, Pomeroy, and

Chuck Perroud, Gallipolis; director and Meigs Chapter
senior DeMolays; "Mom" advisor.
•
Lois Boggs, Columbus,
Members of the local ad·
president; "Mom" Susanne visory council are Hennan
Kutschbach, Cheshire, first Carson, chainnan; Robert V.
vice president; "Morn" Hilda King, Darrell Bechtel, Harry
Quickel, second vice Chesher, James Euler,
president, all of the Ohio · Roger Keller, Theodore
Federation of DeMolay Reed, Eldon Kraeuter,
Mothers Clubs; "Dad" R. V. Thomas Edwards and
King, Middleport, 11th Williaiil Quickel.
district governor ; "Dad" Bill
A buffet dinner was served
Kutschbach, fourth district before ·the installation and
governor, Colwnbus ; "Dad" cake, punch and other light
John Perdurn, 20th district refreshments were served at
deputy , Chillicothe; "Dad" a reception following the in·
Bill Quickel, state L.C.C. stallation.

''When women are there,
they will provide a certain
refinement
to
the
atmosphere," Clark said.
"There will be less profane
language . Manners might
pick up. Competition will be

Prizes of $100 offered in talent competition

is July 14th
ADD HESS
PHONE - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - .~CT

AND MUSIC TO BE USED ____ _ _ _ _ _ __

PEHSONS MAKING UP ACT ______________
ACCOMPANIST - - --

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

Category (check one&gt; Adult _____ Youth------Mail to .Joan Stewart, P. 0. Box 141, Rutland, Ohio.

Meth0 dzsts
• annrove b dr.ge t

at 742·2333. The registration
alson\aybehandledbycomU
pletmg the form below. A
'}/}:/
piano will be on hand but acts
LAKESIDE, Ohio (UP!) - asked to raise these funds to
should have their own ac· Arecord budget of more than help support the programs
companist.
$8.1 million has been ap- and work of the denomination
proved for the coming year at home and abroad.
by the East Ohio Annual Con·
As one of the largest Uniled
ference of The United Methodist conferences within
Methodist Church.
the denomination it has
The conference's ;8,137,793 traditionally been a heavy
budget, approved Friday, contributor to missionary
represents a $2,053,000 in· and charity programs. Over
crease over the previous $3.2 million has been
year's budgel.
designated for those pur·
The 920 local churches poses next year.
within the conference will be
Overwhelming approval

New-town dilemmas lade
alter a WELCOME WAGON call.
As your Hostess, it's my job to help you make the
most of ~our new n11~t1borhood. Our shoppini areas.
Community opportumtles. Special attractions. Lots of facts

to save you time and money,

·

Plus a basket of Kilts lor your family .
I'll bellsteninllor your call.

~~~P.ll
'I

New deadline
for tap fee

RUTLAND BICENTENNIAL TALENT CONTEST
NAME __________________________________

Oetting Settled
made simple.

SALE!

,,

Among those who will be
greeting tJJe women as tJJey
arrive at t~e 18,000-acre
academy, located in the
scenic foothills near 14,110.
foot Pikes Peak, will be Lt.
Betty Price, a member of the
Commandant of Cadets
special planning staff for
women.
Lt. Gen. Albert P. Clark,
former
academy
superintendent now retired,
predicted in 1972 that women
cadets were inevitable and
'that they probably could
leach
their
male
counterparts a lesson or two.

Ed.
Tupper,
war
hero,
Beat...
~
Of the Bend ··:--~ · ran a Gallipolis store
~a

EAST MEIGS - The Tuppers Plains - Chester Water
District is announcing the
closing date for taps under
the new extension is July 14,
1976.
In order to qualify for an
extension tap, the potential
customer must be at least .
50 ft. from an existing main.
This 50 feet is measured from
the center of the existing
main line to the nearest edge
of the customer's property. ·
In order to be counted on
the extension, a customer
must have paid his or her tap
fee and signed a user's
agreement prior to July U.
Customers desiring to pur·
chase a tap after that date on
the new elrtension will be
required to pay the full $275
tap fee.
For further infonnation,
any potenttal customers may
call the Water Office at 98&amp;3315 and talk to Lindsey
Lyons or Albert Martin.

REVIVAL UNDERWAY
GALUPOUS - A revival
is underway at the Mt.
Carmel
Church
with
evangelist Bob Allbright.
SerVIces begin at 7:30 p.m.
Pastor Roger Allen invites
the public.
was _given to a $3,230,336 apportiorunent from tJJe local
churches for Copeland Oaks
the
church-related
retirement center in Sebring.
Minimwn salary support
for pastors serving within th~
conference was set at $8,00iJ
,cash plus housing and
allowances, an increase of$400ayear.
II

By James Sands
Gallla Historical Society
GALLIPOLIS - One of the
most interesting of Gallipolis'
early settlers was General
Edward W. Tupper, son of
Benjamin Tupper, one of tbe
founders of Marietta . BotJJ
Ed and Ben Tupper became
generals in their lives. Ed
was a hero of the War of 1812
and Ben was a Revolutionary
hero.
Ben Tupper fought at tbe
hattleofBemisHeights, West
Point, and Monmouth, where
his horse was shot out from
under him.
Ed Tupper was born in
Chesterfield, Hampshire
County, Massachusetts in
1771 and came to Marietta
with his father · in 1788.
Learning surveying from his
father, he worked at this
trade in Ohio··for about 10
_years. Tupper also worked as
a clerk of the Common Pleas
and Supreme Courts. ·
In lBO! Tupper arranged for
ship carpenters to come to
Marietta from Philadelphia
to build master schooners.
These schooners would be
loaded with Ohio products
and sailed to New Orleans by
river and then across tbe
ocean. Tupper believed tbe
schooners to be faster than
flatboats . These ocean going
vessels must have been
strange sights on tJJe Ohio
river. Tupper also built 3 or 4
frigates.

POMEROY - Before the Big Bend Regalia fades out of
sight for the year, we'd like to collUllend George Arnott and
Ken Gilkey who served as coordinators forth~ event and Mrs.
Lynn Crow, Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce secretary. They
did a great job in getting it all together and too bad, that it had
to be such a rainy weekend. The parade, as far as the regatta
events go, was the "best yet" as far as I'm concerned.
MRS. KATHRYN MORA has been returned to her home on
, Route 7 after an unusual experience.
Mrs. Milra.who has been hospitalized five times since April
25, was admitted to St. Joseph Hospilal where sbe was to
undergo hack surgery. She had made the required mental and
emotional adjustment but before the operation could be
performed, the d&lt;X;tor became ill and so the surgery has been
cancelled until July 24.
MARTHA STRUBLE has been presented a macrame
planter from the Winding Trail Garden Club, the result of one
of tJJe club's Big Bend Regatta Weekend projects. The planter
couldn't be in better hands .

THE OHIO SENATE THROUGH Sen. Oakley Collins has
passed a resolution in tribute to tJJe memory of Jeanne.Morgan
of Middleport.
The resolution reads in part: "Jeanne Morgan was a person of great convictions. Her
optimism and concern for others were continaually
demonstrated by her involvement in civic affairs and
dedication to help elderly citizens. Her passing is an
irreparable loss to the Meigs County collUllunity.
"Jeanne Morgan served on the village council of
Middleport and as a Republican committee woman. She
campaigned vigorously for outstanding candidates to insure
proper functioning of the electoral process, and her efforts
earned her the respect and admiration of members of all
politiCl)l parties. ·
"This outstanding Ohio citizen demonstrated complete
courage and unshakable optimism, even during her illness.
Her life stands as an example of selfless and continual caring
for others and 'her kindness and co~ern will long be
remembered."
The resolution concludes with an expression of sympathy
to Mrs. Morgan's family and friends.
JIM CLELAND, PRESIDENT of the Ohio Valley
Fellowship, Inc., alcohol.and drug abuse program for Meigs
County, recently completed the course of drug studies
sponsored by the Ohio Bureau of Drug Abuse.
The Ohio Drug Studies Institute was held \his year at
Otterbein College in .Westerville. Several nationally known
experts on drug abuse conducted workshops on their varied
spe~i.alties~.d Jim presented a workshop on alcoholism and
the built-'". commurut_y resources for recovery.
. Jun srud tt ts the optmon of most of the experts that ~lcohol·
ts the most abused drug among all ages ~four population and
~lcohol1$111_ls a disease that can h~ve a htgh rate or. recpvery.
The costs 11J money, hwnan suflermg and the ve_ry lives of our
people ?emand that we make _a ~tal c?llUllttment to the
preventiOn and treatment of lJlts disease, 1Cleland says,
MARILYN POWELL, ONE of our most pleasant contacts,
reports tJJat she was most impressed the other evening with
tJJe bicentennial spirit which she noted as she drove intll
Antiquity.
•
At the entrance of the collUllunity, Mrs. Darlene Graham
and her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Barry Allen,
have taken two large truck tires, painted tbem in red, white
and blue and planted them with petunias in the same. colors. A
small building which Mrs. Graham uses for her sales post
during the sununer has been done iii the red, white and. blue
color scheme and the Graham mall box also is done patriotic.

THE FREE JULY 2 CANCER clinic for Meigs County
women has been cancelled. Women scheduled for July 2 will be
examined instead on July 9. Those who had July 2 appoint·
ments are to call Jan Judge, evenings, 992-5832 or the cancer
office in Middleport from I to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays or Thursdays, 992-7531.

keen."

RUTLAND - A talent
show with $100 to be offered
to winners he~ s been
scheduled for 8 p.m. on Mon·
day, July 5, as a part of the
Rutlllnd three day weekend
celebration.
Talent will be judged in
three age groups which are
up to 17 years of age, and
those 18 and older, with
prizes of $25,$1 5 and $10 to be
awarded in each age group.
The winners will be selected
by a panel of judges rather
than by applause. Acts which
might have a ~ombination of
the two age groups will be
placed in a designated
category by the chairman of
tJJe event, Mrs . Joan Stewart.
Immediate regish·ation is
requested for the talent show
to be staged outdoors in the
conununity pa.rk. Those interested may phone 742·2421 ,
Mrs. Stewart, of Jack Walker

,,

By JOHN J. SANKO
· AIR FORCE ACADEMY,
Colo. (UP! )- T~ spit-and·
polish tradition of the nation 's ·
youngest military school will
remain unchanged , but the
ranks of tJJe cadets in blue
will undergo a dramatic and
lasting transformation this
week .
Monday 1,60Q "doolies"as they call first-year
students at the Air Force
Academy- arrive . And lor
the first time in U.S. military
school history, women will be
among them.
President Ford issued an
executive order last year
allowing women to apply to
the nation 's three military
academies. The Air Force
Academy will beat rivals
West Point and the Naval
Academy by one week in the
admission of women.
A spokesman at the
Academy said the new
cadets - including 158
women-will be processed
and sworn in Monday. In
addition, they will receive the
traditional short. GI haircuta butch for the men and and a
not..so.short, off the collar
style for women.
california leads all states
with 23 women represen·
tatives . Texas and Virginia
have eight apiece.
The Academy has been
preparing for the women
cadets and has assigned 18
Air Force officer and enlisted
women to the athletic,
military training and faculty
·
staffs.
"We want professional Air
Force· women to be very
visible to the women cadets,''
said Lt. Gen. James R. Allen,
academy superintendent.
"They will be tangible proof
that women have a
tremendous future in the Air

all~cations thru welfareDeMolay

food stamp

,-;::~'.;;

POMEHOY _ Miss Linda
Hysell , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. r.uy Hyse ll, Pomeroy
Houle 4 Hnd Chuck Blake
son of ~I rs. Wilma Blake:
Clifton, w. Vu ., and the late
Walter Blake, were married
May 22 at 6 p.m. at the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Jack Perry officiated at the
double ring ceremony. Mu.•ic
was by Miss Bonnie Wood and
included " Love Story ."
Arrange ments of carnations
decorated the church
Given in ma rriage ·by her
fa ther, the bride wore a gown
wi th sheer sleeves and wh ite
pem·l .button accent on the
bodice and the sleeves. She
wore a bouffan t veil of
illusion and carried a bouquet
of rainbow carnations.
Rt . 1,
Mrs. D1.ana 8 mg,
Long Bottom, was th e matron
of honor . She wore a lavender
gown with a matching hat
and ca rried a bouquet of
lave nd er flowe rs with
strea mers.
Miss Wood, pianist, was in
a mint green dress with a
white ha 1 and wore a
ca rnation corsage tipped in
mmt green. Guests were
reg istered by Reeky Painter.

Women in
new class
of doolies

11 - The Sunday Tinles -Sentinel, Sanday, June 'll, 1976

There were too ma ny
probl ems to ove rcome in this
business, however, so by 1816
shipbuilding at Mrietta had
ended . Shipbuilding was
revived again in the 1830s
under different ownership.
Factories were built a t
Marietta and Pt. Pleasa nt,
andarope makingfactory (to
supply rigging) was built at
Gallipolis on F ront and
Locust streets.
Tupper became involves in
the Burr conspiracy in 1806.
Tupper was the last roan to
see Blennerhassett befo re
Harman left for the south to
meet Burr. At the trial of
Blennerhassett in 1808 the
prosecution claim ed tha t
Blennerhassett's men had
threatened to kill Tupper.
This statement proved to be a
lie . Tupper was n~ v e r
consulted about this incident,
but second hand testimony
was accepted.
The prosecution's case fell
apart on this point a nd
Blennerhassett was found
innocent of treason . Tupper
wrote a poem about his
a ss oc i at io n wit h
Blennerhassett : '' Old
Blanny's boats, most careless
float, brim full of death and
treason! This band so bold,
the night being cold, and
blacksmith's shop being
handy ; around the forge they
drink and gorge on whiskey
and peach brandy ."
Before Tupper left the ship
business. he built two

gunboats for the goverrunent.
1'hese boats were used in the
War of 1812.
It was in 1809 that Tupper
came to Gallipolis and
established himself in the
store busin ess at Second and
State streets. Coming wi th
Tupper was his wife Bethia
Putnam Tupper whom he
married in 1804. During the
War of 181 2 Tupper wsa
appointed Brigadie r General
of one part of the Ohio
militia. Tupper was ~ut in
charge of the American forts
between Urbana and the lake
(Erie). In 1813 Tupper
defeated about 150 Indians on
the Maumee Hi ver .
After the war Tupper
returned to Gallipolis to his
store business. In 1813 he
served as president of the
ci ty . He also ran for
Congress, and served as a
state representative and as
an officer of Gallia Academy.
111e story is told that
when a ferry was established
between Pt. Pleasant and
Ohio , r esid ents of Pt.
Pleasant objecled and tried
to put the ferry out of
business. Tupper strapped on
his sword and went to Pt.
Pleasa nt where he borrowed
a horse and rode up and down
the street in front of tJJe ferry
landing.
The fe rr y stayed in
business. Tupper died in
Gallipolis in t824. His wife
lived until 1858.

STORE HOURS
MON.-SAI.

8 AM-10 PM

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SU~DAJ

298
. SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OHIO

Prices Effective
Thru July 3, 1976

Composer Mercer dies
LOS ANGELES (UP!) _ orchestras of Paul Whiteman with Glenn Wallichs a nd
Composer Johnny Mercer, and Benny Goodman, and Buddy De Sylva.
who produced a multitude of made some hits such as
Funeral arrangements
popular songs that were on " Lazy Bones" with Bing were pending at Pier ce
the lips of millions, died Crosby.
Brothers Mortuary in
. Friday at his home in Bel-Air.
He went to New York in Hollywood.
He was 66 .
1929 to try to get on the stage
During the "Garrick Gaie·
Mercer was discharged but worked in Wall St. for a ti es,'' Mercer met and
fr.om Huntington Memorial wtUle and wrote songs in his married Elizabeth "Ginger"
Hospital in Pasadena last spare time. His first hit was Meehan . They had · two
March after undergoing "Out ·of Breath, Scared to children, a da ughter,
brain surgery for removal of DeatJJ of You ," written for Amanda, and a son, John.
Amanda
was ' the
a benign tumor .
the Garrick Gaieties, a
inspiration for a song ca lled
HewenttohisBel-Airhome . musical show.
to recuperate and was
One of his all·time favorites "Mandy Is Two,"
He became a big star on
"Accentuate
the
reported at the time in "fair was
condition."
Positive" which he said he radio, singing with "Your Hit
Parade," a popular Saturday
The surgery was last wrote for his psychiatrist.
October and he spent many
"Atchison, Topeka and night show sponsored by
montJJs undergoing various santa Fe" won an Academy Lucky Strike cigarettes.
He wrote the lyrics for the
forms of therapy.
Award as· did three others
He was born in savannah, "Cool, Cool, Cool of the movie "Old Man Rhythm" in
Ga.andwrotehisfirstsongat Evening," ' 'Moon River ," the early 1930s and other
the age of 15 for his sister, and . "Days of Wine and songs such as " Jeepers
Creepers, " " Pardon My
entitled "Sister Suzy Struts Roses."
Her Stuff." He went on to
Some of his other hits were: Southern Accent," "You
write 1,500 songs and 75 of "Goodie, Goodie," "That Old Must Have Been A Beautiful
th01&gt;e were hits.
Black Magic," "You Were Baby!" "Too Marvelous for
Mercer was a singer as well Never Lovelier," and Words," " Angels Sing,"
"Blues In the Night," and
as a composer of both music "Laura."
and lyrics. He sang with the
He was one of the •lt...aw-a.' '
organizers of Capitol Records

USDA Choice Beef

GROUND
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or more

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Four-day celebration planned at Krodel Park

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Boys, The Laurel Mountain
Boys, The Appalachian
Mountaineers, The Blue
Grass Gospel Boys and Ber·
nard . Connolly and the
Kanawha Valley Ramblers.
The bluegrass musicians will
perform Friday, July 2 from
7 p.m. untilll p.m., Saturday
July 3, from 3 p.m. until 7
p.m. and 7:30 p.m. to 11:30
p.m. In addition they will
play on the Mason County
Courthouse steps on Satur·
day, July 3 at I: 30 p.m. prior
to the parade which will
begin at 2 p.m.
A Bicentennial Ball will be
held at the National Guard
Annory from 9 p.m. until I
a.m. with music by the
nationally known Les and
Larry Elgart Orchestra.
Tickets at the door may be
purchased for $19.76 per
couple. This event is spon·
sored by the Pleasant Valley
I Do It EVery T I· me
Hospital Auxiliary and the
r.;;------'-1T--:;:i=i7::::-"'\'\io#:~:--::--l Bicentennial Commission.
Advance tickets are being
~~ . sold for $17.76 at various
business places.
A full day Sunday, July 4
'i'--n-11'71 will open with a Flag Raising
Ceremony at Tu·Endie-Wei
Park and community church
services. Back at Krodel
Park the ox roast will be ser·
ved at II :30 a.m. At noon,
Christine Guthrie will
provide organ selections' and
again at 7 p.m. that evening.
Field events under the direction of Ron Oldaker, City
&lt;WtiS&lt;ll Recreation Director will
begin at I p.m. and will
feature races, horseshoe pit·
ching, frisbee throws, hula
hoop contests, greased Jx.&gt;le, .
I and various other activtties.
A batting cage will be r-un by
the Little League and a
Dunking Machine by the
Jaycees
will add to the
' 7"-K7lr
17AII VEii'&amp;JVSK'(,
merriment.
2 {)fj 72"'P .ST.,
Beginning at 2 p.m. there
-'~O ·BiiRGE/1, N·.Twill be another Gospel ~r·
POINT PLEASANT - The
City of Point Pleasant is
sponsoring a four day
celebration july 2-5 to com·
memorate the nation's Bicentennial Birthday. Most of the
events will be centered
around Krodel Park and the
reco!IStructed Fort Randolph
iii which a stage for en·
tertainers has been built.
A second slage located
near the lake will also be
used for entertainment.
There will be a seating shor·
!age so persons are invited to
bring lawn chairs for their
comfort.
The Isaac Walton League
and the Point Pleasant
Woman's Club will be serving
an Ox Roast with all the trim·
mings and various other con·
cessions will be sold. Picnic

tables and shelters are also
available at the park for
family picnics. The beach
and swimming areas will be
open and the · newly pur·
chased paddle boats will be in
operation.
Activities will begin at the
park .on Friday, July 2, at S
p.m. with Gospel Hannony
groups perfonning. At 7 p.m.
untill! p.m. the R. W. Skeens
Blue Grass Festival, which is
being held in conjunction with
other activities, will begin at
Fort Randolph.
There will be an admission
charge for this affair.
Various entertainers will be
perfonning at the Fort iii·
eluding R. W. Skeens and the
Great Meadow Boys, Jinuny
Likins and the Lewis County

mony group perform. The Bllick Knight Band under the
National Guard will demon· direction of Gerald Stewart.
strate a floating jeep on the lnunediately following this
lake, and _there will be canoe patriotic product ion ,
races and a kayak demon· fireworks over the lake will ·
stratton on the lake followed be displayed.
Monday, July 5, is a day
by a tug-Qf·war. ·
At 4:30 p.m. the Country especially . for the young
Umits from Jackson County, people. Swimming and pad·
W.Va. will entertain followed die boats will open at noon .
at 5:45 p.m. by more Gospel From 7to 9 p.m. that evening
a beach party and rock con·
Harmony.
One of the highlights or the ccrt featuring the musical
weekend will be the presen· group Frockmorton, will be
tation of the Black Knight held at Krodel Lake.
The city of Point Pleasant
Revue in Fort Randolph at 9
welcomes
all area residents
p.m, This very popular
and
visitors
to come to their
musical, I Hear America
park
and
celebrate the
Singing, is presented by the
nation's
bi~thday
with them .
Point Pleasant High School .

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GAY 90's 20

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COUPON

COUPON

ZEST A

ELF CANNED 12 OZ.

POP

lOcAN~~ w;c

WIDE SELECTION

Limit 1 Coupon Per ~ustomer
Good Only .At Powell's
Offer Expires: 7·3·76

GROUPINGS
NOW

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

1

1•10tl•

The Fabric Shop
McCall's, Kwick -Sew, Slmplicily Pal terns
Ill W. Second
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-2284

COUPON

COUPON

GOLD MEDAL

KRAFT

i &amp; Cheese;

FLOUR

59¢
5
lb.
bag

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Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer' :
Good Only At Powell's
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Offer Expires: 7·3-76

$1
5
7'14 oz.
bxs.

W/C
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Limit 1 Coupon Per t..wsro,mer'l,

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires : 7-3-76

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�10::-TheSWidayTimes · Sentinel, Sunday, June '1.7,1976

Nuptial vows read

J

TO PERFORM AT RfVEH llECHicATIONFESTIVAl , The Waymark Gospel Sin gers
. will appear on tJJe 1976 Gallipolis Hiver llrcreation F c~ t1 val prugn1111 on Sunday, J uly 4, betw een 7:30 and 9 p.m. on the park front. Made up of individuals from nearby West Yllw ma,
tJJe Waymark singers have appeared tluuughuut the m ra '"' nu111crous occasions. They
have prepa red a specie I bicentcnnw l progr,un fu r the Gal hpults fe sl1' .II
·
.

Families on HUD .will receive larger
COLUMBUS - A number
of people in Ohio who are ·
receiving rental supplements
through the federa l Housing
and Urban Development
1HUDI program are due for
an eKtra benefi t in food
stamps, according to the Ohio
Department of Publi c
Welfare.

In compl iance wiU1 a U. S.
Court of Appeals ruling, the
United States Dep&lt;JrtnJen l of
Ag ri c ul t ur e , which
administers the food st:unp
program, has notified all
sta te welfare depa rtmenls
that HUD supplements me
not to be considered as
" income1 ' i·n c:i:llcula ting food

_.,. ._ 330 Second Avenue

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'

MiddlcP?rt , who wore a blue
goJI'O w1th a whtte hat and
had ~ co rsage of blue
carna tiUnS. Also regtsten ng
guests
wa s
Tammy
Mossman, Pomeroy, . m a
yellow gown wtth wh1te hat
·and
yellow
car nation
corsage. . ,
f lower gtrls were Donna
Kay .Hysell , Pomeroy, and
_Va lene Blake, Letart,_W. Va .
l'hey were atttrcd m long
pmk dresses with wh tt e
button accent and butterfly
sleeves, and ca rried baskets
of carnation petals.
Timmy Bla ke • Poin t
Pleasa nt, was the ringbearer.
Tom Soulsby, Pomeroy, was
best man and the ushers were
Don Hysell of Pomeroy '
Houtc 4, and Keith Wood, Rt.
1, Long Bottom.
h
For
her
daug ter 's
wedding, Mrs. Hysell wore a
long purple dress with a
purple corsage. Mrs . Blake
was in a ye llow gown and had
a matching corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the
Bradford Church of Christ
base ment imm ediate ly
following the ceremony. The
bride's cake··carried out the

Golf Skirts and 1lops

~ - - c_r.c.:
IGallipolis, Ohio--.

eHOME IMPROVEMENT
LOANS

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stamp
eli gibi lity and
IJ&lt;ne!ils. The USDAdirective
is retroa ctive to Octobe r 8,
1975.
As H result of this ruling,
Ohio fam ilies getting HUD
benefits may receive higher
foo d sta mp bonu ses, the
Welfare
Depa rtm e nt
I'Cporletl.
Und er
th e
retroactive effect, some may
receive extra food stamp

Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Blake
rainbow color scheme of the
wedding. Serving were Ellen
Tucker, Mrs. Sandy Blake
and Dorothy Blake .
The couple resides at Route
4, Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Blake is a
graduate of Meigs High
School. Mr . Blake, a graduate
of Waham.a High School and
the Gallipolis Business

College, . is ~mployed as
manager of the meat depart·
ment at Powell's Super.valu.
Out-of-town-· guests
attending the wedding were
Mrs. Gladys Bowers, Jackie
Bowers, Guysville; Margie
England, Rita Stover,
Stewart; Dorothy Blake and
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Blake,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

rebales, cmd some may get

cash reba tes, according to
the Department.
Tom McDowell , Chief of the
Bureau of f oo d Sta mps in the
Sta te Welfare Department,
said all co unty welfare
departme nts have been
notified of the changes and
have been instructed how to
ca lculate
food stamp
retroactive benefits as well
as the new fo od stamp
eligibili ty requirements and
benefit1 for those receiving
HUD supplements.

officers
installed
MIDDLEPORT - The 14th
annual installation of offi ce1·s
of the Meigs Chapter, Order
or DeMolay , was held Friday
night at the Masonic Temple
in Middleport.
Elected officers installed
during the ceremonies were

Carl Myers, master cow1·
cilor ; Mike Sibley, senior
councilor, and Dick Owen,
jLmior councilor.
Appointed offi cers installed were Steve Harrison,
scribe· treasurer ; Dennis
Wolfe, senior deacon; Eric
Scites, junior deacon ; Scott
Reuter , marshal ; Dallas
Sayre, senior stewart; Shawn
Layne, jw1ior steward; Randy Keller, chaplain; . Pave
White, sentinel and alffioner ;
Keith Kraueter, standard
bearer ; George Knighting,
fi rst preceptor ; Randy
Taylor, second preceptor ;
Oliver Taylor. third precet&gt;lor; Mike Hendrickson, four·
. tJJ preceptor; ,!&gt;teve Rou.&lt;;h,
fifth preceptor; Ed Haycraft,
sixth preceptor, and Paul
Gauze, seventh preceptor.
Bill Quickel, Cheshire,
"Dad' ' of the local chapter,
gave the welcome and in·
stalling officers included Bob
Kutschbach, Columbus, in·
stalling offi cer; Charlie
Baker, Ironton, senior coun~
cilor; Calvin Smith, Sidney,

I

Force."
INSTALLATION - Pictured at friday Jlight's 14th semi-annual installation of the
Meigs Chapter of the Order of DcMolay at the Middleport Masonic ')'emple are, 1to r, Mike
Sibley, Gallipolis, senior councilor; Merri Ault, Middleport, 11th District DeMo lay Sweet·
heart; Carl Myers, Cheshire, master councilor; Mary Sue Zemities, Ohio DcMolay sweet·
heart, and Dick Owen, Middlcpart, junior councilor.
junior councilor;
Scott
Reuter, Middleport , mar·
shal; Bill Richards, Colurn·
bus, chaplain ; Don Vaughan,
Middleport, senior deacon.
Introduced were Mary Sue
Zen1ities, Ohio State
DeMolay sweetheart; Merri
Ault, lith district. sweet·
heart; Kathy Miller, organist
and Pomeroy Bethel62, Job's
Daughters, guardian; Angie
Sisson, Pomeroy, Ohio State
Bethel librarian; Kricket
Kutschback , Columbus,
Buckeye Priory sweetheart ;
John Kerr, Pomeroy, and

Chuck Perroud, Gallipolis; director and Meigs Chapter
senior DeMolays; "Mom" advisor.
•
Lois Boggs, Columbus,
Members of the local ad·
president; "Mom" Susanne visory council are Hennan
Kutschbach, Cheshire, first Carson, chainnan; Robert V.
vice president; "Morn" Hilda King, Darrell Bechtel, Harry
Quickel, second vice Chesher, James Euler,
president, all of the Ohio · Roger Keller, Theodore
Federation of DeMolay Reed, Eldon Kraeuter,
Mothers Clubs; "Dad" R. V. Thomas Edwards and
King, Middleport, 11th Williaiil Quickel.
district governor ; "Dad" Bill
A buffet dinner was served
Kutschbach, fourth district before ·the installation and
governor, Colwnbus ; "Dad" cake, punch and other light
John Perdurn, 20th district refreshments were served at
deputy , Chillicothe; "Dad" a reception following the in·
Bill Quickel, state L.C.C. stallation.

''When women are there,
they will provide a certain
refinement
to
the
atmosphere," Clark said.
"There will be less profane
language . Manners might
pick up. Competition will be

Prizes of $100 offered in talent competition

is July 14th
ADD HESS
PHONE - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - .~CT

AND MUSIC TO BE USED ____ _ _ _ _ _ __

PEHSONS MAKING UP ACT ______________
ACCOMPANIST - - --

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

Category (check one&gt; Adult _____ Youth------Mail to .Joan Stewart, P. 0. Box 141, Rutland, Ohio.

Meth0 dzsts
• annrove b dr.ge t

at 742·2333. The registration
alson\aybehandledbycomU
pletmg the form below. A
'}/}:/
piano will be on hand but acts
LAKESIDE, Ohio (UP!) - asked to raise these funds to
should have their own ac· Arecord budget of more than help support the programs
companist.
$8.1 million has been ap- and work of the denomination
proved for the coming year at home and abroad.
by the East Ohio Annual Con·
As one of the largest Uniled
ference of The United Methodist conferences within
Methodist Church.
the denomination it has
The conference's ;8,137,793 traditionally been a heavy
budget, approved Friday, contributor to missionary
represents a $2,053,000 in· and charity programs. Over
crease over the previous $3.2 million has been
year's budgel.
designated for those pur·
The 920 local churches poses next year.
within the conference will be
Overwhelming approval

New-town dilemmas lade
alter a WELCOME WAGON call.
As your Hostess, it's my job to help you make the
most of ~our new n11~t1borhood. Our shoppini areas.
Community opportumtles. Special attractions. Lots of facts

to save you time and money,

·

Plus a basket of Kilts lor your family .
I'll bellsteninllor your call.

~~~P.ll
'I

New deadline
for tap fee

RUTLAND BICENTENNIAL TALENT CONTEST
NAME __________________________________

Oetting Settled
made simple.

SALE!

,,

Among those who will be
greeting tJJe women as tJJey
arrive at t~e 18,000-acre
academy, located in the
scenic foothills near 14,110.
foot Pikes Peak, will be Lt.
Betty Price, a member of the
Commandant of Cadets
special planning staff for
women.
Lt. Gen. Albert P. Clark,
former
academy
superintendent now retired,
predicted in 1972 that women
cadets were inevitable and
'that they probably could
leach
their
male
counterparts a lesson or two.

Ed.
Tupper,
war
hero,
Beat...
~
Of the Bend ··:--~ · ran a Gallipolis store
~a

EAST MEIGS - The Tuppers Plains - Chester Water
District is announcing the
closing date for taps under
the new extension is July 14,
1976.
In order to qualify for an
extension tap, the potential
customer must be at least .
50 ft. from an existing main.
This 50 feet is measured from
the center of the existing
main line to the nearest edge
of the customer's property. ·
In order to be counted on
the extension, a customer
must have paid his or her tap
fee and signed a user's
agreement prior to July U.
Customers desiring to pur·
chase a tap after that date on
the new elrtension will be
required to pay the full $275
tap fee.
For further infonnation,
any potenttal customers may
call the Water Office at 98&amp;3315 and talk to Lindsey
Lyons or Albert Martin.

REVIVAL UNDERWAY
GALUPOUS - A revival
is underway at the Mt.
Carmel
Church
with
evangelist Bob Allbright.
SerVIces begin at 7:30 p.m.
Pastor Roger Allen invites
the public.
was _given to a $3,230,336 apportiorunent from tJJe local
churches for Copeland Oaks
the
church-related
retirement center in Sebring.
Minimwn salary support
for pastors serving within th~
conference was set at $8,00iJ
,cash plus housing and
allowances, an increase of$400ayear.
II

By James Sands
Gallla Historical Society
GALLIPOLIS - One of the
most interesting of Gallipolis'
early settlers was General
Edward W. Tupper, son of
Benjamin Tupper, one of tbe
founders of Marietta . BotJJ
Ed and Ben Tupper became
generals in their lives. Ed
was a hero of the War of 1812
and Ben was a Revolutionary
hero.
Ben Tupper fought at tbe
hattleofBemisHeights, West
Point, and Monmouth, where
his horse was shot out from
under him.
Ed Tupper was born in
Chesterfield, Hampshire
County, Massachusetts in
1771 and came to Marietta
with his father · in 1788.
Learning surveying from his
father, he worked at this
trade in Ohio··for about 10
_years. Tupper also worked as
a clerk of the Common Pleas
and Supreme Courts. ·
In lBO! Tupper arranged for
ship carpenters to come to
Marietta from Philadelphia
to build master schooners.
These schooners would be
loaded with Ohio products
and sailed to New Orleans by
river and then across tbe
ocean. Tupper believed tbe
schooners to be faster than
flatboats . These ocean going
vessels must have been
strange sights on tJJe Ohio
river. Tupper also built 3 or 4
frigates.

POMEROY - Before the Big Bend Regalia fades out of
sight for the year, we'd like to collUllend George Arnott and
Ken Gilkey who served as coordinators forth~ event and Mrs.
Lynn Crow, Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce secretary. They
did a great job in getting it all together and too bad, that it had
to be such a rainy weekend. The parade, as far as the regatta
events go, was the "best yet" as far as I'm concerned.
MRS. KATHRYN MORA has been returned to her home on
, Route 7 after an unusual experience.
Mrs. Milra.who has been hospitalized five times since April
25, was admitted to St. Joseph Hospilal where sbe was to
undergo hack surgery. She had made the required mental and
emotional adjustment but before the operation could be
performed, the d&lt;X;tor became ill and so the surgery has been
cancelled until July 24.
MARTHA STRUBLE has been presented a macrame
planter from the Winding Trail Garden Club, the result of one
of tJJe club's Big Bend Regatta Weekend projects. The planter
couldn't be in better hands .

THE OHIO SENATE THROUGH Sen. Oakley Collins has
passed a resolution in tribute to tJJe memory of Jeanne.Morgan
of Middleport.
The resolution reads in part: "Jeanne Morgan was a person of great convictions. Her
optimism and concern for others were continaually
demonstrated by her involvement in civic affairs and
dedication to help elderly citizens. Her passing is an
irreparable loss to the Meigs County collUllunity.
"Jeanne Morgan served on the village council of
Middleport and as a Republican committee woman. She
campaigned vigorously for outstanding candidates to insure
proper functioning of the electoral process, and her efforts
earned her the respect and admiration of members of all
politiCl)l parties. ·
"This outstanding Ohio citizen demonstrated complete
courage and unshakable optimism, even during her illness.
Her life stands as an example of selfless and continual caring
for others and 'her kindness and co~ern will long be
remembered."
The resolution concludes with an expression of sympathy
to Mrs. Morgan's family and friends.
JIM CLELAND, PRESIDENT of the Ohio Valley
Fellowship, Inc., alcohol.and drug abuse program for Meigs
County, recently completed the course of drug studies
sponsored by the Ohio Bureau of Drug Abuse.
The Ohio Drug Studies Institute was held \his year at
Otterbein College in .Westerville. Several nationally known
experts on drug abuse conducted workshops on their varied
spe~i.alties~.d Jim presented a workshop on alcoholism and
the built-'". commurut_y resources for recovery.
. Jun srud tt ts the optmon of most of the experts that ~lcohol·
ts the most abused drug among all ages ~four population and
~lcohol1$111_ls a disease that can h~ve a htgh rate or. recpvery.
The costs 11J money, hwnan suflermg and the ve_ry lives of our
people ?emand that we make _a ~tal c?llUllttment to the
preventiOn and treatment of lJlts disease, 1Cleland says,
MARILYN POWELL, ONE of our most pleasant contacts,
reports tJJat she was most impressed the other evening with
tJJe bicentennial spirit which she noted as she drove intll
Antiquity.
•
At the entrance of the collUllunity, Mrs. Darlene Graham
and her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Barry Allen,
have taken two large truck tires, painted tbem in red, white
and blue and planted them with petunias in the same. colors. A
small building which Mrs. Graham uses for her sales post
during the sununer has been done iii the red, white and. blue
color scheme and the Graham mall box also is done patriotic.

THE FREE JULY 2 CANCER clinic for Meigs County
women has been cancelled. Women scheduled for July 2 will be
examined instead on July 9. Those who had July 2 appoint·
ments are to call Jan Judge, evenings, 992-5832 or the cancer
office in Middleport from I to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays or Thursdays, 992-7531.

keen."

RUTLAND - A talent
show with $100 to be offered
to winners he~ s been
scheduled for 8 p.m. on Mon·
day, July 5, as a part of the
Rutlllnd three day weekend
celebration.
Talent will be judged in
three age groups which are
up to 17 years of age, and
those 18 and older, with
prizes of $25,$1 5 and $10 to be
awarded in each age group.
The winners will be selected
by a panel of judges rather
than by applause. Acts which
might have a ~ombination of
the two age groups will be
placed in a designated
category by the chairman of
tJJe event, Mrs . Joan Stewart.
Immediate regish·ation is
requested for the talent show
to be staged outdoors in the
conununity pa.rk. Those interested may phone 742·2421 ,
Mrs. Stewart, of Jack Walker

,,

By JOHN J. SANKO
· AIR FORCE ACADEMY,
Colo. (UP! )- T~ spit-and·
polish tradition of the nation 's ·
youngest military school will
remain unchanged , but the
ranks of tJJe cadets in blue
will undergo a dramatic and
lasting transformation this
week .
Monday 1,60Q "doolies"as they call first-year
students at the Air Force
Academy- arrive . And lor
the first time in U.S. military
school history, women will be
among them.
President Ford issued an
executive order last year
allowing women to apply to
the nation 's three military
academies. The Air Force
Academy will beat rivals
West Point and the Naval
Academy by one week in the
admission of women.
A spokesman at the
Academy said the new
cadets - including 158
women-will be processed
and sworn in Monday. In
addition, they will receive the
traditional short. GI haircuta butch for the men and and a
not..so.short, off the collar
style for women.
california leads all states
with 23 women represen·
tatives . Texas and Virginia
have eight apiece.
The Academy has been
preparing for the women
cadets and has assigned 18
Air Force officer and enlisted
women to the athletic,
military training and faculty
·
staffs.
"We want professional Air
Force· women to be very
visible to the women cadets,''
said Lt. Gen. James R. Allen,
academy superintendent.
"They will be tangible proof
that women have a
tremendous future in the Air

all~cations thru welfareDeMolay

food stamp

,-;::~'.;;

POMEHOY _ Miss Linda
Hysell , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. r.uy Hyse ll, Pomeroy
Houle 4 Hnd Chuck Blake
son of ~I rs. Wilma Blake:
Clifton, w. Vu ., and the late
Walter Blake, were married
May 22 at 6 p.m. at the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Jack Perry officiated at the
double ring ceremony. Mu.•ic
was by Miss Bonnie Wood and
included " Love Story ."
Arrange ments of carnations
decorated the church
Given in ma rriage ·by her
fa ther, the bride wore a gown
wi th sheer sleeves and wh ite
pem·l .button accent on the
bodice and the sleeves. She
wore a bouffan t veil of
illusion and carried a bouquet
of rainbow carnations.
Rt . 1,
Mrs. D1.ana 8 mg,
Long Bottom, was th e matron
of honor . She wore a lavender
gown with a matching hat
and ca rried a bouquet of
lave nd er flowe rs with
strea mers.
Miss Wood, pianist, was in
a mint green dress with a
white ha 1 and wore a
ca rnation corsage tipped in
mmt green. Guests were
reg istered by Reeky Painter.

Women in
new class
of doolies

11 - The Sunday Tinles -Sentinel, Sanday, June 'll, 1976

There were too ma ny
probl ems to ove rcome in this
business, however, so by 1816
shipbuilding at Mrietta had
ended . Shipbuilding was
revived again in the 1830s
under different ownership.
Factories were built a t
Marietta and Pt. Pleasa nt,
andarope makingfactory (to
supply rigging) was built at
Gallipolis on F ront and
Locust streets.
Tupper became involves in
the Burr conspiracy in 1806.
Tupper was the last roan to
see Blennerhassett befo re
Harman left for the south to
meet Burr. At the trial of
Blennerhassett in 1808 the
prosecution claim ed tha t
Blennerhassett's men had
threatened to kill Tupper.
This statement proved to be a
lie . Tupper was n~ v e r
consulted about this incident,
but second hand testimony
was accepted.
The prosecution's case fell
apart on this point a nd
Blennerhassett was found
innocent of treason . Tupper
wrote a poem about his
a ss oc i at io n wit h
Blennerhassett : '' Old
Blanny's boats, most careless
float, brim full of death and
treason! This band so bold,
the night being cold, and
blacksmith's shop being
handy ; around the forge they
drink and gorge on whiskey
and peach brandy ."
Before Tupper left the ship
business. he built two

gunboats for the goverrunent.
1'hese boats were used in the
War of 1812.
It was in 1809 that Tupper
came to Gallipolis and
established himself in the
store busin ess at Second and
State streets. Coming wi th
Tupper was his wife Bethia
Putnam Tupper whom he
married in 1804. During the
War of 181 2 Tupper wsa
appointed Brigadie r General
of one part of the Ohio
militia. Tupper was ~ut in
charge of the American forts
between Urbana and the lake
(Erie). In 1813 Tupper
defeated about 150 Indians on
the Maumee Hi ver .
After the war Tupper
returned to Gallipolis to his
store business. In 1813 he
served as president of the
ci ty . He also ran for
Congress, and served as a
state representative and as
an officer of Gallia Academy.
111e story is told that
when a ferry was established
between Pt. Pleasant and
Ohio , r esid ents of Pt.
Pleasant objecled and tried
to put the ferry out of
business. Tupper strapped on
his sword and went to Pt.
Pleasa nt where he borrowed
a horse and rode up and down
the street in front of tJJe ferry
landing.
The fe rr y stayed in
business. Tupper died in
Gallipolis in t824. His wife
lived until 1858.

STORE HOURS
MON.-SAI.

8 AM-10 PM

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SU~DAJ

298
. SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OHIO

Prices Effective
Thru July 3, 1976

Composer Mercer dies
LOS ANGELES (UP!) _ orchestras of Paul Whiteman with Glenn Wallichs a nd
Composer Johnny Mercer, and Benny Goodman, and Buddy De Sylva.
who produced a multitude of made some hits such as
Funeral arrangements
popular songs that were on " Lazy Bones" with Bing were pending at Pier ce
the lips of millions, died Crosby.
Brothers Mortuary in
. Friday at his home in Bel-Air.
He went to New York in Hollywood.
He was 66 .
1929 to try to get on the stage
During the "Garrick Gaie·
Mercer was discharged but worked in Wall St. for a ti es,'' Mercer met and
fr.om Huntington Memorial wtUle and wrote songs in his married Elizabeth "Ginger"
Hospital in Pasadena last spare time. His first hit was Meehan . They had · two
March after undergoing "Out ·of Breath, Scared to children, a da ughter,
brain surgery for removal of DeatJJ of You ," written for Amanda, and a son, John.
Amanda
was ' the
a benign tumor .
the Garrick Gaieties, a
inspiration for a song ca lled
HewenttohisBel-Airhome . musical show.
to recuperate and was
One of his all·time favorites "Mandy Is Two,"
He became a big star on
"Accentuate
the
reported at the time in "fair was
condition."
Positive" which he said he radio, singing with "Your Hit
Parade," a popular Saturday
The surgery was last wrote for his psychiatrist.
October and he spent many
"Atchison, Topeka and night show sponsored by
montJJs undergoing various santa Fe" won an Academy Lucky Strike cigarettes.
He wrote the lyrics for the
forms of therapy.
Award as· did three others
He was born in savannah, "Cool, Cool, Cool of the movie "Old Man Rhythm" in
Ga.andwrotehisfirstsongat Evening," ' 'Moon River ," the early 1930s and other
the age of 15 for his sister, and . "Days of Wine and songs such as " Jeepers
Creepers, " " Pardon My
entitled "Sister Suzy Struts Roses."
Her Stuff." He went on to
Some of his other hits were: Southern Accent," "You
write 1,500 songs and 75 of "Goodie, Goodie," "That Old Must Have Been A Beautiful
th01&gt;e were hits.
Black Magic," "You Were Baby!" "Too Marvelous for
Mercer was a singer as well Never Lovelier," and Words," " Angels Sing,"
"Blues In the Night," and
as a composer of both music "Laura."
and lyrics. He sang with the
He was one of the •lt...aw-a.' '
organizers of Capitol Records

USDA Choice Beef

GROUND
EEF
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or more

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Four-day celebration planned at Krodel Park

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Boys, The Laurel Mountain
Boys, The Appalachian
Mountaineers, The Blue
Grass Gospel Boys and Ber·
nard . Connolly and the
Kanawha Valley Ramblers.
The bluegrass musicians will
perform Friday, July 2 from
7 p.m. untilll p.m., Saturday
July 3, from 3 p.m. until 7
p.m. and 7:30 p.m. to 11:30
p.m. In addition they will
play on the Mason County
Courthouse steps on Satur·
day, July 3 at I: 30 p.m. prior
to the parade which will
begin at 2 p.m.
A Bicentennial Ball will be
held at the National Guard
Annory from 9 p.m. until I
a.m. with music by the
nationally known Les and
Larry Elgart Orchestra.
Tickets at the door may be
purchased for $19.76 per
couple. This event is spon·
sored by the Pleasant Valley
I Do It EVery T I· me
Hospital Auxiliary and the
r.;;------'-1T--:;:i=i7::::-"'\'\io#:~:--::--l Bicentennial Commission.
Advance tickets are being
~~ . sold for $17.76 at various
business places.
A full day Sunday, July 4
'i'--n-11'71 will open with a Flag Raising
Ceremony at Tu·Endie-Wei
Park and community church
services. Back at Krodel
Park the ox roast will be ser·
ved at II :30 a.m. At noon,
Christine Guthrie will
provide organ selections' and
again at 7 p.m. that evening.
Field events under the direction of Ron Oldaker, City
&lt;WtiS&lt;ll Recreation Director will
begin at I p.m. and will
feature races, horseshoe pit·
ching, frisbee throws, hula
hoop contests, greased Jx.&gt;le, .
I and various other activtties.
A batting cage will be r-un by
the Little League and a
Dunking Machine by the
Jaycees
will add to the
' 7"-K7lr
17AII VEii'&amp;JVSK'(,
merriment.
2 {)fj 72"'P .ST.,
Beginning at 2 p.m. there
-'~O ·BiiRGE/1, N·.Twill be another Gospel ~r·
POINT PLEASANT - The
City of Point Pleasant is
sponsoring a four day
celebration july 2-5 to com·
memorate the nation's Bicentennial Birthday. Most of the
events will be centered
around Krodel Park and the
reco!IStructed Fort Randolph
iii which a stage for en·
tertainers has been built.
A second slage located
near the lake will also be
used for entertainment.
There will be a seating shor·
!age so persons are invited to
bring lawn chairs for their
comfort.
The Isaac Walton League
and the Point Pleasant
Woman's Club will be serving
an Ox Roast with all the trim·
mings and various other con·
cessions will be sold. Picnic

tables and shelters are also
available at the park for
family picnics. The beach
and swimming areas will be
open and the · newly pur·
chased paddle boats will be in
operation.
Activities will begin at the
park .on Friday, July 2, at S
p.m. with Gospel Hannony
groups perfonning. At 7 p.m.
untill! p.m. the R. W. Skeens
Blue Grass Festival, which is
being held in conjunction with
other activities, will begin at
Fort Randolph.
There will be an admission
charge for this affair.
Various entertainers will be
perfonning at the Fort iii·
eluding R. W. Skeens and the
Great Meadow Boys, Jinuny
Likins and the Lewis County

mony group perform. The Bllick Knight Band under the
National Guard will demon· direction of Gerald Stewart.
strate a floating jeep on the lnunediately following this
lake, and _there will be canoe patriotic product ion ,
races and a kayak demon· fireworks over the lake will ·
stratton on the lake followed be displayed.
Monday, July 5, is a day
by a tug-Qf·war. ·
At 4:30 p.m. the Country especially . for the young
Umits from Jackson County, people. Swimming and pad·
W.Va. will entertain followed die boats will open at noon .
at 5:45 p.m. by more Gospel From 7to 9 p.m. that evening
a beach party and rock con·
Harmony.
One of the highlights or the ccrt featuring the musical
weekend will be the presen· group Frockmorton, will be
tation of the Black Knight held at Krodel Lake.
The city of Point Pleasant
Revue in Fort Randolph at 9
welcomes
all area residents
p.m, This very popular
and
visitors
to come to their
musical, I Hear America
park
and
celebrate the
Singing, is presented by the
nation's
bi~thday
with them .
Point Pleasant High School .

••

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•

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BETSY ROSS
GAY 90's 20

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oz.

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BREAD.... ~ ...~.
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----

1

COUPON

COUPON

ZEST A

ELF CANNED 12 OZ.

POP

lOcAN~~ w;c

WIDE SELECTION

Limit 1 Coupon Per ~ustomer
Good Only .At Powell's
Offer Expires: 7·3·76

GROUPINGS
NOW

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

1

1•10tl•

The Fabric Shop
McCall's, Kwick -Sew, Slmplicily Pal terns
Ill W. Second
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-2284

COUPON

COUPON

GOLD MEDAL

KRAFT

i &amp; Cheese;

FLOUR

59¢
5
lb.
bag

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Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer' :
Good Only At Powell's
· ·i
Offer Expires: 7·3-76

$1
5
7'14 oz.
bxs.

W/C
.

Limit 1 Coupon Per t..wsro,mer'l,

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires : 7-3-76

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12 - l'heSUndav Times -Sentinei .Sundav

Trail of enemy dead left ·by Christian forces
r"~~~:1:5~::·· · · ;
:;:: WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Republican Party is !.:
\ fallinll far short of iis f\Uld raising goal this year because ;·;

LED VISITORS - Left to ri ght are Glenn Dillman,
Harry Smith, Robert Kirby, State Director o£ Indiana

Visitors trace route of

Roush to speak

John Hunt Morgan

at celebration
RACINE + Stanley F.
Roush, fonnerly of Racine
and now of Springfield, Mo.,
will deliver a bicentennial address as a part of the
annual July 4th celebration of
Racine Village.
Some 17 United Methodist
Churches are cooperating in
staging the July 4 service at
11 a.m . at which Mr. Roush
will be guest speaker using as
his theme, "The Birthday of a
Nation."

A 1922 graduate o£ Racine
High School, Roush received
his AB degree fr om Ohio
Unlvez·sity in 1926 and has
owned and operated a ;uccessful loan and real estate
business in Springfield for
the past 34 years.
Mr. Roush is active in civic
a£fai rs having served on
Springfi eld City Co\Ulcil for
eight years and mayor
protem two years. He served
on the Springfield Ubrary
Board si.x years and as chairman of the building committee supervised the construction of two branch
libranes. He is now vice
president of the Ozark Empire Fair Board, one of the
largest fairs in the Middle
West.
He is a member of the First
Congregational Church and
teaches a Bible class there.
He served as state moderator
of the Missouri Conference
and on the slate board of
directors for IOyears.
Roush, married to the former Bertha Rose for 44
years, has a son, Philip who
is an electrica l engineer. He
and · his wife have three
granddaughters. Mr. Roush
hos been a reviewer for
Springfield newspaper for 25
years and has served on the
Springfield Symphony Board
for 15 years during which
time he hos seen the orchestra growing to 72 pieces.
At the age of 72, Roush shuns
retirement and actively
manages his own business.
As a port of the weekend
celebration, the fire department will sponsor the Del
Reeves and Good Time
Charlies from Nashville at 8
p.m. at the Sbuthern High
School on Saturday, July 3.
At noon on Sunday
following the outdoor service
in the stadillfD, the fire
department will have a
public chicken barbecue at
the fire station.
At 12:30 p.m. a garden
tractor pulled will be held at
the fire station under the
sponsorship of the Southeast
Ohio
Garden
Tractors
Pu!Jing Assn. A nag raising
ceremony at I :45 p.m. at the
high school will precede the
annual July 4th parade which
wlllleave the high school at 2.
Floats and other entries
will be judged and there will
be a first and second place
award for the best bicentennial theme among church

TOURING STUDENTS- Front , 1-r, are Harry Smzth,
Debbie Ca mpbell , Sa ndy Bauer , all from Connersville,
Indiana; Brian Cnune, Flora, Indiana ; Tammy Williams,
Owensborough, Ken tucky; Linda Craft, Fort Wayne,
Indiana ; Ron Schmucker, Spencerville, Indiana ; Sue
Bellew, Owensborough, Kentucky; Tom Ga tewood,

POMEROY -- Meags
County was host to 20 young
people or the state junior
historical societies of Kentucky and Indiana Thursday
evening and Friday.
The young people and their
chaperones were in Meigs
Co\Ulty to study the raid by
John Hunt Morgan. Thursday
evenmg the group met at tqe
Meigs Museum where C. E.
Blakeslee, president of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Soc iety, spoke on

Morgan 's Ka1d m Mei gs
county and Mike Gerlach
spoke on the new hi stori cal
wa ll of the museum
After spending the night at
the Meigs Inn, and following
brea kfast at Grow' s Steak
House rnday morning , the
visi tors were takell on a tour
of the cowzty following the
GALLIPOUS - Four per- Holzer Medical Center by a
path of Morgan via Rutland,
sons
were injured in a three SEOEMSambulance.
hock of Potneroy, Chester
ve
hicle
pile-up at 5: 15 p.m.
Petrie and Hill were cited
and to Buffington Island near
Friday
at
the jundion of Rt. to Municipal Court for failure
Portland
IGO and 35.
to stop within the assured
The Galha-Meigs Post clear distance.
State H1ghway Patrol said an
Two pe rsons were slightly
auto driven by Harve Ferrell, injured in an accident at 2:20
:!4, Rt. I, Bidwell, was struck p.m. Friday on Rt. 7 in Meigs
in the rear by a vehicle County where a tractorMIIiDLEPOF!'f - Randy Prescott and back in the driven by Ronald L. Petrie, trailer rig driven b) Roger K.
Phillips, formerly of Mid- I Plane No. J 152 Randy had 28, Rt. 2, Vinton. The Petri e Nichols, 26, McArthur, struck
dleport, one year out of the an engme failure. We don't caz was then struck in the the rear of a car operated by
Arizona Sta te University and know the secret of his suc- rear end by an auto operated Ethel A. Newman, 70, Midtaking private flying lessons, cess. but apparently he did by Rona ld K. Hill, 21, Bid- dleport.
got e&lt;tra marks for an everythmg .rzght. He landed well.
Mrs . New man and a
STANELY ROUSH
Injured were Gertrud e pl!ssenger, Usa Lemley; age
emergency landing made the plane m a field outside of
while he was building hours PRC Wi thout wrink le or Ferrell , 30, and Janice 7, Rt. 2, Cheshire, com·
groups ; first and second, for has li cense.
Ferrell , 12, passengers in the plained of minor inruries.
dent. "
bicentennial theme, nonRandy 1s the son of Mr. and Ferrell car and two They were not urunediately
in an azrfield newsletter
church groups ; a prize will was the followmg :
Mrs. Roger Phill ips They passengers in the Petrie treated.
be awarded tile best comvehicle, Denita J . Petrie, 24,
"The Distmguished Flying left Middleport about 1966.
Nichols was charged with
mercial entry and marchin g Cross for this year is awardand Ronald J. Petrie, J r., age failure to stop within the
\Ulit and there will be first, ed to Randy Phillips, along
5. They were taken to the
second and third place with an honorary grant of
awards for the best decorated about I ,000 hours of pilot-inbicycles.
com mand time for ex Games will get underway perience. While on an X-C
at 4 p.m. at the junior high
field and will include sack
races, greased pole, greased
pig and others.
,
At 7:30p.m. a church service will be held at the high
school an&lt;j at 10 p.m. there
will be a fireworks display .
Those who liave contributed
to make the fireworks
display possible are Jaymar
CHESHIRE - Robert E.
Coal, David Zirkle, Harold Swisher was appomled to fill
M. Smith, . Earl Adams, the une&lt;pared term of his
fullph Ours, Dale C. Wamcr father, Leo Swisher, as
Insurance Agency, Racine trustee Ill Cheshire 'l'wp.
PTO and the Racine Home- during a special trustees
National Bank, $100.
meeting Saturday.
Pete Simpson is serving as
Leo Swisher, who d1ed last
general chairman of the tw()o week, would have held the
day celebration. Anyone post through Dec. 31, 1977.
wishmg to participate m the Other trustees are Virgzl
parade - and every is Wamsley and Herma n
welcome - . should contact Reese. Gail S is.~on 1s the
Simpson.
Township Clerk.

Lexington, Kentucky. Back row - left to right , David
Reneer, Lawrence, Indiana; Jeff Minch, Portland,
Indiana; Sissy Meeks, Paducah, Kentucky ; Lisa Bolin,
Indianapolis , Indiana ; Richord Moore , Greensburg,
Kentucky; Cammy Greenfield, Paducah , Kentucky;
Glenn Dillman, U&gt;gansport, Indiana.

Four hurt in pile-up of three cars

Phillips gets extra credits

assured clear distance.
A second Meig3 County
mishap occurred at 2:40p.m.
on Rt. 7 at the junction to Rt.
33 where a trfick driven by
Sullivan R. Sherfey, 48, San
Leandro, Calif. slowed for the
Rt. 33 ramp, lost control of
his vehicle which slid off lhe
right s!rikmg three sand
barrels. There was no contact with a vehicle driven by
Floyd E. Emrick, 77, Bradenton, Fla. who was traveling
ahead of the truck.
At 4:20p.m. an accident occurred on Rt. 669, north or
County Road 27 where cars
driven by Todd A. Eskey, 24,
Amesville, and Davad D.
Roberts, 30, Athens, pulled
out at the same time to pass
an unidentified vehicle. They
collided, wath llllnor damage

resulting . Noone was cited or
injured.
Another Gallia County accident occurred at I ::W p.m.
on County Road 37, one and
one tenth miles east of Rt. 775
where vehicles driven by
Curtis C. Elliott, 16, Rt. I,
Northup, and Lawrence H.
Theiss, 36, Rt. 2, Vinton,
colladed. No one was injured
oa· cited. There was minor
damage to both vehicles.
An early morning accident
occurred on Rt. 554 where
Robert E. Manley, 26, Bidwell, traveling west lost control of his ca r which ran off
the left side of the highway
striking a fence. There was
minor damage.
Manley was charged with
failure
to
display
registration.

Son takes tenn
of his father

~Jeytbuxs

Special models, special values!
..._. AS-41. Orol on S 800 BlU1 cf
((l() l. ng power or dicrl rn o br eo!h ol
lre1 ~ 0" w lllh !!&gt;,, 1pt&lt;ro l fr "jj•do&lt;re
tl idr nQ or c o~men t w•nd ow mod el It i+ h

''I calit be6eve it.
You have3kids •••
and you bought
a gas station?''

m wrr d ow1 ot no n o w 01 1~ "- " l r!t 1o1ol
room &lt;oml o d on to ro om 1 0 1 b•Q 01 190
to 2'20 1q h (\n (hort ) And r1 lll &lt;l
rem ove up to A.'i P'"'' ot mo r1 tur e e•try
24 ~ our 1 to ~elp ndd totol comfo rt to
yo~; r room enwironmtf\1 W ith tt\ Ia.,.. .
omperOQt det•Qn, rl con thort o 1~ ­
omp llft vrl w~tn elt ctrocol c o de~ per ·

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AS-el, AS-BM

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lfi!Mill n.t'l .., ,.....,. ....,..

.... lf'Cill ,_............. "',....
411MMn. &amp;.coute they're "~t· u
dowt p011 1pttrol problem\, to \ily
10lwed b~ hwo F~tljl i da i rt Iteam Atr
Co nd olro ntll lrkt tht \londord
cobintl modtlt, l~ey tlip into piOl f
t otdy beco1.1\.f •hty rt compact ll M~

$219.95

MeNI .U-&amp;M

fd total roo m comfo rt tn to
Wlt: t.l OWI 01 nOHO W 0\ I~ It'.. "' wrlh ti'111

I J) f( •CI I 7,500 BTU frtgrdoore tlodrng (lnd
IOtemenl wtndo w room 011 cond tuontr .

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Amount and lt Ytl ol coohng ,
o
b~tolh of fruh gir, Qrt Qt toly to get 0 1

the !Wr\1 of o dtol And '' olle &lt;1 &lt;ill · w o~
otr flow control

$24US

Ught-l ght

I

Den't let good fri ends become
strangers. Visit with th em as often as you
like. By phone. A tO-m inute ca ll to ariy
stat e outside Ohio, except Alaska or Hawaii,
costs just $2.57 or less, plus tax. Just dia l
direct, without operator assistance, after
5 P.M. Prices are lower after II P.M. and
on weekends. It costs so littl e to say so much.

17 cu. ft.

Frost Proof
• Sale

$399.95*
'""-n ltlt1 N

trldt niCIIMiry

$2.57 or less. Why not visit a faraway
friend. tonight. By ph one.
Dial -(lirect rat es appl y 011 all int ers !at ~ cfl lls (e xcludi ng
i l resalenre or business phone wil llout
IIJl CT&lt;Hor ct~si s t&lt;~n ce . The~' ctlso app ly o n calls pl&lt;lCed with rm
Oflt' T&lt;II nr from a resld ~ ncc or busines~ phone u.rh ere tlia l-direct
far ilitie~ i'lfl! not av! Lii &lt;~I J!e . For dittl-direcl fii iQS to Hawa ii , check
your operrllor. Dial-direct rat es do not apply to person-to-person ,
coin, hote l-guest. credit cmd or colll' cl calls . or to ca lls charned
to ilntt tlu~ r nuu1lH!T, bect1use an operator must assist on Suc h t il lls
A la!&lt;~ kf l ) COII lpl~t ed from

e&gt;.Jr Trade In Policy - we nev~r quort pllttl w1th trod• •n One re01on ''that AU

WEEKEND MEETING
MIDDLEPORT
A
weekend meeting will begin
Wednesday, June 30 at 7:30
p.m. at the Ash Sl. Free Will
Baptist Church, Middleport.
Paul Taylor from Utah will
be the evangelist. The public
is invited to attend.

!rode 1111 011 not wor1 h ! ht 111m~ 81.1 1 wt ¥1111 ljii i Yt you o ltm h ad e rr1 on \'OUR
opp li on~}'t

ond th tt wtll be token oil OYt teg u!o r low

Take ten minutes to stay in touch.

J) fl( t ,

You'/(lleolfy Save AI Ba~tr ' l

Baker Furniture
Middlepnrt, Ohio

:.·':·..':[.'. ,: chairman
big contributors
"are holding back," the GOP fiilance :;:):
said Saturday.
"AI a time when we ... should be doing everything in our :::;
power to unite and win, I find Republicans at every level {
coming up with every excuse in the book for not doing ';';
something," said Jeremiah Milbank, the Republican Na- :;';
tiona! Committee's chief fWld raiser.
:;:;
Addressing the closing session of the two-day RNC }
meeting, Milbank said the party is $16.5 million short of lis ;:;:;
..,. mllli
I
,.,.,
•on goa .
:;:;:
The RNC finished its main business Friday, proposing a ·;:;.
rules change to make delegates to the national convention ::
;;:: vote for l»'esident according to the way they were bound in ;;
~:: state primaries or conventions. It also approved Ford ';:;
:;:; backers as convention offlclals,
;::;
::; The GOP National Convention must approve any rules ·::::
:;;; changes when it meeis in Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 1&amp;-20.
;:;·
:':: Milbank said that follf years ago more than 700 persons ;:;
;;:; contributed an average of $50,000 to elect former Presi- :::
;:; dent Richard M. Nixon, but this year only 105 persons :;: VOL. 11 NO. 22
;:; have given jhe GOP more than $10,000,
.
.;;:
.::: · The new election laws prohibit _individual gifts to \
:::: presidential candidates after they win the nomination- ·:::
:;: the campaigns are financed by the government - b4t :;:;
;:: allow political committees like the RNC to funnel a :;:
:;:: portion of the money it collects for all party candidates to ;:;:
';:; the !»'esldential nominee.
;:;:
:::; Milbank said although the "small" and "middle" con- :::
•
:::: tributorsarecomingthrough, "OUrbasicproblemisstill :::
::.: with our potential major contributors- those who can give :;:;
:;:; $5,000 to $20,000 maxim= gifts. The vast majority of :;;;
} those Republicans who have the where-withal! to give a :::; By HELEN THOMAS
;:;: major contribution are holding back."
) UPI White House Correspon~~~~:::=:=:·:::=:::·:·:::::·:·: :::·::·:::::·:;:;::.::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;: ;:;.;:;: :;:;.;:;:;:.:::;:;:::;.;:·.:: ;::·::; ·:·.-:::. .. ·:: •.•:·:.::; :;: dent
DORADO, Puerto Rico
(UPI) - President Ford
arrived in Puerto Rico
Saturday with unusually
heavy security precautions
and warn ed Cuba that
intervention in the domestic
affairs of Puerto Rico and the
United States "will be an
\Ulfriendly act which will be
resisted
by appropriate
By' IRA R. ALLEN
means . ~~
United Press International
Ford, host of a two-&lt;iay,
Ronald Reagan , who
seven nation economic
narrowly avoided a shutout at
summit conference, landed at
the Minnesota Republican
. the U.S , National Guard
convention, Saturday took his
section of San Juan
delegate hunt to the more
Internat ional Airport and
fertil.e grounds of Montana
new to the Dorado Beach
and Idaho and hoped to
Hotel
in a U.S. Marine
narrow even further the slim
helicopter
with three other
lead held by President Ford.
Marine
helicopter
escorts.
After losing, 17 to 1, in
The
choppers
skimmmed
Minnesota early Saturday ,
low across the ground in
Reagan went west, charging
sunny,
86 degree heat and
the Ford campaign with
landed'
at
the Dorado Beach
making
"a desperate
golf
course.
The use of four
attempt" to change rules at
helicopters
was
the first time
various state conventions to
veteran
reporters
had seen
benefit the President.
such
precautions
for
Ford.
Reagan was counting all or
The
helicopter
fleet
most of the :W delegates
recalled
a
similar
tactic
chosen in ·Montana, 4
reported to have been used by
remaining' in Idaho and 21 in
former
President Johnson
New Mexico.
some
years
ago in the Miami
After the Minnesota
area
when
he was said to
convention, the UPI delegate
have
traveled
in a similar
count showed Ford with 1,064
CANDIDATE
group
of
unmarked
of the 1,130 needed for
REAGAN
helicopters
because
of
nomination to Reagan's 949,
rumors
that
a
Cubans
with 103 uncommitted and 143
planned a kamikaze type
to be chosen.
from North Dakota Saturday attack on Johnson's aircraft.
A Reagan sweep ln the had at least 1,711, pending
The public had been barred
West could have brought him possible switche s in the from
the airport and armed
to within 70 delegate votes of Colorado delegation, which guards patrolled the site ol
Ford with 93left to be chosen had 4 more new delegates to
the weekends of July to in choose Saturday .
North Dakota and Colorado
That leaves only five
and July 16 In Utah and Democratic delegates from
Connecticut.
Puerto Rico not chosen, and
"In every convention state they are expected to be for
I've visited so far, there have Carter when chosen some
been desperate attempts to time next week.
change the rules unusually to
Carter, who had a fish fry
my disadvantage," Reagan at his Plains, Ga., home,
said.
Saturday before making
LUANDA, Angola (UPI) He also complained about fund-raising speech in For 13 mercenaries, this is
the Republican National Atlanta a nd going to a the longest weekend of their
Committee's approval of relative's wedding reception, lives. Monday they may be
Ford backers to hold key said he would help other ordered shot to death .
national convention positions. Democrats raise money for
These soldiers of fortune,
" If we are going to be their fall campaigns.
three Americans and 10 Brisuddenly told at this late
The GOP 's chief fund tons, sat quietly in their cells
stage in the game that in a raiser, Jeremiah Milbank, in Sao Paulo prison Saturday,
spirit of fairness we should told the Republican National reading week-old British
start dividing up delegates, Comittee there has been a newspapers.
then I want to tell you thot I sharp falloff in contributions
But mostly they were waiwould agree witlJ \hal if we by the wealthy and the party ting.
could go all the way back to is $16.5 milllon short of its $25
Tbe five-member Angolan
the first primary in New million fund raising goal.
revolutionary tribunal will
Hampshire and start over."
sentence them Monday for
Reagan lost the nation 's
"war criines."
first primary in New
Their attorneys say some of
SUIT FILED
Hampshire by less than one
GALUPOLIS - Charging the men expect death by
percentage point but got only gross neglect of duty and ex- firing squad. Others expect
3 of the 21 delegates.
treme cruelty, Connae Sue prison.
Ford was in Puerto Rico Burnheimer, In Pine St.
The Americans are Gary
Saturday for the opening of Friday filed a petition for Acker, 21, of Sacramento,
an economic summit with divorce
against
Bobby· calif., Daniel Gearhart, 34, of
alUed nations.
Burnhelrner, same address. Kensington, Md ., a father of
Democrat Jimmy Carter, They were married May 14, four, and Gustavo Grillo, 25,
who won 8of 13 delegate votes 1976.
.
an Argentinian-born

heavily fortified Tal Zaatar
and Jisr AI Pasha tanks grew
desperate.
The Palestinians said
Saturday they beat ba ck an
armored assault by ~ ,000
Christians "but they haven't
given up."
Privately, the Palestinians
expressed concern that the
smaller Jisr AI Pasha camp
may fall if the offensive
continues much longer .
Newspapers quoted military
observers as saying the battle
"should pruve decisive over
the next 48 hours."
In Calro, ,Egypt's National
Security Council warned the
Christian forces in Lebanon

@ohio.Bell
•

.
,J

.

to stop their attacks oo the
refugee camps.
"Egypt wlll not watch with
folded arms if these aggressions continue, but will act in
accordance with its national
and
Pan - Arab
responsibilities," Foreign
Minister Ismail ~·ahmi said.
More than 1,000 rounds of
mortar , rocket and artillery
fire poundecj the two battered
cam~ overnight, accordbig
to reports from the front , and
casualties soared to more
than 170 dead and 300
wounded .
Artillery and gun duels also
raged
throughout th e
garbagestrewn city, now

" We are facing the
without with out water,
electricity or bread supplies horrifying prospe~t of
watching epidemics break
lor five days.
Doctors warned that the out and we will be powerless
lack o! sanitary !acilitles and IQ stop them," said one
the mounting piles o! rotting doctor.
Officials said neither elecgarbage could touch off an
outbreak of typhus.
tricity nor water could be
''Famine and thirst are restored to the sweltering
haunting Beirut like two city \Ultll the fighting ends.
dreadful ghosts," said leftistBut a quick end to the 14held Beirut radio. "Now the month war was nowhere in
third and most dreaded ghost sight.
Efforts to arrange a truce
of all has arrived - disease."
Hospitals . have begun failed Friday night when
urging citizens to report for fighting prevented a meeting
President-elect
vaccinations, but warn that betlveen
serum,
lik e
almost Elias Sarkis and Libyan
everything else in Beirut, is Premier Abdel Salem
Jalloud, who were stranded
in short supply .
on opposite sides of the city.

SUNDAY, JUNE 27, 1976

PAGE 13

:..::.=.....:.::.----·---..,------..,------- ---------------

at Little Big Hom

H eavy

guards surround Ford's
I
•
•
arrtva at summit meetmg

Reagan claims
Ford fouling

the economic conference
which begins Sunday.
Ford, . without mentioning
Cuba by uame, issued the
hands-of£ warning at a
ceremonial welcome at San
Juan International Airport
after he arrived .
White
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen told
reporters that Ford was ·
referring to "Cuba among
others" in condemming
outside interference in
relations between the United
States and the Puerto Rican
Commonwealth.
Nessen said Cuba has a
resolution before the United
Nations asking independence
for Puerto Rico . Asked why
the summit was being held in
Puerto
Rico
where
demonstrations hove been
threatened , Nessen said:
"There is no security
problem at all. There hove
been announcements that
there will be demonstralions....We anticipate nothing
beyond peaceful demonstrations.''
Praising the debate over
the political future of Puerto
Rico, Ford said, HThere are
·those, however, who seek to
distort the facts ; to mislead
others about our relationship
with Puerto Rico . Tbe record
is clear and open. We are
pround of the relationship
that we have developed
together and invite the world
to examine it.
"We commend to its critics
the same freedom or choice
through! the free and' open

election which is enjoyed by
the people of Puerto Rico.
Those who might be inclined
to interfere in our freely
determined reiatioi\S should
know that such an act will be
considered as intervention in
the domestic affairs of Puerto
Rico and the United States: It
will be an unfriendly act
which will be res1sted by
appropriate means ".
After stepping from the
helicopter Ford strode to the ·
villa he will use and posed for
pictures with Gov. Rafael
Hernandez-Colon. He had offended Hernandez;Colon
earlier by failing to notify
him in advance he had chosen
San Juan as the site of the
summit.
White House aides also
ruffled Puerto Rican feelings
by first decreeing that the
Puerto Rican flag could not
be Ooivn and its anthem could
not be played at welcoming

Money banned
for limousines
By ELMER LAMMI
WASffiNGTON (UPI)
The Senate voted Saturday to
spend $53 billion for hundreds
of federal programs ranging
from
building sewage
treatment plants 1o sending
rockets to Venus but not a
penny for limousine service
for four bureaucrats.
Meeting in rare Saturday
session to clear the decks of
major money bills, the Senate
passed three bills covering a
wide raJIIle of activities military construction,
energy,
space,
environmental protection and
housing.
Bya53-2vote,itapproveda
catch-all bill appropriating
$43,3 billion for the Housing
and Urban Development
Department, NASA , the
Environmental Protection
Agency, . the Veterans
Administration and a dozen
other agencies for the fiscal
year beginning Oct I.
A bill app~opriating $H
billion
for
military
construction at home and
abroad was passed, 64 to 0.
A third bill providing $6.3
billion for the Interior
Department, the Forest
Service,
the
Energy
Research and Development
Administration, the Federal
Energy Administration and
more than a dozen other
agencies was approved, 61to

American from Jersey City,
N.J.
In many ways the three
Americans have been lucky .
So far.
Of the seven Americans
who joined the rush lor big
money, four died less than a ·
week after they arrived .
None ever fired a shot. None
was even paid.
Acker, an ex-Marine discharged because of mental
problems, almost changed
his mind about joining the
proWestern forces in Angola,
but he said his parents urged
him to stick to his original
plans.
"You can't back out of
things all your life," his
mother reportedly told hlm.
Most of the Britons were in
the couniry longer, but their
last days of freedom were 4.
(Continued on page 14 l

ceremonies in San Juan. This
was later changed.
White House sources said
Hernandez-Colon brought up
the subject of a new compact
between the United States
and Puerto Rico which would
grant the Commonwealth
more autonomy. The word
"compact" is used rather
than treaty since Puerto Rico
is not a sovereign state.
Nessen said by going to
Puerto Rico for the first time
as President gave Ford a
chance to "to resta te some of
the facts about U.S.-Puerto
Rican relations."
"The President is saying
what he wanted to say,"
Nessen said.
Tbe president was the first
of the seven aiUed leaders to
arrive. The leaders of West
Germany, France, Canada,
Japan, Italy and Great
Britain were arriving later in
the day or Sunday.

The catch-all HUD bill
included a provision barring

use of any of the money to tO
provide limousines and
drivers for the heads of the
VA , EPA and NASA and for
NASA's
deputy
administrator.
A report submitted by Sen.
WIUlam ProJYIIire, D-Wls.,
said
the Senate
APpropriations
Committee
was "particularly alanned"
by EPA Administrator
Russell E. Train's "refusal to
relinquish his vehicle and
driver" even though he suggests other government
workers join carpools, ride
buses or walk.
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias
Jr., R-Md., said Proxmire
had set "a frugal example"
by jogging to work daily, but
hoped the !»'Ovision bannlng
funds for cars and drivers
would not prevent women and
others working late from
being driven home.
Proxmlre said that was not
his intent.
All three bills, passed
earlier by the House, were
amended by the Senate and
thus go back to the House.
The final figures will be
worked out by HouseSenate
committees.
The money billS' were
passed with litUe debate as
the Senate went Into a rare
Saturday session to clear
major bills from lis calendar
before
recessing
for
Independence Day and the
Democratic ~1 ational
Convention.

Mississippi Queen passes her first trial with ease
WUISVILLE, Ky. ( UP~
The $23.5 million
Mississippi Queen, the first
overnight
passenger
riverboat built in half a
century, made iis first trial
run Saturday and gracefully
received t)le ap!»'oval of its •
handlers.
The engine for the 379-foot
long paddlewheeler was built
from plans located in old
sh,lpyard
files.
The
Misalsslppi Queen will be
joining
five
other
steampowered sternwheelers
currently In operation on the
nation's rlverways.
"l'eople who travel on

•

riverboats today do so conducted to determine the
because they love the water effect of wind on steering
and the history connected . capability,
\'{ith the old paddlewheelers
Capt. Ernest E. Wagner,
they read about in Mark skipper of the Delta Queen,
Twain," said Dick Landy, a will become master of the
vice pr esident of the Mississippi Queen next
Cincinnati-based Delta Queen month when its builder,
Steamboat Co.
Jeffboat ,
Inc.,
of
The new riverboat will JeffersonviUe , Ind., turns the
accommodate about 500 ste,rnwheeler . over to its
passengers and a. crew of owners.
about 150. Average cost of a
Wagner guided the tank
river excursion will be $65- tests and maneuvered the
per-day, Landy said.
new boat under conditions
Saturday's tests· provided simulating those on the
data on hull efficiency, Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.
propulsion and steering
Gabriel Chengary. 28, o£
capability. Studies were also Pittsburgh, Pa., will replace

,,

'

In a more ominous development, Christi ans forces
warned they would begin
shelling Beirut airport in five
days il leftist forces did not
agree to prevent the
smuggling of weapons in
incoming cargo.
The airport , which now .~
\Ulder supervision of joint
Arab p~ace-keeplng forre ,
has been the only safe escape
route for those seeking to nee
the wartorn country.
U.S. embassy officials estimate 1,300 Americans, 700
Britons and 500 other
nationals and foreigners
remain ln Beirut, despite
several convoys out of the
country last week.

1' ;:::~,:;:~:::::·1

Longest weekend
for 13 fighters

Frigidaire
8tarof ·

na rr ow, tlid•nQ a nd COitll'lfnl wr., .

LAWFORD WEDS
ARLINGTON, Va. (UPI ) Actor Peter Lawford, whose
previous wives included a
sister of the late President
John Kennedy, was married
for a third time Friday.
Lawford, 52, marraed
Deborah Gould , a ~year-&lt;Jid
Miami woman, in a brief civil
ceremooy. It was his third
marriage and her first.
Lawford's previou" wives
were Patricia Kennedy and
Mary Rowan, daughter of
comedian Dan Rowan .

Junior Histoncal Society; Nancy Penney, ~ tate Directoz·
of Kentucky Junior Historical Society ; Tom Gatewood,
and Mike Gerlach, teacher at Me1gs H1gh School.

By MICHAEL ROSS
BEIRUT, l..ebanon ( UPI)
- Leftist forces, advancing
under heavy artillery fire,
deep
into
penetrated
Ouistian territory Saturday.
trying to open up a supply
route to a pair of Palestinian
refugee camps that have
fou@hl offtank-led attacks for
five days.
Overwhelmed by the threemile-long advance into
eastern Beirut, C,hrislian
forces said they pulled back
''with dead bodies of the
enemy marking the trail of
their retreat."
The all-out ie!tist attack
came as conditions inside the

Wagner as master of the
Della Queen, which was built
in Stocktoo, Calif. in 1926 at a
cost of $875,000.
The Mississippi Queen is
already booked soli~ for its
maiden
voyage
from
Cincinnati to New Orleans
and back, an 1lklay trip
beginning July 27.
Both ships are owned by the
Delta Queen Steamboat Co., a
subsidiary of the Coca Cola
BotUlng Co. of New York.
"The new vessel is not a
replacement for the Delta
Queen." said Betty Blake,
president of the ~teamboat

CUSTER BATTLEFIElD, Mont. (UP! ) (
:;;:
';:;
)
:;;;
:;:;

tom-tom music near their \epees in a belal.t'&lt;l victory
celebration over the defeat of Gen. George Custer at Little
Bighorn .
It was 100 years ago Friday when Custer and 264 o! his
soldiers died ln the historic batUe. Forty-five Indians were
killed .
"No victory dance was held after U1e battle becnu!ll! the
:;'; Indians were running, attempting to escape a cavalry
;:;: network thrown over the area after the butlle," Austin
f Two Moons said today in explainin g ti1e night-long
::;, celebration at his ranch 30 miles from the bntllefleld.
;:;: Several hundred Indians were on hand.
{ Two Moons said he and hi~ fellow Indians decided on thu
:;:, party "because Cheyennes and Sioux were ciOsu to
;: ;: complete extermination thot day, and there is just Cllnse
::;; to celebrate their deliverance from a planned, brutal
:;:: death."
:::: Two Moons is a gramlson of one of Um Indian leaders
';:: wbo participated in the battle against Custer.
Official centennial observances began Thursday at the
:;:; Custer Battlefield National Monument, 'l11ere was aloo a
:;:: rodeo, and speeches by both Indian leaders and
;::. government officials.

?

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)
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:;'
.:;
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:·;
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i;::
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:;:;

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~\J.j: : : · :;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;·::::::··;.·.;:;:,:;:;::.::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:::.::;:;:;;.;;:;:;.::;:-:;:·:;.·:;:;: ;.;;:;:.';::;.:·:;: :;:·:;: :;:.;:~;:;

Carter measures
Ford as leader
PLAINS, Ga . (UP!) - Jitnmy Carter, warming up for the
fall campaign, said Saturday President Ford ls a "very good ,
very kind, honest person who has not ilone a good job ln leading
this country," He also held Ford responsible for Henry
Kissinger's "mistakes".
Sitting on a stone fence during a fish fry at his southwe~t
Georgia farm , the apparent Democratic presldenl.lal nominee,
told reporters he approves of Ford's economic ·summit
meeting this weekend ln Puerto Rico.
He said such meetings
coultl re~stablish ties with rei alions with China.
He praised Ford's \flp to
friendly governments he said
Puerto
Rico because "U1ere's
were excluded !rom former
been
a·
great need to rePresident Hi chard M.
cement
relationships
with
Nixon's major decisions .
European
nations
and
Japl!n
,
Followin g the fish fry,
attended by abount 150 to spell out a comprehensible
friends and relatives , policy as It relates to the
Carter's schedule took him to developing nations of the
Atlanta for a Saturday night world, particularly those ln
fund-raising reception Mrica."
sponsored by Sens . Herman
Talmadge and Sam Nunn.
Curler acknowleged SecreEVENS REt'ORD
tary of State Kissinger was
BIDWELL
- Bub Evans
the "lone ranger" to whom he
Farms
evened
lis season
refei'J'ed last week when he
record
at
3-3
Thursday
night
blasted this nation's "lone
by
defeating
Russ's
Glass,
9-1
ranger diplomacy" during a
in
the
Gallipolis
Slo·l~tch
foreign policy address In New
League. Getting two hlis each
York.
for
the winners were Darrell
. Speaking of Ford, carter Jones, Danny Browning,
said, "I think he's a good
person. I think he's been a Ralph Spence, Dillard
very good, very kind, honest Sanders, and Buzz Coli. Call
person who has not done a was the winning pitcher while
good job leading this country . Steve Kaco took the loss.
" I attribute to the
President a responsibility for
the mistakes that are made
• by the secretary of state that
CARSWELL HELD
serves under that president,"
TALLAHASSEE,
Fla ,
said carter.
IUPI) - G. Harrold CarsThe former governor of well, rejected for a seat 011
Georgia said European the Supreme Court because
leaders were dismayed when of a segregationist speech he
Nixon and former Treasury made 20 years earlier, was
Secretary John Connally arrested on charges ~f
devalued the dollar , and striking an officer, poli ce
Japanese leaders were disclo!ll!d Saturday. The inoffended at not being cident happened Thursday
consulted when Nixon began night at a shopping mall, but
authorities refused to say ·
what brought about Carswell's alleged attack on the
plain clothes officer.

Four killed in
highway crash

WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE, Ohio (UPI) - A
line, "but rather, the first of a which spelled the doom !or man and three women were
instantaneously
new fleet to expand and the continued opera lion of the killed
develop recreational travel wooden-hulled Delta Queen Saturday afternoon when
on American rivers ."
as an overnight passenger their car zoomed off State
Landy said the Mississippi carrier. Congressional Route 41 , near here skidded
Queen's potential earnings exemptions have kept the ' more than 250 feet and
will be in the neighborhood of Delta Queen in business, with crashed into a tree.
Fayette County Sheriff's
$12 million a year, but he the latest one set to expire
deputies said the car had
added it would be "quite a Nov. I, 1978.
number of years before the
Besides the Delta Queen, been speeding.
Pronounced dead on
total cost of the Queen will be the only other steam powered
paid off."
paddlewheelers currently arrival at Fayette Memorial
Planning for the new steel- navigating the nation 's HOliPital were : William Stott,
hulled steamboat was begun waterways
are
the 30, the driver, of Sabina ;
six years before construction community-owned Belle of Brenda K. Fessler, 23,
started in 1973.
U&gt;uisville, the newly built Washington Court House;
It was prompted by the 1966 Julia Belle Swain, the Cotton Brenda K. Braham, 25,
Washington Court House and
federal Safety at Sea Act, Blossom and the Natchez .
Cynthia Gray, 22, Chillicothe.

•

The :;:

CABINET CALLED
O'ITAWA (UPI ) - Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau called his cabinet into emergency session Saturday to consider government
intervention to end Canada's
worsening air strike.

RUBBER MEETING
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Federal mediation chief
James F. Scearce said Satlll'
day he and Labor Secretary
William J . Usery wiU go to
Oeveland, Ohio, Monday to
meet with negotiators in a Jl).
week United Rubber Workers
Union strike.

�.

I

12 - l'heSUndav Times -Sentinei .Sundav

Trail of enemy dead left ·by Christian forces
r"~~~:1:5~::·· · · ;
:;:: WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Republican Party is !.:
\ fallinll far short of iis f\Uld raising goal this year because ;·;

LED VISITORS - Left to ri ght are Glenn Dillman,
Harry Smith, Robert Kirby, State Director o£ Indiana

Visitors trace route of

Roush to speak

John Hunt Morgan

at celebration
RACINE + Stanley F.
Roush, fonnerly of Racine
and now of Springfield, Mo.,
will deliver a bicentennial address as a part of the
annual July 4th celebration of
Racine Village.
Some 17 United Methodist
Churches are cooperating in
staging the July 4 service at
11 a.m . at which Mr. Roush
will be guest speaker using as
his theme, "The Birthday of a
Nation."

A 1922 graduate o£ Racine
High School, Roush received
his AB degree fr om Ohio
Unlvez·sity in 1926 and has
owned and operated a ;uccessful loan and real estate
business in Springfield for
the past 34 years.
Mr. Roush is active in civic
a£fai rs having served on
Springfi eld City Co\Ulcil for
eight years and mayor
protem two years. He served
on the Springfield Ubrary
Board si.x years and as chairman of the building committee supervised the construction of two branch
libranes. He is now vice
president of the Ozark Empire Fair Board, one of the
largest fairs in the Middle
West.
He is a member of the First
Congregational Church and
teaches a Bible class there.
He served as state moderator
of the Missouri Conference
and on the slate board of
directors for IOyears.
Roush, married to the former Bertha Rose for 44
years, has a son, Philip who
is an electrica l engineer. He
and · his wife have three
granddaughters. Mr. Roush
hos been a reviewer for
Springfield newspaper for 25
years and has served on the
Springfield Symphony Board
for 15 years during which
time he hos seen the orchestra growing to 72 pieces.
At the age of 72, Roush shuns
retirement and actively
manages his own business.
As a port of the weekend
celebration, the fire department will sponsor the Del
Reeves and Good Time
Charlies from Nashville at 8
p.m. at the Sbuthern High
School on Saturday, July 3.
At noon on Sunday
following the outdoor service
in the stadillfD, the fire
department will have a
public chicken barbecue at
the fire station.
At 12:30 p.m. a garden
tractor pulled will be held at
the fire station under the
sponsorship of the Southeast
Ohio
Garden
Tractors
Pu!Jing Assn. A nag raising
ceremony at I :45 p.m. at the
high school will precede the
annual July 4th parade which
wlllleave the high school at 2.
Floats and other entries
will be judged and there will
be a first and second place
award for the best bicentennial theme among church

TOURING STUDENTS- Front , 1-r, are Harry Smzth,
Debbie Ca mpbell , Sa ndy Bauer , all from Connersville,
Indiana; Brian Cnune, Flora, Indiana ; Tammy Williams,
Owensborough, Ken tucky; Linda Craft, Fort Wayne,
Indiana ; Ron Schmucker, Spencerville, Indiana ; Sue
Bellew, Owensborough, Kentucky; Tom Ga tewood,

POMEROY -- Meags
County was host to 20 young
people or the state junior
historical societies of Kentucky and Indiana Thursday
evening and Friday.
The young people and their
chaperones were in Meigs
Co\Ulty to study the raid by
John Hunt Morgan. Thursday
evenmg the group met at tqe
Meigs Museum where C. E.
Blakeslee, president of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Soc iety, spoke on

Morgan 's Ka1d m Mei gs
county and Mike Gerlach
spoke on the new hi stori cal
wa ll of the museum
After spending the night at
the Meigs Inn, and following
brea kfast at Grow' s Steak
House rnday morning , the
visi tors were takell on a tour
of the cowzty following the
GALLIPOUS - Four per- Holzer Medical Center by a
path of Morgan via Rutland,
sons
were injured in a three SEOEMSambulance.
hock of Potneroy, Chester
ve
hicle
pile-up at 5: 15 p.m.
Petrie and Hill were cited
and to Buffington Island near
Friday
at
the jundion of Rt. to Municipal Court for failure
Portland
IGO and 35.
to stop within the assured
The Galha-Meigs Post clear distance.
State H1ghway Patrol said an
Two pe rsons were slightly
auto driven by Harve Ferrell, injured in an accident at 2:20
:!4, Rt. I, Bidwell, was struck p.m. Friday on Rt. 7 in Meigs
in the rear by a vehicle County where a tractorMIIiDLEPOF!'f - Randy Prescott and back in the driven by Ronald L. Petrie, trailer rig driven b) Roger K.
Phillips, formerly of Mid- I Plane No. J 152 Randy had 28, Rt. 2, Vinton. The Petri e Nichols, 26, McArthur, struck
dleport, one year out of the an engme failure. We don't caz was then struck in the the rear of a car operated by
Arizona Sta te University and know the secret of his suc- rear end by an auto operated Ethel A. Newman, 70, Midtaking private flying lessons, cess. but apparently he did by Rona ld K. Hill, 21, Bid- dleport.
got e&lt;tra marks for an everythmg .rzght. He landed well.
Mrs . New man and a
STANELY ROUSH
Injured were Gertrud e pl!ssenger, Usa Lemley; age
emergency landing made the plane m a field outside of
while he was building hours PRC Wi thout wrink le or Ferrell , 30, and Janice 7, Rt. 2, Cheshire, com·
groups ; first and second, for has li cense.
Ferrell , 12, passengers in the plained of minor inruries.
dent. "
bicentennial theme, nonRandy 1s the son of Mr. and Ferrell car and two They were not urunediately
in an azrfield newsletter
church groups ; a prize will was the followmg :
Mrs. Roger Phill ips They passengers in the Petrie treated.
be awarded tile best comvehicle, Denita J . Petrie, 24,
"The Distmguished Flying left Middleport about 1966.
Nichols was charged with
mercial entry and marchin g Cross for this year is awardand Ronald J. Petrie, J r., age failure to stop within the
\Ulit and there will be first, ed to Randy Phillips, along
5. They were taken to the
second and third place with an honorary grant of
awards for the best decorated about I ,000 hours of pilot-inbicycles.
com mand time for ex Games will get underway perience. While on an X-C
at 4 p.m. at the junior high
field and will include sack
races, greased pole, greased
pig and others.
,
At 7:30p.m. a church service will be held at the high
school an&lt;j at 10 p.m. there
will be a fireworks display .
Those who liave contributed
to make the fireworks
display possible are Jaymar
CHESHIRE - Robert E.
Coal, David Zirkle, Harold Swisher was appomled to fill
M. Smith, . Earl Adams, the une&lt;pared term of his
fullph Ours, Dale C. Wamcr father, Leo Swisher, as
Insurance Agency, Racine trustee Ill Cheshire 'l'wp.
PTO and the Racine Home- during a special trustees
National Bank, $100.
meeting Saturday.
Pete Simpson is serving as
Leo Swisher, who d1ed last
general chairman of the tw()o week, would have held the
day celebration. Anyone post through Dec. 31, 1977.
wishmg to participate m the Other trustees are Virgzl
parade - and every is Wamsley and Herma n
welcome - . should contact Reese. Gail S is.~on 1s the
Simpson.
Township Clerk.

Lexington, Kentucky. Back row - left to right , David
Reneer, Lawrence, Indiana; Jeff Minch, Portland,
Indiana; Sissy Meeks, Paducah, Kentucky ; Lisa Bolin,
Indianapolis , Indiana ; Richord Moore , Greensburg,
Kentucky; Cammy Greenfield, Paducah , Kentucky;
Glenn Dillman, U&gt;gansport, Indiana.

Four hurt in pile-up of three cars

Phillips gets extra credits

assured clear distance.
A second Meig3 County
mishap occurred at 2:40p.m.
on Rt. 7 at the junction to Rt.
33 where a trfick driven by
Sullivan R. Sherfey, 48, San
Leandro, Calif. slowed for the
Rt. 33 ramp, lost control of
his vehicle which slid off lhe
right s!rikmg three sand
barrels. There was no contact with a vehicle driven by
Floyd E. Emrick, 77, Bradenton, Fla. who was traveling
ahead of the truck.
At 4:20p.m. an accident occurred on Rt. 669, north or
County Road 27 where cars
driven by Todd A. Eskey, 24,
Amesville, and Davad D.
Roberts, 30, Athens, pulled
out at the same time to pass
an unidentified vehicle. They
collided, wath llllnor damage

resulting . Noone was cited or
injured.
Another Gallia County accident occurred at I ::W p.m.
on County Road 37, one and
one tenth miles east of Rt. 775
where vehicles driven by
Curtis C. Elliott, 16, Rt. I,
Northup, and Lawrence H.
Theiss, 36, Rt. 2, Vinton,
colladed. No one was injured
oa· cited. There was minor
damage to both vehicles.
An early morning accident
occurred on Rt. 554 where
Robert E. Manley, 26, Bidwell, traveling west lost control of his ca r which ran off
the left side of the highway
striking a fence. There was
minor damage.
Manley was charged with
failure
to
display
registration.

Son takes tenn
of his father

~Jeytbuxs

Special models, special values!
..._. AS-41. Orol on S 800 BlU1 cf
((l() l. ng power or dicrl rn o br eo!h ol
lre1 ~ 0" w lllh !!&gt;,, 1pt&lt;ro l fr "jj•do&lt;re
tl idr nQ or c o~men t w•nd ow mod el It i+ h

''I calit be6eve it.
You have3kids •••
and you bought
a gas station?''

m wrr d ow1 ot no n o w 01 1~ "- " l r!t 1o1ol
room &lt;oml o d on to ro om 1 0 1 b•Q 01 190
to 2'20 1q h (\n (hort ) And r1 lll &lt;l
rem ove up to A.'i P'"'' ot mo r1 tur e e•try
24 ~ our 1 to ~elp ndd totol comfo rt to
yo~; r room enwironmtf\1 W ith tt\ Ia.,.. .
omperOQt det•Qn, rl con thort o 1~ ­
omp llft vrl w~tn elt ctrocol c o de~ per ·

m••
AS-el, AS-BM

W., .I

IHNiellf

.W.wt

Itt

lfi!Mill n.t'l .., ,.....,. ....,..

.... lf'Cill ,_............. "',....
411MMn. &amp;.coute they're "~t· u
dowt p011 1pttrol problem\, to \ily
10lwed b~ hwo F~tljl i da i rt Iteam Atr
Co nd olro ntll lrkt tht \londord
cobintl modtlt, l~ey tlip into piOl f
t otdy beco1.1\.f •hty rt compact ll M~

$219.95

MeNI .U-&amp;M

fd total roo m comfo rt tn to
Wlt: t.l OWI 01 nOHO W 0\ I~ It'.. "' wrlh ti'111

I J) f( •CI I 7,500 BTU frtgrdoore tlodrng (lnd
IOtemenl wtndo w room 011 cond tuontr .

,._.n

Amount and lt Ytl ol coohng ,
o
b~tolh of fruh gir, Qrt Qt toly to get 0 1

the !Wr\1 of o dtol And '' olle &lt;1 &lt;ill · w o~
otr flow control

$24US

Ught-l ght

I

Den't let good fri ends become
strangers. Visit with th em as often as you
like. By phone. A tO-m inute ca ll to ariy
stat e outside Ohio, except Alaska or Hawaii,
costs just $2.57 or less, plus tax. Just dia l
direct, without operator assistance, after
5 P.M. Prices are lower after II P.M. and
on weekends. It costs so littl e to say so much.

17 cu. ft.

Frost Proof
• Sale

$399.95*
'""-n ltlt1 N

trldt niCIIMiry

$2.57 or less. Why not visit a faraway
friend. tonight. By ph one.
Dial -(lirect rat es appl y 011 all int ers !at ~ cfl lls (e xcludi ng
i l resalenre or business phone wil llout
IIJl CT&lt;Hor ct~si s t&lt;~n ce . The~' ctlso app ly o n calls pl&lt;lCed with rm
Oflt' T&lt;II nr from a resld ~ ncc or busines~ phone u.rh ere tlia l-direct
far ilitie~ i'lfl! not av! Lii &lt;~I J!e . For dittl-direcl fii iQS to Hawa ii , check
your operrllor. Dial-direct rat es do not apply to person-to-person ,
coin, hote l-guest. credit cmd or colll' cl calls . or to ca lls charned
to ilntt tlu~ r nuu1lH!T, bect1use an operator must assist on Suc h t il lls
A la!&lt;~ kf l ) COII lpl~t ed from

e&gt;.Jr Trade In Policy - we nev~r quort pllttl w1th trod• •n One re01on ''that AU

WEEKEND MEETING
MIDDLEPORT
A
weekend meeting will begin
Wednesday, June 30 at 7:30
p.m. at the Ash Sl. Free Will
Baptist Church, Middleport.
Paul Taylor from Utah will
be the evangelist. The public
is invited to attend.

!rode 1111 011 not wor1 h ! ht 111m~ 81.1 1 wt ¥1111 ljii i Yt you o ltm h ad e rr1 on \'OUR
opp li on~}'t

ond th tt wtll be token oil OYt teg u!o r low

Take ten minutes to stay in touch.

J) fl( t ,

You'/(lleolfy Save AI Ba~tr ' l

Baker Furniture
Middlepnrt, Ohio

:.·':·..':[.'. ,: chairman
big contributors
"are holding back," the GOP fiilance :;:):
said Saturday.
"AI a time when we ... should be doing everything in our :::;
power to unite and win, I find Republicans at every level {
coming up with every excuse in the book for not doing ';';
something," said Jeremiah Milbank, the Republican Na- :;';
tiona! Committee's chief fWld raiser.
:;:;
Addressing the closing session of the two-day RNC }
meeting, Milbank said the party is $16.5 million short of lis ;:;:;
..,. mllli
I
,.,.,
•on goa .
:;:;:
The RNC finished its main business Friday, proposing a ·;:;.
rules change to make delegates to the national convention ::
;;:: vote for l»'esident according to the way they were bound in ;;
~:: state primaries or conventions. It also approved Ford ';:;
:;:; backers as convention offlclals,
;::;
::; The GOP National Convention must approve any rules ·::::
:;;; changes when it meeis in Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 1&amp;-20.
;:;·
:':: Milbank said that follf years ago more than 700 persons ;:;
;;:; contributed an average of $50,000 to elect former Presi- :::
;:; dent Richard M. Nixon, but this year only 105 persons :;: VOL. 11 NO. 22
;:; have given jhe GOP more than $10,000,
.
.;;:
.::: · The new election laws prohibit _individual gifts to \
:::: presidential candidates after they win the nomination- ·:::
:;: the campaigns are financed by the government - b4t :;:;
;:: allow political committees like the RNC to funnel a :;:
:;:: portion of the money it collects for all party candidates to ;:;:
';:; the !»'esldential nominee.
;:;:
:::; Milbank said although the "small" and "middle" con- :::
•
:::: tributorsarecomingthrough, "OUrbasicproblemisstill :::
::.: with our potential major contributors- those who can give :;:;
:;:; $5,000 to $20,000 maxim= gifts. The vast majority of :;;;
} those Republicans who have the where-withal! to give a :::; By HELEN THOMAS
;:;: major contribution are holding back."
) UPI White House Correspon~~~~:::=:=:·:::=:::·:·:::::·:·: :::·::·:::::·:;:;::.::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;: ;:;.;:;: :;:;.;:;:;:.:::;:;:::;.;:·.:: ;::·::; ·:·.-:::. .. ·:: •.•:·:.::; :;: dent
DORADO, Puerto Rico
(UPI) - President Ford
arrived in Puerto Rico
Saturday with unusually
heavy security precautions
and warn ed Cuba that
intervention in the domestic
affairs of Puerto Rico and the
United States "will be an
\Ulfriendly act which will be
resisted
by appropriate
By' IRA R. ALLEN
means . ~~
United Press International
Ford, host of a two-&lt;iay,
Ronald Reagan , who
seven nation economic
narrowly avoided a shutout at
summit conference, landed at
the Minnesota Republican
. the U.S , National Guard
convention, Saturday took his
section of San Juan
delegate hunt to the more
Internat ional Airport and
fertil.e grounds of Montana
new to the Dorado Beach
and Idaho and hoped to
Hotel
in a U.S. Marine
narrow even further the slim
helicopter
with three other
lead held by President Ford.
Marine
helicopter
escorts.
After losing, 17 to 1, in
The
choppers
skimmmed
Minnesota early Saturday ,
low across the ground in
Reagan went west, charging
sunny,
86 degree heat and
the Ford campaign with
landed'
at
the Dorado Beach
making
"a desperate
golf
course.
The use of four
attempt" to change rules at
helicopters
was
the first time
various state conventions to
veteran
reporters
had seen
benefit the President.
such
precautions
for
Ford.
Reagan was counting all or
The
helicopter
fleet
most of the :W delegates
recalled
a
similar
tactic
chosen in ·Montana, 4
reported to have been used by
remaining' in Idaho and 21 in
former
President Johnson
New Mexico.
some
years
ago in the Miami
After the Minnesota
area
when
he was said to
convention, the UPI delegate
have
traveled
in a similar
count showed Ford with 1,064
CANDIDATE
group
of
unmarked
of the 1,130 needed for
REAGAN
helicopters
because
of
nomination to Reagan's 949,
rumors
that
a
Cubans
with 103 uncommitted and 143
planned a kamikaze type
to be chosen.
from North Dakota Saturday attack on Johnson's aircraft.
A Reagan sweep ln the had at least 1,711, pending
The public had been barred
West could have brought him possible switche s in the from
the airport and armed
to within 70 delegate votes of Colorado delegation, which guards patrolled the site ol
Ford with 93left to be chosen had 4 more new delegates to
the weekends of July to in choose Saturday .
North Dakota and Colorado
That leaves only five
and July 16 In Utah and Democratic delegates from
Connecticut.
Puerto Rico not chosen, and
"In every convention state they are expected to be for
I've visited so far, there have Carter when chosen some
been desperate attempts to time next week.
change the rules unusually to
Carter, who had a fish fry
my disadvantage," Reagan at his Plains, Ga., home,
said.
Saturday before making
LUANDA, Angola (UPI) He also complained about fund-raising speech in For 13 mercenaries, this is
the Republican National Atlanta a nd going to a the longest weekend of their
Committee's approval of relative's wedding reception, lives. Monday they may be
Ford backers to hold key said he would help other ordered shot to death .
national convention positions. Democrats raise money for
These soldiers of fortune,
" If we are going to be their fall campaigns.
three Americans and 10 Brisuddenly told at this late
The GOP 's chief fund tons, sat quietly in their cells
stage in the game that in a raiser, Jeremiah Milbank, in Sao Paulo prison Saturday,
spirit of fairness we should told the Republican National reading week-old British
start dividing up delegates, Comittee there has been a newspapers.
then I want to tell you thot I sharp falloff in contributions
But mostly they were waiwould agree witlJ \hal if we by the wealthy and the party ting.
could go all the way back to is $16.5 milllon short of its $25
Tbe five-member Angolan
the first primary in New million fund raising goal.
revolutionary tribunal will
Hampshire and start over."
sentence them Monday for
Reagan lost the nation 's
"war criines."
first primary in New
Their attorneys say some of
SUIT FILED
Hampshire by less than one
GALUPOLIS - Charging the men expect death by
percentage point but got only gross neglect of duty and ex- firing squad. Others expect
3 of the 21 delegates.
treme cruelty, Connae Sue prison.
Ford was in Puerto Rico Burnheimer, In Pine St.
The Americans are Gary
Saturday for the opening of Friday filed a petition for Acker, 21, of Sacramento,
an economic summit with divorce
against
Bobby· calif., Daniel Gearhart, 34, of
alUed nations.
Burnhelrner, same address. Kensington, Md ., a father of
Democrat Jimmy Carter, They were married May 14, four, and Gustavo Grillo, 25,
who won 8of 13 delegate votes 1976.
.
an Argentinian-born

heavily fortified Tal Zaatar
and Jisr AI Pasha tanks grew
desperate.
The Palestinians said
Saturday they beat ba ck an
armored assault by ~ ,000
Christians "but they haven't
given up."
Privately, the Palestinians
expressed concern that the
smaller Jisr AI Pasha camp
may fall if the offensive
continues much longer .
Newspapers quoted military
observers as saying the battle
"should pruve decisive over
the next 48 hours."
In Calro, ,Egypt's National
Security Council warned the
Christian forces in Lebanon

@ohio.Bell
•

.
,J

.

to stop their attacks oo the
refugee camps.
"Egypt wlll not watch with
folded arms if these aggressions continue, but will act in
accordance with its national
and
Pan - Arab
responsibilities," Foreign
Minister Ismail ~·ahmi said.
More than 1,000 rounds of
mortar , rocket and artillery
fire poundecj the two battered
cam~ overnight, accordbig
to reports from the front , and
casualties soared to more
than 170 dead and 300
wounded .
Artillery and gun duels also
raged
throughout th e
garbagestrewn city, now

" We are facing the
without with out water,
electricity or bread supplies horrifying prospe~t of
watching epidemics break
lor five days.
Doctors warned that the out and we will be powerless
lack o! sanitary !acilitles and IQ stop them," said one
the mounting piles o! rotting doctor.
Officials said neither elecgarbage could touch off an
outbreak of typhus.
tricity nor water could be
''Famine and thirst are restored to the sweltering
haunting Beirut like two city \Ultll the fighting ends.
dreadful ghosts," said leftistBut a quick end to the 14held Beirut radio. "Now the month war was nowhere in
third and most dreaded ghost sight.
Efforts to arrange a truce
of all has arrived - disease."
Hospitals . have begun failed Friday night when
urging citizens to report for fighting prevented a meeting
President-elect
vaccinations, but warn that betlveen
serum,
lik e
almost Elias Sarkis and Libyan
everything else in Beirut, is Premier Abdel Salem
Jalloud, who were stranded
in short supply .
on opposite sides of the city.

SUNDAY, JUNE 27, 1976

PAGE 13

:..::.=.....:.::.----·---..,------..,------- ---------------

at Little Big Hom

H eavy

guards surround Ford's
I
•
•
arrtva at summit meetmg

Reagan claims
Ford fouling

the economic conference
which begins Sunday.
Ford, . without mentioning
Cuba by uame, issued the
hands-of£ warning at a
ceremonial welcome at San
Juan International Airport
after he arrived .
White
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen told
reporters that Ford was ·
referring to "Cuba among
others" in condemming
outside interference in
relations between the United
States and the Puerto Rican
Commonwealth.
Nessen said Cuba has a
resolution before the United
Nations asking independence
for Puerto Rico . Asked why
the summit was being held in
Puerto
Rico
where
demonstrations hove been
threatened , Nessen said:
"There is no security
problem at all. There hove
been announcements that
there will be demonstralions....We anticipate nothing
beyond peaceful demonstrations.''
Praising the debate over
the political future of Puerto
Rico, Ford said, HThere are
·those, however, who seek to
distort the facts ; to mislead
others about our relationship
with Puerto Rico . Tbe record
is clear and open. We are
pround of the relationship
that we have developed
together and invite the world
to examine it.
"We commend to its critics
the same freedom or choice
through! the free and' open

election which is enjoyed by
the people of Puerto Rico.
Those who might be inclined
to interfere in our freely
determined reiatioi\S should
know that such an act will be
considered as intervention in
the domestic affairs of Puerto
Rico and the United States: It
will be an unfriendly act
which will be res1sted by
appropriate means ".
After stepping from the
helicopter Ford strode to the ·
villa he will use and posed for
pictures with Gov. Rafael
Hernandez-Colon. He had offended Hernandez;Colon
earlier by failing to notify
him in advance he had chosen
San Juan as the site of the
summit.
White House aides also
ruffled Puerto Rican feelings
by first decreeing that the
Puerto Rican flag could not
be Ooivn and its anthem could
not be played at welcoming

Money banned
for limousines
By ELMER LAMMI
WASffiNGTON (UPI)
The Senate voted Saturday to
spend $53 billion for hundreds
of federal programs ranging
from
building sewage
treatment plants 1o sending
rockets to Venus but not a
penny for limousine service
for four bureaucrats.
Meeting in rare Saturday
session to clear the decks of
major money bills, the Senate
passed three bills covering a
wide raJIIle of activities military construction,
energy,
space,
environmental protection and
housing.
Bya53-2vote,itapproveda
catch-all bill appropriating
$43,3 billion for the Housing
and Urban Development
Department, NASA , the
Environmental Protection
Agency, . the Veterans
Administration and a dozen
other agencies for the fiscal
year beginning Oct I.
A bill app~opriating $H
billion
for
military
construction at home and
abroad was passed, 64 to 0.
A third bill providing $6.3
billion for the Interior
Department, the Forest
Service,
the
Energy
Research and Development
Administration, the Federal
Energy Administration and
more than a dozen other
agencies was approved, 61to

American from Jersey City,
N.J.
In many ways the three
Americans have been lucky .
So far.
Of the seven Americans
who joined the rush lor big
money, four died less than a ·
week after they arrived .
None ever fired a shot. None
was even paid.
Acker, an ex-Marine discharged because of mental
problems, almost changed
his mind about joining the
proWestern forces in Angola,
but he said his parents urged
him to stick to his original
plans.
"You can't back out of
things all your life," his
mother reportedly told hlm.
Most of the Britons were in
the couniry longer, but their
last days of freedom were 4.
(Continued on page 14 l

ceremonies in San Juan. This
was later changed.
White House sources said
Hernandez-Colon brought up
the subject of a new compact
between the United States
and Puerto Rico which would
grant the Commonwealth
more autonomy. The word
"compact" is used rather
than treaty since Puerto Rico
is not a sovereign state.
Nessen said by going to
Puerto Rico for the first time
as President gave Ford a
chance to "to resta te some of
the facts about U.S.-Puerto
Rican relations."
"The President is saying
what he wanted to say,"
Nessen said.
Tbe president was the first
of the seven aiUed leaders to
arrive. The leaders of West
Germany, France, Canada,
Japan, Italy and Great
Britain were arriving later in
the day or Sunday.

The catch-all HUD bill
included a provision barring

use of any of the money to tO
provide limousines and
drivers for the heads of the
VA , EPA and NASA and for
NASA's
deputy
administrator.
A report submitted by Sen.
WIUlam ProJYIIire, D-Wls.,
said
the Senate
APpropriations
Committee
was "particularly alanned"
by EPA Administrator
Russell E. Train's "refusal to
relinquish his vehicle and
driver" even though he suggests other government
workers join carpools, ride
buses or walk.
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias
Jr., R-Md., said Proxmire
had set "a frugal example"
by jogging to work daily, but
hoped the !»'Ovision bannlng
funds for cars and drivers
would not prevent women and
others working late from
being driven home.
Proxmlre said that was not
his intent.
All three bills, passed
earlier by the House, were
amended by the Senate and
thus go back to the House.
The final figures will be
worked out by HouseSenate
committees.
The money billS' were
passed with litUe debate as
the Senate went Into a rare
Saturday session to clear
major bills from lis calendar
before
recessing
for
Independence Day and the
Democratic ~1 ational
Convention.

Mississippi Queen passes her first trial with ease
WUISVILLE, Ky. ( UP~
The $23.5 million
Mississippi Queen, the first
overnight
passenger
riverboat built in half a
century, made iis first trial
run Saturday and gracefully
received t)le ap!»'oval of its •
handlers.
The engine for the 379-foot
long paddlewheeler was built
from plans located in old
sh,lpyard
files.
The
Misalsslppi Queen will be
joining
five
other
steampowered sternwheelers
currently In operation on the
nation's rlverways.
"l'eople who travel on

•

riverboats today do so conducted to determine the
because they love the water effect of wind on steering
and the history connected . capability,
\'{ith the old paddlewheelers
Capt. Ernest E. Wagner,
they read about in Mark skipper of the Delta Queen,
Twain," said Dick Landy, a will become master of the
vice pr esident of the Mississippi Queen next
Cincinnati-based Delta Queen month when its builder,
Steamboat Co.
Jeffboat ,
Inc.,
of
The new riverboat will JeffersonviUe , Ind., turns the
accommodate about 500 ste,rnwheeler . over to its
passengers and a. crew of owners.
about 150. Average cost of a
Wagner guided the tank
river excursion will be $65- tests and maneuvered the
per-day, Landy said.
new boat under conditions
Saturday's tests· provided simulating those on the
data on hull efficiency, Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.
propulsion and steering
Gabriel Chengary. 28, o£
capability. Studies were also Pittsburgh, Pa., will replace

,,

'

In a more ominous development, Christi ans forces
warned they would begin
shelling Beirut airport in five
days il leftist forces did not
agree to prevent the
smuggling of weapons in
incoming cargo.
The airport , which now .~
\Ulder supervision of joint
Arab p~ace-keeplng forre ,
has been the only safe escape
route for those seeking to nee
the wartorn country.
U.S. embassy officials estimate 1,300 Americans, 700
Britons and 500 other
nationals and foreigners
remain ln Beirut, despite
several convoys out of the
country last week.

1' ;:::~,:;:~:::::·1

Longest weekend
for 13 fighters

Frigidaire
8tarof ·

na rr ow, tlid•nQ a nd COitll'lfnl wr., .

LAWFORD WEDS
ARLINGTON, Va. (UPI ) Actor Peter Lawford, whose
previous wives included a
sister of the late President
John Kennedy, was married
for a third time Friday.
Lawford, 52, marraed
Deborah Gould , a ~year-&lt;Jid
Miami woman, in a brief civil
ceremooy. It was his third
marriage and her first.
Lawford's previou" wives
were Patricia Kennedy and
Mary Rowan, daughter of
comedian Dan Rowan .

Junior Histoncal Society; Nancy Penney, ~ tate Directoz·
of Kentucky Junior Historical Society ; Tom Gatewood,
and Mike Gerlach, teacher at Me1gs H1gh School.

By MICHAEL ROSS
BEIRUT, l..ebanon ( UPI)
- Leftist forces, advancing
under heavy artillery fire,
deep
into
penetrated
Ouistian territory Saturday.
trying to open up a supply
route to a pair of Palestinian
refugee camps that have
fou@hl offtank-led attacks for
five days.
Overwhelmed by the threemile-long advance into
eastern Beirut, C,hrislian
forces said they pulled back
''with dead bodies of the
enemy marking the trail of
their retreat."
The all-out ie!tist attack
came as conditions inside the

Wagner as master of the
Della Queen, which was built
in Stocktoo, Calif. in 1926 at a
cost of $875,000.
The Mississippi Queen is
already booked soli~ for its
maiden
voyage
from
Cincinnati to New Orleans
and back, an 1lklay trip
beginning July 27.
Both ships are owned by the
Delta Queen Steamboat Co., a
subsidiary of the Coca Cola
BotUlng Co. of New York.
"The new vessel is not a
replacement for the Delta
Queen." said Betty Blake,
president of the ~teamboat

CUSTER BATTLEFIElD, Mont. (UP! ) (
:;;:
';:;
)
:;;;
:;:;

tom-tom music near their \epees in a belal.t'&lt;l victory
celebration over the defeat of Gen. George Custer at Little
Bighorn .
It was 100 years ago Friday when Custer and 264 o! his
soldiers died ln the historic batUe. Forty-five Indians were
killed .
"No victory dance was held after U1e battle becnu!ll! the
:;'; Indians were running, attempting to escape a cavalry
;:;: network thrown over the area after the butlle," Austin
f Two Moons said today in explainin g ti1e night-long
::;, celebration at his ranch 30 miles from the bntllefleld.
;:;: Several hundred Indians were on hand.
{ Two Moons said he and hi~ fellow Indians decided on thu
:;:, party "because Cheyennes and Sioux were ciOsu to
;: ;: complete extermination thot day, and there is just Cllnse
::;; to celebrate their deliverance from a planned, brutal
:;:: death."
:::: Two Moons is a gramlson of one of Um Indian leaders
';:: wbo participated in the battle against Custer.
Official centennial observances began Thursday at the
:;:; Custer Battlefield National Monument, 'l11ere was aloo a
:;:: rodeo, and speeches by both Indian leaders and
;::. government officials.

?

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:;'
.:;
}
:·;
;:;:
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:.;'
·::
/;
::::

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i;::
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:;:;

:;:;
':';
·;:;

~\J.j: : : · :;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;·::::::··;.·.;:;:,:;:;::.::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:::.::;:;:;;.;;:;:;.::;:-:;:·:;.·:;:;: ;.;;:;:.';::;.:·:;: :;:·:;: :;:.;:~;:;

Carter measures
Ford as leader
PLAINS, Ga . (UP!) - Jitnmy Carter, warming up for the
fall campaign, said Saturday President Ford ls a "very good ,
very kind, honest person who has not ilone a good job ln leading
this country," He also held Ford responsible for Henry
Kissinger's "mistakes".
Sitting on a stone fence during a fish fry at his southwe~t
Georgia farm , the apparent Democratic presldenl.lal nominee,
told reporters he approves of Ford's economic ·summit
meeting this weekend ln Puerto Rico.
He said such meetings
coultl re~stablish ties with rei alions with China.
He praised Ford's \flp to
friendly governments he said
Puerto
Rico because "U1ere's
were excluded !rom former
been
a·
great need to rePresident Hi chard M.
cement
relationships
with
Nixon's major decisions .
European
nations
and
Japl!n
,
Followin g the fish fry,
attended by abount 150 to spell out a comprehensible
friends and relatives , policy as It relates to the
Carter's schedule took him to developing nations of the
Atlanta for a Saturday night world, particularly those ln
fund-raising reception Mrica."
sponsored by Sens . Herman
Talmadge and Sam Nunn.
Curler acknowleged SecreEVENS REt'ORD
tary of State Kissinger was
BIDWELL
- Bub Evans
the "lone ranger" to whom he
Farms
evened
lis season
refei'J'ed last week when he
record
at
3-3
Thursday
night
blasted this nation's "lone
by
defeating
Russ's
Glass,
9-1
ranger diplomacy" during a
in
the
Gallipolis
Slo·l~tch
foreign policy address In New
League. Getting two hlis each
York.
for
the winners were Darrell
. Speaking of Ford, carter Jones, Danny Browning,
said, "I think he's a good
person. I think he's been a Ralph Spence, Dillard
very good, very kind, honest Sanders, and Buzz Coli. Call
person who has not done a was the winning pitcher while
good job leading this country . Steve Kaco took the loss.
" I attribute to the
President a responsibility for
the mistakes that are made
• by the secretary of state that
CARSWELL HELD
serves under that president,"
TALLAHASSEE,
Fla ,
said carter.
IUPI) - G. Harrold CarsThe former governor of well, rejected for a seat 011
Georgia said European the Supreme Court because
leaders were dismayed when of a segregationist speech he
Nixon and former Treasury made 20 years earlier, was
Secretary John Connally arrested on charges ~f
devalued the dollar , and striking an officer, poli ce
Japanese leaders were disclo!ll!d Saturday. The inoffended at not being cident happened Thursday
consulted when Nixon began night at a shopping mall, but
authorities refused to say ·
what brought about Carswell's alleged attack on the
plain clothes officer.

Four killed in
highway crash

WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE, Ohio (UPI) - A
line, "but rather, the first of a which spelled the doom !or man and three women were
instantaneously
new fleet to expand and the continued opera lion of the killed
develop recreational travel wooden-hulled Delta Queen Saturday afternoon when
on American rivers ."
as an overnight passenger their car zoomed off State
Landy said the Mississippi carrier. Congressional Route 41 , near here skidded
Queen's potential earnings exemptions have kept the ' more than 250 feet and
will be in the neighborhood of Delta Queen in business, with crashed into a tree.
Fayette County Sheriff's
$12 million a year, but he the latest one set to expire
deputies said the car had
added it would be "quite a Nov. I, 1978.
number of years before the
Besides the Delta Queen, been speeding.
Pronounced dead on
total cost of the Queen will be the only other steam powered
paid off."
paddlewheelers currently arrival at Fayette Memorial
Planning for the new steel- navigating the nation 's HOliPital were : William Stott,
hulled steamboat was begun waterways
are
the 30, the driver, of Sabina ;
six years before construction community-owned Belle of Brenda K. Fessler, 23,
started in 1973.
U&gt;uisville, the newly built Washington Court House;
It was prompted by the 1966 Julia Belle Swain, the Cotton Brenda K. Braham, 25,
Washington Court House and
federal Safety at Sea Act, Blossom and the Natchez .
Cynthia Gray, 22, Chillicothe.

•

The :;:

CABINET CALLED
O'ITAWA (UPI ) - Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau called his cabinet into emergency session Saturday to consider government
intervention to end Canada's
worsening air strike.

RUBBER MEETING
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Federal mediation chief
James F. Scearce said Satlll'
day he and Labor Secretary
William J . Usery wiU go to
Oeveland, Ohio, Monday to
meet with negotiators in a Jl).
week United Rubber Workers
Union strike.

�£J I
k d
.•
r----A~;;-o~;th~---- !Busy Fourth o
u y wee en certam

lf - TheSundayTimes- Sentinei,SW!day,June27, 1976

I

I
CLINT BIRCH

PORTL AND ,. Cli nt Birch
of Portland has leMned of the
death

ot his grandson, Date

Lipps, 21, of Belpre, killed in
a iru c:k ('l cchJent Wedne\da y
even ing a t ap proxi mately
-4 : JO near Barl ow. Ohio .
He is sut vived by hjs
patents. J oe t'lnd Ellen Lipps,
VIncent : two liaughters in
Rhode Island. ,, son at home,
two brothers. Gale Lipps of
Vincen t and. Terry Lipps of
Marlettcl ; two sisters, Mrs.
Bruce Enlow, Newport, Ohio,
and Mr s. Dav id Riggins ol

Lilli• Hocki ng ; his grand lather , Clint Birch, and

severa l aunts and unc les.

Funeri.ll ser vices we r e held

Saturday ,, t

p.m . at the
F uner.1 1 Home in
Belpre. w ith buria l to be in
Belpn.&gt; cl'm e lery .

Spcncl!r

MAUD llODEHAVER

GUYSV IL LE-- Mrs. Maud

•

Rod eh ave r . 9'1 , Guysv ille ,

died Fri day il l the Arcadia
Nursin g Hum !! fol low ing an
e)( tended il!ness.
She was born in Doderidge

INNOC"N'f I'LEA
SA NTA MAHI A. Ca lif.
(UI'I ) - Hobert \yuterfield,
son elf actress Ja ne Russell
and for mer Los Angeles
Hums' foo tball star Bob
Wuterfield, pleuded innocent
hiday to a clwrgfl of second
degree murde1·.
Waterfiei&lt;l, 2U, was ordered
to appear lor a pretrial
hearing July :m.
l
11
·
At . a. I1carm~
· une .. •

~hcr~ ff

s dep ltttes testified
Wot ~rri e ld a farm laborer
'

to1d U1em he

..

, '

htid a ICW

drinks" und lvcnt _"target
•shooliu g" wiUJ his pistol
·liS 1ng the. stgn
. ·on the•
Hay~ul c r Taverr1 in the
•

c uya~~: w

hn'rKet.

Vu!Jey; as

the

•

Longest
(ContinuL&gt;d from page 13)
even wol'se.
"Col. Tony Callan," the•
notorious Greek Cypriot-born
rnemmary conunander, ordered Ute execution of 14
Britons who wanted to go
home.
In tl1e nine-day trial that
ended la st week , U.S.
attorneys Hobert Cesner Jr.
uf Columbus, Ohio, 31ld Bill
Wll'iOn of St. Louis, Mo.,
argued . that Acker and
Genrhart should be treated as
prisoners of war under
provisions of U1e Geneva
Conference.
Grillo, a former bodyguard
for a New Jersey gambler,
was represented by an
Angolan lawyer.
On the finul day of the trial,
Callan, whose real name is
Cestus Georghiou, spoke at
length for the fir st time.
Calla11 fr ee ly admitted
!ll'dcring the death of the 14
Britons and killing an
A11goiall soldier . and a
civilian.
lie also took responsibility
for the actions of all the
mcrtenurics and said he was
ready to atcept the
• t:onsequeuces.

•

By SANDR A L. LATIMER
United Press lntermtllunal
Statewide activities for this
Somm er v i l le. She was a
member of th e Guysville
Fourth of July weekend are
United Me thodist Church.
more nwnerous than usual as
Surviving are th r ee sons ,
rriany comm unities have
William 0 ., M iamisbu rg ;
added
attractions to their
James A., Chauncey , and ·
John G., Guysv ille; three usual celebrations to observe
da ughters. Ha ze l Bernard .
the nation 's 200th birthday.
Guysville ; Helen • McMullen ,
Nearly eve ry community
Athens, and Mabel L
Turnage. Circlevil le ; 15 has planned the usual J?&lt;lrade
grand children . 33 grea l
and fireworks , but other
gr andchildren. fi ve great
communities htive more lhis
grea f .grand child r en. tw o
year. to attract Ohioans who
st ep-grand chi ldr en.
and
choose to travel durin ~ the
thr ee
gr ea t . step
grandchil dren.
four-day weekend .
· Preceding her in dea th
And since the f'ourth falls
were her hu sbrmd , John G.
on
Sunday ,
ma ny
Rod eha ve r , in 19 44 ; a
communities
are
ha
virq~
daughter. Ruth ; t wo s is l er~ ,
and a brother .
speci al worship se rvie es.
Funeral se r vic;es will be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Among them are "200 Years
Whit e Funeral Home in of Christian Worship " at the
Coo lville with the Rev. John Van Wert Coun ty Fair Pal mer offi ciating . Bu r i a t! ground s;
old-fa s hion ed
will be in the Bean Ceme ter y chur ch Servi ces at West
at Guysv ille. F r iends may
Liberty, Wes terv ille and
call at the fun era l home any
Usbon and a mass religious
tim e.
service at Fawcett Stadium
in Canton .
Several activ ities are
planned
for the eve of the
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
f'ourth . These include :
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
- A Glenn Miller concert ,
OF TRANSFJORTATION
with
.Jimmy Henderson
Cclumbus. Oh io
June 11 ,1976·
conducting, at the WrightContract Sales Legal Copy
Patterson Air Forc-e Base
No . 76 · 581
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
near Dayton. Thi s concert,
PMS-0005! S5l
free to the public, will be held
Se aled proposals w i ll be
re ce i ved at fl1e off ice ot the on a fiat-bed trailer out of
Director of th e Onio Depart doors, and will follow the
m ent of Transport atio n ,
Col um bus , Oh io, unli t 10 : 00 dedication of the expa nded
A .M , Oh io Standard l 1me . Glenn Miller exhibit at the
Tuesday , July 13 , 1976, f or
Musewn. The t'On(·ert will be
impro veme nt s In :
D is tricl 10 ( Ptan IO .AJ
moved indoors in case of rctin
Athens . Gai Ha . Hoc king , and fans will be sitting the
Meig s. Morgan . Nob le, Vi~ ton
and washington Coun t• es . floor, reminiscent of th e
Ohio . on various road s in th e Glenn Miller ·toncerts to the
City ot Alhens . th e Vi ll ages ol
American Gl's in ~w·ope
Chaun ce y , Coolvill e ar:'d '"
Athens County ; th e C 1ty of during World War II.
Gallipo l is and tn Gal l ia
- The rededica tion &lt;md rt&gt;County : In Hockin.g co unt ~ .
me VI l lage of Racme and '" naming of tl1e Clark County
Meigs Co unty ; in Morgan
Building No. 1 in Springfield
county : in Nob le county ; in
Vinton Co unty ; th e Vil lage of in honor of the late A.B.
Beverly and In w ashi ngton Graham, \he Clark County
Count y . b y applymg paint to
edge , c enter and lane tine s. school superintendent who, in
Pr o i ecl Len g th - 0 t ee t or o 1902, founded an agricultura l
mi le.
club for boys and girls. The
work L engt h - o fee t or o
Coue ly, W. Va .. daughter of
the la te John T. and Ma rtha

#-

mile .
The Oh io D epa rtm en t or
Transportation
hereby
notif ies aH bidd ers tha t it wil l
affirmatively insure t hat in
an\1 ·COnt rac t e nl ered int o
pursuant
to
th is
ad
vertisement ,
minority
busin ess en terp r ises will be
a fford ed fiJll opportun i ty to
submit b ids in respon se to lh 1s
inv I! at ion and w i 11 not be
discriminat ed aga 1n st on th e
grounds at r ace . color , or
na tural origin i n cq nsid er alion
for an award .
" M in im um wage rates f or
thi s proj ect
ha ve
be e n
predetermin ed as requ 1r ed by
law and ar e se t torth in th e bid
proposal. "
" The dat e set tor completion
of this worK shall be se t tort h
In the b idd ing prop osaL "
Ea c h b idder
sha l l
be
requir ed to tile w i th his b id a
cer t if ie d c heck or cash ier ' s
c heck for an amount equal to
five per cent of his bid, but in
no event more than f i ft y
thousand dollars , or a bond for
ten per cent of his bid, payable
to the Dire ctor .
_
Bidder s mu st apply . on !h e
proP, er fo rms. tor qu ali ficatio n
a t lea st ten days prior to th e
date • set for open ing bid s 1n
acc ordan ct) w i th Chapt er 5525
Ohio Rev ised Code .
Plans and spe c ification s are
on f ite in th e D epartment ot
Trans po rta t ion and the off 1ce
of
th e
D i s t r ic t
Deput y
Director .
Th e D ire cto r r ese r ves the
r ig ht to re j ect an y and al l bi d s.
R I CHARD D . JACKSO N
DIR EC TOR
Rev . a. lJ .7J
June 20. 27

club is now known as 4-H .

- A five-h our extravaganza
at Sciot o Downs nca r
Columbus during which time
a time capsule from 1876 will
be opened ..
Activities througho ut the
weekend include:
- " Gallia Co un (y", u
musical history of what IS
now Gallia, Meigs, Vinton,
Jackson and Lawr ence
tou nti es. Th is wi ll be
performed ea ch weekend this
month in the Bob evans
Farms Amphitheatre in Rio
Grande.

ROSE RESIGNS
COLUMBUS IUPII - Jack
Rose resigned as president of
the Ohio Farmers Union
Friday after two and one half
years in the post.
Rose told the union's boa rd
of directors his resignation,
effective immediately, was
for personal reasons . He said
pressures of the job were
causing him to neglect his
farming operatio ns, hi s
family, church, business and
organizational interests.

Indian Crafts and Culture
!'ow -Wow at Whiteh ouse,
near Toledo, an exchange of
i(leas, erafl itr.ms, skilb cand
knowledge co nce rning the
Amerlran lndian.'i.
,

- Ashville Fourth of July
Ce leb ration, one of the
largest local fndependenL'e
Day cele brations in the
na tion. More Unm twu tons o£
fil;h will be preparL'&lt;l for the
fish frv. Three parades and a
beauty pa ge ant will be
staged .
- Th e Tr ave l i ng
Smithsonian Exhibit, •· tn the
Minds and Hea rts of People",
docum ents and letter of the
ma jor leaders and th eir
thoughts before the America n
Hevoiution. This will be on
. display io Coshocton as part
of the Shriners "Shinabra-

tion."

Acti vities the Fourth
include :
- A re-enactmen t of a
Cen tenni;tl ce lebration at
Ohio Village in Colwnbu s.
The
Ded ara tion
of
Independence will be read
and activities will be geared
to the way Ohioans observed
the July 4, 1816.
'll1e open i n ~ of the Ohio
Aviation Heri ta ge exhibition
&lt;~t

married Sunduy at Kings
Island to Sandra Campbe ll , a
native of Lebanon _ He will
we:1r a Re vo luti onary-era

tuxedo, Miss Campbell will
wear the weddi ng gown
actress fl aquel Welch wore in
"TI1e Three Musketeers" and

the Rev. Gene Skipworth of
Forest
Park
United
Methodist
Church
in
Cincinnati, wbo will perform
the ceremony, will wear an
Uncle Silm ouUit.
Paul Revere and the
Raiders will perform .two
·concerts following the

weddin~
And in many cities
throughout the state, &amp;inday
activities will pause at 2 p.m.
when bells and sirens will
ring for at least two minutes
- the approximate time a
new nation was born 200
years ago.

15 - The Sunday T~es - Sentinel, S~y, June 27, 1976

TOM TIEDE

.
Somewhat soiled Great White Hope
By Tom Tiede
, FLORESVILLE,
Tex.
~ NEA) The aulWIUI'S
presidential campaign will
Wldoubtedly be the peanuttiest in history. There will be
James Earl Carter on the one
~ide, likely. And on the other,
if folks here in the goqber
capital of Texas get their
Wish, will be John Bowden
Connally, the local legend
who may be the best vice
presidential · material the
)ocal legend who may be the
pest vice presidential
material the Republican parly has had in this century.
. To be precise, Connally is
pot a peanut fanner himself.
Peanuts grow on his ranch
here, but he leases the land to
a sod buster. As has Carter,
Connally, too, has been
heavily influenced by the
'egwne. So honored is the industry locally that a statue of
a nut - not Lyndon Jolmson
- sits in the conununity
square. Growing up then,
Connally, the son of a bus
driver, the natives say that
"Mr. Johnny learned about
George Washington Carver
before he learned about
George Washin'gton."
Not that the man's political
education was injured. The
locals insist that Connally
knows
more
about
democracy, government and

Whdll pay you the

on your savings?

Dayton, running through

Aug. 25.
- The opening of Heritage
and Horizons at lhe Toledo
Musetun of ilrt, a survey of
Am e rice~n

pain ti ngs from

1776-1976, running through
Aug. 15.

Ba se ba II , America 's
pa stt ime. will be played in
two 01110 cities as both the
Cleve land Ind ians and
Cincinna ti Heels are at home.
The Heds will host Houston in
;1 dou bleheader
Sunday
afternoon and the Cleveland
ind ians host New York in
th eir fi rst Sunday ni ght

constitutional leadership
than anyone in either party
today. As such, they add, he
is the ooly man in America
who can save the GOP. The
reasoning is ~ t neither
Gerald. Ford nor Ronald
Reagan has the personal
image necessary to carry the
election. But with Connally?
Says Charles Fuller, former
Democratic chainnan of this
region:
" Mr. Johnny could put life
into the Ford campaign. Or
he could add a moderating innuence to Reagan's bid. He is
simply a· remarkable
politician. I think he could
help a jackass get elected
this year."
Increasing numbers of
Republican offiters across
the country agree.
Particularly when they are
referring to Ford. The
opinion is that the Texas rancher is everything that the
Michigan lineman is not. He
is a most effective campaigner, be appeals to both
conservatives
and
moderates, he is channing
and witty and bright. ActuaDy, says a Republican
conunitteeman, "Jolm Connally should be rwming today
instead of Ford.' If it hadn't
been for that milk trouble,
Nixon would have chosen
Connally as his vice

Dr. Lamb

game.

The city of Cinti nnat1 will
observe its Fourth of July

,
,Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. ·
' DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
the condition diagnosed as
diverticulosis. I also have a
tendency toward diarrhea
)md don't seem to he able to
handle raw vegetables, fresh
fruits, bran muffins, etc., ali
of whicN
like, Is this
combination lthusual?
I am supposed todrlnkmUk
three times a day to avoid
bone -thinning and milk is
starting to cause some
discomfort. Would boiling the
milk aid in i~ digestibility?
DEAR READER - Those
llttle pockets aloog the co1on
called diverticulosis are
thought by some authorities
. t he
to he caused by spasms m
• bowel. As lhe pressW'e bui1ds
up inside the bowelit literally
blows out little ruptures or
pockets that are diverticula.
It is often associated with
spastic colon. An overactive
bowel is often associated with
increased pressure inside the
colon. The combination of
irritable
colon
or
diverticulosis and intermittent diarrhea isn't aII that
rare .
In most instances these
conditions appear ,to be
improved py increasing the
bulk in the diet as I have
mentioned before. That
specifically includes a\idlng
i:ereal fiber to the diet as you
jnight find in bran .
Remember there is nothing
rough about bran. Once it is
Soft or moist, which will
happen as soon as It Is mixed
In the stomach, it becomes
"softage." It is this increased
bulk that helps make the
eaton function more normally
and in many instances helps
\0 eliminate spastic colon,
intermittent constipation,
:
·

Monda y with a re-enadme nt
of Yca lman's Landing , two

parades. games in city pa rks.
'lliCre will be a concm:t in
lliverfront Stmlium at 8 p.m
with Cdc Kuenwl cotHiu cting
the Ci ncin na ti Sy mphony
Orehestra . Be1my Goodman
and t::lla Fitzgerald will also
perform . · The cos t of
admission is $1.
King s Island , the family
am usement cenler in so uth-

western Oh io, wiii have
extended hours this weekend.
'111e center will be one of the
sites featured on a 12-hour
sr ndicat ed te lev isi on
n'icenten nial l'elebration
from 7 p.m. Saturday to 7
a.m. Sunday.
The Kings Island porti ons,
both pre-taped and live, will
include a spectacular display
of fir ewo rks and gues ts
app ea rances by severa l
nationally prominent groups,
including Pa ul Revere and
the Raiders. Kings Island will
feature its gate price of$f• at 5
p.m. and will remain open
Sa turday until the park 's
por ti on of the show is
complete.
Revere, the leader of the
musical grou p, will be

no matter what you're looking
for in savings or investment.
certificates...
·
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

5~. S:~~b. ~%

st~.%
RAT£

st~.%

• r.ompounded 0~1 1 y 1

• p,,ya ble Qu arter! ~ • M1mmum S1.000 DO

e Payable Ouarrerly • Minimum Si,OOO .OO

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6~.

6~,

st~.%

RAil

R~TE

canhel .~~

RATE

~nE

• Pavab le Quarterl y • M1 mnwm Sl.OOO DO

R~TE

• Pa yJble Ouarle rly • Minimum S1.000 DO

4-YEAR CE RTIFICAT E

6-YEAR CERTIFICATE

00·0 YOURSElf

.

• Payable Ouarlerly • Minimum $1 .000 .00

AIHl 111 al1C11 110n IG all l!lts

monthly or

ou;ulrrl y mc[lme
oa10 on one two three
low 01 su ~t· ar cerlllltat£'S l n te~est pay ·
dOle rnunlhly 11 you ae~He on ce !l lllt ~ t es
'Mill lace afliOIIfll ol 55 000 00 or more
rcON al Regulation', rcqu1rc a Stl!I'T1ntlal
pen alty 'or prcma11 ,,, withdrawal ol W l1f1·

I P,l'/ahle Ouaflerly • Mlntmu rn Sl .OOU 00

1

P • · ~~ lJu atleJIV • M1ntmum SI .OOO 00

catc hmJs

you'll find it at

',.
'

\Vh v sl' it l(' fo r lt&gt;ss than th e best?
\\'lwn it ronws to your savings, you
wa nt n fair ret um . the highest lega l!.\· possible, 11·i.th &lt;I gua ran tee of
sa ft&gt;t~'

for ~· our funds. and access ih ili t ~· l o these fund s

Berry,s·.World

on reasonable notice of withdrawal.
This is exactly what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their depositors. No won der 1savings deposits continue to be at an
all- time high.

&lt;WE

~OT 'EM!

PRICED
RIGHT!

Ohio Valley Bank

CARTER &amp; EVANS BUILDING SUPPLIES
OLIVE ST.
•

•

•
,.

Gall ipoliS Ohio

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MON. nfRU FRI. 7:30. A.M. TIL 5:00 P.M. SAT. 7:30 Tll .4:00 P.M .
i.\

Member

The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank.

"It doesn't matter. Nobody really has to stand on it. "
~- -------------------------Let&amp;en of oplaloa a~ welcomed. Tbey 1b0111d be

1
1

1
1

I

1
t

:

less 1111111 300 wortlllloog (or be ~ubjed lo reiluetloa by
tbe edilor) aDd mast be tdgned wtt11 llle 1lpee'1 llddress. Names may be wltbbeld upoa pubUcaU011.
However, 011 request, aames will be dllelCIIed. Le«era
sboultl be Ia good taste, addreulllg lllues, Dol persollllltlea.

.8-NU

a

FDIC

"Are you sure we're READY for 'Opera tion Sail
'76,' Viking /'s landing on Mars, Queen
Bizabeth's visit, paradee. fireworks all on the
SAME DAY?"

RAY CROMLEY

Carter's ·funding
is broad based

! ···~-~: ~• •.

8y Ray Cromley
WASHfNGTON - So many people h1tve asked me ot
late "Who is bacldnij Jimmy Carter - where's his money
coming from?" that I went over to the Federa l Election
Commission to see what t•eports were on file.
I1
~Here, too, the answers were vab'U C. The Carter repol'ts,
like those of other leading presidential camlldates, contained
Prayer from the grave
few donors listing their specific business connections. Many
were listed only by name, address und size of donution . Most
A reader who asks her name he withheld clipped the others were too vague to be of mucl,t use.
AIR RACES
article below from "A Huntington" newspaper, and asks It be
Nevertheless, im interesting pattern developed. To one ·
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!) published as a public service:
reading through the il$ts of $10(1-!md-up donors, the numQer of
- Pending approval by the
Please, God, I'm Ouly
attorneys giving sizable amounts seemed ex traordinarily
city solicitor, a series of
Seveuteeu
large In comparison with other ca ndidates. There were ··
airplane pylon races is being
The day I died was an ordinary school day . How I wish I noticeable nwnbers of publishei'S, operators or owners of
planned here for Oct. 8-10.
had taken the bus! But I was too cool for the bus. I remember newspapers and radio stations. Stock b1·okcrs, real estate
The Mansfield Lahm bow I wheedled the car out of Mom. "Specialfavor ,"I pleaded, developers. Contractors und builders.
Airport Commission acted "all the kids drive." When the 2:SO bell rang, I threw all my
There was an interesting sprinkling of college professors
favorably Thursday night on books in the locker. I was free untll8;f0 tomorrow morning. I and some obviously well-heeled studenL&lt;on the big donor lists.
the proposal of a St. Louis ran to the parking lot, excited at the thought of driving a car
There seemed to be a scmcity of donors who, for the
firm to returri pylon racing to and being my own boss. Free!
record, classified U1emselves as businessmen or business
Ohio. Mansfield would be one
It doesn't matter how the accident happened. I · was execl!tives. Or smalllndpendettl oil operators, a listing which
site in an international circuit goofing off -going too fast. ·Taking crazy chances. But f was showed up frequently among Reagan Texas donors.
of such races.
enjoying my frl1edom and having fun. The last thing I
As might be expect~ , a considerable chunk of the e~rly
David - Wolf of Air remember was passing an old lady who seemed to he going Carter money ca.mo from Georgia, wi th emphasis on Atlanta .
International Races awfully slow. I heard the deafening crash and felt a terrific
A spot check indiculL~l \hal. vnrious members of U1e law
presented his finn's proposal jolt. Glass and steel new everywhere. My whole body seemed firm of Lipshutz, Macey, Zusman and Sikes, of Atlanta, and
after an inspection of the city to be turning inside out.l heard myself scream.
their families, gave upwards of $9,:100 lo the campaign. Robert
and the airfield.
Suddenly I awakened : it was very quiet. A pollee officer J. Lipshutz was listed in the reports us U1e Carter campaign
Wolf said crowds could run was standing over me. Then I saw a doctor. My body was treasurer.
up to 60,000 every day of the mangled. 1 was saturated with blood. Pieces' of jagged glass
Jimmy Carter and his inmlCdiate family gave upwards of
race.
were sticking out all over. Strange that I couldn't feel $32,000 in the early reports, the latest figures not being in,
anything.
, b d d Including a donation of $17 .70 from small daughter Amy,
MONORAIL WANTED
Hey, don't pull that sheet over my head. I can t e ea · $13,000 from wife Rosa lynn and $18.200 from Carter himself.
CLEVELAND (UPI) _ I'm only 17. I've got a date tonight. I am supposed to grow up Later reports, when they come in, could raise these figures, of
and have a wonderful life. 1 haven't lived yet. I can't be dead. course.
City officials
this week
will
submit
to the federal
governLater I was placed in a drawer. MY folks had to iden tify
On the $!()().and-over lists available which as noted above
ment a proposal for a $50 me. Why did they have to see me like this? Why.did I have to are nut up-to-date, there was a singular paucity of well-known
took at Mom's eyes when she faced the most tembleordeal of names. There were some, of course. Dean Rusk, fonner
million monorail passenger herlife' Dad
· suddenly 1oo·ked lik e an old man . He totd theman secretary of State, was there. And C. D. Dillon, former
system for downtown, liking
Public Square, Playhouse in charge, "Yes, he is my son."
secretary of the Treasury and under /lCCretnry of State; Henry
The funeral was a weird experience. I saw all my relatives Lu~e, vice president of Time, Inc.; Cyrus Eaton, the
Square'
government and friends walk toward the casket. They passed by, one by · contr.oversialfinancierof Arcadia Farms; BUtt Lancaster, the
~~~~J bU:::::.s '::~~~ one, and looked at me with the sadf destfethyes I'lsvetoevehr sdeen. actor; Frank Ikard, presi dent of the American Petroleum
Someofmybuddleswerecrying.A ewo e gJr
uc e my Institute, James Latham, president of the Transcontinental
dedbythesefacilities.
hand and sobbed as they walked away .
Oil ; Joseph F. Cullman, 3rd, chairman of the Board and chief
Please ... somebody ... wake me up! Get me out of here. I executive officer of Phillip Morris, Inc.; Irving Shepard,
can't bear to see my Mom and Dad so broken up. My president of Cromalloy American; .lmnes D. Maddox, of
JOHNSON CAUGIIT
grandparents are so wracked with grief they can blll'ely walk. Rome, Ga .; Ted Ashley, a motion picture eKecutive with
WAS!llNGTON (UP!)
My brother and sisters are like zombies. They move like Warner Brothers ; Robert Wise , producer of "The Sound of
Morris Lynn Jolmson, 38, one robots. In a daze, everybody . No one can believe this. And, I Music," "West Side Story" and "The Andromeda Strain";
of the FBI's 10 most-wanted can't believe it either .
publisher Bernard Gels. A University of Con necti cut student
Please don't bury me.l'mnotdead! I have a lot of living to gave $1 ,000, a union organizer $500.
fugitives after escaping from do. 1 wimt to laugh and run again. I want to sing and dance·
A number of political funds were represented - the Olin
the
penitentiary
at Pieasedon'tputmeinthegroWld. 1promiSe
· uyougveme
i
just (chemicals) Political F'und, the Southern Railway Good
AU federal
ta
'ght
tha
an near1Y el mon
one more chance God !11 be the most careful driver in the Government Fund, the Non Partisan League of Machinlst.s and
ago, was arrested in New whole world. All i want is one more chance. Please, God, I'm political funds sponsored by Pacific Lighting (utility),
Orlesns, the FBI said Siltur- only 17!
Chevron and Conoco (petroleum ), the Committee of Quality
day.
Government, t11e BetterGovcrmnenl Committee of New York
City, the AFSCME .
Aroutine check of the Carter dollar sources thus reveals
..._..-o-o...:;"&lt;-.-.c;&gt;&lt;=:&gt;-&lt;:~",&lt;..-.c;;&gt;o&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;..o..c....o-e&gt;.c&gt;.c&gt;-o-o'&lt;'~~ no sinister or even worrisome pattern of financial backin~. On
:r~
the surface, at least, it would appear those giving to the
campaign represent a fairly wldesp1·ead andLrepresenlatlve
section of the voting population.
1
'

.Ed
·' •t rza.• l com ment '
l 0

opinion, features

NEW POSI'
COLUMBUS (UPI) Kenneth ·lleShetler, former
director of the state
insurance department, has
Every Democratic presidential canbeen named to the newly- didate since, and Including, Harry Trwnan
created post of vice ll't!Sident in 1948 has campaigned against lhe Taftfor legislative and regulatory Hartley Act, more or less.
affairs.
No candidate today, of course, adDeShetler, a Toledo native, vocates outright repeal of the 1947labor law
headed the insurance depart- in toto. Even Trwnan did not hesitate to
ment from 1971 to 1975 and invoke its 9«klay cooling-off provision when
during that time, was elected . the public interest was threatened by a
president of the National strike in a major industry. Even the ultion
Association of Insurance movement has learned to live with TaftCommissioners.
HarUey and may grudgingly admit that it
has i Is uses .
It's Section 14 1b) of lhe law that conINK TWO PITCHF.R.~
CINCI)IINATI (UPI) -The tinues to stick in the craw of organized labor
Cincinnati Reds have signed and whose repeal this year's Democratic
on two pitchers.
hopefuls, to a man, have said .they favor Third round draft choice or in the case or Mr. Carter, have said they
Greg Meyer, 18, a left-handed wol!ld sign if it were placed on their desk .
pitcher from Ballwin, Mo.,
This is the ~".: lion which allows the states
with an 8-1 high school either or to prohibit compulsory union
record, will report Monday to membership in the form of the closed shop,
the Billings, Moot. Pioneer the so-called " Right-to-Work" section . Since
League.
1947, 19 slates have enacted Right-to-Work
A Reds spokesman said laws banning compulsory union memFriday the team had aiBo bership as a requirement for employment .
signed right-handed pitcher when· 11niuns have won contracts with
Jay }lowell, 20, from the '"""" ~··me n!. A Iota! of 32 states currently
University of Colorado. The f;•riltd the furred unionizalittn of public
All Big 8 Team member was l'lliiJioyes , !lwugh somt• t,mT llilllh' ,.,
a 31st round choke.
Lt~ f' ( inns for tcac:hl!rS, IJllliCCilltll li'iili
•

Section 14 fh)'s repeal would wrong a right

Will!

WE'VE

produces. TheroreUcally, a
person taking three grains a
day would not be producing
any significant hormone from
the thyroid gland.
Beyond this point, taking
excess thyroid may cause the
same symptoms a person has
from an overactive thyroid
gland, except bulging of the
eyes which does not occur_
Such a person may become
nervous, feel hot, lose weigll!,
have a rapid. heart rate ana
could develop serious
problems. While there are
individual differences, taking
excess thyroid without your
doctor's approval is most
unwise.

America still suspects Connally is a cheat.
And so there are at least a
few people in Floresville who
feel the nution no longer
deserves Mr. Johnny's services. Charles Fuller says he
has asked the fanner governor and fanner Treasury
secretary to " come home for
good; settle down, relax, and
let the ingrates go to hell."
But Coonally respectfully
dedines the notion. In fact he
has become the most active
noncandidate in the country.
Using $250,000 raised by
friends, he is averaging three
speeches a week in an
energetic attempt to raise
political con.sciousness from
Orlando to Olympia. One of
his themes: every young man
and woman should be
required to spend one year in
the service of his government. Democracy is shaky,
he insists; what we need 11re
200 million born-again
American.s.
It's not a bad thought, considering the mood of the elettorate. Jinuny Carter could
get the Jesus vote, Jolm Connally the patriotic. At least
that way there would be a
contest. And the lusterless
GOP could offer the voters
something more than
President Clean or Governor
Mean.

dlrrhea
and
other
manifestations of ·improper
bowel fW!ction which often
lead to diverticulosis.
Part&gt;of your problem may,
indeed, be the milk.
Individuals
who
are
Intolerant to the lactose
(double sugar) of milk and
can't split it often have gas
and diarrhea. Boiling the
milk will not help with this
problem. You have to avoid
milk and milk products
altogether, including
excessive use of these items NEW SHERIFF
in cooking. You might he lble
McARTHUR, Ohio (UP!)
· WI'll serve out
to use tow lactose milk made - Jerry Martin
with Lact-Aid.lf that is your the tenn of Sheriff Delno
problem, Uten you will need McClure, who resigned June
.
•
12 .
to get your calciUm
t
coun tY
.
·
Th e
Vm on
supplements in · some other
way, perhaps through Republic n Centra 1
calcium tablets.
Committee picked Martin,
1 am sending you The who was defeated by Neil
Health Letter, Number ~. Scott for the Republican
Diverticulosis to give you nomination for sheriff in
more detailed infonnatloo. June, over McClure's son .
Others who would like to ~ave
County commissioners apthis infonnation can obtain it pointed Delno McClure Jr .,
by forwarding 50 cen~ and a acting sheriff after his lather
tong,
stamped,
self- resigned.
Marm
t. wtll serve WI t'l1 the
addressed enve 1ope ror
malting. Address your letter end of the year.
to me in care of this newspaper, P. O. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, N. Y- BAlLOT RECOUNT
10019.
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
· DEAR DR. LAMB- What (UPl) - The Ross County
ere the consequences U a Board of Elections will
prescription calls for three recount baDots cast in the
grains of thyroid per day and June 8 Republican primary
the patient takes loW' and a · ·election for Ross County
half?
,/ sheriff.
DEAR READER + Tie
Sheriff Fred Heinzelman,
normal adult thyroid gland who lost to Thomas Hanunan
produces enough thyroid by eight votes, asked for the
hormone each day to about reco1111t. .
equal three grains of thyroid.
The unofficial tally showed , _
When a normal person takes Hamman winning by 14'
up to three grains a day the 'votes. But the official count
thyroid gland simply shuts released this week gave
down on how much it Hanunan 3,028 votes to 3,020
for Heinzelman.
·: I
Officials said they would .
starttherecountas~n as ~~
- ~~::&gt;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;~~~~~e&gt;~t~
possible.

OhioValley Bank

•

president when Spiro Agnew
resigned. Ford would stiU be
in Congress. And John would
be the Man."
The "Milk trouble" was, of
course, the charge against
Connally that he accepted
$10,000 from a dairytn311 to
influence price support
legislation. The case again.st
Connally was as weak as a
bruised udder, and Connally
was acquitted in a fedel'al
court. But, after a lifetime of
public service, he was dropped from the company of tne
nervous
Washington
establishment. Even today,
to some, he remains
something to be kept at arm's
length. A risk. A political no.
Few feel he was or is
dishonest but the smell of
suspicion is• not easily
washed away.
And this is the chi•! reason
why the Floresville hopes for
Mr. Johnny are not likely to
be realized this year. Neither
Ford nor Reagan would
easily select a running mate
who, however wrongly accused, was tied to the
Watergate era. He is the only
certifiably innocent man in
national politics today,
but
the
times
are
tough for politicos who
have been indicated . Even
proof of purity is often
not enough. Perhaps half of

firemen.
While there is little present Indication
that Right-to-Work will spread much beyond
the 19 states that have it, there is even less
indication that many of these 19 are about to
repeal their laws. Thus the ~rive by
clllganlzed labor to abolish the governing
section or Taft-Hartley and make the union
shop the rule nationwide, In both private and
public employment.
It is not necessary to be either for or
against Right-to-Work or to be pro-union or
anti-union to believe that this would he a
mistake. Labor should he free to campaign
for the repeal of Right-to-Work in those
states that have enacted such laws. If II can
convince enough legislators and working
people or the virtues of unic;lism, well and
good .
But at the same time, those who oppose
compulsory union members)!jp, who believe
there is a fundamental issue of individual
rights involved here, should be free to
promote their viewpoint.
In the final analysis, whether or not to
belong tu a union is something that every
factory, shop a.~d office worker and public
empluye should have the right to decide for
him~elf . Repeal of Section 14 ib i of TaftHartley would effectively abolish that right.

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America
June 26, 1776:
Sergeant Thoma s Hickey. a member or George
Washington 's Ll!e Guard , is orrested June 151 n New York
on charges of passing count er feil money. While In jail , he
boasts abou1 being part of o ronsplrat y to kidna6
Washington and to deH ver the rom inenta l Army to the
British . Today a court martial find s Hickey guilty of
mutiny , sedition , "and or lreacherous ly corresponding
with ... the ene mies or the Unit ed America n Colonies"notably roya l governor William Tryon of New York and
David Math ews , the mayor or New York. City. Hickey is
hanged in New York on June 28 before 20,000 spec tators the first American soldi er executed by order of a mill tary
co urt . Washington terms the hanging "a warning to
every soldier In the Arm y."

'

�£J I
k d
.•
r----A~;;-o~;th~---- !Busy Fourth o
u y wee en certam

lf - TheSundayTimes- Sentinei,SW!day,June27, 1976

I

I
CLINT BIRCH

PORTL AND ,. Cli nt Birch
of Portland has leMned of the
death

ot his grandson, Date

Lipps, 21, of Belpre, killed in
a iru c:k ('l cchJent Wedne\da y
even ing a t ap proxi mately
-4 : JO near Barl ow. Ohio .
He is sut vived by hjs
patents. J oe t'lnd Ellen Lipps,
VIncent : two liaughters in
Rhode Island. ,, son at home,
two brothers. Gale Lipps of
Vincen t and. Terry Lipps of
Marlettcl ; two sisters, Mrs.
Bruce Enlow, Newport, Ohio,
and Mr s. Dav id Riggins ol

Lilli• Hocki ng ; his grand lather , Clint Birch, and

severa l aunts and unc les.

Funeri.ll ser vices we r e held

Saturday ,, t

p.m . at the
F uner.1 1 Home in
Belpre. w ith buria l to be in
Belpn.&gt; cl'm e lery .

Spcncl!r

MAUD llODEHAVER

GUYSV IL LE-- Mrs. Maud

•

Rod eh ave r . 9'1 , Guysv ille ,

died Fri day il l the Arcadia
Nursin g Hum !! fol low ing an
e)( tended il!ness.
She was born in Doderidge

INNOC"N'f I'LEA
SA NTA MAHI A. Ca lif.
(UI'I ) - Hobert \yuterfield,
son elf actress Ja ne Russell
and for mer Los Angeles
Hums' foo tball star Bob
Wuterfield, pleuded innocent
hiday to a clwrgfl of second
degree murde1·.
Waterfiei&lt;l, 2U, was ordered
to appear lor a pretrial
hearing July :m.
l
11
·
At . a. I1carm~
· une .. •

~hcr~ ff

s dep ltttes testified
Wot ~rri e ld a farm laborer
'

to1d U1em he

..

, '

htid a ICW

drinks" und lvcnt _"target
•shooliu g" wiUJ his pistol
·liS 1ng the. stgn
. ·on the•
Hay~ul c r Taverr1 in the
•

c uya~~: w

hn'rKet.

Vu!Jey; as

the

•

Longest
(ContinuL&gt;d from page 13)
even wol'se.
"Col. Tony Callan," the•
notorious Greek Cypriot-born
rnemmary conunander, ordered Ute execution of 14
Britons who wanted to go
home.
In tl1e nine-day trial that
ended la st week , U.S.
attorneys Hobert Cesner Jr.
uf Columbus, Ohio, 31ld Bill
Wll'iOn of St. Louis, Mo.,
argued . that Acker and
Genrhart should be treated as
prisoners of war under
provisions of U1e Geneva
Conference.
Grillo, a former bodyguard
for a New Jersey gambler,
was represented by an
Angolan lawyer.
On the finul day of the trial,
Callan, whose real name is
Cestus Georghiou, spoke at
length for the fir st time.
Calla11 fr ee ly admitted
!ll'dcring the death of the 14
Britons and killing an
A11goiall soldier . and a
civilian.
lie also took responsibility
for the actions of all the
mcrtenurics and said he was
ready to atcept the
• t:onsequeuces.

•

By SANDR A L. LATIMER
United Press lntermtllunal
Statewide activities for this
Somm er v i l le. She was a
member of th e Guysville
Fourth of July weekend are
United Me thodist Church.
more nwnerous than usual as
Surviving are th r ee sons ,
rriany comm unities have
William 0 ., M iamisbu rg ;
added
attractions to their
James A., Chauncey , and ·
John G., Guysv ille; three usual celebrations to observe
da ughters. Ha ze l Bernard .
the nation 's 200th birthday.
Guysville ; Helen • McMullen ,
Nearly eve ry community
Athens, and Mabel L
Turnage. Circlevil le ; 15 has planned the usual J?&lt;lrade
grand children . 33 grea l
and fireworks , but other
gr andchildren. fi ve great
communities htive more lhis
grea f .grand child r en. tw o
year. to attract Ohioans who
st ep-grand chi ldr en.
and
choose to travel durin ~ the
thr ee
gr ea t . step
grandchil dren.
four-day weekend .
· Preceding her in dea th
And since the f'ourth falls
were her hu sbrmd , John G.
on
Sunday ,
ma ny
Rod eha ve r , in 19 44 ; a
communities
are
ha
virq~
daughter. Ruth ; t wo s is l er~ ,
and a brother .
speci al worship se rvie es.
Funeral se r vic;es will be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Among them are "200 Years
Whit e Funeral Home in of Christian Worship " at the
Coo lville with the Rev. John Van Wert Coun ty Fair Pal mer offi ciating . Bu r i a t! ground s;
old-fa s hion ed
will be in the Bean Ceme ter y chur ch Servi ces at West
at Guysv ille. F r iends may
Liberty, Wes terv ille and
call at the fun era l home any
Usbon and a mass religious
tim e.
service at Fawcett Stadium
in Canton .
Several activ ities are
planned
for the eve of the
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
f'ourth . These include :
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
- A Glenn Miller concert ,
OF TRANSFJORTATION
with
.Jimmy Henderson
Cclumbus. Oh io
June 11 ,1976·
conducting, at the WrightContract Sales Legal Copy
Patterson Air Forc-e Base
No . 76 · 581
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
near Dayton. Thi s concert,
PMS-0005! S5l
free to the public, will be held
Se aled proposals w i ll be
re ce i ved at fl1e off ice ot the on a fiat-bed trailer out of
Director of th e Onio Depart doors, and will follow the
m ent of Transport atio n ,
Col um bus , Oh io, unli t 10 : 00 dedication of the expa nded
A .M , Oh io Standard l 1me . Glenn Miller exhibit at the
Tuesday , July 13 , 1976, f or
Musewn. The t'On(·ert will be
impro veme nt s In :
D is tricl 10 ( Ptan IO .AJ
moved indoors in case of rctin
Athens . Gai Ha . Hoc king , and fans will be sitting the
Meig s. Morgan . Nob le, Vi~ ton
and washington Coun t• es . floor, reminiscent of th e
Ohio . on various road s in th e Glenn Miller ·toncerts to the
City ot Alhens . th e Vi ll ages ol
American Gl's in ~w·ope
Chaun ce y , Coolvill e ar:'d '"
Athens County ; th e C 1ty of during World War II.
Gallipo l is and tn Gal l ia
- The rededica tion &lt;md rt&gt;County : In Hockin.g co unt ~ .
me VI l lage of Racme and '" naming of tl1e Clark County
Meigs Co unty ; in Morgan
Building No. 1 in Springfield
county : in Nob le county ; in
Vinton Co unty ; th e Vil lage of in honor of the late A.B.
Beverly and In w ashi ngton Graham, \he Clark County
Count y . b y applymg paint to
edge , c enter and lane tine s. school superintendent who, in
Pr o i ecl Len g th - 0 t ee t or o 1902, founded an agricultura l
mi le.
club for boys and girls. The
work L engt h - o fee t or o
Coue ly, W. Va .. daughter of
the la te John T. and Ma rtha

#-

mile .
The Oh io D epa rtm en t or
Transportation
hereby
notif ies aH bidd ers tha t it wil l
affirmatively insure t hat in
an\1 ·COnt rac t e nl ered int o
pursuant
to
th is
ad
vertisement ,
minority
busin ess en terp r ises will be
a fford ed fiJll opportun i ty to
submit b ids in respon se to lh 1s
inv I! at ion and w i 11 not be
discriminat ed aga 1n st on th e
grounds at r ace . color , or
na tural origin i n cq nsid er alion
for an award .
" M in im um wage rates f or
thi s proj ect
ha ve
be e n
predetermin ed as requ 1r ed by
law and ar e se t torth in th e bid
proposal. "
" The dat e set tor completion
of this worK shall be se t tort h
In the b idd ing prop osaL "
Ea c h b idder
sha l l
be
requir ed to tile w i th his b id a
cer t if ie d c heck or cash ier ' s
c heck for an amount equal to
five per cent of his bid, but in
no event more than f i ft y
thousand dollars , or a bond for
ten per cent of his bid, payable
to the Dire ctor .
_
Bidder s mu st apply . on !h e
proP, er fo rms. tor qu ali ficatio n
a t lea st ten days prior to th e
date • set for open ing bid s 1n
acc ordan ct) w i th Chapt er 5525
Ohio Rev ised Code .
Plans and spe c ification s are
on f ite in th e D epartment ot
Trans po rta t ion and the off 1ce
of
th e
D i s t r ic t
Deput y
Director .
Th e D ire cto r r ese r ves the
r ig ht to re j ect an y and al l bi d s.
R I CHARD D . JACKSO N
DIR EC TOR
Rev . a. lJ .7J
June 20. 27

club is now known as 4-H .

- A five-h our extravaganza
at Sciot o Downs nca r
Columbus during which time
a time capsule from 1876 will
be opened ..
Activities througho ut the
weekend include:
- " Gallia Co un (y", u
musical history of what IS
now Gallia, Meigs, Vinton,
Jackson and Lawr ence
tou nti es. Th is wi ll be
performed ea ch weekend this
month in the Bob evans
Farms Amphitheatre in Rio
Grande.

ROSE RESIGNS
COLUMBUS IUPII - Jack
Rose resigned as president of
the Ohio Farmers Union
Friday after two and one half
years in the post.
Rose told the union's boa rd
of directors his resignation,
effective immediately, was
for personal reasons . He said
pressures of the job were
causing him to neglect his
farming operatio ns, hi s
family, church, business and
organizational interests.

Indian Crafts and Culture
!'ow -Wow at Whiteh ouse,
near Toledo, an exchange of
i(leas, erafl itr.ms, skilb cand
knowledge co nce rning the
Amerlran lndian.'i.
,

- Ashville Fourth of July
Ce leb ration, one of the
largest local fndependenL'e
Day cele brations in the
na tion. More Unm twu tons o£
fil;h will be preparL'&lt;l for the
fish frv. Three parades and a
beauty pa ge ant will be
staged .
- Th e Tr ave l i ng
Smithsonian Exhibit, •· tn the
Minds and Hea rts of People",
docum ents and letter of the
ma jor leaders and th eir
thoughts before the America n
Hevoiution. This will be on
. display io Coshocton as part
of the Shriners "Shinabra-

tion."

Acti vities the Fourth
include :
- A re-enactmen t of a
Cen tenni;tl ce lebration at
Ohio Village in Colwnbu s.
The
Ded ara tion
of
Independence will be read
and activities will be geared
to the way Ohioans observed
the July 4, 1816.
'll1e open i n ~ of the Ohio
Aviation Heri ta ge exhibition
&lt;~t

married Sunduy at Kings
Island to Sandra Campbe ll , a
native of Lebanon _ He will
we:1r a Re vo luti onary-era

tuxedo, Miss Campbell will
wear the weddi ng gown
actress fl aquel Welch wore in
"TI1e Three Musketeers" and

the Rev. Gene Skipworth of
Forest
Park
United
Methodist
Church
in
Cincinnati, wbo will perform
the ceremony, will wear an
Uncle Silm ouUit.
Paul Revere and the
Raiders will perform .two
·concerts following the

weddin~
And in many cities
throughout the state, &amp;inday
activities will pause at 2 p.m.
when bells and sirens will
ring for at least two minutes
- the approximate time a
new nation was born 200
years ago.

15 - The Sunday T~es - Sentinel, S~y, June 27, 1976

TOM TIEDE

.
Somewhat soiled Great White Hope
By Tom Tiede
, FLORESVILLE,
Tex.
~ NEA) The aulWIUI'S
presidential campaign will
Wldoubtedly be the peanuttiest in history. There will be
James Earl Carter on the one
~ide, likely. And on the other,
if folks here in the goqber
capital of Texas get their
Wish, will be John Bowden
Connally, the local legend
who may be the best vice
presidential · material the
)ocal legend who may be the
pest vice presidential
material the Republican parly has had in this century.
. To be precise, Connally is
pot a peanut fanner himself.
Peanuts grow on his ranch
here, but he leases the land to
a sod buster. As has Carter,
Connally, too, has been
heavily influenced by the
'egwne. So honored is the industry locally that a statue of
a nut - not Lyndon Jolmson
- sits in the conununity
square. Growing up then,
Connally, the son of a bus
driver, the natives say that
"Mr. Johnny learned about
George Washington Carver
before he learned about
George Washin'gton."
Not that the man's political
education was injured. The
locals insist that Connally
knows
more
about
democracy, government and

Whdll pay you the

on your savings?

Dayton, running through

Aug. 25.
- The opening of Heritage
and Horizons at lhe Toledo
Musetun of ilrt, a survey of
Am e rice~n

pain ti ngs from

1776-1976, running through
Aug. 15.

Ba se ba II , America 's
pa stt ime. will be played in
two 01110 cities as both the
Cleve land Ind ians and
Cincinna ti Heels are at home.
The Heds will host Houston in
;1 dou bleheader
Sunday
afternoon and the Cleveland
ind ians host New York in
th eir fi rst Sunday ni ght

constitutional leadership
than anyone in either party
today. As such, they add, he
is the ooly man in America
who can save the GOP. The
reasoning is ~ t neither
Gerald. Ford nor Ronald
Reagan has the personal
image necessary to carry the
election. But with Connally?
Says Charles Fuller, former
Democratic chainnan of this
region:
" Mr. Johnny could put life
into the Ford campaign. Or
he could add a moderating innuence to Reagan's bid. He is
simply a· remarkable
politician. I think he could
help a jackass get elected
this year."
Increasing numbers of
Republican offiters across
the country agree.
Particularly when they are
referring to Ford. The
opinion is that the Texas rancher is everything that the
Michigan lineman is not. He
is a most effective campaigner, be appeals to both
conservatives
and
moderates, he is channing
and witty and bright. ActuaDy, says a Republican
conunitteeman, "Jolm Connally should be rwming today
instead of Ford.' If it hadn't
been for that milk trouble,
Nixon would have chosen
Connally as his vice

Dr. Lamb

game.

The city of Cinti nnat1 will
observe its Fourth of July

,
,Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. ·
' DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
the condition diagnosed as
diverticulosis. I also have a
tendency toward diarrhea
)md don't seem to he able to
handle raw vegetables, fresh
fruits, bran muffins, etc., ali
of whicN
like, Is this
combination lthusual?
I am supposed todrlnkmUk
three times a day to avoid
bone -thinning and milk is
starting to cause some
discomfort. Would boiling the
milk aid in i~ digestibility?
DEAR READER - Those
llttle pockets aloog the co1on
called diverticulosis are
thought by some authorities
. t he
to he caused by spasms m
• bowel. As lhe pressW'e bui1ds
up inside the bowelit literally
blows out little ruptures or
pockets that are diverticula.
It is often associated with
spastic colon. An overactive
bowel is often associated with
increased pressure inside the
colon. The combination of
irritable
colon
or
diverticulosis and intermittent diarrhea isn't aII that
rare .
In most instances these
conditions appear ,to be
improved py increasing the
bulk in the diet as I have
mentioned before. That
specifically includes a\idlng
i:ereal fiber to the diet as you
jnight find in bran .
Remember there is nothing
rough about bran. Once it is
Soft or moist, which will
happen as soon as It Is mixed
In the stomach, it becomes
"softage." It is this increased
bulk that helps make the
eaton function more normally
and in many instances helps
\0 eliminate spastic colon,
intermittent constipation,
:
·

Monda y with a re-enadme nt
of Yca lman's Landing , two

parades. games in city pa rks.
'lliCre will be a concm:t in
lliverfront Stmlium at 8 p.m
with Cdc Kuenwl cotHiu cting
the Ci ncin na ti Sy mphony
Orehestra . Be1my Goodman
and t::lla Fitzgerald will also
perform . · The cos t of
admission is $1.
King s Island , the family
am usement cenler in so uth-

western Oh io, wiii have
extended hours this weekend.
'111e center will be one of the
sites featured on a 12-hour
sr ndicat ed te lev isi on
n'icenten nial l'elebration
from 7 p.m. Saturday to 7
a.m. Sunday.
The Kings Island porti ons,
both pre-taped and live, will
include a spectacular display
of fir ewo rks and gues ts
app ea rances by severa l
nationally prominent groups,
including Pa ul Revere and
the Raiders. Kings Island will
feature its gate price of$f• at 5
p.m. and will remain open
Sa turday until the park 's
por ti on of the show is
complete.
Revere, the leader of the
musical grou p, will be

no matter what you're looking
for in savings or investment.
certificates...
·
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

5~. S:~~b. ~%

st~.%
RAT£

st~.%

• r.ompounded 0~1 1 y 1

• p,,ya ble Qu arter! ~ • M1mmum S1.000 DO

e Payable Ouarrerly • Minimum Si,OOO .OO

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6~.

6~,

st~.%

RAil

R~TE

canhel .~~

RATE

~nE

• Pavab le Quarterl y • M1 mnwm Sl.OOO DO

R~TE

• Pa yJble Ouarle rly • Minimum S1.000 DO

4-YEAR CE RTIFICAT E

6-YEAR CERTIFICATE

00·0 YOURSElf

.

• Payable Ouarlerly • Minimum $1 .000 .00

AIHl 111 al1C11 110n IG all l!lts

monthly or

ou;ulrrl y mc[lme
oa10 on one two three
low 01 su ~t· ar cerlllltat£'S l n te~est pay ·
dOle rnunlhly 11 you ae~He on ce !l lllt ~ t es
'Mill lace afliOIIfll ol 55 000 00 or more
rcON al Regulation', rcqu1rc a Stl!I'T1ntlal
pen alty 'or prcma11 ,,, withdrawal ol W l1f1·

I P,l'/ahle Ouaflerly • Mlntmu rn Sl .OOU 00

1

P • · ~~ lJu atleJIV • M1ntmum SI .OOO 00

catc hmJs

you'll find it at

',.
'

\Vh v sl' it l(' fo r lt&gt;ss than th e best?
\\'lwn it ronws to your savings, you
wa nt n fair ret um . the highest lega l!.\· possible, 11·i.th &lt;I gua ran tee of
sa ft&gt;t~'

for ~· our funds. and access ih ili t ~· l o these fund s

Berry,s·.World

on reasonable notice of withdrawal.
This is exactly what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their depositors. No won der 1savings deposits continue to be at an
all- time high.

&lt;WE

~OT 'EM!

PRICED
RIGHT!

Ohio Valley Bank

CARTER &amp; EVANS BUILDING SUPPLIES
OLIVE ST.
•

•

•
,.

Gall ipoliS Ohio

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MON. nfRU FRI. 7:30. A.M. TIL 5:00 P.M. SAT. 7:30 Tll .4:00 P.M .
i.\

Member

The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank.

"It doesn't matter. Nobody really has to stand on it. "
~- -------------------------Let&amp;en of oplaloa a~ welcomed. Tbey 1b0111d be

1
1

1
1

I

1
t

:

less 1111111 300 wortlllloog (or be ~ubjed lo reiluetloa by
tbe edilor) aDd mast be tdgned wtt11 llle 1lpee'1 llddress. Names may be wltbbeld upoa pubUcaU011.
However, 011 request, aames will be dllelCIIed. Le«era
sboultl be Ia good taste, addreulllg lllues, Dol persollllltlea.

.8-NU

a

FDIC

"Are you sure we're READY for 'Opera tion Sail
'76,' Viking /'s landing on Mars, Queen
Bizabeth's visit, paradee. fireworks all on the
SAME DAY?"

RAY CROMLEY

Carter's ·funding
is broad based

! ···~-~: ~• •.

8y Ray Cromley
WASHfNGTON - So many people h1tve asked me ot
late "Who is bacldnij Jimmy Carter - where's his money
coming from?" that I went over to the Federa l Election
Commission to see what t•eports were on file.
I1
~Here, too, the answers were vab'U C. The Carter repol'ts,
like those of other leading presidential camlldates, contained
Prayer from the grave
few donors listing their specific business connections. Many
were listed only by name, address und size of donution . Most
A reader who asks her name he withheld clipped the others were too vague to be of mucl,t use.
AIR RACES
article below from "A Huntington" newspaper, and asks It be
Nevertheless, im interesting pattern developed. To one ·
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!) published as a public service:
reading through the il$ts of $10(1-!md-up donors, the numQer of
- Pending approval by the
Please, God, I'm Ouly
attorneys giving sizable amounts seemed ex traordinarily
city solicitor, a series of
Seveuteeu
large In comparison with other ca ndidates. There were ··
airplane pylon races is being
The day I died was an ordinary school day . How I wish I noticeable nwnbers of publishei'S, operators or owners of
planned here for Oct. 8-10.
had taken the bus! But I was too cool for the bus. I remember newspapers and radio stations. Stock b1·okcrs, real estate
The Mansfield Lahm bow I wheedled the car out of Mom. "Specialfavor ,"I pleaded, developers. Contractors und builders.
Airport Commission acted "all the kids drive." When the 2:SO bell rang, I threw all my
There was an interesting sprinkling of college professors
favorably Thursday night on books in the locker. I was free untll8;f0 tomorrow morning. I and some obviously well-heeled studenL&lt;on the big donor lists.
the proposal of a St. Louis ran to the parking lot, excited at the thought of driving a car
There seemed to be a scmcity of donors who, for the
firm to returri pylon racing to and being my own boss. Free!
record, classified U1emselves as businessmen or business
Ohio. Mansfield would be one
It doesn't matter how the accident happened. I · was execl!tives. Or smalllndpendettl oil operators, a listing which
site in an international circuit goofing off -going too fast. ·Taking crazy chances. But f was showed up frequently among Reagan Texas donors.
of such races.
enjoying my frl1edom and having fun. The last thing I
As might be expect~ , a considerable chunk of the e~rly
David - Wolf of Air remember was passing an old lady who seemed to he going Carter money ca.mo from Georgia, wi th emphasis on Atlanta .
International Races awfully slow. I heard the deafening crash and felt a terrific
A spot check indiculL~l \hal. vnrious members of U1e law
presented his finn's proposal jolt. Glass and steel new everywhere. My whole body seemed firm of Lipshutz, Macey, Zusman and Sikes, of Atlanta, and
after an inspection of the city to be turning inside out.l heard myself scream.
their families, gave upwards of $9,:100 lo the campaign. Robert
and the airfield.
Suddenly I awakened : it was very quiet. A pollee officer J. Lipshutz was listed in the reports us U1e Carter campaign
Wolf said crowds could run was standing over me. Then I saw a doctor. My body was treasurer.
up to 60,000 every day of the mangled. 1 was saturated with blood. Pieces' of jagged glass
Jimmy Carter and his inmlCdiate family gave upwards of
race.
were sticking out all over. Strange that I couldn't feel $32,000 in the early reports, the latest figures not being in,
anything.
, b d d Including a donation of $17 .70 from small daughter Amy,
MONORAIL WANTED
Hey, don't pull that sheet over my head. I can t e ea · $13,000 from wife Rosa lynn and $18.200 from Carter himself.
CLEVELAND (UPI) _ I'm only 17. I've got a date tonight. I am supposed to grow up Later reports, when they come in, could raise these figures, of
and have a wonderful life. 1 haven't lived yet. I can't be dead. course.
City officials
this week
will
submit
to the federal
governLater I was placed in a drawer. MY folks had to iden tify
On the $!()().and-over lists available which as noted above
ment a proposal for a $50 me. Why did they have to see me like this? Why.did I have to are nut up-to-date, there was a singular paucity of well-known
took at Mom's eyes when she faced the most tembleordeal of names. There were some, of course. Dean Rusk, fonner
million monorail passenger herlife' Dad
· suddenly 1oo·ked lik e an old man . He totd theman secretary of State, was there. And C. D. Dillon, former
system for downtown, liking
Public Square, Playhouse in charge, "Yes, he is my son."
secretary of the Treasury and under /lCCretnry of State; Henry
The funeral was a weird experience. I saw all my relatives Lu~e, vice president of Time, Inc.; Cyrus Eaton, the
Square'
government and friends walk toward the casket. They passed by, one by · contr.oversialfinancierof Arcadia Farms; BUtt Lancaster, the
~~~~J bU:::::.s '::~~~ one, and looked at me with the sadf destfethyes I'lsvetoevehr sdeen. actor; Frank Ikard, presi dent of the American Petroleum
Someofmybuddleswerecrying.A ewo e gJr
uc e my Institute, James Latham, president of the Transcontinental
dedbythesefacilities.
hand and sobbed as they walked away .
Oil ; Joseph F. Cullman, 3rd, chairman of the Board and chief
Please ... somebody ... wake me up! Get me out of here. I executive officer of Phillip Morris, Inc.; Irving Shepard,
can't bear to see my Mom and Dad so broken up. My president of Cromalloy American; .lmnes D. Maddox, of
JOHNSON CAUGIIT
grandparents are so wracked with grief they can blll'ely walk. Rome, Ga .; Ted Ashley, a motion picture eKecutive with
WAS!llNGTON (UP!)
My brother and sisters are like zombies. They move like Warner Brothers ; Robert Wise , producer of "The Sound of
Morris Lynn Jolmson, 38, one robots. In a daze, everybody . No one can believe this. And, I Music," "West Side Story" and "The Andromeda Strain";
of the FBI's 10 most-wanted can't believe it either .
publisher Bernard Gels. A University of Con necti cut student
Please don't bury me.l'mnotdead! I have a lot of living to gave $1 ,000, a union organizer $500.
fugitives after escaping from do. 1 wimt to laugh and run again. I want to sing and dance·
A number of political funds were represented - the Olin
the
penitentiary
at Pieasedon'tputmeinthegroWld. 1promiSe
· uyougveme
i
just (chemicals) Political F'und, the Southern Railway Good
AU federal
ta
'ght
tha
an near1Y el mon
one more chance God !11 be the most careful driver in the Government Fund, the Non Partisan League of Machinlst.s and
ago, was arrested in New whole world. All i want is one more chance. Please, God, I'm political funds sponsored by Pacific Lighting (utility),
Orlesns, the FBI said Siltur- only 17!
Chevron and Conoco (petroleum ), the Committee of Quality
day.
Government, t11e BetterGovcrmnenl Committee of New York
City, the AFSCME .
Aroutine check of the Carter dollar sources thus reveals
..._..-o-o...:;"&lt;-.-.c;&gt;&lt;=:&gt;-&lt;:~",&lt;..-.c;;&gt;o&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;..o..c....o-e&gt;.c&gt;.c&gt;-o-o'&lt;'~~ no sinister or even worrisome pattern of financial backin~. On
:r~
the surface, at least, it would appear those giving to the
campaign represent a fairly wldesp1·ead andLrepresenlatlve
section of the voting population.
1
'

.Ed
·' •t rza.• l com ment '
l 0

opinion, features

NEW POSI'
COLUMBUS (UPI) Kenneth ·lleShetler, former
director of the state
insurance department, has
Every Democratic presidential canbeen named to the newly- didate since, and Including, Harry Trwnan
created post of vice ll't!Sident in 1948 has campaigned against lhe Taftfor legislative and regulatory Hartley Act, more or less.
affairs.
No candidate today, of course, adDeShetler, a Toledo native, vocates outright repeal of the 1947labor law
headed the insurance depart- in toto. Even Trwnan did not hesitate to
ment from 1971 to 1975 and invoke its 9«klay cooling-off provision when
during that time, was elected . the public interest was threatened by a
president of the National strike in a major industry. Even the ultion
Association of Insurance movement has learned to live with TaftCommissioners.
HarUey and may grudgingly admit that it
has i Is uses .
It's Section 14 1b) of lhe law that conINK TWO PITCHF.R.~
CINCI)IINATI (UPI) -The tinues to stick in the craw of organized labor
Cincinnati Reds have signed and whose repeal this year's Democratic
on two pitchers.
hopefuls, to a man, have said .they favor Third round draft choice or in the case or Mr. Carter, have said they
Greg Meyer, 18, a left-handed wol!ld sign if it were placed on their desk .
pitcher from Ballwin, Mo.,
This is the ~".: lion which allows the states
with an 8-1 high school either or to prohibit compulsory union
record, will report Monday to membership in the form of the closed shop,
the Billings, Moot. Pioneer the so-called " Right-to-Work" section . Since
League.
1947, 19 slates have enacted Right-to-Work
A Reds spokesman said laws banning compulsory union memFriday the team had aiBo bership as a requirement for employment .
signed right-handed pitcher when· 11niuns have won contracts with
Jay }lowell, 20, from the '"""" ~··me n!. A Iota! of 32 states currently
University of Colorado. The f;•riltd the furred unionizalittn of public
All Big 8 Team member was l'lliiJioyes , !lwugh somt• t,mT llilllh' ,.,
a 31st round choke.
Lt~ f' ( inns for tcac:hl!rS, IJllliCCilltll li'iili
•

Section 14 fh)'s repeal would wrong a right

Will!

WE'VE

produces. TheroreUcally, a
person taking three grains a
day would not be producing
any significant hormone from
the thyroid gland.
Beyond this point, taking
excess thyroid may cause the
same symptoms a person has
from an overactive thyroid
gland, except bulging of the
eyes which does not occur_
Such a person may become
nervous, feel hot, lose weigll!,
have a rapid. heart rate ana
could develop serious
problems. While there are
individual differences, taking
excess thyroid without your
doctor's approval is most
unwise.

America still suspects Connally is a cheat.
And so there are at least a
few people in Floresville who
feel the nution no longer
deserves Mr. Johnny's services. Charles Fuller says he
has asked the fanner governor and fanner Treasury
secretary to " come home for
good; settle down, relax, and
let the ingrates go to hell."
But Coonally respectfully
dedines the notion. In fact he
has become the most active
noncandidate in the country.
Using $250,000 raised by
friends, he is averaging three
speeches a week in an
energetic attempt to raise
political con.sciousness from
Orlando to Olympia. One of
his themes: every young man
and woman should be
required to spend one year in
the service of his government. Democracy is shaky,
he insists; what we need 11re
200 million born-again
American.s.
It's not a bad thought, considering the mood of the elettorate. Jinuny Carter could
get the Jesus vote, Jolm Connally the patriotic. At least
that way there would be a
contest. And the lusterless
GOP could offer the voters
something more than
President Clean or Governor
Mean.

dlrrhea
and
other
manifestations of ·improper
bowel fW!ction which often
lead to diverticulosis.
Part&gt;of your problem may,
indeed, be the milk.
Individuals
who
are
Intolerant to the lactose
(double sugar) of milk and
can't split it often have gas
and diarrhea. Boiling the
milk will not help with this
problem. You have to avoid
milk and milk products
altogether, including
excessive use of these items NEW SHERIFF
in cooking. You might he lble
McARTHUR, Ohio (UP!)
· WI'll serve out
to use tow lactose milk made - Jerry Martin
with Lact-Aid.lf that is your the tenn of Sheriff Delno
problem, Uten you will need McClure, who resigned June
.
•
12 .
to get your calciUm
t
coun tY
.
·
Th e
Vm on
supplements in · some other
way, perhaps through Republic n Centra 1
calcium tablets.
Committee picked Martin,
1 am sending you The who was defeated by Neil
Health Letter, Number ~. Scott for the Republican
Diverticulosis to give you nomination for sheriff in
more detailed infonnatloo. June, over McClure's son .
Others who would like to ~ave
County commissioners apthis infonnation can obtain it pointed Delno McClure Jr .,
by forwarding 50 cen~ and a acting sheriff after his lather
tong,
stamped,
self- resigned.
Marm
t. wtll serve WI t'l1 the
addressed enve 1ope ror
malting. Address your letter end of the year.
to me in care of this newspaper, P. O. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, N. Y- BAlLOT RECOUNT
10019.
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
· DEAR DR. LAMB- What (UPl) - The Ross County
ere the consequences U a Board of Elections will
prescription calls for three recount baDots cast in the
grains of thyroid per day and June 8 Republican primary
the patient takes loW' and a · ·election for Ross County
half?
,/ sheriff.
DEAR READER + Tie
Sheriff Fred Heinzelman,
normal adult thyroid gland who lost to Thomas Hanunan
produces enough thyroid by eight votes, asked for the
hormone each day to about reco1111t. .
equal three grains of thyroid.
The unofficial tally showed , _
When a normal person takes Hamman winning by 14'
up to three grains a day the 'votes. But the official count
thyroid gland simply shuts released this week gave
down on how much it Hanunan 3,028 votes to 3,020
for Heinzelman.
·: I
Officials said they would .
starttherecountas~n as ~~
- ~~::&gt;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;~~~~~e&gt;~t~
possible.

OhioValley Bank

•

president when Spiro Agnew
resigned. Ford would stiU be
in Congress. And John would
be the Man."
The "Milk trouble" was, of
course, the charge against
Connally that he accepted
$10,000 from a dairytn311 to
influence price support
legislation. The case again.st
Connally was as weak as a
bruised udder, and Connally
was acquitted in a fedel'al
court. But, after a lifetime of
public service, he was dropped from the company of tne
nervous
Washington
establishment. Even today,
to some, he remains
something to be kept at arm's
length. A risk. A political no.
Few feel he was or is
dishonest but the smell of
suspicion is• not easily
washed away.
And this is the chi•! reason
why the Floresville hopes for
Mr. Johnny are not likely to
be realized this year. Neither
Ford nor Reagan would
easily select a running mate
who, however wrongly accused, was tied to the
Watergate era. He is the only
certifiably innocent man in
national politics today,
but
the
times
are
tough for politicos who
have been indicated . Even
proof of purity is often
not enough. Perhaps half of

firemen.
While there is little present Indication
that Right-to-Work will spread much beyond
the 19 states that have it, there is even less
indication that many of these 19 are about to
repeal their laws. Thus the ~rive by
clllganlzed labor to abolish the governing
section or Taft-Hartley and make the union
shop the rule nationwide, In both private and
public employment.
It is not necessary to be either for or
against Right-to-Work or to be pro-union or
anti-union to believe that this would he a
mistake. Labor should he free to campaign
for the repeal of Right-to-Work in those
states that have enacted such laws. If II can
convince enough legislators and working
people or the virtues of unic;lism, well and
good .
But at the same time, those who oppose
compulsory union members)!jp, who believe
there is a fundamental issue of individual
rights involved here, should be free to
promote their viewpoint.
In the final analysis, whether or not to
belong tu a union is something that every
factory, shop a.~d office worker and public
empluye should have the right to decide for
him~elf . Repeal of Section 14 ib i of TaftHartley would effectively abolish that right.

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America
June 26, 1776:
Sergeant Thoma s Hickey. a member or George
Washington 's Ll!e Guard , is orrested June 151 n New York
on charges of passing count er feil money. While In jail , he
boasts abou1 being part of o ronsplrat y to kidna6
Washington and to deH ver the rom inenta l Army to the
British . Today a court martial find s Hickey guilty of
mutiny , sedition , "and or lreacherous ly corresponding
with ... the ene mies or the Unit ed America n Colonies"notably roya l governor William Tryon of New York and
David Math ews , the mayor or New York. City. Hickey is
hanged in New York on June 28 before 20,000 spec tators the first American soldi er executed by order of a mill tary
co urt . Washington terms the hanging "a warning to
every soldier In the Arm y."

'

�16-The Sunday TUne3 -Sentinei,SWlday, June '!/, 1976

Winterization is
urged in summer

•

CHESHIRE - The Gallia • ministration (CSA), and subMeigs Community Action contracted from the CorAgency is Seeking additional poration for Ohio ApDevelopment
applications for ilS Home palachian
(COAD),
·is
designed to
Winterization Program.
'
provide
insulation
and winThis project, funded by the
terization
to
residents
of
Cunummity Services Ad·
senior citizens, and those
economically disadvantaged
whose incomes meet the CSA
Poverty Guidelines . .
It is important to realize
that now iB the time to
OltDER RESCINDED
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. prepare homes for energy
(UP!) ~ In 1838, Gov. Lilburn conservation later during the
Boggs directed his militia to high fuel consumption
, exterminate or expel from season.
Applications for this
Missouri a group of Mormons
can be obtained
program
he said had declared war on
the state. Friday, Gov. from the Community Action
Christopher Bond rescinded Agency Office at the Gallia
the 138-year~Jd order and County Courthouse (446-4612,
extended regret to Mormons Extension 72), Cheshire Offor any suffering and fice (367-7341), or the Meigs
injustice the order may have County Courthouse (9925605).
caused.

WINNER.S of the annual hike-bike for retarded citizens sponsored by the Gallipolis
Area Jayces are front row, (1-r ) Betty Saxon, Jim Johnson, Todd Comer, Jane Ann Denney,
(seCQnd row) Russ Cardwell, Lowell Cardwell, Mike Kanunan, hike-bike chairman; Mindy
Frazier. Not J!iclured are Sheila and Tammy Harrison and linda and Palty Harrison .

Awards are made to

Hike .. Bike winners
GALLIPOLIS- Mike Kamman, Hike-Bike Chainnan of
the Gallipolis Area Jaycees,
presented awards Saturday,
JWJe 19, to the 1976 wiru~ers of
their Ailllual Hike-Bike for
retarded citizens held earUer
this spring.
Wiru~ers were based on the
participants who collected
the largest amoWlt of money.
First prize went to Betty
Saxon, the winner of the 11l-

speed bicycle. Second prize a
$50 Savings Bond went to
Jane Ann Denney. Tlurd
prize, Russ Cardwell, fourth
prize, Lowell Cardwell, ijlld
fifth prize, Todd Comer, each
receiving a $25 Savings Bond.
Sixth prize a porlable radio,
went to Jim Johnson.
All participan ts tha t
walked the 17 miles were
presented with a bicentennial
silver dollar mounted on a

chair. Walkers were Lowell
Cardwell , Linda Cannan,
Patty Carman , Mindy
Frazier, Sheila Harrison,
Tammy Han·ison and Betty
Saxon.
G. C. Murphy, Silver Plaza
Shopping Center, donated the
!().speed bicycle. The Parents Volunteer Assn . of
the Gallipolis State Institute
donated all other prizes.
Other participants were
Mac Cameron, Alan Harris,
Janey Harris, Chriss Huffman, Brenda Mays, Jolm
Roush,. Steve _Runyon ,
Palncia Sheets, Keith Lee
Tyler, Brian Tabit, Jeff
Tabit, Geneva Walker.

Rock, country bands welcomed
RUTLAND - All area rock and CtJunlry bands of the area are invited to U.ke par! in a " 1l111 tie
of the Band s" to be staged on July 5 in Rutland as a part of a three day holiday eelcbrat ion.
Prizes will be awarded to the top three bands including $100,$50 and $25. P. ntry fee is $111 and
must accompany the registration form which is to be mailed to Mrs. Joan Stewa rt, P. 0 . Rux lJ'
Rutland, Ohio 45775.
.
Each band taking pari will make a 15 minute presentation. The evenl 1s co-sponsored by the
Rutland Fire Department and the Rutland Bicentennial Commillee .

WANTED- WANTED

OIL AND GAS LEASES

BIKE DONA TED - G. C. Murphy at the Silver Bridge Plaza donated a iO-speed bicycle
to the annual Hike-bike of the Galliplis Area Jaycees. From the left, are Boyd Stover, G. C.
Murphy; Betty Saxon, first prize winner and Mike Kamman, (like-bike chairman.

RETRACTION MADE
WARSAW, Polans (UP!) Strikes
and
ra ilroad
blockades have forced
Poland to retract planned
food price increases to avert

a repetition of worker riots
that topp led Comrr.unist
party boss Wladyslaw
Gomulka in 1970. One day
after announcing plans to
raise food prices for the first

--··········

time since Gomulka 's ouster,
Premier Piotr Jaroszewicz
told the nation Friday night
tlle government "thinks that
it is necessary to reanalyze
the whole matter again ."

The following townships are
urgently needed for lease: Ohio,
Guyan, Clay, Harrison, Green,
Gallipolis. Also we will consider
all other locations. Write
Universal Petroleum, Box41,
Care of The Daily Tribune. .

BOYS'
SHORT SlEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS
Wide assortment of boys' short
sleeve knit tops. Choose from
crew neck , sui:Jiistatics, photo
sc reen prints, stripes, and 50! ·
ids . Avoila~le in sizes 4-7 and
8-18.

Name of Band - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- -

'-

Address of Person in Charge - - - - - - - - - - - Phone No. Person in charge _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Number in Band and Type of Music-~~-------

to Joan SIPw art.
P . 0 . Box.l4 l. Rutla nd , OhioI

1Mail with $111 reg istration

CHAIRS • .CHAIRS • CHAIRS
We've Got Chairs!

60 in Stock
30 -to Come

open July 3rd celebration
RUTLAND - A bicentennial parade beginning at
10 :30 a.m. on July 3 will oftidally open a three day
holiday weekend celebration
in Rutland under the sponsorship of the Rutland Fire
Department and the Rutland
Bicentennial Commission.
It is reported that many en-

ALL FAMOUS MAKES
*BERKLINE
*BASSETT
*COLLINS
*NORWALK
*MODERN

HOSPITAL
NEWS

SEE THE NEW BENDIX
SECTIONAL HOME 26'X56'

~.,.GV~~~

0.

•

A thought for the day :
. General of the Army Douglas
MacArther said, "In war,
there is no substitute for
victory."

MOBILE HOMES, INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles.Phone 446-9340
Galli olis, Ohio

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

Bicentennial parade will
tries have been received for National Guard equipment.
the bicentennial parade At 9 a.m. a public square
which·will fonn at 9:30a.m. dance will be held in
at the Eli Denison American the gymnasium.
On !:lunday there will be a
Legion Post Home on Beech
hymn
sing at 2 p.m. in the
Grove Road. At l p.m. there
gymnasium
just before 2
will be a speaking program
p.m.
all
or
the
churches of the
with Rep. Ron James and
community and individuals
Sen. Oakley Collins on hand.
Other features of the Satur- who own bells will ring them
day program will include a in observance of July 4th. h t
flower show in the Rutland the afternoon there will be ;•
gymnasium with the public to lug-of-war · at 4 p.m. in the
select the winners and a ConunWJity park with rules
decorated eake show. Entries and regulations to be anfor the flower show are to be nowtced later.
Monday, July 5, there will
in place at 12 noon and en·
tries for the cake show at 10 be a tractor pulling contest at
a.m. The cakes will be auc- I p.m. in the community park
Veterans Memorial Hospital tioned following the judging. and there will be a number of
ADMISSIONS - Deborah Winners will receive the various old-time contests and
Drake, Pomeroy ; Ricky mayor's trophy in both the races for children. The
Wise, Rutland ; Earl Van flower show and the cake evening program which is
Meter, Portland; Elizabeth show. Also there will be a being arranged will be
Ryan, Mason; Howard demonstration on ceramics followed by a fireworks
also presented in the gym- display.
Kitchen, Pomeroy.
Public games will be held
DISCHARGES - Karen nasium and the senior
Cremeans, Myrtle Thomas, citizens will have crafts ami at the park on beth Saturday
Melvin Cunningham, Broce arts on display. A display of and Monday and there will be
Blosser, Glenda Hunt, James National Guard equipment skill game slands, a train
will be featured outside of the ride, refrestunenlS booths
Pooler.
and other attractions will be
gymnasium.
. The ca ke auction is featured for the three days of
scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. the celebration. A softball
Pleasant Valley
DISCHARGES - Mrs. On Saturday afternoon, a tournament will be held on all
Gilly Henry, Gallipoli s jeep will be floated on the three days as well as the ox
Ferry; Mrs. Robert Burton, lake of the American Legion roast, held annually by the
Point Pleasa nt ; Gerald home as well as a piece of fi re department.
Sayre, Ripley ; Mrs. Ralph
Barcus, Gallipolis ; Mrs. John
Zembry, dau ghter, Point
NEW!
Pleasant ; Amy McKinney,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Archie
11
11
Starcher, Gallipolis; Okey
King, Point Pleasant; Ethel
Fortney, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Clement Cooper ,
Syracuse, 0. ; Mrs. William
3 Bedroom, 2 baths. house. siding shingle
Roush, New Haven ; Rhonda
roof.
fa'mily room , dining room, porch . On
Young, Clifton ; Mrs. Franklin Collins, Ashton ; Leonard
Roush, Letart; Mrs. A. J.
Bishop, Middleport; Mrs.
Robert Watkins, Gallipolis,

SILV-0-LINE ALUMINUM FOIL
8 ROLLS

$2~!

Name of Person in Charge--- - - - - - -- -- -

•

12"x25'

To $3.99
CI.OTHIIIC DEI'T.

'

· · : :.....r.

SUNSET OR VERNON

120 MI~UTE CASSETTE
RECORDING TAPE
CHILDREN'S

$200

TENNIS OXFORDS

KLEAR
FLOOR
WAX

$

200

SHITSDIPT.

WILSON

'K28+

GOLF BALLS
. $ 2~~-0F3

Chi ld sizes 8 V•- 12, and Missy size 12 V&gt; -3.

HECK'S RE.G.

CHOICE

HECK'S REG ,
To $2.9_9
(lOTN/1"
DEPT.

$ 200

..

..,,..., ......=-,

EACH

16 OZ. TUBULAR

STEEL HAMMER

S/1011$ DII'T.

MAN'S TRIFOLD

WALLET

LADIES

HALTER TOPS

200

$200

SPIIU1 OF AMERICA

AIRMAnRESS
HECK'S
REG.

$4.44

AlUM IliUM OR CERAMIC

HOT POT
$2~A~H

$2.88

"""""',.,_

6WII.IIY

KODAK
HIGH SPEED

Heel's

Reg.

$3.29

'200
SPORTING DEPT.

SYLVANIA

EKTACIIIOME FILM

FLASHBAR

20 EXPOSURES

TORSO TRIMMER

·&gt;

HECK'S REG.
$3.77 EACH .

PKG.

$2.74

RECLINERS

Our Motto: SALES WITH SERVICE

$2.59

Chi ldren's tennis ox for ds in Infant sizes S-8,

IJEIIT.

. Should Sell For Higher Prices
From $79.95 to $350.00

HECK'S REG.

$200

HA 11/JWA/11 DEl'T.

Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday 8.to 5
(Close At Noon Thu~day).
Shop Friday Til 8 PM.

WHITE &amp; ASST. COLORS

4601.

All Sale Priced

ROCKER RECLINERS
WALL-AWAY RECLINERS

200

..

HECK'S REG.

BASE ROCKERS

$

GYM SHORTS

~·I -

...l

----:_~ .
HECK'S REG.

$2.69
6WB.Ir DII'T.

HECK'S REG.

$2.39

HECK'S
REG.

$2.99

$200

·~

-....

.
. ..
.

-

r.;~
....

.

'[
' j.f
.. ]

~

JIWII.IIY

DII'T.

1/10/ITS Dli'T.

�16-The Sunday TUne3 -Sentinei,SWlday, June '!/, 1976

Winterization is
urged in summer

•

CHESHIRE - The Gallia • ministration (CSA), and subMeigs Community Action contracted from the CorAgency is Seeking additional poration for Ohio ApDevelopment
applications for ilS Home palachian
(COAD),
·is
designed to
Winterization Program.
'
provide
insulation
and winThis project, funded by the
terization
to
residents
of
Cunummity Services Ad·
senior citizens, and those
economically disadvantaged
whose incomes meet the CSA
Poverty Guidelines . .
It is important to realize
that now iB the time to
OltDER RESCINDED
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. prepare homes for energy
(UP!) ~ In 1838, Gov. Lilburn conservation later during the
Boggs directed his militia to high fuel consumption
, exterminate or expel from season.
Applications for this
Missouri a group of Mormons
can be obtained
program
he said had declared war on
the state. Friday, Gov. from the Community Action
Christopher Bond rescinded Agency Office at the Gallia
the 138-year~Jd order and County Courthouse (446-4612,
extended regret to Mormons Extension 72), Cheshire Offor any suffering and fice (367-7341), or the Meigs
injustice the order may have County Courthouse (9925605).
caused.

WINNER.S of the annual hike-bike for retarded citizens sponsored by the Gallipolis
Area Jayces are front row, (1-r ) Betty Saxon, Jim Johnson, Todd Comer, Jane Ann Denney,
(seCQnd row) Russ Cardwell, Lowell Cardwell, Mike Kanunan, hike-bike chairman; Mindy
Frazier. Not J!iclured are Sheila and Tammy Harrison and linda and Palty Harrison .

Awards are made to

Hike .. Bike winners
GALLIPOLIS- Mike Kamman, Hike-Bike Chainnan of
the Gallipolis Area Jaycees,
presented awards Saturday,
JWJe 19, to the 1976 wiru~ers of
their Ailllual Hike-Bike for
retarded citizens held earUer
this spring.
Wiru~ers were based on the
participants who collected
the largest amoWlt of money.
First prize went to Betty
Saxon, the winner of the 11l-

speed bicycle. Second prize a
$50 Savings Bond went to
Jane Ann Denney. Tlurd
prize, Russ Cardwell, fourth
prize, Lowell Cardwell, ijlld
fifth prize, Todd Comer, each
receiving a $25 Savings Bond.
Sixth prize a porlable radio,
went to Jim Johnson.
All participan ts tha t
walked the 17 miles were
presented with a bicentennial
silver dollar mounted on a

chair. Walkers were Lowell
Cardwell , Linda Cannan,
Patty Carman , Mindy
Frazier, Sheila Harrison,
Tammy Han·ison and Betty
Saxon.
G. C. Murphy, Silver Plaza
Shopping Center, donated the
!().speed bicycle. The Parents Volunteer Assn . of
the Gallipolis State Institute
donated all other prizes.
Other participants were
Mac Cameron, Alan Harris,
Janey Harris, Chriss Huffman, Brenda Mays, Jolm
Roush,. Steve _Runyon ,
Palncia Sheets, Keith Lee
Tyler, Brian Tabit, Jeff
Tabit, Geneva Walker.

Rock, country bands welcomed
RUTLAND - All area rock and CtJunlry bands of the area are invited to U.ke par! in a " 1l111 tie
of the Band s" to be staged on July 5 in Rutland as a part of a three day holiday eelcbrat ion.
Prizes will be awarded to the top three bands including $100,$50 and $25. P. ntry fee is $111 and
must accompany the registration form which is to be mailed to Mrs. Joan Stewa rt, P. 0 . Rux lJ'
Rutland, Ohio 45775.
.
Each band taking pari will make a 15 minute presentation. The evenl 1s co-sponsored by the
Rutland Fire Department and the Rutland Bicentennial Commillee .

WANTED- WANTED

OIL AND GAS LEASES

BIKE DONA TED - G. C. Murphy at the Silver Bridge Plaza donated a iO-speed bicycle
to the annual Hike-bike of the Galliplis Area Jaycees. From the left, are Boyd Stover, G. C.
Murphy; Betty Saxon, first prize winner and Mike Kamman, (like-bike chairman.

RETRACTION MADE
WARSAW, Polans (UP!) Strikes
and
ra ilroad
blockades have forced
Poland to retract planned
food price increases to avert

a repetition of worker riots
that topp led Comrr.unist
party boss Wladyslaw
Gomulka in 1970. One day
after announcing plans to
raise food prices for the first

--··········

time since Gomulka 's ouster,
Premier Piotr Jaroszewicz
told the nation Friday night
tlle government "thinks that
it is necessary to reanalyze
the whole matter again ."

The following townships are
urgently needed for lease: Ohio,
Guyan, Clay, Harrison, Green,
Gallipolis. Also we will consider
all other locations. Write
Universal Petroleum, Box41,
Care of The Daily Tribune. .

BOYS'
SHORT SlEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS
Wide assortment of boys' short
sleeve knit tops. Choose from
crew neck , sui:Jiistatics, photo
sc reen prints, stripes, and 50! ·
ids . Avoila~le in sizes 4-7 and
8-18.

Name of Band - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- -

'-

Address of Person in Charge - - - - - - - - - - - Phone No. Person in charge _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Number in Band and Type of Music-~~-------

to Joan SIPw art.
P . 0 . Box.l4 l. Rutla nd , OhioI

1Mail with $111 reg istration

CHAIRS • .CHAIRS • CHAIRS
We've Got Chairs!

60 in Stock
30 -to Come

open July 3rd celebration
RUTLAND - A bicentennial parade beginning at
10 :30 a.m. on July 3 will oftidally open a three day
holiday weekend celebration
in Rutland under the sponsorship of the Rutland Fire
Department and the Rutland
Bicentennial Commission.
It is reported that many en-

ALL FAMOUS MAKES
*BERKLINE
*BASSETT
*COLLINS
*NORWALK
*MODERN

HOSPITAL
NEWS

SEE THE NEW BENDIX
SECTIONAL HOME 26'X56'

~.,.GV~~~

0.

•

A thought for the day :
. General of the Army Douglas
MacArther said, "In war,
there is no substitute for
victory."

MOBILE HOMES, INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles.Phone 446-9340
Galli olis, Ohio

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

Bicentennial parade will
tries have been received for National Guard equipment.
the bicentennial parade At 9 a.m. a public square
which·will fonn at 9:30a.m. dance will be held in
at the Eli Denison American the gymnasium.
On !:lunday there will be a
Legion Post Home on Beech
hymn
sing at 2 p.m. in the
Grove Road. At l p.m. there
gymnasium
just before 2
will be a speaking program
p.m.
all
or
the
churches of the
with Rep. Ron James and
community and individuals
Sen. Oakley Collins on hand.
Other features of the Satur- who own bells will ring them
day program will include a in observance of July 4th. h t
flower show in the Rutland the afternoon there will be ;•
gymnasium with the public to lug-of-war · at 4 p.m. in the
select the winners and a ConunWJity park with rules
decorated eake show. Entries and regulations to be anfor the flower show are to be nowtced later.
Monday, July 5, there will
in place at 12 noon and en·
tries for the cake show at 10 be a tractor pulling contest at
a.m. The cakes will be auc- I p.m. in the community park
Veterans Memorial Hospital tioned following the judging. and there will be a number of
ADMISSIONS - Deborah Winners will receive the various old-time contests and
Drake, Pomeroy ; Ricky mayor's trophy in both the races for children. The
Wise, Rutland ; Earl Van flower show and the cake evening program which is
Meter, Portland; Elizabeth show. Also there will be a being arranged will be
Ryan, Mason; Howard demonstration on ceramics followed by a fireworks
also presented in the gym- display.
Kitchen, Pomeroy.
Public games will be held
DISCHARGES - Karen nasium and the senior
Cremeans, Myrtle Thomas, citizens will have crafts ami at the park on beth Saturday
Melvin Cunningham, Broce arts on display. A display of and Monday and there will be
Blosser, Glenda Hunt, James National Guard equipment skill game slands, a train
will be featured outside of the ride, refrestunenlS booths
Pooler.
and other attractions will be
gymnasium.
. The ca ke auction is featured for the three days of
scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. the celebration. A softball
Pleasant Valley
DISCHARGES - Mrs. On Saturday afternoon, a tournament will be held on all
Gilly Henry, Gallipoli s jeep will be floated on the three days as well as the ox
Ferry; Mrs. Robert Burton, lake of the American Legion roast, held annually by the
Point Pleasa nt ; Gerald home as well as a piece of fi re department.
Sayre, Ripley ; Mrs. Ralph
Barcus, Gallipolis ; Mrs. John
Zembry, dau ghter, Point
NEW!
Pleasant ; Amy McKinney,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Archie
11
11
Starcher, Gallipolis; Okey
King, Point Pleasant; Ethel
Fortney, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Clement Cooper ,
Syracuse, 0. ; Mrs. William
3 Bedroom, 2 baths. house. siding shingle
Roush, New Haven ; Rhonda
roof.
fa'mily room , dining room, porch . On
Young, Clifton ; Mrs. Franklin Collins, Ashton ; Leonard
Roush, Letart; Mrs. A. J.
Bishop, Middleport; Mrs.
Robert Watkins, Gallipolis,

SILV-0-LINE ALUMINUM FOIL
8 ROLLS

$2~!

Name of Person in Charge--- - - - - - -- -- -

•

12"x25'

To $3.99
CI.OTHIIIC DEI'T.

'

· · : :.....r.

SUNSET OR VERNON

120 MI~UTE CASSETTE
RECORDING TAPE
CHILDREN'S

$200

TENNIS OXFORDS

KLEAR
FLOOR
WAX

$

200

SHITSDIPT.

WILSON

'K28+

GOLF BALLS
. $ 2~~-0F3

Chi ld sizes 8 V•- 12, and Missy size 12 V&gt; -3.

HECK'S RE.G.

CHOICE

HECK'S REG ,
To $2.9_9
(lOTN/1"
DEPT.

$ 200

..

..,,..., ......=-,

EACH

16 OZ. TUBULAR

STEEL HAMMER

S/1011$ DII'T.

MAN'S TRIFOLD

WALLET

LADIES

HALTER TOPS

200

$200

SPIIU1 OF AMERICA

AIRMAnRESS
HECK'S
REG.

$4.44

AlUM IliUM OR CERAMIC

HOT POT
$2~A~H

$2.88

"""""',.,_

6WII.IIY

KODAK
HIGH SPEED

Heel's

Reg.

$3.29

'200
SPORTING DEPT.

SYLVANIA

EKTACIIIOME FILM

FLASHBAR

20 EXPOSURES

TORSO TRIMMER

·&gt;

HECK'S REG.
$3.77 EACH .

PKG.

$2.74

RECLINERS

Our Motto: SALES WITH SERVICE

$2.59

Chi ldren's tennis ox for ds in Infant sizes S-8,

IJEIIT.

. Should Sell For Higher Prices
From $79.95 to $350.00

HECK'S REG.

$200

HA 11/JWA/11 DEl'T.

Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday 8.to 5
(Close At Noon Thu~day).
Shop Friday Til 8 PM.

WHITE &amp; ASST. COLORS

4601.

All Sale Priced

ROCKER RECLINERS
WALL-AWAY RECLINERS

200

..

HECK'S REG.

BASE ROCKERS

$

GYM SHORTS

~·I -

...l

----:_~ .
HECK'S REG.

$2.69
6WB.Ir DII'T.

HECK'S REG.

$2.39

HECK'S
REG.

$2.99

$200

·~

-....

.
. ..
.

-

r.;~
....

.

'[
' j.f
.. ]

~

JIWII.IIY

DII'T.

1/10/ITS Dli'T.

�Of FREE

SPARTUS

TUAS IISTRUMIITS

GRANDINETTI
3 1/lQT.
CROCK POT

CALCULATOR•

ANTIQUE STOVE
WALL CLOCK

(,).,r

~lof)O (Jw

l OCJOrr

LADIES'
FASHION SLACKS

"-0\ l:.o=., ll&gt;UUI OI OUht.toJ \ut{P \1 Vrlumn

!extured lodie~· polyes ter fas hion ponts
In three comfortab le styles in sizes 5 to

"""' "''" 1"'"1' 1 ~ ,. ,M lrftrj rho.)· ' '"' 10 ,.h&lt;&gt;l rn o;l" ""Y«~ •~G &lt;J mon1
,. uy th~ 1&lt;do r•o•• I)•&lt;&gt;·•J&lt;. ho.,hhy "' 0"~ ""'"''"" ~ "'11

$697

15.

$·699

$999
HECK'S REG .
$8.99

HICK ' S RIG .
$1$.99

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

HICK ' SREG .

$9.88

$H:.8s

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWELitY ~PT.
CLDIHING
DEPT.

DIAMOND
SX70POUCH
CAMERA CASE

F63

GENERAL ELECTRIC

STEAM IRON

$499

SPARTUS
LEMON &amp; ORANGE

JEWElRY DEPT.

STAND MIXER

WITH 1STAINLESS STill BIMLS

I&gt;' •·":_~~ 1 fl• lv •• ''-'''' Qv"' t '. • ·~••• 1,.._.Hifl ~otto , til &lt;J&gt;
vb • I&gt;"" I '"~II· '•r~ "'"•·• nl '"'~! 1v&gt;l (f; l• . ,,~,,. .,,,,,
1.,, onot """"'
)h, l~· u•&gt; • &gt;~(&gt;I)~ uo ., l!l• , o•"
"' ' '"~ DU"'I ~ " "'" •' ll ~&lt;Me •&gt; IN'&gt; l »'&lt;l""J(wll&gt; ~~ o!

i p~• dl &lt;H nn~ "" " d '" h•l v.oon I vi i r&gt;o~ ., "' C&gt;ll 'f"'"'h •••, '" '~'

,.t

1\"1'1'"'9

io( U• ) lc i&gt;&lt;JI ~~~"" " ! • &lt;rO t br ~I•Ju\ ,, U"'l&lt; obloo "'""'Il l ~ •I I
f .. u ~·~&lt; ~f J O&lt; IJ• &lt;&lt;I&lt;'h l• fl.,.. I ~O&gt;o i •Q•'I i &lt;l&lt; o),,,~ ,W~"" ' "'~ ' " ' '"
bofCIII "' .. ltJI &lt;• '"" "'0"11) lu,u!O!I lu1 &lt;1~•&lt; 1 •Oir&lt;&gt;;_. I J~&lt;•hj

~"

1poe 01 tcnlf!li .. "" lf'" "'ll' l itO&lt; I, ,.,.,, ,.,,

PANT
SUITS
.
the temperature climbs the

· ODYSSEY TV GAMES
WITH FREE AC ADAPTER

Ct,'!l l{)r dr.C \ h011 /(l\1 dinl iho:
(llr Ilow Ot\d ~ p c('(f • he c11 con !ool ·tho! ft·t·l~ U t ~ t !or )"OUr
hi)" U~ ) t !u r you r \lyle
Supt't'bl ow P1~ 1 ol Al torh
•11ent \)l~f' ~ lmr roml o lloblto~ blo" '" Y'"~ to• (u•l~
bong~ fl,p\

$28
~I
"'"''" ''· l·~
,; ,,,., '

HECK ' S
REG .
$9.96

$39.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.

0

$33 .96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

1 '

~~- - ;,

JEWElRY DEPT.

1 FUNCTION
' 'FLIC IT"
L.E.D. WIIS1WATCH

~.

e

e

$79

99

3 ONLY

""' lv"Chon, d '~plo y ~ hc un,
mmvlf ~, ~e&lt;o n d' atlhe /l ie ~ of
th e wt~\ 1 , mon vo l f un~ lion'
identicol to olt1er l E D. mod-

NO IRON

SJ Q99

'"

.$2399

HECK 'SRIG .

$13.96

. HECK'S REG. 129.99

JEWELRY
DEPT.

JEWB.•Y DIPT.

PORTABLE 8 TRACK
PLAYER

SM-1

NATIONAL

COLEMAN

9'X 12' CABIN TENT

EASY LITE
LANTERN

NOT EXACTI.Y
AS SHOWN

[.,,, I••~ ·&lt;•••

"""'~'"'''

' ' " """ lo(&gt;&lt;l«l 'IIQb,
•enl&lt;lcllo•

'''"'""&lt;!

·~• ' •• ''''""' 1.~. ~

AMBASSADOR

$6999

GOLF BAG
An

ull , ,... '""' '"" dr•ogro

,,,, ......

~· f "'"""
~·' lull ~ ~• 8
&lt;~&lt;&gt;&lt;lol

'• ll h~• ·gf,l
"" ~ "'""d

~&lt;th o l vll lenQ t ~

I'"' '"'

pon~~d

1rcr

,,

$5''

SPORTS
DEPT.

,,. r ,, loyH ..,, 9 ,,,

HECK'S REG .

$24 ,99

HECK'S REG. 9.99
SPORTS DEPARTMENT
1

SPOIITS
DEPT.

X·

lei your .. ,ndaw-1 &lt;Om! ill ,.r '""~ th•tt b11gh1 1olcdyl
&lt;u&lt;to &lt;n• . J6 ltng!lo
, &gt;okon&lt;~ +~&lt;lvded '" " q..ai&lt;l) nnd yc..
\.,.. &lt;hoo•• !to.., o """"~jyj ..,I•I+Oil ol p&lt;~nl!-d d'"''ll"' IH

.

'

2'9

BATHROOM EIIISEMBLI

__H_E~K'S
REG. ,,,,,,
SPORTS
DEPT.

'
BAlltTOWEL .... ..... .... ...... . 1 1.44
Hllll TOWEL. .. .. .... . .. ....... . 94'
WASHCLOTII . .... ........ .........

9 .1

IOO'h

'"~'' O\ &lt;h• &gt;'on rlnod Army &lt;OI
t n•r r h t m&gt;c Ol ~·g~ \I lOd e tl•y Norl hor n ~ rc ... n
""'dRO&lt;&gt;J 1"&gt;1 1 ~nu ,. ,j.. '"''' &lt;Ji f ol •ub\101'11&lt;0 1
'' " 10 '"'"' ' ~,.,,_, \ l&lt;rnylh o~d "i.J,., fold,
&gt;&lt;t&lt;~ iCI"JIO&lt;~ .
• r t-. I~ n 'l' riol &lt;&lt;M nlo&lt;&lt;MI

Co"""'''"''

l'lcri&gt; ·.,.., , 11&gt;t &lt;o lf ' 01lon o~d
. nylo~ ble~d lyb. , -~ , One 1l,.
loll 10 10 I} Pompe&lt; ycUI" tr it1

7-14

and buy ••o.t.rot po in

l c • ~•

1~..-hon ol coko"

DIAPER LINERS
HECK'S
REG.
$1.5910X

10 COUNT20

TRASH BAGS

74c,..

$129

HECK'SREG.
$1.29 Pl.

BOX

99 1

7 oz.

30Z.

WD-40SPRAY

H:~::s $

$34.99

2988

SPORTS DEPT.

PRINTED
AIRMAnRESS

NEWBOIIN

TEIINIS PRESS

MONTH

$}48

HECK'SREG. $1.66

SPDITS DEPT.

g(»TS
DEPT.

HECK 'S REG.

$1 . 19

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'SREG.
$1 . 19

. 5]~8
HECK'SREG.
T0$4.28

"""'"',.,

Assorted colon. Numbered fronts
Siz• Med ium O nly.

SIZES 4-14

$100

HECK'S
REG. 11.88

HECK'S REG.

SIZE

REG.
$12.99

gQITSDEPT.

TOWEL

$28~
I

HECK'SREG. $1.66

GOLF

BOYS'
NUMBERED T.SHIRT

FURNITURE POLISH

140COUNT

HERITAGE NAPKINS

HECK'S
REG. 83'

HECK 'SREG.

56

PLAIN MIRROR TILES

HECK'S
REG. 11.08

NOIISIWAII
DB&gt; I.

HECK'S REG. 88'
HOUSEWARES DEPT.

\1

OVEN CLEANER

66e
HECK'S REG. 89'
NOIJSIWARI
IJII'T.

69~

.•,.

ll

39(

HAND I-WRAP

IOXOF6

NOIISIWARI

tlOTrti/IUII'T.

1

200'

HECK'SREG.
$4.99

$1 .44

sse

MR. MUSCLE

BEHOLD
66~

REGULAR LEMON
NATlJRAL WOOD

8 Ol

ClOTIIMD/IIT.

TUBE TOPS .

49(

HECk 'S
REG.

HOIISIWAlii Dll' 1.

MEN'S
TUBE
SOCIS

palrn•e•

SIZES

60COUNT
JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

PLEDGE

HECK'S REG. 11.06

4-6X
AND

ARMY COT

7 Ol

88~

holte• "'I''"''"" • ·6o: ond 7-1-1.

k '&lt;

NDUSEWAitl DE,,

BATHROOM
CLEANER

HALTER SETS
pby!;me ln 1he1•

HECK'S REG. 17.99

17 OZ. DOW

CI.OTriii/C D/IIT.

ClDIH/11&amp; DEI'T.
Coot l o1 ••m"&gt; re•

'3''

· HOUSEWAitl
DEI'T.

HOIISIWAIE DIPT.

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

64'

HECK'SREG. T0$2.29

633

HECK'S
REG. s4.32

HECK'S
REG.
$8.99

10hd1

CAIIIIOIII

~OLOING

22WITHRIFLE
SCOPE

CfOTrii/IG OIPT.

.).-

HECK'S REG.
T0$14.99

ALUMINUM
SKILLET

'"'l"''"
one Ql
loo ((lm iOtlll

HECK'S RIG .
$4 .88

CANNON

SPINCAST REEL

LARGE

$]77

I

.

3TIER
UTILITY TABLE

Si 1~ 1 ~

ClOTrtiN&amp;DB&gt;T.

$

· HOUSEWAIIDEPT• .

b"' .,. ,(,, ~~"' ' rotio" Mo• nrk&gt;n '"
&gt;&lt;&gt;lod,uod p'ton l&gt;

HECK 'S REG.
TO $11.99

on,,,., ~0 lo

$16.88

lt.t iiiOd&lt;t\ Itt \~" h

$666

and pre .,&lt;:1\heu defo om 1eono
11QI&gt;1 f.,, 1t.a1 &gt;pe&lt;:ool moo ,., ·

disc~E~~:s"~"~~:hwo1her !

BOTTLE

TEE

SHIRn
Hot '"'""''" d~1

MEN'S
JEANS

d • d 1long on&lt;Jta• t •ed hnnril~

loon ~ .,I,J, tl,.,old

. LADIES'

,
9
8

H.ere is new beau ty colo r crafted in flqme ho rve~ l on d .·
avo cado to mat ch· mo le your kit chen . Won ' t fa d e o r

Mode of sturdy metol wi th on ele( trical
ou tlet . Perfec t lor kifchen use.

VANGUARD

KITCHEN TIER
CURTAINS

,,.,,1 lh 1 n•ocJelho&gt; 0

Col•~' "" • Pol, I• •~ &lt;oo'e•, lro!hto 9 , 0 , ,.1 .. cyl
&lt;~ l rnco '" l"' ' '"" "~••. •~•PP• •g. ""11'"11 lh•
l or,,h """ l lll dr , I U&lt; • I ru1 l Ur1.'1 ~01 r IOUII1 ""·&lt;Ill

QUART

PAIR

a.r·

· '2"PA .
ClOTHING

•pec•ol &lt;ech.o:tc P'''.,

.

p utchm e of better qual ity loo m bock
drope;, full 50'' width ond lengths 63" o r

$288

~\(llrlPd ~~"'''' b0 tt 0 , , pod

IERKUY

60

When .John ny Miller 5tg ns hi s no me to a golf club, you
know'' 11m to be good . The driver to moke ony golfer
d rive ol! the lee l i ~ ~ ~pro.

Spee~o l

TWIN

R~
1~••

5''

ANTIQUE SATIN
FOAM BACK DRAPES

CASES

COLEMAN 3 LB.
SLEEPING BAG

PAIR

$]88

JEWElRY DEPT.

. BC615

"•&lt;I~

FULL

JEANEnE
DECORATIVE G(ASSWARE . ·
•GONDOLA •LOMBARDI
•FUSTIE BOWL •IRIS VASE
•FRUIT
HECK'S REG. 12.33

ClOTHINC DEPT.

&lt;lo1l,,rog
ond lo•g• t.ort
"" ~ """ p o1 le1 M o d~ o!
~" ' Y 10 rl •111•, dv &lt;o ble ~·

SPORTS DEPT.

WILSON
JOHNNY MILLER
GRAPHITE DRIVER

'99.96

4••·~• &lt; "'" ''I&gt;

HECK 'S
REG.
$24,99
HECK ' SRIG.$11.9 .95 .

H:~~:s

HECK'S
REG. 153.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

$4799

MUSLIN SHEETS

linn arltu ~trnent. Ha ndy rem a.te co rd ~fo rag e. HideOVv u,
'"''e hand le. Sliding le ns cover

GfNERAL ELECTRIC

$7.88

· HECK'SREG.
$9.99

Pro tec tive dust cOver. Hide-a w oy otto cl-1ed power
co rd. E ?~y· occe ss la mp compo rtm;ent. Higher eleva -

$

HECK'S
REG.

7PC. TEFLON II COOKWARE
SET

EACH

LADIES' SHORTS

$799

I(ODAK
CAROUSEL PROJECTOR

3 -5 502

.

.

MIRRO

Pull·on styles in ossorted colors.

lodie1' ~m~y dr!!~Ses in the lo te~ t losh·
ions ol solids, plo ids or che( k ~ in si ze~
12to20on d l6 11 to 24 1:.

701S

.$ 5'9

ClOTNIII' DEPT.

LADIES' DRESSES

JEWElRY DEPT.

3 · 5501

HECK 'S
REG .
$7.88 EACH

-,'V

1-~
r~
. ' JL•

Fun Wll·n- l urtweo r. the\e: novt:hy pOt ter ned
!oCOOier ~ir h are j u~ l right in 1izes 8to 16.

CI.OIHIN'
DEPT.

e
e

HECK'S REG.
$99.99

SB-1

CLAIROL
SKIN MACHINE

LIT RON IX

\ I.

e

....-

~ ~ .r · c:'.)

HECK'S REG.
.. '21.99

Ody ssey tr uly make&lt;.. a lV 1i1q re th an some thing to just.si t and
wa tch! tt turns the TV screen in to o challenging elec tr onic
pl oygrou nd . Ody ssey tS a game lo r oil ages . tt offers tne
followi_ng f ea t ure~ for exclttng playing • . Mec han ical Scoring
Ac ti on Sound
Boll Reb ou nd
Vertic a l and Homontol
, Pla yer Acti on
Speed Con tr ol
Center Conli ol ... a nd
now , you even get o n AC adap tor!

WCII! p0~o&lt;. (H

97

HECK ' S
REG .

hQht, lOc:M ladies jumpsurt&amp; and
pantsuits in-polyester and cakutto .
Auorted lif)'let and oolfJB. Jr.,
miU.., and hatf t izts.

MAGNA VOX

SUPER BLOW
STYLING CENTER

f ht• IQ{X)

~f . .
t\ I ®

When

~. is On eo1p dresii~,wtfh thiH

GENERAL ELECTRIC

POPCORN POPPER

~"""ble ,,,• ..,1 '"''''"' """ '''entl 1 1,., '~" ! IQo &lt;J•ulon9 I ( '"'" " ""

.. AND

JEWELRY
DEPT.

VPX75

4 QT.MUNSEY
SELF BUnERING

GENERAL ELECTRIC

JUMPSUITS

HECK'S REG .
$6 ;96

WALL CLOCK
HICK 'S RIG.
$499
$8.99

LADIIS' •

•1;.:

70Z.
GLADE

55~
HECK'S REG. 69'

�Of FREE

SPARTUS

TUAS IISTRUMIITS

GRANDINETTI
3 1/lQT.
CROCK POT

CALCULATOR•

ANTIQUE STOVE
WALL CLOCK

(,).,r

~lof)O (Jw

l OCJOrr

LADIES'
FASHION SLACKS

"-0\ l:.o=., ll&gt;UUI OI OUht.toJ \ut{P \1 Vrlumn

!extured lodie~· polyes ter fas hion ponts
In three comfortab le styles in sizes 5 to

"""' "''" 1"'"1' 1 ~ ,. ,M lrftrj rho.)· ' '"' 10 ,.h&lt;&gt;l rn o;l" ""Y«~ •~G &lt;J mon1
,. uy th~ 1&lt;do r•o•• I)•&lt;&gt;·•J&lt;. ho.,hhy "' 0"~ ""'"''"" ~ "'11

$697

15.

$·699

$999
HECK'S REG .
$8.99

HICK ' S RIG .
$1$.99

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

HICK ' SREG .

$9.88

$H:.8s

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWELitY ~PT.
CLDIHING
DEPT.

DIAMOND
SX70POUCH
CAMERA CASE

F63

GENERAL ELECTRIC

STEAM IRON

$499

SPARTUS
LEMON &amp; ORANGE

JEWElRY DEPT.

STAND MIXER

WITH 1STAINLESS STill BIMLS

I&gt;' •·":_~~ 1 fl• lv •• ''-'''' Qv"' t '. • ·~••• 1,.._.Hifl ~otto , til &lt;J&gt;
vb • I&gt;"" I '"~II· '•r~ "'"•·• nl '"'~! 1v&gt;l (f; l• . ,,~,,. .,,,,,
1.,, onot """"'
)h, l~· u•&gt; • &gt;~(&gt;I)~ uo ., l!l• , o•"
"' ' '"~ DU"'I ~ " "'" •' ll ~&lt;Me •&gt; IN'&gt; l »'&lt;l""J(wll&gt; ~~ o!

i p~• dl &lt;H nn~ "" " d '" h•l v.oon I vi i r&gt;o~ ., "' C&gt;ll 'f"'"'h •••, '" '~'

,.t

1\"1'1'"'9

io( U• ) lc i&gt;&lt;JI ~~~"" " ! • &lt;rO t br ~I•Ju\ ,, U"'l&lt; obloo "'""'Il l ~ •I I
f .. u ~·~&lt; ~f J O&lt; IJ• &lt;&lt;I&lt;'h l• fl.,.. I ~O&gt;o i •Q•'I i &lt;l&lt; o),,,~ ,W~"" ' "'~ ' " ' '"
bofCIII "' .. ltJI &lt;• '"" "'0"11) lu,u!O!I lu1 &lt;1~•&lt; 1 •Oir&lt;&gt;;_. I J~&lt;•hj

~"

1poe 01 tcnlf!li .. "" lf'" "'ll' l itO&lt; I, ,.,.,, ,.,,

PANT
SUITS
.
the temperature climbs the

· ODYSSEY TV GAMES
WITH FREE AC ADAPTER

Ct,'!l l{)r dr.C \ h011 /(l\1 dinl iho:
(llr Ilow Ot\d ~ p c('(f • he c11 con !ool ·tho! ft·t·l~ U t ~ t !or )"OUr
hi)" U~ ) t !u r you r \lyle
Supt't'bl ow P1~ 1 ol Al torh
•11ent \)l~f' ~ lmr roml o lloblto~ blo" '" Y'"~ to• (u•l~
bong~ fl,p\

$28
~I
"'"''" ''· l·~
,; ,,,., '

HECK ' S
REG .
$9.96

$39.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.

0

$33 .96

JEWELRY
DEPT.

1 '

~~- - ;,

JEWElRY DEPT.

1 FUNCTION
' 'FLIC IT"
L.E.D. WIIS1WATCH

~.

e

e

$79

99

3 ONLY

""' lv"Chon, d '~plo y ~ hc un,
mmvlf ~, ~e&lt;o n d' atlhe /l ie ~ of
th e wt~\ 1 , mon vo l f un~ lion'
identicol to olt1er l E D. mod-

NO IRON

SJ Q99

'"

.$2399

HECK 'SRIG .

$13.96

. HECK'S REG. 129.99

JEWELRY
DEPT.

JEWB.•Y DIPT.

PORTABLE 8 TRACK
PLAYER

SM-1

NATIONAL

COLEMAN

9'X 12' CABIN TENT

EASY LITE
LANTERN

NOT EXACTI.Y
AS SHOWN

[.,,, I••~ ·&lt;•••

"""'~'"'''

' ' " """ lo(&gt;&lt;l«l 'IIQb,
•enl&lt;lcllo•

'''"'""&lt;!

·~• ' •• ''''""' 1.~. ~

AMBASSADOR

$6999

GOLF BAG
An

ull , ,... '""' '"" dr•ogro

,,,, ......

~· f "'"""
~·' lull ~ ~• 8
&lt;~&lt;&gt;&lt;lol

'• ll h~• ·gf,l
"" ~ "'""d

~&lt;th o l vll lenQ t ~

I'"' '"'

pon~~d

1rcr

,,

$5''

SPORTS
DEPT.

,,. r ,, loyH ..,, 9 ,,,

HECK'S REG .

$24 ,99

HECK'S REG. 9.99
SPORTS DEPARTMENT
1

SPOIITS
DEPT.

X·

lei your .. ,ndaw-1 &lt;Om! ill ,.r '""~ th•tt b11gh1 1olcdyl
&lt;u&lt;to &lt;n• . J6 ltng!lo
, &gt;okon&lt;~ +~&lt;lvded '" " q..ai&lt;l) nnd yc..
\.,.. &lt;hoo•• !to.., o """"~jyj ..,I•I+Oil ol p&lt;~nl!-d d'"''ll"' IH

.

'

2'9

BATHROOM EIIISEMBLI

__H_E~K'S
REG. ,,,,,,
SPORTS
DEPT.

'
BAlltTOWEL .... ..... .... ...... . 1 1.44
Hllll TOWEL. .. .. .... . .. ....... . 94'
WASHCLOTII . .... ........ .........

9 .1

IOO'h

'"~'' O\ &lt;h• &gt;'on rlnod Army &lt;OI
t n•r r h t m&gt;c Ol ~·g~ \I lOd e tl•y Norl hor n ~ rc ... n
""'dRO&lt;&gt;J 1"&gt;1 1 ~nu ,. ,j.. '"''' &lt;Ji f ol •ub\101'11&lt;0 1
'' " 10 '"'"' ' ~,.,,_, \ l&lt;rnylh o~d "i.J,., fold,
&gt;&lt;t&lt;~ iCI"JIO&lt;~ .
• r t-. I~ n 'l' riol &lt;&lt;M nlo&lt;&lt;MI

Co"""'''"''

l'lcri&gt; ·.,.., , 11&gt;t &lt;o lf ' 01lon o~d
. nylo~ ble~d lyb. , -~ , One 1l,.
loll 10 10 I} Pompe&lt; ycUI" tr it1

7-14

and buy ••o.t.rot po in

l c • ~•

1~..-hon ol coko"

DIAPER LINERS
HECK'S
REG.
$1.5910X

10 COUNT20

TRASH BAGS

74c,..

$129

HECK'SREG.
$1.29 Pl.

BOX

99 1

7 oz.

30Z.

WD-40SPRAY

H:~::s $

$34.99

2988

SPORTS DEPT.

PRINTED
AIRMAnRESS

NEWBOIIN

TEIINIS PRESS

MONTH

$}48

HECK'SREG. $1.66

SPDITS DEPT.

g(»TS
DEPT.

HECK 'S REG.

$1 . 19

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'SREG.
$1 . 19

. 5]~8
HECK'SREG.
T0$4.28

"""'"',.,

Assorted colon. Numbered fronts
Siz• Med ium O nly.

SIZES 4-14

$100

HECK'S
REG. 11.88

HECK'S REG.

SIZE

REG.
$12.99

gQITSDEPT.

TOWEL

$28~
I

HECK'SREG. $1.66

GOLF

BOYS'
NUMBERED T.SHIRT

FURNITURE POLISH

140COUNT

HERITAGE NAPKINS

HECK'S
REG. 83'

HECK 'SREG.

56

PLAIN MIRROR TILES

HECK'S
REG. 11.08

NOIISIWAII
DB&gt; I.

HECK'S REG. 88'
HOUSEWARES DEPT.

\1

OVEN CLEANER

66e
HECK'S REG. 89'
NOIJSIWARI
IJII'T.

69~

.•,.

ll

39(

HAND I-WRAP

IOXOF6

NOIISIWARI

tlOTrti/IUII'T.

1

200'

HECK'SREG.
$4.99

$1 .44

sse

MR. MUSCLE

BEHOLD
66~

REGULAR LEMON
NATlJRAL WOOD

8 Ol

ClOTIIMD/IIT.

TUBE TOPS .

49(

HECk 'S
REG.

HOIISIWAlii Dll' 1.

MEN'S
TUBE
SOCIS

palrn•e•

SIZES

60COUNT
JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

PLEDGE

HECK'S REG. 11.06

4-6X
AND

ARMY COT

7 Ol

88~

holte• "'I''"''"" • ·6o: ond 7-1-1.

k '&lt;

NDUSEWAitl DE,,

BATHROOM
CLEANER

HALTER SETS
pby!;me ln 1he1•

HECK'S REG. 17.99

17 OZ. DOW

CI.OTriii/C D/IIT.

ClDIH/11&amp; DEI'T.
Coot l o1 ••m"&gt; re•

'3''

· HOUSEWAitl
DEI'T.

HOIISIWAIE DIPT.

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

64'

HECK'SREG. T0$2.29

633

HECK'S
REG. s4.32

HECK'S
REG.
$8.99

10hd1

CAIIIIOIII

~OLOING

22WITHRIFLE
SCOPE

CfOTrii/IG OIPT.

.).-

HECK'S REG.
T0$14.99

ALUMINUM
SKILLET

'"'l"''"
one Ql
loo ((lm iOtlll

HECK'S RIG .
$4 .88

CANNON

SPINCAST REEL

LARGE

$]77

I

.

3TIER
UTILITY TABLE

Si 1~ 1 ~

ClOTrtiN&amp;DB&gt;T.

$

· HOUSEWAIIDEPT• .

b"' .,. ,(,, ~~"' ' rotio" Mo• nrk&gt;n '"
&gt;&lt;&gt;lod,uod p'ton l&gt;

HECK 'S REG.
TO $11.99

on,,,., ~0 lo

$16.88

lt.t iiiOd&lt;t\ Itt \~" h

$666

and pre .,&lt;:1\heu defo om 1eono
11QI&gt;1 f.,, 1t.a1 &gt;pe&lt;:ool moo ,., ·

disc~E~~:s"~"~~:hwo1her !

BOTTLE

TEE

SHIRn
Hot '"'""''" d~1

MEN'S
JEANS

d • d 1long on&lt;Jta• t •ed hnnril~

loon ~ .,I,J, tl,.,old

. LADIES'

,
9
8

H.ere is new beau ty colo r crafted in flqme ho rve~ l on d .·
avo cado to mat ch· mo le your kit chen . Won ' t fa d e o r

Mode of sturdy metol wi th on ele( trical
ou tlet . Perfec t lor kifchen use.

VANGUARD

KITCHEN TIER
CURTAINS

,,.,,1 lh 1 n•ocJelho&gt; 0

Col•~' "" • Pol, I• •~ &lt;oo'e•, lro!hto 9 , 0 , ,.1 .. cyl
&lt;~ l rnco '" l"' ' '"" "~••. •~•PP• •g. ""11'"11 lh•
l or,,h """ l lll dr , I U&lt; • I ru1 l Ur1.'1 ~01 r IOUII1 ""·&lt;Ill

QUART

PAIR

a.r·

· '2"PA .
ClOTHING

•pec•ol &lt;ech.o:tc P'''.,

.

p utchm e of better qual ity loo m bock
drope;, full 50'' width ond lengths 63" o r

$288

~\(llrlPd ~~"'''' b0 tt 0 , , pod

IERKUY

60

When .John ny Miller 5tg ns hi s no me to a golf club, you
know'' 11m to be good . The driver to moke ony golfer
d rive ol! the lee l i ~ ~ ~pro.

Spee~o l

TWIN

R~
1~••

5''

ANTIQUE SATIN
FOAM BACK DRAPES

CASES

COLEMAN 3 LB.
SLEEPING BAG

PAIR

$]88

JEWElRY DEPT.

. BC615

"•&lt;I~

FULL

JEANEnE
DECORATIVE G(ASSWARE . ·
•GONDOLA •LOMBARDI
•FUSTIE BOWL •IRIS VASE
•FRUIT
HECK'S REG. 12.33

ClOTHINC DEPT.

&lt;lo1l,,rog
ond lo•g• t.ort
"" ~ """ p o1 le1 M o d~ o!
~" ' Y 10 rl •111•, dv &lt;o ble ~·

SPORTS DEPT.

WILSON
JOHNNY MILLER
GRAPHITE DRIVER

'99.96

4••·~• &lt; "'" ''I&gt;

HECK 'S
REG.
$24,99
HECK ' SRIG.$11.9 .95 .

H:~~:s

HECK'S
REG. 153.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

$4799

MUSLIN SHEETS

linn arltu ~trnent. Ha ndy rem a.te co rd ~fo rag e. HideOVv u,
'"''e hand le. Sliding le ns cover

GfNERAL ELECTRIC

$7.88

· HECK'SREG.
$9.99

Pro tec tive dust cOver. Hide-a w oy otto cl-1ed power
co rd. E ?~y· occe ss la mp compo rtm;ent. Higher eleva -

$

HECK'S
REG.

7PC. TEFLON II COOKWARE
SET

EACH

LADIES' SHORTS

$799

I(ODAK
CAROUSEL PROJECTOR

3 -5 502

.

.

MIRRO

Pull·on styles in ossorted colors.

lodie1' ~m~y dr!!~Ses in the lo te~ t losh·
ions ol solids, plo ids or che( k ~ in si ze~
12to20on d l6 11 to 24 1:.

701S

.$ 5'9

ClOTNIII' DEPT.

LADIES' DRESSES

JEWElRY DEPT.

3 · 5501

HECK 'S
REG .
$7.88 EACH

-,'V

1-~
r~
. ' JL•

Fun Wll·n- l urtweo r. the\e: novt:hy pOt ter ned
!oCOOier ~ir h are j u~ l right in 1izes 8to 16.

CI.OIHIN'
DEPT.

e
e

HECK'S REG.
$99.99

SB-1

CLAIROL
SKIN MACHINE

LIT RON IX

\ I.

e

....-

~ ~ .r · c:'.)

HECK'S REG.
.. '21.99

Ody ssey tr uly make&lt;.. a lV 1i1q re th an some thing to just.si t and
wa tch! tt turns the TV screen in to o challenging elec tr onic
pl oygrou nd . Ody ssey tS a game lo r oil ages . tt offers tne
followi_ng f ea t ure~ for exclttng playing • . Mec han ical Scoring
Ac ti on Sound
Boll Reb ou nd
Vertic a l and Homontol
, Pla yer Acti on
Speed Con tr ol
Center Conli ol ... a nd
now , you even get o n AC adap tor!

WCII! p0~o&lt;. (H

97

HECK ' S
REG .

hQht, lOc:M ladies jumpsurt&amp; and
pantsuits in-polyester and cakutto .
Auorted lif)'let and oolfJB. Jr.,
miU.., and hatf t izts.

MAGNA VOX

SUPER BLOW
STYLING CENTER

f ht• IQ{X)

~f . .
t\ I ®

When

~. is On eo1p dresii~,wtfh thiH

GENERAL ELECTRIC

POPCORN POPPER

~"""ble ,,,• ..,1 '"''''"' """ '''entl 1 1,., '~" ! IQo &lt;J•ulon9 I ( '"'" " ""

.. AND

JEWELRY
DEPT.

VPX75

4 QT.MUNSEY
SELF BUnERING

GENERAL ELECTRIC

JUMPSUITS

HECK'S REG .
$6 ;96

WALL CLOCK
HICK 'S RIG.
$499
$8.99

LADIIS' •

•1;.:

70Z.
GLADE

55~
HECK'S REG. 69'

�ENTER
OF FREE

upset
WIMBLEDON

5 ~UIJN

WILKINSON
ADJUSTABLE II

ANTACID TABLET~

B64cES 1~1
I

HECK'S REG .
59'

I . ,. .

!I

,, "

s-- - J!

HECK 'S REG. $1.19 ~-

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

"

--

36COUNT

,.

' '- l

~·~-· ~

CUTICURA SOAP

--.;.:;,.~
~~
' \-f\:~
~~
-;:-- --~

BAYER CHILDREN'S

Mcicleans OC' ·'·· •

29&lt;

F~

ASPIRIN

~----

27&lt;

70Z.

MACLEANS TOOTHPASTE

HECK'S REG.

44'

HECK 'S REG .

39'

38'
COSMETIC

HECK 'S REG. 99 '

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

DEPT.

BLACK &amp; DECKER

7 ONLY

SYCAMn

2.0.111CH

MECHANICS CREEPER
$599

IOTARY MOWER
.... ;...t_.,..
... .......... ,___,

_
_
_
--

\

................. 14 ......... d.ck, l

HECK 'S REG.

. . . . . . . . COihL Sia itw;h ......,.

$8.99
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

$5788
-

HECK'S REG.

GREASE GUN

BLACK &amp; DECKER

$299

1/4" DRILL KIT
Peo lt'CII OI d n·JI I\~

~ 6FT.

$19

\

l11c l" d( ~ 701 -1

'-'OJ•&lt;tL I"

r.Ol t.'.

J d.,ll

bo l l,

coloon bvrl

Lt"'d"'Y v. loet.{

.S

lii'Uihllqod I[JtO&gt;I' l'JI~O. i)O(~ IfliJil?d v.f·c-tfmh&lt;) l

JACK
STANDS

$1488

HECK 'S REG. $27 .66

HECK'S REG. $24 .99

7015

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIIDWARI DEPT.

'1''

DURO
RUST PREVENTIVE

GARBAGE CAN

HECK'S REG. 13.48
AUTO. DEPT.

SP.AY PAINT

•122

'3''

HECK'S REG.
1
4.99

HECK'S REG .
$5.99

~Pl ~d l)ro I &lt;hud ~~') (\,1\ l ()!lo f,tte cl 1 lm h( CO r; onu

EXTENSION LADDER
99

r ·~- ...

!, _ _ _ ,. __

-~ ~- -·-- - ·..;....

$69.99
HARDWARE

8 ONLY

-

HKK 'S REG .
$3.44
HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

.YIIIG IIIIICr

SPRAY

•s••

HECK'S REG. sg,99
AUTO. DEPT.

STP

HECK'S REG. 11.88

OIL (

TREATMENT

H.U:DWAII Dfi'T,

sac

•AID

GARDEN
GLOVES

LO
MOUNT
TRUCK
MIRRORS

WEED WHIP

STP

CARBURETOR
CLEANER

99(

HKK'SRffi .

HKK~Rffi.

$1.19

$1.44

HECK'S REG. 1----A_u_ro_M_o_TI-VE_D_f&lt;_'PT.-1.~---A_u_ro_'M_O_TI_~_ID_EP_r._.
MACMILLAN
10W30

2FT. WOOD

STEPLADDER
;j f·\

;_rl:~
.
'

!I

'.
.

ROYAL SCOT

TOILET SEAT

5QTS.

'

(WHITE ONLY)

$200

$299
HECK ' S REG . $4.77

LIMIT

5

CARTER'S
u
WINDSHIELD fi;j
WASHER
/1/
FLUID
3GAL.

"But," he said,

$200

HECK ' S REG •
$4.99

\

20"

HARDWARE

LAWN EDGING
WOODGRAIN OR GREEN

$166

HOFFMAN

TOMATO FOOD

$f44

HECK'S REG.

$2.88

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

'

(UP!) -

Vilas Gerulaitis has the
greatest respect for defen·
ding Wimbledon Champion
Arthur Ashe, but Saturday in
ll6-degree courtside tern·
peratures he tried to run the
32-year-&lt;&gt;ld Miamian into the
ground.
The strategy worked to
perfection and the unseeded .
Gerulaitis marched from a
tw()oset deficit into the quarter.finaLs of the $280,000 tow·nament with a 4-6, 6-9, 6-4, &amp;.
3, 6-4 triumph in 2 hours, 50
minutes.
Gerulaitis, 11 years
younger and unbothered by
the sweltering heat that once
again drove hundreds of faint
spectators to the first aid
stations for relief, said he
· knew his only hoep after
losing the first set to Ashe H
was to make him run and
"pay for his age."
"Even though I lost the first two sets," said the longhair
blond from Howard Beach,
N.Y., who lost the second set
in a tiebreaker 6-9, " All of his
services were hard-fought. I
was losing but I was making
him work. I knew if I could be
lucky enough to get into the
fifth set, I wasn't tired and I
would have good chance. f
just wanted to wear him
dowh, make him pay for his
age ifl could."
·
Gerulaitis never had
beaten Ashe in four previous
meetings, including one on
grass at Forest Hills, and had
never gotten past the first
round at Wimbledon in two
other 'attempts. Last year,
however, he managed to take
the doubles title with Sandy
Mayer.
"I just wanted to get past
one round and go back happy," Gerulaitis said. " I never
really felt that comfortable
on grass."
But Vitas gave some.credit
to a few words of encouragement he received in a
letter from his coach, Harry
Hopmann, the Australian
veteran.
. "Wimbledon only comes
around once a year," Hopman wrote his protege, "And
the really great champions
can get themselves up for it."
"After reading his letter,"
Gerulaitis said, "I sat and
thought about ii for a long'
time. I made up my mind to
get myself up as high as I
could and I just kept getting
higher and higher until the
match today."
Gerulaitis, who next faces
Raul Ramirez of Me&lt;ic;o,
gave Ashe the praise he
deserved for a hard·fought
match.
"You've got to go out and
win the pOints, you can't
expect Arthur Ashe to give
you the game," Gerulaitis
said. "He's still, at this point,
, a better player than I am."
Ahse said he felt exhausted
.after the first two sets and
blamed it on the heat and on
the tension that builds up at
the end of the first week of
Wimbledon.
"The crowds pay enonnous
amounts of money·to see you
play and they want you to
win,'' he said.
It was this tension that
made him "feel dead" during
his match with Gerulaitis and
he decided to coast through
the fourth set.
As he had hoped, he felt
much better for the fifth .

LUG WRENCH

$166

($=9= =&gt;.J

HECK'S REG.

$2.99

11

Yitas

played a great game and at 45 in the fifth he hit two unbelievable forehands. He ·
bucked the odds to hit those
shots because it's not easy to
pass me when I've hit the ball
down the middle."
Ashe said he was only
" disappointed" at the
moment but the real
significance of his defeat
would sink in tomorrow morning. He said recently that
only a man who wins Wimbledon twice in a row is a
"real champion" and since
he is 33 next month this is
now a virtual impossibility
for hiin.
TOPLAYSTARS
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
(UPI) - New NBA superstars Julius Erving and
David Thompson will join
Nate Archibald and a host of
other pro stars in a pair of
games next week against the
U. s. Olympic Basketball
team.
·
·
The All-Pro squad will play
the Collegiate Stars Wednesday night at the Providence Civic Center and the next
night at the Hartford Civic
Center, in Hartford, Conn.

,,

TILL JULY 4th
PlCNH.: IN OUR BEAUTIFUL WEST VIRGINIA HILL ~
THIS BICENTEN NIAL FOURTH ... LET THESE ITEM S
FROM HARDMANS HELP MAKE THIS WEEKENIJ ONE
OF \OUR FAMILY'S NICEST MEMORIES.
... REMEMBER, THESE ARE JUST A FEW
OF THE FANTASTIC SAVINGS
... SEE OUR CIRCULAR FOR I\10RE!

\ \\ ,,,,

~\~1I '

-'

1

Flamb {•an Plo Mics

M ulltl

8"x B"xl h "
1

(RAYZVAC)

KOOL·PAC

Nappe-Sm ith Co.

THERMO·KEEP
INSULATED BAG

Just freeze ancJ place in coo ler .
Reu sable non - t oJ~. ic coolant

REGULAR 1.49

99c

REG .
3.59

266

J . E. Purter

Gut ham

4QUART

ICE CREAM
FREEZER

800UNCE

INSULATED JUG
Foam insulated jug for hot or
cold liqui~s . Flip-lop spout .

Enjoy oil year ! Red fiberglass
tub .l't'ith UL lis ted motor. full
one ye ar guorontee

REGULAR 1.69

REG ULA R29.98

99c

2188
••
•••
••
••
••
•••
•

:•

Cuudle- Litc.

WEATHERPROOF

LANTERN

REGULAR 9.95

688

with BATTERY
One-piece wolerproof plastic case.
4'/,' ' sealed lens . Big comFIT handle.
II floats!

Choose from a so:id or pert oroted spooo ond 111 Ol . ~ol i d
bowl ladle. Hondy honging holes.

YOUR CHOICE
REGULAR2.79

1~A~

PLASTIC
TABLECLOTH

Rose bowl candle with ne t·
CO'Iered g)o ss. Repells inst!cts

Checked -pattern plastic clot h.
Easy ddrnp -wipe clean . Save 20'

~E~

REG .
59•

66c

39c

Gotham

STAINLESS STEEL

SPOONS&amp;
LADLE

CITRONELLA
CANDLE

48" X 78"

5 PIECE

27 QT. FOAM
ICE CHEST
Easy-corry chest has built-in
hand grips . Sturdy molded foom
styrene tor picnics, camping.

REGULAR 1.69

99c

GA 8 ~5' - 11 !5 1 • 1

22" GRILL
4-posit io n gr id ad justment .

legs told for easy s t o r o~e .

REGULAR 12.95

9~N~N

BARBECUE.SET
with TRAY
Inc ludes slott ed turner . fork ,

brush and tongs With chr ome
finish ond wood and metal handles . Handy corry/storage troy .

REGUlAR 10.49

688

E·Z ANT TRAP

REGULAR 4.99 Ce 11 trex

•
••
••

(IAY~.oC]

I

.•

•
...
••
197 ••

6VOLT

QUART

BAnERY

CHARCOAL
LIGHTER
For

borbe cue,

Sealed-in-steel hea11y duty
lantern botte ry. G1ves up to
70 ~c e ~ t ro ~ervic e

fireplo!:e .

life.

Leaves no taste, soot or
odor. One qt .

SALE PRICE

•••••••••••

HARDMANS HOME CENTER
MORE THAN A LUMBER YARD
SUN. 1-7 ·
Mon.·Tues.·Wed. 9-6
Thurs.·fri.·Sat. 9·9

LOTS MORE

Rt. 2 By Pass, Point Pleasant

1'he 'Friendly
. One

�ENTER
OF FREE

upset
WIMBLEDON

5 ~UIJN

WILKINSON
ADJUSTABLE II

ANTACID TABLET~

B64cES 1~1
I

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59'

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99

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'

(UP!) -

Vilas Gerulaitis has the
greatest respect for defen·
ding Wimbledon Champion
Arthur Ashe, but Saturday in
ll6-degree courtside tern·
peratures he tried to run the
32-year-&lt;&gt;ld Miamian into the
ground.
The strategy worked to
perfection and the unseeded .
Gerulaitis marched from a
tw()oset deficit into the quarter.finaLs of the $280,000 tow·nament with a 4-6, 6-9, 6-4, &amp;.
3, 6-4 triumph in 2 hours, 50
minutes.
Gerulaitis, 11 years
younger and unbothered by
the sweltering heat that once
again drove hundreds of faint
spectators to the first aid
stations for relief, said he
· knew his only hoep after
losing the first set to Ashe H
was to make him run and
"pay for his age."
"Even though I lost the first two sets," said the longhair
blond from Howard Beach,
N.Y., who lost the second set
in a tiebreaker 6-9, " All of his
services were hard-fought. I
was losing but I was making
him work. I knew if I could be
lucky enough to get into the
fifth set, I wasn't tired and I
would have good chance. f
just wanted to wear him
dowh, make him pay for his
age ifl could."
·
Gerulaitis never had
beaten Ashe in four previous
meetings, including one on
grass at Forest Hills, and had
never gotten past the first
round at Wimbledon in two
other 'attempts. Last year,
however, he managed to take
the doubles title with Sandy
Mayer.
"I just wanted to get past
one round and go back happy," Gerulaitis said. " I never
really felt that comfortable
on grass."
But Vitas gave some.credit
to a few words of encouragement he received in a
letter from his coach, Harry
Hopmann, the Australian
veteran.
. "Wimbledon only comes
around once a year," Hopman wrote his protege, "And
the really great champions
can get themselves up for it."
"After reading his letter,"
Gerulaitis said, "I sat and
thought about ii for a long'
time. I made up my mind to
get myself up as high as I
could and I just kept getting
higher and higher until the
match today."
Gerulaitis, who next faces
Raul Ramirez of Me&lt;ic;o,
gave Ashe the praise he
deserved for a hard·fought
match.
"You've got to go out and
win the pOints, you can't
expect Arthur Ashe to give
you the game," Gerulaitis
said. "He's still, at this point,
, a better player than I am."
Ahse said he felt exhausted
.after the first two sets and
blamed it on the heat and on
the tension that builds up at
the end of the first week of
Wimbledon.
"The crowds pay enonnous
amounts of money·to see you
play and they want you to
win,'' he said.
It was this tension that
made him "feel dead" during
his match with Gerulaitis and
he decided to coast through
the fourth set.
As he had hoped, he felt
much better for the fifth .

LUG WRENCH

$166

($=9= =&gt;.J

HECK'S REG.

$2.99

11

Yitas

played a great game and at 45 in the fifth he hit two unbelievable forehands. He ·
bucked the odds to hit those
shots because it's not easy to
pass me when I've hit the ball
down the middle."
Ashe said he was only
" disappointed" at the
moment but the real
significance of his defeat
would sink in tomorrow morning. He said recently that
only a man who wins Wimbledon twice in a row is a
"real champion" and since
he is 33 next month this is
now a virtual impossibility
for hiin.
TOPLAYSTARS
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
(UPI) - New NBA superstars Julius Erving and
David Thompson will join
Nate Archibald and a host of
other pro stars in a pair of
games next week against the
U. s. Olympic Basketball
team.
·
·
The All-Pro squad will play
the Collegiate Stars Wednesday night at the Providence Civic Center and the next
night at the Hartford Civic
Center, in Hartford, Conn.

,,

TILL JULY 4th
PlCNH.: IN OUR BEAUTIFUL WEST VIRGINIA HILL ~
THIS BICENTEN NIAL FOURTH ... LET THESE ITEM S
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•••••••••••

HARDMANS HOME CENTER
MORE THAN A LUMBER YARD
SUN. 1-7 ·
Mon.·Tues.·Wed. 9-6
Thurs.·fri.·Sat. 9·9

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1'he 'Friendly
. One

�22 - The Sunday Tunes -Sentmel, SWJday, June 27, 1976

23 - The Sunday Tunes. Sentinel, Stmday, J ~ne 27, 1976

Growing in Stature

Den Talk

Randy Jones: a short, low winner
By Murray Olderman
made up the difference the passively fo1 a gO&lt;xl p1tch
SAN DIEGO, Calif
mound gave to Randy , who" W1th the COWil 2-and-2, Ran-,
dy changed the grt p sbghtl)
(NEA l - On the l1rSI Sunday 5-10
m May, a crisp da y m P1tts- - The re were two Pirate nm· on the bal l cradled m h1s
burgh, Randall Leo Jones of ners on base and nubody out glove He kicked, wh~rl ed and
the San Diego Padres 111 the ninth mmng W1llw, rotated the ball sharply off
revealed the style that makes who 1s w1thin range of 400 Ius fmgerhps Stargell strooe
him the most baffling p1tcher home runs for hiS career, and whipped his bal m an arc
at the same tune As 11
m major league baseball
could be the tying rw1
From the sUghtly elevated
"I threw hun a shder away reached the outs1dc edge of
co11Ull3nd post m the nuddle for a strike," recalls Randy the plate, the ba ll dipped
of Three Rivers Stadium, VIvidly "I came nght back sharply under the swmg
Randy looked at th e With a fast ball on the outs1de Strtke three '
"That was the b1 g out,"
menacing bulk of W1ll1e corner for a str1ke R1ght
Stargell, p01sed w1th a around the knees It sur· remembers manager John
bludgeon m hiS powerful pnsed hun "
McNamara of the Padres
fiSts, only 60 feet 6 mches
Then the chunky lefthandcr "lie d1dn 't g1ve m to h1m and
away
wasted a sbder that was so he got the ball where he wan·
Randy didn't look down w1de Stargel woudln 't bile at te&lt;( to It was the work of a
because Willie's 6 feet 3 m- 1t. He wasted another master craftsman "
Be a !so won the game.
ches (carrymg 220 pounds ) sl1der as W1lhe wa1ted unBy the end of May, Randy
Jones had won 10 games, as
much as any pitcher m the
h1st01 y of the Natwnal
League at that early pmnt of
the season
Coupled w1th the 21).12
season he had last year for a
team wh1ch lost 20 games
more than 1l won, the per·
formance
•s b•llilant BOSTON (UP!) - R1eo Petrocelli smgled m YastrespeCially
f01
an ununposmg
Petrocelli's one-out nmth m· zemskl from third
nmg sacrifiCe fly scored Bol&gt;by Darwin w1th the wmrung
run Saturday to g1ve the
Boston Red Sox a 2·1wm over
the Detrmt Tigers m the
nat~anally-tclevtsed game
OAKLAND, Cah! (UPI I SILLOTH, England (UPJ )
Lws T1ant scattered e1ght
The
Oakland A's and the1r
hits m gomg the distance for - Cathy Panton, a 21 -year·
owner,
Charles 0 Fmley,
his nmth wm aga1nst five old Edinburgh Umvers1ty
played
verbal
poker Saturstudent,
won
the
Br1t1sh
losses while Dave Roberts
day
Ill
their
hghl
over a
Amateur
Women'
s
Golf
yielded just siX hits m al&gt;threatened
stnke
by
the enChampiOnship
Saturday
w1
th
sorbmg his sixth loss m 13
tire
team
unless
three
bench·
a
1-up
VICtory
over
South
deciSions.
ed
stars
are
allowed
to
play
Afncan
champion
Allison
Petroc-ell1, who drove m
for
Sunday
Sheard.
Boston's other run m the 4th
"The players have no say
Panton dumped defendmg
with a smgie, came to the
whatsoever,"
fumed ~' mley ,
Amencan
Champion
Nancy
plate after Darwm doubled to
who
warned
he
would brmg
Syms
m
one
of
Fnday
's
open the mrung and pmch·
runner Rick Miller went to senufmals while M1ss Shea• d up Mmor League players third on Carl Yastrzemski's eliminated U S Walker Cup an entire team 1f necessary
fly to nght Dw1ght Evans star and hot tournament - to replace sinkers
Fmle) sa1d of the A's,
was walked mtentionally favonte Debbie Massey to
' Half the guys didn't even go
before Petrocelli hit a fly to rout the U S challenge
In the fmal, Panton a!'" to college and they don 't
medium deep centerfield that
peared
coastmg to an easy know a thmg about legal matRon Leflore tracked down
wm
at
3-up at the lith ters ''
but was unable to catch
The
extraordinary
Nevers
cost
her the next
Miller taggmg from third.
showdown
m the escalallng
three
holes,
but
she
look
the
The Tigers took a Hl lead
battle
that
p1ts
Fmley agamsl
15th
and
16th
and
lost
the
17th
m the fourth on a smgle by
his
team
and
baseball com·
before
clmching
the
t1Ue
w1th
Tom Veryzer, a double by
nusswner
Bow1e
Ku!UJ stema
regulahon
four
on
the
16th
Ben Ogllvte and Jason Thompson's sacrifice fly. The Red after a 4~-foot b1rd1e putt med from Kulm 's ban of the
Sox lied 11 m the fourth when stopped on the hp of the hole 3 5 nutuon sa le of Oakland

•

Roberts lS 2-1
• •
Fen way VlCtlm
Panton cops

women's title

Stand mgs
Averag es

·:·: the SCOREBOARD
East
Balllmore
Basion
Delrolt
Milwaukee

West

Kan C1l y
TeKas
Oa&lt;land

Delro1 l
Boslon

HPSttlls
1000 100 13- 6 10 1

000 000 200- 2 6 o

Ru h l e ,

H ill e r

( 7l ,

Kmgman (2 4). Ph1ll 1ps ( 11
Ch1 caao M ondav f 121

GB
37 28 569 11, St L OU IS 020000 10 1 4 1-l 1
35 35 500 7 Phil a
200 52003 x 12 12 2
31 34 477 81,
C urt1 ~, Ra smu sse n ( II ) ,
31 36 463 91, '2 So lomon I 5). Wall ace 161
19 43 403 14
Grell ( B) an d F ergu so n

W L Pel
dO 26 606

an d

ChiC~go

Mmn

Cal1f

Saturday ' s results
Balttmore 2 Cleve land 1
Boston 2 DelroJI I
New York 6 Mtlwauk ee 3
Mmnesota
at Oa kland ,

lw1llghl

Callforn ta at Kan sas Ctty ,
ntght
Chtcago at Texas, ntght
Sunday's games·
Mtlwauk ee (Augusttne 2 3
and Br oberg I 5) at New York

Stmm o n s

Ch r i s t e n son ,
Sch ue ler ( Bl and Boone

Ne w York OOOOO lOOx - 1 8 0
Tr ave r s ( B 5) and Porter

Ell iS IB 4) and Hea ly HR

New York

Ca lli
KC
Ro ss.

R1vers ( 4 )

0000 11 010- 3 9 0
00 3 000 30x--6 8 I
Sco ll 191 and

Et che ba r r en
Spl tltorf f.
Litt e ll (7) a nd Mar tin ez

WP Chnslenson 18 31 LP

WP Spl1ltortl

Curf1 S
(5 7l
H RsPh l ladelphl a, Luz msk1 (1 1),

C1 ty Mayberr y 12 1 (91

Allen 171 19)

Ross

(59)

LP-

(7 6 )

H Rs - Kan s a s

--

M1nn
000 000 002- 2 8 0
Oa kland
100 000 004- 5 a 0
Goll z, Ca mp bell (9) and

K tso n ( 5 4) and Sangutllen

Wyncg a r Torr ez Ltn d blad
and Ha ney WP- L tnblad (4

PillS
Monl

412001 010- 9 15 I
ooo 100 100- 2 1 0

Carnlh ers . Long 13)
Scher man (6 1. Granger (91

I) LP Go llz ( 7 5) HR I Hunter B7 and T1drow 2 0) , and Foo te M ora les ( 6 ) L POa kl"nd McMullen (3)
2, I 00 p m
Car rtth ers 13 6)
HRCleveland (WailS 2 I and PJIIsburQh , Hebner (21
Kern 6-2 or 81bby 3 2) at
Pl'ITSBURGH I UPII
Balli more I Ma y 5 3 and Cl ncm
110203 000- 8 15 0 Th e Pittsburgh P1rales
Gr~msley I 41. 2, 2 00 p m
Houston 302 000 010- 6 10 2 s1gned outfielder Lenny
Detr01t (MacCormack 0 3)
H1nton
Borbon
( 3)
al Boslon I Pole 3 41 2 00 McEnaney (81 and Bench, Sp1cer, 18, of Verona, Ky .,
pm
thetr 25th round selectiOn m
Ron don Gnff1n ( a ). Pe nt z
Cal1forma I Kirkwood 2 7l 11) , S1ebe rl (8) WP- Borbon the annual free players draft,
al Kansas C1ly I Busby 3 21. I I I) LP- Grdlm IS 21 they announced Fnday
230pm
HR s- Houston. Robert s (6) ,
Spicer was the 27th player
Mmnesota ( Redfern 2 4) at Ca bell I II Walson 111 Ill
Oakland I Bosman I 01. 4 3q
s1gned of the 36 drafted by the
pm
All
002200 000- 4 8 0 Pira tes
Ch1cago 1Johnson 4 7) at San 01 ego 100000000- 1 4 0
Texa s ( Brtles 6 4). 9 OS p m
Morel. Mar shall ( 8 ) and
National League
East

Wtlltam s

43 27

Louts at
n1ght

Phlladelph1a ,

Pittsburgh al Monlreal n1ghl

Ctnclnnatt at Houston , ntghf

Amencan
1st game

ChiCago
T· xas

Fran ctsco

Angeles. n1ghl

by Indillns
BALTIMORE iUPI) - Lee
May and Regg1e Jackson
each drove m f1rst mnmg
runs while unbeaten Wayne
Garland posted hiS fourth
slra1ght startmg v1ctory
Saturday 111 a 2-1 v1ctory for
the Baltunore Onoles over
the Cleveland Indians.
Garland ~. e1ght·hit the
Indians who spoiled the 2f&gt;..
ye~r
old righthander' s
shutout b1d when Buddy Bell
drove ma Sixth mmng run.
The Onoles gave Garland a
2-0 lead m the hrst off Denms
Eckersley, who was sp1ked
aCCidentally on the foot by
catcher Alan Ashby m the
fourth mmng and was forced
to leave the game
AI Bumbry opened the
Balllmore spurt wtth a
smgle, stole second and after
Paul Blair walked, both runners pulled a double steal
Jackson's ground ball scored
Bumbry and May's enswng
smgle scored Blair

patr of runs Saturday to pace
the New York Yankees to a 63 v1ctory over the Milwaukee
Brewers
The Yankees took a 2-llead
m the fourth on an RBI smgle
by Chambliss and Hendncks'
sacnflce fly. They added two
more m the fifth, routmg
loser J1m Slaton when
Mickey R1vers doubled 1
Carlos May tnpled and
Chambliss smgled
The Yankees scored the1r
fmal two runs m tbe sixth on
a solo homer by Hendricks
and Roy White's sacrifice fly .
The Brewers went ahead I·
0 w1th an unearned run m the
first mmng. RIVers dropped
Von Joshua's leadoff fly ball
for a two-base error and the
Brewer outf1elder later came
m to score on a fiyout and a
fielder's grounder. Berme
Carbo's fourth home run, a
two-run shot off wmnmg pit·
cher Ed F1gueroa, 9-4, m the
s1xth, closed out the scormg
Sparky Lyle repla ced
Figueroa m the mnth , while
Rivers, who had two hits m
the game, extended h1s con-

at

nashua

Sunday's Games

HOMES

Sl Lou1 s (McGiolhen 6 6)
al Philadelphia I lonborg 9
4), 1 35pm
New York I Swan 3 7 ) al
GhiCago 1R Reuschel 7 4) ,
2 15 p m
Pilfsburgh I Rooker 6 3 or
Med iC h 5 l ) al Montreal
!Fryman 751. 2 15 p m

Vu ckov1ch (6), Ham il ton (9)

and Ess 1an , Borr, BacSi k IJI,
Foucault (6) Hoerner (81.
Terpko (91 and Fahey WP
Vucko viC h (6 21
LPFouc aull (6 41
HR sChiCago. Bell 121 Orla 110) ,
TeKas. Harrah (7)

H 5 ::'&amp;:.... \

ON A [);:::&gt;e D

0 !!'11/:.N S t0/'/5

"Mr Fmley sa1d there was
nothing he could do because
the matter was m ht1gahon
and he would have to get per·
m•ss10n from the Red Sox
and Yankees for them to
play.
"We're not on e1ther stde
(In Fmley's dispute w1th
KUhn) , we're here to play
baseball and we're trymg to
w1n We feel that for the
heneh! of the Oakland A's
these three players have to
play "
Fmley put his Tucson fann
team on notice that 11 nught
fly to Oakland and take the
f1eld Sunday. Salt Lake
owner Art Teece 1m·
mediately said he would sue
Fmley if Tucson can't held a
team m Salt Lake C1ty for
Sunday's game which 1s
already a near-sellout

San Fran ctsco ( D' Acqu 1sto

o 4) at Los Angeles (Sutton 6
7).400pm

16-year-old
double winner

Registration Thursday at Rio

..

for second swimming session

'

RIO
GRANDE
Registration for the second
youth swururung lessons at
Rio Grande College · Rio
Grande Connmuntty College
will be held on Thursday,
July I from 4:30 · 6 p. m m
Paul R Lyne Phys1cal
Education Center
A
non-refundable
registrahon fee IS $10 for II
class sess1ons reqwred at lhe
time of registratwn

Syracuse in
first defeat
SYRACUSil/ - In Southern
Pee Wee action, Syracuse
dropped 1ts f1rst game, 19-13
to visitmg Letart. The hosts
dropped to 5-1 on the year
while Letart is 2-4. Winrung
pitcher Keith Allen teamed
w1th Scott Wickline to fan 11
and walk 19 Leading hitter
for the w1nners was Shawn
Stobart With 2 smgles, and
W1cklme had stx RBI's
Darin Roush socked a
double for the losers and
knocked m three runs. Mark
Salser had two smgles. Barry
McCoy had two runs batted
m. Loser Randy Anns and
Roush combmed to stnke out
SIX and walk 28 There were
only SIX hits the entire game,
two by the w1nners and four
by Syracuse
294 4~19 2 I ,
L
082
03-13 4 I
s

NEW
BANKING
HOURS

Kingman
hits 26th

NOW
IN EFFECT••.

home run

DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 3 PM

TUESDAY••••••••• 9 AM TIL 3 PM
DRIVE IN WINDOW 8:30 TIL 3 PM

:

~-- - -12' ·0"-

I

I

I

-7-• .o·--+-a·-· ·· - -r-- -

15 10

• 6oyW1ndow

• Totol Electnc
• o.luJit Furmture

• Detuxe Bar StooiJ
• 2 Door Refr~gerator

'

• Cathedral Ce1ltng wtlh M~r• o rtd Seanu
• Double lavatory m Bath
• Full Houw lnswlol1on
• ~og Carpet tn L.vmg Room 111111 &amp; Master
Bl'droom

'7,695°0

,,

THURSDAY - MAIN LOBBY CLOSED
DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 12 NOON

.,

FRIDAY 9:00 TIL 3 PM
DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 7 PM

SATURDAY 9 AM TIL 3 PM
DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 3 PM
MEMBER OF FDIC

COMMERCIAL. &amp;SAVINGS' BANK

Miller (9) and Duncan WP

Thomas II Il

3)

LP~

Paga n I I

HR s- Cieveland

Sptke s

171 Ba ll1 more Ja ck,on (BJ

Seems like m the last couple of weeks nea rly everyone has
grown fond of Mr Frog, considering the B1g Bend Regalia IS
centered around this creature.
But now that the regatta 11eekend is over, lots of us are
heginmng to see Mr . Frog in a different light - we're looking
only at his legs.
Once the sentimentality 1s overcome, one's palate begms
to water at the menlwn of some dehc1ous frog legs.
Froggin ' (or giggin' at it'ssomet1111es called) is a sport that
many people look forward to all year long Fixed the nght way,
frog legs are one of the tastiest dishes one can prepare, and of
course we all know that frog legs are a delicacy m lots of
restaurants.
The sport 1tself IS s1mple-get a flashlight or some other
bnght light and go to your favorite water hole. Listen for that
tell-tale bellow from an old bull frog and you're m busmessalmost.
Now all that's left 1s to catch the ole leaper before he gels
jumpy and seeks refuge m the water. Oh10 law allows each
frogger 10 frogs per night, and the hunter may take them by
grabbing with h1s hands, by stabbmg them With a frog g1g, or
by shootmg them w1th a bow and arrow. It 1s tllegallo use any
type of firearm m capturmg the leapers
Most "frog" men take only the largest frogs many one booy
of water , and true to the true "hunter," he always leaves a few
for the next year and to keep nature in balance Carry a burlap
hag to put your catch in, but don't open it too wide, or the ones
you've already captured may Jump out as they have great
stamina Once you've skinned the frogs (use all four of their
legs so there won't be any waste) roll the legs in butter or your
favorite batter and flour and fry them over a low fire .
Contrary to what some of you believe, tt IS legal to use a
bnght light However, you must have a vahd Ohto ftshmg
license, no matter if you're froggin ' m a private pond or on a
pubUc body of water Frog season m Ohio opened m OhiO on
June 15 at 6 p.m and will close on May I, 1977. Don 't forget to
ab1de by the laws, and you're m for one of the fmest taste treats
of your life. (Sorry, Mr. Crow, but those croakers are one of my
favorites 1)

••

KNOXVILLE, Tenn (UP! ) with ~50.95 Boggs was twice
- Greg Lougan1s, a 16-year- world champiOn at threeold Califorruan who qualified meters and a member of the
Fnday m the three-meter three-meter Olympic squad
U S Olympic div1ug trials, w1th Lougarus and Robert
led the 10-meter qualifying ftagg of Maple Glen, Pa.
Bnan Bungum, the NCAA
Saturday to become the only
double wmner of the trials champ1on from Bloommgton,
Lougan1s, from El CaJOn, Minn was f1fth w1th 53112
Calif rece1ved 610 41 pomts points
Keith Russell of Conroe,
from the JUdges at the
Umvers1ty of Tennessee Tex. fmlshed sixth at ~07 30,
Cragg was seventh at 497 46,
Aqual1c Center
Don Craine of Fl
and
Kent Vosler of Eaton, Ohw,
Lauderdale,
Fla. was e1ghth
was second w1th 600 12 points
w1th
474
30
pomts
,
and T1111 Moore, the AAU
The women's team was
mdoor champiOn from
Cmcinnat1, Ohio, was third at made up of SIX d1vers The
threemeler team .includes
563 8ll pomts .
There was no doubt that Jenn1fer Candler of Lincoln,
Lougams was headed for Ala., Cynthia Mclngvale uf
vtctory Saturday when twice Dallas, Tex. and Barbara
durmg the afternoon he Nejman of Pittsburgh, Pa
The women 's ten-meter
secullve game hittmg streak scored near perfect diVes
team will be Janet Ely of
worth 10 pomts
to 16.
Capt Phil Boggs of the U S Dallas, Melissa Bnley of San
A1r Force Academy was Antomo, Tex. and Deborah
fourth in the ten-meter finals Wtlson of Columbus, Ohio.

Cinc1nnaft { Norman 5 1) at

011 110 101 - 6 10 o
Houston (R Ichard 78) , 3 05 Cle
Ball
000 301 100- l 9 I
pm
Brown,
Buskey
(41,
Atlanta !Messersmith 7 51
at San D1ego (Strom 6 7), 4 00 Thomas and Fosse. Ashby
( B) , Cuellar , Pa g" n 131.
P m.

t,;:'

Hi:. 7"Altl'S

WEDNESDAY•••••• 9 AM TO 3 PM
1012 2K

Te&lt;as
100 2410 10- 9 12 I
Bamos, Knapp (51 ,

.'

DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 3 PM

Harrah ( 6)

game
Los 2nd
Ch ~eago 040004 014- 14 13 3

" It d1dn't boost my ego,"
shrugs Randy. "But! had my
degree I always wanted to go
out and fmd a JOb, m
busmess or real estate or
computers I 11as already
lookmg for one when San
D1ego sent me to a rook1e
league
"I was there f1ve days It
was ridiculous They were
high school k1ds and I had
four years of college. I picked
them apart. They sent me to
Double A and then I started
to learn about baseball "

MONDAY••••••••• 9 AM TIL 3 PM

Jeff er son (5)
and Down1ng ,

Atlanta at San D1ego, n1ghl

San

NEW YORK (UPI) Orioles slip Chris
Chambliss and Elroo
Bendrtcks each drove home a

020110 OD0-4 8 I
000020105- 8 10 0

Perry 18 5) and Sundberg
LP- Hamlllon 13 4) HR sChiCago. Garr 131 Te&lt;as,

'

I

to eight games,

League

For ste r
Ham11ton

"We weren't m any hurry
to draft him," says Buzzy
Bavas1, the president of the
Pad1 es "We knew nobody
was gomg to take hun Be
was drafted at the ms1stence
of Duke Smder's brother-mlaw who used to manage for
us m Walla Walla. The guy's
name, believe 11 or not, IS
ChffDttto."

Yanks up lead

51 4

Los Ang
39 32 549 4'1'
San D1ego 36 34 51 4 1
Atlanta
32 37 464 101,
Houston
31 39 443 12
San Fran
30 44 40515
Saturday's results·
New York 10 Chicago 2
Sf

Fmley and A's manager
Chuck Tanner 1ece1ved warmngs from Kuhn to use Blue,
Rudi and Fingers "m a normal way " The comnusslOner threatened "grave
penalt•es'' 1f they didn't
"I'm loyal to Charles 0
Fmley," sa1d Tanner "I'll do
anything he says I get my
paychecks from h1111, not the
CommiSSi on er or the
Amen can League n
Kuhn negated the deals m
which Blue was sold to the
New York Yankees for $1.5
Jrulhon and Rud1 and Fmgers
to the Boston Red Sox for $1
rrulllon each
Pitcher J1111 Tood, the A's'
player representative, sa1d of
the Sunday stnke deadhne
"We've g1ven Mr Fmley
an ultunalum that, 1f the
players don't play by Sunday,
we,re gomg on str1ke

Fr e t s le be n ,

Metzg er ( 9 ) and Kendall. B
W L. Pel GB Da v1s (9) WP- Morel (3 7)
Phil
47 19 71 '
LP- FreiSieben 16 21 HR37 28 569 9 1 2 Atlan
P1t1~
ta Henderson ( 6)
1
New York 36 37 ,49 3 14 ?
Sf Louis
30 28 441 18
Fran
000000 001 - 1 d 0
ChiCago
30 39 434 1812 San
Los
Ang
000
000 000- 0 7 I
1
Montreal
23 40 365 22 1
Hal1ck1 (6 10) a n d Hdl
West
W L Pel GB Sadeck1(81, Hoolon 15 Bl and
Yeager

Cmcm

Stars Rothe Fmgers, Joe
Rud1 and VIda Blue
Fmley f1led a $10 rmll10n
su1t Fnday over his nghts to
sell h1s playe rs Kuhn, mean·
while, ordered the A's owner
to play the embattled trio
And late Fnday the team
warned 11 would stnke if the
three don't play
'As long as they are on
strike, their paychecks w1ll
be docked," Fmiey sa1d "If
they want to do 1!, they can be
my guests They Just better
g1ve considerable thought 1o
"hat they'•e domg."
· The A's owner sa1d he
spoke Jo members of h1s
team, mcludmg Sal Bando,
And they told me they
thought they could wm the
div1s1on With those guys
playmg They told me they
rrught be nussmg out on
Playoff and World Senes
money otherwise ·'I told
them if they actually go on
stnke 1t would be one of the
worst moves they ever made
This thing ISm Federal Court
and the players have no say

whatsoever "

Pel GB
Freehan Jenk1 n s, Hous e (8).
41 24 631
Ch1 cago
101 100 100 4 9 I Murph y (9 1 and FISh WP33 32 5(17 8
Hi l ler (5 3) L P- Jenktn s (5
Mal lack (9 21 and Grole
33 33 500 81 2 Burr1 s, Sutler ( 7)
8)
HR - Detro lt Rodngu ez
P
31 34 477 10 Reuschel 171 Garman 181 (41
31 35 468 101 ~ and Sw1sher LP Bu rr 1s (3
25 37 403 141 1 lO t
Mil w
000 000 000- 0 7 0
HR s New
Yo r k ,

W L
New York
Cleveland

Mator League Results
Untted Presslnternat1onat
Nattonal League
New Yor k 003 010 300 7 (4 I

lewd than that "
The Padres gave hun a
mooest bonus of $3.000

Players have no say--Finley

. .·.·..

Un1ted Press lnternattona I
Amencan League

a pomt wt1ere people say ,
'
'W1th h1s,. kmd of stuff
This guy ~ s very good stuff
· He can crank the ball up
when he has to (Randy
estunates Ius fast ball at 60
mph J But he hves w1th h1s
smk er and also h1 s slider Be
has good control and keeps
the ball below the belt What
more can you ask' I'd rather
have f1v e Randy Joneses
than a guy who can't keep the
ballm the balling cage "
Jones, who's 26 years old
" People don 't rea h:te,"
says Randy plac1dly, "my and m his fourth maJor
spec1al p1tch, the one that got league season, w&lt;::~~n't always
me to the b1g leagues and 1s mdemand
Although he has been an
makmg me a success, 1s
All-Amencan
at Chapman
called a smker ball The thing
about a smker ball, It's not College m h1s nahve southern
how hard you throw, 1t's the Califorma, he was an unmovement, I get the most promiSing No. 5 p1ck by the
movement from 65 to 75 m1les Padres 111 the natwnal draft
"A lot of people, my
per hour I really think 75 IS
too hard to get maxunwn coaches, told me I didn't
have a chance at pro ball.,"
movement "
Mana ger Mc Namara remembers Randy If
somebooy had told me m '72
backs hun up
" If you can't throw str1kes when I was about to s1gn that
where you want them, 11 I'd be where I am today I
doesn't matter how hard you would have told them,
throw the ball It 's gettmg to 'You're crazy ' Maybe more

leftha nder Who has fre quently been slurred as
h&lt;t v1ng sorneUung less th&lt;tn a
maJ or league arm
There is this fet1sh about
veloc1ty of pitches, especwlly
preva lent msouthern CaLif or·
ma, where the delive1y of
Nolan Ryan of the Angels has
bt-en t1med at speeds a!'"
proac hing 95 m1les per hour
Randy's best p1tches totter
up to the plate at a snall·hke
65 mph

Froggin' popular sport

COURT STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIC

·'

CHICAGO (UPI) - John
Milner hit his third career
grand slam and Dave
Kingman belted his 26th
homer to highlight a six-run
third inning Saturday which
sent the New York Mets oft to
a 10-2 VIctory over the
Chicago Cubs
Milner, benched the day
before for falling to run out a
pop fly, broke up a 1·1 tie w1th
his grand slam and Kmgman
followed with his leagueleading 25th homer which
cleared the leftfield
bleachers . Both homers
came off loser Btll Bonham.
Jerry Koosman chalked up
hi,s seventh wm m 13
decisions, but his first victory
smce May 27 after losmg f1ve
straight starts Bob Apodaca
relieved for the Mets in the
seventh.
Koosman allowed all three
Chicago hits, the first a
leadoff siXth 1nnmg homer by
Rick Monday. The Mets,
however; tied it 1·1 in the
third on a run-scoring single
by Felix Millan prior to the
homers by Milner and
Kingman
Mike Phillips hJt his second
horne run In the e1ghth for the
Mets, a solo shot, while Ed
Kranepool drilled a two-run
smgle in the eighth innmg for
New York Kingman now has
fiVe homers in five games at
Chicago.
l)

Youngsters can be taught
beginmng swinnmmg, m·
tenned1ate swunmmg, as
well as advanced begmnmg
by qualified American Red
Cross Instructors Children
must be at least SIX years of
age and registration Will be
on a flfst-come-f~rst-serve
bas1s Parents are asked to
register only their own
children.
Due to the Fourth of July
weekend, the second sessiOn
of actual swlll1lllll1g lessons
will not begm until Tuesday,
July 6. Swim lessons are
taught weekdays from 10.30
a. m to II :30 a m. A
maximum of 35 sWll1llllers
are admitted into each
sesswn. ltl can also be noted
that registration for sesswn
three will be held on
Tuesday, July 20 and agam
for sessiOn four on Wednesday, August 4. For more
infonnallon, call 245-5353,
ext 67.

Chester rolls

•

Driessen has 5 RBis zn 8-6 Reds victory
HOUSTON 1UP! ) - Of the
three strongest weapons at
the Astrooome Fr~dlly mght,
the bat of Cmcmnab Reds
utihty man Dan Dnessen was
the least expected.
In all , the Astrodome
treated a standing room only
crowd of 44,988 to the RedsAstra~ game, and then the
closed-ctrcuit antics of two
alleged fights between boxers
and wrestlers.
A head-butt bv Andrr ThP

Archie ties
k11ot Saturday
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Two-tune He1srnan Trophy
winner Archie Griffin of Ohio
State was married Saturday
to Loretta Laffitte of
suburban Warrensville
Heights, an OSU senior who
will graduate m August w1th
a degree m marketmg
Griffin, the 5-9, 162-poWJd
all-time leadmg major
college ground gainer, has
signed a multi-year contract
with the Cincmnati Bengals.
The Bengals took him as their
second cho1ce Ul the first
round of lh1s year's college
player draft.
Griffm, a Columbus nat1ve,
Ohio, was the 24th player
chosen m the draft and the
only running back ever
picked m the first round by
Cincinnati

the f1eld of competitors They
overcame four Houston hume
runs, 13 stranded ba se
runners and a disastrous
start by lefthander Rich
Bmton to successfully open
the weekend senes w1 th
Houston
Bmton, a youngster who
began h1s career m the
American League, was
traded to Cmci nnall this
season. Be lasted only two

and two-uuras mrungs while
giVIng up three homers and
rive runs in his first Na tional
League start
But he was taken off the
hook when, w1th the score
tied :;.s m the SIXth , the 21[&gt;..
hiltmg Dnessen drove m hiS
fourth and fifth runs of the
mght w1th a double
Earlier m the game ea ch of
his two singles knocked m one
run and he walked w1th the

bases loaded to score
another
"This hitting one time ea ch
game was getting me down,"
Dnessen said of his pmchhittmg role. Be started only
his lOth game th1s season
Fnday 10 place of first
baseman Tony Perez
'Tony IS ttred and Wlli Sit
out the ser1es," sa1d Reds
manager Sparky Anderson
Dnessen dressed quickly

alter his biggest night of the
season and sa1d he was
headmg for the Reds du~out
to watch the f1ghts on one of
the six screens set up on the
AstroTurf
Befure Dnessen ~ot to his
seat, thoUI!h, Wepner was
felled by Andre's crushing
blow to the head in the th1rd
round . The All·lnoki standoff,
however, lasted all 1~ rounds
and sent the huge crowd
home m a sour mood

Biggest ripoff nets $9 million

JOHN RUSSI'JLL, left, phystcal educatiOn dtrector at
the GalltpollS State Institute and Dan Bill, a volunteer ,
were busy th1s past week preparmg for the e1ghth annual
Oh1o Special Olympics held this weekend at the Ohio State
Uruversity stadium

soponf1c three-minute rounds
By LEON DANffiL
TOKYO, June 26 (UPI ) - consisted mamly of moving in
Heavywe1ghl
Box1ng a crabhke fashion around the
Champion Muhanunad Ali ring on his bottom and
and
a
pelican-jawed lashing out with his feet.
''We want our money
Japanese
wrestler
ex·
pect to spllr $9 mil· ba ck," shouted fans, some of
han for avo1dmg each whom had shelled out the yen
other to a dull draw Saturday, eqwvalent of $1,000 to be on
m what easily could be hand at rmgs1de for the
forgotten as or!e of history's bizarre bout billed by canny
promoters as "the super fight
greatest rmg ripoffs.
The
biggest cut- $6 of the century "
Told in his dressing room
m111ion - goes to Ali for
flicking a couple of that some of U1e fans had
nondamagmg left Jabs been disappointed, Ali replied
toward Antomo lnokl and "That 's because nobody got
absorbmg a lot of meffectual hurt Be's 1lnokl) too smart
kicks dehvered by the ana I'm too smart. You just
challenger to the champion's saw me make $6 million ."
The champ acknowledged
shins and postenor
lnoki 's effort over the 15 that he ventured only two
punches-both left jabs-

durmg the enure bout.
" I couldn't box because he
was on the floor," said All In
explam1ng why he fa1led to
take the offens1ve.
"Be kept his distance," All
explained " He was so
fast."
Ali hunself occasiOnally resorted to kicking but, unlike
lnoki, the champ delivered
his kicks from a standing
position .
Referee Gene LeBell, a
Hollywood stunt man , scored
the bout 71·71 and the two
Japanese judges scored it 7268 for lnokl and 74-72 lor Ali
All, who wore four-ounce
gloves, frequently taunted
lnoki, who fought bare
knuckled. At one point the
champ turned hts back on the

Knee, joint injuries most
72 from GSI take part common in women athletes
in Special Olympics

DALLAS .(UPI) - The
woman who became the first
athletic tra1ner 1n
professiOnal sports Saturday
GALLIPOUS
John llc1pated in the three day
told
doctors that women
Russell, Phystcal Education event, one of the largest
athletes
are no more suscepDtrector at the GaWpollS sports program sin Ohio.
tible
to
mjuries than the1r
This year's events include
State Institute, made a fmal
male
counterparts.
check Fr1day before the e1ght areas of endeavor, m"There 1s no need to
buses pulled out for the cluding track and f1eld, restnct phys~eal acttvtty for
E1ghth Annual Ohio Special bowlmg, gynmasttcs, floor women in any manner what·
Olymp1cs held this weekend hockey, d1vmg, co-ed
soever," JoanG1llettesa1d.
at the Ohio State Umvers1ty volleyball , 1ce skalmg and
"There IS no danger to the
some wheelchair events
Stadium.
reprooucllve
system and
The Special OlympiCS, Inc ,
Dan H1ll, assi.$tmg, is one
there are no 111 effects durmg
of the 15 volunteers asststmg was ongmated and spon· pregnancy, delivery or later
sored by the Joseph P. KenRussell and hiS staff.
on. Women athletes rece1ve
Seventy-two residents from nedy,Jr Foundation.
mJunes due to the lack of
Gallipolis State Institute par·
proper conditiOning and poor
coaching techniques.''
Gillette, 29, addressed the
LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Week of June 28, 1976
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
June28- CLOSE D
lO 30 11 30 a 1)1

18th Nahonal Conference on
Medical Aspects of Sports, a
Sidelight of the Amencan
Medical Assoc1at10n's annual
conventiOn which opened
Saturday.
Gillette, a former tramer
for the V1rgm1a Stuns,
Women's Tenn" Tour and
now ass1stant trailer for both
men and women's sports at
the Umversity of Nevada ,
told the doctors she conducted a 1974 nattonal survey
to document lnjurtes to
female athletes parttclpatmg
m 19colleglatesports.
She sa1d thai survey m·
dicated the most common Ill·
junes were to the knee and

Letart Falls wins, 14-9

Sw1m Lessons

CLOSED
8 lOp m Open Rec
June 29- CLOSE D

12 I p m Open Sw1m
8 10 p m Open Sw1m
lO 30-11 30a m

CLOSED
8 lOp m Gpen Rec
June 30- CLOSED

12 I p m Open Swim

8 10 p m Open Swim

CLOSED
BIOp.m Open Rec
CLOSED
8 10 p m Open Rec
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED

12 I p m Open Swim
8 lOp m Open Swim
12 I p m Open Swim
8 10 p m Open Sw1m
12 I p m Open Sw1m
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED

over foe, 40-14
CHESTER - - This
week's TeeBall actwn saw
host Chester roll over Reedsville Tuesday mght, 41).14
Home runs for the wmners
were hit by Bnan Beeler and
Huey Eason Bitting tnples
were: Beeler (3), Matt
Barris, Danny Leonard,
Mike Randolph, Jeff Roush
and Scotty Newell Gettmg
doubles were. Tood Clay,
Kyle Davis, MIChael Grant,
Barris, Billy McLaughlin,
Roush (2), Eric S1ms and
Newell. Single hitters were
Clay, Robbie Combs, Kyle
Dav1s, Eason, M1chael
Grant, Harrts, Ketth Karschmk,
Leonard,
McLaughlin, Mike Randolph,
Roush, Sim, and Newell
For the losers Charles
Jones and Milch B socked
homers. Burl Pubnan, Mike
Martm and Jeff Johnson each
got a tnple and Orv1ll Ran·
dolph, Johnson, and Kurt
Reed got doub1es. Smgles hit·
ters were: Jeremy Barker,
Putman, Randy C., Mike
Martm, Randolph and Trent
Upton
lll63-14
R
c
(12 )( ll )4 49-40

G1ant , a 7 ' ~ ", 4~0-pound
wrestler, appeared to floor
boxer Chuck Wepner m the
prelunmary bout
In the finale, world hea vy.
we1ght boxmg champion Muhammed Ali unleashed his
left hook tw1ce but was forced
to settle for a draw with
Japanese wrestler Antonio
Inoki.
Clearly,
the
world
champiOn Reds outclassed

July IJuly2July 3July 4July5-

NOTE

Sw1m Lessons

10 30·11 30p m

Sw1m Lessons

Reg1strat1on for Se sston No 2 of Youth Swtm

Lessons will be held al4 ,30 p m on Thursday , July 1 at Lyne

Cen ter Classes for Sess ton No 2 w i ll begtn on Tuesday, July 6

al 10 30 a m tor those regiStered

LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls Pee Wee squad
upended Portland Tuesday
rught by a score of 14-9, with
Scott W1cklme ptckmg up h1s
second wm of the season
Letart had four singles by
Shawn Stobart, Scott
Wickline, Tim Glllbnde and
Bill Bupp. Joe Roush walked

This week's

local !(ames
GALLIPOLIS · Here's thiS
week's

Applications being
accepted for camps

summer

Monday Senators , 6

Ttgers

students through their semor
year in h1gh school, but not
enough interest was shown in
the older group according to
Osborne.
The GAllS mentor, in
Sprmgfteld last week for a
swruner camp sess10n, sa1d
the GABS gyms will be open
m the day only this week and
closed m the evenings as
residents preiJIIre for the
nver recreation festival.
Osborne added the gyms
would be reopened in the
evenmgs, begtnnmg July 6.
IndiVIduals who have not
yet regtstered for one of the
two day-camp sessions may
do so by fillmg out an entry
blank, which appears below.

Third Annual Gallipolis Basketball Camp
When July 19 2Jrd
Joly 26 30, 4-8 Grade
Where GAHS Gym
If enough enrolled
Who, Grades 4, 5 6, 7, 8 ned vear
Cosl: 115 Wilh Ball &amp; T Shirt
$25 W1thou1 Ball &amp; T Shirl
115 DepoS!I &amp; Balance due July 19th
Please check your chotce

NAME'---------ADDRESS _ _ _~I
AGE _______________ ,pHONE _______
Parent 's or Guardtan Stgnalure· _ _ __;_ _ __

Sf nd to Jtm Osborne , Gatlta Academy H.S., Galltpolts,
0 456)1

Call

3250 or
I School)

4&lt;6

446

9284 1f any qesl1ons a me
I Home I

vs

Tuesday - AthletJcs vs
Cubs, 6
Wednesday - Red So• vs

Yanks 6 Senators vs Wh ite

Sox, 8 15
Thursday

GALLIPOLIS - Ap·
phcabons are still being accepted for the third annual
Gal11pohs Day Basketball
Camp according to J un
Osborne, camp director.
The ftrst of two five-day
sesstons ts scheduled July 19
through 23 at Gallia
Academy High School for
pupils who will be mgrades 4,
5, 6, 7and 8 this fall in the TnCounty Area
H enough interest IS shown,
the second session w1ll be
held July 26 through 30.
Coach Osborne sa1d th~
second session w11l also be for
students m grades 4 through
8 Earlier th1s year, the
second sess10n mcluded

recreatton

baseball schedule
LITTLE LEAGUE

-

Tigers, 6

Cubs

vs

6

~ox vs
Yankees vs

-

Braves

vs

Reds

vs

Frtday -

t&lt;ed

Whtte Sox

AthleiJCS, B 15
PONY LEAGUE
Monday

Dodgers.

Tuesday
Gtants

-

Wednesday
Phill1es
Thursday
Dodgers
Frtday '\......

Ph lilieS

Braves vs

Reds vs
Giants

Games are
rescheduled

vs

and scored three times for a
perfect evemng at the plate.
Portland scores were made
by Bruce Wolfe w1lh two
doubles, Ray Lawrence with
a double, Jeff Connolly with a
smgle and a double, and
Shawn Wolfew1tha single.
In Thursday mght acllon,
Letart Falls Pee Wee Far·
mers u~nded previously unbeaten Syracuse B Team by a
score of 19-13 Letart had a
homerun by Scott Wickline
w1th the bases full. Shawn
Stobart had a smgle, Cindy
Allen had a double
Syracuse had htts by Darm
Roush wtth a smgle, Randy
Anns w1th a smgle, Randy
Dav1s with a single, Mark
Salser with two singles, and
Robert Wlllis with a smgle.
Letart's key blow of tbe game
was in the second tnning
when Scott Wickline hit a
home run with the bases
loaded.

11

'.

1

lnokl, who rose to fame in
professional wrestlmg, which
is as theatrical m JaiJIIn as It
Is in the United States, said in
his dressing room that he
would have won If the special
rules had not favored All.
" I have no regrets about
the draw," said the hulking
Japanese
"I
was
handicapped by the rules,
which were considerably in
All's favor The rules said I
could not tackle and punch
while in the sitting position."
He had no comment when
asked If he wanted a
rematch.
The bout, shown on closed
circuit television in the
United States and other
countries, drew a capacity
crowd of 14,000 at the
Budokan , an arena built to
display Japan's traditional
martial arts .

••

"
"
",,

..

~IDE AWAY

A

'l3M!Jtdlt

KZ400 SPICIAL
Street like
•

OUiel tour -strok e

OHC 396cc engine

~

Another common problem
for women athletes was fool
and arch injunes, Gillette
sa1d.
•
"But they are mainly due
to shoes that are wom by
women but made for men,
which g1ves them 1111proper
fit and no support," she sa1d.

"

..'
"

•76 Kawasaki

hiMOI'Im~....,...l..,...eM

UM fiii!C• ••CIIdtll

pr.,, em.

fr...,.., ....

· - ....wtiMuf
lc~Mt . . . ,....
...

~toD .....

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

Open Frldoiy Evenl119 Till
748 E./Min
.,,.
I
o 0.

A CUT. ABOVE THE REST!

with Seahawks

COSHOCTON, Ohio I UPI)
- Because rain forced the
cancelation of play Thursday
and again Saturday, several
scmro RESULTS
games of the National
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Sky
-Baseball Congress State ,Way Lad took the lead at the
Tournament have been half-way mark and held 11 the
rescheduled .
rest of the way for a two-andThe ne,w times will be
three-(!uarter length win over
Cannelville vs Rohngs Dream of Glory m the
Nuring Home· 6 p.m featured ninth race at the
Thursday
SciOto Downs Frtday mght.
Mansfield Water World vs
The wmner, dnven by
Coshocton Stone Container : 8 Denrus Hawk to a-1 05 mile ,
pm Thursday
pa1d $17 40, $4 60 and $2.60
Columubs McDonald 's vs Dream of Glory returned
Steubenvtlle Stars : noon $3.20 and $2.20 and the show
Saturday, July 3
horse, Dancmg Party, Pllid
Sandusky
vs $2.40,
Newcomerstown · 2 p m
The 1-3 nightly double
Saturday
combmation of DIXIe R
Mt. Vernon vs Farmers Trav el and Edgewood
Bank· 6 p.m Saturday
Roy bess paid $140 40
Manon Elks vs Fatrless
A crowd of 6,596 wagered
Merchants · 8 p m Saturday $396,952

..

"

can t wrestle "

Rowland sign s

SEATTLE (UPI)
Quarterback ChriS Rowland,
who accounted for two
touchdowns m the Coaches
All-America Football game
two weeks ago, agreed to
terrr.s w1th the NFL Seattle
Seahawks Friday
His signing raised the Seahawk roster to 106 college and
expansion draftees and free
agents.

"

"

jomt areas and that the least
common mjury was to the
breasts
Gtllette said a new bra
would he tested thiS fall
espec1aliy destgned for
female athletes on the
women's basketball team at
the University of Nevada
She said she would release
the results of the testing tis
January.
"A female athlete needs
support In the breast area
Uke the male needs in the
crotch area," she sa1d. "All'
athlete needs a bra destgned
for support rather than ~•
fhmsy
mass-produced

Coverup

challenger and ye lled "lnokl

"

Take a test drive.••
and take it easy!
An Anens Rld1ng Mower or Lawn Tractor let s you
get the lawn done faster and move on to what you
really wanI to do There's a mode l to Ill every s1ze
la w~ and every SIZe budget. Th e Fatrway comes In
5 HP and 7 HP s1zes With a 26" mowing deck ,
6 &amp; 8 HP Emperor mo dels otler a 30 ' mow1n g
deck Bolh tealure An enc' Dlsc- 0 -MaiJC dnve and
"FleK·N-Float-Plus" mower oe ch o, ' he 7 and 8 HP
mod els come nng gea r eqUippe d to ac c e ~t elcct nc
start1ng An ens 8 HP L. ,. , T1 Jclor, w.:h electnc
start st andard, co mes 1n two models a gear dnve
mod el Wi th 3 speeds forwa rd plu s reverse, and a
hyd rosta11c dnve model w1th si ngle lever contr ol
Take your test drjve
at lhts Ariens Dealer:

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
Chester, Ohio
985-33011

,,
.,

,,

�22 - The Sunday Tunes -Sentmel, SWJday, June 27, 1976

23 - The Sunday Tunes. Sentinel, Stmday, J ~ne 27, 1976

Growing in Stature

Den Talk

Randy Jones: a short, low winner
By Murray Olderman
made up the difference the passively fo1 a gO&lt;xl p1tch
SAN DIEGO, Calif
mound gave to Randy , who" W1th the COWil 2-and-2, Ran-,
dy changed the grt p sbghtl)
(NEA l - On the l1rSI Sunday 5-10
m May, a crisp da y m P1tts- - The re were two Pirate nm· on the bal l cradled m h1s
burgh, Randall Leo Jones of ners on base and nubody out glove He kicked, wh~rl ed and
the San Diego Padres 111 the ninth mmng W1llw, rotated the ball sharply off
revealed the style that makes who 1s w1thin range of 400 Ius fmgerhps Stargell strooe
him the most baffling p1tcher home runs for hiS career, and whipped his bal m an arc
at the same tune As 11
m major league baseball
could be the tying rw1
From the sUghtly elevated
"I threw hun a shder away reached the outs1dc edge of
co11Ull3nd post m the nuddle for a strike," recalls Randy the plate, the ba ll dipped
of Three Rivers Stadium, VIvidly "I came nght back sharply under the swmg
Randy looked at th e With a fast ball on the outs1de Strtke three '
"That was the b1 g out,"
menacing bulk of W1ll1e corner for a str1ke R1ght
Stargell, p01sed w1th a around the knees It sur· remembers manager John
bludgeon m hiS powerful pnsed hun "
McNamara of the Padres
fiSts, only 60 feet 6 mches
Then the chunky lefthandcr "lie d1dn 't g1ve m to h1m and
away
wasted a sbder that was so he got the ball where he wan·
Randy didn't look down w1de Stargel woudln 't bile at te&lt;( to It was the work of a
because Willie's 6 feet 3 m- 1t. He wasted another master craftsman "
Be a !so won the game.
ches (carrymg 220 pounds ) sl1der as W1lhe wa1ted unBy the end of May, Randy
Jones had won 10 games, as
much as any pitcher m the
h1st01 y of the Natwnal
League at that early pmnt of
the season
Coupled w1th the 21).12
season he had last year for a
team wh1ch lost 20 games
more than 1l won, the per·
formance
•s b•llilant BOSTON (UP!) - R1eo Petrocelli smgled m YastrespeCially
f01
an ununposmg
Petrocelli's one-out nmth m· zemskl from third
nmg sacrifiCe fly scored Bol&gt;by Darwin w1th the wmrung
run Saturday to g1ve the
Boston Red Sox a 2·1wm over
the Detrmt Tigers m the
nat~anally-tclevtsed game
OAKLAND, Cah! (UPI I SILLOTH, England (UPJ )
Lws T1ant scattered e1ght
The
Oakland A's and the1r
hits m gomg the distance for - Cathy Panton, a 21 -year·
owner,
Charles 0 Fmley,
his nmth wm aga1nst five old Edinburgh Umvers1ty
played
verbal
poker Saturstudent,
won
the
Br1t1sh
losses while Dave Roberts
day
Ill
their
hghl
over a
Amateur
Women'
s
Golf
yielded just siX hits m al&gt;threatened
stnke
by
the enChampiOnship
Saturday
w1
th
sorbmg his sixth loss m 13
tire
team
unless
three
bench·
a
1-up
VICtory
over
South
deciSions.
ed
stars
are
allowed
to
play
Afncan
champion
Allison
Petroc-ell1, who drove m
for
Sunday
Sheard.
Boston's other run m the 4th
"The players have no say
Panton dumped defendmg
with a smgie, came to the
whatsoever,"
fumed ~' mley ,
Amencan
Champion
Nancy
plate after Darwm doubled to
who
warned
he
would brmg
Syms
m
one
of
Fnday
's
open the mrung and pmch·
runner Rick Miller went to senufmals while M1ss Shea• d up Mmor League players third on Carl Yastrzemski's eliminated U S Walker Cup an entire team 1f necessary
fly to nght Dw1ght Evans star and hot tournament - to replace sinkers
Fmle) sa1d of the A's,
was walked mtentionally favonte Debbie Massey to
' Half the guys didn't even go
before Petrocelli hit a fly to rout the U S challenge
In the fmal, Panton a!'" to college and they don 't
medium deep centerfield that
peared
coastmg to an easy know a thmg about legal matRon Leflore tracked down
wm
at
3-up at the lith ters ''
but was unable to catch
The
extraordinary
Nevers
cost
her the next
Miller taggmg from third.
showdown
m the escalallng
three
holes,
but
she
look
the
The Tigers took a Hl lead
battle
that
p1ts
Fmley agamsl
15th
and
16th
and
lost
the
17th
m the fourth on a smgle by
his
team
and
baseball com·
before
clmching
the
t1Ue
w1th
Tom Veryzer, a double by
nusswner
Bow1e
Ku!UJ stema
regulahon
four
on
the
16th
Ben Ogllvte and Jason Thompson's sacrifice fly. The Red after a 4~-foot b1rd1e putt med from Kulm 's ban of the
Sox lied 11 m the fourth when stopped on the hp of the hole 3 5 nutuon sa le of Oakland

•

Roberts lS 2-1
• •
Fen way VlCtlm
Panton cops

women's title

Stand mgs
Averag es

·:·: the SCOREBOARD
East
Balllmore
Basion
Delrolt
Milwaukee

West

Kan C1l y
TeKas
Oa&lt;land

Delro1 l
Boslon

HPSttlls
1000 100 13- 6 10 1

000 000 200- 2 6 o

Ru h l e ,

H ill e r

( 7l ,

Kmgman (2 4). Ph1ll 1ps ( 11
Ch1 caao M ondav f 121

GB
37 28 569 11, St L OU IS 020000 10 1 4 1-l 1
35 35 500 7 Phil a
200 52003 x 12 12 2
31 34 477 81,
C urt1 ~, Ra smu sse n ( II ) ,
31 36 463 91, '2 So lomon I 5). Wall ace 161
19 43 403 14
Grell ( B) an d F ergu so n

W L Pel
dO 26 606

an d

ChiC~go

Mmn

Cal1f

Saturday ' s results
Balttmore 2 Cleve land 1
Boston 2 DelroJI I
New York 6 Mtlwauk ee 3
Mmnesota
at Oa kland ,

lw1llghl

Callforn ta at Kan sas Ctty ,
ntght
Chtcago at Texas, ntght
Sunday's games·
Mtlwauk ee (Augusttne 2 3
and Br oberg I 5) at New York

Stmm o n s

Ch r i s t e n son ,
Sch ue ler ( Bl and Boone

Ne w York OOOOO lOOx - 1 8 0
Tr ave r s ( B 5) and Porter

Ell iS IB 4) and Hea ly HR

New York

Ca lli
KC
Ro ss.

R1vers ( 4 )

0000 11 010- 3 9 0
00 3 000 30x--6 8 I
Sco ll 191 and

Et che ba r r en
Spl tltorf f.
Litt e ll (7) a nd Mar tin ez

WP Chnslenson 18 31 LP

WP Spl1ltortl

Curf1 S
(5 7l
H RsPh l ladelphl a, Luz msk1 (1 1),

C1 ty Mayberr y 12 1 (91

Allen 171 19)

Ross

(59)

LP-

(7 6 )

H Rs - Kan s a s

--

M1nn
000 000 002- 2 8 0
Oa kland
100 000 004- 5 a 0
Goll z, Ca mp bell (9) and

K tso n ( 5 4) and Sangutllen

Wyncg a r Torr ez Ltn d blad
and Ha ney WP- L tnblad (4

PillS
Monl

412001 010- 9 15 I
ooo 100 100- 2 1 0

Carnlh ers . Long 13)
Scher man (6 1. Granger (91

I) LP Go llz ( 7 5) HR I Hunter B7 and T1drow 2 0) , and Foo te M ora les ( 6 ) L POa kl"nd McMullen (3)
2, I 00 p m
Car rtth ers 13 6)
HRCleveland (WailS 2 I and PJIIsburQh , Hebner (21
Kern 6-2 or 81bby 3 2) at
Pl'ITSBURGH I UPII
Balli more I Ma y 5 3 and Cl ncm
110203 000- 8 15 0 Th e Pittsburgh P1rales
Gr~msley I 41. 2, 2 00 p m
Houston 302 000 010- 6 10 2 s1gned outfielder Lenny
Detr01t (MacCormack 0 3)
H1nton
Borbon
( 3)
al Boslon I Pole 3 41 2 00 McEnaney (81 and Bench, Sp1cer, 18, of Verona, Ky .,
pm
thetr 25th round selectiOn m
Ron don Gnff1n ( a ). Pe nt z
Cal1forma I Kirkwood 2 7l 11) , S1ebe rl (8) WP- Borbon the annual free players draft,
al Kansas C1ly I Busby 3 21. I I I) LP- Grdlm IS 21 they announced Fnday
230pm
HR s- Houston. Robert s (6) ,
Spicer was the 27th player
Mmnesota ( Redfern 2 4) at Ca bell I II Walson 111 Ill
Oakland I Bosman I 01. 4 3q
s1gned of the 36 drafted by the
pm
All
002200 000- 4 8 0 Pira tes
Ch1cago 1Johnson 4 7) at San 01 ego 100000000- 1 4 0
Texa s ( Brtles 6 4). 9 OS p m
Morel. Mar shall ( 8 ) and
National League
East

Wtlltam s

43 27

Louts at
n1ght

Phlladelph1a ,

Pittsburgh al Monlreal n1ghl

Ctnclnnatt at Houston , ntghf

Amencan
1st game

ChiCago
T· xas

Fran ctsco

Angeles. n1ghl

by Indillns
BALTIMORE iUPI) - Lee
May and Regg1e Jackson
each drove m f1rst mnmg
runs while unbeaten Wayne
Garland posted hiS fourth
slra1ght startmg v1ctory
Saturday 111 a 2-1 v1ctory for
the Baltunore Onoles over
the Cleveland Indians.
Garland ~. e1ght·hit the
Indians who spoiled the 2f&gt;..
ye~r
old righthander' s
shutout b1d when Buddy Bell
drove ma Sixth mmng run.
The Onoles gave Garland a
2-0 lead m the hrst off Denms
Eckersley, who was sp1ked
aCCidentally on the foot by
catcher Alan Ashby m the
fourth mmng and was forced
to leave the game
AI Bumbry opened the
Balllmore spurt wtth a
smgle, stole second and after
Paul Blair walked, both runners pulled a double steal
Jackson's ground ball scored
Bumbry and May's enswng
smgle scored Blair

patr of runs Saturday to pace
the New York Yankees to a 63 v1ctory over the Milwaukee
Brewers
The Yankees took a 2-llead
m the fourth on an RBI smgle
by Chambliss and Hendncks'
sacnflce fly. They added two
more m the fifth, routmg
loser J1m Slaton when
Mickey R1vers doubled 1
Carlos May tnpled and
Chambliss smgled
The Yankees scored the1r
fmal two runs m tbe sixth on
a solo homer by Hendricks
and Roy White's sacrifice fly .
The Brewers went ahead I·
0 w1th an unearned run m the
first mmng. RIVers dropped
Von Joshua's leadoff fly ball
for a two-base error and the
Brewer outf1elder later came
m to score on a fiyout and a
fielder's grounder. Berme
Carbo's fourth home run, a
two-run shot off wmnmg pit·
cher Ed F1gueroa, 9-4, m the
s1xth, closed out the scormg
Sparky Lyle repla ced
Figueroa m the mnth , while
Rivers, who had two hits m
the game, extended h1s con-

at

nashua

Sunday's Games

HOMES

Sl Lou1 s (McGiolhen 6 6)
al Philadelphia I lonborg 9
4), 1 35pm
New York I Swan 3 7 ) al
GhiCago 1R Reuschel 7 4) ,
2 15 p m
Pilfsburgh I Rooker 6 3 or
Med iC h 5 l ) al Montreal
!Fryman 751. 2 15 p m

Vu ckov1ch (6), Ham il ton (9)

and Ess 1an , Borr, BacSi k IJI,
Foucault (6) Hoerner (81.
Terpko (91 and Fahey WP
Vucko viC h (6 21
LPFouc aull (6 41
HR sChiCago. Bell 121 Orla 110) ,
TeKas. Harrah (7)

H 5 ::'&amp;:.... \

ON A [);:::&gt;e D

0 !!'11/:.N S t0/'/5

"Mr Fmley sa1d there was
nothing he could do because
the matter was m ht1gahon
and he would have to get per·
m•ss10n from the Red Sox
and Yankees for them to
play.
"We're not on e1ther stde
(In Fmley's dispute w1th
KUhn) , we're here to play
baseball and we're trymg to
w1n We feel that for the
heneh! of the Oakland A's
these three players have to
play "
Fmley put his Tucson fann
team on notice that 11 nught
fly to Oakland and take the
f1eld Sunday. Salt Lake
owner Art Teece 1m·
mediately said he would sue
Fmley if Tucson can't held a
team m Salt Lake C1ty for
Sunday's game which 1s
already a near-sellout

San Fran ctsco ( D' Acqu 1sto

o 4) at Los Angeles (Sutton 6
7).400pm

16-year-old
double winner

Registration Thursday at Rio

..

for second swimming session

'

RIO
GRANDE
Registration for the second
youth swururung lessons at
Rio Grande College · Rio
Grande Connmuntty College
will be held on Thursday,
July I from 4:30 · 6 p. m m
Paul R Lyne Phys1cal
Education Center
A
non-refundable
registrahon fee IS $10 for II
class sess1ons reqwred at lhe
time of registratwn

Syracuse in
first defeat
SYRACUSil/ - In Southern
Pee Wee action, Syracuse
dropped 1ts f1rst game, 19-13
to visitmg Letart. The hosts
dropped to 5-1 on the year
while Letart is 2-4. Winrung
pitcher Keith Allen teamed
w1th Scott Wickline to fan 11
and walk 19 Leading hitter
for the w1nners was Shawn
Stobart With 2 smgles, and
W1cklme had stx RBI's
Darin Roush socked a
double for the losers and
knocked m three runs. Mark
Salser had two smgles. Barry
McCoy had two runs batted
m. Loser Randy Anns and
Roush combmed to stnke out
SIX and walk 28 There were
only SIX hits the entire game,
two by the w1nners and four
by Syracuse
294 4~19 2 I ,
L
082
03-13 4 I
s

NEW
BANKING
HOURS

Kingman
hits 26th

NOW
IN EFFECT••.

home run

DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 3 PM

TUESDAY••••••••• 9 AM TIL 3 PM
DRIVE IN WINDOW 8:30 TIL 3 PM

:

~-- - -12' ·0"-

I

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I

-7-• .o·--+-a·-· ·· - -r-- -

15 10

• 6oyW1ndow

• Totol Electnc
• o.luJit Furmture

• Detuxe Bar StooiJ
• 2 Door Refr~gerator

'

• Cathedral Ce1ltng wtlh M~r• o rtd Seanu
• Double lavatory m Bath
• Full Houw lnswlol1on
• ~og Carpet tn L.vmg Room 111111 &amp; Master
Bl'droom

'7,695°0

,,

THURSDAY - MAIN LOBBY CLOSED
DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 12 NOON

.,

FRIDAY 9:00 TIL 3 PM
DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 7 PM

SATURDAY 9 AM TIL 3 PM
DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 3 PM
MEMBER OF FDIC

COMMERCIAL. &amp;SAVINGS' BANK

Miller (9) and Duncan WP

Thomas II Il

3)

LP~

Paga n I I

HR s- Cieveland

Sptke s

171 Ba ll1 more Ja ck,on (BJ

Seems like m the last couple of weeks nea rly everyone has
grown fond of Mr Frog, considering the B1g Bend Regalia IS
centered around this creature.
But now that the regatta 11eekend is over, lots of us are
heginmng to see Mr . Frog in a different light - we're looking
only at his legs.
Once the sentimentality 1s overcome, one's palate begms
to water at the menlwn of some dehc1ous frog legs.
Froggin ' (or giggin' at it'ssomet1111es called) is a sport that
many people look forward to all year long Fixed the nght way,
frog legs are one of the tastiest dishes one can prepare, and of
course we all know that frog legs are a delicacy m lots of
restaurants.
The sport 1tself IS s1mple-get a flashlight or some other
bnght light and go to your favorite water hole. Listen for that
tell-tale bellow from an old bull frog and you're m busmessalmost.
Now all that's left 1s to catch the ole leaper before he gels
jumpy and seeks refuge m the water. Oh10 law allows each
frogger 10 frogs per night, and the hunter may take them by
grabbing with h1s hands, by stabbmg them With a frog g1g, or
by shootmg them w1th a bow and arrow. It 1s tllegallo use any
type of firearm m capturmg the leapers
Most "frog" men take only the largest frogs many one booy
of water , and true to the true "hunter," he always leaves a few
for the next year and to keep nature in balance Carry a burlap
hag to put your catch in, but don't open it too wide, or the ones
you've already captured may Jump out as they have great
stamina Once you've skinned the frogs (use all four of their
legs so there won't be any waste) roll the legs in butter or your
favorite batter and flour and fry them over a low fire .
Contrary to what some of you believe, tt IS legal to use a
bnght light However, you must have a vahd Ohto ftshmg
license, no matter if you're froggin ' m a private pond or on a
pubUc body of water Frog season m Ohio opened m OhiO on
June 15 at 6 p.m and will close on May I, 1977. Don 't forget to
ab1de by the laws, and you're m for one of the fmest taste treats
of your life. (Sorry, Mr. Crow, but those croakers are one of my
favorites 1)

••

KNOXVILLE, Tenn (UP! ) with ~50.95 Boggs was twice
- Greg Lougan1s, a 16-year- world champiOn at threeold Califorruan who qualified meters and a member of the
Fnday m the three-meter three-meter Olympic squad
U S Olympic div1ug trials, w1th Lougarus and Robert
led the 10-meter qualifying ftagg of Maple Glen, Pa.
Bnan Bungum, the NCAA
Saturday to become the only
double wmner of the trials champ1on from Bloommgton,
Lougan1s, from El CaJOn, Minn was f1fth w1th 53112
Calif rece1ved 610 41 pomts points
Keith Russell of Conroe,
from the JUdges at the
Umvers1ty of Tennessee Tex. fmlshed sixth at ~07 30,
Cragg was seventh at 497 46,
Aqual1c Center
Don Craine of Fl
and
Kent Vosler of Eaton, Ohw,
Lauderdale,
Fla. was e1ghth
was second w1th 600 12 points
w1th
474
30
pomts
,
and T1111 Moore, the AAU
The women's team was
mdoor champiOn from
Cmcinnat1, Ohio, was third at made up of SIX d1vers The
threemeler team .includes
563 8ll pomts .
There was no doubt that Jenn1fer Candler of Lincoln,
Lougams was headed for Ala., Cynthia Mclngvale uf
vtctory Saturday when twice Dallas, Tex. and Barbara
durmg the afternoon he Nejman of Pittsburgh, Pa
The women 's ten-meter
secullve game hittmg streak scored near perfect diVes
team will be Janet Ely of
worth 10 pomts
to 16.
Capt Phil Boggs of the U S Dallas, Melissa Bnley of San
A1r Force Academy was Antomo, Tex. and Deborah
fourth in the ten-meter finals Wtlson of Columbus, Ohio.

Cinc1nnaft { Norman 5 1) at

011 110 101 - 6 10 o
Houston (R Ichard 78) , 3 05 Cle
Ball
000 301 100- l 9 I
pm
Brown,
Buskey
(41,
Atlanta !Messersmith 7 51
at San D1ego (Strom 6 7), 4 00 Thomas and Fosse. Ashby
( B) , Cuellar , Pa g" n 131.
P m.

t,;:'

Hi:. 7"Altl'S

WEDNESDAY•••••• 9 AM TO 3 PM
1012 2K

Te&lt;as
100 2410 10- 9 12 I
Bamos, Knapp (51 ,

.'

DRIVE IN WINDOWS 8:30 AM TIL 3 PM

Harrah ( 6)

game
Los 2nd
Ch ~eago 040004 014- 14 13 3

" It d1dn't boost my ego,"
shrugs Randy. "But! had my
degree I always wanted to go
out and fmd a JOb, m
busmess or real estate or
computers I 11as already
lookmg for one when San
D1ego sent me to a rook1e
league
"I was there f1ve days It
was ridiculous They were
high school k1ds and I had
four years of college. I picked
them apart. They sent me to
Double A and then I started
to learn about baseball "

MONDAY••••••••• 9 AM TIL 3 PM

Jeff er son (5)
and Down1ng ,

Atlanta at San D1ego, n1ghl

San

NEW YORK (UPI) Orioles slip Chris
Chambliss and Elroo
Bendrtcks each drove home a

020110 OD0-4 8 I
000020105- 8 10 0

Perry 18 5) and Sundberg
LP- Hamlllon 13 4) HR sChiCago. Garr 131 Te&lt;as,

'

I

to eight games,

League

For ste r
Ham11ton

"We weren't m any hurry
to draft him," says Buzzy
Bavas1, the president of the
Pad1 es "We knew nobody
was gomg to take hun Be
was drafted at the ms1stence
of Duke Smder's brother-mlaw who used to manage for
us m Walla Walla. The guy's
name, believe 11 or not, IS
ChffDttto."

Yanks up lead

51 4

Los Ang
39 32 549 4'1'
San D1ego 36 34 51 4 1
Atlanta
32 37 464 101,
Houston
31 39 443 12
San Fran
30 44 40515
Saturday's results·
New York 10 Chicago 2
Sf

Fmley and A's manager
Chuck Tanner 1ece1ved warmngs from Kuhn to use Blue,
Rudi and Fingers "m a normal way " The comnusslOner threatened "grave
penalt•es'' 1f they didn't
"I'm loyal to Charles 0
Fmley," sa1d Tanner "I'll do
anything he says I get my
paychecks from h1111, not the
CommiSSi on er or the
Amen can League n
Kuhn negated the deals m
which Blue was sold to the
New York Yankees for $1.5
Jrulhon and Rud1 and Fmgers
to the Boston Red Sox for $1
rrulllon each
Pitcher J1111 Tood, the A's'
player representative, sa1d of
the Sunday stnke deadhne
"We've g1ven Mr Fmley
an ultunalum that, 1f the
players don't play by Sunday,
we,re gomg on str1ke

Fr e t s le be n ,

Metzg er ( 9 ) and Kendall. B
W L. Pel GB Da v1s (9) WP- Morel (3 7)
Phil
47 19 71 '
LP- FreiSieben 16 21 HR37 28 569 9 1 2 Atlan
P1t1~
ta Henderson ( 6)
1
New York 36 37 ,49 3 14 ?
Sf Louis
30 28 441 18
Fran
000000 001 - 1 d 0
ChiCago
30 39 434 1812 San
Los
Ang
000
000 000- 0 7 I
1
Montreal
23 40 365 22 1
Hal1ck1 (6 10) a n d Hdl
West
W L Pel GB Sadeck1(81, Hoolon 15 Bl and
Yeager

Cmcm

Stars Rothe Fmgers, Joe
Rud1 and VIda Blue
Fmley f1led a $10 rmll10n
su1t Fnday over his nghts to
sell h1s playe rs Kuhn, mean·
while, ordered the A's owner
to play the embattled trio
And late Fnday the team
warned 11 would stnke if the
three don't play
'As long as they are on
strike, their paychecks w1ll
be docked," Fmiey sa1d "If
they want to do 1!, they can be
my guests They Just better
g1ve considerable thought 1o
"hat they'•e domg."
· The A's owner sa1d he
spoke Jo members of h1s
team, mcludmg Sal Bando,
And they told me they
thought they could wm the
div1s1on With those guys
playmg They told me they
rrught be nussmg out on
Playoff and World Senes
money otherwise ·'I told
them if they actually go on
stnke 1t would be one of the
worst moves they ever made
This thing ISm Federal Court
and the players have no say

whatsoever "

Pel GB
Freehan Jenk1 n s, Hous e (8).
41 24 631
Ch1 cago
101 100 100 4 9 I Murph y (9 1 and FISh WP33 32 5(17 8
Hi l ler (5 3) L P- Jenktn s (5
Mal lack (9 21 and Grole
33 33 500 81 2 Burr1 s, Sutler ( 7)
8)
HR - Detro lt Rodngu ez
P
31 34 477 10 Reuschel 171 Garman 181 (41
31 35 468 101 ~ and Sw1sher LP Bu rr 1s (3
25 37 403 141 1 lO t
Mil w
000 000 000- 0 7 0
HR s New
Yo r k ,

W L
New York
Cleveland

Mator League Results
Untted Presslnternat1onat
Nattonal League
New Yor k 003 010 300 7 (4 I

lewd than that "
The Padres gave hun a
mooest bonus of $3.000

Players have no say--Finley

. .·.·..

Un1ted Press lnternattona I
Amencan League

a pomt wt1ere people say ,
'
'W1th h1s,. kmd of stuff
This guy ~ s very good stuff
· He can crank the ball up
when he has to (Randy
estunates Ius fast ball at 60
mph J But he hves w1th h1s
smk er and also h1 s slider Be
has good control and keeps
the ball below the belt What
more can you ask' I'd rather
have f1v e Randy Joneses
than a guy who can't keep the
ballm the balling cage "
Jones, who's 26 years old
" People don 't rea h:te,"
says Randy plac1dly, "my and m his fourth maJor
spec1al p1tch, the one that got league season, w&lt;::~~n't always
me to the b1g leagues and 1s mdemand
Although he has been an
makmg me a success, 1s
All-Amencan
at Chapman
called a smker ball The thing
about a smker ball, It's not College m h1s nahve southern
how hard you throw, 1t's the Califorma, he was an unmovement, I get the most promiSing No. 5 p1ck by the
movement from 65 to 75 m1les Padres 111 the natwnal draft
"A lot of people, my
per hour I really think 75 IS
too hard to get maxunwn coaches, told me I didn't
have a chance at pro ball.,"
movement "
Mana ger Mc Namara remembers Randy If
somebooy had told me m '72
backs hun up
" If you can't throw str1kes when I was about to s1gn that
where you want them, 11 I'd be where I am today I
doesn't matter how hard you would have told them,
throw the ball It 's gettmg to 'You're crazy ' Maybe more

leftha nder Who has fre quently been slurred as
h&lt;t v1ng sorneUung less th&lt;tn a
maJ or league arm
There is this fet1sh about
veloc1ty of pitches, especwlly
preva lent msouthern CaLif or·
ma, where the delive1y of
Nolan Ryan of the Angels has
bt-en t1med at speeds a!'"
proac hing 95 m1les per hour
Randy's best p1tches totter
up to the plate at a snall·hke
65 mph

Froggin' popular sport

COURT STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIC

·'

CHICAGO (UPI) - John
Milner hit his third career
grand slam and Dave
Kingman belted his 26th
homer to highlight a six-run
third inning Saturday which
sent the New York Mets oft to
a 10-2 VIctory over the
Chicago Cubs
Milner, benched the day
before for falling to run out a
pop fly, broke up a 1·1 tie w1th
his grand slam and Kmgman
followed with his leagueleading 25th homer which
cleared the leftfield
bleachers . Both homers
came off loser Btll Bonham.
Jerry Koosman chalked up
hi,s seventh wm m 13
decisions, but his first victory
smce May 27 after losmg f1ve
straight starts Bob Apodaca
relieved for the Mets in the
seventh.
Koosman allowed all three
Chicago hits, the first a
leadoff siXth 1nnmg homer by
Rick Monday. The Mets,
however; tied it 1·1 in the
third on a run-scoring single
by Felix Millan prior to the
homers by Milner and
Kingman
Mike Phillips hJt his second
horne run In the e1ghth for the
Mets, a solo shot, while Ed
Kranepool drilled a two-run
smgle in the eighth innmg for
New York Kingman now has
fiVe homers in five games at
Chicago.
l)

Youngsters can be taught
beginmng swinnmmg, m·
tenned1ate swunmmg, as
well as advanced begmnmg
by qualified American Red
Cross Instructors Children
must be at least SIX years of
age and registration Will be
on a flfst-come-f~rst-serve
bas1s Parents are asked to
register only their own
children.
Due to the Fourth of July
weekend, the second sessiOn
of actual swlll1lllll1g lessons
will not begm until Tuesday,
July 6. Swim lessons are
taught weekdays from 10.30
a. m to II :30 a m. A
maximum of 35 sWll1llllers
are admitted into each
sesswn. ltl can also be noted
that registration for sesswn
three will be held on
Tuesday, July 20 and agam
for sessiOn four on Wednesday, August 4. For more
infonnallon, call 245-5353,
ext 67.

Chester rolls

•

Driessen has 5 RBis zn 8-6 Reds victory
HOUSTON 1UP! ) - Of the
three strongest weapons at
the Astrooome Fr~dlly mght,
the bat of Cmcmnab Reds
utihty man Dan Dnessen was
the least expected.
In all , the Astrodome
treated a standing room only
crowd of 44,988 to the RedsAstra~ game, and then the
closed-ctrcuit antics of two
alleged fights between boxers
and wrestlers.
A head-butt bv Andrr ThP

Archie ties
k11ot Saturday
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Two-tune He1srnan Trophy
winner Archie Griffin of Ohio
State was married Saturday
to Loretta Laffitte of
suburban Warrensville
Heights, an OSU senior who
will graduate m August w1th
a degree m marketmg
Griffin, the 5-9, 162-poWJd
all-time leadmg major
college ground gainer, has
signed a multi-year contract
with the Cincmnati Bengals.
The Bengals took him as their
second cho1ce Ul the first
round of lh1s year's college
player draft.
Griffm, a Columbus nat1ve,
Ohio, was the 24th player
chosen m the draft and the
only running back ever
picked m the first round by
Cincinnati

the f1eld of competitors They
overcame four Houston hume
runs, 13 stranded ba se
runners and a disastrous
start by lefthander Rich
Bmton to successfully open
the weekend senes w1 th
Houston
Bmton, a youngster who
began h1s career m the
American League, was
traded to Cmci nnall this
season. Be lasted only two

and two-uuras mrungs while
giVIng up three homers and
rive runs in his first Na tional
League start
But he was taken off the
hook when, w1th the score
tied :;.s m the SIXth , the 21[&gt;..
hiltmg Dnessen drove m hiS
fourth and fifth runs of the
mght w1th a double
Earlier m the game ea ch of
his two singles knocked m one
run and he walked w1th the

bases loaded to score
another
"This hitting one time ea ch
game was getting me down,"
Dnessen said of his pmchhittmg role. Be started only
his lOth game th1s season
Fnday 10 place of first
baseman Tony Perez
'Tony IS ttred and Wlli Sit
out the ser1es," sa1d Reds
manager Sparky Anderson
Dnessen dressed quickly

alter his biggest night of the
season and sa1d he was
headmg for the Reds du~out
to watch the f1ghts on one of
the six screens set up on the
AstroTurf
Befure Dnessen ~ot to his
seat, thoUI!h, Wepner was
felled by Andre's crushing
blow to the head in the th1rd
round . The All·lnoki standoff,
however, lasted all 1~ rounds
and sent the huge crowd
home m a sour mood

Biggest ripoff nets $9 million

JOHN RUSSI'JLL, left, phystcal educatiOn dtrector at
the GalltpollS State Institute and Dan Bill, a volunteer ,
were busy th1s past week preparmg for the e1ghth annual
Oh1o Special Olympics held this weekend at the Ohio State
Uruversity stadium

soponf1c three-minute rounds
By LEON DANffiL
TOKYO, June 26 (UPI ) - consisted mamly of moving in
Heavywe1ghl
Box1ng a crabhke fashion around the
Champion Muhanunad Ali ring on his bottom and
and
a
pelican-jawed lashing out with his feet.
''We want our money
Japanese
wrestler
ex·
pect to spllr $9 mil· ba ck," shouted fans, some of
han for avo1dmg each whom had shelled out the yen
other to a dull draw Saturday, eqwvalent of $1,000 to be on
m what easily could be hand at rmgs1de for the
forgotten as or!e of history's bizarre bout billed by canny
promoters as "the super fight
greatest rmg ripoffs.
The
biggest cut- $6 of the century "
Told in his dressing room
m111ion - goes to Ali for
flicking a couple of that some of U1e fans had
nondamagmg left Jabs been disappointed, Ali replied
toward Antomo lnokl and "That 's because nobody got
absorbmg a lot of meffectual hurt Be's 1lnokl) too smart
kicks dehvered by the ana I'm too smart. You just
challenger to the champion's saw me make $6 million ."
The champ acknowledged
shins and postenor
lnoki 's effort over the 15 that he ventured only two
punches-both left jabs-

durmg the enure bout.
" I couldn't box because he
was on the floor," said All In
explam1ng why he fa1led to
take the offens1ve.
"Be kept his distance," All
explained " He was so
fast."
Ali hunself occasiOnally resorted to kicking but, unlike
lnoki, the champ delivered
his kicks from a standing
position .
Referee Gene LeBell, a
Hollywood stunt man , scored
the bout 71·71 and the two
Japanese judges scored it 7268 for lnokl and 74-72 lor Ali
All, who wore four-ounce
gloves, frequently taunted
lnoki, who fought bare
knuckled. At one point the
champ turned hts back on the

Knee, joint injuries most
72 from GSI take part common in women athletes
in Special Olympics

DALLAS .(UPI) - The
woman who became the first
athletic tra1ner 1n
professiOnal sports Saturday
GALLIPOUS
John llc1pated in the three day
told
doctors that women
Russell, Phystcal Education event, one of the largest
athletes
are no more suscepDtrector at the GaWpollS sports program sin Ohio.
tible
to
mjuries than the1r
This year's events include
State Institute, made a fmal
male
counterparts.
check Fr1day before the e1ght areas of endeavor, m"There 1s no need to
buses pulled out for the cluding track and f1eld, restnct phys~eal acttvtty for
E1ghth Annual Ohio Special bowlmg, gynmasttcs, floor women in any manner what·
Olymp1cs held this weekend hockey, d1vmg, co-ed
soever," JoanG1llettesa1d.
at the Ohio State Umvers1ty volleyball , 1ce skalmg and
"There IS no danger to the
some wheelchair events
Stadium.
reprooucllve
system and
The Special OlympiCS, Inc ,
Dan H1ll, assi.$tmg, is one
there are no 111 effects durmg
of the 15 volunteers asststmg was ongmated and spon· pregnancy, delivery or later
sored by the Joseph P. KenRussell and hiS staff.
on. Women athletes rece1ve
Seventy-two residents from nedy,Jr Foundation.
mJunes due to the lack of
Gallipolis State Institute par·
proper conditiOning and poor
coaching techniques.''
Gillette, 29, addressed the
LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Week of June 28, 1976
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
June28- CLOSE D
lO 30 11 30 a 1)1

18th Nahonal Conference on
Medical Aspects of Sports, a
Sidelight of the Amencan
Medical Assoc1at10n's annual
conventiOn which opened
Saturday.
Gillette, a former tramer
for the V1rgm1a Stuns,
Women's Tenn" Tour and
now ass1stant trailer for both
men and women's sports at
the Umversity of Nevada ,
told the doctors she conducted a 1974 nattonal survey
to document lnjurtes to
female athletes parttclpatmg
m 19colleglatesports.
She sa1d thai survey m·
dicated the most common Ill·
junes were to the knee and

Letart Falls wins, 14-9

Sw1m Lessons

CLOSED
8 lOp m Open Rec
June 29- CLOSE D

12 I p m Open Sw1m
8 10 p m Open Sw1m
lO 30-11 30a m

CLOSED
8 lOp m Gpen Rec
June 30- CLOSED

12 I p m Open Swim

8 10 p m Open Swim

CLOSED
BIOp.m Open Rec
CLOSED
8 10 p m Open Rec
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED

12 I p m Open Swim
8 lOp m Open Swim
12 I p m Open Swim
8 10 p m Open Sw1m
12 I p m Open Sw1m
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED

over foe, 40-14
CHESTER - - This
week's TeeBall actwn saw
host Chester roll over Reedsville Tuesday mght, 41).14
Home runs for the wmners
were hit by Bnan Beeler and
Huey Eason Bitting tnples
were: Beeler (3), Matt
Barris, Danny Leonard,
Mike Randolph, Jeff Roush
and Scotty Newell Gettmg
doubles were. Tood Clay,
Kyle Davis, MIChael Grant,
Barris, Billy McLaughlin,
Roush (2), Eric S1ms and
Newell. Single hitters were
Clay, Robbie Combs, Kyle
Dav1s, Eason, M1chael
Grant, Harrts, Ketth Karschmk,
Leonard,
McLaughlin, Mike Randolph,
Roush, Sim, and Newell
For the losers Charles
Jones and Milch B socked
homers. Burl Pubnan, Mike
Martm and Jeff Johnson each
got a tnple and Orv1ll Ran·
dolph, Johnson, and Kurt
Reed got doub1es. Smgles hit·
ters were: Jeremy Barker,
Putman, Randy C., Mike
Martm, Randolph and Trent
Upton
lll63-14
R
c
(12 )( ll )4 49-40

G1ant , a 7 ' ~ ", 4~0-pound
wrestler, appeared to floor
boxer Chuck Wepner m the
prelunmary bout
In the finale, world hea vy.
we1ght boxmg champion Muhammed Ali unleashed his
left hook tw1ce but was forced
to settle for a draw with
Japanese wrestler Antonio
Inoki.
Clearly,
the
world
champiOn Reds outclassed

July IJuly2July 3July 4July5-

NOTE

Sw1m Lessons

10 30·11 30p m

Sw1m Lessons

Reg1strat1on for Se sston No 2 of Youth Swtm

Lessons will be held al4 ,30 p m on Thursday , July 1 at Lyne

Cen ter Classes for Sess ton No 2 w i ll begtn on Tuesday, July 6

al 10 30 a m tor those regiStered

LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls Pee Wee squad
upended Portland Tuesday
rught by a score of 14-9, with
Scott W1cklme ptckmg up h1s
second wm of the season
Letart had four singles by
Shawn Stobart, Scott
Wickline, Tim Glllbnde and
Bill Bupp. Joe Roush walked

This week's

local !(ames
GALLIPOLIS · Here's thiS
week's

Applications being
accepted for camps

summer

Monday Senators , 6

Ttgers

students through their semor
year in h1gh school, but not
enough interest was shown in
the older group according to
Osborne.
The GAllS mentor, in
Sprmgfteld last week for a
swruner camp sess10n, sa1d
the GABS gyms will be open
m the day only this week and
closed m the evenings as
residents preiJIIre for the
nver recreation festival.
Osborne added the gyms
would be reopened in the
evenmgs, begtnnmg July 6.
IndiVIduals who have not
yet regtstered for one of the
two day-camp sessions may
do so by fillmg out an entry
blank, which appears below.

Third Annual Gallipolis Basketball Camp
When July 19 2Jrd
Joly 26 30, 4-8 Grade
Where GAHS Gym
If enough enrolled
Who, Grades 4, 5 6, 7, 8 ned vear
Cosl: 115 Wilh Ball &amp; T Shirt
$25 W1thou1 Ball &amp; T Shirl
115 DepoS!I &amp; Balance due July 19th
Please check your chotce

NAME'---------ADDRESS _ _ _~I
AGE _______________ ,pHONE _______
Parent 's or Guardtan Stgnalure· _ _ __;_ _ __

Sf nd to Jtm Osborne , Gatlta Academy H.S., Galltpolts,
0 456)1

Call

3250 or
I School)

4&lt;6

446

9284 1f any qesl1ons a me
I Home I

vs

Tuesday - AthletJcs vs
Cubs, 6
Wednesday - Red So• vs

Yanks 6 Senators vs Wh ite

Sox, 8 15
Thursday

GALLIPOLIS - Ap·
phcabons are still being accepted for the third annual
Gal11pohs Day Basketball
Camp according to J un
Osborne, camp director.
The ftrst of two five-day
sesstons ts scheduled July 19
through 23 at Gallia
Academy High School for
pupils who will be mgrades 4,
5, 6, 7and 8 this fall in the TnCounty Area
H enough interest IS shown,
the second session w1ll be
held July 26 through 30.
Coach Osborne sa1d th~
second session w11l also be for
students m grades 4 through
8 Earlier th1s year, the
second sess10n mcluded

recreatton

baseball schedule
LITTLE LEAGUE

-

Tigers, 6

Cubs

vs

6

~ox vs
Yankees vs

-

Braves

vs

Reds

vs

Frtday -

t&lt;ed

Whtte Sox

AthleiJCS, B 15
PONY LEAGUE
Monday

Dodgers.

Tuesday
Gtants

-

Wednesday
Phill1es
Thursday
Dodgers
Frtday '\......

Ph lilieS

Braves vs

Reds vs
Giants

Games are
rescheduled

vs

and scored three times for a
perfect evemng at the plate.
Portland scores were made
by Bruce Wolfe w1lh two
doubles, Ray Lawrence with
a double, Jeff Connolly with a
smgle and a double, and
Shawn Wolfew1tha single.
In Thursday mght acllon,
Letart Falls Pee Wee Far·
mers u~nded previously unbeaten Syracuse B Team by a
score of 19-13 Letart had a
homerun by Scott Wickline
w1th the bases full. Shawn
Stobart had a smgle, Cindy
Allen had a double
Syracuse had htts by Darm
Roush wtth a smgle, Randy
Anns w1th a smgle, Randy
Dav1s with a single, Mark
Salser with two singles, and
Robert Wlllis with a smgle.
Letart's key blow of tbe game
was in the second tnning
when Scott Wickline hit a
home run with the bases
loaded.

11

'.

1

lnokl, who rose to fame in
professional wrestlmg, which
is as theatrical m JaiJIIn as It
Is in the United States, said in
his dressing room that he
would have won If the special
rules had not favored All.
" I have no regrets about
the draw," said the hulking
Japanese
"I
was
handicapped by the rules,
which were considerably in
All's favor The rules said I
could not tackle and punch
while in the sitting position."
He had no comment when
asked If he wanted a
rematch.
The bout, shown on closed
circuit television in the
United States and other
countries, drew a capacity
crowd of 14,000 at the
Budokan , an arena built to
display Japan's traditional
martial arts .

••

"
"
",,

..

~IDE AWAY

A

'l3M!Jtdlt

KZ400 SPICIAL
Street like
•

OUiel tour -strok e

OHC 396cc engine

~

Another common problem
for women athletes was fool
and arch injunes, Gillette
sa1d.
•
"But they are mainly due
to shoes that are wom by
women but made for men,
which g1ves them 1111proper
fit and no support," she sa1d.

"

..'
"

•76 Kawasaki

hiMOI'Im~....,...l..,...eM

UM fiii!C• ••CIIdtll

pr.,, em.

fr...,.., ....

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Open Frldoiy Evenl119 Till
748 E./Min
.,,.
I
o 0.

A CUT. ABOVE THE REST!

with Seahawks

COSHOCTON, Ohio I UPI)
- Because rain forced the
cancelation of play Thursday
and again Saturday, several
scmro RESULTS
games of the National
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Sky
-Baseball Congress State ,Way Lad took the lead at the
Tournament have been half-way mark and held 11 the
rescheduled .
rest of the way for a two-andThe ne,w times will be
three-(!uarter length win over
Cannelville vs Rohngs Dream of Glory m the
Nuring Home· 6 p.m featured ninth race at the
Thursday
SciOto Downs Frtday mght.
Mansfield Water World vs
The wmner, dnven by
Coshocton Stone Container : 8 Denrus Hawk to a-1 05 mile ,
pm Thursday
pa1d $17 40, $4 60 and $2.60
Columubs McDonald 's vs Dream of Glory returned
Steubenvtlle Stars : noon $3.20 and $2.20 and the show
Saturday, July 3
horse, Dancmg Party, Pllid
Sandusky
vs $2.40,
Newcomerstown · 2 p m
The 1-3 nightly double
Saturday
combmation of DIXIe R
Mt. Vernon vs Farmers Trav el and Edgewood
Bank· 6 p.m Saturday
Roy bess paid $140 40
Manon Elks vs Fatrless
A crowd of 6,596 wagered
Merchants · 8 p m Saturday $396,952

..

"

can t wrestle "

Rowland sign s

SEATTLE (UPI)
Quarterback ChriS Rowland,
who accounted for two
touchdowns m the Coaches
All-America Football game
two weeks ago, agreed to
terrr.s w1th the NFL Seattle
Seahawks Friday
His signing raised the Seahawk roster to 106 college and
expansion draftees and free
agents.

"

"

jomt areas and that the least
common mjury was to the
breasts
Gtllette said a new bra
would he tested thiS fall
espec1aliy destgned for
female athletes on the
women's basketball team at
the University of Nevada
She said she would release
the results of the testing tis
January.
"A female athlete needs
support In the breast area
Uke the male needs in the
crotch area," she sa1d. "All'
athlete needs a bra destgned
for support rather than ~•
fhmsy
mass-produced

Coverup

challenger and ye lled "lnokl

"

Take a test drive.••
and take it easy!
An Anens Rld1ng Mower or Lawn Tractor let s you
get the lawn done faster and move on to what you
really wanI to do There's a mode l to Ill every s1ze
la w~ and every SIZe budget. Th e Fatrway comes In
5 HP and 7 HP s1zes With a 26" mowing deck ,
6 &amp; 8 HP Emperor mo dels otler a 30 ' mow1n g
deck Bolh tealure An enc' Dlsc- 0 -MaiJC dnve and
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mod els come nng gea r eqUippe d to ac c e ~t elcct nc
start1ng An ens 8 HP L. ,. , T1 Jclor, w.:h electnc
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mod el Wi th 3 speeds forwa rd plu s reverse, and a
hyd rosta11c dnve model w1th si ngle lever contr ol
Take your test drjve
at lhts Ariens Dealer:

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
Chester, Ohio
985-33011

,,
.,

,,

�2.4 - The Sunday Times- Sentlnei,Sundav. June 27. 1916

First gym medal

Connors now

•

zn 44 years goal

title favorite
WIMBLEDON (UPI I
Unseeded Vttas Gerulallls
used his It-year advantage to
outlast defending champion
Arthur Ashe m fa llgwng 111)degree heat Saturday ,
leading four Amencan men
and two women mlo the quarter-fmal round of the Wunbledon Tenm s Cham piOnships when Ashe gambled his Wunbledon Title on
savmg himself for the v1ta!
fifth set - and lost
Gerulaltls, who had
never got past the f1rst round
here Ul three years of trymg
and never beaten Ashe m
four prevwus meetmgs, went
through to the last eight of
the $280,000 tournament, -Hi,
ll-9, 6-4, &amp;-3, 6-4, over the topseeded Mtanu, Fla nat1ve
Ashe satd he deliberately
coasted through the fourth
set to save his strength for
the !mal set, "But V1tas
played a great game and at 45 he hit two unbelievable
forehands
"He bucked the odds to hit
those shots because tt's not
easy to pass me when I serve
down the middle."
GerulaJtis, from Howard
Beach, N Y , sa1d he knew he
would have to hit wmners to
get by the champiOn ' I wanted to wear him down, make
him psy for his age 1! I
could," sa1d GerulaJtJS, who
at 21 was II years younger
than Ashe.
Gerulattls ' victory set up
Junmy Connors as an even
clearer favorite to regam the
Iitle The Belleville, Ill lefthander beat 16th seed Stan
SIIII!h 6-4, &amp;-1 , 6-3 and has yet
to drop a set.
The other successful
Amencan men were Charlie

named to
U.S. team
EUGENE, Ore (UP! ) Johnny Jones and Regg1e
Jones, who f1n1shed fourth
and fifth, respectively, m the
J()().meter dash fmal at the U
S Olympic Track and FJeld
Tnals, and Ed Preston, who
was fifth m the 200, Saturday
were named to the team for
the Montreal Ol)mp1cs next
month
The three Jomed sprmters
Harvey Glance, Houston MeTear, Steve R1dd1ck, Millard
Hampton, Dwayne Evans,
and Mark Lutz, but they were
named only as poss1ble participants on the 4()()-meter
relay team
Glance, McTear and Riddick fm1shed 1-2-3 m the 100
mile Hampton, Evans and
Lutz were 1-2-3m the 200
Former ellymptan Lee
Calhoun, the coach m charge
of the 400-meter relay, satd
McTear, who has a slight
hamstnng problem, and Lutz
will not be considered for the
relay team.
" We'll lake the whole
bunch to Plattsburgh N Y ,
(site of the olympic team
trammg base leading up to
Montreal ) and try to p1ck four
for the relay team from
among the seven," sa1d
Cahoun

Farm club will sue if

Finley calls up players
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) The Paciftc Coast Triple-A
Baseball League announced
Saturdsy tt will take legal action againSt the Oakland A's
if owner Charles 0. Finley
.calls up the ma)onty of
players from his Tuscon
Taros farm club to ftll his
Major League roster
The A's voted Fnday rught
to go on strike tf Finley does
not allow V1da Blue, Hollie
Fmgers and Joe Rudi to
return to the lineup Fmley
has reportedly told Toros' offlc18ls to be ready to fly 18 of
the 20 Tuscan players to
Oakland Saturday m
preparatiOn for such a
walkout.
Tile Toros are currently m
Salt Lake Ctty for a weekend
senes w1th the Gulls.
"The ))OSSibtUty ex1sts that
the Oakland A's Trtple-A
farm team, the Tuscon Taros

"It used to be our team
would have one or two older,
mternationally expenenced
gymnasts wtlh a 'name' and
the scores dropped off
drasbcally after that," said
Vega, now coach at
l.oUJSJana State
Desp1te the youth of this
team, rangmg m age from 18
to 24, aU have competed
before International JUdge-s,
most as members of last
fall 's Gold Medai-W111111Ilg
Pan AmeriCan games squad
"We have unproved so
much that our sixth man
should do better m Montreal
than our number one man dtd
two years ago m the World
Games," satd U S. Coach
Karl Schwenzfe1er, who succeeds Wettstone after 11
seasons at the atr force
academy
The U S team, which has
tramed together nme months
while hopscotching the Allanlie m a sertes of four
quahftcation lrwls, leaves
for Canada Mondsy for three
weeks of team workouts
before the games open.
" We've been together a ·
long ltme and we're friends
now. We all may tram differently, but our routines are
compabble," satd Califorma's TomBeach.
It's that compabbJlity, sa1d
Vega, which will allow the U.
S squad to use a team
strategy employed successfully by Japan and the
USSR - put good gymnasts
up early mthe lineup to draw
high scores whtch will
"pump" up the scores of
the1r teammates to follow.

Pasarell , who squeaked
through h1s second-f1 ve set
thnller m two days by edgmg
Australia 's b1g-servmg Phil
Dent, 2~, H , 6-4 , fMl, 7-li, and
Roscoe l'anner of Lookout
Mountam , Tenn , who set up
a quarter-fmal clash w1th
Connors by dwnpmg N1k1
P1llc of Yugoslavia, 6-3, 6-4, 64
Ge ru laills will meet
Mextcan DaviS Cup Player
fu! ul fu!IIIIrez, who won Ius
fourth round match, 9-11, 3-6,
6-1 , 6-1, aga mst South
Africa's Berni e M1tton ,
Friday's conqueror of John
Newcombe
PARTICIPATING IN STAT E OLYM PICS - Ten
attend the state meet Partlclpatmg were (No order
Pasarell , of Santurce,
students
at
the
Gutding
Hand
School
were
m
Columbus
md1cated) Ben Skinner, Maunce Smith, Paul Wmston,
Puerto R1co, who has never
th1s
"
eekend
partJC
ipatmg
m
the
Slate
Olympics
This
Dale Tucker, Ken Shaver, Gene Shaver, Don Saxon,
got to the last e1ght smce he
was
the
fi
rst
group
ever
from
the
GUJdmg
Hand
School
to
Richard
Hood, Joe Dunn and Bill R1ce
first played here 13 years
ago, Will face llie Nastase for
a sem1fmal berth The
Romaman kept hiS temper on
the fifth day of temperatures
of at least 100 deg•ees and
comfortably beat Onny
"Panm of New Zealand, 7-5, 6OAKLAND, Calif I UPI I - don't play by Sunday, we're unmed •ately sa1d he would here to play baseball, and
4,6-3
sue Fmley 1! Tucson can't we're trymg to wm We feel
Members of the Oakland A's, gomg on stnke
The only U S player to lose who have a 7-4 record smce
"Mr Fmley sa1d there was f1eld a team m Salt Lake for that for the benefit of the
was Brian Gottfried, but the three supersta r s Y. ere nothmg he could do because Sunday 's game, wh1ch IS Oakland A's these three
Ft Lauderdale, Fla , Dav1s rCJ11oved from the1r lineup. the matter was m hllgatlon already a near sellout
players have to play "
Cup star was clearly out- may not even take the held and he 11 ould have to get
" We're not on etther s1de
Mana ger Chuck Tann er
played by fourth seed BJom Sunday
perrmss10n from the Red Sox ( m Fmley's dispute w1th hrmly suppor ted Fmley's
Borg The Swede came from
The A's players sa 1d they and Yankees for them to Kuhn ), " Todd said " We're acllons
1-4 down 111 the third to wm 6- would stnke unless owner play "
" I know that the telegram
2, 6-2, 7-5, m a match he Charles 0 Fmley allows Joe
Finley promptly put hiS
from the commiSSioner read
threatened not to play Rud1, Roll1e Fmgers and Vida Tucson farm team on notice
Fmley and Tanner would be
because of a pulled th1gh Blue to return to the lmeup that 11 nught fly to Oakland
m trouble 1f the three players
muscle
Th e announcement \\a s today anu take the held
did not pia), but Charles 0
Bm g will come up agamst made by •·ehever and player Sunday
Fmley has not done anything
Argenhman Gwllenno Vilas represe ntative Jim Todd
Salt Lake own e1 Art Teece
wrong ," Tanner said "He
m the fmal quarte1 -fmal pnor to Oakland 's game
has been fight m everything
pa1r1ng Vilas recovered to Fnday mght With Minnesota
he has done. "
beat Australian Tony Roche, The A's, who seem to thrive
THE CURRACH, Ireland
a sem1-fmallst last year, 6-4, on advers1ty, then went out
(UPf ) - French owned,
3-6, 5-7,6-3,6-4
and downed the Tw1ns, 5-2, on
tramed and ndden second
Chris Evert and Ros1e Ken McMull en's pm ch-h1t in sem ij'inills
favonte Malacate Saturdav
Casals, the only U S players three -run homer m the
SILLOI'H . England ( UPI ) won the $250,000 lnsh SweeP.
left m the women's smgles, bottom of the mnth
stake Derby horse race from
advanced mto the quarter
Fmley had sold Rud1 and - Amenca 's last two hopes Nelson Bunker Hunt's
Fnday
crashed
out
of
the
fmals w1th stratght set w1ns Fmgers to fhe Boston Red
favored Empery
Evert, of Ft Lauderdale, Sox and Blue to New York for Bn ush Women's Amateur
Philippe ' Paquet, aboard
Fla , beat btg-servmg Betty a total of $3 o million Golf ChampiOnship
the 5-l Malacate. foiled
Defendwg
champion
Stove of Holland 6-2, &amp;-2 and Howev er , Commi ssiOn er
Syms
was Hunt's b1d for the double of
'
has looked every mch the Bowie Kuhn blocked the sale Namy
the Insh and Epson Derbys,
champiOn as she Jeached the
Earlier m th e day m overwhelmed m Fnda y's w1lh Lester Piggott aboard
last e1ght droppmg only Ch1cago, Fmle) sued both seJmf1nal by Scottish student the 4-5favonte
seven games - four of them maJor leagues, Kuhn, the Cathy Panton and 11 was all
Tlurd was lrJSh-tramed
Saturday
maJOI league Executive over at the 15th hole In the and own ed No rthern
Evert w11l meet Russ1an Council, the New York other sem1, South Afri can Treasure at 16-1 , w1th
Olga Morozova for a place m Yankees and the Boston Red Champwn Alison Shea rd Gabr1el Curran nding
ended Amenca s t" ()-J ear
the serru-fmals On Fr~day, Sox for $10 million
The wmner, tramed by
dom1nat10n of the event by
Morozova defeated fellow
Todd told reporters "The defeatmg
Francois Boutm won $123,900
hot
favorlle
and
countrywoman Natasha Ch players of the Oakland A's, m
for own er Mam Felix
myreva, 6-4, H, 6-1
heu of what has happened CurtiS Cup star De bbie Berger
Massey
at
the
20th
Casals, of Sausalito, and mthe bestmterests of the
litlfll, "he was absent
Calif, had her volley game three players, who have not
Empery 's Win at Epsom, w oC--'-r
gomg too sharp for Muna been allowed to play, ha ve
on hand at the Curragh
/l("~:::;;.o~~
Jausovec of Yugoslavta , g1ven Mr
Fmley an
SETS NEWMARK
whom she beat 6-2, 7-5 to set ultunatum that, 1f the players
LILLE,
France (UP! )
up a contest with second-seed
Mane-Chnstme
Debourse
Evonne Goolagong, a 6-3, fMl
SIGN CONTRACTS
Saturday
Jumped
6-1 and
wmner m an all-Aust1 allan
BOSTON (UPI )- Runmng
f1ve-eJg~ths to set a French ba ck Stu Betts of Northern
ba ttle w1th D1 a nn e
Women
s High Jwnp record
Fromholtz
dunng
the French Cham- MIChigan and center Todd
The other women's quarpiOnships here from which Anderson of Stanford have
•
ter-fmal pairings w11l see
fmal chmces Will be made for s1gned contracts w1th the
Martma Navratllova play
th1s SUII11ller' s French Olym- New England Palrtots,
Sue Parker and V1rgm1a
bnngmg the number of 1976
pic team
Wade clash w1th Kerry Reid
draft chmces signed to 10
Wade , the Bnhsh No 3
seed, lived the most
precariOusly of the four and
ASSEN, The Netherlands
had to come from 2-5 m the
(UP!)
- Two new leaders In
fmal set w1th a burst of ftve
the
World
Champ10nsh1p
straight games to beat South
Standings
emerged
from the
Mnca 's Manse Krugm, 2&lt;i,
Dutch Grand Pnx Mol01
6-3,7-5
Re1d, seeded e1ghth from Cycle Races, contes ted
Australw, has had to pull out Saturday m troptcal weather
some of her best tenms to before a sweltermg crowd of
come back to a 3-6, 6-3, 6-1 150,000
Spam's Angel N1eto took
wm over another South
over
from Rudolf Kunz of
African, Greer Stevens
West
Germany
m the 50 CC
Navratilova, the self-extled
World
Standmgs
wh1le
Czechoslovakian, also came
Walter
V1lla
of
Italy
from behind to beat French
displaced
Ireland's
Tom
veteran FrancoiSe Durr, 2&lt;i,
Herron
at
the
top
rung
of
the
&amp;-3, 7-5, while Barker, the
250CC
Class
blonde Bnton, ended Mar1a
Tht s unrque 2- Ra ilan plas t ic p a1l can be used fo r many
In the 50 CC, N1eto, on a
Bueno ' s
Wimbledon
oth er JOb s wh en yo u linrsh parn tmB - supply li m ited'
Bultaco, got to the front m the
comeback, 2-9,6-2,6-1
third of mne laps and won by
street length ahead of Switzerland 's Ulnch • Graf
Eugemo Lazzanm of Italy
was runner up on Morbtdelli
unbl he got engmc trouble m
work shoes
the last lap and fell back to
for workmen Quality butlt
fourth place
to stay "on duty' when
In the 125 CC P1er Paolo
B1anchi of Italy won to Inyou 're "on duty ·
crease his lead m the world
Here's an astomshmg value on a 2- gallon pat! of quahty whtte house
Des1gned to keap you
baseball clubs, w1U not f1eld a standings
team m Salt Lake C1ty Saturpa_mt
whil e t hey last I Th1s produc t spreads on smooth and easy,
flable all day
In the 250 CC, Villa , on a
day or Sunday, June 26 and Harley Dav1dson, recovered
dn es qutckly to a beauttful wh1te fim sh It 's durabl e, to stand up
and deliver the
27, due to the call-up of from a poor start to get to the
agamst
th e roughest weather condttwn Clean-u p's a snap JUst wash
k1nd ollong weao
players and the1r non- front m the s1xth of 15 laps
bru~hes and rollers w1th water
replacements m v•olat10n of He won wtlh ease ahead of
you upect lor your
professiOnal baseball rules Takazum1 Katayama of
shoe dollara
regular retail $19 76 for 2 gal You Save $7 00
and the Nahonal Assoc1ahoo Japan (Yamaha) who was an
Agreement, " sa1d PCL early leader
President Roy Jackson m a
In the 350 CC World Stanprepared slatel)lent from hts dings leader Johnny Cecotto Width
office here.
of Venezuela fa1led to get suf- A· BC-D
"Should such an occuraJK'f ficient pressure out of his E EE and
take place, the Pac1f1c Coast engme and had to settle for Hard to Find H WJdth
Triple-A Baseball League e1ghth place This, however,
or only $6.38 1
will JOin the Salt Lake Ctly was sufftc1ent to keep hun on
per
gallon
Gulls Baseball Inc. m fonnal top of the standings
legal actiOn aga1nst the
G1acomo Agosltm of llllly
Oakland A's, a diVISIOn of (MV ) led the 16 laps from
Charles 0 Fmley and Com- start to f1msh
pany Inc , to recover full
Bntams Barry Sheene, the
Mon &amp; Fn 9•30
games.''
strong leader of the 500 CC
312 6TH STREET 675-1160 POINT PLEASANT
hiBp m
Owner Art T-eet'E of the standmgs, had a bad start on
Tues. Wid, Sat.
Gulls has already Indicated Ius Suzukt but took the lead
9 lOitiSp.m
Store Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.-8:00-5:00 Sat. 8:00-12:00
he w11l sue Fmley 1f Tuscon IS by the end of the second of the
Thursday I·JO ttl
llllable to field a club
12 Noon
••• 81eotrto Avt"'"' , .... t ,, ,, •• GttMt
16laps and won the race by a
s1nce 1754 - lmagmat1on from CltELANESE"
Wldemargm

Athletics may strike today

Malacate
captures
Irish Derby

GJJicentennial

Commc1n01-ative

Paint8pecial.~

Nrew leaders
emerge zn
standings

Go to work
in quality

frial plantings inspected on

Your Wayne National Forest

Cornstalk Hunting Area
ljy Jobn Cooper

Soli Cons. Service

POINT PLEASANT - Thomas Crebbs,
State BiologiSt of Sotl Conservation SerVIce,
and Wayne Everett, Plant Matenals
SpecialiSt of SCS, have been m Mason County
lookmg over trial plantings on the Cornstalk
Public Hunting Area.
Millard Wallis, veteran employee of the
Department of Natural Resources, took us to
the planting which was located m what was
formerly known as the Harper pasture If
Wallis had not taken us to the location, flndmg
1t would have been very difficult.
Sawtooth oak was one of the trees m the

Lay of the land
planting and that IS an oak that we had never
seen before It IS highly recommended for Its
nut crop and IS supposed to be very palatable
to wildlife. Tatarwn honeysuckle was another
plant that was observed and tbere was
considerable spreading from the oqglll81
location where the plants were set.
We saw the buffalo near the headquarters
at Cornstalk and we asked Mr. Wallis how
they transferred them from one field to
another. He said that buffalo would not drive
like cattle but had to be enllced by feed to
move. Aset of pens and gates had been made
to get the buffalo to cross th~ road from one
field to the other
DENVER YOHO, FORMER Conservation Technlcl8n m Mason County
who retll'ed last year, still VISits us frequently
to hear reports of what landowners are dmng.
He ts en)oymg his rellremenl on the farm
near Rio Grande, Gallia County. He IS busy

wtth his own farnung operatwns and vts1t1ng
friends and relatives m Ohio and West
Vtrgm1a
WE VISITEDTHE W A BARKER farm
at Southside to look over several thmgs he IS
mterested m and had bee~ domg One ttem of
particular mterest to him and several other
people w1th ponds 1s that he had sprayed 2-4-D
on cattails and had killed them With It He
srud that he had applied the 2-4-D tw1ce, once
about a month ago and agam m about three
weeks. It appeared that he had almost a
complete kill on the cattails
ALBRIGHT PROM(JfED
We got many calls concernmg pond
Wayne Albright of Pedro
management and the elmuna twn of catta1ls
has
received a promotion
and other water weeds 2-4-D 1s one of the
on
the
Ironton Ranger
recommended treallnents along w1th copper
sulphate at times The copper sulphate IS used District of the Wayne
Forest
to
prunar1ly for the control of algae m the ponds National
Supervisor
in
charge
of
rather than leafy-type plants
crews
fn
timber,
Mr Barker mentwned that he had cut
part of hiS hay for the second ltme m the last recreation, and fire
few days and that he had gotten more hay control. He has been with
from hts held the second cuttmg than he did the Forest Service since
the first cuttmg which had been harvested 1967, working 10 timber
management, fire control
about the m1ddle of May
and
recreation. Wayne, hls
We are not turmng mto an official
wife
Bonnte, daughter
weather statiOn; ho"ever, we feel that
Tempest,
bnd son Joey
another report on the amount of ramfall
IIIIght be mterestmg In our ram gauge we reside at Slabfork.
collected .5 mch of ram on June 16 and dunng
the penod June 19-20 we collected 2 9 mches
Smce that time we have collected .3 mch
We have noted that the rainfall at various
places around the county has dtffered
constderably Some places have recetved a
CLOTHING OFFERED
little more ram than we dtd m Pt Pleasant
CHESHIRE
Free
while other places recetved much less The
Clothing
Day
w111
be
held
by
average rainfall m thts part of West Vtrgtrua
the
Gallta-Metgs
C=umty
1s about 3 5 mches per month
Aclioo Agency on Wednesday
from 9 a m to 2 p m for all
area low mcome persons The
clothing bank of the agency IS
lo cated m the former I
Cheshtre High School

Sen. Collins' report
COLUMBUS - Senator
Oakley C. Collins (R-Ironton)
states that this session of the
General Assembly has been
busy, if not as productive as
one would have hoped. Since
January, 1975 nearly 2,300
btlls and joint resolutions
have been Introduced. Of
these, 2Jll House bills and 162
Senate bills were passed and
sent to the Governor
Thirty-five House bills and
14 Senate bills recetved !mal
action durmg the 3-day
"clean-up" sesswn earlier
this month The Governor
just began receiVIng them
last week.
It is a miSconception that
bills must be acted on by the
Governor within 10 days after ·
they are passed. He must sign
or veto a bill, or let 11 become
law without his stgnature
wtthm 10 days after the
Governor's office receives
the final copy.
While a btU IS gomg through
the legislature 11 IS satd to be
m "engrossed" form. After
passage 11 1s reprmted as an
act, or "enrolled." If several
dozen btlls are passed at tht
end of a legislative session 11
may take 2 or 3 weeks to
reprint and proof them, Thus,
11 may actually be up to a
month after fmal passage
that a bill is acted on by the
Governor

PAINT

Three mo re
I '

UNIVERSITY PARK , Pa
(UPIJ - The Umted States IS
sending SIX br1ght, young
gymnasts of near-equal
abili ty to Montreal m a
sen ous effort to wm 1ts ftrst
men's gymnastics medal m
44 years.
"They're not gomg to beat
the Ja pa nese or the
Russi ans, but 1t's possible
they could pull third, parhcularly because !01 the f1rst
tune the crowd w11l be partiSan to the Amencans," sa1d
lw()-tune U S Olymp1an Armando Vega
Vega, a fonner Olympic
JUdge who once coached the
Mextean Nahonal team,
descnbed the U S squad,
tapped from the fmal two-day
tnals which opened Fndsy at
Penn State's Rec Hall, as
"No superstars, but very consiStent "
Team manager Gene Weltstone, 1948 and 1952 US
Coach, sa1d, "I think the
gymnasl• proved to those
who were here why we 're all
saymg this team has a very
real shot at the bronze medal
at the games next month "
Gomg mto Saturday mght's
opllonal portiOn of the final
tnals, the top SIX had
averaged near!) 9 2 out of
10 0 for each of the t8 routmes
performed m the serru-fmal
tnals last month at Berkeley,
Cahf and Fnday mght here
Less than 3 pomts
separated the bunch, each of
whom had scored conSistently highe1 overall than
any other men's team ever
fi elded by the Umted States
man olympic year

.

' Tlll)eS -Se ntmel, Sunday, June 27, 1976
; - The Sunday

As thts ts wrtlten, the
Governor has vetoed 17 btlls,
and made 116 lme-1tem vetoes
on 6 other bills. Any btU can
be vetoed m entirety Lmettem vtoes can be made only
on btlls that appropriate
money.
SIX part1san b1lls from the
"SIX Day War" m January ,
197~
were
ruled
unconstitutiOnal by the Ohio
Supreme Court , and are
stopped from becommg Ia w
In add11ion to b1lls, there
are 3 k10ds of resolullons used
in the Ohio legtslature. Jomt
resolutions can be leg•slallve
proposals to change the Ohio
Consttlutton that go on the
ballot as state-wtde tssues,
may rallfy proposed amendments to the U. S
Coostitut10n (such as the 16year old vote or ERA),
appoint a spectal commlllee,
or recognize an outstanding
event or achievement
Concurrent resolutiOns
may do the Ia Iter 2 things,
while House or Senate
resolullons are usually only
commemorative
Jomt resolutwns on state or
national constJluhonal
amendments reqmre twothirds approval of both
chambers (66 m the House
and 22 m the Senate), but
otherwise need only a stmple
majonty (~0 m the House and

17m the Sena te )
Concurrent resolullons
reqUire a sunple maJOrity m
both , chambers, the House
and Senate resolutiOns need a
s1mple majority only 10 the
house of ot~gm Throughout a
sesswn many hundred of
them are passed as a matter
of course

Field day at
Butler Farms
all day Sunday
GALLIPOLIS
The
Jumor-Semor Hereford
Breeders' Assoctatwn Fteld
Day wtll be held July 3 at the
Ohto farm of John anu Ruth
Butler , owners of Butler
Hereford Farm located etght
m1les south of (ja)lipolis on
State Route 7 (River Road),
or 32 mtles north of
Huntmgton on Oh10 State
Route 7
Hereford Fteld Day S1gns
will d1rect v1s1tors to the
scene of the event.
Here's the held day
program
Master of ceremomes,
Dave Bourgeoise, Ripley,
President, West V1rglma
Jumor Hereford Assoclatioo
9 a m - Regtstrallon of

•

Save all of the quality
that's in your hay crop

Ill
7 &amp; 9 ft. Models
IN STOCK

By T. Allen Wolter
D1s!rict Runger
IRON'I'ON - Th•~ week 's arbole
IS by Raymond J Schoener, Timber
Management Assistant on th e
Ironton Ranger D1stnct of the
Wayne National Forest
Gifford Pinchot ts a name too
fe w Amertcan Citizens recogmze,
but 1t's one that all American
Fores ters and knowledgea bl e
conservatlomsts recogmze and
respect
G1fford Pmchot was our f1rst
native-horn , tramed forester It's
for tunate that he happened to come
along at a time m our history when
another staun ch r onserv ati on!St ,
Theodore Roosevelt was about I Q
step mto the White House
Both men recogmzed the great
t1mber resource wh1ch we sllll had
at the turn of the century They
became warm fnends and tt was
through Pinchot 's close assoctatJon
w1th Theodore Roose velt that the
enlargement of the Natwnal Forests
came 1to bemg and saved mtlllons of
acres of Pubhc Domam for future
generations
G1f fOJ d P1ncho t studied
Forestry m Germany, F1 ance ,
Switzerland, and Austna He' came
back to this country With the
objective of applymg those forestry
practtces which best fit the
conditions of our land
- In 189fhe became Chi ef of the
Dlvtston of Forestry, as the Forest
ScrVJce was known at the t1me
Or1gmally appomted by President
McKmey, he became Chief wtth the
understanding that he would run It
on h1s own terms As he later wrote,
"From the day I entered the
DIVISIOn of Forestry under
Prestdent McKmley until I was
dtsmlssed by Prestdent Taft, not one
smgle person m the off1ce or field

was appointed, promoted, deJJ:!Oted ,
or removed to please any pohtlcJan,
or for any political moti ve,
whatsoever '
. Atthalltme there were only two
ttochnlcal foresters and rune other
employes on the staff of the diVISion,
and fewer than a dozen foresters In
the co untry In order to prov1de a
high grude of forest trammg su1led
to i\mencan conditwns, the Pmchot
family fmanced an endown1enl f01 a
two-year post-graduate school at
Yale Um vers1ty
He chose personnel carefully m
bui lding the orgamza t10n He
formed a decentralized type of
adm1mstra11on, behevmg that 'each
loca lity should be dealt w1th on 1ts
own mcu ts " The present system of
•egwnal offi ces, With thelf forests
and local d1 stncts evo lved
Research m the use of forest
products was resumed He strongly
advocated more money for f1re
protection and control, but 1t took
the bu rnmg of :1,000,000 acres of land
and the death of at least 85 fire
fi ghters and Civilians durmg U1e
terribl e 1910 fire season m the
western part Of the Umted States to
p1 od Congress mto actiOn
Theodore Roosevelt wrote of
Pm chot, " He was pructJ ca lly
breaking new ground, and takmg
1nto account, also, h1s tireless
energy and actiVIty , hiS feurlessness, h1s complete d•smterestedness, h1s smgle-mmded devotiOn to
the mterests of U1e plam people, and
his extraordmary efficiency, I
beheve 1t 1s but JUSt to say that
among the many, m.my public
offl c1a Is,
who
under
my
admm1strat10n rendered literally
mvaluable serv1ce to the people of
the Umted States, he, on the whole,
stood first."
Gifford Pmchot was d1sm1ssed

by Pres ident Taft when he
vehemently protested the sale of
extensive Alaskan coa l lands to a
pn vate syndicate As further proof
of h1s disapproval of Plnchot's
achons, Taft also slashed the ~'orest
Servtce budget
Pinchol still lived a life of public
serv1ce after leavmg h1s federal
pos1tion He beca m~ Governor of
Pennsy lvania twt ce. I was
pnvlieged to see this man whose
1deas would have such an effect on
111) choice of a vocaUQn after I was
&lt;tischnrged from the Navy after WW
II

I

It was an 1936 and I was a young- ·
ster of 11 Panchot, then Governor of
Penn sylv an111 , was makmg a
campa ign
swmg
thr ough
so uthwcste Jn Penn sylv ama I
remember scemg this tall, lean ,
mustachocd, st ra1ght-as-a-ramrod ,
old gentleman speakang from a
dimly lit platform which had been
set up at U1e local railroad station
As he spoke, a soft drtzzle of rain
started to fall bot turned Into a
harder ram, und the SIZeable crowd
begun to thin out as the raindrops
contmued Fanaliy only a few
Jelnalned
Even U10ugh I was a very
young boy and had no 1dea of what a ·
spe cial person he was, other than
that he was governor, I had a feeling .
or sadness as the crowd dwindled
and Governor Pmchot was left
stnndmg almost alone
Governor Pmchot lost In hls bid
for re-election that year It was as
though the people had turned their
back on him, saymg that he had
outlived his usefulness, that
p1·ogress had passed him by
Little d1d I, or the crowd which
the ram had dispersed, fully realize
h1s accompllslunents He was far
ahead of h1s lime, but we dtdn't
1eahzc 1t unlil many years later

Judgmg Teams and lndivJduals...:..Steak Contest, 911 2!&gt;-Type DemonstratiOn,
Judgmg Contest, Wetght
Guessmg Contest, 11 t5-11 30
- Paul Coelman, West
By John c. Rice
Vtrgtma Area F1eldman of
County
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
the Amertcan Hereford
Assoc~Plwn bnngs an update
By Ill')'SOil R. (Buell Carter
report " What cattlemen
POMEROY - Here are Ups on rmsmg frUits and
Ga
Ilia County Extension Agent
expect m marketmg m the vegetables whtch mtght be helpful this tune of year
near future", 11 30-12 Vegetables - after harvest, asparagus and rhubarb
GALLIPOLIS
Two tension Service ana the
Welcome and Introduction of growth can be sttmulated by a mtrogen ferhllzer s1de dressmg , young ladtes who would like Junwr and Semor Sheep
Special Guests - Ruth
watermg and mulchmg Good growth after harvest penod 1s to be Galha County's Sheep Cmmmttees
Butler, Prestdenl, West essential to mamtammg plant productiVIty m subsequent Prmcess are DJana Haffclt,
HOWARD STRODE, of
V1rgm1a Hereford Breeders' seasons
daughter of Mr and Mrs Chesterhill, w1ll be dipping
Association and Co-owner of
- If the rhubarb petioles are thm It may mdJCate the need for Jerry Haffelt, and D1ana sheep In southern Ohlo again
Butler Hereford Farm; 12-1 fert1hzer or tha t the clump needs to be d1v1ded Thts IS best Holley, daughter of Mr and this summer Mr Strode
- InvocatiOn , Dr. William done after dormancy m the fall or early sprmg
Mrs Alfred Holley.
plans to be 1n Gallla County
Benf1eld,
Pastor,
Ftrst
A problem occurrmg m rhubarb last summer was crown
The Sheep Prmcess Con· on July 2 and 3, 1976 (Friday
Presbyterian Church, rot 'This diSease 1s sllmulated by hot, hum1d weather and there test will be held Monday and Saturctay)
Charlestoo, W Va. Lunch, 1s no control available To help keep this problem to a evenmg at 7 p m at the'
Local sheep producers
Courtesy Butler Hereford mmunum set rhubarb plants m a well-dramed sot! 10 a sunny Galli a County Junior w1shmg to have their sheep
Farm and Wes t Vtrg1ma loeahon Good Blf cJrculatlon around plants IS also Fairgrounds Charlie Boyles dipped need to call the Gallla
Hereford Breeders' advantageous
of the Ohio Agricultural County Extension Office (446AssociatiOn, Speech Contest,
When growmg tomatoes on stakes "suckers" (aux1llary Research and Development 4612, extension 32) no Iuter
and Queen's Contest
stems between the mam stem and the leaf) should be removed Center at Caldwell who will than Monday, June 28 (the
Also , J.J 45 - Feature when 1 to Jl;, mches long If suckers are not removed, the be the 1976 Calha County charges for dipping are 50
Speaker, Charles Boyles, plants w11l develop mto large bushes nulhfymg the benefits of Junior Fa1r sheep JUdge, wtll cents per head and drenching
Supenntendent, Oh1o the stakmg (ear her and cleaner frwt on a managed plant I
speak on what he w1ll be charges range from 30 cents
Uruvers1ty Research Farm,
Frutts - Summer top black raspberry plants by remoVIng lookmg for m JUdgmg sheep to 50 cents dependmg upon
Caldwell; 1 45-2 45 - Barn- the top 3 to 4 mches of the growmg (new) shoots when they are at the fair
the material used yard Olymptca, 2 45-3 10 24 mches high. Do not summer top red raspbemes
The program wtll conclude mm1mum stop IS 20 head of
Awards Ceremony and 3 15,
As cherry and blueberry fruit matures 11 needs protectiOn w1th a potluck supper and sheep and-or $10 for dipping
West
V~rgmla
Jumor from birds Nylon or other strong nettmg IS an effecllve folks
are asked to bring a - fanns havmg less than 2tl
Hereford Assn. busmess , method of preventmg fruit loss
covered dish, baked beans, head of sheep should consider
meetmg.
Tomato Blossom Drop and Pepper Fruit Set - The hot , cole salw, potato salad, havmg them dipped with a
On th1s b1centenmal year dry, wmdy weather m many areas IS starting to affect some of desse t or meat d1sh (lamb neighbor's flock)
1
one may des1re to make a two the vegetables. Tomato blossoms are begmmng to drop and prefen
ed, but bnng
I WANT TO EXTEND a
day event by attendmg the peppers are not settmg frwt. Radishes will be hot and p1thy whateve~· you want) Also
spec1al
mv•tatlon to all beef
Field Day and the Arts and and cabbage may have a strong taste. Even cucumbers may bnngyourowntableserv1ce
cattle producers and other
Crafts Fatr at Cedar Lake, be bitter To help allevtate the problem, water all plants
This commg Monday
mterested In beef
R1pley, W Va. The Arts and thoroughly and then apply a 3 to 4 mch mulch. A general rule evenmg's achvitles offers an farmers
cattle to a twilight Beef CatCraft Fatr Will be held from of thumb - plants should recetve one mch of water per week, excellent opportumty for tle-Forage Farm meeting at
July I to 5. Motels m the consequently, tf it doesn't ram, WATER For back-up local sheep
producers, thL' Marton Caldwell fann on
Galhpohs area are Best mformatwn note pages 17 and 23 of Oh10 Bulletm 287, Home frtends and guests to Thursday
evemng, July 8,
Western, Wtlltam Ann Motel, Vegetable Garderung , wh1ch 1s available at your County get
together,
Jalk 5 30p m.
Galbpobs, Tel 614-44&amp;-3373, Extension Off1ce
about the1r sheep, and
We held a smular event at
The Blue Founlam Motel,
Aphids on Rampage - almost every plant IS bemg just have an all-around good the Caldwell farm last year
Galbpobs, Tel 614-44fMl241; attacked by aphtds this year and tt seems they are slanding tune 'l'he pubhc s mvlted and those who attended will
Hobday Inn, Tel 614-44(M)(I9(), three-{jeep on some plants. For unmed1ate control you m1ght This event s bemg1conducted
have an tdea of the kind of ac1
Ctrcle's Motel, Tel 614-446- try some of the contact sprays such as D1azmon, MalathiOn, by the Gallla
County Ex· tivity this will be. Emphasis
2501
mcotme-sulfate, pyrethrms and rotenone - the latter two are
of the program will be direc, - - - - - - - - - - -.......~~~~~~'"1 plant derivallves that g1ve qUick knock-down but are not long - ted toward telling and
lastmg The systemtcs (best used on ornamentals rather than showmg farmers what kind
vegetables) such as Cygon (dlmethoate), and Metz-Systox, of things have been hap&amp;
wtll g1ve a longer lastmg effect as they are absorbed by the pemng on the Ferlt-bull
Ia;~
•H .u
plants and are mgested by the 1nsect Read the label carefully demonstration project and
as some Insecticides are restncted for spectfic plants and the results t()o()ate Another
~~:U:~te~oo a wattmg peflod if the materJBI are used on maJor phase of the program
will be directed toward exSlugs are sttll a problem m many gardens Metaldehyde 1s plammg the procedure for
the ooly material, accordmg to Bug Dope, that can be used making no-till forage
around, not·on, vegetable crops This IS available as Bug-geta, seedmgs and merits of the
Snarol or Slug1t Remember, READ THE LABEL
year-round grazmg program.
Farmers wtll have the opportumty to see eqwpment
demonstrated such as the notill ZIP seeders, manufactured by John Deere as well
as the one avatlable to loan
GALUPOLIS - No one was Galhpolls
from the local Soil ConA h11-sk1p accident oc· se~vahon Service. Round
~~~~~ m four traffic acmvestlgated here curred m the 200 Block of balers will also be on exhibtt
Frtday by c1ty pollee.
Third Ave. where a ptckup
One new attraction to this
Pauline E. Moyer, 55, Rt I, truck owned by Tom's Shell year's twilight meeting at the
South Pomt, was charged Serv1ce was struck by an Caldwell fann will be the
w1th failure to y1eld the nght unkno"n vehicle
SALE
beef pnncess contest which
SALE
of way followmg an acctdent
Abackmg mtshap occurred w11l be held m conjunction
I rn p.m. Fnday on Second at 9 43 p m on the parkmg w1th the farm meeting
nn.. .,S REDUC_
ED FOR QUICK SALE atAve.
and State St.
lot at Bob Evans Dnve In
The evenmg's actlvtties
Offtcers satd the Moyer car where an auto driven by w11l end w1th a light meal, so
FLOOR SAMPLES· DEMONSTRATORS pulled
from a parking space lnana Sue Koehler, 18, Crown plan now to attend
LIMITED QUANTITIES
mto the s1de of an auto Ctly, struck a vehicle owned
The event IS a joint effort
ope1ated by Jud1th A Saun- by Paul W. Wnght of. sponsored by the Gallla
PRICED-WHILE THEY Lllolll ders, 32, Eureka Star Rt Wellston
County Extension Serv1ce,
The•·e was mmordamage
Another backmg accident the ExtenSion Beef ComA backmg acctdent oc- occurred at Fourth Ave and rruttee, the Gallw County Soil
curred on the G&amp;J Auto Locust St where a vehicle Water
Conservation
Parts parkmg lot where an driven by Kathy E. Keenan, DIStriCt and the Soil Con·
CHESHIRE, OHIO
auto driven by Kenneth R 30, Rt 2, GaiUpolis, struck a servatlclnService with assist·
Out 3 blocks on S. R. 554
Bloomer, 38. Rt 3, Gallipolis, parked vehicle owned by Em· ance from local machinery
Open 7 Days A Week
struck a parked car owned by mett Bostic of Gallipolis
and !ann supply dealers
Velva Langhorne, 33, Rt. 2,

County agent's
corner

Agriculture and

our community

WHEEL HORSE

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..""

1975
9 FT. MODELS AT
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SAVE '486.00

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a better JOb to boot W1th the 990 you
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and tall, or thm and short No rnachine you can buy o1fers you more 1n
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o ChOICe of 7 or 9-foot widths
• IH balanced head kn1fe dnve runs
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76

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• Big 44 - mch reel runs at lower RPM
to save leaves. treat crop gentler
• Simple, d1rect power tra1n requ1res
less power, less mamtenance
• Controlled flotat ion platform cuts
clean over uneven ground
• Cond1t1oner rolls adjust automatlcally to crop volume for uniform
drymg , open hydraulically
• Windrow placer attachment lets
you pa1r wmdrows c lose-together

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~·

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I

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INVENTORY CLEAN•UP

Damage minor in 4 accidents

tJ

LITTLE'S TRADING CENTER

•J

II

�2.4 - The Sunday Times- Sentlnei,Sundav. June 27. 1916

First gym medal

Connors now

•

zn 44 years goal

title favorite
WIMBLEDON (UPI I
Unseeded Vttas Gerulallls
used his It-year advantage to
outlast defending champion
Arthur Ashe m fa llgwng 111)degree heat Saturday ,
leading four Amencan men
and two women mlo the quarter-fmal round of the Wunbledon Tenm s Cham piOnships when Ashe gambled his Wunbledon Title on
savmg himself for the v1ta!
fifth set - and lost
Gerulaltls, who had
never got past the f1rst round
here Ul three years of trymg
and never beaten Ashe m
four prevwus meetmgs, went
through to the last eight of
the $280,000 tournament, -Hi,
ll-9, 6-4, &amp;-3, 6-4, over the topseeded Mtanu, Fla nat1ve
Ashe satd he deliberately
coasted through the fourth
set to save his strength for
the !mal set, "But V1tas
played a great game and at 45 he hit two unbelievable
forehands
"He bucked the odds to hit
those shots because tt's not
easy to pass me when I serve
down the middle."
GerulaJtis, from Howard
Beach, N Y , sa1d he knew he
would have to hit wmners to
get by the champiOn ' I wanted to wear him down, make
him psy for his age 1! I
could," sa1d GerulaJtJS, who
at 21 was II years younger
than Ashe.
Gerulattls ' victory set up
Junmy Connors as an even
clearer favorite to regam the
Iitle The Belleville, Ill lefthander beat 16th seed Stan
SIIII!h 6-4, &amp;-1 , 6-3 and has yet
to drop a set.
The other successful
Amencan men were Charlie

named to
U.S. team
EUGENE, Ore (UP! ) Johnny Jones and Regg1e
Jones, who f1n1shed fourth
and fifth, respectively, m the
J()().meter dash fmal at the U
S Olympic Track and FJeld
Tnals, and Ed Preston, who
was fifth m the 200, Saturday
were named to the team for
the Montreal Ol)mp1cs next
month
The three Jomed sprmters
Harvey Glance, Houston MeTear, Steve R1dd1ck, Millard
Hampton, Dwayne Evans,
and Mark Lutz, but they were
named only as poss1ble participants on the 4()()-meter
relay team
Glance, McTear and Riddick fm1shed 1-2-3 m the 100
mile Hampton, Evans and
Lutz were 1-2-3m the 200
Former ellymptan Lee
Calhoun, the coach m charge
of the 400-meter relay, satd
McTear, who has a slight
hamstnng problem, and Lutz
will not be considered for the
relay team.
" We'll lake the whole
bunch to Plattsburgh N Y ,
(site of the olympic team
trammg base leading up to
Montreal ) and try to p1ck four
for the relay team from
among the seven," sa1d
Cahoun

Farm club will sue if

Finley calls up players
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) The Paciftc Coast Triple-A
Baseball League announced
Saturdsy tt will take legal action againSt the Oakland A's
if owner Charles 0. Finley
.calls up the ma)onty of
players from his Tuscon
Taros farm club to ftll his
Major League roster
The A's voted Fnday rught
to go on strike tf Finley does
not allow V1da Blue, Hollie
Fmgers and Joe Rudi to
return to the lineup Fmley
has reportedly told Toros' offlc18ls to be ready to fly 18 of
the 20 Tuscan players to
Oakland Saturday m
preparatiOn for such a
walkout.
Tile Toros are currently m
Salt Lake Ctty for a weekend
senes w1th the Gulls.
"The ))OSSibtUty ex1sts that
the Oakland A's Trtple-A
farm team, the Tuscon Taros

"It used to be our team
would have one or two older,
mternationally expenenced
gymnasts wtlh a 'name' and
the scores dropped off
drasbcally after that," said
Vega, now coach at
l.oUJSJana State
Desp1te the youth of this
team, rangmg m age from 18
to 24, aU have competed
before International JUdge-s,
most as members of last
fall 's Gold Medai-W111111Ilg
Pan AmeriCan games squad
"We have unproved so
much that our sixth man
should do better m Montreal
than our number one man dtd
two years ago m the World
Games," satd U S. Coach
Karl Schwenzfe1er, who succeeds Wettstone after 11
seasons at the atr force
academy
The U S team, which has
tramed together nme months
while hopscotching the Allanlie m a sertes of four
quahftcation lrwls, leaves
for Canada Mondsy for three
weeks of team workouts
before the games open.
" We've been together a ·
long ltme and we're friends
now. We all may tram differently, but our routines are
compabble," satd Califorma's TomBeach.
It's that compabbJlity, sa1d
Vega, which will allow the U.
S squad to use a team
strategy employed successfully by Japan and the
USSR - put good gymnasts
up early mthe lineup to draw
high scores whtch will
"pump" up the scores of
the1r teammates to follow.

Pasarell , who squeaked
through h1s second-f1 ve set
thnller m two days by edgmg
Australia 's b1g-servmg Phil
Dent, 2~, H , 6-4 , fMl, 7-li, and
Roscoe l'anner of Lookout
Mountam , Tenn , who set up
a quarter-fmal clash w1th
Connors by dwnpmg N1k1
P1llc of Yugoslavia, 6-3, 6-4, 64
Ge ru laills will meet
Mextcan DaviS Cup Player
fu! ul fu!IIIIrez, who won Ius
fourth round match, 9-11, 3-6,
6-1 , 6-1, aga mst South
Africa's Berni e M1tton ,
Friday's conqueror of John
Newcombe
PARTICIPATING IN STAT E OLYM PICS - Ten
attend the state meet Partlclpatmg were (No order
Pasarell , of Santurce,
students
at
the
Gutding
Hand
School
were
m
Columbus
md1cated) Ben Skinner, Maunce Smith, Paul Wmston,
Puerto R1co, who has never
th1s
"
eekend
partJC
ipatmg
m
the
Slate
Olympics
This
Dale Tucker, Ken Shaver, Gene Shaver, Don Saxon,
got to the last e1ght smce he
was
the
fi
rst
group
ever
from
the
GUJdmg
Hand
School
to
Richard
Hood, Joe Dunn and Bill R1ce
first played here 13 years
ago, Will face llie Nastase for
a sem1fmal berth The
Romaman kept hiS temper on
the fifth day of temperatures
of at least 100 deg•ees and
comfortably beat Onny
"Panm of New Zealand, 7-5, 6OAKLAND, Calif I UPI I - don't play by Sunday, we're unmed •ately sa1d he would here to play baseball, and
4,6-3
sue Fmley 1! Tucson can't we're trymg to wm We feel
Members of the Oakland A's, gomg on stnke
The only U S player to lose who have a 7-4 record smce
"Mr Fmley sa1d there was f1eld a team m Salt Lake for that for the benefit of the
was Brian Gottfried, but the three supersta r s Y. ere nothmg he could do because Sunday 's game, wh1ch IS Oakland A's these three
Ft Lauderdale, Fla , Dav1s rCJ11oved from the1r lineup. the matter was m hllgatlon already a near sellout
players have to play "
Cup star was clearly out- may not even take the held and he 11 ould have to get
" We're not on etther s1de
Mana ger Chuck Tann er
played by fourth seed BJom Sunday
perrmss10n from the Red Sox ( m Fmley's dispute w1th hrmly suppor ted Fmley's
Borg The Swede came from
The A's players sa 1d they and Yankees for them to Kuhn ), " Todd said " We're acllons
1-4 down 111 the third to wm 6- would stnke unless owner play "
" I know that the telegram
2, 6-2, 7-5, m a match he Charles 0 Fmley allows Joe
Finley promptly put hiS
from the commiSSioner read
threatened not to play Rud1, Roll1e Fmgers and Vida Tucson farm team on notice
Fmley and Tanner would be
because of a pulled th1gh Blue to return to the lmeup that 11 nught fly to Oakland
m trouble 1f the three players
muscle
Th e announcement \\a s today anu take the held
did not pia), but Charles 0
Bm g will come up agamst made by •·ehever and player Sunday
Fmley has not done anything
Argenhman Gwllenno Vilas represe ntative Jim Todd
Salt Lake own e1 Art Teece
wrong ," Tanner said "He
m the fmal quarte1 -fmal pnor to Oakland 's game
has been fight m everything
pa1r1ng Vilas recovered to Fnday mght With Minnesota
he has done. "
beat Australian Tony Roche, The A's, who seem to thrive
THE CURRACH, Ireland
a sem1-fmallst last year, 6-4, on advers1ty, then went out
(UPf ) - French owned,
3-6, 5-7,6-3,6-4
and downed the Tw1ns, 5-2, on
tramed and ndden second
Chris Evert and Ros1e Ken McMull en's pm ch-h1t in sem ij'inills
favonte Malacate Saturdav
Casals, the only U S players three -run homer m the
SILLOI'H . England ( UPI ) won the $250,000 lnsh SweeP.
left m the women's smgles, bottom of the mnth
stake Derby horse race from
advanced mto the quarter
Fmley had sold Rud1 and - Amenca 's last two hopes Nelson Bunker Hunt's
Fnday
crashed
out
of
the
fmals w1th stratght set w1ns Fmgers to fhe Boston Red
favored Empery
Evert, of Ft Lauderdale, Sox and Blue to New York for Bn ush Women's Amateur
Philippe ' Paquet, aboard
Fla , beat btg-servmg Betty a total of $3 o million Golf ChampiOnship
the 5-l Malacate. foiled
Defendwg
champion
Stove of Holland 6-2, &amp;-2 and Howev er , Commi ssiOn er
Syms
was Hunt's b1d for the double of
'
has looked every mch the Bowie Kuhn blocked the sale Namy
the Insh and Epson Derbys,
champiOn as she Jeached the
Earlier m th e day m overwhelmed m Fnda y's w1lh Lester Piggott aboard
last e1ght droppmg only Ch1cago, Fmle) sued both seJmf1nal by Scottish student the 4-5favonte
seven games - four of them maJor leagues, Kuhn, the Cathy Panton and 11 was all
Tlurd was lrJSh-tramed
Saturday
maJOI league Executive over at the 15th hole In the and own ed No rthern
Evert w11l meet Russ1an Council, the New York other sem1, South Afri can Treasure at 16-1 , w1th
Olga Morozova for a place m Yankees and the Boston Red Champwn Alison Shea rd Gabr1el Curran nding
ended Amenca s t" ()-J ear
the serru-fmals On Fr~day, Sox for $10 million
The wmner, tramed by
dom1nat10n of the event by
Morozova defeated fellow
Todd told reporters "The defeatmg
Francois Boutm won $123,900
hot
favorlle
and
countrywoman Natasha Ch players of the Oakland A's, m
for own er Mam Felix
myreva, 6-4, H, 6-1
heu of what has happened CurtiS Cup star De bbie Berger
Massey
at
the
20th
Casals, of Sausalito, and mthe bestmterests of the
litlfll, "he was absent
Calif, had her volley game three players, who have not
Empery 's Win at Epsom, w oC--'-r
gomg too sharp for Muna been allowed to play, ha ve
on hand at the Curragh
/l("~:::;;.o~~
Jausovec of Yugoslavta , g1ven Mr
Fmley an
SETS NEWMARK
whom she beat 6-2, 7-5 to set ultunatum that, 1f the players
LILLE,
France (UP! )
up a contest with second-seed
Mane-Chnstme
Debourse
Evonne Goolagong, a 6-3, fMl
SIGN CONTRACTS
Saturday
Jumped
6-1 and
wmner m an all-Aust1 allan
BOSTON (UPI )- Runmng
f1ve-eJg~ths to set a French ba ck Stu Betts of Northern
ba ttle w1th D1 a nn e
Women
s High Jwnp record
Fromholtz
dunng
the French Cham- MIChigan and center Todd
The other women's quarpiOnships here from which Anderson of Stanford have
•
ter-fmal pairings w11l see
fmal chmces Will be made for s1gned contracts w1th the
Martma Navratllova play
th1s SUII11ller' s French Olym- New England Palrtots,
Sue Parker and V1rgm1a
bnngmg the number of 1976
pic team
Wade clash w1th Kerry Reid
draft chmces signed to 10
Wade , the Bnhsh No 3
seed, lived the most
precariOusly of the four and
ASSEN, The Netherlands
had to come from 2-5 m the
(UP!)
- Two new leaders In
fmal set w1th a burst of ftve
the
World
Champ10nsh1p
straight games to beat South
Standings
emerged
from the
Mnca 's Manse Krugm, 2&lt;i,
Dutch Grand Pnx Mol01
6-3,7-5
Re1d, seeded e1ghth from Cycle Races, contes ted
Australw, has had to pull out Saturday m troptcal weather
some of her best tenms to before a sweltermg crowd of
come back to a 3-6, 6-3, 6-1 150,000
Spam's Angel N1eto took
wm over another South
over
from Rudolf Kunz of
African, Greer Stevens
West
Germany
m the 50 CC
Navratilova, the self-extled
World
Standmgs
wh1le
Czechoslovakian, also came
Walter
V1lla
of
Italy
from behind to beat French
displaced
Ireland's
Tom
veteran FrancoiSe Durr, 2&lt;i,
Herron
at
the
top
rung
of
the
&amp;-3, 7-5, while Barker, the
250CC
Class
blonde Bnton, ended Mar1a
Tht s unrque 2- Ra ilan plas t ic p a1l can be used fo r many
In the 50 CC, N1eto, on a
Bueno ' s
Wimbledon
oth er JOb s wh en yo u linrsh parn tmB - supply li m ited'
Bultaco, got to the front m the
comeback, 2-9,6-2,6-1
third of mne laps and won by
street length ahead of Switzerland 's Ulnch • Graf
Eugemo Lazzanm of Italy
was runner up on Morbtdelli
unbl he got engmc trouble m
work shoes
the last lap and fell back to
for workmen Quality butlt
fourth place
to stay "on duty' when
In the 125 CC P1er Paolo
B1anchi of Italy won to Inyou 're "on duty ·
crease his lead m the world
Here's an astomshmg value on a 2- gallon pat! of quahty whtte house
Des1gned to keap you
baseball clubs, w1U not f1eld a standings
team m Salt Lake C1ty Saturpa_mt
whil e t hey last I Th1s produc t spreads on smooth and easy,
flable all day
In the 250 CC, Villa , on a
day or Sunday, June 26 and Harley Dav1dson, recovered
dn es qutckly to a beauttful wh1te fim sh It 's durabl e, to stand up
and deliver the
27, due to the call-up of from a poor start to get to the
agamst
th e roughest weather condttwn Clean-u p's a snap JUst wash
k1nd ollong weao
players and the1r non- front m the s1xth of 15 laps
bru~hes and rollers w1th water
replacements m v•olat10n of He won wtlh ease ahead of
you upect lor your
professiOnal baseball rules Takazum1 Katayama of
shoe dollara
regular retail $19 76 for 2 gal You Save $7 00
and the Nahonal Assoc1ahoo Japan (Yamaha) who was an
Agreement, " sa1d PCL early leader
President Roy Jackson m a
In the 350 CC World Stanprepared slatel)lent from hts dings leader Johnny Cecotto Width
office here.
of Venezuela fa1led to get suf- A· BC-D
"Should such an occuraJK'f ficient pressure out of his E EE and
take place, the Pac1f1c Coast engme and had to settle for Hard to Find H WJdth
Triple-A Baseball League e1ghth place This, however,
or only $6.38 1
will JOin the Salt Lake Ctly was sufftc1ent to keep hun on
per
gallon
Gulls Baseball Inc. m fonnal top of the standings
legal actiOn aga1nst the
G1acomo Agosltm of llllly
Oakland A's, a diVISIOn of (MV ) led the 16 laps from
Charles 0 Fmley and Com- start to f1msh
pany Inc , to recover full
Bntams Barry Sheene, the
Mon &amp; Fn 9•30
games.''
strong leader of the 500 CC
312 6TH STREET 675-1160 POINT PLEASANT
hiBp m
Owner Art T-eet'E of the standmgs, had a bad start on
Tues. Wid, Sat.
Gulls has already Indicated Ius Suzukt but took the lead
9 lOitiSp.m
Store Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.-8:00-5:00 Sat. 8:00-12:00
he w11l sue Fmley 1f Tuscon IS by the end of the second of the
Thursday I·JO ttl
llllable to field a club
12 Noon
••• 81eotrto Avt"'"' , .... t ,, ,, •• GttMt
16laps and won the race by a
s1nce 1754 - lmagmat1on from CltELANESE"
Wldemargm

Athletics may strike today

Malacate
captures
Irish Derby

GJJicentennial

Commc1n01-ative

Paint8pecial.~

Nrew leaders
emerge zn
standings

Go to work
in quality

frial plantings inspected on

Your Wayne National Forest

Cornstalk Hunting Area
ljy Jobn Cooper

Soli Cons. Service

POINT PLEASANT - Thomas Crebbs,
State BiologiSt of Sotl Conservation SerVIce,
and Wayne Everett, Plant Matenals
SpecialiSt of SCS, have been m Mason County
lookmg over trial plantings on the Cornstalk
Public Hunting Area.
Millard Wallis, veteran employee of the
Department of Natural Resources, took us to
the planting which was located m what was
formerly known as the Harper pasture If
Wallis had not taken us to the location, flndmg
1t would have been very difficult.
Sawtooth oak was one of the trees m the

Lay of the land
planting and that IS an oak that we had never
seen before It IS highly recommended for Its
nut crop and IS supposed to be very palatable
to wildlife. Tatarwn honeysuckle was another
plant that was observed and tbere was
considerable spreading from the oqglll81
location where the plants were set.
We saw the buffalo near the headquarters
at Cornstalk and we asked Mr. Wallis how
they transferred them from one field to
another. He said that buffalo would not drive
like cattle but had to be enllced by feed to
move. Aset of pens and gates had been made
to get the buffalo to cross th~ road from one
field to the other
DENVER YOHO, FORMER Conservation Technlcl8n m Mason County
who retll'ed last year, still VISits us frequently
to hear reports of what landowners are dmng.
He ts en)oymg his rellremenl on the farm
near Rio Grande, Gallia County. He IS busy

wtth his own farnung operatwns and vts1t1ng
friends and relatives m Ohio and West
Vtrgm1a
WE VISITEDTHE W A BARKER farm
at Southside to look over several thmgs he IS
mterested m and had bee~ domg One ttem of
particular mterest to him and several other
people w1th ponds 1s that he had sprayed 2-4-D
on cattails and had killed them With It He
srud that he had applied the 2-4-D tw1ce, once
about a month ago and agam m about three
weeks. It appeared that he had almost a
complete kill on the cattails
ALBRIGHT PROM(JfED
We got many calls concernmg pond
Wayne Albright of Pedro
management and the elmuna twn of catta1ls
has
received a promotion
and other water weeds 2-4-D 1s one of the
on
the
Ironton Ranger
recommended treallnents along w1th copper
sulphate at times The copper sulphate IS used District of the Wayne
Forest
to
prunar1ly for the control of algae m the ponds National
Supervisor
in
charge
of
rather than leafy-type plants
crews
fn
timber,
Mr Barker mentwned that he had cut
part of hiS hay for the second ltme m the last recreation, and fire
few days and that he had gotten more hay control. He has been with
from hts held the second cuttmg than he did the Forest Service since
the first cuttmg which had been harvested 1967, working 10 timber
management, fire control
about the m1ddle of May
and
recreation. Wayne, hls
We are not turmng mto an official
wife
Bonnte, daughter
weather statiOn; ho"ever, we feel that
Tempest,
bnd son Joey
another report on the amount of ramfall
IIIIght be mterestmg In our ram gauge we reside at Slabfork.
collected .5 mch of ram on June 16 and dunng
the penod June 19-20 we collected 2 9 mches
Smce that time we have collected .3 mch
We have noted that the rainfall at various
places around the county has dtffered
constderably Some places have recetved a
CLOTHING OFFERED
little more ram than we dtd m Pt Pleasant
CHESHIRE
Free
while other places recetved much less The
Clothing
Day
w111
be
held
by
average rainfall m thts part of West Vtrgtrua
the
Gallta-Metgs
C=umty
1s about 3 5 mches per month
Aclioo Agency on Wednesday
from 9 a m to 2 p m for all
area low mcome persons The
clothing bank of the agency IS
lo cated m the former I
Cheshtre High School

Sen. Collins' report
COLUMBUS - Senator
Oakley C. Collins (R-Ironton)
states that this session of the
General Assembly has been
busy, if not as productive as
one would have hoped. Since
January, 1975 nearly 2,300
btlls and joint resolutions
have been Introduced. Of
these, 2Jll House bills and 162
Senate bills were passed and
sent to the Governor
Thirty-five House bills and
14 Senate bills recetved !mal
action durmg the 3-day
"clean-up" sesswn earlier
this month The Governor
just began receiVIng them
last week.
It is a miSconception that
bills must be acted on by the
Governor within 10 days after ·
they are passed. He must sign
or veto a bill, or let 11 become
law without his stgnature
wtthm 10 days after the
Governor's office receives
the final copy.
While a btU IS gomg through
the legislature 11 IS satd to be
m "engrossed" form. After
passage 11 1s reprmted as an
act, or "enrolled." If several
dozen btlls are passed at tht
end of a legislative session 11
may take 2 or 3 weeks to
reprint and proof them, Thus,
11 may actually be up to a
month after fmal passage
that a bill is acted on by the
Governor

PAINT

Three mo re
I '

UNIVERSITY PARK , Pa
(UPIJ - The Umted States IS
sending SIX br1ght, young
gymnasts of near-equal
abili ty to Montreal m a
sen ous effort to wm 1ts ftrst
men's gymnastics medal m
44 years.
"They're not gomg to beat
the Ja pa nese or the
Russi ans, but 1t's possible
they could pull third, parhcularly because !01 the f1rst
tune the crowd w11l be partiSan to the Amencans," sa1d
lw()-tune U S Olymp1an Armando Vega
Vega, a fonner Olympic
JUdge who once coached the
Mextean Nahonal team,
descnbed the U S squad,
tapped from the fmal two-day
tnals which opened Fndsy at
Penn State's Rec Hall, as
"No superstars, but very consiStent "
Team manager Gene Weltstone, 1948 and 1952 US
Coach, sa1d, "I think the
gymnasl• proved to those
who were here why we 're all
saymg this team has a very
real shot at the bronze medal
at the games next month "
Gomg mto Saturday mght's
opllonal portiOn of the final
tnals, the top SIX had
averaged near!) 9 2 out of
10 0 for each of the t8 routmes
performed m the serru-fmal
tnals last month at Berkeley,
Cahf and Fnday mght here
Less than 3 pomts
separated the bunch, each of
whom had scored conSistently highe1 overall than
any other men's team ever
fi elded by the Umted States
man olympic year

.

' Tlll)eS -Se ntmel, Sunday, June 27, 1976
; - The Sunday

As thts ts wrtlten, the
Governor has vetoed 17 btlls,
and made 116 lme-1tem vetoes
on 6 other bills. Any btU can
be vetoed m entirety Lmettem vtoes can be made only
on btlls that appropriate
money.
SIX part1san b1lls from the
"SIX Day War" m January ,
197~
were
ruled
unconstitutiOnal by the Ohio
Supreme Court , and are
stopped from becommg Ia w
In add11ion to b1lls, there
are 3 k10ds of resolullons used
in the Ohio legtslature. Jomt
resolutions can be leg•slallve
proposals to change the Ohio
Consttlutton that go on the
ballot as state-wtde tssues,
may rallfy proposed amendments to the U. S
Coostitut10n (such as the 16year old vote or ERA),
appoint a spectal commlllee,
or recognize an outstanding
event or achievement
Concurrent resolutiOns
may do the Ia Iter 2 things,
while House or Senate
resolullons are usually only
commemorative
Jomt resolutwns on state or
national constJluhonal
amendments reqmre twothirds approval of both
chambers (66 m the House
and 22 m the Senate), but
otherwise need only a stmple
majonty (~0 m the House and

17m the Sena te )
Concurrent resolullons
reqUire a sunple maJOrity m
both , chambers, the House
and Senate resolutiOns need a
s1mple majority only 10 the
house of ot~gm Throughout a
sesswn many hundred of
them are passed as a matter
of course

Field day at
Butler Farms
all day Sunday
GALLIPOLIS
The
Jumor-Semor Hereford
Breeders' Assoctatwn Fteld
Day wtll be held July 3 at the
Ohto farm of John anu Ruth
Butler , owners of Butler
Hereford Farm located etght
m1les south of (ja)lipolis on
State Route 7 (River Road),
or 32 mtles north of
Huntmgton on Oh10 State
Route 7
Hereford Fteld Day S1gns
will d1rect v1s1tors to the
scene of the event.
Here's the held day
program
Master of ceremomes,
Dave Bourgeoise, Ripley,
President, West V1rglma
Jumor Hereford Assoclatioo
9 a m - Regtstrallon of

•

Save all of the quality
that's in your hay crop

Ill
7 &amp; 9 ft. Models
IN STOCK

By T. Allen Wolter
D1s!rict Runger
IRON'I'ON - Th•~ week 's arbole
IS by Raymond J Schoener, Timber
Management Assistant on th e
Ironton Ranger D1stnct of the
Wayne National Forest
Gifford Pinchot ts a name too
fe w Amertcan Citizens recogmze,
but 1t's one that all American
Fores ters and knowledgea bl e
conservatlomsts recogmze and
respect
G1fford Pmchot was our f1rst
native-horn , tramed forester It's
for tunate that he happened to come
along at a time m our history when
another staun ch r onserv ati on!St ,
Theodore Roosevelt was about I Q
step mto the White House
Both men recogmzed the great
t1mber resource wh1ch we sllll had
at the turn of the century They
became warm fnends and tt was
through Pinchot 's close assoctatJon
w1th Theodore Roose velt that the
enlargement of the Natwnal Forests
came 1to bemg and saved mtlllons of
acres of Pubhc Domam for future
generations
G1f fOJ d P1ncho t studied
Forestry m Germany, F1 ance ,
Switzerland, and Austna He' came
back to this country With the
objective of applymg those forestry
practtces which best fit the
conditions of our land
- In 189fhe became Chi ef of the
Dlvtston of Forestry, as the Forest
ScrVJce was known at the t1me
Or1gmally appomted by President
McKmey, he became Chief wtth the
understanding that he would run It
on h1s own terms As he later wrote,
"From the day I entered the
DIVISIOn of Forestry under
Prestdent McKmley until I was
dtsmlssed by Prestdent Taft, not one
smgle person m the off1ce or field

was appointed, promoted, deJJ:!Oted ,
or removed to please any pohtlcJan,
or for any political moti ve,
whatsoever '
. Atthalltme there were only two
ttochnlcal foresters and rune other
employes on the staff of the diVISion,
and fewer than a dozen foresters In
the co untry In order to prov1de a
high grude of forest trammg su1led
to i\mencan conditwns, the Pmchot
family fmanced an endown1enl f01 a
two-year post-graduate school at
Yale Um vers1ty
He chose personnel carefully m
bui lding the orgamza t10n He
formed a decentralized type of
adm1mstra11on, behevmg that 'each
loca lity should be dealt w1th on 1ts
own mcu ts " The present system of
•egwnal offi ces, With thelf forests
and local d1 stncts evo lved
Research m the use of forest
products was resumed He strongly
advocated more money for f1re
protection and control, but 1t took
the bu rnmg of :1,000,000 acres of land
and the death of at least 85 fire
fi ghters and Civilians durmg U1e
terribl e 1910 fire season m the
western part Of the Umted States to
p1 od Congress mto actiOn
Theodore Roosevelt wrote of
Pm chot, " He was pructJ ca lly
breaking new ground, and takmg
1nto account, also, h1s tireless
energy and actiVIty , hiS feurlessness, h1s complete d•smterestedness, h1s smgle-mmded devotiOn to
the mterests of U1e plam people, and
his extraordmary efficiency, I
beheve 1t 1s but JUSt to say that
among the many, m.my public
offl c1a Is,
who
under
my
admm1strat10n rendered literally
mvaluable serv1ce to the people of
the Umted States, he, on the whole,
stood first."
Gifford Pmchot was d1sm1ssed

by Pres ident Taft when he
vehemently protested the sale of
extensive Alaskan coa l lands to a
pn vate syndicate As further proof
of h1s disapproval of Plnchot's
achons, Taft also slashed the ~'orest
Servtce budget
Pinchol still lived a life of public
serv1ce after leavmg h1s federal
pos1tion He beca m~ Governor of
Pennsy lvania twt ce. I was
pnvlieged to see this man whose
1deas would have such an effect on
111) choice of a vocaUQn after I was
&lt;tischnrged from the Navy after WW
II

I

It was an 1936 and I was a young- ·
ster of 11 Panchot, then Governor of
Penn sylv an111 , was makmg a
campa ign
swmg
thr ough
so uthwcste Jn Penn sylv ama I
remember scemg this tall, lean ,
mustachocd, st ra1ght-as-a-ramrod ,
old gentleman speakang from a
dimly lit platform which had been
set up at U1e local railroad station
As he spoke, a soft drtzzle of rain
started to fall bot turned Into a
harder ram, und the SIZeable crowd
begun to thin out as the raindrops
contmued Fanaliy only a few
Jelnalned
Even U10ugh I was a very
young boy and had no 1dea of what a ·
spe cial person he was, other than
that he was governor, I had a feeling .
or sadness as the crowd dwindled
and Governor Pmchot was left
stnndmg almost alone
Governor Pmchot lost In hls bid
for re-election that year It was as
though the people had turned their
back on him, saymg that he had
outlived his usefulness, that
p1·ogress had passed him by
Little d1d I, or the crowd which
the ram had dispersed, fully realize
h1s accompllslunents He was far
ahead of h1s lime, but we dtdn't
1eahzc 1t unlil many years later

Judgmg Teams and lndivJduals...:..Steak Contest, 911 2!&gt;-Type DemonstratiOn,
Judgmg Contest, Wetght
Guessmg Contest, 11 t5-11 30
- Paul Coelman, West
By John c. Rice
Vtrgtma Area F1eldman of
County
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
the Amertcan Hereford
Assoc~Plwn bnngs an update
By Ill')'SOil R. (Buell Carter
report " What cattlemen
POMEROY - Here are Ups on rmsmg frUits and
Ga
Ilia County Extension Agent
expect m marketmg m the vegetables whtch mtght be helpful this tune of year
near future", 11 30-12 Vegetables - after harvest, asparagus and rhubarb
GALLIPOLIS
Two tension Service ana the
Welcome and Introduction of growth can be sttmulated by a mtrogen ferhllzer s1de dressmg , young ladtes who would like Junwr and Semor Sheep
Special Guests - Ruth
watermg and mulchmg Good growth after harvest penod 1s to be Galha County's Sheep Cmmmttees
Butler, Prestdenl, West essential to mamtammg plant productiVIty m subsequent Prmcess are DJana Haffclt,
HOWARD STRODE, of
V1rgm1a Hereford Breeders' seasons
daughter of Mr and Mrs Chesterhill, w1ll be dipping
Association and Co-owner of
- If the rhubarb petioles are thm It may mdJCate the need for Jerry Haffelt, and D1ana sheep In southern Ohlo again
Butler Hereford Farm; 12-1 fert1hzer or tha t the clump needs to be d1v1ded Thts IS best Holley, daughter of Mr and this summer Mr Strode
- InvocatiOn , Dr. William done after dormancy m the fall or early sprmg
Mrs Alfred Holley.
plans to be 1n Gallla County
Benf1eld,
Pastor,
Ftrst
A problem occurrmg m rhubarb last summer was crown
The Sheep Prmcess Con· on July 2 and 3, 1976 (Friday
Presbyterian Church, rot 'This diSease 1s sllmulated by hot, hum1d weather and there test will be held Monday and Saturctay)
Charlestoo, W Va. Lunch, 1s no control available To help keep this problem to a evenmg at 7 p m at the'
Local sheep producers
Courtesy Butler Hereford mmunum set rhubarb plants m a well-dramed sot! 10 a sunny Galli a County Junior w1shmg to have their sheep
Farm and Wes t Vtrg1ma loeahon Good Blf cJrculatlon around plants IS also Fairgrounds Charlie Boyles dipped need to call the Gallla
Hereford Breeders' advantageous
of the Ohio Agricultural County Extension Office (446AssociatiOn, Speech Contest,
When growmg tomatoes on stakes "suckers" (aux1llary Research and Development 4612, extension 32) no Iuter
and Queen's Contest
stems between the mam stem and the leaf) should be removed Center at Caldwell who will than Monday, June 28 (the
Also , J.J 45 - Feature when 1 to Jl;, mches long If suckers are not removed, the be the 1976 Calha County charges for dipping are 50
Speaker, Charles Boyles, plants w11l develop mto large bushes nulhfymg the benefits of Junior Fa1r sheep JUdge, wtll cents per head and drenching
Supenntendent, Oh1o the stakmg (ear her and cleaner frwt on a managed plant I
speak on what he w1ll be charges range from 30 cents
Uruvers1ty Research Farm,
Frutts - Summer top black raspberry plants by remoVIng lookmg for m JUdgmg sheep to 50 cents dependmg upon
Caldwell; 1 45-2 45 - Barn- the top 3 to 4 mches of the growmg (new) shoots when they are at the fair
the material used yard Olymptca, 2 45-3 10 24 mches high. Do not summer top red raspbemes
The program wtll conclude mm1mum stop IS 20 head of
Awards Ceremony and 3 15,
As cherry and blueberry fruit matures 11 needs protectiOn w1th a potluck supper and sheep and-or $10 for dipping
West
V~rgmla
Jumor from birds Nylon or other strong nettmg IS an effecllve folks
are asked to bring a - fanns havmg less than 2tl
Hereford Assn. busmess , method of preventmg fruit loss
covered dish, baked beans, head of sheep should consider
meetmg.
Tomato Blossom Drop and Pepper Fruit Set - The hot , cole salw, potato salad, havmg them dipped with a
On th1s b1centenmal year dry, wmdy weather m many areas IS starting to affect some of desse t or meat d1sh (lamb neighbor's flock)
1
one may des1re to make a two the vegetables. Tomato blossoms are begmmng to drop and prefen
ed, but bnng
I WANT TO EXTEND a
day event by attendmg the peppers are not settmg frwt. Radishes will be hot and p1thy whateve~· you want) Also
spec1al
mv•tatlon to all beef
Field Day and the Arts and and cabbage may have a strong taste. Even cucumbers may bnngyourowntableserv1ce
cattle producers and other
Crafts Fatr at Cedar Lake, be bitter To help allevtate the problem, water all plants
This commg Monday
mterested In beef
R1pley, W Va. The Arts and thoroughly and then apply a 3 to 4 mch mulch. A general rule evenmg's achvitles offers an farmers
cattle to a twilight Beef CatCraft Fatr Will be held from of thumb - plants should recetve one mch of water per week, excellent opportumty for tle-Forage Farm meeting at
July I to 5. Motels m the consequently, tf it doesn't ram, WATER For back-up local sheep
producers, thL' Marton Caldwell fann on
Galhpohs area are Best mformatwn note pages 17 and 23 of Oh10 Bulletm 287, Home frtends and guests to Thursday
evemng, July 8,
Western, Wtlltam Ann Motel, Vegetable Garderung , wh1ch 1s available at your County get
together,
Jalk 5 30p m.
Galbpobs, Tel 614-44&amp;-3373, Extension Off1ce
about the1r sheep, and
We held a smular event at
The Blue Founlam Motel,
Aphids on Rampage - almost every plant IS bemg just have an all-around good the Caldwell farm last year
Galbpobs, Tel 614-44fMl241; attacked by aphtds this year and tt seems they are slanding tune 'l'he pubhc s mvlted and those who attended will
Hobday Inn, Tel 614-44(M)(I9(), three-{jeep on some plants. For unmed1ate control you m1ght This event s bemg1conducted
have an tdea of the kind of ac1
Ctrcle's Motel, Tel 614-446- try some of the contact sprays such as D1azmon, MalathiOn, by the Gallla
County Ex· tivity this will be. Emphasis
2501
mcotme-sulfate, pyrethrms and rotenone - the latter two are
of the program will be direc, - - - - - - - - - - -.......~~~~~~'"1 plant derivallves that g1ve qUick knock-down but are not long - ted toward telling and
lastmg The systemtcs (best used on ornamentals rather than showmg farmers what kind
vegetables) such as Cygon (dlmethoate), and Metz-Systox, of things have been hap&amp;
wtll g1ve a longer lastmg effect as they are absorbed by the pemng on the Ferlt-bull
Ia;~
•H .u
plants and are mgested by the 1nsect Read the label carefully demonstration project and
as some Insecticides are restncted for spectfic plants and the results t()o()ate Another
~~:U:~te~oo a wattmg peflod if the materJBI are used on maJor phase of the program
will be directed toward exSlugs are sttll a problem m many gardens Metaldehyde 1s plammg the procedure for
the ooly material, accordmg to Bug Dope, that can be used making no-till forage
around, not·on, vegetable crops This IS available as Bug-geta, seedmgs and merits of the
Snarol or Slug1t Remember, READ THE LABEL
year-round grazmg program.
Farmers wtll have the opportumty to see eqwpment
demonstrated such as the notill ZIP seeders, manufactured by John Deere as well
as the one avatlable to loan
GALUPOLIS - No one was Galhpolls
from the local Soil ConA h11-sk1p accident oc· se~vahon Service. Round
~~~~~ m four traffic acmvestlgated here curred m the 200 Block of balers will also be on exhibtt
Frtday by c1ty pollee.
Third Ave. where a ptckup
One new attraction to this
Pauline E. Moyer, 55, Rt I, truck owned by Tom's Shell year's twilight meeting at the
South Pomt, was charged Serv1ce was struck by an Caldwell fann will be the
w1th failure to y1eld the nght unkno"n vehicle
SALE
beef pnncess contest which
SALE
of way followmg an acctdent
Abackmg mtshap occurred w11l be held m conjunction
I rn p.m. Fnday on Second at 9 43 p m on the parkmg w1th the farm meeting
nn.. .,S REDUC_
ED FOR QUICK SALE atAve.
and State St.
lot at Bob Evans Dnve In
The evenmg's actlvtties
Offtcers satd the Moyer car where an auto driven by w11l end w1th a light meal, so
FLOOR SAMPLES· DEMONSTRATORS pulled
from a parking space lnana Sue Koehler, 18, Crown plan now to attend
LIMITED QUANTITIES
mto the s1de of an auto Ctly, struck a vehicle owned
The event IS a joint effort
ope1ated by Jud1th A Saun- by Paul W. Wnght of. sponsored by the Gallla
PRICED-WHILE THEY Lllolll ders, 32, Eureka Star Rt Wellston
County Extension Serv1ce,
The•·e was mmordamage
Another backmg accident the ExtenSion Beef ComA backmg acctdent oc- occurred at Fourth Ave and rruttee, the Gallw County Soil
curred on the G&amp;J Auto Locust St where a vehicle Water
Conservation
Parts parkmg lot where an driven by Kathy E. Keenan, DIStriCt and the Soil Con·
CHESHIRE, OHIO
auto driven by Kenneth R 30, Rt 2, GaiUpolis, struck a servatlclnService with assist·
Out 3 blocks on S. R. 554
Bloomer, 38. Rt 3, Gallipolis, parked vehicle owned by Em· ance from local machinery
Open 7 Days A Week
struck a parked car owned by mett Bostic of Gallipolis
and !ann supply dealers
Velva Langhorne, 33, Rt. 2,

County agent's
corner

Agriculture and

our community

WHEEL HORSE

2 gallon Drum
of Top QualityExtaior
White Latex House RUnt

..""

1975
9 FT. MODELS AT
lAST YEAR'S PRICES

SAVE '486.00

lnternationar
990 Mower-Conditioner
Get m and out of the field fast, and do
a better JOb to boot W1th the 990 you
get clean cuttmg, and complete cond1t1onmg, whether your crop Is heavy
and tall, or thm and short No rnachine you can buy o1fers you more 1n
the way of quality construction , or
ablilty to handle all of your needs
o ChOICe of 7 or 9-foot widths
• IH balanced head kn1fe dnve runs
smooth, even at h1gh speeds

76

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

• Big 44 - mch reel runs at lower RPM
to save leaves. treat crop gentler
• Simple, d1rect power tra1n requ1res
less power, less mamtenance
• Controlled flotat ion platform cuts
clean over uneven ground
• Cond1t1oner rolls adjust automatlcally to crop volume for uniform
drymg , open hydraulically
• Windrow placer attachment lets
you pa1r wmdrows c lose-together

See us for details. Easy finance plans available.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

~·

992-2176

I

POMEROY

garden tractors

INVENTORY CLEAN•UP

Damage minor in 4 accidents

tJ

LITTLE'S TRADING CENTER

•J

II

�,.

26 - The SWiday Times- Senbnel, :SWJday, .lune 27, 1976

27 - The SWiday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 27, 1976

Manure retards erosion

AMONG those takmg part m a tractor dnvmg toniest
on the Hannan Trace football held m Merce1 v1lle 1ccentlv
were, left to right, Junmy Saunders, R1ck Cla ry Denms

McGuire, Ray Rupe, Bruce Waugh and Eddie Whitt (on
11actor 1 On far light IS Fred Dee!, County 4-H agent

Hannan Trace students complete tractor study
MER C ERVI LLE
Twenty-three Hannan Trace
F r e.s hm en Vocallona l
Agriculture students recently
completed a study of safe
operatiOn of farm tractors
The course, conducted w1th
the assistance of Calha
County 4-H agent Fred Dee!,
cons1sls of the study of
matenals and successful!}
pa ss1ng a wnlten test

provided by the Oh1o 4-H
Tra c tor · Cc 1 tlf !Ccl lton
progra m f ~u ha zar Uous
occupations m agllc1llltu c
Students follo11ed the I'~ A
motto, " Lemn - 13y- Dmn g"
when they were 1equu cd to
operate a traet01 and two
wheeled unplementllu ough a
pre-&lt;letenmned cou1sc !'hey
were graded on sa fety ,md
U1e sk1lls exlubltcd while

opt•r ,, t111g the equipment equipment m agriculture as
mclud1ng the nwNber of golf outlmed m Part 1500 l'ltle 29
l~db chslodged from the tops Chapter Xlll - Child labor
of 1 ·' med,tl condUit used as r eg ul at ion s
Th ese
LOU I sr mm kers
1egulatwns govern the
Si udents s ut cessfully oper at1on of parlicularly
complet mg lh1&gt; Wllllen and haza1 do us equipm ent by
practa.: al cxanunat10n w11l mdividuals below the age of
I CCClV('
a
certlflcdtC 16
exempting them from federal
.Judges for the event at
reguldttons gover mn g the Hannan Tra ce were Fred
ope r Lit JOn of f1azardous Dee!, county HI agent ,
DaVId Carter, Voca t10 nal
AgnC\Jiture Instructor and
Paul Dillon, high schoo l
principal
Stude nts success fully
completmg the program
mcluded, Mark Fulks, Ronrue
Grl lenwa lel , Earl Myers ,
.le11y
Ph11l1ps,
Tony
Saunders James Taylor,
J imm y Sa unders, Eddre
Due1k Will pr ubab ly even
Campbell, R1ck Cla ry,
h;we a chat t m two 'Mth red
Denms McGUir e , Paul
and blue lines all pomtmg Shaffer, Allen Waugh , fi:ddie
tow" ' d the carpel to sho11
Wlutt, Steve Mooney , Rick
how ba d of! the slate IS
L&lt;ine and Lyndon MontBut the mass of figures gomery
may be misleading Already
Spectal thanks were g1ven
they " ' e suspect cons1denng to Bob Clary and Alven
the sou1 ce
Mooney for the use of their
rhe h~ures Ill e designed to tr cu.: tors for the course
back up the gove1nor's statements, lhdt ts wh) lhe.y &lt;:~re
IJemg t'UJnplled
I he effo1 t w1ll be a public
1cl" twns gesture to Ia) a muc h for pubhc relations bas1s f01 the governors he leaves that to lesser
campa ign on behalf of bureaucrats
Rep ub lica n le g tslatlve
But Rhodes does nnnd
candidates m the fall
when what he says 1s not
1 he governm doesn't care accepted as gospel

Rhodes' defense hurrying
up with proof of claims
8) J R Kimmms
COLUMBUS I UP!)
Never let 1t be smd that the
state bureaucracy can't be
pushed mto h1gh gea r when
the white heal ol newspaper
headlines st1rs the pubhc
eonsctence on the credtbthty
of pubhc offlctals
An oft en nemes1s of Gov
James A Rhodes - the
sla te's news med1a - went to

Ohio politics
the mattress last week to lrv
and pm down the basis for the
governo1 's oft-repeated
observatiOn that mdustry was
fleemg the state
Leadmg the charge was the
Scnp ps-Howard group of
three urban dally newspapers
m a report on tts exhaustive
survey of maJor chambers of
commerce
Rhodes' maJOr public
statements m the last year
have constanll) harped on
the theme that Oh1o mduslry
was fleemg U1e slate m
record nwnbers, and that
leg1slattve mact1on on taxbreak measures was why
Rhodes or his surrogates
have never g1ven detatled
factual data for the1r assess
ment
"We aren't ready to release
thatmformatwn yet, " ts the
standard answer when
Rhodes or his spokesman are
pushed to wall when asked
' How do you know '"
After 1ls survey, ScnppsHoward dec1ded that Ohio
industry IS as healthy as ever
and
unemployment 1s
droppmg m Oh1o fa ster than
the natiOna l average
The Scrtpps-Howard report
threw the Department 'of
Economtc and Commumty
Development mto a tizzy
The agency's ch1ef staltsticlan , Burt Herron , was in
the process of compilmg

JUSllft callon f01 Hhodcs
"armngs when the story
broke
It's a hell of p1 oblem
trymg to cunfrnn this data,
sa rd one Development
We
Depar tme nt offi cial
were 'AOrkmg on 1t dt a
regular pace
"Now all of a snclrlen w1th
th1s arllcle a lot of othe1
questions aJ c speechng up the
process, ' he added
Several top-level Development Department staffe1s
were
closeted
11 1th
de par tmenl dlfeclOI J ames
Duerk Fnday m01mng to t1y
and fi gure a way out of the
gover no r s sldt ts ltcdl
dilemna
They dectded th" t they
couldn l get enough m&lt;llCilal
together quickly cnougl1 to
pla n a real Holl ywood
product ton tha t 1'11 d.ty
Anyway , Il WOUlei be I CpOilecl
In Saturda y news papel s
wh1ch ,u en t tha l well1 ed d
Now, He110n's rep01 t hds
been 1ead1ed fo1 release thi s
week It wrll be announce&lt;:! at
a nc11 s conference hosted b)
Duerk
In response to the Scn ppsHoward repor'\, Duerk sa1d
his office had "pretty potent"
statistics to back up Rhodes'
clauns
Furthermore, Duerk Sd id
he was "puzzled why the
cha mber s of comm c1ce
11uuld pamt as 1·osy a piClltre
of the slate 's economy as they
did lo the Scnpps-HOIIHI"d
reporters
The new report IS e'pccled
to cover a 12~month econonll l'
penod from Decembe( 1974
through November 1975
Later this week, Ducrk "ill
release hts new report w1lh "
fro11n It wtll Include a ma ss
of data, possibly mcludmg a
cou nty-by-co unty li st of
mdusln es which have
decided to go to g1 ee ne1
co1porate pastures

At Last, A Fly
Control Block
For Lactating
Dairy Cows

PASADENA, ('AJ IIf

1 UPf )

'The bra1ded pattern IS
conclusive evidence of the
Mars but g1 eat liVers, as b1g reahty of water erosiOn,"
as th e MISSISSipp i, once satd Harold Masursky of the
flo11 ed swiftly across 1ts now US Geologica l Survey,
V1kmg apparently demohshmg for
dnd
surf ace,
sL: Ientists say
good the argument that the
lire latest p1ctm es from powerful Maritan wmds may
Viking I, orbilmg the red have formed the channels
pl,mel befm e a July 4th
'Wmd-eroded forms
touchdown to seek evidence differ markedly The swirling
of life, appear to have ended eff~ct as 11 goes between the
any last doubts that flow1n g ISlands can only be attributed
w"tc1 carved channels m the to water ' '
planets sm face - a sta rtlmg
The piclUI es also appeared
1eve!,, liOn when the first to dec1de the bnef sc1enttflc
Signs 11ere discovered by an debate betwee n the "munea rlier spa cecraft
dalors," who felt the nver
The) show channels that beds were formed by water
sc1en usts a1 e convmccd 11ere flowmg m large quanllt1es,
formed by lar~e nvers
and the ' tncklers, " who
If you saw this on Earth, argued that small amounts of
vou 'd say yuu 11 ere lookmg at water may have eroded the
lhe co nfluen ce of the channels over hundreds of
M1sstss1pp1 and Ohio r1vers,'' m1lllons of years, the way the
smd sCJenlist G Gentry Lee Grand Canyon 11as formed on
Fr~day pmnlmg to a mosa1c
Earth
of photos beamed back to
The groovmg and scourmg
earth from Viking
around boulders u, the rtI he MISSISSippi IS about 'erbeds could only be the
1110 miles w1de at 1ts JW!clure accomplished by ' turbulent,
w1th the Ohto
high veloc1ty wa1er flow,"
The photos show cha nnels Masursky sa1d, not by slow
tw1stmg, meandermg and JOI· erosion
mng, dotted by what were
Masursky and Michael
once Islands
Carr, leader of the orb1ter
- I hc1c may be no canals on

stable flies

·

directors m the country,"
Harbold sa1d, "and we are
de ligh ted that he has agreed
to make his talents and
e~ per~ences ava 1la bl e to
JOurnalism studen ts at

BOS JOHNSON

Marshall Umvers1ty We
believe our J ournalism
Department 1s one of the
finest anywhere and the
add 1t10n of Mr Johnson to the
faculty wtll gtve 11 even
greater strength and depth "
Leammg sa1d the appomtment of Johnson "brmgs to a
clunax the faculty recrmtment plans which the
Journalism faculty has g1ven
pnonty to durmg the past
three years His many years
of quality profess iOnal
expenence wtll be of
tremendous value toward our
goal of prov1dmg students
w1th an exceptionally strong
program tn broadcast
JOurnalism The broadcast
sequence now w11l have the
leadership needed for tt to be
on par w1th the other
sequences m th e department"
In additiOn (o broadcast
JOurnalism, the department
off ers programs m new s
edttonal, adverlismg, public
relatiOns a nd JOUrnalism
education, as well as a
master 's degree program
'' Addmg Bos Johnson to our
faculty . along wtth last year's
appomtment of veteran
newsman Henry Schulte as
the Frank E Gannett
D1stmgu1shed Professor of
Journalism, makes
co nsiderably stronger an
already-excellent faculty,"
Leammg sa1d
" Qutte
frankly , there are few
JOUrnalism schools m the
country which Will be able to
match the strength of

Marshall's
JOUrnali sm
faculty "
Johnson, who has been
WSAZ.'f'Uiews director smce
1960, heads a news staff of 18,
plus 30 correspondents
throughout a four-state
regiOn H1s news department
has recet ved numerous
honors, mcludmg the most
recent Associated Press
Nat10nal
Broadca s t
Enterprise Award
J ohnson 1s past preSident of
the mternahonal RadiOTeleVIsiOn News Dtrectors
AsSOCiation He also served
SIX years as treasurer and
member of the RTNDA
Board of Dll'ectors Durmg
his presidency m 1974 he
arranged and pres1ded over
Pres1dent Ri chard M
N1xon's last nationally •
teleVIsed news conference m
Houston , Texas
A native of Charleston , he
receiVed h1s A B degree
Vtrg1ma
from
West
Uruvers1ty m 1949 and earned
his M.A m Commumcatton
Arts from Marshall m 1969
He has served as a part-tune
IIIStruetor at Marshall at
vartous times smce 1970 and
was a vtsttmg professor of
Journalism at WVU m 1975.
He Jomed WSAt m 1952 as a
news and staff annoWJcer.
Before his appointment as
director of a combined radioteleVIsion news department
m 1960, he was radio news
ed1tor and program director.
Pnor to commg to
Huntmgton, he worked m
program and news capaC! lies

By BERNARD BRENNEn
UPI Fann Editor
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - A
dairy farm spokesman says
he sees good prospects for
goverrunent actiOn to cut off
1mports of a mtlk pr6duct
th at has been edgmg
Amencan nonfat dry mtlk out
of some food markets.
The case mvolves unpor ts
of case m, a dairy mdustry
byproduct, wh1ch currently
can enter the Uruted States
Without restnct1on because
unports 111 the past had
h1stoncally been used m
mdustnal products ra th er
than foods

unagmg team , agreed some
of the fea tures appeared to be
dikes.
"ThiSopens up a whole new
ball game," Masursky sa1d,
but would not specul ate
further ,

Patrtck
B
Healy,
Secretary of the NatiOnal
Mdk Producers Federation,
says Ame n can dairymen
made no fuss about the
1mports of 1110 mtlhon pounds
or more m most past years
because they did not compete
m food markets, and because
the unports were pr1ced far
below the cost of making
casem from nonfat dry rmlk
powder 111 thts country
But da trymen are pushmg
hard for action agamst the
unporls now, Healy says, for
two reasons.
The unported casem, once
used exclusively for products
hke pamts, glues and paper,
has already begun to edge
mto food uses such as bmders
for sausage and bases for
arllftclal coffee creamers
And more sJgmhcantly, the
Food and Drug
Admmtstratton recently
announced a proposal, under
which casem products could
be subslltuted for up to half
the nonfat dry mtlk used m

quote them directly, but he
emphastzed he was "most encouraged" by their response
Healy added he had also
outlmed the problem to a
number of members of Congress, "and we have pledges
of strong support there tf we
need tt "
The dairymen's plea for a
ban on unports of easem for
food use is based on
proVISions of a law dating
back to the 1930's The law
permits Import controls on
farm products m cases where
unports could threaten tbe
effecllve operatton of a
domes l1c prtce support
program
In this ease, Healy noted ,
unlimited casem 1mports
could take markets away
from non fa l dry milk, forcmg
the Agrtculture Department
to a~rb the excess mtlk
powder m Its pnce support
program
Gove rnment
spendmg m the support pro-

Staley's patented molasses salt formu la helps assure you

SweethH RABON Block
We Have It!
•
Stat..y

... the land you need now!

r equtreme nt s

Clyde B. Walker . Mgr
r 11

s

l'dtP• , , tVJ. lJ.I

set

by

the

ron 1n order to take
When the nght piece of farm land becomes Commlss
the test are as foll ows
Ill Age 21 lo 35
ava tl able, the expans 1on-mJnded farmer acts
l?l Re s 1dent of Gn tlla
often wtth the help of a long-term low cost ( Oll ll ly
111 H tgh sc hool graduat e at
Federal Land Bank Loan
fq utva lent
2?8 Upper Riv er Road
P 0 BO K207 , Galhpohs
Phone 446 0203

lr~rJ

Gallipo liS Ohio on July 13
1976 al 7 oo PM The C1v1 l
Se r v1ce CommiSS IOn will
cert1fy the passmg persons to
the Cdy Manager and Ch1et ot
Po llee to be cons 1dered for
employment by lhe C11y The

141 We•gh t and he1ght
proporiiOnd!P
An .'tpplical1on for takmg the
tes l should be filled ou t tn th e
Ctty Manager s off1 ce pr~or to
li\kmg the test The applicants
lh ett a re cer tlfieq for
const deriltron for: em plO ym ent
wdl need a comp lete physr c(11
bt&gt; for e employment
Junp II ht ly

'I

J

Wtth news of the FDA
propos al that co uld g1ve
fore1gn casem producers a
signifiCant share of a market
now filled by Amertca n
farmers, the rmlk producers
fe derallon disclosed last
week 11 has asked the
AgriCIJllure Department kl
move agamst the imports
Federation offiCials urged
the
department
to
recommend lo Prest dent
Ford that he set a zero unport
quota level on ail Imports of
casem and casem mixtures
for use 111 hwnan or anunal
food
The proposal would not
lun1t unports for traditional
lndustlla l uses
Healy, the federation secretary, sa1d m an mterVIew
today he has discussed the
Situation with two h1gh-level
gove,nm ent officials, who
wtll be mvolved in acllon on
lh • problem He declmed to

PURINA
FIELD

Complete and balanced nutrition
Backed by
years of Punna research
Taste dogs really like
Economtcaily priced
For your dog's health, feed Purma dog
foods and see your veterinanan regularly .

so

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.
Vme Street

Gallipolis, Ohio

Business Services

I

room house ve ry well kepi 3 ROOMY 7 yr old one ~ t ory wood
lrorne, two bedrm home
bedrm!&gt; moder n k1tchen wall
THE fomtly of' Pauline Holliday
located between Coolv11le and
lo wall carpel H W lloors full
wishes •to thtlt.. all of lhe.r
I uppers Ploms One ocre lol
basement new gas fu rnace
many krnd friends and ne1hbors
sma ll lot to mow tdeol for
Full or
for the1r assiStance and expres
lwo lcor garogt
City water
ga s ·~====-=======--:-:=:::;;:;~:;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;:;;:~:-=-:;-;:==========
older couple or small fom1ly m
hea
hardwood
floors
-- - Parttime
stan of sympathy tn thtur trme
good ne1ghborhood I ll
corpold llvong room n•c• ......
FREE ESTIMATES
REGU~ATIONS
of sorrow The Fom1ly
Pomeroy Call lor oppotntment
MANUFACTURING
$21000
Phone
(614l
667
3519
Blown
The Publisher reser-ves
Phone 992 3097
the nght to ed1t or re ject 'lfle Fcm1ltes of Leu-. (Frank)
wsulahon SeiVItes
PIECE WORK
Spenter wrsh to e)Cpres the.r
any ads deemed ob
42 one fourth acres of real estate
rll'llnCittl Av1IIJble
Columbus company w111
thanks to lhe Syracuse and
l ~ctronal The publrsher
Co nlrnuous one p1 ecc
more or less s1 tuot ed \1tl Sec
B
lown
mlo Walls I Attics
wrl l not be lf_espons1ble for
fully lram a few reliable
Roctne Emergency !iatuods Or
gutters
We
ha1'9
•L
01
do
1
1
lion 26 Froctron 31 m Rut land
more than one lncorr'1! ct
STORM
Vtllaneowc and staff of
people to asstst 1n out of
yourself
Spectal
p1tces
to
Townsh1p
Me1gs
Count~
Ohio
rnsert !on
Htth PIICes lo1 SCIIp autos,
Veterans
Memortol
H
osp1tal
plant
production
to
make
WINDOWS
&amp; DOORS
For
further
mformat
1on
COiliOct
butld
ers
1 RATES
Ewmg
s
Funeral
Home
the
Nor
small urethane parts on
REPLACEMENT
Berncftd V Fult z Pomeroy No
molo!l and other me!J[s.
For Want Ad Service
ns Trto Rev Otler and Rev
contract sma ll garage s1ze
t1o na l Bonk
Buddrng
WINOOWI
S cents pt'r word one
Phone
949-2814
Phone
992-2228 Monday lhru
Hart Mr Riley P1gotl the churInsert ron
MAIN
shop area and a means to
Pome,oy Oh1 o Teleph one
AlUMINUM
ches fr tends netghbors ond
9
AM
to
5
PM
Mmtmum Charge $1 OOe
9'12 2186
deltver product to our loca l
Fnday 8 3, Satu1dar 8-12.
SIOING SOFFITT
POME
14 cen ts per word three
anyone who helped m anyway
warehouse
requ~red
No
94
992
7320
evenmgs
NEED
A
JOB&gt;
Buy
th
,
Gun!RS
~WNINGS
HOMESITE$
for
sole
1
acre
and
consecut rve msert1ons
126 I IIIU
dunng the 1llness and death at• expenence necessary, If
buS in~SS Will pay off Ill
26 cents per word St)(
up M1ddleport near Rutl and
our
mo
ther
and
grcndmother
you
can
prove
you
are
consecut ive lnsert1ons
less tha n 2 years A man
LARR~"~J.~~DER
Coll 992 7481
Moy God rtchly bless each and&gt;
25 Per Cent D1scount on
dependable and Willing to
and
wde
operat10n
6 11 16
everyone
one
The
Chrldren
Ph 9923993 11 0 I mo
pard ads and ads peid
work A m1mmum cash
Ground bulldrng s an d
wlttlln 10 d!.ys
stock WE HAVE30THER
requ1re -' en t ot $5950
CARD OF THANKS
BUSINESS P LACES FOR
necessary 6 mon th refund
&amp; OBITUARY
WilKINSON'S
SALE
If mt erested dr op rn
program
lnterv1ews
can
CODNER'S CAMPERS
miS,2 1 ~0um for
BO word
CompleleSmall [n&amp;
RACI NE Ftre Deportment w1ll
lhe oft lce
be arranged for those with
RAINBOW RIDGE
Rep11r
hove a gun shoot Saturday at
Each add1tlonal word 3
A NICE PLACE TO LIVE
ava1 lable space and
(8Jsh•n ~ ttl)
cents
: INCOaPOIIAT!:D
6 30 p m at thelr new butldtng
2
lurn
rshed
apartmen
ts
Ch11n
f1nances who are ready to
BLIND ADS
4 12 Pilch
off Bas han Rood
to
rent
Loc ~te on Mulberry
LONG
BOTTOM
Silwsstart 1mm ed1a le ly by
•
AddtiiDr:lal 25c Charge
No
172
100
a
Dexter
Ave
Large
bnck
wlfh
low
24'-$17
28
Lown
per Advertlsemt'nt
ANNUAL Ftsh Fry Me1gs County
ca lling Col lect
area large barn farm
Upkeep
on
exler~or
26'-$18
72
OFFICE HOURS
F1sh ond Game Assn Sundoy
MowenSALES &amp; RENTAl
614•252-4967
vacant , has good bldg sdes
Sac" liCe a l $20 ODD
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m
June 27 1976 at Rutland
28'-$20
16
TtllelsAsk
For
Mr
Green
l11wtl Trat1trs
YOUR DREAM WILL
Dallv, a 30 a m to 12 oo
on qu1et cou ntry road.
Amertcon leg ron Form
Rtdmg
Noon Satur da y
COME TRUE WITH THIS
$2(),000 00
•
Southeastern Ohio
Rutland Ohro Gun sJ,ool slorls
T~actors
Phone today 992 2156
HOME - 1 story lr ame,
No 17 3- Large com bldg
OPEN
otl p m
HEW lawn BoJ mowers Pronee1, Me
recenlly reno va ted
3
Truss Rafter Co.
on 3 6 a, su 1table lor
Days and evenln~Po uup! Tues and
lovely bedrooms, 1 '1 baths
NOTICES
NOTICE As of Juno 23 1976 ihe
Cullou&amp;h ch1m saws Bolen's Mower5
801 21 A
wholesale or retail produce
Wed O! Dr co ntacting R Codr~er
ATTN ! !
Ches ler Volunteer Frre Dept
fu ll ba sement wdh 2 ca r
Rullond Oh10 15775
Meuy liii!IS MTO Mowers
busmes s, larg e cooler
3
bedroom
house
2
baths
owner
garage Th1S home rs fM
ALL HOUSEWIVES
w•ll no lo nger haul water
Ph (6141742 2409
198LOCU1l Sl
room dock area 2 offi ces,
all alec I acre Mtddleport
above
th e average $18 500
We Delt~e1
All Yard Sales, Rummage, WOULD the lady who rece1ved a
S
211
mo
Middleport Oh10 992 3092
~aso l 1 n e pump, 300 It road
close to Rutland Phone 992
ABOUT 6 MIL ES WEST
61 3 76 1ntu
Porch an~ Be semen! Por ch
whrte long holl'ed killen at the
7481
IronIa
ge
138
500
00
and Basement Sale5, t'fc
OF THE COURTHOU SE
must be pltrd In ad\lance
home of Freddre Houdeshell
No .111 - Pomeroy , 3 BR
Modern 1 lloor plan Stee l
Frrdoy afternoon pleose con SMALL form
10% down
Ge t YQUrs rn early by
home, partral base , alum
1 for sale
d
s1d1ng full basement 3
stop p1ng by our office at
tacl Mrss Houdeshell at 992
owner monee Monroe Coun
Sldtng on qu1et street,
BR , bath ult a mod ern
The Dally Senttnel, 111
2520or992 3345
ty W Vo Phot}! (304) 772
$6 000 00
ktl che n rang e &amp; ref
Court
St or ,wrrttng
BoK r'iiiiii~iiii .-r-:3102or (304)772 3'.227
Enormous wor~k shop
729
, Pomeroy
Ohro 45769
~--. . ,., No 167 - Busllless bldg ,
wrlh your rem 1ttan ce
-.oUSE for sole m Ra.me Ohro
with lrv mg quart ers, good
carport about J ac res
L__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J
St Rl 338 lUSt outside town a for grocery
or ~st aurant
Racme, Ohio
PR ICED RI GHT
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
rooms both porch pot1o e~ty
MANY
OTHER
Racrn c. Oh ro
bu s on marn 5f m town
+Tax
PERIENCE? FRIENOL y TOY
water gos forced o1r furnace
PROPERTIES
TO
ASSORTED RUBBER
$20.000 00
Ne ed new root or Qld
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
good lot Call owner onytrme
W1th any 54 oo purchase
CHOOSE FROM - YOUR
re pa1r e&lt;J ? Hou SI.' roof
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
W1lhamMoynord 949 2613
804 W Main
and fhts ad Good th rough
CHOIC E - BRAND NEW
barn shmgl es, butld up
BACK CARPETING
For Paulrne the golden gates
6 30 76
patnt1ng clcc trrca l work
OR OLD ER CLELAND
REC~UiliNG IS EASY BECAUSE OLDER remodeled 3 bedroom
Pomeroy
992 2298
were opened
gutters &amp; downspout s
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
home all electnc on corne1 lot
REALTY - THE HOME
Aller Hours Call
furnaces, water hea ters.
A gentle votce smd Come
MENT NO COLLECTING OR
1n Pomeroy $12 500 Ph one
OF REAL ESTATE IN
Square Yard Insta lled
water solf n,ers , rn s tC~ll c d &amp;
And w lh a farewell unspoken
992-7133
DELIVERING CAll COllECTTO
992 501 1
MEI GS COUNTY LIST
rcpa.red,
Seweg e
She qut el ty entered hpme
David Parsons, Owner
CAROL DAY 5181189 8395 OR
·.----WITH US &amp; YOU ARE IN
Middleport, OhiO
Cr. II us at 949 2981
CONTACT
.
•
W&amp;JTE FRIENDly HOME PAR COUNTRY l&lt;ltmlond wo1h seclud
HENRY E CLELAND
or
94111103
949 28 14
992.6167
lots Paul ey . ..
ed woods water and good oc
She bode no one o lost TitS 20 RAILROAD AVE
.
BROKER
3 28 I mo
6 1 76 1 month
6-7 I mo
ALBANY N y 12205
cess m Monroe County W Va
Branch Manager
farewell
$1 000 down coli (3041 772
She bode goodbye to none
HOUSEWIVES open the doo' to
3102or (3041772 3227
Her hear1 hod ceased to beat
,
.extra
earntng~
Jam
the
sue
W
And ere her dear fomtly knew tl
•
cessful women who ore mak
HY RENT? Buy a new home w11h
payments some or lower than
1ng good money 10 therr spore
EXPERIENCED
Alum inurn Siding,
-she was gone
rent 3 bedrooms den 2 baths
trme
No
expe11enc
e
Poulrne Mtnervo Strong Holl1day
necessary no deltvery,_.,o col
carpel plus o!l the extras o
Roofing, GuHers,
was born tn Col umbra Twp on
CAPTAIN EASY
Radiator·~;:;~
lecltng , no cosh Investment
housewrfe would wont Shown
March 15 1909 and qu te lty
C
all
now
an~et extra early
by
app01n
lment
742
2328
Painting and Repair
Servlc&amp;
passed owoy m Hol zer MediCal
ben.tts Phone 949 2803 or 149 acre form two houses barns
Cen ter on June 22 , 1976 at the
shed several bu1ld rng s ctty
The Complete
oge oJ,-67 yrs 3 mo and 7 949 2786 Al so booktng par
water mtn e ,obll nght sd ttmber
days Slle was lhe daughtes of _t:::•e::•~~~-- ~---Re
mode
ling Service
100 acres It11a e goo posture
Earl Horman and Oorcos Ogdm BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE
For
Your
Home
Unusual o;rportunrty to bltcome
land 8 mtles north ol Pomeroy
Slrong On Dec 12 1928 she
off
Route
33
Hemlock
Grove
was untted tn momoge to John
ossac1ote wtlh a leodmg lost
growrng consumer fmance
Oh1o Phone 992 5014 even mgs
T Holl1day Surv1vmQ are her
company dorng bustness 1• (19) _ alter 5 P m
husband John a son John Ray·
Rutland
742 2328
SMITH NELSON
~and
Hollt doy ond wi fe
slates We tram you tn all HOUSE for sole by owner large
All Wo rk Guaranteed
Marilyn of San 01ego Cal f a
pha ses of work 1nvolvmg con
l1vmg room Iorge krtchen w1lh
Free Estimates
MOTORS, INC.
daug hter• Normo Gall Wrlcox
sumer crecht You w11l contact
butlt 1n brrch cabinets 3
~23 2 mo
lh 9!22174
1011111111
and husband Kenneth of M1d
our customers both m ond out
bedrooms both hardwood
dleport Ohto a son Robert 0
srde the off1ce and leorn to
floors wolllo woll carpet rn all
Holl1day ond wtfe A... anel of
work w1th merc hants In o
room s Carport uldtty room
Dexter Ohto e1ght (8) grand
fr•endly woy you w1ll help pee
house fu!ly tnsulated storm
Junk Battenes $1 Z5
chtldren and three (3) great
pie wtth lhe tr per sonal
doors wrndows extra Iorge lol
grondch 1ldren Also sur111vmg
SWIMMING
fmances Starling salary wtlt
located ouHade Pomeroy Corp
Molo1 Cast Clean
ore two sisters- Mrs Alma
meet the needs of you and your
on Unton Avenue Phone 992
$3 50 Per Hund1ed
El1za Sm1th of langsville Ohto
fomdy now In o few short
7874 for appointment
- POOLS
and Mrs Edrth Ellen Talbert of
years you con earn well above 2 story fram e house 2 bedrooms
AliM llld btlow .-11 pool .lb IO&lt;
Copper 35c
Sun Ctty Amana o brother
overage Our company pro
lito ~tt-rou...n m1n
posstbly 3, ltv1ng room both
Car Bodies
Rufus Ogdtn Strong of Son
motes from w1thln Prev1ous
k1lchen
and
utrhty
room
newly
AU
pool lllppli" ..,Nob~, too
Diego Colt! A coustn ( lemma
e.per.ence not necessary lnScrap Iron
carpeted porl1al bosemenl and
Vole of Cprdtngton Oh1o A ttrotrve and amb1lion pay off
carport 2 stones out bu1ld ng
brother Howord Earl Strong
Must be a h1gh school
forced 01r nalurol gas heat
preceded her tn death She Was
graduate hove cor ond wrlltng
Nliblt Summit Rd ,
lots of storage spoce $17 500
a faLthful member of long ston
to relocate 1mmedrotely E)C
II RLI 24
Pomeroy, Oh1o
Phone
992
7360
alter
5
p
m
MlddltP«&lt;
dtng rn the Old Oeder Church
cephonol employee benef1ts
Phone992 5468
For more than 50y rs she was a
Phone Mr Ohl 1nger at 3 bedroom house wall to wall
PHOIU!!l 5724
loyal member of Slor Grange
I 614 992 2111
CAPITAl
carpel olumtnum stdtng new
6131 mo
6 l l 1111
No 778 executing the dut res of
FINANCE SERVICES 300 W 2nd
cobrnets some furn11ure new
secretory for many years Also
St , Pomeroy , Oh1o AN EQUAL
bathroom 1ust bu tIt pa t1o and
she was a member of the Com
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
wolk One half acre lot 650
muntly Frtendly Netghbors
Osborne St Pomeroy Phone
•
Club Pouhne was a devoted
m 5688
Business Services
wrfe and mother o good
Business Services
nEnghbor and always ready
wiLL l rtm or cui Iroes and shrub BRAD FORD Austronoer Com
and w1l lrng to help those m
bery phone 949 2545 or 742
need In the church school
plete Servrce Phone 949 2487
3lb7
and comm umty ocl tvlt tes she
or q.4q 1000 RociM Ohio Crllt
Vrrgrl B Sr , Reaoror
was always most generous
Bradford
SPRAY PAINTING At TROMM
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.
Ourrng the many months of suf
CONSTRUCTI
ON
Pll
ONE
742
Et WOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Phone 992 -3311
fermg from her heart condl·
2328
Swoepors toostors irons all
tron and frequent hosp1talizo
TUPPERS PLAINS - 4
small appliance&amp; lawn mower
Whtle you tram, we pay
VERMEE
R
BALER
SALES
AND
SER
t1ons she wos reworded many
bedrooms, l1f2 ceram1c tile
ne)Ct lo Slale Hlghwoy Gc;u;oge
trmes by the tender core g1ven $360 permo from f~rst day
J'TTI , ORPHAN ANNIE
VICE Me1gs Alhens County
baths, n1ce fru1twood
011 Route 7 Phone (614) 995
We cover food, quarters
Balers lrorn $3995 up Merrrll
her by the members of her
k1lchen , oil F A furna ce. 2
3825
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-PEEK · A·BOO
Chose (6141698302 1
famtly In the passsrng of our and health care, too Over
ca r garage All on 1 acre
loved one , we have lost o true 70 frelds to choose from and
$22,500
~----~
~~~~~I EXPERIENCED house poin tor REMODELING Plumbtng heattng
frtend, but precrous memorres all guarantees tn wntmg
ond all types of gene ral repair
2 YRS. OLD - Modern 3
l'lffi~f:!i~y l: !
Phone Arthur Muner 742
wrll abtde and forever remmn
Work gunrontaed 20 years a•
bedroom
home
with
ntce
before you enhst For no
1 1~~~=:4
2180
perrence Phone 992 2409
k1tchen wh1ch mclude s
IN Memory of Gary Wolfe who obltgat1on tnformat1on see
QUILDIN G and remodelmg ex
range
glass
oven
ave~.
passed owoy June 27 1963
your Navy Recrutter at :
caval1on concrete work elec O&amp;D TIJ.EE Tnmmmg 20 years ew
D1n1ng, central a1r heat,
penance In sured fre e
Sa&amp;,. mtssed by fam rly, Wtfe
221 Columbus Road
tncol work plumbtng rough
fam1ly
room
w1th
firepla
ce,
eslimales Call 992 2304 or
Paultne and Chns, Gory,
Athens, Oh1o
and
hn1shed
carpentry
and
and 2 car garage '" dry
(6141698 7257 Albany
Peggy Jamte Dorrell Carman
roolu1g Phone 992 7481
basement $38,500
Ph 593-3566
and Jenntfer
' II
SEWING MACHINE Repairs ser
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
I I'
frame house, bath, nat gas
v1ce all makes 9&lt;12 2284 Tho
Fabr ic Shop
Pomeroy
F A furnace, basem ent, st.
Authorr ted Stnger Soles and
drs &amp; Windows Only $8500.
Service We sharpen Scrssors
PORTLAND - 9 room
Lost and Found
house, mod ern kJtchen,
UL ABNER
EXCAVATING doler loader and
new 2 car garage and level
LOST horse chestnut more
backhoe work dump truck s
NO
STOPPIN'
HER
"-SHE'LL
SAvt;
&gt;ORE
lot 90 x90
Phone 992 5382
ond
lo boys for htre will haul
NEW LISTING - Large 2
PA~ J31JT
SEES HER, HELL
fill dirt top so1l limes tone ond
LosT
Tuesday
nrgh1
patr
of
H~gh t
fam1ly home, t2 rms 5 up
WISH HE: WAS IJAI IJ " grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef
blu e proscrtpf lon glosse s
w1th bath, 7 down with
lers
day phone 992 7089
posstbly
los
t
on
Pomeroy
pork
ba th Nat gas heat, c1ty
nlght phone 992 3525 or 992
ng lot Reward tf found Coli
water. and n1ce lot Only
5232
949 2314
$19,000
(On Vacation)
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
WE HAVE A HOME FOR
Sonttotion 992 3954 or 992
EVERYONE COME IN
One-Week Give Away
2428
AND HAVE A LOOK
(New) 3 Pc. Ktng Size Box Spring and
wiLL do roolrng, construction
Mattress
Now only $50.00
plumbtng and heaflng No 1ob
(New) Wooden Rocker
Now only 529.95
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 2348
(New) 2 Pc. L. R. Suite, Early
EXCAVATING doter backhoe
American
$199 .95
ond d1tcher Charles R Hot
(New) Love Seat
Now only $125.00
f1eld 8C~ck Hoe Service
(New) 4 &amp; 5 Drawer Chests
$29.95 &amp; 539.95
Rutland Oh1o Phone 7-42 2008
On any riding mower.
GREG S CB SAlES located at Er
.
wins Gu lf Service Mid
Elec, -Ciean Range, gold, double oven Only
dlepo rt Ohio Phone 992
$239.95
2438
Only $149.95
Bedroom Suite, (twin beds)
Approw: 38 custom ers
SE PTIC Systems rnstolled by
Now only
Garden Tiller, good condihon
Earn eJ~:tra spendtng
lrcensed msloller Shepord
On any !tiler.
Contractors Phone 7~2 - 2409
money and wm valuable
$75.00
pmes Ca II The Oarly
CARPENTER lloonrlg cerl lng
Wheel barrow
Now On I y $3.00
Senhnel at n2 -2156 today .
paneling Phone 992 2759
'74 Honda 360, only 2,000 miles, many
extras. windshield, wing guards, cargo
carrter, AM- FM radio, tape player and 4
On 21" self propelled
speakert, cigarette lighter, chrome all
man more
Now $1195.
mower w-grass bag .
6

GUTTER SERVICE

HALLS
SALVAGE

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&amp;Heating

JUNE SPECIAL

6 CANS OF RC

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

'1.00

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DONEUI'S PIZZA

AL TROMM CONST.

RIDERS SALVAGE

D. Bumgardner

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Help Wanted
GUARANTEED
INCOME

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TEAFORD

SNAPPER SALE
'100 OFF

'N
FARM
DOG FOOD

Real Estate for Sale

Strout,
Realty

wtth WKOY m Bluefield and
WAJR m Morgantown.
Johnson IS the author of a
number of articles printed m
professiOnal publications and
wrote the foreword to a textbook, "How to Shoot Newsfilm " He has been a speaker
or panehst at numerous
broadcast news convenllons
and has been a guest lecturer
at OhiO and Washmgton State
Uruversttles as well as at
Marshall and WVU He
served on the Accredttlng
Comnuttee for Educatton m
Journaltsm.
He IS a member of the
Ma rs hall Journalism
Advisory Committee and
S1gma Delta Ch1 JOurnaltsm
SOCiety and has served as
president of the West Vll'gima
Assoctated
Pre ss
.Broadcasters
Assocrnhon
Johnson also has been
active m a number of oivtc
and charttable orgamzahons
and was president of the
Cabeli-Wayne Untied
Communtty
Serv1ces
orgamza lion. He has served
as an elder of the Sess1on of
the F1rst Presbytenan
Church in Huntington and
was named "Outstandmg
Young Man of the Year" by
tlle Huntington Jaycees m
1959
He IS married to the former
Dorothy Rensch of Upper
Darby, Pa , and they are the
parents of four daughters and
a son . Dr. Dorothy Johnson 1s
chall'l11lln of the Marshall
Speech Department

gram could be boosted by
more than $100 mlllton a year
if officials fail to act agatnsl
casem Imports, the farm
spokesman srud
Healy estunated tha t teecream makers last year used
nearly 390 rmllion pounds of
nonfat milk solids produced
by Amertcan farmers If the
FDA proposal Ill allo\\ use of
casem for up to 50 per cent of
the milk solids content of 1ce
cream 1s adopted, th1s could
take away a market for 195
mtlllon pounds of nonfat m1lk
and depress pnces for
farmers, he satd.
Looking further mto the
future, Healy warned that
technolo g ist s
almost
certainly Will find ways to
substitute an increasmg
percentage of casem m tee
cream Eventually, he sa1d
the potential loss of nonfat
mdk markets mvolved could
reach 400 million pounds or
more

START EARNING
TOMORROW

WANT AOS
INFORMATION
OEAOLINES
s P M
Dey Before
Publlcatron
..
Cenct'lll!lllons ,
correc
tlons accepted f~rst day of
publlcaHon

Dairymen hopeful of protective move

Bulldmg 518 Second Avenue

·

that your cattle Will voluntauly consume the right amount of
R,a bo~ oral larv1c1de plus additional h1ghly a\lallable
dJcalc1um phosphate

c~,.,..~ c~,..,•

HUNTINGTON
C
Bos"orth ( Bos) Joh nso n,
news director of WSAZ TV m
HWJtmglon, has accepted an
offer to become an associa te
professor of JOurnahsm at
Marsha ll fl nlversJly
The
appomtmen t
1s
effechve at the begmnmg of
the Fall Term m late August,
accordmg to Dr George J
Harbold, dean of the College
of Arts and Scwnces, who
made the announcement
along with Dr De ryl R
Leammg, chairman of the
JournaiiSlll Deparunent
" Bos Johnson IS recog mzed
as one of the most
outsta nding telev &lt;swn news

PUBLIC NOTIC
The Gal l1poi1 S C1vll Serv1ce
Commt SS IOn annou es that
th ey wtll be glvtng Polrce
OHt cer tests at th e C1t y

Rabon prevents t he development of the most common

"' sw

da~ry ~ws, spread at a rate of some 12 wns per acre, provea
more than three times as effective as y, mch of liqUid manure
Y1elds of alfalfa forage and corn on the manured plots
were substantially higher than yields on check plots m the
second year of the experunent In tbe f~rst year, however, the
check plots had the best yields Low y1elds on the fertilized
plots m the first year were attributed to dll'ecl contact of the
manure wtlh the foliage Th1s contact caused moderate to
severe burnmg of the vegetation.
However m the second year, manure was applied between
the corn rows On the allalla plots manure was applied one
week after cuttmg of hay when the plants were largely devoid
of foliage
Highest corn y1elds came from plots m wh1ch solid manure
had been cultivated Into the soil immediately after application
Th1s practice helped reduce, by some 55 per cent, the los.s of
ammoma to the atmosphere through volatiliZation Another
phenomenon was noted which has not yet been explamed
Some two to three weeks after planting corn, manure was
culttvated mto the sml and the plots remamed weed free,
makmg further culhvations unnecessary
Further studies may help determme the best application
tunes and rates of appllcallon for maxunum benefit If weed
control through the use of anunal wastes ca n be confirmed as a
practical measure, energy can be saved through reduced
ttllage operations, and poSSible pollution from the use of
herbicides can be durumshed.

lCe cream

flies around your da1ry barn - horn fltes fa ce fltes house and

r;.. l f'i'JI.,M/

Real Estate for Sale

Johnson joins Marshall staff

Mars' signs show
•
rivers once ran

. Statav's new Sweatltx ~&gt; Rabon 'i Block• offers you two
b1g advantages 1 It has EPA approval as a fly con t ro l agent
for lactatmg da1ry cows 2 It is t11e only fly co ntrol agent that
can now be fed to the complete ~a1ry herd

~ 11/lbi), J

BY BOYD A RUTH
District Conservaliorust
POMEROY - Manure spread on gro)&lt;lmg crops helped
prevent erosiOn, conserved sml mo1sture and mcreased yields
m ex perunents conducted by agncullural engmeers of the
USDA, Agrtcultural Research Serv1ce tARS )
The fmdmgs may help farmers make the most economic
use of manure at a ltme when the cost of farm labor has led to
automation o! livestock producllon tn close confmement Also
many livestock producers wtth large operations have hmtted
acreage on which -&lt;lo spread manure
The ARS North Central Sml Conservation Research Center
measured !he effects of applymg manure on alfalfa withm two
weeks after the f1rst cuttmg and on oats and ·corn w1thm 30
day s after plantmg Erosion was reduced substantially on
plots whtch had seven per cent slopes The hrst 60 days after
plantmg ISa lime wher eros1on IS likely to be most severe
In a one-year expertment on oats, 1t was found that a %
mch deep apphcatwn of llqutd manure from beef cattle
reduced SOil loss by 91 percent durmg the critical per1od for
erosiOn and m a two-year experunent on corn, the manure
reduced SOil loss by 52 percent
IAqwd manure reduced r un-Qff from oats, conservmg
more than one mch of water m the SO il for use by tbe crop later
m the growmg season Solid manure on growmg corn
conserved a Similar amount of motslure
In reducmg soil loss from corn plots, solid manure from

For Fast 'Results Use Th~. Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

'75 OFF

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CARRIER WANTED
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HELP WANTED

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Sale ltmited to items
now in stock.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio

Country Cousins Cookshoppe will be
accepting applications June 28-29-30
at their new location at 698 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio from 9:00 to
5:00 .
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26 - The SWiday Times- Senbnel, :SWJday, .lune 27, 1976

27 - The SWiday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, June 27, 1976

Manure retards erosion

AMONG those takmg part m a tractor dnvmg toniest
on the Hannan Trace football held m Merce1 v1lle 1ccentlv
were, left to right, Junmy Saunders, R1ck Cla ry Denms

McGuire, Ray Rupe, Bruce Waugh and Eddie Whitt (on
11actor 1 On far light IS Fred Dee!, County 4-H agent

Hannan Trace students complete tractor study
MER C ERVI LLE
Twenty-three Hannan Trace
F r e.s hm en Vocallona l
Agriculture students recently
completed a study of safe
operatiOn of farm tractors
The course, conducted w1th
the assistance of Calha
County 4-H agent Fred Dee!,
cons1sls of the study of
matenals and successful!}
pa ss1ng a wnlten test

provided by the Oh1o 4-H
Tra c tor · Cc 1 tlf !Ccl lton
progra m f ~u ha zar Uous
occupations m agllc1llltu c
Students follo11ed the I'~ A
motto, " Lemn - 13y- Dmn g"
when they were 1equu cd to
operate a traet01 and two
wheeled unplementllu ough a
pre-&lt;letenmned cou1sc !'hey
were graded on sa fety ,md
U1e sk1lls exlubltcd while

opt•r ,, t111g the equipment equipment m agriculture as
mclud1ng the nwNber of golf outlmed m Part 1500 l'ltle 29
l~db chslodged from the tops Chapter Xlll - Child labor
of 1 ·' med,tl condUit used as r eg ul at ion s
Th ese
LOU I sr mm kers
1egulatwns govern the
Si udents s ut cessfully oper at1on of parlicularly
complet mg lh1&gt; Wllllen and haza1 do us equipm ent by
practa.: al cxanunat10n w11l mdividuals below the age of
I CCClV('
a
certlflcdtC 16
exempting them from federal
.Judges for the event at
reguldttons gover mn g the Hannan Tra ce were Fred
ope r Lit JOn of f1azardous Dee!, county HI agent ,
DaVId Carter, Voca t10 nal
AgnC\Jiture Instructor and
Paul Dillon, high schoo l
principal
Stude nts success fully
completmg the program
mcluded, Mark Fulks, Ronrue
Grl lenwa lel , Earl Myers ,
.le11y
Ph11l1ps,
Tony
Saunders James Taylor,
J imm y Sa unders, Eddre
Due1k Will pr ubab ly even
Campbell, R1ck Cla ry,
h;we a chat t m two 'Mth red
Denms McGUir e , Paul
and blue lines all pomtmg Shaffer, Allen Waugh , fi:ddie
tow" ' d the carpel to sho11
Wlutt, Steve Mooney , Rick
how ba d of! the slate IS
L&lt;ine and Lyndon MontBut the mass of figures gomery
may be misleading Already
Spectal thanks were g1ven
they " ' e suspect cons1denng to Bob Clary and Alven
the sou1 ce
Mooney for the use of their
rhe h~ures Ill e designed to tr cu.: tors for the course
back up the gove1nor's statements, lhdt ts wh) lhe.y &lt;:~re
IJemg t'UJnplled
I he effo1 t w1ll be a public
1cl" twns gesture to Ia) a muc h for pubhc relations bas1s f01 the governors he leaves that to lesser
campa ign on behalf of bureaucrats
Rep ub lica n le g tslatlve
But Rhodes does nnnd
candidates m the fall
when what he says 1s not
1 he governm doesn't care accepted as gospel

Rhodes' defense hurrying
up with proof of claims
8) J R Kimmms
COLUMBUS I UP!)
Never let 1t be smd that the
state bureaucracy can't be
pushed mto h1gh gea r when
the white heal ol newspaper
headlines st1rs the pubhc
eonsctence on the credtbthty
of pubhc offlctals
An oft en nemes1s of Gov
James A Rhodes - the
sla te's news med1a - went to

Ohio politics
the mattress last week to lrv
and pm down the basis for the
governo1 's oft-repeated
observatiOn that mdustry was
fleemg the state
Leadmg the charge was the
Scnp ps-Howard group of
three urban dally newspapers
m a report on tts exhaustive
survey of maJor chambers of
commerce
Rhodes' maJOr public
statements m the last year
have constanll) harped on
the theme that Oh1o mduslry
was fleemg U1e slate m
record nwnbers, and that
leg1slattve mact1on on taxbreak measures was why
Rhodes or his surrogates
have never g1ven detatled
factual data for the1r assess
ment
"We aren't ready to release
thatmformatwn yet, " ts the
standard answer when
Rhodes or his spokesman are
pushed to wall when asked
' How do you know '"
After 1ls survey, ScnppsHoward dec1ded that Ohio
industry IS as healthy as ever
and
unemployment 1s
droppmg m Oh1o fa ster than
the natiOna l average
The Scrtpps-Howard report
threw the Department 'of
Economtc and Commumty
Development mto a tizzy
The agency's ch1ef staltsticlan , Burt Herron , was in
the process of compilmg

JUSllft callon f01 Hhodcs
"armngs when the story
broke
It's a hell of p1 oblem
trymg to cunfrnn this data,
sa rd one Development
We
Depar tme nt offi cial
were 'AOrkmg on 1t dt a
regular pace
"Now all of a snclrlen w1th
th1s arllcle a lot of othe1
questions aJ c speechng up the
process, ' he added
Several top-level Development Department staffe1s
were
closeted
11 1th
de par tmenl dlfeclOI J ames
Duerk Fnday m01mng to t1y
and fi gure a way out of the
gover no r s sldt ts ltcdl
dilemna
They dectded th" t they
couldn l get enough m&lt;llCilal
together quickly cnougl1 to
pla n a real Holl ywood
product ton tha t 1'11 d.ty
Anyway , Il WOUlei be I CpOilecl
In Saturda y news papel s
wh1ch ,u en t tha l well1 ed d
Now, He110n's rep01 t hds
been 1ead1ed fo1 release thi s
week It wrll be announce&lt;:! at
a nc11 s conference hosted b)
Duerk
In response to the Scn ppsHoward repor'\, Duerk sa1d
his office had "pretty potent"
statistics to back up Rhodes'
clauns
Furthermore, Duerk Sd id
he was "puzzled why the
cha mber s of comm c1ce
11uuld pamt as 1·osy a piClltre
of the slate 's economy as they
did lo the Scnpps-HOIIHI"d
reporters
The new report IS e'pccled
to cover a 12~month econonll l'
penod from Decembe( 1974
through November 1975
Later this week, Ducrk "ill
release hts new report w1lh "
fro11n It wtll Include a ma ss
of data, possibly mcludmg a
cou nty-by-co unty li st of
mdusln es which have
decided to go to g1 ee ne1
co1porate pastures

At Last, A Fly
Control Block
For Lactating
Dairy Cows

PASADENA, ('AJ IIf

1 UPf )

'The bra1ded pattern IS
conclusive evidence of the
Mars but g1 eat liVers, as b1g reahty of water erosiOn,"
as th e MISSISSipp i, once satd Harold Masursky of the
flo11 ed swiftly across 1ts now US Geologica l Survey,
V1kmg apparently demohshmg for
dnd
surf ace,
sL: Ientists say
good the argument that the
lire latest p1ctm es from powerful Maritan wmds may
Viking I, orbilmg the red have formed the channels
pl,mel befm e a July 4th
'Wmd-eroded forms
touchdown to seek evidence differ markedly The swirling
of life, appear to have ended eff~ct as 11 goes between the
any last doubts that flow1n g ISlands can only be attributed
w"tc1 carved channels m the to water ' '
planets sm face - a sta rtlmg
The piclUI es also appeared
1eve!,, liOn when the first to dec1de the bnef sc1enttflc
Signs 11ere discovered by an debate betwee n the "munea rlier spa cecraft
dalors," who felt the nver
The) show channels that beds were formed by water
sc1en usts a1 e convmccd 11ere flowmg m large quanllt1es,
formed by lar~e nvers
and the ' tncklers, " who
If you saw this on Earth, argued that small amounts of
vou 'd say yuu 11 ere lookmg at water may have eroded the
lhe co nfluen ce of the channels over hundreds of
M1sstss1pp1 and Ohio r1vers,'' m1lllons of years, the way the
smd sCJenlist G Gentry Lee Grand Canyon 11as formed on
Fr~day pmnlmg to a mosa1c
Earth
of photos beamed back to
The groovmg and scourmg
earth from Viking
around boulders u, the rtI he MISSISSippi IS about 'erbeds could only be the
1110 miles w1de at 1ts JW!clure accomplished by ' turbulent,
w1th the Ohto
high veloc1ty wa1er flow,"
The photos show cha nnels Masursky sa1d, not by slow
tw1stmg, meandermg and JOI· erosion
mng, dotted by what were
Masursky and Michael
once Islands
Carr, leader of the orb1ter
- I hc1c may be no canals on

stable flies

·

directors m the country,"
Harbold sa1d, "and we are
de ligh ted that he has agreed
to make his talents and
e~ per~ences ava 1la bl e to
JOurnalism studen ts at

BOS JOHNSON

Marshall Umvers1ty We
believe our J ournalism
Department 1s one of the
finest anywhere and the
add 1t10n of Mr Johnson to the
faculty wtll gtve 11 even
greater strength and depth "
Leammg sa1d the appomtment of Johnson "brmgs to a
clunax the faculty recrmtment plans which the
Journalism faculty has g1ven
pnonty to durmg the past
three years His many years
of quality profess iOnal
expenence wtll be of
tremendous value toward our
goal of prov1dmg students
w1th an exceptionally strong
program tn broadcast
JOurnalism The broadcast
sequence now w11l have the
leadership needed for tt to be
on par w1th the other
sequences m th e department"
In additiOn (o broadcast
JOurnalism, the department
off ers programs m new s
edttonal, adverlismg, public
relatiOns a nd JOUrnalism
education, as well as a
master 's degree program
'' Addmg Bos Johnson to our
faculty . along wtth last year's
appomtment of veteran
newsman Henry Schulte as
the Frank E Gannett
D1stmgu1shed Professor of
Journalism, makes
co nsiderably stronger an
already-excellent faculty,"
Leammg sa1d
" Qutte
frankly , there are few
JOUrnalism schools m the
country which Will be able to
match the strength of

Marshall's
JOUrnali sm
faculty "
Johnson, who has been
WSAZ.'f'Uiews director smce
1960, heads a news staff of 18,
plus 30 correspondents
throughout a four-state
regiOn H1s news department
has recet ved numerous
honors, mcludmg the most
recent Associated Press
Nat10nal
Broadca s t
Enterprise Award
J ohnson 1s past preSident of
the mternahonal RadiOTeleVIsiOn News Dtrectors
AsSOCiation He also served
SIX years as treasurer and
member of the RTNDA
Board of Dll'ectors Durmg
his presidency m 1974 he
arranged and pres1ded over
Pres1dent Ri chard M
N1xon's last nationally •
teleVIsed news conference m
Houston , Texas
A native of Charleston , he
receiVed h1s A B degree
Vtrg1ma
from
West
Uruvers1ty m 1949 and earned
his M.A m Commumcatton
Arts from Marshall m 1969
He has served as a part-tune
IIIStruetor at Marshall at
vartous times smce 1970 and
was a vtsttmg professor of
Journalism at WVU m 1975.
He Jomed WSAt m 1952 as a
news and staff annoWJcer.
Before his appointment as
director of a combined radioteleVIsion news department
m 1960, he was radio news
ed1tor and program director.
Pnor to commg to
Huntmgton, he worked m
program and news capaC! lies

By BERNARD BRENNEn
UPI Fann Editor
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - A
dairy farm spokesman says
he sees good prospects for
goverrunent actiOn to cut off
1mports of a mtlk pr6duct
th at has been edgmg
Amencan nonfat dry mtlk out
of some food markets.
The case mvolves unpor ts
of case m, a dairy mdustry
byproduct, wh1ch currently
can enter the Uruted States
Without restnct1on because
unports 111 the past had
h1stoncally been used m
mdustnal products ra th er
than foods

unagmg team , agreed some
of the fea tures appeared to be
dikes.
"ThiSopens up a whole new
ball game," Masursky sa1d,
but would not specul ate
further ,

Patrtck
B
Healy,
Secretary of the NatiOnal
Mdk Producers Federation,
says Ame n can dairymen
made no fuss about the
1mports of 1110 mtlhon pounds
or more m most past years
because they did not compete
m food markets, and because
the unports were pr1ced far
below the cost of making
casem from nonfat dry rmlk
powder 111 thts country
But da trymen are pushmg
hard for action agamst the
unporls now, Healy says, for
two reasons.
The unported casem, once
used exclusively for products
hke pamts, glues and paper,
has already begun to edge
mto food uses such as bmders
for sausage and bases for
arllftclal coffee creamers
And more sJgmhcantly, the
Food and Drug
Admmtstratton recently
announced a proposal, under
which casem products could
be subslltuted for up to half
the nonfat dry mtlk used m

quote them directly, but he
emphastzed he was "most encouraged" by their response
Healy added he had also
outlmed the problem to a
number of members of Congress, "and we have pledges
of strong support there tf we
need tt "
The dairymen's plea for a
ban on unports of easem for
food use is based on
proVISions of a law dating
back to the 1930's The law
permits Import controls on
farm products m cases where
unports could threaten tbe
effecllve operatton of a
domes l1c prtce support
program
In this ease, Healy noted ,
unlimited casem 1mports
could take markets away
from non fa l dry milk, forcmg
the Agrtculture Department
to a~rb the excess mtlk
powder m Its pnce support
program
Gove rnment
spendmg m the support pro-

Staley's patented molasses salt formu la helps assure you

SweethH RABON Block
We Have It!
•
Stat..y

... the land you need now!

r equtreme nt s

Clyde B. Walker . Mgr
r 11

s

l'dtP• , , tVJ. lJ.I

set

by

the

ron 1n order to take
When the nght piece of farm land becomes Commlss
the test are as foll ows
Ill Age 21 lo 35
ava tl able, the expans 1on-mJnded farmer acts
l?l Re s 1dent of Gn tlla
often wtth the help of a long-term low cost ( Oll ll ly
111 H tgh sc hool graduat e at
Federal Land Bank Loan
fq utva lent
2?8 Upper Riv er Road
P 0 BO K207 , Galhpohs
Phone 446 0203

lr~rJ

Gallipo liS Ohio on July 13
1976 al 7 oo PM The C1v1 l
Se r v1ce CommiSS IOn will
cert1fy the passmg persons to
the Cdy Manager and Ch1et ot
Po llee to be cons 1dered for
employment by lhe C11y The

141 We•gh t and he1ght
proporiiOnd!P
An .'tpplical1on for takmg the
tes l should be filled ou t tn th e
Ctty Manager s off1 ce pr~or to
li\kmg the test The applicants
lh ett a re cer tlfieq for
const deriltron for: em plO ym ent
wdl need a comp lete physr c(11
bt&gt; for e employment
Junp II ht ly

'I

J

Wtth news of the FDA
propos al that co uld g1ve
fore1gn casem producers a
signifiCant share of a market
now filled by Amertca n
farmers, the rmlk producers
fe derallon disclosed last
week 11 has asked the
AgriCIJllure Department kl
move agamst the imports
Federation offiCials urged
the
department
to
recommend lo Prest dent
Ford that he set a zero unport
quota level on ail Imports of
casem and casem mixtures
for use 111 hwnan or anunal
food
The proposal would not
lun1t unports for traditional
lndustlla l uses
Healy, the federation secretary, sa1d m an mterVIew
today he has discussed the
Situation with two h1gh-level
gove,nm ent officials, who
wtll be mvolved in acllon on
lh • problem He declmed to

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years of Punna research
Taste dogs really like
Economtcaily priced
For your dog's health, feed Purma dog
foods and see your veterinanan regularly .

so

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.
Vme Street

Gallipolis, Ohio

Business Services

I

room house ve ry well kepi 3 ROOMY 7 yr old one ~ t ory wood
lrorne, two bedrm home
bedrm!&gt; moder n k1tchen wall
THE fomtly of' Pauline Holliday
located between Coolv11le and
lo wall carpel H W lloors full
wishes •to thtlt.. all of lhe.r
I uppers Ploms One ocre lol
basement new gas fu rnace
many krnd friends and ne1hbors
sma ll lot to mow tdeol for
Full or
for the1r assiStance and expres
lwo lcor garogt
City water
ga s ·~====-=======--:-:=:::;;:;~:;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;:;;:~:-=-:;-;:==========
older couple or small fom1ly m
hea
hardwood
floors
-- - Parttime
stan of sympathy tn thtur trme
good ne1ghborhood I ll
corpold llvong room n•c• ......
FREE ESTIMATES
REGU~ATIONS
of sorrow The Fom1ly
Pomeroy Call lor oppotntment
MANUFACTURING
$21000
Phone
(614l
667
3519
Blown
The Publisher reser-ves
Phone 992 3097
the nght to ed1t or re ject 'lfle Fcm1ltes of Leu-. (Frank)
wsulahon SeiVItes
PIECE WORK
Spenter wrsh to e)Cpres the.r
any ads deemed ob
42 one fourth acres of real estate
rll'llnCittl Av1IIJble
Columbus company w111
thanks to lhe Syracuse and
l ~ctronal The publrsher
Co nlrnuous one p1 ecc
more or less s1 tuot ed \1tl Sec
B
lown
mlo Walls I Attics
wrl l not be lf_espons1ble for
fully lram a few reliable
Roctne Emergency !iatuods Or
gutters
We
ha1'9
•L
01
do
1
1
lion 26 Froctron 31 m Rut land
more than one lncorr'1! ct
STORM
Vtllaneowc and staff of
people to asstst 1n out of
yourself
Spectal
p1tces
to
Townsh1p
Me1gs
Count~
Ohio
rnsert !on
Htth PIICes lo1 SCIIp autos,
Veterans
Memortol
H
osp1tal
plant
production
to
make
WINDOWS
&amp; DOORS
For
further
mformat
1on
COiliOct
butld
ers
1 RATES
Ewmg
s
Funeral
Home
the
Nor
small urethane parts on
REPLACEMENT
Berncftd V Fult z Pomeroy No
molo!l and other me!J[s.
For Want Ad Service
ns Trto Rev Otler and Rev
contract sma ll garage s1ze
t1o na l Bonk
Buddrng
WINOOWI
S cents pt'r word one
Phone
949-2814
Phone
992-2228 Monday lhru
Hart Mr Riley P1gotl the churInsert ron
MAIN
shop area and a means to
Pome,oy Oh1 o Teleph one
AlUMINUM
ches fr tends netghbors ond
9
AM
to
5
PM
Mmtmum Charge $1 OOe
9'12 2186
deltver product to our loca l
Fnday 8 3, Satu1dar 8-12.
SIOING SOFFITT
POME
14 cen ts per word three
anyone who helped m anyway
warehouse
requ~red
No
94
992
7320
evenmgs
NEED
A
JOB&gt;
Buy
th
,
Gun!RS
~WNINGS
HOMESITE$
for
sole
1
acre
and
consecut rve msert1ons
126 I IIIU
dunng the 1llness and death at• expenence necessary, If
buS in~SS Will pay off Ill
26 cents per word St)(
up M1ddleport near Rutl and
our
mo
ther
and
grcndmother
you
can
prove
you
are
consecut ive lnsert1ons
less tha n 2 years A man
LARR~"~J.~~DER
Coll 992 7481
Moy God rtchly bless each and&gt;
25 Per Cent D1scount on
dependable and Willing to
and
wde
operat10n
6 11 16
everyone
one
The
Chrldren
Ph 9923993 11 0 I mo
pard ads and ads peid
work A m1mmum cash
Ground bulldrng s an d
wlttlln 10 d!.ys
stock WE HAVE30THER
requ1re -' en t ot $5950
CARD OF THANKS
BUSINESS P LACES FOR
necessary 6 mon th refund
&amp; OBITUARY
WilKINSON'S
SALE
If mt erested dr op rn
program
lnterv1ews
can
CODNER'S CAMPERS
miS,2 1 ~0um for
BO word
CompleleSmall [n&amp;
RACI NE Ftre Deportment w1ll
lhe oft lce
be arranged for those with
RAINBOW RIDGE
Rep11r
hove a gun shoot Saturday at
Each add1tlonal word 3
A NICE PLACE TO LIVE
ava1 lable space and
(8Jsh•n ~ ttl)
cents
: INCOaPOIIAT!:D
6 30 p m at thelr new butldtng
2
lurn
rshed
apartmen
ts
Ch11n
f1nances who are ready to
BLIND ADS
4 12 Pilch
off Bas han Rood
to
rent
Loc ~te on Mulberry
LONG
BOTTOM
Silwsstart 1mm ed1a le ly by
•
AddtiiDr:lal 25c Charge
No
172
100
a
Dexter
Ave
Large
bnck
wlfh
low
24'-$17
28
Lown
per Advertlsemt'nt
ANNUAL Ftsh Fry Me1gs County
ca lling Col lect
area large barn farm
Upkeep
on
exler~or
26'-$18
72
OFFICE HOURS
F1sh ond Game Assn Sundoy
MowenSALES &amp; RENTAl
614•252-4967
vacant , has good bldg sdes
Sac" liCe a l $20 ODD
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m
June 27 1976 at Rutland
28'-$20
16
TtllelsAsk
For
Mr
Green
l11wtl Trat1trs
YOUR DREAM WILL
Dallv, a 30 a m to 12 oo
on qu1et cou ntry road.
Amertcon leg ron Form
Rtdmg
Noon Satur da y
COME TRUE WITH THIS
$2(),000 00
•
Southeastern Ohio
Rutland Ohro Gun sJ,ool slorls
T~actors
Phone today 992 2156
HOME - 1 story lr ame,
No 17 3- Large com bldg
OPEN
otl p m
HEW lawn BoJ mowers Pronee1, Me
recenlly reno va ted
3
Truss Rafter Co.
on 3 6 a, su 1table lor
Days and evenln~Po uup! Tues and
lovely bedrooms, 1 '1 baths
NOTICES
NOTICE As of Juno 23 1976 ihe
Cullou&amp;h ch1m saws Bolen's Mower5
801 21 A
wholesale or retail produce
Wed O! Dr co ntacting R Codr~er
ATTN ! !
Ches ler Volunteer Frre Dept
fu ll ba sement wdh 2 ca r
Rullond Oh10 15775
Meuy liii!IS MTO Mowers
busmes s, larg e cooler
3
bedroom
house
2
baths
owner
garage Th1S home rs fM
ALL HOUSEWIVES
w•ll no lo nger haul water
Ph (6141742 2409
198LOCU1l Sl
room dock area 2 offi ces,
all alec I acre Mtddleport
above
th e average $18 500
We Delt~e1
All Yard Sales, Rummage, WOULD the lady who rece1ved a
S
211
mo
Middleport Oh10 992 3092
~aso l 1 n e pump, 300 It road
close to Rutland Phone 992
ABOUT 6 MIL ES WEST
61 3 76 1ntu
Porch an~ Be semen! Por ch
whrte long holl'ed killen at the
7481
IronIa
ge
138
500
00
and Basement Sale5, t'fc
OF THE COURTHOU SE
must be pltrd In ad\lance
home of Freddre Houdeshell
No .111 - Pomeroy , 3 BR
Modern 1 lloor plan Stee l
Frrdoy afternoon pleose con SMALL form
10% down
Ge t YQUrs rn early by
home, partral base , alum
1 for sale
d
s1d1ng full basement 3
stop p1ng by our office at
tacl Mrss Houdeshell at 992
owner monee Monroe Coun
Sldtng on qu1et street,
BR , bath ult a mod ern
The Dally Senttnel, 111
2520or992 3345
ty W Vo Phot}! (304) 772
$6 000 00
ktl che n rang e &amp; ref
Court
St or ,wrrttng
BoK r'iiiiii~iiii .-r-:3102or (304)772 3'.227
Enormous wor~k shop
729
, Pomeroy
Ohro 45769
~--. . ,., No 167 - Busllless bldg ,
wrlh your rem 1ttan ce
-.oUSE for sole m Ra.me Ohro
with lrv mg quart ers, good
carport about J ac res
L__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J
St Rl 338 lUSt outside town a for grocery
or ~st aurant
Racme, Ohio
PR ICED RI GHT
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
rooms both porch pot1o e~ty
MANY
OTHER
Racrn c. Oh ro
bu s on marn 5f m town
+Tax
PERIENCE? FRIENOL y TOY
water gos forced o1r furnace
PROPERTIES
TO
ASSORTED RUBBER
$20.000 00
Ne ed new root or Qld
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
good lot Call owner onytrme
W1th any 54 oo purchase
CHOOSE FROM - YOUR
re pa1r e&lt;J ? Hou SI.' roof
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
W1lhamMoynord 949 2613
804 W Main
and fhts ad Good th rough
CHOIC E - BRAND NEW
barn shmgl es, butld up
BACK CARPETING
For Paulrne the golden gates
6 30 76
patnt1ng clcc trrca l work
OR OLD ER CLELAND
REC~UiliNG IS EASY BECAUSE OLDER remodeled 3 bedroom
Pomeroy
992 2298
were opened
gutters &amp; downspout s
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
home all electnc on corne1 lot
REALTY - THE HOME
Aller Hours Call
furnaces, water hea ters.
A gentle votce smd Come
MENT NO COLLECTING OR
1n Pomeroy $12 500 Ph one
OF REAL ESTATE IN
Square Yard Insta lled
water solf n,ers , rn s tC~ll c d &amp;
And w lh a farewell unspoken
992-7133
DELIVERING CAll COllECTTO
992 501 1
MEI GS COUNTY LIST
rcpa.red,
Seweg e
She qut el ty entered hpme
David Parsons, Owner
CAROL DAY 5181189 8395 OR
·.----WITH US &amp; YOU ARE IN
Middleport, OhiO
Cr. II us at 949 2981
CONTACT
.
•
W&amp;JTE FRIENDly HOME PAR COUNTRY l&lt;ltmlond wo1h seclud
HENRY E CLELAND
or
94111103
949 28 14
992.6167
lots Paul ey . ..
ed woods water and good oc
She bode no one o lost TitS 20 RAILROAD AVE
.
BROKER
3 28 I mo
6 1 76 1 month
6-7 I mo
ALBANY N y 12205
cess m Monroe County W Va
Branch Manager
farewell
$1 000 down coli (3041 772
She bode goodbye to none
HOUSEWIVES open the doo' to
3102or (3041772 3227
Her hear1 hod ceased to beat
,
.extra
earntng~
Jam
the
sue
W
And ere her dear fomtly knew tl
•
cessful women who ore mak
HY RENT? Buy a new home w11h
payments some or lower than
1ng good money 10 therr spore
EXPERIENCED
Alum inurn Siding,
-she was gone
rent 3 bedrooms den 2 baths
trme
No
expe11enc
e
Poulrne Mtnervo Strong Holl1day
necessary no deltvery,_.,o col
carpel plus o!l the extras o
Roofing, GuHers,
was born tn Col umbra Twp on
CAPTAIN EASY
Radiator·~;:;~
lecltng , no cosh Investment
housewrfe would wont Shown
March 15 1909 and qu te lty
C
all
now
an~et extra early
by
app01n
lment
742
2328
Painting and Repair
Servlc&amp;
passed owoy m Hol zer MediCal
ben.tts Phone 949 2803 or 149 acre form two houses barns
Cen ter on June 22 , 1976 at the
shed several bu1ld rng s ctty
The Complete
oge oJ,-67 yrs 3 mo and 7 949 2786 Al so booktng par
water mtn e ,obll nght sd ttmber
days Slle was lhe daughtes of _t:::•e::•~~~-- ~---Re
mode
ling Service
100 acres It11a e goo posture
Earl Horman and Oorcos Ogdm BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE
For
Your
Home
Unusual o;rportunrty to bltcome
land 8 mtles north ol Pomeroy
Slrong On Dec 12 1928 she
off
Route
33
Hemlock
Grove
was untted tn momoge to John
ossac1ote wtlh a leodmg lost
growrng consumer fmance
Oh1o Phone 992 5014 even mgs
T Holl1day Surv1vmQ are her
company dorng bustness 1• (19) _ alter 5 P m
husband John a son John Ray·
Rutland
742 2328
SMITH NELSON
~and
Hollt doy ond wi fe
slates We tram you tn all HOUSE for sole by owner large
All Wo rk Guaranteed
Marilyn of San 01ego Cal f a
pha ses of work 1nvolvmg con
l1vmg room Iorge krtchen w1lh
Free Estimates
MOTORS, INC.
daug hter• Normo Gall Wrlcox
sumer crecht You w11l contact
butlt 1n brrch cabinets 3
~23 2 mo
lh 9!22174
1011111111
and husband Kenneth of M1d
our customers both m ond out
bedrooms both hardwood
dleport Ohto a son Robert 0
srde the off1ce and leorn to
floors wolllo woll carpet rn all
Holl1day ond wtfe A... anel of
work w1th merc hants In o
room s Carport uldtty room
Dexter Ohto e1ght (8) grand
fr•endly woy you w1ll help pee
house fu!ly tnsulated storm
Junk Battenes $1 Z5
chtldren and three (3) great
pie wtth lhe tr per sonal
doors wrndows extra Iorge lol
grondch 1ldren Also sur111vmg
SWIMMING
fmances Starling salary wtlt
located ouHade Pomeroy Corp
Molo1 Cast Clean
ore two sisters- Mrs Alma
meet the needs of you and your
on Unton Avenue Phone 992
$3 50 Per Hund1ed
El1za Sm1th of langsville Ohto
fomdy now In o few short
7874 for appointment
- POOLS
and Mrs Edrth Ellen Talbert of
years you con earn well above 2 story fram e house 2 bedrooms
AliM llld btlow .-11 pool .lb IO&lt;
Copper 35c
Sun Ctty Amana o brother
overage Our company pro
lito ~tt-rou...n m1n
posstbly 3, ltv1ng room both
Car Bodies
Rufus Ogdtn Strong of Son
motes from w1thln Prev1ous
k1lchen
and
utrhty
room
newly
AU
pool lllppli" ..,Nob~, too
Diego Colt! A coustn ( lemma
e.per.ence not necessary lnScrap Iron
carpeted porl1al bosemenl and
Vole of Cprdtngton Oh1o A ttrotrve and amb1lion pay off
carport 2 stones out bu1ld ng
brother Howord Earl Strong
Must be a h1gh school
forced 01r nalurol gas heat
preceded her tn death She Was
graduate hove cor ond wrlltng
Nliblt Summit Rd ,
lots of storage spoce $17 500
a faLthful member of long ston
to relocate 1mmedrotely E)C
II RLI 24
Pomeroy, Oh1o
Phone
992
7360
alter
5
p
m
MlddltP«&lt;
dtng rn the Old Oeder Church
cephonol employee benef1ts
Phone992 5468
For more than 50y rs she was a
Phone Mr Ohl 1nger at 3 bedroom house wall to wall
PHOIU!!l 5724
loyal member of Slor Grange
I 614 992 2111
CAPITAl
carpel olumtnum stdtng new
6131 mo
6 l l 1111
No 778 executing the dut res of
FINANCE SERVICES 300 W 2nd
cobrnets some furn11ure new
secretory for many years Also
St , Pomeroy , Oh1o AN EQUAL
bathroom 1ust bu tIt pa t1o and
she was a member of the Com
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
wolk One half acre lot 650
muntly Frtendly Netghbors
Osborne St Pomeroy Phone
•
Club Pouhne was a devoted
m 5688
Business Services
wrfe and mother o good
Business Services
nEnghbor and always ready
wiLL l rtm or cui Iroes and shrub BRAD FORD Austronoer Com
and w1l lrng to help those m
bery phone 949 2545 or 742
need In the church school
plete Servrce Phone 949 2487
3lb7
and comm umty ocl tvlt tes she
or q.4q 1000 RociM Ohio Crllt
Vrrgrl B Sr , Reaoror
was always most generous
Bradford
SPRAY PAINTING At TROMM
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.
Ourrng the many months of suf
CONSTRUCTI
ON
Pll
ONE
742
Et WOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Phone 992 -3311
fermg from her heart condl·
2328
Swoepors toostors irons all
tron and frequent hosp1talizo
TUPPERS PLAINS - 4
small appliance&amp; lawn mower
Whtle you tram, we pay
VERMEE
R
BALER
SALES
AND
SER
t1ons she wos reworded many
bedrooms, l1f2 ceram1c tile
ne)Ct lo Slale Hlghwoy Gc;u;oge
trmes by the tender core g1ven $360 permo from f~rst day
J'TTI , ORPHAN ANNIE
VICE Me1gs Alhens County
baths, n1ce fru1twood
011 Route 7 Phone (614) 995
We cover food, quarters
Balers lrorn $3995 up Merrrll
her by the members of her
k1lchen , oil F A furna ce. 2
3825
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-PEEK · A·BOO
Chose (6141698302 1
famtly In the passsrng of our and health care, too Over
ca r garage All on 1 acre
loved one , we have lost o true 70 frelds to choose from and
$22,500
~----~
~~~~~I EXPERIENCED house poin tor REMODELING Plumbtng heattng
frtend, but precrous memorres all guarantees tn wntmg
ond all types of gene ral repair
2 YRS. OLD - Modern 3
l'lffi~f:!i~y l: !
Phone Arthur Muner 742
wrll abtde and forever remmn
Work gunrontaed 20 years a•
bedroom
home
with
ntce
before you enhst For no
1 1~~~=:4
2180
perrence Phone 992 2409
k1tchen wh1ch mclude s
IN Memory of Gary Wolfe who obltgat1on tnformat1on see
QUILDIN G and remodelmg ex
range
glass
oven
ave~.
passed owoy June 27 1963
your Navy Recrutter at :
caval1on concrete work elec O&amp;D TIJ.EE Tnmmmg 20 years ew
D1n1ng, central a1r heat,
penance In sured fre e
Sa&amp;,. mtssed by fam rly, Wtfe
221 Columbus Road
tncol work plumbtng rough
fam1ly
room
w1th
firepla
ce,
eslimales Call 992 2304 or
Paultne and Chns, Gory,
Athens, Oh1o
and
hn1shed
carpentry
and
and 2 car garage '" dry
(6141698 7257 Albany
Peggy Jamte Dorrell Carman
roolu1g Phone 992 7481
basement $38,500
Ph 593-3566
and Jenntfer
' II
SEWING MACHINE Repairs ser
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
I I'
frame house, bath, nat gas
v1ce all makes 9&lt;12 2284 Tho
Fabr ic Shop
Pomeroy
F A furnace, basem ent, st.
Authorr ted Stnger Soles and
drs &amp; Windows Only $8500.
Service We sharpen Scrssors
PORTLAND - 9 room
Lost and Found
house, mod ern kJtchen,
UL ABNER
EXCAVATING doler loader and
new 2 car garage and level
LOST horse chestnut more
backhoe work dump truck s
NO
STOPPIN'
HER
"-SHE'LL
SAvt;
&gt;ORE
lot 90 x90
Phone 992 5382
ond
lo boys for htre will haul
NEW LISTING - Large 2
PA~ J31JT
SEES HER, HELL
fill dirt top so1l limes tone ond
LosT
Tuesday
nrgh1
patr
of
H~gh t
fam1ly home, t2 rms 5 up
WISH HE: WAS IJAI IJ " grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef
blu e proscrtpf lon glosse s
w1th bath, 7 down with
lers
day phone 992 7089
posstbly
los
t
on
Pomeroy
pork
ba th Nat gas heat, c1ty
nlght phone 992 3525 or 992
ng lot Reward tf found Coli
water. and n1ce lot Only
5232
949 2314
$19,000
(On Vacation)
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
WE HAVE A HOME FOR
Sonttotion 992 3954 or 992
EVERYONE COME IN
One-Week Give Away
2428
AND HAVE A LOOK
(New) 3 Pc. Ktng Size Box Spring and
wiLL do roolrng, construction
Mattress
Now only $50.00
plumbtng and heaflng No 1ob
(New) Wooden Rocker
Now only 529.95
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 2348
(New) 2 Pc. L. R. Suite, Early
EXCAVATING doter backhoe
American
$199 .95
ond d1tcher Charles R Hot
(New) Love Seat
Now only $125.00
f1eld 8C~ck Hoe Service
(New) 4 &amp; 5 Drawer Chests
$29.95 &amp; 539.95
Rutland Oh1o Phone 7-42 2008
On any riding mower.
GREG S CB SAlES located at Er
.
wins Gu lf Service Mid
Elec, -Ciean Range, gold, double oven Only
dlepo rt Ohio Phone 992
$239.95
2438
Only $149.95
Bedroom Suite, (twin beds)
Approw: 38 custom ers
SE PTIC Systems rnstolled by
Now only
Garden Tiller, good condihon
Earn eJ~:tra spendtng
lrcensed msloller Shepord
On any !tiler.
Contractors Phone 7~2 - 2409
money and wm valuable
$75.00
pmes Ca II The Oarly
CARPENTER lloonrlg cerl lng
Wheel barrow
Now On I y $3.00
Senhnel at n2 -2156 today .
paneling Phone 992 2759
'74 Honda 360, only 2,000 miles, many
extras. windshield, wing guards, cargo
carrter, AM- FM radio, tape player and 4
On 21" self propelled
speakert, cigarette lighter, chrome all
man more
Now $1195.
mower w-grass bag .
6

GUTTER SERVICE

HALLS
SALVAGE

•

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

JUNE SPECIAL

6 CANS OF RC

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

'1.00

'6.95

DONEUI'S PIZZA

AL TROMM CONST.

RIDERS SALVAGE

D. Bumgardner

·--

Help Wanted
GUARANTEED
INCOME

••

'
••
'

•

TEAFORD

SNAPPER SALE
'100 OFF

'N
FARM
DOG FOOD

Real Estate for Sale

Strout,
Realty

wtth WKOY m Bluefield and
WAJR m Morgantown.
Johnson IS the author of a
number of articles printed m
professiOnal publications and
wrote the foreword to a textbook, "How to Shoot Newsfilm " He has been a speaker
or panehst at numerous
broadcast news convenllons
and has been a guest lecturer
at OhiO and Washmgton State
Uruversttles as well as at
Marshall and WVU He
served on the Accredttlng
Comnuttee for Educatton m
Journaltsm.
He IS a member of the
Ma rs hall Journalism
Advisory Committee and
S1gma Delta Ch1 JOurnaltsm
SOCiety and has served as
president of the West Vll'gima
Assoctated
Pre ss
.Broadcasters
Assocrnhon
Johnson also has been
active m a number of oivtc
and charttable orgamzahons
and was president of the
Cabeli-Wayne Untied
Communtty
Serv1ces
orgamza lion. He has served
as an elder of the Sess1on of
the F1rst Presbytenan
Church in Huntington and
was named "Outstandmg
Young Man of the Year" by
tlle Huntington Jaycees m
1959
He IS married to the former
Dorothy Rensch of Upper
Darby, Pa , and they are the
parents of four daughters and
a son . Dr. Dorothy Johnson 1s
chall'l11lln of the Marshall
Speech Department

gram could be boosted by
more than $100 mlllton a year
if officials fail to act agatnsl
casem Imports, the farm
spokesman srud
Healy estunated tha t teecream makers last year used
nearly 390 rmllion pounds of
nonfat milk solids produced
by Amertcan farmers If the
FDA proposal Ill allo\\ use of
casem for up to 50 per cent of
the milk solids content of 1ce
cream 1s adopted, th1s could
take away a market for 195
mtlllon pounds of nonfat m1lk
and depress pnces for
farmers, he satd.
Looking further mto the
future, Healy warned that
technolo g ist s
almost
certainly Will find ways to
substitute an increasmg
percentage of casem m tee
cream Eventually, he sa1d
the potential loss of nonfat
mdk markets mvolved could
reach 400 million pounds or
more

START EARNING
TOMORROW

WANT AOS
INFORMATION
OEAOLINES
s P M
Dey Before
Publlcatron
..
Cenct'lll!lllons ,
correc
tlons accepted f~rst day of
publlcaHon

Dairymen hopeful of protective move

Bulldmg 518 Second Avenue

·

that your cattle Will voluntauly consume the right amount of
R,a bo~ oral larv1c1de plus additional h1ghly a\lallable
dJcalc1um phosphate

c~,.,..~ c~,..,•

HUNTINGTON
C
Bos"orth ( Bos) Joh nso n,
news director of WSAZ TV m
HWJtmglon, has accepted an
offer to become an associa te
professor of JOurnahsm at
Marsha ll fl nlversJly
The
appomtmen t
1s
effechve at the begmnmg of
the Fall Term m late August,
accordmg to Dr George J
Harbold, dean of the College
of Arts and Scwnces, who
made the announcement
along with Dr De ryl R
Leammg, chairman of the
JournaiiSlll Deparunent
" Bos Johnson IS recog mzed
as one of the most
outsta nding telev &lt;swn news

PUBLIC NOTIC
The Gal l1poi1 S C1vll Serv1ce
Commt SS IOn annou es that
th ey wtll be glvtng Polrce
OHt cer tests at th e C1t y

Rabon prevents t he development of the most common

"' sw

da~ry ~ws, spread at a rate of some 12 wns per acre, provea
more than three times as effective as y, mch of liqUid manure
Y1elds of alfalfa forage and corn on the manured plots
were substantially higher than yields on check plots m the
second year of the experunent In tbe f~rst year, however, the
check plots had the best yields Low y1elds on the fertilized
plots m the first year were attributed to dll'ecl contact of the
manure wtlh the foliage Th1s contact caused moderate to
severe burnmg of the vegetation.
However m the second year, manure was applied between
the corn rows On the allalla plots manure was applied one
week after cuttmg of hay when the plants were largely devoid
of foliage
Highest corn y1elds came from plots m wh1ch solid manure
had been cultivated Into the soil immediately after application
Th1s practice helped reduce, by some 55 per cent, the los.s of
ammoma to the atmosphere through volatiliZation Another
phenomenon was noted which has not yet been explamed
Some two to three weeks after planting corn, manure was
culttvated mto the sml and the plots remamed weed free,
makmg further culhvations unnecessary
Further studies may help determme the best application
tunes and rates of appllcallon for maxunum benefit If weed
control through the use of anunal wastes ca n be confirmed as a
practical measure, energy can be saved through reduced
ttllage operations, and poSSible pollution from the use of
herbicides can be durumshed.

lCe cream

flies around your da1ry barn - horn fltes fa ce fltes house and

r;.. l f'i'JI.,M/

Real Estate for Sale

Johnson joins Marshall staff

Mars' signs show
•
rivers once ran

. Statav's new Sweatltx ~&gt; Rabon 'i Block• offers you two
b1g advantages 1 It has EPA approval as a fly con t ro l agent
for lactatmg da1ry cows 2 It is t11e only fly co ntrol agent that
can now be fed to the complete ~a1ry herd

~ 11/lbi), J

BY BOYD A RUTH
District Conservaliorust
POMEROY - Manure spread on gro)&lt;lmg crops helped
prevent erosiOn, conserved sml mo1sture and mcreased yields
m ex perunents conducted by agncullural engmeers of the
USDA, Agrtcultural Research Serv1ce tARS )
The fmdmgs may help farmers make the most economic
use of manure at a ltme when the cost of farm labor has led to
automation o! livestock producllon tn close confmement Also
many livestock producers wtth large operations have hmtted
acreage on which -&lt;lo spread manure
The ARS North Central Sml Conservation Research Center
measured !he effects of applymg manure on alfalfa withm two
weeks after the f1rst cuttmg and on oats and ·corn w1thm 30
day s after plantmg Erosion was reduced substantially on
plots whtch had seven per cent slopes The hrst 60 days after
plantmg ISa lime wher eros1on IS likely to be most severe
In a one-year expertment on oats, 1t was found that a %
mch deep apphcatwn of llqutd manure from beef cattle
reduced SOil loss by 91 percent durmg the critical per1od for
erosiOn and m a two-year experunent on corn, the manure
reduced SOil loss by 52 percent
IAqwd manure reduced r un-Qff from oats, conservmg
more than one mch of water m the SO il for use by tbe crop later
m the growmg season Solid manure on growmg corn
conserved a Similar amount of motslure
In reducmg soil loss from corn plots, solid manure from

For Fast 'Results Use Th~. Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

'75 OFF

•••

••
••

'
••

CARRIER WANTED
FOR GOOD
SYRACUSE
ROUTE

-

•

.•'
"•

••
"

•so OFF

HELP WANTED

'
Sale ltmited to items
now in stock.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio

Country Cousins Cookshoppe will be
accepting applications June 28-29-30
at their new location at 698 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio from 9:00 to
5:00 .
.

••
••
••
••

••

•
£
z
~

"

••

�----

28 - Thl! Sunday Tiines-Sentinei,Sunday, June 27, 197~

CAR

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

YOU MAKE THE PRiCE!

73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

If within reason, you have bought a new Ford
Car or truck or any of these clean, many one
owner , use d cars or trucks. We can give you
form er owner on all of these .

74 FORD V8.. ................. You Make The Price
Gran Torino, 4 dr ., one crt rPful local owner.

74 FORD ....................... You Make The Price
Ocy l., Maverick , 4 dr ., air cond ., like new .

74 FORD PINTO ................You Make The Price
2 dr . and 3 drs., two excellent cars .

74 VOLKSWAGEN ............... You Make The Price
" Bug" , almost lik e thE! day it waS

sold.

73 VOLKSWAGEN ............... You Make The Price
Sta. Wagon , SB, 4 dr .. nice .

73 CHEV ........... ..............You Make The Price
Monte carlo, 2 dr .. hard top. air cond . and a ll goodies .

1975 FORD LT.D. .. .......... You Make The Price
A Dr . se dan, air , li ke new ins ide and out.

72 FORD LTQ ................... You Make The Price
VB,· A dr ., air cond .. l ike riew finish .

71 VOLKSWAGEN .............. You Make The Price

Wh i.te, bl.u e vi nyl top , blue cloth interior, ful l power
equtp ., a 1r , T&amp; T whee l, full stereo , radial tires, one
owner .

'4295
72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
'3295
71 Cadillac Eldorado Cpe.
'3695
67 Cadillac H.T. Sedan

'} dr .. H. T .. air con d .• smart all white wlth bla ck top.

74 FORD 12 TON ............... You Make The Price
Pickups, choice of two l ow m i leage, one owner tru ck s

,v! ,. oickup, excep ti ona l.

73 CHEV ....... ................. You Make The Price
4 cyl. Luv lf1 ton pickup, nice.

71 CHEV. lf2 TON ........ ....... You Make The Price
Pickup, low mileage, one carefu l owner .

69 DODGE 1/z TON ........... . You Make The Price
Pickup, shows good care.

Was $3195.00

'J d r, 6 r;:y l. , auto .. P .S., P.B.,
17,621 miles, loca l one owner .

GMC Financing Availabl e

Ope n Eves. Til6- Til5 p .m . Sat.
See one of th~se courteous salesmen: .
Pete Burris
Lloyd , Me Laugh 1m
Marvin Keebaugh

P.S .. P B.

1974 PONTIAC

11 :30-Star Trek 3; Bonan za 4; Movie " Ta les of
Manhattan" 8; Hawa ii Fi ve -0 10 ; Iron side 13;

Sound stage 20.
12 :0o--ABC News 6; Janak\ 33.
12 :3Q--Bonanza 4; ABC News 13; News 20 .
I:JQ--Peyton Place 4.

a speed, si lver
and biJck . P.S.,· P.B. , local
''wheel dri ve,

a sharp car.
Was $3895.00

6:0()-Thl s Is the Life 10.
6:30-Jer ry Falwell 4; Viewpoint B: Publi c Poli cy
Forum 10, 13 .

7"
Christopher C\cseup 3; Talk ing Hands 8.
7:3Q--This Is the Li fe 3; Your Healt h 4; Jerry Falwell
8; Ca mera Three 10; Amazing Grace Bible Class

13.
7:5.1--B iack Cameo 4.
8:00-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Di scovery 4; Re viva l

Fires 6: Church Service 10; Rev . Home r Click 13.
8:3(}-Qral Roberts 3; Yours for the Aski ng 4: Gospel
Caravan 6; Day of D iscove ry 8; James Robison

Presents 10; Open Bible 15: Rex Humbard lb
9:oo-Gospel Sing ing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; ra 1
Roberts tO; t-&lt;ex Humoar~ 6: Rv. Leonar~ Repass
8: Acrosss the Fnce 1S.

9:3o--lt Is Wr itten 10; Christ Is the Answer 13 ; lnslghl
15.
lO :Oo--J im Franklin 3; .Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center B. Movie " The Tem·
pest" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Faith for Today 15.
10 :3Q--Big Blue Marble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4:
Jimmy Swaggar t 6; Rev. Robert Schuler 8:
Newsmaker '76 13: Th is is the Life 15.
11 ·0o--Vegetable Soup 3: Doctors on Ca\ 14: Hot Fudge
· 6 : Rex Humbard 8,15: Rev . Henry Mahan 13.
11 :3o--TV Chapel 3: Make a Wi sh 6; Focus on
Columbus 4; Rev. Calvin Evans 13.
12:0()-.AT Issue 3; News Conference 4 4; Face \he
Nation 8; Lower Lighthouse 13; Happy Place 15.
12:3Q--Meet the Press 3,4,15; Thinking In Black 8: The
Issue 10; Garner Ted Armstrong 13.
1:00-Movle " Heaven Can Walt " 3; Movie ~~son of

Kong " 4: Communlqu~ 6; Christian BradcastinQ 8;
Face the Nation 10; NFL Action '76 13: Wrestling
15; Bill Moyers' Journal 33.
:3Q--Aware 6; NFL Championship Games 8: Movie
" Copper Canyon" 10: Sportsman 's Friend 13.
2:oo-Poi nl of View 6; Broadcast Forum 8;· Medix 13;
To Be Announced 15; Onedln Line 33.
2:3Q--American Angler 6: Directions 13.
2: 45--Baseball Warm . Up 4.
3:oo-Baseball 3,4; NFL Championship Games 6;
Championship Fishing 8; Meet Tecum seh 10; To Be
Announced 15; Rivals of Sherlock Holmes 33.
3: 3Q--Tennis 6, 13; Wimbledon Tennis 15; Champions 8;
Springnalionals 10.

4:0()-Let's Grow a Garden 33.
4:3o--Golf 8,10: French Chef 33.
·s:oo-.U .S Olympic Trials 6,13; Use It In Good Health .
Charl ie IS; College for Canines 33.
5:3Q--Saint 3: NFL ACtion '76 4; Guppies to Groupers
33.
6:oo-Directlons 4; News 4; David Niven's World 6;
Sports Challenge 8; Las Vegas Hour 10: Jane
Goodal\13 ; Wally's Workshop 15; Wall Street Week

33.
6:3Q--NBC
News 3.4, 15; News 6; WCHS· TV Report 8;
World Press 33.
7:0()-Wor\d of Di sney 3, 15; Jane Goodatl6; 60·Minutes
8, 10; America 13; Crockett's Victory Garden 20:
Onedln Line 33.
7:3o--Ant iques 20.
8 :oo-EIIery Queen 3,4, 15; Six Million Dollar Man 6, 13;
Bolshoi Ballet : Romeo and Juliet 8,10; Nova 20,33.
9: 0()-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 3,4, 15; U.S. Olympic Trilals
6113; Masterpiece Theatre 20,33.
10:0Q--.Bronk 8,10; Mozart In Seattle 20; Great Per formances 33.

11 :oo-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; FBI 6; Monty Python's
Flying Clrc'us 20; Kup's Show 33.
11 :1.5--C BS News 8,10; Oon Kirshner 's Rock Concert
15.

News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

7 3Q--Schoolies 10.

B:oo-Lassie 6i Capt . Kangaroo B, \0 ; Sesame St. 33.
B:JQ--Big Va lley 6.
9:0()-A.M . 3; Phil Donahue 4: Lucy Show B: Mike
Douglas 10; Morning wi th D.J 13; Phil Donahue 15.
9:3Q--C ross.Wits 3: One Life to Li ve 6; Tattletales R:
Mike Doug l as 13.

IO :OQ--Sanf6rd &amp; So n 3.4. 15: Edge of Night 6: Pri ce is
Right 8,10; Bit wilh Knit 33.
10 :3o--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,1 5; Dinah 6; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
II :Oo--Whel of Fortune 3.15: Weekday 4: Gambit B, lO;
Farmer's Oauahter 13.
11 :3Q--Holl ywood Squares 3.4. IS; Happ y Days 13 ; Love
of Li fe 8.10.
11:55--Take Kerr 8: Dan \mel's World 10.
12:0o--Fun Factory 3, 15; Le t's Make a Deal 13; Bob
Braun 4; News 6,8,10; Sesame St . 33 .

12 .3Q--Gong Show 3,15: All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tom orr ow 8, 10 .
12 :5.1--N BC News 3,15.
I :oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Elee. Co . 33.
I :3Q--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15: RhymeS. Reason 6,13:
As the Wor ld Turns B.l O; Earthkeeping 33.
2:0Q--S20,000 f' yram id 6,13; It's About Ti me 33 .
2:3Q--Doclors 3,4, 15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8.1 0; Firing Line 33.
3: 0()-.Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospita\6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Woman 20.
3· 3()-{)ne Life to Live 13; Mi ckey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8, 10; Consumer Su r vi v~1 1 KI t 20; World Press

33.
4:01}-Mister Cartoon 3; M er v Griff in 41 Somerset 15;

Max B. Nim ble 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8: Mister
Rogers 20,33: Mov1e "Town Tamer" 10; Dinah 13.
4: JQ--Bewilched 3; Mod Squad 6: Andy Griffith B:
Sesame St. 20,33: Flintstones 15.
5:0()-Bonan za 3: Partridge Family 8; Miss ion :
Impossible 15.
5:3Q--Adam .12 4; News 6; Family Affair B: Elec. Co~
20,33; Adam ·l2 13.
6:0Q--News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20,33.
6:3Q--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10 : Hodgepodge Lodge 20:
Carrascolendas 33.

I: Oo--Truth orCons . 3; To Tell theTruth 4; Bowl ing for
Doliars6 ; Buck Owens 8; News 10 ; Candid Camera

13; Family Affair 15: Lowell I homas Rem embers
20: Resourceful West Virginia 33.
7:3Q--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; What 06 You
Want to be When You Grow Old' 4: Space : 1999 6;
Pr ice is Righ t 8; Evening Edi t ion with Martin
Agronsky 20: High Road to Adventure 10 ; Freedom
Is 13; F rlends of Man I S; I nner Tennis 33 .

8:0Q--Bobby Vinton 3: Yankee Doodle Cricket 13: Rich
Little 4,15: Gunsmoke 8; U.S.A.: People &amp; Politics
20,33; Rhoda 10.
8:3()-.We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball 6; Mark
Russell 20,33: Phyll is 10; Movie "From Here to
Etern ity" 13.
9:00--Joe ForreSiL•( J,4,i5: At: I n The Family

v.a, automa ti c,

SALE
PRICE

1 own er , runs good , air, v .g, au tomatic. P. S., P.B., 3
sea ts.

$2695.

500 E. Main Street

a, 10;

Sing Amer ica Sing 33; How We Got Here : The
Chinese 20.
9:3Q--Maude 8, tO; World Press 20.
10 :0()-Jigsaw John 3,4, 15; Medi cal Center B.10; News
20: Bi ·Ways 33.
10 :3o--Catch·33 33.
11 :OQ--News 3,4,6.S:IO,I3, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :3()-,Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Geraldo Rivera : Good·
Night Ame r ica 6, 13 ; Movie "Summertime "
Movie "The Gazebo " 10; Janak! 33 .
00- Tomorrow 3,( : News 13.

Pomeroy, 0.

Red finish , good tir es, rad io, good economy .

1970 RENAULT 4 DR. ............. 750
1

Gopd tires , clean interior, 4 speed trans.

New Chevy Van G tO-IlO" W.B, V-8,
automatic, !lOwer steering &amp; brakes,
color black - Available Today.

Yard Sale
IF YOU hove o scrYice to oil er . MEIGS Coun ty Humane Society,
lri5ky killen5 for adoption .
want to buy or se ll something ,
Eight . JO week5 old . Hove
ore looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll ge t results
distemper 5hos end wo rm ed .
las ter wi th o Sentinel Wont Ad.
Phone 992·5427 after 6 p .m .
-~-- ·

-

POODLES , 6 weks old , $35 . Phone

'l'l()2.7671 .
VARD Sole . Monday . Tu esday .
Wednesday , Mo)(ine Mi chael,
PUPS to give owoy . Port Springer
laurel Cliff . Depres5 ion Qlo~s .
Spaniel . part Beagle . Ca ll 9Q2~orne f urniture and misc.
5170 or 992·2669 .
7 Fami ly Vo rd Sale. Tues . ·and
FREE : Collie Pup - pink house
Weds ., June 29 and 30th . 9:30
above Jones 8~~
a .m . ti ll 4 p .m . on corner of
Center and Third Ave. , Ma so n. SIAMESE kittens . $10. Seolpoints.
w. Vo
pho_ne 992 · 32 1 ~ . .
YARD Sale, July 1. 2 . 3. Bo ttom of
Massar Hill, starts a t 9 a .m .
Di5hes. pols . pan5 . some ant iques . Cloth ing , ice cream 1%9 P.lymouth Satell ite , $1200.
f reezer, mi sc. var iety of th ings .
Phone 992-6131 .
ENORMOUS 4 Family Yard So le, 1961 GMC Pickup tru ck, one- hall
July lst , ind, 3rd . Fronk Hvd ·
ton . 327 cu. inch engine, 4
son residence. corner Fifth
speed Irons., good running
and Pearl Streets , Raci ne ,
co ndi t ion . $550. Phone 992·
Ohio. Ant ique trunk : key-wind
7580.
clock ; collec tor 's i tems ; Gibson
gvilor; omplllier ; lawn mower; J9 74 Ford Co ur ier 4 speed, 11, 000
miles . $200 and assvme
5 piece dinette ; tools ; mi sc.
payments. 197.4 Kawasaki 250,
from A to Z.
1966 Nimrod camping trailer
for lost sole . ~~O:~e-992 · 7_066 .,

247·2167 .

Situations Wanted
Will DO odd jobs . rool 1ng. pam ·
t mg, hau ling , treewor k . and
mowing . PhonEi992·7409,

] 975 Ford Granad a 302 V-8, p .s.,
p.b ., o .c. $3895 . Phone 9923451.
1972 Ford •; , ton pickup trvck,

$1350.00. Cc \11 · 378 ~ 6349 .
1970 LTD [9) Passenger station
wagon , air condition , $1250.
Phone Middleport 992 -3647 .
1969 G. T.O·. 4 speed , mags, e)( cellent condition , $900 . Phone

992·7376.

I WOULD l ike to do babysi tt ing in BLUE 6 cyl inder Belair Chevy , 1967
model , $225. Ph one 949 -24 17 or
my home wi th pre-schoo l
see Randy Friend.
children Have e)(pe rie nce and
references . Phone 992 -60 12.
1970 Pon t iac 5500; wooden porch

NEW - 4-Wheel Drive and Luv Trucks In Stock
We have the right deal for you
* Reliable Service after the deal

*

POM'EROY MOTOR CO.
j992-2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves . Til8

-----

CoiN S. tQkens , any form gold or ONE~;-~ rt~-;
si lve r jewelry, spoons, ri ng s,
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
dental. Will trade . Ca ll Roger
fo r $104 mon thly plu s elec . or
Wamsley. Rutland , Ohio, 742·
$130 including electric . LOWER

2~1. ·~----~--~~

swing , $10. Colt 949-2698 after
Sp .m .

budget of Cheshire Township .

1974 Ford vo n.' E300 series , 1
own4H . Phone 992·7320.

2 Chest of drawer s, age not im·
port_?.n t. Phone 949- 242~·---

Not ice is hereby given that

1967 Nova, 2 dr. hardtop , ew ce llen t body , no rust nor pvtty.

PUBLIC NOTICE

on the 6fh day of July . 1976. at
6: 00 P.M ., a publi c hearing

wi ll be he ld on the budge\ of

th e Town~ hip of Cheshire,
Gu tl ia County, Ohio for the
ne xt succeeding fi scal yec1 r
endi ng December 31st. 'r&gt;77.

Such hearing will be held a\ .
the residence of the clerk .
Township Clerk ,
Ga i l ~ i sson

8;
June 77

----

,_

$4695

NICE 2 bedrm , air conditioned
hou5e w ith big yard . Couple
preferred , releren ces. Phone

992·2832.
1611 . camping trailer , good condilian . Phone 843-2542 .
1972. r rave l trailer,
contained. good

16

ft., sel f ·
cond ition .

Phone ( 614 ) 985 · 424~

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
Convenient to shopping on
Third and Mill St reets In Middleport. Brand new high quali·
ty apartm ents . See the
manager at Riverside Apartments or call 992·3273. Furnishe d
o part m9nts
also
avai lab le.

Laguno V.B. auto,. P.S.,
P.B., A.C.,
vi nyl top
T.H.
wheel.
lint. glass,
AM. ·fape

lt
~

:

Gold

:

cyl.,

Duster.

1972 DODGE DART

6

a~to., ~:~i)l699 ~Y~~.ora~:~.~to~: 56

$1895

~

Pla ye r radio .

1973 FORD LID
$2595

·

t

bu~k~~· s=~~~;·

!It

PS
sp0;;

~Doa~~odsr ~~.~~~~~i
15

emo. ee

1974 CHEVROLET NOVA
SS

1975 Chrysler Newport

!

$ 3 1. 9 5

.

2d

HT

o~ty 3~oo m~;s, ~i;:
10

P.S .,

v.

$2895

top .

a uto.

t 1639 EASTERN AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS

6 cy l . sld. only 11 ,000 miles.

i

'

NEW 3 bedroom home in Rutiand
for rent . Furn ls tled Including
colored TV , near mines. Con-

,• .t _( 614)98 ~~57J .~!J.er 6 p.m.
lARGE J r·o..,·i'\ f urnished opart menl . Phone 992·6161 .

•'

$2695

1971 VOLKS. TUDOR

1

2 Dr .. 6 cyl., standa rd. low miles. Gas saver .

1595

$2395
$4295
$2495
$1595
$1595
$1495
$3695

11295
~~~ s~~~ !,~RA
$995
1--1-96-.9-UO_LK_S-ST_W_'A-,.-----+-11_5_9_5-+-~-2-9-5-e
J'
• . • nu.
·
9-Pass .. good for la rge family .

70 LATE MODEL CARS IN STOCK
Sunday Shoppers Welcome,
Come In and Browse Around• .

'75 S.cirocco ... ..• •••.•••...••••.•. ••....• $4695
'74 V. W. Sta , Wag .• •.•••..•• ••••• .•• •.• •• 53995

Ji.

6 cyl . a uto .. 18.000 miles .

'74 V.W. Sla . Wag ....... . ........ ..... .. . $3895

NK FINANCING

t--'67_v_.w_._s,_a.• w.ag_•._..._••_.. _..._.. _.. _..._.. _..._••_s.s9s-t

*
a
*

Free air conditioning on '76 AMC's
for balance of June.

1----------1
~
DON WATTS V,W,, INC,
:

3 speed. VB, p S.. extra nice .

i

PLUS:

**

6 cyl . standard. on ly 11.000 miles .

__._ _s_z29_5_-l

'74 Pinto Ruriabouf ...... • ...............
'74 Jeep V-8 Renegade ..... ........ · .....
'73 Chev. C-10 Pickup ....................
'12 Pinto Runabout .... . .................
'71Piy . Satellile2Dr . H. T ...............
'69 Chev . Pickup .........................
'75 Rabbit, auto .. ....... .................

~.

1974 CHEV. NOVA

Orange, top con dit ion, lot of ecohomy here .

i.,........,$2-.39.,.5_
*
**

2795

Expect the

V.8, auto ·• P · S., rad 1'o, Vtny/
.
•'

;::

**
*
PICK-UP TRUCKS
: 1975 FORD SUPER CAB
,.
: 1975 CHEVROLET CUSTOM
i* 1975 DODGE CUSTOM
: 1974 FORD CUSTOM
1974 CHEVROLET CUSTOM v.a.

1

f'op.

~

$2995

V·8. A.C, P.S., P.B.. AM·
FM, etc., 44,255 mfles.

12995
2795
;.,..._ _ _....._.....;~--1
:
'71 BMW '2002'
'72 MUSTANG
,.

$2795

, 18,000 miles.

1

·$AVE i*

1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA
c

stripes. Sharp!

one.,

P.

1973
CHEV. IMPALA
• Dr ., a ir . radial !Ires. Ret ired school teacher's trade.

,..

:

1 Dr. hatchback , auto ..

'73 CAPRICE
CLASSIC

i ~!~~~~~~~p~~p~_-!4~~~
!GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH :.__ _ _____,
.

446·327~ ~

*"'******-*****-************** *******************',. WIN

AT BRIDGE

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

Give opponents a problem
MAKE spring cleaning profitable, LATEN paper, roller , 2 trucks ,
turn unwonted items inlo cosh .
Ad vertise in the Wont Ads .
LOCUST pasts, round or split.
Phone 949-2774.

reasonable . Phone 992 -7481 .
l975 Buho co 360 Frontier motor·
cycle, Endur o model. mony ew·
tras . reasonably priced. Phone
992·72-91 after 8 p.m.

-

1973 450 Prototype Kawasaki
motorcross, good condition, 74 Kawasaki $475.00. Phone 742·
2980.
$650. Phone 992-3843.

cOAL , lim est one, and calcium

NOHTif 1\Jt

chlor id e and calcium bri ne f or
dusl control and special mi xing
salt lor larmers. Main Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992-

• Q5 4
• A !I :J

3891.

o1o

GQQD 220 V . elec. dryer , $49. 50.

K &lt;11 112

\\EST

Bai ley's Store, Middleport,

t&lt;:AST
"' 7 2
• .J 9 7

-lo ll .I U
¥ 11l8 :l:l

t B6
... !J 7 5 4

SUNDAY
CROSSWORD
PUZZLER.
.
'

SOUTII

I Dress protector
6 Cnargt the
account ot
11 Ctlfysalis (pl.)
16 Brie l
:21 Cosmetic
22 Choice part
23 Perta ining to
Ugrians
2&lt;4 Angry
25 Bone Ol body
2E Measured
duration of
28 Passageway
3J Desire
32 Teutonic deily
33 Bone
:W Man·s nickname
35 Otctare
36 Vast ages
37 Htwalian wreath
38 Marry
40 Surleited
42Matal
43 Region
44 Stare open·
mouthed
45Mature
47 Scoffs
•9Merry
50Everybody 's
uncle
51 Recttly
54 Blb!ICII weecs
55 ShOrt steep (pl.l .
561ndalinlte amoun1
59 In music, high
BOMan's nickname
62ledtes
&amp;4 Abrasive
irwtrumerc
65Conjunctlon
M HtOJtw letter
87 Eti'IIOPIW~IIlle
89 Menttlaufltrings
70 WetHooted bird

71 Greek tetter

128 AMen!
72 O~mon
129 Musical
74 Quantity at
organization
material
131 Prollts
715 Bow
132 Footlike part
77 Father
133 Mountain nymph
78 Urge on
135 Employ
79 Consideration
136 A state (a!Xlr I
82 Changes
139 Residence
84 Cavils
140 Algonquian
85 Transgressts
lnchn
86 Heroic event
141 Sea eagle
8e Ireland
142 Cooled lava
89 .Edible rootetock 143 Spanish for '' yes"
90 Plant product
144 Persian fairy
92 Marsh birds
145Matlce
94 Thick ·sMimed
147 Colorful
animals
149 Urge on
98Convnunts1s
150 Indicate
99 Moccasins
152 Surgical thread
100 Ventilate
154 Newly married
102Roman roads
womBn
103 Capuchtn
!56 Force
monkey
I58 Chairs
104 Bother
159 Narrow, 1ta!
105 Alcoholic
boards
be~o~eraae
ISO Metal
106 ShOwy !lower
161 Watered silk
108 Theater sign
(abbr.)
DOWN
109 Pronoun
1lOA continent
1 Dart
(abbr .)
2Batance
111 Skating area
3 Smear
112Smootneathe
4 King of Basl'lan
feathers or
5 Openwort~. Iabrie
114 One, no matter
6 Resl~na
which
7 Ingredient
116 Collection of
6 Proposition
facts
9 Pronoun
117 Mixes. as dough
10 Allernoon•parly
119Reward
11Korean seaport
120 Short Ja c~et
12 HldeQUs
122 Christian festival
13 Prelix: belore
124 Stalemate
14 Ttlfee-toed sloth
125 Decays
15 Re.,erberated
126 Country of
16 Gratuities
Europe
17 Before

t KQ .l75 1
"' i\ 6

-1oK IIlH54

SUNDAY, June 27. 1976
ACROSS

26

A r\6:1 ·•

18 Sun god

19 Precipitous

¥ A K li
• \114

81 Stopped
89 County tn Ireland
90 Candid
91 Part cf
lor!ilicalion

20 Weird
21 Negrito
29 Eg)'plian
gOddess
92 Sallied
31 Tierra det Fuegan 93lcx:ation
Indian
95 Wile ol Zeus
36 Periods of time
96 A state
37 YoUng sheep
91 Hlnci.r guitar
39 Foolish
99 Me111 fasteners
40 EurOpean
101 Renovates
41 Uletess
10S ·Broad
42 Surgical saw
106 War god
43 Mountains of
107 r.l if ,·t: net wort
Europe
111. , Gray
44 Contest
112 Fondles
46 Proceed
113 Extinct bird
46 Man's name
115 Distance measure
49 Long. slender lis, 116 Altutian Island
(pl.)
118 Sicilian volcano
50 Become sun en
119 Speck
51 ~will
· 121 Sea nymgtls
52 Fragrant
123 A. continent (abbr.)
oleoresin
125 Negligent
53 Bog
126 Clan
55 Sewing
127 Sinews
implement
129 Foundation
56 Keen
130 Ptace in line
57 Bar legally
131 Conjunction
58 Highways
132 A.chea
61 Flying mammate 134 Soutl'lern
63 Malay canoe
blackbird
64 Animal coats
138 Wlaar
68 Knowledge
131 King of birds
70 leads
139 Possaulve
71 Mistakes
pronoun
73Camb form: lake 140Bitmish
74 Man·s nlctt:name 144 Fondle
75 Bhosl'lonean
145 Music : ae wti1ten
Indians
146 Decline
TT CaravanNry
1•7 By way of
78 Peel
148 Obscure
OOMalar dagger
149 Stendef' finial
lvar.
151 Note of scale
81 Pinch
153 Spanish article
83 Gratuity
155 Railroad (abbr .)
64 uncoull'l'persoi'IS 1ST A alate {abbr.l

o~o .IH:I

Nn l'th-Soti lh vultwruble
\\ t's l

Nor th t.:asl

lA

It

Pass

24

Pas~

Pass

!'ass

Pass

South
l A
• 1\

Opt·mnJ;: lt•wJ - B t
fl)• Oswa ld.~ ,Jam es .Jacoby

One of my fi rs t advanced
lessons in play was wh en my
father wrote me from Korea
and explained th e value of giving your opponenl a prob lem.
He said : " Sometimes th ey go
wrong ."
This hand is from a rubber
iJridge game at Notre Dame. I
led the eighl of diamonds
aga in st Sou th 's ironclad fourspade contract. At leas t it was
ironclad with trum ps brea king
J.2.
Sou th went right up with

dumm y's ace of diamonds and
cashed dummy 's ace or
\rumps . I dropped my queen.
Not that I ex pected a n y thin~
good to come about. but jus\
sec what did happen .
Sou th play ed a second
trump . My partner followed
again. 1l1e wheels started to go
Hround rn South 's head. He
fin a ll y dec id ed to guard
againsl four !rumps in my
partner 's hand . He finessed
hiS eight . I look my nine. put
my partner in with a diamond
and made my jack of trumps
by overruffing the third diamond lead . My partner's ace
of elubs wa s the setting trick .

~~~~~

(For a copy ot JA COBY
MODERN , send $1 to: " Win
at Bridge ," c l o this
newspaper, P. 0 . BOK 489,
Radio City Station. New York,

74 AMC Hornet

74 Ford Maverick

4 Dr., low mileage, like new. Small v.e,
auto. trans., P.S., air cond .

2 Dr .. 6 cyl., auto .. P. steering, air cond .

'3195
73 Maverick

•2995
72 Datsun

One owner, very low mileage, standard
trans .. 6 cyl .

4 sp. trans., 4 cylinder , reo\ sharp.

'2495
'1995
73 Olds Custom Cruiser 71 Dodge Coronet

Station wagon, Auto. trans .• V-8 e ngine.
P. steering, a lr con d.

A Pennsylvania r ea de r'
wants to know if the late J ohn
H. Craw ford was ever the bes t
player in \h e world.
In our op inion he wa s during
the lale '40s and earl y '50s. He
wa s cer tain ly the besl in
North America a t that time
and the fta lians had not taken
over as yet.

•2695
71 Dodge Monaco

'1995
70 Dodge Polara

4 Dr ., auto. trans., air cond.

4 Dr .• auto. trans.. 8 c y l., P.S. steering .

'1495
72 International lf• Ton Pickup, small

'1295
70 Ford Galaxie

eight engine, auto . trans .. needs body

500, 2 Dr. Ha rdtop, 8 cyl ., outo. trans..

work , but good running cond.

P. steering , air cond .

Good Buy In A Used Truck!

N Y f0019)

" '1295

'1195

~&amp;011~® 1kJ M&gt;oo·4f•i-J', -

Also a large selection of new cars ~nd trucks

Unscramhle th .. se four Jumhll'!t,

In stock for Immediate delivery.

one letter to tach squart', to
form four ordinary word s.

COURTEOUS SALESMEN TO SERVE YOU.
CHARLIE WEBSTER &amp; BUSTER SPRAGUE

CHULG

[]
iKELCHE

t
I

CARROLL
NORRIS
DODGE
•

I (]

II

~AUIPOLIS,

WHERE EVERYTHIN&amp;
UN17ER THE ~N
APPEARS TO
e.E OOIN&amp;.
pRICED to sell I ! ! Electric w inch

SHURTH
Now arranr~ t.he circled lttten
V ~~ to form the aurpri1e answer, u
~=·==·=::':::;::::':~::'A,~:.Ll::_,•unuttd by tht above cartoon.

II I
I

Prill 1M SIJIPIIShiiSWIUII!

I KX:t J-( X XX1
(.\niWPrl

Mund•7)

JouuM'" HOARD NEWLY CIRCUS MUFFIN
Yr&amp;lrrd•f•
·
.
"''"'".. "' Wllal JIOU might pick MP in Fronce-FRENCH

I

for

oolo .

Coli

992·2623 .

Pomeroy.
---·
,:;;;:iTAG wringer washer ond

dr;or . Pnone (61&lt;) 985·3554 ,
Harold Brewer , long 8ot1om ,
Oi"lio.

TULSA

truck winch, 12.000 lbo,

capacity . Also , two overhead
10x 10 garage doors. Phone
(614) 985-355A. Horold Brewer ,
Long Bottom . Ohio .
NE W 1~ft . f latbed

Brewer , l ong Bottom, Ohio.

!973

UNFURNISHED apt . for ren t , 4
rooms and both. Phone 992.

25

fl .

Yukon

Delta

houseboat, oil !elf-contained,

wltn 1976 Cncysler 105 h.p.
engine.
Phone 992·5532.
--··---....,...___..
____, ....

__

5900 .
ONe acre troller lot , ali facilities

__

19 inch portable Admi ral co lored

Five Points area . Co il c·olleci

T.V.. iuol like new. Coil 992·
3442.

(618)52•·5825.

TRAILER lot In Chesler . el9ctrlclty
ond wy water . Phone 992-60n .

ONE MoSS ey Ferguson Moer , 7 h .
n.rt ; one New Holland Flail
Chopper, all in good condition.

2 bedroom mobile home , Brow n'&amp;
Troi ler Pork , 992-33 24 .

.\:UI.l.I'IUS

Cc \19&lt;9·2092.
SO ta 60 lb plgo: ol•o 30 Jo 40 lb .
pig s. Phone 1-698-889b.

OHIO

H &amp; N day old storted leghorn
puUett. Both floor or cage
grown avol loble . Poultry hous ·
ing and automation . Modern
Poult ry , 'J99W . Main , Pomeroy ,

23

chann el CB fil s tn dosh,
am·fm-mpk radio , 8 track ,
llereo. Call992-3965.
··- -...--- -·-·-.

- --

m -210.. _ _ _ __

MEN'S used work amiform s. pants
28 Inch - 36 Inch woisl, shirts
S-M ·L, short and lang sieve,
$1.98 set . Bailey 's Store , Mid-

dleport,

1974 Suzuki motorcross bike, 1957
Che vy 327 , ~ speed t ransmissio n . Will te ll or trade . Call

m .3J05.

- -·-----

to~ dam trailer . 1973 Hondo 3SO • cylinder, like

Phone (614) 985·355• . Hocold

TRAILER Space for rent in Middleport . Pho ne 992·543.4 ,

Call ( 61&lt; ) 985 ·_~06 . _ _ __
1960 Chevro let truck $85. See ot
570 Pear l. Mi~~~r t ._ _

Pomeroy

OLD furniture , ice howes , bras s FURNISHED , 2 bedrm . oportm enl ,
beds ,
wa ll telephones and
odul h only , in Middleport.
ports, or comp lete household s.
Phone 992-3874.
.Wri te M . D. Miller, Rt . 4,
3 AND 4 RM. furnis hed and un~o:n~roy , ~o. ~992-77f:IJ .
furnished opts . Phone 992·
CASH paid lo r all makes and
5434.
mode ls of mobile homes . CO UN_c
TR
C::V
C::M
:c--:
cb-cll:o--H
,-o_m_e_P
::-c-,k:-,- RI,
Phone area code 614 ·423·9531 .
33, ten miles nor th of Pomeroy.
S$CoshS$$ for iunk.ed auto . Frye's
Large lots w ith concret patios,
Truck Auto Pa ris , Ru!land
sidewa lk s, runners and off
Phone742·2081 .
street parking. Phone 992-7479,

TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts . Top price for standing
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby,
I ·44b-8570.

Notice of public hea ring on the

1972 PLYMOUTH

Good tires, runs out good , V·8, automa tic. P.S.• P.B. ,

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR....... 11695

You owe it to yourself io ch~ck with us
before you buy any car new or used . We
don 't only want you as. a custom·er we want
you for a friend . See one of these friendly
salesmen Ceward Calvert, J . D. Story or Bill
Nelson .

WA NTED to rent 3 bedroom home
locally or w ould like lo buy
home on land cont ract . Phone

1968 CHEV. CAPRICE.............. 1495
ai r.

"Your Friendly De11ler"

Wanted to Rent

1970 OPEL GT CPE.··.... ··· ...... 1495
1

Sharp red finish , good inter ior, 4 speed, radio.

992 -2 174

Cc\1992 ~ 1 1 56 .

P.S ., P. B. , radio . A sport pickup.

1970 OLDS VISTA CRUISER......11295

SMITH NELSON MOTORS IN

State 13.
7:oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS

Super Sharp!

1966 FORD RANCHERO ............. 1489

one OWner , th is is

Was $2 995 .00

6:55--Chuck Wh ite Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri

8' F leetsi dc, wh . over red , clean interior, 350 v.s,
automatic1 power st ee ring &amp; brakes, good t ire~. st ep
bumper, radio, cus tom trim 8. m irror s.

BARGAIN DAY BUYS

trade .

6:4.1--Morning Report 3.
6 so--Good Morning , West Virginia 13.

1973 CHEVROLET C10 ............. 12895

SALE
PRICE

Mach l. "au to., P.S ., P .B., this
is one ni ce Forrt new Pontia c

6:30-Columbus Today 4; News 6: Summer Semes ter
8; Farmtime 10.

1974 FORD F100......................12995

102" C. A., V·B, 5 speed , IB,500 2 speed, R. axle, 900 tires,
solid cab, color wh i iJi! .

1973 FORD MUSTANG

6:00-Summer Semes'ter 10.

4 wh. drive, l ik e new interior , less than 12,.000 miles,
wh . over sil ver; 250 V-8, automa t ic. power steering &amp;
brakes, chrome m ldgs .• bumper , ex terior mir rors,
rad io . See i l now.

'73 CHEV.

:

:
!
..
!

1973 INTERNATIONAL 1600 .... 13895

Was $4795 .00

6: 1.1--Farm Report 13.
6: 1Q--Good News 13.

SUNDAY, JUNE 27,1976

SA!.E
I' RICE

Grand Prix , P.S., P. B., vi ny l
top air , AM-FM and tape, ius !
Iike new. local one ow ner .

$279
. 5

i* ~~S.:rP~a~'~fr;y~~~oP:

8' Sl yleside. green fin ish, good tires, R. bumper,
chrome gri.lls &amp; f its bumper, 6 cyl. &amp; std . trans.

$3995.

Wa s $4295 .00

1973 G.M.C. JIMMY

MONDAY . JUNE 28. 1976

Television Log

SALE
PRICE

Supreme, 2 dr., H.T., !ocal one
owner , lo~V milag e, air, tape,

Pomeroy

Other TEC Chevrolet Conversion Vans and
"The Swing Turtle" by Turtle Top in stock

1975 CHEV. BLAZER K-5 ........"15295

$3395.

1974 OLDS CUTLASS

2 door c oupe.

3695 $2997

1

1

1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo :

1

Light blue, Ieath . Int ..
• radio, 4 speed, A. C.j n ·C·
·trade -in .

i 1 - -.;.37..;,9.;....5_+---2_79_5_-1
lt

i

SALE
PRICE

·SALE
PRICE

Wa s $36 95 .00

" You' II Lik e Our Qua 1ity Way of Doi ng Bu si ness "

: 1975 Chevrolet Monza

,..

$2595.

J .~ ton , long bed, 4· speed .
cu stom ca b. on e owne r, nice.

Ca di II a c-0 ldsmobile
992·5342

$3095.

Wa s $3295 .00

1974 CHEV. C20

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

~ :.~~~~~~~·· ,,

""

;

SALE
PRICE

1975 CHEV. NOVA

Was $2895. 00

(1) Elderado

;~.7~3J~EEP~....----~
'74 SUPER BEmE

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

*

$2995.

2 dr ., 6 cy l. , auto ., th is is a
Grabber, local one owner ,
sharp,

MANY MORE
See: Fred Blaettnar, Melvin little,
or Pat Hill
Open Evemngs Ti17:00
Except Thurs. and Sat , Til5:00

. 2 dr ., ,, cyl. , 4 spe ed. low
milage, a r eal gas saver.

(1) Coupe DeVille

1

4

1975 FORD MAVERICK

Full power. lactorv air .

71 FORD LTD ............ ...... You Make The Price

i

FRESH. NEW FACES

...

~ PLYMOUTH

:

SALE
PRICE

1974 FORD MAVERICK

'1195
'76 Cadillacs In Stock

i

a GALLIPoLis
!,.. CHR~SLER-

&gt;t

. Biu cw 11h blu e v r oof. blue leather in te r ior . f ull power,
fa ctory ai r and T&amp; T wheel._

2 di'"., one caref ul loca l owner .

73 DATSON. /z TON ............ You Make The Price

Touring AMERICA is .a call to adventure
few can resist. When you set out to explore
. . . to get away . from it all lake along
TRAVEL EQUIPMENT CORPORATIO N's
trave l companion that has an eye for space.
a feel for family budgets and a talent for
dependable performance - lhe TEC MIN!motorhome!

'4595
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

73 FORD PINTO ................ You Make The Price

LWB Cargo Van , e:&lt; tra nice .
1

YOUR I NV IT ATION TO ADVENTURE '

Dark g reen -green v roof, full power, air . low mileage .

2 dr . sparkly original fini sh .

73 FORD lfz TON ............... You Make The Price

3 MODELS TO CHOOSE
Good Selection Van Conversions

·

~---···i************-*****-******************' V.W.-AMC-JEEP

CHEVY MINI HOMES

Before You Buy A

We're over stocked

2!1 -The Sunday'l'unes-lienuneJ,Sunday , ' ~"•ie27, 19?o

2 Boots . 5 h.p . John~on outboard;
soddla ond bridle; rebuilt 6
cyl inder engine . Call 742-2932
otter 5 p.m . _
sMITH and Wenon , Model 41 ,
automatic 22 col. target pis tol ;
new $180 firm , 1970 Datsun 510
Sedan, folr condition. runs
good, $500. Pot belly stove.

$1&gt;5 . Phone 'l'n· 7805.

new. 2800 miles with extras.
S87.5 or btat offer. Phone 949-

2181.
R.C.A.

refrigerator ,

exCellent

condition. Phone (614) 667·

TWf:l VE 8 wide mobile home s, 1
and 2 bedroom1, completely
furn ished . Cassius Conodoy ,
1900 Centro! St ., Gollipolis ,
Ohi o . N ea r Smith Buick. Ph one

3808 , Tu pen Plains.
(61•)"6·1391.
17 hood 50 lb. plgo. $35 a ploco 196q 12x60 Schultz. 2 bedroom •.
olr conditioner, good cOndi tion .
for oil, or $37 •och. Phone (61•)
667·3&lt;93 belore 10:30 a.m. or
Phone evenings 7&lt;2::.
·30
::.1:8::..
. - -:

-~5:30 p . m .

INSTAMMIC block and white Ad·
mlrol te(ev lsion, also, studio

10'k 55 '
mobile
home ,
3·
bedrooms, with fuel ol1 heat ,
bo ttle d
goa ,
range ,
telrigerotor, dinotte Ht, bunk

couch. Both goo(! condlllon.
NEW -delu we· Tappan electric
bods. $2000. Phone 'l'n·S786.
Phone 992-7319.
range , full warranty . Has chip
on door , will sacrif ke, $235.00. Three ·yeor·old registered black -1 a,drm . double wide home, 60xKingsbury Home Soles , coli
Angus bull lor solo . Phone (61•1 24 . on lot in Mason, W. Vo .

----

'1'12~

703,4.

-...,.--

qe5·3555.
---·-

Coll9q2 ~703&lt;.

•"
~
"'

•

•

�----

28 - Thl! Sunday Tiines-Sentinei,Sunday, June 27, 197~

CAR

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

YOU MAKE THE PRiCE!

73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

If within reason, you have bought a new Ford
Car or truck or any of these clean, many one
owner , use d cars or trucks. We can give you
form er owner on all of these .

74 FORD V8.. ................. You Make The Price
Gran Torino, 4 dr ., one crt rPful local owner.

74 FORD ....................... You Make The Price
Ocy l., Maverick , 4 dr ., air cond ., like new .

74 FORD PINTO ................You Make The Price
2 dr . and 3 drs., two excellent cars .

74 VOLKSWAGEN ............... You Make The Price
" Bug" , almost lik e thE! day it waS

sold.

73 VOLKSWAGEN ............... You Make The Price
Sta. Wagon , SB, 4 dr .. nice .

73 CHEV ........... ..............You Make The Price
Monte carlo, 2 dr .. hard top. air cond . and a ll goodies .

1975 FORD LT.D. .. .......... You Make The Price
A Dr . se dan, air , li ke new ins ide and out.

72 FORD LTQ ................... You Make The Price
VB,· A dr ., air cond .. l ike riew finish .

71 VOLKSWAGEN .............. You Make The Price

Wh i.te, bl.u e vi nyl top , blue cloth interior, ful l power
equtp ., a 1r , T&amp; T whee l, full stereo , radial tires, one
owner .

'4295
72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
'3295
71 Cadillac Eldorado Cpe.
'3695
67 Cadillac H.T. Sedan

'} dr .. H. T .. air con d .• smart all white wlth bla ck top.

74 FORD 12 TON ............... You Make The Price
Pickups, choice of two l ow m i leage, one owner tru ck s

,v! ,. oickup, excep ti ona l.

73 CHEV ....... ................. You Make The Price
4 cyl. Luv lf1 ton pickup, nice.

71 CHEV. lf2 TON ........ ....... You Make The Price
Pickup, low mileage, one carefu l owner .

69 DODGE 1/z TON ........... . You Make The Price
Pickup, shows good care.

Was $3195.00

'J d r, 6 r;:y l. , auto .. P .S., P.B.,
17,621 miles, loca l one owner .

GMC Financing Availabl e

Ope n Eves. Til6- Til5 p .m . Sat.
See one of th~se courteous salesmen: .
Pete Burris
Lloyd , Me Laugh 1m
Marvin Keebaugh

P.S .. P B.

1974 PONTIAC

11 :30-Star Trek 3; Bonan za 4; Movie " Ta les of
Manhattan" 8; Hawa ii Fi ve -0 10 ; Iron side 13;

Sound stage 20.
12 :0o--ABC News 6; Janak\ 33.
12 :3Q--Bonanza 4; ABC News 13; News 20 .
I:JQ--Peyton Place 4.

a speed, si lver
and biJck . P.S.,· P.B. , local
''wheel dri ve,

a sharp car.
Was $3895.00

6:0()-Thl s Is the Life 10.
6:30-Jer ry Falwell 4; Viewpoint B: Publi c Poli cy
Forum 10, 13 .

7"
Christopher C\cseup 3; Talk ing Hands 8.
7:3Q--This Is the Li fe 3; Your Healt h 4; Jerry Falwell
8; Ca mera Three 10; Amazing Grace Bible Class

13.
7:5.1--B iack Cameo 4.
8:00-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Di scovery 4; Re viva l

Fires 6: Church Service 10; Rev . Home r Click 13.
8:3(}-Qral Roberts 3; Yours for the Aski ng 4: Gospel
Caravan 6; Day of D iscove ry 8; James Robison

Presents 10; Open Bible 15: Rex Humbard lb
9:oo-Gospel Sing ing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; ra 1
Roberts tO; t-&lt;ex Humoar~ 6: Rv. Leonar~ Repass
8: Acrosss the Fnce 1S.

9:3o--lt Is Wr itten 10; Christ Is the Answer 13 ; lnslghl
15.
lO :Oo--J im Franklin 3; .Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center B. Movie " The Tem·
pest" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Faith for Today 15.
10 :3Q--Big Blue Marble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4:
Jimmy Swaggar t 6; Rev. Robert Schuler 8:
Newsmaker '76 13: Th is is the Life 15.
11 ·0o--Vegetable Soup 3: Doctors on Ca\ 14: Hot Fudge
· 6 : Rex Humbard 8,15: Rev . Henry Mahan 13.
11 :3o--TV Chapel 3: Make a Wi sh 6; Focus on
Columbus 4; Rev. Calvin Evans 13.
12:0()-.AT Issue 3; News Conference 4 4; Face \he
Nation 8; Lower Lighthouse 13; Happy Place 15.
12:3Q--Meet the Press 3,4,15; Thinking In Black 8: The
Issue 10; Garner Ted Armstrong 13.
1:00-Movle " Heaven Can Walt " 3; Movie ~~son of

Kong " 4: Communlqu~ 6; Christian BradcastinQ 8;
Face the Nation 10; NFL Action '76 13: Wrestling
15; Bill Moyers' Journal 33.
:3Q--Aware 6; NFL Championship Games 8: Movie
" Copper Canyon" 10: Sportsman 's Friend 13.
2:oo-Poi nl of View 6; Broadcast Forum 8;· Medix 13;
To Be Announced 15; Onedln Line 33.
2:3Q--American Angler 6: Directions 13.
2: 45--Baseball Warm . Up 4.
3:oo-Baseball 3,4; NFL Championship Games 6;
Championship Fishing 8; Meet Tecum seh 10; To Be
Announced 15; Rivals of Sherlock Holmes 33.
3: 3Q--Tennis 6, 13; Wimbledon Tennis 15; Champions 8;
Springnalionals 10.

4:0()-Let's Grow a Garden 33.
4:3o--Golf 8,10: French Chef 33.
·s:oo-.U .S Olympic Trials 6,13; Use It In Good Health .
Charl ie IS; College for Canines 33.
5:3Q--Saint 3: NFL ACtion '76 4; Guppies to Groupers
33.
6:oo-Directlons 4; News 4; David Niven's World 6;
Sports Challenge 8; Las Vegas Hour 10: Jane
Goodal\13 ; Wally's Workshop 15; Wall Street Week

33.
6:3Q--NBC
News 3.4, 15; News 6; WCHS· TV Report 8;
World Press 33.
7:0()-Wor\d of Di sney 3, 15; Jane Goodatl6; 60·Minutes
8, 10; America 13; Crockett's Victory Garden 20:
Onedln Line 33.
7:3o--Ant iques 20.
8 :oo-EIIery Queen 3,4, 15; Six Million Dollar Man 6, 13;
Bolshoi Ballet : Romeo and Juliet 8,10; Nova 20,33.
9: 0()-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 3,4, 15; U.S. Olympic Trilals
6113; Masterpiece Theatre 20,33.
10:0Q--.Bronk 8,10; Mozart In Seattle 20; Great Per formances 33.

11 :oo-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; FBI 6; Monty Python's
Flying Clrc'us 20; Kup's Show 33.
11 :1.5--C BS News 8,10; Oon Kirshner 's Rock Concert
15.

News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

7 3Q--Schoolies 10.

B:oo-Lassie 6i Capt . Kangaroo B, \0 ; Sesame St. 33.
B:JQ--Big Va lley 6.
9:0()-A.M . 3; Phil Donahue 4: Lucy Show B: Mike
Douglas 10; Morning wi th D.J 13; Phil Donahue 15.
9:3Q--C ross.Wits 3: One Life to Li ve 6; Tattletales R:
Mike Doug l as 13.

IO :OQ--Sanf6rd &amp; So n 3.4. 15: Edge of Night 6: Pri ce is
Right 8,10; Bit wilh Knit 33.
10 :3o--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,1 5; Dinah 6; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
II :Oo--Whel of Fortune 3.15: Weekday 4: Gambit B, lO;
Farmer's Oauahter 13.
11 :3Q--Holl ywood Squares 3.4. IS; Happ y Days 13 ; Love
of Li fe 8.10.
11:55--Take Kerr 8: Dan \mel's World 10.
12:0o--Fun Factory 3, 15; Le t's Make a Deal 13; Bob
Braun 4; News 6,8,10; Sesame St . 33 .

12 .3Q--Gong Show 3,15: All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tom orr ow 8, 10 .
12 :5.1--N BC News 3,15.
I :oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Elee. Co . 33.
I :3Q--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15: RhymeS. Reason 6,13:
As the Wor ld Turns B.l O; Earthkeeping 33.
2:0Q--S20,000 f' yram id 6,13; It's About Ti me 33 .
2:3Q--Doclors 3,4, 15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8.1 0; Firing Line 33.
3: 0()-.Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospita\6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Woman 20.
3· 3()-{)ne Life to Live 13; Mi ckey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8, 10; Consumer Su r vi v~1 1 KI t 20; World Press

33.
4:01}-Mister Cartoon 3; M er v Griff in 41 Somerset 15;

Max B. Nim ble 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8: Mister
Rogers 20,33: Mov1e "Town Tamer" 10; Dinah 13.
4: JQ--Bewilched 3; Mod Squad 6: Andy Griffith B:
Sesame St. 20,33: Flintstones 15.
5:0()-Bonan za 3: Partridge Family 8; Miss ion :
Impossible 15.
5:3Q--Adam .12 4; News 6; Family Affair B: Elec. Co~
20,33; Adam ·l2 13.
6:0Q--News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20,33.
6:3Q--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10 : Hodgepodge Lodge 20:
Carrascolendas 33.

I: Oo--Truth orCons . 3; To Tell theTruth 4; Bowl ing for
Doliars6 ; Buck Owens 8; News 10 ; Candid Camera

13; Family Affair 15: Lowell I homas Rem embers
20: Resourceful West Virginia 33.
7:3Q--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; What 06 You
Want to be When You Grow Old' 4: Space : 1999 6;
Pr ice is Righ t 8; Evening Edi t ion with Martin
Agronsky 20: High Road to Adventure 10 ; Freedom
Is 13; F rlends of Man I S; I nner Tennis 33 .

8:0Q--Bobby Vinton 3: Yankee Doodle Cricket 13: Rich
Little 4,15: Gunsmoke 8; U.S.A.: People &amp; Politics
20,33; Rhoda 10.
8:3()-.We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball 6; Mark
Russell 20,33: Phyll is 10; Movie "From Here to
Etern ity" 13.
9:00--Joe ForreSiL•( J,4,i5: At: I n The Family

v.a, automa ti c,

SALE
PRICE

1 own er , runs good , air, v .g, au tomatic. P. S., P.B., 3
sea ts.

$2695.

500 E. Main Street

a, 10;

Sing Amer ica Sing 33; How We Got Here : The
Chinese 20.
9:3Q--Maude 8, tO; World Press 20.
10 :0()-Jigsaw John 3,4, 15; Medi cal Center B.10; News
20: Bi ·Ways 33.
10 :3o--Catch·33 33.
11 :OQ--News 3,4,6.S:IO,I3, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :3()-,Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Geraldo Rivera : Good·
Night Ame r ica 6, 13 ; Movie "Summertime "
Movie "The Gazebo " 10; Janak! 33 .
00- Tomorrow 3,( : News 13.

Pomeroy, 0.

Red finish , good tir es, rad io, good economy .

1970 RENAULT 4 DR. ............. 750
1

Gopd tires , clean interior, 4 speed trans.

New Chevy Van G tO-IlO" W.B, V-8,
automatic, !lOwer steering &amp; brakes,
color black - Available Today.

Yard Sale
IF YOU hove o scrYice to oil er . MEIGS Coun ty Humane Society,
lri5ky killen5 for adoption .
want to buy or se ll something ,
Eight . JO week5 old . Hove
ore looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll ge t results
distemper 5hos end wo rm ed .
las ter wi th o Sentinel Wont Ad.
Phone 992·5427 after 6 p .m .
-~-- ·

-

POODLES , 6 weks old , $35 . Phone

'l'l()2.7671 .
VARD Sole . Monday . Tu esday .
Wednesday , Mo)(ine Mi chael,
PUPS to give owoy . Port Springer
laurel Cliff . Depres5 ion Qlo~s .
Spaniel . part Beagle . Ca ll 9Q2~orne f urniture and misc.
5170 or 992·2669 .
7 Fami ly Vo rd Sale. Tues . ·and
FREE : Collie Pup - pink house
Weds ., June 29 and 30th . 9:30
above Jones 8~~
a .m . ti ll 4 p .m . on corner of
Center and Third Ave. , Ma so n. SIAMESE kittens . $10. Seolpoints.
w. Vo
pho_ne 992 · 32 1 ~ . .
YARD Sale, July 1. 2 . 3. Bo ttom of
Massar Hill, starts a t 9 a .m .
Di5hes. pols . pan5 . some ant iques . Cloth ing , ice cream 1%9 P.lymouth Satell ite , $1200.
f reezer, mi sc. var iety of th ings .
Phone 992-6131 .
ENORMOUS 4 Family Yard So le, 1961 GMC Pickup tru ck, one- hall
July lst , ind, 3rd . Fronk Hvd ·
ton . 327 cu. inch engine, 4
son residence. corner Fifth
speed Irons., good running
and Pearl Streets , Raci ne ,
co ndi t ion . $550. Phone 992·
Ohio. Ant ique trunk : key-wind
7580.
clock ; collec tor 's i tems ; Gibson
gvilor; omplllier ; lawn mower; J9 74 Ford Co ur ier 4 speed, 11, 000
miles . $200 and assvme
5 piece dinette ; tools ; mi sc.
payments. 197.4 Kawasaki 250,
from A to Z.
1966 Nimrod camping trailer
for lost sole . ~~O:~e-992 · 7_066 .,

247·2167 .

Situations Wanted
Will DO odd jobs . rool 1ng. pam ·
t mg, hau ling , treewor k . and
mowing . PhonEi992·7409,

] 975 Ford Granad a 302 V-8, p .s.,
p.b ., o .c. $3895 . Phone 9923451.
1972 Ford •; , ton pickup trvck,

$1350.00. Cc \11 · 378 ~ 6349 .
1970 LTD [9) Passenger station
wagon , air condition , $1250.
Phone Middleport 992 -3647 .
1969 G. T.O·. 4 speed , mags, e)( cellent condition , $900 . Phone

992·7376.

I WOULD l ike to do babysi tt ing in BLUE 6 cyl inder Belair Chevy , 1967
model , $225. Ph one 949 -24 17 or
my home wi th pre-schoo l
see Randy Friend.
children Have e)(pe rie nce and
references . Phone 992 -60 12.
1970 Pon t iac 5500; wooden porch

NEW - 4-Wheel Drive and Luv Trucks In Stock
We have the right deal for you
* Reliable Service after the deal

*

POM'EROY MOTOR CO.
j992-2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves . Til8

-----

CoiN S. tQkens , any form gold or ONE~;-~ rt~-;
si lve r jewelry, spoons, ri ng s,
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
dental. Will trade . Ca ll Roger
fo r $104 mon thly plu s elec . or
Wamsley. Rutland , Ohio, 742·
$130 including electric . LOWER

2~1. ·~----~--~~

swing , $10. Colt 949-2698 after
Sp .m .

budget of Cheshire Township .

1974 Ford vo n.' E300 series , 1
own4H . Phone 992·7320.

2 Chest of drawer s, age not im·
port_?.n t. Phone 949- 242~·---

Not ice is hereby given that

1967 Nova, 2 dr. hardtop , ew ce llen t body , no rust nor pvtty.

PUBLIC NOTICE

on the 6fh day of July . 1976. at
6: 00 P.M ., a publi c hearing

wi ll be he ld on the budge\ of

th e Town~ hip of Cheshire,
Gu tl ia County, Ohio for the
ne xt succeeding fi scal yec1 r
endi ng December 31st. 'r&gt;77.

Such hearing will be held a\ .
the residence of the clerk .
Township Clerk ,
Ga i l ~ i sson

8;
June 77

----

,_

$4695

NICE 2 bedrm , air conditioned
hou5e w ith big yard . Couple
preferred , releren ces. Phone

992·2832.
1611 . camping trailer , good condilian . Phone 843-2542 .
1972. r rave l trailer,
contained. good

16

ft., sel f ·
cond ition .

Phone ( 614 ) 985 · 424~

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
Convenient to shopping on
Third and Mill St reets In Middleport. Brand new high quali·
ty apartm ents . See the
manager at Riverside Apartments or call 992·3273. Furnishe d
o part m9nts
also
avai lab le.

Laguno V.B. auto,. P.S.,
P.B., A.C.,
vi nyl top
T.H.
wheel.
lint. glass,
AM. ·fape

lt
~

:

Gold

:

cyl.,

Duster.

1972 DODGE DART

6

a~to., ~:~i)l699 ~Y~~.ora~:~.~to~: 56

$1895

~

Pla ye r radio .

1973 FORD LID
$2595

·

t

bu~k~~· s=~~~;·

!It

PS
sp0;;

~Doa~~odsr ~~.~~~~~i
15

emo. ee

1974 CHEVROLET NOVA
SS

1975 Chrysler Newport

!

$ 3 1. 9 5

.

2d

HT

o~ty 3~oo m~;s, ~i;:
10

P.S .,

v.

$2895

top .

a uto.

t 1639 EASTERN AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS

6 cy l . sld. only 11 ,000 miles.

i

'

NEW 3 bedroom home in Rutiand
for rent . Furn ls tled Including
colored TV , near mines. Con-

,• .t _( 614)98 ~~57J .~!J.er 6 p.m.
lARGE J r·o..,·i'\ f urnished opart menl . Phone 992·6161 .

•'

$2695

1971 VOLKS. TUDOR

1

2 Dr .. 6 cyl., standa rd. low miles. Gas saver .

1595

$2395
$4295
$2495
$1595
$1595
$1495
$3695

11295
~~~ s~~~ !,~RA
$995
1--1-96-.9-UO_LK_S-ST_W_'A-,.-----+-11_5_9_5-+-~-2-9-5-e
J'
• . • nu.
·
9-Pass .. good for la rge family .

70 LATE MODEL CARS IN STOCK
Sunday Shoppers Welcome,
Come In and Browse Around• .

'75 S.cirocco ... ..• •••.•••...••••.•. ••....• $4695
'74 V. W. Sta , Wag .• •.•••..•• ••••• .•• •.• •• 53995

Ji.

6 cyl . a uto .. 18.000 miles .

'74 V.W. Sla . Wag ....... . ........ ..... .. . $3895

NK FINANCING

t--'67_v_.w_._s,_a.• w.ag_•._..._••_.. _..._.. _.. _..._.. _..._••_s.s9s-t

*
a
*

Free air conditioning on '76 AMC's
for balance of June.

1----------1
~
DON WATTS V,W,, INC,
:

3 speed. VB, p S.. extra nice .

i

PLUS:

**

6 cyl . standard. on ly 11.000 miles .

__._ _s_z29_5_-l

'74 Pinto Ruriabouf ...... • ...............
'74 Jeep V-8 Renegade ..... ........ · .....
'73 Chev. C-10 Pickup ....................
'12 Pinto Runabout .... . .................
'71Piy . Satellile2Dr . H. T ...............
'69 Chev . Pickup .........................
'75 Rabbit, auto .. ....... .................

~.

1974 CHEV. NOVA

Orange, top con dit ion, lot of ecohomy here .

i.,........,$2-.39.,.5_
*
**

2795

Expect the

V.8, auto ·• P · S., rad 1'o, Vtny/
.
•'

;::

**
*
PICK-UP TRUCKS
: 1975 FORD SUPER CAB
,.
: 1975 CHEVROLET CUSTOM
i* 1975 DODGE CUSTOM
: 1974 FORD CUSTOM
1974 CHEVROLET CUSTOM v.a.

1

f'op.

~

$2995

V·8. A.C, P.S., P.B.. AM·
FM, etc., 44,255 mfles.

12995
2795
;.,..._ _ _....._.....;~--1
:
'71 BMW '2002'
'72 MUSTANG
,.

$2795

, 18,000 miles.

1

·$AVE i*

1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA
c

stripes. Sharp!

one.,

P.

1973
CHEV. IMPALA
• Dr ., a ir . radial !Ires. Ret ired school teacher's trade.

,..

:

1 Dr. hatchback , auto ..

'73 CAPRICE
CLASSIC

i ~!~~~~~~~p~~p~_-!4~~~
!GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH :.__ _ _____,
.

446·327~ ~

*"'******-*****-************** *******************',. WIN

AT BRIDGE

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

Give opponents a problem
MAKE spring cleaning profitable, LATEN paper, roller , 2 trucks ,
turn unwonted items inlo cosh .
Ad vertise in the Wont Ads .
LOCUST pasts, round or split.
Phone 949-2774.

reasonable . Phone 992 -7481 .
l975 Buho co 360 Frontier motor·
cycle, Endur o model. mony ew·
tras . reasonably priced. Phone
992·72-91 after 8 p.m.

-

1973 450 Prototype Kawasaki
motorcross, good condition, 74 Kawasaki $475.00. Phone 742·
2980.
$650. Phone 992-3843.

cOAL , lim est one, and calcium

NOHTif 1\Jt

chlor id e and calcium bri ne f or
dusl control and special mi xing
salt lor larmers. Main Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992-

• Q5 4
• A !I :J

3891.

o1o

GQQD 220 V . elec. dryer , $49. 50.

K &lt;11 112

\\EST

Bai ley's Store, Middleport,

t&lt;:AST
"' 7 2
• .J 9 7

-lo ll .I U
¥ 11l8 :l:l

t B6
... !J 7 5 4

SUNDAY
CROSSWORD
PUZZLER.
.
'

SOUTII

I Dress protector
6 Cnargt the
account ot
11 Ctlfysalis (pl.)
16 Brie l
:21 Cosmetic
22 Choice part
23 Perta ining to
Ugrians
2&lt;4 Angry
25 Bone Ol body
2E Measured
duration of
28 Passageway
3J Desire
32 Teutonic deily
33 Bone
:W Man·s nickname
35 Otctare
36 Vast ages
37 Htwalian wreath
38 Marry
40 Surleited
42Matal
43 Region
44 Stare open·
mouthed
45Mature
47 Scoffs
•9Merry
50Everybody 's
uncle
51 Recttly
54 Blb!ICII weecs
55 ShOrt steep (pl.l .
561ndalinlte amoun1
59 In music, high
BOMan's nickname
62ledtes
&amp;4 Abrasive
irwtrumerc
65Conjunctlon
M HtOJtw letter
87 Eti'IIOPIW~IIlle
89 Menttlaufltrings
70 WetHooted bird

71 Greek tetter

128 AMen!
72 O~mon
129 Musical
74 Quantity at
organization
material
131 Prollts
715 Bow
132 Footlike part
77 Father
133 Mountain nymph
78 Urge on
135 Employ
79 Consideration
136 A state (a!Xlr I
82 Changes
139 Residence
84 Cavils
140 Algonquian
85 Transgressts
lnchn
86 Heroic event
141 Sea eagle
8e Ireland
142 Cooled lava
89 .Edible rootetock 143 Spanish for '' yes"
90 Plant product
144 Persian fairy
92 Marsh birds
145Matlce
94 Thick ·sMimed
147 Colorful
animals
149 Urge on
98Convnunts1s
150 Indicate
99 Moccasins
152 Surgical thread
100 Ventilate
154 Newly married
102Roman roads
womBn
103 Capuchtn
!56 Force
monkey
I58 Chairs
104 Bother
159 Narrow, 1ta!
105 Alcoholic
boards
be~o~eraae
ISO Metal
106 ShOwy !lower
161 Watered silk
108 Theater sign
(abbr.)
DOWN
109 Pronoun
1lOA continent
1 Dart
(abbr .)
2Batance
111 Skating area
3 Smear
112Smootneathe
4 King of Basl'lan
feathers or
5 Openwort~. Iabrie
114 One, no matter
6 Resl~na
which
7 Ingredient
116 Collection of
6 Proposition
facts
9 Pronoun
117 Mixes. as dough
10 Allernoon•parly
119Reward
11Korean seaport
120 Short Ja c~et
12 HldeQUs
122 Christian festival
13 Prelix: belore
124 Stalemate
14 Ttlfee-toed sloth
125 Decays
15 Re.,erberated
126 Country of
16 Gratuities
Europe
17 Before

t KQ .l75 1
"' i\ 6

-1oK IIlH54

SUNDAY, June 27. 1976
ACROSS

26

A r\6:1 ·•

18 Sun god

19 Precipitous

¥ A K li
• \114

81 Stopped
89 County tn Ireland
90 Candid
91 Part cf
lor!ilicalion

20 Weird
21 Negrito
29 Eg)'plian
gOddess
92 Sallied
31 Tierra det Fuegan 93lcx:ation
Indian
95 Wile ol Zeus
36 Periods of time
96 A state
37 YoUng sheep
91 Hlnci.r guitar
39 Foolish
99 Me111 fasteners
40 EurOpean
101 Renovates
41 Uletess
10S ·Broad
42 Surgical saw
106 War god
43 Mountains of
107 r.l if ,·t: net wort
Europe
111. , Gray
44 Contest
112 Fondles
46 Proceed
113 Extinct bird
46 Man's name
115 Distance measure
49 Long. slender lis, 116 Altutian Island
(pl.)
118 Sicilian volcano
50 Become sun en
119 Speck
51 ~will
· 121 Sea nymgtls
52 Fragrant
123 A. continent (abbr.)
oleoresin
125 Negligent
53 Bog
126 Clan
55 Sewing
127 Sinews
implement
129 Foundation
56 Keen
130 Ptace in line
57 Bar legally
131 Conjunction
58 Highways
132 A.chea
61 Flying mammate 134 Soutl'lern
63 Malay canoe
blackbird
64 Animal coats
138 Wlaar
68 Knowledge
131 King of birds
70 leads
139 Possaulve
71 Mistakes
pronoun
73Camb form: lake 140Bitmish
74 Man·s nlctt:name 144 Fondle
75 Bhosl'lonean
145 Music : ae wti1ten
Indians
146 Decline
TT CaravanNry
1•7 By way of
78 Peel
148 Obscure
OOMalar dagger
149 Stendef' finial
lvar.
151 Note of scale
81 Pinch
153 Spanish article
83 Gratuity
155 Railroad (abbr .)
64 uncoull'l'persoi'IS 1ST A alate {abbr.l

o~o .IH:I

Nn l'th-Soti lh vultwruble
\\ t's l

Nor th t.:asl

lA

It

Pass

24

Pas~

Pass

!'ass

Pass

South
l A
• 1\

Opt·mnJ;: lt•wJ - B t
fl)• Oswa ld.~ ,Jam es .Jacoby

One of my fi rs t advanced
lessons in play was wh en my
father wrote me from Korea
and explained th e value of giving your opponenl a prob lem.
He said : " Sometimes th ey go
wrong ."
This hand is from a rubber
iJridge game at Notre Dame. I
led the eighl of diamonds
aga in st Sou th 's ironclad fourspade contract. At leas t it was
ironclad with trum ps brea king
J.2.
Sou th went right up with

dumm y's ace of diamonds and
cashed dummy 's ace or
\rumps . I dropped my queen.
Not that I ex pected a n y thin~
good to come about. but jus\
sec what did happen .
Sou th play ed a second
trump . My partner followed
again. 1l1e wheels started to go
Hround rn South 's head. He
fin a ll y dec id ed to guard
againsl four !rumps in my
partner 's hand . He finessed
hiS eight . I look my nine. put
my partner in with a diamond
and made my jack of trumps
by overruffing the third diamond lead . My partner's ace
of elubs wa s the setting trick .

~~~~~

(For a copy ot JA COBY
MODERN , send $1 to: " Win
at Bridge ," c l o this
newspaper, P. 0 . BOK 489,
Radio City Station. New York,

74 AMC Hornet

74 Ford Maverick

4 Dr., low mileage, like new. Small v.e,
auto. trans., P.S., air cond .

2 Dr .. 6 cyl., auto .. P. steering, air cond .

'3195
73 Maverick

•2995
72 Datsun

One owner, very low mileage, standard
trans .. 6 cyl .

4 sp. trans., 4 cylinder , reo\ sharp.

'2495
'1995
73 Olds Custom Cruiser 71 Dodge Coronet

Station wagon, Auto. trans .• V-8 e ngine.
P. steering, a lr con d.

A Pennsylvania r ea de r'
wants to know if the late J ohn
H. Craw ford was ever the bes t
player in \h e world.
In our op inion he wa s during
the lale '40s and earl y '50s. He
wa s cer tain ly the besl in
North America a t that time
and the fta lians had not taken
over as yet.

•2695
71 Dodge Monaco

'1995
70 Dodge Polara

4 Dr ., auto. trans., air cond.

4 Dr .• auto. trans.. 8 c y l., P.S. steering .

'1495
72 International lf• Ton Pickup, small

'1295
70 Ford Galaxie

eight engine, auto . trans .. needs body

500, 2 Dr. Ha rdtop, 8 cyl ., outo. trans..

work , but good running cond.

P. steering , air cond .

Good Buy In A Used Truck!

N Y f0019)

" '1295

'1195

~&amp;011~® 1kJ M&gt;oo·4f•i-J', -

Also a large selection of new cars ~nd trucks

Unscramhle th .. se four Jumhll'!t,

In stock for Immediate delivery.

one letter to tach squart', to
form four ordinary word s.

COURTEOUS SALESMEN TO SERVE YOU.
CHARLIE WEBSTER &amp; BUSTER SPRAGUE

CHULG

[]
iKELCHE

t
I

CARROLL
NORRIS
DODGE
•

I (]

II

~AUIPOLIS,

WHERE EVERYTHIN&amp;
UN17ER THE ~N
APPEARS TO
e.E OOIN&amp;.
pRICED to sell I ! ! Electric w inch

SHURTH
Now arranr~ t.he circled lttten
V ~~ to form the aurpri1e answer, u
~=·==·=::':::;::::':~::'A,~:.Ll::_,•unuttd by tht above cartoon.

II I
I

Prill 1M SIJIPIIShiiSWIUII!

I KX:t J-( X XX1
(.\niWPrl

Mund•7)

JouuM'" HOARD NEWLY CIRCUS MUFFIN
Yr&amp;lrrd•f•
·
.
"''"'".. "' Wllal JIOU might pick MP in Fronce-FRENCH

I

for

oolo .

Coli

992·2623 .

Pomeroy.
---·
,:;;;:iTAG wringer washer ond

dr;or . Pnone (61&lt;) 985·3554 ,
Harold Brewer , long 8ot1om ,
Oi"lio.

TULSA

truck winch, 12.000 lbo,

capacity . Also , two overhead
10x 10 garage doors. Phone
(614) 985-355A. Horold Brewer ,
Long Bottom . Ohio .
NE W 1~ft . f latbed

Brewer , l ong Bottom, Ohio.

!973

UNFURNISHED apt . for ren t , 4
rooms and both. Phone 992.

25

fl .

Yukon

Delta

houseboat, oil !elf-contained,

wltn 1976 Cncysler 105 h.p.
engine.
Phone 992·5532.
--··---....,...___..
____, ....

__

5900 .
ONe acre troller lot , ali facilities

__

19 inch portable Admi ral co lored

Five Points area . Co il c·olleci

T.V.. iuol like new. Coil 992·
3442.

(618)52•·5825.

TRAILER lot In Chesler . el9ctrlclty
ond wy water . Phone 992-60n .

ONE MoSS ey Ferguson Moer , 7 h .
n.rt ; one New Holland Flail
Chopper, all in good condition.

2 bedroom mobile home , Brow n'&amp;
Troi ler Pork , 992-33 24 .

.\:UI.l.I'IUS

Cc \19&lt;9·2092.
SO ta 60 lb plgo: ol•o 30 Jo 40 lb .
pig s. Phone 1-698-889b.

OHIO

H &amp; N day old storted leghorn
puUett. Both floor or cage
grown avol loble . Poultry hous ·
ing and automation . Modern
Poult ry , 'J99W . Main , Pomeroy ,

23

chann el CB fil s tn dosh,
am·fm-mpk radio , 8 track ,
llereo. Call992-3965.
··- -...--- -·-·-.

- --

m -210.. _ _ _ __

MEN'S used work amiform s. pants
28 Inch - 36 Inch woisl, shirts
S-M ·L, short and lang sieve,
$1.98 set . Bailey 's Store , Mid-

dleport,

1974 Suzuki motorcross bike, 1957
Che vy 327 , ~ speed t ransmissio n . Will te ll or trade . Call

m .3J05.

- -·-----

to~ dam trailer . 1973 Hondo 3SO • cylinder, like

Phone (614) 985·355• . Hocold

TRAILER Space for rent in Middleport . Pho ne 992·543.4 ,

Call ( 61&lt; ) 985 ·_~06 . _ _ __
1960 Chevro let truck $85. See ot
570 Pear l. Mi~~~r t ._ _

Pomeroy

OLD furniture , ice howes , bras s FURNISHED , 2 bedrm . oportm enl ,
beds ,
wa ll telephones and
odul h only , in Middleport.
ports, or comp lete household s.
Phone 992-3874.
.Wri te M . D. Miller, Rt . 4,
3 AND 4 RM. furnis hed and un~o:n~roy , ~o. ~992-77f:IJ .
furnished opts . Phone 992·
CASH paid lo r all makes and
5434.
mode ls of mobile homes . CO UN_c
TR
C::V
C::M
:c--:
cb-cll:o--H
,-o_m_e_P
::-c-,k:-,- RI,
Phone area code 614 ·423·9531 .
33, ten miles nor th of Pomeroy.
S$CoshS$$ for iunk.ed auto . Frye's
Large lots w ith concret patios,
Truck Auto Pa ris , Ru!land
sidewa lk s, runners and off
Phone742·2081 .
street parking. Phone 992-7479,

TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts . Top price for standing
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby,
I ·44b-8570.

Notice of public hea ring on the

1972 PLYMOUTH

Good tires, runs out good , V·8, automa tic. P.S.• P.B. ,

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR....... 11695

You owe it to yourself io ch~ck with us
before you buy any car new or used . We
don 't only want you as. a custom·er we want
you for a friend . See one of these friendly
salesmen Ceward Calvert, J . D. Story or Bill
Nelson .

WA NTED to rent 3 bedroom home
locally or w ould like lo buy
home on land cont ract . Phone

1968 CHEV. CAPRICE.............. 1495
ai r.

"Your Friendly De11ler"

Wanted to Rent

1970 OPEL GT CPE.··.... ··· ...... 1495
1

Sharp red finish , good inter ior, 4 speed, radio.

992 -2 174

Cc\1992 ~ 1 1 56 .

P.S ., P. B. , radio . A sport pickup.

1970 OLDS VISTA CRUISER......11295

SMITH NELSON MOTORS IN

State 13.
7:oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS

Super Sharp!

1966 FORD RANCHERO ............. 1489

one OWner , th is is

Was $2 995 .00

6:55--Chuck Wh ite Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri

8' F leetsi dc, wh . over red , clean interior, 350 v.s,
automatic1 power st ee ring &amp; brakes, good t ire~. st ep
bumper, radio, cus tom trim 8. m irror s.

BARGAIN DAY BUYS

trade .

6:4.1--Morning Report 3.
6 so--Good Morning , West Virginia 13.

1973 CHEVROLET C10 ............. 12895

SALE
PRICE

Mach l. "au to., P.S ., P .B., this
is one ni ce Forrt new Pontia c

6:30-Columbus Today 4; News 6: Summer Semes ter
8; Farmtime 10.

1974 FORD F100......................12995

102" C. A., V·B, 5 speed , IB,500 2 speed, R. axle, 900 tires,
solid cab, color wh i iJi! .

1973 FORD MUSTANG

6:00-Summer Semes'ter 10.

4 wh. drive, l ik e new interior , less than 12,.000 miles,
wh . over sil ver; 250 V-8, automa t ic. power steering &amp;
brakes, chrome m ldgs .• bumper , ex terior mir rors,
rad io . See i l now.

'73 CHEV.

:

:
!
..
!

1973 INTERNATIONAL 1600 .... 13895

Was $4795 .00

6: 1.1--Farm Report 13.
6: 1Q--Good News 13.

SUNDAY, JUNE 27,1976

SA!.E
I' RICE

Grand Prix , P.S., P. B., vi ny l
top air , AM-FM and tape, ius !
Iike new. local one ow ner .

$279
. 5

i* ~~S.:rP~a~'~fr;y~~~oP:

8' Sl yleside. green fin ish, good tires, R. bumper,
chrome gri.lls &amp; f its bumper, 6 cyl. &amp; std . trans.

$3995.

Wa s $4295 .00

1973 G.M.C. JIMMY

MONDAY . JUNE 28. 1976

Television Log

SALE
PRICE

Supreme, 2 dr., H.T., !ocal one
owner , lo~V milag e, air, tape,

Pomeroy

Other TEC Chevrolet Conversion Vans and
"The Swing Turtle" by Turtle Top in stock

1975 CHEV. BLAZER K-5 ........"15295

$3395.

1974 OLDS CUTLASS

2 door c oupe.

3695 $2997

1

1

1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo :

1

Light blue, Ieath . Int ..
• radio, 4 speed, A. C.j n ·C·
·trade -in .

i 1 - -.;.37..;,9.;....5_+---2_79_5_-1
lt

i

SALE
PRICE

·SALE
PRICE

Wa s $36 95 .00

" You' II Lik e Our Qua 1ity Way of Doi ng Bu si ness "

: 1975 Chevrolet Monza

,..

$2595.

J .~ ton , long bed, 4· speed .
cu stom ca b. on e owne r, nice.

Ca di II a c-0 ldsmobile
992·5342

$3095.

Wa s $3295 .00

1974 CHEV. C20

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

~ :.~~~~~~~·· ,,

""

;

SALE
PRICE

1975 CHEV. NOVA

Was $2895. 00

(1) Elderado

;~.7~3J~EEP~....----~
'74 SUPER BEmE

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

*

$2995.

2 dr ., 6 cy l. , auto ., th is is a
Grabber, local one owner ,
sharp,

MANY MORE
See: Fred Blaettnar, Melvin little,
or Pat Hill
Open Evemngs Ti17:00
Except Thurs. and Sat , Til5:00

. 2 dr ., ,, cyl. , 4 spe ed. low
milage, a r eal gas saver.

(1) Coupe DeVille

1

4

1975 FORD MAVERICK

Full power. lactorv air .

71 FORD LTD ............ ...... You Make The Price

i

FRESH. NEW FACES

...

~ PLYMOUTH

:

SALE
PRICE

1974 FORD MAVERICK

'1195
'76 Cadillacs In Stock

i

a GALLIPoLis
!,.. CHR~SLER-

&gt;t

. Biu cw 11h blu e v r oof. blue leather in te r ior . f ull power,
fa ctory ai r and T&amp; T wheel._

2 di'"., one caref ul loca l owner .

73 DATSON. /z TON ............ You Make The Price

Touring AMERICA is .a call to adventure
few can resist. When you set out to explore
. . . to get away . from it all lake along
TRAVEL EQUIPMENT CORPORATIO N's
trave l companion that has an eye for space.
a feel for family budgets and a talent for
dependable performance - lhe TEC MIN!motorhome!

'4595
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

73 FORD PINTO ................ You Make The Price

LWB Cargo Van , e:&lt; tra nice .
1

YOUR I NV IT ATION TO ADVENTURE '

Dark g reen -green v roof, full power, air . low mileage .

2 dr . sparkly original fini sh .

73 FORD lfz TON ............... You Make The Price

3 MODELS TO CHOOSE
Good Selection Van Conversions

·

~---···i************-*****-******************' V.W.-AMC-JEEP

CHEVY MINI HOMES

Before You Buy A

We're over stocked

2!1 -The Sunday'l'unes-lienuneJ,Sunday , ' ~"•ie27, 19?o

2 Boots . 5 h.p . John~on outboard;
soddla ond bridle; rebuilt 6
cyl inder engine . Call 742-2932
otter 5 p.m . _
sMITH and Wenon , Model 41 ,
automatic 22 col. target pis tol ;
new $180 firm , 1970 Datsun 510
Sedan, folr condition. runs
good, $500. Pot belly stove.

$1&gt;5 . Phone 'l'n· 7805.

new. 2800 miles with extras.
S87.5 or btat offer. Phone 949-

2181.
R.C.A.

refrigerator ,

exCellent

condition. Phone (614) 667·

TWf:l VE 8 wide mobile home s, 1
and 2 bedroom1, completely
furn ished . Cassius Conodoy ,
1900 Centro! St ., Gollipolis ,
Ohi o . N ea r Smith Buick. Ph one

3808 , Tu pen Plains.
(61•)"6·1391.
17 hood 50 lb. plgo. $35 a ploco 196q 12x60 Schultz. 2 bedroom •.
olr conditioner, good cOndi tion .
for oil, or $37 •och. Phone (61•)
667·3&lt;93 belore 10:30 a.m. or
Phone evenings 7&lt;2::.
·30
::.1:8::..
. - -:

-~5:30 p . m .

INSTAMMIC block and white Ad·
mlrol te(ev lsion, also, studio

10'k 55 '
mobile
home ,
3·
bedrooms, with fuel ol1 heat ,
bo ttle d
goa ,
range ,
telrigerotor, dinotte Ht, bunk

couch. Both goo(! condlllon.
NEW -delu we· Tappan electric
bods. $2000. Phone 'l'n·S786.
Phone 992-7319.
range , full warranty . Has chip
on door , will sacrif ke, $235.00. Three ·yeor·old registered black -1 a,drm . double wide home, 60xKingsbury Home Soles , coli
Angus bull lor solo . Phone (61•1 24 . on lot in Mason, W. Vo .

----

'1'12~

703,4.

-...,.--

qe5·3555.
---·-

Coll9q2 ~703&lt;.

•"
~
"'

•

•

�30- r~~esundayrtm~! ~;daF~~;6 Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
card of Thanks

Advort osen~onts MUST B E

Placed one day

advance.

1n

T MBER
Pome oy Fo est P oducts pays
op p ces fo $ o d ng sow

WANT AD RATES
~Oc a lme
1st mserbon

mbe

Ha by

Col Ken

446

8570

sleups 4 o

mo e

Ub 2756

554

he

a G ove s Stud o 446 7-194

n p nk case

••a•

MUST BE PAID
IN ADVANCE
Yar d Sales
- Help Wa oted
- In Men~ory
-.Card ol Thanks

Farm
co uch

One
from

FOR SALE
MES10NE FOR DRIVEWAYS
( AI( WINlERS PH 24S 5 5

Sale

owo d

e s

3f!8 B174

BOARD NG AKC pupp e
l Ke nels 1 m e~ I o
446 48 2-4

USED APPliANCES

REFR CERA TORS
wo she s
onge
G &amp; l App
19-4 to!. o
Ave Ph 446
7398

YARD SALE

Co

J ye

Clothes toys b ke s et c

9

so fa

cus
podd ng
a pe s Vo e y of
FClb c o d Foon
Sole-.; Mo 5
P P c-oso
Ph 675 3469 9 5 do y
I 8
F day

n Mo day 140 st
Ga ll po s Oh o

4 p

t1 1

Med co Technolog s
fOR LA80RA1 0 RY

WOk

EKG

and ass s w h po ants and
phys c on oft ce W te PO 801:

Pl•ase Rea d Your Ad'

~

Advert sers st'lould read
theu· ad'w'ertts ement the

Hunt ng on W Vo

G FT SHOP

Sole 5 pe :;on

me a)( p nee
9 even ng

torst day ot appears and

respon s ble frw only one
tncorrect 1 JSe rtton

Se

EARN EXTRA MONEY
luz e
Pe san a zed
Cosme! Ci {S ste Company o

Cia o ) Cam p e e Sk n co e
po o full I ne No e to y

LAWN
ov e o d o o I e s
epo s
59 .Se o nd Ave Fo
sule &lt;.:Jw s o I I e s 446
253 1

1/&gt;a

yfeo

es ct ons Fa de a s a f ee
cl n c demons! a on Ph Po
Adk s o eo au se lo
446
7409
AVO N
SUMMERT ME AND THE liVIN
COUlD BE EASY Be an A o n
Rep esen a 'le 4 hou s a day

S EEP NG Roo s wee~ y
Po k Ce
a Hoe

a es

ho

GERMAN 5 ephe d good wa h
dog
geese
ch ke
69
E 9 shf o d Ph 388 8532

Look a
s ovety home oday
Less han yea o d Has 3
b£1d oons
ba hs n ce
k chen w h
ange i'nd
d sposa
ca
ga age
Loca cd on a a gc o
133 000
N EW LI ST ING

NEW LI ST ING
Bar ga n
of he week Look h s ov e

RE SER VE liFE
WANT SYOU
MMEDIATEL Y
Peop e who o e de ous of ge
ng ahead w h o p ofess onol
fvtu e
Wou d $ 0 000 to
$ 5 000 ncome he f s yeo
nte es t you? I s ova loble
w h ou Componv We a e oc
cep ng oppl co ons fo pos
ons n Sou he n Oh o WP.
w I a n nd "'duals n au p o
lessons You ho ve a fu u e
w h good ncome no lovof s
no st kes and good f nge
bene f Is Ca l co lee 6 -4 574
6 8 between 9 o m and

_!' m
lADY a.. ve w th e de ly ody
Ref Ph 379 2400

D [ J 1 o p~ ly w ~ M d ond Po
a o G ope u
0 el P on
o d AquoVop
wo c
p s

P

c\o USo .sf'lo

ocy
he

e FeDepo

o

long@

haul

Wanted to Buy
JUNK uu o

sc op

e

o l Ph

3BB B776

MEN f ee o a e eo n I od e o
cons uct on c ews good pay
Open ngs
you a eo Send
ca
W nandy G ee
House
€ons uc on
2'1
Pea o k
Rd R chmond nd 47374

DO YOU HAVE PART Y PLAN EX
PERIEN Cf? FR ENDLY TO Y
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AR EA
RECRUITING S EASY BECAU SE
OEMS HA VE NO CASH NVES1
MEN! NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CAL COLLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518 489 8394 OR
WR TE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
T ES 20 RA LROAD AVE
ALBANY N Y 2205

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Be on gua d soc a ly today
Do n say o do any I ng o g e
one wh o kes to pu t o he s
dow some h ng o e I e
I en ds abou

e o comp e e
se t You saes
et

o~~
June 27 t976

to hau t

RA LER spa e
o o ed
el Ptl 2
Cl e I e
eo ly o l ook up
g com ng lac e
a e yq u
p 0 tJ 36 usus
pe g oo ned u de sa a y
cond
u b eed~ a ep eO S EEP NG oo
lo
Go lo
446 023
Ho e
POODLE pup~ e
B wk
op
odu
o y a
446 438
H !J I 446 952 l
RABBI I I 446 3732

DoBl:RMAN

AKC

pup

Re I

fe o e sho s and wo ned
$100 Ph 4&lt;6 7878

fQUR n ob le t o
spo es
e e y ng eudy lo I oo lo. up
Ph 37q 24M

OfF CE po
u dA

dow ow

e

5 4 Se

4460008

Auto Sales

Green Apartments

PU

0

5a

Wog o

ucks n
33 P eS
446 2531
67 Chev
37 2

fo

0

d

97 4 Volkswagen
44 6 7 464

a

$2150

FOUR w hee d e
9 3 Su
bu bo
au o
a
pow
s ee ng 8 b alo.e s. o &amp; ado
$3675 446 0008
973 Chev ole Von good o d
o
446 4 q be wee 7 30
am and 4 30 p n

and

972 350 B g Ho n
o e 5 256 9

9M~

Fo d Mo o V B 289 au o
ond S95
a
n uded ex
Ph 388 0488

67 Fo d uns good cody o go
$225 Ph 446 0 12
975 Cop ce Closs
9 000
m es ole ove payne s Con
be seen a 536 W Jad.so
Ap ' 83 A

1975 Fo d Supe Cob 388 8470

I

23)
he

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
t9) Tl s s o a good day o
rr ol&lt;e najo dec so s hast ly
If yo Qt css w ong vou co u d
Ia ~
lJVe so n~J
g asty o
IV

MOTORCYCLE RACES
Sunday June 27 976
RACE I 00 PM
Hodden Hills Raceway
8 ' miles N W on U
35
from Gallopol s

s

973 Fo d P ck up :102 3 spd
stand ve y good co d
o
446 2509

tamptng Equipment
PROWLER
TRAVEL al e s see he No
se e n he USA Sn h s Han
do So es St Rt 7 Go po s
Oh o 446 2240
LA ST week of 9th Ann e sa y
So le on Sa C of M n Moo
12 300 lo 0 500 20 I 7 S C
a er S4 299 lo d down 1900
We se v co w ho we ~o Camp
Con ey S o C o So e R 62
N of P P eoson W Vo

TRA DE UP TO THE SO L D STA IE
APACHE CAMP TRAILER 0 y
fo d down compe w h no con
voss 16 2 f modes One us
ed
ave
0 le
on ~ ssqs
Am sbo y s Apache o e 63
4 h A e Co I po s Oh o 4563

FOR SALE
D ELUX E MOB LE HOME
973
AI e ec c ~ bed oo m
cent a t a r unde p nn ng
t u l y Cit peled
de u,; e
nter or
$8 000
Ph 256 6535
At fer 5 DO p m
Ph 446 0307 9 a m
5p m

40 Acre~ Land ocated n
sec on 27 Cay Townsh p
Sou hern Oh o
Beau fu
COUll yS de Ga PO S C ty
Sc hoo 0 sir c
Pr ced
$250 DO
per
a c re
a
S 0 000 00 nv es m ent
N ne room
wo s o y
pane led and carpe ed four
bedroom home ocated on
co ne r o n 8 dwell New
root
mod ern k tch en
coun y wa er large garden
a ea Pr ce d S22 000
4 oom home n B dwe 1 49 a es
o a d Ru a wa e P ed c
Qulo.e~eSJOO

CLEAR ANCE SA E
New
169 95 7 650 C C 1 u nph Sc o nble
SS75
G 20
a n saw 65 Jeep
Wogo ee 2 WD co lo TV and
$275 up
s e eo como e 367 7 05
972 250 Ho do Mo o Spo
ond $450 Co 367 7234

9~

Como o po
675 3246

w h

IJ ed oom w t'1
ar gc ga ra qe n ce eve
Good buy to $ 500

o

'"

Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estate 446 1066
Even ngs A ussell Wood
446 4611
Ken Morgan 446 0971

36, x.28 X 009

Aluminum
Sheets
USE D OFFSET PLATE S
HAVE
MANY U SES

20'oo

Fe 9 30

Fe 9 20
3000 Fo Ds
860 Fo d
770 0 e 0
Fa a Cub
0 OJD
.4 65 Lo g
Mf o no
Rood o
J m s Fa m Equ p (en e
588 Jackson P ~e
Go po s Oh o
Ph 446 9777 o 446 3592

6for$

$~5

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
825 Thtrd Av e
Ga hpol s 0

GRAN fe I eeze beef d essed
ho g ng q
200 250 pc ha ll
P ed easo ob e con a Tom
Jo es Thu no
Oh o 286
2394
AN QU[ waod(n wheel a n
wogQn w h wooden bed good
o d a S'&gt; sla
Ph 286 2394
976 Ho do CB 4 46 4798
Al l S Cholmbe s comb ne
good ond 446 15 42
420 Jot n De e c Daze w I se I l o
S2500 o
od e o good PU
uc k 682 7672 o 446 9535

UXA AE

NC

EYRAOO

AIR CONDITIONING
s 'I lea
your
hom e r~ny n e o f the yea
bu du ng I o:se on g ho t
su nme
months
how
you
ove I Ca I us loday
for f ee est nates

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
JOO 4th Ave

Ph 446 16 37

BACKHOE DOZER TRENCHER '!r---~::""-----,
WO RK DONE AT REASONABlE ~
RATE
Con oc t Sm h h
~
a a ng Ph 4.46 398
~=~
~-......
;...; :
:
--"""b.
Al l TYPES o doze wa k Ph
379 2621 A len Rul he fa d
ECONOMIZE an fuel w h au
~pee a
on
one I ep aces
o9ue Con ac ng bock and

b ck wa k Ph 3SO 9939
BA CKHOE &amp; doze WO k also ap
so and f l d a a lobe 379
2258
ROOF ING and ex e o pant ng
F eees m e 379 2617
BABY S TT NG pa I me even
ngs 46 3677

ANTIQUE AUCTION
JULY 3 AT 10:30 AM
LOCATION: GALLIACOUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Th s ts an old estate from R o Grande Otno w 1h a few
p ece s added
00 P eces Oe p Glass
on st one
Bo v and P ctu e W eke Basket s Ro sev e Hu and
M cC oy Ca rn v~ G ass Co ffee G nde R S P uss a
R S Germa y 5 e ng 5 vc Lam ps Hava l n Ch na
Ace a e Qu t s
anT ra n cam p e e Stone Ja s Ch na
Lamp Cu i GI.J ss Eb va r a Au str a H sey J Brass
Be ds Oak K tchen Ci!b ne w lh co lo ed Glass n
Door s 2 Came Back Trunks 2 P e Sa fes ron Bed
w th B ass Knobs
o Bed w h Brass Bar 3 Iron
Be ds 2 H gh Boy Chest s 2 Rockers 2 Oak Dressers 6
H gh Hcadboa d Be d W'5h Stan d w fh Tool Rack
Se cr e ' y L brary Table w lh Caw Feet 3 Mat ch ng
Sa l Back Ch
s 3 sels o! Ma ch ng Oak Char s 2
Cvpbo01 rd ~ 7 M; bl e top 0 csse r
on Ke f le Round
l oa Stove Co I "'Inti Wood Cook S ove F ower Chest
Hellt o a 5 L~g O~k Tab e W cke r Rocker Wa I
Te c ph ooe Organ Stool Ha t Table Cla w and Ball
Fcc
Dr esse w nged M r o Mante l Cock s Ba ll
Pockel w, c1 6 II Oak Ro op Desk Pump Organ
Oak V ctor an Wa nut Rocke
Des k Lowboy 2
T I any slyl e La nps Ol d Too ls R R Lantern Adv
gn s C:~ne Bo l am Cha rs T n Toys Stone Ja r s and
many more t erns
terms cas h Lunch w II be ser ved
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
GALLIPOLI S OHIO

s

GallUJ County's Fastest Groumg Real Estate Agency

Beautiful 8 room house 1881 Sq Ft lvlng space
Featuring 3 BR with deluxe wa k n closets 2 Baths
Lg
attractive F R
beautiful rock
field stone
fireplace Formal DR Bu II n k tchen mported lghl
f xlures and pewter door hardware Also enJOY the use
ol Club House &amp; Sw mm ng Pool Call today

~~.

NATURE LOVERS
SURE TO PLEASE
I I 106 .acres with apple
peach and plum ttees
5
acres oft liable and w th a
tobacco base Qlus 4 room
house w tt1 basement Has
n electric sto\fe
dish
a barn
and
storage
build no Ge t away from
d
eye door
c evervthlng Cal today fer
central a r opener
and an appo n m ent
SPRUCE STREET
•
IN GALLIPOLIS
lOR
3 Bedroom modern home
6
ooms
frame
house
bath
b arn storage
w th built n cabinets
house All f
and Chicken
alum num s d ng To al
n ce Place enced n Rea
e ectr c garden space
With n walking distance of
PRtCE REDUCED
down own Ga II polls

SPRING VALLEY ESTATES
Basement fam1ly room n ce
modern kitchen (doshwasher table top range bul I n
wall oven ) Natural gas lorced air furna ce hardwood
floors 2 wood burn1ng t rep aces Large ot Pr ced to
sell
1 Room s plus 2 baths

l 8 BRICK HOME

!LIKE NEW)
Large nice leve lot
steel
nsuta ed

~

KEEP YOUR COO\. th s•
summ er n th s Cen a ~
cond country home Or"wi
beau tul y land scaped ' "'
ac e Qt 3 BR 1 bath sf:
beaut ful mode n k chen ftio
elec ri c nea
plush c ar ~
pet ng
c ty
schools ~..
S32 900
..:

~~e;en;nop:7~h~~nd~rr~:~ff:e

~~:~e~a~ac:;:a:l~h ~s~~~rol
~:~g~~~~~E$

PATIO to ~
sum mer cooko uts plus cen _.:,.,
a r cond make h sa home~
your tam ly w I en oy ~
Also tea ures 3 BR 2 baths
k t tam ly rm comb gas
heat and tu ly carpeted'; ~
Jus off Jackson P ke.:
SJS 000

OUTDOOR

A PLEASING
COUNTRY HOME
7 Rooms and bath Ve y n ce k tchen
w h tabe top range e ge a o
d shwuher washe and dryer New
beau u y conslru eel meta ba n

SPACE:I')
VALUE! 4 BR
stor\lj
s ucco w th forma d n nQ.i
rm on e,;tra lg lot ga ~
hea
2 ca garag e Sun
Valley Dr ve near Hotze(.
Hosp S34 000
....

Good ences or ca e o ho ses
La 9e 91!1 den space eve 1t9 ac es
P ced S29 900 DO

I STORY
COUNTRY HOME
• acres S m les from
Ga I po s 7 rooms
4
bedrooms
partial
basemen
fue oil forced
a r furna ce rura water
Ga llpo s School Oist
Garden space fronlage on
Raccoon Creek
LOT&amp;
MOBILE HOME
In Porter 10 x 50
2
bedrooms Elcona Nice lot
305 acre level Pr ced only
S6 900

•
WOODS -

CABIN IN THE
3 rm tu y turn shed one ~
beaut tu wooded a cres
Ideal tam ly retreat or
hun ers lodge
Ca I tot'!
more nforma on

SUPER VALUE
3 BR
home n c ty at a pr ce you
ca n afford SlO 700
&lt;,II.

•

ROOMY Re asonable
1970 New Moon Mob •
Home w than 8)(8 and 12x 6:.
add ons
all on perrl}~
founda on
Also
haJ,
garage On 1 27 acres ""'
Pair ol
Cadmus
Rd;
S2500
-""

BEAUTIFUL HOME SITE
Jus off 160 Evergreen 36
acres almost a I t I able
Nice hunk. of land
ICE CREAM &amp;
A SANDWICH SHOP
A good golnSJ business
ocated on State H ghway
160 In a n ce commun ty
Land
br ck bu ld)ng
equipment and a I stock
goes Priced right

INVEST IN THE BEST 'J,';
BR , baths
all e ectr c fu 1\'"}
cond
carpe ed comb k t chef\
tam y roa n
now under
canst u c on n
Gree~
Acres
$34 000

NEW LISTING
(PRICED TO SELL I
N ce 7 room frame home
with 4 bedroom bath and 2
porches Surrounded by 1 2
l!lcres w th a I 070 bs
tobacco base A so has a
barn and smal
ut IJV
build ng
TAl LE\4EL
L KE NEW)
Ove 3 000 sq t v ng space 4
bed ooms 3 ba hs lhermop.ene •
doo s and w ndows Elec r c Ilea
and cen 11 11 Ru 11 w.e e sys em
, 2 c11 """ ~e 4ac;esof and Lon
o o he fealu es

1 A &amp; HOME
Just out of ci y lim ts on Rt
4
Nice comfortable S
room home w h wood
bu ning
f rep ace
basement modern k tchen
nat gas furnace c y
water large carper: n ce
6x18 bocksorage bldg
garage spl!ll ce Call now
IAJRM
HOUSE&amp; M HOME
D( 1 ed we I w h elecl c
pump Nice
acre w th 3
•room house and 2 bedroom
mobl e home Apprcx 2 2
m les from Vinton Very
pretty
75 A
LINCOLN PIKE
5 aoms frame house AI
s d ng 3 bedrooms p us
bath kl chen has bu It n
cablne s range and oven
New metal barn also u Illy
bldg 15 )C. 28 good ten
c no tobacco base n cf.
pond 15 acres 1 liable goo4._•
pastur~

61 81 A BARN
LOG CABIN
1 000 bs Tobacco base
n ce 40 x 60 barn 30 A
good dlze t mber
8 A
liable all min era r ghts
goes This farm can be
bought on Land Cont act.
Call
LARGE
COUNTRY HOME
PLU5t9ACRE
7
r ooms
frame
4
bedrooms with bath tots
of buiJt In cab nets good
small barn blacktop roacs
Priced on y $ 6 000

A W SE INVESTMI!NT

BEAUTIFUL HOME
6 rooms (3 bedrooms lots
of bui t n storege space 2
u.ba hs modern k tchen with
bu It n cabine s table top
range
wall oveR
dish
washer
rura
wa er
central a r a gt' lot on R t
160 with a beau ful v ew
Reduced tor quick sale

•

4otl l'llCh

24 _ $17 28
26 -$18 72

28 - $20 16

Southeastern OhiO
Truss Rafter Co
Box 28 A
Rutland Oh10 4S775
Ph (614) 742 2409
We Deliver

REALTY

WHY NOT s ep up to an
area of rna n free v ng 3 BR br ck e ectr c hea
near Ho ze Hasp tal a I
modern canven ences a ,J!
low $34 000

25 Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
Office 446 2674
Luc lie Brannon
Eve 446 1226or446 2674

PLANNING TO BU LO ?
we have cho ce lots 13t
several local ons Aa
d son Twp
Georges
Creek Road Crouse ~e L,.,
Rd S2 250 and up

RON CANADAY
REALTOR

00
39

FOR THE BEST in arch tectu a
des gn of new homes smal
commerc al buildings apt o
remodel ng w th s ote approve
al plans BII Wa ker &lt;46 2146

;!

Audrey Canaday
Saleswoman
446 3636
Any Hour

PUBLIC SALE

EXCAVATING da&gt;er
and d tcher Char es
field
Back Hoe
Rutland Ohio 7A2
446 7087

TIME TO CHECK AIR CONDI
TONERS RESIDENTIAl AND
COMMERCIAl CAll D DAY
REFRIGERATION 18 YRS EX
PERIENCE
AND
SCHOOl
TRAINED PHONE388 8274

J

TV REPAIRS RENTALS
Serv ceColls
P ctura Tube Spec ol1s s
HARTWEll ElECTRONICS

SATURDAY, JULY 3rd-11:30 AM
DISPERSAL OF HOLSTEIN DAIRY HERD
AND EQUIPMENT

land
Gas
bur al

245 5365
G l ARBAUGH TrH Service and
landscape nc Dozer work Sf
Albans Ph 304 722 3498

BORDER S GARAGE DOOR So
v ce Commerc ol and Res den
lal Spec olizlng In ope oto s
Loco 256 0&lt;72

71 Cows tn all stages of lactal1on 12 cows
are now dry and w II freshen In July and
August Several cows have freshened
recently
Th1s ts a young set of cows 12 ftrst calf
he1fers 16 second calf cows 15 5 yr olds
and 14 6 yr old cows
4 yr old herd s1re out of Rag Apple
Elevation and a high producmg dam from
the Jack Crank herd Herd ts Bangs and TB
tested a J pregnancy checked
1 000 ga I st am less steel bulk tank Chore
boy 4 unit p1pelme mtlker Double Four
walk through mtlktng parler wtlh feeders
and controls
1965 Ford truck F 600 wllh holst and 14ft
gratn fed
Dtxte Lou Farms
Galltpolts Ferry W Va
20 mt les below Pf Pleasant on State Rt 2
John McNe1ll Auct
Pete Clerk

backhoe
R Hot
Se v ce
2008 or

1

li.

CONCRETE
s dewa ks

work
pa os
basement
etc

Lou s Cox .... 6 3398
E~ECTRICAl

lnsfollol on
Rtg
Comm
lndust ol 256 08S5
Crown C ty Oh o

CHECK our pr cas on used Mob1la
Homes and trove tro l•rs Trl
State Mobile Homes Soles
1220 Eos en Ave Golllpol s
.; ECONOMY Tractors and Equ P
OMio Bonk Financing
~
ment Co o I s Solea and Ser
~ ~ ;_; 111 Wtst on 588 Ph 1971 Hometto12x602 br
2
1971 Kirkwood 12x65 oxpanda 3
br
dug
245 1970 Elcana 12x62 2 br
1971 Dotrollo 12x60 2 br
\ -==~-::--:-:·· ··
B&amp;S MOB lE HOME SAlES
&lt; APpAlOOSA Stud SeN ce 2•5
Pt Pleosan W Vo
'
9369
14 Penthouse M H 2 BR Iota!
~ FOR ttl• best n architectural
oloct c Ph 245 5166
doslgn ond bu ding ol now
wid•
t a ler 1 and 2
homes
small commercial
bedroom ccmletelv furn
'
build ngs apt COO" omOO.l ng
Call us Canodoy 1900 Central
t.. w th state approval of plans
St Gal polls Oh a 446 13'1
8111 Wolkor ••6 2146 or 446neo Sml hBu ck
~
3918

'
'

.c;

128

house

TREE SHADED HOME
Deep In the heart of town
you will find this large two
story home - covered with
aluminum sdng
4 BR
a ge kitchen OR and den
aundry
and
stonge
porches 2 oom bsm with
gas turn
garage and
storage room very deep lot
with garden spot A lovely
location for children to
walk to school
COUNTRY GRANDEUR
+JOACRES
Luxurious 3 BR 2 bath
ran eM stye home beau ifu
kitchen
formal
DR
1 reploco In LR
WW
carpet cen rat air 2 ca
garage and outbuildings
Th s propertv must be seen
to appreclllte
GOOD PRICEGOOD BUY
3 BR two story home
located In the edge of town
with an ex ra lot for garden
or play area large eat In
kitchen
family
room
porches basement with
gas turn The pr ce s right
Buy now and fhe children
can walk to schoo from
Jhelr new home
HAVE IT YOUR WAY I
You say you Wtllnt 3 BRs
and ve In the coun ry we have I Large 2 story
country k tchen OR part
bsm
and
furnace
alum lnum s ding
storm
w s and d s porch anel
garage
All h s and 7
acres Calf now The pri ce
has been reduced
FACE tT
The FASTEST EASIEST
way to sell vour home s
w th
the
BRANNON
REALTY Coli fodoy - we
w 11 1st your proQerty and
do our very best to promote
a quick sale as we have
done for many others
BETTER

USED M08lE HOMES
CAll 576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE an fuel undorp n
your mob e home ond anchor
lor safely Foster Mob le Hom•
Se v ce 446 2783 o Elme Sk d
more ,.,.6 3.479

COUNTRY BEAUTY 3
BR br ck ran ch on 2 ac
Feat u es large LR w th
I replace
equipped
k tch en dining rm 2 '
baths full basement with
flrer.lace n family rm
cen a r &amp; garage A nice
dr ve to m i nes or Gavin

~0

EN ACRES - S27 900
s the comfort of a r
conditioning
and
the
economy of gas heat nth s
3 BR ranch A so features
WW carpet
arge baCk
porch
garage
&amp; flat
landscaped lot

M DDlEPOAT
BUS NESS INCOME

PROPERTY

NEAR VINTON - 64 A
most y I llable ground No
biJ ld ngs $22 000

UJ) to $660 00 per month
Ren a$ plus a beau lful 7
room {3 bedrooms) home
to lve n yourself alum
Sieling good grade n ce
fran po ch lots of bul tIn
~binets tab e op range
wa I oven laundry t Ubs
nat gas forced al turr1ace
central air We 'Jd burning
flrep lllce Lots of shrub
bery level grassy lot A
be,..utltul place Pus a nice
nO.me Pr ced Oht

SPRING
VALLEYS
FINEST Make an
appointment to see th s
home to be proud of Th s
L shaped
anch features
2500 sq It of ltv ng space
nclud ng
a complefe
k lchen
large LR w th
f replace 3 or 4 BR s
tam ly rm 2 , balhs cent
a r garage and a large
corner lot

92 ACRE FARM
7 room house Storm doors
and windows beaut fu
landscaped yard 2 barns
'hlcken house hog ce lar
smoke house and tool house
and corn cr bs 25 acres
bottom and fruit trees
1 BOO lb tobacco base
Locat~ on Highway 118

CITY -QUIET STREET
- Comfortable 6 rms and
bath with a large back
porch &amp; garage located on
Fifth Ave Prfced to sell $18 000
MORGAN TWP - Pasture
farm 41 acres c ean rolling
grassland good fences
large pond springs old
house wllh 6 rms and bath
eel ar house
AIR CONDITIONED
A most new 3 BR br ck
Is very appea lng
and can be your dream
~orne
Large equipped
k tchen 1 , baths qual ty
carpet throughout large
LR d n ng area garage
full basement
IDEAL RETREAT - ~6
acres with a large pond and
covered w th lots of p ne
lrees In a perfect h de a
way for your weekends
Locafed about 20 ml from
Gall polls $6 900

HOME 446-9539

s p A c E n the fresh
count y a r - 13 acres w tJ)
3 BR
baths a I electr c
hom e $32 000 and for
$10 500 more you can hav e
more space
49 acres w
39 6 b tob base

CLOSE TO MINES I&gt;
ac larm mostly clean
eve I a nd ro I ng land Good
7 r m home

OWNER WILL FINANCE
th s 93 A Raccoon Creek
farm at a low nterest rate
Flat land with ' wooded ' til able Good home w th
6 rm s &amp; bath barn and
outbu ldlngs Near V nton

BEAUTIFUL COLONIAL
TYPE HOWE
Brick front 1 706 sq If
1 v ng space 3 bedrooms
large tam y room I v ng
room forma d n ng room
modern k t chen with lots of
cab nels
dishwasher
range and d spasal central
air fully carpe ed 2 car
garage Located on a level
tat ov er , ac e A beau11ful
home and orlced to ~ell

3 BEDROOM
1 Acre plus - leve ap
prox
1 2 m les from
Hospital on blacktop rd
Plenty of garden space
rura water country livi ng
Close to Gal !polls Pr ced
only S18 000

BRAND NEW All e l ectrl~
3 BR carpeted k chen h~
beaut ful modern cab net~
range disposa and dl s ~l
washer
In small su ~
d vis on $26 000
-.

THIS IS THE ONE your
fam ilv
deserve s
Attract ve 3 BR ranch
fea tures 1 , baths pl us a
In
the
full
shower
basement 2 WB flrep aces
ww ca rpet formal d n ng
rm
modern
k tchen
garage &amp; larg e andscaped
lot 355 It deep Located 2
m1es fro m tow n on 141

BEST BUY IN GALLtA
COUNTY - S21 900 w lh
f nanclng available Lovely
3 BR ranch Is loca ted al the
edge of town and offers HW
f oor s gas heat air cond
large la unory rm modern
k tchen &amp; garage

..

If you are nterested n
se I ng your home farm or
bus ness prope tv call We
have a hsl of po1enha I
buyers

a s

For Sale
1 BA I s C
2 Jub ee Fa d
MF 50 Ds
MF SOGo
MF 61 D 900 h s
MF 50
oo de
MF6SD
MF 50
MF 35 Dsl

Ph Home 379 2184

SEE IN 5 BELIEVIN
~
S23 500 buvs h s near y
new frame ranch on y ~
m es from c y Gall pol~
School D st
,..

EUREKA

tOMATO
pep pe s
abboge
o he pi on s Floyd E
588
Rodney 245 5124

uck 24 000 n es 6
ew es Ph 245 5548

ado

ooms
c oun y wa c
qc o
oom o a g a
;
900

HONDA f a 90
o d ow
£~age 446 71 54 al e 7 p m

4973

972 VW Supe bee e
good cond 992 21J77

Ph

97 5 Kowosok 250
GT 360 256 1206

969 Fo d Vo See o op~ ec o 1:!
460 l o o D e c phone 44 6

74 Move ck 6 cy
AC
on s see be ed
446 4243

Kowaso~

u nace
por Th s
exce
buy

For Sale

$650

2 Ch ys e 2 d H T PS PB
powe w ndows a d eo am
l m op e
I whee S 695
388 BB20

y n ce 3
o ah

N£W Fa d
o o g u k bed
P 44 6 288 of e 5 p
"''eek
days A y ne weekends

367-7250

967 GMC
o p k p good
co d o $750 Ph 446 0859
969 Pon o good
Ph 367 OS4

1 700 m 1es

sO o60 bs pgs 30 o 40 b pg
A bony 698 6896

p

0

New
Modern
hree
b edroom
al l
e ect i c
t'lom es
Ga pol s C y
Schoo
Dsrc
ap
pro x ma t el y 7 m les from
Ga po s
s tuated on
75 x 20 lot s ce ntr al sew er
and
wale
sys ems
P ced S2 0 000

FARMAtl M
o o w h 6 f
owe good o d Pt 245
5064
5 Suzuk GT 550
S JOO 4&lt;16 900

Menl Carter
ABciate

'

') no o cycle s 974 YZ Ya noho
80 97
Sl 00 onda Ph
367 0424

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townho uses
Jl , Baths
Pay Only On e U!J!Jty
Add1son Oh10
Fo~ InformatiOn
Call Sh1rley Adkms

NEEDS ot. Fot.M LY 3 BR
ba hi c ty WI er and $tWe t
schOQ s ca peed vacan and e11d
0 mmed 11 t occupen cy S2S.OOO

~

Lots
9
frontage
dee p 2 o s on R I 7 n
Crown C y P ce SS 000

TARA

446 3636

Hollow Rd

Spnng Valley

e PU

Locust St
Ga lhpolts Ohto

25112

~~t ':t~~r b~x dr~~s ~ne~'g;~:

Acr eage
n ves t n Rus c
So uthea st ern Oh o ap
pro x 20 acre s of wooded
n Watnu
and
oca ed
Twp Pr ce S25 000

446-1599

•
THE WISEMAN

AGENCY
GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

WHY R !:;NT? SlO 000 buy S:
t his a r co nd
2 BR:
F eetwood Tra ler on 1 acr &amp;o~

q74 350 Kowosok 3 000 n es 2
975 von seas ex c cond
97 l TO Cal 446 44 3 o 446
290q alte 5 p n

=~·-··=.

CANADAY
REALTY

PORTER BROOK
new br c k and frame
c olon al s yle ranch
w
ex ra g fami y rm 3 BR
1 2 ba hs U2 900

2

DOBERMAN P che
pupp c
Cha np on b eed AKC R g
bo ck o d us wo ed $ 50
eody fo o e P 388 Q99

II

=··.....

~=----=:-:-::

READY FOR YOU
n
beau tlfu
Green Acr es
subdlv son 3 BR
all
e lec r c
fram e
fu y
car peted n m nt cond t on
r ea dy for mmed ate oc
cu pan cy $29 500

USED FURN TURE
GE flee onge
a y buse
b own
ec e
quee
na ess o d box sp gs
CORB NAND SNYDER
UI ED FU RN
955 ceo d A e
Ph 446 7

•

968 Chev P ckvp V !:1 307 e g
std sh
ad a Ph 446 3670

he Almanac
United Press Internallonal
Today IS Monday June 28
the !80th day of 1976 w th 186
to follow
The moon 1s between 1ts
new phase and f1rst quarter
The morn ng stars are
Mercury and Jup1ter
The evenmg stars are
Venus Mars and Saturn
Those born on thiS date arc
under the s1gn of Cancer
Amencan co mp ose r
Richard Rodgers was born
June 28 1902
On th1s day m history
In 1894 Congress declared
the f rst Monday m
September as Labor Day
In 1919 World War I was
off1c1ally ended w1th the
s1gnmg of the Trea ty of
VerBallles
In 1971 the use of public
funds for parochial schools
was ruled unconslltutwnal by
the Umted States Supreme
Court

home off Low e r Rver
R oad s uated on one acre
plat
arge gar d en ar ea
two balhs modern k tchen
beame d ce I ng
v ng
room
38 x 16
wood
burn n g
f rep l ace
Ga ll po s C ty
Schoo l
0 s r c pr ced $46 000

b ocks
ch nney b ac k
B ock 4.46 1783

CENTENARY Wood ~ Ke

4 oy ba e s

AOUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
A o depends upon the way
yo
an dl e you se I od ay
when othe s make eQIJcsts
Be g
coo pe a ve sc s ne
one o ne lulu e ac t o s

Four bedroom c arpe te d

..

3 be droom ran c h w h
la m y oom you I ag ee
h s s t e b es buy n ne
a ca o $24 900

9013

LAB TECH expe enced fu I me
s off pas on n node n 92 bed
foe ty Contact Ad m n s o o
Hock ng Vo l ey Commun ty
Hosp ol logon Oh o 385
51&gt;3

REALTOR

446-1066

C.AROL YN S Puud e Suo P ofes
s o I 9 oo n g by opp 388

"an
e•p
e Box

WOOD

A U"' NUM b d ngs w h
dows
I oo s and

h e eo n ngs Col 446 058 o
742 2354

A I n okus
Sl Opt c
ll
0

For Rent

e
equ ed
hou s
Send

esume o Box &lt;490 o Ga l po s
T bun e

NotiCes

gbo

gG oo

d pp ng 44b 7878 By appo n
ne:n o y

uI

report errors in time for
the ned m!le tton Paper IS

PHONE 446 2342

JUANITA A A I B cod Dog G con

RUSSELL

OHIO RIVER
REALTY INC.

[H 446-3434

R

n cos o f Po e

Ave

- Lost a nd Found

SFWIN G

CH MNEY Bl fJ( k S W Vo &amp; Oh o
ump Coo
Col po $ 8 ock
Co 446 2783

Pat t y

BOARDIN G &amp; AKC PUPPIES

wo lle s ze po a of you ov
&amp;d one ha~o~e o new one mode

Glosses
o75

6 m les fro n

"feasant

Pt

and M
(a
a d M s Robe-

M

K &amp; P Ke

lOST WAllET? If you ve as

19 cents a lrne
for 6 msertlons

Ant que S.1 fe

Mc(o hy

~ets for

Lost:aml Found

3 mserbons

of so ow

Janey and M

USED Tent

21 cents a hne

W TH doop opp Clc a on o he
M II C eel-. Co,., nvn r to h
though lu eu du g ou

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION
JULYJ
0 00

31 -The Swlday Time1 Sentinel, Sw11lay June '!I 1978

COMMERCIAL SITE - 5
ots and older home on
Slate Route 7 n Kanauga
Lots of potent al for $34 000

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS OHIO

LOTS FOR SALE
loca ted on Ne ighborhood
Rd Lincoln Pike George
Creek Rd
&amp; Rodn ey
Harr sburg Rd F nanclng
ava lab e
ACRES IDEAL
PASTURE
FARM
mostly
clean
rolling
grassland good wove n
w re lences plenty spring
water large fob base 3
barns S92 500

The Ttme I o

HARRISON TOWNSHIP WILL TRADE - 66 acres
of woods and grassland
Fronts on 2 roads

commercia!.!!!• Yours for "~~·· ·

CITY - VACANT LAND Appro x 5 2 acres running
from
Fou th
Ave to
Ch i ckama uga
Creek
56 500 Don t wa t to buy
buy and wa I
NEAR MEIGS MINES 1 8 acres on Margan Lane
features a new unfini shed &lt;1
rm
and bath hom e
c stern pond and lots of
privacy Pri ced at Sl 2 000

*

NEAR RIO GRANDE Over 4 acres levello ro ling
ground w than almost new
modular home f ea tUre s
I 344 sq. It of modern
tl v ng Also Included is a
new 2 car garage apt

LISTINGS NEEDED NOW
TO FIT OUR BUYERS
NEEDS

AT
LAST
YOUR
DREAM HOME - I yr old
brick ranch offers 2 140 s9
It of modern living . Don I
wall to see this 3 BR and 2
bath home The k ! chen Is
compete with d ishwasher
disp m crowave oven and
range
Ofher
spe c ial
features are a large forma l
din ng rm famtly rm with
f replace 14x24 living rm
qu.,lly carpet heat pump
2 sets patio doors 12x57
patio and 2 car garage wlfh
electric door opener This
beauty Is priced In the 50s
and located n R a Grande
Shown by appointment

:+

*

HOUS E AND L OT
87 x 180 on
or v e
""- hr aug h.!t
..,.. n ce k c he
fu rnace
ed

FHA APPROVED yr
old ranch In exce lent
condition has lots to offer
for only $2 900 Tolal
electric home features J
BRs laundry rm
large
kitchen with dishwasher
12x24 I ami y rm w th pat o
doors central water and
sewage and a flat lot In
Rodney VIllage II

THINKING OF
SELLING'
I could be using
this space to
advertise your
home CALL
TODAY'

IAROAtN + MOdt n • oom and
oa t1 hOme w "' fu b.esemen needs

l
ACR E
9 year old 2 s orv 3
bedroom f arne w
fu
ba semen Fu l y ca p et crJ
c ty wa cr
rec ca on
room
St a e Rou c I
close n $2 1 900
ON E STORY
3 bed oom tra m e
ca r pe ed
w h
ba seman
on
He ghl s
Ca u d
re crea on ro om
ha ve
f ep a ce
ba seme n
cen tr e ! hca
gas c ty wa e and sewe r
only S17 600

.ame n shed wo k bu sn bl!ld o
on ~s 3 SOD Located en .e n ac e
of~&gt;nNeghbb hoodR:d

LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
- SELL
TRADE

GALLIPOLIS AREA

CaD us nght now

LISTINGS
Ntce two story three
bedroom
nght
In
Galllpolls
Has
been
remodeled recently One
car garage and nice back
lawn The Pr ce s R ght

A REAL BARGAIN
L ke new three bedroom
ten minute drive from
Gallipolis 1 300 square feet
ol lloor space with a one
car
garage
n
ful
basement
You
won t
bel eve the pr ce for the
product
Very n1ce 4 bedroom on
double lot 1 250 square feet
of floor space w th one car
garage In full basement
Grade A construction and
well taken care of

Just con~pleled
New 3
bedroom home 1', baths
n ce large kitchen and
din ng
area
Tappan
eleclrtc range d sposal
hood large garage fully
carpeted Iorge level lot
Priced right to sell
Located m Green Acres
Sub Close to town lnquJre
al Corbin &amp; Snyder 446
1171 after
446 2S73

s

~=+~~~*=~~==~~
REAl ESTATE lOANS
VA FHA 30 yr loons Park Mor
tgoge Services 77 E Slate
Alhons Ph 592 3051

7

FQR SAlE BY OWNER 2 b homo

Comp
barber
and
shof on Route 7 Large
fha
cou ld be used
mobile home rental
etc Th s JS a good DU!&gt;tness
or
rental
Investment
opporfun ty

on approx :Ia acre w thin 10
m nute dr ve I om down own
homt wll sell w th same
acreage If bought gh owoy
Inter or of home emodeled
ecen ly Cal 4.46 10~9 after 6

p ~-- --- - - --

RE FOR SALE

31 Acre farm located close

We nee d L st i ngs Call the
w seman Agen c y 446 364l
Gall a Co s La 9est Rca
Esto1te Sales Agency
Off ce 4411 lU l
tk4! w sem an 446 3196
E N w seman 446 450 0

to mines Well kepi
2
bedroom home with wood
burn1ng ftreplace Located
on blarktop road 21 acres
pasture 10 acres woods
with large stocked pond
Call
388 8202
lor
3 o1ntment

rNeal Realty

I

11 acres voconl land
plenlv of water 10 m tes
trom town $8 500

73 12SXL Honda S350 or 2 s ee '
400 ro 500 lbs Col1••6

•on

CIJ

2 8R mobile home• $100 3 b
mobile homes $125 .... 6 Ot75

NATIONAL
ADVERTISING

2BR lro le Call «o 3358

•460108

t

lOT w 11 all utlllt os n•la led Ph
446 0108

REALTY

nch

BRANCH MANAGER

GOING BUSINESS
Downtown Gallipolis

Also servtng areas between
Crown
C ty
and
Chesapeake
Joe Crans 256 1456

For Rtnt or Salt
LOT w th all ut "'
I t es lnsta led Ph

BY WISEMAN

Bud McGhee

•

the

SOLD-

VS

Ofhce Ph 4&lt;46 69
E ._en ngs
Cha es M Neal446 1S46
J M chel Neal446 1503
Silm Neal 446 1lSB

Call n lor nformaf on on
other I sf ngs we have In
the Gall pol s and Crown
City areas

with
es

Ll \

~------------------------------------------ ,

.5 m ies from Ho zer J BR
hom e 8.
0
\ 16 500
v ager 6Sx l2 3 BR M
Hom e and lo s 500 69'
K rkwood 55x 2 3 BR M
Home w h a ach ed room s
on
a Ia a S1"i 000

-

5 0oms and Iorge both ful bas•
ment
storm w ndows and
ha dwood flea 1 2 1 f oo s
2 acres 367 7371

Thts Home Wtll Wtn Your Vote

Very well bu111 3 bedroom mn ntenaflce fre e 2 story
hom e with lorma dlntng large family roon1 buill In
ktt applianc es garage central a r and a top notch
ne ghborhood In the elf)' school w&lt;1ter &amp; se wer district
*$3390000
Here 15 a fine home n an excello lt loca l on Owner
...._wants to mov e to the country so must se ll thts beautiful
Jlllf 3 bedroom home In cl udes " large faml Y oom
dmmg central air compl etely bu It in kl::~~~~;[
Located In Washo gton Grade School d stnct
..._ S35 000
~
HOUSE AND 2 LOT S
IN CHESHIRE
....__ 2 s ory 3 bedroo m
a ne
~ ca pe l
a
ove
c n a
hea
a ura gas '1 foo
r v~ lr o t a9e S34 000

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

4467900

IS Right Now

And here ts a specia l home buy that you d eserve to see
A very p relty ve y clean l bodroam hon1e with a wilt
approved kitchen newly d ec orated living room
quality carpetmg throughout plu s a full ba sem eot
breezewayand garag e T hi s home is locat t d on a large
llat well landscaped lol that s perfect as busin ess or

2 b t o fer n Chesh re Melv n
lila
2 BR MH furn beaut ful se tlng
overlook ng Oh o River
loco ed on o d R 7 Add son
OhPh 367 7201
AtMOST new 2 bed tra ler odu ts
o w I /xcept one chid On
Bu ov I e Rd Ph 4.46 1004
HOUSE 1 a le 2 b
located r'1
P onls S b AI ut I es Pd 379
2380

CARTERS PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Co Fou th&amp;P na
Phone .. 46 3888 or .4-46 .,.,.77

- -- - -

STANDARD
P umb ng Heat ng
215ThrdAvo ••63782

GENE PlANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Healing
A
Condit on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph
1637

••o

DEWITT S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160o Evergreen
Phone &lt;46 2735
J

If you want your own busmess lhts could be
11
Includes complete ftxtures and
equipment Reasonable rent or lease CALL
TODAY
We have rece1ved several requests for a
vanety of properties If you are th1nkmg
about selling call us today
Get yours ltsted wh1le fmanc1ng 1s
ava1lable

PHONE 446-0552 - ANTIIME
428 2nd AVE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO)

�30- r~~esundayrtm~! ~;daF~~;6 Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
card of Thanks

Advort osen~onts MUST B E

Placed one day

advance.

1n

T MBER
Pome oy Fo est P oducts pays
op p ces fo $ o d ng sow

WANT AD RATES
~Oc a lme
1st mserbon

mbe

Ha by

Col Ken

446

8570

sleups 4 o

mo e

Ub 2756

554

he

a G ove s Stud o 446 7-194

n p nk case

••a•

MUST BE PAID
IN ADVANCE
Yar d Sales
- Help Wa oted
- In Men~ory
-.Card ol Thanks

Farm
co uch

One
from

FOR SALE
MES10NE FOR DRIVEWAYS
( AI( WINlERS PH 24S 5 5

Sale

owo d

e s

3f!8 B174

BOARD NG AKC pupp e
l Ke nels 1 m e~ I o
446 48 2-4

USED APPliANCES

REFR CERA TORS
wo she s
onge
G &amp; l App
19-4 to!. o
Ave Ph 446
7398

YARD SALE

Co

J ye

Clothes toys b ke s et c

9

so fa

cus
podd ng
a pe s Vo e y of
FClb c o d Foon
Sole-.; Mo 5
P P c-oso
Ph 675 3469 9 5 do y
I 8
F day

n Mo day 140 st
Ga ll po s Oh o

4 p

t1 1

Med co Technolog s
fOR LA80RA1 0 RY

WOk

EKG

and ass s w h po ants and
phys c on oft ce W te PO 801:

Pl•ase Rea d Your Ad'

~

Advert sers st'lould read
theu· ad'w'ertts ement the

Hunt ng on W Vo

G FT SHOP

Sole 5 pe :;on

me a)( p nee
9 even ng

torst day ot appears and

respon s ble frw only one
tncorrect 1 JSe rtton

Se

EARN EXTRA MONEY
luz e
Pe san a zed
Cosme! Ci {S ste Company o

Cia o ) Cam p e e Sk n co e
po o full I ne No e to y

LAWN
ov e o d o o I e s
epo s
59 .Se o nd Ave Fo
sule &lt;.:Jw s o I I e s 446
253 1

1/&gt;a

yfeo

es ct ons Fa de a s a f ee
cl n c demons! a on Ph Po
Adk s o eo au se lo
446
7409
AVO N
SUMMERT ME AND THE liVIN
COUlD BE EASY Be an A o n
Rep esen a 'le 4 hou s a day

S EEP NG Roo s wee~ y
Po k Ce
a Hoe

a es

ho

GERMAN 5 ephe d good wa h
dog
geese
ch ke
69
E 9 shf o d Ph 388 8532

Look a
s ovety home oday
Less han yea o d Has 3
b£1d oons
ba hs n ce
k chen w h
ange i'nd
d sposa
ca
ga age
Loca cd on a a gc o
133 000
N EW LI ST ING

NEW LI ST ING
Bar ga n
of he week Look h s ov e

RE SER VE liFE
WANT SYOU
MMEDIATEL Y
Peop e who o e de ous of ge
ng ahead w h o p ofess onol
fvtu e
Wou d $ 0 000 to
$ 5 000 ncome he f s yeo
nte es t you? I s ova loble
w h ou Componv We a e oc
cep ng oppl co ons fo pos
ons n Sou he n Oh o WP.
w I a n nd "'duals n au p o
lessons You ho ve a fu u e
w h good ncome no lovof s
no st kes and good f nge
bene f Is Ca l co lee 6 -4 574
6 8 between 9 o m and

_!' m
lADY a.. ve w th e de ly ody
Ref Ph 379 2400

D [ J 1 o p~ ly w ~ M d ond Po
a o G ope u
0 el P on
o d AquoVop
wo c
p s

P

c\o USo .sf'lo

ocy
he

e FeDepo

o

long@

haul

Wanted to Buy
JUNK uu o

sc op

e

o l Ph

3BB B776

MEN f ee o a e eo n I od e o
cons uct on c ews good pay
Open ngs
you a eo Send
ca
W nandy G ee
House
€ons uc on
2'1
Pea o k
Rd R chmond nd 47374

DO YOU HAVE PART Y PLAN EX
PERIEN Cf? FR ENDLY TO Y
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AR EA
RECRUITING S EASY BECAU SE
OEMS HA VE NO CASH NVES1
MEN! NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CAL COLLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518 489 8394 OR
WR TE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
T ES 20 RA LROAD AVE
ALBANY N Y 2205

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Be on gua d soc a ly today
Do n say o do any I ng o g e
one wh o kes to pu t o he s
dow some h ng o e I e
I en ds abou

e o comp e e
se t You saes
et

o~~
June 27 t976

to hau t

RA LER spa e
o o ed
el Ptl 2
Cl e I e
eo ly o l ook up
g com ng lac e
a e yq u
p 0 tJ 36 usus
pe g oo ned u de sa a y
cond
u b eed~ a ep eO S EEP NG oo
lo
Go lo
446 023
Ho e
POODLE pup~ e
B wk
op
odu
o y a
446 438
H !J I 446 952 l
RABBI I I 446 3732

DoBl:RMAN

AKC

pup

Re I

fe o e sho s and wo ned
$100 Ph 4&lt;6 7878

fQUR n ob le t o
spo es
e e y ng eudy lo I oo lo. up
Ph 37q 24M

OfF CE po
u dA

dow ow

e

5 4 Se

4460008

Auto Sales

Green Apartments

PU

0

5a

Wog o

ucks n
33 P eS
446 2531
67 Chev
37 2

fo

0

d

97 4 Volkswagen
44 6 7 464

a

$2150

FOUR w hee d e
9 3 Su
bu bo
au o
a
pow
s ee ng 8 b alo.e s. o &amp; ado
$3675 446 0008
973 Chev ole Von good o d
o
446 4 q be wee 7 30
am and 4 30 p n

and

972 350 B g Ho n
o e 5 256 9

9M~

Fo d Mo o V B 289 au o
ond S95
a
n uded ex
Ph 388 0488

67 Fo d uns good cody o go
$225 Ph 446 0 12
975 Cop ce Closs
9 000
m es ole ove payne s Con
be seen a 536 W Jad.so
Ap ' 83 A

1975 Fo d Supe Cob 388 8470

I

23)
he

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
t9) Tl s s o a good day o
rr ol&lt;e najo dec so s hast ly
If yo Qt css w ong vou co u d
Ia ~
lJVe so n~J
g asty o
IV

MOTORCYCLE RACES
Sunday June 27 976
RACE I 00 PM
Hodden Hills Raceway
8 ' miles N W on U
35
from Gallopol s

s

973 Fo d P ck up :102 3 spd
stand ve y good co d
o
446 2509

tamptng Equipment
PROWLER
TRAVEL al e s see he No
se e n he USA Sn h s Han
do So es St Rt 7 Go po s
Oh o 446 2240
LA ST week of 9th Ann e sa y
So le on Sa C of M n Moo
12 300 lo 0 500 20 I 7 S C
a er S4 299 lo d down 1900
We se v co w ho we ~o Camp
Con ey S o C o So e R 62
N of P P eoson W Vo

TRA DE UP TO THE SO L D STA IE
APACHE CAMP TRAILER 0 y
fo d down compe w h no con
voss 16 2 f modes One us
ed
ave
0 le
on ~ ssqs
Am sbo y s Apache o e 63
4 h A e Co I po s Oh o 4563

FOR SALE
D ELUX E MOB LE HOME
973
AI e ec c ~ bed oo m
cent a t a r unde p nn ng
t u l y Cit peled
de u,; e
nter or
$8 000
Ph 256 6535
At fer 5 DO p m
Ph 446 0307 9 a m
5p m

40 Acre~ Land ocated n
sec on 27 Cay Townsh p
Sou hern Oh o
Beau fu
COUll yS de Ga PO S C ty
Sc hoo 0 sir c
Pr ced
$250 DO
per
a c re
a
S 0 000 00 nv es m ent
N ne room
wo s o y
pane led and carpe ed four
bedroom home ocated on
co ne r o n 8 dwell New
root
mod ern k tch en
coun y wa er large garden
a ea Pr ce d S22 000
4 oom home n B dwe 1 49 a es
o a d Ru a wa e P ed c
Qulo.e~eSJOO

CLEAR ANCE SA E
New
169 95 7 650 C C 1 u nph Sc o nble
SS75
G 20
a n saw 65 Jeep
Wogo ee 2 WD co lo TV and
$275 up
s e eo como e 367 7 05
972 250 Ho do Mo o Spo
ond $450 Co 367 7234

9~

Como o po
675 3246

w h

IJ ed oom w t'1
ar gc ga ra qe n ce eve
Good buy to $ 500

o

'"

Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estate 446 1066
Even ngs A ussell Wood
446 4611
Ken Morgan 446 0971

36, x.28 X 009

Aluminum
Sheets
USE D OFFSET PLATE S
HAVE
MANY U SES

20'oo

Fe 9 30

Fe 9 20
3000 Fo Ds
860 Fo d
770 0 e 0
Fa a Cub
0 OJD
.4 65 Lo g
Mf o no
Rood o
J m s Fa m Equ p (en e
588 Jackson P ~e
Go po s Oh o
Ph 446 9777 o 446 3592

6for$

$~5

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
825 Thtrd Av e
Ga hpol s 0

GRAN fe I eeze beef d essed
ho g ng q
200 250 pc ha ll
P ed easo ob e con a Tom
Jo es Thu no
Oh o 286
2394
AN QU[ waod(n wheel a n
wogQn w h wooden bed good
o d a S'&gt; sla
Ph 286 2394
976 Ho do CB 4 46 4798
Al l S Cholmbe s comb ne
good ond 446 15 42
420 Jot n De e c Daze w I se I l o
S2500 o
od e o good PU
uc k 682 7672 o 446 9535

UXA AE

NC

EYRAOO

AIR CONDITIONING
s 'I lea
your
hom e r~ny n e o f the yea
bu du ng I o:se on g ho t
su nme
months
how
you
ove I Ca I us loday
for f ee est nates

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
JOO 4th Ave

Ph 446 16 37

BACKHOE DOZER TRENCHER '!r---~::""-----,
WO RK DONE AT REASONABlE ~
RATE
Con oc t Sm h h
~
a a ng Ph 4.46 398
~=~
~-......
;...; :
:
--"""b.
Al l TYPES o doze wa k Ph
379 2621 A len Rul he fa d
ECONOMIZE an fuel w h au
~pee a
on
one I ep aces
o9ue Con ac ng bock and

b ck wa k Ph 3SO 9939
BA CKHOE &amp; doze WO k also ap
so and f l d a a lobe 379
2258
ROOF ING and ex e o pant ng
F eees m e 379 2617
BABY S TT NG pa I me even
ngs 46 3677

ANTIQUE AUCTION
JULY 3 AT 10:30 AM
LOCATION: GALLIACOUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Th s ts an old estate from R o Grande Otno w 1h a few
p ece s added
00 P eces Oe p Glass
on st one
Bo v and P ctu e W eke Basket s Ro sev e Hu and
M cC oy Ca rn v~ G ass Co ffee G nde R S P uss a
R S Germa y 5 e ng 5 vc Lam ps Hava l n Ch na
Ace a e Qu t s
anT ra n cam p e e Stone Ja s Ch na
Lamp Cu i GI.J ss Eb va r a Au str a H sey J Brass
Be ds Oak K tchen Ci!b ne w lh co lo ed Glass n
Door s 2 Came Back Trunks 2 P e Sa fes ron Bed
w th B ass Knobs
o Bed w h Brass Bar 3 Iron
Be ds 2 H gh Boy Chest s 2 Rockers 2 Oak Dressers 6
H gh Hcadboa d Be d W'5h Stan d w fh Tool Rack
Se cr e ' y L brary Table w lh Caw Feet 3 Mat ch ng
Sa l Back Ch
s 3 sels o! Ma ch ng Oak Char s 2
Cvpbo01 rd ~ 7 M; bl e top 0 csse r
on Ke f le Round
l oa Stove Co I "'Inti Wood Cook S ove F ower Chest
Hellt o a 5 L~g O~k Tab e W cke r Rocker Wa I
Te c ph ooe Organ Stool Ha t Table Cla w and Ball
Fcc
Dr esse w nged M r o Mante l Cock s Ba ll
Pockel w, c1 6 II Oak Ro op Desk Pump Organ
Oak V ctor an Wa nut Rocke
Des k Lowboy 2
T I any slyl e La nps Ol d Too ls R R Lantern Adv
gn s C:~ne Bo l am Cha rs T n Toys Stone Ja r s and
many more t erns
terms cas h Lunch w II be ser ved
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
GALLIPOLI S OHIO

s

GallUJ County's Fastest Groumg Real Estate Agency

Beautiful 8 room house 1881 Sq Ft lvlng space
Featuring 3 BR with deluxe wa k n closets 2 Baths
Lg
attractive F R
beautiful rock
field stone
fireplace Formal DR Bu II n k tchen mported lghl
f xlures and pewter door hardware Also enJOY the use
ol Club House &amp; Sw mm ng Pool Call today

~~.

NATURE LOVERS
SURE TO PLEASE
I I 106 .acres with apple
peach and plum ttees
5
acres oft liable and w th a
tobacco base Qlus 4 room
house w tt1 basement Has
n electric sto\fe
dish
a barn
and
storage
build no Ge t away from
d
eye door
c evervthlng Cal today fer
central a r opener
and an appo n m ent
SPRUCE STREET
•
IN GALLIPOLIS
lOR
3 Bedroom modern home
6
ooms
frame
house
bath
b arn storage
w th built n cabinets
house All f
and Chicken
alum num s d ng To al
n ce Place enced n Rea
e ectr c garden space
With n walking distance of
PRtCE REDUCED
down own Ga II polls

SPRING VALLEY ESTATES
Basement fam1ly room n ce
modern kitchen (doshwasher table top range bul I n
wall oven ) Natural gas lorced air furna ce hardwood
floors 2 wood burn1ng t rep aces Large ot Pr ced to
sell
1 Room s plus 2 baths

l 8 BRICK HOME

!LIKE NEW)
Large nice leve lot
steel
nsuta ed

~

KEEP YOUR COO\. th s•
summ er n th s Cen a ~
cond country home Or"wi
beau tul y land scaped ' "'
ac e Qt 3 BR 1 bath sf:
beaut ful mode n k chen ftio
elec ri c nea
plush c ar ~
pet ng
c ty
schools ~..
S32 900
..:

~~e;en;nop:7~h~~nd~rr~:~ff:e

~~:~e~a~ac:;:a:l~h ~s~~~rol
~:~g~~~~~E$

PATIO to ~
sum mer cooko uts plus cen _.:,.,
a r cond make h sa home~
your tam ly w I en oy ~
Also tea ures 3 BR 2 baths
k t tam ly rm comb gas
heat and tu ly carpeted'; ~
Jus off Jackson P ke.:
SJS 000

OUTDOOR

A PLEASING
COUNTRY HOME
7 Rooms and bath Ve y n ce k tchen
w h tabe top range e ge a o
d shwuher washe and dryer New
beau u y conslru eel meta ba n

SPACE:I')
VALUE! 4 BR
stor\lj
s ucco w th forma d n nQ.i
rm on e,;tra lg lot ga ~
hea
2 ca garag e Sun
Valley Dr ve near Hotze(.
Hosp S34 000
....

Good ences or ca e o ho ses
La 9e 91!1 den space eve 1t9 ac es
P ced S29 900 DO

I STORY
COUNTRY HOME
• acres S m les from
Ga I po s 7 rooms
4
bedrooms
partial
basemen
fue oil forced
a r furna ce rura water
Ga llpo s School Oist
Garden space fronlage on
Raccoon Creek
LOT&amp;
MOBILE HOME
In Porter 10 x 50
2
bedrooms Elcona Nice lot
305 acre level Pr ced only
S6 900

•
WOODS -

CABIN IN THE
3 rm tu y turn shed one ~
beaut tu wooded a cres
Ideal tam ly retreat or
hun ers lodge
Ca I tot'!
more nforma on

SUPER VALUE
3 BR
home n c ty at a pr ce you
ca n afford SlO 700
&lt;,II.

•

ROOMY Re asonable
1970 New Moon Mob •
Home w than 8)(8 and 12x 6:.
add ons
all on perrl}~
founda on
Also
haJ,
garage On 1 27 acres ""'
Pair ol
Cadmus
Rd;
S2500
-""

BEAUTIFUL HOME SITE
Jus off 160 Evergreen 36
acres almost a I t I able
Nice hunk. of land
ICE CREAM &amp;
A SANDWICH SHOP
A good golnSJ business
ocated on State H ghway
160 In a n ce commun ty
Land
br ck bu ld)ng
equipment and a I stock
goes Priced right

INVEST IN THE BEST 'J,';
BR , baths
all e ectr c fu 1\'"}
cond
carpe ed comb k t chef\
tam y roa n
now under
canst u c on n
Gree~
Acres
$34 000

NEW LISTING
(PRICED TO SELL I
N ce 7 room frame home
with 4 bedroom bath and 2
porches Surrounded by 1 2
l!lcres w th a I 070 bs
tobacco base A so has a
barn and smal
ut IJV
build ng
TAl LE\4EL
L KE NEW)
Ove 3 000 sq t v ng space 4
bed ooms 3 ba hs lhermop.ene •
doo s and w ndows Elec r c Ilea
and cen 11 11 Ru 11 w.e e sys em
, 2 c11 """ ~e 4ac;esof and Lon
o o he fealu es

1 A &amp; HOME
Just out of ci y lim ts on Rt
4
Nice comfortable S
room home w h wood
bu ning
f rep ace
basement modern k tchen
nat gas furnace c y
water large carper: n ce
6x18 bocksorage bldg
garage spl!ll ce Call now
IAJRM
HOUSE&amp; M HOME
D( 1 ed we I w h elecl c
pump Nice
acre w th 3
•room house and 2 bedroom
mobl e home Apprcx 2 2
m les from Vinton Very
pretty
75 A
LINCOLN PIKE
5 aoms frame house AI
s d ng 3 bedrooms p us
bath kl chen has bu It n
cablne s range and oven
New metal barn also u Illy
bldg 15 )C. 28 good ten
c no tobacco base n cf.
pond 15 acres 1 liable goo4._•
pastur~

61 81 A BARN
LOG CABIN
1 000 bs Tobacco base
n ce 40 x 60 barn 30 A
good dlze t mber
8 A
liable all min era r ghts
goes This farm can be
bought on Land Cont act.
Call
LARGE
COUNTRY HOME
PLU5t9ACRE
7
r ooms
frame
4
bedrooms with bath tots
of buiJt In cab nets good
small barn blacktop roacs
Priced on y $ 6 000

A W SE INVESTMI!NT

BEAUTIFUL HOME
6 rooms (3 bedrooms lots
of bui t n storege space 2
u.ba hs modern k tchen with
bu It n cabine s table top
range
wall oveR
dish
washer
rura
wa er
central a r a gt' lot on R t
160 with a beau ful v ew
Reduced tor quick sale

•

4otl l'llCh

24 _ $17 28
26 -$18 72

28 - $20 16

Southeastern OhiO
Truss Rafter Co
Box 28 A
Rutland Oh10 4S775
Ph (614) 742 2409
We Deliver

REALTY

WHY NOT s ep up to an
area of rna n free v ng 3 BR br ck e ectr c hea
near Ho ze Hasp tal a I
modern canven ences a ,J!
low $34 000

25 Locust St
Howard Brannon Broker
Office 446 2674
Luc lie Brannon
Eve 446 1226or446 2674

PLANNING TO BU LO ?
we have cho ce lots 13t
several local ons Aa
d son Twp
Georges
Creek Road Crouse ~e L,.,
Rd S2 250 and up

RON CANADAY
REALTOR

00
39

FOR THE BEST in arch tectu a
des gn of new homes smal
commerc al buildings apt o
remodel ng w th s ote approve
al plans BII Wa ker &lt;46 2146

;!

Audrey Canaday
Saleswoman
446 3636
Any Hour

PUBLIC SALE

EXCAVATING da&gt;er
and d tcher Char es
field
Back Hoe
Rutland Ohio 7A2
446 7087

TIME TO CHECK AIR CONDI
TONERS RESIDENTIAl AND
COMMERCIAl CAll D DAY
REFRIGERATION 18 YRS EX
PERIENCE
AND
SCHOOl
TRAINED PHONE388 8274

J

TV REPAIRS RENTALS
Serv ceColls
P ctura Tube Spec ol1s s
HARTWEll ElECTRONICS

SATURDAY, JULY 3rd-11:30 AM
DISPERSAL OF HOLSTEIN DAIRY HERD
AND EQUIPMENT

land
Gas
bur al

245 5365
G l ARBAUGH TrH Service and
landscape nc Dozer work Sf
Albans Ph 304 722 3498

BORDER S GARAGE DOOR So
v ce Commerc ol and Res den
lal Spec olizlng In ope oto s
Loco 256 0&lt;72

71 Cows tn all stages of lactal1on 12 cows
are now dry and w II freshen In July and
August Several cows have freshened
recently
Th1s ts a young set of cows 12 ftrst calf
he1fers 16 second calf cows 15 5 yr olds
and 14 6 yr old cows
4 yr old herd s1re out of Rag Apple
Elevation and a high producmg dam from
the Jack Crank herd Herd ts Bangs and TB
tested a J pregnancy checked
1 000 ga I st am less steel bulk tank Chore
boy 4 unit p1pelme mtlker Double Four
walk through mtlktng parler wtlh feeders
and controls
1965 Ford truck F 600 wllh holst and 14ft
gratn fed
Dtxte Lou Farms
Galltpolts Ferry W Va
20 mt les below Pf Pleasant on State Rt 2
John McNe1ll Auct
Pete Clerk

backhoe
R Hot
Se v ce
2008 or

1

li.

CONCRETE
s dewa ks

work
pa os
basement
etc

Lou s Cox .... 6 3398
E~ECTRICAl

lnsfollol on
Rtg
Comm
lndust ol 256 08S5
Crown C ty Oh o

CHECK our pr cas on used Mob1la
Homes and trove tro l•rs Trl
State Mobile Homes Soles
1220 Eos en Ave Golllpol s
.; ECONOMY Tractors and Equ P
OMio Bonk Financing
~
ment Co o I s Solea and Ser
~ ~ ;_; 111 Wtst on 588 Ph 1971 Hometto12x602 br
2
1971 Kirkwood 12x65 oxpanda 3
br
dug
245 1970 Elcana 12x62 2 br
1971 Dotrollo 12x60 2 br
\ -==~-::--:-:·· ··
B&amp;S MOB lE HOME SAlES
&lt; APpAlOOSA Stud SeN ce 2•5
Pt Pleosan W Vo
'
9369
14 Penthouse M H 2 BR Iota!
~ FOR ttl• best n architectural
oloct c Ph 245 5166
doslgn ond bu ding ol now
wid•
t a ler 1 and 2
homes
small commercial
bedroom ccmletelv furn
'
build ngs apt COO" omOO.l ng
Call us Canodoy 1900 Central
t.. w th state approval of plans
St Gal polls Oh a 446 13'1
8111 Wolkor ••6 2146 or 446neo Sml hBu ck
~
3918

'
'

.c;

128

house

TREE SHADED HOME
Deep In the heart of town
you will find this large two
story home - covered with
aluminum sdng
4 BR
a ge kitchen OR and den
aundry
and
stonge
porches 2 oom bsm with
gas turn
garage and
storage room very deep lot
with garden spot A lovely
location for children to
walk to school
COUNTRY GRANDEUR
+JOACRES
Luxurious 3 BR 2 bath
ran eM stye home beau ifu
kitchen
formal
DR
1 reploco In LR
WW
carpet cen rat air 2 ca
garage and outbuildings
Th s propertv must be seen
to appreclllte
GOOD PRICEGOOD BUY
3 BR two story home
located In the edge of town
with an ex ra lot for garden
or play area large eat In
kitchen
family
room
porches basement with
gas turn The pr ce s right
Buy now and fhe children
can walk to schoo from
Jhelr new home
HAVE IT YOUR WAY I
You say you Wtllnt 3 BRs
and ve In the coun ry we have I Large 2 story
country k tchen OR part
bsm
and
furnace
alum lnum s ding
storm
w s and d s porch anel
garage
All h s and 7
acres Calf now The pri ce
has been reduced
FACE tT
The FASTEST EASIEST
way to sell vour home s
w th
the
BRANNON
REALTY Coli fodoy - we
w 11 1st your proQerty and
do our very best to promote
a quick sale as we have
done for many others
BETTER

USED M08lE HOMES
CAll 576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE an fuel undorp n
your mob e home ond anchor
lor safely Foster Mob le Hom•
Se v ce 446 2783 o Elme Sk d
more ,.,.6 3.479

COUNTRY BEAUTY 3
BR br ck ran ch on 2 ac
Feat u es large LR w th
I replace
equipped
k tch en dining rm 2 '
baths full basement with
flrer.lace n family rm
cen a r &amp; garage A nice
dr ve to m i nes or Gavin

~0

EN ACRES - S27 900
s the comfort of a r
conditioning
and
the
economy of gas heat nth s
3 BR ranch A so features
WW carpet
arge baCk
porch
garage
&amp; flat
landscaped lot

M DDlEPOAT
BUS NESS INCOME

PROPERTY

NEAR VINTON - 64 A
most y I llable ground No
biJ ld ngs $22 000

UJ) to $660 00 per month
Ren a$ plus a beau lful 7
room {3 bedrooms) home
to lve n yourself alum
Sieling good grade n ce
fran po ch lots of bul tIn
~binets tab e op range
wa I oven laundry t Ubs
nat gas forced al turr1ace
central air We 'Jd burning
flrep lllce Lots of shrub
bery level grassy lot A
be,..utltul place Pus a nice
nO.me Pr ced Oht

SPRING
VALLEYS
FINEST Make an
appointment to see th s
home to be proud of Th s
L shaped
anch features
2500 sq It of ltv ng space
nclud ng
a complefe
k lchen
large LR w th
f replace 3 or 4 BR s
tam ly rm 2 , balhs cent
a r garage and a large
corner lot

92 ACRE FARM
7 room house Storm doors
and windows beaut fu
landscaped yard 2 barns
'hlcken house hog ce lar
smoke house and tool house
and corn cr bs 25 acres
bottom and fruit trees
1 BOO lb tobacco base
Locat~ on Highway 118

CITY -QUIET STREET
- Comfortable 6 rms and
bath with a large back
porch &amp; garage located on
Fifth Ave Prfced to sell $18 000
MORGAN TWP - Pasture
farm 41 acres c ean rolling
grassland good fences
large pond springs old
house wllh 6 rms and bath
eel ar house
AIR CONDITIONED
A most new 3 BR br ck
Is very appea lng
and can be your dream
~orne
Large equipped
k tchen 1 , baths qual ty
carpet throughout large
LR d n ng area garage
full basement
IDEAL RETREAT - ~6
acres with a large pond and
covered w th lots of p ne
lrees In a perfect h de a
way for your weekends
Locafed about 20 ml from
Gall polls $6 900

HOME 446-9539

s p A c E n the fresh
count y a r - 13 acres w tJ)
3 BR
baths a I electr c
hom e $32 000 and for
$10 500 more you can hav e
more space
49 acres w
39 6 b tob base

CLOSE TO MINES I&gt;
ac larm mostly clean
eve I a nd ro I ng land Good
7 r m home

OWNER WILL FINANCE
th s 93 A Raccoon Creek
farm at a low nterest rate
Flat land with ' wooded ' til able Good home w th
6 rm s &amp; bath barn and
outbu ldlngs Near V nton

BEAUTIFUL COLONIAL
TYPE HOWE
Brick front 1 706 sq If
1 v ng space 3 bedrooms
large tam y room I v ng
room forma d n ng room
modern k t chen with lots of
cab nels
dishwasher
range and d spasal central
air fully carpe ed 2 car
garage Located on a level
tat ov er , ac e A beau11ful
home and orlced to ~ell

3 BEDROOM
1 Acre plus - leve ap
prox
1 2 m les from
Hospital on blacktop rd
Plenty of garden space
rura water country livi ng
Close to Gal !polls Pr ced
only S18 000

BRAND NEW All e l ectrl~
3 BR carpeted k chen h~
beaut ful modern cab net~
range disposa and dl s ~l
washer
In small su ~
d vis on $26 000
-.

THIS IS THE ONE your
fam ilv
deserve s
Attract ve 3 BR ranch
fea tures 1 , baths pl us a
In
the
full
shower
basement 2 WB flrep aces
ww ca rpet formal d n ng
rm
modern
k tchen
garage &amp; larg e andscaped
lot 355 It deep Located 2
m1es fro m tow n on 141

BEST BUY IN GALLtA
COUNTY - S21 900 w lh
f nanclng available Lovely
3 BR ranch Is loca ted al the
edge of town and offers HW
f oor s gas heat air cond
large la unory rm modern
k tchen &amp; garage

..

If you are nterested n
se I ng your home farm or
bus ness prope tv call We
have a hsl of po1enha I
buyers

a s

For Sale
1 BA I s C
2 Jub ee Fa d
MF 50 Ds
MF SOGo
MF 61 D 900 h s
MF 50
oo de
MF6SD
MF 50
MF 35 Dsl

Ph Home 379 2184

SEE IN 5 BELIEVIN
~
S23 500 buvs h s near y
new frame ranch on y ~
m es from c y Gall pol~
School D st
,..

EUREKA

tOMATO
pep pe s
abboge
o he pi on s Floyd E
588
Rodney 245 5124

uck 24 000 n es 6
ew es Ph 245 5548

ado

ooms
c oun y wa c
qc o
oom o a g a
;
900

HONDA f a 90
o d ow
£~age 446 71 54 al e 7 p m

4973

972 VW Supe bee e
good cond 992 21J77

Ph

97 5 Kowosok 250
GT 360 256 1206

969 Fo d Vo See o op~ ec o 1:!
460 l o o D e c phone 44 6

74 Move ck 6 cy
AC
on s see be ed
446 4243

Kowaso~

u nace
por Th s
exce
buy

For Sale

$650

2 Ch ys e 2 d H T PS PB
powe w ndows a d eo am
l m op e
I whee S 695
388 BB20

y n ce 3
o ah

N£W Fa d
o o g u k bed
P 44 6 288 of e 5 p
"''eek
days A y ne weekends

367-7250

967 GMC
o p k p good
co d o $750 Ph 446 0859
969 Pon o good
Ph 367 OS4

1 700 m 1es

sO o60 bs pgs 30 o 40 b pg
A bony 698 6896

p

0

New
Modern
hree
b edroom
al l
e ect i c
t'lom es
Ga pol s C y
Schoo
Dsrc
ap
pro x ma t el y 7 m les from
Ga po s
s tuated on
75 x 20 lot s ce ntr al sew er
and
wale
sys ems
P ced S2 0 000

FARMAtl M
o o w h 6 f
owe good o d Pt 245
5064
5 Suzuk GT 550
S JOO 4&lt;16 900

Menl Carter
ABciate

'

') no o cycle s 974 YZ Ya noho
80 97
Sl 00 onda Ph
367 0424

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townho uses
Jl , Baths
Pay Only On e U!J!Jty
Add1son Oh10
Fo~ InformatiOn
Call Sh1rley Adkms

NEEDS ot. Fot.M LY 3 BR
ba hi c ty WI er and $tWe t
schOQ s ca peed vacan and e11d
0 mmed 11 t occupen cy S2S.OOO

~

Lots
9
frontage
dee p 2 o s on R I 7 n
Crown C y P ce SS 000

TARA

446 3636

Hollow Rd

Spnng Valley

e PU

Locust St
Ga lhpolts Ohto

25112

~~t ':t~~r b~x dr~~s ~ne~'g;~:

Acr eage
n ves t n Rus c
So uthea st ern Oh o ap
pro x 20 acre s of wooded
n Watnu
and
oca ed
Twp Pr ce S25 000

446-1599

•
THE WISEMAN

AGENCY
GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

WHY R !:;NT? SlO 000 buy S:
t his a r co nd
2 BR:
F eetwood Tra ler on 1 acr &amp;o~

q74 350 Kowosok 3 000 n es 2
975 von seas ex c cond
97 l TO Cal 446 44 3 o 446
290q alte 5 p n

=~·-··=.

CANADAY
REALTY

PORTER BROOK
new br c k and frame
c olon al s yle ranch
w
ex ra g fami y rm 3 BR
1 2 ba hs U2 900

2

DOBERMAN P che
pupp c
Cha np on b eed AKC R g
bo ck o d us wo ed $ 50
eody fo o e P 388 Q99

II

=··.....

~=----=:-:-::

READY FOR YOU
n
beau tlfu
Green Acr es
subdlv son 3 BR
all
e lec r c
fram e
fu y
car peted n m nt cond t on
r ea dy for mmed ate oc
cu pan cy $29 500

USED FURN TURE
GE flee onge
a y buse
b own
ec e
quee
na ess o d box sp gs
CORB NAND SNYDER
UI ED FU RN
955 ceo d A e
Ph 446 7

•

968 Chev P ckvp V !:1 307 e g
std sh
ad a Ph 446 3670

he Almanac
United Press Internallonal
Today IS Monday June 28
the !80th day of 1976 w th 186
to follow
The moon 1s between 1ts
new phase and f1rst quarter
The morn ng stars are
Mercury and Jup1ter
The evenmg stars are
Venus Mars and Saturn
Those born on thiS date arc
under the s1gn of Cancer
Amencan co mp ose r
Richard Rodgers was born
June 28 1902
On th1s day m history
In 1894 Congress declared
the f rst Monday m
September as Labor Day
In 1919 World War I was
off1c1ally ended w1th the
s1gnmg of the Trea ty of
VerBallles
In 1971 the use of public
funds for parochial schools
was ruled unconslltutwnal by
the Umted States Supreme
Court

home off Low e r Rver
R oad s uated on one acre
plat
arge gar d en ar ea
two balhs modern k tchen
beame d ce I ng
v ng
room
38 x 16
wood
burn n g
f rep l ace
Ga ll po s C ty
Schoo l
0 s r c pr ced $46 000

b ocks
ch nney b ac k
B ock 4.46 1783

CENTENARY Wood ~ Ke

4 oy ba e s

AOUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
A o depends upon the way
yo
an dl e you se I od ay
when othe s make eQIJcsts
Be g
coo pe a ve sc s ne
one o ne lulu e ac t o s

Four bedroom c arpe te d

..

3 be droom ran c h w h
la m y oom you I ag ee
h s s t e b es buy n ne
a ca o $24 900

9013

LAB TECH expe enced fu I me
s off pas on n node n 92 bed
foe ty Contact Ad m n s o o
Hock ng Vo l ey Commun ty
Hosp ol logon Oh o 385
51&gt;3

REALTOR

446-1066

C.AROL YN S Puud e Suo P ofes
s o I 9 oo n g by opp 388

"an
e•p
e Box

WOOD

A U"' NUM b d ngs w h
dows
I oo s and

h e eo n ngs Col 446 058 o
742 2354

A I n okus
Sl Opt c
ll
0

For Rent

e
equ ed
hou s
Send

esume o Box &lt;490 o Ga l po s
T bun e

NotiCes

gbo

gG oo

d pp ng 44b 7878 By appo n
ne:n o y

uI

report errors in time for
the ned m!le tton Paper IS

PHONE 446 2342

JUANITA A A I B cod Dog G con

RUSSELL

OHIO RIVER
REALTY INC.

[H 446-3434

R

n cos o f Po e

Ave

- Lost a nd Found

SFWIN G

CH MNEY Bl fJ( k S W Vo &amp; Oh o
ump Coo
Col po $ 8 ock
Co 446 2783

Pat t y

BOARDIN G &amp; AKC PUPPIES

wo lle s ze po a of you ov
&amp;d one ha~o~e o new one mode

Glosses
o75

6 m les fro n

"feasant

Pt

and M
(a
a d M s Robe-

M

K &amp; P Ke

lOST WAllET? If you ve as

19 cents a lrne
for 6 msertlons

Ant que S.1 fe

Mc(o hy

~ets for

Lost:aml Found

3 mserbons

of so ow

Janey and M

USED Tent

21 cents a hne

W TH doop opp Clc a on o he
M II C eel-. Co,., nvn r to h
though lu eu du g ou

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION
JULYJ
0 00

31 -The Swlday Time1 Sentinel, Sw11lay June '!I 1978

COMMERCIAL SITE - 5
ots and older home on
Slate Route 7 n Kanauga
Lots of potent al for $34 000

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS OHIO

LOTS FOR SALE
loca ted on Ne ighborhood
Rd Lincoln Pike George
Creek Rd
&amp; Rodn ey
Harr sburg Rd F nanclng
ava lab e
ACRES IDEAL
PASTURE
FARM
mostly
clean
rolling
grassland good wove n
w re lences plenty spring
water large fob base 3
barns S92 500

The Ttme I o

HARRISON TOWNSHIP WILL TRADE - 66 acres
of woods and grassland
Fronts on 2 roads

commercia!.!!!• Yours for "~~·· ·

CITY - VACANT LAND Appro x 5 2 acres running
from
Fou th
Ave to
Ch i ckama uga
Creek
56 500 Don t wa t to buy
buy and wa I
NEAR MEIGS MINES 1 8 acres on Margan Lane
features a new unfini shed &lt;1
rm
and bath hom e
c stern pond and lots of
privacy Pri ced at Sl 2 000

*

NEAR RIO GRANDE Over 4 acres levello ro ling
ground w than almost new
modular home f ea tUre s
I 344 sq. It of modern
tl v ng Also Included is a
new 2 car garage apt

LISTINGS NEEDED NOW
TO FIT OUR BUYERS
NEEDS

AT
LAST
YOUR
DREAM HOME - I yr old
brick ranch offers 2 140 s9
It of modern living . Don I
wall to see this 3 BR and 2
bath home The k ! chen Is
compete with d ishwasher
disp m crowave oven and
range
Ofher
spe c ial
features are a large forma l
din ng rm famtly rm with
f replace 14x24 living rm
qu.,lly carpet heat pump
2 sets patio doors 12x57
patio and 2 car garage wlfh
electric door opener This
beauty Is priced In the 50s
and located n R a Grande
Shown by appointment

:+

*

HOUS E AND L OT
87 x 180 on
or v e
""- hr aug h.!t
..,.. n ce k c he
fu rnace
ed

FHA APPROVED yr
old ranch In exce lent
condition has lots to offer
for only $2 900 Tolal
electric home features J
BRs laundry rm
large
kitchen with dishwasher
12x24 I ami y rm w th pat o
doors central water and
sewage and a flat lot In
Rodney VIllage II

THINKING OF
SELLING'
I could be using
this space to
advertise your
home CALL
TODAY'

IAROAtN + MOdt n • oom and
oa t1 hOme w "' fu b.esemen needs

l
ACR E
9 year old 2 s orv 3
bedroom f arne w
fu
ba semen Fu l y ca p et crJ
c ty wa cr
rec ca on
room
St a e Rou c I
close n $2 1 900
ON E STORY
3 bed oom tra m e
ca r pe ed
w h
ba seman
on
He ghl s
Ca u d
re crea on ro om
ha ve
f ep a ce
ba seme n
cen tr e ! hca
gas c ty wa e and sewe r
only S17 600

.ame n shed wo k bu sn bl!ld o
on ~s 3 SOD Located en .e n ac e
of~&gt;nNeghbb hoodR:d

LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
- SELL
TRADE

GALLIPOLIS AREA

CaD us nght now

LISTINGS
Ntce two story three
bedroom
nght
In
Galllpolls
Has
been
remodeled recently One
car garage and nice back
lawn The Pr ce s R ght

A REAL BARGAIN
L ke new three bedroom
ten minute drive from
Gallipolis 1 300 square feet
ol lloor space with a one
car
garage
n
ful
basement
You
won t
bel eve the pr ce for the
product
Very n1ce 4 bedroom on
double lot 1 250 square feet
of floor space w th one car
garage In full basement
Grade A construction and
well taken care of

Just con~pleled
New 3
bedroom home 1', baths
n ce large kitchen and
din ng
area
Tappan
eleclrtc range d sposal
hood large garage fully
carpeted Iorge level lot
Priced right to sell
Located m Green Acres
Sub Close to town lnquJre
al Corbin &amp; Snyder 446
1171 after
446 2S73

s

~=+~~~*=~~==~~
REAl ESTATE lOANS
VA FHA 30 yr loons Park Mor
tgoge Services 77 E Slate
Alhons Ph 592 3051

7

FQR SAlE BY OWNER 2 b homo

Comp
barber
and
shof on Route 7 Large
fha
cou ld be used
mobile home rental
etc Th s JS a good DU!&gt;tness
or
rental
Investment
opporfun ty

on approx :Ia acre w thin 10
m nute dr ve I om down own
homt wll sell w th same
acreage If bought gh owoy
Inter or of home emodeled
ecen ly Cal 4.46 10~9 after 6

p ~-- --- - - --

RE FOR SALE

31 Acre farm located close

We nee d L st i ngs Call the
w seman Agen c y 446 364l
Gall a Co s La 9est Rca
Esto1te Sales Agency
Off ce 4411 lU l
tk4! w sem an 446 3196
E N w seman 446 450 0

to mines Well kepi
2
bedroom home with wood
burn1ng ftreplace Located
on blarktop road 21 acres
pasture 10 acres woods
with large stocked pond
Call
388 8202
lor
3 o1ntment

rNeal Realty

I

11 acres voconl land
plenlv of water 10 m tes
trom town $8 500

73 12SXL Honda S350 or 2 s ee '
400 ro 500 lbs Col1••6

•on

CIJ

2 8R mobile home• $100 3 b
mobile homes $125 .... 6 Ot75

NATIONAL
ADVERTISING

2BR lro le Call «o 3358

•460108

t

lOT w 11 all utlllt os n•la led Ph
446 0108

REALTY

nch

BRANCH MANAGER

GOING BUSINESS
Downtown Gallipolis

Also servtng areas between
Crown
C ty
and
Chesapeake
Joe Crans 256 1456

For Rtnt or Salt
LOT w th all ut "'
I t es lnsta led Ph

BY WISEMAN

Bud McGhee

•

the

SOLD-

VS

Ofhce Ph 4&lt;46 69
E ._en ngs
Cha es M Neal446 1S46
J M chel Neal446 1503
Silm Neal 446 1lSB

Call n lor nformaf on on
other I sf ngs we have In
the Gall pol s and Crown
City areas

with
es

Ll \

~------------------------------------------ ,

.5 m ies from Ho zer J BR
hom e 8.
0
\ 16 500
v ager 6Sx l2 3 BR M
Hom e and lo s 500 69'
K rkwood 55x 2 3 BR M
Home w h a ach ed room s
on
a Ia a S1"i 000

-

5 0oms and Iorge both ful bas•
ment
storm w ndows and
ha dwood flea 1 2 1 f oo s
2 acres 367 7371

Thts Home Wtll Wtn Your Vote

Very well bu111 3 bedroom mn ntenaflce fre e 2 story
hom e with lorma dlntng large family roon1 buill In
ktt applianc es garage central a r and a top notch
ne ghborhood In the elf)' school w&lt;1ter &amp; se wer district
*$3390000
Here 15 a fine home n an excello lt loca l on Owner
...._wants to mov e to the country so must se ll thts beautiful
Jlllf 3 bedroom home In cl udes " large faml Y oom
dmmg central air compl etely bu It in kl::~~~~;[
Located In Washo gton Grade School d stnct
..._ S35 000
~
HOUSE AND 2 LOT S
IN CHESHIRE
....__ 2 s ory 3 bedroo m
a ne
~ ca pe l
a
ove
c n a
hea
a ura gas '1 foo
r v~ lr o t a9e S34 000

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

4467900

IS Right Now

And here ts a specia l home buy that you d eserve to see
A very p relty ve y clean l bodroam hon1e with a wilt
approved kitchen newly d ec orated living room
quality carpetmg throughout plu s a full ba sem eot
breezewayand garag e T hi s home is locat t d on a large
llat well landscaped lol that s perfect as busin ess or

2 b t o fer n Chesh re Melv n
lila
2 BR MH furn beaut ful se tlng
overlook ng Oh o River
loco ed on o d R 7 Add son
OhPh 367 7201
AtMOST new 2 bed tra ler odu ts
o w I /xcept one chid On
Bu ov I e Rd Ph 4.46 1004
HOUSE 1 a le 2 b
located r'1
P onls S b AI ut I es Pd 379
2380

CARTERS PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Co Fou th&amp;P na
Phone .. 46 3888 or .4-46 .,.,.77

- -- - -

STANDARD
P umb ng Heat ng
215ThrdAvo ••63782

GENE PlANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Healing
A
Condit on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph
1637

••o

DEWITT S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160o Evergreen
Phone &lt;46 2735
J

If you want your own busmess lhts could be
11
Includes complete ftxtures and
equipment Reasonable rent or lease CALL
TODAY
We have rece1ved several requests for a
vanety of properties If you are th1nkmg
about selling call us today
Get yours ltsted wh1le fmanc1ng 1s
ava1lable

PHONE 446-0552 - ANTIIME
428 2nd AVE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO)

�32-The Sunday Times . S.ntinel, Sunday, June 27, 1976

County court has

Excursion boats were
for dining, dancing
BY FRAN!I,HIU,
boats arrived ?
GALL!POUS - How many
An agent .of these boats
old-timers remember the would arrive in town several
weeks before the date of
arrival and the local store
windows would be full of
large crowds that gaU1ered at posters about a short cruise
the parkfront many years ago that .could be taken on one of
when one of the old Excursion these ~ra nd old boats. Most

Gallia History

NEW
SHIPMENT!
If you got the
GUTS,
. Lee has the
PANTS!

usually there would be
dancing, and refreshments
available for a fee of about $3
Ul $5 per cou~le . These short
cruises
were
usually
moonlight trjps. Youngsters
as well as older folks were
quick to grasp this golden
opportunity to take the gi,rl of
his choice on one of thel\).
Many folks would come from
miles around fqr the danci ng
and ride on these magnificent
boats.
Long before reachiflll port
th e caliope would start
playing to announce the
arrival. This beautiful old
organ type instrwnent could
be hea rd for miles. Playing
such tunes as the Washington
and I.e€ Swing, The Beer
Barrel Polka, Dream Train ,
and many other well known
tunes of tbe day, these grand
old boats were something to
behold as thev landed.
Some of the names I reca ll
of these boats were the
Washington, Homer Smith, J .
S. Deluxe and near the end of
the period the Avalon; and I
must not forget the Island
Queen. I believe the J. S.
Deluxe was about the largest.
Here is another part of
vanishing America gone but
not forg otten by us old

30 cases Friday

Gallia
Hy H.obart Wilson

Jr.

POMEROY - Nineteen
EVERYTHING is "rea dy" for the 1976 Gallipolis River defendants were lined and II
Hecreation Festival according to Casby 1Skip) Meadows, forleited bonds in Meigs
general chairman.
County Court Friday.
.
1 I1
Fined by Judge Robert E.
THE 12th annual(gosh , has it bee n that long since the Buck were John S. Theiss,
festival began'') is scheduled July 2, 3 and 4 along the Rt. 5, Athe!IS, speeding, $15
Upstream Public Use Area and Public Square area.
and costs; Milain Sargent,
+++
Kanauga, speeding, $12 and
MEADOWS and bis committees have done another costs; Sherman F. Paig, Jr.,
outstanding job in preparing for the an nual Fourth of July Front Royal, Va ., speeding,
celebra tion . This year's event will have a special meanin~ in $14 . and costs; William R.
that residents will also be observing the nation.'s 2001)1 birth- Thacker, Hamden, speeding,
day . It should be one residents will remember for yea rs to · $11 and costs; Stephen L.
Colne
Ba. Jdwin, Racine, speeding,
.
+++
$12 and t.'Osts; George W.
LOOSE NOTES - A. A. Medved , PO.f Box
Tyus , J r ., Cl eve 1an d •
fA 322,B Cape
.
Vincent, N. Y., is collecting material oh the l1 e 0 . nn a11ey. speeding, $10 plus costs;
In a letter to the Tribune last week, Medved sa1d tlhas been 22 John V. Gross, Rochester,
years since he left Gallia County ' and that his bu&gt;-htstortcal Ind., speedin~, $10 and costs;
novel vn " Mad Ann " is near completion, He added Galhpohs Dorothea .Pearl Remy,
has a prominent place in later chapters in the novel. He is · Gallipolis, stop ·sign
seeking addition al materia l, along wtth a Galha County map violations, $10 and costs;
showing both the location of Chpper Mills and Hamson Twp., Ralph K. Oiler, Langsville,
where her son, Richard, resided.
failure
to
displa y
+++
registration, $2fl .and costs;
Ricky C. Clark, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle , $30
and costs, $15 suspended;
· Paris K. Hess, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, $30
and costs, $15 suspended ;
Richard Taylor, West Colum·
bia, W.Va. , _speed,_$13 and
costs; Theodore Hayes, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and

The boats were somewhat
like the Della Queen in
appearance, but whereas the
Delta
Queen
takes
passen'ge1·s on long cruises
the old Excursion hoats were
for short, local cruises and
dancing. The Excursion boats
also stopped at most all of the
larger ports along the river.

,''

' l :

I .I

LEE Rlll:RS'"
BOOTCUlS"
For men who ride
bulls 'n broncs, or just
like to watch the action.
look 101 l h1s branded Lee lObei

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Lane moves

renovated with grant

MARIETTA - Approval of
a$150,000granttohelpcreate
inunediate construction jobs
,...
)
for the unemployed he~e , was
announcedSat~nlily by John
RUMORS were circu lating around town after the recent W. Eden, Achng Assistant
To those who may be
circus at the Ga llia County Junior Fairgrounds that one of the Secretary of Conunerce for
interested :
Development.
animals
got loose and was left behind after the circus moved Economic
Many years ago there was
Ohio Showboat Drama,
a bea utiful heavy iron fence on. Monday , Dave Tawney happened to have his camera along Inc., of Marietta applied for
in fron t of Washington school. when 'this ·'gorilla " pulled up bes id e him in an automobile, and the grant from the Econonnic
Near the bottom of lbe asked that his picture be taken. Aw, come on, Dave! It wasn't a Development
AdminisMIDDLEPORT - The Oh·
posts was the name Enos &amp; real gorilla , was it '&gt; Maybe it was just someone promoting the tration , U. S. Depart· Kan Coin Club will conduct a
Hill Compan y, Gallipolis, new Kin g Kong nick.
ment of Conunerce. The regular business meeting
Ohio and a date in the 1880s
+++
funds
will · be
used Monday evening in the social items. Alan Milnone of
TWENTY YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily to help renovate the rooms of the Columbus and Belpre, Ohio will be the guest
when U1e fence was cast and
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... Stanley Eva ns donates 15 Becky Thatcher riverboat Southern Ohio Electric Co. speaker.
erected.
A54-lot coin auction follows
·'Enos and Hill" was a acres of land for permanent fairgrounds just off Rt. 35, four for use as a thea- building, Mill St., Mid·
the
meeting. Refreshments
machin e shop loca ted . on miles north of Gallipolis ... Leo Mossman inducted president of ter,
restaurant
and illeport.
will
be served. Area resi·
Third Ave . wher e the Gallipolis ,Rotary Club ..'. Haskins-Tanne r Store celebrates museum. Six unemployed
A social hour and trading
interested
in
Buckeye Rural Elec tric 90th anniversary ... M. Harold Brown named Gallipolis Clinic persons will be hired for the sess ion prec edes the dents
monCom pany 's office is. This ad ministra tor ... Harry Boggs elected new Legion conunander project. Construction is ex· meeting, starting at 7 p.m. coins or paper
company was formed in 1867 ... Rupert Trout to head Rose Conunandery, Knights Templar pected to begin within 90 days Several out-of-town coin ey are invited' to attend
and was known as Enos. ... Ca rroll Null, li, a native of Cadmus, injured in Colwnbus and be completed in nine dealers will be present to new memberships are now
Menager &amp; Co. In IB6 9 auto wreck ... Ernest like) Wiseman joins staff of insurance months.
buy, sell, or trade collector being accepted.
Menager sold out to Hill and firm in Columbus .. . Opal Camden and Hazel Dauber will
it became known as Enos &amp; represent Bidwell High School in 1956 Ga llia County Junior ·:;:·:-:.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::·:::::::·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:·:·:;:;:::::::
Fair Queen pageant ... Large crowd attends grand opening of
Hill Co.
Thi s company made Bo b ~aunder s Quaker Stale Service Ce nter.
marine Stationary engines.
Thev also handled stea m
gauges and whistles and gu m area .
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET
and leat her belting.
Tile answer to last week's
Tiley did lots o( work for the question:
ri ve r boa ts an d became
Isaac Lewis was an ea rly
known for quality work . At negro se ttler of our city. He
one time they manufactured lived in the Texas Road area .
the best engines in the entire I once read that most all of
th is area of town was owned
at one time by negroes.
.
About IB33 these folks mel
in Mr. Lewis' home and
organized the Paint Creek
Ba ~tist Church, tak ing the
name from the small creek
which runs nearby . They
latet· constructed the grand
old church still standing just
up street from the Tribune
WITH THIS
off ice on Third Ave.
S&lt;Jmething to think about:
DEBRA PRIDDY
Who owned the firs t truck
COMPACT AIR CONDITIONER
POMEROY
- Alrwoman
in our city ?
Debra A. Priddy, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Dale L.
AT A LOW, LOW PRICE!
Priddy of Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
ha s been assigned to
Keesler AFB, Miss., alter
completing Air Force basic
training. She will now
recei&gt;e speCialized
training
In
the
administrative field. The
alrwoman is a 1975
graduate of Meigs High
School.

______

Com luh will'
meet On MOn d

·ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Whirlpool

Where You Savel

6.50%

Even off the
beaten path,
State.F~£111,.
IS

·

I Yr. Certificates of Deposi t
Minimum $1,000.00

7.50%
4 Yr. Certificates of Deposit

Minimum $1,000.00

Insu re the good 11mes. too It
you vc I o ke r~ to ol1 the road 1r.;we1
lor exc rlem en t and retrea tron
you ·rc lrKely to need the el(t ra
prOtt!ctrun or our Rtc:re(l tron al
Vet1rc1e Polrc~ Ca!l or vrsrt l or all
lllC t!PitliiS

Federa l r egu l ations req~ ire 11
substantial penally for pr emrtfure
wi thdr awa l of cer tif ica te funds

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
14

State Street

Gallipolis

Home 446 -4516

••• QullJ s.inp &amp;' - Co.

m W. 2nd St..

Pomeroy, Olllo 45769
RICHARD E. JONES, MANAGER

l1ke a good neighbor.
S/,tfe Fann 15 there
SlA Jl f"HM MUIUA l
II

IAIM

, 'I" • I

~" "'"' "' ·'
I j f, t I

\llll

HOFFMAN'S TRIP
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford designated
Milton Hoffman of Riverdale ,
N. Y., Friday as his special
rep resentative for the
groundbreaking ceremonies
of the American Bicentennial
Park in Israel on July 4.

pa~1~e

5,000 BTU/ Hr.
Check th;;e

~ah;teb~~~sea~~~~J~

Whirlpo~/"

'){'.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , , , , , , ,, ,, ,,, , , , , ,.,

official rcognition by the "
:-:·
:-:Am e r ic an Revolution ~l
COfflfOtf·COnvenience features: ?
·~·~
Bicen:ennial Administration,
} See all the other }
TI1e park is located In the
• 3-speed fan puts you in
(Exhaust) lor removing !i!! ~odels of Whirlpool }
townofBeitShemesh, Israel, '*
cool command
stale, smoky air from ;:;: A1r Conditioners - ::;;
west of Jersusalem.
• SUPE R COOL setting
a room
:!l 8,000, 12,000 and :!:!
tor madx imumdcooling
• COMt F0hRT G UA~D ·. : .::. 1 8 , 0 0 0
8 T U ;:_!•.
when eman s are
con ro 1 e1ps ma111tarn
grea test
comlort rang e you
!'!• capacities. Models !:!:
• 2-way air directlbn puts
select
\ priced as low as;;:;
WALTON QUITS
coo ling air where.you
• Pus hbutton controls
';:; $199.95,
.;:::
NORFOLK, Va. (U P!)
want it
for las\, easy operation }
t
Former · child actor A. w.
Walton began his second ' • Air cha nger co ntrol
' ''"'' : .,...
,,,_, / :i,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:,:,:,))
retirement today . His first
SELECT THE MODEL THAT'S BEST FOR YOU
W!l~ more than 40 years ago
when he quit playing the
curly haired little rich kid in
the ''Our Gang" movie series
. l•f lite 19;!~ ann :lib.
:;::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:,:-:;:::::::::·:;:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~;:-:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~::::::::

t

Phone 446-429 0

MEIGS BRANCH

8
- '~

to 855 2nd

I I&lt; I II I . I&lt; I I

~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

JUDGE ROBERT BUCK TRIES one of the old
Pomeroy Hlgl) School band hats on his young daughter,
Jennifer, at Saturday's Meigs Local School District public
sale. Judge Buck, a graduate of Pomeroy High School and
Ohio State University Law SChool, is judge of the Meigs
County Court. When "the jedge" was in the PHS band, he
played the t"ba.

BARBARA OOA~ BETZING bought the old
Middleport High Sc)JOQI band's bass drum at Saturday's
public sale In tjle Meigs Local School District. Mrs.
Betzlng intends to use it as a coffee table. She is a granddaughter of the late C. T. Coates, superintendent of
Pomeroy schools many years.

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 50

public sale of hundreds of unuaed Items from Mefss Local
schools moving at a good pace.

School days, school days.

-I

businesses

Don't repair it,
replace it now...

It Does Make
A DiHerence

DAN SMITII, LEFT, AND JIM CARNAHAN, In
country straw hats had a ball Saturday as they kept a

Becky Thatcher to he

timers.

r

costs ; Ronnie M. Pickens,
Middleport, failure to yield,
$35 plus costs; James B.
Argabrite, Belpre, reckless
operation, $30 plus costs;
Lula F. Westfall, Rt. I, umg
Bottom, speeding $17 and
costs; Terry A. Cain, Rt. 3, ,
Albany, speeding, $8 · and
costs; Donald Sedgwick, I
Tuppers Plains possession of
illegal &lt;1rug, $100 and costs;
Dave Darst, Midilleport,
possession of stolen articles,
BOB LANE
90 days confinement, 60 days
suspended, creditgiven for30
days served.
Forfeited bonds were
Thomas A. Mathes, South
Point, speeding, $27.50; Sid·
ney Ellis, Rutland, speeding
$27.50 ; David R. Wells,
Reedsville, speeding, $31.50.
John A. Kearns, Logan,
speeding, $27.50; Fred E.
GALLIPOLIS _ Bob Lane
Kuhn, Charleston, W. Va., has announced moving hi.s
speeding, $27.50; Bill Powell businesses to. a single new
Jr., Parkersburg, W. Va., location in Gallipolls. Having
speeding, $27.50; Ralph S. recently purchased the "Mr.
Bickle, Belpre, speeding, · Tax of America" franchise in
$27.50; William Hill, 'l'l/orn- town from Roger E. Stover,
ville,
speeding&gt;
$35.50 ; Lane is moving Toney Realty
David J. Hudson, Colwnbus, Gallery of Homes and his
speeding, $27.50 ; John . D. bookkeeping and tax business
Corn, Jr., Ironton, speedin~, , into the Mr. Tax building at
$27.50; David Wills, Rio 855 Second Ave. He will be
Grande, speeding, $27.50.
operating three businesses
out of this new location:
Toney Rea lty Gallery of
Homes, Bob Lane's Complete
Bookkeeping and Tax
Service, and Mr. Tax of
America .
Lane is being · assisted by
his wife Vicky In the office.
Two associate salesmen are
Ohio Showboat Drama, working with this branch of
Inc., will provide $100,000 to Toney Realty Gallery of
complete the $2,:;0,000 total Homes, Joe Crans in the
cost of the project.
Crown City to Chesapeake
,
area, andDenverK.Higleyin
C
the Gallipolis area. Denver
with the company on a
came . b · fr
Ra h
ay part-llme asis om nc 0

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ByBobHoelllcb
"Going, going gone."
These traditional calls by
auctioneers rang out In the
Rutland gymnasium
Saturday when the Meigs
Local School District held a
public sale which brought
over $3,500 4tto its treasury.
The sale not only put those
dollars Into the district pot
but gave residents a chance
to purchase a piece of

• ••

memorabilia from bygone
days . Sold were over 3110 old
desks, equiJillent no longer
needed, some old Pomeroy
High School band uniforms, a
couple of bass drums, maps,
typewriters, duplicating
equipment and old books.
Residents thronged to the
auditorium and enjoyed
thoroughly the humor which
auctioneers, Jim Carnahan
and Dan Smith, Injected into

their sale pitches. The sale buyers ran out an&lt;l the
offered "something for remainder - some 30
everyone." No one appeared probably- went for $1 for the
to leave empty handed. entire group.
Outdatal desks, dusty and
Typewrlten aold well. One
carved with lnltials, could be went for a high bid of eome
seen stlcldng out ol trunks or $62; another for $50; others
perched on top o! vehicles as sold for $26.50. The machlnea
shoppers left the auditorium had not been u8ed for a
parking area .
munber of years.
Carnahan, of Racine, was
Student desks went for fl
highly cClllllllended for his and many were bought llt that
work· with the auction. He · price. Toward lhe end some
took on the "chore" of of the desks sold for as low as
moving all of the Items, ~. A pickup truck - after
which have been collecting cooslderable urging from the
dust ·for years, at a fiat fee of auctioneers ~ went for $66.
$100, far 1ess than !.he usual One baBS drum 110ld for $11
percentage. He brought with and another for fl.
him a crew of four who
The man behind the sale
insured a l!lllooth running was Dan Morris, aBSIIItant
sale.
superintendent o! Melga
Particularly popular with Local Distrlct1 who aald he
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS bidders were several large, was quite pleased with the
framed contour maps which $3,GOO raised through the
went for f57 bach. ·
tlf!ort. There's more stock
Pomeroy High School band around lind another sale wlll
Wllforma went for 75 cents be annolmced, Morrla aald.
each and a few more moved.
There's no doubt about It
A few minutes later, the though, on Saturday thoae
whole batch was sold for auctioneers said "gone"
$1.25, Band hats sold for $1 often and "gone" in no Ume
Entebbe.
each on the first roWld with
were hyndredl o! items
Uganda Radio said the ooe lady purchasing 50. The really
which
will find good u~~e In
hijackers Issued a 8\atement price then dropped to 50 cents
Meigs
County homes for
saying "the Popular Front and a few more went. Then
many
years
to come.
for the Liberation of
Palestine seized the plane to
declare war on France, which
Is an enemy of the Arabs."
It called France "an
Important executor ' of .
imperialism
in
the
Mediterranean.
The guerrillas, reported to
nwnber between four and
seven, commandeered the
NEW YORK (UP!) - The ground crew lor the lateat
twin-engine jet Sunday less
solo attempt to crou the Atlantic by balloon haa oot heard
than 30 nninutes after tt left
from pilot Karl Tho11181 since 4 a.m. Sunday, but a spokesAthens on a Tel Aviv to Paris
man today expressed optimism that the German-born
flight.
flier was still aloft.
After
refueling
In
"The balloon Is equipped with lleepere tllat
Benghazi, Ubya, the plane
automatically start If the balloon goes down," the spokesheaded for Khartoum but was
. man said. "The fact that the beepers haven't been picked
refused landing pennlssion
up Is our biggest reason for optlnni8m."
and arrived in Entebbe with
He said at least 20 ships .were In the .area where
only IS minutes of fuel left,
Thomas was last reported and could pick up the beeper
Alr Franee officials said in
slgnala If the craft waa In the water.
Paris.
"I'm worried over the lack o! communlcaUon ... any
Indication of Karl's position would be re&amp;BSurlng," said
Wally Clayton, a member of the New York ground control
crew.
But he said Sunday there was no lnunedlate cause
Cllance of showers tonight.
for
alann.
.
.
Lows tonight in lower 608.
Thomas'
flight
was
the
13th
attempt
at
a
solo
transCloudy, a little cooler
atlantic balloon crossing. All similar previous attempts
Tuesday, chance of showers.
failed
and six of the 12 who tried died in the process.
Highs in lower 80s.
Thomas,
27, of Troy, Mich., waalaat reported about
Probabllity of rain 30 per cent
650
miles
east
of New York and 450 mlles south of Cape
today and tonight, 40 per cent
Breton,
Nova
Scotia.
Tuesday.

en tine
MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1976

Arab guenillas take over airliner
Four to die
LUANDA, Angola (UP!) Areyolutionary peoples court
today sentenced four mer·
cenaries, including one
American, to death by firing
squad and handed down long
prison terms against nine
others.
The defendants - three
Americans and 10 Britons 8\ared in shocked silence as
the presiding judge told them
their fate.
The J\ldge sentenced Daniel
Gearhart, 34, of Kensington,
Md., to death because he ran

an advertisement ·offering
himself as a soldier of fortune
and
contacted
an
international mercenary
group based in South Mrica .
Also condemned to be shot
we~e "Col. Tony Callan" and
Andrew Mackenzie because
they participated in the
massacre of 14 of their fellow
· British mercenaries. A·third
Briton, John Barker, was
given death because he
c ommanded other
mercenaries.

·:::::::~=~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:~:~:::::~:~:::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::

lfNews. . •in Briefsft
·=··

··'J

By United Presalntematlonal
SfOCKHOLM, SWEDEN - A FOUR-CAR conunuter
train bound for the southern Swedish city of Malmoe crashed
head~n with a freight outside Helsingborg today scattering
bodies along the track and pinning others in the wreckage.
Rescue workers on the scene said at least seven persons were
killed and ahout 25 Injured in the crash.
"We know that there are more bodies still trapped inside
the train, but the cars are so badly smashed that we have not
been able to get inside," a rescue spokesman said. The
accident happened on a single track several miles south of the
southern city of Helsingborg. Pollee said the collision was so
violent that one of the two locomotives of the northbound
freight destroyed the first passenger car and came to a stoy in
the second car.
BEIRUT, LEBANON - RIGHT-WING CHRISTIAN
gunners shelling Beirut airport destroyed a Middle East
Airlines jet Sunday and door-to-door fighting raged through
the capital, already left without electricity and water and
threatened by a typhoid epidemic. The Christian Phalangist
siege of two Palestinian refugee camps In southeastern Beirut
raged into a sixth day and estimates were as many as 900
persons has died in the fightlng~viest of Lebanon's Ifmonth civil war.
An estimated 3,000 heavy shells fell in the area o1 the Tal al
Zaater and Jisr al Pasha camps in 24 hours, but the two camps
. dl!l, oot fall, rightist and leftist reports said. The war of the
camps set off wild battles on "traditional" fronts as leftists
and Palestinians launched counter offensives and Christians
bombarded the airport with rockets.
USBON, PORTUGAL - GEN ANTONIO RAMALHO
Eanes swept to a landslide victory today in Portugsl's first
free presidential elections on his reputation as a no-nonsense
nnilltary leader promising to put the country back to work .
With about 99 per cent of the votes CQIIIIted, Eanes had just
over 61 per cent compared to Jess than I7 per cent for his
, nearest rival, far-left Maj. Otelo Saralva de Carvalho.
Prime Minister Adrn. Jose Pinheiro de Azevedo, who
suffered a heart attack last week and watched the returns
from his bed in an ()porto hoapltal, had about i4 per cent and
·emununlst candidate Octavio Pato was a poor fourth with
nearly 8 per cent. Eanes ssid in a brief television statement the
election showed "all Portuguese as a free people can choose
wbo they want .to be president - this includes those who
wantal to Impose a dictaiorshlp on November 25."

. LOUISVILLE, KY. -SEN. WENDEU.. FORD, D-Ky .,
says he understands Democratic presidential favorite Jinuny
Carter'sllst of possible vice presidential cantlldatl!s has been
narrowed to four or five names.
The Kentucky Democrat said Sunday speculation In
Washington is that Sen. John Glenn, )).Ohio, will end up as
carter's runningmate. "I would be very satlsfied·lf It Is John
Glen.n," Ford said. Other possiblllties Include Sens. Walter
Mondale o! Mimesota and Frank Church of Idaho, he said.
NEUFVIILE, BELGIUM - AN AMSI'ERDAM ·to· Paris
express packed with holiday travelers deralled Sunday as it
sped through the Belgian countryside, Oinglng five cars into
electrical pylona and leaving a haH·mlle tangle of smashed
coacnes anct dl8membered bodies.
Eleven p8118ertgers were killed and 211 injured in the
accident 20 mlles south of russels, a Belgian railways
communique said, Local officials earlier had put the injured
toll at 59. There were no conflnned American casualties
although an American girl, Law-a 011U of Morris, Minn., was
reported missing by a traveling companion.
l

"(

NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) Arab guerrillas who hijacked
a French airliner with 258
persons aboard from Athens
to Entebbe, Uganda, said
today they did it to "declare
war on France."
The hostages aboard the
Air France jet reportedly
included nine Americans and
at least 86 Israelis as well as a
crew o! 12. The guerrillas
said they were members of
the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine.

An official of an airline image of the Palestinian
operating out ol!'ntebbe told resistance.n
UPI by telephone he had seen
There was contact with the
a number of passengers hijackers at Entebbe by
disembarking, but he French Ambassador Pierre
couldn't see how many left Renard, a colonel of the
the guarded aircraft more Ugandan army and a
than a nnile away at the old representative for the PW.
part of the airport.
Ugandan President ldi Annin
There was no confirmation came !rom Kampala, stayed
of this report. In Paris, the . for a short time, then went to
Palestine Liberation a home he maintains in
Organization dissociated
itself from the hijack, calling ::::::::!::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::::
it "an attempt to tarnish the

Dateline 1776

Reagan pulling
close to Ford
United Press International
President Ford is moving
closer to the magic nwnber of
1,130 delegates needed for the
Republlcan nomination - but
Ronald Reagan is moving
closer to Ford.
·
According to UPI's tabulation, Ford's 17·1 victory in
Minnesota Saturday brought
him to within 76 votes of the
number he needs to win . But
Sunday, Reagari's sweep of 45
delegates in Idaho, Montana
and New Mexico moved him
to within 70 votes of Ford.
In the Democratic race,
with only five Puerto Rican
delegates still to he chosen,
the UP! tabulation shows
Jlnuny Carter with at least
1,714 - well over the 1,505
needed for the nomination at
the convention next month in
New York.
The person-by-person count
in the the Republican race
shows 103 uncommitted and
98 still to be chosen, including
. entire
delegations
In
Connecticut, North Dakota
and Utah and a partial
delegation 'In Colorado.
The UPI tabulation
Includes ' the following
delegates "leaning" to one or
the other candidate: three In
Guam for Ford, 17 in Hawaii
lor Ford, five for Ford and
oile for Reagan in filinols, two
each in Minnesota, lour for
Ford in South Carolina, one

CHARLESTON, S. C.,
June 28 - A British
squadron under Adm.
Samuel Parker tried to
the cbauuel to Cllarlestoa
by
the
A111erlcan
fortlflcatloas at Sulilvan's
Islaud. After a l~our
fray, the Brltlsb warihiJlfl
withdrew with aeveral
shiJlfl severely damaged
and Adm.
Parter'a
breeches blown off by an
American shell. The
British casualties were 281
wounded and killed,
lnclud!Dg fatally wouuded
South Carolina Gov.
Campbell. American
lorees sustained 12 dead
and 23 wounded,

run

for Ford in Vermont, one for
Ford and four for Reagan in
Virginia, four for Ford In the
Virgin Islands, one for Ford
and 14 for Reagan in
Wyoming.
The rest are conunitted.
As the contests of the
weekend ended, Reagan said
in a UPI interview aboard his
plane returning to California
that his own "spirit of unity"
has not reached the breaking
point, but added that II ,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:;:;:;:::::;:;:,:,:,:,:::::::,:,:,:,:,:,::
"divisive" tactics by . the
Ford campaign worsen, the
backing
of
Reagan
supporters may not be
forthcoming If the President
wins the nonnination.
The Pomeroy Emergency
He said he s~metlmes Squad was calledtoNye Ave.
thinks Ford iS more at 9:01 p.m. Saturday for
mterested In bemg nominated ·., Hines Coates who was taken ·
than in winning the election. · to the Holrer Medical Center.
Rep. John Anderson, R-Ill., His was the first o! five
a member of the GOP weekend runs. It also went:
platform candidate, said in a
To the Meigs Theatre at
Reagan nomination "would 10:16 p.m. Saturday for
have a very adverse Impact Henrietta Jenkins, who saf·
on our abllity to gain seats In fered a possible hlp fracture
the House."
·She was taken to Holze~
Anaerson
said
the Medical Center.
President "started with a
At 12:50 a.m. Sunday to
disadvantage" since he SR 143 to assist Arvilla
"didn't have the builtin Don'ahue to Veterans
polltical network that any Memorial Hospital.
·
mcumbent president usually
To the scene of an accident
has."
at 6:13p.m. SundayonSR 124
A Gallup Poll published to take Ann Thomaa to VMH.
Sun~ay showed Carter
And at8:16 p.m. Sunday for
beahng both Ford and Mary Braley, State St.,
(Continued on page 8)
Pomeroy, who was taken to
VMH.

Pomeroy unit

called 5 times

Balloonists'
radios silent

Weather

'Goal too
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White Houee Reporter

DORADO, Puerto Rico
President Ford,
delivering an analysis of the
world's
most
recent
economic downturn, has \
urged Western leaders to aet
more "realistic" social goals
to hold down lnflatioo.
Ford and the leaders of six
other nations attending the
E c onom I c S u m m it
Conference were to hold two
more sessions today on
subjectll ranging from trade
and oorth-tOuth relationships
to energy.
u.s. officlala hostlnll the
twcHlay conference at lhla
tropical resort on the AtlanUc
Ocean said the mood at
Sunday'sopening sess)on was
one of "determination,
confidence
and
joint
(UPI) -

Mars landing delayed by site dQubts
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!)
- Scientists searched the
surface of Mars today for an
alternate landing site for
Viking I 's llfe-hunling lander,
canceling the July 4
Bicentennial touchdown
because "Mars would not
cooperate."
The original landing site
"appears to have too many
unknowns and could- be
hazardous," said project
manager James Martin.
The July 4 landing,
scrubbed after years of effort ·
to keep the da~, waa to have
been part of the nation's 200th
birthday celebration.
"I am disappointed, aa are
many people," Martin said.
"But we've always had in the
back of ow- minds that Mars

would not cooperate.
vanished Martian rivers.
"! would say It has not."
Although the site was
The landing will be late by among the most promising In
at leaat four days and the search for evidence olllfe
possibly by weeks, dependin~ - more likely to develop
on the site chosen.
where there was the most
Scientists considered a spot water - the lander needs a
dubbed "the Northwest Ter· comparatively smooth spot to
ritory," hoping It _would touch down.
provide safer groWld than the
It could be wrecked If It
original site, "A·l," with both came down atop a m8n111zed
In the first general area boulder or on a steeply
chosen, the plain of Cllryse, · sloping crater wall.
Three other locatlona on the
With Viking orbiting 1,000
llst included one all the way nniles above the surface, ill
around the planet.
televlalon cameras cannot
The Viking team at Jet see anything less th4n about
Propulsion Laboratory 3110 feet acroas, maldng any
decided It would lle too risky landing site a gamble of
to send down the lander in the sorts.
A-1 area, laced by canyons
The decision. to delay was
and the dry beds of long- founded on arguments -

opposed by several scientists
- that a site with rough
features large enough to be
seen Ia more likely to have
Ulll1een obstacles as well.
Martin said the most
Important consideration Is to
get the automata! laboratory
ooto the Martian surface in
working order even at the
sacrifice of the "river delta"
landing site.
After examining four
areas, Martin said, scientists
may find "that all areas of
Mars are equally rough and ·
that's the kind of sltuaUon we
will have to live with.
"In that case we can decide
to go back to A·l and then
would land somewhere
lletween July 8 and 12."

\

high'-~Ford

responsibility."
leaders recession and
. The
other
nations joblesaneu were caused by •
·participating were Great decade o! penlstent Inflation.
Britain, France, Gennany,
Grewpan said Fcrd exItaly, Canada and Japan.
prl'llled his own lotlll-beld
The talks have been free· . view that the United ,Stalel
wheeling and dealt frOill the and other govenunenta had
outset
with economic overextended themlelvet~ ' in
recovery and monetary the drive to right BOCial
i.uues.
wronp,
The globallnfiationary cliAlan Greenspan, Ford's
chief ecooomlc adviser, said mate came about in large
the President told the other
(Continued on page 8)

Local news, in briefs
RUTLAND - A "battle of
the bonds" planned as the
evening entertainment of
July 5 os a port of tbe threeday weekend celebration In
Rutland has given way to a
talent show with cash prizes
totaling $100.
The folent show will be of 8
p.m. In the community pork
but will be moved Into the
gymnasium In case of rain.
Prizes of $25, $15 and S10 will
be awarded to the top winners
In two categories which
Include through 17 years of
age and those over 18 In the
competition. A panel of
lodges will select the
winners. Contestants may
register by calling Mrs. Joan
Stewart, 742-2421 , or Jack
Walker at 742-2333.
MARTHA LOU FOX,
Middleport, filed tor support
under
the
reciprocal
agreement act against Lerry
Lee Fo•, Clifton, In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Betty Williams, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, has tiled tor
divorce against Wendell H.
Williams, Buffalo.
TO all spouses of coal
miners and loco! unions 1890,
1886, and 1957 there will be a
meeting at Forest Acres Park
Wednesday, June 30 at 10 • ·
m. to form a club formerly
called \he Coal Miners Wives.
Please bring a covered dish .
Those who have any

r

questions call 669-3635.
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Deportment ond Emergency
Squad will hold a yard sale on
July 10 at the fire station ,
Money donotlons, Iorge or
small, will be appreclatad.
The money will be used
toward lhe cost of the new
squad truck .
Those who wish to donate
Items for the sole and for
pickup may celt these
numbers: Oris Hubbard at
~ -2239, Clyde Triplett atm.
3125, or Ralph Levender at
992-5888.

RACINE -

The Racine

emergency sqlllld answered a

call to Letart Falls at 11 :55 a .
m. Sunday tor Wilbert
McClain, 42, who hod o head·
Injury , He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
At 9: 50 p. m. Sunday, the
squad took Goldie Roberts of
Racine to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Both McClain and
Mrs. Roberts were admlttad.
AT 1: 55 p. m. Sai\Jrday the
Mlddlpeort Emergency
Squad was called to Tall
Timbers night club to ass11t
Jam.. Ritchie, who had been
InJured In a fight. He wa1 ,
taken to Veterans Hospital.
The squad answered a call at
5:05 p. m. Sunday to 699
Broa'llway St. to · assl1t
Elizabeth Scott to Holzer
Medical Cen.ter.

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