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lt-TbeDallySenllDei,Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Frlday,Aug. 13,1976

Ford
wins·
(Continued !rom page

New flag

I)
(Continued from pace I)
p(ayed with prlzes going to gunrelated crime~~ lnlllead !i
Kim Patterson, Ricky gun control; abolllh federal
Sellers, Debbie Fife, Shlpa aid to educatlllll and return
Gordla, Angela Hubbard, eq!llvalent tulnl power Sherr! Marshall and Scott ~bly, the tobacco tu,.,-to
the lilatea; refcrm Coolflt.l;
Fife.
almpllfy and redu~ lUes;
overhaul the welfare system,
and balance the budiet In ~
of wq&amp;oprlct! coo trots or bUlB
ACCORD READIED
to create Jobs.
SIGNEY, Ohio (UPI)- A
'l1le committee agmlzed
tentative agreement on a throuch more than an hour of
three-year contract was debate before .voting ~~ to 47
reached Thursday by tAl reverae a subctlmmlttee
negotiators for the striking declllon to take no position on ·
International Union of ERA. ThreatenlDg to take It
Electrical Workers and tile to the cQIIv~lon floor, ERA
Copeland Corp. 'l1le pact Is advocat¢s al.!o prevallell 5!1subject tAl ratification by 31 agalnat a plank opposing
.
Local 725 members here and ERA.
IUE members at plaots In
Willi the help ol at Ieist Ol)e
West Union and Fostoria.
R~agan defector, ·Ford's
moet prominent slljlllOtters Including Republican leader
H118h Scott-argued the party
should rescind th~. ERA
TONIGHT
support It llrat expreaaed In
August 13th
thru
1940 In . advance of the
August 15th
Democrats.

MEIGS THEATR£
Walt Olsn,y's
No Deposit, No Return

David Niven, · Darren·
McGavin , Don Knotts.
Herschel Bernardi,
Barbara Feidon.
Showstartsot 7 p.m.

Elbow patcbesln
Is your velveteen blazer
worn ouL on the elbows? Give
IL new llfe with patches of .
suede or lea Iller in the same
color.

.How to

-

.

L..--

NewS •• in Briefs

Food .,hampions selected

,
(Continued friX!l page I)
120,000 mlnersln.elcht states ancl divided the tJJo\W, began to
crac:k when miners tn northern West VIrginia.and some In the
soulhel'll area of the state ~eported lot wock. Taklni t11e1r cue
fmn West Virginia,, mlnera trekl!ll bad! to llle pits tn Ohio,
KenQicky ~ild Pennsylvania. ').'be llllke flared In mid July
when a West VIrginia local was fined $50,000 foc vlolatins a
federal court lnjunl;doo.
. PI;AINS, GA. - CALIFORNIA GOV. EdmWld G. Brown
Jr. says Jimmy carter.will get his all-out .helP In the fall
campaign, . and bellev!!S Ronald Jteagan's strength In
C&amp;Wornla Is overemphasl2ed. Brqwn's tw~ngine char~r
plane landed at Plslns' grassy e,initrlp Thursday minutes
ahead of CIA director GeQrge Bush's departure by helicopter.
. Pro)lm, while acknowledging, ~ may be d!Herenefll on
the ~es between Cllrter and himself, said, "The country Is at
a crossroads and unless we make a major Jeep forward, we're
btdeeptrouble. "I think he (C&amp;rter) can do it, and I'm going to
give him all the help I can."
. WASHlJ'iGTON - DEFENSE SECRETARY Donald
flllmsfeld was op,erated oo todal for removal of a small but
possibly c,a~ero\18 lump friXIl his thyroid gland.
Doclocs at Bethesda Naval HO'Pltal began the of,eration'
about 8 a. m. F;DT and pjamed a biopsy before removing the
nodule at the baae !i Rll!lllfeld:s neck. The tissue examination
should determine if the lump Ill malignant.

'

.

•••

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

Schweicker confusing the polls

LOTIERY WINNERS
This week's winning Ohio
elderly wpman and lnjuring,litleast 1~ persons, ooe critically. Lonery numbers:
WAStnNGTON (UPI) At least 30 mobile home~ were deijii'Oyed and 100 others
Pot o' Gold:
Pollsters
Louill . Hartle. and
dan)aged at Ule Westgate, Lee• and King~ ~r Mobile Horne
Five-digit number a-ge Gallup disagree 6VIlr
parks. Pinellas County Sherllf Bill Ro~rts estimated ~ge
14081 (lour-four-zero-eight· whether Rol)ald R~asan:s
at more thjln f500,000. Wreckage was IIC&amp;Itered across two one.
popularity was hurt by his
square miles. ,
Three-digit numbers choice
of Sen. Richard
, A woman w~s ldlled and at least' siJ pei-sons Injured at 26~ (two-six-live) and 695
Schweicker
as a running
Westgate. At least five were hurt at Lees.
(six-nine-five) .
mate.
.
,
.
'!be
Harris
Poll..u&lt;I
ThursWASH!NGTON - TilE BIGGF$1' JUMP In ind~strlal :;:::::;:;:;:;.;.:·:·:·:·::;:;.:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
prices since January Ql:CII!Ted last month, the I.Jibor
.· DepartmeQt repocted Thursday, but govenment econ~ts
saw no cauae. foc alarm. C(lllljlel'ce J:lewortrnent econ~t
Johll Kendrick said lhe q, 71ncrease for Industrial conunodlties
"does not reflect tile basic undedylng rate." .
Wbolesale prices roae 0.3 percent in July, compared to 0.4
per,cent in June 1111d 0.3 per cent In May. The July advance
Holzer M~ical Center
tr8Miate4 IniAl 11,11 aMual inflatiOii ~'~lie ,of ~.6 w cent, and Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Discharges, Aug. 12)
. Wllite Rouse Press Secretary Ron Nesseq said President Ford ADMITTED - Sarah
Nancy Arnold, Wilma
was pleased that the aMual averll!e rate still was below 4 per Dunn, Middleport; Flora
Prall, Pomeroy ;· Ethel Bahr, Mrs. Eddie Bare and
cent.
.
Drake, New Haven, Anna son, John Bowman, Maxine
Frank , Pomeroy ; Albert Conley, Barbara Ferguson,
Frank , Pomeroy ; Juanita Hazel Fuller, Thelma
Justis, Middleport; M,.ggie Grueser, Guy Hamon, Joe
Gilmore , Racine; Shiel a Hunl,
Betty
Me
Mary Skinner , personal 28 from 8:3oa.m. to 4:30p.m. Erlewine, Dexter; Janice Nellln, William Mullins,
All
students
In
grades
8
advocacy coordinator of the
Community Mental Health through 12 are welcome to Groggle, .Por.Uand; Nettie Vivian Plummer, Valerie
Center Contract Agency of att¢nd. Students·must bring a Gosney. Middleport.
Porter. Donald Skaggs,
6ol8 Board, attended a Tille 20 sack lunch .
DISCHARGED - Fred Sophia Tha~ker, Mrs. John
workshop at the State Office
, Nellie Price ' Tilrnbull and daughter, Keith
The "Good News" trio will Tuckerman
Building In Columbus ,
.
be
featured
Sunday,
Aug
.
15
.
Jennifer
Johnson,
Murt Irene Voreh, Quentin White,
'Wednesday.
at 7: 30 p.m. at the Laurel Ours, Jaspar Powell, Er· Shirley Williams and Edith
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Cliff Free Melhodisl Church . nesline Fischer, Vernon Williamson.
Local High School marching The Rev .' Eugene Musser will Harrah.
band camp will be held. at the be guest speaker at both the
school AuQ . 23 through Aug. 9: 30a .m. service and the 7! 30

three traUeqiarks during the ~er hour .ThllndaY, kUUng an

HOSPITAL NEWS

hatch

n~st~.

Local news, in briefs

Nestle down with an easy future.
Open a Savings Account today.
We'll help feather your nest .. :and
make lots of happy things happen.

. Ann IIIII $ut Ellen. Tlkln&amp; the ...,.. Wift boll'll •
employea, CryQ1 Gt.e and Carol Lewll. 'l1111N11111 fllr
will Ret uncleJ'wiJ at 7:30. MC!IIdq alaht with a
blcen~ U~lllical, "Ring ,\II.the 11111111 ql ~" 111
a chorul of some 40 Ma!P ~ty rtlidenll lllldfr
direction of, June VIlA Vrlllken, apcNOI'e(l by the Melp
County Mlnilterlal Aaln.

EN'nUf,S IN 11IE OPEN CLASSES of the 113th
annual Meigs CoWity Fair wer~ being takel) at th~ fair
board office on the Rock SIJ'ings F~iriii'Ounds Thurllday
and Friday. Deadline for moet events wu 4. p. m. today.
Among the mal)y C(IIlpleUng the fonna Thursday were I
to r, CoMie Swisher, Barbara Fry and &lt;laughters, Ruih

LARGO, FLA. - TWO TORNADoES ~ewed thio1111h

·

Sdll!llk• did not cbanp
lllelr bulc view r~~ · ~. ~
~ to Harril, 33 Pfr
cent said they now llllnk le• J
ol Rapn.
.
.
'01jl Gallup J'Qil IIIC!Wed

day tl~Jt Reagali lost ground
to President F~ amoog
· R e p u b I.l c a n 1 • n d
independents after cboolln8
!lehwelbr, The Gallup poU
dllagreed, saying the choice
neither helped nor IWmed
Reagaq.
. Harris reported that .a
survey of 811 ~llcans
and .Independents sbowed
Ford's lead l,ncreaaed 12 per
cenlln the past mooth to the
wideit margin over ReaPn
ma year. Ford now .leads
· Real!lli831Al Sl per cant In the
Jiarrla aw-vey'
.
Altbolll!ll .53 per, cent of
Republicans say the seleCtion

of

Ford's marlin over R,eiCin ·
remained nearly the 11111)11
tram ,Ja1y to the start of tbla .
Wllllk, ~ at 67 to .rz per
cent 81110111 Repibllcalllllld •
411 per cent tAl 38 per ~Ill

1D10111 lndependanta. Lilt
mootb,ll'ord JeiiRMpnlll to
M pe~ . . cent
among
Republlclna and 110 to 41 ger .
cent amon1 Independents,
acC(tding to Gallup.

Staff jobs.available
.

p.m. service.

,.

in the GaWa Center aa head
teacher. This position
requires a Bachelor's degree •
and teaching cerUficaUon. :
Preschool or elementary••
te•ching · ~xperience Ia ·
'preferred.
.
~pplicatlons may be ~ ·
talned at the C.A.A. ad·
ministratlve offices In
Cheshire , Application ·
deadline .is Wednesday.

CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
Meigs C.A.A. Head Start
Program has openings for
two staff posiUon.s. A social
service director is being
sought. Persons with a
in
Bachelor's degree
sociology, education or
related fields with administrative experience may
apply for this position.
A position is also available

Four -crops
Development group meets Aug. 26-2~
Pleasant.
Adena, is secretary; George .· and elected members.
ATHENS - The sixth dollars worth of federal, slate Joseph Jr . Is treasurer; . Invited guests for \he
loan rates
annual meeting of members and local con tracts · for Marvin J. Huaton, RadcWf,
Athens meeting jnclude
the Corporation
Ohib huinan services, most sub- assistant secretaryi and
of the
local AntiJqny Mele, Marietta,
Appalachian Development con!nicted · Cot
Department
of
Public
.announced Ted Patte:rSon will be held at the Ohio distrib.ution by inember assistant treasurer
Welfare, state
health
A contract vole of URW 797
will be held from 10 a.m. to 12
noon Saturday, Aug. 10, at

carpenters hall in Point

of

ill

for

repr~ntatives

Ohio

1:1 :.

pomeroy

pomeroy

tuppers~~ c:~~nal

the bank of
the century
established 1872

/

L

Meigs County ASC an•
nounces loan rates for
commodities for 1976:
Wheal, $1.53 per bushel ;
Oats, .72 per bushel ; Rye,
$1.04 . per bushel, and
soybeans, $2.52 per bushel.
Corn loan rate has not been
announced for 1976. InformaUon can be received by
contacting the Meigs County
ASCS office, Farmers Bank
Building, Pomeroy, Ohio 'or
calling 614-992·6646. Farm
Storage Facility loans are
available for 71'. per cent
interest payable ln four
payments over a five year
period.

Appearing For The First Time
At The Inn Place

THE
WHEELER .BROTHERS

died
WednesdayUniversity
Inn Thursday and
·
·
Fr1day, August 26-27.
RACINE - Ted R. Patlerson, 68, Racine died
Wednesday evening at'Holzer
Medical Center following an
extended illness.
Mr. Patterson was born in
Wilding, Jackson. County, w.
Va., the son of the late James
B. and Emma Hupp Pat:
terson. He was also preceded
In death by two brothers, Roy
and ~x. and two sisters,
Audrey and Ada.
Mr. Patterson was a
protestant by faith, a retired
farmer and was a member of
Farm Bureau of Ohio.
He is survived by his stepmother, !Jessie M. Patterson,
Portland, four sisters, Mrs.
Ann Boso, Portland, Mrs.
Pauline Evans. Parkersburg,
Mrs. Sll81e I..eep and Mrs.
Lucy Rexroat both- of Cincinnati, three brothers,
Herbert, Parkersburg,
Deibert and James of Portland, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
Straight-Tucker Funeral
Horne In Ravenswood with
the Rev. Steve WilsOn officiating. Burial will. bf In
Ravenswood Ce'mltt~ry.
Friends may can. ·;
· ~ j' the
funeral home todajfr · ·.2 to
9 and Saturday 1111Ul · e of
services.
;.

COAD is a non-profit
corporation of 16 Community
Action agencies representing
27 Southeastern Ohio counlies. It was formed in 1971 and
since that lime has received
and dispensed several million

BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!) ..:... .
The N.~w YorI\ S\Bte Tax
Commission is $eekfng
$6,171.22 in back taus from
center Bob M~doo ol the
l:l,atlonal Basketba,ll
Associatim Buffalo Braves.
Th~ department flied
papers in state Supreme
Court .here naming McAdoo
and his wife, B~. who
lived . in
suburban
Williamsville during the
season . The papers allege
that McAdoo owes the taxes
for 1974.

4 Piece Group

From Belair, 0.
Tonight &amp; Sclturday
'

10 til 2

Communit'y ·Action
agencies with COAD memberships Include AdamsBrown, Charles Bucher,
execuUve director; AthensHocking-Perry). Roger Patton); Belmont (Mickey
Tyler); Gallia-Melgs (Joe
Barsotti); Guernsey-Monroe:
Noble (John Tingle); Harcatus (Ge&lt;!rge Joaeph Jr.);
Highland (Robert Orlh) '
.Iron ton-lawrence (Keith
MoUhan);
Jackson·VInton
(William V. Lewis); Jef.
ferson (Robert Cutrl); KnoxHocktns (Phillip Brown);
Musklngum EOA Group
(Robert Windisch)· Pike
(Joseph Huber); ' Ross
(Marjorie Dlstlehorst);
Scioto (Robert WaliAln)· and
Washington-Morgan '(Anthony Meie).
COAD board members
include executive directors,
low-Income representatives

department,
stale
clearl'nghouse, Ohio
Department oiEconomic and
Community Development
(Human Resource Division);
U.S. Department ·of labor,
Ohio COmmiaslon on' Aging
and
Federal
Health,
Education and WeUare In
addition to area state
representatives and state
senators ..
COAD currently is the
"godfather" for six Com·
munlty Action agency ·
programs Including the
Foster Grandparent
program,
the
Senior
Nutrition and "Meals at .
Horne" program, the Senior
Companion program; a
project \0 combat the energy
crlais by low-income home
winterization; a Food Stamp
Outreach project and the
training prpgram for Head
Start personnel.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Save '40.00 When Purchasing ASet of Serta Finn Matba and Matching
Box Spring. Luxurious Quilt Top Construction For Year After Year Slee~ng

Comfort.

• ),

•'
I ·.

"''

.Reg. SS9.95 Full Size Mattress
Reg. SS9.95 Full Size Box Spring

..

GAVE SUED
'i•l ) ·,·\..
··.
l.D~ ANGELES (IJPI) ..:_,
Singer, Marvin Gaye's I~ at''.
troubles are getting . worse.
'l1le rz-year-old musician,
cited for cmtempt of court
. Wednesday . and . with , a
w~t out foc )11.! arrest,
waa sued Thursday for
$520,000 by a Beverly Hills
company for breach · of
contract.

..

Community Action agencies.
The agenda for the sixth
annual COAD meeting Includes an open forum
moderated by Keith Molihan,
executive director of the
Ironton-Lawrence County
CAO, with Invited guests
covering their respective
roles . within the state of
federal plan of providing
human services.
John T;"gle, Caldwell,
COAD prec ·t will conduct
a business moc.ing following
the open forum. Steve
Slanley, Athens, Ohio will
chair a hanquet meeting at 7
p.m·. Thursday .
Fridsy 's session will Include district elections,
election or COAD officers and
a meeting of the execuUve
committee.
Marjorie Distelhorst ,
executive committee of the
CAC Qf Ross County.is COAD
vice-jlresident; June Ver~on,

. . \'r. ..
·,

Save '40.00
•

.

••

""

l

'

'13990
~
·Both Pieces

.

FLOWERS
.

Save

ForM Occasions

'40~.

Ever:rwhlre

'

I

Open Friday

992-2039
Pomi!VJ Flower Shop

Pomeroy

I

L

•

•tt"

For ·
·BothPieces

'
9i3f
to I
•

PM

'

, THE WINNERS IN three olhet clailel of Friday'• food and nutrition Judging
were, grand champions, front, left tAl right, Terri P1aiiiM, Teena Entertain;
Barblra poyglas, ln~rnat~Qnal Foods, and Mike McGuire, Foods \0 T.ake.and
$!are; and tbe reserve cbamploos, back row, Iel't tAl rl&amp;bt, Darla W1111l1!11110n,
TeeM Entertlill; Belli Ritchie, lnternaUOiial Fooda,lllld Becky Eichinger, Foods
to Take and Share.

_
..

•

Weather

tmts

Chance of showers or
thundershowers north with
showers or thundershowers
likely south Sunday. Highs in
the 70s with a few readings in
the low 8Qs . Chance of
showers Sunday night. Lows
from the mid 501! to low ~.

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

.
.
.
F
Metgs a1r·ts
ready to open

Increases
awarded.
by board
MIDDLEPORT - All non-certified
"'DP!oyea ol the Melp Local Sclxlol
, latrlct were awarded pay lncreasefi when
It district's board of education met ·
rldar night.
'lbe·boal'd met In executive aeasion to
laculll'tbe ·agreement reached between
lt board of educa\lm and r&amp;ptwntatlvei
I the no~led employes ln recent
eJOI.Idonl. Following the sesalon, the
oatd appio+id-dll Ill'~~ . -~·
'!be agreement jlrovldes that all nm. ertlfied enlployes
receive -an
~ 25 cents an hbur payment as of
iept. 1this yeiar, and ill except b\18 driv~
rill rteave an additional 25 cents an hour
Jeglnnlng Jan. 1, 1977. .
The board a1ao Increased the salaries' ·
I. the superintendent's secretarY, fi'OIIl
13.21 to $4.21 an hour and the director of
ransportatlon •s salary fr&lt;m $4.20 to $4.70
111 hour elfectlve Sept. 1. The two positions
11'1 not covered by . the non-certified
!IJLpfoyes agreement.
The board employed John Moca, a
ong-time high school . mathematics
:eacher .., the bigh school level, for one
!e81' as principal of the Meigs Junior Hlgh
!chool. Mora aucceeds Jel!rey Weaver
itbo resigned In June.
·
. Mlchaal Wilfong who has been
:eachlng In the EaStern District was
llllled to replace Mora as a math teacher
11 the high sclxlol. Supt. Charles Dowler
IBid be had numeroUs appUcatl0118 foc
the junior hilh poll, so many In fact, that
:1e had to quit accepting them because of
!be time Involved In Interviewing · the
IIJIIIIcanls; He thoUIIht Mora Is the best
~lifted of the candidates.
The board accepted the realgnatlon of
Mrs. R. G, delaval u aaslatant clerk and
oo replacement was named. However, the
board agreed that Marilyn Meter, who hal
been worklntl part · time in the clerk's
Dlllce, can now be employed on a haU-tlme
bula In the clerk's office.
John Triplett, clerk, ssid that Interim
lllnds between payroll perioda can be
Invested for Interest and that plans are
now underway to secure COlla Involved n
tbe vocational program of the district. He
discusled UJo with the l1oard the
C(lllpllation oolunch room costs at each
achool and allo ,the posslblllly of clerkl of
llle Eutem and Southern Local Sclxlol
!)lltrlcta Uling the Melga Local computer
machine for payrolls. The clerks of the two
dlatrlcta wUl dlscuM the plan with their
rtlllpi!CII~ boards. Some charge will be
Imed.
· The board, taking up the matter the
11100\'(1 time, Friday night awarded a
c:ootract for mllk and dairy supplles to
Villey Bell. Board member Bob Snowden
mond tAl give the c:ootract to Valley ilell.
'l1le motion died lor lsck o1 a aecond.
Board member Jennifer Sheets said the
c:ootract lbcJuld be aw~ tAl one of two
!Irma bldln&amp; Vllley Bell or Brolll!hton's,
wl1o l'tlmltted ldsntlcal bids. She moved
tbat the Clllltract be II'WIJ'ded by the rup of
a c:aln, wblch, Clerk Triplett sal\1, Ia
anetimel done. Board President Wendell
&amp;,"" voiced objectiiJIII to such a system
IJiawardlng a contract and Mra. Sheets'
111G11oa died f« tbe lack ol a second .
In arder to apedlle tbt matter, Supt.
Ouirlel Dowler .-Id lblt he would
, J"'W!!mnl llle milk mldalr7 products
be J!lll • a ad 1mn va~~er·ilell. Snowden
111111111111a hll motiGt1 l« v.ne, Bell
· I ~till '~ 111'1. Sbeetl thla "--'
~.
•• S(Q I 'ilrlll llq, I milk prodll::er t
..-e "*"&amp; 1IJd Hoover voted witb
. . _ . - ...... Sheell to live lbe
• Clllltrad .. Vdw BtU.

ROCK SPRINGS - The 1976 Meigs reduced price lickeiS wiU not be avaU~ble
Counly Fair is ready for its curtain to raise at the gale. The Center will be open on a
on Monday evening's opening night ser· regular schedule ail -week.
·
vices.
Beginning at 12:30 that day en· •
From then through Saturday night the tertainment will begin In the, Senior
picturesque grounds tllat have seen over CIUzens Tent. Actlv\Ues will include a
100 fairs staged hopefully will be packed slng..,·iong; readings by Roy Pler9ol, Mrs.
with Meigs Countians and visitors from . Bertha Parker and Mrs. Thora BlackGaliia and Mason Counties.
wood ; music by the Senior Chltizen.s
Tuetday lolarJely 4-H and Jimlor Fair Chorus, Francis Andrews and hla band,
business.
William Grueser and Amos Leonard on
Wednesday is more Junior Fair, and their dulcimers, and WUllam Hoselton, a •
harness racing begins at 4 ·P· m.
.
one-man band.
Thursday is Senior Citizens Day but
Square dancers will also perfOJ:fll and
there is plenty of other evenl8 including recognition will be given to the oldest
livestock judging, twilight harness racing, married couple in Meigs County, Mr. and
and free night time entertainment by the Mrs. Clarence Nichols of Tuppers Plains.
Life Group and Houston and Elmer.
Cookies ard tea will be served all aafGates to the grounds each day open at 9 ternoon.
a. m.
Mrs. Thomas said a shuttle service tAl
Friday, the program opens with pony the fairgrounds will be provided using
and horse running races at 1 p. m.
Senior Citizens buses and the Middleport
Highlights Saturday are the Garden Cab Co. has volunteered to provide
Tractor pull at 9 a.m., tractor pull at 10 a. transportation to the fairgrounds for
m., Pret\y Baby and Uttle Miss a~d . senior citizens at 50 cents per person when
Mister contest at I p. m., women's there are at least five in a load.
costume con \est at 6 p. m. and Kenny
The senior citizens terit will be in place
·Slarr, the 8 p. m. free-entertainment.
on the fairgrounds all week with a variety
Thursday senior citizens· will be ad- or arta and crafts made at the center on
milled to lhe grounds for half price, but sale. Personnel. will be aval)able to
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, Center Director, register senior citizens for the Golden
advises that tickets must be purchased in Buckeye Cards.
advance of that day at the Center. The

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Rain no
diriner ·

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stopper
Tbe scene may not have
been
Bob
Evans
restauran~ but the beans
served during the 1861h
aonual Rio Grande bean
dinner were good ud
warm for a cool and rainy
aftemooa.
Serving beaoa, pictured
at right, are Stan Redd and
Rita Pmla. On the right Is.
Bob Evans, Presldeat of
Bob Evans Farms IDe.,
bean
dinner
host.
Above, not even bad
weather dampened tbe
spirits of the large crowd,
above, that turned out

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 1976

GAlliPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

VU. ll ,NO. 29

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,()(}()
Families

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despite rainy weather.
Many
service
organizations were on hand
to participate. The bean
dinner goes back to 1868
· when the village of Vinton

served such Items as
beans, hardtack (biscuitS$
and black coffee to Civil
War veterans at reunions.
Three years later the
village of Rio Grande

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Musicians' suffer
poisoning by food

RIO GRANDE-Five members of the
Liberty Union High School marching band
started bean dinners ol attending Camp Crescendo on the college
their own. Beans, hard- . camp118 here were hospitalized late Friday
tack, and black coffee were night suffering effects Of apparent food
staple foods for the Union poisoning.
According to tile Holzer Medical
soldiers during the Civil
Center
eight students were treated and
War.

Local option petition invalidatecJ, on _signatures
. The local option was for the question of
GALLIPOLIS - The GaUia CoWity "C" and "D" permits in Green Twp.,
subject
l.o
the
November
election.
sale
or intoxicating liquors. A township is
Board of Elections has disqualified a
Petitions for the local option were filed wet until voted dry. The questions were:
local option and petition concerning the
July
21. According to the board of elec(a) Shall the sale of malt beer, wine
_question of the sale of beer by holders of
lions, both the option and petition were and mixed drinks .by the package be
disqualified because of invalid signatures. _permUted for off-premises consumption
"
PLENTY LITfLE ONES
Courthouse closing
days for fair
POMEROY - Approximately 150
entries have been received In the second
'l'he courthouse will be open until 12
POMEROY - Anticipating· usual
annual pretty baby and UtUe Mr. and Miss requests
noon on Saturday. The legislature has
and
in
accord
with
past
practices,
Meigs County Fair contests to be held at I the Meigs County Courtholl8e will be provided that ea~h Saturday commencing
p.m. Saturday at the new show ring near closed Thursclay and Friday afternoolis In at noon is a holiday. "l trust that the Meigs
the midway on the fairgrounds. Parents support of ·the Meigs County Fair, Jud[&gt;. County Fair will enjoy a record attendan~~t
are to have their children taking part. at John C. Bacon, common pleas court, this bicentennial year", Judge Bacon said.
the show ring by 12 noon so that numbers
can be assigneii and final aspects of announced.
registraUon can be handled• Judging will
be by out of COWity judges.
(

two

only.
(b) Same as above Only for on and off
consumption by _permit only .
(c) Sale of spirituous liquor by the
glass.
.(d) State Liquour Stores sale by the
package for off-premises consumption.
The petitioners sought the local option
because a new carryout, "The Dugout"
opened recently on Rl. 35 in Green Twp.

released . They were, Bll!nche Lucille
Aurand, 15; Timothy Earl Welker, ·15;
Stephanie Stoughton, 14; Kelson Lee
Dearth, 15 ; David Lawrence Rogers, 17;
Nancy Carleen Hughes, 15, and Peggy Sue
BiUer, 16, aU of Baltimore, Ohio, and
Molley Ann Thomas, Rt. 1, Baltimore.
Admitted were Barbara Ann Waugh,
IS, Scott Ashton, 12, Cindy Holbrook, 1~,
David Paul Queen, 15, and Robin Ann
Corneilus, 15, all of Baltimore. Miss
Cornelius is the grandtlaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Cornell\18 of Olelhlre. They
were aU listed in good condition. Atoi\O'Pital ·
spokesman said Saturday afternoon all
students admitted were released.
According to ·unofficial reports, the
students became ill late Friday night
following their evening meal In the Rio
Grande College cateterla.
It Is believed that "Johnny Marzetti"
was the aource ol the poisoning. •
College offlclala could not be reached
Saturday for comment on the incident.

BIDS WILL BE OPENED .
.
COLUMBUS - The Ohio o.ipartment
of TransportaUon will open bids here
Sept. 9, for safety upgrading the us 50 ..:.
Ohw 7 interchange In Troy Twp and
Coolville in Athens · County. · The
progra~ed estimate foc engineering and
construction·costs Is $300,000. Project will
be 90 . per cent federally .financed with
Roadside Obstacle Removal Pr"'!ram
funds by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of
1913.

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Open class entries
to fair total 1,573

POMEROY - A total of 1;573 open
MILLER COMING
class
entries for the 113th annual Meiga
WASIUNGTON, D.C. - During, this
ROCKSPRINGS -An added feature to the 113th annual MeigS County Fair
County
Fair were recorded on ThursdaY .
month's Congressional recess, Tenlh
thl.! year will be demonstrations by the special operations squadron of the Air
and
Friday,
the deadline for mOll open
· District Congressman Clarence Miller )Viii
Force, R.O.T.C., Ohio University, Athens.
class competition in the senil'l' division.
return to Southeastern Ohio for a series of
A group of from six to eight persons from the R.O.T.C., will demonstrate
Breakdown of the total includes dairy
civic and constituent functions .
rope descent, rock cllmbing techniques, and other aspects of their training at 6
cattle,
77; beef cattle, 11; slleep, 25;
HOMEFORELDERLYBURNS
One lson the afternoon of Aug. 20when
p.m. Tueaday and 1 p.m. Thursday at the rocky section overlooking the upper
22; farm crops, 188; WednesdaY
GREENVILLE, Ohio UP! - ·• ne poultry,
he will travel to Meiga County to attend the
secti011 of the fairgrowtds.
flower
llhow
306· Friday nower show. 237;
Darke CoWily Home for the Elderly was - domestic a;ts,
M,Jga County Fair. Area residents who
Among those taking part will be three local young men, Steve Powell
3.14; senloc painting, 25;
destr~yed by a fire, apparently started by
wiah to express their opinions or who have
Pomeroy,
and
Mark
and
Jim
Morris
of
Rutland.
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junior
painting,
19; baking and cann~,
~:
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. hghtmng, Saturday. No Injuries were 325, and granges, rour.
pro\llems
with
the
Federal
Government
... 'In prlar JIUI, lbe milk purchases have
are encouraged to visit with Congressman \(,,,,,,,,,,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\\\! rep or led.
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(Continued 011 ,.., 2) · .
Miller.
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Mrs. Millard Y1n Mater
Ph. m-2039

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SALE

We Wire Ftawars

992-3629

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Reg. '69.95 Twin Mattress.,"
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Reg. '69.95 Twin.. . &amp;Ox·sPrtlll
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THE MEIGS INN
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UniYersity.
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1lle winners were :
POMEROY - More lhan 200 4-H boys
Outdoor Cookery: Brent Bolln of the
ard girls participated In the Meigs County RuUand Roedrunners, grand champion;
Food and Nutrition Fair Friday at Meigs Tammie Starcher of the Five Points Star
High School to ,elect the grand champion
Stitchers Junior Leaders, reserve.
and ..-ve ~- In 14 classes.
All American Foods: PhyiiJs Davis of
From the 14 grand champions, six will
the
Middleport Uberty Belles, grand
be 10Iected Ill take their food projects to
champion;
Renee Trussell of the
the Ohio Stale Fair. However, anMerrymakers
Club
of Bashan, reserve.
nouneemont of the six will not be made
Snacking
and
Packlng
: Sherrie Arunlll WednesdaY night .at the Junior air
nold,
grand
champion;
Biliy Dyer,
Night recogniUOII program.
.·
HillbUly,
of
Rutland,
reserve.
At Friday's judginl! not only did each
Breads: Neisel Duvall, Riverview.
of the priJ and bqyl prepare and bring in
Club,
grand champion; Mary Mora, Five
food which waa tasted lor flavor and
Point
Star Stitchers, reserve champion. ·
checked foc quality and appearance by a
Tricks
for Treats: Robin Plll!er,
panel of competent judges, but each one
Merrymakers
of Long Bottom, grand
had a nutrWon Interview.
,
Henrietta
Thomas,
The Interview consisted or an champion i
evaluation of.tile day's menus plaMed by Merrymakers, reserve.
Preserve and Serve: Pauill Hysell,
the 4-H member, aa well as a table setting.
Each 4-H member was aiso judged on Five Point Star Slitchers, grand chamunderstanding of menu planning, food pion ; Jamie Ray, Columbia Make-It Club,
FOOD AND NVTRJTION Fair wlnnen Friday Included Phrllla DIYII; grand
rserve.
preparadon and table setlings.
champloo In AU American Foods, WI front, with Tanunle Slardler, raerve In
Customize Your Diet: Cindy Pitzer,
Doing the tasting and evaluation were
Outdoor Cooker)'; andback,BrentBolln, grandchlmplonlnOiatdo«' Cookery, and
Merrymakers,
grand champion; Paula
Mrs. Darlene Lambert of the Jackson
Renee Trusaell. reserve champion, In AU American Foods.
Extension Service, Mrs. Bettie Clark, Swindell, Bedfo~d Gals, reserve cham·
·GaUia county Extension Agent, Hoine pion.
Tasty Meals : Debbie Birchfield,
Hillbilly 4-H, grand champion; Patty
Economics;.Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,.former
ColurAbia
Ma)te-It,grandchampion; Mary champion in a self-determining projecton Parker, Five Point Star Stitchers, reserve,
tdelgs County Extension Agent, and Mrs, ·
dairy products.
(Continued on Pill• 2)
Nancy Cline, Rocl&lt;bridge, senior home Mora, Five Point Star Stitchers, reserve.
Making it with Meals : Mary Colwell,
Dairy Foods : Mary Mora, grand
economics student at Ohio State

By Charleae lleefllch

Ph. m-5711

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Gallians give oprnzons rn Miller poll

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Plenty of
gas seen
in Mason

POINT PLEASANT - No
curtailment of natural gas,
for Mason County Schools
from its already allocated
portion, was good news from
a Friday evening meeting of
lhe Mason County Board of
EducaUon ,
In a letter from the
Columbia Gas Company of
West Virginia lo Superin·
tendenl Lowell Cook, it was
noted that Utere should be no
forseeable cutbacks as was
envisioned last year, unless
'.
Utere is a ralller harsh winter
or supplies from llle southwest region of the country
should dwindle.
Besld~ the communication
from Columbia Gos, the
board received a letter from
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the State Department of
....,.
Education, slating that
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Mason
County
has
~ L
.
$3,058,119.26 in its Belter
Schools Building Fund.
Tbese funds will be applied
to
the school building
MARY MORA, SEATED, FRONT LEFT, was grand cbamplm In dairy foods
programs
in Ute future after a
and reserve champion in both Tasty Meals and Breads at the Friday Food Fair
complete study on comjudging. Other grand champions pictured here are front right, Bobln Pitzer,
prehensive education in
Tricks ior Treats, and lleCOIId row, lei\ to right, Debbie Blrchlield, Tasty Meals;
Mason
County has been
Mary Colwell Making it witl) Meals; Paula Hysell, Preserve and Serve; Cindy
made,
according
to
Pitzer,
Your Diet, and Niese! Duvall, Breads. Third row, right to left,
Superintendent
Lowell
Cook.
are the reserve champlona, Paula Swindell, Customize Your Diet; Jamie Ray,
In oUter action, the board
Preserve and Serve; Patty Parker, Making it with Meals; Billy Dyer, Snacking
issued
an artswer to a
and Packing, and HeiB'le\ta Thomas, Tricks for Treats.
.· grievance heating on Mrs.
Shirley Powell, who was·
half Pomeroy and one-llalf Middleport; placed on . a preferred
Carolyn Mummey, Harrisonville, and transfer list earlier in the
Margaret Teaford, Rutland. Personnel year. Shewas an instructor at
designated to work In the Title I JrOgnun, Mason County Vocational
(Continued from page I)
pending its approval, Include Greg Center.
Food to Take and Share: Mike
Superintendent Cook will
McCall , coordinator, ,one-half time ;
McGuire, HDlbiUy ~H Club, Rutland,
contact
Mrs. Powell to inPallline Horton, Sabra Morrison, Barbara
grand champion; Becky Eichinger, Five
form
her
Uta l the board will
Sbull%, Joan Manuel, Margaret Teaford,
Point Star Stitchers, reserve.
place
her
in a teaching
Carol Evans, Carolyn Smith, Carolyn
International . Foods: Barbara
position,
for
which she is
Mununy, Karen Walker, Carol Ohlinger,
f. :· glas, Sunbeam Club, Tuppers Plains,
qualified at the earliest
John Triplett and Donald Wolfe.
Ill'and champion; Beth Ri tc~le, Sunbeams,
Also, pending approval of the program posSible time.
reserve.
Other major business acted
the board hired Sharon Birch, nW'M;
Teens Entertain ; Terri Pullins,
Phyllis Dugan, Carol Gheen, Donna on inc! uded :
Merrymakers Club, grand cham~Approved Qle plan for
Ohlinger, Janet Williamson, Debbie
pion; . and Darla Williamson, Rutland
free
and reduced .meals and
McGuire, and Lois Hawley, aides, and
Lucky Stars, reserve.
free
milk for llle coming
Donna Carr, secretary, for the DPPF
school
year.
program.
,
-Accepted
llle following
' A request from Mr. and Mrs. Jack
SlaVin 1c send their daughter to Pomeroy resignations: Phyllis F.
Elementary School paying tuition was Silver; Susan J. Grimes;
approved and a substitute tellchenJ list Claude A. Sines ; and
(Ointlnaed frml page I)
was approved. On the list are Alire H. Elizabeth McDaniel;
been divided betweed Valley Bell and
-Transferred Kim Neal
Grauer, Daisy Blakeslee, Ladona Boyd,
llrouPlon 's.
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Jennifer Butcher, John Coffman, Betty from liilcber at Hartford to
Remer Hysell was highly commended
Fultz, Grace Hawley, Betty Hulcblnaon, Teaching Principal at
bJ tbe board for Ida free work near the
Jennifer Hill, Pauline Hysell, Farle HarUord, Weady Lowe from
MeJcs Hlch School. In landscaping and
KeJ\IIedy, Vinas Lee, Margaret Ella Lewis, Hannan to West Columbia,
IIIO\'lnjlbup quantities of dirt to create an ·
Roberta Maidens, Charles McManus, Josep)l Scites . fro~ oods
to
West
~ . , . CGII!Piel. It has been
Dorotba Jean Peti'el, Herbert Parker, Elementary
Columbia
Elementary,
and
lltimatA!ci tb&amp;t $2,000,000 worth of work
Gayle Price, AJlll8 W. Rice, Jeannie
David
Hall
from
West
hu been done at the lite over the past five
Taylor, Ruth Tucker, Margaret Parsons,
Columbia to Wahama.
:rean•t practlc:ally no coat to llle district.
Helen Williams and Bill Young.
$lowden wu liked to be the conlacl with
- Hired the following
Substitute coob for the district ~
H)'!lell to secme minor items needed such
Trecie Abbott, Dorothy Long, Addalou personnel : P-amela Dial
aa IIJ'III -s, fertilizer and that time
Lewis, Katherine Powell, Ruby King, Adkins, Speech Palllologist;
tblng.
Connie Qulvey, Joan Kaldor, MiUie Joan Manuel, Teacher, Norlll
The bom'd accepted the resignations of
Humphrey, Merlum Hoffman, Diana Point Pleasant Elementary;
!tacberl, Bbanda Tfllllllll and Shelley
Phillips, Marie Birchfield, Sllrley Priddy Charles Chambers, Science
.Hook, llld IIIIPioyed u ~chera for one
Teacher, Point .Pleasant
and Paula Rife.
year '1'nldy Pryor, Harrisonville fifth
Alii, Supt. Dan Morris dlacussed milk Junior High School; Charles
poade; ,_Vall, Meigs Junior lligh and ·
and lunch prices which will be taken up R. Withers, Teacher, Sunftb 111'1411 bulretball coach; Myra Gmt,
latw. The board hired Rebecca Glaze, nyside Elementary School;
IIIah IChool IOCfal lladies and Engllah;
Jligh St., Middleport, as junior blgh achool Sue Patrick, Teacher,
Glenna lfPrlllle, el-lllty vocal music;
secretary, at $2.82 1111 hour. Dpwler Hlinnan Elementary; Donna
Jo Ami Bartley, secmd pwle at Rutland,
reported tbat all buaes of the diatrlct have Crabtree, Teacher, Ordnance
llld Lull Obbl, onHIIJf ldndergarten and
passed Inspection. Adlninilltrators were Elementary; Patricia
111HIIIf teadllallt HarrllonvWe.
authorized to assign high mileage buses at Darling, Teacher, Wes t
flendlq the illjljJIOViil of Title I funds,
theirdlscretim. Areport as of July 3lfrom Columbia Elementary;
teacbcn were iiiiijAo,flld far me year
Donald Wo~e, clerk-custodian of the Verna Page, · Teacher,
lnclutllng J01111 Manuel, Rutland; Carol
athletic· account, showed a balance of Wabama High School;
Evans, Sllem Cent«; Carolyn Smith, ooe$172.91.
Rhonda Tennant, Teacher
Hartford Elementary; Lou
Gene Kingery, Speclal
Education Testing Assistant;
Tina
Cotton, as Special
PLEASANT VAU.EY
MatUe Dunn, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Oanny Taylor, Point Education Teacher, Letart;
DISCHARGED :- Mrs. 0. Mrs. Bruce Castle, Point Pleasant; a son to Dr. and · Betty McCoy, Contract
J. Slt!lhenson, Gallipolis; Pleuanl; Thomas O'Bryan, Mrs . Montrle Chaksupa, Driver, Rocky Ford area;
Mra. &amp;bert Harper, Point Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Point Pleasant; and a Frances Casto, as Contract
Pteaaant; Darrell Stonr, , Butler, Southside; James daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Driver, Elmwood area;
Charles Willet, New Haven .
Leon; Mrs. Theodore Sturgeon, West ·eo1wnb1a.
Kenneth Riggs as Custodian
Stevena, Point Pleasant;
BIRTHS - AsontoMr.and
Ill for Ordnance Elementary : effective August 16,
1976. Employmen,t to end
June 30, 1977.

GALLIPOLIS
congreuman Miller
saturdaY r&amp;leaaed the rflll)~
of the publlc opinlOII po
conducted by hll oiiiCe at llle
Galllpolia Counlf Yair·

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Increases

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DR. ·LAMB

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SENIOR FRIENDS - Elcbt per1C1111 have been
employed aa SeUor Frlendl who wlll be working with .
older people and liUpei'VISng. The Senior Friends JX'O)ect
is a model Jll'llgram to help geriatric paUents lldjuat to

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
county's probation officer,
who works under direction of
the juvenile court, told
MiddlepOrt .. Pomeroy Rotarians Friday evening
delinquency of 16·11-yearolds 11 serious and In·
creasing, particularly In
. Pomeroy.
Carl Hysell, speak1rig' at
Heath United Methodist

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. POMEROY - The com- To stimulate llle geriatric
munity Mental Heallll Center patient toward sociallzation
of Gallia, Jacks~n and Meigs and rehabiUtation for his
counties has developed . a return to the community.
program which is modeled
To give personalized atafter other prograniS funded tentton to discharged
in Ohio entitled "Senior patients, .to give thetn ·a
Friends" for Meigs County friend's helping hand, and 1c .
cesidepts, The . Gallia- assist them in adjusting to
Jackson-Meigs 648 Board is their strange new world.
delegating llle project to the - To alrect discharged
community Mental Heallll patients to community
C•nter Board, and both resources they may need, ·
agencies work closely willl thus helping them maintain
the Meigs County Council on independent living In dignity
Aging .
•
and willla feeling of security.
The program recruits
The Senior Friends will be
persons over 60 years of age on contract. They will receive
to be trained as Senior $2 per hour to cover their
Friends of persons over 60 expenses for up to 20 hours of
who are now patients at the services rendered per week.
Atherll; Mental Health Center Following training, the
or ·those who have been Friends and geriatric
11!\urned to the community residents
will become
from that facility. The Senior acquainted through various
Friends would work also with activities.
patients in community
In swrunary, the Senior
nursing homes, their own Friends help ' discharged~.
homes after discharge, and patients in their adjustment
the inpatient unit of the wherever they may go,
Gallipolis . Jackson - Meigs whether it is to a nursing
Community Mental Health home, back to their own
Cenler in Gallipolis.
families, to group living, or to.
Tbe obieeUvea of lbe ln4•~&gt;eDdenl ll•lnl. Tbe ,
program are as outlined Sentor · l"rren((a wt11 provide ·
below :
the needed ·support lc more
To restore the geriatric · satisfactory living. They will
patient ot the greatest be the link to llle community
possible degree of health and that will give patients the
independent · functioning by strength lo lose thier
adding a special personal dependency on the hospital.
contact willl reality and the They will give patients new
community through Senior hope and courage lc face the
Friends.
future .

Jurors drawn
POMEROY -

Sixty five Cqrneii. Racine;

Freda

names were drawn Saturday Smith, Rt. 3, Albany; Danny
morning for possible grand
and petit jury in the office or
llle clerk of courts.
Names drawn for possible
grand jury were Dorthy Hall,
Reedsville; Lawrence Rl!ed,
""--!es R.
Rt. I, Middleport; "'""
Karr, Rt · 2• Pomer0 y; Paul

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Zirkle, · Pomeroy; . Keith
Romine, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ;
Dale Colburn, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy; Aida Harmon, RD,
Pomeroy; Robert Lewis, Jr.,
Middleport; Dan C. Arnold,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Peggy
Brickles, Rl. 4, Pomeroy;
Jane Ann Hill, Ra"cine;
Dorollly DkaviRdt, Ml'dd1Aleporba t;
Paul Pee • · 3•
ny;
Betty A. Hutchison, Rl. 1,
RuUand; Raymond Wilcox,
Rt. I, Mld~t; Oscar
Price, Pol!leroy; Nonnan C.
Will, Rt.l, Rutland; Kenneth
K. Alkire, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ;
Mary Jo Buckley, Reedsvlll.e..
Attending the drawing
were Common Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon, jury commissioners, Freeland Norria,
Clerk of Courts, Larry
Spencer, VIckie CUmmins,
Deputy Sheriff Robert
Beegle, Nellie Brown and
Lettie Spencer.

DEAR DR. LAMB _ piercing scream. We rushed lOOk hard, ugly, , cheap and
~
Please print 1b1a !etta. By upstairs and she was pouring smelly. They look like
r
dOing so you ml&amp;llt actually a glass of water on the haggard old witches. The
t•
11ve
some Uvea.ot to
F' t 1'
beauUful new (never slept in halitosis Is nauseating.
• •
II'S • ve g
QPrwa yet) expensive bed to try to Smoking .Ia also very ex: • the following \hQucllt wblch put out the small but pensive. Pleue, some strong
~ !_leOple lee! lbe . _ tlpl'eading flame on
the words from you.
DEAR READER - A
ii
a~o dlsgustlnc bow bedspread. We ·called the fire
• many old people are department because we family has the right to set the
lllloking! Even on llle street! COUldn't control it. We got stand~rds for their own
• '11lal Ia ugly and bad enough lllllllle out and were so glad
ho::;, everyone who .llllokes
but they - male and female n 'IIIII not burned at all.
is '85 bad off as .you cjeiiCI'Ibe .
- not only harm themselves
She !lev r
d
but IIIey aggravate non- 011
e apo1og1ze nor
ered to pay lor lhar Your aunt bu.l lt· Is frequen uY·
amokers and also cause dsmage.t haled to do it but 1 a rather antisocial habit. Il
-'•kiln of
!rouble In many cases, as my finally lol4 her she would
does increase lhe w•u• g
aunt .did.
never be welcome again Ute skin and il does caUBe
She Ia put 60 and nearly unless &amp;he ~topped
kin
most smokers to have foul
caUJtd a tragedy. She We never heai4 : : ~; smelUng breath. ApparenUy
r 'J Uke a dragon. She again.
most smokers are unaware of
1111 110 many wrinkles,
Afriend 01 oun had a real their bad brealll.
~aD the lime and has a tragedy calllld by 1 t:are'-a
Many smokers just dlln'l
...... fGk:e, Ugh! She fell smoker. Five people burned n·"-- the effect of their
......
&amp; j f ! a ctpretle in her to death. A hOUie w• ttm- habit
on other people. 'l'hty
vlllllnl us. My pletely destrO)'«&lt;, F'rGn! 1 111! ilnlnwle
tc the smeU and
•
• (lblldren and I heallll and cosmetic view
don'IIIO!Iee, f 1111 constantly
. . . ..,..,...,. TV down- why can't "srioklng idlota•:
by the number of
.,... . . • ~r~lclllnl her realize the hazards 'of lm1lftlled
people who have quit
,.,.... JII'Ofll'llll IIPIIairs. smoking? Women especially smoking and then realize that
S.ddtftly we heard a •
it is an llllpleaaant habit. For·

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gi!Vernmenl should provide
health l118urance for longterm (catutrophic) illness.
Seventy-three per cent of
those taking the poll

per cent said the United
Stale~ should remain neutral,
thirty-three per cent favored
u.s. arms and aid to lsrael,
twenty per cent believed the
u. s. should support ll;l:ael
with aid and troops, ond ten
per cent had no opinion.
Seventy-eight per cent
support legialaUon requiring
a mandatory sentence and a
denial of parole for aU crimes
keep the mid-teenager from committed with a gun.
finding his associates and· Twenly.two per cent opposed
friends in the crowd lbat such a proposal.
frequents, lor example , the. Asked if Jhe ·Welfare
river front parking lots in System should be federalized
Pomeroy .
·
to provide a guaranteed
"They 're going to run with annuat income fo.r every
somebody, and if they find family , twenty-seven per cent
their friends In the kind that said -yes and seventy-three
help gel them in trouble , in per cent said no.
trouble they' ll . get, " said
In assessing who bears
Hysell.
responsibility for the energy
There's nolhing for them to crisis, twenty-five per cent
do/' he warned.
blamed the Congress, eight
Hysell e,plained the legal per cent the White House ,
objectiveof the juvenile cour t thirty-one per cent the oil
is to "pro~t " children .
companies, sixteen per cent
Acting President Bob Buck consumer demand and waste,
presided, and Carl Denison, . ten per cen t the OPEC (oil
.program chairman, in- exporting ) countries, and ten
troduced the speaker. ·
per cent other , · ·
·
There will be a meeting but
Sixty-two per cent favor an
no program next week, The accelerated program of
following week will be the constructing more· nuclear
club's annual family picnic at power plants and thirty..,ight
the Fort Meigs Park outside per cent opposed such conRutland when the mem- structi on.
bership is expecting to meet
Asked if they favored exits guest exchange student panded U. S. trade and other
from Japan.
exchanges with the &amp;&gt;VIel
One guest, Or. Carl Wood of Uni on, twenty..,igh t per cent
Gallipolis, was introduced. of the poll ·respondents said
Ladies of the church served a yes while seventy-two per
ham dinner.
cen t said no.

·responae&lt;~ yea whtle twenty- federal spending . Twentyseven per cent , r~gistered four per cent opposed such a
opposition.
proposal.
Seventy-5ix per cent favor
lf Israel is all&lt;~cked by
federallnt:ome tax cuts only Arab nations, thirty-seven
when equal cuts are made in

WASHINGTON UPI - A
Federal Power .Commlsalon
judge has asked the Justice
Department to cooduct a
criminal Investigation ;o
determine whether Gulf OU
Corp. and Texas Eastern
Transmission Corp.
conspired to hold back
natural gas In hopes of
getting higher prices.
Adminlatrltlve Law Judge
Rarownd M. ztnunet said
Friday there was strong
evidence that Gulf and Texas
Eastern, a ,gas pipeline
. company, violated federal
antitrust laws by conspiring
to let Gulf supply less gas
than ita conlracts called for .

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By DANIEL F. GilMORE

WASHINGTON (UPI) Chrysler Corp. c;in expect to
reap a profit of almost 114,000
per cent oo production of the
M60Al tank, Rep. Le:l Aspin,
DWia., said Saturday.
Aapln, a ,member of the
Houae Armed Services
Qmunlttee, said Chrysler Is
able to make the huge profit
because It Ia bulldlng the tank
at an Army-owned plant
which ~ supplying almost all
llle tooling.
,
AChrysler IIJIOkesman said
Aspin's charges indicate "a
.complete
lack
of

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF - Making up ule
admlnlstratlve staff for the newly formed program
"senior Friends" are, . seated, Doug Uzm, . program
director, stancilng, 1..,, Kathie Fllsinger, program
coordlnatot, and Pam Rlftle, secretary-booklreeper. The
JII"11I'UUl Ill a fwlded agency of Gallla.Jackson-Melgs
Oommunltr Mental Raallb and }letardatlon Board.

Eastern .

He said the pipeline
company "Is perfectly
eontent with Gulf's lagging
performaoce" and, rather
than prodding the . oil
eompany to abide . by Its
contract, agreed that Gulf
was acting in good faith.

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
AUGUST 15 THRU 21

LUNCH TIME

·
LetienJ Qf opinion are welcomed. Tiley Jboold be
. lesa thl!ll3® JOrds ltJI1g (or be BUhject to ffilactloil by
the editor) and mast be alped with tbe algnee's ad·
· dresa. Name&amp; may be wllbbeld 11J1011 pubUcallon.
However, on requetl, name. wW be diaclNed. LeUenJ
should be bi good taaie, addreulng llaue., not per-

~:!smant':id: .~~ry~:

Childbirth·infonnation
is offered W~dnesday
I l\

POMEROY
Final
arra.ngements are being
made lor llle childbirlll inf9rmaHoo progflllll to be held
on Wednesday at the
PomeroyUbraryat 7:30p.m.

Woman
hurt in
collision
POMEROY - Sheriff
Robert D. Hartenbach's
Dept. · said . Saturday one
person was injured and two
vehicles hei!Vlly damaged in
a collision on Gold Ridge
Road in Bedford Twp.,
Saturday afternoon,
David M. Brickles, 29, Rt, 2
Pomeroy, westbound in a
pickup truck, had it hit by a
car ·driven by Donald G.
Chambers, 39, also Rt. 2
Pomeroy. Sylvia Chambers,
a passenger with Donald
Chambers, ltas removed by
private auto to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for
. treatment ot knee and arm
injuries.
·
The sheriff's office said
Chambers would be cited for
failure to drive on the right
half of the roadway,

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sonalltie~~.

Mr. and Mrs. David Barba
and; Mra ~Giorla Fowler are
prepaiing a pa_~el discussion.
They w!ll talk on methods
of naturlil childbirdl and the
practice of allowing husbands
to accompany their wives
during labor and delivery.
-The practicaUtles.,of breastieeding lind care for the
mother during pregnancy
wiD also be discussed.
A film or&lt;)ered (or showing
tells the, story of a yollllll
couple as llley share Ume
of pregnancy and the birth of
their baby together. Mrs.
Jeannette Moore is planning
talk on what happens to a
woman during childbirth and
how a woman can prepare
physically and emotionally
for birth.
Good health through good
ea Ung for a molller and her
new baby · will be Meg
Everett's topic. At llle end of
the program, refreatunenta
will be served. There will be
Ume for lnfonnal dllcussion
and lor looking at the
pregnancy in forma Uon boOk's
on display at the library.
Interested adults in the
community are invited to lllls
free program.

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"''"'"'N...

"'·•• """ "'"'""

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·
TO GO OR EAT HERE

No Subt.
No Coupons · No Limit

P08LU

UTUY
2nd &amp; Olive

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~~:!!!!!::___N
__o_w:--T,;_H__,R_U.,.W_E_DTN_ES_D_A_Y_,_A-.::::;;U;:G:-._1_8_T_H
__
1

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t-

MlSSES
CAREFREE
NYLON OR
POLYESTER

iATTERY /ELECTRIC
POCillt CALC8lA10R

PRINT
BLOUSES

Automatic' conslanl, large 8 digit
display . Wilh 4 penlight baneries. (Adapte r not included).

REG.

$4.95

AC ADAP'IIR .... .

3••

JUNIORS
and Prints.

August 15th

Wall Cisney's

KNIT TOPS
Short sleeve Teg Tops .
Easy care cottons. Sizes S1
M, l.

No Deposit, No Return

David Niven , Darren
McGavin, Don Knotts,
Herschel Bernardi ,
Barbara Feldon .

$444
REG. SS.44

Show starts a! 1 p.m.

50 FT. NYLON

''

PR
Styler/Dryer

COLO\'
·
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1'111'111 , ...
TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY
Show begins at 8 p.m.

NEWBORN BOYS' /GIRLS'
SLEEP or PLAY SETS
Brushed ace late and
palyesl e r. Zipp e r
or gripper fr ont.
One size (to 14 lbs .)

Dear Sir:
The public Ia repeatedly belnl toid of the critical financial
condition of the City of Gallipolis. Don 'I you think It is about
time the tax paying public should be advised of the tax
JrOposalil being coosidered by the Gallipolis City
.Coounlssioners? Don't we deserve a voice In the matter?
We or our ancestors haye helped pay for the streets, w•ter
and sewage facillUes we now enjoy. Observing condltlons, over
these years, it Ia easy to see why the city Ia In the financial and
physical condltlm it Ia todaY..
Dick Milia did not create the siblatlon.s be Ia now facing.
Too many of his headaches are outaide the Gallipolis City
limits. He may feel the need of a full time alllstanl, but why
should the people of (laillpolla pay the bW? ·
The clwb in the stores and the people on fixed lnCGI!Ies
and many otbers, I could name, are already havlnlflnanclal
problema. They are being involved In the dllenuna without
beU. cOOaulted.
.
Aa a llllrt, how about Incorporating the territory outside
thecltyllmllll thatlaenjoylngcltyservlces? The growth In this
community Ia moetly outalde the city. - Name withheld on ·
.request.

REG.

'2..66

66
EACH

$19

96

REG. '21.96'""'-"''

3 hea1 levels, 2 air speeds. ExIra wid e nozzle. 1200 wa11s .

REINFORCED
GARDEN

~~~~ler $4

88

brass

fillings .

Fe&lt;ible.

REG. '6.88

PRESTONE II
WINTER-SUMMER
II

~W')tfi'... ,.....' M:ni•
:~1 ~

;....- 1

TON
Mon.&amp; Tues.

August IS, 16, 17

1: To whom it may concern
·-,,..
:" ·

Small Drink
of Your Choice

TONIGHT

August 9, 1976

..,
•;
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eFRENCH FRIES

·MEIGS JHEATR£

Let's hear the whole story
'

(Regular Size)

AUGUST
SUPER BUYS

Aspin said he asked the
GAO to study production
costs when he noUced the
price of the M60AI currently America's main
battle tank-had jumped 29
per .cent from 1974 ·to 1975.

Speaking as a c\)8) miner myself, and coming from a coal
mining famUy, it seems that everytlme the miners have a
JrOblem, some self..,lghteous person who has Jrobably never .
worked In the mines seems to know all the 811S\Vei'S.
In regard to the letter In the paper written by Gayle Price,
I agree that we aU live under the same laws and under the
same Oag; that's why when we need to ask forfood stamps we
do. It seems that the people that nevw works and never pay
any taxes can Uve on welfare and food stamps the year round,
and you never see a letter to the editor criticizing these people
or saying that they doo 'I deierve fOod stampS.
·
But If a man goes to work whenever he can, and pays taxes
out of his pay to support the govenunent, he is criticized when
be asks for a little help.
And If Gayle Pricethlnkaworking ina coal mine Is a bed of
roaes, I invite him to have a try at lt.- Robert Richmond, R.D.
I, Middleport.

..
,eHOT DOG

RACK 1'0 ·SCHOOl BARGAINI

sales."

Dear Sir:"

Suncllr Tlm..s.ntlnet

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Its respoosibilltles, Chrysler J
must assemble a large team
of skilled workers. It has to
make inventorY lnv~ts,
negotiate with vendors and
Incur substantial obligations'
religarding quality and
timely delivery , with
contracts negotiated on a
year-to-year-basis. ·
liThese obllgaUons Involve
management responsibilities
totallilg bQndredl of mlWona
of dollarS, with rlllks an along .
the way. · For . these
undertakings and obligations
.. , Chrysler makes ail aftertax profit of approximately
five cents on every dollar of

· Min~rs- work and pay taxes

her

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GOODIE~

SCHOOL

EEF=~

understanding
of
the
economiCS of defense
contracting In general and
the · tank contract in
particular. He · said the
company's real profit · is
about a nlckle on each dollsr
of sales.
Aspin said Chrysler first
entered a bid for the 197Hank
contract with a suggested
Jrofit of $34 million, but later
trimmed that to $25 milliona ll3,536 per cent JX"Ofit on its
$22,000 capital investment.
The congr-essman, a
frequent critic . of the
Pentagon, aald tbe Ganoral

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company's , need . for. the
maximum.
Zinunetaald, homer, that
Gulf signed contracts for new
deliveries to other customers
at IUII'egulated - and higher
- intrastate pricl!ll diD'ing
the same time it was falling
short in meeting Its
commitment lc Texas

The case dates back 12
years ta the FPC's approval
of the 28-)'ear contract
between Gulf and Texas
'Eastern. Gulf agreed to
supply the pipeline company
with U trWion cubic feet of
gas over the life of the
contract, providing between
a mlnlmwn 500 million cubic
· feet and a maximum 625
million cubic feet a day.
The
oil
company
WISUcceSSfully sought a price
Increase from the FPC in
1971. 'OII'ee years later the
firm's deliveries 1c Tesas
Eastern began to fall short of
the minlrnwn called for In tbe
contract despite the pipeline

. Olrysler to reap profits

Pa:i

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having had little wholesOme
family experiences while
young.
" Their parents having
shifted around with husbands
and wives settle down, finally
with livable partners, about
the same time their teenager
children get In trouble," he
said.
Hysell said there is a
critical need for some way to

Church following dinner, said
there just "Isn't much for
young people to do" in
Pomeroy. HyseU 88ld there
are not as many compl~lnts
coming from Middleport· and
other communities.
Hylllll finds in his work
young people who get in
!rouble often appear to be the
product of broken homes, the
16-17 year old bOy or girl

Gulf Oil probe demanded

.'

Mary Lee, Pomeroy; Betty
Lou Blackwood, Rl. 1,
Racine; JViolet Mlllhoan,
Reedsville; Homer Bailey,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Nina MeCumber, Dexter; Pauline
Gar by, Langsville; Homer
Parker, Reedsville; c.
Wayne Swisher, Pomeroy;
Will,
Pomeroy;
Jean
Elizabeth Jordan, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.
Names drawn fot possible
petit jury were Cora Moore,
Rt. 3, Albany; Sarah Yonker,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Howard
p tla d Ch 1
.
La r kIns,
or n ;
ares
Eskew, Pomeroy; Roger
Toney, Chester; Shirley Mobile home
first time they smell the bad Sisson, Rt. 3• Pomeroy;
'
PubiJ&amp;ned tvtry Sunday
by
Tnt
Ohio
VtlltY
breath and the smelly ~~~~oy~,' Ja~~\. ~it~: hit by lightnin
.g
Publl&amp;hln~ ~o,.
,
clothes. They also realize how
. OA~L ~"f~?~rNI
much improved their sense of Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Max Davis,
125 Third AYt., Gelllpotll
1
la!teis.Food nevertastedso Rt.
Middleport; Wilma
CARPENTER-Anewbut Auto runs into
Ohio 45611.
Pub111Md -..,., w"~dtl
good.
Reu~r, RRtt. I,IHaReedsclne;viB.llJ. unoccupied mobile home waa
ff SR 124
tvtnlnl UCtl.l Saturday ,
I have given you a chance
P •
· •
e; destroyed by fire near here ditch 0
. .
· Second Ctau
at GtlliNIIt, Ohla
I.~to express your opinion in my Thad 8· Dye, Rt. 4• Pomeroy; Saturday when lightning
THE
DAILY
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column and your basic Virgin B. Brown, Rl. 3, struck It abOut 8 a.m., Sheriff · POMEROY - The Meigs
111 c.tl Sl .. Pomtrey, o.
message about the safety Pomeroy; Ada Bissell, Long Robert C. Hartenbach County Sheriff's Department 45769. PulllllhN ""'' ""k· 1
avenlnt txcept 111vr
hazard of sm9klng is well Bottom; Mildred Hawley, learned in the afternoon.
Investigated a single . car diY
doy. l!nltriG 11 ...:_OIId c1111 I
mal lint mai!W a! Pomeroy, '
taken. In addition to its Middleport; Maxine Dyer,
Tile sheriff llid the twme, accident Friday at 8 p.m. on OhiO
PMt Olflco. .
.
damaging effects on health, Rt, 1• Bidwell; Janet Con- owned by Thad Dye, was on a . SR 124 south of Long Bottom
By corrlor dally ·tnd
· a fl re hazar d. 1 am nolly,h Reedsvme;
being tn which no personal injuries Sundty_75c per-· Motor
am9kin g 1s
R 1
·Rosalee lot In COlumbia """"·•
""~
route P.2S p._tr mon!h.
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sending you The Health · Wrig • t,
LangsvUie; · prepared for occupancy. were reported.
SUISCIII'JI~/611 ~ ..TIS
Letter number 2-6, Tobacco : William M. Will, Chester; There was no insurance. No
Fannie Durst, Rt. l, PortTht,. Galltpolll DillY
.
Kenneth Imboden, Midd
lied land, was !raveling down
Cigarettes, Cigars, piJ~es, for dleport; Russell Lyons, !Ire epariment was ca ' river when she hit a rough Trlb\:t In Oftlo fAd Wttl 1
a resume of the effects of Middleport; Roger C. Gaul,
1 t ~~~.~··5:!~'" '1.001 r.\~ '
trt SH.
Dtr
tobacco on heallll. Others Rt 3 Pom
Leonard K
spot in the highway, os , 17.00, ll1
year; lrJll IIIOII!hl ' UO;
who want this information for Br.00ks Rl e~oykba
~,
NAMEPALLIIEA•-a
control, went off the highway . !hrtl m 1111 11.101 motor
lhelllselve&amp; or for someone Eb11 R,t ·3 'p
ny; J e
.........,
into a ditch. There wu
1\1
-k-·'d •t
n, · • omeroy; une
VINTON - The McCoy- mod r te damage No
who smollea and .......
mpedn • Ashley, Rl. 2, Racine; Roger Moore Funeral Home her•
ea
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'l.·
-'~~'·
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n:io1
"''"""
can send a long, sta with' Ri•••, Rutland,· Joe M....... , Sa
• cltaUon was islued- '
tlll'hort
sa
....
, s:i:iil.
el•
~~-'"""
lope
...,..
""""
turday lllllled Plllbearera
The sheriff's dt!partment
llelf'lluw""'"" enve
Rutland ; Dorothy Davis, for lbe 1 p.m. liulldaJ funeral
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50 centa far II. Just send your Middleport; Norma Gail of Julian Stevena. They were nparled 11 -1&amp; holding ::; ' w.
ht
un\'"
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ttrntltOIII It tX~IUtiVtlY
letter to me in care of this WllcQx, Middleport; Irene Glenn
Goody,
Don =::c:~C:.C:,IeFO:~Run 1 tnlllltcl
lo
lht::}.lt
tor ·
nenpaper, P. 0. Box l55 1, Baxter, Pomeroy; Chester carruthers, Gary Tannehlll, . and SR 7. The owner can publlcellon 01 • "'•' :
erN!* · It lht 1
Radio CitY· Station, New Mundry, ReedsviUe; Belly Jimmy Casto, BlU Wood.and claim the bike if poaltive dltpitChft
newspaper tncl a110 lilt lllelt
naws"tivbtlthed htrtln.
,
York, NY 10019..
Sayre, Middleport; Beul8h Cliff Callahan.
ld "'I
-en~ calion Ia stven.

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llvlnlln IIOciety Itt. mlrement. Pictured are lila of the
senior Friends, k', Vidl Green, Wayne Turner, Mildred
aetzin'g; John Houck, Wilma Sarcent, aoo Dana Howell
Abient were Olive Smith m1 Lula Belle Hamptoo.

Senior Friends
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mnewp

Carelesssmokers endanger lives

•

on the que1uon 01 wnetroer

Juvenile delinquency found gro~ing

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On SaturdaY, the lut day of ule fair, when I wentto the 4-H

actlvltlel bllllclng to aet my project it was gone. It's hard for
me to lmalline IDIII8CIItillteniiCIIally taking a project I had out
110 IIIIlCh Ume end hard work In!
·
1: ,
'1be milling project Is a belie jum~t with brown
~ ~ .topddq and brown belt.
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If you blve any Information for me or could return my
; : jumpm!t. 1. . would appreciate it!.-Annie Cook, Box 82, Rio
,,·". GJ'IIlde, Ohio 406'/t, MD-6t88.

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ANn BOlt
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·Anti-Freeze

~-,~·~~- !---------------~~
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PREVENTS FREEZE UPS
AND BOIL OVERS THE
YEAR ROUND. FIGHTS
CORROSION

REGULAR 14.99

SAVE
$1.22

21"x16 V."a14"

STORAGE CHEST
Sturdy fiberboard
bo .o~ has t ight f i t l i ng lid . Perlect

f o r mony ho use·
hold storoge needs .

I~!
REG. '1.91

5' x 6' Wall to Wall

BATH CARPEl
'1'11111
l\0
coVER

a~:

Wo sho ble nyl o n p ile . Non skid
bock . Colorfas t decorolor shod~s .

MIIUIIIIWD

OIIIIMTII QIIIG[

VER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

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Gallians give oprnzons rn Miller poll

· 3-TbeSimdlfTIINI·IJIUIIawl,SI 'sf,Atll. IJ,tm

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Plenty of
gas seen
in Mason

POINT PLEASANT - No
curtailment of natural gas,
for Mason County Schools
from its already allocated
portion, was good news from
a Friday evening meeting of
lhe Mason County Board of
EducaUon ,
In a letter from the
Columbia Gas Company of
West Virginia lo Superin·
tendenl Lowell Cook, it was
noted that Utere should be no
forseeable cutbacks as was
envisioned last year, unless
'.
Utere is a ralller harsh winter
or supplies from llle southwest region of the country
should dwindle.
Besld~ the communication
from Columbia Gos, the
board received a letter from
'
the State Department of
....,.
Education, slating that
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Mason
County
has
~ L
.
$3,058,119.26 in its Belter
Schools Building Fund.
Tbese funds will be applied
to
the school building
MARY MORA, SEATED, FRONT LEFT, was grand cbamplm In dairy foods
programs
in Ute future after a
and reserve champion in both Tasty Meals and Breads at the Friday Food Fair
complete study on comjudging. Other grand champions pictured here are front right, Bobln Pitzer,
prehensive education in
Tricks ior Treats, and lleCOIId row, lei\ to right, Debbie Blrchlield, Tasty Meals;
Mason
County has been
Mary Colwell Making it witl) Meals; Paula Hysell, Preserve and Serve; Cindy
made,
according
to
Pitzer,
Your Diet, and Niese! Duvall, Breads. Third row, right to left,
Superintendent
Lowell
Cook.
are the reserve champlona, Paula Swindell, Customize Your Diet; Jamie Ray,
In oUter action, the board
Preserve and Serve; Patty Parker, Making it with Meals; Billy Dyer, Snacking
issued
an artswer to a
and Packing, and HeiB'le\ta Thomas, Tricks for Treats.
.· grievance heating on Mrs.
Shirley Powell, who was·
half Pomeroy and one-llalf Middleport; placed on . a preferred
Carolyn Mummey, Harrisonville, and transfer list earlier in the
Margaret Teaford, Rutland. Personnel year. Shewas an instructor at
designated to work In the Title I JrOgnun, Mason County Vocational
(Continued from page I)
pending its approval, Include Greg Center.
Food to Take and Share: Mike
Superintendent Cook will
McCall , coordinator, ,one-half time ;
McGuire, HDlbiUy ~H Club, Rutland,
contact
Mrs. Powell to inPallline Horton, Sabra Morrison, Barbara
grand champion; Becky Eichinger, Five
form
her
Uta l the board will
Sbull%, Joan Manuel, Margaret Teaford,
Point Star Stitchers, reserve.
place
her
in a teaching
Carol Evans, Carolyn Smith, Carolyn
International . Foods: Barbara
position,
for
which she is
Mununy, Karen Walker, Carol Ohlinger,
f. :· glas, Sunbeam Club, Tuppers Plains,
qualified at the earliest
John Triplett and Donald Wolfe.
Ill'and champion; Beth Ri tc~le, Sunbeams,
Also, pending approval of the program posSible time.
reserve.
Other major business acted
the board hired Sharon Birch, nW'M;
Teens Entertain ; Terri Pullins,
Phyllis Dugan, Carol Gheen, Donna on inc! uded :
Merrymakers Club, grand cham~Approved Qle plan for
Ohlinger, Janet Williamson, Debbie
pion; . and Darla Williamson, Rutland
free
and reduced .meals and
McGuire, and Lois Hawley, aides, and
Lucky Stars, reserve.
free
milk for llle coming
Donna Carr, secretary, for the DPPF
school
year.
program.
,
-Accepted
llle following
' A request from Mr. and Mrs. Jack
SlaVin 1c send their daughter to Pomeroy resignations: Phyllis F.
Elementary School paying tuition was Silver; Susan J. Grimes;
approved and a substitute tellchenJ list Claude A. Sines ; and
(Ointlnaed frml page I)
was approved. On the list are Alire H. Elizabeth McDaniel;
been divided betweed Valley Bell and
-Transferred Kim Neal
Grauer, Daisy Blakeslee, Ladona Boyd,
llrouPlon 's.
'
Jennifer Butcher, John Coffman, Betty from liilcber at Hartford to
Remer Hysell was highly commended
Fultz, Grace Hawley, Betty Hulcblnaon, Teaching Principal at
bJ tbe board for Ida free work near the
Jennifer Hill, Pauline Hysell, Farle HarUord, Weady Lowe from
MeJcs Hlch School. In landscaping and
KeJ\IIedy, Vinas Lee, Margaret Ella Lewis, Hannan to West Columbia,
IIIO\'lnjlbup quantities of dirt to create an ·
Roberta Maidens, Charles McManus, Josep)l Scites . fro~ oods
to
West
~ . , . CGII!Piel. It has been
Dorotba Jean Peti'el, Herbert Parker, Elementary
Columbia
Elementary,
and
lltimatA!ci tb&amp;t $2,000,000 worth of work
Gayle Price, AJlll8 W. Rice, Jeannie
David
Hall
from
West
hu been done at the lite over the past five
Taylor, Ruth Tucker, Margaret Parsons,
Columbia to Wahama.
:rean•t practlc:ally no coat to llle district.
Helen Williams and Bill Young.
$lowden wu liked to be the conlacl with
- Hired the following
Substitute coob for the district ~
H)'!lell to secme minor items needed such
Trecie Abbott, Dorothy Long, Addalou personnel : P-amela Dial
aa IIJ'III -s, fertilizer and that time
Lewis, Katherine Powell, Ruby King, Adkins, Speech Palllologist;
tblng.
Connie Qulvey, Joan Kaldor, MiUie Joan Manuel, Teacher, Norlll
The bom'd accepted the resignations of
Humphrey, Merlum Hoffman, Diana Point Pleasant Elementary;
!tacberl, Bbanda Tfllllllll and Shelley
Phillips, Marie Birchfield, Sllrley Priddy Charles Chambers, Science
.Hook, llld IIIIPioyed u ~chera for one
Teacher, Point .Pleasant
and Paula Rife.
year '1'nldy Pryor, Harrisonville fifth
Alii, Supt. Dan Morris dlacussed milk Junior High School; Charles
poade; ,_Vall, Meigs Junior lligh and ·
and lunch prices which will be taken up R. Withers, Teacher, Sunftb 111'1411 bulretball coach; Myra Gmt,
latw. The board hired Rebecca Glaze, nyside Elementary School;
IIIah IChool IOCfal lladies and Engllah;
Jligh St., Middleport, as junior blgh achool Sue Patrick, Teacher,
Glenna lfPrlllle, el-lllty vocal music;
secretary, at $2.82 1111 hour. Dpwler Hlinnan Elementary; Donna
Jo Ami Bartley, secmd pwle at Rutland,
reported tbat all buaes of the diatrlct have Crabtree, Teacher, Ordnance
llld Lull Obbl, onHIIJf ldndergarten and
passed Inspection. Adlninilltrators were Elementary; Patricia
111HIIIf teadllallt HarrllonvWe.
authorized to assign high mileage buses at Darling, Teacher, Wes t
flendlq the illjljJIOViil of Title I funds,
theirdlscretim. Areport as of July 3lfrom Columbia Elementary;
teacbcn were iiiiijAo,flld far me year
Donald Wo~e, clerk-custodian of the Verna Page, · Teacher,
lnclutllng J01111 Manuel, Rutland; Carol
athletic· account, showed a balance of Wabama High School;
Evans, Sllem Cent«; Carolyn Smith, ooe$172.91.
Rhonda Tennant, Teacher
Hartford Elementary; Lou
Gene Kingery, Speclal
Education Testing Assistant;
Tina
Cotton, as Special
PLEASANT VAU.EY
MatUe Dunn, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Oanny Taylor, Point Education Teacher, Letart;
DISCHARGED :- Mrs. 0. Mrs. Bruce Castle, Point Pleasant; a son to Dr. and · Betty McCoy, Contract
J. Slt!lhenson, Gallipolis; Pleuanl; Thomas O'Bryan, Mrs . Montrle Chaksupa, Driver, Rocky Ford area;
Mra. &amp;bert Harper, Point Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Point Pleasant; and a Frances Casto, as Contract
Pteaaant; Darrell Stonr, , Butler, Southside; James daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Driver, Elmwood area;
Charles Willet, New Haven .
Leon; Mrs. Theodore Sturgeon, West ·eo1wnb1a.
Kenneth Riggs as Custodian
Stevena, Point Pleasant;
BIRTHS - AsontoMr.and
Ill for Ordnance Elementary : effective August 16,
1976. Employmen,t to end
June 30, 1977.

GALLIPOLIS
congreuman Miller
saturdaY r&amp;leaaed the rflll)~
of the publlc opinlOII po
conducted by hll oiiiCe at llle
Galllpolia Counlf Yair·

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Food champions

Increases

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DR. ·LAMB

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SENIOR FRIENDS - Elcbt per1C1111 have been
employed aa SeUor Frlendl who wlll be working with .
older people and liUpei'VISng. The Senior Friends JX'O)ect
is a model Jll'llgram to help geriatric paUents lldjuat to

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
county's probation officer,
who works under direction of
the juvenile court, told
MiddlepOrt .. Pomeroy Rotarians Friday evening
delinquency of 16·11-yearolds 11 serious and In·
creasing, particularly In
. Pomeroy.
Carl Hysell, speak1rig' at
Heath United Methodist

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. POMEROY - The com- To stimulate llle geriatric
munity Mental Heallll Center patient toward sociallzation
of Gallia, Jacks~n and Meigs and rehabiUtation for his
counties has developed . a return to the community.
program which is modeled
To give personalized atafter other prograniS funded tentton to discharged
in Ohio entitled "Senior patients, .to give thetn ·a
Friends" for Meigs County friend's helping hand, and 1c .
cesidepts, The . Gallia- assist them in adjusting to
Jackson-Meigs 648 Board is their strange new world.
delegating llle project to the - To alrect discharged
community Mental Heallll patients to community
C•nter Board, and both resources they may need, ·
agencies work closely willl thus helping them maintain
the Meigs County Council on independent living In dignity
Aging .
•
and willla feeling of security.
The program recruits
The Senior Friends will be
persons over 60 years of age on contract. They will receive
to be trained as Senior $2 per hour to cover their
Friends of persons over 60 expenses for up to 20 hours of
who are now patients at the services rendered per week.
Atherll; Mental Health Center Following training, the
or ·those who have been Friends and geriatric
11!\urned to the community residents
will become
from that facility. The Senior acquainted through various
Friends would work also with activities.
patients in community
In swrunary, the Senior
nursing homes, their own Friends help ' discharged~.
homes after discharge, and patients in their adjustment
the inpatient unit of the wherever they may go,
Gallipolis . Jackson - Meigs whether it is to a nursing
Community Mental Health home, back to their own
Cenler in Gallipolis.
families, to group living, or to.
Tbe obieeUvea of lbe ln4•~&gt;eDdenl ll•lnl. Tbe ,
program are as outlined Sentor · l"rren((a wt11 provide ·
below :
the needed ·support lc more
To restore the geriatric · satisfactory living. They will
patient ot the greatest be the link to llle community
possible degree of health and that will give patients the
independent · functioning by strength lo lose thier
adding a special personal dependency on the hospital.
contact willl reality and the They will give patients new
community through Senior hope and courage lc face the
Friends.
future .

Jurors drawn
POMEROY -

Sixty five Cqrneii. Racine;

Freda

names were drawn Saturday Smith, Rt. 3, Albany; Danny
morning for possible grand
and petit jury in the office or
llle clerk of courts.
Names drawn for possible
grand jury were Dorthy Hall,
Reedsville; Lawrence Rl!ed,
""--!es R.
Rt. I, Middleport; "'""
Karr, Rt · 2• Pomer0 y; Paul

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Zirkle, · Pomeroy; . Keith
Romine, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ;
Dale Colburn, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy; Aida Harmon, RD,
Pomeroy; Robert Lewis, Jr.,
Middleport; Dan C. Arnold,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Peggy
Brickles, Rl. 4, Pomeroy;
Jane Ann Hill, Ra"cine;
Dorollly DkaviRdt, Ml'dd1Aleporba t;
Paul Pee • · 3•
ny;
Betty A. Hutchison, Rl. 1,
RuUand; Raymond Wilcox,
Rt. I, Mld~t; Oscar
Price, Pol!leroy; Nonnan C.
Will, Rt.l, Rutland; Kenneth
K. Alkire, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ;
Mary Jo Buckley, Reedsvlll.e..
Attending the drawing
were Common Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon, jury commissioners, Freeland Norria,
Clerk of Courts, Larry
Spencer, VIckie CUmmins,
Deputy Sheriff Robert
Beegle, Nellie Brown and
Lettie Spencer.

DEAR DR. LAMB _ piercing scream. We rushed lOOk hard, ugly, , cheap and
~
Please print 1b1a !etta. By upstairs and she was pouring smelly. They look like
r
dOing so you ml&amp;llt actually a glass of water on the haggard old witches. The
t•
11ve
some Uvea.ot to
F' t 1'
beauUful new (never slept in halitosis Is nauseating.
• •
II'S • ve g
QPrwa yet) expensive bed to try to Smoking .Ia also very ex: • the following \hQucllt wblch put out the small but pensive. Pleue, some strong
~ !_leOple lee! lbe . _ tlpl'eading flame on
the words from you.
DEAR READER - A
ii
a~o dlsgustlnc bow bedspread. We ·called the fire
• many old people are department because we family has the right to set the
lllloking! Even on llle street! COUldn't control it. We got stand~rds for their own
• '11lal Ia ugly and bad enough lllllllle out and were so glad
ho::;, everyone who .llllokes
but they - male and female n 'IIIII not burned at all.
is '85 bad off as .you cjeiiCI'Ibe .
- not only harm themselves
She !lev r
d
but IIIey aggravate non- 011
e apo1og1ze nor
ered to pay lor lhar Your aunt bu.l lt· Is frequen uY·
amokers and also cause dsmage.t haled to do it but 1 a rather antisocial habit. Il
-'•kiln of
!rouble In many cases, as my finally lol4 her she would
does increase lhe w•u• g
aunt .did.
never be welcome again Ute skin and il does caUBe
She Ia put 60 and nearly unless &amp;he ~topped
kin
most smokers to have foul
caUJtd a tragedy. She We never heai4 : : ~; smelUng breath. ApparenUy
r 'J Uke a dragon. She again.
most smokers are unaware of
1111 110 many wrinkles,
Afriend 01 oun had a real their bad brealll.
~aD the lime and has a tragedy calllld by 1 t:are'-a
Many smokers just dlln'l
...... fGk:e, Ugh! She fell smoker. Five people burned n·"-- the effect of their
......
&amp; j f ! a ctpretle in her to death. A hOUie w• ttm- habit
on other people. 'l'hty
vlllllnl us. My pletely destrO)'«&lt;, F'rGn! 1 111! ilnlnwle
tc the smeU and
•
• (lblldren and I heallll and cosmetic view
don'IIIO!Iee, f 1111 constantly
. . . ..,..,...,. TV down- why can't "srioklng idlota•:
by the number of
.,... . . • ~r~lclllnl her realize the hazards 'of lm1lftlled
people who have quit
,.,.... JII'Ofll'llll IIPIIairs. smoking? Women especially smoking and then realize that
S.ddtftly we heard a •
it is an llllpleaaant habit. For·

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gi!Vernmenl should provide
health l118urance for longterm (catutrophic) illness.
Seventy-three per cent of
those taking the poll

per cent said the United
Stale~ should remain neutral,
thirty-three per cent favored
u.s. arms and aid to lsrael,
twenty per cent believed the
u. s. should support ll;l:ael
with aid and troops, ond ten
per cent had no opinion.
Seventy-eight per cent
support legialaUon requiring
a mandatory sentence and a
denial of parole for aU crimes
keep the mid-teenager from committed with a gun.
finding his associates and· Twenly.two per cent opposed
friends in the crowd lbat such a proposal.
frequents, lor example , the. Asked if Jhe ·Welfare
river front parking lots in System should be federalized
Pomeroy .
·
to provide a guaranteed
"They 're going to run with annuat income fo.r every
somebody, and if they find family , twenty-seven per cent
their friends In the kind that said -yes and seventy-three
help gel them in trouble , in per cent said no.
trouble they' ll . get, " said
In assessing who bears
Hysell.
responsibility for the energy
There's nolhing for them to crisis, twenty-five per cent
do/' he warned.
blamed the Congress, eight
Hysell e,plained the legal per cent the White House ,
objectiveof the juvenile cour t thirty-one per cent the oil
is to "pro~t " children .
companies, sixteen per cent
Acting President Bob Buck consumer demand and waste,
presided, and Carl Denison, . ten per cen t the OPEC (oil
.program chairman, in- exporting ) countries, and ten
troduced the speaker. ·
per cent other , · ·
·
There will be a meeting but
Sixty-two per cent favor an
no program next week, The accelerated program of
following week will be the constructing more· nuclear
club's annual family picnic at power plants and thirty..,ight
the Fort Meigs Park outside per cent opposed such conRutland when the mem- structi on.
bership is expecting to meet
Asked if they favored exits guest exchange student panded U. S. trade and other
from Japan.
exchanges with the &amp;&gt;VIel
One guest, Or. Carl Wood of Uni on, twenty..,igh t per cent
Gallipolis, was introduced. of the poll ·respondents said
Ladies of the church served a yes while seventy-two per
ham dinner.
cen t said no.

·responae&lt;~ yea whtle twenty- federal spending . Twentyseven per cent , r~gistered four per cent opposed such a
opposition.
proposal.
Seventy-5ix per cent favor
lf Israel is all&lt;~cked by
federallnt:ome tax cuts only Arab nations, thirty-seven
when equal cuts are made in

WASHINGTON UPI - A
Federal Power .Commlsalon
judge has asked the Justice
Department to cooduct a
criminal Investigation ;o
determine whether Gulf OU
Corp. and Texas Eastern
Transmission Corp.
conspired to hold back
natural gas In hopes of
getting higher prices.
Adminlatrltlve Law Judge
Rarownd M. ztnunet said
Friday there was strong
evidence that Gulf and Texas
Eastern, a ,gas pipeline
. company, violated federal
antitrust laws by conspiring
to let Gulf supply less gas
than ita conlracts called for .

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By DANIEL F. GilMORE

WASHINGTON (UPI) Chrysler Corp. c;in expect to
reap a profit of almost 114,000
per cent oo production of the
M60Al tank, Rep. Le:l Aspin,
DWia., said Saturday.
Aapln, a ,member of the
Houae Armed Services
Qmunlttee, said Chrysler Is
able to make the huge profit
because It Ia bulldlng the tank
at an Army-owned plant
which ~ supplying almost all
llle tooling.
,
AChrysler IIJIOkesman said
Aspin's charges indicate "a
.complete
lack
of

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF - Making up ule
admlnlstratlve staff for the newly formed program
"senior Friends" are, . seated, Doug Uzm, . program
director, stancilng, 1..,, Kathie Fllsinger, program
coordlnatot, and Pam Rlftle, secretary-booklreeper. The
JII"11I'UUl Ill a fwlded agency of Gallla.Jackson-Melgs
Oommunltr Mental Raallb and }letardatlon Board.

Eastern .

He said the pipeline
company "Is perfectly
eontent with Gulf's lagging
performaoce" and, rather
than prodding the . oil
eompany to abide . by Its
contract, agreed that Gulf
was acting in good faith.

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
AUGUST 15 THRU 21

LUNCH TIME

·
LetienJ Qf opinion are welcomed. Tiley Jboold be
. lesa thl!ll3® JOrds ltJI1g (or be BUhject to ffilactloil by
the editor) and mast be alped with tbe algnee's ad·
· dresa. Name&amp; may be wllbbeld 11J1011 pubUcallon.
However, on requetl, name. wW be diaclNed. LeUenJ
should be bi good taaie, addreulng llaue., not per-

~:!smant':id: .~~ry~:

Childbirth·infonnation
is offered W~dnesday
I l\

POMEROY
Final
arra.ngements are being
made lor llle childbirlll inf9rmaHoo progflllll to be held
on Wednesday at the
PomeroyUbraryat 7:30p.m.

Woman
hurt in
collision
POMEROY - Sheriff
Robert D. Hartenbach's
Dept. · said . Saturday one
person was injured and two
vehicles hei!Vlly damaged in
a collision on Gold Ridge
Road in Bedford Twp.,
Saturday afternoon,
David M. Brickles, 29, Rt, 2
Pomeroy, westbound in a
pickup truck, had it hit by a
car ·driven by Donald G.
Chambers, 39, also Rt. 2
Pomeroy. Sylvia Chambers,
a passenger with Donald
Chambers, ltas removed by
private auto to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for
. treatment ot knee and arm
injuries.
·
The sheriff's office said
Chambers would be cited for
failure to drive on the right
half of the roadway,

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sonalltie~~.

Mr. and Mrs. David Barba
and; Mra ~Giorla Fowler are
prepaiing a pa_~el discussion.
They w!ll talk on methods
of naturlil childbirdl and the
practice of allowing husbands
to accompany their wives
during labor and delivery.
-The practicaUtles.,of breastieeding lind care for the
mother during pregnancy
wiD also be discussed.
A film or&lt;)ered (or showing
tells the, story of a yollllll
couple as llley share Ume
of pregnancy and the birth of
their baby together. Mrs.
Jeannette Moore is planning
talk on what happens to a
woman during childbirth and
how a woman can prepare
physically and emotionally
for birth.
Good health through good
ea Ung for a molller and her
new baby · will be Meg
Everett's topic. At llle end of
the program, refreatunenta
will be served. There will be
Ume for lnfonnal dllcussion
and lor looking at the
pregnancy in forma Uon boOk's
on display at the library.
Interested adults in the
community are invited to lllls
free program.

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·
TO GO OR EAT HERE

No Subt.
No Coupons · No Limit

P08LU

UTUY
2nd &amp; Olive

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__o_w:--T,;_H__,R_U.,.W_E_DTN_ES_D_A_Y_,_A-.::::;;U;:G:-._1_8_T_H
__
1

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MlSSES
CAREFREE
NYLON OR
POLYESTER

iATTERY /ELECTRIC
POCillt CALC8lA10R

PRINT
BLOUSES

Automatic' conslanl, large 8 digit
display . Wilh 4 penlight baneries. (Adapte r not included).

REG.

$4.95

AC ADAP'IIR .... .

3••

JUNIORS
and Prints.

August 15th

Wall Cisney's

KNIT TOPS
Short sleeve Teg Tops .
Easy care cottons. Sizes S1
M, l.

No Deposit, No Return

David Niven , Darren
McGavin, Don Knotts,
Herschel Bernardi ,
Barbara Feldon .

$444
REG. SS.44

Show starts a! 1 p.m.

50 FT. NYLON

''

PR
Styler/Dryer

COLO\'
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1'111'111 , ...
TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY
Show begins at 8 p.m.

NEWBORN BOYS' /GIRLS'
SLEEP or PLAY SETS
Brushed ace late and
palyesl e r. Zipp e r
or gripper fr ont.
One size (to 14 lbs .)

Dear Sir:
The public Ia repeatedly belnl toid of the critical financial
condition of the City of Gallipolis. Don 'I you think It is about
time the tax paying public should be advised of the tax
JrOposalil being coosidered by the Gallipolis City
.Coounlssioners? Don't we deserve a voice In the matter?
We or our ancestors haye helped pay for the streets, w•ter
and sewage facillUes we now enjoy. Observing condltlons, over
these years, it Ia easy to see why the city Ia In the financial and
physical condltlm it Ia todaY..
Dick Milia did not create the siblatlon.s be Ia now facing.
Too many of his headaches are outaide the Gallipolis City
limits. He may feel the need of a full time alllstanl, but why
should the people of (laillpolla pay the bW? ·
The clwb in the stores and the people on fixed lnCGI!Ies
and many otbers, I could name, are already havlnlflnanclal
problema. They are being involved In the dllenuna without
beU. cOOaulted.
.
Aa a llllrt, how about Incorporating the territory outside
thecltyllmllll thatlaenjoylngcltyservlces? The growth In this
community Ia moetly outalde the city. - Name withheld on ·
.request.

REG.

'2..66

66
EACH

$19

96

REG. '21.96'""'-"''

3 hea1 levels, 2 air speeds. ExIra wid e nozzle. 1200 wa11s .

REINFORCED
GARDEN

~~~~ler $4

88

brass

fillings .

Fe&lt;ible.

REG. '6.88

PRESTONE II
WINTER-SUMMER
II

~W')tfi'... ,.....' M:ni•
:~1 ~

;....- 1

TON
Mon.&amp; Tues.

August IS, 16, 17

1: To whom it may concern
·-,,..
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Small Drink
of Your Choice

TONIGHT

August 9, 1976

..,
•;
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eFRENCH FRIES

·MEIGS JHEATR£

Let's hear the whole story
'

(Regular Size)

AUGUST
SUPER BUYS

Aspin said he asked the
GAO to study production
costs when he noUced the
price of the M60AI currently America's main
battle tank-had jumped 29
per .cent from 1974 ·to 1975.

Speaking as a c\)8) miner myself, and coming from a coal
mining famUy, it seems that everytlme the miners have a
JrOblem, some self..,lghteous person who has Jrobably never .
worked In the mines seems to know all the 811S\Vei'S.
In regard to the letter In the paper written by Gayle Price,
I agree that we aU live under the same laws and under the
same Oag; that's why when we need to ask forfood stamps we
do. It seems that the people that nevw works and never pay
any taxes can Uve on welfare and food stamps the year round,
and you never see a letter to the editor criticizing these people
or saying that they doo 'I deierve fOod stampS.
·
But If a man goes to work whenever he can, and pays taxes
out of his pay to support the govenunent, he is criticized when
be asks for a little help.
And If Gayle Pricethlnkaworking ina coal mine Is a bed of
roaes, I invite him to have a try at lt.- Robert Richmond, R.D.
I, Middleport.

..
,eHOT DOG

RACK 1'0 ·SCHOOl BARGAINI

sales."

Dear Sir:"

Suncllr Tlm..s.ntlnet

i..

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Its respoosibilltles, Chrysler J
must assemble a large team
of skilled workers. It has to
make inventorY lnv~ts,
negotiate with vendors and
Incur substantial obligations'
religarding quality and
timely delivery , with
contracts negotiated on a
year-to-year-basis. ·
liThese obllgaUons Involve
management responsibilities
totallilg bQndredl of mlWona
of dollarS, with rlllks an along .
the way. · For . these
undertakings and obligations
.. , Chrysler makes ail aftertax profit of approximately
five cents on every dollar of

· Min~rs- work and pay taxes

her

' "'¥1'

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GOODIE~

SCHOOL

EEF=~

understanding
of
the
economiCS of defense
contracting In general and
the · tank contract in
particular. He · said the
company's real profit · is
about a nlckle on each dollsr
of sales.
Aspin said Chrysler first
entered a bid for the 197Hank
contract with a suggested
Jrofit of $34 million, but later
trimmed that to $25 milliona ll3,536 per cent JX"Ofit on its
$22,000 capital investment.
The congr-essman, a
frequent critic . of the
Pentagon, aald tbe Ganoral

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company's , need . for. the
maximum.
Zinunetaald, homer, that
Gulf signed contracts for new
deliveries to other customers
at IUII'egulated - and higher
- intrastate pricl!ll diD'ing
the same time it was falling
short in meeting Its
commitment lc Texas

The case dates back 12
years ta the FPC's approval
of the 28-)'ear contract
between Gulf and Texas
'Eastern. Gulf agreed to
supply the pipeline company
with U trWion cubic feet of
gas over the life of the
contract, providing between
a mlnlmwn 500 million cubic
· feet and a maximum 625
million cubic feet a day.
The
oil
company
WISUcceSSfully sought a price
Increase from the FPC in
1971. 'OII'ee years later the
firm's deliveries 1c Tesas
Eastern began to fall short of
the minlrnwn called for In tbe
contract despite the pipeline

. Olrysler to reap profits

Pa:i

·I

having had little wholesOme
family experiences while
young.
" Their parents having
shifted around with husbands
and wives settle down, finally
with livable partners, about
the same time their teenager
children get In trouble," he
said.
Hysell said there is a
critical need for some way to

Church following dinner, said
there just "Isn't much for
young people to do" in
Pomeroy. HyseU 88ld there
are not as many compl~lnts
coming from Middleport· and
other communities.
Hylllll finds in his work
young people who get in
!rouble often appear to be the
product of broken homes, the
16-17 year old bOy or girl

Gulf Oil probe demanded

.'

Mary Lee, Pomeroy; Betty
Lou Blackwood, Rl. 1,
Racine; JViolet Mlllhoan,
Reedsville; Homer Bailey,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Nina MeCumber, Dexter; Pauline
Gar by, Langsville; Homer
Parker, Reedsville; c.
Wayne Swisher, Pomeroy;
Will,
Pomeroy;
Jean
Elizabeth Jordan, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.
Names drawn fot possible
petit jury were Cora Moore,
Rt. 3, Albany; Sarah Yonker,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Howard
p tla d Ch 1
.
La r kIns,
or n ;
ares
Eskew, Pomeroy; Roger
Toney, Chester; Shirley Mobile home
first time they smell the bad Sisson, Rt. 3• Pomeroy;
'
PubiJ&amp;ned tvtry Sunday
by
Tnt
Ohio
VtlltY
breath and the smelly ~~~~oy~,' Ja~~\. ~it~: hit by lightnin
.g
Publl&amp;hln~ ~o,.
,
clothes. They also realize how
. OA~L ~"f~?~rNI
much improved their sense of Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Max Davis,
125 Third AYt., Gelllpotll
1
la!teis.Food nevertastedso Rt.
Middleport; Wilma
CARPENTER-Anewbut Auto runs into
Ohio 45611.
Pub111Md -..,., w"~dtl
good.
Reu~r, RRtt. I,IHaReedsclne;viB.llJ. unoccupied mobile home waa
ff SR 124
tvtnlnl UCtl.l Saturday ,
I have given you a chance
P •
· •
e; destroyed by fire near here ditch 0
. .
· Second Ctau
at GtlliNIIt, Ohla
I.~to express your opinion in my Thad 8· Dye, Rt. 4• Pomeroy; Saturday when lightning
THE
DAILY
liN
I
NIL
column and your basic Virgin B. Brown, Rl. 3, struck It abOut 8 a.m., Sheriff · POMEROY - The Meigs
111 c.tl Sl .. Pomtrey, o.
message about the safety Pomeroy; Ada Bissell, Long Robert C. Hartenbach County Sheriff's Department 45769. PulllllhN ""'' ""k· 1
avenlnt txcept 111vr
hazard of sm9klng is well Bottom; Mildred Hawley, learned in the afternoon.
Investigated a single . car diY
doy. l!nltriG 11 ...:_OIId c1111 I
mal lint mai!W a! Pomeroy, '
taken. In addition to its Middleport; Maxine Dyer,
Tile sheriff llid the twme, accident Friday at 8 p.m. on OhiO
PMt Olflco. .
.
damaging effects on health, Rt, 1• Bidwell; Janet Con- owned by Thad Dye, was on a . SR 124 south of Long Bottom
By corrlor dally ·tnd
· a fl re hazar d. 1 am nolly,h Reedsvme;
being tn which no personal injuries Sundty_75c per-· Motor
am9kin g 1s
R 1
·Rosalee lot In COlumbia """"·•
""~
route P.2S p._tr mon!h.
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1
sending you The Health · Wrig • t,
LangsvUie; · prepared for occupancy. were reported.
SUISCIII'JI~/611 ~ ..TIS
Letter number 2-6, Tobacco : William M. Will, Chester; There was no insurance. No
Fannie Durst, Rt. l, PortTht,. Galltpolll DillY
.
Kenneth Imboden, Midd
lied land, was !raveling down
Cigarettes, Cigars, piJ~es, for dleport; Russell Lyons, !Ire epariment was ca ' river when she hit a rough Trlb\:t In Oftlo fAd Wttl 1
a resume of the effects of Middleport; Roger C. Gaul,
1 t ~~~.~··5:!~'" '1.001 r.\~ '
trt SH.
Dtr
tobacco on heallll. Others Rt 3 Pom
Leonard K
spot in the highway, os , 17.00, ll1
year; lrJll IIIOII!hl ' UO;
who want this information for Br.00ks Rl e~oykba
~,
NAMEPALLIIEA•-a
control, went off the highway . !hrtl m 1111 11.101 motor
lhelllselve&amp; or for someone Eb11 R,t ·3 'p
ny; J e
.........,
into a ditch. There wu
1\1
-k-·'d •t
n, · • omeroy; une
VINTON - The McCoy- mod r te damage No
who smollea and .......
mpedn • Ashley, Rl. 2, Racine; Roger Moore Funeral Home her•
ea
'
'l.·
-'~~'·
~~~~~~~=
n:io1
"''"""
can send a long, sta with' Ri•••, Rutland,· Joe M....... , Sa
• cltaUon was islued- '
tlll'hort
sa
....
, s:i:iil.
el•
~~-'"""
lope
...,..
""""
turday lllllled Plllbearera
The sheriff's dt!partment
llelf'lluw""'"" enve
Rutland ; Dorothy Davis, for lbe 1 p.m. liulldaJ funeral
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m~""
50 centa far II. Just send your Middleport; Norma Gail of Julian Stevena. They were nparled 11 -1&amp; holding ::; ' w.
ht
un\'"
''"' 1~- ,
ttrntltOIII It tX~IUtiVtlY
letter to me in care of this WllcQx, Middleport; Irene Glenn
Goody,
Don =::c:~C:.C:,IeFO:~Run 1 tnlllltcl
lo
lht::}.lt
tor ·
nenpaper, P. 0. Box l55 1, Baxter, Pomeroy; Chester carruthers, Gary Tannehlll, . and SR 7. The owner can publlcellon 01 • "'•' :
erN!* · It lht 1
Radio CitY· Station, New Mundry, ReedsviUe; Belly Jimmy Casto, BlU Wood.and claim the bike if poaltive dltpitChft
newspaper tncl a110 lilt lllelt
naws"tivbtlthed htrtln.
,
York, NY 10019..
Sayre, Middleport; Beul8h Cliff Callahan.
ld "'I
-en~ calion Ia stven.

is

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llvlnlln IIOciety Itt. mlrement. Pictured are lila of the
senior Friends, k', Vidl Green, Wayne Turner, Mildred
aetzin'g; John Houck, Wilma Sarcent, aoo Dana Howell
Abient were Olive Smith m1 Lula Belle Hamptoo.

Senior Friends
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mnewp

Carelesssmokers endanger lives

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on the que1uon 01 wnetroer

Juvenile delinquency found gro~ing

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On SaturdaY, the lut day of ule fair, when I wentto the 4-H

actlvltlel bllllclng to aet my project it was gone. It's hard for
me to lmalline IDIII8CIItillteniiCIIally taking a project I had out
110 IIIIlCh Ume end hard work In!
·
1: ,
'1be milling project Is a belie jum~t with brown
~ ~ .topddq and brown belt.
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If you blve any Information for me or could return my
; : jumpm!t. 1. . would appreciate it!.-Annie Cook, Box 82, Rio
,,·". GJ'IIlde, Ohio 406'/t, MD-6t88.

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~.:.l~~~l[l(
ANn BOlt
"" "" .... .... . " '

·Anti-Freeze

~-,~·~~- !---------------~~
'

PREVENTS FREEZE UPS
AND BOIL OVERS THE
YEAR ROUND. FIGHTS
CORROSION

REGULAR 14.99

SAVE
$1.22

21"x16 V."a14"

STORAGE CHEST
Sturdy fiberboard
bo .o~ has t ight f i t l i ng lid . Perlect

f o r mony ho use·
hold storoge needs .

I~!
REG. '1.91

5' x 6' Wall to Wall

BATH CARPEl
'1'11111
l\0
coVER

a~:

Wo sho ble nyl o n p ile . Non skid
bock . Colorfas t decorolor shod~s .

MIIUIIIIWD

OIIIIMTII QIIIG[

VER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

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4 -The Sllldly ~: Sentinel, Sunday, ; •.:g. IS, 1976

•

Miss Smeltzer weds David~Hall

Wedding

·······················································~··ii• •·•
••
••

I Woman 's World

announcedi

CROWN CITY - The dres.-ll11 1 phll&lt; taffeta gown
Crown Oly MethOdist Church wjJJJ a v.ruckllne' She also
was the setUng for the June 5 wore glovH and a large pink
wedding of Jada M. Sme)t#f pictun hal. She carried a
coionlal cascade made up of
and David Dale Hell.
The Rev· Jaclr Ranlrln pinlr and blue carnations with
offlcialed at' 7:30p.m. at the sweetheart roses with pink
double rfng ceremony. The and blue ribbon streamers.
bride ts 111e daughter of Mr.
Tim Hall, brother Of tile
and Mrs. Gerald Smeltzer of groom, served as best man.
. Rt, I, erown City and the Ushers were Roy Jones and
·groom's parents are Mr. and Monte Sheets.
,
Mrs. Kenneth Hall, also of
Ring bearer was Craig
Crown City.
Rankin, nephew of the
Mrs. Sharon
Petrie groom. Flower girl was Eva
presented a half hour of Dawn Henry who was
selected 'nuptial , music dressed ln a pink gown and
preceding the ceremony,
carried a white lace basket
The church was decorated filled With pink rose petals •
With ~n arch WliY featuring
Mrs. Gilbert Caldwell, wh~
love b~rds, bells, and !tiles of registered the guests, also
the valley. There were two decorated the favor basket.
baskets of mixed spring On the front featured pink
flowers on each side along and white carnabons With ,
" with two palm trees.
pink and blue rice favors
•
Candles were lit before the distributed by her daughter,
ceremony by Monte Sheets Christinia Caldwell.
and Roy Jones followed by
The bride's mother Mrs.
the lighting of one candle by Garnet Smeltzer, ch'ose a
the couple during the princess style gown of pink
ce~emony signifying the with a jacket featuring
uruUng of the couple.
embroidered !lowers. Her
A double kneeling bench corsage was white roses with
was used during tfie a pink ribbon.
ceremony where the couple
Mrs. Eloise Hall was atjoined hands for prayer.
tired in a gown of blue knit
punch bowl with pink and
The parents' pews were with a blue crepe scarf. She
blue
roses lroren in the top of
decorated with a single wore a corsage of white roses
it. Punch was served by Mrs.
candlelabrum and the bride's with blue ribbon.
Rankin and Miss Jones. The
favorite color• of pink and
A reception honoring the cake was cut and served by
white was used in bows on the couple was held immediately
Janice Staplewn. Coffee .was
aisle throughout the church. following the ceremony in the
served from a silver coffee
Est;orted to the altar by her church basement.
pot by Mrs. Rutherford .
father, the bride wore a long
The table was draped with
The bride. a 1974 I(I'A~ua1e
sleeved gown accented With a a white tablecloth edged in
French lace bodice with a lace and centered with a four
seed pearl portrait neckline. tiered wedding cake made by
A full skirt of silk organza Janice Stapleton, The cake Jl
over white taffeta, fashioned featured sta'irways leading
GALLIPOLIS
The
with . .a cathedral train up tn the second tier .on both French Art Colony's annual
highlighted tile sown.
sides.
Small
plastic antique seminar Will be held
Her lace trimmed mantUla bridesmaids and groomsmen on Friday .and Saturday, Ocl.
was attached to her seed were placed on the stairway. Jo and 16, conducted by Mrs.
pearl and lace trimmed tiara 'the dresses were made from Orva Walker Heissenbuttel, a
and shoulder length French icing in the color of the real noted antique authority,
illusion veil. She carried a bridesmaids' dresses. There lecturer and columnist from
white Bible attached with a were $Oft green icing leaves Washinglon, D.C.
cascade o! pink roses, car- and vines leading up to the
A native of Gallia County,
nations, and baby's breath stairway. Leaves and pink Mrs. Heissenbu&gt;ttel has been
with pink and white ribbon roses were placed around the an antique dealer in
streamers,
base and sides of the cal!e. Washington, DeC. Cor Ute past
,Brenda Smeltzer, sister
The .table was aCcented 15 years, exhlbi·bng in shows
ot: the .bride, Was maid of with blue candles in a silver m Maryland, Pennsylvania
honor and bridesmaids were . candle. holder. ·
and Virginia, !OJ)OCializing in
Connie Saunders and Marylin
Hos~ far the reception coll"!'tible art glass.
Jones. Tbe attendants woce were Mrs. Edgar Rutherford,
On Friday, Oct. 15, the
blue gowns with V-necklines Gallipolis ; Mrs. Janice morning session of the
and blue picture hats. They Stapleton , Eureka Star seminar will be an in·
wore while gloves and Route , Gallipolis; Mrs. troduc:liion 111 antiques,
carried a colonial cascade Gerald Rankin, Crown Qty, discussiilg what is an antique,
bOuliuet of pink and blue and Diana Jones of an- how w judge the quality, how
camallciae wllb -Uieart ciDNoti.
lo buy and sell, and in·
roses with piJik and white
An ice ring no,~ in the formalioo oo reproductions:
ribboo streamers.
In the ·afternoon, UJe subject
The maid of honor was
Will 'be antiqqe furniture :
restocatioo and refinishing .
Participants may bring a
ebalr, smali table, drawer ,

'

Magnolia
Club
cooks
out
·Darst family gathers
.
.

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GALLIPOUS - The 17th Pauline Davis and Mrs. Ina
annual reunion Of tile family Lemley, Kinton; Mrs.' Hazel
of Rev . B. L. Darst and the Shoemaker, Hamden .
tate Gertie Darst was held ' Tile nex l reunion will be a l
Sunday, Aug. 8 at Ash Cave Chesler with Sarah Spencer
with 42 present.
as hostess. Mrs. Nina Wassel
An enjoyable day was held and Ronnie Spencer will have
with Mrs. Mary Sigman as char~e of prograO'• and
hostess . A picnic dinner was games.
served at noon with Rev . w.
E. Curfman asking the
blessing. After. dinner Rev , :·:.:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Darst read and ga ve a short
GALLIPOLIS _ The
talk from Ephesians 6:1-12. annual homecoming of the
The afternoon was spen t I:•niel Community Church
with picture laking and will be held Sunday, Aug,
singing and lhe children 22 at the church neat,
playing games and touring Gallipolis.
the cave.
Sunday School will be at
The new addition this year · ·to a.m. followed by a short
was the grand:lon of Mr . ·and talk by the pastor, Sam
Mrs.
Roy
Lemley, Marcum. A basket dinner
. Christopher Michael, son of is planned at 12 noon In lite
Mikie aQV Sandi Lemley, teahouse.
Columbus.
Afternoon services bePresent .were Rev. B. L. tween 1:30 and 3 p.m. inDarsl, Rev. and Mrs . Ershel elude special singing and
Curfman. Mr . and Mrs. guest speaker Rev. Jerry
Ershel Curfman Jr., Ctisly Neal of the Vinton Baptist
and Scotty, Cheshire; 'Mr. Church.
and Mrs. Ri char.~. Curfman,
Kimberly Ann· and Richie, · :·:·:·:·:::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::;:;::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::.::::
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
REVIVAL TO START
Burdell Rife , Mr. and Mrs.
POM.ERO.
Y - An old· ·
Rodger Lou Master, Paul
fashioned
camp
meeting
Allen and Stevie, Ridgeway;
r
evival
will
be
held
at
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lemley,
Maplewood
Lake
on
Route
Mr. and Mrs. Mikie Lemley
and Chris, Columbus; Mr. 124 above Syracuse, Aug. IS.
and Mrs. Elmer Sigman 29, with Bible 'study at 10:30
Cheshire; Mr . and Mrs. Joh~ a.m. and evening ·services at
Sigman, Johnnie and RandY. 7:30p.m. Special singing will
Addison ; Mr. and Mrs: be held at 6:30 each evening
Dayton Spencer , Buffalo, W. with the Bissell Brothers, the
Tones,
the
Va.; Mrs, Nina Wassel, Terre Gospel.
Choralires of Parkersburg
Haute, Ind .; Mr. Budd Jr.
and the Haven Family of
Da~st , Middleport ; Laura
Saratoga
, Fla., taking part.
Harrison , Mr. and Mrs.
The
Rev.
0. G. McKinney will
Lonnie Darst, and Lisa, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Smith and be speaker, and free parking
is available for campers.
· Shelly,

Sarah Carsey 1charlene Hoeflich ••

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Gallipolis·Point Pleasant Pomeroy-¥iddleport
992-2156 '
i , 446-2342
l

·
:·
LETART FALLS - The' 0
famlly wedding of Karen :
l·
Nelgler and Phillip Weaver
·•
was an event of Aug. 6, 8 p.m.
at the United Brethren •
·
Church at Letart Falls .
The bride is the daughter of
Mr, and Mrs. Clrol Neigler,
Syracuse ,
and
the
bridegroom is the son of Mr,
and Mrs. Richard Wealll!r,
Syracuse. The Rev. Freeland
and Alldison. Afternoon
reconvened with the clerk
Norris officiated at the ·
preaching services were
wedding ceremony . Keith
By RENE BROYLES
reading the roll call and
Ashley was pianist.
ADDISON - The 64th cards of the deacons and conducted by the Revs. lr·
vlng Reedy, Pyrus Flelda and
Given in marriage by her session of the Harmony ·ministers.
father, the bride wore a white Quarterly Conference con·
Churches represented at Howard Stewart.
The group thanked the
formal gown with white vened at the Addison Free the con(ere nce were the
ladies
of the Addison Church
accessories. The bridegroom Will Baptlst Church Sa tor· Valley, Union
Ridge,
for
their
hospllallly and
was in a velveteen suil. The day , July 31.
Calvary, Elk Creek, Madison
delicious food.
couple took a short wedding
Rev. Walter Patterson,
trip following their marriage. pastor, ope ned the service
They plan to reside in Meigs with Rev. Paul Tackett
County. Guests at the wed· giving the opening prayer.
ding included parents of the Scripture reading was of·
couple, Mrs. Roy Van Meter, fered by Rev . Patterson. Rev.
Becky and Melanie, and Mr. Kenneth McKibben was
· M nomlnateq to serve u
and Mrs. C. T.· ' Norns. r.
Weaver is employed With the moderator for the business
Apple Grove Sand and Gravel · session.
Co. The new Mrs. Weaver is
T'te minutes of the 63rd
employed at the Meigs BOOk· sess•on was read by conof Hannan Trace High School, mobile headquarters in ference clerk Trilba PatJerson, and the lreasurer's
is employed at Holter Pomeroy.
report was given by Rev.
Medical Center in nursing
William Reynolds. Both
service. The groom, a 1973
reports were accepted by
graduate of Hannan Trace, is
motion. The building fund
employed at Broughton 's
report was given by Rev.
Dairy in Huntington.
John
Mayhew and was also
The new Mr. and Mrs. Hall
accepted . Rev. Patterson was
reside in Crown City.
nominated to serve as
chairman of the business
committee with Revs. Pyrus
Fields and Tackell serving as
,
second
and third members.
lra111e (If similar small item
Irwin
Viars was nominated
·for consultation and decision
RUTLAND - Mrs. &lt;lara as chairman of the obituary
m what ma·lerials 1&lt;1 use.
Welsh was welcomed as a committee with Donna Davis
Salu~day will focus on
new member at a recent
antiques of ·the Victorian Era,
meeting of the Star Garden and Irving Reedy also ser·
discussing lhe antiques yilur Club at Forest Acres Park ving. One death in the Ad·
dison Church was repor!A!d.
grandmother or her mother folloWing a picnic.
Limited Edition
had, the kind of :house in
Mrs.
Robert
Jewell The execu Uve committee was
which tile family lived and its (resided at the meeting with composed of Rev . Mayhew,
Our House Tavern Plate
'furnishings, including lhe
members .giving tile Lord's Delbarton, W. Va.; Rev .
fumi1ure, glass, ·china and
Prayer in unison. DevoUons Fields of the Calvary Church
1976 Ohio 5th Issue State
pictures. The Victorian Era ·by Mrs .. Lawrence Chapnuin of Columbus and Rev. Pat.
was basically !:840 ·tn 1890, lhe included the lsi Psaltn and a terson, Mason, W. Va.
Collectors Plate
years that saw America' ,meditation
" An
Old Eleanor · McKibbin was
grea·lest ·development Wjlh Fas)lioned Prayer" from chairperson Of the next
the pioneer movement Ideals. Mrs. Anna Ogdin read session · commitlee. One·
The 1976 "Ohio Fifth Issue" State
westward. The bousehold . "Picnic in the Park". member of each · church
Collector's
Plate that has the "Our House
furnishings of this era were
Members wld what they like represented at the conference
Tavern" design. This is an annual issue of
simiW' lo those in which best about the garden club for met with her . The next
soo
plates only. Each plate is individuallY'
conference Will be al Ute
Riverby was originally roll call.
·numbered and supplied in a gift box. Art
furnished , along wilh many
A discussioo oo the flower Madison Church in Zelski in
October.
work for the design was completed by the
other historical Gallipolis arrangements f&lt;l' the Meigs
Everett
McKibbin
and
well known midwestern artist James
1
'houses.
County Fair was conducted
De1ails oo regisll'atioo ,for by Mrs. Jewell who er;plained Irving Leedy were brought
McBride.
Uhe antique seminar and
points about the various before the eumining comdisplay items lha1 •the Fl&gt;fi!Ch
classes. It was announced mittee ...&amp;Pr the purpose of
Arl Colony would like •lo 'have Ulat Oct. 28 is the day for the ordinabWI into the ministry.
on .embit at Riverby for the dub lo have the tberapy They possessed the necessary
mon·lll &lt;!I October will be .sessl on at the Gallipolis State qualifications , ahd were . Or·
The Plate is Royal Blue Print on a ·
announced .soon.
lnsli!u te. The traveling prize dalned.
background of white porcelain china - 71h''.
Jewell Russell was apdonated by Mrs. Jewell was
pointed w serve with Rev.
won by Mrs. RDbert Halliday.
Mrs. Nellie Nelson was Mayhew on the building and . .
finance committee.
elected secretary-tceasurer
4 Previous Ohio issues by McBride:
The morning session of the
With Mrs. Virginia Nelson as
(Available by Spedal Orderl
conference concluded with
BIDWElL - A reunion of Roger Roush, Grove City; her assistant. Duane Will of special singing by the · Ad1972-Capilal Bldg. • Columbus
lbe family of Mrs. Mary Dean Mr. and ~Mfs. Dale Roush, Mason, W.Va. spoke briefly dison Trio (Mary Barcus,
1973-General Wayne Memorial
was held last Sunday at Sherry and David, Sl. to the group on ilie work of a Rene Broyles and Mickey
1974-0id
Mill at Foster, Ohio
Albans; Mr. and Mrs. dispa Ieber.
Bidwell.
Smith) ; Rev. Paul Tackett
1975-Armstrong
Air &amp; Space Memorial Techniques of drying
At1ending were Mr. and Williord Roush, !Mr. and Mrs.
and Ruthie and Debbie
Wapa korieta
Mrs. Albert· Roush , Becky Junior B'arnharl, Peggy , ·flowers and leaves were
Peters.
discussed
Steven,
Terry,
Douglas,
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D
on
by
Mrs
:
Orion
and Kenny, Kevin and Christi
The group retired to the
Smith, Mrs. Gerrl Kessinger, and Wayne, Bloo!lllield; Mr . Nelson who gave the
basement of the church
Kim and I.JJis Ann, Poineroy; and Mrs, Bill Brown and ingredients of a sDlution to
·where they enjoyed a lun·
Mr _and Mrs. Larry Flowers, Angela, Newwn Falls; Mr. use on leaves and flowers
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James W'utland, parUcularly ·those suitable cheon prepared and served
446-2691
by the ladies of the Addison '
342 2ND AVE.
Jimmy, Sissy, and Gary, l or use in Christmas
Church.
Warren ; Mr. and Mr•. James arrangements.
At I p.m. the conference
Hood, Jimmy anu Keith,
"Planting and Caring lor
Newton Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Dwarf Trees" was 'Mrs.
THE FJRSl' blr1bday of
Homer Roush, Jr., Sandy and Jewell's Wpic. She explained
Weadl u.nnoa, daagllter Greg, Hyattsville, Md .; Mrs. the importance of good
of AI aad Apr0 HanllOO.
RACINE - .The Ruth Homer Roush, Sr ., Lee garden soU 1&lt;1' good growth
Pomeroy, wu eelebcated
Circle of the Bertha M. Sayre Skinner' Mark and Doug, and talked about the need for
rec:eally at tile home of ber
Missionary Society of the Tina Kar Raber and area between trees. She ~lso
graadpareau, Mr. aad
Racine Baptist Church was daughter , Blacksville, W. suggested that a ground
Mn. Vtrgll Teaferd. Sr.
hostess I« a 6 o'clock dinner Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ray cover between them belps
"UeadiJIC were Mr ,. aad in tile church social room Roberts, Cindy, Kathy and retain moi.lture. M~t shrubs,
Mn.
Bob
Murpby,
recenUy. Members of tile Cherie, Bldweil; Mike Wills, she said, need Uttle care,
\'eroalca Provo, Mr. ,ad
Esther Circle. Pastor Don Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs. David except pruning. An auction of
Mrs. Bruce Teaford,
Walker, and three guests Wickline, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. !lower seeds, plants and
Sherry ud Alllela, Mr.
David Wickline, Jr. and bulbs was held.
were present.
and Mrs. Duke BeDtz aad
FoUowing the dinner tile Davey, aU of BidweU; Mr.
Mn. Edltb Teaford.
group went tn the sanctuary and Mrs. William Dean, Mr.
for a meeting ·which opened and Mrs. Lee 0. Woods, OI,
SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
with singing of the Heather and
Joshua,
miasionary byron, "Lord Rutland ; Kathleen Durst, Mrs . Leland Parker are
Speak to Me". Mrs. Mary Mr. and Mrs. Carl Meeks, aMounclng tbe birth of a 10
pound eight ounce son,
Kay Yost, president of the Bidwell.
The Albert Roush and Charles Paul, Saturday
combined circles, gave
. prayer, read ICI'Ipture from Wilford. Roush families morning. Other children of
presented Mrs. Dean With a the Parkers are Patty,
Psalm 90 and had a poem.
Theme
of
the
devoUons
was
.
nora! arrangement. She Ia 80 Kathy, JJminy, Joey and
POMEROY - Mr. and
years old_
"Clear
Shining
After
Rain".
Mike.
Mrs. Ray Wiener of Fairborn,
former residents, recenUy Mrs. Yost read a poem,
relwned from Mayport, Fla. "That by Which We Uve",
accompanied by Mrs. and the group Nng "Showers
Wiener's son, Mick, grandson of BleiiSing". Mrs. Nondus
Childrens 8112 12
Cil Mr. and Mrs. William Hendrlcb had charlie of the
love
gift
Jli'OIIflffi·
Her
topic
~ o! near Pomeroy.
We Have
The action sole of lhls back-1o-school shoe makes it
Medium Widths
.._ '*I j1111t returned from was "Cherrful Givera", and
ideal
lor
I he active life ol young girls. The allractive styl1 ..._ month tour Of duty
she read ICrlpture from II .
ing along with contrasl stitching provides daughler
t~lheu.s.s. Sara tog~. au. Cor. 9 and had prayer. Miss
appeal. Sleel "shank lor extra fool suppor1 And Hush
the ~llrtraft carrier, in Vera Bee&amp;le apoke briefly
111111 WwldY Pllllllc
Puppies• Casuals are born comfortable , . , just lor you
and Mrs. Martha Loll Beegle
the
'-'nan.
Among
and your ,t:t,,,
..,..,. - - - ly ...
poria '1111'-! were Split
introduced Pastor Walker
Yugoslavia, T•anto, Italy , who showed slides. arid
Jtmble~ide
and Monaco. They ~ 1.\ood c~mmenled on his trip to tbe
by at lebanon.
Holy Land. Group singing of
,]
-~
Mr.
and
Mra
."-...-were
"Best Be the Tie" and prayer
...,.,..
ftlll
•
lOCK
OAIOENS
1
at
Jacksonville
when
the
by
Miss Beegle closed tbe
• Mf10' 1001 IAf'IIICAI'INO
Saratoga arrived 111111 IIWl meeting.
• UMI , ......,.. • lllD
5,000 on board, an4 ~
• ..... 1 fOPIOil • M~lCM
among the vlsltora who
Monday. Friday
,....,...,n-NG
boarded the carrier lor 1
'•
t•:lfllolp.m.
tour. Following a 20 dtly 111M
r ...... w..., s.t.
1111 ucOHO.,...,. 1 .., • ..., • . _
~ GlaqJi for !be clay:
Mra. Wiener's son wiU a~ to
t:J0-5
Thurs. f:30 to 12 n M i l l ! : - Pl~l OAIUPOII$, 0 .
Ncrfolk, Va. and later to 'Br!.\lah 110vellat Georse
• • 1114,bttt."Who
riles
Ma)'p&lt;lrt, Fla. He has been In "
.,...,..
man,
hll
the Nav}l since June, 197S.
IRYflf Ia llll'lltred."

Quarterly conference convened
at Addison church in July

I

FOOD OONATED - Mrs. Nonnan S~wart and Mrs. Raymond Willis, seated 1-r,
presented food to Rev. Frank Hayes recently for the GaUla County Food Pantry on behaH of
the Sara Porter Memorial Fund. Frank Porter, far left and Rev. James Frazier, far right, of
. the Grace United Methodist Church, were also present.
.

OUR HOUSE TAVERN
COJJ.ECI'ORS PLATE

Mr. ami Mrs. David D. Hall

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Mrs. Welsh
welcomed
"em·..z'nar set. ·O'C.t·.. 1.5_1.6
by club

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Dean reunion enjoyed

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE .

Ruth Circle
serves dinner

ComfortValue.

Hush Puppic!!® Contemporaries.

Wieners home
from Florida

Did You Know

to

S1499

MBACHER

.....

ARlSUPPUES
AT

arden&amp;, :Inc..

·---~ITS

Peddler's Pantry

.......

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Couch were taken from St.
Matthew . 22
with a
meditaUon, "A Most Important Question" and
prayer. For the program,
Mrs. Bertha Canaday conducted a qmz on songs with
the names of girls in the title
and also had a leaf and shrub
identification game. It was
reported that Mrs . Gladys
Cuckler Is recuperating at

home.
9uests were Mrs. Evelyn
Lucke, Mrs. Kate Goodwin,
Mr. and Mrs . George Shlveler
and Jayne . Tbe Sept. 16·
meeting wlU be at the home of
Miss Jesse with Mrs. Doria
Grueser to have the devotions
and Mrs. Ella. Smith, the
program, · Others attendlng
were Georgia Watson, Burton
Smith and Ethel Stewart.

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Sunday Special

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OFF
ON ALL

HUSH PUPPIES
Men's and women's. Any pair
in stock including new fall styles.

Hush

PuPP.~~~· .
'

PITT
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

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· MON. THRU SAT. 10 nL 9
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

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PORTER, left, presented a check for $100 recently lrom tbe Sara Porier
MemorJal Fund to Rev .. Frank Hayes, president of the Gallia County Ministerial
=~~~~GealllceooUe~twedillMbethusodist~d by the association for various projects. Rev. James
.
r
m
.e
Church, looks on.
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Two projects receive donations
from ·Porter Memorial Fund

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the corner of Se&lt;:ond and
GALLIPOLIS - Two local Willis and Mrs . Norman Cedar Sts. in Gallipolis·.
projects have received Stewart, on behalf of the
donations from the Sara fund, purchased $100 worth of
Porter Memorial Fund, groceries to go into the Fo'od
established by the Wi!$ley Pantry, which is also sponWeds Class of Grace United sored by the Gallia County
Methodist
Church
in Ministerial Association. The
Gallipolis, honoring their food pantry, through agency
long lime teacher and in· referrals, provides a tem·
spiration, the late Sara poracy emergency food
service to cover a three day CAPTURED WITH
Porter.
period.
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
Frank Porter presented a
Anyone who wishes to
LEAR.
check for $100 to Rev. Frank contribute to 'the Sara Porter
First Memorial Fund, which is a COMPLETE WITH
Hayes of the
Presbyterian Church of perpetual fund to be used "for ALBUM. STARTING
Gal,lpolis, : who is the others", may do so by sen- AT ...
(rellident of the Gallia County ding a chec~ payal)Je to
Minlsterial Association, to be Wesley Weds, Grace United
used by the ministerial Methodist Church; designate
ass?Ciatlon' for iis various on the check tnat it is for the
protects to assist meeting the Sara Porter Memorial Fund,
needs of others.
and mail it to the church or
In addition, Mrs. Raymond leave in lhe church office at

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THE STORY
OF YOUR

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BIRTH ANNOUNCED
. CROWN CITY - Mr, and
Mrs. Donald L. Cox of Rt. 2,
Crown City, are announcing
the birth of their son, David
Lee, Thursday , July 29, at
2:02 p.m. He weighed eight
pounds and was 21 1h Inches
long . He is welcomed hOme
by one brother, Daniel Lee.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr, and Mrs. Ellis L. Carter,
Gallipolis. Paternal grand:
paren ls are Mr . and Mrs.
Franklin M. (Pete) Cox,
Crown City. Maternal great.
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ohancie Carter,
Gallipolis.

In 19'14, Greece announced

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PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY

Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
!I mite west of Holrer
Medical Cr·tter on u.s. Rt.
35) Ope:· ·•es.- 5at. 10 _5
Till 8 on 1 ·s.

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MATERNITY I
STYlES
I
New Fall

ARRIVING DAILY

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SAVE SA

1'

1~1size1
s4o~~in $50 sets

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SIZe

sets

Reg. 199.95'
NOW

Check Our
Sale Rack
of

842 ~"""d

Phooo 446·
Colll,.lit

'

S7995

per piece

\

It !'ould not go to war against
Turldah troope apparenUy
bent on ~alzlng Northern
Cyprus, because of the
remoteneu of tile laland and
the mUitary ad'!'llntaae of the
Turks.
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(Formerly Grovers
Studio l

I The Uniform Center
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Slacks, Tops, Dresses I

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r:--~·-·-;.;:··-;;\··-··-· - ··-· -· · -··-··-· ~.J·:-··,

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STUDIO

legislation, Nadine Friend.
Loyally day, Evelyn Norlh,
membership, Neta Wood;
national home, Nancy
Sheets; rehabilitation, Anna
Harrison; safety, Alberta
voice
of
Saunders;
democracy, Grace Tabor;
youth activities , Grace
Tabor ; publicity, Midge
Dennison.

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LEAR

Two members initiated

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$7995

~~LIPOLIS - Gallia
Co
Ladies Auxiliary to
Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Post 4464, met in ritualistic
form , with six officers
presen l. Two new members
initialed were June Can'trell
and Alberta Saunders.
The following committee
chairmen were appointed :
Amertcanlsm, June ·cantrell;
buddy
poppy ,
Peggy
Ferguson; cancer' Neta
Wood; community activities,
Maude Brookins·
en.
vtronmental,
Evelyn' North;
hospital, Vivian Benson ;

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WEDDING

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POMEROY - Mrs. Iris
Kelton and Mrs. Margaret
Rose entertained ThUI'Iday
evening With a cooklllll for
members of the Ma"'oUa
Club at the Kelwn home,
Food was cooked by Aaron
Kelton and George Shlveler.
Miss Erna Jesse pretSided
at the meeting whlch opened
with I he Lord's Prayer.
Devotions by Mrs. Ellen

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SA

s70~~~'" $100
sets .

Reg. 1119.95'

Reg. 1299.90•

NOW

NOW

S9495

per piece

S22990

per sel

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4 -The Sllldly ~: Sentinel, Sunday, ; •.:g. IS, 1976

•

Miss Smeltzer weds David~Hall

Wedding

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I Woman 's World

announcedi

CROWN CITY - The dres.-ll11 1 phll&lt; taffeta gown
Crown Oly MethOdist Church wjJJJ a v.ruckllne' She also
was the setUng for the June 5 wore glovH and a large pink
wedding of Jada M. Sme)t#f pictun hal. She carried a
coionlal cascade made up of
and David Dale Hell.
The Rev· Jaclr Ranlrln pinlr and blue carnations with
offlcialed at' 7:30p.m. at the sweetheart roses with pink
double rfng ceremony. The and blue ribbon streamers.
bride ts 111e daughter of Mr.
Tim Hall, brother Of tile
and Mrs. Gerald Smeltzer of groom, served as best man.
. Rt, I, erown City and the Ushers were Roy Jones and
·groom's parents are Mr. and Monte Sheets.
,
Mrs. Kenneth Hall, also of
Ring bearer was Craig
Crown City.
Rankin, nephew of the
Mrs. Sharon
Petrie groom. Flower girl was Eva
presented a half hour of Dawn Henry who was
selected 'nuptial , music dressed ln a pink gown and
preceding the ceremony,
carried a white lace basket
The church was decorated filled With pink rose petals •
With ~n arch WliY featuring
Mrs. Gilbert Caldwell, wh~
love b~rds, bells, and !tiles of registered the guests, also
the valley. There were two decorated the favor basket.
baskets of mixed spring On the front featured pink
flowers on each side along and white carnabons With ,
" with two palm trees.
pink and blue rice favors
•
Candles were lit before the distributed by her daughter,
ceremony by Monte Sheets Christinia Caldwell.
and Roy Jones followed by
The bride's mother Mrs.
the lighting of one candle by Garnet Smeltzer, ch'ose a
the couple during the princess style gown of pink
ce~emony signifying the with a jacket featuring
uruUng of the couple.
embroidered !lowers. Her
A double kneeling bench corsage was white roses with
was used during tfie a pink ribbon.
ceremony where the couple
Mrs. Eloise Hall was atjoined hands for prayer.
tired in a gown of blue knit
punch bowl with pink and
The parents' pews were with a blue crepe scarf. She
blue
roses lroren in the top of
decorated with a single wore a corsage of white roses
it. Punch was served by Mrs.
candlelabrum and the bride's with blue ribbon.
Rankin and Miss Jones. The
favorite color• of pink and
A reception honoring the cake was cut and served by
white was used in bows on the couple was held immediately
Janice Staplewn. Coffee .was
aisle throughout the church. following the ceremony in the
served from a silver coffee
Est;orted to the altar by her church basement.
pot by Mrs. Rutherford .
father, the bride wore a long
The table was draped with
The bride. a 1974 I(I'A~ua1e
sleeved gown accented With a a white tablecloth edged in
French lace bodice with a lace and centered with a four
seed pearl portrait neckline. tiered wedding cake made by
A full skirt of silk organza Janice Stapleton, The cake Jl
over white taffeta, fashioned featured sta'irways leading
GALLIPOLIS
The
with . .a cathedral train up tn the second tier .on both French Art Colony's annual
highlighted tile sown.
sides.
Small
plastic antique seminar Will be held
Her lace trimmed mantUla bridesmaids and groomsmen on Friday .and Saturday, Ocl.
was attached to her seed were placed on the stairway. Jo and 16, conducted by Mrs.
pearl and lace trimmed tiara 'the dresses were made from Orva Walker Heissenbuttel, a
and shoulder length French icing in the color of the real noted antique authority,
illusion veil. She carried a bridesmaids' dresses. There lecturer and columnist from
white Bible attached with a were $Oft green icing leaves Washinglon, D.C.
cascade o! pink roses, car- and vines leading up to the
A native of Gallia County,
nations, and baby's breath stairway. Leaves and pink Mrs. Heissenbu&gt;ttel has been
with pink and white ribbon roses were placed around the an antique dealer in
streamers,
base and sides of the cal!e. Washington, DeC. Cor Ute past
,Brenda Smeltzer, sister
The .table was aCcented 15 years, exhlbi·bng in shows
ot: the .bride, Was maid of with blue candles in a silver m Maryland, Pennsylvania
honor and bridesmaids were . candle. holder. ·
and Virginia, !OJ)OCializing in
Connie Saunders and Marylin
Hos~ far the reception coll"!'tible art glass.
Jones. Tbe attendants woce were Mrs. Edgar Rutherford,
On Friday, Oct. 15, the
blue gowns with V-necklines Gallipolis ; Mrs. Janice morning session of the
and blue picture hats. They Stapleton , Eureka Star seminar will be an in·
wore while gloves and Route , Gallipolis; Mrs. troduc:liion 111 antiques,
carried a colonial cascade Gerald Rankin, Crown Qty, discussiilg what is an antique,
bOuliuet of pink and blue and Diana Jones of an- how w judge the quality, how
camallciae wllb -Uieart ciDNoti.
lo buy and sell, and in·
roses with piJik and white
An ice ring no,~ in the formalioo oo reproductions:
ribboo streamers.
In the ·afternoon, UJe subject
The maid of honor was
Will 'be antiqqe furniture :
restocatioo and refinishing .
Participants may bring a
ebalr, smali table, drawer ,

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Magnolia
Club
cooks
out
·Darst family gathers
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GALLIPOUS - The 17th Pauline Davis and Mrs. Ina
annual reunion Of tile family Lemley, Kinton; Mrs.' Hazel
of Rev . B. L. Darst and the Shoemaker, Hamden .
tate Gertie Darst was held ' Tile nex l reunion will be a l
Sunday, Aug. 8 at Ash Cave Chesler with Sarah Spencer
with 42 present.
as hostess. Mrs. Nina Wassel
An enjoyable day was held and Ronnie Spencer will have
with Mrs. Mary Sigman as char~e of prograO'• and
hostess . A picnic dinner was games.
served at noon with Rev . w.
E. Curfman asking the
blessing. After. dinner Rev , :·:.:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Darst read and ga ve a short
GALLIPOLIS _ The
talk from Ephesians 6:1-12. annual homecoming of the
The afternoon was spen t I:•niel Community Church
with picture laking and will be held Sunday, Aug,
singing and lhe children 22 at the church neat,
playing games and touring Gallipolis.
the cave.
Sunday School will be at
The new addition this year · ·to a.m. followed by a short
was the grand:lon of Mr . ·and talk by the pastor, Sam
Mrs.
Roy
Lemley, Marcum. A basket dinner
. Christopher Michael, son of is planned at 12 noon In lite
Mikie aQV Sandi Lemley, teahouse.
Columbus.
Afternoon services bePresent .were Rev. B. L. tween 1:30 and 3 p.m. inDarsl, Rev. and Mrs . Ershel elude special singing and
Curfman. Mr . and Mrs. guest speaker Rev. Jerry
Ershel Curfman Jr., Ctisly Neal of the Vinton Baptist
and Scotty, Cheshire; 'Mr. Church.
and Mrs. Ri char.~. Curfman,
Kimberly Ann· and Richie, · :·:·:·:·:::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::;:;::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::.::::
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
REVIVAL TO START
Burdell Rife , Mr. and Mrs.
POM.ERO.
Y - An old· ·
Rodger Lou Master, Paul
fashioned
camp
meeting
Allen and Stevie, Ridgeway;
r
evival
will
be
held
at
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lemley,
Maplewood
Lake
on
Route
Mr. and Mrs. Mikie Lemley
and Chris, Columbus; Mr. 124 above Syracuse, Aug. IS.
and Mrs. Elmer Sigman 29, with Bible 'study at 10:30
Cheshire; Mr . and Mrs. Joh~ a.m. and evening ·services at
Sigman, Johnnie and RandY. 7:30p.m. Special singing will
Addison ; Mr. and Mrs: be held at 6:30 each evening
Dayton Spencer , Buffalo, W. with the Bissell Brothers, the
Tones,
the
Va.; Mrs, Nina Wassel, Terre Gospel.
Choralires of Parkersburg
Haute, Ind .; Mr. Budd Jr.
and the Haven Family of
Da~st , Middleport ; Laura
Saratoga
, Fla., taking part.
Harrison , Mr. and Mrs.
The
Rev.
0. G. McKinney will
Lonnie Darst, and Lisa, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Smith and be speaker, and free parking
is available for campers.
· Shelly,

Sarah Carsey 1charlene Hoeflich ••

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Gallipolis·Point Pleasant Pomeroy-¥iddleport
992-2156 '
i , 446-2342
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LETART FALLS - The' 0
famlly wedding of Karen :
l·
Nelgler and Phillip Weaver
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was an event of Aug. 6, 8 p.m.
at the United Brethren •
·
Church at Letart Falls .
The bride is the daughter of
Mr, and Mrs. Clrol Neigler,
Syracuse ,
and
the
bridegroom is the son of Mr,
and Mrs. Richard Wealll!r,
Syracuse. The Rev. Freeland
and Alldison. Afternoon
reconvened with the clerk
Norris officiated at the ·
preaching services were
wedding ceremony . Keith
By RENE BROYLES
reading the roll call and
Ashley was pianist.
ADDISON - The 64th cards of the deacons and conducted by the Revs. lr·
vlng Reedy, Pyrus Flelda and
Given in marriage by her session of the Harmony ·ministers.
father, the bride wore a white Quarterly Conference con·
Churches represented at Howard Stewart.
The group thanked the
formal gown with white vened at the Addison Free the con(ere nce were the
ladies
of the Addison Church
accessories. The bridegroom Will Baptlst Church Sa tor· Valley, Union
Ridge,
for
their
hospllallly and
was in a velveteen suil. The day , July 31.
Calvary, Elk Creek, Madison
delicious food.
couple took a short wedding
Rev. Walter Patterson,
trip following their marriage. pastor, ope ned the service
They plan to reside in Meigs with Rev. Paul Tackett
County. Guests at the wed· giving the opening prayer.
ding included parents of the Scripture reading was of·
couple, Mrs. Roy Van Meter, fered by Rev . Patterson. Rev.
Becky and Melanie, and Mr. Kenneth McKibben was
· M nomlnateq to serve u
and Mrs. C. T.· ' Norns. r.
Weaver is employed With the moderator for the business
Apple Grove Sand and Gravel · session.
Co. The new Mrs. Weaver is
T'te minutes of the 63rd
employed at the Meigs BOOk· sess•on was read by conof Hannan Trace High School, mobile headquarters in ference clerk Trilba PatJerson, and the lreasurer's
is employed at Holter Pomeroy.
report was given by Rev.
Medical Center in nursing
William Reynolds. Both
service. The groom, a 1973
reports were accepted by
graduate of Hannan Trace, is
motion. The building fund
employed at Broughton 's
report was given by Rev.
Dairy in Huntington.
John
Mayhew and was also
The new Mr. and Mrs. Hall
accepted . Rev. Patterson was
reside in Crown City.
nominated to serve as
chairman of the business
committee with Revs. Pyrus
Fields and Tackell serving as
,
second
and third members.
lra111e (If similar small item
Irwin
Viars was nominated
·for consultation and decision
RUTLAND - Mrs. &lt;lara as chairman of the obituary
m what ma·lerials 1&lt;1 use.
Welsh was welcomed as a committee with Donna Davis
Salu~day will focus on
new member at a recent
antiques of ·the Victorian Era,
meeting of the Star Garden and Irving Reedy also ser·
discussing lhe antiques yilur Club at Forest Acres Park ving. One death in the Ad·
dison Church was repor!A!d.
grandmother or her mother folloWing a picnic.
Limited Edition
had, the kind of :house in
Mrs.
Robert
Jewell The execu Uve committee was
which tile family lived and its (resided at the meeting with composed of Rev . Mayhew,
Our House Tavern Plate
'furnishings, including lhe
members .giving tile Lord's Delbarton, W. Va.; Rev .
fumi1ure, glass, ·china and
Prayer in unison. DevoUons Fields of the Calvary Church
1976 Ohio 5th Issue State
pictures. The Victorian Era ·by Mrs .. Lawrence Chapnuin of Columbus and Rev. Pat.
was basically !:840 ·tn 1890, lhe included the lsi Psaltn and a terson, Mason, W. Va.
Collectors Plate
years that saw America' ,meditation
" An
Old Eleanor · McKibbin was
grea·lest ·development Wjlh Fas)lioned Prayer" from chairperson Of the next
the pioneer movement Ideals. Mrs. Anna Ogdin read session · commitlee. One·
The 1976 "Ohio Fifth Issue" State
westward. The bousehold . "Picnic in the Park". member of each · church
Collector's
Plate that has the "Our House
furnishings of this era were
Members wld what they like represented at the conference
Tavern" design. This is an annual issue of
simiW' lo those in which best about the garden club for met with her . The next
soo
plates only. Each plate is individuallY'
conference Will be al Ute
Riverby was originally roll call.
·numbered and supplied in a gift box. Art
furnished , along wilh many
A discussioo oo the flower Madison Church in Zelski in
October.
work for the design was completed by the
other historical Gallipolis arrangements f&lt;l' the Meigs
Everett
McKibbin
and
well known midwestern artist James
1
'houses.
County Fair was conducted
De1ails oo regisll'atioo ,for by Mrs. Jewell who er;plained Irving Leedy were brought
McBride.
Uhe antique seminar and
points about the various before the eumining comdisplay items lha1 •the Fl&gt;fi!Ch
classes. It was announced mittee ...&amp;Pr the purpose of
Arl Colony would like •lo 'have Ulat Oct. 28 is the day for the ordinabWI into the ministry.
on .embit at Riverby for the dub lo have the tberapy They possessed the necessary
mon·lll &lt;!I October will be .sessl on at the Gallipolis State qualifications , ahd were . Or·
The Plate is Royal Blue Print on a ·
announced .soon.
lnsli!u te. The traveling prize dalned.
background of white porcelain china - 71h''.
Jewell Russell was apdonated by Mrs. Jewell was
pointed w serve with Rev.
won by Mrs. RDbert Halliday.
Mrs. Nellie Nelson was Mayhew on the building and . .
finance committee.
elected secretary-tceasurer
4 Previous Ohio issues by McBride:
The morning session of the
With Mrs. Virginia Nelson as
(Available by Spedal Orderl
conference concluded with
BIDWElL - A reunion of Roger Roush, Grove City; her assistant. Duane Will of special singing by the · Ad1972-Capilal Bldg. • Columbus
lbe family of Mrs. Mary Dean Mr. and ~Mfs. Dale Roush, Mason, W.Va. spoke briefly dison Trio (Mary Barcus,
1973-General Wayne Memorial
was held last Sunday at Sherry and David, Sl. to the group on ilie work of a Rene Broyles and Mickey
1974-0id
Mill at Foster, Ohio
Albans; Mr. and Mrs. dispa Ieber.
Bidwell.
Smith) ; Rev. Paul Tackett
1975-Armstrong
Air &amp; Space Memorial Techniques of drying
At1ending were Mr. and Williord Roush, !Mr. and Mrs.
and Ruthie and Debbie
Wapa korieta
Mrs. Albert· Roush , Becky Junior B'arnharl, Peggy , ·flowers and leaves were
Peters.
discussed
Steven,
Terry,
Douglas,
'
D
on
by
Mrs
:
Orion
and Kenny, Kevin and Christi
The group retired to the
Smith, Mrs. Gerrl Kessinger, and Wayne, Bloo!lllield; Mr . Nelson who gave the
basement of the church
Kim and I.JJis Ann, Poineroy; and Mrs, Bill Brown and ingredients of a sDlution to
·where they enjoyed a lun·
Mr _and Mrs. Larry Flowers, Angela, Newwn Falls; Mr. use on leaves and flowers
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James W'utland, parUcularly ·those suitable cheon prepared and served
446-2691
by the ladies of the Addison '
342 2ND AVE.
Jimmy, Sissy, and Gary, l or use in Christmas
Church.
Warren ; Mr. and Mr•. James arrangements.
At I p.m. the conference
Hood, Jimmy anu Keith,
"Planting and Caring lor
Newton Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Dwarf Trees" was 'Mrs.
THE FJRSl' blr1bday of
Homer Roush, Jr., Sandy and Jewell's Wpic. She explained
Weadl u.nnoa, daagllter Greg, Hyattsville, Md .; Mrs. the importance of good
of AI aad Apr0 HanllOO.
RACINE - .The Ruth Homer Roush, Sr ., Lee garden soU 1&lt;1' good growth
Pomeroy, wu eelebcated
Circle of the Bertha M. Sayre Skinner' Mark and Doug, and talked about the need for
rec:eally at tile home of ber
Missionary Society of the Tina Kar Raber and area between trees. She ~lso
graadpareau, Mr. aad
Racine Baptist Church was daughter , Blacksville, W. suggested that a ground
Mn. Vtrgll Teaferd. Sr.
hostess I« a 6 o'clock dinner Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ray cover between them belps
"UeadiJIC were Mr ,. aad in tile church social room Roberts, Cindy, Kathy and retain moi.lture. M~t shrubs,
Mn.
Bob
Murpby,
recenUy. Members of tile Cherie, Bldweil; Mike Wills, she said, need Uttle care,
\'eroalca Provo, Mr. ,ad
Esther Circle. Pastor Don Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs. David except pruning. An auction of
Mrs. Bruce Teaford,
Walker, and three guests Wickline, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. !lower seeds, plants and
Sherry ud Alllela, Mr.
David Wickline, Jr. and bulbs was held.
were present.
and Mrs. Duke BeDtz aad
FoUowing the dinner tile Davey, aU of BidweU; Mr.
Mn. Edltb Teaford.
group went tn the sanctuary and Mrs. William Dean, Mr.
for a meeting ·which opened and Mrs. Lee 0. Woods, OI,
SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
with singing of the Heather and
Joshua,
miasionary byron, "Lord Rutland ; Kathleen Durst, Mrs . Leland Parker are
Speak to Me". Mrs. Mary Mr. and Mrs. Carl Meeks, aMounclng tbe birth of a 10
pound eight ounce son,
Kay Yost, president of the Bidwell.
The Albert Roush and Charles Paul, Saturday
combined circles, gave
. prayer, read ICI'Ipture from Wilford. Roush families morning. Other children of
presented Mrs. Dean With a the Parkers are Patty,
Psalm 90 and had a poem.
Theme
of
the
devoUons
was
.
nora! arrangement. She Ia 80 Kathy, JJminy, Joey and
POMEROY - Mr. and
years old_
"Clear
Shining
After
Rain".
Mike.
Mrs. Ray Wiener of Fairborn,
former residents, recenUy Mrs. Yost read a poem,
relwned from Mayport, Fla. "That by Which We Uve",
accompanied by Mrs. and the group Nng "Showers
Wiener's son, Mick, grandson of BleiiSing". Mrs. Nondus
Childrens 8112 12
Cil Mr. and Mrs. William Hendrlcb had charlie of the
love
gift
Jli'OIIflffi·
Her
topic
~ o! near Pomeroy.
We Have
The action sole of lhls back-1o-school shoe makes it
Medium Widths
.._ '*I j1111t returned from was "Cherrful Givera", and
ideal
lor
I he active life ol young girls. The allractive styl1 ..._ month tour Of duty
she read ICrlpture from II .
ing along with contrasl stitching provides daughler
t~lheu.s.s. Sara tog~. au. Cor. 9 and had prayer. Miss
appeal. Sleel "shank lor extra fool suppor1 And Hush
the ~llrtraft carrier, in Vera Bee&amp;le apoke briefly
111111 WwldY Pllllllc
Puppies• Casuals are born comfortable , . , just lor you
and Mrs. Martha Loll Beegle
the
'-'nan.
Among
and your ,t:t,,,
..,..,. - - - ly ...
poria '1111'-! were Split
introduced Pastor Walker
Yugoslavia, T•anto, Italy , who showed slides. arid
Jtmble~ide
and Monaco. They ~ 1.\ood c~mmenled on his trip to tbe
by at lebanon.
Holy Land. Group singing of
,]
-~
Mr.
and
Mra
."-...-were
"Best Be the Tie" and prayer
...,.,..
ftlll
•
lOCK
OAIOENS
1
at
Jacksonville
when
the
by
Miss Beegle closed tbe
• Mf10' 1001 IAf'IIICAI'INO
Saratoga arrived 111111 IIWl meeting.
• UMI , ......,.. • lllD
5,000 on board, an4 ~
• ..... 1 fOPIOil • M~lCM
among the vlsltora who
Monday. Friday
,....,...,n-NG
boarded the carrier lor 1
'•
t•:lfllolp.m.
tour. Following a 20 dtly 111M
r ...... w..., s.t.
1111 ucOHO.,...,. 1 .., • ..., • . _
~ GlaqJi for !be clay:
Mra. Wiener's son wiU a~ to
t:J0-5
Thurs. f:30 to 12 n M i l l ! : - Pl~l OAIUPOII$, 0 .
Ncrfolk, Va. and later to 'Br!.\lah 110vellat Georse
• • 1114,bttt."Who
riles
Ma)'p&lt;lrt, Fla. He has been In "
.,...,..
man,
hll
the Nav}l since June, 197S.
IRYflf Ia llll'lltred."

Quarterly conference convened
at Addison church in July

I

FOOD OONATED - Mrs. Nonnan S~wart and Mrs. Raymond Willis, seated 1-r,
presented food to Rev. Frank Hayes recently for the GaUla County Food Pantry on behaH of
the Sara Porter Memorial Fund. Frank Porter, far left and Rev. James Frazier, far right, of
. the Grace United Methodist Church, were also present.
.

OUR HOUSE TAVERN
COJJ.ECI'ORS PLATE

Mr. ami Mrs. David D. Hall

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Mrs. Welsh
welcomed
"em·..z'nar set. ·O'C.t·.. 1.5_1.6
by club

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Dean reunion enjoyed

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE .

Ruth Circle
serves dinner

ComfortValue.

Hush Puppic!!® Contemporaries.

Wieners home
from Florida

Did You Know

to

S1499

MBACHER

.....

ARlSUPPUES
AT

arden&amp;, :Inc..

·---~ITS

Peddler's Pantry

.......

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Couch were taken from St.
Matthew . 22
with a
meditaUon, "A Most Important Question" and
prayer. For the program,
Mrs. Bertha Canaday conducted a qmz on songs with
the names of girls in the title
and also had a leaf and shrub
identification game. It was
reported that Mrs . Gladys
Cuckler Is recuperating at

home.
9uests were Mrs. Evelyn
Lucke, Mrs. Kate Goodwin,
Mr. and Mrs . George Shlveler
and Jayne . Tbe Sept. 16·
meeting wlU be at the home of
Miss Jesse with Mrs. Doria
Grueser to have the devotions
and Mrs. Ella. Smith, the
program, · Others attendlng
were Georgia Watson, Burton
Smith and Ethel Stewart.

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Sunday Special

"

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OFF
ON ALL

HUSH PUPPIES
Men's and women's. Any pair
in stock including new fall styles.

Hush

PuPP.~~~· .
'

PITT
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

'.

· MON. THRU SAT. 10 nL 9
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

•...'

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PORTER, left, presented a check for $100 recently lrom tbe Sara Porier
MemorJal Fund to Rev .. Frank Hayes, president of the Gallia County Ministerial
=~~~~GealllceooUe~twedillMbethusodist~d by the association for various projects. Rev. James
.
r
m
.e
Church, looks on.
~

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Two projects receive donations
from ·Porter Memorial Fund

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the corner of Se&lt;:ond and
GALLIPOLIS - Two local Willis and Mrs . Norman Cedar Sts. in Gallipolis·.
projects have received Stewart, on behalf of the
donations from the Sara fund, purchased $100 worth of
Porter Memorial Fund, groceries to go into the Fo'od
established by the Wi!$ley Pantry, which is also sponWeds Class of Grace United sored by the Gallia County
Methodist
Church
in Ministerial Association. The
Gallipolis, honoring their food pantry, through agency
long lime teacher and in· referrals, provides a tem·
spiration, the late Sara poracy emergency food
service to cover a three day CAPTURED WITH
Porter.
period.
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
Frank Porter presented a
Anyone who wishes to
LEAR.
check for $100 to Rev. Frank contribute to 'the Sara Porter
First Memorial Fund, which is a COMPLETE WITH
Hayes of the
Presbyterian Church of perpetual fund to be used "for ALBUM. STARTING
Gal,lpolis, : who is the others", may do so by sen- AT ...
(rellident of the Gallia County ding a chec~ payal)Je to
Minlsterial Association, to be Wesley Weds, Grace United
used by the ministerial Methodist Church; designate
ass?Ciatlon' for iis various on the check tnat it is for the
protects to assist meeting the Sara Porter Memorial Fund,
needs of others.
and mail it to the church or
In addition, Mrs. Raymond leave in lhe church office at

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THE STORY
OF YOUR

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BIRTH ANNOUNCED
. CROWN CITY - Mr, and
Mrs. Donald L. Cox of Rt. 2,
Crown City, are announcing
the birth of their son, David
Lee, Thursday , July 29, at
2:02 p.m. He weighed eight
pounds and was 21 1h Inches
long . He is welcomed hOme
by one brother, Daniel Lee.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr, and Mrs. Ellis L. Carter,
Gallipolis. Paternal grand:
paren ls are Mr . and Mrs.
Franklin M. (Pete) Cox,
Crown City. Maternal great.
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ohancie Carter,
Gallipolis.

In 19'14, Greece announced

"':)·~)

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PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY

Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
!I mite west of Holrer
Medical Cr·tter on u.s. Rt.
35) Ope:· ·•es.- 5at. 10 _5
Till 8 on 1 ·s.

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MATERNITY I
STYlES
I
New Fall

ARRIVING DAILY

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AT

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SAVE SA

1'

1~1size1
s4o~~in $50 sets

I
I
1

SIZe

sets

Reg. 199.95'
NOW

Check Our
Sale Rack
of

842 ~"""d

Phooo 446·
Colll,.lit

'

S7995

per piece

\

It !'ould not go to war against
Turldah troope apparenUy
bent on ~alzlng Northern
Cyprus, because of the
remoteneu of tile laland and
the mUitary ad'!'llntaae of the
Turks.
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(Formerly Grovers
Studio l

I The Uniform Center
I

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Slacks, Tops, Dresses I

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r:--~·-·-;.;:··-;;\··-··-· - ··-· -· · -··-··-· ~.J·:-··,

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STUDIO

legislation, Nadine Friend.
Loyally day, Evelyn Norlh,
membership, Neta Wood;
national home, Nancy
Sheets; rehabilitation, Anna
Harrison; safety, Alberta
voice
of
Saunders;
democracy, Grace Tabor;
youth activities , Grace
Tabor ; publicity, Midge
Dennison.

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LEAR

Two members initiated

.: ..
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$7995

~~LIPOLIS - Gallia
Co
Ladies Auxiliary to
Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Post 4464, met in ritualistic
form , with six officers
presen l. Two new members
initialed were June Can'trell
and Alberta Saunders.
The following committee
chairmen were appointed :
Amertcanlsm, June ·cantrell;
buddy
poppy ,
Peggy
Ferguson; cancer' Neta
Wood; community activities,
Maude Brookins·
en.
vtronmental,
Evelyn' North;
hospital, Vivian Benson ;

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WEDDING

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POMEROY - Mrs. Iris
Kelton and Mrs. Margaret
Rose entertained ThUI'Iday
evening With a cooklllll for
members of the Ma"'oUa
Club at the Kelwn home,
Food was cooked by Aaron
Kelton and George Shlveler.
Miss Erna Jesse pretSided
at the meeting whlch opened
with I he Lord's Prayer.
Devotions by Mrs. Ellen

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SA

s70~~~'" $100
sets .

Reg. 1119.95'

Reg. 1299.90•

NOW

NOW

S9495

per piece

S22990

per sel

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�1- Tbe ~ TiD!ei·Senllnel, &amp;mday, Aq. 15,11178

Annual Canaday reunion
held in RiQ Grande

Windon reunion
held in Chester
CHESTER - The Hth and Blair, Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
aMoud Windon reunion was Mr. and Mrs. ~ (Virginia
heldAug.l atthehomeol Mr. Windoo) Tyler, Cathy, Ralph,
and Mrs. J. M. Oaul, Sumner Wendell and Unda Fife, Rt. I,
Rd., Chester with 40 GaWpolla; Mrs. Ray Windoo,
descendants of the late Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Windoo,
Joaeph M. and Elbel Johnaon Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Windon
Windon present.
Jr. and Lowell Ill, Mr. and
Tbe only living child of Mrs. Wyatt Will, Teresa Wili
Joseph and Ethel, Mrs. Edna and Billy Welsh, Mr. and
Wlndlll Mcrgan, lie years old, Mrs . Miles (Genevieve Will)
wu praent.
McFarland, all of .Columbus.
Decened children o(
Mr. and Mrs. James Will,
J~~~eph and Ethel are: Ray Brian and Beverly, Mr. and
Wind111, Waid Windon and Mrs. Don (Becky Will)
Norma Windon WiU, Their Cottrill, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
children, ll'lndchildren aild (Brenda Will ) Black, all of
great.grandchlldren make up o Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. J.M.
tile followlnc list of familles (Mildred Morgan) Gaul,
present: Mr. and Mrs. Bud Vicki Gaul and Greg Clark,
(Edna Windon) Morgan, Chesl&lt;!r. VIctor E. Gaul Jr.,
Kimes Convalescent Home, Melropolis, Ill. ; James B.
Albens; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Crockarell Jr., Alexandria,
Windon; Debra, Brian, 'Be&lt;:ky Va.

RIO GRANDE - The daughter JuUe and Jlnger
annual , Canaday reunion, Steele, Mrs. Celesta Switzer,
descendants or Naaman R. all ofGaUipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
and Anna Switzer Canaday, Rober! Canaday, Mrs. Edna.
was held recently at the home Russell of RuUand; Mr. and
or Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Mrs. Gerald Canaday and son
David, Holt, Mich.; Mrs.
Canaday of Rio Grande.
Fifty-eight relatives and Bertha Canaday, Mrs. Paul
friends were present for Chapman and daughters
dinner served at noon. on the Jennifer and Anna Margaret,
spacious lawn . Cassius Mr. anct Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
Canaday offered grace. Two Pomeroy.
Jack Canaday, Mr·. and
July birthdays observed were
Cassius Canaday and Robert Mrs. Gene Canaday and son
Tony, Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Canaday .
Robert Canaday presided Canaday and daughter Amy
al the afternoon busi~
meeting and discussion. The
remainder of lhe afternoon
was spent socially, laking
1o. SPECI/o.L PRESENTATION~ made to Oscar W. Cllrl!e, M.D., on bebiJt of the
family
pictures
and
Gallia county Chapter of the CentralOhio Heart Association, Inc., by the chapter president
discussions of family anMrs. Lena Pleasanl3. The award carried the inscription, "For 25 years of outatandin!i
cestry.
leadership service". Or. Clarke became involved In volWtteer work on behalf of the Heart
Copies or the life and wa:ks
Association inJ 949. Instrumental in lhe organization of the GaWa County Chapter of the or lhe family's great.grfa tCentral Ohio Heart Association, Inc., he was charter president of the loci! chapter serving
uncle , famous journali st,
; · ···:-······...···· · · ····~··· · ...... ' ••••••.•••••••••.•:S..'~)i(l:ll':liJ':$iJ:$ij~
from ils establishment in !95&amp;untill962. He then ser':l'&lt;ki.chapter secretary from l962 unlli
story writer Ambrose Blel'ce
his resignation In 1974. Even though he Is not ~ow act1ve m the heart chapter, he continues to
were given to each member
assist in an advisory capacity. Dr. Clarke IS a lifetime honorary member of the Gallia
or the family. He was a greatCounty Chapter of the Central Ohio Heart Association, Inc.
uncle or lheir mother, Ar.na ·
Switzer Canaday whom ~~
visited many limes.
He was a journalist 111
London, New York, and la ter
in Caijfornia. During the
period that he wrol&lt;! for ~•e
POMER,OY- While Mr. and ,Mi-s. Clarence Nichols, bolh
l('
Hearst
Examiner
in
10, of '~:UPPers Plains, are the oldest malTJed couple of M~s
J
California,
he
was
named
the
Cowl!)' .elected to be hdnored at the Meigs County Fair as a
West Coat's number ,o ne
spedll bicentennial feature, they are not the couple
MIDDLEPORT
The were gil~ or the bride.
cril.ic.
lll8rrlecl the kJ!gest.
.
altar or lhe Bradford Church
Flower girls were Miss
RENEE QUEEN
His work as a scout in the
Mr.and Mrs. E. R. Miller who ~'!!side near Langsville wiU
of Christ was decorated with Stephanie Walker, daughter Civil War was the bssis lor
ceJelnte tbelr 70th wedding anniversary on Dec. i&amp;. Mr. and
vases ol pink , blue and of Mr. and Mrs. Mike · Walk· many of his war stories. A
Mn. Nlcbola wl11 not mark up their 70th UJ1lli sometime in
lavender daisies with fern; er ot Rt. ~. Pomeroy, and number of years . ago, .his
J8IIUII')'. However, Mr. and Mrs. Nichols are bqth in
baby's breath and greenery Tammy Jo Miller, daughl&lt;!r stories were presen~ . on
rMUiably, lood health and , able to ,make personal
flanked by seven-branch of Davey Jo Miller of West l&lt;!ievision by movie actor,
~-at the ~lr, whlie Mr. and Mfs, Miller reaDy
ca ndelabra for the wedding of Columbia. Stephanie wore a Adolphe Menjou.
aren't. Ml'll. MDrer was 89 111 March I, bet husband will be 91 ·
Tammy Diane Schoonover blue and while double knit
Brete Harte , Jo~quin
on Aq. •·
and
Terry
Lee
Pickens
.
go~ with a whil&lt;! lace veil, · Miller and Mark ·Twain were
. '!be MliJen Jive alone. Although cloae, to their daughter,
The bride is the daughter of while Tammy wore a yellow San francisco friends of his.
BIDWELL - Renee Queen,
K. C. Arnott celebrated
Mn. Nellle ..,_..,they do all their own bousew&lt;rk, and .do go
Mr.
and Iilrs. Thomas A. printed gown also with a He was born in Meigs County, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
bis
second
birthday
on
CNt ()('CII!I•"Iy, but infrequeot!y, Sizl)'-nine years of
Schoonover, Rutland, and lhe whil&lt;! lace veil. They ca!Tied but spent most of his life in Robert Queen or Rt. I, Bid·
marlage '- along Ume of togetherness, and both couples are Friday, Aug. &amp; at the
bridegroom is the son of Mr. while satin baskets fiUed with California. His death in well, has bOen selecl&lt;!d lor the
Syracuse home ol his
to be ·omgratulloted.
and
Mrs. Larry Pickens, Rt. daisies.
Mexico has never been lOih annuai edition of "Who's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
4,
Pomeroy.
The
wedding
was
Steve
Pickens,
Rt.
4,
solved.
Who Among American High
satisfactorily
Arnott.
He
received
gills
!iaAIUNG 18 CARING arnl partlcularly when there's one
aneventof
JuneS
at6:30
p.m.
Pomeroy,
served
as
best
man
Attending
.
the
celebration
School
Students, 197:&gt;-76.
and
cards
from
relatives
piclic lilelter, 1ft c:burcb group! and rain, rain ewrywbere.
with
lhe
pastor
Jack
Perry,
for
his
brother.
Ushers
were
Recognition
in Who's Who
were
Golden
Canaday,
Mr.
'lb!:t.Grll WOIIII!IIand Men's&lt;:l.ss of the Middleport.O,urch of and friends.
officiating
at
Ule
double
ring
Wayne
Searls
and
Danny
is
a
national
honor
reserved
aod
Mrs.
Darrell
Canaday
&lt;llrillthawthe PIIIDM) Bapllatstothank. The Baptist •'•"ed
ceremony.
Jeni
Grate
,
lla!Tison.
Ring
bearer
was
and ctaughl&lt;!r Laura, Larry exclusively for junior and
their llbeltlllr at Foreat Acres Park.
pianist, played tradi tiona! Scot! Pickens, also a bro!Jler, Canaday, all of Northup; senior high school students,
wedding music.
and ~he taper lighter was· Mr. and Mrs. Cassius who have demonstrated
~CE PRINTING~ tistlng of ClvU War Soldiers burled
Given
in
marriage
by
her
Tommy
Schoonover, brother Canaday, Mr. and Mrs. leadership
In
either
In )felp Co\mty,lellleteriel, we've beard fnm several whclle
falher,lhe bride wore a gown of lhe bride.
HalTy
Bailey,
Timothy
W.
academics,
athletics,
e~tra·
·~· Mmll were not !Qcluded Among thale wbole
of
while
bridal
satin
with
For
her
daughter's
wed·
c
t~rricular
activities
or
Rutherford,
·Mr.
and
Mrs.
,_blve beta added to t1,1e list are Henry Albert Dizon of
.
e
mbroidered
alencon
lace.
A
ding,
Mrs.
Schoonover
wore
a
community
service.
Niday
and
grandFerrell
the Pqetown ,'Fho la iliJrled In Wells ~etery.
whil&lt;! satin bow at Ule waist pink, double knit suit with
On a national basis, less
·Aaanllnl ~ bla grandaon, lferbert Dizon, he wu Mel&amp;s
held
in
place
lhe
long
·chapel
black
accessories
and
a
white
than
four per cent of the
CQuatr'aoldollt CWil War ve11no w11111 be died at.t6. After bia
train
ol
embroidered
alericon
carnation'
corsage
tinted
in
and senior students are
junior
lllb bi,Uida)' be btai k4 to ftllwlelpda far a ........., at
pleled her state board leal&lt;!red in Who's Who each
lace.
The
briofe
carried
a
pink.
Mrs.
Pickens
was
in
a
wllnnl.
.
bOuquet ,of spring flowers blue, two piece suit with a examinatiOn. Mr. ·Pickens, year.
Anlther one mlue4 1r11 Francis For_!)ea wlxi la buried in
also a Meigs High School
with baby's breath and . pink rosebud corsage.
Renee, a senior at North ·
,Gllmcn Cemetery. H11 daughter Ia ~~Forbes Stewart of
graduate,
is associated with
greenery
tied.
with
·
satin
A
reception
was
held
at
the
Gallia High School, is in·
Pom~. and Iii granddaughter Ia Mrs. Evelyn Lucke,
bows, and a Bible of her Ia!&lt;! RuUand Elementary School his falher in Pickens Pain- valved in the following acSyracuae.
.
.
grandfather, Charles Miller. following the wedding. A ting. While at Meigs, Mrs. tivities: school librarian,
A letter fl'lllll Mrs. Kal)lerlne A. Skeels, CohunbuB, advised
Her only jewelry was a whi!&lt;l llwee tiered cake decorated Pickens was a member of the library club, Beta Club, pep
,!bat ber grealoUncle, Louis Ullidl, born on Dec. 1, 1826, who
gold cross, gift of the groom. 'With pink, lavender and blue Meigs High Flag Corps, vice club, Future Homemakers of
&amp;ei'Vfllln tbe 2ab Ohio Volunt.olnfantry and died on Aug.JO,
president ol the VICA Club.
EDGAR ADAM, foster The bride's headpiece was of roses and Lopped .-ith the
America, Future Nurses of
18'12, II bca W Ia Beech Gnm.
Mr . Pickens was active in the
And fND Dlyld Brewer of Portland comes the names of - of Mr. aad Mrs. Osby · floral petal design with a lradilionai minialllie bride sports program in high . America, and the North
·
and groom centered the
dvU W• wllrlnl, Henry Keys, burled at Bald Kliob and Martin, Pomeroy, was fingertip veil.
school.
· Galli a choir.
Mrs.
Debbie
Searls,
matron
!able.
Whil&lt;!
wedding
bells
boaored
Thursday
evening
Jobn Wtlllle7 Ervin, Ml Herinon Cemetery.
.
at tlie Naylor's Run of honor lor her sisl&lt;!r, w&lt;ire a and colored ~treamer.s
.
Playgrolllld oa his 12tb blue shiflon gown with multi- decorated the aUditorium .
.
AlJCE WHITE Ja having thla,weekend at her, Minersville
birthday. The Junior. colored flowers and carried a · Marge Thomas and Marilyn
laM lhlr blvlng ~ the put three llionths with her
ATTENDS SEMINAR
daualllllr, Vema Mal! Salaer and family at Sheffl,eld Lake. Amerlcu Legion Auxiliary white carnation tinted .in blue Wilt presided at lhe table.
POMEROY _ Mrs. Merle
of Drew Webster Post 39 with blue ribbons. Miss Vicki Terri Fife and Christi Hess
~-, Ja\er today abe 'II return there and en Tuesday will
Johnson ol Jonnie 's Beauty
h01ted tile partY for Edgar Pickens, sister of,tlle groom, reglsl&lt;!red the _guests.
triter tbe Cleveland Clinic l&lt;r ca\Bl'ICt surgery. .
Hera for the weekl!nd to vjllt Mrs. Wbite are bet aorrln-law aad preoenled him with a bridesmaid , wore a pink · For a wedding trip to Shop, ·Union Ave. was in
lllddaapiAJ', T. Sgl.and Mrs. Ronald E. Robinson of Dayton, cake ond gift. Guesl3 were flowered gown and carried a Marietta, the bride changed CoiumSus Monday to attend
T. Sgt. Rob! !!Ifill will retire from the Air Force after 21 yeara In Junior Auxiliary members ,pink carnation, while Miss into a rust 'colored pantsuit. an educational seminar on
early Sehember, and the couple plan to make their home In and children of the Sandy Sprague wore a Mr: and Mrs. Pickens now cuHing and styling. The
Naylor's Run · neigh· lavender gown of chiffon and resode on Beech Gr~ve Road seminar conducted by Frank
Plarlda.
borbood. ·
ca!Tied a lavender tinted at Rutland. A gradual&lt;! or Tricoci and Pel&lt;!r LandSriuin
carnation . All of the at. Meogs
H1gh
SchOol \ was held at the Carousel Inn.
tendants wore picture hats to Cosmotology program, class Among the precision hair
malch lheir gowns. These of 1976. She recently com. cutting t,chniques demonstrated was the wedge cui.

i

Renee Queen
chosen for
Who's Who

96th .annual Blazer reunion
held at Rio Grande recently

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

..

Beth, Mr. and Mra. Jeffery
Canaday, Galllpoli&amp;; Mr. and
Mrs. David r.t. W&amp;rn~r, 11011
David II and dau1hter
Natalie, Richmond, Va.;
Miss Brenda Shaffer, Crown
City; Mr. and Mra. Alltn
Gibson, ColumbUI; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Torres and
daughter Nlchole, . Lansing,
Mich.; Jerry Gooldln, Crown
City;. Mr. -and Mrs. Richard
Madison, Clinton; Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Canaday, Rio
Grande; and !be hoet and
hostess , Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Canaday, daqhter
Joyce Ann and sons Mark and
Scqtt. Unable to attend
because of Illness were
Blanche Canaday, Mrs. Jack
Canaday and Mr. aod Mrs.·
Jimmy Steele of Gallipolis.

POMEROY - Ben Quilenberry, SyraCUJe, II a very
brilliant~. He can quote poetry like yOii wouldn't ,believe
lind In addition · Clll relate eome lnterellinl ttoriea that
happl,lled many yean 18Q.
Lui SUnday he Wll , Clven I book, "The Annotated
Mc&lt;lufey", which lncludea selections (rom the, McGuffy
Reader, fl'Oftlll1311 to 1120, ,n of which Ben stuined u he went
tbrouCh achclol. Tbe book wu given to him,by hla aon an4 wife,
Mr. and Mra. lqer Qulaenberry, Alherf, who have since
IIIOind to Florid&amp;.
The bQQit waa autop:aphed by . tile· outbor, Stanlex w.
Lindberg, IIIIOclate profeuor at Englilh al Ohio University
¥d editor of the "Ohio Review". '11le book waa a gift to Ben on
hla birthday, Aq, 24, when he will be •· .
aen p~~uecllltt bit of poetry 1)0011, reciting from memory.
.
''Sqme IJtde.llulla GoliiiO Find You"
n 11 ,often 11me1 th• quntJon, lri thla ale of lndlceetlon
Wbat to eat, and what to lla,e alone.
Fqr each microbe and baclllfOI,

Soft,
glove leather. Flannel
lining. Crepe sole. Try a •
pair. Feeling . $
26•95
1s believing.

HASKINS. •
TANNER· CO. ·
Gallipolis, Ohio
l uther refers to uppers

.

REUNITE -'i'be Chester High Ciasa of 1931 held 113
•annusl reunion recenUy. Present were, left to rlghl, front
row, Martha Roae, Clifford Hayes, Betty FeU, Earl
Knight, (teacher), Henry Beaver, (teacher); standing,
Virgil McElroy, Esther Gooch, Lucille Smith, (teacher),
. , Nellie Parker, Pauline Rid110our, Lenora Betzlng, Irene
Parker, Opal Wickhim, Fred Smith.

,.~------·---·-~------,

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I imposition of a 10 per cent
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Get to know us; yon IKCUS.® -

Emlbit for the month of August: Watercolors by Audra
Clark of CaUettaburg and Margo Adame of RusaeU, Ky.
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and &amp;mdays, I unlli 5 p.m.;
Tueadays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Aq.l7, Tueaday, 7:30p.m. -F. A. C. Interdepartmental
Meeting, Rl~8:30 p.m. - F.A. C. 'i'ruatees Meeting,
Riverby.
.
Alii. 23, Monday, 7JJ p.m. -Beginning Pllotography, to
cootinue for 12 weeki; Joon Earl Brown, lnatructor, River by.
Aq. 26, Thursday, fl.ll a.m. - Chrlstmau Committee,
Rlverby. 7.1Jp.m. -Intermediate Pllotography to continue for
12 weeki; John Earl Brown, lnatructor, Riverby.
Oct. 15-18 Friday and Saturday- Annual antique seminar
with Orva Walker Helllenbullel. Noted antique·authority from
Wublngton, D.C., Rlverby.

8. W~mm~~~~.

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' CHESTER - The Chester
High Class or 1931 held Its
aMual reunion at the Chester
firehOuse Sunday, July 25
and enjoyed a basket diMer
at noon. Esther Gooch asked
the blessing
Eleven ' members of the
!lass present were Clifford
Kayes, Irene Parker, Fred
lmllh, Virgil McElroy,
l'lartha Rose, Betty Fell;
)pal Wickham, Pauline
~ :Udenour, Lenora Betzlng,
!;sther Gooch, and Nellie
' 'arker. Three teachers a~
.: ended : Lucile Smith, Earl
·:: ~gbt and Henry Beaver.
. Others present were
~orman Rose, Bidwell; Oana
.; ~ell, Washington Court
~oille; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Stewart, Conneaut;
Raymond Gooch, Galllpolll;
Peg Predmore and Edward

'12·95

•co,.,..ltt•

Parker, Columbus; Herbert
Parker, Bertha· Smith, Mary
Buck, John Wickham, Buel
Ridenour, Thelma Farn·
sworth, and Wilber Parker,
all of Meigs County. Florence
Michael was an afternoon
·guest:
· A get-wen card w~s signed
for Mra. Clifford Hayes. The
next reunion wiU be the last
Sunday In July, 1977, at !be
Chesler Firehouse.

VISIT OVERNIGHT
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Kelly, Lancaster,
were recent overnight guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Dixon.

... . CARPETS STEAM CLEANED
' I

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A"•·

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Complet• Une of . . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Suppli•s

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Photi• ••6·1405
Gollipoli•

'

I.

II

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~I

Mrs .

f
. i

U

.
variety of fOOds prepared by
our senior citizens. Mr. and
Mrs. Laurence Spreigel were
host and hosl&lt;!ss for the
evening.
The Olde Tyme Chorus
gave the program they had
planned for the junior fair .
There were also awards
presented which were
sc heduled for the fair . There
was a very nice turnoul for
the picnio. Lots of faces we
hadn 't seen for awhile, in
addition Ill some new ones .
Always nice to meet new
people.
Listen to your radio for
upcoming activities at your
senior citizen center. Don't
forget to sign up for the fair
and the Cincinnati ballgame
Sept. 14. You may sign up for
both or either now if you wish
to go.
.
Come meet your old frie. nds
and neighbors. They will be
glad to see you.
, .

._)

GIJ"riU'Il V"Stts
' ' . N ew
'J:"

o... eans

fior L.utheran
. you th .aathe.
BRING

LIFE TO YOUR

d.

. .

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..t.:r-...:----------------r--------J-

•

Jacob, the first desce~dant,
came to America, In 1787
nearly 200 years ago. Joseph,
selUI!!f in Gallia County, and
the first reunion was held In
1878. Most of these descen·
dants are buried at Centenary, .
·
The meeting was dismissed
following prayer by Rev.
Luther Tracy. The reunion
will be held at the same place
next year on the second
Sunday in August . with the
same officers· presiding :
Claude Blazer, president,
Jim Williams, vice president,,
Jack Campbell, Sr. ·
One death recorded was
Catherine Blazer, wife, of

......................;,

RESIDENT IAL-COMMERCIAL

, )1'

."'f',,
OAUIIIOUI, 01110
PliO. . . . . . . .

de~endants .

was Drove Bla.er of Lima. He
is 88 years old. Sec . Ernest
Blazer is 85 yrs. old. The
..youngest was Jason Walker,
TEN AREA RESIDENTS are In New Orleans today attending the All Lutheran Youlll·
II lflonlh old son of John
Adult Gathering at the New Orleans Superdome. The gathering, which concludes tCIUy,
Walker of Columbus.
began Wednesday, Aug. 11. Present were (not pictured In order) Clleryl Bell, Dr. and Mrs.
Present were: Mr. and
John Groth, Lisa Groth, Peter Groth, Allen Rutz, Eugene Rutz, Gus Rutz, Tim Thoren of St.
Mrs. Roy Clark, Junction
Paul Lutheran congregation In Pomeroy and the Rev. Joe D. WUI.
·
C1ty; . Mr. and . Mrs. Arme
Eastlick, .Ashtabula; Mr. and
Mrs. J1m Jeffers, also of
Ashtabula; Mr. and Mrs.
~
Jack J. Blazer and son or
Wheelersburg ; ¥r. and Mrs. .
I V
It
.
.
.·
I •
. . .
Alva Johnson, Mrs. Tara
Cook, Mr . and Mrs. Es!&lt;ll
n·n~
Lewos,aUofEieanor, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Demsey
6 1
and Tom, Reynoldsburg; Mr .
GALLIPOLIS - Several Rev. Joe D. Will and Tim projects were organized to
and . Mrs. John Walker and youths and adults from -the Thoren of St. Paul Lutheran enable the youths to finance
larruly, Columbus.
New Life Lutheran Church Church in Pomeroy.
.!heir trip to New Orleans. The
Mr. and Mr~. Paul M. here are in New Orleans
Theme for this gathering is group left al6 a.m. Sunday,
Blaz~r of St. Clall'svllle, Mrs. today attending the All "For All lhe Saints '76." Aug. 8 for !heir trip.
Bermce West, Lebanon ; Mr . . Lutheran
Youth·Adult Many of the elements
and Mrs. Frank Blazer aild Gathering ailhe New Orleans featured in "Discovery '73"
lamoly of Glendale, W. Va ;
in 1973 will be repeated.
NEW
d Mr
Superdome.
M 0 th B
. rs. r ea aeon an
s.
The conve nlion, which
Youths and adu lts from the.
Ruth Haves , Huntonglon, W.
v J
wll
d co nclud~s today , began Lutheran Church in America,
a.; ames 1 lams an · Wednesday. Going from here the Ameri can Lutheran CARPETING
sons, W. K. Wolhams and were Cheryl Bell, Dr. and Church and the Lutheran Rev1ve the i
Mrs: John Groth, Lisa Groth, Church-Missouri Synod buill of ycur rugs.
own home
· TJ
Peter Groth Allen Rutz a community of more than
Schrader
~ VV I
'
·
' 25,000 persons from aU over
dJY·Ioam
method.
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. John Methodist Church with the Eugene Rutz,.Gus Rutz, the the country, experiencing the
muss. No fuss.
H. Reese, county contact stained glass windows which
odor. Use the
rich diversity of gifts, talents
same
day.
chairman and member of the told a story, the Priscilla's
and inlerests of God's saints.
French Cily Garden Club, Doll House, Benjamin Handy family, Russell Williams all . They ce lebrated God's All work
and Mrs. . Ernest Covert, House wril&lt;!r of "Darling of Huntington, W. Va.; Ornie presence and love for His guaranteed.
presiden t of Open Gate Nellie Gray" and "UpOn The Blazer, Lima; Mr. and Mrs. people · through study,
Garden Club, Rio Grande Housetop ." The historical I Charles McCray, Wheeling, discussion, singing and
attended the 46th annual house owns and maintains it. W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest sharilll!.
conventi on of the Ohio The !&lt;!a house lour was a Blazer, Mr . and Mrs. Joe
The young people from lhe
Association of Garden Clubs "Japan Mini a Tour" in- Blazer and family, Mr. ani! new Life Ch~rch have spent a
about it. This wlll give us entitled " America Grows'' on . eluding
the
authentic Mrs. LUther Tracy, , Rio great deal of time and
Nlbott &amp; Holfmlll
some insight on what people lhe campus .of Olterbein facilities of the shopping Grande; Mr. and. Mrs. Lyle thought in · preparation for
like to do or places they would College, Weslerville,liils past arcade, public school and Sh!"'ts and family, Gailipoijs. · this ·experience. Beginning . For the finest c1rpet
like to go. It lakes several week. Five hundred and Shin'lo Shrine. All were
Mr . and Mrs. Milfred more than a year ago, several
months of planning to get the twenty registered for the . imported from lhe Orient to Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
!rips set up. It . also takes convention. ,
· create the Japanese corn- Mooney, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
many phone calls to make
Mrs. Dwighl De Voss, pound in Wesl&lt;!rville.
Campbell, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
reservations at motels and Harrisburg , state president,
Dr. Kenneth Reisch who is John Jones and family , Mrs.
restaurants and we can not presided al the lhe business presently the Associal&lt;! Dean, Ruby Saunders, Mr. and Mrs.
charter a bus on one day's session, held al lhe Cowan College of Agriculture and Howard Blazer, Mr. and Mrs.
notice.
Hall.
Home Economics at lhe Ohio Charles McKern, Colin and
Send us a letl&lt;!r, ca ll or
Mrs. Quentin Elder, State University was a J ohn, Mr. and Mrs. William
come in and tell us how you Warsaw, was elected stale speaker Wednesday eveni ng Davis, Cana and Cohy,
feel about these trips.
presiden t for 1976 and 1977. using lhe topic, "A Tree For Floyd Blazer, Jack, Terrie,
We have organ.ized a She and other officers were . Tomorrow."
and Bonnie Campbell, all of
garden club and I'm sure · installed Thursday morning.
The 1977 State Convention Gallipolis; Mr . an d Mrs.
Robert · Shaeffer. from will be held Aug. 5, 6, 7 in Claude Blazer and Miss
there are several people in
our area interested in gar· Lancaster, Ohio, currently Lorain County .
KristyBiazec,allofCheshire,
dening of one kind of another. employed in Boston, Mass.
We meet once a month. has been working
in
Starting in September we will Washington ,
D.C.
He
meet the first Tuesday of made
floral
decorafor
the s Ia te
each month. So far we have lions
· had an instructor on flower dinners and parties at the
arranging and themaking of' While House, I he State
macrame hanging baskets Deparlmenl and numerous
for potted plants. Mrs. Mary embassies. Mark
MeAnn McCarley taught flower Culchan, Eva nsville, Ind.,
arranging and Mrs. Dorothy studied horti cullure and
Wheeler taught macrame. floral design at Michigan
They are members of the University . These two young
Vinton Gardon Club. Visitors men demonstrated their
are always welcome.
floral talents in a program
We also had some ladies emtilled "America Grows In
in bead working. Floral Art" Tuesday evening
Mrs. Fanme Jones demon. and again Thursday afstrated the making of litue l&lt;!rnoon.
. bells for our bicenlennial The tours Wednesday afyear.
l&lt;!rnoon included the Church
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of Messiah, the United
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Chester High class .
•
•
t
~enews acquazn ancesinterested

SAVE $1.36

I

several sacred sun~s. They
were "One Day at a Time"
and "Thanks to Calvary" allQ
''Jnst Being To Live". Th'
was their first reunion. The~}
were the grandchildren of
yarJield Blazer.
Claude Mlller a guest,
pre sen ted a humorous talk on
children. Paul Blazer and son
Frank of S\ . Clairsville
emphasized a I the meeting
the family should be proud or
its being one of the oldest
family reunions in the United
Slates. He has traveled ex·
.U!nsively to Baden, Germany
and lhe NetherL10ds to get
material to write the history
of the Blazer'$. His son,

AUGUST BONUS

332 Second Ave.

II'

RIO GRANDE - The 96th
annual Bla.er reunion was
held at Rio Grande Com·
munity Hall Sunday, Aug. 8·
with 75 persons present.
The mornllll! was spent
socializing and meeting new
cousins. A picnic style lunch
was served at 12:30 with
grace given by Rev. Lulher
Tracy of Rio Grande.
Aile( lunch the business
meeting was called to or,ller
by Claude Blazer, president.
The mi nules were read,
collection taken artd bills paid
for 1976.
,
The Campbell sisters of
New Straitsville, daughters
of Charles Campbell san~

Hu a dll!erent way to kDI Ul,,
And In time •ell one will claim ualor their own.·
There are '1er1111 In food of every kind
t;l
f /1
lri the market, O( upqa tile bl1l of fare,
l;)rlnldjlg _water II jult u ~Y
BY fiUTH MILLER_ .
AI 111' ao-c:alled !llldly whlaky
GALUPOUSThe Gall1a
And it's often a ~~)~~lake to breathe the air.
County
Junior
Fair
is over,
Some little bu8 II f!Oini tc lllld you.
but
our
senior
citizens
are
Some lltUe bull jJ &amp;oing tq lind you aome ~Y.
gelling
ready
for
lhe
stale
Some lltUe buflla gaiq to slip behind you some day.
fair in Columbus.
'11len he'll call f&lt;r hla bl!l frlenda
There are two buses
Md all )'011' ugly troubles end, .
scheduled
to tak.e senwr
Some UtUe bug Ia goln1 to find you some day.
citizens
to
the
fa1r Aug. 26,
Author unk!lOwn.
Senior Citizens Day. Cost is
ART WORK.II on display anil for sale at the Meigs County $11 and bus leaves center at
C!tnmunity Heal\h Center. located In the building where the . 7:45a .m. If you w~uld prefer
to go to the fair another day,
Meigs General Hosp)tal was fol'lllerly lpcated.
. The art wor!r'was made )ly tesidenl3 of Glj]llpollB State you may purchase a ticket for
lllstitute. Every three months new art work is placi!d on $1, and provide yo~r own
lransportation. .
.
dlaplay.
Speaking
of.
fairs
I
would
Might add tl\e art work II very attractive and very wen
like to send a special thank
done.
.
you to all the volunteers who
. JOHN . .WD ANN SI\UVAGE, :$)Tacuse, have been helped man the gates at our
junior fair. They all did a
promoted as senior dlr~lol'$ of the Koscot Company.
'!be couple attended a Koscot convention at HyaU World, beautiful job and helped
Orlando, Fla. 'l1ley were accom)lllnled to Florida by their make some money for our
cenl&lt;!r.
daughter, Jean and grandfon, Cl)rla. .
We also made some money
' · Some of the, entertelners tjley .s.w whlie th~ were Dale
from
our yard party. lt was a
E~1ma, Joliri Delmond, the TeUera, E. J. Daniels and Jim
great success. Our yard party
WUaon.
Ann and Johll were especially pi~ to · meet Vashti .included a bake sale, produce
McKenzie, .ll!ew York mode) and TV PefSOIUllity 1111d Shirley . sale, rummage sale. Ham·
Cothr811, MWI Alnerk:a 1975, the newest l&lt;,oecot advisory bOard burgers and hot dogs were
served for the evemng meal.
members, 1lbo Job! Debbi Bryant, Mill America 1966 and Some
or our seniors enjoyed
Sylvia Hitcbcoct, Mill Universe 1987. . ·
John And' Ann were much impressed . meeting the croquet .and horseshoe pit·
peraonallt11111. llef&lt;re returning hWJe they visited Disney ching.
We are making plans for
World and Daytona Beach.
new trips and new projects.
We are trying to find
something of interest for
everyone. If you have an idea
!bat would appeal to our
seniors please let us know

Pickens-Schoonover
exchange june Vow

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v-Tbe~ ~·&amp;em~nel, &amp;mc~ay, Alll!.lf. tm

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�1- Tbe ~ TiD!ei·Senllnel, &amp;mday, Aq. 15,11178

Annual Canaday reunion
held in RiQ Grande

Windon reunion
held in Chester
CHESTER - The Hth and Blair, Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
aMoud Windon reunion was Mr. and Mrs. ~ (Virginia
heldAug.l atthehomeol Mr. Windoo) Tyler, Cathy, Ralph,
and Mrs. J. M. Oaul, Sumner Wendell and Unda Fife, Rt. I,
Rd., Chester with 40 GaWpolla; Mrs. Ray Windoo,
descendants of the late Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Windoo,
Joaeph M. and Elbel Johnaon Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Windon
Windon present.
Jr. and Lowell Ill, Mr. and
Tbe only living child of Mrs. Wyatt Will, Teresa Wili
Joseph and Ethel, Mrs. Edna and Billy Welsh, Mr. and
Wlndlll Mcrgan, lie years old, Mrs . Miles (Genevieve Will)
wu praent.
McFarland, all of .Columbus.
Decened children o(
Mr. and Mrs. James Will,
J~~~eph and Ethel are: Ray Brian and Beverly, Mr. and
Wind111, Waid Windon and Mrs. Don (Becky Will)
Norma Windon WiU, Their Cottrill, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
children, ll'lndchildren aild (Brenda Will ) Black, all of
great.grandchlldren make up o Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. J.M.
tile followlnc list of familles (Mildred Morgan) Gaul,
present: Mr. and Mrs. Bud Vicki Gaul and Greg Clark,
(Edna Windon) Morgan, Chesl&lt;!r. VIctor E. Gaul Jr.,
Kimes Convalescent Home, Melropolis, Ill. ; James B.
Albens; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Crockarell Jr., Alexandria,
Windon; Debra, Brian, 'Be&lt;:ky Va.

RIO GRANDE - The daughter JuUe and Jlnger
annual , Canaday reunion, Steele, Mrs. Celesta Switzer,
descendants or Naaman R. all ofGaUipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
and Anna Switzer Canaday, Rober! Canaday, Mrs. Edna.
was held recently at the home Russell of RuUand; Mr. and
or Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Mrs. Gerald Canaday and son
David, Holt, Mich.; Mrs.
Canaday of Rio Grande.
Fifty-eight relatives and Bertha Canaday, Mrs. Paul
friends were present for Chapman and daughters
dinner served at noon. on the Jennifer and Anna Margaret,
spacious lawn . Cassius Mr. anct Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
Canaday offered grace. Two Pomeroy.
Jack Canaday, Mr·. and
July birthdays observed were
Cassius Canaday and Robert Mrs. Gene Canaday and son
Tony, Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Canaday .
Robert Canaday presided Canaday and daughter Amy
al the afternoon busi~
meeting and discussion. The
remainder of lhe afternoon
was spent socially, laking
1o. SPECI/o.L PRESENTATION~ made to Oscar W. Cllrl!e, M.D., on bebiJt of the
family
pictures
and
Gallia county Chapter of the CentralOhio Heart Association, Inc., by the chapter president
discussions of family anMrs. Lena Pleasanl3. The award carried the inscription, "For 25 years of outatandin!i
cestry.
leadership service". Or. Clarke became involved In volWtteer work on behalf of the Heart
Copies or the life and wa:ks
Association inJ 949. Instrumental in lhe organization of the GaWa County Chapter of the or lhe family's great.grfa tCentral Ohio Heart Association, Inc., he was charter president of the loci! chapter serving
uncle , famous journali st,
; · ···:-······...···· · · ····~··· · ...... ' ••••••.•••••••••.•:S..'~)i(l:ll':liJ':$iJ:$ij~
from ils establishment in !95&amp;untill962. He then ser':l'&lt;ki.chapter secretary from l962 unlli
story writer Ambrose Blel'ce
his resignation In 1974. Even though he Is not ~ow act1ve m the heart chapter, he continues to
were given to each member
assist in an advisory capacity. Dr. Clarke IS a lifetime honorary member of the Gallia
or the family. He was a greatCounty Chapter of the Central Ohio Heart Association, Inc.
uncle or lheir mother, Ar.na ·
Switzer Canaday whom ~~
visited many limes.
He was a journalist 111
London, New York, and la ter
in Caijfornia. During the
period that he wrol&lt;! for ~•e
POMER,OY- While Mr. and ,Mi-s. Clarence Nichols, bolh
l('
Hearst
Examiner
in
10, of '~:UPPers Plains, are the oldest malTJed couple of M~s
J
California,
he
was
named
the
Cowl!)' .elected to be hdnored at the Meigs County Fair as a
West Coat's number ,o ne
spedll bicentennial feature, they are not the couple
MIDDLEPORT
The were gil~ or the bride.
cril.ic.
lll8rrlecl the kJ!gest.
.
altar or lhe Bradford Church
Flower girls were Miss
RENEE QUEEN
His work as a scout in the
Mr.and Mrs. E. R. Miller who ~'!!side near Langsville wiU
of Christ was decorated with Stephanie Walker, daughter Civil War was the bssis lor
ceJelnte tbelr 70th wedding anniversary on Dec. i&amp;. Mr. and
vases ol pink , blue and of Mr. and Mrs. Mike · Walk· many of his war stories. A
Mn. Nlcbola wl11 not mark up their 70th UJ1lli sometime in
lavender daisies with fern; er ot Rt. ~. Pomeroy, and number of years . ago, .his
J8IIUII')'. However, Mr. and Mrs. Nichols are bqth in
baby's breath and greenery Tammy Jo Miller, daughl&lt;!r stories were presen~ . on
rMUiably, lood health and , able to ,make personal
flanked by seven-branch of Davey Jo Miller of West l&lt;!ievision by movie actor,
~-at the ~lr, whlie Mr. and Mfs, Miller reaDy
ca ndelabra for the wedding of Columbia. Stephanie wore a Adolphe Menjou.
aren't. Ml'll. MDrer was 89 111 March I, bet husband will be 91 ·
Tammy Diane Schoonover blue and while double knit
Brete Harte , Jo~quin
on Aq. •·
and
Terry
Lee
Pickens
.
go~ with a whil&lt;! lace veil, · Miller and Mark ·Twain were
. '!be MliJen Jive alone. Although cloae, to their daughter,
The bride is the daughter of while Tammy wore a yellow San francisco friends of his.
BIDWELL - Renee Queen,
K. C. Arnott celebrated
Mn. Nellle ..,_..,they do all their own bousew&lt;rk, and .do go
Mr.
and Iilrs. Thomas A. printed gown also with a He was born in Meigs County, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
bis
second
birthday
on
CNt ()('CII!I•"Iy, but infrequeot!y, Sizl)'-nine years of
Schoonover, Rutland, and lhe whil&lt;! lace veil. They ca!Tied but spent most of his life in Robert Queen or Rt. I, Bid·
marlage '- along Ume of togetherness, and both couples are Friday, Aug. &amp; at the
bridegroom is the son of Mr. while satin baskets fiUed with California. His death in well, has bOen selecl&lt;!d lor the
Syracuse home ol his
to be ·omgratulloted.
and
Mrs. Larry Pickens, Rt. daisies.
Mexico has never been lOih annuai edition of "Who's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
4,
Pomeroy.
The
wedding
was
Steve
Pickens,
Rt.
4,
solved.
Who Among American High
satisfactorily
Arnott.
He
received
gills
!iaAIUNG 18 CARING arnl partlcularly when there's one
aneventof
JuneS
at6:30
p.m.
Pomeroy,
served
as
best
man
Attending
.
the
celebration
School
Students, 197:&gt;-76.
and
cards
from
relatives
piclic lilelter, 1ft c:burcb group! and rain, rain ewrywbere.
with
lhe
pastor
Jack
Perry,
for
his
brother.
Ushers
were
Recognition
in Who's Who
were
Golden
Canaday,
Mr.
'lb!:t.Grll WOIIII!IIand Men's&lt;:l.ss of the Middleport.O,urch of and friends.
officiating
at
Ule
double
ring
Wayne
Searls
and
Danny
is
a
national
honor
reserved
aod
Mrs.
Darrell
Canaday
&lt;llrillthawthe PIIIDM) Bapllatstothank. The Baptist •'•"ed
ceremony.
Jeni
Grate
,
lla!Tison.
Ring
bearer
was
and ctaughl&lt;!r Laura, Larry exclusively for junior and
their llbeltlllr at Foreat Acres Park.
pianist, played tradi tiona! Scot! Pickens, also a bro!Jler, Canaday, all of Northup; senior high school students,
wedding music.
and ~he taper lighter was· Mr. and Mrs. Cassius who have demonstrated
~CE PRINTING~ tistlng of ClvU War Soldiers burled
Given
in
marriage
by
her
Tommy
Schoonover, brother Canaday, Mr. and Mrs. leadership
In
either
In )felp Co\mty,lellleteriel, we've beard fnm several whclle
falher,lhe bride wore a gown of lhe bride.
HalTy
Bailey,
Timothy
W.
academics,
athletics,
e~tra·
·~· Mmll were not !Qcluded Among thale wbole
of
while
bridal
satin
with
For
her
daughter's
wed·
c
t~rricular
activities
or
Rutherford,
·Mr.
and
Mrs.
,_blve beta added to t1,1e list are Henry Albert Dizon of
.
e
mbroidered
alencon
lace.
A
ding,
Mrs.
Schoonover
wore
a
community
service.
Niday
and
grandFerrell
the Pqetown ,'Fho la iliJrled In Wells ~etery.
whil&lt;! satin bow at Ule waist pink, double knit suit with
On a national basis, less
·Aaanllnl ~ bla grandaon, lferbert Dizon, he wu Mel&amp;s
held
in
place
lhe
long
·chapel
black
accessories
and
a
white
than
four per cent of the
CQuatr'aoldollt CWil War ve11no w11111 be died at.t6. After bia
train
ol
embroidered
alericon
carnation'
corsage
tinted
in
and senior students are
junior
lllb bi,Uida)' be btai k4 to ftllwlelpda far a ........., at
pleled her state board leal&lt;!red in Who's Who each
lace.
The
briofe
carried
a
pink.
Mrs.
Pickens
was
in
a
wllnnl.
.
bOuquet ,of spring flowers blue, two piece suit with a examinatiOn. Mr. ·Pickens, year.
Anlther one mlue4 1r11 Francis For_!)ea wlxi la buried in
also a Meigs High School
with baby's breath and . pink rosebud corsage.
Renee, a senior at North ·
,Gllmcn Cemetery. H11 daughter Ia ~~Forbes Stewart of
graduate,
is associated with
greenery
tied.
with
·
satin
A
reception
was
held
at
the
Gallia High School, is in·
Pom~. and Iii granddaughter Ia Mrs. Evelyn Lucke,
bows, and a Bible of her Ia!&lt;! RuUand Elementary School his falher in Pickens Pain- valved in the following acSyracuae.
.
.
grandfather, Charles Miller. following the wedding. A ting. While at Meigs, Mrs. tivities: school librarian,
A letter fl'lllll Mrs. Kal)lerlne A. Skeels, CohunbuB, advised
Her only jewelry was a whi!&lt;l llwee tiered cake decorated Pickens was a member of the library club, Beta Club, pep
,!bat ber grealoUncle, Louis Ullidl, born on Dec. 1, 1826, who
gold cross, gift of the groom. 'With pink, lavender and blue Meigs High Flag Corps, vice club, Future Homemakers of
&amp;ei'Vfllln tbe 2ab Ohio Volunt.olnfantry and died on Aug.JO,
president ol the VICA Club.
EDGAR ADAM, foster The bride's headpiece was of roses and Lopped .-ith the
America, Future Nurses of
18'12, II bca W Ia Beech Gnm.
Mr . Pickens was active in the
And fND Dlyld Brewer of Portland comes the names of - of Mr. aad Mrs. Osby · floral petal design with a lradilionai minialllie bride sports program in high . America, and the North
·
and groom centered the
dvU W• wllrlnl, Henry Keys, burled at Bald Kliob and Martin, Pomeroy, was fingertip veil.
school.
· Galli a choir.
Mrs.
Debbie
Searls,
matron
!able.
Whil&lt;!
wedding
bells
boaored
Thursday
evening
Jobn Wtlllle7 Ervin, Ml Herinon Cemetery.
.
at tlie Naylor's Run of honor lor her sisl&lt;!r, w&lt;ire a and colored ~treamer.s
.
Playgrolllld oa his 12tb blue shiflon gown with multi- decorated the aUditorium .
.
AlJCE WHITE Ja having thla,weekend at her, Minersville
birthday. The Junior. colored flowers and carried a · Marge Thomas and Marilyn
laM lhlr blvlng ~ the put three llionths with her
ATTENDS SEMINAR
daualllllr, Vema Mal! Salaer and family at Sheffl,eld Lake. Amerlcu Legion Auxiliary white carnation tinted .in blue Wilt presided at lhe table.
POMEROY _ Mrs. Merle
of Drew Webster Post 39 with blue ribbons. Miss Vicki Terri Fife and Christi Hess
~-, Ja\er today abe 'II return there and en Tuesday will
Johnson ol Jonnie 's Beauty
h01ted tile partY for Edgar Pickens, sister of,tlle groom, reglsl&lt;!red the _guests.
triter tbe Cleveland Clinic l&lt;r ca\Bl'ICt surgery. .
Hera for the weekl!nd to vjllt Mrs. Wbite are bet aorrln-law aad preoenled him with a bridesmaid , wore a pink · For a wedding trip to Shop, ·Union Ave. was in
lllddaapiAJ', T. Sgl.and Mrs. Ronald E. Robinson of Dayton, cake ond gift. Guesl3 were flowered gown and carried a Marietta, the bride changed CoiumSus Monday to attend
T. Sgt. Rob! !!Ifill will retire from the Air Force after 21 yeara In Junior Auxiliary members ,pink carnation, while Miss into a rust 'colored pantsuit. an educational seminar on
early Sehember, and the couple plan to make their home In and children of the Sandy Sprague wore a Mr: and Mrs. Pickens now cuHing and styling. The
Naylor's Run · neigh· lavender gown of chiffon and resode on Beech Gr~ve Road seminar conducted by Frank
Plarlda.
borbood. ·
ca!Tied a lavender tinted at Rutland. A gradual&lt;! or Tricoci and Pel&lt;!r LandSriuin
carnation . All of the at. Meogs
H1gh
SchOol \ was held at the Carousel Inn.
tendants wore picture hats to Cosmotology program, class Among the precision hair
malch lheir gowns. These of 1976. She recently com. cutting t,chniques demonstrated was the wedge cui.

i

Renee Queen
chosen for
Who's Who

96th .annual Blazer reunion
held at Rio Grande recently

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow

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Beth, Mr. and Mra. Jeffery
Canaday, Galllpoli&amp;; Mr. and
Mrs. David r.t. W&amp;rn~r, 11011
David II and dau1hter
Natalie, Richmond, Va.;
Miss Brenda Shaffer, Crown
City; Mr. and Mra. Alltn
Gibson, ColumbUI; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Torres and
daughter Nlchole, . Lansing,
Mich.; Jerry Gooldln, Crown
City;. Mr. -and Mrs. Richard
Madison, Clinton; Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Canaday, Rio
Grande; and !be hoet and
hostess , Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Canaday, daqhter
Joyce Ann and sons Mark and
Scqtt. Unable to attend
because of Illness were
Blanche Canaday, Mrs. Jack
Canaday and Mr. aod Mrs.·
Jimmy Steele of Gallipolis.

POMEROY - Ben Quilenberry, SyraCUJe, II a very
brilliant~. He can quote poetry like yOii wouldn't ,believe
lind In addition · Clll relate eome lnterellinl ttoriea that
happl,lled many yean 18Q.
Lui SUnday he Wll , Clven I book, "The Annotated
Mc&lt;lufey", which lncludea selections (rom the, McGuffy
Reader, fl'Oftlll1311 to 1120, ,n of which Ben stuined u he went
tbrouCh achclol. Tbe book wu given to him,by hla aon an4 wife,
Mr. and Mra. lqer Qulaenberry, Alherf, who have since
IIIOind to Florid&amp;.
The bQQit waa autop:aphed by . tile· outbor, Stanlex w.
Lindberg, IIIIOclate profeuor at Englilh al Ohio University
¥d editor of the "Ohio Review". '11le book waa a gift to Ben on
hla birthday, Aq, 24, when he will be •· .
aen p~~uecllltt bit of poetry 1)0011, reciting from memory.
.
''Sqme IJtde.llulla GoliiiO Find You"
n 11 ,often 11me1 th• quntJon, lri thla ale of lndlceetlon
Wbat to eat, and what to lla,e alone.
Fqr each microbe and baclllfOI,

Soft,
glove leather. Flannel
lining. Crepe sole. Try a •
pair. Feeling . $
26•95
1s believing.

HASKINS. •
TANNER· CO. ·
Gallipolis, Ohio
l uther refers to uppers

.

REUNITE -'i'be Chester High Ciasa of 1931 held 113
•annusl reunion recenUy. Present were, left to rlghl, front
row, Martha Roae, Clifford Hayes, Betty FeU, Earl
Knight, (teacher), Henry Beaver, (teacher); standing,
Virgil McElroy, Esther Gooch, Lucille Smith, (teacher),
. , Nellie Parker, Pauline Rid110our, Lenora Betzlng, Irene
Parker, Opal Wickhim, Fred Smith.

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Glltlpells, Ololo

Get to know us; yon IKCUS.® -

Emlbit for the month of August: Watercolors by Audra
Clark of CaUettaburg and Margo Adame of RusaeU, Ky.
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and &amp;mdays, I unlli 5 p.m.;
Tueadays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Aq.l7, Tueaday, 7:30p.m. -F. A. C. Interdepartmental
Meeting, Rl~8:30 p.m. - F.A. C. 'i'ruatees Meeting,
Riverby.
.
Alii. 23, Monday, 7JJ p.m. -Beginning Pllotography, to
cootinue for 12 weeki; Joon Earl Brown, lnatructor, River by.
Aq. 26, Thursday, fl.ll a.m. - Chrlstmau Committee,
Rlverby. 7.1Jp.m. -Intermediate Pllotography to continue for
12 weeki; John Earl Brown, lnatructor, Riverby.
Oct. 15-18 Friday and Saturday- Annual antique seminar
with Orva Walker Helllenbullel. Noted antique·authority from
Wublngton, D.C., Rlverby.

8. W~mm~~~~.

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*Modem

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Sliver Brld9e Plaza
.. Ph. 446·3353

M'xJI' OHU81 1i'd6' 12100.011 2t'll40' 1211UG.
DniONS'

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

1. lulnlttl mt1 :kung l~cllr',

OVER 50 SUITES IN STOCK

2. ...., 11.. '"" flatt.
'a DM111 bolrdl n~ llkltt.
4. OlemiCII n.11t kit.

; I. F~ ,..... IIIIIL

COME IN AND SAVE AT . EMPIRE

I I.T......... n.-.d.

·, 1................. ,.,....h~ .

"A"F..."".w'-&amp;••

1.1tii......,,IIMit..._,orill..-ll•..

' CHESTER - The Chester
High Class or 1931 held Its
aMual reunion at the Chester
firehOuse Sunday, July 25
and enjoyed a basket diMer
at noon. Esther Gooch asked
the blessing
Eleven ' members of the
!lass present were Clifford
Kayes, Irene Parker, Fred
lmllh, Virgil McElroy,
l'lartha Rose, Betty Fell;
)pal Wickham, Pauline
~ :Udenour, Lenora Betzlng,
!;sther Gooch, and Nellie
' 'arker. Three teachers a~
.: ended : Lucile Smith, Earl
·:: ~gbt and Henry Beaver.
. Others present were
~orman Rose, Bidwell; Oana
.; ~ell, Washington Court
~oille; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Stewart, Conneaut;
Raymond Gooch, Galllpolll;
Peg Predmore and Edward

'12·95

•co,.,..ltt•

Parker, Columbus; Herbert
Parker, Bertha· Smith, Mary
Buck, John Wickham, Buel
Ridenour, Thelma Farn·
sworth, and Wilber Parker,
all of Meigs County. Florence
Michael was an afternoon
·guest:
· A get-wen card w~s signed
for Mra. Clifford Hayes. The
next reunion wiU be the last
Sunday In July, 1977, at !be
Chesler Firehouse.

VISIT OVERNIGHT
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Kelly, Lancaster,
were recent overnight guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Dixon.

... . CARPETS STEAM CLEANED
' I

8•2

c~oond

A"•·

Streakless Mit chine W111 Washing

:·I

UDhoJsterv ·Windows. Floors
Complet• Une of . . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Suppli•s

I

11·
"l
:._.1
t

Photi• ••6·1405
Gollipoli•

'

I.

II

"

~I

Mrs .

f
. i

U

.
variety of fOOds prepared by
our senior citizens. Mr. and
Mrs. Laurence Spreigel were
host and hosl&lt;!ss for the
evening.
The Olde Tyme Chorus
gave the program they had
planned for the junior fair .
There were also awards
presented which were
sc heduled for the fair . There
was a very nice turnoul for
the picnio. Lots of faces we
hadn 't seen for awhile, in
addition Ill some new ones .
Always nice to meet new
people.
Listen to your radio for
upcoming activities at your
senior citizen center. Don't
forget to sign up for the fair
and the Cincinnati ballgame
Sept. 14. You may sign up for
both or either now if you wish
to go.
.
Come meet your old frie. nds
and neighbors. They will be
glad to see you.
, .

._)

GIJ"riU'Il V"Stts
' ' . N ew
'J:"

o... eans

fior L.utheran
. you th .aathe.
BRING

LIFE TO YOUR

d.

. .

.• .

'omen atten conventzon

....~ ·wrnJ~urn

ADVMCED a.EANING SERVICE

PAINT SALE!

IN THE NEW 2·GALLON ECONOMY CANS.

------------------------Other August Bonus Buys!

17 cu. ft.

••

Frost Proof

• Sale
$399.95*

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.

t

'

-Denim
-Kettle Cloth

$18.25
$5.99

Y2 PRICE TABLE

*SINGER SALE*
Model 534 ..............Sale 180 Off Reg.
Modei175 ............Sale 1100 Off Reg.

Th!cc~~.~~,~-Se~,hop
Second

Simplicity Patterns
115 W.
Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

Unico Zinc Metal Paint
. (25-0182) Reg. $23.49 Gal.
Asphalt Roof Cr;ating
(25-1200) Reg. $8.25 for 5 gal.

CHECK OUR

You'H ltHflr Sore At lcrlltr'•

:·

I

-60" Polyester Knits
-Jersey$

opplioM.. and thit will be toh•n off our r-aulor low price.

FOR FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES

Unico Super Red Barn &amp; House
Paint (25-0161) Gal. Reg. $9.05 $6.99
In 2·Gal. Can (25·0160
Reg. $8.88 per gal.
per gal. $6.

Large Selection ~ OFF

Price
Price

0-

992.~~~2~----~·~"*:··::::~

.,.,"
"'

seCretary~treas urer,

Senior citizens
P1i•l)pa~1ng·.fio·r "//z"r ~~~~~~e~la:~ :ea~~~~ns~

Ow Trede In l'ollcy ·- wt MVIf ~uott prkfl with ttode ;,__Ont rto~ it f+iot· All
trodt int Oft 1'101 worth the "IOmt. Bvt wt will gi.,. )'Ou o lair """" in on YOUR

..t.:r-...:----------------r--------J-

•

Jacob, the first desce~dant,
came to America, In 1787
nearly 200 years ago. Joseph,
selUI!!f in Gallia County, and
the first reunion was held In
1878. Most of these descen·
dants are buried at Centenary, .
·
The meeting was dismissed
following prayer by Rev.
Luther Tracy. The reunion
will be held at the same place
next year on the second
Sunday in August . with the
same officers· presiding :
Claude Blazer, president,
Jim Williams, vice president,,
Jack Campbell, Sr. ·
One death recorded was
Catherine Blazer, wife, of

......................;,

RESIDENT IAL-COMMERCIAL

, )1'

."'f',,
OAUIIIOUI, 01110
PliO. . . . . . . .

de~endants .

was Drove Bla.er of Lima. He
is 88 years old. Sec . Ernest
Blazer is 85 yrs. old. The
..youngest was Jason Walker,
TEN AREA RESIDENTS are In New Orleans today attending the All Lutheran Youlll·
II lflonlh old son of John
Adult Gathering at the New Orleans Superdome. The gathering, which concludes tCIUy,
Walker of Columbus.
began Wednesday, Aug. 11. Present were (not pictured In order) Clleryl Bell, Dr. and Mrs.
Present were: Mr. and
John Groth, Lisa Groth, Peter Groth, Allen Rutz, Eugene Rutz, Gus Rutz, Tim Thoren of St.
Mrs. Roy Clark, Junction
Paul Lutheran congregation In Pomeroy and the Rev. Joe D. WUI.
·
C1ty; . Mr. and . Mrs. Arme
Eastlick, .Ashtabula; Mr. and
Mrs. J1m Jeffers, also of
Ashtabula; Mr. and Mrs.
~
Jack J. Blazer and son or
Wheelersburg ; ¥r. and Mrs. .
I V
It
.
.
.·
I •
. . .
Alva Johnson, Mrs. Tara
Cook, Mr . and Mrs. Es!&lt;ll
n·n~
Lewos,aUofEieanor, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Demsey
6 1
and Tom, Reynoldsburg; Mr .
GALLIPOLIS - Several Rev. Joe D. Will and Tim projects were organized to
and . Mrs. John Walker and youths and adults from -the Thoren of St. Paul Lutheran enable the youths to finance
larruly, Columbus.
New Life Lutheran Church Church in Pomeroy.
.!heir trip to New Orleans. The
Mr. and Mr~. Paul M. here are in New Orleans
Theme for this gathering is group left al6 a.m. Sunday,
Blaz~r of St. Clall'svllle, Mrs. today attending the All "For All lhe Saints '76." Aug. 8 for !heir trip.
Bermce West, Lebanon ; Mr . . Lutheran
Youth·Adult Many of the elements
and Mrs. Frank Blazer aild Gathering ailhe New Orleans featured in "Discovery '73"
lamoly of Glendale, W. Va ;
in 1973 will be repeated.
NEW
d Mr
Superdome.
M 0 th B
. rs. r ea aeon an
s.
The conve nlion, which
Youths and adu lts from the.
Ruth Haves , Huntonglon, W.
v J
wll
d co nclud~s today , began Lutheran Church in America,
a.; ames 1 lams an · Wednesday. Going from here the Ameri can Lutheran CARPETING
sons, W. K. Wolhams and were Cheryl Bell, Dr. and Church and the Lutheran Rev1ve the i
Mrs: John Groth, Lisa Groth, Church-Missouri Synod buill of ycur rugs.
own home
· TJ
Peter Groth Allen Rutz a community of more than
Schrader
~ VV I
'
·
' 25,000 persons from aU over
dJY·Ioam
method.
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. John Methodist Church with the Eugene Rutz,.Gus Rutz, the the country, experiencing the
muss. No fuss.
H. Reese, county contact stained glass windows which
odor. Use the
rich diversity of gifts, talents
same
day.
chairman and member of the told a story, the Priscilla's
and inlerests of God's saints.
French Cily Garden Club, Doll House, Benjamin Handy family, Russell Williams all . They ce lebrated God's All work
and Mrs. . Ernest Covert, House wril&lt;!r of "Darling of Huntington, W. Va.; Ornie presence and love for His guaranteed.
presiden t of Open Gate Nellie Gray" and "UpOn The Blazer, Lima; Mr. and Mrs. people · through study,
Garden Club, Rio Grande Housetop ." The historical I Charles McCray, Wheeling, discussion, singing and
attended the 46th annual house owns and maintains it. W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest sharilll!.
conventi on of the Ohio The !&lt;!a house lour was a Blazer, Mr . and Mrs. Joe
The young people from lhe
Association of Garden Clubs "Japan Mini a Tour" in- Blazer and family, Mr. ani! new Life Ch~rch have spent a
about it. This wlll give us entitled " America Grows'' on . eluding
the
authentic Mrs. LUther Tracy, , Rio great deal of time and
Nlbott &amp; Holfmlll
some insight on what people lhe campus .of Olterbein facilities of the shopping Grande; Mr. and. Mrs. Lyle thought in · preparation for
like to do or places they would College, Weslerville,liils past arcade, public school and Sh!"'ts and family, Gailipoijs. · this ·experience. Beginning . For the finest c1rpet
like to go. It lakes several week. Five hundred and Shin'lo Shrine. All were
Mr . and Mrs. Milfred more than a year ago, several
months of planning to get the twenty registered for the . imported from lhe Orient to Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
!rips set up. It . also takes convention. ,
· create the Japanese corn- Mooney, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
many phone calls to make
Mrs. Dwighl De Voss, pound in Wesl&lt;!rville.
Campbell, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
reservations at motels and Harrisburg , state president,
Dr. Kenneth Reisch who is John Jones and family , Mrs.
restaurants and we can not presided al the lhe business presently the Associal&lt;! Dean, Ruby Saunders, Mr. and Mrs.
charter a bus on one day's session, held al lhe Cowan College of Agriculture and Howard Blazer, Mr. and Mrs.
notice.
Hall.
Home Economics at lhe Ohio Charles McKern, Colin and
Send us a letl&lt;!r, ca ll or
Mrs. Quentin Elder, State University was a J ohn, Mr. and Mrs. William
come in and tell us how you Warsaw, was elected stale speaker Wednesday eveni ng Davis, Cana and Cohy,
feel about these trips.
presiden t for 1976 and 1977. using lhe topic, "A Tree For Floyd Blazer, Jack, Terrie,
We have organ.ized a She and other officers were . Tomorrow."
and Bonnie Campbell, all of
garden club and I'm sure · installed Thursday morning.
The 1977 State Convention Gallipolis; Mr . an d Mrs.
Robert · Shaeffer. from will be held Aug. 5, 6, 7 in Claude Blazer and Miss
there are several people in
our area interested in gar· Lancaster, Ohio, currently Lorain County .
KristyBiazec,allofCheshire,
dening of one kind of another. employed in Boston, Mass.
We meet once a month. has been working
in
Starting in September we will Washington ,
D.C.
He
meet the first Tuesday of made
floral
decorafor
the s Ia te
each month. So far we have lions
· had an instructor on flower dinners and parties at the
arranging and themaking of' While House, I he State
macrame hanging baskets Deparlmenl and numerous
for potted plants. Mrs. Mary embassies. Mark
MeAnn McCarley taught flower Culchan, Eva nsville, Ind.,
arranging and Mrs. Dorothy studied horti cullure and
Wheeler taught macrame. floral design at Michigan
They are members of the University . These two young
Vinton Gardon Club. Visitors men demonstrated their
are always welcome.
floral talents in a program
We also had some ladies emtilled "America Grows In
in bead working. Floral Art" Tuesday evening
Mrs. Fanme Jones demon. and again Thursday afstrated the making of litue l&lt;!rnoon.
. bells for our bicenlennial The tours Wednesday afyear.
l&lt;!rnoon included the Church
Hurry!! Your chance to save money
of Messiah, the United
on Unico's excellent exterior
WHITE PAINTS. Beauty and
Protection in every can.

DIRT I X 11-1 II ' liON METHOD

•

...

-

- ---'

Frank, wror., a bOOk !racing
lhe family free for all of the

Chester High class .
•
•
t
~enews acquazn ancesinterested

SAVE $1.36

I

several sacred sun~s. They
were "One Day at a Time"
and "Thanks to Calvary" allQ
''Jnst Being To Live". Th'
was their first reunion. The~}
were the grandchildren of
yarJield Blazer.
Claude Mlller a guest,
pre sen ted a humorous talk on
children. Paul Blazer and son
Frank of S\ . Clairsville
emphasized a I the meeting
the family should be proud or
its being one of the oldest
family reunions in the United
Slates. He has traveled ex·
.U!nsively to Baden, Germany
and lhe NetherL10ds to get
material to write the history
of the Blazer'$. His son,

AUGUST BONUS

332 Second Ave.

II'

RIO GRANDE - The 96th
annual Bla.er reunion was
held at Rio Grande Com·
munity Hall Sunday, Aug. 8·
with 75 persons present.
The mornllll! was spent
socializing and meeting new
cousins. A picnic style lunch
was served at 12:30 with
grace given by Rev. Lulher
Tracy of Rio Grande.
Aile( lunch the business
meeting was called to or,ller
by Claude Blazer, president.
The mi nules were read,
collection taken artd bills paid
for 1976.
,
The Campbell sisters of
New Straitsville, daughters
of Charles Campbell san~

Hu a dll!erent way to kDI Ul,,
And In time •ell one will claim ualor their own.·
There are '1er1111 In food of every kind
t;l
f /1
lri the market, O( upqa tile bl1l of fare,
l;)rlnldjlg _water II jult u ~Y
BY fiUTH MILLER_ .
AI 111' ao-c:alled !llldly whlaky
GALUPOUSThe Gall1a
And it's often a ~~)~~lake to breathe the air.
County
Junior
Fair
is over,
Some little bu8 II f!Oini tc lllld you.
but
our
senior
citizens
are
Some lltUe bull jJ &amp;oing tq lind you aome ~Y.
gelling
ready
for
lhe
stale
Some lltUe buflla gaiq to slip behind you some day.
fair in Columbus.
'11len he'll call f&lt;r hla bl!l frlenda
There are two buses
Md all )'011' ugly troubles end, .
scheduled
to tak.e senwr
Some UtUe bug Ia goln1 to find you some day.
citizens
to
the
fa1r Aug. 26,
Author unk!lOwn.
Senior Citizens Day. Cost is
ART WORK.II on display anil for sale at the Meigs County $11 and bus leaves center at
C!tnmunity Heal\h Center. located In the building where the . 7:45a .m. If you w~uld prefer
to go to the fair another day,
Meigs General Hosp)tal was fol'lllerly lpcated.
. The art wor!r'was made )ly tesidenl3 of Glj]llpollB State you may purchase a ticket for
lllstitute. Every three months new art work is placi!d on $1, and provide yo~r own
lransportation. .
.
dlaplay.
Speaking
of.
fairs
I
would
Might add tl\e art work II very attractive and very wen
like to send a special thank
done.
.
you to all the volunteers who
. JOHN . .WD ANN SI\UVAGE, :$)Tacuse, have been helped man the gates at our
junior fair. They all did a
promoted as senior dlr~lol'$ of the Koscot Company.
'!be couple attended a Koscot convention at HyaU World, beautiful job and helped
Orlando, Fla. 'l1ley were accom)lllnled to Florida by their make some money for our
cenl&lt;!r.
daughter, Jean and grandfon, Cl)rla. .
We also made some money
' · Some of the, entertelners tjley .s.w whlie th~ were Dale
from
our yard party. lt was a
E~1ma, Joliri Delmond, the TeUera, E. J. Daniels and Jim
great success. Our yard party
WUaon.
Ann and Johll were especially pi~ to · meet Vashti .included a bake sale, produce
McKenzie, .ll!ew York mode) and TV PefSOIUllity 1111d Shirley . sale, rummage sale. Ham·
Cothr811, MWI Alnerk:a 1975, the newest l&lt;,oecot advisory bOard burgers and hot dogs were
served for the evemng meal.
members, 1lbo Job! Debbi Bryant, Mill America 1966 and Some
or our seniors enjoyed
Sylvia Hitcbcoct, Mill Universe 1987. . ·
John And' Ann were much impressed . meeting the croquet .and horseshoe pit·
peraonallt11111. llef&lt;re returning hWJe they visited Disney ching.
We are making plans for
World and Daytona Beach.
new trips and new projects.
We are trying to find
something of interest for
everyone. If you have an idea
!bat would appeal to our
seniors please let us know

Pickens-Schoonover
exchange june Vow

.

~

v-Tbe~ ~·&amp;em~nel, &amp;mc~ay, Alll!.lf. tm

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�I- 1be Slmday rtm.-llendnel, ~, Aug. '15,19?6

Community Nursery School
ready to start new ye~r
By BARBARA MOORE .
GALLIPOLIS - Almost
time again for school bells to
ring aixl lllat can mean a
great experience at preschool or nursery school for
your three and four-year-old.
We at the Community

Nursery School located at the
First Presby~rian Church
would like to say welcome
back to all our returning
children from last year and a
great big hello to all those
new ones coming to us for the
first time.

Broyles
•
recetves

WELL'S :

As most of you know we try

Mon .-Sat.
.10 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday

to report on the activities of
our children once each
month, but things got pretty
hectic the month of May, so
now instead of a lot of words
we have pictures of
some of ·the things we did in
May. We visited the park for
ice cream and Milstead
Bakery wl1ere each child
purchased his or her favorite

Prices EffectiwJ
Thru Auaust 21st

. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

· cookie . We visited " big lt

school, tried out sitting on one
of those little buses, and had a
turn on lhe

Galliit Diary.

-

.

'

...

146-2312
GALUPOIJS- Rev. Tim Heatoo, associate pa9Wr of the
Grice United Methodist Oturdt bere, is writing and directing
a musical to be performed It fOlD" towns along the Ohio River
tile latter put of thilllllllllh. EatiUed "Good News '76," the
licellteanlal musical wiD trace the history of the Methodist
()lurch and the United Statel.
'lliE PAGEANT openl in Marietta, Aug. 29 at 8 p.m. The
otber performances, aD at 8, are scheduled at Hockingport,
Aug. 30; Porueroy, Aug. 31 and G~llipolis, Sept. 1. The
II08I'IJII II being t!pOIIIOftd by the Athens District of the
United Metbodllt Cl'llrcb, and the stage will be the
~. ~. Open to the public without charge,.
lbe ttbow wiD include everything from traditional gospel songs
to rock. A ''Circuit rider" wiD provide historical narration.

ANomER CULTURAL JN'Oil'am coming to Gallipolis is a
eerill of poetry readlnp and public discussions to be held at
tlleGaDlaCollltyDIItrlctUbrary. Madepo88ible by a grant to
Mlrletta Co1Je8e frcm the Ohio Committee lor Public
Procraml in the Humanities, the II'OJect wiD use selected
American Poetry u a Q18ans to discu.u public policy lsaues. To
JUri lhll faD, the aeries wiD alao be conducted in Wellston,
Crdetllle, Nelaonvllle, Ot1lllcothe, Portsmouth, Pomeroy,
Ironton, Waver~ and McAI'tbur.
· · 11IE SENIOR CITIZENS of Ga!Ua County are an

-aellc and fun group of people. The Olde Tyme Chorus and

JQ!dMp Band, directed by charming Ethel Robinson, always
pao•ldlw 1111 entertaining pi'O(II'am. At Thursday evening's
potluck 111111 nardl preaentatlon at the Senior Citizens Center,
IQIIII U.W, memben of the chorus dsnced the_Charleston and

tile Hawlllan bull to spice up their selections of popular
mwdc. lnvltad to lbe Oblo Stale Fair, the chorus will certainly
be a dellghlful aUractilll. It Ia a shame their appearance at the
Ollila County JqniGr Fair wu cancelled due to the rainy
~.I'm sure they !rOIIid bave been !feU received.

BUYERS Wlll .RECEIVE NEWSPAPER COVERAGE, BE LISTED IN lllE 1977 FAIR CATALOG AND
RECEIVE ABANNER OR PLACARD TO HANG IN lliEIR HOME OR PLACE OF BUSINESS.

pt)YER

No. TIMES
BOUGHT

Jones Boys
Wesley Buehl
Pomeroy National Bank
French City Meats
Production Credit Assn .
Ray Riggs Used Cars
West Virginia Whole
Hog Sausage
Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.
Carter &amp; Evans Const.
Boggs Sales &amp; Service
Vinton County Bank
at Wilkesville
Racine Home National
Bank
Citizens National Bank
Oakley Collins
Carroll Norris Dodge
Five Points Grill
Dill mond Stone (Albany l
Marion' Riggs Ford

7

3
•5
3
3
5

1
7
1

1
2'
6
4
1
I
2
2
3

TOTAL
MONEY

BUYER

No . TIMES
BOUGHT

TOTAL
MONEY

1
1
1
1
1

71.25
97.75
154.70
738.40
. 633.15
667.95
530.10
501.60
567.15
533;00
674.10
603.90
507.50
558.00
426.65
611 .85
564.00
1,051.30
. 67.10
49.50
110.50

Ed Hupp Hog Farm
$4,204.40
Gaul's
Market .
473.55
Pickens
2.810.55
Elberfelds Dept. Store·
817.00
Run Flour Mill
Sugar
904.00''
577.45 Southeastern Equip. Co.
Gordon Page Chevrolet
163.30 Full on· Thompson
Dr. R. R. Pickens
Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharm.
3,057.25
678.50 Racine Food Markel
401.10 Larry l.audermilt
Modern Supply
701 .70 Veterans Memorial Hosp.
John Hancock Ins.
1,952.00 Landmark
1.335.85 Leland and Roy Parker.
103.50 Royal Oak Park
79.20 Holter's Holsteins
142.55 Carnahan Auct. Service
575.00 Chester Agrico
729.25

'

I

1
1

1
1
1
1
1
I
1
2
I
3
1
1
1

BUILDING FUND

Pomeroy National Bank
Royal Oak Pt~rk
French City Meats
Holter's Holstti!IS
Rt~clne Home Nt~tiona .l Bank
carnt~han Auction Service
Five Points Grill
Landmark
Chester Agrico

Carter &amp; Evans Construction
Boggs Sales and Service
Ray Riggs Used Cars
Farmers Bank and Savings Company
Carroll Norris Dodge
Diamond Stone Company
Citizens National Bank
Gaul'~ Mark.e t
Pickens Farm

..

Do you know why more &amp; more people are
buying from Ward's Keyboard?

:JII~Udrenne!c~o~:forvariousoccaslons -

1r7 C

Royal Oak Farm

4-H CLUBS

·'

CELERY•••
. CLORO.X
gal.

49~

,,

.....

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
8-21-7&amp;

"''&amp;'•••"

ELF

CIDER VINEGAR
. gal.

99~

KEYBOARD

made simple.

-Coming
Events

Potluck
~
served I

;.,~·

~~

Thgma and family,

.

..

.

Si: Citizens
Calendar ·

RuU~nd;

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wiblin
Jr ., Penny Wiblin , of
Glouster ; Robert Seeber,
Burr Oak .

GALLIPOLIS
The
POMEROY
Meigs
Women of the Church of God,
Senior
Citizens
Center
ac109 Garfield Ave., held their
prayer retrea t meeting at the tivities located at the
hpme of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pomeroy Junior High School
ROdgers on Route 160 . isopen9a .m.-4p.m., Monday ·
through Friday.
recenUy .
Monday, Aug 16 - Cards
A potluck dinner wa s
and
Games ; Square Dance,
served at 7 p.m. on the back
12:30-3
p.Ol.
lawn of the Rodgers home.
Tuesday, . Aug. 17 Grace was given by Pearl
Physical
Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Elliott.
~
After the dinner a program Chorus 12 :15-2 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 1a was given entitled "HOPE"
Cards,-10-11
:30 a.m.; Games,
with Jean Saunders in
charge. Opening song . was
"We Have A Hope." Several .,p~~;icJ·~: August 19 women read scriptures Senior Citizens Day at Fair.
Friday, Aug. 20 - Arl
concerning ''Hope.''
Carrico, and af·
Penny Haner played a tape . Class, 10-11 :30 a.m. ; Horspeaker~ Rev. Glenn . on recorder, a sermon from seshoes,I0:30a .m.; Bowling,
"""'""". SpeCial singers one of the meetings at the 1-3 p.m.
BLUE DENIM
Senior Citizens Nutrition
thro•ilgll~ut the day. Basket Anderson
Indiana Innoon. Pastor Jesse ternationai Camp Meeting, Program, 11:30 a.rn.-12:30OR NAVY
m••••· lnv1tes ·the public. by Rev . Benjamin Reed , p.m. Mo~day through Friday.
Monday - Ham salad,
RISON reunion from Los Angeles, CaUl.
baked potato, cole slaw with
~~~~~~a~t it~he~~D~e'!'~aware
In closing
.Ohio. formed
a circle, the
each women
holding tomato wedge , prune whip,
of the asmallcandle ,lightedfrom a bread, butler, milk .
Tuesday - Meatballs in
and Rosetta (Chick) larger candle in the center of
gravy,
mashed potatoes,
IT•••tor family Sunday on the circle. Each gave a
succotash
(com and beans ),
IFOI•Ufia:aUon Hlll. All friends sentence prayer. Celestine
relaUves invited.
North sang a solo, "Thro~gh ca nn ed peaches , bread,
ABRAHAM and Eliza Jones It All". The following women buller , milk.
Wednesday
Bakes
Th()lllas reunion Sunday at were pre~&gt;Cnt: ·Jerri Lynn
Tyn Rhos Church. Basket Betta, Nina Burks, • Pearl spaghetti, tossed salad,
dinner at noon.
Elliott; Penny Hanger , banana slices in orange juice,
ANNUAL MITCHELL Vergie Houck , Celestine two oatmeal-raisin cookies,
reupion at Vinton civic park, North, Drema Parrish, Jean hot butter¢ Italian bread.
bai!Jlet lunch at noon. Saunders, Bertina Smeltzer,
Thursday - Sliced turkeyRelatives and friends Patty White, Jenny Yost, and iCranberry relish, candied
welcome.
Lu Wanda and Sam Rodgers. sweet potatoes, buttered
Exciting wedges
JOYFUL ECHOES will sing The meeting was dismissed green beans, mixed fruit cup,
roll, butler, milk.
at the Vinton Baptist 'church by Jean Saunders.
Friday - Beef patty,
Sunday, 7:30p.m. Everyone
macaroni
salad, creamed,
weli:ome.
ste~ed tomatoes, peanut
crepe soles.
B·AILEY reunion, through Friday, 9·11 a. m. butter cake with carmel
de!M:endants of the late each day. Registration , 7:30
Wllllam R. and Sadl~ Bailey a.m. at the front entrance of icing
Coffee,
lea butter,
and buttermilk
, bread,
milk.
and relaUves, Sunday, f!OOn , Gallia Academy. Fee: $5 for served daily.
.at :!!ln'lne Park in Racine. the entire week. For in- · Just a reminder!!! Starting t--.AII,j
Batltet dinner. ·
Monday, you must have your
formation call 446-4372.
reservation
in by noon the
•~, MONDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Radio
day
before
to receive the
Emergency Associated
~L MEIGS High School
regular
Tille
VII Nutrition
sl!!!lenla interested In trying Citizen learn will meet Mtnu. Ali others will receive
out lor the Meigs High goU Monday , 7:30p. rn. a tits new a light lunch. Reservation
team meet at 10 a. m. Mon- meeting place at corner of slips are available at the
dsji at Pomeroy Golf Course. Second Ave. and Mill Creek center .
Rd. All CBers welcome.
T.-~ clubs and be prepared
to ~In pracUclng that dsy. MERCERVILLE Grange will
host Huntington Grange
"
~MEROY
WOMEN'S Monday, 8 p. rn. Members
BO,!I'llng Assn. meeting, bring sofi drinks. Huntington
MOilday, 7:30 p.m. at Grange in charge of the
Ptiheroy Bowling Lanes.
program.
e
.
Cl;IEERLEADING Camp
TUESDAY
IP!II'IIOI'ed by GAllS varsity KENNETH BLEDSOE of
cheerleaders Monday Letart, W. Va. will be the

'1{f(ipnz~p~

257 JACKSON PIKE
GALI.IPOLIS, OHIO

PH. 446-4372

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 8-21-76

BABY FOOD

8/'1

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 1-21·76

Back To Schoo

OUR

·sPECIAL ·
I

1 rt ')

&lt;I

'·

.

•

les

MOC-TOE LOAFER

$ 66

BLACK OR BROWN

Soft knit fit lining ·
Durable soles and
heels
REG. '2.99
SIZES

5 TO 10

$7'44

REG. '9..99

The newest in style •
with accent lacing on
-durable crepe soles ·

BRAZILIAN TAN

~--~;;":"";':~;;;;;;::;:;--;;:;~;;;;:;;.i;i~i'--i, _ _ _ _ _..,..,..,.

.

ruon

HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 10 a .m.-8 p.m.
El(cept Wednesday, IQ a:m .-6 p.m .

PH. 446-1937

1

l

W/C

p

I

WARD'S

Oetting

SPORTY CANVAS OXFOR

Meigs County Junior Fair Steer, Lamb •d Pi&amp; Sale Committee

•

,

.

PICAN NI'PLI OIIICIIII

111oU., IUr a~rualol
fn4Hilllr ..,,._ AI'PEALIN "

Kawai Pianos, Kohler &amp; Campbell Piuos,
Gulbransen Organs, Guitars &amp; Amps:

..

'•

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
Royal Oak Farm

Qilklay Collins

ANSWER:

~

MYSTERY

Elberfelds Department Store

•'

Gilkey family Rathers
fior reunzon
, at parK. .

...

111n.

STEER

,_,..,•• 1.

CHUCK ROAST•••

QUESTION:

Gerber Strained .

BUYERS OF
DONATED LAMBS

BUYERS WHO
DONATED LAMBS

' [~......,

lB.

--··.

1975 BUYERS AND BUILDING DONORS

..-~

. ,__,lAllA&amp;.

U.S.DA ChOice

lltiS YEAR •.

The sGie 's Friday, August 20, at 7:00P.M. In the Show
•..
Barn at the. Fairgrounds.

cU'lJmM®u..t.,....,,_, ,_
tlnlcnmhloilhooerwr Jumbl&lt;o,
.,.. lettft lo tiC~ oquare, to
form four ordiRary . wordt.

MJ~IM

..

I.W:I • 1

.

WE .WISH. TO INVITE YOU AND OlllER PROSPECTIVE BUYERS TO PURCH'-SE

And SAVE!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"~

.

'

Buy From The Tuner

.....

THE JUNIOR FAIR LIVESTOCK SALE COMMITTEE WISHES
TO EXPRESS ITS APPRECIATION TO LAst YEAR'S BUYERS
OF TifE
. STEERS, LAMBS, AND HOGS.
'

by Sarah Carsey

.
SUNDAY
OX ROAST festival at Ou·r
Lady of Loretta Chutch, .
Tuppers Plains, Sunday, 12to
featuriftl
.V.nte AnybOdy
10. Games, rides and garden
tractor pulling contest.
COUNTY wide prayer
· IY IIETI'1E CLARK
meeting, Sunday , .2 p.m .
Ea-'-Al..l, .
Middleport Church of Christ
in
Christian Unioh, Peart St.,
· -r:.• ...u..
Middleport ; ,Glen Bissell,
class leader.
CLELAND Reunion,
&gt;
Sunday
at Forest Acres Park;
' ' :H "
on New Lima Road, out of
Rutland; basket lunch at
...,1'... 'I
noon .
....- ...
"' ..
HOMECOMING Sunday, ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;::::::::;::::::;::::::;::::::::::·:·;:;;
~l
Zion Church· of Christ. Basket ·
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
dinner at noon ; afternoon
oli l \ ,,.
POMEROY
- Mr. and
,._
program at 2 p.m. Ray
.........
'
Mrs.
Dan
Mitchell,
the forRussell as guest speaker;
bring speeial
music;
~ "'
W.
announcing
the
merVa.;
Janeare
Wells,
of Millwood,
•
everyone welcome.
birth
of
a
son,
Matthew
TENTH ANNIVERSARY
'-' l l o
of the new building by Ferrell, July 23 at the Holzer
congregation of St. Paui Medical Center: The baby
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, weighed eight pounds, one
·~.
Sunday with former pastor, ounce. Mr. and Mrs . Mitchell
MARRIED 50 YEARS - Mr. and Mrs. Clyde G.
· uU I
"Joseph R. Kraley, speaking. have a three-year-old
Porter, Rt. 218, Gallipolis, will celebrate their golden
Afternoon service, 2 p.m.; 'daughter, .Car a Jean.
The apedalllt suggesla giving children opportunities to
wedding anniversary with an open house at the hOI!le of
'lP I
coffee and dessert, 3 p.m. and Ma lerna! grandparents are
help cbooM their clotbea at an early age. "Of course," she ·~ their dsughter and son-ln~aw, Mr. and Mrs. Bobbie J.
at 4 p.m . presentation of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wells,
adds, "You or another adUlt llhould make the first !!elections of Jones, Rt. 218, Sunday, Aug. 22 from Ito 4p.m. They were
bicentennial musical, "I Love Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and the
lll,veral equally satllfactoq pnnent.s. Then the child can
married Aug. 19, 1926 In Dayton •. an? are the parents of
. America" by Ch~rch of paternal grandparents are
the final ebplce." ·
·
two dsughters, Elrna Jean, who d1ed minfancy, and Mary
Christ Choir directed by Mr.' and Mrs. Floyd Mitchell,
C&lt;!Mlder children's needs as well as their likes. Some Louise Jones. They have three grandchildren , Tanya,
New Haven, W. Va. Harvey
Debbie Ger Jach.
clotlhe11 m1llt give protection and warmth; and others need to J~e and Brent Jones. All relatives and friends are
Hickman of Birch River, W.
MONDAY
llle -t:oot They llhould allow for growth and activity, and should
mv1ted.
Va. is a paternal greatREVIVAL
at the 11/ew grandfather.
be easy to launder and require very Uttle special care. SelfHaven First Church of God
~~;.~~;~~~:~c~hlldren to develop initiative and selfbeginning Monday through dessert and drinks · will be
Aug. 22, 7:30 nightly. The
h d b lh h 1
riffith of Ritiman . furnis e
y . e os ess .
Rev.
Joe
G
achool, sleeping and dress-up. They need clothes lor
.committee·. In the event of
will he the guest speaker. rain, the meeting will he at
ldllfer·ent &amp;e880118, too.
.L
Special singing each evening. the home of Mrs. Alwilda
P1an carefully before you choose or buy clothing, urges
DeY~J. Plannl!lg is a aessential to obtain a satisfactorY and
Public invited.
Werner, Middleport.
l~=~~w;:ar~drobe for a chlld as It ill for an adult. The type
MIDDLEPORT Business
TUESDAY
Ia
garmenta In the child's wardrobe wl1l depend on . POMEROY - The families Yo~n g,allofAibany; Mr. and and Professional Women's
FRIENDLY
Circle, Trinity
care facilities, and the child's health, age, and of the late Thomas Gilkey Mrs. William Young, Shade;
M
d
Church
,
Tuesday,
7:30 p.m.
children grow rapidly, keep the number of held their sixth an nu al Mrs. Richard Kerns, Mr . and Club, 6;30 p.m. on ay , at the church . Mrs. Elizabeth
at the Route 33
in use at one time to a minimum. Coordinated reunion July 25 at the Mrs. Garold Gilkey , Cindy picnic
Roadside Park:· Hamburger Fick to have the program.
·
Gilkey,
Tanuny
Gilkey,
all
of
that can be worn in different combinations give roadside park on Route 33
SOUTHERN Local band
Athens; Jas on Hanning, fry and wiener roast will .be
. involve few clothes.
south .
held
with
members·
to
take
boosters
Tuesday' 8 p.m.
the child's clothes you now have befor planning
Abasket dinner was served Nelsonville.
food
enough
for
themselves
following
practice.
Everyone ·
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
selections;
.
and music ·provided by Guy
and
their
fam
ilies,
The
urged
to
attend
.
...:ooea the child like the garments?
Thoma, Junior Wlblin , Penny Sargent, VirgiL Gilkey, The
- Are other chUdren wearing similar clothes?
Wiblin , Ronald Wibl ~n. Plains; Mr: and Mrs. Jordie
-Which colors do!l8 he enjoy wearing?
Kermit Gilkey and Mike Varner and girls, Duncan
Falls; Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth
-What styles are moet becoming?
Williams.
Gilkey
and son, Mrs. Edna
-Does he need new clOthes now?
Families attending were:
-Can some be repaired or remodeled to give added Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wibli n Grimm, Tina Grimm, all of
and family , New Holland ; New Haven, W. Va .; Mike '
-Which fabrics are moat satisfactory? Did the ll'lmming Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Gilkey Williams, Middleport; Mr.
New-town dilemmas fade
as well as the garment?
alter a WELCOME WAGON call.
and family , Darwin; Mr. and and Mrs. Roger Gilkey and
As your Hostess, it's my job to help you make the
-Does quaUtyorquantitygive ''more" for the money'
Mrs. Frank Gilkey and · family, Eas t Gates; Gary
most
ot your new neiattborhood. Our shoppine areas.
Ca
rsey,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
- Which characteristics woulc! you !Ike to have in the new family, Malta; Mr. and Mrs.
Community
opporlunilies. Special attractions. Lots of facts
C
la
rence
Carsey,
Mr.
and
garments you are Shopptnc for?
Glen Stanley, Mr. and Mrs.
to save you l1mt and money.
·
Mrs.
Joe
Judson
and
boys,
all
Lyman Stanley, Darrell
~us a basket of &amp;ifts lor your family .
•.....
of Malta; Mr. and Mrs. Guy
I'll be llsttnln&amp; tor your 'all.
Young, Brenda Young, Haley
~

degree

'

aunt, Sissy. Letart, W. va., and Mrs. Gary FreeJJU~n,
and a swimn11ng party at the Brian, Gary, Michael and
home of his aunt and uncle, Dell1na Lyn.
Mrs. Sharon Klncald and
Mr. and Mrs. Joey Roush,
·Michael,
grandmother Mrs.
New Haven . .
Christine
Freeman and
Those enjoymg the event
, were Mr. and Mrs. Joey Dearie, grandparenllt, Mr.
::::::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;:;::::::~:::::::;:::;::-:-:::-:-;·:·::::::::::::::;
Roush, Mike and Mark, Terry and Mrs. William Rousll,
Bro.fn, Sheila ()llJlnger, Mr. Chris Grindley, Mrs. Eleanor
BRIDAL POLICY
Herly Roush, Michelle and Roush and Terri. ;lending a
Wediung and eala&amp;enteal
Cheryl,
Mr. Harry Roush, gift was Mrs. Grace
ootices f 0r the 91ndsy '11mea
Gloeekner of Pomeroy.
Sentinel must he in our budl Marla and Kristin, and Mr .
by 12 noon on the Thunday
preceding publication.
Information lhiY be turned In
or · mailed lo lbe GaiUpolla
'Dally TrlbiDle or Pomeroy
Dally Sentinel. Engagement
and wedding fol'tllll are also
BEST WAY TO BUY!
available on request.
MINERSVILlE - Brian
Keith Freeman, Minersville,
celebrated his eighth birth·
day on August 11, with a
cookout at the ·home of his

.1,11! \

meJ:"ry..go.ro~nd .

We also visited the fire
department. We presented
the end of school program for
parents and each chi ld
re ceived a pre,school
diploma.
CHILDREN of the Community Nursery School in Galllpolis visited the bakery on the
We also attended an end of
last
day
of school last year. It 'Usoon be time for !dtoOito start again.
.
school cookout at the Bob
GALLIPOLIS - John
Evans F'arms.
Thomas Broyles, older son of
For you people who do not
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
kn owabout our program here
Broyles, was among 5,300
is a lillie information. Our
gradua~ of the Ohio Slate
program is broken down into
University Friday, June 11.
two classes. Morning class
On_ the previous evening,
for 4-year-olds is Monday
Broyles received his docthrough Friday, 9-11 :30 a.m.
torate hood in special
These children are inceremonies reserved for
troduced to a more strucgraduates of the Ohio Stale
tured type program getting
College of Medicine .
problems encountered in the them use to the idea before
He is a 1964 graduate of accomplishment of his duties. they attend kindergarten.
GaUia ,Academy High School
Toni has one sister, Mrs. They also have ''lots" of
and a United Stales Air Force Gilbert 1Mona
Jean ) . ;,free " play and learning
veteran. He entered the Air Hamilton of Jamestown, and time.
Force Get. 12• 1965 and has five brothers, Jim , an Air
The afternoon class of 3
heen stal.ionect in Japan and Force veteran and supervisor yea r-olds is Monday, WedVietnam. He attained the · of Banquet .Foods in nesday and Friday from
rank o( sergeant and Wellston ; Mike, lealfma n at 12:45-2 :45. The children are
·distinguished himself by Federal Mogul Corp.; Bill, getting the social adjusUOenl
meritorious service as an automotive pa rts manager at of being .away from their
aerospace operations Sears; Roger, in transport parenls. and lea rning to
specialist while on duty at service at HMC; and Charles share. They also just have
Phan Rang Air Base, who recently enlisted in the lots of fun with each other.
Republic of Vletllarn from . Marine Corps. Dr. Broyles is
If you would like . more
Aug. I, 1967 to June I, 1968. married to the former Marv inf orma liOn about our
D~ring this period, Sgt. · Ann Deva 41t and they are program, you may call Sue
Broyles ' outstanding the parents of one daughter, Moulton at 44&amp;-9655. There
A TRIP to the Gallipolis City Fire department was enjoyed by children of the
professional skill and Lisa Ann . He has begun his are a few openings in the Cornmumty Nur~&gt;Cry School last May. The school is preparing now for its 197&amp;-7'/ year.
initiative
aided
im- three year residency at MI. afternoon class.
measurably in identifying · Carmel Hospil&lt;ll in Colum- · See you .Sept. 7,
and solving numerous bus.

Sarah~

Homemakers'
Circle

Store Hours

8 A.M.· tO P.M.

Social Brian Freeman celebrates birthday ·
Calendar

ASSORTED
COlORS

.r..:..~u

WANTED .COLORS

,...._..,

$660 .

$391

REG. '9.99

REG. 14.97

Nylon .with Suede
Toe Cap

MEN'S

AND
BOYS'

•

�I- 1be Slmday rtm.-llendnel, ~, Aug. '15,19?6

Community Nursery School
ready to start new ye~r
By BARBARA MOORE .
GALLIPOLIS - Almost
time again for school bells to
ring aixl lllat can mean a
great experience at preschool or nursery school for
your three and four-year-old.
We at the Community

Nursery School located at the
First Presby~rian Church
would like to say welcome
back to all our returning
children from last year and a
great big hello to all those
new ones coming to us for the
first time.

Broyles
•
recetves

WELL'S :

As most of you know we try

Mon .-Sat.
.10 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday

to report on the activities of
our children once each
month, but things got pretty
hectic the month of May, so
now instead of a lot of words
we have pictures of
some of ·the things we did in
May. We visited the park for
ice cream and Milstead
Bakery wl1ere each child
purchased his or her favorite

Prices EffectiwJ
Thru Auaust 21st

. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

· cookie . We visited " big lt

school, tried out sitting on one
of those little buses, and had a
turn on lhe

Galliit Diary.

-

.

'

...

146-2312
GALUPOIJS- Rev. Tim Heatoo, associate pa9Wr of the
Grice United Methodist Oturdt bere, is writing and directing
a musical to be performed It fOlD" towns along the Ohio River
tile latter put of thilllllllllh. EatiUed "Good News '76," the
licellteanlal musical wiD trace the history of the Methodist
()lurch and the United Statel.
'lliE PAGEANT openl in Marietta, Aug. 29 at 8 p.m. The
otber performances, aD at 8, are scheduled at Hockingport,
Aug. 30; Porueroy, Aug. 31 and G~llipolis, Sept. 1. The
II08I'IJII II being t!pOIIIOftd by the Athens District of the
United Metbodllt Cl'llrcb, and the stage will be the
~. ~. Open to the public without charge,.
lbe ttbow wiD include everything from traditional gospel songs
to rock. A ''Circuit rider" wiD provide historical narration.

ANomER CULTURAL JN'Oil'am coming to Gallipolis is a
eerill of poetry readlnp and public discussions to be held at
tlleGaDlaCollltyDIItrlctUbrary. Madepo88ible by a grant to
Mlrletta Co1Je8e frcm the Ohio Committee lor Public
Procraml in the Humanities, the II'OJect wiD use selected
American Poetry u a Q18ans to discu.u public policy lsaues. To
JUri lhll faD, the aeries wiD alao be conducted in Wellston,
Crdetllle, Nelaonvllle, Ot1lllcothe, Portsmouth, Pomeroy,
Ironton, Waver~ and McAI'tbur.
· · 11IE SENIOR CITIZENS of Ga!Ua County are an

-aellc and fun group of people. The Olde Tyme Chorus and

JQ!dMp Band, directed by charming Ethel Robinson, always
pao•ldlw 1111 entertaining pi'O(II'am. At Thursday evening's
potluck 111111 nardl preaentatlon at the Senior Citizens Center,
IQIIII U.W, memben of the chorus dsnced the_Charleston and

tile Hawlllan bull to spice up their selections of popular
mwdc. lnvltad to lbe Oblo Stale Fair, the chorus will certainly
be a dellghlful aUractilll. It Ia a shame their appearance at the
Ollila County JqniGr Fair wu cancelled due to the rainy
~.I'm sure they !rOIIid bave been !feU received.

BUYERS Wlll .RECEIVE NEWSPAPER COVERAGE, BE LISTED IN lllE 1977 FAIR CATALOG AND
RECEIVE ABANNER OR PLACARD TO HANG IN lliEIR HOME OR PLACE OF BUSINESS.

pt)YER

No. TIMES
BOUGHT

Jones Boys
Wesley Buehl
Pomeroy National Bank
French City Meats
Production Credit Assn .
Ray Riggs Used Cars
West Virginia Whole
Hog Sausage
Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.
Carter &amp; Evans Const.
Boggs Sales &amp; Service
Vinton County Bank
at Wilkesville
Racine Home National
Bank
Citizens National Bank
Oakley Collins
Carroll Norris Dodge
Five Points Grill
Dill mond Stone (Albany l
Marion' Riggs Ford

7

3
•5
3
3
5

1
7
1

1
2'
6
4
1
I
2
2
3

TOTAL
MONEY

BUYER

No . TIMES
BOUGHT

TOTAL
MONEY

1
1
1
1
1

71.25
97.75
154.70
738.40
. 633.15
667.95
530.10
501.60
567.15
533;00
674.10
603.90
507.50
558.00
426.65
611 .85
564.00
1,051.30
. 67.10
49.50
110.50

Ed Hupp Hog Farm
$4,204.40
Gaul's
Market .
473.55
Pickens
2.810.55
Elberfelds Dept. Store·
817.00
Run Flour Mill
Sugar
904.00''
577.45 Southeastern Equip. Co.
Gordon Page Chevrolet
163.30 Full on· Thompson
Dr. R. R. Pickens
Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharm.
3,057.25
678.50 Racine Food Markel
401.10 Larry l.audermilt
Modern Supply
701 .70 Veterans Memorial Hosp.
John Hancock Ins.
1,952.00 Landmark
1.335.85 Leland and Roy Parker.
103.50 Royal Oak Park
79.20 Holter's Holsteins
142.55 Carnahan Auct. Service
575.00 Chester Agrico
729.25

'

I

1
1

1
1
1
1
1
I
1
2
I
3
1
1
1

BUILDING FUND

Pomeroy National Bank
Royal Oak Pt~rk
French City Meats
Holter's Holstti!IS
Rt~clne Home Nt~tiona .l Bank
carnt~han Auction Service
Five Points Grill
Landmark
Chester Agrico

Carter &amp; Evans Construction
Boggs Sales and Service
Ray Riggs Used Cars
Farmers Bank and Savings Company
Carroll Norris Dodge
Diamond Stone Company
Citizens National Bank
Gaul'~ Mark.e t
Pickens Farm

..

Do you know why more &amp; more people are
buying from Ward's Keyboard?

:JII~Udrenne!c~o~:forvariousoccaslons -

1r7 C

Royal Oak Farm

4-H CLUBS

·'

CELERY•••
. CLORO.X
gal.

49~

,,

.....

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
8-21-7&amp;

"''&amp;'•••"

ELF

CIDER VINEGAR
. gal.

99~

KEYBOARD

made simple.

-Coming
Events

Potluck
~
served I

;.,~·

~~

Thgma and family,

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Si: Citizens
Calendar ·

RuU~nd;

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wiblin
Jr ., Penny Wiblin , of
Glouster ; Robert Seeber,
Burr Oak .

GALLIPOLIS
The
POMEROY
Meigs
Women of the Church of God,
Senior
Citizens
Center
ac109 Garfield Ave., held their
prayer retrea t meeting at the tivities located at the
hpme of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pomeroy Junior High School
ROdgers on Route 160 . isopen9a .m.-4p.m., Monday ·
through Friday.
recenUy .
Monday, Aug 16 - Cards
A potluck dinner wa s
and
Games ; Square Dance,
served at 7 p.m. on the back
12:30-3
p.Ol.
lawn of the Rodgers home.
Tuesday, . Aug. 17 Grace was given by Pearl
Physical
Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
Elliott.
~
After the dinner a program Chorus 12 :15-2 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 1a was given entitled "HOPE"
Cards,-10-11
:30 a.m.; Games,
with Jean Saunders in
charge. Opening song . was
"We Have A Hope." Several .,p~~;icJ·~: August 19 women read scriptures Senior Citizens Day at Fair.
Friday, Aug. 20 - Arl
concerning ''Hope.''
Carrico, and af·
Penny Haner played a tape . Class, 10-11 :30 a.m. ; Horspeaker~ Rev. Glenn . on recorder, a sermon from seshoes,I0:30a .m.; Bowling,
"""'""". SpeCial singers one of the meetings at the 1-3 p.m.
BLUE DENIM
Senior Citizens Nutrition
thro•ilgll~ut the day. Basket Anderson
Indiana Innoon. Pastor Jesse ternationai Camp Meeting, Program, 11:30 a.rn.-12:30OR NAVY
m••••· lnv1tes ·the public. by Rev . Benjamin Reed , p.m. Mo~day through Friday.
Monday - Ham salad,
RISON reunion from Los Angeles, CaUl.
baked potato, cole slaw with
~~~~~~a~t it~he~~D~e'!'~aware
In closing
.Ohio. formed
a circle, the
each women
holding tomato wedge , prune whip,
of the asmallcandle ,lightedfrom a bread, butler, milk .
Tuesday - Meatballs in
and Rosetta (Chick) larger candle in the center of
gravy,
mashed potatoes,
IT•••tor family Sunday on the circle. Each gave a
succotash
(com and beans ),
IFOI•Ufia:aUon Hlll. All friends sentence prayer. Celestine
relaUves invited.
North sang a solo, "Thro~gh ca nn ed peaches , bread,
ABRAHAM and Eliza Jones It All". The following women buller , milk.
Wednesday
Bakes
Th()lllas reunion Sunday at were pre~&gt;Cnt: ·Jerri Lynn
Tyn Rhos Church. Basket Betta, Nina Burks, • Pearl spaghetti, tossed salad,
dinner at noon.
Elliott; Penny Hanger , banana slices in orange juice,
ANNUAL MITCHELL Vergie Houck , Celestine two oatmeal-raisin cookies,
reupion at Vinton civic park, North, Drema Parrish, Jean hot butter¢ Italian bread.
bai!Jlet lunch at noon. Saunders, Bertina Smeltzer,
Thursday - Sliced turkeyRelatives and friends Patty White, Jenny Yost, and iCranberry relish, candied
welcome.
Lu Wanda and Sam Rodgers. sweet potatoes, buttered
Exciting wedges
JOYFUL ECHOES will sing The meeting was dismissed green beans, mixed fruit cup,
roll, butler, milk.
at the Vinton Baptist 'church by Jean Saunders.
Friday - Beef patty,
Sunday, 7:30p.m. Everyone
macaroni
salad, creamed,
weli:ome.
ste~ed tomatoes, peanut
crepe soles.
B·AILEY reunion, through Friday, 9·11 a. m. butter cake with carmel
de!M:endants of the late each day. Registration , 7:30
Wllllam R. and Sadl~ Bailey a.m. at the front entrance of icing
Coffee,
lea butter,
and buttermilk
, bread,
milk.
and relaUves, Sunday, f!OOn , Gallia Academy. Fee: $5 for served daily.
.at :!!ln'lne Park in Racine. the entire week. For in- · Just a reminder!!! Starting t--.AII,j
Batltet dinner. ·
Monday, you must have your
formation call 446-4372.
reservation
in by noon the
•~, MONDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Radio
day
before
to receive the
Emergency Associated
~L MEIGS High School
regular
Tille
VII Nutrition
sl!!!lenla interested In trying Citizen learn will meet Mtnu. Ali others will receive
out lor the Meigs High goU Monday , 7:30p. rn. a tits new a light lunch. Reservation
team meet at 10 a. m. Mon- meeting place at corner of slips are available at the
dsji at Pomeroy Golf Course. Second Ave. and Mill Creek center .
Rd. All CBers welcome.
T.-~ clubs and be prepared
to ~In pracUclng that dsy. MERCERVILLE Grange will
host Huntington Grange
"
~MEROY
WOMEN'S Monday, 8 p. rn. Members
BO,!I'llng Assn. meeting, bring sofi drinks. Huntington
MOilday, 7:30 p.m. at Grange in charge of the
Ptiheroy Bowling Lanes.
program.
e
.
Cl;IEERLEADING Camp
TUESDAY
IP!II'IIOI'ed by GAllS varsity KENNETH BLEDSOE of
cheerleaders Monday Letart, W. Va. will be the

'1{f(ipnz~p~

257 JACKSON PIKE
GALI.IPOLIS, OHIO

PH. 446-4372

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 8-21-76

BABY FOOD

8/'1

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 1-21·76

Back To Schoo

OUR

·sPECIAL ·
I

1 rt ')

&lt;I

'·

.

•

les

MOC-TOE LOAFER

$ 66

BLACK OR BROWN

Soft knit fit lining ·
Durable soles and
heels
REG. '2.99
SIZES

5 TO 10

$7'44

REG. '9..99

The newest in style •
with accent lacing on
-durable crepe soles ·

BRAZILIAN TAN

~--~;;":"";':~;;;;;;::;:;--;;:;~;;;;:;;.i;i~i'--i, _ _ _ _ _..,..,..,.

.

ruon

HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 10 a .m.-8 p.m.
El(cept Wednesday, IQ a:m .-6 p.m .

PH. 446-1937

1

l

W/C

p

I

WARD'S

Oetting

SPORTY CANVAS OXFOR

Meigs County Junior Fair Steer, Lamb •d Pi&amp; Sale Committee

•

,

.

PICAN NI'PLI OIIICIIII

111oU., IUr a~rualol
fn4Hilllr ..,,._ AI'PEALIN "

Kawai Pianos, Kohler &amp; Campbell Piuos,
Gulbransen Organs, Guitars &amp; Amps:

..

'•

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
Royal Oak Farm

Qilklay Collins

ANSWER:

~

MYSTERY

Elberfelds Department Store

•'

Gilkey family Rathers
fior reunzon
, at parK. .

...

111n.

STEER

,_,..,•• 1.

CHUCK ROAST•••

QUESTION:

Gerber Strained .

BUYERS OF
DONATED LAMBS

BUYERS WHO
DONATED LAMBS

' [~......,

lB.

--··.

1975 BUYERS AND BUILDING DONORS

..-~

. ,__,lAllA&amp;.

U.S.DA ChOice

lltiS YEAR •.

The sGie 's Friday, August 20, at 7:00P.M. In the Show
•..
Barn at the. Fairgrounds.

cU'lJmM®u..t.,....,,_, ,_
tlnlcnmhloilhooerwr Jumbl&lt;o,
.,.. lettft lo tiC~ oquare, to
form four ordiRary . wordt.

MJ~IM

..

I.W:I • 1

.

WE .WISH. TO INVITE YOU AND OlllER PROSPECTIVE BUYERS TO PURCH'-SE

And SAVE!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"~

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'

Buy From The Tuner

.....

THE JUNIOR FAIR LIVESTOCK SALE COMMITTEE WISHES
TO EXPRESS ITS APPRECIATION TO LAst YEAR'S BUYERS
OF TifE
. STEERS, LAMBS, AND HOGS.
'

by Sarah Carsey

.
SUNDAY
OX ROAST festival at Ou·r
Lady of Loretta Chutch, .
Tuppers Plains, Sunday, 12to
featuriftl
.V.nte AnybOdy
10. Games, rides and garden
tractor pulling contest.
COUNTY wide prayer
· IY IIETI'1E CLARK
meeting, Sunday , .2 p.m .
Ea-'-Al..l, .
Middleport Church of Christ
in
Christian Unioh, Peart St.,
· -r:.• ...u..
Middleport ; ,Glen Bissell,
class leader.
CLELAND Reunion,
&gt;
Sunday
at Forest Acres Park;
' ' :H "
on New Lima Road, out of
Rutland; basket lunch at
...,1'... 'I
noon .
....- ...
"' ..
HOMECOMING Sunday, ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;::::::::;::::::;::::::;::::::::::·:·;:;;
~l
Zion Church· of Christ. Basket ·
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
dinner at noon ; afternoon
oli l \ ,,.
POMEROY
- Mr. and
,._
program at 2 p.m. Ray
.........
'
Mrs.
Dan
Mitchell,
the forRussell as guest speaker;
bring speeial
music;
~ "'
W.
announcing
the
merVa.;
Janeare
Wells,
of Millwood,
•
everyone welcome.
birth
of
a
son,
Matthew
TENTH ANNIVERSARY
'-' l l o
of the new building by Ferrell, July 23 at the Holzer
congregation of St. Paui Medical Center: The baby
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, weighed eight pounds, one
·~.
Sunday with former pastor, ounce. Mr. and Mrs . Mitchell
MARRIED 50 YEARS - Mr. and Mrs. Clyde G.
· uU I
"Joseph R. Kraley, speaking. have a three-year-old
Porter, Rt. 218, Gallipolis, will celebrate their golden
Afternoon service, 2 p.m.; 'daughter, .Car a Jean.
The apedalllt suggesla giving children opportunities to
wedding anniversary with an open house at the hOI!le of
'lP I
coffee and dessert, 3 p.m. and Ma lerna! grandparents are
help cbooM their clotbea at an early age. "Of course," she ·~ their dsughter and son-ln~aw, Mr. and Mrs. Bobbie J.
at 4 p.m . presentation of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wells,
adds, "You or another adUlt llhould make the first !!elections of Jones, Rt. 218, Sunday, Aug. 22 from Ito 4p.m. They were
bicentennial musical, "I Love Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and the
lll,veral equally satllfactoq pnnent.s. Then the child can
married Aug. 19, 1926 In Dayton •. an? are the parents of
. America" by Ch~rch of paternal grandparents are
the final ebplce." ·
·
two dsughters, Elrna Jean, who d1ed minfancy, and Mary
Christ Choir directed by Mr.' and Mrs. Floyd Mitchell,
C&lt;!Mlder children's needs as well as their likes. Some Louise Jones. They have three grandchildren , Tanya,
New Haven, W. Va. Harvey
Debbie Ger Jach.
clotlhe11 m1llt give protection and warmth; and others need to J~e and Brent Jones. All relatives and friends are
Hickman of Birch River, W.
MONDAY
llle -t:oot They llhould allow for growth and activity, and should
mv1ted.
Va. is a paternal greatREVIVAL
at the 11/ew grandfather.
be easy to launder and require very Uttle special care. SelfHaven First Church of God
~~;.~~;~~~:~c~hlldren to develop initiative and selfbeginning Monday through dessert and drinks · will be
Aug. 22, 7:30 nightly. The
h d b lh h 1
riffith of Ritiman . furnis e
y . e os ess .
Rev.
Joe
G
achool, sleeping and dress-up. They need clothes lor
.committee·. In the event of
will he the guest speaker. rain, the meeting will he at
ldllfer·ent &amp;e880118, too.
.L
Special singing each evening. the home of Mrs. Alwilda
P1an carefully before you choose or buy clothing, urges
DeY~J. Plannl!lg is a aessential to obtain a satisfactorY and
Public invited.
Werner, Middleport.
l~=~~w;:ar~drobe for a chlld as It ill for an adult. The type
MIDDLEPORT Business
TUESDAY
Ia
garmenta In the child's wardrobe wl1l depend on . POMEROY - The families Yo~n g,allofAibany; Mr. and and Professional Women's
FRIENDLY
Circle, Trinity
care facilities, and the child's health, age, and of the late Thomas Gilkey Mrs. William Young, Shade;
M
d
Church
,
Tuesday,
7:30 p.m.
children grow rapidly, keep the number of held their sixth an nu al Mrs. Richard Kerns, Mr . and Club, 6;30 p.m. on ay , at the church . Mrs. Elizabeth
at the Route 33
in use at one time to a minimum. Coordinated reunion July 25 at the Mrs. Garold Gilkey , Cindy picnic
Roadside Park:· Hamburger Fick to have the program.
·
Gilkey,
Tanuny
Gilkey,
all
of
that can be worn in different combinations give roadside park on Route 33
SOUTHERN Local band
Athens; Jas on Hanning, fry and wiener roast will .be
. involve few clothes.
south .
held
with
members·
to
take
boosters
Tuesday' 8 p.m.
the child's clothes you now have befor planning
Abasket dinner was served Nelsonville.
food
enough
for
themselves
following
practice.
Everyone ·
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
selections;
.
and music ·provided by Guy
and
their
fam
ilies,
The
urged
to
attend
.
...:ooea the child like the garments?
Thoma, Junior Wlblin , Penny Sargent, VirgiL Gilkey, The
- Are other chUdren wearing similar clothes?
Wiblin , Ronald Wibl ~n. Plains; Mr: and Mrs. Jordie
-Which colors do!l8 he enjoy wearing?
Kermit Gilkey and Mike Varner and girls, Duncan
Falls; Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth
-What styles are moet becoming?
Williams.
Gilkey
and son, Mrs. Edna
-Does he need new clOthes now?
Families attending were:
-Can some be repaired or remodeled to give added Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wibli n Grimm, Tina Grimm, all of
and family , New Holland ; New Haven, W. Va .; Mike '
-Which fabrics are moat satisfactory? Did the ll'lmming Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Gilkey Williams, Middleport; Mr.
New-town dilemmas fade
as well as the garment?
alter a WELCOME WAGON call.
and family , Darwin; Mr. and and Mrs. Roger Gilkey and
As your Hostess, it's my job to help you make the
-Does quaUtyorquantitygive ''more" for the money'
Mrs. Frank Gilkey and · family, Eas t Gates; Gary
most
ot your new neiattborhood. Our shoppine areas.
Ca
rsey,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
- Which characteristics woulc! you !Ike to have in the new family, Malta; Mr. and Mrs.
Community
opporlunilies. Special attractions. Lots of facts
C
la
rence
Carsey,
Mr.
and
garments you are Shopptnc for?
Glen Stanley, Mr. and Mrs.
to save you l1mt and money.
·
Mrs.
Joe
Judson
and
boys,
all
Lyman Stanley, Darrell
~us a basket of &amp;ifts lor your family .
•.....
of Malta; Mr. and Mrs. Guy
I'll be llsttnln&amp; tor your 'all.
Young, Brenda Young, Haley
~

degree

'

aunt, Sissy. Letart, W. va., and Mrs. Gary FreeJJU~n,
and a swimn11ng party at the Brian, Gary, Michael and
home of his aunt and uncle, Dell1na Lyn.
Mrs. Sharon Klncald and
Mr. and Mrs. Joey Roush,
·Michael,
grandmother Mrs.
New Haven . .
Christine
Freeman and
Those enjoymg the event
, were Mr. and Mrs. Joey Dearie, grandparenllt, Mr.
::::::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;:;::::::~:::::::;:::;::-:-:::-:-;·:·::::::::::::::;
Roush, Mike and Mark, Terry and Mrs. William Rousll,
Bro.fn, Sheila ()llJlnger, Mr. Chris Grindley, Mrs. Eleanor
BRIDAL POLICY
Herly Roush, Michelle and Roush and Terri. ;lending a
Wediung and eala&amp;enteal
Cheryl,
Mr. Harry Roush, gift was Mrs. Grace
ootices f 0r the 91ndsy '11mea
Gloeekner of Pomeroy.
Sentinel must he in our budl Marla and Kristin, and Mr .
by 12 noon on the Thunday
preceding publication.
Information lhiY be turned In
or · mailed lo lbe GaiUpolla
'Dally TrlbiDle or Pomeroy
Dally Sentinel. Engagement
and wedding fol'tllll are also
BEST WAY TO BUY!
available on request.
MINERSVILlE - Brian
Keith Freeman, Minersville,
celebrated his eighth birth·
day on August 11, with a
cookout at the ·home of his

.1,11! \

meJ:"ry..go.ro~nd .

We also visited the fire
department. We presented
the end of school program for
parents and each chi ld
re ceived a pre,school
diploma.
CHILDREN of the Community Nursery School in Galllpolis visited the bakery on the
We also attended an end of
last
day
of school last year. It 'Usoon be time for !dtoOito start again.
.
school cookout at the Bob
GALLIPOLIS - John
Evans F'arms.
Thomas Broyles, older son of
For you people who do not
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
kn owabout our program here
Broyles, was among 5,300
is a lillie information. Our
gradua~ of the Ohio Slate
program is broken down into
University Friday, June 11.
two classes. Morning class
On_ the previous evening,
for 4-year-olds is Monday
Broyles received his docthrough Friday, 9-11 :30 a.m.
torate hood in special
These children are inceremonies reserved for
troduced to a more strucgraduates of the Ohio Stale
tured type program getting
College of Medicine .
problems encountered in the them use to the idea before
He is a 1964 graduate of accomplishment of his duties. they attend kindergarten.
GaUia ,Academy High School
Toni has one sister, Mrs. They also have ''lots" of
and a United Stales Air Force Gilbert 1Mona
Jean ) . ;,free " play and learning
veteran. He entered the Air Hamilton of Jamestown, and time.
Force Get. 12• 1965 and has five brothers, Jim , an Air
The afternoon class of 3
heen stal.ionect in Japan and Force veteran and supervisor yea r-olds is Monday, WedVietnam. He attained the · of Banquet .Foods in nesday and Friday from
rank o( sergeant and Wellston ; Mike, lealfma n at 12:45-2 :45. The children are
·distinguished himself by Federal Mogul Corp.; Bill, getting the social adjusUOenl
meritorious service as an automotive pa rts manager at of being .away from their
aerospace operations Sears; Roger, in transport parenls. and lea rning to
specialist while on duty at service at HMC; and Charles share. They also just have
Phan Rang Air Base, who recently enlisted in the lots of fun with each other.
Republic of Vletllarn from . Marine Corps. Dr. Broyles is
If you would like . more
Aug. I, 1967 to June I, 1968. married to the former Marv inf orma liOn about our
D~ring this period, Sgt. · Ann Deva 41t and they are program, you may call Sue
Broyles ' outstanding the parents of one daughter, Moulton at 44&amp;-9655. There
A TRIP to the Gallipolis City Fire department was enjoyed by children of the
professional skill and Lisa Ann . He has begun his are a few openings in the Cornmumty Nur~&gt;Cry School last May. The school is preparing now for its 197&amp;-7'/ year.
initiative
aided
im- three year residency at MI. afternoon class.
measurably in identifying · Carmel Hospil&lt;ll in Colum- · See you .Sept. 7,
and solving numerous bus.

Sarah~

Homemakers'
Circle

Store Hours

8 A.M.· tO P.M.

Social Brian Freeman celebrates birthday ·
Calendar

ASSORTED
COlORS

.r..:..~u

WANTED .COLORS

,...._..,

$660 .

$391

REG. '9.99

REG. 14.97

Nylon .with Suede
Toe Cap

MEN'S

AND
BOYS'

•

�I

10-'dlt.....,...... ••l,8lmclaJ,Aai,JJ.lm

This is Country Livin'

.-School personnel at_
Southern are hired

.,

Gallipolis had its first
rail service in the 1880s

· and it's gettin' better

GALLIPOLIS
The and State St. where a car
Pollee Dept. driven by Bernadine L.
By BOYD RUTH
reported three •cctdents Steinebrunnlr, 52, GaWpolla
Dlllrlec Co-.rvalleallt
Friday, one a hiwnd.run.
ran a red llgbt and atruck
Thefirsl
wuat5:19p.m,
at
another
driven by~
'Substitute bus drivers hlrtd superinten dent ; Jane
' RACINE - Teachers,'
POMEROY - 'lbeie da;Ys rural America II where It's at.
the
intersection
of
Third
Ave.
·
0.
Gahyen
Jr. 42, Gaht,.U..
Ac.- thenatloo, rurllsreaa and to111111 are belq revived.
aubllltule etachers, aub· were Harold Circle, Earl Wagner, clerk and Robert
Stelnebrunner
w.. c:IIMI lor
.11111111 ~drivers, cooka and Croaa, Gordon Proffitt, and Beegle, principal at Racine
'nMI renewed growth and Vigor of fUI'III America Lt one of the
disobeyinl
ari
automatic
eu~todlans were hired when
11101t dynamic populatkn ReWI stmes today. During the first
Don Smith; substitute cooka, Elementary.
traffic
ligna!.
She
wu taken
111e Southern Local Board of Ruth Smlth, Linda Grindley,
fourye&amp;ll'lofthis decade, UmWion more people moved to the
w the Holzer Medical eerlter
Educallon met Thursday June Ashley, and Cressa
nonmetropolltan areu than moved away !ram them.
for
treatment of claimed
The
enrolhnent
In
aartcultural
colleges
Lt
up.
Record
.
Jillhl.
•
Shain; subslltute CUIIodlanS,
Injuries.
Mary Lou Felts was hlrtd Daniel Shane, and Everett
numbers of students are takinl vocatlonalllflculture courses
The secOnd accident OC·
u flrllt and second grH.e Connolly.
In high acboobi. Twice u IIIIIIY college graduates are now
·
cured
at 8:10 p.m . at 103
returninl
to
the
!ann
as
did
10
Ytltl
ago
reacher at Por!land; Ann
The board adopted a·
Bastian!
Dr. when a car
.
Rural America Is enJoying thla vigor·, storesand fanns are
Shroy u ~ educaUon suspension and expulsion
drlv~n
by
Brent L, Rodgers
expandJnc.lnWstry II movlnl to rural areas. And, mllllons of
GALLIPOLIS - The Galli&amp;
reacher at tile blab IChool and pollcy; a salary schedule for
18,
GaUtpolls
backed Into the
people tripped In the city dream about moving to the country.' County Sheriff 's Dept.
Barblra Baer ... year boOk teachers wl th a baae (lljy of
and Echo lldv1lor.
Melp County II a prime ewnple of what's happenlnl! to Saturday reported a breaking. path of a car tltlven by
· oR. CLARKE
GA LLIPOLIS - · Four
f/,900 and a salary liChedule
rural Amwlca. From a po]llllat!on of 32,3211ln 111110, down to and entering at the Elena J. Charles E. Lee 41, GaW~
Substitule leachel'll hired for non~tlfled employes. persons were injured In a
19,600 In 18'11, there were more people going than coming to Beam residence on Rl. 3 Rodgen was cited lor W.
were Allee Brauer, Jennifer
The following bids were traffic accident at 4 p.m.
·
Meigs.
But tbe last five years have shown an Increase of during daytime on Aug . 13. proper backing.
Butcher, John Coffman, Anna accepted coal, Jeffers Coal Friday on Roush Rd., west of
0 ~ke
The
third
mishap
came
at
almost1,0001*JP)e.
That's
a
rapid
five
per
cent
again
I
And
the
Rice, Wavle Circle, Francea Co.; !Ires, Meigs Tire Center ; UtUe Kyger Rd .
Entry was gained by for·
10:34
p.m.
in
front
of
'654
future
outlook
allows
at
least
22,000
by
INS.
Foater, GriCe Hawley, Farte bus supplies, Texaco Inc.;
cing open a baek door. Stolen
The Gallia·Melgs Post
Time wu, when rural folks were Isolated, out of touch, nQI were home canning goOds. Third Ave. when a parked car
Kennedy,
Vlnaa
Lee
heali1J8 oil, City Ice and Fuel ; State Highway Pairol sa,id
quite "with II." Today, however, Improved transportation, . An allAlmpted breaking and belongill8 to Mary E. Harris
Margaret Lewli, Rober~ baked goods, Betsy Ross; and Allan D. Clark, 17, Scottown,
communlcatluls, and other mOdern conveniences . have entering occured sometime of GaUipolls wss struck by a
Malci!R, Charles McMan111, dairy, Valley Bell.
lost control of his car which 'WI
ellm!nated !wever the Image of a backwai'd rural America. during the night of Aug. 12 at grey Chevrolet. Mler the .
Dorotha Petrel; Herbert . Attending were Jack ran off the hig'hway striking
Machineund technology have replaced muscle, ox, mule, the Jumbo Carry Out in Rio collision the driver of the
GALUPOLIS - Dr. Robert
Parker, Gayle Price, Carolyn Bostick, president; Robert · an embankment and tree:.
D.
Thomas
and
Dr.
W
illiam
and
horse poww on the fann. Modem equipment, developed Grande. Glass from a back Chevrolet fled the scene of
SmUll, · Rut!) Tucker, Pearl sayre, Gary Evans, Roger
Clark
and
three
B.
Thomas
Saturday
an·
by
agricultural
scientists, can do as much work In one hour as window was broken out, but the acch!ent. Two p&amp;aseiJ81l'S
Williams, BW Young lind Adams, Dallas HW, board passengers, L!&gt;ri Foster ,. 13.
nounced
the
as5ocia
tion
of
1
our
grandparents
could do In a week.
'
Betty Hutchllon.
en try was prevented ~y iron in the parked care wti'e
members; Bobby Ord, Gallipolis ; John Spencer, 12,
Dr.
Gary
L.
Clarke
w
ilh
~eir
Machines
now
harvest
our
wheat,
oats,
cllrUs,
tomatoes,
uninjured.
and Craig Woyan, 14, both of
bars In the window frame.
. cherries, grapea, blueberries, and even cucumbers .
Seminole, Fla ., all com· practice of optometry.
Dr. Clarke is the son of Mr. Contalnerizedalr Vlllll move produce from the !ann, over land,
plalned of minor injuries.
and
Mrs. Charles E. Clarke. sea and , without~ unloadlnc and repacking
There was mnderate damage
to Clark's vehicle . No Jr., of 1914 MaxweU Ave., along the way, to overseas markets.
Point Pleasant.
• And modem ·agricultural research has lilcreaaed
charges were filed.
He
was
gradualtd
from
production
per ICre beyond George Waahlngton's wildest
Two drivers were ci ted to
Kyger
Creek
high
School
in
dreama.
Municipal Court for failure to
The modest potato, for Instance, averaged only about 80
slop within the assured clear 1910, th en attended West
V
irginia
University
for
prebushel
per acretn the late 1800's. Production slowly crept up to
distance foUowing rear end
optnmelry
requirements.
He
1!1
bushel
per acre. Betweo:n1910 and 1920, however, USDA
accidents at 3:17 p.m.
Prospective Grand and
, PETIT Jl.(RORS
received
the
degree
or
Doctor
sclentllts
began
to study potato treedlng.It took until the late
Petit Jurors for the Sep- Peggy R. Anderson, Mason; Friday , three tenths of a mile of OptOmetry from lhe Ohio 1940'sforthisreaell'Cht,opayoff - yieldsjumpedtonearly300
tember lerin of Mason County Margaret Athey, New Haven; east of Rt. 588.
·
·
· •
The patrol said an au to Sta ~ University College of bushela per acre.
Circuit Court were aelected sadie E. Balles, 2512 JetThe lnunen8e progress In American ~griculture bears
driven by Ronnie C. See, 23, oP tometry last June, winning
Friday In the office of Circuit .feraon Ave., Point Pleasant; Gallipolis,
"the
Bela
Sigma
Kappa
honor
testimCily
to wbat agricultural research can do. This, coupled
was following an
Clerk Howard Sebultz.
Monte H. Baas, 414 Kennedy unknown vehicle and slop- student award .
with the renewed growth of rural America, is one of the mOst
Jury Commlsalonera Ave., Pt. Pleilant; Don K. ped. A car. driven by
He was an officer or Ep· exciting storlea ill .our Bicentennial Year.
Rlcbard Allltin and Jamet Ball, Letart; Sidney E. Bauer, Theodore 0 . Harper , 42, siion Psi Epsilon Professional
Layne .cooducted the drawing Rt., Leon; Karen R. Beattie, Gallipolis, failed to stop and Pra~rni ty of Optometry and
of names.
Rt. 1, Leon; John R. Bechtell, struck the See car in the rear. lhe American Optometric
The Grand Jury Is Henderson; Carl F. Boswell, Harper's · car was struck Student Associ ation. Dr.
'
scheduled to convene on Rt. 3, . Leon; Ardath 0 . from behind by an auto Clark will engage in · the
"
September 71or the flrlJt time Brinker, Letart; . Ollie T. operated by Unda K. Jones, practice of optometry and
POMEROY
Ten Cheshire , $14 a.nd costs,
during the term.
Browntnc, Letart; Gary 20, Oak Hill. There was minor specialize in contact lens
defendants
were
flOOd
and
12 speeding ; Dean A. · Peugh,
litllng
.
.
· Follo"'l'inn ia a list of the Burdette; Letart; Vernon A. damage.
others
forfeited
bonds
in Columbus, $150 and costs,
pruapectlve Grand and Petit Cadle, Leon;
Bernice B.
Meigs
County
Court
Friday
. three days confinement, six
jarors:
Calloway, Hendeuon.
Fined by Judge Robert E. months probation, driving
GIWIDJURORS
PattyJ.Ciark,NewHaven; Services held
.J
Buck
were
Irene
M.
Dill,
while
in
ioxicated
.
ARBUCKLE DISTRICT - Betty J. Cline, MIDI; Otmer
fl
"
'"
Minersville, $15 and costs,
Forfeiting bonds were
Mar1aret Marie ·Lanier, R. Cooke, New Haven ; John for W, E. Brown
AUG.
15TH
THRU
AUG.
30TH
speeding; Harold S. Helli'Y, Rosamond F. Wolfe, Ripley,
Beech Hill.
W. Cullen, Letart; Jean E.
. '
Whitesville, W. Va., $25 and Samir, S. Kamal, MorganCLENDENIN DISTRICT - Davis, Mason; Morgan Flora,
costs, driving without lights ; town, Phillip Sassper,
OiliEN VOUR ORVER
RETURNEV
Vonoa M. OUv~. Hopett.; Southalde; Donald Fol'lhee, MIDDLEPORT - Funeral
GALUPOLIS- The Seni o~ Patricia !f. Goebel, Rl. 2, Huntington, Katherine Gard,
Earl H. McCoy, Hopett.
GaWpolls Ferry ; Mary E. services were held saturday Citizens Center, located at 220 Coolville , $13 and costs, Hopewell, David C. Watson,
JUST I?ICK VOUR FAVORITE
COLoGNE DISTRICI'
Froendt, West .Columbia ; m Columbus for Wayne E. Jackson Pike in lhe CoUnty .gpeeding ; James R. Parker, Zanesville, Jack K. Lemley,
NEGATIVE ANV ORVER VOUR
Mavis E Weaver Rt 1 Harold R. Fry Jr New Brown, 70, who died Thurs- Home Building , is open McArthur; 60 days con- Parkersburg, Jack D. Riley,
,,
FREE
eNLARGEMENT WITH THE
Cottacmlle.
'
' ' !faven; Clyde Gerla~, Jr.• day ~~ Riverside .Methodist Monday through Friday from linement, six months Jackson , Robert E. Ley ,
COUPON ON YOUR fiLM BAG.
COOPER DISTRICT
Letart ; J11111ea W. Gress, Hospital. The president of the 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule probation , $50 and costs, Athens, Michael R. Delcotto,
......., s. w- , ~
L~Urt· 81._. L. Grl•.., 1 Bi&amp;BearStoresCompany, he of acliv\tiea lor lhis week is confinement
suspended, · Athens, and Glen C. Lambert,
'"""
·-·-· - . .
• u••
• wu J)rtCeded In dealh by his as follows:
.
expired operal+lta li.,....... Commerce City, Colo., $27.50
GRAHAM DISTRICT
Letart; Diane Hickel, 'New wife, Ruth, in 1974.
Monday, Aug. 16 · ~ RoyL. Buchanan,ReedsvWe, each, speeding ; Thomas J.
Velma J. Clarke, Rt. I, Haven; A!ln C. Hickman, Survivors include a
PhySical
Fitness, ll :30 a.m.; $150 and costs, three days Hardin , Columbus, $30.50,
Iaart; Mary E. Workman, Mason; · Mary Wilma daughter and son.{n.Jaw, Mr.
2nd Ave.
' 446·1615
Olde
tyme
Chorus, 1-3 p.m. confinement
license speeding; Michael D. Logan,
4Cb Sl., New Haven.
Hlnerman. RFD, Letart.
and Mrs. Stephen Kellough,
Tuesday, Aug. 17 ;_ SuSpended 60 daYs, restricted Knoxville, Tenn., $27 ,50;
HANNAN DISTRICT Edward R. lble, Letart; Columbus· his brother.ffi-law
Quilting
Visiting, 9 a.m . · drivi1J8, driving while in- passing al intersecllon.
Clarlel C. Wray, Aahioo; Janet C. Juniper, 3201 and siste;.ffi.law, Mr. and 3 p.m.and
.. d
; Food Stamp tos:icated; Sammie Plants,
J._ X. Brumfield, Aahtoa. Franklin Ave., Pt Pleasant; Mrs. Paul E. Davts, Mid- screefung, 12:30 p.m.
Middleport, $25 and costs,
LEWIS DISTRICT
Bracy D. Klnnalrll, 3 3307 dleporl; three grandchildren
\11 I
Wednesday, Aug. 18 - , littering; Donald C. Griffin,
lloniJd F. White, 1111 8tb St., Franklin Ave. PI.Pieuant; and several nieces and Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m. ;
••
Parkersburg, $50 and costs,
....
Pulnt Pleasant; W. Rutillell Geneth G. Kreba, P.O.Box II, nephews.
Card Games, Jr3 p.m.
expired operators license;
I
lllhbee, '512 Cbantller Dr., Point Pleasant; Dorothy A.
Thursday, Aug. 19 - Maxine Howard , Rt. 2,
'
'"
Point Pleasant; Ma!'l1yn L. Leport, 2106 Meadowbrook
Council Meeting, 2 p.m.
"'
Albany, $25 and costs ,
Olexa, 108 Main St.. Point Dr., Point Pleasant; VIrgO L.
SISTER LISTED
Friday, Aug. 20 - Art assault; Eugene I. Swartz,
Pleasant.
Lewia, Weat Columbla; Gary RACINE - A sister, Mrs . . Cl$s,l-3p.m.; Soria! Hour, 7
.. ·•.
•'"
~N DISTRICT _ B. Mitchell, New Haven; Azelline Smith, Parkersburg, p.m.
Franc!J L. McCulloch, 72 Herman
M.
Ohlinger,· is a survivor of Ted. R.
Seniors ' Co-op is open
8ardette Add., PolDtPieaaant. Galllpolls Ferry; Homer. Patterson : 68, Racine, who 12:JOrl:30. The Craft Store is
·~
· UNION DISTRICT
Preece, 802 211th, St., Point died Wednesday evening at open for sales at 12:3(),1 :30.
The Senior Nutrition
~lefty E. Adldml, Rt. 3, Leon. Pleasant; Clara M. Priddy, HolEer Medical Center. She.is
THREE RUNS MADE
one
of
five
surviving
sisters
Program
serves meals at 12
· WAGGENER DISTRICT - 21311 Meadowbrook Dr., Point
MIDDLEPORT
~ The
and
her
name
was
unln·
noon.
The
menu
for
this
week
·~
Flll'riiM. JIIII!J, Mason; Earl Pleasant; Eameat W. Rainey,
Middleport
Emer
gen
cy
tentionally
omitted
from
Mr.
is:
Le'11'11, Letart.
GaWpolls Ferry.
..,.."'
Monday - Cheese 'stuffed Squad answeretJ three calis
ALTERNATE .ruBORS
Janet S. Reynolds, Hen- Patteraons' death notice.
wieners, ·baked potato, cole on Friday. At 10:58 a.m.
CLENDENIN DISTRICT- denon; Dorc!l&amp; J . Riffle,
slaw with tomato wedge, James Haggerty, Cheshire,
'"
Lou!J M. Faudree, Hen- GaWpolls Ferry; Chal'les .A.
bread, butt.ef, raspberry was taken to Veterans
'
tlerson; . Cora A. Barker, Stanley, Mason; Nolan P.
gelatin with whippesl topping, Memorial Hospital as a
OelllpolliFerry.
Swackhamer, Mason;
'"•
medic.il patient. At4:41 p.m.,
Vmrau Memorial H01pltal milk.
COI.OONE DISTRICT
George Turnbull, Hartford;
•1
ADMI'I:TED- Edna Stiles, . Tuesday - Beef biscuit Velma Slde~s. Logan St., was
amtoa a.dette, Leon.
Martha Hlte Watlenlon, Apple Pomeroy; James Haggerty, roll, gravy, mashed' potatOes, taken to Veterans Memorial
"'
COOPER DISTRICT - · Grove; EdiJon W. Weaver,- Cheshire; Richard l,.ong, succotash, bread, butter, .as a result of over
Aibert s. J!oeten, Letart.
~; Robert S. Weaver, Pomeroy; Ruth Parsons, canned peaches, milk.
'"
lll«')caUon , and at 9:26p .m.
..
ROBINSON DI8TRICT
lAtart; Joyce M. Wileman, Racine; Velma Siders, · Wednesday Baked Freeland Teck, Cheshire, a
Jolla V. 11urrt1 n, Rt. 1, 2313 Jacluon Ave., Point Middleport.
stuffed peppers, tossed salad, medical patient, was·laken to
Grandview Hgta., Point Pleasant; Margaret E.
DISCHARGED ..,. Letha banana slices In ora1J8e juice, Holzer Medical Center.
"*-t.
YOWlg, Clifton.
Qualls, Llniouel Johnson, hot buttered Italian bread,
Ruth Par110118.
oabneal-ralsin cookies, milk.
UNJON DISTRICT- Henry
. Thursday - Sliced turkey,
ASK TO WED
Uptla, Rt. S, Leon.
cranberry relish, candied . POMEROY - A marriage
.:
.
i
'
sweet potatoes , buttered license was Issued to Joseph
green beans, roll, butter, Andrew , Canale, Jr., 27,
mixed fruit cup, milk.
Cambridge, Mass ., and
Friday - Fr.ied fish, Katherine McGowan , 27,
macaroni sal~d, stewed POmeroy.
tomatoes, bread, butter, .
peanut butter cake with
$12,500 DOLED OUT
caramel icill8.
"
lilnu'l'rlplett, a candidate won't be there.
savi1J8s and a~ now forced to
Chice of drinks served with
POMEROY
State
lcr IIIII rllll tnntallve, l&amp;itl
'nMI welfare department rely on Stale assistance from each meal.
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
P)1Mr .. . Olllo legislature must ecCilomize; ~t m1111 do a the government ' which each
~epor'ted
the
August
lhoala IIIII IIIUit face the better job. But to expect a tax payer has su.,Ported au
diStribution of $4,220,218.64 in
NO REHEARSALS
~ IIWa by malting dlpartment to provide
their working lives.
MIDDLEPORT - The ID~:al governmenllund money
the hard doc
t.o mlJUCil tn econom1c1 'lillen
Many hardworking, tax
to Ohio's 88 counties and to
pr~ ...... fllldtnt!." they already are proJecting payi1J8 citizens ' will use up eighth grade band of Meigs 367 cities and villages levying
• 'To dlte, tba .......lUre significant llvlll8a 11 'pie-In· their savings rapidly to Junior High School will not be
local income taxes.. Meigs
~-~':" to Jliriltle real the-eky' thinking at ita wnt. support elderly parents rehearsill8 on Saturdays for County
If you:re hea~ing to Commercial &amp; Savings Bank to
received $12,500.
. the rest of the summer.
......... tiOiw IIU erilll.
The
jorlty would alsO needina health vare.
•
• depostt your money In a savings account! .
The lePiaiUre'a lathn to Uke to :pproprlale montes
Old~; citizens should not
ICilldeplarabJe, Weelect the already appropriated lor · tolerate_ their legisiature
Invest your money In a savings. account which pays the
.
INTHE
::::::w~~illbly, welfare. Thill propoeal to .,eeplng lhlll problem under
maximum
Interest. A savings account lets you put money
· llllllliMr" puty llllr IIJienll money twice II Uke oae tile rug until next January.
- away for the future, Insuring your savings up to $.W,OOO.
• SILVER BRIDGE
IN 1
of • wrttlnc a check for our SUch a tactic will be used by
•
•
It's a great way to save and Commercial &amp; Savings Bank Is
Triplett nota4 tllat the Jut
and then wrlllnl 1 tht Democrats to create a
P~AZA
.
a great place to save!
•
projee!!d sbottap lor aeeetiebadllor the same taO ertal1 which will lead
lllldl•
II .. hiP • ~41 - :rGII can't apend money Inevitably a large tax inIIIIWGII aC'IIGI'dlna ~to tile t'*tce.
creaae Iller the Drat of the
IWII ......., · Fallm to deal hcmeaUy year. There ..-e no easy
~~;,:made liiiM and ICN u f&amp;h with Olllo's ana wen to the medicaid
Tile
'
t'l 11tleet Medicaid
will work problem, but one llli1J8 is
Cox's .•• A Good Place to
•nme
IWdllllp •~~~~~y of certain· The people of this
,, I • 1111 lllldlcald • tlda I) ctr
wllo bave
.
.
pH 1 p 'l'llplett nMJ, bas baeltu
le8lalaUYe diltrlet want a
Sltop • , , For Nice Thln1•
11o w' ..a.. rH.,Mitlld but ...... ~~~~of~lhea reprtuntallve who Is willing
Court Street In Glllllpoll&amp;l Silver Bridge
'l!l...._, - - - - . to face the probllmt head-on
• 'Sf MoobJI Jllattona .or • costa of healtll ear. IIIli and tell{ie tnllle.en when it
To Wear
. . ., IIIIIICIIII liMed liJIGII generally lqer ltfel, lllrlt ......,
wtlldl jult (II'Oblblr gone through_ their life
·
Galli~ olis

11J JametSaada

ended 30 frustra ting years of
GaDta Ceuaty
GaWans tryintl to get a
HlltarlcaiSeddy
railroad . Tile railroad was
GAWPOUS - In 1880 (If built lo JacksOn in the 1850s.
one rouaed blm.lelt from bed
In 1850 under a special act
by 48. m.) one could ride the of the le«l!'lature the
treln from GallipoUa to Gallipolis, Ja ckson and
Columbus and return the Chillicothe Railroad Comsame day. The lraln stopped pany was authorized. No
at Porter at 4:28 and Vinton work was ever done, George
at 4:48 arrlvii!J in Columbus House, Robert Black and J.
at 9:45. The return lraln left W. Hll)l were among the
Columbus at 2 p. m. and leaders in this venture. The
arrived In G!llllpolla at 9:45. route of this I!Jver-to-be
That was the year ( 1880) railroad was lhi1iugh . Rod,
that the Ohio and West ney, Ridgeway (II mile north
Vlrginll Railroad was of Rio Grande) and Cen·
completed to. Gallipolis, thus lerv!Ue. The history of these
lilvillll GaWpolla Ita first raU communities would have
service. This · railroad been dramaUcally different
company had been .· In- had the line been laid as
corporated In 1870 under the projected.
name of the Gallipolis,
In 1116(1 a company was
McArthur and Columbus incorporated to build a
Railroad. Construction on the railroad from Gallipolis to
road did not begin unUI1876. Hamden to hook up with the
The company came under Marietta and Cincinnati
various names like the Railroad. The Langley family
Coiumbua, Hocking VaHey . of Gallipolis was prominent
and Toledo Railway Com.. In this venture. No work was
pany which became the ever done.
Hocking Valley Railway
In 1880 the Ohio VaUey
Company In 1899. This Railroad Company was
railroad
became
the Incorporated. It was w run
possession of the C&amp;O In 1930. from Gallipolis to Cincinnati.
The completion of the The names Of Fuller, Mauck,
railroad to Gallia county Rothgeb, and Nash were

Home canning

Four suffer

goods stolen·

minor hurts

Dr

associated

•th Th '

omases

UV. ANDMRII. CROYLE

,

~Pastoral

couple arrives

Jurors selected

in Mason County

Ten draw fines·

ith every Kodacold
roll we proce~sl

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

..

..

zs·

'

.

~

TAW"EY ·STUDIOS

-

You're heading in the
right direction ...

-·
...,.

-·
..
~·

Tnplett rakes Democrats
for .messing up Medicaid
.-a ·

..._llleded

~

*

=

"!!*•'I

-..a,

Open Weekday fveninp
Til
O'Qock

9

cOMMERCIAL &amp;.SAVINGS BANK

n

• rer

l

,,
~.

prominent in this venture.
This
company
never
mualered UJi enough capital
to begin to lay the first Ue.
In 1871 the Daytcn and
Southeastern was incorporated with intentions of
running from . Dayton to
Gallipolis.
When coal was discovered in Jackson and
Meigs
counties,
the
route was changed to run
north of Gallia County. In
1883, this company, then
known as the Toledo, Cincinnati and Sl. L!&gt;uis, began
to lay out a narrow gauge rail
Into Greenfield township. The
rail hauled coal and pig iron
from the Gallia Furance
which in the 1880s was
produd1J8 14tons a day with a
work force of 900.
In 189$ this railroad
became known as the C. H. D. (CincinnaU, Hamilton and
Dayton.). This company
owned 7.72 miles of track In
Gallia Col!lltY . In 1916 the
B&amp;O-took over the road.
The other rail in GaDia
(that runs along the river)
was originally property of the
Kanawha and Michigan .
About the turn of the century
the bridge acroas the Ohio
was completed aloil~ with 13

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS

5x7

NLARGEMEN

Radio Shack's JUly
~es in gain of 46%

0·.,·, .

IIY Frank Hill

~~-------------·-illil' received
GALLIPOLIS:J
a phone callLast
friJIJI&amp;unday
Karenevening
Ellyson.I

Beat • • .

· ,

. t h e Bend . . .
Of

i

•

-

:~

.

By &amp;b Hoeflich

,.

~

l

1

1

'~Geme 1~t

:larailr~~~

She. informthe
the
eiJ81ne,
nera wu on
y al "'"
Confederate Cycolrama in downtown
Allanta, Ga. This is the engine which
"Andrew's Raiders" stole during the Civil
War. Thanks Karen!

funeral.
In the same tiny family cemetery is also
buried-veterans of the war of 1612 and the
Civil War.
For those who may be interested : ;
Francis DeHebercourt, our first poet.
master, was granted !Jle J .ot in the original
drawing on which now "tands Our House.
Our House was not the original name of the
first inn operated here in this building. It
was first known as the Rising Sun Inn and
had a tabem. A "Mr. Ford" was the brick
mason who buill the buildings .
In 18:i6 on the tax duplicate the· Our
House and lot was valued at $1~.
In 1892 J . C. Morris bought the River·
view Hotel from Nancy Maxon for $11,500.
fu 1892, City .officials were paid the
following salaries : Mayor $1,000 per year,
Town Marshal $800 per year, City Police $40
per month and Street Commissioner $1 per
year plus.
On July 4, 1894, Undsey Williams, a
grand old negro genlle111an who was sexton
alPine St. Cemetery, celebrated hiB 100\h

John Gray, the last surviving soldier of
the Revolutionary War, was born at MI.
POMEROY-~ancyReedhaabeenlnE~anddurlng Vernon, Va., Jan. 6, 1764 and died at
her absence hlllbintl; Ted, and the Reeds' sOns were Hiramsburg; Ohio, which is In Noble
tlisculllng the Wtlllen'ln their lives who have been the most County, March 29, 1888. Gray was 104 years
belplul and kind- basldes Nalicy, that is.
. . · old and is buried in a tiny family cemetery
When the votes were counted, the nominees were Eleanor near his last home.
Crow,GraceEichandMaryLewJohnsonandltwasdecldedto
Gray enlisted In the army at an early
have an "appreciated" dinner. The three ladies and their age. He served until the war's end, and was
ttpouaes were Invited to the Reed hotne for dinner and Ted put m111tered out at Richmond, Va. He returned
lheflnilhlng touch on a.good meal by bsklnc homemade bread to Mt. Vernon and his first dsy's work was
to sarve to the guests. AU of th~ finery was Uled except the as a farm laborer on George Washington 's
linen 111~klna- the boys couldn't Bnd 'em and so bad to resort estate.
to paper ones. However, everyone seems lit agreement that 11.
Gray lafA!r mov~ to Ohio. He outlived
'11'1111 quite a dinner.
..
three wives and ijll his children except an 8(1.
year-old daughter with whom he was living
biriMay.
MEMBERs OF DREW WEBSTER POST 38, - • _... at lbe
!!!!!! Dl ~ ~lh .
, _._
~oliil Gray laithftilly attended the
:; ....,._,, are quite 8 tradlUCil at the Meigs County Fair· .._., Methodist Ch\U'Ch for over 75 years, He was
Tile answer to last' week 's question :
"" IIIey will control ilutomoblle traffic during this year's fair· Allo not an illi'-rate
· man as he learned ·to read
The
United Slates Hotel Operated by
!: becunlng all'ad!Uon are members of XI Gamma Mu and Ohio
"'
John F. Hoy, i'nstalled the first Inside
~Phi O!aptersofBetaSigma Phi Sorority who again will be and write before.entering the war. Being a .
bathtub.ill town in 1850.
bsndllng the gates for the fair.
lover of the soil, he remained a farm laborer.
This small brick building stood on the lot
Bands of Meigs County wW play the fair with Southern, . aU his life. When he was no longer able to
now
occupied by Haskins·Tanner .
,.
__
..,
"'·
J
tf
w
B
1n
J
playing
Wedneada
work,
and
feeble
with
age,
Congress
finally
·
. rown g, r.,
on
y;
...........,.. ., e
The
first porcelain bathtub installed in a
Eastern under the direction of Charlas Wllhebn, Jr., playing granted the old soldier a pension of $400 per
hotel in the United States was in 1846 in
Thursday and Meigs Local, directed by Dwight Goins, playing year·
Cincinnati.
·
Gray loved dogs and chewng tobacco.
.Friday; Browning and Wilhelm are both new band directors 1n
tile count)'.
·
He chewed plug tobacco for over 100 years
Something to think about :
Incidentally, young people Involved In the junior fair this and always had a dog at.his side . When he
Who n~med the P~rk Central Hotel?
year, wtn be bard at It Cl1 Saturday afternoon cleaning up the died over a thousand people attended his
•
county carage bulldlng which they wW use for a public ~ce
1rum 1 p.m. untO midnight !bat evening as one of the closing
events of the fair. Playing for the dance will be High Bottom
caused by shorted oul battery
Vinton Joint Vocational
FIRE GOTIEN OUT
Wedge of Point Pleasant. .
The Gallipolis Fire Dept. cables. There was no damage
Anotber Innovation to the fair program this year will be a School. ·
The instructor, Andrew answered a caU Friday at or injuries. A lUling station
change In the opening night program on Mtllday. Although
attendant had extinguished
IIJlOIIIIOred by the Meigs County MinlBterlal Atmclatlon, the Lemley, praised the mem- 8:22 p.m. to 458 Pike St. in the fire by the time the Fire
~ pr0£l'ani will not be the traditional rellglous service. bers of the class for their Kanauga for a fire in a semi Dept. arrived at 8:31 p.m.
This year, the program wW be the bicentennial musical, ''Ring community spirit in Im- tractor trailer. The fire was
· All tbe Bella of Freedom'' perfonned by a cl!olr of aome 40 proving their efficiency in
Melp County resident.&amp; under the directloo of June Van fighting fires . He commended
the men for their Interest in
Vranbn. Starting Ume Lt 7:30 p.m.
Spealrlnc of bicentennial mualcals, a 118C0nd preaentatloo the training and for the
prepared locally and thla one by the Church of Chrlat choir will cooperaUon he received. He
be given aU p.m. today at the St. Paui.Lutheran Olurchand is pointed out that many
open to. tbe publlo. The congregation Ia holding a celebration community fire departments
3 Bedroom, 2 baths, house, siding shingle
today to mark the. lOth anniversary of the new church In were requesting training and
roof,
lamily·room, dining room, porch. On
Pomeroy.'lbe Rev, WUIIam Kraly, who was pastor at the Ume that Interest in fire
Display
Now!
·
tile church was bullt,.Jrill be on band wspeak at 2 p.m. There prevention· and protection
will be deiM't and coffee at 3 p.m. and the bicentennial was growing throughout the
Veteran's 20 yr. loanunilable on all double,·, ,
stale.
musical at 4. Debbie Gerlach Lt director of ihe musical.
The men who qualified and
who
received certificates
A NOVEL oblervan~ will be held Saturday morning, Aug.
21, at the Pcmeroy National Bank. In tribute to the county fair, were Joe Griffin, Bob Hoff,
amplo)'4!1 will serve popcorn .and iloft drinks to the public. Dan Morgan, Earl Thomas,
Marlin Wedeyemeyer, Bob
Employoa will wear jeans for hte observance.
Brandeberry, Sandy Roberts,
1'ALEN'l'ED MUSICIAN, Margaret Neuman, bas moved Mickey · Morgan , Jim
!rum the late Jimm,y Martin property In upper Pomeroy to Roberts, Pat Canaday, Curt
High SJ, Maraaret'a new l'llldence balalllllall area just ott the Ramey, Delbert Russ, Griff
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
living room whlcb llhe wllluae as her millie room for her plano CllOk, Joe Blazer, Bob Shaw,
Phone
446.9340
· and orpn. Ne~ 11'11 undoubtedly looking forward to Dave Morgan.
111111y mustcal1111111enta from Margaret.
.

SEE THE NEW "BENDIX"

SECTIONAL HOME 26'X56'

&amp;'~~~

MOBILE HOMES, I

MEIGS SENIOR CITIZENS are planning quite an evant on
Bept. lB. It will go under the IItle of "Yestetyear" wltb l'lllllly
dlaplays, sames, conteata, foods and demonstntlonl to give
the publlc a glance at the living of yesterday. 'lbe group Ia
ilklnl otber orpnlr.a~Cils to join In which a tllaplay or evea a
111011e)'41111dng at:llvlty which might make the day 1 bigger
tvent and draw more people. U your group bas an Idea, just
~ IJII2.71M or IJII2.7W and talk It over with the senior cltilerul
itlfl. Orpnjzatlons staging money-malting events will get the
lion'• ttbare of their proceeds, of COW'H.

Gitt

over CIIIIIPUfable tb.U.sam~

f37 ,800,000 for

eeo.-.aoo.

..,-oted

(

JOHN HILL
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. John F. Hill, Equlpmeat
miles of track that ran aouth
to Gallipolis and north to the
Meigs line. At one time this
rail wu the property of the
Hocking Valley. Later both
the N.Y. Central and C&amp;O
used the sYStem. The Ohio
and Northwestern RR ran to
Gallipolll from Pt. Pleasant
using other companies'
tracks in the 1880s and 1890s.
In 1893 the value of the
holdings of the railroad
companies · in
Gallia
amounted to over $380,000.
The Hockipg Valley ac.counted for $2M,OOO. Included
in this figure were t5
locomotives, rtine passenger
car~ . one paymaster, two
baggage-mail cars, two
cabooses, 321 box cars, 172
coal cars, three tool cars, one
steam shovel, 25 hand cars, 25
push · cars,. depota at Kert,
Porter, Vinton, Cheshire,
Addison and Gallipolis, water
stations at Gallipolis and
Vinton and a freight hOilse at
GallipoliS.
Other proposed roads to
Gallia that never made it
were : Columbus
and
Gallipolis, 1876; Cleveland
and Gallipolis, 187'/; Portsmouth and Gallipolis,. 1878;
New Richmond, ironton and
Pomeroy, 1877; ~timore,
Cincinnati &amp; western addition, 1880; Cincinnati, ·
Atlantic and Columbus, 1884;
Portsmouth, GaUipolis and
Columbus,19Q5; and the Lake
Erie and Ohio River'RaUroad
In 1912.

e

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME
PARK·AND SN ES
.Your Only. AuthorUed
.
.

HoUr Park,Dealer

• Pick out the- plan lnd «**&lt;Gf'your choice
Select 110m two lnd U..llld~ modelt
ont ~ two blths ... ~ furnilhld,

· move Into. After 1 ...,.. CIOtjrn J!IYmant you
ually paylor.lt Mke rem .In • veiJ
·You need prlvle)l ..

you41t' It •tone wll"':h~";=~
llvlnctn a H•
HOME. Ylllt ...

ond -

""' '-'tlllllt

SEE OUR HUGE SEUCiiOH Of

MOIIU HOMU

NO.BANK IN THE AREA
IS OPEN
LONGER HOURS THAN THE
'

.

.

'

~

'

First National
Bank
.

The First National Seroes Its CustQTners
6 Full Days A Week

AUTO BANK

MAIN BANK

MON.-WED...... 9 A.M.-3 P.M. MON.-WED.... 9 A.M.·3 P.M.
•
THURS. .................. CLOSED lHURS. ........ 9 A.M.·3 P.M.
FRIDAY ..... 9 A.M.-3:00 P.M. . FRIDAY......... 9 A.M.-7 P.M.
SATIJRDAY 9 A.M.-3 P.M. SATIJRDAY .... 9 A.M.-3 P.M.

·PARKING LOT ENTRANCE
Fri.-Sat. 8 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

lHURS. CLOSED
..

(AS N EAR :A S YOUR ['HONE)

'

446-1647

:firemen take training
fire

ehlef, by Andrew Lemley,
Instructor, of the Gallipolill '
Flrt Department.
The certificates, cards and
instruction were made
available by the Trade and
Ipdutrtal Vocational
EducaUcin Sentce of · the
State
Department
of
Education tn cooperation
with the Gallla.Jackaon-

.

Holntl Mike- P a~ta

The First National is open. longer' hours for the
convenience of their cuatomers.

16 Rio Grande
Rlo Grande firemen have
racelvtd certlllcataa lor
CCIIIIple~ 38 houri of ln• 1Ntioa lnflrt flghtinc skllla
and leebniquea at the doae of
the lulct.g pariod At11111t 9.
Individual earda were
prennted WI each man
~ling the lrliDing. A
Cllplrw.nt certlllcaite wu
pntltnted to Robert Bran;

July, lt76, a 411 per cent pin

month last year·
'rhe announcement '11'~1
made by Radio Shack s
parent company, Tandy
Corporation (NYSE), who
reported that COIIIOUdaled
Ope'r ater at tbe Pblltp
111e1 tluriniJ the month a·
Spora Plut aear bere baa
a pin of
beell
t. Ualt ceeded
43
per
cent
when
compared
to
Foremaa. Bora
Ia
comparable
aalea
during
Pomeroy, Hlll Jl'llda I J
July, 1117~. of f42,200,tl00.
!rem Eutera HIP Sc•ul
Cbarlea D. Tandy, chair·
He tened Ia tbe V. S.
man
, and 'hlef executive
Army Utll 1 • Hll emofficer,
silted : "We anploymeld at 8pen Plant
Uciptlle
the
relea.aa of earbelaD ill 1• U I VIWty
nings fot fllcal )97t dUI'Inl
Mall-B. Later .... ;pear lie
the week of August 18th."
received promelloaa lo
Radio · Shack, the largest
UUUty MD-A uti Ullllty
division
of Tandy Cor·
Operalo~. He waallllde aa
poratton,
has
nearly 5,000
A:axlllaty Eqalpmelt
stores
and
dealers
In all 60
Operator Ia 1111, aad
·states
and
Canada.
Their
197'1
Equlpmnt Operator Ia .
electrll!llcs catalotl, leaturtnc
11172 wbere lie aerved uUI
the company's completa 1iDe
bls recent promoUon tO
of
products, will be available
Uall Foremaa. Joba
trom
their stores later tlda
reside• Ia euteni Melp
month.
Couaty.

Mo11.-Wed. 8 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

•

: 1\l(f GRANDE - Sixteen d8iierry, Rio Grande

FORT WORTH, TUaJ - .
Radio Shack'a consumer
ules 111 the tln!tad Stateaand
Canada were reported to be
$65,200,000 for the month of

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!
MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.

MJ10 BANK-THIRD AVE. .
VIN10N BRANat-VINlON
'

"Your Full Service People To People llank."

MEMBER FDIC
. '

•

•

•

••

•

�I

10-'dlt.....,...... ••l,8lmclaJ,Aai,JJ.lm

This is Country Livin'

.-School personnel at_
Southern are hired

.,

Gallipolis had its first
rail service in the 1880s

· and it's gettin' better

GALLIPOLIS
The and State St. where a car
Pollee Dept. driven by Bernadine L.
By BOYD RUTH
reported three •cctdents Steinebrunnlr, 52, GaWpolla
Dlllrlec Co-.rvalleallt
Friday, one a hiwnd.run.
ran a red llgbt and atruck
Thefirsl
wuat5:19p.m,
at
another
driven by~
'Substitute bus drivers hlrtd superinten dent ; Jane
' RACINE - Teachers,'
POMEROY - 'lbeie da;Ys rural America II where It's at.
the
intersection
of
Third
Ave.
·
0.
Gahyen
Jr. 42, Gaht,.U..
Ac.- thenatloo, rurllsreaa and to111111 are belq revived.
aubllltule etachers, aub· were Harold Circle, Earl Wagner, clerk and Robert
Stelnebrunner
w.. c:IIMI lor
.11111111 ~drivers, cooka and Croaa, Gordon Proffitt, and Beegle, principal at Racine
'nMI renewed growth and Vigor of fUI'III America Lt one of the
disobeyinl
ari
automatic
eu~todlans were hired when
11101t dynamic populatkn ReWI stmes today. During the first
Don Smith; substitute cooka, Elementary.
traffic
ligna!.
She
wu taken
111e Southern Local Board of Ruth Smlth, Linda Grindley,
fourye&amp;ll'lofthis decade, UmWion more people moved to the
w the Holzer Medical eerlter
Educallon met Thursday June Ashley, and Cressa
nonmetropolltan areu than moved away !ram them.
for
treatment of claimed
The
enrolhnent
In
aartcultural
colleges
Lt
up.
Record
.
Jillhl.
•
Shain; subslltute CUIIodlanS,
Injuries.
Mary Lou Felts was hlrtd Daniel Shane, and Everett
numbers of students are takinl vocatlonalllflculture courses
The secOnd accident OC·
u flrllt and second grH.e Connolly.
In high acboobi. Twice u IIIIIIY college graduates are now
·
cured
at 8:10 p.m . at 103
returninl
to
the
!ann
as
did
10
Ytltl
ago
reacher at Por!land; Ann
The board adopted a·
Bastian!
Dr. when a car
.
Rural America Is enJoying thla vigor·, storesand fanns are
Shroy u ~ educaUon suspension and expulsion
drlv~n
by
Brent L, Rodgers
expandJnc.lnWstry II movlnl to rural areas. And, mllllons of
GALLIPOLIS - The Galli&amp;
reacher at tile blab IChool and pollcy; a salary schedule for
18,
GaUtpolls
backed Into the
people tripped In the city dream about moving to the country.' County Sheriff 's Dept.
Barblra Baer ... year boOk teachers wl th a baae (lljy of
and Echo lldv1lor.
Melp County II a prime ewnple of what's happenlnl! to Saturday reported a breaking. path of a car tltlven by
· oR. CLARKE
GA LLIPOLIS - · Four
f/,900 and a salary liChedule
rural Amwlca. From a po]llllat!on of 32,3211ln 111110, down to and entering at the Elena J. Charles E. Lee 41, GaW~
Substitule leachel'll hired for non~tlfled employes. persons were injured In a
19,600 In 18'11, there were more people going than coming to Beam residence on Rl. 3 Rodgen was cited lor W.
were Allee Brauer, Jennifer
The following bids were traffic accident at 4 p.m.
·
Meigs.
But tbe last five years have shown an Increase of during daytime on Aug . 13. proper backing.
Butcher, John Coffman, Anna accepted coal, Jeffers Coal Friday on Roush Rd., west of
0 ~ke
The
third
mishap
came
at
almost1,0001*JP)e.
That's
a
rapid
five
per
cent
again
I
And
the
Rice, Wavle Circle, Francea Co.; !Ires, Meigs Tire Center ; UtUe Kyger Rd .
Entry was gained by for·
10:34
p.m.
in
front
of
'654
future
outlook
allows
at
least
22,000
by
INS.
Foater, GriCe Hawley, Farte bus supplies, Texaco Inc.;
cing open a baek door. Stolen
The Gallia·Melgs Post
Time wu, when rural folks were Isolated, out of touch, nQI were home canning goOds. Third Ave. when a parked car
Kennedy,
Vlnaa
Lee
heali1J8 oil, City Ice and Fuel ; State Highway Pairol sa,id
quite "with II." Today, however, Improved transportation, . An allAlmpted breaking and belongill8 to Mary E. Harris
Margaret Lewli, Rober~ baked goods, Betsy Ross; and Allan D. Clark, 17, Scottown,
communlcatluls, and other mOdern conveniences . have entering occured sometime of GaUipolls wss struck by a
Malci!R, Charles McMan111, dairy, Valley Bell.
lost control of his car which 'WI
ellm!nated !wever the Image of a backwai'd rural America. during the night of Aug. 12 at grey Chevrolet. Mler the .
Dorotha Petrel; Herbert . Attending were Jack ran off the hig'hway striking
Machineund technology have replaced muscle, ox, mule, the Jumbo Carry Out in Rio collision the driver of the
GALUPOLIS - Dr. Robert
Parker, Gayle Price, Carolyn Bostick, president; Robert · an embankment and tree:.
D.
Thomas
and
Dr.
W
illiam
and
horse poww on the fann. Modem equipment, developed Grande. Glass from a back Chevrolet fled the scene of
SmUll, · Rut!) Tucker, Pearl sayre, Gary Evans, Roger
Clark
and
three
B.
Thomas
Saturday
an·
by
agricultural
scientists, can do as much work In one hour as window was broken out, but the acch!ent. Two p&amp;aseiJ81l'S
Williams, BW Young lind Adams, Dallas HW, board passengers, L!&gt;ri Foster ,. 13.
nounced
the
as5ocia
tion
of
1
our
grandparents
could do In a week.
'
Betty Hutchllon.
en try was prevented ~y iron in the parked care wti'e
members; Bobby Ord, Gallipolis ; John Spencer, 12,
Dr.
Gary
L.
Clarke
w
ilh
~eir
Machines
now
harvest
our
wheat,
oats,
cllrUs,
tomatoes,
uninjured.
and Craig Woyan, 14, both of
bars In the window frame.
. cherries, grapea, blueberries, and even cucumbers .
Seminole, Fla ., all com· practice of optometry.
Dr. Clarke is the son of Mr. Contalnerizedalr Vlllll move produce from the !ann, over land,
plalned of minor injuries.
and
Mrs. Charles E. Clarke. sea and , without~ unloadlnc and repacking
There was mnderate damage
to Clark's vehicle . No Jr., of 1914 MaxweU Ave., along the way, to overseas markets.
Point Pleasant.
• And modem ·agricultural research has lilcreaaed
charges were filed.
He
was
gradualtd
from
production
per ICre beyond George Waahlngton's wildest
Two drivers were ci ted to
Kyger
Creek
high
School
in
dreama.
Municipal Court for failure to
The modest potato, for Instance, averaged only about 80
slop within the assured clear 1910, th en attended West
V
irginia
University
for
prebushel
per acretn the late 1800's. Production slowly crept up to
distance foUowing rear end
optnmelry
requirements.
He
1!1
bushel
per acre. Betweo:n1910 and 1920, however, USDA
accidents at 3:17 p.m.
Prospective Grand and
, PETIT Jl.(RORS
received
the
degree
or
Doctor
sclentllts
began
to study potato treedlng.It took until the late
Petit Jurors for the Sep- Peggy R. Anderson, Mason; Friday , three tenths of a mile of OptOmetry from lhe Ohio 1940'sforthisreaell'Cht,opayoff - yieldsjumpedtonearly300
tember lerin of Mason County Margaret Athey, New Haven; east of Rt. 588.
·
·
· •
The patrol said an au to Sta ~ University College of bushela per acre.
Circuit Court were aelected sadie E. Balles, 2512 JetThe lnunen8e progress In American ~griculture bears
driven by Ronnie C. See, 23, oP tometry last June, winning
Friday In the office of Circuit .feraon Ave., Point Pleasant; Gallipolis,
"the
Bela
Sigma
Kappa
honor
testimCily
to wbat agricultural research can do. This, coupled
was following an
Clerk Howard Sebultz.
Monte H. Baas, 414 Kennedy unknown vehicle and slop- student award .
with the renewed growth of rural America, is one of the mOst
Jury Commlsalonera Ave., Pt. Pleilant; Don K. ped. A car. driven by
He was an officer or Ep· exciting storlea ill .our Bicentennial Year.
Rlcbard Allltin and Jamet Ball, Letart; Sidney E. Bauer, Theodore 0 . Harper , 42, siion Psi Epsilon Professional
Layne .cooducted the drawing Rt., Leon; Karen R. Beattie, Gallipolis, failed to stop and Pra~rni ty of Optometry and
of names.
Rt. 1, Leon; John R. Bechtell, struck the See car in the rear. lhe American Optometric
The Grand Jury Is Henderson; Carl F. Boswell, Harper's · car was struck Student Associ ation. Dr.
'
scheduled to convene on Rt. 3, . Leon; Ardath 0 . from behind by an auto Clark will engage in · the
"
September 71or the flrlJt time Brinker, Letart; . Ollie T. operated by Unda K. Jones, practice of optometry and
POMEROY
Ten Cheshire , $14 a.nd costs,
during the term.
Browntnc, Letart; Gary 20, Oak Hill. There was minor specialize in contact lens
defendants
were
flOOd
and
12 speeding ; Dean A. · Peugh,
litllng
.
.
· Follo"'l'inn ia a list of the Burdette; Letart; Vernon A. damage.
others
forfeited
bonds
in Columbus, $150 and costs,
pruapectlve Grand and Petit Cadle, Leon;
Bernice B.
Meigs
County
Court
Friday
. three days confinement, six
jarors:
Calloway, Hendeuon.
Fined by Judge Robert E. months probation, driving
GIWIDJURORS
PattyJ.Ciark,NewHaven; Services held
.J
Buck
were
Irene
M.
Dill,
while
in
ioxicated
.
ARBUCKLE DISTRICT - Betty J. Cline, MIDI; Otmer
fl
"
'"
Minersville, $15 and costs,
Forfeiting bonds were
Mar1aret Marie ·Lanier, R. Cooke, New Haven ; John for W, E. Brown
AUG.
15TH
THRU
AUG.
30TH
speeding; Harold S. Helli'Y, Rosamond F. Wolfe, Ripley,
Beech Hill.
W. Cullen, Letart; Jean E.
. '
Whitesville, W. Va., $25 and Samir, S. Kamal, MorganCLENDENIN DISTRICT - Davis, Mason; Morgan Flora,
costs, driving without lights ; town, Phillip Sassper,
OiliEN VOUR ORVER
RETURNEV
Vonoa M. OUv~. Hopett.; Southalde; Donald Fol'lhee, MIDDLEPORT - Funeral
GALUPOLIS- The Seni o~ Patricia !f. Goebel, Rl. 2, Huntington, Katherine Gard,
Earl H. McCoy, Hopett.
GaWpolls Ferry ; Mary E. services were held saturday Citizens Center, located at 220 Coolville , $13 and costs, Hopewell, David C. Watson,
JUST I?ICK VOUR FAVORITE
COLoGNE DISTRICI'
Froendt, West .Columbia ; m Columbus for Wayne E. Jackson Pike in lhe CoUnty .gpeeding ; James R. Parker, Zanesville, Jack K. Lemley,
NEGATIVE ANV ORVER VOUR
Mavis E Weaver Rt 1 Harold R. Fry Jr New Brown, 70, who died Thurs- Home Building , is open McArthur; 60 days con- Parkersburg, Jack D. Riley,
,,
FREE
eNLARGEMENT WITH THE
Cottacmlle.
'
' ' !faven; Clyde Gerla~, Jr.• day ~~ Riverside .Methodist Monday through Friday from linement, six months Jackson , Robert E. Ley ,
COUPON ON YOUR fiLM BAG.
COOPER DISTRICT
Letart ; J11111ea W. Gress, Hospital. The president of the 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule probation , $50 and costs, Athens, Michael R. Delcotto,
......., s. w- , ~
L~Urt· 81._. L. Grl•.., 1 Bi&amp;BearStoresCompany, he of acliv\tiea lor lhis week is confinement
suspended, · Athens, and Glen C. Lambert,
'"""
·-·-· - . .
• u••
• wu J)rtCeded In dealh by his as follows:
.
expired operal+lta li.,....... Commerce City, Colo., $27.50
GRAHAM DISTRICT
Letart; Diane Hickel, 'New wife, Ruth, in 1974.
Monday, Aug. 16 · ~ RoyL. Buchanan,ReedsvWe, each, speeding ; Thomas J.
Velma J. Clarke, Rt. I, Haven; A!ln C. Hickman, Survivors include a
PhySical
Fitness, ll :30 a.m.; $150 and costs, three days Hardin , Columbus, $30.50,
Iaart; Mary E. Workman, Mason; · Mary Wilma daughter and son.{n.Jaw, Mr.
2nd Ave.
' 446·1615
Olde
tyme
Chorus, 1-3 p.m. confinement
license speeding; Michael D. Logan,
4Cb Sl., New Haven.
Hlnerman. RFD, Letart.
and Mrs. Stephen Kellough,
Tuesday, Aug. 17 ;_ SuSpended 60 daYs, restricted Knoxville, Tenn., $27 ,50;
HANNAN DISTRICT Edward R. lble, Letart; Columbus· his brother.ffi-law
Quilting
Visiting, 9 a.m . · drivi1J8, driving while in- passing al intersecllon.
Clarlel C. Wray, Aahioo; Janet C. Juniper, 3201 and siste;.ffi.law, Mr. and 3 p.m.and
.. d
; Food Stamp tos:icated; Sammie Plants,
J._ X. Brumfield, Aahtoa. Franklin Ave., Pt Pleasant; Mrs. Paul E. Davts, Mid- screefung, 12:30 p.m.
Middleport, $25 and costs,
LEWIS DISTRICT
Bracy D. Klnnalrll, 3 3307 dleporl; three grandchildren
\11 I
Wednesday, Aug. 18 - , littering; Donald C. Griffin,
lloniJd F. White, 1111 8tb St., Franklin Ave. PI.Pieuant; and several nieces and Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m. ;
••
Parkersburg, $50 and costs,
....
Pulnt Pleasant; W. Rutillell Geneth G. Kreba, P.O.Box II, nephews.
Card Games, Jr3 p.m.
expired operators license;
I
lllhbee, '512 Cbantller Dr., Point Pleasant; Dorothy A.
Thursday, Aug. 19 - Maxine Howard , Rt. 2,
'
'"
Point Pleasant; Ma!'l1yn L. Leport, 2106 Meadowbrook
Council Meeting, 2 p.m.
"'
Albany, $25 and costs ,
Olexa, 108 Main St.. Point Dr., Point Pleasant; VIrgO L.
SISTER LISTED
Friday, Aug. 20 - Art assault; Eugene I. Swartz,
Pleasant.
Lewia, Weat Columbla; Gary RACINE - A sister, Mrs . . Cl$s,l-3p.m.; Soria! Hour, 7
.. ·•.
•'"
~N DISTRICT _ B. Mitchell, New Haven; Azelline Smith, Parkersburg, p.m.
Franc!J L. McCulloch, 72 Herman
M.
Ohlinger,· is a survivor of Ted. R.
Seniors ' Co-op is open
8ardette Add., PolDtPieaaant. Galllpolls Ferry; Homer. Patterson : 68, Racine, who 12:JOrl:30. The Craft Store is
·~
· UNION DISTRICT
Preece, 802 211th, St., Point died Wednesday evening at open for sales at 12:3(),1 :30.
The Senior Nutrition
~lefty E. Adldml, Rt. 3, Leon. Pleasant; Clara M. Priddy, HolEer Medical Center. She.is
THREE RUNS MADE
one
of
five
surviving
sisters
Program
serves meals at 12
· WAGGENER DISTRICT - 21311 Meadowbrook Dr., Point
MIDDLEPORT
~ The
and
her
name
was
unln·
noon.
The
menu
for
this
week
·~
Flll'riiM. JIIII!J, Mason; Earl Pleasant; Eameat W. Rainey,
Middleport
Emer
gen
cy
tentionally
omitted
from
Mr.
is:
Le'11'11, Letart.
GaWpolls Ferry.
..,.."'
Monday - Cheese 'stuffed Squad answeretJ three calis
ALTERNATE .ruBORS
Janet S. Reynolds, Hen- Patteraons' death notice.
wieners, ·baked potato, cole on Friday. At 10:58 a.m.
CLENDENIN DISTRICT- denon; Dorc!l&amp; J . Riffle,
slaw with tomato wedge, James Haggerty, Cheshire,
'"
Lou!J M. Faudree, Hen- GaWpolls Ferry; Chal'les .A.
bread, butt.ef, raspberry was taken to Veterans
'
tlerson; . Cora A. Barker, Stanley, Mason; Nolan P.
gelatin with whippesl topping, Memorial Hospital as a
OelllpolliFerry.
Swackhamer, Mason;
'"•
medic.il patient. At4:41 p.m.,
Vmrau Memorial H01pltal milk.
COI.OONE DISTRICT
George Turnbull, Hartford;
•1
ADMI'I:TED- Edna Stiles, . Tuesday - Beef biscuit Velma Slde~s. Logan St., was
amtoa a.dette, Leon.
Martha Hlte Watlenlon, Apple Pomeroy; James Haggerty, roll, gravy, mashed' potatOes, taken to Veterans Memorial
"'
COOPER DISTRICT - · Grove; EdiJon W. Weaver,- Cheshire; Richard l,.ong, succotash, bread, butter, .as a result of over
Aibert s. J!oeten, Letart.
~; Robert S. Weaver, Pomeroy; Ruth Parsons, canned peaches, milk.
'"
lll«')caUon , and at 9:26p .m.
..
ROBINSON DI8TRICT
lAtart; Joyce M. Wileman, Racine; Velma Siders, · Wednesday Baked Freeland Teck, Cheshire, a
Jolla V. 11urrt1 n, Rt. 1, 2313 Jacluon Ave., Point Middleport.
stuffed peppers, tossed salad, medical patient, was·laken to
Grandview Hgta., Point Pleasant; Margaret E.
DISCHARGED ..,. Letha banana slices In ora1J8e juice, Holzer Medical Center.
"*-t.
YOWlg, Clifton.
Qualls, Llniouel Johnson, hot buttered Italian bread,
Ruth Par110118.
oabneal-ralsin cookies, milk.
UNJON DISTRICT- Henry
. Thursday - Sliced turkey,
ASK TO WED
Uptla, Rt. S, Leon.
cranberry relish, candied . POMEROY - A marriage
.:
.
i
'
sweet potatoes , buttered license was Issued to Joseph
green beans, roll, butter, Andrew , Canale, Jr., 27,
mixed fruit cup, milk.
Cambridge, Mass ., and
Friday - Fr.ied fish, Katherine McGowan , 27,
macaroni sal~d, stewed POmeroy.
tomatoes, bread, butter, .
peanut butter cake with
$12,500 DOLED OUT
caramel icill8.
"
lilnu'l'rlplett, a candidate won't be there.
savi1J8s and a~ now forced to
Chice of drinks served with
POMEROY
State
lcr IIIII rllll tnntallve, l&amp;itl
'nMI welfare department rely on Stale assistance from each meal.
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
P)1Mr .. . Olllo legislature must ecCilomize; ~t m1111 do a the government ' which each
~epor'ted
the
August
lhoala IIIII IIIUit face the better job. But to expect a tax payer has su.,Ported au
diStribution of $4,220,218.64 in
NO REHEARSALS
~ IIWa by malting dlpartment to provide
their working lives.
MIDDLEPORT - The ID~:al governmenllund money
the hard doc
t.o mlJUCil tn econom1c1 'lillen
Many hardworking, tax
to Ohio's 88 counties and to
pr~ ...... fllldtnt!." they already are proJecting payi1J8 citizens ' will use up eighth grade band of Meigs 367 cities and villages levying
• 'To dlte, tba .......lUre significant llvlll8a 11 'pie-In· their savings rapidly to Junior High School will not be
local income taxes.. Meigs
~-~':" to Jliriltle real the-eky' thinking at ita wnt. support elderly parents rehearsill8 on Saturdays for County
If you:re hea~ing to Commercial &amp; Savings Bank to
received $12,500.
. the rest of the summer.
......... tiOiw IIU erilll.
The
jorlty would alsO needina health vare.
•
• depostt your money In a savings account! .
The lePiaiUre'a lathn to Uke to :pproprlale montes
Old~; citizens should not
ICilldeplarabJe, Weelect the already appropriated lor · tolerate_ their legisiature
Invest your money In a savings. account which pays the
.
INTHE
::::::w~~illbly, welfare. Thill propoeal to .,eeplng lhlll problem under
maximum
Interest. A savings account lets you put money
· llllllliMr" puty llllr IIJienll money twice II Uke oae tile rug until next January.
- away for the future, Insuring your savings up to $.W,OOO.
• SILVER BRIDGE
IN 1
of • wrttlnc a check for our SUch a tactic will be used by
•
•
It's a great way to save and Commercial &amp; Savings Bank Is
Triplett nota4 tllat the Jut
and then wrlllnl 1 tht Democrats to create a
P~AZA
.
a great place to save!
•
projee!!d sbottap lor aeeetiebadllor the same taO ertal1 which will lead
lllldl•
II .. hiP • ~41 - :rGII can't apend money Inevitably a large tax inIIIIWGII aC'IIGI'dlna ~to tile t'*tce.
creaae Iller the Drat of the
IWII ......., · Fallm to deal hcmeaUy year. There ..-e no easy
~~;,:made liiiM and ICN u f&amp;h with Olllo's ana wen to the medicaid
Tile
'
t'l 11tleet Medicaid
will work problem, but one llli1J8 is
Cox's .•• A Good Place to
•nme
IWdllllp •~~~~~y of certain· The people of this
,, I • 1111 lllldlcald • tlda I) ctr
wllo bave
.
.
pH 1 p 'l'llplett nMJ, bas baeltu
le8lalaUYe diltrlet want a
Sltop • , , For Nice Thln1•
11o w' ..a.. rH.,Mitlld but ...... ~~~~of~lhea reprtuntallve who Is willing
Court Street In Glllllpoll&amp;l Silver Bridge
'l!l...._, - - - - . to face the probllmt head-on
• 'Sf MoobJI Jllattona .or • costa of healtll ear. IIIli and tell{ie tnllle.en when it
To Wear
. . ., IIIIIICIIII liMed liJIGII generally lqer ltfel, lllrlt ......,
wtlldl jult (II'Oblblr gone through_ their life
·
Galli~ olis

11J JametSaada

ended 30 frustra ting years of
GaDta Ceuaty
GaWans tryintl to get a
HlltarlcaiSeddy
railroad . Tile railroad was
GAWPOUS - In 1880 (If built lo JacksOn in the 1850s.
one rouaed blm.lelt from bed
In 1850 under a special act
by 48. m.) one could ride the of the le«l!'lature the
treln from GallipoUa to Gallipolis, Ja ckson and
Columbus and return the Chillicothe Railroad Comsame day. The lraln stopped pany was authorized. No
at Porter at 4:28 and Vinton work was ever done, George
at 4:48 arrlvii!J in Columbus House, Robert Black and J.
at 9:45. The return lraln left W. Hll)l were among the
Columbus at 2 p. m. and leaders in this venture. The
arrived In G!llllpolla at 9:45. route of this I!Jver-to-be
That was the year ( 1880) railroad was lhi1iugh . Rod,
that the Ohio and West ney, Ridgeway (II mile north
Vlrginll Railroad was of Rio Grande) and Cen·
completed to. Gallipolis, thus lerv!Ue. The history of these
lilvillll GaWpolla Ita first raU communities would have
service. This · railroad been dramaUcally different
company had been .· In- had the line been laid as
corporated In 1870 under the projected.
name of the Gallipolis,
In 1116(1 a company was
McArthur and Columbus incorporated to build a
Railroad. Construction on the railroad from Gallipolis to
road did not begin unUI1876. Hamden to hook up with the
The company came under Marietta and Cincinnati
various names like the Railroad. The Langley family
Coiumbua, Hocking VaHey . of Gallipolis was prominent
and Toledo Railway Com.. In this venture. No work was
pany which became the ever done.
Hocking Valley Railway
In 1880 the Ohio VaUey
Company In 1899. This Railroad Company was
railroad
became
the Incorporated. It was w run
possession of the C&amp;O In 1930. from Gallipolis to Cincinnati.
The completion of the The names Of Fuller, Mauck,
railroad to Gallia county Rothgeb, and Nash were

Home canning

Four suffer

goods stolen·

minor hurts

Dr

associated

•th Th '

omases

UV. ANDMRII. CROYLE

,

~Pastoral

couple arrives

Jurors selected

in Mason County

Ten draw fines·

ith every Kodacold
roll we proce~sl

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

..

..

zs·

'

.

~

TAW"EY ·STUDIOS

-

You're heading in the
right direction ...

-·
...,.

-·
..
~·

Tnplett rakes Democrats
for .messing up Medicaid
.-a ·

..._llleded

~

*

=

"!!*•'I

-..a,

Open Weekday fveninp
Til
O'Qock

9

cOMMERCIAL &amp;.SAVINGS BANK

n

• rer

l

,,
~.

prominent in this venture.
This
company
never
mualered UJi enough capital
to begin to lay the first Ue.
In 1871 the Daytcn and
Southeastern was incorporated with intentions of
running from . Dayton to
Gallipolis.
When coal was discovered in Jackson and
Meigs
counties,
the
route was changed to run
north of Gallia County. In
1883, this company, then
known as the Toledo, Cincinnati and Sl. L!&gt;uis, began
to lay out a narrow gauge rail
Into Greenfield township. The
rail hauled coal and pig iron
from the Gallia Furance
which in the 1880s was
produd1J8 14tons a day with a
work force of 900.
In 189$ this railroad
became known as the C. H. D. (CincinnaU, Hamilton and
Dayton.). This company
owned 7.72 miles of track In
Gallia Col!lltY . In 1916 the
B&amp;O-took over the road.
The other rail in GaDia
(that runs along the river)
was originally property of the
Kanawha and Michigan .
About the turn of the century
the bridge acroas the Ohio
was completed aloil~ with 13

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS

5x7

NLARGEMEN

Radio Shack's JUly
~es in gain of 46%

0·.,·, .

IIY Frank Hill

~~-------------·-illil' received
GALLIPOLIS:J
a phone callLast
friJIJI&amp;unday
Karenevening
Ellyson.I

Beat • • .

· ,

. t h e Bend . . .
Of

i

•

-

:~

.

By &amp;b Hoeflich

,.

~

l

1

1

'~Geme 1~t

:larailr~~~

She. informthe
the
eiJ81ne,
nera wu on
y al "'"
Confederate Cycolrama in downtown
Allanta, Ga. This is the engine which
"Andrew's Raiders" stole during the Civil
War. Thanks Karen!

funeral.
In the same tiny family cemetery is also
buried-veterans of the war of 1612 and the
Civil War.
For those who may be interested : ;
Francis DeHebercourt, our first poet.
master, was granted !Jle J .ot in the original
drawing on which now "tands Our House.
Our House was not the original name of the
first inn operated here in this building. It
was first known as the Rising Sun Inn and
had a tabem. A "Mr. Ford" was the brick
mason who buill the buildings .
In 18:i6 on the tax duplicate the· Our
House and lot was valued at $1~.
In 1892 J . C. Morris bought the River·
view Hotel from Nancy Maxon for $11,500.
fu 1892, City .officials were paid the
following salaries : Mayor $1,000 per year,
Town Marshal $800 per year, City Police $40
per month and Street Commissioner $1 per
year plus.
On July 4, 1894, Undsey Williams, a
grand old negro genlle111an who was sexton
alPine St. Cemetery, celebrated hiB 100\h

John Gray, the last surviving soldier of
the Revolutionary War, was born at MI.
POMEROY-~ancyReedhaabeenlnE~anddurlng Vernon, Va., Jan. 6, 1764 and died at
her absence hlllbintl; Ted, and the Reeds' sOns were Hiramsburg; Ohio, which is In Noble
tlisculllng the Wtlllen'ln their lives who have been the most County, March 29, 1888. Gray was 104 years
belplul and kind- basldes Nalicy, that is.
. . · old and is buried in a tiny family cemetery
When the votes were counted, the nominees were Eleanor near his last home.
Crow,GraceEichandMaryLewJohnsonandltwasdecldedto
Gray enlisted In the army at an early
have an "appreciated" dinner. The three ladies and their age. He served until the war's end, and was
ttpouaes were Invited to the Reed hotne for dinner and Ted put m111tered out at Richmond, Va. He returned
lheflnilhlng touch on a.good meal by bsklnc homemade bread to Mt. Vernon and his first dsy's work was
to sarve to the guests. AU of th~ finery was Uled except the as a farm laborer on George Washington 's
linen 111~klna- the boys couldn't Bnd 'em and so bad to resort estate.
to paper ones. However, everyone seems lit agreement that 11.
Gray lafA!r mov~ to Ohio. He outlived
'11'1111 quite a dinner.
..
three wives and ijll his children except an 8(1.
year-old daughter with whom he was living
biriMay.
MEMBERs OF DREW WEBSTER POST 38, - • _... at lbe
!!!!!! Dl ~ ~lh .
, _._
~oliil Gray laithftilly attended the
:; ....,._,, are quite 8 tradlUCil at the Meigs County Fair· .._., Methodist Ch\U'Ch for over 75 years, He was
Tile answer to last' week 's question :
"" IIIey will control ilutomoblle traffic during this year's fair· Allo not an illi'-rate
· man as he learned ·to read
The
United Slates Hotel Operated by
!: becunlng all'ad!Uon are members of XI Gamma Mu and Ohio
"'
John F. Hoy, i'nstalled the first Inside
~Phi O!aptersofBetaSigma Phi Sorority who again will be and write before.entering the war. Being a .
bathtub.ill town in 1850.
bsndllng the gates for the fair.
lover of the soil, he remained a farm laborer.
This small brick building stood on the lot
Bands of Meigs County wW play the fair with Southern, . aU his life. When he was no longer able to
now
occupied by Haskins·Tanner .
,.
__
..,
"'·
J
tf
w
B
1n
J
playing
Wedneada
work,
and
feeble
with
age,
Congress
finally
·
. rown g, r.,
on
y;
...........,.. ., e
The
first porcelain bathtub installed in a
Eastern under the direction of Charlas Wllhebn, Jr., playing granted the old soldier a pension of $400 per
hotel in the United States was in 1846 in
Thursday and Meigs Local, directed by Dwight Goins, playing year·
Cincinnati.
·
Gray loved dogs and chewng tobacco.
.Friday; Browning and Wilhelm are both new band directors 1n
tile count)'.
·
He chewed plug tobacco for over 100 years
Something to think about :
Incidentally, young people Involved In the junior fair this and always had a dog at.his side . When he
Who n~med the P~rk Central Hotel?
year, wtn be bard at It Cl1 Saturday afternoon cleaning up the died over a thousand people attended his
•
county carage bulldlng which they wW use for a public ~ce
1rum 1 p.m. untO midnight !bat evening as one of the closing
events of the fair. Playing for the dance will be High Bottom
caused by shorted oul battery
Vinton Joint Vocational
FIRE GOTIEN OUT
Wedge of Point Pleasant. .
The Gallipolis Fire Dept. cables. There was no damage
Anotber Innovation to the fair program this year will be a School. ·
The instructor, Andrew answered a caU Friday at or injuries. A lUling station
change In the opening night program on Mtllday. Although
attendant had extinguished
IIJlOIIIIOred by the Meigs County MinlBterlal Atmclatlon, the Lemley, praised the mem- 8:22 p.m. to 458 Pike St. in the fire by the time the Fire
~ pr0£l'ani will not be the traditional rellglous service. bers of the class for their Kanauga for a fire in a semi Dept. arrived at 8:31 p.m.
This year, the program wW be the bicentennial musical, ''Ring community spirit in Im- tractor trailer. The fire was
· All tbe Bella of Freedom'' perfonned by a cl!olr of aome 40 proving their efficiency in
Melp County resident.&amp; under the directloo of June Van fighting fires . He commended
the men for their Interest in
Vranbn. Starting Ume Lt 7:30 p.m.
Spealrlnc of bicentennial mualcals, a 118C0nd preaentatloo the training and for the
prepared locally and thla one by the Church of Chrlat choir will cooperaUon he received. He
be given aU p.m. today at the St. Paui.Lutheran Olurchand is pointed out that many
open to. tbe publlo. The congregation Ia holding a celebration community fire departments
3 Bedroom, 2 baths, house, siding shingle
today to mark the. lOth anniversary of the new church In were requesting training and
roof,
lamily·room, dining room, porch. On
Pomeroy.'lbe Rev, WUIIam Kraly, who was pastor at the Ume that Interest in fire
Display
Now!
·
tile church was bullt,.Jrill be on band wspeak at 2 p.m. There prevention· and protection
will be deiM't and coffee at 3 p.m. and the bicentennial was growing throughout the
Veteran's 20 yr. loanunilable on all double,·, ,
stale.
musical at 4. Debbie Gerlach Lt director of ihe musical.
The men who qualified and
who
received certificates
A NOVEL oblervan~ will be held Saturday morning, Aug.
21, at the Pcmeroy National Bank. In tribute to the county fair, were Joe Griffin, Bob Hoff,
amplo)'4!1 will serve popcorn .and iloft drinks to the public. Dan Morgan, Earl Thomas,
Marlin Wedeyemeyer, Bob
Employoa will wear jeans for hte observance.
Brandeberry, Sandy Roberts,
1'ALEN'l'ED MUSICIAN, Margaret Neuman, bas moved Mickey · Morgan , Jim
!rum the late Jimm,y Martin property In upper Pomeroy to Roberts, Pat Canaday, Curt
High SJ, Maraaret'a new l'llldence balalllllall area just ott the Ramey, Delbert Russ, Griff
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
living room whlcb llhe wllluae as her millie room for her plano CllOk, Joe Blazer, Bob Shaw,
Phone
446.9340
· and orpn. Ne~ 11'11 undoubtedly looking forward to Dave Morgan.
111111y mustcal1111111enta from Margaret.
.

SEE THE NEW "BENDIX"

SECTIONAL HOME 26'X56'

&amp;'~~~

MOBILE HOMES, I

MEIGS SENIOR CITIZENS are planning quite an evant on
Bept. lB. It will go under the IItle of "Yestetyear" wltb l'lllllly
dlaplays, sames, conteata, foods and demonstntlonl to give
the publlc a glance at the living of yesterday. 'lbe group Ia
ilklnl otber orpnlr.a~Cils to join In which a tllaplay or evea a
111011e)'41111dng at:llvlty which might make the day 1 bigger
tvent and draw more people. U your group bas an Idea, just
~ IJII2.71M or IJII2.7W and talk It over with the senior cltilerul
itlfl. Orpnjzatlons staging money-malting events will get the
lion'• ttbare of their proceeds, of COW'H.

Gitt

over CIIIIIPUfable tb.U.sam~

f37 ,800,000 for

eeo.-.aoo.

..,-oted

(

JOHN HILL
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. John F. Hill, Equlpmeat
miles of track that ran aouth
to Gallipolis and north to the
Meigs line. At one time this
rail wu the property of the
Hocking Valley. Later both
the N.Y. Central and C&amp;O
used the sYStem. The Ohio
and Northwestern RR ran to
Gallipolll from Pt. Pleasant
using other companies'
tracks in the 1880s and 1890s.
In 1893 the value of the
holdings of the railroad
companies · in
Gallia
amounted to over $380,000.
The Hockipg Valley ac.counted for $2M,OOO. Included
in this figure were t5
locomotives, rtine passenger
car~ . one paymaster, two
baggage-mail cars, two
cabooses, 321 box cars, 172
coal cars, three tool cars, one
steam shovel, 25 hand cars, 25
push · cars,. depota at Kert,
Porter, Vinton, Cheshire,
Addison and Gallipolis, water
stations at Gallipolis and
Vinton and a freight hOilse at
GallipoliS.
Other proposed roads to
Gallia that never made it
were : Columbus
and
Gallipolis, 1876; Cleveland
and Gallipolis, 187'/; Portsmouth and Gallipolis,. 1878;
New Richmond, ironton and
Pomeroy, 1877; ~timore,
Cincinnati &amp; western addition, 1880; Cincinnati, ·
Atlantic and Columbus, 1884;
Portsmouth, GaUipolis and
Columbus,19Q5; and the Lake
Erie and Ohio River'RaUroad
In 1912.

e

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME
PARK·AND SN ES
.Your Only. AuthorUed
.
.

HoUr Park,Dealer

• Pick out the- plan lnd «**&lt;Gf'your choice
Select 110m two lnd U..llld~ modelt
ont ~ two blths ... ~ furnilhld,

· move Into. After 1 ...,.. CIOtjrn J!IYmant you
ually paylor.lt Mke rem .In • veiJ
·You need prlvle)l ..

you41t' It •tone wll"':h~";=~
llvlnctn a H•
HOME. Ylllt ...

ond -

""' '-'tlllllt

SEE OUR HUGE SEUCiiOH Of

MOIIU HOMU

NO.BANK IN THE AREA
IS OPEN
LONGER HOURS THAN THE
'

.

.

'

~

'

First National
Bank
.

The First National Seroes Its CustQTners
6 Full Days A Week

AUTO BANK

MAIN BANK

MON.-WED...... 9 A.M.-3 P.M. MON.-WED.... 9 A.M.·3 P.M.
•
THURS. .................. CLOSED lHURS. ........ 9 A.M.·3 P.M.
FRIDAY ..... 9 A.M.-3:00 P.M. . FRIDAY......... 9 A.M.-7 P.M.
SATIJRDAY 9 A.M.-3 P.M. SATIJRDAY .... 9 A.M.-3 P.M.

·PARKING LOT ENTRANCE
Fri.-Sat. 8 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

lHURS. CLOSED
..

(AS N EAR :A S YOUR ['HONE)

'

446-1647

:firemen take training
fire

ehlef, by Andrew Lemley,
Instructor, of the Gallipolill '
Flrt Department.
The certificates, cards and
instruction were made
available by the Trade and
Ipdutrtal Vocational
EducaUcin Sentce of · the
State
Department
of
Education tn cooperation
with the Gallla.Jackaon-

.

Holntl Mike- P a~ta

The First National is open. longer' hours for the
convenience of their cuatomers.

16 Rio Grande
Rlo Grande firemen have
racelvtd certlllcataa lor
CCIIIIple~ 38 houri of ln• 1Ntioa lnflrt flghtinc skllla
and leebniquea at the doae of
the lulct.g pariod At11111t 9.
Individual earda were
prennted WI each man
~ling the lrliDing. A
Cllplrw.nt certlllcaite wu
pntltnted to Robert Bran;

July, lt76, a 411 per cent pin

month last year·
'rhe announcement '11'~1
made by Radio Shack s
parent company, Tandy
Corporation (NYSE), who
reported that COIIIOUdaled
Ope'r ater at tbe Pblltp
111e1 tluriniJ the month a·
Spora Plut aear bere baa
a pin of
beell
t. Ualt ceeded
43
per
cent
when
compared
to
Foremaa. Bora
Ia
comparable
aalea
during
Pomeroy, Hlll Jl'llda I J
July, 1117~. of f42,200,tl00.
!rem Eutera HIP Sc•ul
Cbarlea D. Tandy, chair·
He tened Ia tbe V. S.
man
, and 'hlef executive
Army Utll 1 • Hll emofficer,
silted : "We anploymeld at 8pen Plant
Uciptlle
the
relea.aa of earbelaD ill 1• U I VIWty
nings fot fllcal )97t dUI'Inl
Mall-B. Later .... ;pear lie
the week of August 18th."
received promelloaa lo
Radio · Shack, the largest
UUUty MD-A uti Ullllty
division
of Tandy Cor·
Operalo~. He waallllde aa
poratton,
has
nearly 5,000
A:axlllaty Eqalpmelt
stores
and
dealers
In all 60
Operator Ia 1111, aad
·states
and
Canada.
Their
197'1
Equlpmnt Operator Ia .
electrll!llcs catalotl, leaturtnc
11172 wbere lie aerved uUI
the company's completa 1iDe
bls recent promoUon tO
of
products, will be available
Uall Foremaa. Joba
trom
their stores later tlda
reside• Ia euteni Melp
month.
Couaty.

Mo11.-Wed. 8 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

•

: 1\l(f GRANDE - Sixteen d8iierry, Rio Grande

FORT WORTH, TUaJ - .
Radio Shack'a consumer
ules 111 the tln!tad Stateaand
Canada were reported to be
$65,200,000 for the month of

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!
MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.

MJ10 BANK-THIRD AVE. .
VIN10N BRANat-VINlON
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"Your Full Service People To People llank."

MEMBER FDIC
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�12-1!1ts.dafTimlll·~l.SUIIdllf,

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Aq.15,1976

J

I Overstreet will
I judge song hunt
I
I Counlrf

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FORT WORTH, Teus performer Tommy
1
Overstreet bu been named
• me of tbe Judlea for the 18'16
Reallalic(r) •180,000 CB Solie
, Seareb IPORiored. by tile
I
natloawlda Radio Shack
I : eleelrGnlca alore chin. .
OwwltreetI' '..-N'WI..
- - I "Mr '
&gt;!
t Counlry Ambluador", Ia a.
·l ..-jor Dot.recording artist,
t I IIOilllwrller, music publlsller
1 , and record producer. Among
the 11011p he bas recorded
-which have reached the
th
number one position on e
charta
are :
"Gwen
(Cqratulations)", "I don't
• Know. You Anymore", "AIJI
(Doo'gf&lt;lRunning toHlm),,

!

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lonna and complete contest
rules are available from
Radio Shack stores and
dealers In aU SO· states and
Canada . Contest'ends August
31, 1976.
.
r.macum~~
.... ;..,...... .

By STEVE GI!'.R8'l'EL
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
- Ronald Reagan'• vice
pruldentlal candidate,
Rlcbard Scbwelller, clahned
new tNPPOrt from bom&amp;ttate

r» .
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PemaYlvanla Saturday and
lllid he wu cCI)ftclent Reagan
would not dump him.

Coming
Events

MONDAY
MEIGS • GALUA Chapter
Ohio Civil Services Employes
•···. Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
..,.,..
the Guiding Hand School in

PRICES IN EFFECT

·r .,nd
"~eaven rs t.iy woman's =r:-h·.
tove
CHRISTIAN Women's Club

His current album, monthly luncheon Tuesday,
"Woman Your Name Is My . l2!15p.m. attheHolidaylnn. ·
• Song"ls a collection of songs Babysitting provide(!. For
[ about women 's names, reservations call Es ther
featuring his latest hit, Bechtle, 4ol6-4713.
"{Jeamle Marie) You Were PICNIC for members and
,·
Lady".
a
,·
friends of the P'orter UMW, 6
The 1976 Reali,9Uc $100,000 p.m. Tuesday at the church.
CB Song Search is a unique PATRIOT Grange mee ts
· songwrltlng ~contest open to
II any U. ·s. or Canadian follow
Tuesday, 8 p.m. Potluck to
.
1 resident. $100,000 In cash
LAFAYETIE Shrine No. 44
1 prizes will be awarded for the
best original music arjJ lyrics annual picnic at Krodel Park,
Point Pleasant, Tuesday, 6
in a song centered around the p.rrL Members and their
I
theme · of Cltlzens Band
.
Radio, its . operation, famllles are to bring food and
everyday uae or any phase of . tab~ service.
CB acUvity, real or Imagined. ~Df'lESDAY •
.
Atotal of 63 cash prizeS wiD AME!liCAN Leg1on ..and
be awarded. The ten winning :V"er1~an Legion Auxiliary
Songs will be recorded by 1omt p1cmc and mstaUaUon at
Radio
Shack in
a the home of Mr. and Mrs. L.
professlonaUy arranged. and G. Marchi, 6:30 p.m. Wed·
produced album Entry nesday. Bring. covered dish
··
and table semce.

COLEMAN OVE.N

CLOTHING ·

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AUGUST
ALL SUMMER

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DEPT.

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down a majorhome
improvement Joan?
We Will . . . because we feel money spent
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and iWreaale vafue. Wbether your plBIIII
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kitchen, 1inish:ihg the attic or raising the
roof .. . come.8ee us for a home,improvement loan. You'll find out why everyone calls us The Willing Bank.

~Ohio~~
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Natiollal~

21 PIECE

SPORTS DEPT.

Advertised Brand

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HECK'S
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TEFLON GRIDDLE
HEGIC'SIIG.

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1 1.38

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'1018

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WINDEX

CAR WASH
BRUSH

CAR CREEPER
HECK'S

COLEMAN

15 OUNCE
AEROSOL

99~

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HECK'S REG. 75'

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HOUSEWARES
DEPT
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OVERN CLEANER

77e

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Swivel top allows you to place the cleaner
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$288
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(4 ONLY)

TOY DEPARTMENT
SUNSET I-TRACK'

BLANK TAPES
H.ECK'S
REG. 12.49
JEWELRY D£PT. .

. $1&amp;6EACH

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SUNDAY. AUCUST 15, 1976

John sears, Rea&amp;an'a
Innovative campalan
manager, puslled before tbe ·
rules CCIIIII!llttee hla propoaal
IG Ioree Ford to reveal bll
cbolce of a vice .preeldential ·
candidate. The Sean
. JI.'OplSII was turned clown by
the temporary · rules
committee, dominated by
Ford backers.
The convention's rules
COOlmlltee, however, monl
closely roflects the . close
1a1ance between Reagan and
Ford. Sears has said he would
take the fi~bt to the

convention door If · the
CC11111111tiee rebuffl him.
The ''trllll tile delegates"
pr opoM1 would ferae Ford IG
_......bllcbolcebyta.m.
Wedneldly, about 12 boun
befere tbe beJWI'IIIIJellbll· If
Ford 1 otMCI, aU deleptes
Clllllllllttad IG h!m....Jncludinll
thole pledged by all!te and
party law- would be freed.
The Rea1an strateglltta,
cloeeteclirllb lbe candidate In
California, are convinced
Ford would be bldly burt
among uncommiUedl by
leavln&amp;lbem
Oil a

ar·•·

vice preai:Wltlal candl,data.
"We cloll'l have eDDIICII

.,.. tin lbe !Ira ballot, but
neither c1oea Ford," oee aide
said. "And, If we're aGintl to

-'- Ito lt'l becanae
of tbe
,

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Tbe final drafl of the
platfcrm, completed Friday

nillbt 8ftet almolt J'OUIICI.tbe-

clock cleUberatlctml, wu: I
clear lriumpb for Ford. He
prevailed 011 .uCh key - ai the Equal Rlgbta
Amendment, detente, Henty
Kisllnller's Africa policy, and
lbe Plilama CIDII.
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PAGE 13

Rhodes at convention
By LEE LEONARD
KANSAS CITY (UPI)
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes,
hoping to avoid "dull
meetings" and saying be can
llve with Ronald Reagan If
l'fesldent Ford geta 11p11et,
was to l!rrive here Sunday for
his !lib straight Republican
Natkilal Convention.
Ever unpredictable,
Rhodes said In a pre·
convention Interview that be
might delay bl.s arrival uniU
Mmday and leave right after
the balloting for vice

preSldenl Tburaday.
"1 don't want to be tied up
in duD meetings," said the
governor, acknowledging he
might bring his golf clubs
along.
R bodes,
y.a w n l n g
frequenUy, said he regards
. the convention as just
another political meeting,
adding he doe8il't plan any
per!llnal pyrotechnics.
"I never get way out on a
limb
at
national
conventions," be said,
forgetting for the moment

lbat he wsa nlmlnated for
President In 1968 to avoid
turning Ohio's first-ballot
voteS over to anyone.
"I do a little needling at the
governors' conferences, but
not . at the national
convention.
The governor, a staunch
' aupporter of President Ford,
said he has not yet been asked
to do anything m behalf of the
Pi-esident at lbe coovention,
but expects to be asked. ·
"I've dme everything for
him In Ohio," Rhodes said .

"I've helped blm ,by not
saying Wlklnd words about
anyrx:te."

Ford
holds
•
meetmg
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JOINS STAFF AT VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL - Wl1llam Peterson, M.D.
(third from left) bas joined the staff at Veterans Memorial Hoapltal and has offices In 1be
Meigs Medical Bulldlnl! adjacanl IG the boapltal. Shown are 1-r, Scott Lucas, hoapltal
admlnlslrator; SbmlnRoaeberry, R.N., Dr. Peterson, and Debbie HC!IIIIOll, his reoeptlooilt.

The.governor said avoiding ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) .:_
lntraparty friction Is the only
President
Ford, on the eve of
way the Republican nootinee
his
trip
to
Kansas City for .a
can cmty Ohio, al(bougb he
per!llnaUy Ukes a cmventim showdown with Ron,ld
from 1975 to 1976 doing a
POMEROY ~ Dr. W!Utam National Heallli Service Y.
wilb a good fight. "I lllte 'ein J,teagan, held final talks with
straight
medlc.ai ' mternshlp.
aides Saturday and then went Peterson, M.D. has joined the Corps while in · his second
that way," he said.
His wife, ()beryl Fr~zier
''I don't think open host lilt}' golfing with three long-time staff at Veterans Memorial year of medical training. He · and lwo ,children, William,
Hospital with offiees located trained at United States
Is good," said Rhodes. "Ohio Republican allies.
Ford
planned
a
SWtday
in the Meigs Medical Building Public Health · Service age 3, and Whitney, 7 mon'ths,
Is a difficult state to carry.
Hospital in Staten Island, N. reside in Athens.
We can't fight right up .until afternoon flight to Kansas adjacent to the hospital.
Dr . Peterson , born lri
the Monday before election." City after attending church In
To that end, Rhodes is Washington. His leisurely Washington, D. C., attended
prepared to accept the choice Sallir&lt;la7 lcbedule reflncted Hiram College in Ohio from
•
of the Cllllventloll, even lilt's bla oft..apnplld Cllillldence llle6 to 19'10, graduallng with
be would win the pnllldenlial a BS degree In chemistry and
a.pn.
"I think there's mor~ nomination on the first ballot a minor in German. He
accord between Reagan and at this week's Republican studied in Germany six
·
months while in college at
Ford than meets lbe eye," be National Convention.
said. "It's not how I feel, Ws ' Altllougb Ford gave no Hamburg University as an
events that · dictate the further clues to his · exchange student and
By LEE LEONARD
other Ford delegates are cooventim.
prefen!nce for a running received one year of graduate
He is not only chalnnan of sltuatio~. I can accept mate,
KANSAS CITY (UPI) "soft" and may turn· to
he told the Washington training in Biochemistry
anything
the
Republican
Ohio's 194 delegates and Reagan on the convention the Ohio delegation, but he
Post
in an Inter view from ltoward University in
Natiooal
Convention
does."
alternates to the Republican floor.
' has been here for more lban a
publisbed
Saturday be would Washington, D. C. from 1970
The
governor
said
he
thinks
Natlooal CorivenUon were to
Ford's Ohio forces cmtlnue week presiding over the Ford will win on the first be "very anxious'' to gel to 1971.
irrlve Sunday to prepare for to believe they ¢811 hold 90 or Republican National
Department's Deputy
WASHINGTON (UPI) He attended the Hahn"I think it'll be cut Reagan's recommendation
what could be lbe party's 91 delegates for a presidential C«nmmttee's cmventlm rule- ballot.
Assistant Secretary for
Rep.
Wayne
Hays
viewed
the
writing body. McGovcb Is the (and dried) before Sunday. It for a vice presidential neman Medical College in Foreign BuUdlngs Office at Foreign Bulldln!P• the Post
most exciting· quandrennlal victory on the first ~ot.
oomlnee-' presumably after Philadelphia from 1911 to
cmclave In years. .
An early tipoff of latent Ukely choice for chairman of better be, or somebotly will the batUe for the top spot m 1975. Primary area of con- the State Department as a said. It said Rillston once
be
In
trouble."
convention · rules
In aU, !lime 500 Ohioans are Reagan strength may COIIle the
He said he did not answer the' GOP ticket Is over.
centralion was Neurology . "!dvate duchy" producing managed a department store
committee.
to be on hand for the opening during rules and platform
Hays•
hometown,
Aides declined to say During medical school . he jobs, lucrative contracta and In
Joining McGough In Ford's questionnaire about a
•of the convention at 7 p.m. deblte. Crucial votes may be
Flushing,
Ohio,
and Hays
mate. "I never got whether Ford and Reagan received a federal grant to do free travel for bl.s friends, the
Monday, with lbe nominatim taken oo platform planlts &lt;Ji seeking to prev~nt any running
one," be said. "I don1 answer will meet before the research pertaining to spipal Washington Post said ooce rented an office In the
forelg,n policy, abortion, defections from Ford In the questlmnalres."
lltlllln doubt.
store.
ballotln&amp;. Press Secretary cord · injury. He joined the Saturday.
A Sunday
evening busing or equal rlghta for ado camp .will be Keith
Hays
and
Ralston
An
Investigative
report
by
If
Vice
President
Nelson
A.
Ron Nessen said Ford wiD not
McNamara, who beaded the
receptlm was scheduled for women.
frequenUy
traveled
abroad
IG
Post
writers
l)ob
Woodward
Rockefeller, once a Rhodes make up his miM on a
the . delegation at the
And a fight !IIBY develop Ford primary campaign in favorite, became a factor at runntng mate untU after tbe
and
Carl
Bernstein said Hays "Inspect" U.S. embaslllea,
Sbe~aton-Royal
Hotel, over rules, with Reagan Ohio. The President tapped
had a "stranglehold on the the Post said. It said lbey
serving as Ohio bead- forces seeking procedures McNamara to be a "whip" on the convention, "I'd have to presidential nominee Is
department's
housekeeping went 28 times to I.ondoa,
talk to him. He says be selected Wednesday.
. allowing delegates to the convention floor.
quarters.
functions abroad through his deacribed as Hays• fav&lt;rlte
Ford was e:~:pected to
Other political llimlnaries doesn't want to run. If he's
Ohio's 97 delegates Include abandoo their preprlmary
cbalrman.!hip of the Houae world capital.
changing his mind, be 'd discuss the vice presidency
91 pledlled to President Ford corrunltmenta and permitting In the Ohio delegation are
Raison also accompuied
International Operations subhurry up."
as well as !lime last-minute
and six IG challenger Ronald pro-Reagan delegatlo118 to Gov. James A. Rhodes; better
committee which oversees Hays m a trip to the
Rhodes said he has
strategy during a
.Reagan .
create li groundswell by former RepubUcan National attended every Republican . convention
the Foreign Buildings Dominican Republic, when
round of golf at the Burning
Olalrman Ray C. Bllsa; John
One Ford delegate, Mrs. casting early baUola.
the congressman obialned a
Office ."
Lolli Leggat of Willoughby, · Ohio RepubUcan Chairman W. Bricker, former governor National Convention since Tree Country Club In
divorce,
tbe Post.aaJd Hays
It
said
•
the
Foreign
now lists herself as Kent B. l'fcGough, a staunch and U.S. senator; Cleveland 1936, and was a floor suburban Maryland. He
recently
married tbe former
Buildings
Office
was
In a foursome with
.....
uncommitted and Reagan's backer of President Ford, Mayor Ralph J. Perk; former manager for Sen. Jmn W. played
Pat
Peak,
wbo bad worked
regarded .as the Ohio
Ohio Gov. James Rhodes and
· ~
fotcea claim five to eight will be a strong force at the U. Gov. John W. Brown; and Bricker's vice presidential
with
him
as
a secretary as did
Democrat's "jirlvate duchy,
assorted Republican bid In 1944 when he was the former GOP Reps. James WASIImG'fuN (UPll her
sister
Paula.
congressmen, mayors and 34-year old mayor of Byrnes of Wisconsin, and .warning of a potential a preserve of federal
'
The article said that
Colwnbus.
Leslie C. Arenda of llllnola. conflict of Interest, Rep. privilege."
state legislators.
Hays also had control of the Leonard Peak, a Olattanooga
Michael J. Harrington, OState
Department operating draftsman and 1111! father of
Masa., urged President Ford
budget
Secretary of State Pat and Paula, aJao got a job
Saturday to remove TeDII Henry and A.
Kissinger, as a $100 a day cmsultant to
said..
John Connally from the ordinarily a zealous protector !he State Department In 18681
By CHARLES S. TAYLOR
.EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
The nationwide mass
Foreign Intelligence of State
ATLANTA (UPI) - The
Monday through Wedmade
frequent .
Department and
lmm111lzadoa
program was
swine Influenza vaccine to ba
Advisory Board.
nesday,
a
ebance
of
"business"
trips
IG •
prerogatives
against
given to millions of to bave started In July for
Harrington said In a letter
showers
or
thundershowers
Washington
with
b1.s
wife
at
congressional encroachment,
Americana early tbll faU Ia high riat groupe, such 81 the
to Ford lbat Connally's public was loath to challenge Hays' State Department expe-.
each
day
of
the
period.
sale and effective and llbould elderly and those with
position on the board at a authority, the Post report always stopping by to say
Highs will. be In the 11pper
ceUBe milder side effects than respiratory aliments. Tbe
time when be also serves In a
70s to lbe lower 80s and
bello !Q Hays.
.,
nu sbola of the past, the Insurance controversy set the
private capacity as chairman said.
lows will be In the 50s to the
A
Kissinger
·
aide
was
It
said
Jaclt:
Tyler,
Peak's
project
back
by
two
11101\tha
national Center for Dlaeasi!
of. the Oltize~ Alliance for quoted as regarding the boss, was hired In 1971 to
mld 80s.
but that hurdle was cleared
Controlaald.Saturday.
Mediterranean Freedom Secretary's policy to the malt:e a!eulbillty study for a
Federal health of!lclals with the paaAge of a
"may not directly violate any Foreign BuUdlngil Office as new am~~~ residence
the
PRICE OF STEEL UP
plan a "concerted effort to measur~ maklnl
·
conflict
of Interest statutes." one of "benign neglect." . In AfRban1atan - a project
PITTSBURGH (UPI) point out IG people that the government the. primary
But,
he
said, ConnaUy's
The Post said Hays was lbat no oae In the State
vaccine not only Ill safe an!!,. larget for possible 'suite United Stala Steel Corp., the
"simultaneous
roles
as
Instrumental Ill bavlrig a Oepia lm&amp;it, Including the
•elfectlve bUt aeema to be i ' rather than the drug na lion '• Ia rust producer,
advisor and advocate protege, Orlan C. Rallton, amblsaador in Kabdl,
manufacturers.
Friday
annOUIICed
a
U
per
• gOod bit better then the other
contravene the spirit of appointed
Millar aald It was liard to cent Increase in the base
as
the wanted.
(flu) vacclnes," said Dr. predict
public policy directed at
If there .would be a price of sheet a~d strip
JlcNkl MIJIIr. direct&lt;lr of the
Intelligence commwrlty re·
'CDC'e Bureau of State rlll!b ol Jawsulta flied by products used In the .
form."
perallls claiming to have manufacturing of
Servlctl.
Harrington said that as a
Millar said be was suffered bid reactlona from automObiles and home ap.
member of the alliance
concerned that the prolonged the flu llbots. But he said, pllances. The increase, ef·
Coonally "openly advocates
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (·UPIJ know If either Is on the Uat
contro,ery In Wallhlnltoli "It's not going to be easy to fecllve Oct. 1, will come on
interference or, as he terms - The RepubUCIJII could · Prelldent Ford is considering
11'/er an Insurance ()1'011'... !Q show any relationship top of two previous tioosls In
It, 'meddling,' In the Internal help their atrug1e fer U.S. for Yice president.
protact l'wine vaccine batween thiB vaccine· and prices this year and will
affairs of foreign govern· Senate seats If lbey cou1c1 get
"I tblnlt 60 per cent of tbe
llll!lllfaetur• frml laWIIIIta majer side effects. Thill may mean higher prices for
ments."
their p_resldeotlal mm1nee to Independent voters ara
may have burt the )II'Oil'am. malte the lawyers atop and consumers by the end of the
that, Harrington said, name a woman running women," Stevens said.
'
year ..
"A lot of people have a poor ldnk."
''ca~~.!~~-.~cUed by mate, Seil. 'hcl Stevena R- "Maybe I'm a malt
8wlne Influenza is a new
opinion of tbe flu vaccine and
"ASSEMBLY LINE FOR SEEDUNGS", written by
Alallta, llllid Salunlay, I
chauvinist, but I think U..
- ' i&gt;ISEAsE NAMED
11111 decide not to take it. itlraln ...lnst which most
Boyd A. Rulb, dlatrlct conservationist of the Soil
Connall)' wu named by
Sienna
lllld
repo&amp;taa bll wOOleD would \'Ole fer a mu
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) 'lbey !eel there Ia IOilllllllng Pli'IIOIII bave no natural
Cmaervatlon Service, Pomeroy, apPeared in tbe National · Ford IG the advisory board first c:holce 11 -Secretary who would ~ a WIIW
bad abollt lt. Of courae, lbla II Plollctlan. Federal medical A priest al)d a musician who
Magazine, Soil Co~~~~trvatloo, p•bllllhecl by the U. S.
after the Prellclent erpanded Ceria lllllaal lhe Dep~ilment 11 vice prealcleut. l!'.lllllr .
eJpitll 1117 1t could poee a attended the International
. nat tbe Clll,11 lie Ilk!. .
Department of Agriculture. The article deals with the
the board Feb. 18. At the time · of H•m 1 and · Urban Carla . Hllll or AmM
The ..... NldiGn to lbe majer lllt!.'llll health threat Eucharistic Congress in
handling of tree seedlings, ~every 60 lleOOnds, wrappinll
of the expansion Ford also De ve I o p 111 en t
a n d Armstrong 1fQUid be a ...,
. propoaed nine nu abota tbll fahad winter. 'Ibe new Philadelphia last week have
ordered a reform In Am b 1111 d or ' Anne strong candidll!e. Sev&amp;al ar
them Into bundles of oiO seedlings each at a rate- ol two
· pneratad by tile ina'lnce strain- bellwtdlinlllar w contacted pneumonia causing
bundles every 15 seconds. Ruth wrote at the begibnlng of
Intelligence agency activities Armatrong Ia hla second us have metalliled 11*1 two ·
, controversy "Ia more the nu v1nu that killed doctors to suspect they may
the article, "It Is an assembly Une that would have . that had, In the past, violated choice.
1fmlen to lbe Prealcleot.
11111nou1 to me lban lbe 100,000 'Americana In 191a.19. be suffering from the
pleased Henry Ford himself."
agency charters.
But he lllld be does not
"Legionnaires' Disease."
·' clela1'' of lbe ()I'OII'am, Millar

Dr.·Peterson joins s~ff·

HaYs had
stronghold

Ohioans a1Tive·

Connally
0 bJ•ect 0 f
GOP • e

Vaccine safe

Woman mate could help

hls •"""6'.......

ly

•

potential rumlng-mate. They
toot the 1aaue before the
Qlnventi~J~ ltules C«nmmttee
Saturdly.
Reapn'a strateglllt.a were
cmlldent Ford's refuaai to
aniioWlCe bl.s choice before
lbe ncminatl~J~ would coat
him a heavy share . of the
· uncommitted votes.
"We tblnlt most of them
will not vote for Ford blind,"
a top aide said.
~ MCJ~day.
Reagan, who suffered a
The latest UPI tabulatlm setback when the platform
!bowed Ford with .l.l23 llrst coounlttee virtually rubber·
baUot votes-eeven !hurt of stamped the admlnlltratlon's
the 1,130 needed for program, cmtinued probing
nomination. Reagan . bad for weak spots In Ford's
1,036, and 100 were listed ali ,campaign for the Republican
uncommitted.
presidential ncmlnatlon.
Scbwellter'a announceinent
Reagan's IGp stratel!lstslbat he was making Inroads those m the scene lp Kansas
Into the Permsylvanla delega- City and those wilb him In
lim-a key reason he was California - were cmvlnced
chosen - came as Reagan Ford's refusal !Q name a vice
launched a new effort to presidential candidate In acJ.
Presldeni Ford's support by vance could cost him crucial
forcing him to name bl.s votes on the oomlnatlon roll
· - caU.
_ Ford, the only nonelected
president In U.S. history, and
Reagan are loclted In the
tightest race for the
nomination since Dwight
Eisenhower edged Robert
Taft In 1962.

.- - ~unba)l ~imts itntintl
VOL 11 . NO. 29

TOILET
SEATS

BERNZ-

•
•

&amp;lhwelker, the Uberal
Mn~tor wbolle choice lltunned
Reagan conaervatlves,
arrived at the c~J~vention city
and
said
13
more
Pennsylvania delegates
would back the Reagan·
Schwelker ticltet. He said the
-namea WGUid be announced
over the weekend or oo
Mooday. .
Despite the dllmay of hard·
core conservatives,
Scbwelker 1ald he was
certain Re•n would not ask
him to step aside. Reagan
aides also have denied a
report Scbwellter would be
ditched.
"When I flrllt met with

Governor Relian he made It
abundantly clear that he was
plclting I! team to go aU the
way
to
November,"
Scbwelker said. "I truat
Rooald Reagan."
Rea1an and President
Ford, bo'th claiming- enovcb
votea for .a flrst·ballot
nomination, planried to arrive
Sunday to take personal
command of their forces at
the 31st Nathoo Conventl~J~

,.

.

'"

A

�12-1!1ts.dafTimlll·~l.SUIIdllf,

'

'

Aq.15,1976

J

I Overstreet will
I judge song hunt
I
I Counlrf

.
'

I

l

'

FORT WORTH, Teus performer Tommy
1
Overstreet bu been named
• me of tbe Judlea for the 18'16
Reallalic(r) •180,000 CB Solie
, Seareb IPORiored. by tile
I
natloawlda Radio Shack
I : eleelrGnlca alore chin. .
OwwltreetI' '..-N'WI..
- - I "Mr '
&gt;!
t Counlry Ambluador", Ia a.
·l ..-jor Dot.recording artist,
t I IIOilllwrller, music publlsller
1 , and record producer. Among
the 11011p he bas recorded
-which have reached the
th
number one position on e
charta
are :
"Gwen
(Cqratulations)", "I don't
• Know. You Anymore", "AIJI
(Doo'gf&lt;lRunning toHlm),,

!

I

lonna and complete contest
rules are available from
Radio Shack stores and
dealers In aU SO· states and
Canada . Contest'ends August
31, 1976.
.
r.macum~~
.... ;..,...... .

By STEVE GI!'.R8'l'EL
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
- Ronald Reagan'• vice
pruldentlal candidate,
Rlcbard Scbwelller, clahned
new tNPPOrt from bom&amp;ttate

r» .
~

I
•'$.•

PemaYlvanla Saturday and
lllid he wu cCI)ftclent Reagan
would not dump him.

Coming
Events

MONDAY
MEIGS • GALUA Chapter
Ohio Civil Services Employes
•···. Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
..,.,..
the Guiding Hand School in

PRICES IN EFFECT

·r .,nd
"~eaven rs t.iy woman's =r:-h·.
tove
CHRISTIAN Women's Club

His current album, monthly luncheon Tuesday,
"Woman Your Name Is My . l2!15p.m. attheHolidaylnn. ·
• Song"ls a collection of songs Babysitting provide(!. For
[ about women 's names, reservations call Es ther
featuring his latest hit, Bechtle, 4ol6-4713.
"{Jeamle Marie) You Were PICNIC for members and
,·
Lady".
a
,·
friends of the P'orter UMW, 6
The 1976 Reali,9Uc $100,000 p.m. Tuesday at the church.
CB Song Search is a unique PATRIOT Grange mee ts
· songwrltlng ~contest open to
II any U. ·s. or Canadian follow
Tuesday, 8 p.m. Potluck to
.
1 resident. $100,000 In cash
LAFAYETIE Shrine No. 44
1 prizes will be awarded for the
best original music arjJ lyrics annual picnic at Krodel Park,
Point Pleasant, Tuesday, 6
in a song centered around the p.rrL Members and their
I
theme · of Cltlzens Band
.
Radio, its . operation, famllles are to bring food and
everyday uae or any phase of . tab~ service.
CB acUvity, real or Imagined. ~Df'lESDAY •
.
Atotal of 63 cash prizeS wiD AME!liCAN Leg1on ..and
be awarded. The ten winning :V"er1~an Legion Auxiliary
Songs will be recorded by 1omt p1cmc and mstaUaUon at
Radio
Shack in
a the home of Mr. and Mrs. L.
professlonaUy arranged. and G. Marchi, 6:30 p.m. Wed·
produced album Entry nesday. Bring. covered dish
··
and table semce.

COLEMAN OVE.N

CLOTHING ·

'

•

AUGUST
ALL SUMMER

0

·
I

•. '

HECK'S REG.

I

'14.99

DEPT.

I

•

'Who.ll help you nail
down a majorhome
improvement Joan?
We Will . . . because we feel money spent
to improve your home is a good invest. ment '41 your enjoyment of your home
and iWreaale vafue. Wbether your plBIIII
include 11.dding a rooril, ~modeJ.lng the
kitchen, 1inish:ihg the attic or raising the
roof .. . come.8ee us for a home,improvement loan. You'll find out why everyone calls us The Willing Bank.

~Ohio~~
-

Natiollal~

21 PIECE

SPORTS DEPT.

Advertised Brand

0-MATIC

SOCKET

HECK'S
REG. '5.44

SET
HECK'S REG. $14.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

HOW. DEPT.

WITH ADJUSTABLE HEAD REST

$

REG. Sl'-99

Automotive Dept.

TEFLON GRIDDLE
HEGIC'SIIG.

'3"

HECK'S REG.
1 1.38

13..
·

'1018

S13.99•

WINDEX

CAR WASH
BRUSH

CAR CREEPER
HECK'S

COLEMAN

15 OUNCE
AEROSOL

99~

&lt;

HECK'S REG. 75'

·....:;..~-

. AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HOUSEWARES
DEPT
•
• toi
"""' .,

•

··~ ....

1\

VANISH
48

.

oz.

77~

PRESTONE

8 OUNCE

CAR WASH

HECK'S REG. 89'

HECK'S
REG. '1.09

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

BEHOLD
-

7 OUNCE

•

66~

MR, MUSCLE
OVERN CLEANER

77e

HECK'S REG •.89'
HOUSEWARES DEPT.
REGULAR
&amp; MINT

TOY SPECIALI

HOT CYCLE
HECK'S

CREST
7 01.

REG. 17.99

TOOTHPASTE
.

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HECK'S REG. 83'
HOUSEWARES DEPT.

ALBERTO

•

BALSAM
CREME RINSE

8 oz.
REG. '1.58
COSMETICS DEPT.

PREMIER CANISTER
Swivel top allows you to place the cleaner
In the ceoter of the room and vacuum
every corner with a minimum of steps.

•

HECK'S
REG. 131.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

•

TOY DEPARTMENT
TOY SPECIAL

PONY SWING

89'

HECK'S REG. 99'
COSMETICS DEPT.

FOLDING SYRINGE
..
'

HECK'S
REG. 129.99

$288
. HiCIC~S IIG~

...-..
$3.11

(4 ONLY)

TOY DEPARTMENT
SUNSET I-TRACK'

BLANK TAPES
H.ECK'S
REG. 12.49
JEWELRY D£PT. .

. $1&amp;6EACH

••

,,

SUNDAY. AUCUST 15, 1976

John sears, Rea&amp;an'a
Innovative campalan
manager, puslled before tbe ·
rules CCIIIII!llttee hla propoaal
IG Ioree Ford to reveal bll
cbolce of a vice .preeldential ·
candidate. The Sean
. JI.'OplSII was turned clown by
the temporary · rules
committee, dominated by
Ford backers.
The convention's rules
COOlmlltee, however, monl
closely roflects the . close
1a1ance between Reagan and
Ford. Sears has said he would
take the fi~bt to the

convention door If · the
CC11111111tiee rebuffl him.
The ''trllll tile delegates"
pr opoM1 would ferae Ford IG
_......bllcbolcebyta.m.
Wedneldly, about 12 boun
befere tbe beJWI'IIIIJellbll· If
Ford 1 otMCI, aU deleptes
Clllllllllttad IG h!m....Jncludinll
thole pledged by all!te and
party law- would be freed.
The Rea1an strateglltta,
cloeeteclirllb lbe candidate In
California, are convinced
Ford would be bldly burt
among uncommiUedl by
leavln&amp;lbem
Oil a

ar·•·

vice preai:Wltlal candl,data.
"We cloll'l have eDDIICII

.,.. tin lbe !Ira ballot, but
neither c1oea Ford," oee aide
said. "And, If we're aGintl to

-'- Ito lt'l becanae
of tbe
,

1'1WI

~~~~·"

Tbe final drafl of the
platfcrm, completed Friday

nillbt 8ftet almolt J'OUIICI.tbe-

clock cleUberatlctml, wu: I
clear lriumpb for Ford. He
prevailed 011 .uCh key - ai the Equal Rlgbta
Amendment, detente, Henty
Kisllnller's Africa policy, and
lbe Plilama CIDII.
I

••

PAGE 13

Rhodes at convention
By LEE LEONARD
KANSAS CITY (UPI)
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes,
hoping to avoid "dull
meetings" and saying be can
llve with Ronald Reagan If
l'fesldent Ford geta 11p11et,
was to l!rrive here Sunday for
his !lib straight Republican
Natkilal Convention.
Ever unpredictable,
Rhodes said In a pre·
convention Interview that be
might delay bl.s arrival uniU
Mmday and leave right after
the balloting for vice

preSldenl Tburaday.
"1 don't want to be tied up
in duD meetings," said the
governor, acknowledging he
might bring his golf clubs
along.
R bodes,
y.a w n l n g
frequenUy, said he regards
. the convention as just
another political meeting,
adding he doe8il't plan any
per!llnal pyrotechnics.
"I never get way out on a
limb
at
national
conventions," be said,
forgetting for the moment

lbat he wsa nlmlnated for
President In 1968 to avoid
turning Ohio's first-ballot
voteS over to anyone.
"I do a little needling at the
governors' conferences, but
not . at the national
convention.
The governor, a staunch
' aupporter of President Ford,
said he has not yet been asked
to do anything m behalf of the
Pi-esident at lbe coovention,
but expects to be asked. ·
"I've dme everything for
him In Ohio," Rhodes said .

"I've helped blm ,by not
saying Wlklnd words about
anyrx:te."

Ford
holds
•
meetmg
\

•

.

JOINS STAFF AT VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL - Wl1llam Peterson, M.D.
(third from left) bas joined the staff at Veterans Memorial Hoapltal and has offices In 1be
Meigs Medical Bulldlnl! adjacanl IG the boapltal. Shown are 1-r, Scott Lucas, hoapltal
admlnlslrator; SbmlnRoaeberry, R.N., Dr. Peterson, and Debbie HC!IIIIOll, his reoeptlooilt.

The.governor said avoiding ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) .:_
lntraparty friction Is the only
President
Ford, on the eve of
way the Republican nootinee
his
trip
to
Kansas City for .a
can cmty Ohio, al(bougb he
per!llnaUy Ukes a cmventim showdown with Ron,ld
from 1975 to 1976 doing a
POMEROY ~ Dr. W!Utam National Heallli Service Y.
wilb a good fight. "I lllte 'ein J,teagan, held final talks with
straight
medlc.ai ' mternshlp.
aides Saturday and then went Peterson, M.D. has joined the Corps while in · his second
that way," he said.
His wife, ()beryl Fr~zier
''I don't think open host lilt}' golfing with three long-time staff at Veterans Memorial year of medical training. He · and lwo ,children, William,
Hospital with offiees located trained at United States
Is good," said Rhodes. "Ohio Republican allies.
Ford
planned
a
SWtday
in the Meigs Medical Building Public Health · Service age 3, and Whitney, 7 mon'ths,
Is a difficult state to carry.
Hospital in Staten Island, N. reside in Athens.
We can't fight right up .until afternoon flight to Kansas adjacent to the hospital.
Dr . Peterson , born lri
the Monday before election." City after attending church In
To that end, Rhodes is Washington. His leisurely Washington, D. C., attended
prepared to accept the choice Sallir&lt;la7 lcbedule reflncted Hiram College in Ohio from
•
of the Cllllventloll, even lilt's bla oft..apnplld Cllillldence llle6 to 19'10, graduallng with
be would win the pnllldenlial a BS degree In chemistry and
a.pn.
"I think there's mor~ nomination on the first ballot a minor in German. He
accord between Reagan and at this week's Republican studied in Germany six
·
months while in college at
Ford than meets lbe eye," be National Convention.
said. "It's not how I feel, Ws ' Altllougb Ford gave no Hamburg University as an
events that · dictate the further clues to his · exchange student and
By LEE LEONARD
other Ford delegates are cooventim.
prefen!nce for a running received one year of graduate
He is not only chalnnan of sltuatio~. I can accept mate,
KANSAS CITY (UPI) "soft" and may turn· to
he told the Washington training in Biochemistry
anything
the
Republican
Ohio's 194 delegates and Reagan on the convention the Ohio delegation, but he
Post
in an Inter view from ltoward University in
Natiooal
Convention
does."
alternates to the Republican floor.
' has been here for more lban a
publisbed
Saturday be would Washington, D. C. from 1970
The
governor
said
he
thinks
Natlooal CorivenUon were to
Ford's Ohio forces cmtlnue week presiding over the Ford will win on the first be "very anxious'' to gel to 1971.
irrlve Sunday to prepare for to believe they ¢811 hold 90 or Republican National
Department's Deputy
WASHINGTON (UPI) He attended the Hahn"I think it'll be cut Reagan's recommendation
what could be lbe party's 91 delegates for a presidential C«nmmttee's cmventlm rule- ballot.
Assistant Secretary for
Rep.
Wayne
Hays
viewed
the
writing body. McGovcb Is the (and dried) before Sunday. It for a vice presidential neman Medical College in Foreign BuUdlngs Office at Foreign Bulldln!P• the Post
most exciting· quandrennlal victory on the first ~ot.
oomlnee-' presumably after Philadelphia from 1911 to
cmclave In years. .
An early tipoff of latent Ukely choice for chairman of better be, or somebotly will the batUe for the top spot m 1975. Primary area of con- the State Department as a said. It said Rillston once
be
In
trouble."
convention · rules
In aU, !lime 500 Ohioans are Reagan strength may COIIle the
He said he did not answer the' GOP ticket Is over.
centralion was Neurology . "!dvate duchy" producing managed a department store
committee.
to be on hand for the opening during rules and platform
Hays•
hometown,
Aides declined to say During medical school . he jobs, lucrative contracta and In
Joining McGough In Ford's questionnaire about a
•of the convention at 7 p.m. deblte. Crucial votes may be
Flushing,
Ohio,
and Hays
mate. "I never got whether Ford and Reagan received a federal grant to do free travel for bl.s friends, the
Monday, with lbe nominatim taken oo platform planlts &lt;Ji seeking to prev~nt any running
one," be said. "I don1 answer will meet before the research pertaining to spipal Washington Post said ooce rented an office In the
forelg,n policy, abortion, defections from Ford In the questlmnalres."
lltlllln doubt.
store.
ballotln&amp;. Press Secretary cord · injury. He joined the Saturday.
A Sunday
evening busing or equal rlghta for ado camp .will be Keith
Hays
and
Ralston
An
Investigative
report
by
If
Vice
President
Nelson
A.
Ron Nessen said Ford wiD not
McNamara, who beaded the
receptlm was scheduled for women.
frequenUy
traveled
abroad
IG
Post
writers
l)ob
Woodward
Rockefeller, once a Rhodes make up his miM on a
the . delegation at the
And a fight !IIBY develop Ford primary campaign in favorite, became a factor at runntng mate untU after tbe
and
Carl
Bernstein said Hays "Inspect" U.S. embaslllea,
Sbe~aton-Royal
Hotel, over rules, with Reagan Ohio. The President tapped
had a "stranglehold on the the Post said. It said lbey
serving as Ohio bead- forces seeking procedures McNamara to be a "whip" on the convention, "I'd have to presidential nominee Is
department's
housekeeping went 28 times to I.ondoa,
talk to him. He says be selected Wednesday.
. allowing delegates to the convention floor.
quarters.
functions abroad through his deacribed as Hays• fav&lt;rlte
Ford was e:~:pected to
Other political llimlnaries doesn't want to run. If he's
Ohio's 97 delegates Include abandoo their preprlmary
cbalrman.!hip of the Houae world capital.
changing his mind, be 'd discuss the vice presidency
91 pledlled to President Ford corrunltmenta and permitting In the Ohio delegation are
Raison also accompuied
International Operations subhurry up."
as well as !lime last-minute
and six IG challenger Ronald pro-Reagan delegatlo118 to Gov. James A. Rhodes; better
committee which oversees Hays m a trip to the
Rhodes said he has
strategy during a
.Reagan .
create li groundswell by former RepubUcan National attended every Republican . convention
the Foreign Buildings Dominican Republic, when
round of golf at the Burning
Olalrman Ray C. Bllsa; John
One Ford delegate, Mrs. casting early baUola.
the congressman obialned a
Office ."
Lolli Leggat of Willoughby, · Ohio RepubUcan Chairman W. Bricker, former governor National Convention since Tree Country Club In
divorce,
tbe Post.aaJd Hays
It
said
•
the
Foreign
now lists herself as Kent B. l'fcGough, a staunch and U.S. senator; Cleveland 1936, and was a floor suburban Maryland. He
recently
married tbe former
Buildings
Office
was
In a foursome with
.....
uncommitted and Reagan's backer of President Ford, Mayor Ralph J. Perk; former manager for Sen. Jmn W. played
Pat
Peak,
wbo bad worked
regarded .as the Ohio
Ohio Gov. James Rhodes and
· ~
fotcea claim five to eight will be a strong force at the U. Gov. John W. Brown; and Bricker's vice presidential
with
him
as
a secretary as did
Democrat's "jirlvate duchy,
assorted Republican bid In 1944 when he was the former GOP Reps. James WASIImG'fuN (UPll her
sister
Paula.
congressmen, mayors and 34-year old mayor of Byrnes of Wisconsin, and .warning of a potential a preserve of federal
'
The article said that
Colwnbus.
Leslie C. Arenda of llllnola. conflict of Interest, Rep. privilege."
state legislators.
Hays also had control of the Leonard Peak, a Olattanooga
Michael J. Harrington, OState
Department operating draftsman and 1111! father of
Masa., urged President Ford
budget
Secretary of State Pat and Paula, aJao got a job
Saturday to remove TeDII Henry and A.
Kissinger, as a $100 a day cmsultant to
said..
John Connally from the ordinarily a zealous protector !he State Department In 18681
By CHARLES S. TAYLOR
.EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
The nationwide mass
Foreign Intelligence of State
ATLANTA (UPI) - The
Monday through Wedmade
frequent .
Department and
lmm111lzadoa
program was
swine Influenza vaccine to ba
Advisory Board.
nesday,
a
ebance
of
"business"
trips
IG •
prerogatives
against
given to millions of to bave started In July for
Harrington said In a letter
showers
or
thundershowers
Washington
with
b1.s
wife
at
congressional encroachment,
Americana early tbll faU Ia high riat groupe, such 81 the
to Ford lbat Connally's public was loath to challenge Hays' State Department expe-.
each
day
of
the
period.
sale and effective and llbould elderly and those with
position on the board at a authority, the Post report always stopping by to say
Highs will. be In the 11pper
ceUBe milder side effects than respiratory aliments. Tbe
time when be also serves In a
70s to lbe lower 80s and
bello !Q Hays.
.,
nu sbola of the past, the Insurance controversy set the
private capacity as chairman said.
lows will be In the 50s to the
A
Kissinger
·
aide
was
It
said
Jaclt:
Tyler,
Peak's
project
back
by
two
11101\tha
national Center for Dlaeasi!
of. the Oltize~ Alliance for quoted as regarding the boss, was hired In 1971 to
mld 80s.
but that hurdle was cleared
Controlaald.Saturday.
Mediterranean Freedom Secretary's policy to the malt:e a!eulbillty study for a
Federal health of!lclals with the paaAge of a
"may not directly violate any Foreign BuUdlngil Office as new am~~~ residence
the
PRICE OF STEEL UP
plan a "concerted effort to measur~ maklnl
·
conflict
of Interest statutes." one of "benign neglect." . In AfRban1atan - a project
PITTSBURGH (UPI) point out IG people that the government the. primary
But,
he
said, ConnaUy's
The Post said Hays was lbat no oae In the State
vaccine not only Ill safe an!!,. larget for possible 'suite United Stala Steel Corp., the
"simultaneous
roles
as
Instrumental Ill bavlrig a Oepia lm&amp;it, Including the
•elfectlve bUt aeema to be i ' rather than the drug na lion '• Ia rust producer,
advisor and advocate protege, Orlan C. Rallton, amblsaador in Kabdl,
manufacturers.
Friday
annOUIICed
a
U
per
• gOod bit better then the other
contravene the spirit of appointed
Millar aald It was liard to cent Increase in the base
as
the wanted.
(flu) vacclnes," said Dr. predict
public policy directed at
If there .would be a price of sheet a~d strip
JlcNkl MIJIIr. direct&lt;lr of the
Intelligence commwrlty re·
'CDC'e Bureau of State rlll!b ol Jawsulta flied by products used In the .
form."
perallls claiming to have manufacturing of
Servlctl.
Harrington said that as a
Millar said be was suffered bid reactlona from automObiles and home ap.
member of the alliance
concerned that the prolonged the flu llbots. But he said, pllances. The increase, ef·
Coonally "openly advocates
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (·UPIJ know If either Is on the Uat
contro,ery In Wallhlnltoli "It's not going to be easy to fecllve Oct. 1, will come on
interference or, as he terms - The RepubUCIJII could · Prelldent Ford is considering
11'/er an Insurance ()1'011'... !Q show any relationship top of two previous tioosls In
It, 'meddling,' In the Internal help their atrug1e fer U.S. for Yice president.
protact l'wine vaccine batween thiB vaccine· and prices this year and will
affairs of foreign govern· Senate seats If lbey cou1c1 get
"I tblnlt 60 per cent of tbe
llll!lllfaetur• frml laWIIIIta majer side effects. Thill may mean higher prices for
ments."
their p_resldeotlal mm1nee to Independent voters ara
may have burt the )II'Oil'am. malte the lawyers atop and consumers by the end of the
that, Harrington said, name a woman running women," Stevens said.
'
year ..
"A lot of people have a poor ldnk."
''ca~~.!~~-.~cUed by mate, Seil. 'hcl Stevena R- "Maybe I'm a malt
8wlne Influenza is a new
opinion of tbe flu vaccine and
"ASSEMBLY LINE FOR SEEDUNGS", written by
Alallta, llllid Salunlay, I
chauvinist, but I think U..
- ' i&gt;ISEAsE NAMED
11111 decide not to take it. itlraln ...lnst which most
Boyd A. Rulb, dlatrlct conservationist of the Soil
Connall)' wu named by
Sienna
lllld
repo&amp;taa bll wOOleD would \'Ole fer a mu
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) 'lbey !eel there Ia IOilllllllng Pli'IIOIII bave no natural
Cmaervatlon Service, Pomeroy, apPeared in tbe National · Ford IG the advisory board first c:holce 11 -Secretary who would ~ a WIIW
bad abollt lt. Of courae, lbla II Plollctlan. Federal medical A priest al)d a musician who
Magazine, Soil Co~~~~trvatloo, p•bllllhecl by the U. S.
after the Prellclent erpanded Ceria lllllaal lhe Dep~ilment 11 vice prealcleut. l!'.lllllr .
eJpitll 1117 1t could poee a attended the International
. nat tbe Clll,11 lie Ilk!. .
Department of Agriculture. The article deals with the
the board Feb. 18. At the time · of H•m 1 and · Urban Carla . Hllll or AmM
The ..... NldiGn to lbe majer lllt!.'llll health threat Eucharistic Congress in
handling of tree seedlings, ~every 60 lleOOnds, wrappinll
of the expansion Ford also De ve I o p 111 en t
a n d Armstrong 1fQUid be a ...,
. propoaed nine nu abota tbll fahad winter. 'Ibe new Philadelphia last week have
ordered a reform In Am b 1111 d or ' Anne strong candidll!e. Sev&amp;al ar
them Into bundles of oiO seedlings each at a rate- ol two
· pneratad by tile ina'lnce strain- bellwtdlinlllar w contacted pneumonia causing
bundles every 15 seconds. Ruth wrote at the begibnlng of
Intelligence agency activities Armatrong Ia hla second us have metalliled 11*1 two ·
, controversy "Ia more the nu v1nu that killed doctors to suspect they may
the article, "It Is an assembly Une that would have . that had, In the past, violated choice.
1fmlen to lbe Prealcleot.
11111nou1 to me lban lbe 100,000 'Americana In 191a.19. be suffering from the
pleased Henry Ford himself."
agency charters.
But he lllld be does not
"Legionnaires' Disease."
·' clela1'' of lbe ()I'OII'am, Millar

Dr.·Peterson joins s~ff·

HaYs had
stronghold

Ohioans a1Tive·

Connally
0 bJ•ect 0 f
GOP • e

Vaccine safe

Woman mate could help

hls •"""6'.......

ly

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potential rumlng-mate. They
toot the 1aaue before the
Qlnventi~J~ ltules C«nmmttee
Saturdly.
Reapn'a strateglllt.a were
cmlldent Ford's refuaai to
aniioWlCe bl.s choice before
lbe ncminatl~J~ would coat
him a heavy share . of the
· uncommitted votes.
"We tblnlt most of them
will not vote for Ford blind,"
a top aide said.
~ MCJ~day.
Reagan, who suffered a
The latest UPI tabulatlm setback when the platform
!bowed Ford with .l.l23 llrst coounlttee virtually rubber·
baUot votes-eeven !hurt of stamped the admlnlltratlon's
the 1,130 needed for program, cmtinued probing
nomination. Reagan . bad for weak spots In Ford's
1,036, and 100 were listed ali ,campaign for the Republican
uncommitted.
presidential ncmlnatlon.
Scbwellter'a announceinent
Reagan's IGp stratel!lstslbat he was making Inroads those m the scene lp Kansas
Into the Permsylvanla delega- City and those wilb him In
lim-a key reason he was California - were cmvlnced
chosen - came as Reagan Ford's refusal !Q name a vice
launched a new effort to presidential candidate In acJ.
Presldeni Ford's support by vance could cost him crucial
forcing him to name bl.s votes on the oomlnatlon roll
· - caU.
_ Ford, the only nonelected
president In U.S. history, and
Reagan are loclted In the
tightest race for the
nomination since Dwight
Eisenhower edged Robert
Taft In 1962.

.- - ~unba)l ~imts itntintl
VOL 11 . NO. 29

TOILET
SEATS

BERNZ-

•
•

&amp;lhwelker, the Uberal
Mn~tor wbolle choice lltunned
Reagan conaervatlves,
arrived at the c~J~vention city
and
said
13
more
Pennsylvania delegates
would back the Reagan·
Schwelker ticltet. He said the
-namea WGUid be announced
over the weekend or oo
Mooday. .
Despite the dllmay of hard·
core conservatives,
Scbwelker 1ald he was
certain Re•n would not ask
him to step aside. Reagan
aides also have denied a
report Scbwellter would be
ditched.
"When I flrllt met with

Governor Relian he made It
abundantly clear that he was
plclting I! team to go aU the
way
to
November,"
Scbwelker said. "I truat
Rooald Reagan."
Rea1an and President
Ford, bo'th claiming- enovcb
votea for .a flrst·ballot
nomination, planried to arrive
Sunday to take personal
command of their forces at
the 31st Nathoo Conventl~J~

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11 - Thelluada1~ · ~1dlnei, Smday,Al!8. 15,1976

UPI's notebook
Ualted Prw 'at •" I
Qld IIIIORO, N.C. - STANLEY J.IWUUS Sr., 93,
a 1!: h•ltll arglllizlng tbe !1m Boy._ troap In the United
. . . . dildrrtday. Harris had bMI lllldlll*be didn't have
.... llw,10 be orpnlzed a Boy sat troap Ill have IIOIIieone
to fl bailie With him whUe "getlllll blekiiiJIIrength."
,_ doctor, he sai\1, "told melt die peacefully and I told
111m Iuenr did anything fliiC P 'r " Harrla, who formed the
!reap ill Frankfort, Ky., In dllllln hla lleep at Wesley
Lilli Hm!pital. Funeral a till' m IICbeduled Sunday.

DETROIT - THI V.I. .AUTQ INDUSTRY, paced by
giant Genenl Jlle.a, turned In a reC(ll'd-breaking
pellumance in.., . . . . New car sales W.,ped last year's
cllmally low lewiW 41 per cent.
GM aaldFridiJ II ~~let topped last year's Aug. 1·10 perloil
by nearly 72perellll. Cll'yaler poeted a 74 per cent gain, Ford
waa up 10 per- bat American Motors, caught In a smaU car
aalea .-... ftll _..ty 29 per cent below last year. GM
INNIJIIIII llr 1 bliber.th&amp;IHiormal62 per cent of the 194,760
CII'I.WID the Aug. 1·10 period, eclipsing a liUirk set by the
tnt
I In 1986.
laladaldlllilllr&lt;~

•

WASHINGTON - THE FBI IS ENTERING the
bmltiptlon of the murder of underworld figure John Roselli,
wbold told the Senate Intelligence Committee he tried to
~111111;·wte Fidel Cutro for the CIA. Attorney General
Edward H. levi lilted the FBI Friday to detennine whether
&amp;lel1l wu murdered as a result of his committee testimony
or In arder to prevent possible future testimony.
·
· RGielll'1 ~ was found last week stuffed in a chain·
welpud, ~allon drwn noatlng in a hay near Miami. He had
bleD milling IInce he left hl.ssl.ster'shome July 28 to play golf.
Jlllllee Department spokesman Ro~rt Havel aaid Sens.
Howard Baker, ft.Term., and Daniel K. Inoye, D-Hawall, had
reqllllted an FBI investlgatloO.

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ClEVELAND - TilE UNITED RUBBER WORKERS
Unlon'a Firestone negotiating committee approved a tentative
agreement m e&lt;)Oilomic lasues Friday, clearing the way for
aettlement of ·the marathbn rubber workers' strike .
'Die agreement was announced in Washington early
ThUI'IIIay by union negotiators and representatives !lf the
major dOmestic rubber cocnpanies. U.S. Labor Secretary W. J.
UM')' Jr. described it as the most expensive contract
aettlem•t of the year. Firestone, GoQdyear, B.F. Goodrich
and Unlroyal are due to open negotiations b1 separate cities
Moaday to reach master agreementa with the union. Yet to be
I'IIIOived are h~ltal and medical inaurance coverage, skilled
trade laauel and conlnct language.

PLAINS, GA.- ASSERTING THAT his campaign ...so far
loob pod." Jimmy Carter IICIIOOuled a one-day. trip.Satilrday
to West Viqlnla, one of the few states be didn't vliit on his 19IJIOIItb preeldentlal campaign. The DemocraU:c presidential
nominee planaed to make two apeeches in Charleston - at an
afternoon fllndraller for the state Democratic Committee and
at a Jeffe~.Jaekaon Dlmer ill,the evening.
Asked tw reporters Friday to aaaesa his campaign, carter
llld "110 far it looU good." He said his staff will place an out·
ct«ater in each state unot as a boss but as a knowledgable,
aperlenced, qualified coordinator." Californian Gov.
E+mmd Brown Jr., who wu visiting Carter, said such a move
'llllllld held off ''factionallam" and intra'\!tate bickering.

lOme 4,000 penona was expected to ccme off without a hitch.
The demonatratora protested a U.S. Interior Departroent
ban m nude awlmmlng along the Cape Cod Natioaal Seashore.
A scheduled Jllllle.ln last Sunday wu rained out and gloomy
skies threatened to cancel t.oday's planned prolell.
Se-al dozen park rangers, 110111e on horllebeck, were
ordered to patrol Brush Hollow Beach and arrest anyone who
lllripped in case the weather improved.

OOLUMBUS - A CANDIDATE FOR THE Ohio Senate
says he would like to see the Ohio BeU Telephone Co. issue
supplemental phone books every three months to help
customers avoid paying for directory assistance. Michael
Schwarzwalder, Democratic candidate for the 16th district
senate seat, caUed for the service during a news conference
Friday.
He noted tllat Ohio ·Bell are aUowed three free requests a
month for phone munbers, but any requests after that will cost
20 cents each. He said the ~sent Columbus phone book went
to the printers May 15 and already four per cent ofthe numbers
In it ate wrong, and within a year 20 per cent of the numbers·
will have been cha~ed.
COLUMBUS - TilE omo BUREAU QF Emplo)')llent
Services will take job applications Monday from persons
wanting to work at the Ohio State Fair. ·
The applicatloos can be picked up at a trailer lnslde the
11th Avenue entrance to the Ohio State Fairgrounds. The office
wiD be open Monday through Friday, wiD close Aug, 21 and 22,
and wiD reopen Aug. 23 and remain open throughout the fair.
OBES said waiters, waitresses, ticket takers, tractor drivers,
groundakeepers, and shuttle bua drivers are needed. The fair
nw !rem Aug. 26 throiJI)I Sept. 6,

• IJPONIC)aiNG liNG

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I ad bymn IIIII on

"''....,• ._ II at 10 a.m.
Act!YI.. ,.. lnd.se lila
reauJar ..... lila .....,.
(an ecumtDical wonhlp
-lure ofllitr' 1 sin the
WlhYIIIe 111'1111 at 1 a.m.,
followed by a joint lluDda)'
school at 10 a.m. IIIII dPnner
at noon (potluck) .

§OLIJTION

0

ACROSS
t Cuahloned
7 Wailea IM!tly
t2 Llttonod to

17fr. . tl~el
2 t E~:clte to tcllon

22Boi&gt;Yi"'lrn
-ol-d
23Mittaka
24 VediC flrr god

81 DIM
139 ltl fall
82 P•IOd at laalln g 1'1 Flt~llliOfl
83 Highlander

1-4 2 Ethiopian title

&amp;•Wilhtfed

11.3 "nU«td enln\al

85 Poueutd

25&amp;1n QOCI

28Mualcal
organ lzatlon
28Brand
30 Suy bac«
32tc lngof8111'11n

33RIC:.dl
35 Emp!Oyrc!
31 t.tuaured
duration of
38 Seer ell
40Swdy
41lalln
eonjUncUon

43 Lrmb'o..,
name

450octt.-,e
.(11 Hypotn.tlctl

tore•

48 Fond desire
,g H'"dtr
&amp;2Qr&amp;flt UHof

54 AtludH

eeerag
.&amp;7 D• 'ahorn
51 HMventy body

t!Rip
12 Duck like bird

13 ,...,.,,, )mtgl
e.c Prepoaltlon

IIPerlodol tme
ITMaltohoo

88 SUpply

US European

armtne
·1n Fete
1-49 Oecay
90 Mend
152 N"r
~ 2 Rcm , n road
153 Horus· dOmicile
94 Brittle
155 Str iP tJ lea!her
95 Cubic melen
157 Wander
96 0m ilfrom
159ASII!t (lllibt .)
prCJI"'unclation
160 D irection
97 Parll of play
162 P\lf.t s ,
99 Opanwork fabric 164 Wa !rd
tOO Mountain lake 168 Antwerabte
10 2 Veh icles
168LCM ,flat ce rt
103 Fondle
1$9 St ll"d'led
t05Stay
170Malebet
107 Behold
171 Killer
109 Soothw..tern
(ndlan
DOWN
t 10 Sk in of fru it
1 Pe el
111 ChO\Ctl Plrt
2 OeMJ tdwtller
1t 3 Menr:twith
3 Note .d !ICI II
•
co"on
1 14 lndellnilt
•· Center
number
k ni~llaod
115 Note ol acale
uoon
5 Brol't er Of JacOb
I 16Warm
1 11 NtUve me\ al
STn!ct&lt;
7 N~e olacale
11 8Church be.ich
8 Fe&lt;»rat agency
120 PfiiiX ; down
121 WotfMunCI
linil.l
9 Man's nickname
12 2 Lovld ooe
tO FOld
t 23Chlno"
11 See.aon
PIQodts ·
12Hur-bearing
12 Pronoun

81 FlU I
89Retall
"tabtl ahment

mammlli ·

BDSymbollor
11 Wtiut.: oflndla
72 Co lPII.-!1
7-4 H• •dlt

132 Snare
134 ~tno 11m1
135 Shade''" '
138 Symbot for un
137 Singing voice

~,'

128 Corrupt
128 VItal organ ·
130Chrlstlan
festival

13 Tr·an•w•••

95 Looked 11 fl udly
Q7 8arra cudl
G881attogr !e
102 Scoret\
104 Hill lightly
108 tnaant
107 Rtnt
108 Proprietor
1 10 F~

3 8LOII
40 Jacket
42Tiuue
44 POker I llite

111 WOOCJtn bOIII
112 EI'ICount«
1
lute
I
P0111111Ve

46 Athtetic grwp
48 Cowl

oronoun
1 11 Kiln
11 9 Hoapltll section

A9Field ftower

50 Fini lhed
S t Not~~ or tciJe

53Arrow
5 S Rallroed {lbbr.)

58 PaM Of lktlllon
58 Thief
60 Unuaual

72 Eagle'annt
73 Mc.-al

•
,~

t•
te

12 1 EM:ourage
122 Obatruc:ta
t 23 SY111bot fOt
ltnfllum

t21 Pririt•'l

Row

F

156 Mltll·fUMntr

88
88Arm yoHICer

u•

t58 Cry o1 aoat ·
161 NottOIICIII

irbbr.l
89 Blom lob

t63A.,.talrbbr .l
t85 Cotltgz dqrzr

90 HN&gt;Ptn IQIIn
.g 1 Raise lle spirit

16 Fear

93 Typiti u

ot

glory
days said over

129 Clld!. blellt
, 30 Empower
131 Dugout
1331ndlgent
1 38 PWc111
138 More unuaual
t40Bodlnotwa;rer

15 4 ~male - " •

1' War god
t S Cowt&gt;oy
competitions

(lbbr .•

187 PriPOIItlon

:r:.

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MIAMI (UP!) - Houston
McTear's high school coach
says his association with the
world recprd·holding sprinter
" Is all over" and he believes
McTear's g\ory days are in
the past. . ·
..
1n a ~elephone interview
with the Miami Herald from
hls Cleai'Wa ter home,. Will
Will?~hby . fonrier coach ,
confidant and father..figure to
McTear, said, "He's gone his
way and I've gone mine ."
McTear" tied tlfe world
record of 9.0 seconds over 100
yards
during
the
preliminaries of the state
high school meet in Winter
Park, · Fla ., when he was in
11th grade.
But . things turned sour
during McTear's senior year
in high school. "He got to
where he wouldn't go . to
school, wouldn 't train,"
Willoughby said. . "My per•
sonal opillion Is that he'll
never be as good as he was in
lith grade."
' ·
Willoughby last saw Me·
Tear during the trials for· the
U. S. Olympic Team in
Eugene, Oregon . "I would
say I only served as partially
his coach in that meet."
McTear, · who puUed ~p
lame after qualifying for the
U. S. Team, called Wlllough·
by after he reinjured his leg
during Olympic preparations
in Plattsburgh, N. Y.
.
"I told him I.was sorry he
was hurt," Willoughby said.

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h J h
k'
Dal!enbac .' 0 nc oc . s
stablemate, 18 next to him
after posting ~ 162 ·113·
Janet Guthm managed to
make the f1eld despite .a slow
151.941 mph, about a mile less
the Ume m which she
qualilied for a race here last
M?,Y- ,
.
We retrymg ourdamdesl
to make the car go faster,"
··sa ld Guthr te,
' who star ed
stone-facedly into space as
.·
she contemplated her failure
to keep up with the 3eaders.
She was heard to ask her
teammate, Dick Simon,
"Can 't you f'tn d ou1 wha t's
wrong•"
·
The race could shape up as

Baker wins
first leg

McT~ar's

t28Ha~ger

1~ 1

83 Srt6ct
84 Steeple

•
.·
time lndianapohs 500 winner.
Gordon , Johncock, who
seemingly had a race won
hereearUerthisyearw~nhe
carried a comfortable lead
Into the llnallap, only to run
out of fuel,llnea up along side
Foyt ~ the front row for
Sunday s 4 P· m. ElY! race
start, Johncock was clocked,
In 165.138, second·fastest
among the 22 qua Ufiera.
AI Unser had tho third-best
time of the day, 164.835, and
ta~es off from the second
row, beside Torn Slleva, who
was timed in 163.984~ Johnny
Ruthe
. r ford , win ner of th e
rain·shor tened 1976 Indy
race; made the third row with
a time of 163 934 Roy
· ·

t2S Fat Of lwint

t53Pi-

80Dinor
82Antrl

1 !n~!~ ro~~

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UTICA, N.Y . (UP!) Former Heavyweight
Champion George Foreman
floored Scott Ledoux near the
end of the third round and
registered an easy TKO in a
dull na lion ally televised
heavyweight fight at Utica
Memorial Auditorium
Satilrday afternoqn.
Ledoux, a virtually
unknown fighter from
Minneapolis, cr.umpled to the
canvas with two se~onds
remaining In · the round .
Barely getting to his feet as
the count continued after the
bell, LedOWI was wobbling
toward his corner when the
referee stopped tile bout and
awarded the victory to
Foreman.
The triumph as Foreman's
~din +I profeas?onal fights.
Foreman's only loss wu in
1974 when Muhanunad AU
knocked him out in the eighth
round in Zaire to regain the
heavyweight crown.
.
. Foreman went Into the
fight with six-pound weight
advantage, at 229 paunds,
compared with 223 for
LedOUJi.

'

SILVERSTONE, England
(UP!) - . Steve Baker, a
bespeNacled 23·year-old
American from Bellingham,
near Washington, marked his
first appearance on the
Silverstone Circuit Saturday
by trouncing the opposiiion in
the first leg of the John
Player 750cc Motor Cycle
Grand Prix.
Riding his 750cc Yamaha at
record breaking speed, Baker
lapped all but three of his
rivals to complete the 102
miles at an average speed of
110.30 mph nd set a new
oulrtght circuit record of
ua.79 I!!I!.L
~ ·
·

"But that was just the way
life is. It was his own fault he
injured himse3f and I told him
so. He reinjured . himself
running a relay in practice,
and he wasn't even on any of
the relay teams .. He was out
there fooling around."
Willoughby said that even if
McTear gets over the injury,
he will need self-discipline.
"His changes of going back
to the Olympics in four years
are slim unless he goes to
school and trains for four
years. He's got to do it on his
own. Nobody can do II tor
him. He's got to get his mind
together."
Willoughby, who set up a
.
trust fund and handled the
McTear family finances after
McTear 's father, Eddy,
suffered a stroke, said the
parting was not dramatic. .
~e
"He got out of high school
~
and decided to go his own
BLOOMINGTON, MINN.
way," Willoughby said . "! (UP!) - Roy White and
don't even have any idea Graig Nettles bit home runs
where HQUSton is right now. " and Ken Holtzman hurled an
eight hitter ·s aturday af·
ternoon to lead the New York
Sunday's Probab.lt Pitchers
American Leag.ue
Yankees to a !H victory over
Texas ( Blyleven .9·12 and the Minnesota Twins. The win
Hargan 5·3) at Cleveland was the fifth in a row for New
(Bibby 8·4 and BroWn 7-7) , 2,
York.
1:00 p.m.
Chicago (Forster 2·9) at
Nettles hit his third home
Baltimore (Garland 13·3) , run in the past 24 hours with a
2:00p.m .
. New York (Ellis IHJ at 419..foot solo shot in the fifth
Minnesota (Singer 9·8 or inning, his 18th homer. White
Redfern 3.7), 2: IS p.m.
hit his lOth homer, another
Detroit (Roberts 11 ·111 at solo shot In the sixth. ·
·
Kansas City (Hassler 1·7),
Holtzman had won only one
. 2:3Q p.m.
Milwaukee (Travers 13·9) of his last five starts, walked
etCatllornla (Ross 7·13) , 4:00 one and struck out five in
p.m.
raising his record to 1()..8.
Boston (Wise 9·91 at
1n the second inning, carlos
Dekland (Torrez 10-10), 4:30
May
doubled, and after
p.m.
National League
NetUes walked and third
San Francisco (Halicki 9· baseman Jerr y . Terrell
13)
at
Philadelphia
(Christenson 10·6), 1:35 p.m. bobbled Oscar Gamble's
Clnclnnat (Nolen 10·7) at grounder to load the bases,
New York (Koosman 14-7) , Jlt'ed Stanley was walked to
2:05p.m.
give New York a 1..0 lead. In
St. Louis (Forsch H) at the third, White led off with a
Atlanta INiekro 12-8 or
double and after a groundout, ·
Morton 2·91 , 2: 15 p.m.
San Diego (Grlffrn 6·4) at C~ris Chambliss walked.
Montreal !Carrithers 6-7) , Nettles reached on an error
2: 1S p.m .
Los Angeles (Sutton 13-9) at by second baseman Bobby
Chicago (Bonham 7-9) , 2:15 Randle as White scored on
the play .
·p.m.
Pittsburgh (Rooker 9·6 and
In the fourth, Stanley
Candelaria 11 ·41 at Houston singled and · Mickey Rivers
ILenon 2·3 and Mclaughlin
singled befCire Thurman
1·21. 2, 3:05p.m.
Munson knocked in a run.

Horne runs
help Yanks

e..l

·Twm" s

Randle's single
defeats Indians
,_.

CLEVELAND (UPI) Lenny Randle singled home
the wlnlling run in the lOth
inning Saturday to give the
Texas Rangers a 4-3 victory
over the Cleveland Indians.
Aftet the Indians sent the
game l'hto extra innings with
a run in the seventh, Jeff
Burtoughs opened the lOth
with a walk and Dave Moates
hplaced him •as a pinch· .
l'tlllner. Tom Grieve struck
out, but reliever Jim Kern
Walked Danny Thompson and
Randle sliced a single to left,
wtth Moates beati ~g George
Hendrick's lhr o-. tu lho ~la te .
Burroughs, who had four

'

•
Palmer, who hit 35 greeqs in course Is liUiintaining his
regulation ..But, he conceded, concentration.
hehadnorealexpectationof
"ldon'thaveverymuchto
Winning, primarily asa result be optimistic about," said
of playing the last 1C holes ol Pabner, who has won every

:~~;:~ t~:h ~~:~; ~~~condroundlneightover

was stymied under a Pine
tree, after having hogeytd
two and~ee, also. ·
The
scores among
early flnlshers for 54 holes
was a 214 by Tom Walaon,
who bad 70 Saturday, and 215
by Arnold Palmer, whose 68
SaturdaY was his best PGA
round In a decade, Jerry
Heard, whobadaG9,andJ . C.
Snead, a 70 shooter.
"It «:~~uld have been a lot
better than it was," said

pole position

Foyt's 's peed earns

TRENTON, N.J . (UP!)A. J. Foyt, recovered from a ·
high fever , zoomed around
·the Ill. mile Trenton
speedway at 165 .797 miles an
hour Saturday to earn the
pole posiUon lor Sunday's ~00.
mile United States Auto Club
ctwnplonahlp car event.
Foyt snickering that he
caught the " Philadelphl·a
Flu" when his temperature
. ro~ to 102 degrees Friday,
turned his first lap in IM.8B5
M.P.M. and went almost a
mile faster on his second
lift in I
qua
Y g ap.Texan has won
The grizzled
12 racesa t thisewersey
N . J
oval, is a. slx·tlme national
USAC h
i
d thr
c amp on an
ee·

148 Edlbt~rootttoctl
US P01t
t50H«aldicbllrtng

79Peruaea

1

chlmplanlhJp u 111011 ol 1111 on the fruit nine and feU to · tournament at tbat point.
~ck . Gary
Om January wu even par
Morgan, the obecure third· Player, 1110 me under at the through 45 holes while
year JI'O Who hu put o1f a start ol tbe round, dropped Mastera Champion Ray
career In optometry whUe he two lltroll• and wu one over, Floyd iru in the group with
trill, the tOur, completed 45 tied wi~ Kite.
. player and Kite at one over.
holes at 171, four under par.
At the 45-Mid mart, the
Morgan whole flrlt two
He had Jllrted the warm, only otller players bellidu rounda ,;.ere 68 lind 68,
muqy day at Congreeaional Morgan under pir were Jack bogeyed the 215-yard second
• Country Club with a NicldaUJa!ld Charlea. Coody, and 42~yard fourth, and
tournament . record·tylng both one under. NlcklaUJ, parredtheothersevenholes
::-,. lotalolllMfortworounds, llll 8UJIItlng for a record-tying In an outgoing '11, two over.
under par 1111! fOW" ahe~~d ol flftb PGA ehampionshlp,
Kite a&lt;;tually closed within
11m Kite.
Jlllrred .the flral eight holes two shots after the second

143Siint(abbr.J
144 Shine

7-5 Organ of
hearing
76 TcMd
77 0 itdl in

·
he
802- hole, when
picked up a
yard. pm'-4.
birdie, b!lt the young Texan
David Grablm, winner of then bogeyed the third and
lut month's rich dealinated made a double-bogey six at
Westchester ~c, was two the 42Q..yard fourth hole.
and birdied the r*lth,

cloeeat ~1'1 bulcUd off. thne onr, -

m11.aure

82Rn.aota
religion
65 ~ a1ttl (abbrJ
8BKHn
eg ar.. the loudly
1n t iHP
70 Parnera

·

~~PGU: t:.:r:~: :~er

L

M*

17 Kntve at card I
18Syrnbottartnver
19Pr l... aecr ttly
200fflelal tHI
27 hcll.uled valley
29 Pierces
3 1 Teuton k: dtlty ·
34 Improve
38 E~e p l r ea

·
·
BETIIESDA,Md. (UPI) - · Kite, h o -, played the
Dr. GU Morpn ltruQ1ed frmtnlnein tbreH-1111' 38
tbroulhnineholelliat1111over and feU to 0111 over for 45
par Slturday, but aWl wu hoi• and flveblnd.
able to bold 1 three moire
Tom W~, who had

,

SUNDAY, A.,...t 15, 1976

78 1rrllete
77 Ntnoor sneep
78 Dlaten ce
m•aura (abbt.)
TSI Refund

lli. Morgan holds three•stroke.lead.in PGA
==1
:.:

..

WILitUVlLLE - Tilt
......... Untied lletbDdllt

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

aamirlum

TRURO, MASS. - THE SUN BROKE through gloomy
llldel .today and the aecond annual C&amp;pe Cod "nl!(ie-in" by

BISHOPS OUT
QUITO, Ecuador ( UPI) Four American blahops and
33 other foreign clergymen
have been ordered to leave
Ecuador for allegedly In·
lerfering in the Internal af.
fairs of the coun try.
A government sPOkeQliUin,
Javier Manrique, told a news
conference Friday the
• Roman Catbollc clerics
enterecl Ecuador aecreUy and
accuaed them of "proven
Intervention In Ecuador'•
ln'ternal affatra."
The Americana were•·
Archblahop Robert aancha,
Santa Fe, N. M.; Bishop
HONORED - Wllllall
Patrick F3owera of S.n lfamlltoo of North GaiDa
Antonio, Te. .; Aaxlllary Hlp School, bas been.
Archblahop Juan Anure of !IOUI?ed be wlll be fatured
Los Angeles and AIIXlllAry
'- t?le fall tdltloo of Who's
JOHN KAUFF
Blahop Gilbert Chaves Of San Wbo Among Am erleao .
MIDDLEPORT - Joha
Diego.
Hl&amp;b Scbool Students.
H. Kaulf has been
William, son of BliP and
promoted to EPD data
Judy Hamlltoa, Rt. %,
processing specialist 3 at
, Vbltol, )I active IIi Bela
Ohio.University Computer
Club ud a member of
an EDP computer operator
Services. John has been
Nail-l H-r Soc?ety. He .
l He Is lbe BOD of Mr. llld
with Computer Services
will be a aeDior at North
Mn. Harold ltaufl,
since June, 1971, and slil&lt;:t
GaU?a this fall. .
dlepotl.
September, 1974, bas beea

Major league Standings
United Press fnternationa 1

National League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Phil adel phia 74 39 .655
Pittsburgh 62 52 :544 12'h
New York
60 58 .508 16'h
Chicago
,14 65 .453 23
51. Louis
48 63 ,432 25
Montrea l
41 69 .373 Jl V'
West
.
W. L. Pet. GB
76 41 .652

Los Angeles 62 .14 .534 13'/p
HOIJston
58 61 .487 19 \
San Diego
57 62 .479 20'h
Atlanta
53 63 .457 23
San Fra ncis co 50 68 424 27
American Leagu e

East

New York
Baltimore
Cleveland
Detroit
Boston
Milwa ukee

g~ ~.~and Billy :e~~~
A CUT •

ABOVE THE IIE$T!

W. L; Pet: GB

69 44 .616
56 54 .509 !1
55 58 .487 13'12
55 58 .487 IJ'fl
53 56 .477 14'h
48 61 .440 18'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Kansas City 68 45 .602
Oakland
62 53 .539 7
Mi nneso ta
56 59 .486 13
Texas
56 58 .485 12'12
Chicago
49 63 .438 IB'h
California
50 66 .431 19V'

record S 14th Met save
NEW YORK I UP[) - The
New Yor k Mets scored both
their runs in·the first inning
on only one· hit Saturday and
held on to beat t~e Ci ncinnati
Reds, 2-1, as. Skip LOckwOOd
pici11ld up his 14th sa ve.
Reds' starter Pat Zachry ,
11-4, wa lked the first three
batters to opln the game . Joe
Torr e's sacrifice f I y

p,J.rateS ffi
,
c· Offie•£rom •

he·hm' d wm•
HOUSTON (UP!) - Richie
Hebner and Mari o Mendma
each hi t run-scoring doubles
in the top of the ninth inning
Saturday to drive home two
unearned runs and lead the
Pittsburgh Pirates to a S-4
victory over the Houston
Astros.
Pira tes slar ter J ohn
Candelaria , who stood to lose
the game because of Bob
Watson's gra nd slam homer
in the six II! in ning, was l&lt;lken
off the hook by the Pirates'
ninth Inni ng rally. Reliever
Dave Giusti won his th ird
ga me by hurling the fina l two
innings.

Trailing 4·2 in the eighth,
the Pirates got a run on

delivered Bruce Boiscla ir
with the firs t run and Roy
Staiger's si ngle scored Felix
Millan wi th whpt proved to he
lhe decisive run.

The Reds scored their lone
run in the seventh and
kn oc ked out Ne w Yor k
star ter and wi nner Nin o
Espinosa ,
2·2.
Cesar
Geron imo opened the inning
wi th a tri ple and scored on

7 li P F ef•wr~ y
Aiding Mo...,cr

"FAIRWAY"
RIDIN&lt;i MOWER·
THE PRIDE AND
PLEASURE MACHINE

Dave Concepcion's ·sacri£ice

fly. Bill Plummer singled to
knock out Espinosa and bring
on LOckwood who hurled
hitless ba II over the final 2
and two-thirds inning.
An old Cincinnati nemises,
LockwOOd fanned pitchhltter
Mike Lum and got Pete Rose
to fly ou t to deep center to end
the threa t.
In the eigh th inning, Lock·
wood · retired the hot-hitting
Ken Griffey, Joe Morgan and
Friday night's slugging star
George Foster on fl y balls.
During the scoreless ninth
inning , Dan Driesse n
grounded back to Lockwood,
Geronimo, struck out and
Concepcion fou,ed out .to first
baseman Torre although a
fan caught the ball as Torre
was reachi ng but first base
umpire Harry Wendelstead
ruled fan intefference ending
the game.
Coupled with the Dodgers'
2.0 loss at Chicago, the Reds
remained 13\'.o games out

War. lto take a great deal. of pride and pleasure in
what has been up to now jusl another necessary
chore? Get be hind the wheel ol an Ari ens Fair·
way Riding Mowe r. Grass cutting will take on a
whole new outl oo k.
The Ari ens Fairway is available in two models, a
7 HP and a 5 HP; the 7 HP )lli ll accept an eleclric
starter. There's a 26" "Fiex· N· Fioai-Pi us" rotary
mower; lour speeds forward, neutral and reverse;
a pre-lubricated sealed dillerentia l; Disc·O-Matic
drive; and a full ayto motiv e type positive action
stee ring w~ee l.
Choose an Ariens Fairway- it's '·Buil t To Last A
Lawn Ti me!"

RIDENOUR ·SUPPLY
CHESTER, OHIO
PH. 98S.3308

fr ont of the West Division of

si ngles by Hebner, Ed Kirk· . the National League.
patrick and Rennie Stennett.
[n the nin th, with Astros'
reliever Gene Pentz pi tching
and one out, Astros' second
· base ma n Bob Andr ews
all owed Dave Par ker's
sha rply hit ground ball to roll
through his legs. Hebner then
doubled to ti e the score and,
after Kirkpatrick grounded
out, Ste nn~ tt was walked
intentionally, sett ing the
stage for Men doza ·s gamewinnfng double.

_...................
JOHNSON~S · MOBILE
HOMEfr~INC.

MAN KATO, Minn. (UP!)
- Quarterback Bob Berry
an d runn ing back Willie
Spencer wiD tru)ke their first
starts of the season in the
Minnesota Vikings' third
ex hibition game Monday
again st the Browns in
Cleveland.
·
Gra nt started Fran
Tarkenton and Bob Lee in the
Vikings' first two games as
part of a plan to put all his
quarterbacks into action to
get them ready for the NFL
regular season.

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•'· 2~~;•- lf'O.C . woll 2•4

. ,. 3~ " ~~ ftoor

hits, ran his season RBI total
to 71 with a run-~tcoring single
in the first and a two.run
homer in the fifth. Texas
starter Nelson Briles gave up
a solo borDer to Boog Powell
and a rllll«oring double to
Ray Fosse in the fourth
before departing In the fifth.
Craig Skok look over, but
was chased m the seventh as
the Indians scored a run on
singles by Kuiper, .Manning
and George Hendrick. Steve
Foucault took over and
blanked the Indians the r~st
of the WilY to earn his eighth
triumph against six losses.

STANDINGI

Marpn 3 under, 47 halll
a s.-::· Uetzke and r-,y ~. j UDder 48 hoi•
ce
8 t 218 Jolm D aribam 1~ ~l holel
Aaron were 219 '
Ni~ ' l7 holllll
Mahaffey at
' Bruce
' - · 48 holllll
1 N 13

. ·old nemises Lockwood

a Foyt-Joitncock battle. Foyt
is the all·time USAC race
leader with 55 championshi p
car victories.
" If I can get into the first
tum ahead of A. J., and keep
the lead around the high,
banked third (turn). 1 mi ht
just manage to stay aheal of
Foyt throughout the whole
.. 'd J h
k
1 0
raR
ce, 83Ra
ncoc k.. h.
fi toger i'f .ger, tma tng 1s
rs qua 1ytng a tempt lor a
USA C, !ndy·ty pe race,
rached as ed of 155 .934 m h
pe .
P
a~d was delighted over h1s
lm ha l conquen ng of th1s
co..urse·
I had only 18 laps o.f
r · d
f t
prac .tce.dan.. myd Ratrs re?,'A·
engme n e, sal
~er .
lack of experience in this
type oa.r hampered my ef·
forts to reach raci ng speeds. I
couldn 't get up to boost and at
first failed to move from third
to fourth gear . But when I
finally got the hang of it, I
started to move."
. Vetera n ·driver Sali
Walther failed to reach pny
sort of quaijfying speed whe n
his car malfunctioned and he
was scratched from the race.
The same was true fo r Lee
Kunzman, who quit after the
first of two qualifying laps.
Rutherford enters the race
with a 571).point lead over
Johncock In the USAC point
stand ings, 2,.590 to 2,020.
Ru therford will retain his
lead even if Johncoc'k wins
Sunday's event because the
race only counts for 400 points
in the standing.

Cincin nati

"I did something on the
ninth hole (Friday), and 1
never reaDy regained my
composure," Palmer aald.
What he did was three .putt.
When he was younger " and more arrogant
conceited and confident ,:
Palmer said - he nev~r
wo uld have lost his
co mp os ur e. Rec ently ,
however, he has aaid his
biggest problem on the golf

~~!i~.nshlp

:St!;t
in goU
The 68 matched his score
for the final round of the 1966
PGA · championship at
Firestone Country Club in
·Akron, Ohio . Although he has
finlahed second twice since
then, he had not shot a single
round that low.
Saturday, Palmer had four
birdies 011 putts ranging from
10to20feet, thelongestonthe
finalhole,and twohogeys. He
three-putted the 215-yard
second hole from '18 feet and

miMed a four.-. for I*'

4 ftlld'~ "-'tldt
7 . ... , _ .... _

f ,"'lJb. 'Jit .......

w.a.. a~ w·,~ ;,. ~
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�•

•
11 - Thelluada1~ · ~1dlnei, Smday,Al!8. 15,1976

UPI's notebook
Ualted Prw 'at •" I
Qld IIIIORO, N.C. - STANLEY J.IWUUS Sr., 93,
a 1!: h•ltll arglllizlng tbe !1m Boy._ troap In the United
. . . . dildrrtday. Harris had bMI lllldlll*be didn't have
.... llw,10 be orpnlzed a Boy sat troap Ill have IIOIIieone
to fl bailie With him whUe "getlllll blekiiiJIIrength."
,_ doctor, he sai\1, "told melt die peacefully and I told
111m Iuenr did anything fliiC P 'r " Harrla, who formed the
!reap ill Frankfort, Ky., In dllllln hla lleep at Wesley
Lilli Hm!pital. Funeral a till' m IICbeduled Sunday.

DETROIT - THI V.I. .AUTQ INDUSTRY, paced by
giant Genenl Jlle.a, turned In a reC(ll'd-breaking
pellumance in.., . . . . New car sales W.,ped last year's
cllmally low lewiW 41 per cent.
GM aaldFridiJ II ~~let topped last year's Aug. 1·10 perloil
by nearly 72perellll. Cll'yaler poeted a 74 per cent gain, Ford
waa up 10 per- bat American Motors, caught In a smaU car
aalea .-... ftll _..ty 29 per cent below last year. GM
INNIJIIIII llr 1 bliber.th&amp;IHiormal62 per cent of the 194,760
CII'I.WID the Aug. 1·10 period, eclipsing a liUirk set by the
tnt
I In 1986.
laladaldlllilllr&lt;~

•

WASHINGTON - THE FBI IS ENTERING the
bmltiptlon of the murder of underworld figure John Roselli,
wbold told the Senate Intelligence Committee he tried to
~111111;·wte Fidel Cutro for the CIA. Attorney General
Edward H. levi lilted the FBI Friday to detennine whether
&amp;lel1l wu murdered as a result of his committee testimony
or In arder to prevent possible future testimony.
·
· RGielll'1 ~ was found last week stuffed in a chain·
welpud, ~allon drwn noatlng in a hay near Miami. He had
bleD milling IInce he left hl.ssl.ster'shome July 28 to play golf.
Jlllllee Department spokesman Ro~rt Havel aaid Sens.
Howard Baker, ft.Term., and Daniel K. Inoye, D-Hawall, had
reqllllted an FBI investlgatloO.

....
...

~
••
...

...""•..,

.-..

::•

.....

...-·••
'

1:

. '"'•

r::

•••

:r:
•••
...
'!~

ClEVELAND - TilE UNITED RUBBER WORKERS
Unlon'a Firestone negotiating committee approved a tentative
agreement m e&lt;)Oilomic lasues Friday, clearing the way for
aettlement of ·the marathbn rubber workers' strike .
'Die agreement was announced in Washington early
ThUI'IIIay by union negotiators and representatives !lf the
major dOmestic rubber cocnpanies. U.S. Labor Secretary W. J.
UM')' Jr. described it as the most expensive contract
aettlem•t of the year. Firestone, GoQdyear, B.F. Goodrich
and Unlroyal are due to open negotiations b1 separate cities
Moaday to reach master agreementa with the union. Yet to be
I'IIIOived are h~ltal and medical inaurance coverage, skilled
trade laauel and conlnct language.

PLAINS, GA.- ASSERTING THAT his campaign ...so far
loob pod." Jimmy Carter IICIIOOuled a one-day. trip.Satilrday
to West Viqlnla, one of the few states be didn't vliit on his 19IJIOIItb preeldentlal campaign. The DemocraU:c presidential
nominee planaed to make two apeeches in Charleston - at an
afternoon fllndraller for the state Democratic Committee and
at a Jeffe~.Jaekaon Dlmer ill,the evening.
Asked tw reporters Friday to aaaesa his campaign, carter
llld "110 far it looU good." He said his staff will place an out·
ct«ater in each state unot as a boss but as a knowledgable,
aperlenced, qualified coordinator." Californian Gov.
E+mmd Brown Jr., who wu visiting Carter, said such a move
'llllllld held off ''factionallam" and intra'\!tate bickering.

lOme 4,000 penona was expected to ccme off without a hitch.
The demonatratora protested a U.S. Interior Departroent
ban m nude awlmmlng along the Cape Cod Natioaal Seashore.
A scheduled Jllllle.ln last Sunday wu rained out and gloomy
skies threatened to cancel t.oday's planned prolell.
Se-al dozen park rangers, 110111e on horllebeck, were
ordered to patrol Brush Hollow Beach and arrest anyone who
lllripped in case the weather improved.

OOLUMBUS - A CANDIDATE FOR THE Ohio Senate
says he would like to see the Ohio BeU Telephone Co. issue
supplemental phone books every three months to help
customers avoid paying for directory assistance. Michael
Schwarzwalder, Democratic candidate for the 16th district
senate seat, caUed for the service during a news conference
Friday.
He noted tllat Ohio ·Bell are aUowed three free requests a
month for phone munbers, but any requests after that will cost
20 cents each. He said the ~sent Columbus phone book went
to the printers May 15 and already four per cent ofthe numbers
In it ate wrong, and within a year 20 per cent of the numbers·
will have been cha~ed.
COLUMBUS - TilE omo BUREAU QF Emplo)')llent
Services will take job applications Monday from persons
wanting to work at the Ohio State Fair. ·
The applicatloos can be picked up at a trailer lnslde the
11th Avenue entrance to the Ohio State Fairgrounds. The office
wiD be open Monday through Friday, wiD close Aug, 21 and 22,
and wiD reopen Aug. 23 and remain open throughout the fair.
OBES said waiters, waitresses, ticket takers, tractor drivers,
groundakeepers, and shuttle bua drivers are needed. The fair
nw !rem Aug. 26 throiJI)I Sept. 6,

• IJPONIC)aiNG liNG

_... t 3-'H',.-.....

-.

-

...

--

I ad bymn IIIII on

"''....,• ._ II at 10 a.m.
Act!YI.. ,.. lnd.se lila
reauJar ..... lila .....,.
(an ecumtDical wonhlp
-lure ofllitr' 1 sin the
WlhYIIIe 111'1111 at 1 a.m.,
followed by a joint lluDda)'
school at 10 a.m. IIIII dPnner
at noon (potluck) .

§OLIJTION

0

ACROSS
t Cuahloned
7 Wailea IM!tly
t2 Llttonod to

17fr. . tl~el
2 t E~:clte to tcllon

22Boi&gt;Yi"'lrn
-ol-d
23Mittaka
24 VediC flrr god

81 DIM
139 ltl fall
82 P•IOd at laalln g 1'1 Flt~llliOfl
83 Highlander

1-4 2 Ethiopian title

&amp;•Wilhtfed

11.3 "nU«td enln\al

85 Poueutd

25&amp;1n QOCI

28Mualcal
organ lzatlon
28Brand
30 Suy bac«
32tc lngof8111'11n

33RIC:.dl
35 Emp!Oyrc!
31 t.tuaured
duration of
38 Seer ell
40Swdy
41lalln
eonjUncUon

43 Lrmb'o..,
name

450octt.-,e
.(11 Hypotn.tlctl

tore•

48 Fond desire
,g H'"dtr
&amp;2Qr&amp;flt UHof

54 AtludH

eeerag
.&amp;7 D• 'ahorn
51 HMventy body

t!Rip
12 Duck like bird

13 ,...,.,,, )mtgl
e.c Prepoaltlon

IIPerlodol tme
ITMaltohoo

88 SUpply

US European

armtne
·1n Fete
1-49 Oecay
90 Mend
152 N"r
~ 2 Rcm , n road
153 Horus· dOmicile
94 Brittle
155 Str iP tJ lea!her
95 Cubic melen
157 Wander
96 0m ilfrom
159ASII!t (lllibt .)
prCJI"'unclation
160 D irection
97 Parll of play
162 P\lf.t s ,
99 Opanwork fabric 164 Wa !rd
tOO Mountain lake 168 Antwerabte
10 2 Veh icles
168LCM ,flat ce rt
103 Fondle
1$9 St ll"d'led
t05Stay
170Malebet
107 Behold
171 Killer
109 Soothw..tern
(ndlan
DOWN
t 10 Sk in of fru it
1 Pe el
111 ChO\Ctl Plrt
2 OeMJ tdwtller
1t 3 Menr:twith
3 Note .d !ICI II
•
co"on
1 14 lndellnilt
•· Center
number
k ni~llaod
115 Note ol acale
uoon
5 Brol't er Of JacOb
I 16Warm
1 11 NtUve me\ al
STn!ct&lt;
7 N~e olacale
11 8Church be.ich
8 Fe&lt;»rat agency
120 PfiiiX ; down
121 WotfMunCI
linil.l
9 Man's nickname
12 2 Lovld ooe
tO FOld
t 23Chlno"
11 See.aon
PIQodts ·
12Hur-bearing
12 Pronoun

81 FlU I
89Retall
"tabtl ahment

mammlli ·

BDSymbollor
11 Wtiut.: oflndla
72 Co lPII.-!1
7-4 H• •dlt

132 Snare
134 ~tno 11m1
135 Shade''" '
138 Symbot for un
137 Singing voice

~,'

128 Corrupt
128 VItal organ ·
130Chrlstlan
festival

13 Tr·an•w•••

95 Looked 11 fl udly
Q7 8arra cudl
G881attogr !e
102 Scoret\
104 Hill lightly
108 tnaant
107 Rtnt
108 Proprietor
1 10 F~

3 8LOII
40 Jacket
42Tiuue
44 POker I llite

111 WOOCJtn bOIII
112 EI'ICount«
1
lute
I
P0111111Ve

46 Athtetic grwp
48 Cowl

oronoun
1 11 Kiln
11 9 Hoapltll section

A9Field ftower

50 Fini lhed
S t Not~~ or tciJe

53Arrow
5 S Rallroed {lbbr.)

58 PaM Of lktlllon
58 Thief
60 Unuaual

72 Eagle'annt
73 Mc.-al

•
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t•
te

12 1 EM:ourage
122 Obatruc:ta
t 23 SY111bot fOt
ltnfllum

t21 Pririt•'l

Row

F

156 Mltll·fUMntr

88
88Arm yoHICer

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t58 Cry o1 aoat ·
161 NottOIICIII

irbbr.l
89 Blom lob

t63A.,.talrbbr .l
t85 Cotltgz dqrzr

90 HN&gt;Ptn IQIIn
.g 1 Raise lle spirit

16 Fear

93 Typiti u

ot

glory
days said over

129 Clld!. blellt
, 30 Empower
131 Dugout
1331ndlgent
1 38 PWc111
138 More unuaual
t40Bodlnotwa;rer

15 4 ~male - " •

1' War god
t S Cowt&gt;oy
competitions

(lbbr .•

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MIAMI (UP!) - Houston
McTear's high school coach
says his association with the
world recprd·holding sprinter
" Is all over" and he believes
McTear's g\ory days are in
the past. . ·
..
1n a ~elephone interview
with the Miami Herald from
hls Cleai'Wa ter home,. Will
Will?~hby . fonrier coach ,
confidant and father..figure to
McTear, said, "He's gone his
way and I've gone mine ."
McTear" tied tlfe world
record of 9.0 seconds over 100
yards
during
the
preliminaries of the state
high school meet in Winter
Park, · Fla ., when he was in
11th grade.
But . things turned sour
during McTear's senior year
in high school. "He got to
where he wouldn't go . to
school, wouldn 't train,"
Willoughby said. . "My per•
sonal opillion Is that he'll
never be as good as he was in
lith grade."
' ·
Willoughby last saw Me·
Tear during the trials for· the
U. S. Olympic Team in
Eugene, Oregon . "I would
say I only served as partially
his coach in that meet."
McTear, · who puUed ~p
lame after qualifying for the
U. S. Team, called Wlllough·
by after he reinjured his leg
during Olympic preparations
in Plattsburgh, N. Y.
.
"I told him I.was sorry he
was hurt," Willoughby said.

I
=
·€a,....

.'

"I

'

h J h
k'
Dal!enbac .' 0 nc oc . s
stablemate, 18 next to him
after posting ~ 162 ·113·
Janet Guthm managed to
make the f1eld despite .a slow
151.941 mph, about a mile less
the Ume m which she
qualilied for a race here last
M?,Y- ,
.
We retrymg ourdamdesl
to make the car go faster,"
··sa ld Guthr te,
' who star ed
stone-facedly into space as
.·
she contemplated her failure
to keep up with the 3eaders.
She was heard to ask her
teammate, Dick Simon,
"Can 't you f'tn d ou1 wha t's
wrong•"
·
The race could shape up as

Baker wins
first leg

McT~ar's

t28Ha~ger

1~ 1

83 Srt6ct
84 Steeple

•
.·
time lndianapohs 500 winner.
Gordon , Johncock, who
seemingly had a race won
hereearUerthisyearw~nhe
carried a comfortable lead
Into the llnallap, only to run
out of fuel,llnea up along side
Foyt ~ the front row for
Sunday s 4 P· m. ElY! race
start, Johncock was clocked,
In 165.138, second·fastest
among the 22 qua Ufiera.
AI Unser had tho third-best
time of the day, 164.835, and
ta~es off from the second
row, beside Torn Slleva, who
was timed in 163.984~ Johnny
Ruthe
. r ford , win ner of th e
rain·shor tened 1976 Indy
race; made the third row with
a time of 163 934 Roy
· ·

t2S Fat Of lwint

t53Pi-

80Dinor
82Antrl

1 !n~!~ ro~~

...
...

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UTICA, N.Y . (UP!) Former Heavyweight
Champion George Foreman
floored Scott Ledoux near the
end of the third round and
registered an easy TKO in a
dull na lion ally televised
heavyweight fight at Utica
Memorial Auditorium
Satilrday afternoqn.
Ledoux, a virtually
unknown fighter from
Minneapolis, cr.umpled to the
canvas with two se~onds
remaining In · the round .
Barely getting to his feet as
the count continued after the
bell, LedOWI was wobbling
toward his corner when the
referee stopped tile bout and
awarded the victory to
Foreman.
The triumph as Foreman's
~din +I profeas?onal fights.
Foreman's only loss wu in
1974 when Muhanunad AU
knocked him out in the eighth
round in Zaire to regain the
heavyweight crown.
.
. Foreman went Into the
fight with six-pound weight
advantage, at 229 paunds,
compared with 223 for
LedOUJi.

'

SILVERSTONE, England
(UP!) - . Steve Baker, a
bespeNacled 23·year-old
American from Bellingham,
near Washington, marked his
first appearance on the
Silverstone Circuit Saturday
by trouncing the opposiiion in
the first leg of the John
Player 750cc Motor Cycle
Grand Prix.
Riding his 750cc Yamaha at
record breaking speed, Baker
lapped all but three of his
rivals to complete the 102
miles at an average speed of
110.30 mph nd set a new
oulrtght circuit record of
ua.79 I!!I!.L
~ ·
·

"But that was just the way
life is. It was his own fault he
injured himse3f and I told him
so. He reinjured . himself
running a relay in practice,
and he wasn't even on any of
the relay teams .. He was out
there fooling around."
Willoughby said that even if
McTear gets over the injury,
he will need self-discipline.
"His changes of going back
to the Olympics in four years
are slim unless he goes to
school and trains for four
years. He's got to do it on his
own. Nobody can do II tor
him. He's got to get his mind
together."
Willoughby, who set up a
.
trust fund and handled the
McTear family finances after
McTear 's father, Eddy,
suffered a stroke, said the
parting was not dramatic. .
~e
"He got out of high school
~
and decided to go his own
BLOOMINGTON, MINN.
way," Willoughby said . "! (UP!) - Roy White and
don't even have any idea Graig Nettles bit home runs
where HQUSton is right now. " and Ken Holtzman hurled an
eight hitter ·s aturday af·
ternoon to lead the New York
Sunday's Probab.lt Pitchers
American Leag.ue
Yankees to a !H victory over
Texas ( Blyleven .9·12 and the Minnesota Twins. The win
Hargan 5·3) at Cleveland was the fifth in a row for New
(Bibby 8·4 and BroWn 7-7) , 2,
York.
1:00 p.m.
Chicago (Forster 2·9) at
Nettles hit his third home
Baltimore (Garland 13·3) , run in the past 24 hours with a
2:00p.m .
. New York (Ellis IHJ at 419..foot solo shot in the fifth
Minnesota (Singer 9·8 or inning, his 18th homer. White
Redfern 3.7), 2: IS p.m.
hit his lOth homer, another
Detroit (Roberts 11 ·111 at solo shot In the sixth. ·
·
Kansas City (Hassler 1·7),
Holtzman had won only one
. 2:3Q p.m.
Milwaukee (Travers 13·9) of his last five starts, walked
etCatllornla (Ross 7·13) , 4:00 one and struck out five in
p.m.
raising his record to 1()..8.
Boston (Wise 9·91 at
1n the second inning, carlos
Dekland (Torrez 10-10), 4:30
May
doubled, and after
p.m.
National League
NetUes walked and third
San Francisco (Halicki 9· baseman Jerr y . Terrell
13)
at
Philadelphia
(Christenson 10·6), 1:35 p.m. bobbled Oscar Gamble's
Clnclnnat (Nolen 10·7) at grounder to load the bases,
New York (Koosman 14-7) , Jlt'ed Stanley was walked to
2:05p.m.
give New York a 1..0 lead. In
St. Louis (Forsch H) at the third, White led off with a
Atlanta INiekro 12-8 or
double and after a groundout, ·
Morton 2·91 , 2: 15 p.m.
San Diego (Grlffrn 6·4) at C~ris Chambliss walked.
Montreal !Carrithers 6-7) , Nettles reached on an error
2: 1S p.m .
Los Angeles (Sutton 13-9) at by second baseman Bobby
Chicago (Bonham 7-9) , 2:15 Randle as White scored on
the play .
·p.m.
Pittsburgh (Rooker 9·6 and
In the fourth, Stanley
Candelaria 11 ·41 at Houston singled and · Mickey Rivers
ILenon 2·3 and Mclaughlin
singled befCire Thurman
1·21. 2, 3:05p.m.
Munson knocked in a run.

Horne runs
help Yanks

e..l

·Twm" s

Randle's single
defeats Indians
,_.

CLEVELAND (UPI) Lenny Randle singled home
the wlnlling run in the lOth
inning Saturday to give the
Texas Rangers a 4-3 victory
over the Cleveland Indians.
Aftet the Indians sent the
game l'hto extra innings with
a run in the seventh, Jeff
Burtoughs opened the lOth
with a walk and Dave Moates
hplaced him •as a pinch· .
l'tlllner. Tom Grieve struck
out, but reliever Jim Kern
Walked Danny Thompson and
Randle sliced a single to left,
wtth Moates beati ~g George
Hendrick's lhr o-. tu lho ~la te .
Burroughs, who had four

'

•
Palmer, who hit 35 greeqs in course Is liUiintaining his
regulation ..But, he conceded, concentration.
hehadnorealexpectationof
"ldon'thaveverymuchto
Winning, primarily asa result be optimistic about," said
of playing the last 1C holes ol Pabner, who has won every

:~~;:~ t~:h ~~:~; ~~~condroundlneightover

was stymied under a Pine
tree, after having hogeytd
two and~ee, also. ·
The
scores among
early flnlshers for 54 holes
was a 214 by Tom Walaon,
who bad 70 Saturday, and 215
by Arnold Palmer, whose 68
SaturdaY was his best PGA
round In a decade, Jerry
Heard, whobadaG9,andJ . C.
Snead, a 70 shooter.
"It «:~~uld have been a lot
better than it was," said

pole position

Foyt's 's peed earns

TRENTON, N.J . (UP!)A. J. Foyt, recovered from a ·
high fever , zoomed around
·the Ill. mile Trenton
speedway at 165 .797 miles an
hour Saturday to earn the
pole posiUon lor Sunday's ~00.
mile United States Auto Club
ctwnplonahlp car event.
Foyt snickering that he
caught the " Philadelphl·a
Flu" when his temperature
. ro~ to 102 degrees Friday,
turned his first lap in IM.8B5
M.P.M. and went almost a
mile faster on his second
lift in I
qua
Y g ap.Texan has won
The grizzled
12 racesa t thisewersey
N . J
oval, is a. slx·tlme national
USAC h
i
d thr
c amp on an
ee·

148 Edlbt~rootttoctl
US P01t
t50H«aldicbllrtng

79Peruaea

1

chlmplanlhJp u 111011 ol 1111 on the fruit nine and feU to · tournament at tbat point.
~ck . Gary
Om January wu even par
Morgan, the obecure third· Player, 1110 me under at the through 45 holes while
year JI'O Who hu put o1f a start ol tbe round, dropped Mastera Champion Ray
career In optometry whUe he two lltroll• and wu one over, Floyd iru in the group with
trill, the tOur, completed 45 tied wi~ Kite.
. player and Kite at one over.
holes at 171, four under par.
At the 45-Mid mart, the
Morgan whole flrlt two
He had Jllrted the warm, only otller players bellidu rounda ,;.ere 68 lind 68,
muqy day at Congreeaional Morgan under pir were Jack bogeyed the 215-yard second
• Country Club with a NicldaUJa!ld Charlea. Coody, and 42~yard fourth, and
tournament . record·tylng both one under. NlcklaUJ, parredtheothersevenholes
::-,. lotalolllMfortworounds, llll 8UJIItlng for a record-tying In an outgoing '11, two over.
under par 1111! fOW" ahe~~d ol flftb PGA ehampionshlp,
Kite a&lt;;tually closed within
11m Kite.
Jlllrred .the flral eight holes two shots after the second

143Siint(abbr.J
144 Shine

7-5 Organ of
hearing
76 TcMd
77 0 itdl in

·
he
802- hole, when
picked up a
yard. pm'-4.
birdie, b!lt the young Texan
David Grablm, winner of then bogeyed the third and
lut month's rich dealinated made a double-bogey six at
Westchester ~c, was two the 42Q..yard fourth hole.
and birdied the r*lth,

cloeeat ~1'1 bulcUd off. thne onr, -

m11.aure

82Rn.aota
religion
65 ~ a1ttl (abbrJ
8BKHn
eg ar.. the loudly
1n t iHP
70 Parnera

·

~~PGU: t:.:r:~: :~er

L

M*

17 Kntve at card I
18Syrnbottartnver
19Pr l... aecr ttly
200fflelal tHI
27 hcll.uled valley
29 Pierces
3 1 Teuton k: dtlty ·
34 Improve
38 E~e p l r ea

·
·
BETIIESDA,Md. (UPI) - · Kite, h o -, played the
Dr. GU Morpn ltruQ1ed frmtnlnein tbreH-1111' 38
tbroulhnineholelliat1111over and feU to 0111 over for 45
par Slturday, but aWl wu hoi• and flveblnd.
able to bold 1 three moire
Tom W~, who had

,

SUNDAY, A.,...t 15, 1976

78 1rrllete
77 Ntnoor sneep
78 Dlaten ce
m•aura (abbt.)
TSI Refund

lli. Morgan holds three•stroke.lead.in PGA
==1
:.:

..

WILitUVlLLE - Tilt
......... Untied lletbDdllt

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

aamirlum

TRURO, MASS. - THE SUN BROKE through gloomy
llldel .today and the aecond annual C&amp;pe Cod "nl!(ie-in" by

BISHOPS OUT
QUITO, Ecuador ( UPI) Four American blahops and
33 other foreign clergymen
have been ordered to leave
Ecuador for allegedly In·
lerfering in the Internal af.
fairs of the coun try.
A government sPOkeQliUin,
Javier Manrique, told a news
conference Friday the
• Roman Catbollc clerics
enterecl Ecuador aecreUy and
accuaed them of "proven
Intervention In Ecuador'•
ln'ternal affatra."
The Americana were•·
Archblahop Robert aancha,
Santa Fe, N. M.; Bishop
HONORED - Wllllall
Patrick F3owera of S.n lfamlltoo of North GaiDa
Antonio, Te. .; Aaxlllary Hlp School, bas been.
Archblahop Juan Anure of !IOUI?ed be wlll be fatured
Los Angeles and AIIXlllAry
'- t?le fall tdltloo of Who's
JOHN KAUFF
Blahop Gilbert Chaves Of San Wbo Among Am erleao .
MIDDLEPORT - Joha
Diego.
Hl&amp;b Scbool Students.
H. Kaulf has been
William, son of BliP and
promoted to EPD data
Judy Hamlltoa, Rt. %,
processing specialist 3 at
, Vbltol, )I active IIi Bela
Ohio.University Computer
Club ud a member of
an EDP computer operator
Services. John has been
Nail-l H-r Soc?ety. He .
l He Is lbe BOD of Mr. llld
with Computer Services
will be a aeDior at North
Mn. Harold ltaufl,
since June, 1971, and slil&lt;:t
GaU?a this fall. .
dlepotl.
September, 1974, bas beea

Major league Standings
United Press fnternationa 1

National League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Phil adel phia 74 39 .655
Pittsburgh 62 52 :544 12'h
New York
60 58 .508 16'h
Chicago
,14 65 .453 23
51. Louis
48 63 ,432 25
Montrea l
41 69 .373 Jl V'
West
.
W. L. Pet. GB
76 41 .652

Los Angeles 62 .14 .534 13'/p
HOIJston
58 61 .487 19 \
San Diego
57 62 .479 20'h
Atlanta
53 63 .457 23
San Fra ncis co 50 68 424 27
American Leagu e

East

New York
Baltimore
Cleveland
Detroit
Boston
Milwa ukee

g~ ~.~and Billy :e~~~
A CUT •

ABOVE THE IIE$T!

W. L; Pet: GB

69 44 .616
56 54 .509 !1
55 58 .487 13'12
55 58 .487 IJ'fl
53 56 .477 14'h
48 61 .440 18'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Kansas City 68 45 .602
Oakland
62 53 .539 7
Mi nneso ta
56 59 .486 13
Texas
56 58 .485 12'12
Chicago
49 63 .438 IB'h
California
50 66 .431 19V'

record S 14th Met save
NEW YORK I UP[) - The
New Yor k Mets scored both
their runs in·the first inning
on only one· hit Saturday and
held on to beat t~e Ci ncinnati
Reds, 2-1, as. Skip LOckwOOd
pici11ld up his 14th sa ve.
Reds' starter Pat Zachry ,
11-4, wa lked the first three
batters to opln the game . Joe
Torr e's sacrifice f I y

p,J.rateS ffi
,
c· Offie•£rom •

he·hm' d wm•
HOUSTON (UP!) - Richie
Hebner and Mari o Mendma
each hi t run-scoring doubles
in the top of the ninth inning
Saturday to drive home two
unearned runs and lead the
Pittsburgh Pirates to a S-4
victory over the Houston
Astros.
Pira tes slar ter J ohn
Candelaria , who stood to lose
the game because of Bob
Watson's gra nd slam homer
in the six II! in ning, was l&lt;lken
off the hook by the Pirates'
ninth Inni ng rally. Reliever
Dave Giusti won his th ird
ga me by hurling the fina l two
innings.

Trailing 4·2 in the eighth,
the Pirates got a run on

delivered Bruce Boiscla ir
with the firs t run and Roy
Staiger's si ngle scored Felix
Millan wi th whpt proved to he
lhe decisive run.

The Reds scored their lone
run in the seventh and
kn oc ked out Ne w Yor k
star ter and wi nner Nin o
Espinosa ,
2·2.
Cesar
Geron imo opened the inning
wi th a tri ple and scored on

7 li P F ef•wr~ y
Aiding Mo...,cr

"FAIRWAY"
RIDIN&lt;i MOWER·
THE PRIDE AND
PLEASURE MACHINE

Dave Concepcion's ·sacri£ice

fly. Bill Plummer singled to
knock out Espinosa and bring
on LOckwood who hurled
hitless ba II over the final 2
and two-thirds inning.
An old Cincinnati nemises,
LockwOOd fanned pitchhltter
Mike Lum and got Pete Rose
to fly ou t to deep center to end
the threa t.
In the eigh th inning, Lock·
wood · retired the hot-hitting
Ken Griffey, Joe Morgan and
Friday night's slugging star
George Foster on fl y balls.
During the scoreless ninth
inning , Dan Driesse n
grounded back to Lockwood,
Geronimo, struck out and
Concepcion fou,ed out .to first
baseman Torre although a
fan caught the ball as Torre
was reachi ng but first base
umpire Harry Wendelstead
ruled fan intefference ending
the game.
Coupled with the Dodgers'
2.0 loss at Chicago, the Reds
remained 13\'.o games out

War. lto take a great deal. of pride and pleasure in
what has been up to now jusl another necessary
chore? Get be hind the wheel ol an Ari ens Fair·
way Riding Mowe r. Grass cutting will take on a
whole new outl oo k.
The Ari ens Fairway is available in two models, a
7 HP and a 5 HP; the 7 HP )lli ll accept an eleclric
starter. There's a 26" "Fiex· N· Fioai-Pi us" rotary
mower; lour speeds forward, neutral and reverse;
a pre-lubricated sealed dillerentia l; Disc·O-Matic
drive; and a full ayto motiv e type positive action
stee ring w~ee l.
Choose an Ariens Fairway- it's '·Buil t To Last A
Lawn Ti me!"

RIDENOUR ·SUPPLY
CHESTER, OHIO
PH. 98S.3308

fr ont of the West Division of

si ngles by Hebner, Ed Kirk· . the National League.
patrick and Rennie Stennett.
[n the nin th, with Astros'
reliever Gene Pentz pi tching
and one out, Astros' second
· base ma n Bob Andr ews
all owed Dave Par ker's
sha rply hit ground ball to roll
through his legs. Hebner then
doubled to ti e the score and,
after Kirkpatrick grounded
out, Ste nn~ tt was walked
intentionally, sett ing the
stage for Men doza ·s gamewinnfng double.

_...................
JOHNSON~S · MOBILE
HOMEfr~INC.

MAN KATO, Minn. (UP!)
- Quarterback Bob Berry
an d runn ing back Willie
Spencer wiD tru)ke their first
starts of the season in the
Minnesota Vikings' third
ex hibition game Monday
again st the Browns in
Cleveland.
·
Gra nt started Fran
Tarkenton and Bob Lee in the
Vikings' first two games as
part of a plan to put all his
quarterbacks into action to
get them ready for the NFL
regular season.

Ill•••• .......li:'ir...

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3. Additionoi ,* HpOftidt aoordvndtf" ~~OtMI
•'· 2~~;•- lf'O.C . woll 2•4

. ,. 3~ " ~~ ftoor

hits, ran his season RBI total
to 71 with a run-~tcoring single
in the first and a two.run
homer in the fifth. Texas
starter Nelson Briles gave up
a solo borDer to Boog Powell
and a rllll«oring double to
Ray Fosse in the fourth
before departing In the fifth.
Craig Skok look over, but
was chased m the seventh as
the Indians scored a run on
singles by Kuiper, .Manning
and George Hendrick. Steve
Foucault took over and
blanked the Indians the r~st
of the WilY to earn his eighth
triumph against six losses.

STANDINGI

Marpn 3 under, 47 halll
a s.-::· Uetzke and r-,y ~. j UDder 48 hoi•
ce
8 t 218 Jolm D aribam 1~ ~l holel
Aaron were 219 '
Ni~ ' l7 holllll
Mahaffey at
' Bruce
' - · 48 holllll
1 N 13

. ·old nemises Lockwood

a Foyt-Joitncock battle. Foyt
is the all·time USAC race
leader with 55 championshi p
car victories.
" If I can get into the first
tum ahead of A. J., and keep
the lead around the high,
banked third (turn). 1 mi ht
just manage to stay aheal of
Foyt throughout the whole
.. 'd J h
k
1 0
raR
ce, 83Ra
ncoc k.. h.
fi toger i'f .ger, tma tng 1s
rs qua 1ytng a tempt lor a
USA C, !ndy·ty pe race,
rached as ed of 155 .934 m h
pe .
P
a~d was delighted over h1s
lm ha l conquen ng of th1s
co..urse·
I had only 18 laps o.f
r · d
f t
prac .tce.dan.. myd Ratrs re?,'A·
engme n e, sal
~er .
lack of experience in this
type oa.r hampered my ef·
forts to reach raci ng speeds. I
couldn 't get up to boost and at
first failed to move from third
to fourth gear . But when I
finally got the hang of it, I
started to move."
. Vetera n ·driver Sali
Walther failed to reach pny
sort of quaijfying speed whe n
his car malfunctioned and he
was scratched from the race.
The same was true fo r Lee
Kunzman, who quit after the
first of two qualifying laps.
Rutherford enters the race
with a 571).point lead over
Johncock In the USAC point
stand ings, 2,.590 to 2,020.
Ru therford will retain his
lead even if Johncoc'k wins
Sunday's event because the
race only counts for 400 points
in the standing.

Cincin nati

"I did something on the
ninth hole (Friday), and 1
never reaDy regained my
composure," Palmer aald.
What he did was three .putt.
When he was younger " and more arrogant
conceited and confident ,:
Palmer said - he nev~r
wo uld have lost his
co mp os ur e. Rec ently ,
however, he has aaid his
biggest problem on the golf

~~!i~.nshlp

:St!;t
in goU
The 68 matched his score
for the final round of the 1966
PGA · championship at
Firestone Country Club in
·Akron, Ohio . Although he has
finlahed second twice since
then, he had not shot a single
round that low.
Saturday, Palmer had four
birdies 011 putts ranging from
10to20feet, thelongestonthe
finalhole,and twohogeys. He
three-putted the 215-yard
second hole from '18 feet and

miMed a four.-. for I*'

4 ftlld'~ "-'tldt
7 . ... , _ .... _

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O'DELL LUMBER CO.
446-1276
VIne Street

'•

Gallipolis
·'

.

...... ....

�wncepcion's two homers I dway
NEWYORX'(UPI)-Dave
Conce;w:JGa II nat abOut to
wute •r tlme When he's got
abatiDIUblncl..
'!be CDdDnatl lb«tttGp
jumped Clll tile llnl pitch 1111
flrsl three lripl to the plate
Friday night to produce •
home run, double and lllatber
homer and knock In three
runs ciurln8 a 7-3 victory over
the New y..,k Meta.
"Normally I doo 't like to
swing at · the first pitch,"

CmcepeiClll uld. "But theee
looked lite 1 could hit
them."
.
The homers were tile elihth
and ninth for the . All.star

~-

-

• "I dCI1 'I think I've hit two
bame I'IIU In a &amp;8lllllllince I
waa 12," the I&amp;- year-old

Vc:edded.

-krl, wbo gat olf Ill.
llow 11tar1 thil - · hu
picked up some summer
momerltum In the Redl' drive
for what appears to be their

~ecoad straight d1Ttalo1111l

llllnl J ' - 1r7 111 bit; 1111 11111

tiUe.
"I dClll't UPIII'Italld wb.J I
get o1f 111 a lllow llart but 1
always flnilh fut, So I t1int
I'll end up hittlni ovw .800,"
he llld.
. '
Meemrblle, QmCltJIC(Im '1
artUlery mate, Oeorae
Foeter, added additional
c!amale with three hits llld
lour RBia to extend hll
leaiiUHeadlna total to 1111.
"With men 1!11 se.;ond and

In the
17.,._411
IIUQfl' lllld a1 1111 JUU
- - · '"nle I'll • oar
-lalm ve fut 111011111 • tblt
If latt UDder It tbiJ'I CIIDe
ln. lt'l •
tbll
when IIW!ai up, a lot
ll'e aolua 01&amp;.''
Ctnd!l!!!ltilllrter Jadl BiJ.
1lna1wn pidlad • hll loth
win 11111111 elcbt ..... with
reUef help tram wm
McEnaney and Rawly
Eutwtdl. Mickey Lolk:b 7·
11, took the loea.
'

Fight disrupts Cowboy camp

*•" ...

u.;.,

DAlLAS ( UPI) _ II hu
been live year• since the
Dall!• Cowboys, tr_alnlng
camp was disrupted by the
saga Of Duane Tbomal- And
when Thomas rejoined the
learn this year he became llle
ln!tant subject or poasible
disruptJon apeculaUon .
So it was somewhat
fascinating that when
disorder came to • the
Cowboys' practice sessions
lhls ' year, It involved an
appieo(heeked youngster who
chases ra.tUesnakes and the
veteran quarterback known
around pro football as "Mr.
Clean.''
It usually takes quite a bit
to make ROger Slllubach
angry. And when he returned
to Dallas from the Cowboys
Thousand Oaks, Calif.,
training camp this week, ll
was obvious the club's
veteran quarterback was still
pretty Irate.
· And
Slilubach seemed

at:;:

Bengals please Johnson

FIN1SRES SECOND - Bidwell flnlshed the regula~

seaSO(l In the Gallla County Pony League in If\ ll!lfamillar ~
place secood.llreen won the league crown this swmner.
Teazd members were, left to right, first row, Chuck
C«delJ, Cllarlle Lookado, Brian Martin, Darrell Shaw,

Todd Patu,lon, Keith '"l'urk" Payne 8IMI sCott Howell,
manager; second row, Keith Saunders, coach; BW
'BoUey" Payne, Carl Tadlett, . Dave Shaw, l!lchard
Payne, Doyle Saunders, coach. Absent: Alan Harris, Tim
Howell.

CINCINNATI UPI- "This
has all been a lot o( fun so
far, " grins new Cinclnnali
Bengals heal) coach Bill
Johnson. "Nothing real bad
has happened . Everylhlng 's
just been swell."
Johnson is ail smiles
because his Bengals are off to
a roaring slllrt, looking lor
their third straig ht preseason victory here Saturday
against the Detroit l.lons.
Johnson, SO , is finally .
geltJng a crack al head
coaching after 29 years in pro
football as a player and
assistant coach.
" I 'm happy ·with our
progress up to this point, "
says the man who was hand·
picked by retired head coach

Bobcats
have 43 .
CHESHIRE
Jim
Sprague, head football coach
al Kyger Creek High School
near here, told members or
the KC Athletic Boosters-club
Thursday night that 43 boys
have reported for summer
conditioning drills. ·
The Bobcat squlid will be
loaded wilh experience since
the balk of Ule team is made
up of juniors 08!!d seniors.
Kyger O"eek_, the defending
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference champs, has
scheduled i ls first prHeason
scrimmage at Glouster, Aug,
28.

'

'

: , UNDI!:FEATEI;l SJ;:ASON - Bidwell's T-ball team
• llnillled ita re&amp;ular &amp;eaiOII undefea~ with a 7.0 -reatrd.
l Team mt!!Ilbl!rs were, lel\111 rll!ht, \It ""'• 1l1ck Welch,
t Mutb Pickens, B~ Edwards, Davie Roosh, ·.Doy),e
~! Callihan, Randy ~ackson, ~e L,anch, Carla Uevinl!;
'· 2nd row, Bug )ltu-rjaon, Ouis Patterson, D. L. Glassburn,

D. J. SaiDiden, Sullan Lookado, Greg ijickle; 3rd row,
C&lt;l84"h Keith Sa\Didera, Coach Marty Glaaslm'n, Mlcheel
1....._, Todd ~In, . Todd Watton, Scott Blel')ns,
Coach Doyle Saunders. Abient: Sjlane Glassburn, Rusty
Denney, Roy Cee and Shawn Holliday.

I

._ fCoultt' defeats Phillies 3..0
bunt single to Larry Bon to
opel) the game wt then
struck out the side - Mite
Scbmldt, Greg I.AIZinakl and
Jay JOOnstone- and couted
the rest of the way for his
fourth shutout.
The Glanta jumped on IoBer
Jim Kaat, 1~. for a run in
the flnt inniD8 when Marty
Perez singled and scored on
Gary Matthews' double.
Darrell Ev1111 hit a home run
leadln&amp; otf the fifth and San
Francisco made it 3-0 In the
llizth on a walk to Matthen
and a double by Ken Reitz.
In other games, OliCIIgo
split with Los Angeles, the
CUbs wlnnl.ng the opener, 3-2,
and the Dodgers taking the
..---· '
~Montefusco yielded. a second game, 11-7, San Diego
I able to Dave Cub and a and Montreal also spUt, the

By RICK GOIISEIJN
VPI 8portl Wrtter
•Jolm Montefusco always
did enjoy beating tile best.
Cotmt recorded his
IICOIId straigbt,win over the
Billa Friday night with a flix.
~t perfmD~nce in recordll!g
IU fourth straight victory, a
~ lUnklng of the NL East
l)!aders. Montefusco
attributed his performance to
tile day.
' "Friday the 13th Is my
l!.cty day," he said. "'Ibis
1ju my 13th win. I always
=good In the minora on
y the 13th. I did nat
ct a flllutout tonight, I
told my girlfriend I'd win

:n.e

t ........

it\.U.Ohio Shri:rie Bowl
i

EK)IOI winning, 6-0, before
lolilig, 4-3, Cincinnati riddled
New York, 7-3, St. Louis
blanked Atlanta, 8-0. aod
Plttaburgh clubbed Houston,
8-4.
In the American League,

Detroit tripped Kansas City,
3-1, Teus downed Cleveland,
2·1, New York bombed
Minnesota, 9·3, Chicago
toppled Baltimore, 5•2,Milwaukee blanlted Califor·
nla, 2--0, and Oakland shut out
Bostoo. 2--0.

Oid timers game siaied A~. 22
MILWAUKEE (UP!) - A
team ·of former Milwaukee
Braves lakes on a simi~r
team of Chicago Cu~ in an
old timers day contest at
County Stadium Aug. 22.
. The contest will precede
the regularly scheduled
Milwaukee Brewers-Kansas .
City Royal game.
Warren Spahn , Eddie
Malllews, Bob Uecker and

The only liome scrimmage
is Sept. 4 against Nelsonville·
York.
Admission will.be a bar of
soap.
Thursday night, KenneUt L
Wise,
Ches~ire,
was
reelected president of lhe
aUtletic boosters. Other of.
fleers are Cam Sands, vice·
president; Clljlrlene Darst,
secrelllry and Dorothy Ojala,
treasurer. The group went over the
football program
and
distributed various
businesses which will be
contacted for ads in the
program.

other Braves will try to bring
back the past against former
Cu~ Ernie Banks, Hllf1k
Sauer, Glenn Beckert, among
others. .
·
Former
Milwaukee
Braves' Manager Charlie
Grinun will have a unique
function. He will manage
bolll teams for the three
inning "contest."

P~oving

to Riverfront

· CINCINNATI (UPl) - Ill W81 centrelly located aad
an attempt to aeJ1 JlliiA WU the home of Ohio State
Odlelll,lbe "AU-Olio Sbrlne footblll," saldOtarlesSettle,
Bowl" charity footblll pme potentate of the Onclnnatl
i'a being moved to ClncllmaU Syrien Temple and vice0111 yeer after folD' yean In president of the pme. "But
€ollllllbu8.
.
we found out Columbul was
: '!be game, "wtllch brlnp lltrlctly an Ohio State town."
laletller the top gradliatlng
Ohio college teams playing
lleDiorl from mOlt of Oblo'• in bowl 88111111 dan 'I lltlld
In an East vs. West playera to the 8brlne game.
will be play(\(1 Dec.
''ado . . . hun't been
at
Riverfront ' aendlnC playen, of coune,
~~=~u home of the beclule they've been In the
p
Bengals.
Rolle Bowl so often recently,"
The game II staged by said Settle, "and irben the
lllrlnera to benefit hoapltala Blg Ten deeldld to lllow
Clnclnnatl, Bolton 111d other conference ldtooll to
~=:;:~ treating
Tn., that go to. ~ bowl pmea, we
children figured there would hardly
fnm burns.
ever be a chance to lei 01*1
Sltrlne officials, who State players In our game.
called a news
"So, we're ~ It to
iellfer•mce Monday to Cincinnati, where thare'a
ltllcln transfer of the never been a bowl pme and
OndJuuttl, com- . wbere we're hGplnc to rtaiJJ
that attendence buUd up IODII lnlertll.
aa they
"The pme II alwara
whtn piared .. till tint - Oitlo lD . . 7 her 1114 ...... Nil
Oblo lliPit ltltl ..... In

.

Ct111111"- on atat date,"

........

lllllllllt-811111. ''W.... ......

Ill ...,. ..... • .... lto

"

ST. WUIS (UPI) - The
ptesldent of the St. Louis
Cardinali says John Gaherln,
negotiator tor maj..,-league
baseball owners, and Olarles
S. "Olub" Feeney, president
of the Nallonaluague, have
done a "rotten job" and
should be dlsmlsaed.
'
· Auguat A. Busch Jr., made
the statements In a message
delivered earlier tills week to
other National League
owners meet1na in Phoenix,:
Ariz. Busch made pibilc hls
l"l'IIliU'ks Friday.
"The time has CWle ((I' a
ft'esh start," Busch said. "!
respectfuily submit lor your
coosideratlon the following
steps : the di8charge of John
Gaherin as a representative
of the NaUonal League In aU
laboc matters; the discharge
of president leadership of the
National League. '!be time
· has cune to have a new office
In a new city with a new
leader who will lead, not
follow.
"I harbor no pei"SQilal ill
feelings
toward
the
individuals, but in troth and
In fact they have done a
rotten job. We cannot alford
to put friendship and
11enli!nent ,.\le(Jlre what II
obviod!dy llood business judg·

menl. We would not tolerate

these resUlts in the private
business sector; why shoold
we do it with baseball?"
Buach said rqany of the
clulle requested but were
denied a meeting bef(l'e a
final vote was taken on the
recent labor contract. He also
criticized Feeney's
leadersblp In eapansion.

"What type of leadership
did we get In this whole ·
expansion mess?" Buach
asked, "Was our president
helping us make decisions or
sitting idly by, acting as a
paasive monitor?"
- ~-. Busch also criticized Gaherln's haridiing of the negotla·
Uons with players and asked,
"Would anyone in this room,
fated with a maj.., labor fight
concerning the welfare and
poasible continuation of his
businesS, hire John Gaherln
to represent him and feel he
had the best man In the
world?"

• Pebble textured cowhide
leather
• Weh construction
• Cushion insole and steel
shank arch suppo~
• Oil resistant neoprene sole
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CARL'S
SHOE STORE
Gallipolis. Ohio .

~-~..-.--111111!-~

Summer Clearance Sale
On All Models
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County Fair. ·
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J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

748 E. Main

WEEKL.Y
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5 Foot Rail
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6 Foot Rail
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LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
Week of Auguslt5
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
Aug. 15-2·4 p.m. Open Rec.
2-4p.m. Qp.., Swim
o-5:30p.m. Camp Cresc..,do
Closed
B-10_p.m. Camp Cresc.
·
8·10 p.m. Open Swim
Aug.1~tosed
10:30-11 :30a.m. Swim Lessons
Closed
12-1p.m. Open Swim
2•5:30 p.m. Camp Cresc .
Cl-d
1·10p.m. CampCresc.
8-10 p.m. Camp Cresc,
10:30-11 :30o.m. Swim Lessons
Aug. 17-Closed
Closed
12-1p.m. Open Swim
, 2-5:30p.m. CampCresc.
CIOMd
,
8-10 p.m. Open Swim
:·1~.m. Camp Crose.
10:30-11 :30 a.m. Swim Lessons
Aug. I
tOIId
12·1p.m. Open Swim
2-5:30 p.m. Camp Cresc.
8-10p.m. CampCresc.
. t10c!r,.m. CampCresc.
10:30-11 :30a.m, Swim Lessons
Aug. 1
tosed
'
12-1p.m. Open Swim
Cloled
2-S: 30 p.m. Camp Crtsc,
Cloled
8-IO_p.m. Open Ate.
8·10 p.m. Open Swim
12-1 p.m. Open Swim
Aug. 20-Ciosed
2-5:30 p.m. Camp Cresc.
Closed
,.
8·10 p.m. Open Swim
1-10 p.m. Camp .resc.
Aug. 21-Hp.m. Open Rtc .
2-4p.m . Ot&gt;en Swim

992-2

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,t-""

· Imaginative• stories lo come.
from a number . of dlrec. ttons:"- .
_
Last week, Lasorda was
quoted by the Times as
saymg he was made an offer.
"! was as_ked if I'd. be in·
teres ted '" m~nagmg m
Pillsburgh. ldidn tsay yes or
no. I explained lhat I feel a
great deal of loyalty to lhe
Dodgers," Lasorda was
quoted by lhe newspaper.
Later UP! reached Lasorda
by telephone and asked him
to elaborate on the offer, but
he demed that one had been
. made,.. saying "That's not
true ·
Asked _whether he_ had
llllk~ to ,;tttsburgh O~l~t.als.
he satd, No I haven t.
The AUanlll Braves and the
Montreal Expos approached
Lasorda last year about a
possible managing job, but he
turned them down .
Lasorda has ~lso served as
scout and mmor league
manager for the Dodgers.

- ··'"· 7o~A.M.·S P.M.
Sotur'do'''IOA.M.-4 P.M.

WICHITA, Kan. (U PI) Denver first baseman Roger
. Freed,
the American
Association's most
productive home run hitler in
19 years, heads an all-star
team announced Saturday by
league president Joe Ryan.
Tbe Association All.Sillrs
will challenge the St. Louis
Cardinals Aug. 26 at
Rosenblatt Stadium in
Omaha, Neb,
Freed, who slammed lllree
home runs last Sunday
against Tulsa. hit 3 more
later in the week to run his
season total to 38, the most by
an Assoc_lalion player since

STOCKHOilM (UPI) World Star
Yachting
Champion James .Allsopp ~f
lhe. United Sillies Saturday
won the European Star
Yachting Open Cham·
pionships title by finishing
second in the last ·race off the
Wesl Coast City of Mars·
tra!!d.

PMOHI.....,..

•

entrants

Grapt=l

ByROBERTSEDLACZEK
ZELTWEG, Austria (UP!)
- James Hunt Saturday won
ihe slllrtlng pole position to
remove aU doubts that he is
the favorite for Sunday's
Austrian Formula One Grand
Prix, to be held in the absence
or Ferrari and defending
World Champion Niki Lauds .
The... 29-year-old blonde·
haired Brilon drove his
McLaren around the 3.6-mile
Oeslerreichring Circuit,
whtch winds through the
sce nic landscape o( Austria's
Slyrian Province, in 1 : 56.6~.
ll was, however, a far cry
from his 1:35,02 minutes
clocked on the fi'rsl of two
days of practice runs lhal
the
starting
decided
positions .
"Rain showers made the
track wet so that I had to cut

back my speed during the
The 27-year-old defending
final training session," said world Champion Ia un·
Hunt, who is bidding for his dergoing treatment for llumt
fourth consecuUve victory of at Ludwi gshafen, Weal
the season.
Germany, followi ng a crash
Sweden's Ronnie Peterson. during the German Grand
in a March, turned in the • Prix two weeks ago,
fastest practice llme on "the.
Ferrari withdrew from the
damp irack Saturday, remaining formula one
clocking 1:54.50, but hb best events after its appeals
lime Friday of 1:36.34 gave against Hunt's victories in'
him only third place on the the spanish and Britlsh 1
grid.
.
Grand Prix races were
James Watson of Britain turned down by racing
clocked lhe second fastest authorities. The withdrawal
lime in Friday's training also left Ferrari's nwnber
session In I: 35.84. The two driver, Clay Regazzoni o(
be9ded Briton will lake o_ff Switzerland, without a car,
from the first row of the grtd After 10 or lhe t6 races on
Sunday alongside Hunt. , the championship circuit,
Mtsslng from Sunday s Hunt has a total of H point/!
race, to be flagged off at 2:00 but is still trailing Lauda 's 58
p.m., will be c hampionsh~p points.
leader Ntki Lauda of Auslrta
The Brilon who is expected
and italy's Ferrari team.
to narrow 'Lauds's edge

.

~~E!~r-~~~~~~~~!:~'"'"·" '

South Africa's Jonty Skinner,
who was not allowed to swim
in lhe summer Olympic
games because of politics, set
a world record Saturday in
the IOO.meter freestyle allhe
AAU Outdoor ·National
championships .
The 22-yearoOid Skinner,
· representing the Central
Jersey Aquatic Club, swam
the sprint race in a titpe of
49.44 which was more than
one-half second better than
the record of 49.99 set by Jim
Montgomery in the Olympics
in his gold medal win.
With a large crowd from
New Jersey cheering him on
'
TOURNAMENT ENDS
The
Women 's
Golf
Association finished a twoday Ringer Tournament,
which they started last week,
with about sixla!n ladies
present.
The Ringer Tournament
was won by Bess Grace, and
the · TribUfle Tournament;
which is by match play, was
played off, and the winner for
the 1976 Tribune Tournament
is Eloise Brown, willl Opal
Baker being lhe runner -up.
'

body length in front, but )le favored to wm llle fmals,
pulled away in llle last 50 as she did in lhe 200
meters to win by about five Thursday, although she
yards.
qualified lh!rd m 58._63,
Skinner qualified Saturday Sterkel ha,d the best mor~tn~
morning with the fastest time hme of 58.12, while Boghob,
of 51.88.
· who has anchored Central
He was not allowed in the Jersey A; C.lo two successiVe
Olympics because South relay vtctorie~ here,. was
Africa is banned from the ltmed in 58.22 In the heals.
games. Efforls to ge l to the . Donn~lee Wennerstrom of
Olympics as an American . Northrtdge, Calli., was
competitor wi th the New favored m the 200 meter
Jersey Club were rebuffed. individual medley, an event
Three girls whose greatest not on the Olympic program.
glory came when they The. win~er of llie 400 IM ·
teamed for one important earlier thtsweek, the 16-year·
gold medal al the Olympics old Olympt~ fma~l IS . also
compe ted for one victory the leader m the tndlVldual
Saturday evening at John B. high_ point. award com·
Kelly PooL
petil;on .
Wendy Boglioli , 21, of
Judy Anderson, 17, of Fort
Ocean Township, N.J., Kim Lauderdale, Fla., was fastest
Peyton, 19, of Portland, Ore., in t.he 200 IM heals Wtth
and J(ll Sterkel, 15, of 2_: 23,11, though the e~tire
Hacienda Heights, Calif., held for the fmals qualified
were lhe leading qualifiers within one and a half seconds
for lhe finals of the 100 meter of the leader.
.
freestyle . The three set a
Olympics finalist Steve
world record in the 400 Furniss, 23, of Sanlll Ana,
freestyle relay, the American Calif., led the men's 200 inwomen's sole win at Mon. dividual medley quahfters m
treal, with teammate Sliirley 2:07.04, almost one second o~f
Babashoff. who is not com. t11e world record held by his
peting here.
younger brother, Bruce, who
Peyton, the U. S. record is not swtmmmg here.

-·

sunday, said he bell•n•
Ferrari will return to Fllr·
mula One racint later IJU
seuon.
"They have pul a Jot Of
'II'OI'k into bulldlnl• areal car
and they have gre~~t drlvere.
11 would be a abame II lillY
slay out," sald Hunt.
_

USSR· cops
swim cup
WNOON (UP!) - Tile
SOviet Union, para~ all ita
Olympic stars, Saturday won
lhe finals of the W0111111'1
J':uropa Swimming CUp for
lhe flrsl llnle, fin~ two
points ahead of Eaal Ger·
many. victors In tile four
previous competlllona but
represented here by 1 iiKGIIdstrlng team minus Ill
Olympic cha_mplolll.
A significant moment that
could have cost Ealt Ger·
many the compeUUoo Cllllt
in the 2110 meters tr.elyle
when 100 meters olympic
silver medalist Petra
Preiemer finished only third
behind Holland's Annellea
Maas and Irina Vlasova of
lhe Soviet Union.

Fourth annual
tournament set
ATHENS - The fourth
annual Baron Men's Shop·
Slow Pitch softball tour·
namentwill be beld Aug. 2829 on West Slate St. Flelda
near here. The ASA sane·.
tioned event will be a double
elimination.
Trophies will be awarded to
the first lllree teams while
members of the lop club gets
15 jackets.
· Trophies will also be given
lo the player hitting the most
home runs and the MVP,
Entry fee is $55.
· Further informallon may
be obtained from Larry
Corrigan ,' Athens, or Dwight
Pugh, Baron Men's Shop in
Athens, phone 592-5205 or 5933120,

~mstrong

Bern1ce Bede Osol
For Sundoy; Aug. 15, 11176
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 111) Be
careful today if money is being

exchanged between you and a
frie nd . A misunderstanding
Could arise over something s i t~

ly.

TAURUS (April 20· Moy 20) . _,
lndeciSi'4B people will not wear
well today. Don't get seriously

CEILING

••

InvOlved with anyone who can ~
not make up ~er awn min d.
GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20) You
have a pal who Is always pry.

lng Into your affairs. Today, her
curiosity is at a higher peak
than us.ual. Watch what you

say .
CANCER (Juno 21-.July 22)
You're pron e to lake risks to· .
day, not so much yoursetr but
on others . There's a good
chance you'll back the wrong

c

•WASHABLE SURFACE

horse.

No. 258

LEO ( July 23·Aug. 22) If
you're uncertain about how
something you want to do
might effect others , it's best

•AITRACTIVE RANDOM DESIGN ·

SQ." fl.

•SPECIAL BUDGET PRICE

you don't try .it.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopl, 22) tt
would be a mistake today to
pretend you know something
about a matter of which , In
truth. you know very little.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Cl. 23) Don't
let yourself get Inveigled into o
business situation today with a
fast.talking sales type Who

usually lalls at what he
attempts .

Marv Thornberry hit 42 for
the Bears in 1956 and 40 in
19S7.
Other pow~r hitters In the
lineup will be catcher Btll
. Nahorodny of Oklahoma City,
22 homers; outfielder Mike
Easler of Tulsa, 24; first
baseman Dave Revering of
Indianapolis, 19; and out·
fielder Andre Dawson of
Denver, 18.
Joining Freed, a .319 hitler;
in the infield are .second
baseman Sieve Staggs of
Omaha, shortstop Mike
Buskey of Oklahoma City and
Udrd baseman Pal Scanlon of
Denver .

American Allsopp wins
yachting championship

ITORI HOURS

J

Astra-·

Home run hitter
heads all-stars

iJALLI'OUi;OHIO

~=

denies
~Lasorda story

('UPI)-Bi!t's·
~rgh P.i~ate General
"rdanagerl. JOe Brown termed
~"ridiculous'' .a report b)"lhe
f:Los NJgeles Times Friday
'!'that Los Angeles Dodger
·~third base Coach Tom
~Lasorda has received an offer
•from tbe Pirates to become
-'manager. '\1' '·
" We have had no
discussi~ns
with Tom
Lasorda allout managing our
club. we nave had no
disc·ussion with anybody
about managing out club. We
have a manager " Brown
said Saturday ~hen conlllcled here.
. The ' Pirates' present
manager is Danny Murtaugh,
who joined the Pirates in
1957 retired becaUSl! of ill
· heat'th and returned. He has
been •managing the team for
lhe past four years,
. Asked where he th~ught the
Los Angeles Times beard that
Lasorda had been approached, Brow~ said, "I've
known of a number of

Choose yours tOday at . ..

. aws 91
dr
"'

·~Brown
~HDUSrtONf

Come In' rtow and see •for ·
yourself.

39th Derby

six seasons. Won 75 games
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A by Aug. 23 at offi~es of the and helped Reds win the 1981
AKRON,Ohio (UP!) -The
Cincinnati
Chamber
of
Com·
week of balloting begins MonpelUllllt
when
he
waa
Clncy's
39th
running of the All
day to elect the 40th member meree, which started the first 20-i!ame winner since American Soap Box Derby
to lhe Cincinnati Reds hall of Reds Hall of Fame in 1958111d Ewell Blackwell In 1947.
Saturday afternoon featured
supervises the balloting.
Fame.
Lawrence:
Broke
In
sensa91 youths vying for the
A brief proffie of the seven
Seven former Reda players
tlonally
with
Reds
1n
1956,
gravity racer championship
ar~ ~ the ballot - Joey Jar, candidates:
,
winning
hls
first
13
games.
and
another group In a
Adams : Played 1,087
Brooks Lawrence, Pat
spe
.
cial
"kit car'' division.
Duncan, Jerry Lynch, Cy gainea as a Red, splitting Selected to the All-Star team
and
eventually
Wound·up
with
"
The
spirit of the
SeymolD', Bobby Adams and time ' between secood and 19 victories. Now a member contestants
Is
just
third, Averaged .272 in 10
Chick Hafey.
the Reds' front office staff. phenomenal," said Ronald D.
Ironically, Hafey is a consistent years, the best of ofLynch:
One of the all-time Baker, general manager of.
which
came
in
1962
when
he
national Baseball Hall of
Led 1he the derby.
Farner but is not In the Reds batted .283.
great plnch-l)itters.
Baker and other officials
Duncail:
Batted
.307
in
six
Natlonai!A!ague
in
pinch-hits
were
intent on running lhe
Hall of Fame.
Voting will take place at seasons its a Roids outfielder. in 1980 and 1981 and hatted event without a hint of the
Riverfront Stadium during · Waa the starting lefitlelder ·312 as a regular in 1958 ·
controveray lhat followed the
the Reds-Atlanta Braves · for the Reds in the 1919 World
SeymolD': Owner of the notorious 1974 Derby, the
four-game series Monday Series and batted .269. ·
oldest batting record in Reds' winner of which was disquali·
lllrough Thursday nights and · Hafey: Had live good years history - he hit .an.to lead lied for boosting his car's
ballots also are •vliilable at with the Reds, hilling .344 In National League In 1905. start with an electromagnetic
several do~town Cln~tl his first season in 1932. Had a Converted from a pitcher to
.317llletlme batting average. an outfielder, he had a .303 device.
stores.
Jay: A 20-i!ame winner lifetime average in 16 major . The kit car or junior
All ballots must be received
division, being run for tbe
twice lor the Reds during his Ieague seasons. ·
first lime this year, involved
59 boys and girls aged 10.12.
The All American senior
division was for youths aged
13-15.
..

•'

We are now featuring great

WROUGHTIRON

Reds' Hall of Fame
balloting commences

. I'«&gt;LVERINE~~&gt;
6" WELT \WJRK BOOT

.AND SAVINGS, TOO/

Maynard tops Scioto, 7-4
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - . strikeout ended the game.
Scioto took 011 Maynard, the
Jeff Milla went the diltaoce
only team It has lost to In the on the mound fer Maynard.
•
tourney, for the State
American Legkrl Baseball
Tollflllllllenl championship
ENTRIES NEEDED
Saturday.
GALLIPOLIS - Union
Friday, ~anny Erdos Workman is still accepting
rapped a lhree-run home run entries for the girls' slo.pitch
In the fourth Inning to spark softball tournament slated
Maynard to a 7-l win over Aug. 20·21 on the Elks
Scioto. Erdos' blast gave Diamond .
Maynard a 7.0 lead.
. Lots of trophies will be
Scioto threatened In the given away. Interested teams
ninth, witll runners on first should conlllct Lee Howell ai
and second and one out, but a 446-1361. '!be first 20 teams
popup to the catcher and a will be accepted,

Negotiator
upsets Busch

AUGUST
16-21

0

•

Paul Brown to head the an educational process.
Bengals, now rolling with a 2· · We're learning something
0 pre-season mark.
with each game as we work
"We're still looking ala Jot toward our goal of" being 100
of people at different per cent ready for the regular
positions," he explains. "It's season."

moat irate about the fact~~ whole lhlnl behind us,"
he had no chance to reiallale Landry said.
last Thursday when backUP
"aut llle incident Will not be
r ~·I
Dallao decides
. quarterback Clint ...,,..,
ey over
what 11unlll
will do wllll Longley
felled him with one punch .
"I would never flghla man - trade him, place him on
who did not have a chance to waivers or • perhaps, iry to
defend himself," said convince him to slick with the
Slaubach, who was putting ori Cowboys.
his shoulder pads when
"We have not made a final
Longley hit him, causlng the decision on Longley," Landry
CowboysNo..lquarterbackto said.
· fail back onto a large set of
The Longley·Staubach
scales,
incidenlfinlshed off one of the
· "But I'm going to try to least productive training
forget about it. After this camps in Cowboys history.
discussion about ll I'm not
Preston Pearson, Cliff
going to say another word Harris, Kyle DavlJ, Robert
about the whole thing,"
Newhouse, Lee Roy Jordan
l · h and Duane Thomas have aU
ha
And that Is jUlll w · coac . been bothered by· injuries
Tom Landry wants. After the
incident, which occurred on · _lltat have kept them out of
the eve of the team 's action .
departure from Thousand . "Obviously we were slowed
Oaks, Landry told his players by the injuries," saia Landry.
he dld not want them "But that is just something
discussing the brief scuffle. ·you do not have any control
"ljustwanttotryto get lhe over. We are jusl going lo

have to pul some or these
things ' behind us and gel on
willl the things we h~ve to
do."
One thing Dalla~ will try to
· do is to sillY away from
controversy. And , thus far,
the man most e~cled to
provide some, has been
noticeably dedicated to his
job on the field .
When the charter airliner
carrying the Cowboys back to
town pulled·up to the terminal
last Friday, more · than a
dozen reporters were anxious
to visll willl Slaubach .and
hear, once again, his versipn
of the trouble wi lh Longley.
Slaubach was one of the
lllsl players off the plane.
Long befOre h~ departure a ·
player dressed natliiy in a
grey business sui l had walked
lllrough the crowd almost
unnollced . And that was
probably just the way Duane
Thomas wanted il.

Hunt grabs pole·post

Helsman Allsopp, with
Herman Weiler the only
American participants in the
competion, got a total of 208
points In five races. The
championships Included six
races of 10.8 nauUcai'miles
each, but only lhe best live
results ·lor ·each competllor
are. counted .

'·

SCORPIO (Oct. 2'·Nov. 22)
Someone whose advice you
sought will get a little annoyed
with yoU when she sees you do
just th e opposite of what you
agreed upon.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) You' re not overly industrious today.. You'll look for
st1ortcuts for tasks requiring.,
time and patience. Bungled
pro jects are likely .
CAPRICORN (Doc, 22·Jin
18} tf you want your friends to
tr eat you with warmth and
respect today , you must treat
them in the same manner
yourself.
·

PLAZA
No. 117

just when the end Is In sight. To

•SOUND CONDITIONS ANY ROOM

be a winner you 'll need more
stay ing power .

~own .

Don Miss Out On These Super Buys. ••
See The omplete Armstrong Ceiling l.fne At:

¥our memory

can't be trusted .

~Your

WBirthday

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.

Aug. 15, 1176
This year you will explore new
avenues In order to add to yo ur
resources. Your prospects
look encouraging. provided
you don't QQ off on tangents.

SQ.FT•

•2-TONE EMBOSSED PAITERN

PISCES (Fob, 20·Morch 20)
You may be asked.to relay im· ·
portent information· to
someone today. Write the

message

c

•ACOUSTICAL

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
Today you're likely to pack it ln

67.5·1160

312 6TH STREET

,,'

.

.

1,

POINT PLEASANT

�wncepcion's two homers I dway
NEWYORX'(UPI)-Dave
Conce;w:JGa II nat abOut to
wute •r tlme When he's got
abatiDIUblncl..
'!be CDdDnatl lb«tttGp
jumped Clll tile llnl pitch 1111
flrsl three lripl to the plate
Friday night to produce •
home run, double and lllatber
homer and knock In three
runs ciurln8 a 7-3 victory over
the New y..,k Meta.
"Normally I doo 't like to
swing at · the first pitch,"

CmcepeiClll uld. "But theee
looked lite 1 could hit
them."
.
The homers were tile elihth
and ninth for the . All.star

~-

-

• "I dCI1 'I think I've hit two
bame I'IIU In a &amp;8lllllllince I
waa 12," the I&amp;- year-old

Vc:edded.

-krl, wbo gat olf Ill.
llow 11tar1 thil - · hu
picked up some summer
momerltum In the Redl' drive
for what appears to be their

~ecoad straight d1Ttalo1111l

llllnl J ' - 1r7 111 bit; 1111 11111

tiUe.
"I dClll't UPIII'Italld wb.J I
get o1f 111 a lllow llart but 1
always flnilh fut, So I t1int
I'll end up hittlni ovw .800,"
he llld.
. '
Meemrblle, QmCltJIC(Im '1
artUlery mate, Oeorae
Foeter, added additional
c!amale with three hits llld
lour RBia to extend hll
leaiiUHeadlna total to 1111.
"With men 1!11 se.;ond and

In the
17.,._411
IIUQfl' lllld a1 1111 JUU
- - · '"nle I'll • oar
-lalm ve fut 111011111 • tblt
If latt UDder It tbiJ'I CIIDe
ln. lt'l •
tbll
when IIW!ai up, a lot
ll'e aolua 01&amp;.''
Ctnd!l!!!ltilllrter Jadl BiJ.
1lna1wn pidlad • hll loth
win 11111111 elcbt ..... with
reUef help tram wm
McEnaney and Rawly
Eutwtdl. Mickey Lolk:b 7·
11, took the loea.
'

Fight disrupts Cowboy camp

*•" ...

u.;.,

DAlLAS ( UPI) _ II hu
been live year• since the
Dall!• Cowboys, tr_alnlng
camp was disrupted by the
saga Of Duane Tbomal- And
when Thomas rejoined the
learn this year he became llle
ln!tant subject or poasible
disruptJon apeculaUon .
So it was somewhat
fascinating that when
disorder came to • the
Cowboys' practice sessions
lhls ' year, It involved an
appieo(heeked youngster who
chases ra.tUesnakes and the
veteran quarterback known
around pro football as "Mr.
Clean.''
It usually takes quite a bit
to make ROger Slllubach
angry. And when he returned
to Dallas from the Cowboys
Thousand Oaks, Calif.,
training camp this week, ll
was obvious the club's
veteran quarterback was still
pretty Irate.
· And
Slilubach seemed

at:;:

Bengals please Johnson

FIN1SRES SECOND - Bidwell flnlshed the regula~

seaSO(l In the Gallla County Pony League in If\ ll!lfamillar ~
place secood.llreen won the league crown this swmner.
Teazd members were, left to right, first row, Chuck
C«delJ, Cllarlle Lookado, Brian Martin, Darrell Shaw,

Todd Patu,lon, Keith '"l'urk" Payne 8IMI sCott Howell,
manager; second row, Keith Saunders, coach; BW
'BoUey" Payne, Carl Tadlett, . Dave Shaw, l!lchard
Payne, Doyle Saunders, coach. Absent: Alan Harris, Tim
Howell.

CINCINNATI UPI- "This
has all been a lot o( fun so
far, " grins new Cinclnnali
Bengals heal) coach Bill
Johnson. "Nothing real bad
has happened . Everylhlng 's
just been swell."
Johnson is ail smiles
because his Bengals are off to
a roaring slllrt, looking lor
their third straig ht preseason victory here Saturday
against the Detroit l.lons.
Johnson, SO , is finally .
geltJng a crack al head
coaching after 29 years in pro
football as a player and
assistant coach.
" I 'm happy ·with our
progress up to this point, "
says the man who was hand·
picked by retired head coach

Bobcats
have 43 .
CHESHIRE
Jim
Sprague, head football coach
al Kyger Creek High School
near here, told members or
the KC Athletic Boosters-club
Thursday night that 43 boys
have reported for summer
conditioning drills. ·
The Bobcat squlid will be
loaded wilh experience since
the balk of Ule team is made
up of juniors 08!!d seniors.
Kyger O"eek_, the defending
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference champs, has
scheduled i ls first prHeason
scrimmage at Glouster, Aug,
28.

'

'

: , UNDI!:FEATEI;l SJ;:ASON - Bidwell's T-ball team
• llnillled ita re&amp;ular &amp;eaiOII undefea~ with a 7.0 -reatrd.
l Team mt!!Ilbl!rs were, lel\111 rll!ht, \It ""'• 1l1ck Welch,
t Mutb Pickens, B~ Edwards, Davie Roosh, ·.Doy),e
~! Callihan, Randy ~ackson, ~e L,anch, Carla Uevinl!;
'· 2nd row, Bug )ltu-rjaon, Ouis Patterson, D. L. Glassburn,

D. J. SaiDiden, Sullan Lookado, Greg ijickle; 3rd row,
C&lt;l84"h Keith Sa\Didera, Coach Marty Glaaslm'n, Mlcheel
1....._, Todd ~In, . Todd Watton, Scott Blel')ns,
Coach Doyle Saunders. Abient: Sjlane Glassburn, Rusty
Denney, Roy Cee and Shawn Holliday.

I

._ fCoultt' defeats Phillies 3..0
bunt single to Larry Bon to
opel) the game wt then
struck out the side - Mite
Scbmldt, Greg I.AIZinakl and
Jay JOOnstone- and couted
the rest of the way for his
fourth shutout.
The Glanta jumped on IoBer
Jim Kaat, 1~. for a run in
the flnt inniD8 when Marty
Perez singled and scored on
Gary Matthews' double.
Darrell Ev1111 hit a home run
leadln&amp; otf the fifth and San
Francisco made it 3-0 In the
llizth on a walk to Matthen
and a double by Ken Reitz.
In other games, OliCIIgo
split with Los Angeles, the
CUbs wlnnl.ng the opener, 3-2,
and the Dodgers taking the
..---· '
~Montefusco yielded. a second game, 11-7, San Diego
I able to Dave Cub and a and Montreal also spUt, the

By RICK GOIISEIJN
VPI 8portl Wrtter
•Jolm Montefusco always
did enjoy beating tile best.
Cotmt recorded his
IICOIId straigbt,win over the
Billa Friday night with a flix.
~t perfmD~nce in recordll!g
IU fourth straight victory, a
~ lUnklng of the NL East
l)!aders. Montefusco
attributed his performance to
tile day.
' "Friday the 13th Is my
l!.cty day," he said. "'Ibis
1ju my 13th win. I always
=good In the minora on
y the 13th. I did nat
ct a flllutout tonight, I
told my girlfriend I'd win

:n.e

t ........

it\.U.Ohio Shri:rie Bowl
i

EK)IOI winning, 6-0, before
lolilig, 4-3, Cincinnati riddled
New York, 7-3, St. Louis
blanked Atlanta, 8-0. aod
Plttaburgh clubbed Houston,
8-4.
In the American League,

Detroit tripped Kansas City,
3-1, Teus downed Cleveland,
2·1, New York bombed
Minnesota, 9·3, Chicago
toppled Baltimore, 5•2,Milwaukee blanlted Califor·
nla, 2--0, and Oakland shut out
Bostoo. 2--0.

Oid timers game siaied A~. 22
MILWAUKEE (UP!) - A
team ·of former Milwaukee
Braves lakes on a simi~r
team of Chicago Cu~ in an
old timers day contest at
County Stadium Aug. 22.
. The contest will precede
the regularly scheduled
Milwaukee Brewers-Kansas .
City Royal game.
Warren Spahn , Eddie
Malllews, Bob Uecker and

The only liome scrimmage
is Sept. 4 against Nelsonville·
York.
Admission will.be a bar of
soap.
Thursday night, KenneUt L
Wise,
Ches~ire,
was
reelected president of lhe
aUtletic boosters. Other of.
fleers are Cam Sands, vice·
president; Clljlrlene Darst,
secrelllry and Dorothy Ojala,
treasurer. The group went over the
football program
and
distributed various
businesses which will be
contacted for ads in the
program.

other Braves will try to bring
back the past against former
Cu~ Ernie Banks, Hllf1k
Sauer, Glenn Beckert, among
others. .
·
Former
Milwaukee
Braves' Manager Charlie
Grinun will have a unique
function. He will manage
bolll teams for the three
inning "contest."

P~oving

to Riverfront

· CINCINNATI (UPl) - Ill W81 centrelly located aad
an attempt to aeJ1 JlliiA WU the home of Ohio State
Odlelll,lbe "AU-Olio Sbrlne footblll," saldOtarlesSettle,
Bowl" charity footblll pme potentate of the Onclnnatl
i'a being moved to ClncllmaU Syrien Temple and vice0111 yeer after folD' yean In president of the pme. "But
€ollllllbu8.
.
we found out Columbul was
: '!be game, "wtllch brlnp lltrlctly an Ohio State town."
laletller the top gradliatlng
Ohio college teams playing
lleDiorl from mOlt of Oblo'• in bowl 88111111 dan 'I lltlld
In an East vs. West playera to the 8brlne game.
will be play(\(1 Dec.
''ado . . . hun't been
at
Riverfront ' aendlnC playen, of coune,
~~=~u home of the beclule they've been In the
p
Bengals.
Rolle Bowl so often recently,"
The game II staged by said Settle, "and irben the
lllrlnera to benefit hoapltala Blg Ten deeldld to lllow
Clnclnnatl, Bolton 111d other conference ldtooll to
~=:;:~ treating
Tn., that go to. ~ bowl pmea, we
children figured there would hardly
fnm burns.
ever be a chance to lei 01*1
Sltrlne officials, who State players In our game.
called a news
"So, we're ~ It to
iellfer•mce Monday to Cincinnati, where thare'a
ltllcln transfer of the never been a bowl pme and
OndJuuttl, com- . wbere we're hGplnc to rtaiJJ
that attendence buUd up IODII lnlertll.
aa they
"The pme II alwara
whtn piared .. till tint - Oitlo lD . . 7 her 1114 ...... Nil
Oblo lliPit ltltl ..... In

.

Ct111111"- on atat date,"

........

lllllllllt-811111. ''W.... ......

Ill ...,. ..... • .... lto

"

ST. WUIS (UPI) - The
ptesldent of the St. Louis
Cardinali says John Gaherln,
negotiator tor maj..,-league
baseball owners, and Olarles
S. "Olub" Feeney, president
of the Nallonaluague, have
done a "rotten job" and
should be dlsmlsaed.
'
· Auguat A. Busch Jr., made
the statements In a message
delivered earlier tills week to
other National League
owners meet1na in Phoenix,:
Ariz. Busch made pibilc hls
l"l'IIliU'ks Friday.
"The time has CWle ((I' a
ft'esh start," Busch said. "!
respectfuily submit lor your
coosideratlon the following
steps : the di8charge of John
Gaherin as a representative
of the NaUonal League In aU
laboc matters; the discharge
of president leadership of the
National League. '!be time
· has cune to have a new office
In a new city with a new
leader who will lead, not
follow.
"I harbor no pei"SQilal ill
feelings
toward
the
individuals, but in troth and
In fact they have done a
rotten job. We cannot alford
to put friendship and
11enli!nent ,.\le(Jlre what II
obviod!dy llood business judg·

menl. We would not tolerate

these resUlts in the private
business sector; why shoold
we do it with baseball?"
Buach said rqany of the
clulle requested but were
denied a meeting bef(l'e a
final vote was taken on the
recent labor contract. He also
criticized Feeney's
leadersblp In eapansion.

"What type of leadership
did we get In this whole ·
expansion mess?" Buach
asked, "Was our president
helping us make decisions or
sitting idly by, acting as a
paasive monitor?"
- ~-. Busch also criticized Gaherln's haridiing of the negotla·
Uons with players and asked,
"Would anyone in this room,
fated with a maj.., labor fight
concerning the welfare and
poasible continuation of his
businesS, hire John Gaherln
to represent him and feel he
had the best man In the
world?"

• Pebble textured cowhide
leather
• Weh construction
• Cushion insole and steel
shank arch suppo~
• Oil resistant neoprene sole
·and heel

CARL'S
SHOE STORE
Gallipolis. Ohio .

~-~..-.--111111!-~

Summer Clearance Sale
On All Models
Visit our displaY whil• attending the Meigs
County Fair. ·
on all models in
stock. loth stuetand trail

deal~

bikn 11re now ule priced.

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

748 E. Main

WEEKL.Y
SPECIALS

FlAT

COWMN
Regular
$13.00

Regular Sale
4FootRail
57.40
$5.99
5 Foot Rail
510.25
$8.19
6 Foot Rail
511.20
$8.99
Complete line of accessories in slo_ck.

• For Wooo. Masonry. Meta!
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ELECTRIC
WIRE

• Soap and w,terCiean· UP

12-2 WHh GIOUnd
250 Ft Roll

,

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
Week of Auguslt5
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
Aug. 15-2·4 p.m. Open Rec.
2-4p.m. Qp.., Swim
o-5:30p.m. Camp Cresc..,do
Closed
B-10_p.m. Camp Cresc.
·
8·10 p.m. Open Swim
Aug.1~tosed
10:30-11 :30a.m. Swim Lessons
Closed
12-1p.m. Open Swim
2•5:30 p.m. Camp Cresc .
Cl-d
1·10p.m. CampCresc.
8-10 p.m. Camp Cresc,
10:30-11 :30o.m. Swim Lessons
Aug. 17-Closed
Closed
12-1p.m. Open Swim
, 2-5:30p.m. CampCresc.
CIOMd
,
8-10 p.m. Open Swim
:·1~.m. Camp Crose.
10:30-11 :30 a.m. Swim Lessons
Aug. I
tOIId
12·1p.m. Open Swim
2-5:30 p.m. Camp Cresc.
8-10p.m. CampCresc.
. t10c!r,.m. CampCresc.
10:30-11 :30a.m, Swim Lessons
Aug. 1
tosed
'
12-1p.m. Open Swim
Cloled
2-S: 30 p.m. Camp Crtsc,
Cloled
8-IO_p.m. Open Ate.
8·10 p.m. Open Swim
12-1 p.m. Open Swim
Aug. 20-Ciosed
2-5:30 p.m. Camp Cresc.
Closed
,.
8·10 p.m. Open Swim
1-10 p.m. Camp .resc.
Aug. 21-Hp.m. Open Rtc .
2-4p.m . Ot&gt;en Swim

992-2

Ohio '

RAILING
AND COLUMN

Regular '25.~9

'~"\ $2099

CORNER

COLUMN

lf4

X4X8

CEDAR Q.OSET
UNING
REGULAR '11.65
SHEET ·

,t-""

· Imaginative• stories lo come.
from a number . of dlrec. ttons:"- .
_
Last week, Lasorda was
quoted by the Times as
saymg he was made an offer.
"! was as_ked if I'd. be in·
teres ted '" m~nagmg m
Pillsburgh. ldidn tsay yes or
no. I explained lhat I feel a
great deal of loyalty to lhe
Dodgers," Lasorda was
quoted by lhe newspaper.
Later UP! reached Lasorda
by telephone and asked him
to elaborate on the offer, but
he demed that one had been
. made,.. saying "That's not
true ·
Asked _whether he_ had
llllk~ to ,;tttsburgh O~l~t.als.
he satd, No I haven t.
The AUanlll Braves and the
Montreal Expos approached
Lasorda last year about a
possible managing job, but he
turned them down .
Lasorda has ~lso served as
scout and mmor league
manager for the Dodgers.

- ··'"· 7o~A.M.·S P.M.
Sotur'do'''IOA.M.-4 P.M.

WICHITA, Kan. (U PI) Denver first baseman Roger
. Freed,
the American
Association's most
productive home run hitler in
19 years, heads an all-star
team announced Saturday by
league president Joe Ryan.
Tbe Association All.Sillrs
will challenge the St. Louis
Cardinals Aug. 26 at
Rosenblatt Stadium in
Omaha, Neb,
Freed, who slammed lllree
home runs last Sunday
against Tulsa. hit 3 more
later in the week to run his
season total to 38, the most by
an Assoc_lalion player since

STOCKHOilM (UPI) World Star
Yachting
Champion James .Allsopp ~f
lhe. United Sillies Saturday
won the European Star
Yachting Open Cham·
pionships title by finishing
second in the last ·race off the
Wesl Coast City of Mars·
tra!!d.

PMOHI.....,..

•

entrants

Grapt=l

ByROBERTSEDLACZEK
ZELTWEG, Austria (UP!)
- James Hunt Saturday won
ihe slllrtlng pole position to
remove aU doubts that he is
the favorite for Sunday's
Austrian Formula One Grand
Prix, to be held in the absence
or Ferrari and defending
World Champion Niki Lauds .
The... 29-year-old blonde·
haired Brilon drove his
McLaren around the 3.6-mile
Oeslerreichring Circuit,
whtch winds through the
sce nic landscape o( Austria's
Slyrian Province, in 1 : 56.6~.
ll was, however, a far cry
from his 1:35,02 minutes
clocked on the fi'rsl of two
days of practice runs lhal
the
starting
decided
positions .
"Rain showers made the
track wet so that I had to cut

back my speed during the
The 27-year-old defending
final training session," said world Champion Ia un·
Hunt, who is bidding for his dergoing treatment for llumt
fourth consecuUve victory of at Ludwi gshafen, Weal
the season.
Germany, followi ng a crash
Sweden's Ronnie Peterson. during the German Grand
in a March, turned in the • Prix two weeks ago,
fastest practice llme on "the.
Ferrari withdrew from the
damp irack Saturday, remaining formula one
clocking 1:54.50, but hb best events after its appeals
lime Friday of 1:36.34 gave against Hunt's victories in'
him only third place on the the spanish and Britlsh 1
grid.
.
Grand Prix races were
James Watson of Britain turned down by racing
clocked lhe second fastest authorities. The withdrawal
lime in Friday's training also left Ferrari's nwnber
session In I: 35.84. The two driver, Clay Regazzoni o(
be9ded Briton will lake o_ff Switzerland, without a car,
from the first row of the grtd After 10 or lhe t6 races on
Sunday alongside Hunt. , the championship circuit,
Mtsslng from Sunday s Hunt has a total of H point/!
race, to be flagged off at 2:00 but is still trailing Lauda 's 58
p.m., will be c hampionsh~p points.
leader Ntki Lauda of Auslrta
The Brilon who is expected
and italy's Ferrari team.
to narrow 'Lauds's edge

.

~~E!~r-~~~~~~~~!:~'"'"·" '

South Africa's Jonty Skinner,
who was not allowed to swim
in lhe summer Olympic
games because of politics, set
a world record Saturday in
the IOO.meter freestyle allhe
AAU Outdoor ·National
championships .
The 22-yearoOid Skinner,
· representing the Central
Jersey Aquatic Club, swam
the sprint race in a titpe of
49.44 which was more than
one-half second better than
the record of 49.99 set by Jim
Montgomery in the Olympics
in his gold medal win.
With a large crowd from
New Jersey cheering him on
'
TOURNAMENT ENDS
The
Women 's
Golf
Association finished a twoday Ringer Tournament,
which they started last week,
with about sixla!n ladies
present.
The Ringer Tournament
was won by Bess Grace, and
the · TribUfle Tournament;
which is by match play, was
played off, and the winner for
the 1976 Tribune Tournament
is Eloise Brown, willl Opal
Baker being lhe runner -up.
'

body length in front, but )le favored to wm llle fmals,
pulled away in llle last 50 as she did in lhe 200
meters to win by about five Thursday, although she
yards.
qualified lh!rd m 58._63,
Skinner qualified Saturday Sterkel ha,d the best mor~tn~
morning with the fastest time hme of 58.12, while Boghob,
of 51.88.
· who has anchored Central
He was not allowed in the Jersey A; C.lo two successiVe
Olympics because South relay vtctorie~ here,. was
Africa is banned from the ltmed in 58.22 In the heals.
games. Efforls to ge l to the . Donn~lee Wennerstrom of
Olympics as an American . Northrtdge, Calli., was
competitor wi th the New favored m the 200 meter
Jersey Club were rebuffed. individual medley, an event
Three girls whose greatest not on the Olympic program.
glory came when they The. win~er of llie 400 IM ·
teamed for one important earlier thtsweek, the 16-year·
gold medal al the Olympics old Olympt~ fma~l IS . also
compe ted for one victory the leader m the tndlVldual
Saturday evening at John B. high_ point. award com·
Kelly PooL
petil;on .
Wendy Boglioli , 21, of
Judy Anderson, 17, of Fort
Ocean Township, N.J., Kim Lauderdale, Fla., was fastest
Peyton, 19, of Portland, Ore., in t.he 200 IM heals Wtth
and J(ll Sterkel, 15, of 2_: 23,11, though the e~tire
Hacienda Heights, Calif., held for the fmals qualified
were lhe leading qualifiers within one and a half seconds
for lhe finals of the 100 meter of the leader.
.
freestyle . The three set a
Olympics finalist Steve
world record in the 400 Furniss, 23, of Sanlll Ana,
freestyle relay, the American Calif., led the men's 200 inwomen's sole win at Mon. dividual medley quahfters m
treal, with teammate Sliirley 2:07.04, almost one second o~f
Babashoff. who is not com. t11e world record held by his
peting here.
younger brother, Bruce, who
Peyton, the U. S. record is not swtmmmg here.

-·

sunday, said he bell•n•
Ferrari will return to Fllr·
mula One racint later IJU
seuon.
"They have pul a Jot Of
'II'OI'k into bulldlnl• areal car
and they have gre~~t drlvere.
11 would be a abame II lillY
slay out," sald Hunt.
_

USSR· cops
swim cup
WNOON (UP!) - Tile
SOviet Union, para~ all ita
Olympic stars, Saturday won
lhe finals of the W0111111'1
J':uropa Swimming CUp for
lhe flrsl llnle, fin~ two
points ahead of Eaal Ger·
many. victors In tile four
previous competlllona but
represented here by 1 iiKGIIdstrlng team minus Ill
Olympic cha_mplolll.
A significant moment that
could have cost Ealt Ger·
many the compeUUoo Cllllt
in the 2110 meters tr.elyle
when 100 meters olympic
silver medalist Petra
Preiemer finished only third
behind Holland's Annellea
Maas and Irina Vlasova of
lhe Soviet Union.

Fourth annual
tournament set
ATHENS - The fourth
annual Baron Men's Shop·
Slow Pitch softball tour·
namentwill be beld Aug. 2829 on West Slate St. Flelda
near here. The ASA sane·.
tioned event will be a double
elimination.
Trophies will be awarded to
the first lllree teams while
members of the lop club gets
15 jackets.
· Trophies will also be given
lo the player hitting the most
home runs and the MVP,
Entry fee is $55.
· Further informallon may
be obtained from Larry
Corrigan ,' Athens, or Dwight
Pugh, Baron Men's Shop in
Athens, phone 592-5205 or 5933120,

~mstrong

Bern1ce Bede Osol
For Sundoy; Aug. 15, 11176
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 111) Be
careful today if money is being

exchanged between you and a
frie nd . A misunderstanding
Could arise over something s i t~

ly.

TAURUS (April 20· Moy 20) . _,
lndeciSi'4B people will not wear
well today. Don't get seriously

CEILING

••

InvOlved with anyone who can ~
not make up ~er awn min d.
GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20) You
have a pal who Is always pry.

lng Into your affairs. Today, her
curiosity is at a higher peak
than us.ual. Watch what you

say .
CANCER (Juno 21-.July 22)
You're pron e to lake risks to· .
day, not so much yoursetr but
on others . There's a good
chance you'll back the wrong

c

•WASHABLE SURFACE

horse.

No. 258

LEO ( July 23·Aug. 22) If
you're uncertain about how
something you want to do
might effect others , it's best

•AITRACTIVE RANDOM DESIGN ·

SQ." fl.

•SPECIAL BUDGET PRICE

you don't try .it.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopl, 22) tt
would be a mistake today to
pretend you know something
about a matter of which , In
truth. you know very little.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Cl. 23) Don't
let yourself get Inveigled into o
business situation today with a
fast.talking sales type Who

usually lalls at what he
attempts .

Marv Thornberry hit 42 for
the Bears in 1956 and 40 in
19S7.
Other pow~r hitters In the
lineup will be catcher Btll
. Nahorodny of Oklahoma City,
22 homers; outfielder Mike
Easler of Tulsa, 24; first
baseman Dave Revering of
Indianapolis, 19; and out·
fielder Andre Dawson of
Denver, 18.
Joining Freed, a .319 hitler;
in the infield are .second
baseman Sieve Staggs of
Omaha, shortstop Mike
Buskey of Oklahoma City and
Udrd baseman Pal Scanlon of
Denver .

American Allsopp wins
yachting championship

ITORI HOURS

J

Astra-·

Home run hitter
heads all-stars

iJALLI'OUi;OHIO

~=

denies
~Lasorda story

('UPI)-Bi!t's·
~rgh P.i~ate General
"rdanagerl. JOe Brown termed
~"ridiculous'' .a report b)"lhe
f:Los NJgeles Times Friday
'!'that Los Angeles Dodger
·~third base Coach Tom
~Lasorda has received an offer
•from tbe Pirates to become
-'manager. '\1' '·
" We have had no
discussi~ns
with Tom
Lasorda allout managing our
club. we nave had no
disc·ussion with anybody
about managing out club. We
have a manager " Brown
said Saturday ~hen conlllcled here.
. The ' Pirates' present
manager is Danny Murtaugh,
who joined the Pirates in
1957 retired becaUSl! of ill
· heat'th and returned. He has
been •managing the team for
lhe past four years,
. Asked where he th~ught the
Los Angeles Times beard that
Lasorda had been approached, Brow~ said, "I've
known of a number of

Choose yours tOday at . ..

. aws 91
dr
"'

·~Brown
~HDUSrtONf

Come In' rtow and see •for ·
yourself.

39th Derby

six seasons. Won 75 games
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A by Aug. 23 at offi~es of the and helped Reds win the 1981
AKRON,Ohio (UP!) -The
Cincinnati
Chamber
of
Com·
week of balloting begins MonpelUllllt
when
he
waa
Clncy's
39th
running of the All
day to elect the 40th member meree, which started the first 20-i!ame winner since American Soap Box Derby
to lhe Cincinnati Reds hall of Reds Hall of Fame in 1958111d Ewell Blackwell In 1947.
Saturday afternoon featured
supervises the balloting.
Fame.
Lawrence:
Broke
In
sensa91 youths vying for the
A brief proffie of the seven
Seven former Reda players
tlonally
with
Reds
1n
1956,
gravity racer championship
ar~ ~ the ballot - Joey Jar, candidates:
,
winning
hls
first
13
games.
and
another group In a
Adams : Played 1,087
Brooks Lawrence, Pat
spe
.
cial
"kit car'' division.
Duncan, Jerry Lynch, Cy gainea as a Red, splitting Selected to the All-Star team
and
eventually
Wound·up
with
"
The
spirit of the
SeymolD', Bobby Adams and time ' between secood and 19 victories. Now a member contestants
Is
just
third, Averaged .272 in 10
Chick Hafey.
the Reds' front office staff. phenomenal," said Ronald D.
Ironically, Hafey is a consistent years, the best of ofLynch:
One of the all-time Baker, general manager of.
which
came
in
1962
when
he
national Baseball Hall of
Led 1he the derby.
Farner but is not In the Reds batted .283.
great plnch-l)itters.
Baker and other officials
Duncail:
Batted
.307
in
six
Natlonai!A!ague
in
pinch-hits
were
intent on running lhe
Hall of Fame.
Voting will take place at seasons its a Roids outfielder. in 1980 and 1981 and hatted event without a hint of the
Riverfront Stadium during · Waa the starting lefitlelder ·312 as a regular in 1958 ·
controveray lhat followed the
the Reds-Atlanta Braves · for the Reds in the 1919 World
SeymolD': Owner of the notorious 1974 Derby, the
four-game series Monday Series and batted .269. ·
oldest batting record in Reds' winner of which was disquali·
lllrough Thursday nights and · Hafey: Had live good years history - he hit .an.to lead lied for boosting his car's
ballots also are •vliilable at with the Reds, hilling .344 In National League In 1905. start with an electromagnetic
several do~town Cln~tl his first season in 1932. Had a Converted from a pitcher to
.317llletlme batting average. an outfielder, he had a .303 device.
stores.
Jay: A 20-i!ame winner lifetime average in 16 major . The kit car or junior
All ballots must be received
division, being run for tbe
twice lor the Reds during his Ieague seasons. ·
first lime this year, involved
59 boys and girls aged 10.12.
The All American senior
division was for youths aged
13-15.
..

•'

We are now featuring great

WROUGHTIRON

Reds' Hall of Fame
balloting commences

. I'«&gt;LVERINE~~&gt;
6" WELT \WJRK BOOT

.AND SAVINGS, TOO/

Maynard tops Scioto, 7-4
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - . strikeout ended the game.
Scioto took 011 Maynard, the
Jeff Milla went the diltaoce
only team It has lost to In the on the mound fer Maynard.
•
tourney, for the State
American Legkrl Baseball
Tollflllllllenl championship
ENTRIES NEEDED
Saturday.
GALLIPOLIS - Union
Friday, ~anny Erdos Workman is still accepting
rapped a lhree-run home run entries for the girls' slo.pitch
In the fourth Inning to spark softball tournament slated
Maynard to a 7-l win over Aug. 20·21 on the Elks
Scioto. Erdos' blast gave Diamond .
Maynard a 7.0 lead.
. Lots of trophies will be
Scioto threatened In the given away. Interested teams
ninth, witll runners on first should conlllct Lee Howell ai
and second and one out, but a 446-1361. '!be first 20 teams
popup to the catcher and a will be accepted,

Negotiator
upsets Busch

AUGUST
16-21

0

•

Paul Brown to head the an educational process.
Bengals, now rolling with a 2· · We're learning something
0 pre-season mark.
with each game as we work
"We're still looking ala Jot toward our goal of" being 100
of people at different per cent ready for the regular
positions," he explains. "It's season."

moat irate about the fact~~ whole lhlnl behind us,"
he had no chance to reiallale Landry said.
last Thursday when backUP
"aut llle incident Will not be
r ~·I
Dallao decides
. quarterback Clint ...,,..,
ey over
what 11unlll
will do wllll Longley
felled him with one punch .
"I would never flghla man - trade him, place him on
who did not have a chance to waivers or • perhaps, iry to
defend himself," said convince him to slick with the
Slaubach, who was putting ori Cowboys.
his shoulder pads when
"We have not made a final
Longley hit him, causlng the decision on Longley," Landry
CowboysNo..lquarterbackto said.
· fail back onto a large set of
The Longley·Staubach
scales,
incidenlfinlshed off one of the
· "But I'm going to try to least productive training
forget about it. After this camps in Cowboys history.
discussion about ll I'm not
Preston Pearson, Cliff
going to say another word Harris, Kyle DavlJ, Robert
about the whole thing,"
Newhouse, Lee Roy Jordan
l · h and Duane Thomas have aU
ha
And that Is jUlll w · coac . been bothered by· injuries
Tom Landry wants. After the
incident, which occurred on · _lltat have kept them out of
the eve of the team 's action .
departure from Thousand . "Obviously we were slowed
Oaks, Landry told his players by the injuries," saia Landry.
he dld not want them "But that is just something
discussing the brief scuffle. ·you do not have any control
"ljustwanttotryto get lhe over. We are jusl going lo

have to pul some or these
things ' behind us and gel on
willl the things we h~ve to
do."
One thing Dalla~ will try to
· do is to sillY away from
controversy. And , thus far,
the man most e~cled to
provide some, has been
noticeably dedicated to his
job on the field .
When the charter airliner
carrying the Cowboys back to
town pulled·up to the terminal
last Friday, more · than a
dozen reporters were anxious
to visll willl Slaubach .and
hear, once again, his versipn
of the trouble wi lh Longley.
Slaubach was one of the
lllsl players off the plane.
Long befOre h~ departure a ·
player dressed natliiy in a
grey business sui l had walked
lllrough the crowd almost
unnollced . And that was
probably just the way Duane
Thomas wanted il.

Hunt grabs pole·post

Helsman Allsopp, with
Herman Weiler the only
American participants in the
competion, got a total of 208
points In five races. The
championships Included six
races of 10.8 nauUcai'miles
each, but only lhe best live
results ·lor ·each competllor
are. counted .

'·

SCORPIO (Oct. 2'·Nov. 22)
Someone whose advice you
sought will get a little annoyed
with yoU when she sees you do
just th e opposite of what you
agreed upon.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) You' re not overly industrious today.. You'll look for
st1ortcuts for tasks requiring.,
time and patience. Bungled
pro jects are likely .
CAPRICORN (Doc, 22·Jin
18} tf you want your friends to
tr eat you with warmth and
respect today , you must treat
them in the same manner
yourself.
·

PLAZA
No. 117

just when the end Is In sight. To

•SOUND CONDITIONS ANY ROOM

be a winner you 'll need more
stay ing power .

~own .

Don Miss Out On These Super Buys. ••
See The omplete Armstrong Ceiling l.fne At:

¥our memory

can't be trusted .

~Your

WBirthday

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Co.

Aug. 15, 1176
This year you will explore new
avenues In order to add to yo ur
resources. Your prospects
look encouraging. provided
you don't QQ off on tangents.

SQ.FT•

•2-TONE EMBOSSED PAITERN

PISCES (Fob, 20·Morch 20)
You may be asked.to relay im· ·
portent information· to
someone today. Write the

message

c

•ACOUSTICAL

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
Today you're likely to pack it ln

67.5·1160

312 6TH STREET

,,'

.

.

1,

POINT PLEASANT

�\

~Agriculture

and
our community

corner-a
_.:n;;;,v _ tw

.

.,o or. wayne Ellett, DirectOr

~-Oink,...,..,.,bl

Plant Pathology Notes
1111111; eaddellruCtlaaot,.,.n beans by Bean Yellow
~~~ 0n tbe bull Ill ..-t teleP~ooe caU., field trips
specflnenl received Jut week, we have
IDII ~cmcluslon ~~we are again in !he mldat of a virus
;:....,. 11111 time It's Maize Dwarf Mosaic VIrus on sweet

-

awe

Clllll$-mptoma: '!be f1rst signs of the disease appear in

:=en

• !elves u Indistinct light and dark green mottling
veins, or as elongated pale green blotches and·
lriaTV~ stripes. The blotches and stripes often merge and
1111 lelwt beemle quite yellow.
Planfl irtth these symproms are usually dwarfed or
IIWIIed. On severely affected plants, margin and tip aerosls ·
and browiJig can oeeur. Reduced t!Br al.te, barrenness and war
11111 set may accompany heavy infection. DISeased plants
mar lllve !roof none ro several ear shoots. ·
·
Source and ~read of the VIrus: MDMV is spread by
lfltl'l) species of ~pblth. A3 Dr. Ellett indicated in this Bean
Ylllolf VIrus report, high aphid populations probably account
fer tbe high incidence of these aphid-borne virulles. In addition
1o lnfectlnc Cll'll (field and sweet), MDMV also affects a
Jlllllber ci wild and cultivated grasses. The most Important of
11 Jtiu100 grass, a _pereonlal grass In which the virus
· can overwlder In underground stems and roots. The Johnson
gnus thllllll'l'e&amp; as an Important reservoir lor the virus from
IIUilloltiSOn.
Cqdrol: Satlalactory control methoda are not available lor
. tbil 11.- en sweet corn. Controll!nl{ lhla cfutease with ·
lalldlddes which kill the vJrua.carrylns aphlda ill not
tfectlw, Inseetlcides do not kill the 1n1ects quickly enough til
Jll1llll inlliatien of feeding and Incubation ol the virus.
To the best of my knowledle, no reelatant varieties are
mlllble. We are CUI'I'IliiUy evaluating 21 COIIJI!l4!l'dal sweet
111111 varieties in southern Ohio for reelatance to MDMV..
Relu1ll lhul far !lfe dllcouraginl In that no variety Is
nliltant. There may be differing degrees of tolerance,
bowmr. We will report on these !ellis at the winter vegetable

m.

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

By. Bryson R. &lt;Bud) .C arter
Gallia CQl!lltY Edension Agent

GALUPOUS -It's yellow
jacket season and folkli will
soon be asking ''How do I get
rid of them? " Try chlordane,
diazinon Spectracide ). or
propozur ( Bilygon ).
To mix a solution. check the
container label lor the
amount of Insecticide to be
used in a gallon 01 water.
Then, at night, when the
yellow jackets have gone in
CARL WEBSTER
!heir nests. saturate their
. GALLIPOLIS- Clyde B. nest by pouring the solution In
Walker, manager of the the entrance hole. lf one
Federal Land Bank Office, treatment does not do the job,
228 Upper River Road,
repeat the next night.
announces employment of
Sevin Is probably one of the
Carl L Webster, Carlisle, best Insecticides against
Kentucky,
as
Field Japanese beetle adults. But
Assistant.
Webster killing them one day doesn 'I
graduated from Morehead mean there won't be more
State University wllh a back the next day . They
· degree In Agriculture and migrate In from other areas.
became
a livestock You'll probably need lo treat
technician
at
the_ about every fourth day.
University farm. For !be
The Annual Area Beef
past lhree years be has Outlook meeting , which
been Branch Manager many folks have attended in
at Eastern Kentucky past years, will be held on
Production c;:redll September 2, at the Jackson
Association. He wiD be
Area Center, just south of
.working In the Association Jacklion, Ohio.
area. He and bls wffe SIISan
Dr. Wallace Barr , Ex·
reside at Rio Grande.
tension Economist at the Ohio
State University, will be on
hand again to locus the
discussion on the feeder calf
and led beef priCe prospecls
for the remainder of 1976
Utrough '1m.
A tour of the new Jackson
"Annie Qwnbers had as Research Branch and a steak
hish
classed
an fry will be held prior to lhe
establishment of that sort beef ouUook session. Wagon
that could be.found. Her gals tours of the Research Center
were ladies. !;lewas the most will start at 4:30p.m.
famous madam of her time."
The steak barbecue will. be
Tillis, an optometrist, served at 6:30p.m. and !he
recalls you could buy tbe cost of the meal wlu be $3.50
finest r&lt;teak In Kansas City per person.
for $2 in thoie days. Today
AnyCfle planning to attend
the same steak costs $7.$10. should send their reser·
Olarles Stevenson, 82, a vaUons to Bill Smith, Area
retired business executive Extension Center, P.O. Bo~
aQd author, remembers 32, Jackson, Ohio 45640 by
Kansas City stiU suffered Friday, Augilst '!1 .
growing pains in 1928.'
Here 's a note from 1Bill
"'Farmers . and cowboys · Smith concerning Workman 's
USed to come Into town on · Compensation rate change.
weekends and get pretty New prell!ium rates wentlnro
rowdy," he said. "The West effect onJuly I, 1976 and will
End Hotel wouldn't allow stay the same through next
WOOlen to stay there because June 30, 1977. The new rates
the owner didn't want his for general farm work
place to beeame rowdy.
'(classification 0006) is $9.21
. "Youcouldsmelltheltock- peqlOOcompensation. Keep
yarda in those days, but now In mind compensa Uon mthey're almost all lim down. eludes cash wages plus olber
MOlt of the people in kansas benefits such as housing.
· 'City were law abiding and meat, milk, and so forti!,
• unaware of the aggre&amp;'live which are furnished lo emand colorful characters
downtown. They were a vocal
minority.
"Today there's no need for
speakeasies but I guess you
PROBATE NOTICE
'CQII)d still find bordellos-and
APPROVAL AND
SETTLEMENT OF
I bear there's a lot of
ACCOUNTS
(I'Ostitutes downtown."
Cour-t of Common Pleu.
" -' · ·~

'

Hoover nominated
in KC
..
.,

'

111 VERNON SCOTr

VPI 8e!11or Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)

- Forty-eight years ago
lllrlllrt Hocrm won the GOP
IICIDlnatlon In KaiiiU City, a
oowtown which called ltaelf

'"DDe Heart tl. Amerk:a."

Wben tbe Republlcana met
In 1911to aelect.a pnlidenlial
cmlldate, Kaycee wu a
wlciMpen, beD.{or-leatber
IDWn under the thumb af
political
boss
Tom

Convention Hall (long since
razed).
.
Boss l'ender!last, a Democrat, owned Riverside Race
Track
among
other
enterprises -eome even
legltimate~and made
certain that diversions ·were
readily available to the

vlaltera.

Bllndptgsandspeakeasles,
with two-way windows In the
doors, provided all the
bathtub gin a conventioneer
~.
could gulp.
One . eutern newiJIIIper
Annie Chambers ran tbe
edl!«&lt;allzed: ''Kanaaa aty Ia moat famous bordello.
a town that can wblak ber Gambling jolntl dotted 12th
*lrlaiDCI roll her hole wben . Street.
Topleas
and
the oceulon deniands."
bottomlea llancers c:ould be
Delegates debarking at found In luaty old Kansas
Unlan Stllillll were met by City.
clqlnc trolley can llld
Dr. Sterrett Titus, 80,
COIIIIderabt. heal 1114 ....U. lbe lnl con"'nttm
biiDIIdlty
tbat
were clearly.
llf&amp;J'Ifttad by the aromatic
"Bootlealng Will booming
......tloaa of the lfoc:Qarda. in thoee days," he said.
. SliD, tbec1!1- r.tlve. A "Nobody paid too much
lt-foot gilded Republican attadioo to Probibitlon. 'lbey
Party emblem-a fierce lloccllt In aome good liquor
eqle-waa strung acroaa from abfoad llld you could
13th Street in front of ~P~taomessfewhlte llgbtnlng.

z:wvo.

;;; ;;; s:l M . i88~111i .

Social
Calendar

..• your farm operation!

Barbed Wire
..

121!2 GAUGE
4 PT.
AMERICAN
MADE

farm lane near lbelr unit
ByOKEY KING
• Conservation Teehnlelloa • number two. The heavy
ralnfaU in !he .last month hu
POINT PLEASANT Oldtown Farms are lnstaUing ov~rtopped the toad and
a timber structure along !he washed out a small culvert. A
new pipe drop structure 11o
being designed for this area
and will be Installed in a few
days.
RUMsFELD OKAY
THE ROBER~ GORHAM
WASHINGtoN (UPI) pond near Palestine Church
Defense Secrellry Donald H. Is about complele. A 250-foot
Rwnsfeld, who \~~~derwent
surgery Friday fer "removal
of a noncancerous growth en
hla thyroid gland, may soon diversion has been conbe In good enough shape to structed to provide runoff lor
attend the Republican the new pond.
National Convention.
Carl Boswell has completed
A lump was d~vered on Utree spring developmenta.
Rwil9feld's thyroid during a
physical examination last
week. It was removed·.alon1
with part of the gland at
Bethesda Naval Hospital.
A section of the thyroid waa
frozen and examined Wider a
microscope for po.!iSible signs'
of cancerous growth and
Woods said "preliminary
studies lndicate that . the
pathological specimen was
benign nodular goiter."

lay of--the land

IN

regradlnt and rec~lrllcUna
three ahort dlvenlon1 to
divert water Into an exiltlnt ·
drop structure.
OONGRATliLATJONS to
Mrs. Donald Henderson for
wiMing the ou~ng 4-H
Leaders Award.
~
. JOHN COOPER is at·
lending
the
National
Christmas free Growers
Association meeting In
Holland, Michigan, thla week.

the

estate

of

Til lie

dodoawrouftlll"ttwe«J'·
HodldwllatHet'-ghtbest:
He put H~ artn arourid rov .
Mdwhi-N. "c-homoand
rett."

'

l'llf go"*' l!"to stood opon ,

Ontrooragotodav,

~~~~mlt~d

O,ORTUNITYI
tarnil'fgt .

.,_,.wltheranddetoy,
lut our love for you who siHp1

LYI Work at home, no ex ·
perient• nKttsory tx·

bonooth.
Mlln..,.,flldeoway.

Soclly ml11.d by wile, DO&lt;othr.
ond tont, Joe~ and loren1o. ·

·

o0 YOU HAVE PARTY PlA~ EX·
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA.
RECRUITING IS, EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH !NEST·
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING: CAll COLLECT TO
CAROl DAY 518·489·8395 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR·
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE. ,
ALilANY. N.Y. 12205,
DEMONSTRATORS
AND

the .rainbow n~r
fodoo. Sodly mlu.d by wife,
Vazlel".

MANAGER needed to worlt.

· with lho aldoot Toy &amp; Gift Shop
Port;~

Plan In th. country .
Highest &lt;:ommlttlons · ~o Investment .' Coli or wrllt today,
SANTA's Parties/ Av~m. Conn.

06001. Phono 1 203) 673-3455.
NOW _occeptlnu plano ttudents, ALSO BOOKING PARTIES
t».glnn.ra, Intermediate, ad.
'
to cut gran .
vonced stud.,ts. Colt 992· NEED someone
2270.
Phone 992·5798.

KILL HORN FLIES
LICE, MANGE, and TICKS with

PURINA STOCK SPRAY

FURNISHED. 2 b.drm. oparimont,
adults only, In Middleport.

Phone 992·3874.

·Safe and easy to ui!e, Stock Spray kilt. on contact
and lnsll! for weeks.

3 AND -4 RM . ftJj.nithed ond un·
furnished opts. Phone 992·
5434. '

~

Come in and let us show you how Purina Liquid
Stock Spray can protect your !iv0st0&lt;1k for just
a few cents a head.

COUNTRY Mobile Homo Park. Rt.
33, ten mllet north of Pomeroy.
Large lots w!th concrete p(lliOI,,

J.D. North Produce Co.

sidewalks, rUnners and off
street parking. Phone 992·7479.

110 Vine St.. 446-1933 Gallipolis

3 Room furnished house with

ba!h, Adullo only. Phone 992·

553.1.

For Pomeroy, Ohio
Area
'
Carriers win valuable
prius and earn extra
spe_!ldfng money
Phone The .
'Daily Sentinel
- - Afm--:m6
Or Stop in At
·111 Court Street
Pomeray,O.
-·

.

''
''

•

Log
on
Televisi
-

SUNDAY,AUGU sr 1s. 1976
Is The Llfe 10.
':30-Jerry Falwell 4; VIewpoint 8; Pu,bllc Polley
. Forums 10.13.
.
,.
7:0D-Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Talking Hands 8.
7:30-Thfs is The Llfe 3; Your Health 4; Jerry Falwell
8; Camera Three 10; Amazing Grace Bible
' Claas 13.
7:55-Biack Cameo 4.
.
8:DO-Mormon C:bolr 3; Day of Discovery 4; Wild, Wild
Wo.rid of Animals 6; Church Service 10; Rev.
Homer Click 13.
8:3o-Oral Roberts 3; Yours For The Asking 4; Gospel

6:0G-This

..

'
"

lq

.. '

"'

"

- Presents·10;. Rex Humba!d 13; Open Bible 1S.
9:~~1. Singing J ubi Itt 3; Hour of Power 4: Oral
, Robe,.JO; Rex H~mbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass
., 8; Ac1'1111f J.!ie ·Ffii'ICll 15.

''

~

"' ft'l ~"i/~...

.' •. . .

.. .

J:30-WIIIit"DOH 11M! Bfble Plalny Say? 8; It Is Written
'10; Christ ·I&amp; the. Answer 13; Insight 15.
111!00'-Jim Fr~klln 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
• Jenklns•6; Christian Center 8; Movie "Story of
" Three L!l'lel'.' 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Falth ·For
Today 15. ' '
· . . ·.
·
iD:30-Big Biue Marble 3; Garoer Ted Armstrong 4;
JlinmY,. Swaggart 6; Rev. ·Robert Sch~ler 8;
Newsm•~er '76 13; 'This Is The Life 15.
11 :00-Da'ild Niven's World 3; These Are The Days 6:
· Doctorl on Call4i ,Rex Hum bard 8,15; Rev. Henry
Mahan, 13.
· '

•

'

I

'

..

T \

SIGN UP NOW FOR POMEROY LANO.MARK'S :·
1

I

'

,.

Y COMMITMENT
5% REBATE PROGRAM!

••

•..
•
I

••

',.'

•

At the end of the three ~·
month program, our LAND;
MARK® Feed Serviceman will
bring you your rebate checK
from LANDMARK
Feed.
.
All LANDMARK dairy and
beef feeds are included in
this ."Early Commitment"
program and will earn the
5% rebate for you. Call us
today for details.
·
'

POMEROY LA.N·DMARK
Serving Meigs, Gallia ·a Milson Counties .
Jack w. caney, Mg.r .
· . M·2181
· pOMEROY, OHIO

DAIRY/BEEF ..
FEED .

n.

11:30-tV "chapel · 3; Make A. Wish 6; Focus on
Columbus 4;. Rev. Calvin Evans 13.
12:00-At ·lnue 3;, News Conference 4 4; issues and
Answers '' Face The Nation 8; Lower Lighthouse
13; Happy Place 15. .
12:30-Meet The Press 3,4,1S;Thlnklng ln Black 8;
. The Issue 10; Garryer Ted Armstrong 13.
1:OD-CommunlqiiO 6; Christian Broadcasting 8: Face
The Nation 10; Town Toplcs13; Consumer Survival
Kit 33. .
.
1:»-Formby!sAntlque Fumlture3; Other Side of the
· Mountalna4; Aware 6; NFL Championship Games
8: Movie "Oiaincina Hiad"'fO; Issues and Answers
13; To Be Announced 15; 'Book Beat JJ.
1:~BaseballWarm.up 4.
2,:oo-Baseball3,4; Polnf of VIew 6; To Be Announced
8; Wrestling 15; Onedln Line 33.
,2::10-Amerjcan Afllller 6;, NFL Action '76 13.
3:00-NFL Championship Games 6; Broadcast Forum
B; Medlx 13; Baseball 15; Rivets of Sherlock
. Holmes 33.
·
, 9:30-Goll 6,.131' Champions 8; Call II Macaroni 10.
4:0G-PGA Champlo~shlp 6,13; Auto Racing 8. 10; Let's
Grow a Garden 33.
4:30-1 Dream of Jeannie 4; French Chef 33.
4:»-Gr- Acrea 3.
.
5:oo-N\ovlt "Three Blind Mice" 3; Window on the
, World 4; Inner Tannls 33.
~:30-To Be Announced 15; Gupples:to Groupers 33.
6:00-Ntws 4; Sp&lt;irls Challenge 8; Bacharach ln the
Park 10; Wally's Workshop 15; Wall Street Week 33.
6: »-NBC Ntws 3,4, 15; News 6; WCHS· TV Report 8;
World Prua 33; Gilligan's Island 13.
7:0G-World of Dlaney 3,4,15; Republican Convention
· Preview 6,13; Campaign '76 8,10;· Crockett's VIc·
tory Garden 20; Onedln Line 33.
7: 30--Antlquu 20.
a:oo-McMIIItn &amp; Wife 3,4, 15; Six Million Dollar Man
· 6,13; Sonny&amp;Cher8,10; EvenlngatPops20,33.
?:00-Movle "Paint Your Wagon" 6,13; Kolak 8,10: ·
•• Mastetpltce Theatre 20,33.
.
" 10:00-Declslon '76 3,4,15; Cannon 8.10; Great Per·
formances 20,33.
11:00-News3.4,8,10,1S; Monty Py.thon's Flying Circus
· 20; Piccadilly Circus 33.
·
11:1KBS News 8.10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert
15.
~ •.'~1 :30-Star Trek 3; Bonanza 4;, Movie "Winged Vlc· ·
lory" 8; Hawatll Five·O 10; Soundstage 20.
,, )2,:Ds-FSI .6: Newa 13.
12:11)-Janakl 33.
• 12: 30-BoMnza 4; News 20.
• 12:35-;-lronsldt 13.
. ·1:115-ABC News 6.
'•1:30-Peyton Place 4.
1:35-ABC Ntws 13.
·"
MONDAY,Al(GUSTU, 1976
6:00-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
,. 6:»-Good Ntws 13:
6:30-Cotumbus .Todlly 4; News 6; Summer Semester
'' r-way StrMI 10. ·
, 6:ol5 Morning Report 3.
·,,~Morning, Wflt Vlrglnfa .13.
.6:1J5 Good Morning, Trl Stat,. 13.
7:GO-,Today3A,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
, Nfwl 8; Chuck Whitt. Reports 10.
7:115-Bugs BIIMy &amp; Frllndl 10.

't

'

'192·3538:

ONE

b 1 ~ c:tOf'\

tor $10.. monthly plus elec. or

1130 lndudlng ele&lt;trlc. lOWER
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.

Phone (614)985·3350.

2

hdroom trailer, real nlc',
utilltln paid . Phone 992-332-4.

1975 Mobile hom•. 3bedrooms in.
MOton , W. Va . $150 per month.

Phono (614)698·2922.

AVAILABLE ot Rlvertlde "-port ·
. mentt. 1 bedroom oport.
mentt, SIOO pe r month; 2
~room apor1ments , $133 pe r
month. One pric v tor oil. Phone&gt;

312'1. '

MoBILE home lot for rent on 1
acre , country lOcation , aU
facilities . five Pointl areo . Cal l

collocr (618)524 ·.5825.

GOOO CATTLE FARM FOR SALE
BY OWNER . 71 a cres M&amp;l
Jackso n Co. Fenced . mcderri 5
room
' h ouse ,
r')ewly
rede co rat e d ,
~ omplete'y
carpeted . 55 a cres good , I ___:~!!!~~1-~1.2;0.!_1
posture, 15 acre ' wooded ~
virgin t imber , developed spr- ..
·---'-~=:------,
ings . good barn , and other
bui~dings, 'high country , rolling
hills, e xcell • nt view . Appoint·
me nt only . Phone !6'14 ) 38.-4 2591 after . 5 p .m. Price

::'2J

WIN AT BRIDGE
14

•Q72
¥AQ85
tJ953
•AJ
WEST

EAST

.K1054
• J 9 32
t64
o!o6 53
. SOUTH

• 986 3
• K to 6
tA7
... 974 2
IDI

• AJ ~

• 74
tKQ!082
• K Q 106
North-South v~lnerable
West

I.,.

North Ean

Pass
.-Pass
Pass

Soutb

It .
2o!o
4t

Pass 3t
Pass
Pass
Pass St
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 2 •

s.

••

By Oswald &amp; James Ja~oby
Sometimes it pays to go
•fter overtricks in match·
point play, On other occasions
declarer should give 'the hand
the same play that he would in
rubber bridge. The test is ro
compare the possible r~sults
at your contract with those
. that will be attained by other
declarers.
South saw that if the heart
fines.s.e was on he would make
six diamonds. He would win
the first trjck with the queen
of hearts, kAock oul tbea&lt;:eol

......_-..,..-1
o.a..n.ea•
...
SMITH NELSON

Box21-A
Rutltnd, Ohio 41715
Ph. (6i4) 742-2409
Wt OtiiYtr
7·28·4 mos.

Noble Sum1111t 1~ .•

Mlddleperl
PHONE m-5724
7·2t-1 mo.

trumps, draw trumps, discard
MOTORS, INC.
992·7836.
two ol4ummy's spades on the
l'LtiZ.Zt74
,_
long clubs and eventually ruff 20 Acre form wit h pond , bGrn ,
his jack of spaes in dummy.
smokehouse ond cella r piUs ap ·
pie orchard ond peach lrees,
South also saw that
COMMERCIAL
on j:lroperty 2 story ho use
Also
irrespective of where the
PHOTOGRAPHY
ond &lt;l 2 yeo r old doublewide HOMESITES' for sale , 1 acre and
heart and spade kings were
-Aorlat -Industrial
•
tra iler. On County Rood 18 . All • up. Middleport , neor Rutland
.
Conatrudlon
Progrtil
located; North could make a\
lor $29,000.00, Cell 9'12-7590 · Call '~&lt;~P•81.
-Como'-lt School Servile
least four notrump .
dur ing week .
·
· · Undergrlduttt I
Ther,efore, South reasoned 8 room house for so le a t 126 NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths ,
all elec. , 1 acre , Middleport ,
Efemonttry
that his only chance for any
Laurel St. , Pomeroy. Phone
close to Rutland . Phone 992 ·
School
Ptck..e Ptcturea
match points at all would be to
992·574 1.
7.81.
Seniors
I Yeerbook
play sMe for five diamonds
SIX rooms , both , wo rkshop SMALL form for sale. to•t. down ,
-Wtddlngiiand beat anyone who reached
!toroge bu ilding , Iorge lo t, wv!'l · owner financed. Monroe Coun~
six and found the heart finesse
maintained, reaSonably priced.
ty, w. Vo . Phone {304) 772·
KEN GROVER
wrong.
Phone 992·537A after S p.m .
3102 or (304) 772-3227,
·
PhofOIIrop~y
So South called for dummy's 3 Bedroom home, bath ond one- COUNTRY farmland witk seclud·
985-4155
ace of hearts, went after
Chester, Ohio
ed woods, water and good ac
half. C!JII 992·3129 Or 992·5-434 .
t-rumps and made his coniract 2 new 3 bedroom hOmes for sole cess in Monroe County , W. Vo
7·)4-1 mo.
. right on the nose. rt dido 't do
qn acre trccf5 , one with bo 59 •
Sl ,000 down, cell {304 ) 772
3102 or (~) 772-3227. ~-ment , one without. Call 992,
him much good, but at least it
worked out better than finess·
3454 or (61-4 ) "46-9568 , Lee 2 bedrooms , large modern kil ·
chen , forced oir furnace . Lin · ANTIQUE re!torat ions , reproduc ·
Construction .
ing the heart, losing the spade
coi n Hgts . 992-5737.
lions, cabi net making and fur finesse if East shifted t.o a
nitUre repa ir. 131 v, 3rd , Mid •
spade and winding up in the
3 bedroom house for sale at 520
dl
Sycamore
St.
,
Middleport
,
good
·
eport, 992-5735 day and
ash can.
.
. buy tor $8,000. Phone 992·3578, -;
e';e;n;;;
in~
g ·~·;;::;;;;;::;;;:;:;:;;;~~~

-

~ m~~

HOUSE for ~o l e . 2 Iorge
be.droomL_IQrge lhting room ,
kitchen, di ni ng , corpeld , $9,000
in Harrisonville . Photie 7•2-

'1796.
HOUSE fo r sole , 391 Soutl1 -Second
Ave .. Middlepor t, Phone 992·
2265 .

(For a copy ot JAr.:OBY · garages with work area,
MODERN. send $·1 to : "Win
at Br i dge , " cl o this
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489.
Radio City.Siation, tlew York,
N. Y. 10019)

.

The Almallac

Wider the sign o1 l.A!O.
Press
United
American novellst Edna
lliteraatlonal
Ferber was born Aug. 15,
Today Is Sunday, Aug. IS, 1887.
the 228th day of1976 with 138
On this day in history:
to follow.
In 1914, an American ship
The moon is approaching passed from the Atlantic to
its 1aat &lt;juarter.
the Pacific Ocean, officially
The morning stars are open&amp;lg the Panama Canal.
Jupiter and Saturn.
In 1935, American humorist
The evening stars are Mer- Will Rogers and pllot Wiley
cury, Mars and Venus.
· Post were killed when their
ThoBe born en lhla date are plane crashed In Alaska.

By

7:»-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Jeff's Collie 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St.
33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15: Lucy Show B; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13; Mister Rogers
33.
9:30-Cross-Wits 3; One L,lfe to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas 13; VIlla Alegre 33.
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15;; Price Is Rlght8,10; Bit
With Knit 33.
10: 15-General Hospital 6.
10:31)-(elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15· Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Nigh I 6; Gamblt8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec.
Co. 33.
11 :30-Republlcan Convention 3.4.8,10,15; Happy Days
6, 13; Biography 33.
·
12:00-Hol Seat 13; News 6; Sesame St . :h.
12:30-AII My Children 6.13.
1:00-Ryan"s Hope 6,13; Elec. Co. 33.
1:»-Days of Our Llves 3, 15; Family Feuo6,13; Bob
Braun 4; As The World Turns 8, 10; Zoom 33.
2:00-520,000 Pyramid 13; Dlnah 6.; It's About Time 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,.W, 15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Black Perspective on the News· 33.
3:00-Another World 3,4,1S; Ail In The family 8, 10;
Woman 20; Washlngfon Week In Review 33.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3:30-Max B. Nimble 6; Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 20; World Press 33.
4:oo-Mlster Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4: Somersel15;
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "Rampage at. Apache Wells" 10;
Dlnah 13.
·
4:»-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlflth 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllntstones 15.
5:oo-FBl3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: lmposs!ole
15.
5:30-Adam·12 4,13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:31)-..NBC N.ews 3.4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlltlth 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge '20;
Carrascolendas 33 .
7:01)-Melgs_Falr Preview (cl 5; Truth or Cons. 3; To :
Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Buck Owens
· 8; High Road to Adventure 10; Candid Camera 13;
Family Affair 15; Lowell Thomas .Remembers 20;
West VIrginia Journal 33.
7:30-Republlcan Convent ton 3,4,10,15; Baseball 6, 13;
Price Is Right 8; Robert MacNeil Report 20,33.
8:110-Movle "African Queen .(c) 5; Republican Convention I; Tennis 20; What a Country 33.
9:00-Good Old Days of Radio 33.
.
10:0G-700 Club (c) 5; Republican Conventlon6,13; Bl·
Ways 33.
.
10: 3G-Catch·33 33.
11 :oo-News 6,13,20: ABC News 33.
11:30-News 3,4,15; Honeymoon Sulle 6,13; Janakl33.
12:00-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; News 8,10.
12:30-Movle "Lady L" 8; Movie "Hot Rods to Hell"
. 10.
1:00-News 13.
1::10-Tomorrow 3,4.

baths, utility R., carpeted.
About I acre of ground.
$22.900.00.
CARRY OUT- Has been
establlshed In the same

742·2172.

2524 .

No. 175 - Srracuse area,
new 3 BR ., spilt level, all

Doing
an
excellent
business. Priced right. WE
HAVE
3
·OTHE
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
- CALL lf Interested.
A NEAT PLACE- 5 yrs.
• old. 3 bedrooms. bath, dine.
·In . kitchen , ullllfy R.,
carporf,
air
cond .,
carpeted, lf2 acre with
mefal storage building,
$16.800.00.
GRACIOUS 2 sfory older
home. Formal din ing R.• 4
BRm ., beth. nice kitchen,
carpeting, paneling, 2 car
garage. Some fruit trees.
.69 acre. $18,800.00.
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
NOTED lN THIS AD CALL
FOR
INFORMATION.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·22S9 or 992·2568

elec. , carpet throUghout, on
90 x 124 lot·, quiet

helghborhood,

$26.300.0Q.

No. 171 - 2 BR. older
home, alum. siding, partial
base ., needs some repair,

56,000.00. ,No. 178 - 28 acres
bordering Forest Run Park
Mobile Home plus 28x4ll
mefal shop building, lots of
woods. 517,000.
·
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Mananer

•

•

Winshield Rtllftctment
Frft Esllmttes
. ·
01! IlDdy Work
Expert Ptlnttng
lnsurence Work

Wtlcoint
St. Rt. 7
CoolYlllt, Ohio
667·3127

,,

.7:2f·1 ....,

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com•
· plete Service. Phone 949-2..a7
· or 9.49-2000, Roclne , Ohio, Crltt
Bradford.
~::;::,:::::::__ _ _:c:-:-:::-' ELW®D BOWERS REPAIR
;;:;
. Sweepers , toostets, Irons, all
' small opplioncei.Lown mow~r ,
next to State Highway Garage
MOBILE home for sole or rent , 3
en Route 7. Phone (6U) 985· ·
bedrooms , al utilities paid.
3825.
Ph
992 77 5
~~:__ _ _ _ _.,.-· 1.
one
· REMdOELING , Plumbing, heating
I
1~3 Kirkwood 12)165 . mobil'
and olltvpas of genera repair.
home , front den , w ith bay wfM·
Work guorontMCI 20 yea111 ex·
dews , completely corpetd ex:·
perience. PhoM992·2•09.
cept kitchen , e)lcellent condl·
0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 years ex·
lion. For ·sqle or ouume
perience . lmured free
povmants. Coli Randy Williams ,
estlmotet. Call 992-238.4 or

195A liberty Mobile Home 8x50,
$700.00 .dQwn and toke.. ov•r
bolonc• of poyments, Call 992·

location for many years.

t •

•

-

or m ·7667.

Several readers have asked
when a revoke becomes esMAIN ·
tablished .
The rule is clear here. It
POMEROY, O.
becomes established as soon · WE HAVE 2 NEW 3
as the revoker or his partner bedroom homes just being
plays to the next trick.
completed . Bot~ have

,.

Above IIIII belew ........
pool kits for "" • .jf.)
f"IO"Mif man.
All pool supplies avellallle,
too.
'

·-

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

HOUSE for !ole , 3 bedrooms, all
electric. Family room tully
corpe t&amp;d with wood -burn ing
firtploce , Io rge lot w it~ storage
b\lild ing ond garden spoce.
Rust ic Hill1,. Syracuse. Phone

South checks beet play

SWIMMI,_
POO'S

EXPIRIENaD

ANY PITCH
· ANY SIZE

TRAILER lo t for rent . Nice. yard
$50,000.
.
ond garde n 1poce. Co li 9-492525, 9a .m . to 6 p .m .
1.1S ocres. of land on leading
Creek Rood With water tap.

Call 992·5352 or992·2496.

NOllTil

•

I

Convenient to shopPing on
Third ond Mill Strtets ln Mlddleport . Brand new high quality opc:.rtments . See the
managtr at Apt, 16, or call TWO motor boall with 35 h.p .
motors ; 1965 Volkswagen
992·7721.
Phone992-57• L
·
~PT . for rent, 5 rooms and bath,

3 · roo~ fu rnls ~ ed apartment,
utilllles furni shed . Co il 9'92·

2 Bedroom mobile home,
oreo. Phone 992-5858 .

'

Business Serf,ices

OPQrtmtntt at

VIllAGE MANOR in Middleport

'192·3273.

Carrier Wanted

~,f).. Caravan 6; Day of Discovery li James Robison

j

I

Pass

•

How Early Commitment
Rebate Program works: This
year we have something
extra for you ... a 5% rebate
at the end of the program...
all you do is use at least 80%
of your early · commitment
agreement. The sign-up tim~ .
is from August 16 through .
September 30, with the feed
delivered from October 1st
through Dec. 31st, 1976.

any (nformatlon concetnlng the
whereabout&amp; or welfare of ti'lt

-

Attention,
Dairy &amp; Beef Feeders:

deceased .

white with d&lt;Kked roll. lost In
Rice Run oreo, east of Tuppers
Plolns . REWARQ! Phone J. Alan

DuYoll. (614) 61&gt;7·3477.
cellon! pa1. Wrll• American i.oST: St. Bernard Dog lost 1'.' Long
Service,. 6950 Wayrota llvd.:
Hollow Road ar.a . Brown,
Sullo 132, Mlnnoopollo. MN
block and wh!re . II anyc&gt;ne hot
SS.26.

IHii IOul ol Adolberl 0 . lM lrom
Its clod house wotl loosed and
itl frH On Auguot 15th, 1963:

~..d of cOOt ctcg~ In
loch'll
vicinity .
Plea••
.t..crlbo. PhaM 949·2350.

FOUND 2

.......nstroto T..,. ond Glfll a
f- •vonl"ttS a wool&lt;. NO ..- HEIFER found an Now Lima Road ,
owner mu1t JMntltv and poy
pwiOO)Co. NO paporwork. NO
for
ad. Phono 742-2125.
GIMMICKS!
Gasol lno
olowance. Earn FREE Samplt LOsT-2 yr . old mole Englloh Spr·
Kll. Coli 742·23n. Writo TOY
inQer Sponlel mhced with
lADlES PARTY PLAN.
~oat~lo: shorl holr, black and

4nd flow,rs •wt~ pfOGe Yl»t1 yaut
Johnstown, Pa. 1~ .
• 1 ~•·
ADQRESSEAS wanl.d IMMEDIATE·

' wMre

)

.

.

1

"

Trust Crea fed under the Wilt
of
Mar i e
R.
~uddelt.
No. 15 ,278 First. f inal and
distr ibuti ve account of Floyd
Bell'lap, Ex ecutor of the estate
of Lillian A. Belnap , de c eased .
No. 15 ,A41 F irst , fina.l and
distribul ille account of Larry
L. Boyer , Adm inis t rator of the
estate of G e,or gi a Boyer,
deceased .
No . 15,499 F ir s t , f inal· and
distribut ive ac c ount of Alene '
Whittaker , Adm in istratrix of
the estate o( O' Dell Whi 11aker
deceased .
'
No. 15 ,604 F iru , f inal and
distributiv e account Of Lynn
Tenney. Adm inistratrix of the
estate
Of
J e an
NOble ,
deceased .
No. 15,605 F ir s t, final and
distributive a cc ount of Ed ith
Bane , Ex.ec utr ix Df the estate
of Lavada Myers , decea sed
. t&lt;(o . .15 ,633 First n
ai
account of Ve lv
nderwood
Administra tr ix f the estate oi
Elfl Skidmor , dec eased.
No . 15,648 irst , final and
distribut ive ccount of Morri1
E . Haskin , Executor of the
·estate o
Annie Ga lloway
decea
•
No. 15(651 First. f ine;! and
distribut ve accoun t of Grace
Mack Bradbury , Executr'ix of
the estate of_ V. Wymonct
Bradbury, decea s ed .
NO . 15,684 F irst 1 final and
distr ibutive accoun t of Melva
B. Sheets ,. Execu trix af the
estate of Grover Sh e ets,
deceued .
No . 15,696 F irst , final and
distr i butive
account
of
William
H.
Reynolds,
Executor Of the estate Of
Mabel Reynolds , dece!sed
No . 15,703 F irst and finai
account of Vera Shelton
t:xecutrlx of the estate
Luther A. Shelton , aKa Luther
Shelton, deceased .
Unless except ions are filed
thereto, said a ccounts will be
tor htaring before sa id Court
on tl'le 15th day Of SeJ&gt;tember'
.1976 at which time said ac:
count will be considered and
-con,lnued fror1 day lo da
until finally disposed of
Y
Any person interested mav
file written exceptio'ns to said
1ccounts or to matters per.
t~ll'lino to the execution of ·the
trust , not tess than five days
prior to the date s~t for hering
R . Wil liam Jenkini
.
Judge
Naom1 G. Wilcoxon
Deputy Clerk

Charlot F. luck A

' to toke the mqlf :wonderful
journey In all the world. We ore
' born for o higher deltlliy thon
that of earth. There It o realm

11emen t.

Coughenour Scot t, deceased .
No.· 15, 2.31 First account of

OIWOiiOII "'

HancHey.

~NTS NURIQy k

sa i~ Court of Gallia County,
Oh10, tor approval and set-

ot

.

For Fast Results Us~ The Sunday Times-Sentinel Claui~

AU 1111 dlwa!Dpllllllta are a.d
to one c
DBIInund piped
to I hcimt Wlllr IIIIJIPIJ
reaerv01r. The c-nw"ed now
or U.. aprtnp Cll one check
yielded 46 gaU~_jlll' hour

Probate Division
Ac counts and vouchers Of
the follow ing named persons
and estates tlave been filed in

No. 13,299 First , final and
distr ibuti ve account of Marv
Ka il Mollohan , Adm in istratrix

.

a

o·i

=~
c-,
....
5 .,......

Timber structure planned

ployees:
The new rate for no...
machine work (classiflcauon
0005 ) Is $2.61 per $100.
Remember thi s. every
employer who hires one· or
more workers (par t.time or
full - time~ in the regular
course of this business, is
required to carry workman's
compensation coverage. The
"casual employee" ca tegory
does not apply to employees
hired to perform regular
farm work .
Application blanks for
Workman's Compensation
are available here at the
Extension Office so give us a
·call anytime you need one.
On Thursday, Aug. 26. local
farmers are lrivlled to attend
a tour nea r Portsmouth
which includes a review of
performance of corn hybrids
and their tolerance to Maize
Dwarf Mosiac plus the results
of demons trations of several
herbicides have been used for
.Johnson grass control .
The tour begins . at !he SWEARER PICkED
James Daulton farm ; 3 miles
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI)
wes t of Portsmouth on - Dr. Howard R. Swearer Is
Moores Lane off U.S. Route stepping down as president of
.52 (follow signs for farm ).
Carleton . College
at
Results of the MDM !rials · Northfield, Minn., to become
and herbicide demon. the 15th president of Brown
straUons should be available University,.
•
here at the Extension Office
later oo this fall or winter in
case you do not get t.o attend the price will be $1.50 for
the tour at Portsmouth .
advance tickets.
Plan now to attend teh
Another date {or pork
Annual Ohio stale Farm producers to keep in mind is
Science Review which will be Thursday , September 9, 1976
held at the Ohio Stale which is !he Ohio Swine Day,
University Airport, north· which will be tleld at !he
west of Columbus, Ohio on Swine Research unit at !lie
September 21, 22, :r.., 1976. Ohio t\8ficultural Research
Tickets will be available here Development Center at
at the Extension Office and Wooster, Ohio.

Leon Saunders, Trustee ot the

With a long-term, reasonable cost -loan from
MONDAY
.
MEIGS-GALLIA Chapter
the Federal Land Bank you can finance a Ohio Civil Service Employes
wide variety of farm needs .. ·. such as new A!lsn. Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
buildings and land improvements- and al- - !he Guiding Hand School in
I
h
Cheshire.
.
mos t an yth mg e se t at can make your farm
operation more profitable.
TUESDA v ·
·
'
CHESTER Council 323,
228 Upper River Road
Daughters of America,
p, 0. Box 207, Gallipolis
Tuesday · night, 8 p.m.
Phone 446-0203
Practice t.o be held for in'
Clyde B. Wl'lker-,- Mar.
spectlon on Sept. 7. All
•
members and officers urged
to altA!nd the meeting.

.

lt-Tho llaDdaJ'l'II.DII-Illlllilwol.JUICIIJ.AUI. IJ, 1t'lt

(614) 698·72~7 Alba'!l'.
SEWING MACHINE Ropairo, - ·

vice, all mokn, 992·228.4. The
Fabric Shop, ,Pomeroy.
:-\uthorized · Singer Sal'n and .
Service, We sharpen Sclttors.

'

J970 DOUBLE wide mobile home
set on permanent foundation ,
front perch. 2.46 acres about I
mi le frc;&gt;m Rocine.· 3 bedrooms ,
central o ir conditioning , stove
ond refrigerator , Tuppers
Plains , rural water, $17 .225.
Phone 949-2815 or 949-2~89 .

3 BEDROOM mobile home: ; ith
land , 12 x 60, completely furnisked r priced reasonable.
Phone 992-5491 or 992·3255.

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond .
backhoe work : _.dump trucks
and lo-boys for hlr•: will f',oul
fill dirt, to soft, limestone and
gravel . Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , doy phone 992-7089.
night phone 992·3525 or 992·

5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer , backh&lt;&gt;.
and ditcher. Charlet R. Hotfield , Bock J.toe Service,
.Rutland , Ohio . 'P hone 7"'2·2006.

GREG'S CB SAtES, local..! at Er· .
WANTED to rent house or smoll
for m in country . Cal l collect,
592 -6010 evenings . Responsible
couple .

win 's Gulf Service, · Middleport , Ohio . Phone
992,

2438.

SEPTIC Systei'Tl:£ installed by
ll,tnsed installer. Shepard
Contractors . Phone 7.42·2409.

sEf&gt;TiC TANKS cloon.d. Modern
Wltl DO babysitting weekdays
and some even ings. Pho ne

949·2322.

Sanitation, m-395.4 or 992-

2428.
W1LL do roofing , construction,
plumbing ond heating. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

CARPENTER, flooring , ceiling;
paneling . Phone992·2759.

Situaled in Rutland. Ohio. Hutchinson Sub-division,
Meigs Local School District, new home with carport,

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER-

Phone 99q-3371,
RUTLAND- NICe 01aer 9
room home, 2 beths. 3 Brs.,
or more with closets, full
basement. large front
porch, 2 car garage wlth 2
rooms . Big corner lot .
$40,000.

garage, recreation room with fireplac:e, and kitchen,

Chase, (6") 698·3021,
EXCAVATING. BACkHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. LOW
BOY AND DUMP TltUCKS. Bill
PULLINS, PHONE 992-2478 DA.Y
OR NIGHT.

44 ACRES - On Rt. 143.
Mobile home 12x60 with 2
Brs., drilled well. woods &amp;
some bottom land.

Pomeroy, Ohio

TEAFORD
VIrgil B. ~r .. Kealtar
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.

HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
nlce modern
beth, large modern kitchen
with dining. full basement,
and large lot. 120.000 .
bedrooms,

bi.level construction, first floor, with bafh'. 2nd floor , 3
bedrooms. full bath, living room, large dining fiiOm,
modern kitchen, house fully carpeted. plenty of closet
space, lot site ·9Sxll0', brick front, aluminum siding .

See this home before you bur. Well worth your lime.
Selling price $35,000. Call or see:
GEORGES. HOBSTETTER JR.
Ret! Estate Broker
Phone 985·4186 after 4:ooP.M.

kitchen, large living, full
besement, St. doors, &amp;
windows . · Carport with
utility. 2 acres.' $31,000.
MIDDLEPoRT- $16,500.
A good 4 bedroom home.
1112 beths. large dining and
living, gas hot water heat.
Nice woodwork.
NEW LISTING - 10 •room
apartment

house, ·

2

separate apartmenls . All
utilities wlth natural gas
heat. Lot 121~400. Want
only $12,000.
NEW LISTING - NiCe
split level 3 BR home, nat.
oak varnished floors.
equipped kltchen·stove,

m .59so.

Thursday, August 19, At 12:30 PM ·
Location: 4 miles south of Gallipolis on Rt. 7
at Clipper Mill
Listing In part : plaftorm rocker, high back rocker, felephone bench, 3 piece sectional
living room suite, 2 plecellvlng room suite, 2 stuffed chairs, duncan fife drum table,
duncan fife coffee table, T.V.. book shelves. cadar wtrdrobt, chKt of drawers, 2
small chest of drawers, vanity and bench, Iron bed, blonde JJed room sullt (~Ice), oil
lamp. bedroom suite. 4 folding chairs, table lamps, d"*"'tlon giKI, dutch OYtn,
stainless steel cooking set, Shirley Temple bowl, dinette set, rtlrlgerator freezer
comblnatlon, ·large mixer. 14ft. extension laddtrt, 41ttp leddera, kitchen (ablnet,
utility cabinet, 3 piece breakfast set, library table, Dlllboard motor. 15 gallon stone
lor, 3 lawn choirs, lawn mowers, handtoola of all klnda, loll of dishes, pictures.
f)gurenes. large rope and many. many more Items.
Terms Cash

Lunch

Wi II Be Served

Owner: Myra Gilmore

The Charles Oltvtlltr Estttt

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE·

ret. and bar, din. area,

base, family rm ., 2
porches, garage and 11
acres. $41.500.00.
SEEING IS BELIEVING.
A
BARGAIN
lS
AWAITING YOU. CALL
992-3325.

· BUILDING , remodeling, and
repoirs. Quality work, etfident
service. Jene Rodman, phone

PUBLIC AUCTIO"

1

NEAR RUTLAND- New 3
bedroom home, steps over

VICE. Meigs-Athens County.
Balers from $3995 .up. Merrill

Kenneth Swain
Gallipolis, Ohio

AUCTIOtfEERS
Not Responsible

For Accidents

Plryl Alban
Ot k Hill, Ohio .

.

,,
I

�\

~Agriculture

and
our community

corner-a
_.:n;;;,v _ tw

.

.,o or. wayne Ellett, DirectOr

~-Oink,...,..,.,bl

Plant Pathology Notes
1111111; eaddellruCtlaaot,.,.n beans by Bean Yellow
~~~ 0n tbe bull Ill ..-t teleP~ooe caU., field trips
specflnenl received Jut week, we have
IDII ~cmcluslon ~~we are again in !he mldat of a virus
;:....,. 11111 time It's Maize Dwarf Mosaic VIrus on sweet

-

awe

Clllll$-mptoma: '!be f1rst signs of the disease appear in

:=en

• !elves u Indistinct light and dark green mottling
veins, or as elongated pale green blotches and·
lriaTV~ stripes. The blotches and stripes often merge and
1111 lelwt beemle quite yellow.
Planfl irtth these symproms are usually dwarfed or
IIWIIed. On severely affected plants, margin and tip aerosls ·
and browiJig can oeeur. Reduced t!Br al.te, barrenness and war
11111 set may accompany heavy infection. DISeased plants
mar lllve !roof none ro several ear shoots. ·
·
Source and ~read of the VIrus: MDMV is spread by
lfltl'l) species of ~pblth. A3 Dr. Ellett indicated in this Bean
Ylllolf VIrus report, high aphid populations probably account
fer tbe high incidence of these aphid-borne virulles. In addition
1o lnfectlnc Cll'll (field and sweet), MDMV also affects a
Jlllllber ci wild and cultivated grasses. The most Important of
11 Jtiu100 grass, a _pereonlal grass In which the virus
· can overwlder In underground stems and roots. The Johnson
gnus thllllll'l'e&amp; as an Important reservoir lor the virus from
IIUilloltiSOn.
Cqdrol: Satlalactory control methoda are not available lor
. tbil 11.- en sweet corn. Controll!nl{ lhla cfutease with ·
lalldlddes which kill the vJrua.carrylns aphlda ill not
tfectlw, Inseetlcides do not kill the 1n1ects quickly enough til
Jll1llll inlliatien of feeding and Incubation ol the virus.
To the best of my knowledle, no reelatant varieties are
mlllble. We are CUI'I'IliiUy evaluating 21 COIIJI!l4!l'dal sweet
111111 varieties in southern Ohio for reelatance to MDMV..
Relu1ll lhul far !lfe dllcouraginl In that no variety Is
nliltant. There may be differing degrees of tolerance,
bowmr. We will report on these !ellis at the winter vegetable

m.

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

By. Bryson R. &lt;Bud) .C arter
Gallia CQl!lltY Edension Agent

GALUPOUS -It's yellow
jacket season and folkli will
soon be asking ''How do I get
rid of them? " Try chlordane,
diazinon Spectracide ). or
propozur ( Bilygon ).
To mix a solution. check the
container label lor the
amount of Insecticide to be
used in a gallon 01 water.
Then, at night, when the
yellow jackets have gone in
CARL WEBSTER
!heir nests. saturate their
. GALLIPOLIS- Clyde B. nest by pouring the solution In
Walker, manager of the the entrance hole. lf one
Federal Land Bank Office, treatment does not do the job,
228 Upper River Road,
repeat the next night.
announces employment of
Sevin Is probably one of the
Carl L Webster, Carlisle, best Insecticides against
Kentucky,
as
Field Japanese beetle adults. But
Assistant.
Webster killing them one day doesn 'I
graduated from Morehead mean there won't be more
State University wllh a back the next day . They
· degree In Agriculture and migrate In from other areas.
became
a livestock You'll probably need lo treat
technician
at
the_ about every fourth day.
University farm. For !be
The Annual Area Beef
past lhree years be has Outlook meeting , which
been Branch Manager many folks have attended in
at Eastern Kentucky past years, will be held on
Production c;:redll September 2, at the Jackson
Association. He wiD be
Area Center, just south of
.working In the Association Jacklion, Ohio.
area. He and bls wffe SIISan
Dr. Wallace Barr , Ex·
reside at Rio Grande.
tension Economist at the Ohio
State University, will be on
hand again to locus the
discussion on the feeder calf
and led beef priCe prospecls
for the remainder of 1976
Utrough '1m.
A tour of the new Jackson
"Annie Qwnbers had as Research Branch and a steak
hish
classed
an fry will be held prior to lhe
establishment of that sort beef ouUook session. Wagon
that could be.found. Her gals tours of the Research Center
were ladies. !;lewas the most will start at 4:30p.m.
famous madam of her time."
The steak barbecue will. be
Tillis, an optometrist, served at 6:30p.m. and !he
recalls you could buy tbe cost of the meal wlu be $3.50
finest r&lt;teak In Kansas City per person.
for $2 in thoie days. Today
AnyCfle planning to attend
the same steak costs $7.$10. should send their reser·
Olarles Stevenson, 82, a vaUons to Bill Smith, Area
retired business executive Extension Center, P.O. Bo~
aQd author, remembers 32, Jackson, Ohio 45640 by
Kansas City stiU suffered Friday, Augilst '!1 .
growing pains in 1928.'
Here 's a note from 1Bill
"'Farmers . and cowboys · Smith concerning Workman 's
USed to come Into town on · Compensation rate change.
weekends and get pretty New prell!ium rates wentlnro
rowdy," he said. "The West effect onJuly I, 1976 and will
End Hotel wouldn't allow stay the same through next
WOOlen to stay there because June 30, 1977. The new rates
the owner didn't want his for general farm work
place to beeame rowdy.
'(classification 0006) is $9.21
. "Youcouldsmelltheltock- peqlOOcompensation. Keep
yarda in those days, but now In mind compensa Uon mthey're almost all lim down. eludes cash wages plus olber
MOlt of the people in kansas benefits such as housing.
· 'City were law abiding and meat, milk, and so forti!,
• unaware of the aggre&amp;'live which are furnished lo emand colorful characters
downtown. They were a vocal
minority.
"Today there's no need for
speakeasies but I guess you
PROBATE NOTICE
'CQII)d still find bordellos-and
APPROVAL AND
SETTLEMENT OF
I bear there's a lot of
ACCOUNTS
(I'Ostitutes downtown."
Cour-t of Common Pleu.
" -' · ·~

'

Hoover nominated
in KC
..
.,

'

111 VERNON SCOTr

VPI 8e!11or Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)

- Forty-eight years ago
lllrlllrt Hocrm won the GOP
IICIDlnatlon In KaiiiU City, a
oowtown which called ltaelf

'"DDe Heart tl. Amerk:a."

Wben tbe Republlcana met
In 1911to aelect.a pnlidenlial
cmlldate, Kaycee wu a
wlciMpen, beD.{or-leatber
IDWn under the thumb af
political
boss
Tom

Convention Hall (long since
razed).
.
Boss l'ender!last, a Democrat, owned Riverside Race
Track
among
other
enterprises -eome even
legltimate~and made
certain that diversions ·were
readily available to the

vlaltera.

Bllndptgsandspeakeasles,
with two-way windows In the
doors, provided all the
bathtub gin a conventioneer
~.
could gulp.
One . eutern newiJIIIper
Annie Chambers ran tbe
edl!«&lt;allzed: ''Kanaaa aty Ia moat famous bordello.
a town that can wblak ber Gambling jolntl dotted 12th
*lrlaiDCI roll her hole wben . Street.
Topleas
and
the oceulon deniands."
bottomlea llancers c:ould be
Delegates debarking at found In luaty old Kansas
Unlan Stllillll were met by City.
clqlnc trolley can llld
Dr. Sterrett Titus, 80,
COIIIIderabt. heal 1114 ....U. lbe lnl con"'nttm
biiDIIdlty
tbat
were clearly.
llf&amp;J'Ifttad by the aromatic
"Bootlealng Will booming
......tloaa of the lfoc:Qarda. in thoee days," he said.
. SliD, tbec1!1- r.tlve. A "Nobody paid too much
lt-foot gilded Republican attadioo to Probibitlon. 'lbey
Party emblem-a fierce lloccllt In aome good liquor
eqle-waa strung acroaa from abfoad llld you could
13th Street in front of ~P~taomessfewhlte llgbtnlng.

z:wvo.

;;; ;;; s:l M . i88~111i .

Social
Calendar

..• your farm operation!

Barbed Wire
..

121!2 GAUGE
4 PT.
AMERICAN
MADE

farm lane near lbelr unit
ByOKEY KING
• Conservation Teehnlelloa • number two. The heavy
ralnfaU in !he .last month hu
POINT PLEASANT Oldtown Farms are lnstaUing ov~rtopped the toad and
a timber structure along !he washed out a small culvert. A
new pipe drop structure 11o
being designed for this area
and will be Installed in a few
days.
RUMsFELD OKAY
THE ROBER~ GORHAM
WASHINGtoN (UPI) pond near Palestine Church
Defense Secrellry Donald H. Is about complele. A 250-foot
Rwnsfeld, who \~~~derwent
surgery Friday fer "removal
of a noncancerous growth en
hla thyroid gland, may soon diversion has been conbe In good enough shape to structed to provide runoff lor
attend the Republican the new pond.
National Convention.
Carl Boswell has completed
A lump was d~vered on Utree spring developmenta.
Rwil9feld's thyroid during a
physical examination last
week. It was removed·.alon1
with part of the gland at
Bethesda Naval Hospital.
A section of the thyroid waa
frozen and examined Wider a
microscope for po.!iSible signs'
of cancerous growth and
Woods said "preliminary
studies lndicate that . the
pathological specimen was
benign nodular goiter."

lay of--the land

IN

regradlnt and rec~lrllcUna
three ahort dlvenlon1 to
divert water Into an exiltlnt ·
drop structure.
OONGRATliLATJONS to
Mrs. Donald Henderson for
wiMing the ou~ng 4-H
Leaders Award.
~
. JOHN COOPER is at·
lending
the
National
Christmas free Growers
Association meeting In
Holland, Michigan, thla week.

the

estate

of

Til lie

dodoawrouftlll"ttwe«J'·
HodldwllatHet'-ghtbest:
He put H~ artn arourid rov .
Mdwhi-N. "c-homoand
rett."

'

l'llf go"*' l!"to stood opon ,

Ontrooragotodav,

~~~~mlt~d

O,ORTUNITYI
tarnil'fgt .

.,_,.wltheranddetoy,
lut our love for you who siHp1

LYI Work at home, no ex ·
perient• nKttsory tx·

bonooth.
Mlln..,.,flldeoway.

Soclly ml11.d by wile, DO&lt;othr.
ond tont, Joe~ and loren1o. ·

·

o0 YOU HAVE PARTY PlA~ EX·
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA.
RECRUITING IS, EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH !NEST·
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING: CAll COLLECT TO
CAROl DAY 518·489·8395 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR·
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE. ,
ALilANY. N.Y. 12205,
DEMONSTRATORS
AND

the .rainbow n~r
fodoo. Sodly mlu.d by wife,
Vazlel".

MANAGER needed to worlt.

· with lho aldoot Toy &amp; Gift Shop
Port;~

Plan In th. country .
Highest &lt;:ommlttlons · ~o Investment .' Coli or wrllt today,
SANTA's Parties/ Av~m. Conn.

06001. Phono 1 203) 673-3455.
NOW _occeptlnu plano ttudents, ALSO BOOKING PARTIES
t».glnn.ra, Intermediate, ad.
'
to cut gran .
vonced stud.,ts. Colt 992· NEED someone
2270.
Phone 992·5798.

KILL HORN FLIES
LICE, MANGE, and TICKS with

PURINA STOCK SPRAY

FURNISHED. 2 b.drm. oparimont,
adults only, In Middleport.

Phone 992·3874.

·Safe and easy to ui!e, Stock Spray kilt. on contact
and lnsll! for weeks.

3 AND -4 RM . ftJj.nithed ond un·
furnished opts. Phone 992·
5434. '

~

Come in and let us show you how Purina Liquid
Stock Spray can protect your !iv0st0&lt;1k for just
a few cents a head.

COUNTRY Mobile Homo Park. Rt.
33, ten mllet north of Pomeroy.
Large lots w!th concrete p(lliOI,,

J.D. North Produce Co.

sidewalks, rUnners and off
street parking. Phone 992·7479.

110 Vine St.. 446-1933 Gallipolis

3 Room furnished house with

ba!h, Adullo only. Phone 992·

553.1.

For Pomeroy, Ohio
Area
'
Carriers win valuable
prius and earn extra
spe_!ldfng money
Phone The .
'Daily Sentinel
- - Afm--:m6
Or Stop in At
·111 Court Street
Pomeray,O.
-·

.

''
''

•

Log
on
Televisi
-

SUNDAY,AUGU sr 1s. 1976
Is The Llfe 10.
':30-Jerry Falwell 4; VIewpoint 8; Pu,bllc Polley
. Forums 10.13.
.
,.
7:0D-Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Talking Hands 8.
7:30-Thfs is The Llfe 3; Your Health 4; Jerry Falwell
8; Camera Three 10; Amazing Grace Bible
' Claas 13.
7:55-Biack Cameo 4.
.
8:DO-Mormon C:bolr 3; Day of Discovery 4; Wild, Wild
Wo.rid of Animals 6; Church Service 10; Rev.
Homer Click 13.
8:3o-Oral Roberts 3; Yours For The Asking 4; Gospel

6:0G-This

..

'
"

lq

.. '

"'

"

- Presents·10;. Rex Humba!d 13; Open Bible 1S.
9:~~1. Singing J ubi Itt 3; Hour of Power 4: Oral
, Robe,.JO; Rex H~mbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass
., 8; Ac1'1111f J.!ie ·Ffii'ICll 15.

''

~

"' ft'l ~"i/~...

.' •. . .

.. .

J:30-WIIIit"DOH 11M! Bfble Plalny Say? 8; It Is Written
'10; Christ ·I&amp; the. Answer 13; Insight 15.
111!00'-Jim Fr~klln 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
• Jenklns•6; Christian Center 8; Movie "Story of
" Three L!l'lel'.' 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Falth ·For
Today 15. ' '
· . . ·.
·
iD:30-Big Biue Marble 3; Garoer Ted Armstrong 4;
JlinmY,. Swaggart 6; Rev. ·Robert Sch~ler 8;
Newsm•~er '76 13; 'This Is The Life 15.
11 :00-Da'ild Niven's World 3; These Are The Days 6:
· Doctorl on Call4i ,Rex Hum bard 8,15; Rev. Henry
Mahan, 13.
· '

•

'

I

'

..

T \

SIGN UP NOW FOR POMEROY LANO.MARK'S :·
1

I

'

,.

Y COMMITMENT
5% REBATE PROGRAM!

••

•..
•
I

••

',.'

•

At the end of the three ~·
month program, our LAND;
MARK® Feed Serviceman will
bring you your rebate checK
from LANDMARK
Feed.
.
All LANDMARK dairy and
beef feeds are included in
this ."Early Commitment"
program and will earn the
5% rebate for you. Call us
today for details.
·
'

POMEROY LA.N·DMARK
Serving Meigs, Gallia ·a Milson Counties .
Jack w. caney, Mg.r .
· . M·2181
· pOMEROY, OHIO

DAIRY/BEEF ..
FEED .

n.

11:30-tV "chapel · 3; Make A. Wish 6; Focus on
Columbus 4;. Rev. Calvin Evans 13.
12:00-At ·lnue 3;, News Conference 4 4; issues and
Answers '' Face The Nation 8; Lower Lighthouse
13; Happy Place 15. .
12:30-Meet The Press 3,4,1S;Thlnklng ln Black 8;
. The Issue 10; Garryer Ted Armstrong 13.
1:OD-CommunlqiiO 6; Christian Broadcasting 8: Face
The Nation 10; Town Toplcs13; Consumer Survival
Kit 33. .
.
1:»-Formby!sAntlque Fumlture3; Other Side of the
· Mountalna4; Aware 6; NFL Championship Games
8: Movie "Oiaincina Hiad"'fO; Issues and Answers
13; To Be Announced 15; 'Book Beat JJ.
1:~BaseballWarm.up 4.
2,:oo-Baseball3,4; Polnf of VIew 6; To Be Announced
8; Wrestling 15; Onedln Line 33.
,2::10-Amerjcan Afllller 6;, NFL Action '76 13.
3:00-NFL Championship Games 6; Broadcast Forum
B; Medlx 13; Baseball 15; Rivets of Sherlock
. Holmes 33.
·
, 9:30-Goll 6,.131' Champions 8; Call II Macaroni 10.
4:0G-PGA Champlo~shlp 6,13; Auto Racing 8. 10; Let's
Grow a Garden 33.
4:30-1 Dream of Jeannie 4; French Chef 33.
4:»-Gr- Acrea 3.
.
5:oo-N\ovlt "Three Blind Mice" 3; Window on the
, World 4; Inner Tannls 33.
~:30-To Be Announced 15; Gupples:to Groupers 33.
6:00-Ntws 4; Sp&lt;irls Challenge 8; Bacharach ln the
Park 10; Wally's Workshop 15; Wall Street Week 33.
6: »-NBC Ntws 3,4, 15; News 6; WCHS· TV Report 8;
World Prua 33; Gilligan's Island 13.
7:0G-World of Dlaney 3,4,15; Republican Convention
· Preview 6,13; Campaign '76 8,10;· Crockett's VIc·
tory Garden 20; Onedln Line 33.
7: 30--Antlquu 20.
a:oo-McMIIItn &amp; Wife 3,4, 15; Six Million Dollar Man
· 6,13; Sonny&amp;Cher8,10; EvenlngatPops20,33.
?:00-Movle "Paint Your Wagon" 6,13; Kolak 8,10: ·
•• Mastetpltce Theatre 20,33.
.
" 10:00-Declslon '76 3,4,15; Cannon 8.10; Great Per·
formances 20,33.
11:00-News3.4,8,10,1S; Monty Py.thon's Flying Circus
· 20; Piccadilly Circus 33.
·
11:1KBS News 8.10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert
15.
~ •.'~1 :30-Star Trek 3; Bonanza 4;, Movie "Winged Vlc· ·
lory" 8; Hawatll Five·O 10; Soundstage 20.
,, )2,:Ds-FSI .6: Newa 13.
12:11)-Janakl 33.
• 12: 30-BoMnza 4; News 20.
• 12:35-;-lronsldt 13.
. ·1:115-ABC News 6.
'•1:30-Peyton Place 4.
1:35-ABC Ntws 13.
·"
MONDAY,Al(GUSTU, 1976
6:00-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
,. 6:»-Good Ntws 13:
6:30-Cotumbus .Todlly 4; News 6; Summer Semester
'' r-way StrMI 10. ·
, 6:ol5 Morning Report 3.
·,,~Morning, Wflt Vlrglnfa .13.
.6:1J5 Good Morning, Trl Stat,. 13.
7:GO-,Today3A,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
, Nfwl 8; Chuck Whitt. Reports 10.
7:115-Bugs BIIMy &amp; Frllndl 10.

't

'

'192·3538:

ONE

b 1 ~ c:tOf'\

tor $10.. monthly plus elec. or

1130 lndudlng ele&lt;trlc. lOWER
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.

Phone (614)985·3350.

2

hdroom trailer, real nlc',
utilltln paid . Phone 992-332-4.

1975 Mobile hom•. 3bedrooms in.
MOton , W. Va . $150 per month.

Phono (614)698·2922.

AVAILABLE ot Rlvertlde "-port ·
. mentt. 1 bedroom oport.
mentt, SIOO pe r month; 2
~room apor1ments , $133 pe r
month. One pric v tor oil. Phone&gt;

312'1. '

MoBILE home lot for rent on 1
acre , country lOcation , aU
facilities . five Pointl areo . Cal l

collocr (618)524 ·.5825.

GOOO CATTLE FARM FOR SALE
BY OWNER . 71 a cres M&amp;l
Jackso n Co. Fenced . mcderri 5
room
' h ouse ,
r')ewly
rede co rat e d ,
~ omplete'y
carpeted . 55 a cres good , I ___:~!!!~~1-~1.2;0.!_1
posture, 15 acre ' wooded ~
virgin t imber , developed spr- ..
·---'-~=:------,
ings . good barn , and other
bui~dings, 'high country , rolling
hills, e xcell • nt view . Appoint·
me nt only . Phone !6'14 ) 38.-4 2591 after . 5 p .m. Price

::'2J

WIN AT BRIDGE
14

•Q72
¥AQ85
tJ953
•AJ
WEST

EAST

.K1054
• J 9 32
t64
o!o6 53
. SOUTH

• 986 3
• K to 6
tA7
... 974 2
IDI

• AJ ~

• 74
tKQ!082
• K Q 106
North-South v~lnerable
West

I.,.

North Ean

Pass
.-Pass
Pass

Soutb

It .
2o!o
4t

Pass 3t
Pass
Pass
Pass St
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 2 •

s.

••

By Oswald &amp; James Ja~oby
Sometimes it pays to go
•fter overtricks in match·
point play, On other occasions
declarer should give 'the hand
the same play that he would in
rubber bridge. The test is ro
compare the possible r~sults
at your contract with those
. that will be attained by other
declarers.
South saw that if the heart
fines.s.e was on he would make
six diamonds. He would win
the first trjck with the queen
of hearts, kAock oul tbea&lt;:eol

......_-..,..-1
o.a..n.ea•
...
SMITH NELSON

Box21-A
Rutltnd, Ohio 41715
Ph. (6i4) 742-2409
Wt OtiiYtr
7·28·4 mos.

Noble Sum1111t 1~ .•

Mlddleperl
PHONE m-5724
7·2t-1 mo.

trumps, draw trumps, discard
MOTORS, INC.
992·7836.
two ol4ummy's spades on the
l'LtiZ.Zt74
,_
long clubs and eventually ruff 20 Acre form wit h pond , bGrn ,
his jack of spaes in dummy.
smokehouse ond cella r piUs ap ·
pie orchard ond peach lrees,
South also saw that
COMMERCIAL
on j:lroperty 2 story ho use
Also
irrespective of where the
PHOTOGRAPHY
ond &lt;l 2 yeo r old doublewide HOMESITES' for sale , 1 acre and
heart and spade kings were
-Aorlat -Industrial
•
tra iler. On County Rood 18 . All • up. Middleport , neor Rutland
.
Conatrudlon
Progrtil
located; North could make a\
lor $29,000.00, Cell 9'12-7590 · Call '~&lt;~P•81.
-Como'-lt School Servile
least four notrump .
dur ing week .
·
· · Undergrlduttt I
Ther,efore, South reasoned 8 room house for so le a t 126 NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths ,
all elec. , 1 acre , Middleport ,
Efemonttry
that his only chance for any
Laurel St. , Pomeroy. Phone
close to Rutland . Phone 992 ·
School
Ptck..e Ptcturea
match points at all would be to
992·574 1.
7.81.
Seniors
I Yeerbook
play sMe for five diamonds
SIX rooms , both , wo rkshop SMALL form for sale. to•t. down ,
-Wtddlngiiand beat anyone who reached
!toroge bu ilding , Iorge lo t, wv!'l · owner financed. Monroe Coun~
six and found the heart finesse
maintained, reaSonably priced.
ty, w. Vo . Phone {304) 772·
KEN GROVER
wrong.
Phone 992·537A after S p.m .
3102 or (304) 772-3227,
·
PhofOIIrop~y
So South called for dummy's 3 Bedroom home, bath ond one- COUNTRY farmland witk seclud·
985-4155
ace of hearts, went after
Chester, Ohio
ed woods, water and good ac
half. C!JII 992·3129 Or 992·5-434 .
t-rumps and made his coniract 2 new 3 bedroom hOmes for sole cess in Monroe County , W. Vo
7·)4-1 mo.
. right on the nose. rt dido 't do
qn acre trccf5 , one with bo 59 •
Sl ,000 down, cell {304 ) 772
3102 or (~) 772-3227. ~-ment , one without. Call 992,
him much good, but at least it
worked out better than finess·
3454 or (61-4 ) "46-9568 , Lee 2 bedrooms , large modern kil ·
chen , forced oir furnace . Lin · ANTIQUE re!torat ions , reproduc ·
Construction .
ing the heart, losing the spade
coi n Hgts . 992-5737.
lions, cabi net making and fur finesse if East shifted t.o a
nitUre repa ir. 131 v, 3rd , Mid •
spade and winding up in the
3 bedroom house for sale at 520
dl
Sycamore
St.
,
Middleport
,
good
·
eport, 992-5735 day and
ash can.
.
. buy tor $8,000. Phone 992·3578, -;
e';e;n;;;
in~
g ·~·;;::;;;;;::;;;:;:;:;;;~~~

-

~ m~~

HOUSE for ~o l e . 2 Iorge
be.droomL_IQrge lhting room ,
kitchen, di ni ng , corpeld , $9,000
in Harrisonville . Photie 7•2-

'1796.
HOUSE fo r sole , 391 Soutl1 -Second
Ave .. Middlepor t, Phone 992·
2265 .

(For a copy ot JAr.:OBY · garages with work area,
MODERN. send $·1 to : "Win
at Br i dge , " cl o this
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489.
Radio City.Siation, tlew York,
N. Y. 10019)

.

The Almallac

Wider the sign o1 l.A!O.
Press
United
American novellst Edna
lliteraatlonal
Ferber was born Aug. 15,
Today Is Sunday, Aug. IS, 1887.
the 228th day of1976 with 138
On this day in history:
to follow.
In 1914, an American ship
The moon is approaching passed from the Atlantic to
its 1aat &lt;juarter.
the Pacific Ocean, officially
The morning stars are open&amp;lg the Panama Canal.
Jupiter and Saturn.
In 1935, American humorist
The evening stars are Mer- Will Rogers and pllot Wiley
cury, Mars and Venus.
· Post were killed when their
ThoBe born en lhla date are plane crashed In Alaska.

By

7:»-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Jeff's Collie 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St.
33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15: Lucy Show B; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13; Mister Rogers
33.
9:30-Cross-Wits 3; One L,lfe to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas 13; VIlla Alegre 33.
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15;; Price Is Rlght8,10; Bit
With Knit 33.
10: 15-General Hospital 6.
10:31)-(elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15· Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Nigh I 6; Gamblt8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec.
Co. 33.
11 :30-Republlcan Convention 3.4.8,10,15; Happy Days
6, 13; Biography 33.
·
12:00-Hol Seat 13; News 6; Sesame St . :h.
12:30-AII My Children 6.13.
1:00-Ryan"s Hope 6,13; Elec. Co. 33.
1:»-Days of Our Llves 3, 15; Family Feuo6,13; Bob
Braun 4; As The World Turns 8, 10; Zoom 33.
2:00-520,000 Pyramid 13; Dlnah 6.; It's About Time 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,.W, 15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Black Perspective on the News· 33.
3:00-Another World 3,4,1S; Ail In The family 8, 10;
Woman 20; Washlngfon Week In Review 33.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3:30-Max B. Nimble 6; Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 20; World Press 33.
4:oo-Mlster Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4: Somersel15;
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "Rampage at. Apache Wells" 10;
Dlnah 13.
·
4:»-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlflth 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllntstones 15.
5:oo-FBl3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: lmposs!ole
15.
5:30-Adam·12 4,13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:31)-..NBC N.ews 3.4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlltlth 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge '20;
Carrascolendas 33 .
7:01)-Melgs_Falr Preview (cl 5; Truth or Cons. 3; To :
Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Buck Owens
· 8; High Road to Adventure 10; Candid Camera 13;
Family Affair 15; Lowell Thomas .Remembers 20;
West VIrginia Journal 33.
7:30-Republlcan Convent ton 3,4,10,15; Baseball 6, 13;
Price Is Right 8; Robert MacNeil Report 20,33.
8:110-Movle "African Queen .(c) 5; Republican Convention I; Tennis 20; What a Country 33.
9:00-Good Old Days of Radio 33.
.
10:0G-700 Club (c) 5; Republican Conventlon6,13; Bl·
Ways 33.
.
10: 3G-Catch·33 33.
11 :oo-News 6,13,20: ABC News 33.
11:30-News 3,4,15; Honeymoon Sulle 6,13; Janakl33.
12:00-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; News 8,10.
12:30-Movle "Lady L" 8; Movie "Hot Rods to Hell"
. 10.
1:00-News 13.
1::10-Tomorrow 3,4.

baths, utility R., carpeted.
About I acre of ground.
$22.900.00.
CARRY OUT- Has been
establlshed In the same

742·2172.

2524 .

No. 175 - Srracuse area,
new 3 BR ., spilt level, all

Doing
an
excellent
business. Priced right. WE
HAVE
3
·OTHE
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
- CALL lf Interested.
A NEAT PLACE- 5 yrs.
• old. 3 bedrooms. bath, dine.
·In . kitchen , ullllfy R.,
carporf,
air
cond .,
carpeted, lf2 acre with
mefal storage building,
$16.800.00.
GRACIOUS 2 sfory older
home. Formal din ing R.• 4
BRm ., beth. nice kitchen,
carpeting, paneling, 2 car
garage. Some fruit trees.
.69 acre. $18,800.00.
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
NOTED lN THIS AD CALL
FOR
INFORMATION.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·22S9 or 992·2568

elec. , carpet throUghout, on
90 x 124 lot·, quiet

helghborhood,

$26.300.0Q.

No. 171 - 2 BR. older
home, alum. siding, partial
base ., needs some repair,

56,000.00. ,No. 178 - 28 acres
bordering Forest Run Park
Mobile Home plus 28x4ll
mefal shop building, lots of
woods. 517,000.
·
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Mananer

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Winshield Rtllftctment
Frft Esllmttes
. ·
01! IlDdy Work
Expert Ptlnttng
lnsurence Work

Wtlcoint
St. Rt. 7
CoolYlllt, Ohio
667·3127

,,

.7:2f·1 ....,

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com•
· plete Service. Phone 949-2..a7
· or 9.49-2000, Roclne , Ohio, Crltt
Bradford.
~::;::,:::::::__ _ _:c:-:-:::-' ELW®D BOWERS REPAIR
;;:;
. Sweepers , toostets, Irons, all
' small opplioncei.Lown mow~r ,
next to State Highway Garage
MOBILE home for sole or rent , 3
en Route 7. Phone (6U) 985· ·
bedrooms , al utilities paid.
3825.
Ph
992 77 5
~~:__ _ _ _ _.,.-· 1.
one
· REMdOELING , Plumbing, heating
I
1~3 Kirkwood 12)165 . mobil'
and olltvpas of genera repair.
home , front den , w ith bay wfM·
Work guorontMCI 20 yea111 ex·
dews , completely corpetd ex:·
perience. PhoM992·2•09.
cept kitchen , e)lcellent condl·
0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 years ex·
lion. For ·sqle or ouume
perience . lmured free
povmants. Coli Randy Williams ,
estlmotet. Call 992-238.4 or

195A liberty Mobile Home 8x50,
$700.00 .dQwn and toke.. ov•r
bolonc• of poyments, Call 992·

location for many years.

t •

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or m ·7667.

Several readers have asked
when a revoke becomes esMAIN ·
tablished .
The rule is clear here. It
POMEROY, O.
becomes established as soon · WE HAVE 2 NEW 3
as the revoker or his partner bedroom homes just being
plays to the next trick.
completed . Bot~ have

,.

Above IIIII belew ........
pool kits for "" • .jf.)
f"IO"Mif man.
All pool supplies avellallle,
too.
'

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Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

HOUSE for !ole , 3 bedrooms, all
electric. Family room tully
corpe t&amp;d with wood -burn ing
firtploce , Io rge lot w it~ storage
b\lild ing ond garden spoce.
Rust ic Hill1,. Syracuse. Phone

South checks beet play

SWIMMI,_
POO'S

EXPIRIENaD

ANY PITCH
· ANY SIZE

TRAILER lo t for rent . Nice. yard
$50,000.
.
ond garde n 1poce. Co li 9-492525, 9a .m . to 6 p .m .
1.1S ocres. of land on leading
Creek Rood With water tap.

Call 992·5352 or992·2496.

NOllTil

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I

Convenient to shopPing on
Third ond Mill Strtets ln Mlddleport . Brand new high quality opc:.rtments . See the
managtr at Apt, 16, or call TWO motor boall with 35 h.p .
motors ; 1965 Volkswagen
992·7721.
Phone992-57• L
·
~PT . for rent, 5 rooms and bath,

3 · roo~ fu rnls ~ ed apartment,
utilllles furni shed . Co il 9'92·

2 Bedroom mobile home,
oreo. Phone 992-5858 .

'

Business Serf,ices

OPQrtmtntt at

VIllAGE MANOR in Middleport

'192·3273.

Carrier Wanted

~,f).. Caravan 6; Day of Discovery li James Robison

j

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Pass

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How Early Commitment
Rebate Program works: This
year we have something
extra for you ... a 5% rebate
at the end of the program...
all you do is use at least 80%
of your early · commitment
agreement. The sign-up tim~ .
is from August 16 through .
September 30, with the feed
delivered from October 1st
through Dec. 31st, 1976.

any (nformatlon concetnlng the
whereabout&amp; or welfare of ti'lt

-

Attention,
Dairy &amp; Beef Feeders:

deceased .

white with d&lt;Kked roll. lost In
Rice Run oreo, east of Tuppers
Plolns . REWARQ! Phone J. Alan

DuYoll. (614) 61&gt;7·3477.
cellon! pa1. Wrll• American i.oST: St. Bernard Dog lost 1'.' Long
Service,. 6950 Wayrota llvd.:
Hollow Road ar.a . Brown,
Sullo 132, Mlnnoopollo. MN
block and wh!re . II anyc&gt;ne hot
SS.26.

IHii IOul ol Adolberl 0 . lM lrom
Its clod house wotl loosed and
itl frH On Auguot 15th, 1963:

~..d of cOOt ctcg~ In
loch'll
vicinity .
Plea••
.t..crlbo. PhaM 949·2350.

FOUND 2

.......nstroto T..,. ond Glfll a
f- •vonl"ttS a wool&lt;. NO ..- HEIFER found an Now Lima Road ,
owner mu1t JMntltv and poy
pwiOO)Co. NO paporwork. NO
for
ad. Phono 742-2125.
GIMMICKS!
Gasol lno
olowance. Earn FREE Samplt LOsT-2 yr . old mole Englloh Spr·
Kll. Coli 742·23n. Writo TOY
inQer Sponlel mhced with
lADlES PARTY PLAN.
~oat~lo: shorl holr, black and

4nd flow,rs •wt~ pfOGe Yl»t1 yaut
Johnstown, Pa. 1~ .
• 1 ~•·
ADQRESSEAS wanl.d IMMEDIATE·

' wMre

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"

Trust Crea fed under the Wilt
of
Mar i e
R.
~uddelt.
No. 15 ,278 First. f inal and
distr ibuti ve account of Floyd
Bell'lap, Ex ecutor of the estate
of Lillian A. Belnap , de c eased .
No. 15 ,A41 F irst , fina.l and
distribul ille account of Larry
L. Boyer , Adm inis t rator of the
estate of G e,or gi a Boyer,
deceased .
No . 15,499 F ir s t , f inal· and
distribut ive ac c ount of Alene '
Whittaker , Adm in istratrix of
the estate o( O' Dell Whi 11aker
deceased .
'
No. 15 ,604 F iru , f inal and
distributiv e account Of Lynn
Tenney. Adm inistratrix of the
estate
Of
J e an
NOble ,
deceased .
No. 15,605 F ir s t, final and
distributive a cc ount of Ed ith
Bane , Ex.ec utr ix Df the estate
of Lavada Myers , decea sed
. t&lt;(o . .15 ,633 First n
ai
account of Ve lv
nderwood
Administra tr ix f the estate oi
Elfl Skidmor , dec eased.
No . 15,648 irst , final and
distribut ive ccount of Morri1
E . Haskin , Executor of the
·estate o
Annie Ga lloway
decea
•
No. 15(651 First. f ine;! and
distribut ve accoun t of Grace
Mack Bradbury , Executr'ix of
the estate of_ V. Wymonct
Bradbury, decea s ed .
NO . 15,684 F irst 1 final and
distr ibutive accoun t of Melva
B. Sheets ,. Execu trix af the
estate of Grover Sh e ets,
deceued .
No . 15,696 F irst , final and
distr i butive
account
of
William
H.
Reynolds,
Executor Of the estate Of
Mabel Reynolds , dece!sed
No . 15,703 F irst and finai
account of Vera Shelton
t:xecutrlx of the estate
Luther A. Shelton , aKa Luther
Shelton, deceased .
Unless except ions are filed
thereto, said a ccounts will be
tor htaring before sa id Court
on tl'le 15th day Of SeJ&gt;tember'
.1976 at which time said ac:
count will be considered and
-con,lnued fror1 day lo da
until finally disposed of
Y
Any person interested mav
file written exceptio'ns to said
1ccounts or to matters per.
t~ll'lino to the execution of ·the
trust , not tess than five days
prior to the date s~t for hering
R . Wil liam Jenkini
.
Judge
Naom1 G. Wilcoxon
Deputy Clerk

Charlot F. luck A

' to toke the mqlf :wonderful
journey In all the world. We ore
' born for o higher deltlliy thon
that of earth. There It o realm

11emen t.

Coughenour Scot t, deceased .
No.· 15, 2.31 First account of

OIWOiiOII "'

HancHey.

~NTS NURIQy k

sa i~ Court of Gallia County,
Oh10, tor approval and set-

ot

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For Fast Results Us~ The Sunday Times-Sentinel Claui~

AU 1111 dlwa!Dpllllllta are a.d
to one c
DBIInund piped
to I hcimt Wlllr IIIIJIPIJ
reaerv01r. The c-nw"ed now
or U.. aprtnp Cll one check
yielded 46 gaU~_jlll' hour

Probate Division
Ac counts and vouchers Of
the follow ing named persons
and estates tlave been filed in

No. 13,299 First , final and
distr ibuti ve account of Marv
Ka il Mollohan , Adm in istratrix

.

a

o·i

=~
c-,
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5 .,......

Timber structure planned

ployees:
The new rate for no...
machine work (classiflcauon
0005 ) Is $2.61 per $100.
Remember thi s. every
employer who hires one· or
more workers (par t.time or
full - time~ in the regular
course of this business, is
required to carry workman's
compensation coverage. The
"casual employee" ca tegory
does not apply to employees
hired to perform regular
farm work .
Application blanks for
Workman's Compensation
are available here at the
Extension Office so give us a
·call anytime you need one.
On Thursday, Aug. 26. local
farmers are lrivlled to attend
a tour nea r Portsmouth
which includes a review of
performance of corn hybrids
and their tolerance to Maize
Dwarf Mosiac plus the results
of demons trations of several
herbicides have been used for
.Johnson grass control .
The tour begins . at !he SWEARER PICkED
James Daulton farm ; 3 miles
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI)
wes t of Portsmouth on - Dr. Howard R. Swearer Is
Moores Lane off U.S. Route stepping down as president of
.52 (follow signs for farm ).
Carleton . College
at
Results of the MDM !rials · Northfield, Minn., to become
and herbicide demon. the 15th president of Brown
straUons should be available University,.
•
here at the Extension Office
later oo this fall or winter in
case you do not get t.o attend the price will be $1.50 for
the tour at Portsmouth .
advance tickets.
Plan now to attend teh
Another date {or pork
Annual Ohio stale Farm producers to keep in mind is
Science Review which will be Thursday , September 9, 1976
held at the Ohio Stale which is !he Ohio Swine Day,
University Airport, north· which will be tleld at !he
west of Columbus, Ohio on Swine Research unit at !lie
September 21, 22, :r.., 1976. Ohio t\8ficultural Research
Tickets will be available here Development Center at
at the Extension Office and Wooster, Ohio.

Leon Saunders, Trustee ot the

With a long-term, reasonable cost -loan from
MONDAY
.
MEIGS-GALLIA Chapter
the Federal Land Bank you can finance a Ohio Civil Service Employes
wide variety of farm needs .. ·. such as new A!lsn. Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
buildings and land improvements- and al- - !he Guiding Hand School in
I
h
Cheshire.
.
mos t an yth mg e se t at can make your farm
operation more profitable.
TUESDA v ·
·
'
CHESTER Council 323,
228 Upper River Road
Daughters of America,
p, 0. Box 207, Gallipolis
Tuesday · night, 8 p.m.
Phone 446-0203
Practice t.o be held for in'
Clyde B. Wl'lker-,- Mar.
spectlon on Sept. 7. All
•
members and officers urged
to altA!nd the meeting.

.

lt-Tho llaDdaJ'l'II.DII-Illlllilwol.JUICIIJ.AUI. IJ, 1t'lt

(614) 698·72~7 Alba'!l'.
SEWING MACHINE Ropairo, - ·

vice, all mokn, 992·228.4. The
Fabric Shop, ,Pomeroy.
:-\uthorized · Singer Sal'n and .
Service, We sharpen Sclttors.

'

J970 DOUBLE wide mobile home
set on permanent foundation ,
front perch. 2.46 acres about I
mi le frc;&gt;m Rocine.· 3 bedrooms ,
central o ir conditioning , stove
ond refrigerator , Tuppers
Plains , rural water, $17 .225.
Phone 949-2815 or 949-2~89 .

3 BEDROOM mobile home: ; ith
land , 12 x 60, completely furnisked r priced reasonable.
Phone 992-5491 or 992·3255.

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond .
backhoe work : _.dump trucks
and lo-boys for hlr•: will f',oul
fill dirt, to soft, limestone and
gravel . Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , doy phone 992-7089.
night phone 992·3525 or 992·

5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer , backh&lt;&gt;.
and ditcher. Charlet R. Hotfield , Bock J.toe Service,
.Rutland , Ohio . 'P hone 7"'2·2006.

GREG'S CB SAtES, local..! at Er· .
WANTED to rent house or smoll
for m in country . Cal l collect,
592 -6010 evenings . Responsible
couple .

win 's Gulf Service, · Middleport , Ohio . Phone
992,

2438.

SEPTIC Systei'Tl:£ installed by
ll,tnsed installer. Shepard
Contractors . Phone 7.42·2409.

sEf&gt;TiC TANKS cloon.d. Modern
Wltl DO babysitting weekdays
and some even ings. Pho ne

949·2322.

Sanitation, m-395.4 or 992-

2428.
W1LL do roofing , construction,
plumbing ond heating. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

CARPENTER, flooring , ceiling;
paneling . Phone992·2759.

Situaled in Rutland. Ohio. Hutchinson Sub-division,
Meigs Local School District, new home with carport,

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER-

Phone 99q-3371,
RUTLAND- NICe 01aer 9
room home, 2 beths. 3 Brs.,
or more with closets, full
basement. large front
porch, 2 car garage wlth 2
rooms . Big corner lot .
$40,000.

garage, recreation room with fireplac:e, and kitchen,

Chase, (6") 698·3021,
EXCAVATING. BACkHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. LOW
BOY AND DUMP TltUCKS. Bill
PULLINS, PHONE 992-2478 DA.Y
OR NIGHT.

44 ACRES - On Rt. 143.
Mobile home 12x60 with 2
Brs., drilled well. woods &amp;
some bottom land.

Pomeroy, Ohio

TEAFORD
VIrgil B. ~r .. Kealtar
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0.

HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
nlce modern
beth, large modern kitchen
with dining. full basement,
and large lot. 120.000 .
bedrooms,

bi.level construction, first floor, with bafh'. 2nd floor , 3
bedrooms. full bath, living room, large dining fiiOm,
modern kitchen, house fully carpeted. plenty of closet
space, lot site ·9Sxll0', brick front, aluminum siding .

See this home before you bur. Well worth your lime.
Selling price $35,000. Call or see:
GEORGES. HOBSTETTER JR.
Ret! Estate Broker
Phone 985·4186 after 4:ooP.M.

kitchen, large living, full
besement, St. doors, &amp;
windows . · Carport with
utility. 2 acres.' $31,000.
MIDDLEPoRT- $16,500.
A good 4 bedroom home.
1112 beths. large dining and
living, gas hot water heat.
Nice woodwork.
NEW LISTING - 10 •room
apartment

house, ·

2

separate apartmenls . All
utilities wlth natural gas
heat. Lot 121~400. Want
only $12,000.
NEW LISTING - NiCe
split level 3 BR home, nat.
oak varnished floors.
equipped kltchen·stove,

m .59so.

Thursday, August 19, At 12:30 PM ·
Location: 4 miles south of Gallipolis on Rt. 7
at Clipper Mill
Listing In part : plaftorm rocker, high back rocker, felephone bench, 3 piece sectional
living room suite, 2 plecellvlng room suite, 2 stuffed chairs, duncan fife drum table,
duncan fife coffee table, T.V.. book shelves. cadar wtrdrobt, chKt of drawers, 2
small chest of drawers, vanity and bench, Iron bed, blonde JJed room sullt (~Ice), oil
lamp. bedroom suite. 4 folding chairs, table lamps, d"*"'tlon giKI, dutch OYtn,
stainless steel cooking set, Shirley Temple bowl, dinette set, rtlrlgerator freezer
comblnatlon, ·large mixer. 14ft. extension laddtrt, 41ttp leddera, kitchen (ablnet,
utility cabinet, 3 piece breakfast set, library table, Dlllboard motor. 15 gallon stone
lor, 3 lawn choirs, lawn mowers, handtoola of all klnda, loll of dishes, pictures.
f)gurenes. large rope and many. many more Items.
Terms Cash

Lunch

Wi II Be Served

Owner: Myra Gilmore

The Charles Oltvtlltr Estttt

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE·

ret. and bar, din. area,

base, family rm ., 2
porches, garage and 11
acres. $41.500.00.
SEEING IS BELIEVING.
A
BARGAIN
lS
AWAITING YOU. CALL
992-3325.

· BUILDING , remodeling, and
repoirs. Quality work, etfident
service. Jene Rodman, phone

PUBLIC AUCTIO"

1

NEAR RUTLAND- New 3
bedroom home, steps over

VICE. Meigs-Athens County.
Balers from $3995 .up. Merrill

Kenneth Swain
Gallipolis, Ohio

AUCTIOtfEERS
Not Responsible

For Accidents

Plryl Alban
Ot k Hill, Ohio .

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�Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, power ot-tng, deluxe
equipment. whitewall tires. luggage rack. dark- green
finish , less than 9.000 m'ttes. showroom clean .

1974 Chev. Monte Carto.........
new
Pintos ... ~our
new
Eitl ·
Four new Mavertcks ... Four
Mlllllllll
· · ·... One new
· Ehle
· . . . Th.ree new
new
&amp;rlnadu
.

.

197C Vo~~Wagen 2 Dr..................... u...

210 2 door , local car, 4 speed trans., 44,200 miles, good
. tires, dark g~een finish, real economy.

'2995

.

~ ..(rtlt!l Pull" IMide and out.

1974 Chevy NM 4.Door ..... ... :2795
Local low mileage car, V-8 engine, automatic power
steering and brakes, radio, tires show little wear, gold
finish . Sharp and nice ..

;,74 -fOrd VB Gran Tllino 4 Dr. Sedan....... '2795
()It rocel owner, nice.
1974 ~outh 4 Dr. Satellite. ................. '2995
31~ V-1 englnp•:nt'har2p caDr' !Sedully equipped.
'2795
1914 f«d 1 o r. an ................ .
()It

· 1974 Datsun 260 Z

Local, 1 owner, automatic trans ., power steering,
radio, red finish , good tl,res. really clean.

1g7UMnck Ford, 6 c~. 4 Dr.............. '2995 .
Air cond .• sharp. _ _ \
·
1973 Monte Carlo Chevrolet 2 Dr. Hard Top . '3495

,

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1970 Renault 4 Dr...... ;......... ..

1973 Montego Mertlt1Y VB 2 Dr. HT •......... · 299
_ 5

'

Good tires, clean Interior, grey finish, radio, 4 speed.

l97~ 'v" ~uare Back Sta. Wagon .............'2595

1970 .Camaro Cpe...................11095

.

V-8, automa!lc , P. steering, extra good radial tires .
Needs some body work.

1973 Pinto 2 Dr................. ............... '2i95
()!e careful l~al owner .

•

1975

Air cond .. one careful local owner .

1972 Impala VB Chev. 2 Dr. Hard Top. .. ,..... '2295
care:

.1972 Pinto Ford Sta. Wag. ..................... '1695

...
..~
~

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1968 Buick LeSabre 2 Dr. HT

1912 LlO ford Blough man 4 Dr. Sedan...... '1995
·

1974 Ford 302 VB lfz.Ton LWB Pickup ....... '3195
are closed Sunday

•.IM 'Invtle lnspeplon of an displayed cars and truck~. ' .

See: Fred Blaettnar. Melv_in Little.
or Pat Hill
Open Evenings Til 7:~
~cept
Sat. Ttl 5:00

...,.

,

r"

....

"•

1971 Ford Torino 4 Dr. HT

1973 Chevrolet C.lO ................s2895
a• Fleetside, wht.te over red , clean interior, 350 V-8,

~

•

automatic, power steering and brakes. good tires, step
bumper, radio. cv~tom trim and mirrors.

1971 GMC 4500 Sefies........... s3395
"!?'""'
lean,

i4' Midwest grain and cattle rack bOdy, 350, .v -B
power steering and brakes. Only 8,900 m•les.

MANY MORE

••'
"'

..

1'\

GOSH\ MAVei- l~ERf$ WR.ITII-J'
ON IT, TELl-IN' W'Of 'S GONNA
HAPPEN T ' ME .~ i. I !&lt;E" ONE' 0~
TKEM CHINESE FORTUN&amp;
C9QKIE5:

lOCUST POSTS. ro\olnd or split .

like new.

Phone 949.2774.
COAL, limes tone .' ond calcium

1975 APN:HE MESA FOlJ)O(MN

chloride and .colcium brine for
dust control ond special mixing
salt for formen;, Main Street ,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992-

~·,~..,~~~~7-

pRICED TO SEll!!! Electric winch

lor

sole .

Call

992 -2623 ,.

Pomeroy.
1971 Kawasaki 175, Enduro. S2s0.
Set of motorcycle ca rriers , $13.
Phone 992-5523 .
CANNING tomatoes and sweep
peppers . Cleland Ft~ rm5.
Ge_q:lldine Cleland. Racine ,
Ohio.

~--------~·~-~--~-----

1-Good used JO cu . II.
freer,r .
OnlyStSO '
1- New 5.000 BTU Air
Conditioner •
Reg . S250.95
SPECIAL $175 ,00
1-Good used 12 cu . ft.
freorer.
Only 1125 •

·11 CJdillae Eldora~ Cpe. _
·--~ .....-~ lliltlltlealtler Jnlertor, fult ,powWI

...wrt....r IIIII!.

' ......... -

i~~

67

NOW

'3295

Cadillac H.T. Sedan
Full power •. factory air.

Pomerov Landmartl

POMEROY MOTOR

'1195
'

KARR &amp;.VAN ZANDT
Cadi! .. &lt;·OIIIsmollrte
GMC Fliianclitil AY8118DJe

992·5342

a:.; Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

~
1971

Pomeroy
Open Evenings until8 p.m.
'

(614) 985·3501 after 3 p.m.
RABBITS tor sole. Phone 7_.2·2656.

1970 Olds Cutla n S. 2 dr., loclory TO GIVE AWAYTO GOOC HOME ,
air , outo ., power steering, 350
2bbl, $1200. Co11992-7539.

253 South Filth Avonue , Mid,
Phone aroa code blH23·9531 .
dleport.
yARD
Sole. 810 South Second St. ,
~ for junked auto. fryo•
Middleport , Oh io. Old
TRICk Auto Parts. Rutlond.
glassware, old books, pictures ,
,..,... 7-12·20111.
lamps , bedding , clothing ,
;CCIII, cumftCY, taltons. gold j~lry , lots of misc.
. . . llfyer lowolry. We neecl
ltM and aide&lt; U.S. tolns. Call YARC .SAle. Monday and
for ....... 7-12·~:11 or co.,. out Tuesday, August 16th and 17th.
from 10 a .m. til ~ p.m. S49
• - Cttn shop on Rutland and
Beech Str..t, Middleport .
Ll '"' Creek Rd. · Roger
Dishes , baby cloJhos, bays ,

f...--~·
,........,..
wj,

iJ.I;;roy ' For•t

Pro·

Top prltol for standing

wouu:tlt: l1r,

(atl KeDt Hanby ,

wo rm ed.

ago, Aug. 15, 1946.
hirty Years ago today ou went
away .
ut you're always In our thoughts
aM heart eoc:h day.
So Mother, you 'll never be forgot -

V . W. · PLEASURE horS&amp;s and

Phone949.2172 .
1974 v .W. bus. Phone '192-76'12.

ponies.

Also, will do training. Phone
(614) 698·3290, Ruth Reeves.

by

Sons

and

Ooi.Jghtert .

••

tor sole, $550. Phone 7.42-2856.

b9 Chevrolet pickup 350, stan-

dard. no rust . Phone 992·5301 .

1972 16 h. Crettliner boot , 1973
85 h.p. Mercury motor, and
troller, with edros, $2995,

Phone (614) 667 -3507.

lAWN

Shopptt, 58 Court. GatUpolls ,
Ohio.
r~lr, part1 and supplle• ,.Pick

up and delivery , Oavl1 Vacuum
Cleaner, Vi ml.le up G,e orges

CrHk Rd. Ph, 446-0294 .
THURMAN Hou1t. AnUque• , Furniture stripping, repair and

rollnlshlng. County Rd. 8 oH 35.
Contorvtlle Village. 245·9479 . .'
P~SQUALE Electrical
S.rvlce.
~2716doyornlght.

••

,....:.;'

'192-7790.
t'!66 DODGE , sJandord, 3 speed,
. $50. Phono '192-~ .

t974 MONTE CARLO. grHn with

ONE 70,000 BTU gas circulating
heater with fa n; 3 ro!l ·away
g&lt;&gt;od condition. Phone .'192~; one chest of drawers:
3625.
one van ity dresser; 3 meto i
twin bedw with springs; one
1974 VEGA G.T. equipped 4
wood twin bed with springs: 2
sp..d, very abod condlt•on.
Cali985·3537 orler 4 p.m.
full Size beds with 1prings .
Phone 9A9-2666, Aline Weqver ,
1'11&amp; GMC 4 whHI drlvo pickup,
Ra cine, Ohio.
.
green vinyl top. Air, p .b., p.s. ,

-"-~::_·-~~----------

Wlllltec~

grooming fQCilltlet . Hav• 'yOur
pet groomed undeer sanitary
cond. All breeds accepted,
4~6·0231.

tor v1C1Hon
Aug. 16tfltlttu
Aug. 21

BRIARPATCH Kennels. Boordlng.·
Iorge indoor-outdoor runs . 3•;,
mot. AKC Gordon Setter, mele

rison's TV Service,
276
Sycamore St .. Ml~port,
Ohio. Phone 992·2522.
1973 HONDA 350 4 cyl., like new,
2800 mles, extras, $800 firm,
Must sell. Phone 9•9-2181 .

...,.._,_

-----

··~-

· Wlty welt ereund wttli

ll'rll•..r

Mrvlct or no

,..., ....... &amp; .......eT '

MR tUstt SERVICE .

~ckiiP
rMIOIIIbi:':':..~··

. ,_ •

,

3 Family Yard Sole, Su n., Mon.,
Tuesday , 265 State St., all size
clo thi ng, books, baby furniture,

~·-

NEWGMC

1975 Chevrolet luv PU

SOMMERS
Trucks . Inc.
133PineS t.

446·2532
FOUR wheel drive - 1913 ubur·
ban , auto. Iro ns .. power steerlng &amp; prol(es, air &amp; radio ,

-.,.'$~·~
3 b::_
75~. .::446
::::-0:::::.
008 · -~
197 Che_.rolet Vcn, good condilion. Al•6-&lt;4119, between 7:30

446·4191 .
'
a.m. and4 :30p.m.
ENGLISH sollor pupa, f.D.S.I., 71 Cadge Charger , S1JOO. e.c .
Reg. , tOwHksold . 245·5617.
conct., 675-2651 -

• TusH SEIVICE
FOR SALE ....:... good used T.V,'•,
calor ond black and white. Har-

1975 Harley Davidson Sportster
XLH . low mileage, coll 446-3563

Truck Headquarters
1970 Ford Pickup
8570.
.
1974 IJt T. GMC Pickup
1974 1/ 1 T. GMC Pitkup
1974 •; , T. CheV. PU4 WD1975 •; , T. Chev . PU
1973 three ·fourth T. Chev . PU
BOARCING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennel s, 388-8274 , Rt. 1971 Chev. lmpo la
1970MM1e Carlo
55-4, Yt mile &amp;ast of Porter,
1971 three.fourthGMC PU
BOARDING , Siamese Kittens Clr- 1971 O lds Sto . Wagon
cl. L. Kenne ls, 2 miles irom IW4 Chev. Malibu Classic
town, 446-4824.
IW3 'h Chev. Pickup

cENTENARY Woods Kennel Pot

&amp;

''

men 's 1 women's, cloth.S. all 1972 DODGE Co~onet, air condislzes, loys, cos metics, ~isc.
, . tionlnSJ. p~yllls Cljne, Phone

1966 Chevy Fleelside, IJ1 ton
truck. cheap. Ph. 379-2281 .

.

He•tlnt

'

1969 FALCON 6 cyl . aulomallt .
Nltt~condltlon . Cali992-2849.

l•tumblng

af

DRAGONWVND Cot ..ry-Kennel

.71 YOLKS BEAnE
Top condition .

speed. while. A·l.

51795

51295

$1495

51295.

s1795

51395

$1695 51295

1972 Che_. rolet Impala. auto .,

$2695 $23951-E•xtr_a_sh_a..;,rp•
. -...,;.....;.;.._ _,__ _...__.....,

Prices At Their
•
LOWEST!

5
2495

Come! Look! Check!

74 PONTIAC

t~uck . cheap. Ph . 379-2281 .

b9 Falcon, make offef, 4.46-2524 .

body rusted. $19S. b75-1777 .

Siomete. Also stud servlc;e,
Drogonwynd Conery-Kannel.
Ph. 4~~-38-'4oher 1 p.m .

s2395·

Air. vinyl top. extra sharp.

1966 CHEVY Flee lside, holf ton

PUPPIES and . Kittens, Chow- 1'166 'I.T. GMC PU
Chow ,
Himalaya n
and 1974 'h T. GMC PU

196SPiymouth . Phono '192-3574.

~ Dewm·s

TIMBER

Auto .. 44,000 mtles .

72 MONTE CARLO

'f'ARDSale, Tues., Wed., Thurs ., 9
to 6 , one-fourth mile off Cora·
Rodney Rd. Watch for sign,
clothing , cor speake rs, camper
Ice box, police scanner,
Polaroid cam.ero · and ot her
mis c. items .

Pomeroy Forest Products pcys
top prices for standing saw
timber . Call Ken t Ha nb y 446·

71 VOLKS 411 SEDAN

$2995

Air, Radials, one owner.

1975 FORO Torino Station Wagon ,
overage retail $3750. Will
SCKrif ice 53350. Ph. •U6·1622
evenings.

mower ~;~nd rototillers,

$1795 $1395

72 OPEL TUDOR.

~~f!r~~.~~iles.

RuMMAGE Sale at Centenary
Town Hall, Gorden tractor, TV.
guns •. dishes , mini bike, a nd
many other items, Mon. &amp;
Tues., 9 till dark.

ror.lrs 1159 Second Ave. For
sot m~wen and tillers, 4~6- JUNK auto.ond scrap metal. Ph .
2531.
388-8776 .

~w~~ b~~rth more.

95
~A~ir,-load_ed._~_rth-mo-re.--~$3_49_5~5_27~
- ~6~9~~~~~~l~--~$1-5-95~2~9~5

1970 Fiat 2 dr. B50 Sedan,

REDUCE safe and fa st with
GoBese Tablets and E·Vop
1
' water pills", Gillingham Drug.
Grov•r 's Studio. Now open lOS, Tues. Sat. till Bon Thursday .

UNDER '1500

73 PONTIAC LeMANS 2DR HT s3295 52995
..,.A_ir,_2a_,ooo_m_ile_s._su__
pe_r_sh_ar_p.---ll---+---171 CHEV. IMPALA 2 DR. HT
OLDS TORONADO .
Air, gold, vinyl top .

Sat .. one-fourth mile out
Bulaville, Westbrook Subdivision, 9-6, clothing, baby items,
furn., glassware , m in.

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY , formerly

l952 llf.. Ton Chevrolet truck ,

oquipped to haul chlpwood.
PHone247-2241.

ALL persorts wishing fo help pro·
teet the average citizens right
to penonal gun ownership Ph
Vesta Hom at ~46-930&lt;t or write
PO Box 185, Cheshire, Ohio

3495

4

J Family 'f'ard Sale , Friday and

45620 ..

miles , excellent condi tion,
helmets Included , priced to

sell. Phone 949-2133.
36 INCH White Magic Chel gas
1968 Ucon Delta camping trailer, . range. Caii 992-S210.

l)EAD Stock removed. No c;horge.

Call245-5514.

tan .
Sadly ml11ed

sWEEPER and sewing machine

1966

ostlmale caii379-26S2.

1795

Air, custom Int .. like new.

Air, auto., vinyl top .

1968 Bu ick · Wi ld cat. factory air
cind other extras . Very good
condi tion . $500. Ph. 446· 7501$.
aEGIN your spring cleaning by
having your carpets cleaned by
best method known . Remove
all the dirt. Make your carpet
look new again . For free

3995

.•

52295 $1895

72 PLY. FURY Ill t DR. HT

74 MUSTANG II GHIA

--~.!!.'.LP .m::.:·--...,...,--.,-

1974 TRIUI.\PH 750 Tridenl , 3000

Also .

VARO Sol•. 3 F~mlly Sole, goo~
Squar"back run s good, S}ood
teenage, adult and children s ,' work car r $250. Phone (61")
clothes. El.cttolu" floor sham.· 378-6376 after S p.m. Also have
pooer, Inch worm •. boOks and ~g~u::;
ns:_:f:;:
or:..:•::::•:i•::.·
:: --:--~:;-:-:::-:;;­
monyh misc. ilerns . Monday 69 (:hrysfer Newport , good tan di and Tuesday , 9 a .m. tlll 4 p .m .
lion, new .tlres 1 new battery :
(ASH poid tor all makes ,and

homes.

CoNSOLE st8reo. om-fm radio , A
speed change r.
Balance
mothe r

3 female Collie pups , already

nice.

72 OLDS "98" 2 DR HT

SEWING Machine repair service.
All makes . Fench City Fabric

.

mobile

1974 Suzuki .G.T . 380. e)lcellent
condition . Cal17.o12·2U3 oher 5
p.m. or contact Dallas Weber.

Air. lime

If You Are Thinking Used
These
Are The Sharpest Around

$102. i'o or terms. Coli '192-3%5.
J97l Novo V·B, p.s .. a ir, best of·
Thoroughbred, father mixed .
TRAM Diamond Ml, antenna, e)(f.
fer. Phone992-7897 .
Phone992-2667.
speaker. e)ltro c;oox , oil like
Beetle, e..:ceHent runn· AKC IRISH SETIER puppies , $50.
1967 V.W.
new , $175_ Al so, CLR2 Bo se
·
h
Phone 949-2n6.
ing condition, body roug ,
Antenna , $20. Phone992·5616.
$450.

of

12.00o-

miles, perfe'ct condition. Call

·You'll Like our Quality .'hay of Doing Business"

models

CL-4&gt;0,

5

s3495

74 BUI_
CK CE_NTURY 4 DR

74

pipes. $650 . Call 949·2480.
1975 Handa CBI25. approx . 500

'Pomeroy ·

Ooen Eves. Til 6-Ttl 5 p.m. Sat.
see one OITnese ct~urteous salesmen:
Pwte Burris
Lloyd, Me Laughlin
Mal:vin Keebaugb

HONDA

miles . sissy lxlr, crash bars,
pull bac;k handle bo n, new tire
and nol1, ·Scrambler side

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126

Phone 992-218t

3995

UNDER '3000

'Save. Big' .On The Above Cars

memory of Amanda Esther
Five who pc;~ued oway'30 years

$1795

Auto., P. steering. custom·

Air, new Buick trade .

.rl~

Auto., P. steering, vinyl top.

73 OlDS '98' 4 DR HT

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
DON WAns- VOLKSWAGEN
Rt. 7, Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446·9800

FREEZER SALE

2 DR. HT

72 PONTIAC CATALINA
Air, vinyl top, Gran Prix trade.

5

'75' Caniaro, v.a, auto, P.S., P.B.• mags, N.C. trade-in, very sharp.
'75' Gremlin, 1owner, N.C. trade-in.only 13,179 miles.
'75' V. W. Rabbit, auto., N.C. trade in, only 16,165 miles.
'75' V.W. Scirocco, a beauty, N.C. trade-in. 12,720 miles.
2·'74' Type 4, V,W. Sta. Wagons, 1owner, very. very sharp.
-173' O!ev. 'Laguna', v.a, auto., P.S., P.B.• A.C .• radials. sharp car.
'74' PintO Runabout, auto., radio, N.C. trade·in
'73' Fiat '124' Spider Convit; 5speed, N.C. trade-in. ·
'73' Mercury Capri. red, V-6, 4 speed, sharp car.
,;'72' Pinto 'Runabout, blue, 4 speed, very economical.
.'71' Ply. Satellite, '71' Scamp. '71'-LTO, 4 door
'69' Valvo '142s' 2 dr., very sharp for '69', N.C. trade·in
'71' V. W. Bus, blue and wht .• overhauled engine, N.C. trilde·in.
'68'
Fastback. 4
$395.00
,

3891.
CANNING peaches now reody
thru Augus t. Several varieties
by the bushel, 1/J bushel · or
peck:. Pleose bring own container , 2 convenient locations.:
Mlcfwa)' Market,
Pbmi!'roy ,
992 -2582;'Bob 's,M orket, Meson .·
. 773-57~1.

'4495

'1

'

radials and all the extras,
2-'76' AMC Matador Cou~e, sales man'g. car., A.C.,
auto., V-B, P.S., P.B., and all tJ'Ie extras,
3-'76' AMC Pacer•X, '6', auto., P.S., etc.
4--'76' AMC Pacer, '6', auto., A.C., P.S.; etc .
5-:-'76' AMC Pacer.x, auto., A.C., P.S., etc .
6-'75' AMC Hornet, 4 dr., V-8, auto., P.S. and lots of ·
extras, way below original cost.
7-'76' V.W. Rabbit, 4 speed, salesman's car
8-'75' W.V. Rabbit, 4 speed, salesman's car
9-'76' V.W. Rabbit, auto, radio, etc.
1~'74' Dasher, dealer's car, auto., 4 door, has never
been titled~
·

. ...
....
.,
..•.
. ".,..,...
•

'\

5

MGBGT

1-'76' Sportabout Wagon, Dealer's Car, auto., A. C., P.S.,

~

.

75 AMC PACER X
Air, AM-FM, 7,000 miles.

BELOW COST DEALS ON ALL
THE FOlLOWING UNTIRED CARS:

:z..
•

1968 Pontiac Exec. 4 Or. HT

&lt;

chrome grille, and front bumper, 6 cyl. and standard
trans.

Oomed bY local minister .

We

~

~

$4695 5 3995

24,000 miles. Expect the best.

73 PLY.

73 MAVERICK 4 DR.

PLUS:

~.

~

a• Stylestde. green finish, good tires, R. bumper,

1971 Volllswagen 2 Dr. Sedan ........... ...... '1500
Air cond .. one owner , really sharp.

Chevrolet 8' Reetside . s3795

1974 Ford F-100 ................ :....'2995

A cyt .. auto. trans., 1ug, rack .

One l!l(al owoer .

$"•.

1969 Cheveh Wagon

Fleetside C10 local 1 ov;ner, light blue finish 350 V8
Eng . P.S ., Std. trans., good t ires, posttraciiQII ax le,
step bumper .

ON Ali NEW AND
USED 1976 AMC,
GREMUNS, HORNEtS,
PACERS &amp; MATADORS
IN SI(JCI\

!

1969 Ford Lm 4 Dr. HT

z~. !!~~m~

'

....

•

1972 Skylark VB Buick 4 Dr. Sedan ........... '2595
'SnowS render

"Your Friendly Dealer"
992-2174
Pomerov. 0.

$4795 54495

UNDER '4000

•1. 0000 OVER COST

...••

$2495

· 6 cyl., standard. 24,000 mlies.

cond.

•'

Fair Specials

SMI'Ili Na5QN MOlORS

74 QIV, NOVA 2 DR.

Waiting Fori

••'

$495•

HURRY-HURRY-HURRY
To
·

S75Q

You Have Been

~:

nlc. :amity

A bHufllul car Inside and out .

Auto. trans .. clean .

1974 Olds CuUass
•4295

Good ti'r es, cl~n Interior , radio, red finish , good

Sparkling 1111 tnce col_or with matching. Interior, a ir cond. and
fviiiHIIIIPment.
·
,

'500r~O~~w~A~sl~•s:__L~U~N~DE~1~'2t~D-~D-~D-4·~W~A!1 +~·~

UNDER

~

••
••
••

1972 Chev. 9 Pa Wagon

eConomy.

The Clean Sw. .p Sale_That

...
......
"
••

Supreme; 2 dr., H.T., vinyl top, air, sport
wheels. e.tra low mlleege.

1972 Volkswagen 2 Dr......... ..S1695

'

'76' CLEARANCE

'."'

1974 Chav. Moote Carlcr
2 dr., air ., P.S., P .B.. tape, black wtth
black to(i, low _mlleage. f4U•II

. t&lt;uto. , air, sport wheels, a real sharp sport
car.

1973 VEGA ST. WAGON .......,..'1695

c•ortolul local own..-.

I

,n\lftoll"·

360 ·engine, ~ulo. , P.S., P.B.. l~~~;al one
owner, sha~P -

'.

:-••

4 speed, • cyl, we aold IIlia one new. tow

2 dr ., 6 cyt .. auto..
car .

•

~•
..
=
-.....

1974 Opel Marta 2 Dr.

Ford Mauerick
a raa_l ;as saver, local
'2M5
19.74 Plymouth

1974 DATSUN................ Qnlu,, $2395

I

.

14195

Landau, local owner, blk ., blk. vinyl top, blk. bucket
swivel seats, radio &amp; tape , air, P. steering &amp; bra~es ,
lilt wheel, power windows, nice, nice .

CLEARANCE SALE
pjckuD•·

-...•

•0

1976 AMC HORNEJ....:.......... 13995

•

mechonic;oll~ very good , need
some body works , $450. 446·

1425.

----

1963 Chevrolet , auto. , runs good ,

Catalina 4·Dr. Sedan
Blue

metall.l ~

fin . with matching Int., P.S.,

P. B., auto. trans., factory air, w·s·w rad .
tires, 20,000 miles.

'3595
·4 - Demonstrators 76
Models
WOOD MOTOR SALES"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Eastern Ave.

1973 Nova , 5 ,000 mi les, like hew,
2 dr .. 6 c;y i,. , auto ., · power,
$~ . 500 . Ph . 3~7 · 0! 30:~---­
.1967 Chevrolet station wagon,
327 engine , oil power $250. Ph_

446-9780.
1186-8627.

1969 New Moon mobile home,
12x60 wl!h eKpondo . must sell.
Coii.U6-2531 anytim~r.

tion, $900. Coll388-8798 .

8- WHK OLD pigs $25 ea .. th;s
week on ly. 388-8280. ___ _

1971 VW Supe r Beetle , $750. Ph:

:-:::c...:::.:c_:_- --·-~
1970 Volkswagen , good condi-

CHIMNEY Slacks, W. Va. &amp; Ohio
Lum p Cool , Gallipolis Block

Co., 446·2783.
·FOR SALE
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS.
CARL WINTERS. PH . 245-SllS .

70 Mercury Cougar $99S . 4.46- . TWO U&gt;e8" Chrome reverse rims, 0458.
w1th or without !Ires. Ph. 4•6- All TYPES of building materials ,
'
·
·
4737.
bloc;k, brick , sewer pipes; , winWE WISH to thank oil those who .
--·-dows . lintels, e tc. Claude
were of asslslonce during the 8 week old pigs. $25 eo . This
Winters , Rio Grande , 0 . P~one
illness and death a f our fa ther.
week only. 388-8280.
2.o15-5 121 aft ~ r 5.
Charles Scott, particularly Or. 197
S-k~~~ _._._ _:::_:..::~=::..:::.___
Randolph G. Hf]nd , Or. Daniel
like new ~~foo' Ca~J~~ :~e.
USED APPLIANCES
•
H. Whiteley , nursing staff and .,......· '
· 0
REFRIGERATORS, was hers ,
emergen cy room stoff of Hol zer CHAIN
Link' t-ence , fre e
dryeF , r'~nges , Gene Skaggs,
Medical (enter, Southeast
es tim'o tes .
In stall ed
to
t294 Eosern-Ave. Ph , 4•6·7398 .
customers ' sa tisfa ctio n , pOLY .FOAM , for sofa, chair ,
Ohio Ern() rgency Medical Serguaran teed
insta ll ations .
cus hi oris. mottrenes. podding,
vice, Middleport Volunteer
. Newman 's Fencing, Ironton ,
ideal for campers . Voriet~ of
Emergency Squad , Jam es E.
Simpson , funeral director of
Ohio 1-532-0509.
sizes. Direct Fabr ic and Foam
Rawlings-Coates Home for
Sales , Main St. , Pt. Pleasant.
Funerals , pallbearers Allan , '21 ft . self-contained pull type
Richord .ond Rofldy 'Scott, Steve
tamping trciler. eJCc. cond .
Ph . 675 ·3,.69, 9-5 daily , till 8
Corptinter. Jo ck Rathburn and
$1 .350: 197~ 250 Sport Sus uk i -,-:F
.:.r:.:
lde!
ayc.·_ _ _ __ __
Ti m Lucas , Rev , Chesler
$700 . Have to see to ap - ALUMINUM buildings with wln Lemley, pianist , Mrs . William
predate . Ph. 446·0871 or if no
dows . floors and_ electric
answer -446-0167 .
blocks , tile , c;ement, mortar .
Price , organi!t , Mrs . Ed Spears,
the Old Kyger Freewil Baptist MOBJiECB~odlo tele~h~ne typ;
chi mr;tey bloc;k, Gall ipolis
Church Choir and to all
anten'no included. ,. 46•3934 .
Block , ~46·2783 .
.
rel a tives,
friends
a nd
C"NNING PEACHES : Now r..,dy
neighbors for their pro)'ers , · 31J; X7 ft. pool table with ac·
thru August, · Several varieties .
cessori es, $-JS. Portable ga s
visits, cards, food and flowers
of yellow Freestone , available.
lo_g·b~rnin~ fireplace with ocand oil other acts of kfndness .
By bushel ,' v~ bushel or peck .
Jerry and Phyllis Scott , Donny
ceuories , $85. Ph, 4~6· 1 323.
Please bring .o wn container , 2
Scott, Robert and Jan ice l ucas , FA RM EQUIPMENT ; Mossey
convenient locations. Bob's
. Raymond a nd Ani ta Fife and
Ferguson trocto~ (used 169 hn. )
Markel , Mason 773 -5721 . MidFamilies.
$4500 ; Mosley Ferg uson boiler
way Market , Pomeroy, 992~582.
$2300; Mossey Ferg , wheel
rake $600 ; Massey Ferg . cutter
USED FURNITURE
bar $730; Mossey Ferg. tractor
REFRIGERATOR,
GAS RANGE,
li ft $35.00; Money Ferg. disc
LIVING
ROOM
SUITE. FOUR
plow $200; Mossey Ferg. 3
f915 Hondo 350 XL. Call 388-9S34
ROCKERS.
FOOT
STOOL
, 2TV 'S,
point di sc $225 : Shaver
VACUUM
CLEANER.
2
METAL
-~~
hyd rauli c post driver $400: Hoy
CABINETS
,
ROUND
MIRROR
.
1975 ~ondo 350 XL. Coli 388-8534
conveyer with motor $125; all
BEDROOM SUITE , WOOC
_c:!_~er .5 p.m.
·
like new other mis c. form
CINETTE SET, 1 SET ol SPRINGS
Items. Ph . 8110-8627 .
RED Mediterranean sofa &amp; c;hairs .
ANC MATTRESS. 1- 9xl2

S55o

2

A.K .C.-C .F.A. Hlmoloyon (PO&lt;:
P.S., P.B., A·C . good tond.
sian) and Slomeso. 446·3844
Phone44b-4327 .
alter 1 p.m.
1'167 Buick Elec:ta 225 , go;;dc-;;;;;l,
AKC Irish Setter 'pups, 6 weeks
15oo. Ph, 446· 1750. · ·
_ ol_d._$50
_ . 9_
A9 :3:~n::6c_·_ _ _
1'115 DolSon blO, Sro . Wag .. exc.
Good condition. Ph. 4A6-03'13. -POTATOES, B'lt c o lb. , onio ns 12t
GREAT Dane, FM, Alaskan -'~d. , 14,000mllos , 446-1050.
--~
lb, Orin Sheets, Thivener, 0 . ,
Malmute, male . Make oflor. 1'168 Mustang, 3spcl .. b cyl .. good 71 Hondo 125, SL , good condition.
Ph,
446-7850.
__
f!.t.2_. ~'.?~~ Ci!y ' 0 .
_ P":_4_4b_030
__ L__ ··----. _condition ~::.4.~6-4~·- _
.__, --·- .. -

,.

~c.~
~~\\ ~ ·
c.V · ~~

WOOL RUG. RICE'S NEW ANC
USED FURNITURE , 85.1 SECOND.
4&lt;6-9•23.,
-

' - ..-

10 - Fadory Officials Cars
75 · &amp;76 Models
15- New Cars
5 - New Trucks

·-----------------50 - Used Cars

.

15 - Used Trucks
No Reasonable
OHer RefusadiLet•s DEAL Nowl
CHARLIE WEBSTER
BUSTER .SPRAGUE
DON HARDEN
TOM NO.RRIS

Carroll Norris
'

'

Dodge
Gallipolis, Ohio

ct~ yOu know you can bo enjoy- '1311. COmpe&lt;tOhtplelwwlth !Oft.
1ng your own anground 16'lll32'

ttrMf'l.:i

In

fOKh,

~

simmlng pool within 7 days?
$575.00. Ph • ..._1111.
Ccill o: Bumgardner Scllos
Moblio Summ it Rd., Rt. 1, Mid: 1'NO whoollomllllltltir 'lfltlle h .
dl-t, Ohio A5760. Phone
bed. Phonw216 tiiOO.
992-$'124. Comploto pools and 1974 Ka~ 1(11), ...,.tV...,.
.supplies .
ph. 245-1123. ·
1.
.. I

\

�Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, power ot-tng, deluxe
equipment. whitewall tires. luggage rack. dark- green
finish , less than 9.000 m'ttes. showroom clean .

1974 Chev. Monte Carto.........
new
Pintos ... ~our
new
Eitl ·
Four new Mavertcks ... Four
Mlllllllll
· · ·... One new
· Ehle
· . . . Th.ree new
new
&amp;rlnadu
.

.

197C Vo~~Wagen 2 Dr..................... u...

210 2 door , local car, 4 speed trans., 44,200 miles, good
. tires, dark g~een finish, real economy.

'2995

.

~ ..(rtlt!l Pull" IMide and out.

1974 Chevy NM 4.Door ..... ... :2795
Local low mileage car, V-8 engine, automatic power
steering and brakes, radio, tires show little wear, gold
finish . Sharp and nice ..

;,74 -fOrd VB Gran Tllino 4 Dr. Sedan....... '2795
()It rocel owner, nice.
1974 ~outh 4 Dr. Satellite. ................. '2995
31~ V-1 englnp•:nt'har2p caDr' !Sedully equipped.
'2795
1914 f«d 1 o r. an ................ .
()It

· 1974 Datsun 260 Z

Local, 1 owner, automatic trans ., power steering,
radio, red finish , good tl,res. really clean.

1g7UMnck Ford, 6 c~. 4 Dr.............. '2995 .
Air cond .• sharp. _ _ \
·
1973 Monte Carlo Chevrolet 2 Dr. Hard Top . '3495

,

.

.

1970 Renault 4 Dr...... ;......... ..

1973 Montego Mertlt1Y VB 2 Dr. HT •......... · 299
_ 5

'

Good tires, clean Interior, grey finish, radio, 4 speed.

l97~ 'v" ~uare Back Sta. Wagon .............'2595

1970 .Camaro Cpe...................11095

.

V-8, automa!lc , P. steering, extra good radial tires .
Needs some body work.

1973 Pinto 2 Dr................. ............... '2i95
()!e careful l~al owner .

•

1975

Air cond .. one careful local owner .

1972 Impala VB Chev. 2 Dr. Hard Top. .. ,..... '2295
care:

.1972 Pinto Ford Sta. Wag. ..................... '1695

...
..~
~

'

.

1968 Buick LeSabre 2 Dr. HT

1912 LlO ford Blough man 4 Dr. Sedan...... '1995
·

1974 Ford 302 VB lfz.Ton LWB Pickup ....... '3195
are closed Sunday

•.IM 'Invtle lnspeplon of an displayed cars and truck~. ' .

See: Fred Blaettnar. Melv_in Little.
or Pat Hill
Open Evenings Til 7:~
~cept
Sat. Ttl 5:00

...,.

,

r"

....

"•

1971 Ford Torino 4 Dr. HT

1973 Chevrolet C.lO ................s2895
a• Fleetside, wht.te over red , clean interior, 350 V-8,

~

•

automatic, power steering and brakes. good tires, step
bumper, radio. cv~tom trim and mirrors.

1971 GMC 4500 Sefies........... s3395
"!?'""'
lean,

i4' Midwest grain and cattle rack bOdy, 350, .v -B
power steering and brakes. Only 8,900 m•les.

MANY MORE

••'
"'

..

1'\

GOSH\ MAVei- l~ERf$ WR.ITII-J'
ON IT, TELl-IN' W'Of 'S GONNA
HAPPEN T ' ME .~ i. I !&lt;E" ONE' 0~
TKEM CHINESE FORTUN&amp;
C9QKIE5:

lOCUST POSTS. ro\olnd or split .

like new.

Phone 949.2774.
COAL, limes tone .' ond calcium

1975 APN:HE MESA FOlJ)O(MN

chloride and .colcium brine for
dust control ond special mixing
salt for formen;, Main Street ,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992-

~·,~..,~~~~7-

pRICED TO SEll!!! Electric winch

lor

sole .

Call

992 -2623 ,.

Pomeroy.
1971 Kawasaki 175, Enduro. S2s0.
Set of motorcycle ca rriers , $13.
Phone 992-5523 .
CANNING tomatoes and sweep
peppers . Cleland Ft~ rm5.
Ge_q:lldine Cleland. Racine ,
Ohio.

~--------~·~-~--~-----

1-Good used JO cu . II.
freer,r .
OnlyStSO '
1- New 5.000 BTU Air
Conditioner •
Reg . S250.95
SPECIAL $175 ,00
1-Good used 12 cu . ft.
freorer.
Only 1125 •

·11 CJdillae Eldora~ Cpe. _
·--~ .....-~ lliltlltlealtler Jnlertor, fult ,powWI

...wrt....r IIIII!.

' ......... -

i~~

67

NOW

'3295

Cadillac H.T. Sedan
Full power •. factory air.

Pomerov Landmartl

POMEROY MOTOR

'1195
'

KARR &amp;.VAN ZANDT
Cadi! .. &lt;·OIIIsmollrte
GMC Fliianclitil AY8118DJe

992·5342

a:.; Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

~
1971

Pomeroy
Open Evenings until8 p.m.
'

(614) 985·3501 after 3 p.m.
RABBITS tor sole. Phone 7_.2·2656.

1970 Olds Cutla n S. 2 dr., loclory TO GIVE AWAYTO GOOC HOME ,
air , outo ., power steering, 350
2bbl, $1200. Co11992-7539.

253 South Filth Avonue , Mid,
Phone aroa code blH23·9531 .
dleport.
yARD
Sole. 810 South Second St. ,
~ for junked auto. fryo•
Middleport , Oh io. Old
TRICk Auto Parts. Rutlond.
glassware, old books, pictures ,
,..,... 7-12·20111.
lamps , bedding , clothing ,
;CCIII, cumftCY, taltons. gold j~lry , lots of misc.
. . . llfyer lowolry. We neecl
ltM and aide&lt; U.S. tolns. Call YARC .SAle. Monday and
for ....... 7-12·~:11 or co.,. out Tuesday, August 16th and 17th.
from 10 a .m. til ~ p.m. S49
• - Cttn shop on Rutland and
Beech Str..t, Middleport .
Ll '"' Creek Rd. · Roger
Dishes , baby cloJhos, bays ,

f...--~·
,........,..
wj,

iJ.I;;roy ' For•t

Pro·

Top prltol for standing

wouu:tlt: l1r,

(atl KeDt Hanby ,

wo rm ed.

ago, Aug. 15, 1946.
hirty Years ago today ou went
away .
ut you're always In our thoughts
aM heart eoc:h day.
So Mother, you 'll never be forgot -

V . W. · PLEASURE horS&amp;s and

Phone949.2172 .
1974 v .W. bus. Phone '192-76'12.

ponies.

Also, will do training. Phone
(614) 698·3290, Ruth Reeves.

by

Sons

and

Ooi.Jghtert .

••

tor sole, $550. Phone 7.42-2856.

b9 Chevrolet pickup 350, stan-

dard. no rust . Phone 992·5301 .

1972 16 h. Crettliner boot , 1973
85 h.p. Mercury motor, and
troller, with edros, $2995,

Phone (614) 667 -3507.

lAWN

Shopptt, 58 Court. GatUpolls ,
Ohio.
r~lr, part1 and supplle• ,.Pick

up and delivery , Oavl1 Vacuum
Cleaner, Vi ml.le up G,e orges

CrHk Rd. Ph, 446-0294 .
THURMAN Hou1t. AnUque• , Furniture stripping, repair and

rollnlshlng. County Rd. 8 oH 35.
Contorvtlle Village. 245·9479 . .'
P~SQUALE Electrical
S.rvlce.
~2716doyornlght.

••

,....:.;'

'192-7790.
t'!66 DODGE , sJandord, 3 speed,
. $50. Phono '192-~ .

t974 MONTE CARLO. grHn with

ONE 70,000 BTU gas circulating
heater with fa n; 3 ro!l ·away
g&lt;&gt;od condition. Phone .'192~; one chest of drawers:
3625.
one van ity dresser; 3 meto i
twin bedw with springs; one
1974 VEGA G.T. equipped 4
wood twin bed with springs: 2
sp..d, very abod condlt•on.
Cali985·3537 orler 4 p.m.
full Size beds with 1prings .
Phone 9A9-2666, Aline Weqver ,
1'11&amp; GMC 4 whHI drlvo pickup,
Ra cine, Ohio.
.
green vinyl top. Air, p .b., p.s. ,

-"-~::_·-~~----------

Wlllltec~

grooming fQCilltlet . Hav• 'yOur
pet groomed undeer sanitary
cond. All breeds accepted,
4~6·0231.

tor v1C1Hon
Aug. 16tfltlttu
Aug. 21

BRIARPATCH Kennels. Boordlng.·
Iorge indoor-outdoor runs . 3•;,
mot. AKC Gordon Setter, mele

rison's TV Service,
276
Sycamore St .. Ml~port,
Ohio. Phone 992·2522.
1973 HONDA 350 4 cyl., like new,
2800 mles, extras, $800 firm,
Must sell. Phone 9•9-2181 .

...,.._,_

-----

··~-

· Wlty welt ereund wttli

ll'rll•..r

Mrvlct or no

,..., ....... &amp; .......eT '

MR tUstt SERVICE .

~ckiiP
rMIOIIIbi:':':..~··

. ,_ •

,

3 Family Yard Sole, Su n., Mon.,
Tuesday , 265 State St., all size
clo thi ng, books, baby furniture,

~·-

NEWGMC

1975 Chevrolet luv PU

SOMMERS
Trucks . Inc.
133PineS t.

446·2532
FOUR wheel drive - 1913 ubur·
ban , auto. Iro ns .. power steerlng &amp; prol(es, air &amp; radio ,

-.,.'$~·~
3 b::_
75~. .::446
::::-0:::::.
008 · -~
197 Che_.rolet Vcn, good condilion. Al•6-&lt;4119, between 7:30

446·4191 .
'
a.m. and4 :30p.m.
ENGLISH sollor pupa, f.D.S.I., 71 Cadge Charger , S1JOO. e.c .
Reg. , tOwHksold . 245·5617.
conct., 675-2651 -

• TusH SEIVICE
FOR SALE ....:... good used T.V,'•,
calor ond black and white. Har-

1975 Harley Davidson Sportster
XLH . low mileage, coll 446-3563

Truck Headquarters
1970 Ford Pickup
8570.
.
1974 IJt T. GMC Pickup
1974 1/ 1 T. GMC Pitkup
1974 •; , T. CheV. PU4 WD1975 •; , T. Chev . PU
1973 three ·fourth T. Chev . PU
BOARCING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennel s, 388-8274 , Rt. 1971 Chev. lmpo la
1970MM1e Carlo
55-4, Yt mile &amp;ast of Porter,
1971 three.fourthGMC PU
BOARDING , Siamese Kittens Clr- 1971 O lds Sto . Wagon
cl. L. Kenne ls, 2 miles irom IW4 Chev. Malibu Classic
town, 446-4824.
IW3 'h Chev. Pickup

cENTENARY Woods Kennel Pot

&amp;

''

men 's 1 women's, cloth.S. all 1972 DODGE Co~onet, air condislzes, loys, cos metics, ~isc.
, . tionlnSJ. p~yllls Cljne, Phone

1966 Chevy Fleelside, IJ1 ton
truck. cheap. Ph. 379-2281 .

.

He•tlnt

'

1969 FALCON 6 cyl . aulomallt .
Nltt~condltlon . Cali992-2849.

l•tumblng

af

DRAGONWVND Cot ..ry-Kennel

.71 YOLKS BEAnE
Top condition .

speed. while. A·l.

51795

51295

$1495

51295.

s1795

51395

$1695 51295

1972 Che_. rolet Impala. auto .,

$2695 $23951-E•xtr_a_sh_a..;,rp•
. -...,;.....;.;.._ _,__ _...__.....,

Prices At Their
•
LOWEST!

5
2495

Come! Look! Check!

74 PONTIAC

t~uck . cheap. Ph . 379-2281 .

b9 Falcon, make offef, 4.46-2524 .

body rusted. $19S. b75-1777 .

Siomete. Also stud servlc;e,
Drogonwynd Conery-Kannel.
Ph. 4~~-38-'4oher 1 p.m .

s2395·

Air. vinyl top. extra sharp.

1966 CHEVY Flee lside, holf ton

PUPPIES and . Kittens, Chow- 1'166 'I.T. GMC PU
Chow ,
Himalaya n
and 1974 'h T. GMC PU

196SPiymouth . Phono '192-3574.

~ Dewm·s

TIMBER

Auto .. 44,000 mtles .

72 MONTE CARLO

'f'ARDSale, Tues., Wed., Thurs ., 9
to 6 , one-fourth mile off Cora·
Rodney Rd. Watch for sign,
clothing , cor speake rs, camper
Ice box, police scanner,
Polaroid cam.ero · and ot her
mis c. items .

Pomeroy Forest Products pcys
top prices for standing saw
timber . Call Ken t Ha nb y 446·

71 VOLKS 411 SEDAN

$2995

Air, Radials, one owner.

1975 FORO Torino Station Wagon ,
overage retail $3750. Will
SCKrif ice 53350. Ph. •U6·1622
evenings.

mower ~;~nd rototillers,

$1795 $1395

72 OPEL TUDOR.

~~f!r~~.~~iles.

RuMMAGE Sale at Centenary
Town Hall, Gorden tractor, TV.
guns •. dishes , mini bike, a nd
many other items, Mon. &amp;
Tues., 9 till dark.

ror.lrs 1159 Second Ave. For
sot m~wen and tillers, 4~6- JUNK auto.ond scrap metal. Ph .
2531.
388-8776 .

~w~~ b~~rth more.

95
~A~ir,-load_ed._~_rth-mo-re.--~$3_49_5~5_27~
- ~6~9~~~~~~l~--~$1-5-95~2~9~5

1970 Fiat 2 dr. B50 Sedan,

REDUCE safe and fa st with
GoBese Tablets and E·Vop
1
' water pills", Gillingham Drug.
Grov•r 's Studio. Now open lOS, Tues. Sat. till Bon Thursday .

UNDER '1500

73 PONTIAC LeMANS 2DR HT s3295 52995
..,.A_ir,_2a_,ooo_m_ile_s._su__
pe_r_sh_ar_p.---ll---+---171 CHEV. IMPALA 2 DR. HT
OLDS TORONADO .
Air, gold, vinyl top .

Sat .. one-fourth mile out
Bulaville, Westbrook Subdivision, 9-6, clothing, baby items,
furn., glassware , m in.

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY , formerly

l952 llf.. Ton Chevrolet truck ,

oquipped to haul chlpwood.
PHone247-2241.

ALL persorts wishing fo help pro·
teet the average citizens right
to penonal gun ownership Ph
Vesta Hom at ~46-930&lt;t or write
PO Box 185, Cheshire, Ohio

3495

4

J Family 'f'ard Sale , Friday and

45620 ..

miles , excellent condi tion,
helmets Included , priced to

sell. Phone 949-2133.
36 INCH White Magic Chel gas
1968 Ucon Delta camping trailer, . range. Caii 992-S210.

l)EAD Stock removed. No c;horge.

Call245-5514.

tan .
Sadly ml11ed

sWEEPER and sewing machine

1966

ostlmale caii379-26S2.

1795

Air, custom Int .. like new.

Air, auto., vinyl top .

1968 Bu ick · Wi ld cat. factory air
cind other extras . Very good
condi tion . $500. Ph. 446· 7501$.
aEGIN your spring cleaning by
having your carpets cleaned by
best method known . Remove
all the dirt. Make your carpet
look new again . For free

3995

.•

52295 $1895

72 PLY. FURY Ill t DR. HT

74 MUSTANG II GHIA

--~.!!.'.LP .m::.:·--...,...,--.,-

1974 TRIUI.\PH 750 Tridenl , 3000

Also .

VARO Sol•. 3 F~mlly Sole, goo~
Squar"back run s good, S}ood
teenage, adult and children s ,' work car r $250. Phone (61")
clothes. El.cttolu" floor sham.· 378-6376 after S p.m. Also have
pooer, Inch worm •. boOks and ~g~u::;
ns:_:f:;:
or:..:•::::•:i•::.·
:: --:--~:;-:-:::-:;;­
monyh misc. ilerns . Monday 69 (:hrysfer Newport , good tan di and Tuesday , 9 a .m. tlll 4 p .m .
lion, new .tlres 1 new battery :
(ASH poid tor all makes ,and

homes.

CoNSOLE st8reo. om-fm radio , A
speed change r.
Balance
mothe r

3 female Collie pups , already

nice.

72 OLDS "98" 2 DR HT

SEWING Machine repair service.
All makes . Fench City Fabric

.

mobile

1974 Suzuki .G.T . 380. e)lcellent
condition . Cal17.o12·2U3 oher 5
p.m. or contact Dallas Weber.

Air. lime

If You Are Thinking Used
These
Are The Sharpest Around

$102. i'o or terms. Coli '192-3%5.
J97l Novo V·B, p.s .. a ir, best of·
Thoroughbred, father mixed .
TRAM Diamond Ml, antenna, e)(f.
fer. Phone992-7897 .
Phone992-2667.
speaker. e)ltro c;oox , oil like
Beetle, e..:ceHent runn· AKC IRISH SETIER puppies , $50.
1967 V.W.
new , $175_ Al so, CLR2 Bo se
·
h
Phone 949-2n6.
ing condition, body roug ,
Antenna , $20. Phone992·5616.
$450.

of

12.00o-

miles, perfe'ct condition. Call

·You'll Like our Quality .'hay of Doing Business"

models

CL-4&gt;0,

5

s3495

74 BUI_
CK CE_NTURY 4 DR

74

pipes. $650 . Call 949·2480.
1975 Handa CBI25. approx . 500

'Pomeroy ·

Ooen Eves. Til 6-Ttl 5 p.m. Sat.
see one OITnese ct~urteous salesmen:
Pwte Burris
Lloyd, Me Laughlin
Mal:vin Keebaugb

HONDA

miles . sissy lxlr, crash bars,
pull bac;k handle bo n, new tire
and nol1, ·Scrambler side

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126

Phone 992-218t

3995

UNDER '3000

'Save. Big' .On The Above Cars

memory of Amanda Esther
Five who pc;~ued oway'30 years

$1795

Auto., P. steering. custom·

Air, new Buick trade .

.rl~

Auto., P. steering, vinyl top.

73 OlDS '98' 4 DR HT

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
DON WAns- VOLKSWAGEN
Rt. 7, Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446·9800

FREEZER SALE

2 DR. HT

72 PONTIAC CATALINA
Air, vinyl top, Gran Prix trade.

5

'75' Caniaro, v.a, auto, P.S., P.B.• mags, N.C. trade-in, very sharp.
'75' Gremlin, 1owner, N.C. trade-in.only 13,179 miles.
'75' V. W. Rabbit, auto., N.C. trade in, only 16,165 miles.
'75' V.W. Scirocco, a beauty, N.C. trade-in. 12,720 miles.
2·'74' Type 4, V,W. Sta. Wagons, 1owner, very. very sharp.
-173' O!ev. 'Laguna', v.a, auto., P.S., P.B.• A.C .• radials. sharp car.
'74' PintO Runabout, auto., radio, N.C. trade·in
'73' Fiat '124' Spider Convit; 5speed, N.C. trade-in. ·
'73' Mercury Capri. red, V-6, 4 speed, sharp car.
,;'72' Pinto 'Runabout, blue, 4 speed, very economical.
.'71' Ply. Satellite, '71' Scamp. '71'-LTO, 4 door
'69' Valvo '142s' 2 dr., very sharp for '69', N.C. trade·in
'71' V. W. Bus, blue and wht .• overhauled engine, N.C. trilde·in.
'68'
Fastback. 4
$395.00
,

3891.
CANNING peaches now reody
thru Augus t. Several varieties
by the bushel, 1/J bushel · or
peck:. Pleose bring own container , 2 convenient locations.:
Mlcfwa)' Market,
Pbmi!'roy ,
992 -2582;'Bob 's,M orket, Meson .·
. 773-57~1.

'4495

'1

'

radials and all the extras,
2-'76' AMC Matador Cou~e, sales man'g. car., A.C.,
auto., V-B, P.S., P.B., and all tJ'Ie extras,
3-'76' AMC Pacer•X, '6', auto., P.S., etc.
4--'76' AMC Pacer, '6', auto., A.C., P.S.; etc .
5-:-'76' AMC Pacer.x, auto., A.C., P.S., etc .
6-'75' AMC Hornet, 4 dr., V-8, auto., P.S. and lots of ·
extras, way below original cost.
7-'76' V.W. Rabbit, 4 speed, salesman's car
8-'75' W.V. Rabbit, 4 speed, salesman's car
9-'76' V.W. Rabbit, auto, radio, etc.
1~'74' Dasher, dealer's car, auto., 4 door, has never
been titled~
·

. ...
....
.,
..•.
. ".,..,...
•

'\

5

MGBGT

1-'76' Sportabout Wagon, Dealer's Car, auto., A. C., P.S.,

~

.

75 AMC PACER X
Air, AM-FM, 7,000 miles.

BELOW COST DEALS ON ALL
THE FOlLOWING UNTIRED CARS:

:z..
•

1968 Pontiac Exec. 4 Or. HT

&lt;

chrome grille, and front bumper, 6 cyl. and standard
trans.

Oomed bY local minister .

We

~

~

$4695 5 3995

24,000 miles. Expect the best.

73 PLY.

73 MAVERICK 4 DR.

PLUS:

~.

~

a• Stylestde. green finish, good tires, R. bumper,

1971 Volllswagen 2 Dr. Sedan ........... ...... '1500
Air cond .. one owner , really sharp.

Chevrolet 8' Reetside . s3795

1974 Ford F-100 ................ :....'2995

A cyt .. auto. trans., 1ug, rack .

One l!l(al owoer .

$"•.

1969 Cheveh Wagon

Fleetside C10 local 1 ov;ner, light blue finish 350 V8
Eng . P.S ., Std. trans., good t ires, posttraciiQII ax le,
step bumper .

ON Ali NEW AND
USED 1976 AMC,
GREMUNS, HORNEtS,
PACERS &amp; MATADORS
IN SI(JCI\

!

1969 Ford Lm 4 Dr. HT

z~. !!~~m~

'

....

•

1972 Skylark VB Buick 4 Dr. Sedan ........... '2595
'SnowS render

"Your Friendly Dealer"
992-2174
Pomerov. 0.

$4795 54495

UNDER '4000

•1. 0000 OVER COST

...••

$2495

· 6 cyl., standard. 24,000 mlies.

cond.

•'

Fair Specials

SMI'Ili Na5QN MOlORS

74 QIV, NOVA 2 DR.

Waiting Fori

••'

$495•

HURRY-HURRY-HURRY
To
·

S75Q

You Have Been

~:

nlc. :amity

A bHufllul car Inside and out .

Auto. trans .. clean .

1974 Olds CuUass
•4295

Good ti'r es, cl~n Interior , radio, red finish , good

Sparkling 1111 tnce col_or with matching. Interior, a ir cond. and
fviiiHIIIIPment.
·
,

'500r~O~~w~A~sl~•s:__L~U~N~DE~1~'2t~D-~D-~D-4·~W~A!1 +~·~

UNDER

~

••
••
••

1972 Chev. 9 Pa Wagon

eConomy.

The Clean Sw. .p Sale_That

...
......
"
••

Supreme; 2 dr., H.T., vinyl top, air, sport
wheels. e.tra low mlleege.

1972 Volkswagen 2 Dr......... ..S1695

'

'76' CLEARANCE

'."'

1974 Chav. Moote Carlcr
2 dr., air ., P.S., P .B.. tape, black wtth
black to(i, low _mlleage. f4U•II

. t&lt;uto. , air, sport wheels, a real sharp sport
car.

1973 VEGA ST. WAGON .......,..'1695

c•ortolul local own..-.

I

,n\lftoll"·

360 ·engine, ~ulo. , P.S., P.B.. l~~~;al one
owner, sha~P -

'.

:-••

4 speed, • cyl, we aold IIlia one new. tow

2 dr ., 6 cyt .. auto..
car .

•

~•
..
=
-.....

1974 Opel Marta 2 Dr.

Ford Mauerick
a raa_l ;as saver, local
'2M5
19.74 Plymouth

1974 DATSUN................ Qnlu,, $2395

I

.

14195

Landau, local owner, blk ., blk. vinyl top, blk. bucket
swivel seats, radio &amp; tape , air, P. steering &amp; bra~es ,
lilt wheel, power windows, nice, nice .

CLEARANCE SALE
pjckuD•·

-...•

•0

1976 AMC HORNEJ....:.......... 13995

•

mechonic;oll~ very good , need
some body works , $450. 446·

1425.

----

1963 Chevrolet , auto. , runs good ,

Catalina 4·Dr. Sedan
Blue

metall.l ~

fin . with matching Int., P.S.,

P. B., auto. trans., factory air, w·s·w rad .
tires, 20,000 miles.

'3595
·4 - Demonstrators 76
Models
WOOD MOTOR SALES"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Eastern Ave.

1973 Nova , 5 ,000 mi les, like hew,
2 dr .. 6 c;y i,. , auto ., · power,
$~ . 500 . Ph . 3~7 · 0! 30:~---­
.1967 Chevrolet station wagon,
327 engine , oil power $250. Ph_

446-9780.
1186-8627.

1969 New Moon mobile home,
12x60 wl!h eKpondo . must sell.
Coii.U6-2531 anytim~r.

tion, $900. Coll388-8798 .

8- WHK OLD pigs $25 ea .. th;s
week on ly. 388-8280. ___ _

1971 VW Supe r Beetle , $750. Ph:

:-:::c...:::.:c_:_- --·-~
1970 Volkswagen , good condi-

CHIMNEY Slacks, W. Va. &amp; Ohio
Lum p Cool , Gallipolis Block

Co., 446·2783.
·FOR SALE
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS.
CARL WINTERS. PH . 245-SllS .

70 Mercury Cougar $99S . 4.46- . TWO U&gt;e8" Chrome reverse rims, 0458.
w1th or without !Ires. Ph. 4•6- All TYPES of building materials ,
'
·
·
4737.
bloc;k, brick , sewer pipes; , winWE WISH to thank oil those who .
--·-dows . lintels, e tc. Claude
were of asslslonce during the 8 week old pigs. $25 eo . This
Winters , Rio Grande , 0 . P~one
illness and death a f our fa ther.
week only. 388-8280.
2.o15-5 121 aft ~ r 5.
Charles Scott, particularly Or. 197
S-k~~~ _._._ _:::_:..::~=::..:::.___
Randolph G. Hf]nd , Or. Daniel
like new ~~foo' Ca~J~~ :~e.
USED APPLIANCES
•
H. Whiteley , nursing staff and .,......· '
· 0
REFRIGERATORS, was hers ,
emergen cy room stoff of Hol zer CHAIN
Link' t-ence , fre e
dryeF , r'~nges , Gene Skaggs,
Medical (enter, Southeast
es tim'o tes .
In stall ed
to
t294 Eosern-Ave. Ph , 4•6·7398 .
customers ' sa tisfa ctio n , pOLY .FOAM , for sofa, chair ,
Ohio Ern() rgency Medical Serguaran teed
insta ll ations .
cus hi oris. mottrenes. podding,
vice, Middleport Volunteer
. Newman 's Fencing, Ironton ,
ideal for campers . Voriet~ of
Emergency Squad , Jam es E.
Simpson , funeral director of
Ohio 1-532-0509.
sizes. Direct Fabr ic and Foam
Rawlings-Coates Home for
Sales , Main St. , Pt. Pleasant.
Funerals , pallbearers Allan , '21 ft . self-contained pull type
Richord .ond Rofldy 'Scott, Steve
tamping trciler. eJCc. cond .
Ph . 675 ·3,.69, 9-5 daily , till 8
Corptinter. Jo ck Rathburn and
$1 .350: 197~ 250 Sport Sus uk i -,-:F
.:.r:.:
lde!
ayc.·_ _ _ __ __
Ti m Lucas , Rev , Chesler
$700 . Have to see to ap - ALUMINUM buildings with wln Lemley, pianist , Mrs . William
predate . Ph. 446·0871 or if no
dows . floors and_ electric
answer -446-0167 .
blocks , tile , c;ement, mortar .
Price , organi!t , Mrs . Ed Spears,
the Old Kyger Freewil Baptist MOBJiECB~odlo tele~h~ne typ;
chi mr;tey bloc;k, Gall ipolis
Church Choir and to all
anten'no included. ,. 46•3934 .
Block , ~46·2783 .
.
rel a tives,
friends
a nd
C"NNING PEACHES : Now r..,dy
neighbors for their pro)'ers , · 31J; X7 ft. pool table with ac·
thru August, · Several varieties .
cessori es, $-JS. Portable ga s
visits, cards, food and flowers
of yellow Freestone , available.
lo_g·b~rnin~ fireplace with ocand oil other acts of kfndness .
By bushel ,' v~ bushel or peck .
Jerry and Phyllis Scott , Donny
ceuories , $85. Ph, 4~6· 1 323.
Please bring .o wn container , 2
Scott, Robert and Jan ice l ucas , FA RM EQUIPMENT ; Mossey
convenient locations. Bob's
. Raymond a nd Ani ta Fife and
Ferguson trocto~ (used 169 hn. )
Markel , Mason 773 -5721 . MidFamilies.
$4500 ; Mosley Ferg uson boiler
way Market , Pomeroy, 992~582.
$2300; Mossey Ferg , wheel
rake $600 ; Massey Ferg . cutter
USED FURNITURE
bar $730; Mossey Ferg. tractor
REFRIGERATOR,
GAS RANGE,
li ft $35.00; Money Ferg. disc
LIVING
ROOM
SUITE. FOUR
plow $200; Mossey Ferg. 3
f915 Hondo 350 XL. Call 388-9S34
ROCKERS.
FOOT
STOOL
, 2TV 'S,
point di sc $225 : Shaver
VACUUM
CLEANER.
2
METAL
-~~
hyd rauli c post driver $400: Hoy
CABINETS
,
ROUND
MIRROR
.
1975 ~ondo 350 XL. Coli 388-8534
conveyer with motor $125; all
BEDROOM SUITE , WOOC
_c:!_~er .5 p.m.
·
like new other mis c. form
CINETTE SET, 1 SET ol SPRINGS
Items. Ph . 8110-8627 .
RED Mediterranean sofa &amp; c;hairs .
ANC MATTRESS. 1- 9xl2

S55o

2

A.K .C.-C .F.A. Hlmoloyon (PO&lt;:
P.S., P.B., A·C . good tond.
sian) and Slomeso. 446·3844
Phone44b-4327 .
alter 1 p.m.
1'167 Buick Elec:ta 225 , go;;dc-;;;;;l,
AKC Irish Setter 'pups, 6 weeks
15oo. Ph, 446· 1750. · ·
_ ol_d._$50
_ . 9_
A9 :3:~n::6c_·_ _ _
1'115 DolSon blO, Sro . Wag .. exc.
Good condition. Ph. 4A6-03'13. -POTATOES, B'lt c o lb. , onio ns 12t
GREAT Dane, FM, Alaskan -'~d. , 14,000mllos , 446-1050.
--~
lb, Orin Sheets, Thivener, 0 . ,
Malmute, male . Make oflor. 1'168 Mustang, 3spcl .. b cyl .. good 71 Hondo 125, SL , good condition.
Ph,
446-7850.
__
f!.t.2_. ~'.?~~ Ci!y ' 0 .
_ P":_4_4b_030
__ L__ ··----. _condition ~::.4.~6-4~·- _
.__, --·- .. -

,.

~c.~
~~\\ ~ ·
c.V · ~~

WOOL RUG. RICE'S NEW ANC
USED FURNITURE , 85.1 SECOND.
4&lt;6-9•23.,
-

' - ..-

10 - Fadory Officials Cars
75 · &amp;76 Models
15- New Cars
5 - New Trucks

·-----------------50 - Used Cars

.

15 - Used Trucks
No Reasonable
OHer RefusadiLet•s DEAL Nowl
CHARLIE WEBSTER
BUSTER .SPRAGUE
DON HARDEN
TOM NO.RRIS

Carroll Norris
'

'

Dodge
Gallipolis, Ohio

ct~ yOu know you can bo enjoy- '1311. COmpe&lt;tOhtplelwwlth !Oft.
1ng your own anground 16'lll32'

ttrMf'l.:i

In

fOKh,

~

simmlng pool within 7 days?
$575.00. Ph • ..._1111.
Ccill o: Bumgardner Scllos
Moblio Summ it Rd., Rt. 1, Mid: 1'NO whoollomllllltltir 'lfltlle h .
dl-t, Ohio A5760. Phone
bed. Phonw216 tiiOO.
992-$'124. Comploto pools and 1974 Ka~ 1(11), ...,.tV...,.
.supplies .
ph. 245-1123. ·
1.
.. I

\

�._,_;....,,.......R~~.-~st
Results
UBe
The
Sunday
Times-Sentirtel
Orr•
..
~~=

I

-~

_-___.,;.

' ~F~~~p~;;R;;;Jt, Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classified.

_____ ! -

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THINKING OF'

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-YOURDREAM

1 yr old brick ranch Oilers 2.1o10 sq It of modern
living Don't walt to see thls3 BRand 2 bl111 home The 111
t:ll
kitchen Is complete wl111 dishwasher, dlsp , microwave _
oven and range Other special features are a large ~
formal d ining rm , family rm , with fireplace, 14x24
living rm, quality carpet. heal pump. 2 sets patio
doors, 12x57 patio and 2 CBr garage with electric door
opener. This beauty Is priced In the 50s and located In 1P"'
st-n by 8PP!IIn~ent.

z

THE

I

HIRd'r' Min Spt(lll
If you c an pain t you can
make a qu ick profit here or
have your self a very n ite
bargain nome , 3 or .t
bedroom , large living room
and kitch en 1 car garage
Yours for $27 soo
• overlooking River
Com"letel y
remodeled
older home on a double lot
hiQh an dr y on the river
bank su, lt 1n krtchen ,
wonderfu I shady yard
Owner Moved
New L1sflng- ll-Level
Need A or i · bedrooms '
Large k1tchen (J.III of
cabmets . 21h baths: family
room , a tenths of •c 2 car
garage , city s£h dlstnct ,
more house for lout money
than you 'II buy anywhere
else Pru~ed at $11 ,000 00

~

THEONEYOU'VEIEENWAITINGFOR

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of Spring Valley's finest This attractive bride
ranch Offers 2.500 sq It of modern comfort-ble living j:
otlier special features are a complete kitchen, large 111
LR with fireplace, J or 4 BRs family rm , 2'12 ba111s, ::;
~ cent. air, garage and a large corner lot Must be seen to
1ft epprec!ale Shown by appointment

Ill WALNUT

TWP 7t
111 acru roll ing pasture and
, . woodland , good tenc! s, old
r- buildings, springs, $17,500
COUNTRY BEAUTY - 3
BR br 1ck ranch on 2 ac
Features large LR: w 1th
fireplace. equ opped kit
• chen, d ining rm • 2'h baths,
basement .
With
1111 full
f1replace m fam1ly rm •
cent a1r. and garage A
nice dr1ve to m1nes or
Gavin
NEAR VINTON - u A
Ill mostly ttlllble uround No
-1 build ings 122 ooo
- '
GROCERY BIZ- Corner
Locat1on - This lar~e a 1r
Qcondil
.... otters ioned
a anteblock
In a bulldmg
lifetime
••appartun •tv
to
some
business minded person
All stock and equ ,pment
Ill plus 2 ren tals go with th 1S
llllucrat1ve busmess
..

I

446-7900

NEEDED NON

liliE.Etii,~. OUR BUYERS'

LO(;Uif ~,.,

•

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How arCS a-ralfll1h-=--rokt,.
Office 446,2674
LUCIIIt lrlnnon
"-••· 4"~1126 or 446-2614

!:

of

JAY DRIVE

nh:e place to live,

beautiful well kept

Z

home with 11

AREA LISTINGS
\~try

IIJ

RIVERVIEW
listed 3 BR ond both,

GALLIPOLIS

A

0

Rf.AlTY

three

the
In
In

bedroom on • nice Iaroe

Z

lot

Ntw LlsiiOI

lltttraw..t Drhr•

_.CITY -

QUIET STREET
Comtorteble 6 rm1 . and
~bath with 1 larve back

1!1-

NJet thrM Hdroam on

'••'•

large lot NIOCfest price.

porch and garage locatt-d
Fifth Ave Prtced to sell
- 111,000
MOAGAN TWP. - Paslure
farm , AI acres c:tean rol ling
.graaslend , good fences,
old
... leroe pond, aprmgs,
-hOUSf'Wifh6rms
anclbath,

vacant Llld

I

~ppro• 17 ocrH tn "d·
.:Ilion Township
Good

bulfdlnt sift for sub
division or 1 baby farm
1CROWN CITY

LISTINGS

Vtrr Hlct Fum
• Route 7, 17 mile
Oolllpolls
Brick

witt. .a a"es of river

1_b!&gt;I!O·~

and p,..,ly ot other

'"""

leautifuU IHroom,

''

2~

loth
On 1 19 acres slttlnu
Route 1 A home for
portlculor and hard

I

I

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P'"'"'
luslnoll Opperhlnlly
E•lsllnu barber shop and
bNuty shop on Route 1 No
blrbtr within several
mlln of this location Also
IOOd far other business or.
rnvtttm~t activities

I

•'
•

OTif•~

CIIUNSEL.ORS
&amp;ALL,OLIS
1
Dl. .or X. HIIIIY •46-0012
CROWN CITY
Joo Crans
256-1•56

,.

.

wl111

111e

IAOOtol, DOZlA TRENCHER
DONl liT REASONABLE
RATl Contact Smtih Ex
CGYOtlng Ph 466-:1991

Alt. TY1'H of ~... - k

:m 2621

Ph

011

carpet,
gas fur 10
garage, well landscaped
with plenty shade~ near
town
IE THE JUDGE!
see for yourself if thil isn't
1 good buy The perfect
loca11on
for
school
children, 1 large lawn and
garage for the huSband 1nd
a spacious old home for
mother Create the kitchen
to her likes lor 4 nict BR.
DR, two room bsm with
gas fur, nice front room,
aluminum siding, storm
windows and doors. This is
1 oood buy at 126,250
LARGE FARM
COUNTRY CHARM
190 .acres, 3 barns, 60 a
tractor lind, sprrna water
ond 2 ponds A well buill 6
yr old home, 4 BR,
spacious kitchen, DR, LR
with fireplace, full bsm
and garage
LOTS
3 good building lots In
excellent location Priced
12,000 each
Includes
streets, rural water. un
derground electr•c and
telephone
CHARM· VALUE
Two new homes, well
constructed, 3 BR, 1112
blth, delux
kitchens,
laundry room, w w plush
carP.et, att garage, level
lois Prlcld tor • quick
sale
FACE ITII
The fastest, easiest war to
sen your home Is with your
friend~ YOUR BROKER
Phone 4&lt;14 267• "II Will
Pay"
WE SELL
BETTER LIVING

•'•

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IDEAl RETREAT 26111
acres
a large pond and II
covet
of p ine
trees
\c t hide a
way tOr- •.,.__ weekends
Loca ted abour..., m 1 t r am
Galhpohs , $8.9'00
..1
COMMERCIAL SITE - S lots and otder home on IU
s tate Route 7 1n Kani uga 4ft
L.o~ of potentJ al for $34,000
CLOSE TO MINES - 116 1M
ac farm . mostly clean, ~
level and roll •ng land Good ~
7 r m home
LOTS FOR SUE
Located on Neoghbor hOOd
Rd , Lmcoln P 1ke , Geo rge •"Creek Rd and ROdney v
Harrisburg Rd F ina nc ing

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0
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ava~lables

TOWNS
HARRI ON
HIP WILL TRADE - 66 acres
of woods and grassland
Fronts on 2 roads
CITY- VACANT LANDApprox '11 1cres ruM lng
trom
ourth Ave
to
Chick
aug a
Creek ·
$6,
Don' t wall to buy ,
buy nd wait
NE R MEIGS MINES11 acres on Morgan Lane
f tures a new unf1n1shed A
r
and bath home,
1stern , pond and lots of
privacy Prtced al Sl2,000
NEAR RIO GRANDE Over -4 acres level to rolling
ground with an a lmost new
modular home features
1,l•• sq It ol modern
Jiving AlSO InClUded IS I
new 2 car garage apt
IARGAIN Modern "'
room and bo th home wllh
full basement, ne!ds some

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2 81 UllfliRII •
APMliEIIT

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'190 per mo.
Ph. 4461451

~

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'

kitchen with ran9e , oven ,
refrlg , dining room, china
closet , 2 baths , some
furniture . new oversized 2
car oarage
Can you
believe the price $27,500.
Irick Home
600 teet lrontage on US 35
1nd large 3 bedroom brick
with big kll , l'h baths.
dining area , rec room , 2
tire places , 2 car garage ,
will sell lots or home
separate
Ont of Oolllo co.
Nicest Small Farms
73 acres with a good 3
bedroom home, nice kit
chen
w b
fireplace ,
basement, 3 barns, 2 car
garage and granery plus a
100xt4 block bldg cone
floor tor equip
and
workshop a rea 25 to 30 ac
crop land balance Is
pasture All .bUilding have
water and elect In city
school dlst on state Rt 775

• · ~ ·Here 's a Cheapleu
very qood near new 3
bec;troom home with fur
nace , bath , nice kitchen ,
cllv school. $15,900 You
can 't beat this

New Listing
LOW util lheS KISS those big
electric b ills good buy ThiS
perfect 3 bedroom home
has na tural gas heat and
a wOOd burn10g fireplace
Very n ice kitChen , Ph
bath$ and lovely family
room Price Sll,OOO Owner
very anKious
1

&lt;.ONCRHE
WORK
poloos
s1dewalks
basement
etc
Louis Cox ~3398 .
ELECTRICAL Installation
Reg •
Comm lndus tnal 256 6855
Crown C1ly Ohto

REA tTY

Ill

G

BUD McGHEE

-

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Branch Manager

Z

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!:.

oven 1n_. atove,

Smllt~arm

•

S6 Acres
Loti of T imber
small stre1m
Perfect for lake
City School District
Ru,.r water A viii,
Good Home Slle
IJ6,000.00

•

Ill

~

I

-

SANDY and Beaver Insurance Co
has offered Mrv•c•• for Fire In
surance coverogt in Galllo
County for ajmost 'a ('".,tury
CoUGHEililrorWciii&lt;' Dlllvory
Farms hom•• and personal
-16 3'162, ~"''"'time
property
coverages are
land
available to mMI Individual
nee«k Cantoct Chcnles Neal
your neighbor and agef't

--------- --- ----•

BOG&gt; CB Rodlo Equip .
everything In Two·Wfltl Radio,
Antennat and occn. Georges
Creek Rd Gollipoli1 416-•St 7

-

--~

InteriOr,

oo~D!s

II!AUTIPUL IRICII Ill 11'111... YALLil

with troniiDt \n
Crtlk IRd bi.aktap
2 ml off Rl. 7 Two
2 good
m
II
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'

IIODNIY AREA - Vory
nice 5 room frame home
wllh carpet, gard. , nice lot
Prrced reasonable
S1 ACRIS Moolly
woodland,
some
nw
tim btr, and some coal
land HoUse, barn, and
1torage crlba In good
condition
dloposol.
YO II' CAN OECORATE to
suit your taste, nearl
finiShed, 3 BR. l'h
contemporary,
kitchen famll
range, hood dl~:h_"!!"\~!!;:il
disposal , oven, over
sq ft , cent air,
school• S34 000

U ACR•s- Plenty of road
frontage with established
1i10blle home site Land IS
ciHrtd end fenced
~A:. Arnold •46-0756
a. Evannll-1111
&amp;. M1Uio•"·1911
D. Woods •46-9210

EXCAV...riNG dozer backhoe
and d1tcher Charles R Hotflelst Bock·~ Hoe Service,
Rutland OtHo 1 7.o422008 or

HOME ANO INCOME
Two 12lc:60 mS)blle homes ,
fully furnished, air !:Ond ,
rural water, septic tank , lg
tot $16.000

Mldlcal Technologist
FOR LABOI111TORY work, EKG 1
and assist wtth palients and
physklon, off1ce Write PO Box
ACREAGE
Ap
&gt;&lt;t"'
834, Huntington, W Va
f proximately 60 acres in
Gallipolis Twp , off Rt 160,
GIFT SHOP Solto person, lull
between Gallipolis City and
" ~~
time, exp nee., ref required
Rt 35 Price SlO,OOO
I 9 evening hours. Send
At R . . . . ._._.
A~ ~
rnume to lox 490 ll". GoiUpollll
proximately 3 acres ad
n .-1
Tribune
facent to Rt 160. between
GalllpOIII City and Rt 35,
~ ~" c;RTT or eligible preferably o
near hospital Price $7 ,500,
'~'
graduate of on approved
technician program to super·
vlH and anlst dtredor of
respiratory therapy In 110 bed
aeute area hospital Hours 8
a m to .o4
m Monday thru
Friday. Pal
hosp•tolizahon
Wogot $3.90 to S.. :10 per hoyr
Contact lob Casto ARRT at
O'aleneu Hospital Athens,
61•·593-5551, ext 340 lin
RIO GRANDE AREA•
Equol Opportunity Employ"'
26 xco•, 2 bedroom cottage
sltua ted on 1 acre lot 2 car
NOW HIRING, $50 uross wages
garage , wired and ln .
starting 2 days a month free
sulated modern kitchen,
lunch 2 days, work clothing fur
rural water , F A fuel all
'"' nished, over 40 technical lurnace Price S23,000
cor"r opportunities many fr ·
4 BEOROOM CARPETED
lngo bonoflts IN YOUR AREA
HOME near Cloy School,
- 9 :10 August 1976, contocl by
Gallipolis
City
S D ,
phone SSG Roger 0 Garrett
situated on I acre lot, w b
'
Wnt Vlrglnio Army Natonol
tlreplect, unique living and
'
Guard ot •&lt;16•7476 or ••6-2560
dining room Call for more
SSG Garrett will bot eosily
Information
recognized driving around In
C1ll WIIOdlnsunnce&amp;
his red, white and blue teep
Rullstoto •u 1ot•
Flou him down
Evenings Runt II Wood
U6-4611
Kto Morton •46-0971

PORTERBROOK - Brock
and frame ranch, 3 BR, 1'11
baths , all electr ic. fully
carpeted, patio for family
cookouts , c1ty schools
$35,000

'

~·676117

TtME TO CHECK AIR CONDI- ,
TIONERS RESIDENTIAL liND
COMMERCIAL CAH D MY
REFRIGERATION, 18 YRS EXPERIENCE
AND SCHOOL
TRAINED PHONE 388 8274

30J

•

-.

"

BUILD YOUR HOME on
this 3 acre lot with pic
tur'"'que view of the OhiO
R lver. 16,300
MOBILE HOME 3 BR
range , refrlg , oven, gas
htat , on perm foundation
with two built on additions
A:lso hils porch and garage,
on 1 27 acres Very well
~ept S12.500
SUMMER PLACE or year
round home , 3 rm fully
furnished cabin on 3
beautiful wooded acres
Call for more Information
GEORGE'S
CREEK
ROAD
100KI50'
lOt
suitable for mobile home or
building site R:ural wa ~er
available 12,250

RON CANADAY
REALTOR
Audrey Canaday
Sa leswontan

Gallipolis School Dlstrld B rooms plus 1'1&gt; bl111s.
bltemtnt, 2 car garage. natural gas FA furnace,• 2
flroplaces. All walls ore plaster (white) Storm doors
end windows Real modern kitchen with dishwasher
Nice homo In a nice community Must see
IMMEOIATE
liOACRES PLUS
POSSESSION
Vacant - A woodland
IN GALLIPOLIS
wonderland
some
Owner moving out ot town,
pasture end tillable lanes
must sell Immediately
L.ess then $160,00 oer acre
Nice homo ' Beautiful
PRICE REDUCED
wooded
lOt,
walking
A PLEASING
distance to city schools 3
COUNTRY HO"E
Bedrooms. formal d ining
m
7 R:ooms and bath Verv
room, nice mOdern kitchen.
0 1Ce kltcnen with table top
rul ly carpeted, f in ished
garage 1 nat vas forced air
rano e, refrigerator , d is h
IU rance, central air Won ' t wash er washer ancs dryer
New beau ti fully
con
last long, see It now
structect me tal barn Good
TRI·LEVEL
fen c es tor cat tle or horses
(LIKE NEW,
Large garden space level
Ovtr 3.000 SQ ft living I 99
acre s
Pr iced
space , "' bedrooms , 3 baths , 129,900 oo
fhermopane doors and
feE CREAM•
w•ndows Electric hell l'd
A SANDWICH SHOP
central arr Rural water A GOOd going bus lnvs
system , 2 car garaQe , A 1 1 d
sta te Highway
.cr.. Of land Lo ts of other oca e on
160 In a nice commun ity
features
Land . brick bu lld lnu .
COMMERCIAL
equipmtnf 1 and all stoc k
IWILI:iillG &amp; SITE
goes Priced rlgM
State Highway 7 North
UAUTIFUL
Masonry Building with
3 BEDROOM
brick front, build ing like
Full ba&amp;ement wllh a large
new Approx size 30 'x2A' 2 fam ilY. room, 2 beths ,
story Level lo1 fronts 17S garage , central air , n1ce
ft on Sfate Highway 7 Calf ca~ petmg, real nice krt
now
_
_
ch. .en
.
Located on 1 large
21i ACR:ES
lot Approx 2 years old
6 R:oom nome , F A fur
You must see the ins ide of
nace ,
wood burnrng thiS house to appreciate
f1replace , .-4 barns . m•I J&lt;.
12 ACRI:S RT 325
house , 500galfon m il k Janie
Near Meigs Mines , has
good fencing , all mineral barn . storage bu ilding.
r igtlts goes , lots of Pasture . farm pond Presef\tiY has
approx 25 a c res Of 1111able
one tnuler rental space
Off State Route 218
-ThiS can be developed 10to
NEIGH&amp;ORHOOD R:OAD
a n ice mcarne property
GREEN TOWNSHIP
6 Room home , bath ,
168 ACRES
modern kllchen , natura l
GOOD CATTLE FARM
gas F A furnace . air Lots of poulbllltles , 21arge
cond 1troner washer and stock barns , good concre'e
dryer Priced only S13,900 round stock water In
This ctn be bOUQht on a trough
30
acres
In
land contnct
cultivation, 1200 tb tobacco
310 ACit!S
bas.e tots of new fencing
NICE HOME
Plenty wate r in fields 10
A
wonderful
couple acres timber Owner ri!ally
developed th1S attractive anKious to sell, can be
farm
homestead
At
bought as a smgle unit or
tractive modern 6 room smaller amounts
hOmt, very pretty sethng
Barn, nice 'h acre pond
21EDROOM
stocked with fish Gooa 1Acra Plus _ level . IP·
meadow
and
fescue rox
l lh miles from
pasture I deal for cattle or ~
Ita I on blacktop rd
horses 10 acres timber Po,spt of ""lrdtn spice,
with trails to r ide In
en Y...... ..,_,-. _
Teacher being transferred, 'T \lrll water. country living
Immed iate possession Call Cion to GaMIP'OIIs Prlud
now
only S18,000
2 STORY
COUNTRY HOME
";PRUCE STREET
11.4 acres, S miles from
IN GALLtPOLtS
all i polls, 7 rooms . 4 3 Bedroom modern hom'
drooms.
artlal with built In cabinets ,
rt~;;;~:r:uel
forced alumirtum Siding Total
rural watet , electric, aarden spece
Dlst
Within walking distance of
lrontau• on downtown Gallipolis

~

... ---:·""'

. .

.

C~L

.

41EDROOMJ-ROUTI . .

LIIDY to 11¥1 In and do light
houHwork call388 8126
APPLICATIO~S

It' san older home with 3 or 4 BR natural gas heat, city
schools, lots of like new carpet, 'I• acre flat lot, and the
PRICE IS RIGHT. call VS REALTY today

'

SPECIAL
New full size brass btd with box
$239.95
springs and mattress

PHONE 446-0552 - ANmME
428 2nd AVE.

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

~~--------------------·.~~.::s~.~f.:::{~:~

I
'

.~.. l,lJ1~!~~.~

12d.O mobile home, one mile MOBILE homo, I br, $1.0,
ulihtlto pold 4&lt;14 ••t6 ofter 6
lrom HMC Rt 35 Ph 4.6 3805
~
pm .

end CHy IIWtr.

muat lie
, filioN t41-U45
lowm1n. Mlltall'·

Positions Availlble
Rtglstertd Nurstt

Llcenotd ProctiCII Nu,_
Excellnt frln .. ltentflll
Cont1ct LAura Cornwell,

R.N. at

GAlLIPOLIS

STATE INST1TUTE
Ph. 441M2 Ext. 213
An

Equal Clttportunlty
Empto,.e

·~--~--------~~~

Apply In Pea IWr. ••

Bob Evans Drive-In

---.

'

LICENSED
INSURANCE AGENT
1 Qualified loadslurnlshtd
2 Most pre eJic\sting condition
covered
3 Work out at your hom.
4 Compony bonoflll furnished
Call collect 61•-6181 boiwoen 9
am and I p m

CURB
WAITRISSES

Mo:;F'

m altl ., lll'~~tr. $45
.n.rt1IOp.m. Riehl

•so

NcM TUIRL~ For

e'JC70',

Park I.IMMIIIIIIe ttom• Court,4ml. Wftlof
Galllpolll, at. U. BIICktop 11reeta,
completelY medenl flcllltltll excelllnt
H¥1
COIIIIt1Jelll• O.lllpols ,aty lcboOI
llletrlc or .....,.. .-.. City ~

.,..:lcf,

sz:i"::

Nice vinyl lounge cft•lr
MO.OO
Mlh Corner Cabinet
saa.oo
Cof~ and end tablel
$10.00 seflnd up
Sliding,.....,. china cabinet_ suus

FOR lENT
UmltiCI numW of LlfS IVI~IIIiltt

14lJsed refrigerators, ____ $3S. and up
Breakfast sets
Whitetop oven range. Electric:.
$1 ,_,
New Ht bunk beds
s21u 55
8111 cabinets :..--::--::--=::;::~11. and up
Chest 1nd dresH~
New Early Amlerclfl2 pc. living room
~~~"'
suIt•

now taken for
broiler cooks at Holldoy Inn
Poke St Golllpolls.

161 ACRES
NEAR PORTER
New house Linder constr
plus It room farm house.
bern &amp; other outbulldlnos
Approx
uo ecru of
pasturt and timber &amp;
approx 21 ac r es of tillable
land All m ineral rights
goes, scm e gooG-fe'*es All
land &amp; house\ fo r only
155.000 Now

U'lA, BARN ,
LOG CABIN
1,000 lbs rooacca base , nfce
40'Jl60' barn , 30 A gaod size
ti mber, 8 A lllll!f&gt;le , Ill
m ineral rights goe._ This
farm can bt bOught on
land Cont ract Call
LA~OE

COUNTRY HOME
PLUS II ACRES
7
rooms
frame,
4
bedrooms , with bath , lots
of bulft In cabinets, good
small barn , blacktop road
Priced Oll!.Y $16 ,000
MIDDLEPORT.
BUSINESS I~COME
PROPERTY
Up to SUO 00 per month
Rentals. plus a beautiful 7
room (J bedrooms) home
to live In yourself a1um .1
siding, good grade, nice
front porch , lots of built In ,
cabinets, table top range,
wall oven . laundry tubs,
nat gas forced air furnace, 1
centr:al air. Wood burning '
flreplact Lots of snrub ·
bery, level grassy tot A
beautifu l place plus a n ice
Income. Priced rloht

1

SPRING VALLEY
I STATES

ftooms

plua.

2 balht

Basement. ramlty room
nice modern kitchen (diSh
waSher , tab le top range . ~
built In wall oven J Natural
gas, forced air furnace,
hardwood floors , 2 wood
burn ing fireplaces Large
lot Priced to sell

•

TARA ESTATES
ONLYS41,QQO
Beautiful 8 room house,
1881 sq ft living space
Featur ing 3 BR: with del uxe
walk in closets, 2 baths, lg
attrac tlve F R, beautif Ul
rock, field stone fireplace
Formal DR Builtin kit
chen Imported light fi x
tur es and pewter door
hardware Also enloy the
use of Club House &amp;
Sw i mming Poo l Priced
Reduced to S..8,000

LOT &amp; _ _
MOITI:TROMJ!
~
In Porttr
to~x50',
2!
bedrooros. Elcona, NIce
lot, 305 acre lovi Prlctd'
fin"' _14, 900
Large
cod Hom•
2300 sq ft o llvln5J space, .o4
bedrooms, 2 bllhs, formal
living roam wltn W B.1
fireplace , family room,
completely furnished
kitchen , counter top range,
built in wall oven, disposal
&amp; dishwasher. 2 car
garage, located on 1 acre In
Gall ipolis City School Dlst
See Th is
_ _
A WISE INVESTM.NT
6 R:oom ho11se. 71 A , b1rn
and utility bulldlnu House
hn a built rn kitchen.
running water , FA fur - ,
nace Several 1cres of 1
tillable land , 1.296 lb . '
tobacco base, lots of
pasture and some timber .
All for $23,000 00

l

13A CRES
CLEAN
On! Of Gallla County's
cleanest Hill Farms It has
good clean pasture, no
br ters, brushes or rocks
Plenty of w•ter 1025 lb
tobacco base , some aooct
ti mber, attractive f•rm. 4
room
cottaglt,
barn,
ctllcken houst Tlkt over
where a deserving couple
have retired Not mtnr like
rt , call now
111 ACRE FARM
NEAR RIO GRANDE
Gallipolis School District, 2
barns. 2 sheds . approK 20
acres 01 pasture. 40 acres
ot gOOd timber {Oak a.
Pine) Approx '20 acres of
tillable land All mineral
rights goes, tobacco base,
some farm machinery,
livestock Chogs and laying
hens ) 3 Rural Water taps
paid All crops goes 2
mabrle homes Cone is
14'x65') and a 5 room attic
house Just listed
7 ROOMS
• BEDROOMS
Galli pol iS School Distric t,
basement , 1 1h
b aths,
modern k 1tchen , complete
with b irch cab inets , F A
turnace, carpor t, 2 wood
burn ing firep la ces family
room large lot w•th fruit
trees and a storage
building Within 5 miles or
Gallipolis. Nice hOme at 1
good price

.

CALL NOW. OFFiCE 446-7699 HOME 446-9539

auto , P .S , white with lllut
Inter I or, t x c tllent
condition

1

1695

71' atEVY IMPMA
Custom 2 dr ., V 8, auto.,
P.S •• P B. a ir. beige wltll
blade vinyl roof

'1795
72 FORD
Grind Torino Sport l'aat.
leek. 2 dr. hardtop, 251'
Cleveland, V 8, auto 1 P .S ..
,,8 . radio, road wheel•,
vinyl roof, vety hard to
find

'2195
1974

v.w.

CGnvertlblt, orange finish,
blade INtherettelntarior, ~
......,, radio, white sidewell llrts, low mllttgt.

•3195
1974 DODGE
Dart Swloger, 2
hardtop.
6
~IInder,
•tanderd transmlnlon ,
radio, dark ,,....._,, blade
Interior. -Y' ~erp

72 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 Dr HT, V-1. auto.. P S.~
P.B , air, vinyl roof, loc.lly
owned
Brown w-btslge
vinyl roof.

'1M5
72 VOLKSWAGEN
Type II, 4

,puc~, radiO,
blue wl111 grey Interior

'1495
75 QIEVY

1972 14x65 W1mhor Mob1le
USED MOBILE HOMES
Home central air &amp; ac
CALL 516 2711
cenone! exc cond Ph 'MJ7
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel underpin
0418
our mobile home and anchor
3
8R all el~;~ctnc double wtde
ror safety Foster Mobile Home
mobile home on lot Rt 160, 2
Service, 4A6 2783 or Elmer Sk 1d
m1leS of Porter Ruuelll Boll
more 446 3479
197• Kirk wood. 12x60, oil e lec
1971 Homette 12x60 2 br
fn c central Olf underp1nmng
1971 Kirkwood 12•65 expondo 3
10x7 ut1hty bu1ld1ng priced to
br
sell at $6 000 446 7346 or AA6
1970 El&lt;ona 12x62 2 br
03SA
1971 Oetroller 12x60 2 br
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
1959 8 K35 Mobile home carpet
Pt Pleasant W Va
very clean, could be used for
offlco Ph 379 2281
PRICES REDUCED
TRAVEL TRMERS
1964 10 x 50 with lipout 2
1977 25 Cordobc
bedroom mobile home, carpel ,
1977 1B Solari
some furn iture included $2500
196417 Fon
Call 446 0820
196316' Loylon
1'16414 DeCamp
196" lOICSO with tlpout
2
MOBILE HOMES
bedroom mobile home carpel
197312x60Gieon 8roof&lt;
some furniture mduded $2500
Call ~•6 0820
1972 12•6-Hroedom
196612x60Marlette
\959 8x~ mobile home carpet
1'160 10x50Fieotwood
very deon could be used for
19538•27. 1 br
off1ce Ph 379 2281
Trl Stal• Mobile Homes Sal&amp;s
1220 Eostarn Ave Gallipolis
1976 Mobile home 3 BR, tolol
Oh 8onk Financing
olec $6800 Ph ••6-4568
2x60
Mobile
Home
with
t1lt-out
1
on private lot, near Kyger
CrHk HS 3 br central o.r gas
heat, clean and good cond
OWN YOUR OWN FASHION
SHOP Over 1SO Notionally
Adverllted Name Brands ore
available ta your shop Jumo.r
&amp; Missy styles Continuous buy
CARTERS PLUMBING
lng serv1ce Complete framing
AND HEATING
program. lnrtial Inventory
Cor Fourth &amp; Pine
Grand opening promotion '
Phone •-"i·3888 or
Your choice of fixture decors
ST...NDARO
VIsit our shops or tolk to our I
owners Compare our shops
Plumbing • Hoollnu
with ~n• s Investment Re
215 Third Avo , 446 3782
qulred $18 500 00 Coli Collect
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
(813)922-07881orMr ~flo"... .
PlUMBING _ Heotong - Air
Conditioning 300 Fourth A11t.
Ph 416-1637
DEWm S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
ROOMMATE wanted to share two
bedroom apartment
Coli
loutel60at Evergreen
P"-446-2735
-days ofe!~ p m 4•6 319•

•.u ••m

•

72 PLYMOUIH
FURY IU
,JTI

c•r•

We're Out To Sell The E?arth.
We Need Your Home or Farm to Sell.

~~~=========;;;

---------

'2495

Gallipolis ~chool Ols1t'lct. lots of room, biHment,
family room , 20;, baths, garage, modern kitchen. wood·
burning fireplace, large lot and garden space, storaght1
bulldlnu, approx 8'x10'. Close to Rodney Priced rig •

446·3636

In the vl 1119e of Cheshlr~ronllng on State Route 7
If's an plder h~ ery livable. When one
considers 111e lots
res) and the location, It Is
conceivable that
. decision today could mean
profits tomorrow.

low

soo-

. •'

5-Now 4 pc. bedroom sulfto, plno or maplll, shiner
ltoxmlrror . AtgularS.99.95
Salll$299.95
l-Bookcua hudboard bedroom sullts. Reg.
,
Sl99 95
Sale Prl~ed $239.95
3-4'pc. btdroom suites. Reg. 1299.95--.:...Salll Price(~
$199.95
'
4-Soll glass top tables. Reg.S249.95 ser-Salt Priced
$16U5 stl

~ ...... cyl ..
P S., rtdla. white
IIICII-1!1111 tlr.., ""'He wttll

Galaxle
4 door, V-t.
automatic, P.S , P. 1., tact.
air, red flnltl1, black
lntorlor. black vinyl tap,

40 ACRIS Moally
cleeroct rolllnu land 2 br
home well Insulated, alum
Siding. 2 drilled wella, barn
and other storaoe bldgs

I

MMy of you hlive calltd 1boul thtl beauty an Debby
Dr 1 feel sure 111at 1 personal tour of 1111s fine home will
con~ Inee you that 1111s Is without a doubt one of the blst
buys en the real estate market today. For en
appointment call VS REALTY today

1974 atm IOVA

1973 FORD

0

W

Ph. Home 446-2885
G•Uia County:. p..,_, ~ Real E,qte Apncy

'2695

RIYIIPIIDNT LOTS ldlliiY lOCI lad On Rt . 7 for
the roc,.tllon m lndtd or
lar' Investment

45 Ac. 11 rt Land
15 ac pasture balance Is
wooded Near Yt(aterloo
' We Have
Lots ~nd lots of lots for
building your dream home
From 1 to 20 ac

I

Aslocilll

Ph. flame 379-2114

Woll

·~~~:~~'! CIIIIK liD. -

:"

!

This modern l-thaped all bride home ""' mort lltln
ample room . 11 Is situated on 1 full acre lot Backyard
Is fenced. From the comfortable family room (with
fireplace) you have easy access to all parts of lite
home, For further details call VS REALTY today.

-

Wllllar, comDinld froozer .
rolrlg Locotld off 5N · on
CrOUII lock ROIG Mutt
lot to opprocloto

111 Ac
All rolling to hill and all
covered with timber Good
huntlno with small stream
and good home site
Greenfield Twp

I

1

Nl
and frlme ham•
lot ~ Br, 2 bltfll,
rm , lg . flroplaeo,
arapn, bulll·ln

ECONOMY Tractors ond Equ1p
ment Carrolls So les and Ser
vice 2 m1les West on 588 Ph
4&lt;16 m3
TV REPAIRS RENTALS
FOR lhe best 10 architectural
Serv1ce C~lls
design and buldrng cf new
PICture Tube Speciohsts
homes
small commercial
HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
bu1ld1ngs, apt , or remodeling
245 5365
w1th state oppro~ol ..of pions
Btll Walker 4•6-21•6 or 446
8652
BoRDERS GARAGE DOOR Ser. 1
ANY and all types of construction
v1ce Commercial and Reslden
ond concrete work Doter
hal Speclahzmg 1n operators
backhoe dumptruck serv1ce
local 256-6472
I
Stewart Construction ~all 256· PASQUALE Insulating 103 Cador !
1911 for tree est1mate
St, Gollipal 11 Ph .t.a6 2716 or 1
Stewart Construction Bo~ J35,
4.o46--109'2
0
=C=row
:::::n7C:::il~y·c::::h;:;io::_-:;--;;;;::;: ; CusTOM REMODELING :10 yooro
SEPTIC Tonks Cleaned Plants
e xpertence, 388 8308 New dry
Septic Tank Ser'o41ce Ph. 4.o46
wall ce1Bng with swirl or tax
1fl72 or 675 26A7
ture dnigns Other dry woll,
0 Ooy Refrigerator commercial
repau vinyl wallpoperlng, new 1
and residential schooling a 18
baths new kltch•n• Anything
yn exp Ph. 388-8274
! __:l:n:.;.:
rt:::m:::o=d•'.::
ln"'gc:o_r_re_,p_o lr---:=

-

nlg~t

~

AI Whit YQu're Mining
Almost new 4 bedroum
home completely built In

Z

NG- WE SELL MORE

SPRING VAU.EY
GREEN

Don•tMin
This Opportunity
Seldom will you have a
,hante at one like this
small fam ll y run motel,
pl"-'s good , 3 bedroom hom.e
on the river in town Will
pay tor itself 1n a few short
years Let your wife run It
and double your lnc:omt

vs

1r:

SLEEPING Rooms woekly rotes
IACKHOE I Dozer work, aloo top
Pork Central Hotel
aoll ond Hll dirt avolloblo 3)9,
PROWLER
LOW
weekly and monthly rotH at
:mll
TRAVEL
trollers
' " the No I
Libby Hotel, ••6 17•3
seller 1n the USA Smiths Hon
BICENTENNI"L
LIGHT housokHplnu room, Park
do SoiM St At 7 Galhpolis
SPECIAL
C~tral Hotel
Oh.o -1&lt;16 2240.
Complete auto point 1ob on•
color only $76 00. 2 tono$100 2 TRAILER 1pacos locoted in STIIACRAFT 1977 22 II Dodge
yAYLOR S Air Cond1t1on•ng and
Month of July only Stop •n at
Choshlro riOdy for hook up
M•nl -l«l onu $14,300 now
Refngltfation Commercial and
hnon 11ody Shop, 26 lallrood
Phone 367 0505
$12,500 All 1976 traolors, lold
domestic, _.46 22Jt7.
II . Middleport Oh,o or call
downs and m1nls reduced 1977
SLEEPING rooms lor rent Gallto
361.0165
u"'t' arriving doily Camp Con
TRUSSED RAFTERS
Hotel
loy Starcrolt So 1., Rt 62 N
~JittiR•L Conlroctors Do all
Any
pitch
any
size ,
_ . ,, corpontor &amp; plumb OFFK:E space downtown 51 AS.·
Southeastern Ohio Truss Rofter
Pt Pll W Vo
cond
Avo
••6.(1006
Ina Install and repair all
, Co Box 28 A Rutland 0
.Tvoways Ph 4&lt;14 '1587
45775 Ph (614) 7•2 2409 We
del1ver
HOUSE or smoll farm tn country, HuFFINES ond Sons Fix tl Sl!op
Plumbing
electrical
small
call coll.c:t, evenings 592 6010.
appl
washer
and
dryer,
corp
RMponslble couple
repairs and 98 nerol rtpalrs
MOO£-. air cood. 3 room oftlce
Coll388·fl8.17, over 15 yn oxp
tulle, coli or see Morrlt
HOWARD pock Wotor Oolivery .
Hcnklos, ~ 2631
2-15 9315 or 388 8262 doy or

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leJciate

hou,
urool
IRYOftt
mtnea who
1
firm . too 1 &amp;40.000

•NIARLY

------------------:---~

~

cellar house
...
FHA OR VA _ 1 yr old
Zranch In excell~nt con.
"""'
C dillon h., lots to offer lor
~
llllllil: 00 I $21 900 TOtal elettfiC
Y
'
BR
Dhome features 3
s
Ill BEAUTY tN THE WOODS
_ You won't find many like
this one • Secluded brlcdk :,•;\'f~5~bu~~~~Je~a~~o= CI J
ranch II almost new an I 23 acre lot on Neigh IU t
05011 u0 , . . on latres of land
b h d Rd
t:ll •
1, 600 sq ft of or 00
1M 1
area wh ich Includes NEW LISTING- 4 yr old 111 1
l'h both• formal L shaped ranch offers 1,800
1
dm lno rm
with patio sq 1t. ot modtrn living
d 00 rs large LR with bow which includes 3 BRs, 2 .ta l
•
kit h
th b4ths, roomy- kitchen and ••
window ,
c en w 1 dining ar.ee large famllb •A
double oven. range and
'
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diShwasher PLUS a 2 car: rm
With ttrep 1act '"
full basement with PI tlo doors, 2 car garage
garage,
with electr ic door opener •
fireplace and 2 Iorge All thll plus 1 larue flol lot
porches Not bod for only 3 ml out for only $37,500 . .
ll7, 500
I!IZUo BUSINESS - An ::;
BAR BUSINESS &amp; HOTEL tKCOIIent opportunity for
_ Bt our own boss with some business m inded
thiS Onyce In 1 lifetime In penon This large corntr
lot with a modern brick
vestment Located on a .building rs a gooct place to Ill
corner lot In Middleport start C1n bt booaht with &amp;l
Call tor more Information or wlthoug equipment C•ll
PRICE REDUCED TO fOr IPtiAlnlm.on'
~
$26,000 - See thiS 3 BR
C
ranchw ~-•r.ar,pet,gosLISTINOS NEEDED-_.
heat ~ I
large W E
A D V E R T I S I!
a1
back pore..
~II nl1ct NATIONALLY- WE BUY
subdivision ho.. _ In c ly _ SELL- TRADE
school district
111 1

Allen '•thortord

E'ONOMJZE on fuol whh our
1ptdal on 1tone flr~locea
Logue Contractmg b&amp;ock and
bllck - k Ph 388 9939

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.AIU:" MANAGER
8S5SECONDAVENUE
GALLIPCfLtS,l)HlO '

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101

WISEMAN AGENCY

"'-3636

ADDISON - Oldor 3 br .
fremt home on large lot
AIM two aalolnlng toto.
Will stll oil of 11 or part.
Prlcea to HI\

1111111&amp; IUt HOUII
On the marktt today for the
ExcustMt
rnoney 3 or A bedrooms ,
1 sar pardon me , yes vou ,
perfect kllchen, family
vou heven •t seen this no • room
, combo plus formal
melntanente , 2 story with
huge rec room , 3
3 dining.,
larue family room
baths
and
2 car garage
1
bedrooms.
l'h
bo hs ,
Llko
Now
Irick
d lnlno area . very nice
Roolly Worth Tho Money
small kitchen , carpet Hert
Is the cleanest home
throughout, please rook at
on lht market 3 bedrooms ,
this sharp home , pr lc:ed at
beautllol built In kltchan .
$33,!00
IY2 baths , central air , full
basement. overslted 2 car
9arage very , very nice
139,900 00

500 2nd AVE.

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NIW LIITINI ocrt
lot with 111 mobile hoo"'o 't
hoek-up•. Flvt m1111 trom ,r
Oolllpollo on Routo w

Warm, Graclout,tKcetdlngly llvablt,andbullllo 1111
Your own country Htate wl111 a lake, grttn meadows,
woodtd hillsides and lots or wlldllt. This •PPtllling
early American house lncl\ldeo a splendid moctarn
kitchen (micro oven and range, dlahwaahar, trash
moth«, etc ) 5 bedrooms, formal dining, JV. baths,
den or library , huge family and rec. room, 2 fireplaces
trom 15 to 25 ac

33 exciting rewarding years of actively
selling Real Estate In Gallla CoU{lty.

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CANADAY
·R£ALTY
isVJ Locust St.

n..

tmalllokt In It yard. 5 to 6.5 ac plus born and otliar
buildings

YOUR PROPERTY TO SELL

Q

-..:=..::::_

NIW t.IITINI - lltiWoll
ArOI - flow 6 room brick
ond fromo r1nch ''Yit
homt on 4.3 acru. )
llldrooms, 1\'J bl111,, ~
IMIHITIIIIIt, w -ll"ndry room
end area ld . . l for a
llr.,.loce, hot Wlllr
t
and 1 two car gorago Call
us tor 1111 appolntmtnl

Htm an OUIIIIIIdl,. Ollila Co. prtperty
located In tht city school dlatrlct n•r Rio Grinde. A
beautiful 3 bedroom split IIWI wl1h IBrgt family room
and flrtplac:a, 2'12 baths, hHt pumpt, 2 CBr gll'age.

Our most successful year leaves· us low on
listing. We need

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Tol.&amp;1~1tN

THE BEST PLAa
TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY IS
WHERE THE MOS_T
PROPERTY IS SOLD

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REIUOR

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Artllor A. Nlflort, lroktr I

o.dsion

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RfAI.TY

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Is An Important

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SEWNG

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APPROX 6 acre$ m Green Twp
on township rood A~ A216

=90~7
A::cr:::e=tr:.o:o":c,=;5"-":m::';l;le:C
: ,~i,=o=m

Goll lpohs Loc hs 2 larg&amp; pom.!s
stocked w 1th f 1 s~ :ZS acres level
w1th 5 "room frame house and 1
oo1~uld1ng w1ll sell oil or any
por t Fmanclng available w1 lh
small down payment . Ph 256·
M7•or256-6816
3 Bed room bnck heme one mile
from HMC foully corpetd large
li vin g room &amp; large bath por ·
tlolly paneled large front por·
ch &amp; poho oil elec , elec
range Included all for $32 500
Call -446 .4255 anylln:Je

ton pickup,
l1titnd;ord:
6
cylinder,
radiO,
2 BR house 1n c1ty qu1et
green wltll custom
neighborhood Ph ••6 3%4
NICE two bedroom form home '-lrlalna . 10,000 miles. full
BUYING OR SELLING A HOME? At
wh 1ch has been completely
covers Sharp as a
no obhgohon to you I d /1ke
remode led recently large born
one.
you to dr.o p by the oHicr and
In good condltiOfl All th is 111
r hot with me over a cup ot cof
Mg on opprox 17 acres near
fee I don I know oil the
town Buyer coukl taka home
onsw&amp;l'$ e1ther but Ill do my
wolhout acreage Call ~-"i 1~9
best to fmd out whot the
ofter6 OOp m
answtrs are for you Colt or
Mave~ck . 2 Door, '
drop by the office and ste Bob LOT, noor city llm•ts opprox
three fourth of acre cltywoter
Toney Really Gallery of Homes
cylinder,
automatic,
85.5 Second Ave Gallipolis
..u~~ 25S.
clttuxe Interior. radio,
-lAb 7900
I
1 rttal·~· tires, less 111en
2 Bedroom home carpeted, on 25
les, medium brown,
acres clean Jond, good pond
RIVER bottom 12 ocres 500 It
nver frontage Kanawha River,
stockld One troller hool&lt;up,
lltl9e root
Po1nt Pleosont 614 379 2663
~ty of good water Call 2-15-

•3695

t----------.. .
1915

n.ooo

•3495

dY owner 2 bedroom "'m1les out
Mill Creek $16,500. Ph 446
1691

1971 FORD

cROWN Coty 2 bedroo m home,
den, with fireplace, 1 '!J boths,
loundry room kitchen, carpet
double garage
olummum
siding Ph 256 6552
ONlY $4,000 with .A room house &amp;
bath 1 acre t~r'ound w 1th metal
buildmg needs some remodel
1ng work Colt 446 n52 or
•&lt;16 0580
Lor 88 x88
good well and con.
crete bloc:k storage bldg. 7 x9',
2 mobile homes both rented,
Konauga Oh (Gallipolis areo),
,$12,000 Ph 886-8627

SWAIN
AUt.'liOII BARN
WI' sttl anythtng for,
anybody 1t our Auction
81rn or In your home. For
informaUan and pickup
ltfYOCI Clll 256·1"7
Slit &amp;\'try Stturday
Night 117 p m

SWAIN

AUCOON
SERVItE
Kenneth Sw11n, Auc:t.
Cor~tr Third &amp; Olivo

fORD

ENJOY
THE

Meigs County

FAIR
I will be looldnJ for

6 Passenger, Country
Squirt Station Wagon.
flctary air, auto • P S •
P B.. radio, lugg19e rack,
""'"' finish with brown
Interior

1

1795

1967 PLYMOUTH
4 DR.
VB, Auto., PS,
Local Car.
1

you•• •

1695

MERRIL TRIPLETT
FOR STATE REPRISINTATIVI

REPUBLICAN 92ND HOUSE DISTlUCT

LOcated.._
Tile Solver I SNrllo .,...,._

Pd. Pol. Adv.
1'

�._,_;....,,.......R~~.-~st
Results
UBe
The
Sunday
Times-Sentirtel
Orr•
..
~~=

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_-___.,;.

' ~F~~~p~;;R;;;Jt, Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classified.

_____ ! -

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-YOURDREAM

1 yr old brick ranch Oilers 2.1o10 sq It of modern
living Don't walt to see thls3 BRand 2 bl111 home The 111
t:ll
kitchen Is complete wl111 dishwasher, dlsp , microwave _
oven and range Other special features are a large ~
formal d ining rm , family rm , with fireplace, 14x24
living rm, quality carpet. heal pump. 2 sets patio
doors, 12x57 patio and 2 CBr garage with electric door
opener. This beauty Is priced In the 50s and located In 1P"'
st-n by 8PP!IIn~ent.

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THE

I

HIRd'r' Min Spt(lll
If you c an pain t you can
make a qu ick profit here or
have your self a very n ite
bargain nome , 3 or .t
bedroom , large living room
and kitch en 1 car garage
Yours for $27 soo
• overlooking River
Com"letel y
remodeled
older home on a double lot
hiQh an dr y on the river
bank su, lt 1n krtchen ,
wonderfu I shady yard
Owner Moved
New L1sflng- ll-Level
Need A or i · bedrooms '
Large k1tchen (J.III of
cabmets . 21h baths: family
room , a tenths of •c 2 car
garage , city s£h dlstnct ,
more house for lout money
than you 'II buy anywhere
else Pru~ed at $11 ,000 00

~

THEONEYOU'VEIEENWAITINGFOR

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of Spring Valley's finest This attractive bride
ranch Offers 2.500 sq It of modern comfort-ble living j:
otlier special features are a complete kitchen, large 111
LR with fireplace, J or 4 BRs family rm , 2'12 ba111s, ::;
~ cent. air, garage and a large corner lot Must be seen to
1ft epprec!ale Shown by appointment

Ill WALNUT

TWP 7t
111 acru roll ing pasture and
, . woodland , good tenc! s, old
r- buildings, springs, $17,500
COUNTRY BEAUTY - 3
BR br 1ck ranch on 2 ac
Features large LR: w 1th
fireplace. equ opped kit
• chen, d ining rm • 2'h baths,
basement .
With
1111 full
f1replace m fam1ly rm •
cent a1r. and garage A
nice dr1ve to m1nes or
Gavin
NEAR VINTON - u A
Ill mostly ttlllble uround No
-1 build ings 122 ooo
- '
GROCERY BIZ- Corner
Locat1on - This lar~e a 1r
Qcondil
.... otters ioned
a anteblock
In a bulldmg
lifetime
••appartun •tv
to
some
business minded person
All stock and equ ,pment
Ill plus 2 ren tals go with th 1S
llllucrat1ve busmess
..

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446-7900

NEEDED NON

liliE.Etii,~. OUR BUYERS'

LO(;Uif ~,.,

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How arCS a-ralfll1h-=--rokt,.
Office 446,2674
LUCIIIt lrlnnon
"-••· 4"~1126 or 446-2614

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JAY DRIVE

nh:e place to live,

beautiful well kept

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home with 11

AREA LISTINGS
\~try

IIJ

RIVERVIEW
listed 3 BR ond both,

GALLIPOLIS

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three

the
In
In

bedroom on • nice Iaroe

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lot

Ntw LlsiiOI

lltttraw..t Drhr•

_.CITY -

QUIET STREET
Comtorteble 6 rm1 . and
~bath with 1 larve back

1!1-

NJet thrM Hdroam on

'••'•

large lot NIOCfest price.

porch and garage locatt-d
Fifth Ave Prtced to sell
- 111,000
MOAGAN TWP. - Paslure
farm , AI acres c:tean rol ling
.graaslend , good fences,
old
... leroe pond, aprmgs,
-hOUSf'Wifh6rms
anclbath,

vacant Llld

I

~ppro• 17 ocrH tn "d·
.:Ilion Township
Good

bulfdlnt sift for sub
division or 1 baby farm
1CROWN CITY

LISTINGS

Vtrr Hlct Fum
• Route 7, 17 mile
Oolllpolls
Brick

witt. .a a"es of river

1_b!&gt;I!O·~

and p,..,ly ot other

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leautifuU IHroom,

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loth
On 1 19 acres slttlnu
Route 1 A home for
portlculor and hard

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luslnoll Opperhlnlly
E•lsllnu barber shop and
bNuty shop on Route 1 No
blrbtr within several
mlln of this location Also
IOOd far other business or.
rnvtttm~t activities

I

•'
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CIIUNSEL.ORS
&amp;ALL,OLIS
1
Dl. .or X. HIIIIY •46-0012
CROWN CITY
Joo Crans
256-1•56

,.

.

wl111

111e

IAOOtol, DOZlA TRENCHER
DONl liT REASONABLE
RATl Contact Smtih Ex
CGYOtlng Ph 466-:1991

Alt. TY1'H of ~... - k

:m 2621

Ph

011

carpet,
gas fur 10
garage, well landscaped
with plenty shade~ near
town
IE THE JUDGE!
see for yourself if thil isn't
1 good buy The perfect
loca11on
for
school
children, 1 large lawn and
garage for the huSband 1nd
a spacious old home for
mother Create the kitchen
to her likes lor 4 nict BR.
DR, two room bsm with
gas fur, nice front room,
aluminum siding, storm
windows and doors. This is
1 oood buy at 126,250
LARGE FARM
COUNTRY CHARM
190 .acres, 3 barns, 60 a
tractor lind, sprrna water
ond 2 ponds A well buill 6
yr old home, 4 BR,
spacious kitchen, DR, LR
with fireplace, full bsm
and garage
LOTS
3 good building lots In
excellent location Priced
12,000 each
Includes
streets, rural water. un
derground electr•c and
telephone
CHARM· VALUE
Two new homes, well
constructed, 3 BR, 1112
blth, delux
kitchens,
laundry room, w w plush
carP.et, att garage, level
lois Prlcld tor • quick
sale
FACE ITII
The fastest, easiest war to
sen your home Is with your
friend~ YOUR BROKER
Phone 4&lt;14 267• "II Will
Pay"
WE SELL
BETTER LIVING

•'•

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IDEAl RETREAT 26111
acres
a large pond and II
covet
of p ine
trees
\c t hide a
way tOr- •.,.__ weekends
Loca ted abour..., m 1 t r am
Galhpohs , $8.9'00
..1
COMMERCIAL SITE - S lots and otder home on IU
s tate Route 7 1n Kani uga 4ft
L.o~ of potentJ al for $34,000
CLOSE TO MINES - 116 1M
ac farm . mostly clean, ~
level and roll •ng land Good ~
7 r m home
LOTS FOR SUE
Located on Neoghbor hOOd
Rd , Lmcoln P 1ke , Geo rge •"Creek Rd and ROdney v
Harrisburg Rd F ina nc ing

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ava~lables

TOWNS
HARRI ON
HIP WILL TRADE - 66 acres
of woods and grassland
Fronts on 2 roads
CITY- VACANT LANDApprox '11 1cres ruM lng
trom
ourth Ave
to
Chick
aug a
Creek ·
$6,
Don' t wall to buy ,
buy nd wait
NE R MEIGS MINES11 acres on Morgan Lane
f tures a new unf1n1shed A
r
and bath home,
1stern , pond and lots of
privacy Prtced al Sl2,000
NEAR RIO GRANDE Over -4 acres level to rolling
ground with an a lmost new
modular home features
1,l•• sq It ol modern
Jiving AlSO InClUded IS I
new 2 car garage apt
IARGAIN Modern "'
room and bo th home wllh
full basement, ne!ds some

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APMliEIIT

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'190 per mo.
Ph. 4461451

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kitchen with ran9e , oven ,
refrlg , dining room, china
closet , 2 baths , some
furniture . new oversized 2
car oarage
Can you
believe the price $27,500.
Irick Home
600 teet lrontage on US 35
1nd large 3 bedroom brick
with big kll , l'h baths.
dining area , rec room , 2
tire places , 2 car garage ,
will sell lots or home
separate
Ont of Oolllo co.
Nicest Small Farms
73 acres with a good 3
bedroom home, nice kit
chen
w b
fireplace ,
basement, 3 barns, 2 car
garage and granery plus a
100xt4 block bldg cone
floor tor equip
and
workshop a rea 25 to 30 ac
crop land balance Is
pasture All .bUilding have
water and elect In city
school dlst on state Rt 775

• · ~ ·Here 's a Cheapleu
very qood near new 3
bec;troom home with fur
nace , bath , nice kitchen ,
cllv school. $15,900 You
can 't beat this

New Listing
LOW util lheS KISS those big
electric b ills good buy ThiS
perfect 3 bedroom home
has na tural gas heat and
a wOOd burn10g fireplace
Very n ice kitChen , Ph
bath$ and lovely family
room Price Sll,OOO Owner
very anKious
1

&lt;.ONCRHE
WORK
poloos
s1dewalks
basement
etc
Louis Cox ~3398 .
ELECTRICAL Installation
Reg •
Comm lndus tnal 256 6855
Crown C1ly Ohto

REA tTY

Ill

G

BUD McGHEE

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Branch Manager

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oven 1n_. atove,

Smllt~arm

•

S6 Acres
Loti of T imber
small stre1m
Perfect for lake
City School District
Ru,.r water A viii,
Good Home Slle
IJ6,000.00

•

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SANDY and Beaver Insurance Co
has offered Mrv•c•• for Fire In
surance coverogt in Galllo
County for ajmost 'a ('".,tury
CoUGHEililrorWciii&lt;' Dlllvory
Farms hom•• and personal
-16 3'162, ~"''"'time
property
coverages are
land
available to mMI Individual
nee«k Cantoct Chcnles Neal
your neighbor and agef't

--------- --- ----•

BOG&gt; CB Rodlo Equip .
everything In Two·Wfltl Radio,
Antennat and occn. Georges
Creek Rd Gollipoli1 416-•St 7

-

--~

InteriOr,

oo~D!s

II!AUTIPUL IRICII Ill 11'111... YALLil

with troniiDt \n
Crtlk IRd bi.aktap
2 ml off Rl. 7 Two
2 good
m
II
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'

IIODNIY AREA - Vory
nice 5 room frame home
wllh carpet, gard. , nice lot
Prrced reasonable
S1 ACRIS Moolly
woodland,
some
nw
tim btr, and some coal
land HoUse, barn, and
1torage crlba In good
condition
dloposol.
YO II' CAN OECORATE to
suit your taste, nearl
finiShed, 3 BR. l'h
contemporary,
kitchen famll
range, hood dl~:h_"!!"\~!!;:il
disposal , oven, over
sq ft , cent air,
school• S34 000

U ACR•s- Plenty of road
frontage with established
1i10blle home site Land IS
ciHrtd end fenced
~A:. Arnold •46-0756
a. Evannll-1111
&amp;. M1Uio•"·1911
D. Woods •46-9210

EXCAV...riNG dozer backhoe
and d1tcher Charles R Hotflelst Bock·~ Hoe Service,
Rutland OtHo 1 7.o422008 or

HOME ANO INCOME
Two 12lc:60 mS)blle homes ,
fully furnished, air !:Ond ,
rural water, septic tank , lg
tot $16.000

Mldlcal Technologist
FOR LABOI111TORY work, EKG 1
and assist wtth palients and
physklon, off1ce Write PO Box
ACREAGE
Ap
&gt;&lt;t"'
834, Huntington, W Va
f proximately 60 acres in
Gallipolis Twp , off Rt 160,
GIFT SHOP Solto person, lull
between Gallipolis City and
" ~~
time, exp nee., ref required
Rt 35 Price SlO,OOO
I 9 evening hours. Send
At R . . . . ._._.
A~ ~
rnume to lox 490 ll". GoiUpollll
proximately 3 acres ad
n .-1
Tribune
facent to Rt 160. between
GalllpOIII City and Rt 35,
~ ~" c;RTT or eligible preferably o
near hospital Price $7 ,500,
'~'
graduate of on approved
technician program to super·
vlH and anlst dtredor of
respiratory therapy In 110 bed
aeute area hospital Hours 8
a m to .o4
m Monday thru
Friday. Pal
hosp•tolizahon
Wogot $3.90 to S.. :10 per hoyr
Contact lob Casto ARRT at
O'aleneu Hospital Athens,
61•·593-5551, ext 340 lin
RIO GRANDE AREA•
Equol Opportunity Employ"'
26 xco•, 2 bedroom cottage
sltua ted on 1 acre lot 2 car
NOW HIRING, $50 uross wages
garage , wired and ln .
starting 2 days a month free
sulated modern kitchen,
lunch 2 days, work clothing fur
rural water , F A fuel all
'"' nished, over 40 technical lurnace Price S23,000
cor"r opportunities many fr ·
4 BEOROOM CARPETED
lngo bonoflts IN YOUR AREA
HOME near Cloy School,
- 9 :10 August 1976, contocl by
Gallipolis
City
S D ,
phone SSG Roger 0 Garrett
situated on I acre lot, w b
'
Wnt Vlrglnio Army Natonol
tlreplect, unique living and
'
Guard ot •&lt;16•7476 or ••6-2560
dining room Call for more
SSG Garrett will bot eosily
Information
recognized driving around In
C1ll WIIOdlnsunnce&amp;
his red, white and blue teep
Rullstoto •u 1ot•
Flou him down
Evenings Runt II Wood
U6-4611
Kto Morton •46-0971

PORTERBROOK - Brock
and frame ranch, 3 BR, 1'11
baths , all electr ic. fully
carpeted, patio for family
cookouts , c1ty schools
$35,000

'

~·676117

TtME TO CHECK AIR CONDI- ,
TIONERS RESIDENTIAL liND
COMMERCIAL CAH D MY
REFRIGERATION, 18 YRS EXPERIENCE
AND SCHOOL
TRAINED PHONE 388 8274

30J

•

-.

"

BUILD YOUR HOME on
this 3 acre lot with pic
tur'"'que view of the OhiO
R lver. 16,300
MOBILE HOME 3 BR
range , refrlg , oven, gas
htat , on perm foundation
with two built on additions
A:lso hils porch and garage,
on 1 27 acres Very well
~ept S12.500
SUMMER PLACE or year
round home , 3 rm fully
furnished cabin on 3
beautiful wooded acres
Call for more Information
GEORGE'S
CREEK
ROAD
100KI50'
lOt
suitable for mobile home or
building site R:ural wa ~er
available 12,250

RON CANADAY
REALTOR
Audrey Canaday
Sa leswontan

Gallipolis School Dlstrld B rooms plus 1'1&gt; bl111s.
bltemtnt, 2 car garage. natural gas FA furnace,• 2
flroplaces. All walls ore plaster (white) Storm doors
end windows Real modern kitchen with dishwasher
Nice homo In a nice community Must see
IMMEOIATE
liOACRES PLUS
POSSESSION
Vacant - A woodland
IN GALLIPOLIS
wonderland
some
Owner moving out ot town,
pasture end tillable lanes
must sell Immediately
L.ess then $160,00 oer acre
Nice homo ' Beautiful
PRICE REDUCED
wooded
lOt,
walking
A PLEASING
distance to city schools 3
COUNTRY HO"E
Bedrooms. formal d ining
m
7 R:ooms and bath Verv
room, nice mOdern kitchen.
0 1Ce kltcnen with table top
rul ly carpeted, f in ished
garage 1 nat vas forced air
rano e, refrigerator , d is h
IU rance, central air Won ' t wash er washer ancs dryer
New beau ti fully
con
last long, see It now
structect me tal barn Good
TRI·LEVEL
fen c es tor cat tle or horses
(LIKE NEW,
Large garden space level
Ovtr 3.000 SQ ft living I 99
acre s
Pr iced
space , "' bedrooms , 3 baths , 129,900 oo
fhermopane doors and
feE CREAM•
w•ndows Electric hell l'd
A SANDWICH SHOP
central arr Rural water A GOOd going bus lnvs
system , 2 car garaQe , A 1 1 d
sta te Highway
.cr.. Of land Lo ts of other oca e on
160 In a nice commun ity
features
Land . brick bu lld lnu .
COMMERCIAL
equipmtnf 1 and all stoc k
IWILI:iillG &amp; SITE
goes Priced rlgM
State Highway 7 North
UAUTIFUL
Masonry Building with
3 BEDROOM
brick front, build ing like
Full ba&amp;ement wllh a large
new Approx size 30 'x2A' 2 fam ilY. room, 2 beths ,
story Level lo1 fronts 17S garage , central air , n1ce
ft on Sfate Highway 7 Calf ca~ petmg, real nice krt
now
_
_
ch. .en
.
Located on 1 large
21i ACR:ES
lot Approx 2 years old
6 R:oom nome , F A fur
You must see the ins ide of
nace ,
wood burnrng thiS house to appreciate
f1replace , .-4 barns . m•I J&lt;.
12 ACRI:S RT 325
house , 500galfon m il k Janie
Near Meigs Mines , has
good fencing , all mineral barn . storage bu ilding.
r igtlts goes , lots of Pasture . farm pond Presef\tiY has
approx 25 a c res Of 1111able
one tnuler rental space
Off State Route 218
-ThiS can be developed 10to
NEIGH&amp;ORHOOD R:OAD
a n ice mcarne property
GREEN TOWNSHIP
6 Room home , bath ,
168 ACRES
modern kllchen , natura l
GOOD CATTLE FARM
gas F A furnace . air Lots of poulbllltles , 21arge
cond 1troner washer and stock barns , good concre'e
dryer Priced only S13,900 round stock water In
This ctn be bOUQht on a trough
30
acres
In
land contnct
cultivation, 1200 tb tobacco
310 ACit!S
bas.e tots of new fencing
NICE HOME
Plenty wate r in fields 10
A
wonderful
couple acres timber Owner ri!ally
developed th1S attractive anKious to sell, can be
farm
homestead
At
bought as a smgle unit or
tractive modern 6 room smaller amounts
hOmt, very pretty sethng
Barn, nice 'h acre pond
21EDROOM
stocked with fish Gooa 1Acra Plus _ level . IP·
meadow
and
fescue rox
l lh miles from
pasture I deal for cattle or ~
Ita I on blacktop rd
horses 10 acres timber Po,spt of ""lrdtn spice,
with trails to r ide In
en Y...... ..,_,-. _
Teacher being transferred, 'T \lrll water. country living
Immed iate possession Call Cion to GaMIP'OIIs Prlud
now
only S18,000
2 STORY
COUNTRY HOME
";PRUCE STREET
11.4 acres, S miles from
IN GALLtPOLtS
all i polls, 7 rooms . 4 3 Bedroom modern hom'
drooms.
artlal with built In cabinets ,
rt~;;;~:r:uel
forced alumirtum Siding Total
rural watet , electric, aarden spece
Dlst
Within walking distance of
lrontau• on downtown Gallipolis

~

... ---:·""'

. .

.

C~L

.

41EDROOMJ-ROUTI . .

LIIDY to 11¥1 In and do light
houHwork call388 8126
APPLICATIO~S

It' san older home with 3 or 4 BR natural gas heat, city
schools, lots of like new carpet, 'I• acre flat lot, and the
PRICE IS RIGHT. call VS REALTY today

'

SPECIAL
New full size brass btd with box
$239.95
springs and mattress

PHONE 446-0552 - ANmME
428 2nd AVE.

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

~~--------------------·.~~.::s~.~f.:::{~:~

I
'

.~.. l,lJ1~!~~.~

12d.O mobile home, one mile MOBILE homo, I br, $1.0,
ulihtlto pold 4&lt;14 ••t6 ofter 6
lrom HMC Rt 35 Ph 4.6 3805
~
pm .

end CHy IIWtr.

muat lie
, filioN t41-U45
lowm1n. Mlltall'·

Positions Availlble
Rtglstertd Nurstt

Llcenotd ProctiCII Nu,_
Excellnt frln .. ltentflll
Cont1ct LAura Cornwell,

R.N. at

GAlLIPOLIS

STATE INST1TUTE
Ph. 441M2 Ext. 213
An

Equal Clttportunlty
Empto,.e

·~--~--------~~~

Apply In Pea IWr. ••

Bob Evans Drive-In

---.

'

LICENSED
INSURANCE AGENT
1 Qualified loadslurnlshtd
2 Most pre eJic\sting condition
covered
3 Work out at your hom.
4 Compony bonoflll furnished
Call collect 61•-6181 boiwoen 9
am and I p m

CURB
WAITRISSES

Mo:;F'

m altl ., lll'~~tr. $45
.n.rt1IOp.m. Riehl

•so

NcM TUIRL~ For

e'JC70',

Park I.IMMIIIIIIe ttom• Court,4ml. Wftlof
Galllpolll, at. U. BIICktop 11reeta,
completelY medenl flcllltltll excelllnt
H¥1
COIIIIt1Jelll• O.lllpols ,aty lcboOI
llletrlc or .....,.. .-.. City ~

.,..:lcf,

sz:i"::

Nice vinyl lounge cft•lr
MO.OO
Mlh Corner Cabinet
saa.oo
Cof~ and end tablel
$10.00 seflnd up
Sliding,.....,. china cabinet_ suus

FOR lENT
UmltiCI numW of LlfS IVI~IIIiltt

14lJsed refrigerators, ____ $3S. and up
Breakfast sets
Whitetop oven range. Electric:.
$1 ,_,
New Ht bunk beds
s21u 55
8111 cabinets :..--::--::--=::;::~11. and up
Chest 1nd dresH~
New Early Amlerclfl2 pc. living room
~~~"'
suIt•

now taken for
broiler cooks at Holldoy Inn
Poke St Golllpolls.

161 ACRES
NEAR PORTER
New house Linder constr
plus It room farm house.
bern &amp; other outbulldlnos
Approx
uo ecru of
pasturt and timber &amp;
approx 21 ac r es of tillable
land All m ineral rights
goes, scm e gooG-fe'*es All
land &amp; house\ fo r only
155.000 Now

U'lA, BARN ,
LOG CABIN
1,000 lbs rooacca base , nfce
40'Jl60' barn , 30 A gaod size
ti mber, 8 A lllll!f&gt;le , Ill
m ineral rights goe._ This
farm can bt bOught on
land Cont ract Call
LA~OE

COUNTRY HOME
PLUS II ACRES
7
rooms
frame,
4
bedrooms , with bath , lots
of bulft In cabinets, good
small barn , blacktop road
Priced Oll!.Y $16 ,000
MIDDLEPORT.
BUSINESS I~COME
PROPERTY
Up to SUO 00 per month
Rentals. plus a beautiful 7
room (J bedrooms) home
to live In yourself a1um .1
siding, good grade, nice
front porch , lots of built In ,
cabinets, table top range,
wall oven . laundry tubs,
nat gas forced air furnace, 1
centr:al air. Wood burning '
flreplact Lots of snrub ·
bery, level grassy tot A
beautifu l place plus a n ice
Income. Priced rloht

1

SPRING VALLEY
I STATES

ftooms

plua.

2 balht

Basement. ramlty room
nice modern kitchen (diSh
waSher , tab le top range . ~
built In wall oven J Natural
gas, forced air furnace,
hardwood floors , 2 wood
burn ing fireplaces Large
lot Priced to sell

•

TARA ESTATES
ONLYS41,QQO
Beautiful 8 room house,
1881 sq ft living space
Featur ing 3 BR: with del uxe
walk in closets, 2 baths, lg
attrac tlve F R, beautif Ul
rock, field stone fireplace
Formal DR Builtin kit
chen Imported light fi x
tur es and pewter door
hardware Also enloy the
use of Club House &amp;
Sw i mming Poo l Priced
Reduced to S..8,000

LOT &amp; _ _
MOITI:TROMJ!
~
In Porttr
to~x50',
2!
bedrooros. Elcona, NIce
lot, 305 acre lovi Prlctd'
fin"' _14, 900
Large
cod Hom•
2300 sq ft o llvln5J space, .o4
bedrooms, 2 bllhs, formal
living roam wltn W B.1
fireplace , family room,
completely furnished
kitchen , counter top range,
built in wall oven, disposal
&amp; dishwasher. 2 car
garage, located on 1 acre In
Gall ipolis City School Dlst
See Th is
_ _
A WISE INVESTM.NT
6 R:oom ho11se. 71 A , b1rn
and utility bulldlnu House
hn a built rn kitchen.
running water , FA fur - ,
nace Several 1cres of 1
tillable land , 1.296 lb . '
tobacco base, lots of
pasture and some timber .
All for $23,000 00

l

13A CRES
CLEAN
On! Of Gallla County's
cleanest Hill Farms It has
good clean pasture, no
br ters, brushes or rocks
Plenty of w•ter 1025 lb
tobacco base , some aooct
ti mber, attractive f•rm. 4
room
cottaglt,
barn,
ctllcken houst Tlkt over
where a deserving couple
have retired Not mtnr like
rt , call now
111 ACRE FARM
NEAR RIO GRANDE
Gallipolis School District, 2
barns. 2 sheds . approK 20
acres 01 pasture. 40 acres
ot gOOd timber {Oak a.
Pine) Approx '20 acres of
tillable land All mineral
rights goes, tobacco base,
some farm machinery,
livestock Chogs and laying
hens ) 3 Rural Water taps
paid All crops goes 2
mabrle homes Cone is
14'x65') and a 5 room attic
house Just listed
7 ROOMS
• BEDROOMS
Galli pol iS School Distric t,
basement , 1 1h
b aths,
modern k 1tchen , complete
with b irch cab inets , F A
turnace, carpor t, 2 wood
burn ing firep la ces family
room large lot w•th fruit
trees and a storage
building Within 5 miles or
Gallipolis. Nice hOme at 1
good price

.

CALL NOW. OFFiCE 446-7699 HOME 446-9539

auto , P .S , white with lllut
Inter I or, t x c tllent
condition

1

1695

71' atEVY IMPMA
Custom 2 dr ., V 8, auto.,
P.S •• P B. a ir. beige wltll
blade vinyl roof

'1795
72 FORD
Grind Torino Sport l'aat.
leek. 2 dr. hardtop, 251'
Cleveland, V 8, auto 1 P .S ..
,,8 . radio, road wheel•,
vinyl roof, vety hard to
find

'2195
1974

v.w.

CGnvertlblt, orange finish,
blade INtherettelntarior, ~
......,, radio, white sidewell llrts, low mllttgt.

•3195
1974 DODGE
Dart Swloger, 2
hardtop.
6
~IInder,
•tanderd transmlnlon ,
radio, dark ,,....._,, blade
Interior. -Y' ~erp

72 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 Dr HT, V-1. auto.. P S.~
P.B , air, vinyl roof, loc.lly
owned
Brown w-btslge
vinyl roof.

'1M5
72 VOLKSWAGEN
Type II, 4

,puc~, radiO,
blue wl111 grey Interior

'1495
75 QIEVY

1972 14x65 W1mhor Mob1le
USED MOBILE HOMES
Home central air &amp; ac
CALL 516 2711
cenone! exc cond Ph 'MJ7
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel underpin
0418
our mobile home and anchor
3
8R all el~;~ctnc double wtde
ror safety Foster Mobile Home
mobile home on lot Rt 160, 2
Service, 4A6 2783 or Elmer Sk 1d
m1leS of Porter Ruuelll Boll
more 446 3479
197• Kirk wood. 12x60, oil e lec
1971 Homette 12x60 2 br
fn c central Olf underp1nmng
1971 Kirkwood 12•65 expondo 3
10x7 ut1hty bu1ld1ng priced to
br
sell at $6 000 446 7346 or AA6
1970 El&lt;ona 12x62 2 br
03SA
1971 Oetroller 12x60 2 br
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
1959 8 K35 Mobile home carpet
Pt Pleasant W Va
very clean, could be used for
offlco Ph 379 2281
PRICES REDUCED
TRAVEL TRMERS
1964 10 x 50 with lipout 2
1977 25 Cordobc
bedroom mobile home, carpel ,
1977 1B Solari
some furn iture included $2500
196417 Fon
Call 446 0820
196316' Loylon
1'16414 DeCamp
196" lOICSO with tlpout
2
MOBILE HOMES
bedroom mobile home carpel
197312x60Gieon 8roof&lt;
some furniture mduded $2500
Call ~•6 0820
1972 12•6-Hroedom
196612x60Marlette
\959 8x~ mobile home carpet
1'160 10x50Fieotwood
very deon could be used for
19538•27. 1 br
off1ce Ph 379 2281
Trl Stal• Mobile Homes Sal&amp;s
1220 Eostarn Ave Gallipolis
1976 Mobile home 3 BR, tolol
Oh 8onk Financing
olec $6800 Ph ••6-4568
2x60
Mobile
Home
with
t1lt-out
1
on private lot, near Kyger
CrHk HS 3 br central o.r gas
heat, clean and good cond
OWN YOUR OWN FASHION
SHOP Over 1SO Notionally
Adverllted Name Brands ore
available ta your shop Jumo.r
&amp; Missy styles Continuous buy
CARTERS PLUMBING
lng serv1ce Complete framing
AND HEATING
program. lnrtial Inventory
Cor Fourth &amp; Pine
Grand opening promotion '
Phone •-"i·3888 or
Your choice of fixture decors
ST...NDARO
VIsit our shops or tolk to our I
owners Compare our shops
Plumbing • Hoollnu
with ~n• s Investment Re
215 Third Avo , 446 3782
qulred $18 500 00 Coli Collect
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
(813)922-07881orMr ~flo"... .
PlUMBING _ Heotong - Air
Conditioning 300 Fourth A11t.
Ph 416-1637
DEWm S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
ROOMMATE wanted to share two
bedroom apartment
Coli
loutel60at Evergreen
P"-446-2735
-days ofe!~ p m 4•6 319•

•.u ••m

•

72 PLYMOUIH
FURY IU
,JTI

c•r•

We're Out To Sell The E?arth.
We Need Your Home or Farm to Sell.

~~~=========;;;

---------

'2495

Gallipolis ~chool Ols1t'lct. lots of room, biHment,
family room , 20;, baths, garage, modern kitchen. wood·
burning fireplace, large lot and garden space, storaght1
bulldlnu, approx 8'x10'. Close to Rodney Priced rig •

446·3636

In the vl 1119e of Cheshlr~ronllng on State Route 7
If's an plder h~ ery livable. When one
considers 111e lots
res) and the location, It Is
conceivable that
. decision today could mean
profits tomorrow.

low

soo-

. •'

5-Now 4 pc. bedroom sulfto, plno or maplll, shiner
ltoxmlrror . AtgularS.99.95
Salll$299.95
l-Bookcua hudboard bedroom sullts. Reg.
,
Sl99 95
Sale Prl~ed $239.95
3-4'pc. btdroom suites. Reg. 1299.95--.:...Salll Price(~
$199.95
'
4-Soll glass top tables. Reg.S249.95 ser-Salt Priced
$16U5 stl

~ ...... cyl ..
P S., rtdla. white
IIICII-1!1111 tlr.., ""'He wttll

Galaxle
4 door, V-t.
automatic, P.S , P. 1., tact.
air, red flnltl1, black
lntorlor. black vinyl tap,

40 ACRIS Moally
cleeroct rolllnu land 2 br
home well Insulated, alum
Siding. 2 drilled wella, barn
and other storaoe bldgs

I

MMy of you hlive calltd 1boul thtl beauty an Debby
Dr 1 feel sure 111at 1 personal tour of 1111s fine home will
con~ Inee you that 1111s Is without a doubt one of the blst
buys en the real estate market today. For en
appointment call VS REALTY today

1974 atm IOVA

1973 FORD

0

W

Ph. Home 446-2885
G•Uia County:. p..,_, ~ Real E,qte Apncy

'2695

RIYIIPIIDNT LOTS ldlliiY lOCI lad On Rt . 7 for
the roc,.tllon m lndtd or
lar' Investment

45 Ac. 11 rt Land
15 ac pasture balance Is
wooded Near Yt(aterloo
' We Have
Lots ~nd lots of lots for
building your dream home
From 1 to 20 ac

I

Aslocilll

Ph. flame 379-2114

Woll

·~~~:~~'! CIIIIK liD. -

:"

!

This modern l-thaped all bride home ""' mort lltln
ample room . 11 Is situated on 1 full acre lot Backyard
Is fenced. From the comfortable family room (with
fireplace) you have easy access to all parts of lite
home, For further details call VS REALTY today.

-

Wllllar, comDinld froozer .
rolrlg Locotld off 5N · on
CrOUII lock ROIG Mutt
lot to opprocloto

111 Ac
All rolling to hill and all
covered with timber Good
huntlno with small stream
and good home site
Greenfield Twp

I

1

Nl
and frlme ham•
lot ~ Br, 2 bltfll,
rm , lg . flroplaeo,
arapn, bulll·ln

ECONOMY Tractors ond Equ1p
ment Carrolls So les and Ser
vice 2 m1les West on 588 Ph
4&lt;16 m3
TV REPAIRS RENTALS
FOR lhe best 10 architectural
Serv1ce C~lls
design and buldrng cf new
PICture Tube Speciohsts
homes
small commercial
HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
bu1ld1ngs, apt , or remodeling
245 5365
w1th state oppro~ol ..of pions
Btll Walker 4•6-21•6 or 446
8652
BoRDERS GARAGE DOOR Ser. 1
ANY and all types of construction
v1ce Commercial and Reslden
ond concrete work Doter
hal Speclahzmg 1n operators
backhoe dumptruck serv1ce
local 256-6472
I
Stewart Construction ~all 256· PASQUALE Insulating 103 Cador !
1911 for tree est1mate
St, Gollipal 11 Ph .t.a6 2716 or 1
Stewart Construction Bo~ J35,
4.o46--109'2
0
=C=row
:::::n7C:::il~y·c::::h;:;io::_-:;--;;;;::;: ; CusTOM REMODELING :10 yooro
SEPTIC Tonks Cleaned Plants
e xpertence, 388 8308 New dry
Septic Tank Ser'o41ce Ph. 4.o46
wall ce1Bng with swirl or tax
1fl72 or 675 26A7
ture dnigns Other dry woll,
0 Ooy Refrigerator commercial
repau vinyl wallpoperlng, new 1
and residential schooling a 18
baths new kltch•n• Anything
yn exp Ph. 388-8274
! __:l:n:.;.:
rt:::m:::o=d•'.::
ln"'gc:o_r_re_,p_o lr---:=

-

nlg~t

~

AI Whit YQu're Mining
Almost new 4 bedroum
home completely built In

Z

NG- WE SELL MORE

SPRING VAU.EY
GREEN

Don•tMin
This Opportunity
Seldom will you have a
,hante at one like this
small fam ll y run motel,
pl"-'s good , 3 bedroom hom.e
on the river in town Will
pay tor itself 1n a few short
years Let your wife run It
and double your lnc:omt

vs

1r:

SLEEPING Rooms woekly rotes
IACKHOE I Dozer work, aloo top
Pork Central Hotel
aoll ond Hll dirt avolloblo 3)9,
PROWLER
LOW
weekly and monthly rotH at
:mll
TRAVEL
trollers
' " the No I
Libby Hotel, ••6 17•3
seller 1n the USA Smiths Hon
BICENTENNI"L
LIGHT housokHplnu room, Park
do SoiM St At 7 Galhpolis
SPECIAL
C~tral Hotel
Oh.o -1&lt;16 2240.
Complete auto point 1ob on•
color only $76 00. 2 tono$100 2 TRAILER 1pacos locoted in STIIACRAFT 1977 22 II Dodge
yAYLOR S Air Cond1t1on•ng and
Month of July only Stop •n at
Choshlro riOdy for hook up
M•nl -l«l onu $14,300 now
Refngltfation Commercial and
hnon 11ody Shop, 26 lallrood
Phone 367 0505
$12,500 All 1976 traolors, lold
domestic, _.46 22Jt7.
II . Middleport Oh,o or call
downs and m1nls reduced 1977
SLEEPING rooms lor rent Gallto
361.0165
u"'t' arriving doily Camp Con
TRUSSED RAFTERS
Hotel
loy Starcrolt So 1., Rt 62 N
~JittiR•L Conlroctors Do all
Any
pitch
any
size ,
_ . ,, corpontor &amp; plumb OFFK:E space downtown 51 AS.·
Southeastern Ohio Truss Rofter
Pt Pll W Vo
cond
Avo
••6.(1006
Ina Install and repair all
, Co Box 28 A Rutland 0
.Tvoways Ph 4&lt;14 '1587
45775 Ph (614) 7•2 2409 We
del1ver
HOUSE or smoll farm tn country, HuFFINES ond Sons Fix tl Sl!op
Plumbing
electrical
small
call coll.c:t, evenings 592 6010.
appl
washer
and
dryer,
corp
RMponslble couple
repairs and 98 nerol rtpalrs
MOO£-. air cood. 3 room oftlce
Coll388·fl8.17, over 15 yn oxp
tulle, coli or see Morrlt
HOWARD pock Wotor Oolivery .
Hcnklos, ~ 2631
2-15 9315 or 388 8262 doy or

I

l.QQK

leJciate

hou,
urool
IRYOftt
mtnea who
1
firm . too 1 &amp;40.000

•NIARLY

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~

cellar house
...
FHA OR VA _ 1 yr old
Zranch In excell~nt con.
"""'
C dillon h., lots to offer lor
~
llllllil: 00 I $21 900 TOtal elettfiC
Y
'
BR
Dhome features 3
s
Ill BEAUTY tN THE WOODS
_ You won't find many like
this one • Secluded brlcdk :,•;\'f~5~bu~~~~Je~a~~o= CI J
ranch II almost new an I 23 acre lot on Neigh IU t
05011 u0 , . . on latres of land
b h d Rd
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1, 600 sq ft of or 00
1M 1
area wh ich Includes NEW LISTING- 4 yr old 111 1
l'h both• formal L shaped ranch offers 1,800
1
dm lno rm
with patio sq 1t. ot modtrn living
d 00 rs large LR with bow which includes 3 BRs, 2 .ta l
•
kit h
th b4ths, roomy- kitchen and ••
window ,
c en w 1 dining ar.ee large famllb •A
double oven. range and
'
v ,,
diShwasher PLUS a 2 car: rm
With ttrep 1act '"
full basement with PI tlo doors, 2 car garage
garage,
with electr ic door opener •
fireplace and 2 Iorge All thll plus 1 larue flol lot
porches Not bod for only 3 ml out for only $37,500 . .
ll7, 500
I!IZUo BUSINESS - An ::;
BAR BUSINESS &amp; HOTEL tKCOIIent opportunity for
_ Bt our own boss with some business m inded
thiS Onyce In 1 lifetime In penon This large corntr
lot with a modern brick
vestment Located on a .building rs a gooct place to Ill
corner lot In Middleport start C1n bt booaht with &amp;l
Call tor more Information or wlthoug equipment C•ll
PRICE REDUCED TO fOr IPtiAlnlm.on'
~
$26,000 - See thiS 3 BR
C
ranchw ~-•r.ar,pet,gosLISTINOS NEEDED-_.
heat ~ I
large W E
A D V E R T I S I!
a1
back pore..
~II nl1ct NATIONALLY- WE BUY
subdivision ho.. _ In c ly _ SELL- TRADE
school district
111 1

Allen '•thortord

E'ONOMJZE on fuol whh our
1ptdal on 1tone flr~locea
Logue Contractmg b&amp;ock and
bllck - k Ph 388 9939

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LAftc
.AIU:" MANAGER
8S5SECONDAVENUE
GALLIPCfLtS,l)HlO '

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446-3643

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101

WISEMAN AGENCY

"'-3636

ADDISON - Oldor 3 br .
fremt home on large lot
AIM two aalolnlng toto.
Will stll oil of 11 or part.
Prlcea to HI\

1111111&amp; IUt HOUII
On the marktt today for the
ExcustMt
rnoney 3 or A bedrooms ,
1 sar pardon me , yes vou ,
perfect kllchen, family
vou heven •t seen this no • room
, combo plus formal
melntanente , 2 story with
huge rec room , 3
3 dining.,
larue family room
baths
and
2 car garage
1
bedrooms.
l'h
bo hs ,
Llko
Now
Irick
d lnlno area . very nice
Roolly Worth Tho Money
small kitchen , carpet Hert
Is the cleanest home
throughout, please rook at
on lht market 3 bedrooms ,
this sharp home , pr lc:ed at
beautllol built In kltchan .
$33,!00
IY2 baths , central air , full
basement. overslted 2 car
9arage very , very nice
139,900 00

500 2nd AVE.

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NIW LIITINI ocrt
lot with 111 mobile hoo"'o 't
hoek-up•. Flvt m1111 trom ,r
Oolllpollo on Routo w

Warm, Graclout,tKcetdlngly llvablt,andbullllo 1111
Your own country Htate wl111 a lake, grttn meadows,
woodtd hillsides and lots or wlldllt. This •PPtllling
early American house lncl\ldeo a splendid moctarn
kitchen (micro oven and range, dlahwaahar, trash
moth«, etc ) 5 bedrooms, formal dining, JV. baths,
den or library , huge family and rec. room, 2 fireplaces
trom 15 to 25 ac

33 exciting rewarding years of actively
selling Real Estate In Gallla CoU{lty.

tC

CANADAY
·R£ALTY
isVJ Locust St.

n..

tmalllokt In It yard. 5 to 6.5 ac plus born and otliar
buildings

YOUR PROPERTY TO SELL

Q

-..:=..::::_

NIW t.IITINI - lltiWoll
ArOI - flow 6 room brick
ond fromo r1nch ''Yit
homt on 4.3 acru. )
llldrooms, 1\'J bl111,, ~
IMIHITIIIIIt, w -ll"ndry room
end area ld . . l for a
llr.,.loce, hot Wlllr
t
and 1 two car gorago Call
us tor 1111 appolntmtnl

Htm an OUIIIIIIdl,. Ollila Co. prtperty
located In tht city school dlatrlct n•r Rio Grinde. A
beautiful 3 bedroom split IIWI wl1h IBrgt family room
and flrtplac:a, 2'12 baths, hHt pumpt, 2 CBr gll'age.

Our most successful year leaves· us low on
listing. We need

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-

Tol.&amp;1~1tN

THE BEST PLAa
TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY IS
WHERE THE MOS_T
PROPERTY IS SOLD

.z,.,
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Ill

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REIUOR

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-

n lflltllrHI
Artllor A. Nlflort, lroktr I

o.dsion

t l-' l l l " -

= -

RfAI.TY

~·­
Is An Important

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--=:-- -=--

-

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SEWNG

-

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APPROX 6 acre$ m Green Twp
on township rood A~ A216

=90~7
A::cr:::e=tr:.o:o":c,=;5"-":m::';l;le:C
: ,~i,=o=m

Goll lpohs Loc hs 2 larg&amp; pom.!s
stocked w 1th f 1 s~ :ZS acres level
w1th 5 "room frame house and 1
oo1~uld1ng w1ll sell oil or any
por t Fmanclng available w1 lh
small down payment . Ph 256·
M7•or256-6816
3 Bed room bnck heme one mile
from HMC foully corpetd large
li vin g room &amp; large bath por ·
tlolly paneled large front por·
ch &amp; poho oil elec , elec
range Included all for $32 500
Call -446 .4255 anylln:Je

ton pickup,
l1titnd;ord:
6
cylinder,
radiO,
2 BR house 1n c1ty qu1et
green wltll custom
neighborhood Ph ••6 3%4
NICE two bedroom form home '-lrlalna . 10,000 miles. full
BUYING OR SELLING A HOME? At
wh 1ch has been completely
covers Sharp as a
no obhgohon to you I d /1ke
remode led recently large born
one.
you to dr.o p by the oHicr and
In good condltiOfl All th is 111
r hot with me over a cup ot cof
Mg on opprox 17 acres near
fee I don I know oil the
town Buyer coukl taka home
onsw&amp;l'$ e1ther but Ill do my
wolhout acreage Call ~-"i 1~9
best to fmd out whot the
ofter6 OOp m
answtrs are for you Colt or
Mave~ck . 2 Door, '
drop by the office and ste Bob LOT, noor city llm•ts opprox
three fourth of acre cltywoter
Toney Really Gallery of Homes
cylinder,
automatic,
85.5 Second Ave Gallipolis
..u~~ 25S.
clttuxe Interior. radio,
-lAb 7900
I
1 rttal·~· tires, less 111en
2 Bedroom home carpeted, on 25
les, medium brown,
acres clean Jond, good pond
RIVER bottom 12 ocres 500 It
nver frontage Kanawha River,
stockld One troller hool&lt;up,
lltl9e root
Po1nt Pleosont 614 379 2663
~ty of good water Call 2-15-

•3695

t----------.. .
1915

n.ooo

•3495

dY owner 2 bedroom "'m1les out
Mill Creek $16,500. Ph 446
1691

1971 FORD

cROWN Coty 2 bedroo m home,
den, with fireplace, 1 '!J boths,
loundry room kitchen, carpet
double garage
olummum
siding Ph 256 6552
ONlY $4,000 with .A room house &amp;
bath 1 acre t~r'ound w 1th metal
buildmg needs some remodel
1ng work Colt 446 n52 or
•&lt;16 0580
Lor 88 x88
good well and con.
crete bloc:k storage bldg. 7 x9',
2 mobile homes both rented,
Konauga Oh (Gallipolis areo),
,$12,000 Ph 886-8627

SWAIN
AUt.'liOII BARN
WI' sttl anythtng for,
anybody 1t our Auction
81rn or In your home. For
informaUan and pickup
ltfYOCI Clll 256·1"7
Slit &amp;\'try Stturday
Night 117 p m

SWAIN

AUCOON
SERVItE
Kenneth Sw11n, Auc:t.
Cor~tr Third &amp; Olivo

fORD

ENJOY
THE

Meigs County

FAIR
I will be looldnJ for

6 Passenger, Country
Squirt Station Wagon.
flctary air, auto • P S •
P B.. radio, lugg19e rack,
""'"' finish with brown
Interior

1

1795

1967 PLYMOUTH
4 DR.
VB, Auto., PS,
Local Car.
1

you•• •

1695

MERRIL TRIPLETT
FOR STATE REPRISINTATIVI

REPUBLICAN 92ND HOUSE DISTlUCT

LOcated.._
Tile Solver I SNrllo .,...,._

Pd. Pol. Adv.
1'

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.·
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.. You ju81 have to find the good people
\

Jl -Tbt &amp;~~ay,...._·Sta''nt! ~.AU«.15.197&amp;

Tawney:
.,.... ,....., How to travel and love it
.

Your Wayne National Forest
B~~i~:~·~~:~:r

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a lawsuit, tbere
llrvleeprovldedbftbu........
IRONTON _ "Good morning,
isn't much to be done. I've seen
. checllllat of pro~ "-e lbe
u. s. Forest Service."
limber harvest o9eraUoris In this
landowner lbould put bite lllmple
"Yes. hello, I'd like to speak to
part of Ohio that makes me cringe.
contract.
the Ranger."
Rip ~nd roar - get the Umber out
Contracta need not bi • eiiiJ.
"Certainly, may 1 ask who's
the fastest aitd easiest way with
plica ted thai only an attorn., eGQid
caUing and the nature of your
nary a thought for the luture forest,
understand them. ObvtOWI u.., 1o
business?"
erosion or wlldll[e. The sad part Is
consldfl! are, of ~. dollara,
"My name is John Doe and I
that with just a smidgen of tender
when pay menta are lo be madt
have · some limber I'm thinking
loving care, a minimum of effort at
where wiU the main h!lul be located
about cutUng. "
litUe or no cost, the job can be done
and perhaps the periOd of lbe aale
"One moment, sir, while 1 ring
properly.
,
· Otivlously tbe iandowner donn•i
hi ..
·
There are many 'reasons why the
want tbe ·sale to drag on for JUrt.
m;'AI Wolter speaking , may I help : landowner docsn'ttake the Ume to
Nol so obvious are whers will
· M Doe
find out what his timber Is really
tbe skid trails be located, (a very
you ... , ~~ve a~~ acre tract of limber
worth, to find a reliable, ex·
crltlal part of any limber aale) will
th~t looks like it's readY. to cut but 1 perienced Jogger and to demand lhllt
tbere be a penalty for e•ceaslw
don 't wantto leljust anyone do II. r
the job is done right. .
damage to the ref!lalnlng trees,
want a good job and 1 want it done
A good stand of timber is like
what kind of equlpme.ntls to be USfd,
right! "
money in the bank. Landowners hold
operations during fire season, .wiU
1 get many calls just like that
this in reserve and .just like a
wildlife den trees be lefflstandlng,
and most of them have 8 happy
savings account, it accumulates
and of great economic Importance oo ·
ending. 1 refer such calls to the
Interest with each year 's growth.
the seller, who wiU do the timber
Service Forester in the county In
But a sickness occurs In tbe family
stand Improvement work after the
which . they reside. We don't gel
and there are large doctor bills or a
sale is complete. Often this can be
direclly involved In managng · series of srnaU debts mushroom Into
dOne as the sale progresses at UIUe
private lands, that's the service
a pressing need for hard cash.
cost to the Jsndowner .
forester's job.
Perhaps the landowner has been
Apoor logging job v;tll result In
dori't
mind
the
calls
a
bit
thinking
of
selling
tbe
timber
for
a
poor,
low quality stand In the
1
·though and ·here's why . 1 get other
some Lime but Just nevrr got around
future. With nearly 60 percent .of the .
calls too, and they go like this :
to do it. One evening n operator ' u. s. commercial forest land In
"Good morning. u. s. Forest
stops in, offers what ap; ~rs to be a
prlvale ownership, the management
Se ·
'" tc ..
fair price and the next day, the hills
or
these land.! Is Important to the
rvlc€:, e~ .• e ·
·
"Mr. Wolter, what can 1 do• !let
rallle
with the sound of trucks and
nations wood supply.
·
my third cousi n's nephew's uncle's
chainsaws. Then my phone starts to
So if you're thinking of selling
friend cut the back forty and you
ring - too lale !
some Umber, contact your service
should just see what's been done to ' Service Fores~rs provide a
forester or a consulting forester . For
my property! He took only the best
wide range of advisory assistance . If
Scioto and Lawrence Counties,
trees, damaged a lot of the sta nding
you don •t like his looks, consulting
contact Clyde Heazilt, 353-7939 in
trees, ran down my fencing. my
foresters are avllable also.
Portsmouth. Residents of Jackson
catUe are out and there 's terrible
For the pros pective limber
and GaUia Counties should call
ruts where he hauled the timber out.
seller, I thinil the most valuable
Frank Toih, 286-0029 in Jackson .
.L_,..;.._ _ _

reservation. and go. I never spoke Chinese but I sure got
.-r. LIS J lfirll to
had any problem whal1oever. through . to ~im with sign
U~U&lt;UI'O • ;..ptt who always playeif It by ear. One · But, in Taiwan it was a language that I had . 28
/ : : lilt
nice spould never worry or get differen t story. They do not minules to gel to the airport.
~ 011 my recent excited; bi calm at aU limes. have a large airport tike He came right bark to me In
lriieltP and I would like to I have seen people miss their Hong ~ong or Tokyo where his sign language that it
pu awrt of lhe numerthaoust plane, loae their I)&amp;Qage, you can go and leave any couldn't be done.
_ . Jrilillg from 11
think they had a hotel hour w'ilhout any problems. I
Then I reached in my
hue beef! uked .
reeervallon and found out hailed a cab and told him to pocket, pulled out anotber
. 110.1 - lferen't you afraid differently .
They get take me to the Northwest silver dollar centennial and
Ill lriVti by yourself In so hysterical and a person would Orient head office, which he gave him to understand It
i*'1 djelant lands 1 SUppoae lhlnk they were going to have did. I walked in and there was his if he got me there in
~ had gotten sick, lost, a heart attack alld !Imagine were three beauUful girls time .
I wa tched
the
fobbed, (t killed?
aome do.
silting at their individual speedometer jump from 50 to
; No. 2 - l}'hat country did
flu I the way I feel l~ that if desks. I picked the cenler one · 70 mUes per hour and he
JW like !Jeil? ·
you ml11 your plane there is because I just had a leeling passed everything in front ,
· )(q. 3 - If you 11ad your always
another
one she was a·lucky one.
ran two red lights and almost
cholh lD live in a foreign tomorrow.! have seen people
I just sat down and started hit a man pushing a cart of
•try, which would you .gel so msd at a ticket agent talking to her about straw across the road.
cboole?
thalllhlnk If they had a gun everything except a ticket to
He threw on his brakes, the
: fn.!lnswer to QUeations No. they would shoot him, but it is Tokyo. I asked her il she had car spun around, I shut my
dot hla fault.
seen our Centennial Silver eyes and scooled down in the
.. I never w111 forget when I Dollar. I knew she hadn 't. So, seat because I just knew he
.CARROL K. SfiOWDEN wanted to leave Taiwan for I look one I had around my was goi ng to hit the man and
'
Tokyo. They told me it·would neck mounted on a chain and kill him. When I opened my
St.
o.mM!ta,o.
bi nine days before I could handed II to her and ex· eyes, the car had skidded
. ,·
Ph.446.420f
get a ticket out because there plained II to her. She took It to around complelely and the
~11 '.
was a world trade show going · tbe other girls and showed it old man and his cart were on
on and if I did not have a . to them. I heard them ooh and the other side, We got back on
, ticket reservation, it was ah over it for some time. the track and took orr again.
impossible.
_ Then she brought it back to
l kept looking at my watch
I never had a reservation at me.
and it was two minules till
'I d
·
d takeo(f whe n we pu lied up a1
I '--k
any lime oil this trip.
wo 1 an put tt aroun
Whenever I got tired and her neck and told her she · the airport and I knew I could
thought 1 had seen enough ol could keep il a~ a gill from ·not possibly make il as they
a country, 1 would call the the USA. She said she had to check me through
airport and ask whal time the couldn 't take my only good customs. My cabbie look me
· next plane left, mske
luck charm from me just like to tbe right place and I paid
that because il meant too him and lipped him with
much tome. But after not too another silver dollar. He
•
much persuasion. she ac- hugged me and kept jab·
The.-e must be a reason
. cepl'&lt;!d it.
bering in Chinese to the
Then, I said to her I would customs agent. !I worked
just like her to do me one because lnever went through Taiwa n was in a restaurant
why Kingsbury Home Sales
lillie favor and that was get · customs ataU but they had to where I went to eat my
me a ticket to Tokyo. She then check out my passport which evening meal. Everything
told ·me the same story I took another 10 minu~s . I was written in Chinese on the
is selling so many
heard before lhal the World was now 15 to 20 minutes past menu. I asked if anyone
Trade Fair had everything takeoff. They whisked me out spoke English. In ab&lt;&gt;ut 10
booked solid . But she said, to the wailing plane. There minutes a young boy of about
modular homes in this area.
"let me see what I can do." was a Japanese man really 17 came up and said that he
· She got on the phone and I mad ab&lt;&gt;ut something and spoke English. He took my
know
she was on it for 15 was making quite a scene. I order. While I was eating, he
We think 141 because,of the quality of our
!.
minutes
and at times she ran up the steps and got in- and four others came over to
products, our attitude in dealing with our
talked very excited in side , the plane. The copilot mY table and sa t down..
CUJtomers and tilt service we pro vir' ·· at the
·Chinese. She hung up and said to me as I entered the Through this boy. who acted
sare.
then·said to me tha t I had 45 plane, "You sure must have a as my interpreter, they asked
.Stop In and see our display homes "••d give
.minutes to get to the airport. good frienq s9meplace me hundreds of questions
us an opportunity to fill your housing needs.
· Slle said grab a cab quick because you see that · about the USA. They were so
because it is 30 miles to llle Japanese man down lllere ? eager to talk to me. They
airport from Taipei.. I took He was bumped so you could would not let me leave until
IM!r hand and kissed it, ran go to Tokyo."
~!ley closed atil p.m. 1 gave
out the door, grabbed a cab to
I did not tell him, but in my each Of them a 1976 fifty cent
my hole! to pick up my mind I though! to myself that piece and they were. overluggage. told the cabbie to liUie girl at Northwest Orient joyed. ll made me feel good
wait right there, threw my Airline Office was a dear to see how happy l.had made
luggage in and took off for the friend.
these young people of Taipei.
airport. (I found that I left
So, you see how a little They walked me to my hotel
"QUALITY ALWAYS'
one suit and a pair of shoes in psychology works, if you use and insisted that I come back.
..
!flY closet at the holel).1 hope it right. If I had gone in there but I had to go to another city
liMn: Man .. Tu..,, ;-t.un.,s.t.,t.7:JO
.
somec&gt;ne In Talpel enjoys and lold them I had to have a the next day . .
Wtclntldly-Prlclly 9:otl-9:00, Sunclly Closed .
them ).
ticket or else, acted mad,
No, I am not afraid to .take
l'llmtnly ·
·
992-7034
Ohio
The traffic was very heavy ek., I would have spent a trip and travelalone .. Jf you
l'llarl Alh m.uu. Roger O.vls, m.r.n
that morning and m~ny , anotber 9 days in Taipei.
treat people with klndness
traffiC lights. My cabbie "!'IY
Another e1perience I had in and do not take advantage of
.lllem, kindness will be
returned , in most cases. After
all, I was once a poor farm
boy raised in Green Township
and worked hard .all my life.
Many a pay I had hoed corn,
set and suckered tobacco for
fft a day and when we used to
thresh wheal, (me a.nd my
brother Bill) we always had
to stack the straw and the
chaff would always get aU
over me. When I got through,
I would head for the old
swimming hole to gel rid of
the chaff that went down my
back.
·
Just remember, these
foreign neighbors want to
talk to you just as bad as you
want to talk to tbem and I try
my best to talk to them on
tbeir own level.
AS to all.!wering question
No. Z (What country I liked
best) :
All I can say Ia that I like
every country I have ever
NOTI(EI
visited . It Is a thrill to see and
1. .
I was never afraid. I

,

SALE

•

N.L BIMD flEW MODB.S ·
Must bellO lei fit miikt room
the new models • • .

THE SALE OF SALES

WHILE THEY lAST!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~

Buy The Best.

CAMERA AND FILM DEPARTMENT - FIRST FLOOR

HEAVY DUTY

D1YERS

Hftvy dutY. big drum.
CY4:111

I

·store at Rotorua and in- there are only three months
troduced myself. The owner !bey can'. gel out · over · the
just couldn 't belleve a mountains . December,
jeweler from the USA was January and February. The
stOpping In to see ·him. He rest of ·the year they are
closed shop and took me out snowed in . The mountains
to lunch. A photographer around the estate range up oo
from Auckland took off two 4,1100 fl. , so the only otber
hours to drive me around and outiet is by boat over the lake.
show me the city of Auckland.
I took some beautiful
Now if these kind people don 't sunset photos that evening
turn you on about a country, I thatlook like paintings. They
don't know what would.
have 30,1100 sheep and around
When I landed in Queens. 800 cattle. Mark told me they
town, New Zealand, I met a were -lucky If they made 40c
travel agent by the name of per'head on the sheep. He had
Don Kennett. I talked to him 8 sheep dogs so well trained
about 20 minutes and he that you would th)nk they
handed me two com· were human. He can talk to
plimentary tour tickets. One them and the)&gt; will drive the
was on the ski lift. and the sheep like a person. He has
other was to Walter Peak six whistle signals which all
Esta le of H~gh MacKenzie, mean different direction. He
which consisted ol 160,1100 never pels them or allows
acres. There were IS of us on anyone else oo touch them.
the tour. The cou 1le that lived
Aller a good nights' rest In
there·and mana~- the estate . this lovely home filled with
are Mark and Mary McLean, antiques worth ll fortune, we
real B&lt;itiSh speakin~ people. got up at f.he break of ,
By the way. Mr. MacKenzie · to a breakfast fit for a
is from England. He dl&lt;\d in They thought it was Odd that
1970 at the age of 92. His two qe~et .drink coffee or lea, but
sons and a daughler now own I sure got rid of a pitcher of
it.
,,. rich cold milk.
I had quile a conversation
We went Bulside and there
with Mark and I told him I was a heavy frost on the
sure would like to spend the ground, almost like snow. II
night in this lovely old home. was just like a crisp October
He said why not, so he told me morning here. I helped him
to tell the guide to take all the with some of the chores until
others back. They were all 8:30. He wanted me to go
Australians. i was the only hunting up in the mountains
American in the group. You but I told him I must g.
see, the Australians always because I wanted to be 01
come here for ·thei1· Sydney by tomorrow oo be
vacations. What a pleasure it with my 1tlaughter, Nancy, as
was that night. ·
I was already two days late.
· Mary fixed one of the most
So we got in his mooorboal
delicious meals I ever sat and took off for Queenstown
down to. I ate leg of lamb, 'h hopr away. I promised
which must have been 3lbs., these lovely people I would
and topped It off with two return some day; I am sure
pieces of some kind of berry going to live up to that
pie and two glasses of rich promill!!,JVhich wiU hopefully
meal.
be ne•t year.
Aflersupperwesatdown in
So, you see, there are a ·lol
front of a six ft. fireplace Of nice, decent people leflln
burning with three or four this old world, AU you have to
large logs. You see they have do is go find them. Next, I wiU
their winler' when we are write about another beautiful
having summer. In fact, .country, probably Ball.

LIMITED QUANTITIES
I

lASHERS

talk to foreign people and see
how they live. I lake .a tape
recorder and. try to reeord
their methods and history of
Uteir country.! have so many
tapes, I could wrile a book. In
fact, when I retire.. that is
what I am going to do. I will
atlempt to take one country
at a time and tell why I admire it. I wlll start with New
Zealand. I was on a 4\', hour
flight from Fiji to New
Zealand and it was my fortune to get a seat next to a
travel agent by ·the name of
Graham Stafford. He asked
me where I was going. I
showed him iny ticket and
told him lha t my main purpose was to "'•it my daughler
Nancy in Australia. He
looked at my ticket and told
me I could go almost around
the world with this ticket. Il
just wasn't made out right by
the ticket agent.
I told him I used to work for
AAA bUt I didn't know much
about making out tickets. He
said· AAA did not make llle
ticket out because he worked
with them on touts and they
are the best in tbe business.
So. when we landed in New
Zealand, he insisted I stay all
night with him as it was 1:30
a.m. I did stay lhe night with
him ·•nd he said he would take
me '" his office the loU owing
morning and change my
ijcket. When he got up at 7
a.m. we had breakfast where
I mel his lovely wife and two
sons. He had even inade one
of the boys sleep on the floor
so that I could have his bed.
We went to his office and he
told me he could send me to
Thailand, Taiwan, Tokyo and
Alaska , or go through Guam
and Manila. I told him to book
me by 41aska as I had always
wanted oo go there.
So, if it hadn't been for him
I would never have seen these
.countries.
I make it a point when I '
travel to meet men of my
trade of phol~grapbers and
jewelers. I went in a jewelry

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of. llt·nntl nu
AWARDS DISPLAYED - These Meig,. County
prden club members took lime out Sunday evening from
their work In painting the display area for the lwo Meigs
County Fair flower shows on Wednesday and Friday, to
dlsplaysonle Of the engraved i!llver trays that will be
awarded d\lring the shows. The trays will go to the best of

llliow and reserve best of show In the artistic division and
to the horticulturist sweepltakes winner on both days.
From the left are Janet Bolin, Suzie Carpenter and Alice
ThompiOtl. Both shows will he In a rennovated building on
~ grounds known as "F1oral Hall".

-,-----'-------------"----'---..:...------..1

'\.

/

~~=~::::::::::::=:=:·:;:·:=:·:·=·=·=·=·=·=~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:~=:::::::::::=:=:=: =::::::::::·:·:·:·:=:-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:~~..:::::::::'(.:=:•:?.~!:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=!=~~~:=:=~::::f.::~~:::=x~~.:::.:::~~::-t~

.

NO. 84

..

at y

e
VOL XXVIII

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~:.:.:..::__~---.:..:.:.:.:.::.:.:..===-.::.:.:.:....:::.::___----'-_
•

.

.

.•

.

.

vow court fight
CHARLESTON, W.Va . "ignited in. southern West .
(UPI)- Leaders of a month- Virginia by a heevy fine on a
long coal strike withdrew Uirlted Mine Workers local
picket lines today In for engaging in an illegal
bituminous pits, but .renewed strike.
their VUWI lo end federal
Dissidents clainjed the
Court Intervention In mining strike solidified tbe nmk.and.dlspuleil.
file in: its opposition to courl
A~ many a~ 120,1100 miners Injunctions, frequently used
were Idled at the belght of the by coal operators to end mine
Industry-wide wlldca t, strikes.
:::::::::::::::::::~:::::~~=::::~:;:;:;:;:;::~:::;:;:::~::~:~:::f::::::::~:::::::::!:!:!:±:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::c:.::::::;

:•::

{
Leaders said the mines ::::
would insist that United Mine ·:·:

A sult asking damages for
alienation of affection was
one ol four filed Friday and
saturday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Mr · and Mrs. Thomas E.
Buckley, Chesl'&lt;!r, filed for
judgment in the smount of
UOO.OOO for alienalion of
affection of their daughter ,
Lorie Ann, 7·
The suit claims alienation
:-:· has been caused by Mr · and

PARKERSBURG, W. Va. (UPI)- When Mrs. R. J. Niery Is ;heeled Into an
operating rooin, tbe only linesthellc she wantala her husband's voice. .
"Everybody thought.I wss crazy," the Cleveland, Ohio, resident 11ld of her
fu:sl use of hypnosis in ari operation.
That came in childbirth. In labor Z3 boilrll wltb her first child, Mrs. Nlery
Insists she felt no pain, even though she politely declined an offer for anestbesla.
Ustenlng to the tape-recorded voice of her husband, a hypnosis eiPef(, Mrs.
Niery underwent an opera tim that involved the probing of her t!plne.
Using her lwsband's voice 00 relax her, Mrs. Niery aays tbere was no attending
pain during or after the operation.
"There were no pt'Hhots," she added.
lm!ce she was successful in her first attempt to lace an operation without an
•

•

~~==r;~~:= ::.;~::~:~ii:~=-~:.:::;:C~it~ '. \·;:~['· .D...an
U · ... ·g· of
:tl\

to-strike clause when he · :'::
negotiates a new coal ::::
contract next year.
•:::

applied. Later, she refused to pay the bW and was suc~ulln her objectloll.!. "I
didn't ask for' him;'' she explained: ·
·
.
. · ·
Mrs. Nlery's husband is a lecturer and has been a profession~ hypnotlat f.X: 24

:)

::::

youths
~:::~~~:r~~EdE , ., ::,~~=,:,;,::,:.,.:::.:::.,::::::,.,:., ::i,:.:.: ,:.:,~':.,:::.:,.:::,.':::.,. .
Just
fiNews. • . in Briefsi
Pike County mines at work go·wild
obligation not to strike.
"We're not going back and .
fall over and play dead,"
said one strike activist from
District 29, at nearby
Beckley. "We're going to
organize ourselves and stand
By United Press International
LONG BEACH, CALIF. --' FBI AGENTS .TODAY up the nell\ time."
The miner said strikers
searched "aU over Southern California" for two women wbo
learned
from.reliable sources
escaped a D!deral prison Saturday - Susan K. Murphy and ·
that
coal
operators were
Diane Ellls. Miss Murphy was con\1cted with Manson ~Ills!
almost
provoked
into taking
sandra Goode of conspiring to semi death threat letters to
drastic
action
as
the
wildcat
business executives. MIS. Ellis was convicted of bank robbery.
wore
on,
.
because
coal
The women overpowered a lemale guard al .the federal
prllon on Termlnsl Island saturday and escaped in the stockpiles were dwindling.
"Operators were shalring
guard's car, which was found about four hours later
at
the end," he said. "They
abandoned In nearby Long Beach. An FBI spokesman said
were
just about to do
Sunday they had no clues as to the whereabouts of the women
something
big. It was lust
an4 were concentrating their search throughout the Southern
around
the
corner. Their
California area.
stockpiles
weren't
what they
KANSAS CITY, MO. - SEN. HOWARD BAKER of
Tennessee IIYS he wants to be president some day and !hal's thought they were." ·
The strike flared July 19
why he'll accept the vice presidential nomination this year If
after
local 1759 was ordered
It's offered. "If anybody asked me, llhlnk I probably would do
oo
pay
$50,1100 for defying a
II," Baker said Sunday In response lA! a question from a
back-towork
order. Pickets
Mississippi delegate.
spread
throughout
seven
Baker aald "It's fiatterlng" to be mentioned as one of the
other
states,
Idling
workers
in
lop names on President Ford'sllst of potential running mates,
Penns
y
Ivan
I
a
,
0
hi
o,
rut after being on slml1ar lists In 1968 and 1972, "We don't gel
very excited about lt." Asked If he really wanted to be a Kentucky, VIrginia,
presidential nominee, Baker replleq : "WeD, yeah, to be frank Alabama, Indiana . and
with you, I would. But !bat Is not in •: .~ cards in 1976. Maybe II illinois.
Mlller made four trlpa 1!.
will be someday. I hope that doesn't sound vain."
West VIrginia before a backPOIN'fE..A·PITRE, GUADELOUPE - A RUMBLING, t~ork trend began to
SMOKING La Soufrlere volcano spewed ashes and choking surface.
1umes over deserted mountain villages today, signaling an
Imminent erupUon that experts said could equal several
atomic bombs.
·
Offlclala reported aU residents bad been evacuated from
the threatened area 'and a (ew stray cats and ·dogs were the
only living u-eatures seen In a tour of almost a dozen towns
'nesUed on the slopes of the cloud-enshrouded volcano. An
estimated 130,000 persons SWiday fled their homes on the
10uthern baU of Basse·Terre, !be westernmoat ptrllon of this
ootterfly.ahaped F-rench Carlbeean Island.

·.!!.,,.,..

,.,,,,):i.

.

The last few hundred of
Kentucky's coal miners who
remaiJI!!d off the job Ia~ last
week returned to work today
In Pike County.
At one time · 13,000
Kentucky miners-7 ,000 ln
western Kentucky and some
6,000 In- eastern Kentuckyhad walked out in sympathy
to United Mine Workers in

Weath.er

West VIrginia who left tbe
pits In protest to contempt
fines levied In connectim
with a federal court judge's
decision .
"Everybody Ia back today
and work is back to normal,"
Mart Bailey, Pikeville, pres!-

Pomeroy twit

called Sunday

The Pomeroy ER Squad
was called Saturday at 7:14 .
p.m. for Margaret Sinclair
who was taken to Vel'&lt;!rans
Memorial Hospital and again
at 9:16 p.m. lo transfer her
to Holzer Medical Center.
Sunday at 11 :47 a.m. the
:.:::,::::::::::::::::::::::•:•:•:•:•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
unit transported Less Price,
EXTEND EO
Pomeroy, to Veterans
Wednesday through Memorial Hospital, and at 9
Friday, lair with highs In a.m. today went to Brown's
70s and low 80s, and lows in Tractor sales for Charles
50s and low 60s.
Eskew who was taken to the
Medical Plaz~ in Gallipolis.
Sunny and cool today and
Tuesday. Highs Tuesday in
upper 70s and low 80s. Clear
and cool tonight. Lows. 50 lo
55. Chance of rain near zero
through Tuesday.

dent of the Pike County Coal
Operators Association, Inc.,
said today. The Ollsolrn Mine
and the Kentland-Elkhorn
Mine crews were the last oo
return oo work in the eastern
Kentucky coal field.
Most western Kentucky
miners went back oo lhi! job
Aug. 9 after a brief walkout.
Bltlley said It was difficult
to detennine the tonnage Of
coal lost in Pike County over
the two-week long walkout.
"It

was so spotty," he said,

"Some mines would work one
day and be off the next and
then others would go out-It
was pretty hard oo keep any

·record."
TRUSTEES TO MEET
· The Rio Grande Community College board of
trustees will meet Thursday,
Aug. 19, 7 p.m. at Allen Hall
on the Rio Grande College
campus.

•

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Ohio's 97-member
delegalloo to the Republican National Convention plans a
caucus today, but no Important policy matters are on tap.
Repitbllcap state chairman Kent B. McGoucb, chairman of the
delegallm, said the major problem to be Ironed out was the
procedure for suliltltutlng alternateS when the voting
delegatee leave the noor. ·
MCGough, whp said President Ford's strength In !be Ohio
delegatlm was siiU unwavering, announced that the
. President's son, Jaclt, would attena the Ohl.o caucua meallng
wedneadlly morning. Ford has 90 of Ohio's 97 delegates. Six
others are pledged to Rmald Reagan, while one Is listed u
uncomml~·

TOKYO- FORMER PREMIER KAKUEI TANAKA, the
rags-to-riches politician who beaded Japan's govl!rlllllenl from
1972 to 1974, wulndlcled today m a
of accepting a •1.67
tnDIIOO bribe from tha Lockheed Aircraft Corp. He Is the first
premier Ill Japmt's history to be Indicted for corrupUon while
1te Wllln office.
.
'Jbellldletmenl by the Tokyo District Prosecutor's office
accusell Tanaka, 58, of accepting the bribe in return for(ConUnued on page 8)

m.rge

TirE SHOW WILL GO

-:

TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE
8 p.m. - Coavelllloa
called
to
order.
8:25 p.m. - Welcome by
MJJsourl Gov. Cllrillopber
S. Boad ; speeches by Gov.
James B. Edwards of South
ClroUu; VIce President
Nelaoa Rockefeller; Sea.
Bltrry M. Goldwaler of
Arlzoaa, GOP caadldale Ia
l984; Mn. Smith; Hoa. AU
Laadon of Kansas, GOP
candldale In lf36; lemporary chairman Sen•.
Robert Dole of KaDHs;
Ka11.1as Gov. Robert F.
Bellllf!tt; Keynote speaker
Sen. Howard F. Baker of
Teonessee.
10:2t p.m. - Benedlctl011
ud adjournment anlll 8
p.m. EDT Tuesday.

If II did, the delegation
vole according .to
(cOnllnued.m ~e &amp;)

woul~

CENT~ $ '0 as
_.:__---"-'------'----~----- for alienation .
&lt;

.

delegates.
'"Ibis Is the ldnd of en·
thUlium that will give us a
vlcttryon Wednelltlay night,"
Ford told his boosters,
sweltering In the muggy
Allguat heat.
'!be 30.vote MIPiulppl
delegation, the largest lllngle
uncommitted bloc at the
convention, was crucial oo
Ford's bopes. He sent Sen.
Howard H. Balr:er, R-Tetm.,
who keynotes the cmventlm
tonight and Ia me ii Ftrd's
leading prospects for a
runnl!tg mate, to urge the
Milslaslpplans to ''vote your
conscience."
But they also wanted oo
hear frmn Reagan, wbom
they favored unlll he tapped
liberal
Sen.
Richard
Sehwelcker Ol Pennsylvania.
So they postponed until
Tuesday - and poulbly unlll
a few hours before the
presidential balloting begins
Wednesday night - any
declslm on abandoning their
1 self-Imposed unit rule.

r.J.l .

PRICE FIFTEEN

Husband's voice perfect anesthetic

~

delegates

&lt;.

MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1976

Strl.ke..lea de·. •"-'
&lt;

d wInd II n g · AmerIcan Ford faDing a tantalizing flw
cmitltuency, open their 31st votes lhort of the 1,130-vote
national cmventlon atill torn majt.-lty he n~ to win on
between two warring !be llrat ballot.
conservatives, President
Reagan, tanned, relaxed
Ford and Rmald Reagan.
and seemingly confident he
Even as the convention Is woul". ultimately prevail,
pveled Into lellllon today at probed for wealmeos In the
futuristic Kemper Arena, . Pr:esldenl's ranks to bolster
Ford linda himself IICfapplnB bis 1,038-vole total.
witb the flrmer CalHornia . "Can we win It?" Reapn
governor over the few~ than asked on arrival by chartered
100 ~~~~~;oounltted delegatell. jet Sunday afternoon. "Yes, II
who bold the elusive key to a would be easier on the second
flrstballol presidential liallol but, yes, we can win m
pomlnallon Wednesday night. the first ballot."
· AlthOugh he and his • So seriously did Ford
political advisers lns.lsted regard &amp;lagan's challenge
victory was thelri, Ford was that he broke tradltloo and
fighting the llloll serious flew In from WaahlngtOO
challenge for nominatim that before the convention began.
any
Incumbent
GOP He greeted a cheering,
· president has laced In this chanting throng awaiting him
century, and IIill Btruggllng at !be ~own Center Hotel
oo gain rontrol of hla own and went Immediately to his
party.
~Y rooftcp suite to
. Hours before !be showdown start telephoning stray

ON - Despite heavy rains
which hit Meigs County early Sunday morning, workers of
Gambill and Bates Brothers Amusement Co., Route 2;

Wintersville, were buSy aasembllng rides for the midway
attractions of !be Melp County Fair. The fair will open
for Its first full,day of activity Tuesday and run through
Saturday night.

NEW YORK (UPI) Youths barred from a "disco
party" went on a spree of
robberies and vandalism In
midtown Manhattan Sunday,
assaulting pedestrians and
smashing windows. Ten
persons were arrested.
Pollee said more than 20
robberies were reported and
several windows were
smashed by band.! of youths
roaming the area from
Manhattan Center, two
blocks from the site of the
recent Democratic National
Convention, to Times Square.
The youths had been denie&lt;\
admittance to the center,
pollee aald.
Four teen-agers were
arrested by city police and
charged with robbery,
assault and disorderly
conduct. Transit Authority
offlciala arrested another six
on ·charges of looting
concessions In the subways.
The Manhattan Center bad
been rented for the night by a
group sponsoring a "disco
party " a spokesman for the
bulltfu.g said. He said the
suspecta refused to pay tbe $6
entrance charge and began
"making trouble" outside the
building.
Pollee said the youths
began roaming the streets in
small · groups, robbing
passersby of wallets, watches.
and other valuables.
"They also knocked down
anyooe who got In their way,"
said one officer at the
statlonhou.se.
'!be officer said the
windows of a delicatessen
were smashed "and they
rifled the cash register."

Mrs. James w. Suttle, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom. The suit alleges
the
defendants
were
strangers to the · Buckleys'
daughter, Lorle Ann, and
visited her at the Buckley ·
home at the expressed
prohibition .of her parents.
According to the suit, such
visits disrupted and invaded
the privacy and harmony of
the plaintiffs' home, and Mrs.
Suttle improperly visited
Lorie Ann at school.
The plaintiffs attempt8'!, ·AQ p)ltaln. lll!hool l;l!laJ;d .
assistance . In ._!l.cllping
the visits. AS a result of this
action privale and personal
details of the plaintiffs' lives
and that or Lori Ann allegedly
surfaced ca using embarrassment and damage to
their reputation and standing
in the community.
The suit seeks $511,000 lor
injuries sustained to family
prtvacy diid reputation in
addition to $50,000 sought to
compensate for the alienation
of Lorie Ann 's affections.
In other court action,
Martha Anderson, Rutland,
liled fo r divorce from
Thomas Anderson, RuUand.
The Motorists Insurance'
Companies, Columbus, filed
for judgment in the amount of
$625 ·- and costs against
William Edward Eakins, Rt.
2, Racine .

Leila "'velyn Clark,
Pomeroy, and Carmin E.
Clark filed for dissolution ol
marriage.

Coon hunt,
bench show
planned
'

RACINE
A U.K.C.
licensed Wild Coon Hunt and
Bench Show will be held
Saturday at the American
Legloo Hall in Racine under
the sponsorship of the Shade
River CoonhiUllers Assn.
The bench show will be at 4
p.m. with an entry fee of f4
competing for a full set for
trophies. Immediately
following tbe bench show will
be a treeing contest with an
entry fee of f,! and a re-entry
fee of''· The night hunt entry
fee Is $6 for grade and ~ for
registered with 10 trophies to
be awarded for registered
and five for grade. Trophies
will be ~warded for plus
points only and there will .be
hunting and non·huntlng

DAMAGE MINOR
judg
The Middleport Police
A ~OpJJy for grand night
Department investigated a · champion was dooated by the
minor accident Saturday at Farmers Bank and Savings
11 a.m. Trudy A. Casto, Rl. 4, Co., and special trophies for
Pomeroy, making a left turn tbe high point female and
from Walnut St. onto North hlghpolntmaleofthehuntby
Second Ave., scraped her Richarda and Son Sand and
right fron t bumper into t~• Gravel.
left rear fender of an auto · Anyme Wishing any mort
driven by Harvey L. lnfonnaUm on the event may
Erlewine. There were no contact Carl Hall 992-7222·
injuries, no citations·, and Bill Smith 992·5206 o~
orily minor damage.
Kenneth ruriey, 9&lt;19-2657.

II

'&amp;.

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