<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16516" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/16516?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T03:35:11+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49653">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/a33e2660d653f65681fd8bdc3111ef22.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f16dd05c3e56b55a1a0a54be1643b733</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52791">
                  <text>I" ,

f

10- 'l'he DaUy sentl!lel, Mlddleport-PGineroy, 0., Marcll3, tt72

Weather
Variable · rloudiness and
rather cold today through
Sunday . Chance of snow
flurries today and snow is
likely !'a te tonight and Saturday. Daytime highs in the
upper 20s or lower 30s and lows
at night 15 lo 20.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
March 3-4
CHROME AND
HOT LEATHER
( Technicolor)

William Smi th
Tony Young

GP

THE HIRED ·HANO
(Technicolor)

Peter Fonda
Warren Oates

GP
Sun. , Mon . &amp; Tues.
March 5-7
Walt Disnev 's
THE LADY AND
THE TRAMP
&lt;Technicolor)

Disney Featurette:
Wet

Back

Hound

Disney Car1oon :
Tiger Trouble

Donald's Vacation
Swim Dog, Swim
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

QUALITY •••
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!

BUT

I

!amotion Division approved
plans for reh8bUI~tion of the
stripped areas before the coal
removal.
"This plantiog is part of our
effort to make the land more
productive after mining than It
was prior to the coal removal,"
said Chris Olengelis, association president. ''That is the law
in Ohio."
He said the plantings were
designed to nurture future tim-

YOU'LL NEVER BUY QUALITY

The Stale Highway Patrol
investigated lwo minor accidents in Meigs County
Thursday , Patrolman Jim
Sheets reported.
The first occurred at 2:50
p.m. on US Rt. 33, three tenths
of a mile north of SR 7 where
Vernon Lance, 41, Portland,
Rt. 1, headed south, missed a
turn and went onto lhe median.
There was minor damage to
lhe undercarriage of Lance's
car.
Al4:55 p.m. on SR 7, Wallace
Davis,
17, Middleport,
traveling north, lost control on
wet pavement. He drove off the

Tony

FOR LESS
THAN YOU DO AT

BAKER'S
Furniture

MIDDLEPORT

OHIO

(Continued from page I)
you can live with your consciences,! can live with mine."
Yablonski was au•sslnated
just a few weeks after he lost a
contested election for the UMW
presidency to Incumbent W.A.
"Tony" Boyle.
When the name "Tony" first
entered the case last June,
UMW headquarters
vehemently denied it had
anything to do with Boyle.

Pomeroy National Bank.
It's been a hundred years.
So far.

Ju ne 17. t872. to June 17, t972. One
cen tury. A century that 's seen war and

peace. least and lamina. The century
man learned to fly"and flew to the moon.
Seventy-two to seventy-two. The first
100 years of Pomeroy National Bank.
We'd like to take the credlllor getting
the town started. but lhe fact is the area
had been settled lor nearly 70 years before we first opened our doors. Pomeroy

had been the seat ot Meigs County since
t 841 , and the town was well on ils way

a big '"thank you very kindly'" for you.
You and the people in your past are responsible lor our past, and necessary
for our future.
The big celebration will be the week
ot June t 7. Please plan to drop in. Mean-

while. drop in any lime. Particularly on
Saturday morqtngs for a piece of our
birthday cake. or any time. to pick up
your copy of a brochure commemorating

to a solid com mercial foothold in . coal

your city's latest hundred years. We'd
just like to say hello. Even II you don't
bank here, we all live here.
At both the main office and Rutland

small feat in the early days of American

branch. we've been showing a modern
new look and referring to ourselves as

and sail.
0 1course. the doors stayed open. No
banking. And through those doors ever
vate citizens who 'd made the decision

'" The Bank ol the Century'" , Great. But
we're really talking about two centuries-

thai here wa s where the business of

one of fond memory, one of firm com-

since have. come businessmen and pri·

banking was best conducted.
During 1972, we'd like to com bine our
little pat-on-the-back for ourselves with

pom.. or
f ullond

DiedR~dy ~.

ber -relaled industries,
enhance the beauty and quality
ol the envtromnent, stimulate
wildlife development and
provide recreation and ·
development sites.
The association said it planted more than 65.7 million trees
in the last 25 years. The total
acreage planted In trees and
11 ~ed with gra~ totaled
more than 110,000.

2 Cars Go Off Highway

••

Fin~

Betty FOrenuln :

3¥2 Million Trees
On Stripped ·Land
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Reclamation Association
plans to plant more than 3.5
million trees, as well as grass·es and legumes, on some 4,000
acres of strip-mined land this
summer as part of an environmental improvement and reclmalion project .
The association said about 24
varieties of trees, mainly hardwood types, will be placed on
private land in 16 counties
which had been primarily
scrub forests and marginal
farm s prior to the coal
removal.
To get ready for the project,
a special training program for
planting foremen was held at
Cambridge this week. The
foremen were taught to follow
the planting plans, developed
in keeping with soil conditions,
good conservation techniques
and future land use objectives.
The state Forestry and Rec-

•

'

J

I

mitment.
We're thinking about one. And work·

ing on the other.

pomeroy
natlona
bank

highway on the right and over
an embankment. There was
minor damage to his car.
There were no ~citations
Issued or personal injuries
reported in either accident.

MelO'S Fems
0

·

'

""'e

w•m 42.25
.
The Meigs girls' basketball
squad downed the Gallia
Academy girls' learn Thursday
nigh!, 42 lo 25, at Meigs High
School.
Meigs trailed at the end of
the first quarter 10 lo 9, but
came on strong in the second
quarter and held GaUipolis to
only three poin Is.
For Meigs, Pal Harris was
lhe big gun with 13 points
followed by Sherrie King with
10, Leanne Sebo and Debbie
Ohlinger with 9 each and
Sharon Cogar, 1.
For Gallipolis Swain led all
scorers with 18 followed by
Christy King with 4, Carol
Folden 2, and Helen Akers 1.
Pictures of the game will be
published SUtiday.
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
9 20 25 42
Gallipolis
10 13 19 25

PAINT BRUSHES AND ROLLERS, and paper hanging equipment were the IDola of the
day Wednesday when some 15 Meigs County women began redecoratiog a modern apartment
over the Meigs County Museum. The apartment is to be rented to help the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society defray expenses of operating the museum. Among tbose
donating their services were, from left, Mrs. Margaret Rose, r,linersvllle; Mrs. Ada Titus,
Pomeroy (on ladder), and Mrs. Bertha Canaday, Pomeroy.
CHAPTER TO MEET
SUPPORT ASKED
Past
matrons and past
Under the Slates' Reciprocal
Agreement Acl, Kathleen patrons wiU be honored at a
Mary Hall, Pt. Pleasant, has meeting of Racine Chapter No,
filed for support in Meigs 134, Order of Eastern Star, to
County Common Pleas Court be held at 8 p.m. Monday
against Marvin Noel Moore, evening at the temple. Those
having March birthdays will
Middleport.
also be honored. Members are
asked to pay dues Monday.
DF.ADLINE NOTED
INFANT ILL
Mrs. Sue Imboden, MidThe
Middleport
E-R squad
dleport, Deputy Registrar of
Motor Vehicles, said today answered a call at 7:53 p.m.
plates may be reserved until Thursday to the home of Mr.
March 10. Her office is located and Mrs. William Harris ,
Second Ave., for Michael
at ~22 Palmer St.
Harris, an infant, who was iU.
He was taken to and admitted
al
Veterans Memorial
SERVICE TONIGHT
Members of Chester Lodge Hospital.
323, Daughters of America, wiU
conduct memorial services for
Mrs. Idonia Johnston al 7:30
tonight at the White Funeral
Home in CoolviUe. AU members are asked to wear white.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Names of persons admitted
have been temporarily
discontinued until further
notice.
Discharges: Roy Brinker,
Clifton; Mrs. Gary Clark,
Clifton; Delores Duff, Charles
HiU, Mrs. Rodney Wamsley,
Mrs. Ralph Amburgey,
Timothy Harmon, Point
Pleasant.
LODGE TO MEET
A regular meeting of Mid·
dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will
be held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
lhe temple. All master masons
at·e invited . Wednesday
evening the grand master wiU
visit. Dinner will he held at 6:30
p.m. with ladies invited.

. LODGE TO MEET
PROGRAM NOTE
The Meigs Chapter, Order of
A program, "Wings of
DeMolay, will meet at 7:30 Healjng," will be on WMPO
p.m. Monday al the Middleport Radio at 7 a.m. Sunday by
Masonic Temple.
Dorothy Overton.

Taft
·· (Continued from page I)
the endorsement of all other
members of the Ohio ·
delegation.
"For some strange reason,
Taft's opposed' io me," Bush
said. "He's opposed to the
whole commission."
Th• Portsmouth man, first
appointed to the ICC in 1961 by
President John F. Kennedy
and re-named in 1964 by
President Johnson , was
notified Wednesday he would
not he reappointed for another
seven-year term. His term
expired Dec. 31 bul he continues in office until a successor is named and confirmed
by the senate.
Bush said leaders of both
parties in both the House and
Senate have asked for his
renomination, along with the
Ohio Trucking Association, rail
truck, bus and oil pipeline
groups, and the Teamsters and
railway unions: .
Robert Feldkamp, Saxbe's
press secretary, said his
senator had backed Bush despite the fact he belonged to the
opposite party. When asked if
Saxbe· would lake the matter
again to the White House,
Feldkamp said, "No, definitely
not." He explained Saxbe did
not want to get into an intriparty dispute over the matter.
There was soeculation the
new ICC conimissioner would
not be an Ohioan.

Mrs . Edward (Betty)
Foreman, 38, died Ja•t Friday
at the MI. Carmel Hotipl!jll 1n;
Columbus following a long·
illness. She was a member of
the Darbydale . Nazarene
Olurch · at Grove City where
she lived.
•
Surviving are her husband, ,
Edward; three daughters,.
Sylvia, tolaomi and JennHer;;
· two sons, John, and Robert, all;
at home; her parenb, Mr. and:
Mrs. Harold Rawson, of
Canton ; two brothers, Paul:
Rawson and Dale Whitlach,:
USAF; and her grandmother,:
Mrs . Betty Collj~s. of;
Pomeroy.
;
Funeral services were held;
Monday I p.m. at ~. Par-;
bydale Nazarene Church at;
Grove City with the Rev.;
Walter Moore officiating.;
Burial was in the Concord;
Cemetery. Schoedinger-Norris:
funeral home was In charge ot:
arrangements. Mrs. Foreman:
was a former Meigs County;
resident.
.:
Attending .funeral services.;
for Mrs. Foreman were Mr ,,
and Mrs. Joe Foreman, James,.:
David and Joyce; Mrs. Vernon;
Lance, Gene ~mley, . and Mr;::
and Mrs. Ray Heiney, aU of.~
Haclne.
:i

~ov.

GOVERN'OR GILLIGAN

,I

'

.

SCHOOLS CLOSED ~
All Meigs County schoolij
were closed today due ·'"to ~
three-inch snowfall overnigh ~
This is the fourth day of closin~
this school term for the Melg~
and Southern Local Schooli:
and the third for the Easter~
District due to weather con,:
dilions. Districts are permitte¢
five · days of such closings:
without time having to be made
.
up.
.
.;

SUnday cloudy, windy and
colder with a chance of snow
flurries northeast and variable
cloudiness
and
colder
elsewhere . High Sunday In the
30s. Partly cloudy northeast .
and fair elsewhere Sunday
night.

.

Veterans Memorial Hospital !.'·
Discharged· - Florence:
Rowe, Charles Crislip, Anna~
Hoffman, DIUon Taylor, Nora:
Curtis, Paul Burton, Nell,;
White, John Bailey, Burke:·
Hathaway, Edna Davidson,:
Marjorie Wamsley, Rex:
Argabrite.

-

34 PAGES

'HREE SECTIONS
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972

...... .

.

'

·,

I

•••.• will be

~-11

lor

tile

~cil ~ctingthe sehoolltUUdlng
with" -ita necelsary appurtenances,
equipMent and iiCqul.lltiOn d. land. ·
The two mill levy, H approved, will
continue for 10 years. The school would
acconunodate 750 students In the lith and
12th grades.
.
Thompson said by approving the
measure In May, the proPQsal will.be on
the state's list for matching and federal
funds. Priority will be lost Hthe IBsue falls.
The structure estimated to COli $3,922,122
wiU be financed by the State Department
of Education, Appalachian Act and local
laxation.
The state share would total $1,961,060;
the federal share would be t714,240 whUe
$1,176,820 would come from local lunda.
The Gallis.Jackson CGWlty Vocational
C. ROGER BARRON
Board was fanned ·after the Jackson
APPOINTED CO-CHAIRMAN
County Vocational Board disbanded in·
C. Roger Barron, 12% Balllanl Dr.,
August, It'll. Gallis and Jackson each
GaiUpolls, former pre11de1l of !be
proposed separate tax levies and bond
Galllpollo Chamber of Commeree, aad
Issues In last year's .Primary. All were
Claude Swick of . Wellltoa 8alarllly
defeated;
were umed co-chalrmaa ol the Gallfa·
Gallia County voters defeated two taJ:
Jackson Joint Voullo4al School · issues for Its proposed joint vocational
CGI!llllltlee. They wm be Ia charge of all
school. A 2.2 miU tax levy failed by 200
public Information promellou con·
votes, 1,668 to 1,4811. A .9 mUI bond issue
cernlng !be school btaae. The ap·
failed by 195 votes,l,633 to 1,438. The Issue
pointments were announced by
passed only in one district, NOrth Gallis.
Clarence E, Thompson, Gallla CGUDty
In 1969, House BiU 531 enacted by the
School Superintendent.

-~9:t!ll·~1'~·9P1
Children's Department
Second Floor

.
'

Families

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

15 CENTS

.

Ohio Legislature stated U..t by 1974 all
school districbl In the State of Ohio must
have a vocational J!rogram that would
support to pet. ol the lltudent l*!Y,
'!'his program mtllrt colilprlle not less
ihan 12 different dli'ricaluni ~ and
~~~ ' . I widt'oollelti tbln Jti£iicWil per
ciau. ~one 'cif . tht. achooll Iii tlie .Gallis·
Jaclim .Joint V'oc&amp;ilonal School niltrict
mee!J lOOse req~enll. , . . •
· The Gallia.JacWBon Joint Vocational
School would offer studenbt In ihe 11th and
12th . grades of any of the eight par- .
tlcipatingschoolsan opportunity to attend
a vocational 1chool ··.regardless of
academic standing (high, low, or
..medium) . ..
Students attending would still be
'assodated with their school district. The
siudent would graduate from his parent
school an! stiU be eligible to participate In
any extra-curricular activities In his
school such as athletics, band, music, etc.
Districts particlpatiog are Gallipolis City,
Jackson City, Wellston City, Kyger Creek,
Hannan Trace, Southwestern, Oak Hill
Union, and North Gallia.
. '
According to the Joint Vocational Board,
the school would offer more training lor aU
students · and adults; provide special
courses to meet the particular needl in
agriculture, Industry and busineu; area
buying power, through more productive
citizens, wlll,lle Increased and economic
growth will be stlmulaled. Vocational
training produces better citizens which
lowers welfare costs because more
(Continued on page 3)

SIUPMENT OF MUSTANGS ARRIVE- Bob Evans,
!l"esident of Bob Evans Farms, Inc., Rio Grande, Saturday
received from Mrs. Jan Eggleton, Gusher, Utah, a shipment
of five wild Mustangs - two of them above - which wiU live
on the Evans Farms, joining four others obtained earlier in
Mexico. Evans said the animals will be the nucleus of a

Mustang herd. So far as Is known It will be the only sucll~Jerd
in eastern United states. Mustangs are small, tough horses
direct descendants of Spanish horses brought into south·
western United States by the Spaniard! the 16th Century.
They roam wild In the west. The horses Mrs. Eggleton
brought were captured two weeks ago.

m

Venereal Diseases on Increase
BY DALE R0'111GEB, JR.
GALUPOIJS - Venereal disease Is
on the rise In Gallia County according to
Dr. Francil W. Shane, County Health
'CGnunlssioner, who gave his annual repi&gt;rt
Friday to the county's Health Advisory
Council. ·
Dr. Shane said venereal disease
outnumbers all other communicable
diseases except the conunon cold.
Gallia CoUnty Is foUowlng the national
trend with gonorrheal Infections outnumbering syphillsaeven to one. The

young age group experiences the highest
attack rate according to Dr. Shane. During
1971, 13 local cases of gonorrhea
reported to the Gallia County Health
Department along with four syphilis cases.
Those are only a few cases we know about
said Slane.
..
Several other persons affected by the
disease were treated by their personal
physicians, who did not make a report to
the local ·health agency.
Dr. Shane advlaed that the keys to
fighting venereal disease are recognitlon,

immediate treatment and Immediate
examination of all sell contacts. There are
no Isolated cases of venereal disease.
For every patient treated there is at
least one additional patient who needs
treatment. Dr. Shane said the Gallia
County Health Department provides free
venereal disease examinations and
treatment. He said the disease attacks
Without warning,crosses all races, sex and
social-economic boundaries.
Diseases ofthe heart and blood vessels
(Continued on page 3)

2 'Plead
Guilty

t ~ t ce~ \ LII~

u \obi•1hed 161l

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down. town Pomeroy at II a.m.
Friday was 30 degrees with
light snow failing.

''

POMEROY - Three men
were arraigned on charges of
possession of marijuana
Friday before Judge John C.
Bacon In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

.,

······~·~····················

The three were arrested
Thursday as the result of a raid
on an apartment in Middleport
by Middleport Pollee Chief J.
J. Cremeans and his department assisted by the .Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.

AT THE

MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

Than 11,000

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

.
GALUPOLIS - The G.llia.Jackson May ·Primary Election.
According to qaJ1ia County School
Joint Vocational School ..,e will be
SUperintendent
Clare:nce E. Thompson,
submitted as a multi-purpolf levy In the
I
«XiJy ~o milll oo tile combined Gallia:
Jac~scin Count)' tax duplicate .of'

tht bonk ol

The Critics Otoice
SATURDAY NIGHT, 9 'TIL 1

Reaching More

oint Voc-Ed Plan
On

MARRIAGE LICENSE
John Harvey Wiles, 19,
Pomeroy, and Carla Jean
Fisher, 19, MineraviUe.

'

Your Invited Guest

tmts
Pomeroy-Middleport

VOL. VII _NO. 5

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30A.M. TO 9:00P.M.

tJri fJ!~:!£!'!!3

+

Weather

PPEN" TONIGHT, FRIDAY UNTIL 9 ·P.:M:
D~A~fJ

the
Atlantic,
the Congress from (,)hlo's Ftrat Gilligan sought and won a seat In a .major political upset, and Ohio. He was inaugurated on
GAWPOUS - John J. in
Gilligan, Ohio's 62nd governor, . Mediterranean and the Pacific. District, a district U..t bad sent on Cincinnati City Council was narrowly defeated by Jan. 11. 1971.
Republican William B. Saxbe
will be the principal speaker At Okinawa, he saved fellow ·a Democrat to Congress only again In 1967.
Jack and Katie Gilligan have
in the 1968 general election.
during the Gallipolis Chamber crew members'. from the twice In 6$ yea~ , He was caUed
In 1968, he dedded to seek his
On May 5, 1970, he won the four children, Donald, 24, a
Of Commerce's 35th annual destroyer U.S.S. l!odman, set "exciting and among the
teacher at BiShop Hartley High
dinner meeting, sla~ for 6:30 afire by enemy guna. His hardest working members Of party's,nomination for the U. S. Democratic nomination for School in Columbus; Kathleen,
p.m., on 'l'hursday, Match 16, gallantry earned for him the Congress" by the New. York senate, laking on the venerable Governor of Ohio, garnering 23, a recent graduate of Trinity
Times and "an unusuaUy in· incumbent Frank J. Lausche. more · votes than any
in the Rio Grande College Silver Star.
College in Washington , D. C.;
Discharged as a lieutenant teUigent and capable young Earning the slate De~ocratlc Democratic nominee in Ohio
Cafeteria.
John P., 22, currently serving
Executive Committee's en- history . - ··
Tlcllefi"re now on sale at the (j.g.) in 1945, Jack Gilligan man" by Time Magazine.
On Nov. 3, 1970, he was in the U.S. Army, and Ellen,
chamber office. They are $5 returned to Cincinnati and, on · Defeated in his bid ' for re- dorsement, he went on to
18, a student at Boston College.
per person . Deadline for June 28, 1945, _married Mary election by Robert Taft, Jr., defeat Lausche in the primary elected the 62nd Governor of
reservations is Thursday, Kathryn Dillon, daughter of a
Match 10.
·
Cincinnati judge. He then
Richard Carter, Wendell enrolled at the University of
Thomas and Earl Tope are in Cincinnati where he earned a
charge of this year's banquet master:s degre!\.
From 1948-53, Gilligan was
activities.
POMEROY - An Ohio Department of program to community leaders and in- selective development approach and to
Born March 22, 1921 in an instructor of literature at
Development
program funded by an terested citizens. The program seminar is involve each respective community in the
In
CinXavier
University
Cincinnati, Gilligan graduated
from St. Xavier High School, cinnati, but a growing interest $85,000federal grantfrom the Appalachian scheduled to be held at 9:30 am. at the _pro IJ!:am ·
"Aitilough every interested Apthen reaeived his bachelor's in the problems of his city and Regional COmii\lSiloit -10 stiiiiulafe in- United" MethOdiSt Olurch.
Sweet pointed out that since the palachian community will be involved ,"
degree from Notre Dame its people led to his su~X:essful du.atrial development In Ohio's 28 Appalachian
counties
has
entered
the
improgram's
inception in November, staff Sweet said, "the program Initially
campaign fpt Cincinnati City
University in 1943.
members have met with more than 450 designated Portsmouth, Zanesville,
From Notre Dame, he was CoUncil in November, 1953. He plementation phase.
Department
Director
David
C.
Sweet
community
leaders and private citizens in SteubenvJUe and their respective counties
commissioned as an ensign in was re-elected in 1955, 1957,
said his staff wiU be In Pomeroy March 16 15 communities throughout the Ap· as 'target areas.' But due to enthusiaStic
the Navy and served 'l1 months 1959, 1961, and 1963.
In 1964, he was elected to to present the selective development palachian region in an effort to explain the
• (Continued on page 3)
of sea duty as a gunnery officer

Development Seminar in Pomeroy

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

Gilligan is Otamber Sp~aker

For Lillie Patriots, fresh -looking
striped seersucker with star motif.
Long -wearing . and easily cared-for
blend of 65 per cent Polyester· and 35
per tent cotton . The com pi ete
collection includes :

--~

'

Hotall, Shorts, Slacks and Infants' Bubble. A11 to be worn with famous Buster
Brown shirts and socks made of 100 per cent Premium Bebon Cotton .
'i

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I.

'

:..

·'

APASSENGER TRAINwuwrecked (len, above), In theftood of 1916 at
Cabin Creek, W. Va. Soldiers of the second Regiment of the West Virginia
National Guard guard one of the cars reported to contain a considerable

amoWlt of money. Ealtey Hill, Pomeroy, took part In the cleaning up of the
damaged area as a member of the Second Regiment of theW. Va. National
Guard. The damage, above, right, in the recent disaster of Logan, W. Va.,
was similar to that which occurred at Cilbin Creek.

Tragedy at Cabin Creek in 1916 is Recalled

Arrested were Christopher
C. Dinguss, 23, Middleport;
Michael R. Taylor, Pomeroy
BY KATIE CROW
was involved In a similar
Route 4, 18, and Roger L.
POMEROY - The recent tragedy in 1916.
Pickens, 18, Middleport.
dl8aster in Logan CoUnty, W.' · It was Aug. 9, 1916, Hill was
Va ., brought back unpleasant stationed at !{anauga City with
Arraigned' on a bill of in·
memor-ies to Eskey Hill .who the !50th Infantry, U. S. Army,
formation filed by Prosecuting
·Attorney B.ernard ~'ultr.
Friday afternoon, Pickens and Thieves Rob Church Pop Machine
Dlnguss entered pleas ·of
guilty. Taylor entered an in: , GALLIPOUS - City pollee also reported Saturday. Bill
Saturday investigated the theft Mills, manager of the upper G.
nocent plea and reques~ a
of approximately $15 to $20 in
1ury trial.
change from a soft drink C. Murphy Store sald'SOilleone
Prosecuting Attorney. Fultz machine at the Grace United used a pellet gun in breaking
w111 call a grand jury soon to Metliodist Church. The theft the glass out of the rear door to
hear evidence against Taylor.. occurred sometime between 4 his store, A similar act was
The
defendants
were p.m. Friday and 10:10 .a.m. reported by Wayne Niday of
·
remanded 1o the custody of Saturday.
the Commercial · and Savings
Two acts of vandalism were Bank . ...
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach.

which later became the Second u.~u . Creek were carried out
Regiment of the West Virginia on pack milles. Hill remembers
National Guard when a terrific a passenger train that was
cloudburst -occurred at Cabin wrecked during the flood . One
Creek, causing a disastrous of the cars contained a large
flood . There was near total amoun l of money and HIU was
destruction and heavy loss of .
life.
H111, only 18 at the time, and
EXILE KILLED .
his unit were sent Into the area
BEIRUT (UP!) - Exiled
to aearch for bodies and clean
Gen.
Mohanuned Omran, a
'IP debris. 'l'hey were in the
ar 'a five days,, subsisting on former Syrian Vice premier
canned meat and coffee.
who had lived in the nllfthern
· Hlll said the cleanlr:g up don., Lebanese city of Tripoli for the.
by large l!l!Uipment at Buffalo past three years, was shot and
Creek was done In 1916 by killed Saturday when he anh(lrH I. BudiPs nt l11r \'ir·'im!; al
sw~red a kn cr.k on his door.

.

assigned to stand guard. The
engineer gave him a blackjack
which he later gave to the late
Walter Wolfe who was at the
time Pomeroy Police chief.
HEADS HUNT
cOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
retired president of the Kroger ·
Co., has been named to head a
new search for a successor to
Novice G. Fawcett who Is
retiring_ ~s presidunt of Ohio
State University. jacob E.
bavis will head a 15 member
group to look for a new
president.

ESKEY HILL, Pomeroy, at home today, The L91110
County, W. Va ., tragedy last week recalled for him a slmU&amp;r
event In 1916 at Cabin Creek.

1

�'

...

~ i' '

2- The Swlday Tinnes- Sentinel, Sunday, MarCh 5, 1972

PRICE HIKES
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Lyke · Youngstown Corp's
Youngstown Metal Products
Division was granted a 9.31 pet.
price hike by the federal Priee
Commission Friday. The firm
had requested a 9.91 pet, increase.

1,722 ·Receire Diabetes.Tests
GALLIPOUS - A total of
1,722 persons received the
Diabetes blood test during the
recent eight day survey according to a. r-eport .g!V.n
today by Francis W. Shane,
M.D. Four-hund~:ed and
seventy-one persons received
diabetes tests Friday here,
T~hnicians also gave 493 chest
x-ran.
Credit for the survey's
success was due to the efforts
of 122 volun leers and with tile
cooperation of Gallia County
and Gallipolis City Health
Departments, Dr. Shane said.
Each person will receive a
confidential report by mail of
the results within lwo or three
weeks. The blood samples are
now being analyzed at the State
Health
Department
Laboratory in Columbus.
Persons whose test requires
further study will be given an
opportunity to have additional
BUSY DAY- Miss Virginia Killin, right, city health nurse, looks over activities during
tests. They will he notified of
this by mail.
Thursday and Friday's visit of the Diabetes Detection and Mobile X-Ray Unit. The Ohio
"One of the important byDepartment of Health, along with local health officials, tested more than 17110 persons during
products of such a survey," Dr. · the 10-day program throughout Gallia County.
Shane said, "is the peace of
mind you enjoy upon learning
that your test shows no signs of this age group.
Richards , Mrs. Ernest Florence Trainer, Zelia Craft,
Volunteers helping Friday Wiseman, Mrs . Thelma Ellabelle McDonald, Dorothy
diabetes."
However, he advised were Mrs. Andrew Toler, Mrs. Shaver, Elsie N. Neal, Mrs. B. Smith, Beverly Wilson,
everyone over 3S years of age Bobby J. Clark, Mrs. Wilma Sigismund Harder, Mrs. Bess Katherine Dobbins, and Wilnell
to have a Diabetes test as part Brown, Mrs. John H. Drew, Grace, Mrs. Bess Call, Rodgers.
of his periodical physical Mrs. Marvin Pullins, Mrs. W.
examination. This test is Kenneth Welk.er, Mrs. Earl
Durham, Mrs. Karen Blanton,
esp~iaily important to the
over 3S age group since the Mrs. Betty Lou Moore, Mrs.
disease is more prevalent in Terry Danner, Mrs. Robert

T,tLKS P()S'J'I'ONED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
opening round of negotiations,
for a new hard coal minen
wage cootract wu JIOitponed
Friday becauae Inclement
.weather prevented par·
Uclpanfa from lraveJinc to New
York.
'

DAVIP BRYAN, ~r., a member of the Gallipolis Future
Farmers of America Chapter, was quite surprised on Feb. 28.
- Bryan went to the barD to check on his sheep, and found a ewe
which hBd just given birth to one lamb on Feb. 22, had
· produced twins six days later. The oldest lamb weighed 11
pounds. '!be twins weighed 6&gt;,2 and 7 pounds. The mother will
not nurse them, thus they must be fed froiD a bottle. Bryan's
FF A major project is sheep.

McClung Honored
MIDDLEPORT - Thomas
G. McClung, 967 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport, was recently
honored by Knapp King Size
Corporation of Brockton, Mass.
Knapp is celebrating Its 51st
year as a manufacturer and
distributor of footwear selling
directly to customers through

local independent sales persons. In such a capacity,
McClung has satisfactorily
served his customers in' this
area and in appreciation of his
ability, cooperation, loyalty
and friendship he has been
presented a lapel pin signifying
his membership in the five
years of Knapp Service Club.

:FOUND

'YOUR
MOBil£
HOME? ·

NOW FIND OUT ABOUT
OUR LOW-COST MOBILE
HOME LOANS!

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOANPhoneCOMPANY
Opposite Post Office

Gallipolis ,

446-38l2

•

Mrs. Blakeslee to-Head
1972 Easter Seal Sales
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. C. E. Easter Seals to Meigs CounBiakeslee, a teacher at Meigs Uans and on March 10, Rotary
High School, will serve as . Club members will be joined by
chairman for the annual their wives for a stuffing bee at
Easter Seal Sale of the Meigs which time the seals are
County Crippled Society for prepared for the mails.
Crippled Children and Adults.
Some of the speech class
Traditionally, . the sale is students at Meigs High School
·sponsored by the Middleport- have prepared tapes on the
Pomeroy Rotary Club. The Easter Seal sale and fund drive
wife of the Rotary Club and these wiU be played on
president automatically serves WMPO Radio this month as a
as chairman of the drive.
part of the promotional efforts
Students of Mrs. Bernice of the campaign. Students
Hoffman at Meigs High School making tapes for broadcasting
li:ave prepared envelopes for· are Q!l\-«n,e De~g~J, Tom
the mailing of thousands of the Kern, Rosemary Rice,-Marge
,A
Riggs, Mike Struble, John
ro,~er
Swart% and Keith Van Jnwagen. Meigs County will also
take part ina telethon this year
as a part of fund drive activities with Earl Ingles serCOLUMBUS (UP!)
ving as chairman of that enCharges against Gerald deavor.
Donahue, Sidney Griffith and
Harry Groban , the three
Crofters, Inc., officials who
SUNDAY
arranged a number of
TIMES.SENTINEL
PvDt ist.to
by l nt Ohio
questionable state loans two
"''"' " ubl lth l"! Co.
G• Ll iP OL I Olll tlY T- 18UNt':
years ago , were dropped
Tn lrO Awt , Glll iPOIIt .
dill
i&gt;ll i)tilntd I VIry WIM.Oiy I Ytfl inll U " l)i
during their trial Friday.
Stl ut dll
Cl ll. l Po ntet J'I ICI 11
GIII IPOII I , Ofi iO, 4,.J1
T11E Oollt L 'r S.EN ft NIH
Judge Robert Cook, sitting
1\1
. . Pomtroy, 0 ., u"'
nlry !Utkdly IYtfl lft.V trUI) I
here on assignment from
s.r~"'''~' · f.:nrtrt&lt;l n I~COn d ,ru\ mt ll lng
m tlle.- 11 ,.om Rroy ,
,.ur Otllct .
Tt: I!M S OF !1JIU( III,T10 "
Ravenna, dismissed the
I~ u rr lt r 1,.11 , Inc! SYndty , toe '"'
charges against the three that
""'MAl l I!PQIII
SUII ! CII I,TION IIAl f$
Tr IIIYnt In Cil lo e no WUI
they made false statements to I VlrglUln GII
lt . C&lt;l t rur JU ,OO , 1i o manlht \ 1.
lh r u m on 1111 SI .Sf;
ont , .. ,
io m..,ll._ 51 ; tll r tt mOnlhl 15 .00
obtain loans from the state 1I IUlht, lOtill
S.n!lntl. ant.,.,., .11 .00 , tr•
11 i . rr1r" m ont111 li .SD .
treasury . Cook said the I m onlh1
flu Unlttd P r us ln !lrn tiiOnll 11 t•
1 (lu t ht l• tnlllll'lllo til• li lt lor
prosecution failed to prove the 1 "' tit ""''' Olll!U ch n . ntdlrH ro 11111
I Pllbllt hH llenln . tiiO lht 1"'11 n tW I
charges.

3~The~ Times. Sentinel, Sunday, March 6, 1972

Venereal
DliWe
(Continued from Page 1)

Voc-Ed Vote

conUnued to be Gallia 's nwnber one health
II'Oblem ln. 1971. Heart disease was the
leading cauae of deJth In the county.
'lblrty.UOe penons succwnbed to
beart seizures during the yar _ Other
death causeiJ were cancer ,live; accidents,
12; pneumonia, two; suicide, four;
medullary paralysis, three, snd ooe death
was lilted as und~rmlned. Deceased
Per80118 wbo ri!aided; in· the city would be
ilsted In the Galllpoils City Health
Department records.
'lbe health department did not record
a birth In the countY during the year,
Gallia County Sanitarian Frank Petrie
gave his environmental report, st.ressing
the need for assistance from ail county
villages and residents.
During 1971, over 100 inspections were
held on public water supplies with 100
consultations ~ing conducted through the
local and Ohio Department of Health.
There, were .117 Inspections of private
water ·supplies with 169 corisultations. in
the waste disposal area, there were 12
inspectloos and 20 consultations made on
public sewage systems.
Petrie also Inspected private waste
disposal systems, conducted 22 con.
sultations and approved 123 sewage
systems. One-hundred and seventeen
water samples were collected from
private supplles, 100
municipal and
15.from swimming pools.
In the environmental sanitation ac·
tlvitles, there were 118 ·nuisance complaints resulting .In 118 inspections.
Thirteen animal heads were sent to the
Ohio Department of Health lliboratories
for rabies examination with one positive
case reported. It involved a grey fox that
bit a cow owned by . Paul Niday. There
were 45.animal bites reported In which
investigations were made and the proper
slep8 taken in each case.
David Garst reviewed the water
supply improvement project funded by the
federal government. The program is
designed to determine the existing status
of water supplies affectlr@ the rural
resident; to provide detailed current data
for future program planning purposes; to
create public awareness of the lmjJortance
of safe adequate water supplies: to
provide educational materials to the rural
resident snd IQ encourage persons to
develop an Interest In allied health fields.
'!be program was initiated in June,
1970. Garst said 882 water samples were
taken with 498 being ruled safe and 3fi4

from

(Continued from Page I)
{Continued from page 1)
students.complete high school and become response and inlilrel!t, the program's
employable at .better jobs.
initial activity has been expanded to in·
Courses offered will be :
elude other conununities In the ·Ap·
VOCATIONAL '- Agriculture Business, palachiml regloo."
,tgriculture Mechanics &amp; Diesel, and
The pilot Appalachian program
Forestry Resources Conservatioo (Hor· feplaces the . "shotgun" industrial
Uculture Landscaping).
development teclmique of attempting to
BUSINESS EDUCATION - BuSiness draw sny industry into a region. The plan
Data Processing (Computers) and - substit~tes the "rifle" approach:- uSe of
Cooperative Office Educatioo.
selective development techniques to guide
DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION.
&lt;»nun unities to industries best suited to
llOME ECONOMICS - ·Food Services, their needs, goals and resources.
Home Nursing Aides.
The II'Ogram, which is expected to
.TECHNICAL TRAINING - Auto serve as a pilot program for other states in
Mechanics, Auto Body Repair, the region, is unique in its ''total depen·
Cosmetology, Drafting, Electricity, dence on the grass-roots conununtty efElectronlcs, Madline Shop, DiverSified fort, interest and lmowledge for success,"
Co-opTraining,Diversified Co-op Training Sweet said. An area development
in Health Services, Sheet Metal &amp; Welding economist will work full-time In eaCh local
and Industrial Maintenance.
conununlty during the implementation
phase.
"The. field economist will first
determine community needs and goals
through a series of surveys and meetings
unsafe.
.Dr. Shane also oullined other services .with conununily leaders and private
offered by the health department including citizens encompassing a broad spectrum
its free immuni2ation clinics; cardiac, of interests," he explained. "Then
orthopedic; hearing and speech clinics; potential industry alternatives will be
school visiting and the family living presented to the community."
programs.
The Development Department will
During the business session, the group also provide continuing technical and
reelected Raymond Lester of Raccoon marketing assistance In 4Ppalachian
· Twp., as president.of the advlsory council. conununitles through the program. "This
C. B. Clary of Ohio Twp.,,is vice president assistance will ·aid each community to
and Marvin Ours, Clay Twp., is the develop and put into action continuing
secretary.
local development programs," Sweet said.
Other members are J. A. French,
Addison Twp.; Clair Athey, Cheshire
Twp.; Gary Bane, Gallipolis Twp.; Bryan
· B. Saunders, Green Twp.: John E. Lewis,
Guyan Twp.; Merritt Sanders, Harrison
GASOLINE STOLEN
Twp.; WiiJard Woodruff, Huntington
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia county
Twp.; Harold M. Russell, Morgan Twp.; sheriff's deputies Friday investigated the
T. A.Gooidin, Ohio Twp.; Alden Salisbury, theft of 30 gallons of gasoline from a
Perry Twp.; D. W. DeWitt, Springfield Hannan Trace School bus. The bus was
.Twp.: Cecil R. Rice, Walnut Twp.: Stanley parked in front of the home of Jake Halley,
Watts, Crown City Village; Gilbert Boster, a driver in the district.
. Centerville Village; Walter S. Lucas,
Cheshire ViiJagei Arlen Owens, Rio
Grande Village and Ludena Stollings,
Vinton Village.
ROAD CLOSED
Dale Gleason of Vinton was reapPOMEROY- Route 124 between Long
pointed to a five-year term on the board of
Bottom
snd Portland has been closed due
health. Other members are Dr. James
Kemp, Lee Rose, Walter Rife, and Frank to water from the 'ohio River over the
road, James Bailey, superintendent of the
Ruff.
'!be advisory council approved the State Highway Department in Meigs
placing of a five tenths mUI operating Jeyy County, said Saturday afternoon. The
on the November General Election Ballot. flooded area is .known as Rock Run.

••

.

~

C
Trio
Is Innocent

-

GAU.IPOUS, OHIO

Q ~I Q,

~ KOIHI

~•~ r t

PU ~ III~IG

...... . _

~

. ....u...

~1

O~ lo ,

II$4W ~ trt.

p~III I U !I an

FI IWijlfiiRF

tn(l

8 Forfeit

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

CUSTOM MADE
FIBERGLAS

Court Bond
More durabilily from

mc~~~~~tll'

DRAPES

~

Lined or
Unlined or
Thermal Bonded
In solids, plaids,
stripes, florals &amp; mod
patterns.
Also :
super -wide
sheers and bedspread
co-ordinates.

• Retards soilingcover stays cleaner, fresher,
newer looking longer
It should ~ome as no news to you
that the cosl of just about everything
IS Up.

And perhaps you've resigned
yourself to the fact that you just can't
get as much for your money anymore.
Right?
.wrong . If you're talking telephone
servtce.
Here are 11 simple ways to keep
costs down without giving up a single
call.
1. When you move. plan ahead.
Have all the phones you'll need installed at the same time for a single
installation charge. If you ask us to
come back later, there's an added
charge.
2. If you have youngsters away
from home, set a specific time for you
to call them or them to .call you at low
station-to-station rates. (Calling
person-to-r•erson can cost up to three
times as much.)

3. Dial long distance direct. You.
tong distance. It's usually cheaper in
save on all out-of-state, station-to·
the evenings, even cheaper on week·
station calls you dial yourself withoot
ends.
operator assistance.
9. Pian your long distance calls in
4. If you don't know the out-of·
advance . Make notes, If you have to.
town number, call directory assistance
Then slick to the script. You'll be
in the distant city. At no charge. Dial 1,
amazed at the lime (and money) y&amp;u
lhe area code (if different from your
save.
own), then 555·1212.
10. If you ' re leaving town for one
5. You're dialing direct and you · to n.ine months, ask us to put your
reach a wrong number. No problem~
serv1ce on our reduced vacation rate.
Simply dial the operator and explain
11. If one of our pay phones takes
what happened. You won't be charged
your dtme and doesn't give you a call
for the call.
please do this. Jot down the numbe;
6. You 're talking long distance
of lhe offending phone and, when you
and you're cut off. If you're the calling
get the opportunity, report it. Just dial
party, just dial the operator. The
"operator." We'll see that the phone
charge will be adjusted.
gets fixed. And we'll see that you get
7. If you're just starting out and
your dime back.
on a limited budget, maybe you should
consider a basic black watt or desk
phone. The service is the same just a
•
'
little bit cheaper.
8. Know the best limes to call

@ohioB~II

• More comfort wilh deep
quilling to Sealyfoam••
... layers of puffy cushioning
like sleeping on a cloud
• More support
from hundreds
of extra firm
Dur•Fiex coils

~

• More firmness from
patenled Dura·Gard
foundationtorsion bar design
is more durable, · ~·"
gives stronger edge

$3445
BOX SPRING OR MATTRESS
$4750
SAVE ON
EACH PIECE

REG. VAL 179.95

FULl. OR TWIN

..

FOB

POMEROY - Nine defendants were fined and eight
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Darrell W. Young,
Dexter, Rt. I, $25 and costs, no
highway use tax sticker: Roy
E. Powell, Middleport, $10 and
costs, speeding; Harry D.
Barton, Reedsville, Rt. I, $5
· and costs, no brakes, Shelby N.
Pickens, Racine, Rt. I, $5 and
' costs, unsafe vehicle; Willie T.
Jones, Reedsville, Rt.1, $5 and
costs, insecure load: Ronald L.
Swain, Reedsville, .Rt. I, $10
and costs, failure to register;
A.
Laudermilt,
. James
. . Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
driving under suspension, $5
and costs, unsafe vehicle; Don
R. Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, $58 and
costs, $38 suspended, overload;
Alfred E. 'Deren berger,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failure
to stop within assured clear
distance.
Forfeiting bonds were Lester
M. Lewis, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$27.50, failure to register; Paul
Abrams, Pomeroy , Rt . 4,
$17.50, no muffler ; Clyde
Downing, Clarksburg, 0 ., $25
failure to stop within assured
clear distance: Edwin R.
Conaway, Chillicothe, $2HO,
speeding; Steven E. Nunn,
Galiipolis, Rt. 1, $257.50,
driving while intoxicated : ·
Richard C. Jarboe, Wheeling,
W. Va ., $17.50, defective'
muffler ; Charles L. Fryline,
Columbus, $27.50, speeding;
Bayard M. Murdoch , Wellston,
$27.50, expired operators
license.

1-•••----••••••llliiiii-.;;iiiiiiiiiiii...
841
•••.
Ph••• 446-140$
Golli,olis

GALLIPOLIS - Frank
Petrie, Jr ., Gallia County
Sanitarian , Saturday urged
farmers who will be using
chemical s to burn their
tobacco beds to be extra
careful. Petrie said last year
some of the chemicals were
discarded into streams which
resulted in damages to aquatic

SALOM RIZK
POMEROY - Salom Rlzk,
noted author and lecturer,
· will be the keynote speaker
at the Meigs High ,School
Monday morning when a
general assembly of all
students officially opens
Vocational Conference
Week. Mr. Rlzk, who has
won International fame
through an Interpretative
autobiography, "Syrian
Yankee,"

is

one

REESE WHOLESALE FURNITU
.OUTLET :,
2nd'&amp; Sycamore

.. ,

. Gallipolis, Ohio

WOMEN AU..OWED
NEW YORK (UP! )- Edwin
B. Dooley, chairman of the
New York State Athletic
Commission, announced
women
Thursday
that
reporters will be allowed to sit
in the working press section at
boxing matches and wrestling
exhibitions.
'!'he commission had a longstanding policy which prohibited women journalists from
working on press row.

of

America 's foremost platform personalities. Mr. Rlzk
has made five natloual tours
with Readers Digest and
Rotary lnternatloual, has
spoken at many places In
Europe and the Near East,
and Is the originator of Voice
of Man Radio International.

Mothers' March
Co l
•
mp eted m
,,
2 Communtties

•. "'~··

&lt;

/1

life in the Gallia County area.
The sariitaria11 also reported
that children playing in the
affected creeks developed
blisters andburning sensations
on their hands and feet after
coming into contact with the

Tonight thru
Wednesdav

"NEVER GIVE AINCH"
was the motto
of the Stampers of Oregon ...

water.

and live II theJ did f

Petrie urged everyone to use
extreme caution when using
chemicals of any type and
asked all users to follow the

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.

March 5·6·7
Walt Oisnev's
THE LADY II NO
THE TRAMP
(TechnicolorJ

Disney Feature"e:

Wet. Back Hound ,

Disney Cartoon :
Tiger Trouble
Donald's Vacation
Swim DoQ, Swim

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Sometimes a Gl't!at
Koticn
.
---

_

CARTOON

____:.__;;.:__;~;.:.._-

Sunday • Monday - Tuesday · Wednesday

POMEROY - The Mothers'
March has been completed in
Chester and Tuppers Plains
with $241 being collected, Mrs.
Vikki Gloeckner, chairman,
said.
Joan Smith and Sharo"
Louks, Chester, served as
chairmen and extend thanks to
workers and contributors.
Given special thanks for her ·
work in Chester was Pat
Thomas.
Workers included Nancy
Cole, Jerry Griffith, Janet
, Connolly, Mary Longenette,
Patsy Chapman, Carolyn
Tripp, Pam Hager, Mrs. Henry
.•.T,hQillas,.Fiossie !$xspn, Lila
yan Meter, Sara Bailey, Judy
M...
S@_fl;ller, .:ij~a ·.Q.R\Iilas,
'
.
help. They were unable to get Marilyn Ro~i;~~n, Dorothy
Calloway, Judy Ginther, Betty
back Into the burning house.
Gaul, Diana R~ush and Paula
The Bashan Fire Department Sayre.
answered the call.
Dr. R. R. Pickens, Meigs
County Coroner, ruled death
In 1945 the Nazis sent their
was caused by suffocation. flying "buzz" bombs across the
The partial remains of the body English Channel against Britain
were taken to Ewing Funeral for the first time. It turned out
Home. The house, which to be a· desperate last ditch
burned to the ground, was attempt that failed .
owned by Samantha Roberts of
Hookervilie, W. Va.
Mr. Barnette is survived by
his wife, Mary Lou, three
children, Danny, David and
Kathy; his mother and stepfather, Ralph and Jane
Johnson of Racine; two
brothers, Wendell of Richwood,
W. Va., and Kyle of Syracuse,
and his grandmother, Mrs.
Samantha
Roberts
of
Hookervilie. His father, Harley
Barnette, p~eded ' him in
death.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Tuesday morning at
the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ, Latter Day
Saints, on the Racine-Portland
Road. Elder Bill Anderson will
offociate. Burial will be in
'lickory Flails Cemetery at
·bscon, W. Va. Friends may
I at the Ewing Funeral
e any tlmt.
Assisting at the fire was
Chester Fire Department.

&gt;.-o./ 0 &lt;~ '• ......... .. ~

POMEROY - A fire early
Saturday morning is believed
to have caused the death of
Wilbur Eugene Barnette, . 36,
Meigs County Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach reported.
Barnette and a woman officers did not .identify went to
the Barnette home on Eagle
Ridge in Chester Township
near Bashan at 3 a.m. Saturday. At 6 a.m. the woman
awoke to fine the house on fire.
The woman was unable to
awaken Barnefte, who was
asleep on a couch in the living
room.
The woman went to the home
of Carl Lee, a neighbor, for

. CORNER OF SEOOND &amp; SYCAMORE

sv ~ny

U~

Offered Advice

WHti~ll:E~~~;~ .Whtl~?Sle:~ptng :·:~ ·

,------------------•~tr y

Tobacco Growers

Man Suffocates

REESE FURNITURE
!\ ,,.

Seminar

instructions on the use and
discarding of the material.

and Thursday Only!
No

No

Coupons!

Limit!

Dinner Box Special
1/2 Chicken $ 29

4 Pieces ·
:.' • , Potatoes • Cole Slaw
"

• Dinner Roll -

t~akt

.
Reg. $1.65

t4nppt

"THAT OLD FASHIC*ED GOODNESS"

2nd' &amp; OLIVE St.

Gii'IPOIJS. OHIO

Get acar loan from

First National

Since 1859

THE BANK THAT REALLY WANTS 10 MAKE lOANS.

Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back

•

"THE OLD. BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

Mon. &amp; Tues.
Only!

TURKEY
LEG
QUA'RTERl
LB.

29l~b.

or
more

GROUND C!tUCK lb.89'

"109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

I

I

�'

...

~ i' '

2- The Swlday Tinnes- Sentinel, Sunday, MarCh 5, 1972

PRICE HIKES
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Lyke · Youngstown Corp's
Youngstown Metal Products
Division was granted a 9.31 pet.
price hike by the federal Priee
Commission Friday. The firm
had requested a 9.91 pet, increase.

1,722 ·Receire Diabetes.Tests
GALLIPOUS - A total of
1,722 persons received the
Diabetes blood test during the
recent eight day survey according to a. r-eport .g!V.n
today by Francis W. Shane,
M.D. Four-hund~:ed and
seventy-one persons received
diabetes tests Friday here,
T~hnicians also gave 493 chest
x-ran.
Credit for the survey's
success was due to the efforts
of 122 volun leers and with tile
cooperation of Gallia County
and Gallipolis City Health
Departments, Dr. Shane said.
Each person will receive a
confidential report by mail of
the results within lwo or three
weeks. The blood samples are
now being analyzed at the State
Health
Department
Laboratory in Columbus.
Persons whose test requires
further study will be given an
opportunity to have additional
BUSY DAY- Miss Virginia Killin, right, city health nurse, looks over activities during
tests. They will he notified of
this by mail.
Thursday and Friday's visit of the Diabetes Detection and Mobile X-Ray Unit. The Ohio
"One of the important byDepartment of Health, along with local health officials, tested more than 17110 persons during
products of such a survey," Dr. · the 10-day program throughout Gallia County.
Shane said, "is the peace of
mind you enjoy upon learning
that your test shows no signs of this age group.
Richards , Mrs. Ernest Florence Trainer, Zelia Craft,
Volunteers helping Friday Wiseman, Mrs . Thelma Ellabelle McDonald, Dorothy
diabetes."
However, he advised were Mrs. Andrew Toler, Mrs. Shaver, Elsie N. Neal, Mrs. B. Smith, Beverly Wilson,
everyone over 3S years of age Bobby J. Clark, Mrs. Wilma Sigismund Harder, Mrs. Bess Katherine Dobbins, and Wilnell
to have a Diabetes test as part Brown, Mrs. John H. Drew, Grace, Mrs. Bess Call, Rodgers.
of his periodical physical Mrs. Marvin Pullins, Mrs. W.
examination. This test is Kenneth Welk.er, Mrs. Earl
Durham, Mrs. Karen Blanton,
esp~iaily important to the
over 3S age group since the Mrs. Betty Lou Moore, Mrs.
disease is more prevalent in Terry Danner, Mrs. Robert

T,tLKS P()S'J'I'ONED
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
opening round of negotiations,
for a new hard coal minen
wage cootract wu JIOitponed
Friday becauae Inclement
.weather prevented par·
Uclpanfa from lraveJinc to New
York.
'

DAVIP BRYAN, ~r., a member of the Gallipolis Future
Farmers of America Chapter, was quite surprised on Feb. 28.
- Bryan went to the barD to check on his sheep, and found a ewe
which hBd just given birth to one lamb on Feb. 22, had
· produced twins six days later. The oldest lamb weighed 11
pounds. '!be twins weighed 6&gt;,2 and 7 pounds. The mother will
not nurse them, thus they must be fed froiD a bottle. Bryan's
FF A major project is sheep.

McClung Honored
MIDDLEPORT - Thomas
G. McClung, 967 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport, was recently
honored by Knapp King Size
Corporation of Brockton, Mass.
Knapp is celebrating Its 51st
year as a manufacturer and
distributor of footwear selling
directly to customers through

local independent sales persons. In such a capacity,
McClung has satisfactorily
served his customers in' this
area and in appreciation of his
ability, cooperation, loyalty
and friendship he has been
presented a lapel pin signifying
his membership in the five
years of Knapp Service Club.

:FOUND

'YOUR
MOBil£
HOME? ·

NOW FIND OUT ABOUT
OUR LOW-COST MOBILE
HOME LOANS!

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOANPhoneCOMPANY
Opposite Post Office

Gallipolis ,

446-38l2

•

Mrs. Blakeslee to-Head
1972 Easter Seal Sales
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. C. E. Easter Seals to Meigs CounBiakeslee, a teacher at Meigs Uans and on March 10, Rotary
High School, will serve as . Club members will be joined by
chairman for the annual their wives for a stuffing bee at
Easter Seal Sale of the Meigs which time the seals are
County Crippled Society for prepared for the mails.
Crippled Children and Adults.
Some of the speech class
Traditionally, . the sale is students at Meigs High School
·sponsored by the Middleport- have prepared tapes on the
Pomeroy Rotary Club. The Easter Seal sale and fund drive
wife of the Rotary Club and these wiU be played on
president automatically serves WMPO Radio this month as a
as chairman of the drive.
part of the promotional efforts
Students of Mrs. Bernice of the campaign. Students
Hoffman at Meigs High School making tapes for broadcasting
li:ave prepared envelopes for· are Q!l\-«n,e De~g~J, Tom
the mailing of thousands of the Kern, Rosemary Rice,-Marge
,A
Riggs, Mike Struble, John
ro,~er
Swart% and Keith Van Jnwagen. Meigs County will also
take part ina telethon this year
as a part of fund drive activities with Earl Ingles serCOLUMBUS (UP!)
ving as chairman of that enCharges against Gerald deavor.
Donahue, Sidney Griffith and
Harry Groban , the three
Crofters, Inc., officials who
SUNDAY
arranged a number of
TIMES.SENTINEL
PvDt ist.to
by l nt Ohio
questionable state loans two
"''"' " ubl lth l"! Co.
G• Ll iP OL I Olll tlY T- 18UNt':
years ago , were dropped
Tn lrO Awt , Glll iPOIIt .
dill
i&gt;ll i)tilntd I VIry WIM.Oiy I Ytfl inll U " l)i
during their trial Friday.
Stl ut dll
Cl ll. l Po ntet J'I ICI 11
GIII IPOII I , Ofi iO, 4,.J1
T11E Oollt L 'r S.EN ft NIH
Judge Robert Cook, sitting
1\1
. . Pomtroy, 0 ., u"'
nlry !Utkdly IYtfl lft.V trUI) I
here on assignment from
s.r~"'''~' · f.:nrtrt&lt;l n I~COn d ,ru\ mt ll lng
m tlle.- 11 ,.om Rroy ,
,.ur Otllct .
Tt: I!M S OF !1JIU( III,T10 "
Ravenna, dismissed the
I~ u rr lt r 1,.11 , Inc! SYndty , toe '"'
charges against the three that
""'MAl l I!PQIII
SUII ! CII I,TION IIAl f$
Tr IIIYnt In Cil lo e no WUI
they made false statements to I VlrglUln GII
lt . C&lt;l t rur JU ,OO , 1i o manlht \ 1.
lh r u m on 1111 SI .Sf;
ont , .. ,
io m..,ll._ 51 ; tll r tt mOnlhl 15 .00
obtain loans from the state 1I IUlht, lOtill
S.n!lntl. ant.,.,., .11 .00 , tr•
11 i . rr1r" m ont111 li .SD .
treasury . Cook said the I m onlh1
flu Unlttd P r us ln !lrn tiiOnll 11 t•
1 (lu t ht l• tnlllll'lllo til• li lt lor
prosecution failed to prove the 1 "' tit ""''' Olll!U ch n . ntdlrH ro 11111
I Pllbllt hH llenln . tiiO lht 1"'11 n tW I
charges.

3~The~ Times. Sentinel, Sunday, March 6, 1972

Venereal
DliWe
(Continued from Page 1)

Voc-Ed Vote

conUnued to be Gallia 's nwnber one health
II'Oblem ln. 1971. Heart disease was the
leading cauae of deJth In the county.
'lblrty.UOe penons succwnbed to
beart seizures during the yar _ Other
death causeiJ were cancer ,live; accidents,
12; pneumonia, two; suicide, four;
medullary paralysis, three, snd ooe death
was lilted as und~rmlned. Deceased
Per80118 wbo ri!aided; in· the city would be
ilsted In the Galllpoils City Health
Department records.
'lbe health department did not record
a birth In the countY during the year,
Gallia County Sanitarian Frank Petrie
gave his environmental report, st.ressing
the need for assistance from ail county
villages and residents.
During 1971, over 100 inspections were
held on public water supplies with 100
consultations ~ing conducted through the
local and Ohio Department of Health.
There, were .117 Inspections of private
water ·supplies with 169 corisultations. in
the waste disposal area, there were 12
inspectloos and 20 consultations made on
public sewage systems.
Petrie also Inspected private waste
disposal systems, conducted 22 con.
sultations and approved 123 sewage
systems. One-hundred and seventeen
water samples were collected from
private supplles, 100
municipal and
15.from swimming pools.
In the environmental sanitation ac·
tlvitles, there were 118 ·nuisance complaints resulting .In 118 inspections.
Thirteen animal heads were sent to the
Ohio Department of Health lliboratories
for rabies examination with one positive
case reported. It involved a grey fox that
bit a cow owned by . Paul Niday. There
were 45.animal bites reported In which
investigations were made and the proper
slep8 taken in each case.
David Garst reviewed the water
supply improvement project funded by the
federal government. The program is
designed to determine the existing status
of water supplies affectlr@ the rural
resident; to provide detailed current data
for future program planning purposes; to
create public awareness of the lmjJortance
of safe adequate water supplies: to
provide educational materials to the rural
resident snd IQ encourage persons to
develop an Interest In allied health fields.
'!be program was initiated in June,
1970. Garst said 882 water samples were
taken with 498 being ruled safe and 3fi4

from

(Continued from Page I)
{Continued from page 1)
students.complete high school and become response and inlilrel!t, the program's
employable at .better jobs.
initial activity has been expanded to in·
Courses offered will be :
elude other conununities In the ·Ap·
VOCATIONAL '- Agriculture Business, palachiml regloo."
,tgriculture Mechanics &amp; Diesel, and
The pilot Appalachian program
Forestry Resources Conservatioo (Hor· feplaces the . "shotgun" industrial
Uculture Landscaping).
development teclmique of attempting to
BUSINESS EDUCATION - BuSiness draw sny industry into a region. The plan
Data Processing (Computers) and - substit~tes the "rifle" approach:- uSe of
Cooperative Office Educatioo.
selective development techniques to guide
DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION.
&lt;»nun unities to industries best suited to
llOME ECONOMICS - ·Food Services, their needs, goals and resources.
Home Nursing Aides.
The II'Ogram, which is expected to
.TECHNICAL TRAINING - Auto serve as a pilot program for other states in
Mechanics, Auto Body Repair, the region, is unique in its ''total depen·
Cosmetology, Drafting, Electricity, dence on the grass-roots conununtty efElectronlcs, Madline Shop, DiverSified fort, interest and lmowledge for success,"
Co-opTraining,Diversified Co-op Training Sweet said. An area development
in Health Services, Sheet Metal &amp; Welding economist will work full-time In eaCh local
and Industrial Maintenance.
conununlty during the implementation
phase.
"The. field economist will first
determine community needs and goals
through a series of surveys and meetings
unsafe.
.Dr. Shane also oullined other services .with conununily leaders and private
offered by the health department including citizens encompassing a broad spectrum
its free immuni2ation clinics; cardiac, of interests," he explained. "Then
orthopedic; hearing and speech clinics; potential industry alternatives will be
school visiting and the family living presented to the community."
programs.
The Development Department will
During the business session, the group also provide continuing technical and
reelected Raymond Lester of Raccoon marketing assistance In 4Ppalachian
· Twp., as president.of the advlsory council. conununitles through the program. "This
C. B. Clary of Ohio Twp.,,is vice president assistance will ·aid each community to
and Marvin Ours, Clay Twp., is the develop and put into action continuing
secretary.
local development programs," Sweet said.
Other members are J. A. French,
Addison Twp.; Clair Athey, Cheshire
Twp.; Gary Bane, Gallipolis Twp.; Bryan
· B. Saunders, Green Twp.: John E. Lewis,
Guyan Twp.; Merritt Sanders, Harrison
GASOLINE STOLEN
Twp.; WiiJard Woodruff, Huntington
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia county
Twp.; Harold M. Russell, Morgan Twp.; sheriff's deputies Friday investigated the
T. A.Gooidin, Ohio Twp.; Alden Salisbury, theft of 30 gallons of gasoline from a
Perry Twp.; D. W. DeWitt, Springfield Hannan Trace School bus. The bus was
.Twp.: Cecil R. Rice, Walnut Twp.: Stanley parked in front of the home of Jake Halley,
Watts, Crown City Village; Gilbert Boster, a driver in the district.
. Centerville Village; Walter S. Lucas,
Cheshire ViiJagei Arlen Owens, Rio
Grande Village and Ludena Stollings,
Vinton Village.
ROAD CLOSED
Dale Gleason of Vinton was reapPOMEROY- Route 124 between Long
pointed to a five-year term on the board of
Bottom
snd Portland has been closed due
health. Other members are Dr. James
Kemp, Lee Rose, Walter Rife, and Frank to water from the 'ohio River over the
road, James Bailey, superintendent of the
Ruff.
'!be advisory council approved the State Highway Department in Meigs
placing of a five tenths mUI operating Jeyy County, said Saturday afternoon. The
on the November General Election Ballot. flooded area is .known as Rock Run.

••

.

~

C
Trio
Is Innocent

-

GAU.IPOUS, OHIO

Q ~I Q,

~ KOIHI

~•~ r t

PU ~ III~IG

...... . _

~

. ....u...

~1

O~ lo ,

II$4W ~ trt.

p~III I U !I an

FI IWijlfiiRF

tn(l

8 Forfeit

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

CUSTOM MADE
FIBERGLAS

Court Bond
More durabilily from

mc~~~~~tll'

DRAPES

~

Lined or
Unlined or
Thermal Bonded
In solids, plaids,
stripes, florals &amp; mod
patterns.
Also :
super -wide
sheers and bedspread
co-ordinates.

• Retards soilingcover stays cleaner, fresher,
newer looking longer
It should ~ome as no news to you
that the cosl of just about everything
IS Up.

And perhaps you've resigned
yourself to the fact that you just can't
get as much for your money anymore.
Right?
.wrong . If you're talking telephone
servtce.
Here are 11 simple ways to keep
costs down without giving up a single
call.
1. When you move. plan ahead.
Have all the phones you'll need installed at the same time for a single
installation charge. If you ask us to
come back later, there's an added
charge.
2. If you have youngsters away
from home, set a specific time for you
to call them or them to .call you at low
station-to-station rates. (Calling
person-to-r•erson can cost up to three
times as much.)

3. Dial long distance direct. You.
tong distance. It's usually cheaper in
save on all out-of-state, station-to·
the evenings, even cheaper on week·
station calls you dial yourself withoot
ends.
operator assistance.
9. Pian your long distance calls in
4. If you don't know the out-of·
advance . Make notes, If you have to.
town number, call directory assistance
Then slick to the script. You'll be
in the distant city. At no charge. Dial 1,
amazed at the lime (and money) y&amp;u
lhe area code (if different from your
save.
own), then 555·1212.
10. If you ' re leaving town for one
5. You're dialing direct and you · to n.ine months, ask us to put your
reach a wrong number. No problem~
serv1ce on our reduced vacation rate.
Simply dial the operator and explain
11. If one of our pay phones takes
what happened. You won't be charged
your dtme and doesn't give you a call
for the call.
please do this. Jot down the numbe;
6. You 're talking long distance
of lhe offending phone and, when you
and you're cut off. If you're the calling
get the opportunity, report it. Just dial
party, just dial the operator. The
"operator." We'll see that the phone
charge will be adjusted.
gets fixed. And we'll see that you get
7. If you're just starting out and
your dime back.
on a limited budget, maybe you should
consider a basic black watt or desk
phone. The service is the same just a
•
'
little bit cheaper.
8. Know the best limes to call

@ohioB~II

• More comfort wilh deep
quilling to Sealyfoam••
... layers of puffy cushioning
like sleeping on a cloud
• More support
from hundreds
of extra firm
Dur•Fiex coils

~

• More firmness from
patenled Dura·Gard
foundationtorsion bar design
is more durable, · ~·"
gives stronger edge

$3445
BOX SPRING OR MATTRESS
$4750
SAVE ON
EACH PIECE

REG. VAL 179.95

FULl. OR TWIN

..

FOB

POMEROY - Nine defendants were fined and eight
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Darrell W. Young,
Dexter, Rt. I, $25 and costs, no
highway use tax sticker: Roy
E. Powell, Middleport, $10 and
costs, speeding; Harry D.
Barton, Reedsville, Rt. I, $5
· and costs, no brakes, Shelby N.
Pickens, Racine, Rt. I, $5 and
' costs, unsafe vehicle; Willie T.
Jones, Reedsville, Rt.1, $5 and
costs, insecure load: Ronald L.
Swain, Reedsville, .Rt. I, $10
and costs, failure to register;
A.
Laudermilt,
. James
. . Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
driving under suspension, $5
and costs, unsafe vehicle; Don
R. Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, $58 and
costs, $38 suspended, overload;
Alfred E. 'Deren berger,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failure
to stop within assured clear
distance.
Forfeiting bonds were Lester
M. Lewis, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$27.50, failure to register; Paul
Abrams, Pomeroy , Rt . 4,
$17.50, no muffler ; Clyde
Downing, Clarksburg, 0 ., $25
failure to stop within assured
clear distance: Edwin R.
Conaway, Chillicothe, $2HO,
speeding; Steven E. Nunn,
Galiipolis, Rt. 1, $257.50,
driving while intoxicated : ·
Richard C. Jarboe, Wheeling,
W. Va ., $17.50, defective'
muffler ; Charles L. Fryline,
Columbus, $27.50, speeding;
Bayard M. Murdoch , Wellston,
$27.50, expired operators
license.

1-•••----••••••llliiiii-.;;iiiiiiiiiiii...
841
•••.
Ph••• 446-140$
Golli,olis

GALLIPOLIS - Frank
Petrie, Jr ., Gallia County
Sanitarian , Saturday urged
farmers who will be using
chemical s to burn their
tobacco beds to be extra
careful. Petrie said last year
some of the chemicals were
discarded into streams which
resulted in damages to aquatic

SALOM RIZK
POMEROY - Salom Rlzk,
noted author and lecturer,
· will be the keynote speaker
at the Meigs High ,School
Monday morning when a
general assembly of all
students officially opens
Vocational Conference
Week. Mr. Rlzk, who has
won International fame
through an Interpretative
autobiography, "Syrian
Yankee,"

is

one

REESE WHOLESALE FURNITU
.OUTLET :,
2nd'&amp; Sycamore

.. ,

. Gallipolis, Ohio

WOMEN AU..OWED
NEW YORK (UP! )- Edwin
B. Dooley, chairman of the
New York State Athletic
Commission, announced
women
Thursday
that
reporters will be allowed to sit
in the working press section at
boxing matches and wrestling
exhibitions.
'!'he commission had a longstanding policy which prohibited women journalists from
working on press row.

of

America 's foremost platform personalities. Mr. Rlzk
has made five natloual tours
with Readers Digest and
Rotary lnternatloual, has
spoken at many places In
Europe and the Near East,
and Is the originator of Voice
of Man Radio International.

Mothers' March
Co l
•
mp eted m
,,
2 Communtties

•. "'~··

&lt;

/1

life in the Gallia County area.
The sariitaria11 also reported
that children playing in the
affected creeks developed
blisters andburning sensations
on their hands and feet after
coming into contact with the

Tonight thru
Wednesdav

"NEVER GIVE AINCH"
was the motto
of the Stampers of Oregon ...

water.

and live II theJ did f

Petrie urged everyone to use
extreme caution when using
chemicals of any type and
asked all users to follow the

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonight, Mon. &amp; Tues.

March 5·6·7
Walt Oisnev's
THE LADY II NO
THE TRAMP
(TechnicolorJ

Disney Feature"e:

Wet. Back Hound ,

Disney Cartoon :
Tiger Trouble
Donald's Vacation
Swim DoQ, Swim

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Sometimes a Gl't!at
Koticn
.
---

_

CARTOON

____:.__;;.:__;~;.:.._-

Sunday • Monday - Tuesday · Wednesday

POMEROY - The Mothers'
March has been completed in
Chester and Tuppers Plains
with $241 being collected, Mrs.
Vikki Gloeckner, chairman,
said.
Joan Smith and Sharo"
Louks, Chester, served as
chairmen and extend thanks to
workers and contributors.
Given special thanks for her ·
work in Chester was Pat
Thomas.
Workers included Nancy
Cole, Jerry Griffith, Janet
, Connolly, Mary Longenette,
Patsy Chapman, Carolyn
Tripp, Pam Hager, Mrs. Henry
.•.T,hQillas,.Fiossie !$xspn, Lila
yan Meter, Sara Bailey, Judy
M...
S@_fl;ller, .:ij~a ·.Q.R\Iilas,
'
.
help. They were unable to get Marilyn Ro~i;~~n, Dorothy
Calloway, Judy Ginther, Betty
back Into the burning house.
Gaul, Diana R~ush and Paula
The Bashan Fire Department Sayre.
answered the call.
Dr. R. R. Pickens, Meigs
County Coroner, ruled death
In 1945 the Nazis sent their
was caused by suffocation. flying "buzz" bombs across the
The partial remains of the body English Channel against Britain
were taken to Ewing Funeral for the first time. It turned out
Home. The house, which to be a· desperate last ditch
burned to the ground, was attempt that failed .
owned by Samantha Roberts of
Hookervilie, W. Va.
Mr. Barnette is survived by
his wife, Mary Lou, three
children, Danny, David and
Kathy; his mother and stepfather, Ralph and Jane
Johnson of Racine; two
brothers, Wendell of Richwood,
W. Va., and Kyle of Syracuse,
and his grandmother, Mrs.
Samantha
Roberts
of
Hookervilie. His father, Harley
Barnette, p~eded ' him in
death.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Tuesday morning at
the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ, Latter Day
Saints, on the Racine-Portland
Road. Elder Bill Anderson will
offociate. Burial will be in
'lickory Flails Cemetery at
·bscon, W. Va. Friends may
I at the Ewing Funeral
e any tlmt.
Assisting at the fire was
Chester Fire Department.

&gt;.-o./ 0 &lt;~ '• ......... .. ~

POMEROY - A fire early
Saturday morning is believed
to have caused the death of
Wilbur Eugene Barnette, . 36,
Meigs County Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach reported.
Barnette and a woman officers did not .identify went to
the Barnette home on Eagle
Ridge in Chester Township
near Bashan at 3 a.m. Saturday. At 6 a.m. the woman
awoke to fine the house on fire.
The woman was unable to
awaken Barnefte, who was
asleep on a couch in the living
room.
The woman went to the home
of Carl Lee, a neighbor, for

. CORNER OF SEOOND &amp; SYCAMORE

sv ~ny

U~

Offered Advice

WHti~ll:E~~~;~ .Whtl~?Sle:~ptng :·:~ ·

,------------------•~tr y

Tobacco Growers

Man Suffocates

REESE FURNITURE
!\ ,,.

Seminar

instructions on the use and
discarding of the material.

and Thursday Only!
No

No

Coupons!

Limit!

Dinner Box Special
1/2 Chicken $ 29

4 Pieces ·
:.' • , Potatoes • Cole Slaw
"

• Dinner Roll -

t~akt

.
Reg. $1.65

t4nppt

"THAT OLD FASHIC*ED GOODNESS"

2nd' &amp; OLIVE St.

Gii'IPOIJS. OHIO

Get acar loan from

First National

Since 1859

THE BANK THAT REALLY WANTS 10 MAKE lOANS.

Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back

•

"THE OLD. BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

Mon. &amp; Tues.
Only!

TURKEY
LEG
QUA'RTERl
LB.

29l~b.

or
more

GROUND C!tUCK lb.89'

"109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

I

I

�•

-·

•'
'
•- TheSwlday Times
. .-Sentinel, Swlday,March 5, 1972

Stuffing ·Bee
On Next Friday

Men and Women Molded
.

.By Rutland's Teachers
Misner1 Clyde (Barney)
BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY
Russell Kennedy,'- Abe Young, Bob
Musser left Rutland and Meigs Young, Ronald Barton, Paul
Winn, Leland Miller, Roy
County in 1928.
Snowden,
Gerald Rupe,
He went to Springfield, Ohio, ·
where he became associated Russell Musser, Wally Grant,
with International Harvester Carl Denison, Delbert Beach,
and retired from that !irm in Eddie Church, Kermit Church,
1966. Since then, he has become Harold Smith (manager) , Cecil
interested in woodwork and Camp, Sylvester King, Wm.
has become an authority on Buck, Wayne Rupe, Cecil
making spinning wheels. He Powers.
"We had some wonderful
has traveled to many foreign
countries to visit collectors of high school teachers. There is a
spinning wheels and museums great deal of difference in the
featuring large spinning wheel high schools of that era and the
high schools of today. We boys
displays.
Uke many who leave Meigs respected those teachers and
County to find employment, tried to copy after them,
" the memory lingers on ." because we liked them so well.
Although busy with his hobby They were very strict.
''How many can remember
and his travels, Musser recalls
wilh fondness lils early days in George~Crow and how he could
Meigs County. Not only that - add on the blackboard? He was
he would like to move hack a county superintendent and
we enjoyed him coming to visit
here to spend his last days.
Musser recalls of his days in our school on Hysell Run. Then
there was William Merritt. We
Meigs County :
"I was born on Hysell Run, would try to talk like him
September 30, 1904. The doctor because he was a very good
came by horse and buggy to teacher and speaker. He too
d~liver me. But he was a was a county superintendent.
"Then in high school (1921),
drinking man and fell out of the
buddy when he came. There "Bernard Higley was principal,
was a colored family ·by the Clarence Chapman was coach
name o! Bentley that lived on and Marcus Roush was a
my dad's farm . So dad got Mrs . . teacher. We tried to be men
Bentley to deliver me. After 67 like them and I am sure it paid
of! in our lives. As long as we
years, here I am.
"1 went to Hysell Run Grade live, we will never forget them.
School. Here are the names of These were the men who made
the teachers I had, Harvey us the men we are today. They
Skinner, Guy Mutchler, Esta taught us children that we had
Warner, Esta Arnold, Neva to be good citizens. So we are
Scott, Jap Folden, Tacey very thankful for these men
Hysell
and
Winifried who taught us.
"After high school I tried to
Williamson. Then I went to
high school in Rutland. Walked find a job. The mines in
that distance across the hills. Pomeroy Bend were on strike.
Sometimes I rode horse back We boys thought we could
and I went by the way of Happy clean up these mines and
Hollow, but the last year of secure work. This we did,
high school! owned a Model T under guard.
"But in 1927, Arthur Steele
witli side curtains, and I drove
it to high school depending on and I decided to go West. We
the mud roads up Hysell Run. were gone the whole swnmer
. "In 1922 we had the first and nearly starved to death .
football team. I played center But we did work in Kansas and
for 4 years. Clarence Chapman Wyoming. We were very glad
was our football coach and we to get back to Meigs County.
called him Chappy.
Then I did go back to No. &gt;
.Some of the boys on the team mine, which was up Bailey
itre 1Eti ' War'ner, Mousey Run , ana later go\ a job inside

the mine building doors and
bradishes.
"As I was putting up a door
post one day, a rock bell fell
from the roof and I just laid my
hand on it-15 tons - It was so
close. I picked up my tools and
walked out of the mine. That
was on Friday.
"I went to Pomeroy on
Saturday and bought a bus
ticket to Springfield, Ohio. On
Monday, I started to work for
the International Harvester
Company. That was in April
1928. As I was going with a girl
from Dexter by the name of
Opal Amos, we married in 1929,
and came back to Springfield
to make our home.
"We were the parents of five
children . Opa.l died in 19li2-of
cancer. I now have 15 grandchildren and one greatgranddaughter. I retired from
International Harvester in
1966.
"It was then that I started
working with wood and became
interested in spinning. To date
I have built some 23 spinning
wheels. I also correspond with
people all over the world who
share the interest in spinning.
From as far away as 400 miles
north of the Antarctic Circle. I
have also traveled some 45
countries of the world ."

GALLIPOLIS - Two persons were slighly injured in
four minor traffic accidents
investigated Friday and
Saturday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first injury mishap
occurled at 6:45 a.m. Friday
on Rt. 160, five tenths of a mile
west of Gallipolis where Karen
J. Alderigi, 30, Rt. 2, lost
control of her car which went
off the highway and struck a
Virginia
J.
guardrail.
Thompson , 4&gt;, Gallipolis, a
passenger, received minor
injuries. There was heavy
damage to the Alderigi car but
no charges were filed.
A second accident blamed on

Collisions
A. Northup said the blaze in the
12x57 foot trailer was caused · Ar
by a malfunction in the fuel oil
e Minor
furnace. The home was owned

.Auto Lands

In a Creek

vestigated a single car accident Saturday at 2:4&gt; a.m. on
U.S. Rt. 33at the intersection of
Charter Oak Hollow.
Dennis C. Clark, 17,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, drove his auto
around a curve on 33 near
Reuter's Station, hit an icy
place on the' highway, went out
of control, hit a utility pole, and
went into a creek.
There was heavy damage to
the car, but no injuries. No
citation was issued.

DIVORCE GRANTED
POMEROY - Woodrow Hall
was granted a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Margaret M. Hall on
charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. The
case of Denny W. Games, etal
versus C. E. Austin was
dismissed.

FORMER RUTLAND RESIDENT, a,ussell Musser, is one of the few people in the world
engaged in making spinning wheels. Although busy with his hobby, Musser, pictured at work
on some of the many spinning wheels he has made, would like to return to Meigs County to
spend his last years. Musser left Meigs County over 40 years ago and now resides in
SPringfield, Ohio.

GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured or cited in three minor
traffic accidents investigated
Friday by city police officers.
The first occurred at a:07
p.m. on Third Ave., where an
auto driven by Cecil E. Morris,
58, drifted forward striking the
rear end of a car operated by
Vernon W. Bing, 29, Gallipolis.
There was light damage to both
cars.
The second accident occurred at 8:10 p.m. on Fourth
Ave. and Sycamore St., where
an auto driven by Mary K.
Stanbaugh, 43, Rt. 2, Ewington,
struck a parked car owned by
Allen Baker,l45 Woodland Dr.
Another collision occurred on
Second Ave., where an auto
driven by Irvin Potter, 36, Rt.
4, Oak Hill, backed into a car
driven by Claire E. Markley,
17, Gallipolis.

CHURCH GOES INC.
TAKES TRAINING
COLUMBUS :... Articles of
POMEROY _ James YinOak Hill Hospital News
incorporation
have
been
filed
cent
Broderick , Rt . 2,
Present PaUems - Zack
Hutchison and Stanley Russell, m Columbus with Secretary of Pomeroy , was among 18
Rt. 4, Oak Hill; Luther Thomas State Ted W. Brown by Chester foremen attending a -special
and George Crabtree, Oak United M;ethodisi Church, training program on tree
Hill ; Roy Payne, Jackson'; through Leonard Erwin, planting conducted this week in
Martha Ramsey, Rt. 1 Oak Richard Fick, Sr ., Virgil cambridge He will be active in
HiD: Wilma Morris, South Windon, by their agent, H~ry the progra-m announced last
Webster: Rodney Mlllhuff, Holter, Route I, Minersville;- - week of planting of over 3.5
Coalton ; Leonard Woods, Oak through Webster and Fultz, million trees ln 16 Ohio
counties this summer.
Hill ; Florence Grooms, Pomeroy.
Jackson; Roma Collins, Rt . 2
South Webster ; Orpha Cordell
and Ella Lesser, Jackson ;
Mabel Brisker, Oak Hill ;
Dagmar Rummager, Jackson; ·
George Larry Metzler, Oak
Hill : Franklin Yates, Brenda\
Smith, Marlene Mercer ,
Frances Priest, and Helen
Moore, Jackson.
Patients Releaoed
Lawrence Robinson, Wendell
E. Morgan, Harold Coyan, Mae
Gahm, Steven Arrowood,
David Dulaney, Delmar
20 sq. yds. Minimum
Snyder, Dennis Strickland,
Maude Gray, Mary Cart~,
ePASSION PINK
Garnet
Fair,
Wilb•rn
eBRIUIANT BLUE .
Williams, Amanda Stapleton,
Norm~( ln$t&amp;tlation
•GENTLEMAN GREEN
Blanche Rife, Wlie Blanton,
•PADDING &amp; INSTAllATION INCLUDED
Florence McGhee , Ellen
Ketler, Brabara Sutton, Erma
Holloway, Martha Knigge,
Betty Carlisle, Warren Colley,
George Colvin, J. Dewey Sims,
Ruby Carling, Gladys Hinkle,
Genevieve Chanriell, Patricia
Coleman, Walter PauliJ:s and
Jom DuVall.

One of Our
Many
March
"Windy"
Specials

the slippery road conditions
occurred al8:4a a.m. on Rt. 35
where Pauline B. Davis, 20, Rio
Grande, pulled out to pass
another vehicle, then lost
control or her car which ran off
the right side of the highway
and struck an embankment.
There was moderate damage
to her car. No citation was
issued.

Both drivers were cited to
Municipal Court following a
collision on Rt. 7, one mile
north of Kanauga. Orficers said
James Patrick, 44, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, pulled out to pass
just as a car driven by Jackie
Lee Parsons, 18, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, attempted to make
a left turn. Parsons received
·minor injuries but was not

8 Parcels Ordered Sold
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
Judge 'Ronald R. Calhoun
Friday .ordered for sale eight
parcels of land in which
delinquent land lax suits have
been filed.
The sale orders were
prepared on the following
properties : Janice McCellan,
14 acres in Greenfield Twp.,
with a ta&lt; lien of $580.64 ; Fred
Biars, .17 acres in Gallipolis
Twp., with a ta&lt; lien of $146.80;
Noel Herman, lot 372 in
Cheshire Twp., tax lien of
$&gt;65.55; James and Dorothy
Thomas, 8.3 acres in Green
Twp., ta&lt; lien $283.74; John N.
Sheets, 83.35 acres in Walnut
Twp ., tax lien $636.01 ;
Elizabeth Gertrude Welch,
47.63 acres in Walnut Twp., tax
lien of $33.70; Charlotte Bar-

ASK TO WED
GALLIPOLIS - Timothy
Dale Nichols, 18, Thurman, U.
S. Army and Hazel Louise
Booth, of Bidwell, applied for a
marriage license Saturday in
Gallia County Probate Court.

nett, 10 acres in Cheshire Twp.,
tax lien of $273.63 ; and
Jeanette Brenamen, part of lot
32 in Hamilton's Addition to the
Village of Bidwell in
Springfield Twp. The tax lien is
$309.24.
.------,------.

'

immediately treated. He was
cited for defective turn signals.
Patrick was charg'ed with
improper passing. There was
moderate damage to both cars.
A Saturday mishap occurred
at 1 a.m. on Rt. 35, where
Michael D. Houck, 20, Patriot
Star Rt., lost control of his car
when a front tire went flat. The
car left the highway and struck
an embankment causing
moderate damage. No one was
injured or cited.

Ring making
~~

!If'

lq,v~liest..

,

In nl!w r

TEXTURED
GOLD
WEDDING RINGS

~tCarved~

BAND
INSTRUMENTS

AT BRUNICARDI'S

Be a .r.eal part of school
· activities ... join the
band! It's fun, but it's
more than that. It's education that will reward
you all your life. lf you
don't already play a musical instrument, come
in to our store and take
the simple "WlSIP" instrument aptitude test
. .. which tells you .which
instrument you .are best
'sdited'to'play. Brli'lg'M'om·
and Dad along. ·There's ·
no obligation, of· course~ ·

HOLTON

works.
Help it.
Work.

Very
SPECIAL
TRADE
ALLOWANCES on the following:

n, ~

Americom Red Cross.

•SELMER SERIESlO CLARINET
•SELMER SERIES 9 CLARINET

HAND-FLORENTINED
DAWN SH
Hit ·' $45.00 Ya~r1 .

•ENGLISH BESSON TRUMPET

$42.50

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

eKING
. SILVER FLAIR TRUMPET
.

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC

AulkQroxed A_r!(arved Jeweler

446-0687 .

54 State St .• Gallipolis

STRAPS 'n STUDS ... forfl

attery
seet?ru
style.

DAN THOMAS &amp;SON

Well-heeled

and handsome in White or Brown
soft leather uppers, $12.

"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936" .
324 SECOND AVENUE

FAIFARIS ..

GAUlPOLIS

'6!~vo.

MERCERVII,LE - Tbe
lfllnnan Trace· F.IIA Cbapw
hosted the South· ' Ill
Subregional State Deiree
Homemaker Interviews 1biJra.. day ,March 2, in the high school

GALUPOUS - The Elkil
l«!ge will hold its annual
Charity Ball March II, with the
proceeda going to the
reflabillta'tion rA cerebral palsy
victims. This is one of the
major projects d: the Ohio
. State Assodatlon ol Elks.
Exalted Ruler Robert Nibert
w-ges an members to attend
111d make UU. project a succies8. There Will be a social
hoUr from l. tlll 8, a steak
dinner 8 to9:30. DanCing to the
music of the ·Modern Times
Sextet will complete the
evening.
Reservations 11U18I be in my
Wednesday, March 8. A
donation of $10 is requested and
all proceeds will go to the Ohio
Elks Cerebral Palsy Fund.

gym.

Eighteen girls were In·
tertlewed from 10 schools
having degree candidates.
The · three !rom Gallla
County were Lois Angell
from Gallla- .Academy;
Belville from Hannan Trace
and Porothy Phillips from
Hannan Trace. These girls will
receive
their
Stale
Homeiil!lker Degree at the
State FHA convention at
Columbus on AprU 21.
Tbe teachers who dld the
interviewing were Mrs. Bette
Clark, Home Econo111ics
Teacher at Gallia Academy;
Miss Leda Kraueter, ·Home
Economica Teacher at Meigs:
.Mrs~
. Martha ~Miller, Home
Economics at Oak ·Hill and
Mrs. Adel Riegel, State FHA
Supervisor; Mrs. Karen Man-,
Home Economics Teacher at
Southwestern served as
secretary and Cheryl Garrett,
senior at JackSon High, who
received her state homemaker
degree last year, served as
student helper during the Interviews.
Four FHA'ers from Hannan
Trace serving throughout the
day were Julia Hineman and
Debbie Waugh at the refreshment table, and Althea Jenkins
and Diana Perkins as
hostesses.
Mrs. Sophia Campbell is
FHA adviser at Hannan Trace.

·Gall

Coming
Events
MONDAY
EXECUTIVE board meeting of
the Band Boosters, 7:30p.m. in
the band room.
AMERICAN Red Cross (Gray
Ladies) luncheon meeting,
12:30 p.m. at the Holzer
Medical Center cafeteria.
HI LO Canasta Club 7p.m. wlth
~s . WUH~ ~ow~ ,

eSELMER MARK VI ALTO SAX

ltrefl}ly

Inurviews Held

MUW with Mrl. Ruth Tap, 521

COMPLETE STOCKS - PROMPT SERVICE
CONVENIENT TERMS - FAVORABLE TNADES

Elks Plan
·Charity 11all

"

LEblANc®

•SELMER MARK VI TENOR SAX

SHAG CARPETING

l

Spuker was Evan~Uat Qr.
James DeWeerd who J. coodueling an ev.arigelistic
crusade at the Middleport
Elementary School Feb. 'll
through March 5, 7:30 p.m.
nightly. He was ·introduced by
Rotarian Charles Simons,.
pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Middleport. '
Dr. DeWeerd spoke 1m _the
topic "Double or Nol\ling," a
spirited defense of the
American eco.nomic system
which has produced the higheSt
standard of living in world
history.
He related the Bible parable
about the three men, one with
10 talents, one with five, and
the third with one, to the
American system in which
individual effort is rewarded
by material wealth.
He emphasized that the
observation, "Them what has,
gets" characterizes America.
One new member, Robert
Schuck, of the Imperial
Electric Co., was introduced.
Ladies of the church served
dinner preceding the meeting.

Injuries Slight in Four Accidents

Tr8iler Damaged

GALLIPOLIS - Damage
was estinJated at $400 in a fire
at 10:27 p.m. Friday at the
mobile home residence of Jack
McGinness located at Cen- by Raymond Smith. Eighteen
tenary.
firemen and three trucks
Gallipolis Fire Chief James responded to the emergency
call.
A second fire call came at
4:58a.m. Saturday to the rear
of Barr's Super Market on Vine
St. Cause of the blaze in a trash
and debris area was undetermined. Damage was set
$2!i. Fifteen men and two
al
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. in- trucks went to the scene.

. MIDDLEPOflT- Rotarians
and Rolary-Anns wiU dine next
Friday evening, then stuff
mailer envelopes· with Easter
, Seals at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Plans for the "stuffing bee,"
·an · annual ·exercise of the
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Club, were announced Friday
evening .by President C. E.
Blakeslee. The club, which
doubles as the Meigs County
Crippled Children's Society,
conducts the annual Easter
Seal campaign.
George Meinhart, project
chairman of the Rotary Intemational Affairs Institute in
Cincinnati April 7-8, said Meigs
County students selected to
attend, sponsored by the local
club, are Mike Struble of
Pomeroy and Harry Wilcox of
Racine. Mike Gerlach will
accompany the boys to the
institute.
One guest was James
Hamilton, Colwnbus, a senior
medical student at Ohio State
University, of Dr. R. R.
Pickens with whom Hamilton .
is spending a month observing.

FHA Subregional

First Ave. 7:4&gt; p.m: Bob
Condee will be guest speaker.
DINNER meeting of the Grace
Guild 6:15 at the church, bring
table service.
nJESDAY
ENGUSH Club with Mrs. L. H.
Wickline, 7 p.m. Program bl'
Mrs. James L. Cark and Mrs. '
W. A. Lewis.
PROGRESSIVE Mothers
League 8 p.m. with Mrs. Larry
Betz.
WEDNESDAY
SADDLE and Sirloin Riding
Club, Bulavllle Townhouse,
7:30 p.m. Members, bring
.sandwiches.
GRACE United Methodist
Olurch circle meetings 7:30
p.m. Circle 1, Mrs. Harold
Swindler, 853 Second Ave.,
Circle 2, Mrs. Keith Suiter, 861
Second Ave., Circle 3, Mrs.
Faye Reese, li50 Third Ave.,
and Clrcle 4, Grace United
Methodist Church,
HOME Council meeting, 10
a.m. Grace Methodist Church.
Program "Safe at Home," and
Ohio Bell's "Wonderful World
of Ohio" and demonstration on
"Decoupage." Bring sack
lunch, beverage will be furnished.
THURSDAY
RIO GRANDE Garden Club
Calvary Baptist Church 7:30
p.m.

Civil Defe_nse
To Meet

j

Clevengers Have

little Baby Boy

Mrs. Francis A. Case

Cornelius-Case United
In Christmas Ceremony

'

~~~Y

~ 19850

TAWNEY STUDIO

CHESHIRE
Miss dresses. The empire bodice
Jacqueline K. Cornelius and was accented with a low
Mr. Francis A. Case were neckline attd short puffed
united in a candlelight sleeves . They carried white fur
Chrlsimas ceremony at the muffs accented with red
First Baptist Church In carnations and holly. _
Cheshire on Saturday, Dec. 18,
The bride's older sister, Mrs.
at half after two o'clock.
Ray Saxon, Gallipolis, served
The bride is the daughter of as matron of honor and
, Mr.andMrs.RobertComeliU.s, wore a forest green velvet
Sr., Cheshire, and the groom Is gown. Miss Dianne Cornelius,
the son of Mrs. Thehna Farns- bridesmaid, wore red velv-.t.
worth, Route I, Long Bottom. Miss Robin Cornelius, niece of
The double-ring ceremony the bride, served as junior
was performed by the Rev. Bob bridesmaid. She also wore red
WilklnsJollowing a program of velvet and a corsage of red and
nuptial music by Miss Teresa white roses. Miss Crystal
Thompson, organist. The Cornelius, niece of the bride,
music selections were "For All served as flower girl. Her gown
We Know," "We've Only Just was identical to her sister's.
Beg.u n," · "Laura's Them~," The bride's gown an~ those of
and the traditional wed~ing her attendants were all made
march.
, by her mother, Mrs. Erna
Red . poinsettias and arch · Cornelius.
Mr. Robert Hall, West Union,
candelabra decorated the
altar. The chapel was already W. ,Va., served as · best man.
decorated in ·the Chrlsimas Ushers were Mr. Robert
spirit with candles in the Cornelius, Jr. lind E. Ronald
windows and the Christmas Cornelius, both of Lancaster.
tree.
For her daughter's we.dding,
Given in marriage by her lolrs. Cornelius wore a' twofather; the bride was attired in piece suit of sliver lame' with
a formal length A-line gown of matchlog accessories and a
white velvet. The empire- corsage of' red rosebuds with
bodice featured a high neckline silver trim.
Mrs. Farnsworth, mother of
,and long fitted sleeves .trimmed in Irish lace which also the groom, wore an A-line 1 1
trimmed the front of the gown. dress of gold lilrne' with mat- ......._ I'VfWIIIaiiW
Her detachable train fell ching accessories and a cor- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . from waist back to chapel sage of red rosebuds .with gold
...
length. The bride's chapel trim.
length veil of white silk illusion
A reception immediately
featured a Juliet cap also followed the ceremony in the
trimmed in Irish lace. She fellowship room of the church.
carried a colonial bouquet of The bride's table was covered
white carnations accented with in a white linen cloth with a
holly, red star flowers and a lace covering. It was centered .
\Abinht-Wa
. ....L...-·
white velvet bow.
with a three-tiered wedding
v Y10J"15' n.
.l U 1t:.1 ::&gt;
The bride's attendants wore cake topped with the
formal length A-line velvet traditional bride and groom. ·

ICoLORFuLYouNG
I
FASHIONS
...

'

BOYS TUIT
SUITS

....

~--------· •'•'&gt;;:~:·

iiOI.....

.:&gt;

~:

~==

to help~ lose

:-:·

and leePit olfl

~~

\~~X•.

TheMew

~

,~-:~

Eight and Forty To
Have April 6 Dinnet

!i

n iversar~'.

.

.

,,•

sgoo

:&lt;:
-:·:

r.-~:

SIZES 7 to 14

?.

-~

Free Meeting
Rio Grande

TODDLER
BOYS

sgoo

!:1

OF OUR NEW CLASS IN

i
~

~(,
$!

Opening Wed ., Mar . lth

All PURPOSE COATS

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE :~
. HOLZER HALL
· Rto Grande, !J., 7:30 p.m .
&gt;~Regular Class witt meet ·

f:

AND CAPS TO
MATCH

Every Wedn, . 7,30 p.m .. at the . :
;-.;

cotte~.

------"!!--------·
Classes Als~ Meet
i~

$goo

~=·

Mondays7 :30p.m.
St . Paul Lutheran Church

131 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, 0 .
Wednesday9 :30a . m.
Grace United

Methodist Church
2nd al redai', Gallipolis, o.
Tuesdays 7, 30 p.m.
St. LOUi$ Catholic Church

~:~
~=·
:.;::
,.

~?.

· ~:;

-~:;

..

~

.

WEiGHT-~

~1!htl~ll§ I

• - - ·- - ~ -~ ...

-......;.- --

SIZES 7 to 14

SIZES 3 to 6X

~~~--~t:~~~::J~
'

$1800

CAPES

.;.:

ASSOCIATION TO MEET
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Trustees and Clerks
Association will meet in the
courtroom of the courthouse at
I p.m. Saturday, March 11.
MANY THANKS
Mrs. David 'Finch, Colum- '
bus, who recently celebrated
her 9lst birthday, wishes to
thank her many f••lcnds who
rememb&lt;&gt;r~ h.r on her an-

WASHABLE ORLON
ACRYLIC KNIT

I

· Come To A

OF SLEEVELESS DRESS AND
COAT TO MATCH
BONDED ACRYLIC ..

;~

program

discussed. Correspondence
included acknowledgement of
donations for children and
youth work from Secretaire
Departemenllile Myrtle
Walker, and an announcemen l
of Candidacy of Evalina
Berkley of Nevada, Ohio for
the office of Chapeau bepartemental, to be considered at
La Marche in Cincinnati in
July.
The meeting closed by
repeating Obligation to Eight
and Forty and refreshments
were served bY the hostess,
Joan Wood.

GIRLS' PLAID
.ENSEMBLE

11

~

GALUPOLIS - Plans were
completed at Thursday
LAMP LIGHT SERvlCE
evening's meeting of Gallia
An old fashioned lamp Ught County Salon No. 612, Eight
service is to be held at King's and Forty for the visit of Mary
Chapel Church on Saturday, Martin, Chapeau DeparMarch J, at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. temental D'Ohlo. A dinner will
Earl Whitmore will bring the be served in the ,Legion Hall,
message. Tbe pastor, Rev. · Gallipolis Thursday evening,
Jack Rankin, welcomes the April 6, to which all Oeparpublic and all singers.
temental Officers have been
invited, also Partners of
nearby Salons. A patriotic
TO MEET THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Most theme will be carried out with
Excellent Masters Degree will Joan Wood, assisted by Faye
be conferred when Pomeroy Wildermuth in charge of table
Chapter 80, Royal Arch decorations.
Tbe business meeting was
Masons, meet at 7:30 p.m.
pPened
by Le Petit Chapeau
Thursday •at tbe temple in
Pomeroy. All officers and Joan Wood using the
companions are ·asked to be proscribed opening form.
Children and Youth Chairman
present.
Emma Wayland reported that
she has sen! birthday cards
.CLUB TO MEET
and gifts to eight children
MIDDLEPORT - . The patients at the National Jewish
· Middleport Amateur Garden Hospital in Denver thls past
Club wlll meet at t p.m. month. Hours &amp;pent ~Y PartWedneaday at the social room ners as volunteer workers at
· of the Columbus and Southern the TB Mobile X-ray visit .Viii
Ohio Electric Co. with Mrs. be included in her report to
Edgar Reynolds, Mn. Guy · Departement Chairman.
Reynolda and Mrs. Nina Bland
A report of PouvJir
as bC)Itessea.
·
Departemental was read and

I ,.

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs. Harland f~ick ) Conley
of 462 Neighborhood Road, are
announcing the birth of a
daughter on Feb. 7 at Holzer
Medical Center.
The haby weighed 7 lb. and 6
ozs. and has been named Susan
Brooke . She was welcomed
home by her sister, Lynn
Brooke.
Maternal grimdparenta are
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bahrof
Chester, Ohio. • Paternal
grandparents are Mrs. Maxine
Conley of Gallipolis and Mr.
Howard Conley of Springfield.

KANAUGA - The Kanauga
WSCS met on March 2 at the
home of Mrs. John Raike
where a memorial was coO:.
dueled for Mrs. Ethel Messler,
a member, who passed away
last week. The Bible service,
. "Rivers of Uving Waters,"
was given in observance of
World Day of Prayer.
The program was giVfll in
three parts with Dr. Edna
Gettles and Mrs. Carl Roush
giving "The Need Of The Holy
SPirit" followed by the second
part, "The Nature of the Holy
Spirit" by Evelyn Rothgeb and
Mrs. Pina Ward. Mrs. R. G.
Swisher and Mary Shamblin
gave "The Evidence of the
Holy Spirit," followed with a
hymn .
The Commitment was given
by Mrs. William Spencer and
Mrs. John Ralke . The club
reported having sent carda to
the sick and having made 23
sick calla.
· The next meeting wlU be held
in April at the home of Mrs.
Pina Ward.

The
Newcomen' Club Ia Plannlnc a
tour of the New Holur M"trat
Center on March I at 6;30 p.m. ·
A dinner will be held at GrfiCe
United Methodiat Chlll'ch .
which will be pnpared by Mn.
Bess Grace and her circle.
The hospital is nearly
completed and on. will be a
chance for the elu.b to view the
town's newest and lll&lt;Mit linportant building. All memben
are urged to attend. Reier•
vatlons may be obtained by
calling 446.11634 before Monday,
March 8. The cost of the dinner
is $2.75 per person.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Auxiliary of the Gallia County
Unit of the Clvll Defense wlll
meet on Monday evening at
7:30 at the Gallia County
Courthouse . The wives and
·daughters of member~ of the
Civil Defense are especially
invited.
The purpose of the meeting is
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
for selection of officers and to
Mrs.
Ted Clevenger of
decide which evening would be
the best to have meetings in the Colun1bus (the former Mary
Fry), are announcing the birth
future .
of
a son on Feb. 2, named
This is a vital organization
and there are many ways the Christopher Oliver, weighing 8
....... ..
lb.
and
13
ozs.
The
maternal
ladies of the community can
assist these men when they are grandmother is Mrs. Gus Frye,
called upon in any emergency . Gallipolis, and paternal
The support of the citizens is grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
422 Second Ave.
necessary and will be greatly 0. L. Clevenger of canton,
Gallipolis
Ohio.
appreciated.
The bottom of the cake was
la.:.:::.:m.~.:..$.t'k~.Q.C::.'••••...•.e\M:..:;.mw..:.:..~....*·:.n..::·~-~-~.!W.:t~:::!::s:~s:::3:~..;.,.;.:::;:;::x~~·.·::mt..-:::::~·.·~·::::::~.m~mt~;~J~l:I.0Jl:I.0J3't~JI:WIIIII•
encircled with a garland of
holly and fruit. On each side of ~
the . cake lay two large red
velvet bows. The cake was
baked by Mrs . Dorothy
Thompson , Cheshire.
Presiding at the reception
table were' Mrs. Brenda Cornelius, Lancaster; Mr~. Nancy
Preston, Mrs. Helen Preston,
and Miss Cathy Hall, all of
.
Cheshire. After opening I:-:~
presents the bride changed into ::~
a red velveteen jumper and :~~
The wee folk love the grown-up look&amp;.
-:-.
matching accessories: After a :=-J
·-~
),
short wedding. trip the couple
::::
now resides at Route I, Long :-:That's why we've rounded·up a lot
-!•:
.
. Bottom, Ohio.
:·:·0:·:
Out of town guests were Mi·. ~·:·
for Easter, Spring! Dapper d~ds for
~·· .
and Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Mid- ~~
dleport; Mrs. Sarah Moshier ~;;:
him, sweet things for her.
and Bert, Gallipolis; Mrs. ~::
~-:
Laura Mae Nice, Chester; Mrs. ·~·
~-:
Nora Brown, Chester; Mr. :-:·:.:
Robert Brandeberry, Rio ::~
}::
Grande; Mrs . Jean Sum- ,:.
.•..
merfield, Chester, and Mrs. ·:·:
~~
:;:.
Opal Eichinger, Chester.
•'•'
Pre-wedding showers were ·:·:
'•'·
given by Miss Cathy Hall, ~:
SIZES 2 to 4 &amp;3 to 7
Cheshire; Mrs. Dan Casto, ~=:
~=:
Ravenswood ; Mrs. Laura Mae ~::
Nice, and Mrs. Opal Eichinger, ..•.
'i:::
both of Chester.
from
~=
·:·:

.

..

Memorial Seroice (;onleys Welcome Club to Tour
Hospital
Observed ·
Second Daughrer New
GALLIPOLIS ,

--

fine STORES"
{}allipc}t6, Ohto ·

"ONE OF OHIO'S

-··

-».:. ..........;.:,v.· ,~·=·............~.."«..:...........................,y_......._..:..
~.,. • • •"~~&gt;.

• ••••, . • • •

•

.

y;.•;w.-.-..:.,':«9N-N?.":-.•o-.o;v.;-.•;-,io-.O::::;,~:;..Y,,:~:~::~~~:·:·:•:•:O:·:-:.o.•,.:•··········•;•,•.•.o~.·.o.•,-.•,-.•,•,·l.~l
· .-.o:.~-.~;';h•~':j
• •••••• ;.;; ................................................;-.:.:.:-:-:...·
...... .-~"X~~; -•i&amp;lJi&amp;lJg~J&amp;~~MiiiiMIIIIMIIIIMIIIMitiMitl
_,

-

..

�•

-·

•'
'
•- TheSwlday Times
. .-Sentinel, Swlday,March 5, 1972

Stuffing ·Bee
On Next Friday

Men and Women Molded
.

.By Rutland's Teachers
Misner1 Clyde (Barney)
BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY
Russell Kennedy,'- Abe Young, Bob
Musser left Rutland and Meigs Young, Ronald Barton, Paul
Winn, Leland Miller, Roy
County in 1928.
Snowden,
Gerald Rupe,
He went to Springfield, Ohio, ·
where he became associated Russell Musser, Wally Grant,
with International Harvester Carl Denison, Delbert Beach,
and retired from that !irm in Eddie Church, Kermit Church,
1966. Since then, he has become Harold Smith (manager) , Cecil
interested in woodwork and Camp, Sylvester King, Wm.
has become an authority on Buck, Wayne Rupe, Cecil
making spinning wheels. He Powers.
"We had some wonderful
has traveled to many foreign
countries to visit collectors of high school teachers. There is a
spinning wheels and museums great deal of difference in the
featuring large spinning wheel high schools of that era and the
high schools of today. We boys
displays.
Uke many who leave Meigs respected those teachers and
County to find employment, tried to copy after them,
" the memory lingers on ." because we liked them so well.
Although busy with his hobby They were very strict.
''How many can remember
and his travels, Musser recalls
wilh fondness lils early days in George~Crow and how he could
Meigs County. Not only that - add on the blackboard? He was
he would like to move hack a county superintendent and
we enjoyed him coming to visit
here to spend his last days.
Musser recalls of his days in our school on Hysell Run. Then
there was William Merritt. We
Meigs County :
"I was born on Hysell Run, would try to talk like him
September 30, 1904. The doctor because he was a very good
came by horse and buggy to teacher and speaker. He too
d~liver me. But he was a was a county superintendent.
"Then in high school (1921),
drinking man and fell out of the
buddy when he came. There "Bernard Higley was principal,
was a colored family ·by the Clarence Chapman was coach
name o! Bentley that lived on and Marcus Roush was a
my dad's farm . So dad got Mrs . . teacher. We tried to be men
Bentley to deliver me. After 67 like them and I am sure it paid
of! in our lives. As long as we
years, here I am.
"1 went to Hysell Run Grade live, we will never forget them.
School. Here are the names of These were the men who made
the teachers I had, Harvey us the men we are today. They
Skinner, Guy Mutchler, Esta taught us children that we had
Warner, Esta Arnold, Neva to be good citizens. So we are
Scott, Jap Folden, Tacey very thankful for these men
Hysell
and
Winifried who taught us.
"After high school I tried to
Williamson. Then I went to
high school in Rutland. Walked find a job. The mines in
that distance across the hills. Pomeroy Bend were on strike.
Sometimes I rode horse back We boys thought we could
and I went by the way of Happy clean up these mines and
Hollow, but the last year of secure work. This we did,
high school! owned a Model T under guard.
"But in 1927, Arthur Steele
witli side curtains, and I drove
it to high school depending on and I decided to go West. We
the mud roads up Hysell Run. were gone the whole swnmer
. "In 1922 we had the first and nearly starved to death .
football team. I played center But we did work in Kansas and
for 4 years. Clarence Chapman Wyoming. We were very glad
was our football coach and we to get back to Meigs County.
called him Chappy.
Then I did go back to No. &gt;
.Some of the boys on the team mine, which was up Bailey
itre 1Eti ' War'ner, Mousey Run , ana later go\ a job inside

the mine building doors and
bradishes.
"As I was putting up a door
post one day, a rock bell fell
from the roof and I just laid my
hand on it-15 tons - It was so
close. I picked up my tools and
walked out of the mine. That
was on Friday.
"I went to Pomeroy on
Saturday and bought a bus
ticket to Springfield, Ohio. On
Monday, I started to work for
the International Harvester
Company. That was in April
1928. As I was going with a girl
from Dexter by the name of
Opal Amos, we married in 1929,
and came back to Springfield
to make our home.
"We were the parents of five
children . Opa.l died in 19li2-of
cancer. I now have 15 grandchildren and one greatgranddaughter. I retired from
International Harvester in
1966.
"It was then that I started
working with wood and became
interested in spinning. To date
I have built some 23 spinning
wheels. I also correspond with
people all over the world who
share the interest in spinning.
From as far away as 400 miles
north of the Antarctic Circle. I
have also traveled some 45
countries of the world ."

GALLIPOLIS - Two persons were slighly injured in
four minor traffic accidents
investigated Friday and
Saturday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first injury mishap
occurled at 6:45 a.m. Friday
on Rt. 160, five tenths of a mile
west of Gallipolis where Karen
J. Alderigi, 30, Rt. 2, lost
control of her car which went
off the highway and struck a
Virginia
J.
guardrail.
Thompson , 4&gt;, Gallipolis, a
passenger, received minor
injuries. There was heavy
damage to the Alderigi car but
no charges were filed.
A second accident blamed on

Collisions
A. Northup said the blaze in the
12x57 foot trailer was caused · Ar
by a malfunction in the fuel oil
e Minor
furnace. The home was owned

.Auto Lands

In a Creek

vestigated a single car accident Saturday at 2:4&gt; a.m. on
U.S. Rt. 33at the intersection of
Charter Oak Hollow.
Dennis C. Clark, 17,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, drove his auto
around a curve on 33 near
Reuter's Station, hit an icy
place on the' highway, went out
of control, hit a utility pole, and
went into a creek.
There was heavy damage to
the car, but no injuries. No
citation was issued.

DIVORCE GRANTED
POMEROY - Woodrow Hall
was granted a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Margaret M. Hall on
charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. The
case of Denny W. Games, etal
versus C. E. Austin was
dismissed.

FORMER RUTLAND RESIDENT, a,ussell Musser, is one of the few people in the world
engaged in making spinning wheels. Although busy with his hobby, Musser, pictured at work
on some of the many spinning wheels he has made, would like to return to Meigs County to
spend his last years. Musser left Meigs County over 40 years ago and now resides in
SPringfield, Ohio.

GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured or cited in three minor
traffic accidents investigated
Friday by city police officers.
The first occurred at a:07
p.m. on Third Ave., where an
auto driven by Cecil E. Morris,
58, drifted forward striking the
rear end of a car operated by
Vernon W. Bing, 29, Gallipolis.
There was light damage to both
cars.
The second accident occurred at 8:10 p.m. on Fourth
Ave. and Sycamore St., where
an auto driven by Mary K.
Stanbaugh, 43, Rt. 2, Ewington,
struck a parked car owned by
Allen Baker,l45 Woodland Dr.
Another collision occurred on
Second Ave., where an auto
driven by Irvin Potter, 36, Rt.
4, Oak Hill, backed into a car
driven by Claire E. Markley,
17, Gallipolis.

CHURCH GOES INC.
TAKES TRAINING
COLUMBUS :... Articles of
POMEROY _ James YinOak Hill Hospital News
incorporation
have
been
filed
cent
Broderick , Rt . 2,
Present PaUems - Zack
Hutchison and Stanley Russell, m Columbus with Secretary of Pomeroy , was among 18
Rt. 4, Oak Hill; Luther Thomas State Ted W. Brown by Chester foremen attending a -special
and George Crabtree, Oak United M;ethodisi Church, training program on tree
Hill ; Roy Payne, Jackson'; through Leonard Erwin, planting conducted this week in
Martha Ramsey, Rt. 1 Oak Richard Fick, Sr ., Virgil cambridge He will be active in
HiD: Wilma Morris, South Windon, by their agent, H~ry the progra-m announced last
Webster: Rodney Mlllhuff, Holter, Route I, Minersville;- - week of planting of over 3.5
Coalton ; Leonard Woods, Oak through Webster and Fultz, million trees ln 16 Ohio
counties this summer.
Hill ; Florence Grooms, Pomeroy.
Jackson; Roma Collins, Rt . 2
South Webster ; Orpha Cordell
and Ella Lesser, Jackson ;
Mabel Brisker, Oak Hill ;
Dagmar Rummager, Jackson; ·
George Larry Metzler, Oak
Hill : Franklin Yates, Brenda\
Smith, Marlene Mercer ,
Frances Priest, and Helen
Moore, Jackson.
Patients Releaoed
Lawrence Robinson, Wendell
E. Morgan, Harold Coyan, Mae
Gahm, Steven Arrowood,
David Dulaney, Delmar
20 sq. yds. Minimum
Snyder, Dennis Strickland,
Maude Gray, Mary Cart~,
ePASSION PINK
Garnet
Fair,
Wilb•rn
eBRIUIANT BLUE .
Williams, Amanda Stapleton,
Norm~( ln$t&amp;tlation
•GENTLEMAN GREEN
Blanche Rife, Wlie Blanton,
•PADDING &amp; INSTAllATION INCLUDED
Florence McGhee , Ellen
Ketler, Brabara Sutton, Erma
Holloway, Martha Knigge,
Betty Carlisle, Warren Colley,
George Colvin, J. Dewey Sims,
Ruby Carling, Gladys Hinkle,
Genevieve Chanriell, Patricia
Coleman, Walter PauliJ:s and
Jom DuVall.

One of Our
Many
March
"Windy"
Specials

the slippery road conditions
occurred al8:4a a.m. on Rt. 35
where Pauline B. Davis, 20, Rio
Grande, pulled out to pass
another vehicle, then lost
control or her car which ran off
the right side of the highway
and struck an embankment.
There was moderate damage
to her car. No citation was
issued.

Both drivers were cited to
Municipal Court following a
collision on Rt. 7, one mile
north of Kanauga. Orficers said
James Patrick, 44, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, pulled out to pass
just as a car driven by Jackie
Lee Parsons, 18, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, attempted to make
a left turn. Parsons received
·minor injuries but was not

8 Parcels Ordered Sold
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
Judge 'Ronald R. Calhoun
Friday .ordered for sale eight
parcels of land in which
delinquent land lax suits have
been filed.
The sale orders were
prepared on the following
properties : Janice McCellan,
14 acres in Greenfield Twp.,
with a ta&lt; lien of $580.64 ; Fred
Biars, .17 acres in Gallipolis
Twp., with a ta&lt; lien of $146.80;
Noel Herman, lot 372 in
Cheshire Twp., tax lien of
$&gt;65.55; James and Dorothy
Thomas, 8.3 acres in Green
Twp., ta&lt; lien $283.74; John N.
Sheets, 83.35 acres in Walnut
Twp ., tax lien $636.01 ;
Elizabeth Gertrude Welch,
47.63 acres in Walnut Twp., tax
lien of $33.70; Charlotte Bar-

ASK TO WED
GALLIPOLIS - Timothy
Dale Nichols, 18, Thurman, U.
S. Army and Hazel Louise
Booth, of Bidwell, applied for a
marriage license Saturday in
Gallia County Probate Court.

nett, 10 acres in Cheshire Twp.,
tax lien of $273.63 ; and
Jeanette Brenamen, part of lot
32 in Hamilton's Addition to the
Village of Bidwell in
Springfield Twp. The tax lien is
$309.24.
.------,------.

'

immediately treated. He was
cited for defective turn signals.
Patrick was charg'ed with
improper passing. There was
moderate damage to both cars.
A Saturday mishap occurred
at 1 a.m. on Rt. 35, where
Michael D. Houck, 20, Patriot
Star Rt., lost control of his car
when a front tire went flat. The
car left the highway and struck
an embankment causing
moderate damage. No one was
injured or cited.

Ring making
~~

!If'

lq,v~liest..

,

In nl!w r

TEXTURED
GOLD
WEDDING RINGS

~tCarved~

BAND
INSTRUMENTS

AT BRUNICARDI'S

Be a .r.eal part of school
· activities ... join the
band! It's fun, but it's
more than that. It's education that will reward
you all your life. lf you
don't already play a musical instrument, come
in to our store and take
the simple "WlSIP" instrument aptitude test
. .. which tells you .which
instrument you .are best
'sdited'to'play. Brli'lg'M'om·
and Dad along. ·There's ·
no obligation, of· course~ ·

HOLTON

works.
Help it.
Work.

Very
SPECIAL
TRADE
ALLOWANCES on the following:

n, ~

Americom Red Cross.

•SELMER SERIESlO CLARINET
•SELMER SERIES 9 CLARINET

HAND-FLORENTINED
DAWN SH
Hit ·' $45.00 Ya~r1 .

•ENGLISH BESSON TRUMPET

$42.50

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

eKING
. SILVER FLAIR TRUMPET
.

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC

AulkQroxed A_r!(arved Jeweler

446-0687 .

54 State St .• Gallipolis

STRAPS 'n STUDS ... forfl

attery
seet?ru
style.

DAN THOMAS &amp;SON

Well-heeled

and handsome in White or Brown
soft leather uppers, $12.

"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936" .
324 SECOND AVENUE

FAIFARIS ..

GAUlPOLIS

'6!~vo.

MERCERVII,LE - Tbe
lfllnnan Trace· F.IIA Cbapw
hosted the South· ' Ill
Subregional State Deiree
Homemaker Interviews 1biJra.. day ,March 2, in the high school

GALUPOUS - The Elkil
l«!ge will hold its annual
Charity Ball March II, with the
proceeda going to the
reflabillta'tion rA cerebral palsy
victims. This is one of the
major projects d: the Ohio
. State Assodatlon ol Elks.
Exalted Ruler Robert Nibert
w-ges an members to attend
111d make UU. project a succies8. There Will be a social
hoUr from l. tlll 8, a steak
dinner 8 to9:30. DanCing to the
music of the ·Modern Times
Sextet will complete the
evening.
Reservations 11U18I be in my
Wednesday, March 8. A
donation of $10 is requested and
all proceeds will go to the Ohio
Elks Cerebral Palsy Fund.

gym.

Eighteen girls were In·
tertlewed from 10 schools
having degree candidates.
The · three !rom Gallla
County were Lois Angell
from Gallla- .Academy;
Belville from Hannan Trace
and Porothy Phillips from
Hannan Trace. These girls will
receive
their
Stale
Homeiil!lker Degree at the
State FHA convention at
Columbus on AprU 21.
Tbe teachers who dld the
interviewing were Mrs. Bette
Clark, Home Econo111ics
Teacher at Gallia Academy;
Miss Leda Kraueter, ·Home
Economica Teacher at Meigs:
.Mrs~
. Martha ~Miller, Home
Economics at Oak ·Hill and
Mrs. Adel Riegel, State FHA
Supervisor; Mrs. Karen Man-,
Home Economics Teacher at
Southwestern served as
secretary and Cheryl Garrett,
senior at JackSon High, who
received her state homemaker
degree last year, served as
student helper during the Interviews.
Four FHA'ers from Hannan
Trace serving throughout the
day were Julia Hineman and
Debbie Waugh at the refreshment table, and Althea Jenkins
and Diana Perkins as
hostesses.
Mrs. Sophia Campbell is
FHA adviser at Hannan Trace.

·Gall

Coming
Events
MONDAY
EXECUTIVE board meeting of
the Band Boosters, 7:30p.m. in
the band room.
AMERICAN Red Cross (Gray
Ladies) luncheon meeting,
12:30 p.m. at the Holzer
Medical Center cafeteria.
HI LO Canasta Club 7p.m. wlth
~s . WUH~ ~ow~ ,

eSELMER MARK VI ALTO SAX

ltrefl}ly

Inurviews Held

MUW with Mrl. Ruth Tap, 521

COMPLETE STOCKS - PROMPT SERVICE
CONVENIENT TERMS - FAVORABLE TNADES

Elks Plan
·Charity 11all

"

LEblANc®

•SELMER MARK VI TENOR SAX

SHAG CARPETING

l

Spuker was Evan~Uat Qr.
James DeWeerd who J. coodueling an ev.arigelistic
crusade at the Middleport
Elementary School Feb. 'll
through March 5, 7:30 p.m.
nightly. He was ·introduced by
Rotarian Charles Simons,.
pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Middleport. '
Dr. DeWeerd spoke 1m _the
topic "Double or Nol\ling," a
spirited defense of the
American eco.nomic system
which has produced the higheSt
standard of living in world
history.
He related the Bible parable
about the three men, one with
10 talents, one with five, and
the third with one, to the
American system in which
individual effort is rewarded
by material wealth.
He emphasized that the
observation, "Them what has,
gets" characterizes America.
One new member, Robert
Schuck, of the Imperial
Electric Co., was introduced.
Ladies of the church served
dinner preceding the meeting.

Injuries Slight in Four Accidents

Tr8iler Damaged

GALLIPOLIS - Damage
was estinJated at $400 in a fire
at 10:27 p.m. Friday at the
mobile home residence of Jack
McGinness located at Cen- by Raymond Smith. Eighteen
tenary.
firemen and three trucks
Gallipolis Fire Chief James responded to the emergency
call.
A second fire call came at
4:58a.m. Saturday to the rear
of Barr's Super Market on Vine
St. Cause of the blaze in a trash
and debris area was undetermined. Damage was set
$2!i. Fifteen men and two
al
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. in- trucks went to the scene.

. MIDDLEPOflT- Rotarians
and Rolary-Anns wiU dine next
Friday evening, then stuff
mailer envelopes· with Easter
, Seals at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Plans for the "stuffing bee,"
·an · annual ·exercise of the
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Club, were announced Friday
evening .by President C. E.
Blakeslee. The club, which
doubles as the Meigs County
Crippled Children's Society,
conducts the annual Easter
Seal campaign.
George Meinhart, project
chairman of the Rotary Intemational Affairs Institute in
Cincinnati April 7-8, said Meigs
County students selected to
attend, sponsored by the local
club, are Mike Struble of
Pomeroy and Harry Wilcox of
Racine. Mike Gerlach will
accompany the boys to the
institute.
One guest was James
Hamilton, Colwnbus, a senior
medical student at Ohio State
University, of Dr. R. R.
Pickens with whom Hamilton .
is spending a month observing.

FHA Subregional

First Ave. 7:4&gt; p.m: Bob
Condee will be guest speaker.
DINNER meeting of the Grace
Guild 6:15 at the church, bring
table service.
nJESDAY
ENGUSH Club with Mrs. L. H.
Wickline, 7 p.m. Program bl'
Mrs. James L. Cark and Mrs. '
W. A. Lewis.
PROGRESSIVE Mothers
League 8 p.m. with Mrs. Larry
Betz.
WEDNESDAY
SADDLE and Sirloin Riding
Club, Bulavllle Townhouse,
7:30 p.m. Members, bring
.sandwiches.
GRACE United Methodist
Olurch circle meetings 7:30
p.m. Circle 1, Mrs. Harold
Swindler, 853 Second Ave.,
Circle 2, Mrs. Keith Suiter, 861
Second Ave., Circle 3, Mrs.
Faye Reese, li50 Third Ave.,
and Clrcle 4, Grace United
Methodist Church,
HOME Council meeting, 10
a.m. Grace Methodist Church.
Program "Safe at Home," and
Ohio Bell's "Wonderful World
of Ohio" and demonstration on
"Decoupage." Bring sack
lunch, beverage will be furnished.
THURSDAY
RIO GRANDE Garden Club
Calvary Baptist Church 7:30
p.m.

Civil Defe_nse
To Meet

j

Clevengers Have

little Baby Boy

Mrs. Francis A. Case

Cornelius-Case United
In Christmas Ceremony

'

~~~Y

~ 19850

TAWNEY STUDIO

CHESHIRE
Miss dresses. The empire bodice
Jacqueline K. Cornelius and was accented with a low
Mr. Francis A. Case were neckline attd short puffed
united in a candlelight sleeves . They carried white fur
Chrlsimas ceremony at the muffs accented with red
First Baptist Church In carnations and holly. _
Cheshire on Saturday, Dec. 18,
The bride's older sister, Mrs.
at half after two o'clock.
Ray Saxon, Gallipolis, served
The bride is the daughter of as matron of honor and
, Mr.andMrs.RobertComeliU.s, wore a forest green velvet
Sr., Cheshire, and the groom Is gown. Miss Dianne Cornelius,
the son of Mrs. Thehna Farns- bridesmaid, wore red velv-.t.
worth, Route I, Long Bottom. Miss Robin Cornelius, niece of
The double-ring ceremony the bride, served as junior
was performed by the Rev. Bob bridesmaid. She also wore red
WilklnsJollowing a program of velvet and a corsage of red and
nuptial music by Miss Teresa white roses. Miss Crystal
Thompson, organist. The Cornelius, niece of the bride,
music selections were "For All served as flower girl. Her gown
We Know," "We've Only Just was identical to her sister's.
Beg.u n," · "Laura's Them~," The bride's gown an~ those of
and the traditional wed~ing her attendants were all made
march.
, by her mother, Mrs. Erna
Red . poinsettias and arch · Cornelius.
Mr. Robert Hall, West Union,
candelabra decorated the
altar. The chapel was already W. ,Va., served as · best man.
decorated in ·the Chrlsimas Ushers were Mr. Robert
spirit with candles in the Cornelius, Jr. lind E. Ronald
windows and the Christmas Cornelius, both of Lancaster.
tree.
For her daughter's we.dding,
Given in marriage by her lolrs. Cornelius wore a' twofather; the bride was attired in piece suit of sliver lame' with
a formal length A-line gown of matchlog accessories and a
white velvet. The empire- corsage of' red rosebuds with
bodice featured a high neckline silver trim.
Mrs. Farnsworth, mother of
,and long fitted sleeves .trimmed in Irish lace which also the groom, wore an A-line 1 1
trimmed the front of the gown. dress of gold lilrne' with mat- ......._ I'VfWIIIaiiW
Her detachable train fell ching accessories and a cor- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . from waist back to chapel sage of red rosebuds .with gold
...
length. The bride's chapel trim.
length veil of white silk illusion
A reception immediately
featured a Juliet cap also followed the ceremony in the
trimmed in Irish lace. She fellowship room of the church.
carried a colonial bouquet of The bride's table was covered
white carnations accented with in a white linen cloth with a
holly, red star flowers and a lace covering. It was centered .
\Abinht-Wa
. ....L...-·
white velvet bow.
with a three-tiered wedding
v Y10J"15' n.
.l U 1t:.1 ::&gt;
The bride's attendants wore cake topped with the
formal length A-line velvet traditional bride and groom. ·

ICoLORFuLYouNG
I
FASHIONS
...

'

BOYS TUIT
SUITS

....

~--------· •'•'&gt;;:~:·

iiOI.....

.:&gt;

~:

~==

to help~ lose

:-:·

and leePit olfl

~~

\~~X•.

TheMew

~

,~-:~

Eight and Forty To
Have April 6 Dinnet

!i

n iversar~'.

.

.

,,•

sgoo

:&lt;:
-:·:

r.-~:

SIZES 7 to 14

?.

-~

Free Meeting
Rio Grande

TODDLER
BOYS

sgoo

!:1

OF OUR NEW CLASS IN

i
~

~(,
$!

Opening Wed ., Mar . lth

All PURPOSE COATS

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE :~
. HOLZER HALL
· Rto Grande, !J., 7:30 p.m .
&gt;~Regular Class witt meet ·

f:

AND CAPS TO
MATCH

Every Wedn, . 7,30 p.m .. at the . :
;-.;

cotte~.

------"!!--------·
Classes Als~ Meet
i~

$goo

~=·

Mondays7 :30p.m.
St . Paul Lutheran Church

131 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, 0 .
Wednesday9 :30a . m.
Grace United

Methodist Church
2nd al redai', Gallipolis, o.
Tuesdays 7, 30 p.m.
St. LOUi$ Catholic Church

~:~
~=·
:.;::
,.

~?.

· ~:;

-~:;

..

~

.

WEiGHT-~

~1!htl~ll§ I

• - - ·- - ~ -~ ...

-......;.- --

SIZES 7 to 14

SIZES 3 to 6X

~~~--~t:~~~::J~
'

$1800

CAPES

.;.:

ASSOCIATION TO MEET
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Trustees and Clerks
Association will meet in the
courtroom of the courthouse at
I p.m. Saturday, March 11.
MANY THANKS
Mrs. David 'Finch, Colum- '
bus, who recently celebrated
her 9lst birthday, wishes to
thank her many f••lcnds who
rememb&lt;&gt;r~ h.r on her an-

WASHABLE ORLON
ACRYLIC KNIT

I

· Come To A

OF SLEEVELESS DRESS AND
COAT TO MATCH
BONDED ACRYLIC ..

;~

program

discussed. Correspondence
included acknowledgement of
donations for children and
youth work from Secretaire
Departemenllile Myrtle
Walker, and an announcemen l
of Candidacy of Evalina
Berkley of Nevada, Ohio for
the office of Chapeau bepartemental, to be considered at
La Marche in Cincinnati in
July.
The meeting closed by
repeating Obligation to Eight
and Forty and refreshments
were served bY the hostess,
Joan Wood.

GIRLS' PLAID
.ENSEMBLE

11

~

GALUPOLIS - Plans were
completed at Thursday
LAMP LIGHT SERvlCE
evening's meeting of Gallia
An old fashioned lamp Ught County Salon No. 612, Eight
service is to be held at King's and Forty for the visit of Mary
Chapel Church on Saturday, Martin, Chapeau DeparMarch J, at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. temental D'Ohlo. A dinner will
Earl Whitmore will bring the be served in the ,Legion Hall,
message. Tbe pastor, Rev. · Gallipolis Thursday evening,
Jack Rankin, welcomes the April 6, to which all Oeparpublic and all singers.
temental Officers have been
invited, also Partners of
nearby Salons. A patriotic
TO MEET THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Most theme will be carried out with
Excellent Masters Degree will Joan Wood, assisted by Faye
be conferred when Pomeroy Wildermuth in charge of table
Chapter 80, Royal Arch decorations.
Tbe business meeting was
Masons, meet at 7:30 p.m.
pPened
by Le Petit Chapeau
Thursday •at tbe temple in
Pomeroy. All officers and Joan Wood using the
companions are ·asked to be proscribed opening form.
Children and Youth Chairman
present.
Emma Wayland reported that
she has sen! birthday cards
.CLUB TO MEET
and gifts to eight children
MIDDLEPORT - . The patients at the National Jewish
· Middleport Amateur Garden Hospital in Denver thls past
Club wlll meet at t p.m. month. Hours &amp;pent ~Y PartWedneaday at the social room ners as volunteer workers at
· of the Columbus and Southern the TB Mobile X-ray visit .Viii
Ohio Electric Co. with Mrs. be included in her report to
Edgar Reynolds, Mn. Guy · Departement Chairman.
Reynolda and Mrs. Nina Bland
A report of PouvJir
as bC)Itessea.
·
Departemental was read and

I ,.

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs. Harland f~ick ) Conley
of 462 Neighborhood Road, are
announcing the birth of a
daughter on Feb. 7 at Holzer
Medical Center.
The haby weighed 7 lb. and 6
ozs. and has been named Susan
Brooke . She was welcomed
home by her sister, Lynn
Brooke.
Maternal grimdparenta are
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bahrof
Chester, Ohio. • Paternal
grandparents are Mrs. Maxine
Conley of Gallipolis and Mr.
Howard Conley of Springfield.

KANAUGA - The Kanauga
WSCS met on March 2 at the
home of Mrs. John Raike
where a memorial was coO:.
dueled for Mrs. Ethel Messler,
a member, who passed away
last week. The Bible service,
. "Rivers of Uving Waters,"
was given in observance of
World Day of Prayer.
The program was giVfll in
three parts with Dr. Edna
Gettles and Mrs. Carl Roush
giving "The Need Of The Holy
SPirit" followed by the second
part, "The Nature of the Holy
Spirit" by Evelyn Rothgeb and
Mrs. Pina Ward. Mrs. R. G.
Swisher and Mary Shamblin
gave "The Evidence of the
Holy Spirit," followed with a
hymn .
The Commitment was given
by Mrs. William Spencer and
Mrs. John Ralke . The club
reported having sent carda to
the sick and having made 23
sick calla.
· The next meeting wlU be held
in April at the home of Mrs.
Pina Ward.

The
Newcomen' Club Ia Plannlnc a
tour of the New Holur M"trat
Center on March I at 6;30 p.m. ·
A dinner will be held at GrfiCe
United Methodiat Chlll'ch .
which will be pnpared by Mn.
Bess Grace and her circle.
The hospital is nearly
completed and on. will be a
chance for the elu.b to view the
town's newest and lll&lt;Mit linportant building. All memben
are urged to attend. Reier•
vatlons may be obtained by
calling 446.11634 before Monday,
March 8. The cost of the dinner
is $2.75 per person.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Auxiliary of the Gallia County
Unit of the Clvll Defense wlll
meet on Monday evening at
7:30 at the Gallia County
Courthouse . The wives and
·daughters of member~ of the
Civil Defense are especially
invited.
The purpose of the meeting is
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
for selection of officers and to
Mrs.
Ted Clevenger of
decide which evening would be
the best to have meetings in the Colun1bus (the former Mary
Fry), are announcing the birth
future .
of
a son on Feb. 2, named
This is a vital organization
and there are many ways the Christopher Oliver, weighing 8
....... ..
lb.
and
13
ozs.
The
maternal
ladies of the community can
assist these men when they are grandmother is Mrs. Gus Frye,
called upon in any emergency . Gallipolis, and paternal
The support of the citizens is grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
422 Second Ave.
necessary and will be greatly 0. L. Clevenger of canton,
Gallipolis
Ohio.
appreciated.
The bottom of the cake was
la.:.:::.:m.~.:..$.t'k~.Q.C::.'••••...•.e\M:..:;.mw..:.:..~....*·:.n..::·~-~-~.!W.:t~:::!::s:~s:::3:~..;.,.;.:::;:;::x~~·.·::mt..-:::::~·.·~·::::::~.m~mt~;~J~l:I.0Jl:I.0J3't~JI:WIIIII•
encircled with a garland of
holly and fruit. On each side of ~
the . cake lay two large red
velvet bows. The cake was
baked by Mrs . Dorothy
Thompson , Cheshire.
Presiding at the reception
table were' Mrs. Brenda Cornelius, Lancaster; Mr~. Nancy
Preston, Mrs. Helen Preston,
and Miss Cathy Hall, all of
.
Cheshire. After opening I:-:~
presents the bride changed into ::~
a red velveteen jumper and :~~
The wee folk love the grown-up look&amp;.
-:-.
matching accessories: After a :=-J
·-~
),
short wedding. trip the couple
::::
now resides at Route I, Long :-:That's why we've rounded·up a lot
-!•:
.
. Bottom, Ohio.
:·:·0:·:
Out of town guests were Mi·. ~·:·
for Easter, Spring! Dapper d~ds for
~·· .
and Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Mid- ~~
dleport; Mrs. Sarah Moshier ~;;:
him, sweet things for her.
and Bert, Gallipolis; Mrs. ~::
~-:
Laura Mae Nice, Chester; Mrs. ·~·
~-:
Nora Brown, Chester; Mr. :-:·:.:
Robert Brandeberry, Rio ::~
}::
Grande; Mrs . Jean Sum- ,:.
.•..
merfield, Chester, and Mrs. ·:·:
~~
:;:.
Opal Eichinger, Chester.
•'•'
Pre-wedding showers were ·:·:
'•'·
given by Miss Cathy Hall, ~:
SIZES 2 to 4 &amp;3 to 7
Cheshire; Mrs. Dan Casto, ~=:
~=:
Ravenswood ; Mrs. Laura Mae ~::
Nice, and Mrs. Opal Eichinger, ..•.
'i:::
both of Chester.
from
~=
·:·:

.

..

Memorial Seroice (;onleys Welcome Club to Tour
Hospital
Observed ·
Second Daughrer New
GALLIPOLIS ,

--

fine STORES"
{}allipc}t6, Ohto ·

"ONE OF OHIO'S

-··

-».:. ..........;.:,v.· ,~·=·............~.."«..:...........................,y_......._..:..
~.,. • • •"~~&gt;.

• ••••, . • • •

•

.

y;.•;w.-.-..:.,':«9N-N?.":-.•o-.o;v.;-.•;-,io-.O::::;,~:;..Y,,:~:~::~~~:·:·:•:•:O:·:-:.o.•,.:•··········•;•,•.•.o~.·.o.•,-.•,-.•,•,·l.~l
· .-.o:.~-.~;';h•~':j
• •••••• ;.;; ................................................;-.:.:.:-:-:...·
...... .-~"X~~; -•i&amp;lJi&amp;lJg~J&amp;~~MiiiiMIIIIMIIIIMIIIMitiMitl
_,

-

..

�'...;.The SlllldayTtmes -sentinel, SundaY. March 5, 1972

Ancient Gallipolis-··Rose Bush
Still Lives in Barboursville
_:;;;

-

. BY FRA!'!K BAU.
BARBOURSVILLE, W. Va.
-No cabeU County r"esidenl is
old enough to remember when
the ancient rose bush in the
yard of Mrs. Trilby Fay in
Barboursville, W. Va. wasn't
there.
In 1935, John W. Miller, then
90, grandson of John Miller,
. early resident of Gallipolis,
told me the plant was 90 years
old. But if it was, he must have
been counting i'ts age before it
was transplanted from his
aunt's front yard in Gallipolis.
I wish I knew which aunt and
what addresa, for John MiUer
had 11 children, several of
them born in the GallipolisPoint Pleasant area.
AI any rate, Willlam Clendenin Miller, second child of
John Miller, didn't own the
land on which the ancient
flower now blooms until 1852;
he lived in a big log house
across Barboursville's Main
Street from the magnificent
brick house he built in the early
1850s in the yard of which his
daughter, Eugenia, set out the
little gill from her Ohio aunt.
Recently, I took Willlam C.
Miller's little great - great great - granddaughter, Miss
Melisa Reed, 7, back to the
homestead of her ancestors_to
snap her picture beside the
rose bush from whose branches
thousands of roses have b'een
plucked over perhaps 115
years.
Melisa's grandmother is
Mrs. Dorothy MiUer Stackpole,
great - granddaughter of
William C. Mlller, who rates
near the top of the list of
·Barboursville's most influential people, prominent
merchant, landowner, builder,
and civic leader. Several
buildings erected under his
supervision still stand, including the old courthouse
building built in 1850.
· But back to the rose bush. To
get its 113ncestry,n we must go
back to Zwiebrucken, Germany, early in 1749. Ulrich
MueUer is telling his son,
Jacob, and Jacob's wife and
their six children, "goodby."
Jaoob is ~1 . but is leaving for
the much heralded land of
opportunity, the American
Colonies.
can you Imagine the sadness
of the German burger and his
wife saying farewell to the
family with the six children,
one a little fellow five years old
named Christian?
Someone wrote an historical
genealogy of the "Mlller
family" under discussion in
1914. Some of the descendants
think that it was authored by
Florence Miller, prominent
Cabell County educator and
granddaughter of Gallipolis's
John Miller. Others think that
it was her brother, John W.,
town historian, who died in 1936
at the age of 91. I am ruling
U1em both out, for it carries a
few discrepancies that they
wouldn't have authored. But
just the same, it makes interesting reading, especially to
the many families concerned.
The author says that on Sept.
5, 1749, a boatload of 550
German immigrants landed on
the banks of the Delaware
River, having sailed from
Rotterdam , Holland, from
several German towns and
cities. They were distinguished
by the fact that about all could
read and write, rather unusual
in that age . Most of them
remained in Pennsylvania, a
state that somehow has appealed to German and Dutch
immigrants . But others
journeyed south into Virginia.
Jacob and his family settled
first in York, Pa.. on the

--

-

· FamUies Leaders in GaUia, .
Mason Counties
Many Years
.
.

~ l ll ''SI 1 1t"ll~:o~n, .f, Jht.- P . .M y l' l'~ .
I,.

News, Event
-

,

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Green.,·
and _granddaughter, 'Rella
Rhodes, were guest.s ol Mrs.
Greenlees' brother-In-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
&amp;nlth and daughter In Belpre
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Pl!rry
and granddaughter, Mona,
spent the weekend at their
fann home here.
Mra. Goldie Gillogly waa a
guest on SUnday at the honie ol
her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr •. and Mra. Paul Gastoo and
family.
Mrs. Martha Mays attended
the funeral of Margaret EdJ1lll!idson of SaleDi Center.
Mrs. Edmundson, widow of the
late Clair Edmundsoil, neJi!ew
ol Ney Carpenter, had been a
freQuent visitor in the Carpenter-Mays .home this past
SUIJll!lfr. Qle 'passed away at
the home d her only child,
Mrs. Edw&amp;I'II·(Eileen) GQrtlon
in Tucson, ~. where abe
bad gl)lle to spend lhe winter.
Burial was in the Salem Center
Cemetery.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
entertained with a family
gathering honoring . Gary
Hamon who is being sent to
Okinawa. Those present were
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Hamon
and Randy, Zaleski; Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Kirby and children,
and Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Wiseman and children,
Hamden; Mr. and Mrs.
Preston Hamon and children,
Athens, the host family, Mr. ·
and Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don,
Kathy and Rexie, and the
honored guest.
Mrs. Virginia Townsend and
Paul Henry, .Colwnbus, visited
with her uncles, Paul and W. C.
Peck.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Thad D_ye and
daughter were Mr. and Mrs.
Grant Price and sons,
Columbus; Mrs. Madge Blackwood and daughter, Lisa Dye,
carrabeile, Florida; Dale Dye
and Helen Queen, local. caners
were Mrs. Virginia Townsend
and Paul Henry, Colwnbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith and
Paul and William C. Peck,
local.
Mrs. Carl Rosa and family,
Circleville, visited her,parents,
!'4r. ,apd~~,-\Y9Ji!lm ,h\lel!lil~.

present Putnam County where
he bought1,000 acres on the old
Lexington-Richmond turnpike.
The genealogist' also says It
was here he entertained men
like Clay, Marshall, and
Jackson.
But our biographer may
have exercised his Imagination
about the turnpike. It was 1828 '
before traffic of any volume
was traversing it. But here, as
in Mason County, he owned
much land and a large brick
house.
He sold it all in 1831 and
moved, his last time, to a point
about four miles up the
Kanawha from Point Pleasant.
Here he purchased two farms,
the Locust Hill and Beech HOI,
900 acres in all, a part of the
George Washington grant of
1772. He was owner of 25
slaves, was 40 years a Master
Mason and was -a charter
member of Morning Dawn
Lodge at Gallipolis. He died
March 19, 1846, age 65.
Few people are interested in
family history other than those
related . But, parenthetically,
maybe we had better list all of
LITI1.E MELISA REED, AT ancient rose bush that came from Gallipolis probably 90
John's children rather than
years ago.
just William Clendenin's, who
cut such a swath historically in
our village.
go by.
county office in Indianapolis, cashier of the First Huntington
John's first child was
My encyclopaedia says that and lived on there to prosper in National Bank. Though he and
Christopher, who married there are between 400 and 500 business; John W., landowner Florence both had German
Letitia Hamilton ; William species of roses and more than and dealer in livestock; backgrounds, they were not
Clendenin who married Eliza 4,1100 varieties, but it says Eugenia, who married Prof. B. related, nor was either f'l!llily
Gardner, a granddaughter of a nothing about the age of an H. Thackston; Josep!J.S., who related to a third Barboursville
French nobleman; Charles, individual plant of this fu&gt;wer
served as Comm~ner of . Miller family immigrating
married Eleanor Cantrell; of antiquity. Is this an infant,
Internal Revenue under from Germany and with
Henry Harrison, married Eliza or do we have Methuselah on President Grover Cleveland prominent records in our
Chapman; Margaret, married our hands' Will the rose littie both terms, was instrumental county.
Thomas Thornburg of Bar- Melisa picked be among the in opening up Wayne County · To continue with the sucboursville, another prominent last, or will her greatcoal lands, and the town of cesses of the descendants of
man in the history of Cabell grandchildren return to their Lavalette in Wayne County is William C. Miller would get
County, merchant, civic ancestral home to pluck a rose
named for his daughter, monotonous, but the children of
leader, school official and from its ancient branches?
Lavalette, and Florence the fifth generation, the
county court member. The _ Time will tell.
Gardner Miller, long an Spencers, Hickses, Millers and
Thornburg name has been
The children of the WiUiam educator in Cabell County who Reeds flitting about our slreets
prominent in Cabell County C. Millers were six: Charles, became the second wife of and over the village greens are
since 1820.
who prospered in the timber George F. Miller, far and away active in church, school, 4-H,
Sophia Clendenin Miller died and mill business; Frank, who
the most enterprising business Scouts, and Little League
in April, 1823, and old John married Kale Davidson , man of his generation.
baseball, and they wiil become
didn't wait the year out out to granddaughter of Governor
prominent
in the annals of our
When he died in 1910 he was
remarry. In October of the Noble of Indiana. filled a
area in years to come.
same year, he married 23-yearSo the adventUrous, youthful
old Sallie, daughter of Colonel
John Miller from the Valley of
John and Elizabeth (Stodgill)
were Sunday afternoon visitors the Shenandoah, left us more
Henderson of Henderson at the
of Mr . and Mrs. J. R. Murphy than an ancient rose bush to
mouth of the Kanawha. She
and
family.
remember him by.
'
., 1
. :..
··
was 20 years John's junior'.
Mrs. carrie Wears was a
Their sill children wet'e Nancy,
recent visitor of Mrs. ·Clair
who married Rev. Stephen
Giles.
Kisling Vaught; James HenMrs. Glen Mayes .and Mark
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
derson, married Harriet Gina, Tahnee Jo and Brady of Racine visited Thursday
Craig; Anne Eliza, married and Mrs. Geneva Shumate with Mrs. Clair Giles.
James Robert Buffington, a arrived Thursday evening at
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Tilckerprominent Huntington name; their home here from Orlando, man of Springfield and Helen
Mary Caroline, married Ab- Fla ., where Mr. Johnson has Cook of california were recent
salom Chapman; Rhoda, been working for some lime. visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Clair
married Edmund Chancellor;
Recent visitors of Mr. and Giles and sons.
and Sarah Emily, married Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr.
Over the weekend Mrs. Clair
Hunter Ben Jenkins.
Giles
and Ce~il and Franklin
and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
Our genealogist has our family and Mrs. Shumate. visited with Mr. and Mrs .
William Clendenin Miller born Sunday visitors were Mr. and Ralph Rhoton and Gary, Mr.
in Mason County in 1809 but has Mrs . Franklin Russell of and Mrs. Wallace Whitted,
his parents living in Gallipolis Middleport, Miss Karen Gilkey Emma and Ralph of Dayton.
untill910. So lake your choice. and Tad Gilkey, Albany.
They also visited in Springfield
He came into our village in
Mrs. Howard Thoma and with Mrs. Lois Zimmer, Gary,
the early 1830s when it was a Mrs. Harley Johnson were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Moore
busUing courthouse town with recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. and Susan, Debbie, Samuel
stores, hotels, mills, a lannery, Lincoln Russeil.
Hart and Bertha and Mrs.
and stagecoach and other
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce Ronald Slarder, Mr. and Mrs.
turnpike traffic stirring up the of Columbus were weekend Sam Hart, Vickie Charles, and
dust of our Main Street daily. visitors of Mr . and Mrs. George of St. Paris, Mr. and
He was postmaster from 1840 Howard Russell.
Mrs. Gerald Gracy, Cathy and
until1860, business man extraMr. and Mrs . Fred Jerry of New Carlisle.
ordinary, and builder whose Tuckerman and Rhonda
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Johnson
structures still stand in Bar- Haning were Sunday visitors of and family and Mr. and Mrs . .
boursville to this day, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bratton of James W
. Johnson and family
monuments to his memory.
of Pomeroy, Mrs. Lee Roush
Radcliff.
About 1852, he built a large
Mr . and Mrs. Charley Smith and family of Logan and Mr.
14-room house at what is now were Sunday dinner guests of and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson and
1212 Main St., which was a Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson . family were Sunday visitors of
showplace' of its era. He was a
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Elam Mrs. Helen Johnson .
very hospitable man as were were Sunday visitors of Mr.
Kail, Charles and Kevin
his forefathers before him. The and Mrs. Bill Fouch and family Knapp were Friday overnight
property lelt the Miller hands of Hunlington.
·&lt;,.
guests of grandparentS, Mr.
shortly after his death in 1886,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson and Mrs. Charley Smith.
but was regained and held until
U1e heirs sold it within recent
years. Its owner is now Mrs.
Trilby Fay, an officer in the
Cabell-Wayne Historical
Society and is proud of the fact
tha t she lives in and owns one
of Cabell County's landmarks.
washer
One of the older children of
William Clendenin Miller and
Eliza Gardner Miller was
Eugenia: She loved the
A. Patte'rson , Carmen Pugh, beautiful and had an outgoing
Perry A. Riggs, Jean M. personality . She married
Stewart, Edward Wallen, Professor B. H. Thackston,Lawrence H. Welch, Ruth long a prominent educator in
Wineka, Billie S. Bush, Sharrie Cabell County.
Lynn White and Timothy Allen
_. As a child she went to visit
Mas ters.
an aunt in Gallipolis and adCOME INmired a little rose bush in the
Best Valllell on
NOW'S. A
yard. The aunt dug it up,
'
Veterans Memorial Hospital
J'oods - Clothing • Hardware
DISCHARGED - An nie wrapped the roots carefully,
SPECIAL TIME
Icenhower, Clifford Jenkins6n, and little Eugenia brought it
- in Gallia County ·
l&gt;ack to grow beside the old
James Roberts.
TO BUY!
James River and Kanawha
Parking
For
OYer
100
Cars
Turnpike, later the RichmondPLEASANTV fi-LLEY
Lexington Turnpike; then with
DISCHARGES:
James the coming of the trains, a
Lilly, Point Pleasant; Robert common dirt street; but later,
VanMater, Clifton; John still the Midland Trail where
Hones, Henderson; Timot~ -­ tin liZllies and monstrous buses
Edwards, Mrs . . Mclv ... lumbered by ; then Route 60
Halstead, Valley Toney, Mrs. ~·alfic; then when the roull
'
Charles Messick , Point went around the town, back to
VTNG~·
Pleasant: Carolyn Wheeler, BarbuursviUe's paved Main ·
West Columbia.: Mrs. Rubert Street again.
ID PlnelliWI
.
f'I'CJ\dor d , l\ pplt• -C rn \'P ;
Gallipolis,
01110
Truly. t~~~ lillie Buckeye
1!· "· ' ~ ~ '' '-t'!' tl rlif;l l';ll'(l;ol uf llll'!l
Susquehanna River; leaving
one to wonder if they didn't sail
to s.tart with up the
Susquehanna instead of the
Delaware that forms Pennsylvania's eastern border.
News of the cheap, rich lands
or the Shenandoah Valley
up
the
leaked
back
Susquehanna. So Jacob took
his wife and children down
across the Potomac to 400
acres gran led him by Lord
Fairfax in what is now
Shenandoah County . He bought
more land and received two
more grants from Fairfax and
laid off a 1200-acre town that he
called Muellersladt (Millertown) .
When it grew large enough to
be declared a town, -George
Washington , a burgess from
Frederick County, had the
name changed to Woodstock. It
is now the county seat. Jacob's
other children were Ulrich,
Jaco)l, Susannah, Mary, and
Martin.
UtUe Christian Miller (the
name correctly changed from
Mueller to Miller in America )
grew to manhood and; like his
father, became a great landowner in the Shenandoah
Valley. He was a sergeant in
the Virginia Volunteers and
when he died in 1836 was
reputedly
the
last
Revolutionary War soldier
from the valley to die. His
funeral was reputedly the
largest ever seen in Woodstock
to that date. He had married
Catherine Wiseman in 1771.
They had eight children living
to maturity, two of whom were
John and Henry.
The biographer says John
was born in 1781 and migrated
in to the Kanawha Valley in
1795, rather young at the time,
if the dates arc right. The
author further says that he
stopped at Charieston where he
met Sophia Clendenin, whom
he married lO years Ia ter .
But William Clendenin, cofounder of Charleston, was
U~en living down below the
mouth of the Kanawha opposite
Gallipolis, trying to get Mason
County formed. And his little
12-yearrjll\\··~·~ .wi!Jl
him.l\[llltam w~~ a . AAj~~_t~)~
the Ball,le.llf Point Ple.3$int bu1
a major in the Kanawha
Militia. Several belong to the
D.A.R.. and S.A.R. on his
record. He married Margaret
Handley.
. Well, old Christian gave his
son with itchy feet 40 pounds
and bade him Godspeed with
the advice never to be a surety •
for any man (as Christian had
done to his sorrow) but to be
honest and fair in all his
dealings . And John came
across our mountains and into
our valleys to settle in
Gallipolis in 1800 or earlier .
Here he could find but two
people who spoke English, the
record says. So he set in to
learn French; eventually he
spoke three languages. And
here he entered the trade of a
hatter.
One wonders why this landindentured son of the soil
should enter the business of
selling, making, repairing, or
blocking skypieces. Maybe the
French were heavy on hat
styles. Anyway, he followed the
trade until 1610, then took his
savings and with his wife,
Sophia Clendenin, whom he
married in 1806, crossed the
river into the land of her
fathers where he bought a
large tract of land and built
what is said to have been the
first brick house in Mason
Coun ty.
About 1820 he sold out, lock,
stock, and homestead and went
inlo Teays Valley in the

Wolfpen

SOOP lHE NEW.JONES BOYS'

lt.

FOR..BIG riSCOUNT SA

..

.,

News, 'Notes

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-11 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward .
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lee
Petry, Jackson, a daughter and
Mr. and Mrs. William P.
McCreedy , Kerr, a daughter.
Discharges
Sharon Sue Click, Mack R.
Bennett, Sr., Robert L. P')Qre,
Danny S. Strickland; 'Clarence
L. Folden, Lula Hubbard,
Luelva Sinclair, Robert L.
'Deal, Mrs. William C. Faught,
Jr. and son, Mrs. A. Margaret
Ireland, Autumn Sue Taynor,
Sharon S. Bailey, Lonnie D.
Black, Mrs. Cara M. Cooper,
Lida Durst, Dean T. Eplin~.
Ru!iSell Utile, Rerthald 0 .

Carpenter

MUler (Mueller)-Clendenin

Ill)

Sunday.

Mr. and Mn. H. E. StLilly
were In CoJumboll w-.lay
and Thursday where tbey
attended ibe &amp;111118] meellng ll
Policyholde" of the
r,tutual Casualty Insurance
Company and also tbe
Directtn meetlnp d other
Insurance companies. They
called to see Mrs. Jeule Jewell
while they were In eoiumbull,
also.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
GUlogly, . Vicky and Bruce,
were business visitors in
Coium,bus aDd were guesll of
lila sister, Bernice McKnJabt
and faniliy.
Mr. a.nd Mrs. Bob Mati(JJ
attended a TUrkey Growen' ·
meeting at Mt. Ve~, were In
New Phlladelphla and' visited
an aunt, Mrs. Eva Blakeslee at

Calendar of Events
Released
by Church
.

Gra••

Medina.
Don Wilson was a dinner
gu"'t at the home rl. Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Jeffers and family.
Mrs : Richard Jeffers
honored Mrs. Don Cr81l8ton
and new baby with a shower,
Those attending were Mrs.
Willlam Cheadle, Mrs. Reed
Jeffers, Metta Fisher, Mrs.
Gene Jeffers, Mrs, Unda Dye,
the hostess and guests of honor.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree, ..
Russell and Kevin, were guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Crabtree for a birthday
dinner honoring Arthur
Crabll'ee.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
visited her mother, Mrs.
Beulah Cordray and her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and MrS. Herman Cordray, all
of Athens Route.

The Almanac
By United Press IDternatJonal
Today is Sunday, March 5,
the 65th day of 1972.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus; Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces.
American lithographer James
Ives, of the Currier and Ives
team, was born March 5, 1800.
On this day in history:
In 1770 British troops kiUed
five civilians m the SI).(:Blled
"Boston Massacre."
In 1953 the Soviet Union
announced that Premier Josef
Stalin had died at the age of 73.
In 1966 a British airliner
crashed into Japan's Molin!
F .. k'lH I
'
.
"WI-•"'IoWg ~ Jlllr~o~AJ'bflprd.
i'l•

.,

'

"

H '·

-

GALLIPOLIS
The
Teachers and Officers Conference of Paint Creek Baptist
Sunday School held Its
February meetlng in the
clmch fellowahip room with
Mrs. John King and Cliristy aa ·

hoslelses.

·

Mrs.
Lealie - Howard,
lllperintendent, presided a"d
"A Charge To 'Keep I Have~:
was SJ\ng by tjle group.
Serlpiure, Mark 8:31.:16 and
comments by Mrs. · Howard.
LINDA DENNEY
Prayer ·was by Rev. E. D.
MeG~.
Roll caU was answered with
a quote or fact about George
Washington or Abraham
Lincoln. The minutes were
read and approved as read by
VINTON - Unda Darlene secretary, Mrs. Bobby Gordon.
Denney, daughter of Mr. and During the business a report
Mrs. Marvin Denney, Route 1 was given on finance for
has received a ltiitlon awar&lt;l ~ vacation'.Bible school.
pur8ue cosmetology training at
Calendar or Events thr4&gt;ugh .
the Ohio State School of June: March 5, Gallla Sub
Cosmetology In Columbus. District Sunday School and
Miss Denney wa~ one of the B.T.U. Institutei Mar~h 6,
winners over 300 OhiO-area Providence Area School of
appHcanta. She waa selected on Religion; March 'II, Mission
· the basis of recommendations Sunday, local mission in
of her high 8Chool officials, and
ranked at the top In evaluations
by the Scholarship Committee
r1. the Ohio State School which
is one of the top ranking
schools in the country.

Mirs Denny Won
Tuition Award

Family Reunion
Held In Florida

.
GALLIPOLIS - Sunday,
Feb. 11 was a day long tO be
remembered by the seven
children of the late Mr. and
Mrs. 0. E. George. The group
met at the home of Mr. and
Mrl. J.ester George In Gainesville, Fla.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
W. J. George, Mr. and Mrs,
Mark (Jessie) Pearce and Mrs.
C1ifford (Carrie) Rice, Miami,
Fla.; Mrs. Robert (Grace)
Bowman, Downingtown, Pa.;
Mr. and MrS- Ernest George,
St. Paris, Ohio, and Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Harrison, Gallipolis.
They attended church In a
body where the eldest son of
Lester George is the pastor.
·• Ail enjoyed ' a wonderful
dinner, after which pictures
were taken and Ume spent
visiting and reminiscing in the
past,

GALLIPOLIS --"- Thomas
Luellen, 17 year-old son of Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Luellen,
Groveport, Ohio and grandson
of Mrs. Dale Gilkey of
Gallipolis, has been named an
oqtstandlng teenager of
America for 1972,

Ewington

this.special
&lt;1E&gt;
Whlr,pool
washer .value
won't wait
for winter
It's a specially featured model; And
it's bound to go fast at this low price. 2
- speeds, 3 cycles - ·NORMAL, GENTLE and
PERMANENT PRESS. Special permanent prtll
cool-down fights wrinkles before clothes go into
the dryer. Super' SURGILATOR' agitator scrubs·
clothes clean. Maeic-Mix• filter traps lint. Twoposition water level control and five water temperature selections for washing flexibility, Soek·
setting for those extra-dirty washables. A sreat
buy- especially now!
,,..._

$

95

ONLY
WITH MATCHING
WHIRLPOOL DRYER

~

$389

95

charge; .\prll 2, Easter and
Decision Day wlth hom~
visitation Holy Week; May,
Christian Family Month, and
May It, M~r's Day. The
llitter part of May and June
will be for entertaining of high
school graduates,
The program was . an
educational feature, "How to
Build
An
Evangelistic
Christian Education Program,
ap8heldlscuaslonbymlnlsters
of five ·conll!'l!gati~ of dif.
ferent ~ who gave keys
of their successful work.
Mrs. · Leslie
Howard
represented the West, a large
congregation; - Mrs. John
Casey, the East; a small
congregation and Mrs. Hurl
Hogans, the Nortb presented
the panel keys and ways to help
build
the
evangelistic
program.
DlsmlsaBI was forming a
friendship circle and repeating
Bible verses. A social hour
followed with Charades of
Hymn Titles conducted by Mrs.
John Rippey.

KYGER - The Golden Rul~ and questions IIi the past years,
Clallll of the Old Kyger Owrtn J\lra. Ge«ge Gardner gave the
met with Mrs: Ecllrard Spears aecretary's report and · Mrs.
on Wednellday since Mrs. Dale Ben Rupe gave the treasurer's
Mulford could 110t be holltesa as report.
her husband wu hospitalized
Get well cards were signed
with a heart attacll.
for Dale Mulford and Mrs. Ettil
The mornipg was spent m Skidmore, patients In the.
sewing raga for ruga, '!be hospital. Readlnga were given
devotional meeting wu opened by Mrs. lester Roush, Mrs.
by the group singing, "I'll Live Mpllie Johnson, Mrs. Ben
·J for Him" with prayer and the Rupe, Mra. Hortle Roush, Mrs.
~~eripture taken !toni the 12tl) Gectge G~ and III;Ien
Chapter d Romans.
Spears. Mrli. Spears aaked
The roll c.U wu answered Bible questions which were
by members telling how they Interesting · and educaliO!Jal.
benefited from the meetings or
The door prize, donated by
what they wOuld like to do.
Mrs. Lester Roush, waa won by
One member emphasized Miss Johnson. A special
that she had received help and · meeting will be held March 15
a better understanding of the with Miss Johnson to make a
scripture by the Bible study coverlet and se\v rags.

Prayer and Self-Denial
Theme of WSCS Meeting
PORTER - 'The February
meeting -of the Porter United
Methodist Women's Society of
Christian Service was held at
the Porter Church. A short
business meeting with Mrs.
Josephine Maze in charge was
held. The minutes of the last
meeting were read and approved and roll call was an-

Mrs. Robert Ruff
Given Baby Shower

THURMAN - A stork
shower was given on Feb. 12 in
honor of Mrs. Robert Ruff at
the Thurman United Methodist
Church bY Mrs. Robert Ball,
\Irs. David Rees, and Mrs.
George Lewis. Games and
refreshments were enjoyed by
all. !\!tending were Carolee
Lewis, Naomi Beman, Judy
Crlsj), Patricia Elliott,
Wilmenia Carter, Henrietta,
Terry Audrey Brewer, Hattie
Saxton, Ruth Whitt, Marie
Ruff, Myrtle Kuhn, 1Allma
Walker, Burl Griffith, Wanda
Terry, Mrs. Sylvia Humphreys, Mrs. Thomas Meek,
Marla Moore, Mrs. Orville
Jones,
Lula
Richards
Margaret Thomas, Mrs, Dal~
Saunders, J osine Moses, -Mrs.
Jim Burleson, · Mrs. Flem
Arrowood, Mrs. James
Arrowood,
Mrs.
Ervin
Arrowood, lyiisa Sue Luman,
Mlsa Mary Wiseman, Mrs .

Mrs. Gilkey's Grandson
Is Outstanding Teenager
Why wait? Buy e
Whirlpool was.her
and dryer early
.•. before it's time
to tangle with wln~rwinds and frozen
clotheslines!

.

Golden Rule Class
Sews Rags For Rugs

By Mrs. MltcmeU Webb
Mrs. Elva Huntley was
moved from Hqlzer Hoepltal to
Jenkins Memorial, Wellston,
Ohio, Code No. 45692. She
would appreciate hearing from
her friends.
Sunday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach
and family, Gallipolis, were
Mrs. Roach's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. David Ball, Mrs. Ball's
mother, Mrs. Oral Webb
'
Vinton, and Mrs. Roach's
sliter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Roble, Bidwell . .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barr and
family of Gallipolis were
Sunday visitors of Mrs. Barr's
mother, . Mrs. · Erma Robie,
Bidwell.
A birthday surprise dinner
was given for Mrs. Helen Tyler
at her home Saturday evening
by her children. Those who
helped to enjoy the occasion
were her daughter and family,
Mr. and Mra. Basel Harris of
St. Albans, W. Va., another
daughter and husband, Mr, and
Mrs. Wyman Denney of Bidwell, a son, Francis and wife,
Ewington. Her daughter-inlilw, Mrs. Francis Tyler, baked
the birthday cake.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Green
were Sunday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Dewey Good and Mr.
and Mrs. Alva Lowe of
Ewing ton.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball and
daughter, Patricia, ·y;ere
Monday evening dinner
visitors of Mrs, Ball's mother.
Mr. and Mrs. William
McGarvey and Mrs. Blanch
Jones d Wellston were Sunday
visitors rl. their sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Tyler,
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Lowe
were recent vlslton In
Wells lAin. Mr. Lowe want to
consult her doctor,

.

Glen Wiseman, Mrs. Esther
Luman, Mrs. Clyde Walker,
Mrs. Janice Layton, Rebecca
Gill, Ruthie Arrowood, Kimberly Ball, Mary Lynn Ruff,
Amy Lou Wesley, Terry
Walker, Kim Arrowood, Lynn
Lewil!, Terry Humphrey, and
the guest of honqr, Ml's- Sue
Ruff.
: r
The following sent gifts:
Mary Hall, I;lella Tate, carolee
Pope, Anna Mae Perroud and
Jan, Joan Beman, and Janet
Beman.

Fairview
News
Notes
VlsiUng Mrs. Kate Rowe and
Ada Sunday were Mrs. Unda
Cleland and children, Brian
and Vince, Mrs. Anna Wines
and Jackie and Karen and Neal
Baker of Racine ,
Mrs. Edward Laudermill
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Blackwell of Letart
were Sunday guests of Mrs.
Mary -Donahue and son, David,
and Mrs. Rose Bachus.
Edward Laudermilt spent
the weekend in Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton spent Sunday with Mr,
and Mrs. Rusaell Roush and
called on Mrs. Edna Roush and
Mrs. Gladys Shields at Racine,
Roger Roush and Jeff Miller
were dinner guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rusaell at
Middleport.
·
Bill Robinson and children,
Pat, Brad, Dave, Berta and
Pete of Racine Route visited
Mrs. Bertha Robinson Sunday.
Mrs. Luda Arnott and son,
Don Arnott, of Parkersburg
visited Sunday with Ott Arnott.
Mr, and Mrs. Bill Arnott of
Clarksburg spent a weekend at
their home.
Wiley Ours of Racine Route
called on· Russell Roush
Sunday.
· -Mrs. Herbert Roush

He was nominated by his
principal at the Groveport
High School as one of four
students from his high school to
receive this award In nationwide competition. He Is being
considered al9ng with other
award winners for hiS state's
outstanding teenage~ of the
year award trophy and two
$1,000 national scholarships.
He is also competing wi\h
nominees from states in his
area for a $500 regional
scholarship.
As an outstanding teenager
he wiil be honored In ' the 1972
edition of "Outstanding
Teenagers of America." His
complete biography and many
achievements will be included
In the book to be published this
spring. He recently received
the Eagle Scout Award; he is
president of his class and is
Swallows traditionaily return
to the Missio9 of San
outstanding in football.This fall
Juan
Capistrano on St, Johe plans to attend Ohio State
University majoring in pre- seph's ·Day, March 19, and
depart on San Juan's Day,
riled. '
Oct. 23.

Seventh Graders
See Slides of
· Other Countries
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Irene
Brannon's seventh grade
Geography clasa at Rio Grande
Elementary had the pTtvUege
of seeing slides of Nicaragua
and . El Salvador taken by
Margaret Tracy and Sarah
Winters on their trip to Central
America last summer.
The girls told of the people
they met, the friends they
made and the way the people
live.
Since the seventh grade is
studying Western Hemisphere
Geography and is now
studying South America, the.
study of Middle America and
this area will be most
meaningful because of the
pictures, the lalks, and things
the girls bought in these
countries.
Ralph Waugh, village
policeman for Rio Grande,
·gave a talk to the seventh
gra~e Civics Class, telling of
his duties, explaining some
village ordinances and giving a
very informative talk on drugs.
A question and answer
period followed the talk. The
children had many questions to
ask about drugs and of the
procesaes of law, The first
hanq knowledge of the work of
those who are involved in
government means much.

swered by 10 members who
responded with Bible verses.
One visitor, Mrs. Ester Hit,
was welcomed and reports
were given. about several of the
members who are · ill. Mrs.
Dorothy Phillips and Mrs.
Wilma Geer have been
hospjtalized and Mrs. Sabra
Clark is being cared for at the
home of Mrs. 0. K. Phillips in
Rodney.
Suggestions for a project
were discussed, but nothing
was definitely decided. Nelle
Mossman made the motion
that a subscription to Response
Magazine, for the program
chairman, be paid for out of the
treasury and Mrs. Margaret
Black seconded the motion,
"The can to Prayer and SelfDenial" was used as the
program theme of the evening
by Mrs. Elizabeth Mcinturff.
Quiet music was played by
Margaret Black while the
members meditated. Mrs.
Mcinturff offered prayer and
read an introduction to the
program. The members Sang
"Open Mine Eyes That I May
See".

Short scripture readings
were given by Mrs. Ethel
Walters, Mrs. Clara Fisher and
Mrs. Mary Kennedy.
A poem was read by Mrs.
Delll1 ·Stevens • and 'special
scripture pasaages were read
by Mrs. Nelle Mossman who
read chapter 12 from Romans,
and Mrs. Opal Mitchell who
read chapter 25 from Matthew.
A "Prayer of Confession" was
read by the members in unison.
A question and answer
composition was read with
Mrs. Elizabeth Mcinturff as
leader, and response being
given by the members in
unison. A poem was read by
Mrs. Ester Hit and closing song
was "Blest Be the Tie That
Binds."

Three New Members joined The
Retired Teachers AssQciation
GAu.IPOIJS - '!be Gallia
County Olapter of Retired
Teachers held its first meeting
of the year at the Grace United
Methodist Olurch Thursday
with 32 members attending.
Following the luncheon in the
dining aHa, the members met
in the Olapel where the group
sang several old favorite songs
and Mrs. Jennie Elliott
suggested a song pledging
support to the president, Ed-~
ward Parkins.
During the buSiness session
Mr. Parkins appointed committees to serve during the
year.
Lawrence Hineman in-

I

GAWPOIJS - The Christ met last Sunday evening with
United Methodist Sr. M.Y.F. Kala Sue Waugh presiding.
"Someone Goofed" was read
by Tim Chevalier and the
group was led in !lOng by Ubby
Willis, who ·also gave the
minutes of the last meeting.
Craig Thompson gave the
treasurer's report and plans
were made for the youth's part
Calendar
in the Easter Worship Service
MARCH - Ohio University and a skating party to be held
Alumni Invitational in March.
·
Exhibition, Sunday, March 12
The meeting was adjourned
- Reception honoring new by a unison benediction.
members
at
Riverby;
Tuesday, March 21 - 8 p.m.
FAC Board Meeting, and
Tuesday, March 28 - 8 p.m.
FAC Board of Trustees
meeting.

IS N0.1 IN

Alfred
. Social Notes

WEDDING RINGS

Sunday School attendance on
Feb. 27 was 39. Offering was
$16.05. Worship services had an
attendance of 32. Rev. Lehman
spoke on "Loving, Kind and
Just."
Mary Carr spent Tuesday
through Friday of last week
with Mr. and Mrs. Seldon
O'Brien in Columbus. She
reports the O'Briens pretty
well for their years.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz,
Clara Follrod and Nina
Robinson went to the Gallipolis
State Hospital, Sunday afternoon to visit their sister,
Helen Follrod . She seems
somewhat improved.
Th6,_birthday ol Vere Sl"ar~
was observed Saturday, Feb.
26, at his home here. His
children and grandchildren all
called in at different times
during the day. Mr. Swartz has
been in poor health for some
time .
The birthday of Freddie
Honacher was observed
Sunday, FeQ. 27, at his home
here._Besides the family, his
grandmother, Anna Thompson
and Harley Sidwell, Coolville,
were present.
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Atherton were Sunday dinner
guests of her brother, Elbert
Taylor and family, Pomeroy
Rd.

why when you
come In and. see the
Imagination, quality and
craftsmanship that go Into
every style.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
421 Second Avo.

Go t

The well-bred look ·

SPORTSMEN MEET
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Fish and Game
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the club
rooms In Syracuse.

Ho1w's ~lady to _accent those refi~e,d
new fash1onsl Wtth smart but femmme
shoes from our current Auditions
collection. Black Patent
1

20.95

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
- Middleport Lions Club will
meet at 12 noon Wednesday for
a luncheon at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.

auditions~

tll

llftll-

ROUSE

into·a better

Mon., Tues., Wed., Thun.-11 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sat-- II A.M. to 11 P.M.
Closed Sunday

to buy a new car! ~""''
get your best deal . .
~orne in and let us figure
Chances are you 'll ~A'"'
ONEY and " drive as
on comfartable mo,nthiiYI

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

'

_Italian Spaghetti

ments that suit ~ou!

Ohio

SPAGHETTI DINNER with Meat Sauce . .. . ........ . 1.95
RAVIOLI DINNER with Meat Sauce .. ... . .. _ ... . . _. 2.25
Includes: Salad and Drink ... Rye &amp; French Bread

Mon. Tues. Wed - Sat. 9-5
Thurs. 9-12, Fri. 9-8

Dinners
FILET MIGNON, Wropped w1th Sa con .- . . ... .. . ....
T-BONE STEAK, ( 16 ot .) U.S. Prime . .... . ..... . . . .
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce . . . ... .. _ . . . ..
HOME BAKED HAM, Howaiion Pineapple Ring ......
FILLET OF WHITE FISH, Tart'or Sauce : . . . , . .........
GRILLED CUBE STEAK .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. .. . . .
Entree Include• Solad . Vegetable, ond Drink

Let us
HELP

"SHIFT"

Hours

steal....spachetti

tlemenl.
The name of Roosevelt,
Vanderbilt , Livingston and
others appear throughout the
story of the early days. The
book ends with the wedding of
Jackie Onasais on an Island in
Greece.
"The Upper Crust" is a
beautiful book and the members enjoyed seeing the
illustrations in the book.

MCarved

4. 25
4.25
3.25
2.25
2.25
1.95

Valley
Bank

BankAmericard
Welcome
''the now bank that
appreciates your businesa"
Nkmbf r Fl':dt:r11l L:l.:posit

Children's Portions Available

ln.~rancc" Cnrporat~

. - -~

'
,.

Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tracy,
Mrs. Luther Shelton and Elmer
Caldw•U.
A thank you note WI!-' read
GALLIPOLIS
The
from the family of Mr, Chal'les
Thursday Club met at the home
V. Ward. "What Is ATeacher,"
of Mrs. William Jenkins where
was the theme selected by
Mrs. tharles Switzer reviewed
Elmer Caldwell for the
the book "The Upper Crust" by
program. The program was
Allen Churchill.
interesting and brought back
"The Upper Crust" is a story
memories of the duties
of New York society from the
demanded of the teachers in
1600s to the present day.
Gallia COWity a few decades
New York took its first step
ago:
· in society, with the arrival of
The meeting was adjourned
the first British governor,
to meet the first Thursday in
Colonel Benjamin Fletcher in
June with details to ·be an1692. The Colonel and Mrs.
nounced later.
Fletcher entertained in their
governor's mansion which was

Easter Plans Made by M YF~:ll~s~,o~!: 1~~ c~h~n ~e~~

.

I

lro!luced three new members,

Thursday
Club Reviews
Book

-

�'...;.The SlllldayTtmes -sentinel, SundaY. March 5, 1972

Ancient Gallipolis-··Rose Bush
Still Lives in Barboursville
_:;;;

-

. BY FRA!'!K BAU.
BARBOURSVILLE, W. Va.
-No cabeU County r"esidenl is
old enough to remember when
the ancient rose bush in the
yard of Mrs. Trilby Fay in
Barboursville, W. Va. wasn't
there.
In 1935, John W. Miller, then
90, grandson of John Miller,
. early resident of Gallipolis,
told me the plant was 90 years
old. But if it was, he must have
been counting i'ts age before it
was transplanted from his
aunt's front yard in Gallipolis.
I wish I knew which aunt and
what addresa, for John MiUer
had 11 children, several of
them born in the GallipolisPoint Pleasant area.
AI any rate, Willlam Clendenin Miller, second child of
John Miller, didn't own the
land on which the ancient
flower now blooms until 1852;
he lived in a big log house
across Barboursville's Main
Street from the magnificent
brick house he built in the early
1850s in the yard of which his
daughter, Eugenia, set out the
little gill from her Ohio aunt.
Recently, I took Willlam C.
Miller's little great - great great - granddaughter, Miss
Melisa Reed, 7, back to the
homestead of her ancestors_to
snap her picture beside the
rose bush from whose branches
thousands of roses have b'een
plucked over perhaps 115
years.
Melisa's grandmother is
Mrs. Dorothy MiUer Stackpole,
great - granddaughter of
William C. Mlller, who rates
near the top of the list of
·Barboursville's most influential people, prominent
merchant, landowner, builder,
and civic leader. Several
buildings erected under his
supervision still stand, including the old courthouse
building built in 1850.
· But back to the rose bush. To
get its 113ncestry,n we must go
back to Zwiebrucken, Germany, early in 1749. Ulrich
MueUer is telling his son,
Jacob, and Jacob's wife and
their six children, "goodby."
Jaoob is ~1 . but is leaving for
the much heralded land of
opportunity, the American
Colonies.
can you Imagine the sadness
of the German burger and his
wife saying farewell to the
family with the six children,
one a little fellow five years old
named Christian?
Someone wrote an historical
genealogy of the "Mlller
family" under discussion in
1914. Some of the descendants
think that it was authored by
Florence Miller, prominent
Cabell County educator and
granddaughter of Gallipolis's
John Miller. Others think that
it was her brother, John W.,
town historian, who died in 1936
at the age of 91. I am ruling
U1em both out, for it carries a
few discrepancies that they
wouldn't have authored. But
just the same, it makes interesting reading, especially to
the many families concerned.
The author says that on Sept.
5, 1749, a boatload of 550
German immigrants landed on
the banks of the Delaware
River, having sailed from
Rotterdam , Holland, from
several German towns and
cities. They were distinguished
by the fact that about all could
read and write, rather unusual
in that age . Most of them
remained in Pennsylvania, a
state that somehow has appealed to German and Dutch
immigrants . But others
journeyed south into Virginia.
Jacob and his family settled
first in York, Pa.. on the

--

-

· FamUies Leaders in GaUia, .
Mason Counties
Many Years
.
.

~ l ll ''SI 1 1t"ll~:o~n, .f, Jht.- P . .M y l' l'~ .
I,.

News, Event
-

,

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Green.,·
and _granddaughter, 'Rella
Rhodes, were guest.s ol Mrs.
Greenlees' brother-In-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
&amp;nlth and daughter In Belpre
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Pl!rry
and granddaughter, Mona,
spent the weekend at their
fann home here.
Mra. Goldie Gillogly waa a
guest on SUnday at the honie ol
her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr •. and Mra. Paul Gastoo and
family.
Mrs. Martha Mays attended
the funeral of Margaret EdJ1lll!idson of SaleDi Center.
Mrs. Edmundson, widow of the
late Clair Edmundsoil, neJi!ew
ol Ney Carpenter, had been a
freQuent visitor in the Carpenter-Mays .home this past
SUIJll!lfr. Qle 'passed away at
the home d her only child,
Mrs. Edw&amp;I'II·(Eileen) GQrtlon
in Tucson, ~. where abe
bad gl)lle to spend lhe winter.
Burial was in the Salem Center
Cemetery.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
entertained with a family
gathering honoring . Gary
Hamon who is being sent to
Okinawa. Those present were
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Hamon
and Randy, Zaleski; Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Kirby and children,
and Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Wiseman and children,
Hamden; Mr. and Mrs.
Preston Hamon and children,
Athens, the host family, Mr. ·
and Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don,
Kathy and Rexie, and the
honored guest.
Mrs. Virginia Townsend and
Paul Henry, .Colwnbus, visited
with her uncles, Paul and W. C.
Peck.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Thad D_ye and
daughter were Mr. and Mrs.
Grant Price and sons,
Columbus; Mrs. Madge Blackwood and daughter, Lisa Dye,
carrabeile, Florida; Dale Dye
and Helen Queen, local. caners
were Mrs. Virginia Townsend
and Paul Henry, Colwnbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith and
Paul and William C. Peck,
local.
Mrs. Carl Rosa and family,
Circleville, visited her,parents,
!'4r. ,apd~~,-\Y9Ji!lm ,h\lel!lil~.

present Putnam County where
he bought1,000 acres on the old
Lexington-Richmond turnpike.
The genealogist' also says It
was here he entertained men
like Clay, Marshall, and
Jackson.
But our biographer may
have exercised his Imagination
about the turnpike. It was 1828 '
before traffic of any volume
was traversing it. But here, as
in Mason County, he owned
much land and a large brick
house.
He sold it all in 1831 and
moved, his last time, to a point
about four miles up the
Kanawha from Point Pleasant.
Here he purchased two farms,
the Locust Hill and Beech HOI,
900 acres in all, a part of the
George Washington grant of
1772. He was owner of 25
slaves, was 40 years a Master
Mason and was -a charter
member of Morning Dawn
Lodge at Gallipolis. He died
March 19, 1846, age 65.
Few people are interested in
family history other than those
related . But, parenthetically,
maybe we had better list all of
LITI1.E MELISA REED, AT ancient rose bush that came from Gallipolis probably 90
John's children rather than
years ago.
just William Clendenin's, who
cut such a swath historically in
our village.
go by.
county office in Indianapolis, cashier of the First Huntington
John's first child was
My encyclopaedia says that and lived on there to prosper in National Bank. Though he and
Christopher, who married there are between 400 and 500 business; John W., landowner Florence both had German
Letitia Hamilton ; William species of roses and more than and dealer in livestock; backgrounds, they were not
Clendenin who married Eliza 4,1100 varieties, but it says Eugenia, who married Prof. B. related, nor was either f'l!llily
Gardner, a granddaughter of a nothing about the age of an H. Thackston; Josep!J.S., who related to a third Barboursville
French nobleman; Charles, individual plant of this fu&gt;wer
served as Comm~ner of . Miller family immigrating
married Eleanor Cantrell; of antiquity. Is this an infant,
Internal Revenue under from Germany and with
Henry Harrison, married Eliza or do we have Methuselah on President Grover Cleveland prominent records in our
Chapman; Margaret, married our hands' Will the rose littie both terms, was instrumental county.
Thomas Thornburg of Bar- Melisa picked be among the in opening up Wayne County · To continue with the sucboursville, another prominent last, or will her greatcoal lands, and the town of cesses of the descendants of
man in the history of Cabell grandchildren return to their Lavalette in Wayne County is William C. Miller would get
County, merchant, civic ancestral home to pluck a rose
named for his daughter, monotonous, but the children of
leader, school official and from its ancient branches?
Lavalette, and Florence the fifth generation, the
county court member. The _ Time will tell.
Gardner Miller, long an Spencers, Hickses, Millers and
Thornburg name has been
The children of the WiUiam educator in Cabell County who Reeds flitting about our slreets
prominent in Cabell County C. Millers were six: Charles, became the second wife of and over the village greens are
since 1820.
who prospered in the timber George F. Miller, far and away active in church, school, 4-H,
Sophia Clendenin Miller died and mill business; Frank, who
the most enterprising business Scouts, and Little League
in April, 1823, and old John married Kale Davidson , man of his generation.
baseball, and they wiil become
didn't wait the year out out to granddaughter of Governor
prominent
in the annals of our
When he died in 1910 he was
remarry. In October of the Noble of Indiana. filled a
area in years to come.
same year, he married 23-yearSo the adventUrous, youthful
old Sallie, daughter of Colonel
John Miller from the Valley of
John and Elizabeth (Stodgill)
were Sunday afternoon visitors the Shenandoah, left us more
Henderson of Henderson at the
of Mr . and Mrs. J. R. Murphy than an ancient rose bush to
mouth of the Kanawha. She
and
family.
remember him by.
'
., 1
. :..
··
was 20 years John's junior'.
Mrs. carrie Wears was a
Their sill children wet'e Nancy,
recent visitor of Mrs. ·Clair
who married Rev. Stephen
Giles.
Kisling Vaught; James HenMrs. Glen Mayes .and Mark
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
derson, married Harriet Gina, Tahnee Jo and Brady of Racine visited Thursday
Craig; Anne Eliza, married and Mrs. Geneva Shumate with Mrs. Clair Giles.
James Robert Buffington, a arrived Thursday evening at
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Tilckerprominent Huntington name; their home here from Orlando, man of Springfield and Helen
Mary Caroline, married Ab- Fla ., where Mr. Johnson has Cook of california were recent
salom Chapman; Rhoda, been working for some lime. visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Clair
married Edmund Chancellor;
Recent visitors of Mr. and Giles and sons.
and Sarah Emily, married Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr.
Over the weekend Mrs. Clair
Hunter Ben Jenkins.
Giles
and Ce~il and Franklin
and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
Our genealogist has our family and Mrs. Shumate. visited with Mr. and Mrs .
William Clendenin Miller born Sunday visitors were Mr. and Ralph Rhoton and Gary, Mr.
in Mason County in 1809 but has Mrs . Franklin Russell of and Mrs. Wallace Whitted,
his parents living in Gallipolis Middleport, Miss Karen Gilkey Emma and Ralph of Dayton.
untill910. So lake your choice. and Tad Gilkey, Albany.
They also visited in Springfield
He came into our village in
Mrs. Howard Thoma and with Mrs. Lois Zimmer, Gary,
the early 1830s when it was a Mrs. Harley Johnson were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Moore
busUing courthouse town with recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. and Susan, Debbie, Samuel
stores, hotels, mills, a lannery, Lincoln Russeil.
Hart and Bertha and Mrs.
and stagecoach and other
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce Ronald Slarder, Mr. and Mrs.
turnpike traffic stirring up the of Columbus were weekend Sam Hart, Vickie Charles, and
dust of our Main Street daily. visitors of Mr . and Mrs. George of St. Paris, Mr. and
He was postmaster from 1840 Howard Russell.
Mrs. Gerald Gracy, Cathy and
until1860, business man extraMr. and Mrs . Fred Jerry of New Carlisle.
ordinary, and builder whose Tuckerman and Rhonda
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Johnson
structures still stand in Bar- Haning were Sunday visitors of and family and Mr. and Mrs . .
boursville to this day, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bratton of James W
. Johnson and family
monuments to his memory.
of Pomeroy, Mrs. Lee Roush
Radcliff.
About 1852, he built a large
Mr . and Mrs. Charley Smith and family of Logan and Mr.
14-room house at what is now were Sunday dinner guests of and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson and
1212 Main St., which was a Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson . family were Sunday visitors of
showplace' of its era. He was a
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Elam Mrs. Helen Johnson .
very hospitable man as were were Sunday visitors of Mr.
Kail, Charles and Kevin
his forefathers before him. The and Mrs. Bill Fouch and family Knapp were Friday overnight
property lelt the Miller hands of Hunlington.
·&lt;,.
guests of grandparentS, Mr.
shortly after his death in 1886,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson and Mrs. Charley Smith.
but was regained and held until
U1e heirs sold it within recent
years. Its owner is now Mrs.
Trilby Fay, an officer in the
Cabell-Wayne Historical
Society and is proud of the fact
tha t she lives in and owns one
of Cabell County's landmarks.
washer
One of the older children of
William Clendenin Miller and
Eliza Gardner Miller was
Eugenia: She loved the
A. Patte'rson , Carmen Pugh, beautiful and had an outgoing
Perry A. Riggs, Jean M. personality . She married
Stewart, Edward Wallen, Professor B. H. Thackston,Lawrence H. Welch, Ruth long a prominent educator in
Wineka, Billie S. Bush, Sharrie Cabell County.
Lynn White and Timothy Allen
_. As a child she went to visit
Mas ters.
an aunt in Gallipolis and adCOME INmired a little rose bush in the
Best Valllell on
NOW'S. A
yard. The aunt dug it up,
'
Veterans Memorial Hospital
J'oods - Clothing • Hardware
DISCHARGED - An nie wrapped the roots carefully,
SPECIAL TIME
Icenhower, Clifford Jenkins6n, and little Eugenia brought it
- in Gallia County ·
l&gt;ack to grow beside the old
James Roberts.
TO BUY!
James River and Kanawha
Parking
For
OYer
100
Cars
Turnpike, later the RichmondPLEASANTV fi-LLEY
Lexington Turnpike; then with
DISCHARGES:
James the coming of the trains, a
Lilly, Point Pleasant; Robert common dirt street; but later,
VanMater, Clifton; John still the Midland Trail where
Hones, Henderson; Timot~ -­ tin liZllies and monstrous buses
Edwards, Mrs . . Mclv ... lumbered by ; then Route 60
Halstead, Valley Toney, Mrs. ~·alfic; then when the roull
'
Charles Messick , Point went around the town, back to
VTNG~·
Pleasant: Carolyn Wheeler, BarbuursviUe's paved Main ·
West Columbia.: Mrs. Rubert Street again.
ID PlnelliWI
.
f'I'CJ\dor d , l\ pplt• -C rn \'P ;
Gallipolis,
01110
Truly. t~~~ lillie Buckeye
1!· "· ' ~ ~ '' '-t'!' tl rlif;l l';ll'(l;ol uf llll'!l
Susquehanna River; leaving
one to wonder if they didn't sail
to s.tart with up the
Susquehanna instead of the
Delaware that forms Pennsylvania's eastern border.
News of the cheap, rich lands
or the Shenandoah Valley
up
the
leaked
back
Susquehanna. So Jacob took
his wife and children down
across the Potomac to 400
acres gran led him by Lord
Fairfax in what is now
Shenandoah County . He bought
more land and received two
more grants from Fairfax and
laid off a 1200-acre town that he
called Muellersladt (Millertown) .
When it grew large enough to
be declared a town, -George
Washington , a burgess from
Frederick County, had the
name changed to Woodstock. It
is now the county seat. Jacob's
other children were Ulrich,
Jaco)l, Susannah, Mary, and
Martin.
UtUe Christian Miller (the
name correctly changed from
Mueller to Miller in America )
grew to manhood and; like his
father, became a great landowner in the Shenandoah
Valley. He was a sergeant in
the Virginia Volunteers and
when he died in 1836 was
reputedly
the
last
Revolutionary War soldier
from the valley to die. His
funeral was reputedly the
largest ever seen in Woodstock
to that date. He had married
Catherine Wiseman in 1771.
They had eight children living
to maturity, two of whom were
John and Henry.
The biographer says John
was born in 1781 and migrated
in to the Kanawha Valley in
1795, rather young at the time,
if the dates arc right. The
author further says that he
stopped at Charieston where he
met Sophia Clendenin, whom
he married lO years Ia ter .
But William Clendenin, cofounder of Charleston, was
U~en living down below the
mouth of the Kanawha opposite
Gallipolis, trying to get Mason
County formed. And his little
12-yearrjll\\··~·~ .wi!Jl
him.l\[llltam w~~ a . AAj~~_t~)~
the Ball,le.llf Point Ple.3$int bu1
a major in the Kanawha
Militia. Several belong to the
D.A.R.. and S.A.R. on his
record. He married Margaret
Handley.
. Well, old Christian gave his
son with itchy feet 40 pounds
and bade him Godspeed with
the advice never to be a surety •
for any man (as Christian had
done to his sorrow) but to be
honest and fair in all his
dealings . And John came
across our mountains and into
our valleys to settle in
Gallipolis in 1800 or earlier .
Here he could find but two
people who spoke English, the
record says. So he set in to
learn French; eventually he
spoke three languages. And
here he entered the trade of a
hatter.
One wonders why this landindentured son of the soil
should enter the business of
selling, making, repairing, or
blocking skypieces. Maybe the
French were heavy on hat
styles. Anyway, he followed the
trade until 1610, then took his
savings and with his wife,
Sophia Clendenin, whom he
married in 1806, crossed the
river into the land of her
fathers where he bought a
large tract of land and built
what is said to have been the
first brick house in Mason
Coun ty.
About 1820 he sold out, lock,
stock, and homestead and went
inlo Teays Valley in the

Wolfpen

SOOP lHE NEW.JONES BOYS'

lt.

FOR..BIG riSCOUNT SA

..

.,

News, 'Notes

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-11 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward .
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lee
Petry, Jackson, a daughter and
Mr. and Mrs. William P.
McCreedy , Kerr, a daughter.
Discharges
Sharon Sue Click, Mack R.
Bennett, Sr., Robert L. P')Qre,
Danny S. Strickland; 'Clarence
L. Folden, Lula Hubbard,
Luelva Sinclair, Robert L.
'Deal, Mrs. William C. Faught,
Jr. and son, Mrs. A. Margaret
Ireland, Autumn Sue Taynor,
Sharon S. Bailey, Lonnie D.
Black, Mrs. Cara M. Cooper,
Lida Durst, Dean T. Eplin~.
Ru!iSell Utile, Rerthald 0 .

Carpenter

MUler (Mueller)-Clendenin

Ill)

Sunday.

Mr. and Mn. H. E. StLilly
were In CoJumboll w-.lay
and Thursday where tbey
attended ibe &amp;111118] meellng ll
Policyholde" of the
r,tutual Casualty Insurance
Company and also tbe
Directtn meetlnp d other
Insurance companies. They
called to see Mrs. Jeule Jewell
while they were In eoiumbull,
also.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
GUlogly, . Vicky and Bruce,
were business visitors in
Coium,bus aDd were guesll of
lila sister, Bernice McKnJabt
and faniliy.
Mr. a.nd Mrs. Bob Mati(JJ
attended a TUrkey Growen' ·
meeting at Mt. Ve~, were In
New Phlladelphla and' visited
an aunt, Mrs. Eva Blakeslee at

Calendar of Events
Released
by Church
.

Gra••

Medina.
Don Wilson was a dinner
gu"'t at the home rl. Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Jeffers and family.
Mrs : Richard Jeffers
honored Mrs. Don Cr81l8ton
and new baby with a shower,
Those attending were Mrs.
Willlam Cheadle, Mrs. Reed
Jeffers, Metta Fisher, Mrs.
Gene Jeffers, Mrs, Unda Dye,
the hostess and guests of honor.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree, ..
Russell and Kevin, were guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Crabtree for a birthday
dinner honoring Arthur
Crabll'ee.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
visited her mother, Mrs.
Beulah Cordray and her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and MrS. Herman Cordray, all
of Athens Route.

The Almanac
By United Press IDternatJonal
Today is Sunday, March 5,
the 65th day of 1972.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus; Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces.
American lithographer James
Ives, of the Currier and Ives
team, was born March 5, 1800.
On this day in history:
In 1770 British troops kiUed
five civilians m the SI).(:Blled
"Boston Massacre."
In 1953 the Soviet Union
announced that Premier Josef
Stalin had died at the age of 73.
In 1966 a British airliner
crashed into Japan's Molin!
F .. k'lH I
'
.
"WI-•"'IoWg ~ Jlllr~o~AJ'bflprd.
i'l•

.,

'

"

H '·

-

GALLIPOLIS
The
Teachers and Officers Conference of Paint Creek Baptist
Sunday School held Its
February meetlng in the
clmch fellowahip room with
Mrs. John King and Cliristy aa ·

hoslelses.

·

Mrs.
Lealie - Howard,
lllperintendent, presided a"d
"A Charge To 'Keep I Have~:
was SJ\ng by tjle group.
Serlpiure, Mark 8:31.:16 and
comments by Mrs. · Howard.
LINDA DENNEY
Prayer ·was by Rev. E. D.
MeG~.
Roll caU was answered with
a quote or fact about George
Washington or Abraham
Lincoln. The minutes were
read and approved as read by
VINTON - Unda Darlene secretary, Mrs. Bobby Gordon.
Denney, daughter of Mr. and During the business a report
Mrs. Marvin Denney, Route 1 was given on finance for
has received a ltiitlon awar&lt;l ~ vacation'.Bible school.
pur8ue cosmetology training at
Calendar or Events thr4&gt;ugh .
the Ohio State School of June: March 5, Gallla Sub
Cosmetology In Columbus. District Sunday School and
Miss Denney wa~ one of the B.T.U. Institutei Mar~h 6,
winners over 300 OhiO-area Providence Area School of
appHcanta. She waa selected on Religion; March 'II, Mission
· the basis of recommendations Sunday, local mission in
of her high 8Chool officials, and
ranked at the top In evaluations
by the Scholarship Committee
r1. the Ohio State School which
is one of the top ranking
schools in the country.

Mirs Denny Won
Tuition Award

Family Reunion
Held In Florida

.
GALLIPOLIS - Sunday,
Feb. 11 was a day long tO be
remembered by the seven
children of the late Mr. and
Mrs. 0. E. George. The group
met at the home of Mr. and
Mrl. J.ester George In Gainesville, Fla.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
W. J. George, Mr. and Mrs,
Mark (Jessie) Pearce and Mrs.
C1ifford (Carrie) Rice, Miami,
Fla.; Mrs. Robert (Grace)
Bowman, Downingtown, Pa.;
Mr. and MrS- Ernest George,
St. Paris, Ohio, and Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Harrison, Gallipolis.
They attended church In a
body where the eldest son of
Lester George is the pastor.
·• Ail enjoyed ' a wonderful
dinner, after which pictures
were taken and Ume spent
visiting and reminiscing in the
past,

GALLIPOLIS --"- Thomas
Luellen, 17 year-old son of Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Luellen,
Groveport, Ohio and grandson
of Mrs. Dale Gilkey of
Gallipolis, has been named an
oqtstandlng teenager of
America for 1972,

Ewington

this.special
&lt;1E&gt;
Whlr,pool
washer .value
won't wait
for winter
It's a specially featured model; And
it's bound to go fast at this low price. 2
- speeds, 3 cycles - ·NORMAL, GENTLE and
PERMANENT PRESS. Special permanent prtll
cool-down fights wrinkles before clothes go into
the dryer. Super' SURGILATOR' agitator scrubs·
clothes clean. Maeic-Mix• filter traps lint. Twoposition water level control and five water temperature selections for washing flexibility, Soek·
setting for those extra-dirty washables. A sreat
buy- especially now!
,,..._

$

95

ONLY
WITH MATCHING
WHIRLPOOL DRYER

~

$389

95

charge; .\prll 2, Easter and
Decision Day wlth hom~
visitation Holy Week; May,
Christian Family Month, and
May It, M~r's Day. The
llitter part of May and June
will be for entertaining of high
school graduates,
The program was . an
educational feature, "How to
Build
An
Evangelistic
Christian Education Program,
ap8heldlscuaslonbymlnlsters
of five ·conll!'l!gati~ of dif.
ferent ~ who gave keys
of their successful work.
Mrs. · Leslie
Howard
represented the West, a large
congregation; - Mrs. John
Casey, the East; a small
congregation and Mrs. Hurl
Hogans, the Nortb presented
the panel keys and ways to help
build
the
evangelistic
program.
DlsmlsaBI was forming a
friendship circle and repeating
Bible verses. A social hour
followed with Charades of
Hymn Titles conducted by Mrs.
John Rippey.

KYGER - The Golden Rul~ and questions IIi the past years,
Clallll of the Old Kyger Owrtn J\lra. Ge«ge Gardner gave the
met with Mrs: Ecllrard Spears aecretary's report and · Mrs.
on Wednellday since Mrs. Dale Ben Rupe gave the treasurer's
Mulford could 110t be holltesa as report.
her husband wu hospitalized
Get well cards were signed
with a heart attacll.
for Dale Mulford and Mrs. Ettil
The mornipg was spent m Skidmore, patients In the.
sewing raga for ruga, '!be hospital. Readlnga were given
devotional meeting wu opened by Mrs. lester Roush, Mrs.
by the group singing, "I'll Live Mpllie Johnson, Mrs. Ben
·J for Him" with prayer and the Rupe, Mra. Hortle Roush, Mrs.
~~eripture taken !toni the 12tl) Gectge G~ and III;Ien
Chapter d Romans.
Spears. Mrli. Spears aaked
The roll c.U wu answered Bible questions which were
by members telling how they Interesting · and educaliO!Jal.
benefited from the meetings or
The door prize, donated by
what they wOuld like to do.
Mrs. Lester Roush, waa won by
One member emphasized Miss Johnson. A special
that she had received help and · meeting will be held March 15
a better understanding of the with Miss Johnson to make a
scripture by the Bible study coverlet and se\v rags.

Prayer and Self-Denial
Theme of WSCS Meeting
PORTER - 'The February
meeting -of the Porter United
Methodist Women's Society of
Christian Service was held at
the Porter Church. A short
business meeting with Mrs.
Josephine Maze in charge was
held. The minutes of the last
meeting were read and approved and roll call was an-

Mrs. Robert Ruff
Given Baby Shower

THURMAN - A stork
shower was given on Feb. 12 in
honor of Mrs. Robert Ruff at
the Thurman United Methodist
Church bY Mrs. Robert Ball,
\Irs. David Rees, and Mrs.
George Lewis. Games and
refreshments were enjoyed by
all. !\!tending were Carolee
Lewis, Naomi Beman, Judy
Crlsj), Patricia Elliott,
Wilmenia Carter, Henrietta,
Terry Audrey Brewer, Hattie
Saxton, Ruth Whitt, Marie
Ruff, Myrtle Kuhn, 1Allma
Walker, Burl Griffith, Wanda
Terry, Mrs. Sylvia Humphreys, Mrs. Thomas Meek,
Marla Moore, Mrs. Orville
Jones,
Lula
Richards
Margaret Thomas, Mrs, Dal~
Saunders, J osine Moses, -Mrs.
Jim Burleson, · Mrs. Flem
Arrowood, Mrs. James
Arrowood,
Mrs.
Ervin
Arrowood, lyiisa Sue Luman,
Mlsa Mary Wiseman, Mrs .

Mrs. Gilkey's Grandson
Is Outstanding Teenager
Why wait? Buy e
Whirlpool was.her
and dryer early
.•. before it's time
to tangle with wln~rwinds and frozen
clotheslines!

.

Golden Rule Class
Sews Rags For Rugs

By Mrs. MltcmeU Webb
Mrs. Elva Huntley was
moved from Hqlzer Hoepltal to
Jenkins Memorial, Wellston,
Ohio, Code No. 45692. She
would appreciate hearing from
her friends.
Sunday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach
and family, Gallipolis, were
Mrs. Roach's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. David Ball, Mrs. Ball's
mother, Mrs. Oral Webb
'
Vinton, and Mrs. Roach's
sliter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Roble, Bidwell . .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barr and
family of Gallipolis were
Sunday visitors of Mrs. Barr's
mother, . Mrs. · Erma Robie,
Bidwell.
A birthday surprise dinner
was given for Mrs. Helen Tyler
at her home Saturday evening
by her children. Those who
helped to enjoy the occasion
were her daughter and family,
Mr. and Mra. Basel Harris of
St. Albans, W. Va., another
daughter and husband, Mr, and
Mrs. Wyman Denney of Bidwell, a son, Francis and wife,
Ewington. Her daughter-inlilw, Mrs. Francis Tyler, baked
the birthday cake.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Green
were Sunday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Dewey Good and Mr.
and Mrs. Alva Lowe of
Ewing ton.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball and
daughter, Patricia, ·y;ere
Monday evening dinner
visitors of Mrs, Ball's mother.
Mr. and Mrs. William
McGarvey and Mrs. Blanch
Jones d Wellston were Sunday
visitors rl. their sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Tyler,
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Lowe
were recent vlslton In
Wells lAin. Mr. Lowe want to
consult her doctor,

.

Glen Wiseman, Mrs. Esther
Luman, Mrs. Clyde Walker,
Mrs. Janice Layton, Rebecca
Gill, Ruthie Arrowood, Kimberly Ball, Mary Lynn Ruff,
Amy Lou Wesley, Terry
Walker, Kim Arrowood, Lynn
Lewil!, Terry Humphrey, and
the guest of honqr, Ml's- Sue
Ruff.
: r
The following sent gifts:
Mary Hall, I;lella Tate, carolee
Pope, Anna Mae Perroud and
Jan, Joan Beman, and Janet
Beman.

Fairview
News
Notes
VlsiUng Mrs. Kate Rowe and
Ada Sunday were Mrs. Unda
Cleland and children, Brian
and Vince, Mrs. Anna Wines
and Jackie and Karen and Neal
Baker of Racine ,
Mrs. Edward Laudermill
and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Blackwell of Letart
were Sunday guests of Mrs.
Mary -Donahue and son, David,
and Mrs. Rose Bachus.
Edward Laudermilt spent
the weekend in Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton spent Sunday with Mr,
and Mrs. Rusaell Roush and
called on Mrs. Edna Roush and
Mrs. Gladys Shields at Racine,
Roger Roush and Jeff Miller
were dinner guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rusaell at
Middleport.
·
Bill Robinson and children,
Pat, Brad, Dave, Berta and
Pete of Racine Route visited
Mrs. Bertha Robinson Sunday.
Mrs. Luda Arnott and son,
Don Arnott, of Parkersburg
visited Sunday with Ott Arnott.
Mr, and Mrs. Bill Arnott of
Clarksburg spent a weekend at
their home.
Wiley Ours of Racine Route
called on· Russell Roush
Sunday.
· -Mrs. Herbert Roush

He was nominated by his
principal at the Groveport
High School as one of four
students from his high school to
receive this award In nationwide competition. He Is being
considered al9ng with other
award winners for hiS state's
outstanding teenage~ of the
year award trophy and two
$1,000 national scholarships.
He is also competing wi\h
nominees from states in his
area for a $500 regional
scholarship.
As an outstanding teenager
he wiil be honored In ' the 1972
edition of "Outstanding
Teenagers of America." His
complete biography and many
achievements will be included
In the book to be published this
spring. He recently received
the Eagle Scout Award; he is
president of his class and is
Swallows traditionaily return
to the Missio9 of San
outstanding in football.This fall
Juan
Capistrano on St, Johe plans to attend Ohio State
University majoring in pre- seph's ·Day, March 19, and
depart on San Juan's Day,
riled. '
Oct. 23.

Seventh Graders
See Slides of
· Other Countries
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Irene
Brannon's seventh grade
Geography clasa at Rio Grande
Elementary had the pTtvUege
of seeing slides of Nicaragua
and . El Salvador taken by
Margaret Tracy and Sarah
Winters on their trip to Central
America last summer.
The girls told of the people
they met, the friends they
made and the way the people
live.
Since the seventh grade is
studying Western Hemisphere
Geography and is now
studying South America, the.
study of Middle America and
this area will be most
meaningful because of the
pictures, the lalks, and things
the girls bought in these
countries.
Ralph Waugh, village
policeman for Rio Grande,
·gave a talk to the seventh
gra~e Civics Class, telling of
his duties, explaining some
village ordinances and giving a
very informative talk on drugs.
A question and answer
period followed the talk. The
children had many questions to
ask about drugs and of the
procesaes of law, The first
hanq knowledge of the work of
those who are involved in
government means much.

swered by 10 members who
responded with Bible verses.
One visitor, Mrs. Ester Hit,
was welcomed and reports
were given. about several of the
members who are · ill. Mrs.
Dorothy Phillips and Mrs.
Wilma Geer have been
hospjtalized and Mrs. Sabra
Clark is being cared for at the
home of Mrs. 0. K. Phillips in
Rodney.
Suggestions for a project
were discussed, but nothing
was definitely decided. Nelle
Mossman made the motion
that a subscription to Response
Magazine, for the program
chairman, be paid for out of the
treasury and Mrs. Margaret
Black seconded the motion,
"The can to Prayer and SelfDenial" was used as the
program theme of the evening
by Mrs. Elizabeth Mcinturff.
Quiet music was played by
Margaret Black while the
members meditated. Mrs.
Mcinturff offered prayer and
read an introduction to the
program. The members Sang
"Open Mine Eyes That I May
See".

Short scripture readings
were given by Mrs. Ethel
Walters, Mrs. Clara Fisher and
Mrs. Mary Kennedy.
A poem was read by Mrs.
Delll1 ·Stevens • and 'special
scripture pasaages were read
by Mrs. Nelle Mossman who
read chapter 12 from Romans,
and Mrs. Opal Mitchell who
read chapter 25 from Matthew.
A "Prayer of Confession" was
read by the members in unison.
A question and answer
composition was read with
Mrs. Elizabeth Mcinturff as
leader, and response being
given by the members in
unison. A poem was read by
Mrs. Ester Hit and closing song
was "Blest Be the Tie That
Binds."

Three New Members joined The
Retired Teachers AssQciation
GAu.IPOIJS - '!be Gallia
County Olapter of Retired
Teachers held its first meeting
of the year at the Grace United
Methodist Olurch Thursday
with 32 members attending.
Following the luncheon in the
dining aHa, the members met
in the Olapel where the group
sang several old favorite songs
and Mrs. Jennie Elliott
suggested a song pledging
support to the president, Ed-~
ward Parkins.
During the buSiness session
Mr. Parkins appointed committees to serve during the
year.
Lawrence Hineman in-

I

GAWPOIJS - The Christ met last Sunday evening with
United Methodist Sr. M.Y.F. Kala Sue Waugh presiding.
"Someone Goofed" was read
by Tim Chevalier and the
group was led in !lOng by Ubby
Willis, who ·also gave the
minutes of the last meeting.
Craig Thompson gave the
treasurer's report and plans
were made for the youth's part
Calendar
in the Easter Worship Service
MARCH - Ohio University and a skating party to be held
Alumni Invitational in March.
·
Exhibition, Sunday, March 12
The meeting was adjourned
- Reception honoring new by a unison benediction.
members
at
Riverby;
Tuesday, March 21 - 8 p.m.
FAC Board Meeting, and
Tuesday, March 28 - 8 p.m.
FAC Board of Trustees
meeting.

IS N0.1 IN

Alfred
. Social Notes

WEDDING RINGS

Sunday School attendance on
Feb. 27 was 39. Offering was
$16.05. Worship services had an
attendance of 32. Rev. Lehman
spoke on "Loving, Kind and
Just."
Mary Carr spent Tuesday
through Friday of last week
with Mr. and Mrs. Seldon
O'Brien in Columbus. She
reports the O'Briens pretty
well for their years.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz,
Clara Follrod and Nina
Robinson went to the Gallipolis
State Hospital, Sunday afternoon to visit their sister,
Helen Follrod . She seems
somewhat improved.
Th6,_birthday ol Vere Sl"ar~
was observed Saturday, Feb.
26, at his home here. His
children and grandchildren all
called in at different times
during the day. Mr. Swartz has
been in poor health for some
time .
The birthday of Freddie
Honacher was observed
Sunday, FeQ. 27, at his home
here._Besides the family, his
grandmother, Anna Thompson
and Harley Sidwell, Coolville,
were present.
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Atherton were Sunday dinner
guests of her brother, Elbert
Taylor and family, Pomeroy
Rd.

why when you
come In and. see the
Imagination, quality and
craftsmanship that go Into
every style.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
421 Second Avo.

Go t

The well-bred look ·

SPORTSMEN MEET
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Fish and Game
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the club
rooms In Syracuse.

Ho1w's ~lady to _accent those refi~e,d
new fash1onsl Wtth smart but femmme
shoes from our current Auditions
collection. Black Patent
1

20.95

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
- Middleport Lions Club will
meet at 12 noon Wednesday for
a luncheon at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.

auditions~

tll

llftll-

ROUSE

into·a better

Mon., Tues., Wed., Thun.-11 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sat-- II A.M. to 11 P.M.
Closed Sunday

to buy a new car! ~""''
get your best deal . .
~orne in and let us figure
Chances are you 'll ~A'"'
ONEY and " drive as
on comfartable mo,nthiiYI

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

'

_Italian Spaghetti

ments that suit ~ou!

Ohio

SPAGHETTI DINNER with Meat Sauce . .. . ........ . 1.95
RAVIOLI DINNER with Meat Sauce .. ... . .. _ ... . . _. 2.25
Includes: Salad and Drink ... Rye &amp; French Bread

Mon. Tues. Wed - Sat. 9-5
Thurs. 9-12, Fri. 9-8

Dinners
FILET MIGNON, Wropped w1th Sa con .- . . ... .. . ....
T-BONE STEAK, ( 16 ot .) U.S. Prime . .... . ..... . . . .
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce . . . ... .. _ . . . ..
HOME BAKED HAM, Howaiion Pineapple Ring ......
FILLET OF WHITE FISH, Tart'or Sauce : . . . , . .........
GRILLED CUBE STEAK .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. .. . . .
Entree Include• Solad . Vegetable, ond Drink

Let us
HELP

"SHIFT"

Hours

steal....spachetti

tlemenl.
The name of Roosevelt,
Vanderbilt , Livingston and
others appear throughout the
story of the early days. The
book ends with the wedding of
Jackie Onasais on an Island in
Greece.
"The Upper Crust" is a
beautiful book and the members enjoyed seeing the
illustrations in the book.

MCarved

4. 25
4.25
3.25
2.25
2.25
1.95

Valley
Bank

BankAmericard
Welcome
''the now bank that
appreciates your businesa"
Nkmbf r Fl':dt:r11l L:l.:posit

Children's Portions Available

ln.~rancc" Cnrporat~

. - -~

'
,.

Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tracy,
Mrs. Luther Shelton and Elmer
Caldw•U.
A thank you note WI!-' read
GALLIPOLIS
The
from the family of Mr, Chal'les
Thursday Club met at the home
V. Ward. "What Is ATeacher,"
of Mrs. William Jenkins where
was the theme selected by
Mrs. tharles Switzer reviewed
Elmer Caldwell for the
the book "The Upper Crust" by
program. The program was
Allen Churchill.
interesting and brought back
"The Upper Crust" is a story
memories of the duties
of New York society from the
demanded of the teachers in
1600s to the present day.
Gallia COWity a few decades
New York took its first step
ago:
· in society, with the arrival of
The meeting was adjourned
the first British governor,
to meet the first Thursday in
Colonel Benjamin Fletcher in
June with details to ·be an1692. The Colonel and Mrs.
nounced later.
Fletcher entertained in their
governor's mansion which was

Easter Plans Made by M YF~:ll~s~,o~!: 1~~ c~h~n ~e~~

.

I

lro!luced three new members,

Thursday
Club Reviews
Book

-

�.

'I

8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel,~,Mar(U,1972

Rio Show
On Road
I

RIO GRANDE - The 60m,ember
" Ballad
For
America.ns" touring show
perforJiled by Rio Grande
College studen~ travels to
Berea College Wednesday for
the first of four schedu)ed
performances this spring. ·The
show is being c~onsored by
the college and the Ohio Arts
Council (OAC).
The second stop on the tour
will be the Cancer Crusade
show in Gallipolis April 6 at
Gallia Academy High School
marking the second time Rio
Grande College has participated in the Cancer
Crusade. Other stops this
semester include ~ackson and
Coal Grove on dates to be
announced.
"Ballad For Americans" is a
look at American history
through great writings,
speeches and music performed
by the college's Chorus and
Wind Symphony. The two
groups gathered material for
the show and researched it for
accuracy.
"Ballad For Americans,"
said Merlyn Ross, its director,
MARK SHREVE, A JUNIOR at Rio Grande College,
"is a story of all Americans,
portrays Thomas Jefferson in "Ballad For Americans," the
black, white and red, and oftouring show co-.sponsored by tbe Ohio Arts Council and the
fends no one."
College. The show will appear at Berea College in Kentucky
"What we try to show," he
next week.
said, "is that this great country
of ours was founded on
revolution and revolutionary
ideas.
This is the second .touring
show co-sponsored by the OAC
and the college. Last 51lason
the two combined on "God's
Trombones," a collection of
Negro folk sermons. The show
All food stores must now longer permitted because the
made mote than a dozen issue credit slips or, tokens to Agricultural · Appropriation
performances in Ohio.
Food Stamp customers when Committee felt that giving
the amount of change due to change in cash threatened tbe
ON DEAN'S ROLL
program participants does not success of the food aid
RIO GRANDE - Four Meigs exceed 49 cents, the U. S. program.
County students have been Department of Agriculture's
The credit slips will be good
named to the Dean's Honor Food and Nutrition Service only in the stores which issue
Roll (3.5 or better) for the first announced today. The new them and may be used to
semester at Rio Grande policy became effective Thurs- purchase eligible food items
College. They are Twila Sue day.
·
only.
Clatworthy, daughter of Mr.
\he stores will continue
Another immediate
and Mrs. James Clatworthy, using unendorsed 50 cent procedure change deals with
Middleport; John W. Johnson, coupons when the amount to be payment by food stamp
son of Mr. and Mrs. Elber returned is 50 cents or more. customers for deposits on reJohnson , Pomeroy; Mary
Previous Food Stamp usuable bottles. Previously the
Marlene Johnson, daughter of regulations allowed authorized payment could be made in food
Mr. and Mrs. David Goodwin, food stores to return up to 49 coupons. Now stores are no
Pomeroy, and Carol Ann cents in cash change to lo~ger allowed to accept food
Ohlinger, Pomeroy.
recipients. This practice is no coupons for the bottles.

New Food Stamp
Policy Announced

Two Appointments Made to County's
Service to Military Families Unit
GALLIPOLIS
Appointment of Mrs. William 0.
Smeltzer and Mrs. George
Grace as members of their
Service to Military Families
committee has been announced
by E. Ray Bailey and C. Comer
Bradbury, c~hairmen of the
Gallia County Chapter
American Red Cross.
Considered the biggest of all
Red Cross responsibilities in
the thousands of offices in a
round-the-world network, the
local chapter is measuring up
to the ,obligation specified in
the congressional charter of
the American Red Cross.
In fact, the Red Cross is the
only organization chartered by
congress to serve as a medium
of voluntary relief and communications between the
American people and their
armed forces.
Specifically, this committee
and local staff, as well as staff
at military installations and
hospitals around the world
work together In providing.
Counseling in personal and
family problems, reporti'ng
and communications services,
assistance in applying for
government benefits, referral
services, financial assistance
and training and recreation.
The Gallia County Chapter's
committee reports handling 36
cases or Service to Military
Families in the first seven
weeks of 1972. These cases
concerned Gallia County 's own 1
young men serving In the ·
armed forces.
In servicing these cases 54
incoming telephone calls were
handled along with 5ll outgoing
calls, two home visits, and
considerable written correspondence.
While all Information
received in connection with
handling these cases is held in
strictest confidence, local

TOO MUCH EXCITEMENT
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) _
An autopsy . revealed Friday
that Sally, a five-year-old sea
lion. with an "excitable perso~ality," died of a hea•t attack Thursday after being
transferred to a newly
renovated pool.
'

r

committee members have
requested and were granted
permission to cite an example
for the public's enlightenment.
On the morning of January
11, 1972 a phone call was
received from a mother who
stated that she had received
word from her son on January
8 that he was in an army
hospital awaiting surgery. She
had not had any additional
information .
.
The local worker placed a .
call to the field director of the
Red Cross at the army hospital
requesting a report on the
young man . After seeking out
the serviceman and his doctors
a return call was made
reporting the serviceman had
minor surgery and would be
hospitalized for several weeks
for additional tests. The serviceman had also given his
permission for the hospital to
release medical information to
his mother.
On January 19 the mother
called again . Her son had
undergone major surgery and
was in serious condition . She
requested that another son,
who was stationed in Europe,
be given emergency leave to
visit his brother.
The local Red Cross worker
called the army hospital to
verify the serviceman's condition and later in the day was
able to notify the mother that
.the leave was granted.
Handling the 36 cases
mentioned has required about
23 hours of volunteer . service,
with the amount of time per
case varying from 5 to 6
minutes to as much as six
hours.
With only two volunteers
engaged in this important
service, the local chapter is

anxious to have others step
forward and become a part of
this work as well as to receive
your contributions of cash in
the current fund drive to meet
the expense of long distance
telephone tolls and other expenses involved in discharging
the chapter's obligation of
service to military families.
Anyone interested in participating in this service should
call Mrs. Smeltzer (446-4471) or
Mrs. Grace (441Hl953) for information as to trainin5
required. They state that work
can be done most of the time at
home and does not require a
specific time schedule.

LT. COUlNELJAMESO. FROWNFELTER, son of Mrs.
Juanita Ostergren, Route I, CrOWil City, recently received
his Master Army Aviator's wings from Brigadier General
Leo E. Soucek, right, Ft. Wolters commanding general. To
earn Master's wings, an aviator must have completed 15
years of service as a rated aviators, have accumulated 3,000
hours of flying time, and hold a special instnunent rating. Lt.
Col. Frownfelter has been in the Army since January,J953. A
1949 graduate of Mercerville High School, he attended Rio
Gran!l_e College and received his bachelor's degree from the
University of Nebrasta. He came to Ft. Wolters, where he is
executive officer, in 1968 following a second tour of duty in
Vietnam. He also served in Vietnam in 1962-63 and in Europe
in 1957-1960. He and his wife Barbara and their three children
live at 909 NW lith St., Mineral Wells, Tex.

OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

U.S. GOYT. INSPECTED -WHOLE FRYIIG CHICKENS.
l'

ATHENS - The Athens
office of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) advises
that the FBI is now accepting
applications for employment
with the FBI in the
Washington, D. C. area. Jobs
available include clerical ,
typist and stenographic
TY/
h
Week's w eat er

GALLIPOLIS

perature,

Tem .

precipitation, . and

weather conditions for each 24-

hour period as recorded by
Pete McCorm ick, Fairfield
Weather obser11er:

Day
High Low Prec.
Sunday
50
22
Monday
68
37
Tuesday
77
44
Wednesday 74
52
Thursday 64
33
,94
Friday
38
18
.51
Saturday 23
14
Average high temperature

for week fhis year - 56.2. Last
year - 52 .8.
Average low temperature for

week this year year -

31.4.

Last

29.8.

Total precipitation for week
this year - 1.45 inches . Last
year - .72 inch.
Tofal precipitation to date
this year - 9.23 inches. Last
year - 5.06 inches .

Normal

average

precipitation annually -

inches.

40.99

GRANTS RELEASED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan annollnced
approval of several federal
grants to Ohio Communities
Friday. They included: $20,879 to Tiffin for a juvenile
bureau for the police department. - $15,830 to Huron
County to establish a community relations program for
the sheriff's department. $8,820 to Mercer County to
allow the sheriff's office to
obtain architectural plans for
jail renovation. - $3,752 to
Madison Township in Montgomery County for communical[Pns and investigative
equipment for the police
department.

CHICKEN .
p
'

positions for both male and
female. Starting salaries are
$2.50 per hour for a clerk; $2.80
per hour, typist, and $3.15 per
hour, stenographer. There is
opportunity for advancement
with liberal sick leave and paid
vacations. Transportation to
Washington, D. C. is paid.
Applicant must be a high
school graduate or at least due
to graduate this spring, in good
physical condition and be able
to pass certain tests for the
typing and stenographic
positions. Anyone interested
should contact the FBI office at
26 West Stimson Avenue,
Athens, telephone 593-6473, or
wrl te to FBI, Post Office Box
688, Athens, Ohio 45701.

Includes: 3 Brellit Quarters 3 . Leg Quarters - 3 Wings 2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks

9 A. M:-SP. M. SATURDAYS
. PHONE : 446 -0303
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
OP£N TODAY

.'•

.,.....
•

•

'

'.

Srlndra Kay ·Trussell Betrothed

Nancy Jayne Ours of Racine Engaged

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trussell of Chester
are announcing the engagement of tbeir daughter, Sandra
Kay, to Mr. Richard Allen Kerns, sonofMr.andMrs. John K.
Kerns of Belpre. Miss Trussell is a graduate of Eastern mgh
School and is now employed at the Parkersburg Beauty
College as a master instructor of cosmetology.
Mr. Kerns is a graduate of Belpre·mgh School and the
Pa6J;ersburg Beauty College. He ls now employed at
Maxine's Beauty Salon In Belpre. An open church wedding is
being planned for April 9 at the Chester Methodist Church.

·'

........
...•

,·

'

~:

Want To
Get Ahead?
Enroll Now for New
Quarter-Classes
Begin
March 16

Red Potatoes
At a Special Low Price

All
college
leve l
·subjects approved for
VA Benefits.

10-lb.

Job Placement
Assistance

Bag

Wr1tc , V 1~ it , or Ca II 446·4367
tor our bulletin.

·Gallipolis Business

STATE FARE
SLICED

College

White ·areacl

J6locust Sl .
Rey .

No . no,. oOJlB ·

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

Us
We're H &amp; R Block. with over 6,000
conveniently located offices manned
by thous.ands of specially trained tax
preparers who eat, sleep, and drink in.
come tax returns. People who set out to
save you money and much of the time
do it. The cost? Fees start at $5 and the
average cost was under $12.50 for over
7 million customers we served last year.
Furthermore, if your return is audited
we will accompany you, at no extra
cost, to the Internal Revenue Service
and explain how your return was prepared! even though we will not act as
your ega! representative.
And everyone is eligible to receive our
year 'round service which is covered by
our one time fee. No extra charge for
help with audits, estimates, or tax
questions.
We know the people we've just told you
about will do Your income tax return
for less than we can but we don't think
youcan afford them.

DON'T LET AN AMATEUR DO
HaR BLOCK'S JOB.

H&amp;RBiock.
'J\eilo1 I
lupeapl1.

27 SYCAMORE ST.
'

Gallipolis, Ohio

I ..:;;.,R::::::.!!-::;.,.,.,

ti~ 176 Beech St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement of
~ their daughter, Dixie Rose Snyder, to George T. Luster, son

GOLDEN GRAIN

Macaroni &amp; Cheddar

am

of Mr.
Mrs. George ThomasLuster,Sr.,573 Bryan Place,
. Middleport.
Ml!lll Snyder ls a junior at Meigs High Schoql wbere she Is
~ enrolled in cosmetology. Mr. Luster, a !971 graduate of
tT MelgaHighSchool,iSnowattendingHocklngStateTechniClll
t• College at Nelsonville where he ls majoring ln !lata
:: procesalng. Wedding plans are incomplete.

~
.

DINNERS
7Yo~ ·oz•.Pkgs.

:!

•1

·

'

~Founders

JOAN OF ARC

4

'

Bathroom Tissue

31 e

Potato Chip .
39~

69e

I

SCHICK

.

BUDES

$139

43e

Homestead Name of Club

A BATILE ()F THE BANDS will be held at the Pomeroy
Junior High School at 7:30 p.m. on Apri114 with area bands invited to participate.'l'he contest is beingsponsored by the Meigs .
County Chapter of Vocational Industrial Clubs of America.
The first prize wlmer will receive $100 and a trophy with
trophiesgoingtothesecondandthirdplacewinners.
Groups interested In participating will be asked to pay a $5
·mtry fee. Those interested are asked to call 992-2404, 99Z-7831 or
or write V.I.C.A., Meigs High School, Pomeroy, Rt. 3:

Choose a Memorial with Care,
Common S®se.

Are Honored:::O·

;:" POMEROY - Founder 's
•: Day was observed and Order of
:: the Eastern Star members
1·1b, 14-oz. Cans
:: were honored at a meeting
:: Monday night of Bethel 62,
:: International Order of Job's
'
.;
~ Daughter, at the Pomeroy
PILLSBURY
~ ; Masonic Temple.
Refrigerated
:;,: Millsa Rizer, honored queen,
PUTIIU~
::.: welcomed the guests and ln::; troduced Irene Barnes, a past
Country Style
.H -C1.
" • honored queen· Thomas Edor Buttermilk
ln1ector
: .. ; wards, associate guardian;
..; · Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, guardian;
·8-oz:
· ·: James Buchanan, worshipful
Tubes
. WHITE CLOUD
::; : master .of Middleport Lodge;
·::. : Mrs. Dorothy Woodard, worthy
:_, matron of Pomeroy Chapter;
PRINGLES
: . Mr. and Mrs. Cl)esher, worthy
2-Ron
2:Roll
"" matron arid worthy patron of
Pkg.
Pkg.
.
"Newfangled"
Evangeline Chapter, Mid;.: dlejJOrt; Fred. Blaettnar ~nd
:.~ DaleSmith,knlghtsofthe Y~rk
Sla-Puf Fabric Softener . .. . ..... , . .. .. ··~:,~1. 17c
. . . . . . . . . • . . . . . ..,.
'·"· 45c
:.:: Croas of Honor; Bob King,
Fie:....
~a~o~•mann 's Marpnne
4%-oz.
::.' ldvisor of DeMolay; and Mrs.
Folp(s Ceffee .... : . . .. .... . .. .. .. • . ~:; 93c
Carton
..,. Emma Clatworthy, past
0 &amp;CFriiiCh fried Onions ........ : .. . • ·~;:.· 35c
. 'IJ!W'dlan of Bethel 62.
'·'•·
.... 59c
9-oz.
SUnsh.IRI Hydrox ,.....,.es
""'"''
..............
"''·
·' Other Order of the Eastern
Twin Pak
' .
,.1•• 41 c
. "-·•
Sunsh.tnt KriSpJ
"'"""'". . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,.
tl Star members recognized wer~
' Mrs. Wanda Rizer, Mrs.
Florence Well, Mr. and Mra.
rc---ll ~_.,:.romRoush, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Bowen, Mra. Ella Smith, Mrs.
Amber War~•r, Mrs , Lois

PLUS

those not acquainted with
garden club work, a variety of
thmgs can be learned (rom the
monlhly programs such as ·
By Katie Crow·
LANGSVILLE
The Mrs. Leslie Hoffman, Thurs- p.m. on the third Thursday of se lection of seeds, proper
Homestead Garden Club of day, with Mrs. Larry Barr, each month. Membership dues planting time&gt; and methods,
Langsville is the name selected president-elect of the new club, will be $1.50 a year payable on hardening of cut flowers for
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McElllinneys' home for the newest Meigs County presiding .
or before the March 16 arranging, artistic flower
away from horne, a hoWietrailer-located at Tycoon Lake in Gallia garden club.
The first reg~lar meeting of meeting. Attending the arranging , how to select and
CoUnty, was destroyed by fire recently.
The name, subject to the the gro up will be held on March meeting as advisors were Mrs. condition specimen flowers ,
The McEihinneys, whenever they could, journeyed to Tycoon approval of the Ohio 16, at 7:30p.m. at Fellowship Bolin, regional director ; Mrs. plant . propagation, pruning
Lake to spend the weekends. Cause of the fire that destroyed the Association of Garden Clubs, Hall of the Langsville Christian Parker,
chairman
of methods, how to make a cold
Church.
Mrs.
Joe
Bolin,
organizing the club, and Mrs. frame , proper fertilizing,
trailer and its contents is unknown. The McElhinneys, who live in was selected during a special
I Middleport, were notified by phone of the loss of their trailer.
meeting held at the home of Region 11 director of the Harold Wolfe, president, all making your own containers,
Ohio Association of Gar- members of the Rutland just to riame a few .
den Club,s, . will install Friendly Gardeners .
ELEM\OR ROBSON is back at her job .as Meigs County
Mrs. Barr has named the
officers
of
the
new
Mrs. Barr stated that anyone following COfllJili lte~ ~pa)f , ,
~rder after)lllvinfl minor surgery recently, Eleanor extends
organization.
desiring rlieni6ership in the men : Publicity, Mrs. Alpha
, her.,sincere !'~hanks" to,tb• 'l!'ho remembered her with cards.
The officers are Mrs. Barr, club as charter members Barr ; Finances, Mrs. Francis
1 ·
Mrs. Hoffman, vi~e should apply before, or at the W. Wilcox ; Green Thumb
THE MEMBERS of Uie Ladies 1\uxiliary of the Syracuse
prestdent ; Mrs . Bernard M~rch 16 meeting. Mem- Notes, Mrs. Bruce Morris;
Fire Depariment were dealt quite a blow recently when they lost
Ledlie,
secretary, and Mrs. bership after that date will be Civic, Mrs . Bernard Leadlle,
one of tbeir faithful members, Doris Friend, who died quite . ATHENS- District 14 of the
suddenly with infectious meningitis.
Ohio Nurses Association met Francis W. Wilcox, treasurer. subject to a pproval by chm., Mrs. Richard FetSr.,
and
Miss
Due to the fact that the late Mrs. Friend helped with the recently in the dining room of Members of the Rutland members, according to the by- ty,
Friendly Gardeners, and the laws. After that, names must Rita Davis; Telephone,
·group's yearly project of making Easter baskets, it was · O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Rutland Garden Club, sponBernard
Ledlie
necessary for all the candy and containers to be destroyed.
in Athens with Mrs. Laurie sors, are invited to attend the be submitted at the meeting Mrs .
and
voted
upon
at
the
following
and Mrs . Alpha Barr ,
The ladles have hadagreatdeal of expense and it would be a Kirchner, Mrs . Barbara meeting. Mrs. Robert Kuhn ,
and Mrs. Leslie Hoffman as
month
's
meeting.
very thoughtful gesture if each and everyone could send a Pfeifer and Mrs. Mona Jackson Meigs County garden clubs
program chairman named
However, The Homestead
donation to the group. H you desire, donations may be sent to as hostesses.
contact chairman; Mrs. Wilson Garden Club is still inviting
Mrs. Delbert Mitchell and Mrs.
Mrs. Jean Hall, Syracuse.
·
The business me~ting was Carpenter,
region
II
Francis Wilcox to assist her.
persons to join with them. Any
conducted by Mrs. Jenny
Shipman, president. Reports treasurer ; Mrs. William person who thinks they might Other committee chairmen
DID YOU EVER STOP to think bow many miles a postman
will be named later. Mrs.
were given on various nursing Willford, region II secretary; be interested in the club is
walks a day? Bill Radford, letter carrier for the Pomeroy Post
Mrs.
Homer
Parker,
region
II
Hoffman
served cake, coffee
invited
to
attend
the
March
16
programs being carried out in
Office walks at least 13 to 14 miles a day five days a week and the district. The program was publicity book chairman; Mrs. meeting, says Mrs. Barr. For and tea .
part of tlils Is up hill and up steps .
under the direction of Mrs. Tom Stewart, regj.on II , Ohio
And no matter what the weather is like the rounds have to be Lucy Cotner, R.N ., director of Association of Garden Clubs
made.
nursing, Mt. St. Mary Hospital, publication sales chairman,
Nelsonville. Mrs. Cotner used and Mrs. James Carpenter,
MRS. BEULAH EWING, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ewing and . the theme for the year, Meigs County ga rden therapy
daughter and Mr; and Mrs. Don Spires, have returned home after "Getting to Know You" as her chairman , will be in attendance .
visiting Disney Land in Florida. Beulah says Disney Land is topic.
During the business session
''fabulous, well worth the trip."
District 14 meets the third
While in Florida they visited Henny and Harmon O'Brien, Thursday of each month and Thursday the club adopted byformer Syracuse residents, who are now living in Inverness. The invites all registered nurses laws deciding upon 10 meetings
O'Briens accompanied the group to Disney Land.
whether they are a member or a year, all months except
January and February .
Also visiting Disney Land recently were Mr. and Mrs. Bill not to aitend the meetings.
Meetings will be held at 7:30
Grueser ofl\llddleport. Bill also agrees, it is quite a place.

A Modern Memorial that combines the proper
beauty, design and craftsmanship to fit your
particul ar requirement is our learned
suggestion . We have a large selection of
E.G.A. Certified Memorials from which to
choose . Let us help you .

:.

Kidney Beans

BISCUITS

In 1968 an Air France jetliner
hit a mountain top in Guade. Ioupe, killing 62.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Gail P. Buck, Pomeroy, are announcing tbe marriage of their
daughter, Gloria Jean, to Mr. Bruce Donald Wallace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight B. Wallace,
Middleport. The wedding was an event of February 17 at Pearisburg, Va. Tbe Rev. John W.
Sherman officiated.
'The bride is a graduate of Pomeroy High School and attended Kent State University . She is
presently attending Ohio University. Mr. Wallace is a graduate of Middleport High School and
Marshall University .
The couple is residing in Syracuse. The groom is employed by the Southern Local School
District ·where he is bead football coach at Southern High School, Racine. He also teaches
health and physical education. Mrs . Wallace has dance and baton studios in Pomeroy and
Gallipolis.

Nurses .Meet
AtO 'Blenesspresident;

.A'LL PORPdSF{

Bus.: Administration
Executive Secretarial
Jr. •Accounting
Secretarial
General Office

RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Ours of Racine Route 2are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Nancy Jayne, to Mark Anthony Yoacham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reed Kirkham,
Middleport Route I.
Miss Ours is a senior at Southern High School in Racine and will be attending the
University ofUtsh in the fall. Mr. Yoacham'has attended Brigham Young University in Utah
and is now residing with his parents. Wedding Jillans are incomplete.

Katie's Korner

..

Because we think our competition represents
more of a threat to you than it does to us, we're going
to help You sort them out.

9 A.M. -6 P.M. WEEKDAYS

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Wallace

',•

And now a word about
H&amp;R Block's competition
Your Family
The greatest people in the world. Most
of the time. Unfortunately, most of the
time doesn't include income tax time.
Because the last thing you need when
you're doing your taxes is an aUnt who
took an accounting course just before
she dropped out of college. Or a father
who thinks how much money you make
and what you do with it is something
the rest of the family should know
about.
Your Nei&amp;flbors
You know the type. The mild-mannered shoe salesman next door who
suddenly turns into a mathematical
genius just about the time income tax
is due. He knows all the angles. Some
· of which even the Internal Revenue
Service doelln't know about yet. And
he's willing to share them with you,
· "Just to be neighborly."

•'

or FAMILY PAK

FBI Has Jobs In W~hington

You
Your own worst enemy. All year long
you ean't balance your check book, but
that doesn't stop you. Armed with your
W-2's,a few reams of paper and a couple
or' gallons of coffee you bravely attack
tluit stack of forms. You may be taking
deductions you're not entitled to,. and
entitled to deductions you're not taking. So, should you be doing your own

DAN THOMAS
AND $ON.

2521HIRD AVENUE, GALliPOLIS, OHIO

''

BOUNTY
TOWELS

49e

::J

.

Thompson ,
Mrs.
June
Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Stanley, Mrs. • Bessie King,
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan, and
Mrs . .Margaret Blaettnar .
Plans •were made for a
bowling party to be hel.d at the
Pm11eroy Lanes on March 12. A
short program honoring the
OES members was presented
by the girls. A cake decorated
with the Eastern Star emblem
was served with punch.
. SURGERY COMPLETED
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Janice
Lawson, and 3-year-old Marvin
Teaford have returned from
Columbus where Marvin had
undergone surgery on his hand.
Mrs. Lawson's mother, Mrs .
James Teaford, stayed with
her son David, and Brenda
Teaford, during her absence.

IN HOSPITAL
MIDDLEPORT - Myron
Miller is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Visiting
here with him have been Mr.
and Mrs . James Miller,
Nelsonville. They also visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Kauff.

Sym~hy

The
Tender Touch

Dudley's Aorist

DANCE SET
POMEROY - A d8nce will
be staged Friday from 8 to 11
p.m. at Royal Oak Park by the
Meigs High School VICA with
music by the Willies,

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, 0.,
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .

I

I
COUPON
I
I
Pom er oy , 0 . I
(
·
)
Please send me FREE booklets I
I showi ng memorials printed in full color

·PHILCOMATIC'"
25':~.~~..~ COLOR TV

~~

·Better color, automatically

I
I
I

lifelike color. Phllcomatic
~lor TV fine tunes at the touch of a button and "locks-in"

The
Shop
"custom meat cutting"
Pleesant Midge Road
POMEROY OHIO '
·

'

the picture. Set and forget- no ffddling every time you
change channels,. Gives more lifelike flesh tom~s. bl'ltter
'~
color in every scene-automatically! • Phllco Hi.R.dte

MagiColor picture tube • Tilt-front control deck

.

• Contemporary, Simulated Walnut finish
,.-------~

'

I

, ~ ·, "'~

Dick &amp; Dale
really
,know

'

2S Inch pic:'ture meaSured d~agonally, 315 square inch picture

'

·!

.
.
OUICK SERVICE ·
how

to cut up.

-..~--·

Open Att Year
To Servo You.

1

Onft!.

$549

95

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

.,.

lI

I

with sizes and prices !isted.
1 ) Kindly have an authorized logan

Monument Co. representative call at my
home.

1
I

Now, enjoy easy tuning, more

'

a.m:

------------·

Model C7310AWA

Loqa n Monument Company,

of Caring

.,,- \

SALE DAY SET
POMEROY - The Melgs
Hlgh School VICA Club will
hold a bake sale from .9 to 11:30
at the Davis-Warnfr
Jaance office in Pomerdy.

Rowers

( l Please send me details
Mausoleums without obligation.

'

I
I
•I

Name
Street or P.O.

about

1
I

Bo~

·------------·
__________ _
City or Town

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

POMEROY! OHIO
.

I,

1 Display.Yard near I
I Pomeroy-Mason Bridge I
I Leo L. Vaughan. Mgr. _.1
TelephJne 992-2588
1

__________
l

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I

I

r------ --,
I VINTON, OHIO I
II

Display Yard
on W. Main Street·
1 James 0 . Bush, Mgr.
1

I

I
I

1_ _2!:e!._t:_"!.3!!~-J

�.

'I

8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel,~,Mar(U,1972

Rio Show
On Road
I

RIO GRANDE - The 60m,ember
" Ballad
For
America.ns" touring show
perforJiled by Rio Grande
College studen~ travels to
Berea College Wednesday for
the first of four schedu)ed
performances this spring. ·The
show is being c~onsored by
the college and the Ohio Arts
Council (OAC).
The second stop on the tour
will be the Cancer Crusade
show in Gallipolis April 6 at
Gallia Academy High School
marking the second time Rio
Grande College has participated in the Cancer
Crusade. Other stops this
semester include ~ackson and
Coal Grove on dates to be
announced.
"Ballad For Americans" is a
look at American history
through great writings,
speeches and music performed
by the college's Chorus and
Wind Symphony. The two
groups gathered material for
the show and researched it for
accuracy.
"Ballad For Americans,"
said Merlyn Ross, its director,
MARK SHREVE, A JUNIOR at Rio Grande College,
"is a story of all Americans,
portrays Thomas Jefferson in "Ballad For Americans," the
black, white and red, and oftouring show co-.sponsored by tbe Ohio Arts Council and the
fends no one."
College. The show will appear at Berea College in Kentucky
"What we try to show," he
next week.
said, "is that this great country
of ours was founded on
revolution and revolutionary
ideas.
This is the second .touring
show co-sponsored by the OAC
and the college. Last 51lason
the two combined on "God's
Trombones," a collection of
Negro folk sermons. The show
All food stores must now longer permitted because the
made mote than a dozen issue credit slips or, tokens to Agricultural · Appropriation
performances in Ohio.
Food Stamp customers when Committee felt that giving
the amount of change due to change in cash threatened tbe
ON DEAN'S ROLL
program participants does not success of the food aid
RIO GRANDE - Four Meigs exceed 49 cents, the U. S. program.
County students have been Department of Agriculture's
The credit slips will be good
named to the Dean's Honor Food and Nutrition Service only in the stores which issue
Roll (3.5 or better) for the first announced today. The new them and may be used to
semester at Rio Grande policy became effective Thurs- purchase eligible food items
College. They are Twila Sue day.
·
only.
Clatworthy, daughter of Mr.
\he stores will continue
Another immediate
and Mrs. James Clatworthy, using unendorsed 50 cent procedure change deals with
Middleport; John W. Johnson, coupons when the amount to be payment by food stamp
son of Mr. and Mrs. Elber returned is 50 cents or more. customers for deposits on reJohnson , Pomeroy; Mary
Previous Food Stamp usuable bottles. Previously the
Marlene Johnson, daughter of regulations allowed authorized payment could be made in food
Mr. and Mrs. David Goodwin, food stores to return up to 49 coupons. Now stores are no
Pomeroy, and Carol Ann cents in cash change to lo~ger allowed to accept food
Ohlinger, Pomeroy.
recipients. This practice is no coupons for the bottles.

New Food Stamp
Policy Announced

Two Appointments Made to County's
Service to Military Families Unit
GALLIPOLIS
Appointment of Mrs. William 0.
Smeltzer and Mrs. George
Grace as members of their
Service to Military Families
committee has been announced
by E. Ray Bailey and C. Comer
Bradbury, c~hairmen of the
Gallia County Chapter
American Red Cross.
Considered the biggest of all
Red Cross responsibilities in
the thousands of offices in a
round-the-world network, the
local chapter is measuring up
to the ,obligation specified in
the congressional charter of
the American Red Cross.
In fact, the Red Cross is the
only organization chartered by
congress to serve as a medium
of voluntary relief and communications between the
American people and their
armed forces.
Specifically, this committee
and local staff, as well as staff
at military installations and
hospitals around the world
work together In providing.
Counseling in personal and
family problems, reporti'ng
and communications services,
assistance in applying for
government benefits, referral
services, financial assistance
and training and recreation.
The Gallia County Chapter's
committee reports handling 36
cases or Service to Military
Families in the first seven
weeks of 1972. These cases
concerned Gallia County 's own 1
young men serving In the ·
armed forces.
In servicing these cases 54
incoming telephone calls were
handled along with 5ll outgoing
calls, two home visits, and
considerable written correspondence.
While all Information
received in connection with
handling these cases is held in
strictest confidence, local

TOO MUCH EXCITEMENT
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) _
An autopsy . revealed Friday
that Sally, a five-year-old sea
lion. with an "excitable perso~ality," died of a hea•t attack Thursday after being
transferred to a newly
renovated pool.
'

r

committee members have
requested and were granted
permission to cite an example
for the public's enlightenment.
On the morning of January
11, 1972 a phone call was
received from a mother who
stated that she had received
word from her son on January
8 that he was in an army
hospital awaiting surgery. She
had not had any additional
information .
.
The local worker placed a .
call to the field director of the
Red Cross at the army hospital
requesting a report on the
young man . After seeking out
the serviceman and his doctors
a return call was made
reporting the serviceman had
minor surgery and would be
hospitalized for several weeks
for additional tests. The serviceman had also given his
permission for the hospital to
release medical information to
his mother.
On January 19 the mother
called again . Her son had
undergone major surgery and
was in serious condition . She
requested that another son,
who was stationed in Europe,
be given emergency leave to
visit his brother.
The local Red Cross worker
called the army hospital to
verify the serviceman's condition and later in the day was
able to notify the mother that
.the leave was granted.
Handling the 36 cases
mentioned has required about
23 hours of volunteer . service,
with the amount of time per
case varying from 5 to 6
minutes to as much as six
hours.
With only two volunteers
engaged in this important
service, the local chapter is

anxious to have others step
forward and become a part of
this work as well as to receive
your contributions of cash in
the current fund drive to meet
the expense of long distance
telephone tolls and other expenses involved in discharging
the chapter's obligation of
service to military families.
Anyone interested in participating in this service should
call Mrs. Smeltzer (446-4471) or
Mrs. Grace (441Hl953) for information as to trainin5
required. They state that work
can be done most of the time at
home and does not require a
specific time schedule.

LT. COUlNELJAMESO. FROWNFELTER, son of Mrs.
Juanita Ostergren, Route I, CrOWil City, recently received
his Master Army Aviator's wings from Brigadier General
Leo E. Soucek, right, Ft. Wolters commanding general. To
earn Master's wings, an aviator must have completed 15
years of service as a rated aviators, have accumulated 3,000
hours of flying time, and hold a special instnunent rating. Lt.
Col. Frownfelter has been in the Army since January,J953. A
1949 graduate of Mercerville High School, he attended Rio
Gran!l_e College and received his bachelor's degree from the
University of Nebrasta. He came to Ft. Wolters, where he is
executive officer, in 1968 following a second tour of duty in
Vietnam. He also served in Vietnam in 1962-63 and in Europe
in 1957-1960. He and his wife Barbara and their three children
live at 909 NW lith St., Mineral Wells, Tex.

OPEN 9 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

U.S. GOYT. INSPECTED -WHOLE FRYIIG CHICKENS.
l'

ATHENS - The Athens
office of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) advises
that the FBI is now accepting
applications for employment
with the FBI in the
Washington, D. C. area. Jobs
available include clerical ,
typist and stenographic
TY/
h
Week's w eat er

GALLIPOLIS

perature,

Tem .

precipitation, . and

weather conditions for each 24-

hour period as recorded by
Pete McCorm ick, Fairfield
Weather obser11er:

Day
High Low Prec.
Sunday
50
22
Monday
68
37
Tuesday
77
44
Wednesday 74
52
Thursday 64
33
,94
Friday
38
18
.51
Saturday 23
14
Average high temperature

for week fhis year - 56.2. Last
year - 52 .8.
Average low temperature for

week this year year -

31.4.

Last

29.8.

Total precipitation for week
this year - 1.45 inches . Last
year - .72 inch.
Tofal precipitation to date
this year - 9.23 inches. Last
year - 5.06 inches .

Normal

average

precipitation annually -

inches.

40.99

GRANTS RELEASED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan annollnced
approval of several federal
grants to Ohio Communities
Friday. They included: $20,879 to Tiffin for a juvenile
bureau for the police department. - $15,830 to Huron
County to establish a community relations program for
the sheriff's department. $8,820 to Mercer County to
allow the sheriff's office to
obtain architectural plans for
jail renovation. - $3,752 to
Madison Township in Montgomery County for communical[Pns and investigative
equipment for the police
department.

CHICKEN .
p
'

positions for both male and
female. Starting salaries are
$2.50 per hour for a clerk; $2.80
per hour, typist, and $3.15 per
hour, stenographer. There is
opportunity for advancement
with liberal sick leave and paid
vacations. Transportation to
Washington, D. C. is paid.
Applicant must be a high
school graduate or at least due
to graduate this spring, in good
physical condition and be able
to pass certain tests for the
typing and stenographic
positions. Anyone interested
should contact the FBI office at
26 West Stimson Avenue,
Athens, telephone 593-6473, or
wrl te to FBI, Post Office Box
688, Athens, Ohio 45701.

Includes: 3 Brellit Quarters 3 . Leg Quarters - 3 Wings 2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks

9 A. M:-SP. M. SATURDAYS
. PHONE : 446 -0303
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
OP£N TODAY

.'•

.,.....
•

•

'

'.

Srlndra Kay ·Trussell Betrothed

Nancy Jayne Ours of Racine Engaged

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trussell of Chester
are announcing the engagement of tbeir daughter, Sandra
Kay, to Mr. Richard Allen Kerns, sonofMr.andMrs. John K.
Kerns of Belpre. Miss Trussell is a graduate of Eastern mgh
School and is now employed at the Parkersburg Beauty
College as a master instructor of cosmetology.
Mr. Kerns is a graduate of Belpre·mgh School and the
Pa6J;ersburg Beauty College. He ls now employed at
Maxine's Beauty Salon In Belpre. An open church wedding is
being planned for April 9 at the Chester Methodist Church.

·'

........
...•

,·

'

~:

Want To
Get Ahead?
Enroll Now for New
Quarter-Classes
Begin
March 16

Red Potatoes
At a Special Low Price

All
college
leve l
·subjects approved for
VA Benefits.

10-lb.

Job Placement
Assistance

Bag

Wr1tc , V 1~ it , or Ca II 446·4367
tor our bulletin.

·Gallipolis Business

STATE FARE
SLICED

College

White ·areacl

J6locust Sl .
Rey .

No . no,. oOJlB ·

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

Us
We're H &amp; R Block. with over 6,000
conveniently located offices manned
by thous.ands of specially trained tax
preparers who eat, sleep, and drink in.
come tax returns. People who set out to
save you money and much of the time
do it. The cost? Fees start at $5 and the
average cost was under $12.50 for over
7 million customers we served last year.
Furthermore, if your return is audited
we will accompany you, at no extra
cost, to the Internal Revenue Service
and explain how your return was prepared! even though we will not act as
your ega! representative.
And everyone is eligible to receive our
year 'round service which is covered by
our one time fee. No extra charge for
help with audits, estimates, or tax
questions.
We know the people we've just told you
about will do Your income tax return
for less than we can but we don't think
youcan afford them.

DON'T LET AN AMATEUR DO
HaR BLOCK'S JOB.

H&amp;RBiock.
'J\eilo1 I
lupeapl1.

27 SYCAMORE ST.
'

Gallipolis, Ohio

I ..:;;.,R::::::.!!-::;.,.,.,

ti~ 176 Beech St., Middleport, are announcing the engagement of
~ their daughter, Dixie Rose Snyder, to George T. Luster, son

GOLDEN GRAIN

Macaroni &amp; Cheddar

am

of Mr.
Mrs. George ThomasLuster,Sr.,573 Bryan Place,
. Middleport.
Ml!lll Snyder ls a junior at Meigs High Schoql wbere she Is
~ enrolled in cosmetology. Mr. Luster, a !971 graduate of
tT MelgaHighSchool,iSnowattendingHocklngStateTechniClll
t• College at Nelsonville where he ls majoring ln !lata
:: procesalng. Wedding plans are incomplete.

~
.

DINNERS
7Yo~ ·oz•.Pkgs.

:!

•1

·

'

~Founders

JOAN OF ARC

4

'

Bathroom Tissue

31 e

Potato Chip .
39~

69e

I

SCHICK

.

BUDES

$139

43e

Homestead Name of Club

A BATILE ()F THE BANDS will be held at the Pomeroy
Junior High School at 7:30 p.m. on Apri114 with area bands invited to participate.'l'he contest is beingsponsored by the Meigs .
County Chapter of Vocational Industrial Clubs of America.
The first prize wlmer will receive $100 and a trophy with
trophiesgoingtothesecondandthirdplacewinners.
Groups interested In participating will be asked to pay a $5
·mtry fee. Those interested are asked to call 992-2404, 99Z-7831 or
or write V.I.C.A., Meigs High School, Pomeroy, Rt. 3:

Choose a Memorial with Care,
Common S®se.

Are Honored:::O·

;:" POMEROY - Founder 's
•: Day was observed and Order of
:: the Eastern Star members
1·1b, 14-oz. Cans
:: were honored at a meeting
:: Monday night of Bethel 62,
:: International Order of Job's
'
.;
~ Daughter, at the Pomeroy
PILLSBURY
~ ; Masonic Temple.
Refrigerated
:;,: Millsa Rizer, honored queen,
PUTIIU~
::.: welcomed the guests and ln::; troduced Irene Barnes, a past
Country Style
.H -C1.
" • honored queen· Thomas Edor Buttermilk
ln1ector
: .. ; wards, associate guardian;
..; · Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, guardian;
·8-oz:
· ·: James Buchanan, worshipful
Tubes
. WHITE CLOUD
::; : master .of Middleport Lodge;
·::. : Mrs. Dorothy Woodard, worthy
:_, matron of Pomeroy Chapter;
PRINGLES
: . Mr. and Mrs. Cl)esher, worthy
2-Ron
2:Roll
"" matron arid worthy patron of
Pkg.
Pkg.
.
"Newfangled"
Evangeline Chapter, Mid;.: dlejJOrt; Fred. Blaettnar ~nd
:.~ DaleSmith,knlghtsofthe Y~rk
Sla-Puf Fabric Softener . .. . ..... , . .. .. ··~:,~1. 17c
. . . . . . . . . • . . . . . ..,.
'·"· 45c
:.:: Croas of Honor; Bob King,
Fie:....
~a~o~•mann 's Marpnne
4%-oz.
::.' ldvisor of DeMolay; and Mrs.
Folp(s Ceffee .... : . . .. .... . .. .. .. • . ~:; 93c
Carton
..,. Emma Clatworthy, past
0 &amp;CFriiiCh fried Onions ........ : .. . • ·~;:.· 35c
. 'IJ!W'dlan of Bethel 62.
'·'•·
.... 59c
9-oz.
SUnsh.IRI Hydrox ,.....,.es
""'"''
..............
"''·
·' Other Order of the Eastern
Twin Pak
' .
,.1•• 41 c
. "-·•
Sunsh.tnt KriSpJ
"'"""'". . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,.
tl Star members recognized wer~
' Mrs. Wanda Rizer, Mrs.
Florence Well, Mr. and Mra.
rc---ll ~_.,:.romRoush, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Bowen, Mra. Ella Smith, Mrs.
Amber War~•r, Mrs , Lois

PLUS

those not acquainted with
garden club work, a variety of
thmgs can be learned (rom the
monlhly programs such as ·
By Katie Crow·
LANGSVILLE
The Mrs. Leslie Hoffman, Thurs- p.m. on the third Thursday of se lection of seeds, proper
Homestead Garden Club of day, with Mrs. Larry Barr, each month. Membership dues planting time&gt; and methods,
Langsville is the name selected president-elect of the new club, will be $1.50 a year payable on hardening of cut flowers for
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McElllinneys' home for the newest Meigs County presiding .
or before the March 16 arranging, artistic flower
away from horne, a hoWietrailer-located at Tycoon Lake in Gallia garden club.
The first reg~lar meeting of meeting. Attending the arranging , how to select and
CoUnty, was destroyed by fire recently.
The name, subject to the the gro up will be held on March meeting as advisors were Mrs. condition specimen flowers ,
The McEihinneys, whenever they could, journeyed to Tycoon approval of the Ohio 16, at 7:30p.m. at Fellowship Bolin, regional director ; Mrs. plant . propagation, pruning
Lake to spend the weekends. Cause of the fire that destroyed the Association of Garden Clubs, Hall of the Langsville Christian Parker,
chairman
of methods, how to make a cold
Church.
Mrs.
Joe
Bolin,
organizing the club, and Mrs. frame , proper fertilizing,
trailer and its contents is unknown. The McElhinneys, who live in was selected during a special
I Middleport, were notified by phone of the loss of their trailer.
meeting held at the home of Region 11 director of the Harold Wolfe, president, all making your own containers,
Ohio Association of Gar- members of the Rutland just to riame a few .
den Club,s, . will install Friendly Gardeners .
ELEM\OR ROBSON is back at her job .as Meigs County
Mrs. Barr has named the
officers
of
the
new
Mrs. Barr stated that anyone following COfllJili lte~ ~pa)f , ,
~rder after)lllvinfl minor surgery recently, Eleanor extends
organization.
desiring rlieni6ership in the men : Publicity, Mrs. Alpha
, her.,sincere !'~hanks" to,tb• 'l!'ho remembered her with cards.
The officers are Mrs. Barr, club as charter members Barr ; Finances, Mrs. Francis
1 ·
Mrs. Hoffman, vi~e should apply before, or at the W. Wilcox ; Green Thumb
THE MEMBERS of Uie Ladies 1\uxiliary of the Syracuse
prestdent ; Mrs . Bernard M~rch 16 meeting. Mem- Notes, Mrs. Bruce Morris;
Fire Depariment were dealt quite a blow recently when they lost
Ledlie,
secretary, and Mrs. bership after that date will be Civic, Mrs . Bernard Leadlle,
one of tbeir faithful members, Doris Friend, who died quite . ATHENS- District 14 of the
suddenly with infectious meningitis.
Ohio Nurses Association met Francis W. Wilcox, treasurer. subject to a pproval by chm., Mrs. Richard FetSr.,
and
Miss
Due to the fact that the late Mrs. Friend helped with the recently in the dining room of Members of the Rutland members, according to the by- ty,
Friendly Gardeners, and the laws. After that, names must Rita Davis; Telephone,
·group's yearly project of making Easter baskets, it was · O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Rutland Garden Club, sponBernard
Ledlie
necessary for all the candy and containers to be destroyed.
in Athens with Mrs. Laurie sors, are invited to attend the be submitted at the meeting Mrs .
and
voted
upon
at
the
following
and Mrs . Alpha Barr ,
The ladles have hadagreatdeal of expense and it would be a Kirchner, Mrs . Barbara meeting. Mrs. Robert Kuhn ,
and Mrs. Leslie Hoffman as
month
's
meeting.
very thoughtful gesture if each and everyone could send a Pfeifer and Mrs. Mona Jackson Meigs County garden clubs
program chairman named
However, The Homestead
donation to the group. H you desire, donations may be sent to as hostesses.
contact chairman; Mrs. Wilson Garden Club is still inviting
Mrs. Delbert Mitchell and Mrs.
Mrs. Jean Hall, Syracuse.
·
The business me~ting was Carpenter,
region
II
Francis Wilcox to assist her.
persons to join with them. Any
conducted by Mrs. Jenny
Shipman, president. Reports treasurer ; Mrs. William person who thinks they might Other committee chairmen
DID YOU EVER STOP to think bow many miles a postman
will be named later. Mrs.
were given on various nursing Willford, region II secretary; be interested in the club is
walks a day? Bill Radford, letter carrier for the Pomeroy Post
Mrs.
Homer
Parker,
region
II
Hoffman
served cake, coffee
invited
to
attend
the
March
16
programs being carried out in
Office walks at least 13 to 14 miles a day five days a week and the district. The program was publicity book chairman; Mrs. meeting, says Mrs. Barr. For and tea .
part of tlils Is up hill and up steps .
under the direction of Mrs. Tom Stewart, regj.on II , Ohio
And no matter what the weather is like the rounds have to be Lucy Cotner, R.N ., director of Association of Garden Clubs
made.
nursing, Mt. St. Mary Hospital, publication sales chairman,
Nelsonville. Mrs. Cotner used and Mrs. James Carpenter,
MRS. BEULAH EWING, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ewing and . the theme for the year, Meigs County ga rden therapy
daughter and Mr; and Mrs. Don Spires, have returned home after "Getting to Know You" as her chairman , will be in attendance .
visiting Disney Land in Florida. Beulah says Disney Land is topic.
During the business session
''fabulous, well worth the trip."
District 14 meets the third
While in Florida they visited Henny and Harmon O'Brien, Thursday of each month and Thursday the club adopted byformer Syracuse residents, who are now living in Inverness. The invites all registered nurses laws deciding upon 10 meetings
O'Briens accompanied the group to Disney Land.
whether they are a member or a year, all months except
January and February .
Also visiting Disney Land recently were Mr. and Mrs. Bill not to aitend the meetings.
Meetings will be held at 7:30
Grueser ofl\llddleport. Bill also agrees, it is quite a place.

A Modern Memorial that combines the proper
beauty, design and craftsmanship to fit your
particul ar requirement is our learned
suggestion . We have a large selection of
E.G.A. Certified Memorials from which to
choose . Let us help you .

:.

Kidney Beans

BISCUITS

In 1968 an Air France jetliner
hit a mountain top in Guade. Ioupe, killing 62.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Gail P. Buck, Pomeroy, are announcing tbe marriage of their
daughter, Gloria Jean, to Mr. Bruce Donald Wallace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight B. Wallace,
Middleport. The wedding was an event of February 17 at Pearisburg, Va. Tbe Rev. John W.
Sherman officiated.
'The bride is a graduate of Pomeroy High School and attended Kent State University . She is
presently attending Ohio University. Mr. Wallace is a graduate of Middleport High School and
Marshall University .
The couple is residing in Syracuse. The groom is employed by the Southern Local School
District ·where he is bead football coach at Southern High School, Racine. He also teaches
health and physical education. Mrs . Wallace has dance and baton studios in Pomeroy and
Gallipolis.

Nurses .Meet
AtO 'Blenesspresident;

.A'LL PORPdSF{

Bus.: Administration
Executive Secretarial
Jr. •Accounting
Secretarial
General Office

RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Ours of Racine Route 2are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Nancy Jayne, to Mark Anthony Yoacham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reed Kirkham,
Middleport Route I.
Miss Ours is a senior at Southern High School in Racine and will be attending the
University ofUtsh in the fall. Mr. Yoacham'has attended Brigham Young University in Utah
and is now residing with his parents. Wedding Jillans are incomplete.

Katie's Korner

..

Because we think our competition represents
more of a threat to you than it does to us, we're going
to help You sort them out.

9 A.M. -6 P.M. WEEKDAYS

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Wallace

',•

And now a word about
H&amp;R Block's competition
Your Family
The greatest people in the world. Most
of the time. Unfortunately, most of the
time doesn't include income tax time.
Because the last thing you need when
you're doing your taxes is an aUnt who
took an accounting course just before
she dropped out of college. Or a father
who thinks how much money you make
and what you do with it is something
the rest of the family should know
about.
Your Nei&amp;flbors
You know the type. The mild-mannered shoe salesman next door who
suddenly turns into a mathematical
genius just about the time income tax
is due. He knows all the angles. Some
· of which even the Internal Revenue
Service doelln't know about yet. And
he's willing to share them with you,
· "Just to be neighborly."

•'

or FAMILY PAK

FBI Has Jobs In W~hington

You
Your own worst enemy. All year long
you ean't balance your check book, but
that doesn't stop you. Armed with your
W-2's,a few reams of paper and a couple
or' gallons of coffee you bravely attack
tluit stack of forms. You may be taking
deductions you're not entitled to,. and
entitled to deductions you're not taking. So, should you be doing your own

DAN THOMAS
AND $ON.

2521HIRD AVENUE, GALliPOLIS, OHIO

''

BOUNTY
TOWELS

49e

::J

.

Thompson ,
Mrs.
June
Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Stanley, Mrs. • Bessie King,
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan, and
Mrs . .Margaret Blaettnar .
Plans •were made for a
bowling party to be hel.d at the
Pm11eroy Lanes on March 12. A
short program honoring the
OES members was presented
by the girls. A cake decorated
with the Eastern Star emblem
was served with punch.
. SURGERY COMPLETED
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Janice
Lawson, and 3-year-old Marvin
Teaford have returned from
Columbus where Marvin had
undergone surgery on his hand.
Mrs. Lawson's mother, Mrs .
James Teaford, stayed with
her son David, and Brenda
Teaford, during her absence.

IN HOSPITAL
MIDDLEPORT - Myron
Miller is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Visiting
here with him have been Mr.
and Mrs . James Miller,
Nelsonville. They also visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Kauff.

Sym~hy

The
Tender Touch

Dudley's Aorist

DANCE SET
POMEROY - A d8nce will
be staged Friday from 8 to 11
p.m. at Royal Oak Park by the
Meigs High School VICA with
music by the Willies,

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, 0.,
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .

I

I
COUPON
I
I
Pom er oy , 0 . I
(
·
)
Please send me FREE booklets I
I showi ng memorials printed in full color

·PHILCOMATIC'"
25':~.~~..~ COLOR TV

~~

·Better color, automatically

I
I
I

lifelike color. Phllcomatic
~lor TV fine tunes at the touch of a button and "locks-in"

The
Shop
"custom meat cutting"
Pleesant Midge Road
POMEROY OHIO '
·

'

the picture. Set and forget- no ffddling every time you
change channels,. Gives more lifelike flesh tom~s. bl'ltter
'~
color in every scene-automatically! • Phllco Hi.R.dte

MagiColor picture tube • Tilt-front control deck

.

• Contemporary, Simulated Walnut finish
,.-------~

'

I

, ~ ·, "'~

Dick &amp; Dale
really
,know

'

2S Inch pic:'ture meaSured d~agonally, 315 square inch picture

'

·!

.
.
OUICK SERVICE ·
how

to cut up.

-..~--·

Open Att Year
To Servo You.

1

Onft!.

$549

95

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

.,.

lI

I

with sizes and prices !isted.
1 ) Kindly have an authorized logan

Monument Co. representative call at my
home.

1
I

Now, enjoy easy tuning, more

'

a.m:

------------·

Model C7310AWA

Loqa n Monument Company,

of Caring

.,,- \

SALE DAY SET
POMEROY - The Melgs
Hlgh School VICA Club will
hold a bake sale from .9 to 11:30
at the Davis-Warnfr
Jaance office in Pomerdy.

Rowers

( l Please send me details
Mausoleums without obligation.

'

I
I
•I

Name
Street or P.O.

about

1
I

Bo~

·------------·
__________ _
City or Town

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

POMEROY! OHIO
.

I,

1 Display.Yard near I
I Pomeroy-Mason Bridge I
I Leo L. Vaughan. Mgr. _.1
TelephJne 992-2588
1

__________
l

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I

I

r------ --,
I VINTON, OHIO I
II

Display Yard
on W. Main Street·
1 James 0 . Bush, Mgr.
1

I

I
I

1_ _2!:e!._t:_"!.3!!~-J

�. .

I

I .

10- The SUnday

· ll · ~~dayTilnes-Sentinel,Sunday,J.farchS, 1972

l

Supply Artery Still Blocked

Pastor L~nd Social
Shows Ftlm ~ C l d :
,.,. ., A .'1' ~ a.en ar
.1 o
uxz,zary

•

Couple Surprised on Anniversary
WPPERS PLAINS - Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock were
pleasantly surprised Sunday afternoon when relatives
gathered at their home in Tuppers Plains in observance of
the couple's 43rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Starling Massar
baked an anniversary cake decorated with a miniature bride
and groom encircled with a white wreath and ribbon, the
design of Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles. Mrs. Massar also presented
her aunt, Mrs. Babcock, with a red carnation corsage. The
couple received a gift of money. Movies were taken alter
which time refreshments of .ice cream and cake were served.

POMEROY - The Rev.
Arthur C. Lund, pastor of the
St. Paul Lutheran Church, was
the guest when the Women's
Auxiliary
of
Veterans
Memorial Hospital met
recently.
Rev . Lund opened the
meeting by showing a film on
"Drugs in our Society ·and
Facts on Alcoholism, " and
discussed Meigs County's part
in alcoholism and what his
committee was doing.
The business session was
conducted by the president,
Mrs. Alec Wheeler. Minutes of
the last meeting were read by
Mrs. Dana Nelson, recording
secretary, and the treasurer's .
report was given by Mrs.
Wheeler, pro tern.
An upeoming gilt show was
discussed and a donation of $25
was made to the Rev. Lund's
work.
The Middleport Garden Club
sent tray favors lor patients lor
valentine day.
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman of
Rutland will show pictures and
lecture on her trip to the Holy
Land at the meeting on March
21.

The hostesses, Mrs. Eslie
Mossman and Mrs. Charles
Karr, with Mrs. Clyde Henderson and Mrs. Bertha Parker
contributing, served refreshments to those named and Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs, Mrs . Fred
lighting they need, and how to Leifheit, Mrs. Ada Slack, Mrs.
fertilize. Mrs. Osborne also Ernest Molden, Mrs. Albert
showed slides of a vacation trip Roush, Mrs. R. K. Rowan, Mrs.
to Florida, featuring flowers Corrine Combs, Mrs. George
White, Mrs. Harold Sauer,
found in the South.
Mrs.
Arnold Hayes, Miss Erma
''Now is the time to," was
give n by Mrs. Walter Brown. Smith, Mrs. Pearl Williams.
Mrs. Lyle Balderson, who
displayed a glass jar terrarium
she had made, gave each
member an instruction sheet
on how to make one.
Games were conducted by
RACINE - The Racine
Mrs. Wilson , prizes going to Alumni metrecenUy to plan for
Mrs . Walter Brown and Mrs. the Alumni banquet and dance
Denver Weber. Mrs. Weber to be Saturday, May 'a. There
also won the door prize. will be no invitation sent to
Refreshments were served by Alumni in Meigs County due to
the hostesses to the above and the expense . The commitMrs . Frank Bise, Mrs. Herman tee wants to know of
Grossnickle, Mrs . Ernest a n y charige
of adWhitehead, Mrs'.' R. L. Larkins, dresses of those outside the
and a gqest, Mrs. Roger Dillon . county, or who have moved
within the past year in or out of
the county. There are some
that can't be traced. Anyone
Birthday Observed
wanting information about
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. reunion addresses can call or
Steve Finlaw entertained write Mrs. Raymond Pierce,
Friday evening with a party Sec.-Treas., Rt. 2, Box 44,
honoring their daughter, Racine, Phone 949-2:174.
Heather, on her first birthday .
Gifts were presented lo the
NAME OMITTED
youngster and cake, ice cream,
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Jean
and punch were served. Guests Thomas was chairman of food
were Mr. and Mrs. William
ror the blue and gold bsnquet of
King, Kathy and Kevin, Mr. Middleport
Cub Scout Pack 24&gt;
and Mrs. Richard Finlaw, Mr . held recently at the American
and Mrs . Frank Grueser
Allred Grueser, Ron. Eastman: L€gionHall.Hernamewasnot
in an earlier account of
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley. listed
the banquet.

Garden Club Meets At
Williams-Balderson Home
REEDSVILLE - Mrs .
Donald Putman was co-hostess
lor the February meeting of
the Riverview Garden Club at
the Williams-Balderson home.
Mrs. Harliss Frank conducted
the devotions reading from the
5th chapter of Matthew and
ano ther, " The Lord Will
Provide."

Roll call was answered by
members naming an historical
event. Mrs. Putman, president,
conducted the business
meeting when thanks were
extended from the Meigs
Children's Home lor the
subscription for "Highlights
for Children,'' which was
recenUy subscribed for by the
club . Tl)e Athens Mental
Health cenier also thanked the
club -lor 'Iielp: whh "Operation
San Ia Claus."
The next meeting will be
March 30, instead of on the
regular meeting night at the
home of Mrs. Walter Brown
with Mrs. Donald Myers as cohostess. A note was read from
Mrs. Shellie Petty thanking
members for a gift to ·her.
Mrs . Roy Hannum was to
take care of the article for the
"Green Thumb Notes ." An
auction was held with Mrs.
Gene Wilson as the auctioneer.
For the program, Mrs.
Rona ld Osborne presented an
article on foliage plants. She
told of the dillerent types of
plants, how to water, the

Racine Alumni
Planning Dance

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
THE MAN HAS GOOD 'VffiES'

NEW YORK (KFS) - Jazz king Uonel
Hampton's already booked for the re-electedNixon Inauguration Ball, he tells us. Somerset
Maugham's secretary- companion lor decades,
Alan Searle, has turned down a real fortune to
write a book about his late boss. The Old Party's
confessed homosexuality is the vulgar key to the
big offers but Searle won 't do it. Maugham left
him far more than enough money not to ...
Revlon's European Pres. Paul Hughes and his
Patsy are divorcing. Sad. Nice people.
Eva Gabor's serious, even if Sinatra isn't ...
Sports lllustrated gifted writer Dan Jenkins has
a first novel, "Semi-Tough," that has the galleyproofers prophesying certain best..sellerdom ...
Willie Freischauer's book "David Frost" really
takes that carbonated English import apart.
Diahann won't like it' ... Only makeup artist in
"Who 's Who" is Dick Smith, who Mafia-aged
Brando lor "The Godpappy."
Duke Ellington hasn 't much more room for
honors but collects three more anyway :
Downbeat Mag 's top composer, arranger, and
big-band categories ... Greek money..shipper
stavros Niarchos bought the Chateau de Ia Croe
from the Duke of Windsor IS years ago - and
never stayed in it one night. But 'his bride Tina
· looked it over and now they 'll live in that Antibes showplace permanenUy ... This is
Publicity Today : the news Juliet Prowse is
being signed to play the Mt. Airy Lodge also
includes the leer that' she's "having a baby out
of wedlock" ... That's taking candor from a
baby, no?
One of the "Superstar" leads was told by
the management to cut out the public boozing
and cu'ssing ... Tennessee Williams is writing
again but not a play. Says his project is "eitber
a novel or a ram bling memoir." Not, he says, an
autobiography ... The deal for Faberge, Cary
Grant's firm, to buy Compoz and Zizanie isn't
quite closed 'yet. Handshakes, but they aren't
worth the paper they're written on, of course ...
South Alrlcan-ltaliao Sergio Franchi 's
becoming a U. S. cit.ize~: Our gain.

~areintroduced ByHos

suNDAY ·
SKATING PARTY, Sunday,
2 p.m. at Skate.A-Way Rink;
Rou te 7, by Pomeroy
Elementary Safety Patrol,
open to public.
LOVE JOY Circle, Middleport First Baptist Church,
to meet at the church at 2:15
p.m. to go to Meigs CountY.
Infirmary for a program.
"

MONDAY
OPEN HOUSE and family
night when Salem Center PTA
meets at 6:30 p. m. Monday at
the school. There will be a
covered dish dinner and entertainment by the Grate
Family.
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
7:30 p. m. Monday, home of
Mrs. Fred Blaettna~ . Mrs. E.
W. Coates, assisting hostess.

MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30p.m., home of Mrs.
C. M. Hennesy with Mrs. Crary
Davis and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler,
co-hostesses. Miss Lucille
Smith to give the program
"Wi tc hcraft in Your Garden".
Roll call, a bird you like and
why .
MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, 7:30 Monday at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
· will honor all past matrons,
past patrons and those having
March birthdays, at a meeting
at 8 p.m. Monday at the temple. Members to pay dues at
meeting.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, Tuesday , 7:30p.m. at
temple. All Master Masons
invited. Grand Master's visit
Wednesday, dinner, 6:30p.m.,
ladies invited .
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Louis Osborne.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday, 8:15p.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Becky Anderson and Donna
Nease to give cultural program
on dance . Election of officers·
Phyllis Bennett and Marth~
McPhail as hostesses.
POMEROY Ch.~pter 186,
OES, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple. Members requested to
pay dues at that time.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, Middleport
Legion Hall, initiation of
candidates.
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
p.m. Wednesday, Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. (postponed
Friday due to the snow.)

Luncheon
C'T/tU b Meettn
,a
6

Held

POMEROY - The Quarterly
Luncheon Club met Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Phil
Critic Marya Mannes now reveals she was a Williamson for a potluck
dinner.
World War II spy . For our side ... Her cover was
Grace was by Miss Lydia
,as New Yorker mag reporter in Spain and Ebersbach, Mrs. Katrine
Portugal ... She reversed some of the usual Millikan, president, gave
Bonded-tension: a German spy once saved her devotions using scriptures
... Danish secretary Birgitte van Deurs from several of the New
beco~es a ".Royal'.' British princess via Testament books. The Lord's
mamage to Prmce,Rlchard of Gloucester. The Prayer was given in unison.
Duchess of Wt;tdsor s been wed to her ex.j{ing 3&gt; , Thank you note was read from
years and sttll hasn't been officially dubbed the family of Georgia
"roy~l " ... Next week is "Return Borrowed Williamson.
Books Week" ; anyone know the author of the
For the program each
me.mber gave a verse or poem
quatratn :
T 'e characters who borrow books
on spring. Plans were made lor
come from all races and religions.
a white elephant sale to be held
I wish some kind Burbankian guy
at the June meeting at the
would cross my books with homing home of Mrs. T. A. Hennesy.
pigeons.
Mrs. Millikan will be the coSUzanne and Sidney Blackmer ~( Sidney's h~stess, and Miss Nelle Bing
been ill ) proved he's lit again at L'Aiglon. Said woll have d~vottcns. Apatriotic
both will appear in "Night of the Cat," to be program .wtU be presented.
filmed in Charlotte, N. c., in April ... Copa
Attendtng bestdes those
headliner Bobby Darin lugs a tape recorder to named were Mrs. Robert
all interviews to make certain no one ntisquotes Warner. Mrs. Jed Webster, Sr.,
him . A regula.' Chou ·En-lai eh? ... Crime Is
LoutS Retbel, Mr~ . Clara
costmg the natton's business almost $16 billion a MKa r, Mrs. Be? Neutzlmg, and
rs. Dale Smtih.
year, but the Commerce Dep't says
·
businessmen are too apathetic about spending
what it takes to erase It ... Karen Morrow, who
belts out a song like Merman , was signed for
"The Selling of the President" and didn't get
one song to wallop. Now they may write one in
... Especially after the three Phllly reviews. All
POMEROY - A Hocking
bad.
sub.Qistrict meeting of the
After Dark mag gives its "Ruby" awaro to religious education and school
Dorothy Collins, one of the major "Follies" of religion has been called by
excitements after all those cooolsyiJOO early the instructor, the Rev. Samuel
Hit Paraded too-cute years ... U Jessica Walters Jackson, for 7 p.m. Sunday
wins an Oscar for "Play Misty l~r Me" she'll r tonight) at the Naomi Baptist
certainly indulge a pregnant pause on the way Church .
to the podium: As Mrs. Ross Bowman she's
At the meeting plans will be
expecting a baby In May ... Caesars Palace made for the school and dates
topped Yugoslavia's bid for the Bobby Fischer· and hours set. Mrs. Campbell
Russki chess championship ($175,000 to the Harper is chairman lor the
Yugo $153,000) ... The players decided CJiesars district school Jf reli~tvn and
Palace has too many distractions. Of course It. Mrs.·Zuelelia Smith i' publicity
chairman assisted by Oscar
has.
Qualls an1 Julius McCloud.

lathe!' .In opportunity to take a vital
part in hla · Important role, the
Maternity ,Department of Pleasant
Valley HOIPI!al has departed from the
iradltl~ 8epll'llti~ of father !rQm
baby aDd mother and hu emblrked on
an . exciting new Famlly Centertd
~to Maternity Care."
With evident entbualasm, Mrs.
Eugene M. (Shirley) Garlow, Hospital
Obstetrical .SUpervisor and '-If
mother. of lour, e!p)alna the new
Pleasant Valley ·program in this

HalnptoD, p-esjdent, left, and Mrs. T. T. Shelton, vice
president, standing ; and seated from the left around the
table, Mrs. Joseph Cook, treasurer; Mn. Oliver Mlcbael,
membership chairman; Mrs. Robert Warner, secretary, aDd
Mn. Elsie Roush.
· ,

FRANCES WILLARD TEA - Pomeroy Women's
Christian Temperance leaders gave tribute to the founder of
Ute World's WCTU ThUrsday afternoon at Ute Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Pictured here are Mrs. Allen

Crusader Honored
POMEROY - A tea in
tribute .to the brilliant and
indefatigable crusader on
behalf of prohibition, Frances
Wil!.rd, was staged Thursday
afternoon at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church by
the Pomeroy · Women's
Christian Temperance Union .
Mrs.
Oliver
Michael
presented the program using
"Christ for the World" as her
theme. She spoke of the natural
endowments for leadership of
Miss Willard who was elected
to the Hall of Fame for Great
Americans in 1910, and of her
concern with not only temperance but also the general
role of women and the labor
question.
Ait educator by profession,
Miss Willard returned from a
two year world educational
tour in 1874 and resolved that

30,000,000 work Intermittently,
three-fifths of the working
women are married and one
out of three have 'children
under 18. years of age. "The
inc~eased prestige gained by
better jobs are causing ·vast
changes in husband-wife
relationships, child rearing,
welfare programs
.
'
recreational needs, housing
and food buying habits," she
said.
Mrs. Michael credited Miss .
Willard with foreseeing all this
and recognizing the need for
temperance reform as a means
of preServing the family. Her
methods are agitate, educate,
organize and legislate.
Scripture, group singing of
"Christ. for the World We
Sing," ~d the Lord's Prayer in
unison , concluded Mrs.
Michael's program.
Mrs . Allen
Hampton
presided at the meeting during
which time It was reported that
two films, "Safety First" and
"School froblems" had been
s~pwn..,IQ ~tudents at MeigS
l!lglt .School and that 1,500
pamphlets
had
been

she would invest her life in
humanity, Mrs. Michael noted.
The program leader said that
it was through the Women's
Christian Temperance Union
that she saw an opportunity to
make the influence of women
an appreciable power in the
world, not only against the
liquor trallic but against every
ill that threatens the home and
strikes at civilization.
''Three times the Congress ol
the United Slates has paused to
do her honor," pointed out Mrs.
Michael.
·
She told of women's
changing role in a changing
world noting that more than
one-fourth of all women work
putside the home, and that onethird of tHe world's labor force
is women. In the United States
about 25,000,000 women work
permanently and about

Civil War Experiences
Related in Books
MIDDLEPORT - Two books
dealing with Civil War experiences ol two soldiers - one
•from the North and one from
the South - were reviewed
when the Middleport Uterary
Club met Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Nan Moore.
Mrs. Roy Cassell reviewed
"Five Days to Glory" which
dealt with a filteen-year.old
northern boy who had live days
before being discharged when
he was killed. The book is in the
form or letters written by the
young serviceman during the
Civil War. The second book,

alter the death ol his wife. He
was a front line soldier and the
book relates his role in the war.
Mrs . James Euler had
prepared a note for members
to sign. The note will be sent to
Mrs. Larry Spencer, a former
member who moved from
Middleport recently . Mrs.
Richard Owen, president,
presided over the meeting
attended by 12 members and
two guests, Mrs. John Kincaid
and Mrs. Mildred Ziegler. Mrs.
Moore served candy.

distributed at both the junior
and senior high schools. Mn.
Hampton and .Mrs. Robert
Warner delivered the fUms and
pamphleta.
Arrangementa were inade to '
secure posters and the
governor's proclamation lor
Youth Temperance Education
Week, April23-29. These will be
displayed in downtown
business windows.
Mn. Warner reported on
HR-4836 which has been introduced Into the Congress.
This bill, if paSE"&lt;&lt;, would ban
all radio or televisio•. ucensees
from broadcasting any advertising
()f
alcoholic
beverages of more than 'h pet.
alcohol. Sponsors of the bill are
Congressmen Harley Staggers
of West VIrginia, Charles J.
Carney and Clarence J. Brown
of Ohio. Members were urged
to promote a · letter writing
campaign requesting a hearing
on the bill. Letters should be
directed to the House of
Representatives, Washington,
D. C. 20015.
.
Mrs. T. T. Shelton was at Ute
piano lor group singing of
"Have Thine Own Way" to
open the meeting. She also
gave the opening prayer..
Tea and'cookies were ~FlY~
at the ~oncluslon of the
meeting.
'

WINTER
CLEARANCE
NEW .MARKDOWNS
'

and

REDUCTIONS

'

Greenhouse ·fn!Sh

''Time of Drums" was
reviewed by Mrs . Walter
Waddell and related the experiences of a southern serviceman who joined the war

20% to 50%

Foliage Gardens

$3.00uP

LODGE TO MEET
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Masons, will meet for a stated
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the temple in
Pomeroy.

SAVING AT

Dudley's Aorist

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, G.lllpolis,
&amp; MliSon Co., W.Va.

Middleport, Ohio

o..

involvement. . . .
.
It waa.. esplalned. that the lather IS
never· considered a vllltor In the
Maternity Deplrtment of the hospital.
· He ta welcome anytime from qine In Ute
morning through ten at night. Although
all other vllltors are asked to maintain
the regular visiting hours of 2:.30 to 4
and 7 to 8:30p.m., It was stressed that
fathers are welcome anytime,
PBpeeially at(eeding time in which they
are invited to COOle and join ·thelr wife
.In holding and feeding their baby.
manller..
.·
It was also explained that the baby is
Early ill tbs: p!'e:IU!tal period the
brough\ .to the mother's f!JOIII every
expectant couple Is sent a letter Inviting
four hours for feeding. If a couple
them to villi the department and to
desires to .viBit with their baby at other
take a tour so !hal theY can become
times, nursing personnel are happy to
acquainted with the facUlties and
bring Ute baby to the room any other
·procedures ~t will be used in the
time other than during regular viBIUhg
delivery IU)d child care.
hours when visitors other than the
Already many couples are taking
father , would. be present in the
advanlll!e of thla service, according to,
departinent; however, the babies are
Mrs. Garlow. Many enthusiastic ·
kept on view in the nursery lor all to see
responaea are belng reg~tered as
during these hours.
couples are given thtae per!!Oilallzed
Mn. Garlow tells of the great
to~. Her entire staff has noted the
~t~actlon she and her staff .are
confidence aDd ease being reflected by
fmding as they see both. mother and .
these
when their . time of
father shar~ together With their baby In
delivery arnves as they already know
these
fm~t
days .
in advance exactly what to do, where to
She also showed with pride how the
go and what·to expect when they arrive
color scheme of pink and blue Is car~led
out in the department. Nursing
at the h08pital. ·
When · th~ expectant mother Is
1!frsonnel wear pink dresses, doctors
admitted in labor, lhla new Pleasant
wear blue scrub sulta. Newborn girls
Valley Family Centertd Program of
are Identified with pink bracelets and
Maternity Care Invites the father to
blanke\S whUe the blue is used for the
stay with his. wife lri the Labor Room
boYS: The traditional white of the
until the tlrile she is taken to the
h~pl~ room has been. r~laced w1th
Delivery Room.
pink striped sheets and pillow cases and
Throughout thl4 period, both mother
Pink draperies.
and fathei'-to-be are kept Informed by
Saving the best till last, she said, "We
nursing personnel by~~ of a labor
use baby lotion on our babies, put a .
progress chart. Coffee .nd,cookies are
'bow' in their hair so they will look
provided for tlie father throughout this
pretty and smell S)l'eet when we bring
experience. .
them out to their parents."
This warm, .,...,nal .nc1 supporUve
Plea.sant
Valley
Hospital
approach .Is contll!ued as the father
Admimstrator James L. Farley said
wails ·in the Maternity Department
the hospital considers Itself fortunate in
while his wife Is in the Delivery Room.
having an exceptionally qualified staff
When delivery _Is complete and .the
of workers in the Maternity
IWI'se Is .preparing Ute mother aDd the
Department. He explained that Mrs.
new baby for transfer from Delivery
Garlow, wile of Rev. Eugene M.
Room to her own room, the new Father
Garlow, Pastor of Bellemead United
is invited to scrub hla handl and arms,
Methodist Church of Point Pleasant,
and to don a father's sown, and be
was appointed to the position of
ready to receive his wife aDd their baby
Supervisor in Obstetrics last
as they are broUI!ht from th@ Deliv~rv
Sep~mber, .and that it has been under
lfoo'iW( '"'"" dl l QOfbmni:'' l'
' :· &lt;~~. )E. her ''lelldel~lli\'1'1tJ\Iit this new Family
•"lite motheJ.·~lrOill 'the 'Delivery "" Ceritered ':AJ)pr~&lt;ib to Maternity Care
· Room holding their baby aDd then she
has come Into ~g.
presenta their baby to her husband so
M.._. Garlow Is a graduate of
that he rilay hold hla 1011 or daughter in
Fairmont General Hospital School of
his arms. After the mother Is
Nursing, Falrrnont, West Virginia.,
· . where she was employed in their
transferred into her bed the parenta
and baby are left alone to share their
Obstetrical De'parlment for six months
joyous experience t.og~tlift. for a while.
following her· graduation. During the
· The delight of lhla o''·n-repeated
years 1956-1969 Mrs. Garlow served as
assistant Head Nurse in Delivery

coupi:U

Storys Run

Room, Supervisor of the ~!rica
Departrilent, and Instructor of Student
Nursea in Delivery Room at the Miami
, Valley Hospital in Dayton, Ohio, where
at tluittime the hospital was averageing
a birth rate of nearly five thousarid per
year.
·
Mrs. Garlow has been on the Pleasant
Valley Hospital staff for three years.
Working with Mrs. Garlow are Mn.
Young Kim, R.N.; Mrs. Curtis Riffle,
LcP.N.; Mrs. Ruben Sturgeon, L.P.N. ;
and Mrs. Pat Perrine, L.P.N. Aides are
Miss Jan Emrick, Mrs, James . A.
Burgess, Mrs. Darnell Jeffries, Mrs.
William Woomer, Mrs. Vila Deweese
and Mrs. Nial Minton. Each has been
specially trained in Obstetrical li!td
Nurseryeare and bring many years .of
experience to the Department.
The -newesi member of ttie
Obstetrical Staff at Pleasant Valley
Hospital Is Maxwell C. Kimball, M.D.
who is concentrating ln Obstetrics and
Gynecology. Dr. Kimball took his
medical training at the University of
Kentucky College of l&gt;te4icine. PostGraduate trainin~ in Obstetrics arid
Gynecology was received at the
University of Kentucky Hospitals.
Dr. Kimball also served a residency
in Anesthesiology at the same hospital.
Growing interef~! is being reHected in
newer methods of anesthesia being
introduced into the Maternity
Department by Dr. Kimball which
Include the para-eervical block during
labor and the pudendal block during
delivery.
·
Mrs. Garlow said the Medical Staff
Hospital Administrator and Nursing'
Service have been most cooperative in
supporting and helping to implement
the program of Family Centered
Approach to Maternity Care.
The large attractive nursery holds
u~ to 15 cribs a.rid incubators. Always
alert to securt!l the finest equipment
available, Pleasant Valley Hospital
now has on order a new incubator which
is said to be "the Cadillac of
incubators" and which features latest
advances In medical technology.

"It is hoped," Mrs. Garlow said ;
"that this fine new piece of equipment
will help us to do even a better job in
maintaining and excelling our
excellent record of saving premature
babies." The Nursery is fortunate in
having David Pitsenberger, M.D.
~ B!lllrd 9e1'$ifie&lt;\ , ~edilttrjciJ\n. , ~s ?i~
' Chtef\ of•Nursety -and• Pedfali'tcs.~ Dr.
Pitsenberger received · his medical
training at the Medical Coolege of
Virginia.

ital

FIRE DAMAGE HIGH
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) Damage was estimated at
$150,000 in a fire which
destroyed three barns on the
farm of Robert Prosechel near
here.

. OBEDIENCE SClfOOL TEACHERS - Orville Strow,
Crab Creek Road, is shown in the above picture with his
German Shepherd, Mitz' lV, C. D., 6-years-old, who will assist
hiin in teaching at Obedience Dog Training School which
begins Sunday at the Mason County Fairgrounds. Mitz
participates in the show as a demonstrator of commands. She
has a degree in Companion Dog from the American Kennel
Club. The school is sponsored by the Mason County 4-H
Leaders Association and will open at3:30 p.m. Sunday.

tHE SHOE

'biY

~nere

Are Sensl

priced

snoes
.
M\DDLiPOR1, 0 •

.,

®r\S®rp

0fk7@0~

In the EASTI:R PARADE

Mr:.

'

Come one, come all and outfit the
family in handsome shoes. For
Easter. For Sprip.g. Styles to please
Mom,· Dad, teens and kids.

Sub-District
Meeting Called
-

.This Shoe Has Everything

We Add To Our

COLORS:
NAVY &amp; ri.ACK

'fS

MEN~

FOR
FOR WOMEN .,M
AND CHILDREN , &gt;e

'

AA to EE
Width

Q99

Arrangements
Bouquets
Polled Plants

REMEMBER EASTER IS APRIL 2
"We felt we should go along
with the NCAA in view of the
fact that other major independents and conferences have
already done so," said Rev.
Edmund P. Joyce; the board's
executive vice president.

WE WIRE FLOWERS EVERYWHERE

Pomeroy Flower Shop
MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
· 992.2039
POMEROY

de~

Couples
iring such classes are .i ·
invited to speak to their doctors about
them,. or to register their interest by
calling Mrs. Shirley Garlow, R.N. at ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,;;-

BY GLENNA SHULER
PITTSBURGH (UPI) Mr. and Mr•. Joe Leach Eight CATV systems in Ohio
spent a day recently with Mr. and one In Indiana were
and · Mrs. Adolph Smith In acquired Friday by TeleJackson.
Communications; Inc. of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Priddy of Denver from Rust Craft
Rutland spent Monday with Greeting Cards in a $10 million
Mr. and Mrs. John Veith and deal.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leach
The' CATV systems are franand Roger.
chised In the Ohio clUes of
Mrs. Otis Chapman and Mrs. Steubenville, Moundsville,
Jerry Brown and clilldren Martins Ferry, East Uverpool,
spent a recent evening with Marion, Uma, Middletown and
Mr. and Mrs. Michael McClain Hamilton. The Indiana city Is
and Jill In NelsonvUie.
New Castle.
Recent visitors of Mr, and
Mrs. Paul Searls were Mr. and
Mrs. AselSearls, Jr., dauchter
and daughter-in-law of Dayton,
Mr. and Mrs. Orland FloYd and
daughter of Pomeroy, Mrs.
Joan Fife, Timmy and
Melissa, Rt. 7.
- ATHE.NS - High · school
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife seniors who lj&amp;ve shown ability
spent SUnday with Mr. and in creative writing may 'apply
Mrs. Hurley Rlfe.and famlly In for
three
scholarships
Wellston.
.
available to freshmen entering
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leobard Ohio University In September,
of Rock Springs spent a reeent The scholarshlpa, for entering
evening with Mr. and Mn. freshmen only, will carry a
stipend ol $480 per year,
James Conkle.
Mr. and Mrs. James Haffey, renewable each year of the
Grove City spent the weekend .four-year program.
with Mrs. Frances Conkle and
To apply for the creative
the Robert and James Conkle writing scholarships, students
families.
must be sponsored by a high
,r.trs. Joann Conkle and Mn. school English department or a
Ruth Lambert spent Tuesc!&amp;Y professional . writers'
with Mr. and Mn. Charles organization and must submit
Pyles In Pt. Pleasant.
three manuscripts lor conMr. and Mrs. Eddie sideration at Ohio University.
Carruthers, Rt. 7, aDd Mt. and
Applications may be obMrs. James Conkle spent a talned ,from Daniel Keyes,
recent evening with the Robert director of the Creative
Conkle family.
Writing Program, English
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Brad- Department, Ohio University
bury called on Mr. and Mn. Athena, Ohio, 45701.
•'
Wendell Roush.
)lr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe,
· EPA APPOINTMENT
Kyger, and Mrs. Ross Shuler,
CLEVELAND ( U,PI')
Rt. 1 Langsville, called on Mr ..
WIUlam
L. West has been
and Mn. Alex Shuler a day
appointed chief of the
recenUy.
Cleveland office of the federal
. Mr. and Mn. Donald Leach,
Marcia, Johnny and Roger, Environmental Protection
spent a day recently with Mr. Agency.
and Mrs. Joe Leach and Arthur.
FORMER MAYOR SHOT
NORFOLK, \ Va. (UP!) Tile'- a v I! r a g e Amor1can Former Mayor Fred W. Duckconsumes a 155.8-pound com- worth was found shot to death
binatlon of barley, com, oats. on~ city street Friday night.
rice, rye and wheat each. Pollee said he apparently' had
year.
been robbed.

Lpuls Berkman, chairman of

and 65,00 shares of $6
Rust Craft, and Bob Magness, cumulative preferred stock,
president
. of
Tele- convertible Into 216,688 shares
Conununlcatlons (TCI), jolntiy ol common stock. At Friday's
announced the trade of the market price, over the counter,
CATV systems lor 139,000 346,688 shares of TCI wo.uld be
shares of TCI corrunon stock worth more than $10 million.

BAKERS PRESENTS:
u

A ~lunatic Collection of Sofas and IAJve Seats.,

"

TO PROVIDE A CONVERSATION:AL CORNER FOR YOU AND YOUR GUESTS-WITH MORE SEATING SPACE IN LESS FLOOR SPACE

Are Announ.ced

SOl

FADELY PROMOTED
PATRIOT - Michael F.
Fadeley, soit of Mr. and Mn.
William F. Fadeley, Patriot
Star Route , rece~tly was
promoted to Army Specialist
five. He is serving In Elrama,
Pa., as a radar mechanic in
Battery D, 3rd Battalion, 1st
Air Defense Artillery. A 11168
graduate of Southwestern High
School, be attended Rio Grande
College.

\

NOTKE DAME AGREES
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)Notre Dame's faCulty board in
control of athletics voted
reluctantly Thursday to SU)r
port an NCAA resillutlon
allowing freshmen to , play
~arsity football arid basketball .

Whatever your taste

in

furniture, you can choos.e
with

confJdence

from

Baker: ~ s
selections .
Whether you select con·
temporary , traditionaL
modern or colonia l, you

wilt find an

~i2
•r'

j

Impecca ble

elegance In every piece
!hat will be a proud ad·

dillon fo your home .
Hundreds and hundreds of
fabr ics, all decorator.
selected for beautiful
correctness:. give. you a
choice of solids In a varle1y
of rich weaves, prints,
quilled
fabrics.

matelasses,

brocades,

velvets
and
other
lashlonable fabri.cs.

CHOOSE.
FROM

10
l{ i.-.1...

•

DIFFERENT SETS
iN STOCK NOW.

'"• ·• • . " '•·i'.,
•·•f . ·-. ., • ." .....
r
.:; . "" . ' rlu.,.•.,.;',tw..lt,...
..,,t...r.;..._, ~ w '

••t •4 Cllalf. A lradlUanal favorlle.

IIH lol' '--•..

detlgn quilled 1111 anlt btc:k culh lont.

FREE

•

BA·KER

'

FURNITURE

CONVENIENT

.M~DDLEPORT, OHIO

I

,.
;·

..

and between 100 to 150 persona
unaccounted for following the
msmmoth flash flooding · at
Buffalo Creek hollow one week
ago. About 4,000resldents were
left homeless by the water that
swept down the .valley.

Eight CATV Systems Go to Denver Firm

&amp;Jwlarships

·

·

experience Ia show~\ In the lace of Mrs..
GII'!Ow aa .abe .esp1ained it · 'with
eagerMD and joy born out of personal

to make the birth
more meanincfuJ to both
mother and Iaiiier, aDd to give the
II) Ill elbt

e:ql~!!'ier~Ce

MAN, W. Va, (UPIJ - The
main supply artery between
flood.ravaged Man and Logan
remained blocked Saturday by
a massive earth and rock slide,
which slate pollee indicated
might hinder .relief operations.
Officials described the slide
as ''the worsl one yet" noting
they doubted that W. Va. 10 at
Lyburn could be repaired by
Monday.
There were 88 known dead

�. .

I

I .

10- The SUnday

· ll · ~~dayTilnes-Sentinel,Sunday,J.farchS, 1972

l

Supply Artery Still Blocked

Pastor L~nd Social
Shows Ftlm ~ C l d :
,.,. ., A .'1' ~ a.en ar
.1 o
uxz,zary

•

Couple Surprised on Anniversary
WPPERS PLAINS - Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock were
pleasantly surprised Sunday afternoon when relatives
gathered at their home in Tuppers Plains in observance of
the couple's 43rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Starling Massar
baked an anniversary cake decorated with a miniature bride
and groom encircled with a white wreath and ribbon, the
design of Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles. Mrs. Massar also presented
her aunt, Mrs. Babcock, with a red carnation corsage. The
couple received a gift of money. Movies were taken alter
which time refreshments of .ice cream and cake were served.

POMEROY - The Rev.
Arthur C. Lund, pastor of the
St. Paul Lutheran Church, was
the guest when the Women's
Auxiliary
of
Veterans
Memorial Hospital met
recently.
Rev . Lund opened the
meeting by showing a film on
"Drugs in our Society ·and
Facts on Alcoholism, " and
discussed Meigs County's part
in alcoholism and what his
committee was doing.
The business session was
conducted by the president,
Mrs. Alec Wheeler. Minutes of
the last meeting were read by
Mrs. Dana Nelson, recording
secretary, and the treasurer's .
report was given by Mrs.
Wheeler, pro tern.
An upeoming gilt show was
discussed and a donation of $25
was made to the Rev. Lund's
work.
The Middleport Garden Club
sent tray favors lor patients lor
valentine day.
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman of
Rutland will show pictures and
lecture on her trip to the Holy
Land at the meeting on March
21.

The hostesses, Mrs. Eslie
Mossman and Mrs. Charles
Karr, with Mrs. Clyde Henderson and Mrs. Bertha Parker
contributing, served refreshments to those named and Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs, Mrs . Fred
lighting they need, and how to Leifheit, Mrs. Ada Slack, Mrs.
fertilize. Mrs. Osborne also Ernest Molden, Mrs. Albert
showed slides of a vacation trip Roush, Mrs. R. K. Rowan, Mrs.
to Florida, featuring flowers Corrine Combs, Mrs. George
White, Mrs. Harold Sauer,
found in the South.
Mrs.
Arnold Hayes, Miss Erma
''Now is the time to," was
give n by Mrs. Walter Brown. Smith, Mrs. Pearl Williams.
Mrs. Lyle Balderson, who
displayed a glass jar terrarium
she had made, gave each
member an instruction sheet
on how to make one.
Games were conducted by
RACINE - The Racine
Mrs. Wilson , prizes going to Alumni metrecenUy to plan for
Mrs . Walter Brown and Mrs. the Alumni banquet and dance
Denver Weber. Mrs. Weber to be Saturday, May 'a. There
also won the door prize. will be no invitation sent to
Refreshments were served by Alumni in Meigs County due to
the hostesses to the above and the expense . The commitMrs . Frank Bise, Mrs. Herman tee wants to know of
Grossnickle, Mrs . Ernest a n y charige
of adWhitehead, Mrs'.' R. L. Larkins, dresses of those outside the
and a gqest, Mrs. Roger Dillon . county, or who have moved
within the past year in or out of
the county. There are some
that can't be traced. Anyone
Birthday Observed
wanting information about
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. reunion addresses can call or
Steve Finlaw entertained write Mrs. Raymond Pierce,
Friday evening with a party Sec.-Treas., Rt. 2, Box 44,
honoring their daughter, Racine, Phone 949-2:174.
Heather, on her first birthday .
Gifts were presented lo the
NAME OMITTED
youngster and cake, ice cream,
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Jean
and punch were served. Guests Thomas was chairman of food
were Mr. and Mrs. William
ror the blue and gold bsnquet of
King, Kathy and Kevin, Mr. Middleport
Cub Scout Pack 24&gt;
and Mrs. Richard Finlaw, Mr . held recently at the American
and Mrs . Frank Grueser
Allred Grueser, Ron. Eastman: L€gionHall.Hernamewasnot
in an earlier account of
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley. listed
the banquet.

Garden Club Meets At
Williams-Balderson Home
REEDSVILLE - Mrs .
Donald Putman was co-hostess
lor the February meeting of
the Riverview Garden Club at
the Williams-Balderson home.
Mrs. Harliss Frank conducted
the devotions reading from the
5th chapter of Matthew and
ano ther, " The Lord Will
Provide."

Roll call was answered by
members naming an historical
event. Mrs. Putman, president,
conducted the business
meeting when thanks were
extended from the Meigs
Children's Home lor the
subscription for "Highlights
for Children,'' which was
recenUy subscribed for by the
club . Tl)e Athens Mental
Health cenier also thanked the
club -lor 'Iielp: whh "Operation
San Ia Claus."
The next meeting will be
March 30, instead of on the
regular meeting night at the
home of Mrs. Walter Brown
with Mrs. Donald Myers as cohostess. A note was read from
Mrs. Shellie Petty thanking
members for a gift to ·her.
Mrs . Roy Hannum was to
take care of the article for the
"Green Thumb Notes ." An
auction was held with Mrs.
Gene Wilson as the auctioneer.
For the program, Mrs.
Rona ld Osborne presented an
article on foliage plants. She
told of the dillerent types of
plants, how to water, the

Racine Alumni
Planning Dance

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
THE MAN HAS GOOD 'VffiES'

NEW YORK (KFS) - Jazz king Uonel
Hampton's already booked for the re-electedNixon Inauguration Ball, he tells us. Somerset
Maugham's secretary- companion lor decades,
Alan Searle, has turned down a real fortune to
write a book about his late boss. The Old Party's
confessed homosexuality is the vulgar key to the
big offers but Searle won 't do it. Maugham left
him far more than enough money not to ...
Revlon's European Pres. Paul Hughes and his
Patsy are divorcing. Sad. Nice people.
Eva Gabor's serious, even if Sinatra isn't ...
Sports lllustrated gifted writer Dan Jenkins has
a first novel, "Semi-Tough," that has the galleyproofers prophesying certain best..sellerdom ...
Willie Freischauer's book "David Frost" really
takes that carbonated English import apart.
Diahann won't like it' ... Only makeup artist in
"Who 's Who" is Dick Smith, who Mafia-aged
Brando lor "The Godpappy."
Duke Ellington hasn 't much more room for
honors but collects three more anyway :
Downbeat Mag 's top composer, arranger, and
big-band categories ... Greek money..shipper
stavros Niarchos bought the Chateau de Ia Croe
from the Duke of Windsor IS years ago - and
never stayed in it one night. But 'his bride Tina
· looked it over and now they 'll live in that Antibes showplace permanenUy ... This is
Publicity Today : the news Juliet Prowse is
being signed to play the Mt. Airy Lodge also
includes the leer that' she's "having a baby out
of wedlock" ... That's taking candor from a
baby, no?
One of the "Superstar" leads was told by
the management to cut out the public boozing
and cu'ssing ... Tennessee Williams is writing
again but not a play. Says his project is "eitber
a novel or a ram bling memoir." Not, he says, an
autobiography ... The deal for Faberge, Cary
Grant's firm, to buy Compoz and Zizanie isn't
quite closed 'yet. Handshakes, but they aren't
worth the paper they're written on, of course ...
South Alrlcan-ltaliao Sergio Franchi 's
becoming a U. S. cit.ize~: Our gain.

~areintroduced ByHos

suNDAY ·
SKATING PARTY, Sunday,
2 p.m. at Skate.A-Way Rink;
Rou te 7, by Pomeroy
Elementary Safety Patrol,
open to public.
LOVE JOY Circle, Middleport First Baptist Church,
to meet at the church at 2:15
p.m. to go to Meigs CountY.
Infirmary for a program.
"

MONDAY
OPEN HOUSE and family
night when Salem Center PTA
meets at 6:30 p. m. Monday at
the school. There will be a
covered dish dinner and entertainment by the Grate
Family.
POMEROY GARDEN Club,
7:30 p. m. Monday, home of
Mrs. Fred Blaettna~ . Mrs. E.
W. Coates, assisting hostess.

MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30p.m., home of Mrs.
C. M. Hennesy with Mrs. Crary
Davis and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler,
co-hostesses. Miss Lucille
Smith to give the program
"Wi tc hcraft in Your Garden".
Roll call, a bird you like and
why .
MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
DeMolay, 7:30 Monday at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
· will honor all past matrons,
past patrons and those having
March birthdays, at a meeting
at 8 p.m. Monday at the temple. Members to pay dues at
meeting.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, Tuesday , 7:30p.m. at
temple. All Master Masons
invited. Grand Master's visit
Wednesday, dinner, 6:30p.m.,
ladies invited .
GOLDEN RULE Class of
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Louis Osborne.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday, 8:15p.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Becky Anderson and Donna
Nease to give cultural program
on dance . Election of officers·
Phyllis Bennett and Marth~
McPhail as hostesses.
POMEROY Ch.~pter 186,
OES, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple. Members requested to
pay dues at that time.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, Middleport
Legion Hall, initiation of
candidates.
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
p.m. Wednesday, Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. (postponed
Friday due to the snow.)

Luncheon
C'T/tU b Meettn
,a
6

Held

POMEROY - The Quarterly
Luncheon Club met Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Phil
Critic Marya Mannes now reveals she was a Williamson for a potluck
dinner.
World War II spy . For our side ... Her cover was
Grace was by Miss Lydia
,as New Yorker mag reporter in Spain and Ebersbach, Mrs. Katrine
Portugal ... She reversed some of the usual Millikan, president, gave
Bonded-tension: a German spy once saved her devotions using scriptures
... Danish secretary Birgitte van Deurs from several of the New
beco~es a ".Royal'.' British princess via Testament books. The Lord's
mamage to Prmce,Rlchard of Gloucester. The Prayer was given in unison.
Duchess of Wt;tdsor s been wed to her ex.j{ing 3&gt; , Thank you note was read from
years and sttll hasn't been officially dubbed the family of Georgia
"roy~l " ... Next week is "Return Borrowed Williamson.
Books Week" ; anyone know the author of the
For the program each
me.mber gave a verse or poem
quatratn :
T 'e characters who borrow books
on spring. Plans were made lor
come from all races and religions.
a white elephant sale to be held
I wish some kind Burbankian guy
at the June meeting at the
would cross my books with homing home of Mrs. T. A. Hennesy.
pigeons.
Mrs. Millikan will be the coSUzanne and Sidney Blackmer ~( Sidney's h~stess, and Miss Nelle Bing
been ill ) proved he's lit again at L'Aiglon. Said woll have d~vottcns. Apatriotic
both will appear in "Night of the Cat," to be program .wtU be presented.
filmed in Charlotte, N. c., in April ... Copa
Attendtng bestdes those
headliner Bobby Darin lugs a tape recorder to named were Mrs. Robert
all interviews to make certain no one ntisquotes Warner. Mrs. Jed Webster, Sr.,
him . A regula.' Chou ·En-lai eh? ... Crime Is
LoutS Retbel, Mr~ . Clara
costmg the natton's business almost $16 billion a MKa r, Mrs. Be? Neutzlmg, and
rs. Dale Smtih.
year, but the Commerce Dep't says
·
businessmen are too apathetic about spending
what it takes to erase It ... Karen Morrow, who
belts out a song like Merman , was signed for
"The Selling of the President" and didn't get
one song to wallop. Now they may write one in
... Especially after the three Phllly reviews. All
POMEROY - A Hocking
bad.
sub.Qistrict meeting of the
After Dark mag gives its "Ruby" awaro to religious education and school
Dorothy Collins, one of the major "Follies" of religion has been called by
excitements after all those cooolsyiJOO early the instructor, the Rev. Samuel
Hit Paraded too-cute years ... U Jessica Walters Jackson, for 7 p.m. Sunday
wins an Oscar for "Play Misty l~r Me" she'll r tonight) at the Naomi Baptist
certainly indulge a pregnant pause on the way Church .
to the podium: As Mrs. Ross Bowman she's
At the meeting plans will be
expecting a baby In May ... Caesars Palace made for the school and dates
topped Yugoslavia's bid for the Bobby Fischer· and hours set. Mrs. Campbell
Russki chess championship ($175,000 to the Harper is chairman lor the
Yugo $153,000) ... The players decided CJiesars district school Jf reli~tvn and
Palace has too many distractions. Of course It. Mrs.·Zuelelia Smith i' publicity
chairman assisted by Oscar
has.
Qualls an1 Julius McCloud.

lathe!' .In opportunity to take a vital
part in hla · Important role, the
Maternity ,Department of Pleasant
Valley HOIPI!al has departed from the
iradltl~ 8epll'llti~ of father !rQm
baby aDd mother and hu emblrked on
an . exciting new Famlly Centertd
~to Maternity Care."
With evident entbualasm, Mrs.
Eugene M. (Shirley) Garlow, Hospital
Obstetrical .SUpervisor and '-If
mother. of lour, e!p)alna the new
Pleasant Valley ·program in this

HalnptoD, p-esjdent, left, and Mrs. T. T. Shelton, vice
president, standing ; and seated from the left around the
table, Mrs. Joseph Cook, treasurer; Mn. Oliver Mlcbael,
membership chairman; Mrs. Robert Warner, secretary, aDd
Mn. Elsie Roush.
· ,

FRANCES WILLARD TEA - Pomeroy Women's
Christian Temperance leaders gave tribute to the founder of
Ute World's WCTU ThUrsday afternoon at Ute Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Pictured here are Mrs. Allen

Crusader Honored
POMEROY - A tea in
tribute .to the brilliant and
indefatigable crusader on
behalf of prohibition, Frances
Wil!.rd, was staged Thursday
afternoon at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church by
the Pomeroy · Women's
Christian Temperance Union .
Mrs.
Oliver
Michael
presented the program using
"Christ for the World" as her
theme. She spoke of the natural
endowments for leadership of
Miss Willard who was elected
to the Hall of Fame for Great
Americans in 1910, and of her
concern with not only temperance but also the general
role of women and the labor
question.
Ait educator by profession,
Miss Willard returned from a
two year world educational
tour in 1874 and resolved that

30,000,000 work Intermittently,
three-fifths of the working
women are married and one
out of three have 'children
under 18. years of age. "The
inc~eased prestige gained by
better jobs are causing ·vast
changes in husband-wife
relationships, child rearing,
welfare programs
.
'
recreational needs, housing
and food buying habits," she
said.
Mrs. Michael credited Miss .
Willard with foreseeing all this
and recognizing the need for
temperance reform as a means
of preServing the family. Her
methods are agitate, educate,
organize and legislate.
Scripture, group singing of
"Christ. for the World We
Sing," ~d the Lord's Prayer in
unison , concluded Mrs.
Michael's program.
Mrs . Allen
Hampton
presided at the meeting during
which time It was reported that
two films, "Safety First" and
"School froblems" had been
s~pwn..,IQ ~tudents at MeigS
l!lglt .School and that 1,500
pamphlets
had
been

she would invest her life in
humanity, Mrs. Michael noted.
The program leader said that
it was through the Women's
Christian Temperance Union
that she saw an opportunity to
make the influence of women
an appreciable power in the
world, not only against the
liquor trallic but against every
ill that threatens the home and
strikes at civilization.
''Three times the Congress ol
the United Slates has paused to
do her honor," pointed out Mrs.
Michael.
·
She told of women's
changing role in a changing
world noting that more than
one-fourth of all women work
putside the home, and that onethird of tHe world's labor force
is women. In the United States
about 25,000,000 women work
permanently and about

Civil War Experiences
Related in Books
MIDDLEPORT - Two books
dealing with Civil War experiences ol two soldiers - one
•from the North and one from
the South - were reviewed
when the Middleport Uterary
Club met Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Nan Moore.
Mrs. Roy Cassell reviewed
"Five Days to Glory" which
dealt with a filteen-year.old
northern boy who had live days
before being discharged when
he was killed. The book is in the
form or letters written by the
young serviceman during the
Civil War. The second book,

alter the death ol his wife. He
was a front line soldier and the
book relates his role in the war.
Mrs . James Euler had
prepared a note for members
to sign. The note will be sent to
Mrs. Larry Spencer, a former
member who moved from
Middleport recently . Mrs.
Richard Owen, president,
presided over the meeting
attended by 12 members and
two guests, Mrs. John Kincaid
and Mrs. Mildred Ziegler. Mrs.
Moore served candy.

distributed at both the junior
and senior high schools. Mn.
Hampton and .Mrs. Robert
Warner delivered the fUms and
pamphleta.
Arrangementa were inade to '
secure posters and the
governor's proclamation lor
Youth Temperance Education
Week, April23-29. These will be
displayed in downtown
business windows.
Mn. Warner reported on
HR-4836 which has been introduced Into the Congress.
This bill, if paSE"&lt;&lt;, would ban
all radio or televisio•. ucensees
from broadcasting any advertising
()f
alcoholic
beverages of more than 'h pet.
alcohol. Sponsors of the bill are
Congressmen Harley Staggers
of West VIrginia, Charles J.
Carney and Clarence J. Brown
of Ohio. Members were urged
to promote a · letter writing
campaign requesting a hearing
on the bill. Letters should be
directed to the House of
Representatives, Washington,
D. C. 20015.
.
Mrs. T. T. Shelton was at Ute
piano lor group singing of
"Have Thine Own Way" to
open the meeting. She also
gave the opening prayer..
Tea and'cookies were ~FlY~
at the ~oncluslon of the
meeting.
'

WINTER
CLEARANCE
NEW .MARKDOWNS
'

and

REDUCTIONS

'

Greenhouse ·fn!Sh

''Time of Drums" was
reviewed by Mrs . Walter
Waddell and related the experiences of a southern serviceman who joined the war

20% to 50%

Foliage Gardens

$3.00uP

LODGE TO MEET
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Masons, will meet for a stated
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the temple in
Pomeroy.

SAVING AT

Dudley's Aorist

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, G.lllpolis,
&amp; MliSon Co., W.Va.

Middleport, Ohio

o..

involvement. . . .
.
It waa.. esplalned. that the lather IS
never· considered a vllltor In the
Maternity Deplrtment of the hospital.
· He ta welcome anytime from qine In Ute
morning through ten at night. Although
all other vllltors are asked to maintain
the regular visiting hours of 2:.30 to 4
and 7 to 8:30p.m., It was stressed that
fathers are welcome anytime,
PBpeeially at(eeding time in which they
are invited to COOle and join ·thelr wife
.In holding and feeding their baby.
manller..
.·
It was also explained that the baby is
Early ill tbs: p!'e:IU!tal period the
brough\ .to the mother's f!JOIII every
expectant couple Is sent a letter Inviting
four hours for feeding. If a couple
them to villi the department and to
desires to .viBit with their baby at other
take a tour so !hal theY can become
times, nursing personnel are happy to
acquainted with the facUlties and
bring Ute baby to the room any other
·procedures ~t will be used in the
time other than during regular viBIUhg
delivery IU)d child care.
hours when visitors other than the
Already many couples are taking
father , would. be present in the
advanlll!e of thla service, according to,
departinent; however, the babies are
Mrs. Garlow. Many enthusiastic ·
kept on view in the nursery lor all to see
responaea are belng reg~tered as
during these hours.
couples are given thtae per!!Oilallzed
Mn. Garlow tells of the great
to~. Her entire staff has noted the
~t~actlon she and her staff .are
confidence aDd ease being reflected by
fmding as they see both. mother and .
these
when their . time of
father shar~ together With their baby In
delivery arnves as they already know
these
fm~t
days .
in advance exactly what to do, where to
She also showed with pride how the
go and what·to expect when they arrive
color scheme of pink and blue Is car~led
out in the department. Nursing
at the h08pital. ·
When · th~ expectant mother Is
1!frsonnel wear pink dresses, doctors
admitted in labor, lhla new Pleasant
wear blue scrub sulta. Newborn girls
Valley Family Centertd Program of
are Identified with pink bracelets and
Maternity Care Invites the father to
blanke\S whUe the blue is used for the
stay with his. wife lri the Labor Room
boYS: The traditional white of the
until the tlrile she is taken to the
h~pl~ room has been. r~laced w1th
Delivery Room.
pink striped sheets and pillow cases and
Throughout thl4 period, both mother
Pink draperies.
and fathei'-to-be are kept Informed by
Saving the best till last, she said, "We
nursing personnel by~~ of a labor
use baby lotion on our babies, put a .
progress chart. Coffee .nd,cookies are
'bow' in their hair so they will look
provided for tlie father throughout this
pretty and smell S)l'eet when we bring
experience. .
them out to their parents."
This warm, .,...,nal .nc1 supporUve
Plea.sant
Valley
Hospital
approach .Is contll!ued as the father
Admimstrator James L. Farley said
wails ·in the Maternity Department
the hospital considers Itself fortunate in
while his wife Is in the Delivery Room.
having an exceptionally qualified staff
When delivery _Is complete and .the
of workers in the Maternity
IWI'se Is .preparing Ute mother aDd the
Department. He explained that Mrs.
new baby for transfer from Delivery
Garlow, wile of Rev. Eugene M.
Room to her own room, the new Father
Garlow, Pastor of Bellemead United
is invited to scrub hla handl and arms,
Methodist Church of Point Pleasant,
and to don a father's sown, and be
was appointed to the position of
ready to receive his wife aDd their baby
Supervisor in Obstetrics last
as they are broUI!ht from th@ Deliv~rv
Sep~mber, .and that it has been under
lfoo'iW( '"'"" dl l QOfbmni:'' l'
' :· &lt;~~. )E. her ''lelldel~lli\'1'1tJ\Iit this new Family
•"lite motheJ.·~lrOill 'the 'Delivery "" Ceritered ':AJ)pr~&lt;ib to Maternity Care
· Room holding their baby aDd then she
has come Into ~g.
presenta their baby to her husband so
M.._. Garlow Is a graduate of
that he rilay hold hla 1011 or daughter in
Fairmont General Hospital School of
his arms. After the mother Is
Nursing, Falrrnont, West Virginia.,
· . where she was employed in their
transferred into her bed the parenta
and baby are left alone to share their
Obstetrical De'parlment for six months
joyous experience t.og~tlift. for a while.
following her· graduation. During the
· The delight of lhla o''·n-repeated
years 1956-1969 Mrs. Garlow served as
assistant Head Nurse in Delivery

coupi:U

Storys Run

Room, Supervisor of the ~!rica
Departrilent, and Instructor of Student
Nursea in Delivery Room at the Miami
, Valley Hospital in Dayton, Ohio, where
at tluittime the hospital was averageing
a birth rate of nearly five thousarid per
year.
·
Mrs. Garlow has been on the Pleasant
Valley Hospital staff for three years.
Working with Mrs. Garlow are Mn.
Young Kim, R.N.; Mrs. Curtis Riffle,
LcP.N.; Mrs. Ruben Sturgeon, L.P.N. ;
and Mrs. Pat Perrine, L.P.N. Aides are
Miss Jan Emrick, Mrs, James . A.
Burgess, Mrs. Darnell Jeffries, Mrs.
William Woomer, Mrs. Vila Deweese
and Mrs. Nial Minton. Each has been
specially trained in Obstetrical li!td
Nurseryeare and bring many years .of
experience to the Department.
The -newesi member of ttie
Obstetrical Staff at Pleasant Valley
Hospital Is Maxwell C. Kimball, M.D.
who is concentrating ln Obstetrics and
Gynecology. Dr. Kimball took his
medical training at the University of
Kentucky College of l&gt;te4icine. PostGraduate trainin~ in Obstetrics arid
Gynecology was received at the
University of Kentucky Hospitals.
Dr. Kimball also served a residency
in Anesthesiology at the same hospital.
Growing interef~! is being reHected in
newer methods of anesthesia being
introduced into the Maternity
Department by Dr. Kimball which
Include the para-eervical block during
labor and the pudendal block during
delivery.
·
Mrs. Garlow said the Medical Staff
Hospital Administrator and Nursing'
Service have been most cooperative in
supporting and helping to implement
the program of Family Centered
Approach to Maternity Care.
The large attractive nursery holds
u~ to 15 cribs a.rid incubators. Always
alert to securt!l the finest equipment
available, Pleasant Valley Hospital
now has on order a new incubator which
is said to be "the Cadillac of
incubators" and which features latest
advances In medical technology.

"It is hoped," Mrs. Garlow said ;
"that this fine new piece of equipment
will help us to do even a better job in
maintaining and excelling our
excellent record of saving premature
babies." The Nursery is fortunate in
having David Pitsenberger, M.D.
~ B!lllrd 9e1'$ifie&lt;\ , ~edilttrjciJ\n. , ~s ?i~
' Chtef\ of•Nursety -and• Pedfali'tcs.~ Dr.
Pitsenberger received · his medical
training at the Medical Coolege of
Virginia.

ital

FIRE DAMAGE HIGH
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) Damage was estimated at
$150,000 in a fire which
destroyed three barns on the
farm of Robert Prosechel near
here.

. OBEDIENCE SClfOOL TEACHERS - Orville Strow,
Crab Creek Road, is shown in the above picture with his
German Shepherd, Mitz' lV, C. D., 6-years-old, who will assist
hiin in teaching at Obedience Dog Training School which
begins Sunday at the Mason County Fairgrounds. Mitz
participates in the show as a demonstrator of commands. She
has a degree in Companion Dog from the American Kennel
Club. The school is sponsored by the Mason County 4-H
Leaders Association and will open at3:30 p.m. Sunday.

tHE SHOE

'biY

~nere

Are Sensl

priced

snoes
.
M\DDLiPOR1, 0 •

.,

®r\S®rp

0fk7@0~

In the EASTI:R PARADE

Mr:.

'

Come one, come all and outfit the
family in handsome shoes. For
Easter. For Sprip.g. Styles to please
Mom,· Dad, teens and kids.

Sub-District
Meeting Called
-

.This Shoe Has Everything

We Add To Our

COLORS:
NAVY &amp; ri.ACK

'fS

MEN~

FOR
FOR WOMEN .,M
AND CHILDREN , &gt;e

'

AA to EE
Width

Q99

Arrangements
Bouquets
Polled Plants

REMEMBER EASTER IS APRIL 2
"We felt we should go along
with the NCAA in view of the
fact that other major independents and conferences have
already done so," said Rev.
Edmund P. Joyce; the board's
executive vice president.

WE WIRE FLOWERS EVERYWHERE

Pomeroy Flower Shop
MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
· 992.2039
POMEROY

de~

Couples
iring such classes are .i ·
invited to speak to their doctors about
them,. or to register their interest by
calling Mrs. Shirley Garlow, R.N. at ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,;;-

BY GLENNA SHULER
PITTSBURGH (UPI) Mr. and Mr•. Joe Leach Eight CATV systems in Ohio
spent a day recently with Mr. and one In Indiana were
and · Mrs. Adolph Smith In acquired Friday by TeleJackson.
Communications; Inc. of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Priddy of Denver from Rust Craft
Rutland spent Monday with Greeting Cards in a $10 million
Mr. and Mrs. John Veith and deal.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leach
The' CATV systems are franand Roger.
chised In the Ohio clUes of
Mrs. Otis Chapman and Mrs. Steubenville, Moundsville,
Jerry Brown and clilldren Martins Ferry, East Uverpool,
spent a recent evening with Marion, Uma, Middletown and
Mr. and Mrs. Michael McClain Hamilton. The Indiana city Is
and Jill In NelsonvUie.
New Castle.
Recent visitors of Mr, and
Mrs. Paul Searls were Mr. and
Mrs. AselSearls, Jr., dauchter
and daughter-in-law of Dayton,
Mr. and Mrs. Orland FloYd and
daughter of Pomeroy, Mrs.
Joan Fife, Timmy and
Melissa, Rt. 7.
- ATHE.NS - High · school
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife seniors who lj&amp;ve shown ability
spent SUnday with Mr. and in creative writing may 'apply
Mrs. Hurley Rlfe.and famlly In for
three
scholarships
Wellston.
.
available to freshmen entering
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Leobard Ohio University In September,
of Rock Springs spent a reeent The scholarshlpa, for entering
evening with Mr. and Mn. freshmen only, will carry a
stipend ol $480 per year,
James Conkle.
Mr. and Mrs. James Haffey, renewable each year of the
Grove City spent the weekend .four-year program.
with Mrs. Frances Conkle and
To apply for the creative
the Robert and James Conkle writing scholarships, students
families.
must be sponsored by a high
,r.trs. Joann Conkle and Mn. school English department or a
Ruth Lambert spent Tuesc!&amp;Y professional . writers'
with Mr. and Mn. Charles organization and must submit
Pyles In Pt. Pleasant.
three manuscripts lor conMr. and Mrs. Eddie sideration at Ohio University.
Carruthers, Rt. 7, aDd Mt. and
Applications may be obMrs. James Conkle spent a talned ,from Daniel Keyes,
recent evening with the Robert director of the Creative
Conkle family.
Writing Program, English
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Brad- Department, Ohio University
bury called on Mr. and Mn. Athena, Ohio, 45701.
•'
Wendell Roush.
)lr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe,
· EPA APPOINTMENT
Kyger, and Mrs. Ross Shuler,
CLEVELAND ( U,PI')
Rt. 1 Langsville, called on Mr ..
WIUlam
L. West has been
and Mn. Alex Shuler a day
appointed chief of the
recenUy.
Cleveland office of the federal
. Mr. and Mn. Donald Leach,
Marcia, Johnny and Roger, Environmental Protection
spent a day recently with Mr. Agency.
and Mrs. Joe Leach and Arthur.
FORMER MAYOR SHOT
NORFOLK, \ Va. (UP!) Tile'- a v I! r a g e Amor1can Former Mayor Fred W. Duckconsumes a 155.8-pound com- worth was found shot to death
binatlon of barley, com, oats. on~ city street Friday night.
rice, rye and wheat each. Pollee said he apparently' had
year.
been robbed.

Lpuls Berkman, chairman of

and 65,00 shares of $6
Rust Craft, and Bob Magness, cumulative preferred stock,
president
. of
Tele- convertible Into 216,688 shares
Conununlcatlons (TCI), jolntiy ol common stock. At Friday's
announced the trade of the market price, over the counter,
CATV systems lor 139,000 346,688 shares of TCI wo.uld be
shares of TCI corrunon stock worth more than $10 million.

BAKERS PRESENTS:
u

A ~lunatic Collection of Sofas and IAJve Seats.,

"

TO PROVIDE A CONVERSATION:AL CORNER FOR YOU AND YOUR GUESTS-WITH MORE SEATING SPACE IN LESS FLOOR SPACE

Are Announ.ced

SOl

FADELY PROMOTED
PATRIOT - Michael F.
Fadeley, soit of Mr. and Mn.
William F. Fadeley, Patriot
Star Route , rece~tly was
promoted to Army Specialist
five. He is serving In Elrama,
Pa., as a radar mechanic in
Battery D, 3rd Battalion, 1st
Air Defense Artillery. A 11168
graduate of Southwestern High
School, be attended Rio Grande
College.

\

NOTKE DAME AGREES
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI)Notre Dame's faCulty board in
control of athletics voted
reluctantly Thursday to SU)r
port an NCAA resillutlon
allowing freshmen to , play
~arsity football arid basketball .

Whatever your taste

in

furniture, you can choos.e
with

confJdence

from

Baker: ~ s
selections .
Whether you select con·
temporary , traditionaL
modern or colonia l, you

wilt find an

~i2
•r'

j

Impecca ble

elegance In every piece
!hat will be a proud ad·

dillon fo your home .
Hundreds and hundreds of
fabr ics, all decorator.
selected for beautiful
correctness:. give. you a
choice of solids In a varle1y
of rich weaves, prints,
quilled
fabrics.

matelasses,

brocades,

velvets
and
other
lashlonable fabri.cs.

CHOOSE.
FROM

10
l{ i.-.1...

•

DIFFERENT SETS
iN STOCK NOW.

'"• ·• • . " '•·i'.,
•·•f . ·-. ., • ." .....
r
.:; . "" . ' rlu.,.•.,.;',tw..lt,...
..,,t...r.;..._, ~ w '

••t •4 Cllalf. A lradlUanal favorlle.

IIH lol' '--•..

detlgn quilled 1111 anlt btc:k culh lont.

FREE

•

BA·KER

'

FURNITURE

CONVENIENT

.M~DDLEPORT, OHIO

I

,.
;·

..

and between 100 to 150 persona
unaccounted for following the
msmmoth flash flooding · at
Buffalo Creek hollow one week
ago. About 4,000resldents were
left homeless by the water that
swept down the .valley.

Eight CATV Systems Go to Denver Firm

&amp;Jwlarships

·

·

experience Ia show~\ In the lace of Mrs..
GII'!Ow aa .abe .esp1ained it · 'with
eagerMD and joy born out of personal

to make the birth
more meanincfuJ to both
mother and Iaiiier, aDd to give the
II) Ill elbt

e:ql~!!'ier~Ce

MAN, W. Va, (UPIJ - The
main supply artery between
flood.ravaged Man and Logan
remained blocked Saturday by
a massive earth and rock slide,
which slate pollee indicated
might hinder .relief operations.
Officials described the slide
as ''the worsl one yet" noting
they doubted that W. Va. 10 at
Lyburn could be repaired by
Monday.
There were 88 known dead

�'

...

~-

•

l

-.
..

,.

:Reptiblicms Cheer 'Preside:Rt in New Hamps
.

.

'

•

e

B7 United Pftu llderuiiOIIII (N.H.) Unloft Leada' sata Its more than 400,000 have come Mayor Sam Yorty will debate public service jobs,

OPEN SUNDAY
12 NOON UNTIL 6

On the last weellend before
New Hainplhlre•s preslclentlal
primary, the nation's first,
Republican regulars' held an
atravanganza for. President
Nixon and Democratic candidates planned'' a 90-mlnute
televised debate. .
Even lis cabinet members
Elliot L. Richardson and John
A. Volpe Dew In a chartered
plane to their native New
England to campaign for Nimn
Friday night, the Manchester

RIGHT RESERVED m·

UMIT QUANTITIES .

WITH COU·PON
AND

OR MORE
OPEN
SUNDAY
12 NOON
TILL 6

EXTRA SPECIAL
LIMIT 1

CANNON EXTRA HEAVY

'

99SET

PARROT GREEN ONLY

'

;

'

TOILET TISSUE

4 ROUS

.IT'S GARDEN TIME

~;

50 LB. BAG

EA.

BOUNTY
TOWELS

ONLY

JUMBO
ROLLS

FOR

BAG

Adding
L ustre

17 Ki11ed
In Crash

Locomotive -Runs Wild

Three Killed in.Church Bus

,·

.MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
I

Mus ·e Fights
To Hold Lead

Tun·e 1•8

Hatch Kidding

I

I

I

PAGE 13

Poll Hints of Trouble

WASHINGTON (UPI) _; A Senate vote on Richard G.
Klelndlenat's nomll!etion for attorney general was delayed In·
definitely Saturday when a key lobbyist sought for questioning
about a Justice Deparimelll antitrust case was found gravely ill
In a De11ver hospital.
Mrs. Dlta D. Beard, 53, the Washington lobbyist for InternaUonal Telephone and Telegraph Corp. (ITT), had been
sought by FBI agents as the purported author of a memorandum
linking the goverrunenfs settlement of a comroversial ITT
.MRS: MARIE WAT!klN, left, WIU be maldng five of the
merger proposal a11d an rri' subsidiary's $400,000 offer to help
late I~ ~stumes to he worn by women employes of the
finance the 1972 Republican Natiol!al Convention.
Pomeroy National Bank, ooo day a week for the remainder of
the year as a part of the bank's tooth birthday lirullversary.
Afew hours after Mrs. Beard
Mrs. Watson is Pictured fitting a "leg of mutton" sleeve In a
was located at Rocky Mountain three states trying to find her.
On a Up from m, she was
gown worn by her daughter, Mrs. Bessie Sylvester; ooo of the
Osteopathic Hospital in
By STEVE GERSTEL
bank employes. Men employes will be sporting blazers bn
Denver, undergoing Intensive foillld In the coronary unit of
MANCHESTER, N.H. (UP!)
"costume days" at the llank. Each Saturday plOrnlng, cake
care for a serious heart con· the Denver hospital, where her
doctors
reported
she
was
llis support dropping
dillon, Senate 'Democr~tic
and coffee are being served at the bank in observance of the
dramatically • Sen. Edmund S.
leader Mike Mansfield said suffering "acute chest pains"
anniversary:
and
was
forbidden
to
see
Muskie of Maine battled
the confirmation vote on
Kleindienst would be· post· anyone,lncludlng waiting FBI ,ewu:m~~·o·»"*:;~::::-. Saturday for the voles he needs
poned Indefinitely.
agents and members of her
in the New Hampshire primary
The Senate Judiciary Com· family.
to hang on as the front-runner
mittee has unanimously ap..
"She Is In serious condition,"
for
the
Democratic
proved the Kleindienst said her physician, Dr. David
presidential nomination.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio against the bill.
nomination, but reopeoed Its Garland. "We are trying to
Although Muskie showed no
AFUIO-·chief Frank King
Unions For Bill
hearings at his request to l!~vent a coronary thrombosis
viSible signs of a candidate In
said Saturday Hanna Coal Co.
The miners are members of COilsider the lmplic;~tions anll further damage to the
trouble as he tramped the
President Ralph Hatch was the United Mine Workers of raised by Mrs. Beard's memo, heart."
soowy streets of the state
"crying wolf" when he said America and are about 13,000 published earlier this week by
!11 Washington, Mansfield
soliciting votes, a poll by the
enactment of ·a House-passed stro11g in Ohio.
syndicated columnist Jack told UP! by telephone from his
Boston Globe showed that he
strip mine bill would force him
King said Hatch, by letting Anderson . Two subpoen~ home that · the nomination
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Sen· ha~ and was colltlnulng to slip
to close all his surface · UMW members come here, were Issued for Mrs. Bearil to could be delayed for several ate Democratic Leader Mike ba41y. campaign aides ·lor the
operatio11s· In eastern Ohio ,
hoped .to give the Impression testify, and FBI age11ts combed weeks.
Mansfield said Saturday the Maine senator confll'llled an
·"He Is making so much that the unions had joined
''Things will have to be held significance of President Nix· erosion ~ut did not spell out its
money off those strip mines management In opposing the
In abeyance until all this Is on'sChinatripfortheeaslngof extent.
your couldn't force him out let bill.
.
cleared up," he said. I'm sure world tensiOilS "looks evel!
Muskle Kee)lll Good Lead
alone get him to quit," said
"Well, we thlnk.'it Is very
Mr. Kleindienst would like to better with the passage of
With probjlbly more at stake
King In an exclusive interview Important that the 'legislators
hlive this mauer cleared up. time."
than any of the other candiwith UP!.
know that urllons are FOR the
He has said as lo11g as this is
But Mansfield, who will visit dates, Muskie was fighting for
going
one,.])e's
got
a
cloud,
a
Clllna
blmself later this year, a percentage of the vote"He's CfYini.&lt; wq)(,' . sp:t bill," said .~· "We are the -~
Res'~AW,gnt
King. "ffe ·l$"'ii!!l',..~cs most fjOwet!UI&lt;ilniorUn .Ohi,._...,
"f. ~ . • •
shadow.~ hta.lloed·~ he .. said·llhe politiOI!·Impacl fli the which he !laa.~called" tile,_
of 50 or 60 years ago wllere the one nillllon stl'ong - a11d Ire
BELFAST (UPI)-A bomb wants it removed."' ·
· Pre~nt's joUrney has been "phantom candidate" -that
boss, the owner of the company are for the bill.. The unions exploded without warntng siit.
TheBeard.memolsacentral "pretty well milked" already, would justify hill standing as
or somebody like that gets all don't agree with Hatch."
urday killing at least two point in published suggestions seven months ahead of the the leading contender and at
his employes together tile day
Gov. John J. Gilligan twice women and Injuring 72 other .that the Justice . Department, presidential election.
the same lime provide
before an election and tells this week has attacked Hatch persons In a downtown Beifast with Kleindienst's knowledge
"I think It's pretty well run momentum for the crucial
them if so and so is elected this and said his strip mine opera· restaurant crowded !Vith shot&gt;- as deputy attorney general, its course," he said of the primaries ahead.
country is going to go to hell. tio11s would tum eastern Ohio pers having afternoon tea.
dropped Its antitrust suit political mileage to be gained'
Despite the slippage, Muskie
He tells them to vote against Into 11 "Gobi ·Desert."
One gunman was killed and agalnat ITT In ~change for the from Nixo11's trip. "I don't maintained a comfortable lead
- this man ."
"Their hand ought to be call- anotber seriously wounded by reported offer by ITT's Shera- think there's much more In the over Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern
King referred to a meeting ed," said King. "I am 100 per pollee when the two men were ton Hotel Corp.; to underwrite way of a run to be had at this of South Dakota In the first test
Hatch held In cadiz with ~bout cent in accord with what the caughtplallting a bomb outside GOP convention costs.
time."
of voter sentiment Tuesday.
1.400 miners and their families governor is trying to accom- anotber Belfast building. Near
President Nixon nominated Meeting with reporters In his
Two poDs, taken within days
where he told them if the House pUsh."
Londonderry, police found the . Kleindienst to succeed At· capitol office Mansfield said. of each other by tbe Globe,
passed strip&lt;nlne reclamaUon
The bill Is presenUy In the hooded body of a member of torney Gelleral John N. Mit- he fell doubb about Nixon's showed that Muskle had
bill is enacted he would . he hands of a Senate Highways &amp; the Volunteer Ulster Defense chell, who left office March 1 to trip-parUcularly Its impact on dropped from a bigll of 65 per
forced to shut down all~ sur· Urba11 Affairs subcomm!Uee Regiment who had been shot direct Nixon's re-election u.s. ties With the Nationalist cent two mo11ths ago to 42 per
face operations and possibly and the official voice of the twice through the head a11d campaign. Kleindienst and Chillese government on cent as of Friday night.. Even
bis underground mines also. · Ohio AFIA::IO, it's weekly dumped on a snowy country MitcheJI have denied any Taiwan - have been "e•· more alarmlllg to the Muskie
Hatcjl gave several hMdred newsletter, said the longer it . road.
wrongdoing.
plained satisfactorily to cause was the decline from 49
of the miners a day off so they stays in either the committee
A British Army spokesman
Mrs. Beard's doctor said she anyone whose mind ill open to . to 42 per cent within the last
could come here and lobby or subcoiiUIIittee the chances said most of the customers in was stricken Thuraday mor· reason."
week.
for passage of a strong bill be- the Belfast restaurant were 11ing on a flight from
"The evidence 1s pretty clear
comes "slimmer and slim- women and children who were Washington to Denver, and there W!'fe 110 secret agreemer." ·
·
1 hurled ai:ross the room by the that she was given oxygen ments and no secret under·
"Hearings conducted by that · force of the blast )Vhlch killed aboard the plane. Her standings ... ," Mansfield said.
subcommittee were something at least two of the women. Washington doctor, Dr. L. M. "ln.my qplnlon, the trip looks
else," said the newsletter. '1t's Some of the InJured were work· Radetsky, was reported even better with the passage of
time.
very first session was dornJnat. men repairing dam8ge caused heading for Denver.
Sen. James 0. Eastland, )).
"The results achievedLORDSTOWN, 'Ohio (UP!) ed by Harold G. "Tony" Ed· by a bomb explosion two
By WilLIAM S. STEVENS
- The United Auto Workers wards, the strip mine lobbyist mo11ths ago at the back of the Miss., the Senate Judiciary crossing the bridge, opening
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)- The
restaurant.
(Continued on page H)
the gate and walking Into
Union (UAW) struck the giant · (Col!tinued on page 14)
certain parts of mainland pilot of a Mohawk airliner 'that
General Motors complex here
China were all worthwhile." crashed Into a home Friday
Saturday, idling 10,000 em·
The mere opening made to night, killing the pilot, copilot
ployes and shutting down. the
China is a "most significant and 15otherpersons, may have
only Chevrolet Vega assembly
maneuvered the plane at the
one," he said.
line fn the nation.
last
moment to avoid even
LONDON (UP!) -CommuLocal 1112 of the UAW, by a
Mansfield, whose field as a
Frantic ~ailway officials swung myself aboard.
"I'd 11ever been In an engine college professor was Far more deaths, It was reported
97 per cent vote, authorized the ters at five railroad staUons telephoned warnings to
strike because of a long- could hardly ~lieve their eyes stations along the way. cab before, There were a lot of ·Eastern affairs, has been in- Saturday.
An 11-man illvestlgatlng
smouldering dispute over whel! they saw a driverless Co.mmuters gaped as the dials and levers.' '!'here was a .vited by Chinese Premier Chou
producUon.Jine methods. The locomotive tearing dor.n the driverless engine whizzed by. catch saying 'emergency En-lai · alo11g with Senate team found the airplane's voice
line produces 100 of the small tracks.
The signalman at the disused brake on' ao I pulled It and Republican Leader Hugh Scott, I!Dd flight recorders .In "ex·
Vegas an hQur.
station of Marston ·Moor, 12 gradually ' the thing stopped," an e:q&gt;ert oo Oriental art, to cellent condltioo" Saturday.
The recorders, · which lliight
visit China later this year.
Some of the workers took
The lOO·ton locomotive, miles from the freight yard, he said.
explain the cause of the crash,
personal tools with them when whose brake.s had apparently got ready to act. Kenneth
were se11t to Washington for
The state-owl!ed British
the strike began at 2 a.m., not been set, rolled . out of Bristow, 43, ran alongside the
TOURS MOSCOW
indicating they expected along Harrogate freight yard in locomotive, now slow~ to 20 Hallways Issued a statement MOSCOW (UPI ) - Prime studies that might take several
northern England Friday.
walkout.
miles per hour by an uphill saying Bristow, a rallwayman Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rah· weeks, a spokesman said.
Killed In the crash were
for 27 years, "did a marvellous man of Bangladesh, with ~
A long downhUI stretch of grade.
At first the workers would
Robert
McAdam, South Hemp..
not let management personnel track enabled the runaway
"I was pelting alongside the job."
pledge of urgent · Soviet stead, N.Y., the pilot, the
His wife thought otherwise. economic help in his pocket,
leave the plant but relented engl11e to pick up speed, cab door wh(ch was slightly
later when Trwnbull CoMly reaching 60 miles per hour as it open," Bristow told newsmen "She Just played hell," Brl.stow turned tourist in Leningrad copilot of the Mohawk Airlines,
sheriff's deputies arrived on sped through the English later. "I grabbed hold of a said, "she said I could have with Prime Minister Alexei N. twin-englned FH227 turboprop,
14 of tile 4~ passengers, In·
countryside.
the scene.
hamlle, got a foothold a11d killed myself."
Kosygln as his guide Saturday. eluding four General Electric
executives; and one of six
residents of the $50,000 home in
Albany.
Thlr~..five persons were seriously 'injured, Including the
stewardess and three persons
In tbe house. The two others In
UNCOLN, Calli. (UPI)- A Christian and Missionary AI· way Patrol Sgt. Bill Champion. Robert Rose, at, Chico fireman direction, close to the center the house,-a wOilllln and a 6church bus filled with teen· llance Church, went off the
year-old boy-lluffered minor
The inside of the bus was and church member, •-had line .
agers on their way to a skiing right shoulder of the road, eovered with blood and brokell driven the eighJ...year-old bus
injuries. All 31 surviving
, weekend In California's High clipped two trees and flipped glass from shattered windows... for two f\!BrS. The road was a
District Attorney lniu passengers were seriously Jn.
Sierra overturned on a narrow over on its left .side against a ~Joodstailled plilows and . shortcut Rose was apparently Higgins said Rose told him he jured
rural road Saturday and third.
sleeping bags were Strewn over takillg to Interstate ~ which eased the bus over 011 the right
, !llllashed upside down against a
FI:-IDS FAVOR
the dead and Injured.
leads Into the Sierra and up 'to side and wheels slipped off onto
tree.
"When we arrived at the
MANILLA
( UP!)
Donner Pass, the group's the dirt shoulder of the road.
Three young people were scene there , were ap·
Assistant
Secretary
of State
Seven persons were admitted destination.
Rose, who was not irljured,
killed and 19 InJured, nv~ uroximately 15 to 20 persons to Hospitals, five in serious
described the accident as Marshall Green has so far
ser;iously:
lying IJI!I in the roadway and condition. The ·four most
At 7:30 a.m , about four "unreal.''
fount: favorable · reactions to
The bright blue and white another lour In the bus who serious were tnlen by ambu· miles east of LJIColn. the bus
One of the victims was President Ni&lt;o n's visit to
bus, carrying 56 young ~pie were very seriously or lance to Sacramento, 40 miles entered a curve : Rose told
identified as Roger Weiss. The I China in Japan and South
and adult counselors frolli the critically injured o~ possibly .away.
·
·
officers anoth·Jr vehicle ap.. other two, nof immedlatelv Korea, Americar. diplomatic
Chico, Calif. , Neighborhood. dead," said California HighChampion IIBid the driver, proached in tlu' "ppos; · ~ ideutiiied, were girls.
' _s9u!ces said Saturday.

Vega Lines
Closed

BOX

5-10-10

Ill-MONTH SUPPLY
MARSEILLES, France
(UPI) - U.S. narcotics
agents believe smugglers
have stockpUed euou£b raw
heroin in tbe Marseille• area
to supply addicts In the
United States lor 18 months,
It was reported Saturday.
Tbe report In the
newspaper Mertdlonai·La
France, quoting a "blgh U.
S. official working closely
with the Bureau of Narcotics
and Dangerous DrU£S,"
followed the French capture
Thursday o,l HO pounds of
pure heroin bidden in a
converted shrimp boat ln.
Marseilles.

reaffirm his commitment to
In a sPeeCh to the Texas the 1955 Mutual Security
State AFI..OO In Galveston, Treaty between. the United
Hwnphrey said his proposal States and Nationalist China,
would provide 250,000 Jobs for to sell F4 PhantoiJI jet fighters
young persons through a five- to the Nationalists, and :1Q,
fold expansion of tlie Neighbor. increase patrolling of the ~
hood Youth Corps.
Taiwan Straits by the U.S. 7th
Muskle said In a statement Fleet.
that his bill to provide $8$
Rep. Shirley T. Chisholm, 0.
million to Israel for aid to N.Y., c!Jarged that Nixon "lied
Jewlah lrnmlgrants from the to the American people" when
Soviet Union now has 37 he said in January that the
cosponsors.
administration 's wage and
Ashbrook called on Nixon to price controls were working.

SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972

At

DAYTIME 30's

FERTILIZER

VOL VII ~0 5

on a statewide network Sunday ·
evening .
Supporters of Rep. Wilbur D.
MIUs, O.Ark . have put on a
well.flnaqced television cam·
paign to solicit write-in votes
for him . Mills himself has not
campaigDed In New Hampshire recently.
Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey,
who Is I!Ot on the .New Hampshire ballot, proposed a
comprehensive manpower program to create ,·one· million

Ln Bom b B. la st

LIMIT

PERSON

CHARM
IN
.'

home."
Nixon was spending the
weekend at the Florida White
House at Key Biscayne, He Is ·
being challenged In New
Hampshire by liberal Rep.
Paul N. McCiosl!:ey of
calliornla and conservative
Rep. John_ M. Ashbrook of
Ohio.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskle, the
acknowledged fronH'unner ;
SeQ. George S. McGovern; Sen.
Vance Hartke and Los Angeles

Two Women Die

8.TO 'A·
BARGAINLAND ONLY

poll showed that OM of
every four Republican wters
In the state was undecided
whom to vote for iii . the
,Tueaday primary. '
: The loudest applauae for
Nixon came when Volpe, the
secretary of (ransportation,
told the appreciation dinner
audience In Manchester that
"In the thretl years before
January
1969,
300,000
Amer!C1Ul8 went to Vietnam
and In three years sinCe then

Kleindienst
Has to Wait

PURCHASE

PC. A·LUMINUM
10" FRY PAN
COLORTONE 1 QT LIPPED SAUCEPAN
3 Ql SAUCEPOT W/COVER
COOK A
2 QT SAUCEPAN W/OOVER

~test

McGovern, who has set a
goal of 25 per cent for the
nation's first primary, started
with 18 per cent two months
ago, rose to 31 per ce11t last
week but then slipped back to
26 per cent.
An unusual aspect of the poll,
which could still put Muskie
over the :;o per cent level next
week, showed :» pe~ cent of
Democratic voters 'still undecided four days before they
go to the poDs, double the
amount a week earlier.
The other candidates, those
on the ballot and those waging
write-in efforts, were not a
factor In the two polis, sharing
12 per cent.
McGovern said he would
consider 'It a11 upset if he held
Muskle below 50 per cent of the
vote . "A few weeks ago,
Senator Muskie said II he didn't
get 50 - ·cell! of th"~' he'll
pud ~tor· the
~ said.
''That's what I intend tb do."

!are:"

Asked about his own recent
drop In the poll, McGovern
said, "I know we're going to do
well. I think I kirow more about
the voters of New Hampshire
than somebody at the other end
of a telephone line In Boston."
Bareheaded but wanned· by
a greatcoat with huge collar,
Muskie started campaigning
early In the morning north of
Manches!er, speaking at a
luncheonette and touring a
shopping center which was
ooarly empty because of the
hour.
Candidate Challeqes
In Nashua, Ned Coli, a 32-

year-old native of Hartford,
Conn., who Is on the ballot but
too young to serve as president,
accosted Muskie In front of the
sel!ator's headquarters. ChaJ.
lenglng Muskie to speak out on
the "gut Issues," Coli tried to
keep the Maine senator In a
sidewalk debate.
But after Ustelling patiently,
Muskie reminded Coli of a-busy
schedule and added, "I'm
campaigning In seven states
you are not entered ln ."
Whell Coil kept . pressing,
Muskie broke away, charging,
"you're not Interested in
anything I say."
McGovern Greets Voters
In a rniddle~lass neighbor.
hood In Nashua, and In multi·
family houses In Manchester,
Muskle knocked on doors to
solicit votes and hand out
sample ballots. In his brief
speeches, and In his face-to- ·
fl,ce convwsaUona with wters,
Muskie repeatedly stressed
that he was a New Englander
and a l!eighbor and that
without 8upport from his own
~1011 he could go nowhere.
During the same period,
McGovern, dwarfed by WashIngton Redsklns guard Ray
Shoenke at his side, greeted
shoppers oo a bright sunny day
In Plalnstow and Salem and In
a shopping center In Bedford,
the same one Muskie had
visited two hours earlier.
McGovern's crowd was
smaller and younger but just
as enthusiastic at seeing the
South Dakota senator as they
had been .earlier when Muskie
made his way through the
mall.

:::::swc ··m
DRAFr ACCEPrED
TAIPEI
(UPI)
Generalissimo Chiang Kal·
sbek, M, who expressed the
desire to retire after nearly a
quarter of a century as
president of Nationalist
China, will accept a draft
aud run for a fifth six-year
term, a party spokesman
said Saturday.
Chen Yu·cblng, spokes·
man for the ruling
Kuomintang Nationalist
party on Taiwan, said Ching
"wUI act In accordance with
what the nation desires."
Chiaug also Is director·
genersl of tbe Kuomintang.

$45 Tuition

Is Offered
•
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The
Ohio Education Department
has announced parents of
nearly 300,000 students attending parochial schools in
Ohio will be receiving ap..
plications in the next few days
for $45-per'Jlupil state subsidy
payments.
Herbert D. Brum, State
&amp;hool Finance Director, said
under the new state budget
parents of parochial school
children will receive up to $45
per pupil each semester as
partial reimbursement ·of
tuition costs.
.. The guidelines follow
closely the state statute which
provides payments to pare11ts
of pupils 1.ttendlng state ap·
proved non-public schools,
effective March . 20," Brwn
said.

Nun Denies
Kissinger
Kidnap Plot
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Sister Elizabeth Me Alister,
one of the Harrisburg Seven,
said here Saturday the~~e was
no plot to kidnap presidential
advisor Henry Kissinger.
The 32-year-old nun from
New York, here to raise moooy
for the Harrisburg Defense
Committee, Is 011 trial along
with Father Philip Berrigan
and five others In connection
with the alleged kidnap plot.
She said she would not con·
lest the llccuracy of letters
attributed to her and Berrigan
in which Kissinger was men·
tioned. The letters have been
read into evidence in the trial
at Harrisburg, Pa .
However, she said U1ey were
not In proper context.
''There is a difference be·
tween ideas expressed in let·
ters and co11versations and a
co11splracy," she said.
Appearing before newsmen
a't St. John College along with
Miss Ann Berrigan, a 27-year·
old niece of Fr. Berrigan,
Sister Elizabeth also denied
there was any plot to blow ur
heating tunnels In Washingtor.
D. C. to protest the VIetnam
war.
However, she conceded that
some among the Harrisburg
Seven look part in raids on
draft board offices where records were deatroyed.
"I acted In a sence of ChrJa.
Uan respOrlsibility, as 1 see it,
to say something a~t the
(Continued 011 page 14)

L.

�'

...

~-

•

l

-.
..

,.

:Reptiblicms Cheer 'Preside:Rt in New Hamps
.

.

'

•

e

B7 United Pftu llderuiiOIIII (N.H.) Unloft Leada' sata Its more than 400,000 have come Mayor Sam Yorty will debate public service jobs,

OPEN SUNDAY
12 NOON UNTIL 6

On the last weellend before
New Hainplhlre•s preslclentlal
primary, the nation's first,
Republican regulars' held an
atravanganza for. President
Nixon and Democratic candidates planned'' a 90-mlnute
televised debate. .
Even lis cabinet members
Elliot L. Richardson and John
A. Volpe Dew In a chartered
plane to their native New
England to campaign for Nimn
Friday night, the Manchester

RIGHT RESERVED m·

UMIT QUANTITIES .

WITH COU·PON
AND

OR MORE
OPEN
SUNDAY
12 NOON
TILL 6

EXTRA SPECIAL
LIMIT 1

CANNON EXTRA HEAVY

'

99SET

PARROT GREEN ONLY

'

;

'

TOILET TISSUE

4 ROUS

.IT'S GARDEN TIME

~;

50 LB. BAG

EA.

BOUNTY
TOWELS

ONLY

JUMBO
ROLLS

FOR

BAG

Adding
L ustre

17 Ki11ed
In Crash

Locomotive -Runs Wild

Three Killed in.Church Bus

,·

.MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
I

Mus ·e Fights
To Hold Lead

Tun·e 1•8

Hatch Kidding

I

I

I

PAGE 13

Poll Hints of Trouble

WASHINGTON (UPI) _; A Senate vote on Richard G.
Klelndlenat's nomll!etion for attorney general was delayed In·
definitely Saturday when a key lobbyist sought for questioning
about a Justice Deparimelll antitrust case was found gravely ill
In a De11ver hospital.
Mrs. Dlta D. Beard, 53, the Washington lobbyist for InternaUonal Telephone and Telegraph Corp. (ITT), had been
sought by FBI agents as the purported author of a memorandum
linking the goverrunenfs settlement of a comroversial ITT
.MRS: MARIE WAT!klN, left, WIU be maldng five of the
merger proposal a11d an rri' subsidiary's $400,000 offer to help
late I~ ~stumes to he worn by women employes of the
finance the 1972 Republican Natiol!al Convention.
Pomeroy National Bank, ooo day a week for the remainder of
the year as a part of the bank's tooth birthday lirullversary.
Afew hours after Mrs. Beard
Mrs. Watson is Pictured fitting a "leg of mutton" sleeve In a
was located at Rocky Mountain three states trying to find her.
On a Up from m, she was
gown worn by her daughter, Mrs. Bessie Sylvester; ooo of the
Osteopathic Hospital in
By STEVE GERSTEL
bank employes. Men employes will be sporting blazers bn
Denver, undergoing Intensive foillld In the coronary unit of
MANCHESTER, N.H. (UP!)
"costume days" at the llank. Each Saturday plOrnlng, cake
care for a serious heart con· the Denver hospital, where her
doctors
reported
she
was
llis support dropping
dillon, Senate 'Democr~tic
and coffee are being served at the bank in observance of the
dramatically • Sen. Edmund S.
leader Mike Mansfield said suffering "acute chest pains"
anniversary:
and
was
forbidden
to
see
Muskie of Maine battled
the confirmation vote on
Kleindienst would be· post· anyone,lncludlng waiting FBI ,ewu:m~~·o·»"*:;~::::-. Saturday for the voles he needs
poned Indefinitely.
agents and members of her
in the New Hampshire primary
The Senate Judiciary Com· family.
to hang on as the front-runner
mittee has unanimously ap..
"She Is In serious condition,"
for
the
Democratic
proved the Kleindienst said her physician, Dr. David
presidential nomination.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio against the bill.
nomination, but reopeoed Its Garland. "We are trying to
Although Muskie showed no
AFUIO-·chief Frank King
Unions For Bill
hearings at his request to l!~vent a coronary thrombosis
viSible signs of a candidate In
said Saturday Hanna Coal Co.
The miners are members of COilsider the lmplic;~tions anll further damage to the
trouble as he tramped the
President Ralph Hatch was the United Mine Workers of raised by Mrs. Beard's memo, heart."
soowy streets of the state
"crying wolf" when he said America and are about 13,000 published earlier this week by
!11 Washington, Mansfield
soliciting votes, a poll by the
enactment of ·a House-passed stro11g in Ohio.
syndicated columnist Jack told UP! by telephone from his
Boston Globe showed that he
strip mine bill would force him
King said Hatch, by letting Anderson . Two subpoen~ home that · the nomination
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Sen· ha~ and was colltlnulng to slip
to close all his surface · UMW members come here, were Issued for Mrs. Bearil to could be delayed for several ate Democratic Leader Mike ba41y. campaign aides ·lor the
operatio11s· In eastern Ohio ,
hoped .to give the Impression testify, and FBI age11ts combed weeks.
Mansfield said Saturday the Maine senator confll'llled an
·"He Is making so much that the unions had joined
''Things will have to be held significance of President Nix· erosion ~ut did not spell out its
money off those strip mines management In opposing the
In abeyance until all this Is on'sChinatripfortheeaslngof extent.
your couldn't force him out let bill.
.
cleared up," he said. I'm sure world tensiOilS "looks evel!
Muskle Kee)lll Good Lead
alone get him to quit," said
"Well, we thlnk.'it Is very
Mr. Kleindienst would like to better with the passage of
With probjlbly more at stake
King In an exclusive interview Important that the 'legislators
hlive this mauer cleared up. time."
than any of the other candiwith UP!.
know that urllons are FOR the
He has said as lo11g as this is
But Mansfield, who will visit dates, Muskie was fighting for
going
one,.])e's
got
a
cloud,
a
Clllna
blmself later this year, a percentage of the vote"He's CfYini.&lt; wq)(,' . sp:t bill," said .~· "We are the -~
Res'~AW,gnt
King. "ffe ·l$"'ii!!l',..~cs most fjOwet!UI&lt;ilniorUn .Ohi,._...,
"f. ~ . • •
shadow.~ hta.lloed·~ he .. said·llhe politiOI!·Impacl fli the which he !laa.~called" tile,_
of 50 or 60 years ago wllere the one nillllon stl'ong - a11d Ire
BELFAST (UPI)-A bomb wants it removed."' ·
· Pre~nt's joUrney has been "phantom candidate" -that
boss, the owner of the company are for the bill.. The unions exploded without warntng siit.
TheBeard.memolsacentral "pretty well milked" already, would justify hill standing as
or somebody like that gets all don't agree with Hatch."
urday killing at least two point in published suggestions seven months ahead of the the leading contender and at
his employes together tile day
Gov. John J. Gilligan twice women and Injuring 72 other .that the Justice . Department, presidential election.
the same lime provide
before an election and tells this week has attacked Hatch persons In a downtown Beifast with Kleindienst's knowledge
"I think It's pretty well run momentum for the crucial
them if so and so is elected this and said his strip mine opera· restaurant crowded !Vith shot&gt;- as deputy attorney general, its course," he said of the primaries ahead.
country is going to go to hell. tio11s would tum eastern Ohio pers having afternoon tea.
dropped Its antitrust suit political mileage to be gained'
Despite the slippage, Muskie
He tells them to vote against Into 11 "Gobi ·Desert."
One gunman was killed and agalnat ITT In ~change for the from Nixo11's trip. "I don't maintained a comfortable lead
- this man ."
"Their hand ought to be call- anotber seriously wounded by reported offer by ITT's Shera- think there's much more In the over Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern
King referred to a meeting ed," said King. "I am 100 per pollee when the two men were ton Hotel Corp.; to underwrite way of a run to be had at this of South Dakota In the first test
Hatch held In cadiz with ~bout cent in accord with what the caughtplallting a bomb outside GOP convention costs.
time."
of voter sentiment Tuesday.
1.400 miners and their families governor is trying to accom- anotber Belfast building. Near
President Nixon nominated Meeting with reporters In his
Two poDs, taken within days
where he told them if the House pUsh."
Londonderry, police found the . Kleindienst to succeed At· capitol office Mansfield said. of each other by tbe Globe,
passed strip&lt;nlne reclamaUon
The bill Is presenUy In the hooded body of a member of torney Gelleral John N. Mit- he fell doubb about Nixon's showed that Muskle had
bill is enacted he would . he hands of a Senate Highways &amp; the Volunteer Ulster Defense chell, who left office March 1 to trip-parUcularly Its impact on dropped from a bigll of 65 per
forced to shut down all~ sur· Urba11 Affairs subcomm!Uee Regiment who had been shot direct Nixon's re-election u.s. ties With the Nationalist cent two mo11ths ago to 42 per
face operations and possibly and the official voice of the twice through the head a11d campaign. Kleindienst and Chillese government on cent as of Friday night.. Even
bis underground mines also. · Ohio AFIA::IO, it's weekly dumped on a snowy country MitcheJI have denied any Taiwan - have been "e•· more alarmlllg to the Muskie
Hatcjl gave several hMdred newsletter, said the longer it . road.
wrongdoing.
plained satisfactorily to cause was the decline from 49
of the miners a day off so they stays in either the committee
A British Army spokesman
Mrs. Beard's doctor said she anyone whose mind ill open to . to 42 per cent within the last
could come here and lobby or subcoiiUIIittee the chances said most of the customers in was stricken Thuraday mor· reason."
week.
for passage of a strong bill be- the Belfast restaurant were 11ing on a flight from
"The evidence 1s pretty clear
comes "slimmer and slim- women and children who were Washington to Denver, and there W!'fe 110 secret agreemer." ·
·
1 hurled ai:ross the room by the that she was given oxygen ments and no secret under·
"Hearings conducted by that · force of the blast )Vhlch killed aboard the plane. Her standings ... ," Mansfield said.
subcommittee were something at least two of the women. Washington doctor, Dr. L. M. "ln.my qplnlon, the trip looks
else," said the newsletter. '1t's Some of the InJured were work· Radetsky, was reported even better with the passage of
time.
very first session was dornJnat. men repairing dam8ge caused heading for Denver.
Sen. James 0. Eastland, )).
"The results achievedLORDSTOWN, 'Ohio (UP!) ed by Harold G. "Tony" Ed· by a bomb explosion two
By WilLIAM S. STEVENS
- The United Auto Workers wards, the strip mine lobbyist mo11ths ago at the back of the Miss., the Senate Judiciary crossing the bridge, opening
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)- The
restaurant.
(Continued on page H)
the gate and walking Into
Union (UAW) struck the giant · (Col!tinued on page 14)
certain parts of mainland pilot of a Mohawk airliner 'that
General Motors complex here
China were all worthwhile." crashed Into a home Friday
Saturday, idling 10,000 em·
The mere opening made to night, killing the pilot, copilot
ployes and shutting down. the
China is a "most significant and 15otherpersons, may have
only Chevrolet Vega assembly
maneuvered the plane at the
one," he said.
line fn the nation.
last
moment to avoid even
LONDON (UP!) -CommuLocal 1112 of the UAW, by a
Mansfield, whose field as a
Frantic ~ailway officials swung myself aboard.
"I'd 11ever been In an engine college professor was Far more deaths, It was reported
97 per cent vote, authorized the ters at five railroad staUons telephoned warnings to
strike because of a long- could hardly ~lieve their eyes stations along the way. cab before, There were a lot of ·Eastern affairs, has been in- Saturday.
An 11-man illvestlgatlng
smouldering dispute over whel! they saw a driverless Co.mmuters gaped as the dials and levers.' '!'here was a .vited by Chinese Premier Chou
producUon.Jine methods. The locomotive tearing dor.n the driverless engine whizzed by. catch saying 'emergency En-lai · alo11g with Senate team found the airplane's voice
line produces 100 of the small tracks.
The signalman at the disused brake on' ao I pulled It and Republican Leader Hugh Scott, I!Dd flight recorders .In "ex·
Vegas an hQur.
station of Marston ·Moor, 12 gradually ' the thing stopped," an e:q&gt;ert oo Oriental art, to cellent condltioo" Saturday.
The recorders, · which lliight
visit China later this year.
Some of the workers took
The lOO·ton locomotive, miles from the freight yard, he said.
explain the cause of the crash,
personal tools with them when whose brake.s had apparently got ready to act. Kenneth
were se11t to Washington for
The state-owl!ed British
the strike began at 2 a.m., not been set, rolled . out of Bristow, 43, ran alongside the
TOURS MOSCOW
indicating they expected along Harrogate freight yard in locomotive, now slow~ to 20 Hallways Issued a statement MOSCOW (UPI ) - Prime studies that might take several
northern England Friday.
walkout.
miles per hour by an uphill saying Bristow, a rallwayman Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rah· weeks, a spokesman said.
Killed In the crash were
for 27 years, "did a marvellous man of Bangladesh, with ~
A long downhUI stretch of grade.
At first the workers would
Robert
McAdam, South Hemp..
not let management personnel track enabled the runaway
"I was pelting alongside the job."
pledge of urgent · Soviet stead, N.Y., the pilot, the
His wife thought otherwise. economic help in his pocket,
leave the plant but relented engl11e to pick up speed, cab door wh(ch was slightly
later when Trwnbull CoMly reaching 60 miles per hour as it open," Bristow told newsmen "She Just played hell," Brl.stow turned tourist in Leningrad copilot of the Mohawk Airlines,
sheriff's deputies arrived on sped through the English later. "I grabbed hold of a said, "she said I could have with Prime Minister Alexei N. twin-englned FH227 turboprop,
14 of tile 4~ passengers, In·
countryside.
the scene.
hamlle, got a foothold a11d killed myself."
Kosygln as his guide Saturday. eluding four General Electric
executives; and one of six
residents of the $50,000 home in
Albany.
Thlr~..five persons were seriously 'injured, Including the
stewardess and three persons
In tbe house. The two others In
UNCOLN, Calli. (UPI)- A Christian and Missionary AI· way Patrol Sgt. Bill Champion. Robert Rose, at, Chico fireman direction, close to the center the house,-a wOilllln and a 6church bus filled with teen· llance Church, went off the
year-old boy-lluffered minor
The inside of the bus was and church member, •-had line .
agers on their way to a skiing right shoulder of the road, eovered with blood and brokell driven the eighJ...year-old bus
injuries. All 31 surviving
, weekend In California's High clipped two trees and flipped glass from shattered windows... for two f\!BrS. The road was a
District Attorney lniu passengers were seriously Jn.
Sierra overturned on a narrow over on its left .side against a ~Joodstailled plilows and . shortcut Rose was apparently Higgins said Rose told him he jured
rural road Saturday and third.
sleeping bags were Strewn over takillg to Interstate ~ which eased the bus over 011 the right
, !llllashed upside down against a
FI:-IDS FAVOR
the dead and Injured.
leads Into the Sierra and up 'to side and wheels slipped off onto
tree.
"When we arrived at the
MANILLA
( UP!)
Donner Pass, the group's the dirt shoulder of the road.
Three young people were scene there , were ap·
Assistant
Secretary
of State
Seven persons were admitted destination.
Rose, who was not irljured,
killed and 19 InJured, nv~ uroximately 15 to 20 persons to Hospitals, five in serious
described the accident as Marshall Green has so far
ser;iously:
lying IJI!I in the roadway and condition. The ·four most
At 7:30 a.m , about four "unreal.''
fount: favorable · reactions to
The bright blue and white another lour In the bus who serious were tnlen by ambu· miles east of LJIColn. the bus
One of the victims was President Ni&lt;o n's visit to
bus, carrying 56 young ~pie were very seriously or lance to Sacramento, 40 miles entered a curve : Rose told
identified as Roger Weiss. The I China in Japan and South
and adult counselors frolli the critically injured o~ possibly .away.
·
·
officers anoth·Jr vehicle ap.. other two, nof immedlatelv Korea, Americar. diplomatic
Chico, Calif. , Neighborhood. dead," said California HighChampion IIBid the driver, proached in tlu' "ppos; · ~ ideutiiied, were girls.
' _s9u!ces said Saturday.

Vega Lines
Closed

BOX

5-10-10

Ill-MONTH SUPPLY
MARSEILLES, France
(UPI) - U.S. narcotics
agents believe smugglers
have stockpUed euou£b raw
heroin in tbe Marseille• area
to supply addicts In the
United States lor 18 months,
It was reported Saturday.
Tbe report In the
newspaper Mertdlonai·La
France, quoting a "blgh U.
S. official working closely
with the Bureau of Narcotics
and Dangerous DrU£S,"
followed the French capture
Thursday o,l HO pounds of
pure heroin bidden in a
converted shrimp boat ln.
Marseilles.

reaffirm his commitment to
In a sPeeCh to the Texas the 1955 Mutual Security
State AFI..OO In Galveston, Treaty between. the United
Hwnphrey said his proposal States and Nationalist China,
would provide 250,000 Jobs for to sell F4 PhantoiJI jet fighters
young persons through a five- to the Nationalists, and :1Q,
fold expansion of tlie Neighbor. increase patrolling of the ~
hood Youth Corps.
Taiwan Straits by the U.S. 7th
Muskle said In a statement Fleet.
that his bill to provide $8$
Rep. Shirley T. Chisholm, 0.
million to Israel for aid to N.Y., c!Jarged that Nixon "lied
Jewlah lrnmlgrants from the to the American people" when
Soviet Union now has 37 he said in January that the
cosponsors.
administration 's wage and
Ashbrook called on Nixon to price controls were working.

SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972

At

DAYTIME 30's

FERTILIZER

VOL VII ~0 5

on a statewide network Sunday ·
evening .
Supporters of Rep. Wilbur D.
MIUs, O.Ark . have put on a
well.flnaqced television cam·
paign to solicit write-in votes
for him . Mills himself has not
campaigDed In New Hampshire recently.
Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey,
who Is I!Ot on the .New Hampshire ballot, proposed a
comprehensive manpower program to create ,·one· million

Ln Bom b B. la st

LIMIT

PERSON

CHARM
IN
.'

home."
Nixon was spending the
weekend at the Florida White
House at Key Biscayne, He Is ·
being challenged In New
Hampshire by liberal Rep.
Paul N. McCiosl!:ey of
calliornla and conservative
Rep. John_ M. Ashbrook of
Ohio.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskle, the
acknowledged fronH'unner ;
SeQ. George S. McGovern; Sen.
Vance Hartke and Los Angeles

Two Women Die

8.TO 'A·
BARGAINLAND ONLY

poll showed that OM of
every four Republican wters
In the state was undecided
whom to vote for iii . the
,Tueaday primary. '
: The loudest applauae for
Nixon came when Volpe, the
secretary of (ransportation,
told the appreciation dinner
audience In Manchester that
"In the thretl years before
January
1969,
300,000
Amer!C1Ul8 went to Vietnam
and In three years sinCe then

Kleindienst
Has to Wait

PURCHASE

PC. A·LUMINUM
10" FRY PAN
COLORTONE 1 QT LIPPED SAUCEPAN
3 Ql SAUCEPOT W/COVER
COOK A
2 QT SAUCEPAN W/OOVER

~test

McGovern, who has set a
goal of 25 per cent for the
nation's first primary, started
with 18 per cent two months
ago, rose to 31 per ce11t last
week but then slipped back to
26 per cent.
An unusual aspect of the poll,
which could still put Muskie
over the :;o per cent level next
week, showed :» pe~ cent of
Democratic voters 'still undecided four days before they
go to the poDs, double the
amount a week earlier.
The other candidates, those
on the ballot and those waging
write-in efforts, were not a
factor In the two polis, sharing
12 per cent.
McGovern said he would
consider 'It a11 upset if he held
Muskle below 50 per cent of the
vote . "A few weeks ago,
Senator Muskie said II he didn't
get 50 - ·cell! of th"~' he'll
pud ~tor· the
~ said.
''That's what I intend tb do."

!are:"

Asked about his own recent
drop In the poll, McGovern
said, "I know we're going to do
well. I think I kirow more about
the voters of New Hampshire
than somebody at the other end
of a telephone line In Boston."
Bareheaded but wanned· by
a greatcoat with huge collar,
Muskie started campaigning
early In the morning north of
Manches!er, speaking at a
luncheonette and touring a
shopping center which was
ooarly empty because of the
hour.
Candidate Challeqes
In Nashua, Ned Coli, a 32-

year-old native of Hartford,
Conn., who Is on the ballot but
too young to serve as president,
accosted Muskie In front of the
sel!ator's headquarters. ChaJ.
lenglng Muskie to speak out on
the "gut Issues," Coli tried to
keep the Maine senator In a
sidewalk debate.
But after Ustelling patiently,
Muskie reminded Coli of a-busy
schedule and added, "I'm
campaigning In seven states
you are not entered ln ."
Whell Coil kept . pressing,
Muskie broke away, charging,
"you're not Interested in
anything I say."
McGovern Greets Voters
In a rniddle~lass neighbor.
hood In Nashua, and In multi·
family houses In Manchester,
Muskle knocked on doors to
solicit votes and hand out
sample ballots. In his brief
speeches, and In his face-to- ·
fl,ce convwsaUona with wters,
Muskie repeatedly stressed
that he was a New Englander
and a l!eighbor and that
without 8upport from his own
~1011 he could go nowhere.
During the same period,
McGovern, dwarfed by WashIngton Redsklns guard Ray
Shoenke at his side, greeted
shoppers oo a bright sunny day
In Plalnstow and Salem and In
a shopping center In Bedford,
the same one Muskie had
visited two hours earlier.
McGovern's crowd was
smaller and younger but just
as enthusiastic at seeing the
South Dakota senator as they
had been .earlier when Muskie
made his way through the
mall.

:::::swc ··m
DRAFr ACCEPrED
TAIPEI
(UPI)
Generalissimo Chiang Kal·
sbek, M, who expressed the
desire to retire after nearly a
quarter of a century as
president of Nationalist
China, will accept a draft
aud run for a fifth six-year
term, a party spokesman
said Saturday.
Chen Yu·cblng, spokes·
man for the ruling
Kuomintang Nationalist
party on Taiwan, said Ching
"wUI act In accordance with
what the nation desires."
Chiaug also Is director·
genersl of tbe Kuomintang.

$45 Tuition

Is Offered
•
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The
Ohio Education Department
has announced parents of
nearly 300,000 students attending parochial schools in
Ohio will be receiving ap..
plications in the next few days
for $45-per'Jlupil state subsidy
payments.
Herbert D. Brum, State
&amp;hool Finance Director, said
under the new state budget
parents of parochial school
children will receive up to $45
per pupil each semester as
partial reimbursement ·of
tuition costs.
.. The guidelines follow
closely the state statute which
provides payments to pare11ts
of pupils 1.ttendlng state ap·
proved non-public schools,
effective March . 20," Brwn
said.

Nun Denies
Kissinger
Kidnap Plot
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Sister Elizabeth Me Alister,
one of the Harrisburg Seven,
said here Saturday the~~e was
no plot to kidnap presidential
advisor Henry Kissinger.
The 32-year-old nun from
New York, here to raise moooy
for the Harrisburg Defense
Committee, Is 011 trial along
with Father Philip Berrigan
and five others In connection
with the alleged kidnap plot.
She said she would not con·
lest the llccuracy of letters
attributed to her and Berrigan
in which Kissinger was men·
tioned. The letters have been
read into evidence in the trial
at Harrisburg, Pa .
However, she said U1ey were
not In proper context.
''There is a difference be·
tween ideas expressed in let·
ters and co11versations and a
co11splracy," she said.
Appearing before newsmen
a't St. John College along with
Miss Ann Berrigan, a 27-year·
old niece of Fr. Berrigan,
Sister Elizabeth also denied
there was any plot to blow ur
heating tunnels In Washingtor.
D. C. to protest the VIetnam
war.
However, she conceded that
some among the Harrisburg
Seven look part in raids on
draft board offices where records were deatroyed.
"I acted In a sence of ChrJa.
Uan respOrlsibility, as 1 see it,
to say something a~t the
(Continued 011 page 14)

L.

�.,
•

c

14-Tbe ~Times. Sentinel, Smday. March 5, 1972.

Mrs. Beard Found

~::~.r;;:;~.:.~.Q.~*;.'J$!0 I

JUt' LJd

Bobcats Romp over BG .

Kidnap

EAGLES WIN
'ROCK' SPRINGS
Ea•tera 111gb School turned
(Continued froni Jllile 13)
tbe tables on North GaiDa
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) .:... Tom Corde, estab1Jal1ed the 12-0 lead and heid a 19-1 adD~R (UPI) -Mrs. Dita condition.
.. Umversity,
·
"'"'ft•," the 111111 --.
;.....,_
here Saturdly Dlgbt In the oh10
~tting ' two school's Individual field goal vantage before five mlnul4!8 ne-''.......,_,.
Colorado, and said she was
D. Beard, sought for questionFBI agents waited . in t11e "physically aU right but upset
finals of the Class A ~ec­ records wlth its · sizzling percentage mart by sinking 13 had elape'ed.
acld1n8 that lbe lnot frlcbtening In 'the ITT antitnlst case, corridor outside her room to
Uoaal
Basketball
toursbooting,
Jwnped
Off
to
a
19-1'
of
14
for
92.9
per
cent.
Previous
''Our-early
fantastic
shooting
ed
by the trial.
over the controversy."
was found hospitalized give her a subpoena which
nament, avenging two lead and rolled to an easy 101&gt;- · recQrd was Greg McDivitt's threw Bowling Green off
"I am tlnd of awed by tile
"She Is the most marvelous
Saturday suffering from a would require her to return to
defeali
In
regular
seuon
8i
win
over
Bowling
Green
nine
of
10
against
Western
stride,"
said
a
happy
Oblo
judge
(R. Dl:tm Herman) haYperson you have ever met," he
serious heart condition.
Washington for an appearance said.
play with a thumping 7f.55 here_ Saturdav afternoon to Mi
. 'chigan in llrnl.
lcoach Jim Snvder after the _ing_thll power 0- oar Uve.,"
Her doctor, Victor Uszka, before the Senate Judiciary
victory
over
North
Gallli.
finish
in
a
tie
'with
Toledo
for
Corde
added
a
free
throw
to
g'ame. Snyder has coached bla !be uld, "Pirtlcullrly when
· "Mrs. Beord was admitted
flew to Den.ver from Washing- Committee. The agents refused
Tbe Eagle• advance to the the Mid-American Conference his 13 field goab and finished Bobcats to six conference . :~ ::t!n~!. or eiiJeton and said Mrs . Beard to let anyone other than doctors Friday evening with angina
Dlslrlcl
Tournament at champlonship.
pectoris, an ~ufflciency of
as the game's leading scorer UUes, a MAC record. Ohio Is 14''We knew It wu
. ""'""to be
wanted to testify about her or nurses onto the floor where
ChUUcothe thlo weekend.
arterial
circulation
to
the
with
'l1
poinb.
All
five
Ohio
10
overall
this
season.
,..u.
knowledge of the Justice Mrs. Beard was staying.
By
Quarters
The
Bobcats
and
Rockets
starters were In double fljure5,
heart," said Dr. David Garland
·
"
awful and ltla,"lbe uld of the.
Department's settlement of the
No one, including the of the Osteopathic Hospital.
Eaotern
18 34 54 70 botli finished with 7-3 league Dave BaD and Tom Riccardi
"Corde
.
Is
just
super,"
trial. ·~t we aU can learn by
ITT antitrust action, but authorities, was allowed to see
N.
Gallla
15
%7
tz
55
-rlence,"
marks
and
will
tangle
Tuesday
"She was suffering acute chest
had 17 apiece and Bob Howell Snyder said of his shooting the -..because of her condition she Mrs. Beard on the orders of pains.
night at Bowling Green In a and Todd LaUch loased In 13 slar. "He's just something
Miss Berrigan, not lnwlftll
could not testify soon.
Ustka.
'playoff
game.
conference
Mrs. Beard, reported to be
each.
e•. " He's been fantastic for In ihe trial_berielf, llld !be
Mrs. Beard apparently suf"Any attempt to get Mrs. one of the highest paid lobToledo made it to the playoffs
Bowling
Green,
which
wound
us
aU year.
feels "a giut _..II oJrtnie
fered chest pains on an ~ trip Beard to WaShington within the
by edging Kent State 5!1-S7 up Its worst season In history
byists- In Washington, first
Bowling Green coach Pat at the Invasion II. prjvacy of
from Washington to Denver, next few days would be a total
Saturday.
suffered
the
chest
pains
Thurswith a 4-~ slate, was led by llalley . also had praise for : : ) ,people (the dei~where she had plaMed a waste of time," said Uszka.
day
aboard the flight to DenOhio
set
a
school
record
by. Daylynn"l!adenh0p's 15 poipts. Corde
·
·
vacation. She was under in- "She wants to testify."
ver.
hitting
t-4 of 71 field goals for 62 Le Henson and Brian Scanlmi
"1 ~ant io shake Tommy • In an appearance Friday
tensive care at Rocky MounUszka said he had examined
"They had to give her oxygen
per cent. Previous Bobcat best added 14apiece and Jeff LeSsig Corde's han\lin respect and 1 night at Cue W~ lin ve
tain Osteopathic Hospital. A Mrs. Beard in Washington last
on board the flight," Garland
was 56 per cent against Toledo helped out with 12. The Falcons must say I'm ;,lad he's g e , UniversitY she .commented,
doctor said she was in serious Tuesday before her trip to said.
1
•
on • ·~t's not going ID be dlffk:alt fw
in 1967.
finished 1-9 in the conference. Hal~y said, referring to them (the proleCUIIon) to get a
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE,
Ohio's six-foot senior guard,
The Bobcats opened with. a Corde's last collegiate season. Conviction.
Calif. (UP! )- The World Cup
Men's Slalom was postponed
"1 think lt•a a well-conceived
today while crews packed and
plan by the government to hold
salted the softening course as
the trial In th!l middle dlatrlet
temperatures climbed at
of PeMIIyvanla which Ia very
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. ginia dam was 40 feet high, 100 officials to examine statutory
Heavenly
Valley
Ski
Resort.
conservative,"
Mise Berrtpn
John J. Gilligan said today the yards wide and was made of ex-emptions- for four types of
"! think we may have to call
added.
Department of Natural unusable coal and slag. The dams, to see If changes In the
it
off,"
chief
of
course
Pepi
Resources is "taking every governor
said
Natural law are needed.
Greimeister said as the
precaution to see that dams Resources officials know of no
The four exempted from the mercury passed the 40 degree
such as the one that lroke in such dams in Ohio, and regulations by state law are
West Virginia wiU not be built requested citizens knowing of dams buUt In the final cut of a mark at 9:30 a.m. PST, the
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
in Ohio" and is considering any slag dams to contact the strip mine; dams built by con- scheduled time for the start of text of the purported memo to continue to do that, regar- versations with Louie B. Nunn,
the first of two runs in the
dless of · from whom any former Gov. of Kentucky (re
(Continued from page 13)
regulations covering dam deparbnent.
servancy districts; dams built men's event.
from ITT lobbyist Dita D. questions come, White House Mitchell) that our noble who had a hand In lipping ID
construction.
Gilligan said legislation al- as part of Soil Conserwlion
He ordered the course salted Beard to W. R. Merriam, head or whoever. John Mitchell has cOil)mitmept has gone a tong shreds the .last strip mine re"The Deparlment of Natural lows the department to adopt Service projects and dams
boot-packed
by of the firm's Washington office, certainly kept it on the higher way toward our negotiations on form bW back In 1965.
Resources has been working on dam CO?,struction which are less than 10 feet in and
Lobbyi,t Domlnalet
the regulations for several requirements and permit height from the stream bed to gatekeepers and attendants in was made public by Columnist level only. We should be able to the mergers eventually colJling
Jack Anderson:
do
the
same.
hopes
a
one-run
slalom
could
out
as
Hal
wants
them.
Cer"As
the soft spoken Edwards
months," said GUUgan. "And procedures was approved In ' the spillway level.
"!just
had
a
long
talk
with
E.
be
conducted.
"I
was
afraid
the
discussion
tainly the President has . told told how his clients were dedithe tragic event in West V'tr- 1963 but the Rhodes adThe proposed regulations exJ.
Gerrity,
head
of
public
The
snow
at
Heavenly
Valley
about
·the
three
hundred-four
Mitchell
to see that things are cated to good slrip mine reclilginia adds urgency to our ef- ministration refused to imple- empt only dams being built by
relations
for
ITI'.
I'm
so
sorry
was
granular
and
the
base
on
hundred
thousand
comworked out fairly. It is still on matlon, the faithful cluster of
forts to protect lives and prop- ment them.
the federal government which the slalom course -down to that we got that call from the mitment would come up soon. Richard W. McLaren's (for- mine operators sat erect In
erty."
The governor said he has has Its own criteria for the safe
Gilligan said the West Vir- also asked Natural Resources construction of dams and those three to five feet following rain White Ho.use. I thought you and If you remember, I suggested mer head of the antitrust their chairs," uld the newsearlier in the
week. I had ~greed very thoroughly that we aU stay out of that, division) Mickey-Mouse we are letter. "Hanna Coal President
classified as low-bazurd. This Greimeister said the warming that under no circumstances other than the fact that I told
Ralph Hatch (Ohio's ""'ft~
ff
·clsssificalion Includes dams Saturday had deeply softened would anyone in this -office you I bad heard Hal (Harold S. su ering.
"We aU know Hal and his big Coal") steppe&lt;! up the tempo of
that are less than 20 feet in it, raising the possibility of discuss with anyone our par- Geneen, president of ITT) up
mouth. But thls Is one time he his gum chewing.
height from the stream bed to serious injuries if competitors ticipation in the convention, the original amount.
cannot tell you and Ned one
''Nell TostensOn, a ConaoUithe top of the dam, storing less broke through during a turn. Including me. Other lhan
"Now I understand from Ned thlng and Wilson and me dated Coal Co. lobbyist 'Who
than 50 acre feet of water, havpermitting John Mitchell, Lt. that both he and you are upset another.
·
just switched parties to run
ing a drainage area of less than
Gov. . Ed Reinecke of about the decision to make it
"I hope, dear Bill, that aU of against Rep. 'Sam Specik (au100 acres and being built in a
California, Bob Haldeman of four hundred In services . this can be reconciled _ be- thor of this bill) in November,
location where there is no
the White House staff and Believe me, this is not what Hal tween Hal and Wilson- if aU of flashed his ever present grin,"
COLUMBUS (UP!) - All
Nixon (besides Rep. Bob said, Just after I talked with us in this office remain totally the newsletter continued. "And
"Unless processors agree to danger of loss of life or damage
popcorn raisers in Ohio, the at least meet last year's price of properly should the dam
Wilson of California, of course) Ned, Wilson called me, to ignorant of any commlbnent . Marietta Coal Co. bead George
Mason Bowling Center
nation's fifth largest producer, of $80 per ton for shelled corn, treak.
no
one has known from whom report on this meeting with ITT has made to anyone. If it Nlcolozakes looked like he
Kyger Creek
The regulations provide that
'have been urged to switch to there will be many farmers
I. Odd Balls 52·20; 2. Day that 400 thousands com- Hal. Hal at no time told Wilson gets too much publicity, you wished he had brought along •
other crops to protest the lower who just won't grow popcorn applications for a dam con- Main f. 44-28; 3. A. Shift 42-30; 4. mitment had come. You can't that our donation would be In can believe our negotiations his James Bond-4ype camera
struction permit be made by a Timber Splitters 38-34; 5. imagine how many queries I've services only. In fact, quite the
prices offered by Ohio this year.
Rejects 36-36; 6. Strugglers 28·
with Justice will wind up shot to capture the drama on Olm."
enregistered
professional
processors, which "has in·
44
; 7. BShift 26-46 ; 8. C Shill 22- had from "friends" about this contrary, there would be very down. Mitchell Is definitely
" Processors are offering
King said bia organization
luriated the growers."
only $7~ to $73 per ton and some gineer; that a surety bond be 50.Team High Series - Odd situation and I have in each little cash involved, but cer- helping us, but cannot let It be has been following that bill
"Ohio's popcorn growers are have even reduced hauling posted to guarantee perform- Balls 2694 and 2637. Team High and every case denied tainly some. I am convinced, known. Please destroy this, since It was written and ihe
In a fighting mood," said allowan~eS' whic~: farmers ance of the conditions of ' per- Game - Odd Bolls 945 and 930. knowledge of any kind. It because . of several ~on- huh?"
main job of bill watching· was
..
Robert Ruble, a Lancaster receive for trucking popcorn to mit; and that the chief of the Ind . High Series - · G. would be wise for all of us here
o..Oiolnecfto OmCk Borsart Wbo
Shrimplin 643 and H.· Carson
area popcorn grower who is a the proc~ssing plant. This has Division of Water of the De- 623.
- ~~ttl~ h~ter." I ''1''"'
Ind. High Game - R.
parbnenl
of
Natural
Resources
-,~...
.
0'::?
of
the
Popcorn
member
Hysell 265 and G. Milch, 245. ~!W~:e::c:.
infuriated the growers." About
T.
lll
"We have'cbartered a plane
Monday Merthants
JOe
1r~organ
for him to ny over the strip
Division Operating Board of 50,375,000 pounds of popcorn may make Inspection of conl. Harls Used Cars 36-12; 2.
TIGERS WIN
the
Ohio
Agricultural was produced in Ohio last year. struction sites.
·
mined areas and he has been
36·
12
;3.
Miller's
Insurance
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio Gilligan
said
he
is
deterMarketing Association.
Keefers
Service
Station
30-18;
"These farmers don't have to
permitted to sit in on aU the
"Some Ohio processors are play around with cheap pop- mined that Ohio will never be 4. Mason Auto Mart 26·22 ; 5. Tbe Ironton Tigers knocked
committee and subcommittee
Co. Bank 22-26; 6. W. off the GalllpoUs Blue Devils
trying to gouge farmers by corn," Ruble said. "They can hit with a flood like the one Mason
hearings," King said.. "And In
Va
.
Nat.
Guard 20-28; .7. Penn
offering them as much as a $10 grow other crops, such as which claimed 76 lives in Central14-34; 8. Hoffmans 8-40. · 57-52 here Saturday Dlghtln
order
to demonstrate our conTAMPA,
Fla.
(UPI)
to them things they were doing
Team High Series - Mason finals of lh.e Class AA Secper ton price decrease from soybeans, and earn more for southern West Virginia.
Cincinnati Reds ' manager which gave -a baserunner a cern and Interest for aucceulul '
"Seeing the utter destruction Co. Bonk 2890 and Harts Used tional Basketball Tourlast year .
strip mining · legislation for
their hard work," he said.
Sparky Anderson p~id his chance to take big leads.
nament.
caused by this nash flood, with Cars 2837. Hi~h Team Game W. Va. Nat1onal Guard' 1015
newly-acquired sec.ond
Morgan has averaged 40 or Ohio we wnte thae articleS.
houses strewn about like and Harts Used Cards 1007.
Gallipolis led durlug muah
"We want to make sure It ls
haseman Joe Morgan A flat- more thefts In each of last
matchsticks, should move
High Ind. Series - Bodkin of lbe first ball but fell
known, that we as an organlatering compliment Saturday. three seasons.
every local official in Ohio to 672 and Mason 671. High Ind. behind al Ill end, 3&amp;-26, and
Game - Snyder 265 and Nelson
Anderson made Morgan
"How did you steal all of Uon are for a good strip mine
never. got abead ~terward.
RIO GRANDE - Twenty~ix Lemley; James E. Harrison, use restrictive flood plain 258.
what almost amounted to an those hases when you weren't reclamation bill," said King.
Ironton advances to the
Gallia County students have son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynas zoning,"·. said Gilligan. ·"The
honorary coach.
in perfect physical condition?"
Tuesday Women
Clau AA Dlslrlct tourbeen named to the Dean 's Harrison ; Roger Warne fewer houses there are in a
·
Morgan,
one
of
the
top
base
1.
Hair
Harbour
46·18;
2.
asked Johnny Bench kiddingly
Honor Roll (3.5 or better) for Hyden ; Joyce Eileen Myers; flood plain, the fewer lives are Roush Construction 44-20; 3. nament al Rio Grande this
stealers
in
the
National
as Morgan grunted and
Mason Furni.ture .40-24; 4. weekend.
the first semester at Rio Deborah North, daughter of lost in such a disaster."
League, worked with Reds' groaned his way through the
Harts Used Cars 40-24 ; 5. Tom
Grande College. They are:
Mr. and Mrs . John North;
. Rue Motors 34-30; 6. M&amp; R
pitchers Saturday, pointing out Reds' dally calisthenics.
(Continued from page 13)
Shirley Ann Allbright, Richard Rinehart, son of Mr .
FoodJiner 32 -32 ; 7. Ingels
- "I was running against
Furniture 20-44.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Dean B. Rinehart ; .,.• SNAKES GO LAZY
·
.. -:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·.·:···.· Cincinnati pitchers," was Committee chairman, said 20
Team High Series - M&amp;R
FBI agents had been searching
OPP, Ala. (UP!) - A tangle Foodliner
Dallas Edward Allbright ; Richard Roderick, Brenda
1892 and Hair
Morgan's
retort.
The
ex-Astro
for Mrs. Beard In West
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) Albert Jackson Bailes, son of Jean Stewart; Everetta of spitting and buzzing rat- Harbour 1672 . Team Hlqh
was
only
half
kidding.
VIrginia, where she owns
Clay Carroll ended bls
Mr. and Mrs. James Bailes; Taylor , daughter of Mrs. tlesnakes began "the world's Game - M &amp; R Foodllner
According
to
Morgan
only
655
and
619.
property,
In Montana and In
holdout with the Clnclmtall
Joseph Bailey; Catherine Barbara Taylor; Margaret Lu only snake race" on the Town
Ind. High Series - Betty
Jim
Merritt
and
Jim
the Denver area, where she
Reds Saturday aad will
Berry, daughter of Mrs. Wilda Tracy, daughter of Mr. and Square today, but none Batey 536 and Judy Young 464.
McGlothlin
do
a
good
job
when
sometlnies
skis In the Colorado
begin workouts with lbe club
Houck;
Diana · Brown, Mrs. Luther Tracy; Beverly finished. Designed as a climax Ind. High Game - Betty Batey
it
comes
to
holding
a
runner
Rockies.
195 and Evelyn Proffitt 185.
loday.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Wallen ;
Glenna
Fry to the 12th annual rattlesnake
·a ut an ITT spokesman,
roundup that began in
Carroll, the Redo' top close to the bag.
Carroll Carman Brown; Whealdon ,
Steelworkers
RALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) and
Robert
"Clay
.
Carroll,"
said.
Bernard Goodrich, discloeed
relief pitcher a year ago, was
January, the snakes lost in- , 1. Rejects 76; 2. Nuts &amp; Bolls Five leading scorers who tower
Nicolyn Sue Burnett, daughter Williams.
Morgan,
referring
to
the
Reds'
Saturday
that ''we have been
seeking a contract for
terest in crawling when they 66 ; 3. Wonders 64; 4. Foote anaverageof6-9inheightwere
of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
lone
holdout,
"is
the
easiest
Heels 44; 5. Skips 36; 6. F..ros h
S t d
t th
notified by a friend of Mrs.
felt the bite of 37-degree 35;
$50,000, and while no terms
Burnett ; Karen Coker,
1. Stingers 34,
. c ose_n
a ur ay o
_e
to
steal
on
the
Reds
pitcher
Beard's
that she is In a Denver
of the agreement were anHigh Team Series - Won- mythical 1972 All-Allanite
daughter of Mrs. Irene Coker;
BROWN TO RECOVER · weather.
have."
hospital."
ders 2786 and Rejects 2610; Coast Conference basketball
nounced, It was beUeved be
Joanna Corfias; Freddie Joe
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) OUtfielder
Bernie
Carbo,
who
Team High Game - Rejects team
agreed to a compromise
Dee!, son of Mr. and Mrs. Defensive end Bob Brown of
1009 and Wonders 964.
·
HEARINGS SET
agreed to terms several days
settlement.
Ind.
High
Series
~
H.
Nelson
Bar:ry
Parkhill
of
Virginia,
6Hayes Deel ; Rita Kay the Green Bay Packers, shot in
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
ago, arrived In camp and
Carroll compiled a to-4
DeVault, daughter of Mrs. the neck by an acquaintance Senate Health subcommittee 658 and T. Kearns 619. Ind. fool-4 and smallest of the five,
participated In his first
High Game - H. Nelson 257 was chosen on each of 107 record with a U9 earned run
Nellie DeVault; Eleanor Friday night, should tk out of will hold hearings Monday and and
K. Imboden 235.
.
workout
of the spring.
Tuesday Industrial
ballots cast by memhers of the average and 15 saves last
F~deley ; Vickie J. Fowler ; the hospital by Tuesday and is Tuesday on a bill that would
l. Burton Sunoco 56-8; 2. Atlantic Coast SportS Writers
season. He was the Reds'
Dianna Jo Green, daughter of not expected to suffe; any provide $50 million to combat
Coca
-Cola
38-26
;
3.
Penn
Association
which
makes
the
last holdout.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Green; interruption to his professional lead-based paint poisoning Central 38·16; 4. Mason Agg.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
Georgena Harrison, daughter football career, his wife said among children. Sen. Edward 34-30; 5. Carolina Lumber Co. official selection.
(UP!) -They were two days
20-44; 6. New Haven Furniture
Each of the five won his
of Mr . and Mrs. George Saturday.
M. Kennedy, 0-Mass., said the 10-54,
late for practical Plll'(IOiel, but
b th
'th t
.
Team High Game - Burton er
WI ou
a seriOUs • PACKERS SIGN BAILEY
Mrs. Brown said that her measure would provide $45
a group of strlp mine
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI)
husband and a friend , W. C. million for several health , Sunoco 913 and 912. Team High challenge, even though the
aboUtlonlats demonstrated at
Pass receiver David Bailey
Series - Burton Sunoco 2725 second unit includes some of
McMiller, picked up the education
the statehouae Saturday on
and
welfare and
Saturdoy'st:xhibltlon
Coc~ - Cola 2498.
the country's best plavers
has signed a professional
Bueboll
Results
acquaintance, identified as department programs and $5
Ind. H1gh Series - Davis 567,
'
·
behalf of their callle,
DISQUALIFIED
Robert McAdoo; 6-10 North football contract with the By United Press tnternotlonot · About 100 members rA QtiHoward Sanders, at an in- million for contintied research Grate 564 ; Ind. High Game (At Bradenton, Fla.)
ONTARIO, Calif. · ( UPI )
Carolina center, was chosen on Green Bay Packers, Univertersection in West Memphis, into the problem. He said it Miller 212 and 'Grate '211.
Boston
120 002 020-7 9 2 zens to tholiah Strip Mlplng
Stock car champion George
sity of Alabama offiCials said Pitts.
all but five ballots.
000 002 10~8 13 2 paraded around the capitol
Ark. All three are residents of also would lower the level or
Sporn
Follmer was disqualified
Pattin, Tlant (4}, Lee (7) and
Rounding out what may be Saturday.
1. Wild Men 52·36; 2. B Shift
West Memphis, across the lead content of interior paints
Josephson, Montgomery (6); rotunda, singing folk songs and
by
NASCAR
Saturday
49-39:
3. King Pins 48-40 ; 4. the tallest AU.Starr team In the
Bailey,
who
won
All-Southjust before the second Mississippi River from from I per cent lead by weight Rejects 47-H; 5. A Shift 46-42 ; annals of college basketball eastern Conference honors in Blass, Walker (4), Johnson (7) carrying placards.
Memphis.
and Sands, Taylor (69!. WPto .06 per cent.
They gathered In frmt of the
6. The P.O. 42-46 ; 7 . D. Shlft36annual Sportsman 250 here In a
32 ; 8. Unll 3 32-36.
are Tom McMillen, 6-11, of 1971 at Alabama, said he was Johnson . LP-Lee . HR -D. Houae of Delega14!8 chamber
Mrs . Brown quoted her
controversy over the shape of husband as saying as soon as
Team Hloh Series - D Shift Maryland; Dennis Wuyclk, 6-0, "eagerly looking forwurd to Miller.
while th!l House was In Rulon.
MUSKIE
FIRST
2477
and Unit 3 2462; Team
his car. Follmer, defending 250 Sanders got in to the car, he
joining the Packers." He said
of
North
Carolina,
and
7-1
I
At
Sarasota,
Flo.)
Dell. Warren McGraw, oRALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) - High Game - Wild Men 904
champion at the Ontario Motor shot Brown in the neck.
and
A
Shift
876.
Tommy
Burleson
of North he has been working out with N.Y. ( NL) 001 000 ooo-1 6 3 Wyoming, and Ivan While, !).
Sen. · Edmund Muskie, DSpeedway, refused to allow
Ind. High Game - Couch 575 Carolina St.lte.
Green Bay quarterback Scoti Chi. (AL) 033 000 OOx~ 10 0 boone, sponsors of 111U«rip
Malne,
became
the
first.
to
file
Seaver, Mc~raw ·(3),
and
Fry
550;
Ind.
High
Game
NASCAR to compare the lines
Wuyclk is a repeater from l!unter,alsoa former Alabama Matlack !7) and Grote, Nolan mine lills, Spoke lriefly to the
- Van Pelt 256 and Searls 223.
'in
North
Carolina's
l\fay
6
of hi• 1968 Mercury again•t the ORVIS SIGNED
last season. Parkhill, then a star, who lives here during the 1711 Bahnsen, Palmer (4), crowd.
'
It
presidential
primary
Friday.
race officials' template.
off-season.
Robertson (7) and Brinkman.
Wednesday Mixed
DETROIT (UPi i-The Desophomore,
made
till
All·ACC
President ol the cltlzena
WP.Bahnsen. LP-Seaver. HR·
t . Try Hards 38· 18 ; 2. All-Tournament team and was
troit Lions Friday signed was announced that Gov.
Brinkman.
group,
Gerald Sizemore, ubd ..
ShamrO&lt;ks
37-19;
3.
Smith
&amp;
defensive end Herb Orvis of George Wallace of Alabama ~oush 37-19: 4. H&amp;H 34-22 ; 5. a second-team choice for the INDOOR TENNIS
!he ljvo delegates _
to 10 back
HAMPTON, Va. (UPI)-Ilie
Colorado, their No. I draft and President Nixon would join Alley Gators 32-24 ; 6. Pin 'regul6r season .
(AI LAkeland, Ft..)
lnsid the chamber •~ the
·Spotters 20-36·; 7. Son.Q.Guns
20t 001' 010-5 11 o
e
• ""
Nastase and Ion Tirtac of' Minn.
choice, to a contract for the the list Monday.
Detroit
001 001 012- 4 4 1 memben lalow the ~lllla18-38;
8.
Woolles
8-4
.
1972 National Football League
Romania beat an American
SOX BOMB METS
Team High Series Biyleven, Norton 171 and tcrs were ll!n, llld lelllbem
BLAIR SETS RECORD
season.
duo
of Cliff Richey and Tom Dempsey ; Coleman, Ware (7) to "act before lt'l too t.le,"
GRANT
RECEIVED
Shamrocks
mund
Try
Hards
SARASoTA, Fla. (UPI)
PRINCETON, N. J. (UPI)- Edlefsen, 7.0, U, 7-6, Friday to and Hailer. WP-Biyleven. 'LP·
The ,;.,.,n sat ltr the u-·CLEVELAND (UP!) - Rep. 1797.
Chuck Brinkman cracked a
~--..,..._
Team
High
Game
Tom
Blair's meet record pole gain the tloubles final of the Coleman. HRS· Darwln, G.
Louis
Stokes,
D-Ohio,
antwo-run ~omer and Luis
Brown.
gaUery
whUe
th!l
=rion
Wll
Shamrocks
729
and
Try
Hards
vault (16'-8 ¥,") victory ~.ooo World Indoor Tennis
TO PLAY THURSDAY
nounced Saturday that the 0~~ .
Alvarado drove in two runs
·
•
going
on,
and
later
moftll
to
CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Ind. High Series - Men: D. sparked the University of Championship.
(At Fort Louclerdale, Flo.)
the Senate
·
Saturday while the Chicago Creek High School Key Club Department of Health, Mlller612
and R. Capehart 584; Pennsylvania ~a 26-25 victory
Th __;.._
,;...,~-~~
They will meet Americans 15'12 Innings, rain)
Education and Welfare ·has Women : M.
While~ bombed Tom Seaver
Rot
&lt;
Sh
40
and
J.
Texas
012
CJ0-3
4
0.
n
"""'
no
u..._.
.
over
Villanova
in
the
1C4A
will sponsor a basketball game
Jbil CoMors and Tom Gor- N.Y. IAL)
•
for eight hils and six runs to Thursday night between the awarded the C!~veland Council Foglesong 459.
000
O&lt;Hl
5
21
The
..
at
two
da)oa,
~
Ind. High Gaone - Men : R. track and field championships man, who beat Spaniards
Goglewskl, Hand W . ancl . caltq for a refaenrlwn on
defeat the New York Mrts, 6-1, KC faculty and Southwestern for Economic Opportunities a Capehart
232 ard D. Miller 217. Satllrday, ending the Wildcals' Andres Gimeno and Manuel King; Keklch, Hinton (4) and·
.....
$ll0,000
grant
to
fund
a
child
In the Meta' exhibition openei'. . faculty . Admission is 50 cents.
Women : M. Roosh 183 and D. five-year reign ' in the 51st
Munson, WP.Goglewskl.i LP. , atrlpplna .... oufrllblabollllotl
advocacy program.
Orantes: 6-4, 7-', in the other Keklch. .
Harbour 1;7,
of ibe lndUJtry were tabled In
annual meet.
semifinal doubles .rnatclt. ·
commltleea of' bOth~.

Event Is .
Postponed
By Weather

Precautions Taken in Ohio

Anderson R.eveals Text
Of Alleged ITT Memo

Hatch ·

Popcorn Growers -

Are Popping Mad

Local Bowling

Spar.k y P.ays

Flattering Compliment

26 .Earn Honors At Rio Grande

Kleindienst

'72 All ACC
Dream Team ·
Averages 6-9

A,bolitionists
Demonstrate
In ChArleston

Exhibition
Results

\

JJ- Tbe Sunday Tlmel- Seltlnet, Slllda~. )llarch s, 11m

·Dateline
Gallia
BY HOBART ~N, JR.
MR. and Mrs. Frank E. Wetherholt, .420 First Ave.,
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fulton, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, are
mighty proud grandparenls these days.

+++++
~HEIR

granddaughter,
Martha Wetherholt, 18,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Wetherbolt, 942 Lancaster St., Marietta, was
recently chosen Marietta's
"ou~taqdlng young . citizen,"
by the Marietta Jaycees.
Martha is a native of
Gallipolis.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 5
.

1 TO 7 PM SUNDAY
WOOLITE

IMPACT BRAND

•

GOLF
ALLS

+++++
A picture .of Martha
receiving a .trophy for ihe
hOnor appeared in the Wednesday, Feb. 23 iasue of the
Marietta Times. It was accompanied by the following
story:

+++++

Heck's Reg.

Martha Wetherholt, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wetherliolt, 942 Lancaster St., has been chosen Marietta's
"outstanding young cltizi!n" by Marietta Jaycees.
Chalnnan for the competition, Bob Bl!l'ton, characterizes
Martha as ."Idealist enough to see a better world and realist
enough ID wilrk hard to achieve it."
llurtoil and Mac Fenton contaeted the guidance deparlments ,
at both Marietta Senior )llgh and the junior high and students
were nominated by Individual clsss counselors.
Applications were studied by a panel of Jaycee jndges, and
Martha was the winner, mainly, said Burton, "because of her
work with people who need help." At school, she tutors students
who need academic assistance, and at First Presbyterian
Church, she has participated for two years in the Youth Sunday
program agd this year presented part of the sermon.
At home, much of the homemaking responsibility fails on
Martha's shoulders, because her mother has been iU for the past
two years.
Martha has two brothers, Karl, a sophomore at th~
University of Virginia, and Jon, a sixth grader.
Martha is fully capable of running the entire household from
cooking to painting a room, according to the judges. She sews
and makes many of her own clothes. Hobbies Include knitting
and reading. Her interests include reUgious education, math and
law.
She was recently accepted at Case Western Reserve
University, and has been saving money for college since the age
of 13. Martha has worked as a babysitter and for two summers
!las been employed full~ime as a housekeeper-baby sitter.
She has been a 4-H club member for five years and has won
awards
her $ewin• bblllty . In Junior Achievement she has
vriff ~ !jJco H h. J:Juu.,,-- :;;:~tl' ' .l'l ,
serveu as .weasurer "' ' ro aco.
Last winter, In addition tO her school work, she successfully
completed the Red Cross water safety Instructor course: At
school she is active In ·German Club, Science Club and Ubrary
Oub, and was elected to the National Honor Society in her junior
year. This year she is In charge of the tutoring program spon·
sored by that group. This entails securing a tutor for any student
who Is having trouble with his school work . She is contacted by
teachers, guidance personnel and students themselves.
Martha Is also a member of the American Field Service and
is In charge of publicity lor the organization.
She was selected to attend a week-long seminar of the
University of Young Americans held at Baldwin-Wallace
CoUege. To qualify to attend, a student must have formed strong
opinions based on knowledge and familiarity with the topics and
problems facing citizens today.
Martha has served as a library aide for two years, and is
enrolled In the highest academic program at Marietta Senior
High.

11.39

.

\,., ' ·.

(BROWN ONLY)
Heck' s Reg.

"TRUE TONE"

TURKEY CALLER
Heck's Reg. $699

Housewares

99

99

50

99

Heck's
Reg.

Hardware
Dept.

$3.68

LADIES'
SEAMLESS
MESH

ALL CAPS
ASST. COLORS

.

CLAW HAMMER

$299

ior

+++++

-~

FIBERGLASS

CAR MATS

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly GaUia Times ... Cecil A. Hartsook, 57, Vinton, killed
In truck accident near St. Albans, W. Va ... Five Cheshire boys,
Bob Mulford, Jim Conkle, Bob Bocock, Dick Russell and Howard
Roush, enlist in U.S. Navy ... Portsmouth East nips GAHS 51-48
In Oass A quarterfinab in district cage tournament at Athens ...
SEOAL champion Nelsonville upsets Corning 73-67 to capture
· Oass B Distl'ict basketball Iitle.

.,,

Dept.

FRONT

$

n

Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg, 11.29

Heck's
Reg.

¢

66

$3.96 DOZ.

$

RUG CLEANER

DOW
'

SENTINEL
'

'

NYLON
HOSE

FREEZE

Heck's Reg. 2 pair 77e

Heck's Reg.

$1.49

ANTIFREEZE
CCCLANT ...W,.
.
...
, ,., _ ··-.

-

~-·-·

...... ·-

2 PAIR PKG. ·

GAL

$238

.Sierra Ouh Says
Hanna Ads False
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The Nothing in this bill will cause a
Ohio chapter of the Sierra Club mine to close, unless it cannot
Friday filed a complaint with properly be reclaimed."
the Federal Trade Commission
Citing as an example a Feb.
accusing the Hanna Coal Co. of 13 ad that claimed that only one
"false and grossly misleading" of every three light bulbs would
newspaper advertising.
· remain lit if surface mining
The group charged the ads were stopped, Gibson said the
were scare tactics used by the ad was not only iticonsistenl
firm to undermine a strip mine but "intended to frighten the
· reclamation bill before the reader into believing that. if
Ohio Senate.
strip mine control bills were
Chapter Vice Chairman enacted, his lights would go
Donald Gibson said the ads, out."
which appeared- in . several
"This is blatantly and
newspapers In Ohio and West delihera tely false , because the
VIrginia, Intended to make present strip mine control bills
people think passage of the bill are intended to insure that
would Increase unemployment · proper reclamation practices
and electrical brownouts.
, are carried out, not to close all
"Neither of these are true," · the mines," Gibson said .
Gibson said. "Strict en- .
forcement of reclamation
procedures should require the
ANNIVERSARY SPLIT
use of more men, no~ .fewer.
ATLANTA (UP!) --- Und~rground Atlanl;l, one of the
city's top tourist attractions,
will mark Atlanta's 125lh
NAMED TO COMMISSION
anniversary March 16 _with a
KEY BISCAYNE, !'.a. . 1,000-po~nd bana_na spht. The
(UPI) _ Francis T. Mayo,.. . concoctton, wh1ch mcludes
Chicago
regional
ad- 1,000 hananas, surpasses the
ministrator of the · En- previous record of 600 pounds.
vironmental Protection
Agency, , has been named by
President Nixon to be a
TURTLE PERMITS
commissioner on the Ohio
HARRISBURG IUP! )
River Valley Water Sa~italion Gov. Milton J. Shapp Friday
Commission. Mayo will signed a bill prohibitiug turtles ·
represent the federal govern- from entering Peimsylvania
without pennits .
ment on the comm181ion. :

. REBUILT

SPARK PLUGS
Jl SET OF

8

00

'

Great For

ea,.ping!

Heck's Reg.
11.48

$

PORTA LAMP
Heck's Reg. $599

66

•

6 PACK
PRIZE PENN
MOTOR OIL

Heck's
Re11. To

$2.38

,

$

66

�.,
•

c

14-Tbe ~Times. Sentinel, Smday. March 5, 1972.

Mrs. Beard Found

~::~.r;;:;~.:.~.Q.~*;.'J$!0 I

JUt' LJd

Bobcats Romp over BG .

Kidnap

EAGLES WIN
'ROCK' SPRINGS
Ea•tera 111gb School turned
(Continued froni Jllile 13)
tbe tables on North GaiDa
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) .:... Tom Corde, estab1Jal1ed the 12-0 lead and heid a 19-1 adD~R (UPI) -Mrs. Dita condition.
.. Umversity,
·
"'"'ft•," the 111111 --.
;.....,_
here Saturdly Dlgbt In the oh10
~tting ' two school's Individual field goal vantage before five mlnul4!8 ne-''.......,_,.
Colorado, and said she was
D. Beard, sought for questionFBI agents waited . in t11e "physically aU right but upset
finals of the Class A ~ec­ records wlth its · sizzling percentage mart by sinking 13 had elape'ed.
acld1n8 that lbe lnot frlcbtening In 'the ITT antitnlst case, corridor outside her room to
Uoaal
Basketball
toursbooting,
Jwnped
Off
to
a
19-1'
of
14
for
92.9
per
cent.
Previous
''Our-early
fantastic
shooting
ed
by the trial.
over the controversy."
was found hospitalized give her a subpoena which
nament, avenging two lead and rolled to an easy 101&gt;- · recQrd was Greg McDivitt's threw Bowling Green off
"I am tlnd of awed by tile
"She Is the most marvelous
Saturday suffering from a would require her to return to
defeali
In
regular
seuon
8i
win
over
Bowling
Green
nine
of
10
against
Western
stride,"
said
a
happy
Oblo
judge
(R. Dl:tm Herman) haYperson you have ever met," he
serious heart condition.
Washington for an appearance said.
play with a thumping 7f.55 here_ Saturdav afternoon to Mi
. 'chigan in llrnl.
lcoach Jim Snvder after the _ing_thll power 0- oar Uve.,"
Her doctor, Victor Uszka, before the Senate Judiciary
victory
over
North
Gallli.
finish
in
a
tie
'with
Toledo
for
Corde
added
a
free
throw
to
g'ame. Snyder has coached bla !be uld, "Pirtlcullrly when
· "Mrs. Beord was admitted
flew to Den.ver from Washing- Committee. The agents refused
Tbe Eagle• advance to the the Mid-American Conference his 13 field goab and finished Bobcats to six conference . :~ ::t!n~!. or eiiJeton and said Mrs . Beard to let anyone other than doctors Friday evening with angina
Dlslrlcl
Tournament at champlonship.
pectoris, an ~ufflciency of
as the game's leading scorer UUes, a MAC record. Ohio Is 14''We knew It wu
. ""'""to be
wanted to testify about her or nurses onto the floor where
ChUUcothe thlo weekend.
arterial
circulation
to
the
with
'l1
poinb.
All
five
Ohio
10
overall
this
season.
,..u.
knowledge of the Justice Mrs. Beard was staying.
By
Quarters
The
Bobcats
and
Rockets
starters were In double fljure5,
heart," said Dr. David Garland
·
"
awful and ltla,"lbe uld of the.
Department's settlement of the
No one, including the of the Osteopathic Hospital.
Eaotern
18 34 54 70 botli finished with 7-3 league Dave BaD and Tom Riccardi
"Corde
.
Is
just
super,"
trial. ·~t we aU can learn by
ITT antitrust action, but authorities, was allowed to see
N.
Gallla
15
%7
tz
55
-rlence,"
marks
and
will
tangle
Tuesday
"She was suffering acute chest
had 17 apiece and Bob Howell Snyder said of his shooting the -..because of her condition she Mrs. Beard on the orders of pains.
night at Bowling Green In a and Todd LaUch loased In 13 slar. "He's just something
Miss Berrigan, not lnwlftll
could not testify soon.
Ustka.
'playoff
game.
conference
Mrs. Beard, reported to be
each.
e•. " He's been fantastic for In ihe trial_berielf, llld !be
Mrs. Beard apparently suf"Any attempt to get Mrs. one of the highest paid lobToledo made it to the playoffs
Bowling
Green,
which
wound
us
aU year.
feels "a giut _..II oJrtnie
fered chest pains on an ~ trip Beard to WaShington within the
by edging Kent State 5!1-S7 up Its worst season In history
byists- In Washington, first
Bowling Green coach Pat at the Invasion II. prjvacy of
from Washington to Denver, next few days would be a total
Saturday.
suffered
the
chest
pains
Thurswith a 4-~ slate, was led by llalley . also had praise for : : ) ,people (the dei~where she had plaMed a waste of time," said Uszka.
day
aboard the flight to DenOhio
set
a
school
record
by. Daylynn"l!adenh0p's 15 poipts. Corde
·
·
vacation. She was under in- "She wants to testify."
ver.
hitting
t-4 of 71 field goals for 62 Le Henson and Brian Scanlmi
"1 ~ant io shake Tommy • In an appearance Friday
tensive care at Rocky MounUszka said he had examined
"They had to give her oxygen
per cent. Previous Bobcat best added 14apiece and Jeff LeSsig Corde's han\lin respect and 1 night at Cue W~ lin ve
tain Osteopathic Hospital. A Mrs. Beard in Washington last
on board the flight," Garland
was 56 per cent against Toledo helped out with 12. The Falcons must say I'm ;,lad he's g e , UniversitY she .commented,
doctor said she was in serious Tuesday before her trip to said.
1
•
on • ·~t's not going ID be dlffk:alt fw
in 1967.
finished 1-9 in the conference. Hal~y said, referring to them (the proleCUIIon) to get a
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE,
Ohio's six-foot senior guard,
The Bobcats opened with. a Corde's last collegiate season. Conviction.
Calif. (UP! )- The World Cup
Men's Slalom was postponed
"1 think lt•a a well-conceived
today while crews packed and
plan by the government to hold
salted the softening course as
the trial In th!l middle dlatrlet
temperatures climbed at
of PeMIIyvanla which Ia very
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. ginia dam was 40 feet high, 100 officials to examine statutory
Heavenly
Valley
Ski
Resort.
conservative,"
Mise Berrtpn
John J. Gilligan said today the yards wide and was made of ex-emptions- for four types of
"! think we may have to call
added.
Department of Natural unusable coal and slag. The dams, to see If changes In the
it
off,"
chief
of
course
Pepi
Resources is "taking every governor
said
Natural law are needed.
Greimeister said as the
precaution to see that dams Resources officials know of no
The four exempted from the mercury passed the 40 degree
such as the one that lroke in such dams in Ohio, and regulations by state law are
West Virginia wiU not be built requested citizens knowing of dams buUt In the final cut of a mark at 9:30 a.m. PST, the
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
in Ohio" and is considering any slag dams to contact the strip mine; dams built by con- scheduled time for the start of text of the purported memo to continue to do that, regar- versations with Louie B. Nunn,
the first of two runs in the
dless of · from whom any former Gov. of Kentucky (re
(Continued from page 13)
regulations covering dam deparbnent.
servancy districts; dams built men's event.
from ITT lobbyist Dita D. questions come, White House Mitchell) that our noble who had a hand In lipping ID
construction.
Gilligan said legislation al- as part of Soil Conserwlion
He ordered the course salted Beard to W. R. Merriam, head or whoever. John Mitchell has cOil)mitmept has gone a tong shreds the .last strip mine re"The Deparlment of Natural lows the department to adopt Service projects and dams
boot-packed
by of the firm's Washington office, certainly kept it on the higher way toward our negotiations on form bW back In 1965.
Resources has been working on dam CO?,struction which are less than 10 feet in and
Lobbyi,t Domlnalet
the regulations for several requirements and permit height from the stream bed to gatekeepers and attendants in was made public by Columnist level only. We should be able to the mergers eventually colJling
Jack Anderson:
do
the
same.
hopes
a
one-run
slalom
could
out
as
Hal
wants
them.
Cer"As
the soft spoken Edwards
months," said GUUgan. "And procedures was approved In ' the spillway level.
"!just
had
a
long
talk
with
E.
be
conducted.
"I
was
afraid
the
discussion
tainly the President has . told told how his clients were dedithe tragic event in West V'tr- 1963 but the Rhodes adThe proposed regulations exJ.
Gerrity,
head
of
public
The
snow
at
Heavenly
Valley
about
·the
three
hundred-four
Mitchell
to see that things are cated to good slrip mine reclilginia adds urgency to our ef- ministration refused to imple- empt only dams being built by
relations
for
ITI'.
I'm
so
sorry
was
granular
and
the
base
on
hundred
thousand
comworked out fairly. It is still on matlon, the faithful cluster of
forts to protect lives and prop- ment them.
the federal government which the slalom course -down to that we got that call from the mitment would come up soon. Richard W. McLaren's (for- mine operators sat erect In
erty."
The governor said he has has Its own criteria for the safe
Gilligan said the West Vir- also asked Natural Resources construction of dams and those three to five feet following rain White Ho.use. I thought you and If you remember, I suggested mer head of the antitrust their chairs," uld the newsearlier in the
week. I had ~greed very thoroughly that we aU stay out of that, division) Mickey-Mouse we are letter. "Hanna Coal President
classified as low-bazurd. This Greimeister said the warming that under no circumstances other than the fact that I told
Ralph Hatch (Ohio's ""'ft~
ff
·clsssificalion Includes dams Saturday had deeply softened would anyone in this -office you I bad heard Hal (Harold S. su ering.
"We aU know Hal and his big Coal") steppe&lt;! up the tempo of
that are less than 20 feet in it, raising the possibility of discuss with anyone our par- Geneen, president of ITT) up
mouth. But thls Is one time he his gum chewing.
height from the stream bed to serious injuries if competitors ticipation in the convention, the original amount.
cannot tell you and Ned one
''Nell TostensOn, a ConaoUithe top of the dam, storing less broke through during a turn. Including me. Other lhan
"Now I understand from Ned thlng and Wilson and me dated Coal Co. lobbyist 'Who
than 50 acre feet of water, havpermitting John Mitchell, Lt. that both he and you are upset another.
·
just switched parties to run
ing a drainage area of less than
Gov. . Ed Reinecke of about the decision to make it
"I hope, dear Bill, that aU of against Rep. 'Sam Specik (au100 acres and being built in a
California, Bob Haldeman of four hundred In services . this can be reconciled _ be- thor of this bill) in November,
location where there is no
the White House staff and Believe me, this is not what Hal tween Hal and Wilson- if aU of flashed his ever present grin,"
COLUMBUS (UP!) - All
Nixon (besides Rep. Bob said, Just after I talked with us in this office remain totally the newsletter continued. "And
"Unless processors agree to danger of loss of life or damage
popcorn raisers in Ohio, the at least meet last year's price of properly should the dam
Wilson of California, of course) Ned, Wilson called me, to ignorant of any commlbnent . Marietta Coal Co. bead George
Mason Bowling Center
nation's fifth largest producer, of $80 per ton for shelled corn, treak.
no
one has known from whom report on this meeting with ITT has made to anyone. If it Nlcolozakes looked like he
Kyger Creek
The regulations provide that
'have been urged to switch to there will be many farmers
I. Odd Balls 52·20; 2. Day that 400 thousands com- Hal. Hal at no time told Wilson gets too much publicity, you wished he had brought along •
other crops to protest the lower who just won't grow popcorn applications for a dam con- Main f. 44-28; 3. A. Shift 42-30; 4. mitment had come. You can't that our donation would be In can believe our negotiations his James Bond-4ype camera
struction permit be made by a Timber Splitters 38-34; 5. imagine how many queries I've services only. In fact, quite the
prices offered by Ohio this year.
Rejects 36-36; 6. Strugglers 28·
with Justice will wind up shot to capture the drama on Olm."
enregistered
professional
processors, which "has in·
44
; 7. BShift 26-46 ; 8. C Shill 22- had from "friends" about this contrary, there would be very down. Mitchell Is definitely
" Processors are offering
King said bia organization
luriated the growers."
only $7~ to $73 per ton and some gineer; that a surety bond be 50.Team High Series - Odd situation and I have in each little cash involved, but cer- helping us, but cannot let It be has been following that bill
"Ohio's popcorn growers are have even reduced hauling posted to guarantee perform- Balls 2694 and 2637. Team High and every case denied tainly some. I am convinced, known. Please destroy this, since It was written and ihe
In a fighting mood," said allowan~eS' whic~: farmers ance of the conditions of ' per- Game - Odd Bolls 945 and 930. knowledge of any kind. It because . of several ~on- huh?"
main job of bill watching· was
..
Robert Ruble, a Lancaster receive for trucking popcorn to mit; and that the chief of the Ind . High Series - · G. would be wise for all of us here
o..Oiolnecfto OmCk Borsart Wbo
Shrimplin 643 and H.· Carson
area popcorn grower who is a the proc~ssing plant. This has Division of Water of the De- 623.
- ~~ttl~ h~ter." I ''1''"'
Ind. High Game - R.
parbnenl
of
Natural
Resources
-,~...
.
0'::?
of
the
Popcorn
member
Hysell 265 and G. Milch, 245. ~!W~:e::c:.
infuriated the growers." About
T.
lll
"We have'cbartered a plane
Monday Merthants
JOe
1r~organ
for him to ny over the strip
Division Operating Board of 50,375,000 pounds of popcorn may make Inspection of conl. Harls Used Cars 36-12; 2.
TIGERS WIN
the
Ohio
Agricultural was produced in Ohio last year. struction sites.
·
mined areas and he has been
36·
12
;3.
Miller's
Insurance
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio Gilligan
said
he
is
deterMarketing Association.
Keefers
Service
Station
30-18;
"These farmers don't have to
permitted to sit in on aU the
"Some Ohio processors are play around with cheap pop- mined that Ohio will never be 4. Mason Auto Mart 26·22 ; 5. Tbe Ironton Tigers knocked
committee and subcommittee
Co. Bank 22-26; 6. W. off the GalllpoUs Blue Devils
trying to gouge farmers by corn," Ruble said. "They can hit with a flood like the one Mason
hearings," King said.. "And In
Va
.
Nat.
Guard 20-28; .7. Penn
offering them as much as a $10 grow other crops, such as which claimed 76 lives in Central14-34; 8. Hoffmans 8-40. · 57-52 here Saturday Dlghtln
order
to demonstrate our conTAMPA,
Fla.
(UPI)
to them things they were doing
Team High Series - Mason finals of lh.e Class AA Secper ton price decrease from soybeans, and earn more for southern West Virginia.
Cincinnati Reds ' manager which gave -a baserunner a cern and Interest for aucceulul '
"Seeing the utter destruction Co. Bonk 2890 and Harts Used tional Basketball Tourlast year .
strip mining · legislation for
their hard work," he said.
Sparky Anderson p~id his chance to take big leads.
nament.
caused by this nash flood, with Cars 2837. Hi~h Team Game W. Va. Nat1onal Guard' 1015
newly-acquired sec.ond
Morgan has averaged 40 or Ohio we wnte thae articleS.
houses strewn about like and Harts Used Cards 1007.
Gallipolis led durlug muah
"We want to make sure It ls
haseman Joe Morgan A flat- more thefts In each of last
matchsticks, should move
High Ind. Series - Bodkin of lbe first ball but fell
known, that we as an organlatering compliment Saturday. three seasons.
every local official in Ohio to 672 and Mason 671. High Ind. behind al Ill end, 3&amp;-26, and
Game - Snyder 265 and Nelson
Anderson made Morgan
"How did you steal all of Uon are for a good strip mine
never. got abead ~terward.
RIO GRANDE - Twenty~ix Lemley; James E. Harrison, use restrictive flood plain 258.
what almost amounted to an those hases when you weren't reclamation bill," said King.
Ironton advances to the
Gallia County students have son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynas zoning,"·. said Gilligan. ·"The
honorary coach.
in perfect physical condition?"
Tuesday Women
Clau AA Dlslrlct tourbeen named to the Dean 's Harrison ; Roger Warne fewer houses there are in a
·
Morgan,
one
of
the
top
base
1.
Hair
Harbour
46·18;
2.
asked Johnny Bench kiddingly
Honor Roll (3.5 or better) for Hyden ; Joyce Eileen Myers; flood plain, the fewer lives are Roush Construction 44-20; 3. nament al Rio Grande this
stealers
in
the
National
as Morgan grunted and
Mason Furni.ture .40-24; 4. weekend.
the first semester at Rio Deborah North, daughter of lost in such a disaster."
League, worked with Reds' groaned his way through the
Harts Used Cars 40-24 ; 5. Tom
Grande College. They are:
Mr. and Mrs . John North;
. Rue Motors 34-30; 6. M&amp; R
pitchers Saturday, pointing out Reds' dally calisthenics.
(Continued from page 13)
Shirley Ann Allbright, Richard Rinehart, son of Mr .
FoodJiner 32 -32 ; 7. Ingels
- "I was running against
Furniture 20-44.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Dean B. Rinehart ; .,.• SNAKES GO LAZY
·
.. -:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·.·:···.· Cincinnati pitchers," was Committee chairman, said 20
Team High Series - M&amp;R
FBI agents had been searching
OPP, Ala. (UP!) - A tangle Foodliner
Dallas Edward Allbright ; Richard Roderick, Brenda
1892 and Hair
Morgan's
retort.
The
ex-Astro
for Mrs. Beard In West
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) Albert Jackson Bailes, son of Jean Stewart; Everetta of spitting and buzzing rat- Harbour 1672 . Team Hlqh
was
only
half
kidding.
VIrginia, where she owns
Clay Carroll ended bls
Mr. and Mrs. James Bailes; Taylor , daughter of Mrs. tlesnakes began "the world's Game - M &amp; R Foodllner
According
to
Morgan
only
655
and
619.
property,
In Montana and In
holdout with the Clnclmtall
Joseph Bailey; Catherine Barbara Taylor; Margaret Lu only snake race" on the Town
Ind. High Series - Betty
Jim
Merritt
and
Jim
the Denver area, where she
Reds Saturday aad will
Berry, daughter of Mrs. Wilda Tracy, daughter of Mr. and Square today, but none Batey 536 and Judy Young 464.
McGlothlin
do
a
good
job
when
sometlnies
skis In the Colorado
begin workouts with lbe club
Houck;
Diana · Brown, Mrs. Luther Tracy; Beverly finished. Designed as a climax Ind. High Game - Betty Batey
it
comes
to
holding
a
runner
Rockies.
195 and Evelyn Proffitt 185.
loday.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Wallen ;
Glenna
Fry to the 12th annual rattlesnake
·a ut an ITT spokesman,
roundup that began in
Carroll, the Redo' top close to the bag.
Carroll Carman Brown; Whealdon ,
Steelworkers
RALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) and
Robert
"Clay
.
Carroll,"
said.
Bernard Goodrich, discloeed
relief pitcher a year ago, was
January, the snakes lost in- , 1. Rejects 76; 2. Nuts &amp; Bolls Five leading scorers who tower
Nicolyn Sue Burnett, daughter Williams.
Morgan,
referring
to
the
Reds'
Saturday
that ''we have been
seeking a contract for
terest in crawling when they 66 ; 3. Wonders 64; 4. Foote anaverageof6-9inheightwere
of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
lone
holdout,
"is
the
easiest
Heels 44; 5. Skips 36; 6. F..ros h
S t d
t th
notified by a friend of Mrs.
felt the bite of 37-degree 35;
$50,000, and while no terms
Burnett ; Karen Coker,
1. Stingers 34,
. c ose_n
a ur ay o
_e
to
steal
on
the
Reds
pitcher
Beard's
that she is In a Denver
of the agreement were anHigh Team Series - Won- mythical 1972 All-Allanite
daughter of Mrs. Irene Coker;
BROWN TO RECOVER · weather.
have."
hospital."
ders 2786 and Rejects 2610; Coast Conference basketball
nounced, It was beUeved be
Joanna Corfias; Freddie Joe
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) OUtfielder
Bernie
Carbo,
who
Team High Game - Rejects team
agreed to a compromise
Dee!, son of Mr. and Mrs. Defensive end Bob Brown of
1009 and Wonders 964.
·
HEARINGS SET
agreed to terms several days
settlement.
Ind.
High
Series
~
H.
Nelson
Bar:ry
Parkhill
of
Virginia,
6Hayes Deel ; Rita Kay the Green Bay Packers, shot in
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
ago, arrived In camp and
Carroll compiled a to-4
DeVault, daughter of Mrs. the neck by an acquaintance Senate Health subcommittee 658 and T. Kearns 619. Ind. fool-4 and smallest of the five,
participated In his first
High Game - H. Nelson 257 was chosen on each of 107 record with a U9 earned run
Nellie DeVault; Eleanor Friday night, should tk out of will hold hearings Monday and and
K. Imboden 235.
.
workout
of the spring.
Tuesday Industrial
ballots cast by memhers of the average and 15 saves last
F~deley ; Vickie J. Fowler ; the hospital by Tuesday and is Tuesday on a bill that would
l. Burton Sunoco 56-8; 2. Atlantic Coast SportS Writers
season. He was the Reds'
Dianna Jo Green, daughter of not expected to suffe; any provide $50 million to combat
Coca
-Cola
38-26
;
3.
Penn
Association
which
makes
the
last holdout.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Green; interruption to his professional lead-based paint poisoning Central 38·16; 4. Mason Agg.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
Georgena Harrison, daughter football career, his wife said among children. Sen. Edward 34-30; 5. Carolina Lumber Co. official selection.
(UP!) -They were two days
20-44; 6. New Haven Furniture
Each of the five won his
of Mr . and Mrs. George Saturday.
M. Kennedy, 0-Mass., said the 10-54,
late for practical Plll'(IOiel, but
b th
'th t
.
Team High Game - Burton er
WI ou
a seriOUs • PACKERS SIGN BAILEY
Mrs. Brown said that her measure would provide $45
a group of strlp mine
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI)
husband and a friend , W. C. million for several health , Sunoco 913 and 912. Team High challenge, even though the
aboUtlonlats demonstrated at
Pass receiver David Bailey
Series - Burton Sunoco 2725 second unit includes some of
McMiller, picked up the education
the statehouae Saturday on
and
welfare and
Saturdoy'st:xhibltlon
Coc~ - Cola 2498.
the country's best plavers
has signed a professional
Bueboll
Results
acquaintance, identified as department programs and $5
Ind. H1gh Series - Davis 567,
'
·
behalf of their callle,
DISQUALIFIED
Robert McAdoo; 6-10 North football contract with the By United Press tnternotlonot · About 100 members rA QtiHoward Sanders, at an in- million for contintied research Grate 564 ; Ind. High Game (At Bradenton, Fla.)
ONTARIO, Calif. · ( UPI )
Carolina center, was chosen on Green Bay Packers, Univertersection in West Memphis, into the problem. He said it Miller 212 and 'Grate '211.
Boston
120 002 020-7 9 2 zens to tholiah Strip Mlplng
Stock car champion George
sity of Alabama offiCials said Pitts.
all but five ballots.
000 002 10~8 13 2 paraded around the capitol
Ark. All three are residents of also would lower the level or
Sporn
Follmer was disqualified
Pattin, Tlant (4}, Lee (7) and
Rounding out what may be Saturday.
1. Wild Men 52·36; 2. B Shift
West Memphis, across the lead content of interior paints
Josephson, Montgomery (6); rotunda, singing folk songs and
by
NASCAR
Saturday
49-39:
3. King Pins 48-40 ; 4. the tallest AU.Starr team In the
Bailey,
who
won
All-Southjust before the second Mississippi River from from I per cent lead by weight Rejects 47-H; 5. A Shift 46-42 ; annals of college basketball eastern Conference honors in Blass, Walker (4), Johnson (7) carrying placards.
Memphis.
and Sands, Taylor (69!. WPto .06 per cent.
They gathered In frmt of the
6. The P.O. 42-46 ; 7 . D. Shlft36annual Sportsman 250 here In a
32 ; 8. Unll 3 32-36.
are Tom McMillen, 6-11, of 1971 at Alabama, said he was Johnson . LP-Lee . HR -D. Houae of Delega14!8 chamber
Mrs . Brown quoted her
controversy over the shape of husband as saying as soon as
Team Hloh Series - D Shift Maryland; Dennis Wuyclk, 6-0, "eagerly looking forwurd to Miller.
while th!l House was In Rulon.
MUSKIE
FIRST
2477
and Unit 3 2462; Team
his car. Follmer, defending 250 Sanders got in to the car, he
joining the Packers." He said
of
North
Carolina,
and
7-1
I
At
Sarasota,
Flo.)
Dell. Warren McGraw, oRALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) - High Game - Wild Men 904
champion at the Ontario Motor shot Brown in the neck.
and
A
Shift
876.
Tommy
Burleson
of North he has been working out with N.Y. ( NL) 001 000 ooo-1 6 3 Wyoming, and Ivan While, !).
Sen. · Edmund Muskie, DSpeedway, refused to allow
Ind. High Game - Couch 575 Carolina St.lte.
Green Bay quarterback Scoti Chi. (AL) 033 000 OOx~ 10 0 boone, sponsors of 111U«rip
Malne,
became
the
first.
to
file
Seaver, Mc~raw ·(3),
and
Fry
550;
Ind.
High
Game
NASCAR to compare the lines
Wuyclk is a repeater from l!unter,alsoa former Alabama Matlack !7) and Grote, Nolan mine lills, Spoke lriefly to the
- Van Pelt 256 and Searls 223.
'in
North
Carolina's
l\fay
6
of hi• 1968 Mercury again•t the ORVIS SIGNED
last season. Parkhill, then a star, who lives here during the 1711 Bahnsen, Palmer (4), crowd.
'
It
presidential
primary
Friday.
race officials' template.
off-season.
Robertson (7) and Brinkman.
Wednesday Mixed
DETROIT (UPi i-The Desophomore,
made
till
All·ACC
President ol the cltlzena
WP.Bahnsen. LP-Seaver. HR·
t . Try Hards 38· 18 ; 2. All-Tournament team and was
troit Lions Friday signed was announced that Gov.
Brinkman.
group,
Gerald Sizemore, ubd ..
ShamrO&lt;ks
37-19;
3.
Smith
&amp;
defensive end Herb Orvis of George Wallace of Alabama ~oush 37-19: 4. H&amp;H 34-22 ; 5. a second-team choice for the INDOOR TENNIS
!he ljvo delegates _
to 10 back
HAMPTON, Va. (UPI)-Ilie
Colorado, their No. I draft and President Nixon would join Alley Gators 32-24 ; 6. Pin 'regul6r season .
(AI LAkeland, Ft..)
lnsid the chamber •~ the
·Spotters 20-36·; 7. Son.Q.Guns
20t 001' 010-5 11 o
e
• ""
Nastase and Ion Tirtac of' Minn.
choice, to a contract for the the list Monday.
Detroit
001 001 012- 4 4 1 memben lalow the ~lllla18-38;
8.
Woolles
8-4
.
1972 National Football League
Romania beat an American
SOX BOMB METS
Team High Series Biyleven, Norton 171 and tcrs were ll!n, llld lelllbem
BLAIR SETS RECORD
season.
duo
of Cliff Richey and Tom Dempsey ; Coleman, Ware (7) to "act before lt'l too t.le,"
GRANT
RECEIVED
Shamrocks
mund
Try
Hards
SARASoTA, Fla. (UPI)
PRINCETON, N. J. (UPI)- Edlefsen, 7.0, U, 7-6, Friday to and Hailer. WP-Biyleven. 'LP·
The ,;.,.,n sat ltr the u-·CLEVELAND (UP!) - Rep. 1797.
Chuck Brinkman cracked a
~--..,..._
Team
High
Game
Tom
Blair's meet record pole gain the tloubles final of the Coleman. HRS· Darwln, G.
Louis
Stokes,
D-Ohio,
antwo-run ~omer and Luis
Brown.
gaUery
whUe
th!l
=rion
Wll
Shamrocks
729
and
Try
Hards
vault (16'-8 ¥,") victory ~.ooo World Indoor Tennis
TO PLAY THURSDAY
nounced Saturday that the 0~~ .
Alvarado drove in two runs
·
•
going
on,
and
later
moftll
to
CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Ind. High Series - Men: D. sparked the University of Championship.
(At Fort Louclerdale, Flo.)
the Senate
·
Saturday while the Chicago Creek High School Key Club Department of Health, Mlller612
and R. Capehart 584; Pennsylvania ~a 26-25 victory
Th __;.._
,;...,~-~~
They will meet Americans 15'12 Innings, rain)
Education and Welfare ·has Women : M.
While~ bombed Tom Seaver
Rot
&lt;
Sh
40
and
J.
Texas
012
CJ0-3
4
0.
n
"""'
no
u..._.
.
over
Villanova
in
the
1C4A
will sponsor a basketball game
Jbil CoMors and Tom Gor- N.Y. IAL)
•
for eight hils and six runs to Thursday night between the awarded the C!~veland Council Foglesong 459.
000
O&lt;Hl
5
21
The
..
at
two
da)oa,
~
Ind. High Gaone - Men : R. track and field championships man, who beat Spaniards
Goglewskl, Hand W . ancl . caltq for a refaenrlwn on
defeat the New York Mrts, 6-1, KC faculty and Southwestern for Economic Opportunities a Capehart
232 ard D. Miller 217. Satllrday, ending the Wildcals' Andres Gimeno and Manuel King; Keklch, Hinton (4) and·
.....
$ll0,000
grant
to
fund
a
child
In the Meta' exhibition openei'. . faculty . Admission is 50 cents.
Women : M. Roosh 183 and D. five-year reign ' in the 51st
Munson, WP.Goglewskl.i LP. , atrlpplna .... oufrllblabollllotl
advocacy program.
Orantes: 6-4, 7-', in the other Keklch. .
Harbour 1;7,
of ibe lndUJtry were tabled In
annual meet.
semifinal doubles .rnatclt. ·
commltleea of' bOth~.

Event Is .
Postponed
By Weather

Precautions Taken in Ohio

Anderson R.eveals Text
Of Alleged ITT Memo

Hatch ·

Popcorn Growers -

Are Popping Mad

Local Bowling

Spar.k y P.ays

Flattering Compliment

26 .Earn Honors At Rio Grande

Kleindienst

'72 All ACC
Dream Team ·
Averages 6-9

A,bolitionists
Demonstrate
In ChArleston

Exhibition
Results

\

JJ- Tbe Sunday Tlmel- Seltlnet, Slllda~. )llarch s, 11m

·Dateline
Gallia
BY HOBART ~N, JR.
MR. and Mrs. Frank E. Wetherholt, .420 First Ave.,
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fulton, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, are
mighty proud grandparenls these days.

+++++
~HEIR

granddaughter,
Martha Wetherholt, 18,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Wetherbolt, 942 Lancaster St., Marietta, was
recently chosen Marietta's
"ou~taqdlng young . citizen,"
by the Marietta Jaycees.
Martha is a native of
Gallipolis.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 5
.

1 TO 7 PM SUNDAY
WOOLITE

IMPACT BRAND

•

GOLF
ALLS

+++++
A picture .of Martha
receiving a .trophy for ihe
hOnor appeared in the Wednesday, Feb. 23 iasue of the
Marietta Times. It was accompanied by the following
story:

+++++

Heck's Reg.

Martha Wetherholt, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wetherliolt, 942 Lancaster St., has been chosen Marietta's
"outstanding young cltizi!n" by Marietta Jaycees.
Chalnnan for the competition, Bob Bl!l'ton, characterizes
Martha as ."Idealist enough to see a better world and realist
enough ID wilrk hard to achieve it."
llurtoil and Mac Fenton contaeted the guidance deparlments ,
at both Marietta Senior )llgh and the junior high and students
were nominated by Individual clsss counselors.
Applications were studied by a panel of Jaycee jndges, and
Martha was the winner, mainly, said Burton, "because of her
work with people who need help." At school, she tutors students
who need academic assistance, and at First Presbyterian
Church, she has participated for two years in the Youth Sunday
program agd this year presented part of the sermon.
At home, much of the homemaking responsibility fails on
Martha's shoulders, because her mother has been iU for the past
two years.
Martha has two brothers, Karl, a sophomore at th~
University of Virginia, and Jon, a sixth grader.
Martha is fully capable of running the entire household from
cooking to painting a room, according to the judges. She sews
and makes many of her own clothes. Hobbies Include knitting
and reading. Her interests include reUgious education, math and
law.
She was recently accepted at Case Western Reserve
University, and has been saving money for college since the age
of 13. Martha has worked as a babysitter and for two summers
!las been employed full~ime as a housekeeper-baby sitter.
She has been a 4-H club member for five years and has won
awards
her $ewin• bblllty . In Junior Achievement she has
vriff ~ !jJco H h. J:Juu.,,-- :;;:~tl' ' .l'l ,
serveu as .weasurer "' ' ro aco.
Last winter, In addition tO her school work, she successfully
completed the Red Cross water safety Instructor course: At
school she is active In ·German Club, Science Club and Ubrary
Oub, and was elected to the National Honor Society in her junior
year. This year she is In charge of the tutoring program spon·
sored by that group. This entails securing a tutor for any student
who Is having trouble with his school work . She is contacted by
teachers, guidance personnel and students themselves.
Martha Is also a member of the American Field Service and
is In charge of publicity lor the organization.
She was selected to attend a week-long seminar of the
University of Young Americans held at Baldwin-Wallace
CoUege. To qualify to attend, a student must have formed strong
opinions based on knowledge and familiarity with the topics and
problems facing citizens today.
Martha has served as a library aide for two years, and is
enrolled In the highest academic program at Marietta Senior
High.

11.39

.

\,., ' ·.

(BROWN ONLY)
Heck' s Reg.

"TRUE TONE"

TURKEY CALLER
Heck's Reg. $699

Housewares

99

99

50

99

Heck's
Reg.

Hardware
Dept.

$3.68

LADIES'
SEAMLESS
MESH

ALL CAPS
ASST. COLORS

.

CLAW HAMMER

$299

ior

+++++

-~

FIBERGLASS

CAR MATS

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly GaUia Times ... Cecil A. Hartsook, 57, Vinton, killed
In truck accident near St. Albans, W. Va ... Five Cheshire boys,
Bob Mulford, Jim Conkle, Bob Bocock, Dick Russell and Howard
Roush, enlist in U.S. Navy ... Portsmouth East nips GAHS 51-48
In Oass A quarterfinab in district cage tournament at Athens ...
SEOAL champion Nelsonville upsets Corning 73-67 to capture
· Oass B Distl'ict basketball Iitle.

.,,

Dept.

FRONT

$

n

Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg, 11.29

Heck's
Reg.

¢

66

$3.96 DOZ.

$

RUG CLEANER

DOW
'

SENTINEL
'

'

NYLON
HOSE

FREEZE

Heck's Reg. 2 pair 77e

Heck's Reg.

$1.49

ANTIFREEZE
CCCLANT ...W,.
.
...
, ,., _ ··-.

-

~-·-·

...... ·-

2 PAIR PKG. ·

GAL

$238

.Sierra Ouh Says
Hanna Ads False
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The Nothing in this bill will cause a
Ohio chapter of the Sierra Club mine to close, unless it cannot
Friday filed a complaint with properly be reclaimed."
the Federal Trade Commission
Citing as an example a Feb.
accusing the Hanna Coal Co. of 13 ad that claimed that only one
"false and grossly misleading" of every three light bulbs would
newspaper advertising.
· remain lit if surface mining
The group charged the ads were stopped, Gibson said the
were scare tactics used by the ad was not only iticonsistenl
firm to undermine a strip mine but "intended to frighten the
· reclamation bill before the reader into believing that. if
Ohio Senate.
strip mine control bills were
Chapter Vice Chairman enacted, his lights would go
Donald Gibson said the ads, out."
which appeared- in . several
"This is blatantly and
newspapers In Ohio and West delihera tely false , because the
VIrginia, Intended to make present strip mine control bills
people think passage of the bill are intended to insure that
would Increase unemployment · proper reclamation practices
and electrical brownouts.
, are carried out, not to close all
"Neither of these are true," · the mines," Gibson said .
Gibson said. "Strict en- .
forcement of reclamation
procedures should require the
ANNIVERSARY SPLIT
use of more men, no~ .fewer.
ATLANTA (UP!) --- Und~rground Atlanl;l, one of the
city's top tourist attractions,
will mark Atlanta's 125lh
NAMED TO COMMISSION
anniversary March 16 _with a
KEY BISCAYNE, !'.a. . 1,000-po~nd bana_na spht. The
(UPI) _ Francis T. Mayo,.. . concoctton, wh1ch mcludes
Chicago
regional
ad- 1,000 hananas, surpasses the
ministrator of the · En- previous record of 600 pounds.
vironmental Protection
Agency, , has been named by
President Nixon to be a
TURTLE PERMITS
commissioner on the Ohio
HARRISBURG IUP! )
River Valley Water Sa~italion Gov. Milton J. Shapp Friday
Commission. Mayo will signed a bill prohibitiug turtles ·
represent the federal govern- from entering Peimsylvania
without pennits .
ment on the comm181ion. :

. REBUILT

SPARK PLUGS
Jl SET OF

8

00

'

Great For

ea,.ping!

Heck's Reg.
11.48

$

PORTA LAMP
Heck's Reg. $599

66

•

6 PACK
PRIZE PENN
MOTOR OIL

Heck's
Re11. To

$2.38

,

$

66

�. j

•
;

Buc
•

.After a 29-29 halftime ti~,
Indiana raced into a 48-40 lead
only to have the Buckeyes reel
off eight straight points to tie it.
The Hoosiers then took the
lead for good, scoring six
straight points. John Ritter hit
a free toss, Joby Wright got a
free throw and a ftelder and

Steve Downlhg bagged a
jumper as .the . Hoosiers
grabbed a 54-48 lead and Ohio
State never recov.ered.
Downing wound up with 21
pbirits, Wright 19 and Ritter 10.
Ailan Hornyak of Ohio State

topped all scorers with 25
points. Luke Witte and Wardell
Jackson each added 13.
Ohio State is now 9-4 in the
Big Ten and •17-6 overall whlle
Indiana is 7-5 in the loop and 15. 7 overall.

OHIO . STATE 1571 Jackson, 5 IJ.SI 13r Minor, I 10·
OJ 2; Witte, 6' (1.3) 13; Gerhard,
1 (2·5) ~; Hornyak, 8 (9·101 25:
Wolfe, 0 (O.QJ 0; Merchant, 0 IO·
0) 0; Wagar, 0 (Q.OJ 0; Slekmann, 0 (0·0) o. Totals, 21 11523., 57.
INDIANA (65) - WriQht, 8

13·71 19; Ritter, 3 1"-s'l . 10;
Downing, 9 13·5) 21 ; Wilson, 1
(0-0) 21 White, o (6·8) 6:
Pemberton, 2 13·3) 7. Tot1h, 23
I 19-29) 65.
Half!I me score: Indiana 29
Ohio State ·29; fouled out:
Minor. Total Fouls: Ohio State
21 ; Indiana 16. ·

Gophers Rip
Illini Five
' .•
·~

-

.....,,
~-· -

CHARLOTIE ADAMS, a. member of tbe All-American
Red Heads professional basketball team, is considered the
team'sdefensive ace. Miss Adams stands 6-1,and is a strong,
vicious•and aggressive performer with a passion for playing
basketball for the world champion girls team. A forward,
Miss Adams is one of the team's top scorers. She is a fine
outside shooter and possesses a sensational tricky whirl shot
from the pivot position. The Red Heads will battle members
of the GAHS Coaches staff, beginning at 2 p.m., today on the
varsity hardwood. The contest is being sponsored by the
Gallipolis Area Jaycees.

Rain Delays
Dora.l Tourney

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP))
The
University of Minnesota Gophers, hungry for its
first Big Ten basketball title in 35 years, outscored ·
Illinois 28-5 at the opening of the second half
Saturday and breezed to a 91-62 victory to hold first
place in the hectic conference race.
The Gophers, who entered
the ga!lle as the lowest scoring
team in the league, charmed a
jubilant crowd of 14,666 wilh
their highest point output of the
season. Their pressing defense
forced 14 first half lllini turnovers as Minnesota took a 40'll lead at the intermission.
Minnesota then scored 12

Michigan
Upset By
Spartans

straight points to open the
second half and had a 66-34
advantage when Coach Bill
Musselman replaced starting
guard Bob Nix to a standing
ovation with 12:13 remaining.
It was the lOth win in 11 home
games for the Gophers, who
are 10-3 in the conference and
16-6 overall. Illinois is 4-8 in the
conference and 12-9 overall.
Illinois tied it briefly 16-16 on
a layup by Nick Weatherspoon,
who had 24 points, but the
Gophers shot ahead with seven
straight points.
Clyde Turner led the
Gophers with 21, Dave Winfield
had 20, Keith Young scored 19
and Jim Brewer had 13, along
with 16 rebounds.

Bearcats In

V'ct
pse
ory

Defiance
Coach ·Js·
Honored

.

FRANKIE BURKE, left; GaDtpoHo, Ia C111181'1111111ted by
Jim Dobbins, director rJ. the 1972 Skyline Lanes' Handicap
Bowling T011rnament, after Burke captured first place'
honors with an 884actualand 28-bandicapfor a 91210tal.

7 Offers Mat!e To Buy Royals

Aspromonte Plans

4-Man Rotation

with former Boston Celtics
President Marvin Kratter and
Pete Graham, owner of the San
Diego International Sports
Arena, both of whom want to
put a National Basketball Association team in San Diego.
"I ca~ report that I have an
offer I feet is fair and just and
am willing to forward to the
stockholders with," Jacobs
commented. "It is contingent
on being able to obtain a proper
lease on a building."
He said that if a lease is
worked out he would then take
the purchase offer to the stock-

holders. HiS brother,- .~m-y, is
the largest stockholder with 56
per cent but there are 91 other
stockholders.
Jacobs also mentioned that
he had not been able .to give
sufficient study so far to a proposal from a local group intereste.d iriJbUUdlni,,a ilew&lt;cio)mo
town sports arena 10 .hau$e a
new National Hockey League
team and an NBA team.
"They · say they definitely
want ,an NBA team 10 play in
the new arena but they haven't
made any specific requests,"
be said.

1 SUPER SHE~"

, RIO GRANDE - Lancaster
cashed five of six chances at
the free thrqw line in the four til
quarter and got m points from
Walt Dillard in a 57 to 54 victory oyer M8rietta in a Class
AAA Sectional basketball
tourriament game Friday.
Portsmouth won tile second
game beating Chillicothe 7().54,
aa All-Ohio candidate Mike
Lovenguth tossed in 34 points.
Porjsrnouth and Lancaster
col)i~ed for the Rio title
Satljrday night and a trip to the
AAA DIBirlct at Steubenville.
Lancaster made 15 of 22 free
thro'!' 19 ,'MI.rletta'a Mor-19
and this W11J the ball game
beeause Mlrletta , had two
more )laskets, 23-21.
Rlcll Powers popped in 18 for
Lancaster. with Dillard and
Br.lan Arledge getting 15 each.
Dillard alio h!id nine rebounds.
Bi)l Sutton; with 12, was high
for Marietta. Marietta hit on 44
pet,' of Ita shots and Lancaster

The Trojans ~hot in 45.4 pet.'
from the field; Chillicothe
ranged in 42. Rebounds were
even at 32, but the Cavaliers
committed three more tur·
nov'ers 24-21.
Box Scores :
. First Game
MARIETTA (54)- Hawe 2·
1-5; Cumblldge 4·2·10; Maker~2·10; Mathney H ·l; Neeson 1·
0-21 BQner 4·0'8; Suttoo 6·0-12.
Totals - 33·8·45.
LANCASTER (57)- Dillard
6·3-15; Gordon 2·0-~; Arledge 4·
7-15; Powers 7-4·18; Uhl 2·1·81
Totals - 21 -15-57.
By Quarters:
Marietts
14 30 ·.u 5~
Lancaster
15 29 40 57
Second Game
PORTSMOUJH (70)
Gentry 1-0·2: McGlone 1-0-2;
Dickerson 4· J.9; Lonaennuth
11·12·34;
Oaehler
4.3.111
Hopkins H -10; Prater 1·0·2.
Totals,. 25-20·70.
CHilLICOTHE (54)- Blake
1·0-2; ~everly, D. J.0-6;
Beverly, J. 5·5·15; Blevins 3-17; Gatliff '1·2·4: Gause 1-0-2 ;
Kuhner 5-2·1.2; Ratzlaff 2-2·6.
'Totals. 21 , 12·54.
By Quarters:
Portsmouth
14 32 51 70
Chillicothe
11 26 39 54

W. L. Pel. GB

Milwaukee 56 16 .771 .. .
Chicago
50 22 .694 6
Phoenix
~2 JO' .583 14
Detroit
23 •s .324 10•,;
W. L. Pel. Gl

MEIGS GALS ON THE GO- The ~•eig.s girls' basketball team is pictured here on a fast
break against visiting Gallipolis Thursday night. The Meigs g.sls won, 42-?S. Girls in the above
photo, left to right, are Sherrie King, Carolyn Swain, Debbie Ohlinger, Patty Burnett, Connie
Cotton, Pat Harris (with ball) and Leanne Sebo.

Bruins Rack Up 24th
Straight Cage Victory

Swimmers On

Family Pack
includes these , .
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders
of french fries.

ORIY

EverY SundaY
(ALL DAY)

1S03 EASTERN AVEtiJE .

GALLIPOlJt .

Big Eight Slams Door On ABA

mstron

BEAU
BUDG

ONA

312

-

Ualted Press IDtei'IUIUonal
The division finals of 'the
Ohio Conference basketball
championship tournament
were played at two sites
Saturday night, with the
winpera going against each
other at Alliance T)Jesday night
for all the marbles.
Baldwin-Wallace won a berth
In the northern division Friday
night by edging Mount Union
~ while Kenyon got by
Wooster 85-83.
In the southern division,
played at Granville, Wittenberg whipped Dennison 66~lle 'Capital tmade· short
work of Musklngum Bl-66.
Joe Jacobus led a balanced
Capital scoring attack with 21
points. Muskingum's Jim
Vejsicky was high for the game
with 23 points.
Wittenberg outscored
Denison 19-1 during a sevenminute span in the second half.
Joe Hamilton led Wittenberg

GALUPOLIS - II will be the
Bullets vs. the Bucks and the
Lakers vs. the Travellers in
Monday night's championship
games of the Gallipolis RinkyDlnk League post-season
basketball tournament on the
Washington School hardwood.
Friday night, in Class B
semifinal action, the Bullets
bombed the Rockets 40-24 whlle
the Lakers downed the Knicks
17-Bin Class A semifinal play.
In Friday's first game, the
Bullets broke up a Ught game
by outscoring the Rockets 22-9
in the second half of play. High
for the winners was J. Arm.\ strong with 16 points. B. Barr
had 11. Steve Thomas pumped
in 19 for the losers.
The Bullets-Bucks championship game will begin at

Kent State

Top In Race

Deniso,n, 66-57
with 17 points. Dudley Brown
headed Denison with 24 points.
· In the northern division at
Alliance, Dean Martin hit a 10foot jump shot with 10 seconds
left to give Baldwin-Wallace a
comeback ·victory over Mount
Union.
Martin's winning shot from
the baseline gave him a gamehigh 36 points, 291n the se~ond
half. Jim Howell led Mount ·
Union with 18 points.
The first game of the night
was even more exciting, with
sophomore guard Billy Kozy
hitting a 30-!oot jump ahot with
one second remaining for the
Kenyon win. The two points
were his only ones of the game.
The bulk of Kenyon's scoring
attack was carried by Jim
Smith and Marty Hunt, ·who
scored 32 points apiece.
Wooster had four players in
double figures, led by Rich
Dutter's 23.

JUMP SHOT -; GaDipolis' Helen Akers (42) attempts to
block Meigs' Debbie Ohlinger (14) jump shot duril\g. thiS
action shot taken Thursday evening at Rock Springs. Meigs.
girls downed GAHS, 42-25.

By United Press lutematloaal
UCLA is suffering from
"victory fatigue. "
The Bruins knocked off
California, 85-71, FridaY night
for its 24th straight win this
season. But if the final score
indicates an easy victory,
that's misleading.
The young Brulna had eased
to a 44-33 halftime lead and
appeared to have things all
their own way, as usual.
Suddenly, they found Cal
three points down and risin' as
the keyhole popping of Ansley
Truitt and Bill puew dre)V the
Bears to within ~1-411.
But the No. I UCLAns rallied
for seven of the next eight
points with Larry Farmer
scoring six of his 16 , points
during the spree and that was
all she wrote·:
"This was our toughest
game," Bruins' Coach John
Wooden said. "No team has
closed to three points on us in
the second half."
Waltoa Leads Brullls
Sophomore center Bill
Walton led the Bruins with 24
points and Duew topped Cal
with 19.
Texas El Paso recovered

from a l4iroint halftime deficit straight game and clinched a
to upset seventh-ranked Brig- tie for Ita third straight Ivy
ham Young, 73-89,in a Western League tiUe with an 86-65 romp
Athletic Conference game.
·over outclassed Yale.
Charlie Braki)S, who hit for
Awarded Game Ball
18 points, put the Miners ahead
PhU Hanklnaon led the Penn
for good at 54-S3 when he hit a attack with 'll points, and
free throw with 10:07 Corky Calhoun added 21.
remaining in the contest. Calhoun's 011tput pushed his
Bernie Fryer of tbe Cougars career points total to 1,006 and
waa high scorer in the game be was awarded the game ball
with 23 points.
when he topped 1,000 with 12;25
No. 4 PeM won its 13th to go in the game.
East Carolina edged DavldReds Mail Half
aon, 81-77, and Flirman topped
Million Tickets
William &amp; Mary, 93-71, 1n the
ciNCINNATi - The Cln- semifinal rounds ol tile Southcinnatl Reds the past 72 hours ern Conference tournament at
have mailed more than a half- · Greenville., S.C.. East
million tickets for 1972 to Carolina and Furman clalh at
season holders and mail order 8:00 p.m. EST tonight for the
conference croWI'! and the right
patrons.
"The total represents the to go on to the NCAA toilr·
largest advance sale, for" ·this nament., .·.:-:1 • '· ~~
The same holds irue for the
date in the club's history," said
Bob Farrell, Reds Ticket champion of the Middle Atlantic Conference playoffs, which
Services Director.
Farrell said a good supply of will be either Temple or St.
$3 reserved seats are available Joseph's (Pa.).
The Owls preyed upon
for the April 5 Opening Day
Lafayette,
87-75, while si.
game with Houston.
He also reported that in- Joseph's toppled Rider, 82-77,
dividual-game ticket orders in semifinal action. Albright
are running well ahead of 1971 blasted Scranton, 99-74, in the
and season sales are alsc up. MAC College Division playoff.

Bullets, Lakers
Gain R-D Finals
,.

ColletelllsketbltiResuhs
By United Press l~tol'llltonal
Mlddlt Atlt~Rtlc Conllrence·
(lsi Round)
Temple 87 Lafayette 75
Sl. Jos .• Po. 82 Rider 77
•
Colltae Division
C~ln1tl

Albrlghl99 Scranton 74
SOuthern Conltrtnce
( S.mlflnlls)
East Car. 81 Davidson 56
Furman 93 Wm.&amp;Mary 78

I

I

~

'

NIAs!1ndl...
By United Preaalnt...,..tlollll
E1slern c-rtiiCe
Atlantic Divlsioll
W. L. Pel. Gl
Bosloo
49 23 .611 ...
New York
42 27 .609 5'h
Philadelphia 27 4:1 .391 20'12
Buffalo
19 50 .275 21'12
Ctnfrll Division
W. L. Pel. GB
Ball lmore
31 39 .443 ..
Atlanta
27 42 .391 3'12
Cincinnati
22 48 .314 9
Cleveland
20 50 .286 10'12
Midwest Division

OC Champs Whip
PRESENTED $300 CHECK - Jerry Mercer, right,
Belpre, is presented a $300 check by Skyline Lanes Bowling
Alley owner Dr. Donald Warehime for his historic feat on
Sunday, Feb. 'll. Mercer, a resident of Belpre, rolled a
perfect 300 in the Blue Fountain Singles 'tournament. It was
the first perfect game ever recorded at Skyline Lanes,
located in Kanauga.

.

Pro~

42.

EAST LANSING, Mich .
IUPil - Mike Robinson
pumped in 37 points Saturday
leading Michigan state to ~U
~
l
MIAMI I UP! I - The third nament was washed out at awhile
96-92 Big Ten upset over
1
round of the $1~0 , 000 Dora!- . about the midway point
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A Jacobs Family, admitted that
CINCINNATI (UP!) _ The
Eastern Open Golf Tour- Saturday because of heavy Michigan and severely damage
rains which flooded three the Wolverines' hopes for a University of Cincinnati put total of sev~ offers have been several of the offers came from
conference championship.
five men in double figures, led made recently to buy the the San Diego area.
greens.
The 5-foot-10 sophomore by Derrek Dickey with 20 Ciqcinnati Royals, according
"Some of the offers involve
No decision was made imto
Royals
board
chairman
Max
San
Diego, a couple do not," he
guard
scored
consjstenUy
all
points,
in
upsetting
lith
ranked
mediately as to whether to
Jacobs,
who
said
one
of
the
said. "One group doesn't know
schedule 36 holes of golf on afternoon on short jump shots Florida State 118-64 Saturday
offers
"!
feel
is
fair."
and
layups,
including
six
afternoon.
what it wants to do, one gr011p
Sunday or delay the finish of
Jacobs,
appearing
in
Los
Anis interested in the middle west
The Bearcats reeled off eight
the 72-hole tournament until straight points late in the game
geles
Friday
to
testify
in
a
and
there is another gr011p in
that put the Spartans ahead for straight points to break a 12-12
Monday.
federal
court
trial
involving
New Orleans."
tie midway through the first
Although nearly half of the good, 90-88.
The Spartans also were aided
Emprise
Corp.,
owned
by
the
Jacobs said he had talked
field of 82 golfers who made the by senior forward Pat Miller's half, with six points produced
cut Friday had completed their
by Dickey. The Seminoles were
finest
game
as
a
collegiate
.
unable
to recover the rest of
rounds, all scores were washed
player.
Miller
hit
12
of
1~
goal
the
game.
out and fresh rounds will be
attempts, many' of them on
started Sunday.
COLUMBUS (UPI)
feeds from Robinson, and
Florida State, despite Ron
ll was the first time this year
Marvin Hohenberger, who
King's game-high 22 points,
ended the game with 26 points. failed to pull closer than 10
coached Defiance College to a a round had to be called off.
Michigan scoring was led by points to the hot shooting
23-1 record this basketball
When play starts again
season, · has been selected the today, Lee Trevino wiiHold a guard Henry Wilmore's 22 Bearcats in the second half
1972 Ohio College Basketball one-stroke lead over aging Sam points, forward John Lockard after rallying from the half21, and center Ken Brady lime 44 _34 deficit. .
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI)- better with three days rest.
Coach of the Year. ,
Snead and veteran Paul with
with 20.
Cleveland Manager Ken He'll set the pattern for the
Hohenberger received eight Harney at six under par 138.
The Wolverines fell to .S-4 in
Cincinnati played without its
first place votes and was men- Harney and Snead were at 139 the Big Ten and JJ-g for the two big men, Dickey and Gred Aspromonte said Saturday he rest. I'll go this way all year
tioned on 25 ballots for a total of and two strokes back after
Jurcisin, for most of the second will use a ·~our-man rotation" except for doubleheaders.
54 points .In the pd]l of Ohio Friday's second round as were season · Michigan State, which half as both had four personals, for his pitching staff--tlle first Then we'll pick the best fifth
defeated its arch rival for the
time in years the Indians have man at that time."
College coaches conducted by Jerry McGee, Bob Rosburg first
time since Gus Ganakas butSophomore Jesse Jemison used a four man staff.
"Pitchers get stale not
the Columbus Dispatch.
and Ken Still.
assumed the pivot spot and
"I'm
going
with
a
four-man
look
over
as
head
coach
in
1969,
scored
points
as
the
Bearthrowing," he said. "It won't
\ Wyatt Webb of Akron was
Earlier, a heavy downpour
14
upped its conference mark to~rotation," said Aspromonte. hurt a kid. With the use of "elief
~nd with a tots 1 of 12 first had forced a 23-minu te
7and its season record to 10-10. cats ran away with the game. "Gaylord Perry proved he's
pitchers today that's not too
place votes and 53 points in the suspension which ended at 2:26
Reggie Royals scored 15
much work."
closest voting in the 19 year p.m . after the rain had
points for the NCAA-bound
history of the poll.
Pitching coach Warren
slackened and the three
and Rowland
Twins Nip Tigers Seminoles
Spahn
pitched with three day's
Vince Chickerella of Capital flooded greens had drained.
Garrett added 11. Uoyd Batts
rest during most of his career.
University was third with 44
But 12 minutes after golfers
scored 16 points for Cincinnati,
points and Bobby Nichols of resumed play, the skies opened In Spring Opener
"If I got an extra day rest
Dave Johnson hit for 1~ and
Toledo fourth with 37.
because of a rainout, it hurt my
again, play was suspended and
Uonel Harris chipped in with
control,"
he said. "My theory
"It certainly is &amp;·tremendous then eventually cancelled. One
LAKELAND, Fla. (UP!) 11.
honor but it seems the honor of the big casualties of the rain Rookie rightfielder Bobby
is pitchers don't throw en011gh,
should belong to the team," was Still, who shot birdies on Darwin drove in three runs
"Half tbe kids here have no
McLAIN TRADED
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
said Hohenberger.
his first two holes, moving him with a homer and double
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. KentStatehadwinnersin three idea how 10 train," said Spahn.
"The
players
have into a tie with Trevino, who Saturday to lead the Minnesota (UPI) - DennyMcLain,atwo- of Friday's six events to take "we're working them all hard
responded so well 10 any played his first three holes at Twins to a 5-4 victory over the time winner of the American over the lead after two days in so they'll be ready to do what
situation they have been even par.
Detroit Tigers in their League's Cy Young Award and the Mid-American Conference we ask."
presented with this year," said
I fully recuperate after three
The two hottest complete Grapefruit League opener.
the last pitcher to win 30 games swimming championships.
Hohenberger. "It's an honor rounds turned in before the
Darwin, playing in place of in a season, was traded for the
The three-day meet was days and I'm ready," said Perfor me just to be associated rains came were four under American League batting second time in two seasons concluded here Saturday with ry. "To wait a day more messes me up."
with them because they make par 68s by Tony Jacklin and champion Tony Oliva, hit a Saturday when the Texas seven events.
everything much easier for Tom Weiskopf, winner of last two-run homer off Tiger Rangers dealt him to the
Steve Dunning was happy
At the end of Friday 's
me."
week 's Jackie Gleason In- starter Joe Coleman in the first Oakland Athletics for two . competition, Kent had 98 with the news that he would be
Hohenberger, along with verrary Classic.
inning and doubled home minor league pitchers.
points, followed by Ohio with one of the four rotating starters.
Toledo Coach Murphy, the Ohio
But the two golfe" had another run in the third as the
In exchange for McLain the 87, Miami, 55, Bowling Green .
College Football Coach of the three-round totals of even par Twins pounded the Tiger Rangers received righthanders 31 and Western Michigan 11.
"!need to pitch more often,"
Year, will be honored at The 216 over the par 72, 7,028-yard pitchers for 11 hits .
Don Stackhouse and Jim
Four records were set he said, "The more I go out
Dispatch All-High Major "blue monster" course at the
Gates Brown belted a two- Panther, both of whom played Friday. Gerry Muske of Kent there the more I'm going to
Sports banquet March 13 at the Dora! Country Club, putting
run homer for t~e Tigers' final with Iowa in the American set a league and pool record learn and more quickly. On
Ohio Union.
.two runs in the ninth inning. Association last season.
them far back in the pack.
with a 53.71 time in the 100-yard that kind of schedule you can .
· backstroke. A conference and pattern your whole life. Just .
pool mark also was set by like anything else, it's better if
you pitch more.'•
Ohio's 8!JO.yard freestyle relay
learn with a lillie of 7:08.62.
Rick Clark of Ohio set a pool
KANSAs CITY, Mo. (UJ:'I)- most offensive . It is apparent
record
with 4:23.97 in the 400"Further, it is our hope that more ethical manner."
The Big Eight Conference, in a that the ABA is determined to ~other major conferences and
The statement was the result yard individual medley and
joint statement of faculty create a chaotic situation in independent institutions might of the annual Big Eight Tom Perrin of Miami
representatives and )lthletic order to gain support from the alse· follow this action as a meetings held in conjunction established a pool record 1of
directors, told the American colleges in attempting to positive measure designed to with the conference's indoor I : 4~ . 81 in the 200-yard
Basketball Association secure congressional approval protect basketball from the track meet.
freestyle .
Saturday that its agents, scouts for a merger with the National questionable and -disruptive
Other winners Friday were
Other action resulted in the
and . coaches are no longer Basketball Association...
, activities of the ABA."
Pat
McGinnis of Kent in the
· football coaches voting to allow
welcome. on Big Eight cam"The Big Eight Conference
Neinas said ABA scouts often freshmen to be Invited to fall WO-yard butterfly and Jeff
puses.
abhors the method of reprisal requested film clips and practice whenever the in- Horvath of Kent in the 100-yard
"There is n.othing we can do chosen by the ABA.
tickets. "At least, now we don 't dividual school wished. Alpo. breaststroke.
about them (the ABA) talking
have to cooperate with them," freshmen may not play in more
REACH SEMIS
to players off-camp•ts, "
"The members of the Big he added. ,
,
lhan one game - either freshROCHESTER,
Minn .
Commissioner Chuck Ntomas Eight Conference have
"Contacts have beert made man or varsity - within one
(UP!
)Rosemary
Casals
of
said. "But the one thing we can determined to stand strongly with Big Eight basketball cal endar week, Sunday
San Francisco and Wendy
do is not cooperate. We're very against the ABA by formally players by agents who are through Sa·turday. ,
Overton
of Chevy Chase, Md.,
discouraged with the actions of withdrawing . any form of primarily interested in selling
reached the semifinals Friday
the ABA."
cooperation previously them to the ABA and the ABA
The Big Eight announced its
The Big Eight cited the provided scouts, coaches or certainly· has indicated a outdoor track and golf of the $15,000 K-Mart InABA's "announced Intention to agenta of the ABA office or Its receptiveness to such/' Neina~ championships ·will be held in vitational women's tennis
tourney,
draft and sign underclaSSJIIen" members. The conference said.
Boulder, Colo., May 19-20. The
88 being of "great concern." . wishes to emphaslze that ABA
The Big Eight comniissioner tennis tournam ~nt will be held · Miss Casa!s .defeated Julie
The Statement, in part, read: SCOIItS, coaches and age~ts are also said the NBA "Has been lrl Johnson County, Kiln., at the Heldman of Houston, 2-6, 6-4, 6"The conference fi~ds the not welcome on Big Eight inore open and above-board Homestead CNntr)· Club at the 0, and MIS$ Overton beat Betty
.Stove of the Netherlands, 6-4,6'tacUcs employed by the ABA . Conference campuses ...•
and ha ~ been operating in a san1e lime.
4.

\

Marietta .Are Eliminated

ocked.Out of First

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (Ul'l l
- Indiana blew an eighti&gt;oint
lead then rallied to whip Ohio
State, 65-~7, Saturday and
knock the Buckeyes out of a tie
for the Big Ten basketball lead.
Ohio State's lo$5, coupled
with Miimeso\a's win over
Illinois, gave the Gophers sole
possession of the Big Ten lead . ,

\

.

Princeton ,80 Brown 56
Roctoester 11~ Ithaca 114
Ind., Po. 64 Grove City 58
' Howard 67 Morgan St. 66
Harvard 86 Columbia 84
UTEP73 Brigham Young 69
Penn 86 Yale 65
Okla. 82 Iowa Sl. 77
Phlla. Te.. 89 Wilkes 72
Sl. Fran ., Pa. 79 Crghlon 68
Dartmouth 9'1 Cornell 90
New Mexico 77 Utah 58
Wash. 81 Oregon 75
Ore. Sl. 99 Wash . Sl. 64

6:30 p.m., Monday.
In Friday's Class Anigh tcap,
the Lakers limited th &lt; :· . ''S
to only two points i1 ' '· · .,
half and six in the fi n:.. hell .
gain the finals in th111 livish•.:
Bradd Abels pa&lt;. d 1he
winners with seven }JUI 1, • lt ,n
Jackson was the only K n!(;K
able to dent the hoops for the
losers.
The Lakers-Travellers
championship game will begin
at 8 p.l)'l., Monday.
Here's.Friday's box scores:
Flrsl Game
BULLETS (40)- R. Rlggans
1; R. Hatfield 7; S. Simon 5; B.
Barr t1'; J. Armstrong· 16: D.
Sickles 0; T. Smith 0.
ROCKETS (24) - E. Wallen
1; B. Quails O; T. Lewis 1; R.
Mackenzie 0; S. Thomas 19;
Scott Thomas 3.
By Quarters:
.
Bullets
8 10 10 12- 40
Rockets
8 7 3 6-24

SHERRfE King is guarded here by Gallla 's Carol Folden
during Thursday's Gallipolis-Meigs girls basketball game at
Meigs. In background is Gallia's Carolyn Swain,

CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
- Bowling Green, Ohio State,
Cedarville and Akron won
berths in Saturday's semifinals
of the Ohio State Women's
Intercollegiate Basketball
Tournament with wins Friday
night.
BG
edged
defending
champion M&lt;IW!t St. Joseph 42OHIO COLLEGE
41; while Ohio State downed
BASKETBALL SCORES
Wittenberg 47-28, Cedarville
United PreiS lntornatlonal
Olllo ConfertiiCt Tournomenl beat Ohio U. 54-44 and Akron
Nortllern Olvls~ 11 ~llilnct downed the OSU-Newark
Kenyon 85 Wooster 83
Baltlwln-Wallace 89 Mount branch 40-37.
Union II
The semifinals . were
southern DivhiollltGr•nvllll Saturday morning wttll U1e
C.!llllt 11 Musklngum 66
final• SatUrday night. 1
Wllttnberg '66 .Dtnlson 5I

/•

Boston

W. L. T.

36 17
Nova~otle
33 17
Springfield • 27 23
Providence
22 2\1
Rochester
21 33
'Weat
W. L.
Baltimore
27 24
Clevelar.d
27 26
Hershey
26 22
Cincinnati
23 26
Rlchmood
23 29
Tldewaler
17 36
Frld1y's Rtsults
Rochester 5 Boston5
Sprlngfleld6Cieve. ~

11
12
13
10
•

IOnlygaln~~~uled)

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) George Foster seems to have
new-found confidence this
season after being known as a
shy, soft-spoken man who was
so eager to mske It last year
with the Cincinnati Reds he
" swung at just about
everything pitchers threw up
there."

Assist Woody
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
appointment of Edward A.
Ferkany as assistant football
coach at Ohio State was approved Friday by the
university board of trustees.
Ferkany, a graduate . of
Bowling Green (Ohio) State,
will succeed Earl Bruce, who
resigned to accept the head
coaching job at the University
of Tampa .
Ferkany has· been an
assistant coach at the ·U. S.
Naval Academy since 1969. He
previously coached at Western
Michigan .
Under OSU head coach
Woody Hayes, he will lle in
charg~ of offensive guards and
cehlers.
I

even reminded a waitress that
she brought him the wrong order," joked Bobby Tolan.
Foster is considered top contender for starting in right field
but three others also want the
job - Bernie Carbo, Cesar
Geronimo and Hal McRae.
.Foster hit .234 after joining
the Reds last season in a trade
with the San Francisco Giants
and be is predicting he will
definitely hit over .270 by playing the entire season this year.
"Nobody will hit a ball out of
the park ·faster than Foster
when he really gets hold of a
pitch," Manager Sparky Anderson admits.
"The ball jumps off Foster's
bat. He hlt a ball over the fence
his first day here and it looked
like a rocket shot. It must have
carried about 420 feet.
"Last year George was so
eager to prove himself after he
got a. chance to play that he
swung at just about everything
pltcl.ers threw up there,"
Anderson recalls.
But not this year, says Foster. "I'm going to be more selective when I swlte the bat
this year," he said. ''I've got to
concentrate on just making
contact with the ball. I've got to
keep reminding myseU not to
lunge at tbe plate."
1
Only one player, ace reliefer
.Clay Carroll, has not been signed. He reported!• · is holdfng out
for $50,000, $5 , ~ III UI'C than
what the Reds "eport,·dly have
offe1 ed.
·

70 Sq. Ft. Roll

A
D

ROLL

J

u

s

B
L
A

T
T

c

0

K

7'
9"

A
N

p

D
E

'6.45

c

FORMICA

Slop AI The

Friendly Store
For All Your
Building Needs.

K
E

SPECIAL

49e
:..:

R

SQ. FT.

T

~~ .. 11 • ·· ,. • · SPECIAL
.27W Lin. ft.
WHITE

0
0
L

beauty is baked on to stay on_......,.,.\.,.
providing yea.rs of added beauty

s

"Some,thing New"
Carter &amp; Evans Catalog Sales Weekly Delive-ry . Name
brands, Tools, household and giflwares •. sporting goods • .
electrical appliances and toys. Many, Many Others.

~~and

~e.

"BUILDING SUPPLIES"

• • ,;11 :

Pts

13
18
f7
54
50

T. Pts
10 64
9 63
10 62
13 59
10 56
8 42

3W' X 56 ft.

Selective This Year

•

I ,

AHL Standings
By United Prtlllntarneftonll
Elst

FLOOR JACKS

Foster Going To Be

Ferkany Will

Are Beaten, 42-41

ABA Standlngl
By Unlttd Prtss lnhrnaftonll
EISI
W. L. Pet. GB
. Kentucky
55 1~ .797
Virginia
41 29 .586 1.'12
New York
33 36 .478 22
Floridians 29 41 .414 26'12
C.rolina
27 42 .391 21
Plftsburgh 24 4.5 .3411 31
West
·
W. L. Pel. GB
Utah
48 21 .6911 ...
Indiana
38 30 .559 91f&gt;
Dallas
33 38 ..465 16
Denver
21 39 .424 19
Memphis
24 •s .341 24
Frldly's Rnuhl
PI llsburg h 115 Memphis 114
Virginia 121 Indiana 116
Floridians 130 Carolina 127
IOnlygamesschedutedl
Sund1y's O.mes
New York vs. Carolina · .
At Raleigh, N.C.
Memphis al Denver
Dallaullndlana
(Onlygamesscheduled)

Specials

Fellow players are remarkSecond Ga 1111
LAKERS (171- T. Gillespie ing at spring training camp
0; B. Abels 7; J. Brown 5; B. how Foster has come out of his
Woyan S1 D. Wickline 0; J. shell.
Nelson 0; J. Adkins 0.
"Why, 'this morning George
KNICKS (I) -Steinbeck 0;
Watson 0; Brown 0; Jackson 8;
Weaver 01 Tapp O; Kiesling o.
By Quarters:
Lakers
4 0 8 5- 17
Knlcks
2 o 4 2- s.

Defending Champs

•·Los Angeles 59 11 .843 ...
S..•ltle
4.5 26 .634 U'h
Golden St.
44 26 .611 15
Houston
28 41 .406 JO'h
Portland
15 58 .205 .S'h
x-CIIncbed Division Title
Frldlr's Results
Buffalo 105 New York 97
Milwaukee 94 Phlla 81
Boston 12$ Detroit 96
Los Angeles 114 Atlanta 104
Baltimore 90 Portland 80
Golden Sl. 108 Houston 107
Seattle 112 Chicago 103
IOnly games scheduled)
Sund•r's G1me1
Cincinnati at Boston
New York al Philadelphia
Baltimore at Los Angeles
Buffalo If Phoenix
Atlanta al Seattle ,
Chicago af Houston '
IOnfygamesscheduled)

�. j

•
;

Buc
•

.After a 29-29 halftime ti~,
Indiana raced into a 48-40 lead
only to have the Buckeyes reel
off eight straight points to tie it.
The Hoosiers then took the
lead for good, scoring six
straight points. John Ritter hit
a free toss, Joby Wright got a
free throw and a ftelder and

Steve Downlhg bagged a
jumper as .the . Hoosiers
grabbed a 54-48 lead and Ohio
State never recov.ered.
Downing wound up with 21
pbirits, Wright 19 and Ritter 10.
Ailan Hornyak of Ohio State

topped all scorers with 25
points. Luke Witte and Wardell
Jackson each added 13.
Ohio State is now 9-4 in the
Big Ten and •17-6 overall whlle
Indiana is 7-5 in the loop and 15. 7 overall.

OHIO . STATE 1571 Jackson, 5 IJ.SI 13r Minor, I 10·
OJ 2; Witte, 6' (1.3) 13; Gerhard,
1 (2·5) ~; Hornyak, 8 (9·101 25:
Wolfe, 0 (O.QJ 0; Merchant, 0 IO·
0) 0; Wagar, 0 (Q.OJ 0; Slekmann, 0 (0·0) o. Totals, 21 11523., 57.
INDIANA (65) - WriQht, 8

13·71 19; Ritter, 3 1"-s'l . 10;
Downing, 9 13·5) 21 ; Wilson, 1
(0-0) 21 White, o (6·8) 6:
Pemberton, 2 13·3) 7. Tot1h, 23
I 19-29) 65.
Half!I me score: Indiana 29
Ohio State ·29; fouled out:
Minor. Total Fouls: Ohio State
21 ; Indiana 16. ·

Gophers Rip
Illini Five
' .•
·~

-

.....,,
~-· -

CHARLOTIE ADAMS, a. member of tbe All-American
Red Heads professional basketball team, is considered the
team'sdefensive ace. Miss Adams stands 6-1,and is a strong,
vicious•and aggressive performer with a passion for playing
basketball for the world champion girls team. A forward,
Miss Adams is one of the team's top scorers. She is a fine
outside shooter and possesses a sensational tricky whirl shot
from the pivot position. The Red Heads will battle members
of the GAHS Coaches staff, beginning at 2 p.m., today on the
varsity hardwood. The contest is being sponsored by the
Gallipolis Area Jaycees.

Rain Delays
Dora.l Tourney

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP))
The
University of Minnesota Gophers, hungry for its
first Big Ten basketball title in 35 years, outscored ·
Illinois 28-5 at the opening of the second half
Saturday and breezed to a 91-62 victory to hold first
place in the hectic conference race.
The Gophers, who entered
the ga!lle as the lowest scoring
team in the league, charmed a
jubilant crowd of 14,666 wilh
their highest point output of the
season. Their pressing defense
forced 14 first half lllini turnovers as Minnesota took a 40'll lead at the intermission.
Minnesota then scored 12

Michigan
Upset By
Spartans

straight points to open the
second half and had a 66-34
advantage when Coach Bill
Musselman replaced starting
guard Bob Nix to a standing
ovation with 12:13 remaining.
It was the lOth win in 11 home
games for the Gophers, who
are 10-3 in the conference and
16-6 overall. Illinois is 4-8 in the
conference and 12-9 overall.
Illinois tied it briefly 16-16 on
a layup by Nick Weatherspoon,
who had 24 points, but the
Gophers shot ahead with seven
straight points.
Clyde Turner led the
Gophers with 21, Dave Winfield
had 20, Keith Young scored 19
and Jim Brewer had 13, along
with 16 rebounds.

Bearcats In

V'ct
pse
ory

Defiance
Coach ·Js·
Honored

.

FRANKIE BURKE, left; GaDtpoHo, Ia C111181'1111111ted by
Jim Dobbins, director rJ. the 1972 Skyline Lanes' Handicap
Bowling T011rnament, after Burke captured first place'
honors with an 884actualand 28-bandicapfor a 91210tal.

7 Offers Mat!e To Buy Royals

Aspromonte Plans

4-Man Rotation

with former Boston Celtics
President Marvin Kratter and
Pete Graham, owner of the San
Diego International Sports
Arena, both of whom want to
put a National Basketball Association team in San Diego.
"I ca~ report that I have an
offer I feet is fair and just and
am willing to forward to the
stockholders with," Jacobs
commented. "It is contingent
on being able to obtain a proper
lease on a building."
He said that if a lease is
worked out he would then take
the purchase offer to the stock-

holders. HiS brother,- .~m-y, is
the largest stockholder with 56
per cent but there are 91 other
stockholders.
Jacobs also mentioned that
he had not been able .to give
sufficient study so far to a proposal from a local group intereste.d iriJbUUdlni,,a ilew&lt;cio)mo
town sports arena 10 .hau$e a
new National Hockey League
team and an NBA team.
"They · say they definitely
want ,an NBA team 10 play in
the new arena but they haven't
made any specific requests,"
be said.

1 SUPER SHE~"

, RIO GRANDE - Lancaster
cashed five of six chances at
the free thrqw line in the four til
quarter and got m points from
Walt Dillard in a 57 to 54 victory oyer M8rietta in a Class
AAA Sectional basketball
tourriament game Friday.
Portsmouth won tile second
game beating Chillicothe 7().54,
aa All-Ohio candidate Mike
Lovenguth tossed in 34 points.
Porjsrnouth and Lancaster
col)i~ed for the Rio title
Satljrday night and a trip to the
AAA DIBirlct at Steubenville.
Lancaster made 15 of 22 free
thro'!' 19 ,'MI.rletta'a Mor-19
and this W11J the ball game
beeause Mlrletta , had two
more )laskets, 23-21.
Rlcll Powers popped in 18 for
Lancaster. with Dillard and
Br.lan Arledge getting 15 each.
Dillard alio h!id nine rebounds.
Bi)l Sutton; with 12, was high
for Marietta. Marietta hit on 44
pet,' of Ita shots and Lancaster

The Trojans ~hot in 45.4 pet.'
from the field; Chillicothe
ranged in 42. Rebounds were
even at 32, but the Cavaliers
committed three more tur·
nov'ers 24-21.
Box Scores :
. First Game
MARIETTA (54)- Hawe 2·
1-5; Cumblldge 4·2·10; Maker~2·10; Mathney H ·l; Neeson 1·
0-21 BQner 4·0'8; Suttoo 6·0-12.
Totals - 33·8·45.
LANCASTER (57)- Dillard
6·3-15; Gordon 2·0-~; Arledge 4·
7-15; Powers 7-4·18; Uhl 2·1·81
Totals - 21 -15-57.
By Quarters:
Marietts
14 30 ·.u 5~
Lancaster
15 29 40 57
Second Game
PORTSMOUJH (70)
Gentry 1-0·2: McGlone 1-0-2;
Dickerson 4· J.9; Lonaennuth
11·12·34;
Oaehler
4.3.111
Hopkins H -10; Prater 1·0·2.
Totals,. 25-20·70.
CHilLICOTHE (54)- Blake
1·0-2; ~everly, D. J.0-6;
Beverly, J. 5·5·15; Blevins 3-17; Gatliff '1·2·4: Gause 1-0-2 ;
Kuhner 5-2·1.2; Ratzlaff 2-2·6.
'Totals. 21 , 12·54.
By Quarters:
Portsmouth
14 32 51 70
Chillicothe
11 26 39 54

W. L. Pel. GB

Milwaukee 56 16 .771 .. .
Chicago
50 22 .694 6
Phoenix
~2 JO' .583 14
Detroit
23 •s .324 10•,;
W. L. Pel. Gl

MEIGS GALS ON THE GO- The ~•eig.s girls' basketball team is pictured here on a fast
break against visiting Gallipolis Thursday night. The Meigs g.sls won, 42-?S. Girls in the above
photo, left to right, are Sherrie King, Carolyn Swain, Debbie Ohlinger, Patty Burnett, Connie
Cotton, Pat Harris (with ball) and Leanne Sebo.

Bruins Rack Up 24th
Straight Cage Victory

Swimmers On

Family Pack
includes these , .
4 sandwiches
and 4 orders
of french fries.

ORIY

EverY SundaY
(ALL DAY)

1S03 EASTERN AVEtiJE .

GALLIPOlJt .

Big Eight Slams Door On ABA

mstron

BEAU
BUDG

ONA

312

-

Ualted Press IDtei'IUIUonal
The division finals of 'the
Ohio Conference basketball
championship tournament
were played at two sites
Saturday night, with the
winpera going against each
other at Alliance T)Jesday night
for all the marbles.
Baldwin-Wallace won a berth
In the northern division Friday
night by edging Mount Union
~ while Kenyon got by
Wooster 85-83.
In the southern division,
played at Granville, Wittenberg whipped Dennison 66~lle 'Capital tmade· short
work of Musklngum Bl-66.
Joe Jacobus led a balanced
Capital scoring attack with 21
points. Muskingum's Jim
Vejsicky was high for the game
with 23 points.
Wittenberg outscored
Denison 19-1 during a sevenminute span in the second half.
Joe Hamilton led Wittenberg

GALUPOLIS - II will be the
Bullets vs. the Bucks and the
Lakers vs. the Travellers in
Monday night's championship
games of the Gallipolis RinkyDlnk League post-season
basketball tournament on the
Washington School hardwood.
Friday night, in Class B
semifinal action, the Bullets
bombed the Rockets 40-24 whlle
the Lakers downed the Knicks
17-Bin Class A semifinal play.
In Friday's first game, the
Bullets broke up a Ught game
by outscoring the Rockets 22-9
in the second half of play. High
for the winners was J. Arm.\ strong with 16 points. B. Barr
had 11. Steve Thomas pumped
in 19 for the losers.
The Bullets-Bucks championship game will begin at

Kent State

Top In Race

Deniso,n, 66-57
with 17 points. Dudley Brown
headed Denison with 24 points.
· In the northern division at
Alliance, Dean Martin hit a 10foot jump shot with 10 seconds
left to give Baldwin-Wallace a
comeback ·victory over Mount
Union.
Martin's winning shot from
the baseline gave him a gamehigh 36 points, 291n the se~ond
half. Jim Howell led Mount ·
Union with 18 points.
The first game of the night
was even more exciting, with
sophomore guard Billy Kozy
hitting a 30-!oot jump ahot with
one second remaining for the
Kenyon win. The two points
were his only ones of the game.
The bulk of Kenyon's scoring
attack was carried by Jim
Smith and Marty Hunt, ·who
scored 32 points apiece.
Wooster had four players in
double figures, led by Rich
Dutter's 23.

JUMP SHOT -; GaDipolis' Helen Akers (42) attempts to
block Meigs' Debbie Ohlinger (14) jump shot duril\g. thiS
action shot taken Thursday evening at Rock Springs. Meigs.
girls downed GAHS, 42-25.

By United Press lutematloaal
UCLA is suffering from
"victory fatigue. "
The Bruins knocked off
California, 85-71, FridaY night
for its 24th straight win this
season. But if the final score
indicates an easy victory,
that's misleading.
The young Brulna had eased
to a 44-33 halftime lead and
appeared to have things all
their own way, as usual.
Suddenly, they found Cal
three points down and risin' as
the keyhole popping of Ansley
Truitt and Bill puew dre)V the
Bears to within ~1-411.
But the No. I UCLAns rallied
for seven of the next eight
points with Larry Farmer
scoring six of his 16 , points
during the spree and that was
all she wrote·:
"This was our toughest
game," Bruins' Coach John
Wooden said. "No team has
closed to three points on us in
the second half."
Waltoa Leads Brullls
Sophomore center Bill
Walton led the Bruins with 24
points and Duew topped Cal
with 19.
Texas El Paso recovered

from a l4iroint halftime deficit straight game and clinched a
to upset seventh-ranked Brig- tie for Ita third straight Ivy
ham Young, 73-89,in a Western League tiUe with an 86-65 romp
Athletic Conference game.
·over outclassed Yale.
Charlie Braki)S, who hit for
Awarded Game Ball
18 points, put the Miners ahead
PhU Hanklnaon led the Penn
for good at 54-S3 when he hit a attack with 'll points, and
free throw with 10:07 Corky Calhoun added 21.
remaining in the contest. Calhoun's 011tput pushed his
Bernie Fryer of tbe Cougars career points total to 1,006 and
waa high scorer in the game be was awarded the game ball
with 23 points.
when he topped 1,000 with 12;25
No. 4 PeM won its 13th to go in the game.
East Carolina edged DavldReds Mail Half
aon, 81-77, and Flirman topped
Million Tickets
William &amp; Mary, 93-71, 1n the
ciNCINNATi - The Cln- semifinal rounds ol tile Southcinnatl Reds the past 72 hours ern Conference tournament at
have mailed more than a half- · Greenville., S.C.. East
million tickets for 1972 to Carolina and Furman clalh at
season holders and mail order 8:00 p.m. EST tonight for the
conference croWI'! and the right
patrons.
"The total represents the to go on to the NCAA toilr·
largest advance sale, for" ·this nament., .·.:-:1 • '· ~~
The same holds irue for the
date in the club's history," said
Bob Farrell, Reds Ticket champion of the Middle Atlantic Conference playoffs, which
Services Director.
Farrell said a good supply of will be either Temple or St.
$3 reserved seats are available Joseph's (Pa.).
The Owls preyed upon
for the April 5 Opening Day
Lafayette,
87-75, while si.
game with Houston.
He also reported that in- Joseph's toppled Rider, 82-77,
dividual-game ticket orders in semifinal action. Albright
are running well ahead of 1971 blasted Scranton, 99-74, in the
and season sales are alsc up. MAC College Division playoff.

Bullets, Lakers
Gain R-D Finals
,.

ColletelllsketbltiResuhs
By United Press l~tol'llltonal
Mlddlt Atlt~Rtlc Conllrence·
(lsi Round)
Temple 87 Lafayette 75
Sl. Jos .• Po. 82 Rider 77
•
Colltae Division
C~ln1tl

Albrlghl99 Scranton 74
SOuthern Conltrtnce
( S.mlflnlls)
East Car. 81 Davidson 56
Furman 93 Wm.&amp;Mary 78

I

I

~

'

NIAs!1ndl...
By United Preaalnt...,..tlollll
E1slern c-rtiiCe
Atlantic Divlsioll
W. L. Pel. Gl
Bosloo
49 23 .611 ...
New York
42 27 .609 5'h
Philadelphia 27 4:1 .391 20'12
Buffalo
19 50 .275 21'12
Ctnfrll Division
W. L. Pel. GB
Ball lmore
31 39 .443 ..
Atlanta
27 42 .391 3'12
Cincinnati
22 48 .314 9
Cleveland
20 50 .286 10'12
Midwest Division

OC Champs Whip
PRESENTED $300 CHECK - Jerry Mercer, right,
Belpre, is presented a $300 check by Skyline Lanes Bowling
Alley owner Dr. Donald Warehime for his historic feat on
Sunday, Feb. 'll. Mercer, a resident of Belpre, rolled a
perfect 300 in the Blue Fountain Singles 'tournament. It was
the first perfect game ever recorded at Skyline Lanes,
located in Kanauga.

.

Pro~

42.

EAST LANSING, Mich .
IUPil - Mike Robinson
pumped in 37 points Saturday
leading Michigan state to ~U
~
l
MIAMI I UP! I - The third nament was washed out at awhile
96-92 Big Ten upset over
1
round of the $1~0 , 000 Dora!- . about the midway point
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A Jacobs Family, admitted that
CINCINNATI (UP!) _ The
Eastern Open Golf Tour- Saturday because of heavy Michigan and severely damage
rains which flooded three the Wolverines' hopes for a University of Cincinnati put total of sev~ offers have been several of the offers came from
conference championship.
five men in double figures, led made recently to buy the the San Diego area.
greens.
The 5-foot-10 sophomore by Derrek Dickey with 20 Ciqcinnati Royals, according
"Some of the offers involve
No decision was made imto
Royals
board
chairman
Max
San
Diego, a couple do not," he
guard
scored
consjstenUy
all
points,
in
upsetting
lith
ranked
mediately as to whether to
Jacobs,
who
said
one
of
the
said. "One group doesn't know
schedule 36 holes of golf on afternoon on short jump shots Florida State 118-64 Saturday
offers
"!
feel
is
fair."
and
layups,
including
six
afternoon.
what it wants to do, one gr011p
Sunday or delay the finish of
Jacobs,
appearing
in
Los
Anis interested in the middle west
The Bearcats reeled off eight
the 72-hole tournament until straight points late in the game
geles
Friday
to
testify
in
a
and
there is another gr011p in
that put the Spartans ahead for straight points to break a 12-12
Monday.
federal
court
trial
involving
New Orleans."
tie midway through the first
Although nearly half of the good, 90-88.
The Spartans also were aided
Emprise
Corp.,
owned
by
the
Jacobs said he had talked
field of 82 golfers who made the by senior forward Pat Miller's half, with six points produced
cut Friday had completed their
by Dickey. The Seminoles were
finest
game
as
a
collegiate
.
unable
to recover the rest of
rounds, all scores were washed
player.
Miller
hit
12
of
1~
goal
the
game.
out and fresh rounds will be
attempts, many' of them on
started Sunday.
COLUMBUS (UPI)
feeds from Robinson, and
Florida State, despite Ron
ll was the first time this year
Marvin Hohenberger, who
King's game-high 22 points,
ended the game with 26 points. failed to pull closer than 10
coached Defiance College to a a round had to be called off.
Michigan scoring was led by points to the hot shooting
23-1 record this basketball
When play starts again
season, · has been selected the today, Lee Trevino wiiHold a guard Henry Wilmore's 22 Bearcats in the second half
1972 Ohio College Basketball one-stroke lead over aging Sam points, forward John Lockard after rallying from the half21, and center Ken Brady lime 44 _34 deficit. .
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI)- better with three days rest.
Coach of the Year. ,
Snead and veteran Paul with
with 20.
Cleveland Manager Ken He'll set the pattern for the
Hohenberger received eight Harney at six under par 138.
The Wolverines fell to .S-4 in
Cincinnati played without its
first place votes and was men- Harney and Snead were at 139 the Big Ten and JJ-g for the two big men, Dickey and Gred Aspromonte said Saturday he rest. I'll go this way all year
tioned on 25 ballots for a total of and two strokes back after
Jurcisin, for most of the second will use a ·~our-man rotation" except for doubleheaders.
54 points .In the pd]l of Ohio Friday's second round as were season · Michigan State, which half as both had four personals, for his pitching staff--tlle first Then we'll pick the best fifth
defeated its arch rival for the
time in years the Indians have man at that time."
College coaches conducted by Jerry McGee, Bob Rosburg first
time since Gus Ganakas butSophomore Jesse Jemison used a four man staff.
"Pitchers get stale not
the Columbus Dispatch.
and Ken Still.
assumed the pivot spot and
"I'm
going
with
a
four-man
look
over
as
head
coach
in
1969,
scored
points
as
the
Bearthrowing," he said. "It won't
\ Wyatt Webb of Akron was
Earlier, a heavy downpour
14
upped its conference mark to~rotation," said Aspromonte. hurt a kid. With the use of "elief
~nd with a tots 1 of 12 first had forced a 23-minu te
7and its season record to 10-10. cats ran away with the game. "Gaylord Perry proved he's
pitchers today that's not too
place votes and 53 points in the suspension which ended at 2:26
Reggie Royals scored 15
much work."
closest voting in the 19 year p.m . after the rain had
points for the NCAA-bound
history of the poll.
Pitching coach Warren
slackened and the three
and Rowland
Twins Nip Tigers Seminoles
Spahn
pitched with three day's
Vince Chickerella of Capital flooded greens had drained.
Garrett added 11. Uoyd Batts
rest during most of his career.
University was third with 44
But 12 minutes after golfers
scored 16 points for Cincinnati,
points and Bobby Nichols of resumed play, the skies opened In Spring Opener
"If I got an extra day rest
Dave Johnson hit for 1~ and
Toledo fourth with 37.
because of a rainout, it hurt my
again, play was suspended and
Uonel Harris chipped in with
control,"
he said. "My theory
"It certainly is &amp;·tremendous then eventually cancelled. One
LAKELAND, Fla. (UP!) 11.
honor but it seems the honor of the big casualties of the rain Rookie rightfielder Bobby
is pitchers don't throw en011gh,
should belong to the team," was Still, who shot birdies on Darwin drove in three runs
"Half tbe kids here have no
McLAIN TRADED
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
said Hohenberger.
his first two holes, moving him with a homer and double
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. KentStatehadwinnersin three idea how 10 train," said Spahn.
"The
players
have into a tie with Trevino, who Saturday to lead the Minnesota (UPI) - DennyMcLain,atwo- of Friday's six events to take "we're working them all hard
responded so well 10 any played his first three holes at Twins to a 5-4 victory over the time winner of the American over the lead after two days in so they'll be ready to do what
situation they have been even par.
Detroit Tigers in their League's Cy Young Award and the Mid-American Conference we ask."
presented with this year," said
I fully recuperate after three
The two hottest complete Grapefruit League opener.
the last pitcher to win 30 games swimming championships.
Hohenberger. "It's an honor rounds turned in before the
Darwin, playing in place of in a season, was traded for the
The three-day meet was days and I'm ready," said Perfor me just to be associated rains came were four under American League batting second time in two seasons concluded here Saturday with ry. "To wait a day more messes me up."
with them because they make par 68s by Tony Jacklin and champion Tony Oliva, hit a Saturday when the Texas seven events.
everything much easier for Tom Weiskopf, winner of last two-run homer off Tiger Rangers dealt him to the
Steve Dunning was happy
At the end of Friday 's
me."
week 's Jackie Gleason In- starter Joe Coleman in the first Oakland Athletics for two . competition, Kent had 98 with the news that he would be
Hohenberger, along with verrary Classic.
inning and doubled home minor league pitchers.
points, followed by Ohio with one of the four rotating starters.
Toledo Coach Murphy, the Ohio
But the two golfe" had another run in the third as the
In exchange for McLain the 87, Miami, 55, Bowling Green .
College Football Coach of the three-round totals of even par Twins pounded the Tiger Rangers received righthanders 31 and Western Michigan 11.
"!need to pitch more often,"
Year, will be honored at The 216 over the par 72, 7,028-yard pitchers for 11 hits .
Don Stackhouse and Jim
Four records were set he said, "The more I go out
Dispatch All-High Major "blue monster" course at the
Gates Brown belted a two- Panther, both of whom played Friday. Gerry Muske of Kent there the more I'm going to
Sports banquet March 13 at the Dora! Country Club, putting
run homer for t~e Tigers' final with Iowa in the American set a league and pool record learn and more quickly. On
Ohio Union.
.two runs in the ninth inning. Association last season.
them far back in the pack.
with a 53.71 time in the 100-yard that kind of schedule you can .
· backstroke. A conference and pattern your whole life. Just .
pool mark also was set by like anything else, it's better if
you pitch more.'•
Ohio's 8!JO.yard freestyle relay
learn with a lillie of 7:08.62.
Rick Clark of Ohio set a pool
KANSAs CITY, Mo. (UJ:'I)- most offensive . It is apparent
record
with 4:23.97 in the 400"Further, it is our hope that more ethical manner."
The Big Eight Conference, in a that the ABA is determined to ~other major conferences and
The statement was the result yard individual medley and
joint statement of faculty create a chaotic situation in independent institutions might of the annual Big Eight Tom Perrin of Miami
representatives and )lthletic order to gain support from the alse· follow this action as a meetings held in conjunction established a pool record 1of
directors, told the American colleges in attempting to positive measure designed to with the conference's indoor I : 4~ . 81 in the 200-yard
Basketball Association secure congressional approval protect basketball from the track meet.
freestyle .
Saturday that its agents, scouts for a merger with the National questionable and -disruptive
Other winners Friday were
Other action resulted in the
and . coaches are no longer Basketball Association...
, activities of the ABA."
Pat
McGinnis of Kent in the
· football coaches voting to allow
welcome. on Big Eight cam"The Big Eight Conference
Neinas said ABA scouts often freshmen to be Invited to fall WO-yard butterfly and Jeff
puses.
abhors the method of reprisal requested film clips and practice whenever the in- Horvath of Kent in the 100-yard
"There is n.othing we can do chosen by the ABA.
tickets. "At least, now we don 't dividual school wished. Alpo. breaststroke.
about them (the ABA) talking
have to cooperate with them," freshmen may not play in more
REACH SEMIS
to players off-camp•ts, "
"The members of the Big he added. ,
,
lhan one game - either freshROCHESTER,
Minn .
Commissioner Chuck Ntomas Eight Conference have
"Contacts have beert made man or varsity - within one
(UP!
)Rosemary
Casals
of
said. "But the one thing we can determined to stand strongly with Big Eight basketball cal endar week, Sunday
San Francisco and Wendy
do is not cooperate. We're very against the ABA by formally players by agents who are through Sa·turday. ,
Overton
of Chevy Chase, Md.,
discouraged with the actions of withdrawing . any form of primarily interested in selling
reached the semifinals Friday
the ABA."
cooperation previously them to the ABA and the ABA
The Big Eight announced its
The Big Eight cited the provided scouts, coaches or certainly· has indicated a outdoor track and golf of the $15,000 K-Mart InABA's "announced Intention to agenta of the ABA office or Its receptiveness to such/' Neina~ championships ·will be held in vitational women's tennis
tourney,
draft and sign underclaSSJIIen" members. The conference said.
Boulder, Colo., May 19-20. The
88 being of "great concern." . wishes to emphaslze that ABA
The Big Eight comniissioner tennis tournam ~nt will be held · Miss Casa!s .defeated Julie
The Statement, in part, read: SCOIItS, coaches and age~ts are also said the NBA "Has been lrl Johnson County, Kiln., at the Heldman of Houston, 2-6, 6-4, 6"The conference fi~ds the not welcome on Big Eight inore open and above-board Homestead CNntr)· Club at the 0, and MIS$ Overton beat Betty
.Stove of the Netherlands, 6-4,6'tacUcs employed by the ABA . Conference campuses ...•
and ha ~ been operating in a san1e lime.
4.

\

Marietta .Are Eliminated

ocked.Out of First

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (Ul'l l
- Indiana blew an eighti&gt;oint
lead then rallied to whip Ohio
State, 65-~7, Saturday and
knock the Buckeyes out of a tie
for the Big Ten basketball lead.
Ohio State's lo$5, coupled
with Miimeso\a's win over
Illinois, gave the Gophers sole
possession of the Big Ten lead . ,

\

.

Princeton ,80 Brown 56
Roctoester 11~ Ithaca 114
Ind., Po. 64 Grove City 58
' Howard 67 Morgan St. 66
Harvard 86 Columbia 84
UTEP73 Brigham Young 69
Penn 86 Yale 65
Okla. 82 Iowa Sl. 77
Phlla. Te.. 89 Wilkes 72
Sl. Fran ., Pa. 79 Crghlon 68
Dartmouth 9'1 Cornell 90
New Mexico 77 Utah 58
Wash. 81 Oregon 75
Ore. Sl. 99 Wash . Sl. 64

6:30 p.m., Monday.
In Friday's Class Anigh tcap,
the Lakers limited th &lt; :· . ''S
to only two points i1 ' '· · .,
half and six in the fi n:.. hell .
gain the finals in th111 livish•.:
Bradd Abels pa&lt;. d 1he
winners with seven }JUI 1, • lt ,n
Jackson was the only K n!(;K
able to dent the hoops for the
losers.
The Lakers-Travellers
championship game will begin
at 8 p.l)'l., Monday.
Here's.Friday's box scores:
Flrsl Game
BULLETS (40)- R. Rlggans
1; R. Hatfield 7; S. Simon 5; B.
Barr t1'; J. Armstrong· 16: D.
Sickles 0; T. Smith 0.
ROCKETS (24) - E. Wallen
1; B. Quails O; T. Lewis 1; R.
Mackenzie 0; S. Thomas 19;
Scott Thomas 3.
By Quarters:
.
Bullets
8 10 10 12- 40
Rockets
8 7 3 6-24

SHERRfE King is guarded here by Gallla 's Carol Folden
during Thursday's Gallipolis-Meigs girls basketball game at
Meigs. In background is Gallia's Carolyn Swain,

CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
- Bowling Green, Ohio State,
Cedarville and Akron won
berths in Saturday's semifinals
of the Ohio State Women's
Intercollegiate Basketball
Tournament with wins Friday
night.
BG
edged
defending
champion M&lt;IW!t St. Joseph 42OHIO COLLEGE
41; while Ohio State downed
BASKETBALL SCORES
Wittenberg 47-28, Cedarville
United PreiS lntornatlonal
Olllo ConfertiiCt Tournomenl beat Ohio U. 54-44 and Akron
Nortllern Olvls~ 11 ~llilnct downed the OSU-Newark
Kenyon 85 Wooster 83
Baltlwln-Wallace 89 Mount branch 40-37.
Union II
The semifinals . were
southern DivhiollltGr•nvllll Saturday morning wttll U1e
C.!llllt 11 Musklngum 66
final• SatUrday night. 1
Wllttnberg '66 .Dtnlson 5I

/•

Boston

W. L. T.

36 17
Nova~otle
33 17
Springfield • 27 23
Providence
22 2\1
Rochester
21 33
'Weat
W. L.
Baltimore
27 24
Clevelar.d
27 26
Hershey
26 22
Cincinnati
23 26
Rlchmood
23 29
Tldewaler
17 36
Frld1y's Rtsults
Rochester 5 Boston5
Sprlngfleld6Cieve. ~

11
12
13
10
•

IOnlygaln~~~uled)

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) George Foster seems to have
new-found confidence this
season after being known as a
shy, soft-spoken man who was
so eager to mske It last year
with the Cincinnati Reds he
" swung at just about
everything pitchers threw up
there."

Assist Woody
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
appointment of Edward A.
Ferkany as assistant football
coach at Ohio State was approved Friday by the
university board of trustees.
Ferkany, a graduate . of
Bowling Green (Ohio) State,
will succeed Earl Bruce, who
resigned to accept the head
coaching job at the University
of Tampa .
Ferkany has· been an
assistant coach at the ·U. S.
Naval Academy since 1969. He
previously coached at Western
Michigan .
Under OSU head coach
Woody Hayes, he will lle in
charg~ of offensive guards and
cehlers.
I

even reminded a waitress that
she brought him the wrong order," joked Bobby Tolan.
Foster is considered top contender for starting in right field
but three others also want the
job - Bernie Carbo, Cesar
Geronimo and Hal McRae.
.Foster hit .234 after joining
the Reds last season in a trade
with the San Francisco Giants
and be is predicting he will
definitely hit over .270 by playing the entire season this year.
"Nobody will hit a ball out of
the park ·faster than Foster
when he really gets hold of a
pitch," Manager Sparky Anderson admits.
"The ball jumps off Foster's
bat. He hlt a ball over the fence
his first day here and it looked
like a rocket shot. It must have
carried about 420 feet.
"Last year George was so
eager to prove himself after he
got a. chance to play that he
swung at just about everything
pltcl.ers threw up there,"
Anderson recalls.
But not this year, says Foster. "I'm going to be more selective when I swlte the bat
this year," he said. ''I've got to
concentrate on just making
contact with the ball. I've got to
keep reminding myseU not to
lunge at tbe plate."
1
Only one player, ace reliefer
.Clay Carroll, has not been signed. He reported!• · is holdfng out
for $50,000, $5 , ~ III UI'C than
what the Reds "eport,·dly have
offe1 ed.
·

70 Sq. Ft. Roll

A
D

ROLL

J

u

s

B
L
A

T
T

c

0

K

7'
9"

A
N

p

D
E

'6.45

c

FORMICA

Slop AI The

Friendly Store
For All Your
Building Needs.

K
E

SPECIAL

49e
:..:

R

SQ. FT.

T

~~ .. 11 • ·· ,. • · SPECIAL
.27W Lin. ft.
WHITE

0
0
L

beauty is baked on to stay on_......,.,.\.,.
providing yea.rs of added beauty

s

"Some,thing New"
Carter &amp; Evans Catalog Sales Weekly Delive-ry . Name
brands, Tools, household and giflwares •. sporting goods • .
electrical appliances and toys. Many, Many Others.

~~and

~e.

"BUILDING SUPPLIES"

• • ,;11 :

Pts

13
18
f7
54
50

T. Pts
10 64
9 63
10 62
13 59
10 56
8 42

3W' X 56 ft.

Selective This Year

•

I ,

AHL Standings
By United Prtlllntarneftonll
Elst

FLOOR JACKS

Foster Going To Be

Ferkany Will

Are Beaten, 42-41

ABA Standlngl
By Unlttd Prtss lnhrnaftonll
EISI
W. L. Pet. GB
. Kentucky
55 1~ .797
Virginia
41 29 .586 1.'12
New York
33 36 .478 22
Floridians 29 41 .414 26'12
C.rolina
27 42 .391 21
Plftsburgh 24 4.5 .3411 31
West
·
W. L. Pel. GB
Utah
48 21 .6911 ...
Indiana
38 30 .559 91f&gt;
Dallas
33 38 ..465 16
Denver
21 39 .424 19
Memphis
24 •s .341 24
Frldly's Rnuhl
PI llsburg h 115 Memphis 114
Virginia 121 Indiana 116
Floridians 130 Carolina 127
IOnlygamesschedutedl
Sund1y's O.mes
New York vs. Carolina · .
At Raleigh, N.C.
Memphis al Denver
Dallaullndlana
(Onlygamesscheduled)

Specials

Fellow players are remarkSecond Ga 1111
LAKERS (171- T. Gillespie ing at spring training camp
0; B. Abels 7; J. Brown 5; B. how Foster has come out of his
Woyan S1 D. Wickline 0; J. shell.
Nelson 0; J. Adkins 0.
"Why, 'this morning George
KNICKS (I) -Steinbeck 0;
Watson 0; Brown 0; Jackson 8;
Weaver 01 Tapp O; Kiesling o.
By Quarters:
Lakers
4 0 8 5- 17
Knlcks
2 o 4 2- s.

Defending Champs

•·Los Angeles 59 11 .843 ...
S..•ltle
4.5 26 .634 U'h
Golden St.
44 26 .611 15
Houston
28 41 .406 JO'h
Portland
15 58 .205 .S'h
x-CIIncbed Division Title
Frldlr's Results
Buffalo 105 New York 97
Milwaukee 94 Phlla 81
Boston 12$ Detroit 96
Los Angeles 114 Atlanta 104
Baltimore 90 Portland 80
Golden Sl. 108 Houston 107
Seattle 112 Chicago 103
IOnly games scheduled)
Sund•r's G1me1
Cincinnati at Boston
New York al Philadelphia
Baltimore at Los Angeles
Buffalo If Phoenix
Atlanta al Seattle ,
Chicago af Houston '
IOnfygamesscheduled)

�•
I

19- Tbe Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, March 5, 1~7)!
. ' really get the urge . If so, consider starting a few n~wer seeds
indoors. You can get a head start ou the growing season. H you're
. not experienced In growing bedding plants; d\"1 'I be too disap.
pointed if you make a flop thellrst Ume around. nd. ·
Lack of light causes most beginnedailures. Getting seeds to .
germinate and grow is easy enough, but under average home
'light the plants usually grow weak and spindly rather than bushy
surfa~e of the planting medium. After sowing and watering,
. and compact. Artificial light is helpful: Two or more 40 wa~
cover fiats with plastic or glass. Once gennlnation beginS,
fluorescent tubes with reflectors work well. Suspend them from
uniform moisture an~ air circulation is vital, so it is usually best
the ceiling over a table (In the. basement) on chains so they can
fD remove the cover and water seedtingB as needed.
be railed as planta grow. Seedlings grown under artlfictalllght
Use a flne-IIQUI~ sprinkler for watering to avoid washing
should haY~~ about14hoursofllghtper day.
seediinglloutolthesoil. Keep soil moiSt but not too wet .
· To top It off, people that love to prune trees and shrubs but
H seedlings are too thick, thin them out or transplant fD Individual growing pots. Then when the weather Is right outside, are afraid to do so should contact the Extension Office lor
bulletin 543, "Pruning Landscape Plants," which is just off the
transplant to desired location and enjoy the fruits of you~ efforts.
ll'eBII. The new 211&lt;page publication, authored by Horticulturists
Get Head Start
. Many people take a look at the colorful flower catalogues and Elton Smith, James Caldwell, and Kenneth Reisch gives you the
"Wby," "When," and "How" of pruning. It contains some 28
detailed Illustrations that leave tittle doubt In one's mind as to
where pruning cuts should be made.
·

Jtastern And North Gallia Gain JlinalS . Gardeners Anxious to Get Started
•
•

ROCK SPRINGS
The
Eastern Eagles and the North
G.allla battled their way into
the Meigs Sectional "A"
tournament finals with semifinal wins here Friday night.
·The Eagles thumped the
underdog Hannan Trace
Wlldcats 7~2. pulling away in
the {ina! minute while the
Pirates wiped out a seven point
Symmes Valley Viking halftime lead to win going away,
113-72.
FIRST GAME
Behind Arthur Clark's 21
points , 24 rebounds, and
tremendous defense, the North
Gallia Pirates advanced to
final round play .- The Pirates,
now 11!-2, trailed throughout
most of the first half. In the
second half, however, the
Pirate guns started to fire with

deadlier range while holding
the Vikin gs with the installation of a zone defense
instead of their usual man-toman ·defense.
North Gallia, coached by Jim
Foster, shot out to a i&gt;Oleact
and were on top 7-1 with 4:46,
left in the opening quarter.
Symmes Valley, led by Danny
Wilson and Phil Robinson with
eight points apiece in the
quarte r, capitalized on
numerous North Gallia errors
to lead 22-16 after eight
minutes, however.
Robinson, shooting from the
t8-20 foot mark, kept finding
the bottom of the net with his
shol&gt;, rallied the Vikings to a
huge 32-20 lead 1with 4:41
1remaining in the first half.
1
After the Pirates battled
back 'to 32-30, Robinson drilled

three straight twin-pointers to making 31 of 79 from the field .
SECOND GAME
aid the Vikirtgo into a 40-33 · The Pira~s were 23 of 31 for 74
Dennis ' Eichinger hlt a
halftime margin. Robinson pet. from the foul line . The career-high 36 p&lt;&gt;ints and

accounted for ~ points In the Vikings, closing out their grabbed 17 rebouilda pacing
first half.
season at 12-8, made 29 of 81 for the Eagles to !hell' 7~2 win
In the second half, It wss all 36 pet. from the field and 14 of over the · Hannan Trace
North Gallia from. beginning to · 24 from !lie foul line for 58 pet. Wildcats.
end. Making less errors and
The game· was much closer
playing much better defense,
The Pirates commanded the than the 13 point margin Inthe Pirates began to force boards, 63-49, with Clark dicates. The Wildcats, closing
Vlkir\g turnovers and turning pulling down 24; Larry JustiJs, out their season at 10-10, were
them into essy lay-11ps. It was · ,14, and Gary Crosswhite, II. trailing by only four points, 66tied 44-44 with 4:27 remaining Keith Roach led Symmes · 62, with 59 seconds still on the
in the third period, but the Valley with 14 grabs while clock. Seven free throws and a
Pirates were never .headed Wilson had 13 and Jack Taylor, bucket, all by the Eagles,
after that. North Gallia out.. 10.
closed out the scoring after
scored Coach Wayne White's
j:'at Stout led the Pirates In that.
Vlltlngo 21i-9ln the third period. sc~ring with 22. while Clark
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles,
The VIkings did rally back to added 21 and Justus 20. now 13-2; breezed t~ugh the
within seven, 7~. with alittle Crosswhite had 12.
first quarter with 21-10 lead
under two minutes left, but
Robinson took game scoring ·and led 33-~ with 3:07 left In
some good free throw shooting hon~rs' with 28 with Wllson the first half. But ten straight
by the Pirates Iced the win.
adding 21 and Roach 12 fir the . .points by Coach Paul DiUon 's
North GaWa shot 39 pel. Vikings.
.
.
· Wildcats lowered the ad-

the field for a coolish 36.pet, but
hit on 21 of 31 from the free
throw line for a warm 68 pet:
The-Wildcats made 24 of 60
from the field for an even 40
pet. while dfOPplng In 14 of 25
from th" foul line for 56 pel.
The Eagles dominated the
boards, 49-35, with Eichinger
pulling down 17. for game
honors. Alan Duvall added 10
for ~ Eagles, Don Wells led
Hannan Trace with 13.
·
Eichinger's
36
potnr
production game ·by WilY ·or a
combination o! very long
jumpers from at least 25 feel
out and short lay-Ins on 11\iSSed
shots. ·Boring had one of his
finest games with 21 points and
great floor leadership.
Mike catawell and John•
Lusher each hit for 15 to pace
the Wildcats. Keith Swain_
added If. and Wells 12 for the

vantage to 33-30 with 37
seconds lefi In the ball.
Esstem led at the half, 35-30.
. The Eagles malnlalned their
live point lead'!llQIIt of the third
quarter but pUlled away In the
final minute to lead $4-43 after
three quarters. ·
Hannan Trace cut Eastern's
~ lead in half with seven
straight points to be down only
6().53 with 3:45 showing on the
clock. Then Randy Bor~ and
Eichinger . took complete
·control of the game. They
accounted for all but three of ·
the Eagles' 21 fourth quarter
points.
With I :51 left in the game,
and Eastern leading 64-55,
Boring ripped in six and
Eichinger five points to cap off
the Eagles' scoring.
Esstern made 27 of 75 from

'

•

losers.

~IRST

GAM£

SYMMES VALLEY (71) Roach 3·6·12, Taylor 2-0·4,
Wilson 8·5·21, Myers 1·1-3, P.
Robinson 13·2·28, Benne!! I·Q-2,
Willis 1·0·2. TOTAL$ 29-14'72.
NORTH GALLI~\ tl51. - L.
Justus 6·8· 20, Stout 7·8·22,

'

•

BY C. E, BLAKESLEE

•

Ext Agent, A&amp;rblture
POMEROY - Spring is In the air. Home gardeners and
''would be" hune.gardeners hardly can wait to get someihlng

•
,;

started.

the New in Fanning

'
,

J

7. The 19'12 Strawberry Short Course will be held at the Ohio
Agricullul'al Reaearch and Develotment Center.
A team of research scientists, extension specialists, and
strawberry growers will partlciP.te In a broad-based, fastmriylng IJ'Ogram, designed 10 help growers - both large and
small scale operators - maximize production of high quality
fruit.
.
.

•

•

8-36, Boring 6-9-21. 0Uvelf2-3-7, .:
Spencer 2·1-S, Sheets 0·0.0. •

TOTALS .27-21,75.
HAI!NAN TRA~E (62) Swain · 4· 6-14, Ours 2-2·6,
Caldwell 6·3-15, Well&amp; 5·2· 12,
Lusher 7·1·15. TOTALS 24·14·

62.

. .

.

By Quarters:

Eastern .

.

.21 35

s.c,75

'

A 111ft sign of spring is that Ohio growers of that favorite
first-of.U.e-eessonfrujt, the Strawberry, will have an opportunity
to learn the latest In production techniques and research
developments at a special day-tong conference Tuesday, March

•

;
Clark 8-5-21, Brown 4-0-8/ •.
Crosswhite 5·2· 12, Weddlnglon '
1·0·2. TOTALS 31-13·15.
By Quarters:
Symmes Valley
22 40 49 ,72 '
North Gatlia
16 33 ~ 85 •

Officials, Newman and
Davis.
·
SECOND GAME
..
EASTERN (7$) - Caldw,ll
1·0·2, Young 2-0·4, Eic:ll)nger U-

'

!

:

•
"
;
'

· Becalille of the intensified Interest In the pick-your-own
concept of strawberry harvest and marketing, thls ll'actice will
get top billing on the afternoon short course program. Mr. ~nd
Mrs. Charles Tbompeon, strawberry growers from Bristol,
Wisconsin, will share with Ohio growers many of the
management ll'&amp;ctlces they follow In a plck-youf.own operation
In the Badger state.
Growers interested in attending the 1972 Strawberry Short
CoUrse are Invited to pre-register by sending the registration fee
($5) name and address to the Department of Agriculture, Ohio
Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, Ohio

~

~

Hannan \race
10 30 43 62 •
Offldots. Dotv ANI f'hri•toan. ~

•
"•
••

.
~

»

44691.
This will be the fourth Strawberry Short Course for Ohio
growers. It is sponsored by the DeP:Brtment of Horticulture at
The Ohio State University In cooperation with the Research
Center, ·ohio Cooperauve·Extension Service, and The Ohio State
Horticultural Society.
For those who would like to start their seeds indoors here are
some suggestions. You can start some ,of your flower and
vegetable seeds Indoors and be ahead of the game by the time the
weather waims enough to sow seeds outside. Start about two
months ahead of the time you would nonnaUy plant seeds outside. Then you'D have well-developed plants ready for transplanting when neighbors are just starting their seed beds.
Expert Advice
Hortlcullurisls tell us to use sterilized potting soil or similar
seeding medium. Some may prefer peat pots, available in
several sizes both square and round. As for fiats to sow seed in,

~

~

•

••

32

~~GRAVELY

BRINGS HOME
THE GROCERIES

• •'

Toronto

Bulfalo

Vancouver

47 8 9 103
43 , 10 96
37 14 12 86
2828965
27 27 , 65
13 37 15 41
16 .41 6 38

United Press International

Cia., AAA
.
Col. South 75 . Col. Marion
Franklin 35 .
Col. Walnut Ridge 49 Newark

West

73
53
52
51
49
39

Vancouver at New York

eo
'''
I

',
'.
,''
~.
''
'

.,
'

,'

...''
•
'.

,JUMP BALL??? - Eastern's Randy Y~g (23) and
Hannan !frace's John Lusher (20) seem to be tied up for a
jump ball during.Friday's game In the Class A Tournament
at Meigs High School. Eastern won 75-62 thus advancing to
Saturday's championship game against the North Gallia
Pirates.

Paine sville Riverside 56

Los Angeles at Boston
Pltlsburgh at Detro II
St. Louis at Buffalo
Chicago at Minn.
(Onlygamesscheduied I

Ashland 74 Sandusky 41
Zanesville 64 Cambridge 61
Lancaster 57 Marietta 54
Portsmouth 70 Chillicothe 54
Class AA
Napoleon 83 Wayne Trace 55
Saint Henry 85 Lima Bath· 68
Ashtabula Harbor 75 Ashtabula
St. John 64
Eiyric Catholic 68 Oberlin 61

&lt;ASSISTANT NAMES
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI)The U.S. Naval Academy
Friday named Tom Harp an
assistant football coach to
succeed Ed Ferkany. Harp Is a
former Cornell and Duke head
coach, leading the Big Red to a
19-~ record In five seasons
and posting a 22-28-1 mark with
Duke in five campaigns.

•

'

'
~

.••
•

Philadelphia scored 25 points
In one half last nigh\.
No, not one Individual 76er.
The entire team. 25 points.
That happened· io be the
National Bask e tball
Association season low for
bCOfin~ in two cor"ecutive
per1ods. Naturally, Lne 76ers

lost- to Milwaukee, 94~1. as
Kareem Abdul -Jabbar
collected 27 points and devoured 23 rebounds.
Philadelphia missed its first
17 field goal attempts and
fo und itself trailing , 10-0,
t&gt;efore kevin Loughery sank a
16:foot. )ump sh ~l seven
mmutes t11 ~ • :!1e game. The

almost as easy as
gomg to the store. Call or see

Hank .Aaron Reports

Norwayne 56 North Ridgeville
43

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - Hank Aaron reported
to the Atlanta Braves camp
and worked out for the first
lime Saturday since signing a
recOrd contract last Tuesday .
The Braves star was greeted
by travellnif secretary Don

Gr1vely 7.6 HP Convertible

Tr•ctor with Rotary

Plow Attachment

Davison, who said, "I better belied a couple of pitches off
give him his transp~rtation the fences here his first time In
money. He might be a little the batting cage, then cleared
short ."
them on each of his next two
Aaron's contract was a three turns.
He has a total of 639 career
year deal which calls for
around $200,000 per season.
homers, 75 short of Babe
The 38-year-old slugger Ruth's record of 714.

Hudson 66 Streetsboro 49

New

Lexington

67

Federal

' VACATIONING? TRY OHIO!"

Open Monday Thru Saturday
8Til5

SUMMER VACATION
SPACE STILL AVAILABLE

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;Service
992-2975

OAK STATE PARK
DON'T WAIT I

Trace 62

Crooksville 61 Miller 59
Peebles 72 Piketon 67

512

CALL NOW-TODAY OR TONIGHT
(614) 767-2112

Rose Southeastern 72 Eastern

(Pike) 69
Portsmoult1 Clay 66 Valley 58
Portsmoult1 East 68 Green
Township 62
Ate&gt;&lt;ander 98 Lauretlvitle 68
S!ryker 79 Faye!le 47

Pomeroy, Ohio

TOBACCO
HEAQQUARTERS

SWIM-BOAT-FISH-HIKE-GOLF-TENNIS-RELAX
OPERATED IY OHIO INNS, INC., FOR THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL OISOUICES

Ayresville 56 Hi cksville 3.4

Here I

HARRIS TO TEACH
EAST STROIJDSliURG, Pa.
(UP!)-Richard Harris, a Philadelphia Eagles' defensive
end, has jOined the faculty of
East Stroudsburg Stale College
as a physical education
teacher. Harris wW also help
out with spring football
practice.
-·

E. Main

Make This Your

'

NEW KENDALL

.

STUNG BY INFLATION?

Tobacco Canvas

----------------------Simplex Applicators

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING!

----------------------.Methyl Bromide Gas

Wide Selection Of
'

PANELING

AT LOW PRICESI

Milwaukee Defense S~ines
In 94-81 Win Over .76ers

By. United Pftu Iatematlonal

reverse, Gravely makes
~ardening

us for a free demonstration.

.

''

'
~
'.,•

. . H8rV~ Brown · &lt;~&gt; dribbles lletw·~

Symmes ~alley's Jack Taylor (33) and Jene Myers (31) during hot action In Friday's. semifinals at the Class ATournament played on the Meigs High School Hardwood.

Hocking 59
44
Sheridan 57 Belpre 31
Lorain Admiral King 72
Class A
Midview 60
Zanesville Rosecrans 80
Cleve. East Tech 89 Cleve. Ma x
Fronller Local 57
Hayes 57
Ripley 77 Felicity 67
Cleve. Heights 79 Cleve. John Middletown Fenwick 53 New
Adams 78 loll
Miami 46
Celina 97 Defiance 66
Columbia 76 Lorain Catholic 74
Cleve. Collinwood 72 Cleve. St. Kirtland 63 Richmond Heights
Joseph 69
47
Lancaster 57 Mar ietta 54.
North Gatiia 85 Symmes Valley
Valley Forge 56 Midpark 55
72
.
Willoughby South 69''
Eastern (Meigs) 75 Hannan

W. L. T. Pis
89

Ch icago
40 16 9
Minnesota
32 22 9
St. Louts
22 34 9
California
18 32 16
Philadelphia
20 32 11
Pltlsburgh
20 35 9
Los Angeles
16 42 7
Friday's Results
Chicago 4 California 4
!Onlygamescheduledl
Sunday's Gamts
Montreal al PhiladelphIa

' '·' '. illooiliiNd Wit6ddll -~ori:h1 &lt;:~~·8 .

High School Tourney
Basketball Results

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis

Boston

•11

''. ,

UP, UP, AND AWAY
(32)
and Synunes Valley's Danny Wilson (23) batUe for a rebound
during action in Friday's semi finals of the Class A Tournament at Meigs lJlgh·SchO!ll. Eastern and North Gallla met
Saturday night In tlie championship game and trip to the
district tournament at Chillicothe.

EICHINGER SCORES- Dennis Eichinger (IS) the anchor of the Eastern Eagles dUmps in
two points with a jumper over the outstretched hands of Mike Caldwell (24) of the Hannan
Trace Wildcats. Eichinger, an all-state candidate, scored 36 points In Eastern's 7~2 victory.
(Photos by Katie Crow) .

New York
Montreat
Delroi t

' •lI

After it takes c~re of your lawn,
your Gravely tractor takes care
of your garden. The. Rotary
Plow attachment gives a
perfect seedbed in one
operation, other attachments
keep your garden weed free
and productive all season
long. With all-gear-drive,
insta~t forw~r,d , neut~al, anp

eSTORM
eSCREENS .
•SHUTTERS

76ers ended the penod with five
ol27fieldgoal attempts for 18.5
per cent and a tolal of 12 t&gt;Oints.
Philadelphia shot five-lor 20
from the floor In the second
period as the Bucks took a 43-25
lead at intermission. Dave
Wohllopped whatlitUe scoring
there was for the 76ers with 17
points.

STOP IN SOON
AND SEE OUR
· WIDE S~LECTION
OF HOME IMPROVEMENTS.

BATHROOM &amp; KITCHEN

SUPPUES!
Something New!

PICTURE FRAMING
MAKE YOUR OWN••. IT'S
EASY TO FRAME YOUR
OWN PICTURES.

RIC~A.RD

All Your Painting

.. Needs Are Here!

TOBACCO SEED

•-

DUTCH STANQARD PAINT.

----------------------PLANT BED
.

You'll

'''

Find
·· At Low

FERTILIZER

·-·--------------------

'''
•

Prices!
.

Fumigation Covers

ELECTRIC
SUPPLIES
.

FRENCH CITY---.-.
.... BUILDERS SUPPLY ....
750 1st Ave.

---------------·
------FW

'

.

-----------------~----·
.

Central Soya

.

"Your Fa~m Supply
Supermarket"

Gallipolis, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.I

the plastic types are best lllnce they are practically unbreakable,
rotproof aqd easy to clean. Most gardeners have a few of these
around the house left o\'ef from bedding plants bought from
garden centers. Or, yilu can make flats from wood. Aluminum
tin3 used for pa~kaging frozen cakes or other food products ~re
also suitable.
H you sow several varieties In one fiat, be sure to label each
variety. Plastic or wood markers are good for id~tifying trays
or Individual varieties.
Small seeds that are a U!Ue tricky to halllle can be mixed
with a little of the planting mix and then spread lhbdy over the

Lay of the Land

Land Slippage Can be Checked
By JOHN COOPER

SoU CooservaUon Service
PT. PLEASANT- There has been .a
lot of rain the last mQnth ,.. so which at this
time of year may cause land .slips In
certain soil colllltiona. The Soil Survey
report for Mason and· Jackson Counties
describes two of the main soils likely to
have land slips as .·vandalia Silty Clay
Loam and Upshur-Musltingum Silty Clay
Loam •

Denver Casto of.Gunville Ridge and A.
c. Bingham of Road Fork of Eighteen Mile
Creek each asked us to examine some slips
and advise them what to do. Land slips can
be very annoying, and sometimes
destrucUve, depending on where IIley
might be. Both of these slips were near
farm ponds and the landowners were both
concerned that the pond might become
filled with moving earth.
A slip is started because a large
amount of water soaks down through the
soil to a hard slick place, usually a. clay
layer and the layer ill greased by !lie slick

wet clay so that the wetght of earth above
causes a slip.
The.main treatment for these slips we
usually suggest is to prevent water.from
getting down to the slick lajrer. Thlil.is done
by fllllng an ever.present crack at the
under edge of the slip and properly tampIng the soil into the crack so as to make it
as Impervious as possible. Care is exercised to eliminate depressions In which
water might collect. Sometimes it is
·necessary to smooth the rough places In
land slips so that machinery can be
operated again over the area.
OSCAR GRIMM on the head of West
Creek and L. W. McQuaid on Uttle Sixteen
Mile Creek are planning use of their land
mainly for wildlife habitat Improvement.
Each is making plans to build a farm pond.
Mr. Grinun Is also planning to put out an
annual grain food mix f~r the benefit of
birds and rabbits. Denver Yolto. of SCS
helped them with locating !Jlaces In which
a pond f:Ould be buill.
FRANK HENDRICKSON of Mason

says that be is ''recreation fanning." He
means It, lo&lt;l, because part of hls land use
IJ'Ogr&amp;m conail!ts of renting part of hls
land which joins the Ohio River to campers
who may bring trailers In or may tent
camp. Many of them rent these lots and
move a camping trailer to his beach and
let it remain there for the entire summer.
There is. nearly one mlle ol river front on
the Hendrickson fann .
HARRY KRI:BS of SandhiU Road is
planning to build a water supply system
for use around hls barn. The source of this
water will be a spring. The soil !ldjacentto
the barn.ill Monongahela Silt Loam and it
is common thai extremely wet and seepy
places appear In this soil .
Denver Yoho of SCS examined the wet
area with Mr. Krebs and it was decided
that about 150 feet of tile were needed to
best coUect all of the water so as to dry the
ground ss well as to colleet the water atlts
main source. Alter It is collected, It will be
earrled apd stored In a 1200 gallon lank.

:IIMIWt'M1Hlm11LtiiTH!~'LFttill•·IMWii'IWfMI£1fi@8tM\MW!tT'fb:ill'~~"j.

:r

1

:d:: •::~::~t;h:

Your
Wayne
Nati•onai
·
n
u
:;o:
· .
ill
~~e;,:u::~a%ndd~:~n~~~~
F•&lt;
:l?
l,~.· .
:.l,l.' ! F
M!~
t
nz
ores
M¥

Mrs. Cora McGhee had as

BY T. ALLEN WOLTER
DISTRICT RANGER

ti.:.:.r.·,\

'·

GALLIPOLIS _ Last week 1
had the opportunity to visit the
Forest Service Insect &amp;
Disease Research Lab located
near Delaware, Ohio. As the
name implies, this lab is
primarily concerned with
research on insects and disease
that affect not only the nation's
timber supplies but also the
vast array of shade and ornament.ill tr,ee~ thai add beauty
to our environment.
· Most people have heard of
some of the more common
insects and diseases that affect
shade and ornamental trees
such as Dutch Elm disease and
perhaps forest tent caterpillars. What is not evident to
most is that insects and disease
cause more damage to the
nation's timber than all other
causes combined (fire, windstorms, flood, etc.).
Last year alone, insects
devoured enough timber to
build an additional 500,000
homes. Added to this is an
estimated
5 billion cubic feet of
timber destr~yed
by disease.

and Mrs. Charles Shultz and
Tom Courtright and girlfriend,
all of Columbus.
Dr. D. K. Matthews, a former·Vinton resident, but now
located at Dresden, 0., is a
patient in Good Samaritan
Hospilal, Zanesville, o., Room
538, Zip Code 43101.
Huber Lanier is a patient in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and
Mrs.
Jim
Wooldridge and family have
moved into their home which
they recenUy purchased on the
Woods Mill road
Mr. and Mrs, Ronnie Knoble,
Ulriii, Mw' Birdie" 'Uinler,
Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Lanier, son Adam, of
Lancaster
were recent
weekend visitors o! Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Lanier and called on
Huber Lanier in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wood and
family, Columbus, were recent
f
weekend guests o her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Ward
and David.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fisher

{@
• • • •;• •

th t
, . .. 'th f .
e ree • vems WI oretgn dollar size hole is punched
matter.
through the bark but not into
Forest Service scientists at the wood. A neopreme washer,
· Delaware are concentrating (same size as hole) with ·a
their efforts on two fronts. small hole in the center is
Control of the beetle and placed into the hole. Next, a
control of the dutch elm virus hose nozzle Is placed over the
itself through immunization of washer and clamped under
the trees.
great hydraulic pressure to the
The scientists have borrowed tree Itself lo prevent leakage.
a Irick from the ladles and are . The liquid innoculant is forced '
chemically Isolating an insect into the tree using compressed
"perfume" fro.m the female gas. · In exper•·ments ' ad ye was
bark beetle. This perfwne acts added to the innoct!lant to
as a sex attractant to the male d
etermine dispersal within the
beetle. Once the chemical. tree. Scientists folllld that after
make-up of this substance is only a few minutes the dye was
known the rest is relatively forced into every branch and
easy. '
twig on the tree ! Once perAlthough scientists have not fected you may be able to call
developed the actual control up your local tree surgeon and
procedures to be used it may have all of your yard trees
work· somethl'ng lt'ke thJ·s. The· .
. ed .
mtmun1z
tn a matter of
chemical can be produced in minutes.
large quantities and sprayed The Forest Service Research
on elm trees. The odor leads arm is involved 1n many other
the beetle to believe the tree is h
of
k
h
f'
P ases
wor sue as Jre,
already full of beetles and he ·recreation, wildlife and
looks elsewhere for a home. watershed research. The
my observations
the dispersed
results of this
research
is then
labFrom
the day
is not far off at
when
to state
and federal

Other indirect losses occur.
Recreational values of affected
areas decline, the fire danger
increases, and wildlife habitat
changes. Perhaps the most
interesting phase of the
research I viewed was the
work being done · to control
Dutch Elm disease. American
Elm, a popular shade and
ornamental tree is the hardest
hit species of elm . The
American Eln1, which has the
widest natural range of any
tree in America, has already
been effectively eliminaled as
a shade tree in the Midwest and
Northeastern United States.
The disease is still spreading.
The culprit in the whole
· matter is a tiny insect about¥•inch long called the European
Elm Bark Beetle. Like Typhoid
Mary, he Is the carrier of a
virus whjch, when introduced
into the elm tree by the beetle,
suffocates the tree by filling up

and Mrs. Mary Ann Filch, son,
Donnie, spent an evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fisher
celebrating the birthday of

Now and Get the Early

DISCOUNT
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available
now . Take delivery now from our area
warehouse at Pomeroy.

Ask About Complete
Custom Spray Service
·(WE 00 ALL THE WORK)
Our New

Line of
Spring
Tillers and
Mowers
Are'Here!

·'

POMEROY
Servi119 Meigs, Gallia
ond Mason Counties
Ph. 992·2181
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Look for the Big "L" on Route 7 &amp; 33 allhe
Upper End of Pomeroy

Open Daily Until 6:00 P.M.

~~:~:.::~~~.:::::::::::::::::::::
Mrs.
Fisher.

your favorite shade tree can land managers such as myself
receive ·the best possible to assist us In managing the
medical care. A portable nation's forest.
mobilex-raymachinehasbeen
developed by the lab. :I'his can
be moved into the for ' t (or on
BY MARIE ALEXANDER
to your lawn) and x-rays taken
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cane
to determine the health of the
celebrated their 50th wedding
tree. The x-rays can reveal
anniversary recently at the
diseased tissue, rot, nails, home of their daughter and
buckshot, hidden knots, in fact, husband, Mr. and Mrs. Don
very little could hide from the
Barnett, Langsville. Attending
x-ray unit. It's still ex- from here were Mrs. Laura
perimental but shows great Brown, Mrs. Hazel Harman
promise for a host of practical and Mrs. Grace Welker. Mrs.
applications . .
Evelyn Denney and son Tom,
By the way, when was the Evergreen, also attended.
last time you had your tree
Friends here were Saddened
.vaccinated?
by the sudden 'desth of Lewis
The lab is working on a Bartley who passed away at his
technique to inject an In- home Feb. 21. Funeral services
noculant into the tree to were from the McCoy-Moore
prevent disease. It might even Funeral Home and burial was
work to eliminate or stop the in Vinton Memorial Cennetery.
spread or disease within the
Mrs . Wesley Emch · and
tree.
da~ghter , Cary , Ill. and
Here's how it works : A half mother, Mrs. Gerald Woodley,
Columbus, were two days
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Daft.
YOUR FARM SUPPLY
Tan a George, daughter of
· Mr. and Mrs. Everett George,
has been confined to her home
here with pneumonia.
Mrs . James Casto, Mrs. John
Stevens
and"Mrs. Bill Quickie
• fiELD SEEDS
• DAIRY CLEANING
spent a day with Mrs. Edwin
Hudson, the former Lorainne
SUPPLIES
• TOBACCO SEED
Kessell, Letart, W. Va.
Mrs. Kathryn Rece left for a
• -PLANT BED SUPPLIES . • A"IMAL HEALTH
week's visit with her daughter
AIDS
AND
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Okey
• SEED SOWERS
Myers, Delaware, and Mr. and
VACCINES
• BARB WIRE
Mrs. Tom Rece and son Ash,
vHk , U. s: ~" wa~ acrhmPanied
to Chillicothe by Mr. and Mrs.
hmes Casto.
We Carry Vaccine lor Preventi'on Of Pink Eye.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Burris
l.•xing ton Park, Md. spent ~
recent weekend here with his
mother Mrs. Lricille Burris
Gallipolis, Ohio
Vine Street
and· !amity.
f Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mahaffey
and baby, Columbus, .and .
C~ri os Recc. were recent

v.·nton

Headquarters

1

J. D.· NORTH PRODUCE CO.

wttekend guests ot

WHY WAIT
BUY YOUR
FERTILIZER

Lut:u

'

Great New Low-Priced Tractor

32 HP• INTERNATIONAL: 354
• Choice..:husky gas or die~el engines- both 144 c u. in .
• 8 fwd - 2 rev speeds
• Dry type air cleaner
• 6 '12 in. disc brakes
• 3-polnl hitch with draft and position control
• Constant running PTO
?
1m
• Safety starting
• 12-volt system - 12 gallon fuel tank
• Underslung muffler. "New look" iH styl ing.
'Mfr. est. max. PTO. All the above a•e standard . Only options are auxiliary valves, verllcal

HI.

muffler, ~ower ~teari ng, protective frame. See the new low cost 354, now.

·

Meigs Equipment Co.
Third St.

POMEROY, OHIO

Ph. 992-2176

lilulhcr. \Irs. Louise Rece.

'·

~~
I

,· . .. I .

,

.

�•
I

19- Tbe Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, March 5, 1~7)!
. ' really get the urge . If so, consider starting a few n~wer seeds
indoors. You can get a head start ou the growing season. H you're
. not experienced In growing bedding plants; d\"1 'I be too disap.
pointed if you make a flop thellrst Ume around. nd. ·
Lack of light causes most beginnedailures. Getting seeds to .
germinate and grow is easy enough, but under average home
'light the plants usually grow weak and spindly rather than bushy
surfa~e of the planting medium. After sowing and watering,
. and compact. Artificial light is helpful: Two or more 40 wa~
cover fiats with plastic or glass. Once gennlnation beginS,
fluorescent tubes with reflectors work well. Suspend them from
uniform moisture an~ air circulation is vital, so it is usually best
the ceiling over a table (In the. basement) on chains so they can
fD remove the cover and water seedtingB as needed.
be railed as planta grow. Seedlings grown under artlfictalllght
Use a flne-IIQUI~ sprinkler for watering to avoid washing
should haY~~ about14hoursofllghtper day.
seediinglloutolthesoil. Keep soil moiSt but not too wet .
· To top It off, people that love to prune trees and shrubs but
H seedlings are too thick, thin them out or transplant fD Individual growing pots. Then when the weather Is right outside, are afraid to do so should contact the Extension Office lor
bulletin 543, "Pruning Landscape Plants," which is just off the
transplant to desired location and enjoy the fruits of you~ efforts.
ll'eBII. The new 211&lt;page publication, authored by Horticulturists
Get Head Start
. Many people take a look at the colorful flower catalogues and Elton Smith, James Caldwell, and Kenneth Reisch gives you the
"Wby," "When," and "How" of pruning. It contains some 28
detailed Illustrations that leave tittle doubt In one's mind as to
where pruning cuts should be made.
·

Jtastern And North Gallia Gain JlinalS . Gardeners Anxious to Get Started
•
•

ROCK SPRINGS
The
Eastern Eagles and the North
G.allla battled their way into
the Meigs Sectional "A"
tournament finals with semifinal wins here Friday night.
·The Eagles thumped the
underdog Hannan Trace
Wlldcats 7~2. pulling away in
the {ina! minute while the
Pirates wiped out a seven point
Symmes Valley Viking halftime lead to win going away,
113-72.
FIRST GAME
Behind Arthur Clark's 21
points , 24 rebounds, and
tremendous defense, the North
Gallia Pirates advanced to
final round play .- The Pirates,
now 11!-2, trailed throughout
most of the first half. In the
second half, however, the
Pirate guns started to fire with

deadlier range while holding
the Vikin gs with the installation of a zone defense
instead of their usual man-toman ·defense.
North Gallia, coached by Jim
Foster, shot out to a i&gt;Oleact
and were on top 7-1 with 4:46,
left in the opening quarter.
Symmes Valley, led by Danny
Wilson and Phil Robinson with
eight points apiece in the
quarte r, capitalized on
numerous North Gallia errors
to lead 22-16 after eight
minutes, however.
Robinson, shooting from the
t8-20 foot mark, kept finding
the bottom of the net with his
shol&gt;, rallied the Vikings to a
huge 32-20 lead 1with 4:41
1remaining in the first half.
1
After the Pirates battled
back 'to 32-30, Robinson drilled

three straight twin-pointers to making 31 of 79 from the field .
SECOND GAME
aid the Vikirtgo into a 40-33 · The Pira~s were 23 of 31 for 74
Dennis ' Eichinger hlt a
halftime margin. Robinson pet. from the foul line . The career-high 36 p&lt;&gt;ints and

accounted for ~ points In the Vikings, closing out their grabbed 17 rebouilda pacing
first half.
season at 12-8, made 29 of 81 for the Eagles to !hell' 7~2 win
In the second half, It wss all 36 pet. from the field and 14 of over the · Hannan Trace
North Gallia from. beginning to · 24 from !lie foul line for 58 pet. Wildcats.
end. Making less errors and
The game· was much closer
playing much better defense,
The Pirates commanded the than the 13 point margin Inthe Pirates began to force boards, 63-49, with Clark dicates. The Wildcats, closing
Vlkir\g turnovers and turning pulling down 24; Larry JustiJs, out their season at 10-10, were
them into essy lay-11ps. It was · ,14, and Gary Crosswhite, II. trailing by only four points, 66tied 44-44 with 4:27 remaining Keith Roach led Symmes · 62, with 59 seconds still on the
in the third period, but the Valley with 14 grabs while clock. Seven free throws and a
Pirates were never .headed Wilson had 13 and Jack Taylor, bucket, all by the Eagles,
after that. North Gallia out.. 10.
closed out the scoring after
scored Coach Wayne White's
j:'at Stout led the Pirates In that.
Vlltlngo 21i-9ln the third period. sc~ring with 22. while Clark
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles,
The VIkings did rally back to added 21 and Justus 20. now 13-2; breezed t~ugh the
within seven, 7~. with alittle Crosswhite had 12.
first quarter with 21-10 lead
under two minutes left, but
Robinson took game scoring ·and led 33-~ with 3:07 left In
some good free throw shooting hon~rs' with 28 with Wllson the first half. But ten straight
by the Pirates Iced the win.
adding 21 and Roach 12 fir the . .points by Coach Paul DiUon 's
North GaWa shot 39 pel. Vikings.
.
.
· Wildcats lowered the ad-

the field for a coolish 36.pet, but
hit on 21 of 31 from the free
throw line for a warm 68 pet:
The-Wildcats made 24 of 60
from the field for an even 40
pet. while dfOPplng In 14 of 25
from th" foul line for 56 pel.
The Eagles dominated the
boards, 49-35, with Eichinger
pulling down 17. for game
honors. Alan Duvall added 10
for ~ Eagles, Don Wells led
Hannan Trace with 13.
·
Eichinger's
36
potnr
production game ·by WilY ·or a
combination o! very long
jumpers from at least 25 feel
out and short lay-Ins on 11\iSSed
shots. ·Boring had one of his
finest games with 21 points and
great floor leadership.
Mike catawell and John•
Lusher each hit for 15 to pace
the Wildcats. Keith Swain_
added If. and Wells 12 for the

vantage to 33-30 with 37
seconds lefi In the ball.
Esstem led at the half, 35-30.
. The Eagles malnlalned their
live point lead'!llQIIt of the third
quarter but pUlled away In the
final minute to lead $4-43 after
three quarters. ·
Hannan Trace cut Eastern's
~ lead in half with seven
straight points to be down only
6().53 with 3:45 showing on the
clock. Then Randy Bor~ and
Eichinger . took complete
·control of the game. They
accounted for all but three of ·
the Eagles' 21 fourth quarter
points.
With I :51 left in the game,
and Eastern leading 64-55,
Boring ripped in six and
Eichinger five points to cap off
the Eagles' scoring.
Esstern made 27 of 75 from

'

•

losers.

~IRST

GAM£

SYMMES VALLEY (71) Roach 3·6·12, Taylor 2-0·4,
Wilson 8·5·21, Myers 1·1-3, P.
Robinson 13·2·28, Benne!! I·Q-2,
Willis 1·0·2. TOTAL$ 29-14'72.
NORTH GALLI~\ tl51. - L.
Justus 6·8· 20, Stout 7·8·22,

'

•

BY C. E, BLAKESLEE

•

Ext Agent, A&amp;rblture
POMEROY - Spring is In the air. Home gardeners and
''would be" hune.gardeners hardly can wait to get someihlng

•
,;

started.

the New in Fanning

'
,

J

7. The 19'12 Strawberry Short Course will be held at the Ohio
Agricullul'al Reaearch and Develotment Center.
A team of research scientists, extension specialists, and
strawberry growers will partlciP.te In a broad-based, fastmriylng IJ'Ogram, designed 10 help growers - both large and
small scale operators - maximize production of high quality
fruit.
.
.

•

•

8-36, Boring 6-9-21. 0Uvelf2-3-7, .:
Spencer 2·1-S, Sheets 0·0.0. •

TOTALS .27-21,75.
HAI!NAN TRA~E (62) Swain · 4· 6-14, Ours 2-2·6,
Caldwell 6·3-15, Well&amp; 5·2· 12,
Lusher 7·1·15. TOTALS 24·14·

62.

. .

.

By Quarters:

Eastern .

.

.21 35

s.c,75

'

A 111ft sign of spring is that Ohio growers of that favorite
first-of.U.e-eessonfrujt, the Strawberry, will have an opportunity
to learn the latest In production techniques and research
developments at a special day-tong conference Tuesday, March

•

;
Clark 8-5-21, Brown 4-0-8/ •.
Crosswhite 5·2· 12, Weddlnglon '
1·0·2. TOTALS 31-13·15.
By Quarters:
Symmes Valley
22 40 49 ,72 '
North Gatlia
16 33 ~ 85 •

Officials, Newman and
Davis.
·
SECOND GAME
..
EASTERN (7$) - Caldw,ll
1·0·2, Young 2-0·4, Eic:ll)nger U-

'

!

:

•
"
;
'

· Becalille of the intensified Interest In the pick-your-own
concept of strawberry harvest and marketing, thls ll'actice will
get top billing on the afternoon short course program. Mr. ~nd
Mrs. Charles Tbompeon, strawberry growers from Bristol,
Wisconsin, will share with Ohio growers many of the
management ll'&amp;ctlces they follow In a plck-youf.own operation
In the Badger state.
Growers interested in attending the 1972 Strawberry Short
CoUrse are Invited to pre-register by sending the registration fee
($5) name and address to the Department of Agriculture, Ohio
Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, Ohio

~

~

Hannan \race
10 30 43 62 •
Offldots. Dotv ANI f'hri•toan. ~

•
"•
••

.
~

»

44691.
This will be the fourth Strawberry Short Course for Ohio
growers. It is sponsored by the DeP:Brtment of Horticulture at
The Ohio State University In cooperation with the Research
Center, ·ohio Cooperauve·Extension Service, and The Ohio State
Horticultural Society.
For those who would like to start their seeds indoors here are
some suggestions. You can start some ,of your flower and
vegetable seeds Indoors and be ahead of the game by the time the
weather waims enough to sow seeds outside. Start about two
months ahead of the time you would nonnaUy plant seeds outside. Then you'D have well-developed plants ready for transplanting when neighbors are just starting their seed beds.
Expert Advice
Hortlcullurisls tell us to use sterilized potting soil or similar
seeding medium. Some may prefer peat pots, available in
several sizes both square and round. As for fiats to sow seed in,

~

~

•

••

32

~~GRAVELY

BRINGS HOME
THE GROCERIES

• •'

Toronto

Bulfalo

Vancouver

47 8 9 103
43 , 10 96
37 14 12 86
2828965
27 27 , 65
13 37 15 41
16 .41 6 38

United Press International

Cia., AAA
.
Col. South 75 . Col. Marion
Franklin 35 .
Col. Walnut Ridge 49 Newark

West

73
53
52
51
49
39

Vancouver at New York

eo
'''
I

',
'.
,''
~.
''
'

.,
'

,'

...''
•
'.

,JUMP BALL??? - Eastern's Randy Y~g (23) and
Hannan !frace's John Lusher (20) seem to be tied up for a
jump ball during.Friday's game In the Class A Tournament
at Meigs High School. Eastern won 75-62 thus advancing to
Saturday's championship game against the North Gallia
Pirates.

Paine sville Riverside 56

Los Angeles at Boston
Pltlsburgh at Detro II
St. Louis at Buffalo
Chicago at Minn.
(Onlygamesscheduied I

Ashland 74 Sandusky 41
Zanesville 64 Cambridge 61
Lancaster 57 Marietta 54
Portsmouth 70 Chillicothe 54
Class AA
Napoleon 83 Wayne Trace 55
Saint Henry 85 Lima Bath· 68
Ashtabula Harbor 75 Ashtabula
St. John 64
Eiyric Catholic 68 Oberlin 61

&lt;ASSISTANT NAMES
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI)The U.S. Naval Academy
Friday named Tom Harp an
assistant football coach to
succeed Ed Ferkany. Harp Is a
former Cornell and Duke head
coach, leading the Big Red to a
19-~ record In five seasons
and posting a 22-28-1 mark with
Duke in five campaigns.

•

'

'
~

.••
•

Philadelphia scored 25 points
In one half last nigh\.
No, not one Individual 76er.
The entire team. 25 points.
That happened· io be the
National Bask e tball
Association season low for
bCOfin~ in two cor"ecutive
per1ods. Naturally, Lne 76ers

lost- to Milwaukee, 94~1. as
Kareem Abdul -Jabbar
collected 27 points and devoured 23 rebounds.
Philadelphia missed its first
17 field goal attempts and
fo und itself trailing , 10-0,
t&gt;efore kevin Loughery sank a
16:foot. )ump sh ~l seven
mmutes t11 ~ • :!1e game. The

almost as easy as
gomg to the store. Call or see

Hank .Aaron Reports

Norwayne 56 North Ridgeville
43

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - Hank Aaron reported
to the Atlanta Braves camp
and worked out for the first
lime Saturday since signing a
recOrd contract last Tuesday .
The Braves star was greeted
by travellnif secretary Don

Gr1vely 7.6 HP Convertible

Tr•ctor with Rotary

Plow Attachment

Davison, who said, "I better belied a couple of pitches off
give him his transp~rtation the fences here his first time In
money. He might be a little the batting cage, then cleared
short ."
them on each of his next two
Aaron's contract was a three turns.
He has a total of 639 career
year deal which calls for
around $200,000 per season.
homers, 75 short of Babe
The 38-year-old slugger Ruth's record of 714.

Hudson 66 Streetsboro 49

New

Lexington

67

Federal

' VACATIONING? TRY OHIO!"

Open Monday Thru Saturday
8Til5

SUMMER VACATION
SPACE STILL AVAILABLE

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;Service
992-2975

OAK STATE PARK
DON'T WAIT I

Trace 62

Crooksville 61 Miller 59
Peebles 72 Piketon 67

512

CALL NOW-TODAY OR TONIGHT
(614) 767-2112

Rose Southeastern 72 Eastern

(Pike) 69
Portsmoult1 Clay 66 Valley 58
Portsmoult1 East 68 Green
Township 62
Ate&gt;&lt;ander 98 Lauretlvitle 68
S!ryker 79 Faye!le 47

Pomeroy, Ohio

TOBACCO
HEAQQUARTERS

SWIM-BOAT-FISH-HIKE-GOLF-TENNIS-RELAX
OPERATED IY OHIO INNS, INC., FOR THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL OISOUICES

Ayresville 56 Hi cksville 3.4

Here I

HARRIS TO TEACH
EAST STROIJDSliURG, Pa.
(UP!)-Richard Harris, a Philadelphia Eagles' defensive
end, has jOined the faculty of
East Stroudsburg Stale College
as a physical education
teacher. Harris wW also help
out with spring football
practice.
-·

E. Main

Make This Your

'

NEW KENDALL

.

STUNG BY INFLATION?

Tobacco Canvas

----------------------Simplex Applicators

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING!

----------------------.Methyl Bromide Gas

Wide Selection Of
'

PANELING

AT LOW PRICESI

Milwaukee Defense S~ines
In 94-81 Win Over .76ers

By. United Pftu Iatematlonal

reverse, Gravely makes
~ardening

us for a free demonstration.

.

''

'
~
'.,•

. . H8rV~ Brown · &lt;~&gt; dribbles lletw·~

Symmes ~alley's Jack Taylor (33) and Jene Myers (31) during hot action In Friday's. semifinals at the Class ATournament played on the Meigs High School Hardwood.

Hocking 59
44
Sheridan 57 Belpre 31
Lorain Admiral King 72
Class A
Midview 60
Zanesville Rosecrans 80
Cleve. East Tech 89 Cleve. Ma x
Fronller Local 57
Hayes 57
Ripley 77 Felicity 67
Cleve. Heights 79 Cleve. John Middletown Fenwick 53 New
Adams 78 loll
Miami 46
Celina 97 Defiance 66
Columbia 76 Lorain Catholic 74
Cleve. Collinwood 72 Cleve. St. Kirtland 63 Richmond Heights
Joseph 69
47
Lancaster 57 Mar ietta 54.
North Gatiia 85 Symmes Valley
Valley Forge 56 Midpark 55
72
.
Willoughby South 69''
Eastern (Meigs) 75 Hannan

W. L. T. Pis
89

Ch icago
40 16 9
Minnesota
32 22 9
St. Louts
22 34 9
California
18 32 16
Philadelphia
20 32 11
Pltlsburgh
20 35 9
Los Angeles
16 42 7
Friday's Results
Chicago 4 California 4
!Onlygamescheduledl
Sunday's Gamts
Montreal al PhiladelphIa

' '·' '. illooiliiNd Wit6ddll -~ori:h1 &lt;:~~·8 .

High School Tourney
Basketball Results

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pis

Boston

•11

''. ,

UP, UP, AND AWAY
(32)
and Synunes Valley's Danny Wilson (23) batUe for a rebound
during action in Friday's semi finals of the Class A Tournament at Meigs lJlgh·SchO!ll. Eastern and North Gallla met
Saturday night In tlie championship game and trip to the
district tournament at Chillicothe.

EICHINGER SCORES- Dennis Eichinger (IS) the anchor of the Eastern Eagles dUmps in
two points with a jumper over the outstretched hands of Mike Caldwell (24) of the Hannan
Trace Wildcats. Eichinger, an all-state candidate, scored 36 points In Eastern's 7~2 victory.
(Photos by Katie Crow) .

New York
Montreat
Delroi t

' •lI

After it takes c~re of your lawn,
your Gravely tractor takes care
of your garden. The. Rotary
Plow attachment gives a
perfect seedbed in one
operation, other attachments
keep your garden weed free
and productive all season
long. With all-gear-drive,
insta~t forw~r,d , neut~al, anp

eSTORM
eSCREENS .
•SHUTTERS

76ers ended the penod with five
ol27fieldgoal attempts for 18.5
per cent and a tolal of 12 t&gt;Oints.
Philadelphia shot five-lor 20
from the floor In the second
period as the Bucks took a 43-25
lead at intermission. Dave
Wohllopped whatlitUe scoring
there was for the 76ers with 17
points.

STOP IN SOON
AND SEE OUR
· WIDE S~LECTION
OF HOME IMPROVEMENTS.

BATHROOM &amp; KITCHEN

SUPPUES!
Something New!

PICTURE FRAMING
MAKE YOUR OWN••. IT'S
EASY TO FRAME YOUR
OWN PICTURES.

RIC~A.RD

All Your Painting

.. Needs Are Here!

TOBACCO SEED

•-

DUTCH STANQARD PAINT.

----------------------PLANT BED
.

You'll

'''

Find
·· At Low

FERTILIZER

·-·--------------------

'''
•

Prices!
.

Fumigation Covers

ELECTRIC
SUPPLIES
.

FRENCH CITY---.-.
.... BUILDERS SUPPLY ....
750 1st Ave.

---------------·
------FW

'

.

-----------------~----·
.

Central Soya

.

"Your Fa~m Supply
Supermarket"

Gallipolis, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.I

the plastic types are best lllnce they are practically unbreakable,
rotproof aqd easy to clean. Most gardeners have a few of these
around the house left o\'ef from bedding plants bought from
garden centers. Or, yilu can make flats from wood. Aluminum
tin3 used for pa~kaging frozen cakes or other food products ~re
also suitable.
H you sow several varieties In one fiat, be sure to label each
variety. Plastic or wood markers are good for id~tifying trays
or Individual varieties.
Small seeds that are a U!Ue tricky to halllle can be mixed
with a little of the planting mix and then spread lhbdy over the

Lay of the Land

Land Slippage Can be Checked
By JOHN COOPER

SoU CooservaUon Service
PT. PLEASANT- There has been .a
lot of rain the last mQnth ,.. so which at this
time of year may cause land .slips In
certain soil colllltiona. The Soil Survey
report for Mason and· Jackson Counties
describes two of the main soils likely to
have land slips as .·vandalia Silty Clay
Loam and Upshur-Musltingum Silty Clay
Loam •

Denver Casto of.Gunville Ridge and A.
c. Bingham of Road Fork of Eighteen Mile
Creek each asked us to examine some slips
and advise them what to do. Land slips can
be very annoying, and sometimes
destrucUve, depending on where IIley
might be. Both of these slips were near
farm ponds and the landowners were both
concerned that the pond might become
filled with moving earth.
A slip is started because a large
amount of water soaks down through the
soil to a hard slick place, usually a. clay
layer and the layer ill greased by !lie slick

wet clay so that the wetght of earth above
causes a slip.
The.main treatment for these slips we
usually suggest is to prevent water.from
getting down to the slick lajrer. Thlil.is done
by fllllng an ever.present crack at the
under edge of the slip and properly tampIng the soil into the crack so as to make it
as Impervious as possible. Care is exercised to eliminate depressions In which
water might collect. Sometimes it is
·necessary to smooth the rough places In
land slips so that machinery can be
operated again over the area.
OSCAR GRIMM on the head of West
Creek and L. W. McQuaid on Uttle Sixteen
Mile Creek are planning use of their land
mainly for wildlife habitat Improvement.
Each is making plans to build a farm pond.
Mr. Grinun Is also planning to put out an
annual grain food mix f~r the benefit of
birds and rabbits. Denver Yolto. of SCS
helped them with locating !Jlaces In which
a pond f:Ould be buill.
FRANK HENDRICKSON of Mason

says that be is ''recreation fanning." He
means It, lo&lt;l, because part of hls land use
IJ'Ogr&amp;m conail!ts of renting part of hls
land which joins the Ohio River to campers
who may bring trailers In or may tent
camp. Many of them rent these lots and
move a camping trailer to his beach and
let it remain there for the entire summer.
There is. nearly one mlle ol river front on
the Hendrickson fann .
HARRY KRI:BS of SandhiU Road is
planning to build a water supply system
for use around hls barn. The source of this
water will be a spring. The soil !ldjacentto
the barn.ill Monongahela Silt Loam and it
is common thai extremely wet and seepy
places appear In this soil .
Denver Yoho of SCS examined the wet
area with Mr. Krebs and it was decided
that about 150 feet of tile were needed to
best coUect all of the water so as to dry the
ground ss well as to colleet the water atlts
main source. Alter It is collected, It will be
earrled apd stored In a 1200 gallon lank.

:IIMIWt'M1Hlm11LtiiTH!~'LFttill•·IMWii'IWfMI£1fi@8tM\MW!tT'fb:ill'~~"j.

:r

1

:d:: •::~::~t;h:

Your
Wayne
Nati•onai
·
n
u
:;o:
· .
ill
~~e;,:u::~a%ndd~:~n~~~~
F•&lt;
:l?
l,~.· .
:.l,l.' ! F
M!~
t
nz
ores
M¥

Mrs. Cora McGhee had as

BY T. ALLEN WOLTER
DISTRICT RANGER

ti.:.:.r.·,\

'·

GALLIPOLIS _ Last week 1
had the opportunity to visit the
Forest Service Insect &amp;
Disease Research Lab located
near Delaware, Ohio. As the
name implies, this lab is
primarily concerned with
research on insects and disease
that affect not only the nation's
timber supplies but also the
vast array of shade and ornament.ill tr,ee~ thai add beauty
to our environment.
· Most people have heard of
some of the more common
insects and diseases that affect
shade and ornamental trees
such as Dutch Elm disease and
perhaps forest tent caterpillars. What is not evident to
most is that insects and disease
cause more damage to the
nation's timber than all other
causes combined (fire, windstorms, flood, etc.).
Last year alone, insects
devoured enough timber to
build an additional 500,000
homes. Added to this is an
estimated
5 billion cubic feet of
timber destr~yed
by disease.

and Mrs. Charles Shultz and
Tom Courtright and girlfriend,
all of Columbus.
Dr. D. K. Matthews, a former·Vinton resident, but now
located at Dresden, 0., is a
patient in Good Samaritan
Hospilal, Zanesville, o., Room
538, Zip Code 43101.
Huber Lanier is a patient in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and
Mrs.
Jim
Wooldridge and family have
moved into their home which
they recenUy purchased on the
Woods Mill road
Mr. and Mrs, Ronnie Knoble,
Ulriii, Mw' Birdie" 'Uinler,
Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Lanier, son Adam, of
Lancaster
were recent
weekend visitors o! Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Lanier and called on
Huber Lanier in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wood and
family, Columbus, were recent
f
weekend guests o her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Ward
and David.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fisher

{@
• • • •;• •

th t
, . .. 'th f .
e ree • vems WI oretgn dollar size hole is punched
matter.
through the bark but not into
Forest Service scientists at the wood. A neopreme washer,
· Delaware are concentrating (same size as hole) with ·a
their efforts on two fronts. small hole in the center is
Control of the beetle and placed into the hole. Next, a
control of the dutch elm virus hose nozzle Is placed over the
itself through immunization of washer and clamped under
the trees.
great hydraulic pressure to the
The scientists have borrowed tree Itself lo prevent leakage.
a Irick from the ladles and are . The liquid innoculant is forced '
chemically Isolating an insect into the tree using compressed
"perfume" fro.m the female gas. · In exper•·ments ' ad ye was
bark beetle. This perfwne acts added to the innoct!lant to
as a sex attractant to the male d
etermine dispersal within the
beetle. Once the chemical. tree. Scientists folllld that after
make-up of this substance is only a few minutes the dye was
known the rest is relatively forced into every branch and
easy. '
twig on the tree ! Once perAlthough scientists have not fected you may be able to call
developed the actual control up your local tree surgeon and
procedures to be used it may have all of your yard trees
work· somethl'ng lt'ke thJ·s. The· .
. ed .
mtmun1z
tn a matter of
chemical can be produced in minutes.
large quantities and sprayed The Forest Service Research
on elm trees. The odor leads arm is involved 1n many other
the beetle to believe the tree is h
of
k
h
f'
P ases
wor sue as Jre,
already full of beetles and he ·recreation, wildlife and
looks elsewhere for a home. watershed research. The
my observations
the dispersed
results of this
research
is then
labFrom
the day
is not far off at
when
to state
and federal

Other indirect losses occur.
Recreational values of affected
areas decline, the fire danger
increases, and wildlife habitat
changes. Perhaps the most
interesting phase of the
research I viewed was the
work being done · to control
Dutch Elm disease. American
Elm, a popular shade and
ornamental tree is the hardest
hit species of elm . The
American Eln1, which has the
widest natural range of any
tree in America, has already
been effectively eliminaled as
a shade tree in the Midwest and
Northeastern United States.
The disease is still spreading.
The culprit in the whole
· matter is a tiny insect about¥•inch long called the European
Elm Bark Beetle. Like Typhoid
Mary, he Is the carrier of a
virus whjch, when introduced
into the elm tree by the beetle,
suffocates the tree by filling up

and Mrs. Mary Ann Filch, son,
Donnie, spent an evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fisher
celebrating the birthday of

Now and Get the Early

DISCOUNT
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fertilizer, all available
now . Take delivery now from our area
warehouse at Pomeroy.

Ask About Complete
Custom Spray Service
·(WE 00 ALL THE WORK)
Our New

Line of
Spring
Tillers and
Mowers
Are'Here!

·'

POMEROY
Servi119 Meigs, Gallia
ond Mason Counties
Ph. 992·2181
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Look for the Big "L" on Route 7 &amp; 33 allhe
Upper End of Pomeroy

Open Daily Until 6:00 P.M.

~~:~:.::~~~.:::::::::::::::::::::
Mrs.
Fisher.

your favorite shade tree can land managers such as myself
receive ·the best possible to assist us In managing the
medical care. A portable nation's forest.
mobilex-raymachinehasbeen
developed by the lab. :I'his can
be moved into the for ' t (or on
BY MARIE ALEXANDER
to your lawn) and x-rays taken
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cane
to determine the health of the
celebrated their 50th wedding
tree. The x-rays can reveal
anniversary recently at the
diseased tissue, rot, nails, home of their daughter and
buckshot, hidden knots, in fact, husband, Mr. and Mrs. Don
very little could hide from the
Barnett, Langsville. Attending
x-ray unit. It's still ex- from here were Mrs. Laura
perimental but shows great Brown, Mrs. Hazel Harman
promise for a host of practical and Mrs. Grace Welker. Mrs.
applications . .
Evelyn Denney and son Tom,
By the way, when was the Evergreen, also attended.
last time you had your tree
Friends here were Saddened
.vaccinated?
by the sudden 'desth of Lewis
The lab is working on a Bartley who passed away at his
technique to inject an In- home Feb. 21. Funeral services
noculant into the tree to were from the McCoy-Moore
prevent disease. It might even Funeral Home and burial was
work to eliminate or stop the in Vinton Memorial Cennetery.
spread or disease within the
Mrs . Wesley Emch · and
tree.
da~ghter , Cary , Ill. and
Here's how it works : A half mother, Mrs. Gerald Woodley,
Columbus, were two days
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Daft.
YOUR FARM SUPPLY
Tan a George, daughter of
· Mr. and Mrs. Everett George,
has been confined to her home
here with pneumonia.
Mrs . James Casto, Mrs. John
Stevens
and"Mrs. Bill Quickie
• fiELD SEEDS
• DAIRY CLEANING
spent a day with Mrs. Edwin
Hudson, the former Lorainne
SUPPLIES
• TOBACCO SEED
Kessell, Letart, W. Va.
Mrs. Kathryn Rece left for a
• -PLANT BED SUPPLIES . • A"IMAL HEALTH
week's visit with her daughter
AIDS
AND
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Okey
• SEED SOWERS
Myers, Delaware, and Mr. and
VACCINES
• BARB WIRE
Mrs. Tom Rece and son Ash,
vHk , U. s: ~" wa~ acrhmPanied
to Chillicothe by Mr. and Mrs.
hmes Casto.
We Carry Vaccine lor Preventi'on Of Pink Eye.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Burris
l.•xing ton Park, Md. spent ~
recent weekend here with his
mother Mrs. Lricille Burris
Gallipolis, Ohio
Vine Street
and· !amity.
f Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mahaffey
and baby, Columbus, .and .
C~ri os Recc. were recent

v.·nton

Headquarters

1

J. D.· NORTH PRODUCE CO.

wttekend guests ot

WHY WAIT
BUY YOUR
FERTILIZER

Lut:u

'

Great New Low-Priced Tractor

32 HP• INTERNATIONAL: 354
• Choice..:husky gas or die~el engines- both 144 c u. in .
• 8 fwd - 2 rev speeds
• Dry type air cleaner
• 6 '12 in. disc brakes
• 3-polnl hitch with draft and position control
• Constant running PTO
?
1m
• Safety starting
• 12-volt system - 12 gallon fuel tank
• Underslung muffler. "New look" iH styl ing.
'Mfr. est. max. PTO. All the above a•e standard . Only options are auxiliary valves, verllcal

HI.

muffler, ~ower ~teari ng, protective frame. See the new low cost 354, now.

·

Meigs Equipment Co.
Third St.

POMEROY, OHIO

Ph. 992-2176

lilulhcr. \Irs. Louise Rece.

'·

~~
I

,· . .. I .

,

.

�20 - 1be&amp;l)dayTimes-Sentlnei,Sunday , Ma~ 5,1972
.

.

'

'

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
IN MEM6RY of our . Mother

Helo

who left us ll years ago

March 3, 1%1.

Nothing can erase the m ernory

01 one so good and kind.
She's living in our hearts today

Wanted
DELIVERY
DRIVER SALES

Real Estate For Sale

livillg _room, dining room ,

kitchen, family room, full

perience necessary.

And. she is always In our mind .

No ex -

The Children
'3.57 HOUR
54-1 NOT too much for delivery and

- ------'--

sales of small appliances.

IN MEMORY of Mrs . H. A.

s1ill

ache

with

Secret tears sti ll flow ;
Wha t i t meant to lose you ,

No one will ever kn ow.
When days are ·dark and dreary
And everyt hing goes wrong

We seem to hear you whisper
" Cheer up and carry on."
Each time we see your picture
You seem to smile and say.
" Don' t cry, I' m only sleepfng ,
We will meet again some day."

rooms, 2 baths, gas hot air
f u r n a c e _ P r e s e n tarrangement 2 apartments.
Easi ly converted to one

family dwelling. Asking
135,000. Shown by appt. Ph.
446·0208.

old, all brick , 3 large bdrm s.,

ll v. rm . 20 x 20 with F.P.,
DESIGNED FOR GRACIOUS LIVING
Very beautiful inside and out and is as new
spring flower. Four large
bedrooms, lovely large living room with
· fireplace, formal dining and wife approved
kitchen (range. oven. dishwasher. etc). large
family room with fireplace and the entire
house is carpeted . 2112 baths and 2 car garage .
This is a very lovely home which would be
hard to replace for the asking price.

Ma -mlsh as a·

manager's

license preferred but not
necessary. Ph. 446-1209.

52·3

we sell or under service A MASTER beautician. Ph . 446·
con tract. Simmons Ptg . &amp;
4442.

Office Equip! Ph. 446·1397.
51 -If

52·3

R;::;-;U~M;-;M-;-A;-;G:c;E;:-s~a;-;le-a~t-;;K~ana-uga,
Rt . 7, second house above

HOW MUCH can you earn
se lling

Blue Willow, March 3 to 13.
52-6
TWO-WAY Radi os Sales 8.
Service. N~w and used CB's,

famou s

Avon

products? Man y Avon Sales

people, make fri ends. For.
detail s write or call Mrs.
Helen Yeager, Box 172,

BRICK RANCH WITH BASEMENT
If you're looking for a reaL good, well-bu!ll
home, see this before someone else buys 11 .
Three nice sized bedrooms. large carpeted
living room. 1'12 ceramic baths. family size
kitchen with dishwasher and range. Dry
basement just waiting for someone to finish
into a nice family room.

2 Bedroom
Bargain

l

LOCA TEO ON A RE AL
NICE LOT IN EX CELLENT
NEI GHBORH OO O AND
IN CLUDE S A VERY NIC E
K ITCHEN , FULL
BASEMENT , REC . ROOM,

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

ALUM INU M

PETING

+++
To Irate Elder :
I had to laugh when I read your letter complaining about
today's young people. It wasn't they who overpopulated our
world to the point of starvation. It wasn 't the youth who got us
into another war. It wasn't the kids who polluted our air with
smog and our water with trash .
True, many young people are throwing their lives away by
taking drugs, but think of the courage it takes for those who
are n't, to live in this messed-up world and find beauty and
goodness in it.
You might think one of the younger generation was writing
this letter, so just sign me - OVER 6ii.

++-+

Dear Helen and Sue :
1wish that every "Irate Elder" could attend classes with me
at our local community college. A grandmother several times
over, I enrolled as a freshman last September. Most of. the
students are 18 and 19.
The boys are bearded; boys and girls alike have long hair
and wear colorful garb. P•1t these teens are courteous , considerate, helpful, friendly, and have gone out of their way to
make me feel welcome in their classrooms . They're youths of
whom any parent or grandparent can be proud.
It's unfortunate that so much publicity is given to the
mioorlty when the majority are firie young people. I know! ELDER BUT NOT IRATE

+++

Dear Both of You :
The Irate Elders of this world get an idea, then set out to
'prove it by reading only the bad things about youth. Pity! -

l ar~e

kitchen

PRETTY

.t

List Your Property
With the Leading
Real Estate Sales
Office ln .Gallia Co .

2 Bedroom Brick
$6,500.00
EDGE OF TOWN ON ~
ACRE . NE EDS BATH ' AND
FURNACE . COU LD BE A

MONEY MAKER FO R A DO
FIX

UP

Investment Prop.
3 Apartments
LOCATED ON A FULL
CITY LOT IN EXCEL LENT
LOCATIO N ON 2ND AVE .
2lh

BLOCKS FROM CIT Y

P ARK . . PRESENTLY
RENT S FOR $160 PER MO .
NEED S SOME REPAIR
BUT COUL D BRIN G IN S250
WITH EASE .

Land - Building Lots
AC . CITY SC H. DI ST .
$5,000.

9

'l lf1

AC . CITY SC H. DI ST .

S7 ,500

152 AC . CITY SC H. OIST .

S1 5,000

l b AC . SUBDIVISION LOTS

FRO M $2,200 UP .

Help Wanted
BAR MAID or

cock tail

waitress . Apply in person at
Sky line Lanes.

53-4
Wanted To Do
ALTERATIONS ON all types ot
clot hing in my home . Ca ll

Mrs . Ross Northup, 446·2543.
21 -lf

sn

NURSE ' S aide would like
private duty nursing at night.

Ph. 256·6814.
53-3
CAR PENTER

work ,

, r emode li ng, roof ing, siding,
' furna ce installation , concrete

work . Ph . 446-9271, John H.
Queen &amp; Son.
54-12
BOB
Lane ·5
co mple•·~::
Bookkeepi ng and Tax Ser vice, A24'h Fourth Aye .•

Kanauga .

Ph .

446·1049.

Business hourS 9 a.m .· 1 p. m.

Monday thru Saturday. Lef
Bob take care of yo ur
bookkeeping and lax needs.

By appointment only.
294-tf

-~-'­

SEWI NG in my hom~ . Barbara

Stover, 44H986.

49-6

R 10 - All brick, all electric,
beautiful 5 rm. home, located
in excellent residential
section. Owner uses huge ll v.
rm. for beauty salon. This

property may be bought with
3 First Lady beaut y Salon

FULL
VERY

K I T C H EN

I RA NGE, OVEN , ETC I
WITH LOTS OF CAB INET S,
GARAGE, LA~GE FLAT
LOT
IN
EXCEL L ENT
N E IGHB OR HOOD- CIT Y
SC HOOL .

They Don't Build
Them Like They
Use To
HERE 'S ONE FOR THE
RECORD. UNOCCUPIED
FOR 40 YEARS. THIS 3
BEDROOM HOME HAS
BEEN COM PLETELY
REDONE - IN CLUDE S A
MODERN
BUILT · IN
KI TCHEN
(RANGE ,
OVENI
CO MPLETELY
CA RPETED UPSTA IR S
AND
DOWN, LARGE
FA MILY ROOM WITH
F IREPLACE ,

NEW

FURNACE , NEW WALLS ,
CE ILIN G, PLUMBING AND
WIRING . PLENTY OF
CLO SETS . GOOD NEIGH .
BOR HOOD, CITY SCHOO L
DI STRICt, LARGE FLAT
TREE SHA DED LO T WITH
LARGE GARDE N SPOT .
MID TWE NTIES.
Bargain Of The Week
115,500 BUY S THI S 8 YR .
OLD VERY
NICE 3
BEDROOM
HOME .
PRETTY
KIT CHEN,
LARGE GARAGE, 2 A. LOT
IN THE r rT Y SCHOOL
DISTR ICT .
Priced For
Quick Sale
VERY NICE 3 BEDROOM
HOME

AT

20251/'l

CHATH AM . CONCRETE
SLAB FOR ~WO CARS,
SMALL LOT, PLUMBED
FOR WASHER &amp; DRYGER ,
VERY NICE
NEIGH.
BORHOOD . $14,750.

HOUSE FOR SALE
3 bedrooms, Jl/2 baths,
central gas heating
and air conditioning,
inside city limits, river
view. 3/o acre, in low
thirtie s.
House
available beg'inning of
March. Ph. 446-4885.
Instruct iol.l
GRADERS, SCRAPERS,
BULLDOZERS, BACKHOES

For Rent
Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOM house &amp; bath,
FOR sale b( owner. 3 bedroom
Kanauga. Ph. 446·4322.
house a l&lt;anauga , good
54-3
location, $12,000. Ph. «6-«WS.
55·3
HALF ot duplex, 2 bedrooms.
iar.ge living room and kitchen,
.
carpeted throughou!, yard.
25 Locust st:
Water, sewer, garbage paid.
Howard 'Brannon, Broker
$135
mo. Ph. 446·.1806.
_,'.
Off. 446-2674
28 1
World's
Largest
Lucltle Brannon
Eve. 446·1226
THE LliADt~ SINCE 1900 IN
.N.EW
SERV·ING THE · NATION'$·
2 BEDRM.
Delightful
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
TOWNHOUSE
APTS.
• •
.Ph~·0008
BE
WITH
the
first
to choose
S
b
b
L
· u ur an IVI09
·i · · ·
your residence In these
ALL BRICK RANCH - 3 BR. GEO RGES CREEK
RD . .
suburban apts.
w, bath, w .w ca rpet In LR &amp; Building and mobile home beautiful
Contem porary In style,
large family room, del uxe lois. All uhllt1es available.
luxurious carpeting, In ki tchen
in
copper tone,
Some can be bought on a land
dividually controlled h~tln.a ,
laundrv .room , attached . contract.
color
coordinated
ap·
garage, farge covered pallo, 'CITY ..:y-B~ - located on a
pllances , private patios ,
es tablished fawn, ~ow vacant.
quiet st., ca rpet over HW
many other features. Lease
Just 3 mi. to Gavon plant.
floors, built-in kitchen, ulillty
$135 mO. Calf 446·3772 for
appointment to see model
The Utmost In
. room , air .:;&gt;n~ .• and carpor\.
· uni!. 526 Jackson Pike, Near
S BR . - 21f• BATHS Holzer Med . Center.
Living Comfort
Nearly new--by.fevel within
THIRTY-FIVE WEST
walking distance of new
· APARTMENTS
THIS HOME provides every hospital on a large corner lot.
. 51 -tf
imaginable convenience . It
Completely buitt-ln 'kitchen.
fea tures 11 rooms, 21f2 baths,
ww carpet, 2 car garage.
----:----:-::
OFF ICE space, ground floor
LISTINGS WANTED
fspac
11ous LR with WB
location ,
downtown
~re p ace. over .me 1.am• 1Y
·we HAVE BUYERS
Gallipolis, all utilities , paid.
ro.om, new all bu".t 1n kitchen
WE NEED SELLERS
Ph. 446·3472 Merrill Evans.
w1lh self -c lean1n!l oven, COLD WEATHER SPECIAL 51 -6
formal DR, master BR has a
this large sto'ne fireplace can
walk In 7xl0 closet, a pic· make Feb . feel like July.
ruresque library, all second Lovely modern home with 3 NOW ·leasing new 1 bedroom
fl oor c~rpeted, finished 2 BR and 1'1• baths
apartments, adults only. Ph .
room at he, 3 room basement,
675-3450 Pt. Pleasant.
garage. Shown by ap .
296-tf
Nicely
poin tment only. Can be seen POMEROY
remodeled 2 story home
any day .
located on a quiet st 2 BEDROOM m'oblle home ln.
Cheshire. Ph. 367-7329.
Presently rentinQ for $185 per
J4.tf
Large Family Special · Mo. Buy below replacement
cost
$17,500.
SPACIOUS two story home, 4
BR &amp; ba th, large LR with BIDWELL - Like new 3 BR SLEEPif'.IG ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
open sta ir s, family room , two
home, would probably ap.
308-tf
porches, part basement, nice
prove for FHA loan, or make
deep lot. Surprisingly low
a 10 pet. down payment and APARTMENT for construction
priced.
go conventional. ALSO, 2 men. Ph . 446-0756.
·
story home In good repair
267-tf
with 7 rms. and bath, cellar, 2 - - - - - - - - Easy Living
car garage and 3 lots .
SLEEP,ING ROOMS weekly
J UST PERFECT for the
rates, tree garage parking,
ATTENTION
retiring couple. All electric, 2
BR home. walls are pl~ ster DUE lo I he present constructlor. Libby Hotel.
in Gall-ia Co., we have several
289-tf
and paneled. Ntce kitchen

REALTY

wi th plenty ca binets and
amp le eati ng area, TV room ,
storage room,
carport ,
aluminum si ding . Deep well .
Localed on a large double lot.
Quick possession.

S-P-R-E - A-DO-U-T

THERE'S ROOM lo spare most
everywhere in this ~ BR two
story home. Banquet size
and chairs. All for 124,000.
kitchen, formal DR , fireplace
House 121 ,000.
in LR, two room basemen t,
'
porches,
garage. All this on a
KERR - Near new, all brick , 4
deep well sodded lor .
bdrms., large iiv. rm ., din.
rm . , and Mrs . approved Convenient Location
kitchen. It has H. W. floors
and carpet. Full fini shed THI S ATTRACTIVE 2 BR
base., with a 2 car g~r - Thi s
house has 1.888 sq . f t . li v. area
on each floor . Locat ed on near
2 A. leVe l land. Bought for
replacement cost.

base., H.w: floors with

new

ca rpet and paneling in ltv.
rm. Don' t wait to see this one.

Price 117,500.
GR EEN ACRES - Real nice, 4

porch, new natural gas. tur ·

Don't Fence Me In!
WANT A large· lot? I Here's one1 - 50 A., vacant, $9,000.
_
"tailor made" to your desire!
LOTS OF LOTS
2 BR &amp; bath, all · il~J itin ~lt - ,wE HAVE several nice level
chen , carpeted LR , sun porch, lots 1 mi. from new hasp., 100
full basement. All this wllh a fl . front. 200 ft. deep, rural
picturesque view of the ri ver .

LOWDOWN PAYMENT
This 3 BR home with full

older home, pond and dr illed

well. Price 135.000.
barn, some bottom land, 6 rm .

house, plenty water, 1,600 lb.
lob. base. $14,000.
Any hr. - 446-1998
E. Winters - 446·3828
At Arnold - 446-0756
Eve., J. Futler - 446-3246
Eve., J. Berry - 446-3466

structi on worKe rs by

the

week . Kitchen privileges, full
bath, pri vate parking, 25
minutes to Gavin Plant

Evenings
Oscar C. Baird, 446-4632
D. J. We!herhott, 446·4244
Steven R. Betz, 446-9583

RUSSELL,
WOOD
REALTOR

Askew .

ranc h, t wo income un its,

52·3

Slate Rt. 160.

SLEEP IN G room or board and
room. Ph . 4A6·0060 .
home, barns, near Vi nton.
50·6
$15,500.

40 ACRES, Cozy two bedroom

446-1066

~

for rebuttal.

how to run your bus1ness and

•

Buy

Roe Crites Antlaues. carl
collec l, 614-9r.3-362 1.
44·26

53-J

53-tf

wanfs. Make us an offer.

Ofiice 446·1066
· Evenings : Call
Ron canaday 446-)636
Russell D. Wood 4•6·4611

TARA

qi.f6·0001

1968 VW TRANSPORTER

1966 OPEL STA. WAGON

OPEN FROM 8:30 TILL 7 P.M. WEEKDAYS

'129

1969 Ford F-100 Pick-Up
Ranger Pickup, bea utiful two-tone green, 61f2 ft . bed , V-8
engine, radio, w-s-w tires , wheel covers, chrome ' bumpers; new exhaust system , show room cond. ·

YA'LL

1966
Impala
. Chevrolet
.

COMPARE

-4 Dr. station Wagon, 8 cyl. eng ine, auto. tran s., p. steer ing,

luggage rack , w-s-w fires, rad io. In excellent cond .

,~.

DOD

'895

MARTIN FORD PRICE

Blue Lustre carpet cleaner .
Rent electric shampooer Sl.

Lower G. C. Murphy Store.
54-6
'66 MUSTANG, good condition,
$450. Ph. 245-5873.
54·3

-----MODERN Wa ln ut Stereo-rad io

$69.40. Use our budgel terms.
Calf 446-1028.
54-3 .

----------

speakers, 4 speed automati c

changer. Balance 179.34. Use
our budge! terms. Call 446·
1028.
54-3

-------1965 CHEV. Impala 2 dr. hdtp. ,
automatic ; 7 pc. dinette sel.
Ph. 446-3548.

Kanauga, Ohio

- - - - - --

We ..u anything lor
uybody . Bring your
Items to Knolls Com.
mun.ily Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Oflvt.,
For appointment .call
446-2t17 , Salt ovory
Saturday · Evening at
70'Ciock.

DODGECHA
lOP

3 GOOD used NCR cash
For Sale
registers, 1 electric. Sfmmons
Ptg. &amp; Office Equip. Ph. 446·
REG.
BASSETT
Hound
puppies
1967 INTERNATIONAL Scout
1397.
$35.
Ph.
446·3845.
with hard!op, good cond. Call
53 ·2
54-If
Ron Sheet•, 446·4195 after 4
p.m .
51-4 1965CHEV. Impala , PS, PB , 283
· PiLE Is soft and lofty ... colors
relaln brilliance In carpets
cleaned with Blue Lustre.
Rent electric shampooer SL
Central Supply Co.

l\lBA111S

TOWNHOUSE'

,APARTMENTS

,.

Ph . 245-5593.

good

New GMC

condit ion .

52-3

RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
'67
PMC
52x12
54-6
'67 Elcona 50x12
'66 New Moon 50x10
WHITE electric range $50. Ph . '64 Elcona 60x10
446-3662 afler 6 p.m.
'64 Detroiter 54X10
'64 Star 55x10
'62 Liberty 50•10
'65 IMPALA Super Sport 321, '49 Columbia 27x8
auto. console, PS, PB. Ph. 446·
B&amp;S Mobile Homes
0766.
Second &amp; Vlond St.
54·3
Pt. Pleasanl t NeKIIo Heck's. l
52-tf
1970 DODGE Super Bee, 1
owner, low mll~age, e.cellent
'
condition. Ph. «6-?380.
_ 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine
54 3
left in layaway . Beautih•l
pas tel color, full size model.
Al l buill-in lo buttonhole, do
J P's Tropical Wonderland,
st re tch sewir\g and fancy
415'12 Main St., Pt. Pleasant.
Sl ilching. Pay just 148.75 cash
FIsh and supplle•. Op&lt;"' 11
or te rms availilbte. Trade-ins
a.m. till 6 p.m.
accepted. Phone 446-4811.
17-tf
50-6

Truc:k Headquarters
1%4 1;, T. Ford PU
1%9 'I' T. Chev: PU , auto.
trans .

1967

'I•

T. Chev, PU

196i 1;, T. Chev. PU

1963 GMC dump truck
1968 3 T. GMC
.
1971 'I• T. GMC PU
New 11 fl . camper
1966 'I• T. GMC

1967 Plymouth 4 dr. sedan
1%9 Roadruhner
·
1968 '12 T. GMC PU ·
1966 112 T. GMC PU
1963 v, T. GMC PU
1965 1 T. GMC
1967
T. GMC PU
1968 Chev . Suburban
1966 ,,. T. Chevrolet PU
1967 '12 T. Chev. PU
1963 F600 Ford· Truck
1961 2 T. GMC
1964 3 T. GMC
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
' TRUCKS, INC.
133 Pine St.
TtRES. lactory to yo~ prices, VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
446-2532
first line and prem1um. By
model. Complete wilh all
40-l t
cleaning loafs. Small pain t
order only 388-8221 .
50-tt
damage In shipp ing . Will lake
S27 cash or. budget plan WHITE cement, all sizes tile in
available. Phone 446·481 1.
stock . 12" and 15" field tile,
IF YOU desire a· pipe, we have
50-6 suitable for highway ditching,
In atock over 500 of the finest
' to· chopse from, GBD,
concret~
block s .
Charatan. Savineffl. Tawney 71 VW, excellent condit ion. Ph . GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO ..
446·3284.
·. 123'12 Pine Sr ., Ph . 446·27~3.
Jewelers.
u .tf
. 16-lf
50·6 '

•.r

'69 CHEVROLET BELAIR

'f•

--l~~----~-

•so. Less Than Ford Gran Torino
'200. Less Than l:hevelle SS Sport l:oape

cu . in. V-8 engine, p.
steering, auto . trans . , radio, white
finish with blk . interior, w -s -w tires.

4 dr •. sedan, 350

'1695

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Compare DODGE CHARGER coupe or hardtop with sporty topper
package against competition- on features- on added benefits on
quality- on price and Charger bas the edge Depend on it.

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

Eastern Ave .

For Sale

Our product and our prices do our
Tallcing ••• Depend on it.

·,

DEAD STOCK

GOO D CLEA N LUMP a nd
stoker coli. Carl Winters; Rio

· Grande. Phone 245·5115.
8-tf

54-6

For Sale

automatic,

::&gt;·

NO~,HEA~.

We invite you to compare the quality &amp;
price of all these used cars. · Each one
carrys the Ford A-1 Warranty!

combination, fOur speed Intermixed changer, four
speaker
sound
system,
separate controls. Balance

COLON IAL Maple stereo-radio,
beautiful Early Ameri ca n
sty le, with AM-FM' radlo, four

SMITH AUTO.SALES

NOTICE

'595

size coil springs, 2 cocktail
tables, red utility ca rl, pole

FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE

PUBLIC

Red , 4 s peed. nice 2nd ca r tor the
wife.

oven Tappan electric stove.

DATSUN

PH. 446-3444

I,

'2495

dlnelle set with 4 chairs, full

Lots of things that help us win
races make our lowest-priced Datsun
an exceptional value.
Safety front disc brakes .. Steel
unibody construction. 5-main:bearing
engine. 4-speed stick shift. Plus
full-vinyl interior with bucket seats.
Whitewalls. Nylon carpeting.
Datsun 1200 Sedan. It sure beats
whatever's second.

I

MARTIN FORD PRICE

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURN . CO.
USED: 36" gas stove, double

~----------

I

'2495

-4 Or., v~ aeng ine, auto. trans_, p. steering~ 4 new tires, fac .
air cond ., tinted glass, light blue with dark blue interior . A
real cream puff !

ONE of Ihe finer things of lite -

For lllforiDadon faD llblrley Allklni_.,·'I!SG

"

Auto .• P.S., P.B., 19,000 miles ,
nice to ha ul ca mpe r.

50 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

'1495

1968 Torino

--------:-:::

..........._ ....._____.....

Denver k. Hiqloy 446-0002
Wanda 5. tshenaur 446;0003

MARTIN FORD PRICE

1972

.,

· ZBEDRooMTOWNHOUiiES .

new exliaust system , 38,000 miles. One owner .

DELUXE mod. zig za9.
Will self for $39.41 or pay $6.50
a mon. Ph . 446-0921.
54-If

·"'

• •• '"' ·~u•• ••o

Auto ., P .S., 22.000 miles, sharp .
New Electra trad e.

8ft. Flare Side pickup. slant 6 engine, 4 new G-78x15 tires,

lamp. Plenty free parking.
()pen Friday evenings till 8.
Ph . 446-1171. 955 Second Ave.
48-tf

S.~YRE

1970 GMC PICKUP

'1995

1969 Dodge Pick-Up

AUTHQIIIUD

'!'.• .. •.•.,.11.,•. •,11,.~,,1.1•.•.•~ ,. For Sate ... "··

.Datsun 1200
·From a long Uae
ofchalaps.

'795

MARTIN I'ORD PRICE

MARTIN FORD PRICE.

.•._..... ~.·

.,;--~-.,.~-"'!"~-·
•,~
.'

with rural water on lots. 150
ft. deep f.riced · at 122.50 per
front foo . No restrictions on
trailers, can finance.

brick home on Third
ORGA N, 2 keyboa•d Ph . 446- DOUBLE
Avenue
400 Block. Six large
9318
rooms on ~ach side, bath and
54·3 furnace. can sell h•lllf buyer

-----ESTATES con'taining r. nt1ques,

on .

.·
ELECTRIC IT':
. .
We furnish Water · sewage· Uarbage Collection • AmJIIe
Parking - TV Antenna • WaU:Co-wan Carpeting •
Draperies • Raqes · Refrlgeraton • Air Conditioning •
Garbage Dilpo~all • Dllbwaahen • Heat Lampri • Private .,
_Pailos • Swim~~~~ • Clllbb~Ulle. .
.'

•

Tha t's th e price yo u poy lo r
four free diagn osis check -ups
and o ne fr ee mainte nance to
make su re il stays frne .
That's th e p ri ce 'you poy for
the longest warronty1 in the a u·tomo bile industry (wilh th e exce ption o f Ro ll s- Ro ycel.
That's th e price you ' poy for
one o llhe highest resale va lues
in th e aut o mobi le indust ry !like
lhe Cadil locl.
Tha i's the price you pay for
ou r lwen ly-lour yea rs of perfeeling and imp roving one
sing le model (w ith lhe exception of nobodyl.

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
Mon.- 12 P.M. Untif9:00 P.M.
Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri.- 8:00 A.M. Unltf 5:00P.M.
Thursday-8:00A.M. Until9 :00 P.M.
Sa!urday-8:00 A.M. Until Noon

PAY ONLY ·oNE UTILITY

approx. 7,000' plus
AN efficiency ex peri ls one who ,. 200ro·ACRES,
ad frontage on 4 roads near
Is smarr enough ro. tell you
new Medical Center .

•

Cust. . 2 dr . hdtp. , air cJnd ., P.S.,
P.'J3., new LeSabre trade this
week.

'2695

St . Wagtb n, air cond .• gas he ater,
one owner . low miles .

buck·et seats, air cond ., white with blue interior.
,. "

Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.

TH E ONLY reason some people 50 ACRES, Vacant land, drilled
listen to reason is to gain time
we ll , Raccoon Twp. $8,500.

i

Want~d To

That's ihe price you pay now
that lhe tax and money si tu at ion
is bac~ lo norma l.
That's lhe pri ce yo u poy fo r
o rear-mounted, air-coo led .e n·
gine thai's anti-wa te r and ant iantifreeze .
That's the price you pay foro
co r thai won 't let yo u assemb le
mu ch of o gloss, silve rwa re, or
green stomp co llecti on fr o m
your loca l gas statio n.
That's lhe price you pay for
9,160 inspectors lhol slo nd be .
hind it lond unde r if, and in side
it, and thr o ugh out ill to make
sure it's frne .

A~CJIONEER

to one family . See Carl D.

1970 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

2 Dr. hard!op, 6 cyl. engine, standard shift, wheel covers.

WAY" _

Tave rn , 856 Sec ond Ave .
Would like to rent w hol e unit

30 ACRES. Custom buil t brick

1965 Mustang

"SELL THE AUCJION

HOBART DILLON
Real Estate Broker
P. 0. BoxS16
EXCLUSIVE agent for Raccoon
Valley Campsites. Ph . 446·
2130.
47-tf

1971 OLDS TORONADO

1970 FORD RANQfO

.
109
5-

MARTIN FORO PRICE

~46 -9523 .

,JIMME

'1195

rubber, ten passenger model •. luggage rack. dark green
with saddle Interior.
,

AUCTION
SERVICE

Evenings

'2795

Station wagon, V,8, auto. trans. , p. steeririg, exce ll ent

Bolen Husky. Ph. 388-9906.
53-3

Charles M. Neal44.6-:546
J . Michael Neal 446-1503

2 Dr . hdtp ., red . black vinyl top,
air con d ., ex tra nice, was $2995.00.

'4995

. 1967 Ford Country Squire

buy a rotary mower for 8.50

For Rent
2 APARTME NTS over Carl's

For Land's . Sake!
14 ACRES, eight room home, lot
of road frontage, RL 554 near
Cheshire, .S\6.000.

MARTIN FORD PRICE

STOCK car trailer, a lso want to

$15,000.
Office Phone 446-1694

695

bucket seats.

GERMAN Shepherd. mate 1
year old, black and silver.
Ca ll after 4 p.m. 446-0057.
53-3

for$7,000. Would make a good
lot for mobile .homes.

1970 OLDS CUTlASS

'4995
AM-F M tape , air cond .• powe r .
windows , power sea t s, 9,000
miles . so ld new for $7300.00. New
Riviera Trade.

2 Or. hardtop, 6 cyL engine, W·s-w tires, whee l covers /

-..,.,.-,-~~~--:­

SLEEP IN G ROOMS for con-

SWA N CREEK - 100 A.. big

dltl

4 Dr . hdtp .• air cond ., 60 -40 seat,
power windows. power seat , AM·
F M radio. Sold new for $7500.00 .

1968 Pontiac LeMans,

1 YOUNG red sow, may be
bred, 1 young red boar, 300
lb . each. Yellowtown-Ciay
Chapel Rd. Barney Prince,
256·1247.
S3-3

larg e lot, thr ee car metal
garage, three bedrooms, easy See this 3 BR home located just
4 miles south of Gallipolis on a
access to town.
2 acre lot. Pr iced to .sell

large living room , garage.

· MARTIN . FORD PRICE.

RICE'S NEW &amp;
USED FURNITURE
NEW3 pc. solid mapl~ .bedrilog"
suites $269.95, new 2 pc . EarfY

S!atlon. I

Realty

NEAR NEW HOSPITAL
FARMS
Between Ga llipolis and fhe
NEAR PA TR lOT - 95 A..
by-pass
iusr off S. R. 160, 3 BR,
tillable 45, 1,332 lb. tab. base. tull ba th,
beautiful kitchen,
good buildings, r emodeled

'

Herculon covel $169.95. 854

basement has ju st been
ca rpeted over H.W. floors, Jlh
redecorated and is r eady for
baths. cen. air , l car base.
you to move in. Ha s ca rpet in
gar. with elec. door. It has
living room, kitchen and one
452 Second Ave.
redwood fenced Patio and
bedroom . Ca ll today for
446-3434 444·4115
located on a large landscaped ON THE RIVE'R details.
Price $13,500.
Three
lot. If you are looking for
bedrooms, 1V2 baths, garage,
qual ity, see this one now.
small lot, in heart of town , 3 lots on US Rt . 35 in Rio
Grande, Ohio. Good place to r
furnac.e, lull basement, under
EURE KA - All brick ranch, 5 $20,000.
a business or 3 houses. Choice
rms ., full base_, large li v. rm .
of lots 12.500 or a ll lhree

wi th F. P. All birch ki!chen OVERLOOK THE DAM - On
a nd din . area, base. Is
S. R. 7, nice home, full bath,
fini shed wit h F.P. Owner has

t

1971 BUICK LIMITED

-4 Or .. V-8 engine, auto. trans.• w-s-w tires, p. steeri ng, fac.
air cond., tinted glass. In beautiful cond .

Second (across from Texaco

Neal Realty

OHIO RIVER

11

SMITH

1970 Galaxle 500

Amer ican liv ing room suite
trimmed in maple with strong

wafer, $2,700, $500 dn .

FARM LISTINGS
NEEDED
THE BUYING SEASON is j'usf

House Listings

i

THESE CARS HAVE BEEN IN
STOCK OVER 30 DAYS AND
HAVE TO BE SOLD. ! ! !

'

y _8 std . trans ., air con -'

MORGAN TOW

1 - 30 A., pasture and woods,
nice 5 : m. home, barn, pond,

nace, garage .

FAIRVIEW SUB. - Price
reduced on this all brick 4 yr.
old beauty, 5 large rm s., a ll

price.

MARTIN FORD
SPECIALS!

Insurance

dillon ng, exce en con
Ph . 446-1073.

"DOC"

••

settle for less than nationwide HAWK Insurance Agency, 541
adver tising. CALL STROUT
Fourth Avenue, Phone 446·
FARMS2300. Fire-life-auto-church .
8-tf
SPRINGFIELD TWP.
2- 76 A. Bidwell -Rodney Rd., -,,------~~­
mostly level and rolling · For Sale
ground, some bottom, pond, ,66 BUICK La Sabre, extra
creek, $11,900.
C R J r
446
3- 50 A. level &amp; rolling land .' sharp. al 1 ev. us oce, ·
This farm Is fenced in and
4156 .
53-3
ready for cattle. Pond, concrete drinker for collie, barn 4 WHEE' drive ,Jeep with top.
and lots of frontage on BT rd.
good c~nditlon. Ph. 388-9991.
- 163 A., good home and
53-6
bulldings, 56A.bottom,100A.; 1966 FORDGa:axle2dr.hdtp .,

home, now vacant, all pai nted pasture, Perry Twp.
•
up and ready to move into.
Nice kitchen &amp; dinette, HUNTINGTON TWP - 50 A 2
. ''
.
laundry room, large sun .
barns, 109 house . N$8S,800HIP.

roo smar r ro slart one of his
L1stmgs Needed
own.
' WE HAVE buyers for out-of.
NO Experience necessary_ Will
town property. Homes,
tr ain . Earn $300-$400 per 3 BEDRO s 'ome on one acre
Farms. and Lands. Call
week . For application call
of
Ia.
0 l(ana ug a, Wanda,
Denver or Jay any
31?-545-6431. or wri te :o Wo_rld Alumihum !t•... D jge and
time.
W1de Syslems. 3512 Rockville
basement, pricea • .000.
Rd , Building C Rm . 130,
For Lease
lnoia na polis, Ind .
60 A. VACANT land four miles
Four - Bedroom ranch home,
4p6 from Ga ll ipolis In Springtield
cou ntry size kitchen. large
- -- -- -- -Townshi p. $8,000.
l lvl ng room , den with
Wanted
fir eplace, utilitf room, 1 1J~
ALSO. lots on Kemper Hollow
baths. Addison wp.
Roa d and Bethel Chur&lt;h Road
BABYSITTER . Ph . 446·9560.
54-3

homes in thrs area. It you

ha¥e property tor sa le, don ' t

Wanted!
around the corn er_ For ast
WE NEED FARMS TO SELL, action on your property, call
Ranny Blackburn
ACREAGES ,
COUNTRY
Branch Manager
HOMES ,
TIMBER
GROUNDS, AND ALL SIZE · - - -- - - - HOMES. LIST WITH THE
BRANNOI&gt;f
REALTY
TODAY . IT WILL PAY.

house for $24,5()0, the asking

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ou l of town buyers in need of

yrs . old, brick and fram e,
H.W. floors, covered with
expens ive carpeti ng, 3 ni ce
bdrm s., l arge liv . rm .,
beautifu l kitchen a nd din.
area. It has a 2 car gar. with
elec . controlled dr. located on
a large lot. Pric ed in low
twenties.

a&lt;:cess to river and a ni ce
view. You co uldn't build th is

Oil CANADIRN ~QI.UWAGtH DhlEit . AliD T!111 WII.L 1£ 0011[ flU[ or CH ARii[ .

•STROUT REALTY

stations , r eception desk, 2
First Lady dr yi ng sta1ions

house in good repair, some
new copper plumbing and
wiring . 5 nlce.rms. &amp; bath, tull

--=---~--:­

BABYS ITTING in my home.
Ph . 446-9868.

$27,000.

CITY - Located at 127 Kineon.

RA NCH
WITH
BASEMENT.

HOME
INCLUDES
3
BEDROOMS . PANELED ,
LIVING ROOM , CARPORT
AND
E XCEL LE NT
LOCATION .

MAN .

AT

US AN

ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM

TH IS MODESTLY PR ICED

YOURSELF

MAKE

Here's A Honey On
Lower River Road

City and
New Hospital

IT

PR I CED

SU ,OOO OFFER .

YOU WON 'T F IND MANY
AT T HI S PRI CE.

"IRATE ELDER" IS BLASTED

S IDING AND

WALL TO WALL CAR .

'h Way Between
Dear All :
"Irate Elder" wins the alwn-stuffed pincushion this month
as our readers' most disliked contributor to GENERATION
RAP . His blast on "boozing, drug-taking, rioting, shiftless, etc.,
etc." modem youth brought hundreds of brickbats and not one
bouquet.
Samples:
Dear Rap :
My congratulations to the two of you for putting "Irate
Elder" in his place.
For a minute I thought my husband was the writer, but I
know he couldn't drag himself away from his martinis long
enough. He once remarked that all teenagers should be whipped
within an inch oftheir lives at least once a week.
These two "Irate Elders" forget they were once kids, and
when they wanted to show girls the difference between the sexes
they did so In ba1'118, meadows and especially cornfields, and then
blackmailed "Rosie" into "oot tellin ' " or "you'll git it from yur
pa." Rosie was sent to Aunt Abigail's, to be put into a room until
the baby arrived, said child to be put on the doorstep of a foundling home, unnamed. Look back into history, Messrs . I.E., and
you'll find that 's why Auntie never wed - she wasn't a virgin,
therefore unfit.
About drugs, I.E ., remember when Paw made his own corn
likker, and you kids tested and liked it ?
As for rioting, bow about the strikes back in our lime, when
our generation w.anted better working conditions? The strikers
were haled by the "good people," whose children benefited from
the stronger labor laws they fought for.
And how about the hunger marches on our Capitol? I participated in one of them and had a piece of bologna, green with
mold, thrown at me. It was then the riot started, and I was saved
by a soldier (who incidentally in those days was known as "the
scum of the earth") or I would have been hit by a "good citizen."
Mr. I.E., our teens today have enough gwnption not to
believe what is no lon ger true, or take the gulf handed out by
people like you, and I say hurrah for them. - AN ADMIRING
ELDER

water tank , new plumbtng,
and new shingle roof. Has
large garage. Larg e loi , 9
fruit trees and rm . fo r a
garden. Price 516,000. If you
want an investment you ca n
buy this one and another 6 rm.
(2 apartments)
in Qood
r epair, beside it ; both for

closets . Located on a large lot
in the center of town . Only

I

By Helen and Sue Hottel

kitch en, new bath, new hot

with plenty cab., huge llv.
rm .• 4 bdrms. with plenty

DAY CARE
Sun Valley Nursery School , ~--------- ----licensed by State of Ohio, 1V2
miles west of new hospital. 1 Classified Ads
I
511 Sun Valley Dr. Ph . 446· I
1
3657. Day care that says "we I
38 Acre Farm
care."
I
bring you
1
City School District
28-tf
extra cash
10 TO 15 A(. TILLAB LE
1
TH GOO D FENCE
for
• I WI
AROUND
PASTURE ,
I
I PLENT
FA IR
I shopping sprees 1 HOUSEYOFINWATER.
CLUDE S 3
I
I BEDR OOMS,
KI TCHEN ,
BATH ,
NEW LY
IN
STAL
LE
O
FORCED
AIR
1 FUR NACE . SEVERAL
OUTBUILDINGS AND
EXCELLE NT LOCA TION
FOR NEW HOME . $12,900.

Generation Rap

house is in good repa ir, with
most of interior new. New

formal din. rm .,

54-3

l

CtTY - Located at 88 Pine St. 6
rms .. bath &amp; utility rm. This

CITY - Large 2 story, 7 rm .
older brick home, full base.,

It's a profitable way to meet

police monitors, antennas ,

dining area 10 x 12, all carpeted. 2 car gar. w ith elec.
controlled dr. Located on a
large corner lot. Priced for a
qui ck sale $22,500.

$26,500.

Representatives earn an
es timated $40a week or more.

etc. Bob' s Citizens Band
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Jackson. Ohio. Ph . 286-4028.
Rd .. Gallipolis, Ohro:446.~517 .
49·6
16-lf
.
~• . WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
RALPH' S Carpel &amp; Upholstery Nurse ro work in nursing
Cleaning Serv ice. Free . home. Can li ve In If desired .
estimates . Ph . 446-029~ . Ralph ' Wr ite Box 313 Rt. 1, Ironton,
A..... Oavls, ownerOhio.
9-tf

IRATE YOU'l'll

FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
brick at 452 ~i(SI Ave. 1

PLEASA NT VALLEY - 2 yr.

The Children and Grand·

Notice
SORRY- we service only what

54-12

Realty, 32 State Sl
Tel. 446-1998

Experience Helpful
Send Resume to Box 208, c-o
Gallipolis Tribune.

54-1 BEAUTICIAN ,

446-2~9 .

MASSIE

ch ildren

w ·~· ...

limits. By appt. Ph.
.

LOCAL BUSINESS
NEEDS PERSoN ABLE
TO DO BOOKKEEPING
AND SOME SALES
WORK.

who depar ted this I ife March
5, 1971.
Our hearts
sadness,

and air, on 1 acre within city

Office 444-3643
Evenings Call
E...M. "Ike" Wiseman 4444796
E. N.-Wisenun 444-45NI

FULL OR
Saunders who passed away I
year ago today, March 5, 1971.
PART TIME
Sadly missed by children &amp; MR. ROW, 446·0677 Monday and
grandcl!lldren.
Tuesday only 9 to 5.
54-1
54-1

IN MEMORY of our father and
-----~----------grandfather . Edward Beck,

basement, centra l heating

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

WE NEED young men for
imme diate work.

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE , 4 bedrooms, 21h baths,

&gt;'

"vo~• swAQfN !in•-il t ll SUG0Ut£1l Rtf~IL .lttC£, , f .O.t . , l'*"l UUS AJUl OfltU OfALCII CioiAitGU, If ANt' , AO D.IIO IIU ,
t1, lioN OW IIIII tiiA!IIUIN! AND Ult~t C(S Ioiii II(O!!C Ll !H llC;;OIIOIIi"C[ WITH lloj( VOL-~III.l(l[N MAINJ,II-NC( IC H[OUL[ AMY fllCIO•Y I' Alii I !J"Nit TO L)t
:l~,[CIIIt( ,fi MAI[It l ...l Olt 'II'DRIIMAJI $ H,Ir WtTiil lt 4'4 MONTH! 011 24,000 MIL U, WI'I II!Hb'U \;,O M($ fi ll S I, Wil-L It llti'AIII(Q 011 lt(,.L,U:l\). 11 1 AJ'I Y U.t.

ss:oo Service Charge

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE, INC.

Will remove your dead
horse and cows

IF YO U are bu ilding a new
Call Jackson 286·4531
home or remodeling. see us. L - - - - - - - - - - - '
We are build ers. Distr ibutor ; ·

STATE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

for Hotpoin! Applian ces.
Allison Electric.

154.11
WE HAVE in stock a fine
selection of diamonds and

wedding bands . Col umbia,
Keepsake, and Artcarved.
Tawney Jewelers.

44-lf

---=-------

WE HAVE a complete line of all
new TimeK Walches . $6.95 to
S25. Tawney Jewelers.

44· 11

--:=---25 PCT. off on bronzing baby
shoes, February on l y. Bring

. ~em in \ today. Tawney

Jewelers.

'

-

44·11

Camping Equipment .
IF YOlf plan io buy th is year,
you cannot afford to miss our
winter sa le price on trailers

SWISHER'S
and campers . 'Camp Conley Plumb ing &amp; Heating and
electrical service . 367-7475.
Starcraft Sales, RL 62 N. ol
Pr. Pleasant .
306-tf
51 ·11
, SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and insta lled

Plumbing &amp;Heating
GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heal ing &amp; Air

· Conditioning. 300 Fourth Ave.

Ph .

446 ·1637.

Brammer's

{F.ormerly

Fabric Shoppe, Singer apProved dealer, 58 Court Sf..
Ph . 446-9255.
30e.tf

&amp;

Plumb ing

Heating. I

48-11

.

:it NGER Sewing. Ma chine Sales
&amp; )ervice. All
models in
stock. Free delivery . Service
guaranteed. Models priced
from $69 .95 . French City

Services Offered

Services Offered

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160at Evergreen

Phone 446·2735
187-tt

Russell 's Plumbing, 446·&lt;782
297.rt

.

C&amp;S Eleclntal Service ' &amp;
Repair s. House wir'ing .
electric heat. motor con tro ls.
Free estimates . Ph . 446-4561

or 675-336 1.

ntf

HOLLEY'S DITCHING
COMPt_ ETE water line in ·
sta llali on, backhoe, bul ldozer
and boring machine services.

J . P. Holfey, Ph . 245-5018 or

446-4344.

FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Controt
Wheelersburg , Ohio

Ph. 574-6112
231-lt
ALBERT EHMAN
Water DelivP.ry Serv ice

Patriot Star Rt.. Gallipolis
Ph. 379·2133
243-tf

LEGAL NOTICE

The undersigned is offering
lor sale th e hOuse and lot owned
by the late Clara Ga rland in
Welchtown . Minersv il le, Ohio.
Property appraised at $6,500 .00
and cannot be so ld for less tha n
th e appra ised value . All in .
teres ted persons con ta ct Mary
Harr is, Executrix , Minersville ,
Ohio . Telephone 992 ·3327. · Sa le
sub ject to the approva l o·r the
Probate Court , Meigs County ,
Ohio.

Mary Ha rris, Execulr lx
of th e Es tate of
Clara E. Garland ,
Arab Exterminating Co.
Deceased
TERMITE ·Pesr Con trol. Free Crow , Crow &amp; Porter,
Inspect ion. Cal l Russe l l's Attorneys
Plum bing , 446 ·4782 Gallipolis.

l-It

131 5, 6,

Ohio .

7,

31

48-52
NOTICE

BANK S TREE SERVICE
The undersigned will offer tor
FRE E estimates, liabili ty in. sale. by auction , at the premises

suran ce . Pruning , trimm ing ot the United Methodist Church
Parsonage at Reedsville , Oh io,
and
cavi ty work, tree ancl the
CAR_I~~·~:.!"~r~~ING,
pa rsonage real estate, on
stump removal. Ph. 446·4953. Mar ch
9. 1972. at 2:00 O'Cl ock Cor. Fourth &amp; Pl,ne
TERM ITE PEST CONTROL
73-tf P .M . The property will be sold
.
Phone446·3888or446-4477
FREE insoection. Call446·3245.
Ia the hioh.est bi dder : reserving
FOR THE besi dea r in a new .or
,,.
155-tf
Merrill O' Dell. Operator for GILLENWATER 'S septic tank lo
tne Trustees the r ight to
use d lnob ite hom e try - - - Extermi nal Termite Serv ice ,
re-ject the hig hest bid in the
cl
eaning
and
r
epair.
also
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
STANDARD
19 Belmont Dr.
'
house w recking . Ph. 446·9499. event H is deemed lnsutllc!ent .
Kana uga, Ohio. Ph . 446-9662.
Plumbing &amp; Heating
267-tf
Edward Blake
Established in 1940.
··
Dan~
t1offman, Sr .
296-tf
215 Third Ave .. 446·3782
-;:--:--:-:-:--:--::::--c:169-tf
Ben Buckl~y
--=,---~-187-tf l
l::.ntral Air Conditioning
~:-:-~--:-Charles
Hensley
CCiR.Bt N &amp; SNYDER - - ---::-;;:;-;:';:-: ,...-::-&amp; Healing
D. P MAP.TIN &amp; Son Water
Harold Brannon
'sER TA &amp; Bemc.o Matlresses &amp;
RUSSELL'S
Free E•limates
0JIIvery Se rvice . Your
Trusttes ,
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Stewart's Hordware
bo• springs $29 up. 955 Second
Reedsville Cln.ult of
·patronage will pe ap .
Ave. 446. 1q1. ,
21 Gallia Ave.
446·4782
Vinton, O~io
Uni"~ed Methodist Church'
pt'l!cla ted . Ph. 4_411·0463.
10-lf .
297ilt
J44.ft
7-tf 13 ) 3, ~ • • . 7, 8, 51

-------

~

�20 - 1be&amp;l)dayTimes-Sentlnei,Sunday , Ma~ 5,1972
.

.

'

'

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
IN MEM6RY of our . Mother

Helo

who left us ll years ago

March 3, 1%1.

Nothing can erase the m ernory

01 one so good and kind.
She's living in our hearts today

Wanted
DELIVERY
DRIVER SALES

Real Estate For Sale

livillg _room, dining room ,

kitchen, family room, full

perience necessary.

And. she is always In our mind .

No ex -

The Children
'3.57 HOUR
54-1 NOT too much for delivery and

- ------'--

sales of small appliances.

IN MEMORY of Mrs . H. A.

s1ill

ache

with

Secret tears sti ll flow ;
Wha t i t meant to lose you ,

No one will ever kn ow.
When days are ·dark and dreary
And everyt hing goes wrong

We seem to hear you whisper
" Cheer up and carry on."
Each time we see your picture
You seem to smile and say.
" Don' t cry, I' m only sleepfng ,
We will meet again some day."

rooms, 2 baths, gas hot air
f u r n a c e _ P r e s e n tarrangement 2 apartments.
Easi ly converted to one

family dwelling. Asking
135,000. Shown by appt. Ph.
446·0208.

old, all brick , 3 large bdrm s.,

ll v. rm . 20 x 20 with F.P.,
DESIGNED FOR GRACIOUS LIVING
Very beautiful inside and out and is as new
spring flower. Four large
bedrooms, lovely large living room with
· fireplace, formal dining and wife approved
kitchen (range. oven. dishwasher. etc). large
family room with fireplace and the entire
house is carpeted . 2112 baths and 2 car garage .
This is a very lovely home which would be
hard to replace for the asking price.

Ma -mlsh as a·

manager's

license preferred but not
necessary. Ph. 446-1209.

52·3

we sell or under service A MASTER beautician. Ph . 446·
con tract. Simmons Ptg . &amp;
4442.

Office Equip! Ph. 446·1397.
51 -If

52·3

R;::;-;U~M;-;M-;-A;-;G:c;E;:-s~a;-;le-a~t-;;K~ana-uga,
Rt . 7, second house above

HOW MUCH can you earn
se lling

Blue Willow, March 3 to 13.
52-6
TWO-WAY Radi os Sales 8.
Service. N~w and used CB's,

famou s

Avon

products? Man y Avon Sales

people, make fri ends. For.
detail s write or call Mrs.
Helen Yeager, Box 172,

BRICK RANCH WITH BASEMENT
If you're looking for a reaL good, well-bu!ll
home, see this before someone else buys 11 .
Three nice sized bedrooms. large carpeted
living room. 1'12 ceramic baths. family size
kitchen with dishwasher and range. Dry
basement just waiting for someone to finish
into a nice family room.

2 Bedroom
Bargain

l

LOCA TEO ON A RE AL
NICE LOT IN EX CELLENT
NEI GHBORH OO O AND
IN CLUDE S A VERY NIC E
K ITCHEN , FULL
BASEMENT , REC . ROOM,

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

ALUM INU M

PETING

+++
To Irate Elder :
I had to laugh when I read your letter complaining about
today's young people. It wasn't they who overpopulated our
world to the point of starvation. It wasn 't the youth who got us
into another war. It wasn't the kids who polluted our air with
smog and our water with trash .
True, many young people are throwing their lives away by
taking drugs, but think of the courage it takes for those who
are n't, to live in this messed-up world and find beauty and
goodness in it.
You might think one of the younger generation was writing
this letter, so just sign me - OVER 6ii.

++-+

Dear Helen and Sue :
1wish that every "Irate Elder" could attend classes with me
at our local community college. A grandmother several times
over, I enrolled as a freshman last September. Most of. the
students are 18 and 19.
The boys are bearded; boys and girls alike have long hair
and wear colorful garb. P•1t these teens are courteous , considerate, helpful, friendly, and have gone out of their way to
make me feel welcome in their classrooms . They're youths of
whom any parent or grandparent can be proud.
It's unfortunate that so much publicity is given to the
mioorlty when the majority are firie young people. I know! ELDER BUT NOT IRATE

+++

Dear Both of You :
The Irate Elders of this world get an idea, then set out to
'prove it by reading only the bad things about youth. Pity! -

l ar~e

kitchen

PRETTY

.t

List Your Property
With the Leading
Real Estate Sales
Office ln .Gallia Co .

2 Bedroom Brick
$6,500.00
EDGE OF TOWN ON ~
ACRE . NE EDS BATH ' AND
FURNACE . COU LD BE A

MONEY MAKER FO R A DO
FIX

UP

Investment Prop.
3 Apartments
LOCATED ON A FULL
CITY LOT IN EXCEL LENT
LOCATIO N ON 2ND AVE .
2lh

BLOCKS FROM CIT Y

P ARK . . PRESENTLY
RENT S FOR $160 PER MO .
NEED S SOME REPAIR
BUT COUL D BRIN G IN S250
WITH EASE .

Land - Building Lots
AC . CITY SC H. DI ST .
$5,000.

9

'l lf1

AC . CITY SC H. DI ST .

S7 ,500

152 AC . CITY SC H. OIST .

S1 5,000

l b AC . SUBDIVISION LOTS

FRO M $2,200 UP .

Help Wanted
BAR MAID or

cock tail

waitress . Apply in person at
Sky line Lanes.

53-4
Wanted To Do
ALTERATIONS ON all types ot
clot hing in my home . Ca ll

Mrs . Ross Northup, 446·2543.
21 -lf

sn

NURSE ' S aide would like
private duty nursing at night.

Ph. 256·6814.
53-3
CAR PENTER

work ,

, r emode li ng, roof ing, siding,
' furna ce installation , concrete

work . Ph . 446-9271, John H.
Queen &amp; Son.
54-12
BOB
Lane ·5
co mple•·~::
Bookkeepi ng and Tax Ser vice, A24'h Fourth Aye .•

Kanauga .

Ph .

446·1049.

Business hourS 9 a.m .· 1 p. m.

Monday thru Saturday. Lef
Bob take care of yo ur
bookkeeping and lax needs.

By appointment only.
294-tf

-~-'­

SEWI NG in my hom~ . Barbara

Stover, 44H986.

49-6

R 10 - All brick, all electric,
beautiful 5 rm. home, located
in excellent residential
section. Owner uses huge ll v.
rm. for beauty salon. This

property may be bought with
3 First Lady beaut y Salon

FULL
VERY

K I T C H EN

I RA NGE, OVEN , ETC I
WITH LOTS OF CAB INET S,
GARAGE, LA~GE FLAT
LOT
IN
EXCEL L ENT
N E IGHB OR HOOD- CIT Y
SC HOOL .

They Don't Build
Them Like They
Use To
HERE 'S ONE FOR THE
RECORD. UNOCCUPIED
FOR 40 YEARS. THIS 3
BEDROOM HOME HAS
BEEN COM PLETELY
REDONE - IN CLUDE S A
MODERN
BUILT · IN
KI TCHEN
(RANGE ,
OVENI
CO MPLETELY
CA RPETED UPSTA IR S
AND
DOWN, LARGE
FA MILY ROOM WITH
F IREPLACE ,

NEW

FURNACE , NEW WALLS ,
CE ILIN G, PLUMBING AND
WIRING . PLENTY OF
CLO SETS . GOOD NEIGH .
BOR HOOD, CITY SCHOO L
DI STRICt, LARGE FLAT
TREE SHA DED LO T WITH
LARGE GARDE N SPOT .
MID TWE NTIES.
Bargain Of The Week
115,500 BUY S THI S 8 YR .
OLD VERY
NICE 3
BEDROOM
HOME .
PRETTY
KIT CHEN,
LARGE GARAGE, 2 A. LOT
IN THE r rT Y SCHOOL
DISTR ICT .
Priced For
Quick Sale
VERY NICE 3 BEDROOM
HOME

AT

20251/'l

CHATH AM . CONCRETE
SLAB FOR ~WO CARS,
SMALL LOT, PLUMBED
FOR WASHER &amp; DRYGER ,
VERY NICE
NEIGH.
BORHOOD . $14,750.

HOUSE FOR SALE
3 bedrooms, Jl/2 baths,
central gas heating
and air conditioning,
inside city limits, river
view. 3/o acre, in low
thirtie s.
House
available beg'inning of
March. Ph. 446-4885.
Instruct iol.l
GRADERS, SCRAPERS,
BULLDOZERS, BACKHOES

For Rent
Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOM house &amp; bath,
FOR sale b( owner. 3 bedroom
Kanauga. Ph. 446·4322.
house a l&lt;anauga , good
54-3
location, $12,000. Ph. «6-«WS.
55·3
HALF ot duplex, 2 bedrooms.
iar.ge living room and kitchen,
.
carpeted throughou!, yard.
25 Locust st:
Water, sewer, garbage paid.
Howard 'Brannon, Broker
$135
mo. Ph. 446·.1806.
_,'.
Off. 446-2674
28 1
World's
Largest
Lucltle Brannon
Eve. 446·1226
THE LliADt~ SINCE 1900 IN
.N.EW
SERV·ING THE · NATION'$·
2 BEDRM.
Delightful
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
TOWNHOUSE
APTS.
• •
.Ph~·0008
BE
WITH
the
first
to choose
S
b
b
L
· u ur an IVI09
·i · · ·
your residence In these
ALL BRICK RANCH - 3 BR. GEO RGES CREEK
RD . .
suburban apts.
w, bath, w .w ca rpet In LR &amp; Building and mobile home beautiful
Contem porary In style,
large family room, del uxe lois. All uhllt1es available.
luxurious carpeting, In ki tchen
in
copper tone,
Some can be bought on a land
dividually controlled h~tln.a ,
laundrv .room , attached . contract.
color
coordinated
ap·
garage, farge covered pallo, 'CITY ..:y-B~ - located on a
pllances , private patios ,
es tablished fawn, ~ow vacant.
quiet st., ca rpet over HW
many other features. Lease
Just 3 mi. to Gavon plant.
floors, built-in kitchen, ulillty
$135 mO. Calf 446·3772 for
appointment to see model
The Utmost In
. room , air .:;&gt;n~ .• and carpor\.
· uni!. 526 Jackson Pike, Near
S BR . - 21f• BATHS Holzer Med . Center.
Living Comfort
Nearly new--by.fevel within
THIRTY-FIVE WEST
walking distance of new
· APARTMENTS
THIS HOME provides every hospital on a large corner lot.
. 51 -tf
imaginable convenience . It
Completely buitt-ln 'kitchen.
fea tures 11 rooms, 21f2 baths,
ww carpet, 2 car garage.
----:----:-::
OFF ICE space, ground floor
LISTINGS WANTED
fspac
11ous LR with WB
location ,
downtown
~re p ace. over .me 1.am• 1Y
·we HAVE BUYERS
Gallipolis, all utilities , paid.
ro.om, new all bu".t 1n kitchen
WE NEED SELLERS
Ph. 446·3472 Merrill Evans.
w1lh self -c lean1n!l oven, COLD WEATHER SPECIAL 51 -6
formal DR, master BR has a
this large sto'ne fireplace can
walk In 7xl0 closet, a pic· make Feb . feel like July.
ruresque library, all second Lovely modern home with 3 NOW ·leasing new 1 bedroom
fl oor c~rpeted, finished 2 BR and 1'1• baths
apartments, adults only. Ph .
room at he, 3 room basement,
675-3450 Pt. Pleasant.
garage. Shown by ap .
296-tf
Nicely
poin tment only. Can be seen POMEROY
remodeled 2 story home
any day .
located on a quiet st 2 BEDROOM m'oblle home ln.
Cheshire. Ph. 367-7329.
Presently rentinQ for $185 per
J4.tf
Large Family Special · Mo. Buy below replacement
cost
$17,500.
SPACIOUS two story home, 4
BR &amp; ba th, large LR with BIDWELL - Like new 3 BR SLEEPif'.IG ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
open sta ir s, family room , two
home, would probably ap.
308-tf
porches, part basement, nice
prove for FHA loan, or make
deep lot. Surprisingly low
a 10 pet. down payment and APARTMENT for construction
priced.
go conventional. ALSO, 2 men. Ph . 446-0756.
·
story home In good repair
267-tf
with 7 rms. and bath, cellar, 2 - - - - - - - - Easy Living
car garage and 3 lots .
SLEEP,ING ROOMS weekly
J UST PERFECT for the
rates, tree garage parking,
ATTENTION
retiring couple. All electric, 2
BR home. walls are pl~ ster DUE lo I he present constructlor. Libby Hotel.
in Gall-ia Co., we have several
289-tf
and paneled. Ntce kitchen

REALTY

wi th plenty ca binets and
amp le eati ng area, TV room ,
storage room,
carport ,
aluminum si ding . Deep well .
Localed on a large double lot.
Quick possession.

S-P-R-E - A-DO-U-T

THERE'S ROOM lo spare most
everywhere in this ~ BR two
story home. Banquet size
and chairs. All for 124,000.
kitchen, formal DR , fireplace
House 121 ,000.
in LR, two room basemen t,
'
porches,
garage. All this on a
KERR - Near new, all brick , 4
deep well sodded lor .
bdrms., large iiv. rm ., din.
rm . , and Mrs . approved Convenient Location
kitchen. It has H. W. floors
and carpet. Full fini shed THI S ATTRACTIVE 2 BR
base., with a 2 car g~r - Thi s
house has 1.888 sq . f t . li v. area
on each floor . Locat ed on near
2 A. leVe l land. Bought for
replacement cost.

base., H.w: floors with

new

ca rpet and paneling in ltv.
rm. Don' t wait to see this one.

Price 117,500.
GR EEN ACRES - Real nice, 4

porch, new natural gas. tur ·

Don't Fence Me In!
WANT A large· lot? I Here's one1 - 50 A., vacant, $9,000.
_
"tailor made" to your desire!
LOTS OF LOTS
2 BR &amp; bath, all · il~J itin ~lt - ,wE HAVE several nice level
chen , carpeted LR , sun porch, lots 1 mi. from new hasp., 100
full basement. All this wllh a fl . front. 200 ft. deep, rural
picturesque view of the ri ver .

LOWDOWN PAYMENT
This 3 BR home with full

older home, pond and dr illed

well. Price 135.000.
barn, some bottom land, 6 rm .

house, plenty water, 1,600 lb.
lob. base. $14,000.
Any hr. - 446-1998
E. Winters - 446·3828
At Arnold - 446-0756
Eve., J. Futler - 446-3246
Eve., J. Berry - 446-3466

structi on worKe rs by

the

week . Kitchen privileges, full
bath, pri vate parking, 25
minutes to Gavin Plant

Evenings
Oscar C. Baird, 446-4632
D. J. We!herhott, 446·4244
Steven R. Betz, 446-9583

RUSSELL,
WOOD
REALTOR

Askew .

ranc h, t wo income un its,

52·3

Slate Rt. 160.

SLEEP IN G room or board and
room. Ph . 4A6·0060 .
home, barns, near Vi nton.
50·6
$15,500.

40 ACRES, Cozy two bedroom

446-1066

~

for rebuttal.

how to run your bus1ness and

•

Buy

Roe Crites Antlaues. carl
collec l, 614-9r.3-362 1.
44·26

53-J

53-tf

wanfs. Make us an offer.

Ofiice 446·1066
· Evenings : Call
Ron canaday 446-)636
Russell D. Wood 4•6·4611

TARA

qi.f6·0001

1968 VW TRANSPORTER

1966 OPEL STA. WAGON

OPEN FROM 8:30 TILL 7 P.M. WEEKDAYS

'129

1969 Ford F-100 Pick-Up
Ranger Pickup, bea utiful two-tone green, 61f2 ft . bed , V-8
engine, radio, w-s-w tires , wheel covers, chrome ' bumpers; new exhaust system , show room cond. ·

YA'LL

1966
Impala
. Chevrolet
.

COMPARE

-4 Dr. station Wagon, 8 cyl. eng ine, auto. tran s., p. steer ing,

luggage rack , w-s-w fires, rad io. In excellent cond .

,~.

DOD

'895

MARTIN FORD PRICE

Blue Lustre carpet cleaner .
Rent electric shampooer Sl.

Lower G. C. Murphy Store.
54-6
'66 MUSTANG, good condition,
$450. Ph. 245-5873.
54·3

-----MODERN Wa ln ut Stereo-rad io

$69.40. Use our budgel terms.
Calf 446-1028.
54-3 .

----------

speakers, 4 speed automati c

changer. Balance 179.34. Use
our budge! terms. Call 446·
1028.
54-3

-------1965 CHEV. Impala 2 dr. hdtp. ,
automatic ; 7 pc. dinette sel.
Ph. 446-3548.

Kanauga, Ohio

- - - - - --

We ..u anything lor
uybody . Bring your
Items to Knolls Com.
mun.ily Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Oflvt.,
For appointment .call
446-2t17 , Salt ovory
Saturday · Evening at
70'Ciock.

DODGECHA
lOP

3 GOOD used NCR cash
For Sale
registers, 1 electric. Sfmmons
Ptg. &amp; Office Equip. Ph. 446·
REG.
BASSETT
Hound
puppies
1967 INTERNATIONAL Scout
1397.
$35.
Ph.
446·3845.
with hard!op, good cond. Call
53 ·2
54-If
Ron Sheet•, 446·4195 after 4
p.m .
51-4 1965CHEV. Impala , PS, PB , 283
· PiLE Is soft and lofty ... colors
relaln brilliance In carpets
cleaned with Blue Lustre.
Rent electric shampooer SL
Central Supply Co.

l\lBA111S

TOWNHOUSE'

,APARTMENTS

,.

Ph . 245-5593.

good

New GMC

condit ion .

52-3

RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
'67
PMC
52x12
54-6
'67 Elcona 50x12
'66 New Moon 50x10
WHITE electric range $50. Ph . '64 Elcona 60x10
446-3662 afler 6 p.m.
'64 Detroiter 54X10
'64 Star 55x10
'62 Liberty 50•10
'65 IMPALA Super Sport 321, '49 Columbia 27x8
auto. console, PS, PB. Ph. 446·
B&amp;S Mobile Homes
0766.
Second &amp; Vlond St.
54·3
Pt. Pleasanl t NeKIIo Heck's. l
52-tf
1970 DODGE Super Bee, 1
owner, low mll~age, e.cellent
'
condition. Ph. «6-?380.
_ 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine
54 3
left in layaway . Beautih•l
pas tel color, full size model.
Al l buill-in lo buttonhole, do
J P's Tropical Wonderland,
st re tch sewir\g and fancy
415'12 Main St., Pt. Pleasant.
Sl ilching. Pay just 148.75 cash
FIsh and supplle•. Op&lt;"' 11
or te rms availilbte. Trade-ins
a.m. till 6 p.m.
accepted. Phone 446-4811.
17-tf
50-6

Truc:k Headquarters
1%4 1;, T. Ford PU
1%9 'I' T. Chev: PU , auto.
trans .

1967

'I•

T. Chev, PU

196i 1;, T. Chev. PU

1963 GMC dump truck
1968 3 T. GMC
.
1971 'I• T. GMC PU
New 11 fl . camper
1966 'I• T. GMC

1967 Plymouth 4 dr. sedan
1%9 Roadruhner
·
1968 '12 T. GMC PU ·
1966 112 T. GMC PU
1963 v, T. GMC PU
1965 1 T. GMC
1967
T. GMC PU
1968 Chev . Suburban
1966 ,,. T. Chevrolet PU
1967 '12 T. Chev. PU
1963 F600 Ford· Truck
1961 2 T. GMC
1964 3 T. GMC
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
' TRUCKS, INC.
133 Pine St.
TtRES. lactory to yo~ prices, VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
446-2532
first line and prem1um. By
model. Complete wilh all
40-l t
cleaning loafs. Small pain t
order only 388-8221 .
50-tt
damage In shipp ing . Will lake
S27 cash or. budget plan WHITE cement, all sizes tile in
available. Phone 446·481 1.
stock . 12" and 15" field tile,
IF YOU desire a· pipe, we have
50-6 suitable for highway ditching,
In atock over 500 of the finest
' to· chopse from, GBD,
concret~
block s .
Charatan. Savineffl. Tawney 71 VW, excellent condit ion. Ph . GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO ..
446·3284.
·. 123'12 Pine Sr ., Ph . 446·27~3.
Jewelers.
u .tf
. 16-lf
50·6 '

•.r

'69 CHEVROLET BELAIR

'f•

--l~~----~-

•so. Less Than Ford Gran Torino
'200. Less Than l:hevelle SS Sport l:oape

cu . in. V-8 engine, p.
steering, auto . trans . , radio, white
finish with blk . interior, w -s -w tires.

4 dr •. sedan, 350

'1695

WOOD MOTOR SALES

Compare DODGE CHARGER coupe or hardtop with sporty topper
package against competition- on features- on added benefits on
quality- on price and Charger bas the edge Depend on it.

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

Eastern Ave .

For Sale

Our product and our prices do our
Tallcing ••• Depend on it.

·,

DEAD STOCK

GOO D CLEA N LUMP a nd
stoker coli. Carl Winters; Rio

· Grande. Phone 245·5115.
8-tf

54-6

For Sale

automatic,

::&gt;·

NO~,HEA~.

We invite you to compare the quality &amp;
price of all these used cars. · Each one
carrys the Ford A-1 Warranty!

combination, fOur speed Intermixed changer, four
speaker
sound
system,
separate controls. Balance

COLON IAL Maple stereo-radio,
beautiful Early Ameri ca n
sty le, with AM-FM' radlo, four

SMITH AUTO.SALES

NOTICE

'595

size coil springs, 2 cocktail
tables, red utility ca rl, pole

FROM NISSAN WITH PRIDE

PUBLIC

Red , 4 s peed. nice 2nd ca r tor the
wife.

oven Tappan electric stove.

DATSUN

PH. 446-3444

I,

'2495

dlnelle set with 4 chairs, full

Lots of things that help us win
races make our lowest-priced Datsun
an exceptional value.
Safety front disc brakes .. Steel
unibody construction. 5-main:bearing
engine. 4-speed stick shift. Plus
full-vinyl interior with bucket seats.
Whitewalls. Nylon carpeting.
Datsun 1200 Sedan. It sure beats
whatever's second.

I

MARTIN FORD PRICE

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURN . CO.
USED: 36" gas stove, double

~----------

I

'2495

-4 Or., v~ aeng ine, auto. trans_, p. steering~ 4 new tires, fac .
air cond ., tinted glass, light blue with dark blue interior . A
real cream puff !

ONE of Ihe finer things of lite -

For lllforiDadon faD llblrley Allklni_.,·'I!SG

"

Auto .• P.S., P.B., 19,000 miles ,
nice to ha ul ca mpe r.

50 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

'1495

1968 Torino

--------:-:::

..........._ ....._____.....

Denver k. Hiqloy 446-0002
Wanda 5. tshenaur 446;0003

MARTIN FORD PRICE

1972

.,

· ZBEDRooMTOWNHOUiiES .

new exliaust system , 38,000 miles. One owner .

DELUXE mod. zig za9.
Will self for $39.41 or pay $6.50
a mon. Ph . 446-0921.
54-If

·"'

• •• '"' ·~u•• ••o

Auto ., P .S., 22.000 miles, sharp .
New Electra trad e.

8ft. Flare Side pickup. slant 6 engine, 4 new G-78x15 tires,

lamp. Plenty free parking.
()pen Friday evenings till 8.
Ph . 446-1171. 955 Second Ave.
48-tf

S.~YRE

1970 GMC PICKUP

'1995

1969 Dodge Pick-Up

AUTHQIIIUD

'!'.• .. •.•.,.11.,•. •,11,.~,,1.1•.•.•~ ,. For Sate ... "··

.Datsun 1200
·From a long Uae
ofchalaps.

'795

MARTIN I'ORD PRICE

MARTIN FORD PRICE.

.•._..... ~.·

.,;--~-.,.~-"'!"~-·
•,~
.'

with rural water on lots. 150
ft. deep f.riced · at 122.50 per
front foo . No restrictions on
trailers, can finance.

brick home on Third
ORGA N, 2 keyboa•d Ph . 446- DOUBLE
Avenue
400 Block. Six large
9318
rooms on ~ach side, bath and
54·3 furnace. can sell h•lllf buyer

-----ESTATES con'taining r. nt1ques,

on .

.·
ELECTRIC IT':
. .
We furnish Water · sewage· Uarbage Collection • AmJIIe
Parking - TV Antenna • WaU:Co-wan Carpeting •
Draperies • Raqes · Refrlgeraton • Air Conditioning •
Garbage Dilpo~all • Dllbwaahen • Heat Lampri • Private .,
_Pailos • Swim~~~~ • Clllbb~Ulle. .
.'

•

Tha t's th e price yo u poy lo r
four free diagn osis check -ups
and o ne fr ee mainte nance to
make su re il stays frne .
That's th e p ri ce 'you poy for
the longest warronty1 in the a u·tomo bile industry (wilh th e exce ption o f Ro ll s- Ro ycel.
That's th e price you ' poy for
one o llhe highest resale va lues
in th e aut o mobi le indust ry !like
lhe Cadil locl.
Tha i's the price you pay for
ou r lwen ly-lour yea rs of perfeeling and imp roving one
sing le model (w ith lhe exception of nobodyl.

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
Mon.- 12 P.M. Untif9:00 P.M.
Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri.- 8:00 A.M. Unltf 5:00P.M.
Thursday-8:00A.M. Until9 :00 P.M.
Sa!urday-8:00 A.M. Until Noon

PAY ONLY ·oNE UTILITY

approx. 7,000' plus
AN efficiency ex peri ls one who ,. 200ro·ACRES,
ad frontage on 4 roads near
Is smarr enough ro. tell you
new Medical Center .

•

Cust. . 2 dr . hdtp. , air cJnd ., P.S.,
P.'J3., new LeSabre trade this
week.

'2695

St . Wagtb n, air cond .• gas he ater,
one owner . low miles .

buck·et seats, air cond ., white with blue interior.
,. "

Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.

TH E ONLY reason some people 50 ACRES, Vacant land, drilled
listen to reason is to gain time
we ll , Raccoon Twp. $8,500.

i

Want~d To

That's ihe price you pay now
that lhe tax and money si tu at ion
is bac~ lo norma l.
That's lhe pri ce yo u poy fo r
o rear-mounted, air-coo led .e n·
gine thai's anti-wa te r and ant iantifreeze .
That's the price you pay foro
co r thai won 't let yo u assemb le
mu ch of o gloss, silve rwa re, or
green stomp co llecti on fr o m
your loca l gas statio n.
That's lhe price you pay for
9,160 inspectors lhol slo nd be .
hind it lond unde r if, and in side
it, and thr o ugh out ill to make
sure it's frne .

A~CJIONEER

to one family . See Carl D.

1970 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

2 Dr. hard!op, 6 cyl. engine, standard shift, wheel covers.

WAY" _

Tave rn , 856 Sec ond Ave .
Would like to rent w hol e unit

30 ACRES. Custom buil t brick

1965 Mustang

"SELL THE AUCJION

HOBART DILLON
Real Estate Broker
P. 0. BoxS16
EXCLUSIVE agent for Raccoon
Valley Campsites. Ph . 446·
2130.
47-tf

1971 OLDS TORONADO

1970 FORD RANQfO

.
109
5-

MARTIN FORO PRICE

~46 -9523 .

,JIMME

'1195

rubber, ten passenger model •. luggage rack. dark green
with saddle Interior.
,

AUCTION
SERVICE

Evenings

'2795

Station wagon, V,8, auto. trans. , p. steeririg, exce ll ent

Bolen Husky. Ph. 388-9906.
53-3

Charles M. Neal44.6-:546
J . Michael Neal 446-1503

2 Dr . hdtp ., red . black vinyl top,
air con d ., ex tra nice, was $2995.00.

'4995

. 1967 Ford Country Squire

buy a rotary mower for 8.50

For Rent
2 APARTME NTS over Carl's

For Land's . Sake!
14 ACRES, eight room home, lot
of road frontage, RL 554 near
Cheshire, .S\6.000.

MARTIN FORD PRICE

STOCK car trailer, a lso want to

$15,000.
Office Phone 446-1694

695

bucket seats.

GERMAN Shepherd. mate 1
year old, black and silver.
Ca ll after 4 p.m. 446-0057.
53-3

for$7,000. Would make a good
lot for mobile .homes.

1970 OLDS CUTlASS

'4995
AM-F M tape , air cond .• powe r .
windows , power sea t s, 9,000
miles . so ld new for $7300.00. New
Riviera Trade.

2 Or. hardtop, 6 cyL engine, W·s-w tires, whee l covers /

-..,.,.-,-~~~--:­

SLEEP IN G ROOMS for con-

SWA N CREEK - 100 A.. big

dltl

4 Dr . hdtp .• air cond ., 60 -40 seat,
power windows. power seat , AM·
F M radio. Sold new for $7500.00 .

1968 Pontiac LeMans,

1 YOUNG red sow, may be
bred, 1 young red boar, 300
lb . each. Yellowtown-Ciay
Chapel Rd. Barney Prince,
256·1247.
S3-3

larg e lot, thr ee car metal
garage, three bedrooms, easy See this 3 BR home located just
4 miles south of Gallipolis on a
access to town.
2 acre lot. Pr iced to .sell

large living room , garage.

· MARTIN . FORD PRICE.

RICE'S NEW &amp;
USED FURNITURE
NEW3 pc. solid mapl~ .bedrilog"
suites $269.95, new 2 pc . EarfY

S!atlon. I

Realty

NEAR NEW HOSPITAL
FARMS
Between Ga llipolis and fhe
NEAR PA TR lOT - 95 A..
by-pass
iusr off S. R. 160, 3 BR,
tillable 45, 1,332 lb. tab. base. tull ba th,
beautiful kitchen,
good buildings, r emodeled

'

Herculon covel $169.95. 854

basement has ju st been
ca rpeted over H.W. floors, Jlh
redecorated and is r eady for
baths. cen. air , l car base.
you to move in. Ha s ca rpet in
gar. with elec. door. It has
living room, kitchen and one
452 Second Ave.
redwood fenced Patio and
bedroom . Ca ll today for
446-3434 444·4115
located on a large landscaped ON THE RIVE'R details.
Price $13,500.
Three
lot. If you are looking for
bedrooms, 1V2 baths, garage,
qual ity, see this one now.
small lot, in heart of town , 3 lots on US Rt . 35 in Rio
Grande, Ohio. Good place to r
furnac.e, lull basement, under
EURE KA - All brick ranch, 5 $20,000.
a business or 3 houses. Choice
rms ., full base_, large li v. rm .
of lots 12.500 or a ll lhree

wi th F. P. All birch ki!chen OVERLOOK THE DAM - On
a nd din . area, base. Is
S. R. 7, nice home, full bath,
fini shed wit h F.P. Owner has

t

1971 BUICK LIMITED

-4 Or .. V-8 engine, auto. trans.• w-s-w tires, p. steeri ng, fac.
air cond., tinted glass. In beautiful cond .

Second (across from Texaco

Neal Realty

OHIO RIVER

11

SMITH

1970 Galaxle 500

Amer ican liv ing room suite
trimmed in maple with strong

wafer, $2,700, $500 dn .

FARM LISTINGS
NEEDED
THE BUYING SEASON is j'usf

House Listings

i

THESE CARS HAVE BEEN IN
STOCK OVER 30 DAYS AND
HAVE TO BE SOLD. ! ! !

'

y _8 std . trans ., air con -'

MORGAN TOW

1 - 30 A., pasture and woods,
nice 5 : m. home, barn, pond,

nace, garage .

FAIRVIEW SUB. - Price
reduced on this all brick 4 yr.
old beauty, 5 large rm s., a ll

price.

MARTIN FORD
SPECIALS!

Insurance

dillon ng, exce en con
Ph . 446-1073.

"DOC"

••

settle for less than nationwide HAWK Insurance Agency, 541
adver tising. CALL STROUT
Fourth Avenue, Phone 446·
FARMS2300. Fire-life-auto-church .
8-tf
SPRINGFIELD TWP.
2- 76 A. Bidwell -Rodney Rd., -,,------~~­
mostly level and rolling · For Sale
ground, some bottom, pond, ,66 BUICK La Sabre, extra
creek, $11,900.
C R J r
446
3- 50 A. level &amp; rolling land .' sharp. al 1 ev. us oce, ·
This farm Is fenced in and
4156 .
53-3
ready for cattle. Pond, concrete drinker for collie, barn 4 WHEE' drive ,Jeep with top.
and lots of frontage on BT rd.
good c~nditlon. Ph. 388-9991.
- 163 A., good home and
53-6
bulldings, 56A.bottom,100A.; 1966 FORDGa:axle2dr.hdtp .,

home, now vacant, all pai nted pasture, Perry Twp.
•
up and ready to move into.
Nice kitchen &amp; dinette, HUNTINGTON TWP - 50 A 2
. ''
.
laundry room, large sun .
barns, 109 house . N$8S,800HIP.

roo smar r ro slart one of his
L1stmgs Needed
own.
' WE HAVE buyers for out-of.
NO Experience necessary_ Will
town property. Homes,
tr ain . Earn $300-$400 per 3 BEDRO s 'ome on one acre
Farms. and Lands. Call
week . For application call
of
Ia.
0 l(ana ug a, Wanda,
Denver or Jay any
31?-545-6431. or wri te :o Wo_rld Alumihum !t•... D jge and
time.
W1de Syslems. 3512 Rockville
basement, pricea • .000.
Rd , Building C Rm . 130,
For Lease
lnoia na polis, Ind .
60 A. VACANT land four miles
Four - Bedroom ranch home,
4p6 from Ga ll ipolis In Springtield
cou ntry size kitchen. large
- -- -- -- -Townshi p. $8,000.
l lvl ng room , den with
Wanted
fir eplace, utilitf room, 1 1J~
ALSO. lots on Kemper Hollow
baths. Addison wp.
Roa d and Bethel Chur&lt;h Road
BABYSITTER . Ph . 446·9560.
54-3

homes in thrs area. It you

ha¥e property tor sa le, don ' t

Wanted!
around the corn er_ For ast
WE NEED FARMS TO SELL, action on your property, call
Ranny Blackburn
ACREAGES ,
COUNTRY
Branch Manager
HOMES ,
TIMBER
GROUNDS, AND ALL SIZE · - - -- - - - HOMES. LIST WITH THE
BRANNOI&gt;f
REALTY
TODAY . IT WILL PAY.

house for $24,5()0, the asking

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ou l of town buyers in need of

yrs . old, brick and fram e,
H.W. floors, covered with
expens ive carpeti ng, 3 ni ce
bdrm s., l arge liv . rm .,
beautifu l kitchen a nd din.
area. It has a 2 car gar. with
elec . controlled dr. located on
a large lot. Pric ed in low
twenties.

a&lt;:cess to river and a ni ce
view. You co uldn't build th is

Oil CANADIRN ~QI.UWAGtH DhlEit . AliD T!111 WII.L 1£ 0011[ flU[ or CH ARii[ .

•STROUT REALTY

stations , r eception desk, 2
First Lady dr yi ng sta1ions

house in good repair, some
new copper plumbing and
wiring . 5 nlce.rms. &amp; bath, tull

--=---~--:­

BABYS ITTING in my home.
Ph . 446-9868.

$27,000.

CITY - Located at 127 Kineon.

RA NCH
WITH
BASEMENT.

HOME
INCLUDES
3
BEDROOMS . PANELED ,
LIVING ROOM , CARPORT
AND
E XCEL LE NT
LOCATION .

MAN .

AT

US AN

ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM

TH IS MODESTLY PR ICED

YOURSELF

MAKE

Here's A Honey On
Lower River Road

City and
New Hospital

IT

PR I CED

SU ,OOO OFFER .

YOU WON 'T F IND MANY
AT T HI S PRI CE.

"IRATE ELDER" IS BLASTED

S IDING AND

WALL TO WALL CAR .

'h Way Between
Dear All :
"Irate Elder" wins the alwn-stuffed pincushion this month
as our readers' most disliked contributor to GENERATION
RAP . His blast on "boozing, drug-taking, rioting, shiftless, etc.,
etc." modem youth brought hundreds of brickbats and not one
bouquet.
Samples:
Dear Rap :
My congratulations to the two of you for putting "Irate
Elder" in his place.
For a minute I thought my husband was the writer, but I
know he couldn't drag himself away from his martinis long
enough. He once remarked that all teenagers should be whipped
within an inch oftheir lives at least once a week.
These two "Irate Elders" forget they were once kids, and
when they wanted to show girls the difference between the sexes
they did so In ba1'118, meadows and especially cornfields, and then
blackmailed "Rosie" into "oot tellin ' " or "you'll git it from yur
pa." Rosie was sent to Aunt Abigail's, to be put into a room until
the baby arrived, said child to be put on the doorstep of a foundling home, unnamed. Look back into history, Messrs . I.E., and
you'll find that 's why Auntie never wed - she wasn't a virgin,
therefore unfit.
About drugs, I.E ., remember when Paw made his own corn
likker, and you kids tested and liked it ?
As for rioting, bow about the strikes back in our lime, when
our generation w.anted better working conditions? The strikers
were haled by the "good people," whose children benefited from
the stronger labor laws they fought for.
And how about the hunger marches on our Capitol? I participated in one of them and had a piece of bologna, green with
mold, thrown at me. It was then the riot started, and I was saved
by a soldier (who incidentally in those days was known as "the
scum of the earth") or I would have been hit by a "good citizen."
Mr. I.E., our teens today have enough gwnption not to
believe what is no lon ger true, or take the gulf handed out by
people like you, and I say hurrah for them. - AN ADMIRING
ELDER

water tank , new plumbtng,
and new shingle roof. Has
large garage. Larg e loi , 9
fruit trees and rm . fo r a
garden. Price 516,000. If you
want an investment you ca n
buy this one and another 6 rm.
(2 apartments)
in Qood
r epair, beside it ; both for

closets . Located on a large lot
in the center of town . Only

I

By Helen and Sue Hottel

kitch en, new bath, new hot

with plenty cab., huge llv.
rm .• 4 bdrms. with plenty

DAY CARE
Sun Valley Nursery School , ~--------- ----licensed by State of Ohio, 1V2
miles west of new hospital. 1 Classified Ads
I
511 Sun Valley Dr. Ph . 446· I
1
3657. Day care that says "we I
38 Acre Farm
care."
I
bring you
1
City School District
28-tf
extra cash
10 TO 15 A(. TILLAB LE
1
TH GOO D FENCE
for
• I WI
AROUND
PASTURE ,
I
I PLENT
FA IR
I shopping sprees 1 HOUSEYOFINWATER.
CLUDE S 3
I
I BEDR OOMS,
KI TCHEN ,
BATH ,
NEW LY
IN
STAL
LE
O
FORCED
AIR
1 FUR NACE . SEVERAL
OUTBUILDINGS AND
EXCELLE NT LOCA TION
FOR NEW HOME . $12,900.

Generation Rap

house is in good repa ir, with
most of interior new. New

formal din. rm .,

54-3

l

CtTY - Located at 88 Pine St. 6
rms .. bath &amp; utility rm. This

CITY - Large 2 story, 7 rm .
older brick home, full base.,

It's a profitable way to meet

police monitors, antennas ,

dining area 10 x 12, all carpeted. 2 car gar. w ith elec.
controlled dr. Located on a
large corner lot. Priced for a
qui ck sale $22,500.

$26,500.

Representatives earn an
es timated $40a week or more.

etc. Bob' s Citizens Band
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Jackson. Ohio. Ph . 286-4028.
Rd .. Gallipolis, Ohro:446.~517 .
49·6
16-lf
.
~• . WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
RALPH' S Carpel &amp; Upholstery Nurse ro work in nursing
Cleaning Serv ice. Free . home. Can li ve In If desired .
estimates . Ph . 446-029~ . Ralph ' Wr ite Box 313 Rt. 1, Ironton,
A..... Oavls, ownerOhio.
9-tf

IRATE YOU'l'll

FOR SALE by owner. 2 story
brick at 452 ~i(SI Ave. 1

PLEASA NT VALLEY - 2 yr.

The Children and Grand·

Notice
SORRY- we service only what

54-12

Realty, 32 State Sl
Tel. 446-1998

Experience Helpful
Send Resume to Box 208, c-o
Gallipolis Tribune.

54-1 BEAUTICIAN ,

446-2~9 .

MASSIE

ch ildren

w ·~· ...

limits. By appt. Ph.
.

LOCAL BUSINESS
NEEDS PERSoN ABLE
TO DO BOOKKEEPING
AND SOME SALES
WORK.

who depar ted this I ife March
5, 1971.
Our hearts
sadness,

and air, on 1 acre within city

Office 444-3643
Evenings Call
E...M. "Ike" Wiseman 4444796
E. N.-Wisenun 444-45NI

FULL OR
Saunders who passed away I
year ago today, March 5, 1971.
PART TIME
Sadly missed by children &amp; MR. ROW, 446·0677 Monday and
grandcl!lldren.
Tuesday only 9 to 5.
54-1
54-1

IN MEMORY of our father and
-----~----------grandfather . Edward Beck,

basement, centra l heating

THE WISEMAN
AGENCY

WE NEED young men for
imme diate work.

Real Estate For Sale
HOUSE , 4 bedrooms, 21h baths,

&gt;'

"vo~• swAQfN !in•-il t ll SUG0Ut£1l Rtf~IL .lttC£, , f .O.t . , l'*"l UUS AJUl OfltU OfALCII CioiAitGU, If ANt' , AO D.IIO IIU ,
t1, lioN OW IIIII tiiA!IIUIN! AND Ult~t C(S Ioiii II(O!!C Ll !H llC;;OIIOIIi"C[ WITH lloj( VOL-~III.l(l[N MAINJ,II-NC( IC H[OUL[ AMY fllCIO•Y I' Alii I !J"Nit TO L)t
:l~,[CIIIt( ,fi MAI[It l ...l Olt 'II'DRIIMAJI $ H,Ir WtTiil lt 4'4 MONTH! 011 24,000 MIL U, WI'I II!Hb'U \;,O M($ fi ll S I, Wil-L It llti'AIII(Q 011 lt(,.L,U:l\). 11 1 AJ'I Y U.t.

ss:oo Service Charge

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE, INC.

Will remove your dead
horse and cows

IF YO U are bu ilding a new
Call Jackson 286·4531
home or remodeling. see us. L - - - - - - - - - - - '
We are build ers. Distr ibutor ; ·

STATE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

for Hotpoin! Applian ces.
Allison Electric.

154.11
WE HAVE in stock a fine
selection of diamonds and

wedding bands . Col umbia,
Keepsake, and Artcarved.
Tawney Jewelers.

44-lf

---=-------

WE HAVE a complete line of all
new TimeK Walches . $6.95 to
S25. Tawney Jewelers.

44· 11

--:=---25 PCT. off on bronzing baby
shoes, February on l y. Bring

. ~em in \ today. Tawney

Jewelers.

'

-

44·11

Camping Equipment .
IF YOlf plan io buy th is year,
you cannot afford to miss our
winter sa le price on trailers

SWISHER'S
and campers . 'Camp Conley Plumb ing &amp; Heating and
electrical service . 367-7475.
Starcraft Sales, RL 62 N. ol
Pr. Pleasant .
306-tf
51 ·11
, SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and insta lled

Plumbing &amp;Heating
GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heal ing &amp; Air

· Conditioning. 300 Fourth Ave.

Ph .

446 ·1637.

Brammer's

{F.ormerly

Fabric Shoppe, Singer apProved dealer, 58 Court Sf..
Ph . 446-9255.
30e.tf

&amp;

Plumb ing

Heating. I

48-11

.

:it NGER Sewing. Ma chine Sales
&amp; )ervice. All
models in
stock. Free delivery . Service
guaranteed. Models priced
from $69 .95 . French City

Services Offered

Services Offered

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160at Evergreen

Phone 446·2735
187-tt

Russell 's Plumbing, 446·&lt;782
297.rt

.

C&amp;S Eleclntal Service ' &amp;
Repair s. House wir'ing .
electric heat. motor con tro ls.
Free estimates . Ph . 446-4561

or 675-336 1.

ntf

HOLLEY'S DITCHING
COMPt_ ETE water line in ·
sta llali on, backhoe, bul ldozer
and boring machine services.

J . P. Holfey, Ph . 245-5018 or

446-4344.

FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Controt
Wheelersburg , Ohio

Ph. 574-6112
231-lt
ALBERT EHMAN
Water DelivP.ry Serv ice

Patriot Star Rt.. Gallipolis
Ph. 379·2133
243-tf

LEGAL NOTICE

The undersigned is offering
lor sale th e hOuse and lot owned
by the late Clara Ga rland in
Welchtown . Minersv il le, Ohio.
Property appraised at $6,500 .00
and cannot be so ld for less tha n
th e appra ised value . All in .
teres ted persons con ta ct Mary
Harr is, Executrix , Minersville ,
Ohio . Telephone 992 ·3327. · Sa le
sub ject to the approva l o·r the
Probate Court , Meigs County ,
Ohio.

Mary Ha rris, Execulr lx
of th e Es tate of
Clara E. Garland ,
Arab Exterminating Co.
Deceased
TERMITE ·Pesr Con trol. Free Crow , Crow &amp; Porter,
Inspect ion. Cal l Russe l l's Attorneys
Plum bing , 446 ·4782 Gallipolis.

l-It

131 5, 6,

Ohio .

7,

31

48-52
NOTICE

BANK S TREE SERVICE
The undersigned will offer tor
FRE E estimates, liabili ty in. sale. by auction , at the premises

suran ce . Pruning , trimm ing ot the United Methodist Church
Parsonage at Reedsville , Oh io,
and
cavi ty work, tree ancl the
CAR_I~~·~:.!"~r~~ING,
pa rsonage real estate, on
stump removal. Ph. 446·4953. Mar ch
9. 1972. at 2:00 O'Cl ock Cor. Fourth &amp; Pl,ne
TERM ITE PEST CONTROL
73-tf P .M . The property will be sold
.
Phone446·3888or446-4477
FREE insoection. Call446·3245.
Ia the hioh.est bi dder : reserving
FOR THE besi dea r in a new .or
,,.
155-tf
Merrill O' Dell. Operator for GILLENWATER 'S septic tank lo
tne Trustees the r ight to
use d lnob ite hom e try - - - Extermi nal Termite Serv ice ,
re-ject the hig hest bid in the
cl
eaning
and
r
epair.
also
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
STANDARD
19 Belmont Dr.
'
house w recking . Ph. 446·9499. event H is deemed lnsutllc!ent .
Kana uga, Ohio. Ph . 446-9662.
Plumbing &amp; Heating
267-tf
Edward Blake
Established in 1940.
··
Dan~
t1offman, Sr .
296-tf
215 Third Ave .. 446·3782
-;:--:--:-:-:--:--::::--c:169-tf
Ben Buckl~y
--=,---~-187-tf l
l::.ntral Air Conditioning
~:-:-~--:-Charles
Hensley
CCiR.Bt N &amp; SNYDER - - ---::-;;:;-;:';:-: ,...-::-&amp; Healing
D. P MAP.TIN &amp; Son Water
Harold Brannon
'sER TA &amp; Bemc.o Matlresses &amp;
RUSSELL'S
Free E•limates
0JIIvery Se rvice . Your
Trusttes ,
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Stewart's Hordware
bo• springs $29 up. 955 Second
Reedsville Cln.ult of
·patronage will pe ap .
Ave. 446. 1q1. ,
21 Gallia Ave.
446·4782
Vinton, O~io
Uni"~ed Methodist Church'
pt'l!cla ted . Ph. 4_411·0463.
10-lf .
297ilt
J44.ft
7-tf 13 ) 3, ~ • • . 7, 8, 51

-------

~

�..
I

22- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , March 5, 1972

5

clocks,

Publication

Cancellation &amp; Corrections

'

and -or

com pl e te

house holds . Wr ite M. D.
Miller. Rt. 4. Pome roy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 . •
--11- I Hf &lt;

Monday Deadllnt 9 a .m.

Will be accepted untll9a .m . for~

Day of Publication,.
REGUL.ATIONS

Wanted To Do

deemed objectional. The

BABYSITTING in my home,

·publi sher
w i II
not
be
responsible for more than one
Wlcor r ect inse rt ion .

Mrs . Gl enn Smith. Roc k
Springs Rd ., ph one 992 -6187 .

3. 1-6tc

RATES
For Want Ad Ser vice
5 cents ·per Word one Insertion
M ini mum Charge 75c

per word

.

Help Wanted '

. '.'

work ,

ex~erien ce

or part ti me. Mr . Row, 446·

and

Mobile Homes For Sale

Sentinel·

Ph. 614-992-2156

aluminum

and

LANCE LOT

three

consecutive insertions .
• 18 cents per word six cdn .
secutlve insertions .

~------~

r."-'---, ··;·,;;~RL··,·.· . .c:--60
:=,=w:--,::..cc,.:=-,---,
AT

&gt;II. IONIG.I·fT·· Ilt ~l&lt;

.,r

'-OIJ !"&lt;::

FA"l'kf!ll IF' HE

25 Per Cent Discount on pa id

awning,

aluminum skirting , com pletely setup. Beautiful
location.
Owneror
leaving
slale.·
Phone 949-4892
992-5272
. '

SMITH NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.·

~----------~---~--t-O-~lfc ~P~h-~"~2~-2~17~4~==··~~==~

ads and ads pa id within 10

days:
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUA. RY

MILLER

Free Estimate
ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CO~DITIONING

Card of Thanks

MOBILE HOMES

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

I WISH

1220 Washinglon Blvd .
Belpre, Ohio

Sl .SO for SO word1 minimum . ·

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Add it ional 25c Charge per
Adverti sement.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon

12' - 14' - 24' - WlDE

CAPTAIN EASY
Wlff~

Al•if'

THf' GLJARP
\YATCHP06DI,.TP'A CTED ~y ,._ CHe5f4H• DL!CEY

Saturday .

:!Jli(CUJ)S

N

!"'Tf~IN6 8~ED,OE'~

C OLII.IT'RY!!f!!!~

to tha nk all ot my

frJ.ends who se nt the many get
well , birthday and Valentine
cards ,' fl owers, pictures and
letters while I was in the

For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

hospital. They were all deeply
apprec iated.
Fannie Belle Brown

The New '72
Models-

3-5-ltp
-:-:::--c~-:-:---­

WE WISH to express ou r si n-

cere

th anks, to relatives.
neighbors and friends, for

their kindne•s and sympathy
extended to us during the loss

LIBERTY
BELMONT

of ou r dear Mother and
Grandmother,
Ida
to those sending f loral
arrangement s, fo od and
cards, also Rev . Forrest

Donley, Rev . Wendell Slut.
ler,

Ewing

FUneral

and Gerald
k indness

SEE THE NEW
FLAMINGO
ALL ELECTRIC
HOME!'

Home

Powell . Your

will

never

be

forgotten.
Mrs. Lill ian Napper, Mr.
Robert Laudermilk , Mr.
Lawren~e . A. Napper, Miss
Betty ·Sprouse.
J.5-ltp

- - -- --

BIG DISOOUNT

Found

ON 3 .

RlNG fou nd in Pomeroy_Owner
may have by identifying.
Phone 99H175.
3-S-Jtp

1971 MODELS

-----·Notice

All
Prices
Include
Delivery and Setup.
1Best Financing Plan
Available. Up to 12 Years
to
Pay. On the Spot
Dan Thompson
The Dealin' Man .• ,, Financing •... Bank .. Rates .

WI LL DO bookkeeping, ta x
services In the ·privacy of my

home. Evelyn C. Young,
phone 949-3741, Racine.
2-21·12tc

'

(t-----.-----;--

5tt\ANNUAL Hereford S~ l e': 26
Bull s

and

22

Females,

Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Associa tion .

All

Talk lo Dan Thompson, Joe Ho.odor Tom Llovender.

clean

pedigrees both horned and
polled. Saturday, March 18,
1972. Show 10:00 A.M. Sale ·1
P.M. Rock Springs Fair
Grou nds, Rt. 33. three miles , CAMPUs CLATrER
north:.of Pomeroy. Ohio . For
I 'M ~AVIN6 ANOTf&lt;ER.
ca talogs write to lloyd Black DOOit !NSTJ.LL.ED FOR

wood , Sa le Mg r. , Rt.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

3,

GOBLE MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Lot Phone 992-7004. If no answer, Ph. 992-2196
586 Locust St.
Middleport
Open Daily 10 to 6, Sunday 1:00 to15:00

T~E s:..si(.ETS~ LL
J.~E:NJ.

3-n lc
GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club, Su nday, March

'

5, noon ti ll ...

For Rent

GU N SHOOT. Sunday, March 5,
1 p. m. Factory choked guns
only. Seco nd pl ace shooters
get free shot In next match .
Assor ted meats . Racine Gun

Club.

3-2·3tc

U'l. ABNER
TOO LATE FOR HIM

tJGI!!- C&gt;fOI&lt;l!!

TO ANSWER., SON-

'IO.J'RE. tlt1 tiAP:'Y'

KOSCOT KOSMETI CS, Flame
of Hope Perfumes, Human
and Synthetic wigs . We're
here for your conven ience.

2-25-tfc
AN YONE interested in learning
cra fts and making flowers
contact Eulah Francis at 992 -

3-H tp

c hoked shotguns

will

AND DONT

THINK 1 DON'T
A ~&lt;ECIATf. IT!

be

handica pped . Rifles will be in
scope, bench rest and off
hand . Rif le shoote rs will

3-l-41c

Wat chers 1R I Class in
Pomeroy writ e : Wel~ht
Watchers IRI, 1863 Sect1on
Rd, Cincinnati, Oh io 45237.
10-3-tfc

--------

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
sick TV lo Chuck ' s TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pome.rov

11 -21 -tfc

Wanted T.o Buy
OLD
POCKET
kn ives,
espe&lt;ial ly Case XX. Also
have other old knives to trade

or sell. Phone 992-2343 .
3·5-ltc

-=------CHARDLAIS BULLS, only $400

from

The Station
That Listens

To You

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

automation . Modern Poulti-y ,

Bradbury School. Call 992- 399 w. Ma'n
o , p_omeroy, 992 .
5308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
2164.
·
house south from Bradbury
3-5-ltc
School. Pets welcome.
2-21 -tfc GREEN MAYTAG dishwasher,
2 BEDROOM mobile home In I year old, phone 247-2664.
3·5-6tc
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
2-16-tfc NEW PONTOON boats, 3 good
used boats, runabout and
S PACIOU S unfurnished · cabin
cruiser. Boa! Repairs,
apartment in Mason, 4 rooms
Middleport
Boa! Shop, Pearl
&amp; bath, electric heat ; phone
Dick
Karr 992-5367.
Street,
773-5975.
3-5-Jtc
2-27-61c .· -.,- - -- - - -- -

.------:--.....

------

---:---:-:---

--

2 BEuROOM, 1/ 2 double, fur nished on 4th &amp; College In Real Estate For Sale
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
NICE 2-Siory nome wllh fuil
basemen!, 2 lois, new forced
2-29-6tc
air furnace . Near Pomeroy.
Elementary School. Phone
FURNISHED an&lt;! unfurnished
992-7384 to see.
apartments. Close to school
Phone 99·2·5d3d.
·
11-7-lfc
10-t,.ffc
SIX ROOM house, IJ3 o3utlernut
5 I{QOM house, 120 Lincoln
Ave. Conlact Ed Hedrick , 2137
Road, phone 992-2433 or 992·
Wadsworlh Drive, Columbus,
2883.
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
11·21 -tfc
3·3·6fc

:::-:-~-:--­

TRAILER. Brown's Trailer

4 WHEEL drive jeep. Phone
after 5 p.m. 992.3062.
2-27-12tc

12 FT. WI DE trailer with air
conditioning, washer &amp; dryer
- $3,700 ; see Harold Johnson,
Chester. Ohio.
-:-::--:-:-- -- - - -3·_5-6tp
GOOD mixed hay . Phone
Wilkesville 669-4777.
3-Htc

- -- - - -

furnish own shells. Any
calibre ol ri f l e, muzz l e
loa ders included.
WEIGHT ~
overweig ht ladies, tee ns and
men in terested in a Weight

- -- - - - --

each, papers available . Call
698-4803.
3-5-ltc
TWO BEDROOM mobile home, ---::--:-:-----Call 992-5623 .
3 BEDROOM Vlndale mobile
3-5·31c
home, l'h baths on choice
- -&gt;1
,,-:-. -----rental lot. Herman Bolinger,
5 ROOM and bath apartment, 992 -5570.
turnished.
M&amp;G
Food
J.5-6tp
Market, 3 mile south, Mid- - -- - -- - - - dleport. Rt. 7.
H &amp; N day old or started
3-2-3tp " Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
cage grown available.
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
Poultry
housing
&amp;
mobile home across

two classes . Open sites and

ABOUT YOUR

MEIGS INN
ROOMS
PH. 992-3629

Please call 992-5113.

A SHOT GUN and rifle match
will be held Sunday, March 5,
at 12 o'cloc k, Rutland Gun
Club, New Lima Road. Hand

MALE Norwegian E lkhound
pups, 10 weeks old - $25 ;
phone 992-2362,
3·5-Jtp

by
Day, Week, Month
Liberal Rates

ALL RIGHT.':'

5884.

For Sale
THE

3 2·31c

Court ,

M i ner svi ll e,

phone 992-3324.

'

992-3975

Ohio,

Phone
992-5786

Real Estate F9r Sale

Virgil B. ·
TeAford, Sr.

l lf2

baths.

Modern kitchen. Recreation
room . 2 drilled wells.
Foundation for 2nd house. 10
acres. NOW only $20,000.00.
NEW• LISTING
7 ACRES - On Route 7 near
Eastern School. Ideal for
housing project or small

REALTY
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
Pomeroy, Ohto
BUSINESS INVESTMENT
Large tile and brick
building, 2 story, 4 aparl ·
ments, (3 furnished) 2
business rooms, storage
room, present business goes

with lhe building . $29.500.
FAMILY HOME
4 bedrooms, bath, porches,
forced air heat, large barn
and storage building. $8,900.
80ACRES
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP 1•12 story frame home, 7

rooms, bath, cellar, large
barn, crib, implement bldg .,
chicken house, milk house.
Close

to

the new mines.

$17,600.
CHEAP HOME
11h story frame, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, bath , ullllty
room , some hardwood floors,
gas forced air heat, p()rch,
S3,500 . I mmed l ate
possession .
1 story frame, 2 bedrooms,
cablnels
In
kitchen,
basement, large lot. All In
excellent condition . Just
$7,900.
.
WE HAVE 35 PROPERTIES, ONE OF WHICH MAY
SUIT YOU. COME TO THE
OFFICE OR ' CALL, WE
WILL BE GLAD TO SHOW
THEM TO YOU.
Henry Cleland, Realtor

·.' 3-3-tfc

For'Sale
SKYLINE Mobile home, 10 x 50
- S2,ooo; II interested phone
992-5433 .

~-::---:------~
3 -3-3tc
JOHN Deere bater and hay
conditioner . Phone 949-3193.
3·3-3tc
TROPICAL

-FIS!i.

fancy
gupp1es. angels an d breeders ,

Bellas and supplies. Phone
992 -5443.
_ _ _ --:----~ · lfc 1

·Of Cowse .:You Cmt" ·

INTERIOR i, exterior oalntlnq.
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
2-28-5tc
-:--=---~

GET your Doat read~ for
summer! Call D. Karr, 992.
-5367.
.
2-27-6lc

--:-----o---=-""'=""'

AUTOMOBILE insu~ance been
cancelled?
Los! . your
~f:Jalor's license.? Calt .992.

WHITE

REALTY~

Ccmtact. 'IJ II:Ciate
VERA EBLEN
992-3020

192 N. 2nd

Middleport

69 CADIUAC SEDAN DeVILLE

Fury Ill, 2 dr. H.J., V-8, std.
shift, looks &amp; runs fine.

. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rales Ph -146
4782, Gallipolis. Joh~ Ruiseu:
O..ner &amp; Operalor.
=----,~~
S.l 2-.tfc
SEWiNG MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
l'he Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
·
3-29-tfc

LOOKING for lnveslmenlt
properly? Fantastic Is theo
word for this spacious 12-·
room , 2-bath all brick home,
setup as duplex, or can be
used as offices . Located In
Middleport's business district
overlooking the Ohio River.
6
Boo-m-2 bath home, SIGNS, posters, mall boxes an.,
(shingle). cellar house, favorite · saying; hand leigarage, plus extra lots. One tot tered; In your favor lie style.
HOUSE , 1642 Lincoln H~lghts . has walkways, set up for
David Hooker, Rl. 2, Albany,
Call Danny Thompson, 992- trailer. Located In business Ohio 45710 (Pagelown) .
2196.
district, across from the A&amp;P
2-6-JO!c.
7' 18-ttc Store In Middleport. Floor ;;-;:::-:----':-'~--7-:­
turn. Asking .. . S20,000 for all. Why buy new fur.n lturef Have
that old made new by Sylvia's
HOUSE In Long aottom, phone
Upholstering Shop, Mrs.
985-3529.
' Lot with radial garage,
lneeds
roof
90
ft.
frontage,
Woodrow
T. Zwilling, Prop.,
1-28-tt.c suitable for large trailer or
Syracuse, Ohio.
--:.-.,--- - small business. In business
2 1• 301
BUILDING lots In Branchwood dis lrlct •. across from the A&amp;P
· •· p
Subdivision at Rock Springs, Store, Middleport, Ohio
T. P. water, phone 992-2789. Asking ... $4,000.
.
3·1·12tc
Le tart Falls - 10 room house
Rent
with
bath, basement, fenced.
3 BEDROOM ranch lype home,
In lawn, lwo buildings, fuel oil
Arbaugh Addlllon, Tuppers
heat,
5 lots, three of them TWO Bedroom home In AlbanyPlains. All . new with lotal
tangsvltle . Mlddleporl .
on tho river front
located
electric and · central atr ·
Pomeroy
area . A. W. Walson
selling due to Ill health, $25,oo0
conditioping, bath and 3.4 fully
P.
0
.
Box
35, Langsville, Ohio:
for all. Home has two porches,
car~eted, full basement ·
_
_
_
_
_ _ ___:3:...;.·1-tllp
one
enclo-.d,
wi
thin
walking
garape In basemen!. ·see by
dis
:ance
of
school.
appotntment, phone 992-2196
MODERN lor 4 bedroom home.
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson.
I Need Lis lints lot Farma 11N1
Phone 992·3062.
, .
Financing available.
Homes. Also Hondlt Rtnt1ls.
3-2-lfc
12·JO·tft

Wanted To

r
'

.

$1095
1964 Dtevrolet
Pickup, 6 · cylinder, 3 speed
'
sharpest lillie '64 In !own.

. sags

Full power equlpmenl, Cllmale Conlrol ·air conditioning, like new w-s-w tires, only 26,000 miles.

Jones. Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallitce Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

Cldlllooc. Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Avo liable

· 992·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDI,EPORT

Sat.

"You'li like Our Qua lily Way of DOing Bustne5s"

r------------, , 12&gt;&lt;60,
2 Bedroom Mobile home,
Fot Sale

For.SaJe
36":X 23" x .oo9

Aluminum
Sheets
..
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY
.. USES
)•

.

."V J IF, ~/ ~t'!'lf

II""

8 for s·1.00 ·

The

like new. Priced for quick
sale. For further Information
742 3183
call
·
3.2.3tc

THREE one-half Angus cows
with 6 wk. old calves, also
yearling
grade Angus helters. ·
Phone 843·2436.
3.2.3tp
1964 PL YMDUTH Vallanl
Statton Wagon, $150; Living
room sulle, contour chair, 110.
See Edna Monk, Larkin 51.,
Rutland:
3-2·31c

TIICU

l'
-:============~
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
s·nvciAL
c500 E. Main St.
Pomeroy. Ohio
5
'72
_ ~/:!:f '3595 ·.
FORD LTD
4 Or. Pillared hardlop, blue vinyl roof, med. blue melalllc
cover, w-s-wllres, vlslbillly group, radio, bumper guards,
door edge guards, lac. air cond., wheel covers, vinyl body
m.ouldlnn,
• tlnled glas•. This Is a Driver's Education car
with 4,600 miles. In ex.cellent cqnd. from bumper to
bumper. The remaining portion of 12,000 mile warranly lo

ftrf~rul 0011 ~-~kat,:::!:! _,J

~ ~ ~~® M i ' · ·
UIIICRmble the•e four Jumble1,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words.

---,---- -

WEST .

.J4

EAST

.63
¥AKJ95
t QJ6 3.
.102

¥83
t A972
.QJ843

S0\1111 (D)

.AK8752
¥Q764
tK
.AK
Both vulnerable
West North Eul , Souih
p...
Pass
Pass

2 N.T.
4•

Pass

2.

3.
Pass Pa"

Station,

up the "Battle RoyRI" in his
own ·words. ·" I ~WJaned inwardly when South orned
that horrible two bl and
wondered if I dared Impose ·
the maximum fine.
"The rest .of the bidding
was normal. West openell the
king of hearts and Instead of
making the killing shift to a
trump continued with the ace
and anotbl!r heart.
"Now s~e's going to mak~
this horrible contract, I refleeted bitterly, but dummy
came through. He 'took his
nine of trumps, remarked,
'Here'a wliere dummy takes.
a trick,' and tossed the nlne
In the center of the table.
. Ea1t plunked on the jack.
\

H.Y. 10019.

South to lose another trick .
Game and rubber.
"A genuine grand finale.
I lined South •10 for the two
bid, West 115 for bad defense,
N o r t h UO for chucking a
trick as dummy and East
$10 for about as bad a play ·
as I have even seen." ·

Opening lead- • K

By Oawald &amp; Jamea Jaeaby
We .wlll Jet Culbertson wind

Hw Y01k,

(~IWSPA"l

llfTUPliSI ASSN.I

•J.CII ~UJi ·rtJI'At
Th• blddil1fl

w11t

hr. been :

Horth

Eut

South
Paos
3t

Dble
zt
p..
•t
Paas Ut
Pus
• N.T.
P- 5¥
P...
5 N.T.
Pau
1'111
8t
Paos
'
You, South, hold:
•n• u • A q 1 t Au .u 4
What do you do now?
A-Bid olx optdes, Your ptrtnor to trylq to plio seven. fnat
Y"" don't hold non one lipide
honor.
. TODAY'S QtJJsTION
1t

6.

What do you
wilh:

bid

01

dealer

.IUU ¥AZ tl .A KQ78 ?

Anower Monday

, I

Green finish, blk . vinyl roof , green vinyl Inferior. new .
wide oval tires, 4 speed lrans .. power steering, radio. A
sweetheart of a buy .
.

1970 Dodge Polara ________!2395
Factory air conditioning, V-8 engine, auto. trans., P.S.,
P.B., good W·s-w tire s, many more extras. A low price
now!

1969 atev. Impala Cpe. ----- '2095

V-8 engine. automatic trans. , p. steering, faclory air
COnditioned, good W •W tires, radio, dark green finiSh with
spotless Interior.

1967 Pontiac Grand Prix------1395
Converllble. V-8 auto., P.S., P.B., lilt steering wheel, lapci
player, good !ires, dark blue, like new top while, white
buckel seats wllh console, nice and clean 1owner car.

1967 atevelle Malibu HT Cpe.-)1395.
327 engine. 4 speed lrans., clean Interior &amp; good tires.
Med. grn. finish . Nice.
·

1967 Ford Mustang---------'1295
6 cyl., auto. trans ., radio, new tires, maroon finish w'llh .
black interior.

'

.

1967 Chev. El' Camino
I

V-8 engine, aulo. trans .. p. steering, radio, good W· W
!Ires, red finish . Anice one. Cover for body.

'1695

bloh blah ..•

\

I

I I

Pomeroy Motor Co.

V "J

I

·)
I
(
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1.-.:..:.:::..=======--l

cinnati. .

Yetlerdty'•

,
'

Antwer~ TlaU lllOuld detuibe a hilfh·tpirit~d

,.

chUeler- ''CHIPPII"

Eugene Sellers, son of Mrs.
Ada Sellers, has enlisted in lhe
army and is stationed at Ft.
Knox, Ky.
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
accompanied Mr. Milton
Houdashelt and family to near
New Lexington to attend the
:'&gt;5th wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Lewis.
·
Mrs. Arthur Cleland left
Sunday for an indefinite visit
with her son and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Cleland at

SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972

btvaraa• (pi,)
30-Unmarrled
1 woman
31-Small amount

M-Rupen (abbr.) 129-Havlna many
65-Compan point
fltsuru
66-Short ja.:ket
131-clayay e.rth
67-Aslan pt~nlnsula 132-P•rt of flr.plaee
69---Welrd
133-Cioth menur11
71--contalnar
134-Convulslve
73- PNPII'tls
twltchlnl
the WI)!
136--0utflts
74-Genu s of
13t-Addltlontl
olives
138-Qid pronoun
76-PtunJed
1 39- Pn~flx : down
79-Ptrmit
1-40-COYir tht
81-A slate (abbr.)
surface of
82-Limb
141- Period of time
14-Metal fasteners 1&lt;12- M•nufactured
85-lndlan tent
143- Walks on
87-Deposlt of mud 144- Daug;hter of
90-Heatlna;
l&lt;ine Minos
92-Rotatlns pleee 146-Fur scarf
93-Style of
148-Steep
automobile
• 1o49-Joln

32-Parmlt

95-Comen

!SO-Hostelry

33-Sip of ZOdiac

97-Ftulf
98-Parent (coi'OQ .)
99-Symbol fo1·
d)'lprosium

151-Pier

1- Entre.tltt

6-Campelltor
11-Pope'a palace
18-EIIIt't ntst
19-Gtt up
20-Ftow forth
21-0rn•mtnltd by
~ettln&amp; 'In
sm•ll pieces
23- Lona walk
(colloq.)
24-larp truck
26-Siclllan voletno
27-Road (abbr.)
2~-Sw•t

34--Mocc:~ttns

35-UMdlllttraled
38-Hindt,.
31--A&lt;!o.ond
4o-~Westem

101-Wint drink

42-Sharpen
43-Ynlt of

104-Evtrtretn tf'llfl
105-0ity In ltely
108-,.Siendtr finial
110- Haty

41~r

Siamese

46-Symbat for
tellurium
41-Rabblt hutch
48-Kenrueky hills
pastime

49-Rtllll

.

tllf!blishment
Sl ....Pilaster
52--Plural endln1

53-POIIHII\11
prO"noun
54-float !n •ir
55-oozlna
'
51-0ffsprine.
58-0eclaf'll
60-Urae on
61-brlnll slowly
62-Man'• n•m•

,,

...

103-Prlc~ly Mtd

,

112- W•rblt

curNncy
45-0omaln

'72

I

Mr. Otis Bailey is a patient in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Those here to visit him over the
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Bailey and children of
Dayton and Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Wigal, Bryan, George
and Harry of Prospect. ·
Mrs. Jack Sharpnack is a
patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Her· children of
Colwnbus have been here to
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy, visit her.
Parkvtew Kennels, Phone 992-•
Mrs. Ulah Bracken has
5~3 .
·
. returned to · her ,home after
8·15-lfc being hospiialized at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

ACROSS

SPECIAL

•••

IINLO/V1

"Now she's dow n; I reflected, but East made the
frightful play of a low diamond away from the ace and
there really was no way for
SoH II to&lt; JACOIY MOOfiH boot
to : "Win •t lridt~:· (c/o Ibis news~
popor), P.O. lox 419, lodio Citr

1970 Dtevelle SS396 Cpe.~----- 2295

CADILP
By Mrs. Francis Morris
1-:.;..;::_..,..,"""'t·--r--r:"'""='=
iHI~ 15 U~IN
Bea Jay Autherson. entered
V 'l
SPfo . CUSTOM PICKUP
'UMMIN&amp; UP.
Veterans Memorial Hospital L--'--'-&gt;~'-".A"---J'--"h..__._,.A
F-100, 302 V-8 engine, auto. Irons., radio, chrome weslern
for surgery.
mirrors, wheel covers, body side moulding, convenience
group. p. sleering, heavy duly springs, rear slep bumper.
Mrs. Essie Wiltshire who has
been hospitalized In Veterans 1-..:..:..,.:=.:;,;....--t---,(~"')r-'1 - Now U'I'1IIIP the circled lettere
V
to form the aurprlae arutwtr, u
Memorial Hospital, suffered a
t-,
111ueote4 b7 the tlboYe ·cartoon.
stroke. Her children, here to be =~;;i~~~~~~;=l
at her bedside, are Jack~- Plitle.IIAIISW!IIIn
Wiltshire of Huntington, · Bob
(AIIowert Moodoy)
Wiltshire of Mannet, Mr. and
'
Mrs. Norman Hoover of anJumbleo: PUPIL HOVEL DISCUS QUAIITZ
~,.;;::;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==::J

For Sale

\_.

$

Chevy Dealer
9'92-2126'''"" Open· Eves TU ..
· Pomny,.,

------

.Q109
'¥102
t10 .8 H
.9765

.

Yo~r

Daily·Sentinel

Everybody/s Wro~g Here

.

His fatal alibi

YIRIYT

4 GRAVE tot at Meigs
Memorial Gardens , '66 THUNDE'RBIRD, V-8,
reasonable. Phone 949-4962.
automatic, power sleerlng,
J.l-6tc
power brakes, power windows, phone 992-5637.
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
3-Hlp
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356. - - - - - - ' - 11 i Court St.
Tropical fish and supplies. 1963 FORD with 12 ft. dump,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Stop In and compare.
new p!lint, priced lo sell,
3·1·27tp
phone 992-3165.
' .
STRAW II E R R Y PI ants · 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine
Robinson's,
Catskill , · lett In tayawar. Beautiful 1970 FORD Camper Special,
Midland, Sure Crop, Sparkle,
pastel color, ful size model.
automatic, power steering,
Midway and Sunrise.. Leave
All buill-In to buttonhole, do
power brakes, phone 992-3954.
your order al !he • Midway
stretch HWirljl and fancy
J.5.3tc
Markel soon. Phone 992-2582
stitching. Pay 1ust 541.75 cash
or 992-2565.
or terms avallablt. Trade-Ins 196l DODGE '12 ton pickup.
3-2-3tc
accepted. Phone 992-5641 .
Phone 9o19-2977.
-------·
3-1-6tc
3-5-2tc
'EARLY AMERICAN Slerei:o,
AM-FM radio, ~ speed VACUUM Cleaner, new 1971
changer, ~ speaker sound · model. Complete with all 1969 DODGE Super Bee, 383 cu.
ln ., 4 speed transmission,
system, Balance $79. 32. Use
cleaning fools. Small paint
posltractlon. good condition,
our budget terms. Call 992- ·damage In shipping. Will take
$1,600 or take over payments,
7085.
$27 cash or budget plan
phone 992-2511 or 992-3205.
3-l-6tc
available. Phone "2-56.11 .
3-5-2tc
------~3·1-6tc -----:-'--STEREO-Radio Combination,
I = WALNUT finish, four
1964 CHEVELLE, 2 door hard·s
lnlermlxed changer, ~
top, call 992·7329 after 4 p.m.
speaker sound system, NEW Kawasaki mlnl-blke .
3-5-Jtc
Phone 992-2068 afler 4 p. m.
Balance ~3 .99 . Use. our
except
weekends.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
3·2·3tp
J.l-6tc

NOR111

c_

'"·

Cenlurlon, new condl!l.on,
never raced. Phone afler 6 p.
m. 992-3401.
3·2-6tc

WIN AT BRIDOI!

.

L

----1970 KAWASAKI, model G-31,

------

Local fowner, new car trade In, 13,000 miles, automati&lt;
trans., luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, blue
color, blk. vinyl Interior.

New ring job, clean Interior, good tires, radio, heater.
Sharp black finish .

OPEN UNTIL 8:00 .P.M. each evening
except Saturday &amp; Sunday.

·For Sale

Clean OK Used Cars
1971 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan 12495

1966 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan '1095

.

.

For Good

·

See Bill Nelson, Ron Smilh, Ceward Calvert, or Ed
Bartels.
Open Evenings Till 7 P.M.. Sal. Till 5 P.M. Service on
Sat. Tiil 12 Noon.
SALE ENDS MARCH 11, 1972

DEPENDABLE CITY

Pomeroy

Oilen 'Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M.

brakes, radio. fully equipped. No power windows or power
seats .

RAWLINGS

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992-5342

All these cars have auto., power steering, power disc

See

'2400 .

DOZER WORK . Reasonab 1e
r~tes. ACHD 11, Phone D.
Karr, 992-5367.
-=-=-=-:-:-:--:--2-2.:. 7 ·6tp
,BACKHOE AND DOZER work ••
Sepllc tanks Ins! ailed. Georao
IBill) Pullins. Phone 992-.u fe.
. ..j,lS.lfc

$1595

67 ~ILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

6-i.S.ltc

JOHN

. .

'3900

Monda• lhru Seturdly
606 E. Mloln, Pomoroy, 0 .

READY-MIX COt.1.RETE de·
livered rlghllo your•proJect.
Fasl and easy. Free
esllmales . Phone 992-3284 .
Goegleln Rea4y -MI.x Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-lfc

,

1967 Plymouth

s

HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
3-5-JOtc

-

'5500

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

- -----,---

Coronet, 2 dr. H.T.. V-8, p..st.,
console &amp; buckels, one owner.

·Sliver melalllc· flntsh· wllh black vinyl top, malchlng
Interior, Ml power equlpmenl, Cllmale Conlrol air
I condlllonlng. ;
WAS $4101 .

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative . For free
esllmales, phone Charles
Lisle. Syracuse,' V. V.
Johnson and ·Son, Inc.
3-2-tfc:- - - - -- - -

$1695

Sliver finish, black vinyl lop, black Inferior, full power,
Cllmale Conlrol atr, l owner new Cadillac trade.

On Mosl American Cars

C. BRADFORD, 1\uclloneer
Complele Service
·
Phone 94'1·3821
Recine, Ohio
Crllt Bredfbrd
5-1-tfc

•

Stock No. 58 Cata Iina 4 dr. H. T., bronze with .
tan vinyl top . Sticker price S5086.05 less air
cond. FREE.
Your Price $4632.12
Stoc;k No. 59 Catalina 2 dr. H.T., green with
white top~ Price S4952.291ess air FREE. Your
Price
$4508.36
Stock No. 85 Catalina Broug. 4 dr . sed .• solid
green . Sticker Price $4821.90 less air cond.
FREE. Buy a full size Pontiac with air for
only
$4390.90
Stock No. 91 Lesabre. Buick, 4 dr . sed., dark
blue bottom &amp;-light blue. Sticker Price $5053.05
less air cond. FREE.
Your Price$4622.05
Stock No. 92. Cata Iina 4 dr. sed., color dark
green . Sticker Price $4603.90 less air FREE.
You can move up to a full size Pontiac. For ·
only
.
$4172;90 ·
Stock No. 97 Catalina Broug . 2 dr . H.T) gold,
black vinyl top . Sticker Price $4909.90. Your
price with the air FREE. Just think this car
· for only
$4478.90

1968 Dodge

1970 CADillAC ElDORADo COUPE
I ,

For !his week only on the following cars In stock. If you
one oflhese cars we witt give you !he air conditioning .
FREE.

American, 2 dr. sedan. economy
six cyl ., std. shill, low mileage.

.·

_,

~uy

1969 Rambler

. :CADD.I.AC, :

Check Our ww Prices

Air Conditioning Free

s1995·

.,.'OWN A

·EXPERT·
Wheet.Alignment
: '5.55

______ _,___ - - - - - ~

. 1969 Dodge

1

HARRISON'S TV and Anlenne
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-10-tfc
Bu""t"'td-,e-r-s-&amp;--:Con "'A""L""L""S"'tD:-E::-:struction Co. We specialize In
aluminum. vinyl and sleel
farm . · A
bargain
at
siding; fiberglas, brick and
$10.000.00.
stone ; complete line of
MODERN
residential and commercial
RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
roof tng ;
remod ellng,
hot water healing. Nice
building,
suspended
ceiUngs,
kilchen with dishwasher, ,
Interior
and
exterior
paincook and bake units. Fully
ting ; complele line of
carpeted . Carport and
Masonry work. All work'
fenced yard . $20.000.00.
guaranteed to cuslomer
MIDDLEPORT
sallsfactlon. We are fully
3 BE OROOMS - Bath, cute
insured for you.r prolecllon. 32
kitchen, large living and
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
·dining . Garage. All on corner
2·15-JOtc
lot for only SIO.OOO.OO.
SEPTIC tanks (/ealled. Mi1111
Sanllallon, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph
WANT A GOOD PRICE FOR
YOUR PROPERTY, LIST
662-3035.
WITH US, AND START
LOOKING.
O'DELL WHEEL allghmenl
localed al Crossroads, Rt. 124.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Complele front end service,
ASSOCIATE
tune up and• brake service.
192-3325
992-2378
Wheels balanced ·etec,
lroolcally .
All
wor~
guaranleed.
Reasonable.
rales. Phone 992'3213.
CLELAND
'
7·27-tfc

New Car Sale. We Have 35 New
Buicks, Pontiacs &amp; Opels In Stock

Polara, 4 dr. sedan, V-8, p.. sf., p.br .• T-flile. air cond.

'

~ptniTII

Our Word Is Our Bond

GTO, V-8. 4 ·spd., p.isteerlng,
sharp &amp; low miiMge,

co.

742,3947
992-Seol
•
992-3898 742-4761
We are fully lnsurtd

NEW ~ISTt~G
175 ACRE STOCK FARM-2
barns, 2 ponds, 2 springs, 3
dug wells, and wafer tap, '
paid . 9 room renovated older
home. Plenty of good
pasture. Free gas with own
gas well. Would you believe
only $42,500.00.
4BEDROOMS
COUNTRY HOME - Hoi

We Service What We Sell

$2495

service.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, 0., 45769

heat,

'

'

240 Uncotn 51.
Middltport, Ohio
dboi Anlilony Phimblng
We hon a compltla Homo
Maintononco Service tho
yeoriaround, No mallllr wiNo!
your .notd. Complttt roof or
spouting repair. tntorior or ·
exterior carpentry. Ctllint
lite·~ Pontll~t onct Siding.
Complele Plumbing &amp;
Heoflng.
D'y Number m -2550
We h~ve 24 hr. omorgoncy

1

·Ideal . tor meellng place with or wlthoul kllchen·
privileges.
Individual Calerlng
Will seal up to 150 people.

water

VAN DYKE
FLAMINGO
KING

Lauder mikk. Special thanks

reservations for your
prlvale parties, banquets, '

special occasions.

Dependable
City
.
. 1970 Pontiac

•

I&amp;-· PLUMBING

Mak~

500 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2174 .

AT

.All WEATHER ROOFING
i: &amp; OONSTRIICTION
.' .

The '
OJchid Room.

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

fo pliue our cuslomen: ''

· • Or. INordlop,
qlne, vinyl root. auto. trans .. w-i&gt;-w
tlra radio, p. slt&lt;trlnii, p. brat&lt;n. bumper euerds, whtel
CDvti'l, dilar
tulrds, lac. 11r cond., dull IPtllk•n,
body
llnltd oteu.

. I

From the largos!
Bulldozer Radlalor to the
Smallest Heater Core.
·Nathon Bltgs
R dl
s ·
a ·~ Plclattst

4~-NV .:'VII-' ,l.ap·

'

J

'72 CNIANQ

Business Serli.ces

Phone 992-3874.

0677, Monday and Tuesday
only, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
3·5·21c or used mobile. home, lry
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
7L-;A-;:D;;:Y;,;
T;;
O' t"lv'e-;:i
' n-w"'it;:-h""e"lder Iy Kanauga, Ohio.
lady, light 1housekeeping ,
phone 949-4904 or 667-3319.
- -- - - - - - 3-5-3tc · 60Xl2, 2- bedroom, all -electric,
- - -- - -- -air condllloned, 8x20 ft. Porch

HARTFORD

Dai~

no

SPECIAL "

I. '

necessary. $3.57 an our . Not
3-5-tfc
too much for delivery c;tnd - - - - - - - - sales of sma ll appliance. Full

MASON

The

For Rent

DELIVERY• DRIV.ER SALE's . d ROOMS &amp; bath, unfurnished
Young men for im me ilate house, 1650 Lincoln Heights.

0

Carrlen For

'-

The Publ is her reserves the
right to edi t or reject any ads

12 cents

WANTED I

.

•

. For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times~Sentinel ,Classifieds
WANT ADS
Wanted To Buy
INFORMATION
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
DEADLINES
tables. Brass beds. di shes(·
P.M.
Day
Before

'

113-Man's
nlckn1mt
114-Pronoun
11 5--Cushlons

117-Sttrnnns
liB-Chinese
dyntst)'

119- Hail
120-For uampie
Cabbr.)
121-Mountaln
nympol

1-23-Swlss river

12C.:....Sh•ttow
VI IIIII

125-Post
126-Maeaw

,2 7-0llct•d on Ice

DOWN

1..... Pmentlous
home
2--conductl
l 3~dessol
r ' discord
4- Suc:C:or

5-compass polnl
6- Utt
7- lrrilates
8-Conlend

9-Cqnjunctlon
IQ-FoUowar of
Levi
ll- Re1•rd u
sacred '
12- Part of " to be"
13- Unll ol
Chinese
turroncy
14- Bury
15-E'Isy calt
16-lndoneslan

tribum•n
17-corr.p•ss point·
21- Atlributes
22-Tid.,tsl
2J-Lease

('

or the
Sta;net {abbr.)

2S-Devoured
27-Dealtr in
proPflrtl"
28--Htlstlrt'
jackets

flo-Writer

91-Symbol for
nlton
94-Fieecy

10--Medltatt
31-Repelr

headdress
96-Symbol for

33- lncllnes
3s-Ve&amp;nla
36-lnfluible
37-Mine
IXCIII'Itlan

krypton
98-Small fa ctory
99-0eprived of
office ,.
100-G iis tan

39- Edible seed
41-Aeptlltlon
42-Usten to
44-Sarter
47--Quote

102-Sweet
s ubstance
104-Metel fasteners
lOS-Shaded walk
106-Amerlcln

48-Jet of water
49-Part of flower
50-Uraed on

Indian
107-Nullifles
109-Hiehest

5-4-Retls
'
55-Ston:ae pit

standard
Ill-Small tpeeles

56---G•ff ropt
of lory
59-Corners
. 11 2-Triaonometrle
60-Portieo
fullction
61-A continent
113-CIII
(abbr.)
· 116-Poled to;
f.i3-Benk of a rl\ler
portrait
66-Printer's
118-Chureh service
mnsurt
119-Sollclludt
67-Manuscript
122-Hold b1ck
(tbbr,)
124-~t..tium .. rt
68-A one-yur·old
125-F~m•le horse
70-Herolc
126-Pitee whtrt
71-Fiylnc mammal
bees ,,.. kept
72-Beverqe
128-Low 10f1
73-Country of
Uo-Rustian
Europf
commune

75-Pnwldln&amp;
weapons

71--Guido't
hl&amp;h note
78-0islin&amp;ulshed
Service Medal
(abbr.)

'so-unlock
83-Possesslve
pronoun
86-Ardtnt
89-Pertalnlng to ·
a lobe
89- Journey

131- Pattem
132-Btd linen
135--Givt up

137- Mncullne
138-AIIowtnct
for wute

140- ln favor of

142-Witty · r~mark

143-f&gt;tlfinite article
144- Aiternatlne
curre nt (abbr.)
145-Neg;ttivt
1 &gt;~7 - Prepos1Uon

148-Society of
Jest.:s (ll bbr.)

I

Kingston, Ind .
Critt Bradford, Jr. of Worthington spent the weekend and
Mr. and Mrs, Herman Carson
of Coolville spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Crill
Bradford, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cleland of
Parkersburg and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Cleland of Flatwood
Road, Pomeroy , were guests of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Shane
have moved into the former

s~::::J

'3180

MARTIN FORD SALES

George Clark property .
Parkersburg spent Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simp. with her parenta, Mr. and Mrs.
son and Miss Mildred Gillilan George Neigler.
spent Sunday in Colwnbus wilh
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Carlyle and
family.
Mr . Lynne ldallory of
Nelsonville was a weekend
guest of his parenls, Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Mallory. ·
Mrs. Mattie Yost was a guest
Sunday of her sister, Mrs.
Hattie Paynter.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
of Patriol spent ·Sunday wilh
his mother, Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
Mr. and Mrs. Rob Palmer of

SOLUTION

�..
I

22- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday , March 5, 1972

5

clocks,

Publication

Cancellation &amp; Corrections

'

and -or

com pl e te

house holds . Wr ite M. D.
Miller. Rt. 4. Pome roy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 . •
--11- I Hf &lt;

Monday Deadllnt 9 a .m.

Will be accepted untll9a .m . for~

Day of Publication,.
REGUL.ATIONS

Wanted To Do

deemed objectional. The

BABYSITTING in my home,

·publi sher
w i II
not
be
responsible for more than one
Wlcor r ect inse rt ion .

Mrs . Gl enn Smith. Roc k
Springs Rd ., ph one 992 -6187 .

3. 1-6tc

RATES
For Want Ad Ser vice
5 cents ·per Word one Insertion
M ini mum Charge 75c

per word

.

Help Wanted '

. '.'

work ,

ex~erien ce

or part ti me. Mr . Row, 446·

and

Mobile Homes For Sale

Sentinel·

Ph. 614-992-2156

aluminum

and

LANCE LOT

three

consecutive insertions .
• 18 cents per word six cdn .
secutlve insertions .

~------~

r."-'---, ··;·,;;~RL··,·.· . .c:--60
:=,=w:--,::..cc,.:=-,---,
AT

&gt;II. IONIG.I·fT·· Ilt ~l&lt;

.,r

'-OIJ !"&lt;::

FA"l'kf!ll IF' HE

25 Per Cent Discount on pa id

awning,

aluminum skirting , com pletely setup. Beautiful
location.
Owneror
leaving
slale.·
Phone 949-4892
992-5272
. '

SMITH NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.·

~----------~---~--t-O-~lfc ~P~h-~"~2~-2~17~4~==··~~==~

ads and ads pa id within 10

days:
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUA. RY

MILLER

Free Estimate
ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CO~DITIONING

Card of Thanks

MOBILE HOMES

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

I WISH

1220 Washinglon Blvd .
Belpre, Ohio

Sl .SO for SO word1 minimum . ·

Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Add it ional 25c Charge per
Adverti sement.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon

12' - 14' - 24' - WlDE

CAPTAIN EASY
Wlff~

Al•if'

THf' GLJARP
\YATCHP06DI,.TP'A CTED ~y ,._ CHe5f4H• DL!CEY

Saturday .

:!Jli(CUJ)S

N

!"'Tf~IN6 8~ED,OE'~

C OLII.IT'RY!!f!!!~

to tha nk all ot my

frJ.ends who se nt the many get
well , birthday and Valentine
cards ,' fl owers, pictures and
letters while I was in the

For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

hospital. They were all deeply
apprec iated.
Fannie Belle Brown

The New '72
Models-

3-5-ltp
-:-:::--c~-:-:---­

WE WISH to express ou r si n-

cere

th anks, to relatives.
neighbors and friends, for

their kindne•s and sympathy
extended to us during the loss

LIBERTY
BELMONT

of ou r dear Mother and
Grandmother,
Ida
to those sending f loral
arrangement s, fo od and
cards, also Rev . Forrest

Donley, Rev . Wendell Slut.
ler,

Ewing

FUneral

and Gerald
k indness

SEE THE NEW
FLAMINGO
ALL ELECTRIC
HOME!'

Home

Powell . Your

will

never

be

forgotten.
Mrs. Lill ian Napper, Mr.
Robert Laudermilk , Mr.
Lawren~e . A. Napper, Miss
Betty ·Sprouse.
J.5-ltp

- - -- --

BIG DISOOUNT

Found

ON 3 .

RlNG fou nd in Pomeroy_Owner
may have by identifying.
Phone 99H175.
3-S-Jtp

1971 MODELS

-----·Notice

All
Prices
Include
Delivery and Setup.
1Best Financing Plan
Available. Up to 12 Years
to
Pay. On the Spot
Dan Thompson
The Dealin' Man .• ,, Financing •... Bank .. Rates .

WI LL DO bookkeeping, ta x
services In the ·privacy of my

home. Evelyn C. Young,
phone 949-3741, Racine.
2-21·12tc

'

(t-----.-----;--

5tt\ANNUAL Hereford S~ l e': 26
Bull s

and

22

Females,

Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Associa tion .

All

Talk lo Dan Thompson, Joe Ho.odor Tom Llovender.

clean

pedigrees both horned and
polled. Saturday, March 18,
1972. Show 10:00 A.M. Sale ·1
P.M. Rock Springs Fair
Grou nds, Rt. 33. three miles , CAMPUs CLATrER
north:.of Pomeroy. Ohio . For
I 'M ~AVIN6 ANOTf&lt;ER.
ca talogs write to lloyd Black DOOit !NSTJ.LL.ED FOR

wood , Sa le Mg r. , Rt.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

3,

GOBLE MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Lot Phone 992-7004. If no answer, Ph. 992-2196
586 Locust St.
Middleport
Open Daily 10 to 6, Sunday 1:00 to15:00

T~E s:..si(.ETS~ LL
J.~E:NJ.

3-n lc
GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club, Su nday, March

'

5, noon ti ll ...

For Rent

GU N SHOOT. Sunday, March 5,
1 p. m. Factory choked guns
only. Seco nd pl ace shooters
get free shot In next match .
Assor ted meats . Racine Gun

Club.

3-2·3tc

U'l. ABNER
TOO LATE FOR HIM

tJGI!!- C&gt;fOI&lt;l!!

TO ANSWER., SON-

'IO.J'RE. tlt1 tiAP:'Y'

KOSCOT KOSMETI CS, Flame
of Hope Perfumes, Human
and Synthetic wigs . We're
here for your conven ience.

2-25-tfc
AN YONE interested in learning
cra fts and making flowers
contact Eulah Francis at 992 -

3-H tp

c hoked shotguns

will

AND DONT

THINK 1 DON'T
A ~&lt;ECIATf. IT!

be

handica pped . Rifles will be in
scope, bench rest and off
hand . Rif le shoote rs will

3-l-41c

Wat chers 1R I Class in
Pomeroy writ e : Wel~ht
Watchers IRI, 1863 Sect1on
Rd, Cincinnati, Oh io 45237.
10-3-tfc

--------

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
sick TV lo Chuck ' s TV shop,
151 Butternut Ave .. Pome.rov

11 -21 -tfc

Wanted T.o Buy
OLD
POCKET
kn ives,
espe&lt;ial ly Case XX. Also
have other old knives to trade

or sell. Phone 992-2343 .
3·5-ltc

-=------CHARDLAIS BULLS, only $400

from

The Station
That Listens

To You

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

automation . Modern Poulti-y ,

Bradbury School. Call 992- 399 w. Ma'n
o , p_omeroy, 992 .
5308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
2164.
·
house south from Bradbury
3-5-ltc
School. Pets welcome.
2-21 -tfc GREEN MAYTAG dishwasher,
2 BEDROOM mobile home In I year old, phone 247-2664.
3·5-6tc
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.
2-16-tfc NEW PONTOON boats, 3 good
used boats, runabout and
S PACIOU S unfurnished · cabin
cruiser. Boa! Repairs,
apartment in Mason, 4 rooms
Middleport
Boa! Shop, Pearl
&amp; bath, electric heat ; phone
Dick
Karr 992-5367.
Street,
773-5975.
3-5-Jtc
2-27-61c .· -.,- - -- - - -- -

.------:--.....

------

---:---:-:---

--

2 BEuROOM, 1/ 2 double, fur nished on 4th &amp; College In Real Estate For Sale
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
NICE 2-Siory nome wllh fuil
basemen!, 2 lois, new forced
2-29-6tc
air furnace . Near Pomeroy.
Elementary School. Phone
FURNISHED an&lt;! unfurnished
992-7384 to see.
apartments. Close to school
Phone 99·2·5d3d.
·
11-7-lfc
10-t,.ffc
SIX ROOM house, IJ3 o3utlernut
5 I{QOM house, 120 Lincoln
Ave. Conlact Ed Hedrick , 2137
Road, phone 992-2433 or 992·
Wadsworlh Drive, Columbus,
2883.
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
11·21 -tfc
3·3·6fc

:::-:-~-:--­

TRAILER. Brown's Trailer

4 WHEEL drive jeep. Phone
after 5 p.m. 992.3062.
2-27-12tc

12 FT. WI DE trailer with air
conditioning, washer &amp; dryer
- $3,700 ; see Harold Johnson,
Chester. Ohio.
-:-::--:-:-- -- - - -3·_5-6tp
GOOD mixed hay . Phone
Wilkesville 669-4777.
3-Htc

- -- - - -

furnish own shells. Any
calibre ol ri f l e, muzz l e
loa ders included.
WEIGHT ~
overweig ht ladies, tee ns and
men in terested in a Weight

- -- - - - --

each, papers available . Call
698-4803.
3-5-ltc
TWO BEDROOM mobile home, ---::--:-:-----Call 992-5623 .
3 BEDROOM Vlndale mobile
3-5·31c
home, l'h baths on choice
- -&gt;1
,,-:-. -----rental lot. Herman Bolinger,
5 ROOM and bath apartment, 992 -5570.
turnished.
M&amp;G
Food
J.5-6tp
Market, 3 mile south, Mid- - -- - -- - - - dleport. Rt. 7.
H &amp; N day old or started
3-2-3tp " Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
cage grown available.
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
Poultry
housing
&amp;
mobile home across

two classes . Open sites and

ABOUT YOUR

MEIGS INN
ROOMS
PH. 992-3629

Please call 992-5113.

A SHOT GUN and rifle match
will be held Sunday, March 5,
at 12 o'cloc k, Rutland Gun
Club, New Lima Road. Hand

MALE Norwegian E lkhound
pups, 10 weeks old - $25 ;
phone 992-2362,
3·5-Jtp

by
Day, Week, Month
Liberal Rates

ALL RIGHT.':'

5884.

For Sale
THE

3 2·31c

Court ,

M i ner svi ll e,

phone 992-3324.

'

992-3975

Ohio,

Phone
992-5786

Real Estate F9r Sale

Virgil B. ·
TeAford, Sr.

l lf2

baths.

Modern kitchen. Recreation
room . 2 drilled wells.
Foundation for 2nd house. 10
acres. NOW only $20,000.00.
NEW• LISTING
7 ACRES - On Route 7 near
Eastern School. Ideal for
housing project or small

REALTY
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
Pomeroy, Ohto
BUSINESS INVESTMENT
Large tile and brick
building, 2 story, 4 aparl ·
ments, (3 furnished) 2
business rooms, storage
room, present business goes

with lhe building . $29.500.
FAMILY HOME
4 bedrooms, bath, porches,
forced air heat, large barn
and storage building. $8,900.
80ACRES
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP 1•12 story frame home, 7

rooms, bath, cellar, large
barn, crib, implement bldg .,
chicken house, milk house.
Close

to

the new mines.

$17,600.
CHEAP HOME
11h story frame, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, bath , ullllty
room , some hardwood floors,
gas forced air heat, p()rch,
S3,500 . I mmed l ate
possession .
1 story frame, 2 bedrooms,
cablnels
In
kitchen,
basement, large lot. All In
excellent condition . Just
$7,900.
.
WE HAVE 35 PROPERTIES, ONE OF WHICH MAY
SUIT YOU. COME TO THE
OFFICE OR ' CALL, WE
WILL BE GLAD TO SHOW
THEM TO YOU.
Henry Cleland, Realtor

·.' 3-3-tfc

For'Sale
SKYLINE Mobile home, 10 x 50
- S2,ooo; II interested phone
992-5433 .

~-::---:------~
3 -3-3tc
JOHN Deere bater and hay
conditioner . Phone 949-3193.
3·3-3tc
TROPICAL

-FIS!i.

fancy
gupp1es. angels an d breeders ,

Bellas and supplies. Phone
992 -5443.
_ _ _ --:----~ · lfc 1

·Of Cowse .:You Cmt" ·

INTERIOR i, exterior oalntlnq.
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
2-28-5tc
-:--=---~

GET your Doat read~ for
summer! Call D. Karr, 992.
-5367.
.
2-27-6lc

--:-----o---=-""'=""'

AUTOMOBILE insu~ance been
cancelled?
Los! . your
~f:Jalor's license.? Calt .992.

WHITE

REALTY~

Ccmtact. 'IJ II:Ciate
VERA EBLEN
992-3020

192 N. 2nd

Middleport

69 CADIUAC SEDAN DeVILLE

Fury Ill, 2 dr. H.J., V-8, std.
shift, looks &amp; runs fine.

. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rales Ph -146
4782, Gallipolis. Joh~ Ruiseu:
O..ner &amp; Operalor.
=----,~~
S.l 2-.tfc
SEWiNG MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
l'he Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
·
3-29-tfc

LOOKING for lnveslmenlt
properly? Fantastic Is theo
word for this spacious 12-·
room , 2-bath all brick home,
setup as duplex, or can be
used as offices . Located In
Middleport's business district
overlooking the Ohio River.
6
Boo-m-2 bath home, SIGNS, posters, mall boxes an.,
(shingle). cellar house, favorite · saying; hand leigarage, plus extra lots. One tot tered; In your favor lie style.
HOUSE , 1642 Lincoln H~lghts . has walkways, set up for
David Hooker, Rl. 2, Albany,
Call Danny Thompson, 992- trailer. Located In business Ohio 45710 (Pagelown) .
2196.
district, across from the A&amp;P
2-6-JO!c.
7' 18-ttc Store In Middleport. Floor ;;-;:::-:----':-'~--7-:­
turn. Asking .. . S20,000 for all. Why buy new fur.n lturef Have
that old made new by Sylvia's
HOUSE In Long aottom, phone
Upholstering Shop, Mrs.
985-3529.
' Lot with radial garage,
lneeds
roof
90
ft.
frontage,
Woodrow
T. Zwilling, Prop.,
1-28-tt.c suitable for large trailer or
Syracuse, Ohio.
--:.-.,--- - small business. In business
2 1• 301
BUILDING lots In Branchwood dis lrlct •. across from the A&amp;P
· •· p
Subdivision at Rock Springs, Store, Middleport, Ohio
T. P. water, phone 992-2789. Asking ... $4,000.
.
3·1·12tc
Le tart Falls - 10 room house
Rent
with
bath, basement, fenced.
3 BEDROOM ranch lype home,
In lawn, lwo buildings, fuel oil
Arbaugh Addlllon, Tuppers
heat,
5 lots, three of them TWO Bedroom home In AlbanyPlains. All . new with lotal
tangsvltle . Mlddleporl .
on tho river front
located
electric and · central atr ·
Pomeroy
area . A. W. Walson
selling due to Ill health, $25,oo0
conditioping, bath and 3.4 fully
P.
0
.
Box
35, Langsville, Ohio:
for all. Home has two porches,
car~eted, full basement ·
_
_
_
_
_ _ ___:3:...;.·1-tllp
one
enclo-.d,
wi
thin
walking
garape In basemen!. ·see by
dis
:ance
of
school.
appotntment, phone 992-2196
MODERN lor 4 bedroom home.
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson.
I Need Lis lints lot Farma 11N1
Phone 992·3062.
, .
Financing available.
Homes. Also Hondlt Rtnt1ls.
3-2-lfc
12·JO·tft

Wanted To

r
'

.

$1095
1964 Dtevrolet
Pickup, 6 · cylinder, 3 speed
'
sharpest lillie '64 In !own.

. sags

Full power equlpmenl, Cllmale Conlrol ·air conditioning, like new w-s-w tires, only 26,000 miles.

Jones. Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallitce Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

Cldlllooc. Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Avo liable

· 992·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDI,EPORT

Sat.

"You'li like Our Qua lily Way of DOing Bustne5s"

r------------, , 12&gt;&lt;60,
2 Bedroom Mobile home,
Fot Sale

For.SaJe
36":X 23" x .oo9

Aluminum
Sheets
..
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY
.. USES
)•

.

."V J IF, ~/ ~t'!'lf

II""

8 for s·1.00 ·

The

like new. Priced for quick
sale. For further Information
742 3183
call
·
3.2.3tc

THREE one-half Angus cows
with 6 wk. old calves, also
yearling
grade Angus helters. ·
Phone 843·2436.
3.2.3tp
1964 PL YMDUTH Vallanl
Statton Wagon, $150; Living
room sulle, contour chair, 110.
See Edna Monk, Larkin 51.,
Rutland:
3-2·31c

TIICU

l'
-:============~
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
s·nvciAL
c500 E. Main St.
Pomeroy. Ohio
5
'72
_ ~/:!:f '3595 ·.
FORD LTD
4 Or. Pillared hardlop, blue vinyl roof, med. blue melalllc
cover, w-s-wllres, vlslbillly group, radio, bumper guards,
door edge guards, lac. air cond., wheel covers, vinyl body
m.ouldlnn,
• tlnled glas•. This Is a Driver's Education car
with 4,600 miles. In ex.cellent cqnd. from bumper to
bumper. The remaining portion of 12,000 mile warranly lo

ftrf~rul 0011 ~-~kat,:::!:! _,J

~ ~ ~~® M i ' · ·
UIIICRmble the•e four Jumble1,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words.

---,---- -

WEST .

.J4

EAST

.63
¥AKJ95
t QJ6 3.
.102

¥83
t A972
.QJ843

S0\1111 (D)

.AK8752
¥Q764
tK
.AK
Both vulnerable
West North Eul , Souih
p...
Pass
Pass

2 N.T.
4•

Pass

2.

3.
Pass Pa"

Station,

up the "Battle RoyRI" in his
own ·words. ·" I ~WJaned inwardly when South orned
that horrible two bl and
wondered if I dared Impose ·
the maximum fine.
"The rest .of the bidding
was normal. West openell the
king of hearts and Instead of
making the killing shift to a
trump continued with the ace
and anotbl!r heart.
"Now s~e's going to mak~
this horrible contract, I refleeted bitterly, but dummy
came through. He 'took his
nine of trumps, remarked,
'Here'a wliere dummy takes.
a trick,' and tossed the nlne
In the center of the table.
. Ea1t plunked on the jack.
\

H.Y. 10019.

South to lose another trick .
Game and rubber.
"A genuine grand finale.
I lined South •10 for the two
bid, West 115 for bad defense,
N o r t h UO for chucking a
trick as dummy and East
$10 for about as bad a play ·
as I have even seen." ·

Opening lead- • K

By Oawald &amp; Jamea Jaeaby
We .wlll Jet Culbertson wind

Hw Y01k,

(~IWSPA"l

llfTUPliSI ASSN.I

•J.CII ~UJi ·rtJI'At
Th• blddil1fl

w11t

hr. been :

Horth

Eut

South
Paos
3t

Dble
zt
p..
•t
Paas Ut
Pus
• N.T.
P- 5¥
P...
5 N.T.
Pau
1'111
8t
Paos
'
You, South, hold:
•n• u • A q 1 t Au .u 4
What do you do now?
A-Bid olx optdes, Your ptrtnor to trylq to plio seven. fnat
Y"" don't hold non one lipide
honor.
. TODAY'S QtJJsTION
1t

6.

What do you
wilh:

bid

01

dealer

.IUU ¥AZ tl .A KQ78 ?

Anower Monday

, I

Green finish, blk . vinyl roof , green vinyl Inferior. new .
wide oval tires, 4 speed lrans .. power steering, radio. A
sweetheart of a buy .
.

1970 Dodge Polara ________!2395
Factory air conditioning, V-8 engine, auto. trans., P.S.,
P.B., good W·s-w tire s, many more extras. A low price
now!

1969 atev. Impala Cpe. ----- '2095

V-8 engine. automatic trans. , p. steering, faclory air
COnditioned, good W •W tires, radio, dark green finiSh with
spotless Interior.

1967 Pontiac Grand Prix------1395
Converllble. V-8 auto., P.S., P.B., lilt steering wheel, lapci
player, good !ires, dark blue, like new top while, white
buckel seats wllh console, nice and clean 1owner car.

1967 atevelle Malibu HT Cpe.-)1395.
327 engine. 4 speed lrans., clean Interior &amp; good tires.
Med. grn. finish . Nice.
·

1967 Ford Mustang---------'1295
6 cyl., auto. trans ., radio, new tires, maroon finish w'llh .
black interior.

'

.

1967 Chev. El' Camino
I

V-8 engine, aulo. trans .. p. steering, radio, good W· W
!Ires, red finish . Anice one. Cover for body.

'1695

bloh blah ..•

\

I

I I

Pomeroy Motor Co.

V "J

I

·)
I
(
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1.-.:..:.:::..=======--l

cinnati. .

Yetlerdty'•

,
'

Antwer~ TlaU lllOuld detuibe a hilfh·tpirit~d

,.

chUeler- ''CHIPPII"

Eugene Sellers, son of Mrs.
Ada Sellers, has enlisted in lhe
army and is stationed at Ft.
Knox, Ky.
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
accompanied Mr. Milton
Houdashelt and family to near
New Lexington to attend the
:'&gt;5th wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Lewis.
·
Mrs. Arthur Cleland left
Sunday for an indefinite visit
with her son and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Cleland at

SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972

btvaraa• (pi,)
30-Unmarrled
1 woman
31-Small amount

M-Rupen (abbr.) 129-Havlna many
65-Compan point
fltsuru
66-Short ja.:ket
131-clayay e.rth
67-Aslan pt~nlnsula 132-P•rt of flr.plaee
69---Welrd
133-Cioth menur11
71--contalnar
134-Convulslve
73- PNPII'tls
twltchlnl
the WI)!
136--0utflts
74-Genu s of
13t-Addltlontl
olives
138-Qid pronoun
76-PtunJed
1 39- Pn~flx : down
79-Ptrmit
1-40-COYir tht
81-A slate (abbr.)
surface of
82-Limb
141- Period of time
14-Metal fasteners 1&lt;12- M•nufactured
85-lndlan tent
143- Walks on
87-Deposlt of mud 144- Daug;hter of
90-Heatlna;
l&lt;ine Minos
92-Rotatlns pleee 146-Fur scarf
93-Style of
148-Steep
automobile
• 1o49-Joln

32-Parmlt

95-Comen

!SO-Hostelry

33-Sip of ZOdiac

97-Ftulf
98-Parent (coi'OQ .)
99-Symbol fo1·
d)'lprosium

151-Pier

1- Entre.tltt

6-Campelltor
11-Pope'a palace
18-EIIIt't ntst
19-Gtt up
20-Ftow forth
21-0rn•mtnltd by
~ettln&amp; 'In
sm•ll pieces
23- Lona walk
(colloq.)
24-larp truck
26-Siclllan voletno
27-Road (abbr.)
2~-Sw•t

34--Mocc:~ttns

35-UMdlllttraled
38-Hindt,.
31--A&lt;!o.ond
4o-~Westem

101-Wint drink

42-Sharpen
43-Ynlt of

104-Evtrtretn tf'llfl
105-0ity In ltely
108-,.Siendtr finial
110- Haty

41~r

Siamese

46-Symbat for
tellurium
41-Rabblt hutch
48-Kenrueky hills
pastime

49-Rtllll

.

tllf!blishment
Sl ....Pilaster
52--Plural endln1

53-POIIHII\11
prO"noun
54-float !n •ir
55-oozlna
'
51-0ffsprine.
58-0eclaf'll
60-Urae on
61-brlnll slowly
62-Man'• n•m•

,,

...

103-Prlc~ly Mtd

,

112- W•rblt

curNncy
45-0omaln

'72

I

Mr. Otis Bailey is a patient in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Those here to visit him over the
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Bailey and children of
Dayton and Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Wigal, Bryan, George
and Harry of Prospect. ·
Mrs. Jack Sharpnack is a
patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Her· children of
Colwnbus have been here to
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy, visit her.
Parkvtew Kennels, Phone 992-•
Mrs. Ulah Bracken has
5~3 .
·
. returned to · her ,home after
8·15-lfc being hospiialized at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

ACROSS

SPECIAL

•••

IINLO/V1

"Now she's dow n; I reflected, but East made the
frightful play of a low diamond away from the ace and
there really was no way for
SoH II to&lt; JACOIY MOOfiH boot
to : "Win •t lridt~:· (c/o Ibis news~
popor), P.O. lox 419, lodio Citr

1970 Dtevelle SS396 Cpe.~----- 2295

CADILP
By Mrs. Francis Morris
1-:.;..;::_..,..,"""'t·--r--r:"'""='=
iHI~ 15 U~IN
Bea Jay Autherson. entered
V 'l
SPfo . CUSTOM PICKUP
'UMMIN&amp; UP.
Veterans Memorial Hospital L--'--'-&gt;~'-".A"---J'--"h..__._,.A
F-100, 302 V-8 engine, auto. Irons., radio, chrome weslern
for surgery.
mirrors, wheel covers, body side moulding, convenience
group. p. sleering, heavy duly springs, rear slep bumper.
Mrs. Essie Wiltshire who has
been hospitalized In Veterans 1-..:..:..,.:=.:;,;....--t---,(~"')r-'1 - Now U'I'1IIIP the circled lettere
V
to form the aurprlae arutwtr, u
Memorial Hospital, suffered a
t-,
111ueote4 b7 the tlboYe ·cartoon.
stroke. Her children, here to be =~;;i~~~~~~;=l
at her bedside, are Jack~- Plitle.IIAIISW!IIIn
Wiltshire of Huntington, · Bob
(AIIowert Moodoy)
Wiltshire of Mannet, Mr. and
'
Mrs. Norman Hoover of anJumbleo: PUPIL HOVEL DISCUS QUAIITZ
~,.;;::;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==::J

For Sale

\_.

$

Chevy Dealer
9'92-2126'''"" Open· Eves TU ..
· Pomny,.,

------

.Q109
'¥102
t10 .8 H
.9765

.

Yo~r

Daily·Sentinel

Everybody/s Wro~g Here

.

His fatal alibi

YIRIYT

4 GRAVE tot at Meigs
Memorial Gardens , '66 THUNDE'RBIRD, V-8,
reasonable. Phone 949-4962.
automatic, power sleerlng,
J.l-6tc
power brakes, power windows, phone 992-5637.
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
3-Hlp
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356. - - - - - - ' - 11 i Court St.
Tropical fish and supplies. 1963 FORD with 12 ft. dump,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Stop In and compare.
new p!lint, priced lo sell,
3·1·27tp
phone 992-3165.
' .
STRAW II E R R Y PI ants · 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine
Robinson's,
Catskill , · lett In tayawar. Beautiful 1970 FORD Camper Special,
Midland, Sure Crop, Sparkle,
pastel color, ful size model.
automatic, power steering,
Midway and Sunrise.. Leave
All buill-In to buttonhole, do
power brakes, phone 992-3954.
your order al !he • Midway
stretch HWirljl and fancy
J.5.3tc
Markel soon. Phone 992-2582
stitching. Pay 1ust 541.75 cash
or 992-2565.
or terms avallablt. Trade-Ins 196l DODGE '12 ton pickup.
3-2-3tc
accepted. Phone 992-5641 .
Phone 9o19-2977.
-------·
3-1-6tc
3-5-2tc
'EARLY AMERICAN Slerei:o,
AM-FM radio, ~ speed VACUUM Cleaner, new 1971
changer, ~ speaker sound · model. Complete with all 1969 DODGE Super Bee, 383 cu.
ln ., 4 speed transmission,
system, Balance $79. 32. Use
cleaning fools. Small paint
posltractlon. good condition,
our budget terms. Call 992- ·damage In shipping. Will take
$1,600 or take over payments,
7085.
$27 cash or budget plan
phone 992-2511 or 992-3205.
3-l-6tc
available. Phone "2-56.11 .
3-5-2tc
------~3·1-6tc -----:-'--STEREO-Radio Combination,
I = WALNUT finish, four
1964 CHEVELLE, 2 door hard·s
lnlermlxed changer, ~
top, call 992·7329 after 4 p.m.
speaker sound system, NEW Kawasaki mlnl-blke .
3-5-Jtc
Phone 992-2068 afler 4 p. m.
Balance ~3 .99 . Use. our
except
weekends.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
3·2·3tp
J.l-6tc

NOR111

c_

'"·

Cenlurlon, new condl!l.on,
never raced. Phone afler 6 p.
m. 992-3401.
3·2-6tc

WIN AT BRIDOI!

.

L

----1970 KAWASAKI, model G-31,

------

Local fowner, new car trade In, 13,000 miles, automati&lt;
trans., luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, blue
color, blk. vinyl Interior.

New ring job, clean Interior, good tires, radio, heater.
Sharp black finish .

OPEN UNTIL 8:00 .P.M. each evening
except Saturday &amp; Sunday.

·For Sale

Clean OK Used Cars
1971 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan 12495

1966 Volkswagen Sq. Back Sedan '1095

.

.

For Good

·

See Bill Nelson, Ron Smilh, Ceward Calvert, or Ed
Bartels.
Open Evenings Till 7 P.M.. Sal. Till 5 P.M. Service on
Sat. Tiil 12 Noon.
SALE ENDS MARCH 11, 1972

DEPENDABLE CITY

Pomeroy

Oilen 'Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M.

brakes, radio. fully equipped. No power windows or power
seats .

RAWLINGS

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992-5342

All these cars have auto., power steering, power disc

See

'2400 .

DOZER WORK . Reasonab 1e
r~tes. ACHD 11, Phone D.
Karr, 992-5367.
-=-=-=-:-:-:--:--2-2.:. 7 ·6tp
,BACKHOE AND DOZER work ••
Sepllc tanks Ins! ailed. Georao
IBill) Pullins. Phone 992-.u fe.
. ..j,lS.lfc

$1595

67 ~ILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

6-i.S.ltc

JOHN

. .

'3900

Monda• lhru Seturdly
606 E. Mloln, Pomoroy, 0 .

READY-MIX COt.1.RETE de·
livered rlghllo your•proJect.
Fasl and easy. Free
esllmales . Phone 992-3284 .
Goegleln Rea4y -MI.x Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-lfc

,

1967 Plymouth

s

HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
3-5-JOtc

-

'5500

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

- -----,---

Coronet, 2 dr. H.T.. V-8, p..st.,
console &amp; buckels, one owner.

·Sliver melalllc· flntsh· wllh black vinyl top, malchlng
Interior, Ml power equlpmenl, Cllmale Conlrol air
I condlllonlng. ;
WAS $4101 .

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative . For free
esllmales, phone Charles
Lisle. Syracuse,' V. V.
Johnson and ·Son, Inc.
3-2-tfc:- - - - -- - -

$1695

Sliver finish, black vinyl lop, black Inferior, full power,
Cllmale Conlrol atr, l owner new Cadillac trade.

On Mosl American Cars

C. BRADFORD, 1\uclloneer
Complele Service
·
Phone 94'1·3821
Recine, Ohio
Crllt Bredfbrd
5-1-tfc

•

Stock No. 58 Cata Iina 4 dr. H. T., bronze with .
tan vinyl top . Sticker price S5086.05 less air
cond. FREE.
Your Price $4632.12
Stoc;k No. 59 Catalina 2 dr. H.T., green with
white top~ Price S4952.291ess air FREE. Your
Price
$4508.36
Stock No. 85 Catalina Broug. 4 dr . sed .• solid
green . Sticker Price $4821.90 less air cond.
FREE. Buy a full size Pontiac with air for
only
$4390.90
Stock No. 91 Lesabre. Buick, 4 dr . sed., dark
blue bottom &amp;-light blue. Sticker Price $5053.05
less air cond. FREE.
Your Price$4622.05
Stock No. 92. Cata Iina 4 dr. sed., color dark
green . Sticker Price $4603.90 less air FREE.
You can move up to a full size Pontiac. For ·
only
.
$4172;90 ·
Stock No. 97 Catalina Broug . 2 dr . H.T) gold,
black vinyl top . Sticker Price $4909.90. Your
price with the air FREE. Just think this car
· for only
$4478.90

1968 Dodge

1970 CADillAC ElDORADo COUPE
I ,

For !his week only on the following cars In stock. If you
one oflhese cars we witt give you !he air conditioning .
FREE.

American, 2 dr. sedan. economy
six cyl ., std. shill, low mileage.

.·

_,

~uy

1969 Rambler

. :CADD.I.AC, :

Check Our ww Prices

Air Conditioning Free

s1995·

.,.'OWN A

·EXPERT·
Wheet.Alignment
: '5.55

______ _,___ - - - - - ~

. 1969 Dodge

1

HARRISON'S TV and Anlenne
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-10-tfc
Bu""t"'td-,e-r-s-&amp;--:Con "'A""L""L""S"'tD:-E::-:struction Co. We specialize In
aluminum. vinyl and sleel
farm . · A
bargain
at
siding; fiberglas, brick and
$10.000.00.
stone ; complete line of
MODERN
residential and commercial
RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
roof tng ;
remod ellng,
hot water healing. Nice
building,
suspended
ceiUngs,
kilchen with dishwasher, ,
Interior
and
exterior
paincook and bake units. Fully
ting ; complele line of
carpeted . Carport and
Masonry work. All work'
fenced yard . $20.000.00.
guaranteed to cuslomer
MIDDLEPORT
sallsfactlon. We are fully
3 BE OROOMS - Bath, cute
insured for you.r prolecllon. 32
kitchen, large living and
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
·dining . Garage. All on corner
2·15-JOtc
lot for only SIO.OOO.OO.
SEPTIC tanks (/ealled. Mi1111
Sanllallon, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph
WANT A GOOD PRICE FOR
YOUR PROPERTY, LIST
662-3035.
WITH US, AND START
LOOKING.
O'DELL WHEEL allghmenl
localed al Crossroads, Rt. 124.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Complele front end service,
ASSOCIATE
tune up and• brake service.
192-3325
992-2378
Wheels balanced ·etec,
lroolcally .
All
wor~
guaranleed.
Reasonable.
rales. Phone 992'3213.
CLELAND
'
7·27-tfc

New Car Sale. We Have 35 New
Buicks, Pontiacs &amp; Opels In Stock

Polara, 4 dr. sedan, V-8, p.. sf., p.br .• T-flile. air cond.

'

~ptniTII

Our Word Is Our Bond

GTO, V-8. 4 ·spd., p.isteerlng,
sharp &amp; low miiMge,

co.

742,3947
992-Seol
•
992-3898 742-4761
We are fully lnsurtd

NEW ~ISTt~G
175 ACRE STOCK FARM-2
barns, 2 ponds, 2 springs, 3
dug wells, and wafer tap, '
paid . 9 room renovated older
home. Plenty of good
pasture. Free gas with own
gas well. Would you believe
only $42,500.00.
4BEDROOMS
COUNTRY HOME - Hoi

We Service What We Sell

$2495

service.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, 0., 45769

heat,

'

'

240 Uncotn 51.
Middltport, Ohio
dboi Anlilony Phimblng
We hon a compltla Homo
Maintononco Service tho
yeoriaround, No mallllr wiNo!
your .notd. Complttt roof or
spouting repair. tntorior or ·
exterior carpentry. Ctllint
lite·~ Pontll~t onct Siding.
Complele Plumbing &amp;
Heoflng.
D'y Number m -2550
We h~ve 24 hr. omorgoncy

1

·Ideal . tor meellng place with or wlthoul kllchen·
privileges.
Individual Calerlng
Will seal up to 150 people.

water

VAN DYKE
FLAMINGO
KING

Lauder mikk. Special thanks

reservations for your
prlvale parties, banquets, '

special occasions.

Dependable
City
.
. 1970 Pontiac

•

I&amp;-· PLUMBING

Mak~

500 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2174 .

AT

.All WEATHER ROOFING
i: &amp; OONSTRIICTION
.' .

The '
OJchid Room.

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

fo pliue our cuslomen: ''

· • Or. INordlop,
qlne, vinyl root. auto. trans .. w-i&gt;-w
tlra radio, p. slt&lt;trlnii, p. brat&lt;n. bumper euerds, whtel
CDvti'l, dilar
tulrds, lac. 11r cond., dull IPtllk•n,
body
llnltd oteu.

. I

From the largos!
Bulldozer Radlalor to the
Smallest Heater Core.
·Nathon Bltgs
R dl
s ·
a ·~ Plclattst

4~-NV .:'VII-' ,l.ap·

'

J

'72 CNIANQ

Business Serli.ces

Phone 992-3874.

0677, Monday and Tuesday
only, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
3·5·21c or used mobile. home, lry
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
7L-;A-;:D;;:Y;,;
T;;
O' t"lv'e-;:i
' n-w"'it;:-h""e"lder Iy Kanauga, Ohio.
lady, light 1housekeeping ,
phone 949-4904 or 667-3319.
- -- - - - - - 3-5-3tc · 60Xl2, 2- bedroom, all -electric,
- - -- - -- -air condllloned, 8x20 ft. Porch

HARTFORD

Dai~

no

SPECIAL "

I. '

necessary. $3.57 an our . Not
3-5-tfc
too much for delivery c;tnd - - - - - - - - sales of sma ll appliance. Full

MASON

The

For Rent

DELIVERY• DRIV.ER SALE's . d ROOMS &amp; bath, unfurnished
Young men for im me ilate house, 1650 Lincoln Heights.

0

Carrlen For

'-

The Publ is her reserves the
right to edi t or reject any ads

12 cents

WANTED I

.

•

. For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times~Sentinel ,Classifieds
WANT ADS
Wanted To Buy
INFORMATION
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
DEADLINES
tables. Brass beds. di shes(·
P.M.
Day
Before

'

113-Man's
nlckn1mt
114-Pronoun
11 5--Cushlons

117-Sttrnnns
liB-Chinese
dyntst)'

119- Hail
120-For uampie
Cabbr.)
121-Mountaln
nympol

1-23-Swlss river

12C.:....Sh•ttow
VI IIIII

125-Post
126-Maeaw

,2 7-0llct•d on Ice

DOWN

1..... Pmentlous
home
2--conductl
l 3~dessol
r ' discord
4- Suc:C:or

5-compass polnl
6- Utt
7- lrrilates
8-Conlend

9-Cqnjunctlon
IQ-FoUowar of
Levi
ll- Re1•rd u
sacred '
12- Part of " to be"
13- Unll ol
Chinese
turroncy
14- Bury
15-E'Isy calt
16-lndoneslan

tribum•n
17-corr.p•ss point·
21- Atlributes
22-Tid.,tsl
2J-Lease

('

or the
Sta;net {abbr.)

2S-Devoured
27-Dealtr in
proPflrtl"
28--Htlstlrt'
jackets

flo-Writer

91-Symbol for
nlton
94-Fieecy

10--Medltatt
31-Repelr

headdress
96-Symbol for

33- lncllnes
3s-Ve&amp;nla
36-lnfluible
37-Mine
IXCIII'Itlan

krypton
98-Small fa ctory
99-0eprived of
office ,.
100-G iis tan

39- Edible seed
41-Aeptlltlon
42-Usten to
44-Sarter
47--Quote

102-Sweet
s ubstance
104-Metel fasteners
lOS-Shaded walk
106-Amerlcln

48-Jet of water
49-Part of flower
50-Uraed on

Indian
107-Nullifles
109-Hiehest

5-4-Retls
'
55-Ston:ae pit

standard
Ill-Small tpeeles

56---G•ff ropt
of lory
59-Corners
. 11 2-Triaonometrle
60-Portieo
fullction
61-A continent
113-CIII
(abbr.)
· 116-Poled to;
f.i3-Benk of a rl\ler
portrait
66-Printer's
118-Chureh service
mnsurt
119-Sollclludt
67-Manuscript
122-Hold b1ck
(tbbr,)
124-~t..tium .. rt
68-A one-yur·old
125-F~m•le horse
70-Herolc
126-Pitee whtrt
71-Fiylnc mammal
bees ,,.. kept
72-Beverqe
128-Low 10f1
73-Country of
Uo-Rustian
Europf
commune

75-Pnwldln&amp;
weapons

71--Guido't
hl&amp;h note
78-0islin&amp;ulshed
Service Medal
(abbr.)

'so-unlock
83-Possesslve
pronoun
86-Ardtnt
89-Pertalnlng to ·
a lobe
89- Journey

131- Pattem
132-Btd linen
135--Givt up

137- Mncullne
138-AIIowtnct
for wute

140- ln favor of

142-Witty · r~mark

143-f&gt;tlfinite article
144- Aiternatlne
curre nt (abbr.)
145-Neg;ttivt
1 &gt;~7 - Prepos1Uon

148-Society of
Jest.:s (ll bbr.)

I

Kingston, Ind .
Critt Bradford, Jr. of Worthington spent the weekend and
Mr. and Mrs, Herman Carson
of Coolville spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Crill
Bradford, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cleland of
Parkersburg and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Cleland of Flatwood
Road, Pomeroy , were guests of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Shane
have moved into the former

s~::::J

'3180

MARTIN FORD SALES

George Clark property .
Parkersburg spent Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simp. with her parenta, Mr. and Mrs.
son and Miss Mildred Gillilan George Neigler.
spent Sunday in Colwnbus wilh
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Carlyle and
family.
Mr . Lynne ldallory of
Nelsonville was a weekend
guest of his parenls, Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Mallory. ·
Mrs. Mattie Yost was a guest
Sunday of her sister, Mrs.
Hattie Paynter.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
of Patriol spent ·Sunday wilh
his mother, Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
Mr. and Mrs. Rob Palmer of

SOLUTION

�__ ,.._......

. ~~The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, March 5,1972
0

•

•

0

r -------------------------I
·1

•

Governor's Attack ·on Hattna. Is'· ·Area Deaths !
Nellk M. Cottrell
Gertrude Raub
Departure from His Coolness
COLUMBUS (UP!) -There were
probably plenty of times during the 1970
gubernatorial campaign and during the
heated budget-tax battle of last year when
Gov. John J. Gilligan wanted to take a big
bite out of somebody's hide - preferably a
Republican's.
Despite the temptations, coolness
prevailed, and the governor · won the
election, his income tax and a budget
outlay unmatched in Ohio history.
At no time during those 22 hectic months
did the governor so thoroughly defoliate
any of his many detractors with a verbal
c' blistering as he did last week with
statements about Ralph W. Hatch,
president of Hanna Coal Co.
Set off by Hatch's statement of a week
ago that Hanna would cease swiace
mining in Ohio if some changes were not
made in the House.passed version of the
strip mine control bill, Gilligan accused
Hatch of being dishonest, of a "brazen and
brutal attempt...to blackmail this
government" and suggested maybe Hanna
needed a new president.
To dispel suspicions his remarks to
the legislature might have been a mistake,
the governor amplified them on a plane

'
trip last Friday. "Next thing
you know,"
quothGIUigan, "he (Hatch) wiD be holding
50 school clilldren hostage or something."
Never had Gilligan said such things in
public about House or Senate Republican
leaders or lobbyists who were under hls
skin most of last year.
Not in years had such words from a
governor of 011lo traveled to the ears of a
captain of industry.
Why did Gilligan pick on Hatch, whom
he hardly knows? No one can climb inside
the governor's mind to find out, but his
press secretary, Robert C. Tenenbaum,
can shed some light.
·"Nothlug Personal"
"He's not picking on Hatch," Tenebaum
insisted. Thls is nothing personal against
Hatch. It's against anyone who wants to
weaken the bill."
Tenebaum conceded Hatch was the
immediate target because he made the
statement - "threat," Tenenbaum
corrected - about Hanna closing its
operations in Ohio.
''The governor is afraid they're goint to
water the biD down or kill it," Tenenbaum
said.
He was reminded that there is such

GALLIPOUS - Mrs. NeUie
M. Cottrell, 78, of 3313 !tedding
Road,
Colqrr.bus, died.
pressure for a strip mine bill, it probably Saturday at home. She was
will not be killed.
oorn at Adamsville in Gallia
"U it's watered down so it's no use, they . County, Jan. 29, 1894, the
might as weD kill It," Tenenbaum replied. daughler of the late Andrew J.
But even lf the Senate .subcommittee Clark and Lola TObin Clark
changes the bill, the provisions can always She was a GaUia County schooi
be restored on the Senate Door, he was teacher.
reminded,
She is survived by her
"The governor thinks thi$ is the critical husband, Lc Talmadge Col·
phase,': T~nenbaum said. "Everything treU; four sisters, Mrs. Mary ·
was alr1ghtm 1965, too;and then at the last Clark U!wis Columbus· Mrs
minu~ -kaboom, ~ey blew the biD out ?f Gladys Al~n. Oak Hill, and
the water. Uwe don t ~~tit this year, It U Mrs. Sophia G. Liggett, and
be another. f1ve years.
Mrs. Lola Merriam, both of
But why use such strong words against a Adian, Mich . She be.
mao whose ~mpany has, a good reputation longed to the Calvary
for . follow1~g Oh10 s reclamation Baptist Church, Rio Grande.
reqwrements ·
Funeral services will be
"Because they'~e ~ing strong pressures conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m.
to cl_lang.e that bill, Tenenbaum replied. from Schoedinger NorthIt 1s eVIdent Gllllgan feeLs s~ngly about west Chapel, 1740 Zollenger
a strict str1~ rrun.e. ~ontrol bill -.strong Rd., Columbus, where caUing
enough to riSk criticiSm for rejecting hls hours will be from 7·9 p m
normal low-key spproach and becoming . tOday and 2-4 and 7-9 p:m:
dramatic.
Monday. Graveside rites wiD .
Tenebaum "absolutely' refuted the be. conducted at the Calvary
cla~ of some Statehouse o~ervers th~t Baptist Cemetery, Rio Grande,
GIU1ga~ lost control and fmaUy S81d Tuesday at 2 p.m. with the Rev.
something he would later regret.
Robert D. W!Uiams officiating.

Local Bowling

basketball.
1
There are many good things taking place in your schools
which you have not heard ab&lt;&gt;ut. .
All of tbe aoove mentioned has been accomplished through
dedication of many fine teachers, the enthusiasm of a great
group of studentSand the cooperation ol the community.
I certainly appreciate the news coverage of the gond things
by the radio, newspaper and television.
Paul F. Kuhn, Superintendent, Gallipolis City Schools,

Early Bird League
March I, 1972
Standings :

Team

D. G. Plnnetles
King Builders

66
46
44

Evelyn 's Grocery

Larry's Ashland
34
Rawlings Dodge
28
Meigs Mabile Hames
22
Team High Game - Larry's
Ashland 823, Evelyn's Grocery
778, D. G. Pinnettes 769 .
Team High Series - D. G.
Pinnettes

2227,

Flossie Maxson 469 .

Get a
wheel deal
A S !a:~e Farm M~bi! eHcrr: e own e!"s
J;:clicy protects your mo':)i!e home,'
lis con tents, and i!i cludes Per·
son !.: !ia:i~ ! ty c~· e rage, 2.11 I~ ·a

· sinQie, low·cost ·cadi!ge. S~!t ~
Farm Is 2.!1 you netd to k'i.CW

abcut ins~ ranee. c~~ me. tccal'•

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Ave.- Ph. 446-4290
Home Ph. 446-4518
Gallipolis

$t!Tt ~!.'{M

.--l

F-"Ol
t:
(
I

Nelle Shumway

Larry's

Ashland 2205. Meigs Mobile
Homes 2130.
Ind. High Game - Mary
Voss 220, Flossie Maxson 203 ,
Maxine Dugan 184.
Ind. High Series - Mary
Voss 526c Maxine Dugan 515,

S:at.e Fano~ F' ~ e IN:.
Ce!u&amp;lr, Com pa.nt.
Home OH•ce:
B lo ~mm &gt;; u.. :ui:-.eit

.
.
POMEROY- Mrs..9ertrude
Marie Raub, 75, died une11·
pectedly Saturday morning at
her home, 107 Ebenezer St.
The Pomeroy Emergency
sqiLad answered a caD to the
home at 7:49 a.m. She waa
dead upon the squad's arrival.
Mrs. Raub was a metnber of
the Sacred Hearl Church and
the Catholic Women's Club.
She is survived )ly ~er
husband, Joe, and the followmg
children,
Mrs.
Bertha
Jungnickei, ·cincinnati; Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Pol\leroy;
Nicholas, Fort Knox, Ky.; Mrs.
Dorothy Taylor, Gro~e City;
Mrs. Joanne · · Tatterson,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Winifred
Proctor, Hamilton; Rose .Mary
Raub, Grove City; Sue Jean
Raub, Miami, Fla., and John
Raub, Pomeroy; a stepsis~r,
Mrs . . Philamena Harbrecht,
Hamilton: 14 grandchildren; .
five great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Peter and ·susan
Ziti Kieling, and a son, Paul
Edward.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m .. Wednesday at the
Sacred Heart Church with the
Rev . Father Bernard Kracjovic officiating. Rosary
services will be held at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home where friends
may call anytime. Burial will
be In Sacred Heart Cemetery.

Public Explanation Asked
March I, 1972

Dear Sir:
I read with concern the letter published In your paper 28
February 1972 by Richard W. Rawlings pertaining to "Lowest
Truck Bid Not Accepted."
'
My wlfe and I are former residents of Meigs County and are
still taxpayers in that County so we are just Wondering if the
public is getting value received for the tax dollar in this instance.
We feel a public explanation by the commisilloners is
required tO clarify the situation as described by Mr . Rawlings.
Several conditions can govern acceptance-rejection of a bid,
such as; (a) Did the Vehicles that Mr. Rawlings qu?ted on meet
the specifications in every aspect? (b) Delivery date? (c)
standard stock item, no alterations in any manner? (d) and
numerous other requirements?
U the vehicles that Mr. Rawlings submitted hls bid on met aU
of the requirements in the specifications he ls to be commended
for&lt;bringing this to all of our attention. Furthermore, the action
he recommended should not be taken lightly by the taxpayer. In
addition, there are ways to get' a just legal deeision through
higher authority,
Your efforts in obtaining a public response by the county
commissioners will be greatly appreciated.
Gerald E. Ours, 68 Simpson Drive, Huntington, W. Va.

Appreciation Recorded
Dear Sir:
Recently all of you have read of the fine accomplishments of
Gallipolis music students participating in contests. The
tremendous success story of the many vocational programs
covered by ali of the news media. ALso you have been aware of
the accomplishments by the athletic programs in football and

'

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Anna M. Ryther, Comm.,
Mary ,M. Diddle, dec'd., to
!,.lice Jane Flanagan, Delia
Marie Starkey, Anna Grace
Oiler, Lot 21, Syracuse.
Alice Jean Flanagan, Della
Marie Starkey to Anna Grace
Oiler,
Lot 21,
Herman
P. Syracuse.
Hoffner lo Ed·
ward P.. White, Prudence E.
White, Lots, P.omeroy.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Hysell to Harold Edgar Hysell,
Lot 7, Rathburn Add., Rutland.
Mary L, Roush, Gdn .,
Patricia Ann Woods, Myra
Jean Woods, Joanie Lynn
Woods, Mary Kay Woods to
Kathryn Brown, 4.25 Acres,
Sutton.
Mary L. Roush, Millard L.
Roush , Gilbert Anthony Woods,
Vicki Viola Woods, Marion
Rife , Wanda Lou Rife to

Kathryn Brown, Parcels,
SYRACUSE: - Mrs. Fred
Sutton.
(Nelle) Shumway, 80, formerly
Ernest Dale Johnson, dec'd., · of Syracuse, died Friday afto Emma Della Johnson, ternoon in Bradenton, Florida.
Parcel, Sutton.
Mrs. Shumway had been in
Sherman Tillis, Kathlei n failing health for several
Tillis to John William Brown, weeks.
Myrville Brown, Lot, Rutland.
She and her husband, the late
Fred C. Koster, Sarah Koster Fred Shumway, operated
to Robert W. Sloan, Karen S. Shumway Florists a number of
Sloan, 1.75 Acres, Bedford.
years.
George A. Molden, Bernice
She is survived by a
Molden to Thomas E. Molden; daughter, Mrs. John (Doris)
Judy I. Molden, 55.43 Acres, Gilmore of Bradenton, with
Rutland.
whom she made her home;

.
. tmts
'

•,

.'

f· ·~J.,

•

.;\NO TKeN

THE MINSTREL SHOW SOLOISTs AND FUNNY MEN
above wiD star in the 19th annual Wellston Rotary club
minstrel show to be presented at the WelLston high school
auditorium Friday and Satuday ·nights, March 17·18. The
backdrop is Rotary International's famous "Rotary Wheel."
Interlocutor (top) Is Charles N. GaskiU, with his hands on
John L. Weber,left, and J. Herbert Clark. Below are Charles
M!Uiken and U!Roy Hutchison. Mmlken, Hutchison, Weber
and Clark are end men, and aU are Rotarians residing in
Wellston. Proceeds from the annual show wiD be used by the
Rotary club for community projects.

'

•'

'

.,

'

~1-\E'D KIND

OF GRIN ..

'··

'
..

three grandchildien, John F.
Gilmore, Sarasota, Fla.; Mrs.
Richard Ashley, Braijenton,
Fla., and Mrs. Robert E.
Beegle, Racine; three greatgrandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be held Monday
morning at the Griffith and
Cline Funeral Home with
burial in Manasota Memorial ·
Garden, Oneco, Fla.'

BR0111ERS ACQUIRED

t'M woRRte'o,, ·

ST. LOUIS (UPI)-The St.
Louis Blues of the National
Hockey U!ague boasted a new
brother combination today.
St. LouiB picked up right
wing Kevin 0 'Shea from
Buffalo on waivers Friday.
Danny O'Shea was acquired
recently from the Chicago
Black Hawks in a trade.

ABOUT Lfou, .

. ' 'fE9, ' 11MW~8~tEb

AB.OUT ,,
ME? ,.

THAt '{OU'RE LIVING

·TOo MVCH I~ THE :PA5T...'(OU I-IAYEN'T ~tEN ·
THAT. LITTtE .RED..:HAIRED 61RL FoR OY~ItA
!IEA~,;A;ND '&lt;El ~OV :l(eEP. TALKING ABOUI HER

CHUO(

.

' ' • l,

.

•

.

j

• •

.

'

r---------------------------------------iiiiiililll
Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your Shopping Center.
Wearing Apparel for.y~ur family and furnishings for your home.
See the many new arrivals all over the store.

·--------------------------------------------------7 PIECE SET...BRONZE.

Elegant bow-end table
with wipe-clean. wood·

Winter Concert

grain finish plastic top,
36x48x60. 8 chairs
covered In glowing

Given Recently

amber vinyls. This set
also available In

Black or Avocado.

At Southern

Pomeroy National Bank.
It's been a.hundred years.
So fat. ·

RACINE
Sunday,
February 20, under the
direction cof Mrs . Connie
Romine, the Southern Junior
and Senior bands presented
their annual winter concert at
the hig'h school in ):tacine.
The Junior High Band
presented selections entitled,
"Colonel John," "Holiday in
France," "A-Roving," and "A
Service Medley ." The High
School Band presented
''Citadel,'' ''Danse Pavanne,''

"Johnny Comes Swinging
Home," unays of Glory,"

"Bolero Non ," and the Theme
from Love Story."
Thursday, Feb. 24, 110 band
students went to Ohio
University to attend a young
people 's concert presented by
the Ohio University Symphony
Orchestra. The students were.
accompanied by Mrs. Romine
and several mothers.
On Saturday, Feb. 26,
several students attended the
District XV Solo-Ensemble
Contest at Ohio University.
Ratings of one to five are used.
Bill Wheeler was awarded a I
(superior ) for his sousaphone
solo; receiving a II (excellent)
were Barb Fisher, bassoon,
Steve Yonker, trumpet solo;
Corena Rhodes, saxophone;
Koste Hysell, clarinet, and
Bobui Chapman, flute solo, and
ratings of Ill were awarded,to
.Jeannie Sellers, drum solo, and ,
Stephanie Ord, trombone solo.
Accompanist for the soloists
was Mrs. Romine.
11

June 17. 1872 . lo J une 17. 1972. One
ce ntu ry . A cen tury that's seen war and
peace . feast and famine. The century
man learned to fl y and I lew to the moon.

Seveh ly·two lo seventy-lwo. The first
I 00 years of Pomeroy Nat io nal Bank.
We'd like to take the credit lor gelling
the town started. but the tact is the area

had been settled lor nea rly 70 years be·
fore we firs t opened ou r doors. Pomeroy
had been the seat of Me igs Co unty si nce
1841 . and the town was well on its way
to a solid com mercial footh ol d in coal
and sa lt

01 courseclhe doors slayed open No

small feat in the earl y days of American
banking And through lhose doors ever
si nce have come busi nessmen and private citize ns · who "d made the decision
that here was where the business of
banki ng was best cond ucted.
•

Duri ng 1972. we'd like to combine our
lil tle pal-on·lhe·back fo r ourse lves with

oom..-or
rut la nd

a big "thank you very kindly" lor you .
You and the people in your past are responsible lor our past, and necessary
lor our tuture.
The big celebration will be the week
of June 17. Please plan lodrop in. Mean·
while , drop in any time. Particularly on
Saturday mornings for a piece of our

birthday cakec or any time, to pick up
your copy of a brochure commemorating
you r city's latesl hundred years. We'd
just like to say hello. Even if you don't
bank here. we all live here.
At both the main otfice and Rutland
branchc weVe been showing a mQdern
new look and referring to ourselves as
"The Bank of the Century". Great. But
we 're really talking about two centuriesone of tond memory, one of firm commitment.

We're thinking about one. And work·
ing on the other.

pomeroy

c:~tna
the c•nlury

e~tQ bl lshtc:t 11_12

THREE CITIES ADDED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Three more cities - Altoona
and Pittsburgh, Pa ., and
Wheeling, W. V:o.- have been
added to the Labor . Department's list of major areas with
1
c1 unemployment of 6 per cent or
---,--- more.

j

...

I.

......

\ •

I

'

'

7 PIECE SET ... BLACK .
Octagon shape, doUble-

podoSial !able In

•.

Mediterranean styling

I.

I

..

i~

with simulated

•

.,

' '

wrought iron SCI"OIIwork .
Plastic , worry-free

lop. 36x48x60. Smartly
deslgrted . cathedral-back

•
,

chairs.

I
.,
I

I

''•

' (

..

•

! I'M GOING TO f:;t)

7 PIECE SET .. .

L.ATE:GT E;TE:P! ·

AVOCADO.

'

'
'

!

Chairs feature eve·

I

style galleries. Thia
olao available In

••I

Black or Bronzetone.

BE THRIFTY I SAVE ALL. OF YOUII' SALESLIPS FROM

'

•

I
\

catching. decOrator-

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

'

Avocado p'con finish ·
plastic top, 36x48x60.

I.
I.

';

'

Graceful , oval shape
table with attractive

'.

• .•..

.

•

••

�__ ,.._......

. ~~The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday, March 5,1972
0

•

•

0

r -------------------------I
·1

•

Governor's Attack ·on Hattna. Is'· ·Area Deaths !
Nellk M. Cottrell
Gertrude Raub
Departure from His Coolness
COLUMBUS (UP!) -There were
probably plenty of times during the 1970
gubernatorial campaign and during the
heated budget-tax battle of last year when
Gov. John J. Gilligan wanted to take a big
bite out of somebody's hide - preferably a
Republican's.
Despite the temptations, coolness
prevailed, and the governor · won the
election, his income tax and a budget
outlay unmatched in Ohio history.
At no time during those 22 hectic months
did the governor so thoroughly defoliate
any of his many detractors with a verbal
c' blistering as he did last week with
statements about Ralph W. Hatch,
president of Hanna Coal Co.
Set off by Hatch's statement of a week
ago that Hanna would cease swiace
mining in Ohio if some changes were not
made in the House.passed version of the
strip mine control bill, Gilligan accused
Hatch of being dishonest, of a "brazen and
brutal attempt...to blackmail this
government" and suggested maybe Hanna
needed a new president.
To dispel suspicions his remarks to
the legislature might have been a mistake,
the governor amplified them on a plane

'
trip last Friday. "Next thing
you know,"
quothGIUigan, "he (Hatch) wiD be holding
50 school clilldren hostage or something."
Never had Gilligan said such things in
public about House or Senate Republican
leaders or lobbyists who were under hls
skin most of last year.
Not in years had such words from a
governor of 011lo traveled to the ears of a
captain of industry.
Why did Gilligan pick on Hatch, whom
he hardly knows? No one can climb inside
the governor's mind to find out, but his
press secretary, Robert C. Tenenbaum,
can shed some light.
·"Nothlug Personal"
"He's not picking on Hatch," Tenebaum
insisted. Thls is nothing personal against
Hatch. It's against anyone who wants to
weaken the bill."
Tenebaum conceded Hatch was the
immediate target because he made the
statement - "threat," Tenenbaum
corrected - about Hanna closing its
operations in Ohio.
''The governor is afraid they're goint to
water the biD down or kill it," Tenenbaum
said.
He was reminded that there is such

GALLIPOUS - Mrs. NeUie
M. Cottrell, 78, of 3313 !tedding
Road,
Colqrr.bus, died.
pressure for a strip mine bill, it probably Saturday at home. She was
will not be killed.
oorn at Adamsville in Gallia
"U it's watered down so it's no use, they . County, Jan. 29, 1894, the
might as weD kill It," Tenenbaum replied. daughler of the late Andrew J.
But even lf the Senate .subcommittee Clark and Lola TObin Clark
changes the bill, the provisions can always She was a GaUia County schooi
be restored on the Senate Door, he was teacher.
reminded,
She is survived by her
"The governor thinks thi$ is the critical husband, Lc Talmadge Col·
phase,': T~nenbaum said. "Everything treU; four sisters, Mrs. Mary ·
was alr1ghtm 1965, too;and then at the last Clark U!wis Columbus· Mrs
minu~ -kaboom, ~ey blew the biD out ?f Gladys Al~n. Oak Hill, and
the water. Uwe don t ~~tit this year, It U Mrs. Sophia G. Liggett, and
be another. f1ve years.
Mrs. Lola Merriam, both of
But why use such strong words against a Adian, Mich . She be.
mao whose ~mpany has, a good reputation longed to the Calvary
for . follow1~g Oh10 s reclamation Baptist Church, Rio Grande.
reqwrements ·
Funeral services will be
"Because they'~e ~ing strong pressures conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m.
to cl_lang.e that bill, Tenenbaum replied. from Schoedinger NorthIt 1s eVIdent Gllllgan feeLs s~ngly about west Chapel, 1740 Zollenger
a strict str1~ rrun.e. ~ontrol bill -.strong Rd., Columbus, where caUing
enough to riSk criticiSm for rejecting hls hours will be from 7·9 p m
normal low-key spproach and becoming . tOday and 2-4 and 7-9 p:m:
dramatic.
Monday. Graveside rites wiD .
Tenebaum "absolutely' refuted the be. conducted at the Calvary
cla~ of some Statehouse o~ervers th~t Baptist Cemetery, Rio Grande,
GIU1ga~ lost control and fmaUy S81d Tuesday at 2 p.m. with the Rev.
something he would later regret.
Robert D. W!Uiams officiating.

Local Bowling

basketball.
1
There are many good things taking place in your schools
which you have not heard ab&lt;&gt;ut. .
All of tbe aoove mentioned has been accomplished through
dedication of many fine teachers, the enthusiasm of a great
group of studentSand the cooperation ol the community.
I certainly appreciate the news coverage of the gond things
by the radio, newspaper and television.
Paul F. Kuhn, Superintendent, Gallipolis City Schools,

Early Bird League
March I, 1972
Standings :

Team

D. G. Plnnetles
King Builders

66
46
44

Evelyn 's Grocery

Larry's Ashland
34
Rawlings Dodge
28
Meigs Mabile Hames
22
Team High Game - Larry's
Ashland 823, Evelyn's Grocery
778, D. G. Pinnettes 769 .
Team High Series - D. G.
Pinnettes

2227,

Flossie Maxson 469 .

Get a
wheel deal
A S !a:~e Farm M~bi! eHcrr: e own e!"s
J;:clicy protects your mo':)i!e home,'
lis con tents, and i!i cludes Per·
son !.: !ia:i~ ! ty c~· e rage, 2.11 I~ ·a

· sinQie, low·cost ·cadi!ge. S~!t ~
Farm Is 2.!1 you netd to k'i.CW

abcut ins~ ranee. c~~ me. tccal'•

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Ave.- Ph. 446-4290
Home Ph. 446-4518
Gallipolis

$t!Tt ~!.'{M

.--l

F-"Ol
t:
(
I

Nelle Shumway

Larry's

Ashland 2205. Meigs Mobile
Homes 2130.
Ind. High Game - Mary
Voss 220, Flossie Maxson 203 ,
Maxine Dugan 184.
Ind. High Series - Mary
Voss 526c Maxine Dugan 515,

S:at.e Fano~ F' ~ e IN:.
Ce!u&amp;lr, Com pa.nt.
Home OH•ce:
B lo ~mm &gt;; u.. :ui:-.eit

.
.
POMEROY- Mrs..9ertrude
Marie Raub, 75, died une11·
pectedly Saturday morning at
her home, 107 Ebenezer St.
The Pomeroy Emergency
sqiLad answered a caD to the
home at 7:49 a.m. She waa
dead upon the squad's arrival.
Mrs. Raub was a metnber of
the Sacred Hearl Church and
the Catholic Women's Club.
She is survived )ly ~er
husband, Joe, and the followmg
children,
Mrs.
Bertha
Jungnickei, ·cincinnati; Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Pol\leroy;
Nicholas, Fort Knox, Ky.; Mrs.
Dorothy Taylor, Gro~e City;
Mrs. Joanne · · Tatterson,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Winifred
Proctor, Hamilton; Rose .Mary
Raub, Grove City; Sue Jean
Raub, Miami, Fla., and John
Raub, Pomeroy; a stepsis~r,
Mrs . . Philamena Harbrecht,
Hamilton: 14 grandchildren; .
five great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Peter and ·susan
Ziti Kieling, and a son, Paul
Edward.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m .. Wednesday at the
Sacred Heart Church with the
Rev . Father Bernard Kracjovic officiating. Rosary
services will be held at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home where friends
may call anytime. Burial will
be In Sacred Heart Cemetery.

Public Explanation Asked
March I, 1972

Dear Sir:
I read with concern the letter published In your paper 28
February 1972 by Richard W. Rawlings pertaining to "Lowest
Truck Bid Not Accepted."
'
My wlfe and I are former residents of Meigs County and are
still taxpayers in that County so we are just Wondering if the
public is getting value received for the tax dollar in this instance.
We feel a public explanation by the commisilloners is
required tO clarify the situation as described by Mr . Rawlings.
Several conditions can govern acceptance-rejection of a bid,
such as; (a) Did the Vehicles that Mr. Rawlings qu?ted on meet
the specifications in every aspect? (b) Delivery date? (c)
standard stock item, no alterations in any manner? (d) and
numerous other requirements?
U the vehicles that Mr. Rawlings submitted hls bid on met aU
of the requirements in the specifications he ls to be commended
for&lt;bringing this to all of our attention. Furthermore, the action
he recommended should not be taken lightly by the taxpayer. In
addition, there are ways to get' a just legal deeision through
higher authority,
Your efforts in obtaining a public response by the county
commissioners will be greatly appreciated.
Gerald E. Ours, 68 Simpson Drive, Huntington, W. Va.

Appreciation Recorded
Dear Sir:
Recently all of you have read of the fine accomplishments of
Gallipolis music students participating in contests. The
tremendous success story of the many vocational programs
covered by ali of the news media. ALso you have been aware of
the accomplishments by the athletic programs in football and

'

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Anna M. Ryther, Comm.,
Mary ,M. Diddle, dec'd., to
!,.lice Jane Flanagan, Delia
Marie Starkey, Anna Grace
Oiler, Lot 21, Syracuse.
Alice Jean Flanagan, Della
Marie Starkey to Anna Grace
Oiler,
Lot 21,
Herman
P. Syracuse.
Hoffner lo Ed·
ward P.. White, Prudence E.
White, Lots, P.omeroy.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Hysell to Harold Edgar Hysell,
Lot 7, Rathburn Add., Rutland.
Mary L, Roush, Gdn .,
Patricia Ann Woods, Myra
Jean Woods, Joanie Lynn
Woods, Mary Kay Woods to
Kathryn Brown, 4.25 Acres,
Sutton.
Mary L. Roush, Millard L.
Roush , Gilbert Anthony Woods,
Vicki Viola Woods, Marion
Rife , Wanda Lou Rife to

Kathryn Brown, Parcels,
SYRACUSE: - Mrs. Fred
Sutton.
(Nelle) Shumway, 80, formerly
Ernest Dale Johnson, dec'd., · of Syracuse, died Friday afto Emma Della Johnson, ternoon in Bradenton, Florida.
Parcel, Sutton.
Mrs. Shumway had been in
Sherman Tillis, Kathlei n failing health for several
Tillis to John William Brown, weeks.
Myrville Brown, Lot, Rutland.
She and her husband, the late
Fred C. Koster, Sarah Koster Fred Shumway, operated
to Robert W. Sloan, Karen S. Shumway Florists a number of
Sloan, 1.75 Acres, Bedford.
years.
George A. Molden, Bernice
She is survived by a
Molden to Thomas E. Molden; daughter, Mrs. John (Doris)
Judy I. Molden, 55.43 Acres, Gilmore of Bradenton, with
Rutland.
whom she made her home;

.
. tmts
'

•,

.'

f· ·~J.,

•

.;\NO TKeN

THE MINSTREL SHOW SOLOISTs AND FUNNY MEN
above wiD star in the 19th annual Wellston Rotary club
minstrel show to be presented at the WelLston high school
auditorium Friday and Satuday ·nights, March 17·18. The
backdrop is Rotary International's famous "Rotary Wheel."
Interlocutor (top) Is Charles N. GaskiU, with his hands on
John L. Weber,left, and J. Herbert Clark. Below are Charles
M!Uiken and U!Roy Hutchison. Mmlken, Hutchison, Weber
and Clark are end men, and aU are Rotarians residing in
Wellston. Proceeds from the annual show wiD be used by the
Rotary club for community projects.

'

•'

'

.,

'

~1-\E'D KIND

OF GRIN ..

'··

'
..

three grandchildien, John F.
Gilmore, Sarasota, Fla.; Mrs.
Richard Ashley, Braijenton,
Fla., and Mrs. Robert E.
Beegle, Racine; three greatgrandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be held Monday
morning at the Griffith and
Cline Funeral Home with
burial in Manasota Memorial ·
Garden, Oneco, Fla.'

BR0111ERS ACQUIRED

t'M woRRte'o,, ·

ST. LOUIS (UPI)-The St.
Louis Blues of the National
Hockey U!ague boasted a new
brother combination today.
St. LouiB picked up right
wing Kevin 0 'Shea from
Buffalo on waivers Friday.
Danny O'Shea was acquired
recently from the Chicago
Black Hawks in a trade.

ABOUT Lfou, .

. ' 'fE9, ' 11MW~8~tEb

AB.OUT ,,
ME? ,.

THAt '{OU'RE LIVING

·TOo MVCH I~ THE :PA5T...'(OU I-IAYEN'T ~tEN ·
THAT. LITTtE .RED..:HAIRED 61RL FoR OY~ItA
!IEA~,;A;ND '&lt;El ~OV :l(eEP. TALKING ABOUI HER

CHUO(

.

' ' • l,

.

•

.

j

• •

.

'

r---------------------------------------iiiiiililll
Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your Shopping Center.
Wearing Apparel for.y~ur family and furnishings for your home.
See the many new arrivals all over the store.

·--------------------------------------------------7 PIECE SET...BRONZE.

Elegant bow-end table
with wipe-clean. wood·

Winter Concert

grain finish plastic top,
36x48x60. 8 chairs
covered In glowing

Given Recently

amber vinyls. This set
also available In

Black or Avocado.

At Southern

Pomeroy National Bank.
It's been a.hundred years.
So fat. ·

RACINE
Sunday,
February 20, under the
direction cof Mrs . Connie
Romine, the Southern Junior
and Senior bands presented
their annual winter concert at
the hig'h school in ):tacine.
The Junior High Band
presented selections entitled,
"Colonel John," "Holiday in
France," "A-Roving," and "A
Service Medley ." The High
School Band presented
''Citadel,'' ''Danse Pavanne,''

"Johnny Comes Swinging
Home," unays of Glory,"

"Bolero Non ," and the Theme
from Love Story."
Thursday, Feb. 24, 110 band
students went to Ohio
University to attend a young
people 's concert presented by
the Ohio University Symphony
Orchestra. The students were.
accompanied by Mrs. Romine
and several mothers.
On Saturday, Feb. 26,
several students attended the
District XV Solo-Ensemble
Contest at Ohio University.
Ratings of one to five are used.
Bill Wheeler was awarded a I
(superior ) for his sousaphone
solo; receiving a II (excellent)
were Barb Fisher, bassoon,
Steve Yonker, trumpet solo;
Corena Rhodes, saxophone;
Koste Hysell, clarinet, and
Bobui Chapman, flute solo, and
ratings of Ill were awarded,to
.Jeannie Sellers, drum solo, and ,
Stephanie Ord, trombone solo.
Accompanist for the soloists
was Mrs. Romine.
11

June 17. 1872 . lo J une 17. 1972. One
ce ntu ry . A cen tury that's seen war and
peace . feast and famine. The century
man learned to fl y and I lew to the moon.

Seveh ly·two lo seventy-lwo. The first
I 00 years of Pomeroy Nat io nal Bank.
We'd like to take the credit lor gelling
the town started. but the tact is the area

had been settled lor nea rly 70 years be·
fore we firs t opened ou r doors. Pomeroy
had been the seat of Me igs Co unty si nce
1841 . and the town was well on its way
to a solid com mercial footh ol d in coal
and sa lt

01 courseclhe doors slayed open No

small feat in the earl y days of American
banking And through lhose doors ever
si nce have come busi nessmen and private citize ns · who "d made the decision
that here was where the business of
banki ng was best cond ucted.
•

Duri ng 1972. we'd like to combine our
lil tle pal-on·lhe·back fo r ourse lves with

oom..-or
rut la nd

a big "thank you very kindly" lor you .
You and the people in your past are responsible lor our past, and necessary
lor our tuture.
The big celebration will be the week
of June 17. Please plan lodrop in. Mean·
while , drop in any time. Particularly on
Saturday mornings for a piece of our

birthday cakec or any time, to pick up
your copy of a brochure commemorating
you r city's latesl hundred years. We'd
just like to say hello. Even if you don't
bank here. we all live here.
At both the main otfice and Rutland
branchc weVe been showing a mQdern
new look and referring to ourselves as
"The Bank of the Century". Great. But
we 're really talking about two centuriesone of tond memory, one of firm commitment.

We're thinking about one. And work·
ing on the other.

pomeroy

c:~tna
the c•nlury

e~tQ bl lshtc:t 11_12

THREE CITIES ADDED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Three more cities - Altoona
and Pittsburgh, Pa ., and
Wheeling, W. V:o.- have been
added to the Labor . Department's list of major areas with
1
c1 unemployment of 6 per cent or
---,--- more.

j

...

I.

......

\ •

I

'

'

7 PIECE SET ... BLACK .
Octagon shape, doUble-

podoSial !able In

•.

Mediterranean styling

I.

I

..

i~

with simulated

•

.,

' '

wrought iron SCI"OIIwork .
Plastic , worry-free

lop. 36x48x60. Smartly
deslgrted . cathedral-back

•
,

chairs.

I
.,
I

I

''•

' (

..

•

! I'M GOING TO f:;t)

7 PIECE SET .. .

L.ATE:GT E;TE:P! ·

AVOCADO.

'

'
'

!

Chairs feature eve·

I

style galleries. Thia
olao available In

••I

Black or Bronzetone.

BE THRIFTY I SAVE ALL. OF YOUII' SALESLIPS FROM

'

•

I
\

catching. decOrator-

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

'

Avocado p'con finish ·
plastic top, 36x48x60.

I.
I.

';

'

Graceful , oval shape
table with attractive

'.

• .•..

.

•

••

�ALLBY OOP
DINNY1S

BROUGHTlH'
1.1TTU: FELI.A
B.AO&lt;!

by ~Dick Cavalli

I

'

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

I lHOUGHT 'rt)U

.

STEAK, MA'IB'a ? .

STGI.U ...
~0 IL.EP f$Eei= ...

S&amp;lD .HE .JUMPED

1"H LITTLE CRITIER

'

....

~,,.

,

"·
.,
;:.

HAM •• • SAUSAGE: •••

•

1CAUSE:

HE THOUGHT
IT WAS GONNA

·i

BITE'r'OUJ

0 .

\

.,,

~

...

. ,. .
'

,"
''

..-·.
'

0

...
...

.

"•

.,

- -'

... HE MIGHT OBJeCT 10 US
EATIN 1 lH' LITTLE .SO'N1SO/
.
:

..

''

'

A DOG IS GeTiiNG ON

OOOPS!

\

WHE:N H6 RUNS TH~
WRONG WAY WH6N
CALL~D FOR

..

'

0

•

. ..

;

•

I ,

ANDY -. CA.PP.

'

'·

AI V'el'llleer.

•,

;

''

--·'·
'l
•

.

'

'

.' ...' .. l

••
'&lt; ~

'•·

I

-,

,I '

1

.

.
.
rr

~·

1

. '

•
.

.

.

.

.

. _
,_

. '

'

• '

4111'---, . I.

f,.

...
·.

'

'

&gt; ..

, , . _ _ J'

.

~-

.

·--....I

. ' .. '

..

'

.

'

'

'

'

.TpH_~~·~ WON:p~B

.-~:.

•••

•'0:••
~·;
•

0

.!:.
•'• .

0

•

,•.

•••

~. ~

~

..UT I'M No'l' IXAcTtl' A STRA~GER , ,
I Uf.IEVE I'VI ANNOYED YOU IEFOKEt'
• '-"' --- --- · ~

•

-

' .

'L.'
-"'·

'

I

l

H~Ve

NO.

'

NO

1\1 A L..

MICii

NC~.Ut1!

eec~use:

1-r 'l'loltNKS
1'HS MOUSe M~'Y
fUP::POCA1'f 1,fY GAAWI,If\1~ • IN1'0 1'Hii iNI' Or:'·

·

· ..

5UCI1.AjlolUIIf · · ...
Slf~ 1' AMUfH
ut ·"f!0-1'HINI&lt;
1'HAJ A. '"''IN"r'

· M0~6
.

t, I PLAY THROUGII1l'MA DOCTOR, AND

'

'

e

.

-rlol •~-• I'JoiA.N"1"
If F~IIH1.eN-~'..,

I HAV&amp;;AN IMWi&amp;NCY 0'£MTIOH WAITING!"

.·

,

.

.

"• . .

~~

.

I

II

'

·'

I

;

.

'

·.

'

'

'

•

t;rs ~Nt&lt;

.

CA.~
Flli~H1'fN 11'.
I
11-jt'!' ~~SA. IS 1'1o1A.'I' ..

' .,_

..

~.

''

·.

•i.ltNII

.
l''

,. Hoo'
tel

.

' Clt~WL.
IT~·· MQ\J·S· .I'IP
. fN1'0 1'Hii

•

-. ...-·.
I'

· , ~,:

...

..".-

. •...

..

~

.

. •'·
••

:!•lf'WIN'I'f WOUI..O
'f'I-1~~~6PH~N1'

~
,_.,"'f.

'11!~"··

'f8 · W 11' OU1' W11'H
i'l'' MIGI-I'I"Y fNSStl#.

lwc: ...

•

'I&lt;;

1~~1'H l~ i,.HA1', IF=

.
-

1~e

-

.,
,,,.•

�'

.

I

- -'

'

..

011, MY.STARS, llNaE.
.JOHN WILL BE

C/..05£0 BEFORE

ICANPAWN
THAr
F'/JRTI1ANTEAU!

fROM 000'-IT'r'La COi..L'EG.E .

br~tiJwU-

.'

. ... ...... .

.• .

·,

.

'•.''

.

'

::·. ~.-....:.. ...·~ ~- .tlr:!}.I:. . L ....,.....~.

__ ..

~--·------

.

• •

,. •

~ -~~"

.1'

•

' '

'

1

: bF~Stoffi·I ·&amp; , _: HeiJildahl.

··:. - ~ •-i·~:- .. ~;": ~-

·,.
'

•.:.•

..

;

·'

. HiYAJpe~IA! AM t .
GLAD 1"'see.-.cu!'

MOI&lt;J'I 1'11=&gt;,..1

,
.'
.,

',. ·'

.'J"·;_
c, •'
.
wl

•

•

1~~N -:t;~ CAtlb~l
IN A Bl..IZ::ZARD!

AND ANO'f!-IER ONE
%'A1' MS LJPf

TB:I: BORN LOr~~-~-~
~. ~-----, bF Art· Sa11som.
.

'

''

•, ."

. . ._

-·-··-

~

~~·

1$&gt;
' .

.'

.

,.._.:......_..._....~ liiooiliiijl~~., • •'
'

··~

;·

.

·.:

. ,:.

'
11,_·:·

.·
)

•

(!)
·.

"

,:

..• -·
•

..

'
'

•

•

'

'

'

.

..r ~.
-'

"

SO?
I

·C

,

I

"'

.
. . ..
- .

:

. .'

::

'.

'

~

.

-.-

- .----~-

&lt;:: ' ' ~-:&lt;&gt;

@

-~

--

�''

?
.

'

~ Now
•'

You.Know
,. ,,

'

Weather

I

ARebozo Is a long lK:arf worn
chiefiy by Mexican women.

t:RIEND, A'MANDA,.

L.IN6·AT 'YOU. ·
'

I

Ch8nce of light snow north,
otherwiJe moa.Uy cloudy lind
not a1 cold tonight. Low In the
lower 30s south. Warmer and
windy Tuesday. IUgh In the 60s
south.

.·'
Devol«~ To 7lae Inter~" Of 7lae Meigl- M010n Area
•
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MONDA¥; MARCH 6, 1972

VOL. XXIV . NO. 229

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

'

Nixon Leans
Away From
No 'Bus Law
·32

.Fenwick
Building

.• ·;-5

Eastern Victorious·in Final Game

\

All the Comforts
· of Home
®

'

'

'

'

'-"E'RE. PUTTING AUDOGPATCH ON El'.HIBITION
AT THE GOVEP.NMENT
'
HOUSINIGSHOW!!
"
'
.

wt=. LO\II'.S, Rt=.&amp;Pt=.CKS
· AN' 1-\0NORS TH ' U .S.
GO\/AMINT.'.'- ~,...-'\

HVRRIC:ANE

NOW.'

DOG PATCH
IS TH'.WA':/

HAI"-l 1 T

IT AI:J.U5 ·

THARrf

'

WAS!!'.

CAPTAIN EASY
EA$Y, ME:6i 'M,l&lt;E:!:. INPU5&gt;fRII:5' ~e:WE5-T
I'ECRUif.-li'OO ~TRON6FO()T. ACB MAIIJHU~TEF&lt;..
OF TH6 N~TIONAL. COU~T61'~PY . AGE:NCY!

MOPJ:!&gt;TY
FORBID~ M&amp;
TO DI5-CU5~
MV MANY
t:XCITI~6

CA$SG!

'

THE: REAL. MODeL.'$ 1'-1 TI-ll!&gt; ·~W~Eii
$TORE:HOU$E;,..THE BUYER, HORACE:',
FI6B'I, 1$ COMifJ(S TO IN5PE:CT
.
ON TUE$DAY!
'
'

.

•:•;o,-;;o;-x
... .....
;;;
...._~,f••f,.~

• ·~.o;v.q~;w
'11 T~-w·'"'~'·"~~·.

ews.. in Briefi . $20,000

TI-IANK '7'0! SON-

. L-LUCKY
I&gt;OGPATCH .

GRABS REBOUND - Eastern's Randy Young (23), above, grabs a rebound from the
outstretched hands of NorthGallla's Larry Justus (32) and Arthur Clark (30) during action in
Saturday's finals of the Class ASectional Tournament at Meigs High School. Clark played the
entire contest with a chipped bone In his right ankle. He scored only 10 points. Eastern avenged
two earlier losses to North Gallia in the 7~ triumph.
CALDWElL SCORES -Bob Caldwell, at right, senior guard for Eastern, pwnps in two
points during the championship game of the Class A Sectional Tournament Saturday night at
Meigs High School. Caldwell had one of his better nights against North Gallia in helping
Ea9terndown the favored SVoACchamps, 70-55. Eastern advanced to the district tournament al
Chillicothe. The Pirates' Arthur Clark (30) is at the right.
CHEERING FANS - Emolions were high Saturday night as a large crowd packed the
Meigs High School Gym for the finala of the Class A Sectional Tournament. Eastern won its
thlrd.stralght trip to Chillicothe by dropping North Gallia 's powerful Pirates, 70-55. See Page 3
for details.
. . .•.

..
8ACKHOM£.,

Hit Hard

by Crooks &amp; LawreDce.
I'L.L.. REI-'1' 01-J ·VOU TO GUARD·
OUR '-lEW MUL.TIMILL.JOI\rOOU.AR
51JPER COMPUTER BUILT fOR
Flc313'r'
.....$PI\C!: LAS$!

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
HEAVY SNOW WARNINGS were issued for portions of the
East today whlie Cdld ~tabbed the centrlilliiid Soilllieast sections
of the coimtry. 'Travelers'warilings were 'iii effect lor northern
and eastern Maine with 41nches of snow expected.
Cold wave warnings were ln effect for Alabama, northwestern Florida and portions of Georgia and South Carolina.
The mercury was expected to dip well below freezing before
dawn as far South as northwestern Florida. There was locally
heavy snow in the vicinity of Lake Ontario Sunday night with
Boonville, N. Y., receiving &amp;'Inches ina !Hiour period.
LORDSrOWN, OHIO - A 39-HOUR marathon bargaining
session between General Motors aiid the· United Auto Workers
broke off without agreement early today as the str~e at the giant
complex here went into its third full day. George Morris, Jr., GM
vice president of industrial relations, announced the cessation of
talks. Earlier in the morning, a spokesman for UAW Locall112
had warned if the talks were broken off this .morning without a
settlement, ''we're going to be in for a long strike."
"It now appears thai the local union is more concerned with
exerting its muscle than continuing to work for a responsible
settlement for the approximately 7,800 hourly employes at this
plant," Morris said. "The ' union's belated 'package proposal'
was rejected because it fell far short as a basis for·a fair settlement."

Loss Set
Property' loss ri'e stini'atect at
$20,000 as the result of a fire
which leveled the frame home
of Mr. and Mrs·. Charles R.
Sheils ori Cook -Road in
Hemlock Grove Sunday
evening.
Chester and Pomeroy
volunteer firemeQ were at the
scene after the · home was
· discovered engulfed in names
by a neighbor after 6 p.m.
Sunday. The Chester Depart·
ment 's Fire Chief, Ross
Cleland, said the fire was out of
control when his department
arrived. The
Pomeroy
department received its call at
6:48p.m.

J

Farm Set-aside
Deadline Near

With the March 10 deadline
for sign up in the 1972 ·feed
grain and wheat programs
drawing near, over 100 farmers
are expected to visit the Meigs
County
Agricultural
. COLUMBUS -A GROUP OF TEACHERS from Ohio plans
Stabilizalion and Conservation
to meet with Republican congressmen from the state in
office during this final week.
Washington on Tuesday to seek for their help in getting federal
About 300 producers in Meigs
· Pay Board approval of new mi~imum teacher salary schedules.
Countf were sigQed up for one
William C. McDonald, president of the Ohio Education '
or more of the set.aside
Association, said the new statewide teachers salary schedule
progra'ms offered this year,
goes into effect this month if the Pay Board gives its approval.
according to Orion Roush,
LAST DAY NEAR
The Ohio General Assembly in December raised the
All Pomeroy Peewee, Pony county ASC committee
minimum salary schedule from $5,200 for a beginner with a and Utile League baseball chairman .
bachelor degree to $5,~ beginning this month and to $6,400 players must register for
"We've heen recording about
beginning July I.
participation from 1 to 3 p.m. 20 signups pel' day, but we
Sunday at the Pomeroy €ity expect that average to climb
NEW YORK - ALMOST TWO-THIRDS of all Americans Hall. Boys not register~ by sharply during the last week,"
favor school desegregation, but even more - 60 pet. - o!)pose the March 12 deadline will not Roush said.
0
Farmers have been waiting
compullory busing to achieve racial balance, a Gallup Poll be permitted to piay in the
published today in Newsweek magazine indicates. ''Opposition to summer program: Following to sign up early, he reported,
racial busing cuts · across geographic, · economic and - to a the 3 p.m. signup closing starting at 7:45a.m. when the
surprising extent-even across racial lines, acCording to the Sunday, a planning session will local ASCS office opens. The
telephone survey of a national cross section of 548 adults," the be held at city hall for all office closes at 4:30 p.m. Any
managers and interested men producer who is in the office
Newsweek article reported.,
Sixty-eight pet. of Northern whites and 74 pet. of Southern and women, Tom Grueser, before closing time will be
whites are opposed to compulsory busing, Newsweek said. And president of the Pomeroy enrolled that day.
program, said.
In the 1972 voluntary farm
(Continued on Page 10)
programs, participants agree
•••••~m~IMI!m~.!lml.lll~~W.~~;~m:®~»=~&lt;~IMIISIIIII.m~m-'~W~m;;r,·olm1'm!1'm!mll!mi.MIIII!I·----~
Cleland said the entire
contents of the home, which
was being remodeled, were
destroyed . The fire apparently
'
slarted from a wood
burning
stove. Mr. and Mrs. Sheets had
left the home about 5 p.m.
There was no insurance on the
house or its contents.

Damages were expected to
run into thousands of dollars in
recent valdalism at the Bishop
Fenwick High School Building
- unused since 1963 - near
Cheshire.
Gallia County sheriff's
deputies late Saturday afternoon were called to. the
building located north of the
Cheshire corporation. Thomas
L. Goett of Pomeroy
discovered the vandalism.
According· to the sheriff's
department, eight doors were
destroyed ; the fire alann and
PA system were severely
damaged; a piano was
demolished, and the lK:hool's
clock and bell systems were
demolished in every room In
the Jlld.l41l1g. AlSo damage&lt;!
were· gym curtains, stage
lights, an office window and
several classrooms.
Deputies investigated three
separate home burglaries. Ray
Waugh , Davis Rd ., said
someone eniered his home
Sunday night by going through
the back door. Nothing was
reported missing.
Joyce Newell , Rt. 35,
reported her mobile home was
entered by removing a lK:reen
on the back door . Again ,
nothing was taken.
Jack Lane, Chillicothe Rd.,
said someone entered his
basement and threw paint over
the floor.
City pollee officers continued
investigating acts of vandalism
involving pellet guns. City
Chief of Police John Taylor
said all three Gallipolis banks
had windows broken by BB
pellets over the weekend.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Nixon will not endorse a
constitutional amendment to end busing, it was learned today.
Jnstead, he probably will ask Congress for a moratoriiun on new
court-&lt;lrdered busing, and propose legislation to ensure quality
education for every school chUd.
The cabinet-level committee which Nixon asked for a policy
recommendation on the forced busing lssue was expected to offer
Its advice 1100n, possibly this week. Nixon called the panel to the
White House today, aloog with top black officials within the
administration, to discuss the question.
But sources close to the schools.
committee said this much was
In the meantime, it would
clear: Nixon will not choose propose a moratoriwn on new
the Constitutional amendment busing decrees from the courts .
route. Not only have the
By itaelf, the moratoriwn
committee members-form- idea likely would be defeated in
er Attorney General John N. the Senate, where a strong
Mitchell; Elliot L. Richardson, an tibuslng proposal offered by
Secretary of Health, Education Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich .,
and Welfare ; and Budget died last week. When tied to an
Director George · P. Shultz- education • Improvement
publicly opposed that route, but proposal, it might win strong
the amendment idea still lacks election
year
support,
the two-thirds support it would especially since it would offer a
need to clear the House and chance to lower the busing
Senate.
issue temperature while
The cabinet committee plans Congress attacks the root of the ·
to recommend, and Nixon Ukely question .
will request, that legislation be
It could not be learned
offered to attack the problem immediately just how it may be
by eliminating educational Ine- proposed that Congress perquities which have prompted suade-or force-the courts to
courts to order black children respect a moratorium on new
and whites bused to other busing ord~s.

Three G Is Die
In Ammo Blast
SAIGON (UP!) - Three
American soldiers were killed
today when ammunition they
were stacking exploded.
The three, who were not
identified, were stacking old
ammunition In an exclosed
area at Long Binh, the U. S.
headquarters in VIetnam, 18
miles from Saigon.
The blast was tremendous,
much larger than the normal
ammunition for rifles and
machineguns would have
caused, officers at the base
said. They added lhat an investigation was ordered into
the possibility of sabotage, a
stray guerrilla mortar round or
the chance that land mines or
bombs. had been Improperly
sto~ed in the area.
Elsewhere, guerrilla rockets
hit the big U. S. Alr Base at
Cam Ranh Bay an hour before

dawn today, slightly injuring
one man with shrapnel. It was
the first tbne Cam Ranh Bay
had been rocketed since Jan.
16.
The U. S. command reported
that Navy planes new two
more "protective reaction"
strikes against antiaircraft
guns in North Vietnam on
Sunday. Results of those
strikes were not known.
In South VIetnam's Central
Highlands, where North
Vietnamese infiltration is
reported at its highest In years,
allied .patrols found secUons of
a brand-new guerrilla road
leading east from the triborder area of Vietnam, Laos
and Cambodia.
South Vietnamese engineers
were sent in to blow up sections
of the road and felled dense
jungle trees with dynamite so
the road could be seen from the
air.
All told, 116 men were killed
or wounded on both sides including one American
wounded at Cam Ranh Bay in the 24 hours ended early
today.
Military sources also
disclosed a new South Viet·
namese drive that started
Friday against the Com.
munists' key "base area 114"
staging area in Quang Tri
Province , adjoining the
Demilitarized Zone.

to set aside 25 pet. of their
farm 's feed grain base - corn,
barley, graih sorghum - of
whatever crop or crops they
sign up for, and for wheat
agree to set aside acreage
equal to 83 pet. of the !ann
domestic allotment.
,\M;@ffli%~.$.l.1.l!frl!nl&lt;llr"
Options are offered for ad·
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
ditional voluntary set..aside in
Ohio Extended Outlookthe wheat and feed grain
Wednesday through Friday:
programs in order to aid
Turning cooler Wednesday
fa rmers in bringing produclion
and Thunday and not much
into better adjustment with
change
Friday. A chance
market demand. In return for
or
snow
setting aside a portion of their of · rain
The Meigs County Sheriff's
productive land, producers Wednesday and again Friday.
.
Highs
mostly
Dept. reported a single car
earn set-aside payments based
In
the
50s
Wednesday
aod
lo
accident
Sunday at 7:30 p. m.
on their farm's established
yields for the program crops. the 30s and lower 40s 'lbnn· on the Albany-Carpenter Road,
day and Friday. Overnight three miles north of SR 143.
Additionally, program crops
Rosemary Landers , 17,
on participating farms are lows In the 30s and lower 40s
Wednesday
morning,
Albany, Rt. 3, was traveling
eligible for support loans.
dropping
to
the
20s
Thunday
south
on the Albany-Carpenter
The chairman reminded
Road when she hit an icy area
producers tha t they may and Friday mornings.
~.w::~~:~:*-~»-~@m®=
.
;@'
~~i
:
·&amp;1i~
.
mm11m•
causing her car to go off the
request se t·aside inspection
highway on the right and over
and measurement service at
Marriage Ucense
an embankment. Miss Landers
LOCAL TEMPS
the same time they sign for the
Mickey Hay Hutton, 2l,
Temperature in downtown was taken to a physician in
farm programs. This service,
Rutland,
Rt. I, and Rachael
provided at cost, offers a Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m. Albany by private car. There
quali ty and quantity guarantee was 30 degrees, under sunny was heavy damage to her car, Katheryn McGrath, 28,
Rutland .
skies.
but no arrests.
~ on set..aside acres.

Teenager's Car

Goes off Road

Subpoena Accepted in HospitaljJunior Fair Planning Underway

DENVER (UPI) - Washington lobbyist Dita Davis Beard,
a key witness In the International Telephone &amp; Telegraph '
Corp. (m) antitrust case, has
accepted a federal subpoena in
her hospital room but will not
appear immediately before 'he
Senate Judiciary Committee.
Dr. David Garland of- the
Rocky Mountain Osteopathic
Hospital said Sunday that the
federal government had
agreed to 1\elay the testimony
because Mrs .. Beard might
sustain " permanent heart
damage Or death from such an
appearalice."
Mrs. Beard, 53, was the
purported au!h ~r of a., memor' ,;,

.'

'

andum which linked the settlement of an ITT antitrust case
with a $400,000 donation to help
finance the 1972 Repubiican
National Convention.
Attorney General-elect Richard Kleindienst and other
federal officials have ·denied
any direct connection between
settlement of the ITT matter
and the convention finance
pledge.
Two FBI agents who had
been camped outside Mrs.
Beard's hospital room served
the subpoef\a on the· woman
Salurday night alter her
personal physician from Washington , D.C., arrived and
rer"i ved assurao&lt;:c !hat she

would not haye to appear that the requirements of
before the committee Tuesday compliance with It would not be
necessary due to Mrs. Beard's
as scheduled.
The physician, Dr . 'Victor condition," Garland said.
"This inade the .serving of
llizka, said it was obvious she
couid not appear unless there the subpoena more of a benefit
was a drastic improvement in than 11 detriment to the'
her condition, "and this would patient's condition, since it
decreased the tension and ,
be a miracle," he said.
stra!n
of the Impending service
Mrs. Beard is suffering from
acute angina pectoris, a heart of this on her. Add! tiona I stress
disease, and dQCiors expect she could have precipitated (corothrombosis with
will·remain hOspitalized for at nary l
least 10 days. Garland said the . resultan t permanent heart
stress of the past few days damage or death ;" Garland
' ·
could have been a factor in her said .
condiUon.
Garland said Mrs. H··&lt;~ rd 's
"Dr. Liszka was able to eondition had impro1w! somearrange the presentation or the what 'ince her hospilalization
suhpoo•na with l!u· "~stlr an &lt;'&lt;' Frirt"''

There will be a bigger junior ,
fair board in 1972 if first plans
for the fair launched Saturday
at the county extension office
materialize .
Representatives of 4·H clubs,
th e Future Farmers of
A.'Tierica and the . Junior Fair
Advisory Board scheduled a
special meeting for 7:30 p.m.
on March 22 when o!licers to
head I he annual junior fair will
be selected.
Te mporary officers were
appuinled tu notify members of
lhc juni~or b~om·d of the up·
cuming meeting. Tcniporary
11ffi ccrs a"e Steven Stanley,

president ; Charles Yost, vice
president, and Daniel Midkiff,
secretarY:treasurer.
Adult advisors attending
Saturday's meeting were Pat
liolter, C. E. Blakeslee and
Randall Roberts ; Tom Hamm,
oulgoing president of the
Junior Fair Board, and Gloria
Cross. pu:•licity chainnan
Yost will Invite the
Southern High School Future
Homemakers of America
Cha~ter to be represented on
the junior board. The FHA
Chapters or Melg~ County
sthools have not pU·
ticlpa!l'd t•xtensively · In the

junior lair. This year,
however, 'southern High
School, has Indicated Interest. The chapter will be
asked to send two delegatea
to the board.
Roberts reported that he has
made arrangements with the
senior fair board to include
judging of rabbits in an open
class division th~ year and to
make the class open also to
senior parlicipation.
The group discussed the ·
method of !H!Iecting the, junior
fair king and queen this year,
Directors, some 'of whom
have another year to serve,

Include Ruth Jordan , Margie
Jeffers, Rhea Mora and Jean
Whitehead, re~resenttng 4-H
girls; Mike Benedwn, Alan
Holter, Steven Stanley and
Rick Pierce, 4-H boys; TOm
Harnm, 'Dan Midkiff, Charles
Yo.! and Frank Broderick,
Future Farmers of America,
and Ann Ohlinger , Millsa
Rizer, Jo Ellen Diehl and
Becky Wright, Girl Scouts.
Members of the advisory
board are Pat Holter and
. Carroll Pierce, 4-Q; Clayton
Coffee and Everett Holcomb,
FF A, and Donna Ohlinger and
·Carol Ohlinger, Girl Scouts1

I

~--. ----------~--~·~--~--~----~--~---~----------~'

l

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="723">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11123">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52793">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52792">
              <text>March 5, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2079">
      <name>barnette</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="512">
      <name>cottrell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7864">
      <name>kieling</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2153">
      <name>raub</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4018">
      <name>shumway</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
