<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11435" 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/11435?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:25:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42403">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/166cebc9af643ba993354beb61126abc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b206c16a7948ab6dd1df83e5b8b44f85</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36024">
                  <text>'
12- The Dill)' Sentmei,Middleport.f\meroy,O., Dec. 2f,IJ'II

'#'l!f'JI!I!.'Jrf!:&lt;V:/::JI/:.

a time for dreaming

:=-

Cannon Joi11s Local
.lb.

Patrol Post Today
•

XOM ONG , Vietnam (UP! l
- Christmas, 1971, Vietnam.
It's a tilDe for dreaming.
Thoughts of home . Logs
crackling in the fireplace . The
big tree, the gaily wrapped
gifts. The tinsel and glittering
stars and colored lights.
Then , back to reality. A tank
caked with mud. A can of c.
ration boned turkey . The sun
and the jungle. The danger
once in a while and the
boredom the rest of the time.
"It's not Christmas at all
when you're over here," Spec.
4 Larry Morse, 19, of Salina,
Okla., said . "It's just another
day . Like any other. That's
why it's so bad . You just sit
around and do nothing, like
always."
Morse sat on top of a
~eridan tank , his boots splat·
tered with yellow mud and his
brown hair blowing in the
morning wind . He and the
other Gl's in F troop of the lith
Armored cavalry Regiment
were setting up camp in chest·
high elephant grass 25 miles
northeast of Saigon.
It's not fun on Christmas for
the 159,000 American soldiers
in Vietnam . It's especially
tough for an estimated 15,000
"grunts" still out in the field in
combat.
U.S. commanders arranged

hot turkey dinners Saturday
for Gl's in Vietnam, but some
troops out in the "boondocks"
expected to get their Christmas
meals a couple of days late .
Morse, a tank gunner, said
he had only one Christmas wish
and he didn't expect Santa
Claus to grant it -"I'd like to

Clara Garland
Died Thursday
MINERSVILLE - Miss
Clara E. Garland, 82, Miners·
ville , died Thursday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Garland had been a
railroad employe 35 years. She
was a member of the Minersville Methodist Church and of
its wscs.
Miss Garland was preceded
in death by her parents, Joseph
and Sarah Jones Garland ; two
sisters, Ethel and Elizabeth
Garland , and a brother ,
Ge orge . Several cousins
survive.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
£'uneral Home with the Rev.
£'orrest Donley officiating.
Burial will be in Minersville
Hill Cemetery . friends may
call at the funeral home any

·get out of here, right, now,
right this minute."
"I'm sick and tired of this
place ," he said, his shirt open
and a copper cross dangling
from a black bootlace around
his neck. "What I'd like is some
snow. Christmas doesn't mean
anything to me without snow."
· Spec . 4 William Harper, 20,
of Cookeville, Tenn., stood on
top of APC and decorated a
wilting Christmas tree the
chaplain sent to F troop. His
unbuttoned fatigue shirt
flapped in the breeze outside
his trousers.
"I guess we just got to be
here," he said. "But it won't be
nothing like home . That 's
where I'd like to be now. Back
home. There it is."

David Carmon, 24, a native
of Ironton, has joined the ·
Gallla-Meigs Post, State High·
way Patrol, according to an
announcement today 'by Lt.
Ernest Wigglesworth, commander.

Army.

Patrolman Carmon, a Rock
Hill High School graduate, is a
Vietnam War veteran, having
served in Vietnam War .
veteran , having served in
Vietnam two years as a
paratrooper with the U. S.

Married, the new patrolman
and his wife reside at 5
Edgemont Dr.
Prior to' his transfer to the
Gallia·Melgs Post, Patrolman
Cannon was assigned to the
Swanton Post near Toledo.
Carmon was a member of the
State Patrol Academy's 84th
graduating class on Dec. 12,
1969.
With the addition of Carmon,
the local post now has II
uniformed officers.

Economy Fattened
About $1,208,000 will have
been added to the Mason
County, W. Va., economy by
Jan. 3 in the form of food
purchasing power as a result of
the Federal Food Stamp
Program which will mark its
fifth year of operation in the
county on that date.
According to the U, S.
Department of Agriculture's
FoOd and Nutrition Service,
low income families in the
county have paid about $862,000
for food stamp coupons valued
at $2,070,000 since the program
started in January, 1967. The
difference of .1,208,000

~.
' lllj~

Now You Know

The Christmas
Story

T

w

·k

Police

50TH

"''

,. .

EASY

KER FURNITURE
0.

FREE

YOUR
BUDGET

,.

\

•

...

~,

.....

•

II

I

•l I
I

. ..

•
'

•

.

Y'

~

•

,.

Women Gained

,. ' ,.

I.

•

•

'""
~

•

"

Equality or

DISCHARGES - Euvetta
Bechtle, Freda Henderson,
Doris Yonker, Robert Perkins,
Idonia Johnston, Ralph Ours,
Murl Ours, Sandra Floceari,
Phyllss Davis, Cllarles Barrett
lll, Sharon TbJmpson, Blanche
Hickle, William BarTelt, Ar·
thur Carnahan,

Accident Under
Investigation
Pomeroy police are ln·
vestlgatlng a single car accident that occurred at 4:311
a.m. today on Pomeroy's West
Main St. Jeffrey Alan Morri.s,
17, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, was
traveling east on West Main
when he went off the right of
the highway , and struck a
utWty pole.
He wu taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted for lacerations
and contusions.

•

i

~

~

Christmases of our Childhood
BY BECKY VANCO
GALLIPOLIS _ Friday night,
Christmas Eve, took me back . . .
Where have they gone' The old
time Christmases, 1 mean, the ones
where parents , grandparents and
children sat around the fire on
Christmas Eve waiting and watching
for the coming of old St. Nick, as
grandfather read the Christmas Story
from the Bible, interrupted from t,tme
to time by children rushing out into
the blue cold night to find the star that
stopped over the manger in
Bethlehem•
On a Christmas long ago, when I
was a small child, I remember vividly
the large family of perhaps 20
gathered around the fireplace in the

~

~

i!

home of my grandparents. The long
aHwaHite.~ knock wdasdgiven,gantdhea 'd'Harok. .i:.
O· o resoun e a1on
,
road where horses and sleigh stood .
Santa and his "little helper" came
toward us, knocking the snow from his
pack and oul of his beard; calling
each of us by name as he came in, and
giving a small gift to each of us.
Since that long ago Christmas, I
find myself still watching out the
window on Christmas Eve, if it is
snowing, to see that Jolly Old Fellow
come bouncing up to the door.
I have never figured out who that
SanUI was, for he must have been
someone we all know very well. But
with all the family accounted for, he ::::
remained a mystery . We never-knew . &amp;!

...

I

S:?.::::~~:::?.~~z;:::::=~:~:::::::::::::::~:::::::;::!8~:~===~~=~::?.:~:::::~::::!:::~v.::;:::o::-;:::::::::::::;.'!-:!:~:!:!8?.:~=-;~~=::!:::::::X!::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::~...;:;:·

Don't Take That
One for the Road
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio Highway
Patrol · Supt. Robert M. Chiaramonte
Friday urged Ohioans who intend to drink
over the holidays to use temperance if they
intend to drive.
"One of the biggest problems on our
highways is the drinking driver," said
Chiaramonte. "He is the major conlributing factor in our high traffic accident
death rate.
"Not only is the drinking driver a
hazard to every car he meets on the highway, he is also his own wrost enemy,'' said
Chiaramonte. "Of every 10 one-car fatal
accidents we investigate, seven indi ~ate
that the driver has been drlnltlng heavily."

BY KATHLEEN NEUMEYER
WS ANGELES (UP! )- They didn 't know it until Friday, but several hundred
California women gained equality for Christmas.
Their husbands had answered an advertisement nmning in newspapers and
magazmes throughout Southern California headed "Give your wife equality for
Christmas.''
The campaign was financed by actress Joyce Jillson, who was appalled to discover
that under the community property laws prelavent in the western U,nited States,
husbands have complete management and control of family funds, including the salary
earned by the wife .
Although the wife is entitled to half the income earned by her husband she has no
legal say .in how the money is spent - and in fact is required by law to liv~ where her
husband tells her to.
Miss Jillson said the subject came up at ownership but not even I per cent of the joy
breakfast one morning when her husband and responsibility of control.
of two years, Joseph Gallagher, com"We are presenting this message as a
mented,
public service to husbands who want to do
" You know, I have complete control of something very special for their wives this
all our community property."
Christmas.
Miss Jillson, a former Broadway actress
"If you write to the address indicated
and star of television's "PeytonPiace," below, we will send you a simple form
'- said she was stunned.
which a busband and wife can execute in
"It's a pretty sorry state when a young the privacy of their own home to give your
career woman earns half the family in· wife an equal voice in deciding how to use
come, and then doesn't have any say over the property which is hers as much as
what's done with it," she said,
yours."
Gallagher, who graduated !rom liar·
Miss Jillson said she and Gallagher
vard Law School but has been working at executed their personal agreement seven
Universal studios rather than practicing weeks ago and so far she has exercised her
law, told his wife he would draw up an share of control by voting some stock they
agreement so they would share equally in owned .
managing their funds .
"But we have a dream marriage
"I asked him lfthatmeantl would be the anyway," she said, "And there's never
only woman in California who had that been any question about doing things the
right, and he said, yes, unless somebody way I wanted.
else had a similar agreement drawn up,"
"Women's liberation overstates the
Miss Jillson related.
case,'' she said, 'because women . never
"So we decided to run the ads as a public really were slaves. That's why I call this
service. It's cost me more than $10,000 of equalization. It balances the scales,
my own money, but I think it's worth it." without taking any manhood from the
"The ad doesn't mention my name, but men. Sharing responsiblllty is part of an
even so some people have accused me of up-to-date marriage."
doing it for publicity," she said. "That's
like a blow in the stomach, but I decided it
was a worthy enough cause that I could
FULL COMPLIANCE
live with the adverse comments."
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The U. S.
The 500.word advertisement says:
Department of Transportation has ruled
"If you, as a husband, trust and respect that Ohio is in full compliance with the 1956
your wife as a truly equal marriage Highway Beautification Act of 1965 and
partner, you should want to change a will not lose about 120 million a year in
situation which gives her 50 per cent of the federal funds, it was announced Thursday.
1

" Although the presence of a drunk
driver on our highways is a significant
problem, there are other major problems
to consider in holiday driving," said
Chairamonte.
" Rainy or snow weather , icy streets,
and poor visibility, are added problems
encountered during the winter season," he
said. " Holiday traffic congestion is
POMEROY - Next Tuesday, Dec. 28, donate a unit of blood for ·someone in our
another hazard to consider ."
is Bloodmobile Day foe Meigs County at community who needs it.
the Pomeroy Elementary School from I to
Availability of blood becomes a matter
"The Christmas and New Year's 6 p.m.
of public concern. If we want blood lor
holidays frequently sound the death knell
One of the things science has not been each other as a part of our medical
for hundreds of people across the nation able to discover is a way to manufacture treatment we should appear on next
who become tragically involved in traffic human blood. It can only be done by the Tuesday and donate a unit for ourselves or
accidents," he said.
human body. We should be willing to a neighbor .

Only Humans Can Make Human Blood

For Subcontinent
By ROBERT KAYWR

· NEW DELHI (UPI)- For close to onefifth of the world's population on the Indian
subcontinent, 14 days of savage war put a
grim cap to 1971 and posed some vast
problems for 1972 and years beyond.
The immediate result of the IndiaPakistan war was the dismemberment of
Pakistan as a Moslem nation, the world's
fifth largest couniry in terms of population
and a major force in the power structure of

the subcontinent.
For the first time, India was clearly
established as the subcontinent's
dominant force and India's determined,
slnglemlnded and unswervable prime
minister, Indira Gandhi, clearly emerged
as the dominant personality behind the
force.
With the lreakup of Pakistan came the
birth of the new nation of Bangia Desh
(Bengal land) in the former area of East
Pakistan, a land of upwards of 75 milllon
people and even poorer in many respecta
than some of the most diamally poverty.
ridden parts of India.
For most of the poor millions of the
subcontinent, events of 1971 presaged an
era of great economic trouble.
'·· India bad severe ecooomic 'problems
·'even before the devastaling civU war
lroke out in Eaat Pakistan in March that
eventually led .to all-out war. AI war's end,
India faced a staggering task of trying to
pt the new democracy of Bangia Desh on
1111 feet economically.
Pakistan's economy, which was
1radually recovering from a severe
ncellion, plunged to near ruin after the
OOitly war with India and the leu of the
jute lnduatry of Ealt

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

~

~;
~

1
N

~

l

written to scout headquarters for an award
to be given at a later date. Mark is a
member of Den 3, Pack 245, Middleport.
His den mother, Mrs. Eulah £'rancis,
and Tom Grubb, M-G·M District Scout
leader, were present at Holzer Medical
Center this week with his mother, Mrs.
John Tyree, to give Mark some Christmas
presents from his fellow cub scouters.
Mrs. Francis also presented him with his
Wolf Patch in scouting.
While in Holzer, Mark has had many
toys to play with, and while it's not as good
as being home for Christmas, it does help
ease the loneliness of being in the hospital
when you're nine years old.
Soon, Holzer Medical Center will be
moving to its new location on Rt. 35 and to
a brand new pediatric floor with a new
playzoom. However the playroom at
present is unfurnished . Many of the toys
now used by boys like Mark were pur·
chased through the Ruth Lyons Fund
which is no longer available to Holzer
Medical Center.
Mark may be home for Christmas, but
there are others on Holzer's Pediatric
Floor who won't be.
A sad Christmas for a small child is
one in the hospital, even a good hospital
like Holzer.

Where Are They, Those Old

~

~
'{·

Prospects Bleak

FOCUS: '72

I

!~

:~::

Sad at Christmas

Hazelton, Middleport.

I

~

Boy in Traction
GALLIPOLIS - What do you get a
nine-year old boy who may have to spend
Christmas in the hospital?
A release to go home!
Even young heroes like Mark Tyree, 9,
of Hobson, near Middleport, who are
hospitalized as Christmas approaches, get
a little aJttious to be released and on their
way home.
Mark, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Tyree,
is in Holzer Medical Center here with a
broken right ann and fractured pelvis. It's
possible he may have to stay there past
Christmas Day. However, in giving up his
Christmas fun, he made it possible for one
of his young friends to be home enjoying
the holidays.
Agroup of boys were playing on a huge
rock near Mark's horne last week when
one of the boys stumbled and teetered
toward falling over the edge.
Mark jumped in front of the falling
boy, pushing him to safety on top of the
rock. But in doing this, Mark was knocked
off balance, and went over the edge.
The fall broke his arm and fractured
his pelvis. Thus, while other children
enjoyed the Christmas vacation from
school, Mark was in traction on the
pediatric floor of Holzer Medical Center.
In recognition of his brave and selfless
"' deed, Mark's cub scout leaders h•"•

1;s.•_..•~&amp;=·==~~w.m-·-~8.~:::;:::::t':!:&lt;!'.:::::::m:::::::::::::::::::;::.~::::-.,:::::::::::::::m:;:;:;:;:;.~:;s::!:!t.~::~:
.
«

»

~

•

UNITC~D

TO FIT

'

~

ji.- -

.\

MARK TYREE, 9, Hobmn, a patient in the Holzer Medical Center,
Galllpolis, receives Christmas gtfls and his Cub Scout Wolf Patch from his
mother, Mrs. John Tyree, left, his den mother, Mrs. Eulah Francis, right, and
· Tom Grubb, far right, MGM District Scout leader. Young Tyree suffered a
lroken right ann and fractured his pelvis while trying to rescue a playmate
who was about to fall from a huge rock in Meigs County last week.

Savings!

SHOES

15 CENTS

Christmas '71

Special

The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called at 5:M a .m.
today to the Doris Reinhart
residence, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. ~e was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and later transferred to Holzer
Medical Center.

"'11:
l
I 1

At

You are invited to come, look. create beautiflJt......
rooms! With the finest furniture for beauty, \
comfort, and styling In this areil .

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

•'

•

. . . . ......,..,..._ _ _c _

Vetera• Memorial Hoapltal
ADMISSIONS - Cynthia

a son, Russell; a daughter,
Mabel; her first husband,
Lewis LaRue in 1928, and her
second husband, Kenneth
. Ridenour, In 1971. She was a
member of the New Haven
£'irst Church of God.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30p.m. Monday at the New
Haven First Church of God
with the Rev. David Fields, Jr.,
officiating. £'rienda may call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
after 3 p.m. Sunday. The body
will be taken to the church one
hour preceding the service on
Monday. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.

•

',- &lt;I

\..U .IDA\..A A:I' LUliAN

Among those present were
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Black,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lipscomb
and sons, Eyria, Robert,
Daniel and William; Miss
Louiae Pennington, Mr. and
Mrs . Mayo Bales and
daughter, Rhonda; Mr. and
Mrs. Rodney E. Spires, Diana
and Timmy; Mrs. Marie Spires
and daughters Denise and
Julie, and Mrs. Rita Wright.
Highlighting the evening was
a gift exchange and a
Christmas treat to each person.

Families

TWO SECTIONS

,.

,,'

LOGAN, Ohl'o (UPI) - The
Lockheed-Georgia Corp., faced
with a cutback In orders for its
huge CM airplane, said it will
close its plant near here as of
Jan. I, 1973. About 120 persons
currently are employed at the
local plant.

Mrs. Ridenour Died Thursday

MEIGS THEATRE

Than 11,()()()

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

V_OL_._V_I_N_0._4_B_________Pn_m_er_ov_·M-id-dle_oo_rt_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _S~
UNDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1971

Adventists' Party Held

C. Whittington Died Thursday

tmts·

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More

18 PAGES

ST. LUKE, CHAPTER %
And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a
decree from Caesar Augustus, that all the world should be taxed.
(And this taxing was first made when Cyrenlus was governor
of Syzla.)
And all went to be taxed, every one into his own city.
And Joseph also went up from Galilee, out of the city of
Nazareth, into Judaea, unto the city of David, which is. called
Bethlehem; (because he was of the house and lilleage li David:)
To be taxed with Mary his espoused wife, being great with
child,
And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were
accompUSIIed that She sliould be delivered.
And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in•
swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was
no room for them in the in'n.
And there were in the same country ahepherda abiding in the
field, keeping watch over their flock by night.
_ And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory
of the Lord shone around about them; and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring
you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.
For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour,
which is Christ the Lord.
And this shall be a sign unto you : Ye shall find the babe
wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the
heavenly host praising God, and saying,
Glory to Gnd in the highest and on earth peace, good will
toward men.
And it came to pass, as the angels were gone away from
them into heaven, the shepherds said one to another, Let us now
go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which is come to pass,
which the Lord hath made known unto us.
And they came with haste, and found Mary, and Joseph, and
the babe lying in a manger.
And when they had seen it, they made known abroad the
saying which was told them concerning this child.
And all they that heard lt wondered at those things which
were told them by the shepherds.
But Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her
heart.
And the shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for
all the things that they had heard and seen, as it was told unto
them.

represents the increase in food
sales that has directly
LOCAL TEMPS
benefitted county food merThe temperature in down·
chants. About 2,300 persons
town Pomeroy at 10 a.m.
participate in the program
Friday was 52 degrees, under
each month.
extremely cloudy skies.
Currently there are 52 food
retailers in the county
THEY'RE READY
authorized by USDA to accept
The Shade Elementary
coupons. Many of these grocers
School
Biddie
League
have increased their sales
basketball team - composed
substantially in meat and dairy
of fourth, fifth and sixth grade
products as well as in produce
boys - is now scheduling
Items
since the program
games. Coaches in the area
began.
who wish to schedule a game
may contact Joe Pedigo, Shade
Under the program, which is
administered
jointly by the
Route 1, or phone 696-1058
lime.
USDA's £'ood and Nutrition
evenings.
Service and the West Virginia
Department of Welfare,
eligible low income families
invest the money they would
normally use to buy food each
month in coupons that have a
greater monetary value.
These coupons may then be
spent like cash at authorized
food markets. Coupons can
only be used to purchase
domestically produced food
products and some specified
Imported foods. Food mer·
chants redeem the coupons at
face value at local banks.
Although the local welfare
department is responsible for
certifying recipients, low in·
come families not receiving
public assistance may also be
eligible to receive food stamp
coupons.
POMEROY - ALL FIRE DEPARTMENTS of Meigs
from the left and the department represented included Henry
Persons wishing to inquire as
County received checks for $1!10 each through the generosity
Werry, Pomeroy; Ross Cleland, Chester; Ralph Trussell,
to their ellgibillty to parof the Pomeroy National Bank. ~own making the presenBashan; Grant Boring, Olive Township; Archie McKinney,
ticipate in the program are
tations on the left is bank president, Edison Hobstetter, who
Rutland; Bill Rice, Syzacuse; Jim Daniels, Middleport , aod
advised to make an apcommended the groups for their worlr. Receiving the checks
Walter Cleland, Racine.
pomtment to VISit the food
stamp certification officer in
BURNED, DIES
TEENAGER KILLED
the county department of
A Christmas party and
CLEVELAN D ( UPI )
LISBON, Ohio ( UPI )
welfare office located at 230 fellowship hour was held
Barbara Barret, 35, Cleveland, Patricia McBride, 19, East
Main St., Point Pleasant. The Saturday evening in the
was killed today when fire Palestine, was killed Thursday
phone number is 67[&gt;.2164.
basement of the Seventh Day
Charles William Whittington, in Gravel Hill Cemetery at .
swept through her apartment night in a two-car accident on
AdvenUst Church, Mulberry
on the city's west side.
Ohio 14, two miles west of Ohio 41, Main St. , Rutland, died Cheshire. Friends may call at
Heights, Pomeroy. The group
Thursday
at
the
Holzer
165, in Columbiana County.
the funeral home until 9 p.m.
WO
reC S sang Christmas carols and
Medical Center.
today and from 3 to 5 and from
played games with prizes going
Born March 9, 1930 in Meigs 7 to 9 p.m. on Saturday.
to Mrs. Patsy Spires, Miss
County, he is survived by his
U n d e r ProheDiana Spires and Eyzia Lips·
FATAL BATH
wife, Jennie M. Noble Whitcomb,
WAUSEON, Ohio (UP! )
tington; his father, Theodore
The door prize was awarded
Mike Hallett, Wauseon, died Whittington , Cheshire ; a
The Meigs County Sheriff's
to Denise Spires. After prayer
today when a radio fell into a daughter, Lynetta Jo; four
Dept. investigated two ac· by Burdell Black buffet
(Continued from Page 11
bathtub and electrocuted him sons, Charles Raymond ,
cidents Thursday. At 4:30p.m. refreshments were served.
auto.
while he was taking a bath.
on SR 681, James R. Morris, 16,
William Dean, and James
"They
were
parked
next
to
ClUB
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, was traveling
Allen, all of Rutland, and
FOR72 .........
Charles William,' Jr., Mid· the car," Beeler said. "The east when he hit a lilippery
dleport; three brothers, Leslie, mother watched it for about 15 place and lost control in a
Make 49 payments , SOc
Middleport Route I; Clifford, minutes and then sent the little curve, the vehicle going off the
road to the left. The car hit an
to $10.00 and we make
of Harrisonville, and Lewis, of girl to steal the gifts."
Tonight &amp; Saturday
'
One
suspect
arrested
on
a
Brunswick, Ga .; three sisters,
embankment and turned over.
the
HARTFORD - Blanche J.
December 24-25
charge of. taking a stero tape
Morris
sustained
a
sprained
Mrs.
Erma
Mulford,
Kanauga;
Ridenour, 88, Hartford, died
MAROONED
deck from an auto at Eastland elbow but was not immediately
Mrs.
Fred
(Marie
)
Buck,
(Technicolorl
Thursday at Thomas Memorial
~opping Center allegedly ad·
treated. No citation was issued. Hospital.
Gregory Peck
Zanesville, and Miss Wilma
Richard Crenna
Whittington, Gallipolis, and mitted taking more than 150 There was heavy damage to
tape decks in the last three the car.
" G"
several nieces, nephews,
The daughter of the late
months, and bragged he could
Featurette :
On Township Rnad 122, seven
aunts, uncles and cousins.
The Ghost Talks
remove them from a locked car tenths of a mile north of Isaiah W, and Mary Baker
Mr. Whittington was
3 Stooges
Syracuse Homer Mills, Jr., 15, Gibbs, Mrs. Ridenour is sur·
preceded in death by his in less than a minute.
"Actually, that's just what Syracuse, was traveling north, vived by a brother, Isaiah W.
mother, Dorothy Archer
he did," Beeler said. "Two The car went to the left over an Gibbs, Hartford; a sister, Mrs.
Sun., Mon .. Tues.
Whittington, in 1968. He was a
The Athens County
officers observed him punch embankment and struck a tree. Edna Rogers, Chester, W. Va.;
December 26-27.28
veteran of World War II having
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
FIVE EASY PIECES
out a vent with a bayonet, open
Brian
Ritchhart,
17, three sons, Todd La Rue,
296 Second St.
served in the USAF and the
(Technicolorl
Dallas
LaRue,
the car door and cut the wires Syracuse, a passenger, Nitro;
Pomeroy, Ohio
Marines. He was an iron
Jack Nicholson
of the stereo player, He had it sustained a laceration to his Manhattan, Calif., and Clifworker with the Lasco Corp., of
Karen Black
fvo\ember Federal Home Loan
out and was back in his auto in scalp. He was not immediately ford, of Brilliant, Ohio; four
" R"
Decatur, Ill.
Bank .
less than 40 seconds."
grandchildren, and 10 greatColorCartoons :
treated.
Funeral services will be held
Five
others
were
arrested
Red Tractor
Member Federa l Savings &amp;
Mills was cited to court on grandchildren.
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the when they attempted to steal a
Brothers in Ou1er Space
She was preceded in death by
Loan Insurance Corp. All
charges of no operator's
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Stooge
car parked at a discount store. license and excessive speed,
ccounts ins ur ed up 1o
with the Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Police said they were in a
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
20,000.00.
Jr., officiating. Burial will be stolen car at the time and were The car was demolished .
later linked to four armed
BANKER DIES
robberies, two grand larcenies
If It's Fine Upholstered Furniture
and an old auto theft charge. NORWALK, Ohio (UP!) Former
Ohio
Bankers
Association President John E.
You Are Looking For • . .
Wise died Thursday. He was 87.
Wise spent more than 60 years
in the banking business in
IMPORTANT CASES
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The Bellevue, Willard and NorSupreme Court, which will walk.
receive its two new justices
. TWO DEAD
Jan , 7, has announced that it
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
will hear arguments shortly
(UP!)
- Two persons were
thereafter on challenges to the
death penalty and other cases killed early today in a three car
which it held up while it was collision on Interstate 75 near
here, the Ohio Highway Patrol
not at full strength.
reported. One of the vlclirils
was identified as Thomas
Norris, 23, Bowling Green. The
Identification of the other
victim was withheld pending
, notification of next of kin.

+

The first Christmas card, as
it ~ presently known, was
designed in England by J . C.
Horaley in 1843 and was in·
traduced into the United States
by Louis Prang of Boston in
1875.

The war between India and Pakistan
grew out of undying hatreds between
Hindu India and Moslem Pakistan which
have caused them to go to war three times
since they became independent in 1947.
The December conflict stemmed from
general elections in Pakistan in Decem·
ber, 1970, and the resulting victory of the
Bengali autonomy leader, Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman, who was able to win a majority
of National Assembly seats because of
East Pakistan's population edge over the
West.
Following the victory, Pakistani
President Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan
refused to convene the National Assembly
because of Mujlb's pledge to establish
autonomy for East Pakistan, where the
Bengali population felt it had been
economically exploited by the Punjab! and
Pathan peoples of West Pakistan.
Aserlea of meetings between Yahya and
the Sheikh fatled on the evening of March
25 and Yahya abruptly departed from the
East Pakistani capital of Dacca for
Islamabad, the nation's capital.
Within four ·hours, Yahya's West
Pakistani armybegan what has come to be
regarded as the worst blrodbath of modern
times.
Foreign newsmen trapped in a hotel in
Dacca watched Pakistani troops backed
by tanks machine gun and burn a
newspaper office. Authorities arrested
Mujib and flew 'lim to prison In West
Pakistan. The following day, Hindu areas
of Dacca burned in colwnns of flame and
smoke as newsmen were hustled to
Dacca's airport and eJected' from the
country,
As a convoy carrying the journalists
drove to the airport lt pasaed an area of
thatched huts of Bengali peasants that was
in flam~s. A Punjabi lieutenant, asked
fi~~Hnu ......

....

o ....... _'

o·\

•

.

)

•
&gt;

'

'

..

•

'.fl"*
THROUGH ~ GENEROSITY and thoughlfulness of residents
Christmas at the Meigs County Infirmary and Children's Home will be
special. Here,.Dtana Lewis, granddaughter of the infirmary superintendent,

Mrs. Clifford Jacobe, arranges packages under a large tree In the foyer of
the building as gifts cOntinued to arrive for residents of the county bomt. '

�,-

'
•

2-111e SmdayTimei · Semlllei,Sunday, Dec... lfll

Prospects Bleak

Two Busy Months for

lipkmatlc IIIUI'Ces here.

Before her departure for Western
((¥tlnlled from Pa&amp;e ll
Europe and Wublnetoo in October to
II)Out the fate oHhe inhabilallta, !Oott:d at. · ciBcula the altuation With l're!lkll!llt Nixon
the flames and laughed.
and oilier Western leaders, Mrt. Gandhi
"We wW fix these people," he said.
told 1 Dml eollferenoe that the questlm
In the weeks that followed, the ll'lllf
was not one for negotlilt!On between India
lliaerted eootrol and famed out frcm
IIIII Palr.lltan-- but that at the lllllllf time
Dacca. Its main targets were lhe'followen
the lnflu rl. refugees made It manda!Dry
fl Rahman and the Hindu minority. All
that Plklstan create condiliona which
wbo could, fled to India-by atim•te a
11!ould allow them to go beet.
human refugee tide of 9.7 m1lllm per!IOII8.
FollowiDg ·bel' return, Mrs. Gandhi's
loa villages were burned and wboJeaale
position hardened furtber atm. ·The
killing p_rogreased, foreign observers
unaMounced Incursions Into East
estimated tbat 200,000 periOill died.
Pakistan bepn. Mrs. Gllldlll declared her
loa the refugees inundated India, the
objectives before parliament.
India government aecretJy began to asalat
"I do feel that In today's Bituation the
Bengali guerrWas, and dashes along the
very presence of Palr.lstanl troops In
border resulted.
Bangia Desh II a threllt to our security,"
By.early November the tenalm reached
llhe aa.ld. "I would certainly welcome the
flash pOint. India was 1e11dlng Ita troops
wltlwbwal ol troopa, and I thlnlr. that
into East Pakistan m unamounced in· troopa to be withdrawn are the Palrlstanl
curs!OIIS. Pakistani troops moved to the
troops from Bqla Desh...
western border and Indian military units
Qle week earlier Indian planes had Sl\ot
followed suit.
down 111ree Palr.lstanl jet fighters along the
India claims that PaldstPJ!I jets attacked
East Palr.lstan border. Western mllitary
several
air
bases
In
the
area
along
the
IIOUI'cel
bere l8ld that It wu ooen to
DIANECffiCLE
West PaltliWI border on the nlgbt of Dec.·s argumeot m which side of the border !lie
in
year, she currently is working as a what Mrs. Gandhi desaibed u the start dogfight occurred.
In any case, denoww::ement and full.
saleslady in a toy store ... and at Christ.. of fullscale war. But the first Open of·
fensive
operations
came
when
Indian
scale war came wltbln folD' dlys of Mrs.
mas.
troope
moved
aCI'OliS
the
border
of
East
Gandhi's words.
"I like it," she smiles. "It's really
Pakistan, and fighting started on the West
fWI !"
Standing behind Mrs. Gandhi's har·
Pakistan border.
Western efforts to maintain peace In the den!ng of purpose was the surprise
region were criticized as ballbearted by frlend8hlp treaty ber goverrunent signed
Indian officials who accuaed the Western with the Soviet Unlm during a vtalt by
powers and especially the United States of Russian Foreign Minister Andrei.
IRONTON, Ohio (UP!) - Nonnan being partial to Pakistan.
GrCIIIYko Aug. 8. 'lbe treaty signing wu
Rose, a student at Marietta College who
Mrs. Gandhi told the West tbat Pakistan followed by a procession of vtalta by high·
attempted to paddle a rubber raft from
ranlr.lng Soviet civilian and mllitary ofwould have to \1' prepared to negotiate
Marietta to Cincinnati by Christmas, gave with the elected leaders In the East
ftclall to New DelhiP!!d a large infusion of
up late Thursday when his raft sprung a meaning Mujlb, who wu put on trial f!J.' Soviet mUitary equipment wbleh Included
leak and his cold began getting worse.
treason by Yahya. 'lbe I'Ulstani!Jfl!ident more than 250 tanlr.s u well u antiaircraft
Rose said the cold which he picked up
several days ago had spread into his lungs
so he pulled his raft asllore here and
planned to continue his trip by hitchhiking.
Athought for the day : British
Rose spent Wednesday night in
Ironton and said, at that time, that he Prof. John Tyndall said, " It i.s
would continue. So far on the trip he has as fatal as it is cowardly to
slept in a cornfield, a hollow pine tree and blink facta because they are not
to our taste."
a motel.

Young College Grad
POMEROY - For Diane Circle,
November and December have been full of
new titles : Mrs.; B. S. in Elementary
Education, and saleslady.
In November , Miss Obranovich
married David Circle, formerly of Meigs
Cowlty and a former schoolmate at Ohio
Dominican College, Columbus, where she
received her degree summa cum laude in
December.
And she attained a 3.995 average out of
a possible 4.0 for her four-year course
which she completed in three-and-a-llalf
years at the college. She chalked up her
only Bin a half-hour one semester physical
education course. A member of Delta
Epsilon Sigma, academic honorary, she
was named to the Dean's List for
academic achievement at ODC.
As a sophomore at the coeducational
college, she received the St. Catherine
Medal, awarded by Kappa Gamma Pi,
national Catholic College Senior Women's
Honor Society . The medal is presented

-lmmovale lD his nfuaa1, according to m18811" and apare parts for India's Soviet..

annually to the undergraduate most likely
to fulfill membership requirements for the
society : attain a 3.6 academic average
throughout college; sllow outstanding
extra curricular leadership, and indicate
an ability for outstanding service in post
graduate life.
In her junior year at the liberal arts
college of approximately 1000 students,
Diane was president of the Student
Education Association.
The Circles reside at 4719 E. Broad St.,
Columbus. Mr . Circle, a 1970 OD graduate
and the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Otha
Circle of Meigs County, is associated with
Press Pharmacies in Columbus. The new
Mrs. Circle, a graduate of Notre Dame
Academy, Chardon, is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Obravovich, 10014 Flrwoud
Rd., Cleveland.
While Diane would like to teach fourth
or fifth grade in the Columbus School
System, and hopes to do substitute
teaching for the remainder of the school

Student Gives Up

229,100 Out of Work in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services reported
Friday that 229,100 persons were out of
work in Ohio in November boosting the
percentage rate to 5.1.
The bureau said Ohio had 4.5 per. cent
of the work force unemployed in October.
"Each month this year, both for the
natiqn and Ohio, rates were above
corresponding months last year," the

report said.
The bureau said November employment in basic steel in Ohio dropped 14
per cent from last year and production of
aircraft and parts fell off 25 per cent.

designed fighters and atta.ck aircraft.
'lbe sumlen Soviet ucendance matched
plummeting U:S. Influence In lntlla that
wM apurred by clllclolurel of American
arms shl!ll"lnta to Palr.latan In June. U.S.·
Indian relatl01111 reached an all-time low.
Soviet lriflul!llce also became evident in
events In ~ ilmaller natlOIIS of the subeootlnent which were overshadowed by the
lndo-Paldstan war and the event&amp; Ieallq
to lt.
In Ceylon, where frustrated youths
launched an abortive revolution II) April,
the Soviet Union stepped in qulclr.ly to olfer
the bankrupt govenunent ol Prime .
Mlniater slrtmavo Bandaranallr.e a
morale-booater of six MIG fighter planes
along with Russian technlcal aBBistance.
In the Himalayan mountain kingdom of
Nepal, traditionally under Indian Jn..
Ouence but leaning further towlll'd Ita
mainland Chinese neighbors to the north,
Russia moved to quadruple Ita foreign aid
commitment of "·8 m!Dion.
While Nepal showed signs during the
year of resisting Indian Influence, the tiny
mountain kingdom of Bhutan remained
firmly on India's side dei!Pite its border
with · Chlnese«eupled Tibet. 'lbe
Himalayan tln8dom of less than me
m!Dion persons entered the United Nat101111
with Indian assistance and lunda. It
quickly honored the debt by beccmlng the
second nation after India to recognize the
Bangia Desh government of the East
Pakistani rebels.

In the aftermath of war, the task of
economic reconstruction remained
massive for botb India and Paldstan, even
without considering the damage done by
bullets and bomba.

"at

As for the future, the bureau predicted
the "usual post-holiday rise in JanuaryFebruary unemployment. "

~

'
the last one is on us!"

.

THE LOOK
HAIR HERE
Achieve the look that the
A handy aid to any girl on
top designers are showing the go is a collection of hair
with very little money, but pieces. Dyne! curls, braids
lots of imagination . You can and chignons m a k e the
g e t inexpensive separates transition from everyday to ~
that will look like an original party look a simple one. Just ~
when put together. A halter brush your halr back and ~::
body suit top with bare back pin on wherever fuDness is
and halter front matched needed-at the nape of the
with a multicolor flowing taf- ueek, high on the bead or at
feta skirt will look a lot more the sides. As a final touch ::{:
h.
.
expensive than it wiiTCost. add a jeweled pin, velvet rlb· ill
!.etten ill ..,lnlaa are welcomed. 'lbey aboalcl be leai
Or try a plain capped sleeve bon or cluster of flowers.
\:~ tban301 wordslaag (or be aubjeet toredllclkcl by tbeedllefl
blouse under a cotton apron
aDd muat be aiped with lbe alpee'• addre.. N1111et1 1D1J
in checked gingham to create the "new" pinafore look .
' be- wltbheld upoa pabUcall~, llowever, aa reqae~t•.Letters
, aboald be In
lute, lllldmalq llnel, not perMI)Itlel.

Letters of
0
.
.
.
1 pm1on
J

~OI.lil'IOS

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

,
1

66---Son of Jacob
129- Reverbe ra ted
67 - lm1tation
131-Transaction
1-Challenaed
69- Nerve no!l works 132-Sheep shed
6-Heatl1en
_ 7 1~Vut lie
133-Preft.c three
11 - Metal rines ·
73-Man' s name
134-Cry of goat
18-HiJbituate
74-Monetary tJnit
136-Greek letter
19-Lasso
of Rumania (pl.) 137- Story
20--Refe rred
75-Sa lty
138- Cries
21-Trouih
· 79-Spuder
139- Steamship
23-Articles of
8 1-A nger
(abbr.)
fu rniture
82-Crims.on
140-0ccupy
24--Etectrified
84 - Hot wine
14 1- Mo hammedan
particle
beverage
title
26-Leave ou t
85- Sta llls
142-Nip
27-0istrtct
87- Bristle
143- Bo rini tool
AHorney (abbr.) 90 - Most ln~nquil
144-Amass
29-Paker stakes
92-Pounds (abbr.) 146-Merrily
30----C rate
93-Walks lamely
148--Hi ndu !:fUeen
31- Hai rtess
95-M o re mat ure
149-Fo recast
32-0btained
97- En treaty
!50-Chemical
33-Disease o f
9!!-Hebrew letter
compound
stleep
99-Parent
!51-Enthusiasm
34- Face of walch
(colloq .)
35-Seed
10 1- Duckli ke bi rds
DOWN
contai ners
103-Ri ve r island
36--More mournful 104-Condes cending
1- Pertalnina to
38-Sow again
look
t he teeth
40-Sick
105-Cast a ballot
2-Heevenly
41-0istancc
l OB--Gi rl's name
be ins
measure
ItO-Partisans
3-Regrell
42- Vent ilates
11 2-Ursi ne an imal
4-Be mistaken
43-Thinls, in law 113-Noise
5-Prefix: down
45-ltalian poet
114- Comp ass point
6-News papers,
46-Spanish fo r
l iS-Ceremo ny
col lectively
"yes "
117-South
7-Assistant
47-Wither
American
8-Ae riform fluid
48-Shade trees
ani mill
9-Nu
r
49-0epressions
liB-Co untry of
10-Swimmers
51 - Cut of meat
Asi a
52- Preposition
119-Temperate
11-Roamer
53-Cloth mnsure 120-Symba l for
12-Man's
54- Break suddenly
te ll urium
nickname
55-Su re
12 1-P.artners
13-Piod throuah
57-C onjunction
123-Guido's high
mire
58-C ountry of
note
14-Wit
Asia
124-Chiel god of
IS-Prepared for
60- Wooden pins
Mempl1is
p rin t
61-Coo ling device 1:?5-Ad dition al
16-Soak
62-H indu guitar
126-Part of bo d ~
64-A state (abbr.) 127-St yle of
17-A sl ate (a bbr . ~
65-Teutonlc deity
printing
21--4th President

22-Chemical
compound
23-Commanded
25-Ancient
27-Followlna
prescribed
food procram
2!l-Additions
30-Youns horse
31-Prohibits
33-City in lhly
3&gt;-Pellet
36--ldiot ( 1lan1~
37-Leases

39-Sodium
chloride
41-Smal l factory

42-Word of
sorrow
44-Step
47-Have on one 's
person
48- Manaae
49-Thick
50-Locations

54-Cuts
55- Hail
56-Swimming
59-Writing
Im plement
60-Persian fairy
61-Note of scale
• 63-lrritate

66-French article
67-Symbol for

'"'"

68-Pertalninc to
a particular
continent
70-Pendant
orname nt
71-Bitter vetch
72-Grain
73-Earthquake
75-0ealer

77-Knat

89-Sacred bull at
faypt
90-Credit (abbr.)
91-A c;:ontinent
(a bbr.)
94-5houlder wrap
96-Latin
conjunction
98-Body of water
99--AIIows
100--FI!es
102-Vapid
104-Girl's name
105-0dlous
106-Quallfy
107-Most prvfound
109-Esilence
111-Wute away
112-Wire nail

11 3-Extremely
terrible
116--L.amprey
118--VIrginla willow
119-Burrowin&amp;
animal
122-Ficure of
speech
124-Thick soup
125-Masculine
126-Stupid

blunder
(slang)
128-HaUs
130-Pic
131-5ylvan deity
132-stone cut

In relief
135-Appellation of
Athena
137-Baked clay
138--Tie

140-Preposition
142-Tiny amount
143- Lona, slender
fish

144-Candle power

78-Worm
(abbr.)
80--Heroic event
145-Cout Guard
83-Antlered animal
(a bbr.}
86-Bobbin
147-Conjunct ion
88-Crown
148-Sun &amp;od

-t-+-1
..-:-1-+--+--i

.

fOOD FOR AMERICANS

GalliaNotesiSpicy Stuffed Pot Roast
~

'·
GALLIPOLrS - The Betty Mrs. Cliff Wilson, Mrs. James Homer Johnson, Mrs. John
Starn Class of the First Baptist Danner ;Mrs. Emerson Evans. Wood, and Mrs . Marland
~ix ham, salami, green pep· rhurch .held
'.ii cup chopped ham
its annual Mrs . Calvin Layne, Mrs . Cremeens .
•;, cup chopped hard salami per and egg and fill pocket Christmas dinner recently in
•;, cup chopped green
with mixture . Tie or skewec the Fellowshi p room. The
pepper
ends.
..
dinner this year was potluck
I hard-cooked egg,
Brown roast 011 all sides in style and the ladies invited
····n ~
chopped
large
a
lu
minum
Dutch
oven·
·
their
husbands
to
join
them.
I cup chopped onion
Drain off fat. Add remaining The evening started with a
I clove garlic, chopped
ingredients e x c e p t flour .
2 bay leaves
Cover and cook over low social period and then every
~, teaspoon oregano
heat about 3 hours or until one sat down to beautifully
I teaspoon salt
meat
is tender. R e m o v e decorated tables. The favors,
1io teaspoon fresh ground
1oast to platter. Meas ure for the place settings, were'
pepper
liquid in pan and add addi - angels made by Mrs. John
I tablespoon vinegar
tiona! water to make 2 cups. Wood . Cliff Wilson gave the
I cup water
Stir
flour . Bring to a boil . blessing.
3 tablespoons instant flour Slicein pot
roast and serve
gravy.
Makes 6 se rv
After the meal was over
with
Have butcher make a pockings.
everyo
ne stood and sang
et through the center of the

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burge (Janice Houck) Rhindlander,
Wis., are in Gallipolis to spend the holidays with her mother,
Mrs. Arbeautis Houck.

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
A pot roast goes a long
way and makes a pleasurable and inexpensive meal
!or several persons. A der arture from the n o r m a l
roast is to stuff the center
with a surprising combination of ham, hard salami,
green pepper, chopped egg
mixed with spices and garlic. S e r v e with gravy ,
m a s h e d potatoes and a
hearty green salad.
FLORIDA POT ROAST
3 pounds eye round beef
roast

Mr. and Mrs. Gene R. Myer and daughter, Jodee Lyn of I
Amtin are guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe D. MUler for
the holidays.

Farm Bureau Women Meet

Phone 44f1-2142

By J3.ecky Vanco

GALIJPOIJS - Tanya Jones, a sophomore at Lake Erie
College in PainesviUe, is home to visit with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bobbie J. Jones of Gallipolis for the Christmas holidays.
Miss Jones is majoring in chemistry.
Senior and graduate studenta of Ohio State University
receiving degrees at its autumn commencement from Gallipolis
were Jeffery D. Miller, Bachelor of Science in Education; Ruby
Ziesler Rowles, Bachelor of Science in Education, and Charles D.
Webster, llachelor of Science.

Brenda Kay Logan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W.
Logan, Route 1, Vinton, and Peggy D. Prose, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. H. C. Prose, Route 2, Patriot, have been accepted by Bliss
College,131 East State St., Columbus, for the fall term beginning
on Sept. 11, 1972.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Sommer and sons John and Jason, visited
with his mother, Mrs. Dorothy Sommer and son Fred of Findlay,
on Wednesday.
Charles Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Baker, 145
Woodland Dr., a graduate of Gallia Academy, won a major
award at Anderson (Ind.) College, where he helped the Raven
cross country team break even in eight meets.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Farm Bureau women 'met Tuesday morning
at the home of Mrs. Waldo
Brown for their annual
wrapping of boxes of fruit and
candy for residents of the
Gallia County home.
Mrs. Brown served coffee
and cake at the noon hour after
which the ladies went to the
home to present the gifts.
Mrs. Stanley Wood gave the
program and led the group in '
singing carols .

Betty Stam Class ·P(lrty Held
···.·.····...

roast or c ut one yourself.

Those going to the home
were Mrs. Clarence Davis,
Mrs. Lawrence Hineman, Mrs . .
Frank Mills, Mrs . Don Notter
and Mrs. Waldo Brown.
The custom of breaking a
wine glass in a Jewish marriage ceremony is based on
the memory of the destruction of Jerusalem and its
temple in A.D. 70.

!N EWSPA PER

ENTERP~SE ASSN.J

BUDDY PAROLED
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! I The oldest resident of the Ohio,
Penitentiary was paroled in
time to spend Christmas in a
private home. Buddy, a green
parrot who has been at the
penitentiary since 1943, is
believed to be at least 100 years
old. His present owner has
been made a trusty and transferred to the honor dormiatory
outside the prison walls, taking
Buddy with him.

Forests co v e r approxi- - - - -- - - - - - mately 22 m iII i on square earth's surface, according to
miles or 42 per cent of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

several Christmas carols. The
devotions were given by Mrs.
Paul Pullins, who read Luke 2
and offered prayer.
Mrs. Cliff Wilson then explained the gift exchange and
the next ho ur was spent
selecting a gift by number and
then being allowed to take a
gift from whomever they
pleased. When all the gifts had
been used and exchanged, a
game of "Make a Deal" was
played by several guests.
Everyone present enjoyed
the evening's fun, the food and
the Christian fellowship. Mr .
Wayne Amsbary closed the
activities with a prayer of
thankfulness.
Committee officers were

/J xtend a hand to
neighbors, friends . .. welcome
the New Year with friendship and
understanding. To all, our warm thanks.
Management &amp; Employees

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supp~. Co.
Pf . Pleasant, W. Va .

Capt. and Mrs. David L. Porter and daughter, Amy
Elizabeth, of Mineral Wells, Texas, are visiting Amy 's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Saunders of Cheshire and Mr.
and Mrs. J. Sherman Porter of Gallipolis, over the Yuletid~
holidays .
Mrs . Reva Reynolds recently returned home after being
called to Rostoria by the death of an aunt, Miss Cora Miller, 88
years old and a former native of Salem Center, in Meigs County.
Mr. and Mrs. Harland Vollborn, Mrs. Francis Burdell and
Dean Jones, Rio Grande, attended the funeral of Mrs. Mayne
Davis Blagg, a former resident of Gallia County, on Thursday in
Columbus.
Mrs. Varney Faye Clendenin, 96 Court St., left on Dec . 22 to
visit with her daughters, Mrs. George Christ (Betty), Cleveland,
later visiting with Mrs. Santos (Harriet ) in PeMsylvania and
Mrs. Ctine (Barbara) at Kettering before returning to home and
job.

POLLY'S POINTERS
~·••.

J

.Her Bulletin Boards,

•

Are on Cupboard Doors

Animals are Neglected

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1971
ACROSS

c.-

3- 'lbe Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sundav, Dee. 26, 1971
~~~~~~~~
~
._.....
. · .····"~~--::;&amp;--··
~XI&gt;: ·'r-•X"•:O:o;: ·'· ,o;o:;o:O:&gt;~~~
· ·····

/

By POLLY CRAMER

Aproblem that is seldom talked outside of individual neighborhoods in Gallia County is concerned with animals, which are
sometimes neglected, especially those we refer to as "household
pets."
'
I happen to live In a nelghborhoud tbat some persollll feel i.s a
good piace to dump their unwanted anlmai.s. 'lbe practice leads
me to feel there is a place for some kind of an organization of dog
and cat lovers to come to the aid of these unfortunates of the
animal world. If there could be some lr.lnd ol clearing bouae,
many of the unwanted animals could be directed to homes that
are reaUy longing for either a cat or a dog. Many rJ. these anlmala
lead what might be called a dog's life. They are cussed, diBcUBBed
and often treated much worse. Most persons sympathy goes out
to them because their condition of homeleSIIIIes8 Is not their own
fault but the making of someone else. '!bey take the rap for ·
those who should be their keepers. 111ey not only receive our
sympathy for the way they are treated, but when It comes to cold
weather they really suffer.
'lbere are owners of animals who don't even keep drinking
water or shelter available for their animals. To tie a dog In the
snow is a cruel thing'to do. Animals need care just the IIIUilf as
humans and If we are human we wW most certainly treat them In
that manner. U people want pets tbey should be willing to
provide, food, water and sllelter for tbem.
Persons wbo should be punished are the owners of dogs who
let their animals get into trouble. '!bey permit their dogs and cats
to breed offspring, later to be turned out In society as strB)'s or to
multiply indefinitely.
Such people are not friends of anlmals, but their enemies. We
are thankful for the many persons who have a big heart, and who
do everything In their power to see that unfortunate animals get
a fair break. It is sometimes d011e at the elpeJlse of considerable
time, money and effort, and in my book, those people show their
great humanity In the things they do for these animals that mean
so much to young and old.
If we would all do as much for the anlma1s tbat surround us,
we would not be confronted with the heart rending slgbt ol stray
and neglected P!!lmals.
Mrs. Mary Rusk James,
237 Second Ave., Gallipolis

r-------------------·
SUNDAY
i
i

TIMES..SENTINEL

l"ubllj,ft" •w•rr S11M 1r bY 1~ Otl .. ,,
'ol •ll•y P1.1blltl\6nl Co .
GAL LifiOLI DA ILY TltillJNI!
US Tlllrd AYI •. Gtlllpellt . Ol'lla. 4Mll . ~
fll.llllllhta tvlf~ WHkGty IWtnlftl I~C:tlll ~
~t11rdlr. · $1C0110 CIUI I"Otllll l"lld j t I
G•lllpolt, 01\la, • S631 .
THE OAI L"¥ SINTIHEL
11! C:ourt St .• 1"1mer1y, 0 .. U1H.
1
"' fiVIII!tlltcl tvtf~ Wltklllty IWtn\ll'tjl tiiU'I
$ilturnv. £t'lltr"" ft'ONI Cl . .l mtlllnl
"'llttr 11 fiMIIrt Yj 011 1 ~, '"011 Olfkt .
TUM.$ OF U&amp;SCI IPTION
ay u rr ltr fi lLy 1nd S""'dily , Jlk: 11tf
Willi .
MAIL $UI5CRII"TION RAT IS
Tilt Gt iiiJIQIII Tr lbUf\1 111 OhiO tnd WKI
Vl.rvl nll , OJnl Yll' .U ,OO / 1111 mGnlt"lt II ;

I

lhrn m..-.lt!t ••. ~; ''"•~•••• on• ' " '
1131 tl~ mon thl &amp;7: lhru monlht .U .IICI.
Tilt Dtlll Stnlln11. 01'11 yNr ll".ao ' 1111
month' 11. i : tnrH moniU ••·" · .
Tl" U~llft l"rttl '"' "~t Uontl It Ill •
ctutlnlr •~II litO'- tht '"'"'or publluiiOI'I
Of illl ntwl d ltpillc lltl triiiiii.O to l hlt

ntwlj)tptr an lf 1110
pulllltlltct lllrtln .

th

local

!Miwt

DEAR POLLY- The insides of my kitchen cupboards
are my bulletin boards. On them I tape all the family
schedules, such as football , band practice, etc . On the
door of the cupboard by the phone , I have made pockets
by taping on envelopes in which I keep prescription
numbers . telephone numbers of those in car pools , and
so on. Near the outside door is an envelope for the chi!·
dren's library cards. On the dooo. to the cupboard that
holds chma I have taped newspaper clippings , poems and
so on that I enjoy rereading.- MRS S. W.

'• · , •··..,.

CHRISTMAS ClUB

q~ inDEAR
POLLY- For the fir st time , we are living
a home serviced by a septic tank so would like a

~ list of "Dos and Don'ts " that others have found •
~ useful for the proper use of this type of facility. \

t:~~:~:!!::tt:~::~:,.:,::~.:~~;:w:,::~:::J
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with air·conditioning
filters that cannot be easily removed. Manufacturers.
please help us. In the meanwhile, I have a temporary
solut1on that works for me. Before inserting the filter ,
I stick loops of masking tape or gummed plastic tape
on each end to make tabs for use in removing the filter
from the unit when tim e comes for a change.- MRS. J . B.

Join NOW . •. we make
your last payment FREE!

DEAR POLLY - 1 have some possible help for Mrs.
V. S. whose sailcloth dress with a jacket wrinkles so
badl y. An Agricultural Dept. Extension agent passed it
on to me several years ago. To keep a summer suit or
dress clean longer and more wrinkle-proof, wash and
iron , then spray the garment with that widely used water.
proofing and spot resistant protective spray. It does not
show and keeps soil and wrinkles away.- MRS. W. R. S.
DEAR GIRLS-I have some sailcloth curtains and· find
they look better II taken from the line or dryer whDe
still damp rather than being allowed to eomr,letely dry
and then be sprinkled. Do not roll up before ronlng but
fold to prevent more wrinkles from forming . Iron until
dry.-POLLY
EXTENDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services has announced it
would begin paying extended
benefits Jan. 3 to persons who .
, have recently exhausted their
Unemployment compensation.
William E. Garnes, Bureau
Administrator, sald the additional 10 to 13 weeks of
compensation wlll be paid
under il federal law calling for
-atension of the·benefits if the
unemployment rate ' In the
nation was higher tban 4.5 pet.
for three consecutive months.
BENEF~

COI.O\'
,,,,I/ II,.
Tonight thru
Wednesday

I

Tonight, Mon., Tues.

Decemhr 26-27·21
FIVE EASY PIECES
(Technicolorl
Jack Nlchols011
Karen Black
." R"

Joe SolomOn ~·

GEORGE

SUE

HAMILTON""' LYON~

SHOW STAATS! P.M.

Bank rnat appreci.ates
your business"

.. , th&amp; laat of the d•rtd•vU•I·

Rod Tractor
Brothers In Outer Space
,;,~·

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Mone Back

EGG

.L.------------------·J.

MEIGS THEATRE

CARTOON

!

· Polly's Problem m*•:;.~.r!IA•.:!''""W('"''

'

It should come as no news to you
that the cost of just about everything
is up.
And perhaps yqu've resigned
yourself to the fact that you just can't
get as much for your money anymore.
Right?
.
Wrong . If you're talking lelephone
service.
Here are 11 simple ways to keep
costs down without giving up a single
call.
1, Wh,en you move, plan ahead.
Have all the phones you 'll need in·
stalled at the same time for a single
installation charge. If you as~ us lo
come back lat e r, there's an added
charge.
2. If you have· youngsters away
from home, sel a specific time for you
to call them or them to call you at low
station-to-station rates. (Calling
person-to-person can cost up to three
times as much .)

3. Dial long distance direct. You
save 43 to 56 per cent on all out-ofstate, station-to-station calls you dial
yourself wilhout operator assistance.
4. If you don 't know the out-of·
town number, call directory assistance
in the distant city. At no charge. Dial 1,
the area code (if. different from your
own), then 555· 1212.
5. You 're dialing direc t and you
reach a wrong number. No problem.
Simply dial the operator and explain
what happened. You won't be charged
for the call.
6. You 're ta lking long distance
and you're cut off. If you're the call ing
party, just dial the operator. The
charge will be adjusted.
·
7. If you 're just starling out, and
on a limited budget, maybe you should
consider a basic black wall or desk
phone. The service is the same, just a
little bit cheaper.
B. Know the best times to ca ll

· long distance. It's usually cheaper in
the evenings, even cheaper on week·
ends.
9. Plan your long distance calls in
advance. Make notes, if you have to.
Then st ick to the script. You 'll be
amazed at the time (and mo~ey) you
save.
10. II you're leaving town for one
to nine months, ask us to put your
serv1ce on our reduced vacation rale.
11 . II one of ou r pay phones takes
your dime and does n't give you a cal l,
please do this. Jot down the number
of th e offend ing phone and, when you
gel the opportunity, report it. Just di a l
"operator." We'll see that the phone
gets fixed . And we'll see th at you get
yo ur dime back.

@Ohio Bell

Proiesslonal Buolness
Training can be oblalnod
only through a colleg•level
IH'oaram.

GBC Graduates Get
' The'Better Jobs!
Volrlle or call 446·4367 for
catalog of courses and next
starting date .

QT.

USE WURPIIONE FOR AL'-R'S WORTH.

· GALLI POLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

·u Locust St.

1 Gallipolis
. Slate R... No, 71-0:1-00_3,,2.,8"--"1 -

"

-

�,-

'
•

2-111e SmdayTimei · Semlllei,Sunday, Dec... lfll

Prospects Bleak

Two Busy Months for

lipkmatlc IIIUI'Ces here.

Before her departure for Western
((¥tlnlled from Pa&amp;e ll
Europe and Wublnetoo in October to
II)Out the fate oHhe inhabilallta, !Oott:d at. · ciBcula the altuation With l're!lkll!llt Nixon
the flames and laughed.
and oilier Western leaders, Mrt. Gandhi
"We wW fix these people," he said.
told 1 Dml eollferenoe that the questlm
In the weeks that followed, the ll'lllf
was not one for negotlilt!On between India
lliaerted eootrol and famed out frcm
IIIII Palr.lltan-- but that at the lllllllf time
Dacca. Its main targets were lhe'followen
the lnflu rl. refugees made It manda!Dry
fl Rahman and the Hindu minority. All
that Plklstan create condiliona which
wbo could, fled to India-by atim•te a
11!ould allow them to go beet.
human refugee tide of 9.7 m1lllm per!IOII8.
FollowiDg ·bel' return, Mrs. Gandhi's
loa villages were burned and wboJeaale
position hardened furtber atm. ·The
killing p_rogreased, foreign observers
unaMounced Incursions Into East
estimated tbat 200,000 periOill died.
Pakistan bepn. Mrs. Gllldlll declared her
loa the refugees inundated India, the
objectives before parliament.
India government aecretJy began to asalat
"I do feel that In today's Bituation the
Bengali guerrWas, and dashes along the
very presence of Palr.lstanl troops In
border resulted.
Bangia Desh II a threllt to our security,"
By.early November the tenalm reached
llhe aa.ld. "I would certainly welcome the
flash pOint. India was 1e11dlng Ita troops
wltlwbwal ol troopa, and I thlnlr. that
into East Pakistan m unamounced in· troopa to be withdrawn are the Palrlstanl
curs!OIIS. Pakistani troops moved to the
troops from Bqla Desh...
western border and Indian military units
Qle week earlier Indian planes had Sl\ot
followed suit.
down 111ree Palr.lstanl jet fighters along the
India claims that PaldstPJ!I jets attacked
East Palr.lstan border. Western mllitary
several
air
bases
In
the
area
along
the
IIOUI'cel
bere l8ld that It wu ooen to
DIANECffiCLE
West PaltliWI border on the nlgbt of Dec.·s argumeot m which side of the border !lie
in
year, she currently is working as a what Mrs. Gandhi desaibed u the start dogfight occurred.
In any case, denoww::ement and full.
saleslady in a toy store ... and at Christ.. of fullscale war. But the first Open of·
fensive
operations
came
when
Indian
scale war came wltbln folD' dlys of Mrs.
mas.
troope
moved
aCI'OliS
the
border
of
East
Gandhi's words.
"I like it," she smiles. "It's really
Pakistan, and fighting started on the West
fWI !"
Standing behind Mrs. Gandhi's har·
Pakistan border.
Western efforts to maintain peace In the den!ng of purpose was the surprise
region were criticized as ballbearted by frlend8hlp treaty ber goverrunent signed
Indian officials who accuaed the Western with the Soviet Unlm during a vtalt by
powers and especially the United States of Russian Foreign Minister Andrei.
IRONTON, Ohio (UP!) - Nonnan being partial to Pakistan.
GrCIIIYko Aug. 8. 'lbe treaty signing wu
Rose, a student at Marietta College who
Mrs. Gandhi told the West tbat Pakistan followed by a procession of vtalta by high·
attempted to paddle a rubber raft from
ranlr.lng Soviet civilian and mllitary ofwould have to \1' prepared to negotiate
Marietta to Cincinnati by Christmas, gave with the elected leaders In the East
ftclall to New DelhiP!!d a large infusion of
up late Thursday when his raft sprung a meaning Mujlb, who wu put on trial f!J.' Soviet mUitary equipment wbleh Included
leak and his cold began getting worse.
treason by Yahya. 'lbe I'Ulstani!Jfl!ident more than 250 tanlr.s u well u antiaircraft
Rose said the cold which he picked up
several days ago had spread into his lungs
so he pulled his raft asllore here and
planned to continue his trip by hitchhiking.
Athought for the day : British
Rose spent Wednesday night in
Ironton and said, at that time, that he Prof. John Tyndall said, " It i.s
would continue. So far on the trip he has as fatal as it is cowardly to
slept in a cornfield, a hollow pine tree and blink facta because they are not
to our taste."
a motel.

Young College Grad
POMEROY - For Diane Circle,
November and December have been full of
new titles : Mrs.; B. S. in Elementary
Education, and saleslady.
In November , Miss Obranovich
married David Circle, formerly of Meigs
Cowlty and a former schoolmate at Ohio
Dominican College, Columbus, where she
received her degree summa cum laude in
December.
And she attained a 3.995 average out of
a possible 4.0 for her four-year course
which she completed in three-and-a-llalf
years at the college. She chalked up her
only Bin a half-hour one semester physical
education course. A member of Delta
Epsilon Sigma, academic honorary, she
was named to the Dean's List for
academic achievement at ODC.
As a sophomore at the coeducational
college, she received the St. Catherine
Medal, awarded by Kappa Gamma Pi,
national Catholic College Senior Women's
Honor Society . The medal is presented

-lmmovale lD his nfuaa1, according to m18811" and apare parts for India's Soviet..

annually to the undergraduate most likely
to fulfill membership requirements for the
society : attain a 3.6 academic average
throughout college; sllow outstanding
extra curricular leadership, and indicate
an ability for outstanding service in post
graduate life.
In her junior year at the liberal arts
college of approximately 1000 students,
Diane was president of the Student
Education Association.
The Circles reside at 4719 E. Broad St.,
Columbus. Mr . Circle, a 1970 OD graduate
and the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Otha
Circle of Meigs County, is associated with
Press Pharmacies in Columbus. The new
Mrs. Circle, a graduate of Notre Dame
Academy, Chardon, is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Obravovich, 10014 Flrwoud
Rd., Cleveland.
While Diane would like to teach fourth
or fifth grade in the Columbus School
System, and hopes to do substitute
teaching for the remainder of the school

Student Gives Up

229,100 Out of Work in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services reported
Friday that 229,100 persons were out of
work in Ohio in November boosting the
percentage rate to 5.1.
The bureau said Ohio had 4.5 per. cent
of the work force unemployed in October.
"Each month this year, both for the
natiqn and Ohio, rates were above
corresponding months last year," the

report said.
The bureau said November employment in basic steel in Ohio dropped 14
per cent from last year and production of
aircraft and parts fell off 25 per cent.

designed fighters and atta.ck aircraft.
'lbe sumlen Soviet ucendance matched
plummeting U:S. Influence In lntlla that
wM apurred by clllclolurel of American
arms shl!ll"lnta to Palr.latan In June. U.S.·
Indian relatl01111 reached an all-time low.
Soviet lriflul!llce also became evident in
events In ~ ilmaller natlOIIS of the subeootlnent which were overshadowed by the
lndo-Paldstan war and the event&amp; Ieallq
to lt.
In Ceylon, where frustrated youths
launched an abortive revolution II) April,
the Soviet Union stepped in qulclr.ly to olfer
the bankrupt govenunent ol Prime .
Mlniater slrtmavo Bandaranallr.e a
morale-booater of six MIG fighter planes
along with Russian technlcal aBBistance.
In the Himalayan mountain kingdom of
Nepal, traditionally under Indian Jn..
Ouence but leaning further towlll'd Ita
mainland Chinese neighbors to the north,
Russia moved to quadruple Ita foreign aid
commitment of "·8 m!Dion.
While Nepal showed signs during the
year of resisting Indian Influence, the tiny
mountain kingdom of Bhutan remained
firmly on India's side dei!Pite its border
with · Chlnese«eupled Tibet. 'lbe
Himalayan tln8dom of less than me
m!Dion persons entered the United Nat101111
with Indian assistance and lunda. It
quickly honored the debt by beccmlng the
second nation after India to recognize the
Bangia Desh government of the East
Pakistani rebels.

In the aftermath of war, the task of
economic reconstruction remained
massive for botb India and Paldstan, even
without considering the damage done by
bullets and bomba.

"at

As for the future, the bureau predicted
the "usual post-holiday rise in JanuaryFebruary unemployment. "

~

'
the last one is on us!"

.

THE LOOK
HAIR HERE
Achieve the look that the
A handy aid to any girl on
top designers are showing the go is a collection of hair
with very little money, but pieces. Dyne! curls, braids
lots of imagination . You can and chignons m a k e the
g e t inexpensive separates transition from everyday to ~
that will look like an original party look a simple one. Just ~
when put together. A halter brush your halr back and ~::
body suit top with bare back pin on wherever fuDness is
and halter front matched needed-at the nape of the
with a multicolor flowing taf- ueek, high on the bead or at
feta skirt will look a lot more the sides. As a final touch ::{:
h.
.
expensive than it wiiTCost. add a jeweled pin, velvet rlb· ill
!.etten ill ..,lnlaa are welcomed. 'lbey aboalcl be leai
Or try a plain capped sleeve bon or cluster of flowers.
\:~ tban301 wordslaag (or be aubjeet toredllclkcl by tbeedllefl
blouse under a cotton apron
aDd muat be aiped with lbe alpee'• addre.. N1111et1 1D1J
in checked gingham to create the "new" pinafore look .
' be- wltbheld upoa pabUcall~, llowever, aa reqae~t•.Letters
, aboald be In
lute, lllldmalq llnel, not perMI)Itlel.

Letters of
0
.
.
.
1 pm1on
J

~OI.lil'IOS

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

,
1

66---Son of Jacob
129- Reverbe ra ted
67 - lm1tation
131-Transaction
1-Challenaed
69- Nerve no!l works 132-Sheep shed
6-Heatl1en
_ 7 1~Vut lie
133-Preft.c three
11 - Metal rines ·
73-Man' s name
134-Cry of goat
18-HiJbituate
74-Monetary tJnit
136-Greek letter
19-Lasso
of Rumania (pl.) 137- Story
20--Refe rred
75-Sa lty
138- Cries
21-Trouih
· 79-Spuder
139- Steamship
23-Articles of
8 1-A nger
(abbr.)
fu rniture
82-Crims.on
140-0ccupy
24--Etectrified
84 - Hot wine
14 1- Mo hammedan
particle
beverage
title
26-Leave ou t
85- Sta llls
142-Nip
27-0istrtct
87- Bristle
143- Bo rini tool
AHorney (abbr.) 90 - Most ln~nquil
144-Amass
29-Paker stakes
92-Pounds (abbr.) 146-Merrily
30----C rate
93-Walks lamely
148--Hi ndu !:fUeen
31- Hai rtess
95-M o re mat ure
149-Fo recast
32-0btained
97- En treaty
!50-Chemical
33-Disease o f
9!!-Hebrew letter
compound
stleep
99-Parent
!51-Enthusiasm
34- Face of walch
(colloq .)
35-Seed
10 1- Duckli ke bi rds
DOWN
contai ners
103-Ri ve r island
36--More mournful 104-Condes cending
1- Pertalnina to
38-Sow again
look
t he teeth
40-Sick
105-Cast a ballot
2-Heevenly
41-0istancc
l OB--Gi rl's name
be ins
measure
ItO-Partisans
3-Regrell
42- Vent ilates
11 2-Ursi ne an imal
4-Be mistaken
43-Thinls, in law 113-Noise
5-Prefix: down
45-ltalian poet
114- Comp ass point
6-News papers,
46-Spanish fo r
l iS-Ceremo ny
col lectively
"yes "
117-South
7-Assistant
47-Wither
American
8-Ae riform fluid
48-Shade trees
ani mill
9-Nu
r
49-0epressions
liB-Co untry of
10-Swimmers
51 - Cut of meat
Asi a
52- Preposition
119-Temperate
11-Roamer
53-Cloth mnsure 120-Symba l for
12-Man's
54- Break suddenly
te ll urium
nickname
55-Su re
12 1-P.artners
13-Piod throuah
57-C onjunction
123-Guido's high
mire
58-C ountry of
note
14-Wit
Asia
124-Chiel god of
IS-Prepared for
60- Wooden pins
Mempl1is
p rin t
61-Coo ling device 1:?5-Ad dition al
16-Soak
62-H indu guitar
126-Part of bo d ~
64-A state (abbr.) 127-St yle of
17-A sl ate (a bbr . ~
65-Teutonlc deity
printing
21--4th President

22-Chemical
compound
23-Commanded
25-Ancient
27-Followlna
prescribed
food procram
2!l-Additions
30-Youns horse
31-Prohibits
33-City in lhly
3&gt;-Pellet
36--ldiot ( 1lan1~
37-Leases

39-Sodium
chloride
41-Smal l factory

42-Word of
sorrow
44-Step
47-Have on one 's
person
48- Manaae
49-Thick
50-Locations

54-Cuts
55- Hail
56-Swimming
59-Writing
Im plement
60-Persian fairy
61-Note of scale
• 63-lrritate

66-French article
67-Symbol for

'"'"

68-Pertalninc to
a particular
continent
70-Pendant
orname nt
71-Bitter vetch
72-Grain
73-Earthquake
75-0ealer

77-Knat

89-Sacred bull at
faypt
90-Credit (abbr.)
91-A c;:ontinent
(a bbr.)
94-5houlder wrap
96-Latin
conjunction
98-Body of water
99--AIIows
100--FI!es
102-Vapid
104-Girl's name
105-0dlous
106-Quallfy
107-Most prvfound
109-Esilence
111-Wute away
112-Wire nail

11 3-Extremely
terrible
116--L.amprey
118--VIrginla willow
119-Burrowin&amp;
animal
122-Ficure of
speech
124-Thick soup
125-Masculine
126-Stupid

blunder
(slang)
128-HaUs
130-Pic
131-5ylvan deity
132-stone cut

In relief
135-Appellation of
Athena
137-Baked clay
138--Tie

140-Preposition
142-Tiny amount
143- Lona, slender
fish

144-Candle power

78-Worm
(abbr.)
80--Heroic event
145-Cout Guard
83-Antlered animal
(a bbr.}
86-Bobbin
147-Conjunct ion
88-Crown
148-Sun &amp;od

-t-+-1
..-:-1-+--+--i

.

fOOD FOR AMERICANS

GalliaNotesiSpicy Stuffed Pot Roast
~

'·
GALLIPOLrS - The Betty Mrs. Cliff Wilson, Mrs. James Homer Johnson, Mrs. John
Starn Class of the First Baptist Danner ;Mrs. Emerson Evans. Wood, and Mrs . Marland
~ix ham, salami, green pep· rhurch .held
'.ii cup chopped ham
its annual Mrs . Calvin Layne, Mrs . Cremeens .
•;, cup chopped hard salami per and egg and fill pocket Christmas dinner recently in
•;, cup chopped green
with mixture . Tie or skewec the Fellowshi p room. The
pepper
ends.
..
dinner this year was potluck
I hard-cooked egg,
Brown roast 011 all sides in style and the ladies invited
····n ~
chopped
large
a
lu
minum
Dutch
oven·
·
their
husbands
to
join
them.
I cup chopped onion
Drain off fat. Add remaining The evening started with a
I clove garlic, chopped
ingredients e x c e p t flour .
2 bay leaves
Cover and cook over low social period and then every
~, teaspoon oregano
heat about 3 hours or until one sat down to beautifully
I teaspoon salt
meat
is tender. R e m o v e decorated tables. The favors,
1io teaspoon fresh ground
1oast to platter. Meas ure for the place settings, were'
pepper
liquid in pan and add addi - angels made by Mrs. John
I tablespoon vinegar
tiona! water to make 2 cups. Wood . Cliff Wilson gave the
I cup water
Stir
flour . Bring to a boil . blessing.
3 tablespoons instant flour Slicein pot
roast and serve
gravy.
Makes 6 se rv
After the meal was over
with
Have butcher make a pockings.
everyo
ne stood and sang
et through the center of the

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burge (Janice Houck) Rhindlander,
Wis., are in Gallipolis to spend the holidays with her mother,
Mrs. Arbeautis Houck.

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
A pot roast goes a long
way and makes a pleasurable and inexpensive meal
!or several persons. A der arture from the n o r m a l
roast is to stuff the center
with a surprising combination of ham, hard salami,
green pepper, chopped egg
mixed with spices and garlic. S e r v e with gravy ,
m a s h e d potatoes and a
hearty green salad.
FLORIDA POT ROAST
3 pounds eye round beef
roast

Mr. and Mrs. Gene R. Myer and daughter, Jodee Lyn of I
Amtin are guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe D. MUler for
the holidays.

Farm Bureau Women Meet

Phone 44f1-2142

By J3.ecky Vanco

GALIJPOIJS - Tanya Jones, a sophomore at Lake Erie
College in PainesviUe, is home to visit with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bobbie J. Jones of Gallipolis for the Christmas holidays.
Miss Jones is majoring in chemistry.
Senior and graduate studenta of Ohio State University
receiving degrees at its autumn commencement from Gallipolis
were Jeffery D. Miller, Bachelor of Science in Education; Ruby
Ziesler Rowles, Bachelor of Science in Education, and Charles D.
Webster, llachelor of Science.

Brenda Kay Logan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W.
Logan, Route 1, Vinton, and Peggy D. Prose, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. H. C. Prose, Route 2, Patriot, have been accepted by Bliss
College,131 East State St., Columbus, for the fall term beginning
on Sept. 11, 1972.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Sommer and sons John and Jason, visited
with his mother, Mrs. Dorothy Sommer and son Fred of Findlay,
on Wednesday.
Charles Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Baker, 145
Woodland Dr., a graduate of Gallia Academy, won a major
award at Anderson (Ind.) College, where he helped the Raven
cross country team break even in eight meets.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Farm Bureau women 'met Tuesday morning
at the home of Mrs. Waldo
Brown for their annual
wrapping of boxes of fruit and
candy for residents of the
Gallia County home.
Mrs. Brown served coffee
and cake at the noon hour after
which the ladies went to the
home to present the gifts.
Mrs. Stanley Wood gave the
program and led the group in '
singing carols .

Betty Stam Class ·P(lrty Held
···.·.····...

roast or c ut one yourself.

Those going to the home
were Mrs. Clarence Davis,
Mrs. Lawrence Hineman, Mrs . .
Frank Mills, Mrs . Don Notter
and Mrs. Waldo Brown.
The custom of breaking a
wine glass in a Jewish marriage ceremony is based on
the memory of the destruction of Jerusalem and its
temple in A.D. 70.

!N EWSPA PER

ENTERP~SE ASSN.J

BUDDY PAROLED
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! I The oldest resident of the Ohio,
Penitentiary was paroled in
time to spend Christmas in a
private home. Buddy, a green
parrot who has been at the
penitentiary since 1943, is
believed to be at least 100 years
old. His present owner has
been made a trusty and transferred to the honor dormiatory
outside the prison walls, taking
Buddy with him.

Forests co v e r approxi- - - - -- - - - - - mately 22 m iII i on square earth's surface, according to
miles or 42 per cent of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

several Christmas carols. The
devotions were given by Mrs.
Paul Pullins, who read Luke 2
and offered prayer.
Mrs. Cliff Wilson then explained the gift exchange and
the next ho ur was spent
selecting a gift by number and
then being allowed to take a
gift from whomever they
pleased. When all the gifts had
been used and exchanged, a
game of "Make a Deal" was
played by several guests.
Everyone present enjoyed
the evening's fun, the food and
the Christian fellowship. Mr .
Wayne Amsbary closed the
activities with a prayer of
thankfulness.
Committee officers were

/J xtend a hand to
neighbors, friends . .. welcome
the New Year with friendship and
understanding. To all, our warm thanks.
Management &amp; Employees

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supp~. Co.
Pf . Pleasant, W. Va .

Capt. and Mrs. David L. Porter and daughter, Amy
Elizabeth, of Mineral Wells, Texas, are visiting Amy 's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Saunders of Cheshire and Mr.
and Mrs. J. Sherman Porter of Gallipolis, over the Yuletid~
holidays .
Mrs . Reva Reynolds recently returned home after being
called to Rostoria by the death of an aunt, Miss Cora Miller, 88
years old and a former native of Salem Center, in Meigs County.
Mr. and Mrs. Harland Vollborn, Mrs. Francis Burdell and
Dean Jones, Rio Grande, attended the funeral of Mrs. Mayne
Davis Blagg, a former resident of Gallia County, on Thursday in
Columbus.
Mrs. Varney Faye Clendenin, 96 Court St., left on Dec . 22 to
visit with her daughters, Mrs. George Christ (Betty), Cleveland,
later visiting with Mrs. Santos (Harriet ) in PeMsylvania and
Mrs. Ctine (Barbara) at Kettering before returning to home and
job.

POLLY'S POINTERS
~·••.

J

.Her Bulletin Boards,

•

Are on Cupboard Doors

Animals are Neglected

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1971
ACROSS

c.-

3- 'lbe Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sundav, Dee. 26, 1971
~~~~~~~~
~
._.....
. · .····"~~--::;&amp;--··
~XI&gt;: ·'r-•X"•:O:o;: ·'· ,o;o:;o:O:&gt;~~~
· ·····

/

By POLLY CRAMER

Aproblem that is seldom talked outside of individual neighborhoods in Gallia County is concerned with animals, which are
sometimes neglected, especially those we refer to as "household
pets."
'
I happen to live In a nelghborhoud tbat some persollll feel i.s a
good piace to dump their unwanted anlmai.s. 'lbe practice leads
me to feel there is a place for some kind of an organization of dog
and cat lovers to come to the aid of these unfortunates of the
animal world. If there could be some lr.lnd ol clearing bouae,
many of the unwanted animals could be directed to homes that
are reaUy longing for either a cat or a dog. Many rJ. these anlmala
lead what might be called a dog's life. They are cussed, diBcUBBed
and often treated much worse. Most persons sympathy goes out
to them because their condition of homeleSIIIIes8 Is not their own
fault but the making of someone else. '!bey take the rap for ·
those who should be their keepers. 111ey not only receive our
sympathy for the way they are treated, but when It comes to cold
weather they really suffer.
'lbere are owners of animals who don't even keep drinking
water or shelter available for their animals. To tie a dog In the
snow is a cruel thing'to do. Animals need care just the IIIUilf as
humans and If we are human we wW most certainly treat them In
that manner. U people want pets tbey should be willing to
provide, food, water and sllelter for tbem.
Persons wbo should be punished are the owners of dogs who
let their animals get into trouble. '!bey permit their dogs and cats
to breed offspring, later to be turned out In society as strB)'s or to
multiply indefinitely.
Such people are not friends of anlmals, but their enemies. We
are thankful for the many persons who have a big heart, and who
do everything In their power to see that unfortunate animals get
a fair break. It is sometimes d011e at the elpeJlse of considerable
time, money and effort, and in my book, those people show their
great humanity In the things they do for these animals that mean
so much to young and old.
If we would all do as much for the anlma1s tbat surround us,
we would not be confronted with the heart rending slgbt ol stray
and neglected P!!lmals.
Mrs. Mary Rusk James,
237 Second Ave., Gallipolis

r-------------------·
SUNDAY
i
i

TIMES..SENTINEL

l"ubllj,ft" •w•rr S11M 1r bY 1~ Otl .. ,,
'ol •ll•y P1.1blltl\6nl Co .
GAL LifiOLI DA ILY TltillJNI!
US Tlllrd AYI •. Gtlllpellt . Ol'lla. 4Mll . ~
fll.llllllhta tvlf~ WHkGty IWtnlftl I~C:tlll ~
~t11rdlr. · $1C0110 CIUI I"Otllll l"lld j t I
G•lllpolt, 01\la, • S631 .
THE OAI L"¥ SINTIHEL
11! C:ourt St .• 1"1mer1y, 0 .. U1H.
1
"' fiVIII!tlltcl tvtf~ Wltklllty IWtn\ll'tjl tiiU'I
$ilturnv. £t'lltr"" ft'ONI Cl . .l mtlllnl
"'llttr 11 fiMIIrt Yj 011 1 ~, '"011 Olfkt .
TUM.$ OF U&amp;SCI IPTION
ay u rr ltr fi lLy 1nd S""'dily , Jlk: 11tf
Willi .
MAIL $UI5CRII"TION RAT IS
Tilt Gt iiiJIQIII Tr lbUf\1 111 OhiO tnd WKI
Vl.rvl nll , OJnl Yll' .U ,OO / 1111 mGnlt"lt II ;

I

lhrn m..-.lt!t ••. ~; ''"•~•••• on• ' " '
1131 tl~ mon thl &amp;7: lhru monlht .U .IICI.
Tilt Dtlll Stnlln11. 01'11 yNr ll".ao ' 1111
month' 11. i : tnrH moniU ••·" · .
Tl" U~llft l"rttl '"' "~t Uontl It Ill •
ctutlnlr •~II litO'- tht '"'"'or publluiiOI'I
Of illl ntwl d ltpillc lltl triiiiii.O to l hlt

ntwlj)tptr an lf 1110
pulllltlltct lllrtln .

th

local

!Miwt

DEAR POLLY- The insides of my kitchen cupboards
are my bulletin boards. On them I tape all the family
schedules, such as football , band practice, etc . On the
door of the cupboard by the phone , I have made pockets
by taping on envelopes in which I keep prescription
numbers . telephone numbers of those in car pools , and
so on. Near the outside door is an envelope for the chi!·
dren's library cards. On the dooo. to the cupboard that
holds chma I have taped newspaper clippings , poems and
so on that I enjoy rereading.- MRS S. W.

'• · , •··..,.

CHRISTMAS ClUB

q~ inDEAR
POLLY- For the fir st time , we are living
a home serviced by a septic tank so would like a

~ list of "Dos and Don'ts " that others have found •
~ useful for the proper use of this type of facility. \

t:~~:~:!!::tt:~::~:,.:,::~.:~~;:w:,::~:::J
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with air·conditioning
filters that cannot be easily removed. Manufacturers.
please help us. In the meanwhile, I have a temporary
solut1on that works for me. Before inserting the filter ,
I stick loops of masking tape or gummed plastic tape
on each end to make tabs for use in removing the filter
from the unit when tim e comes for a change.- MRS. J . B.

Join NOW . •. we make
your last payment FREE!

DEAR POLLY - 1 have some possible help for Mrs.
V. S. whose sailcloth dress with a jacket wrinkles so
badl y. An Agricultural Dept. Extension agent passed it
on to me several years ago. To keep a summer suit or
dress clean longer and more wrinkle-proof, wash and
iron , then spray the garment with that widely used water.
proofing and spot resistant protective spray. It does not
show and keeps soil and wrinkles away.- MRS. W. R. S.
DEAR GIRLS-I have some sailcloth curtains and· find
they look better II taken from the line or dryer whDe
still damp rather than being allowed to eomr,letely dry
and then be sprinkled. Do not roll up before ronlng but
fold to prevent more wrinkles from forming . Iron until
dry.-POLLY
EXTENDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services has announced it
would begin paying extended
benefits Jan. 3 to persons who .
, have recently exhausted their
Unemployment compensation.
William E. Garnes, Bureau
Administrator, sald the additional 10 to 13 weeks of
compensation wlll be paid
under il federal law calling for
-atension of the·benefits if the
unemployment rate ' In the
nation was higher tban 4.5 pet.
for three consecutive months.
BENEF~

COI.O\'
,,,,I/ II,.
Tonight thru
Wednesday

I

Tonight, Mon., Tues.

Decemhr 26-27·21
FIVE EASY PIECES
(Technicolorl
Jack Nlchols011
Karen Black
." R"

Joe SolomOn ~·

GEORGE

SUE

HAMILTON""' LYON~

SHOW STAATS! P.M.

Bank rnat appreci.ates
your business"

.. , th&amp; laat of the d•rtd•vU•I·

Rod Tractor
Brothers In Outer Space
,;,~·

Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Mone Back

EGG

.L.------------------·J.

MEIGS THEATRE

CARTOON

!

· Polly's Problem m*•:;.~.r!IA•.:!''""W('"''

'

It should come as no news to you
that the cost of just about everything
is up.
And perhaps yqu've resigned
yourself to the fact that you just can't
get as much for your money anymore.
Right?
.
Wrong . If you're talking lelephone
service.
Here are 11 simple ways to keep
costs down without giving up a single
call.
1, Wh,en you move, plan ahead.
Have all the phones you 'll need in·
stalled at the same time for a single
installation charge. If you as~ us lo
come back lat e r, there's an added
charge.
2. If you have· youngsters away
from home, sel a specific time for you
to call them or them to call you at low
station-to-station rates. (Calling
person-to-person can cost up to three
times as much .)

3. Dial long distance direct. You
save 43 to 56 per cent on all out-ofstate, station-to-station calls you dial
yourself wilhout operator assistance.
4. If you don 't know the out-of·
town number, call directory assistance
in the distant city. At no charge. Dial 1,
the area code (if. different from your
own), then 555· 1212.
5. You 're dialing direc t and you
reach a wrong number. No problem.
Simply dial the operator and explain
what happened. You won't be charged
for the call.
6. You 're ta lking long distance
and you're cut off. If you're the call ing
party, just dial the operator. The
charge will be adjusted.
·
7. If you 're just starling out, and
on a limited budget, maybe you should
consider a basic black wall or desk
phone. The service is the same, just a
little bit cheaper.
B. Know the best times to ca ll

· long distance. It's usually cheaper in
the evenings, even cheaper on week·
ends.
9. Plan your long distance calls in
advance. Make notes, if you have to.
Then st ick to the script. You 'll be
amazed at the time (and mo~ey) you
save.
10. II you're leaving town for one
to nine months, ask us to put your
serv1ce on our reduced vacation rale.
11 . II one of ou r pay phones takes
your dime and does n't give you a cal l,
please do this. Jot down the number
of th e offend ing phone and, when you
gel the opportunity, report it. Just di a l
"operator." We'll see that the phone
gets fixed . And we'll see th at you get
yo ur dime back.

@Ohio Bell

Proiesslonal Buolness
Training can be oblalnod
only through a colleg•level
IH'oaram.

GBC Graduates Get
' The'Better Jobs!
Volrlle or call 446·4367 for
catalog of courses and next
starting date .

QT.

USE WURPIIONE FOR AL'-R'S WORTH.

· GALLI POLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

·u Locust St.

1 Gallipolis
. Slate R... No, 71-0:1-00_3,,2.,8"--"1 -

"

-

�I'

4- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Slllday, Dec. 26, 1971

Christ United WSCS
Has Christmas Meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Christ
United Methodist Women
Society for Christian Service
held its annual Christmas
party recently at the home of
Mrs . Bien Thompson, hostess,
with Mrs. Richard Baker the
co-hostess. The opening song,
"Joy to the World " was sung
and Mrs. Marvin Robinson
gave devotions reading from
Luke 2 following with a poem,
"The First Christmas Night, "
and prayer by Mrs. Charles
Martin.
The president, Mrs. Troy

Stewart presided over the
business meeting in which 23
members answered roll call
and66sick calls were reported.
The treasurer and secretary's
reports were read and
approved. Two letters were
read from John Agbro of
Nigeria and a vote was taken
and accepted that the club
donate $25 to John Agbro and
. his family.
Clothing was distributed
from the mission house to two
families whose homes were
burned.
Mrs. Tho~as Russell, in
charge of the program, led the
group in singing "Oh Come Ali
Ye Faithful," and ';Hark The
Herald Angels Sing." .
Mrs. James Craft gave a
candy cane to each one present
and presented an impressive
reading on how the red and
white cane is a symbol of
Christmas.
Mrs . Raymond Willis gave
two readings, "This Time of
Year" and ,;We've Come A
GALLIPOLIS - A large Long Way Since the First
audience attended the Paint Christmas Day.''
Creek Regular Baptist Sunday
Mrs . Russell read two
School 's
pre-Christmas poems, " Ready for Christmas~~
program on Dec. 19th. Mrs. and "It's Not So Far" with the
Harold Mills accompanied the group singing the closing song,
congregation which sang "0, usilent Night".
Come All Ye Faithful," and
Santa appeared and gave out
"Silent Night."
Secret Sister gift exchanges.
Scripture, St. Luke 2:1-11, The closing prayer was given
was read and the prayer given by·'Mrs. James Craft followed
by Rev. Elbert McGhee .
with refreshments of sandRecitations were said by wiches, cranberry bread,
Brian Briggs and Kirk Jackson mints, nuts, coffee and punch
from the nursery department, heing served during a social
Juan McCabe and Marlin hour .
Robinson from the beginner
department and April Gordon
from the prunary department.
An exercise, "Thanksgiving
At Christmas" was by the
Primary department and
"What Is Christmas?" by the
Junior department.
The intermediate class sang
a medley of carols.
Mrs . Frank Washington
sang, "Away In A Manger,"
accompanied by Mrs. Elbert
McGhee.
The pastor, Rev. and Mrs.
Grover Turner sang, "Go Tell
It On the Mountain That Jesus
.·: Cl\rwlls Born."
• A· play "God Hosts A
Christmas ", introduced by
Skipper Johnson and Brenda
Lee , was given by the senior
department.
A play, Christmas In the
Anderson Home," had as Mr ,
and Mrs . Anderson, Jane
Charles
Saunders
and
Jamison; their daughters were
Christy King and Camille
Doss ; son, Bruce Jamison, and
a friend , by Gail Craig. The
play was directed by the
teacher, Mrs. Bobby Gordon .
Mistress of ceremonies was
Mrs. Cheryl Rippey Gray;
program chairman, Mrs. John
Rippey assisted by all the
teachers, and ushers were
Leon Briggs and Skipper
Johnson .

Pre- Cbrts• t mas

Program Is
Successful

Mrs. Bradbury
Fr~nch

City Garden

GALLIPOLIS - The French
City Garden ~;tub enjoyed its
annual Christmas dinner and
gift exchange at the home of
Mrs . Wymond Bradbury
Tuesday evening with Mrs.
Earl
Neff
co-hostess.
Following the dinner Mrs.
Harley George presided over
the opening of the meeting and
the group read the club prayer
in unison.
The treasurer's report was
given by Miss Marie Meal and
bills to be paid were duly approved.
Mrs. Florence Trainer
reported she had made table
arrangements using T.B. and
Health Seals for the Home
Council meeting and also for
the Rodney Grange dinner.
Mrs. Bradbury reported that
she had given a demonstration
in Christmas arrangements for
the Riverside Study Club held
at the home of Mrs. L. H.
Nelson .
Members brought specimens
of evergreens for identification . Mrs. Jewell Moore
introduced the program and
Mrs. Charles Lanier read
"Christmas Thoughts for all
the Year."

Christmas is celebration and
celebration is instinct in the
heart. Faith and Hope and
Love cannot be bought or sold
but only given. They are not
easy to come by but are in

GALIJPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Milstead entertained
the Ambassador Class of the
unlimited supply . Through First Baptist Church on Dec. 11
and- with a Christmas potluck
many
centuries
threatening circumstances dinner.
Christmas has been celebrated
since that first cry of "Joy to ·The evening began with Rev.
Cole asking grace and the
the World."
dinner
preceding a short
Mrs. John Reese led a panel
discussion on "Hollies" of the business meeting. Mrs. Pat
Dex group. There are many McBride gave devotions on the
varieties of hollies which bear "Ufe of Jesus," beginning with
an abundance of berries while
others bear none. This could be
that some trees bear aU male
flowers and others aU female
flowers.
It is necessary to have both
male and female trees in the
same vicinity to produce
berries. There are some
fJ f ~
varieties being prOduced,
however, which do not require
CHESHIRE - The Faithful
male and female species.
Workers
Society of the Poplar
Holly is propragated by
seed or cutting. Seeds should Ridge Free Will Baptist
be planted in the apring and Church met recenUy at the
may take one to three years to home of Mrs. Elizabeth Welch
germinate. Cuttings are best with 31 attending.
The meeting was called to
taken in September or October
and started in a greenhouse. order by the president. The
Hollies are very decorative and
are usually pruned at
Christmas time so the cuttings
may be used for decorations.
.. PARTY PLANNED
The meeting adjourned with
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
the next meeting to be in Christmas party of the
January at the home of Mrs. S. American Legion Au•iliary
L. Bossard with Mrs. Owen will be Dec. 28 at the home of
Cantrell co-hostess. Cards Dorothy Hecker, Third Ave.
were signed by aU for Mrs. and Grape St. A gift exchange
Blain Wallace , Mrs. Earl will be held and members
Brown and Mrs. Osa Baird.
please bring holiday refresh·
ments.

his birth until his crucifixion,
and rising from the dead.
The class joined in the
singing of Christmas carols
after which Mrs. Carl Simpkins
surprised everyone .by singing
a solo. Rev. Cole expressed
how .thankful he was for such a
joyous Ume of the year and the
birth of Jesus Christ, son of
God.
He also mentioned the new
pastor, Rev. Wahl, who will

Held Meeting

group sang "Silent Night," and
the Lord's Prayer was prayed
in unison. The scripture lesson,
read by the hostess, was St.
Luke, second chapt. The roll
was called by the Secretary,
and dues and ·the Sunshine
fund were collected. Records of
the previous meeting were
read by the secretary, Mrs.
Grace Lemley. Bills were paid
and get-well cards were signed
to be sent to Mrs. Jean Nobles
and Mrs. Betty Lemley.
Christi Lemley received a
birthday gift from her mystery
sister. Names were drawn for
birthdays for the coming year.
The program consisted of
readings by Phyllis Berkley,
Mrs. Alma Hix, Mrs. Dotty
McCoy, Mrs. Grace Lemley,
Mrs. Pearl Lemley, and Mrs.
Rosetta Jones . Tbe highlight of
the program was recitations
and songs by the children. Lori
McCoy, Christi Lemley, Mark
Trout, Tarrun'y Dalton and
Susan McCoy; songs by, Lori
McCoy, Tammy Dalton, Donna
Welch, and Susan McCoy.
Dismissed by Mrs. Pearl
Lemley. Refreshments of ice
cream, cake, punch and coffee
were served.
A gift exchange was enjoyed
by all.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAU.IPOLIS
Lt. and Mrs. Phillip Miller
COME TO A

FREE OPEN MEETING
OF OUR NEW CUSS IN

POMEROY
OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231

E. Second St .. POmeroy, Ohio

NO REGISTRATION

NO OBLIGATION

CLASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY .
IN GAlliPOLIS Groce United
St. Louis Church

91 State St.
·•Tue,....ys 7:30p.m.
n.oo Registration

Methodist Church
2nd
Wed neMAI'ys
·•-&amp; Ctcliir
9 :l01.m.

$2.00 Wuk Duos

Add a lady Iike touch to your favorite pants with o delicately styled " little bl.a ck blouse" from Keneth
Knits . It's drip-dry and easy to core for . The monoplane belt buckles give a hint of the post (left) . Put a
posy in the heart-shaped necklace by award-winner Alexis Kirk. Then toke time to read poetry, wearing
a puff-shouldered pantsuit by Carissimo division of Weber Originals. Your re9ding time goes up as laundry-room time drops when you choose care-free fab rics. These designs are in Quintess polyester.

NEW YORK - ( NEA 1-lf
the new romantic mood con·
trasted with the thought of
PATRIOT - The Patriot com fort a b I e pants suits
Social Club met Tuesday gives you fashion schizophre·
evening with Mrs Thelma nia- take heart. Designers
Barker opening the meeting may have learned a lesson.
and Edna Ashworth reading a They aren't about to abanChristmas prayer. Christmas don a style that women have
cards were prepared for adopted with such enlhusi·
members who are away . asm. Ins I e ad, this winter
Happy birthday was sung to pants are being designed
Nancy Rhodes, Thelma with c h arming feminine
Barker, Garnet Jones and touches that make yo u feel
Christy Crews.
Edna Ashworth presented
the Christmas program with
readings and games prior to an
exchange of gifts.
Attending were Nancy,
KYGER - The Golden Rule
Dewey, Sherry and Jerry
Class of the Old Kyger Free
Rhodes, Mary, Robin, Roger Will Baptist Church met
and Chris Crews, Garnet Wednesday for their annual
Jones, Laura Crews, Ada Christmas dinner and meeting
Carter, Magdalene Grate, with Miss Mollie Johnson at
'Gertrude Davis, Edna Ash· Gallipolis .
worth, Thelma Barker, Debbie
'At noon a delicious potluck
Grate, Shenie Burnett and dinner was enjoyed with Mrs .
Scott Wood. The group enjoyed Lester Roush giving the
refreshments and a social blessing.
hour. The next meeting will be
The afternoon meeting was
at the Grange Hall the second opened by the president, Mrs.
Tuesday in January at 7:30 p. Dale Mulford, leading the
m. Secret Sister names will be group in singing, "Silent
drawn at that time .
Night," with the Lord's Prayer
repeated by all. Mrs. Edward
Spears read the Christmas
SUPPER ENJOYED
ENO - The Eno Grahge scripture from the second
chapter of Luke, after which
annual Christmas supper was
held recenUy with 27 persons she gave a reading on the song,
"Silent Night" which told the
attending. The room ·was
words were written in 1616 by a
beautifull decorated for \he priest as he walked in the night
occaslo . There was no
looking up in the sky and
business onducted. Grace was
thinking of the Lord Jesus'
said by the grange chaplain.
birih. The melody was written
All enjoyed a gift exchange.
by a young school ieacher who
After whlc.h aU enjoyed a social
loved music.
h ...... """'"' """""'j a•o.naA miHI!tlnl1

Tuesday

Carter and members, Rev. and
Mrs. Harry Cole, Mr. and 1\lra.
John Kerr, Mr. and Mi-l.
~nle Keenan, Mr. and MrS.
Uoyd Danner, Mr. and Mil.
Llirry Marr, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Simpkins, Mr. and Mrs.~
Hardesty, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
McBride, Mr. and Mrs. J.,.-y
M~Divlt, and Mr. and M\'1.
Tom Milstead, taking home
several very unusual glflt.

Faithful Workers of
C' 1-U,..'Ch Met Recently

Pants With a Feminine Touch

Social Club

arrive on Jan. 22 and he asked
everyone to give hlm a warm
welcome by attending church
services.
The January meeting will be
a bowling party with members
meeting afterward at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Simpkins.
A white elephant gift exchange was held with ,special
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Wilt, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie

more ladylike without giv·
ing up one iota of the ease of
trousers. Ideas are around,
too, for accessorizing the
pants suit without sacrificing practicality.
A key feature of the pants
suits of the season is their
carefree fabrics. More and
more are made up in doubleknit synthetics which can be
popped into the washing
machine, will drip dry and
stay wrinkle-free e f for I·

·tessly .
As everyone knows (and
teen-age brides·t~be are. frequently warned) long rroning sessions in the laundry
room don't set the ideal
scene for love.
If th 'd
f
b' .
e 1 ea o com mmg
this year's romantic look
with comfort appeals to you
avoid strict ·tailoring and
look for pants suits with
these touches-gentle puffed
sleeves, lace-trimmed collars
and cuffs, a little black

' that
blouse, as glamorous as
old favorite the little black
dress, or dashing Russian
Cossack lines.
In accessories, wear a
heart-if not on your sleeve,
then on a thin cord around
your neck
·
One giant heart pendant
even holds water for a few
fresh flowers. Or season ro-m an c e with nostalgia and
pick a belt buckle of World
War I airplanes.

&lt;

HOBO DOUGH
.FOR NEXT cHRISTMAS

Golden Rule Class
·Has Annual Dinner
was held announcing that two
Christmas arrangements had
been placed in 1M church.
Readings were offered by
members, "A Recipe for
Christmas," by Mollie John·
son ; ''Merry Christmas Day,''
by Mrs. Lester Roush; "The
Salvation Plan," by Mrs .
Leona Spires; "Prayer for
Christmas," by Mrs . Ben
Rupe ;; "That First Christmas," by Mrs. Willa Fry; and
"Christmas Comes AI Dif.
ferent Times", by Mrs. Spears.
Adiscussion was held on Old
Time Christmases, and
brought many fond memories
to all.
Mrs. Mulford asked Bible
questions after which a gift
exchange was held . Mrs.
Spires received the door prize
given by the hostess who also
presented each one present
with a gift of candy. •
The January meeting will be
with Mrs. Lester Roush at
Gallipolis, a former resident of

FOR YOUR

'

JOIN OUR 1972 •••

CHRISTMAS
SAVINGS CLUB
.

SHOP lHE NEW JONES BOYS'
Be1t Value. on
Food.- Clothing- Hardware
- in

\M ·

G~llia

Parking For OYer 100 I C.rs

DIS&lt;XJUNT SA
117 PIM...,..,
Gliii!MIIt. Cllllo

June Neigler Was
September Bride
POMEROY - Miss June
Marie Neigler, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George J . Neigler,
Racine, Route I, and Lt. Phillip
I. Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William B. Miller of Columbus
exchanged wedding vows at
2:30 p.m. on Sept. 18 at the
Racine First Baptist Church.
The Rev. Charles S. Norris
officiated at the double ring
ceremony.
Nuptial music by Mrs .
Lillian Hayman, pianist, in·
eluded "SUU as the Night" ,
"Largo", "How Great Thou
Art", "Saviour Like a
Shepherd Lead Us" . and Mrs.
Dottie
Brown
singing
11
Because" and "The Wedding
Prayer." Vases of white
lladloll and orange mums
~orated the altar, orange
berries were used in the
windows and a fall flower
arraugement was on the piano.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was in a
fonnai length gown of white
English lace designed with a
ocaUoped neckline edged with
a ruffle of lace and a row of
small seed pears. Tiny satin
buttons centered the bodice
from the neckline to the empire
waist. The skirt was softly
gathered as were the long
Bishop sleeves which ended
with a deep cuff at the wrist.
The bride wore a headpiece
of the same material from
which feU tiers of illusion . She
carried a white Bible topped
with a bouquet of white carnations and fall colored mums.
Miss Shirlee Neigler, sister
of the bride, of Parkersburg,
was the maid of honor, and
Mrs. Isabel Howard of Shelby,
N. C., was the matron of honor.
They wore floor length gowns
of orange serrano with brown ,
gold 'and beige embroidered
!rim. They were fashioned with
full length bishop sleeves and a
hllh scooped neckline.
Mr. Carl T. Miller of
Columbus, brother of the
groom, was best man, and Mr.
Gary Kinnison of Cedarville
and Mr. David Neigler, brother
of the bride, Racine, were the

/

'THE OLD BANK WITH
. N'EW . IDEAS"

ushers.

For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Neigler was in a beige
polyester knit suit with brown
accessories , She wore an
orange rose corsage. Mrs.
Miller was in a mint green coat
and dress ensemble of silk
shantung with matching accessories and had a corsage of
white rosebuds.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the
basement of the Racine First
Baptist Church. The wedding

ARMOUR
Sandra arkk Betrothed
SYRACUSE - Mr . and Mrs. William R. Zerkle of Syracuse are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Sandra, to Mr. Dennis Carol, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Carol
of Detroit, Mich. The bride-elect is a junior at Ohio State University where she is majoring in
special education. Mr. Carol will receive his bachelor of arts degree in marketing in June. He
plays on the Ohio State Hockey Team. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Consult the Fashion Coordinator included in each
Yaung Original for color,
fabric and accessory suggestions.

Send $1.25 for this smart
Young Original pattern designed for women who sew.
Write (name of your newspaper), Box 438, M i d town
Station; New York, N,Y,
10018. Print .full name, addren with zip code, pattern
number and size.

We re$erYe the right to

limit quantities on all

lb.

item1 in ttli1 ad. Pr ius
elfective thru Sat. Jan.

1, 1H2 -

NOI'If! S.old To

Dealers.

white with orange trim topped
with the traditional bride and
groom.
Mrs. Harriet Neigler· had
charge of the reception and
serving as hostesses were Mrs .
Phillip Ro6etti:" fiiitnhf;~ Mrs.
James Dagger!, Columbus,
and Mrs . Fred Shriner,
Thornville . Guests were
registered by Miss Lynn Cross,
a cousin of the bride .
For a wedding trip to
Piepstem, W. Va. the bride
changed into a gray knit dress
with blue patent accessories.
The couple resides at 372
South Ashburton Road ,
Columbus.
Mrs . Miller is a 1966
graduate of the Holzer Hospital
School of Nursing and was
formerly employed at Mount
Carmel Hospital Columbus.
Mr. Miller graduated from
Ohio State University with a
bachelor of science degree in
agriculture . He is now serving
as a lieutenant with the Supply
Corps of the United States
Navy at the Defense Construction Supply Center in
Columbus.

TAFFETA'S BACK
THffeta's back both lor the
evening out on the town in
sultry black with rows of
ruffles or for the stay at
home hostess in plaids with
puffed sleeves, sashed with
a big how and topped with a
silk organza blouse to give
the country-girl look.

Building a Wardrobe . . .

.

OUTS

cake was a cross replica in

YOUNG ORIGINALS

Use this pattern to build
your wardrobe .. . a handsame dress and a pretty
pan t su i t. Use a pretty
floral print for the suit;
black with white-trim for
the eosy·w~or dress.

:4
-U.S. Govt Inspected-LEAN SELECTED
•
PORK
FJRST

U.S. No. 1 Grade
NEW RED

POTATOES
"So good in so many ways"

c

10-lb.

Bag
STATE FARE

POTATO
IPS
1-lb. Pkg.

LIBBY'S

Newlyweds Sgt. and Mrs. Elton Steele

TOMATO
JUICE

POMEROY - Sgt. and Mrs. Elton M. Steele are residing in Oceanside, Calif., following a
mid.,summer weddiug . The bride is the former Helen Jean Grimm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Marion Grimm of Kirkland, Iii. and the bridegroom is the son of Mr .. and Mrs. Robert M.
Steele, Pomeroy, Route 3, wbere the ceremony was held. The double-ring evening ceremony
was performed by the Rev. William Airson before members of the immediate family . Sgt.
Steele is serving with the Marine Corps at Camp Pendleton, California.

Done on Sunday
POMEROY - Christmas
decorations in the Chester area
lighting contest will be judged
at 6:30 p. m. Sunday, Dec. 26.
The Chester Garden Club is
sponsoring the contest with
first, second and third place
prizes to be awarded in the
category of overall decorating.
The judging will begin at Five
Points and end at Eastern High
School on Route 7.
Residents who live off Route
7 but want to have their
decorations included in the
judging are asked to contact
either Mrs. Reid Young 9925643 or Mrs. Roy Miller, 9853817.

The judges will go to the
home of Mrs. Miller following
their tour to view the
decorations for a social hour.
On the committee besides Mrs.
Miller and Mrs. Young are
Mrs. George Frederick and
Mrs. Macil Barton. An elec·
trical appliance has been
provided hy the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. for
one of the prizes.

1-Qt.14-oz. Can

ON

fudging Will be

: B-160 with Photo-Guide
is in . Sizes IOV2 to 241;2
(bust 33-47) . Size 12Y2,
35 bust ... pantsuit, 4 Ya
yards of 54-inch; dress,
2% yords.

County

OPEN 9 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M. MON. THRU FRI.
'TIL 6 P

STATE FARE
WIENER OR SANDWICH

BUNS

TAP

Pkg. of 8

-

JENO'S PIZZA MIXES

.

Cheese ~~ow~o s,.. . . . . . . . • . ··~;-- 53c
Cheese - '"• ....... • ·•~:~:,...•· 89c
Pe erona• ~~o.w. g.. • • • • • • l-It..,.,.I! .... 99 c

THE MOM.NT
IT'S NEEDED
Nothing compares to the
peace of mind that
comes from having cash
in reserve that earns a
fine return .. . money
that you can get . your
hands on immediately
without sacrifice or
principal.

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

MUSSELMAN'S FEATURES
APPLE BUnER .... , ....... ..
APPLE BUnER ...... .... ... .
CHUNKY APPLE SAUCE ..•... '";~;·•• 35c
APPLE SAUCE
- Hb. J-or. 49c
APPLE SAUCE . , .. ........... '·";:;" 39c

........ ...... '"

All Savings Guaranteed In Full

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY
OpnMite Post Office Pho11e
446.· 3832 Gallipolis
.
.

e WILL CLOSE NEW

,.

CHIFFON
SOFT
MARGARINE
1·1b.
Pkg.

47~

IDEAL
DOG FOOD

2-lb.
Can

$,.,

3-lb.
Can

$269

BILTMORE
Luncheon or
Sandwich Loaf

3 12-oz.$1

151&gt;-o•·
l&amp;~
Can

Cens

YEARS

EVE. AT 4 P.M.
I

'

II/.:

�I'

4- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Slllday, Dec. 26, 1971

Christ United WSCS
Has Christmas Meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Christ
United Methodist Women
Society for Christian Service
held its annual Christmas
party recently at the home of
Mrs . Bien Thompson, hostess,
with Mrs. Richard Baker the
co-hostess. The opening song,
"Joy to the World " was sung
and Mrs. Marvin Robinson
gave devotions reading from
Luke 2 following with a poem,
"The First Christmas Night, "
and prayer by Mrs. Charles
Martin.
The president, Mrs. Troy

Stewart presided over the
business meeting in which 23
members answered roll call
and66sick calls were reported.
The treasurer and secretary's
reports were read and
approved. Two letters were
read from John Agbro of
Nigeria and a vote was taken
and accepted that the club
donate $25 to John Agbro and
. his family.
Clothing was distributed
from the mission house to two
families whose homes were
burned.
Mrs. Tho~as Russell, in
charge of the program, led the
group in singing "Oh Come Ali
Ye Faithful," and ';Hark The
Herald Angels Sing." .
Mrs. James Craft gave a
candy cane to each one present
and presented an impressive
reading on how the red and
white cane is a symbol of
Christmas.
Mrs . Raymond Willis gave
two readings, "This Time of
Year" and ,;We've Come A
GALLIPOLIS - A large Long Way Since the First
audience attended the Paint Christmas Day.''
Creek Regular Baptist Sunday
Mrs . Russell read two
School 's
pre-Christmas poems, " Ready for Christmas~~
program on Dec. 19th. Mrs. and "It's Not So Far" with the
Harold Mills accompanied the group singing the closing song,
congregation which sang "0, usilent Night".
Come All Ye Faithful," and
Santa appeared and gave out
"Silent Night."
Secret Sister gift exchanges.
Scripture, St. Luke 2:1-11, The closing prayer was given
was read and the prayer given by·'Mrs. James Craft followed
by Rev. Elbert McGhee .
with refreshments of sandRecitations were said by wiches, cranberry bread,
Brian Briggs and Kirk Jackson mints, nuts, coffee and punch
from the nursery department, heing served during a social
Juan McCabe and Marlin hour .
Robinson from the beginner
department and April Gordon
from the prunary department.
An exercise, "Thanksgiving
At Christmas" was by the
Primary department and
"What Is Christmas?" by the
Junior department.
The intermediate class sang
a medley of carols.
Mrs . Frank Washington
sang, "Away In A Manger,"
accompanied by Mrs. Elbert
McGhee.
The pastor, Rev. and Mrs.
Grover Turner sang, "Go Tell
It On the Mountain That Jesus
.·: Cl\rwlls Born."
• A· play "God Hosts A
Christmas ", introduced by
Skipper Johnson and Brenda
Lee , was given by the senior
department.
A play, Christmas In the
Anderson Home," had as Mr ,
and Mrs . Anderson, Jane
Charles
Saunders
and
Jamison; their daughters were
Christy King and Camille
Doss ; son, Bruce Jamison, and
a friend , by Gail Craig. The
play was directed by the
teacher, Mrs. Bobby Gordon .
Mistress of ceremonies was
Mrs. Cheryl Rippey Gray;
program chairman, Mrs. John
Rippey assisted by all the
teachers, and ushers were
Leon Briggs and Skipper
Johnson .

Pre- Cbrts• t mas

Program Is
Successful

Mrs. Bradbury
Fr~nch

City Garden

GALLIPOLIS - The French
City Garden ~;tub enjoyed its
annual Christmas dinner and
gift exchange at the home of
Mrs . Wymond Bradbury
Tuesday evening with Mrs.
Earl
Neff
co-hostess.
Following the dinner Mrs.
Harley George presided over
the opening of the meeting and
the group read the club prayer
in unison.
The treasurer's report was
given by Miss Marie Meal and
bills to be paid were duly approved.
Mrs. Florence Trainer
reported she had made table
arrangements using T.B. and
Health Seals for the Home
Council meeting and also for
the Rodney Grange dinner.
Mrs. Bradbury reported that
she had given a demonstration
in Christmas arrangements for
the Riverside Study Club held
at the home of Mrs. L. H.
Nelson .
Members brought specimens
of evergreens for identification . Mrs. Jewell Moore
introduced the program and
Mrs. Charles Lanier read
"Christmas Thoughts for all
the Year."

Christmas is celebration and
celebration is instinct in the
heart. Faith and Hope and
Love cannot be bought or sold
but only given. They are not
easy to come by but are in

GALIJPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Milstead entertained
the Ambassador Class of the
unlimited supply . Through First Baptist Church on Dec. 11
and- with a Christmas potluck
many
centuries
threatening circumstances dinner.
Christmas has been celebrated
since that first cry of "Joy to ·The evening began with Rev.
Cole asking grace and the
the World."
dinner
preceding a short
Mrs. John Reese led a panel
discussion on "Hollies" of the business meeting. Mrs. Pat
Dex group. There are many McBride gave devotions on the
varieties of hollies which bear "Ufe of Jesus," beginning with
an abundance of berries while
others bear none. This could be
that some trees bear aU male
flowers and others aU female
flowers.
It is necessary to have both
male and female trees in the
same vicinity to produce
berries. There are some
fJ f ~
varieties being prOduced,
however, which do not require
CHESHIRE - The Faithful
male and female species.
Workers
Society of the Poplar
Holly is propragated by
seed or cutting. Seeds should Ridge Free Will Baptist
be planted in the apring and Church met recenUy at the
may take one to three years to home of Mrs. Elizabeth Welch
germinate. Cuttings are best with 31 attending.
The meeting was called to
taken in September or October
and started in a greenhouse. order by the president. The
Hollies are very decorative and
are usually pruned at
Christmas time so the cuttings
may be used for decorations.
.. PARTY PLANNED
The meeting adjourned with
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
the next meeting to be in Christmas party of the
January at the home of Mrs. S. American Legion Au•iliary
L. Bossard with Mrs. Owen will be Dec. 28 at the home of
Cantrell co-hostess. Cards Dorothy Hecker, Third Ave.
were signed by aU for Mrs. and Grape St. A gift exchange
Blain Wallace , Mrs. Earl will be held and members
Brown and Mrs. Osa Baird.
please bring holiday refresh·
ments.

his birth until his crucifixion,
and rising from the dead.
The class joined in the
singing of Christmas carols
after which Mrs. Carl Simpkins
surprised everyone .by singing
a solo. Rev. Cole expressed
how .thankful he was for such a
joyous Ume of the year and the
birth of Jesus Christ, son of
God.
He also mentioned the new
pastor, Rev. Wahl, who will

Held Meeting

group sang "Silent Night," and
the Lord's Prayer was prayed
in unison. The scripture lesson,
read by the hostess, was St.
Luke, second chapt. The roll
was called by the Secretary,
and dues and ·the Sunshine
fund were collected. Records of
the previous meeting were
read by the secretary, Mrs.
Grace Lemley. Bills were paid
and get-well cards were signed
to be sent to Mrs. Jean Nobles
and Mrs. Betty Lemley.
Christi Lemley received a
birthday gift from her mystery
sister. Names were drawn for
birthdays for the coming year.
The program consisted of
readings by Phyllis Berkley,
Mrs. Alma Hix, Mrs. Dotty
McCoy, Mrs. Grace Lemley,
Mrs. Pearl Lemley, and Mrs.
Rosetta Jones . Tbe highlight of
the program was recitations
and songs by the children. Lori
McCoy, Christi Lemley, Mark
Trout, Tarrun'y Dalton and
Susan McCoy; songs by, Lori
McCoy, Tammy Dalton, Donna
Welch, and Susan McCoy.
Dismissed by Mrs. Pearl
Lemley. Refreshments of ice
cream, cake, punch and coffee
were served.
A gift exchange was enjoyed
by all.

252 THIRD AVENUE, GAU.IPOLIS
Lt. and Mrs. Phillip Miller
COME TO A

FREE OPEN MEETING
OF OUR NEW CUSS IN

POMEROY
OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231

E. Second St .. POmeroy, Ohio

NO REGISTRATION

NO OBLIGATION

CLASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY .
IN GAlliPOLIS Groce United
St. Louis Church

91 State St.
·•Tue,....ys 7:30p.m.
n.oo Registration

Methodist Church
2nd
Wed neMAI'ys
·•-&amp; Ctcliir
9 :l01.m.

$2.00 Wuk Duos

Add a lady Iike touch to your favorite pants with o delicately styled " little bl.a ck blouse" from Keneth
Knits . It's drip-dry and easy to core for . The monoplane belt buckles give a hint of the post (left) . Put a
posy in the heart-shaped necklace by award-winner Alexis Kirk. Then toke time to read poetry, wearing
a puff-shouldered pantsuit by Carissimo division of Weber Originals. Your re9ding time goes up as laundry-room time drops when you choose care-free fab rics. These designs are in Quintess polyester.

NEW YORK - ( NEA 1-lf
the new romantic mood con·
trasted with the thought of
PATRIOT - The Patriot com fort a b I e pants suits
Social Club met Tuesday gives you fashion schizophre·
evening with Mrs Thelma nia- take heart. Designers
Barker opening the meeting may have learned a lesson.
and Edna Ashworth reading a They aren't about to abanChristmas prayer. Christmas don a style that women have
cards were prepared for adopted with such enlhusi·
members who are away . asm. Ins I e ad, this winter
Happy birthday was sung to pants are being designed
Nancy Rhodes, Thelma with c h arming feminine
Barker, Garnet Jones and touches that make yo u feel
Christy Crews.
Edna Ashworth presented
the Christmas program with
readings and games prior to an
exchange of gifts.
Attending were Nancy,
KYGER - The Golden Rule
Dewey, Sherry and Jerry
Class of the Old Kyger Free
Rhodes, Mary, Robin, Roger Will Baptist Church met
and Chris Crews, Garnet Wednesday for their annual
Jones, Laura Crews, Ada Christmas dinner and meeting
Carter, Magdalene Grate, with Miss Mollie Johnson at
'Gertrude Davis, Edna Ash· Gallipolis .
worth, Thelma Barker, Debbie
'At noon a delicious potluck
Grate, Shenie Burnett and dinner was enjoyed with Mrs .
Scott Wood. The group enjoyed Lester Roush giving the
refreshments and a social blessing.
hour. The next meeting will be
The afternoon meeting was
at the Grange Hall the second opened by the president, Mrs.
Tuesday in January at 7:30 p. Dale Mulford, leading the
m. Secret Sister names will be group in singing, "Silent
drawn at that time .
Night," with the Lord's Prayer
repeated by all. Mrs. Edward
Spears read the Christmas
SUPPER ENJOYED
ENO - The Eno Grahge scripture from the second
chapter of Luke, after which
annual Christmas supper was
held recenUy with 27 persons she gave a reading on the song,
"Silent Night" which told the
attending. The room ·was
words were written in 1616 by a
beautifull decorated for \he priest as he walked in the night
occaslo . There was no
looking up in the sky and
business onducted. Grace was
thinking of the Lord Jesus'
said by the grange chaplain.
birih. The melody was written
All enjoyed a gift exchange.
by a young school ieacher who
After whlc.h aU enjoyed a social
loved music.
h ...... """'"' """""'j a•o.naA miHI!tlnl1

Tuesday

Carter and members, Rev. and
Mrs. Harry Cole, Mr. and 1\lra.
John Kerr, Mr. and Mi-l.
~nle Keenan, Mr. and MrS.
Uoyd Danner, Mr. and Mil.
Llirry Marr, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Simpkins, Mr. and Mrs.~
Hardesty, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
McBride, Mr. and Mrs. J.,.-y
M~Divlt, and Mr. and M\'1.
Tom Milstead, taking home
several very unusual glflt.

Faithful Workers of
C' 1-U,..'Ch Met Recently

Pants With a Feminine Touch

Social Club

arrive on Jan. 22 and he asked
everyone to give hlm a warm
welcome by attending church
services.
The January meeting will be
a bowling party with members
meeting afterward at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Simpkins.
A white elephant gift exchange was held with ,special
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Wilt, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie

more ladylike without giv·
ing up one iota of the ease of
trousers. Ideas are around,
too, for accessorizing the
pants suit without sacrificing practicality.
A key feature of the pants
suits of the season is their
carefree fabrics. More and
more are made up in doubleknit synthetics which can be
popped into the washing
machine, will drip dry and
stay wrinkle-free e f for I·

·tessly .
As everyone knows (and
teen-age brides·t~be are. frequently warned) long rroning sessions in the laundry
room don't set the ideal
scene for love.
If th 'd
f
b' .
e 1 ea o com mmg
this year's romantic look
with comfort appeals to you
avoid strict ·tailoring and
look for pants suits with
these touches-gentle puffed
sleeves, lace-trimmed collars
and cuffs, a little black

' that
blouse, as glamorous as
old favorite the little black
dress, or dashing Russian
Cossack lines.
In accessories, wear a
heart-if not on your sleeve,
then on a thin cord around
your neck
·
One giant heart pendant
even holds water for a few
fresh flowers. Or season ro-m an c e with nostalgia and
pick a belt buckle of World
War I airplanes.

&lt;

HOBO DOUGH
.FOR NEXT cHRISTMAS

Golden Rule Class
·Has Annual Dinner
was held announcing that two
Christmas arrangements had
been placed in 1M church.
Readings were offered by
members, "A Recipe for
Christmas," by Mollie John·
son ; ''Merry Christmas Day,''
by Mrs. Lester Roush; "The
Salvation Plan," by Mrs .
Leona Spires; "Prayer for
Christmas," by Mrs . Ben
Rupe ;; "That First Christmas," by Mrs. Willa Fry; and
"Christmas Comes AI Dif.
ferent Times", by Mrs. Spears.
Adiscussion was held on Old
Time Christmases, and
brought many fond memories
to all.
Mrs. Mulford asked Bible
questions after which a gift
exchange was held . Mrs.
Spires received the door prize
given by the hostess who also
presented each one present
with a gift of candy. •
The January meeting will be
with Mrs. Lester Roush at
Gallipolis, a former resident of

FOR YOUR

'

JOIN OUR 1972 •••

CHRISTMAS
SAVINGS CLUB
.

SHOP lHE NEW JONES BOYS'
Be1t Value. on
Food.- Clothing- Hardware
- in

\M ·

G~llia

Parking For OYer 100 I C.rs

DIS&lt;XJUNT SA
117 PIM...,..,
Gliii!MIIt. Cllllo

June Neigler Was
September Bride
POMEROY - Miss June
Marie Neigler, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George J . Neigler,
Racine, Route I, and Lt. Phillip
I. Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William B. Miller of Columbus
exchanged wedding vows at
2:30 p.m. on Sept. 18 at the
Racine First Baptist Church.
The Rev. Charles S. Norris
officiated at the double ring
ceremony.
Nuptial music by Mrs .
Lillian Hayman, pianist, in·
eluded "SUU as the Night" ,
"Largo", "How Great Thou
Art", "Saviour Like a
Shepherd Lead Us" . and Mrs.
Dottie
Brown
singing
11
Because" and "The Wedding
Prayer." Vases of white
lladloll and orange mums
~orated the altar, orange
berries were used in the
windows and a fall flower
arraugement was on the piano.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was in a
fonnai length gown of white
English lace designed with a
ocaUoped neckline edged with
a ruffle of lace and a row of
small seed pears. Tiny satin
buttons centered the bodice
from the neckline to the empire
waist. The skirt was softly
gathered as were the long
Bishop sleeves which ended
with a deep cuff at the wrist.
The bride wore a headpiece
of the same material from
which feU tiers of illusion . She
carried a white Bible topped
with a bouquet of white carnations and fall colored mums.
Miss Shirlee Neigler, sister
of the bride, of Parkersburg,
was the maid of honor, and
Mrs. Isabel Howard of Shelby,
N. C., was the matron of honor.
They wore floor length gowns
of orange serrano with brown ,
gold 'and beige embroidered
!rim. They were fashioned with
full length bishop sleeves and a
hllh scooped neckline.
Mr. Carl T. Miller of
Columbus, brother of the
groom, was best man, and Mr.
Gary Kinnison of Cedarville
and Mr. David Neigler, brother
of the bride, Racine, were the

/

'THE OLD BANK WITH
. N'EW . IDEAS"

ushers.

For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Neigler was in a beige
polyester knit suit with brown
accessories , She wore an
orange rose corsage. Mrs.
Miller was in a mint green coat
and dress ensemble of silk
shantung with matching accessories and had a corsage of
white rosebuds.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the
basement of the Racine First
Baptist Church. The wedding

ARMOUR
Sandra arkk Betrothed
SYRACUSE - Mr . and Mrs. William R. Zerkle of Syracuse are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Sandra, to Mr. Dennis Carol, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Carol
of Detroit, Mich. The bride-elect is a junior at Ohio State University where she is majoring in
special education. Mr. Carol will receive his bachelor of arts degree in marketing in June. He
plays on the Ohio State Hockey Team. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Consult the Fashion Coordinator included in each
Yaung Original for color,
fabric and accessory suggestions.

Send $1.25 for this smart
Young Original pattern designed for women who sew.
Write (name of your newspaper), Box 438, M i d town
Station; New York, N,Y,
10018. Print .full name, addren with zip code, pattern
number and size.

We re$erYe the right to

limit quantities on all

lb.

item1 in ttli1 ad. Pr ius
elfective thru Sat. Jan.

1, 1H2 -

NOI'If! S.old To

Dealers.

white with orange trim topped
with the traditional bride and
groom.
Mrs. Harriet Neigler· had
charge of the reception and
serving as hostesses were Mrs .
Phillip Ro6etti:" fiiitnhf;~ Mrs.
James Dagger!, Columbus,
and Mrs . Fred Shriner,
Thornville . Guests were
registered by Miss Lynn Cross,
a cousin of the bride .
For a wedding trip to
Piepstem, W. Va. the bride
changed into a gray knit dress
with blue patent accessories.
The couple resides at 372
South Ashburton Road ,
Columbus.
Mrs . Miller is a 1966
graduate of the Holzer Hospital
School of Nursing and was
formerly employed at Mount
Carmel Hospital Columbus.
Mr. Miller graduated from
Ohio State University with a
bachelor of science degree in
agriculture . He is now serving
as a lieutenant with the Supply
Corps of the United States
Navy at the Defense Construction Supply Center in
Columbus.

TAFFETA'S BACK
THffeta's back both lor the
evening out on the town in
sultry black with rows of
ruffles or for the stay at
home hostess in plaids with
puffed sleeves, sashed with
a big how and topped with a
silk organza blouse to give
the country-girl look.

Building a Wardrobe . . .

.

OUTS

cake was a cross replica in

YOUNG ORIGINALS

Use this pattern to build
your wardrobe .. . a handsame dress and a pretty
pan t su i t. Use a pretty
floral print for the suit;
black with white-trim for
the eosy·w~or dress.

:4
-U.S. Govt Inspected-LEAN SELECTED
•
PORK
FJRST

U.S. No. 1 Grade
NEW RED

POTATOES
"So good in so many ways"

c

10-lb.

Bag
STATE FARE

POTATO
IPS
1-lb. Pkg.

LIBBY'S

Newlyweds Sgt. and Mrs. Elton Steele

TOMATO
JUICE

POMEROY - Sgt. and Mrs. Elton M. Steele are residing in Oceanside, Calif., following a
mid.,summer weddiug . The bride is the former Helen Jean Grimm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Marion Grimm of Kirkland, Iii. and the bridegroom is the son of Mr .. and Mrs. Robert M.
Steele, Pomeroy, Route 3, wbere the ceremony was held. The double-ring evening ceremony
was performed by the Rev. William Airson before members of the immediate family . Sgt.
Steele is serving with the Marine Corps at Camp Pendleton, California.

Done on Sunday
POMEROY - Christmas
decorations in the Chester area
lighting contest will be judged
at 6:30 p. m. Sunday, Dec. 26.
The Chester Garden Club is
sponsoring the contest with
first, second and third place
prizes to be awarded in the
category of overall decorating.
The judging will begin at Five
Points and end at Eastern High
School on Route 7.
Residents who live off Route
7 but want to have their
decorations included in the
judging are asked to contact
either Mrs. Reid Young 9925643 or Mrs. Roy Miller, 9853817.

The judges will go to the
home of Mrs. Miller following
their tour to view the
decorations for a social hour.
On the committee besides Mrs.
Miller and Mrs. Young are
Mrs. George Frederick and
Mrs. Macil Barton. An elec·
trical appliance has been
provided hy the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. for
one of the prizes.

1-Qt.14-oz. Can

ON

fudging Will be

: B-160 with Photo-Guide
is in . Sizes IOV2 to 241;2
(bust 33-47) . Size 12Y2,
35 bust ... pantsuit, 4 Ya
yards of 54-inch; dress,
2% yords.

County

OPEN 9 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M. MON. THRU FRI.
'TIL 6 P

STATE FARE
WIENER OR SANDWICH

BUNS

TAP

Pkg. of 8

-

JENO'S PIZZA MIXES

.

Cheese ~~ow~o s,.. . . . . . . . • . ··~;-- 53c
Cheese - '"• ....... • ·•~:~:,...•· 89c
Pe erona• ~~o.w. g.. • • • • • • l-It..,.,.I! .... 99 c

THE MOM.NT
IT'S NEEDED
Nothing compares to the
peace of mind that
comes from having cash
in reserve that earns a
fine return .. . money
that you can get . your
hands on immediately
without sacrifice or
principal.

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

MUSSELMAN'S FEATURES
APPLE BUnER .... , ....... ..
APPLE BUnER ...... .... ... .
CHUNKY APPLE SAUCE ..•... '";~;·•• 35c
APPLE SAUCE
- Hb. J-or. 49c
APPLE SAUCE . , .. ........... '·";:;" 39c

........ ...... '"

All Savings Guaranteed In Full

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY
OpnMite Post Office Pho11e
446.· 3832 Gallipolis
.
.

e WILL CLOSE NEW

,.

CHIFFON
SOFT
MARGARINE
1·1b.
Pkg.

47~

IDEAL
DOG FOOD

2-lb.
Can

$,.,

3-lb.
Can

$269

BILTMORE
Luncheon or
Sandwich Loaf

3 12-oz.$1

151&gt;-o•·
l&amp;~
Can

Cens

YEARS

EVE. AT 4 P.M.
I

'

II/.:

�•
• t"•

7- The Sunday Times ·&amp;!ntinel, Sunday, Dec. 26, 1971

1- The Slwlday Times · Sentlnel,SIIIday, Dec. 26, 1971

....

""i'ill!llll!ll!llli!1!811!81-M!Wi~~l8illil8illi!t«tll8881:i88W!&amp;:;:;
···:-~;·o·.···········
.....»:·:~····.:~·~·
:9i
:.••••••-;..............
,.

'O:O:"~IIIllll1181111l881118111118111111!1111!1····--&gt;:&lt;:

!o...

0 • ••••• • •-.• • , . . ; : . - .......

Christmas Greeting~
And other Notes on
·This Holiday Season
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PorUaod, Ohio
To Our Policemen :
May the sun shine wann on your back,
May the wind blow soft on your shoulders,
May the spirit of Christmas give you courage,
First to be brave, secondly, patient ;
May all our actions, yours and mine,
Be worthy of mutual respect, throughout the days of the
year.

-

To the school principal : (Thoughts from a studen~ passing
through ):
In hopes that this school will always deserve my loyalty,
In hopes that you, its principal, will always deserve my
respect,
In hopes that 1, one of its students, make a contribution
wward these goals before !leave.
I send you greetings at O!ristmas.
To someone we may have mistrusted, or misWJderstood :
That we might look for the good in each other instead of the
bad.
That we might not spend so much time mulling over annoyances that we miss the sincerity,
That we might not crave so much to be understood as to
understand,
I send you my best wishes for good things, not ill, this
O!ristmas season and in all the months ahead.
Christmas Greetings to a Jewish friend :
May the happiness of my holiday gladden yours,
May the warmth of your holiday brighten mine.
May our friendship grow,
Unshaked by differences in faith and creed . .
- By Phyllis R. Naylor.
HOLY NIGHT
(From the painting by Carlo Maralta ), By Viola Mercer.
Away from the clamor and buslle
In the stable at the Inn,

Against the curtain of darkness
Which their light can scarcely dim.
The beautiful face of Mary,
With aU ber new motherly channs,
Is glowing in sweet adoration
On the infant she holds in her arms.
Her cloak she spreads widely for Rhelter
From.any stray draft in the air;
Three cherubs peer over her shoulder
At the treasure she cradles there.
· As sheeanson the edge of the mauger

And rests Him on the hay,
The tiny adorable Baby
Who gave us our Chritml!s Day.

•

And somewhere out of the picture,
Where his vigil has just begun,
What love in the eyes of Joseph
As he gazes on Mother and Son!
How well the artist has painted,
For my soul is on its knees,
Rendering humble homage
To The Child that Mary sees.

Community Come

Personality
Profile

By Charlene Hoeflich
•
POMEROY -Christmas Eve,197l,andahush falls Soddenly the season takes on an air of solemnity and
nostalgia as people everywhere turn from the commerclallsm of
days past wthe beauty and reverence of the time at hand.
The sound of church bells, the soft candlelight, the
peacefulness of it aU seems almost overwhehning as one reflects
on the rushing crowds, the blinking and twinkling of window
displays, the carols and other seasonal songs blaring from
loudspeakers - only hours before.
Concern for those in war-torn countries sweeps the soul,
compassion for those fam!Ues with sons and daughters In
faraway pla~s brings a tear to the eye. For most certainly,
happiness for the holidays is families reunited, not expensive
gifts and bountiful buffets.
And many families are U)gether .....
Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch is spending the holidays In Florida
with her son, Arthur Qulvey and his family. She left Sunday from
the Columbus airport where she was taken by Mrs. Alice
Robeson.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary and Miss Helen Lochary left
via jet Wednesday morning for Glen Ridge, N. J . for Christmas
with the fanner's son and daughter·ln~aw, Mr. and Mrs. James
Lochary, Susan, James, Patricia and Christopher:
Christmas will be a little late for Mrs. Harry Houdeshell and
daughter, Fredljje, since the Rev. and Mrs. Ronald Place,
Louise, a freshman at Potsdam College, Becky, Gregory and
Steve, Grollln, N. Y., will not be arriving until Monday.
Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Morris, Middleport, will be their son and daughters and their families, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Abbott, Lorrie and Megan, Lancaster, Mr. and
Mrs. David Baker and Jay, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Morris, Springfield, and Krista, at home. They will be joined by
Mrs. Morris' sister, Mrs. Phil Mullen of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Geneva Yates is in Cambridge for the holiday ol&gt;servance with her son, David Robert Yates, Sr. and family .
Making a pre-holiday visit here with her were Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Yates and children, Shellie, Jeff and Judd, Jackson, David
Robert Yates, Sr. of Cambridge, and Mrs. C. F. Hibbs, Middleport.
Mrs. Alma Thompson of Columbus joined her brother, Edward
Hoeflich, and Mr. and Mrs. Reino Lind, Pomeroy, for the holiday
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson of Norfolk, Va., will arrive
Monday for a post-Christmas visit with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. George Morris and Mrs. T. A. Hewetson. John is stationed
at Norfolk with the U. S. Navy.
Having her first Christmas at home for many years Is Mrs.
Rosetta Jo Bunton and son, Brett, of Denver, Colo. They are here
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Richards, a sister, Mrs.
Ann Angel, and her son, Kevin. Joining the family group this
weekend will be Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith, Vaughan lmd
Seglenda of Columbus. Coming Wednesday night for a visit with
their nephew, Brett Bunton, were Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Turner of
Dayton. Brett will spend Christmas Day with his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Nafhl!n Bunton, Cincinnati.
·
Mr. and Mrs. David Sellers and daughter, Amy, Delaware,
and Miss Jndy Sellers, Columbus, made a pre-Christmas visit
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sellers, Portland, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Landers, POmeroy, and their brothers, James
Sellers and Larry Sellers, and their families of Pomeroy,

MIDDLEPORT - Kathy Erwin
presents a picture perfect of a wife and
· mother competent and content in her
role without a trace of a liberation
bangup.
She enjoys keeping house and doing
all sorts of things with her husband,
Don, a draftsman at the Gavin Plant,
and their delightful flve-year~ld, Amy.

~'· centerMostaround
of the activities of the famUy
the church. Both are

members of the Middleport Church of
: Christ, and believe In involvement for
· Christ. Kathy is an assistant teacher in
the Primary Department, works with a
• youth group of third, fourth and fifth
graders, is assistant secretary o! the

Sunday school, sings in the choir, and is
active in the Philathea Society and the
Tic-Toe Class.
.
Sewing being Kathy's favorite
hobby , she makes most of tier own and
Amy's clothes. She also enjoys
needlework and has completed seven
afghans, several of which she has given
away. For fun reading Kathy prefers
mysteries and so is a regular visitor ro
the Middleport Public Library.
The family resides on Grant St. in
Middleport. Kathy is the daughter ~f
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Wolfe of Columbus,
formerly of Welshtown Hill, and hiis
four brothers and two sisters.
Chrisirnas is her favorite time of
Ute year.

·X · X .?'

:...-..:; ....

Usually the day is chosen at ra ndom- usually it's the
day after I've wedged one heel in an empty milkshake
carton and the other heel into an old watermelon rind.
Sometimes the day is chosen, necessarily, because I've
been so ridiculous as to put my gloves in the glove com·
partment. You'd think I would have learned by now.
Learned that I'll probably never see them again, sunken,
as they are, into a quagmire of torn maps , broken plastic
spoons and squashed packages of catsup and salt from
the drive-in.
Anyway , it all begins with my calling cheerfully , "Come,
dears ! Time to clean out the car!" 1 No, those aren't my
S.,;A HATS
Hats take on the look of
the sea with yachting caps,
· sailor caps in w h i t e sail
cloth and the Frenc h sea·
man's hat with gold anchor
or steering wheel emblems
fixed to the top .

•
• • • Ill

Personally, I view cleaning out a car as a real challenge
~s well as a journey into the unknown . Where else can
you practice your most intricate Yoga exercises, get a
migraine and find the shoes your son outgrew three
months ago all at the same time'!
When cleaning a family room one might find 35 cents
under the chair cushion. When cleaning a bedroom one
may possibly turn up a long-lost hairbrush. When clean·
ing a kitchen drawer, a recipe for Danish Delight may be
discovered where it has caught on a hairnet inside an old
ice cube tray. But, for a real sense of achievement, a
source of surprises, nothing surpasses cleaning out a car.
Where else can a woman find, in one swoop, her son's
class ring Iunder the floor mat); a bag of marshmallows
(under the back seat) : two unmatching earrings (under
the marshmallows) ;. one rubber glove Iunder the ear·
rmgs) . And end up wtth one clean car Iunder no delusion
that it will stay that way) .
{NEWSPAPER £NTUPRISE ASSN .I

TIES, TIES, TIES
Women's lies in wool chal·
lis are coming in full force
with the very tailored look.
Worn with suits or just pants
and a s h I r t, the ties are
brightly colored to accent the
blacks, grays and browns
which are such popular lash ·
ion colors.

ENAMEL BELTS
Make that leather or suede
belt a little different fro m
everyone else's . Try adding
enamel designs to the belt.
Or let the · enamel cluster
serv~ as the buckle .

We do not com mit our·
selves on anything without
negotiations. We have one
precondition- no conditions.
- Premier Go lda Meir of Is·
rae/.

The Shop

OUR PRECIOUS SAVIOUR

MADDOX

Eat Well Against A Rough Winter
By GAYNOR MADDOX
All signs point toward a
rough-and-ready winter. So
much so that the Department
of Commerce r e c e n t l y

Katie's Korner

T

CALl POINJVIEW: .

the Car

exact words but the kids get the idea. 1

I know some families set aside a certain Friday after·
noon for such activities but. at our house. we're not so
systematic.

corner

warned citizens of the dan·
gers of winter storms: It
urges all Americans to winteri ze their homes and their
v e h i c I e s early. It also
warned everyone to get into
good physical shape before
the first storm strikes.
G o o d physical condition
depends largely on sound
eating h a bits. Therefore .
start now to check up on
what you eat and how much.
Storms play rough with unfortifi
ed bodies.
By Katie Crow
Among other things the
Department of Commerce
stresses that the most common winter hazard is upper
PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TO MEN
respiratory infection. Older
POMEROY - As Christmas draws near I would like to take people with bronchitis, em·
this opportunity to wish you and yours a very MERRY physema or asthma especial·
· CHRISTMAS!
ly need to be cautious' of the
cold
air.
A poem, given to me by Mrs. Harold (Evelyn) Smith, who is
The
Department recom·
confined ro her home due to illness, explains what Christmas is mends building
up the body's
really aU about.
resistance to infection by
d a i I y eating moderately
meals that are gond, enjoyREADY FOR CHRISTMAS
able.
"Ready for Christmas," she said with a sigh
We discussed this matter
As she gave a last touch to the gifts piled high.
with three nationally known
Then wearily sat for a moment to read
nutritionists, each the direcTill soon, very soon, she was nodding her head.
tor of a •1niversity department of nutrition. Here is a
Then quietly spoke a voice in her dream,
summary of their specific
"Ready for Christmas, what do you mean ?
advice:
Ready fbr Christmas when only last week
• A good diet must in·
You wouldn't acknowledge your friend on the street'
elude adequate amounts of
Ready for O!ristmas while holding a grudge?
me a I (beef, pork , lamb,
OUR CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Perhaps you'd better let God be the judge."
etc.) , fish, p o u I\ r y and
Mnley, Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. David Ohlinger, both observing 9te woke with a start and a cry of despair.
cheese. These are all good
wedding anniversaries on Christmas Day, ·and wEloise Hayes,
"There's so little time and I've still wll'fpare.
protein
foods.
Merri Christine Ault, and Alfred Roush celebrating
In addition, a good diet
Oh, Father! Forgive me,! see what you mean !
birthdays.
To be ready means more than a house swept clean.
And our belated best wishes to Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Bradbury · Yes, more than the giving of gifts and a tree.
wintering in Florida , who marked up their 50th anniversary last
It's the hearlsweptclean that He wanted wsee,
Saturday.
Aheart that is free from bitterness and sin.
So be ready for Christmas - and ready for Him."
AND TO YOU, AND YOU, and especislly YOU, a very
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
MERRY CHRISTMAS.
·
Congratulations to three Ohio University students (that 1
know of) who received a grade of B or better for the winter
quarter.
Chip Haggerty, son of Mr. and Mrs . Robert Haggerty,
Middleport, had 4.0; Pam Neutzling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard NeutzUng, Pomeroy, earned a 3.75, and Jim Crow, our
younger son, had 3.67.
Know there are other students who have done as well. We
would appreciate hearing of them.

Buried Treasure
We have just indulged in that great American pastime
known as Cleaning Out the Car.

the poet's

··:·:Y•.'·:····. ' '

'-\\~\\

By BETTY CANARY

RIO ·
GRAND~
"Civilisation,:.' the renowned
color !lim S!ll'ies on the cultural
llte of Western tnan, written
and narrated by art hisrorian
Kenneth Clark, will be shown
at Rio Grande College
be&amp;lnning In mid-January. The
first program in the series is
scheduled for Jan. 13.
Each .or·the 13 films in the
serl~ will he shown twice, at
1:40 and at 8:30 p.m., in the
Holzer Hall Recreation Room

KATHY ERWIN
···:···. ·· 'X·:

992-2505

NATURE RINGS
Sterling silver rings decked
with tiny house.s , trees and
animals are g r e a t accessories for the little sweaters
that feature the same nature
themes.

will include a liberal amount
of f r u i t s and vegetables
(don't forget the potatoes),
breakfast cereals , bread and
r o II s, macaroni products ,
cornbread and rice for essential energy.
• Eat g o o d and ample
meals regularly to build up
resistance agamst wIn t e r
winds and storms. But don't
eat too much. Avoid stuffing at mealtime. Excess
calories means excess body
fat, which is a form of mal·
nutrition .
• Don't allow too much
time to e I a P. s e between
meals. This wtll cause a de·
pressicm of the body's fWJc-

put your foot down fol ..

Make 49 pavments,
to $10.00 and we maket
the

50TH

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loon Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
~~=n~:ber Federal Home

IME•m ber Federal Savings
Insurance Corp.

la ccounl s Insured up

nm

If It's Fine Upholstered Furniture
You Are Looking For ••.

At
TO WISH
OLD FRIENDS A
HAPPY NEW YEAR!

. '
Savmgs.

I see the shining angels,
Who rold about His birth,
And gave to Gnd the glory
For sending Him to earth.
I see the lowly shepherds,
Who worshipped Him that day,
And see His loving mother,
Near-by the place He lay .

was prnduced originally for the
Brl tish Broadcastmg Cor·
poration and premiered in this
country in 1969 at the National
Gallery of Art in Washington,
D. C. Since then, it has attracted more than 275,000
people in 100 showings at the
National Gallery, and was
aired across the United States
on the National Educational

Television network.
20th century .
Ke nneth Clark's se ries
In preparing the series,
traces the story of Western C:lark, 2 producers and 3
Civilisation through the arts, cameramen spent two years
music, literature and political traveling through 11 countries.
history. Beginning wi th the In addition to the 13-film series,
first film, which concerns the Clark produced a 360-page
Vikings .. the Dark Ages and the vol ume " Civilisation, " with
Age of Charlemange, the series nearly 300 illustrations.
The showings at Rio Grande
chronicles the fall ul the
Roman Empire through the College are part of a na tional

twice

to make

it

Gheshire 367. Guyan 256, Rio Grande 245,

How?
Direct Distance Dialing for telephone users
in these communities.
It makes long distance calling as easy as a-b-c.
a. Dial "1 " to connect with the long
distance equipment.
b. Dial the 3-digit area code if it's different from 614.
c. Dial the complete 7-digit out-of-town
phone number.
That's all it takes to keep in touch with the
whole tribe.

Vinton 388. Walnut 379 telephone users:

@ohio Bell

I see the wise men enter,
And see the star above
That led them to our Saviour,
A se• their gifts of love.
Again, I see our Saviour,
While setting sinners free
From Satan, sin and darness,
And He included me.

And now, I see our Saviour,
In His bright Horne above,
With arms outstretched
qaiting
To give His wondrous love.
A Saviour, who is willing
To free us from aU sin,
And give ro us the vict'ry
If we will let Him in .

.,I I

I

A Saviour, wondrous Saviour,
And Jesus, is His name,
0 ! let us love and praise Him,
Because for us He came.
And when we think of
Christmas,
Let us remember Him,
Who left His Home in Heaven
To save us from all sin.
Composed by Mrs. Riley
Pigott, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.

CluJllenge Due

0, Income Tax
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Rep.
Joseph Tully' 11-MenWr. said
he and several others members
of the General Assembly . will
p-obably challenge the state's
Income tu In the courts On the
grounds that It is uncoJ18(1·
tutional.
"The graduated personal in·
come tax Is challengable Wider
the U.S. Constitution," said

,,

Fully.
However, he said it is Wllikely that the court test would stop
immediate collection of the
~ w tax.
.
·
"We may ask for an injunc·
lion, but 11 is my understanding
that the co uris normally don 'I
l.uue one on this type of
legislation," he said.
He pointed out that the Pennsylvania SUpreme Court struck
down an Income tax measure
In that ltate altd required the
administration wreturn every
dollar.

l

•
I
I'

'

I

I

·I

POMEROY,OHIO

,-- ------"'
/ If I have to go ',
._', take me to The,
, . 1, Shop
'
.........

1
You are invited to come. look.-create beautiful
rooms! With the finest furniture for beauty,
comfort, and sty Iing in ~thl~· area.

Quick Service
Government Inspected

Cui To Your Specifications

Llick Vaughan
992 - ~~74

I

~
l
'

__ .-- --·

?92-6J46

sho wn

available to both students and
the community.
A total of 400 colleges and
universities will receive the
film s, and an es tima te d

3,1100,1100 people will ·see the
series this year , Brown said .
He noted that 20,000 people
came to the series premier in
the 3()().seat auditorium at the
National Gallery.
For more information
concerning the .series, contact
Gerald A. Ramsay, direclllr of
special services at Rio Grande
College, at 245-5353, ext. 79. ·

ATTENTION

Pleasant Ridge Road

I

director of the National
Gallery, makes it possible for
audiences ail over the country
to see the "Civilisation " films .
He said that each film will be

EASIER

DISTANCE IS
CA
THA EVER BEF.ORE.

"custom meat cutting"

Dale l.ilfle

distribution program set up
under matching grants from
the National Endowment for
the Humanities and from the
Xerox Corporation totaling
$18I,O!i6. The films are being
diStributed to colleges and
universities wi th enrollments
under 2,1100.
The distribution program ,
according to J . Carter Brown,

A Saviour, who is ready
To hear our every cry,
And give us grace sufficient
To last until we die.
A Saviour, who is coming
To take us Home above,
Where we shall live forever
In perfect peace and love.

...,

THE .
BOOT
LOOK!

Special

What do I think of Christmas?
What does it mean to me?
Just listen, and I'll tell you
Of wonders I can $00.
I see our precious Saviour
When as a Babe, He came,
Gnd's Only Son, from Heaven,
And Jesus is His name.

at the college. All the films are )
open w the public wiL~out
charge, and each film runs 50
minutes.
· Following the opening
program on .jan. 13, the second
and third segments will be
shown Jan. 20 and 27. One fiirn
will be shown each week
through April 20.
Th'e "Civilisation " series

He gave His life for sinners
Upon the cruel tree,
And paid for our redemption
Upon Mount Calvary.
He rose, and won the vict'ry
O'e death, sln and the grave,
Then He went back to Heaven,
And has the pow'r to save .

Rand puts you in the Fashion Picture

EVERYDAY SUEDE
S u e de Is becoming an
everyday thing. Long suede
skirts, Oared at the hlp, can
be dressed up or played
down with a quick change of
sweater. The long suede skirt
looks Its classic best topped
with ahlrt and sweater with
a big buckled belt at the
wai&amp;t. The belted suede jacket with 1 a r g e pockets In
either matching or contrastIng color with the skirt put.s
the finishing touches to a
'
perfect outfit.

-· Clark's 'Civilization' Films Coming to Rio Grande College

EASY

TriMS

BAKER FURNITURE
o.

FREE

.'

Open All Day Thursdays
Open Friday Nights
Ur.til 9:00

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK, POMEROY
'

'

AND SON
•
"

�•
• t"•

7- The Sunday Times ·&amp;!ntinel, Sunday, Dec. 26, 1971

1- The Slwlday Times · Sentlnel,SIIIday, Dec. 26, 1971

....

""i'ill!llll!ll!llli!1!811!81-M!Wi~~l8illil8illi!t«tll8881:i88W!&amp;:;:;
···:-~;·o·.···········
.....»:·:~····.:~·~·
:9i
:.••••••-;..............
,.

'O:O:"~IIIllll1181111l881118111118111111!1111!1····--&gt;:&lt;:

!o...

0 • ••••• • •-.• • , . . ; : . - .......

Christmas Greeting~
And other Notes on
·This Holiday Season
BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PorUaod, Ohio
To Our Policemen :
May the sun shine wann on your back,
May the wind blow soft on your shoulders,
May the spirit of Christmas give you courage,
First to be brave, secondly, patient ;
May all our actions, yours and mine,
Be worthy of mutual respect, throughout the days of the
year.

-

To the school principal : (Thoughts from a studen~ passing
through ):
In hopes that this school will always deserve my loyalty,
In hopes that you, its principal, will always deserve my
respect,
In hopes that 1, one of its students, make a contribution
wward these goals before !leave.
I send you greetings at O!ristmas.
To someone we may have mistrusted, or misWJderstood :
That we might look for the good in each other instead of the
bad.
That we might not spend so much time mulling over annoyances that we miss the sincerity,
That we might not crave so much to be understood as to
understand,
I send you my best wishes for good things, not ill, this
O!ristmas season and in all the months ahead.
Christmas Greetings to a Jewish friend :
May the happiness of my holiday gladden yours,
May the warmth of your holiday brighten mine.
May our friendship grow,
Unshaked by differences in faith and creed . .
- By Phyllis R. Naylor.
HOLY NIGHT
(From the painting by Carlo Maralta ), By Viola Mercer.
Away from the clamor and buslle
In the stable at the Inn,

Against the curtain of darkness
Which their light can scarcely dim.
The beautiful face of Mary,
With aU ber new motherly channs,
Is glowing in sweet adoration
On the infant she holds in her arms.
Her cloak she spreads widely for Rhelter
From.any stray draft in the air;
Three cherubs peer over her shoulder
At the treasure she cradles there.
· As sheeanson the edge of the mauger

And rests Him on the hay,
The tiny adorable Baby
Who gave us our Chritml!s Day.

•

And somewhere out of the picture,
Where his vigil has just begun,
What love in the eyes of Joseph
As he gazes on Mother and Son!
How well the artist has painted,
For my soul is on its knees,
Rendering humble homage
To The Child that Mary sees.

Community Come

Personality
Profile

By Charlene Hoeflich
•
POMEROY -Christmas Eve,197l,andahush falls Soddenly the season takes on an air of solemnity and
nostalgia as people everywhere turn from the commerclallsm of
days past wthe beauty and reverence of the time at hand.
The sound of church bells, the soft candlelight, the
peacefulness of it aU seems almost overwhehning as one reflects
on the rushing crowds, the blinking and twinkling of window
displays, the carols and other seasonal songs blaring from
loudspeakers - only hours before.
Concern for those in war-torn countries sweeps the soul,
compassion for those fam!Ues with sons and daughters In
faraway pla~s brings a tear to the eye. For most certainly,
happiness for the holidays is families reunited, not expensive
gifts and bountiful buffets.
And many families are U)gether .....
Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch is spending the holidays In Florida
with her son, Arthur Qulvey and his family. She left Sunday from
the Columbus airport where she was taken by Mrs. Alice
Robeson.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary and Miss Helen Lochary left
via jet Wednesday morning for Glen Ridge, N. J . for Christmas
with the fanner's son and daughter·ln~aw, Mr. and Mrs. James
Lochary, Susan, James, Patricia and Christopher:
Christmas will be a little late for Mrs. Harry Houdeshell and
daughter, Fredljje, since the Rev. and Mrs. Ronald Place,
Louise, a freshman at Potsdam College, Becky, Gregory and
Steve, Grollln, N. Y., will not be arriving until Monday.
Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Morris, Middleport, will be their son and daughters and their families, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Abbott, Lorrie and Megan, Lancaster, Mr. and
Mrs. David Baker and Jay, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Morris, Springfield, and Krista, at home. They will be joined by
Mrs. Morris' sister, Mrs. Phil Mullen of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Geneva Yates is in Cambridge for the holiday ol&gt;servance with her son, David Robert Yates, Sr. and family .
Making a pre-holiday visit here with her were Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Yates and children, Shellie, Jeff and Judd, Jackson, David
Robert Yates, Sr. of Cambridge, and Mrs. C. F. Hibbs, Middleport.
Mrs. Alma Thompson of Columbus joined her brother, Edward
Hoeflich, and Mr. and Mrs. Reino Lind, Pomeroy, for the holiday
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson of Norfolk, Va., will arrive
Monday for a post-Christmas visit with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. George Morris and Mrs. T. A. Hewetson. John is stationed
at Norfolk with the U. S. Navy.
Having her first Christmas at home for many years Is Mrs.
Rosetta Jo Bunton and son, Brett, of Denver, Colo. They are here
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Richards, a sister, Mrs.
Ann Angel, and her son, Kevin. Joining the family group this
weekend will be Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith, Vaughan lmd
Seglenda of Columbus. Coming Wednesday night for a visit with
their nephew, Brett Bunton, were Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Turner of
Dayton. Brett will spend Christmas Day with his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Nafhl!n Bunton, Cincinnati.
·
Mr. and Mrs. David Sellers and daughter, Amy, Delaware,
and Miss Jndy Sellers, Columbus, made a pre-Christmas visit
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sellers, Portland, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Landers, POmeroy, and their brothers, James
Sellers and Larry Sellers, and their families of Pomeroy,

MIDDLEPORT - Kathy Erwin
presents a picture perfect of a wife and
· mother competent and content in her
role without a trace of a liberation
bangup.
She enjoys keeping house and doing
all sorts of things with her husband,
Don, a draftsman at the Gavin Plant,
and their delightful flve-year~ld, Amy.

~'· centerMostaround
of the activities of the famUy
the church. Both are

members of the Middleport Church of
: Christ, and believe In involvement for
· Christ. Kathy is an assistant teacher in
the Primary Department, works with a
• youth group of third, fourth and fifth
graders, is assistant secretary o! the

Sunday school, sings in the choir, and is
active in the Philathea Society and the
Tic-Toe Class.
.
Sewing being Kathy's favorite
hobby , she makes most of tier own and
Amy's clothes. She also enjoys
needlework and has completed seven
afghans, several of which she has given
away. For fun reading Kathy prefers
mysteries and so is a regular visitor ro
the Middleport Public Library.
The family resides on Grant St. in
Middleport. Kathy is the daughter ~f
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Wolfe of Columbus,
formerly of Welshtown Hill, and hiis
four brothers and two sisters.
Chrisirnas is her favorite time of
Ute year.

·X · X .?'

:...-..:; ....

Usually the day is chosen at ra ndom- usually it's the
day after I've wedged one heel in an empty milkshake
carton and the other heel into an old watermelon rind.
Sometimes the day is chosen, necessarily, because I've
been so ridiculous as to put my gloves in the glove com·
partment. You'd think I would have learned by now.
Learned that I'll probably never see them again, sunken,
as they are, into a quagmire of torn maps , broken plastic
spoons and squashed packages of catsup and salt from
the drive-in.
Anyway , it all begins with my calling cheerfully , "Come,
dears ! Time to clean out the car!" 1 No, those aren't my
S.,;A HATS
Hats take on the look of
the sea with yachting caps,
· sailor caps in w h i t e sail
cloth and the Frenc h sea·
man's hat with gold anchor
or steering wheel emblems
fixed to the top .

•
• • • Ill

Personally, I view cleaning out a car as a real challenge
~s well as a journey into the unknown . Where else can
you practice your most intricate Yoga exercises, get a
migraine and find the shoes your son outgrew three
months ago all at the same time'!
When cleaning a family room one might find 35 cents
under the chair cushion. When cleaning a bedroom one
may possibly turn up a long-lost hairbrush. When clean·
ing a kitchen drawer, a recipe for Danish Delight may be
discovered where it has caught on a hairnet inside an old
ice cube tray. But, for a real sense of achievement, a
source of surprises, nothing surpasses cleaning out a car.
Where else can a woman find, in one swoop, her son's
class ring Iunder the floor mat); a bag of marshmallows
(under the back seat) : two unmatching earrings (under
the marshmallows) ;. one rubber glove Iunder the ear·
rmgs) . And end up wtth one clean car Iunder no delusion
that it will stay that way) .
{NEWSPAPER £NTUPRISE ASSN .I

TIES, TIES, TIES
Women's lies in wool chal·
lis are coming in full force
with the very tailored look.
Worn with suits or just pants
and a s h I r t, the ties are
brightly colored to accent the
blacks, grays and browns
which are such popular lash ·
ion colors.

ENAMEL BELTS
Make that leather or suede
belt a little different fro m
everyone else's . Try adding
enamel designs to the belt.
Or let the · enamel cluster
serv~ as the buckle .

We do not com mit our·
selves on anything without
negotiations. We have one
precondition- no conditions.
- Premier Go lda Meir of Is·
rae/.

The Shop

OUR PRECIOUS SAVIOUR

MADDOX

Eat Well Against A Rough Winter
By GAYNOR MADDOX
All signs point toward a
rough-and-ready winter. So
much so that the Department
of Commerce r e c e n t l y

Katie's Korner

T

CALl POINJVIEW: .

the Car

exact words but the kids get the idea. 1

I know some families set aside a certain Friday after·
noon for such activities but. at our house. we're not so
systematic.

corner

warned citizens of the dan·
gers of winter storms: It
urges all Americans to winteri ze their homes and their
v e h i c I e s early. It also
warned everyone to get into
good physical shape before
the first storm strikes.
G o o d physical condition
depends largely on sound
eating h a bits. Therefore .
start now to check up on
what you eat and how much.
Storms play rough with unfortifi
ed bodies.
By Katie Crow
Among other things the
Department of Commerce
stresses that the most common winter hazard is upper
PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TO MEN
respiratory infection. Older
POMEROY - As Christmas draws near I would like to take people with bronchitis, em·
this opportunity to wish you and yours a very MERRY physema or asthma especial·
· CHRISTMAS!
ly need to be cautious' of the
cold
air.
A poem, given to me by Mrs. Harold (Evelyn) Smith, who is
The
Department recom·
confined ro her home due to illness, explains what Christmas is mends building
up the body's
really aU about.
resistance to infection by
d a i I y eating moderately
meals that are gond, enjoyREADY FOR CHRISTMAS
able.
"Ready for Christmas," she said with a sigh
We discussed this matter
As she gave a last touch to the gifts piled high.
with three nationally known
Then wearily sat for a moment to read
nutritionists, each the direcTill soon, very soon, she was nodding her head.
tor of a •1niversity department of nutrition. Here is a
Then quietly spoke a voice in her dream,
summary of their specific
"Ready for Christmas, what do you mean ?
advice:
Ready fbr Christmas when only last week
• A good diet must in·
You wouldn't acknowledge your friend on the street'
elude adequate amounts of
Ready for O!ristmas while holding a grudge?
me a I (beef, pork , lamb,
OUR CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Perhaps you'd better let God be the judge."
etc.) , fish, p o u I\ r y and
Mnley, Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. David Ohlinger, both observing 9te woke with a start and a cry of despair.
cheese. These are all good
wedding anniversaries on Christmas Day, ·and wEloise Hayes,
"There's so little time and I've still wll'fpare.
protein
foods.
Merri Christine Ault, and Alfred Roush celebrating
In addition, a good diet
Oh, Father! Forgive me,! see what you mean !
birthdays.
To be ready means more than a house swept clean.
And our belated best wishes to Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Bradbury · Yes, more than the giving of gifts and a tree.
wintering in Florida , who marked up their 50th anniversary last
It's the hearlsweptclean that He wanted wsee,
Saturday.
Aheart that is free from bitterness and sin.
So be ready for Christmas - and ready for Him."
AND TO YOU, AND YOU, and especislly YOU, a very
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
MERRY CHRISTMAS.
·
Congratulations to three Ohio University students (that 1
know of) who received a grade of B or better for the winter
quarter.
Chip Haggerty, son of Mr. and Mrs . Robert Haggerty,
Middleport, had 4.0; Pam Neutzling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard NeutzUng, Pomeroy, earned a 3.75, and Jim Crow, our
younger son, had 3.67.
Know there are other students who have done as well. We
would appreciate hearing of them.

Buried Treasure
We have just indulged in that great American pastime
known as Cleaning Out the Car.

the poet's

··:·:Y•.'·:····. ' '

'-\\~\\

By BETTY CANARY

RIO ·
GRAND~
"Civilisation,:.' the renowned
color !lim S!ll'ies on the cultural
llte of Western tnan, written
and narrated by art hisrorian
Kenneth Clark, will be shown
at Rio Grande College
be&amp;lnning In mid-January. The
first program in the series is
scheduled for Jan. 13.
Each .or·the 13 films in the
serl~ will he shown twice, at
1:40 and at 8:30 p.m., in the
Holzer Hall Recreation Room

KATHY ERWIN
···:···. ·· 'X·:

992-2505

NATURE RINGS
Sterling silver rings decked
with tiny house.s , trees and
animals are g r e a t accessories for the little sweaters
that feature the same nature
themes.

will include a liberal amount
of f r u i t s and vegetables
(don't forget the potatoes),
breakfast cereals , bread and
r o II s, macaroni products ,
cornbread and rice for essential energy.
• Eat g o o d and ample
meals regularly to build up
resistance agamst wIn t e r
winds and storms. But don't
eat too much. Avoid stuffing at mealtime. Excess
calories means excess body
fat, which is a form of mal·
nutrition .
• Don't allow too much
time to e I a P. s e between
meals. This wtll cause a de·
pressicm of the body's fWJc-

put your foot down fol ..

Make 49 pavments,
to $10.00 and we maket
the

50TH

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loon Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
~~=n~:ber Federal Home

IME•m ber Federal Savings
Insurance Corp.

la ccounl s Insured up

nm

If It's Fine Upholstered Furniture
You Are Looking For ••.

At
TO WISH
OLD FRIENDS A
HAPPY NEW YEAR!

. '
Savmgs.

I see the shining angels,
Who rold about His birth,
And gave to Gnd the glory
For sending Him to earth.
I see the lowly shepherds,
Who worshipped Him that day,
And see His loving mother,
Near-by the place He lay .

was prnduced originally for the
Brl tish Broadcastmg Cor·
poration and premiered in this
country in 1969 at the National
Gallery of Art in Washington,
D. C. Since then, it has attracted more than 275,000
people in 100 showings at the
National Gallery, and was
aired across the United States
on the National Educational

Television network.
20th century .
Ke nneth Clark's se ries
In preparing the series,
traces the story of Western C:lark, 2 producers and 3
Civilisation through the arts, cameramen spent two years
music, literature and political traveling through 11 countries.
history. Beginning wi th the In addition to the 13-film series,
first film, which concerns the Clark produced a 360-page
Vikings .. the Dark Ages and the vol ume " Civilisation, " with
Age of Charlemange, the series nearly 300 illustrations.
The showings at Rio Grande
chronicles the fall ul the
Roman Empire through the College are part of a na tional

twice

to make

it

Gheshire 367. Guyan 256, Rio Grande 245,

How?
Direct Distance Dialing for telephone users
in these communities.
It makes long distance calling as easy as a-b-c.
a. Dial "1 " to connect with the long
distance equipment.
b. Dial the 3-digit area code if it's different from 614.
c. Dial the complete 7-digit out-of-town
phone number.
That's all it takes to keep in touch with the
whole tribe.

Vinton 388. Walnut 379 telephone users:

@ohio Bell

I see the wise men enter,
And see the star above
That led them to our Saviour,
A se• their gifts of love.
Again, I see our Saviour,
While setting sinners free
From Satan, sin and darness,
And He included me.

And now, I see our Saviour,
In His bright Horne above,
With arms outstretched
qaiting
To give His wondrous love.
A Saviour, who is willing
To free us from aU sin,
And give ro us the vict'ry
If we will let Him in .

.,I I

I

A Saviour, wondrous Saviour,
And Jesus, is His name,
0 ! let us love and praise Him,
Because for us He came.
And when we think of
Christmas,
Let us remember Him,
Who left His Home in Heaven
To save us from all sin.
Composed by Mrs. Riley
Pigott, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.

CluJllenge Due

0, Income Tax
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Rep.
Joseph Tully' 11-MenWr. said
he and several others members
of the General Assembly . will
p-obably challenge the state's
Income tu In the courts On the
grounds that It is uncoJ18(1·
tutional.
"The graduated personal in·
come tax Is challengable Wider
the U.S. Constitution," said

,,

Fully.
However, he said it is Wllikely that the court test would stop
immediate collection of the
~ w tax.
.
·
"We may ask for an injunc·
lion, but 11 is my understanding
that the co uris normally don 'I
l.uue one on this type of
legislation," he said.
He pointed out that the Pennsylvania SUpreme Court struck
down an Income tax measure
In that ltate altd required the
administration wreturn every
dollar.

l

•
I
I'

'

I

I

·I

POMEROY,OHIO

,-- ------"'
/ If I have to go ',
._', take me to The,
, . 1, Shop
'
.........

1
You are invited to come. look.-create beautiful
rooms! With the finest furniture for beauty,
comfort, and sty Iing in ~thl~· area.

Quick Service
Government Inspected

Cui To Your Specifications

Llick Vaughan
992 - ~~74

I

~
l
'

__ .-- --·

?92-6J46

sho wn

available to both students and
the community.
A total of 400 colleges and
universities will receive the
film s, and an es tima te d

3,1100,1100 people will ·see the
series this year , Brown said .
He noted that 20,000 people
came to the series premier in
the 3()().seat auditorium at the
National Gallery.
For more information
concerning the .series, contact
Gerald A. Ramsay, direclllr of
special services at Rio Grande
College, at 245-5353, ext. 79. ·

ATTENTION

Pleasant Ridge Road

I

director of the National
Gallery, makes it possible for
audiences ail over the country
to see the "Civilisation " films .
He said that each film will be

EASIER

DISTANCE IS
CA
THA EVER BEF.ORE.

"custom meat cutting"

Dale l.ilfle

distribution program set up
under matching grants from
the National Endowment for
the Humanities and from the
Xerox Corporation totaling
$18I,O!i6. The films are being
diStributed to colleges and
universities wi th enrollments
under 2,1100.
The distribution program ,
according to J . Carter Brown,

A Saviour, who is ready
To hear our every cry,
And give us grace sufficient
To last until we die.
A Saviour, who is coming
To take us Home above,
Where we shall live forever
In perfect peace and love.

...,

THE .
BOOT
LOOK!

Special

What do I think of Christmas?
What does it mean to me?
Just listen, and I'll tell you
Of wonders I can $00.
I see our precious Saviour
When as a Babe, He came,
Gnd's Only Son, from Heaven,
And Jesus is His name.

at the college. All the films are )
open w the public wiL~out
charge, and each film runs 50
minutes.
· Following the opening
program on .jan. 13, the second
and third segments will be
shown Jan. 20 and 27. One fiirn
will be shown each week
through April 20.
Th'e "Civilisation " series

He gave His life for sinners
Upon the cruel tree,
And paid for our redemption
Upon Mount Calvary.
He rose, and won the vict'ry
O'e death, sln and the grave,
Then He went back to Heaven,
And has the pow'r to save .

Rand puts you in the Fashion Picture

EVERYDAY SUEDE
S u e de Is becoming an
everyday thing. Long suede
skirts, Oared at the hlp, can
be dressed up or played
down with a quick change of
sweater. The long suede skirt
looks Its classic best topped
with ahlrt and sweater with
a big buckled belt at the
wai&amp;t. The belted suede jacket with 1 a r g e pockets In
either matching or contrastIng color with the skirt put.s
the finishing touches to a
'
perfect outfit.

-· Clark's 'Civilization' Films Coming to Rio Grande College

EASY

TriMS

BAKER FURNITURE
o.

FREE

.'

Open All Day Thursdays
Open Friday Nights
Ur.til 9:00

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK, POMEROY
'

'

AND SON
•
"

�.·
•

•

I - The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, Dec. 26,1971
•

•

avortte
By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
ClEVELAND (UPI)- The
defending champion Baltimore
Colts, who blew a division title
111 the last day of Ute season,
take their first step toward
mOther possible Super Bowl
&amp;inday in a playoff game

against
the
streaking assertion by Cleveland
Cleveland Browns.
quarterback Bill Nelsen that
Baltimore, Ute AFC's "wild "we have something to
card" team with the best ll'OVe ."
second-place record, has been
"Our losing streak in Ute
made a slight favorite despite . middle of the season convinced
its regular-season loss to everybody that we weren't
Cleveland, the Browns' five capoble," Nelsen said. "So now
straight victories, and an we have to prove a little dif.

ferently."
The Browns turned their
season around after a fourgame losing streak, the longest
in their history, and finished
first In the AFC Central
Division with a 9-5 record.
Baltimore was J()-1 and second
to Miami in the East .

Gallipolis Elks To Sponsor
Hoop Shoot Contest Dec. 28
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Elks Lodge , in
connection with Ute Ohio Elks
Association, will sponsor a
"Hoop Shoot" for all Gallia
County boys between the ages
of 8 and 14 according to a lodge
IJ)Okesman.
The event will be held In
lhe GAHS varsity gym on
Tuesday, Dec. 28, begl.nulng
at I p. m. John Mllboan, exGARS
and
Marshall
VDiverslty cage star, will
usllt Elks members In the
contest, similar to football's
punt, pass and kick contest
All Gallia County sludents
between the ages of 8 and 14
will be eligible to participate.
The football event last October
attracted moce than 200 youths
from both Ute city and county
schools.
All ages on Ute Hoop Shoot
contest will be based on Feb. I,
1972. Boys up to and including
eighth grade and under 15
years of age are eligible.
Grade school coaches and
athletic department heads are
invited to take part in Ute
contest's operation, an Elks
spokesman pointed out.
Suggested uniforms include
tennis or basketball shoes, a
clean white T shirt or
basketball shirt. Shorts are
auggested, but slacks or pants
may be worn.

All basketballs will be
provided by GARS.
According to the contest
roles, boys wW be given live
practice shots, then 25
counting throws. In the event
of a tie for the local lodge
IItle, an addltlonai!O throws
wUI decide the champion.
The contest will be held in
three different age groups.
They are :
Class I - For 8, 9 and II).

year-Qlds; Class 2- For 11 and be held at St. John Arena in
12-year-Qlds; Class 3- Ages 13 Columbus on Feb. 12, during
the halftime show of the
and 14.
Purdue.()hio
State basketball
Only one winner in each clasS
from each lodge is eligible for game.
Tbe Ohlo E1b Association
the state shoot contest. All
was
number one In the nation
local winners must be deterlast year according to Russ
mined by Jan. 6, 1972.
Walkup, slate hoop shoot
Local winners will be chairman.
Entry blanks will be passed
presented a small trophy for
out to all contestants prior to
their efforts.
The state championship will the local contest.

MASON BOWLING CENTER
Sporn
·
1. King Pins 6-2; 2. Unit 36-2;
3. Rejects 6-2; 4. B Shift 4-4; 5.
Wild Men 4-4; 6. A Shit! 2-6; 7.
D Shill 2.6; 8. The P.O. 2·6.
High Team 3 games - B
Shilt2554, King Pins 2483; High
Team game - B Shift 944,
Rejects 883.
High Ind. 3games - Harmon
586, Ed Wright 556 ; High Ind.
Game - Harmon 234. Ed
Wright 212.
Tuesday Women
1. Mason Furniture 86-34; 2.
Hair Harbour 86-34; 3. Hart's
Used cars 79-41 ; 4. M&amp;R
Foodllner 71 -49 ; 5. Tom Rue
Motors 65-59 ; 6. Roush Con·
strucllon 54.66 ; 7. Ingels

High Ind . Game - Betty Batey
199, Doris Roberts 194.
Wednesday Mixed
1. Try Hard 76·36 ; 2. H&amp;H 6943 ; 3. Alley Gators 65·47 ; 4.
Smith &amp; Roush 60·52 ; 5. Pin
Spotters 56-56 i 6. Shamrocks
52-60 ; 7. Soos-O.Guns 40-72 ; 8.
Woolies 30-82 .
Team High Series - Try
Hards, H!.H . Team High Game
- Try Hards, Smith &amp; Roush.
High Ind . Series - Men, C.
Yeager 553, J. Smith 536 ;
Women - J. Foglesong 480, L.
Yeager 467. Ind . High Game Men, C. Yeager 205, B. Tennant
195; Women - J. Foglesong
178, B. Robinson 163.
Early Sunday Mixed
1. Duncan &amp; Sines 86-26 ; 2.
Cremeans &amp; Smith 64-48 ; 3.
Ferguson &amp; White 62-50 ; 4.
Goodrich &amp; Roush 60·52 ; 6.
Wright &amp; Smith 56·56 ; 7.

High Team Series - Hair
Harbour 1869, M&amp;R Foodliner
1733. High Team Game - Hai r
Harbour 678, M&amp;R Foodliner

Withers &amp; Blake 20-92.
Team High Series - Duncan
&amp; Sines, Ferguson and While;
Team High Game- Ferguson

Weal Bowling

Furniture 16-104.

Fearsome Four 42-70 ; 8.

619.

and White, Duncan and Sines.

High Ind. Series - Dix ie
Sines 500, Bettv Robinson 480;

Ind . High Series - Men, D.
Duncan 673, B. White 591 ;
Women - P. Ferguson 476, F.
Duncan 471. Ind . High Game Men, D. Duncan 256, B. White

{7AHS Cage Statistics
"'
GAHS CAGE STATISTICS
G--PLAYER
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP AVG.
6--Larry Snowden
44-98 38-47 11 24 12 126 21.0
6--Rod Ferguson
32-61 20-25 12 66 11
84 14.0
6--GII Price
30-47 22-32 21 88 10 82 13.6
6--J immy Noe
27-58 18-32 18 45 12 72 12.0
6--Rick Boone
15-45
4-9 21 16 16 34
5.6
+-Kev Sheets
3-4
5-5 6 6 7 11
2.7
+-Merk Kiesling
3-7
5-8 3 11
11
2.7
5
3-'-0ave White
1-5
1-2 2 4 2
3
1.0
3-'-TopperOrr
1-1
0·2 3 5 3
2
.6
2- Bill Thomas
0-1
0·0 0 0 0
0
.0
6- TOTALS
156-327 113-162 t7 265 78 425 70.8
Opponents
125-339 80-132 117 187 103 330 55.0
, SCORE BY QUARTERS:
Gallipolis Blue Devils
94 94 99 138 - 425
Opponents
70 83 86 91 - 330
SEASON RECORD
Gallipolis 86 Federal Hocking 54
Gallipol is 64 Athens so
Gallipolis 77 Chesapeake 59
Gallipolis 77 Wellston 50
Gallipolis 54 Ironton 60
Gallipolis 67 Meigs 57
Jan. 7 - At . Logan
Jan . 11 - Jackson. home.

245 ; Women -

56 -64 ; 5. New Haven Furniture
6.

Insurance 44-68; 8. HoHman 4072.
Team High Series -

Mason

Co. Bank 2890. Harts Used Cars
2833; Team High Game Harts Used cars 996, Harts
Used Cars 983.
Ind. High Series- D. Mason
671, W. K~ng 660 ; High Ind.
Game - Paugh 24-5 , H. Slsk
and D. Mason 243.
Steelworkers
I. Ferros 8-0; 2. Nuts and
Bolts 8·0: 3. Rejects a.o; 4.
Wonders 8-0; 5. Foote Heels o.
3; 6. Stingers 0-3; 7. Skips 0-3;
8. Wheels 0-3.
High Team Serles -

carolina Lumber 16·

48 .

High Team Series - Coca·
Cola 2684, Burton Sunoco 2549.
Team High Game - Coca-Cola
959, Coca-Cola 914.
High Ind . Game - P. Burton

WEEKEND
SPECIAL

SAVE

•99500
ELCONA

14x65 3 BEDROOM, EXTRA NICE.

$AVE$$$
This

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

EverY Sunday
(ALL DAY!

•

1503
EASTERN

WIIL--------.-------1.

•

n

IN GALLIPOLIS

conditioning, one owner , new Cadillac trace .

Tawny beige llnlsh, brown vinyl top, beige Interior, full
power equipment, Climate Control a ir conditioning .

'3900

Gold metallic finish, green Interior, full power equipment,
till &amp; telescope wheel , Climate Control air conditioning.
Real ni ce one.

SMITH BUICK CO.
O'DELL TEXACO SERVICE
QUAKER STATE SERVICE CENTER
SUITER SHELL SERVICE
SOMMER GMC TRUCKS
HARRY'$ SERVICE STATION
•MEIGS COUNTY

Otdllllobi \e
Open Eves . .Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
. 12-5342
GMAC Flnenctng hlfllb\e
Pom""'y
" You'll LI~ • Our Quellly WayO!_ Dol.ng Bu~•"
C'ldiiiiC •

491

m

By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE

Fother of the Bowl ·Games
Egad, friends , the moon
over Miami has never shone
on such a glittering array of
football stars as it will this
New Year's night when
Nebraska and Alabama clash
in the Battle of the Century.
But that-kaff-kaff is only
one of seven outstanding
contests slated for the long
New Year's week~nd .
SEOAL llESERVES
Since many, many of you
TEAM , W l. P OP
lr.ont6n 1'
4 o 22J
122 have written, asking for my
Waverly
3 1 186 153 Bowl'forecast we'll get right
Logan
3 1 187 172 to the point. Some of the preMeigs
2 2 139 120 diclions will astound you Jackson
2 2 158 160
Athens
1 3 146 163 um-kumph!
Wellston
1 3 160 239
PEACH BOWL
Gallipolis
0 4 130 200
Dec.
30, Atlanta, Ga.
TOTALS\ · 16 16 1329 1329
' '~
Georgia Tech 24, Mississippi
SEOAL VARSITY
%2. The improving Yellow
TEAM
W L P OP Jackets, victors in four of
Waverly
4 0 336 192
Galllpollt
3 I 262 217 their last five games, are the
lrbnton , 3 I 282 260 surprise choice of the Hoople
Athens
• 3 1 248 225 System to u~set favored
Meigs ' ' .. I 3 217 240 Mississippi . Leading the way
Wellston
1 3 242 329 for Bud Carson's Ramblin'
Logan .
I
3 227 305 Wreck will be the talented
Jackson
o 4 215 261 quarterback
Eddie McAshan .
TOTALS
16 t6 2029 2029
GATOR BOWL
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Dec. 31, Jacksonville, Fla.
TEAM
W L P OPGeorgia 38, North Carolina
Logan
4 o 241
94
Waverly
3 1 192 151 27. In the Baltle of the
Gallipolis
3 1 194 163 Brothers Dooley, Vince's
lrontoo
2 2 208 177 Bulldogs have the edge over
Athens
2 2 157 15ll Bill's Tar Heels. In a thrill·
Meigs
2 2 146 166
Jackson
o , 4 108 216 ing'Offensive show, Georgia's
Wellston
0 4 111 232 outstanding r u nne r-passer
TOTALS
16 16 1357 13l7 Andy Johnson will spell the
difference--bar-rum ph!
ASTRO-BLUEBONNET
Dec. 31, Houston, Tex.
Colorado 35, Houstan 28.
Standings
Eddie . Crowder's Buffaloes,
rated No. 7 and losers only
to No. I Nebraska and No. 3
SVAC STANDINGS
Oklahoma this year, are a
SVACONLY
TEAM
W. L. P DP one-touchdown pick by the
Symmes Valley
Hoople Syslem in w h a t
5 0 400 278 promises to be a cliff-hanger.
North Gall Ia 4 1 431 259
Eastern
4 1 358 249
ROSE BOWL
Hannan Trace 2 3 271 290
Jan. I, Pasadena, Calif.
Southern
2 3 309 316
Kyger Creek 1 4 278 353 Michigan 24, Stanford 15.
Southwestern 0 6 213 515 The Daddy of the Bowl
Totols
18 11 2260 2260 Games matches the perfect
ALL GAMES
record (11-0 ), Big Ten champ
TEAM
W L
P OP
Symmes Valley
6 0 470 348
Eastern
5 1 424 301
North Galli a 4 . 2 503 335
~nnan ~~.i~~ 7~ ~ 1 ••. . -fa.,.. a h p
Sf\JttM!n"' ""i.a,~· " 429 .• ,
·--~"-"-''
Kyger Creek 1 5 317 m
Southwestern

MOBILE
HOME
KIRKWOOD

.

-DOUBLE W-I·D-E-S
60'x24'

Vinton, Ohio

PONN SERVICE STATION
Wilkesville, Ohio

HIGGINS atEVROLET CO.
Wi II ow Wood, Ohio

3 Bedroom, two full baths. carpeted
throughout. completely finished with
house-type furniture . Family room &amp;
utility room. Check the floor plan on this
beautiful home.

THE OLD BOY HIMSELF
Wolverines and the slightly
tarnished Pacific 8 champion Stanford Indians, possessors of an 8-3 record. The Indians shocked Ohio State last
year, but this season the Big
Ten gets revenge.
SUGAR BOWL
Jan. I , New Orleans, La.
Oklahoma 42, Auburn 28.
In a free-scoring fray , I see
the Sooners with wishbone
whiz Jack Mildren in lhe
vanguard breezing past the
Auburn Tigers. The latter.
led by the Pat Sullivan-Terry
Beasley aerial combo, will
make it a good show but will
be unable to stem lhe Oklahoma tide.
COTION BOWL
Jan. I, Dallas, Tex.
Penn Slate 31, Texas 18.
We look for the point-happy
Nittany Lions to bounce back
from their shocking upset by
Tennessee to down rugged
Texas . In ll games- 10 wins.

-Save '1000

I loss- the Lions have averaged 41.3 points per contest,
while Texas has been held to
an average of 2'1.5 points .

··-------------------------~·

52'x24' Kirkwood Double W-1-d-e

ORANGE BOWL
Jan. I, Miami, Fla.
Nebraska 32, Alabama 28.
Separating these two teams
was a monumental task.
Their ratings as the nation's
No. 1 and No. 2 teams are
accuralely reflected in a
study of the statistics. In
total defense Nebraska has
allowed 202.9 yards per contest, while Alabama limited
its opponents to 219.7 yards.
In scoring, Nebraska has
averaged 39.1 points a game
while Alabama registered a
fancy 32.9. On balance, your
favorite correspondent picks
Nebraska.
And now, dear friends , before writing finis to another
exciting football season, let
me wish you, one and all, a
happy and prosperous 1972.

CHARLEY LYON'S GMAGE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mason, W. Va.

_-.FLESHER'S TEXACO SERVICE

Poineroy, Ohio

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

'.

New Haven, W. Va.

SPONSORED BY: G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

,, .

COIJJNSON WAIVERS
CHICAGO(UPI)-TlteChlcago Bulil of the National
Buketball AuoclaUon announced Wedneallay that they
had placed guard Jimmy
Ccillina on ll'alvers.
· Collina, a graduate of New
· Muico Stale University, wu
lbe,p'a.Ncr. I drift pick in

'

.-;--- --

~ "

111'111..1

-· .

Just Arrived!

Save •1500

'5995

·------------------~--------·
Two bedrooms, Bay windows in dining area,
two door refr ., frost free. House type door
?" '-'wrth··stOl'l'ff tnsor~ &amp;' windows. Carpeti"ng in
living room . Deluxe kitchen cabinets . See
this one!

'.

.b . • .

Save '1000

•4995

··-------------------------·.
YOUR CHOICE

'72 Freedom Home
2 or 3 Bedroom

MOBILE HOIIIfES

60'xl2'

2 or 3 Bedroom . deluxe furniture, third outside
door off kitchen , raised ceiling, shag carpet in
living room, house type door with storm doors &amp;
windows . House type plank ceiling.

•4995

.
·-------------------------·.
,
•7295
60 X14'
•;, " Salem Birch Paneling. 30 Gal. elec . water
heater, Early American decor, completely
c~rpeted, house.type door with storm doors &amp;

'71 NEW MOON

•

wmdows. Full one year warranty . Nat1on 's Be st
Seller. Man y more extras .

60'xl2' '72 NEW MOON
64'xl4' ·n BROADMORE
65'x12' '72 CONCORD
65'xl4' '72

HOLIDAY

2 Bedroom with full one year warranty. Nati on's
Best Seller. House-t ype door w it h storm doors &amp;
windows . Carpet in large 17' living room . Ha s

deluxe kitchen range.
All gas, 30 ga l. water heater. 2 extra large
bedrooms. house-type door &amp; storm doors &amp;

· w1ndows . H1gh level oven .

2 Bedroom, Spanish decor , ex tra larg e bedrooms
with deluxe furniture. Here's a r eal nice hom e a t
real nice pr ice.

a

Three Bedroom , bath and 'h bath, total electric
with carpet throughout. See this home today .

•4995
'6495
'5995
'6995

. TRAVEL TRAILERS REDUCED
I~---------------·
.
--------· r----------------------~
1
1
1
I
I
1I 22 Ft. completely self contained, shower. 30 1I 1 17 Ft., completely self contained, 9,000 I

'72 "Terry" Trailer

I

gal. holding tank, 30 gal. water tank, 6 gal. hot
water tank. 5 cu . ft. gas or elec. ref . See this
one.

I

I

SNACK BOX
.2 PIECES CHICKEN
IOU &amp; POTATOES
"IT'S

NO.
COUPONS
TO CLIP!

INCOMPARABLE"

BOX

WHY COOK? PICK UP A SNACK BOX
FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

•

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE St

Completely carpeted, house-type door with
storm door and windows. Third door off
dining room . Frost free 2 door ref. Bay
windows, front dinette, deluxe wood dinette
set.

'72 Kirkwood 60'x12'

• Wedne..rcday
•11nusday
Only!

'

•2000

·--------------------------·
'72 Kirkwood • 65'xl2'

RIO GRANDE - Statistics 13.5 points per game. Ironton's made the scores close.
released Friday show· that six Steve Bartram is fourth, with
Rio Grande hit 9 of 13 atRloGrande~llegeplayersare 12.5, followed by Harry tempts in Ute first game, as
averaging m double figures Hariston (12.1), last year's they won 101-99 in double
after the first eight games of Most Valuable Player. Senior overtime. Tuesday night the
the season. The Redmen ·stand Wray Jordon rounds out Ute top game wenl one overtime
at 5.3 after splitting a two- six with an l1.6 average.
period wjth Rio Grande losing
game set with West Florida
As a team, Rio Grande is 92,9i.ln that game, Rio Grande
University Monday and averaging 97 points per game, hit 11 of 161rom Ute free throw
Tuesd
ay,
with a season high of 114 stripe while West Florida hit 20
Ron Lambert, a sophomore against Alderson-Broaddus. of 29.
from Alexandria, Va., leads The Redmen have hit on 47 per
The Redmen will be idle until
Rio Grande In scoring, with 16 cent of their field goals and 66 after Ute first of the year. They
poiniS per game. He has scored per cent of their free throws travel to Otterbein for a game
128 potniS on Ute year, and bas through eight games.
Jan. 6, then return home for a '
a single-game high of 30 this
Commenting on the two Jan . 12 game against Lander
season. Captain
Roger games with West Florida College . They face Walsh Jan.
Bentley is second in scoring, University, head . coach Art 14, then bave a rematch with
averaging 15.6 per outing.
Lanham pointed out the im- Mid.Qhio opponent Malone on
PER OUTING.
portant role that fouls played in Jan . 15.
AI Martin, who sat out last both games. He said that Rio
All Rio Grande College
season and made his debut this Grande scored more field goals Redmen basketball games can
season Monday night, is third than West Florida in both be heard on WJEH-FM,
on the team in scoring, with games, but that Ute free throws Gllipolis.

•Monday
•Tuesday

Save Now

Completely furnished with house type furniture. Carpet
throughout, 1!4' Paneling, 3 bedrooms, bath and '12 bath .
Here is a home you can buy at a very low price.

I

'50

'71 "Rover" Trailer

I

1 I B.T.U. furnace, gas or elec. I
I 1 refrigerator, sleeps 6, has commode &amp; I
1 holding tank .
1
1

I

'MAKE AN OFFERI
I
~-----------~----------~ &amp;..----------------------~ Will Sell

Over Cost

I

e Free Delivery
All Mo~ile Homes In Stock ReducedL

•Free S•tup
'~reas

l
I

Oldest Most Experienced Dealer"

OPEN THIS WEEK

\

K&amp;V MOTORS

Pomeroy, Ohio

RAnJFF SUPER SERVICE

ear

"THIS YEARS TOP KIRKWOOD DEALER IN DOUBLE-WIDES
IN OHIO &amp; WEST VIRGINIA"

Men In Double Fiuures
'"'e -

• MASON COUNTY ,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

398

ROCHESTER, N. Y, (UPI)
- Tite batUe between fifth
ranked Southern California
and 17th ranked PeMSYlVanla
In Tuesday's openhig session of
the Kodak Buketball Classic
here will: attract a national
television 'audience.
The Penn-USC clash follows
the first round game between
St. Bonaventure and the
Unlverl!ity of Rochester, the
host team which has never won
the 'tourney. The winners of
both games meet In Wed·
neaday's final,
USC, a team with three
returning starters from last
year's squad which dropped
only two declslona, both to
UCLA, takes on a Penn ,learn
which holds two straight Ivy
!.ague t!Ues and has nine
returning letlennen.
.
·All-American candidate Paul
Westphal, a senior forward,
wW lead lhe Trojans .~gainst
the Quakers and 6'8" Bob
Morae, the team's leadlnf
acorer for the past two seasons.

AT THE FOLLOWING DEALERS.

'6100

1970 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE .......... '5100

5

Penn-USC
Battle On
Television

TRADE IN NOW - THEN START WHEN YOU WANT TO!

Black finish with green leather Interior, full power
equipment, Climate Control air conditioning .

2

m

'
Or some cold morning.
Or whenever you want to get started in a hurry.
Because a Delco Energizer gives you a big burst of starting power.
And you know how much cranking power the Energizer can deliver in
the first few seconds of starting .. . even at zero degrees. It's shown by
the Peak Watts Rating molded right into the case.
Also, Energizers are dry-charged and vacuum-sealed at the factory.
So when we break the seal and add fluid, your Energizer is ready to go
with all the fresh starting power you need.
Stop in today for the Delco Energizer that is just right for you.
For your car.

1971 CADIUAC COUPE DeVILLE ..........''6100

Meeting Is Matchmaker's Dream

Eastern
5 0 228 168
North Gall Ia 4 1 205 174
Symmes Valley
KygerCreek ~ ~ ~~~
Hannan Trace
2 3 167 20s
Southern
2 3 189 222
Southwestern 0 6 193 249
Tatlls
11 11 1441 1441
This week's gomes:
Tuosd1y - Alumni at
Hannan Trace
J1n. 7 - Southern at Symmes Valley ; North Gallla at
~!gl':r~~eek ; Hannan Trace at
J1n, I - Eastern at South.
western; Federal. Hocking at
North Gallla .

Free Delivery, Free Set-Up

........ '6100

~!::

2 4 398 396
2 4 351 371

TEAMSVACR~sl~v~1 ~~;

Phone 992·7004
Daily 12 lo9, Sunday 1to6
Middleport, Ohio

1971 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE

Nebraska-Alabama Orange Bowl

s ••

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOMES

Dark gold wllh vinyl top, matching Interior, full power
equipment, 1111 &amp; telescope wheel, Climate Control air

OP
330
324
325
559

SVAC

• KING
•FLAMINGO
MOBILE HOMES
•••••••••••••••••••••••••• •

69 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

MOBILE
HOME
SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

·'

eLl BERTY

'

&amp;-·~if

ODIJ

For

Tawny beige finish, brown vinyl top, matching leather
in!., full power equipment, Climate Control air con ..
dltioning, AM-FM radio, 1 owr"" new Cadillac tr~de .

NEW MODERN

Until a week ago, the Colts
seemed headed for the AFC's
Eastern Division title and a
first-round playoff game
against Kansas City, but a
final-game, 21·1'1 upset loss to
New England cost them first
place and sent them bere instead of to Kansas Oty.
Some cynics figured the
,··
Colts would have prefen-ed It
that way anyway, since the
Chiefs were considered
stronger opponents, but O&gt;ach
Don McCafferty dusted off the
old cliche, "mom011tmn," and
said there was nothing pleasing
Family Pac:k
about last week's defeat.
includes these •
"You like to keep on win·
4 sandwiches •
ning," McCafferty said.
and 4 orders
"That's where you get yoiD'
of
french fries.
momentum. If we play like we
did last Sunday, we're not
gonna beat anybody." The
Browns beat the Colts 14-13 at
Baltimore In the second game
of Ute regular season but that
game was so long ago neither
side figures it means anything
now.
"Both teams have forgotten
even exactly what happened in
the game, I'm sure," Nelsen
said.
Dale With Namlith
In 1968, Nelsen and Ute
Ftmlly Rtotauronto
N
Browns also beat the Colts 3020 during the regular season
but Baltimore walloped
Cleveland :IW in Ute playoffs
jressure off them by not liD'· .....
on the way to its fateful date ntng
the ball over too much, '

Price. Qua lily , Savings

71 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE

. IrontOn ·
~an

CHECK US

14x60 SYLVAN PARK

''SEOAL ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
GaiiiJ"?IIS
5 I 425
Waverly
5 · 1 457
Athens . 5 1 370
Portsmouth 5 3 sao
Fed&gt;Hocklng

./llckson .: _ o 6 360
DECEMBER 21:
Parkersburg at Athens
Meigs_ at South Point
D~:CEMBER 29:
Lali~aster at Athens
DE(EMBER 30:
Well$1on at Alexander
Por!lmouth at Waverly
. JANUARY 7:
Meigs aF irontoo
Atheno a~ Waverly
Galllp&amp;lls at, Logan
Wellston. at Jac~son

I SUPE._ '8HE.F

Classic ConteSt; ·

SEU Standings

Mtlgs

2549, Wonders 2485. High Team
Game - Ferros 889, Skips 860.
High Ind. Series - R. Singes
588, L. James 555; High Ind.
Game - L. James 223, J.
Robinson 211.

SALES-SERVICE

t...vnteSmday Times· 8enttnei, Sunday, Dk 26, 1971

C~Npeake

Ferros

14 WIDE

•2 BEDROOM •FRONT KITDfEN
•FORMAL DINING

(NBC).

with Joe Namath in the Super
Bowl.
Baltimore, whose lour losses
all were by a touchdown or
less, hopes to have Nonn
Bulaich back in its lineup after
he missed last week's game
because of a severely pulled
hamstring mll!icle.
Bulaich, who was Injured tn
the Colts' 14-3 victory over
Miami Dec. 11, led Ute team
with 743yards rushing and a 4.9
average.
If Bulalch Is not able to play,
Ute Colts will start Tom Matte
(607 yards) and rookie Don
Nottingham (388), the next-tolast · player chosen tn last
year's draft, as the running
backs.
· Johnny Unitas, who rode the
bench behind Earl Morrall
early In the season as he
recovered from an Injury,
finished the year with only
three touchdown passes
against eight Interceptionsworst ratio of his career-but
will make his sixth successive
start at quarterback.
Unltas completed 92 of 176
passes for 942 yards during the
season. Nelsen, who completed
174 of 325for 2,319yards and 13
touchdowns, but threw 23 In·
terceptions, credited Ute defense with getting the Browns
into Ute playoffs.
" Defense wins football ·
games nowadays, " Nelsen
said. "When they can play the
way they did the last few
weeks, and if I can keep Ute

P. Ferguson

198, F. Duncan 176.
Kyger Creek
I. A Shift 66·38; 2. C Shifl64·
40 ; 3. Odd Balls 62-42 ; 4.
Timber Splitters 56-48 ; l .
Rejects 44-60; 6. D. Main!. 42·
62 ; 7. B Shift 42-62 ; 8.
Strugglers 40·64.
Team High Series - Odd
Balls 2599, C Shill 2560. Team
High Game - Odd Balls 936,
Odd Balls 922.
Ind . High Series - G.
Shrimplin 643, R. Cremeans
600 ; Ind. High Game - G.
Milch 245, R. Cremeans 243.
Tuesday lnduslrial
1. Burton Sunoco 88·32; 2.
Coca-Cola 82·38 ; 3. Penn
· Central 68·52 ; 4. Mason Agg.
38-74;

590, R. capeharl 546; High Ind.
Game - P. Burtoo 247, R.
Capehart 220.
Monday Merchlnls
I. Mason Co. Bank 78-34 ; 2.
Harts Used cars 72-40 ; 3. West.
Va. National Guard 66·46 ; 4.
Mason Auto Mart 54-Sll; 5.
Penn Central 49-63 ; 6. Keefer
Service Station 45-67; 7. Millers

A near-capacity crowd of
80,000 Is expected for Ute game,
which begins at I pm. ESl' and
will be nationally lelevised

then we're capable of beating the run. Baltimore allowecl&lt;an
anyone."
average ot jUBl '19.5 )'ar4l a
Leroy Kelly (885 yards) and game rushing, a club record,
Bo Scott (606), who combined and Ute Colta' IOugb IIC!COIIdary
for 19 toUChdo1'/IIS, wUI be tn lnterce~ed· 28 paaaea.
.
the Cleveland backfield.
The ··winner of Sunday'&amp;
The Colts' defense, however, game wW mote Into the c:onwhich allowed ollly HO polnta- · ferel!l;e cbampiDDihlp pme
second best in tile NFL-WBB Jan. 2 where it II guarlllllllid a
particularly ..,octive against minlmll!,ll of tri.JOO per man.

:Monday thru Thursday 9 AM to 9 PM • Fri. 9 AM to 12 Noon

Johnson's Mobile ., Home Sales
2110 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

VINDALE • NEW MOON • CHAMPION •
!!!!!!!!!!!I~~~~!!!!!!~

�.·
•

•

I - The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, Dec. 26,1971
•

•

avortte
By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
ClEVELAND (UPI)- The
defending champion Baltimore
Colts, who blew a division title
111 the last day of Ute season,
take their first step toward
mOther possible Super Bowl
&amp;inday in a playoff game

against
the
streaking assertion by Cleveland
Cleveland Browns.
quarterback Bill Nelsen that
Baltimore, Ute AFC's "wild "we have something to
card" team with the best ll'OVe ."
second-place record, has been
"Our losing streak in Ute
made a slight favorite despite . middle of the season convinced
its regular-season loss to everybody that we weren't
Cleveland, the Browns' five capoble," Nelsen said. "So now
straight victories, and an we have to prove a little dif.

ferently."
The Browns turned their
season around after a fourgame losing streak, the longest
in their history, and finished
first In the AFC Central
Division with a 9-5 record.
Baltimore was J()-1 and second
to Miami in the East .

Gallipolis Elks To Sponsor
Hoop Shoot Contest Dec. 28
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Elks Lodge , in
connection with Ute Ohio Elks
Association, will sponsor a
"Hoop Shoot" for all Gallia
County boys between the ages
of 8 and 14 according to a lodge
IJ)Okesman.
The event will be held In
lhe GAHS varsity gym on
Tuesday, Dec. 28, begl.nulng
at I p. m. John Mllboan, exGARS
and
Marshall
VDiverslty cage star, will
usllt Elks members In the
contest, similar to football's
punt, pass and kick contest
All Gallia County sludents
between the ages of 8 and 14
will be eligible to participate.
The football event last October
attracted moce than 200 youths
from both Ute city and county
schools.
All ages on Ute Hoop Shoot
contest will be based on Feb. I,
1972. Boys up to and including
eighth grade and under 15
years of age are eligible.
Grade school coaches and
athletic department heads are
invited to take part in Ute
contest's operation, an Elks
spokesman pointed out.
Suggested uniforms include
tennis or basketball shoes, a
clean white T shirt or
basketball shirt. Shorts are
auggested, but slacks or pants
may be worn.

All basketballs will be
provided by GARS.
According to the contest
roles, boys wW be given live
practice shots, then 25
counting throws. In the event
of a tie for the local lodge
IItle, an addltlonai!O throws
wUI decide the champion.
The contest will be held in
three different age groups.
They are :
Class I - For 8, 9 and II).

year-Qlds; Class 2- For 11 and be held at St. John Arena in
12-year-Qlds; Class 3- Ages 13 Columbus on Feb. 12, during
the halftime show of the
and 14.
Purdue.()hio
State basketball
Only one winner in each clasS
from each lodge is eligible for game.
Tbe Ohlo E1b Association
the state shoot contest. All
was
number one In the nation
local winners must be deterlast year according to Russ
mined by Jan. 6, 1972.
Walkup, slate hoop shoot
Local winners will be chairman.
Entry blanks will be passed
presented a small trophy for
out to all contestants prior to
their efforts.
The state championship will the local contest.

MASON BOWLING CENTER
Sporn
·
1. King Pins 6-2; 2. Unit 36-2;
3. Rejects 6-2; 4. B Shift 4-4; 5.
Wild Men 4-4; 6. A Shit! 2-6; 7.
D Shill 2.6; 8. The P.O. 2·6.
High Team 3 games - B
Shilt2554, King Pins 2483; High
Team game - B Shift 944,
Rejects 883.
High Ind. 3games - Harmon
586, Ed Wright 556 ; High Ind.
Game - Harmon 234. Ed
Wright 212.
Tuesday Women
1. Mason Furniture 86-34; 2.
Hair Harbour 86-34; 3. Hart's
Used cars 79-41 ; 4. M&amp;R
Foodllner 71 -49 ; 5. Tom Rue
Motors 65-59 ; 6. Roush Con·
strucllon 54.66 ; 7. Ingels

High Ind . Game - Betty Batey
199, Doris Roberts 194.
Wednesday Mixed
1. Try Hard 76·36 ; 2. H&amp;H 6943 ; 3. Alley Gators 65·47 ; 4.
Smith &amp; Roush 60·52 ; 5. Pin
Spotters 56-56 i 6. Shamrocks
52-60 ; 7. Soos-O.Guns 40-72 ; 8.
Woolies 30-82 .
Team High Series - Try
Hards, H!.H . Team High Game
- Try Hards, Smith &amp; Roush.
High Ind . Series - Men, C.
Yeager 553, J. Smith 536 ;
Women - J. Foglesong 480, L.
Yeager 467. Ind . High Game Men, C. Yeager 205, B. Tennant
195; Women - J. Foglesong
178, B. Robinson 163.
Early Sunday Mixed
1. Duncan &amp; Sines 86-26 ; 2.
Cremeans &amp; Smith 64-48 ; 3.
Ferguson &amp; White 62-50 ; 4.
Goodrich &amp; Roush 60·52 ; 6.
Wright &amp; Smith 56·56 ; 7.

High Team Series - Hair
Harbour 1869, M&amp;R Foodliner
1733. High Team Game - Hai r
Harbour 678, M&amp;R Foodliner

Withers &amp; Blake 20-92.
Team High Series - Duncan
&amp; Sines, Ferguson and While;
Team High Game- Ferguson

Weal Bowling

Furniture 16-104.

Fearsome Four 42-70 ; 8.

619.

and White, Duncan and Sines.

High Ind. Series - Dix ie
Sines 500, Bettv Robinson 480;

Ind . High Series - Men, D.
Duncan 673, B. White 591 ;
Women - P. Ferguson 476, F.
Duncan 471. Ind . High Game Men, D. Duncan 256, B. White

{7AHS Cage Statistics
"'
GAHS CAGE STATISTICS
G--PLAYER
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP AVG.
6--Larry Snowden
44-98 38-47 11 24 12 126 21.0
6--Rod Ferguson
32-61 20-25 12 66 11
84 14.0
6--GII Price
30-47 22-32 21 88 10 82 13.6
6--J immy Noe
27-58 18-32 18 45 12 72 12.0
6--Rick Boone
15-45
4-9 21 16 16 34
5.6
+-Kev Sheets
3-4
5-5 6 6 7 11
2.7
+-Merk Kiesling
3-7
5-8 3 11
11
2.7
5
3-'-0ave White
1-5
1-2 2 4 2
3
1.0
3-'-TopperOrr
1-1
0·2 3 5 3
2
.6
2- Bill Thomas
0-1
0·0 0 0 0
0
.0
6- TOTALS
156-327 113-162 t7 265 78 425 70.8
Opponents
125-339 80-132 117 187 103 330 55.0
, SCORE BY QUARTERS:
Gallipolis Blue Devils
94 94 99 138 - 425
Opponents
70 83 86 91 - 330
SEASON RECORD
Gallipolis 86 Federal Hocking 54
Gallipol is 64 Athens so
Gallipolis 77 Chesapeake 59
Gallipolis 77 Wellston 50
Gallipolis 54 Ironton 60
Gallipolis 67 Meigs 57
Jan. 7 - At . Logan
Jan . 11 - Jackson. home.

245 ; Women -

56 -64 ; 5. New Haven Furniture
6.

Insurance 44-68; 8. HoHman 4072.
Team High Series -

Mason

Co. Bank 2890. Harts Used Cars
2833; Team High Game Harts Used cars 996, Harts
Used Cars 983.
Ind. High Series- D. Mason
671, W. K~ng 660 ; High Ind.
Game - Paugh 24-5 , H. Slsk
and D. Mason 243.
Steelworkers
I. Ferros 8-0; 2. Nuts and
Bolts 8·0: 3. Rejects a.o; 4.
Wonders 8-0; 5. Foote Heels o.
3; 6. Stingers 0-3; 7. Skips 0-3;
8. Wheels 0-3.
High Team Serles -

carolina Lumber 16·

48 .

High Team Series - Coca·
Cola 2684, Burton Sunoco 2549.
Team High Game - Coca-Cola
959, Coca-Cola 914.
High Ind . Game - P. Burton

WEEKEND
SPECIAL

SAVE

•99500
ELCONA

14x65 3 BEDROOM, EXTRA NICE.

$AVE$$$
This

Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

EverY Sunday
(ALL DAY!

•

1503
EASTERN

WIIL--------.-------1.

•

n

IN GALLIPOLIS

conditioning, one owner , new Cadillac trace .

Tawny beige llnlsh, brown vinyl top, beige Interior, full
power equipment, Climate Control a ir conditioning .

'3900

Gold metallic finish, green Interior, full power equipment,
till &amp; telescope wheel , Climate Control air conditioning.
Real ni ce one.

SMITH BUICK CO.
O'DELL TEXACO SERVICE
QUAKER STATE SERVICE CENTER
SUITER SHELL SERVICE
SOMMER GMC TRUCKS
HARRY'$ SERVICE STATION
•MEIGS COUNTY

Otdllllobi \e
Open Eves . .Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
. 12-5342
GMAC Flnenctng hlfllb\e
Pom""'y
" You'll LI~ • Our Quellly WayO!_ Dol.ng Bu~•"
C'ldiiiiC •

491

m

By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE

Fother of the Bowl ·Games
Egad, friends , the moon
over Miami has never shone
on such a glittering array of
football stars as it will this
New Year's night when
Nebraska and Alabama clash
in the Battle of the Century.
But that-kaff-kaff is only
one of seven outstanding
contests slated for the long
New Year's week~nd .
SEOAL llESERVES
Since many, many of you
TEAM , W l. P OP
lr.ont6n 1'
4 o 22J
122 have written, asking for my
Waverly
3 1 186 153 Bowl'forecast we'll get right
Logan
3 1 187 172 to the point. Some of the preMeigs
2 2 139 120 diclions will astound you Jackson
2 2 158 160
Athens
1 3 146 163 um-kumph!
Wellston
1 3 160 239
PEACH BOWL
Gallipolis
0 4 130 200
Dec.
30, Atlanta, Ga.
TOTALS\ · 16 16 1329 1329
' '~
Georgia Tech 24, Mississippi
SEOAL VARSITY
%2. The improving Yellow
TEAM
W L P OP Jackets, victors in four of
Waverly
4 0 336 192
Galllpollt
3 I 262 217 their last five games, are the
lrbnton , 3 I 282 260 surprise choice of the Hoople
Athens
• 3 1 248 225 System to u~set favored
Meigs ' ' .. I 3 217 240 Mississippi . Leading the way
Wellston
1 3 242 329 for Bud Carson's Ramblin'
Logan .
I
3 227 305 Wreck will be the talented
Jackson
o 4 215 261 quarterback
Eddie McAshan .
TOTALS
16 t6 2029 2029
GATOR BOWL
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Dec. 31, Jacksonville, Fla.
TEAM
W L P OPGeorgia 38, North Carolina
Logan
4 o 241
94
Waverly
3 1 192 151 27. In the Baltle of the
Gallipolis
3 1 194 163 Brothers Dooley, Vince's
lrontoo
2 2 208 177 Bulldogs have the edge over
Athens
2 2 157 15ll Bill's Tar Heels. In a thrill·
Meigs
2 2 146 166
Jackson
o , 4 108 216 ing'Offensive show, Georgia's
Wellston
0 4 111 232 outstanding r u nne r-passer
TOTALS
16 16 1357 13l7 Andy Johnson will spell the
difference--bar-rum ph!
ASTRO-BLUEBONNET
Dec. 31, Houston, Tex.
Colorado 35, Houstan 28.
Standings
Eddie . Crowder's Buffaloes,
rated No. 7 and losers only
to No. I Nebraska and No. 3
SVAC STANDINGS
Oklahoma this year, are a
SVACONLY
TEAM
W. L. P DP one-touchdown pick by the
Symmes Valley
Hoople Syslem in w h a t
5 0 400 278 promises to be a cliff-hanger.
North Gall Ia 4 1 431 259
Eastern
4 1 358 249
ROSE BOWL
Hannan Trace 2 3 271 290
Jan. I, Pasadena, Calif.
Southern
2 3 309 316
Kyger Creek 1 4 278 353 Michigan 24, Stanford 15.
Southwestern 0 6 213 515 The Daddy of the Bowl
Totols
18 11 2260 2260 Games matches the perfect
ALL GAMES
record (11-0 ), Big Ten champ
TEAM
W L
P OP
Symmes Valley
6 0 470 348
Eastern
5 1 424 301
North Galli a 4 . 2 503 335
~nnan ~~.i~~ 7~ ~ 1 ••. . -fa.,.. a h p
Sf\JttM!n"' ""i.a,~· " 429 .• ,
·--~"-"-''
Kyger Creek 1 5 317 m
Southwestern

MOBILE
HOME
KIRKWOOD

.

-DOUBLE W-I·D-E-S
60'x24'

Vinton, Ohio

PONN SERVICE STATION
Wilkesville, Ohio

HIGGINS atEVROLET CO.
Wi II ow Wood, Ohio

3 Bedroom, two full baths. carpeted
throughout. completely finished with
house-type furniture . Family room &amp;
utility room. Check the floor plan on this
beautiful home.

THE OLD BOY HIMSELF
Wolverines and the slightly
tarnished Pacific 8 champion Stanford Indians, possessors of an 8-3 record. The Indians shocked Ohio State last
year, but this season the Big
Ten gets revenge.
SUGAR BOWL
Jan. I , New Orleans, La.
Oklahoma 42, Auburn 28.
In a free-scoring fray , I see
the Sooners with wishbone
whiz Jack Mildren in lhe
vanguard breezing past the
Auburn Tigers. The latter.
led by the Pat Sullivan-Terry
Beasley aerial combo, will
make it a good show but will
be unable to stem lhe Oklahoma tide.
COTION BOWL
Jan. I, Dallas, Tex.
Penn Slate 31, Texas 18.
We look for the point-happy
Nittany Lions to bounce back
from their shocking upset by
Tennessee to down rugged
Texas . In ll games- 10 wins.

-Save '1000

I loss- the Lions have averaged 41.3 points per contest,
while Texas has been held to
an average of 2'1.5 points .

··-------------------------~·

52'x24' Kirkwood Double W-1-d-e

ORANGE BOWL
Jan. I, Miami, Fla.
Nebraska 32, Alabama 28.
Separating these two teams
was a monumental task.
Their ratings as the nation's
No. 1 and No. 2 teams are
accuralely reflected in a
study of the statistics. In
total defense Nebraska has
allowed 202.9 yards per contest, while Alabama limited
its opponents to 219.7 yards.
In scoring, Nebraska has
averaged 39.1 points a game
while Alabama registered a
fancy 32.9. On balance, your
favorite correspondent picks
Nebraska.
And now, dear friends , before writing finis to another
exciting football season, let
me wish you, one and all, a
happy and prosperous 1972.

CHARLEY LYON'S GMAGE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mason, W. Va.

_-.FLESHER'S TEXACO SERVICE

Poineroy, Ohio

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

'.

New Haven, W. Va.

SPONSORED BY: G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

,, .

COIJJNSON WAIVERS
CHICAGO(UPI)-TlteChlcago Bulil of the National
Buketball AuoclaUon announced Wedneallay that they
had placed guard Jimmy
Ccillina on ll'alvers.
· Collina, a graduate of New
· Muico Stale University, wu
lbe,p'a.Ncr. I drift pick in

'

.-;--- --

~ "

111'111..1

-· .

Just Arrived!

Save •1500

'5995

·------------------~--------·
Two bedrooms, Bay windows in dining area,
two door refr ., frost free. House type door
?" '-'wrth··stOl'l'ff tnsor~ &amp;' windows. Carpeti"ng in
living room . Deluxe kitchen cabinets . See
this one!

'.

.b . • .

Save '1000

•4995

··-------------------------·.
YOUR CHOICE

'72 Freedom Home
2 or 3 Bedroom

MOBILE HOIIIfES

60'xl2'

2 or 3 Bedroom . deluxe furniture, third outside
door off kitchen , raised ceiling, shag carpet in
living room, house type door with storm doors &amp;
windows . House type plank ceiling.

•4995

.
·-------------------------·.
,
•7295
60 X14'
•;, " Salem Birch Paneling. 30 Gal. elec . water
heater, Early American decor, completely
c~rpeted, house.type door with storm doors &amp;

'71 NEW MOON

•

wmdows. Full one year warranty . Nat1on 's Be st
Seller. Man y more extras .

60'xl2' '72 NEW MOON
64'xl4' ·n BROADMORE
65'x12' '72 CONCORD
65'xl4' '72

HOLIDAY

2 Bedroom with full one year warranty. Nati on's
Best Seller. House-t ype door w it h storm doors &amp;
windows . Carpet in large 17' living room . Ha s

deluxe kitchen range.
All gas, 30 ga l. water heater. 2 extra large
bedrooms. house-type door &amp; storm doors &amp;

· w1ndows . H1gh level oven .

2 Bedroom, Spanish decor , ex tra larg e bedrooms
with deluxe furniture. Here's a r eal nice hom e a t
real nice pr ice.

a

Three Bedroom , bath and 'h bath, total electric
with carpet throughout. See this home today .

•4995
'6495
'5995
'6995

. TRAVEL TRAILERS REDUCED
I~---------------·
.
--------· r----------------------~
1
1
1
I
I
1I 22 Ft. completely self contained, shower. 30 1I 1 17 Ft., completely self contained, 9,000 I

'72 "Terry" Trailer

I

gal. holding tank, 30 gal. water tank, 6 gal. hot
water tank. 5 cu . ft. gas or elec. ref . See this
one.

I

I

SNACK BOX
.2 PIECES CHICKEN
IOU &amp; POTATOES
"IT'S

NO.
COUPONS
TO CLIP!

INCOMPARABLE"

BOX

WHY COOK? PICK UP A SNACK BOX
FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

•

"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE St

Completely carpeted, house-type door with
storm door and windows. Third door off
dining room . Frost free 2 door ref. Bay
windows, front dinette, deluxe wood dinette
set.

'72 Kirkwood 60'x12'

• Wedne..rcday
•11nusday
Only!

'

•2000

·--------------------------·
'72 Kirkwood • 65'xl2'

RIO GRANDE - Statistics 13.5 points per game. Ironton's made the scores close.
released Friday show· that six Steve Bartram is fourth, with
Rio Grande hit 9 of 13 atRloGrande~llegeplayersare 12.5, followed by Harry tempts in Ute first game, as
averaging m double figures Hariston (12.1), last year's they won 101-99 in double
after the first eight games of Most Valuable Player. Senior overtime. Tuesday night the
the season. The Redmen ·stand Wray Jordon rounds out Ute top game wenl one overtime
at 5.3 after splitting a two- six with an l1.6 average.
period wjth Rio Grande losing
game set with West Florida
As a team, Rio Grande is 92,9i.ln that game, Rio Grande
University Monday and averaging 97 points per game, hit 11 of 161rom Ute free throw
Tuesd
ay,
with a season high of 114 stripe while West Florida hit 20
Ron Lambert, a sophomore against Alderson-Broaddus. of 29.
from Alexandria, Va., leads The Redmen have hit on 47 per
The Redmen will be idle until
Rio Grande In scoring, with 16 cent of their field goals and 66 after Ute first of the year. They
poiniS per game. He has scored per cent of their free throws travel to Otterbein for a game
128 potniS on Ute year, and bas through eight games.
Jan. 6, then return home for a '
a single-game high of 30 this
Commenting on the two Jan . 12 game against Lander
season. Captain
Roger games with West Florida College . They face Walsh Jan.
Bentley is second in scoring, University, head . coach Art 14, then bave a rematch with
averaging 15.6 per outing.
Lanham pointed out the im- Mid.Qhio opponent Malone on
PER OUTING.
portant role that fouls played in Jan . 15.
AI Martin, who sat out last both games. He said that Rio
All Rio Grande College
season and made his debut this Grande scored more field goals Redmen basketball games can
season Monday night, is third than West Florida in both be heard on WJEH-FM,
on the team in scoring, with games, but that Ute free throws Gllipolis.

•Monday
•Tuesday

Save Now

Completely furnished with house type furniture. Carpet
throughout, 1!4' Paneling, 3 bedrooms, bath and '12 bath .
Here is a home you can buy at a very low price.

I

'50

'71 "Rover" Trailer

I

1 I B.T.U. furnace, gas or elec. I
I 1 refrigerator, sleeps 6, has commode &amp; I
1 holding tank .
1
1

I

'MAKE AN OFFERI
I
~-----------~----------~ &amp;..----------------------~ Will Sell

Over Cost

I

e Free Delivery
All Mo~ile Homes In Stock ReducedL

•Free S•tup
'~reas

l
I

Oldest Most Experienced Dealer"

OPEN THIS WEEK

\

K&amp;V MOTORS

Pomeroy, Ohio

RAnJFF SUPER SERVICE

ear

"THIS YEARS TOP KIRKWOOD DEALER IN DOUBLE-WIDES
IN OHIO &amp; WEST VIRGINIA"

Men In Double Fiuures
'"'e -

• MASON COUNTY ,

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

398

ROCHESTER, N. Y, (UPI)
- Tite batUe between fifth
ranked Southern California
and 17th ranked PeMSYlVanla
In Tuesday's openhig session of
the Kodak Buketball Classic
here will: attract a national
television 'audience.
The Penn-USC clash follows
the first round game between
St. Bonaventure and the
Unlverl!ity of Rochester, the
host team which has never won
the 'tourney. The winners of
both games meet In Wed·
neaday's final,
USC, a team with three
returning starters from last
year's squad which dropped
only two declslona, both to
UCLA, takes on a Penn ,learn
which holds two straight Ivy
!.ague t!Ues and has nine
returning letlennen.
.
·All-American candidate Paul
Westphal, a senior forward,
wW lead lhe Trojans .~gainst
the Quakers and 6'8" Bob
Morae, the team's leadlnf
acorer for the past two seasons.

AT THE FOLLOWING DEALERS.

'6100

1970 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE .......... '5100

5

Penn-USC
Battle On
Television

TRADE IN NOW - THEN START WHEN YOU WANT TO!

Black finish with green leather Interior, full power
equipment, Climate Control air conditioning .

2

m

'
Or some cold morning.
Or whenever you want to get started in a hurry.
Because a Delco Energizer gives you a big burst of starting power.
And you know how much cranking power the Energizer can deliver in
the first few seconds of starting .. . even at zero degrees. It's shown by
the Peak Watts Rating molded right into the case.
Also, Energizers are dry-charged and vacuum-sealed at the factory.
So when we break the seal and add fluid, your Energizer is ready to go
with all the fresh starting power you need.
Stop in today for the Delco Energizer that is just right for you.
For your car.

1971 CADIUAC COUPE DeVILLE ..........''6100

Meeting Is Matchmaker's Dream

Eastern
5 0 228 168
North Gall Ia 4 1 205 174
Symmes Valley
KygerCreek ~ ~ ~~~
Hannan Trace
2 3 167 20s
Southern
2 3 189 222
Southwestern 0 6 193 249
Tatlls
11 11 1441 1441
This week's gomes:
Tuosd1y - Alumni at
Hannan Trace
J1n. 7 - Southern at Symmes Valley ; North Gallla at
~!gl':r~~eek ; Hannan Trace at
J1n, I - Eastern at South.
western; Federal. Hocking at
North Gallla .

Free Delivery, Free Set-Up

........ '6100

~!::

2 4 398 396
2 4 351 371

TEAMSVACR~sl~v~1 ~~;

Phone 992·7004
Daily 12 lo9, Sunday 1to6
Middleport, Ohio

1971 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE

Nebraska-Alabama Orange Bowl

s ••

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOMES

Dark gold wllh vinyl top, matching Interior, full power
equipment, 1111 &amp; telescope wheel, Climate Control air

OP
330
324
325
559

SVAC

• KING
•FLAMINGO
MOBILE HOMES
•••••••••••••••••••••••••• •

69 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

MOBILE
HOME
SALES
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

·'

eLl BERTY

'

&amp;-·~if

ODIJ

For

Tawny beige finish, brown vinyl top, matching leather
in!., full power equipment, Climate Control air con ..
dltioning, AM-FM radio, 1 owr"" new Cadillac tr~de .

NEW MODERN

Until a week ago, the Colts
seemed headed for the AFC's
Eastern Division title and a
first-round playoff game
against Kansas City, but a
final-game, 21·1'1 upset loss to
New England cost them first
place and sent them bere instead of to Kansas Oty.
Some cynics figured the
,··
Colts would have prefen-ed It
that way anyway, since the
Chiefs were considered
stronger opponents, but O&gt;ach
Don McCafferty dusted off the
old cliche, "mom011tmn," and
said there was nothing pleasing
Family Pac:k
about last week's defeat.
includes these •
"You like to keep on win·
4 sandwiches •
ning," McCafferty said.
and 4 orders
"That's where you get yoiD'
of
french fries.
momentum. If we play like we
did last Sunday, we're not
gonna beat anybody." The
Browns beat the Colts 14-13 at
Baltimore In the second game
of Ute regular season but that
game was so long ago neither
side figures it means anything
now.
"Both teams have forgotten
even exactly what happened in
the game, I'm sure," Nelsen
said.
Dale With Namlith
In 1968, Nelsen and Ute
Ftmlly Rtotauronto
N
Browns also beat the Colts 3020 during the regular season
but Baltimore walloped
Cleveland :IW in Ute playoffs
jressure off them by not liD'· .....
on the way to its fateful date ntng
the ball over too much, '

Price. Qua lily , Savings

71 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE

. IrontOn ·
~an

CHECK US

14x60 SYLVAN PARK

''SEOAL ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
GaiiiJ"?IIS
5 I 425
Waverly
5 · 1 457
Athens . 5 1 370
Portsmouth 5 3 sao
Fed&gt;Hocklng

./llckson .: _ o 6 360
DECEMBER 21:
Parkersburg at Athens
Meigs_ at South Point
D~:CEMBER 29:
Lali~aster at Athens
DE(EMBER 30:
Well$1on at Alexander
Por!lmouth at Waverly
. JANUARY 7:
Meigs aF irontoo
Atheno a~ Waverly
Galllp&amp;lls at, Logan
Wellston. at Jac~son

I SUPE._ '8HE.F

Classic ConteSt; ·

SEU Standings

Mtlgs

2549, Wonders 2485. High Team
Game - Ferros 889, Skips 860.
High Ind. Series - R. Singes
588, L. James 555; High Ind.
Game - L. James 223, J.
Robinson 211.

SALES-SERVICE

t...vnteSmday Times· 8enttnei, Sunday, Dk 26, 1971

C~Npeake

Ferros

14 WIDE

•2 BEDROOM •FRONT KITDfEN
•FORMAL DINING

(NBC).

with Joe Namath in the Super
Bowl.
Baltimore, whose lour losses
all were by a touchdown or
less, hopes to have Nonn
Bulaich back in its lineup after
he missed last week's game
because of a severely pulled
hamstring mll!icle.
Bulaich, who was Injured tn
the Colts' 14-3 victory over
Miami Dec. 11, led Ute team
with 743yards rushing and a 4.9
average.
If Bulalch Is not able to play,
Ute Colts will start Tom Matte
(607 yards) and rookie Don
Nottingham (388), the next-tolast · player chosen tn last
year's draft, as the running
backs.
· Johnny Unitas, who rode the
bench behind Earl Morrall
early In the season as he
recovered from an Injury,
finished the year with only
three touchdown passes
against eight Interceptionsworst ratio of his career-but
will make his sixth successive
start at quarterback.
Unltas completed 92 of 176
passes for 942 yards during the
season. Nelsen, who completed
174 of 325for 2,319yards and 13
touchdowns, but threw 23 In·
terceptions, credited Ute defense with getting the Browns
into Ute playoffs.
" Defense wins football ·
games nowadays, " Nelsen
said. "When they can play the
way they did the last few
weeks, and if I can keep Ute

P. Ferguson

198, F. Duncan 176.
Kyger Creek
I. A Shift 66·38; 2. C Shifl64·
40 ; 3. Odd Balls 62-42 ; 4.
Timber Splitters 56-48 ; l .
Rejects 44-60; 6. D. Main!. 42·
62 ; 7. B Shift 42-62 ; 8.
Strugglers 40·64.
Team High Series - Odd
Balls 2599, C Shill 2560. Team
High Game - Odd Balls 936,
Odd Balls 922.
Ind . High Series - G.
Shrimplin 643, R. Cremeans
600 ; Ind. High Game - G.
Milch 245, R. Cremeans 243.
Tuesday lnduslrial
1. Burton Sunoco 88·32; 2.
Coca-Cola 82·38 ; 3. Penn
· Central 68·52 ; 4. Mason Agg.
38-74;

590, R. capeharl 546; High Ind.
Game - P. Burtoo 247, R.
Capehart 220.
Monday Merchlnls
I. Mason Co. Bank 78-34 ; 2.
Harts Used cars 72-40 ; 3. West.
Va. National Guard 66·46 ; 4.
Mason Auto Mart 54-Sll; 5.
Penn Central 49-63 ; 6. Keefer
Service Station 45-67; 7. Millers

A near-capacity crowd of
80,000 Is expected for Ute game,
which begins at I pm. ESl' and
will be nationally lelevised

then we're capable of beating the run. Baltimore allowecl&lt;an
anyone."
average ot jUBl '19.5 )'ar4l a
Leroy Kelly (885 yards) and game rushing, a club record,
Bo Scott (606), who combined and Ute Colta' IOugb IIC!COIIdary
for 19 toUChdo1'/IIS, wUI be tn lnterce~ed· 28 paaaea.
.
the Cleveland backfield.
The ··winner of Sunday'&amp;
The Colts' defense, however, game wW mote Into the c:onwhich allowed ollly HO polnta- · ferel!l;e cbampiDDihlp pme
second best in tile NFL-WBB Jan. 2 where it II guarlllllllid a
particularly ..,octive against minlmll!,ll of tri.JOO per man.

:Monday thru Thursday 9 AM to 9 PM • Fri. 9 AM to 12 Noon

Johnson's Mobile ., Home Sales
2110 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

VINDALE • NEW MOON • CHAMPION •
!!!!!!!!!!!I~~~~!!!!!!~

�.. ,

·'

.'

•.

10 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. :&gt;1i, 1971

,

•

I

Meigs County Farm Income Comparisons Made
the five million
dollilr mark. These years were
probably a reflection of the
economic conditions of the
country as well as the Climatic
conditions which faced farmers.
The average gross cash
income per farm in 1970
achreved the highest to date
wi th $5,826 per farm and $39.00
per acre. These figures reflect
the continually decreasin g
number of farms .
It should be pointed out that
gross cash income is simply a
measurement of total dollars
handled. Expenses normally
exceed 50 pet. of this amount
with a part of the balance being
the farmer 's personal share for
management and labor.
With approximately one-half
of the farmers achieving a
higher income and one-half
achieving a lower income, we
can see that many of the farms
had very limited cash income .
It is possible that we are
seeing a distinct change in
trend of enterprises. For the
fi rst time income £rom cattle
minimum 25 percent qualifying exceeded that fo r dai ry
set-aside that the producer production. Cattle income was
must sign-up for if he wants to estimated to represent 29 pet.
participate. Payment rate for of the total with dairy at 27 pet.
this is set at 80 cents a bushel Dairy has been the highest
for corn, 64 cents per bushel for percentage ever since 1961. For
barley, and 76 cents per bushel the six years 1955 to 1960
for grain sorghum, paid on the poultry had been the leading
established farm yield times
the- qualifying set-aside acres
(25 per cent of the farm basel.
Option 2 - After signing for
POMEROY - The Annual
Option I, the producer can Meigs-Washington Winter
agree to set aside an additional Vegetable School will be held
amount of acreage, up to 10 on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 1972,
percent of his corn and gra in ac cordi ng to C. J. Cunsorghum base and up to 20 ningham, Washington County
percent of his barley base . Extension Agent, Agriculture.
He'll be paid for Utis at 52 cents
This year the school will be
per bushel for corn, 42 cents held at the Washington
per bushel for barley, and 49 Electr ic Coope rative, 40G
cents per bushel for grain Colegate Drive, Marietta. The
sorghum. Payment under this program is scheduled to star!
option is figur ed on the altOa.m. and conclude after a
established farm yield limes panel discussion and questions
the ac res of additional at 2 p.m .
voluntary set aside .
Speakers will be Bill Brooks,
Option 3- The producer can Extension
Horticult urist,
offer to set aside still another 5 Vegetable Production , who will
or 10 percent of his corn and talk about " Management
grain sorghum base acreage
but the Secretary of
Agriculture has until midMarch to decide whether or not
he want.s to accept any or all of
this offer. If Ute Secretary
WASHINGTON (UP! I - The
accept.s the offer, the ad- Agriculture Department estiditional set-aside payment and mates Ohio's 1972 winter wheal
method of computation are the production a144,160,000 bushe Is,
same for corn or gra in
up more than 1.4 million bushsorghum as under Option 2.
els from last year.
There is no third option for
The estimates, released
barley .
Thursday, are based on Dec. 1
Under the liberalized subconditions.
stitution, a farmer with a feed
grain base and a wheat
The department's national
allotment can plant his eligible
cropland acreage to wheal, winter wheal estimate is
1,291 ,428,000 bushels, up 11 per
corn, grain sorghum , barley,
or soybeans without loss of cent from last year .
The crop is planted this fa ll
base or allotment. Also , he can
for
harvest next summer.
receive both wheal certificates
Should the estimate prove
and feed grain payments, if he
true,
it would be a new allsigns up in both programs,
meets set-aside requirements time high. The current record
for both programs and crop is the 1,235,063,000 bushels
maintains his farm's con- in 1968.
The Crop Reporting Board
serving base.
also estimated that 42,239,000

By C. E. BLAKESLEE
Unemployment Compensation·
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
Law by Industrial Group .
POMEROY - Comparisons
We will not attempt to show
are difficult to make if its ac tual comparisons but here
apples and peaches, pigs and are some of the· interesting
cows, gross cash income and fi gures ..
weekl y wages or gross income
For the ye ar 1970 the
and net income being com- estimated gross cash rece ipts
pared.
. of Meigs County farm ers
Reports received recently 1n totaled $5,243,000 which is the
fourth highest total income
New in Farming during the last twen ty yea rs. It
the county extension office give is in teresting to note that the
us the opportunity to look at the three years were probably a
figures. Then we do our own reflec tion of the econom1c
conditions of the country
comparisons.
l' or the ye ar 1970 the
The 1970 Ohio Farm Income.
es
timated gross cash rece ipts
which includes cash receipts
by Ohio farm ers fr om of Meigs County fm;me rs
livestock, crops, and govern- totaled $5,243,000 which is the
ment payments, and prepared fourth highest total income
by the Oh io Agricultura l durmg the last twenty yea rs. II
Research and De velopment is interesting to note that the
Center at Woos ter ~ was three years with slightly higher
received recently . Als o totals were 1956, 1957, and 1968.
In addition to these yea rs.
received was Payrolls and
Contribu tions Under Ohi o 1955, 1958, 1961, 1966, 1967 and

196~ ~ x ceeded

Meigs ASC Report
POMEROY - Notices of
feed grain bases and yields are
being prepared by Meigs
County ASC Office to be mailed
to farmers approximately
December 30. The sign up in
Ute 1972 feed grain and wheat
program will start Ja nuary 17
and end February 2:i.
The 1972 Feed Grain
Program should help correct
Ute over-«upply of corn caused
by this year's tremendous corn
crop and increase farm incomes.
Fanners look advantage of
exceptionally favora ble early
planting conditions this year
and increased their corn
plantings by II percent in
anticipation of heavy damage
from Southern Corn Leaf
Blight. Many scientists had
predicted that corn blight
r10uld be even more severe in
1971 lban it was in 1970.
Many farmers gambled tha t
corn blight would hit their
neighbor's corn but wouldn 'l
bother their's. With favorable
early planting con~itions also a
factor, fa nners across the
nation exceeded their January
and March planting intentions'
by 3 million acres .
The 1972 Feed Grain
Program, with it.s additional
set-aside options, should
correct any imbalance caused
by this year's record-breaking
crop. At the same time, setaside payments have been
boosted to increase farm income.
An increase in the qualifying
set-aside from 20 to 25 percent
of he base acreage, plus the
additional set..aside options,
should result in taking at least
38 million acres out of
production - compared with
18.2 million acre~ this year. It
is estimated that farme rs will
produce about 4.5 billion
bushels of corn on this acreage.
This reduced production
should allow a draw-down in
stocks of corn next year.
The 1972 program although
designed to red uce corn
productio n, offers farmers
even more decision-making
freedom than they had in 1971,
the first year of a new farm
program which emphasized
the importance of farmers
making their own management
decisions. The two new setaside options and more liberal
substitution make the difference.
Option I - This is the
The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Dec . 26, the
360lh day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercur~ and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Capricorn:·
Admiral George Dewey, the
naval hero of Manila , was born
Dec. 26, 1837.
On this da y in history :
In 1865 James Nason of
Franklin, Mass., was awarded
the patent for the invention of a
coffee percolator.
In 1917 the federal government took over operation of the
nation's ra ilroads for the
duration of Wor·Id War I.
In 1941 Winston Churchill
became the first British prime
minister to address a joint
session of Congress .
In 1947 the Northeast was
buried under almost 26 inches
of snow. New York City was hit
hardest with the heaviest fall
since the blizzard of 1888 .
A thought for today : British
Novelist George Eliot said,
"Bie'ISed is the man who, with
~othing to say , abstains from
~iving in words evidence of ti1at

iRcome producing enterprise
except one year when dairy
was higher.
In
1970
commercial
vegetables accounted for 20
pet. of the cash receipts;
poultry 13 pet. ; hogs 4 pel. ;
corn 2 pet.; and forestry and
hay 1 pet. each.
Figured in the cash receipts
from farming in 1970 was
$311,000 in governmen t
payments for conservation
practices, erosion control and
establishment of vegetative
cover and development of
water supplies for livestock to
permit better utilization of
pasture.
Agriculture is still Meigs
Coun ty's biggest business but
one of the ways we can expand
Meigs County's economic
position is to have more people
in public works or industry.
l'ig ures for industrial employment in Meigs County are
frequently misleading because
most of our workers work out
of the coun ty or out of the stale.
For the year 1970 the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services reported that 1,652 Meigs
County workers were covered
under the Ohio Unemployment
Compensa tion Law . The
greatest number of these, 709
were covered in wholesale and
retail trade with only 51 of
these in wholesale trade. The

Vegetahle School Set
Techniques and New Ideas,"
Robert Partyka, Extension
Plant Pathologist, will discuss
"Disease Control and Pollution
Problems," and "The Pesky
Pest Control Situation" will be
the subject of Dick Miller,
Extension Entomologist.
After lunch, commercial
seed compa nies' representatives will tell us about the
varieties for our area , followed
by a panel discussion and
questions.
The meeting is open to all
area v·egetable growers, according to C. E. Blakeslee,
Meigs .. County Ext ension
Agent, Agriculture .

next largest figure was 401 in
man ufacturing ; 298 in the
production of durable goods;
and 122 in contract construction. 136 were engaged in
transportation Hnd utilities
services and 103 in production
of non-durable goods such as
food and kindred products,
chemical and allied products,
petroleum and coal products.
. There were 124 involved in
services such as hotels and
personal services and other
services, and 84 were listed in
fi nance, insurance, and real
estate.
The total payroll reported
under the Ohio UnempioymeiJt
Compensation Law was
$9,079,143 for the year 1970.
This averaged out at $105.69 as
the average weekly earning.
As would be anticipated, the
contract construction industry
had the highest average
weekly earnings of $202.19 per
week follow'ed by transportation and utilities at
$147.58. Services averaged
$75.19 per week with wholesale
and retail trade averaging out
at $80.14.
The total number of employer units reporting in 1970
was 177 with 92 of these being in
wholesale and retail trade; 19
units reported employees in
each services and contract
cons truction. These were 17
reporting unit.s in manufacturing, ten in durable goods
and 12 in transportation and

utilities .
An exparded economy c•n

be buill up in Meigs County
only by in~reasing our units or

•s

START·E'M RIGHT
WITH

• J54

.us

•su

69 Oldsmobile 98
70 Monte Carlo

tK109

~$

w..t

Pass 3•·
Pus 3N.T.
Puo Pass _p_...
Opening lead-• Q

~~~

By Olwald &amp; Jame1 Jacoby
"God bless us each and
every one," said Tiny Tim .
"I do believe I'm going to
take five spade tricks."
"Bah, humbug," cried Old
Scrooge. "Why couldn't my
partner have gone to four

'4'0

STILL ONLY

Both vulnerable
North Eost Soulll
IN.T.

CAL-f _LAC

We don't Intend to ¥et into
an a r g u m e n t wtth Old
Scrooge, but we feel that he
should have bld four hearts
himself when his partner bid
three no-trump. If Scrooge
and partner were using the
Jacoby Transfer Bid t h e y
might h a v e gotten them,!.elves a real Christmas present at six clubs.
Scrooge would r e s p o n d
with the two-diamond transfer and South would doutifully bid two hearts. Scrooge
would not want to commit
the band to hearts, so he
would bid three clubs to
show his second suit.
South would go to four
clubs. Ace-klng.queen-small
i~ mighty good trump sup·
port.
After tbls, Scrooge might
just bid four hearts. How·
ever, an alert player would
show his d I am o n d ace,

ASK FOR QUANTITY DlsaJUNTS

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC.
Third &amp; Sycamore
GALLIPOLIS, OHI045631
Phone 446-2463

Year
End
""

'. . '

Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters

INTUP~ISI

w.. t

North

u•

V-8, auto.
Our
will be your gain if you buy before the
1st of January.

I

Ph. 992-2181

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
'
Store Open Mon.-Sat. Til 6, Station Open 24 Hours
You Can Buy at Landmark-Everyone Canl
_,

1965

evenlnl.

Mr, and Mrs. Raymond
ble were lhoppln[l In

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
.,.,,.,

Auto._ P.S.• P.B., local doctor's trade.

.... •2295

Pontia~ ..........

m

.....

SS75

1968 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR.
Air cond., da rk blue,

72

Electra

.'r~de . ., """"'"""" ••••••

1969 OPEL STA. WAGON

S

--

$

139 5

22 9 5

Auto trans .• nice for wife. '"'""'", ....... .......... ,, , ......

992-2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT

69 Pontiac Catalina
2 Dr . hardtop. radio, auto. transmission, air
cond .• green metallic finish with matching
Interior, w-s-w tires, one owner car in excellent cond.

Year-End Buys!

•2295

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT UP TO
36 MONTHS TO PAY

USED CARS
69 Ford XL Convertible, air ...............; '1695
69 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, air............. '2995'
.69 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe, air·· •·· ·~ ·· •· '2295

•s

vllitu'lln O!llllrotbe Saturday

Factory air, vinyl top. Sharp! ...................... , ..........

DEPENDABLE CITY

1~00

SedaD

T.F~E.

do you do now?

Jack W. CaJSey, Manager

1970 OLDS CUTlASS 4 DR.

American Wagon, six cyl .• automatic. We
have 2 of these ready for you

·RAWLINGS

TODAY'S QUESTION
w..t redoubles. North passel!
and East biola four hearts. What

POMEROY LANDMARK

Roadrunner 2 Dr. V-8, 4 speed, clean and
ready to go, was $1695.

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
W~llace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

putner. Your threo ·opade open·
bu DOl shown ony delerulve
tricks.

Through Dec. 31, 1971

1968 Plymouth .....now s1495

Tempest 2 dr ., V-8, automatic. Special at

•KQJL0715 "QJ2
What do you do now?
A-Piu U you trust your

Mr. and Mrs. Alva : Love,
Ewlngton, left Saturday
uiornlng for the northern part
of the alate to visit their
chlldren;
Harley Green was a Sunday
momblg vls1Wr of Mr. and
Mrs. JohMie Keys and
datq[hter.
Mr. and Mn. Elmer McNealey-of I.Dgan, W. Va., spent
the weelrend at their parents'
borne at Ewlngton.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball and
Mn . Ball's mother were

•2995 ·
$ .
.
269 5

Fact. Air cond., bucket seats, 24,000 mites.

1968 Rambler..............J1495

Tbamnothlngfuaay
abaaloar 1200 Sedan,

Mrs. Clarence Swick of
Morral, 0., Ia spending the
week with her coUBins, Mrs.
Garnet Rupe and Mrs. Valley
Goddard and Mrs. Florence
Trainer. Dinner guests of Mrs.
Rupe Wednesday were Mrs.
Valley Goddard, Mrs. Ora.i
Webb
and
daughter,
Ge&lt;rglana.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Vance,
Ewlngton, were Thursday
afternoon visitors of their
cousin, Mrs. Oral Webb,
Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball
were visitors In Columbus
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Green
were visitors In Wellston
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Vance,
Mrs. Oral Webb were visitors
In Gallipolis Wednesday.
Mn. Clara Ball was a visitor
of Mrs. Belle Terry and Mrs.
Edna Vance.

_1970 SKYLARK CUSJ. CONV.

Polara Custom 4
t .-fllte, p.-st ., p. ·br.,
sharp one-owner car. was $1895.

ASSN.)

4•

With Any Siegler Fuel Oil Heater·

More power
Double-Wall Boxes
Optional disc brakes
Optional rear anti-skid
brake systems
• New ventilating systems
• Blggeat choice of rear
axle ratings

Truck, '4 Ton, V-8, auto.. P.S., P.B.

1968 DodgeDr.,..........
now 51695
V-8,

69 El Camino

•299

1970 Dodge .......... now s2695

Auto Fastback. factory tape player, one local owner.

East

Dble
Pass
You, South, hold:

Coronet Custom 4· door station wagon,
t .fllte, p.-st., p.-br .• air cond., like new, less than
5,000 miles. was $3795.

Olarger 2 Dr. H.T .• V-8, t .-flite. p.-st .• p.-br .,
stereo tape, W!i_S $2895.

The bidding has been:

We Finance!

•
•
•
•

1971 Dodge.......... now 3595
V-8,
5

·3 Quarter ton, V-8, standard, long wide bed.

whereupon South could af(ord to jump to six clubs.
North would not be thinking
of a slam with a jack-high
" club suit if he was afraid of
two losers in the unbid suit.
Slx clubs makes because
of the 4-4 lit. The opponents
can take one spade only and
eventually the diamond loser
goes on a long heart. At
hearts, only 11 tricks come
In, since a spade and diamond must be lost.
(NIWSPArt•

The new Sieg le r
gives
you
the
amazing co mfort of
war m floor heating
- and only Siegler
has the patented
Inn e r Heater Tubes
and built-in blower
system that stops
the waste of heat on
th e ce iling and out
!he chimney. Drop
in and let us prove
ho w Siegler can
give you Super
Floor
Hea ting
co mfort as it pays
for itself w ith the
fu e l it saves .

69 Chevrolet Custom

Truck, V-8, standard, loog wide bed.

red, black, vinyl top. Sharp .......

1995

SST 2 Dr. Sed ., V-8, p. -steerin_g . automatic,
wafi' ~2195.

.Convertible, white with black top.

!!!e~e~~d~,

Save I90IJ On This ''Demo"
Hornet .......,now :5

V-8, auto., P.S.. P.B.. factory air, factory stereo tape
player, dr. green, wtth green vinyl top.

70 Fiat Spider
69 Volkswagen
71 Chevrolet Pick·UD
68 Chevrolet Pick-Up Truck
69 Ford Pick-Up Truck

Send $1 lot JACOIY MODERN hook
to: "Wi• tt lri4p," (c/o this ltf'WI·
pope&lt;), , ,0 . lo• 419, Rod;. Citr
St•tiM, H•• YotA, N.Y. JOOI9. o~

,.

0100 'h ton Sweptline Adventurer SE V-8, t .fllte, p.-st., p. -br., factory official unit, In cludes camper cap.

1970

Impala, loaded wllh extras, Including atr conditioning,
blue with white top.

b'earts?"

PER 25 LB. BAG

1972 Dodge

Ldeded with extras, dark green with black vinyl top.

.AKQ7

We Senice!

INTERNATIONA('72 KEEPS IT HAPPENING!

992-2176

Luxury sedan. loaded with extras, blue with black vinyl
top.

SOUTH (D)
• 963
"A93

200 Gallons No. 1
Landmark ·Fuel Oil

THIRD ST.

.Kl07 2
"7 6
• Q732

•Ju ·

We Install!

HI.

POMERQY

70 Oldsmobile 98

EAST

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sen enylfllng lor
enybody. Bring your
Items 1o Knotts Community Auction Bern.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. ,
For appointment .. 11
446-2917. Silo every
Soturdty Evening et

Mn. Mllcllell Webb

1m

Meigs Equipment Co..

DeVIlle, IOI&lt;Itd with extr•s, blue with white vinyl top.

Ewington

Truck durability!
Truck chassis!
Truck power!
Truck reliability!

Want a pickup truck? Get
the one that has truc k built
parts• The only o n ~ . Then
ch oose from truck- built engines- higherpowered engines fro m standard eix up
to big V-392. Truck-buill options
Include power steering , automatic
transmission , all-wheel drive, air
. conditioning and stereo. Name
your needs. Name your deal.
Call us now!

70 Cadillac Sedan

25

WEST
.AQJ84

Year End Close ·Out on All
Used Cars to Avoid Paying
TAX. No Reasonable Offer
Refused!! ·

'SMITH

"KQlQ5 2
tA86
.Jl083

PICKUP 1972

INTE

·"OOC''

Bah! Humbug
on Yule Hand
NORTH

Wheat Production Up
acres of winter wheat were
planted this fall , compared
with 38,698,000 acres a year
ago. Yield per seeded acre for
1972 harvest was estimated at
an average of 30.6 bushels, also
a record, compared witlt 30.5
bushels in 1971.
The all-wheal crop for 1971,
counting both winter and
spring-planted crops, was an
all-time record and officials
have ra ised acreage-idling requirements in the 1972 support
program in an effort to trim
back production next yea r.
Experts said the program for
1972 was expected to produce
"some" increase in winter
wheal plantings, but they hoped
this would be more than offset
by cutbacks in the spring-planted crop.

by expanding production of ·
existing units.

WIN AT BRIDGE

II.E.E.!

T.E.E. H.E.E. stand lor
Technical Enqineerinq
Ezcellence. And Hiqhly
Eztravaqant Eztraa.
Standard equipment like:
• Safety front disc brakes
• A hiqh-cam engine
• Whitewalla
• Front bucketa
See your Dataun dealer,
the Small Car Ezpert.
Drive a Datsun .. .then;
decide.

70'Ciock.

Hlllltington.
Miss Redith Boster, ThW'·
man, Miss Patricia Ball were
visitors In Colwnbus Thursday.

11995
68 Olds 98 4 Dr. H.T., air.................
,
68 P~. Barracuda 2 Dr. H.T.............. 11295

67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. .. .. •.. ••• 11195
66 Olds 88 4 Door ....................... '895
66 MercuiJ Sta. Wagon, v.a auto. ......... '795
66 Buick LaSabre 4 Doort air .............'1095
65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door
........ '795
65 MercuiJ Station Wagon, air ............ '695
66 Comet 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 std............. '695
65 Olds 98 4 Dr. H.L ~ir..;..............l595

Karr
&amp; Van Zandt
'

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until 6:.o o- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

c1111U~~~~=!~...J=
~te thele IGur Juuleo,
- leUer. to -h oquan, to
form r..r onllnar, wenl1.

I I

o.~y ,., ~~oo

....

Racine Social Events

who-

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The BOOiller Sunday .School
Class was entertained In the
home of Mrs. Gretta Slmpeon
with Mrs. Isabel SlmJliOII, C!&gt;hos\ess, Thursday evening,
Dec. 16. Tape recorded organ
and plano ·music by 18abel
Simpson and Lillian Hayman
was enjoyd during the
eyening. A program of
Christmas readings and songs
were given. Lovely refresh·
ments were served by the
hoetesaes and gifts were exchanged from under a
beautiful lighted Christmas

I tJ

IPYLGOO , . ) I
I I K

tree.
(AioowHO lllooday)

I

J• It •• MOUIN IOUH ACCINt PILLAII

YHNrtlaJ'•

·.

Ho 1M ..,,.,..
-"'""' I&lt;&gt; Jlftjl'
. · .....,,_
ttll
COMI'OIII

"

GET

•

Smith Auto Sales
Kanauga, Ohio

30

67 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air •••• 11195

A very large crowd enjoyed
the Christmas program at the
First Baptist ChW'ch Sunday
night. The younger children
with sorip and pieCes, the
JWtlors with a play were a part
of the pNgram. ~-he Youth
Choir ot 23 membeR pve .the

Chrlatmas story In a medley of
songs with Christmas folk style
music.
The Youth Choir of the
Baptist Church were guests at
a Chrtatmas party at the home
of Mr . and Mrs . William
Hayman, SWiday evening after
the program. Refreshments
were served to Helen Wilcoxen,
Larry Wilcoxen, Rhoda South,
Keith Ashlef, David Hud·
dleston, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Brown, Bill Beegle, Pam Buck,
John Eichinger, Denise O'oss,
Debbie O'ois, Della Cross,
Nick lhle, Diane Norrla, Sandy
Norris, Jeane Sloter, Roy
Johnson, Beverly Stobart,
Patti lhle, Heidi Ashley, Mike
Robinson, stlaron Pyles, Mike
lhle, Mr. and Mrs. John
Slobart, Mt. and Mri. Martin
Wilcoxen and Miss Sandra
Boothe. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon

--------

AmiiTIOI
For Sale
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
septic tank, get Klean-Em-AII
Septic Tank Cleaner. Landmark

Pomeroy .

Farm

Bureau ,

12-24-1tc

24 25FT. TRAILER, completel y
redecorated inte rior. Must
sell, $975. Call 9'12-5171.
12-24-Jtc
HOME RAIDED
CANBERRA (UPI ) - One
man was believed shot today
trying to throw a Molotov
cocktail at the residence of
Australian Prime Minister
William McMahon.
Johnson and Miss Edith
Hayman spent Sunday in
Colwnbus with Grace and Ruth
Ellis at their new home which
they recently purchased.
Mr. Robert Yost or New
Galilee, Pa. , visited his
mother, Mrs. Mattie Yost,
recently.
Mrs. Sam Bartrug and sister·
In-law, Debra Bartrug of
Hundred, W. Va., spent a few
days with Mr . and Mrs. Gene
Yost.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Beaver
and son, Eric, of Colwnbus
visited his aunt.s, Mrs. Mattie
Yost and Mrs. Hattie Paynter.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Robert.s
of Patriot spent Sunday with
his mothor, Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris
visited her sister, Mrs. Esther
Comstock at Kan8uga.

1972

DODGE CARS

&amp; TRUCKS IN

510CKAI
71 PRICES.
IF YOU .ARE PLANNING TO BUY A NEW C~~
THIS YEAR - DON'T WAIT. 8UY NOW.
PRICES Will NEYER BE THISLOW'AGAIN. GET
THE ADVANTAGE OF THE LOWER PRICES
P.LUS. THE 7% FEDERAL EXCISE TAX REFUND.
PLUS JANUARY 1, 1972 INCREASE.

Carroll Norris Dodge
GALLIPOLIS, 0.

today·s FUNNY

Wall Disney popularized
animated cartoons with his
film productions of "Snow
White and the Seven
Dwarfs l " " Pinocchio ' "

.. Bamb1/' "Fantasia'' and

"Cinderella.' ' The World
Almanar notes that "Snow
White, " the first full-length
animated cartoon, required
about 2 million drawings
and employed 800 artists.

•

�.. ,

·'

.'

•.

10 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. :&gt;1i, 1971

,

•

I

Meigs County Farm Income Comparisons Made
the five million
dollilr mark. These years were
probably a reflection of the
economic conditions of the
country as well as the Climatic
conditions which faced farmers.
The average gross cash
income per farm in 1970
achreved the highest to date
wi th $5,826 per farm and $39.00
per acre. These figures reflect
the continually decreasin g
number of farms .
It should be pointed out that
gross cash income is simply a
measurement of total dollars
handled. Expenses normally
exceed 50 pet. of this amount
with a part of the balance being
the farmer 's personal share for
management and labor.
With approximately one-half
of the farmers achieving a
higher income and one-half
achieving a lower income, we
can see that many of the farms
had very limited cash income .
It is possible that we are
seeing a distinct change in
trend of enterprises. For the
fi rst time income £rom cattle
minimum 25 percent qualifying exceeded that fo r dai ry
set-aside that the producer production. Cattle income was
must sign-up for if he wants to estimated to represent 29 pet.
participate. Payment rate for of the total with dairy at 27 pet.
this is set at 80 cents a bushel Dairy has been the highest
for corn, 64 cents per bushel for percentage ever since 1961. For
barley, and 76 cents per bushel the six years 1955 to 1960
for grain sorghum, paid on the poultry had been the leading
established farm yield times
the- qualifying set-aside acres
(25 per cent of the farm basel.
Option 2 - After signing for
POMEROY - The Annual
Option I, the producer can Meigs-Washington Winter
agree to set aside an additional Vegetable School will be held
amount of acreage, up to 10 on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 1972,
percent of his corn and gra in ac cordi ng to C. J. Cunsorghum base and up to 20 ningham, Washington County
percent of his barley base . Extension Agent, Agriculture.
He'll be paid for Utis at 52 cents
This year the school will be
per bushel for corn, 42 cents held at the Washington
per bushel for barley, and 49 Electr ic Coope rative, 40G
cents per bushel for grain Colegate Drive, Marietta. The
sorghum. Payment under this program is scheduled to star!
option is figur ed on the altOa.m. and conclude after a
established farm yield limes panel discussion and questions
the ac res of additional at 2 p.m .
voluntary set aside .
Speakers will be Bill Brooks,
Option 3- The producer can Extension
Horticult urist,
offer to set aside still another 5 Vegetable Production , who will
or 10 percent of his corn and talk about " Management
grain sorghum base acreage
but the Secretary of
Agriculture has until midMarch to decide whether or not
he want.s to accept any or all of
this offer. If Ute Secretary
WASHINGTON (UP! I - The
accept.s the offer, the ad- Agriculture Department estiditional set-aside payment and mates Ohio's 1972 winter wheal
method of computation are the production a144,160,000 bushe Is,
same for corn or gra in
up more than 1.4 million bushsorghum as under Option 2.
els from last year.
There is no third option for
The estimates, released
barley .
Thursday, are based on Dec. 1
Under the liberalized subconditions.
stitution, a farmer with a feed
grain base and a wheat
The department's national
allotment can plant his eligible
cropland acreage to wheal, winter wheal estimate is
1,291 ,428,000 bushels, up 11 per
corn, grain sorghum , barley,
or soybeans without loss of cent from last year .
The crop is planted this fa ll
base or allotment. Also , he can
for
harvest next summer.
receive both wheal certificates
Should the estimate prove
and feed grain payments, if he
true,
it would be a new allsigns up in both programs,
meets set-aside requirements time high. The current record
for both programs and crop is the 1,235,063,000 bushels
maintains his farm's con- in 1968.
The Crop Reporting Board
serving base.
also estimated that 42,239,000

By C. E. BLAKESLEE
Unemployment Compensation·
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
Law by Industrial Group .
POMEROY - Comparisons
We will not attempt to show
are difficult to make if its ac tual comparisons but here
apples and peaches, pigs and are some of the· interesting
cows, gross cash income and fi gures ..
weekl y wages or gross income
For the ye ar 1970 the
and net income being com- estimated gross cash rece ipts
pared.
. of Meigs County farm ers
Reports received recently 1n totaled $5,243,000 which is the
fourth highest total income
New in Farming during the last twen ty yea rs. It
the county extension office give is in teresting to note that the
us the opportunity to look at the three years were probably a
figures. Then we do our own reflec tion of the econom1c
conditions of the country
comparisons.
l' or the ye ar 1970 the
The 1970 Ohio Farm Income.
es
timated gross cash rece ipts
which includes cash receipts
by Ohio farm ers fr om of Meigs County fm;me rs
livestock, crops, and govern- totaled $5,243,000 which is the
ment payments, and prepared fourth highest total income
by the Oh io Agricultura l durmg the last twenty yea rs. II
Research and De velopment is interesting to note that the
Center at Woos ter ~ was three years with slightly higher
received recently . Als o totals were 1956, 1957, and 1968.
In addition to these yea rs.
received was Payrolls and
Contribu tions Under Ohi o 1955, 1958, 1961, 1966, 1967 and

196~ ~ x ceeded

Meigs ASC Report
POMEROY - Notices of
feed grain bases and yields are
being prepared by Meigs
County ASC Office to be mailed
to farmers approximately
December 30. The sign up in
Ute 1972 feed grain and wheat
program will start Ja nuary 17
and end February 2:i.
The 1972 Feed Grain
Program should help correct
Ute over-«upply of corn caused
by this year's tremendous corn
crop and increase farm incomes.
Fanners look advantage of
exceptionally favora ble early
planting conditions this year
and increased their corn
plantings by II percent in
anticipation of heavy damage
from Southern Corn Leaf
Blight. Many scientists had
predicted that corn blight
r10uld be even more severe in
1971 lban it was in 1970.
Many farmers gambled tha t
corn blight would hit their
neighbor's corn but wouldn 'l
bother their's. With favorable
early planting con~itions also a
factor, fa nners across the
nation exceeded their January
and March planting intentions'
by 3 million acres .
The 1972 Feed Grain
Program, with it.s additional
set-aside options, should
correct any imbalance caused
by this year's record-breaking
crop. At the same time, setaside payments have been
boosted to increase farm income.
An increase in the qualifying
set-aside from 20 to 25 percent
of he base acreage, plus the
additional set..aside options,
should result in taking at least
38 million acres out of
production - compared with
18.2 million acre~ this year. It
is estimated that farme rs will
produce about 4.5 billion
bushels of corn on this acreage.
This reduced production
should allow a draw-down in
stocks of corn next year.
The 1972 program although
designed to red uce corn
productio n, offers farmers
even more decision-making
freedom than they had in 1971,
the first year of a new farm
program which emphasized
the importance of farmers
making their own management
decisions. The two new setaside options and more liberal
substitution make the difference.
Option I - This is the
The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Dec . 26, the
360lh day of 1971.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercur~ and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Capricorn:·
Admiral George Dewey, the
naval hero of Manila , was born
Dec. 26, 1837.
On this da y in history :
In 1865 James Nason of
Franklin, Mass., was awarded
the patent for the invention of a
coffee percolator.
In 1917 the federal government took over operation of the
nation's ra ilroads for the
duration of Wor·Id War I.
In 1941 Winston Churchill
became the first British prime
minister to address a joint
session of Congress .
In 1947 the Northeast was
buried under almost 26 inches
of snow. New York City was hit
hardest with the heaviest fall
since the blizzard of 1888 .
A thought for today : British
Novelist George Eliot said,
"Bie'ISed is the man who, with
~othing to say , abstains from
~iving in words evidence of ti1at

iRcome producing enterprise
except one year when dairy
was higher.
In
1970
commercial
vegetables accounted for 20
pet. of the cash receipts;
poultry 13 pet. ; hogs 4 pel. ;
corn 2 pet.; and forestry and
hay 1 pet. each.
Figured in the cash receipts
from farming in 1970 was
$311,000 in governmen t
payments for conservation
practices, erosion control and
establishment of vegetative
cover and development of
water supplies for livestock to
permit better utilization of
pasture.
Agriculture is still Meigs
Coun ty's biggest business but
one of the ways we can expand
Meigs County's economic
position is to have more people
in public works or industry.
l'ig ures for industrial employment in Meigs County are
frequently misleading because
most of our workers work out
of the coun ty or out of the stale.
For the year 1970 the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services reported that 1,652 Meigs
County workers were covered
under the Ohio Unemployment
Compensa tion Law . The
greatest number of these, 709
were covered in wholesale and
retail trade with only 51 of
these in wholesale trade. The

Vegetahle School Set
Techniques and New Ideas,"
Robert Partyka, Extension
Plant Pathologist, will discuss
"Disease Control and Pollution
Problems," and "The Pesky
Pest Control Situation" will be
the subject of Dick Miller,
Extension Entomologist.
After lunch, commercial
seed compa nies' representatives will tell us about the
varieties for our area , followed
by a panel discussion and
questions.
The meeting is open to all
area v·egetable growers, according to C. E. Blakeslee,
Meigs .. County Ext ension
Agent, Agriculture .

next largest figure was 401 in
man ufacturing ; 298 in the
production of durable goods;
and 122 in contract construction. 136 were engaged in
transportation Hnd utilities
services and 103 in production
of non-durable goods such as
food and kindred products,
chemical and allied products,
petroleum and coal products.
. There were 124 involved in
services such as hotels and
personal services and other
services, and 84 were listed in
fi nance, insurance, and real
estate.
The total payroll reported
under the Ohio UnempioymeiJt
Compensation Law was
$9,079,143 for the year 1970.
This averaged out at $105.69 as
the average weekly earning.
As would be anticipated, the
contract construction industry
had the highest average
weekly earnings of $202.19 per
week follow'ed by transportation and utilities at
$147.58. Services averaged
$75.19 per week with wholesale
and retail trade averaging out
at $80.14.
The total number of employer units reporting in 1970
was 177 with 92 of these being in
wholesale and retail trade; 19
units reported employees in
each services and contract
cons truction. These were 17
reporting unit.s in manufacturing, ten in durable goods
and 12 in transportation and

utilities .
An exparded economy c•n

be buill up in Meigs County
only by in~reasing our units or

•s

START·E'M RIGHT
WITH

• J54

.us

•su

69 Oldsmobile 98
70 Monte Carlo

tK109

~$

w..t

Pass 3•·
Pus 3N.T.
Puo Pass _p_...
Opening lead-• Q

~~~

By Olwald &amp; Jame1 Jacoby
"God bless us each and
every one," said Tiny Tim .
"I do believe I'm going to
take five spade tricks."
"Bah, humbug," cried Old
Scrooge. "Why couldn't my
partner have gone to four

'4'0

STILL ONLY

Both vulnerable
North Eost Soulll
IN.T.

CAL-f _LAC

We don't Intend to ¥et into
an a r g u m e n t wtth Old
Scrooge, but we feel that he
should have bld four hearts
himself when his partner bid
three no-trump. If Scrooge
and partner were using the
Jacoby Transfer Bid t h e y
might h a v e gotten them,!.elves a real Christmas present at six clubs.
Scrooge would r e s p o n d
with the two-diamond transfer and South would doutifully bid two hearts. Scrooge
would not want to commit
the band to hearts, so he
would bid three clubs to
show his second suit.
South would go to four
clubs. Ace-klng.queen-small
i~ mighty good trump sup·
port.
After tbls, Scrooge might
just bid four hearts. How·
ever, an alert player would
show his d I am o n d ace,

ASK FOR QUANTITY DlsaJUNTS

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC.
Third &amp; Sycamore
GALLIPOLIS, OHI045631
Phone 446-2463

Year
End
""

'. . '

Siegler Fuel Oil Heaters

INTUP~ISI

w.. t

North

u•

V-8, auto.
Our
will be your gain if you buy before the
1st of January.

I

Ph. 992-2181

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
'
Store Open Mon.-Sat. Til 6, Station Open 24 Hours
You Can Buy at Landmark-Everyone Canl
_,

1965

evenlnl.

Mr, and Mrs. Raymond
ble were lhoppln[l In

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
.,.,,.,

Auto._ P.S.• P.B., local doctor's trade.

.... •2295

Pontia~ ..........

m

.....

SS75

1968 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR.
Air cond., da rk blue,

72

Electra

.'r~de . ., """"'"""" ••••••

1969 OPEL STA. WAGON

S

--

$

139 5

22 9 5

Auto trans .• nice for wife. '"'""'", ....... .......... ,, , ......

992-2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT

69 Pontiac Catalina
2 Dr . hardtop. radio, auto. transmission, air
cond .• green metallic finish with matching
Interior, w-s-w tires, one owner car in excellent cond.

Year-End Buys!

•2295

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT UP TO
36 MONTHS TO PAY

USED CARS
69 Ford XL Convertible, air ...............; '1695
69 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan, air............. '2995'
.69 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe, air·· •·· ·~ ·· •· '2295

•s

vllitu'lln O!llllrotbe Saturday

Factory air, vinyl top. Sharp! ...................... , ..........

DEPENDABLE CITY

1~00

SedaD

T.F~E.

do you do now?

Jack W. CaJSey, Manager

1970 OLDS CUTlASS 4 DR.

American Wagon, six cyl .• automatic. We
have 2 of these ready for you

·RAWLINGS

TODAY'S QUESTION
w..t redoubles. North passel!
and East biola four hearts. What

POMEROY LANDMARK

Roadrunner 2 Dr. V-8, 4 speed, clean and
ready to go, was $1695.

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
W~llace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

putner. Your threo ·opade open·
bu DOl shown ony delerulve
tricks.

Through Dec. 31, 1971

1968 Plymouth .....now s1495

Tempest 2 dr ., V-8, automatic. Special at

•KQJL0715 "QJ2
What do you do now?
A-Piu U you trust your

Mr. and Mrs. Alva : Love,
Ewlngton, left Saturday
uiornlng for the northern part
of the alate to visit their
chlldren;
Harley Green was a Sunday
momblg vls1Wr of Mr. and
Mrs. JohMie Keys and
datq[hter.
Mr. and Mn. Elmer McNealey-of I.Dgan, W. Va., spent
the weelrend at their parents'
borne at Ewlngton.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball and
Mn . Ball's mother were

•2995 ·
$ .
.
269 5

Fact. Air cond., bucket seats, 24,000 mites.

1968 Rambler..............J1495

Tbamnothlngfuaay
abaaloar 1200 Sedan,

Mrs. Clarence Swick of
Morral, 0., Ia spending the
week with her coUBins, Mrs.
Garnet Rupe and Mrs. Valley
Goddard and Mrs. Florence
Trainer. Dinner guests of Mrs.
Rupe Wednesday were Mrs.
Valley Goddard, Mrs. Ora.i
Webb
and
daughter,
Ge&lt;rglana.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Vance,
Ewlngton, were Thursday
afternoon visitors of their
cousin, Mrs. Oral Webb,
Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball
were visitors In Columbus
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Green
were visitors In Wellston
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Vance,
Mrs. Oral Webb were visitors
In Gallipolis Wednesday.
Mn. Clara Ball was a visitor
of Mrs. Belle Terry and Mrs.
Edna Vance.

_1970 SKYLARK CUSJ. CONV.

Polara Custom 4
t .-fllte, p.-st ., p. ·br.,
sharp one-owner car. was $1895.

ASSN.)

4•

With Any Siegler Fuel Oil Heater·

More power
Double-Wall Boxes
Optional disc brakes
Optional rear anti-skid
brake systems
• New ventilating systems
• Blggeat choice of rear
axle ratings

Truck, '4 Ton, V-8, auto.. P.S., P.B.

1968 DodgeDr.,..........
now 51695
V-8,

69 El Camino

•299

1970 Dodge .......... now s2695

Auto Fastback. factory tape player, one local owner.

East

Dble
Pass
You, South, hold:

Coronet Custom 4· door station wagon,
t .fllte, p.-st., p.-br .• air cond., like new, less than
5,000 miles. was $3795.

Olarger 2 Dr. H.T .• V-8, t .-flite. p.-st .• p.-br .,
stereo tape, W!i_S $2895.

The bidding has been:

We Finance!

•
•
•
•

1971 Dodge.......... now 3595
V-8,
5

·3 Quarter ton, V-8, standard, long wide bed.

whereupon South could af(ord to jump to six clubs.
North would not be thinking
of a slam with a jack-high
" club suit if he was afraid of
two losers in the unbid suit.
Slx clubs makes because
of the 4-4 lit. The opponents
can take one spade only and
eventually the diamond loser
goes on a long heart. At
hearts, only 11 tricks come
In, since a spade and diamond must be lost.
(NIWSPArt•

The new Sieg le r
gives
you
the
amazing co mfort of
war m floor heating
- and only Siegler
has the patented
Inn e r Heater Tubes
and built-in blower
system that stops
the waste of heat on
th e ce iling and out
!he chimney. Drop
in and let us prove
ho w Siegler can
give you Super
Floor
Hea ting
co mfort as it pays
for itself w ith the
fu e l it saves .

69 Chevrolet Custom

Truck, V-8, standard, loog wide bed.

red, black, vinyl top. Sharp .......

1995

SST 2 Dr. Sed ., V-8, p. -steerin_g . automatic,
wafi' ~2195.

.Convertible, white with black top.

!!!e~e~~d~,

Save I90IJ On This ''Demo"
Hornet .......,now :5

V-8, auto., P.S.. P.B.. factory air, factory stereo tape
player, dr. green, wtth green vinyl top.

70 Fiat Spider
69 Volkswagen
71 Chevrolet Pick·UD
68 Chevrolet Pick-Up Truck
69 Ford Pick-Up Truck

Send $1 lot JACOIY MODERN hook
to: "Wi• tt lri4p," (c/o this ltf'WI·
pope&lt;), , ,0 . lo• 419, Rod;. Citr
St•tiM, H•• YotA, N.Y. JOOI9. o~

,.

0100 'h ton Sweptline Adventurer SE V-8, t .fllte, p.-st., p. -br., factory official unit, In cludes camper cap.

1970

Impala, loaded wllh extras, Including atr conditioning,
blue with white top.

b'earts?"

PER 25 LB. BAG

1972 Dodge

Ldeded with extras, dark green with black vinyl top.

.AKQ7

We Senice!

INTERNATIONA('72 KEEPS IT HAPPENING!

992-2176

Luxury sedan. loaded with extras, blue with black vinyl
top.

SOUTH (D)
• 963
"A93

200 Gallons No. 1
Landmark ·Fuel Oil

THIRD ST.

.Kl07 2
"7 6
• Q732

•Ju ·

We Install!

HI.

POMERQY

70 Oldsmobile 98

EAST

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sen enylfllng lor
enybody. Bring your
Items 1o Knotts Community Auction Bern.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. ,
For appointment .. 11
446-2917. Silo every
Soturdty Evening et

Mn. Mllcllell Webb

1m

Meigs Equipment Co..

DeVIlle, IOI&lt;Itd with extr•s, blue with white vinyl top.

Ewington

Truck durability!
Truck chassis!
Truck power!
Truck reliability!

Want a pickup truck? Get
the one that has truc k built
parts• The only o n ~ . Then
ch oose from truck- built engines- higherpowered engines fro m standard eix up
to big V-392. Truck-buill options
Include power steering , automatic
transmission , all-wheel drive, air
. conditioning and stereo. Name
your needs. Name your deal.
Call us now!

70 Cadillac Sedan

25

WEST
.AQJ84

Year End Close ·Out on All
Used Cars to Avoid Paying
TAX. No Reasonable Offer
Refused!! ·

'SMITH

"KQlQ5 2
tA86
.Jl083

PICKUP 1972

INTE

·"OOC''

Bah! Humbug
on Yule Hand
NORTH

Wheat Production Up
acres of winter wheat were
planted this fall , compared
with 38,698,000 acres a year
ago. Yield per seeded acre for
1972 harvest was estimated at
an average of 30.6 bushels, also
a record, compared witlt 30.5
bushels in 1971.
The all-wheal crop for 1971,
counting both winter and
spring-planted crops, was an
all-time record and officials
have ra ised acreage-idling requirements in the 1972 support
program in an effort to trim
back production next yea r.
Experts said the program for
1972 was expected to produce
"some" increase in winter
wheal plantings, but they hoped
this would be more than offset
by cutbacks in the spring-planted crop.

by expanding production of ·
existing units.

WIN AT BRIDGE

II.E.E.!

T.E.E. H.E.E. stand lor
Technical Enqineerinq
Ezcellence. And Hiqhly
Eztravaqant Eztraa.
Standard equipment like:
• Safety front disc brakes
• A hiqh-cam engine
• Whitewalla
• Front bucketa
See your Dataun dealer,
the Small Car Ezpert.
Drive a Datsun .. .then;
decide.

70'Ciock.

Hlllltington.
Miss Redith Boster, ThW'·
man, Miss Patricia Ball were
visitors In Colwnbus Thursday.

11995
68 Olds 98 4 Dr. H.T., air.................
,
68 P~. Barracuda 2 Dr. H.T.............. 11295

67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. .. .. •.. ••• 11195
66 Olds 88 4 Door ....................... '895
66 MercuiJ Sta. Wagon, v.a auto. ......... '795
66 Buick LaSabre 4 Doort air .............'1095
65 Oldsmobile 98 4 Door
........ '795
65 MercuiJ Station Wagon, air ............ '695
66 Comet 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 std............. '695
65 Olds 98 4 Dr. H.L ~ir..;..............l595

Karr
&amp; Van Zandt
'

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until 6:.o o- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

c1111U~~~~=!~...J=
~te thele IGur Juuleo,
- leUer. to -h oquan, to
form r..r onllnar, wenl1.

I I

o.~y ,., ~~oo

....

Racine Social Events

who-

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The BOOiller Sunday .School
Class was entertained In the
home of Mrs. Gretta Slmpeon
with Mrs. Isabel SlmJliOII, C!&gt;hos\ess, Thursday evening,
Dec. 16. Tape recorded organ
and plano ·music by 18abel
Simpson and Lillian Hayman
was enjoyd during the
eyening. A program of
Christmas readings and songs
were given. Lovely refresh·
ments were served by the
hoetesaes and gifts were exchanged from under a
beautiful lighted Christmas

I tJ

IPYLGOO , . ) I
I I K

tree.
(AioowHO lllooday)

I

J• It •• MOUIN IOUH ACCINt PILLAII

YHNrtlaJ'•

·.

Ho 1M ..,,.,..
-"'""' I&lt;&gt; Jlftjl'
. · .....,,_
ttll
COMI'OIII

"

GET

•

Smith Auto Sales
Kanauga, Ohio

30

67 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air •••• 11195

A very large crowd enjoyed
the Christmas program at the
First Baptist ChW'ch Sunday
night. The younger children
with sorip and pieCes, the
JWtlors with a play were a part
of the pNgram. ~-he Youth
Choir ot 23 membeR pve .the

Chrlatmas story In a medley of
songs with Christmas folk style
music.
The Youth Choir of the
Baptist Church were guests at
a Chrtatmas party at the home
of Mr . and Mrs . William
Hayman, SWiday evening after
the program. Refreshments
were served to Helen Wilcoxen,
Larry Wilcoxen, Rhoda South,
Keith Ashlef, David Hud·
dleston, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Brown, Bill Beegle, Pam Buck,
John Eichinger, Denise O'oss,
Debbie O'ois, Della Cross,
Nick lhle, Diane Norrla, Sandy
Norris, Jeane Sloter, Roy
Johnson, Beverly Stobart,
Patti lhle, Heidi Ashley, Mike
Robinson, stlaron Pyles, Mike
lhle, Mr. and Mrs. John
Slobart, Mt. and Mri. Martin
Wilcoxen and Miss Sandra
Boothe. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon

--------

AmiiTIOI
For Sale
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
septic tank, get Klean-Em-AII
Septic Tank Cleaner. Landmark

Pomeroy .

Farm

Bureau ,

12-24-1tc

24 25FT. TRAILER, completel y
redecorated inte rior. Must
sell, $975. Call 9'12-5171.
12-24-Jtc
HOME RAIDED
CANBERRA (UPI ) - One
man was believed shot today
trying to throw a Molotov
cocktail at the residence of
Australian Prime Minister
William McMahon.
Johnson and Miss Edith
Hayman spent Sunday in
Colwnbus with Grace and Ruth
Ellis at their new home which
they recently purchased.
Mr. Robert Yost or New
Galilee, Pa. , visited his
mother, Mrs. Mattie Yost,
recently.
Mrs. Sam Bartrug and sister·
In-law, Debra Bartrug of
Hundred, W. Va., spent a few
days with Mr . and Mrs. Gene
Yost.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Beaver
and son, Eric, of Colwnbus
visited his aunt.s, Mrs. Mattie
Yost and Mrs. Hattie Paynter.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Robert.s
of Patriot spent Sunday with
his mothor, Mrs. Frances
Roberts.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris
visited her sister, Mrs. Esther
Comstock at Kan8uga.

1972

DODGE CARS

&amp; TRUCKS IN

510CKAI
71 PRICES.
IF YOU .ARE PLANNING TO BUY A NEW C~~
THIS YEAR - DON'T WAIT. 8UY NOW.
PRICES Will NEYER BE THISLOW'AGAIN. GET
THE ADVANTAGE OF THE LOWER PRICES
P.LUS. THE 7% FEDERAL EXCISE TAX REFUND.
PLUS JANUARY 1, 1972 INCREASE.

Carroll Norris Dodge
GALLIPOLIS, 0.

today·s FUNNY

Wall Disney popularized
animated cartoons with his
film productions of "Snow
White and the Seven
Dwarfs l " " Pinocchio ' "

.. Bamb1/' "Fantasia'' and

"Cinderella.' ' The World
Almanar notes that "Snow
White, " the first full-length
animated cartoon, required
about 2 million drawings
and employed 800 artists.

•

�A Sort of·]oumal
BY J. A. McKEAN
GAillPOUS - Each year I'm
confronted by the thought, does anyone
know a sure-fire way to quieUy and
systematically plan for Christmas?
Take a simple thing like erecting the
Christmas tree as an example.
Early last week one of my· roosters
· asked, "Pop, when we gonna put up the
tree?"
"This weekend.11

"Just a week ahead! Jeerniny,
everybody else has theirs up already!"
"It's a matter of preference, son.
We do it differenUy." (Timing is the
first issue every year.)
"Anyone seen the tree stand since
we moved?" I asked.
She said, "Oh, I gave that old thing

away."
POMEROY - lltija

I~---------------------------,
I
.
I
I
I
I

II Of the Bend
I

I

'

I

By Bob Hoeflich

antique!"

"You'd fumed at that thing long
enough. Besides, it was a cheapie
anyway.~~

"You don 't understand! That
holder was an old friend. A beloved
antagonist. It challenged me for 15
years and I won every time !"
O.K.,'' I said, "it's done. Now,
who's gonna get the tree?"
"You are," was the unanimous
reply.
"Oh, no! Not old Pop! There's a
scout axe in the basement, a hillside full
of trees within walking distance, and
two healthy colts just brimming with
energy sitting here who can do the job.
I've cut dozens of 'em."
"Pop, nobody does that now!
Besides, it's illegal."
" It was then. Half the fun ."
"You are clearly some kind of nut, "

1

POMEROY - Well - the season has been a real whirl of
activity hasn't it ?I!
According to the popular songs (and I love 'em) hauled out
each holiday season, your Christmas can be white, blue or green.
Personally, mine has been green and I don't mean "money
green" . I mean "envy green". I really turn "kelly " at those
people who are so completely organized. Cards, they have ready
for mailing on the 15th. Gifts are bought and wrapped days and
days ahead and decorations are shimmering from their vantage
points way before the holiday.
Now - Christmas Eve may fiJld you where the firelight
gleams. It finds me in complete frustration still trying to wrap up
the deal and not too successfully. I seem to have to do everything
at least three times and the results are almost scary. Drained by
the time Christmas Eve rolls around, I can flake at the tip of a
tree . And trees do tip you know . And isn't it fascinating how
easily some of those ornaments break. How can there he so many
little slivers of glass from our ornament'
Of course, the Christmas holiday does provide the opportunity for many to do their thing and the housewives really
shine turning out cookies and candy which, everyone suddenly
discovers, are quite fattening . Annie Canaday Chapman did a
thoughtful act. She prepared plates of mouth-watering delectables and sent them about the neighborhood via her youngsters,
Mitch and Jenny. So now everyone on the street will put on a little
weight and all will appear proportunately the same. You should
have seen the plates- just like in the slick magazines.
Doing his share also during the holiday season, certainly a
tradition, has been Gene Grate. He takes to the kitchen at his
attractive home to turn out pound, after pound, after pound of
hand dipped chocolates and elaborately decorated fruit cakes.
These are distributed to many, many friends who abandon the
diet and weight watching and dig right in .
The increased interest in the ceramics hobby has provided
some attractive gilts for the season as those following the hobby
decide on a "home made Christmas". It looks like quite a chore
but those addicted say they really enjoy the whole bit. Mickey
Russell was one of the ceramic enthusiasts to use her talent in
creating gifts and Jane Walton made ceramic favors for her card
club. They were quite a hit, we're told. Geez- and only 128 hours
of work involved. Well - maybe it wasn't thatlong, really .
Then there are the home decorating contests. There's no
doubt about it, the contests do really give Meigs County communities encouragement towards beauty during the holiday
season. Although many don't really go all out to compete,
decorating does appear to be "contagious" and everyone about
seems to put out a litUe something. This year's winds were really
tough on the outdoor decorating scene. At the Meigs High School
where the art department had turned out a Christmas message
which was placed high on the building, the wind finally brought
down the entire decoration after toying with a few of the letters
from several days. And those lawn figures . If you think weights,
wires or ropes will keep 'em standing, forget it.
Hey - and haven't the schools been attractive for the
season ? One wonders where teachers come up with so many
ideas to carry out through their students. Hope you visited a
school - an elementary one - during the holiday season. It
seems to me that children appear almost angelic as they move
through their little programs prepared for the season. Maybe it
would he nice if we could see Christmas through their eyes.
I do hopeyourChristmas is the merriest. I hope that you also
have done one litUe deed for someone less fortunate than yourself. CounUess have and I know they have found it rewarding. If
it hadn't been for your generosity in many directions, i~ would
have been a bleak Chrislmas for many.
Of course, beyond the glitter and tinsel lies the real meaning
and the real reason for the observance of the most wonderful
time - despite my personal frustrations - of the year.
And - from me to you:
Again it's that wonderful time of the year,
The magical, miracle Yuletide is here;
'Tis the season for kindness with no special reason,
Amid joyful laughter and a wee bit of tea sin'.
The presents you bought, you hope will be pleasin',
And under thetree are some gifts you'll he squeezin';
You'll hear those voices rise in good cheer,
The beautiful carols again fall on your ear.
it's time for a party , time for a friend,
A moment for worship - a rich dividend;
And it's time for me to extend to you,
Best Holiday Wishes - Happy "Seventy-Two"!

Milestone is Achieved
Mason County's Phillp Sporn
Plant Thursday at 10 a. m.
reached a milestone in safety
and industry according to an
announcement by Plant
Manager Eugene H. Gloss.
The Sporn plant, operated by
the Central Operating Company made up of Ohio Power
and Appalachian Power
Companies, completed 1
million man hours without a
lost time injury since April 25,
1970.
Immediately upon reaching
this record Joe GiUs, vicepresident and
general
manager of tllll Ohio Power
Company, and W. S. White,
vice-president and general
manager of the Appalachian
Company, called congratlaUons to the 300 plant perSOilnel.
· "

emergency units received checks for $100 each from the
Pomeroy National Bank. Edison Hobstetter, president of the
bank, made the presentation to representatives of the units
including, from the left, Bill Rice, Syracuse; Tom (Pee Wee)
Werry, Pomeroy; Russell MiUs, Middleport, and Walter
Cleland, Racine.

I
II

Beat....

"You didn't! I explaimed. "That
stand was a genuine, dyed-in-the-wool

i•IWI from the OOUDI7'1 four

·,·
'·

Plan Ouistmas?
1

she observed.
I bargained. If they selected a tree
and brought if home, I'd pay the tab.
Next I asked how big a tree we'd
get. That's always good for a beauttlul
hassle.
"A small one . Just big enough for
the lamp table."
"Oh, no! It's gotta set on the floor.
Maybe about four feet."
"Yeah," one said. "About up to
here." His hand washeadleveland he's
5'7" and rising.
This war was averted by my
asking, "Have you agreed on the kind
we'll have this year?"
"A cedar,'' she said. "I never saw a
pine Christmas tree until we moved to
Ohio." (I refrained from answering
with my special biijng wit.)
"I want pine,'' one said. "They smell
so good."
"Too bulky," the other advised.
"How about a nice blue spruce?"
"Kind of expensive," I said. "But I
saw a dandy growin' in a guy's yard on
Hedgewood Drive. If ya wantta use that
axe, a quick rnidnigh! requisition would
do it."
"You want to get them shot!" she
cried.
"Don't know . Check our in-

surance."
The meeting adjourned for a couple
of days . Mayhem Is especially
disturbing at Christmas time. ,
Saturday motning my pudding
giant and his friend, Louis McCormick,
came in with a grocery bag full of
mistletoe. Enough to supply Gallia
county, with Middleport thrown in for
good measure.
"Heavens to Betsy! Have you boys

cornered the market on young ladles'
favors? "

"Naw, we're gonna divide it."
"You'll both have enough
decorate every living room In town,
including the city park!"
"I mean, we'll share II. (With
whom?)
"Pop, shall 1 get the tree?"
"Yeah, gn ahead. So long as you
don't lift somebody's shrubbery. Makes
your mo ther nervous. "
And so he brought the tree home; a
real pretty four foot pine and a new
stand.
"Where're we gonna put it," I
asked. That also is an annual subject
for lengthy, heated debate.
.
"In dining room corner between
the windows."
"In the living room between the

tile

Devoted To The Greater Middle 0/UQ ·VaUev
.
·

:
:

windows.''

.

"In front of the fireplace."
(Luckily, we don't use it.)
"Hoiv about the clothes closet?" I
inquired,
My suggestion was dismissed with
the utter contempt it deserved. The
fireplace spot was adopted.
Now, each year as the youngunb
have grown up I've perfected a few
clever maneuvers which, by degrees,
have shifted the tree decorating onto
them. My schemes worked, and the
boys worked, and by-golly they came
through with about the prettiest tree
we've ever had. With the lights plugged
in, the ornaments sparkled brllllantly.
Very nice, very tasteful.
"Pop, what would you like most
for Christmas? "
"Never mind, lads; I bave II . fond

:
.
:
:
·
:

......... :''.

• "'

..·.. -

-.

.

··· ···~·"' '

.:.·•

~-

.

-'

0

0
j

~AWN

0

c

'

c
a

memories.''

0

a

,·

·.

Business Members Taking Hard Line
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
five business members of the
Pay Board, taking an increasingly harder tine against wage
increases, served notice today
they will challenge all deferred
pay hikes exceeding the board's
top limit of 7 per cent a year.
Their intentions were disclosed after the board, follow-

ANTIQUITY - Mrs. Sarah Diddle, better known u
"Mom Diddle," who has lived all her life in Antiquity,
collects salt and pepper shakers, numbering 125, more or
Jess. She also has 17 coffee pots, one holding 32 cupts that all
members of the family use. She received a travel coffee pot
from her son and daughter-ln-law in Texas for a Christmas
present. She has given away five coffee pots to make others
happy.
Mom Diddle has made pillow slips and crocheted pot
holders for all her friends since she had a stroke in April,
!970. She still crochets every day to help with her therapy
treatments. With the aid of her husband, Oval, she still does
all her own housework . .Mr. and Mrs. Diddle have five boys,
all who served in service, and four daughters; 17 grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren, all who help her with
all her collections when she has a birthday or celebrates
holidays.

---------- .-------....J

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

ing a lengthy late Tuesday
debate between the public and
business members, deferred
until January a decision on
whether to approve the full 12
per cent first year increases in
contracts for 250,000 aerospace
workers.
Although delaying action on
the aerospace contracts, the

board reaffirmed Its earlier
decision to grant full retroactivity to Oct. I for a 5 per cent
raise for 11,500 railroad signalmen. The action expected to set
a pattern for an additional
500,000 rail workers with raises
that fell due also on Oct. l.
After the day-long deUberathe

business members disclosed he
and his management colleagues
had drafted and would present
a proposal automatically challenging any deferred wage
increases of more than 7 per
cent a year In contracts
negotiated prior to the wageprice freeze.

0

0

0

0

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

0

()
.....

~

'

0
,..

0

0

·..o

0

0

0
0

0

'6 ·

0

()

0

0

_,..,

0

-~ -

0

0

-P-~.~" ...... 0

0

o

'

0

.,

0
0

0

0

()

0

0
__,,
....

··-o ...

-

~.

a

0

.....

~-.

0

""0

0

IT'S SNORING
OUTSIDE!

1-1
I
I
I
I

Dateline

I

Gallia

I

I

BY HOBART WiUION, JR.

v

I

l

THE rush is over. It will take several days for most residents
to recover from the frantic pace preceding Christmas.

++ +
BEFORE we start thinking about 1972 and new year's
resolutions, here's a few statements from Gallia County servicemen stationed in the Far East who received Christmas gifts
from the folks back home during the 1971 Operation Yule Seven
project.

+++
Hey! Who is E. E. Caldwell? I got a package the other day
that had a bunch of candy in it and a couple of ink pens, one from
the Conunercial and Savings Bank and one from Quaker State
Oil Co. There was a card in it that said from the folks back home
so I kind of gathered it was from some of the business people in
town. Anyway, if you know E. E. Caldwell, tell him thanks for
me, 'cause that's whose name was on the box.
Corporal Jerry Burns, Okinawa.

+++
I would lik~ to tell you how much I appreciate the large box of
candy you sent to me. It not only made me very happy, a few of
my friends were happy to see it also.
I thank you again for the nice Christmas present, and hope
you will have a nice Christmas.
Sp-4 Robert H. Burlile

+++
I wish to thank you for the present which I received today. I
appreciate the trouble in which you took to send it. I only hope
that this will be the last Christmas which anybody in the military
will have to spend away from home. Thank you again.
SP. James Phillips

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Triblllle
and weekly Gallia Times ... Charleston firm to locate new
asphalt plant in Gallla County area ... Dan T. Davis, 72, former
editor of the Oak HID Press, claimed by death .. . William F.
Glenn, 38, Vinton, found dead on front porch of his home , ..
Farmer's Supply Building, 912 Third Ave., leveled by blaze ...
Columbus East, defending Ohio Class A state champions, bury
Blue Devils, 88-35 . •• Forward Terry Johnson suffers shoulder
dislocation, lost to Blue Devils squad remainder of year.

on these great Playtex Products
PLAYTEX• LIVINc;.
STRETCH BRA-Moves
with You , •. bretthes
with )'00.
Stretch Strops 32·36A.
32-408, 32-42C
Re1. $4.95 Now $3.94
32-420 Now $4.94
Cotton StroP!I32·36A,
32-408, 32·42C
Re1. $4.50 Now $3.49
32·420 Now $4.41

PLAYTEX• LIVING•
LONGLINE STRETCH
BRA-ends midriff
bull• · .. comforttbly-

stretch straps..

34-36A. 34-408. 3H2C
Rea. $7.95 Now $U4
34-440 Now $7.94
Cotton Strops34·36A,
34-408, 34·44C
Ree. $7.95 Now $6.94
34·440 Now $7.94

"-

l!~ng. Line

Stretch

Strop0 34-36A,
34-408, 34·420
Rec. $7.95 Now $6.94
34·440' Now $7.94

Save $1.01
1'\.AYTEX• LIVING'
UNOERWIRE
STRETCH BRAIIIf·adjust, for
comfortable fit and
support-stretch

stropo.
32-408, 32-42C
Rea. $7.00
Now$UI
32420 NowS1.99

Save $1.01

Save
$1.01
1'\.AYTEXO CROSS YOUR
HEART' COTTON BRAStrotch strops. Llfto ond
Seporotes for o Lowlier
Fl111ra.
32-36A. 3HOB, 32·•2C
Roc. $3.SOto.
Now2forll-99

1'\.AYTEXO FREE
SPIRITO TRICOT BRA-

Save $1.01

Total Comfort in a
linJtrit·Soft Tricot for

1'\.AYTEXt CROSS YOUR
HEA~ TRICOT BRA-tho
Noturallooll of Trtcot In a
Cro11Your Hoort Stretch Bro.
Soft Cup-Tricot Strops
32-36~. 32-408, 32-42C
R11. $5.00 Now$3.11
Now 32-420 Now $4.99
Flbtrllll Llnlna-Strlllch
Strops 32-36A, 32·408, •
32-40C
Roc.
Now $4.99

Tod•(.• "Noturol
Look' ... In three Styles:
Soft Cup 32-36.\,
32·408, 32-40C
Roa. $5.00 Now $3.1t
Fiberfill Unod 32-36A,
32·388, 32·38C
Re1. $6.00 Now $4.99
Fully Podded 32-36A,
32·388
Ror. $6.00 Now$4.1t

u.oo

Save $2.01
PLAYTEX~ DOUBLE
CIA MONO·• GIRDLENow with extra tummy

panels for extr1 control.
Shortie-XS, S,.M, L, XL•

Reg. $12.50 Now $10.0
Avg. Leg- XS, S. M, L, XL •
Re1. $12.95 Now ~10.94
Re1. Girdle-XS, S, M. ;_, XL•

Q- W ho is the firs t reign·
ing Japanese monarch ever
to leave his homeland? ·

Save $1.01
1'\.AYTEX•LIVING• LONG-LINE STRETCH BRA-

with extrateneth waistband for tJCtra midriff conlrol.

Strllch

otr~ps

(:otton Strops 34-44C

3•·36A. 34-40B, J,4-42C
Rea. $8.95 Now. ~.M
3..440 Now .94
Roa- $8.95 Now 7.94
34-440 Now
94

Res. $10.95 N"" $8.94
(XL • $1.00 More)

so called?

A-Its name comes from
the fact that it grows in clus·
A- Emp~ror Hirohito, who ters, like grapes.
in 1971, embarked on a
Q-Why is Sept .. 25 , 1956.
seven-nation European tour. nn i.mportant date m the hiSHe met with President Nixon tory of labor?
on his first stop in Alaska . ·
A- It was on this date that
Q- W hich is the smallest the Ford Motor Company
of the woodwi nd instru· established an eight - hour
ments?
day and a five-day week.
A- The piccolo. It is also . Q- Wiw first saw th.e
the highest In pitch.
mnn11 th:-ough a .: e!escope?
Q-,-Wii 1f is lli e Qraptfruit
A- Gallleo in 1609,

· by Coker &amp; Penn

.....

:---

Save $1.01

Ro1. $13.95 Now fH.94

QUICK QUIZ

LANCELOT

Save $1.01

Lon1 Le&amp;-X5, S, M. L XL •

MR. GLOIIII

•
tmts··

Is It Possible To

Offer ex~lres Jan . 15 1972. All eras and Girdles- White . ~ouPont'_s registered trademark. PLAYTEX made with LYCRA• Girdle· Back panel: 74" acetett,
16% rayon, 10% sp.!ndex . Crotch : 100% nylon. (Elastic $ides: 80% nylon, 20% spancte1c.1 E)(Ciuslwe of other elastic .
.
ill 1•11 SY INTII!: It NA TIQ "' .. L ' l o\ Y T £• COII IO O II"TI 0"1
,l'tiNTitD IN U . S . .\ . •

Use Our Free Customer Parking on Second Sbeet and Mechanic Street

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

. '(E:!;I, 6U1" THS &amp;re I?AY TO GO TO 1HS 'b10~5
ANP eXctHANG&amp;: .OLJR GIFT~ ISN'T ·TIL-t.

1.

�A Sort of·]oumal
BY J. A. McKEAN
GAillPOUS - Each year I'm
confronted by the thought, does anyone
know a sure-fire way to quieUy and
systematically plan for Christmas?
Take a simple thing like erecting the
Christmas tree as an example.
Early last week one of my· roosters
· asked, "Pop, when we gonna put up the
tree?"
"This weekend.11

"Just a week ahead! Jeerniny,
everybody else has theirs up already!"
"It's a matter of preference, son.
We do it differenUy." (Timing is the
first issue every year.)
"Anyone seen the tree stand since
we moved?" I asked.
She said, "Oh, I gave that old thing

away."
POMEROY - lltija

I~---------------------------,
I
.
I
I
I
I

II Of the Bend
I

I

'

I

By Bob Hoeflich

antique!"

"You'd fumed at that thing long
enough. Besides, it was a cheapie
anyway.~~

"You don 't understand! That
holder was an old friend. A beloved
antagonist. It challenged me for 15
years and I won every time !"
O.K.,'' I said, "it's done. Now,
who's gonna get the tree?"
"You are," was the unanimous
reply.
"Oh, no! Not old Pop! There's a
scout axe in the basement, a hillside full
of trees within walking distance, and
two healthy colts just brimming with
energy sitting here who can do the job.
I've cut dozens of 'em."
"Pop, nobody does that now!
Besides, it's illegal."
" It was then. Half the fun ."
"You are clearly some kind of nut, "

1

POMEROY - Well - the season has been a real whirl of
activity hasn't it ?I!
According to the popular songs (and I love 'em) hauled out
each holiday season, your Christmas can be white, blue or green.
Personally, mine has been green and I don't mean "money
green" . I mean "envy green". I really turn "kelly " at those
people who are so completely organized. Cards, they have ready
for mailing on the 15th. Gifts are bought and wrapped days and
days ahead and decorations are shimmering from their vantage
points way before the holiday.
Now - Christmas Eve may fiJld you where the firelight
gleams. It finds me in complete frustration still trying to wrap up
the deal and not too successfully. I seem to have to do everything
at least three times and the results are almost scary. Drained by
the time Christmas Eve rolls around, I can flake at the tip of a
tree . And trees do tip you know . And isn't it fascinating how
easily some of those ornaments break. How can there he so many
little slivers of glass from our ornament'
Of course, the Christmas holiday does provide the opportunity for many to do their thing and the housewives really
shine turning out cookies and candy which, everyone suddenly
discovers, are quite fattening . Annie Canaday Chapman did a
thoughtful act. She prepared plates of mouth-watering delectables and sent them about the neighborhood via her youngsters,
Mitch and Jenny. So now everyone on the street will put on a little
weight and all will appear proportunately the same. You should
have seen the plates- just like in the slick magazines.
Doing his share also during the holiday season, certainly a
tradition, has been Gene Grate. He takes to the kitchen at his
attractive home to turn out pound, after pound, after pound of
hand dipped chocolates and elaborately decorated fruit cakes.
These are distributed to many, many friends who abandon the
diet and weight watching and dig right in .
The increased interest in the ceramics hobby has provided
some attractive gilts for the season as those following the hobby
decide on a "home made Christmas". It looks like quite a chore
but those addicted say they really enjoy the whole bit. Mickey
Russell was one of the ceramic enthusiasts to use her talent in
creating gifts and Jane Walton made ceramic favors for her card
club. They were quite a hit, we're told. Geez- and only 128 hours
of work involved. Well - maybe it wasn't thatlong, really .
Then there are the home decorating contests. There's no
doubt about it, the contests do really give Meigs County communities encouragement towards beauty during the holiday
season. Although many don't really go all out to compete,
decorating does appear to be "contagious" and everyone about
seems to put out a litUe something. This year's winds were really
tough on the outdoor decorating scene. At the Meigs High School
where the art department had turned out a Christmas message
which was placed high on the building, the wind finally brought
down the entire decoration after toying with a few of the letters
from several days. And those lawn figures . If you think weights,
wires or ropes will keep 'em standing, forget it.
Hey - and haven't the schools been attractive for the
season ? One wonders where teachers come up with so many
ideas to carry out through their students. Hope you visited a
school - an elementary one - during the holiday season. It
seems to me that children appear almost angelic as they move
through their little programs prepared for the season. Maybe it
would he nice if we could see Christmas through their eyes.
I do hopeyourChristmas is the merriest. I hope that you also
have done one litUe deed for someone less fortunate than yourself. CounUess have and I know they have found it rewarding. If
it hadn't been for your generosity in many directions, i~ would
have been a bleak Chrislmas for many.
Of course, beyond the glitter and tinsel lies the real meaning
and the real reason for the observance of the most wonderful
time - despite my personal frustrations - of the year.
And - from me to you:
Again it's that wonderful time of the year,
The magical, miracle Yuletide is here;
'Tis the season for kindness with no special reason,
Amid joyful laughter and a wee bit of tea sin'.
The presents you bought, you hope will be pleasin',
And under thetree are some gifts you'll he squeezin';
You'll hear those voices rise in good cheer,
The beautiful carols again fall on your ear.
it's time for a party , time for a friend,
A moment for worship - a rich dividend;
And it's time for me to extend to you,
Best Holiday Wishes - Happy "Seventy-Two"!

Milestone is Achieved
Mason County's Phillp Sporn
Plant Thursday at 10 a. m.
reached a milestone in safety
and industry according to an
announcement by Plant
Manager Eugene H. Gloss.
The Sporn plant, operated by
the Central Operating Company made up of Ohio Power
and Appalachian Power
Companies, completed 1
million man hours without a
lost time injury since April 25,
1970.
Immediately upon reaching
this record Joe GiUs, vicepresident and
general
manager of tllll Ohio Power
Company, and W. S. White,
vice-president and general
manager of the Appalachian
Company, called congratlaUons to the 300 plant perSOilnel.
· "

emergency units received checks for $100 each from the
Pomeroy National Bank. Edison Hobstetter, president of the
bank, made the presentation to representatives of the units
including, from the left, Bill Rice, Syracuse; Tom (Pee Wee)
Werry, Pomeroy; Russell MiUs, Middleport, and Walter
Cleland, Racine.

I
II

Beat....

"You didn't! I explaimed. "That
stand was a genuine, dyed-in-the-wool

i•IWI from the OOUDI7'1 four

·,·
'·

Plan Ouistmas?
1

she observed.
I bargained. If they selected a tree
and brought if home, I'd pay the tab.
Next I asked how big a tree we'd
get. That's always good for a beauttlul
hassle.
"A small one . Just big enough for
the lamp table."
"Oh, no! It's gotta set on the floor.
Maybe about four feet."
"Yeah," one said. "About up to
here." His hand washeadleveland he's
5'7" and rising.
This war was averted by my
asking, "Have you agreed on the kind
we'll have this year?"
"A cedar,'' she said. "I never saw a
pine Christmas tree until we moved to
Ohio." (I refrained from answering
with my special biijng wit.)
"I want pine,'' one said. "They smell
so good."
"Too bulky," the other advised.
"How about a nice blue spruce?"
"Kind of expensive," I said. "But I
saw a dandy growin' in a guy's yard on
Hedgewood Drive. If ya wantta use that
axe, a quick rnidnigh! requisition would
do it."
"You want to get them shot!" she
cried.
"Don't know . Check our in-

surance."
The meeting adjourned for a couple
of days . Mayhem Is especially
disturbing at Christmas time. ,
Saturday motning my pudding
giant and his friend, Louis McCormick,
came in with a grocery bag full of
mistletoe. Enough to supply Gallia
county, with Middleport thrown in for
good measure.
"Heavens to Betsy! Have you boys

cornered the market on young ladles'
favors? "

"Naw, we're gonna divide it."
"You'll both have enough
decorate every living room In town,
including the city park!"
"I mean, we'll share II. (With
whom?)
"Pop, shall 1 get the tree?"
"Yeah, gn ahead. So long as you
don't lift somebody's shrubbery. Makes
your mo ther nervous. "
And so he brought the tree home; a
real pretty four foot pine and a new
stand.
"Where're we gonna put it," I
asked. That also is an annual subject
for lengthy, heated debate.
.
"In dining room corner between
the windows."
"In the living room between the

tile

Devoted To The Greater Middle 0/UQ ·VaUev
.
·

:
:

windows.''

.

"In front of the fireplace."
(Luckily, we don't use it.)
"Hoiv about the clothes closet?" I
inquired,
My suggestion was dismissed with
the utter contempt it deserved. The
fireplace spot was adopted.
Now, each year as the youngunb
have grown up I've perfected a few
clever maneuvers which, by degrees,
have shifted the tree decorating onto
them. My schemes worked, and the
boys worked, and by-golly they came
through with about the prettiest tree
we've ever had. With the lights plugged
in, the ornaments sparkled brllllantly.
Very nice, very tasteful.
"Pop, what would you like most
for Christmas? "
"Never mind, lads; I bave II . fond

:
.
:
:
·
:

......... :''.

• "'

..·.. -

-.

.

··· ···~·"' '

.:.·•

~-

.

-'

0

0
j

~AWN

0

c

'

c
a

memories.''

0

a

,·

·.

Business Members Taking Hard Line
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
five business members of the
Pay Board, taking an increasingly harder tine against wage
increases, served notice today
they will challenge all deferred
pay hikes exceeding the board's
top limit of 7 per cent a year.
Their intentions were disclosed after the board, follow-

ANTIQUITY - Mrs. Sarah Diddle, better known u
"Mom Diddle," who has lived all her life in Antiquity,
collects salt and pepper shakers, numbering 125, more or
Jess. She also has 17 coffee pots, one holding 32 cupts that all
members of the family use. She received a travel coffee pot
from her son and daughter-ln-law in Texas for a Christmas
present. She has given away five coffee pots to make others
happy.
Mom Diddle has made pillow slips and crocheted pot
holders for all her friends since she had a stroke in April,
!970. She still crochets every day to help with her therapy
treatments. With the aid of her husband, Oval, she still does
all her own housework . .Mr. and Mrs. Diddle have five boys,
all who served in service, and four daughters; 17 grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren, all who help her with
all her collections when she has a birthday or celebrates
holidays.

---------- .-------....J

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

ing a lengthy late Tuesday
debate between the public and
business members, deferred
until January a decision on
whether to approve the full 12
per cent first year increases in
contracts for 250,000 aerospace
workers.
Although delaying action on
the aerospace contracts, the

board reaffirmed Its earlier
decision to grant full retroactivity to Oct. I for a 5 per cent
raise for 11,500 railroad signalmen. The action expected to set
a pattern for an additional
500,000 rail workers with raises
that fell due also on Oct. l.
After the day-long deUberathe

business members disclosed he
and his management colleagues
had drafted and would present
a proposal automatically challenging any deferred wage
increases of more than 7 per
cent a year In contracts
negotiated prior to the wageprice freeze.

0

0

0

0

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

0

()
.....

~

'

0
,..

0

0

·..o

0

0

0
0

0

'6 ·

0

()

0

0

_,..,

0

-~ -

0

0

-P-~.~" ...... 0

0

o

'

0

.,

0
0

0

0

()

0

0
__,,
....

··-o ...

-

~.

a

0

.....

~-.

0

""0

0

IT'S SNORING
OUTSIDE!

1-1
I
I
I
I

Dateline

I

Gallia

I

I

BY HOBART WiUION, JR.

v

I

l

THE rush is over. It will take several days for most residents
to recover from the frantic pace preceding Christmas.

++ +
BEFORE we start thinking about 1972 and new year's
resolutions, here's a few statements from Gallia County servicemen stationed in the Far East who received Christmas gifts
from the folks back home during the 1971 Operation Yule Seven
project.

+++
Hey! Who is E. E. Caldwell? I got a package the other day
that had a bunch of candy in it and a couple of ink pens, one from
the Conunercial and Savings Bank and one from Quaker State
Oil Co. There was a card in it that said from the folks back home
so I kind of gathered it was from some of the business people in
town. Anyway, if you know E. E. Caldwell, tell him thanks for
me, 'cause that's whose name was on the box.
Corporal Jerry Burns, Okinawa.

+++
I would lik~ to tell you how much I appreciate the large box of
candy you sent to me. It not only made me very happy, a few of
my friends were happy to see it also.
I thank you again for the nice Christmas present, and hope
you will have a nice Christmas.
Sp-4 Robert H. Burlile

+++
I wish to thank you for the present which I received today. I
appreciate the trouble in which you took to send it. I only hope
that this will be the last Christmas which anybody in the military
will have to spend away from home. Thank you again.
SP. James Phillips

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Triblllle
and weekly Gallia Times ... Charleston firm to locate new
asphalt plant in Gallla County area ... Dan T. Davis, 72, former
editor of the Oak HID Press, claimed by death .. . William F.
Glenn, 38, Vinton, found dead on front porch of his home , ..
Farmer's Supply Building, 912 Third Ave., leveled by blaze ...
Columbus East, defending Ohio Class A state champions, bury
Blue Devils, 88-35 . •• Forward Terry Johnson suffers shoulder
dislocation, lost to Blue Devils squad remainder of year.

on these great Playtex Products
PLAYTEX• LIVINc;.
STRETCH BRA-Moves
with You , •. bretthes
with )'00.
Stretch Strops 32·36A.
32-408, 32-42C
Re1. $4.95 Now $3.94
32-420 Now $4.94
Cotton StroP!I32·36A,
32-408, 32·42C
Re1. $4.50 Now $3.49
32·420 Now $4.41

PLAYTEX• LIVING•
LONGLINE STRETCH
BRA-ends midriff
bull• · .. comforttbly-

stretch straps..

34-36A. 34-408. 3H2C
Rea. $7.95 Now $U4
34-440 Now $7.94
Cotton Strops34·36A,
34-408, 34·44C
Ree. $7.95 Now $6.94
34·440 Now $7.94

"-

l!~ng. Line

Stretch

Strop0 34-36A,
34-408, 34·420
Rec. $7.95 Now $6.94
34·440' Now $7.94

Save $1.01
1'\.AYTEX• LIVING'
UNOERWIRE
STRETCH BRAIIIf·adjust, for
comfortable fit and
support-stretch

stropo.
32-408, 32-42C
Rea. $7.00
Now$UI
32420 NowS1.99

Save $1.01

Save
$1.01
1'\.AYTEXO CROSS YOUR
HEART' COTTON BRAStrotch strops. Llfto ond
Seporotes for o Lowlier
Fl111ra.
32-36A. 3HOB, 32·•2C
Roc. $3.SOto.
Now2forll-99

1'\.AYTEXO FREE
SPIRITO TRICOT BRA-

Save $1.01

Total Comfort in a
linJtrit·Soft Tricot for

1'\.AYTEXt CROSS YOUR
HEA~ TRICOT BRA-tho
Noturallooll of Trtcot In a
Cro11Your Hoort Stretch Bro.
Soft Cup-Tricot Strops
32-36~. 32-408, 32-42C
R11. $5.00 Now$3.11
Now 32-420 Now $4.99
Flbtrllll Llnlna-Strlllch
Strops 32-36A, 32·408, •
32-40C
Roc.
Now $4.99

Tod•(.• "Noturol
Look' ... In three Styles:
Soft Cup 32-36.\,
32·408, 32-40C
Roa. $5.00 Now $3.1t
Fiberfill Unod 32-36A,
32·388, 32·38C
Re1. $6.00 Now $4.99
Fully Podded 32-36A,
32·388
Ror. $6.00 Now$4.1t

u.oo

Save $2.01
PLAYTEX~ DOUBLE
CIA MONO·• GIRDLENow with extra tummy

panels for extr1 control.
Shortie-XS, S,.M, L, XL•

Reg. $12.50 Now $10.0
Avg. Leg- XS, S. M, L, XL •
Re1. $12.95 Now ~10.94
Re1. Girdle-XS, S, M. ;_, XL•

Q- W ho is the firs t reign·
ing Japanese monarch ever
to leave his homeland? ·

Save $1.01
1'\.AYTEX•LIVING• LONG-LINE STRETCH BRA-

with extrateneth waistband for tJCtra midriff conlrol.

Strllch

otr~ps

(:otton Strops 34-44C

3•·36A. 34-40B, J,4-42C
Rea. $8.95 Now. ~.M
3..440 Now .94
Roa- $8.95 Now 7.94
34-440 Now
94

Res. $10.95 N"" $8.94
(XL • $1.00 More)

so called?

A-Its name comes from
the fact that it grows in clus·
A- Emp~ror Hirohito, who ters, like grapes.
in 1971, embarked on a
Q-Why is Sept .. 25 , 1956.
seven-nation European tour. nn i.mportant date m the hiSHe met with President Nixon tory of labor?
on his first stop in Alaska . ·
A- It was on this date that
Q- W hich is the smallest the Ford Motor Company
of the woodwi nd instru· established an eight - hour
ments?
day and a five-day week.
A- The piccolo. It is also . Q- Wiw first saw th.e
the highest In pitch.
mnn11 th:-ough a .: e!escope?
Q-,-Wii 1f is lli e Qraptfruit
A- Gallleo in 1609,

· by Coker &amp; Penn

.....

:---

Save $1.01

Ro1. $13.95 Now fH.94

QUICK QUIZ

LANCELOT

Save $1.01

Lon1 Le&amp;-X5, S, M. L XL •

MR. GLOIIII

•
tmts··

Is It Possible To

Offer ex~lres Jan . 15 1972. All eras and Girdles- White . ~ouPont'_s registered trademark. PLAYTEX made with LYCRA• Girdle· Back panel: 74" acetett,
16% rayon, 10% sp.!ndex . Crotch : 100% nylon. (Elastic $ides: 80% nylon, 20% spancte1c.1 E)(Ciuslwe of other elastic .
.
ill 1•11 SY INTII!: It NA TIQ "' .. L ' l o\ Y T £• COII IO O II"TI 0"1
,l'tiNTitD IN U . S . .\ . •

Use Our Free Customer Parking on Second Sbeet and Mechanic Street

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

. '(E:!;I, 6U1" THS &amp;re I?AY TO GO TO 1HS 'b10~5
ANP eXctHANG&amp;: .OLJR GIFT~ ISN'T ·TIL-t.

1.

�'

•

.

,-.

by V. T. HaD&amp;li:ai ,·

ALLEY OOP

WINTIIROP

'

X TIAAP OP 'YOLIR . ·
sPOOi&lt;V 81-!liN.A.NJeAWsf
THUi' 'mRORIZI~'f MY
SU&amp;IECJ'S HA.S
'A
.
1M

OOP/ I'VEi NI'\V
MONKiiiY ... I "'''"'" u.u ~­
'YOU I CAN

·J BST IF I STAY
'

•,.•'
I.

.

.'

.'

'

.

.

.,.

.\

'

·~·.

'' ;
·,

...' ,

•

.

·,

Tf-U:RE HE:
IS/

DARK ., - I Bt=T

I'LL SEE HIM
PRETTi 600N.

HIM lDN IGHT.

•'

.~)

'

.· . l"r'6 GETTING PRETTY

LlP I'LL6EE

STOP, V'HEA~?'

'\

by Dick Cavalli ·.

.

•

'

.

''

'

•
\

•'

'

'

•'

'.

...IN ·FACT
I 1M TRVIN 1
1-!AitD Not
T'SCAR.E
PI=OPI-1:!

HAH! . 1.11&lt;&amp; iH 1 WA.V 'r'OU GOT il-10$1&amp;

FEL.L.AS INTO THIS CAVf! 11-IEN UT
'!OURSELF UP LIKE A CHP.ISJMM•
l'Ft!E AN 1SCARED 1J!M .Sil..l.V!

... NOWLETSS~
IF "r''U CAN,

WHOOPEE! 1J.-I.A.T'

I

'

SCARE MJ;;.

WA550NIE

PARlY•••WHEI:.'

,.•
.,

. 'NIGHT, CHARLEY/

HOHOHO/
L.E5 SING J
ANOTHER. ·

. SONG.!

••
•'
'

.

'~

.,.

'"•

".•

....
~

.•'

·~

..••

"* J..IT"ERA.L

TRANSLATION

•
'
'

.

PBISCIL~A'S
'

POP

by AI Veruteer

ANDY CAPP

She \&lt;Qpt
maklnq ·
peanutbutter- ·
-sandw1ches
... ahd me ,.
· with my ·
weiQht :

'
~

• • •• • •

•

0

0

problem~

0

0

•

•

••

t'&gt;ON 1f 'STANt&gt;
AT THE OOOR,
......IJ

-C0"1e

ON IN AN'

EN J'O"{

"'1f~R

PA~TY. -

.

I could
1&gt;8 tomOI"row &amp;
"GIRL HIJACKS
1

· ~ld

Finally I . made a last:, desperate
dash -fot" ft-eadom...

·

Pat, 011.

'. JOHNNY WONDBB

..._by Dick Roir;ers
r

'
'

.'
'•

.

!Jf.GAN -ON
: MA!lCH l·
~N 46 IJ.C •

''...

..•.
'

'

'

.
·••
•
.
.
...,. ..'
.,

___

.,..

'jiNifilcts.... '
l'N ANCIE!N1'
1'1MS6, 1'HE!
NSW YSAIZ..

1
'

•.

.

.'
' '
'

JUI..I US CA66AIZ. ..
MOVS~ 1HE! ·
!'!!~INNING OF

:

•

•

'1'HS NfiW Yli'A~ .
1'0 J'ANUA~Y i. ··

.

''

'

~

•'

.

.
,,

THIS WEEK'S TOP
PRIZE QUESTION :

,,'

'•''

fi
.B
,,
".•

'•

'

~

•"..

,, .

...

· I. •
'

'.

~

'

.:J.'

I '

•IVEN IF I AM THE CHAIRMAN OF THE IIVEl Alffi.POU.UTION COMMITTU,
:ETHEL, I'D JUST AS SOON YOU STOPPED ltEFEWHG TO Ml /IS

"1111 WAY I UHDlUTAND IT HEll Glllll.l ur GOI" .

. .""

THE HIGH MUCKY-MUCKr

.

••

l. .

'

~

· - .... - - ~. ~·-/ ·-· ·· -I

'
·-··

.
.· - ..
••

'

. ·'

'

~-

•

'

I

1

''

.•"".

•

�by Les Carroll

OUR, BOARDING HOUSE
Dv III'T Tli LL
ME 'YOU'RE
SK11NG1
SH.4RI&lt;..!

AT L~,t..ST WE KNOW
. WHE\(E. "TO l-OOK,'lHE. QWL~ CLUB!

. JUST

FAVORING

IF' ~ANTA

'S/&gt;..Y~

1'EGAD'' WHEN HE

T~\5 DO~t..

·

MY NEW WRI~T WATCH SAY!5
·n·IE. !&lt;E5ClJcRS, H.Ao.Vt:: FALLEN
INTO lt-\c TENDER TRAP~

OPEN$ THe: DOOR,
WE'IIE' GOT HIM!

~ESC.UEI&lt;S!

Pr~oTo

' '

LLlG- KOME THREE
I&lt;IJM·AND·I3UiTE.RED
6E.NT5 IG MOJ:lE.
Tr\AN :I: CAN

WHO'LL GO TO
REGCt.iE. It-It::

WITH A

.

HOW ONE MAN CAl'\ .

FATHOM!

'"

~'""'"'•

~ND

YJU SAID
'IOU t&gt;ON'f SK.d
i,

\WIGGG. YOU'RE. IHE. LA&lt;SI
KOY'E OF THI~ 16LOO TO
~UND UP OUR
1&lt;ELUCTANT

GOMEiiMES

t

Wl~li

EGAP. IWIGG5. YOU'RE
JU~i IN "TIME TO .JOIN
'lHE. HOOPLE M.A.NOR
UNIT OF' THE OWLS
CLUB TRA'JELIN6

'l'D NE.\/E~ LEFi

~COTI.AND YA~D­

WHP..T-!

~E.INDE~~!

- .

1',

YE MERRIE, CSEN"TLEMEN •••

ALL

106E.T11ER,

./"

(,.

NOW: '

MIHSIREL~ 1

'

•.
••

HAPPY

1-\0LIDAYG

TO

AL.L!

UJt\Ai lliP ~00 !{~~~?
. "I, 402, 94~ Gr..A'SS~S

of

'411-K AND 825,2"'.1'9 .
COO!&lt;t~S.I

. by Stoffel &amp; Hei:tndahl

BUGS BUNNY
W~AcK.:

WAKE UP, SYLvesreg,

YA LAZY CLUCK/

w

.

SPI.OOT- ••

5~0~~}(.·

MN~=or1

a

'V.b!VE. f&gt;EEN EAIIN' AN'

OFF Mt: TH' . 1
WHOLe: HOLIDAY SEASON,
SLE~PIN'

PACK UP AN' SCRAM!

I

IMPL.O~E

'IOU

I REALI:i!'E
I HAVE.

YEAH iHAi 600K
O' WAt:LPAI'ER

NOI~EN
A~L­

5AMPLES

GUE:'SI, 6u'r
I 010 GIVE

I~

REAL

E')(CinN''
•

YOUA ..

CHF{\STMA'S

Fl
L

C71FI/

I'U. LE:r

YA STAY
ON 111.\..
Ne\'

YOLlRWISH
IS MY

COMMANO/

Yi:A~'S
I~

YA

HEI.P ME.
CLEAN
UP TI-l'

PLACE.,1

D

I CAI'J'r .
DfCIDI!a

'TIS A

PS~P\..~ING

Wl-leTH~R

F'ROI3LEM!

T'SIARI IN

I\,h 7AKE A S~T' CATNAP WHIL~
YUI..IRE MAKING uP YOUR MIND/

He~E~ON

"THAI PILE.
O' Dti~TY
DISHES
IN TH'

KITCHEN/

SURE!
NOW,

o;IR. KNIC,\-\T,
REM~MBER.

THE.

FIRST

--

by Art Sansom.

TilE BORN LOSBR

LESSON!

IF ~ERE'S Ol-E P6R~ I'V(;; WANTeD TO
MEeT, IT'S GLADYS' U~LE CHAl&lt;LIE!

.A DAY SELroA PASSES -rn~&gt;.TW~
Mt:NTION 'lOUR t.lAME!

JUST LAST ~\U{T, !5/&gt;.ID ~f..T/IS, IT1S HI~ TIM~
~~~CAARLIE P/&gt;.\D US A\1\SIT!

J

I N..~'1S SA~ BLOOD IS 11-\ICKGR 'THAN NaJ-I

.1ER~ RI~T,

.,

•

'
T)o4, lq, U.S. Pat. Otf.

'

H~~~HEH,HE~

~I

·~ "

--~1"'1'PJ4-R!J.Q -

c.AAR!..I&amp;~

'
'

IF ~OU ~U..~ W.b..t..\T 11\M.
TO REMEM~R US HJ HIS
WILL, STOP C,A.l..Ll~
U~LE" FRED WCLE

CHAAL.te!

�.

J '

'

•·. , •

The American Farm~r in 1972:
A Dwindling Troubled Breed
By JESSE BOGUE
United Press Iolernatlonal
In 1870, Ebner Zeis' grandfather loaded
his household goods into a wagon and left
Ne1v York state for the west, to the threeyear-old state ol Nebraska .
It was not a unique event. By the
thOU!allds, others were doing the same or
already had headed for those rich prairies
beyond the Mississippi and the Missouri.
Now, by the millions, their descendants
~\ave left the soil, and gone back to the
cities and towns.
But Ebner Zeis still is on a Nebraska
!ann, living in the farmhouse where he
wu born, working 600 acres of levellapd
northeast of the town of Valley, 18 miles
west of the bustling city of Omaha where
other descendants of the covered wagon

I

© 1971 by IUA, 1"·•

voyagers now live the urban life.
. A. Deellnhlg Breed
Zels, a hard-working and thoughtful
man, represents a. declining breed-a
fanner who has stayed on the land. He
plans to continue his life there.
The shrinkage of the United States fann
population is shown by government figures
for the post-World War II years.
In 1949, an estimated 26 million persons
were on farms, representing 17.5 per cent
of the total United States population at that
time. In 1959, it was down to 16.6 million,
representing 9.4 per cent of the total, or a
little more than half of what had been the
proportion 10 years earlier. By 1969, it was
10.3 million, 5.1 pet. of the total; and
the estimated population for 1970 wu 9.7
million, or 4. 7 per cent.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:\

'

•

Nixon Certairi
en1ng
China Talks Finest Act
Highway

Found Devaluation of

-""'

Deaths

U.S. Dollar Toughest
MISS AMERICA, Ulurie Lea Schaefer, who began her climb to international fame as Miss
Southern Ohio in 1968at Pomeroy, looks on as Gov. Gilligan (left ) and North American Rockwell President Robert Anderson (right) discuss the beneflts of doing business in Ohio. Miss
Schaefer has joined Ohio's development team on several ocCBBions to help promote the
ooainess opporlunities which exist in the state. The governor is holding an Ohi&lt;rmade
product, Moon Oleeze, produced by Fisher Cheese Co., Wapakoneta, home of Neil Armstrong,
first man on the moon.

-..--

lllttl _ _ _ _

LIKE '10

THAR'S &amp;I
OF 'EM,AL~
"ROUND US!! EACH ONE WIF
SHARP LI'L TEETf-1-

!;AID. PANTLESS," f1E
WHO'S SCRATCH Il-l'
HAIN'T P\JNCHIN'.'r'
THANKS A LOT-

f

-'

~~~~-~~·-·
• •
•--• •-••••

••

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

l'l"®i.-~!I!!K'li~
··~
· :;:'f'j~···········.-.·-.-..·.·········
• . . . ~ •••• '"'
"'"""'.
.~...!.
· " '.........
. . . . . . .. . . . ..... . . . . . . .. .~
-0:.' oh
o o oo&lt;oo~ooooo&lt;o~o*

I N~ws. . •in Briefs I
By United Press International

~R·R·R! ,,

ffiA~'f'~NOT

OUT OF THE

wooo5 'le:r..

WITH ON8
L.E'6 IN A
!E:AR TRAP!

51...AZE5r
WHAT A ME?7!

CAt.J'T VEL.!. FOR
HEL.P•• OR THAr
CONNIVI~G FE:MAL.S
AND HSF:. FATHE:R

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence
OH,OH; WHAT':7 THAI I HSAR~ ...
50ME ANIMAL. CREI:Pir-16 LJP ~

MA'{ 55 AFTE:R
ME: A6AIIJ WIT"'
50TH BARRE:l.S&gt;
II

••

5URE. I BETCHA!,,
GO L.OOK AT THE:'
TI&lt;'AP.l;'J&lt;'E~CH'il

N · G£:6 WHIZ, EA~Y! ... Mci&lt;E:E:

·

c ~AID
'IOU ViER!= 1"-' IMP 0/JOR.
WITH.J..ORD PERTWI:IS .AI\IP HI?

X

T

DAU6HTER-

~LJT

IDI CUI.OU!!!&gt;!

THI:&gt; 17

Tree Lights

Blamed for

WASHINGTON -ON NEW YEAR'S DAY, FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover will celebrate his 77th birthday. He describes his
health as "excellent" and says he never has considered stepping
down.
"I have never considered stepping down from my position in
the FBI u long u I can be of service to my country and have the
health, vigor and enthusiasm to perform my responsibilities in
the manner my superiors and the public have a right to expect,"
Hoover said. Hoover made the comment in answer to written
questions submitted him by UP!.

CAPTAIN EASY

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1971

Time's Man of the Year

HAS 'IO'INER. SEEN

A H()SQUITO? -

In Fresno, California, in the land from
which much of the United States gets its
fruits and other land products, Vernon
Wynn is manager of the Production Credit
Assoclatioo, source of farm loans. He said
the farmer could not have witmtood inDation had he not increased efficiency and those who could not make !he grade
are mostly gone.
Wynn said the average loan made by
PCA was $20,000 in 1961, and has jumped to
about $75,000 today. Farmers are having a
tough time meeting expenses from their
own resources, he said, and are borrowing
for longer periods of time.
In some cases, he hu told a farmer \o
find an "outside" job, or even to have his
wife get a job in order to make enough
money to live upon.

Devoted To Tlte Interestl Of The Meigs-Mason Area

-THE'I WON'T BITE ~017'1'
THE'I'5 50 SMALL!! AN' ~.-"\ UNLE.SS Tf.\E'I'~ FLAVORED
THE'I'S SO FlloaiCI&lt;'I'··
WIF SWEET PATOOTIE POLLEN-

5E.E.N A
MOSQUITO-BUT

TH' "SAVE. NOW,
PM LATER''
PLAN-

want to stay on the farm.
"We're still waiting for things to get
better. Ten years ago, I would have
thought by now we would not have any
financial problems -and we shouldn't, but
we do.
·
"I keep doing more very year to try and
expand - like I want to put 100 more acres,
in crops and increase my feeding
operation. Yet, I'm afraid of the prices.
"I don't think the government has solved
anything since it began creating
agricultural programs," Zeis continued,
"But I don't think now it;.could leave
suddenly. I wouldn 'I prefer any more
permanent help from the government; but
they got us into it, they should get us out ...
pricing and tax relief are things the
government could do pretty easily."

Cloudy today, tonight and
Tuesday, chance of light rain
or drizzle today, rain changing
.. w showers tonight and
ruesday. Low tonight in the
low 40s to low 50s south. High
Tuesday in the 60s south,
turning cooler in the afternoon .

Tht: Worst is
Yet to Come

ME.!! !:V'R'IOOD'i'S

tax relief are things the government can do pretty easily. ... '
. . . . .·. .... ........ ...... ................. .;.,.....:·.·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·.·. ·............··.·. .

Many English graves are
adorned with hatchments,
diamond-shaped wooden or
canvas plaques which by their
coloration and design told of
the
deceased's
accomplishments, sex and
marital status

00 WONDER. NOe&lt;ODY I!YI.R DID

AH'LL HANDLE

...........-:.

Weather

•

YORE CASE O!J

•

. ..

'The government got us into this, it can get us 'out; pricing and

Skyrockellug Costs
ment for under $1,000," he said. "The
Zeis, helped out by his wife, Irene, and .combine I bought this fall cost $20,000; l
sons Mike, 14, and David, 12, grows about pay all that and use it one month out of the
330 acres of corn, some hay, and feeds year. Then I have to trade a piece or two
about 300 head of cattle a year. He is a each year just to keep current."
Zeis estimates he has $50,000 tied up in
fann bureau'member, and president of the
machinery, and another $25,000 in storage
Douglas Couilty Extension Board.
To Zeis, price fluctuations are part of the buildings and bins. "It's just as if someone
overall picture that has seen the small in the city would try to get along with what
fanner leave his land to a larger en- they made 30 years ago," he said.
Cost factors are ahnost as bad in the
terprise.
Asked to pinpoint the main problem livestock area, he continued. Buy beef for
facing farmers, he gave an answer which feeding at $36.50 per hundred pounds; add
might be typical of any small buslhess- to that the costs of feed; a death loss of lto
man: Crop and livestock prices might be 2 per cent; .7 to 7% per cent interest on
satisfactory if it were not for the money borrowed to buy ·livestock;
skyrocketing costs of equipment and machinery prices; fence and building
upkeep, veterinary costs ...
maintenance.
"You can't get a piece of small equip·
"We're not crybabies," Zeis said. "I just

1

PRIC!'.I NO oeJ!'.CK,
PANTLE.SS P!'.RKINS!." oJI'.ST
SAvE MAH &gt;JOSE. FUM
61TTIN' FLATTENED BY
ROTTEN RALPH IE.,
TOMORR'I-

·..

• •·.·.·.••·••·.·.·,•,-.-,· , •,·,·.·.·.·.·-············· .·.• ·.·.·.·.-.·.-.·.·.·.·.. ·• .u·.. •·• •

Now You Know

VOL. XXIV NO. 179

®

·.·.-. _.-

$2,000 Loss

Damage lo the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Grueser,
Laurel St., Pomeroy, were
estimated at $2,000 as a result
of fire Saturday night.
WASHINGTON- 'DIE U.S. CHAMBER of Commerce's
Pomeroy Fire Chief Henry
chief economist predicts American economic output wlll jump Werry said that the family was
9.5 pet. in 1972 while the inflaUon rate wlll he cut substantiaUy. in Athens on a visit and had left
The opl1mlstic forecast wu made Sunday by Dr. Carl H. the lights burning on their
Madden in a year.end paper. He predicted a "record economic Christmas tree. A defective
advance" next year.
wire apparently started the
"The streugth and breadth of accelerated economic grojVIh fire in the tree. The blaze
will extend to every sector, including consumer buying and spread upstairs between
blslness investment," Madden wrote. "All the economy gathered rafters, causing heavy smoke
!trength, the jobless rates will fall along' with the rate of pMce damage to the contents of the
house .
Increases."
The call was received at 9:35
other business leaders polled by Nation's Business magazine
generally agreed the economy should be on the upswing in 1972 p.m. Saturday. It had not been
bit had difficulty assessing President Nixon's economic policy. determined Monday morning if
the two story frame home or its
WASHINGTON - EARL L. BUTZ, THE NEW agriculture contents were covered by insecretary, has set a colllslon course with Congress by demanding ' surance.
The fire was discovered by a
defeat of a bill to boost wheat and feed grain price supports for
fanners by 25 pet. Butz earlier had merely said he was studying neighbor who turned in the
the legislation for Us posalhle impact, although other ad- alann.
mlnlstration fann off!ctsis had denounced it.
But Ina weekend "Wasblngton Window" interview with UPI,
the secrelary urged the Senate to kill the price support blll, ·
already passed by the House, on grounds it would ''wreck" farm
export prospects and the government's !ann surplus suppOrt
program. Butz also said in the interview that he opposed any
reduction in the currept $55,IJOO.iler-crop ceiling on government
Two cars collided at the
subsidies to blg fanns, although he planned to vigorously enforce
intersection of Bridgeman and
the current limit.
Second Sts. in the vlllage of
Syracuse Friday at 5:20 p.m.,
THE NEW B~GLA DESH GOVERNMENT issued a formal
Marshall Milton Varian
appeal today asking Bengalill not to take revenge against East
reported.
Pakislani collaborators. The request was the first from the new
A car driven by Ronnie M.
government asking Bengalill to stop reprisals against oon- Pickens, 15, Syracuse, collided
Bengalissince the 14-day war between India and Pakistan ended with another driven by
Clarence A. Searls, 54,
Dec. 17.
Cheshire. There were no in·
An Indian official said earller Indian troops would not step
juries. The.r e was minor
Into local affairs and planned no action to try to stop conununal
strife. Ben gall residenla of the People's Republic of Bangla Desh damage to both vehicles.
Pickens was cited to juvenile
- formerly East Pakistan - said West Pakislanl troops and
court
on charges of no
collaborators corrunltted thousands of atrocities In the country
operator's license.
since civil war broke out March 25.
.

Collide at
Comer

McLEAN, VA. - RETIRED GEN. Emmett "Rosie"
O'Dormell Jr., credited with "one of the most distinguished
careers In the history of the U.S. AJr Force, died here SUnday. He
was 65.
·
O'Donnell died of coronary artest at his home In Mclean a
•
(Con~wed on Page 8}

LOCAL TEMPS
.
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 57 degrees under
J

t'lnud,v_ lllki~,«.l.

Top 600

NEW YORK (UPI) - President Nixon said Sunday his most
bnportant decision of 1971 was opening cOmmunications with
China, a move he believes will contribute more to world peace
than anything else he has done .
The most difficult domestic decision this Y.ear was to impose
wage-price controls and devalue the dollar, the President said.
Named "Man of the Year" by Time magazine, Nixon's
remarks were made in an interview published by the magazine
Sunday.
"The most important
decision I made this year wu
the decision to open com·
munications with Olina," he
said. "I believe that it will
make a grealer contribution to
the next generation, to peace in
the world, than anything else
we have done.
"It was a mixed bag u far as
publlc reaction was concerned," the President said. "I
knew that it posed many
rcoblems with many of our
friends in the world. But It had
to be done and this country had
to make that move. No other
country could; ironically, the
Soviet Union was unable to."
Discussing his economic
moves on the domestic front,
Nixon said, "It became apparent that if the U.S. was
going to mainlain Its competitive positron in the world, some
very strong medicine had to be
taken by the patient, the U.S.,
and also given to our trading
partners in the world.

"I wsa troubled by It because
I am committed to the free
market. "But I would be much
more troubled If this had been
done by someone else. I don't
believe in controls as an end in
themselves or on a pennanent
basis."
·
Nixon said he believed he has
a greater opportunity than any

Be~Jrd

President in history to help
create a new structure of peace
in the world.

$500 Won

In Pomeroy
Kathleen Hesson, New
Haven, was the grand prize
winner in Pomeroy's annual
merchant holiday promotion
program. She was awarded a
$SOil prize Friday afternoon.
Winners of $5 glft certifi1ates
we':'e Belly Denny, Middleport;
Mary Roush, Pomeroy;
Nondus Hendricks, Racine;
Eliza Powell, Pomeroy Route
4; Fay Gum, Pomeroy, Route
4;
Elizabeth
Ohlinger,
Pomeroy; Eileen Swan,
Syracuse; Mrs. S. F.
Nicholson, Rutland ; Nancy
Bragg, Point Pleasant; Walter
Grinslead, New Haven; Robert
Brown, Pomeroy; Mary
Robinson, Coolville Route 2;
Mary Kauff, Pomeroy; Vernal
Well, Shade; Mrs. Paul
McElroy, Pomeroy; Nancy
Adams, Racine; Mildred
Zirkle, Hartford; Wilma
Davidson, Rutland; Greg
Poston, Worthington; A. Abbott, Pomeroy Route 3; Leon
McKnight, Pomeroy; Berela
Dalley, Pomeroy, and C. R.
Hysell, Middleport.

~.

:

...

'f

Car Destroyed by Fire

Shed in Pulpit

· BROOKTON, Mass. (UPI)-Carolyn
O'Brien was never particularly fond of
her husband's beard. She wasn't
exactly wlld about the way he decided
to shed it either.
"I felt like crawling under the pew,"
she said Sunday alter her lwsband, the
Rev. James O'Brien, produced a pair
of .clippers and an electric razor to
shave the five-month growth during a
sennon from the pulpit of the First
Pal1sh Congregational Church. His
topic wu judging people by appearances.
Mrs. O'Brien said later, however, she
was.pleased with the outcome. ''I think
he looks younger without it."
Her children, Kathryn, 11, and David,
·9, who mu.mured ' \ don't belleve it"
...hi1lll thoir f'o.thoa.r

Unlled Press Jnlernatlonal
The Christmas holiday
traffic death toll passed the 600
mark today, far surpassing
last year's total of 504 and
closing in on the upper end of
the National Safety Council's
estimate for this year's holiday
'
weekend.
Despite an all-out effort by ·
•·
most states to curb this year's
traffic death toll, the death
figure soared. Many states
issued special holiday direcUves to policemen to especially
"concentrate on areu of high
traffic and heavy traffic."
Florida Gov. Reubin Askew
ordered the highway patrol to
MRS. ROGER miL, Racine, gave birth to a six-pound,
"get every available man on
one-l!alf ounce boy Christmas Day in the Holzer Medical
the road ... to keep people from
Center, Gallipolis. The baby arrived at 6:48p.m., and was the
killing themselves."
first of four Christmas Day babies born in HMC Saturday.
The NSC had estimated that
between 520 and 620 persons
would die In traffic accidents
before the 78-hour holiday
period that began at 6 p.m.
A car was destroyed by fire County Sheriff Dept. reported. Thursday local time ended at
and another demolished in a
Saturday at 5 p.m. a car Sunday .midnight.
A United Press International
single car accident over the driven by Claire Emerson
holiday weekend the Meigs Mitchell, 36 1 Pomeroy, Rt. (, count at 9 a.m. EST showed 616
caughtfire moving on township persons died In traffic acroad 41. The 1971 Plymouth cidents during the holiday
Accidents Run
was completely destroyed. period.
A breakdown:
Mitchell escaped without inTraffic
616
To Total of 10
Juries.
Fires
65
According to the activity
Planes
10
Sunday at 9 a.m. on county .
report of the GaUia-Meigs Post road 26, eight tenths of a mile Other
34
State Highwa:r Patrol, 10 southwest of Five Points,
Total
725
traffic accidents were in, Daniel Charles Bissell, 38,
California reported 64 traffic
vestigated over the Christmas Chester, was traveling nor(Continued on Page 8)
holidays in which four persons thwest when his vehicle went
..........-:..·.•,•.-.·.·.· .......... .
were injured. There were no off the highway on the right RC.It!:li.!IHi
fatalities.
PICKUP DAYS
and struck a tree. The driver
The patrol arrested 46 said he fell asleep.
RACINK- There wW be a
persons, issued 60 warnings
trub
pickup In this village
Bissell was taken to VeteranS
and made 15 assists to Memorial Hospital by the
tomorrow, Wedllesday and
motorists. Eleven persons Pomeroy E·R unit where he
on every Tuesday thereafter,
were charged with driving was admitted. No citation was
Mayor Charlu Pyles anwhile under the influence.
nounced today.
issued.

•hovl ..cr ;.., l•f'\nf

of an astonished congregation, later

turned thumbs down on their dad.
saying he looked more ''hip" with the
growth.
For his part, the 37-year-old minister
said his act served the purpose.
"I did it as an objectlesson, but It was
a lot of good fun, too. I asked them if I
were any different going bearded into
the pulpit than coming out clean·

shaven."
The minister said he rec.elved "a lot
of flak" from his congregation when he
appearf\1 with the beard after his vacation last summer.
"I'm just finishing up eight years so
people know me well enough to know
that I'm not a kooky guy," he said, "but
when I appeared with the beard I had
I,..,~ .~

.,i;..,a ,...

f t - - - "' '

Probes Seek Oases
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet
Union's Mars 2 and Mars 3 probes are
looking for "oases" on ihe red planet
that might contain life.
Two scientists said Sunday the
mission of the two unmanned craft
orbiting Mars Is "to study Mars
thoroughly and see .whether there are
what might be called "osaes &lt;111 the
surface --aections more suitable for life
than other."
Writing in Pravda, the Communist
Party newspaper, Prof. Georgi Petrov
and Dr. V. Moroz said. .
"The biosphere, II there is such, must
be concentrated in such oases. They
must be warmer and situated In low
places where there Ia more inOlsture."
Their commentary made clear that a
search for Martlu llffl

.......,....__lha

Soviet Mars program. They defended
the !rOKram against skeptics who
contend Mats Is barren.
"U there is life anywhere else in the
solar system, It is on Mars," they

wrote.
"We know the climate of Mars is
severe, but that Is not enough to force.a
negative reply to the question whether
there Is life on Mars."
The i!Cientlala said "the general
direction of our program Ia to prepare
· for the senllna of autCIIUited biological
labocatarlee to Mar~."
Man 2 and Mara 3_are the vquard
of such pnpm'lltloo, they llllid.
"Ufe fofllll, 11¥1 eapeclallJ the
life fOI'IIll, haYe I 'Vel'J' broad
l .l i m p l e l t

..__ tl

tMn

n

thlnr .,..,.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="83">
    <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="1803">
                <text>12. December</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="36026">
            <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="36025">
              <text>December 26, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
