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TheOaililySelnt~I.Middleport-Pomer~yt
, O., Ja~5f
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.F irst business meetui.g Monday

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GSI re.cei·vm·g "ad·d·t.·onal
$294 ooo
· _£or provements

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MEIGS THEATRE

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FIELD OONVEYOR- One of the 80-foot field &lt;:Onveyors
used by the lj:pling .Co. is In plaqe and ready to move coal

from barge to storage area at the site of the Gavin Power
Plant construction project.

Sand, gravel firm ·busy-at
• Pictures and

Story
· By Daje Rothgeb, Jr.
, CHESHIRE - Ten tons .a minute every minute - seven hours a day for 15 ·
days.
That's 70,000 tons of sand and gravel
unloaded by tl!e M. T. Epling Company's
floating derrick, the Hoosier, at the Gavin
plant. Fi'onl barges on the Ohio river, the
M006ier, operated by Bernard Fellure and

his crew, lifts the material in a clamshell
into a hopper. The hopper feeds onto a
chain of conveyor belts.
And that chain of conveyor belts
carries the sand and gravel 700 feet from
the river bank across a field , up and over
Route 7 through a bridge into the concre~
materials storage yard where it Is stacked
30 feet high.
A vital link in the chain of regional

Ga~in

industrial development, the M. T. Epling
Company is busy doing more than
producing sand and gravel for roads, highways, and construction . Epling's
"stevedores" load and unload bulk
commOdities '- sand, gravel, stone, slag,
salt, coal, and ore- for customers all over
the. Ohio River System. These "portable
port" fleets include the Hoosier, the
Bluegrass,and the Buckeye. Each ofthese

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Alley Cats •
All in the Famity
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Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

38

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Team high game -

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Men ' s high series -

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.

THREE SECTIONS
Pomeroy -Middleport

NO. 49

VOL VII

SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1973 · · -

Men's high ga · e -

f irSt.

Ken Longstr~19 ; secoM,
Wally Hatfield 1.
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pom01oy
rullond

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Ken Longstreth ·194; second,
Jerry Vanlnwagen 191.

Women's high series - fil'st, ·

pomeroy
nationa
bank

Sandy Korn 4S8 ; second, Diane
Hawley 394 .

Women's high game - first.
Barb Murray ,169 ; second,
Belly Longstreth 163.

the bonk of
the century

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established IB72

Weather
Snow likely tonight and
Saturday IX"Slbly mixed with
rain or 'sleet in the extreme
south. LQWs tonight In the 20s
and upp~r teens . . Highs
Saturday In the 20s In the north
to the mid aos in the south.

filember

FDIC

MIDDL.EPORT, 0.

-Womens and Girls Cbats,
Sportswear
. Dresses,
.
.
~Mens and Boys J~~~s, Sweatets, Shirts
-Sheets, Towels, Bed Spreads, Jewelcy,
H$1dbags, Lingerie, BMyshifts.·

Four rescued
rom burning&amp;~
.

Ingels and Rickman
elected by C of C
MIDDLEPORT - Officers for 1973 and lng~is for their wor~ in c~rrying out
were elected Friday night by the Mid- the holiday promotion. "Without. their
dleport Chamber of Commerce meeting at efforts the program could not have been
the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electrlc carried out," Kloes said.
Co.
,
The chamber madethits Cotha nksbofficiadl
George Ingels was elected new to Middleport vi 11age, e 1um us an
presldent of the organization and Jim Southern Ohio Electric Co. and to memRickman was named new ~ice president. · hers of the Meigs .Chapter, Order of
Reelected were .. Mrs. June Kloes, DeMolay, for their wo.rk in decorating the
secretary, and Mrs. Alwilda Werner, town and for assisting with the "freeing "
treasurer. cash Bahr, chairman, reported - of the meters during the holiday season.
for the nominating committee.
Thanks were Qlso extended to the
Manning Kloes, outgoing president, Middleport Fire Dept., the high school
was highly complimentary to Mrs. Werner . bands of Kyger Creek, Eastern, Southern,
and Meigs Local for participating II) the
Christmas parade, and to the Riggs Royal
Kadets and the Wallace Glo-ettes and all
others who took part.

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Two plead
their guilt

,

GEORGE INGELS, center, was
elected president of the Middlepori
Chamber of Commerce Friday night.
Mrs. June Kloes, left, was reelected
secretary, and Mrs. Alwilda Werner,
right, reelected treasurer. Jim Rickman, not pictured, was named vice
president.

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy.
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Four other perao111 released on bond •
Friday were Michael B. carlisle, William
WINTER HoBBY .- Occupying her time the past two winters haji. been no
'Bill Henry, Sandra Pierce and Eddie Pesrl
problem
for Mrs. Myrtle Harrison of r,tiddleiXlrt. She spent the long cold days
· McDermitt.
·
Saturdaf morning those in jail were working on this colotful quilt- the flower garden pattern - · putting together the
John Paul Hailleld, Nicholas King and ~.628 pieces. It \vas completed last week. The quilt iS Mrs. Harrison's belated
Christmas gift to ber daughter, Mrs. Elbert Williams, of Minersville Hill.
··
Karl Utiey Ballne•

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Wide area in
dark for
three hours .
GALLIPOLIS - Residents west of Rt.
160 and those residing in the Bidwell,
Vinton, ' and' Rio Grande areas were
without electricity for three hours FridJy
night following a freak accident at the
junction of Rt. 35 and Jerry Drive .
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post,
the dump bed on a truck driven by Lonnie
Boggs, Rt. 1, Bidwell, came up, striking a
telephone line. It iore down three
telephone poles and two electris: poles
owned by the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company, There was minor
damage offjcers said.
The outage left· hundreds of homes
without electrical heat.
In addition, lights flickered during at
. least · two area basketball gallles, the
Gallipolis-Logan tilt, and the Kyger CreekNorth Gallia game.
Ahorse owned by Max Elkins of Rt. 2,
NEW BANK DIRECTOR - Atty.
Crown City, was killed at 3 a.m. Saturday
John E. Halliday, president of the First
when siruck by a state highway truck
National ·Bank, Galllpolls, Saturday
operated by John Paul Stone, 55,
announced the .appointment of Paul c: Gallipolis.
~tewart, 46, Walnut T,.lp., as a new
The accident occurred at the inbank director. Mr. Stewart I• a farmer . tersection of Rt.. 218. and Clay Chapel Rd.
and stock dealer, and Is marrled to the
Officers reported another horse owned by
fomuir Betty A. Bradshaw, Waterloo.
Elkins was struck by an auto driven by
They~~ the parents of seven children.
Kenneth R. Birchfield, 32, Rt. 2, Northup,
·Agraduate of-Cadmus High School, Mr.
Friday afternoon.
Ste~art seped in the United States·
Merrill F. Cox, 34, Gallipolis, was '
A:rmy from 194t to 1946. Other directors
cited to Municipal Court for driving left of
Include E. E. Nuil, Clyde Ramsay,
center following a traffic ~ccident at 5:50
. Russell
Wood
and
Mr.
Halliday.
p.m. Friday on Rt. 160, six tenths miles
.
north of Vinton.
CALLED OUT TWICE
The patrol said Cox's car collided with
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's an auto operated by Ivan D. Grant, 18, Rt.
volunteer emergency squad was called 1, Ewington . There .was moderate damage
twice Friday. Squadmen transferred Oral to both cars. '
Barnett,. 42, Salyersville, Ky., .who was
· Officers extinguished an auto· fire at
v-isiting friends here to the Holzer Medical 7:10 p.m. Friday on Rt. 7, two and two
Center for 'treatment of a head laceration. tenths miles south o( Rt. 218. A short in
Oma· Martin, 73, Rt. I, Bidwell, was electrical wiring was blamed f~r a fire In a
taken to the. hospital as a medical patient 1973 auto owned by Robert E. Spears, 28,
Friday night.
Gallipolis.
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mide~nor.

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PT. PLEASANT - An eighth name,
Donald R. Bankenship, has been released
lfl connection ·with drug . indictments
returne9 by the January term Grand Jury
•Tuesday.
.
Blankenship and Nicholas King en·
tered pleas of "guilty" to Judge James Lee
Thompson in Circuit Court Friday. .
· The two were among II persons m·
. dieted on presentmerits made by ·
.rrosecutlng AttOrney Don C. Kingery·.The
names of two juveniles have. not been
· teleased and neither has the name of
another adult not In custody·
Blankenship and King were
represented by attorney c. J. Hyer.
Blankenship.plesded 'guilty to possession,
a misdlmleanor offense, and King guilty to
sale of an illegal or controlled drug, a
felony. King . was also charged with
possession and is expected to enter a plea
to thls Indictment, when the two appear
. before Judge ThQrnpson for sentencing
February 2,
Bolid for those charged In connection·.
wltl! the drug coWIIs was set as $10,000 Ill!
the felony ch8rge and $1,1100 on . the

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis firemen who had beell rescued earlier by ·police,
and police rescued four persons, two of . was treated ·and released for minor burps
t)lem WICOnscious, from a blazing two- and cuts.
Northup said the fire broke out in
story apartment building and beauty salon
Lohse's
first-floor apartment shortly after ·
here early Saturda~ .
5 a.m. The cause was not immediately
Fi~e chief James Northup said Robert
Spaide, 56, and his wife, Gail, 51, were known. The blaze gutted the apariments
found unconscious In their second-story but damage to the beauty salon was minor,
apartment. The couple and another mainly from water . He estimated
· woman, Elsie Sherman, 62, suffered from damage at $25,000 to the building and
smoke inhalation and burns. All were $15,(MJO .to contents.
. .
Listed
in
fair
condition
Saturday
aladmitted at the Holzer Medlcal Center .
l
Continued
on
page
2)
A fourth person, William Lohse, 28,

AGREEMENT MADE
BRECKSVILLE, Ohio (UP!) - Tentative agreement was reached here .
Saturday between the Ohio Assn. of
Public School Employes (OAPSE ) and the
Brecksville Board of Education~ James
Perkins, OAPSE field representative, said
all classified employes would report for
work Monday mor.ning. ·
BILLBOARDS GOING
· WASHINGTON .(UP!) - Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe announced Saturday that 171,441 billboards
have been removed from the nation's highways and said he expected the removal of
the·signs will be greatly accelerated'in the
future.

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'apartments
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15 CENTS

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

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Save During Our Bli
· Store . Wide Sa.le

Lucky Strikers 735: second/
Four Jokers 699.

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34 PAGES

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OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9
Shop.S~turday 9:30 to 9:00 pm

Mr. and Mrs. 1066; second,
Lucky Strikers 2016.
"

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Blcick matrix- surrounds each color dot . . . the contrast
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Dec .. 21, 1972
Standings

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tm.t s

Cloudy and cold, snow.
probable Sunday, highs in mld
2tl!. Monday continued cold,
JIOSI!ible .snow. Low Sumlay
night high teens. ·

Elberfelds hi ·Pomeroy

Early Thursday Mixed

· ANOTIIER SHIPMENT- The Panzo has arrived with another barge load of
sand to be unloaded.

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Weather

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Modol WUe106,

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floating derricks ha'r-its own complement
of belt conveyors, loaders, hoppers,
barges, and towboat.
Earl Adams and his crew have just
brought ·the Buckeye back from the Elk
River at Charleston, W. Va., where they
·have been unloading materials for the I-70,
1-79 interchange. Following minor repairs
and maintenance, they will be out on
another job by week's end.
The Bluegrass is at Epling's dock for
overhaul and repowering. Operator Clovis
Bailey and crew are working with Epling's
Marine Repair Superintendent , Bob
Johnson, and his crew to complete the job.
Johnson's marine repair fleet includes the
floating derrick, Virginian, the largest
boat of its kind on the Ohio River.
. The Mountaineer is a fifth floating
derrick, this one operated by Terley Clagg.
It is generally engaged in dredging sand
and gravel merchandised through the
Gallipolis plant. ·
·
.The Wiloading operation completed
Jan . 3 at Gavin by the Hoosier fleet is
typical of the M. T. Epling Company's
(Continued on Page 2)

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Mrs. Shwnaker
· died Friday

Mediterra nean Styling.
Casters.

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teams in
split of games
, bo:ch
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solid
state
design

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industrial region

News ..• in Briefs

SUrvived

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brought Thursday

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outfit
grow~ up
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Six indictments

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·ThiS is a_can do

1
BY GEORGE HARGRAVES, .SUPT.
Mr. Morrison and his condition. He is stlllinRooll) IOU,of tl!e
WASHINOTON ( UPI) - murdered in ~mber, 19()9, ternalional,raffairs, $25,000; of Mines for ''not adequately
M~lgs LoCal SebooiDistrlct •
University HOspltSlln cOlumbus. As I ha.ve menuoned bel~, he
New United MiiJe Workers less than a month after he ran and Richard Bank assistant to enforcing federal coal mille .·.
The Meigs ·toea) Board of · Edut:lltion held Its ailnual certamly woUld weleoin~ a card or letter froiD you. ~e is able to.
. President Arnold Miller , an unsuccessful campaign to the president; $20,000.
health and safety laws." He organizational meeting earlier this week; the ·first step to receive visitors and would be happy to have you drop m. You can
keeping a campaign promise,' beat Boyle. That election .was
Miller also di~losed that all also said Tnle Pavis would-re- carryillg out the board's business. The first meeting of l,hls yf ar . call him by long distance at 422-{;734, if you SO desire.· I am qUite
Thursday announced salary voided by a fe9eral judge, UMW boatd members would sign as president of the union- will be next MondBy.
·
ce~tamihatbewillappreclateaiiycall,visit,card&lt;irletter. . ..
cuts . for himself and other paving the way for the election receive $23,000a year, endillg a • controlled National Bank of
The most important business of the Board ol Education in its
Hours. in a h06pital get to be very long ; he -has ~ there
UMW officials totaling $365,000 Miller won .
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perio!l of uneven pay 8cales. Washington In March and new January meeting is the adoption of the appropriations resolution ' almost six weeks now. ·
.
a year.
Three associates of the
ifhat action, as well iis other directors would be BBked to set for the caleqdar year. Each July. the Board of F;ducation must
WEARECOMINGtothattimeofyearagam when we will be
Miller, who charged in his younger Yablonski in hjs activity of the board, may be up a credit union for miners. adopt a propOsed budget for the next calendar year and submit it registering students for courses for next year. This Ia a time of
successful campaign over in- Miners Project Office in Wash- tested in court by ·Boyle supto the County Budget Commission for Its consideration. The great decision, particularly for those students who will be going
cum bent W. A. ''T-ony'; Boyle ington were named associate. porters who claim Miller un- · Miller repeated he Intends to- County ·Budget Budget Commission has as its members the Into grade 9 or grade 11. Adecision must be made as to whether
that union officials were over- counsel for tl!e tjMW. They cdl'stitutionally fired Boyle-ap- ' move the union headquarters county's treasurer, auditor and prosecuting attorney. They JllUSt tl!e studerit wi~ be going to coll~ge or_not. ~the student is not
paid, trimmed his own salary are, with their respective pointed; board members and from -Washington, but has not approve tl!e proposed budget and retw:n it to the Board of going to college, _serious ctnsideraUon .sliould be givel\ to
from . $50,000 to. $35,000 and salaries., Clarice Feldman, replaced them with Interim yetselectedaslle. Healsosald Education.
selecting a vocational course.
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eliminated an automatic $25 $30,000; Daniel Edelman, members pending elections in he has asked the Labor . From th.is budget tl!ere is then constructed the apRecent reports from colleges across the country mdlcate
per diem payment · for his of. $23,000, and Lewis Sargentich, respective districts.
Departmerit to supervise all propriations resolution for adoption in J'-uary. This is. the of· that there has been a general decrease ·tn enrollment. ~e
lice.
$13,800.
"Some people who supported UMW district elections in the ficial adoption of the budget as the financial instrument that will students are dropping out of colle~e and the pe~tage of high
Among others taking salary
Two other new officials of the the opposition haven't realized same manner the international guide the district·~ expenditures for the calendar year. Included . sChool. graduates entering as freShmen is declinmg. There are
cuts were Mike Trbovich, vice union are Meyer Bernstein, di- yet that they lost," Miller said. election last month was monl- In the budget must be a listing of money sources. This fear's • several reasons for tillS.
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president, and Harry Patrick, rector of public and inMiller criticized the Bureau tored.
budget will be slightly over two million dollars. About 75 pet. or
The first is tl!e continuing high cost of a college education.
secretary-treasurer. Their salslightly over m million dollars comes from the State of Ohio.- . Secondly, the change in tbe draft law has had some effect. In
·aries will drop from $40,000 to
About25pet.or just over"' million dollars will come from local ' addition, many graduates of tl!e 1ast .two years have been
$30,000 and each will lose the
·sources. This' Includes the ad\fitional 5 mills approved by the unable to find employlnent In the fields for which they prepared.
$25 per diem payment.
voters In November. ,
These facts plus many others must force serious consideration
Miller told a news conference
As you can see from the above statements, we are still prior to deciding on a pre-college traming program.
here told the union 's Interrm·
k.
h f J\f
This same cosideration should also enCO'f&amp;ge a second look
national executive board has
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']JeB mg 0 SC OO s-J lO. 263
at vocational education. A vocational course is, by no means, a .
approved the pay cuts and had
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receiving a very high perc~ge of our fWids for school guarantee of future employment. Nothing Is. Nevertheless, a
given him authority -to "reThe Gallipolis State Institute their needs. It is also a new , where fifty or more (l&lt;!Ople operation from the State Foundation Program. 1 hope you will person .with only a high sc\lool diploma .with some vocational
evajuate" the salaries of all has received an additional attitude toward the mentally ill ' sleep 36Jnights per year in one Check the report of Monday's Board meeting to see exactly what trail\lng has, generally speaking, more to offer a prospeCtive
International officers and staff. $294,000 from the state for and mentally retarded - one room.
sums of money the Boa.rd will receive and how it proposes to employer than does a graduate with a high school diploma in·
"With these salary cuts, coal humanization projects to that stresses respect and
"The structure will be expend them.
volving only college preparatory traming.
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COmpany Offl.ci'als will know improve food service f and di'gni·ty for all human beings", completely remodeled and WI'll
PIease do no1 m..w
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I have had queries from people Interested In the p06Sibillty of
..erstan d my statemen••
"'· I am not
they are talking to union men, cottage equipment according Dr. Niehm said.
provide sleeping modules of an adult sewing class. We will attempt to establish such a class if discouragingpreparationfor and entrance Into college. After all,
not a set of executives who just to an announcement made
Continued the · superln- five and six people each. Each we have enough persons interested. You should understand that that's the world 1 kliow and ~ocedure that I followed. I am
happen to be on the other side," today by Dr. Bernard F. tendent, "Our Humanization resident would have, . in ad- there will be some small tuition cost Involved. 11 you are in- only encoaraging you to titve ~Ions thought to the direction In
Miller said.
Niehm, superintendent.
Pilot Project No. I is designed dition to his own bed, a w~rd- terested In such a class, call my office 81 992-2153 and leave your which your youngster-will move the years to come.
Miller also announced that
The latest sum is to he used to afford independent living for robe and chest of drawers name, address and telephone number. You could also write the
Ahigh school graduate in the college preparatory course who
the union's new general for rewiring and installation of those residents capable of where he can have his clothes 8ame Information and send it to me in Middleport. Please do this does not go to college is not very well prepared for any kind of a
counsel, J06eph A. "Chip" transformers ~I a cost of performing in a home-like ~nd private possessions in an soon so we \vill be able to determine just exactly what the Interest job. A high school graduate with vocational train~ hiis some
Yablonski will receive a $35,000 $200,000; installation of dish- environment as opposed to the area he can can his own as is.
·
definite advantage in the job market. You might want to consider
a year salary. Yablonski Is a washers for $32,000 and the large ward type structure of opposed to a pigeon hole and
We, of course continue to have constant·questions concerning the items that I have mentioned above as you look to the fu!W'e.
son of the late Joseph A. addition of steam or electric institutionalization.
one large clothes room for all
"Jock" Yablonski, who was tables for $62,000.
" Residents are free to residents:
'
The $29&lt;1,000, 'plus $950,000 re~uest independent living and
"Modern bathroom facilities
previously allocated for the may participate in some design will he provided on all floors.
three pilot projects brings the and selection of room colors, First and second floors will
(Continued from page 1)
total to $1,244,000 for furniture , etc. Both male and have modern lounges with TV
TONIGHT and-Saturday
Agriculture Cominittee today to explain tl!e adminlatratlon's
humanization projects now female residents may par- area, kitchenette, table and
.
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January S-6
position in announcing cutbacks or elimination of several !ann
under way at the GSI.
ticipate in this program. There chairs for refreshments· and
SILENT RUNNING
Dr. Niehm announced he is will be three Wilts for each sex. games.
programs. Senators told Butz Thursday and a bipartisan group of
(Te~hnicolor)
PT. PLEASANT - Four employ him as an attorney-at- House members prepared to tell him today they did not intend to
pleased
with
the
new
"Pilot
Project
.No.
2
is
"Basement
area
will
provide
Bruce Dern. Clilf Potts
THE CONCERT FOR
allocations for the much designed lor children between a large recreation area and felony and twci misdemeanor law to enforce and prosecute a stand for the cutback!~ without a fight.
BANGLADESH .
It could become one of the first confrontations of the new
needed food service im- ·the ages of five and 15 who are Hobby. shop . vocational area · lndlcbnents were returned by claim for dsmages for personal
CTechnioclor)
the
January
term
Grand
Jury
injuries
of
John
Morrow;
"session between a Congress concerned about loamg its power to
provements and is hopeful that attending our academic school. plus storage.
George Harrison, Eric
late
Thursda~ afternoon in received on October 7, 1972.
the executive branCh. Rep. John MelCher, D-Mont., chairman of
aaditional
.money
will
be
II
will
prnvide
a
remodeled
"These
Important
projects
Claplon, Ringo Starr
Mason
County
Circuit
Court.
Prosecuting
Attorney
Don
C.
a Democratic Study G~oup Committee pushing the confrontation,
available in the near future for structure with modern design are being directed by William
Sunday, Monday
this and ~ther humanization for homogenious . living for Hall,
coordinator,
and There were no additional drug Kingery presented tlie cases. said he has been encouraged by tl!e bipartisan response and felt
And Tues~ay
projects.
approximately 30students. The specially appointed staff charges, but those returned Donald F. Roush was grand that if no headway were made In the IIJeeting with Butz, forces
Jaquarv 7-8-9
jury foreman.
could be marshaled for a strong congressional fight within tl!e
Dr. Niehm said the three newly remodeled structure will committee on Humanization. Thursday were varied.
BEN
J.
0.
Baker
was
charged
with
Grand
jurors
serving
In
the
coming week.
pilot projects are well under provide module type sleeping · There is also a resident
(Technicolorl
false
pretense
with
inten.
t
to
January
tenn
were
.
M\-.
Roush
way
and
that
the
program
areas
with
bed,
wardrobe,
·Committee
on
Humanization
Lee Harcourt Montgomery
Joseph Campanella
consists of three projects .chest of drawers, chair, table composed of residents who will defrall!l John Smith; Lloyd Lee and John F. Kelsey, Clyde M.
CARTOONS:
was charged .with feloniously Bowen Jr., Victoria L. Keefer,
designed to allow maximwn and lamp. A lounge or living be the consumers."
Grad~
How-Do-Dee-Doody
stealing food items from Lawrence R. Wolf, Mary H.
JOBLESS AT 5.2
resident participatioh. room equipped with modern
Special Helper
Central School; Paul N. Smith Arnold, Matthew · Long,
WASHINGTON iUPI)
SHOW STARTS 7 P:M.
"Humanization means being · furniture such as couches,
was charged witl! feloniously Sammie C. .Stw:geon, ..M!'s. !Jnemt:h!~ent . ~~·t•I.D.oc!
'::::::;;;:::::~.c:o:n:ce:r:ne:d~ab:o:u:t~p:e:op:ie~a:n;d
tables, chairs, TV. The food
M·~~~ MCitel~~;;;
stealing from Central School Jack McNeely, Joe R. Neeley, uoctuillJOd 1iiDeceiiilieiala
•
·
preparation roQm and dining
(these charges stem from an Harley Burns, Charles D. 28-month low of.5.Z pet. of the
eighth grade Marauder
room will also be located In the
work
force,
bat
the
number
basketball team Thursday
incident in November last Baker, Melvin E. Clark, Carol
immediate area. The library, (Continued from page 1)
of
penons
with
jobs
rose
to
J.
Lathey,
Ralph
E.
Barker,
its second straight
scored
Greenspan
withdrew
his
year);
Aldridge
Lanhan
was
counciling rooms· and modem
·an all-time hiBh of. 82.8
come-from-behind victory, 35
toilet facilities will be con- prophecy following the disas- char~ed with fel~~iously and Nikki A. Cremeans.
million.
to ' 30 over Federal Hocking.
Irons
Managua,
Nicaragua,
.
stealing
a
RCA
teleVISIOn
set
veniently located. Inside
The Bureau of Labor
Meigs trailed for three and a
recreation ar..s along with 'quake. But a few of the local valued at $50 from Ann Fisher,
Statistics
said
that
residents
who
had
planned
to
all
felony
indiclmenls.
half quarters but rallied in the
vocational hobby shop and
joblessneu •veraged 5.1 pel.
Misdemeanor indiclments
late minutes to win.
laundry facilities will be be out . of town Thursday
In th:
In
1972,
down
from
th~
5.9
Mark Haggerty drilled in
located in the basement area. morning left anyway- just In were against Lewis Michael
'
case.
Oliver,
destruction
of
property
pel.
rate
In
1171
but
still
three
straight long shots to
"Outside recreation and
higher
than
the
average
rate
Earthquake experts scoffed concerning a mobile home
cl06e the gap. Haggerty also
game areas, pet pens and
of
t:9
pet.
In
1970
and
U
pel.
at
the
prediction,
insisting
no
owned
by
Charles
L.
Brown
led the Meigs squad in scoring
' picnic area will be located
Mrs . Earl Shumaker, 56,
one can predict the hour or day with damages listed as $2,500; New Lexington, the former In 1919, President Nixon's
with 10 points. Steven Ranadjacent to the building.
flrat
year
In
oHice.
of
a
major
'quake.
But
they
J.
L.
Horberg,
an
attorney-atdolph
threw in 9, Greg
"Project No.3is designed for
Anna Crary of Pomeroy, died
Browning had 8, Alan Stewart
adult male residents who need also noted that large 'quakes law, with soliciting by early Friday at her residence.
strike
this
area
periodically.
requestir,g
John
Morrow
to
7,
and Tom Walters 1.
a moderate amount of
Mrs. Shumaker was the
MEETING
TONIGHT
i Butcher of Federal
supervision, but can adapt to The further away the last one
daughter of the late Mark and
A
meeting
of
ACf
Adoptis,
the
sooner
!be
next
one
can
Hocking was the game's
the module type living as opLouise Crary. She is survived
A-Child-Today,
will
be
held
at
8
CALL
ANSWERED
be
expected,
they
warned
.
leading
scorer with 17, all
posed to the large dormitory
by her husband, Earl; six
The Middleport E-R squad children, Robert, and Mrs . this evening at Cheryl's Wig corning In the first half. Meigs
answered a can to Palmer St. Nancy Robinson of Somerset; Boutique, 295 Main St., used two players to shut him
at 7:17p.m. Thursday.forMrs. Charles and Roger of New Jackson. Election of officers out in the second half.
Georgia Ervin, !10, who was Lexington; Mrs. Donald will be held and everyone inIn the seventh grade game
experiencing chest pains. She (Pauline) Fink of Columbus, terested Is invited. For futther the mini-Marauders were
was taken to Vsterans and Mrs. David (Jane) Jones Information on the program clobbered 49 to 28 by a talented
Memorial Hospital where she In Nebraska; three sisters, contact Martha and Jerry group of F·H seventh graders.
was admitted.
Mrs. Gerald WildermUth and . Grim at 384-61198 or Sue and Joe Kelley Winebrenner and Chuck
Mrs. Pearl Mora of Pomeroy, Johnston at aM-5156 or 384-M58 Follrod led Meigs wllh 8 points
each,_Greg Witte had 5, Gene
and Mrs. Norman Fisller . of in Wellston .
SPEAKER NOTED
Halley 4, Brent Stanley 2 and
Senecaville, and two brothers,
Speaking at tl!e Zion Church
Kevin McLaughlin · 1. B.
Reed Crary of Reedsville and
LOCAL TEMPS
of Christ on ·the PomeroyChadwell
led the Lancers with
George Crary of Atlanta, Ga.
The temperature in down- 16.
Harrisonville Road at 7:30p.m.
Funeral services have ten- town Pomeroy at II a.m. today
Sunday will' be Ed Bousman,
Next games for Meigs are at
tatively been set for Sunday at was 36 degrees Wider cloudy
minister on the radio program,
Wellston Monday imd at home
New· Lexington.
skies.
·
"God is Just a Prayer Away."
against Logan ThursdaY.,:·
The public Is invited.

!

..

'
'

FREEZING temperatures made It
rather difficult to fight Saturday's f~
in downtown Gallipolis. Photo was
ta~en shortly after 7 a.m., by Steve . ,,
Wilson showing volunteer Iireman Neil
McMahon· on top of the Gallipolis Fire
Department's aerial ladder. McMahon
was later relieved by John Taylor.

Car demolished
early Saturday
POMEROY - A car was demolished
in a single-vehicle accident on Route
JJ, just north of the Pomer9y corporation
limits at 12:30 a,m. 8aturday.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbac~'s Dept.
said a northboWid car driven by Rex Allen
Darst, Middleport, hit an Icy area on the
road, slid to its left, up an em))ankment,
and turned over on its right side. Darst
escaped injury . 1'1l,ere was no charge filed .
At midnight, the department was
called io Chester to investigate a com- •
plaint where officers arrested Robert
Bissell 18, who Saturday was in county
jail under $500 cash bond . Bissell was
charged with intoxication, resisting
arrest, , disorderly conduct, assault a'Id
battery on a pollee officer, and destrnct.on
of property.

.

.

C OF C TO ~T
POMEROY - The Emergency
Chamber ol Commerce will meet. at 12
. noon Monday .at the Meigs Inn.

�3- The Sunday Tilpes -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 1, 197~ .

,.,

·r-----------------..

2-1·re SUnday Times-Sentinel, SWldaY. Jan. 7,1973 •

Epling company

-;~,:\0~;.;;:,.,.

•

~--,- ---~

! ·Area De~ths !_-

(Continued f~o'!l Page 1)
"portable port" oilerations. The day this
reporter got the accompanying pictures,
the empty concrete materials storage area
was receiving the conveyors. Aself.folding
100-foot riullal stacker had been delivered
over-the-road by truck . Richard Wade,
transportation superintendent, .IoVas
preparing ID unfold it and set it in position.
The conveyor bridge across Route 7
was designed by Epling, specially
fabricated lor the Gavin ltnstallation, and
lifted into place on its supports intact,
.conveyor and all. Six other sections of
conveyor were unloaded from the Hoosier
barge and pulled in!D position by
bulldozer. When the electric hook-up was ·
sompleted, the system was ready.
Willi the .Hoosier -spudded down in
place, the !Dwboal Panzo with Jerry
Truesdell in the pilot house, brought
barges alongside ID be Wlloaded and
moved the empties away. Charles Watson
operated an end-loader in the barge ID
keep the material cleaned up around the
edges while .John Metzger and Larry
Kingery were busy shifting and tying th~
barge as requited In the ope'ration . Deckhands Lester Wells and John Glover
manned pumps ID keep :!he barges dry. and
attended other duties.
•
The Hoosier was designed and built by
M., T. Epling Company in 1971 expressly
for the unloading trade. Installing a P&amp;H
eleclric·motor.&lt;Jriven crane on a rein·
forced deck barge, Epling set a receiving
hopper down into the barge over an 81).foot
by 3&amp;-inch belt conveyor. A huge cater·
pillar generator installed below deck
provides power for the crane, the conveyor
system, and the boat's ancillary equip·
ment.
"The Hoosier operation at Gavin is
fairly typical of our whole business attitude,'' said Miles T. Epling, president
and son of the late Capt. Moses T. Epling,
founder of the company .'
"Since 1925, when there's been a job
for us to do, we've done it. We expect to
keep on (\oing it," lie said.
The 50 or so people who work for M. T.
Epling Coll)Pany reflect that same "can
do" attitude .
And after all, why ~ouldn't they• The
Epling Company from president to
deckhands grew up and work in the "can
do" atmoapht\re of the Gallipolis area's
people. It is an attitude that in perhaps the
last half-century has become a tradition of
.the Galllpolis community.
Beyond the economics of a substantial
payroll spent in the area each week, the
many benefits of a more lasting nature
that the M. T: Epling Company has
brought to Gallipolis are obvious.
Growing with a growing -Gallipolis,
Epling's new brick office building and
familiar "barbed e" logo, are evidence of
the company's faith . in the continued
growth potential ·of the area .
M. T. Epllng Company is an out·
standing example of local people in local
industry keeping the wheels of prosperity
turning. It Is ·· expected that they will
continue for. a long time to come'.

Floyd 0. Boyer

Jake Gaul

a

t ed provisional approval
.Water
Supply
in
Galli
poll~ is gran_
.

Televisiort
Log
'

'

'

GALLIPOLIS - According Gallfpolis' water supply was V of the U. S. Environ;.entai
ID,a release Saturday from the "provisionally " approved Protection Agency.
'Umted States Enyironmental recently by orficials of Region
The report .said six water
.
'
Protection·Agency ii\ Chicago,

.
SUNDAY, JAN. 7, 1973
6:00 - Film 4, ·
·
,
Llk
6:30_: This Week 4; Newsmaker '7213; Bob Harrlngton6;
e
'
A Constant. Spring 1'0.
7:00 - Communique 6; Old Tim• Gospel Hour 13; T-Ill~ Is The
AhSwer 3· Time Por Timothy 4; Religion 1210.
· .
.
· 7:30= F.aith For Today·s; Revival Fires 6; Herald ot Truth 3;
Davey &amp; Goliath 4; Qamera Three 10.
.
8:00 ~ Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan ·6; Church Ser,vlce
13; Mormon Choir 3; Dar ot Discovery 4; Billy James Harg,ls
and His All-American K1ds. 10.
S:30- Oral Robert~3 ; Your Health 4; Day of Dl~cov~ry8; Rex
Humbard 13; Rev1v"l. F~res 15; Kathry~ Kul\tam 6, Rlghl_pn
10.
"
'" . .
9:00 - Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel4; Rex Humbard 15, 6,
Oral Roberts 10;. Archie's Fun House 8. .
9:30- Church by Side of Road 4; ~ampus Crusade10; Dr. Paul
Warren 13; Globetrotters 8.
·
10·00 - Church Serv ice4; Faith For Today 15; Cur-Iosity Shop6,
i3 ; This Is The Llfe3; Old-Time Gospel Hour 8; Movie "Esther

&lt;RACICE .- Orville . Jacob
MIDDLEPORT - Floyd
Orion Boyer, so,. Broadway St., (Jake) Gaul, 61, Racine Route
Midllleport, ' died ' early I, former Racine businessman,
Saturday morning at the died Saturday at home.
Mr.' Gaul operated a grocery
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Boyer was born June 19, store in Racine · a number of
1892 in Mason County, W. Va., years. It is now the Rac!Jie
the son of the late Ellsworth Food Market. Mr. Gaul was
and Vina Bell Boyer. Besides member of the Racine Masonlc
his parents, he was preceded in Lodge. He was a well-known
death by two brothers and a ~mi-pro baseball catcher in
and the King" 10.
sister. Mr. Boyer was a retired the ~ and 40s.
10:30- Insight 4; Captain Noah 3; Consumer Reporf 15. .
He is survived by his wife, 11 :00' - TV Chapel 3; Focus on Columbus 4; Point of V1ew 6; ,
section laborer on the New
Buliwlnkle 13.
.
York Central Railroad, a Firn Beegle Gaul; a daughter,
11
:30
Make
A
Wish
6,
13;
Out~each
15;
This Is The Answer 3.
member of the Middleport Mrs. Ruth Ann Johnson, Norih 12:00- Calvin Evans 13; AI Issue 3; Sacred
Heart 15; Fred
Church of ,Christ, a veteran of Olmsl!!d, Ohio; a son, Charles
Taylor 4; CBPA Bowling 6; CBS News Speclal10.
World War I and was a Gaul, Swan!Dn, Ohio; a sister, 12 :30- Revival Fires 13; MeetThe Press 3, 4, 15; Fallh In Action
member of Feeney-Bennett Mrs. John Wickham, Chester, 1800 - Lower Lighthouse 13; College Basketball 3, 4, IS; To Be
and four grandchildren.
Post 128, American Legion.
Announced 8.
1:30Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13 i WHA Hockey 8; Columbus Town
Funeral
services
will
be
held
Surviving are his wife,
Meeting
10.
Margaret E. Gerlach Boyer; at 1p.ln. Tuesday at the Ewing 2:00- Farmer's Daughter 13; World of Survlval6.
two daughters, Mrs. Walter Funeral Home where friends 2:30- American Spor,tsman 6, 13; l!rban League Pr'esents 10.
(Hazel) Friend, Letart, W. Va., , may call anytime. Burial will 3: oo - Sports Challenge 3; NHL Hockey 4, 15; Face the Nation
and Miss Thelma Boyer, at be in the Letart Falls 3:~ - Roller Derby 3; NBA · Basketball 6, 13; Then Came
Bronson 10.
~
horne; a son, Willard F. Boyer, Cemetery.
4:00
'Washington
Week
In
Review
33.
Pomeroy; seven grand4:30 - Age of Anxiety 33 ; Petticoat Junction 3; Golf 8, 10.
children, several· great5:00- Ripples 33; Green Acres 3.
5:30 - It Takes a Thiel 3; To Be Announced 4; Roller Derby 15.
Robert
P.
Varian.
grandchildren and a number of
- Sesame Street 33 ; Howard Cosell 6, 13. ,
aunts, Wlcles, nieces, nephews
~
RACINE - Robert P. 6:00 - News 4; 60 Minu1es 8, 10.
6:30 ..:.. News 3. 4. 15; Untamed World 6 ; Human Dimension 33;
and cousins.
Varian, 86, Racine Route . 2,
Lawrence Welk 13.
Funeral services will be died Saturday morning at an 7:00
- Lawrence Welk 13; Safari to Adventure 3; This Is Your
VOLUNTEER FIRE;MAN Tim Mills pours water on rear section of third Ave., conducted at 2 p.m. Monday at
Life
4; Wild Kingdom 15; UFOS; In The Know 10; Zoom 20, 33 ;
apartment house in Gallipolis early Saturday morning. Damage was estimated at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral • Athens hospital.
Wall Till Your Falher Gels Ho'l'e 6.
A retired carpenter, Mr.
- World of Disney 3+ 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal 6; Snow
$33,000. It was Gallia's first major fire of the new year.
Horne with the Rev. Raulllri Vari;m, was preceded in death 7:30
Whlte20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 10; I Am Joe's Hearl 13.
Moyer officiating. Burial will by his wife, Elva M. Pickens ·8:00 - FBI 6, 13; Mash 8, 10.
- French Chet 20. 33; McCloud 3, 4, 15; Mannix 8, 10.
be in Riverview Cemetery. Varian, and two brothers and 8:30
9:oo-MasterP,iece Thealre 20,, 33; Dick Van Dyke 8, 10; Movie
Friends may call at the funeral two sisters. He is survived by a
"Hurry Sundown" 6, 13.
horne anytime after 11 am. son; Robert M. Varian, anq a 9:30 - Bing Crosby 8, 10.
- Night Gallery 3, 4, 15; F~rlng Line 20. 33.
today. Military services at the grandson, Robert J. Varian, 10:00
'
10:30 - We Think You Should Know 3; Evil Touch'S; High Road
grave will be conducted by both of Syracuse.
(Continued from page 1)
tydventure 10; Police Surgeon 15; Protectors 4.
)1:00 - News 3. 4, 8,10. 15.
~ Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Funeral services will be held 11 : ~ - CBS News S, 10.
·
ternoon in the medical center were Elsie
at 2 p.m. Monday at the Ewing 11 : - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 1S: Mov ie 8; Movie "A Step Out of
Sherman, Robert Cecil Spaide, 56, and his
L ne" 10.
.
'
Bruno p:· Casci
Funeral Home with the Rev. 12:00
- -ABC News 6, 13.
wife, Gail Spaide, ol, til uf Gallipolis. They
Marshall Larimore officiating. 12:115 - Good News 6; News 13.
ail suffered from smoke inhalation and
POMEROY - Funeral
Burial will be in the Letart 12:l!O- This Is the Year That Will Be 13.
services for,Bruno P. Case!, 60,
burns. Spaide's burns, the most serious,
12:45 - This Week In The NBA
were to the face and hands.
who died Sunday at the Falls Cemetery. Friends may 1'00- News 4, 13.
. Ve~erans Hospital in St. Cloud, call at the funeral home
William Lohse, 28, was treated and
MONDAY, JAN. 8, 1973
anytime.
relea'sed for smoke inhalation and minor
Minn., were conducted Friday
6:00 - ·sunrise Sem inar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: IS - Farmtime 10.
cuts of the arms.
at 10 a.m. at the Sacred Hearl
6:25 - Paul Har.vey 13.
All are tenants in a 15 room apartment
Church with burial in the Wateman White
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Good N~w~. 13;
house owned by Glenn and Faye Thomp· Sacred Heart Cemetery,
School Scene 10.
..
6:
45
.Corncob
Reporl
3
.
. son of Eureka.
Pallbearers were Paul
LONG BOTTOM- Wateman 7:00 - Today 3. 4, 15; News, Weather, Sports 6; CBS News B. 10;
Gallipolis Fire Chief James A. NorSimon, Guido Giralami, David White, 76, Long Bottom Route
Flintstones 13.
.
7:25
Sports
13.
·
thup said Wayne Elliott, a fireman , was
Casci, Arthur Casci, Robert 1, died Friday at his home
7:30
Romper
Room
6 ; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Buliwinkle
treated at the Holzer Medical Center for
Casci, and Paul Casci. Military following an extended illness.
13; Popeye 10.
exhaustion. Firemen fought the blaze
rites were conducted by Drew
Mr. White was born in Roane 8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue13 ; Sesame St. 33;
6.
.
several hours before bringing it under
Webster Post 39, American cOunty, W.Va., the son of the 8;30Lassie
- Jack LaLanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Re.vlew6 .
control. II is located across the streetfrom·
Legion..
late William Carey and 8:S5 - Local News 13.
·
the old Kroger Store.
Out-of·town relatives and Hanabell Taylor White. A 9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Capt. Kangaroo 8;
Concentratlon6: Friendly Junction 10; A.M. 3; Ben Casey 13.
The Powder Puff Beauty Shop
frie~ds here .for the service farmer the greater part of his 9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6 ; HazelS.
operated by the Thompsons on the first
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert life, Mr. White was a member 10:00 - Columbus-Six Calling; Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3,
·
DR.
R.
E.
BOICE,
above,
widely
15; Joker's Wlj~ 8, 10.
, ,1 , 1 1 . L. II 1, , t\ ,-1.-l l
floor of the bqilding ~ad only minor water
Casci and daughter, Patricia, , ol ·the •R.id ~ , &lt;lldn:b of 10:30
srllt
Second
13;
Concenfi'
..
llon 3, 'lS i ' &gt;'h Dona ue ' .
known
Pomeroy
physician.
and
damage. ·Twenty-four firemen answerell
St. Paul, Minn.; Frank and Christ· a veteran of World War
Price
s
Right
8,
10.
"" •'
'
surgeon, bas been named new John Di · Piero, Colulllb~s; I,hayingservedinEurope,and
the first alarm of 1973.
11 :00 - Password·l3; Sale of the Century3, 15; Lo.ve, American
Style 6: Gambit 8, 10; Electric Co. 20.
·
Contrary to reports late Saturday, no president of the Twin City Shrine Club David Casci,. Colwnbus; Ar· a member of Drew Webster 11 :30Bewitched
6. 13; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 ; Love of Life
one else was in the structure at the time of lor 1973. Other new officers are Lorenzo thur Casci, Akron; Aldo Del Post 39, American Legion, at
a, tO ; Sesame Street 30.
12:00 .:... Password 6; News 10, 13; Contact 8; Bob Braun 50-SO
the blaze. One resident, Charles Car- Davis, vice president; Richard Dugan, Chiccolo, Huntington, W. Va.; Pomeroy.
Club •·
penter, Apartment 2, front, was working assistant vice president; David Fox, Dante and Louis Man:etU,
Surviving are his wife, Esla ; 12:25
- CBS News 8.
secretary;
Ralph
Webb,
treasurer,
and
. on the river. Chief Northup said volunteer
Ashland, Ky. ; Mrs. Dorothy a sister, · Mrs. Edith Kyle, 12:30 - Split Se&lt;:ond 6; Who, What or Where 3, IS; Search for
Tomorrow 8. 10.
firemen searched the rubble early Walter Grueser, immediate past Dandikis, Athens; and Mr. and Colwnbus; a brother, Woodrow
1:00 - All My Children 6. 13; News 3; Jackie Oblinger! ; Green
new·trustee.
president,
Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Kenneth Russell. Racine. w• Wh'te
1 , St• Albans, w. Va.,
Acres 10.
~
·
and several nieces and 1:30 - Let's Make A~16, 13; Three on AMatch 3, 4, 15; As the
World Turns 8, 10.
nephews. He was preceded in 2:00 - Days ot Our Lives 3, 4, IS ; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
~
Julia Bell Davis
Douglass 6; Guiding Light B. 10.
death by six brothers and two
GALLIPOIJS - Mrs. Julia
2:
30
- Datlne Game 13; Doctors 3, 4, 15; Edge of Nighl8, 10.
sisters.
3:00 - General Hospital6, 13; Another World 3, 4. 15 : Love Is A
Bell Davis, 90, a resident of 934
Funeral services will be held
Many Splenctored Thlnq8, 10; 30 Minutes With 20.
· COhUMBUS (UP!)
· Rawlins testified he offered Second Ave., died in the Holzer
3:3D-Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
at
2
p.m.
Monday
at
the
White
Famed dance instructor the Pottel'$ private lessons at Medical Center about 10:30
Secret Storm 8, 10; French Chef 20.
Funeral Horne in Coolville with 4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Fllntstones 6; Sesame St. 20, 33 ; Love
Jimmy
Rawlins
said
Friday
he
class
rates
.
He
said
he
felt
as
·
Sat
d
1
a.m.
ur ay.
evangelist Vernon Dolan of.
American Style 13; Merv Grlltln 4; Somerset t 5; Movie "Sign
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The have relatives and friends been turned away a black couple hwniliated as they did.
Born in Mason CoWlty, W.
of
the Pagan" 10.
ficiating. Burial will be in the
new leadership of the United preferred to fill vacancies, but from his dancing classes
"Oddly enough, I am on their va.,on ""
• ..,c.4,1882 ,shewas the Christian Cemetery at Tuppers 4:30 - I Love Lucy 6; Daniel Boone 13; Petticoat Junction 3;
Merv .Griftln 8; Andy Griffith 15.
Mine Wor~ers of America . what is worse, useless jobs because of objections of his side,'' he said. .
.
daughter of the late Thomas A. ·Plains. Friends may call at the 5:00
- Mr. Rogers 20, 33 ; Daniel Boone 6: Ponderosa 3. 4; Merv
(UMWA) Friday announced have been created to assure middle-aged white clients.
Rawilns sa1d h1s class . and Caroline Bush Ganterbury.
Griffin 8; Dick Van Dy ke 15.
funeral
home
anytime
alter
Rawlins testified at a members did not seem to She married Ernest H. Davis
new policies regarding high incomes for these chosen
5:30- Ele&lt;:. Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Marshall Dlllor 1S: Dragnet 8.
'
_ne,potism - favoring relatives elite," the resolution r~ad in hearing before the Ohio Civil object to Indians, Egyptians on Dec. 25, 1898. He died in noon Sunday.
6:00 - News3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; News 13, 15; Around
Rights Commission on charges and others, only Negroes. He 1944. Both were retired rural
- in the union and· said part.
. The Bend 3J ; Sesame St. 20.
of
discrtinina tions brought by said he recently enrolled a mail carriers.
6:30 - ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; Insight 33; I Dream of
vacations for UMWA officials
The two changes , followed
Jeannie 13; News 3, 4, 15.
.
henceforth would be the same Thursday's announcem~nt of a Mr. and Mrs. William Potter, black in a class and lost many
Surviving are these children,
7:00 - News 6; What's My Line 8; Read Your Way Up 33; ~le&lt;:.
coal miners receive.
Co. 20 ; Truth or Consequences 3; Beat the Clock 4; News 19;
cutback in ali international Columbus, who had been white clients.
Dana Davis, of Linthincum,
Circus 13; Saint IS ; Take: Five 5.
The two policy changes, officer salaries, including rejected in their bid to take
. Md .; Mrs. Caddie Wickham,
!:30- To·Tell The Truth6; Young Dr. Kildare 8; Parent Game
•• l •
recpmmended
by
new Miller's which dro~ped from dancing lessons from Rawlins.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Bernetta
3; Hollywood Squares 4; Marco Sporlllte 33 ; Movie "The Lost
FIVE KILLED
Rawlins, indicating he was
President Arnold R. Miller, $50,ooo to $35,000.
Tribe" 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Fair, Ft. Wallen Beach, Fla.,
8:00
- Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh· in 3, 4. 15; Rookies 6; The
ACCORD,
N.
Y.
(UPI)
not
prejudiced,
said
he
does
not
were approved by the Union's
Beginning this year, all
and seven grandchildren and
Tribe
That Hides ,trom Man 20; College Basketball 33;
executive board Thilrsday, but UMWA employes and staff as feel that way about black Fire swept through a three· six great-grandchildren. A son,
COLUMBUS - HolllH!hold
Gunsmoke 8, 10. .
were not announced until well as international and people at all, and deplores the story building at a resort hotel ,Glenn,· died in 1932 and a goods and jlppliances sold by ~: 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10; Movies "Set This Town on Fire" 3, 4,
15; "5 Card Stud" 6, 13; The American River20.
Friday.
district offices will receive two attitude of so many of his near this Catskill Mountain daughter, Mrs. Daphne "gifkl-gram" constitute the 9:30 - Doris Day 8, 10; Book Beat 20.
hamlet, Sunday killing five Broyles, died in 1970.
The resolution affecting weeks paid vacation : This . middle-aged white clients.
latest sales hoax plaguing 10:00 - News 20; CBS News Special 8. tO ; Holidays - Hollow
Days 33.
The Potters said they were persons and 1feaving several
nepotism will not ban the corresponds to the present two
Ohioans,
·Ohio Commerce
One brother, Jol)n D. Can·
11
:00
- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
others
U.accounted
for.
Fire
hiring of· relatives to union weeks paid vacation for coal turned down for the class when
terbury, Galilpolis Ferry, Director Dennis' Shaul said 11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack Paar Tonlte 6, 13; Movie 8;
Movie " Never Say Goodbye" 10.
posts, bUt will control such miners under the bituminous they went to one of his studios and police spokesmen at the survives.
Friday.
'
Focus on Columbus 4; News 13.
1:00
scene
said
the
ruins
of
the
wood
for
an
appointment.
Potter
practices.
Commerce's Consumer 1:30 'coal contract.
She was a member of the
News 4.
"Nepotism is a plague in all
Prior to the policy change, quoted Rawlins as saying: frame . building were being First Baptist Church and the Protection Division has
organizations, but it appears!D most international union "The age group I deal with searched for o.ther possible· Ann Judson Bible Class and the received nwn~ous complaints
victims.
have. become endemic and employes and officers received won't accept your race."
concerning agencies who introduces one of his strongest 4S
VW
D of A Lodge. .
672
permanent in the United Mine four weeks vacation.
Funeral services will be held contact potential buyers seiling points. If the conswner
'
new
8
Workers of America. Not only
2 p,m. Tuesday at Miller's through the mall offering them chooses to become a lifetime sold in November
Home for Funerals with Rev. 8 free gift in combination with 'merqberin the organization, he
.
.·
Dalesaunders Rulen . of- the purchase of additional maymakeanyfiiturepurcfiase · - ouBI:;IN,Ohlo-nra-montb
fici•ting. Burial will be in mer~handise. Although con· · foragreatlyreducedprice. As whennewcarsalesreachedan
Mound Rill Cemetery.
tacted initially in his home, the soon as the consumer shows all-time November high,
'
· · Friends rna)' call at the conswner must go to the any interest in any of the Nov~mber showed a continued
funeral home on Monday be· salesman's lo~al office to products, the salesman begins upswing for Volkswagen witb
tween 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
,obtain his gift; lhus giving up to fill in a sales contract national sales of 48,672 new~
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Sweet"also rapped Rhodes'
his 3-day cooling off protection. allowing the consumer no time 1/W's.
·Loopholes in this new la'r, to think over the of{er. Given
In the Ohio and Kentucky
LONDON (UP!) - The including such Scotches as Development Director David business ventures outside the
C.
Sweet
Friday
took
exception
state.
which went in!D effect January . the time to consider his pur- area, Volkswagen dealers sold
Distillers Co., reacting to a Johnnie Walker, Dewar and
"There are some ironies for
OBTAINS RIGHTS
I, 1973, prevent the consumer chase, the consumer would find 2,941 new VW's and. poeled
boycott of its products and Black and White, had first with remarks made by former
Gov . . James A. Rhodes someone who hammered on the
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The who ~es invol~ed in one of the product Is being sold ID him t!Jeir fourth · consecutive
mounting public anger, ap· offered $11.7 million.
regarding
industrial
growth
in
point
(Developing
Ohio)
for
Federal
Communications these gift.o-gram deala from alan inflated price. As may be monthly sales increa11 ovu
pealed today to the parents of
"The boar,d of directors
.eight years as the number one Commission has given Western .cancelling an unwanted, high expected with this once in a corresponding months in 1971.
hundreds of children delocmed wishes to make it clear that it Ohio.
executive in the state to Union Telegraph Co. rights tO pressure salea agreement.
lifetime deal, easy financing . The uptrend started thi.s past
by the drug Thalidomide to cannot contemplate any in·
Rhodes, earlier last week, develop elsewhere as a major operate the first satellite
When the consumer arrives terms are available.
August with 3,340 new car
accept Its new $47 million offer · crease in the swns now of.
referring
to
his
own
business executive in the system int1mded lor com- at the salesman'soffice to pick
Consumers ' who have been sales, an ·all-time August
of reparations.
· rered," the announcement
•
development business, state," Sweet said.
The company, which sold said. ·
munications solely within the up his gift, h'e is subjected to an cheated or approached by record, and pula VW sales in
"When we announced a United Slates. the company e~tensive Interview and sales representatives of one of these the two state area 24.2 pet,
Thalidomide in Britain but has
The statement said tlie remarked: " We do have
always denied legalliabWty in money would be paid over 10 trouble drawing industry to program on travel and tourism plans a '70 million, two- Pilch. He is asked 1D evaluate I!Chemea' are aaked to contact ahead of tbe ume period lui
ID promote Ohio, we got some satellite system called Westar several products and to select . lhe consumer Protection year.
the yean of, litigation over the years into a "charitable trust" Ohio."
iuue, announced the new offer for the benefit of all the · "I take exception with the criticism because Gov. John J. for use by television networks, . the one he could "really put to Division on their toll.free line ·
more than a decade after 410 children for the rest of their comment, if 'we' means Ohio,'' Gilligan was vac~tioning at his busin~ communications and good use." ~ •PPV&amp;.nl low 1~282-11160, Shaul added. ·
VOTE CENSURE
children were born limbless or lives. It did not say how much Sweet said, "Our indicators (amily home in Michigan," he Western Union's 'own 1111e, to be prjce on sever81 pU!Wises is
O'fTAWA (UP!) - The
operational by mid-1974. ·
justified by ''low advertising
with other deformities after each child would receive. The show business is going io .be up. said.
· Canadian HOUle of Commons
costs." Testimonial letters are
Sir Walter Raleigh was·
their mothers took · the · firm said it "hopes ~his . " And if 'we' · means his • 'At the same time Rhodes was
granted
an estate of 12 000 unanimOUiiy approved Friday
lledaU~.
proposal will be accepted by all business we have had in- building a Howard Johnson · The tail ~f 8 comet pointS .offered fOr the.: consumer to
acres in Ireland by Qu~n a reaolutlon wblch dep1ll'a tbe
The cunplny, one of the the familles and that all out· dications they are doing some motel in Florida and a facilitx . awar from the sun, no mat· · read, and he. Is asked ID write 'Elizabeth. It was on this land bombin1 of the Hanoi·
Wll'ld'• 11111jor producers of standing litigation can thereby business since we are helping at O'Hara Airport in Chicago," . ter ID what direction the his evaluation of the products. that he first planted the po· Halphrlig area 111111 ua tbe
said Sweet. · •
comet is traveling.
At this Point, the" salesman tato in 1596.
them out," said Sweet.
wbl.ty, gin and oilier llquors, be settled."
United Stalell not to f'IUIIIe lt.

'

NOT TOO HAPPY about that getup, it appears, is
Andy, an 8·week-old poodle. Taking Andy shopping
ln•Brlstol, Conn., is Jimmy Rya n, 10.
!

*'

~

:~

T

T

&amp;x::c~&gt;.::::;c::::::::::~~

,

;

WEDNESDAY

i

Soc IaI

POMEROY · Middleport

~ ~~ns ~~~g~oo~~ednes':!~i::

~ recognition for service. All

~ Calendar!.•.~, Royal
Li~~~:~~~
~h:~:::·. ao.
Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
~

SUNDAY
MISSION Rally, 7 p.m . each
evenin~ through SWlday at
Bradford Church of Christ.
Speaker Don Poorman who.has
been working in mission field
in Austria.
ED BOUSMAN, minister on
radio program, "God Is Just A
Prayer Away", will. speak at
7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Zion
Church of Christ Pomeroy·

,_,_a.tE lf.m

Plenty insur.ance to
cover you.

GILLENWATER •
Phone 446-9499

invite .

MONDAY
~EJGS Chapter 53 ' DAV t
·30
7• p, m, Monday at chaptef
horne , Butternut
Ave. I
1
r.r. '

•

Pomeroy Refreshments All
•

•

members asked to attend.
PROGRAM b La
'II
Y
flgSVl e
Boy Sc ou t Tr oop when SaIem

Center PTA mee ts aI 7·.30 p.m.
Monday at SCh00I,

I·

DIRECTORS or Ken Arns~
bary · Chapter, lzaak Walton
League ·of America, 7 p.m.
Monday at clubhouse near
Chester.
· MEETING OF Salon 710, 8 &amp;
40 scheduled for Monday has
been cancelled.
TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Local Chapter
4!i3, Ohio Association of Public
Scliool Employes, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Southern 'High
School. All members asked to
attend.

'
:

1

rr

TIM t;s.sE~T•NEI.

I' UDI

~-r~ra e.v~ol;:lli~lo~·f,

..

" • "• ~ ~ ~" "" ~Q c~

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11~ 1h•c A.. ,. '· • '" ~~'" O~·o •l•l'
P v tJi o \ hr~h roy "' "~ • O• , t• r noroq P• I• P' I
II G~··o'&lt;J
O&gt; &lt;.no"" [ .... "o"~g• ··~ ·0 •• I1
• ll op OI•I Ol&gt;•o Hill
''""

Ul&gt;O L Y ~ f .. T I N[ l

\ov• • ~ ·

''&lt;lh~"h

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o

¢

TWIN
FITTED
IIG 12 97
811104" I f
fULL FITHO
Dur able blend rJf 50%
\electe d Ame ric a n co r
ton and 50 % pQ iye\h•r

StoY t

smoother. wronlr.!e

EA.
REG $2 9~ TRIM RIB KNITS

free .

REGULAR $3.91

NYLON TOPS

421U' , lllOWCASH
IEGULU Sl67

HANDBAGS

~197

mvn 294
~

~

STRIPE OR FLORALS

Dan River· NO-IRON sHEETs
RIG. $2.99
g2xt04"
or ~A,VE 19'7

Corelree

100 % nylon 26"
length Shorr sle~ &gt; el U netic Ire
fr o nl and co llar sly let S•1u
S,M,l Foshr o110ble co lor s

Shovldtr 5!rap, top ha ndlt,
2ipper to te styles. Wet look
v in y l ~. antique goa l fonr$ht1i ,
Pop~o~lor

IIGULAI $1.49

REGUlAR S1.79

~·"
297
1

u' u

J11104 .. It
.,

fUll fiiUD

GIRLS' J.6X
DENIM PANTS

\\ .l

Carefree put tl'rrunk

F ortre l ~

II!G. 14t MEN 'S

BOYS' &amp;·GIRLS'

CUSHIONED

FLARE PANTS

TUBESOOC:~

poft ·

~58~.

e1lar ond coll on blend. "Su·
~an ' s Garde n" ll orol print on
while , ''S ol em Slftpe~ " in blu e ,
t;~retn , yellow or pinl

......

~

colc.rs.

'1 .02

TWIN FITTED

...... . ...
~ · ··

"t: rr r

TONICHT THRU
WEDNESDAY

I

I
1

1

,,,
1 P~~·

HEAD
SQUARES

BED SHEETS

·'

G •u•~&gt;ot •'&gt; o•" ~" !~ ! BUNt

I·

NO-IRON
72x104"

COLO\\ ·
1''

SHEER

DAYTIME

REG. $2.37

.

,

IEGUL.U $5 .44

PRICES YOU'VE DREAMED Of

.!1UfYi /#CHECK

THEY TAKE TURNS
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. JUPI)
- Santa CrU2 sheriff's IM'puiies
had to take turns Friday
burning 1,500 pounds of
marijuana. The fumes from
the blaze kept blowing out of
the incinerator when the door
was opened to stuff in more
weed confiscated in recent
raids. Since some of the smoke
was being trapped inside a
fence around the burner,
lea ~ ng a pungent aroma,
deputies decided to take short
shifts as a preventive measure.

i

®

OUR OWN BRAND

Wednesday ' at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple . Attendance
urged.
•
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday
"Striking the Flag" means
at the home of Mrs. Selwyn lowering it at sea. or taking
Smith. Mr";,. Joe Bolin will give it down in battle as a sign of
..
a demonstration on making sur render.
corn husk roses. Members are
to take corn hti'sks if they li@ve
them.
( ·

1---• ----- - ---------·
II!
.J&gt; 'd
"l'
I
.IJo ·' Qlli'\lli i ' · ,,, .,, I I '
i(J ~t:t ·AA -+: ~"'.. )~ n r. , n .. "\.
~~~f'l·, .,,..,i"'~ ?
tit ~

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1nro f v~• • " t • • n ~v ~'"~ ~~ r • c~pr I
I ~ ·· v• H • r nltr•~ .... .. ~Jnu { !,! .... m~ linu I

1 "''"•·, : ·~~~D,"'Q',"\~,~o;~~ ..~~~; ,g ~· tr
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MA

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l nr r. •t. '"' ' '' T· oun r on

1/orq on o•
IM U

10.

I

~·· 1I

n~ .otf',f"
'"" "" "" I
' "' I I I

REG . S1.2S COMFORT' lONG WEA~'

onr ''"' \1\ 011 ' •

1• •o • -~ .. -~· · a.. ~ .. ~, ,

,.,,., , .. ,

"'f"
""~'~d• • n~d' '' f •
1 Cl" l " t'o t l&gt;l 10(&gt;0
I Q on ful • IO• ~UO I ( 81 10&lt;&gt;

1

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0 ' ~' ~.....
"..." ~ ·P" ~no "'\Q "' '•''"'' '''"
I pu~ •·• h•d "'"'''"

I
I

'"~ vn ·~~~

I

I

Macfoune wc , ho·
ble,
dryo ble
Mothproof New
fas hion colors
~-,

\

ar ~ " ,~., , O&gt;P ~' '" ' '

Includes 1un ·
flow er seed!
to ottroc t
cordmol1 .

TRI·PAK BRIEFS

1 ' i]~r '0'~.-::e~.'~' ·'~. ;;·.~:e~·o·;•,:·~~ ~. 1
1 "'0"'h • 11 1\ IM~~ "'onr •·' H ~o
1

1...-- - --- -- -- -- ·-----~

17 Pc. Stalq!ess

'BURT
LANCASTER
ULZANA'S
RAID

MEIGS lHEATRE
Sun. , Mon ., Tues.
January 7·8-9

'BEN
(Technicolor,
Lee Harcourt Mon tgomery

Joseph Campanella
.. Arthur O'Con nell
Rosemary Murphy

CUTLERY SET
FlUFFY

Carloons ;
HOW· Do· Dee-Doo.dy

2 4 ~t 4.4 ''

ALUMINUMWARE

BEAUTIES

LARGE BATH TOWELS

2 Fl~ ~5~'

TECHN!COLOR (!
l1i1
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE ~

( G)

I

REGULAR $1.98 TO $1 .98

YOUR

CHOICE
each

J pt HJucepon ,., 3 qt co~e red
10 uce po n, 4 ql. cove 11~ d sau ce

Thrck th intv towelt in bold fash ·
ion slfl pei, conl•mporory tolrdl .

W AJHCLOTH5

~t.

96C

pot 1 cup pe rcolol or, co ~ e / utrl r·

Sr.., 11

l ~"f(f
CAlVING

ALL 3

"'
I,.,

2!!Dl5

sns

lUG. 7lc POUND CANDIES

Co r~ rng

se t hem sli( er ,
7 !-7" raosl slr cer o nd
fork Ko! chen tel 8" roost ,

S£1

Peppermint Patties
Cho(olote cov ~

.,.,, •••''" st.VE
to lwttt lt n
\6'

slicer, French co ok , send·
wtch , ulr lt ly , porr ng ond

5UAk
kN!VU .

c •lru s
edges

ly pon .

kn rv e~

Serro ltd

57c

your bUdget

POUND

Special ·Helper

t.N It PER!.PIR~NI

AIRID •
EXTRA DRY

67C
6o7u.N

Fo r ,;ent le, oil

i

day P'ol•&lt;hon ,

~Ul

DNI' JAN 1·11

VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARl'

HOLDS IN ANY WEATHER

. HAIR SPRAY
\IMIT 1
HI(OWOII
UUSOIUY
MM. t-U

Thurs. Only

Sun . . Mon. -Tues. • Wed.
'

~---·--·-·--·--

~

WITH
COUPON'

43C

liMIT DtH

$

li
OZS.

66

'

.

'

'

2nd·&amp;OUVE ST.
'
.,

GAWPOUS, OHIO
\..

,.,

77C

liMII ONI PU COUPOM

'

VALUES
OPEN
, AND
CULLOnE STYLES
FLEECY AND QUILTED
MATERIALS
ZIPPER AND BUTTON

99

SALE PRICE
WHILE THEY LAST

'

j~akf
.
·~ltPJII
"' "THAT OLD-FASHIONED GOODNESS"

CONTAC lO's
. WITH
COIIPON
,
PIG

$13 TO $15

THE FEELING
OF .LUXURY
AT A REAL

..

FOR QUICK PICKUP SERVICE PHONE 446-:i682
'

1
4 ..... 74
19c 101

FO~ YOUR-WINTER COLDS

OUT LOSS YOUR r.AIN - LATE CHRISTMAS SHIPMENT

:No Coupons --:-·No Limit
'

~=.,..

..

Way
•

Ill

.
-------------------------------------------------~--------

Fixed The

Like 'em

U.US OIIU IAII

lox of 20D Tluu01
LIMIT • PO COUPON

LADIES'

You

~!Jfll

m (QUPON

REGULAR

,,

'·

ESTIMATES
ON
HOUSE
DEMOLITION

NU

THE "Si!D SACK" or
Wotld War II is recalled by
this South VIe In a m e s e
marine on guard duty in
miserable we at h e r near
Hue.

- R-hodes called on .
latest statement

..

~REE

SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

•
d
t•
WhItes tOrce ac IOn

'

Jim Boster, city 'sanitarian,
could not be reached 'by
telephone for a comment by the ·
Times-SI&gt;ntinel.

samples per month.
EPA Region V Ad·
ministrator Francis T. Mayo
said :
"Under
Federal
quarantine regulations, water
supplies from which · buses,
trains, and airplanes take the
water which they serve to their
passengers. must meet
standards set liy EPA. :'
The EPA classificatipiis are
part of an ongoing inspection
program b.y the Agency
designed to assist the U. S.
Food and Drug Administration
with its responsibility for
certifying water used by interstate carriers. At present, 85

.

-

higher settlement

· water ,of safe quality has been
compromised.
In the case of'Gallipolis, the
bacteriological record showed'
an inadequate numb er . of
sam pl es ta ken from the
distribution system lot 6
months of the 18 month penod
ehding June, 1972.
The classification will have
an expiration date of Sep!ember 3a, 1973, at which time
available data will be reviewed
and the supply reclassified.
The city was ·notified that
correction ofthedeiiciency can
be achieved lly maintaining a
record of 8 or more bacteriai

'

LAl·AWAY

Gift-o-grams
latest Sllles \
'pitching hoax

-Distillers
offer.

supplies in Region V have been
classified'·: as having met
established Federal standards'
for use by, interstate carriers,
but that one water supply, in
the city of · Gallipolis, was
"provisionally" approved.
The provisionally approved
classification means that a
water supplY has been judged
capable of serving water or
safe quality to the' public, but
that the water quality is con·
sidered ID be deficient, that the
water quality records a re
inadequate, or that th e
operation or facilities are such
that the consistent provision or

'

CASH, CHARGE,

4 Rescued

Neoptism .o ut in
~ew· minor policy

•

t ...,'

•

'

'

�3- The Sunday Tilpes -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 1, 197~ .

,.,

·r-----------------..

2-1·re SUnday Times-Sentinel, SWldaY. Jan. 7,1973 •

Epling company

-;~,:\0~;.;;:,.,.

•

~--,- ---~

! ·Area De~ths !_-

(Continued f~o'!l Page 1)
"portable port" oilerations. The day this
reporter got the accompanying pictures,
the empty concrete materials storage area
was receiving the conveyors. Aself.folding
100-foot riullal stacker had been delivered
over-the-road by truck . Richard Wade,
transportation superintendent, .IoVas
preparing ID unfold it and set it in position.
The conveyor bridge across Route 7
was designed by Epling, specially
fabricated lor the Gavin ltnstallation, and
lifted into place on its supports intact,
.conveyor and all. Six other sections of
conveyor were unloaded from the Hoosier
barge and pulled in!D position by
bulldozer. When the electric hook-up was ·
sompleted, the system was ready.
Willi the .Hoosier -spudded down in
place, the !Dwboal Panzo with Jerry
Truesdell in the pilot house, brought
barges alongside ID be Wlloaded and
moved the empties away. Charles Watson
operated an end-loader in the barge ID
keep the material cleaned up around the
edges while .John Metzger and Larry
Kingery were busy shifting and tying th~
barge as requited In the ope'ration . Deckhands Lester Wells and John Glover
manned pumps ID keep :!he barges dry. and
attended other duties.
•
The Hoosier was designed and built by
M., T. Epling Company in 1971 expressly
for the unloading trade. Installing a P&amp;H
eleclric·motor.&lt;Jriven crane on a rein·
forced deck barge, Epling set a receiving
hopper down into the barge over an 81).foot
by 3&amp;-inch belt conveyor. A huge cater·
pillar generator installed below deck
provides power for the crane, the conveyor
system, and the boat's ancillary equip·
ment.
"The Hoosier operation at Gavin is
fairly typical of our whole business attitude,'' said Miles T. Epling, president
and son of the late Capt. Moses T. Epling,
founder of the company .'
"Since 1925, when there's been a job
for us to do, we've done it. We expect to
keep on (\oing it," lie said.
The 50 or so people who work for M. T.
Epling Coll)Pany reflect that same "can
do" attitude .
And after all, why ~ouldn't they• The
Epling Company from president to
deckhands grew up and work in the "can
do" atmoapht\re of the Gallipolis area's
people. It is an attitude that in perhaps the
last half-century has become a tradition of
.the Galllpolis community.
Beyond the economics of a substantial
payroll spent in the area each week, the
many benefits of a more lasting nature
that the M. T: Epling Company has
brought to Gallipolis are obvious.
Growing with a growing -Gallipolis,
Epling's new brick office building and
familiar "barbed e" logo, are evidence of
the company's faith . in the continued
growth potential ·of the area .
M. T. Epllng Company is an out·
standing example of local people in local
industry keeping the wheels of prosperity
turning. It Is ·· expected that they will
continue for. a long time to come'.

Floyd 0. Boyer

Jake Gaul

a

t ed provisional approval
.Water
Supply
in
Galli
poll~ is gran_
.

Televisiort
Log
'

'

'

GALLIPOLIS - According Gallfpolis' water supply was V of the U. S. Environ;.entai
ID,a release Saturday from the "provisionally " approved Protection Agency.
'Umted States Enyironmental recently by orficials of Region
The report .said six water
.
'
Protection·Agency ii\ Chicago,

.
SUNDAY, JAN. 7, 1973
6:00 - Film 4, ·
·
,
Llk
6:30_: This Week 4; Newsmaker '7213; Bob Harrlngton6;
e
'
A Constant. Spring 1'0.
7:00 - Communique 6; Old Tim• Gospel Hour 13; T-Ill~ Is The
AhSwer 3· Time Por Timothy 4; Religion 1210.
· .
.
· 7:30= F.aith For Today·s; Revival Fires 6; Herald ot Truth 3;
Davey &amp; Goliath 4; Qamera Three 10.
.
8:00 ~ Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan ·6; Church Ser,vlce
13; Mormon Choir 3; Dar ot Discovery 4; Billy James Harg,ls
and His All-American K1ds. 10.
S:30- Oral Robert~3 ; Your Health 4; Day of Dl~cov~ry8; Rex
Humbard 13; Rev1v"l. F~res 15; Kathry~ Kul\tam 6, Rlghl_pn
10.
"
'" . .
9:00 - Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel4; Rex Humbard 15, 6,
Oral Roberts 10;. Archie's Fun House 8. .
9:30- Church by Side of Road 4; ~ampus Crusade10; Dr. Paul
Warren 13; Globetrotters 8.
·
10·00 - Church Serv ice4; Faith For Today 15; Cur-Iosity Shop6,
i3 ; This Is The Llfe3; Old-Time Gospel Hour 8; Movie "Esther

&lt;RACICE .- Orville . Jacob
MIDDLEPORT - Floyd
Orion Boyer, so,. Broadway St., (Jake) Gaul, 61, Racine Route
Midllleport, ' died ' early I, former Racine businessman,
Saturday morning at the died Saturday at home.
Mr.' Gaul operated a grocery
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Boyer was born June 19, store in Racine · a number of
1892 in Mason County, W. Va., years. It is now the Rac!Jie
the son of the late Ellsworth Food Market. Mr. Gaul was
and Vina Bell Boyer. Besides member of the Racine Masonlc
his parents, he was preceded in Lodge. He was a well-known
death by two brothers and a ~mi-pro baseball catcher in
and the King" 10.
sister. Mr. Boyer was a retired the ~ and 40s.
10:30- Insight 4; Captain Noah 3; Consumer Reporf 15. .
He is survived by his wife, 11 :00' - TV Chapel 3; Focus on Columbus 4; Point of V1ew 6; ,
section laborer on the New
Buliwlnkle 13.
.
York Central Railroad, a Firn Beegle Gaul; a daughter,
11
:30
Make
A
Wish
6,
13;
Out~each
15;
This Is The Answer 3.
member of the Middleport Mrs. Ruth Ann Johnson, Norih 12:00- Calvin Evans 13; AI Issue 3; Sacred
Heart 15; Fred
Church of ,Christ, a veteran of Olmsl!!d, Ohio; a son, Charles
Taylor 4; CBPA Bowling 6; CBS News Speclal10.
World War I and was a Gaul, Swan!Dn, Ohio; a sister, 12 :30- Revival Fires 13; MeetThe Press 3, 4, 15; Fallh In Action
member of Feeney-Bennett Mrs. John Wickham, Chester, 1800 - Lower Lighthouse 13; College Basketball 3, 4, IS; To Be
and four grandchildren.
Post 128, American Legion.
Announced 8.
1:30Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13 i WHA Hockey 8; Columbus Town
Funeral
services
will
be
held
Surviving are his wife,
Meeting
10.
Margaret E. Gerlach Boyer; at 1p.ln. Tuesday at the Ewing 2:00- Farmer's Daughter 13; World of Survlval6.
two daughters, Mrs. Walter Funeral Home where friends 2:30- American Spor,tsman 6, 13; l!rban League Pr'esents 10.
(Hazel) Friend, Letart, W. Va., , may call anytime. Burial will 3: oo - Sports Challenge 3; NHL Hockey 4, 15; Face the Nation
and Miss Thelma Boyer, at be in the Letart Falls 3:~ - Roller Derby 3; NBA · Basketball 6, 13; Then Came
Bronson 10.
~
horne; a son, Willard F. Boyer, Cemetery.
4:00
'Washington
Week
In
Review
33.
Pomeroy; seven grand4:30 - Age of Anxiety 33 ; Petticoat Junction 3; Golf 8, 10.
children, several· great5:00- Ripples 33; Green Acres 3.
5:30 - It Takes a Thiel 3; To Be Announced 4; Roller Derby 15.
Robert
P.
Varian.
grandchildren and a number of
- Sesame Street 33 ; Howard Cosell 6, 13. ,
aunts, Wlcles, nieces, nephews
~
RACINE - Robert P. 6:00 - News 4; 60 Minu1es 8, 10.
6:30 ..:.. News 3. 4. 15; Untamed World 6 ; Human Dimension 33;
and cousins.
Varian, 86, Racine Route . 2,
Lawrence Welk 13.
Funeral services will be died Saturday morning at an 7:00
- Lawrence Welk 13; Safari to Adventure 3; This Is Your
VOLUNTEER FIRE;MAN Tim Mills pours water on rear section of third Ave., conducted at 2 p.m. Monday at
Life
4; Wild Kingdom 15; UFOS; In The Know 10; Zoom 20, 33 ;
apartment house in Gallipolis early Saturday morning. Damage was estimated at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral • Athens hospital.
Wall Till Your Falher Gels Ho'l'e 6.
A retired carpenter, Mr.
- World of Disney 3+ 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal 6; Snow
$33,000. It was Gallia's first major fire of the new year.
Horne with the Rev. Raulllri Vari;m, was preceded in death 7:30
Whlte20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 10; I Am Joe's Hearl 13.
Moyer officiating. Burial will by his wife, Elva M. Pickens ·8:00 - FBI 6, 13; Mash 8, 10.
- French Chet 20. 33; McCloud 3, 4, 15; Mannix 8, 10.
be in Riverview Cemetery. Varian, and two brothers and 8:30
9:oo-MasterP,iece Thealre 20,, 33; Dick Van Dyke 8, 10; Movie
Friends may call at the funeral two sisters. He is survived by a
"Hurry Sundown" 6, 13.
horne anytime after 11 am. son; Robert M. Varian, anq a 9:30 - Bing Crosby 8, 10.
- Night Gallery 3, 4, 15; F~rlng Line 20. 33.
today. Military services at the grandson, Robert J. Varian, 10:00
'
10:30 - We Think You Should Know 3; Evil Touch'S; High Road
grave will be conducted by both of Syracuse.
(Continued from page 1)
tydventure 10; Police Surgeon 15; Protectors 4.
)1:00 - News 3. 4, 8,10. 15.
~ Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Funeral services will be held 11 : ~ - CBS News S, 10.
·
ternoon in the medical center were Elsie
at 2 p.m. Monday at the Ewing 11 : - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 1S: Mov ie 8; Movie "A Step Out of
Sherman, Robert Cecil Spaide, 56, and his
L ne" 10.
.
'
Bruno p:· Casci
Funeral Home with the Rev. 12:00
- -ABC News 6, 13.
wife, Gail Spaide, ol, til uf Gallipolis. They
Marshall Larimore officiating. 12:115 - Good News 6; News 13.
ail suffered from smoke inhalation and
POMEROY - Funeral
Burial will be in the Letart 12:l!O- This Is the Year That Will Be 13.
services for,Bruno P. Case!, 60,
burns. Spaide's burns, the most serious,
12:45 - This Week In The NBA
were to the face and hands.
who died Sunday at the Falls Cemetery. Friends may 1'00- News 4, 13.
. Ve~erans Hospital in St. Cloud, call at the funeral home
William Lohse, 28, was treated and
MONDAY, JAN. 8, 1973
anytime.
relea'sed for smoke inhalation and minor
Minn., were conducted Friday
6:00 - ·sunrise Sem inar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: IS - Farmtime 10.
cuts of the arms.
at 10 a.m. at the Sacred Hearl
6:25 - Paul Har.vey 13.
All are tenants in a 15 room apartment
Church with burial in the Wateman White
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Good N~w~. 13;
house owned by Glenn and Faye Thomp· Sacred Heart Cemetery,
School Scene 10.
..
6:
45
.Corncob
Reporl
3
.
. son of Eureka.
Pallbearers were Paul
LONG BOTTOM- Wateman 7:00 - Today 3. 4, 15; News, Weather, Sports 6; CBS News B. 10;
Gallipolis Fire Chief James A. NorSimon, Guido Giralami, David White, 76, Long Bottom Route
Flintstones 13.
.
7:25
Sports
13.
·
thup said Wayne Elliott, a fireman , was
Casci, Arthur Casci, Robert 1, died Friday at his home
7:30
Romper
Room
6 ; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Buliwinkle
treated at the Holzer Medical Center for
Casci, and Paul Casci. Military following an extended illness.
13; Popeye 10.
exhaustion. Firemen fought the blaze
rites were conducted by Drew
Mr. White was born in Roane 8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 10; New Zoo Revue13 ; Sesame St. 33;
6.
.
several hours before bringing it under
Webster Post 39, American cOunty, W.Va., the son of the 8;30Lassie
- Jack LaLanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Re.vlew6 .
control. II is located across the streetfrom·
Legion..
late William Carey and 8:S5 - Local News 13.
·
the old Kroger Store.
Out-of·town relatives and Hanabell Taylor White. A 9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Capt. Kangaroo 8;
Concentratlon6: Friendly Junction 10; A.M. 3; Ben Casey 13.
The Powder Puff Beauty Shop
frie~ds here .for the service farmer the greater part of his 9:30- To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6 ; HazelS.
operated by the Thompsons on the first
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert life, Mr. White was a member 10:00 - Columbus-Six Calling; Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3,
·
DR.
R.
E.
BOICE,
above,
widely
15; Joker's Wlj~ 8, 10.
, ,1 , 1 1 . L. II 1, , t\ ,-1.-l l
floor of the bqilding ~ad only minor water
Casci and daughter, Patricia, , ol ·the •R.id ~ , &lt;lldn:b of 10:30
srllt
Second
13;
Concenfi'
..
llon 3, 'lS i ' &gt;'h Dona ue ' .
known
Pomeroy
physician.
and
damage. ·Twenty-four firemen answerell
St. Paul, Minn.; Frank and Christ· a veteran of World War
Price
s
Right
8,
10.
"" •'
'
surgeon, bas been named new John Di · Piero, Colulllb~s; I,hayingservedinEurope,and
the first alarm of 1973.
11 :00 - Password·l3; Sale of the Century3, 15; Lo.ve, American
Style 6: Gambit 8, 10; Electric Co. 20.
·
Contrary to reports late Saturday, no president of the Twin City Shrine Club David Casci,. Colwnbus; Ar· a member of Drew Webster 11 :30Bewitched
6. 13; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 ; Love of Life
one else was in the structure at the time of lor 1973. Other new officers are Lorenzo thur Casci, Akron; Aldo Del Post 39, American Legion, at
a, tO ; Sesame Street 30.
12:00 .:... Password 6; News 10, 13; Contact 8; Bob Braun 50-SO
the blaze. One resident, Charles Car- Davis, vice president; Richard Dugan, Chiccolo, Huntington, W. Va.; Pomeroy.
Club •·
penter, Apartment 2, front, was working assistant vice president; David Fox, Dante and Louis Man:etU,
Surviving are his wife, Esla ; 12:25
- CBS News 8.
secretary;
Ralph
Webb,
treasurer,
and
. on the river. Chief Northup said volunteer
Ashland, Ky. ; Mrs. Dorothy a sister, · Mrs. Edith Kyle, 12:30 - Split Se&lt;:ond 6; Who, What or Where 3, IS; Search for
Tomorrow 8. 10.
firemen searched the rubble early Walter Grueser, immediate past Dandikis, Athens; and Mr. and Colwnbus; a brother, Woodrow
1:00 - All My Children 6. 13; News 3; Jackie Oblinger! ; Green
new·trustee.
president,
Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Kenneth Russell. Racine. w• Wh'te
1 , St• Albans, w. Va.,
Acres 10.
~
·
and several nieces and 1:30 - Let's Make A~16, 13; Three on AMatch 3, 4, 15; As the
World Turns 8, 10.
nephews. He was preceded in 2:00 - Days ot Our Lives 3, 4, IS ; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
~
Julia Bell Davis
Douglass 6; Guiding Light B. 10.
death by six brothers and two
GALLIPOIJS - Mrs. Julia
2:
30
- Datlne Game 13; Doctors 3, 4, 15; Edge of Nighl8, 10.
sisters.
3:00 - General Hospital6, 13; Another World 3, 4. 15 : Love Is A
Bell Davis, 90, a resident of 934
Funeral services will be held
Many Splenctored Thlnq8, 10; 30 Minutes With 20.
· COhUMBUS (UP!)
· Rawlins testified he offered Second Ave., died in the Holzer
3:3D-Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
at
2
p.m.
Monday
at
the
White
Famed dance instructor the Pottel'$ private lessons at Medical Center about 10:30
Secret Storm 8, 10; French Chef 20.
Funeral Horne in Coolville with 4:00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Fllntstones 6; Sesame St. 20, 33 ; Love
Jimmy
Rawlins
said
Friday
he
class
rates
.
He
said
he
felt
as
·
Sat
d
1
a.m.
ur ay.
evangelist Vernon Dolan of.
American Style 13; Merv Grlltln 4; Somerset t 5; Movie "Sign
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The have relatives and friends been turned away a black couple hwniliated as they did.
Born in Mason CoWlty, W.
of
the Pagan" 10.
ficiating. Burial will be in the
new leadership of the United preferred to fill vacancies, but from his dancing classes
"Oddly enough, I am on their va.,on ""
• ..,c.4,1882 ,shewas the Christian Cemetery at Tuppers 4:30 - I Love Lucy 6; Daniel Boone 13; Petticoat Junction 3;
Merv .Griftln 8; Andy Griffith 15.
Mine Wor~ers of America . what is worse, useless jobs because of objections of his side,'' he said. .
.
daughter of the late Thomas A. ·Plains. Friends may call at the 5:00
- Mr. Rogers 20, 33 ; Daniel Boone 6: Ponderosa 3. 4; Merv
(UMWA) Friday announced have been created to assure middle-aged white clients.
Rawilns sa1d h1s class . and Caroline Bush Ganterbury.
Griffin 8; Dick Van Dy ke 15.
funeral
home
anytime
alter
Rawlins testified at a members did not seem to She married Ernest H. Davis
new policies regarding high incomes for these chosen
5:30- Ele&lt;:. Co. 33 ; Gomer Pyle 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Marshall Dlllor 1S: Dragnet 8.
'
_ne,potism - favoring relatives elite," the resolution r~ad in hearing before the Ohio Civil object to Indians, Egyptians on Dec. 25, 1898. He died in noon Sunday.
6:00 - News3, 4, 8, 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; News 13, 15; Around
Rights Commission on charges and others, only Negroes. He 1944. Both were retired rural
- in the union and· said part.
. The Bend 3J ; Sesame St. 20.
of
discrtinina tions brought by said he recently enrolled a mail carriers.
6:30 - ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; Insight 33; I Dream of
vacations for UMWA officials
The two changes , followed
Jeannie 13; News 3, 4, 15.
.
henceforth would be the same Thursday's announcem~nt of a Mr. and Mrs. William Potter, black in a class and lost many
Surviving are these children,
7:00 - News 6; What's My Line 8; Read Your Way Up 33; ~le&lt;:.
coal miners receive.
Co. 20 ; Truth or Consequences 3; Beat the Clock 4; News 19;
cutback in ali international Columbus, who had been white clients.
Dana Davis, of Linthincum,
Circus 13; Saint IS ; Take: Five 5.
The two policy changes, officer salaries, including rejected in their bid to take
. Md .; Mrs. Caddie Wickham,
!:30- To·Tell The Truth6; Young Dr. Kildare 8; Parent Game
•• l •
recpmmended
by
new Miller's which dro~ped from dancing lessons from Rawlins.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Bernetta
3; Hollywood Squares 4; Marco Sporlllte 33 ; Movie "The Lost
FIVE KILLED
Rawlins, indicating he was
President Arnold R. Miller, $50,ooo to $35,000.
Tribe" 13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Fair, Ft. Wallen Beach, Fla.,
8:00
- Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh· in 3, 4. 15; Rookies 6; The
ACCORD,
N.
Y.
(UPI)
not
prejudiced,
said
he
does
not
were approved by the Union's
Beginning this year, all
and seven grandchildren and
Tribe
That Hides ,trom Man 20; College Basketball 33;
executive board Thilrsday, but UMWA employes and staff as feel that way about black Fire swept through a three· six great-grandchildren. A son,
COLUMBUS - HolllH!hold
Gunsmoke 8, 10. .
were not announced until well as international and people at all, and deplores the story building at a resort hotel ,Glenn,· died in 1932 and a goods and jlppliances sold by ~: 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10; Movies "Set This Town on Fire" 3, 4,
15; "5 Card Stud" 6, 13; The American River20.
Friday.
district offices will receive two attitude of so many of his near this Catskill Mountain daughter, Mrs. Daphne "gifkl-gram" constitute the 9:30 - Doris Day 8, 10; Book Beat 20.
hamlet, Sunday killing five Broyles, died in 1970.
The resolution affecting weeks paid vacation : This . middle-aged white clients.
latest sales hoax plaguing 10:00 - News 20; CBS News Special 8. tO ; Holidays - Hollow
Days 33.
The Potters said they were persons and 1feaving several
nepotism will not ban the corresponds to the present two
Ohioans,
·Ohio Commerce
One brother, Jol)n D. Can·
11
:00
- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
others
U.accounted
for.
Fire
hiring of· relatives to union weeks paid vacation for coal turned down for the class when
terbury, Galilpolis Ferry, Director Dennis' Shaul said 11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Jack Paar Tonlte 6, 13; Movie 8;
Movie " Never Say Goodbye" 10.
posts, bUt will control such miners under the bituminous they went to one of his studios and police spokesmen at the survives.
Friday.
'
Focus on Columbus 4; News 13.
1:00
scene
said
the
ruins
of
the
wood
for
an
appointment.
Potter
practices.
Commerce's Consumer 1:30 'coal contract.
She was a member of the
News 4.
"Nepotism is a plague in all
Prior to the policy change, quoted Rawlins as saying: frame . building were being First Baptist Church and the Protection Division has
organizations, but it appears!D most international union "The age group I deal with searched for o.ther possible· Ann Judson Bible Class and the received nwn~ous complaints
victims.
have. become endemic and employes and officers received won't accept your race."
concerning agencies who introduces one of his strongest 4S
VW
D of A Lodge. .
672
permanent in the United Mine four weeks vacation.
Funeral services will be held contact potential buyers seiling points. If the conswner
'
new
8
Workers of America. Not only
2 p,m. Tuesday at Miller's through the mall offering them chooses to become a lifetime sold in November
Home for Funerals with Rev. 8 free gift in combination with 'merqberin the organization, he
.
.·
Dalesaunders Rulen . of- the purchase of additional maymakeanyfiiturepurcfiase · - ouBI:;IN,Ohlo-nra-montb
fici•ting. Burial will be in mer~handise. Although con· · foragreatlyreducedprice. As whennewcarsalesreachedan
Mound Rill Cemetery.
tacted initially in his home, the soon as the consumer shows all-time November high,
'
· · Friends rna)' call at the conswner must go to the any interest in any of the Nov~mber showed a continued
funeral home on Monday be· salesman's lo~al office to products, the salesman begins upswing for Volkswagen witb
tween 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
,obtain his gift; lhus giving up to fill in a sales contract national sales of 48,672 new~
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Sweet"also rapped Rhodes'
his 3-day cooling off protection. allowing the consumer no time 1/W's.
·Loopholes in this new la'r, to think over the of{er. Given
In the Ohio and Kentucky
LONDON (UP!) - The including such Scotches as Development Director David business ventures outside the
C.
Sweet
Friday
took
exception
state.
which went in!D effect January . the time to consider his pur- area, Volkswagen dealers sold
Distillers Co., reacting to a Johnnie Walker, Dewar and
"There are some ironies for
OBTAINS RIGHTS
I, 1973, prevent the consumer chase, the consumer would find 2,941 new VW's and. poeled
boycott of its products and Black and White, had first with remarks made by former
Gov . . James A. Rhodes someone who hammered on the
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The who ~es invol~ed in one of the product Is being sold ID him t!Jeir fourth · consecutive
mounting public anger, ap· offered $11.7 million.
regarding
industrial
growth
in
point
(Developing
Ohio)
for
Federal
Communications these gift.o-gram deala from alan inflated price. As may be monthly sales increa11 ovu
pealed today to the parents of
"The boar,d of directors
.eight years as the number one Commission has given Western .cancelling an unwanted, high expected with this once in a corresponding months in 1971.
hundreds of children delocmed wishes to make it clear that it Ohio.
executive in the state to Union Telegraph Co. rights tO pressure salea agreement.
lifetime deal, easy financing . The uptrend started thi.s past
by the drug Thalidomide to cannot contemplate any in·
Rhodes, earlier last week, develop elsewhere as a major operate the first satellite
When the consumer arrives terms are available.
August with 3,340 new car
accept Its new $47 million offer · crease in the swns now of.
referring
to
his
own
business executive in the system int1mded lor com- at the salesman'soffice to pick
Consumers ' who have been sales, an ·all-time August
of reparations.
· rered," the announcement
•
development business, state," Sweet said.
The company, which sold said. ·
munications solely within the up his gift, h'e is subjected to an cheated or approached by record, and pula VW sales in
"When we announced a United Slates. the company e~tensive Interview and sales representatives of one of these the two state area 24.2 pet,
Thalidomide in Britain but has
The statement said tlie remarked: " We do have
always denied legalliabWty in money would be paid over 10 trouble drawing industry to program on travel and tourism plans a '70 million, two- Pilch. He is asked 1D evaluate I!Chemea' are aaked to contact ahead of tbe ume period lui
ID promote Ohio, we got some satellite system called Westar several products and to select . lhe consumer Protection year.
the yean of, litigation over the years into a "charitable trust" Ohio."
iuue, announced the new offer for the benefit of all the · "I take exception with the criticism because Gov. John J. for use by television networks, . the one he could "really put to Division on their toll.free line ·
more than a decade after 410 children for the rest of their comment, if 'we' means Ohio,'' Gilligan was vac~tioning at his busin~ communications and good use." ~ •PPV&amp;.nl low 1~282-11160, Shaul added. ·
VOTE CENSURE
children were born limbless or lives. It did not say how much Sweet said, "Our indicators (amily home in Michigan," he Western Union's 'own 1111e, to be prjce on sever81 pU!Wises is
O'fTAWA (UP!) - The
operational by mid-1974. ·
justified by ''low advertising
with other deformities after each child would receive. The show business is going io .be up. said.
· Canadian HOUle of Commons
costs." Testimonial letters are
Sir Walter Raleigh was·
their mothers took · the · firm said it "hopes ~his . " And if 'we' · means his • 'At the same time Rhodes was
granted
an estate of 12 000 unanimOUiiy approved Friday
lledaU~.
proposal will be accepted by all business we have had in- building a Howard Johnson · The tail ~f 8 comet pointS .offered fOr the.: consumer to
acres in Ireland by Qu~n a reaolutlon wblch dep1ll'a tbe
The cunplny, one of the the familles and that all out· dications they are doing some motel in Florida and a facilitx . awar from the sun, no mat· · read, and he. Is asked ID write 'Elizabeth. It was on this land bombin1 of the Hanoi·
Wll'ld'• 11111jor producers of standing litigation can thereby business since we are helping at O'Hara Airport in Chicago," . ter ID what direction the his evaluation of the products. that he first planted the po· Halphrlig area 111111 ua tbe
said Sweet. · •
comet is traveling.
At this Point, the" salesman tato in 1596.
them out," said Sweet.
wbl.ty, gin and oilier llquors, be settled."
United Stalell not to f'IUIIIe lt.

'

NOT TOO HAPPY about that getup, it appears, is
Andy, an 8·week-old poodle. Taking Andy shopping
ln•Brlstol, Conn., is Jimmy Rya n, 10.
!

*'

~

:~

T

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&amp;x::c~&gt;.::::;c::::::::::~~

,

;

WEDNESDAY

i

Soc IaI

POMEROY · Middleport

~ ~~ns ~~~g~oo~~ednes':!~i::

~ recognition for service. All

~ Calendar!.•.~, Royal
Li~~~:~~~
~h:~:::·. ao.
Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
~

SUNDAY
MISSION Rally, 7 p.m . each
evenin~ through SWlday at
Bradford Church of Christ.
Speaker Don Poorman who.has
been working in mission field
in Austria.
ED BOUSMAN, minister on
radio program, "God Is Just A
Prayer Away", will. speak at
7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Zion
Church of Christ Pomeroy·

,_,_a.tE lf.m

Plenty insur.ance to
cover you.

GILLENWATER •
Phone 446-9499

invite .

MONDAY
~EJGS Chapter 53 ' DAV t
·30
7• p, m, Monday at chaptef
horne , Butternut
Ave. I
1
r.r. '

•

Pomeroy Refreshments All
•

•

members asked to attend.
PROGRAM b La
'II
Y
flgSVl e
Boy Sc ou t Tr oop when SaIem

Center PTA mee ts aI 7·.30 p.m.
Monday at SCh00I,

I·

DIRECTORS or Ken Arns~
bary · Chapter, lzaak Walton
League ·of America, 7 p.m.
Monday at clubhouse near
Chester.
· MEETING OF Salon 710, 8 &amp;
40 scheduled for Monday has
been cancelled.
TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Local Chapter
4!i3, Ohio Association of Public
Scliool Employes, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Southern 'High
School. All members asked to
attend.

'
:

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TWIN
FITTED
IIG 12 97
811104" I f
fULL FITHO
Dur able blend rJf 50%
\electe d Ame ric a n co r
ton and 50 % pQ iye\h•r

StoY t

smoother. wronlr.!e

EA.
REG $2 9~ TRIM RIB KNITS

free .

REGULAR $3.91

NYLON TOPS

421U' , lllOWCASH
IEGULU Sl67

HANDBAGS

~197

mvn 294
~

~

STRIPE OR FLORALS

Dan River· NO-IRON sHEETs
RIG. $2.99
g2xt04"
or ~A,VE 19'7

Corelree

100 % nylon 26"
length Shorr sle~ &gt; el U netic Ire
fr o nl and co llar sly let S•1u
S,M,l Foshr o110ble co lor s

Shovldtr 5!rap, top ha ndlt,
2ipper to te styles. Wet look
v in y l ~. antique goa l fonr$ht1i ,
Pop~o~lor

IIGULAI $1.49

REGUlAR S1.79

~·"
297
1

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J11104 .. It
.,

fUll fiiUD

GIRLS' J.6X
DENIM PANTS

\\ .l

Carefree put tl'rrunk

F ortre l ~

II!G. 14t MEN 'S

BOYS' &amp;·GIRLS'

CUSHIONED

FLARE PANTS

TUBESOOC:~

poft ·

~58~.

e1lar ond coll on blend. "Su·
~an ' s Garde n" ll orol print on
while , ''S ol em Slftpe~ " in blu e ,
t;~retn , yellow or pinl

......

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colc.rs.

'1 .02

TWIN FITTED

...... . ...
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"t: rr r

TONICHT THRU
WEDNESDAY

I

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HEAD
SQUARES

BED SHEETS

·'

G •u•~&gt;ot •'&gt; o•" ~" !~ ! BUNt

I·

NO-IRON
72x104"

COLO\\ ·
1''

SHEER

DAYTIME

REG. $2.37

.

,

IEGUL.U $5 .44

PRICES YOU'VE DREAMED Of

.!1UfYi /#CHECK

THEY TAKE TURNS
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. JUPI)
- Santa CrU2 sheriff's IM'puiies
had to take turns Friday
burning 1,500 pounds of
marijuana. The fumes from
the blaze kept blowing out of
the incinerator when the door
was opened to stuff in more
weed confiscated in recent
raids. Since some of the smoke
was being trapped inside a
fence around the burner,
lea ~ ng a pungent aroma,
deputies decided to take short
shifts as a preventive measure.

i

®

OUR OWN BRAND

Wednesday ' at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple . Attendance
urged.
•
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday
"Striking the Flag" means
at the home of Mrs. Selwyn lowering it at sea. or taking
Smith. Mr";,. Joe Bolin will give it down in battle as a sign of
..
a demonstration on making sur render.
corn husk roses. Members are
to take corn hti'sks if they li@ve
them.
( ·

1---• ----- - ---------·
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REG . S1.2S COMFORT' lONG WEA~'

onr ''"' \1\ 011 ' •

1• •o • -~ .. -~· · a.. ~ .. ~, ,

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"'f"
""~'~d• • n~d' '' f •
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Macfoune wc , ho·
ble,
dryo ble
Mothproof New
fas hion colors
~-,

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Includes 1un ·
flow er seed!
to ottroc t
cordmol1 .

TRI·PAK BRIEFS

1 ' i]~r '0'~.-::e~.'~' ·'~. ;;·.~:e~·o·;•,:·~~ ~. 1
1 "'0"'h • 11 1\ IM~~ "'onr •·' H ~o
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17 Pc. Stalq!ess

'BURT
LANCASTER
ULZANA'S
RAID

MEIGS lHEATRE
Sun. , Mon ., Tues.
January 7·8-9

'BEN
(Technicolor,
Lee Harcourt Mon tgomery

Joseph Campanella
.. Arthur O'Con nell
Rosemary Murphy

CUTLERY SET
FlUFFY

Carloons ;
HOW· Do· Dee-Doo.dy

2 4 ~t 4.4 ''

ALUMINUMWARE

BEAUTIES

LARGE BATH TOWELS

2 Fl~ ~5~'

TECHN!COLOR (!
l1i1
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE ~

( G)

I

REGULAR $1.98 TO $1 .98

YOUR

CHOICE
each

J pt HJucepon ,., 3 qt co~e red
10 uce po n, 4 ql. cove 11~ d sau ce

Thrck th intv towelt in bold fash ·
ion slfl pei, conl•mporory tolrdl .

W AJHCLOTH5

~t.

96C

pot 1 cup pe rcolol or, co ~ e / utrl r·

Sr.., 11

l ~"f(f
CAlVING

ALL 3

"'
I,.,

2!!Dl5

sns

lUG. 7lc POUND CANDIES

Co r~ rng

se t hem sli( er ,
7 !-7" raosl slr cer o nd
fork Ko! chen tel 8" roost ,

S£1

Peppermint Patties
Cho(olote cov ~

.,.,, •••''" st.VE
to lwttt lt n
\6'

slicer, French co ok , send·
wtch , ulr lt ly , porr ng ond

5UAk
kN!VU .

c •lru s
edges

ly pon .

kn rv e~

Serro ltd

57c

your bUdget

POUND

Special ·Helper

t.N It PER!.PIR~NI

AIRID •
EXTRA DRY

67C
6o7u.N

Fo r ,;ent le, oil

i

day P'ol•&lt;hon ,

~Ul

DNI' JAN 1·11

VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARl'

HOLDS IN ANY WEATHER

. HAIR SPRAY
\IMIT 1
HI(OWOII
UUSOIUY
MM. t-U

Thurs. Only

Sun . . Mon. -Tues. • Wed.
'

~---·--·-·--·--

~

WITH
COUPON'

43C

liMIT DtH

$

li
OZS.

66

'

.

'

'

2nd·&amp;OUVE ST.
'
.,

GAWPOUS, OHIO
\..

,.,

77C

liMII ONI PU COUPOM

'

VALUES
OPEN
, AND
CULLOnE STYLES
FLEECY AND QUILTED
MATERIALS
ZIPPER AND BUTTON

99

SALE PRICE
WHILE THEY LAST

'

j~akf
.
·~ltPJII
"' "THAT OLD-FASHIONED GOODNESS"

CONTAC lO's
. WITH
COIIPON
,
PIG

$13 TO $15

THE FEELING
OF .LUXURY
AT A REAL

..

FOR QUICK PICKUP SERVICE PHONE 446-:i682
'

1
4 ..... 74
19c 101

FO~ YOUR-WINTER COLDS

OUT LOSS YOUR r.AIN - LATE CHRISTMAS SHIPMENT

:No Coupons --:-·No Limit
'

~=.,..

..

Way
•

Ill

.
-------------------------------------------------~--------

Fixed The

Like 'em

U.US OIIU IAII

lox of 20D Tluu01
LIMIT • PO COUPON

LADIES'

You

~!Jfll

m (QUPON

REGULAR

,,

'·

ESTIMATES
ON
HOUSE
DEMOLITION

NU

THE "Si!D SACK" or
Wotld War II is recalled by
this South VIe In a m e s e
marine on guard duty in
miserable we at h e r near
Hue.

- R-hodes called on .
latest statement

..

~REE

SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

•
d
t•
WhItes tOrce ac IOn

'

Jim Boster, city 'sanitarian,
could not be reached 'by
telephone for a comment by the ·
Times-SI&gt;ntinel.

samples per month.
EPA Region V Ad·
ministrator Francis T. Mayo
said :
"Under
Federal
quarantine regulations, water
supplies from which · buses,
trains, and airplanes take the
water which they serve to their
passengers. must meet
standards set liy EPA. :'
The EPA classificatipiis are
part of an ongoing inspection
program b.y the Agency
designed to assist the U. S.
Food and Drug Administration
with its responsibility for
certifying water used by interstate carriers. At present, 85

.

-

higher settlement

· water ,of safe quality has been
compromised.
In the case of'Gallipolis, the
bacteriological record showed'
an inadequate numb er . of
sam pl es ta ken from the
distribution system lot 6
months of the 18 month penod
ehding June, 1972.
The classification will have
an expiration date of Sep!ember 3a, 1973, at which time
available data will be reviewed
and the supply reclassified.
The city was ·notified that
correction ofthedeiiciency can
be achieved lly maintaining a
record of 8 or more bacteriai

'

LAl·AWAY

Gift-o-grams
latest Sllles \
'pitching hoax

-Distillers
offer.

supplies in Region V have been
classified'·: as having met
established Federal standards'
for use by, interstate carriers,
but that one water supply, in
the city of · Gallipolis, was
"provisionally" approved.
The provisionally approved
classification means that a
water supplY has been judged
capable of serving water or
safe quality to the' public, but
that the water quality is con·
sidered ID be deficient, that the
water quality records a re
inadequate, or that th e
operation or facilities are such
that the consistent provision or

'

CASH, CHARGE,

4 Rescued

Neoptism .o ut in
~ew· minor policy

•

t ...,'

•

'

'

�. •

- 4- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan _7, 1973

·Kyger Coupcil D of
A elects new officers
KYGER - Election of of·
licers highlighted tlie Dec. 27
m·eeting of the Kyger Council,
Daughters of America·, No. 227
al t~e Lodge Hall.
Elected were councilor , Mrs.
Nina Rupe; assistant coun·
cilor, Mrs . Dottie McCoy; vice
councilor, , Mrs. Mary Brad·
bury; ass!siant vice councilor'
Mr ~. Belly Conkle; recording
secretary, Mrs. Mary B.
Sisson ; assistant recording
secretary, Mrs. Irma Bales;
financial secretary, Mrs .

Malinda Bradbury ; treasurer,
·Mrs. Lucille Mulford ; con·
doctor , Mrs. Ka)l Hockman ;
warden, Mrs, Rita Wright;
iliside sen\inel, Miss Becky
'Hockman; outside sentinel,
Miss Rhonda Bales; Junior
past councilor, Mrs. Garnet
Rope, and assistant Junior
past councilor, Mrs. Cora Ward
Rlipe, Trustees are Mrs. Kay
Hockman, Mrs. Mary Bradbury and Mrs. Rita Wright.
Insta)lalion will take place
during the Jan . 31 meeting. A
supper will follow.

.

•

.,

"

0

GALLIPOLIS
Flex
Greenlee was reci,n\Iy named
wiriner of a color television .
~warded by the Gallia County
citizens' Band Radio Club.
. ·Mr. ·Greenlee's pame was
;elected by Bill Mitcheli,
lirector of the Emergency
&gt;quad;last Saturday in front of
lhe Courthouse . All proceeds in
lhe project were given to the
' sheriff 's emergency squad
fund.
Mr, Greenlee will be guest·
of-h&amp;nor at the next meeting of
the Gallia County C.B. Radio
Club, on Jan. II, at the A.C.E.

'
'

MISS DYAN LYNN KELLOGG
GALLIPOLIS -- TO WED - Mr. and Mrs . Creighton
Kellogg, 733 Butternut Dr., Gates !'.!ills, Ohio,.are announcing
the engagement oftheir daughte(, Dyan Lynn, to Jack Blaine
Matthews, son of Mr. and Mrs, B. B. Matthews, 13 Garfield
Ave. The couple are juniors at Morehead Slate University.
Mis.s Kellogg is a member of Delta Zeta Sorority and Mr.
Matthews is ~ member of Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. The
wedding will be held at Mayfield United Methodist Church in
Gtes Mills on Aug. II.

QUICK QUIZ
Q- WJwt i.'i the commet·
.... cia / val ue rJj ba'I.I XHe?

SEIKO

lr

A- Makin g alun)inum _
(j-Fo r what is astro naut
Ed w ard Wh ite especially
1W ted?

A- He was the first Amer·
lean to ' 'walk in space." 20
minutes in 1965.

MEANS PRECISION

Q-Wh o is consid ered the
fi rst m o d er n heav yweight
boxing eli amp io n of the

wor!d'
A-John L, Sullivan ,
Q-flow far back in 'his·
t!)r !l does advertisi11g go '

Self -Wind Dav -Da! e Ca iBndar,
98.2 Ft W11 1e1 Tested . Yellow Too /

~tllln lo! s Stool Back. Bllfnt Umbe r
Dial. S65 00

TED FLOOD;
Watchmaker
"We service what we, sell."

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS Band Boosters
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
Band room. General meeting
for Cadet and Senior parents.
REGULAR meeting of
Cheshire-Kyger PTA at 7:30
p.m: Program will be a three
part drama presented by the
Kyger High School Speech
Class under tba direction of
Mrs. Faye Sauer.
FRENCH Colony Chapter DAR
will meet with Mis~ Catherine
Hayward at 2 p,m.
WA~HINGTON School PTA, 7
p.m., Judge .Wray Bevens
'guest speaker.
'MERCERVILLE Grange
regular meeting at 7:30 p.m.
· Annual dues now payable to the
secretary, !Ia Hineman .
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club will
meet at I p.m. with Mrs. L. W
Wickline hostess.

A- The earliest was a bush RIO GRANDE Calvary Baptist
over a doorway advertising a
wine shop in Babylon 5.000 Auxiliary will meet at lhe
church at 7:30p.m.
years ago.
GRACE United Methodist
Q- Where ar e the Euro·
pean headq rw rt.ers of the Chlulrch Clircltesth- Nho . h4
U11ited Nati o"s'
wr mee a
e c urc
A- Geneva. Switzerland. at 9:30 a.m. and No. 5
Q- Wiwt freshwat er lake will meet at the church at
I p.m. The nursery will be
1s the wo-rld's lonpest?
open.
·. - .
A- La k ~ Tiingany\l&lt;a in
Africa. It c overs 12 ,7.00
GRACE . United Methodist
square .Wil~s,
Church Circles - No I
Q-ls uU beach swul simi· will
meet
at · 7:30
/a r in color?
p.m . with Mrs. Harold
A-No. Depending on its Swindler, 653 Second Ave.; No.
composition, it may be white .
tan . yellow , green , purple . 2 will meet at 7:30 p.m. with
and even black where vol· Mrs. W. D. Abblett, 51 Gar{ield
canic ruck has been pulver· Ave.; and Circle No. 3 will
ized.
meet at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs.
Q- Did A bra ham Lincoi11 Emmett Morrison, 533 Fourth
leave a large estate'
Ave.
A- He left $110,794 .

By Ada Keels
Mrs. Mary Howard ~nd son,
T-FHT Clarence Howard, Mrs.
Jackie Howard and children
vL!;ited her daughter, Mrs.
Marianna Morgan and
husband and daughters at
Youngstown, 0., Thursday and
Friday.
Mr. Wesley Hurl visited
friends at Cambridge over
Christmas.
Mr . and Mrs . Larry C. Smith
and brother Hubert were in
Chillicothe Sunday.
Mr. Robert Cooper was
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Payne Tuesday.
Mrs. Edna Long, Colwnbus,
called her mother, Mrs. Daisy
Ross Christmas Day stating
she fell on ice and hurt her leg.
Mrs. Sandria Robison and
children from Gallipolis visited
her parents, Mr, and Mrs:
Wesley Hurt and family
Christmas Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Howard and family .from
Jackson and Mr. and Mrs.
.
'
Bobbie Gorden and son Bo5bie
Deen, Gallipolis, Mr, and Mrs,
Jim Howard and children, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Howard and
---------WEDNESDAY
SADDLE and Sirloin Riding
Club will meet at the Bulaville
TownHouse at 7 p.m. Members
are asked to bring dessert..

.

THE GALLIA County Ex!iension Homemakers' Council
will meet at 10 a.m. at the
·G_race United r.Jethodisl
~hurch . The program will~~:
' Your Lines are Showmg ·
Everyone welcome. Potluck
lunch at noon.
THURSDAY
FIRST Church of God
Missionary Society will meet
wilh Mrs . Allen Baker,
Woodland Dr., at 7:30p.m.

HOOVER DELUXE ,_SALE I
'

Adjusts To All Types' Of

Carpets

T
0

SAVE $15.00

LOW

A
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--,/~J

NOAMAl

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No. 1031

c

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Reg. •79,95
Sale '64.95

T

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TOOLS

0

Reg. '14.95
Sale '10.00

N

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• "It beats, as it
'sweeps, as it cleans".
• Extra large throw·
away bag- holds more
dirt-change less
eften!
• Vinyl outer jacketnever a dusty odor.
Wipe clean with a
damp cloth.
"
• Instant rug adjust·
ment ... low pile to
deep shag.
• Two speed motor50% more suction
with cleaning tools,
automatically!
• Rolls on wheels.
• Wide angle head·
light . .

N
0

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I

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A
v
E

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SAVE s4.95
HDDVER'S AG!TA IDA

11 buh u •t 1wttp1 , ~ 1 •t c l1111 1.

Prer o) oo n ll\111 \ moun tel1
on ball l! farm g~ '
Soli

bl•~ l lt&lt;l

\W~~~~

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New Hope

'

Ewirigton

•

MISS DEBORAJJ: LYNN CiiAMBERS
GALLIPOLIS - ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
Capt. and Mrs . HarryD. Chambers, Neighborhood Rd., are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Deborah
Lynn, to Randal G. Prater, son of Mr. and Mrs. Waller
Prater, Richmondale, Ohio. Miss Chambers is a senior at
Gallia Academy High School and a part-lime employee at
Larobi's. Mr. Prater is a senior of Southeastern High School
in Richmllndale. Wedding plans are ineomplete.

children, John Howard and
TSHT Clarence · Howard all
enjoyed a delicous dinner at
home Monday. The family was
not complete, Mrs, Marianna
Morgan from Youngstown and
Mrs, Hazel Young from qayton
were absent.

Mrs. Daisy ·Ross . received
word that her daughter-in-law,
Mrs . Edward Ross from
Chicago, Ill,, bad fallen on lhe
ice and hurl herself. She is
walking on crutches.
Mr. Dennis Hurt who was in
the Army at Ft. Knox, Ky., is
spending ten days with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Hurt. When he returns to the
army he will go to Texas for
further training,
Miss Myra Bunch and
brother Steven from Urbana
visited their uncles, Mr. Larry
C, Smith and family and Mr.
Hubert Smith and family, Also
th ·
d
ts M
d
eir gran paren • r. an
Mrs. John Morgan Saturday.
New Hope Simday·SChbolhad!
their program and Christmas
treat right af!er Sunday SQhool
and was well attended.
Mrs. Silva Coleman,
Morgantown, W. Va., visited
her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross
from Friday until Sunday. She
left Sunday afternoon for
Wilberforce to visit her
daughter, Mrs. Joann Carter
and family for a few days. Her
daughter and family left
Tuesday to drive through to St.
Louis to visit another daughter
Mrs. Belly Jean Parron and
family for a few days. They all
retu'rned to Wilberforce where
Silva Coleman left the next day
t'o visit her mother, Mrs . Daisy
Ross over New Years before
returning, to her work on
Tuesday.
Mr. Roger Gamble, Concord, ·
California, called his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Gamble
stating his family is fi,ne but he
bas been very sick with throat
.trooble.
Mr. and Mrs. James Dewey
Keels, Kinunie and Twania all
from Cincinnati, also his sister,
Mrs. Darline Grant and
husband from Gallipolis visited
Mrs. Grant·~ and Jal)les'
father, Mr. Dewy Keels New
Year's Day:
Mr. and Mrs. Ross McDaniel
from Orient, 0., and sister,
Lenora McDaniel, Berlin, 0.,
visited Mrs . Daisy Ross
Saturday. t Mr . Robert Cooper attended
the funeral of Mr. Reid Garns
a! Providence (Buckridge)
Tuesday morning alll o'clock.
-. Mrs. Audrey Pryor arid son;'
Mark, Cincinnati, visited lier
mother, Mrs. Ada Keels and .
family Friday and Saturday.
TSPC Claren~ Howard left
one ·day this week for Minnesota where he will · be

stationed for an indefinite
time.

Sherri Howard returned to
her studies at Rio Grande
grade school after her
Christmas vacation.
Mr. Sam Hutcheson is
assisting the Howard brothers
tying their tobaceo for market.
Mrs. Ada Keelt! received
word that Addie Bell Howell is
able to leave the hospital and
return to her home in Cin·
cinnali, 0 .

ELECTION SET
RACINE - The Southern
High School Athletic Boosters
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
at the high school here.
Election of officers will be
held. All members and in·
terested persons are asked to
be present.

By Mrs. Mftchell Webb
Mr. and.Mrs. Francis Tyler
and daughter were recent
visitors of Mrs . Tyler's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Marvin.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach
ant! fal)lily of Galllpolis were
Mrs. Roach's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. David Ball and family ,
another daughter and husband
and Mr. Roach's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Arnold, Freddie Burnette,
Gallipolis, Mrs. Oral Webb,
Vinton.
Christmas dinner visitors of
Mr. and Mrs, Basel Harris of
St. Albans, W. Va. were Mrs.
Harris' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Tylei af Vinton; Mr. and
Mrs. Wyman Denney of Bid·
well;. Mr . and Mrs. Francis
Tyler and daughter of
Ewinglon; another son of the
Tylers, Mr . Lee Tyler, and
children of Gnstonia, N. C.,
joined them at the home of her
Sliter at St. Albans, W. Va.
'\!r. and Mrs. Jack Brewer
and daughter of Florida, who
have spent a week with Mr.
Brewer's parents, Mr . dnd
Mrs. Harry Polsley, Ewing ton,
and Mrs. Brewer's mother of
Gallipolis, left for their home.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball and
daughter, Shirley Robie and

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It buts . as 11 ueeps. u rl clunt

707

lrom bile ot cH pet

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COME IN AND SEE THE POWER DRIVE

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. GALLIPOLIS - Partners of paiients. Other donations will
Gallia County Salon No. 612, be to the American ~ion
Eight and F~rly, met at the Child Welfare F;oundation;
, hoine of · Dorothy Hecker .Cystic Fibrosis, Research for
Thursday evening .. Le Petit Camp Fund, Telephone Fund,
Chapeau Carrie - Neutzling medicine, and clothing al NJH.
presided at the business The Chapeau Carrie an :
session.
nounced plans for the annual•
The Children and Youth dinner and visit of 'depar- '
Chairman reported that she tementale officers &gt;yhlch will
bas seill three reports to the . be held April 5, at Trinity
departmental chairman. She Church in Pomeroy. Partners
read .. . bulletin from the Area from nearby Salons
be
C&amp;Y Chairman, Mary Martin, invited . Committees were
outlining the various projects appointed to.help with favors
for the year. The Salon voted to and table decorations.
·donate to these projects, which
Refreshments were served
include • bed at National by hostess, Dorothy Hecker,
Jewish · Hospital, NJH, in and door prizes distributed.
Denver to be endowed by Ohio Favors were ceramic toothpick ·
Eight and Forty.
holders which had been made
The "All Partners" project by patients at Gallipolis State .
this year is a Gas . Institute.
.
Chromatograph which : The next meeting wiy be
me~sures drugs in the system Feb. I , at the home of Erma
before the doctor PI[~cribes Smith, Spring St., Pomeroy .
new medication for CF or TB

'Your Lines Are Showing'
program for homemakers

Henderson-Pauley
wed in Arkansas

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

1'1 '

SPLIT "
FRYE_8S

· The
GALLIPOLIS
marriage of · Miss Kathryn
Henderson and Gregory
Pauley was solemnized at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Church of
·Christ of Mountain Home in
Arkansas. O«iljiatlng at the
double-ring ceremony was
Michael Goff of Memphis,
Tenn ., a brother-in-law of the
groom .
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Henderson
of Mount.ain Homd, and parents of the groom are Mr . and
'Mrs. Loy Pauley of Gallipoll;.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a full!liltll~~llf111!.ov41.'~•lt
wlifch featured 1111 applique of
seed pearls at the neckline and
long sleeves which tapered to
points at the wrist. Tiers of lace
start"~! at the gathered waistline of the skirt, and fonned a
Cathedral train. The bride's
veil of tulle was held by a
modified Juliet cap, covered
with seed pearls . She carried a
cascade bouquet of pink carnations and red roses .

BACKS, NECKS &amp;
GIBLETS INCLUDED

33~

-----------WHOLE SMOKED
PICNICS

59e .

Wlloll the llmlly shol&gt;llolothtl
JZI Stcond An.
Gollipolls, 0.

GALLIPOLIS - If you feel
you need a better understanding of how the ~ of
lines in clothing and home
furnishings help to achieve the
effect you want, be sure to
attend the January meeting of
the Gallia County Extension
Homemakers' Council at the
Grace United Methodist
Church at 10 a.m. Wednesday,
Jan . 10.
Lunch will be potluck with
each person
bringing her own
.r\

table service. Gallipolis
women are hostesses with Bea
Evans and Ethel Robinson
serving as co-chairmen.
The lesson on design will be
in two 'parts with lesson one
being given in the morning and
lesson two in the afternoon.
Please bring a pair of scissors
for cutting paper; glue or
rubber cement, and several
colored magazine pages particularly greens and blues .

The maid of honor was Miss Richard Lawyer, all of
· Gayle Henderson, sister of the Mountain , Home, and BeQny
_bride, and Mrs. Ronald Baker Gooden of Montgomery City,
of Little Hock served as the Mo . Other music included
matron of honor. Bridesmaids recordings
of
"Elsa 's
were Miss Becky Pauley of Procession to the Cathedral,"
Gallipolis, a sister of the by Wagner, and "Color My
groom, and Miss Kelda Easley Worm," by Chicago.
of Mountain Home, a cousin of
As the couple lighted the
I
the bride. Miss Henderson Unity Candle, selections from
00S
CU
S
carried a cascade bouquet of Sonnets from the Portuguese
pink carnat ions and red roses. were read by Mr. and Mrs . ..
Mrs. Bake r, Miss Pauley and Roger Margason of Fort
A pollock supper was en- Jan . 15, at the high school.
Miss Easley carried ca_scade Worth, Texas .
joyed by members of the Hannan Trace parents are
bouquets of pink and while
Candlelighters were Roger Hannan Trace Booster's Club urged to attend the meeting
carnations.
Haney of Mountain·Home, and at its monthly meeting, Dec . and support the school's acThe attendants wore full- Kurtis Boughton of Topeka, 18. Aspeci~l program pi music tivities ,
length ~owns which featured Kan ., both cousins of the bride. was provided b by ;he H~h
,,
n\ulti,l~.f&gt; 'd'~klrt 'of . l"k "'~' A;l~~itlleslboQ~,l"lis.. choo) l;lj~!ll er,. ,_ns~ m e.
' .
organza over plilk taffeta and Miss Anita· Colli~ of Mountain under the direction of Robert
bodices of white with pink Home.
Shaver.
embroidery.
Serving at the reception in Money-making proj~cts were Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary Ford,
Serving ·as best man was the the fellowship hall of the dl~~ussed and. a special fundLetart,
W. Va.; Frances
father · of the groom. Grooms- church were Miss Anne Baker raising commrttee, conststmg
men were Allan Boster and of Mountain Home; Mrs. Bob .I of Robert Shaver, Tom Belvtlle Miller, Racine; Bobby Miller, .
David Barridg0 of Gallipolis, Felt of Jonesboro; Mrs. Joel and Clarence Clary, wa~ ~p­ Ashland, Ky.; Pamela Lanand John Farmer of Glade- Marx of Fayetteville; and Mrs. pomted to ratse money t.o fimsh daker, Pomeroy; Earl Werner,
water, Texas.
Carl· Betzold of Chicago, Ill. paymg for the bands new Middleport; Oswell Durham,
Middleport; Rosa Ball, PortMusic was provided by a Assisting with the reception uniforms.
land;
·· Ronald Bostic, Point
quartet comprising Nelda Jo wf•e Mrs. T. J. Henderson and
A summe~ basketball
Gettys, Barbara Ward and Mrs. Robert Haney, both of program 15 bemg planned so Pleasant-; William Shively,
Mountain Home , and Mrs, Ken that the new outside basketball Racine .
'
Boughton of Topeka, all aunts court, financed by the booster's DISCHARGED - William
of the bride.
club this past year, can be Stone, Howard Searles,
Clarence Mcintyre,
In charge of the gifts table utilized.
were Mrs. Leon Smith of
The next meeting of the Christopher Barker, Cheryl
Wichita, Kan ,, also an aunt of Booster's Club will be Monday, Mefford, Richard Rathburn.
the bride.
The Shoestring Knots mel Powers .
Cousins of the bride who
Dec. 28 at the hol)le of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Mitchell . The
The Gage Invaders met Dec. distributed rice bags were Miss
advisor, Norman Mitchell, 26 at the Patriot Grange Hall Terry Haney of Mountain
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presided.
with Mark Carter presiding. Home and Kenton Boughton of
New officers were elected Richard Ingles led devotions Topeka .
Following a short wedding
and are, president, Nelson and Terry Lakins led. the
trip, Mrs. Pauley will be
Dray; vice-president, Bill pledge to the flags.
Biars; secretary, Melvin
Election.of officers was held. teaching at Laddonia, Mo., and
Blars; treasurer, Sheila New officers are as follows: Mr. Pauley will reswne his
Cromlish; recreation leader, Mark Carter, president; David studies at Harding College at
I
Pete Biars; safety chairman, Ingles, vice president; Timmy Searcy.
Kevin Mitchell; news reporter, - Davis, secretary; Richard
ASKS DIVORCE
Greg Mitchell, and chaplain, Ingles, treasurer; Terry Lakin,
POMEI\OY - Charging
George Holley . The next news reporter; Brent Briggs, gross neglect of duty and exmeeUng will be held Jan. 25, at safety; Stanley Grego.ry, treme cruelty, Karen White of
7:30p.m. at the hoJlle of Mr. health; and John Ingles, song Pomeroy has · filed suit for
and Mrs.· Norman Mitchell.
leader.
divorce from James White,
Club advisors are Mr. and
Members present were Columbus, in Meigs County
Mrs! Nonnan Mitchell . .Club Terry- Lakin, Richard, David, Common Pleas Court. The
members present were Chris JohnandJimingles, Tim, Jeff, plaintiff · seeks custody of on'e
Blars, Pete Blars, Paul Blars, and David Davis, Mark Carter, minor child.
Melvin Biars, Bill Biars , Brent Briggs, Danny Davis,
Shelia Cromllsh, Angie and a new member was Steve
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Cromllsh, Nick Cromlish, Baker. After the meeting a gift
POMEROY - Thomas
Nelson Dray, Debbie Dray, exchange was held and Richard Spencer, 20, and Cathy
- Timmy Lewis, -lee-Mitchell-, refreshmentswere served. The · D. Pickens, 17, both of Long
!lreg Mltch~ll, Kevin Mitchell, next meeting will be Jan. 30. Bottom Route 1.
•
George Holley, Rick Holley,
Barry Plymale and Doug
Shipley.
Guests present were Mrs.
Junior Blars, Philip, Mark and
~ ·''
...... . .
,., . .....-::..;:
TO THE HARD OF /~
.... •..."
Betllany Mitchell.
HEA RING .. ,.J&lt; ,.; .,
', · l: ,
Conn &amp; Yamaha
TL LEPHONE
I
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,...., II
'.. ~
The VInton Highlighlers met
Dec. 20 at the home of Mr. and
......
This of.r1\!PLIFtilER
ct Is mite d lo , · r.:!!;
..,,· •·It&amp;- •.·•
1
Mrs. Harold Pauley . Mrs.
the Hurd· of· Henring ~~··.
·~.,
Wllma Pauley had charge of
only. .lull Jill out the
, "'~"
.
coupon h•low and moil .
·-._
p
. (fi;. ,
the program.
Our , Sl• •ply Is !lmit•d,
..,,
Christinas gifts· were ex- ,
so m ,,.,I tHe coupon
'\
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changed and dancing and
NOW!
. ., .:·" .
,.... ... . .,.
. ~
. f
refreshmenta_,followed .
S
~D
THIS
:
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Club members present were
OUPON
.
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Patty and Bobby. Alley,
TODAY
·
Trhonda · Callihan, Ron and
Carol · Davis, Dre!llll Eddy,
Bobby Gibson, Oelsa and
AimRESS .. .. .... ..... ..... .....
.. .• ~ .. .... u.
James Kemp, Sharon Miller,
('ltV .... , ................ ST,\TE ... .. . ...... ..
Cindy Pauley, Karen; Valerie,
Becky, and Vicky · Powers,
TEL~f,H,~u~~ 1~P~~FIER ·
Todd Comer, Ronnie Warner •
COLUMBUS, OHIO t l'! U
~46-0687
-....!
54 State St.
Gallipolis
and Teresa Whilley. ··Also
pre.enl was Mrs. William

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Tues. Wed. Sat. '
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Thurs. 9:30-12 noon

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36 Loc•.st St.
Gallipolis
State Reg. No. 71·02·00328 •

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GALLIPOLIS - FHA
GIRL OF. MONTH- Miss
Sharon Hively, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles t.
Hively, was elected· ''Girl of
lhe Month " at the last
meeting of the Kyger Creek
Chapter af the Future
Homemakers of America :
Sharon, a junior, is a
member of the Silver
Memorial Freewill Baptist
Church and is very active in
FHA.

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PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES:
Glen
Stanley, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fred Fields, Hartford; ·Mrs.
Thomas Jones, Cheshire;
Willard Nibert, Gallipolis
Ferry;
John
Jackson,
Southside; Mrs. Cleo Smith,
Ashton; Mrs. Charles Leach,
Mrs. Bernard Wallace,
Christopher Williams , Mrs.
Charles Powells, Eunice
Hesson, Point Pleasant;
Thomas McDaniel, East
Liverpool, 0., and Mrs.
Charles Neal, Colwnbus, Ohio.

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Gallia 4-H Ouh News

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MRS. GREGORY PAULEY

av~ilable. All. are approwed

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Sev.eral career courses

for Veterans.

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Pleasatlt ; Grace Patterson ,
Gallipolis Ferry; Opal Roush,
Henderson ; Orville Watson,
Henderson .
·
BIRTH: Jan . 5, a d~ughter to
Mr , " and Mrs.. BillY. Joe
Harrington, Gallipolis F ~r.ry .

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Smooth . ool•~hed me 111 bar!'
ltnl ly ~ 1 br ~ t e t'mb ~ lldrd ~r · l

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br uS Mt 1

yp ' sufl ace ••Her

'

her granomother, Mrs. Oral
Webb, were visitors in Huntington recently .
Mrs. Mildred Baker spent a
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Harley Green, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Green
were visitors in Wellston
recently. Mr. Green went to
consult his doctor. '

-·

HOOVER'S TRIPLE ACTION

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Union Hall tin Second Ave. ·
· Tollil aniount to ·be donated
,;.ill be a~nounced Jan . 11'. as
all funds have .nOt been accounted for at this tim,e.
This is the second lime the
club has made c_ontributions to
the Emergency Squad. Oxygen
eqUipment was supplied for tile •
ambulance at an earlier 4ate.
The Radio Club will still
accept' donations .for the
Emergency· Squad for anyone
interested in supporting the
squad.

lb.

PLEAS.)NT VALLEV
DISCHARGES: Mrs. James
L.· Hall1 son, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. William Floyd, son ,
Glenwood;' Venetta . Smith,
Point Pleasant; Mary Smith,
Pomeroy; Lilliap Robbins ,
Mrs. Carl ~·: Simpkins , Point

Mrs.
. Hecker ·bosts
.,...·Eight af!d Forty ·

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·1 .Coming
I Events ·~

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CB Radio Club-will
give second dona~ion.

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GALLIPOLIS

SHOP ·NOW AND SAVE
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STOREWIDE
CLEARANCE

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ON HUNDREDS OF

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FEATURES

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A Sale You Can't Afford To Miss
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Monday Store Hours 9:30 AM to 8 PM

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- 4- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Jan _7, 1973

·Kyger Coupcil D of
A elects new officers
KYGER - Election of of·
licers highlighted tlie Dec. 27
m·eeting of the Kyger Council,
Daughters of America·, No. 227
al t~e Lodge Hall.
Elected were councilor , Mrs.
Nina Rupe; assistant coun·
cilor, Mrs . Dottie McCoy; vice
councilor, , Mrs. Mary Brad·
bury; ass!siant vice councilor'
Mr ~. Belly Conkle; recording
secretary, Mrs. Mary B.
Sisson ; assistant recording
secretary, Mrs. Irma Bales;
financial secretary, Mrs .

Malinda Bradbury ; treasurer,
·Mrs. Lucille Mulford ; con·
doctor , Mrs. Ka)l Hockman ;
warden, Mrs, Rita Wright;
iliside sen\inel, Miss Becky
'Hockman; outside sentinel,
Miss Rhonda Bales; Junior
past councilor, Mrs. Garnet
Rope, and assistant Junior
past councilor, Mrs. Cora Ward
Rlipe, Trustees are Mrs. Kay
Hockman, Mrs. Mary Bradbury and Mrs. Rita Wright.
Insta)lalion will take place
during the Jan . 31 meeting. A
supper will follow.

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GALLIPOLIS
Flex
Greenlee was reci,n\Iy named
wiriner of a color television .
~warded by the Gallia County
citizens' Band Radio Club.
. ·Mr. ·Greenlee's pame was
;elected by Bill Mitcheli,
lirector of the Emergency
&gt;quad;last Saturday in front of
lhe Courthouse . All proceeds in
lhe project were given to the
' sheriff 's emergency squad
fund.
Mr, Greenlee will be guest·
of-h&amp;nor at the next meeting of
the Gallia County C.B. Radio
Club, on Jan. II, at the A.C.E.

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MISS DYAN LYNN KELLOGG
GALLIPOLIS -- TO WED - Mr. and Mrs . Creighton
Kellogg, 733 Butternut Dr., Gates !'.!ills, Ohio,.are announcing
the engagement oftheir daughte(, Dyan Lynn, to Jack Blaine
Matthews, son of Mr. and Mrs, B. B. Matthews, 13 Garfield
Ave. The couple are juniors at Morehead Slate University.
Mis.s Kellogg is a member of Delta Zeta Sorority and Mr.
Matthews is ~ member of Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. The
wedding will be held at Mayfield United Methodist Church in
Gtes Mills on Aug. II.

QUICK QUIZ
Q- WJwt i.'i the commet·
.... cia / val ue rJj ba'I.I XHe?

SEIKO

lr

A- Makin g alun)inum _
(j-Fo r what is astro naut
Ed w ard Wh ite especially
1W ted?

A- He was the first Amer·
lean to ' 'walk in space." 20
minutes in 1965.

MEANS PRECISION

Q-Wh o is consid ered the
fi rst m o d er n heav yweight
boxing eli amp io n of the

wor!d'
A-John L, Sullivan ,
Q-flow far back in 'his·
t!)r !l does advertisi11g go '

Self -Wind Dav -Da! e Ca iBndar,
98.2 Ft W11 1e1 Tested . Yellow Too /

~tllln lo! s Stool Back. Bllfnt Umbe r
Dial. S65 00

TED FLOOD;
Watchmaker
"We service what we, sell."

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS Band Boosters
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
Band room. General meeting
for Cadet and Senior parents.
REGULAR meeting of
Cheshire-Kyger PTA at 7:30
p.m: Program will be a three
part drama presented by the
Kyger High School Speech
Class under tba direction of
Mrs. Faye Sauer.
FRENCH Colony Chapter DAR
will meet with Mis~ Catherine
Hayward at 2 p,m.
WA~HINGTON School PTA, 7
p.m., Judge .Wray Bevens
'guest speaker.
'MERCERVILLE Grange
regular meeting at 7:30 p.m.
· Annual dues now payable to the
secretary, !Ia Hineman .
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club will
meet at I p.m. with Mrs. L. W
Wickline hostess.

A- The earliest was a bush RIO GRANDE Calvary Baptist
over a doorway advertising a
wine shop in Babylon 5.000 Auxiliary will meet at lhe
church at 7:30p.m.
years ago.
GRACE United Methodist
Q- Where ar e the Euro·
pean headq rw rt.ers of the Chlulrch Clircltesth- Nho . h4
U11ited Nati o"s'
wr mee a
e c urc
A- Geneva. Switzerland. at 9:30 a.m. and No. 5
Q- Wiwt freshwat er lake will meet at the church at
I p.m. The nursery will be
1s the wo-rld's lonpest?
open.
·. - .
A- La k ~ Tiingany\l&lt;a in
Africa. It c overs 12 ,7.00
GRACE . United Methodist
square .Wil~s,
Church Circles - No I
Q-ls uU beach swul simi· will
meet
at · 7:30
/a r in color?
p.m . with Mrs. Harold
A-No. Depending on its Swindler, 653 Second Ave.; No.
composition, it may be white .
tan . yellow , green , purple . 2 will meet at 7:30 p.m. with
and even black where vol· Mrs. W. D. Abblett, 51 Gar{ield
canic ruck has been pulver· Ave.; and Circle No. 3 will
ized.
meet at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs.
Q- Did A bra ham Lincoi11 Emmett Morrison, 533 Fourth
leave a large estate'
Ave.
A- He left $110,794 .

By Ada Keels
Mrs. Mary Howard ~nd son,
T-FHT Clarence Howard, Mrs.
Jackie Howard and children
vL!;ited her daughter, Mrs.
Marianna Morgan and
husband and daughters at
Youngstown, 0., Thursday and
Friday.
Mr. Wesley Hurl visited
friends at Cambridge over
Christmas.
Mr . and Mrs . Larry C. Smith
and brother Hubert were in
Chillicothe Sunday.
Mr. Robert Cooper was
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Payne Tuesday.
Mrs. Edna Long, Colwnbus,
called her mother, Mrs. Daisy
Ross Christmas Day stating
she fell on ice and hurt her leg.
Mrs. Sandria Robison and
children from Gallipolis visited
her parents, Mr, and Mrs:
Wesley Hurt and family
Christmas Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Howard and family .from
Jackson and Mr. and Mrs.
.
'
Bobbie Gorden and son Bo5bie
Deen, Gallipolis, Mr, and Mrs,
Jim Howard and children, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Howard and
---------WEDNESDAY
SADDLE and Sirloin Riding
Club will meet at the Bulaville
TownHouse at 7 p.m. Members
are asked to bring dessert..

.

THE GALLIA County Ex!iension Homemakers' Council
will meet at 10 a.m. at the
·G_race United r.Jethodisl
~hurch . The program will~~:
' Your Lines are Showmg ·
Everyone welcome. Potluck
lunch at noon.
THURSDAY
FIRST Church of God
Missionary Society will meet
wilh Mrs . Allen Baker,
Woodland Dr., at 7:30p.m.

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Ewirigton

•

MISS DEBORAJJ: LYNN CiiAMBERS
GALLIPOLIS - ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
Capt. and Mrs . HarryD. Chambers, Neighborhood Rd., are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Deborah
Lynn, to Randal G. Prater, son of Mr. and Mrs. Waller
Prater, Richmondale, Ohio. Miss Chambers is a senior at
Gallia Academy High School and a part-lime employee at
Larobi's. Mr. Prater is a senior of Southeastern High School
in Richmllndale. Wedding plans are ineomplete.

children, John Howard and
TSHT Clarence · Howard all
enjoyed a delicous dinner at
home Monday. The family was
not complete, Mrs, Marianna
Morgan from Youngstown and
Mrs, Hazel Young from qayton
were absent.

Mrs. Daisy ·Ross . received
word that her daughter-in-law,
Mrs . Edward Ross from
Chicago, Ill,, bad fallen on lhe
ice and hurl herself. She is
walking on crutches.
Mr. Dennis Hurt who was in
the Army at Ft. Knox, Ky., is
spending ten days with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Hurt. When he returns to the
army he will go to Texas for
further training,
Miss Myra Bunch and
brother Steven from Urbana
visited their uncles, Mr. Larry
C, Smith and family and Mr.
Hubert Smith and family, Also
th ·
d
ts M
d
eir gran paren • r. an
Mrs. John Morgan Saturday.
New Hope Simday·SChbolhad!
their program and Christmas
treat right af!er Sunday SQhool
and was well attended.
Mrs. Silva Coleman,
Morgantown, W. Va., visited
her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross
from Friday until Sunday. She
left Sunday afternoon for
Wilberforce to visit her
daughter, Mrs. Joann Carter
and family for a few days. Her
daughter and family left
Tuesday to drive through to St.
Louis to visit another daughter
Mrs. Belly Jean Parron and
family for a few days. They all
retu'rned to Wilberforce where
Silva Coleman left the next day
t'o visit her mother, Mrs . Daisy
Ross over New Years before
returning, to her work on
Tuesday.
Mr. Roger Gamble, Concord, ·
California, called his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Gamble
stating his family is fi,ne but he
bas been very sick with throat
.trooble.
Mr. and Mrs. James Dewey
Keels, Kinunie and Twania all
from Cincinnati, also his sister,
Mrs. Darline Grant and
husband from Gallipolis visited
Mrs. Grant·~ and Jal)les'
father, Mr. Dewy Keels New
Year's Day:
Mr. and Mrs. Ross McDaniel
from Orient, 0., and sister,
Lenora McDaniel, Berlin, 0.,
visited Mrs . Daisy Ross
Saturday. t Mr . Robert Cooper attended
the funeral of Mr. Reid Garns
a! Providence (Buckridge)
Tuesday morning alll o'clock.
-. Mrs. Audrey Pryor arid son;'
Mark, Cincinnati, visited lier
mother, Mrs. Ada Keels and .
family Friday and Saturday.
TSPC Claren~ Howard left
one ·day this week for Minnesota where he will · be

stationed for an indefinite
time.

Sherri Howard returned to
her studies at Rio Grande
grade school after her
Christmas vacation.
Mr. Sam Hutcheson is
assisting the Howard brothers
tying their tobaceo for market.
Mrs. Ada Keelt! received
word that Addie Bell Howell is
able to leave the hospital and
return to her home in Cin·
cinnali, 0 .

ELECTION SET
RACINE - The Southern
High School Athletic Boosters
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
at the high school here.
Election of officers will be
held. All members and in·
terested persons are asked to
be present.

By Mrs. Mftchell Webb
Mr. and.Mrs. Francis Tyler
and daughter were recent
visitors of Mrs . Tyler's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Marvin.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach
ant! fal)lily of Galllpolis were
Mrs. Roach's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. David Ball and family ,
another daughter and husband
and Mr. Roach's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Arnold, Freddie Burnette,
Gallipolis, Mrs. Oral Webb,
Vinton.
Christmas dinner visitors of
Mr. and Mrs, Basel Harris of
St. Albans, W. Va. were Mrs.
Harris' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Tylei af Vinton; Mr. and
Mrs. Wyman Denney of Bid·
well;. Mr . and Mrs. Francis
Tyler and daughter of
Ewinglon; another son of the
Tylers, Mr . Lee Tyler, and
children of Gnstonia, N. C.,
joined them at the home of her
Sliter at St. Albans, W. Va.
'\!r. and Mrs. Jack Brewer
and daughter of Florida, who
have spent a week with Mr.
Brewer's parents, Mr . dnd
Mrs. Harry Polsley, Ewing ton,
and Mrs. Brewer's mother of
Gallipolis, left for their home.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ball and
daughter, Shirley Robie and

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It buts . as 11 ueeps. u rl clunt

707

lrom bile ot cH pet

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COME IN AND SEE THE POWER DRIVE

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. GALLIPOLIS - Partners of paiients. Other donations will
Gallia County Salon No. 612, be to the American ~ion
Eight and F~rly, met at the Child Welfare F;oundation;
, hoine of · Dorothy Hecker .Cystic Fibrosis, Research for
Thursday evening .. Le Petit Camp Fund, Telephone Fund,
Chapeau Carrie - Neutzling medicine, and clothing al NJH.
presided at the business The Chapeau Carrie an :
session.
nounced plans for the annual•
The Children and Youth dinner and visit of 'depar- '
Chairman reported that she tementale officers &gt;yhlch will
bas seill three reports to the . be held April 5, at Trinity
departmental chairman. She Church in Pomeroy. Partners
read .. . bulletin from the Area from nearby Salons
be
C&amp;Y Chairman, Mary Martin, invited . Committees were
outlining the various projects appointed to.help with favors
for the year. The Salon voted to and table decorations.
·donate to these projects, which
Refreshments were served
include • bed at National by hostess, Dorothy Hecker,
Jewish · Hospital, NJH, in and door prizes distributed.
Denver to be endowed by Ohio Favors were ceramic toothpick ·
Eight and Forty.
holders which had been made
The "All Partners" project by patients at Gallipolis State .
this year is a Gas . Institute.
.
Chromatograph which : The next meeting wiy be
me~sures drugs in the system Feb. I , at the home of Erma
before the doctor PI[~cribes Smith, Spring St., Pomeroy .
new medication for CF or TB

'Your Lines Are Showing'
program for homemakers

Henderson-Pauley
wed in Arkansas

Everything Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

1'1 '

SPLIT "
FRYE_8S

· The
GALLIPOLIS
marriage of · Miss Kathryn
Henderson and Gregory
Pauley was solemnized at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Church of
·Christ of Mountain Home in
Arkansas. O«iljiatlng at the
double-ring ceremony was
Michael Goff of Memphis,
Tenn ., a brother-in-law of the
groom .
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Henderson
of Mount.ain Homd, and parents of the groom are Mr . and
'Mrs. Loy Pauley of Gallipoll;.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a full!liltll~~llf111!.ov41.'~•lt
wlifch featured 1111 applique of
seed pearls at the neckline and
long sleeves which tapered to
points at the wrist. Tiers of lace
start"~! at the gathered waistline of the skirt, and fonned a
Cathedral train. The bride's
veil of tulle was held by a
modified Juliet cap, covered
with seed pearls . She carried a
cascade bouquet of pink carnations and red roses .

BACKS, NECKS &amp;
GIBLETS INCLUDED

33~

-----------WHOLE SMOKED
PICNICS

59e .

Wlloll the llmlly shol&gt;llolothtl
JZI Stcond An.
Gollipolls, 0.

GALLIPOLIS - If you feel
you need a better understanding of how the ~ of
lines in clothing and home
furnishings help to achieve the
effect you want, be sure to
attend the January meeting of
the Gallia County Extension
Homemakers' Council at the
Grace United Methodist
Church at 10 a.m. Wednesday,
Jan . 10.
Lunch will be potluck with
each person
bringing her own
.r\

table service. Gallipolis
women are hostesses with Bea
Evans and Ethel Robinson
serving as co-chairmen.
The lesson on design will be
in two 'parts with lesson one
being given in the morning and
lesson two in the afternoon.
Please bring a pair of scissors
for cutting paper; glue or
rubber cement, and several
colored magazine pages particularly greens and blues .

The maid of honor was Miss Richard Lawyer, all of
· Gayle Henderson, sister of the Mountain , Home, and BeQny
_bride, and Mrs. Ronald Baker Gooden of Montgomery City,
of Little Hock served as the Mo . Other music included
matron of honor. Bridesmaids recordings
of
"Elsa 's
were Miss Becky Pauley of Procession to the Cathedral,"
Gallipolis, a sister of the by Wagner, and "Color My
groom, and Miss Kelda Easley Worm," by Chicago.
of Mountain Home, a cousin of
As the couple lighted the
I
the bride. Miss Henderson Unity Candle, selections from
00S
CU
S
carried a cascade bouquet of Sonnets from the Portuguese
pink carnat ions and red roses. were read by Mr. and Mrs . ..
Mrs. Bake r, Miss Pauley and Roger Margason of Fort
A pollock supper was en- Jan . 15, at the high school.
Miss Easley carried ca_scade Worth, Texas .
joyed by members of the Hannan Trace parents are
bouquets of pink and while
Candlelighters were Roger Hannan Trace Booster's Club urged to attend the meeting
carnations.
Haney of Mountain·Home, and at its monthly meeting, Dec . and support the school's acThe attendants wore full- Kurtis Boughton of Topeka, 18. Aspeci~l program pi music tivities ,
length ~owns which featured Kan ., both cousins of the bride. was provided b by ;he H~h
,,
n\ulti,l~.f&gt; 'd'~klrt 'of . l"k "'~' A;l~~itlleslboQ~,l"lis.. choo) l;lj~!ll er,. ,_ns~ m e.
' .
organza over plilk taffeta and Miss Anita· Colli~ of Mountain under the direction of Robert
bodices of white with pink Home.
Shaver.
embroidery.
Serving at the reception in Money-making proj~cts were Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary Ford,
Serving ·as best man was the the fellowship hall of the dl~~ussed and. a special fundLetart,
W. Va.; Frances
father · of the groom. Grooms- church were Miss Anne Baker raising commrttee, conststmg
men were Allan Boster and of Mountain Home; Mrs. Bob .I of Robert Shaver, Tom Belvtlle Miller, Racine; Bobby Miller, .
David Barridg0 of Gallipolis, Felt of Jonesboro; Mrs. Joel and Clarence Clary, wa~ ~p­ Ashland, Ky.; Pamela Lanand John Farmer of Glade- Marx of Fayetteville; and Mrs. pomted to ratse money t.o fimsh daker, Pomeroy; Earl Werner,
water, Texas.
Carl· Betzold of Chicago, Ill. paymg for the bands new Middleport; Oswell Durham,
Middleport; Rosa Ball, PortMusic was provided by a Assisting with the reception uniforms.
land;
·· Ronald Bostic, Point
quartet comprising Nelda Jo wf•e Mrs. T. J. Henderson and
A summe~ basketball
Gettys, Barbara Ward and Mrs. Robert Haney, both of program 15 bemg planned so Pleasant-; William Shively,
Mountain Home , and Mrs, Ken that the new outside basketball Racine .
'
Boughton of Topeka, all aunts court, financed by the booster's DISCHARGED - William
of the bride.
club this past year, can be Stone, Howard Searles,
Clarence Mcintyre,
In charge of the gifts table utilized.
were Mrs. Leon Smith of
The next meeting of the Christopher Barker, Cheryl
Wichita, Kan ,, also an aunt of Booster's Club will be Monday, Mefford, Richard Rathburn.
the bride.
The Shoestring Knots mel Powers .
Cousins of the bride who
Dec. 28 at the hol)le of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Mitchell . The
The Gage Invaders met Dec. distributed rice bags were Miss
advisor, Norman Mitchell, 26 at the Patriot Grange Hall Terry Haney of Mountain
I
I
I
presided.
with Mark Carter presiding. Home and Kenton Boughton of
New officers were elected Richard Ingles led devotions Topeka .
Following a short wedding
and are, president, Nelson and Terry Lakins led. the
trip, Mrs. Pauley will be
Dray; vice-president, Bill pledge to the flags.
Biars; secretary, Melvin
Election.of officers was held. teaching at Laddonia, Mo., and
Blars; treasurer, Sheila New officers are as follows: Mr. Pauley will reswne his
Cromlish; recreation leader, Mark Carter, president; David studies at Harding College at
I
Pete Biars; safety chairman, Ingles, vice president; Timmy Searcy.
Kevin Mitchell; news reporter, - Davis, secretary; Richard
ASKS DIVORCE
Greg Mitchell, and chaplain, Ingles, treasurer; Terry Lakin,
POMEI\OY - Charging
George Holley . The next news reporter; Brent Briggs, gross neglect of duty and exmeeUng will be held Jan. 25, at safety; Stanley Grego.ry, treme cruelty, Karen White of
7:30p.m. at the hoJlle of Mr. health; and John Ingles, song Pomeroy has · filed suit for
and Mrs.· Norman Mitchell.
leader.
divorce from James White,
Club advisors are Mr. and
Members present were Columbus, in Meigs County
Mrs! Nonnan Mitchell . .Club Terry- Lakin, Richard, David, Common Pleas Court. The
members present were Chris JohnandJimingles, Tim, Jeff, plaintiff · seeks custody of on'e
Blars, Pete Blars, Paul Blars, and David Davis, Mark Carter, minor child.
Melvin Biars, Bill Biars , Brent Briggs, Danny Davis,
Shelia Cromllsh, Angie and a new member was Steve
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Cromllsh, Nick Cromlish, Baker. After the meeting a gift
POMEROY - Thomas
Nelson Dray, Debbie Dray, exchange was held and Richard Spencer, 20, and Cathy
- Timmy Lewis, -lee-Mitchell-, refreshmentswere served. The · D. Pickens, 17, both of Long
!lreg Mltch~ll, Kevin Mitchell, next meeting will be Jan. 30. Bottom Route 1.
•
George Holley, Rick Holley,
Barry Plymale and Doug
Shipley.
Guests present were Mrs.
Junior Blars, Philip, Mark and
~ ·''
...... . .
,., . .....-::..;:
TO THE HARD OF /~
.... •..."
Betllany Mitchell.
HEA RING .. ,.J&lt; ,.; .,
', · l: ,
Conn &amp; Yamaha
TL LEPHONE
I
;
,...., II
'.. ~
The VInton Highlighlers met
Dec. 20 at the home of Mr. and
......
This of.r1\!PLIFtilER
ct Is mite d lo , · r.:!!;
..,,· •·It&amp;- •.·•
1
Mrs. Harold Pauley . Mrs.
the Hurd· of· Henring ~~··.
·~.,
Wllma Pauley had charge of
only. .lull Jill out the
, "'~"
.
coupon h•low and moil .
·-._
p
. (fi;. ,
the program.
Our , Sl• •ply Is !lmit•d,
..,,
Christinas gifts· were ex- ,
so m ,,.,I tHe coupon
'\
\ . '• "-.'I
changed and dancing and
NOW!
. ., .:·" .
,.... ... . .,.
. ~
. f
refreshmenta_,followed .
S
~D
THIS
:
,'
·
"»-·,I
'
'•
Club members present were
OUPON
.
... \'
Patty and Bobby. Alley,
TODAY
·
Trhonda · Callihan, Ron and
Carol · Davis, Dre!llll Eddy,
Bobby Gibson, Oelsa and
AimRESS .. .. .... ..... ..... .....
.. .• ~ .. .... u.
James Kemp, Sharon Miller,
('ltV .... , ................ ST,\TE ... .. . ...... ..
Cindy Pauley, Karen; Valerie,
Becky, and Vicky · Powers,
TEL~f,H,~u~~ 1~P~~FIER ·
Todd Comer, Ronnie Warner •
COLUMBUS, OHIO t l'! U
~46-0687
-....!
54 State St.
Gallipolis
and Teresa Whilley. ··Also
pre.enl was Mrs. William

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Tues. Wed. Sat. '
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Thurs. 9:30-12 noon

'
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36 Loc•.st St.
Gallipolis
State Reg. No. 71·02·00328 •

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GALLIPOLIS - FHA
GIRL OF. MONTH- Miss
Sharon Hively, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles t.
Hively, was elected· ''Girl of
lhe Month " at the last
meeting of the Kyger Creek
Chapter af the Future
Homemakers of America :
Sharon, a junior, is a
member of the Silver
Memorial Freewill Baptist
Church and is very active in
FHA.

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PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES:
Glen
Stanley, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fred Fields, Hartford; ·Mrs.
Thomas Jones, Cheshire;
Willard Nibert, Gallipolis
Ferry;
John
Jackson,
Southside; Mrs. Cleo Smith,
Ashton; Mrs. Charles Leach,
Mrs. Bernard Wallace,
Christopher Williams , Mrs.
Charles Powells, Eunice
Hesson, Point Pleasant;
Thomas McDaniel, East
Liverpool, 0., and Mrs.
Charles Neal, Colwnbus, Ohio.

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422 Second

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Gallia 4-H Ouh News

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starting date.

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MRS. GREGORY PAULEY

av~ilable. All. are approwed

'

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will

'

Sev.eral career courses

for Veterans.

'

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Pleasatlt ; Grace Patterson ,
Gallipolis Ferry; Opal Roush,
Henderson ; Orville Watson,
Henderson .
·
BIRTH: Jan . 5, a d~ughter to
Mr , " and Mrs.. BillY. Joe
Harrington, Gallipolis F ~r.ry .

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Since 1859

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Smooth . ool•~hed me 111 bar!'
ltnl ly ~ 1 br ~ t e t'mb ~ lldrd ~r · l

..

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br uS Mt 1

yp ' sufl ace ••Her

'

her granomother, Mrs. Oral
Webb, were visitors in Huntington recently .
Mrs. Mildred Baker spent a
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Harley Green, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Green
were visitors in Wellston
recently. Mr. Green went to
consult his doctor. '

-·

HOOVER'S TRIPLE ACTION

.

.

Union Hall tin Second Ave. ·
· Tollil aniount to ·be donated
,;.ill be a~nounced Jan . 11'. as
all funds have .nOt been accounted for at this tim,e.
This is the second lime the
club has made c_ontributions to
the Emergency Squad. Oxygen
eqUipment was supplied for tile •
ambulance at an earlier 4ate.
The Radio Club will still
accept' donations .for the
Emergency· Squad for anyone
interested in supporting the
squad.

lb.

PLEAS.)NT VALLEV
DISCHARGES: Mrs. James
L.· Hall1 son, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. William Floyd, son ,
Glenwood;' Venetta . Smith,
Point Pleasant; Mary Smith,
Pomeroy; Lilliap Robbins ,
Mrs. Carl ~·: Simpkins , Point

Mrs.
. Hecker ·bosts
.,...·Eight af!d Forty ·

0

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' ·".

·1 .Coming
I Events ·~

'

CB Radio Club-will
give second dona~ion.

.•

GALLIPOLIS

SHOP ·NOW AND SAVE
.

•

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STOREWIDE
CLEARANCE

•

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·~

6- The SWld4y Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Jan. 7,1973

GAHS]CL
on lhe.·move

Ministerordained
GALL/POLIS - 1\n uverflow
crowd of 150 friends and
relatives witnessed . the"Qr,
qinat ion Service ol DTnny
Coburn on New Year's Eve at
the Gallipolis Ch ristian
Church. The "Calling of the
Ministry "

and

" The

Examination of the Candidate"
was given by Glen Wheeler,
Minister of Central Christian
Church of Ironton. Edler Ben
. Fitts of Central Christian
Church, Ironton, gave "The
t:xamlnatio n
of
the
~ongregation " followed by the
Ordination Prayer given l)y
Roy Ratliff, Elder of Central
Christian Church. "The Charge
of · th e Candidate" was
lJresented by Elder Harold
Sloan, Central Christian
. Church, Ironton , and the
Certificate of Ordination was
presented by Jay Coburn,
brother of the candidate. Glen
Wheeler gave the Ordination
Sermon.
Mr. Coburn was presented
gifts by Richard Steinbeck and
Milton Houdashelt on behalf of
the Gallipolis Christian Church
congregation and Master John
Elardo presented an engraved
gold plaque on behalf of the
junior choir.

A reception in the fellowship
rooms of the Sunday School
building followed the . Ordination Service. A lighted
foWltain, with tapers in silver
holders on either side, served
as the centerpiece for the
beautifully decorated .buffet
table. Serving at Ute pWlch
bowl was Mrs. Robert Brandeberry. Coffee and te~ were
poured by Mrs. Cecil Vinson .
Serving at the buffet table were
Mrs. John Bowman, Mrs.
Richard Steinbeck, Mrs .
William Bartley, ·Mrs. Jerry
McManis and Mrs. Kenneth
Scites.
Among the invited guests
were Mr. Coburn's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl !. Coburn,
and his brothers and their

,

•'Grbuing
. Old''
.

.

GALLIPOLIS
Junior this .
Classical LeaJllle, the Latin
Club members plan to go to
Club of GAHS, .has be~n busy the state con~ention March 10,
for the school year 1972-13 and · 1973, at Ohio State University
has eve n ·been celebrating where they will compete in
holidays Roman style.
various contests on Roman
To start the year, the club Life and !Jistory.
held a picnic a~ fortification
The next activity will be
Hill. The new members, who electing new officers . The
acted as slaves, served the food nominating will be done by
to their masters. A chariot past officers. The club advisor
race was held (a wagon drawn is Mrs. Kathryn Bennett and
by a slave and a rider ). The the cmisul is Brant Adams.
MR. DENNY COBURN
champions were Liz Roderick,
'
Coburn and Mr. and Mrs. Gary pulled by her slave for the day,
Coburn, all of Ironton; his Greg Thomas.
The November · meeting
sisters, Mrs. Mart (Theda)
Jenkins and Miss Garnita symbolized the freeingof the
Coburn, and an aWlt, Mrs. slaves for the year. A skit was
DAUGHTER BORN
Lexie Walters of Ashland, Ky . . also presented by' sdine of the
new
members.
\
VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
Last April, the Gallipolis
On
Dec
.
19,
theclub
John
Holcomb, Coronet Or.,
Christian Church, located at
celebr1;1ted
Saturnalia.
A
play
Columbus, wish to announce
513 Magnolia Dr ., in th e
was
given
by
some
of
the
the birth of a daughter, Julie
Fairview Subdiv~ion, was but
members.
Brant
Adams
Ann, Sept. 22. Julie was 21
a lew weeks old and holding
por-trayed
the
consul,
Jennifer
inches
long and weighed seven
only Sunday morning worship
MISS CHRISTINE BUCCI
Kerns
the
priest,
and
Alan
poWlds and 12 oWlces. She has
services when a call Was ex:
GALUPOLIS
- F11A GIRL OF MONTH - Miss
tended to Mr. Coburn. Under Kemp, the father. Saturnalia to one sister, Melissa Stephanie .
Christine Bucci, daughter or' Mr. and Michael Bucc:i,
his. leadership and spiritual the Romans is a time when the Maternal grandparents are
512Maple
Or.,)Vas chosen January ~'HA girl of the month by
guidance, the church became whip is thrown away and the Mr . and Mrs. . George
the Gallipolis chapter of Future Homemakers of America.
incorporated and the charter slaves are free and equal to Kruskamp, Vinton, and
Chris,
a freshman at GAHS, is a member of FHA, FHA
was received from the state. their masters. It was a time of paternal grandparents are
Award of Merit committee, Girl Scouts, a Gallia Script
The Warner property was rejoicing and a sacrifice, such ·Mildred Holcomb, Ewingron,
reporter,
and the Chess Club. She is also a member of the St.
purchased, a Sunday School as a pig, was offered to Saturn. and Wendell Holcomb,
Louis Catbolic Church. Her hobbies include swimming,
was organized, Sunday evening A religious ceremony signifies Chillicothe.
cooking,
reading, skating and skiing. Mrs. Larry Kendall is
services and Wednesday night
the FHA faculty advisor.
Bible study classes began and
the adult and junior choirs
POI.L l"'S POINTERS
were formed. Due to· the rapid
(~ .

increase in attendance! a

larger area was needed lor the
worship services. Abuilding on
the property was then
remodeled for that purpose.
Mr. Coburn attends The TriState Bible College in Ashland,
''JCy. and is the vice-president of
Allstate Credit Corporation
and of the Allstate Industrial
Mortgage Corporation with
offices in HW!tington, W. Va .
and Chesapeake, Ohio. He and
his wife, Shirley, the former
Miss Shirley Orr of Marion,
Ohio, live with their two boys,
Bryan, age 12 and Brent, age
eight, at 2308 Blackburn Ave.,
wives, Mr . and Mrs. Jay Ashland, Ky.

J;om.en's Jeans Need ·

~at 'Hippy' Look

By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is wtth the makers of
wom en 's jeans . When will they learn that many women 's

hips are larger in proportion to their waists than are
men 's' I love wearing jeans but hate to have to wea r a
belt to ci nch them in to fit my waist -E . B.
·;;n6tc&gt;'~&gt;'

· ,

\

Polly's ·Problem

DEAR POLLY - Can a nyone tell me a fairly simple
way to keep my house plants watered fo r a week or
two so I will not have to bother my ne ighbors with
this while we are away on a trip? Thank you .HELEN

Biography reviewed

GALLIPOLIS
The chill's mother.
Cake and coffee were served
Emanon Club met with Mrs. W.
by
the hostess during the social
H. Walker recently and
following a short business hour.
meeting, Mrs. Harland Martin
gave a most interesting review

By BETTY CANAR¥-·

l lind' it most disturbing that so many children have
what parents refer to as "our eating problem."
To be honest, the only food problem we have ever experienced with the children .was the problem of tryi ng to
get th e food to the table before they ate it.
It oc'allrred to me that lack of communication mi g ht be
the real problem. Perhaps most parents are incapable of
und erstandin g exac tly what the children are saying.
The following list includes phrases picked at random.
At one time it was a longe r list but before I got it to my
desk and typwriter. part of it mysteriously disappeared.
Possi bly one of the children ate it.
"This is yukky" means "It's made with cream sauce."
"Gargh," means "You put mushroom s in again !'"
··what's this yukky stuff?" l it isn'l hamburger. 1
" Not again!" 1You've offered iamb ~ho ps fo r th e sec-

DEAR POLLY and SALLY-I have a great way torecycle used, empty gallonsized plastic bottles. My son
wanted a basket for his tri-,.- .
cycle so I cut the top off a
bleach bottle just below the
- handle . I scalloped the top
of the bottom half and decorated it with plastic cowboys and Indians that were
fa stened on with those
plastic-coated, wire bag •••
closers alter I had punctured the plastic with a
sharp instrument. Plastic flowers would look nice on such
a ·basket for a little girL To attach the basket to the tri- .
cycle I cut two one-inch strips from the top part of the
,bottle and fastened them around the handle bars with a
small nut and bolt- MRS. G. B.

ond time in rive years. l

' '

"I ca n't eat these funny looking lumps." I He'll eat the
beef in the stew and that is alL I ·
" I'm chokin g. I tell you'" 1You fixed carrols again. )
" What's for dessert"" ill il 's coconut pie he won't eat
' fif th hotdog. 1
" I 'm not hungry." !He's already eaten the coconut pie
&lt;llld also th e cookies you hid in the front hail closet. I
"Why can't yo u fix what I like?" I You only had fried
ch icke n four times this wee k.)

"Wow! You trying to turn me into a vegetarian • " I He
discove red one green bean on his plate. I
" Mor ~ of th is garbage? '' 1There has been lettuce on the
tab le twice this month. I

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write PoUy Ia care of tbls aewspaper.

13 Court Street

For 6-8
Yr . Oids

Gallipolis, Ohio

• Modern Jazz For. Teens
• Modern Ballet For Young Adults .

Call Today'

446&lt;.4528

Tie one on.
It's R.I.G.H. T. at the bottom of you r jeans. in
two tone Krunch leather. The ~ee l is higher,
on a notched sole. Get it together in Dark and
Light Brown or Blue and Light Brown.
So good it' s

FT. KNOX, Ky. - Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph West are happy to
annoWlce the birth of ~baby
daughter Dec. 25, 1972 at i1 :59
p.m. (just in time for Christmas) . She weighed seven
pounds, 7% ounces, and
measured 20 inches long. She
has been named Mary Lou and
was welcomed home by four

".

!

( ':
•'

RIO
GRANDE
Registration for the second
semester at Rio Grande
College will be Tuesday ,
January 9, in Allen Hall. Day
class registration will be from

A thought for the day :
British author William
Somerset Maugham said,
"There are two good things in
life, freedom of thought and
freedom of action."

'

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
City National Bank and Trust
Co. wiD implement a new
electronic bill paying system in
60 .area stores this year, using
point-of-sale tenninals and a
Bank-Americard or "Bank24"
card.
Bank Chainnan John G.
McCoy · said the tenninal tested for nine-months in
suburban Upper Arlington will pennlt both credit card
and
checking
account
authorization and data
collection.
Tlte Upper Arlington experiment was considered a
major fliceess _in showing
appllcabillty of point-of-sale
terminals to bank credit card
operations and acceptability
by customers and merchants of
such a system.
A total of 46,,803-transactions
totaling $748,918 were completed ~ and only one perlcent
of the sales were declined, he
'said.
1 · ·
' the bill paymg
. system.
After
is undenvay, McCoy said the
Cleveland Trust Co., Ohio's

'

Royal Deluxe Electric

Adqing Machine
Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
Value

Sale!
cafelree

solid stainless . Bur newt Ll mlled·lime sale ends January 31, 1973.

$6?.2,.,,,.,
Co m.. un;l, 91111..,, "lgw, 1091 oloono"':

L011 lo~

..,,. , ll!o••Cd' , ~oul ... .,.,. . , Yt ..IIO', c..&gt;t,.o' ,
~-

lilloH*' , foootN,.•

ONEIDA• DELUXE STAINLESS

$4~~M,UHo
o .,.ldo Do l•" potlor•t below, lop to bellO"'

CIHirlo', lponlo~

i.l*'· ~o r&lt;IIC

llri i\G' , Cnorno•. Ltiii'IO

~•••

c ..... . , c:a,1.

••AVE $$$ DURING
OUR ANNUAL CLEARANCE
On All Din
Room Furnl

largest bank, will take part in
the project and install 20 terminals in Cleveland stores .
These Terminals will be
connected through a switching
network directly to City
National's Computer Center
here.
"Data gained through the
Cleveland store terminals is
ex~ted to lead the way
toward an eventual multi-state
electronic payment system,"
McCoy said.

NOW O" ·SALEI
Royo l make s figure work
fo st,.eosy and occur'ote with
o !ull ·size, hig~ speed od der.

CLARK'
S JEWELRY STORE
Aillllt

~2 Second

..'

~llipo!is. Ollio

•

·326 Second .Ave.
l

Gallipolis, Ohio

WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE
.
.
.

STARTING MONDAY MORNING JAN. 8th - 9:30 SHARP
COCKTAIL

OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 10 AM 11L 9 PM
SATURDAY 10 AM 11L 6 PM

Royol Delu•e Add or pdds,
subtrot.ts and multiplies outomoticolly, and it prints at 165
(PM lor fost entry, immediate
?nswers. Convenlenct features
111clude on electric clear, multi·
p l e- ~:ero keys , d· combination
~dd/sub •total bar, lwo color ,
nb,bon and o responsive key..
board that · reddcts trror·
cou sin g finger fatig~.:~e. All-··
steel operatin g portl for years
of trouble -fret use .

.

.·

records at the college, stud ents
wbo have pre-registered and
paid their fees do not have w
report on registration day.
They simply•· report to class at
the scheduled times. Students
wbo have not pre-registered
are to report to Allen Hall,
loeated next to Community
Hall on the Rio Grande cam·
pus.
Students, Brown said, will
report to Allen Hall according
.to the timetable set up by the
· Admissions and Records Oflice. Students whose last name
begins with A through Dare· to
report from 9 to 10 a.m.
Students with last names
beginning with E through G
from 10 to fi, while H through
N report from 11 to 12 noon.
Students whose last names
begins with 0 th1ough Z are to
report from 2 to 3 p.m.
New students are scheduled
wreport between I and 2 p.m.

l
'

. DAN .THOM_AS
AND SON .

WERE •27 TO •62

WERE •35 TO '60

WINTER FASHIONS IN WOOL
·AND POLYESTERS
SIZ.ES 6 to 18

MAN
• MADE FUR AND WOOLS
MISSES SIZES 8 to 18
JR. SIZES 5 to 15

slnce1936"

Ohio

WERE •42 TO •110

WOOLS, POLYESTERS AND MAN ~ADE
FURS. GIBSON LENGTHS AND
KNEE LENGTH
MISSES 6 to 18 JR. 5 to 15

'

COLORS: BONE, BROWN &amp; BlACK

•

$600ro $}]50
SHORT AND LONG LENGTHS
•

WERE '9 TO •26 ·

FLEECE, NYWN OR COTTON QUILTS.

.

SPORTSWEAR
SKIRTS
BLOUSE'S
•

$800 ro $}495
WERE '11 TO •22

DRESSY, TAILORED, DARKS, PAS1ELS IN
SOLIDS, PRINTS AND PLAIDS

$goo $12oo
T9

WERE •13 TO '18

SPORTY, CASUA~ DRESSY
WASHABLE FABRICS
·,

DOZENS .OF STYLES &amp; COLORS
SIZES 34 TO 40

WEDDING DRESSES

• Washable • Moth Proof

1 GROUP OF

DISCONTINUED
STYLES

·• Non-Allergenic

~·

SAVINGS UP TO 40%

LIGHTWEIGHT

by Beacon

...

SIZES 6 to 18
1 GROUP ZIPPED IN LINING COATS

·,

$}99'5

..

12 ~ OFF REG. PRICE
.

WERE •13 TO •22

POLYESTERS AND WOO~ SOLIDS
AND PLAIDS.
'
..
SIZES B.to 18.- 5 to 16
'

• GROUP OF LINGERIE
.,

BIG SAVINGS

•'

UPTO

30%To50%
•

·
!·

ALL SALES ARE .FINAL
'

OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. 9:-30 to·8·PM

•

.

WERE •42.50 TO •60

~!m'I(S~~~ ·

BLANKETS

412-414 Second Ave.

$3l To $45°

0

88

and th e period from 3 to 3:30
p.m. has been set aside for
studen ts who were tak in g
American College Test or other
examinations during ea rlier
hours.
Evening
class
registration will be from 6:30 to
8:30p.m.
Brown said needed schedule
changes may be made during
the first five days of classes
and that no changes will be
made on registratiqn day.
During the semester, th e
college will be closed March 10
Utrough 18 lor Spring vacation,
and April 20 through 23 for
Easter 'The semester will end
with final examinations May 7
throu·glt- II, and commencement, May 13.
fo r more information on
registra ti on for second
semester at Rio Gra nde
College , contact the Admissions and Records Office at
245-5353, ext. 37.

· ~.su,

SAVINGS UP TO 50%
..

RAIN COATS

ELECTRIC

·.

LONG AND SHORT LENGTHS

MISSES SIZES 6 to 18 - JR. 5 to 15
HALF SIZES 12Vz to 24%

SINGLE CONTROL.:............... 72x84 .... ~16.99 .
DUAL CONTROL .................... 72x84 .... ~19.99

'

I

WERE 132 TO '60

WERE •20 TO 160

2 YEAR GUARANTEE

l

DRESSES

$}Q00To $3]95

WERE •9 TO •11

.,

ALL FURNITURE &amp;ACCE~RIES

··~

9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with evening
class registration set for.6:30 to
8:30 p.m. Classes begin
Wednesday, January 10.
According to Dean S. Brown,
dlrecror of admfssions and

Needed now·: automatic
accounts' replenisher

Place Setting
COMMUNI~ STA INLESS

I

'

\•.

savlnOs on

.,

Registration set January 9

Monday &amp;
Friday
9:30 to 8 p.m . .
Thurs ..9:30 to 12 Noon
Tues .-Wed. &amp; Sat. 9:30 to. 5
p. m.

SPECIAL PURCHASE

. '·

'

THESE BOOTS WERE •30

on SOlid StolniHI
by ONI!IOA

Here's an unusual oppor1unity for exceptional

•

I

By LUOEN"A STOLLINGS
GALUPOLIS- Webb's f'ancy Girl, a
three-year old St. Bernard, gave birth to a
Utter of 16 on Christmas day, 14 of which
siuwived and are doing well. Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Webb,owners, are claimmg tlie record
breaking surviving litter for Ohio.
This Is Fancy Girl's third Utter, having
produced 38 pups 'in. 19 months. Weighing
175 pounds and measlll'ing six feet from
nose 'to · tail tip, Fancy Girl'·stands approximately 30" a\ the withers.
The rota! w~i~ht of t))e 16 pups wlls 26
· pounds, the largest being two poWlds, the
smallest one poWld, lour ounce's. The
suvivors nave been registered with AKC
for pectigrees.
The l~rge litter has created a feeding
problem for the W~bbs, who reside at Rt.
141, Centenary. Mrs. Webb has taken on
!he responsilii\ity very nicely, however,
and to supplement.the mother's supply, is
feeding the pups every hour, an OWlce or
mi)J'e of Borden's Esbilac, · a milk
replacement for bitch's milk. This supplemental feeding is expected to continue
until the pups a~e seven weeks old. At two ,
and one-half weeks, they . will also be
started on Kennel Ration and puppy chow.
, Fancy Girl, the mother, eats one
J. W. Meade, who sired Fancy Girl's new litter, and his owner and trainer,
gallon of l'w'ina Dog Chow per day and
Mrs. Bill Webb.
two cans of Carnation evaporated milk. At
present she Is also eating a can of beef
broth with vitamins ov~ 'the chow and
drinks 14 quarts of water illli!y. Mrs. Webb
also cooks beef liver and hlitnfl!trger for
Fancy Girl since she doesn'.t like raw
meat.
J . W. Meade, the pups' sire, is also threeyears old and weigha about 200 poWlds.
Mrs. Webb said her,1~aking for the
Christmas holidays lncllfted an eightpound brandy fruit cak.e. While the cake
cooled, sbe decided to take a nap. Meade,
who was visiting the evening, deciding It
was a treat just for him, proceeded to eat
the whole thing!
The Webbs have the only St. Bernard
kennel in Gallia County, the "Centenary
Woods Kennel. " Mrs. Webb said 12 of the
pups already have been spoken for and will
·be ready lor sale at six weeks.
The Saint Bernard, a Swiss Alpine
imported breed, Is well known ·for its
rescue work at the Hospice where they
have aided lost travelers and saved many
hufan 11~~ The St. Bernard In the United
S~s, as good as the St. Bernard of
SWltzerland, Is bred in almost every state.
Mr. Webb, a high school teacher at
Point Pleasant, and Mrs. Webb, also a
certified teacher, have a son, Shannon, 3,
The Webbs derive great pleasure in pets, w{th ideal temperament. They are
who helps Momma at feeding time, and a training and caring for the St. Bernards. trusted watchdogs and have proven to be
two-year old daughter, Jarrod .
Mrs. Webb said they are "very intelligent" good baby sitters for the Webb's children.

DOROTHY GRIFFINS
DANCE STUDIO

AND
ACROBATICS

\

'

Sun'IVIDg

AT THE

•BALL~

•

• •

MANLY

DAUGHTER BORN

1 109.00

SAVE I

Fancy Girl ,

NEW DANCE
ClASSES OPEN

biography of Winston Chur-

(NEWSPAPER E':4TERPR!S E ASSN .)

Dl N I NG ROOM CLEARANCE

•

of the book, ~~Jennie, ' ' a

DEAR POLLY- I have just made a i!nit dress with a
roll collar that zips. down the neck. When making such a
dress I usually tack the two points of the back of the
collar to the dress so they lie flat. but I could not do
that this time as my dress was a matching jacket. I
sewed the tops of tiny snaps under the collar points and
then bottom halves of the snaps to both dress and the
jacket so I can always snap the collar down and it will · sisters, Jeanette , Beverly,
stay in place . When cutting out a garment as you remove Jolene, Vera and one brother,
eac h section of the pattern from the Iabrie. pin it to the Scott. Mrs. West is the former
nearest curtain where you can see and refer tti it and Elenor Fry. Maternal grandsave a lot of looking and unfoldin g. This also keeps the parents are Mr. and Mrs.
pieces together .- MRS. ~. R.
Oscar Fy, 2131 Chestnut St.,
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell Sally that we have found Gallipolis, and paternal
many uses for gallon-size plastic bottles. We fill them with grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
water and freeze lor our ice chest. We also freeze a fruit- Edward West of Bidwell. Mrs.
Ha¥ored powdered d•ink the children like as well as iced
tea. When they inelt, we drink the contents. Cut such West has just returned home
bottles in half and use the tops for funnel s. The bottoms after visiting the new ardval
can hold nails, bolts, clothespins, onions and other small and reports the mother and
items. We also use these bottles for buoys in the water
baby doing fine .
· We do a lot of campin g and . find their uses are almosl
unlimited.-S. S.

Translation Helps
With Kids' Eating

Hunnel.
The ~ext meeting ·will be ,
Feb. 6 at 7:30 p.rn. at the
church . ..

BIRTH ANNOUN(:EO
GALLIPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs_. Charles Chevali~r,
Patriot Star Route, . are announcing ·the birth of· a'
daughter Dec. 27, at
Holzer Medical Center.
The child weighed six
poilnds, two . ounces and has
been named Lesley Ann. She Is
welcomed by two brothers,
. Jeffrey' eight years old and
Scott, six years old. Maternal
grandparents are Mr: anct Mrs.
Willie McKinney, Buchanan,
Mich ., and great-grandparents
ASK TO WJID
are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stover
GALLIPOLIS - Donald and Mrs. Charles McKinney,
· I(Iinger, 39, Zanesville, driver, . ail of Gallipolis. · P'aternal
and Susie A. Sheets, 19, Crown grandparents are Mr: and Mrs.
City, nurse aide, applied for a ·cleo Chevalier and greatmarriage license Friday in grandfather, Clark Chevalier,
Gallia CoWlty Probate Court. all of Gallipolis.

4

J

14 Pups by ',

.

BIDWELL - The WSCS of
Unite~ Methodist
Church · met at ·the chore)\
Tuesday, Jan. 2, at 7:30 p.rn. A
·program on "Growing Old"
was very inte•esting.
A business meetin~ followed,
alter which refreshm ents were
served and a social hour, ineluding a gilt exchange, was
enjoyed by all.
Those present were Mrs.
Joan Roberts, Miss Cindy .
Roberts, Mrs . Ethel PeWitt,
Mrs. Mary Dean, Mrs. Wanda
Atha, Mrs. Mary Roberts, Mrs.
Sarah Spencer and Mrs. Elsie

•

7- Tbe Sundar Times -Sentinel, S~&lt;!aY.•Jan. 7, )1173

u:scs/;rJ~am
. ,

the Bidwell

•

I.

.·

. TUES.-WED.-THURS.-SAT.
9:30 AM 'TIL ~ PM

'

�.
·~

6- The SWld4y Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Jan. 7,1973

GAHS]CL
on lhe.·move

Ministerordained
GALL/POLIS - 1\n uverflow
crowd of 150 friends and
relatives witnessed . the"Qr,
qinat ion Service ol DTnny
Coburn on New Year's Eve at
the Gallipolis Ch ristian
Church. The "Calling of the
Ministry "

and

" The

Examination of the Candidate"
was given by Glen Wheeler,
Minister of Central Christian
Church of Ironton. Edler Ben
. Fitts of Central Christian
Church, Ironton, gave "The
t:xamlnatio n
of
the
~ongregation " followed by the
Ordination Prayer given l)y
Roy Ratliff, Elder of Central
Christian Church. "The Charge
of · th e Candidate" was
lJresented by Elder Harold
Sloan, Central Christian
. Church, Ironton , and the
Certificate of Ordination was
presented by Jay Coburn,
brother of the candidate. Glen
Wheeler gave the Ordination
Sermon.
Mr. Coburn was presented
gifts by Richard Steinbeck and
Milton Houdashelt on behalf of
the Gallipolis Christian Church
congregation and Master John
Elardo presented an engraved
gold plaque on behalf of the
junior choir.

A reception in the fellowship
rooms of the Sunday School
building followed the . Ordination Service. A lighted
foWltain, with tapers in silver
holders on either side, served
as the centerpiece for the
beautifully decorated .buffet
table. Serving at Ute pWlch
bowl was Mrs. Robert Brandeberry. Coffee and te~ were
poured by Mrs. Cecil Vinson .
Serving at the buffet table were
Mrs. John Bowman, Mrs.
Richard Steinbeck, Mrs .
William Bartley, ·Mrs. Jerry
McManis and Mrs. Kenneth
Scites.
Among the invited guests
were Mr. Coburn's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl !. Coburn,
and his brothers and their

,

•'Grbuing
. Old''
.

.

GALLIPOLIS
Junior this .
Classical LeaJllle, the Latin
Club members plan to go to
Club of GAHS, .has be~n busy the state con~ention March 10,
for the school year 1972-13 and · 1973, at Ohio State University
has eve n ·been celebrating where they will compete in
holidays Roman style.
various contests on Roman
To start the year, the club Life and !Jistory.
held a picnic a~ fortification
The next activity will be
Hill. The new members, who electing new officers . The
acted as slaves, served the food nominating will be done by
to their masters. A chariot past officers. The club advisor
race was held (a wagon drawn is Mrs. Kathryn Bennett and
by a slave and a rider ). The the cmisul is Brant Adams.
MR. DENNY COBURN
champions were Liz Roderick,
'
Coburn and Mr. and Mrs. Gary pulled by her slave for the day,
Coburn, all of Ironton; his Greg Thomas.
The November · meeting
sisters, Mrs. Mart (Theda)
Jenkins and Miss Garnita symbolized the freeingof the
Coburn, and an aWlt, Mrs. slaves for the year. A skit was
DAUGHTER BORN
Lexie Walters of Ashland, Ky . . also presented by' sdine of the
new
members.
\
VINTON - Mr. and Mrs.
Last April, the Gallipolis
On
Dec
.
19,
theclub
John
Holcomb, Coronet Or.,
Christian Church, located at
celebr1;1ted
Saturnalia.
A
play
Columbus, wish to announce
513 Magnolia Dr ., in th e
was
given
by
some
of
the
the birth of a daughter, Julie
Fairview Subdiv~ion, was but
members.
Brant
Adams
Ann, Sept. 22. Julie was 21
a lew weeks old and holding
por-trayed
the
consul,
Jennifer
inches
long and weighed seven
only Sunday morning worship
MISS CHRISTINE BUCCI
Kerns
the
priest,
and
Alan
poWlds and 12 oWlces. She has
services when a call Was ex:
GALUPOLIS
- F11A GIRL OF MONTH - Miss
tended to Mr. Coburn. Under Kemp, the father. Saturnalia to one sister, Melissa Stephanie .
Christine Bucci, daughter or' Mr. and Michael Bucc:i,
his. leadership and spiritual the Romans is a time when the Maternal grandparents are
512Maple
Or.,)Vas chosen January ~'HA girl of the month by
guidance, the church became whip is thrown away and the Mr . and Mrs. . George
the Gallipolis chapter of Future Homemakers of America.
incorporated and the charter slaves are free and equal to Kruskamp, Vinton, and
Chris,
a freshman at GAHS, is a member of FHA, FHA
was received from the state. their masters. It was a time of paternal grandparents are
Award of Merit committee, Girl Scouts, a Gallia Script
The Warner property was rejoicing and a sacrifice, such ·Mildred Holcomb, Ewingron,
reporter,
and the Chess Club. She is also a member of the St.
purchased, a Sunday School as a pig, was offered to Saturn. and Wendell Holcomb,
Louis Catbolic Church. Her hobbies include swimming,
was organized, Sunday evening A religious ceremony signifies Chillicothe.
cooking,
reading, skating and skiing. Mrs. Larry Kendall is
services and Wednesday night
the FHA faculty advisor.
Bible study classes began and
the adult and junior choirs
POI.L l"'S POINTERS
were formed. Due to· the rapid
(~ .

increase in attendance! a

larger area was needed lor the
worship services. Abuilding on
the property was then
remodeled for that purpose.
Mr. Coburn attends The TriState Bible College in Ashland,
''JCy. and is the vice-president of
Allstate Credit Corporation
and of the Allstate Industrial
Mortgage Corporation with
offices in HW!tington, W. Va .
and Chesapeake, Ohio. He and
his wife, Shirley, the former
Miss Shirley Orr of Marion,
Ohio, live with their two boys,
Bryan, age 12 and Brent, age
eight, at 2308 Blackburn Ave.,
wives, Mr . and Mrs. Jay Ashland, Ky.

J;om.en's Jeans Need ·

~at 'Hippy' Look

By POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is wtth the makers of
wom en 's jeans . When will they learn that many women 's

hips are larger in proportion to their waists than are
men 's' I love wearing jeans but hate to have to wea r a
belt to ci nch them in to fit my waist -E . B.
·;;n6tc&gt;'~&gt;'

· ,

\

Polly's ·Problem

DEAR POLLY - Can a nyone tell me a fairly simple
way to keep my house plants watered fo r a week or
two so I will not have to bother my ne ighbors with
this while we are away on a trip? Thank you .HELEN

Biography reviewed

GALLIPOLIS
The chill's mother.
Cake and coffee were served
Emanon Club met with Mrs. W.
by
the hostess during the social
H. Walker recently and
following a short business hour.
meeting, Mrs. Harland Martin
gave a most interesting review

By BETTY CANAR¥-·

l lind' it most disturbing that so many children have
what parents refer to as "our eating problem."
To be honest, the only food problem we have ever experienced with the children .was the problem of tryi ng to
get th e food to the table before they ate it.
It oc'allrred to me that lack of communication mi g ht be
the real problem. Perhaps most parents are incapable of
und erstandin g exac tly what the children are saying.
The following list includes phrases picked at random.
At one time it was a longe r list but before I got it to my
desk and typwriter. part of it mysteriously disappeared.
Possi bly one of the children ate it.
"This is yukky" means "It's made with cream sauce."
"Gargh," means "You put mushroom s in again !'"
··what's this yukky stuff?" l it isn'l hamburger. 1
" Not again!" 1You've offered iamb ~ho ps fo r th e sec-

DEAR POLLY and SALLY-I have a great way torecycle used, empty gallonsized plastic bottles. My son
wanted a basket for his tri-,.- .
cycle so I cut the top off a
bleach bottle just below the
- handle . I scalloped the top
of the bottom half and decorated it with plastic cowboys and Indians that were
fa stened on with those
plastic-coated, wire bag •••
closers alter I had punctured the plastic with a
sharp instrument. Plastic flowers would look nice on such
a ·basket for a little girL To attach the basket to the tri- .
cycle I cut two one-inch strips from the top part of the
,bottle and fastened them around the handle bars with a
small nut and bolt- MRS. G. B.

ond time in rive years. l

' '

"I ca n't eat these funny looking lumps." I He'll eat the
beef in the stew and that is alL I ·
" I'm chokin g. I tell you'" 1You fixed carrols again. )
" What's for dessert"" ill il 's coconut pie he won't eat
' fif th hotdog. 1
" I 'm not hungry." !He's already eaten the coconut pie
&lt;llld also th e cookies you hid in the front hail closet. I
"Why can't yo u fix what I like?" I You only had fried
ch icke n four times this wee k.)

"Wow! You trying to turn me into a vegetarian • " I He
discove red one green bean on his plate. I
" Mor ~ of th is garbage? '' 1There has been lettuce on the
tab le twice this month. I

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write PoUy Ia care of tbls aewspaper.

13 Court Street

For 6-8
Yr . Oids

Gallipolis, Ohio

• Modern Jazz For. Teens
• Modern Ballet For Young Adults .

Call Today'

446&lt;.4528

Tie one on.
It's R.I.G.H. T. at the bottom of you r jeans. in
two tone Krunch leather. The ~ee l is higher,
on a notched sole. Get it together in Dark and
Light Brown or Blue and Light Brown.
So good it' s

FT. KNOX, Ky. - Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph West are happy to
annoWlce the birth of ~baby
daughter Dec. 25, 1972 at i1 :59
p.m. (just in time for Christmas) . She weighed seven
pounds, 7% ounces, and
measured 20 inches long. She
has been named Mary Lou and
was welcomed home by four

".

!

( ':
•'

RIO
GRANDE
Registration for the second
semester at Rio Grande
College will be Tuesday ,
January 9, in Allen Hall. Day
class registration will be from

A thought for the day :
British author William
Somerset Maugham said,
"There are two good things in
life, freedom of thought and
freedom of action."

'

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
City National Bank and Trust
Co. wiD implement a new
electronic bill paying system in
60 .area stores this year, using
point-of-sale tenninals and a
Bank-Americard or "Bank24"
card.
Bank Chainnan John G.
McCoy · said the tenninal tested for nine-months in
suburban Upper Arlington will pennlt both credit card
and
checking
account
authorization and data
collection.
Tlte Upper Arlington experiment was considered a
major fliceess _in showing
appllcabillty of point-of-sale
terminals to bank credit card
operations and acceptability
by customers and merchants of
such a system.
A total of 46,,803-transactions
totaling $748,918 were completed ~ and only one perlcent
of the sales were declined, he
'said.
1 · ·
' the bill paymg
. system.
After
is undenvay, McCoy said the
Cleveland Trust Co., Ohio's

'

Royal Deluxe Electric

Adqing Machine
Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
Value

Sale!
cafelree

solid stainless . Bur newt Ll mlled·lime sale ends January 31, 1973.

$6?.2,.,,,.,
Co m.. un;l, 91111..,, "lgw, 1091 oloono"':

L011 lo~

..,,. , ll!o••Cd' , ~oul ... .,.,. . , Yt ..IIO', c..&gt;t,.o' ,
~-

lilloH*' , foootN,.•

ONEIDA• DELUXE STAINLESS

$4~~M,UHo
o .,.ldo Do l•" potlor•t below, lop to bellO"'

CIHirlo', lponlo~

i.l*'· ~o r&lt;IIC

llri i\G' , Cnorno•. Ltiii'IO

~•••

c ..... . , c:a,1.

••AVE $$$ DURING
OUR ANNUAL CLEARANCE
On All Din
Room Furnl

largest bank, will take part in
the project and install 20 terminals in Cleveland stores .
These Terminals will be
connected through a switching
network directly to City
National's Computer Center
here.
"Data gained through the
Cleveland store terminals is
ex~ted to lead the way
toward an eventual multi-state
electronic payment system,"
McCoy said.

NOW O" ·SALEI
Royo l make s figure work
fo st,.eosy and occur'ote with
o !ull ·size, hig~ speed od der.

CLARK'
S JEWELRY STORE
Aillllt

~2 Second

..'

~llipo!is. Ollio

•

·326 Second .Ave.
l

Gallipolis, Ohio

WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE
.
.
.

STARTING MONDAY MORNING JAN. 8th - 9:30 SHARP
COCKTAIL

OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 10 AM 11L 9 PM
SATURDAY 10 AM 11L 6 PM

Royol Delu•e Add or pdds,
subtrot.ts and multiplies outomoticolly, and it prints at 165
(PM lor fost entry, immediate
?nswers. Convenlenct features
111clude on electric clear, multi·
p l e- ~:ero keys , d· combination
~dd/sub •total bar, lwo color ,
nb,bon and o responsive key..
board that · reddcts trror·
cou sin g finger fatig~.:~e. All-··
steel operatin g portl for years
of trouble -fret use .

.

.·

records at the college, stud ents
wbo have pre-registered and
paid their fees do not have w
report on registration day.
They simply•· report to class at
the scheduled times. Students
wbo have not pre-registered
are to report to Allen Hall,
loeated next to Community
Hall on the Rio Grande cam·
pus.
Students, Brown said, will
report to Allen Hall according
.to the timetable set up by the
· Admissions and Records Oflice. Students whose last name
begins with A through Dare· to
report from 9 to 10 a.m.
Students with last names
beginning with E through G
from 10 to fi, while H through
N report from 11 to 12 noon.
Students whose last names
begins with 0 th1ough Z are to
report from 2 to 3 p.m.
New students are scheduled
wreport between I and 2 p.m.

l
'

. DAN .THOM_AS
AND SON .

WERE •27 TO •62

WERE •35 TO '60

WINTER FASHIONS IN WOOL
·AND POLYESTERS
SIZ.ES 6 to 18

MAN
• MADE FUR AND WOOLS
MISSES SIZES 8 to 18
JR. SIZES 5 to 15

slnce1936"

Ohio

WERE •42 TO •110

WOOLS, POLYESTERS AND MAN ~ADE
FURS. GIBSON LENGTHS AND
KNEE LENGTH
MISSES 6 to 18 JR. 5 to 15

'

COLORS: BONE, BROWN &amp; BlACK

•

$600ro $}]50
SHORT AND LONG LENGTHS
•

WERE '9 TO •26 ·

FLEECE, NYWN OR COTTON QUILTS.

.

SPORTSWEAR
SKIRTS
BLOUSE'S
•

$800 ro $}495
WERE '11 TO •22

DRESSY, TAILORED, DARKS, PAS1ELS IN
SOLIDS, PRINTS AND PLAIDS

$goo $12oo
T9

WERE •13 TO '18

SPORTY, CASUA~ DRESSY
WASHABLE FABRICS
·,

DOZENS .OF STYLES &amp; COLORS
SIZES 34 TO 40

WEDDING DRESSES

• Washable • Moth Proof

1 GROUP OF

DISCONTINUED
STYLES

·• Non-Allergenic

~·

SAVINGS UP TO 40%

LIGHTWEIGHT

by Beacon

...

SIZES 6 to 18
1 GROUP ZIPPED IN LINING COATS

·,

$}99'5

..

12 ~ OFF REG. PRICE
.

WERE •13 TO •22

POLYESTERS AND WOO~ SOLIDS
AND PLAIDS.
'
..
SIZES B.to 18.- 5 to 16
'

• GROUP OF LINGERIE
.,

BIG SAVINGS

•'

UPTO

30%To50%
•

·
!·

ALL SALES ARE .FINAL
'

OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. 9:-30 to·8·PM

•

.

WERE •42.50 TO •60

~!m'I(S~~~ ·

BLANKETS

412-414 Second Ave.

$3l To $45°

0

88

and th e period from 3 to 3:30
p.m. has been set aside for
studen ts who were tak in g
American College Test or other
examinations during ea rlier
hours.
Evening
class
registration will be from 6:30 to
8:30p.m.
Brown said needed schedule
changes may be made during
the first five days of classes
and that no changes will be
made on registratiqn day.
During the semester, th e
college will be closed March 10
Utrough 18 lor Spring vacation,
and April 20 through 23 for
Easter 'The semester will end
with final examinations May 7
throu·glt- II, and commencement, May 13.
fo r more information on
registra ti on for second
semester at Rio Gra nde
College , contact the Admissions and Records Office at
245-5353, ext. 37.

· ~.su,

SAVINGS UP TO 50%
..

RAIN COATS

ELECTRIC

·.

LONG AND SHORT LENGTHS

MISSES SIZES 6 to 18 - JR. 5 to 15
HALF SIZES 12Vz to 24%

SINGLE CONTROL.:............... 72x84 .... ~16.99 .
DUAL CONTROL .................... 72x84 .... ~19.99

'

I

WERE 132 TO '60

WERE •20 TO 160

2 YEAR GUARANTEE

l

DRESSES

$}Q00To $3]95

WERE •9 TO •11

.,

ALL FURNITURE &amp;ACCE~RIES

··~

9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with evening
class registration set for.6:30 to
8:30 p.m. Classes begin
Wednesday, January 10.
According to Dean S. Brown,
dlrecror of admfssions and

Needed now·: automatic
accounts' replenisher

Place Setting
COMMUNI~ STA INLESS

I

'

\•.

savlnOs on

.,

Registration set January 9

Monday &amp;
Friday
9:30 to 8 p.m . .
Thurs ..9:30 to 12 Noon
Tues .-Wed. &amp; Sat. 9:30 to. 5
p. m.

SPECIAL PURCHASE

. '·

'

THESE BOOTS WERE •30

on SOlid StolniHI
by ONI!IOA

Here's an unusual oppor1unity for exceptional

•

I

By LUOEN"A STOLLINGS
GALUPOLIS- Webb's f'ancy Girl, a
three-year old St. Bernard, gave birth to a
Utter of 16 on Christmas day, 14 of which
siuwived and are doing well. Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Webb,owners, are claimmg tlie record
breaking surviving litter for Ohio.
This Is Fancy Girl's third Utter, having
produced 38 pups 'in. 19 months. Weighing
175 pounds and measlll'ing six feet from
nose 'to · tail tip, Fancy Girl'·stands approximately 30" a\ the withers.
The rota! w~i~ht of t))e 16 pups wlls 26
· pounds, the largest being two poWlds, the
smallest one poWld, lour ounce's. The
suvivors nave been registered with AKC
for pectigrees.
The l~rge litter has created a feeding
problem for the W~bbs, who reside at Rt.
141, Centenary. Mrs. Webb has taken on
!he responsilii\ity very nicely, however,
and to supplement.the mother's supply, is
feeding the pups every hour, an OWlce or
mi)J'e of Borden's Esbilac, · a milk
replacement for bitch's milk. This supplemental feeding is expected to continue
until the pups a~e seven weeks old. At two ,
and one-half weeks, they . will also be
started on Kennel Ration and puppy chow.
, Fancy Girl, the mother, eats one
J. W. Meade, who sired Fancy Girl's new litter, and his owner and trainer,
gallon of l'w'ina Dog Chow per day and
Mrs. Bill Webb.
two cans of Carnation evaporated milk. At
present she Is also eating a can of beef
broth with vitamins ov~ 'the chow and
drinks 14 quarts of water illli!y. Mrs. Webb
also cooks beef liver and hlitnfl!trger for
Fancy Girl since she doesn'.t like raw
meat.
J . W. Meade, the pups' sire, is also threeyears old and weigha about 200 poWlds.
Mrs. Webb said her,1~aking for the
Christmas holidays lncllfted an eightpound brandy fruit cak.e. While the cake
cooled, sbe decided to take a nap. Meade,
who was visiting the evening, deciding It
was a treat just for him, proceeded to eat
the whole thing!
The Webbs have the only St. Bernard
kennel in Gallia County, the "Centenary
Woods Kennel. " Mrs. Webb said 12 of the
pups already have been spoken for and will
·be ready lor sale at six weeks.
The Saint Bernard, a Swiss Alpine
imported breed, Is well known ·for its
rescue work at the Hospice where they
have aided lost travelers and saved many
hufan 11~~ The St. Bernard In the United
S~s, as good as the St. Bernard of
SWltzerland, Is bred in almost every state.
Mr. Webb, a high school teacher at
Point Pleasant, and Mrs. Webb, also a
certified teacher, have a son, Shannon, 3,
The Webbs derive great pleasure in pets, w{th ideal temperament. They are
who helps Momma at feeding time, and a training and caring for the St. Bernards. trusted watchdogs and have proven to be
two-year old daughter, Jarrod .
Mrs. Webb said they are "very intelligent" good baby sitters for the Webb's children.

DOROTHY GRIFFINS
DANCE STUDIO

AND
ACROBATICS

\

'

Sun'IVIDg

AT THE

•BALL~

•

• •

MANLY

DAUGHTER BORN

1 109.00

SAVE I

Fancy Girl ,

NEW DANCE
ClASSES OPEN

biography of Winston Chur-

(NEWSPAPER E':4TERPR!S E ASSN .)

Dl N I NG ROOM CLEARANCE

•

of the book, ~~Jennie, ' ' a

DEAR POLLY- I have just made a i!nit dress with a
roll collar that zips. down the neck. When making such a
dress I usually tack the two points of the back of the
collar to the dress so they lie flat. but I could not do
that this time as my dress was a matching jacket. I
sewed the tops of tiny snaps under the collar points and
then bottom halves of the snaps to both dress and the
jacket so I can always snap the collar down and it will · sisters, Jeanette , Beverly,
stay in place . When cutting out a garment as you remove Jolene, Vera and one brother,
eac h section of the pattern from the Iabrie. pin it to the Scott. Mrs. West is the former
nearest curtain where you can see and refer tti it and Elenor Fry. Maternal grandsave a lot of looking and unfoldin g. This also keeps the parents are Mr. and Mrs.
pieces together .- MRS. ~. R.
Oscar Fy, 2131 Chestnut St.,
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell Sally that we have found Gallipolis, and paternal
many uses for gallon-size plastic bottles. We fill them with grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
water and freeze lor our ice chest. We also freeze a fruit- Edward West of Bidwell. Mrs.
Ha¥ored powdered d•ink the children like as well as iced
tea. When they inelt, we drink the contents. Cut such West has just returned home
bottles in half and use the tops for funnel s. The bottoms after visiting the new ardval
can hold nails, bolts, clothespins, onions and other small and reports the mother and
items. We also use these bottles for buoys in the water
baby doing fine .
· We do a lot of campin g and . find their uses are almosl
unlimited.-S. S.

Translation Helps
With Kids' Eating

Hunnel.
The ~ext meeting ·will be ,
Feb. 6 at 7:30 p.rn. at the
church . ..

BIRTH ANNOUN(:EO
GALLIPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs_. Charles Chevali~r,
Patriot Star Route, . are announcing ·the birth of· a'
daughter Dec. 27, at
Holzer Medical Center.
The child weighed six
poilnds, two . ounces and has
been named Lesley Ann. She Is
welcomed by two brothers,
. Jeffrey' eight years old and
Scott, six years old. Maternal
grandparents are Mr: anct Mrs.
Willie McKinney, Buchanan,
Mich ., and great-grandparents
ASK TO WJID
are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stover
GALLIPOLIS - Donald and Mrs. Charles McKinney,
· I(Iinger, 39, Zanesville, driver, . ail of Gallipolis. · P'aternal
and Susie A. Sheets, 19, Crown grandparents are Mr: and Mrs.
City, nurse aide, applied for a ·cleo Chevalier and greatmarriage license Friday in grandfather, Clark Chevalier,
Gallia CoWlty Probate Court. all of Gallipolis.

4

J

14 Pups by ',

.

BIDWELL - The WSCS of
Unite~ Methodist
Church · met at ·the chore)\
Tuesday, Jan. 2, at 7:30 p.rn. A
·program on "Growing Old"
was very inte•esting.
A business meetin~ followed,
alter which refreshm ents were
served and a social hour, ineluding a gilt exchange, was
enjoyed by all.
Those present were Mrs.
Joan Roberts, Miss Cindy .
Roberts, Mrs . Ethel PeWitt,
Mrs. Mary Dean, Mrs. Wanda
Atha, Mrs. Mary Roberts, Mrs.
Sarah Spencer and Mrs. Elsie

•

7- Tbe Sundar Times -Sentinel, S~&lt;!aY.•Jan. 7, )1173

u:scs/;rJ~am
. ,

the Bidwell

•

I.

.·

. TUES.-WED.-THURS.-SAT.
9:30 AM 'TIL ~ PM

'

�'t

8- The Sunday Times !Se~tinel. Sunday ,Jan. 7,1973

Lecture series .is pl~e.d

1'·
.

'

'

.

a.m. Regulations~onotpermit
food, including !'3Ck IIIIIChes, to
be brought into Baker Center.
However, a persorl·may attend
the lectures without eating
. ....
lunch .
"We hope that all members
of the commWlity, for ex;un·
· pie, busineSsmen, secretaries,
far!llers and housewives, as
, well as students, faculty and
staff members of Ohio
University, will take advantage of this rather unique
school secretaries, cooks and educational program," said
· WM. F. HEDRiCK
other regularly employed Curtis Johnson, director of the
COLUMBUS- William F. .
school personnel.
Extension Division.
- To provide annually apThe title of the first lecture in .. Hedrick, son ol Mr. and .Mn.
proximately . $32,406 for free the series is "Art: A Diversion · Edward Hedrick, former
textbooks, grades K-12.
or a Disease?" It will be given
Pomeroy residents, bas lleen
- To provide annually ap- by Prof. Robert · Borchard of
appointed junior steward of
Humbvldl Masonic 'Lodge
proxilnately $35,000 for im· , the School of Art.
provement of 11;~nsportation
Other subjects and speakers
476, Columbus. Agraduate of
facilities.
sc~eduled for the winter -l&gt;omeroy Hlgb School,
- To provide annually ap.. quarter series are : Jan. 18,
Hedrick Is an electrician and
prvximately $25,000 for the "Energy, E;nvironment,
a Iarmer, not qualllyiDg
purpose vf purchasing in- GN.P-Watts Gain~ On?", Dr.
wnich is his profession· and
structivn materials and-vr Roy Lawrence.
which Is his hobby. He and
equipment which would be
Jan. 25, "Understanding the
his wife, BoDDie and two
used for fees in grades K-12. Metric System," Dr. Paul
children, Billy, Jr., and
:_ To provide annually ap- Plvutz.
Barbara, live at 1041 Sun·
pro;;imately $87,500 for the
Feb. !, "Noise Pollution:
view Road, Reynoldsburg.
'
•'
operations of the school system Gnats on the Drumhead,"
or may be used as matching lor Ralph Burhans.
Mason CoWlty's shate for the
Feb. 7, "Science Fiction and
Better School Building Planetary Mythologies," Dr.
Amendment funds.
Dennis Uvingston.
There will be no mailing of
Feb. 22, "Memory: The
GALLIPOLIS - Principal ·
ballots outside the U.S. after ShortandLvngoflt,"Dr.Gary
James
N. M. Davis annoWlced
January 13.
Schumacher.
A period from January 15
Mar. I, "Foods: Facts and Saturday a Champion Spark
through January 27 has been Fallacies," Dr. Betty Sullivan. Plug Highway Safety Program
set aside for absentee voting.
Mar. 8, "Organized Crime in has been scheduled Jan. 23, at
January 15 is the first day to America," Dr. William Moore. 8:15a.m. for grades 9-12 and
vote in person J n the Mason
Further information may be 8:55a.m. for grades 7..1J.
Jvhnny Bvyd, veteran of the
County School Board office and obtained and reservativns
January 27 is the last day to made by calling the Wvrkshops Indianapolis "500" will tell why
"Highway Safety is No Ac·
vote abseny e in person.
Office at 594-4907.
cident." The goal is to leave the
student body realizing that it is
a privilege to hold a driver's
.I
license lind a responsibility to
PT. PLEASANT - Com- person, firm or cvrpvration retain it.
The prv~ram . has been
plaints to the office of the City vivlating this city ordinance
developed
by the Champion
Inspector frvm residents vf and upon conviction thereof,
Point Pleasant have been shall be fined not more than Spark Plug Co. and has ·
made of neighbors conducting $100. Each and every day received the Public Service
a business in their homes in during which such illegal Award vf !he National Safety
areas zoned for residential use location use cvntinues shall be. Council.
Johnny Boyd Is fully
vnly.
deemed a separate offense.
The city is divided into
Any person, firm or cor- qualified to speak on the imdistricts under fvur geiieraf · poration planning any type portant subject of Highway
categories,
Open Area business within the city limits Safety. In addition to having
Districts, Residential must cvntact the office of the driven race cars for years, he
Districts, Business Districts zoning officer for informativn averages 35,1100 miles a year as
a highway driver.
and Industrial Districts: Any regarding zoning. 675-2360,

ATHENS - Noi{.\pollution,
The ·"Mid-&lt;lay Mini Lee·
crime, science ·fiction ar\d the · tures", vrganized by the
energy crisis ate among the · university ' s E.xtensivn
. topics to be discussed during a Di•ision, are open to the
series of eigh.t free mini lee- general public. ~ctures will
lures scheduled fvr the IUfiCh begin at !2:10p.m. and will end
hour on Thursdays beginning by i p.m. A light )Wlch will be
Jan. II in Ohio University's available for purchase at the
Baker Center Ballrvom.
lecture site starting at 11:30

.

Special levy election January 30th

CONTRIBUTE TO BAND - Worthy Matron Wanda
Gabrit.sch and Worthy .Patron Oscar Casto, representing
Chapter 157 of the Order of Eastern Star, present a check for
$100 to the "Wahama Band to Washington" fund. Accepting
the check in behalf of the band are, from left, Jayne Hart,
Dianna Harris and John Bnrris, president of the band. The
band was selected to represent West Virginia in the
Inauguration Parade of President Nixon on January 20,
Collections to date in the drive for dofuttions total $2,697.65. PHOTO BY SAM NICHOLS Ill.
·-..,
,I

w:

Bidwell

Confidence,
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Deval,
Mark and Lisa of Plain City,
visited recently with her
paren'ts, Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Waugh.
M.r . and Mrs. Donald
Palmer, Mrs. Anna Rathburn,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mwray,
Terri Lynn and David, spent
New Year's Eve with Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Hemphill and family
at Northup .
.Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
McClaskey, Ronnie/ and Mrs .
Barbara Sue Wells of Junction
City visited recently with Mrs .
James Reynolds and daughter,
'

By Hallie Murray
Mr. and Mrs. Ai Morris of
Harris visited recently with
Mr. James Reynolds and
daughter, Olive.
Mr. and Mrs. ·Dennis Bunke
of Columbus spent Monday and
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
William Fraley and daughter,
Marlene.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles ,
Murray, Terri Lynn and David
of Lariat Drive, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis BWlke of Columbus,
Mr , and Mrs. William Fraley
and Marlene spent New Year's
Day with Mr. and Mrs. An·
thvny Murray.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Feustel
and children vf Gallipolis, Mr.
and Mrs. Toney Weary and
family vf Fairborn, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike McBride and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hayes
and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
McBride and svn all spent
Sunday with Mrs. Hanna
McBride and family .
¥rs. Anthony Murray and
son· Charles Murray, spent
Wednesday at Windfield and

Olive.

An •exciting Christmas
surprise for Mr. and Mrs. John
Rhodes and family and
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Denney, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy Rhodes and son, Terry
Lee flew home from Tampa,
Fla .,' to visit his parents,
grandparents and many
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernie Green,
Mrs. Erma Robey and Mrs.
Homer Painter were recent
callera•·&lt;l;l ~ames and Olive
Reynolds.

..

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I Beat • • •
1
,
11 Of the Bend

I1

1

1
1
I
I

I
1

!

·1 By Bob Hoeflich

·
POMEROY - Tuesday, Pomeroy's Christmas trees,
gathered from homes ea~lier, will be mulched on the parking lot
just off Mechanic St.
Pomeroy residents can take .their containers and shovels to
the lot and pick up a supply of garden mulch, free of charge, on
Tuesday.
,
The recycling process has been arranglld by the Winding
Trail Garden Club with the cooperation vf Pomeroy Mayor
. William Baronick and the council.
ONE ELECTrON SEEMS to fellow right after another.
The Meigs County Board of Elections is now preparing for
primaries in Pomeroy and Middlepo~t Villages where seyeral
members for council and the boards of public affairs will be
r.Jn,inated in May. Petitions of candidacy can ·be secured from
the Board of Elections office located in the Masonic Temple.
MEIGS COUNTY'S first baby of the new year seems slow in
arriving. So far, there have been no entries in the annual baby
derby. Anumber of gifts provided by Meigs merchants are being
offered to the first baby of 1973 and its parents.
WALLACE BRADFORD AND BILL DOWNIE were in
Colpmbus Tuesday and Wednesday-to attend the annual county
fair cvnvention. County fair events are generally booked at the
convention.

By the way , the Meigs County !;air Board recently reelected
Bradford as president; !lanny Zirkle as vice president; Bill
Downie as treasurer~ and Mrs. Marvin King, secretary.
Dates for the 1973 fair have been approved by the Ohiv
Director of Agriculture. The event will be Aug. 14 through Aug.
18.

•

MR. AND MRS. BEN EWING and daughter, Beth Ann, and
Mrs. Beulah Ewing returned home Wednesday from Pasadena
where l~ey attended the Rose Bowl game and, of course, viewed
the colorful Rose Bowl parade.
The Ewings made the trip as a part of a Shriners' tour
leaving from Columbus via plane on Dec. 28. They landed in Lvs
Angeles and were bussed tv their hotel accommodations in
Pasadena. Besides tbe Rose Bowl ~ctivities, the group toured
Knotts Berry Farm. Disneyland and other points vf interest.
There were some 200 persons in the party.
RUTH HAWKINS OF Middleport has such beautiful articles
sent to her by her relatives from foreign cvuntries. Many of the
attractive items are on display at Ruth's business establishment
on North Second . Apair vf Spanish dancers among them is really
svmething!

C•n .., lnlt•lltlll In tny '''"'

from butmtlll te tlllc.

9 FT. X 12 FT.
ROOM

$23.76
4'x8'
PANELING
PRICES AS LOW AS

$2.99

collision
GALLIPOLIS - Two per·
sons were injured in a traffic
accident at 10:15 p.m. Friday
on First Ave.
City pvlice said an auto
driven by David K. Snyder, Rt.
2, Gallipolis, stopped to avoid
striking a dog which ran into
the street. His car was struck
·in the rear by an auto operated
by Charles R. Cox, 20,
Gallipolis.
·
Debbie Russell, 17, a
passenger in the Snyder auto
had a neck injury while Jeff
Lewis, a passenger in the Cox
autv, suffered a laceratiou of
the head. Cox was charged
with failure to stop within the
assured clear distance .
An accident occurred, on
Second Ave., near the White
Palace Restaurant where, ,
auto driven by Be't\y ·
Sa1111ders, 45, Bidwell, backed
into another driven by Becky S.
Brown, 18, Gallipolis.

Cole elected to

lead Bar 30

Watercraft is

BEDROOM REDUCTIONS

assembly topic
GALLIPOLIS - Principal
James N. M. Davis annoWlced
Saturday he has scheduled two
assemblies for Watercraft
Safety for Gallia Academy
High School; one March 9, for
grades 9-12 at 8:15 a.m. and
another for 7..1J graders at 8:55

F~~CTO

$3.89

Safety program
set March 9th

Home-Jbusiness against rules

The Watercraft Agents are
Chuck Carney and Duane
Lucas, Division vf Watercraft,
Department of Natural
Resources, State of Ohio. After
1hese two assemblies these
agents will act as resource
)ievple for Gallia Academy
bi!ys' avd girls' physical
education class.
The assemblies were
scheduled because the need to
be better informed and better
prepared about boating safety
critically affects more and ..,._..,..,.,.~....,...,.,.,........,....,.,.,..,......,..,.,.,.........,..,......
more people, young and old .
alike, ~ach year. The above
educational services are · offered to this community ih
hopes that thrvugh educativn,
the public will become more
safety conscious and thus mere
safe on the water.

'

BUT THEY'RE
NOT
.
We Pay
.Daily Interest
on

Passbook Savings
•. ' THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

•GIGANTIC REDUCTIONS
ON ALL' BED~OOM SUITES

CAROLINA
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
'

PHONE 675-1160

POINT PLEASANT

'

POMEROY -Fourteen ol22 Route I, $10 and costs.
traffic cases heard by Meigs
Othei'S' fined were Jack E.
County Judge Frank W. Pvrter · Hall, Cheshire Rvute I, $10 and
Friday Involved excess speed. cosl:, failure tv stop within
Seven of 10 defendants fined_ Q~ured ·clear distance ahead;
were found guilty of speeding · Terry Napper, Langsville
and seven of 12 defendants Rvute I, unsafe vehicle, $5 and
forfeited bvnds made lor the costs, and William Pooler,
same offense.
P~y Rvute 3, expired ·
Fined were Gary Ellis, operator's license, $10 and
Middleport, $10 and costs; · costs.
Fvrfeiting bvnds posted on
David W. Grindstaff, Racine
Route I, $15 and cvsls; James speeding were Lon H. Boggs,
C..Wyatt, Pumeroy Rvute 4, $10 South Point; Leroy J . Rossiter,
and coets; Harry .i Wade, Crown City Route 2; Carl L.
Nitro, W. Va., $10 and costs; Brown, Pomeroy; Ray D.
Robert Lee Fisher, Racine, $10 Saxtvn, HWltingtvn, w. Va.;
and costs; Thomas Wilson, Melvin B. Freeman, MidPomeroy Rvute 2, $30 and costs dleport Rout~ I; Jan Van
and Dal]a Aldridge, Racine

,,, . '

,.

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William P. Harper, Parkersburg,$ZI.50,expiredvperator's
hcense; Gevrge Hudson,
·
" ,. .
Pomeroy Route 4, $27.50, stop
Voohees Schneider, Dresden, sign violation; Edward C.
all $27.50 each; Bruce C. Gvrdon, Mentor, $27.50,
Justice, Middlepvrt, $39.50.
passing without assured clear
Others forfeiting bonds were distance ahead, and Mickey
Harold Heines, Darlington, HuttOn, near Albany, $25, inPa., '17.50, no mud flaps; toxication.

oven that

MIDDLEPORT- Pnlgrams
the next three weeks were
announced by John Will,
chairman, following diMer at
Heath United Methodist
Church Friday for . the Mid-

.
Navy expanding
Dppo program
to 6!{fields
The

Bureau of Naval Personnel has authorized the Navy
Recruiting Cvmmand to implement an expanded Direct
Procurement Petty Officer
(DPPO) Program, effective
immediately.
The Navy now , will recruit
men and women into some 65
rating specia!Uea and offer
them an advanced paygrade
from three to seven grades
above recruit depending on the
Individuals training and experience . In the past, the Navy
has had,a program ol this type,
but it was limited to three
specialties.
This new DPPO Program
was established to recruit
personnel into the Regular
Navy, in the 21 to 32 year old
age span,'who possess civilian
acquired education ·and-vr
work experience equivalent to
that of paygrades E-4 through
E-7 in selected non-nuclear
ratings.
Enlistments will be fvr a
period of four years. Ap.
pilean Is having less tl!an 6·
months actlv~ ml~tary service
will be enliated at paygrade E.J
and upon successful compleUon of recruit training will
lie advanced to the petty officer
grade for which recruited.
Applicants wbo have more
than six months active duty
behind them will be made
available for . Immediate
. assig"Wnt to lhe neet.

dleport • Pom~roy Rotary
Club.
Gene Riggs, president, home
from a two-week trip to the
Southwest; gave an lnfvrmal
report on sights and events of
his travel. It was' an open
meeting with nv planned
program.
· Program chairman Will said
Bill Miller, manager of WJEH
Radio stqtion, Gallipolis, will
speak nexi Friday evening;
Tom Cassell, manager of the
Middleport division, Columbia
Gas Co., will give the program
on Jan. 19th, and on tbe 26th of
January John Reece, public
affairs coordlnlitor for the Ohio
Power Co. at the Gavin Power
Plant, wUI show and narrate
pictures of progress made at
Meigs Mines Nos. ! and 2 on the
Salem Center area .
January birthdays were
reoognized for the Rev. Bob
Kuhn and Chet Tannehill.
Ladles vi the chur~h served a
fried chicken dinner.

~

'

FRESH

.,
FROM

lb.

lllld a companY.,spokellllll~.

GROUND FRESH
DAILY
•

GOLDEN CORN

.MOTOR .OIL

Whole Kernel or Cream

7

17 oz. cans

M&gt;crowave Ovens

NobOdy knows more abou1 microwa11e cooking !han litton. Nobod y.

&lt;4

Foreman &amp; Abbott
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

650 Flnt Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio ·

1-

Older frame home Includes 6 rooms and bath, just
city park, aluminum siding, flat lot 26'x86' 10'12' '.

1-

1fJ

652 and 660 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

...

Vacant lot 54'x86' 10'12".

:s

Rear

C

1: s~TL _

13 oz.

Kounty Kist

MAJESTIC
SPRAY P.AINT

GREEN BEANS
('

7

~

$

16 oz. cans

CAN

114 VInton Cou.r t, Gallipolis, Ohio

O
Ml

LISTERINE
MOUTH WASH

$

\

Modern 3 bedroom home, nice kitchen and bath, hardwood floors ,
utility room, garage, small flat landscaped lot .

Mo

14 oz.

SWEET PEAS

[8LITTON
Litton

4ft

Ill:

'

KOUNTY KIST

::oa k bacon st rips in 2 minutes. 4 trozen lunc heo n
hamb urg ers 1n 5 minutes. A bea uti full y brown ed 4·
lb. dinner roast in 22 minutes . Coo k meals in 1/ , the
tim e!
You do it al l, thanks to these Litton tirsts : An auto·
mali c defroster that defrosts 16 oz. steak in 4 min.
Easy-clean acrylic inte rior. Plus th e larg est inte rior
ot ·any counter-top .oven I (Cooks a 20-lb. tur key)
FREE COOKBOOK TOO. Tells everythi ng about
cooking, detrosting, ro asting . 168 pages. 300 rec ipes.
Come in tor a demonstrationI

$

17 oz. cans

,.

Sealed bids ali the following described properties will be accepted at
the executi~e offices of the Holzer Foundation, :iss Jackson Pike, on
or before January 10, 1973. You may bid on all parcels together, each
of them separately, or, any combination. The Holzer Fo~ndation
reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Keys and appointments to
view the properties may be arranged by calling Robert Fanning's
office 'a t 446-5152.
·

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7

'·

$34995
.

Kist

QUAKER STATE

...---REAL ESTATE FOR SALE---

•
Ill
. ::

~.. ,Kounty

SUPER BLEND

QT.

Microwave cooking comes of age with
the practical Litton Minute master~

.

.

c

~

'
PRIC ED

'

GROUND BEEF

.,.

2112

blocks from

n Spruce·· Flnt Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

Vacant lot 43' 5"x87'.

...·0

"'

15 Spruca •Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
Vacant lot 48.5'xl73' 10".

644 First .Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
Warehouse (concrete block) 7056 s.q. feet in excellent condition and
perfect location with ample parking, L·shaped l.ot with 43'12' frontage
on First Avenue.

wine

'.

POMEROY, OHIO

F~BULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

~~day.

anuary prograini lis ed:: ~

co.

"109YEARS.OF SERVICE"

700 WEST MAIN STREET

, al d
m a Y
Speed: common
•

111EY'RE TRYING
WHITEFISH, Mont. (UP!) . .
~ Roclcy Mountain Caskei
Is trying to do IOIIlething about
lilt high cost of dying.
The Whitefish fjrm announced that it Is now
pr¢uclng old fashioned pine
bOn~ for $125 apiece-and
supesta purchase in advanee,
•'The eaaket can be uaed as a
rack or 8 linen cloeet unW
the llayer's t1m11 hu come,"

NOW ON SALEJ

137 PINE STREET
GALLIPOUS, OHIO

1

•

ALL FURNITURE &amp; ACCESSORIES

-

'

Accounts
would be alike if
all Banks were alike

.

a

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•

Notes from
the. StUdio .

_. . . . . .. -------""··*"""' __.,

AI '·savings ·

..

a.m.

ANTIQUE
KITS

312 6th ST.

2 hurt in

TUPPERS PLAINS - Bill
Cole has been elected president
of the Bar.JO Horsemen for
1973. Other officers elected for
IF YOU ARE ONE WHO likes to see Ohiv first, perhaps, you the new year are Homer A.
will be interested In a new publication listing dates and locations Cole, vice president; Norma
of 87 Ohio festivals and events being held from nvw thrvugh May. Newland, secretary, and J. R.
You can get a free cvpy of the calendar of events from the Kennedy, treasurer.
Publication Center, Ohio Department of Economic and ComThe riding group already has
munity Development, Box 1001, Columbus, 43216.
begWl plans for its forthcoming
hvrse show season. The club
ANOTHER FREE OFFER: Wildlife habitat tree and shrub · will sponsor a square dance
planting stvck is available from the Division of Wildlife to from 9 p.m. until midnight on
qualifying rural landowners at no cost. Several varieties of pine, Jan. 13 at the Tuppers Plains
fruit bearing trees and shrubs are included.
Elementary School. Open to
Farmers, sportsmen's clubs and other rural landowners, the public, the dance will
with 30 acres or more on.which hunting is permitted, are eligible feature music by Jhe Country
to receive the planting stock to improve wildlife food and cover Boys from Mareitta. A
on their land.
.
Valentine's Day dance is
Applications are available from Gary Swope, local game planned under club spanprotector, Middleport, of the district wildlife office in Athens.
sorship for Feb. 10.

VINYL ASBESTOS

ONLY

PT. PLEASANT - Mason
CDWlty voters will go tv the
polls January 30 tv cast ballots
in a special levy election to
provide approximately
$3,712,175 over the next five
years for the local school
system.
· This does nvt ask for an increa~ in taxes, but is a
renewal of the additional levy
and shall apply to five fiscal
years, beginning in 1973
through 1977.
" The purpose and app'~oximate annual amoWlt for
which s~ch additional funds
are needed are as follows:
- To provide annually approxiniately $562,529 to supplement · the salaries of
teachers, bus drivers, janitors,

Jl1W&gt;cle--like oiec:es of clay are put over
in the art form) . f usually don't pay any
that before
pie&lt;;e even begins to
attention to the "subject" at first, but
rese111~le ~ model, or so it seems .tQ
gv chlSI', about eight l!lches from the .
. .
.
· people whose eyes are unused to ·piece, and look at in in little pieces.
looking "deeply."
. I look' at brush strokes and sketch :
I HAD PLANNED to have an easy
lines and see each little bit.of cvlor .·I try. i
. . time this week.;t:!ib ~ visiting artist
to.
imagine myself tile author ·and hold :
• · By Ka'ti Meet
·~doi~g aU , the wor'P.- But I have
his brush, and I am as close to the j
,
ArtiJt-la·Resldeaee
di8covered what Is, for me, the mast
surface of the painting as he was while :
.GAUJPOUS- W~ll, I ,once said difficult work: silting stni. I would not
putting the brush to it. When I have :
· that I wished there were tWo of me. want a job as protessiol)al -model,
seen a.ll of the painting a little at a time, :
: Another now · elists; Just the head, though I have a new respect for such a _! step bilck, vne step at a time, wat- .
: however i wha\1 really need is extra profession. I also have to wonder how
ching the littl~ paris draw together into •
: hands. HaviDg the extra head is sort of we can expect our children to sit still on
one whole- picture as it was intended to :
fun, even with it full of plaster!
hard chairs for even an hour. 'I;ry it
be seen.
:
ThUI'Iday and Friday, the peq&gt;le yourself. I foWld It the most tiring and c
Then I can· see quite clearly nvt :
. who came to. the studio saw Joy uncvmfvrtal!le thing-ihat I lulve done in
only the general subject, but often, I· :
: U~dskold, the ·sculptor, , look- six montha!
_ believe, why the artist wanted to paint ·
, lng' Jll the model with deep
For soniethlng you don't have to sit
it.
'
'
• concentrl'tion and then, gra~ still tv enjoy; visit the Frencn Art
I have never been to the ocean
by .gram, adding and shaping soft clay · Col011y January exhibit of water colvr
I have neve.r walked by an ocean
tJR .the roughly 50 lba. of built-up paintings. These 26 watercolors were shore.
heath at low .tide or smelled the sea's .:::·:
~terl'!l represented what the sculptor
selected from the California National
water, but a man by the name of Frank (
saw; 'not just the Sill'face (the skin) but Watercolor's Society;s 51st Annual
Ackerman has done all these things, .:
the bones_!!lld muscles underneath.
Exhibition at the Laguna Beach Art
and thrvugh his eye; an,d nose and feet ::
An arlist in any medium, wvrklng
Museum, The~ paintings were _shown - and hand and mind, with a sheet of'::
· .for a repre~ntatlon of a live being, in New York City by special invitation
pape~ and a little pigment, we have a i :
must have a thorough knowledge of of the National Academy of Design and
twenty-minute vacation there. Free.:::.
La: ::~~ "I:Jle surface of a body, are.now here as part ~fa two-year tour.
That painting is nwnbered "!." I? .
j•
a . human head, Is so
Watercolor has been perhaps the · would tell abvut some of the others, that ::::·
: geomell'lcally- complex that 'It is not ,least respected vf the traditional
gave me so much happiness, but you .:;;:;,:
possible to represent that surface painting media. This exhlbitivn Is .must see them yourselves. The French
' witltout understanding the causes of the certainly evidence that watercolor is as
Art Colony is open Saturday, Sunday,
·complexities.
r vital and expressive as any medium
and Tuesday. If you are really in a
l am sorry that not everyone was when skillfully employed.
hurry when you get there, be sure at
able to see the development of the piece
I SUPPOSE THAT MY method of least to look at numbers 5, 3, 10, 15, 25,
from the beglnnlng, when the first clay looking at a painting is unconventional, 14, 2 and ~ot necessarily my •
was put onto the armature. Asculpture but I'll tell you about it (maybe it will favvrltes, but pieces esPecially in· :
in the early stages looks a great deal help someone else who "doesn't know
teresting because of a particular :
like a skeletvn - bvnes and very anything about painting" find pleasure
technique or quality.
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. ............ REAL ESTATE
...

FOR SALE~------

4'x8' SHEEl
PACESETTER
·- PANELING
'

$ 59
Sheet
Medium·Wood
Grain Color

Golden Grain
Macaroni &amp; Cheddar

DINNERS

6

$

SYLVANIA
liGHT
BULBS
for

7lfc oz. boxes
SOW • 75W • lOOW
Reg. 30' each

c

�'t

8- The Sunday Times !Se~tinel. Sunday ,Jan. 7,1973

Lecture series .is pl~e.d

1'·
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'

'

.

a.m. Regulations~onotpermit
food, including !'3Ck IIIIIChes, to
be brought into Baker Center.
However, a persorl·may attend
the lectures without eating
. ....
lunch .
"We hope that all members
of the commWlity, for ex;un·
· pie, busineSsmen, secretaries,
far!llers and housewives, as
, well as students, faculty and
staff members of Ohio
University, will take advantage of this rather unique
school secretaries, cooks and educational program," said
· WM. F. HEDRiCK
other regularly employed Curtis Johnson, director of the
COLUMBUS- William F. .
school personnel.
Extension Division.
- To provide annually apThe title of the first lecture in .. Hedrick, son ol Mr. and .Mn.
proximately . $32,406 for free the series is "Art: A Diversion · Edward Hedrick, former
textbooks, grades K-12.
or a Disease?" It will be given
Pomeroy residents, bas lleen
- To provide annually ap- by Prof. Robert · Borchard of
appointed junior steward of
Humbvldl Masonic 'Lodge
proxilnately $35,000 for im· , the School of Art.
provement of 11;~nsportation
Other subjects and speakers
476, Columbus. Agraduate of
facilities.
sc~eduled for the winter -l&gt;omeroy Hlgb School,
- To provide annually ap.. quarter series are : Jan. 18,
Hedrick Is an electrician and
prvximately $25,000 for the "Energy, E;nvironment,
a Iarmer, not qualllyiDg
purpose vf purchasing in- GN.P-Watts Gain~ On?", Dr.
wnich is his profession· and
structivn materials and-vr Roy Lawrence.
which Is his hobby. He and
equipment which would be
Jan. 25, "Understanding the
his wife, BoDDie and two
used for fees in grades K-12. Metric System," Dr. Paul
children, Billy, Jr., and
:_ To provide annually ap- Plvutz.
Barbara, live at 1041 Sun·
pro;;imately $87,500 for the
Feb. !, "Noise Pollution:
view Road, Reynoldsburg.
'
•'
operations of the school system Gnats on the Drumhead,"
or may be used as matching lor Ralph Burhans.
Mason CoWlty's shate for the
Feb. 7, "Science Fiction and
Better School Building Planetary Mythologies," Dr.
Amendment funds.
Dennis Uvingston.
There will be no mailing of
Feb. 22, "Memory: The
GALLIPOLIS - Principal ·
ballots outside the U.S. after ShortandLvngoflt,"Dr.Gary
James
N. M. Davis annoWlced
January 13.
Schumacher.
A period from January 15
Mar. I, "Foods: Facts and Saturday a Champion Spark
through January 27 has been Fallacies," Dr. Betty Sullivan. Plug Highway Safety Program
set aside for absentee voting.
Mar. 8, "Organized Crime in has been scheduled Jan. 23, at
January 15 is the first day to America," Dr. William Moore. 8:15a.m. for grades 9-12 and
vote in person J n the Mason
Further information may be 8:55a.m. for grades 7..1J.
Jvhnny Bvyd, veteran of the
County School Board office and obtained and reservativns
January 27 is the last day to made by calling the Wvrkshops Indianapolis "500" will tell why
"Highway Safety is No Ac·
vote abseny e in person.
Office at 594-4907.
cident." The goal is to leave the
student body realizing that it is
a privilege to hold a driver's
.I
license lind a responsibility to
PT. PLEASANT - Com- person, firm or cvrpvration retain it.
The prv~ram . has been
plaints to the office of the City vivlating this city ordinance
developed
by the Champion
Inspector frvm residents vf and upon conviction thereof,
Point Pleasant have been shall be fined not more than Spark Plug Co. and has ·
made of neighbors conducting $100. Each and every day received the Public Service
a business in their homes in during which such illegal Award vf !he National Safety
areas zoned for residential use location use cvntinues shall be. Council.
Johnny Boyd Is fully
vnly.
deemed a separate offense.
The city is divided into
Any person, firm or cor- qualified to speak on the imdistricts under fvur geiieraf · poration planning any type portant subject of Highway
categories,
Open Area business within the city limits Safety. In addition to having
Districts, Residential must cvntact the office of the driven race cars for years, he
Districts, Business Districts zoning officer for informativn averages 35,1100 miles a year as
a highway driver.
and Industrial Districts: Any regarding zoning. 675-2360,

ATHENS - Noi{.\pollution,
The ·"Mid-&lt;lay Mini Lee·
crime, science ·fiction ar\d the · tures", vrganized by the
energy crisis ate among the · university ' s E.xtensivn
. topics to be discussed during a Di•ision, are open to the
series of eigh.t free mini lee- general public. ~ctures will
lures scheduled fvr the IUfiCh begin at !2:10p.m. and will end
hour on Thursdays beginning by i p.m. A light )Wlch will be
Jan. II in Ohio University's available for purchase at the
Baker Center Ballrvom.
lecture site starting at 11:30

.

Special levy election January 30th

CONTRIBUTE TO BAND - Worthy Matron Wanda
Gabrit.sch and Worthy .Patron Oscar Casto, representing
Chapter 157 of the Order of Eastern Star, present a check for
$100 to the "Wahama Band to Washington" fund. Accepting
the check in behalf of the band are, from left, Jayne Hart,
Dianna Harris and John Bnrris, president of the band. The
band was selected to represent West Virginia in the
Inauguration Parade of President Nixon on January 20,
Collections to date in the drive for dofuttions total $2,697.65. PHOTO BY SAM NICHOLS Ill.
·-..,
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Bidwell

Confidence,
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Deval,
Mark and Lisa of Plain City,
visited recently with her
paren'ts, Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Waugh.
M.r . and Mrs. Donald
Palmer, Mrs. Anna Rathburn,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mwray,
Terri Lynn and David, spent
New Year's Eve with Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Hemphill and family
at Northup .
.Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
McClaskey, Ronnie/ and Mrs .
Barbara Sue Wells of Junction
City visited recently with Mrs .
James Reynolds and daughter,
'

By Hallie Murray
Mr. and Mrs. Ai Morris of
Harris visited recently with
Mr. James Reynolds and
daughter, Olive.
Mr. and Mrs. ·Dennis Bunke
of Columbus spent Monday and
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
William Fraley and daughter,
Marlene.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles ,
Murray, Terri Lynn and David
of Lariat Drive, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis BWlke of Columbus,
Mr , and Mrs. William Fraley
and Marlene spent New Year's
Day with Mr. and Mrs. An·
thvny Murray.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Feustel
and children vf Gallipolis, Mr.
and Mrs. Toney Weary and
family vf Fairborn, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike McBride and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hayes
and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
McBride and svn all spent
Sunday with Mrs. Hanna
McBride and family .
¥rs. Anthony Murray and
son· Charles Murray, spent
Wednesday at Windfield and

Olive.

An •exciting Christmas
surprise for Mr. and Mrs. John
Rhodes and family and
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Denney, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy Rhodes and son, Terry
Lee flew home from Tampa,
Fla .,' to visit his parents,
grandparents and many
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernie Green,
Mrs. Erma Robey and Mrs.
Homer Painter were recent
callera•·&lt;l;l ~ames and Olive
Reynolds.

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I Beat • • •
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11 Of the Bend

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·1 By Bob Hoeflich

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POMEROY - Tuesday, Pomeroy's Christmas trees,
gathered from homes ea~lier, will be mulched on the parking lot
just off Mechanic St.
Pomeroy residents can take .their containers and shovels to
the lot and pick up a supply of garden mulch, free of charge, on
Tuesday.
,
The recycling process has been arranglld by the Winding
Trail Garden Club with the cooperation vf Pomeroy Mayor
. William Baronick and the council.
ONE ELECTrON SEEMS to fellow right after another.
The Meigs County Board of Elections is now preparing for
primaries in Pomeroy and Middlepo~t Villages where seyeral
members for council and the boards of public affairs will be
r.Jn,inated in May. Petitions of candidacy can ·be secured from
the Board of Elections office located in the Masonic Temple.
MEIGS COUNTY'S first baby of the new year seems slow in
arriving. So far, there have been no entries in the annual baby
derby. Anumber of gifts provided by Meigs merchants are being
offered to the first baby of 1973 and its parents.
WALLACE BRADFORD AND BILL DOWNIE were in
Colpmbus Tuesday and Wednesday-to attend the annual county
fair cvnvention. County fair events are generally booked at the
convention.

By the way , the Meigs County !;air Board recently reelected
Bradford as president; !lanny Zirkle as vice president; Bill
Downie as treasurer~ and Mrs. Marvin King, secretary.
Dates for the 1973 fair have been approved by the Ohiv
Director of Agriculture. The event will be Aug. 14 through Aug.
18.

•

MR. AND MRS. BEN EWING and daughter, Beth Ann, and
Mrs. Beulah Ewing returned home Wednesday from Pasadena
where l~ey attended the Rose Bowl game and, of course, viewed
the colorful Rose Bowl parade.
The Ewings made the trip as a part of a Shriners' tour
leaving from Columbus via plane on Dec. 28. They landed in Lvs
Angeles and were bussed tv their hotel accommodations in
Pasadena. Besides tbe Rose Bowl ~ctivities, the group toured
Knotts Berry Farm. Disneyland and other points vf interest.
There were some 200 persons in the party.
RUTH HAWKINS OF Middleport has such beautiful articles
sent to her by her relatives from foreign cvuntries. Many of the
attractive items are on display at Ruth's business establishment
on North Second . Apair vf Spanish dancers among them is really
svmething!

C•n .., lnlt•lltlll In tny '''"'

from butmtlll te tlllc.

9 FT. X 12 FT.
ROOM

$23.76
4'x8'
PANELING
PRICES AS LOW AS

$2.99

collision
GALLIPOLIS - Two per·
sons were injured in a traffic
accident at 10:15 p.m. Friday
on First Ave.
City pvlice said an auto
driven by David K. Snyder, Rt.
2, Gallipolis, stopped to avoid
striking a dog which ran into
the street. His car was struck
·in the rear by an auto operated
by Charles R. Cox, 20,
Gallipolis.
·
Debbie Russell, 17, a
passenger in the Snyder auto
had a neck injury while Jeff
Lewis, a passenger in the Cox
autv, suffered a laceratiou of
the head. Cox was charged
with failure to stop within the
assured clear distance .
An accident occurred, on
Second Ave., near the White
Palace Restaurant where, ,
auto driven by Be't\y ·
Sa1111ders, 45, Bidwell, backed
into another driven by Becky S.
Brown, 18, Gallipolis.

Cole elected to

lead Bar 30

Watercraft is

BEDROOM REDUCTIONS

assembly topic
GALLIPOLIS - Principal
James N. M. Davis annoWlced
Saturday he has scheduled two
assemblies for Watercraft
Safety for Gallia Academy
High School; one March 9, for
grades 9-12 at 8:15 a.m. and
another for 7..1J graders at 8:55

F~~CTO

$3.89

Safety program
set March 9th

Home-Jbusiness against rules

The Watercraft Agents are
Chuck Carney and Duane
Lucas, Division vf Watercraft,
Department of Natural
Resources, State of Ohio. After
1hese two assemblies these
agents will act as resource
)ievple for Gallia Academy
bi!ys' avd girls' physical
education class.
The assemblies were
scheduled because the need to
be better informed and better
prepared about boating safety
critically affects more and ..,._..,..,.,.~....,...,.,.,........,....,.,.,..,......,..,.,.,.........,..,......
more people, young and old .
alike, ~ach year. The above
educational services are · offered to this community ih
hopes that thrvugh educativn,
the public will become more
safety conscious and thus mere
safe on the water.

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BUT THEY'RE
NOT
.
We Pay
.Daily Interest
on

Passbook Savings
•. ' THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

•GIGANTIC REDUCTIONS
ON ALL' BED~OOM SUITES

CAROLINA
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
'

PHONE 675-1160

POINT PLEASANT

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POMEROY -Fourteen ol22 Route I, $10 and costs.
traffic cases heard by Meigs
Othei'S' fined were Jack E.
County Judge Frank W. Pvrter · Hall, Cheshire Rvute I, $10 and
Friday Involved excess speed. cosl:, failure tv stop within
Seven of 10 defendants fined_ Q~ured ·clear distance ahead;
were found guilty of speeding · Terry Napper, Langsville
and seven of 12 defendants Rvute I, unsafe vehicle, $5 and
forfeited bvnds made lor the costs, and William Pooler,
same offense.
P~y Rvute 3, expired ·
Fined were Gary Ellis, operator's license, $10 and
Middleport, $10 and costs; · costs.
Fvrfeiting bvnds posted on
David W. Grindstaff, Racine
Route I, $15 and cvsls; James speeding were Lon H. Boggs,
C..Wyatt, Pumeroy Rvute 4, $10 South Point; Leroy J . Rossiter,
and coets; Harry .i Wade, Crown City Route 2; Carl L.
Nitro, W. Va., $10 and costs; Brown, Pomeroy; Ray D.
Robert Lee Fisher, Racine, $10 Saxtvn, HWltingtvn, w. Va.;
and costs; Thomas Wilson, Melvin B. Freeman, MidPomeroy Rvute 2, $30 and costs dleport Rout~ I; Jan Van
and Dal]a Aldridge, Racine

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William P. Harper, Parkersburg,$ZI.50,expiredvperator's
hcense; Gevrge Hudson,
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Pomeroy Route 4, $27.50, stop
Voohees Schneider, Dresden, sign violation; Edward C.
all $27.50 each; Bruce C. Gvrdon, Mentor, $27.50,
Justice, Middlepvrt, $39.50.
passing without assured clear
Others forfeiting bonds were distance ahead, and Mickey
Harold Heines, Darlington, HuttOn, near Albany, $25, inPa., '17.50, no mud flaps; toxication.

oven that

MIDDLEPORT- Pnlgrams
the next three weeks were
announced by John Will,
chairman, following diMer at
Heath United Methodist
Church Friday for . the Mid-

.
Navy expanding
Dppo program
to 6!{fields
The

Bureau of Naval Personnel has authorized the Navy
Recruiting Cvmmand to implement an expanded Direct
Procurement Petty Officer
(DPPO) Program, effective
immediately.
The Navy now , will recruit
men and women into some 65
rating specia!Uea and offer
them an advanced paygrade
from three to seven grades
above recruit depending on the
Individuals training and experience . In the past, the Navy
has had,a program ol this type,
but it was limited to three
specialties.
This new DPPO Program
was established to recruit
personnel into the Regular
Navy, in the 21 to 32 year old
age span,'who possess civilian
acquired education ·and-vr
work experience equivalent to
that of paygrades E-4 through
E-7 in selected non-nuclear
ratings.
Enlistments will be fvr a
period of four years. Ap.
pilean Is having less tl!an 6·
months actlv~ ml~tary service
will be enliated at paygrade E.J
and upon successful compleUon of recruit training will
lie advanced to the petty officer
grade for which recruited.
Applicants wbo have more
than six months active duty
behind them will be made
available for . Immediate
. assig"Wnt to lhe neet.

dleport • Pom~roy Rotary
Club.
Gene Riggs, president, home
from a two-week trip to the
Southwest; gave an lnfvrmal
report on sights and events of
his travel. It was' an open
meeting with nv planned
program.
· Program chairman Will said
Bill Miller, manager of WJEH
Radio stqtion, Gallipolis, will
speak nexi Friday evening;
Tom Cassell, manager of the
Middleport division, Columbia
Gas Co., will give the program
on Jan. 19th, and on tbe 26th of
January John Reece, public
affairs coordlnlitor for the Ohio
Power Co. at the Gavin Power
Plant, wUI show and narrate
pictures of progress made at
Meigs Mines Nos. ! and 2 on the
Salem Center area .
January birthdays were
reoognized for the Rev. Bob
Kuhn and Chet Tannehill.
Ladles vi the chur~h served a
fried chicken dinner.

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FRESH

.,
FROM

lb.

lllld a companY.,spokellllll~.

GROUND FRESH
DAILY
•

GOLDEN CORN

.MOTOR .OIL

Whole Kernel or Cream

7

17 oz. cans

M&gt;crowave Ovens

NobOdy knows more abou1 microwa11e cooking !han litton. Nobod y.

&lt;4

Foreman &amp; Abbott
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

650 Flnt Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio ·

1-

Older frame home Includes 6 rooms and bath, just
city park, aluminum siding, flat lot 26'x86' 10'12' '.

1-

1fJ

652 and 660 First Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

...

Vacant lot 54'x86' 10'12".

:s

Rear

C

1: s~TL _

13 oz.

Kounty Kist

MAJESTIC
SPRAY P.AINT

GREEN BEANS
('

7

~

$

16 oz. cans

CAN

114 VInton Cou.r t, Gallipolis, Ohio

O
Ml

LISTERINE
MOUTH WASH

$

\

Modern 3 bedroom home, nice kitchen and bath, hardwood floors ,
utility room, garage, small flat landscaped lot .

Mo

14 oz.

SWEET PEAS

[8LITTON
Litton

4ft

Ill:

'

KOUNTY KIST

::oa k bacon st rips in 2 minutes. 4 trozen lunc heo n
hamb urg ers 1n 5 minutes. A bea uti full y brown ed 4·
lb. dinner roast in 22 minutes . Coo k meals in 1/ , the
tim e!
You do it al l, thanks to these Litton tirsts : An auto·
mali c defroster that defrosts 16 oz. steak in 4 min.
Easy-clean acrylic inte rior. Plus th e larg est inte rior
ot ·any counter-top .oven I (Cooks a 20-lb. tur key)
FREE COOKBOOK TOO. Tells everythi ng about
cooking, detrosting, ro asting . 168 pages. 300 rec ipes.
Come in tor a demonstrationI

$

17 oz. cans

,.

Sealed bids ali the following described properties will be accepted at
the executi~e offices of the Holzer Foundation, :iss Jackson Pike, on
or before January 10, 1973. You may bid on all parcels together, each
of them separately, or, any combination. The Holzer Fo~ndation
reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Keys and appointments to
view the properties may be arranged by calling Robert Fanning's
office 'a t 446-5152.
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$34995
.

Kist

QUAKER STATE

...---REAL ESTATE FOR SALE---

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Ill
. ::

~.. ,Kounty

SUPER BLEND

QT.

Microwave cooking comes of age with
the practical Litton Minute master~

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PRIC ED

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GROUND BEEF

.,.

2112

blocks from

n Spruce·· Flnt Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

Vacant lot 43' 5"x87'.

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15 Spruca •Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
Vacant lot 48.5'xl73' 10".

644 First .Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
Warehouse (concrete block) 7056 s.q. feet in excellent condition and
perfect location with ample parking, L·shaped l.ot with 43'12' frontage
on First Avenue.

wine

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POMEROY, OHIO

F~BULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

~~day.

anuary prograini lis ed:: ~

co.

"109YEARS.OF SERVICE"

700 WEST MAIN STREET

, al d
m a Y
Speed: common
•

111EY'RE TRYING
WHITEFISH, Mont. (UP!) . .
~ Roclcy Mountain Caskei
Is trying to do IOIIlething about
lilt high cost of dying.
The Whitefish fjrm announced that it Is now
pr¢uclng old fashioned pine
bOn~ for $125 apiece-and
supesta purchase in advanee,
•'The eaaket can be uaed as a
rack or 8 linen cloeet unW
the llayer's t1m11 hu come,"

NOW ON SALEJ

137 PINE STREET
GALLIPOUS, OHIO

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ALL FURNITURE &amp; ACCESSORIES

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Accounts
would be alike if
all Banks were alike

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Notes from
the. StUdio .

_. . . . . .. -------""··*"""' __.,

AI '·savings ·

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a.m.

ANTIQUE
KITS

312 6th ST.

2 hurt in

TUPPERS PLAINS - Bill
Cole has been elected president
of the Bar.JO Horsemen for
1973. Other officers elected for
IF YOU ARE ONE WHO likes to see Ohiv first, perhaps, you the new year are Homer A.
will be interested In a new publication listing dates and locations Cole, vice president; Norma
of 87 Ohio festivals and events being held from nvw thrvugh May. Newland, secretary, and J. R.
You can get a free cvpy of the calendar of events from the Kennedy, treasurer.
Publication Center, Ohio Department of Economic and ComThe riding group already has
munity Development, Box 1001, Columbus, 43216.
begWl plans for its forthcoming
hvrse show season. The club
ANOTHER FREE OFFER: Wildlife habitat tree and shrub · will sponsor a square dance
planting stvck is available from the Division of Wildlife to from 9 p.m. until midnight on
qualifying rural landowners at no cost. Several varieties of pine, Jan. 13 at the Tuppers Plains
fruit bearing trees and shrubs are included.
Elementary School. Open to
Farmers, sportsmen's clubs and other rural landowners, the public, the dance will
with 30 acres or more on.which hunting is permitted, are eligible feature music by Jhe Country
to receive the planting stock to improve wildlife food and cover Boys from Mareitta. A
on their land.
.
Valentine's Day dance is
Applications are available from Gary Swope, local game planned under club spanprotector, Middleport, of the district wildlife office in Athens.
sorship for Feb. 10.

VINYL ASBESTOS

ONLY

PT. PLEASANT - Mason
CDWlty voters will go tv the
polls January 30 tv cast ballots
in a special levy election to
provide approximately
$3,712,175 over the next five
years for the local school
system.
· This does nvt ask for an increa~ in taxes, but is a
renewal of the additional levy
and shall apply to five fiscal
years, beginning in 1973
through 1977.
" The purpose and app'~oximate annual amoWlt for
which s~ch additional funds
are needed are as follows:
- To provide annually approxiniately $562,529 to supplement · the salaries of
teachers, bus drivers, janitors,

Jl1W&gt;cle--like oiec:es of clay are put over
in the art form) . f usually don't pay any
that before
pie&lt;;e even begins to
attention to the "subject" at first, but
rese111~le ~ model, or so it seems .tQ
gv chlSI', about eight l!lches from the .
. .
.
· people whose eyes are unused to ·piece, and look at in in little pieces.
looking "deeply."
. I look' at brush strokes and sketch :
I HAD PLANNED to have an easy
lines and see each little bit.of cvlor .·I try. i
. . time this week.;t:!ib ~ visiting artist
to.
imagine myself tile author ·and hold :
• · By Ka'ti Meet
·~doi~g aU , the wor'P.- But I have
his brush, and I am as close to the j
,
ArtiJt-la·Resldeaee
di8covered what Is, for me, the mast
surface of the painting as he was while :
.GAUJPOUS- W~ll, I ,once said difficult work: silting stni. I would not
putting the brush to it. When I have :
· that I wished there were tWo of me. want a job as protessiol)al -model,
seen a.ll of the painting a little at a time, :
: Another now · elists; Just the head, though I have a new respect for such a _! step bilck, vne step at a time, wat- .
: however i wha\1 really need is extra profession. I also have to wonder how
ching the littl~ paris draw together into •
: hands. HaviDg the extra head is sort of we can expect our children to sit still on
one whole- picture as it was intended to :
fun, even with it full of plaster!
hard chairs for even an hour. 'I;ry it
be seen.
:
ThUI'Iday and Friday, the peq&gt;le yourself. I foWld It the most tiring and c
Then I can· see quite clearly nvt :
. who came to. the studio saw Joy uncvmfvrtal!le thing-ihat I lulve done in
only the general subject, but often, I· :
: U~dskold, the ·sculptor, , look- six montha!
_ believe, why the artist wanted to paint ·
, lng' Jll the model with deep
For soniethlng you don't have to sit
it.
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• concentrl'tion and then, gra~ still tv enjoy; visit the Frencn Art
I have never been to the ocean
by .gram, adding and shaping soft clay · Col011y January exhibit of water colvr
I have neve.r walked by an ocean
tJR .the roughly 50 lba. of built-up paintings. These 26 watercolors were shore.
heath at low .tide or smelled the sea's .:::·:
~terl'!l represented what the sculptor
selected from the California National
water, but a man by the name of Frank (
saw; 'not just the Sill'face (the skin) but Watercolor's Society;s 51st Annual
Ackerman has done all these things, .:
the bones_!!lld muscles underneath.
Exhibition at the Laguna Beach Art
and thrvugh his eye; an,d nose and feet ::
An arlist in any medium, wvrklng
Museum, The~ paintings were _shown - and hand and mind, with a sheet of'::
· .for a repre~ntatlon of a live being, in New York City by special invitation
pape~ and a little pigment, we have a i :
must have a thorough knowledge of of the National Academy of Design and
twenty-minute vacation there. Free.:::.
La: ::~~ "I:Jle surface of a body, are.now here as part ~fa two-year tour.
That painting is nwnbered "!." I? .
j•
a . human head, Is so
Watercolor has been perhaps the · would tell abvut some of the others, that ::::·
: geomell'lcally- complex that 'It is not ,least respected vf the traditional
gave me so much happiness, but you .:;;:;,:
possible to represent that surface painting media. This exhlbitivn Is .must see them yourselves. The French
' witltout understanding the causes of the certainly evidence that watercolor is as
Art Colony is open Saturday, Sunday,
·complexities.
r vital and expressive as any medium
and Tuesday. If you are really in a
l am sorry that not everyone was when skillfully employed.
hurry when you get there, be sure at
able to see the development of the piece
I SUPPOSE THAT MY method of least to look at numbers 5, 3, 10, 15, 25,
from the beglnnlng, when the first clay looking at a painting is unconventional, 14, 2 and ~ot necessarily my •
was put onto the armature. Asculpture but I'll tell you about it (maybe it will favvrltes, but pieces esPecially in· :
in the early stages looks a great deal help someone else who "doesn't know
teresting because of a particular :
like a skeletvn - bvnes and very anything about painting" find pleasure
technique or quality.
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...

FOR SALE~------

4'x8' SHEEl
PACESETTER
·- PANELING
'

$ 59
Sheet
Medium·Wood
Grain Color

Golden Grain
Macaroni &amp; Cheddar

DINNERS

6

$

SYLVANIA
liGHT
BULBS
for

7lfc oz. boxes
SOW • 75W • lOOW
Reg. 30' each

c

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.10 - The'Sunday Times . Sent~I, SWlday;Jan. 7, 1973

·~~~:;:;:;:;:;:;w-,;:;:-,~:;;;:-~;:;;::~;:~~.;::~::::~..;z.-:;::::;:::::::::.{:w;~:=~~::

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SO MUCH ENJOYMENT the boys and girls at the Meigs
County Children's Home are getting from their new record
players. The two players, for !he bgys'..room upstairs and the
other for the girls' downstairs bedroom, were Christmas gifts
from the Jay Hall family of the Jaymar Coal Co . They also
provided. a lovely new couch for the home.

NO POST-HOLIDAY BLUES for Janice Smith. She's happily ·
planning and packing for a trip to HawaU (we're green with
envy) and will be leaving come Jan.l6for a week there.
'
Janice will be joined for the trip by Sue Stewart of Dayton
'
. and over New Year's weekend
she and her mother Mrs.
Raymond Smith, w~ayton to visit Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Stewart and Su&amp;1ilgo over the plans.
The two will leave the morning of the 16th from the Columbus
Airport on a chartered flight. A beautician at the Chateau in
Pomeroy, Janice and her friend will be joining other
cosmetologists from around the state on the tour which is
sponsored by Capital Supply Co.

]o Ann Brooks to wed in June
REEDSY.J LLE - Mrs. Mildred Brooks, Reedsville
Route 1, is announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of her daughter, JoAnn, to Mr. William E. Francis,
son of Mrs. Kathleen Francis, Syracuse, and the late W. H.
Francis. Miss Brooks, a 1970 graduate of Eastern Hign
School, is presently employed by W. A. Gibbs in Pomeroy.
Mr. Francis, a 1966 graduate of Pomeroy High School,
;;~ tended 8hio University and is currently associated with
Francis Florist in Pomeroy. A June wedding is being planned. The gracious custom of open church.will be observed.

.

. THE REV. AND MRS. CHARLES SIMONS and children,

Mrs. Joann Dobbins, Colum-·
bus; Earnest Brewer, Racine,
and Sammie Rairden, Long
Bottom.
·
Mr. Brewer, who has been in
very poor health, is improving
slowly. He celebratea his birthday January 5. Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Donnan and family,
their daughter living in
Newburgh, Indiana, phoned
several times during the
Christmas season .
VISITING RELA T!VES
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Harry E. Hoagland and Miss
Graee Sauvage of Columbus
are the weekend guests of their
niece and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry E. Moore.

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POMEROY- For the Lawrence Rupes, the arrival of their
son, .S.Sgt. Larry W. Rupe and his family from Tampa, Fla.
· provided a double treat. It was Larry's first Christmas home
with his parents in six years, and it was his parents first time to
see their new !:':anddaughter, four-month-old Aimee. .
Larry and Beverly also have a son, Jason, two, who really
put some spirit in Christmas at the Rupe household. The family
left Thursday for sunny Florida after two weeks here. Larry is
,stationed at tl)e MacDill Air Force Base near Tampa:

STIVERSVILLE - Visitors
at the home of Mr. 'and Mrs.
Allen and David Brewer during
the Christmas holiday were
Mr. and Mrs. John Beall and
Ronda, Mark, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer,
Teresa and Kenneth II,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Close, Wayne and Roy of
Waterford; Miss Reta Close,
Columbus;
Mrs . Linda
Reisinger, Columbus, who wlll
leave on January IS to join her
husband in England for two
years; Mr. and Mrs: Harold
Brewer, Jane, Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs . Edgar Brewer,
Mrs. Leonna Beegle, Crista
and Rodney, Racine ; r-trs .
Charles Simeral, Findlay;

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·.·•

Visitors here on holidays

'

'

.f

Children's
Christmas
made ·nice

· Community . . .
··1Corner ·By Charlene Hoeflich ,!:··.

Wes. and Carol, spent the holidays in Florida. They left Middleport on Christmas Day, drove to Sebastian Inlet which is .
along the coast ·of the Atlantic, set up their tent, and enjoyed
thoroughly some fun on the beach.
One day they toured Cape Kennedy, another day they took in
Disney World, and the day before New Year's they visited
McKee Jungle Garden. Also included ln their week were services
at three different Baptist churches.

.

11 ..,. :rhe Sunday Times· Sentinei;s'¥'day, Jar, 7, 1973
'

OUR CONGRATULATIONS TO Steven Craig Stanley, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley, Pomeroy, Route 4. Steven received
a perfect!our point for the fall quarter at Ohio University.
He is a freshman at Ohio, majoring in electrical-engineering.
Steve's many 4-H projects in electricity through the years left
little doubt about his exceptional ability in this field. He has built
all sorts of things including model rockets which he launched at
the Meigs County Fair last fall.
Incidentally, during the holidays he built a 25-inch color
television set which is ready now to be put into the cabinet. He
must be a handy one to have around the house.
'

'

Chester families at party
CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department
enjoyed their annual Christmas party at the Chester grade
school building Sunday
evening, Dec.l7, with a potluck
supper at 5 p.m. '1'1\e Auxiliary
furnished baked ham, potato
chips, coffee and punch, the
members bringing a covered
dish.
Guests were the firemen and
the famiUes. Highlight ·was a
visit from Santa Claus who
gave sacks of candy and other
gifts to the children. Door
prizes were won by Jean

RETURN HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. ·and
Mrs. A. W. Hayes returned
Thursday night from Pontiac,
Ill. where they spent the
holidays with their sons and
families, Mr. and Mrs, Robert
Hayes and Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Eugene. Hayes.

Sexson, , Kenny Newell,
Leonard and Sheila Koenig.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Ne~ell uann, Kathy,
Kenny and tmmy; Mr. and
Mrs. Johii ickharn, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Wood, Bob and
Sandy; Mr and Mrs. Robert
Burke, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Myers, Joyce, Linda, Bruce
3!1d Leonard; Mr. · and Mrs.
Hobart Newell and Sheila,
Jerry Burke and daughter.,
Mrs . Opal Eichinger, Don and
Laura ; Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Orr, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. ·Gaul
and Vickie, Mr. and Mrs. Errol
Conroy, Mrs. Alice Dodson,
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland,
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bahr and
Jane, Roger Coats, Mrs. Grace
Gumpf, Tom and Tim, Miss
Sandy Sayer, Miss Cheryl
Kuhn, Mr..and Mrs. Tom Nice,
Mrs . Mabel VanMeter, Mrs.
Opal Hollan, Mrs. Jean Sexson
and Marcy, Danny Bissell, Mr.
and Mrs. " Leonard Koenig,
Sheila, Bonnie and Leorikrd.

•

POMEROY
Christmas
)Vas es))Ol!ially nice for the boys
iand girls at the Meigs County
Children's Home due to the
generosity of residents, Mrs.
Joann Clark, former matron,
reports.
.
Contributing towarg ,_the
hilppy holiday with gifts and
other remembrances were Mr.
lllfd Mrs. William Radford,
Avon representatives, Bill and
tee's Music Store, the Loyal
Pals .Cia., of the Middleport
Church of Christ; Pomeroy
National Bank, the Carleton
Church, Mrs. John Cline of
Belpre, Sew·rlte..SCwing Club,
Eastern and Pomeroy Chapter
of the F.H.A., the Pomeroy
American Legion, the Rutland
Church of Christ, Mrs. Frank
Beach, tars. Norma Baxter,
the· Pomeroy Gun Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Oriort.CObner,
Ferman Moore of Royal Crown
Bottling Co.; Mr. and. Mrs.
Victor Hannahs, Mr. and Mrs.
0. D. Miller, the Syracuse
United Presbyterian Church,
Bethel 62, Inrern~tlonal Order
of Jobs Daughters-( Clyde
Davis, the Minersville WSCS,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spencer,
Mrs. Harry Davis, King
Builders, the Reedsville WSCS,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, Mrs.
Barbara Shuler, Mrs. Mary
Birchfield, the Hazel Community Church, the Laurel
Cliff Free Methndist Church,
Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
. The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.
The Pomeroy Fr-iendly
Neighbors Ciub, Mrs. Ann
Chapman, Mr . and Mrs. Jay
Hall and family, the Mid·
dleport American Legion, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo,
Jeanette Scot·t, Pomeroy
Episcopal Church, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mr. Criner,
the Middleport Church of
Christ, the Racine Baptist
Church, the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church, the Pine Grove
Lutheran Church, George Hall,
Citizens National Bank, Mr :
and Mrs. James Weber, Henry
Swift fund , Ohio Valley
Commandery, Knights
Templar, Becky Hayes, the
First Baptist Church, Mid·
dleport, the Goldefi Rule Class
and the EJecta Circle of the
Baptist Church, and Mrs .
Mildred McDaniel.
BIRTHDAY NEAR
POMEROY - James Ables,
formerly of Syracuse, a
resident of the Fairview Rest
Home, Logan, Rt. 4, Ohio, will
celebrate a birthday on Jan. 9.
He would
cards.

~

Baclmers to celebrate golden wedding

....

THE GOLDEN WEPDING ANNIVERSARY of Mr. and Mrs, Dale Bachner ~ill be observed Sunday, Jan. 14 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the social room of the Rutland Methodist Church.
Hosting the observance oo which all relatives and friends of the couple are invited will be Mr.
and Mrs. Bachners' nieces and n,$phews, the children of Mr. and Mrs. Ge~ald Minor of Dexter,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice of Rutland.

New officers are installed

.-...

::r::~~:O:!U:!"!
c.:J

POMEROY _ New officers Mrs. Glenora Swatzel, trustee.' '1\lentswlll beservedted .bThepMrlze
· 'I;th e ' mee t'gth
p~dona
rs.
10
were installed at a recent Durmg
e Ha
ck
rded Y
to Mrs
meeting of Theodorus Council auditing report was given and
u was awa
·
17, Daughters of America, held plans were made to observe WUI. Games were played,
at the IOOF ball.
Installed were Mrs. Etta
Will, councilor; Mrs. Lillie
Hauck, treasurer; Mr~. Ferne
Roush, financial secretary;
Mrs . Edith Spencer, vice
councilor; Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
associate vice councilor; and

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AUXILIARY MEETS
CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Volunteer fire
department met Jan. 3 at the
firehouse with President Grace
Gumpf, presiding. Minutes of
the previous meeting were
read by Margaret Christy and
the treasurer's report by Opal
Wickham. Reports of com·
mittees were given. Me~bers ·
voted to buy a small cliffee pot
for use at the fire house, also to
order greeting cards. Ham
sandwiches and coffee were
served to Grace Gumpf,
1\largaret Christy, Opal
Wickham, Clara Conroy,
Clarice Allen, Dorothy Myer,
Inzy Newell and Betiy Newell. .

FASHION VALUE IN···

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FOR AU. THE FAMILY

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You Will Find The

BIGGEST
VALUES
RIGHT NOW

z1.1.1-

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SHOES . BOOTS
-

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All Women's and
Children's ~ress

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MIDDLEPORT. 0.

'

POMEROY, OHIO

•'.

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.......

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111:1

.

No Games, No Gimmicks•••
Interest Rates in Area

5%

Athens Coun~y Savings &amp; Loan Co.

REGULAR
PASS BOOK
SAVINGS

Liberal
Savings Plans!

...

...ac:
Q

...'

_

- r•

6.
7.
8.
9,

Christmas Club ·
Vacation Club
Travelers ,Chec;ks
Money Orders

CERTIFICATES .
OF DE-POSIT

MEIGS ·

BRAN()I

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Ill

•

.

'

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
·,
COMPANY
296 W. SECOND ST. POMEROY, OHIO
· · Earl F. Ingels, ~r., Manager

·.\

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Our 50th Anniversary Year- 1923·1973

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Watch For Many Special Promotions Throughout

.

'

'

90~ DAY

Phone 992-3863

.

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Ill'

Investigate an ACS&amp; L Monthly income
· Account.

..'

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a:::

TWO-YEAR .
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPO.SI.T

'

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c.:J

.6%

We take dimes ·and dollars . .. give them , professional
,. care . .. make them grow with interest. We have a plan
to meet every situation and need. Let us tell you about
our various Savir,lgs Accounts and Certificates. Highest
. rates in the' area . Deposits are insured up to $20,000.

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The Meigs Branch ·-

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Just Highest

ON

EVERYBODY'S

1. Home Const~uction Loans
2. Home Purchase Loans
3. Home Improvement Loans
4. Home Consolidation Loans
· 5. Mobile Home Loans

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ALL-SE.RVICE SAVINGS AND LOAN

.

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.10 - The'Sunday Times . Sent~I, SWlday;Jan. 7, 1973

·~~~:;:;:;:;:;:;w-,;:;:-,~:;;;:-~;:;;::~;:~~.;::~::::~..;z.-:;::::;:::::::::.{:w;~:=~~::

··- ··- - - .. .

I

•

SO MUCH ENJOYMENT the boys and girls at the Meigs
County Children's Home are getting from their new record
players. The two players, for !he bgys'..room upstairs and the
other for the girls' downstairs bedroom, were Christmas gifts
from the Jay Hall family of the Jaymar Coal Co . They also
provided. a lovely new couch for the home.

NO POST-HOLIDAY BLUES for Janice Smith. She's happily ·
planning and packing for a trip to HawaU (we're green with
envy) and will be leaving come Jan.l6for a week there.
'
Janice will be joined for the trip by Sue Stewart of Dayton
'
. and over New Year's weekend
she and her mother Mrs.
Raymond Smith, w~ayton to visit Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Stewart and Su&amp;1ilgo over the plans.
The two will leave the morning of the 16th from the Columbus
Airport on a chartered flight. A beautician at the Chateau in
Pomeroy, Janice and her friend will be joining other
cosmetologists from around the state on the tour which is
sponsored by Capital Supply Co.

]o Ann Brooks to wed in June
REEDSY.J LLE - Mrs. Mildred Brooks, Reedsville
Route 1, is announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of her daughter, JoAnn, to Mr. William E. Francis,
son of Mrs. Kathleen Francis, Syracuse, and the late W. H.
Francis. Miss Brooks, a 1970 graduate of Eastern Hign
School, is presently employed by W. A. Gibbs in Pomeroy.
Mr. Francis, a 1966 graduate of Pomeroy High School,
;;~ tended 8hio University and is currently associated with
Francis Florist in Pomeroy. A June wedding is being planned. The gracious custom of open church.will be observed.

.

. THE REV. AND MRS. CHARLES SIMONS and children,

Mrs. Joann Dobbins, Colum-·
bus; Earnest Brewer, Racine,
and Sammie Rairden, Long
Bottom.
·
Mr. Brewer, who has been in
very poor health, is improving
slowly. He celebratea his birthday January 5. Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Donnan and family,
their daughter living in
Newburgh, Indiana, phoned
several times during the
Christmas season .
VISITING RELA T!VES
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Harry E. Hoagland and Miss
Graee Sauvage of Columbus
are the weekend guests of their
niece and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry E. Moore.

'

·:

',]:.

POMEROY- For the Lawrence Rupes, the arrival of their
son, .S.Sgt. Larry W. Rupe and his family from Tampa, Fla.
· provided a double treat. It was Larry's first Christmas home
with his parents in six years, and it was his parents first time to
see their new !:':anddaughter, four-month-old Aimee. .
Larry and Beverly also have a son, Jason, two, who really
put some spirit in Christmas at the Rupe household. The family
left Thursday for sunny Florida after two weeks here. Larry is
,stationed at tl)e MacDill Air Force Base near Tampa:

STIVERSVILLE - Visitors
at the home of Mr. 'and Mrs.
Allen and David Brewer during
the Christmas holiday were
Mr. and Mrs. John Beall and
Ronda, Mark, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer,
Teresa and Kenneth II,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Close, Wayne and Roy of
Waterford; Miss Reta Close,
Columbus;
Mrs . Linda
Reisinger, Columbus, who wlll
leave on January IS to join her
husband in England for two
years; Mr. and Mrs: Harold
Brewer, Jane, Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs . Edgar Brewer,
Mrs. Leonna Beegle, Crista
and Rodney, Racine ; r-trs .
Charles Simeral, Findlay;

'

'

·.·•

Visitors here on holidays

'

'

.f

Children's
Christmas
made ·nice

· Community . . .
··1Corner ·By Charlene Hoeflich ,!:··.

Wes. and Carol, spent the holidays in Florida. They left Middleport on Christmas Day, drove to Sebastian Inlet which is .
along the coast ·of the Atlantic, set up their tent, and enjoyed
thoroughly some fun on the beach.
One day they toured Cape Kennedy, another day they took in
Disney World, and the day before New Year's they visited
McKee Jungle Garden. Also included ln their week were services
at three different Baptist churches.

.

11 ..,. :rhe Sunday Times· Sentinei;s'¥'day, Jar, 7, 1973
'

OUR CONGRATULATIONS TO Steven Craig Stanley, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley, Pomeroy, Route 4. Steven received
a perfect!our point for the fall quarter at Ohio University.
He is a freshman at Ohio, majoring in electrical-engineering.
Steve's many 4-H projects in electricity through the years left
little doubt about his exceptional ability in this field. He has built
all sorts of things including model rockets which he launched at
the Meigs County Fair last fall.
Incidentally, during the holidays he built a 25-inch color
television set which is ready now to be put into the cabinet. He
must be a handy one to have around the house.
'

'

Chester families at party
CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department
enjoyed their annual Christmas party at the Chester grade
school building Sunday
evening, Dec.l7, with a potluck
supper at 5 p.m. '1'1\e Auxiliary
furnished baked ham, potato
chips, coffee and punch, the
members bringing a covered
dish.
Guests were the firemen and
the famiUes. Highlight ·was a
visit from Santa Claus who
gave sacks of candy and other
gifts to the children. Door
prizes were won by Jean

RETURN HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. ·and
Mrs. A. W. Hayes returned
Thursday night from Pontiac,
Ill. where they spent the
holidays with their sons and
families, Mr. and Mrs, Robert
Hayes and Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Eugene. Hayes.

Sexson, , Kenny Newell,
Leonard and Sheila Koenig.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Ne~ell uann, Kathy,
Kenny and tmmy; Mr. and
Mrs. Johii ickharn, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Wood, Bob and
Sandy; Mr and Mrs. Robert
Burke, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Myers, Joyce, Linda, Bruce
3!1d Leonard; Mr. · and Mrs.
Hobart Newell and Sheila,
Jerry Burke and daughter.,
Mrs . Opal Eichinger, Don and
Laura ; Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Orr, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. ·Gaul
and Vickie, Mr. and Mrs. Errol
Conroy, Mrs. Alice Dodson,
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland,
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bahr and
Jane, Roger Coats, Mrs. Grace
Gumpf, Tom and Tim, Miss
Sandy Sayer, Miss Cheryl
Kuhn, Mr..and Mrs. Tom Nice,
Mrs . Mabel VanMeter, Mrs.
Opal Hollan, Mrs. Jean Sexson
and Marcy, Danny Bissell, Mr.
and Mrs. " Leonard Koenig,
Sheila, Bonnie and Leorikrd.

•

POMEROY
Christmas
)Vas es))Ol!ially nice for the boys
iand girls at the Meigs County
Children's Home due to the
generosity of residents, Mrs.
Joann Clark, former matron,
reports.
.
Contributing towarg ,_the
hilppy holiday with gifts and
other remembrances were Mr.
lllfd Mrs. William Radford,
Avon representatives, Bill and
tee's Music Store, the Loyal
Pals .Cia., of the Middleport
Church of Christ; Pomeroy
National Bank, the Carleton
Church, Mrs. John Cline of
Belpre, Sew·rlte..SCwing Club,
Eastern and Pomeroy Chapter
of the F.H.A., the Pomeroy
American Legion, the Rutland
Church of Christ, Mrs. Frank
Beach, tars. Norma Baxter,
the· Pomeroy Gun Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Oriort.CObner,
Ferman Moore of Royal Crown
Bottling Co.; Mr. and. Mrs.
Victor Hannahs, Mr. and Mrs.
0. D. Miller, the Syracuse
United Presbyterian Church,
Bethel 62, Inrern~tlonal Order
of Jobs Daughters-( Clyde
Davis, the Minersville WSCS,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spencer,
Mrs. Harry Davis, King
Builders, the Reedsville WSCS,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, Mrs.
Barbara Shuler, Mrs. Mary
Birchfield, the Hazel Community Church, the Laurel
Cliff Free Methndist Church,
Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
. The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.
The Pomeroy Fr-iendly
Neighbors Ciub, Mrs. Ann
Chapman, Mr . and Mrs. Jay
Hall and family, the Mid·
dleport American Legion, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo,
Jeanette Scot·t, Pomeroy
Episcopal Church, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mr. Criner,
the Middleport Church of
Christ, the Racine Baptist
Church, the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church, the Pine Grove
Lutheran Church, George Hall,
Citizens National Bank, Mr :
and Mrs. James Weber, Henry
Swift fund , Ohio Valley
Commandery, Knights
Templar, Becky Hayes, the
First Baptist Church, Mid·
dleport, the Goldefi Rule Class
and the EJecta Circle of the
Baptist Church, and Mrs .
Mildred McDaniel.
BIRTHDAY NEAR
POMEROY - James Ables,
formerly of Syracuse, a
resident of the Fairview Rest
Home, Logan, Rt. 4, Ohio, will
celebrate a birthday on Jan. 9.
He would
cards.

~

Baclmers to celebrate golden wedding

....

THE GOLDEN WEPDING ANNIVERSARY of Mr. and Mrs, Dale Bachner ~ill be observed Sunday, Jan. 14 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the social room of the Rutland Methodist Church.
Hosting the observance oo which all relatives and friends of the couple are invited will be Mr.
and Mrs. Bachners' nieces and n,$phews, the children of Mr. and Mrs. Ge~ald Minor of Dexter,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice of Rutland.

New officers are installed

.-...

::r::~~:O:!U:!"!
c.:J

POMEROY _ New officers Mrs. Glenora Swatzel, trustee.' '1\lentswlll beservedted .bThepMrlze
· 'I;th e ' mee t'gth
p~dona
rs.
10
were installed at a recent Durmg
e Ha
ck
rded Y
to Mrs
meeting of Theodorus Council auditing report was given and
u was awa
·
17, Daughters of America, held plans were made to observe WUI. Games were played,
at the IOOF ball.
Installed were Mrs. Etta
Will, councilor; Mrs. Lillie
Hauck, treasurer; Mr~. Ferne
Roush, financial secretary;
Mrs . Edith Spencer, vice
councilor; Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
associate vice councilor; and

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AUXILIARY MEETS
CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Volunteer fire
department met Jan. 3 at the
firehouse with President Grace
Gumpf, presiding. Minutes of
the previous meeting were
read by Margaret Christy and
the treasurer's report by Opal
Wickham. Reports of com·
mittees were given. Me~bers ·
voted to buy a small cliffee pot
for use at the fire house, also to
order greeting cards. Ham
sandwiches and coffee were
served to Grace Gumpf,
1\largaret Christy, Opal
Wickham, Clara Conroy,
Clarice Allen, Dorothy Myer,
Inzy Newell and Betiy Newell. .

FASHION VALUE IN···

z

FOR AU. THE FAMILY

-....

'

I

~· '\&lt;

~

~.,.

;

......ac:

I

e,:, '

TH£ SHOE BOX

lOLA'S

(,:,

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(I

,.

fj\

Q
Q
z

AT

a::

'

ffi
a::

15%0FF

I

1.1.1

•

You Will Find The

BIGGEST
VALUES
RIGHT NOW

z1.1.1-

~
~

~

SHOES . BOOTS
-

··o

•

-~

All Women's and
Children's ~ress

~

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C)

SHOES
1 RACK

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Whtrt ~~Art Sellsllllr Prictdl

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

'

POMEROY, OHIO

•'.

,

.......

,... ::::J
111:1

.

No Games, No Gimmicks•••
Interest Rates in Area

5%

Athens Coun~y Savings &amp; Loan Co.

REGULAR
PASS BOOK
SAVINGS

Liberal
Savings Plans!

...

...ac:
Q

...'

_

- r•

6.
7.
8.
9,

Christmas Club ·
Vacation Club
Travelers ,Chec;ks
Money Orders

CERTIFICATES .
OF DE-POSIT

MEIGS ·

BRAN()I

...z

Ill

•

.

'

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
·,
COMPANY
296 W. SECOND ST. POMEROY, OHIO
· · Earl F. Ingels, ~r., Manager

·.\

"

~
~

.....

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$
.

D:.

Our 50th Anniversary Year- 1923·1973

•

'~

0

0

Watch For Many Special Promotions Throughout

.

'

'

90~ DAY

Phone 992-3863

.

Ll.l

Ill'

Investigate an ACS&amp; L Monthly income
· Account.

..'

r"

a:::

TWO-YEAR .
CERTIFICATES
OF DEPO.SI.T

'

e,:,

c.:J

.6%

We take dimes ·and dollars . .. give them , professional
,. care . .. make them grow with interest. We have a plan
to meet every situation and need. Let us tell you about
our various Savir,lgs Accounts and Certificates. Highest
. rates in the' area . Deposits are insured up to $20,000.

~'

;
'•

"'
....N

51h% :

'

,.,.
••
;:

.'•••'
•

The Meigs Branch ·-

,.,.•

iS

L1J '
111::

Just Highest

ON

EVERYBODY'S

1. Home Const~uction Loans
2. Home Purchase Loans
3. Home Improvement Loans
4. Home Consolidation Loans
· 5. Mobile Home Loans

,,.'

c.:J

'

ALL-SE.RVICE SAVINGS AND LOAN

.

'

-.CI).
'

--....

a:::~ ::&gt;&lt; ci
.
Ll.l
-a:::

Ci

:5I
N

-

Q

i

....

.,2:
•..

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....

.'·

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,.
12 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sun4•Y. Jan. 7.1973

'•

.

., , , , ,rh';'~' r~;!';;*~l VolUnteer ·advisor key to ·4-H ·program
~~:· Corner

~·

By Roberto. Plymale
...·
'"
Area Extension Agent
Mrs . Glen Sc hneider of . JACKSON ·,-_ The key to a
Buckhannon , W. Va ., penned
the following poem lwtribute to successful 4-H program is the
her dog , "Mamie" who was a 4-H advisor who volunteers in
family pet tor t6 years before giving leadership and advising
she died. " Mamie" was ofn
unwanted pup. Mr . and Mrs. 4-H members who take
Schneider se nt a contribution projects.
· to the Meigs County Humane
Four-H advisors wear many
Society which helps to place
unwanted pups in good homes. different leadership hats in the
MY MAMIE
4-H program. Some of these
She was no doggie in the hats include the organizational
window
""
hat, the project teaching hat,
she had no royal pedigree
,
she was just. one of a litter
tile activity hat, the resource
an unwanted pup for free.
consultant hat, and the key
"You are welcome," said leader hat. Regardless of what
"t~e;n~"o~";'you 1 ike
your interest and abilities are,
· providing that you'll love her there is some type of leaderan,
d take
always
right."
" .'II
thistreat
one,"her
I Sfid
with ship hat that will fit you in the
glee
4-H organization, indicates
as she snuggled up to me,
Duane Plymale, Jackson Area
"She is cuter than a button
and suits me to a T."
4-H Agent.

· !~reign

A
visitor to . the
United States once o~served
thatmostactivitywouldcome .
to a halt if Americans would
suddenly stop doing volunteer
work. That certainly would be
true in 4-H. In the nine counties
in the Jackson Area, over' 1200
adults served as 4-H advis. ors.
They give generously of their
time and talent so that over
9,100 4-H members in more
than 560 clubs willlearn.many
skills essential to good
leadership and citizenship.
As mentioned above, there
are many different leadership
hats in 4-H and i\. takes many
different adults with various
lalents and inte'rests to wear
them . These adults form the
leadership team for the l&lt;ical

There niust have been
a deep down need

in each of us that day

Ingels elected

in a very special way

each happy yip she uttered

see med to say
"I'm so glad that you chose me

board chairman

and I'll lry so hard to please
you
everyday in every way ."

Sixteen year s were hers and
n'line
we shared each joy and

wOe

a while

when It was t ime for her to go

and find in sleep release from
pain

no loving hand could stay.
With her last ounce of strength
she rose on painful feet ·
to nose my tear -drenched

cheek
It was her dear familiar way

of saying " please don't weep
it makes me_sad to go
'
and leave you all alone

_I'd gladly stay with you
and suffer untold pain

if only I could
but the Master calls,
He

sai~

'come. Mamie, lay

do\Vn by my leet

where rest Is sweet

so please don't weep : "
I know some folks will say

~·there

Is no room for dogs

upon God's golden street
but God Is love; He mode me
too
and He won't keep apart
such friends as you and I.
If up in heaven you should cry
for me

we will be unljed - just walt
an.d see -

and when the Master says to
you,
"come home, my child,"

·He will look at you and smile,
then with a wink and loving
grin
He will look at me
and say. " Yes, Mamie, " you
too come In,"

so please don't weep.

Oh. God, I fray, help me to be

rxps sure \bt-God's,, love
l'i Mamie

as my.

t. her love for man so near divine

!' shames the little I can find

around the world for man's
own kind.

Each hand held out to her was
met
with
ln!tant
tall-waggtn
friendship.
So color bllnd ·was my Mamie
she questioned not man's race
or creed
my Mamie never went to

school
and yet she lived the golden
rule

always falthtul, loyal, true

I'm such a

compared to her

fool.

'

My Mamie's gone. and yet
weep
for me, not her
she earned sweet sleep
I weep because I cannot un -

derstand

man's Inhumanity to· man .

Group elects officers·
MASON - Officers were
elected and new business was
discussed at the December
meeting of the Bend ,Area
Community Action Group In
Mason .
Officers elected were,
president, Mrs. Nancy
Kimes; vice - president,
Mrs. Freda Turley; secrelary, Mrs. Wanda Bush;

NEW HAVEN - Officers
were elected for the New
Haven United Methodist
" Church Board of Trustees at a
meeting F.rcday evening.
George Ingels, owner and
operator of Ingels Furniture
Store in Middleport, was
named chairman. James N.
Roush, a New Haven Real
Estate Agent, was elected vicechairman and Hardld Lee
?A!rkle, a foreman in construction, is the31eW'~cretary,
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Five other "W!"bers of the Educator's schedule for
JEFF SMml
board of trustee s named . are JanW!ry 8th - 12th in Meigs
JOINS OVB STAFF
Richard Ord, Hazen Roush,
Emerson E. Evans, pres- Bernard Lieving, , Harold County:
January 9 - Salisbury
Ident
of Ohio VatBumgarner, anh ,Eddte Keith Elementary, 9 - 11 :15; Rutland
ley
Bank, Gatllimlls, Bumgarner.
Salem Street, 7:45- 8:15.
Saturday announced the
January 10 - WMPO, 7:30addition of Jeff Smith to the
8.
bank's staff. Mr. Smith
SON BORN
January II - Salem Center,
graduated from Ohio
CHESHIREMr.
and
Mrs.
5:30
-6; Hysell Run, 6:30 -7:30;
university last fall wllb a
Lionel Gilmore of Cheshire are Hyland Olurch, 8 - 8: IS.
major In accounting and
announcing
the birth of a son,
January 12 - Pearl Street
finance. He recently comRobert Joseph, on Dec. 29 at . Elementary, 9 - 11:30; Portpleted his military servlee as
the
Holzer Medical Center. The land Elementary, 1 - 2:30;
a second lieutenant with the
infant weighed nine pounds, Great Bend, 3. 3:30; SliversU. s. Army at Fl. Benning,
Ga. He Is the son •!1,Earl and three ounces. Mr._and Mrs. ville, 4 - 5:30; Syracuse
Belly Smllh, Rl. 2, Gilmore. have three other (Rizer's), 6 • 6:30; Syracuse
Gallipolis. Mr. Smith and hls children, Bruce, Mark and P.O. , 6:45 • 7:15; Arms, 7:45 wife Marsha reside at 332 Richie. Grandparents are Mr. 8:15.
Third Ave. Smltb was an and Mrs . Richard Fink and Mr.
outstanding football player and Mrs: Millard Gilmore,
at GAHS In the mld-1960s. Cheshire.
;
FLOODS CONTINUE
Flooding continued in northCHIEF DIES
ern Illinois today with no relief
UNLUCKY THIEVES
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UP!) '- in site for families in low-lying
BROADFIELD, England Albert Dusz, police chief here areas surrounding the ice(UP!) - Thieves who stole five for the past eight years, died jammed Rock River as another
pigeons valued at $1,200 from a Friday afternoon after suf- band of precipilatlon moved
loft might not be able to keep fering an apparent heart at- into the eastern half of the
their stolen goods, police said tack at the office.
nation.
today. The birds - homing
The UP! said the flooding,
pigeons - will Oy home the
The sea is accepted by which started Monday, has
first chance they get, police most scientists as the birth- stranded
families
and
said.
place of all forms of life.
livestock.
'

'

.

'

Eddy 's schedule

..,

~ •. ::a.a.mmx~~m-.=x=:~.."X.~=;~:,~'*-=:=::-;')$.:~=:::::~:x::~:~='$,.{i.:'&amp;:::..""«:.;oJ%X:~-:x~·~)$$p,~::~-;::::::::::.-:-s.:::"«::~"Ss·1
·~

I foice·along Br'Way

'

MIDDLEPORT - "What
Makes Freedom Ring" will 1M)
the theme of the program io be
presented at the Friday
meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution by Mrs. · Thereon
Johnson.
The meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs . .James
Brewington, 258 'Main St., ·
Middleport, at 2 p.m. Mrs.
Patrick Lochary will give
resolutions, and members are
to respond to roll call with
current events. ·
There also will be election of
delegates to the state conference . Mrs. Brewington,

Mrs. David M!Uer and MiSs
Frieda _Faehnle will be . the ·
hoatesses,

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY -Mr. and MrS.
m/ger B. Hill, West Palm
Beach, Fla., formefly of
Racine, are . announclitg the
birth of their f'trsl child, !I five
pound, nioe ounce dilughter,
Terri Lynn, born on Jan. 2 at
the West Palm Beach Hospital.
Maternal grandparent~ ire'
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis McMillian,
Racine, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
LeO c. Hut, Route 1 Racine.

STARTS

.-

Men's, Women's and Children's Shoes
ONE GROUP
WOMEN'5-Connie

SHOES 30% ~ , w,_,$~0~~ ."3,0~t~,~~~o
0

1..--~"~
' ~'~·~"~'~
- -w~~
- ~~~~~ I HJ ~U~
'·~
l
' .l 11'rV 01 ril·

.',ti,'.J

.

.

1
f(
~ ..

WORK SHOES.. .': ...... ~:.-.. :.:::......................20% OFF ,
SLIPPERS ~~~~~~\ ....._..............................50% OFF
FASHION BOOTS ~~~~~·s .................... ~~95 ....$1995
SNOW· BOOTS.~:~~~~~~ -~........:. ~~~~~~\ 30% OFF

LADIES'

ONE GROUP

IIJYS AND GIRlS

PURSES
30% OFF

ON DEAN'S LIST
POMEROY - Three area
students earning grades to
qualify on the dean's list at
Mountain State College,
Parkersburg, are the twins,
Darla and Marla Neutzllng,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Neutzling, 796 Lincoln
Hill, and Connie Lanning,
daug~ter of Mr. and Mrs .
Donald L. Lanning, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. Darla and Connie
had 4 o ks M 1a
. mar , ar 3.8.

SHOES _30% OFF

.

By LEE LEON~
for Ohio govenunent that state
.UPI Statehouse Reporter
Finance [)jrector Harold A.
COLUMBUS ·(UPI) ~State
~ovey, hav~ worked himself
. govenunent personnel rolls are out of a joli, ls departing to
replete with the names of em- become budget director of Dliploye! qualified for mediocrity nois.
who put in their elghl hours a
Hovey joined the admlrtlBtraday ' programmed hopelesaly 'tion of Gov. John J. Gllllgan In
Into a fO\\tine of the way it's al- 1971. He was 32, and his job
ways been done.
· .
seemed [nsunriounlable. Some
'lliey ~ supervised by poll- people laugbed tmd said they
sent s boy to do a man's job.
Ohio politics

20% OFF ON All
SHOE SHINE
KITS,
'
UMBREUAS,
SOCKS AND HOSE

By CRAIG PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ For
five years Dr. John Calhoun
gave his mouse cOlony the best
of everything-plenty of food,
perpetual fair weather and
freedom from both disease and
natural enemies.
But this mouae utopia Is now ·
doomed to extinction througb a
Sequence of over.populatlon
and social disintegration which
Calhoun believes has lessons
for humans.
"lf man were In a comparable situation of overcrowding,
we might anticipate a breakdown of soda! and bttellectual
behavofr," he said In ·an tntervl~ Thursday._Calhoun is a
research .pilycholdglst speclallzillg bt behavioral systems at
the National institute of Mental
Health.
His colony began with four
couples Uvlng bt a space thai
cwld COmfortably aCCDIIlllll)date 160.
As the population grew,
Calhoun said, the40ice passed
through stages of rejection by
each other, violence, seJ:ual
aggression by those rejected,
destruction of soctal order ,IOM
of sexual tntere!t and ultimate-

~

passivity.
poin~lllertWl!re~'2di

"""'"" 'Ui.,....,...li!al•. """'· • •~ ""''
•
died, al· the human equivalent
oflOOyearaofage,leavtngonly
,_,•fetnales ....."fivebadbeen
'""'
""'
living together contentedly but
wilhdl:awn frmn each other.
''That waa lbe trouble with
all of them," Calhoun said,
,..,.,
too lent lf
...ey were
con · an
absence of stresa Is ·bapplnesa,
to that extent they were happy,
Nothing bothered them. They
had completely turned inwapls
where every animal waa an
'·'"-d unto Itself."
.....,,
He called those five "the
beauUful ones" who were so
pathological from generations

unenvfpble task of asking a
reluctant General Assembly to
enact the
state's first
personal
'
.
,income tax.
.
The young director did his
job. His personal appearances
· in the legislative halls won
points for the administration.
Much of the budget-tax package was approved, and Hovey
lrought bt talented young people to operate the state's appropriations machinery. ·
,
·So last wl.ek, at 34, Hovey
waillteraUy washed up in Ohio
govenunent. .He had nothing
more to offer.
"I went out to Dllnois for a
.

.

few days to help the new
Democrat!~ administration gel
set up," Hovey said in the
Statehouse pressroom as he
explairled his resignation.
"When I came back, I realized it hadn 'i made any difference thc~l' I was gone," the director said. "Everything worked without me. When they first
offered me the job in Dlinols, I
said I wasn't interested. It
would be hard, and I had it so
easy now in Ohio , Then I realized I needed the challenge . I am
basically crisis-oriented, and
there's rJ longer any criSis in
Ohio."
Hovey took a sheet of paper
and began to draw pBfaUel
lines across it, one at the top
and one at the bottom,
"Whe.n you first come ·to
state goverrunent, your ability

..

STATE REP. OAKLEY roLLINS (R-lronton), right, was sworn in by Ohio Chief Justice C.
William O'Neill as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives during the opening session
of the llOth General Assembly in Columbus January I. Rep. Collins representS the 92od Ohio
House district, comprised of Lawrence, Gallia and Meigs counties and part of Athens county,

The famous Flt;xsteel· springs are made of arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to for!)J-- a single unit that
suports tn restful ease -like floating on air. FlfXSTEEl SPRINGS ARE

CONSTRUCTION

Most Icelanders are descended from ancient Norse
and Celtic settlers of the island. No Eskimos live there.

\
~·· ' .

FLOOR LENGTH

REDUCED 30%
3 5 TO •80.00
ALL WEATHER &amp; TOP COATS
REDUCED 30%
'17.50 TO '56.00
SWEATERS COAT &amp;
REDUC~D 30%
SALE
PRICE

TO

SUBURBAN

COATS REDUCED
SLACKS AND
JEANs · REDUCED

•soo

ODD LOT OF SLACKS

Knit.

Jackets, Snow Suits, Hats, Gloves

Red~ced

KNIT SHIRTS

30%
HATS AND CAPS
REDUCED .20%

Boys' 5 to 12, velour, flannel.
permanent press button
shirts.
·
Pajamas and gowns

'

DRESS &amp; CASUAL
Knit &amp; Wool Blends

Reduced

ALL SALES FINAL
NO APPROVALS
NO LAY·A·WAYS

Sport Coats
Reduced20%

TH
0~

PP
-

_..._..

LADIES -T SUITS

CAPES &amp; SWEATERS .
REDUCED

-

MIDDLEPORT

20%

ALL LADIES BLOUSES

·aAHR CLOTHIERS
.~-

REDUCED

1 RACK OF LADIES SUITS, PA~T .
BLOUSES, SWEATERS &amp; SKIRTS

REDUCED

REDUCED-30

THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

%'

MEN'S
DOUBLE KNITS

20 o/o

'

LADIES SUITS'REDUCED
Wools &amp; Polyester Knits
20%

Wools and Dacron

·PANTS

RE.DUCED 20%

Misses. Jr.'s, lf2 Sizes

Long Sleeve Wool &amp; Orlan

Boys' and girls' crib sets.

&amp; ·Blends

LADIES

SIZE 28 To 42
SAL:E

$9.00

1h PRICE

LADIES
RE CED
DRESS COATS .·
tadies ALL WEATHER .COATS

&amp; FlANNEL PANTS
Reg.

2

1 LOT SCARFS &amp; MITTEN SETS, FUR HATS,

REDUCED 20%
•
(1 LOT) WOOL SHIRTS
• Regular
SALE
Price 516.50
PRICE
'1000
CAR COATS
REDUCED 30% ,

50%0FF

lRICE

DRESSES

·U LOT) DRESS &amp; SPORT SHIRTS

JANUARY.
FURNITURE .
SALE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1925.

-~---~FOR
·n~1r-1
LADIES'

suITS

Boys'. infants', toddler
shirts, corduroy slacks and
overalls.
·

CLEANLINESS

Team High game - Mark V
671
..
.
Team HigH Series - Mark V .

SALE STARTS TOMORROW .
MOMDAY, JANUARY \)8tb, .,.

. . --~-·FOR HIM-----

Girls'
dresses.
shirts,
blouses. pullover sweaters.
~lacks, shorts. ~lack sets.

Frames are of finest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and
corner-blocked for added ,strength. Upholstering is expert and
ta1jonng carefully detailed.
·

Marlene Wilson 458.

I•

I-

COLORED DRESS SHIRTS

~atS,

struction in the legislature, and
now he was packing I!P and
moving to Dlinois as casually
as one would cross the street.
"Nice working with you fellows," called Hovey as he vanished from the pressroom.
· James Leckrone, one of Hovey's deputies, was asked later
what. state government could
do to hang onto valuable public
servants.
''Not a damn thing that I.
know of," lamented Leckrone.

Early Sunday Mixed ·
League
Standings
Team
W. L.
Tom's Carry Out
84 52
Mark V
81 55
Eagles Club
72 64
Racine Food Mkt.
64 72
Team No.3
61 75
Farmers Bank
50 B6
High lndivldtlal .Game
Men, Jr. Phelps 215; Women,
Betty Smith 200.
,
Second High Ind. Game Men, Clarence' Boyles 209 ;
women, Betty Sintth \87.
High Series - Men, Brady
Huffman 553; women, Betty
Smith 571 .
Second High Series - Men,
Jr . Phelps 547 ; women ,

SATURDAY

Price

SO DURABLE THEY WIU PROVIDE WTING COMFORT!

really not having any input at
all. l am literally a bureaucrat
who has worked himself out of
a job."
Harold Hovey was a coll•ge
graduate at 19, regarded as a
genius in some quarters; so
anti-political that he was not
even a registered voter, let
alone a Democrat, 'when he
joined the administration.
His savvy on public finance
probably saved Gilligan's fiscal program from total de-

TO '8:00·' ·,., )'

20%

PATENTED SPRINGS

Baker ·furniture

High Series - Men, John
Ty.ree 512; women, Betty Smith
534:
'
Second High Series - Men,
, Clarence Boyles 510; women.
Marlene Wilson 502.
Team High Game - Mark V
682 .
.
't'
Team -High Series - earn
No. 3 1925.

$8.00

FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE

2 6

. Smith l9'3; women, Marlene
and Maxine 178.

MON. rnRU FRI.

FOR CHILDREN
INFANTS THRU SIZE 12

•,

Tom.-s Carry Out
0 8
Racine Food Ml&lt;t.
0 8
High Individual Game Men, Clarence Boyles 200 ;
women, Betty ,Smith t96.
Second High ·Ind. Game Men. John Tyree · Charles

VALUES TO

',

.

-farmerS Bank

1

.---------------------------------------~

Flexsteel !urn_iture is not only a smart addition to your home bUt
also a w1se mvestment tbat will give years of faultless service.

.

. OPEN
9:15 TO 5:00

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SATISFACTION

.

Local Bowling

.

Flexsteel is easily ·riept factory-fresh and clean. No cambric bottoms .
to gather dust and allergens.
·

I

know how io relate at all.
is \vay down here," he said,
Calhoun's experiment Is de- "and the opportunity for doing
"Then you hire talented peoscribed In the current Issue Jf a things for the people of the ple, and they begin to make
British publication, "Proceed- state iS way up here." He important contributions·,
Ings of the &amp;yal Society of · pointed to the top line.
cutting down still further on
Medicine," and an in"As time goes by, these lines your own usefullness. "
ternational
journal, start to converge. You get betHovey dre)V some lines con"Tecbnologlcal Forecasting ter at your job, but the deci· verging inside the 9rlginal ones
and Social. Change."
sions you make .seem to lock to make wbat looked like a pair
you in on a set path, and the of scisS!lrs.
chances of makini changes be"Finally, you reach the point
come less and less."
where you ·are standing still.''
Hovey drew the lines diago- The lines met in the center.
for the men was 210 pins held
KE.ITH GOBLE FORD
by Jack Mink followed closely nally toward the middl~ of the "That's where I am.now. At the ·
BOWLING LEAGUE
by Charlie Neal with a 209. ·
January 2, 1973
paper.
point these lines cross, you're
High series for the ladles was
, Standings:
Team
Won Lost 534 total pins, held by Helen
No. 12
14
2 Osellind and for the men 588
No. 5
13
3 total pins held by Charlie NeaL
· No. 1
12
4
No. t4 .
12
4
No. 6
10
6
TIMBER SPLITTERS
No. tO
10
6
Wednesday, Jan. 3 bowl ing
No. t3
10
6 results are as follows :
No. 8
8
8
Falls City and R. Mitchell's
No. t·1
a 8 244-6.0 - 8 pts., Ashland 011 and
No. 4
6
10 E. Gardner's 223-583 - 0 pts.
No. 3
3 13
Moose Lodge and B. Tillis'
No. 7
2 14 202-555 · 8 pts .• Marchi's Carry
No. 9
2 14 Out and M. Null's 187-499 . 9
No. 1
2 14 pts.
·
On Jan. 2, 1973, Team 12 took
Farmer' s Hdwr. and B.
8 points from Team 7. Jack . Cook's 209-582 - 8 pts., Dock Inn
Ferguson was high for Team 12 and L. Angell's 201 -562 · o pts.
with 081 pins and Keirn Malone
Foster's Store and M.
was high for Team 7 with 459 Canaday's 208-541 · 8 pts., City
pins.
Ice &amp; Fuel and T. Kna·pp's 174Team 2 took 8 points ftom 469 • 0 pts.
,
Team 9. Jack Mink was high
Larry's Wayside and C.
for Team 2 with 456 pins, end Meadow's 204-574 · 7 pis.,
Gary Ellis was high for Team 9 McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr. and
with 507 pins.
P. Clifford's 222-576 · 1 pt .
•
Team 5 took 6 points from
Tawney's Studio ,and T.
T!!i!m )0. Burl Cook was high Rieser's 216-573 · ~pis. , French
lor Team 5Iwith 5-46 pins and Ctty. Mobile • Homes and . J. 0
Retph- F.-lluson &gt;-(ovltl- wH--YOtnkuno' 232-627 - 4 .¢1. I a
high for THm 10 with 490 pins.
Standings:
Team 14 took 6 points from ITails City
14 ,2
Team · \ . Hellft Oseland was Mooselodge
14 2
high for T..,m 14 with Sll pins . French City Homes
12 4
and Ora Baird was high for Larry's Wayside
l2 4'
Team 1 with ~ pins.
Farmer's Hdwr.
to 6
Team 13 tool&lt; 6 points from Tawney's Studio
10 6
Team 8. Marlo Bush was high Foster's Store
10 6
for Team 13 with SIS pins and Dock Inn
6 10
Charlie Noat was high for McKnight &amp; Davies
3 13
KNIT &amp; WOOL
Team 8 with 588 pins.
City Ice &amp; Fuel
3 13
Team 11 took 6 points from Marchi's Carry Out
2 14
Team 3. Bill Johnson was high Ashland Oil
0 16
for Team 11 with 442 pins and
.
• SALE
· Steve Carter wu high for
Reg
.
s5o.oo
to
sns.oo
'PRicE •
Team 3 wllll 534 pins.
Team 4 split 8 points with ·
Team 6. Jock Janey was high
A thought for the day:
for Team 4 with 493 pins and French novelist Andre Maurois
John Fuller was high for Team
·
lfish6 with m pins.
said. "Modesty and unse
SALE ·
·
Reg.
High sl'lt" game for the ness, these are the virtues men
'
PRICE
Price 525 to $80
~~~~·~.ldby ~~~~~~::J ~~~ praise, am pass by."

STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 8

I&amp;"Jb.~ STORE

Bowling ,

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early $unday Mixed
. League
Dec. ll, 1972
StandinGS
Team
W. L.
Eagles Club .
8 D
' MarkV
8 0
Team No. J
6, 2

of overcrowding and lack of
privacyth8t "theydidn'lrelate
to each other."
When uloplll became n\l!ht'
mare and the colony dwlnded
In size, the survivors might
have returned to normal soctal
relationships, · Calhoun said.
But by that time they did not

heritage house
YOUR

1..0~

·.

'

Utopia leads to·extinction

20 % OFF ON ALL
ONE GROUP
MEN'S-Thom MeAn

·~

.

·FAMilY IHOEI

PT. PLEASANT- Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Roush served turkey
with all the trimmings for New
Year Eve's dinner. Present
were Mr, and Mrs. Oakley
Faudree and Ronda! D. Roush,
their son from the U. S.
General Accounting
Headquarters of Washb\glonf!
D. C. and the host and hostess.
· Mr . Roush returned to
Washington via air flight this
week, following his annual
vacation and an extra day for
mournin~ the death of former
President Harry S Truman, as
designated by the President.
Mr. Roush expects to attend
the inauguration for President
Richard M. Nixon in the capitol
city this !l'onth.
·

'

Ucians .who SJiend their ·time
Hovey was faced with upqaiCulatlng their next move to- grading Ohio's n\ulti-blllion
ward higher appolitllve or but!get and writing an acelec~ office.
· ceptable lax package to
This Is why It is doubly sad '- ftpance it. 1bls included the

MONDAY,
•
JANUARY 8th

SALE

Roush family
entertains

'

I.

:H~vey,
not
.
.

STOREWIDE SALE'

treasurer,
Mrs .
Stella
O'Bryari, and committee
members and trustees are
Mrs. Bertha Hall, Mrs. Lucille
Powell, Mrs. Helen Kimes,
Mrs. Nancy Kimes and Mrs.
Freda Turley.
· A potluck was seved with
party favors made by Mrs.
Clara Staats and gifts were
exchanged,
Present were Mrs. Pauline
Marshall, Mrs. Maxine Arnold,
Mrs. Lucille Powell ,- Mrs.
Bertha Hall , Mrs . Freda
Turley, Mrs. Wanda Bush,
Mrs. Helen Kimes, Mrs. Nancy
Kimes, Mrs. Stella O'Bryan,
Mrs. Clara Staats, Mrs. Evelyn
Edwards, Mrs. Loretia Bush,
Mrs. Bertha ·Prinee and Mrs ..
Frances Stewart.

_,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
came to Ice Capades and I've been here ever
SLIPPING
ON
THE
ICE
since."
.
NEW YORK (KFS) -We don't agree that
Freddie creates his skits away from tlje ice ,
rest
yet she will be remembered
New York is on the skids, but on the Ice, well,
locked in a room somewhere.
long as memor y lasts.
"An important concept of a clown act," he
Another puppy now glads our about every six months a touring lee show
days
comesintothenever-unwelcomingtown ... This ' said, "Is to come up with surprises that make
she romps thru rooms
time it's the Ice Capades that's ready to open at the audience laugh. Suppose, for example,
where Mam le played
Madison Square Garden, and that means there's.a banana peel on the iee that is seen by
she came to us
a wee mistreated ball of fluff Freddie Trenkler, the comic skater who still
the audience, but not by the clown. He slips on it,
' th
but today her happr yips deny I k l'k
remembrances o crueltl ~s
oo sto1count
e a pixie
aftera shower
more seasons
an we
coursesurprise
is that
manages
care
... With
of Ice chips,
he of
to slay
on hisbut
feet.theT~en,
pleased
withhebimself
he
long gone by,
·
and knowing my Mamie ' s Interrupted his workout.
struts off - und here comes another surprise.
unself love
"I
always
rehearse
to
get
the
feel
of
a
local
He trips over somethinv else and this time he
l 'm sure she looks down from
arena," said Freddie . "But, there are more goes down with a bang. And that brings even a
•
up above
as she lays down at the important reasons. I've been a comedy skater
bigger langh. Aclown must always think abead
Master's feet
of his audience.
content that I no longer weep for more than 30 years - 17 of them with Ice
and find at la st undisturbed Capades - but I still practice daily. You know,
.. '-'You know, when I was a figure skater, my
sleep.
every day we live is a new experience. We inst,ructors told me to watch the experts. But as
a comedian I had to break that habit. When I
Sometimes In dream s my constantly discover something new about
Mamie creeps
ourselves, about others, about our emotions became a clown, I went to the public rinks and
across my mind so deep In
about life Itself. What I learn every day helps looked for the worst skaters. 1 studied the
sleep
and I reach out to empty space me perfect my art."
.
rankest amateurs ... and from them I developed
and wake to weep
On the ice Freddie is a shy, timid character, a repertoire of awkward gestures and pratfalls.
then something furry soft and
always
harried and pushed around by the I will visit the rinks and watch all the beginwarm
• no5es my wet cheek
• bullies and the authorities. He's the wistful, yet ners ."
and snuggles up to me ;
Although Freddie's career spans more than
how like Mamie is my Ang le charming, little guy. The underdog, the one
everybody leans against. He takes his lumps, three decades on the ice, he's had only one
and in the quiet of the night
she nestled in my willing arms but somehow he manages to outwit the villains serious Injury . .
end ing my desire to weep
and win out in the end.
, "It was in 1958, and as part of my act r had
for somewhere Mamie waits
for me
"I think my act helps keep a dream alive for to grab a wire that would send me swinging out
perhaps outside God's 9olden all those little gnys out there in the audience-a over the audience. One night, the wire was
gate
dream that they, too, can one day rise up unsteady and I let go of it, and crashed into a
and when she sees me coming
near
against their tormentors and taste sweet vic- wooden barrier. The accident was seen by
she wil l bark real loud and
tory. !think those people can relate to my clown millions of people because thai night the show
clear
routine - and have fun at the same time. ",
was being televised on the Ed Sullivan Show.
to ban ish all my fears .
Audiences roar their ·approval of Freddie's
"That sequence is no longer in my act.
How great and good our God
awkwardness,
,but
his
skating
skill
However,
my approach to comedy remains the
appareqt
mu ~t be
to let we selfish mortals see
shows through the carefully rehearsed bum- same because f feel that' h·wnan nature never
reflected in a puppY's eyes
bling. In fact, back in his native Vie1111a, at the .changes. Humor and real-life situations g0
.all things loyaL kind and wise.
age of 15 he was the European junior figure hand in hand."
Sometimes It takes more tears
than smiles
skating champion. But that was before he .
Freddie won'trevealhow old he is, but It's a
to learn the truth we seek
turned
to
comedy.
cinch
that he's at an age when most men would
and if we learn our lesson well
·"My heart was never really in figure think only of sitting in the sun. Most skaters
perhaps the God above
will spread His peace abroad skating. I enjoyed the free-skating. events in retire when they're in their 30's, No),Freddle.
, and bring the joy tha~ nations
which I could do as ·l'pleased and experime_nt
" Retire? I never liked that wor&lt;f.'To me, it
seek
for everything that suffers
with clowning. When I got a chance to fill in for sounds too final. You know, I've been in thls
Is a challenge to tHe rest
the clown in an lee show in Vienna, I grabbed it. business so long ... I once figured out that I've
If's the Savior's way of
I stayed with the show · and toured all over done more than 12,000 performances during my
measuring tho kindness
In man 's breast.
,
Europe. And then, one day in 1~40, Sonja Henle career - and I've taken something like 60 000
asked me to join. her show, I was with that falls. But every time seems like the first fun!~. ·
The ruby is the rarest of ~on~~ullady f~r several years and milde a So, how can l even think of retirement?" .
all gems, and in large sizes, f1hn With . her. 'The Courit of Monte Cristo.'
We're with you, Freddie. Please -+ don't
the cos,t lieslof the gems . , When her lee show finally disbanded In 1955, I · ever qu)t.
Many years -have passed
since my little friend went to

'

year, we salule . tbe 4-H advisQrs ,of the Jacks'bn Area
countii!Sandsay "Thankyou!"
foryourtime •-•ent d ff t
•,... , an e . or
on behalf of the' 4-H boys and
girls. '
I
n 1973, there will be many
major efforts to expand the 4-H
experience to more boys and
·1
T
d
h'
h
g1r s.
o o I Is t e
Cooperative Extension Service
will need more adults .to wear
the various 'leadership hats of
4-H Wh don't you 'oln th
·
Y
I
e
greatest team going volunteer to be a 4-H advisor.
Don't sit back and ask "What's
this younger generation
cominglo?",butrather,joinln
as an 4-H advisor and "help
determine where it's going."
C ta t ·
1 1 c '
on c your oca ounty
Extension Office, and join the
4-H team!

~

to belong to someone

yet it seemed so little

F,pllo~;ng

club .
is a brief subject matter area .
1
description of each. In same
The Activity Advisor works
clubsoneadultmaywear.more withmembersand committees
·
·
than one type of leadership hat. to plan, conduct, and evaluate
In fact, the same person may related ¢ucatiimal programs
wear all the leadership hats! such as health, safety, ~omThe Organizational Advisor munity service, camping, .
is the manager of the local4-H 'tours, field trips, recreation,
Club. Th_ey· let boys, ·girls, and other "Fun and Learning"
parents, and the commUI!ity experiences for the enrichment
knowabout4-H,helpthemplan of the club.
their program, assist in
Resource Consultants are.
.organizing the club. They work people with special skills,
,with officers, members, and interests, hobbies,. or abilities
o!her advisors in gaining what . which they are willing to share
they want from the 4-H ex- with 4-H Club members.
perience. They also handle
Key Leaders are adults who
inuch of the various records, as specialists aSsist more than
reports,andpaperworkforthe one
4·H
Club
w1'th
club.
organizational tasks, an acThe ProJ'ect Advisor is a tivity, or a pro1'ect area.
teacher of i! specifl~~oject or
As we close the 1972 4-H Club
.,

apolitical .type,
had to move .l() a' new crisis

13.,--The Swlday Times • Sentinel, SUnday, Jan ..7,1973 .

20%
,..

r

�•
,.
12 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sun4•Y. Jan. 7.1973

'•

.

., , , , ,rh';'~' r~;!';;*~l VolUnteer ·advisor key to ·4-H ·program
~~:· Corner

~·

By Roberto. Plymale
...·
'"
Area Extension Agent
Mrs . Glen Sc hneider of . JACKSON ·,-_ The key to a
Buckhannon , W. Va ., penned
the following poem lwtribute to successful 4-H program is the
her dog , "Mamie" who was a 4-H advisor who volunteers in
family pet tor t6 years before giving leadership and advising
she died. " Mamie" was ofn
unwanted pup. Mr . and Mrs. 4-H members who take
Schneider se nt a contribution projects.
· to the Meigs County Humane
Four-H advisors wear many
Society which helps to place
unwanted pups in good homes. different leadership hats in the
MY MAMIE
4-H program. Some of these
She was no doggie in the hats include the organizational
window
""
hat, the project teaching hat,
she had no royal pedigree
,
she was just. one of a litter
tile activity hat, the resource
an unwanted pup for free.
consultant hat, and the key
"You are welcome," said leader hat. Regardless of what
"t~e;n~"o~";'you 1 ike
your interest and abilities are,
· providing that you'll love her there is some type of leaderan,
d take
always
right."
" .'II
thistreat
one,"her
I Sfid
with ship hat that will fit you in the
glee
4-H organization, indicates
as she snuggled up to me,
Duane Plymale, Jackson Area
"She is cuter than a button
and suits me to a T."
4-H Agent.

· !~reign

A
visitor to . the
United States once o~served
thatmostactivitywouldcome .
to a halt if Americans would
suddenly stop doing volunteer
work. That certainly would be
true in 4-H. In the nine counties
in the Jackson Area, over' 1200
adults served as 4-H advis. ors.
They give generously of their
time and talent so that over
9,100 4-H members in more
than 560 clubs willlearn.many
skills essential to good
leadership and citizenship.
As mentioned above, there
are many different leadership
hats in 4-H and i\. takes many
different adults with various
lalents and inte'rests to wear
them . These adults form the
leadership team for the l&lt;ical

There niust have been
a deep down need

in each of us that day

Ingels elected

in a very special way

each happy yip she uttered

see med to say
"I'm so glad that you chose me

board chairman

and I'll lry so hard to please
you
everyday in every way ."

Sixteen year s were hers and
n'line
we shared each joy and

wOe

a while

when It was t ime for her to go

and find in sleep release from
pain

no loving hand could stay.
With her last ounce of strength
she rose on painful feet ·
to nose my tear -drenched

cheek
It was her dear familiar way

of saying " please don't weep
it makes me_sad to go
'
and leave you all alone

_I'd gladly stay with you
and suffer untold pain

if only I could
but the Master calls,
He

sai~

'come. Mamie, lay

do\Vn by my leet

where rest Is sweet

so please don't weep : "
I know some folks will say

~·there

Is no room for dogs

upon God's golden street
but God Is love; He mode me
too
and He won't keep apart
such friends as you and I.
If up in heaven you should cry
for me

we will be unljed - just walt
an.d see -

and when the Master says to
you,
"come home, my child,"

·He will look at you and smile,
then with a wink and loving
grin
He will look at me
and say. " Yes, Mamie, " you
too come In,"

so please don't weep.

Oh. God, I fray, help me to be

rxps sure \bt-God's,, love
l'i Mamie

as my.

t. her love for man so near divine

!' shames the little I can find

around the world for man's
own kind.

Each hand held out to her was
met
with
ln!tant
tall-waggtn
friendship.
So color bllnd ·was my Mamie
she questioned not man's race
or creed
my Mamie never went to

school
and yet she lived the golden
rule

always falthtul, loyal, true

I'm such a

compared to her

fool.

'

My Mamie's gone. and yet
weep
for me, not her
she earned sweet sleep
I weep because I cannot un -

derstand

man's Inhumanity to· man .

Group elects officers·
MASON - Officers were
elected and new business was
discussed at the December
meeting of the Bend ,Area
Community Action Group In
Mason .
Officers elected were,
president, Mrs. Nancy
Kimes; vice - president,
Mrs. Freda Turley; secrelary, Mrs. Wanda Bush;

NEW HAVEN - Officers
were elected for the New
Haven United Methodist
" Church Board of Trustees at a
meeting F.rcday evening.
George Ingels, owner and
operator of Ingels Furniture
Store in Middleport, was
named chairman. James N.
Roush, a New Haven Real
Estate Agent, was elected vicechairman and Hardld Lee
?A!rkle, a foreman in construction, is the31eW'~cretary,
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Five other "W!"bers of the Educator's schedule for
JEFF SMml
board of trustee s named . are JanW!ry 8th - 12th in Meigs
JOINS OVB STAFF
Richard Ord, Hazen Roush,
Emerson E. Evans, pres- Bernard Lieving, , Harold County:
January 9 - Salisbury
Ident
of Ohio VatBumgarner, anh ,Eddte Keith Elementary, 9 - 11 :15; Rutland
ley
Bank, Gatllimlls, Bumgarner.
Salem Street, 7:45- 8:15.
Saturday announced the
January 10 - WMPO, 7:30addition of Jeff Smith to the
8.
bank's staff. Mr. Smith
SON BORN
January II - Salem Center,
graduated from Ohio
CHESHIREMr.
and
Mrs.
5:30
-6; Hysell Run, 6:30 -7:30;
university last fall wllb a
Lionel Gilmore of Cheshire are Hyland Olurch, 8 - 8: IS.
major In accounting and
announcing
the birth of a son,
January 12 - Pearl Street
finance. He recently comRobert Joseph, on Dec. 29 at . Elementary, 9 - 11:30; Portpleted his military servlee as
the
Holzer Medical Center. The land Elementary, 1 - 2:30;
a second lieutenant with the
infant weighed nine pounds, Great Bend, 3. 3:30; SliversU. s. Army at Fl. Benning,
Ga. He Is the son •!1,Earl and three ounces. Mr._and Mrs. ville, 4 - 5:30; Syracuse
Belly Smllh, Rl. 2, Gilmore. have three other (Rizer's), 6 • 6:30; Syracuse
Gallipolis. Mr. Smith and hls children, Bruce, Mark and P.O. , 6:45 • 7:15; Arms, 7:45 wife Marsha reside at 332 Richie. Grandparents are Mr. 8:15.
Third Ave. Smltb was an and Mrs . Richard Fink and Mr.
outstanding football player and Mrs: Millard Gilmore,
at GAHS In the mld-1960s. Cheshire.
;
FLOODS CONTINUE
Flooding continued in northCHIEF DIES
ern Illinois today with no relief
UNLUCKY THIEVES
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UP!) '- in site for families in low-lying
BROADFIELD, England Albert Dusz, police chief here areas surrounding the ice(UP!) - Thieves who stole five for the past eight years, died jammed Rock River as another
pigeons valued at $1,200 from a Friday afternoon after suf- band of precipilatlon moved
loft might not be able to keep fering an apparent heart at- into the eastern half of the
their stolen goods, police said tack at the office.
nation.
today. The birds - homing
The UP! said the flooding,
pigeons - will Oy home the
The sea is accepted by which started Monday, has
first chance they get, police most scientists as the birth- stranded
families
and
said.
place of all forms of life.
livestock.
'

'

.

'

Eddy 's schedule

..,

~ •. ::a.a.mmx~~m-.=x=:~.."X.~=;~:,~'*-=:=::-;')$.:~=:::::~:x::~:~='$,.{i.:'&amp;:::..""«:.;oJ%X:~-:x~·~)$$p,~::~-;::::::::::.-:-s.:::"«::~"Ss·1
·~

I foice·along Br'Way

'

MIDDLEPORT - "What
Makes Freedom Ring" will 1M)
the theme of the program io be
presented at the Friday
meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution by Mrs. · Thereon
Johnson.
The meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs . .James
Brewington, 258 'Main St., ·
Middleport, at 2 p.m. Mrs.
Patrick Lochary will give
resolutions, and members are
to respond to roll call with
current events. ·
There also will be election of
delegates to the state conference . Mrs. Brewington,

Mrs. David M!Uer and MiSs
Frieda _Faehnle will be . the ·
hoatesses,

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY -Mr. and MrS.
m/ger B. Hill, West Palm
Beach, Fla., formefly of
Racine, are . announclitg the
birth of their f'trsl child, !I five
pound, nioe ounce dilughter,
Terri Lynn, born on Jan. 2 at
the West Palm Beach Hospital.
Maternal grandparent~ ire'
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis McMillian,
Racine, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
LeO c. Hut, Route 1 Racine.

STARTS

.-

Men's, Women's and Children's Shoes
ONE GROUP
WOMEN'5-Connie

SHOES 30% ~ , w,_,$~0~~ ."3,0~t~,~~~o
0

1..--~"~
' ~'~·~"~'~
- -w~~
- ~~~~~ I HJ ~U~
'·~
l
' .l 11'rV 01 ril·

.',ti,'.J

.

.

1
f(
~ ..

WORK SHOES.. .': ...... ~:.-.. :.:::......................20% OFF ,
SLIPPERS ~~~~~~\ ....._..............................50% OFF
FASHION BOOTS ~~~~~·s .................... ~~95 ....$1995
SNOW· BOOTS.~:~~~~~~ -~........:. ~~~~~~\ 30% OFF

LADIES'

ONE GROUP

IIJYS AND GIRlS

PURSES
30% OFF

ON DEAN'S LIST
POMEROY - Three area
students earning grades to
qualify on the dean's list at
Mountain State College,
Parkersburg, are the twins,
Darla and Marla Neutzllng,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Neutzling, 796 Lincoln
Hill, and Connie Lanning,
daug~ter of Mr. and Mrs .
Donald L. Lanning, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. Darla and Connie
had 4 o ks M 1a
. mar , ar 3.8.

SHOES _30% OFF

.

By LEE LEON~
for Ohio govenunent that state
.UPI Statehouse Reporter
Finance [)jrector Harold A.
COLUMBUS ·(UPI) ~State
~ovey, hav~ worked himself
. govenunent personnel rolls are out of a joli, ls departing to
replete with the names of em- become budget director of Dliploye! qualified for mediocrity nois.
who put in their elghl hours a
Hovey joined the admlrtlBtraday ' programmed hopelesaly 'tion of Gov. John J. Gllllgan In
Into a fO\\tine of the way it's al- 1971. He was 32, and his job
ways been done.
· .
seemed [nsunriounlable. Some
'lliey ~ supervised by poll- people laugbed tmd said they
sent s boy to do a man's job.
Ohio politics

20% OFF ON All
SHOE SHINE
KITS,
'
UMBREUAS,
SOCKS AND HOSE

By CRAIG PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ For
five years Dr. John Calhoun
gave his mouse cOlony the best
of everything-plenty of food,
perpetual fair weather and
freedom from both disease and
natural enemies.
But this mouae utopia Is now ·
doomed to extinction througb a
Sequence of over.populatlon
and social disintegration which
Calhoun believes has lessons
for humans.
"lf man were In a comparable situation of overcrowding,
we might anticipate a breakdown of soda! and bttellectual
behavofr," he said In ·an tntervl~ Thursday._Calhoun is a
research .pilycholdglst speclallzillg bt behavioral systems at
the National institute of Mental
Health.
His colony began with four
couples Uvlng bt a space thai
cwld COmfortably aCCDIIlllll)date 160.
As the population grew,
Calhoun said, the40ice passed
through stages of rejection by
each other, violence, seJ:ual
aggression by those rejected,
destruction of soctal order ,IOM
of sexual tntere!t and ultimate-

~

passivity.
poin~lllertWl!re~'2di

"""'"" 'Ui.,....,...li!al•. """'· • •~ ""''
•
died, al· the human equivalent
oflOOyearaofage,leavtngonly
,_,•fetnales ....."fivebadbeen
'""'
""'
living together contentedly but
wilhdl:awn frmn each other.
''That waa lbe trouble with
all of them," Calhoun said,
,..,.,
too lent lf
...ey were
con · an
absence of stresa Is ·bapplnesa,
to that extent they were happy,
Nothing bothered them. They
had completely turned inwapls
where every animal waa an
'·'"-d unto Itself."
.....,,
He called those five "the
beauUful ones" who were so
pathological from generations

unenvfpble task of asking a
reluctant General Assembly to
enact the
state's first
personal
'
.
,income tax.
.
The young director did his
job. His personal appearances
· in the legislative halls won
points for the administration.
Much of the budget-tax package was approved, and Hovey
lrought bt talented young people to operate the state's appropriations machinery. ·
,
·So last wl.ek, at 34, Hovey
waillteraUy washed up in Ohio
govenunent. .He had nothing
more to offer.
"I went out to Dllnois for a
.

.

few days to help the new
Democrat!~ administration gel
set up," Hovey said in the
Statehouse pressroom as he
explairled his resignation.
"When I came back, I realized it hadn 'i made any difference thc~l' I was gone," the director said. "Everything worked without me. When they first
offered me the job in Dlinols, I
said I wasn't interested. It
would be hard, and I had it so
easy now in Ohio , Then I realized I needed the challenge . I am
basically crisis-oriented, and
there's rJ longer any criSis in
Ohio."
Hovey took a sheet of paper
and began to draw pBfaUel
lines across it, one at the top
and one at the bottom,
"Whe.n you first come ·to
state goverrunent, your ability

..

STATE REP. OAKLEY roLLINS (R-lronton), right, was sworn in by Ohio Chief Justice C.
William O'Neill as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives during the opening session
of the llOth General Assembly in Columbus January I. Rep. Collins representS the 92od Ohio
House district, comprised of Lawrence, Gallia and Meigs counties and part of Athens county,

The famous Flt;xsteel· springs are made of arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to for!)J-- a single unit that
suports tn restful ease -like floating on air. FlfXSTEEl SPRINGS ARE

CONSTRUCTION

Most Icelanders are descended from ancient Norse
and Celtic settlers of the island. No Eskimos live there.

\
~·· ' .

FLOOR LENGTH

REDUCED 30%
3 5 TO •80.00
ALL WEATHER &amp; TOP COATS
REDUCED 30%
'17.50 TO '56.00
SWEATERS COAT &amp;
REDUC~D 30%
SALE
PRICE

TO

SUBURBAN

COATS REDUCED
SLACKS AND
JEANs · REDUCED

•soo

ODD LOT OF SLACKS

Knit.

Jackets, Snow Suits, Hats, Gloves

Red~ced

KNIT SHIRTS

30%
HATS AND CAPS
REDUCED .20%

Boys' 5 to 12, velour, flannel.
permanent press button
shirts.
·
Pajamas and gowns

'

DRESS &amp; CASUAL
Knit &amp; Wool Blends

Reduced

ALL SALES FINAL
NO APPROVALS
NO LAY·A·WAYS

Sport Coats
Reduced20%

TH
0~

PP
-

_..._..

LADIES -T SUITS

CAPES &amp; SWEATERS .
REDUCED

-

MIDDLEPORT

20%

ALL LADIES BLOUSES

·aAHR CLOTHIERS
.~-

REDUCED

1 RACK OF LADIES SUITS, PA~T .
BLOUSES, SWEATERS &amp; SKIRTS

REDUCED

REDUCED-30

THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

%'

MEN'S
DOUBLE KNITS

20 o/o

'

LADIES SUITS'REDUCED
Wools &amp; Polyester Knits
20%

Wools and Dacron

·PANTS

RE.DUCED 20%

Misses. Jr.'s, lf2 Sizes

Long Sleeve Wool &amp; Orlan

Boys' and girls' crib sets.

&amp; ·Blends

LADIES

SIZE 28 To 42
SAL:E

$9.00

1h PRICE

LADIES
RE CED
DRESS COATS .·
tadies ALL WEATHER .COATS

&amp; FlANNEL PANTS
Reg.

2

1 LOT SCARFS &amp; MITTEN SETS, FUR HATS,

REDUCED 20%
•
(1 LOT) WOOL SHIRTS
• Regular
SALE
Price 516.50
PRICE
'1000
CAR COATS
REDUCED 30% ,

50%0FF

lRICE

DRESSES

·U LOT) DRESS &amp; SPORT SHIRTS

JANUARY.
FURNITURE .
SALE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

1925.

-~---~FOR
·n~1r-1
LADIES'

suITS

Boys'. infants', toddler
shirts, corduroy slacks and
overalls.
·

CLEANLINESS

Team High game - Mark V
671
..
.
Team HigH Series - Mark V .

SALE STARTS TOMORROW .
MOMDAY, JANUARY \)8tb, .,.

. . --~-·FOR HIM-----

Girls'
dresses.
shirts,
blouses. pullover sweaters.
~lacks, shorts. ~lack sets.

Frames are of finest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and
corner-blocked for added ,strength. Upholstering is expert and
ta1jonng carefully detailed.
·

Marlene Wilson 458.

I•

I-

COLORED DRESS SHIRTS

~atS,

struction in the legislature, and
now he was packing I!P and
moving to Dlinois as casually
as one would cross the street.
"Nice working with you fellows," called Hovey as he vanished from the pressroom.
· James Leckrone, one of Hovey's deputies, was asked later
what. state government could
do to hang onto valuable public
servants.
''Not a damn thing that I.
know of," lamented Leckrone.

Early Sunday Mixed ·
League
Standings
Team
W. L.
Tom's Carry Out
84 52
Mark V
81 55
Eagles Club
72 64
Racine Food Mkt.
64 72
Team No.3
61 75
Farmers Bank
50 B6
High lndivldtlal .Game
Men, Jr. Phelps 215; Women,
Betty Smith 200.
,
Second High Ind. Game Men, Clarence' Boyles 209 ;
women, Betty Sintth \87.
High Series - Men, Brady
Huffman 553; women, Betty
Smith 571 .
Second High Series - Men,
Jr . Phelps 547 ; women ,

SATURDAY

Price

SO DURABLE THEY WIU PROVIDE WTING COMFORT!

really not having any input at
all. l am literally a bureaucrat
who has worked himself out of
a job."
Harold Hovey was a coll•ge
graduate at 19, regarded as a
genius in some quarters; so
anti-political that he was not
even a registered voter, let
alone a Democrat, 'when he
joined the administration.
His savvy on public finance
probably saved Gilligan's fiscal program from total de-

TO '8:00·' ·,., )'

20%

PATENTED SPRINGS

Baker ·furniture

High Series - Men, John
Ty.ree 512; women, Betty Smith
534:
'
Second High Series - Men,
, Clarence Boyles 510; women.
Marlene Wilson 502.
Team High Game - Mark V
682 .
.
't'
Team -High Series - earn
No. 3 1925.

$8.00

FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE

2 6

. Smith l9'3; women, Marlene
and Maxine 178.

MON. rnRU FRI.

FOR CHILDREN
INFANTS THRU SIZE 12

•,

Tom.-s Carry Out
0 8
Racine Food Ml&lt;t.
0 8
High Individual Game Men, Clarence Boyles 200 ;
women, Betty ,Smith t96.
Second High ·Ind. Game Men. John Tyree · Charles

VALUES TO

',

.

-farmerS Bank

1

.---------------------------------------~

Flexsteel !urn_iture is not only a smart addition to your home bUt
also a w1se mvestment tbat will give years of faultless service.

.

. OPEN
9:15 TO 5:00

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SATISFACTION

.

Local Bowling

.

Flexsteel is easily ·riept factory-fresh and clean. No cambric bottoms .
to gather dust and allergens.
·

I

know how io relate at all.
is \vay down here," he said,
Calhoun's experiment Is de- "and the opportunity for doing
"Then you hire talented peoscribed In the current Issue Jf a things for the people of the ple, and they begin to make
British publication, "Proceed- state iS way up here." He important contributions·,
Ings of the &amp;yal Society of · pointed to the top line.
cutting down still further on
Medicine," and an in"As time goes by, these lines your own usefullness. "
ternational
journal, start to converge. You get betHovey dre)V some lines con"Tecbnologlcal Forecasting ter at your job, but the deci· verging inside the 9rlginal ones
and Social. Change."
sions you make .seem to lock to make wbat looked like a pair
you in on a set path, and the of scisS!lrs.
chances of makini changes be"Finally, you reach the point
come less and less."
where you ·are standing still.''
Hovey drew the lines diago- The lines met in the center.
for the men was 210 pins held
KE.ITH GOBLE FORD
by Jack Mink followed closely nally toward the middl~ of the "That's where I am.now. At the ·
BOWLING LEAGUE
by Charlie Neal with a 209. ·
January 2, 1973
paper.
point these lines cross, you're
High series for the ladles was
, Standings:
Team
Won Lost 534 total pins, held by Helen
No. 12
14
2 Osellind and for the men 588
No. 5
13
3 total pins held by Charlie NeaL
· No. 1
12
4
No. t4 .
12
4
No. 6
10
6
TIMBER SPLITTERS
No. tO
10
6
Wednesday, Jan. 3 bowl ing
No. t3
10
6 results are as follows :
No. 8
8
8
Falls City and R. Mitchell's
No. t·1
a 8 244-6.0 - 8 pts., Ashland 011 and
No. 4
6
10 E. Gardner's 223-583 - 0 pts.
No. 3
3 13
Moose Lodge and B. Tillis'
No. 7
2 14 202-555 · 8 pts .• Marchi's Carry
No. 9
2 14 Out and M. Null's 187-499 . 9
No. 1
2 14 pts.
·
On Jan. 2, 1973, Team 12 took
Farmer' s Hdwr. and B.
8 points from Team 7. Jack . Cook's 209-582 - 8 pts., Dock Inn
Ferguson was high for Team 12 and L. Angell's 201 -562 · o pts.
with 081 pins and Keirn Malone
Foster's Store and M.
was high for Team 7 with 459 Canaday's 208-541 · 8 pts., City
pins.
Ice &amp; Fuel and T. Kna·pp's 174Team 2 took 8 points ftom 469 • 0 pts.
,
Team 9. Jack Mink was high
Larry's Wayside and C.
for Team 2 with 456 pins, end Meadow's 204-574 · 7 pis.,
Gary Ellis was high for Team 9 McKnight &amp; Davies Hdwr. and
with 507 pins.
P. Clifford's 222-576 · 1 pt .
•
Team 5 took 6 points from
Tawney's Studio ,and T.
T!!i!m )0. Burl Cook was high Rieser's 216-573 · ~pis. , French
lor Team 5Iwith 5-46 pins and Ctty. Mobile • Homes and . J. 0
Retph- F.-lluson &gt;-(ovltl- wH--YOtnkuno' 232-627 - 4 .¢1. I a
high for THm 10 with 490 pins.
Standings:
Team 14 took 6 points from ITails City
14 ,2
Team · \ . Hellft Oseland was Mooselodge
14 2
high for T..,m 14 with Sll pins . French City Homes
12 4
and Ora Baird was high for Larry's Wayside
l2 4'
Team 1 with ~ pins.
Farmer's Hdwr.
to 6
Team 13 tool&lt; 6 points from Tawney's Studio
10 6
Team 8. Marlo Bush was high Foster's Store
10 6
for Team 13 with SIS pins and Dock Inn
6 10
Charlie Noat was high for McKnight &amp; Davies
3 13
KNIT &amp; WOOL
Team 8 with 588 pins.
City Ice &amp; Fuel
3 13
Team 11 took 6 points from Marchi's Carry Out
2 14
Team 3. Bill Johnson was high Ashland Oil
0 16
for Team 11 with 442 pins and
.
• SALE
· Steve Carter wu high for
Reg
.
s5o.oo
to
sns.oo
'PRicE •
Team 3 wllll 534 pins.
Team 4 split 8 points with ·
Team 6. Jock Janey was high
A thought for the day:
for Team 4 with 493 pins and French novelist Andre Maurois
John Fuller was high for Team
·
lfish6 with m pins.
said. "Modesty and unse
SALE ·
·
Reg.
High sl'lt" game for the ness, these are the virtues men
'
PRICE
Price 525 to $80
~~~~·~.ldby ~~~~~~::J ~~~ praise, am pass by."

STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 8

I&amp;"Jb.~ STORE

Bowling ,

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early $unday Mixed
. League
Dec. ll, 1972
StandinGS
Team
W. L.
Eagles Club .
8 D
' MarkV
8 0
Team No. J
6, 2

of overcrowding and lack of
privacyth8t "theydidn'lrelate
to each other."
When uloplll became n\l!ht'
mare and the colony dwlnded
In size, the survivors might
have returned to normal soctal
relationships, · Calhoun said.
But by that time they did not

heritage house
YOUR

1..0~

·.

'

Utopia leads to·extinction

20 % OFF ON ALL
ONE GROUP
MEN'S-Thom MeAn

·~

.

·FAMilY IHOEI

PT. PLEASANT- Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Roush served turkey
with all the trimmings for New
Year Eve's dinner. Present
were Mr, and Mrs. Oakley
Faudree and Ronda! D. Roush,
their son from the U. S.
General Accounting
Headquarters of Washb\glonf!
D. C. and the host and hostess.
· Mr . Roush returned to
Washington via air flight this
week, following his annual
vacation and an extra day for
mournin~ the death of former
President Harry S Truman, as
designated by the President.
Mr. Roush expects to attend
the inauguration for President
Richard M. Nixon in the capitol
city this !l'onth.
·

'

Ucians .who SJiend their ·time
Hovey was faced with upqaiCulatlng their next move to- grading Ohio's n\ulti-blllion
ward higher appolitllve or but!get and writing an acelec~ office.
· ceptable lax package to
This Is why It is doubly sad '- ftpance it. 1bls included the

MONDAY,
•
JANUARY 8th

SALE

Roush family
entertains

'

I.

:H~vey,
not
.
.

STOREWIDE SALE'

treasurer,
Mrs .
Stella
O'Bryari, and committee
members and trustees are
Mrs. Bertha Hall, Mrs. Lucille
Powell, Mrs. Helen Kimes,
Mrs. Nancy Kimes and Mrs.
Freda Turley.
· A potluck was seved with
party favors made by Mrs.
Clara Staats and gifts were
exchanged,
Present were Mrs. Pauline
Marshall, Mrs. Maxine Arnold,
Mrs. Lucille Powell ,- Mrs.
Bertha Hall , Mrs . Freda
Turley, Mrs. Wanda Bush,
Mrs. Helen Kimes, Mrs. Nancy
Kimes, Mrs. Stella O'Bryan,
Mrs. Clara Staats, Mrs. Evelyn
Edwards, Mrs. Loretia Bush,
Mrs. Bertha ·Prinee and Mrs ..
Frances Stewart.

_,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
came to Ice Capades and I've been here ever
SLIPPING
ON
THE
ICE
since."
.
NEW YORK (KFS) -We don't agree that
Freddie creates his skits away from tlje ice ,
rest
yet she will be remembered
New York is on the skids, but on the Ice, well,
locked in a room somewhere.
long as memor y lasts.
"An important concept of a clown act," he
Another puppy now glads our about every six months a touring lee show
days
comesintothenever-unwelcomingtown ... This ' said, "Is to come up with surprises that make
she romps thru rooms
time it's the Ice Capades that's ready to open at the audience laugh. Suppose, for example,
where Mam le played
Madison Square Garden, and that means there's.a banana peel on the iee that is seen by
she came to us
a wee mistreated ball of fluff Freddie Trenkler, the comic skater who still
the audience, but not by the clown. He slips on it,
' th
but today her happr yips deny I k l'k
remembrances o crueltl ~s
oo sto1count
e a pixie
aftera shower
more seasons
an we
coursesurprise
is that
manages
care
... With
of Ice chips,
he of
to slay
on hisbut
feet.theT~en,
pleased
withhebimself
he
long gone by,
·
and knowing my Mamie ' s Interrupted his workout.
struts off - und here comes another surprise.
unself love
"I
always
rehearse
to
get
the
feel
of
a
local
He trips over somethinv else and this time he
l 'm sure she looks down from
arena," said Freddie . "But, there are more goes down with a bang. And that brings even a
•
up above
as she lays down at the important reasons. I've been a comedy skater
bigger langh. Aclown must always think abead
Master's feet
of his audience.
content that I no longer weep for more than 30 years - 17 of them with Ice
and find at la st undisturbed Capades - but I still practice daily. You know,
.. '-'You know, when I was a figure skater, my
sleep.
every day we live is a new experience. We inst,ructors told me to watch the experts. But as
a comedian I had to break that habit. When I
Sometimes In dream s my constantly discover something new about
Mamie creeps
ourselves, about others, about our emotions became a clown, I went to the public rinks and
across my mind so deep In
about life Itself. What I learn every day helps looked for the worst skaters. 1 studied the
sleep
and I reach out to empty space me perfect my art."
.
rankest amateurs ... and from them I developed
and wake to weep
On the ice Freddie is a shy, timid character, a repertoire of awkward gestures and pratfalls.
then something furry soft and
always
harried and pushed around by the I will visit the rinks and watch all the beginwarm
• no5es my wet cheek
• bullies and the authorities. He's the wistful, yet ners ."
and snuggles up to me ;
Although Freddie's career spans more than
how like Mamie is my Ang le charming, little guy. The underdog, the one
everybody leans against. He takes his lumps, three decades on the ice, he's had only one
and in the quiet of the night
she nestled in my willing arms but somehow he manages to outwit the villains serious Injury . .
end ing my desire to weep
and win out in the end.
, "It was in 1958, and as part of my act r had
for somewhere Mamie waits
for me
"I think my act helps keep a dream alive for to grab a wire that would send me swinging out
perhaps outside God's 9olden all those little gnys out there in the audience-a over the audience. One night, the wire was
gate
dream that they, too, can one day rise up unsteady and I let go of it, and crashed into a
and when she sees me coming
near
against their tormentors and taste sweet vic- wooden barrier. The accident was seen by
she wil l bark real loud and
tory. !think those people can relate to my clown millions of people because thai night the show
clear
routine - and have fun at the same time. ",
was being televised on the Ed Sullivan Show.
to ban ish all my fears .
Audiences roar their ·approval of Freddie's
"That sequence is no longer in my act.
How great and good our God
awkwardness,
,but
his
skating
skill
However,
my approach to comedy remains the
appareqt
mu ~t be
to let we selfish mortals see
shows through the carefully rehearsed bum- same because f feel that' h·wnan nature never
reflected in a puppY's eyes
bling. In fact, back in his native Vie1111a, at the .changes. Humor and real-life situations g0
.all things loyaL kind and wise.
age of 15 he was the European junior figure hand in hand."
Sometimes It takes more tears
than smiles
skating champion. But that was before he .
Freddie won'trevealhow old he is, but It's a
to learn the truth we seek
turned
to
comedy.
cinch
that he's at an age when most men would
and if we learn our lesson well
·"My heart was never really in figure think only of sitting in the sun. Most skaters
perhaps the God above
will spread His peace abroad skating. I enjoyed the free-skating. events in retire when they're in their 30's, No),Freddle.
, and bring the joy tha~ nations
which I could do as ·l'pleased and experime_nt
" Retire? I never liked that wor&lt;f.'To me, it
seek
for everything that suffers
with clowning. When I got a chance to fill in for sounds too final. You know, I've been in thls
Is a challenge to tHe rest
the clown in an lee show in Vienna, I grabbed it. business so long ... I once figured out that I've
If's the Savior's way of
I stayed with the show · and toured all over done more than 12,000 performances during my
measuring tho kindness
In man 's breast.
,
Europe. And then, one day in 1~40, Sonja Henle career - and I've taken something like 60 000
asked me to join. her show, I was with that falls. But every time seems like the first fun!~. ·
The ruby is the rarest of ~on~~ullady f~r several years and milde a So, how can l even think of retirement?" .
all gems, and in large sizes, f1hn With . her. 'The Courit of Monte Cristo.'
We're with you, Freddie. Please -+ don't
the cos,t lieslof the gems . , When her lee show finally disbanded In 1955, I · ever qu)t.
Many years -have passed
since my little friend went to

'

year, we salule . tbe 4-H advisQrs ,of the Jacks'bn Area
countii!Sandsay "Thankyou!"
foryourtime •-•ent d ff t
•,... , an e . or
on behalf of the' 4-H boys and
girls. '
I
n 1973, there will be many
major efforts to expand the 4-H
experience to more boys and
·1
T
d
h'
h
g1r s.
o o I Is t e
Cooperative Extension Service
will need more adults .to wear
the various 'leadership hats of
4-H Wh don't you 'oln th
·
Y
I
e
greatest team going volunteer to be a 4-H advisor.
Don't sit back and ask "What's
this younger generation
cominglo?",butrather,joinln
as an 4-H advisor and "help
determine where it's going."
C ta t ·
1 1 c '
on c your oca ounty
Extension Office, and join the
4-H team!

~

to belong to someone

yet it seemed so little

F,pllo~;ng

club .
is a brief subject matter area .
1
description of each. In same
The Activity Advisor works
clubsoneadultmaywear.more withmembersand committees
·
·
than one type of leadership hat. to plan, conduct, and evaluate
In fact, the same person may related ¢ucatiimal programs
wear all the leadership hats! such as health, safety, ~omThe Organizational Advisor munity service, camping, .
is the manager of the local4-H 'tours, field trips, recreation,
Club. Th_ey· let boys, ·girls, and other "Fun and Learning"
parents, and the commUI!ity experiences for the enrichment
knowabout4-H,helpthemplan of the club.
their program, assist in
Resource Consultants are.
.organizing the club. They work people with special skills,
,with officers, members, and interests, hobbies,. or abilities
o!her advisors in gaining what . which they are willing to share
they want from the 4-H ex- with 4-H Club members.
perience. They also handle
Key Leaders are adults who
inuch of the various records, as specialists aSsist more than
reports,andpaperworkforthe one
4·H
Club
w1'th
club.
organizational tasks, an acThe ProJ'ect Advisor is a tivity, or a pro1'ect area.
teacher of i! specifl~~oject or
As we close the 1972 4-H Club
.,

apolitical .type,
had to move .l() a' new crisis

13.,--The Swlday Times • Sentinel, SUnday, Jan ..7,1973 .

20%
,..

r

�•

,."

Qmi~ous. fuel S.hortige ihis .Winter faces
'

CLYDE RAMSAY, manager of the Buckeye Rural Electric ·
CoOperative and Gallia ,County's 1972 "Man of the Year" was
honored with a rresolution recently by the Ohio Senate, ,

PRICES IN EFFECT·WHILE

+++

NTITI ES LAST

RESOLUTION No. 261, sub111itted by former Sen. Oakley
Collins, was approved on Dec. 13. It follows :
~

'

WHEREAS, Clyde Ramsay has been selected by the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council as Gallia County's 1972
"Man of U1e Year," an honor which recognizes his unselfisp
dedication to his profession and his singular contributions to the
people in his community and his state; and
WHEREAS, Serving the people of southeastern Ohio .as .
manager of the Buckeye Rural Electric C&lt;Kip, Gallipolis, Ohio,
Clyde Ramsay has, for many years, worked unswervingly to ·
increase his company's services to the benefit of their many
satisfied consumers; and
WHEREAS, Not satisfied to devote his entire time to his
business pursuits, Mr. Rmsay involved himself wholehearted!)
in the activities of his community and unstintingly worked to'
foster and improve its development through his presidency of the
Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce and the City. Planning Commission, whereupon he was instrumental in ·getting that city's
industrial development program into operation ; and
WHEREAS, Clyde Ramsay's self-sacrificing work in his
community and his many praiseworthy contributions to his
chosen profession have distinguished him as a civic leader in his·
community - one worthy of the emulation of the young citizens
of Gallipolis ; therefore be it
'
RESOLVED, That we, the members of the Senate of.-the
109th G,eneral Assembly of Ohio , in adopting this Resolution,
congratulate Clyde Ramsay, a man not content to take a passive
role in his community, on the honor of being chosen Gallia
County's 1972 "Man ot'the Year" by the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Co,unciL

ALL FALL &amp;.WINTER

. By United Press International
·
·-· ... .
Wln~er.'
~loods are casting ominous shado~s across th~
- natio~ s fuel supply, a.sutvey indicated Saturday,
.'·
· _The coi!Riry may squeak through until spring , without
widespread shuldownS"o! industry and public institutions -but
· only if it's a mild winter from here on in,
.
· A shortage of natural gas is repor~almos"t all regions, ·
: fore~ Industry and public establishments to tum to oil and
: propane. 'l'!lis in turn increases the strain on those fuel supplies
. largely dependent for transport on wintry highways aiound the
., country.
.
Th~.!'iidwest has been particularly hard hit, with an icy \)'inter
followmg.a'Welfall whieh skyrocketed demand for natural gas to
heatlngojl to dry the com, soybean and sorghum crops.
Part of the Denver public _school system was forced to close for
se-al days, and will re-ope11 on Kthree-day week only because
'!fan emergency release by"the Texaco Oil Co. of 80,000 gallons of
oil. Natural gas supp~es have been cut off from schools, fa~tories

I

THI

DHO students delivered Christmas messages to all Holzer
Medical Center patients, served punch and cookies to residents
of Unit 8 at the G~llipolis State Institute, made and delivered
Santa Claus favors to pediatric patients in Holzer M~dicaL
Center.

+++

THE Christmas'messages for HMC patients were prepared
at GAHS, then folded, distributed to each patient by a member ·
of the class. Participating in this phase of the project were
Denise Lanier, sally Winters, Paula Butler, Donna Patrick,
Debbie Barr, Janet Warren, Debbie Malone, Debbie Johnson and
Donna Pugh, Those who served punch and cookies to the GSI
residents were Paula Butler, Elizabeth Martin, and Iantha
Garnes. A majority of class members were present for a carol
sing with the residents. Sally Winters led the group in singing the
Christmas songs. Participating in ·making of favors for the
pediatric patients at HMC were Lynn Mitchell, Janet Yoho, and
Kim Ellcessor.

HECK'S REG • .PRICE
'

..

.,

' +++

WOSE NOTES - Ronald Blevins, son of Mrs. Arnold
Dickersol\ and the late Vir•i\ E. Blevins, was included in an
Assoi:ia\1!0 'tli-~ss' w\l!e '~~~!\i which ' a\i~"rlld' IR ' \h~ 'tolumblls'' '
Dispatch on Dec . .13, during the flight-of Apolio 17, Ronald has
been with NASA program since 1966. He helped train Apollo 15
and Apollo 17 crews for experiments they performed while on the
moon. Blevins attended the Gallipolis City schools and schools in
Wheelwright, Ky. He is a gra~uate of Ohio University, Athens.

! Li

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TWENTY YEARS ago, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times : .. Month~ong fund drive begins for
National Polio Fou(\dation. Gallia in debt over $13,000 as result of
polio outbreaks in 1952 ,, Mrs, Robert C. Roush , Letart, W. Va.,
has first baby (a daughter) of 1953 in Holzer Hospital ,, Atty.
John Halliday and Ally. Warren F. Sheets form new law partnership on Locust St ,, Ohio State Patrol probes 485 auto accidents during 1952 ,, GAHS Starts new year off right with 64-54
' victory over Wellston.
cage

affair."

LOSES 90 POUNDS IN 7 MONTHS
Snubbed as "Other Woman"
" My sister-in-law completely
my husband
I•
we accidental ly met at a
l r&lt;&gt;sta uran t one evening last lall.
. " We hadh't· seen each other
se veral months. Dur ing this
me I was rea ll y taking off the

·~:~~~,,~ me and

•:.~~~~i This story has a happy

1•

oee&lt;•use_my sister -in -law
I me that she did not
r~~~g~~~~=v~m;~e in f he restaurant.

her brother, my

hu sband , was ou t wit h 'another
woman.' She ~ aid she was too
shocked and embarassed to
speak to us.

. " Her shock wa; my thrill."

says Mr s. Fran ces Wil loman ,
who lost 9() pounds in ju st 7
months . " I followed the Conway

1000-Calorle Diet, attended

Motivation Se minars; and lncrea·sed my physical activity.
Years of accumu lat ed fat and
iusf pl ai n self -conscious ness
di sa ppeared in mont hs. I feel so
al ive and self-confid ent now!

My doctor is deligh ted with 'flY
he alth and my husband is 1.1er y
proud of fhe 'new woman' in his

life.

The Orchid Room
' East Main St.
,(over lola's Dress Shop&gt;
POMEROY,

e LADIES SLACKS
e LADIES SWEATERS
e LADIES KNIT TOPS
• LADIES FLANNEL GOWNS
e GIRLS FLANNEL GOWNS
e GIRLS FLANNEL PAJAMAS
eiNFANT &amp; TODDLERSSNOW SU
e LADIES FALL DRESSES
e MENS JACKETS
e-BOYS JACKETS
eMENS SWEATERS
eBOYS SWEATERS
e MENS CORDUROY-PANTS
e BOYS CORDUROY PANTS
e BOYS SKI PAJAMAS
PAJAMAS
•

•

MONDAYS, 7:30 P.M.
OHIO

Or Call992,2926
New members always welcome.
Registration $5,00 and Weekly Seminars $2.00
CONWAY Dl ET INSTITUTE- " Definitely
Superior"

Lack of flatural gas placing more

'

demands on oil, propane which
'

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•'

~ , Wild ducks fooled by kindness

f~

COVENTRY, Cono. (UP!)- Coventry resldeol!i are
~- too kind to their web-footed friends, and a number of wild
;;: ducks have died as a result.
RO!IideniB of the shores of Coventry Lake took pity
~:: during the fall on the ducks which had spent the summer
~ ou the lake and began
feeding them when frost set ln.
.
;:;:
The dueks, normally migratory birds, Uked the
;:;: hospitality and forsook their traditional ways. Instead of
:::! flying South with the oaset of winter, they seUied In the
I ~~ ::1:
Some of them, It turned out, seUied a Uttle too per:j:1 manently. When the lake froze over, they found their feet
!:1: t;apped by the hardening Ice,
,
;j;j
Unable •o do more than quack and fiap their wlugs,
~~ the helpless ducks were devoured by wild aalmals
_:;l prowllug the lake shor~ for food. The pollee department
;$ Issued a plea to lakeside residents to stop feeding the
«
3!! remaining ducks so they'll abandon the area aud fly
:::: South.

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depend on motor tranwortation
industrial plants but only-scattered shutdowns as a result.
- Michigan. Gov. William Milliken's seven-member panel
monitoring fuel supplies said the -state could get through the
winter provided there is no abnormal cold spell.
- New York. State Public Service Commission spokesmen say
definite shortages of both natural gas and oil, with supplies to
interruptible customers "curtailed drastically ," One spokesman
added whether some people are going to go cold depends a great
deal on the weather."

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!:~ VOL VII NO. 49

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PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1973

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Le Due Tho brings
hard line to Paris
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...

CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) - President NiXon issued final
!~
negotfating instructions toDr. Henry A. Kissinger Saturday in
'ijf:'
.
pr,eJ)Iiration for another round of end-the-war talks,
.:::.:
Th~ two met alone for more than two hours at Aspen Lodge at
::::
the President's retreat, Deputy White House Press Secretary
PARIS (UP! ) - Declaring talks said Tho "probably" definite choice
the made no mention of a Hanoi
Gerald L, Warren declined to characterize the meeting beyond
the U. S. mus\ either sign the would meet as scheduled with responsibility falls ent,ir~ on protest that the United States
had bombed above the 20th
saying it was to discuss the U, S. position in the talks which
October draft Vietnam peace Kissinger.
it."
.;-'
after
Nixon's
Kissinger will begin Monday In Paris with Le Due Tho, Hanoi's
agreement or face continued Tho debarked from a Soviet At Camp David, Nixon and parallel
chief negotiator,
war, North Vietnamese negotia· jetliner from Moscow and told Kissinger ' met privately suspension order,or that the U.
Klsslnger, accompanied by Winston Lord and Peter Rodman
tor Le Due Tho arrived in Paris newsmen North Vietnam had Saturday for a final review of S. had violated its pl¢ge under
of his National Security Staff, was to depart Ifom Andrews Air
Saturday to resume private not wavered from the stand it the U, S, position before w,hich Hanoi agreed to return
Force Base outside Washington at 10 a.m. E~ Sunday for his
talks with White House adviser held when the talks-broke down Kissinger makes his 23rd trip to the conference talbe.
Kissinger and Tho last met
23rd visit to the French capital in quest of an Indo Chinj setHenry A. Kissinger .
Dec. 13. He said the United to Paris.
tlement,
Kissinger met with President' States had the choice of either Kissinger flew by helicopter on Dec. 13 when the bilateral
Two other Kissinger assistNixon at Camp David, Md,, and signing the agreement of Oct, to the mountaintop retreat and talks ended in deadlock. Five
ants -John Ne,groponte and 26-day breakdown in the
was scheduled' to fly to Paris 20.without any changes or of began discussions with Nixon days later, on 'orders from
the
San
Francisco
Bay
area
David t=::ngel, both Interpreters negotiations which saw the
By CHARLES S. TAYLOR Jr.
Sunday night.
continued war.
at 10:30 a.m. (EST). He' is President Nixon, U. S. war- as ·well as Deputy United States launch the most
ATLANTA (U P!) - New and in Los Angeles County,
The Kissinger-Tho negotia- "The decisive moment has scheduled to leave Washington planes mounted the aerial
Although
there
is
no
specific
offensive.
Assistant Secretary of State massive air attack of the long outbreaks of influenza were
lions were scheduled to resume arrived," Tho said, reading a at 10 a.m. Sunday for Paris.
Full-scale bombing of the
William H. Sullivan Jr . have conflict against North Viet- reported across the country vaccine to prevent the London Monday a fter a three-week prepared text before television
In Saigon, U. S. Ambassador
flu
,
health
authorities
said
the
Hanoi-Haiphong
area and
been ·in Paris since last nam's heartland.
Saturday by fe,deral health
suspension in which U. S. cameras.
Ellsworth Bunker met for 65
Tuesday. holding technical
The intense bombing , officials, with 18 deaths in vaccine currently effective for warplanes carried out the "It is a matter of resolving minutes with President other targets north of the 20th
meetings on details on a cease- coming after both Nixon and California attributed to the the Type-B and Hong Kong heaviest bombardment of the quickly . the Vietnamese Nguyen Van Thieu in their first parallel was ordered stopped
fire plan with North Viet- Kissinger predicted a quick London strain for which there Influenza, of which the London war on Hanoi and Haiphong,
problem and signing the private session in a week. No · on Dec. 30 when Nixon made
strain is a "cousin'\ offers A spokesman for the North agreement or of continuing the details were disclosed .
known he believed Hanoi was
namese officials,
end to the war last Oct. 26, has is no specific vaccine.
for
userious"
The lower~evel delegations brought widespread protest
The latest states reporting some protection.
Vietnamese delegation to the war, The American adTho did not answer questions ready
are
advised
for
.
(
Cor!lnu~don
pe,ge
16)
Flu
shots
ha' f ! . hamnnerin&amp;:ii!!,Jli.!J..,both at home and abroad .
influenza act! ity were Virregull(r, semi-private ~aris -.ministration .must make u • •lOiter his Paris statement and
.
. 'llnl!i~t In the_pr~-: ~ But Nixon told the congres- ginia, Georgia,-- -and' Ohio, elderly persons 'and those
cord' and the length of their slonal leaders he was con- bringing to at least 18 the suffering from chronic ail,.
sessions, more than 25 hours so vinced that his course was a . number of states experiencing ments, such as heart disease or
far. '\'h•Y have spurred hopes correct one, and he would not cases of the disease, most of emphysema.
In addition to outbreaks of
that i'clsiinglil' and Tho move be deterred by the protests.
which appears to be caused by
rapidly ,to a settlement on the The past two months have the A-England virus, better influenza in Virginia, Georgia,
broader Issues.
'
seen the hopes of the nation for known as the London flu .
and Ohio, the National Center
Nixon has said he Is neither peace fluctuate wildly and
CalifOrnia was one of the For Disease Control in Atlanta SAIGON (UPI) -More than
Military spokesmen also reThe U.S. command said 115 secutive day of bombing,
optimistic or pessimistic about Nixon is now limiting his states hardest hit by influenza . earlier reported cases of flu or 150 U.S. B52 bombers and ported an upsurge in ground jet fighters and 15 waves of
· military
sources
said.
chances for reaching a set- comments on Vietnam, Except Health officials there said ari flu-like illnesses in Washington, fighter planes attacked targets action, including a rocket B52s bombed trucks, railways
President Nixon ordered
tlement.
.
for his meeting with the , outbreak of flu, "undoubtedly Hawaii, California, Arizona, in the southern panhandle of attack less than 12 miles from and other "enemy military
renewed bombing last April 6
In his only public remarks congressmen, he has not the London strain," has taken Colorado, Kansas, Texas, New North Vietnam Friday and Saigon.
targets" south of the 20th to retaliate against the Comabout the negotiations, he told spoken publicly about the 13 at ·least 18 lives in the San York, PenQsylvania, Massa· Saturday as the United States
Pilots from the air force, parallel Friday and Saturday. munist spring offensive.
congressional leaders days of massive bombing he Francisco Bay area In the past chusetts, Connecticut, Tennes· ended the ninth consecutive navy and marines carried the
The command also anOfficial communiques show
North ordered in the populace Hanoi- two weeks,
Friday if the
see, Illinois, Maryland and New month of the heaviest raids of bombing of the North into a nounced that two U.S. at least 53,500 raids by fighters
Vietnamese
assume - a Haiphong areas. He or,Pered a
Deaths due to pneumonia, Jersey,
the Indochina War, the U.S. lOth month Saturday with no destroyers were damaged off and some 1,475 waves of B52s
cooperative aUitude, the war llfting of the air aUacks in this often a complication of influenDr. Bernard Guyer •a Tennes- command said,
break, military sources said. the North while shelling shore bombing the north. In nine
can be ended quickly with the area last Friday in order to za, jumped during the same see epidemiologist, reported
positions. The uss Lawrence months, military sources said,
United States getting back its enhance the climate for the period with 17 deaths in Santa 1,450 cases of influenza in that
was hit hy Communist shore the bombing campaign was
prisoner\. and all sldes in resumed negotiations.
Clara, Call!., and 24 in San state during the week ended
batteries sometime between more intense than in any single
Vietnam having an opportunity
On Oct. 26, both Kissinger Francisco. All of the flu victims Dec, 30, compared to 702 lor
Christmas and New Year's year of the air war in North
to determine the nation's and Nixon said a settlement were adults, most of them the previous week. Most of the
Day, with no casualties and Vietnam conducte~ by former
future.
was inuninent and could be elderly,
cases were concentrated in the
unreported d amage, President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Resumption .of the talks . worked out In one more brief
London flu cases have been Memphis-shelby County area.
spokes men sa id, The USS
Each B52 wave drops an
Monday will mark the end of a negotiating session.
confinned in three counties in He said the London flu virus
Henry B. Wilson was damaged estimated 90 tons of bombs and
·'
had been isolated in some of COLUMBUS (UP!) _ The unemployment
insurance early Saturday when a five- each fighter-bomber carries
the cases.
Ohio AFUJO said Saturday benefits for workers who had inch shell blew up inside a gun approximately five tons of
.
Hawaii was the only state in Ohioans should take a look at exhausted earlier assistance. turret, wounding two men.
explosives. Using t\tis yardthe nation listing both Influenza how Rep. Clarence Miller, R- Mr, Miller reneged on a
Another American airman . stick the Americans have
•
-A and Influenza-S infections. Lancaster, votes rather than promised pay raise for fed~ral was captured or killed Thurs- dropped more than 400,000 tons
employees.
day when his F4 Phantom went of bombs on the North in the
United Press International for second offenders, Naw lawmakers would approve the The outbreak there involved bow often.
"Miller voted to disallow down over Laos, spokesmen past nine months.
Pushing across the grain of York, New Hampshire and death penalty on the second mostly teen-agers and young Miller said recently he had
conviction.
children.
The
symptoms
in
teen
100
per
cent
attendance
on
roll
food
stamps to workers on -said Saturday. The second
Montana.
the nationwide trend to liberalAlthough official figures are
Increased severity on a
Another Republi ca n -agers included high fever, call votes during the 92nd Con- strike, even though those crewman was .rescued .
ize drug laws, state officials or
still classified, an estimated
A, headache, sore throat and a dry gress.
workers were persons in
I~ the . South, Communist 155,000 fighter-bomber strikes
Nelson
lawmakers in a half-dozen lesser scale has been propOBed governor,
Rockefeller of New York, cough .
"Ordinarily, such service need," said the labor forces launched more than 100 and 141 852 raids hit North
• states, mostly in the northeast, in Indiana and Florida . .
wants
mandatory
life
senwould
deserve praise for dili- organization. " He voted attacks, the Saigon command VIetnam In four yean under
In some other. states, the
are pressing for the severest
, gence and dedication," the Ia- against sending more fe~eral said. Spokesmen reported 106 Johnson.
penalties for hard-drug tendency appears to be toward tences for hard-drug 'pushers
and
violent
addicts,
with
no
·
FIREBUG
SOUGHT
bor · organization said in its tax dollars back to local school - "enemy-initiated incidents"
. pushers, Including the death firmer enforcemertt of existing
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) - weekly newsletter. "But in districts even though he knows between 'daivn . Friday and
hard-drug' laws, often coupled possibility of parole or plea
penalty.
bargaining,
·
More
than 500 downtown hotel Congressmen Mlller's case the more federal money sunrise Saturday.
But the "winds of change" with a reduetion in penalties
The New York governor's guests fled to the street Friday we're not so certain. A look at pumped Into local schoolli, the
Fighting was reported from
toward greater leniency for for first-time possession of
soft -drug possession or use such soft drugs as marijuana. call for action at the 'opening of morning after one or more How he votes-rather than how less strain there will be on local each of the four military
regions of the country and
In Connecticut, Republican this year's legislative session arsonists set a series of fires in often he votes-is a better taxpayers.
continue,
rooms. In· . -record of service, we think." · "With such a voting record Communists raided a meeting
A sampling of official and Gov. Thomas J. Meskill favors was applauded by the . unoccupied
GALLIPOLIS - Forrest W.
legislators
but
drew
lnunediate
vestigators
said
the firebug
"In the 92ild Congress '100' perhaps it might be better for and ro cke\ed a dis trict
execUting
hard-drug
pushers
legislative programs around
Rahe , 544 Jackson Pike,
the countcy found demands for on the first conviction. protests from civil liber- entered the Four Queens hotel per CCIII Miller sided with bus- the people of the lOth congres- (county) .capital within 12 Friday filed a 175,000 damage
and used a clga~ette lighter to ines_s bosses against a good sional district - and all Ohio- miles of Saigon, spokesmen
extreme stringency In punish- Although he has ~n told the tarians.
•suit in Gallia County Common
In New Hampshire, Republi· ignite bedding mrooms on the minimum wage law," said the ans- ifMr. Miller would be ab- said.
.
ing hard-drug pushers in legislature will not go along
Pleas Court as a result of a
Saturday's raids against the
Connecticut,' where the gover- with a penalty that harsh; he · can State Rep, George Qordon fifth, eighth, 'ninth and 17th AFL-CIO. "He voted against sent a bit more,''the AFL-CIO
traffic accident Jan . 6, 1971, in
• floors.
an innmediate extension of said.
North marked the 265th connor is asking the death penalty says he has been a8sured 'the (Continued on page 16)
Lexington, Ky . Talmadge
Smith, Rt. 2, Mount Sterling,
Ky,., was named defendant In
the action.
Plaintiff says the defendant
'
negligently
drove his truck into
I
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.
. . •, , ,, • ,
• •, .,. • ·, ·, ·0•0•0
~~%-~i:!::.:~»..:.:.:.:.:.~!•!•:•x•!&gt;:o!b~ •!o! o:o:b»:O!o;o;.:~o:o:o:6:&lt;x o!o~.:~.•.-;•,•~,·
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (UP! ) if the first one ' brought a 7,0QO.pound vehicle . It could the car before, but I came here about one mile to the gallon. the plain tiff's car, The accident
... , 'wASHINGTON (uPI) - Coo&amp;reos eame lo a foregone
- A Pennsylvania exhibitor ''minimum price" of around pull a 5,000-pound weapons to buy it. I didn 't intend to go I'm glad I filled it up before I occurred at·the intersection of
cenclnslon Salurday and declared Prelldeut Nixon's · reNorth Broadway and Haggard
carrier through rough desert back emptyhanded. It was brought it here. "
pail! $153,000, a-world record $125 000.
elecllon official at a apanely atteuded cetemoolal countlug
iile biddiltg took place at an · terrain. ,
for a car, Saturday· for the
worth it."
Cruse said $153,000 was the Lane in Lexinglon. Rahe·sa'ys
of Electoral College votet. Oaly about a dozen Senaton aud
auction
of
more
than
50
classic
Bidding
on
'the
first
Hitler
personal parade automobile of
At each successive increase most ever paid for a single, he has suffered permanent
House memben were still on hand when the ritual ended with
cars. Among them were the parade car opened at $40,000, in the bidding, the car's siren used ·automobile, German, injuries and medical expenses
Adolph Hitler,
,
Nixon and VIce ~alden! Spiro T. Apew defeating the
. The high bid for the 2~ot 1910 Stoddard-Dayton built,!or and progressed quickly, mostly was~unded by Barrett, who Mexican and Japanese plus a loss of income.
· Democratic ticket of Sen. George S. McGovern and Sargent
long Mercedes Benz was made E.W, Scripps, founder of the 'in increments of $1,000, up to acquired ·the automobile 10 · representatives as well as . In other court action, Linda
Sbrlver. · ·
,
'
,
Dotson , · Lower . River Rd ..
by Earl Clark, operator of Scripps Howard newspaper $120,000 when most bidders years ago.
A~n ericans participated in the
· McGovem wu one of 111ore than 75 seuaton and twoThe car is an eight passen- bidding.
Gallipolis, flied a petition
Dutch Wonderland, a *-ere group, al)d the 1906 M~rcedes .dropped out.
thlrdll of tbe'JJouae memherfwho ablenl_ed lbemlelvee from _ r~ation parli in Lancaster, of T. Oden Armour, of the
ger,
armor-plated
con"ertible
Auctioneer Dean Cru~e
seeking divorce from Larry
w&amp;al Rep, AI- UlimaD, JJ.Ore., called a "charade." Ullman . Pa, i
Armour Meat Co .
of Aublirn, lnd,, then urged with a straight-S engine
The two Hitler cars are the Dotson, Patriot Star Rt, She
. •d a 1111111ber ol ~ iued the oe~IOD tG call for
German Field Marshal remaining bidders on, saying capable of developing 230 only ones the Fuehrer had built ch~rged gross neglect of duty
The seller, Tom Barret, a
alitJIIPmeal of !be Eleclml CoHese and Ill replacement·
Scottsdale real estate man,- Erwin Rommel's open staff car "when you get in this range, horsepower and speeds of 150 for his personal use, Hitler and extreme cruelty. They
with cUnet popular elect(on of lhe Prelldent and vice
_ visited the factory several were married Sept, 28; 196S at
~lso owns another Hitler also was for sale. The "Desert $5;000 or $10,000 doesn 't -make miles an hoilr, .
prelldeal.
&lt;
Barrett
quippe&lt;)
that
the
parade car which he said Fox" commanded the Africa any differonLe." .
times to supervis~ their con- Sparta, N, C., and ha~e three
10,000-pound
vehicle
"
gets
Corps
from
.the
armor-plated,
'Clark
said,
"I
had
never
seen'
struction.
children.
before
the
auction
he
would
sell
..•.x: .... ;;.., ":¥' ••u,';.:. "*~~~:&gt;.:~:::::;.::&amp;a~8;:.r.-.:::~~
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Fatal flu hits
eastern states

150

-. :·~...

·~-

·•~r· · ·

B52s hit panhandle

a1 Millar recor· d

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h
d
.
p Ush ers may lve ~ .
.

t

Court asked
for $75,000

Hitler's parade Mercedes Be~tz nets record $153,000

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•o:o 'o' o' o; O,:o "o"o' o'o' "' ' o' o"o"o' o!O.:O.:o ...;.o:o• o • o • o • o • o ·o:o;o:.o•o•,.,•.-,•~o"~oV•

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•

a

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-.,

uDIOD
• _wondermg
•

Both of the President's
daughters will be back from
European trips in tiine for the
dinner. Aides said the celebration would be "a quiet fa mily

MOTIVATION SEMINARS
WEEKLY SCHEDULE

..

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+++

" I r eco mm end the COnway
Diet In st it ute to you if you are
overwei ght. It' s. definite!'( a
superior program," says Mrs.
Wi t loman.

and office buil~ing5 in Nebraska, Indiana , I0wa, Dlinois and Ohio Wolbrette, executive secretary of the LOuisiana Chemical
and heating oil has been rationed.
.
Association :
'
Natural gas stUI flows into the stoves and furpaces of private
''The Federal Power Commission offers all kinds of incentives
homes and institutions which are "regular" customers, but in- for producers to' put their gas in interstate. lines. The FPC is
dustries with "interruptible" contr-acts -because , of their · doing everything it can to take gas away from tlie_producing
capability of using other sources of energy -haye gen,-ally been states."
forced to turn to dearer, dirtier oll or propane ,
The situation in some parts of the nation :
The White House Office of Emergency Preparedness called on
-Califorrii;l , Public Utilities Commission Chairman Vernon L,
the governors of atntates to set up strong •fuel conservation
~turgeon says there has been "extensive curtailment" of natul'al
measures.
gas to interruptible customers, including a 90 [ier cent cut to
OEP Direetor George A. Lincoln said "the cold spell caused a steam elee.tric plants in the southern part of the state, and 50 per ·
signi(icant cutoff of interruptible gas custom.ers" .and supplies of 1cent·in the northern part.
the olt and propane alternatives are not adequate for the un·
- New Mexico. The gas supply is adequate with some minor
•
foreseen demand.
curtailments to industry,
·
Lincoln aiS(I attributed the need for fllel conservation to the
- Texas, Cold weather in the north has forced a cutoff of gas to
''unprecedented crop-drying requirement in the Midwest."
city of Austin industrial users, with the city using 50 per cent gas
Even gas-producing Louisiana has seen some plants close
and 50 per cent fuel oil to generate electric JlOWer.
down or curtail production ~use, according to Henri
- Missouri. Natural gai; supplies down 50 per cent to large

~ \: : : : : :;:~: : : : : :::~:~::::: : : :!: : : ~::: : : : : : : : : : : i: : : :i: :~: ~: : : ~: : : : : : : :;: :;: : : : : : : : : : : -::::~~;~

+++

51

•

Nixon gives
Kissinger
the signa~s

MEMBERS of Mrs. Janet Wethrholt's Diversified Health
Occupations class at Gallia Academy High School kept busy over
· the Christmas holidays.
·

A FAMILY AFFAffi
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Nixon will be 60
years old Tuesday and is ex·
peeled to mark the occasion
with a family dinner party at'
. Md. ·

.

:::;::::::::::~:.z.::::::~:=:=:=x::::::::::~:=:=x~~=~=::::::::s.w;;:::::::~&lt;.;.~~;:;r.?-;wx.~-;.:*:wi¢.»."-:..":tJ.

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stotm

Bv Hobart Wilson Jr.

+++

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Qmi~ous. fuel S.hortige ihis .Winter faces
'

CLYDE RAMSAY, manager of the Buckeye Rural Electric ·
CoOperative and Gallia ,County's 1972 "Man of the Year" was
honored with a rresolution recently by the Ohio Senate, ,

PRICES IN EFFECT·WHILE

+++

NTITI ES LAST

RESOLUTION No. 261, sub111itted by former Sen. Oakley
Collins, was approved on Dec. 13. It follows :
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WHEREAS, Clyde Ramsay has been selected by the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council as Gallia County's 1972
"Man of U1e Year," an honor which recognizes his unselfisp
dedication to his profession and his singular contributions to the
people in his community and his state; and
WHEREAS, Serving the people of southeastern Ohio .as .
manager of the Buckeye Rural Electric C&lt;Kip, Gallipolis, Ohio,
Clyde Ramsay has, for many years, worked unswervingly to ·
increase his company's services to the benefit of their many
satisfied consumers; and
WHEREAS, Not satisfied to devote his entire time to his
business pursuits, Mr. Rmsay involved himself wholehearted!)
in the activities of his community and unstintingly worked to'
foster and improve its development through his presidency of the
Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce and the City. Planning Commission, whereupon he was instrumental in ·getting that city's
industrial development program into operation ; and
WHEREAS, Clyde Ramsay's self-sacrificing work in his
community and his many praiseworthy contributions to his
chosen profession have distinguished him as a civic leader in his·
community - one worthy of the emulation of the young citizens
of Gallipolis ; therefore be it
'
RESOLVED, That we, the members of the Senate of.-the
109th G,eneral Assembly of Ohio , in adopting this Resolution,
congratulate Clyde Ramsay, a man not content to take a passive
role in his community, on the honor of being chosen Gallia
County's 1972 "Man ot'the Year" by the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Co,unciL

ALL FALL &amp;.WINTER

. By United Press International
·
·-· ... .
Wln~er.'
~loods are casting ominous shado~s across th~
- natio~ s fuel supply, a.sutvey indicated Saturday,
.'·
· _The coi!Riry may squeak through until spring , without
widespread shuldownS"o! industry and public institutions -but
· only if it's a mild winter from here on in,
.
· A shortage of natural gas is repor~almos"t all regions, ·
: fore~ Industry and public establishments to tum to oil and
: propane. 'l'!lis in turn increases the strain on those fuel supplies
. largely dependent for transport on wintry highways aiound the
., country.
.
Th~.!'iidwest has been particularly hard hit, with an icy \)'inter
followmg.a'Welfall whieh skyrocketed demand for natural gas to
heatlngojl to dry the com, soybean and sorghum crops.
Part of the Denver public _school system was forced to close for
se-al days, and will re-ope11 on Kthree-day week only because
'!fan emergency release by"the Texaco Oil Co. of 80,000 gallons of
oil. Natural gas supp~es have been cut off from schools, fa~tories

I

THI

DHO students delivered Christmas messages to all Holzer
Medical Center patients, served punch and cookies to residents
of Unit 8 at the G~llipolis State Institute, made and delivered
Santa Claus favors to pediatric patients in Holzer M~dicaL
Center.

+++

THE Christmas'messages for HMC patients were prepared
at GAHS, then folded, distributed to each patient by a member ·
of the class. Participating in this phase of the project were
Denise Lanier, sally Winters, Paula Butler, Donna Patrick,
Debbie Barr, Janet Warren, Debbie Malone, Debbie Johnson and
Donna Pugh, Those who served punch and cookies to the GSI
residents were Paula Butler, Elizabeth Martin, and Iantha
Garnes. A majority of class members were present for a carol
sing with the residents. Sally Winters led the group in singing the
Christmas songs. Participating in ·making of favors for the
pediatric patients at HMC were Lynn Mitchell, Janet Yoho, and
Kim Ellcessor.

HECK'S REG • .PRICE
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WOSE NOTES - Ronald Blevins, son of Mrs. Arnold
Dickersol\ and the late Vir•i\ E. Blevins, was included in an
Assoi:ia\1!0 'tli-~ss' w\l!e '~~~!\i which ' a\i~"rlld' IR ' \h~ 'tolumblls'' '
Dispatch on Dec . .13, during the flight-of Apolio 17, Ronald has
been with NASA program since 1966. He helped train Apollo 15
and Apollo 17 crews for experiments they performed while on the
moon. Blevins attended the Gallipolis City schools and schools in
Wheelwright, Ky. He is a gra~uate of Ohio University, Athens.

! Li

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TWENTY YEARS ago, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times : .. Month~ong fund drive begins for
National Polio Fou(\dation. Gallia in debt over $13,000 as result of
polio outbreaks in 1952 ,, Mrs, Robert C. Roush , Letart, W. Va.,
has first baby (a daughter) of 1953 in Holzer Hospital ,, Atty.
John Halliday and Ally. Warren F. Sheets form new law partnership on Locust St ,, Ohio State Patrol probes 485 auto accidents during 1952 ,, GAHS Starts new year off right with 64-54
' victory over Wellston.
cage

affair."

LOSES 90 POUNDS IN 7 MONTHS
Snubbed as "Other Woman"
" My sister-in-law completely
my husband
I•
we accidental ly met at a
l r&lt;&gt;sta uran t one evening last lall.
. " We hadh't· seen each other
se veral months. Dur ing this
me I was rea ll y taking off the

·~:~~~,,~ me and

•:.~~~~i This story has a happy

1•

oee&lt;•use_my sister -in -law
I me that she did not
r~~~g~~~~=v~m;~e in f he restaurant.

her brother, my

hu sband , was ou t wit h 'another
woman.' She ~ aid she was too
shocked and embarassed to
speak to us.

. " Her shock wa; my thrill."

says Mr s. Fran ces Wil loman ,
who lost 9() pounds in ju st 7
months . " I followed the Conway

1000-Calorle Diet, attended

Motivation Se minars; and lncrea·sed my physical activity.
Years of accumu lat ed fat and
iusf pl ai n self -conscious ness
di sa ppeared in mont hs. I feel so
al ive and self-confid ent now!

My doctor is deligh ted with 'flY
he alth and my husband is 1.1er y
proud of fhe 'new woman' in his

life.

The Orchid Room
' East Main St.
,(over lola's Dress Shop&gt;
POMEROY,

e LADIES SLACKS
e LADIES SWEATERS
e LADIES KNIT TOPS
• LADIES FLANNEL GOWNS
e GIRLS FLANNEL GOWNS
e GIRLS FLANNEL PAJAMAS
eiNFANT &amp; TODDLERSSNOW SU
e LADIES FALL DRESSES
e MENS JACKETS
e-BOYS JACKETS
eMENS SWEATERS
eBOYS SWEATERS
e MENS CORDUROY-PANTS
e BOYS CORDUROY PANTS
e BOYS SKI PAJAMAS
PAJAMAS
•

•

MONDAYS, 7:30 P.M.
OHIO

Or Call992,2926
New members always welcome.
Registration $5,00 and Weekly Seminars $2.00
CONWAY Dl ET INSTITUTE- " Definitely
Superior"

Lack of flatural gas placing more

'

demands on oil, propane which
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~ , Wild ducks fooled by kindness

f~

COVENTRY, Cono. (UP!)- Coventry resldeol!i are
~- too kind to their web-footed friends, and a number of wild
;;: ducks have died as a result.
RO!IideniB of the shores of Coventry Lake took pity
~:: during the fall on the ducks which had spent the summer
~ ou the lake and began
feeding them when frost set ln.
.
;:;:
The dueks, normally migratory birds, Uked the
;:;: hospitality and forsook their traditional ways. Instead of
:::! flying South with the oaset of winter, they seUied In the
I ~~ ::1:
Some of them, It turned out, seUied a Uttle too per:j:1 manently. When the lake froze over, they found their feet
!:1: t;apped by the hardening Ice,
,
;j;j
Unable •o do more than quack and fiap their wlugs,
~~ the helpless ducks were devoured by wild aalmals
_:;l prowllug the lake shor~ for food. The pollee department
;$ Issued a plea to lakeside residents to stop feeding the
«
3!! remaining ducks so they'll abandon the area aud fly
:::: South.

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depend on motor tranwortation
industrial plants but only-scattered shutdowns as a result.
- Michigan. Gov. William Milliken's seven-member panel
monitoring fuel supplies said the -state could get through the
winter provided there is no abnormal cold spell.
- New York. State Public Service Commission spokesmen say
definite shortages of both natural gas and oil, with supplies to
interruptible customers "curtailed drastically ," One spokesman
added whether some people are going to go cold depends a great
deal on the weather."

itntitttl

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!:~ VOL VII NO. 49

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PAGE 15

SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1973

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Le Due Tho brings
hard line to Paris
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CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) - President NiXon issued final
!~
negotfating instructions toDr. Henry A. Kissinger Saturday in
'ijf:'
.
pr,eJ)Iiration for another round of end-the-war talks,
.:::.:
Th~ two met alone for more than two hours at Aspen Lodge at
::::
the President's retreat, Deputy White House Press Secretary
PARIS (UP! ) - Declaring talks said Tho "probably" definite choice
the made no mention of a Hanoi
Gerald L, Warren declined to characterize the meeting beyond
the U. S. mus\ either sign the would meet as scheduled with responsibility falls ent,ir~ on protest that the United States
had bombed above the 20th
saying it was to discuss the U, S. position in the talks which
October draft Vietnam peace Kissinger.
it."
.;-'
after
Nixon's
Kissinger will begin Monday In Paris with Le Due Tho, Hanoi's
agreement or face continued Tho debarked from a Soviet At Camp David, Nixon and parallel
chief negotiator,
war, North Vietnamese negotia· jetliner from Moscow and told Kissinger ' met privately suspension order,or that the U.
Klsslnger, accompanied by Winston Lord and Peter Rodman
tor Le Due Tho arrived in Paris newsmen North Vietnam had Saturday for a final review of S. had violated its pl¢ge under
of his National Security Staff, was to depart Ifom Andrews Air
Saturday to resume private not wavered from the stand it the U, S, position before w,hich Hanoi agreed to return
Force Base outside Washington at 10 a.m. E~ Sunday for his
talks with White House adviser held when the talks-broke down Kissinger makes his 23rd trip to the conference talbe.
Kissinger and Tho last met
23rd visit to the French capital in quest of an Indo Chinj setHenry A. Kissinger .
Dec. 13. He said the United to Paris.
tlement,
Kissinger met with President' States had the choice of either Kissinger flew by helicopter on Dec. 13 when the bilateral
Two other Kissinger assistNixon at Camp David, Md,, and signing the agreement of Oct, to the mountaintop retreat and talks ended in deadlock. Five
ants -John Ne,groponte and 26-day breakdown in the
was scheduled' to fly to Paris 20.without any changes or of began discussions with Nixon days later, on 'orders from
the
San
Francisco
Bay
area
David t=::ngel, both Interpreters negotiations which saw the
By CHARLES S. TAYLOR Jr.
Sunday night.
continued war.
at 10:30 a.m. (EST). He' is President Nixon, U. S. war- as ·well as Deputy United States launch the most
ATLANTA (U P!) - New and in Los Angeles County,
The Kissinger-Tho negotia- "The decisive moment has scheduled to leave Washington planes mounted the aerial
Although
there
is
no
specific
offensive.
Assistant Secretary of State massive air attack of the long outbreaks of influenza were
lions were scheduled to resume arrived," Tho said, reading a at 10 a.m. Sunday for Paris.
Full-scale bombing of the
William H. Sullivan Jr . have conflict against North Viet- reported across the country vaccine to prevent the London Monday a fter a three-week prepared text before television
In Saigon, U. S. Ambassador
flu
,
health
authorities
said
the
Hanoi-Haiphong
area and
been ·in Paris since last nam's heartland.
Saturday by fe,deral health
suspension in which U. S. cameras.
Ellsworth Bunker met for 65
Tuesday. holding technical
The intense bombing , officials, with 18 deaths in vaccine currently effective for warplanes carried out the "It is a matter of resolving minutes with President other targets north of the 20th
meetings on details on a cease- coming after both Nixon and California attributed to the the Type-B and Hong Kong heaviest bombardment of the quickly . the Vietnamese Nguyen Van Thieu in their first parallel was ordered stopped
fire plan with North Viet- Kissinger predicted a quick London strain for which there Influenza, of which the London war on Hanoi and Haiphong,
problem and signing the private session in a week. No · on Dec. 30 when Nixon made
strain is a "cousin'\ offers A spokesman for the North agreement or of continuing the details were disclosed .
known he believed Hanoi was
namese officials,
end to the war last Oct. 26, has is no specific vaccine.
for
userious"
The lower~evel delegations brought widespread protest
The latest states reporting some protection.
Vietnamese delegation to the war, The American adTho did not answer questions ready
are
advised
for
.
(
Cor!lnu~don
pe,ge
16)
Flu
shots
ha' f ! . hamnnerin&amp;:ii!!,Jli.!J..,both at home and abroad .
influenza act! ity were Virregull(r, semi-private ~aris -.ministration .must make u • •lOiter his Paris statement and
.
. 'llnl!i~t In the_pr~-: ~ But Nixon told the congres- ginia, Georgia,-- -and' Ohio, elderly persons 'and those
cord' and the length of their slonal leaders he was con- bringing to at least 18 the suffering from chronic ail,.
sessions, more than 25 hours so vinced that his course was a . number of states experiencing ments, such as heart disease or
far. '\'h•Y have spurred hopes correct one, and he would not cases of the disease, most of emphysema.
In addition to outbreaks of
that i'clsiinglil' and Tho move be deterred by the protests.
which appears to be caused by
rapidly ,to a settlement on the The past two months have the A-England virus, better influenza in Virginia, Georgia,
broader Issues.
'
seen the hopes of the nation for known as the London flu .
and Ohio, the National Center
Nixon has said he Is neither peace fluctuate wildly and
CalifOrnia was one of the For Disease Control in Atlanta SAIGON (UPI) -More than
Military spokesmen also reThe U.S. command said 115 secutive day of bombing,
optimistic or pessimistic about Nixon is now limiting his states hardest hit by influenza . earlier reported cases of flu or 150 U.S. B52 bombers and ported an upsurge in ground jet fighters and 15 waves of
· military
sources
said.
chances for reaching a set- comments on Vietnam, Except Health officials there said ari flu-like illnesses in Washington, fighter planes attacked targets action, including a rocket B52s bombed trucks, railways
President Nixon ordered
tlement.
.
for his meeting with the , outbreak of flu, "undoubtedly Hawaii, California, Arizona, in the southern panhandle of attack less than 12 miles from and other "enemy military
renewed bombing last April 6
In his only public remarks congressmen, he has not the London strain," has taken Colorado, Kansas, Texas, New North Vietnam Friday and Saigon.
targets" south of the 20th to retaliate against the Comabout the negotiations, he told spoken publicly about the 13 at ·least 18 lives in the San York, PenQsylvania, Massa· Saturday as the United States
Pilots from the air force, parallel Friday and Saturday. munist spring offensive.
congressional leaders days of massive bombing he Francisco Bay area In the past chusetts, Connecticut, Tennes· ended the ninth consecutive navy and marines carried the
The command also anOfficial communiques show
North ordered in the populace Hanoi- two weeks,
Friday if the
see, Illinois, Maryland and New month of the heaviest raids of bombing of the North into a nounced that two U.S. at least 53,500 raids by fighters
Vietnamese
assume - a Haiphong areas. He or,Pered a
Deaths due to pneumonia, Jersey,
the Indochina War, the U.S. lOth month Saturday with no destroyers were damaged off and some 1,475 waves of B52s
cooperative aUitude, the war llfting of the air aUacks in this often a complication of influenDr. Bernard Guyer •a Tennes- command said,
break, military sources said. the North while shelling shore bombing the north. In nine
can be ended quickly with the area last Friday in order to za, jumped during the same see epidemiologist, reported
positions. The uss Lawrence months, military sources said,
United States getting back its enhance the climate for the period with 17 deaths in Santa 1,450 cases of influenza in that
was hit hy Communist shore the bombing campaign was
prisoner\. and all sldes in resumed negotiations.
Clara, Call!., and 24 in San state during the week ended
batteries sometime between more intense than in any single
Vietnam having an opportunity
On Oct. 26, both Kissinger Francisco. All of the flu victims Dec, 30, compared to 702 lor
Christmas and New Year's year of the air war in North
to determine the nation's and Nixon said a settlement were adults, most of them the previous week. Most of the
Day, with no casualties and Vietnam conducte~ by former
future.
was inuninent and could be elderly,
cases were concentrated in the
unreported d amage, President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Resumption .of the talks . worked out In one more brief
London flu cases have been Memphis-shelby County area.
spokes men sa id, The USS
Each B52 wave drops an
Monday will mark the end of a negotiating session.
confinned in three counties in He said the London flu virus
Henry B. Wilson was damaged estimated 90 tons of bombs and
·'
had been isolated in some of COLUMBUS (UP!) _ The unemployment
insurance early Saturday when a five- each fighter-bomber carries
the cases.
Ohio AFUJO said Saturday benefits for workers who had inch shell blew up inside a gun approximately five tons of
.
Hawaii was the only state in Ohioans should take a look at exhausted earlier assistance. turret, wounding two men.
explosives. Using t\tis yardthe nation listing both Influenza how Rep. Clarence Miller, R- Mr, Miller reneged on a
Another American airman . stick the Americans have
•
-A and Influenza-S infections. Lancaster, votes rather than promised pay raise for fed~ral was captured or killed Thurs- dropped more than 400,000 tons
employees.
day when his F4 Phantom went of bombs on the North in the
United Press International for second offenders, Naw lawmakers would approve the The outbreak there involved bow often.
"Miller voted to disallow down over Laos, spokesmen past nine months.
Pushing across the grain of York, New Hampshire and death penalty on the second mostly teen-agers and young Miller said recently he had
conviction.
children.
The
symptoms
in
teen
100
per
cent
attendance
on
roll
food
stamps to workers on -said Saturday. The second
Montana.
the nationwide trend to liberalAlthough official figures are
Increased severity on a
Another Republi ca n -agers included high fever, call votes during the 92nd Con- strike, even though those crewman was .rescued .
ize drug laws, state officials or
still classified, an estimated
A, headache, sore throat and a dry gress.
workers were persons in
I~ the . South, Communist 155,000 fighter-bomber strikes
Nelson
lawmakers in a half-dozen lesser scale has been propOBed governor,
Rockefeller of New York, cough .
"Ordinarily, such service need," said the labor forces launched more than 100 and 141 852 raids hit North
• states, mostly in the northeast, in Indiana and Florida . .
wants
mandatory
life
senwould
deserve praise for dili- organization. " He voted attacks, the Saigon command VIetnam In four yean under
In some other. states, the
are pressing for the severest
, gence and dedication," the Ia- against sending more fe~eral said. Spokesmen reported 106 Johnson.
penalties for hard-drug tendency appears to be toward tences for hard-drug 'pushers
and
violent
addicts,
with
no
·
FIREBUG
SOUGHT
bor · organization said in its tax dollars back to local school - "enemy-initiated incidents"
. pushers, Including the death firmer enforcemertt of existing
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) - weekly newsletter. "But in districts even though he knows between 'daivn . Friday and
hard-drug' laws, often coupled possibility of parole or plea
penalty.
bargaining,
·
More
than 500 downtown hotel Congressmen Mlller's case the more federal money sunrise Saturday.
But the "winds of change" with a reduetion in penalties
The New York governor's guests fled to the street Friday we're not so certain. A look at pumped Into local schoolli, the
Fighting was reported from
toward greater leniency for for first-time possession of
soft -drug possession or use such soft drugs as marijuana. call for action at the 'opening of morning after one or more How he votes-rather than how less strain there will be on local each of the four military
regions of the country and
In Connecticut, Republican this year's legislative session arsonists set a series of fires in often he votes-is a better taxpayers.
continue,
rooms. In· . -record of service, we think." · "With such a voting record Communists raided a meeting
A sampling of official and Gov. Thomas J. Meskill favors was applauded by the . unoccupied
GALLIPOLIS - Forrest W.
legislators
but
drew
lnunediate
vestigators
said
the firebug
"In the 92ild Congress '100' perhaps it might be better for and ro cke\ed a dis trict
execUting
hard-drug
pushers
legislative programs around
Rahe , 544 Jackson Pike,
the countcy found demands for on the first conviction. protests from civil liber- entered the Four Queens hotel per CCIII Miller sided with bus- the people of the lOth congres- (county) .capital within 12 Friday filed a 175,000 damage
and used a clga~ette lighter to ines_s bosses against a good sional district - and all Ohio- miles of Saigon, spokesmen
extreme stringency In punish- Although he has ~n told the tarians.
•suit in Gallia County Common
In New Hampshire, Republi· ignite bedding mrooms on the minimum wage law," said the ans- ifMr. Miller would be ab- said.
.
ing hard-drug pushers in legislature will not go along
Pleas Court as a result of a
Saturday's raids against the
Connecticut,' where the gover- with a penalty that harsh; he · can State Rep, George Qordon fifth, eighth, 'ninth and 17th AFL-CIO. "He voted against sent a bit more,''the AFL-CIO
traffic accident Jan . 6, 1971, in
• floors.
an innmediate extension of said.
North marked the 265th connor is asking the death penalty says he has been a8sured 'the (Continued on page 16)
Lexington, Ky . Talmadge
Smith, Rt. 2, Mount Sterling,
Ky,., was named defendant In
the action.
Plaintiff says the defendant
'
negligently
drove his truck into
I
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• •, .,. • ·, ·, ·0•0•0
~~%-~i:!::.:~»..:.:.:.:.:.~!•!•:•x•!&gt;:o!b~ •!o! o:o:b»:O!o;o;.:~o:o:o:6:&lt;x o!o~.:~.•.-;•,•~,·
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (UP! ) if the first one ' brought a 7,0QO.pound vehicle . It could the car before, but I came here about one mile to the gallon. the plain tiff's car, The accident
... , 'wASHINGTON (uPI) - Coo&amp;reos eame lo a foregone
- A Pennsylvania exhibitor ''minimum price" of around pull a 5,000-pound weapons to buy it. I didn 't intend to go I'm glad I filled it up before I occurred at·the intersection of
cenclnslon Salurday and declared Prelldeut Nixon's · reNorth Broadway and Haggard
carrier through rough desert back emptyhanded. It was brought it here. "
pail! $153,000, a-world record $125 000.
elecllon official at a apanely atteuded cetemoolal countlug
iile biddiltg took place at an · terrain. ,
for a car, Saturday· for the
worth it."
Cruse said $153,000 was the Lane in Lexinglon. Rahe·sa'ys
of Electoral College votet. Oaly about a dozen Senaton aud
auction
of
more
than
50
classic
Bidding
on
'the
first
Hitler
personal parade automobile of
At each successive increase most ever paid for a single, he has suffered permanent
House memben were still on hand when the ritual ended with
cars. Among them were the parade car opened at $40,000, in the bidding, the car's siren used ·automobile, German, injuries and medical expenses
Adolph Hitler,
,
Nixon and VIce ~alden! Spiro T. Apew defeating the
. The high bid for the 2~ot 1910 Stoddard-Dayton built,!or and progressed quickly, mostly was~unded by Barrett, who Mexican and Japanese plus a loss of income.
· Democratic ticket of Sen. George S. McGovern and Sargent
long Mercedes Benz was made E.W, Scripps, founder of the 'in increments of $1,000, up to acquired ·the automobile 10 · representatives as well as . In other court action, Linda
Sbrlver. · ·
,
'
,
Dotson , · Lower . River Rd ..
by Earl Clark, operator of Scripps Howard newspaper $120,000 when most bidders years ago.
A~n ericans participated in the
· McGovem wu one of 111ore than 75 seuaton and twoThe car is an eight passen- bidding.
Gallipolis, flied a petition
Dutch Wonderland, a *-ere group, al)d the 1906 M~rcedes .dropped out.
thlrdll of tbe'JJouae memherfwho ablenl_ed lbemlelvee from _ r~ation parli in Lancaster, of T. Oden Armour, of the
ger,
armor-plated
con"ertible
Auctioneer Dean Cru~e
seeking divorce from Larry
w&amp;al Rep, AI- UlimaD, JJ.Ore., called a "charade." Ullman . Pa, i
Armour Meat Co .
of Aublirn, lnd,, then urged with a straight-S engine
The two Hitler cars are the Dotson, Patriot Star Rt, She
. •d a 1111111ber ol ~ iued the oe~IOD tG call for
German Field Marshal remaining bidders on, saying capable of developing 230 only ones the Fuehrer had built ch~rged gross neglect of duty
The seller, Tom Barret, a
alitJIIPmeal of !be Eleclml CoHese and Ill replacement·
Scottsdale real estate man,- Erwin Rommel's open staff car "when you get in this range, horsepower and speeds of 150 for his personal use, Hitler and extreme cruelty. They
with cUnet popular elect(on of lhe Prelldent and vice
_ visited the factory several were married Sept, 28; 196S at
~lso owns another Hitler also was for sale. The "Desert $5;000 or $10,000 doesn 't -make miles an hoilr, .
prelldeal.
&lt;
Barrett
quippe&lt;)
that
the
parade car which he said Fox" commanded the Africa any differonLe." .
times to supervis~ their con- Sparta, N, C., and ha~e three
10,000-pound
vehicle
"
gets
Corps
from
.the
armor-plated,
'Clark
said,
"I
had
never
seen'
struction.
children.
before
the
auction
he
would
sell
..•.x: .... ;;.., ":¥' ••u,';.:. "*~~~:&gt;.:~:::::;.::&amp;a~8;:.r.-.:::~~
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Fatal flu hits
eastern states

150

-. :·~...

·~-

·•~r· · ·

B52s hit panhandle

a1 Millar recor· d

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h
d
.
p Ush ers may lve ~ .
.

t

Court asked
for $75,000

Hitler's parade Mercedes Be~tz nets record $153,000

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•o:o 'o' o' o; O,:o "o"o' o'o' "' ' o' o"o"o' o!O.:O.:o ...;.o:o• o • o • o • o • o ·o:o;o:.o•o•,.,•.-,•~o"~oV•

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a

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-.,

uDIOD
• _wondermg
•

Both of the President's
daughters will be back from
European trips in tiine for the
dinner. Aides said the celebration would be "a quiet fa mily

MOTIVATION SEMINARS
WEEKLY SCHEDULE

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,.,,. ~- ~

+++

" I r eco mm end the COnway
Diet In st it ute to you if you are
overwei ght. It' s. definite!'( a
superior program," says Mrs.
Wi t loman.

and office buil~ing5 in Nebraska, Indiana , I0wa, Dlinois and Ohio Wolbrette, executive secretary of the LOuisiana Chemical
and heating oil has been rationed.
.
Association :
'
Natural gas stUI flows into the stoves and furpaces of private
''The Federal Power Commission offers all kinds of incentives
homes and institutions which are "regular" customers, but in- for producers to' put their gas in interstate. lines. The FPC is
dustries with "interruptible" contr-acts -because , of their · doing everything it can to take gas away from tlie_producing
capability of using other sources of energy -haye gen,-ally been states."
forced to turn to dearer, dirtier oll or propane ,
The situation in some parts of the nation :
The White House Office of Emergency Preparedness called on
-Califorrii;l , Public Utilities Commission Chairman Vernon L,
the governors of atntates to set up strong •fuel conservation
~turgeon says there has been "extensive curtailment" of natul'al
measures.
gas to interruptible customers, including a 90 [ier cent cut to
OEP Direetor George A. Lincoln said "the cold spell caused a steam elee.tric plants in the southern part of the state, and 50 per ·
signi(icant cutoff of interruptible gas custom.ers" .and supplies of 1cent·in the northern part.
the olt and propane alternatives are not adequate for the un·
- New Mexico. The gas supply is adequate with some minor
•
foreseen demand.
curtailments to industry,
·
Lincoln aiS(I attributed the need for fllel conservation to the
- Texas, Cold weather in the north has forced a cutoff of gas to
''unprecedented crop-drying requirement in the Midwest."
city of Austin industrial users, with the city using 50 per cent gas
Even gas-producing Louisiana has seen some plants close
and 50 per cent fuel oil to generate electric JlOWer.
down or curtail production ~use, according to Henri
- Missouri. Natural gai; supplies down 50 per cent to large

~ \: : : : : :;:~: : : : : :::~:~::::: : : :!: : : ~::: : : : : : : : : : : i: : : :i: :~: ~: : : ~: : : : : : : :;: :;: : : : : : : : : : : -::::~~;~

+++

51

•

Nixon gives
Kissinger
the signa~s

MEMBERS of Mrs. Janet Wethrholt's Diversified Health
Occupations class at Gallia Academy High School kept busy over
· the Christmas holidays.
·

A FAMILY AFFAffi
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Nixon will be 60
years old Tuesday and is ex·
peeled to mark the occasion
with a family dinner party at'
. Md. ·

.

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+++

'

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stotm

Bv Hobart Wilson Jr.

+++

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16-TheSwldayTimes-Sentinel,SIIIlday, Jait7, 1~73

.

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_

~;~=~:~In~~Ti;i;/;l ~~n~~~I~ge

fl ' e...

.·'

15)

By United .Press International
. "
has filed a bill which would
l::OLUMBUS - SEVEN u;ADING OWO clergymen. in a make life imprisonment
statement released Friday called upon the nation's citizens to mandatory for convicted
"be prepared to make imown their utter dist~ste for and · sellers of heroin unless they
repudiation of escalated violence' ~ in the war in Vietnam.
. were addicls, in which case the
"Surely there are better ways to reach peace then by killing penalty would be 20 years in
men, women and children whose longing for peace is no less than prislln.
•
'd
·
th
A
.
companion
.·
measure
I
that of the people of our own country," the c ergymen sal m e
llatomeot read by Bishop Clarence E. Elwell of the Roman proposed by Gordon proVides
Catholic Diocese of Columbus. "We suggest that these words he for suspension of students at
addressed to both sides," ljQid the Bishop.
state colleges and the
.V
University of N~w Hampshire
WASHINGTON- REP. CLARENCE E. MILLER, R.Qhio, If they are found in possession
has criticized President Nixon. for his decision to halt diSaster . of prohibited ~rugs on campus.
loans to farmers. "This time thet~dget cutting ax has fallen in
Legislation already introthewrong,place at the wrong time," Miller said. "Where ca'n the duced in Montana would make
thouSallds of farmers eligible for these em~rgency .loans possibly a life sentence mandatory on
get the kind of cre&lt;!it U,ey need to rebuild for 1~73?"
_ the secOI)d conviction of hard
The admini.str;~tion said last week it was shutting off disaster drug selling and would eliml'loans in an effort to hold government spending at $230 billion for · nate the present automatic
liscal1973. Ohio officials estimated some $25() million in losses · deferment of sentence for first
were suff~red by Ohio farmers because of the excessiv~ wet offenders 21 years of age or
conditions during the harvest season.
yo1111ger
A bill pending in the Indiana
legislature
would make ~year
CHICAGO - A SET OF QUINTUPLETS born Friday to a
suburban Northbrook couple was in fair condition early today in sentences mandatory for hardthe pediatri,e-r1ursery of Evanston Hospital, a hospital spokes- drug pushers, with a
man said. The Uttee gfrls and two boys, born between 5:31 and stipulation excluding them
5:55 p.m. at Highland Park Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. James from parole.
Aides of Florida Attorney
Baer, Northbrook, were being fed intravenously through the
General
Roliert Shevin say he
night, each enclosed in his own isolette, or small individual inbelieves in getting tougber with
cubator.
drug
dealers, but not to the
Their mother, Lynn Baer, 26, was reported in good condition
at the hospital where the one-month premature babies were degree advocated by tHe
hardest-liners. Shevin supports
delivered. A Highland Park Hospital spokesman said the quints
were the Baers' first children and that Mrs. Baer had been taking ·a measure which would ina fertility drug. The spokesman, however, IJ!clined to identify the crease the penalty for heroin
sale in his state from five years
ckug.
to 10 years in prison.
Already on the books in
SAN JUAN, P.R.- U.S. NAVY DIVERS working in 120
Florida,
however, is a Jaw
feet of water Friday located parts of the cargo plane that crashed
New Year's Eve, killing baseball staPRoberto Clemente and four providing the death penalty for
any person convicted of a
other persons. No bodies were recovered.
A Coast Guard spokesman said the wreckage of the cockpit heroin sale which directly
and part of the cargo area of the plane was found a mile and a resulted in the death of the
half from San Juan International Airport from which the user.
Sentiment appears to .be
JI'Opeller- driven OOtook off on a mercy mission .to Managua,
Nicaragua. The only body recovered so far has been that of the growing in states as diverse as
Maine, Texas and Georgia for
pilot, Jerry Hill of Ypsilanti, Mich. ft was fo1111d Wednesday.
reduction of the penalty for
first-time
possession of
ST. LOUIS, MO. - THE DOCTORS WHO TOOK part in
Missouri's first heart transpl!mt operation said Friday the heart marijuana, usually by·making
it a misdemeanor rather than a
they gave Vincent Dobelman was probably cancerous.
The heart transplant team at the St.. Louis University felony,
Under present Texas law, a
Medical Center released a brief statement saying the connection
between the cancerous brain tumor that killed the heart donor, first offender could be senClaytua Williams, and the cancer that led to ' the death of tenced, to two years to life in
Dobebnan was ''highly.probable." The doctors refused to discuss prison for possession of a single
the connection between the two deaths after tersely confirming marijuana cigarette. A bill
reducing the offense to a
II.
misdemeanor was defeated in
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON has accepted the 1971, but a UPI poll of Texas
resignation of Robert M. Ball, head of the Social Sec!ll'ity system lawmakers Indicated such a
for more than 10 years. Like hundreds of other high ad- proposal would be more wel,mlnlstratlon officials, Ball, 58, has been required to submit his come this year.

Le DUC .Th. 0
.(Continued lrorr( page 15)
negotiations.
Thti indicated no changes in
North Vietnam's negotiating
position .
"If the American side
demonstrates ·proof of a really
serious altitude and of $ood
will, then the Vietnamese
problem can be •resolved
peacefully and in a rapid
faShion," he said .
"If, on the contrary, the
Am'erican side persists in
wishing to prolong and extend
the
war,
demanding
unreasonable modifications in
the principles and substance of
the agreement, then the
Vietnamese p'eople are
determined not to give way
, before any pressure and

"'n

COLUMBUS -TilE CHAmMAN OF THE Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio called for an immediate investigation
Friday of the freight train derailment and explosion in Harrod,
· saying he has "serious concerns" about the ability of railroads to
JI'Operly maintain their equipment.
_
An Erie Lackawanna freight train derailed Thursday in the
middle of the Allen County community, about 10 miles east of
Lima, A tank car filled with a petrochemical caught fire and
exploded, with shrapnel from the car killing a 15-year.old girl
and Injuring her father. "We have serious concerns about the
ability of the railroads operating in Ohio to properly maintain
their equipment and property/' Chairman Henry W. Eckhart
Said.
PORTSMOUTH, OHIO -TilE $3.4 MU..IJON Shawnee State
Lodge at Portsmouth State Park will officially open Jan. 14, it
was announced Friday.
Natural Resources Director William B. Nye said the iilk"oom
lodge, overlooking Turkey Creek Lake, will become Ohio's filth
alate park lodge. Nye said the lodge is equipped with special
fixtures and extenSive rampways to accommodate the handicapped.

Bidwell 8th grade is 6-0

•

a

Open.
~d, who last won this

•

ARBOUR LEAVE'! BLUE'!
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - AI
Arbour, fired .as .coacli of the
. St. LouiS Blues Nov. &amp;after t,wo
seasons at the heln., includmg
one Stanley Cup semifinalberth, aimounced Friday that ·
he will not accept any other
position in the Blues' organiza-'
lion.
Arbour said, however, he
"will definitely remain in
hockey" and thanked the Blues
and the fans ''for many happy
memories in the six years I
played and coached here."

tournament back in 1950 and
earned a mere $2,600 for the
vic'tory, had three birdies pn
tedmical talks have been the front nine at Riviera on a
•
dealing with protocols to carry bairny, summer-like day.
out terms of any eventual ·
cease-fire agreement including
TWIXT TRIUMPHS
release of prisoners .of ·war,
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - the fourth · running of the
demining of North Vietnamese Mrs. John M. Franklin's Twixt $33,475 Tuscarora Handicap at
harbors and other matters.
raced to a half-length victory in Liberty Bell Saturday.

menace and to pursue with

perseverance their resistance
against American
'aggression."
Tho, speaking Vietnamese
and followed by a French in' lerpreler, said the Nixon administration "thou~ht it could
put the Vietnamese ]Hlople on
their knees and oblige it to ·
' accept the U. S. conditions at
the negotiations::
HHowever, the American
admi~tration, except for
assassinating \housands of '
innocent civilians, could not
obtain any result. Our people ·
are not bowing tho least bit
before American bombs."
As Tho arrived, American
and North Vietnamese tower:
ranking negotiators met for tt.e
fifth consecutive day for talks
on a technical level. The

FAVORITE-WJNS ·
BOWIE, Md. (UP!) - Evil
Intention, the favorite with I!·
crowd of J5,009, ~ored a baHlength victory In the.$24,960 E.
Palmer H!lllgerty ·Stakes for ·
Maryland-bred 3-year-(llds Saturday at Bowie Race
Coitrse.

DENTON, . Tex. (UPI) Howard Cissel, a head coach
for 10 years at Arkan11118 high
schools, was named Salw'day
to the football staH at North
Te1as State University. H!!atl
Coa~h Hayden Fry said Cisal!l
would serve as one of tllree
defensive assistants.
. O~E OF THE NEWEST ;.,usical grpups playing the southern
and neighlxlfing West
Vtrgl(Jia ctrcult is Marvin'Wickline's Young Americans. The musicians have been going strong
since caplw'ing the Galiia County Farm Bureau Talent Show contest at the 1972 junior lair. "rh•• -·Young Americans features the voice of Tammy Lynn. The group plans to make some recordings in the near future. Mr~ Wickline of Gallipolis is manager of the rock and country music
group.
,

ohio

.

The New

INN ~

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PH. 992-3629

The Amber Lounge Opens

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LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 p;M,, DINNERS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet Luncheon 11:00 to 1:30, Mom;tay
thru Saturday)
.
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Starting the new year, we will compute and compound interest on your
regular ova passbook savings.account
every day_ Put your money in the bank
any time- take it out arw time. We pay
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in g.after your money for you ... even the
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·
Now . . . OVB's passbook savings
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with Miss Constance Welch,
and directing experience with
Jose Quinlolro. He has also
taught speech and drama at
City College in New York for 29
years.
For further information
concerning tryouts for the
community production "The
Matchmaker," contact Dr.
U!wis . Rutherf,ord, Chairman
of the Humanities Division of
Rio Grande College at 245-5353;
ext. 10.
_
Half Pork loin
Sliced ln1o. C~ops

Taxpayers will
. ATHENS - John R. Abel,
representative of the District
Director for the Athens office
of the Internal Revenue Service, announced Saturday
increased taxpayer assistance
will be available during the
1~13
tax filing season.
~sistance will he offered on
Fridays from 9- 12 and t - 4; on
Saturdays from 10- 3 p.m. and
on Monday, April16 from~- 12
and 1 - 7,4;r, ·
· 'Tile IRS' office is located hi
the Matters Building at 24 E.
State Street. Assistance may
also be obtained by calling 5921188 during the above times.

--

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Jan. 30 - Kyger Creek at
BIDWELL - Coach Ron
Twymin's Bidwell Pirates Bidwell
Feb. I
Rio Grande at
eighth grade learn had a
perfect 6-0 slate at the Christ- Bidwell
mas break. Bidwdll had poste'd
vic-tories over Meigs, Coalton ,
LIVING ROOM CLEARANCE
Southwestern, Hannan Trace
1nd Rio Grande.
Fred Logan Is the Pirate
leading scorer with 24.8 points
per game while Mark Theiss
has been averaging 12.4 points.
The Pirates are averaging 45 pohits per game while permitting 30.4 points . Tiieiss is
the rebo1111ding leader with 12
per game .,
Team members are Freddie
Logan, Mark Theiss, Doug
Sisson, Sltlve Mundell, Marty
Hash, Tom Brumlieid, Rick
Johnson, Ed Wood, Ronnie
Plants, Homer McMUian, Mike
Gee, Arnold Jackson, Leo
Stumbo, and Stanley Cooper.
Here is the remaining Pirate
schedule :
Jan . 8 - AI Southwe$tern
NOW ON ALL
Jan. ~ - Vinton nt Bidwell
Jan. 23 - Meigs at Bidwell
Jan . 24 - At Kyger Creek
Jan. 25- At Vinton

OFFER MADE
' BELFAST (UPI) - The
outlawed Irish Republican
Army (IRA) Saturday offered
to· meet with the militant
Protestants of the Ulster
· Defense As8ociation' ( UDA) to
dilcull an end to sectarian
violence ln Northern Ireland.

lte•s u~ Priles -

I

RIO GRANDE - Tryouts lor
·
'"
Davidson for many years, and
The M~tchmaker, a farce that he is a "most wonderful
comedy 1.n two acts and lour · person ." She said she felt
scenes Will be held at 8 p.m. people who participated in the
'Thursdaf, Jan. 11 •. m Com- production under Dr. Davidson
mwuty H~ll at Rio Grande would learn a great deal about
College. Nme men and seven acting and the theatre.
women
Dr. Davt'dson
· rece1v
. ed hi s
.
. are needed for the cast
IDCiudmg a male and female Masters of Fine Arts from the
lead who can appear to be tn Yale School of Drama and his
their early 50s on stage.
Ph . D. in Drama from New
The play, to he. directed by York University. He received
Dr. Frank C. Davidson of New ~n Honorary Doctor of
York, Is bemg partially Uterature from Union Colfinance~ by a, $500 grant from lege
in
Barboursville,
the Oh1o Arts Council. Dr. Kentucky
and
has
Davidson said this Will be a had
acting
experie~ce
community production with
members of the cast and crew COP SENTENCED
coming from the Gallipolis,
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (UP!)
Jackson, Rio Grande, ·Vinton _ A veteran policeman conand Wellston areas as well as · victed of burglarizing stores
from the campus . The was sentenced to six years in
production will be presented prison and given a tongueJan. 31, Feb. 2 and 3rd.
lashing Thursday .
· Dr.· Davidson, ·who has 21
"That badge you wore is a
·years experience directin badge of honor and you insununer stock, is no stranger suited it," Supreme Court
to GaUipolls. This past summer Justice George Beisheim Jr.,
he w;u a·guest at "Gatewood" told former patrolman David
the summer home of Mrs. 0 . 0. · A. Birdsall, 45.
Mcf~tyre, widow of the famed
Birdsall was convicted last
New York,columnist who was a month on three counts of
native of Gallipolis.
second degree burglary for
Mrs. Mcintyre, contacted in thefts from stores. He was the
New York where she is first to be sentenced of 16
spending the winter, said she Newburgh policemen accused
has been good friends with Dr. of wrongdoing in 'the citY,.

4t 11:00 A.M.

''

ORDINARY ILLNESS
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst said Saturday the
Justice' Department struck
hard at organized' crime and
illegal drug traffic in 1972. He
predicted organized crime ·
would be reduced ·to ·an ordinary irritant In our society by
end of this ·

TU llrottr CD.
QUIIIIiq Ri&amp;llll AISetved ,

The Matchmaker at Rio

SATURDAY
10 P.M. • 2 A.M.

,j

'

tiJJfiJIU 1113-·

·cast o£,16 needed for ·

MEIGS

•

PEACE A BORJ'!?
MOSCOW, Idaho (UP!) Peace is a bore in international
politics -if games players are
any indication.
University of Idaho officials
reported Friday on the playing '
of a new internati6nal politics
game, called Atlas, which was
developed at the school.
Players used pollllcal moves,
military power and economic
pressures to gain political
dominance. A secondary goal
is achievement of international '
_peace. But officials discovered
that the players, mostly
students, found the game
boring once peace was
achieved because of the lack of
danger and excitement caused
by wars and military
takeovers.

SHOP llROGIR
THIS Wl£11 FOil ·. • •

•.

•

"

res!&amp;nation so Nixon could decide whether to keep him during his
term of office.
BaU's headquarters in S&lt;lltimore received Nixon's letter
accepting the resignation on Friday,just about the time Ball was
ll'rivlng in San Francisco to make a speech.

CONTINUES HEX
NEW YORK (UPI) -'- Hugh
Harris, Rick Martin, Gerry
Meehan and Rene Robert .all
scored in the third .period
Saturday afternoon as the
Buifalo SabreS contin~ed their
hei over the Rangers by
bj!ating New · York for the
' fourth straight lime this
season, 4-1.

TWO SHARE LEAD
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Sam Snead, a smooth swinger
despite ~is 60 years, and David
Graham, a
26-year.old
Austrillian golf pro, shared a
. 01)0-6\roke lead Saturday in the
third ro1111d of 72-hold $135,000
Glen Campbell Los Angeles

'

...

•

~i
$1

·]28·oz.
Cans

with

coupon

All Vari•lie:~.

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16-TheSwldayTimes-Sentinel,SIIIlday, Jait7, 1~73

.

.

_

~;~=~:~In~~Ti;i;/;l ~~n~~~I~ge

fl ' e...

.·'

15)

By United .Press International
. "
has filed a bill which would
l::OLUMBUS - SEVEN u;ADING OWO clergymen. in a make life imprisonment
statement released Friday called upon the nation's citizens to mandatory for convicted
"be prepared to make imown their utter dist~ste for and · sellers of heroin unless they
repudiation of escalated violence' ~ in the war in Vietnam.
. were addicls, in which case the
"Surely there are better ways to reach peace then by killing penalty would be 20 years in
men, women and children whose longing for peace is no less than prislln.
•
'd
·
th
A
.
companion
.·
measure
I
that of the people of our own country," the c ergymen sal m e
llatomeot read by Bishop Clarence E. Elwell of the Roman proposed by Gordon proVides
Catholic Diocese of Columbus. "We suggest that these words he for suspension of students at
addressed to both sides," ljQid the Bishop.
state colleges and the
.V
University of N~w Hampshire
WASHINGTON- REP. CLARENCE E. MILLER, R.Qhio, If they are found in possession
has criticized President Nixon. for his decision to halt diSaster . of prohibited ~rugs on campus.
loans to farmers. "This time thet~dget cutting ax has fallen in
Legislation already introthewrong,place at the wrong time," Miller said. "Where ca'n the duced in Montana would make
thouSallds of farmers eligible for these em~rgency .loans possibly a life sentence mandatory on
get the kind of cre&lt;!it U,ey need to rebuild for 1~73?"
_ the secOI)d conviction of hard
The admini.str;~tion said last week it was shutting off disaster drug selling and would eliml'loans in an effort to hold government spending at $230 billion for · nate the present automatic
liscal1973. Ohio officials estimated some $25() million in losses · deferment of sentence for first
were suff~red by Ohio farmers because of the excessiv~ wet offenders 21 years of age or
conditions during the harvest season.
yo1111ger
A bill pending in the Indiana
legislature
would make ~year
CHICAGO - A SET OF QUINTUPLETS born Friday to a
suburban Northbrook couple was in fair condition early today in sentences mandatory for hardthe pediatri,e-r1ursery of Evanston Hospital, a hospital spokes- drug pushers, with a
man said. The Uttee gfrls and two boys, born between 5:31 and stipulation excluding them
5:55 p.m. at Highland Park Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. James from parole.
Aides of Florida Attorney
Baer, Northbrook, were being fed intravenously through the
General
Roliert Shevin say he
night, each enclosed in his own isolette, or small individual inbelieves in getting tougber with
cubator.
drug
dealers, but not to the
Their mother, Lynn Baer, 26, was reported in good condition
at the hospital where the one-month premature babies were degree advocated by tHe
hardest-liners. Shevin supports
delivered. A Highland Park Hospital spokesman said the quints
were the Baers' first children and that Mrs. Baer had been taking ·a measure which would ina fertility drug. The spokesman, however, IJ!clined to identify the crease the penalty for heroin
sale in his state from five years
ckug.
to 10 years in prison.
Already on the books in
SAN JUAN, P.R.- U.S. NAVY DIVERS working in 120
Florida,
however, is a Jaw
feet of water Friday located parts of the cargo plane that crashed
New Year's Eve, killing baseball staPRoberto Clemente and four providing the death penalty for
any person convicted of a
other persons. No bodies were recovered.
A Coast Guard spokesman said the wreckage of the cockpit heroin sale which directly
and part of the cargo area of the plane was found a mile and a resulted in the death of the
half from San Juan International Airport from which the user.
Sentiment appears to .be
JI'Opeller- driven OOtook off on a mercy mission .to Managua,
Nicaragua. The only body recovered so far has been that of the growing in states as diverse as
Maine, Texas and Georgia for
pilot, Jerry Hill of Ypsilanti, Mich. ft was fo1111d Wednesday.
reduction of the penalty for
first-time
possession of
ST. LOUIS, MO. - THE DOCTORS WHO TOOK part in
Missouri's first heart transpl!mt operation said Friday the heart marijuana, usually by·making
it a misdemeanor rather than a
they gave Vincent Dobelman was probably cancerous.
The heart transplant team at the St.. Louis University felony,
Under present Texas law, a
Medical Center released a brief statement saying the connection
between the cancerous brain tumor that killed the heart donor, first offender could be senClaytua Williams, and the cancer that led to ' the death of tenced, to two years to life in
Dobebnan was ''highly.probable." The doctors refused to discuss prison for possession of a single
the connection between the two deaths after tersely confirming marijuana cigarette. A bill
reducing the offense to a
II.
misdemeanor was defeated in
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON has accepted the 1971, but a UPI poll of Texas
resignation of Robert M. Ball, head of the Social Sec!ll'ity system lawmakers Indicated such a
for more than 10 years. Like hundreds of other high ad- proposal would be more wel,mlnlstratlon officials, Ball, 58, has been required to submit his come this year.

Le DUC .Th. 0
.(Continued lrorr( page 15)
negotiations.
Thti indicated no changes in
North Vietnam's negotiating
position .
"If the American side
demonstrates ·proof of a really
serious altitude and of $ood
will, then the Vietnamese
problem can be •resolved
peacefully and in a rapid
faShion," he said .
"If, on the contrary, the
Am'erican side persists in
wishing to prolong and extend
the
war,
demanding
unreasonable modifications in
the principles and substance of
the agreement, then the
Vietnamese p'eople are
determined not to give way
, before any pressure and

"'n

COLUMBUS -TilE CHAmMAN OF THE Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio called for an immediate investigation
Friday of the freight train derailment and explosion in Harrod,
· saying he has "serious concerns" about the ability of railroads to
JI'Operly maintain their equipment.
_
An Erie Lackawanna freight train derailed Thursday in the
middle of the Allen County community, about 10 miles east of
Lima, A tank car filled with a petrochemical caught fire and
exploded, with shrapnel from the car killing a 15-year.old girl
and Injuring her father. "We have serious concerns about the
ability of the railroads operating in Ohio to properly maintain
their equipment and property/' Chairman Henry W. Eckhart
Said.
PORTSMOUTH, OHIO -TilE $3.4 MU..IJON Shawnee State
Lodge at Portsmouth State Park will officially open Jan. 14, it
was announced Friday.
Natural Resources Director William B. Nye said the iilk"oom
lodge, overlooking Turkey Creek Lake, will become Ohio's filth
alate park lodge. Nye said the lodge is equipped with special
fixtures and extenSive rampways to accommodate the handicapped.

Bidwell 8th grade is 6-0

•

a

Open.
~d, who last won this

•

ARBOUR LEAVE'! BLUE'!
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - AI
Arbour, fired .as .coacli of the
. St. LouiS Blues Nov. &amp;after t,wo
seasons at the heln., includmg
one Stanley Cup semifinalberth, aimounced Friday that ·
he will not accept any other
position in the Blues' organiza-'
lion.
Arbour said, however, he
"will definitely remain in
hockey" and thanked the Blues
and the fans ''for many happy
memories in the six years I
played and coached here."

tournament back in 1950 and
earned a mere $2,600 for the
vic'tory, had three birdies pn
tedmical talks have been the front nine at Riviera on a
•
dealing with protocols to carry bairny, summer-like day.
out terms of any eventual ·
cease-fire agreement including
TWIXT TRIUMPHS
release of prisoners .of ·war,
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - the fourth · running of the
demining of North Vietnamese Mrs. John M. Franklin's Twixt $33,475 Tuscarora Handicap at
harbors and other matters.
raced to a half-length victory in Liberty Bell Saturday.

menace and to pursue with

perseverance their resistance
against American
'aggression."
Tho, speaking Vietnamese
and followed by a French in' lerpreler, said the Nixon administration "thou~ht it could
put the Vietnamese ]Hlople on
their knees and oblige it to ·
' accept the U. S. conditions at
the negotiations::
HHowever, the American
admi~tration, except for
assassinating \housands of '
innocent civilians, could not
obtain any result. Our people ·
are not bowing tho least bit
before American bombs."
As Tho arrived, American
and North Vietnamese tower:
ranking negotiators met for tt.e
fifth consecutive day for talks
on a technical level. The

FAVORITE-WJNS ·
BOWIE, Md. (UP!) - Evil
Intention, the favorite with I!·
crowd of J5,009, ~ored a baHlength victory In the.$24,960 E.
Palmer H!lllgerty ·Stakes for ·
Maryland-bred 3-year-(llds Saturday at Bowie Race
Coitrse.

DENTON, . Tex. (UPI) Howard Cissel, a head coach
for 10 years at Arkan11118 high
schools, was named Salw'day
to the football staH at North
Te1as State University. H!!atl
Coa~h Hayden Fry said Cisal!l
would serve as one of tllree
defensive assistants.
. O~E OF THE NEWEST ;.,usical grpups playing the southern
and neighlxlfing West
Vtrgl(Jia ctrcult is Marvin'Wickline's Young Americans. The musicians have been going strong
since caplw'ing the Galiia County Farm Bureau Talent Show contest at the 1972 junior lair. "rh•• -·Young Americans features the voice of Tammy Lynn. The group plans to make some recordings in the near future. Mr~ Wickline of Gallipolis is manager of the rock and country music
group.
,

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The New

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PH. 992-3629

The Amber Lounge Opens

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with Miss Constance Welch,
and directing experience with
Jose Quinlolro. He has also
taught speech and drama at
City College in New York for 29
years.
For further information
concerning tryouts for the
community production "The
Matchmaker," contact Dr.
U!wis . Rutherf,ord, Chairman
of the Humanities Division of
Rio Grande College at 245-5353;
ext. 10.
_
Half Pork loin
Sliced ln1o. C~ops

Taxpayers will
. ATHENS - John R. Abel,
representative of the District
Director for the Athens office
of the Internal Revenue Service, announced Saturday
increased taxpayer assistance
will be available during the
1~13
tax filing season.
~sistance will he offered on
Fridays from 9- 12 and t - 4; on
Saturdays from 10- 3 p.m. and
on Monday, April16 from~- 12
and 1 - 7,4;r, ·
· 'Tile IRS' office is located hi
the Matters Building at 24 E.
State Street. Assistance may
also be obtained by calling 5921188 during the above times.

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Jan. 30 - Kyger Creek at
BIDWELL - Coach Ron
Twymin's Bidwell Pirates Bidwell
Feb. I
Rio Grande at
eighth grade learn had a
perfect 6-0 slate at the Christ- Bidwell
mas break. Bidwdll had poste'd
vic-tories over Meigs, Coalton ,
LIVING ROOM CLEARANCE
Southwestern, Hannan Trace
1nd Rio Grande.
Fred Logan Is the Pirate
leading scorer with 24.8 points
per game while Mark Theiss
has been averaging 12.4 points.
The Pirates are averaging 45 pohits per game while permitting 30.4 points . Tiieiss is
the rebo1111ding leader with 12
per game .,
Team members are Freddie
Logan, Mark Theiss, Doug
Sisson, Sltlve Mundell, Marty
Hash, Tom Brumlieid, Rick
Johnson, Ed Wood, Ronnie
Plants, Homer McMUian, Mike
Gee, Arnold Jackson, Leo
Stumbo, and Stanley Cooper.
Here is the remaining Pirate
schedule :
Jan . 8 - AI Southwe$tern
NOW ON ALL
Jan. ~ - Vinton nt Bidwell
Jan. 23 - Meigs at Bidwell
Jan . 24 - At Kyger Creek
Jan. 25- At Vinton

OFFER MADE
' BELFAST (UPI) - The
outlawed Irish Republican
Army (IRA) Saturday offered
to· meet with the militant
Protestants of the Ulster
· Defense As8ociation' ( UDA) to
dilcull an end to sectarian
violence ln Northern Ireland.

lte•s u~ Priles -

I

RIO GRANDE - Tryouts lor
·
'"
Davidson for many years, and
The M~tchmaker, a farce that he is a "most wonderful
comedy 1.n two acts and lour · person ." She said she felt
scenes Will be held at 8 p.m. people who participated in the
'Thursdaf, Jan. 11 •. m Com- production under Dr. Davidson
mwuty H~ll at Rio Grande would learn a great deal about
College. Nme men and seven acting and the theatre.
women
Dr. Davt'dson
· rece1v
. ed hi s
.
. are needed for the cast
IDCiudmg a male and female Masters of Fine Arts from the
lead who can appear to be tn Yale School of Drama and his
their early 50s on stage.
Ph . D. in Drama from New
The play, to he. directed by York University. He received
Dr. Frank C. Davidson of New ~n Honorary Doctor of
York, Is bemg partially Uterature from Union Colfinance~ by a, $500 grant from lege
in
Barboursville,
the Oh1o Arts Council. Dr. Kentucky
and
has
Davidson said this Will be a had
acting
experie~ce
community production with
members of the cast and crew COP SENTENCED
coming from the Gallipolis,
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (UP!)
Jackson, Rio Grande, ·Vinton _ A veteran policeman conand Wellston areas as well as · victed of burglarizing stores
from the campus . The was sentenced to six years in
production will be presented prison and given a tongueJan. 31, Feb. 2 and 3rd.
lashing Thursday .
· Dr.· Davidson, ·who has 21
"That badge you wore is a
·years experience directin badge of honor and you insununer stock, is no stranger suited it," Supreme Court
to GaUipolls. This past summer Justice George Beisheim Jr.,
he w;u a·guest at "Gatewood" told former patrolman David
the summer home of Mrs. 0 . 0. · A. Birdsall, 45.
Mcf~tyre, widow of the famed
Birdsall was convicted last
New York,columnist who was a month on three counts of
native of Gallipolis.
second degree burglary for
Mrs. Mcintyre, contacted in thefts from stores. He was the
New York where she is first to be sentenced of 16
spending the winter, said she Newburgh policemen accused
has been good friends with Dr. of wrongdoing in 'the citY,.

4t 11:00 A.M.

''

ORDINARY ILLNESS
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst said Saturday the
Justice' Department struck
hard at organized' crime and
illegal drug traffic in 1972. He
predicted organized crime ·
would be reduced ·to ·an ordinary irritant In our society by
end of this ·

TU llrottr CD.
QUIIIIiq Ri&amp;llll AISetved ,

The Matchmaker at Rio

SATURDAY
10 P.M. • 2 A.M.

,j

'

tiJJfiJIU 1113-·

·cast o£,16 needed for ·

MEIGS

•

PEACE A BORJ'!?
MOSCOW, Idaho (UP!) Peace is a bore in international
politics -if games players are
any indication.
University of Idaho officials
reported Friday on the playing '
of a new internati6nal politics
game, called Atlas, which was
developed at the school.
Players used pollllcal moves,
military power and economic
pressures to gain political
dominance. A secondary goal
is achievement of international '
_peace. But officials discovered
that the players, mostly
students, found the game
boring once peace was
achieved because of the lack of
danger and excitement caused
by wars and military
takeovers.

SHOP llROGIR
THIS Wl£11 FOil ·. • •

•.

•

"

res!&amp;nation so Nixon could decide whether to keep him during his
term of office.
BaU's headquarters in S&lt;lltimore received Nixon's letter
accepting the resignation on Friday,just about the time Ball was
ll'rivlng in San Francisco to make a speech.

CONTINUES HEX
NEW YORK (UPI) -'- Hugh
Harris, Rick Martin, Gerry
Meehan and Rene Robert .all
scored in the third .period
Saturday afternoon as the
Buifalo SabreS contin~ed their
hei over the Rangers by
bj!ating New · York for the
' fourth straight lime this
season, 4-1.

TWO SHARE LEAD
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Sam Snead, a smooth swinger
despite ~is 60 years, and David
Graham, a
26-year.old
Austrillian golf pro, shared a
. 01)0-6\roke lead Saturday in the
third ro1111d of 72-hold $135,000
Glen Campbell Los Angeles

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is chalnpion ·;~
'

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•

loop·· opener 33-30 ·in

thriller

COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPll - Sophomore ~at_TIPY
Russell scored 23 points Saturday to lead a M1ch1gan , MOBILE, Ala . (UP!) - BQwI College All-Star football
comeback that gave the Wolverines a 68·62 Big Ten, Chuck Foreman of Miami game.
(Fla.) ran for 167 yards, in- .. Foreman's touchdown run
victory over Ohio State.
cluding a 10-yard touchdown came on the first play ~f the
Michigan, now 3-3 on the Michigan traded . baskets
year and 1-0 in the Big Ten,
grabbed the lead at 4-2 on a
basket by. Russell and led until
6:28 remaining !n the game
when a jump shot by Ohio
State's Alan Hornyak tied it
52 _52 .
The Buckeyes then IIJok their
only lead of the game 54-52 on a
basket by Sophomore Btll

jaunt, and Barry Smith of
Florida State caught two
rouchdown passes Saturday to
lead the South IIJ a 33-JO victory
over the North in the Senior

before Russell hit two .free
throws and a lay up to give the
Wolverines a six point lead
with two minutes to go. ·
Hornyak, the only Ohio State
player in double figures with 28 ·
points, kept the Buckeyes in ~ ·
the contest with his outside
.
shooting.
The Wolverines were outshot

t
t
t
a e.r.no 0_ s a.y

Andreas.
.ussell,however,put
fromthefield29-to-24buthi;o~
M
ichigan Rback
in front with 20
of 31free throw attempts o
two baskets.
. .,. of 8 for .the Buckeyes.
Hornyak and '·E J. Kupec of
For Michigan, which led 3221 at halftime, Ernie Johnson
scored 16 points to back up
Russell, and Henry Wilmore
added 14.
Ohio State, performing
before a capacity crQwd of
13,489 is now 5-5,and I).I in the
Big Ten.
MICHIGAN (68) - Brady 13-5; Russell 8·1·23 ; J. Johnson

South
slops
•
towm

HONOLULU (UP!) - The
South, capitalizing on North
miscues, scored a 17-3 vicrory
Saturday in the 27lh annual
Hula Bowl football game.
A steady rain which started
two hours before the game
began ended at halftime but
not in titne to prevent the field
from becoming a mud bath and
causing numerous fumbles by
both sides.
All of the South's scores
came as a result of North
miscues. After Wooster's Bob
Macorittikickeda22-yardfield
goal to give the North a 3-0
lead, John Stearns, defensive
back from Colorado, fell on a
North fumble on the 24. Three
plays gained only a yard but
place kicker Mark Williams of
Rice set a Hula Bowl record
with a 4().yard field goal to tie
the score.
ji;lis placement broke the 31·
yurii record beld·by'Bob Griese '
of Purd~e and set in 1967..
Late m the second . per1od,
Bob Crum ,. a defensive end
from Arizona, fell on an errant
pitchout by North quarterback
John Hufnagel of Penn State on
the North 17 After Greg Pruitt,
·
.
named th~ game's outstandmg
player picked up 14 yards,
•
Rose Bowl record setter Sam
Cunningham of Southern Cal
drove over from the three.
Williams' placement gave the
South a 11).3 lead at halftime
and it never trailed again .
.
The only other score came m
the final period when Stanford
1
d
linebacker
Jim Mer defensive
o, name
the
outstanding
player, intercepted a Hufnage 1
pass on the eight and went into
the end zone unmolested.

Dolphins
roll over
Cajun five
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(U P!) ·
.
Unranked
Ja cksonville hit a blistering 63
per cent from the floor for a 6736 halftime edge and coasted to
a 120-78 win over eighth-ranked
SoutHwestern Loui siana
Saturday afternoon.
Sophomore Henry Williams
led the Dolphins with 29 points,
21 in the torrid first half, as he
hit an · assortment of long .
jumpers and crowd-pleasing
drives . .
Forward Abe Steward added
21 points for Jacksonville while
Leon I..enbow had 18 and Butch
Taylor arid Rick Coleman had
17 each.
Guard Dwight Lamar scored
31 points for Southwestern
Louisiana as the ·Ragin' Cajuns
suffered their first loss in eight
ga mes. Center Roy Ebron
added 17.
· Jacksonville, now 10-2,
ripp'ed off 11 'straight points for
an 1S-;; lead after six minutes.
The Dolphins turned the game
into a rout by outscoring the
Cajuns 2U over the last four
and one-half minutes of the
first half.
The Dolph iris, who led by as .
many as 42.points in the second
half, hit tlie 100 mark with
nearly eight minutes left and
reserved mopped up.

1- 0-2;

Wilmore 5-4-14;

John so n 7-2-16 ;

E.

Buss 0-0-0;

Kupec 1-2-4; Lockard 1-2·4:
Tolals 24-20·68.
OHIO STATE !621 - Hornyak, 13·2·28; Repella 0-1-1;
Jackson 3-1-7; Wenner 2-0-4;

Andreas 3-0-6; Wille 3-0-6;
Gerhard 3-0-6; Wolle 2-0-4;
Totals 29-4-62.
Halftime: Michigan 32 Ohio
Stale 21.
Fouled out: Brady, Jackson,

Andreas, Witte.

Total louis: Michigan 14.
Ohio Stale 14.
A - 13.489.

Cavs drop

_

a·t' Re'nn. State

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP!)- Penn State Coach Joe
Paterno lent further credence
IIJ his "football shoul~ be fun "
philosophy Saturday when he
turned down a reported $1
million offer to coach the New
E'ngland Patriots of the
American Fooiball Con-

EAST LANSING ; Mich .
(UP! ) - Guard Mike Robinson
scored 22 points and forward
Bill Kilgore added 21 Saturday
to lead Michigan Sl;lte to a 90-

I

UP!)

_

•
Lenny Wilkens, who was held
lo one point in the first quarter,
'poured in 36 points Saturday
afternoon to spark the
CHARLOTTESVILLE , Va.
Cleveland Cavaliers to a IOB-93 (UP!) - North Carolina State,
Nat i 0 n a 1 Basket b a II led by .ti~y . Monte Towe, held
Association victory over the off a V1rgm1a rally m the !mal
Lo An i I,aM
. minutes Saturday IIJ defeat tl!e
1
·
c~veJ,' ~ho :aij:Oe into 1 ·) aifaliers. 611-iil ' in ·t.he Wolfgame with an II-29 record, tied pack's f1rst Atlantic . Coast
the . game,. at 23_23 with 43 Conference game.
seconds left in the first quarter.
The 5-foot-7 Towe , the
Th e score was tied fo ur tt'mes .smallest player m the
. ACC,
.
in the second quarter before a scored 17 points, mcludmg
22-foote b Wilkens and an three key free throws after
. ht f rt Yb R' k R be
Virginia had pulled within two
e1g -ooer y 1c o rson
. (s f h f'fth
k d
put the CAVS ahead to stay.
pam o t e I -ran e
Wh 'l W'lk
h"tt '
Wolfpack with about 1:30 to go.
1 e 1 ens was 1 mg on
kh 'll
v· ..
Barry Par I . o1 Jr~IDJa
14 of 23 from the field and
led all scorers wtth 26 pomts.
eight of II from the free throw
The Pack's usual scoring
line Roberson picked off 13 of
d
th e CAVS 55 rebounds and leaders, sophomore Davi
Thompson and 7-foot-4 center
chipped in with 19 points.
Tom Burleson, were checked in
The Cleveland defense held the fl'rst half by an aggress 1've
LA to only 18 points in the Cavalier defense. Thompson
second and third quarters and fl' nished the game with 14
the CAVS took a 78-59lead into pol'nts, whl'le Burleson had 11.
theJim
final 12McMillian
minutes. ,
It was the first ACC loss for
Gail
Goodrich and Jerry West Virginia, which is now 2~1 in
carried the Lakers' offense conference play and 6-3
with 27, 26 and 25 points while overall. N. C. State'has won
Wilt Chamberlain grabbed· 15 nine games without a defeat.
defeat.
·
rebounds.

·; 'e

j;;

•

Miami slips by
OXFORD, Ohio . (UP!)
Miami University, paced by
Phil Lumpkin who scored 26 of
his 27 points from the field for a
new Miami home record, led
all the way Saturday to·a 67-82
Mid-American · Conference
basketball victory over
Bowling Green . .
Cornelius Cash led Bowling
Green with 23 points and got
game rebound honors with 18.
Rich Hampron led M~i in
rebounds with 12.
Miami is now 2-0 in the loop
and 8-2 overall while BG is 1-1
in the MAC and 3-5 overall.

Rio ends slump,
trip

Kee~e

NORFOLK, Va. - After victory in 10 starts. The win
trailing the first 15 minutes of snapped Rio's four-game
play, Coach Art Lanham's Ri~ losing streak in regular season
Grande College Redmen came play.
alive to take a 41-37 halftime
Rio placed four men in
lead over Keene State College double figures , led by Capt.
of N~w Hampshire, then weni Ron Lambert's 24 points.
on to capture the Round Robin Jackson's Mike Rouse pumped
Holiday Tournament here in 20 and Dave Fausnaugh
Friday night.
added 18. Newcomer Dave
Final score was 94ll5 as the Poling ,
former
StarrRedmen chalked up their third Washington ~ce two years ago,

State

pumped in 11.
Jake DeCausey's 28 markers
paced the Owls scoring. Dale
Roy added 13 and Jinn McCrackew had 10.
. Rio picked off 39 rebounds.
The Redmen shot 52 pet from
. the field. At the foul circles,
Rio hit 24 of 27 for 92 pet.
· Keene State shot 45 pet. from
the field, but was 7 of 21 from
the foul circles for a cold 33 pet.
Keene State picked . off 47
rebounds.
Rio will be idle until Jan. 12.
The Redmen play Walsh
College in Canton on that date,
and on Jan. 13, Rio opens play
in the Mid.()hio Conference In
Canton with a contest against
the second half was 12 points
the Malone Pioneers.
and the closest Illinois could
Box score of Friday's viccaine was 65-59 midway tory :
•
through the period.
RIO GRANOE (941 Garrett scored 20 points in Barlram, 3-0·6; Fausnaugh, 7the first half and had 10 in the 4-1 8; Hart. 1·2·4 : Rouse, 7-6-20;
second before fouling out with Bolllng 0r, 1-1-3·; Lambert, 10-424 ; Poling, 5·7-17; Thompson,
·seven minutes to play. Frank 1·0·2. TOTALS ll-24.94.
·
KEENE STATE !~I 1\endrick added 25.
DeCausey. 13·2·28 ; Hi&lt;ks. 3·2·
Jeff Dawson led tlie lllini 8;
Symonette, 4-0·8; Dunbar, 1with ' 26 .Poinls, Nick 2-.4; Pearson,4-0-8; Roy , 6-l-13;
Wealherspoon added 24 and Drew. 3·0·6; McCrackew. 5·0·
10. TOTALS 39-7-85.
Otho .Tucker 22. Scoreal hall - Rio41 , Keene
37.

MERCERVILLE - Coach Patll Dillon's Hannan
Tra.ce Wildcats rallied from an 11 point deficit early
in the second quarter here Friday to defeat the
Eastern Eagles, 58-52 in a key Southern V;~lley
Athletic Conference game before 'a capacity crowd.
The win moved the Wildcats into undisputed
first place in the loop standings.
Hannan Trace, picked to win the 1972-73 cage
crown, is 5-l while the Eagles of Coach Bill Phillips
dropped to secpnd place with a 4·1 slate. Eastern had
previously beaten the Gallians, 55·53, at Eastern.
Hannan Trace has won nine of its 10 outings.
The Wildcats gained control
midway through the final
period. Mark Swain, 5-10
sophomore guard, paced
Hannan ·Trace during its 18
point fourth period. Swain
scored eight points on the fast
break while John Lusher, 6-0
junior fot&lt;.vard, added five
points.
Mike Boring, f&gt;-9 senior, led
the Eagles with eight poirits.
With LUsher leading the way,
Hannan Trace held a
precarious 40-39lead going into
the final period.
Eastern jumped into a 15-8
lead in the opening period
behind the hot shooting of Alan
Duvall, fl.! senior forward.
Duvall hitting consistently
from the outside, had nine
points in the first quarter.
Rodney Dunfee, 6-9 senior
guard, working the Hannan
Trace fast break with perfection, led the big comeback
for the Wildcats. He scored
seven points in the second
periOd while Swain added four .
Duvall wa ~ the game's
leading point-ma.ker with 18
·points on eight baskets and two
free throws.
,Bodng .finished with 14
points.
Dunfee and Swain had 14
each for the Wildcats· while
Lusher added 13. Big Mike
Caldwell, IHl senior, had nine
points .
Hannan Trace converted 23

lltl

SOUTHEASTERN'
E UIPMENT CO., INC.

LIST NARROWED
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Philadelphia Eagles' owner
Leonard Tose, who is looking
for a new coach and-or general
manager after firing Coach Ed
Khayat and GM Pete Retzlaff
last month, said Friday that he
has narrowed the list of ca ndidateS to six,-but refuses to
name those under consideration.
"The man will be named
after the Super Bowl and ·
before the (Jan. 31).31) draft,"
Tose said. "I've narrowed the
list down to, let's say, six
people I want to talk to. Five
are from the pro ranks and one
from college." One of those
professionals speculated about
strongly is Mike McCormack,
offensive · line coach of the
Washington Redskins; the college prospect is rumored to be
retired Nebraska head Coach
Bob Devaney.

'

Route 7, Just Above New Sliver Memorial Bridge

Phone 446-3910

James R. _Allen, Manager .

• SALES • RENTAL • SERVICE
WABCO

CASE

'

17 21

of 55 field attempts for 52 pet.

while Eastern hit 21 of 50 for 43
pet. The Eagles hit 10 of 15
ch•rity tosses while HT sank 12
uf 22. Hannan Trace collected.
40 rebounds with Caldweli
grabbing 16.
Eastern's reserves with a big
20 point, fourth period defeated
Hannan Trace's reserves, 42·
31, Steve Milhoane led the
winners with 10 points. Bill
Hall scored 10 for the losers.
Eastern played Southweute rn Saturday night.
Hannan Tr.ace travels to Kyger
Creek Friday night.
EASTERN (521 - Sheels, Q.
0-0; Dill, 2-4-8; Boring, 7-0·14;
Spencer, 1-3-5; Duvall, 8-2.18:
Cross. 3-1·7. Totals 21 -10-52.
HANNAN TRACE (58) Ca ldwell, 4·1·9; Wells, 4·0·8;
Lusher, 4-5- 13; Dunfee, 5-4-14;

Swain, 6·2·14. Tolals 23-12-l&amp;.
By Quarlers :
Easlern
15 10 14 13- 52
H. Trace
8 16 16 18- 58

Refs will
discuss
new rules
ROCK SPRINGS - Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
wrestling referees and coaches
will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the Meigs High ScHool with
John Young, secretarytreasurer, conducting a
discussion of this year's
wrestling rules.
Coaches attending are · to
bring tennis shoes and clothing
ro work out on the mats. They
will work on mechanics and
procedures that will innprove
and help in officiating and
conducting a match. All
coaches and officials are invited.

Vikings nip
Southern bY
63-62 count

BUT WE 1RV TO .GIVE MORE FOR
. YOUR FOOD
.

.590
.447

2!12
S'h

29 .285 121/2
·

29 13
14
21 24
II 22

.690
.650 2
.467 10'1;
.4J6 10117

29

Pacific Division
w. I. Pel. a.b.
Los Angeles 30 a .789

Golden St.
Phoenix
Seattle ·
Portland

.

.

26
20
13
11

12
21
31
31

.684 · 4
.488 tl'h
.295 20
·&lt;~211

Friday' s Results

New York 129 Buffalo 106
Boston 126 Atlanta 108
KC-Omaha 103 Detroit 100
P~oenix 126 Chicago 115
Golden St. 128 'Seattle 96
Portland 135 Phil a 102
(Only games scheduled)

·RACINE - Pliil Robinson, 5- the field for 40 per cent and
ABA Standings
10 senior guard and a AII-SVAC dropped in 10 of 15 free throws. By United Press lnternalional
East
pick last year, hit a game- Coach Wayne White's Vikings
w. I. pel. g.b.
winning 15-foot jump shot with connected on 28 of 58 froin the Carolina
29 14 .674
Kentucky
26 14 .650 1'/ 2
42 seconds lett to give the field for a warm 48 per cent and Virgini
a
23 22 .511 7
Symmes Valley Vikings a made seven of 12 charity Memphis
15 26 .366 13
15 27 .357 13'12
surprisingly tough 63-82 win tosses. The Tornadoes con- New York
West
over Southern here Friday trolled the boards with 50
w. I. pet. g.b.
night in a Southern Valley rebounds compared to only 31 Utah
26 16 .619
22 18 .550 3
Athl•tic Conference game . .
for Symmes Valley. On several Denver
Indiana
22 18 .550 3
Coach Bob Ord's Tornadoes occasions Southern got two or Dallas
16 24 .400 9
led 53-44 after three quarters of more shots at the bucket.
~an Uiego
16 31 .340 12'12
Friday
s
Results
play, but the slick shooting
In tbe preliminary game,
New York 113 San Diego 108
Vikings kept narrowing the gap Coach Dwain Wolfe's little Carolina 135 Virginia 118
Kentucky 115 Utah 106
until they took the lead on Tornadoes won their fifth game
Dallas
110 Memphis 108
Robinson's shot
against two losses with a 32-28 (Only games scheduled)
The win gave the Vikings a 3- win over the little Vikings .
1SVAC record and a 3-3 overall Southern is 4-2 in league play
slate. Southern dropped to 2-5 . while Symmes Valley Is 1-3.
overall and 2-4 in league play. Mitch Nease and Dan Brown
Robinson led the Vikings in led the Southern Reserves with
scoring with 18 points. Jene seven each and Greg Dunning
Myers backed that up with 16 and Tim Hill had six apiece. P.
points and 13 rebounds while Jones topped Symmes Valley
Jamie Lafon added 17 with II.
markers.
Synunes Valley hosted the
Junior Norman Curfman led Kyger Creek Bobc~ls last night
the upset-minded Tornadoes and will host Coach Lewis D. By United Pri!~ tnternational
1
with 22 points. Ron Hill, Pete Antoni's Chesapeake Panthers Brown 102 Cornell 79
Sayre, and Bobby Miller, who 'Saturday. Southern was at Yale 76 Columbia 64
Wesleyan 72 Colby 70
played his first game since a Waterford last night and will Sou.
Conn. 73 SI.Mry's-N.S. 59
shoulder dislocation, each had play at home against Hannan, NY Tech 68 New Paltz 64
Princeton 71 Harvard 70
II points. Hill also had a gameW. Va. Fri d ay.
Penn 65 Dartmouth 65
high 16 reb~unds .
SOUTHERN (62) - I hie 0·2· Md.- Balt Co. 80 Bowie SL 63
Southern held a 14-13 lead 2; Curfman 9-4-22; Hill 5·1-11 ; Eckard 95 Jhn's Hpkns 81
alter one period. SHS main- Miller 5-1·11 ; Nease 2-1-5: Lebanon Vat. 79 Maryvl 66
Say re 5-1-11. Totals 26-10-62. Pace 67 .Bates 57
tained that advantage, 33-32 at
SYMMES VALLEY (63) Midwest
'the half After SHS pulled away Jene Myers 1·2·16; Dunfee 2·2· Luther 69 Simpson sa
'
6; Lafon 8-1-17, Rob1nson 9-0- Northwstrn 101 Ind.· East 86
to its biggest lead of the night,_. ) 8; Com ·o.q ;.,J~ye 1.\,yftr!O+ . Wartburg 79 Dubuque 43 · ·
·5:J.i:44 Symmes Valley caught· 4T'We!&gt;b 0-1-1. Total&lt; 28-7-63. Iowa Ws leyn 84111 . Coli. 69
t · h' to
By Quarters:
Norlh Park 74 Wheaton 67
f. ' d. h
Ire an t e res IS IS ry.
Symmes Valley 13 19 12 19-63 Wm . Penn 76 Buena Vista 59
Southern made 26 of 60 from Soulhern
14 19 20 9- 62 St.Xavier 78 111.-Chi Crcle 60
South
Vatdosla 101 W. Liberty 78
Hntngln 101 Millign 86
Xavier-N.O. 94 La . CoiL 43
Hmpdn -Sydny 96 St. Paul's 69
North Park 74 Wheaton 67

STORE . HOURS

QAILY 9 TO 9-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS
U.S.Q~A.

Famil

INSPECTED

Chicken Parts
Includes: 3 Breast Quarter&lt; with
backs, 3 Leg Quarters with backs,
2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

1

Frichly's
college
results

Waverly plays poorly,
still wins tilt by 21

ATHENS _ '!'he pressure of
a crucial SEOAL contest took
il!: toll of the Waverly Tigers
and Athens Bulldogs Friday
night as both teams played
probably their worst games of
the season before Waverly
emerged with a 64-43 victory.
Both teams had miserable
shootin g as the Bulldogs
connected on just 19 of 60 shots
for 31 pet while the Tigers hit
26 of 86 for a 3ll pet. average.
However the Tigers remain
undefeated because they
dominated the boards by
OUT OF ACI'ION
pulling down 45 rebounds while
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Athens managed just 34 grabs.
New York Raiders announced
Bill Maloy's 25 points topped
Friday that Bobby Sheehan, the Tiger attack with Dan
the Raiders' second highest ~lyers adding 14 and Ed
goal scorer with 25 aod second- Thompson 10. Maloy also
high point man at 54, strained hauled down 12 rebounds to
ligaments in his left knee in the lead his team in that departsecond period of Thursday ment.
night's 9-4 defeat of Ottawa and
Mark Mace continued his hot
will not see action iq satur- shooting for Athens by canning
day's
World
Hockey' 22 points . and was. the only
Association All-Star Game. in Bulldog .to finish in double
Quebec City.
figures.
.
The con test was close in the

~

•••

...
•.
'~

'

.~

•

early gomg as Waverly led Jl-8
after one period, and went
on top 29-17 at halftime.
In the third period the Tig~r
board strength enabled them to
stretch the lead to 41-19 and it
was no contest as they rolled up
their 29th consecutive SEOAL
victory and remain tied with
Gallipolis lor the league lead.
Athens remained in a
deadlock with Logan for third
place with a 3-2 league mark.
TueSday night the Tigers
journey to Ironton while
Athens invadllS Logan in a
pair of important league
contests.
The box score :

we ruer · the right to limit quantities on 111 item' in this ad . Prices effective thru ,Sat, J•n. n, lf73. Nont 50idto dealers .

ARMOUR* STAR-SELECTED PORK
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FRESH

Pork Roasts

Picnic Style ·-whole 4 to 8-lb. bg.

Luther 69 Simpson 58

Southwest
Tex. Wsleyn 70 Wylnd Bap. 61
Mdwstrn 84 Lbbck Chris. 68
Tex.Sou. 104 Dallas Bap. 80
Cent. Ok . St. 75 S.E. Okla . 61
Houston 130 W. Tex. Sl . 84
West
UCLA 64 Oregon 38
San Jse Sl. 68 Lng Bch St. 65
Wyoming 76 Utah 68
Ariz. St. 67 New Mex . 62
Gnzaga .73 Boise Sl. 58
Colo. St. 93 BYU 86, ol
Presidential Classic
At Washington, D. C.
(First Round)
Geo. Wash. 88 Citadel 80
American 80 Rice 61

Washinglon &amp; Lee lnvitalional
At Lexinglon, Va . ·
(Firs I Round I
Madison 87 Va. Wesleyan 56
Martinsburg Invitational
At Martinsburg, West Va.
(First Round)
Glenvl 83 Frostb!l 66
Shepard 78 Mt. Sf. Mry's 69

WAVERLY (641 - Maloy W:
5·25; Oyer J. 1-7 ; Pleller 1-0-2;
Thompson 5-0-10; Shoemaker
2-2·6; Salyers 5-4-14. TOTALS
26-12-64.
ATHENS (43) - Mace 9-4-22; LALONDE SUSPENDED
Skinner 1-0-2; EsseK 2-0-4;
PITTSBURGH (UPI)
Ch~ko 4-1-9; Handley 1-0-2;
Willtams 2-0·4. TOTALS 19-l- Vancouver Canucks' Coach Vic
43.
Stasiuk announced Friday that
Score by quarters:
center Bobby Lalonde has been
Waverly
II 18 19
Alhens
8 9 8
suspended "indefinitely'' for .
Reserve score: Waverly
failing
to report to a practice
Alhens 29.
session ordered by Stasillk
after the Canucks' 11-3 loss to
the last-place California
Golden Seals Wednesday night
Stasiuk, who said that La·
lonoe had shown "open defiance to a drill," also called lor
practice sessions for Friday
night and Saturday before
Saturday's game with the
Pittsburgh Penguins,.
·

Sound Ripe

BANANAS

lb.

·STATE FARE

SLICED

HITE BREAD
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

PAL
IMITATION

PEANUT BUTTER
2·1b. 8-oz. Jar

YOSEMITE
BARTLETT

PEAR HALVES.
1-lb. Cans

.

ALL MOBILE HOMES ON DISPLAY ARE PRICED
FOR JANUARY SALE. SIX ALL ELE.CTRIC HOMES
TO CHOOSE FROM.
Sizes

!

Houston

11

15

20 .524

Western Conference

••
•
••

I

23
22

Cleveland

'

•DOZERS

eSNOW ·PLOWS
•SPREADERS ·

Baltimore

'•

JAEGER
•AIR COMPRESSORS
•WATER PUMPS
• CONCRETE MIXERS
•AIR TOOLS

Allanla

Milwaukee
Chicago
K C-Om aha
Detroit ·

.

GLEDHILL

Centra I Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

,•

•BACKHOES'
•WHEEL and
CRAWLER LOADERS

Garrett nets 30
in Purdue victory
WEST LAFAYETTE, lud.
(UP!) - John Garrett hit 30
points before fouling out to lead
Purdue to a 91-80 victory over
Illinois Saturday in their Big
Ten Basketball opener.
The Boilermakers broke
away from a IHl tie and led the
rest of lhe way. Their biggest
spread was 16 points at 47-31
before the lllihi got six straight
poi.nt.S and trailed at the half,
47-37.
;Purdue's biggest spread in

,. Hannan Trace in
first ·all alone

'

• MOTOR' GRADERS
eSCRAPERS.

w. I. pet. g.b.
Bcyslon
31 7 .816
· New York
33 · 10 ' .767 117
., Bulfal.o
11 28 .282 20•12
Phtladelphia 3 37 .075 29'/'

-. Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

NOW OPEN ·FOR BUSIN.ESS

Gallipolis, Ohio

..

Atlantic OiV.ision '

-

· ili
'' '
1111 1111

Falcons, 67-62

~

' ·~-.~~BA~~!l&lt;!i!lgs . .
By Untied Pressl~ternattonal
Eastern·Conierence

.

.

Bucks revise
d hedul
gn
e

co.a.c~h~.•llllll!l••••••s•lip~p•ed•to-sec-on•d•p•la•c•e•.--••••••••••••··~·- • ·••

floor and
did not
until. .. •
.seven
minutes
into score
,the game
MSU built up a 13·point lead
several times in the first half
and held a nine-point ad- .
vantage, 39-30, at halftime .

catS

'

Divers find .
more parts
of airplane

Spartans clip
NW five, 90-77

LA qum
• l el NCState
108 to 93 pz•cks up
1
•
nznth Wln
CLEVELAND

.

· Pro smndings

Clarke's third victory on the'
SAN JOSE, Calit (UP!) Professional
· Bow.Jing
Allie Clarke of 1\Jtron, Ohio
picked up two clutch strikes in Association rour was wqrth
,4. ·',(
the lOth franne Saturday to post $7500
' .
Clarke, who was seeded ,fifth
a 203-201 ·comeback victory
and
last in the nationally
over Don Johnson, also of .
Akron, and win the J65,000 San tele..ised finals, ripped through
Jose Open Bowling To.ur- three straight opponents on his
way to the championship
nament.
\.
.match against Johnson., secorid
all-tinne leadU.g title wjnner,
who led the event through the
first three days.
The final game saw Johl'"on,
trying for his 21st crown, take
an eight pin lead after four
frames. Clark, however, took
over the lead·iii the n.inth frame
and Johnson , last year's
.
SAN JUAN, I''.!L (UPI)- U. leading money winner with
S. Navy divers . Saturday over $56,000, finished with a
located the tail and a section of 201.
Clarke, who had 176 in the
fuselage of the DC7 in which
Pittsburgh Pirates base bah ninth box, stepped to the line
star Roberto Clemente and needing a pair of strikes for the
four others !'ere .killed New victory and he came through.
On his way to the cham·
Year's E;ve.
A spokesman said the divers pionship tilt, Clarke downed
found the tail and fuselage still Johnny Petraglia of Brooklyn,
intact on the bottom of the sea N. Y., 238-223, defending
at a depth of 120 feet, some 400 champion' Gus Lampo of Enyards from the spot where a dicott, N.Y., 2311-225, and Don
section of the cabin was found Glover of South Bend, Ind:, 279236, a gaihe·in which'Ciarke put
Friday.
together
his first nine strikes.
The spokesman said,
however, that there was no
sign of the bodies of. the four
persons still missing, including
Clemente.
Wednesday the searchers
•
found the body of the pilot,
SC
Jerry Hill, floating on the
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Four
surface.
·
Ohio State foothall game playing sites in 1973 have been "
East hockey stars
switched, it was announced
Saturday .
capture 6·2 win
The Bucks said the revised
·• schedule, approved by the Big
QUEBEC · CITY (UP!)
Ten will include:
John McKenzie, Larry Pleau
_Oct 20-At Indiana instead
lind Jim Dorey each seared of here.
goals in the second period
- Oct. 27-Northwestern here
Saturday afternoon to lead the instead of at Northwestern .
East to a 6-2 victory over the
- Nov. 3-At fllinois instead
Wesfin the first World Hockey of here.
Association All-Star game,
_ Nov. !().Michigan State
played at the Quebec Coliseum. here instead of at Michigan
Sub-zero temperatures and State.
televising of the game by five
The Big Ten said some of the
local channels contributed to schools were unhappy with
the poor attendance at the their schedules but did not s;iy
game.
which ones.
I

.

Brigham Young, the natio.n's tied the score with 4:32 left in
leading collegiate rusher last the first period when he picked
fall, gained 159 yards running off a North pass and raced 21
lor the North, including a yards to the South's first muchsecond period and gave the Senior Bowl record ?&gt;-yard down\
The North cut the ga911J 14-10
South a lead it was not to give dash off tackle that put the
early
in the second period on
up the remainder of the af- North ahead 7-0 with only 5:27
the first of three field goals by
gone in the first period.
ternoon.
Danny Sanspree of Auburn Nick ~ke-Mayer of Te":lple.
Pete Van Valkenburg of
The South got that back w1th a
field goal by Scott Marcus of
Louisville, to gg ahead 17-10, but
Mike-Mayer added a 41-yard
. field goal just as tbe half ended
ro enable the North tO trail only
17-13 at intermission.
.
The South broke open the
contest in the first five minutes
of the second half when Smith
caught his two touchdown
ference.
He said he told Pats' passes, the first a ?7-yarder
"Penn State is too good a presideht Billy Sullivan on from All-America quarterback
place to leave," Paterno, 46, ··Friday morning that .he had Bert Jones of LSU, and the
told newsmen in refuting a decided to remain in the second a 33-yarder from his
published report that he had college ranks.
teammate at Florida State,
signed a five-year contract as "He has been a very won- Gary Huff.
head coach and general derful and generous man,"
That gave the South a 31).13
manager of the downtrodden Paterno said of Sullivan. "The · lead but the North, taking
Patriots.
Pats tried to present an op- advantage of a Senior Bowl
portunity IIJ me which I felt rule that enables a team
was as good as anyone was trailing by nine or more points
able to get out of pro football. to receive the kickoff regardAnd Ifeltl could enjoy working less of ·who scored, came
with Mr. Sullivan and the storming back.
Pats."
Mike-Mayer's third field goal
However, Penn ~tate af. with5 :09leftinthethirdperiod
forded him an opportunity "To was offset by a Marcus field
work in an ainnosphere on goal early in the final quarter.
campus where the approach by But two late touchdown passes
77 victory over Northwestern the administration towards by Ron Jaworski of Youngsin their Big Ten League . athle'tics was such that I could town State cut the final margin
op~ner.
be a little more than just a to just three points.
Undsay Hariston added 14 football coach."
points for the Spartans, who
The Patriots had pursued
won their sev~nth straight Paterno even J!lOre avidly than
IN· FIRST PLACE
game and advanced to 8-2 for the Pittsburgh Steelers did five
CHICAGO (UP!) - John /
the season. Northwestern's years ago, when they were Ajamian, 22, Detroit, has taken
Mike Sililey took game scoring reported to have offered him a over first place in the 63rd
honors wilh 25 as the Wildcats $70,000 per-year, long-term Petersen Bowling Classic,
dropped to 1-8.
contract to leave the rolling officials sa~d Saturday.
The Spartans went 3:10 into fa rmland' of Central ~ennAjamian, a graduate of
the game before forward Allen sylvania.
Wayne State University in
Smilh put them on the board
"The challenge is still here at Detroit, had scores of 236, 191,
with a field shot Northwestern Penn State," said Paterno; 188, 202, 222, 186, 215, 193 for .0
was plagued by even colder whose teams have finished in rota! 1,633.
shooting. The Wildcats missed the top 10 nationally three of
He replaced Roger Holt·
their first 11 attempts from the his seven seasons as head zkamp of St. Paul, Minn., w_ho

.

.'

.,.

'

. 19- The Sunday Tinnes. Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 7, 1973

IH - 1 ne Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday , Jan. 7, 1?73

~

.

12

X

12

x60

Two ·

52

12 X 68
14 X 60

&amp;' .
Three

PAUL &amp; MADGE NORTH UP

•&gt;&lt;o .. r
JU / I I b IUft

...-ll.,l"l.,.l....
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Bedroom ·"''lliqrw
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Models,

M1N1 PLtAslllr.f. wru

~~·~a'"'" 1uu

Appalachian Power
Joins· In Bringing You
This Message.
.

THREE ENTER GAMES
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Three
of the top four finishers in the
Olympic hig h hurdles- Rod
Milburn, :rom Hlll and Willie
Davenport- have entered the
66th annual Millrose Games,
'scheduled for Madison Square
' on Jan. 26.
Garden
Milburn, the gold niedal
wiMer; ho1ds the world record
of 13.0 in the 120-yard h(gh
hurdles and ·is the defending
champion in the meet. Daven'port, who finished fourth at
Munich, is a meet record
holder and has won the
Millrose event four times. Hill
ivas the Iirenze medal winner
iri the Olympics,
,

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loop·· opener 33-30 ·in

thriller

COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPll - Sophomore ~at_TIPY
Russell scored 23 points Saturday to lead a M1ch1gan , MOBILE, Ala . (UP!) - BQwI College All-Star football
comeback that gave the Wolverines a 68·62 Big Ten, Chuck Foreman of Miami game.
(Fla.) ran for 167 yards, in- .. Foreman's touchdown run
victory over Ohio State.
cluding a 10-yard touchdown came on the first play ~f the
Michigan, now 3-3 on the Michigan traded . baskets
year and 1-0 in the Big Ten,
grabbed the lead at 4-2 on a
basket by. Russell and led until
6:28 remaining !n the game
when a jump shot by Ohio
State's Alan Hornyak tied it
52 _52 .
The Buckeyes then IIJok their
only lead of the game 54-52 on a
basket by Sophomore Btll

jaunt, and Barry Smith of
Florida State caught two
rouchdown passes Saturday to
lead the South IIJ a 33-JO victory
over the North in the Senior

before Russell hit two .free
throws and a lay up to give the
Wolverines a six point lead
with two minutes to go. ·
Hornyak, the only Ohio State
player in double figures with 28 ·
points, kept the Buckeyes in ~ ·
the contest with his outside
.
shooting.
The Wolverines were outshot

t
t
t
a e.r.no 0_ s a.y

Andreas.
.ussell,however,put
fromthefield29-to-24buthi;o~
M
ichigan Rback
in front with 20
of 31free throw attempts o
two baskets.
. .,. of 8 for .the Buckeyes.
Hornyak and '·E J. Kupec of
For Michigan, which led 3221 at halftime, Ernie Johnson
scored 16 points to back up
Russell, and Henry Wilmore
added 14.
Ohio State, performing
before a capacity crQwd of
13,489 is now 5-5,and I).I in the
Big Ten.
MICHIGAN (68) - Brady 13-5; Russell 8·1·23 ; J. Johnson

South
slops
•
towm

HONOLULU (UP!) - The
South, capitalizing on North
miscues, scored a 17-3 vicrory
Saturday in the 27lh annual
Hula Bowl football game.
A steady rain which started
two hours before the game
began ended at halftime but
not in titne to prevent the field
from becoming a mud bath and
causing numerous fumbles by
both sides.
All of the South's scores
came as a result of North
miscues. After Wooster's Bob
Macorittikickeda22-yardfield
goal to give the North a 3-0
lead, John Stearns, defensive
back from Colorado, fell on a
North fumble on the 24. Three
plays gained only a yard but
place kicker Mark Williams of
Rice set a Hula Bowl record
with a 4().yard field goal to tie
the score.
ji;lis placement broke the 31·
yurii record beld·by'Bob Griese '
of Purd~e and set in 1967..
Late m the second . per1od,
Bob Crum ,. a defensive end
from Arizona, fell on an errant
pitchout by North quarterback
John Hufnagel of Penn State on
the North 17 After Greg Pruitt,
·
.
named th~ game's outstandmg
player picked up 14 yards,
•
Rose Bowl record setter Sam
Cunningham of Southern Cal
drove over from the three.
Williams' placement gave the
South a 11).3 lead at halftime
and it never trailed again .
.
The only other score came m
the final period when Stanford
1
d
linebacker
Jim Mer defensive
o, name
the
outstanding
player, intercepted a Hufnage 1
pass on the eight and went into
the end zone unmolested.

Dolphins
roll over
Cajun five
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(U P!) ·
.
Unranked
Ja cksonville hit a blistering 63
per cent from the floor for a 6736 halftime edge and coasted to
a 120-78 win over eighth-ranked
SoutHwestern Loui siana
Saturday afternoon.
Sophomore Henry Williams
led the Dolphins with 29 points,
21 in the torrid first half, as he
hit an · assortment of long .
jumpers and crowd-pleasing
drives . .
Forward Abe Steward added
21 points for Jacksonville while
Leon I..enbow had 18 and Butch
Taylor arid Rick Coleman had
17 each.
Guard Dwight Lamar scored
31 points for Southwestern
Louisiana as the ·Ragin' Cajuns
suffered their first loss in eight
ga mes. Center Roy Ebron
added 17.
· Jacksonville, now 10-2,
ripp'ed off 11 'straight points for
an 1S-;; lead after six minutes.
The Dolphins turned the game
into a rout by outscoring the
Cajuns 2U over the last four
and one-half minutes of the
first half.
The Dolph iris, who led by as .
many as 42.points in the second
half, hit tlie 100 mark with
nearly eight minutes left and
reserved mopped up.

1- 0-2;

Wilmore 5-4-14;

John so n 7-2-16 ;

E.

Buss 0-0-0;

Kupec 1-2-4; Lockard 1-2·4:
Tolals 24-20·68.
OHIO STATE !621 - Hornyak, 13·2·28; Repella 0-1-1;
Jackson 3-1-7; Wenner 2-0-4;

Andreas 3-0-6; Wille 3-0-6;
Gerhard 3-0-6; Wolle 2-0-4;
Totals 29-4-62.
Halftime: Michigan 32 Ohio
Stale 21.
Fouled out: Brady, Jackson,

Andreas, Witte.

Total louis: Michigan 14.
Ohio Stale 14.
A - 13.489.

Cavs drop

_

a·t' Re'nn. State

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP!)- Penn State Coach Joe
Paterno lent further credence
IIJ his "football shoul~ be fun "
philosophy Saturday when he
turned down a reported $1
million offer to coach the New
E'ngland Patriots of the
American Fooiball Con-

EAST LANSING ; Mich .
(UP! ) - Guard Mike Robinson
scored 22 points and forward
Bill Kilgore added 21 Saturday
to lead Michigan Sl;lte to a 90-

I

UP!)

_

•
Lenny Wilkens, who was held
lo one point in the first quarter,
'poured in 36 points Saturday
afternoon to spark the
CHARLOTTESVILLE , Va.
Cleveland Cavaliers to a IOB-93 (UP!) - North Carolina State,
Nat i 0 n a 1 Basket b a II led by .ti~y . Monte Towe, held
Association victory over the off a V1rgm1a rally m the !mal
Lo An i I,aM
. minutes Saturday IIJ defeat tl!e
1
·
c~veJ,' ~ho :aij:Oe into 1 ·) aifaliers. 611-iil ' in ·t.he Wolfgame with an II-29 record, tied pack's f1rst Atlantic . Coast
the . game,. at 23_23 with 43 Conference game.
seconds left in the first quarter.
The 5-foot-7 Towe , the
Th e score was tied fo ur tt'mes .smallest player m the
. ACC,
.
in the second quarter before a scored 17 points, mcludmg
22-foote b Wilkens and an three key free throws after
. ht f rt Yb R' k R be
Virginia had pulled within two
e1g -ooer y 1c o rson
. (s f h f'fth
k d
put the CAVS ahead to stay.
pam o t e I -ran e
Wh 'l W'lk
h"tt '
Wolfpack with about 1:30 to go.
1 e 1 ens was 1 mg on
kh 'll
v· ..
Barry Par I . o1 Jr~IDJa
14 of 23 from the field and
led all scorers wtth 26 pomts.
eight of II from the free throw
The Pack's usual scoring
line Roberson picked off 13 of
d
th e CAVS 55 rebounds and leaders, sophomore Davi
Thompson and 7-foot-4 center
chipped in with 19 points.
Tom Burleson, were checked in
The Cleveland defense held the fl'rst half by an aggress 1've
LA to only 18 points in the Cavalier defense. Thompson
second and third quarters and fl' nished the game with 14
the CAVS took a 78-59lead into pol'nts, whl'le Burleson had 11.
theJim
final 12McMillian
minutes. ,
It was the first ACC loss for
Gail
Goodrich and Jerry West Virginia, which is now 2~1 in
carried the Lakers' offense conference play and 6-3
with 27, 26 and 25 points while overall. N. C. State'has won
Wilt Chamberlain grabbed· 15 nine games without a defeat.
defeat.
·
rebounds.

·; 'e

j;;

•

Miami slips by
OXFORD, Ohio . (UP!)
Miami University, paced by
Phil Lumpkin who scored 26 of
his 27 points from the field for a
new Miami home record, led
all the way Saturday to·a 67-82
Mid-American · Conference
basketball victory over
Bowling Green . .
Cornelius Cash led Bowling
Green with 23 points and got
game rebound honors with 18.
Rich Hampron led M~i in
rebounds with 12.
Miami is now 2-0 in the loop
and 8-2 overall while BG is 1-1
in the MAC and 3-5 overall.

Rio ends slump,
trip

Kee~e

NORFOLK, Va. - After victory in 10 starts. The win
trailing the first 15 minutes of snapped Rio's four-game
play, Coach Art Lanham's Ri~ losing streak in regular season
Grande College Redmen came play.
alive to take a 41-37 halftime
Rio placed four men in
lead over Keene State College double figures , led by Capt.
of N~w Hampshire, then weni Ron Lambert's 24 points.
on to capture the Round Robin Jackson's Mike Rouse pumped
Holiday Tournament here in 20 and Dave Fausnaugh
Friday night.
added 18. Newcomer Dave
Final score was 94ll5 as the Poling ,
former
StarrRedmen chalked up their third Washington ~ce two years ago,

State

pumped in 11.
Jake DeCausey's 28 markers
paced the Owls scoring. Dale
Roy added 13 and Jinn McCrackew had 10.
. Rio picked off 39 rebounds.
The Redmen shot 52 pet from
. the field. At the foul circles,
Rio hit 24 of 27 for 92 pet.
· Keene State shot 45 pet. from
the field, but was 7 of 21 from
the foul circles for a cold 33 pet.
Keene State picked . off 47
rebounds.
Rio will be idle until Jan. 12.
The Redmen play Walsh
College in Canton on that date,
and on Jan. 13, Rio opens play
in the Mid.()hio Conference In
Canton with a contest against
the second half was 12 points
the Malone Pioneers.
and the closest Illinois could
Box score of Friday's viccaine was 65-59 midway tory :
•
through the period.
RIO GRANOE (941 Garrett scored 20 points in Barlram, 3-0·6; Fausnaugh, 7the first half and had 10 in the 4-1 8; Hart. 1·2·4 : Rouse, 7-6-20;
second before fouling out with Bolllng 0r, 1-1-3·; Lambert, 10-424 ; Poling, 5·7-17; Thompson,
·seven minutes to play. Frank 1·0·2. TOTALS ll-24.94.
·
KEENE STATE !~I 1\endrick added 25.
DeCausey. 13·2·28 ; Hi&lt;ks. 3·2·
Jeff Dawson led tlie lllini 8;
Symonette, 4-0·8; Dunbar, 1with ' 26 .Poinls, Nick 2-.4; Pearson,4-0-8; Roy , 6-l-13;
Wealherspoon added 24 and Drew. 3·0·6; McCrackew. 5·0·
10. TOTALS 39-7-85.
Otho .Tucker 22. Scoreal hall - Rio41 , Keene
37.

MERCERVILLE - Coach Patll Dillon's Hannan
Tra.ce Wildcats rallied from an 11 point deficit early
in the second quarter here Friday to defeat the
Eastern Eagles, 58-52 in a key Southern V;~lley
Athletic Conference game before 'a capacity crowd.
The win moved the Wildcats into undisputed
first place in the loop standings.
Hannan Trace, picked to win the 1972-73 cage
crown, is 5-l while the Eagles of Coach Bill Phillips
dropped to secpnd place with a 4·1 slate. Eastern had
previously beaten the Gallians, 55·53, at Eastern.
Hannan Trace has won nine of its 10 outings.
The Wildcats gained control
midway through the final
period. Mark Swain, 5-10
sophomore guard, paced
Hannan ·Trace during its 18
point fourth period. Swain
scored eight points on the fast
break while John Lusher, 6-0
junior fot&lt;.vard, added five
points.
Mike Boring, f&gt;-9 senior, led
the Eagles with eight poirits.
With LUsher leading the way,
Hannan Trace held a
precarious 40-39lead going into
the final period.
Eastern jumped into a 15-8
lead in the opening period
behind the hot shooting of Alan
Duvall, fl.! senior forward.
Duvall hitting consistently
from the outside, had nine
points in the first quarter.
Rodney Dunfee, 6-9 senior
guard, working the Hannan
Trace fast break with perfection, led the big comeback
for the Wildcats. He scored
seven points in the second
periOd while Swain added four .
Duvall wa ~ the game's
leading point-ma.ker with 18
·points on eight baskets and two
free throws.
,Bodng .finished with 14
points.
Dunfee and Swain had 14
each for the Wildcats· while
Lusher added 13. Big Mike
Caldwell, IHl senior, had nine
points .
Hannan Trace converted 23

lltl

SOUTHEASTERN'
E UIPMENT CO., INC.

LIST NARROWED
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Philadelphia Eagles' owner
Leonard Tose, who is looking
for a new coach and-or general
manager after firing Coach Ed
Khayat and GM Pete Retzlaff
last month, said Friday that he
has narrowed the list of ca ndidateS to six,-but refuses to
name those under consideration.
"The man will be named
after the Super Bowl and ·
before the (Jan. 31).31) draft,"
Tose said. "I've narrowed the
list down to, let's say, six
people I want to talk to. Five
are from the pro ranks and one
from college." One of those
professionals speculated about
strongly is Mike McCormack,
offensive · line coach of the
Washington Redskins; the college prospect is rumored to be
retired Nebraska head Coach
Bob Devaney.

'

Route 7, Just Above New Sliver Memorial Bridge

Phone 446-3910

James R. _Allen, Manager .

• SALES • RENTAL • SERVICE
WABCO

CASE

'

17 21

of 55 field attempts for 52 pet.

while Eastern hit 21 of 50 for 43
pet. The Eagles hit 10 of 15
ch•rity tosses while HT sank 12
uf 22. Hannan Trace collected.
40 rebounds with Caldweli
grabbing 16.
Eastern's reserves with a big
20 point, fourth period defeated
Hannan Trace's reserves, 42·
31, Steve Milhoane led the
winners with 10 points. Bill
Hall scored 10 for the losers.
Eastern played Southweute rn Saturday night.
Hannan Tr.ace travels to Kyger
Creek Friday night.
EASTERN (521 - Sheels, Q.
0-0; Dill, 2-4-8; Boring, 7-0·14;
Spencer, 1-3-5; Duvall, 8-2.18:
Cross. 3-1·7. Totals 21 -10-52.
HANNAN TRACE (58) Ca ldwell, 4·1·9; Wells, 4·0·8;
Lusher, 4-5- 13; Dunfee, 5-4-14;

Swain, 6·2·14. Tolals 23-12-l&amp;.
By Quarlers :
Easlern
15 10 14 13- 52
H. Trace
8 16 16 18- 58

Refs will
discuss
new rules
ROCK SPRINGS - Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
wrestling referees and coaches
will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the Meigs High ScHool with
John Young, secretarytreasurer, conducting a
discussion of this year's
wrestling rules.
Coaches attending are · to
bring tennis shoes and clothing
ro work out on the mats. They
will work on mechanics and
procedures that will innprove
and help in officiating and
conducting a match. All
coaches and officials are invited.

Vikings nip
Southern bY
63-62 count

BUT WE 1RV TO .GIVE MORE FOR
. YOUR FOOD
.

.590
.447

2!12
S'h

29 .285 121/2
·

29 13
14
21 24
II 22

.690
.650 2
.467 10'1;
.4J6 10117

29

Pacific Division
w. I. Pel. a.b.
Los Angeles 30 a .789

Golden St.
Phoenix
Seattle ·
Portland

.

.

26
20
13
11

12
21
31
31

.684 · 4
.488 tl'h
.295 20
·&lt;~211

Friday' s Results

New York 129 Buffalo 106
Boston 126 Atlanta 108
KC-Omaha 103 Detroit 100
P~oenix 126 Chicago 115
Golden St. 128 'Seattle 96
Portland 135 Phil a 102
(Only games scheduled)

·RACINE - Pliil Robinson, 5- the field for 40 per cent and
ABA Standings
10 senior guard and a AII-SVAC dropped in 10 of 15 free throws. By United Press lnternalional
East
pick last year, hit a game- Coach Wayne White's Vikings
w. I. pel. g.b.
winning 15-foot jump shot with connected on 28 of 58 froin the Carolina
29 14 .674
Kentucky
26 14 .650 1'/ 2
42 seconds lett to give the field for a warm 48 per cent and Virgini
a
23 22 .511 7
Symmes Valley Vikings a made seven of 12 charity Memphis
15 26 .366 13
15 27 .357 13'12
surprisingly tough 63-82 win tosses. The Tornadoes con- New York
West
over Southern here Friday trolled the boards with 50
w. I. pet. g.b.
night in a Southern Valley rebounds compared to only 31 Utah
26 16 .619
22 18 .550 3
Athl•tic Conference game . .
for Symmes Valley. On several Denver
Indiana
22 18 .550 3
Coach Bob Ord's Tornadoes occasions Southern got two or Dallas
16 24 .400 9
led 53-44 after three quarters of more shots at the bucket.
~an Uiego
16 31 .340 12'12
Friday
s
Results
play, but the slick shooting
In tbe preliminary game,
New York 113 San Diego 108
Vikings kept narrowing the gap Coach Dwain Wolfe's little Carolina 135 Virginia 118
Kentucky 115 Utah 106
until they took the lead on Tornadoes won their fifth game
Dallas
110 Memphis 108
Robinson's shot
against two losses with a 32-28 (Only games scheduled)
The win gave the Vikings a 3- win over the little Vikings .
1SVAC record and a 3-3 overall Southern is 4-2 in league play
slate. Southern dropped to 2-5 . while Symmes Valley Is 1-3.
overall and 2-4 in league play. Mitch Nease and Dan Brown
Robinson led the Vikings in led the Southern Reserves with
scoring with 18 points. Jene seven each and Greg Dunning
Myers backed that up with 16 and Tim Hill had six apiece. P.
points and 13 rebounds while Jones topped Symmes Valley
Jamie Lafon added 17 with II.
markers.
Synunes Valley hosted the
Junior Norman Curfman led Kyger Creek Bobc~ls last night
the upset-minded Tornadoes and will host Coach Lewis D. By United Pri!~ tnternational
1
with 22 points. Ron Hill, Pete Antoni's Chesapeake Panthers Brown 102 Cornell 79
Sayre, and Bobby Miller, who 'Saturday. Southern was at Yale 76 Columbia 64
Wesleyan 72 Colby 70
played his first game since a Waterford last night and will Sou.
Conn. 73 SI.Mry's-N.S. 59
shoulder dislocation, each had play at home against Hannan, NY Tech 68 New Paltz 64
Princeton 71 Harvard 70
II points. Hill also had a gameW. Va. Fri d ay.
Penn 65 Dartmouth 65
high 16 reb~unds .
SOUTHERN (62) - I hie 0·2· Md.- Balt Co. 80 Bowie SL 63
Southern held a 14-13 lead 2; Curfman 9-4-22; Hill 5·1-11 ; Eckard 95 Jhn's Hpkns 81
alter one period. SHS main- Miller 5-1·11 ; Nease 2-1-5: Lebanon Vat. 79 Maryvl 66
Say re 5-1-11. Totals 26-10-62. Pace 67 .Bates 57
tained that advantage, 33-32 at
SYMMES VALLEY (63) Midwest
'the half After SHS pulled away Jene Myers 1·2·16; Dunfee 2·2· Luther 69 Simpson sa
'
6; Lafon 8-1-17, Rob1nson 9-0- Northwstrn 101 Ind.· East 86
to its biggest lead of the night,_. ) 8; Com ·o.q ;.,J~ye 1.\,yftr!O+ . Wartburg 79 Dubuque 43 · ·
·5:J.i:44 Symmes Valley caught· 4T'We!&gt;b 0-1-1. Total&lt; 28-7-63. Iowa Ws leyn 84111 . Coli. 69
t · h' to
By Quarters:
Norlh Park 74 Wheaton 67
f. ' d. h
Ire an t e res IS IS ry.
Symmes Valley 13 19 12 19-63 Wm . Penn 76 Buena Vista 59
Southern made 26 of 60 from Soulhern
14 19 20 9- 62 St.Xavier 78 111.-Chi Crcle 60
South
Vatdosla 101 W. Liberty 78
Hntngln 101 Millign 86
Xavier-N.O. 94 La . CoiL 43
Hmpdn -Sydny 96 St. Paul's 69
North Park 74 Wheaton 67

STORE . HOURS

QAILY 9 TO 9-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS
U.S.Q~A.

Famil

INSPECTED

Chicken Parts
Includes: 3 Breast Quarter&lt; with
backs, 3 Leg Quarters with backs,
2 Pkgs. Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

1

Frichly's
college
results

Waverly plays poorly,
still wins tilt by 21

ATHENS _ '!'he pressure of
a crucial SEOAL contest took
il!: toll of the Waverly Tigers
and Athens Bulldogs Friday
night as both teams played
probably their worst games of
the season before Waverly
emerged with a 64-43 victory.
Both teams had miserable
shootin g as the Bulldogs
connected on just 19 of 60 shots
for 31 pet while the Tigers hit
26 of 86 for a 3ll pet. average.
However the Tigers remain
undefeated because they
dominated the boards by
OUT OF ACI'ION
pulling down 45 rebounds while
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Athens managed just 34 grabs.
New York Raiders announced
Bill Maloy's 25 points topped
Friday that Bobby Sheehan, the Tiger attack with Dan
the Raiders' second highest ~lyers adding 14 and Ed
goal scorer with 25 aod second- Thompson 10. Maloy also
high point man at 54, strained hauled down 12 rebounds to
ligaments in his left knee in the lead his team in that departsecond period of Thursday ment.
night's 9-4 defeat of Ottawa and
Mark Mace continued his hot
will not see action iq satur- shooting for Athens by canning
day's
World
Hockey' 22 points . and was. the only
Association All-Star Game. in Bulldog .to finish in double
Quebec City.
figures.
.
The con test was close in the

~

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...
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•

early gomg as Waverly led Jl-8
after one period, and went
on top 29-17 at halftime.
In the third period the Tig~r
board strength enabled them to
stretch the lead to 41-19 and it
was no contest as they rolled up
their 29th consecutive SEOAL
victory and remain tied with
Gallipolis lor the league lead.
Athens remained in a
deadlock with Logan for third
place with a 3-2 league mark.
TueSday night the Tigers
journey to Ironton while
Athens invadllS Logan in a
pair of important league
contests.
The box score :

we ruer · the right to limit quantities on 111 item' in this ad . Prices effective thru ,Sat, J•n. n, lf73. Nont 50idto dealers .

ARMOUR* STAR-SELECTED PORK
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FRESH

Pork Roasts

Picnic Style ·-whole 4 to 8-lb. bg.

Luther 69 Simpson 58

Southwest
Tex. Wsleyn 70 Wylnd Bap. 61
Mdwstrn 84 Lbbck Chris. 68
Tex.Sou. 104 Dallas Bap. 80
Cent. Ok . St. 75 S.E. Okla . 61
Houston 130 W. Tex. Sl . 84
West
UCLA 64 Oregon 38
San Jse Sl. 68 Lng Bch St. 65
Wyoming 76 Utah 68
Ariz. St. 67 New Mex . 62
Gnzaga .73 Boise Sl. 58
Colo. St. 93 BYU 86, ol
Presidential Classic
At Washington, D. C.
(First Round)
Geo. Wash. 88 Citadel 80
American 80 Rice 61

Washinglon &amp; Lee lnvitalional
At Lexinglon, Va . ·
(Firs I Round I
Madison 87 Va. Wesleyan 56
Martinsburg Invitational
At Martinsburg, West Va.
(First Round)
Glenvl 83 Frostb!l 66
Shepard 78 Mt. Sf. Mry's 69

WAVERLY (641 - Maloy W:
5·25; Oyer J. 1-7 ; Pleller 1-0-2;
Thompson 5-0-10; Shoemaker
2-2·6; Salyers 5-4-14. TOTALS
26-12-64.
ATHENS (43) - Mace 9-4-22; LALONDE SUSPENDED
Skinner 1-0-2; EsseK 2-0-4;
PITTSBURGH (UPI)
Ch~ko 4-1-9; Handley 1-0-2;
Willtams 2-0·4. TOTALS 19-l- Vancouver Canucks' Coach Vic
43.
Stasiuk announced Friday that
Score by quarters:
center Bobby Lalonde has been
Waverly
II 18 19
Alhens
8 9 8
suspended "indefinitely'' for .
Reserve score: Waverly
failing
to report to a practice
Alhens 29.
session ordered by Stasillk
after the Canucks' 11-3 loss to
the last-place California
Golden Seals Wednesday night
Stasiuk, who said that La·
lonoe had shown "open defiance to a drill," also called lor
practice sessions for Friday
night and Saturday before
Saturday's game with the
Pittsburgh Penguins,.
·

Sound Ripe

BANANAS

lb.

·STATE FARE

SLICED

HITE BREAD
1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

PAL
IMITATION

PEANUT BUTTER
2·1b. 8-oz. Jar

YOSEMITE
BARTLETT

PEAR HALVES.
1-lb. Cans

.

ALL MOBILE HOMES ON DISPLAY ARE PRICED
FOR JANUARY SALE. SIX ALL ELE.CTRIC HOMES
TO CHOOSE FROM.
Sizes

!

Houston

11

15

20 .524

Western Conference

••
•
••

I

23
22

Cleveland

'

•DOZERS

eSNOW ·PLOWS
•SPREADERS ·

Baltimore

'•

JAEGER
•AIR COMPRESSORS
•WATER PUMPS
• CONCRETE MIXERS
•AIR TOOLS

Allanla

Milwaukee
Chicago
K C-Om aha
Detroit ·

.

GLEDHILL

Centra I Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

,•

•BACKHOES'
•WHEEL and
CRAWLER LOADERS

Garrett nets 30
in Purdue victory
WEST LAFAYETTE, lud.
(UP!) - John Garrett hit 30
points before fouling out to lead
Purdue to a 91-80 victory over
Illinois Saturday in their Big
Ten Basketball opener.
The Boilermakers broke
away from a IHl tie and led the
rest of lhe way. Their biggest
spread was 16 points at 47-31
before the lllihi got six straight
poi.nt.S and trailed at the half,
47-37.
;Purdue's biggest spread in

,. Hannan Trace in
first ·all alone

'

• MOTOR' GRADERS
eSCRAPERS.

w. I. pet. g.b.
Bcyslon
31 7 .816
· New York
33 · 10 ' .767 117
., Bulfal.o
11 28 .282 20•12
Phtladelphia 3 37 .075 29'/'

-. Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

NOW OPEN ·FOR BUSIN.ESS

Gallipolis, Ohio

..

Atlantic OiV.ision '

-

· ili
'' '
1111 1111

Falcons, 67-62

~

' ·~-.~~BA~~!l&lt;!i!lgs . .
By Untied Pressl~ternattonal
Eastern·Conierence

.

.

Bucks revise
d hedul
gn
e

co.a.c~h~.•llllll!l••••••s•lip~p•ed•to-sec-on•d•p•la•c•e•.--••••••••••••··~·- • ·••

floor and
did not
until. .. •
.seven
minutes
into score
,the game
MSU built up a 13·point lead
several times in the first half
and held a nine-point ad- .
vantage, 39-30, at halftime .

catS

'

Divers find .
more parts
of airplane

Spartans clip
NW five, 90-77

LA qum
• l el NCState
108 to 93 pz•cks up
1
•
nznth Wln
CLEVELAND

.

· Pro smndings

Clarke's third victory on the'
SAN JOSE, Calit (UP!) Professional
· Bow.Jing
Allie Clarke of 1\Jtron, Ohio
picked up two clutch strikes in Association rour was wqrth
,4. ·',(
the lOth franne Saturday to post $7500
' .
Clarke, who was seeded ,fifth
a 203-201 ·comeback victory
and
last in the nationally
over Don Johnson, also of .
Akron, and win the J65,000 San tele..ised finals, ripped through
Jose Open Bowling To.ur- three straight opponents on his
way to the championship
nament.
\.
.match against Johnson., secorid
all-tinne leadU.g title wjnner,
who led the event through the
first three days.
The final game saw Johl'"on,
trying for his 21st crown, take
an eight pin lead after four
frames. Clark, however, took
over the lead·iii the n.inth frame
and Johnson , last year's
.
SAN JUAN, I''.!L (UPI)- U. leading money winner with
S. Navy divers . Saturday over $56,000, finished with a
located the tail and a section of 201.
Clarke, who had 176 in the
fuselage of the DC7 in which
Pittsburgh Pirates base bah ninth box, stepped to the line
star Roberto Clemente and needing a pair of strikes for the
four others !'ere .killed New victory and he came through.
On his way to the cham·
Year's E;ve.
A spokesman said the divers pionship tilt, Clarke downed
found the tail and fuselage still Johnny Petraglia of Brooklyn,
intact on the bottom of the sea N. Y., 238-223, defending
at a depth of 120 feet, some 400 champion' Gus Lampo of Enyards from the spot where a dicott, N.Y., 2311-225, and Don
section of the cabin was found Glover of South Bend, Ind:, 279236, a gaihe·in which'Ciarke put
Friday.
together
his first nine strikes.
The spokesman said,
however, that there was no
sign of the bodies of. the four
persons still missing, including
Clemente.
Wednesday the searchers
•
found the body of the pilot,
SC
Jerry Hill, floating on the
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Four
surface.
·
Ohio State foothall game playing sites in 1973 have been "
East hockey stars
switched, it was announced
Saturday .
capture 6·2 win
The Bucks said the revised
·• schedule, approved by the Big
QUEBEC · CITY (UP!)
Ten will include:
John McKenzie, Larry Pleau
_Oct 20-At Indiana instead
lind Jim Dorey each seared of here.
goals in the second period
- Oct. 27-Northwestern here
Saturday afternoon to lead the instead of at Northwestern .
East to a 6-2 victory over the
- Nov. 3-At fllinois instead
Wesfin the first World Hockey of here.
Association All-Star game,
_ Nov. !().Michigan State
played at the Quebec Coliseum. here instead of at Michigan
Sub-zero temperatures and State.
televising of the game by five
The Big Ten said some of the
local channels contributed to schools were unhappy with
the poor attendance at the their schedules but did not s;iy
game.
which ones.
I

.

Brigham Young, the natio.n's tied the score with 4:32 left in
leading collegiate rusher last the first period when he picked
fall, gained 159 yards running off a North pass and raced 21
lor the North, including a yards to the South's first muchsecond period and gave the Senior Bowl record ?&gt;-yard down\
The North cut the ga911J 14-10
South a lead it was not to give dash off tackle that put the
early
in the second period on
up the remainder of the af- North ahead 7-0 with only 5:27
the first of three field goals by
gone in the first period.
ternoon.
Danny Sanspree of Auburn Nick ~ke-Mayer of Te":lple.
Pete Van Valkenburg of
The South got that back w1th a
field goal by Scott Marcus of
Louisville, to gg ahead 17-10, but
Mike-Mayer added a 41-yard
. field goal just as tbe half ended
ro enable the North tO trail only
17-13 at intermission.
.
The South broke open the
contest in the first five minutes
of the second half when Smith
caught his two touchdown
ference.
He said he told Pats' passes, the first a ?7-yarder
"Penn State is too good a presideht Billy Sullivan on from All-America quarterback
place to leave," Paterno, 46, ··Friday morning that .he had Bert Jones of LSU, and the
told newsmen in refuting a decided to remain in the second a 33-yarder from his
published report that he had college ranks.
teammate at Florida State,
signed a five-year contract as "He has been a very won- Gary Huff.
head coach and general derful and generous man,"
That gave the South a 31).13
manager of the downtrodden Paterno said of Sullivan. "The · lead but the North, taking
Patriots.
Pats tried to present an op- advantage of a Senior Bowl
portunity IIJ me which I felt rule that enables a team
was as good as anyone was trailing by nine or more points
able to get out of pro football. to receive the kickoff regardAnd Ifeltl could enjoy working less of ·who scored, came
with Mr. Sullivan and the storming back.
Pats."
Mike-Mayer's third field goal
However, Penn ~tate af. with5 :09leftinthethirdperiod
forded him an opportunity "To was offset by a Marcus field
work in an ainnosphere on goal early in the final quarter.
campus where the approach by But two late touchdown passes
77 victory over Northwestern the administration towards by Ron Jaworski of Youngsin their Big Ten League . athle'tics was such that I could town State cut the final margin
op~ner.
be a little more than just a to just three points.
Undsay Hariston added 14 football coach."
points for the Spartans, who
The Patriots had pursued
won their sev~nth straight Paterno even J!lOre avidly than
IN· FIRST PLACE
game and advanced to 8-2 for the Pittsburgh Steelers did five
CHICAGO (UP!) - John /
the season. Northwestern's years ago, when they were Ajamian, 22, Detroit, has taken
Mike Sililey took game scoring reported to have offered him a over first place in the 63rd
honors wilh 25 as the Wildcats $70,000 per-year, long-term Petersen Bowling Classic,
dropped to 1-8.
contract to leave the rolling officials sa~d Saturday.
The Spartans went 3:10 into fa rmland' of Central ~ennAjamian, a graduate of
the game before forward Allen sylvania.
Wayne State University in
Smilh put them on the board
"The challenge is still here at Detroit, had scores of 236, 191,
with a field shot Northwestern Penn State," said Paterno; 188, 202, 222, 186, 215, 193 for .0
was plagued by even colder whose teams have finished in rota! 1,633.
shooting. The Wildcats missed the top 10 nationally three of
He replaced Roger Holt·
their first 11 attempts from the his seven seasons as head zkamp of St. Paul, Minn., w_ho

.

.'

.,.

'

. 19- The Sunday Tinnes. Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 7, 1973

IH - 1 ne Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday , Jan. 7, 1?73

~

.

12

X

12

x60

Two ·

52

12 X 68
14 X 60

&amp;' .
Three

PAUL &amp; MADGE NORTH UP

•&gt;&lt;o .. r
JU / I I b IUft

...-ll.,l"l.,.l....
,l.,llnfVril
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Bedroom ·"''lliqrw
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Models,

M1N1 PLtAslllr.f. wru

~~·~a'"'" 1uu

Appalachian Power
Joins· In Bringing You
This Message.
.

THREE ENTER GAMES
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Three
of the top four finishers in the
Olympic hig h hurdles- Rod
Milburn, :rom Hlll and Willie
Davenport- have entered the
66th annual Millrose Games,
'scheduled for Madison Square
' on Jan. 26.
Garden
Milburn, the gold niedal
wiMer; ho1ds the world record
of 13.0 in the 120-yard h(gh
hurdles and ·is the defending
champion in the meet. Daven'port, who finished fourth at
Munich, is a meet record
holder and has won the
Millrose event four times. Hill
ivas the Iirenze medal winner
iri the Olympics,
,

j

.

KRAFT SPAGHETTI DINNERS
..
• . . . ,. .
Tangy ItaI1an
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p.,.· 47c
WITH
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• • •
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FEA
Country Style Biscuits .. / '4 !b:;42c
.... 42«;
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1-lb.

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CHASE.&amp; SANBORN

COFFEE
3-lb.
Can

$267
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•

20- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, SWJday, Jan. 7, 1973

.

' 21 - TheSwidayTirnes-Sentlnei,Swulay,Jan. 7 ·1973

.

cO}&gt;S;:'M:e igs ~. edgeS' Irontoil
•
2nd straight WID in'last five seconds
....
•

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on; LBS is

wins first

upset 68-61

roll over Cubs

loop tilt

SKYLINE LANES

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Captain's LounRe
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CRev gaun ~ate~ CWaQQ cpait~t!

446-3362

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DEVELOPMENT CORP.
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appliances, full·
;aped , concrete dnve &amp;
streets, 2112 car Qaragt,..
Icony, lot 75K l 75, coun t y
water, Tara sewer system.

Ill
Ill
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3 Bedroom , 3 bath rooms, 2 car garage, elect ric forced air ~
furnace and air condition er, fami ly room, 14'x26' mast er
be.droom, dil) ing ba lcony.

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Building Sites

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Homes buil.l

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to I j I
specifications.
,All Underground Utilities Provided.

FOR INFORMATION, OR APPOINTMENT

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Phone 446-9:14o
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O.llipolls, Ohio ill

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Ohio

Kanauga, Ohio

Valley's

fi'nest Nl'ght a··ub
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ill We'll Sell Outright or Trade. You can Savea. Bundlt·
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91

''BUILDING SUPPLIES"

,u

Monday Thru Fridoy-7 A.M. to l P.M.
· Saturday- 7 A.M. to 4 P.M.
PHONE 444-m-4

]?.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO'

·

·

..

-

.

.

·

.

·

5·15 o.o o

1 5 10

Jim Whit craft, g

0·2 0-0 1 0 0 0
2·7

0·0

0

1

0

4

9.17

J.J

4 18

2 19

6· 11

1·2

o

5

2 13

9 6 12 19

46

·Brute Walker,f
3-3 0-0 1 2 · o 6
Dave Krebs, f
0-2 o.o " 2 4 2 o
Jack McGrady ,g
0·6 A·5 2 1 3 4
BiiiHorwell ,.t
1·1 2-2 0 2 0 4 .
TOTALS
.
f7 .6J 12 -15 14 28 14 . 46
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (71)
PLA'I'ER- Pos.
FG-A FT.A PF RB TO TP

Blue
Devils still
.

GiiPrice,c

'

Jimm y Noe, I

tied for top spot

12-16 0-1 · 2

Mark Kie sl ing ,g

Topper Orr , l
·Jim Singer, g
Mike Bercidge, I
Kev Sheets, g
Roger Da iley, I,
Jim Niday, g
Skipjler Johnson, c
TOTALS

'

GALLIPOLIS - Aggressive Gallipolis caught . ·
visiting Logan way off form before a packed house .
here Friday night as Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
~evils posted their seventh straight hardwood
VICtory, 71-46.
..
.
·
~e Southeastern Ohio League triumph kept the
Galhans in a .first place tie with defending·champion .
Waverly ~s the Tigers bombed host Athens 64-43
Friday for their seventh consecutive win. Both the
Blue Devils and Tigers are s-o in the conference.

2-6 Q-0
0-2 0-0
1-5 0-0
D
0-0
0-0 1-2
2·3 2·2
0·1 o.o
33·64 5-11

Score By Quarters:

logan Chieftains
GA HS Blue Devils

8 J 24

0
2
0
0
2
1
2
13

4· 1
1 0
1 2
2 1
1 4
1 2
1 1
42 18

4
0
2
2
1
6
0
71

11 21 22 11
71
OFFICIALS - -Gary Duza n and Paul Maple , Portsmouth

chapter.

Hil lsboro 86 Greenville 85

Coach Scott Filzgerald's
Chleltalnsdrop~d ,to\4-4on the Log•o was six of Ui. Gallla'8
year, and 3-2 in loop piJiy.
6-1 junior center 011 Price,
The rangy Cbieftairui'etitered after a cold flrat half, found
Friday's encounter with.a .500 the range and scored 10 of bla
shooting percentage from the 19 markers In this stanza.
field In four previous loop
After Jimmy Noe's goal put
outings'. ~ainst the Galllans' the home club on top by 36
sticky man-to-man defense, points, 64-28, with 7:05 left in
LHSmanagedonly 17of63field the game for Gallia's biggest
NOE CUT OFF - It wasn't very often Jimmy Noe (22)
goal attempts for a cold 26.9 lead, Osborne cleared his
was cut off going toward the basket for an easy layup Friday
pet.
bench. Coach Fitzgerald sent
night but Steve WilSon caught Logan's sophomore guard Jim
That, plus the tact Lo- .. in his secorid team at the start
Kemper (13) doing just that in this action photo of Friday's
gan was s.lmply not as of the final period.
aggressive
as
It
Logan's second WJit re~d
bad been In previous off 13 straight points to cut the
GIL PRICE, Gallipolis' 6-4
outings,
enabled
the deficit to 23 markers (64-41) jWJior center, picked off 18
O.bornemen to win going with 4:20 remaining.
rebounds and scored 19 points
away.
. Jimmy Niday, 6-l sophomore offensively, and held Logan's
Doors to the GAHS gyrn were GAHS p;uard, suffered a cut high-scoring center Handy
closed at 7:30p.m., according up(ll'r lip during a collision Norris to seven points and six
to Athletic Director Ed Stewart with a Chieftain with 1:14 reboWJds as GAHS defeated
after a capacity c~ow~ of 1,000 remaining, but stayed in- the Logan 71-46 in a SEOAL hardhad been admitted. Several game.
wood game Friday night. On
fans were unable to attend the
GARS was four of 12 in the ., !eft is Gallia 's sop homore
important SEOAL contesl, due last period Logan five of 17 guard Jim Niday. Logan's
to limited seating facilities in
Gallipoll; shot 5l.ii from th~ Dave Krebs (21, right) looks
Gallia's 14-year-old structure. field sinking 33 of 64 field goal on. Headl~g down court is
The Blue Devils were never atte~pts. GAHS was five of 11 se nior Blue Devil forward
headed . in Friday's contest. at the charity circles, a cool Topper Orr, 14.
Jirnmy -Noe, 6-3 senior GARS 4ii.4 pet. The Galllans comforward put GAHS on top "411' mitted 13 personals, hauled ,the Chiefs.
Randy Norris, veteran 6-3
7: Ill eft 1n tha first stanza. Jim down 42 rebounds, and lost the
senior
center who was
Kemper, 6-2 sophomore guard, ball 18 times on turnovers.
tied It at 2-all (9r the Chiefs Eight miscues came in the averaging 15 points a game
was limited to seven markers
with 6:41 left in a tap-in. Gil final stanza.
·
and six rebcunds by Gil Price.
Price's free throl" with 5:52
Noe sparked tb~HS
Noe held Jeff Campbell and
showing on the clock put GAHS
attack with 24 points. He was
Ken Culbertson to a combined
ahead to stay.
1% of 16 f~om the field. Price
total of nine points .
GARS htt eight of 16 from the
added I~ Pjlln18, and coo·
The Chiefs were up to par·'' ·"
fieid In the first stanza while
trolled beth boards wit&amp;• II
at
the charity line, sinking 12
LJIS managed only three of 16.
rebounds . Kiesling aiao
of 15 attempts k'r 80 p~t.
The Galllans were on top 17·9
finished In double figures
Logan had 14 personals,
after the first whliJUe stop.
with 13 markers.
hauled down 28 rebounds and
With Noe, Price and Mark
Topper Orr, 6-1 senior forcommitted 14 turnovers, five
Kiesling hitting from close ward, worked his way through
In the last period.
range, GAHS increased its lead the Logan defense for a couple
Gallipolis will play at
lo 25 points on two occasions in backdoor goals, hauled down
Tuesday. Logan will
Jackson
the second period . It was 36-11 four rebcWJds, and turned in
with I :34left in the half, and 311- another outstanding floor host Athens, beginning at 7:30
p.m.
13 at the :47 mark. GAHS led game for the Galllans.
38·15 during the halftime
Kiesling also turned ln a fine
break. Gallia hit 10 of 111 shots floor game as he hit the big
In the second period. Logan men underneath with pinpoint
.
ALL GAI.iES
. W L P OP
was three of 12.
passing throughout the game. Team
Wavedy
7 0 546 397
The Osbornemen con·
Kev Sheets held Logan 's Ga ll ipolis
7 o 470 342
tlaued to bombard the hoop
outstanding guard, ·Jim Pierce, Portsmouth
7 3 707 670
6 4 708 585
In the third stanza, pulllug
ii-10 jWJior, to eight points South Point
Athens
5 4 500 477
away to a 33-polnt ad·
before departing with 2:30 left Chesapeake
4 3 420 403
vanlage, II0-27. The Devils bit
in the third stanza. Pierce Logan
·
4 4 518 495
4 4 487 497
11 of 17 abuts In Ibis period.
finished with 10 points, high for Meigs
Fed-Hocking
4 4 408 460

.

'

.

:. 'SEO stan~ngs

Ironton

Papooses hold on for
33-30 win over Imps ·

Jim Pierce. g

Ken Cu lbertson, c

'

2 6

Ja ckson
Wellston

497

Waverl y 64 Athens 43
Meigs 55 Ironton 53
Gallipolis 71 logan 46

SEOAL cage battle at Gallipolis. Oa left is GAHS guard Kev'
Sheets (34). Noe popped in 24 points, hitting 12of 16 field goal
attempts, to pace the Gallians to their seventh straight win,
71-46.

Hayesville 73 New Lexington 65
Springfield North 91
Kettering Fairmont West SS

Jackson 58 Wellston 50

.Henry Block _has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
Rell8(..n 2. We're human, and once in a
great while we make a mistake. But if our
error means you must pay additional tax,
you pay only the lax. We pay any interest
or penalty.

'

OO&amp;l:KlBLOCM
JHE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
Second &amp; Sycamore:-Gallipolis
Open 9 A. M. to 6 P . M. Weekdays. 9-5 Sat.
Phone 446-0303
304 E. Main-992-3795-Pomeroy
Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon . thru Sat .
No Appointment Necessary

What do you want ...
a low cost ·
4 bedroom home ?

492

2 6 421 555
0 7 355 578

Friday 's Results :

Gallipolis 71 Logan 46
Jackson 58 Wellston 50
Meigs 55 Ironton 5J
Waverl y 64 Athens 43
Sprin~fi e ld Sout h 87
Ports·
mo~t~ 64
South Point 71 Oak Hill 61
Chesapeake 58 Faiftand 56
Fed·Hocking 59 Belpre 58

GALLIPOLIS
Two 3:24 remaining In Ute game.
technical fouls, two turnovers
Bill Undsey's short jumper
and two missed shotS in the with 3:131eft was countered by
· SEOAL VARSITY
finul two minutes of play. by a long jumper by Gallla's Tom ,
Team
• W l P DP
Coach Ed Pauley's GAHS Blue Myers with 3:02 remaining. . Waverly
5 0 395 263
Gallipolis
5 0 J35 246
Imps enabled Logan's visiting Logan Jed 31-28.
J 2 280 26 1
Papooses to hold on for a
Theil came ri rash of Blue Athens
,. . ....
.......
Logan
3 2 J19 312
thrilling 33-30 SEOAL victory Imp mistakes and the victory Meigs
2 J 284 J29
1 4 29J 288
in Friday night's preJirnlnary went to Logan. Tom Gosnell's Ironton ·
Jackson
1 4 282 362
contest on the GARS hard- freethrowwlth2:10madeit3:1- Wellston
0 5 251 378
woqd.
28. Gosnell made it 33-28 with · TOTALS
20 20 2439 2439
;
The triumph left Logan in 1:28left.JohnGrothhitalayup
SEOAL RESERVES
WJdtiputed first place in the with 1:01 remaining to Ctll Team
W L P ·op
Lilgan
5 0 2J5 170
reserve league with a~ mark. Logan's lead to 33-30.
Waverly
4 1 208 170
The Papooses are 7-1 on '.the
GARS then stole the ball, but ·Athens
even !urn ish the materials and. include the cost in
Some !amities need a... four-bedroom home .. . others lime enjoying your home and your family while your
3 2 197 . 167
neighbors
are
li
xing
up
and
painting
.
That's
because
your mortgage if you like .
yeru:. The Blue Imps are now 3- lost It again with 30 seconds Gall ipolis
just want one . Some don' I need or want a home quite
J 2 182 142
Meigs
2 3 195 198
that large. But, at Jim Walter Homes it doesn't we'uso bu ild ing material• that ara especially salected
2 in league play, and 5-2 on the remaining.
• OVER 20 "BETTER BUY" MODELS
Ironton
2
3
186
210
for long life . . aluminum windows, hardboard
.
maner
what needs or wants you h'ave , .. we build
year. The loss snapped the
LJ!Shlt 13of 40 from the field Ja ckson .
1 4 188 224
• BUILT ON YOUR PROPERTY
"wood made better" •iding that holds paint years
· them all . .. four bedroiiiii'S:": . three ... two or just
Imps four-game winning for 32 (ict. The winners were Wellston
0 5· 128 238
longer
than
ordinary
siding
and
heavy
duty
roofing
,
one
.
Whatever
you
want.
Jim
Walt
er
"better
buy"
Coil
or write your local Jim Wa(ler Homes' manager
.20 20 1519 1519
streak, and left them two seven of 15 from the 'foul cir· TOTALS
to
mention
a
few
.
Reserve Results:
homes are cuSlDm buill on your P.roperty in a wide
today. He ' ll give .you complete information and the
games behind the Papoose~. cles. Logan picked off 23 Logan 33 Gallipolis 30
variety of sizes and model s ... and they all accent
low cost of building a lour-bedroom, two-bath home
Now , to keep the cost of your home even lower,
Don Young, 6-3 sophomore, rebounds. Young had 10. LHS Ja ckson 49 Wellston 39
comfort
and
fun
ctional
beauty
with
special
emphasis
Jim
Waller
~ill build on your property, completely
for
you . . , or any bther home you want .or need ...
Meigs 54 Ironton 33
led the wiruiers with 12 points. conimitted 12 personaliJ.
on
LOW
COST'.
What
do
you
want?
We'll
build
it
and
explain how qualified property owners can get
fin
ishing,
the
outSide
down
to
the
last
nail,
the
Waver ly 32 Athens 29
John Grath, 5-9 sophomore . GARS hit 11 of 30 shots from
forVOU. Jan. 9 Games:
INSTANT
MORTGAGE FINANCING . Isn't it lime you
shutters and the paint - buJ slop al almosl any sta9e
guard, led Gallipolis' attack the field for 36 pet. The Imps Gallipolis at Ja ckson
movad
up
to
a " battar buy" by Jim Walter? Sure it is ..
And these custo m built homes conform to high otand- of inoide completion ... you do the rest and save
Athens
at
Logan
with nine points. l)opbomore . were eight of 14 at the foul Wa verly at Ironton
ards of quality to give you years and years of low
money . The handier you are with tool s and the more
'
Who '
"
/
&gt;I '
,. '
1
~ '
interior work you do , the more you 'll save . We'll
maintenance upkeep . You'll spend more o~ your spa re
Mike Sickles added eight for circles. GAllS had 17 rebounds Meigs at Well ston
the losers.
(only four off the offensive
.
After a 11-6 first period tie, boards) . Valentine h~uled Team SEOAL F~O~H p OP
./}_+: [:•ib . ~. f'l_- _-· J. I.I.,.,.... b
-AI
. Logan forged ahead 14-12 with down seven. The Imps com- Jackson
5 1 322 220
~leU!. ![.ftC, or~ ~-ectJ'K() TTvr.MA:. l..AJ'f.A.a,gt:'J
JIM WALTER HOMES
1:20remalninginthefirsthalf. nilttediBpersonalsandlostthe r~~~olls
~ ~~;
~MORTGAGE
I ':;,·;,'d"t;'k:·;~··~~!~e~ore
.
The Papooses were never · ball16 times on turnovers. ·
Waverly
info•molion
and
t~e
-coll
ol
175
2 3 222
v to qu~lifie d property owners
headed after that, pullin
. g away
Box SCj)re :
Ironton
2 3 160 192
. buHd;ng on my prope r,ty. I
to a 19-14 halftime advantage.
AI hens
2 3 174 166
unde,.land !here would be
Itwas26-l 7 afterthreeperiods.
PAPOOSE"S t3:ii - Gosnell, Meigs
2 J 159 18J ·
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
no obligation to buy ond
f.2·4; Lindsey,2·0·4; Young,5- Wellston
0 S llJ 311
SO . CHARLESTON, W. VA. 25303 f·. ~t~olyouwouldg;•emethm
The 'lisitors lncrellsed their 2·12 ; Fuller, 0·1-1; Porter, 3.o.\ TOTALS
21 21 1596 1596
foc rs lree of charge.
leadto·IOpOJnts,27-17wltlr4:51 6; G. Culbertson, 2·2-6 :
Thursday's Results :
Old Hwy . 52
P. 0 . Box 8367 ·
NAME
.
·lod
before
Meadows.
0·0·0.
TOTALS
13·7·
Jackson
7
,
9
.
W
ellston
12
·
p
,
0
.
Bo
x
250
(
608
ls
i
Ave
.
South
Gallipolis 39 Logan 33
AODRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
left in the final .pet'
33, ·
BLUEtMPSI30l - Groth. 4· Meigs 136 lronton 33
Ph : 867 · 3153
&lt;
· U.S. Hwy . 25 (Nitro . W. Va .)
.the Pauleymert staged. a
b k
1-9'; Watson 3·0-6; Valentine, 2· Athens 34 Waverly JJ
Ph 727 296
.
CITY ~+------ STATE ~--spectactl
~e. ac '
o.• ; Sickles; 1·6·8; T. Myers, 1·
Monday's Games:
:
·2
Tolophan •• nolghbon) ________ _
A goal by Mille Watson, two 1·3: warren, o:o.o; Jc Myers, o- Jackson at Gallipoli s
'1
.·by John Groth, and three foul o.o. TOTALS ll-8-30.
Waverly at Ironton
If rural..
pi•••• ,,•• diroctiono _ __ _
t
Score
By
Quarters
:
·
Wellston
a.t
Meigs
.
OPEN
8
'til
8
........._
OPEN
8
'til
6
shots by Mike SlCldes cu Papooses
. 6 13 6 8-JJ Logan a t Ath!!fls, to be P,layed
--~ wn proptr!y in
~
Login•a margi!t .t o 29-26 with Blue Imps
6 8 .3 13- 30 on Jon. lJ.
' - - - - - - : - - -·· -·....;..__w_e_e_k_d~a.;.y_s_____. _s_o_t._&amp;_s_u_"..• _;;;_________
county. .

- ·-

]imllhlter builds a better_buy!

1

A·/I__ ...

i

'J

87 OLIVE ST.

.

,

·Mara-pder Babes

Jackson

..

,.

.

• second
straight,
gave
had'three free throws .
Bobcats
a
2-3
Robinette and Stout led the the'
as Sayre hit an 18· Ironton had \urned the ball shooting guard Jeff Hann"l1
league mark and 3-6 slate
BY KEITH WISECUP
and swished the nets after
Pirates' 16 point outburst in the
footer wlt'b 2:55 left over twice in the final minute was held to 12 points,' seven .. ,
overall. North Gallia dropped
ROCK SPRINGS - Mike Meigs had gotten the ball on a
second period. They scored six to 2-4 in ·the SVAC and 2-7 Sayre popped in a 20-foot jump · turnover with 11 seconds left.
to make It 51·50, then of play to stop any chances of below his average. He was
1
going ahead.
defensed by B. Vaughan and
points each. Wise paced the overall.
Bill Vaughan also hit a long
shot with five seconds
·M~!.gs had trailed for only the
The
win·
for
Coaci1
Carl
Rich Bailey at different InBobcat attack with 10 points on
KC played at Symmes Valley remaining to )ill the Meigs second time in the game, jumper with 1:44 remaining Wolfe's Marauders gives them tervals.
,,
four baskets and two foul shots.
to give Meigs a 52·51 lead.
·Saturday night. North Gallia Marauders to a come-from- ii1·48,
with
3:22
left
The
Ma ~. auders ~
Clay Hudson, 5-10 jWJior, had
After Andy Vaughan's free a4-4overallslateanda2-3
travels to Eastern Friday behind iiii-ii3 win over the in · the
fourth
.q uarleague
record,
The
Tigers
outre
bounded
the slightly
three points .
night.
·
Ironton·Tigers in a hard-fought ter. The Tigers gained throw wi'th ii8 seconds left, fall to '2-6 overall and 1-1 in taller Tigers 44-28, probabl)l
J
North Gallia continued its
Bill
Markin
KYG ~ R CREEK (561 - Southeastern Ohio Athletic that lead when Mark Ferguson Ironton's
i
league action.
the key statistic In the game.
comeback in the third
McCarty, 1·2-4; Hudson. 3-1·7: League basketball game here missed the second of two free positioned himself perfectly
I
Sayre, a !H) senior forward, Meigs several times had
period behind · the hot Rumley, 4-2·10: Darst, 4· 1-9: . Friday night.
· throws after making the first under the boards to re·
also
had
13
reboWJds
to
his
more
lhan
one
shot
under
·
I
shooting
of
Robinette, Stidham.0·0-0; Wise, 9-3-21and
and
lay
back
Cremeans. 1-J.5. Totals 22-12Sayre , the game's leading and teammate Kenny Green bound
Miller and Stout. Rob• 56.
in
a
missed
shot
by
the credit plus a good defensive their bucket while lrn~llln
scorer with 2ii points, and the tipped in the rebound breaking
)
inette scored 'six points,
Tigers' David Rann to tie it at g-:.me. He hit on. II of.18 from was kept to only one most of
NORTH GALl fA H4l - most outstanding. player, took a ••
'8 deadlock.
~
.,
the field, a combination of long
the t!me.
..
Miller had six and Stout added Weddington, 1·1-3; Robinette 7!
o.fA ; Robinson . 2·1·5: Miller, 3- a pass near the top of the key
•he Marauders came back ii3-all with 2ii seconds left. jumpers and driving lay-ups. - Each team hit 40 pet. from
four.
I
6-12 ; Smith, 2-0·4: Payne, 1-0-2
He kept the Marauders in the the field; Ironton 24 of 61 and
Wise and Rumley topped the ·and Stout, 7-0-14. Totals 23-8-54.
I
By Quarters :
game in the third period by · Mkigs 23 of ii8. Meigs made 9 of
Bobcats.
Kyger Creek ' 13 13·17 13- 56
scoring their first 10 points and 14 from the foul line while .the
In the hectic fourth period the North Gall Ia
6 16 20 12- 54
12 of 14 during ·the qparter.
Tigers canned five of seve!'.
lead see-sawed back and forth
Andy
Vaughan
als'o
~
was
a
Ironton '\'as chargejl with ~8
three times.
stalwart on defehse as the 5-10 turnovers while. ~Meigs turn'
KC's Rumley, Wise, and
senior forward had 14rebcWJds ed
it · over
nine
Hudson traded baskets with
.. and chipped in eight points. ' tiines. The lead changed
Robinette , Miller and Stout.
Senior captain guard Jim· hanjs II titnes and it
Rumley 's two pointer put the
are 2-3 in league play. Ironton Boggs had 12 points. was tied 11 different tiines.
,
ROCK
SPRINGS
The
Bobcats into a three point lead
·Meigs Marauder reserves is also 2-3 in league action.
Big Mark We rry . camr
The Marauders played at
until Miller hit the sec·
jumped
out
to
an
early
lead
and
Lonnie
Coates
led
Meigs
with
off the bench to 'spell foul· Wahama last night in a nonond end of two free
By United Press International were never threatened in a 13 and center Danny Dodson
throws. North GalJia missStop Bill Walton and you lopsided 54-33 basketbaJI win added 10. Perk Ault and Steve plagued Bill Chaney and had 10 league encounter. They travel
to Wellston Tuesday for a
ed two other scoring
don't necessarily stop UCLA, over Ironton High reserves Walburn each had eight for the reboWJds.
Big and strong 6-4 senior SEOAL battle.
changes when Keith Wedbut stop Ed Ratleff and ... well, here Friday night. '
winners. Myers was Ironton's ce nter Bill Markin was Iron,.,;
ding ton's attempt went wide.
In the halftime fifth and sixth
WELLSTON - Behind Paul the Long Beach State 49ers
The
win
was
the
fifth
in
eight
scorer
with
17.
leading
Joe Stidham, 6-1 sophomore White's 2ii points the Jackson would rather not discuss it. ·
ton 's chief weapon with .17 grade game, Rutland breezed
outings for Coach Hoger
Meigs hit on 24 of 4ti shots for points and 11 reboWJds. Slick· past Pomeroy 14-2.
center, who did not score, Ironmen defeated
host
Emplaying a stall for most of
grabbed his 12th rebound of the Wellston Friday night !ill-50 to the game, the University of Birch's little Marauders. They a hot 52 per cent and Ironton
made only 12 of 46 for 2ti per
game giving KC possession move out of the SEOAL cellar Oregon held · Walton to six
cent.
The · lillie Marauders ·
MEIGS-IRONTON CAGE STATISTICS
with 10 seconds left in the a,l a into a tie with Ironton for points but got blitzed by the
MEIGS
dropped
only
six
of
19
from
the
PLAYE.,R
game.
FG·A FT-A RB PF TP
sixth place in the league rest of the Bruins in the second
free
throw
line
while
Ironton
ll-18 3-4 ' 1J 2 25
Sayre
Kyger Creek hit 22 of 48 field standings.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
'
half an d en ded up on the 8 hort
1·4 6·10 14 3 8
BASKETBALL
SCORES
A.
Vau,ghan
made
nine
of
15.
goal attempts for 46 pet., and 12 '
0-l
0-0 2 3 0
In a thrilling cross~oWJty end of a 64-38 score ·as UCLA By United Press lnternallonat
ME'IGS (54) - Quails 3·0-6, Chaney
6-18 0-0 2 1 12
of 23 free throws. North Gallia game played at Wellston the posted its ii4th consecutive · Canton Lehman 78 Cuyahoga c,emeans 1-0-2, Coates 6·1-13, Boggs
J-9 0·0 1 0 6
Falls 56
sank 23 of 61 floor attempts and winless Rockets jumped to a
Dodson 5-0-10, Ault 4·0·8, B. Vaughan
1
2
1·6 0-0
2
Bai
ley
Canton South 61 Marlington 46 Colburn l-2-4, S. Walburn 3·2-8,
eight of 12 free throws. The 14-12 first period lead and then victory.
1'2 0·0 10 2 2
Oregon trailed by only four Fairless 52 Canton Hoover 50 G. Walburn 1-0-2, Riley 0·1·\, Werry
23·l8 9·14 44 12 55
Pirates collected 51 rebounds fell behind 24-22 at halftime. points, 111-14, at halftime, but Canton Aquinas 58 Minerva 57 Ebersbach 0-0-0. Totals 24-6-54 . • TOTALS
IRONTON
•
East Canton 80 Northwest 55
IRONTON (33) - Wiley 1-1·
with Robinette leading the way
FG·A FT-A R&amp; PF TP
After three periods the ,the Bruins outscored the Akron Central Hower 82 Akron 3, Beckett 2·1·5, Thomas 2-1-5, PLAYER
with 15. KC had 36 rebounds. Ironmen hajj.moved into a 311-28 Ducks, 21-4, in the opening
2-14 0-0 0 1 4
Myers 7-3· 17, . McGeer 0-1-1, Rann
East 75
6-17 0·0 4 4 12
North Gallia 's reserves lead befofe the two teams eight minutes of the second Akron Ellet 62 Akron Kenmore Cockrell 0-2·2. Totals 12-9-33. Hannon
J-5 3-4 6 I 9
Green
44
By Quarters:
.
moved into first place in the exploded for 42 points in the half .to turn the game mto
8·15 1·1 "
2 17
a · Akr on Garfield 74 Akron Ironton
4 11 7 11- 33 Markin
S~AC standings with a 67·23
2-6
1·2 3 '
5
Meigs
11 1J 13 17- 54 Ferguson
Firestone 54
final period with Jackson rout. Larry Farmer and Keith
3·4
0·0
4
2
6
McCreary
Officia ls, Bragg and Vance .
romp over the Bobkittens. notching its first league win Wilkes led the second half blitz Akron South 63 Akron North J9
24-61 5-7 28 11 l3
TOTALS
•
Mil lersport 75 Lancaster
Greg James led the winners while, the battling Rockets for UCLA as each
By
Quarters:
finished with
Fisher Cathol ic 66
Ironton
10 14 16 13
53
with 18 points. Mike Camden remain winless in five loop 14 points.
Cots. Walnut Ridge 78 MarionMeigs
13
15
14
13
55
Franklin 76
added tii. Tony Hopp led the outings.
Officials - Bill Thompson and Ken Thompson .
San Jose State had much Rossford 66 Perrysburg 50
losers with seven points.
White was the only Ironman better success against Ratlefl lima Shawnee 68 l ima Central
'I
The win, Kyger Creek's in double figures while Dave and his Long Beach State
Catholic 62 ,
Fostoria 68 Port Clinton 55
.
Wapakoneta · 73 Ottawa Sylvania 52 Oregon qay 5U
Souders pumped In 20 points teammates.
Usmg
an
Glandorf 49
linden McK inley 58
·
aggressive
zone
in
the
second
Springfield
Central
Catholic
47
Columbus Eastmore 57
,,
. •: 'U/,,)
-~------•••••••••••... and Charlie Snare added 12 for
t
t
d
the
9e
,
·
Bellefontaine
45
·
Columbus
South 70 Columbus
4 rs Delphos St. Johns 72 Lima Bath
half · o cu own
the losers.
'I "' \, J,I n
North 47
•
Jackson was hot from the inside scoring, · the Spartans
64
Columbus West IJ Columbus
Whetstone 48
floor with 2ii of 48 field goals for held Ratleff to 12 points and St . Mary's 74 Coldwater 59
'1
Findlay 65 Mari on Harding 48 Columbus Northland 66
52 pet. and 10 of 25 free throws. upset the fifth-ranked 49ers, 611- Upper ·Scioto Valley 85 Bluffton
Columbus Brookhaven 54
I!'
56
Columbus East 70 Columbus
Don Jenkins pulled down 61.
Ratleff was rattled by the Mansfield Senior 90 Sandusky
Central 62
nine of the 25 Jackson
:il
40
Whitehall 76 Reynoldsburg 55
"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
reboWJds.
Spartans' pressure defense. He Clearfork 70 Plymouth 57
Delaware 60 Worh ington 46
FEATURING
Wellston connected on 23 of managed to hit only five of 18 Willard 53 Upper Sandusky 48 Westerville 51 Westland 49
Cambridge 55 Coshocton 53
Mt. Vernon 61 Gahanna 41
ii9 attempts for 39 pet. and s hots from l he fl oor an d Ridgewood 86 Newcomerstown · Bexley 68 Urbanna 52
67
Grove City 67 London 56
added four or 12 at the charity committed nine turnovers·.
The
rest
of
the
Long
Beach
Garoaway
65
Hiland
47
Grandview
64 Hilliard 43
stripe.
't
much
better.
Ind
ian
Valley
South
46
Indian
Groveport
76
Mifflin 73
Charlie Arnold picked off 14 State team Wasn
Valley No. 32
DeSales 79 Watterson 67 ·
I
The 49ers hit on just 37 per cent Orrville 87 West Holmes 79 (of) Columbus Wehrle 59
'
of the Rockets ' 35 reboWJds.
of
their
shots
from
the
floor
as
Ashland
61
Dover
60
Columbus
Biohop
Hartley
57
, Specializing in AMF &amp;
::.
Tuesday night the Ironmen
Warren Reserve 65 Nil es Teays Valley 83 Franklin
Columbia Bowling Balls.
~!I IIII
will host WJdefeated Gallipolis they dropped their first game
McKinley" 48
Heig hts 81
.
ill
of the. year after II victories. East Liverpool 52 Warren Dublin 46 Otentangy 44
whils
Wellston
entertains
a
fast
PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING, .
·
Harding 39
Hamil ton Township 66 Marys·
. S
improving Meigs team.
J ohnote
DRILLING&amp; IN·
kinner, a semor Poland 59 Warren JFK 48
ville 55
!l
The bcx score :
STRUCTION AVAILABLE
guard, led San Jose State with Defiance 57 Bryan 52
Marietta 65 Lancaster 50
li
.
Edgerton 62 Stryker 60
Dan vi lle
70
Columbus
JACKSON (58) - Morrow 2· 27 points .
SPECIAL RATES TO:
Napoleon
66
Archibald
56
Academy
57
1-5: Whlte 12·1-25 ; Martin 1·1-3;
East Cleve. Shaw 86 Parma Centerberg 77 East Knox 70
CHURCH GROUPS,
DeStephen 3·0·6; Conroy 2-4·8;
,
Normandy 74
Heat h 77 Watk ins 73
PARTIES, STUDENTS.
Jenk ins 1·2·4; McDonald 2·0·4;
'I
53 Bedford 52
Gran vi lle 90 Utica 69
Billman 1·1·3. TOTALS 24·10· Columbus Ready 97 London- Berea
Eastlake North 62 Mentor 51 Li cking Heights 62 Johnstown
58.
Monroe 60
.AMF Equipment"
Macom ber 70 Toledo
58
·
WELLSTON (SOl - Sna,re 6· West Musloingum 71 Licking Toledo
Scott 58
Federal Hocking 59 Belpre 58
0·12
:
Souders
10-0-20;
Valley
51
Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, _Oh~o
Toledo St. Francis 62 Toledo ' Vinton County 77 Warren Local
McK inni ss 0-2-2; Peoples 2-0-4; . Unioto 72 Zane Trace 62
ltapplieseasily and smoothlywithoutd rips or runs, .
Start 51
67
Sites 1-0-2; Gilliland 1-0-2; Pike Western 82 Chillicothe
l
Toledo
Rogers
65 Toledo Kyger Creek 56 North Gall ia 54
yet.
does not leave unsightly lap or bru sh marks.
Arnold J-2-8. TOTALS 23·4-50.
Ftaget 67
.
Cardinal Strltch 49
Lakewood 81 North Ridge 60
Score by quar1ers :
You can create a fresh new atmosphere for an
Logan Elm 95 Madison Palins Tot.
Woodward
59 Tot. Bowher Bloom Carroll 81 Pickerington
66
r----;--~----~----------1 Jackson ·
12 12 14 2!f-58
entire room in just one afternoon .. . and do ·il so
52
64
Wellston
14 8 6 22- 50 Adena 58 Westfall 40
inexpensively. Rev Satin Latex Wall Paint dries in
Reserve score,: Ja ckson .49, WilmlnRton 81 Miami Trace 66 Tot. DeVilbiss 69 Tot. Wa ite 60 Fairlield Union 61 Canal
Tot. St. John 59 Tot. Whitmer 49
Winchester 60
just 20 minutes , .. you can replace draperies
Wellston 39.
Taledo Central 55 To Iedo Amanda. Ctearcreek 75 Berne
and furn ish ings and entertain the same day.
'I
There
are no lingering, tell-tale odors with Rev
$ $$$ $ $$ $$$$$$$$$$ $$ $ $ $$ $ $ $$$! ~~~~~~Springfield 59
Co~~~~~: Mohawk 70 St .
G
Satin Latex Wall Paint ... in fa ct, Rev Satin Late x
'1
Wall Paint is completely free of all objectionable
)
odors. Best of all, your Rev Satin Latex Wall Paint
u ... M . . .
·I
. finished walls will be completely washable ...
I
simply scrub away handprints and other acci·
IJ
~
~
dental smudges to restore the sparkling bright
Rev Satin Late ~ Waii'Paint appearance .
:
IT'S TIME TO MOVE OUR
:

UCLA rolls

,. ....·. . ...

GAHS catcheS Logan way·off.~~~~=~:~:'::.~::
"' I·e
· .'fs' ' 7
'
I·
.
46~·
~Jrc~§i~fi~f:
nn! ~. · ~ ~
"form,.«&lt;efeats

Kyger ·Creek
VINTON - Playing a steady
defensive game for the second
straight week , Coach .lim
Arledge's Kyger Creek Bob·
cats held off the North Gallia
Pirates in the final seconds to
post a 56-M victory here Friday
night in a 'Southern Valley
Athletic Conference game.
In a replay of last iveek's
consolation game of ·the Gallia
CoWJty Holiday Tournament,
the Bobcats took the lead , froze
the ball and were fouled in the
final seconds.
Kyger Creek led 55-54 with 10 .
seconds rema ining in the._
game.
·
Dave Wise, ii-8 sophomore
guard, was fouled with four
seconds remaining. Wise
connected .on the first half of
the bonus situation to give the
Bobcats a two point lead.
North GalJia grabbed the
reboWJd on the second ·free
throw attempt but was WJable
to get the baJI down the floor :
Wise, starting his fourth
straight game, was the leadfug
scorer. with 21 points on nine
baskets. and three free throws.
He was· particularly hot in the
second and third periods.
J ohn Rumley, !H) jWJior,
came off the bench to score 10
points, six in the final stanza .
Mark Darst, 6-1 senior, had
nine points.
Three players hit double
figures for Coach Jim Foster's
Pirates, Dave Robinette, ·6-1
jWJior forward and Tim Stout,
:&gt;-7 junior, had 14 points each
while Dan Miller, 5-8 jWJior
guard, canned 12 points, II in
the second· half.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
13-ti lead in the first period and
held an II point lead, before the
Pirates began hitting midway
in the second quarter.
Darst and Orland Cremeans
led the first period scoring.
DljFSl scored six points while
Cremeans, a senior ·forward,

.......

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'/1-H:...

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FINANCING

::6

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&gt;

•

.._...Jim Waller~

I
I

CD

•.

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•

20- The Sunday Times· Sentinel, SWJday, Jan. 7, 1973

.

' 21 - TheSwidayTirnes-Sentlnei,Swulay,Jan. 7 ·1973

.

cO}&gt;S;:'M:e igs ~. edgeS' Irontoil
•
2nd straight WID in'last five seconds
....
•

.

.

'

'

•

on; LBS is

wins first

upset 68-61

roll over Cubs

loop tilt

SKYLINE LANES

'·'

and PRO-SHOP

•24 New ·AMF Lanes
•Snack Bar and
\ ~~
Captain's LounRe
~\\ V
~

!/

\j

.

~
p

HONE

6.

[g gontethit~g you dot~' t have wit!t
CRev gaun ~ate~ CWaQQ cpait~t!

446-3362

,,"

''All New

~

REDUCED

DEVELOPMENT CORP.
NEW HOMES FOR SALE

~

SPLIT LEVEL

KIT SECTIONAL HOME DISPLAY

:

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~

Fas·oL . .
D

-4 BR, 2 bath s,
~~~"~m , total electric with Wlnianison
1
Heating and Cfl
....ning, Genera l El~ctrl c
appliances, full·
;aped , concrete dnve &amp;
streets, 2112 car Qaragt,..
Icony, lot 75K l 75, coun t y
water, Tara sewer system.

Ill
Ill
Ill
ill

BI-LEVEL
3 Bedroom , 3 bath rooms, 2 car garage, elect ric forced air ~
furnace and air condition er, fami ly room, 14'x26' mast er
be.droom, dil) ing ba lcony.

....

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Ill

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o£'

' 1"

room ,

Genera l Elec trtc c
concre te drive &amp; streeh, _
lot 95xl75,

coun~y

b~se merit, -total

electric·
" l=!n tral alr conditioning,

'

o .arpeted , landscaped,

1rage. dining balcony,
water, Tara ~... . Ner system .

FIVE LEVELS
3 Bedrooms, 21 :1 baths, 2 car

garage, 12)(24 li ving room,

total electric family room, .fire place.

' .
Building Sites

Available.
Homes buil.l

King s berry
to I j I
specifications.
,All Underground Utilities Provided.

FOR INFORMATION, OR APPOINTMENT

•

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ill

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Happy Hour Daily 2:30p.m •. 8: 30p.m.

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Upper Rl. 7 ll:exl Door to Auto Auc,l ion
....
Phone 446-9:14o
.
O.llipolls, Ohio ill

Wlltl'

,

,,

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·

Ohio

Kanauga, Ohio

Valley's

fi'nest Nl'ght a··ub
.

· Ph. 446-9174

$$$$$SSSSSSS :ss ill'------------~··.;,.·_..,..I
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uarter

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br••h or l1p m1rkl.

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Tou1t1l durable flntah-ls
': CIIIn up ~IUihU llld
coinp tltl1 wuhlblt.
tqulpmttl In minutu
Sm~rtlllt finish r»mPII· ·
with just warm, 101"

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Ttliek IAOUih to IPPir
1moothlr withOut driP· '
lllna. 111. do. not lane

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any

367-7250

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GIVE NEW LIFE, NEW COLOR TO ANY ROOM
WITH' JUST ONE tOAT O{ MINNFLO LATEX

1

!Closed Sundayl

~

,Come In Todlly - If you are even tn lnklng ol a new home
"this
spring, It will pay you to buv. now. Th is home m,ustl
111
~ move now as we need the space lor a new display. .
ill We'll Sell Outright or Trade. You can Savea. Bundlt·
ill
(Only One~tthls Discount Price) ..

.I

eOPEN 2:30P.M. TU 2:30A.M.•

~

24x48-Foyer, living room. ~lnlng room, beautiful kit·
chen,
utility, 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths with Fiberglass tub &amp;
~
shower.
Fully carpeted with lndoor.Qutdoor on kitchen,
Ill
hall
and
bath5. 8 ft . ceilings, hlp root with asphalt roo.t
Ill
.,.. shingles. Built to F.H.A. speclflcatto•s.

"

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SOUTHERN COLONIAL

TO THE
"SWEET LOVIN' BLUES"

eNO COVER CHARGE
ePOPULAR PRICES

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·JI
91

''BUILDING SUPPLIES"

,u

Monday Thru Fridoy-7 A.M. to l P.M.
· Saturday- 7 A.M. to 4 P.M.
PHONE 444-m-4

]?.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO'

·

·

..

-

.

.

·

.

·

5·15 o.o o

1 5 10

Jim Whit craft, g

0·2 0-0 1 0 0 0
2·7

0·0

0

1

0

4

9.17

J.J

4 18

2 19

6· 11

1·2

o

5

2 13

9 6 12 19

46

·Brute Walker,f
3-3 0-0 1 2 · o 6
Dave Krebs, f
0-2 o.o " 2 4 2 o
Jack McGrady ,g
0·6 A·5 2 1 3 4
BiiiHorwell ,.t
1·1 2-2 0 2 0 4 .
TOTALS
.
f7 .6J 12 -15 14 28 14 . 46
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (71)
PLA'I'ER- Pos.
FG-A FT.A PF RB TO TP

Blue
Devils still
.

GiiPrice,c

'

Jimm y Noe, I

tied for top spot

12-16 0-1 · 2

Mark Kie sl ing ,g

Topper Orr , l
·Jim Singer, g
Mike Bercidge, I
Kev Sheets, g
Roger Da iley, I,
Jim Niday, g
Skipjler Johnson, c
TOTALS

'

GALLIPOLIS - Aggressive Gallipolis caught . ·
visiting Logan way off form before a packed house .
here Friday night as Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
~evils posted their seventh straight hardwood
VICtory, 71-46.
..
.
·
~e Southeastern Ohio League triumph kept the
Galhans in a .first place tie with defending·champion .
Waverly ~s the Tigers bombed host Athens 64-43
Friday for their seventh consecutive win. Both the
Blue Devils and Tigers are s-o in the conference.

2-6 Q-0
0-2 0-0
1-5 0-0
D
0-0
0-0 1-2
2·3 2·2
0·1 o.o
33·64 5-11

Score By Quarters:

logan Chieftains
GA HS Blue Devils

8 J 24

0
2
0
0
2
1
2
13

4· 1
1 0
1 2
2 1
1 4
1 2
1 1
42 18

4
0
2
2
1
6
0
71

11 21 22 11
71
OFFICIALS - -Gary Duza n and Paul Maple , Portsmouth

chapter.

Hil lsboro 86 Greenville 85

Coach Scott Filzgerald's
Chleltalnsdrop~d ,to\4-4on the Log•o was six of Ui. Gallla'8
year, and 3-2 in loop piJiy.
6-1 junior center 011 Price,
The rangy Cbieftairui'etitered after a cold flrat half, found
Friday's encounter with.a .500 the range and scored 10 of bla
shooting percentage from the 19 markers In this stanza.
field In four previous loop
After Jimmy Noe's goal put
outings'. ~ainst the Galllans' the home club on top by 36
sticky man-to-man defense, points, 64-28, with 7:05 left in
LHSmanagedonly 17of63field the game for Gallia's biggest
NOE CUT OFF - It wasn't very often Jimmy Noe (22)
goal attempts for a cold 26.9 lead, Osborne cleared his
was cut off going toward the basket for an easy layup Friday
pet.
bench. Coach Fitzgerald sent
night but Steve WilSon caught Logan's sophomore guard Jim
That, plus the tact Lo- .. in his secorid team at the start
Kemper (13) doing just that in this action photo of Friday's
gan was s.lmply not as of the final period.
aggressive
as
It
Logan's second WJit re~d
bad been In previous off 13 straight points to cut the
GIL PRICE, Gallipolis' 6-4
outings,
enabled
the deficit to 23 markers (64-41) jWJior center, picked off 18
O.bornemen to win going with 4:20 remaining.
rebounds and scored 19 points
away.
. Jimmy Niday, 6-l sophomore offensively, and held Logan's
Doors to the GAHS gyrn were GAHS p;uard, suffered a cut high-scoring center Handy
closed at 7:30p.m., according up(ll'r lip during a collision Norris to seven points and six
to Athletic Director Ed Stewart with a Chieftain with 1:14 reboWJds as GAHS defeated
after a capacity c~ow~ of 1,000 remaining, but stayed in- the Logan 71-46 in a SEOAL hardhad been admitted. Several game.
wood game Friday night. On
fans were unable to attend the
GARS was four of 12 in the ., !eft is Gallia 's sop homore
important SEOAL contesl, due last period Logan five of 17 guard Jim Niday. Logan's
to limited seating facilities in
Gallipoll; shot 5l.ii from th~ Dave Krebs (21, right) looks
Gallia's 14-year-old structure. field sinking 33 of 64 field goal on. Headl~g down court is
The Blue Devils were never atte~pts. GAHS was five of 11 se nior Blue Devil forward
headed . in Friday's contest. at the charity circles, a cool Topper Orr, 14.
Jirnmy -Noe, 6-3 senior GARS 4ii.4 pet. The Galllans comforward put GAHS on top "411' mitted 13 personals, hauled ,the Chiefs.
Randy Norris, veteran 6-3
7: Ill eft 1n tha first stanza. Jim down 42 rebounds, and lost the
senior
center who was
Kemper, 6-2 sophomore guard, ball 18 times on turnovers.
tied It at 2-all (9r the Chiefs Eight miscues came in the averaging 15 points a game
was limited to seven markers
with 6:41 left in a tap-in. Gil final stanza.
·
and six rebcunds by Gil Price.
Price's free throl" with 5:52
Noe sparked tb~HS
Noe held Jeff Campbell and
showing on the clock put GAHS
attack with 24 points. He was
Ken Culbertson to a combined
ahead to stay.
1% of 16 f~om the field. Price
total of nine points .
GARS htt eight of 16 from the
added I~ Pjlln18, and coo·
The Chiefs were up to par·'' ·"
fieid In the first stanza while
trolled beth boards wit&amp;• II
at
the charity line, sinking 12
LJIS managed only three of 16.
rebounds . Kiesling aiao
of 15 attempts k'r 80 p~t.
The Galllans were on top 17·9
finished In double figures
Logan had 14 personals,
after the first whliJUe stop.
with 13 markers.
hauled down 28 rebounds and
With Noe, Price and Mark
Topper Orr, 6-1 senior forcommitted 14 turnovers, five
Kiesling hitting from close ward, worked his way through
In the last period.
range, GAHS increased its lead the Logan defense for a couple
Gallipolis will play at
lo 25 points on two occasions in backdoor goals, hauled down
Tuesday. Logan will
Jackson
the second period . It was 36-11 four rebcWJds, and turned in
with I :34left in the half, and 311- another outstanding floor host Athens, beginning at 7:30
p.m.
13 at the :47 mark. GAHS led game for the Galllans.
38·15 during the halftime
Kiesling also turned ln a fine
break. Gallia hit 10 of 111 shots floor game as he hit the big
In the second period. Logan men underneath with pinpoint
.
ALL GAI.iES
. W L P OP
was three of 12.
passing throughout the game. Team
Wavedy
7 0 546 397
The Osbornemen con·
Kev Sheets held Logan 's Ga ll ipolis
7 o 470 342
tlaued to bombard the hoop
outstanding guard, ·Jim Pierce, Portsmouth
7 3 707 670
6 4 708 585
In the third stanza, pulllug
ii-10 jWJior, to eight points South Point
Athens
5 4 500 477
away to a 33-polnt ad·
before departing with 2:30 left Chesapeake
4 3 420 403
vanlage, II0-27. The Devils bit
in the third stanza. Pierce Logan
·
4 4 518 495
4 4 487 497
11 of 17 abuts In Ibis period.
finished with 10 points, high for Meigs
Fed-Hocking
4 4 408 460

.

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:. 'SEO stan~ngs

Ironton

Papooses hold on for
33-30 win over Imps ·

Jim Pierce. g

Ken Cu lbertson, c

'

2 6

Ja ckson
Wellston

497

Waverl y 64 Athens 43
Meigs 55 Ironton 53
Gallipolis 71 logan 46

SEOAL cage battle at Gallipolis. Oa left is GAHS guard Kev'
Sheets (34). Noe popped in 24 points, hitting 12of 16 field goal
attempts, to pace the Gallians to their seventh straight win,
71-46.

Hayesville 73 New Lexington 65
Springfield North 91
Kettering Fairmont West SS

Jackson 58 Wellston 50

.Henry Block _has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
Rell8(..n 2. We're human, and once in a
great while we make a mistake. But if our
error means you must pay additional tax,
you pay only the lax. We pay any interest
or penalty.

'

OO&amp;l:KlBLOCM
JHE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
Second &amp; Sycamore:-Gallipolis
Open 9 A. M. to 6 P . M. Weekdays. 9-5 Sat.
Phone 446-0303
304 E. Main-992-3795-Pomeroy
Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon . thru Sat .
No Appointment Necessary

What do you want ...
a low cost ·
4 bedroom home ?

492

2 6 421 555
0 7 355 578

Friday 's Results :

Gallipolis 71 Logan 46
Jackson 58 Wellston 50
Meigs 55 Ironton 5J
Waverl y 64 Athens 43
Sprin~fi e ld Sout h 87
Ports·
mo~t~ 64
South Point 71 Oak Hill 61
Chesapeake 58 Faiftand 56
Fed·Hocking 59 Belpre 58

GALLIPOLIS
Two 3:24 remaining In Ute game.
technical fouls, two turnovers
Bill Undsey's short jumper
and two missed shotS in the with 3:131eft was countered by
· SEOAL VARSITY
finul two minutes of play. by a long jumper by Gallla's Tom ,
Team
• W l P DP
Coach Ed Pauley's GAHS Blue Myers with 3:02 remaining. . Waverly
5 0 395 263
Gallipolis
5 0 J35 246
Imps enabled Logan's visiting Logan Jed 31-28.
J 2 280 26 1
Papooses to hold on for a
Theil came ri rash of Blue Athens
,. . ....
.......
Logan
3 2 J19 312
thrilling 33-30 SEOAL victory Imp mistakes and the victory Meigs
2 J 284 J29
1 4 29J 288
in Friday night's preJirnlnary went to Logan. Tom Gosnell's Ironton ·
Jackson
1 4 282 362
contest on the GARS hard- freethrowwlth2:10madeit3:1- Wellston
0 5 251 378
woqd.
28. Gosnell made it 33-28 with · TOTALS
20 20 2439 2439
;
The triumph left Logan in 1:28left.JohnGrothhitalayup
SEOAL RESERVES
WJdtiputed first place in the with 1:01 remaining to Ctll Team
W L P ·op
Lilgan
5 0 2J5 170
reserve league with a~ mark. Logan's lead to 33-30.
Waverly
4 1 208 170
The Papooses are 7-1 on '.the
GARS then stole the ball, but ·Athens
even !urn ish the materials and. include the cost in
Some !amities need a... four-bedroom home .. . others lime enjoying your home and your family while your
3 2 197 . 167
neighbors
are
li
xing
up
and
painting
.
That's
because
your mortgage if you like .
yeru:. The Blue Imps are now 3- lost It again with 30 seconds Gall ipolis
just want one . Some don' I need or want a home quite
J 2 182 142
Meigs
2 3 195 198
that large. But, at Jim Walter Homes it doesn't we'uso bu ild ing material• that ara especially salected
2 in league play, and 5-2 on the remaining.
• OVER 20 "BETTER BUY" MODELS
Ironton
2
3
186
210
for long life . . aluminum windows, hardboard
.
maner
what needs or wants you h'ave , .. we build
year. The loss snapped the
LJ!Shlt 13of 40 from the field Ja ckson .
1 4 188 224
• BUILT ON YOUR PROPERTY
"wood made better" •iding that holds paint years
· them all . .. four bedroiiiii'S:": . three ... two or just
Imps four-game winning for 32 (ict. The winners were Wellston
0 5· 128 238
longer
than
ordinary
siding
and
heavy
duty
roofing
,
one
.
Whatever
you
want.
Jim
Walt
er
"better
buy"
Coil
or write your local Jim Wa(ler Homes' manager
.20 20 1519 1519
streak, and left them two seven of 15 from the 'foul cir· TOTALS
to
mention
a
few
.
Reserve Results:
homes are cuSlDm buill on your P.roperty in a wide
today. He ' ll give .you complete information and the
games behind the Papoose~. cles. Logan picked off 23 Logan 33 Gallipolis 30
variety of sizes and model s ... and they all accent
low cost of building a lour-bedroom, two-bath home
Now , to keep the cost of your home even lower,
Don Young, 6-3 sophomore, rebounds. Young had 10. LHS Ja ckson 49 Wellston 39
comfort
and
fun
ctional
beauty
with
special
emphasis
Jim
Waller
~ill build on your property, completely
for
you . . , or any bther home you want .or need ...
Meigs 54 Ironton 33
led the wiruiers with 12 points. conimitted 12 personaliJ.
on
LOW
COST'.
What
do
you
want?
We'll
build
it
and
explain how qualified property owners can get
fin
ishing,
the
outSide
down
to
the
last
nail,
the
Waver ly 32 Athens 29
John Grath, 5-9 sophomore . GARS hit 11 of 30 shots from
forVOU. Jan. 9 Games:
INSTANT
MORTGAGE FINANCING . Isn't it lime you
shutters and the paint - buJ slop al almosl any sta9e
guard, led Gallipolis' attack the field for 36 pet. The Imps Gallipolis at Ja ckson
movad
up
to
a " battar buy" by Jim Walter? Sure it is ..
And these custo m built homes conform to high otand- of inoide completion ... you do the rest and save
Athens
at
Logan
with nine points. l)opbomore . were eight of 14 at the foul Wa verly at Ironton
ards of quality to give you years and years of low
money . The handier you are with tool s and the more
'
Who '
"
/
&gt;I '
,. '
1
~ '
interior work you do , the more you 'll save . We'll
maintenance upkeep . You'll spend more o~ your spa re
Mike Sickles added eight for circles. GAllS had 17 rebounds Meigs at Well ston
the losers.
(only four off the offensive
.
After a 11-6 first period tie, boards) . Valentine h~uled Team SEOAL F~O~H p OP
./}_+: [:•ib . ~. f'l_- _-· J. I.I.,.,.... b
-AI
. Logan forged ahead 14-12 with down seven. The Imps com- Jackson
5 1 322 220
~leU!. ![.ftC, or~ ~-ectJ'K() TTvr.MA:. l..AJ'f.A.a,gt:'J
JIM WALTER HOMES
1:20remalninginthefirsthalf. nilttediBpersonalsandlostthe r~~~olls
~ ~~;
~MORTGAGE
I ':;,·;,'d"t;'k:·;~··~~!~e~ore
.
The Papooses were never · ball16 times on turnovers. ·
Waverly
info•molion
and
t~e
-coll
ol
175
2 3 222
v to qu~lifie d property owners
headed after that, pullin
. g away
Box SCj)re :
Ironton
2 3 160 192
. buHd;ng on my prope r,ty. I
to a 19-14 halftime advantage.
AI hens
2 3 174 166
unde,.land !here would be
Itwas26-l 7 afterthreeperiods.
PAPOOSE"S t3:ii - Gosnell, Meigs
2 J 159 18J ·
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
no obligation to buy ond
f.2·4; Lindsey,2·0·4; Young,5- Wellston
0 S llJ 311
SO . CHARLESTON, W. VA. 25303 f·. ~t~olyouwouldg;•emethm
The 'lisitors lncrellsed their 2·12 ; Fuller, 0·1-1; Porter, 3.o.\ TOTALS
21 21 1596 1596
foc rs lree of charge.
leadto·IOpOJnts,27-17wltlr4:51 6; G. Culbertson, 2·2-6 :
Thursday's Results :
Old Hwy . 52
P. 0 . Box 8367 ·
NAME
.
·lod
before
Meadows.
0·0·0.
TOTALS
13·7·
Jackson
7
,
9
.
W
ellston
12
·
p
,
0
.
Bo
x
250
(
608
ls
i
Ave
.
South
Gallipolis 39 Logan 33
AODRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
left in the final .pet'
33, ·
BLUEtMPSI30l - Groth. 4· Meigs 136 lronton 33
Ph : 867 · 3153
&lt;
· U.S. Hwy . 25 (Nitro . W. Va .)
.the Pauleymert staged. a
b k
1-9'; Watson 3·0-6; Valentine, 2· Athens 34 Waverly JJ
Ph 727 296
.
CITY ~+------ STATE ~--spectactl
~e. ac '
o.• ; Sickles; 1·6·8; T. Myers, 1·
Monday's Games:
:
·2
Tolophan •• nolghbon) ________ _
A goal by Mille Watson, two 1·3: warren, o:o.o; Jc Myers, o- Jackson at Gallipoli s
'1
.·by John Groth, and three foul o.o. TOTALS ll-8-30.
Waverly at Ironton
If rural..
pi•••• ,,•• diroctiono _ __ _
t
Score
By
Quarters
:
·
Wellston
a.t
Meigs
.
OPEN
8
'til
8
........._
OPEN
8
'til
6
shots by Mike SlCldes cu Papooses
. 6 13 6 8-JJ Logan a t Ath!!fls, to be P,layed
--~ wn proptr!y in
~
Login•a margi!t .t o 29-26 with Blue Imps
6 8 .3 13- 30 on Jon. lJ.
' - - - - - - : - - -·· -·....;..__w_e_e_k_d~a.;.y_s_____. _s_o_t._&amp;_s_u_"..• _;;;_________
county. .

- ·-

]imllhlter builds a better_buy!

1

A·/I__ ...

i

'J

87 OLIVE ST.

.

,

·Mara-pder Babes

Jackson

..

,.

.

• second
straight,
gave
had'three free throws .
Bobcats
a
2-3
Robinette and Stout led the the'
as Sayre hit an 18· Ironton had \urned the ball shooting guard Jeff Hann"l1
league mark and 3-6 slate
BY KEITH WISECUP
and swished the nets after
Pirates' 16 point outburst in the
footer wlt'b 2:55 left over twice in the final minute was held to 12 points,' seven .. ,
overall. North Gallia dropped
ROCK SPRINGS - Mike Meigs had gotten the ball on a
second period. They scored six to 2-4 in ·the SVAC and 2-7 Sayre popped in a 20-foot jump · turnover with 11 seconds left.
to make It 51·50, then of play to stop any chances of below his average. He was
1
going ahead.
defensed by B. Vaughan and
points each. Wise paced the overall.
Bill Vaughan also hit a long
shot with five seconds
·M~!.gs had trailed for only the
The
win·
for
Coaci1
Carl
Rich Bailey at different InBobcat attack with 10 points on
KC played at Symmes Valley remaining to )ill the Meigs second time in the game, jumper with 1:44 remaining Wolfe's Marauders gives them tervals.
,,
four baskets and two foul shots.
to give Meigs a 52·51 lead.
·Saturday night. North Gallia Marauders to a come-from- ii1·48,
with
3:22
left
The
Ma ~. auders ~
Clay Hudson, 5-10 jWJior, had
After Andy Vaughan's free a4-4overallslateanda2-3
travels to Eastern Friday behind iiii-ii3 win over the in · the
fourth
.q uarleague
record,
The
Tigers
outre
bounded
the slightly
three points .
night.
·
Ironton·Tigers in a hard-fought ter. The Tigers gained throw wi'th ii8 seconds left, fall to '2-6 overall and 1-1 in taller Tigers 44-28, probabl)l
J
North Gallia continued its
Bill
Markin
KYG ~ R CREEK (561 - Southeastern Ohio Athletic that lead when Mark Ferguson Ironton's
i
league action.
the key statistic In the game.
comeback in the third
McCarty, 1·2-4; Hudson. 3-1·7: League basketball game here missed the second of two free positioned himself perfectly
I
Sayre, a !H) senior forward, Meigs several times had
period behind · the hot Rumley, 4-2·10: Darst, 4· 1-9: . Friday night.
· throws after making the first under the boards to re·
also
had
13
reboWJds
to
his
more
lhan
one
shot
under
·
I
shooting
of
Robinette, Stidham.0·0-0; Wise, 9-3-21and
and
lay
back
Cremeans. 1-J.5. Totals 22-12Sayre , the game's leading and teammate Kenny Green bound
Miller and Stout. Rob• 56.
in
a
missed
shot
by
the credit plus a good defensive their bucket while lrn~llln
scorer with 2ii points, and the tipped in the rebound breaking
)
inette scored 'six points,
Tigers' David Rann to tie it at g-:.me. He hit on. II of.18 from was kept to only one most of
NORTH GALl fA H4l - most outstanding. player, took a ••
'8 deadlock.
~
.,
the field, a combination of long
the t!me.
..
Miller had six and Stout added Weddington, 1·1-3; Robinette 7!
o.fA ; Robinson . 2·1·5: Miller, 3- a pass near the top of the key
•he Marauders came back ii3-all with 2ii seconds left. jumpers and driving lay-ups. - Each team hit 40 pet. from
four.
I
6-12 ; Smith, 2-0·4: Payne, 1-0-2
He kept the Marauders in the the field; Ironton 24 of 61 and
Wise and Rumley topped the ·and Stout, 7-0-14. Totals 23-8-54.
I
By Quarters :
game in the third period by · Mkigs 23 of ii8. Meigs made 9 of
Bobcats.
Kyger Creek ' 13 13·17 13- 56
scoring their first 10 points and 14 from the foul line while .the
In the hectic fourth period the North Gall Ia
6 16 20 12- 54
12 of 14 during ·the qparter.
Tigers canned five of seve!'.
lead see-sawed back and forth
Andy
Vaughan
als'o
~
was
a
Ironton '\'as chargejl with ~8
three times.
stalwart on defehse as the 5-10 turnovers while. ~Meigs turn'
KC's Rumley, Wise, and
senior forward had 14rebcWJds ed
it · over
nine
Hudson traded baskets with
.. and chipped in eight points. ' tiines. The lead changed
Robinette , Miller and Stout.
Senior captain guard Jim· hanjs II titnes and it
Rumley 's two pointer put the
are 2-3 in league play. Ironton Boggs had 12 points. was tied 11 different tiines.
,
ROCK
SPRINGS
The
Bobcats into a three point lead
·Meigs Marauder reserves is also 2-3 in league action.
Big Mark We rry . camr
The Marauders played at
until Miller hit the sec·
jumped
out
to
an
early
lead
and
Lonnie
Coates
led
Meigs
with
off the bench to 'spell foul· Wahama last night in a nonond end of two free
By United Press International were never threatened in a 13 and center Danny Dodson
throws. North GalJia missStop Bill Walton and you lopsided 54-33 basketbaJI win added 10. Perk Ault and Steve plagued Bill Chaney and had 10 league encounter. They travel
to Wellston Tuesday for a
ed two other scoring
don't necessarily stop UCLA, over Ironton High reserves Walburn each had eight for the reboWJds.
Big and strong 6-4 senior SEOAL battle.
changes when Keith Wedbut stop Ed Ratleff and ... well, here Friday night. '
winners. Myers was Ironton's ce nter Bill Markin was Iron,.,;
ding ton's attempt went wide.
In the halftime fifth and sixth
WELLSTON - Behind Paul the Long Beach State 49ers
The
win
was
the
fifth
in
eight
scorer
with
17.
leading
Joe Stidham, 6-1 sophomore White's 2ii points the Jackson would rather not discuss it. ·
ton 's chief weapon with .17 grade game, Rutland breezed
outings for Coach Hoger
Meigs hit on 24 of 4ti shots for points and 11 reboWJds. Slick· past Pomeroy 14-2.
center, who did not score, Ironmen defeated
host
Emplaying a stall for most of
grabbed his 12th rebound of the Wellston Friday night !ill-50 to the game, the University of Birch's little Marauders. They a hot 52 per cent and Ironton
made only 12 of 46 for 2ti per
game giving KC possession move out of the SEOAL cellar Oregon held · Walton to six
cent.
The · lillie Marauders ·
MEIGS-IRONTON CAGE STATISTICS
with 10 seconds left in the a,l a into a tie with Ironton for points but got blitzed by the
MEIGS
dropped
only
six
of
19
from
the
PLAYE.,R
game.
FG·A FT-A RB PF TP
sixth place in the league rest of the Bruins in the second
free
throw
line
while
Ironton
ll-18 3-4 ' 1J 2 25
Sayre
Kyger Creek hit 22 of 48 field standings.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
'
half an d en ded up on the 8 hort
1·4 6·10 14 3 8
BASKETBALL
SCORES
A.
Vau,ghan
made
nine
of
15.
goal attempts for 46 pet., and 12 '
0-l
0-0 2 3 0
In a thrilling cross~oWJty end of a 64-38 score ·as UCLA By United Press lnternallonat
ME'IGS (54) - Quails 3·0-6, Chaney
6-18 0-0 2 1 12
of 23 free throws. North Gallia game played at Wellston the posted its ii4th consecutive · Canton Lehman 78 Cuyahoga c,emeans 1-0-2, Coates 6·1-13, Boggs
J-9 0·0 1 0 6
Falls 56
sank 23 of 61 floor attempts and winless Rockets jumped to a
Dodson 5-0-10, Ault 4·0·8, B. Vaughan
1
2
1·6 0-0
2
Bai
ley
Canton South 61 Marlington 46 Colburn l-2-4, S. Walburn 3·2-8,
eight of 12 free throws. The 14-12 first period lead and then victory.
1'2 0·0 10 2 2
Oregon trailed by only four Fairless 52 Canton Hoover 50 G. Walburn 1-0-2, Riley 0·1·\, Werry
23·l8 9·14 44 12 55
Pirates collected 51 rebounds fell behind 24-22 at halftime. points, 111-14, at halftime, but Canton Aquinas 58 Minerva 57 Ebersbach 0-0-0. Totals 24-6-54 . • TOTALS
IRONTON
•
East Canton 80 Northwest 55
IRONTON (33) - Wiley 1-1·
with Robinette leading the way
FG·A FT-A R&amp; PF TP
After three periods the ,the Bruins outscored the Akron Central Hower 82 Akron 3, Beckett 2·1·5, Thomas 2-1-5, PLAYER
with 15. KC had 36 rebounds. Ironmen hajj.moved into a 311-28 Ducks, 21-4, in the opening
2-14 0-0 0 1 4
Myers 7-3· 17, . McGeer 0-1-1, Rann
East 75
6-17 0·0 4 4 12
North Gallia 's reserves lead befofe the two teams eight minutes of the second Akron Ellet 62 Akron Kenmore Cockrell 0-2·2. Totals 12-9-33. Hannon
J-5 3-4 6 I 9
Green
44
By Quarters:
.
moved into first place in the exploded for 42 points in the half .to turn the game mto
8·15 1·1 "
2 17
a · Akr on Garfield 74 Akron Ironton
4 11 7 11- 33 Markin
S~AC standings with a 67·23
2-6
1·2 3 '
5
Meigs
11 1J 13 17- 54 Ferguson
Firestone 54
final period with Jackson rout. Larry Farmer and Keith
3·4
0·0
4
2
6
McCreary
Officia ls, Bragg and Vance .
romp over the Bobkittens. notching its first league win Wilkes led the second half blitz Akron South 63 Akron North J9
24-61 5-7 28 11 l3
TOTALS
•
Mil lersport 75 Lancaster
Greg James led the winners while, the battling Rockets for UCLA as each
By
Quarters:
finished with
Fisher Cathol ic 66
Ironton
10 14 16 13
53
with 18 points. Mike Camden remain winless in five loop 14 points.
Cots. Walnut Ridge 78 MarionMeigs
13
15
14
13
55
Franklin 76
added tii. Tony Hopp led the outings.
Officials - Bill Thompson and Ken Thompson .
San Jose State had much Rossford 66 Perrysburg 50
losers with seven points.
White was the only Ironman better success against Ratlefl lima Shawnee 68 l ima Central
'I
The win, Kyger Creek's in double figures while Dave and his Long Beach State
Catholic 62 ,
Fostoria 68 Port Clinton 55
.
Wapakoneta · 73 Ottawa Sylvania 52 Oregon qay 5U
Souders pumped In 20 points teammates.
Usmg
an
Glandorf 49
linden McK inley 58
·
aggressive
zone
in
the
second
Springfield
Central
Catholic
47
Columbus Eastmore 57
,,
. •: 'U/,,)
-~------•••••••••••... and Charlie Snare added 12 for
t
t
d
the
9e
,
·
Bellefontaine
45
·
Columbus
South 70 Columbus
4 rs Delphos St. Johns 72 Lima Bath
half · o cu own
the losers.
'I "' \, J,I n
North 47
•
Jackson was hot from the inside scoring, · the Spartans
64
Columbus West IJ Columbus
Whetstone 48
floor with 2ii of 48 field goals for held Ratleff to 12 points and St . Mary's 74 Coldwater 59
'1
Findlay 65 Mari on Harding 48 Columbus Northland 66
52 pet. and 10 of 25 free throws. upset the fifth-ranked 49ers, 611- Upper ·Scioto Valley 85 Bluffton
Columbus Brookhaven 54
I!'
56
Columbus East 70 Columbus
Don Jenkins pulled down 61.
Ratleff was rattled by the Mansfield Senior 90 Sandusky
Central 62
nine of the 25 Jackson
:il
40
Whitehall 76 Reynoldsburg 55
"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
reboWJds.
Spartans' pressure defense. He Clearfork 70 Plymouth 57
Delaware 60 Worh ington 46
FEATURING
Wellston connected on 23 of managed to hit only five of 18 Willard 53 Upper Sandusky 48 Westerville 51 Westland 49
Cambridge 55 Coshocton 53
Mt. Vernon 61 Gahanna 41
ii9 attempts for 39 pet. and s hots from l he fl oor an d Ridgewood 86 Newcomerstown · Bexley 68 Urbanna 52
67
Grove City 67 London 56
added four or 12 at the charity committed nine turnovers·.
The
rest
of
the
Long
Beach
Garoaway
65
Hiland
47
Grandview
64 Hilliard 43
stripe.
't
much
better.
Ind
ian
Valley
South
46
Indian
Groveport
76
Mifflin 73
Charlie Arnold picked off 14 State team Wasn
Valley No. 32
DeSales 79 Watterson 67 ·
I
The 49ers hit on just 37 per cent Orrville 87 West Holmes 79 (of) Columbus Wehrle 59
'
of the Rockets ' 35 reboWJds.
of
their
shots
from
the
floor
as
Ashland
61
Dover
60
Columbus
Biohop
Hartley
57
, Specializing in AMF &amp;
::.
Tuesday night the Ironmen
Warren Reserve 65 Nil es Teays Valley 83 Franklin
Columbia Bowling Balls.
~!I IIII
will host WJdefeated Gallipolis they dropped their first game
McKinley" 48
Heig hts 81
.
ill
of the. year after II victories. East Liverpool 52 Warren Dublin 46 Otentangy 44
whils
Wellston
entertains
a
fast
PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING, .
·
Harding 39
Hamil ton Township 66 Marys·
. S
improving Meigs team.
J ohnote
DRILLING&amp; IN·
kinner, a semor Poland 59 Warren JFK 48
ville 55
!l
The bcx score :
STRUCTION AVAILABLE
guard, led San Jose State with Defiance 57 Bryan 52
Marietta 65 Lancaster 50
li
.
Edgerton 62 Stryker 60
Dan vi lle
70
Columbus
JACKSON (58) - Morrow 2· 27 points .
SPECIAL RATES TO:
Napoleon
66
Archibald
56
Academy
57
1-5: Whlte 12·1-25 ; Martin 1·1-3;
East Cleve. Shaw 86 Parma Centerberg 77 East Knox 70
CHURCH GROUPS,
DeStephen 3·0·6; Conroy 2-4·8;
,
Normandy 74
Heat h 77 Watk ins 73
PARTIES, STUDENTS.
Jenk ins 1·2·4; McDonald 2·0·4;
'I
53 Bedford 52
Gran vi lle 90 Utica 69
Billman 1·1·3. TOTALS 24·10· Columbus Ready 97 London- Berea
Eastlake North 62 Mentor 51 Li cking Heights 62 Johnstown
58.
Monroe 60
.AMF Equipment"
Macom ber 70 Toledo
58
·
WELLSTON (SOl - Sna,re 6· West Musloingum 71 Licking Toledo
Scott 58
Federal Hocking 59 Belpre 58
0·12
:
Souders
10-0-20;
Valley
51
Upper Rt. 7 Kanauga, _Oh~o
Toledo St. Francis 62 Toledo ' Vinton County 77 Warren Local
McK inni ss 0-2-2; Peoples 2-0-4; . Unioto 72 Zane Trace 62
ltapplieseasily and smoothlywithoutd rips or runs, .
Start 51
67
Sites 1-0-2; Gilliland 1-0-2; Pike Western 82 Chillicothe
l
Toledo
Rogers
65 Toledo Kyger Creek 56 North Gall ia 54
yet.
does not leave unsightly lap or bru sh marks.
Arnold J-2-8. TOTALS 23·4-50.
Ftaget 67
.
Cardinal Strltch 49
Lakewood 81 North Ridge 60
Score by quar1ers :
You can create a fresh new atmosphere for an
Logan Elm 95 Madison Palins Tot.
Woodward
59 Tot. Bowher Bloom Carroll 81 Pickerington
66
r----;--~----~----------1 Jackson ·
12 12 14 2!f-58
entire room in just one afternoon .. . and do ·il so
52
64
Wellston
14 8 6 22- 50 Adena 58 Westfall 40
inexpensively. Rev Satin Latex Wall Paint dries in
Reserve score,: Ja ckson .49, WilmlnRton 81 Miami Trace 66 Tot. DeVilbiss 69 Tot. Wa ite 60 Fairlield Union 61 Canal
Tot. St. John 59 Tot. Whitmer 49
Winchester 60
just 20 minutes , .. you can replace draperies
Wellston 39.
Taledo Central 55 To Iedo Amanda. Ctearcreek 75 Berne
and furn ish ings and entertain the same day.
'I
There
are no lingering, tell-tale odors with Rev
$ $$$ $ $$ $$$$$$$$$$ $$ $ $ $$ $ $ $$$! ~~~~~~Springfield 59
Co~~~~~: Mohawk 70 St .
G
Satin Latex Wall Paint ... in fa ct, Rev Satin Late x
'1
Wall Paint is completely free of all objectionable
)
odors. Best of all, your Rev Satin Latex Wall Paint
u ... M . . .
·I
. finished walls will be completely washable ...
I
simply scrub away handprints and other acci·
IJ
~
~
dental smudges to restore the sparkling bright
Rev Satin Late ~ Waii'Paint appearance .
:
IT'S TIME TO MOVE OUR
:

UCLA rolls

,. ....·. . ...

GAHS catcheS Logan way·off.~~~~=~:~:'::.~::
"' I·e
· .'fs' ' 7
'
I·
.
46~·
~Jrc~§i~fi~f:
nn! ~. · ~ ~
"form,.«&lt;efeats

Kyger ·Creek
VINTON - Playing a steady
defensive game for the second
straight week , Coach .lim
Arledge's Kyger Creek Bob·
cats held off the North Gallia
Pirates in the final seconds to
post a 56-M victory here Friday
night in a 'Southern Valley
Athletic Conference game.
In a replay of last iveek's
consolation game of ·the Gallia
CoWJty Holiday Tournament,
the Bobcats took the lead , froze
the ball and were fouled in the
final seconds.
Kyger Creek led 55-54 with 10 .
seconds rema ining in the._
game.
·
Dave Wise, ii-8 sophomore
guard, was fouled with four
seconds remaining. Wise
connected .on the first half of
the bonus situation to give the
Bobcats a two point lead.
North GalJia grabbed the
reboWJd on the second ·free
throw attempt but was WJable
to get the baJI down the floor :
Wise, starting his fourth
straight game, was the leadfug
scorer. with 21 points on nine
baskets. and three free throws.
He was· particularly hot in the
second and third periods.
J ohn Rumley, !H) jWJior,
came off the bench to score 10
points, six in the final stanza .
Mark Darst, 6-1 senior, had
nine points.
Three players hit double
figures for Coach Jim Foster's
Pirates, Dave Robinette, ·6-1
jWJior forward and Tim Stout,
:&gt;-7 junior, had 14 points each
while Dan Miller, 5-8 jWJior
guard, canned 12 points, II in
the second· half.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
13-ti lead in the first period and
held an II point lead, before the
Pirates began hitting midway
in the second quarter.
Darst and Orland Cremeans
led the first period scoring.
DljFSl scored six points while
Cremeans, a senior ·forward,

.......

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•,

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FINANCING

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,

'23-'lbeSunday Tlmes-Sent~I,Sunday, Jan. 7,1973

Card )f ,T~anks

..
JOHN REECE
RUTLAND - " [. never
realized what I was letting
\
I
myself in for when I started
th is project."
That's how Roy Euge ne
"Gene" O'Dell feels a,)xlut his
renovated home here. houd of . . .r'
the results, he elqllained, "We
lived in the mbe house behind
GENE O'DELL
here when l got the opportunity
to buy this one. Then after
Junior
High.
completely guttin g it, I Meigs
remodeled the whole thing, Photography and target
including the wiring, the shooting arc high on his list of
plumbing, the flooring .. . the personal ac tivities. The O'Dell
family attends the thurch of
whole thing !"
"When you live in one area God in Rutland .
nearly all of your life, you
"I've been in a lot of coal
J become quite attached to it.
mines, but I can honestly say
Gene O'Dell has become at- that the Meigs Mines are the
tached to the Rutland . area · safest I've ever seen," he
since his parents mo"ed there stated .."And they are being
in !938 from Charleston w. built Wtlh the very best of
Va ., when Gene was in' the present teCIJ!Iology. I'm just
fo~rth grade. The one real happy that I've gotten the
drawback to living in Rutland chance to go to work lor a good
was the distance Gene had to company so close to home."
drive to work. The reason for
the distance in driving, you
Deer~
see, is that Gene O'Dell . is a
By Mrs. W. H. Thomas
coal miner.
Mrs.
Callie Lundy visited
"Pve been a coal miner over
·.7 years and had to drive quite relatives in Cincinnati for a
a distance every day, so you week: Her son, Joe Lundy
can see how excited I got when brought her home and called on
the Southern Ohio Coal his uncle, Chester R. Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Irwin,
Company's Meigs Mines very
Robin
and Ryal of Chillicothe,
near here were announced," he
said. "I was sure anxious to get spent Saturday with Mr. and
a chance to go to work for Mrs. Haldon Thomas.
Mrs. John Vance is having a
them."
t~ree
weeks vacation from her
Gene's chance became
reality on August 22, 1972 when work at Davis Hall, and she
he started to 1¥0rk at Meigs and her two daughters, Ellen
Mine No. 2as a roof bolter. But Orinda and Jean Ann, spent
the summer before lha l he severa l day s in Columbus
attended and completed the visiting Mr. and Mrs . Melvin
Foreman's Training Program Kitchen and , Mr. and Mrs.
at Meigs High School. Thus, Cla rence Dyer.
Mr . and Mrs . Haldon
Gene had prepared himself for
advancement prior to his Thomas and Mr. and Mrs .
employment.
Then
on James K. Thomas and S&lt;Jn,
November I, 1972 when the visited the former's mother,
first opening lor Section Mrs. Lula Thomas at Huston
Foreman came up, Gene was Rest Home last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huntley,
promoted to his present
Vin
to n, were Sattfrday afposition .
Arter attending Rutland ternoon callers of Mrs. W. H.
schools, Gene was in the U. S. Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell CardArmy fro)n 19ol to 1953, serving in the medical services well and family, Columbus,
during the Korean Conflict. . Mrs. Juanita Ferguson,
Then- in 1955, he married the Youngstown, spent part of the
former 3ebea Joyce Chapman. holidays here with Mr. and
Also in 1955, he went to work Mrs. Francis Cardwell and
for Leiving Coal Company in other relatives.
Clifton, W. Va. until it closed in
Mr. and Mrs. James K.
1968. Then O'Dell went to work Thomas and son Jamie spent
· for Union Carbide's Putnam the weekend in Columbus
Mine in Leon, W. Va. until late visiting Mr. and Mrs. Junior
1971. In January .of 1972, he bewis.
drove 66 miles each way to
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle and
Peabody Coal Company in New family, Fairborn , spent Dec.
Lexington, Ohio until he came 26th with Mr . and Mrs. Chesler
to work for Southern Ohio Coal · Jones and enjoyed a belated
Company.
Christmas dinner.
When not workin g, Gene's
Mr . and Mrs . Anthony
time is taken up with his wife Childers spent Christmas Day
and two sons, Gary , 17, a with their son, Mr . and Mrs.
Junior at Meigs High School, Howard Childers and family.
and Mark, 13, who attends
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilfong
BY

\

Creek

THE DUKE
·wELLINGTON BOOT.

100%
WATERPROOF

SIZES 3-6 .

'5.95

SIZES 7-12

·6~95

Conservation, $3,754,000; Cropland Adjustment, $2,817,000;
fourth place at 10 pet.
_,
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE .
livestock and livestock products in 1971 totaled $3,856,000 Sugar Act, $1,571,000; Wool Act, $2,068,000; miscellaneous
County Extension Agent, Agriculture
with crops $1,210,00j). Government payments of $188,000 makes .programs, $6,000.
POMEROY - The estimated gross cash receipts by Meigs
OHIO FARM MARKETINGS during . 1971 amounttd to
the
total $5,254,000.
County f~rmers from livestock, crops, and government
$1,415,405,000.
Of !lie total, livestock and livestock · products
In comparison with our neighbors, Washington County is
payments were $5,254,000 in 1971 , according to Department
high with $6,967,000. Others are Scioto $6,335,000, Gallia accounted for 54.2 pel. and crops accounted for 45.8 pet.
Series E.S.M. Report 438 by the Ohio Agricultural Research and
$5,916,000, MeigS $5,254,000, Pike $5,135,000, Perry $4,659,000, Livestock cash ~eceipts were down only slightly from .a year
Development Center at Wooster in December. This figure is just
Jackson $4,340,1Jj)tl, Athens ·$4,100,000, ·Morgan $3,400,000, earlier; while Income from crops rose 12 pet. from 1970.
$11,000 over the total for 1970, but $128,000 over the most recent
Ohio's'lwo major field crops, soybeans and corn, were. up B
high figure in 1968. The oulyother years to exceed the 1971 figure , Lawrence $3,162,000, Noble $3,120,000, Hocking $2,403,000 and
pet.
and 19 pet. resepclively from 1970 cash receipt,5.
..
Vinton
.
$2,214,000.
,
were 1956 and 1957 in the Eiseghower era.
The
two
major
livestock
groups,
dairy
products
and
cattle .
Income per farm shows Pike ·county high with $8,023
The figure for 1971 averages out to $39 per acre, identical to
' 1970, indic••.ing abuut the same acreage was involved each year. followed by Scioto $7,199, Jackson $6,781, Meigs $6,181, Athens and calves, were up 4pet. and 11 pet., respectively. Qish receipts
The 1970-1. :gures are the hig~esl on record, liut this figure has $6,029, Perry $5,682, Vinton $5,677, Washington $5,123, Gallia from hogs were down IS pet. from 1970whilereceipts from sheep,
$4,658, Morgan $4,595, Hocking $4,291, Noble $3,852 and Lawrence lambs and wool were dom~9 pet. and poultry and eggs were off'! I
the NEW in FARMING
$3,953.
.
pet.
· Darke County remained the top' county In 1971 with cash
Meigs
County
ranks
well
up
in
the
list
as
to
income
per
acre
.
been rising since 1965. The average income per farm is $6,181
which exce.eds the previous high in 1970 of $5,826. This probably with only Scioto County at $52 per acre, Jackson CoWlty at $44 per · receipts of over $4~ million. The next five highest counties --;
acre, and Perry and Pike Counties at f41 per acre, exceeding th~ Mercer, Wayne, Fulton, Wood and Putnam -each exceeded $30
'ndicates a slightly smaller humber of farms .
·
According to the estimates, government payments in 1971 Meigs Co. figure of $39. Other counties show cash receipts per million in cash receipts and were unchanged in ranking from a
acre of $35 in Washington, Athens, and Gallla Counties; $32 in year earlier. Leading coWJties by commodities were : Wayne,
were only $188,0110, down from the 1970 figure of $311,000.
According to these estimates cattle represented 33 pet. of the Vinton County, $25 in Hocking County, $24 in Morgan County and dairy products; Fulton, cattle and calves; Clinton, hogs; Mercer,
poultry; Wood, soybeans and wheat; Darke, corn; Lorain,
cash receipts, dairy 28 pel., v~getables. 16 pet., poultry 10 pet., $20 in Noble County.
Gross cash receipts average per farm in the · nine-county vegetables; and Lake, greenhouse and nurseries .
hogs 4 pet., fruit4 pet., corn 2 pet., forest 1 pet., and other 2 pet.
Jacks&lt;in
Area ia $5,791 and per acre $38.
It is interesting to go back over the 43 years since these
Farm income in Ohio hit a new record high in 1971. Cash reports have been prepared. From 1929lo 1933 and from 1938 to
1942poultry was the leading industry. Again from 1945 to 1949 and receipts from marketings and government payments totaled
$1,486,596,000, up 3 pet. from a year earlier. A decrease of $18
1955to 1958and in 1960 poultry ranked first.
Dai.ry moved into first place in 1933 to 1938, again in !943- million in government payments to Ohio Farmers was more than
1944, and 1950 to 1954, and 1959. Dairy has remained in first place offset by an increase of about $63 million in cash receipts from
farm marketings. Payments ,under the Feed Grain Program
from 1961 until1969 when it was replaced by cattle.
other than the three enterprises of cattle, dairy and poultry, were down about $18 million in Ohio, accounting for the drop in
which is now in fourth position, commercial vegetables have goverrunent .payments.
By program, Ohio government payments for 1971 were, Feed
been the other major income item. In 1971 commercial
vegetables represented 16 pet. of the total income with poultry in Grain Program, $35,811,000; Wheal Program, $25,164,000;

MASTER

:Your Farm
Supply

SeMce Center

CENTRAL. SOYA
OF OHIO

.

Nqtice · · .

:

BUY

Cities, towns can he sued
for fish kill by pollution
COLUMBUS - The Sixth discharged from the city's
District Court of Appeals has sewage treatment phinl into
affirmed the right of the the Portage River on Sopdivision of wildlife of the Ohio !ember 18, 1968, and September
Department of Natural 22, 1970.
Resources to seek damages
The dismissal has been on
from cities and villages for fish grounds that the city is imkilied by pollulidn from mune for legal·action because
municipal sewage treatment ... the operation of a sewage
plants.
disposal plant is a governNatural Resources Director mental fun ction, and that the
William B. Nye said the state had to show intent or fault
decision is "extremely '
significant in Ohio's efforts to
protect fish and qther wildlife
and to control pollution."
The decision reverses a
dismissal by the Wood County
Common Pleas Court of a
complaint by the wildlife
CHESTER - Charles L.
division seeking $4,971.63 in
damages from the City of Bissell, Chester, has retired as
Bowling Green for 20,000 fish a school bus : driver in the
allegedly killed by pollutants Eastern Local School District
after 16 years of service.
Bissell began his duties when
accompanied their son Olen Chester High School was still in
and wife to Russell, Ky :, where operation. Eastern High School
they ale Christmas dinner with was opened for students in the
their son and brother, Mr. and middle of the term · during
Bissell's first year of driving.
Mrs. Vernon Wilfong.
Bissell is a member of the
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H.
Thomas, Westerville, spent a Ohio Association of Public
day IV.ith his mother, Mrs. W. School Employes and of the
Chester Church of the
H. Thomas.
Mr . and Mrs. Haldon Nazarene where he serves as a
Thomas spent Christmas Day trustee , ass istant superinwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. tendent and general church
Kerr McClaskey, Bidwell, treasurer. He has been a
where they met other members member of the Carpenters
of the family, includirig Mr. Local Union 899 at ParkersMcClaskey, nephew, and Mr. burg the past 26 years. An
and Mr&amp;. Clarence Alva Wood, active Republican in county
and daughter of Springfield . politics, Bissell is serving his
Mrs. Addie Ingram and 20th year as a Chester
daughter of Prichard, W. Va., Township trustee and hopes to
spent Sunday and Monday with continue in that job. He is a
. the fo1·mer's mother, Mrs. member of the Ohio
Amanda Blackburn, Cherry Association of Township Clerks
and Trustees.
Ridge.
His retirement as a bus
Herscheli Norman called on
driver
came earlier than he
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Adkins
had expected due to a back
and family.
injury
which he received in
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilfong
were callers of Mr. and l\1rs. 1964 when he gave up bus
driving for some three months
Chesler Jones Monday.

in the killing of fish or g~me
before it could hold the city
li'!ble .
The Court of Appeals, in its
reversal decision, ruled that a
municipality exercises a
proprietary function rather
than a governmental funcUon
in operating a sewage treat.ment plant and sewage system,
and therefore has no governmental immunity from

liability.
When
performing
a
proprietary function, the appeals
court
said,
a
municipality Is liable for
damage ig the same way and to
the same extent as a private
corporation or an Individual.
The court said the argument
that the state had to show the
city's intent or fault in · the
killing of fish or !!a. me "has no
logic or legal precedent for its
foundation.,
"Anyone who creates or
maintains a nuisance intends
the natural consequences of his
nuisance creation, and is at
fault for it," the appeals court
said. "There is no legal text or

~~~~~~~~·~

RATS
PURINA :::
_;::-::::;~

RAT
KILL
It '~ a different k_md of killer for... rats and. mice, n "t·a rry-home"
bait . Hats hnu l 1t ba(·k to the nest , ,. distribute it themselves
.. . feed RAT·K I l..L to the whole family till th ey're dead\ .
• Highly palatable to rats • Sure kill in 5 to 15 days
• Very low in cost.

J. D. North Produce Co.
Vi_ne ·street
Ga hipolis, o.

Wanted

'

Help Wanted

For Sale

WE, t~e famll~ of Charles 'L"' ,
· Waugh, Sr., would like to RUSS'$ Gi~ ss Se;vtce Gtasslo
. thank aU of the frt~s. neigh·
all needs, we sell windshield:,
bar~ .and retal!~es. for a.ll &lt;!!
~form 'windows' and doors

.

Help. Wanted

Wanted To Do .

' NOTICE

NEEDS LP N or ret;red RN lo SALESLADY, Appl)l In pefSQI• · oOOFING ·
· .
Another B!dg.?
SOMEONE to share' ride to SEE· Need
"'Mi lstead Baker,y, 244 Third ~ .
and spo_ut~ng, ·ex· wOrk in nur sing home , ·ca n .
our
aluminum
bldg
s.
Ave
~
·
penenced roofers . Ph . 388· Florida . . Responsible driver,
live tn . Write- Box 313, Ironton.
Heavy. duty, with flooring,
.
, 2-tf . 8114, James Marcum .
Call 446·mt.
.
Oh
io
Route
1.
f9'" electric. Also· west
th~•r · great services, foods,
·awnings and mirrors 704
3·3 wired.
. 2-tf
.,.:.:
295·30
Vlr'gi!lia ~hunk coal ! ·drain
'
. flowers and other o!ferlngs.
Pine St. Rio Grande 24S·50411 ~p::tile.
belt
tile,
cement
and
.
A
~
R
~
T
-:T
~
I-:
M-::
E"b
a"
b_
y
_sist
er,
_
:
4
46-''
. SEMI-DRtVE~S NEEDED TOOl sha rpenin g, . saws,
We would like to give special
'
·
' 295 ti
mortar. Gallipolis Block &amp; AN OHIO OIL CO. offers OP· LOCAL compan1es need Cer- sc iSsors, shears home and
ill)anks .for and to Mr. and
.0625. In Gall ipolis.
. . Coat
Co., 123'12 Pine, 4&lt;16-2783. portunity for high incpme
tit led Sem_i-Dri yers . E·arn , garden tools. Sharp ·. Shop,
Mrs , Freddie Woods fO~· Ihelr TWO-WAY Radios S"ales &amp;
3·6
PLU S cash bonuse,, /ton·
.
207-tl
S400 per Week : No e.x ·
Alley rear 147 Second .
re•t services, , Rev: Home' .Service. New .and used CB's, ~~-~---.....::
vention trips and· tri.nge · SJO~penence
neces-sary.
w1ll
..
·
216-ff
. lary, who did an especlattr.
pollee monitors. antennas,
benefits to mature man -In
train . For application cal l3 17- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_
.great service at the funera , etc. Bob's Citizens Band Musical Instruments
Gall ipol is area . Regard less of
or write Coastway REMODELING, building new
pallbearers, · and ~peclally
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
SPl!IET-tONSOLE Pl.ANO USED FURNITURE ex per ience. air mail I. 1. · 636·2675,
AmeriCan
Systems. P. 0 . Box
rooms, ce ment. roofing,
the Heywood•, the wonderful
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio 446-4517. WANTED responsible party to
Read , Pres ., American · 11125, Indianapoli
s, Indiana
sidinQ , furnace ins .. J . H.
m ·lf ' take over spinet plano. Easy SPECIAL SPECIAL
· slngers, and especially great ____:_,._ _ _ _~
Lub r i q mts Co ., Box 696,
46201 .
Queen]!, Son, 446-9211.
t~k~ to the great doctors,
terms. Can be seen locally .
· Dayton, Ohio 45401.
298-30
.. 68-tl
nurses and nur..s aides of the RA~PH'S 'carpet &amp; Upholstery , Write Credit Manager. p. o. Like brand new maple bunk bed
5-4
Vli'gtnla Hospital, Hun ·
Cleaning Service. Free
Box 276, Shetbyvttte, Indiana set complete with Bemco
.WASH and wax cars . Ph'orie 446 tlngton, W.Va. Special thanks · estimates. Ph . 446·0294. Ralph
mattresses. Real nice 3 pc . TEX S 0 COMPANY
d
46176 .
A
lL
nee s
MEN NEEDED
.2, bedroom suite complete with
0734.
to Rev. and Mrs. Marion
A Davis owner
4
box spring and mattress . 3 pc. good man over 40 for short
SEMI-DRIVERS AND
WitHams during' the weel\s of
.
'
.
9 11 ~------_
__ _ _ _ _ 5·3
end table set. like brand new 2 !rips surrounding Gatlipofis.
. HEAVY EQUIPMENT
our father's sickness that
·
pc. living room suite. Sunray
Contact customers. We tra;n.
OPERATORS
· gavethetrservl~es . We would ·.ROOFING and ' gutter work. fOR SALE .
FOR
b
tt
Ci
k
·
gas
range
under
2
yrs.
old.
2
Air
mail
.
A.
B.
Dickerson,
BROKER
lor Pre-Employment For Rent
ltke to give spe-cial thanks to William Mitchell , 388-8507.
1
1o eep dinette sets. Beautiful white
.
e er eanng,
P res . , ·So uthw este rn . Training .
lmmed late
Mr . Rover Brumfield, for hts
67-if colors
gleaming,
use Frehch Provincial bedroom
Petroleum C_orp., Ft. Worth,
openings on Bulldozers, P?ns,
great ' job of wrlHtig the
Blue Lustre Caroet cleanser. suite. Maple chest ol drawers.
Tex.
Scrapers and Semi-Tractor 12x50 TRAI~ER 2 br . utiliti~s
.obituary. Signed, Mrs.
DAY CARE '
5·1 · Trallers. No experience
pdid , rent by week or month.
Rent
electric shampooer Sl . Dresser . 2 rockers . Old trunk .
Charles ~ee Waugh, Sr .. and SUN VA~LEY Nursery School.
G.
C.
Murphy
Lower
Store.
.----------~·
necessary.
Average
National
one mil e fr om No. 1 mine site
' family, and special thanks
licensed by State of Ohio, 1112
on Rt . 325. 742-5980.
·
· 307·6
Baker cook for day shift,
Earnings $12,000 . $15,000 per
from Charles Lee Waugh, Jr . . miles west of new hospital.
• J.6
ex perience helpful but not
yea r . For application call
. necessa ry , also waitress, 10
Area Coqe 419-241 -6532, or
- - - - - - - - - - 5·1 571 Sun Valley Dr. Ph. 446· CARPETS and · life too
3657. Day c.aJe that says "we can
~e
beau111ul
if
p. m. to ~ a . m. shill. Good
write North Central SerVices, HOUSE located on Buiaville
care ." Madge . Hauldren,
you
use
Blue
Lustre,
Rent
working
condition
..
Pa
id
P. 0 . Box 7207, Toledo, Ohio
Addison Road, ca ll 367-7438 or
For Sale
Owner': Lor'~~llh &amp; John
446-3879.
electric . shampooer "' Sl. NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE vacation , Apply in person
43615.
Hauldren, Operators.
CORN. Glenn Graham. 446·11411.
Central Supply.
only at Bob Evan' Steak
3·3
114-tf
307-6
854 SE'COND 446-9523
Hou,c.
_ _ _ _ __ _ ...::307·6

.

==-.....:..___

· WELDING SERVICE

R·1cE' s

- -- - - -

ARC WELDING
ALSO
PORTABLE WORK.
Court St.
Phone 446-1001
56

..
NOW OPEN!
HILLCREST CLINIC
l oca ted Ph m i les west of
Hol zer Med ica l Center on Rt .

35.
DR. MEL P. SIMON
Urologist
Ph. 446·0021 or 446·001 2
Office Hours

Mon .. Tues. &amp; Fri. 1 p.m. to 5
p.m.

Thur. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
&amp;7p.m. to9p.m. ·

WISEMAN REAL ESlATE AGENCY
500 2nd AVE.
GALUPOLIS, OHIO

~OUR

HELIARC AND

~--'---~~

THE

WHY -WAIT

USE

Tricot Uned FPI LDng Wear. You Will
Find Them P.s Comfortable As Any You
Have Ever Wom. ·

c

.

E. M. (IKE) WISEMAN, BROKER
E.N. WISEMAN, BROKER

REALTORS

FERTILIZER
NOW AND GET THE EARLY

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

NOW, AWIDE AND WONDERFUL SELECTION OF EXCITING NEW

POMEROY
Serving Meigs, Gallia
and Mason Counties
Ph. 992-2181
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

HOMES DESIGNED BY AMERICA'S LEADING ARCHITECTS
AND BUILT BY

Look for the Big" L" on Route 7 &amp; 33 at the
Upper End of Pomeroy

state's complaint back to the
Wood County Common Pleas
Court for a hearing and further
action.

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 6:00 PM

CARTER· &amp; EVANS INC.

MR. TRACTOR
OWNER! .
.
'
rooms, terrific kitchens ~include Hotpoint ranges, dishwashers). Every comfort

SAVE TIME

- -

,,

\~

Let Us Service

YOUR TRACTOR NOW

•
CHARLES BISSEU

It's The Smart ·
Thing To Do! .

to reenter the conslruction
trade.
All 13 or the Bissell children
attended schools in the Eastern
Local District.

DRIVE OUT ROUTE 35 TO PARKLANE SUBDIVISION

•

HI.

HAVE A LOOK AROUND THEN CALL
)I'

.I 'JI

be started in '73

DREAM GAME
MIAMI (UPI ) - A computerized dream . game
featuring the Super Bowlbound Miami Dolphins and a
team comprised of the allltime
football all.,slars will be heard
over several radio stations in
F1orida on Jan. 7.
Included on the all-timers
are Sammy Baugh, Johri
Uriitas, Jlril Brbwn ; Red
Grange, and Jim Tharpe.
•,

baths, one and two car garages. Large landscaped lots with clean, fresh country air
added in. Wonderful homes you never thought you could own Bu~ Now You Can.

Billion trees to

WASHINGTON, D. C.
During 1973 almost a billion
small trees, or five for every
American, will be planted in
the nation 's forests, according
to American Forest Institute.
. The gigantic planting replaces
trees that have been harvested
or lost to fire, insects or
· disease.
More than 1.3 million acres
are expected to be planted this
fall. an~ next spring. Over
200,000 additional acres are
expected to be aerially seeded
by helicipter as well, with
applications ranging from
10,000 to 30,000 seeds per acre
depending on tree species. '

you have longed for. Central air conditioning, completely carpeted. I V2 , 2 and 21;2

I

THE WISEMAN AGENCY REALTORS 446-3643
"'DR ANY OF THE FOLLOWING-

MERRILL EVANS, BUILDER 446-3943
FOREST MUtLINS, BUILDER .446-2387
..

·,

Winter Time • • •
is the best ~ime to get our ca~eful, (NO RUSH), service
now. If your tractor needs mtnor repairs or a complete
overhaul, why not get It done now BEFORE SPRING.
It's the wise and convenient thing to do. We: re ready to
serve you.
'

MORE FAMILIES LIVE .IN

NATIONAL HOMES THAN ANY OTHER HOMES IN THE WORLD

AND ft'ORE .FAMILIES IN

GALLIA co. LIVE IN MORE HOMES SOLO
BY THE WISEMAN AGENCY
••

f

PRICE ABIG PROBLEM?

-

Meigs Equipment Co.
'

Ph. 992-2176

.

GEORGE CARTER, BUILDER 44&amp;4668
IKE WISEMAN, REALTOR 446-3796

..

Here's the best buy around. 117,900
bu)'S this nea~y new 3 bedroom home.

"

large beautiful kitchen with buiHins.

~WE

NEEDLISTINGS

NEED 5 BEDROOMS?
We have it and it includes· a huge
family room, lovely kitchen, dining
area, sun deck, central air, 2 baths
and garage.

•33,900

)
HOME·S
THE GROWTH 5HILTU COMPAN.Y

THAN AN OTHER

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'23-'lbeSunday Tlmes-Sent~I,Sunday, Jan. 7,1973

Card )f ,T~anks

..
JOHN REECE
RUTLAND - " [. never
realized what I was letting
\
I
myself in for when I started
th is project."
That's how Roy Euge ne
"Gene" O'Dell feels a,)xlut his
renovated home here. houd of . . .r'
the results, he elqllained, "We
lived in the mbe house behind
GENE O'DELL
here when l got the opportunity
to buy this one. Then after
Junior
High.
completely guttin g it, I Meigs
remodeled the whole thing, Photography and target
including the wiring, the shooting arc high on his list of
plumbing, the flooring .. . the personal ac tivities. The O'Dell
family attends the thurch of
whole thing !"
"When you live in one area God in Rutland .
nearly all of your life, you
"I've been in a lot of coal
J become quite attached to it.
mines, but I can honestly say
Gene O'Dell has become at- that the Meigs Mines are the
tached to the Rutland . area · safest I've ever seen," he
since his parents mo"ed there stated .."And they are being
in !938 from Charleston w. built Wtlh the very best of
Va ., when Gene was in' the present teCIJ!Iology. I'm just
fo~rth grade. The one real happy that I've gotten the
drawback to living in Rutland chance to go to work lor a good
was the distance Gene had to company so close to home."
drive to work. The reason for
the distance in driving, you
Deer~
see, is that Gene O'Dell . is a
By Mrs. W. H. Thomas
coal miner.
Mrs.
Callie Lundy visited
"Pve been a coal miner over
·.7 years and had to drive quite relatives in Cincinnati for a
a distance every day, so you week: Her son, Joe Lundy
can see how excited I got when brought her home and called on
the Southern Ohio Coal his uncle, Chester R. Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Irwin,
Company's Meigs Mines very
Robin
and Ryal of Chillicothe,
near here were announced," he
said. "I was sure anxious to get spent Saturday with Mr. and
a chance to go to work for Mrs. Haldon Thomas.
Mrs. John Vance is having a
them."
t~ree
weeks vacation from her
Gene's chance became
reality on August 22, 1972 when work at Davis Hall, and she
he started to 1¥0rk at Meigs and her two daughters, Ellen
Mine No. 2as a roof bolter. But Orinda and Jean Ann, spent
the summer before lha l he severa l day s in Columbus
attended and completed the visiting Mr. and Mrs . Melvin
Foreman's Training Program Kitchen and , Mr. and Mrs.
at Meigs High School. Thus, Cla rence Dyer.
Mr . and Mrs . Haldon
Gene had prepared himself for
advancement prior to his Thomas and Mr. and Mrs .
employment.
Then
on James K. Thomas and S&lt;Jn,
November I, 1972 when the visited the former's mother,
first opening lor Section Mrs. Lula Thomas at Huston
Foreman came up, Gene was Rest Home last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huntley,
promoted to his present
Vin
to n, were Sattfrday afposition .
Arter attending Rutland ternoon callers of Mrs. W. H.
schools, Gene was in the U. S. Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell CardArmy fro)n 19ol to 1953, serving in the medical services well and family, Columbus,
during the Korean Conflict. . Mrs. Juanita Ferguson,
Then- in 1955, he married the Youngstown, spent part of the
former 3ebea Joyce Chapman. holidays here with Mr. and
Also in 1955, he went to work Mrs. Francis Cardwell and
for Leiving Coal Company in other relatives.
Clifton, W. Va. until it closed in
Mr. and Mrs. James K.
1968. Then O'Dell went to work Thomas and son Jamie spent
· for Union Carbide's Putnam the weekend in Columbus
Mine in Leon, W. Va. until late visiting Mr. and Mrs. Junior
1971. In January .of 1972, he bewis.
drove 66 miles each way to
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle and
Peabody Coal Company in New family, Fairborn , spent Dec.
Lexington, Ohio until he came 26th with Mr . and Mrs. Chesler
to work for Southern Ohio Coal · Jones and enjoyed a belated
Company.
Christmas dinner.
When not workin g, Gene's
Mr . and Mrs . Anthony
time is taken up with his wife Childers spent Christmas Day
and two sons, Gary , 17, a with their son, Mr . and Mrs.
Junior at Meigs High School, Howard Childers and family.
and Mark, 13, who attends
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilfong
BY

\

Creek

THE DUKE
·wELLINGTON BOOT.

100%
WATERPROOF

SIZES 3-6 .

'5.95

SIZES 7-12

·6~95

Conservation, $3,754,000; Cropland Adjustment, $2,817,000;
fourth place at 10 pet.
_,
BY C. E. BLAKESLEE .
livestock and livestock products in 1971 totaled $3,856,000 Sugar Act, $1,571,000; Wool Act, $2,068,000; miscellaneous
County Extension Agent, Agriculture
with crops $1,210,00j). Government payments of $188,000 makes .programs, $6,000.
POMEROY - The estimated gross cash receipts by Meigs
OHIO FARM MARKETINGS during . 1971 amounttd to
the
total $5,254,000.
County f~rmers from livestock, crops, and government
$1,415,405,000.
Of !lie total, livestock and livestock · products
In comparison with our neighbors, Washington County is
payments were $5,254,000 in 1971 , according to Department
high with $6,967,000. Others are Scioto $6,335,000, Gallia accounted for 54.2 pel. and crops accounted for 45.8 pet.
Series E.S.M. Report 438 by the Ohio Agricultural Research and
$5,916,000, MeigS $5,254,000, Pike $5,135,000, Perry $4,659,000, Livestock cash ~eceipts were down only slightly from .a year
Development Center at Wooster in December. This figure is just
Jackson $4,340,1Jj)tl, Athens ·$4,100,000, ·Morgan $3,400,000, earlier; while Income from crops rose 12 pet. from 1970.
$11,000 over the total for 1970, but $128,000 over the most recent
Ohio's'lwo major field crops, soybeans and corn, were. up B
high figure in 1968. The oulyother years to exceed the 1971 figure , Lawrence $3,162,000, Noble $3,120,000, Hocking $2,403,000 and
pet.
and 19 pet. resepclively from 1970 cash receipt,5.
..
Vinton
.
$2,214,000.
,
were 1956 and 1957 in the Eiseghower era.
The
two
major
livestock
groups,
dairy
products
and
cattle .
Income per farm shows Pike ·county high with $8,023
The figure for 1971 averages out to $39 per acre, identical to
' 1970, indic••.ing abuut the same acreage was involved each year. followed by Scioto $7,199, Jackson $6,781, Meigs $6,181, Athens and calves, were up 4pet. and 11 pet., respectively. Qish receipts
The 1970-1. :gures are the hig~esl on record, liut this figure has $6,029, Perry $5,682, Vinton $5,677, Washington $5,123, Gallia from hogs were down IS pet. from 1970whilereceipts from sheep,
$4,658, Morgan $4,595, Hocking $4,291, Noble $3,852 and Lawrence lambs and wool were dom~9 pet. and poultry and eggs were off'! I
the NEW in FARMING
$3,953.
.
pet.
· Darke County remained the top' county In 1971 with cash
Meigs
County
ranks
well
up
in
the
list
as
to
income
per
acre
.
been rising since 1965. The average income per farm is $6,181
which exce.eds the previous high in 1970 of $5,826. This probably with only Scioto County at $52 per acre, Jackson CoWlty at $44 per · receipts of over $4~ million. The next five highest counties --;
acre, and Perry and Pike Counties at f41 per acre, exceeding th~ Mercer, Wayne, Fulton, Wood and Putnam -each exceeded $30
'ndicates a slightly smaller humber of farms .
·
According to the estimates, government payments in 1971 Meigs Co. figure of $39. Other counties show cash receipts per million in cash receipts and were unchanged in ranking from a
acre of $35 in Washington, Athens, and Gallla Counties; $32 in year earlier. Leading coWJties by commodities were : Wayne,
were only $188,0110, down from the 1970 figure of $311,000.
According to these estimates cattle represented 33 pet. of the Vinton County, $25 in Hocking County, $24 in Morgan County and dairy products; Fulton, cattle and calves; Clinton, hogs; Mercer,
poultry; Wood, soybeans and wheat; Darke, corn; Lorain,
cash receipts, dairy 28 pel., v~getables. 16 pet., poultry 10 pet., $20 in Noble County.
Gross cash receipts average per farm in the · nine-county vegetables; and Lake, greenhouse and nurseries .
hogs 4 pet., fruit4 pet., corn 2 pet., forest 1 pet., and other 2 pet.
Jacks&lt;in
Area ia $5,791 and per acre $38.
It is interesting to go back over the 43 years since these
Farm income in Ohio hit a new record high in 1971. Cash reports have been prepared. From 1929lo 1933 and from 1938 to
1942poultry was the leading industry. Again from 1945 to 1949 and receipts from marketings and government payments totaled
$1,486,596,000, up 3 pet. from a year earlier. A decrease of $18
1955to 1958and in 1960 poultry ranked first.
Dai.ry moved into first place in 1933 to 1938, again in !943- million in government payments to Ohio Farmers was more than
1944, and 1950 to 1954, and 1959. Dairy has remained in first place offset by an increase of about $63 million in cash receipts from
farm marketings. Payments ,under the Feed Grain Program
from 1961 until1969 when it was replaced by cattle.
other than the three enterprises of cattle, dairy and poultry, were down about $18 million in Ohio, accounting for the drop in
which is now in fourth position, commercial vegetables have goverrunent .payments.
By program, Ohio government payments for 1971 were, Feed
been the other major income item. In 1971 commercial
vegetables represented 16 pet. of the total income with poultry in Grain Program, $35,811,000; Wheal Program, $25,164,000;

MASTER

:Your Farm
Supply

SeMce Center

CENTRAL. SOYA
OF OHIO

.

Nqtice · · .

:

BUY

Cities, towns can he sued
for fish kill by pollution
COLUMBUS - The Sixth discharged from the city's
District Court of Appeals has sewage treatment phinl into
affirmed the right of the the Portage River on Sopdivision of wildlife of the Ohio !ember 18, 1968, and September
Department of Natural 22, 1970.
Resources to seek damages
The dismissal has been on
from cities and villages for fish grounds that the city is imkilied by pollulidn from mune for legal·action because
municipal sewage treatment ... the operation of a sewage
plants.
disposal plant is a governNatural Resources Director mental fun ction, and that the
William B. Nye said the state had to show intent or fault
decision is "extremely '
significant in Ohio's efforts to
protect fish and qther wildlife
and to control pollution."
The decision reverses a
dismissal by the Wood County
Common Pleas Court of a
complaint by the wildlife
CHESTER - Charles L.
division seeking $4,971.63 in
damages from the City of Bissell, Chester, has retired as
Bowling Green for 20,000 fish a school bus : driver in the
allegedly killed by pollutants Eastern Local School District
after 16 years of service.
Bissell began his duties when
accompanied their son Olen Chester High School was still in
and wife to Russell, Ky :, where operation. Eastern High School
they ale Christmas dinner with was opened for students in the
their son and brother, Mr. and middle of the term · during
Bissell's first year of driving.
Mrs. Vernon Wilfong.
Bissell is a member of the
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H.
Thomas, Westerville, spent a Ohio Association of Public
day IV.ith his mother, Mrs. W. School Employes and of the
Chester Church of the
H. Thomas.
Mr . and Mrs. Haldon Nazarene where he serves as a
Thomas spent Christmas Day trustee , ass istant superinwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. tendent and general church
Kerr McClaskey, Bidwell, treasurer. He has been a
where they met other members member of the Carpenters
of the family, includirig Mr. Local Union 899 at ParkersMcClaskey, nephew, and Mr. burg the past 26 years. An
and Mr&amp;. Clarence Alva Wood, active Republican in county
and daughter of Springfield . politics, Bissell is serving his
Mrs. Addie Ingram and 20th year as a Chester
daughter of Prichard, W. Va., Township trustee and hopes to
spent Sunday and Monday with continue in that job. He is a
. the fo1·mer's mother, Mrs. member of the Ohio
Amanda Blackburn, Cherry Association of Township Clerks
and Trustees.
Ridge.
His retirement as a bus
Herscheli Norman called on
driver
came earlier than he
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Adkins
had expected due to a back
and family.
injury
which he received in
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilfong
were callers of Mr. and l\1rs. 1964 when he gave up bus
driving for some three months
Chesler Jones Monday.

in the killing of fish or g~me
before it could hold the city
li'!ble .
The Court of Appeals, in its
reversal decision, ruled that a
municipality exercises a
proprietary function rather
than a governmental funcUon
in operating a sewage treat.ment plant and sewage system,
and therefore has no governmental immunity from

liability.
When
performing
a
proprietary function, the appeals
court
said,
a
municipality Is liable for
damage ig the same way and to
the same extent as a private
corporation or an Individual.
The court said the argument
that the state had to show the
city's intent or fault in · the
killing of fish or !!a. me "has no
logic or legal precedent for its
foundation.,
"Anyone who creates or
maintains a nuisance intends
the natural consequences of his
nuisance creation, and is at
fault for it," the appeals court
said. "There is no legal text or

~~~~~~~~·~

RATS
PURINA :::
_;::-::::;~

RAT
KILL
It '~ a different k_md of killer for... rats and. mice, n "t·a rry-home"
bait . Hats hnu l 1t ba(·k to the nest , ,. distribute it themselves
.. . feed RAT·K I l..L to the whole family till th ey're dead\ .
• Highly palatable to rats • Sure kill in 5 to 15 days
• Very low in cost.

J. D. North Produce Co.
Vi_ne ·street
Ga hipolis, o.

Wanted

'

Help Wanted

For Sale

WE, t~e famll~ of Charles 'L"' ,
· Waugh, Sr., would like to RUSS'$ Gi~ ss Se;vtce Gtasslo
. thank aU of the frt~s. neigh·
all needs, we sell windshield:,
bar~ .and retal!~es. for a.ll &lt;!!
~form 'windows' and doors

.

Help. Wanted

Wanted To Do .

' NOTICE

NEEDS LP N or ret;red RN lo SALESLADY, Appl)l In pefSQI• · oOOFING ·
· .
Another B!dg.?
SOMEONE to share' ride to SEE· Need
"'Mi lstead Baker,y, 244 Third ~ .
and spo_ut~ng, ·ex· wOrk in nur sing home , ·ca n .
our
aluminum
bldg
s.
Ave
~
·
penenced roofers . Ph . 388· Florida . . Responsible driver,
live tn . Write- Box 313, Ironton.
Heavy. duty, with flooring,
.
, 2-tf . 8114, James Marcum .
Call 446·mt.
.
Oh
io
Route
1.
f9'" electric. Also· west
th~•r · great services, foods,
·awnings and mirrors 704
3·3 wired.
. 2-tf
.,.:.:
295·30
Vlr'gi!lia ~hunk coal ! ·drain
'
. flowers and other o!ferlngs.
Pine St. Rio Grande 24S·50411 ~p::tile.
belt
tile,
cement
and
.
A
~
R
~
T
-:T
~
I-:
M-::
E"b
a"
b_
y
_sist
er,
_
:
4
46-''
. SEMI-DRtVE~S NEEDED TOOl sha rpenin g, . saws,
We would like to give special
'
·
' 295 ti
mortar. Gallipolis Block &amp; AN OHIO OIL CO. offers OP· LOCAL compan1es need Cer- sc iSsors, shears home and
ill)anks .for and to Mr. and
.0625. In Gall ipolis.
. . Coat
Co., 123'12 Pine, 4&lt;16-2783. portunity for high incpme
tit led Sem_i-Dri yers . E·arn , garden tools. Sharp ·. Shop,
Mrs , Freddie Woods fO~· Ihelr TWO-WAY Radios S"ales &amp;
3·6
PLU S cash bonuse,, /ton·
.
207-tl
S400 per Week : No e.x ·
Alley rear 147 Second .
re•t services, , Rev: Home' .Service. New .and used CB's, ~~-~---.....::
vention trips and· tri.nge · SJO~penence
neces-sary.
w1ll
..
·
216-ff
. lary, who did an especlattr.
pollee monitors. antennas,
benefits to mature man -In
train . For application cal l3 17- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_
.great service at the funera , etc. Bob's Citizens Band Musical Instruments
Gall ipol is area . Regard less of
or write Coastway REMODELING, building new
pallbearers, · and ~peclally
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
SPl!IET-tONSOLE Pl.ANO USED FURNITURE ex per ience. air mail I. 1. · 636·2675,
AmeriCan
Systems. P. 0 . Box
rooms, ce ment. roofing,
the Heywood•, the wonderful
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio 446-4517. WANTED responsible party to
Read , Pres ., American · 11125, Indianapoli
s, Indiana
sidinQ , furnace ins .. J . H.
m ·lf ' take over spinet plano. Easy SPECIAL SPECIAL
· slngers, and especially great ____:_,._ _ _ _~
Lub r i q mts Co ., Box 696,
46201 .
Queen]!, Son, 446-9211.
t~k~ to the great doctors,
terms. Can be seen locally .
· Dayton, Ohio 45401.
298-30
.. 68-tl
nurses and nur..s aides of the RA~PH'S 'carpet &amp; Upholstery , Write Credit Manager. p. o. Like brand new maple bunk bed
5-4
Vli'gtnla Hospital, Hun ·
Cleaning Service. Free
Box 276, Shetbyvttte, Indiana set complete with Bemco
.WASH and wax cars . Ph'orie 446 tlngton, W.Va. Special thanks · estimates. Ph . 446·0294. Ralph
mattresses. Real nice 3 pc . TEX S 0 COMPANY
d
46176 .
A
lL
nee s
MEN NEEDED
.2, bedroom suite complete with
0734.
to Rev. and Mrs. Marion
A Davis owner
4
box spring and mattress . 3 pc. good man over 40 for short
SEMI-DRIVERS AND
WitHams during' the weel\s of
.
'
.
9 11 ~------_
__ _ _ _ _ 5·3
end table set. like brand new 2 !rips surrounding Gatlipofis.
. HEAVY EQUIPMENT
our father's sickness that
·
pc. living room suite. Sunray
Contact customers. We tra;n.
OPERATORS
· gavethetrservl~es . We would ·.ROOFING and ' gutter work. fOR SALE .
FOR
b
tt
Ci
k
·
gas
range
under
2
yrs.
old.
2
Air
mail
.
A.
B.
Dickerson,
BROKER
lor Pre-Employment For Rent
ltke to give spe-cial thanks to William Mitchell , 388-8507.
1
1o eep dinette sets. Beautiful white
.
e er eanng,
P res . , ·So uthw este rn . Training .
lmmed late
Mr . Rover Brumfield, for hts
67-if colors
gleaming,
use Frehch Provincial bedroom
Petroleum C_orp., Ft. Worth,
openings on Bulldozers, P?ns,
great ' job of wrlHtig the
Blue Lustre Caroet cleanser. suite. Maple chest ol drawers.
Tex.
Scrapers and Semi-Tractor 12x50 TRAI~ER 2 br . utiliti~s
.obituary. Signed, Mrs.
DAY CARE '
5·1 · Trallers. No experience
pdid , rent by week or month.
Rent
electric shampooer Sl . Dresser . 2 rockers . Old trunk .
Charles ~ee Waugh, Sr .. and SUN VA~LEY Nursery School.
G.
C.
Murphy
Lower
Store.
.----------~·
necessary.
Average
National
one mil e fr om No. 1 mine site
' family, and special thanks
licensed by State of Ohio, 1112
on Rt . 325. 742-5980.
·
· 307·6
Baker cook for day shift,
Earnings $12,000 . $15,000 per
from Charles Lee Waugh, Jr . . miles west of new hospital.
• J.6
ex perience helpful but not
yea r . For application call
. necessa ry , also waitress, 10
Area Coqe 419-241 -6532, or
- - - - - - - - - - 5·1 571 Sun Valley Dr. Ph. 446· CARPETS and · life too
3657. Day c.aJe that says "we can
~e
beau111ul
if
p. m. to ~ a . m. shill. Good
write North Central SerVices, HOUSE located on Buiaville
care ." Madge . Hauldren,
you
use
Blue
Lustre,
Rent
working
condition
..
Pa
id
P. 0 . Box 7207, Toledo, Ohio
Addison Road, ca ll 367-7438 or
For Sale
Owner': Lor'~~llh &amp; John
446-3879.
electric . shampooer "' Sl. NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE vacation , Apply in person
43615.
Hauldren, Operators.
CORN. Glenn Graham. 446·11411.
Central Supply.
only at Bob Evan' Steak
3·3
114-tf
307-6
854 SE'COND 446-9523
Hou,c.
_ _ _ _ __ _ ...::307·6

.

==-.....:..___

· WELDING SERVICE

R·1cE' s

- -- - - -

ARC WELDING
ALSO
PORTABLE WORK.
Court St.
Phone 446-1001
56

..
NOW OPEN!
HILLCREST CLINIC
l oca ted Ph m i les west of
Hol zer Med ica l Center on Rt .

35.
DR. MEL P. SIMON
Urologist
Ph. 446·0021 or 446·001 2
Office Hours

Mon .. Tues. &amp; Fri. 1 p.m. to 5
p.m.

Thur. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
&amp;7p.m. to9p.m. ·

WISEMAN REAL ESlATE AGENCY
500 2nd AVE.
GALUPOLIS, OHIO

~OUR

HELIARC AND

~--'---~~

THE

WHY -WAIT

USE

Tricot Uned FPI LDng Wear. You Will
Find Them P.s Comfortable As Any You
Have Ever Wom. ·

c

.

E. M. (IKE) WISEMAN, BROKER
E.N. WISEMAN, BROKER

REALTORS

FERTILIZER
NOW AND GET THE EARLY

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

NOW, AWIDE AND WONDERFUL SELECTION OF EXCITING NEW

POMEROY
Serving Meigs, Gallia
and Mason Counties
Ph. 992-2181
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

HOMES DESIGNED BY AMERICA'S LEADING ARCHITECTS
AND BUILT BY

Look for the Big" L" on Route 7 &amp; 33 at the
Upper End of Pomeroy

state's complaint back to the
Wood County Common Pleas
Court for a hearing and further
action.

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 6:00 PM

CARTER· &amp; EVANS INC.

MR. TRACTOR
OWNER! .
.
'
rooms, terrific kitchens ~include Hotpoint ranges, dishwashers). Every comfort

SAVE TIME

- -

,,

\~

Let Us Service

YOUR TRACTOR NOW

•
CHARLES BISSEU

It's The Smart ·
Thing To Do! .

to reenter the conslruction
trade.
All 13 or the Bissell children
attended schools in the Eastern
Local District.

DRIVE OUT ROUTE 35 TO PARKLANE SUBDIVISION

•

HI.

HAVE A LOOK AROUND THEN CALL
)I'

.I 'JI

be started in '73

DREAM GAME
MIAMI (UPI ) - A computerized dream . game
featuring the Super Bowlbound Miami Dolphins and a
team comprised of the allltime
football all.,slars will be heard
over several radio stations in
F1orida on Jan. 7.
Included on the all-timers
are Sammy Baugh, Johri
Uriitas, Jlril Brbwn ; Red
Grange, and Jim Tharpe.
•,

baths, one and two car garages. Large landscaped lots with clean, fresh country air
added in. Wonderful homes you never thought you could own Bu~ Now You Can.

Billion trees to

WASHINGTON, D. C.
During 1973 almost a billion
small trees, or five for every
American, will be planted in
the nation 's forests, according
to American Forest Institute.
. The gigantic planting replaces
trees that have been harvested
or lost to fire, insects or
· disease.
More than 1.3 million acres
are expected to be planted this
fall. an~ next spring. Over
200,000 additional acres are
expected to be aerially seeded
by helicipter as well, with
applications ranging from
10,000 to 30,000 seeds per acre
depending on tree species. '

you have longed for. Central air conditioning, completely carpeted. I V2 , 2 and 21;2

I

THE WISEMAN AGENCY REALTORS 446-3643
"'DR ANY OF THE FOLLOWING-

MERRILL EVANS, BUILDER 446-3943
FOREST MUtLINS, BUILDER .446-2387
..

·,

Winter Time • • •
is the best ~ime to get our ca~eful, (NO RUSH), service
now. If your tractor needs mtnor repairs or a complete
overhaul, why not get It done now BEFORE SPRING.
It's the wise and convenient thing to do. We: re ready to
serve you.
'

MORE FAMILIES LIVE .IN

NATIONAL HOMES THAN ANY OTHER HOMES IN THE WORLD

AND ft'ORE .FAMILIES IN

GALLIA co. LIVE IN MORE HOMES SOLO
BY THE WISEMAN AGENCY
••

f

PRICE ABIG PROBLEM?

-

Meigs Equipment Co.
'

Ph. 992-2176

.

GEORGE CARTER, BUILDER 44&amp;4668
IKE WISEMAN, REALTOR 446-3796

..

Here's the best buy around. 117,900
bu)'S this nea~y new 3 bedroom home.

"

large beautiful kitchen with buiHins.

~WE

NEEDLISTINGS

NEED 5 BEDROOMS?
We have it and it includes· a huge
family room, lovely kitchen, dining
area, sun deck, central air, 2 baths
and garage.

•33,900

)
HOME·S
THE GROWTH 5HILTU COMPAN.Y

THAN AN OTHER

I

�....

~·

' '

,

'•

'

'

,,·

'
~ ·· '

'

'

24 _J1.1e Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 7, 1973

.

Notice .,

INFORMATION

·

!&gt;EADL!NES

I ~~M Day Before Publiq lion
·
nday Deadl irw 9 a.m
ancetlation - Correction s
Will be ac(ep ted un t i l 9 a m. for
Day of Publ iCBt ion
REGULATIONS
The Publis her res erves the
r ight to edit or rei ect any ads
deemed
obj.ett iona l.
The
Pllbl lsh er will not be respons1ble.
for more than On't' incorrect
in se rtion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 ce nts per word on e insertloJ
Min1mum Charge·7Sc
12 cents· per word thret
con5e..:utlve insertion s.
18 cen ts per word si~~; con
secut ive insertions
25 Per Cent Discouf'l on paid
ads and ads paid wi t hin lOdays .
CARD OF THANKS .
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 50 for 50 word m inimum .
Ea ch additional word 2c
•

Notice

OFFICE

Notice

good man Ove'r AO for short
t r ips surroUnding Pomeroy
Contact customers. W~train .
Air mail B. G. Dickerson ,
P r es . . Southwe s tern

Petroleum Corp " Ft. Worth ,

Tex .

1·3 4tc

HAYMAN'S Auction - a ~ood BUSINESS Opportunity to~
lnf om e Ta xes ; daily e)(cept
place to go each Fnday m~n and women . Inquire by
Sunday , 9 a .m . to 5 p rn .,
evening. 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff wntlng: R. D. 2. Box 73.
eve ni ng s by appointment ,
on old Rt. 7. 1 mile west of
Racine, Ohio. ~
Mrs. Steven (Wanda ) Eblin ,
Rock Springs Fa irground .
1·5·121P·
Rt. 2, Pomeroy ( Liturcl Cl iff
10.JO.tfc
Rd off Rt 7 By Pass ) ; phone
-Ko- sc,..,.
o=-TKc-::o-sM
:;-=E=T,::::cs-::-&amp;7.7wtGS.
992 2212.
SPECIALS MONTHLY.
lc
About
sev,en·tenths
of
a
hu
1 3 30
- -----.. -· _ .. ____
man body I s water.
n3,ffc

IVE tWr

uP, I('ED!

C.U~MeRs

WJU1iN6' W THAT
S IL!/ERINJII('E ! ...

LADY 'to do housework by the
day in Pomeroy or Chester
· area; phone 985·357 4.
1·7-Jic

•.

- - - - -- - -·Pets For Sale
business .

Big

·e :JO a .m to 5:00pm . Da ily,
8 : 30 a.m
to 12 ·oo Noon
Saturdav .

RED IRISH Setter puppies,

THE

FAMILY

registere~.

of

thanks to all

Paula

Wanteti To Buy

the Jobs

OLD furniture, oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass

beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Phone 992·
6271.
1·7·1fc

many people. Mr . and Mrs.
Paul 'Eichinger and fam1ly.

'

1·7· lip

lielp Wanted

WE WISH to say THANK YOU

THE BOARD of Public Affairs
of the Village of Syracuse Is
now accepting applications
for the position of clerk. The
duties of the clerk shall be
co ll ection of . water bills,

to all the church groups and
organlutions·, private in ·
diViduals and emplOyees for
their
expressions
of
thoughtfulness
lor
our

residents at Christmas and
throughout the past year .
Paul and Virg ie Buckley,
Adm inistrators, Elmwood
Nursing Home, Rt. 2,
Coolville.
1·7·11P

preparation and mailing of
statements~
maintaining
office hours as prescribed by

the

maintain

WE WISH to thank everyone for
their cards, telephone calls
and flowers, while we were

both in Holzer Medical Center
and Grant Hospital. Marvin
and Helen Miller, Langsville,

Chill

- - -- -- 1·7·llc
Notice

GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fisn
and supplies; new location,
Ash Sfreet, Middleport near
park ; phone 992·5443.
1.7.tfc

bright future with nationally

and

phone 742·6085.

. 1·7·61c
INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording, puolishlng,
free mem.bershlp ; write
I.S.C.. Rl. L Box 210, Mid·
dleport , Ohio 45760.
_ _ __ _ _ _ _
H ·61p

621· 1006, 18001 621 ·8182, (8001
621 ·7501.

1-CPEFULL'f', YOU
WON'T GET SO

].7. lip

- - ----

INVOLVED ON

\OUR NEXT
A% 1GNMENl

FREE puppies to give away ;
phone 992·6083
1-Htp

TEXAS REFINERY CORP.
offers opportunity for hi~h
Income PLUS cash bonuses,
convention trips and lrmge
benefits to mature man In
Pomeroy area . Regardles~ of
experience, air mail I. I.
Pate, Pres ., Texas Refinery
Corp., Box 711, Fort Worth,

6L.ff WE FEEL

1HAT PERIW'G
"" CHAt.l::.2: WULD

GUN SHOOT. Sunday, January

6E IN ORDER.

7. 1 p. m . Factory choked guns
only . Second place shooters

Texas 7610L

get free shot in next match .
Assorted meats. Racine Gun

NATCHf:RL'I
HE KIN TR.u$T'
US. WHAT' Do

1-0tc

WE CARE

WHAT'S IN
HIS ROTTEN
0 1-E BOX.?

OVERWEIGHT? Have the
Holidays added to your
weight problem? Let us help

1·7·4fp

DON' T OPEN

THAT.HON~T

Al!o£-010,

AH'LL l!iOX

VO~EEARS!!

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS .
Enlist now- stay home until
after grlduation . Guaranteed
ass i gnments to
Europe,
Hawaii, Korea or selected

locations in the US. See your

'iOU remove that excess at

local Army representative for

Conway Diet Institute Orchid Room - Mondays at
7:30p.m. For Information call
992·2926.
1-5·3fc

facts about the 180· Day
Delayed Entry .Program and
the Army's new pay raise.
For more Information call

-- -- SHOTGUN MATCH, Sunday,

collect SS G. Clark 593·3022.
1·7·61c

- - - -- --

Jan. 7, 12 noon , Side Hill Gun
Club; assorted meats, no
alcoholic beverages allowed;
soft drinks will be sold ; free
coflee ; not respons ible for
accidents ; trophies for High
Point Card.
J.5.2tc

CAR HOP and Grill Cook
wanted; apply in person ,
Craw's Steak House.
12·3Htc
WE' RE LOOKING for a person
Who can Sell, Collect, Manage

- - - -----

their own t ime and other

--------

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING'

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

become proficient on Air
Defense Missiles. Then give
you a job in Europe or Korea.

TERRY

A job you'll find as exciting as
the country you'll be working
ln. You' ll get 30 days ,paid
vacation a year, too . Plus lots
of other benefits. If you'd like
the challenge and excitement
of living and working in
another country , Today's

Army wants to. join you. For
complete. details call collect
SS G. Clark, 593-3022.
li·31·6k

992·2448
Pomeroy, 0.
MEN 18·24' l EA R'N CON.
STRU CTION1 SKILLS FOR
COMBAT ENGINEERING
JOB IN EUROPE . Today's
Army , will train competent
young men in the combat
field .
And
engineering

guarantee a job In europe.
You'll assist ·or engage in t.he

main.

tenance of roads, bridging,
shelters, and structures .

COMPANION to li ve in with
elderly woman . no la·undry ,

day off. Phone 992·5397 or 992·
3507.
1·4·3tc
PLUMBING and Heating man,
expenenced; If not ex·
perlehced and honest, do not
apply; phone 992·2511 or 992.
3'1 18.
12·6-llc

The~e are

lots of benefits, foo.
Like 30 days paid vacation a
year . If you'd 1like to learn

lifetime skills while you Jive
and work irr Europe, Today's

Army wanfs to join you . Call
collect SS G. Clark , 593·3022.
1·J.6k

Phone 992·2511
or 992-3918

On Most American Cars ·
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992'·2094
oi&gt;enBTits
Mondaythru Saturday
606 E. Main,_Pomeroy, 0.

Wanted To Do

72 Olds R(rjale 88 H.T. Sed.

Level lot about 1h acre,
carport, 2 storage bldgs.

$14,900.00.
LITTLE UPKEEP
SYRACUSE - BRICK - 4
B. R., dining R.. NEW bath
and utility R.• NEW plum·
bing &amp; F.A gas furnace. 2
large level lots, EX.
CELLENT
NEIGH ,
BORHOOD.
· RUTLAND
HERE IS AN EXCELLENT
BUY - 1 story frame, 3
B.R., large bath, utility,
dining R. paneling and other,

out cellar. THE MEAGER
SUM OF $9,200,00.
MUCH WORK DONE HERE
Within sight of the Gavin
stack. 3 B.R., NEW bath,
NEW F.A. furnace. NEW
paneling, utility

R. large

Red . R. Out cellar and
storage, large lot. THIS YOU
MUST SEE. $9,800.00.
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
PROPERTIES WHICH WE
CONSIDER GOOD BUYS.
CONTACT US TODAY. IF
WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE
WILL GET IT.
HENRY E. CLELANO
3 ASSOCIATES TO SELL
YOUR PROPER'TY.
992·22!9
If no answer
985.4209 or 992·2168

Virgil B.
·Teaford, . Sr.
Broker
NEW LISTING
t OR 3 ACRES - In the
country. Two good houses or
mobi le home sites. On a
corner acre . All for $1200.00 .

NEW LISTING
VACANT - Building lot 1n
Pomeroy on Rt . 33. Asking
Only $1500.00.
NEW LISTING
3 ACRES - Small barn, 6
room house, twa baths, 3

bedrooms. all with closets. 3
basement

and

drilled well. Wanl $10.500.00.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - 1'12 baths,
wall to wall carpeting,
modern kitchen,

gas

fur -

nace. Full basement. front
porch 'and garage. Like to

have $12,500.
,,
NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
paneled home. Nice bath.
utility, and kitchen. Wall· to
wall carpeting and nice level

lot. Need $12.000.00.
BU!L~ING LOTS
T.P. WATER - 1 acre
rolling land in 11\j! country
near Rt. 7 and close to town.

8 ACRES
ON HARD ROAD - A little
bit of privacy on new
proposed

water

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,.INC.
992.2174

Pomeroy

line .

•4200

' Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

WANTE-D
CHIPWOOD
Poles
Maximum
Diameter ·
10" on

-992 "5341 ,

THE SHOP

DELIVERED
A
TO

OHIO
PALLET CO.

B ~ S CARPENTER• Work
remodeling , paneling and
On Old Rt. 33
interior decorating; phone
Phone 992·2689
446-9487.
'
- -· - -- - - ' ·Htp . ._.P.o11
m•e•r•ov•••Oh_i•o-. .

GMA_C Finan.c:ing Av,~ilable

1969 CADILLAC ELDORADO
1~73

1972 DODGE POLARA

Pomeroy

!Jpen Eves. Til 6--: Til 5 P.M. Sat.
"You' II Like('· ;, Qua lily Way of, Oolnp Business"

"Cusom
M~:~~;~~.:~,:~.,~&lt;!
Quick
and

DALE

MQbi!e ~omes For Sale

LITTLE

992·3884
Let Dick Jnd Dale Help

Arthur

rl)Odels of mobile homes .

Phone area code 614 -423·9531 .
4· 13·tfc
1970 SCHULT mobtle home ,
12X70, 3 bedroom ; carpeting
through,o ut;
combination
washer &amp; . ~ryer. Lived in for 1

.: Air Conditioners
·~Awnings

12·12·30fp

Real Estate For Sale

Complete

1972 atEVROLET CAPRICE ........ J3995

1971 Pontiac ..................$3995

4·door. new car title &amp; bal'ance Of warranty, covert color
withblack vinyl roof, tinted glass. factory air, front &amp; rear
guards, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall f1res N1ce and
clean. Retai l $4860. Priced tO move

Grandville 2 dr . H.T. , factory air. local one
owner.

----:-:::-:---:::-::---:--

------

CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
992-2151

Middleport, 0.

designs. etc. Paint slightty
blemished. Choice of carrying

-'--- - - --

FURNISHED 3 room house,
bath, furnace, on corner lot In

We talk to you
like a person.
•

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

- -- - --

For Sale By Owner
Completely modernized 10-room
house, two full baths, all built-in kit. chen, 1st floor wall-to-wall carpets,
gas central heat. On two town lots in·
good Middleport neighborhood. Owner
leaving town. See by appointment by
calling 992-3486.
·
'

-------

'--- - - --

+++

'

1969 Ford .............. only $1395
1968 Cadillat ..................$2495

Local 1 owner, new car trade in with less than J9,00ll
miles, show rOOf11 clean mtenor, good tires1 6 cy l engine,
automatic trans ., radio. green f inish . Sharpest 67 in the

1967 Int. ............... only $1695

·

Carry·AII 4 wheel drive . Real sharp. Nice
camper vehicle .

Don't Forget

Local owner, V-8 engme, automatic trans ... p. steering ,
tinted glass, vinyl int . trim, green finish, good tires , radio ..

We Service What We Sell

1965 CHEVY NOVA WAGON ........ ..J450

Our Word Is Our Bond

Good ,fires, 6 cyl., with automatic, sound mechanrcally,
radio, popular model &amp; ready to work .

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m . &amp; Sat. Till 5 p.m .
Service Til 12 noon on Saturday.

1966 OLDS TORONADO CPE. ...... ..1995
Local owner. all good t ires. full power equipment , fa ctory
a·lr, AM -FM radio, run s out sweet.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

1971 DODGE 8' WIDE PICKUP

•1995

Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

l.s now employed at Carroll Norris Dodge, Inc.
as a salesman.
SO State St.; Gallipolis,
Ph. 446-0842

CHEVROLET

POMEROY .MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Till 8

Pomeroy

3 ROOM, furn ished apartment. SLEEPING ROOM with use of
utilities paid. lnquir.e at 631 . kitchen ~ l iving r oom , garage,
priva te entrance . Call 675Th ird Ave.
4-3 3536.
278·1f

APARTMENT for lease, un· SLEEPING ROOMS, week ly
furn ished, $100 per month, 2
rates. Park Central Hotel.
bedrooms, second floor ,
308-tf
opposite city park , central
.heat and air condition mg . 446-

.

•

.\

•

APARTMEN T tor construction
men . Ph . 446-0756.
26Hf

2325 or 446-4425.

3·tf
BAKER STEPS UP
For Rent
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jolm J. Gilligan announced MODERN house in Addison , tu lt
basement, call after 4: 3~. 367·
·Wednesday that Deputy
7455.
Finance Director Robert H.
3·3
Baker will become acting
director to replace Harold 4 ROOM apartment with
t;arage , private entran ce .
Hovey, who resigned to accept
all 675·3536.
a similar position in illinois.
299·11
Baker, JIJ, was appointed
deputy director in April, 1972, 2 BEDROOM trailer in
Cheshire, 36J.7J29 .
after serving as president of
306·1f
the Sundry Claims Board and
legal adviser to the department.

SLEEPING rooms , weekly

looktng far .1 mobil e- home
lot ora qualrty mobile home?
We have both at

rates, free garage parking,

Liftby Hotel.

241 ,tf

QUAIL CREEK
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

FURNISHED mobile home in
Galli pol is, 446·0338.
227·1f
FURNISHED Apt. park ing.
central heat , two adults only,

446·0338.

248-tf

Rodney-Cora Rd .
Rodney , Ohto
Hours. 9 .1.m. to 9 p.m
Monday lhru Saturday

SLEEPING , rooms for ren t.
Gall ia Hotel , 446·9715.
181 .tf

Ph. 245-937 4- 245·5021

Attention Dog Owners

PROTEST DENIED
NEW YORK (UPI)- Walter
Kennedy, Commissioner of the
National Basketball Associa·
tion , Thur&amp;day denied a protest
by the Chicago Bulls of a game
·played on Dec. 12 against the
Los Angeles Lakers.

'

'

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1973 DOG LICEN S E IS
JANUARY 20TH. ONE DOLLAR ($1.00} PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE US E
THIS HAI'1DY APPLICAT ION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS
($2.00} FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.

.
.want eo To Buy

To obtain license by mail·, fill in and mail this form to GORDON H.
CALDWELL, COUNTY AUDITOR .- ·Meigs Coun\y. Pomeroy, Ohi o .
Enclose sell·addressed ·stamped envelope and price of license.
•

WILL BUY your old plano
Please state make and pri ce
of piano. Reply Bo&gt;1 246, C·o
Gallipolrs Tribune .
J.6.

----,-----,.-----,
JUNK autos itnd scraP meta~
388·8776.
245·78

Male Dog $2 .00

Spayed Femal.e $2 .00

Female $2 .00

Ke nn e l Li ce n se $10

'

-------

Owners Name

WANTED to buy, sell or trade,
toy electric train , 446·4843.
240-lf

----------------------------•

Address--------------------------------·

CATTLE, lop prices. 446·3792.
2·6

Township--------------~---------------·

For Rent

.

o.,

For Rent

For Rent

.992-2126

(®e

• 992-2174

6 Cyl. engine, std . trans ., good H. duty tires, clean car in 2tone of wh . &amp; green, deluxe mldgs ., 34.,000 miles by local
~ :~' ............~_,...~
owner., .Music &amp; ht!at: ··· · ~"· Yr.

.,

·-r---------~--------------r---------- -~-

Ali•

Sex

COLOR

Hair

Breed

Yr. Mo. M. F. Blk Whi te •Gray Brindle Tan Brown Yellow Long Short II Kno'4tr

-

e

Meigs County Auto Buyers

auto . Real sharp

new G. P . trade in.

MODERN h9use for rent,
In 1789, George Washington
handy, · localed In vicinity of
was elected the first president
Cheshire. Ph. 367·7350.
5·6
of the United States.
-::-:-=-:--In 1918, Nikolai Lenin esta- GERT'S a gay girl- ready for
seventh day of 1973 with 359 to
-,
APPLE GROVE
a whirl after cleaning carpets
follow .
.
· blished a dictatorship of the
with Blue Lustre. Rent
For Sa I
Mrs. Eula Wolfe returned . The moon is between its new ' proletariat and abolished the
electricshampooer $1 at G. C.
'COAL, Limestone, Excelsior home Tue&amp;day after spending phase and first quarter.
constituent assembly of the
Murphy, lower store .
Salt Works, E. . Main St.. Chr.lsbnas with her daughter,
5·6
The
morning
_
stars
are
Soviet
Union.
,
•·
'Pomeroy. Phone 992·389 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen · Swart and Mercury, Venus and Mars.
-~----,--.
In
1927,
~egitlar
lransatlantic
. .
4· 12·1fC
FURNISHED apartm~nt.
.. , family at Dixon, Ill.
,
The evening stars are telephone service began beadults only, utilities paid, 258
REGISTERED Angus bulls i
Mrs. Eula Wolfe attended Jupiter and ,Saturn .
State Street. Phone 446·0085.
tween New York and London.
call alter 5 p.m., Bill Witte, fWleral services for her cousin,
5·1f
Those born on this· date are
In 1972 • President Nixon
992·2789.
, 1·5-6tc Lyle Wheatl~y at Logan, W. under the sign of Capricorn. announced his ·iniention to run CARPETS and life too can be
Va. She was a guest of Mrs.
beautiful if you use Blue
Millard Fillmore, 13th pres· for re-election to a second
Lustre .
Rent
electr ic
ZENITH 23" bla~k and white John Ord Tuesday and Wedident of the United States, was term . He won in November,
shampooer $1 at Central
Conso le 'T.V.; very good
condition, $65 ; phone 992·5919. nesday nights at Letart, W. Va. born Jail. 7, 1800.
Supply. Co.
overwhelmingly defeating Sen.
f.5.3tc Routt.
5·6
On thts day in history:
George McGovern.

AmNTION

v.a,

Fairlane soo Wagon ,
little wagon.

1967 atEVROLET BEL AIR 4 OR. $1095

-

1955 CHEVROLET newly
·1;, DOUB L'E, ' 2 bedroom, tur·
overhauled engine; Jim
nl shed ; on Fourth &amp; College
Chadwell. Reedsville , Ohio ;
Almanac
Streets, Syracuse. phone 992·
667·3652.
2749.
1.7.3tc . By United Press International
12·29·1fC
Today is Sunday, Jan. 7, the

P . R. camper

2 dr. H.T., black with black vinyl top, loaded ,

1966 BUICK SPECIAL 4 DOOR.......J795

'·

3/4 Ton Pickup. auto .• P.S..
special. Red &amp; white . Sharp .

6 cyl inder engine, automatic tran smission, radio, good ww tires, black vinyl top and red fini sh, black bucket seats .

Phone 992·7755 .

+++

1969 Ford............... only $2295

1968 CAMARO HT CPE.. ............ !1545

always ava llable , at ...

Meigs
Equipment·Co.

Montego 4 dr . sed., lactory air, ve ry low
mileage . Priced to sell.

Malibu sport coupe, air conditioned , 307 engine, power
steer ing, power brakes, red fini sh w ith black vinyl top and
black vinyl interior, radio. good white-wall tires

coun~.

1970 FORD

1969 Mercury:.........~...... $1595

1968 CHEVELLE .......................~1695

case or sewing stand . 549 .80
o sh or term s available .

1-Ht c

Caprice 2 dr. H. T. , factory air , r e al sharp local
car.

Sport Sedan, local I owner car, beautiful turquoise f injs h
wrth spotless m'iltching interior trim. black v i nyl top,
factory ~ i r , V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic , power steering
and brakes, radio, good w-w tires, 'delu xe bumper guards,
nice and clea'n ·

'display of mobile homes

- -----

----=--=-:---:--

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE .........$2495

2-door, local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires, clean in terior, green finish, radio. 2000cc engine, 4-speed.

•895

1.970 Chev.............. only $2695

.

.

..--THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL-..
V·8, 4speed, dump bed, can be used for any job, looks a
little bedraggled but look at this price .

Bonneville 4 dr . H.T., factory air. on e owner ,
low !Jlileage .

4 door , local I owner. low mileage car,...,beige fini sh with
brown vinyl top, vinyl interior, factory air, 350-engine,
power steering &amp; brakes . Delu xe bumpers, wheel covers,
like new w-w tires, radio &amp; other fin e a ccessories. A sharp
car &amp; one you would like.

1971 PINTO FORD ................... ~1599

1967 DODGE 0300 1-TON

197LPontiac ......... only $3795

1971 CHEVROLET
BEL AIR ....... }2895
•

Coronet 4 Dr. Sed. Slant six, standard shlft.

1 SET wagonwheel bunk beds;
Gulli Is Pain In the Neck
Sauvage Fox double barrel 12
gau~e shotgun, Model B Dear Helen and Sue :
1220 Washington Blvd.
ventrlated rib single trigger ;
I am almost 14 and have been going with this boy for eight
.23·7521
BELPRE, 0 .
both , excellent condition ,
months , but not on real dates. We have never done anything bad.
phone 985·3530.
1-7·31p
My Mom Jet me go to a party where all the kids were, in· ·
Au-to ' Sales
_N_E_W_ H
_o-sp_l_ta-1_b_e_d_, - 5-200
- , 1 eluding my big-mouth brother.
1967 CHEVROLET Impala . 283,
brand new wheelchair , never
WeJJ, that night I got a hickey on my neck. You know ho'!
V·8, automali c,
power
been used, $100; phone 992· mothers feel about hickeys 1So I decided I'd better teJJ her it
s tee ring , good condition ,
5736, John Bigelow, 545 Park
pricf. 5650 : Elmer F. Bailey.
St., Middleport.
didn't lead to anything before she found out about it through old
Darwin. 992·5530,
1·7-3tc flap-lips.
7 31
- - =,.,-,=-.,.---:-:--':·- · P. : : - - -- - - - - Next morning I caJJed her from my girl friend's house
1970 1 TON ford. dual wheels , HOMECLEANING products ; (where 1 stayed overnight). She only said, "I'll talk to you about
long wheel base. power
phone 992·2579 or 247·2193.
brakes, 12'12 ft. bed. less than
1·5·30fp it when you get horne ." ·
23,000 miles, clean as new ;
When 1 got home, all she said was I couldn 't go out that night.
phone 9B5·3554, Harold BAR with D. 1• D·2 License ; She never mentioned the hickey again. ·
Bottom
Business and equipment i
L
B
r~w ~r. ong
· 1·7·1fc· Phillips Bar, East Main St.,
But! get a feeling Mom doesn't !rust me any more. I seem to
'" IG' ,. .... , I '" ? '
"
Po'fl~fq~ .. . ..~
tc
get
'l!amed
for ,~i~~S 1J!l:,\&gt;rolher or 1 si~~ ,W/, U~~...k)lql,l',sb~ \~.,
15 3
1968'COF&lt;Vef'rE ,'&gt;I~rl.' 4 ~peed? " ·
· · · ashamed of me, and she probably hates my boyfriend, even
AM-FM radio, new ex.haust.
new tire s; excellent con - SPINET·CONSOLE PIANO . thoughthat's the onlythinghe'severdoneorlried.
dillon. $3.000; phone 992·2238.
Wanted resp.onslbl~ party to
Don't suggest &amp;mother.&lt;Jaughter talk. That's what I lried
take over sp1net p1ano. Easy
,
1-5·31c
- - - - -- - - - terms . Can be seen locally . over the phone. - WORRIED SICK
1966 CHEVY ; phone 992-5535
Write Credll Manager, P. 0.
after 5 p.m.
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana Dear W.S.:
H ·31p
46176.
I'll betcha abnost anything your mother has just about
1·5·2fp
-----forgotten the incident, but your guilty consciimce won 't accept
300 BALESol hay ; 45c a bale ;
that fa ct. Maybe you were a lot more scared about her reaction
phone 985-4100.
Buy For Youl
1.5-Jtc than she was upset by your first hickey .
Y'see, most teenagers suspect they're evil, vicious, rott~n.
EARLY American stereo·radio
combination , AM-F M .radio, 4 mean kids at heart, (honest, now, don't you spend a Jot of time
Custom
speaker sound system, 4 worrying about how no.good you are?) so when we get caught, we
Station Wagon
speed automatic changer .
Auto . tr ans,, P,S,, 351Y8
Balance $79 .57 Use our always expect the worst. When thataWrul torture doesn't come,
engine: 4 new t ires, (snow
budge! term s. Call 992 7085 . we start imagining that every little thing our parents do is part of
t ir es on rear ), 35,000 actu al
1·4·6fc the punislunent.
m iles. excell ent condition .
Really, you don't have to convince your mother you 're okay.
MODERN Wa lnut style stereo,
radio •. AM · fM radio , 4 And if you don't believe rne,Jet her read this colwnn - then ask
speaker !.aund system , 4
speed automatic changer . her! - SUE
Balance $67 .32. Use our
Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2176
budget terms . Call 992-7085. Dear Motl)er of W.S. :
·
H ·61c
I don't know whether you're an unflappable parent (many
WEIMARANER pupp ies; 1 aren't, y'know, Sue! ) or a scared but WICornmunicative one.
. For' Rent
litter AKC ; 1 litter '¥&lt;
Either way, you 're creating a lot more guilt in your daughter
FURNISHED a partment ;
Weimaraner and 'f• bird dog .
than
she deserves to feel for one smaiJ hickey .It's quite probable
phone 992·2780 or 992·3432.
Phone 614-742·6834.
·
1·5·1fc
1 ·~· 5k
I'm worthat
her call meant "Look, Mom,
UNFURNISHED 3 room COMPLETE maple bunk bed ried.l'd like to talk about my feelings - and not just because my
apartment. adults only . No
set. 1year old. Phone 247 -2082. big-mouth brother might get to you first." When you closed her
pets . 408 Spring Ave ..
1·4·6fc off, you opened ihe door to many doubts, both yours and hers.
Pomeroy .
It's past time for that mother.&lt;Jaughter talk. Get on with it!
1·7·1tC AMWAY
Homecleaning
- HELEN
products ; phone 992·2579 or
TRAILER by week or month ,
247·2193.
all ut ilities paid ; in Danville ·
12·28·12tp
close to new m ine ; phone 742·
flap:
.
59.80.
I'm
a
freshman
in
a
small
college where all the girls seem to
B. RADIOS, antennas, also
J.7.6fp C. poli
ce scann ers , Dailey 's be either engaged or married.
Rad10 Shop, Box 21 B. Long
TRAILER ; bath &amp; half; on
.During Orientation , I met this beautiful typing teacher. She's
Bottom, Ohio .
large lot in Syracuse ; catl9921·Htc
single,
looks around' 25 and doesn't wear an engagell!ent ring.
3525.
' 12·31 ·61C
U2 ACRE lot ; phone 742·3656. I'm 19 .
1haven'tseen her much since but I'd sure like to date her. Do
1·7·21p
MODERN 6 room house. full
--you thing she'd go with a student? Should I just come right out
basement, garage. outbul 'l ding ;
references 350 HONDA, 1971 , 1,080 miles, and ask her to dinner? She remembers me, as we speak when we
SSOO ; mahogany plano, S200;
requ ired ; phone 992.2310 after
living room suite, $150; 2 pass in the halls. - SHY GUY IN A HURRY
5 p. m or 992-3425.
mahogany end tables and
12·31 .1fc
coffee table, $60 ; stereo.AM·
FM radio, $55; 985·4288, fifth Dear Guy :
TWO new mobile homes, never
Why not enroiJ in her typing class this semester? I mean,
house past Chester Golf
lived in; phone 992·2511 .
Course .
slow down and get to know this teacher before you ask her out.
12·5·1fC
J.7-11p
, Maybe you '11 discover she isn't your type . - SUE
FURNISHED 2 bedroom H &amp; N day old or started
apartment, adults only.
Leghorn pullets . Both floor or Dear SGIH:
Middleport ; phone 992·3874. cage grown
available .
12· 12.1fc
And maybe you'JI discover there 's a college rule against
Poultry
housing
and
'·
automation. Modern Poultry, student's dating instructors. Don 't set your hopes too high- but
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
399 W. Main, Pom~roy. 992· remember typing classes are full of girls - and not all of them
unfurn i shed
apartments .
2164 .
Phone 992-5434.
could be engaged. - HELEN
1 ·7 · 11 ~
4·12·1fc

=----- - -

742-3101 '

1969 DODGE .................. ..S1295

1·3·4fc

MILLER
MOIIILE HOMES

HOUSE 1n Middleport, 2 , marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
• bedroom ; call949-3832 or 843·
representative. For free
2667 .
esllmates,
phone Charles
1·3·6tc
Lisle
,
Syracuse.
V. V.
------Johnson and Son, Inc.
CUSTOM built new all·electric
3·2·1fC
home under ' $20,000. Three
bedrooms, dining room , ::6-:
A~C-K:H
- :0::-:E::--:-AN=D-::D-::0-:::ZE:::R:--work.
garage,
one·lhlrd
acre
Septic
tanks Installed. George
lot
landscaped;
2'1'
(Bill)
Pullins.
Phone 992·2478.
miles from Holzer Med.
H5·11C
leal Center. 5 miles from
downtown Gallipolis; call 446·
ELNA and White Sewing
9568 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m .
Machines ... service on all
1·7·1fc
makes. Reasonable rates .
The
Sewing Center, Mid·
2 STORY home, full basement.
dleport,
Ohio.
balm &amp; 'h extra lot and at·
11·16·tfc
!ached garage; available
now ; may be had with basic G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair:
furniture; near Pomeroy
Repair of all laundry
Elementary School ; phone
equipment, refrigeration
993·7384 or 992·7133.
equipment and house wiring.
1·7·6fc
,Call 614·992-6050.
12·31·30fp
2 BEDROOM home, total
electric, utility room , storm
BUILDING or remodeling from
windows, double garage,
a closet to a house; call Er·
(insulated an paneled). paved
.nest Deeter 949·3832.
driveway, city water. lot 100 x
1·Hic
416; extra lot and building. -:-::- : - -- -Close to school ; Donafd AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
Headley. Rt . 681, Tuppers
cancelled?
Lost
your
Plains, Ohio.
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
1·5·6tp
--=- - - -6· ts.tfc .
8 ROOM house with bath and
full basement. Bullf·ln kit· WALL PANELING and ceiling
chen cabinets. double sink, 2
tile Installation. Reasonable
porches; 145 Butternut Ave.,
rates. For estimate call 992·
Pomeroy, phone 992·7170.
5471.
1.5-6tc
1·4·3tp

My Home Phone Is

ham&lt;

service .;....- plus gigantic'

doors and windows, carpqrts,

'

mQbile

Custom 4 dr. V-S, T.mte, p-st., p·br. , air cond ., v·roof ..
demo . and priced to go.

ZIQ·Zag sewing ma chines. For
sewing stretch
fabrics ,
making buttonholes, fancy

:Underpinning

MACHINES. Repair
flOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick SEWING
service,
all makes. 992·2284.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
The
Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy.
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
Authorized
Singer
Sales and
location. close to school and
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
city; contact Lou Osborne or
3-29·1fC
call 992-5898.
1l ·26·tfC R
~
EAO
=
A==
v=:M~IX--~C~O~NC~R~ETE
delivered
right to your
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
project. Fast and easy. Free
985-3529.
eshmates. Phone 992·3284.
6· 11 .ifc
Goeglein Ready·MI• Co.,
Mldd leport. Ohio.
l'h STORY 2 bedroom brick
6-JO.tfc
house in Middleport Car·
peted, paneled. Kitchen and
dining room tiled. Complete SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
with drapes. $6.500. Call 992- REASONABLE roles. Ph. «6·
4782, Galll~olls , John Russell,
3465.
Owner &amp; Operator .
12·28-ltc
5-12·1fC
HOUSE , 5 rooms &amp; bath on Rt.
C. BRADFORD, Auclllloeer
124 w1th 3'h acres of land ;
, Complete Service
phone 992·3908.
Phone 949-3821
1·3·61c
RaclnJ. Ohio
Crill Bradford
NEW 6 room house and bath , lf2
5·1·1fc
mile East ol Rutland; Sidney
:-::::-:-::-:::-:-:---:--:----:Hayman.
1·J.6fp SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

JERRY BROWN

camper ; includes spare tire,
canopy and plastic storm
w•.odow . Trailer has been
wired far electr ic, 3 outlets
Excellent condition , $675 ; call,
992·5815 after 5 p.m ..

1959 MOUNTAINEER Camper,
yr . $7600. Phone 992·7661 .
excellent condition, SLOOO ;
1+3tc
ca ll 992·2789
l-3·6k

Musser, phone. 742·

5223.

For Sale

CASH paid tor all makes and 1972 APACHE Eagle Fold·up

W1lh your meat problems.

automatic, p-st .. air .

2 Dr . H.T., p·St ., p.-br., ·p-wds ., p;seats , air, v-roof, stereo
AM FM.i'dliketomovethissoon,seeonprice.

:Odillac . Oldsmqbue

la~gest End

$7.00 Per.Ton

-

·.KARR' &amp; VAN ZANDT

PAPER Hanging and painting;

piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

Biscayne 4 Dr .

. ~ · '(lay se~t.

DOZER and back hoe
ponds and septic tanks, dif. SEPTIC • TANKS AROBIC
ching service ; top soi l, fill
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN· '
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
cavatlng . Pnone 992·5367,
SANITATION. STEWART,
Dick l&lt;arr, Jr.
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
9·1·1fc
10·4·11C

--,-:-----

110 Mechan1c St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

porches ,

Radiator Specialist

1968. CHEVROLET.
...
:
.......
s1095
v.a,

Gold fin ., black vinyl roof, full pow. equip. including
factory air. 13,000 mL, jOst like new.

FI,JRN ITURE

Bulldozer Radiator to the

USED. CAR

IRIMIMIIR WI SILt QUAliTY &amp; IIRVICI) _ .,

Custo.m 4 Dr . Sed .. V-8. automatic. p.sfeering.

and

Smatl~st

HARRISONVILLE
2 Story frame. 4 bedrooms.
bath,
dining
area,
·RECEN.TLY RENOVATED.

1970 FOR0 ...•... -...............$1595

· • No Payments Until After Feb. 15,

Heater . Core.
Nathan Biggs

Dr . H-top , '3b4 ' V-8,' automatic. p.sf.. v ·roof, air con d.,
~
sharp .

OFFICE SUPPLIES

From the largest

Pomeroy

·. 1970
JAVELIN
...........
.,
...
}2195
2

'6100

If I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To

601 E. Main

· 72 ,Cadillac Coupe DeVille

Pomeroy

START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT·
WITH ASMITH N.ELSON v Y"'

to these llh~new cars

'

fdnditloning, 5 new whitewall tires ,

Re.al Esti!te For Sale
CLELAND
''REALTY

-

992·2094

606 E. Main

oo~~rM~~~~

'·

Dark grey finish wl;t, red leather Int., full power
wJpment. AM. FM stereo. Climate Control air

HOME &amp; AUTO

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

$4,500.00.
Syracuse; price S3.900 phone
people ; 2 years of college ·
· $6500.00
992·2360.
preferable but not required ; RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
1·5·11C
No investment needed except modern bath and kitchen.
servlcable automobile, for
Front porch, nice lot, out of 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
which we will pay mlleaQe ; high
water.
l large lot, natural gas, builf·in
Salary open; Hospitalization
cabinets In kitchen, close to
and paid vacat10n; send
radio station in Bradbury,
LOOK AT LAST YEAR,
quallfio::e;tions.and experience
Phone 992-2602.
In .,wn handwriting to : Box WOULDN'T YOU Ll KE TO
12·21 ·20tp
.729.A, C·P The Dally Sentinel, MAKE MORE IN '73. COME
IN AND SEE OUR OF· :5-:R:;:oo=M;--;h::oc:us::e:-:;a:;;n;rd bath. 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
12·31 ·6fc FERINGS, THEN INVEST
porches, big flat lawn, fur·
FOR YOUR FUTURE.
nllure Included 58000; located
WORK · WITH
MISSILE
at Enterprise on Rt . 33. Phone
LAUNCHERS IN .,EUROPE
HELEN .L. TEAFORD,
992-6362.
OR KOREA. FULL PAY
1·4·3tp
ASSOCIATE
WHILE
YOU
TRAIN.
NOSUNDAY SHOWINGS
Today's Army will help you
992·3325

PART,TfME babysitter ; phone
after 5 p.m. 992-5535.
1·5·3tp

and

all

advertised company. E)( tremely
high
earnings
potential. Our top producers
earn commissions of $25,000
... to $50,000 per year. If you can
travel extensively and have a
good car, we'll prove it to you .
For additional information
and personal interview, call
Mr Porter, toll free at 18001

clerical work in my homei

ARNOLD
BROTHfRS ·

of

such as man who has
successfully sold land, in surance, mutual funds, home
Improvements,
franchises,
freezer
plans.
vending ,
education , etc. Can have

I·Oic

Hot Water 'Heaters
· Plumbing
Electrical' Work

minutes

and

clos~r ,

and Gun Club, New Haven, W.
Va ., Sunday, Jan, 7 Noon 'Ill ..

Club.

attend

meetings of the board and
such dulles as 1)1e Board may
direct. Applications shall be
submitted prior to Jan. 10,
. 1973 to Betty J :. Hayes,
President of the Board.
1.7-ltc
_W_A_N-TE_D
_:___E_X_P~
ERIE
-N-CED
SPECIALTY SALESMAN TO
ESTAB.LI.SH NEW AC·
COUNTS GUARANTEED
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST
COMMISSIONS. One·call

- -- - - -

- -- -WILL DO bookkeeping

Board,

Cha Hdwe. to.

1-7 .Jtc

AKC toy p~dle puppies, $75.
S85; Siamese kittens, $10;
phone 1·256-6247.
H ·10tc

Daughters who have helped In
so many ways during' her .past
four months of confinement.
Words cannot express the
appreciation we feel to so

co~strucflon

make excellent

pets Call 992·5072.

Eichinger wishes to e&gt;1press
their most sincere ap preciation to all the many
people who M 1ped in so many
ways to make Paula 's Chnstmas a most happy one while
she is cohflned to bed . Special

Concrete Work

POMEROY

price

reduction on all dogs. All AK·
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
12-13·1fc

HOURS

c1 Thanks

HEATING

,

PARKVIEW Kennels going out
of

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment
•s •55

~emodeling

Employment Wanted

'

;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;--;:::=======:::::::q"]=:;:;:;:..q:=;::-·:-:.:::;_:·-::::::::.-=:-=i· ·

OHIO 992·511 3.

Charge per

· Card

·,

PLUMBING

On The ·Best

•

.Business Services

~~g~~- HJ,~'flt.E~t~f.

L-eTs HUW( fT

..

'

Notice

TEXAS QIL .COMPANY needs TAX Serv ice, Federal and State

BLIND ADS

Additiona l 2Sc
Advertisement.

~-

... ..

·· .Be~er ·.Buys

.'

.

'

~

25-TheSundayTimes-~ntinel,Sund9v . •1on 7 t ' 3

.
Time~-Sentinel
Classifieds
For Fast 'Results 'Use. The. S.u nday
.
.
.
..
WANT AilS

.....

"

.

Fees

Paid

---

'

Gordon

H. Caldwell

County Auditor of f"elgs Cou"ty

License must be·obtained not later than Jan. 20,1973. to avoid paying penally. Alter this date
penalty will be !MOfor single tag and SS.OO for kennel license.
'

,

'
I

~·

-

�....

~·

' '

,

'•

'

'

,,·

'
~ ·· '

'

'

24 _J1.1e Sunday Times . Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 7, 1973

.

Notice .,

INFORMATION

·

!&gt;EADL!NES

I ~~M Day Before Publiq lion
·
nday Deadl irw 9 a.m
ancetlation - Correction s
Will be ac(ep ted un t i l 9 a m. for
Day of Publ iCBt ion
REGULATIONS
The Publis her res erves the
r ight to edit or rei ect any ads
deemed
obj.ett iona l.
The
Pllbl lsh er will not be respons1ble.
for more than On't' incorrect
in se rtion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 ce nts per word on e insertloJ
Min1mum Charge·7Sc
12 cents· per word thret
con5e..:utlve insertion s.
18 cen ts per word si~~; con
secut ive insertions
25 Per Cent Discouf'l on paid
ads and ads paid wi t hin lOdays .
CARD OF THANKS .
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 50 for 50 word m inimum .
Ea ch additional word 2c
•

Notice

OFFICE

Notice

good man Ove'r AO for short
t r ips surroUnding Pomeroy
Contact customers. W~train .
Air mail B. G. Dickerson ,
P r es . . Southwe s tern

Petroleum Corp " Ft. Worth ,

Tex .

1·3 4tc

HAYMAN'S Auction - a ~ood BUSINESS Opportunity to~
lnf om e Ta xes ; daily e)(cept
place to go each Fnday m~n and women . Inquire by
Sunday , 9 a .m . to 5 p rn .,
evening. 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff wntlng: R. D. 2. Box 73.
eve ni ng s by appointment ,
on old Rt. 7. 1 mile west of
Racine, Ohio. ~
Mrs. Steven (Wanda ) Eblin ,
Rock Springs Fa irground .
1·5·121P·
Rt. 2, Pomeroy ( Liturcl Cl iff
10.JO.tfc
Rd off Rt 7 By Pass ) ; phone
-Ko- sc,..,.
o=-TKc-::o-sM
:;-=E=T,::::cs-::-&amp;7.7wtGS.
992 2212.
SPECIALS MONTHLY.
lc
About
sev,en·tenths
of
a
hu
1 3 30
- -----.. -· _ .. ____
man body I s water.
n3,ffc

IVE tWr

uP, I('ED!

C.U~MeRs

WJU1iN6' W THAT
S IL!/ERINJII('E ! ...

LADY 'to do housework by the
day in Pomeroy or Chester
· area; phone 985·357 4.
1·7-Jic

•.

- - - - -- - -·Pets For Sale
business .

Big

·e :JO a .m to 5:00pm . Da ily,
8 : 30 a.m
to 12 ·oo Noon
Saturdav .

RED IRISH Setter puppies,

THE

FAMILY

registere~.

of

thanks to all

Paula

Wanteti To Buy

the Jobs

OLD furniture, oak tables,
organs, dishes, clocks, brass

beds or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Phone 992·
6271.
1·7·1fc

many people. Mr . and Mrs.
Paul 'Eichinger and fam1ly.

'

1·7· lip

lielp Wanted

WE WISH to say THANK YOU

THE BOARD of Public Affairs
of the Village of Syracuse Is
now accepting applications
for the position of clerk. The
duties of the clerk shall be
co ll ection of . water bills,

to all the church groups and
organlutions·, private in ·
diViduals and emplOyees for
their
expressions
of
thoughtfulness
lor
our

residents at Christmas and
throughout the past year .
Paul and Virg ie Buckley,
Adm inistrators, Elmwood
Nursing Home, Rt. 2,
Coolville.
1·7·11P

preparation and mailing of
statements~
maintaining
office hours as prescribed by

the

maintain

WE WISH to thank everyone for
their cards, telephone calls
and flowers, while we were

both in Holzer Medical Center
and Grant Hospital. Marvin
and Helen Miller, Langsville,

Chill

- - -- -- 1·7·llc
Notice

GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod

HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fisn
and supplies; new location,
Ash Sfreet, Middleport near
park ; phone 992·5443.
1.7.tfc

bright future with nationally

and

phone 742·6085.

. 1·7·61c
INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording, puolishlng,
free mem.bershlp ; write
I.S.C.. Rl. L Box 210, Mid·
dleport , Ohio 45760.
_ _ __ _ _ _ _
H ·61p

621· 1006, 18001 621 ·8182, (8001
621 ·7501.

1-CPEFULL'f', YOU
WON'T GET SO

].7. lip

- - ----

INVOLVED ON

\OUR NEXT
A% 1GNMENl

FREE puppies to give away ;
phone 992·6083
1-Htp

TEXAS REFINERY CORP.
offers opportunity for hi~h
Income PLUS cash bonuses,
convention trips and lrmge
benefits to mature man In
Pomeroy area . Regardles~ of
experience, air mail I. I.
Pate, Pres ., Texas Refinery
Corp., Box 711, Fort Worth,

6L.ff WE FEEL

1HAT PERIW'G
"" CHAt.l::.2: WULD

GUN SHOOT. Sunday, January

6E IN ORDER.

7. 1 p. m . Factory choked guns
only . Second place shooters

Texas 7610L

get free shot in next match .
Assorted meats. Racine Gun

NATCHf:RL'I
HE KIN TR.u$T'
US. WHAT' Do

1-0tc

WE CARE

WHAT'S IN
HIS ROTTEN
0 1-E BOX.?

OVERWEIGHT? Have the
Holidays added to your
weight problem? Let us help

1·7·4fp

DON' T OPEN

THAT.HON~T

Al!o£-010,

AH'LL l!iOX

VO~EEARS!!

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS .
Enlist now- stay home until
after grlduation . Guaranteed
ass i gnments to
Europe,
Hawaii, Korea or selected

locations in the US. See your

'iOU remove that excess at

local Army representative for

Conway Diet Institute Orchid Room - Mondays at
7:30p.m. For Information call
992·2926.
1-5·3fc

facts about the 180· Day
Delayed Entry .Program and
the Army's new pay raise.
For more Information call

-- -- SHOTGUN MATCH, Sunday,

collect SS G. Clark 593·3022.
1·7·61c

- - - -- --

Jan. 7, 12 noon , Side Hill Gun
Club; assorted meats, no
alcoholic beverages allowed;
soft drinks will be sold ; free
coflee ; not respons ible for
accidents ; trophies for High
Point Card.
J.5.2tc

CAR HOP and Grill Cook
wanted; apply in person ,
Craw's Steak House.
12·3Htc
WE' RE LOOKING for a person
Who can Sell, Collect, Manage

- - - -----

their own t ime and other

--------

"HElL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING'

Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

become proficient on Air
Defense Missiles. Then give
you a job in Europe or Korea.

TERRY

A job you'll find as exciting as
the country you'll be working
ln. You' ll get 30 days ,paid
vacation a year, too . Plus lots
of other benefits. If you'd like
the challenge and excitement
of living and working in
another country , Today's

Army wants to. join you. For
complete. details call collect
SS G. Clark, 593-3022.
li·31·6k

992·2448
Pomeroy, 0.
MEN 18·24' l EA R'N CON.
STRU CTION1 SKILLS FOR
COMBAT ENGINEERING
JOB IN EUROPE . Today's
Army , will train competent
young men in the combat
field .
And
engineering

guarantee a job In europe.
You'll assist ·or engage in t.he

main.

tenance of roads, bridging,
shelters, and structures .

COMPANION to li ve in with
elderly woman . no la·undry ,

day off. Phone 992·5397 or 992·
3507.
1·4·3tc
PLUMBING and Heating man,
expenenced; If not ex·
perlehced and honest, do not
apply; phone 992·2511 or 992.
3'1 18.
12·6-llc

The~e are

lots of benefits, foo.
Like 30 days paid vacation a
year . If you'd 1like to learn

lifetime skills while you Jive
and work irr Europe, Today's

Army wanfs to join you . Call
collect SS G. Clark , 593·3022.
1·J.6k

Phone 992·2511
or 992-3918

On Most American Cars ·
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992'·2094
oi&gt;enBTits
Mondaythru Saturday
606 E. Main,_Pomeroy, 0.

Wanted To Do

72 Olds R(rjale 88 H.T. Sed.

Level lot about 1h acre,
carport, 2 storage bldgs.

$14,900.00.
LITTLE UPKEEP
SYRACUSE - BRICK - 4
B. R., dining R.. NEW bath
and utility R.• NEW plum·
bing &amp; F.A gas furnace. 2
large level lots, EX.
CELLENT
NEIGH ,
BORHOOD.
· RUTLAND
HERE IS AN EXCELLENT
BUY - 1 story frame, 3
B.R., large bath, utility,
dining R. paneling and other,

out cellar. THE MEAGER
SUM OF $9,200,00.
MUCH WORK DONE HERE
Within sight of the Gavin
stack. 3 B.R., NEW bath,
NEW F.A. furnace. NEW
paneling, utility

R. large

Red . R. Out cellar and
storage, large lot. THIS YOU
MUST SEE. $9,800.00.
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
PROPERTIES WHICH WE
CONSIDER GOOD BUYS.
CONTACT US TODAY. IF
WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE
WILL GET IT.
HENRY E. CLELANO
3 ASSOCIATES TO SELL
YOUR PROPER'TY.
992·22!9
If no answer
985.4209 or 992·2168

Virgil B.
·Teaford, . Sr.
Broker
NEW LISTING
t OR 3 ACRES - In the
country. Two good houses or
mobi le home sites. On a
corner acre . All for $1200.00 .

NEW LISTING
VACANT - Building lot 1n
Pomeroy on Rt . 33. Asking
Only $1500.00.
NEW LISTING
3 ACRES - Small barn, 6
room house, twa baths, 3

bedrooms. all with closets. 3
basement

and

drilled well. Wanl $10.500.00.
NEW LISTING
4 BEDROOMS - 1'12 baths,
wall to wall carpeting,
modern kitchen,

gas

fur -

nace. Full basement. front
porch 'and garage. Like to

have $12,500.
,,
NEW LISTING
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
paneled home. Nice bath.
utility, and kitchen. Wall· to
wall carpeting and nice level

lot. Need $12.000.00.
BU!L~ING LOTS
T.P. WATER - 1 acre
rolling land in 11\j! country
near Rt. 7 and close to town.

8 ACRES
ON HARD ROAD - A little
bit of privacy on new
proposed

water

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,.INC.
992.2174

Pomeroy

line .

•4200

' Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

WANTE-D
CHIPWOOD
Poles
Maximum
Diameter ·
10" on

-992 "5341 ,

THE SHOP

DELIVERED
A
TO

OHIO
PALLET CO.

B ~ S CARPENTER• Work
remodeling , paneling and
On Old Rt. 33
interior decorating; phone
Phone 992·2689
446-9487.
'
- -· - -- - - ' ·Htp . ._.P.o11
m•e•r•ov•••Oh_i•o-. .

GMA_C Finan.c:ing Av,~ilable

1969 CADILLAC ELDORADO
1~73

1972 DODGE POLARA

Pomeroy

!Jpen Eves. Til 6--: Til 5 P.M. Sat.
"You' II Like('· ;, Qua lily Way of, Oolnp Business"

"Cusom
M~:~~;~~.:~,:~.,~&lt;!
Quick
and

DALE

MQbi!e ~omes For Sale

LITTLE

992·3884
Let Dick Jnd Dale Help

Arthur

rl)Odels of mobile homes .

Phone area code 614 -423·9531 .
4· 13·tfc
1970 SCHULT mobtle home ,
12X70, 3 bedroom ; carpeting
through,o ut;
combination
washer &amp; . ~ryer. Lived in for 1

.: Air Conditioners
·~Awnings

12·12·30fp

Real Estate For Sale

Complete

1972 atEVROLET CAPRICE ........ J3995

1971 Pontiac ..................$3995

4·door. new car title &amp; bal'ance Of warranty, covert color
withblack vinyl roof, tinted glass. factory air, front &amp; rear
guards, radio &amp; rear speaker, white-wall f1res N1ce and
clean. Retai l $4860. Priced tO move

Grandville 2 dr . H.T. , factory air. local one
owner.

----:-:::-:---:::-::---:--

------

CLOSE OUT on 1972 full size

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
992-2151

Middleport, 0.

designs. etc. Paint slightty
blemished. Choice of carrying

-'--- - - --

FURNISHED 3 room house,
bath, furnace, on corner lot In

We talk to you
like a person.
•

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

- -- - --

For Sale By Owner
Completely modernized 10-room
house, two full baths, all built-in kit. chen, 1st floor wall-to-wall carpets,
gas central heat. On two town lots in·
good Middleport neighborhood. Owner
leaving town. See by appointment by
calling 992-3486.
·
'

-------

'--- - - --

+++

'

1969 Ford .............. only $1395
1968 Cadillat ..................$2495

Local 1 owner, new car trade in with less than J9,00ll
miles, show rOOf11 clean mtenor, good tires1 6 cy l engine,
automatic trans ., radio. green f inish . Sharpest 67 in the

1967 Int. ............... only $1695

·

Carry·AII 4 wheel drive . Real sharp. Nice
camper vehicle .

Don't Forget

Local owner, V-8 engme, automatic trans ... p. steering ,
tinted glass, vinyl int . trim, green finish, good tires , radio ..

We Service What We Sell

1965 CHEVY NOVA WAGON ........ ..J450

Our Word Is Our Bond

Good ,fires, 6 cyl., with automatic, sound mechanrcally,
radio, popular model &amp; ready to work .

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m . &amp; Sat. Till 5 p.m .
Service Til 12 noon on Saturday.

1966 OLDS TORONADO CPE. ...... ..1995
Local owner. all good t ires. full power equipment , fa ctory
a·lr, AM -FM radio, run s out sweet.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

1971 DODGE 8' WIDE PICKUP

•1995

Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

l.s now employed at Carroll Norris Dodge, Inc.
as a salesman.
SO State St.; Gallipolis,
Ph. 446-0842

CHEVROLET

POMEROY .MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Till 8

Pomeroy

3 ROOM, furn ished apartment. SLEEPING ROOM with use of
utilities paid. lnquir.e at 631 . kitchen ~ l iving r oom , garage,
priva te entrance . Call 675Th ird Ave.
4-3 3536.
278·1f

APARTMENT for lease, un· SLEEPING ROOMS, week ly
furn ished, $100 per month, 2
rates. Park Central Hotel.
bedrooms, second floor ,
308-tf
opposite city park , central
.heat and air condition mg . 446-

.

•

.\

•

APARTMEN T tor construction
men . Ph . 446-0756.
26Hf

2325 or 446-4425.

3·tf
BAKER STEPS UP
For Rent
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jolm J. Gilligan announced MODERN house in Addison , tu lt
basement, call after 4: 3~. 367·
·Wednesday that Deputy
7455.
Finance Director Robert H.
3·3
Baker will become acting
director to replace Harold 4 ROOM apartment with
t;arage , private entran ce .
Hovey, who resigned to accept
all 675·3536.
a similar position in illinois.
299·11
Baker, JIJ, was appointed
deputy director in April, 1972, 2 BEDROOM trailer in
Cheshire, 36J.7J29 .
after serving as president of
306·1f
the Sundry Claims Board and
legal adviser to the department.

SLEEPING rooms , weekly

looktng far .1 mobil e- home
lot ora qualrty mobile home?
We have both at

rates, free garage parking,

Liftby Hotel.

241 ,tf

QUAIL CREEK
MOBILE
COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

FURNISHED mobile home in
Galli pol is, 446·0338.
227·1f
FURNISHED Apt. park ing.
central heat , two adults only,

446·0338.

248-tf

Rodney-Cora Rd .
Rodney , Ohto
Hours. 9 .1.m. to 9 p.m
Monday lhru Saturday

SLEEPING , rooms for ren t.
Gall ia Hotel , 446·9715.
181 .tf

Ph. 245-937 4- 245·5021

Attention Dog Owners

PROTEST DENIED
NEW YORK (UPI)- Walter
Kennedy, Commissioner of the
National Basketball Associa·
tion , Thur&amp;day denied a protest
by the Chicago Bulls of a game
·played on Dec. 12 against the
Los Angeles Lakers.

'

'

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1973 DOG LICEN S E IS
JANUARY 20TH. ONE DOLLAR ($1.00} PENALTY IF LICENSE IS
PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE US E
THIS HAI'1DY APPLICAT ION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS
($2.00} FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.

.
.want eo To Buy

To obtain license by mail·, fill in and mail this form to GORDON H.
CALDWELL, COUNTY AUDITOR .- ·Meigs Coun\y. Pomeroy, Ohi o .
Enclose sell·addressed ·stamped envelope and price of license.
•

WILL BUY your old plano
Please state make and pri ce
of piano. Reply Bo&gt;1 246, C·o
Gallipolrs Tribune .
J.6.

----,-----,.-----,
JUNK autos itnd scraP meta~
388·8776.
245·78

Male Dog $2 .00

Spayed Femal.e $2 .00

Female $2 .00

Ke nn e l Li ce n se $10

'

-------

Owners Name

WANTED to buy, sell or trade,
toy electric train , 446·4843.
240-lf

----------------------------•

Address--------------------------------·

CATTLE, lop prices. 446·3792.
2·6

Township--------------~---------------·

For Rent

.

o.,

For Rent

For Rent

.992-2126

(®e

• 992-2174

6 Cyl. engine, std . trans ., good H. duty tires, clean car in 2tone of wh . &amp; green, deluxe mldgs ., 34.,000 miles by local
~ :~' ............~_,...~
owner., .Music &amp; ht!at: ··· · ~"· Yr.

.,

·-r---------~--------------r---------- -~-

Ali•

Sex

COLOR

Hair

Breed

Yr. Mo. M. F. Blk Whi te •Gray Brindle Tan Brown Yellow Long Short II Kno'4tr

-

e

Meigs County Auto Buyers

auto . Real sharp

new G. P . trade in.

MODERN h9use for rent,
In 1789, George Washington
handy, · localed In vicinity of
was elected the first president
Cheshire. Ph. 367·7350.
5·6
of the United States.
-::-:-=-:--In 1918, Nikolai Lenin esta- GERT'S a gay girl- ready for
seventh day of 1973 with 359 to
-,
APPLE GROVE
a whirl after cleaning carpets
follow .
.
· blished a dictatorship of the
with Blue Lustre. Rent
For Sa I
Mrs. Eula Wolfe returned . The moon is between its new ' proletariat and abolished the
electricshampooer $1 at G. C.
'COAL, Limestone, Excelsior home Tue&amp;day after spending phase and first quarter.
constituent assembly of the
Murphy, lower store .
Salt Works, E. . Main St.. Chr.lsbnas with her daughter,
5·6
The
morning
_
stars
are
Soviet
Union.
,
•·
'Pomeroy. Phone 992·389 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen · Swart and Mercury, Venus and Mars.
-~----,--.
In
1927,
~egitlar
lransatlantic
. .
4· 12·1fC
FURNISHED apartm~nt.
.. , family at Dixon, Ill.
,
The evening stars are telephone service began beadults only, utilities paid, 258
REGISTERED Angus bulls i
Mrs. Eula Wolfe attended Jupiter and ,Saturn .
State Street. Phone 446·0085.
tween New York and London.
call alter 5 p.m., Bill Witte, fWleral services for her cousin,
5·1f
Those born on this· date are
In 1972 • President Nixon
992·2789.
, 1·5-6tc Lyle Wheatl~y at Logan, W. under the sign of Capricorn. announced his ·iniention to run CARPETS and life too can be
Va. She was a guest of Mrs.
beautiful if you use Blue
Millard Fillmore, 13th pres· for re-election to a second
Lustre .
Rent
electr ic
ZENITH 23" bla~k and white John Ord Tuesday and Wedident of the United States, was term . He won in November,
shampooer $1 at Central
Conso le 'T.V.; very good
condition, $65 ; phone 992·5919. nesday nights at Letart, W. Va. born Jail. 7, 1800.
Supply. Co.
overwhelmingly defeating Sen.
f.5.3tc Routt.
5·6
On thts day in history:
George McGovern.

AmNTION

v.a,

Fairlane soo Wagon ,
little wagon.

1967 atEVROLET BEL AIR 4 OR. $1095

-

1955 CHEVROLET newly
·1;, DOUB L'E, ' 2 bedroom, tur·
overhauled engine; Jim
nl shed ; on Fourth &amp; College
Chadwell. Reedsville , Ohio ;
Almanac
Streets, Syracuse. phone 992·
667·3652.
2749.
1.7.3tc . By United Press International
12·29·1fC
Today is Sunday, Jan. 7, the

P . R. camper

2 dr. H.T., black with black vinyl top, loaded ,

1966 BUICK SPECIAL 4 DOOR.......J795

'·

3/4 Ton Pickup. auto .• P.S..
special. Red &amp; white . Sharp .

6 cyl inder engine, automatic tran smission, radio, good ww tires, black vinyl top and red fini sh, black bucket seats .

Phone 992·7755 .

+++

1969 Ford............... only $2295

1968 CAMARO HT CPE.. ............ !1545

always ava llable , at ...

Meigs
Equipment·Co.

Montego 4 dr . sed., lactory air, ve ry low
mileage . Priced to sell.

Malibu sport coupe, air conditioned , 307 engine, power
steer ing, power brakes, red fini sh w ith black vinyl top and
black vinyl interior, radio. good white-wall tires

coun~.

1970 FORD

1969 Mercury:.........~...... $1595

1968 CHEVELLE .......................~1695

case or sewing stand . 549 .80
o sh or term s available .

1-Ht c

Caprice 2 dr. H. T. , factory air , r e al sharp local
car.

Sport Sedan, local I owner car, beautiful turquoise f injs h
wrth spotless m'iltching interior trim. black v i nyl top,
factory ~ i r , V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic , power steering
and brakes, radio, good w-w tires, 'delu xe bumper guards,
nice and clea'n ·

'display of mobile homes

- -----

----=--=-:---:--

1970 CHEVROLET CAPRICE .........$2495

2-door, local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires, clean in terior, green finish, radio. 2000cc engine, 4-speed.

•895

1.970 Chev.............. only $2695

.

.

..--THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL-..
V·8, 4speed, dump bed, can be used for any job, looks a
little bedraggled but look at this price .

Bonneville 4 dr . H.T., factory air. on e owner ,
low !Jlileage .

4 door , local I owner. low mileage car,...,beige fini sh with
brown vinyl top, vinyl interior, factory air, 350-engine,
power steering &amp; brakes . Delu xe bumpers, wheel covers,
like new w-w tires, radio &amp; other fin e a ccessories. A sharp
car &amp; one you would like.

1971 PINTO FORD ................... ~1599

1967 DODGE 0300 1-TON

197LPontiac ......... only $3795

1971 CHEVROLET
BEL AIR ....... }2895
•

Coronet 4 Dr. Sed. Slant six, standard shlft.

1 SET wagonwheel bunk beds;
Gulli Is Pain In the Neck
Sauvage Fox double barrel 12
gau~e shotgun, Model B Dear Helen and Sue :
1220 Washington Blvd.
ventrlated rib single trigger ;
I am almost 14 and have been going with this boy for eight
.23·7521
BELPRE, 0 .
both , excellent condition ,
months , but not on real dates. We have never done anything bad.
phone 985·3530.
1-7·31p
My Mom Jet me go to a party where all the kids were, in· ·
Au-to ' Sales
_N_E_W_ H
_o-sp_l_ta-1_b_e_d_, - 5-200
- , 1 eluding my big-mouth brother.
1967 CHEVROLET Impala . 283,
brand new wheelchair , never
WeJJ, that night I got a hickey on my neck. You know ho'!
V·8, automali c,
power
been used, $100; phone 992· mothers feel about hickeys 1So I decided I'd better teJJ her it
s tee ring , good condition ,
5736, John Bigelow, 545 Park
pricf. 5650 : Elmer F. Bailey.
St., Middleport.
didn't lead to anything before she found out about it through old
Darwin. 992·5530,
1·7-3tc flap-lips.
7 31
- - =,.,-,=-.,.---:-:--':·- · P. : : - - -- - - - - Next morning I caJJed her from my girl friend's house
1970 1 TON ford. dual wheels , HOMECLEANING products ; (where 1 stayed overnight). She only said, "I'll talk to you about
long wheel base. power
phone 992·2579 or 247·2193.
brakes, 12'12 ft. bed. less than
1·5·30fp it when you get horne ." ·
23,000 miles, clean as new ;
When 1 got home, all she said was I couldn 't go out that night.
phone 9B5·3554, Harold BAR with D. 1• D·2 License ; She never mentioned the hickey again. ·
Bottom
Business and equipment i
L
B
r~w ~r. ong
· 1·7·1fc· Phillips Bar, East Main St.,
But! get a feeling Mom doesn't !rust me any more. I seem to
'" IG' ,. .... , I '" ? '
"
Po'fl~fq~ .. . ..~
tc
get
'l!amed
for ,~i~~S 1J!l:,\&gt;rolher or 1 si~~ ,W/, U~~...k)lql,l',sb~ \~.,
15 3
1968'COF&lt;Vef'rE ,'&gt;I~rl.' 4 ~peed? " ·
· · · ashamed of me, and she probably hates my boyfriend, even
AM-FM radio, new ex.haust.
new tire s; excellent con - SPINET·CONSOLE PIANO . thoughthat's the onlythinghe'severdoneorlried.
dillon. $3.000; phone 992·2238.
Wanted resp.onslbl~ party to
Don't suggest &amp;mother.&lt;Jaughter talk. That's what I lried
take over sp1net p1ano. Easy
,
1-5·31c
- - - - -- - - - terms . Can be seen locally . over the phone. - WORRIED SICK
1966 CHEVY ; phone 992-5535
Write Credll Manager, P. 0.
after 5 p.m.
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana Dear W.S.:
H ·31p
46176.
I'll betcha abnost anything your mother has just about
1·5·2fp
-----forgotten the incident, but your guilty consciimce won 't accept
300 BALESol hay ; 45c a bale ;
that fa ct. Maybe you were a lot more scared about her reaction
phone 985-4100.
Buy For Youl
1.5-Jtc than she was upset by your first hickey .
Y'see, most teenagers suspect they're evil, vicious, rott~n.
EARLY American stereo·radio
combination , AM-F M .radio, 4 mean kids at heart, (honest, now, don't you spend a Jot of time
Custom
speaker sound system, 4 worrying about how no.good you are?) so when we get caught, we
Station Wagon
speed automatic changer .
Auto . tr ans,, P,S,, 351Y8
Balance $79 .57 Use our always expect the worst. When thataWrul torture doesn't come,
engine: 4 new t ires, (snow
budge! term s. Call 992 7085 . we start imagining that every little thing our parents do is part of
t ir es on rear ), 35,000 actu al
1·4·6fc the punislunent.
m iles. excell ent condition .
Really, you don't have to convince your mother you 're okay.
MODERN Wa lnut style stereo,
radio •. AM · fM radio , 4 And if you don't believe rne,Jet her read this colwnn - then ask
speaker !.aund system , 4
speed automatic changer . her! - SUE
Balance $67 .32. Use our
Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2176
budget terms . Call 992-7085. Dear Motl)er of W.S. :
·
H ·61c
I don't know whether you're an unflappable parent (many
WEIMARANER pupp ies; 1 aren't, y'know, Sue! ) or a scared but WICornmunicative one.
. For' Rent
litter AKC ; 1 litter '¥&lt;
Either way, you 're creating a lot more guilt in your daughter
FURNISHED a partment ;
Weimaraner and 'f• bird dog .
than
she deserves to feel for one smaiJ hickey .It's quite probable
phone 992·2780 or 992·3432.
Phone 614-742·6834.
·
1·5·1fc
1 ·~· 5k
I'm worthat
her call meant "Look, Mom,
UNFURNISHED 3 room COMPLETE maple bunk bed ried.l'd like to talk about my feelings - and not just because my
apartment. adults only . No
set. 1year old. Phone 247 -2082. big-mouth brother might get to you first." When you closed her
pets . 408 Spring Ave ..
1·4·6fc off, you opened ihe door to many doubts, both yours and hers.
Pomeroy .
It's past time for that mother.&lt;Jaughter talk. Get on with it!
1·7·1tC AMWAY
Homecleaning
- HELEN
products ; phone 992·2579 or
TRAILER by week or month ,
247·2193.
all ut ilities paid ; in Danville ·
12·28·12tp
close to new m ine ; phone 742·
flap:
.
59.80.
I'm
a
freshman
in
a
small
college where all the girls seem to
B. RADIOS, antennas, also
J.7.6fp C. poli
ce scann ers , Dailey 's be either engaged or married.
Rad10 Shop, Box 21 B. Long
TRAILER ; bath &amp; half; on
.During Orientation , I met this beautiful typing teacher. She's
Bottom, Ohio .
large lot in Syracuse ; catl9921·Htc
single,
looks around' 25 and doesn't wear an engagell!ent ring.
3525.
' 12·31 ·61C
U2 ACRE lot ; phone 742·3656. I'm 19 .
1haven'tseen her much since but I'd sure like to date her. Do
1·7·21p
MODERN 6 room house. full
--you thing she'd go with a student? Should I just come right out
basement, garage. outbul 'l ding ;
references 350 HONDA, 1971 , 1,080 miles, and ask her to dinner? She remembers me, as we speak when we
SSOO ; mahogany plano, S200;
requ ired ; phone 992.2310 after
living room suite, $150; 2 pass in the halls. - SHY GUY IN A HURRY
5 p. m or 992-3425.
mahogany end tables and
12·31 .1fc
coffee table, $60 ; stereo.AM·
FM radio, $55; 985·4288, fifth Dear Guy :
TWO new mobile homes, never
Why not enroiJ in her typing class this semester? I mean,
house past Chester Golf
lived in; phone 992·2511 .
Course .
slow down and get to know this teacher before you ask her out.
12·5·1fC
J.7-11p
, Maybe you '11 discover she isn't your type . - SUE
FURNISHED 2 bedroom H &amp; N day old or started
apartment, adults only.
Leghorn pullets . Both floor or Dear SGIH:
Middleport ; phone 992·3874. cage grown
available .
12· 12.1fc
And maybe you'JI discover there 's a college rule against
Poultry
housing
and
'·
automation. Modern Poultry, student's dating instructors. Don 't set your hopes too high- but
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
399 W. Main, Pom~roy. 992· remember typing classes are full of girls - and not all of them
unfurn i shed
apartments .
2164 .
Phone 992-5434.
could be engaged. - HELEN
1 ·7 · 11 ~
4·12·1fc

=----- - -

742-3101 '

1969 DODGE .................. ..S1295

1·3·4fc

MILLER
MOIIILE HOMES

HOUSE 1n Middleport, 2 , marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
• bedroom ; call949-3832 or 843·
representative. For free
2667 .
esllmates,
phone Charles
1·3·6tc
Lisle
,
Syracuse.
V. V.
------Johnson and Son, Inc.
CUSTOM built new all·electric
3·2·1fC
home under ' $20,000. Three
bedrooms, dining room , ::6-:
A~C-K:H
- :0::-:E::--:-AN=D-::D-::0-:::ZE:::R:--work.
garage,
one·lhlrd
acre
Septic
tanks Installed. George
lot
landscaped;
2'1'
(Bill)
Pullins.
Phone 992·2478.
miles from Holzer Med.
H5·11C
leal Center. 5 miles from
downtown Gallipolis; call 446·
ELNA and White Sewing
9568 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m .
Machines ... service on all
1·7·1fc
makes. Reasonable rates .
The
Sewing Center, Mid·
2 STORY home, full basement.
dleport,
Ohio.
balm &amp; 'h extra lot and at·
11·16·tfc
!ached garage; available
now ; may be had with basic G&amp;E APPLIANCE Repair:
furniture; near Pomeroy
Repair of all laundry
Elementary School ; phone
equipment, refrigeration
993·7384 or 992·7133.
equipment and house wiring.
1·7·6fc
,Call 614·992-6050.
12·31·30fp
2 BEDROOM home, total
electric, utility room , storm
BUILDING or remodeling from
windows, double garage,
a closet to a house; call Er·
(insulated an paneled). paved
.nest Deeter 949·3832.
driveway, city water. lot 100 x
1·Hic
416; extra lot and building. -:-::- : - -- -Close to school ; Donafd AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
Headley. Rt . 681, Tuppers
cancelled?
Lost
your
Plains, Ohio.
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
1·5·6tp
--=- - - -6· ts.tfc .
8 ROOM house with bath and
full basement. Bullf·ln kit· WALL PANELING and ceiling
chen cabinets. double sink, 2
tile Installation. Reasonable
porches; 145 Butternut Ave.,
rates. For estimate call 992·
Pomeroy, phone 992·7170.
5471.
1.5-6tc
1·4·3tp

My Home Phone Is

ham&lt;

service .;....- plus gigantic'

doors and windows, carpqrts,

'

mQbile

Custom 4 dr. V-S, T.mte, p-st., p·br. , air cond ., v·roof ..
demo . and priced to go.

ZIQ·Zag sewing ma chines. For
sewing stretch
fabrics ,
making buttonholes, fancy

:Underpinning

MACHINES. Repair
flOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick SEWING
service,
all makes. 992·2284.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
The
Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy.
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
Authorized
Singer
Sales and
location. close to school and
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
city; contact Lou Osborne or
3-29·1fC
call 992-5898.
1l ·26·tfC R
~
EAO
=
A==
v=:M~IX--~C~O~NC~R~ETE
delivered
right to your
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
project. Fast and easy. Free
985-3529.
eshmates. Phone 992·3284.
6· 11 .ifc
Goeglein Ready·MI• Co.,
Mldd leport. Ohio.
l'h STORY 2 bedroom brick
6-JO.tfc
house in Middleport Car·
peted, paneled. Kitchen and
dining room tiled. Complete SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
with drapes. $6.500. Call 992- REASONABLE roles. Ph. «6·
4782, Galll~olls , John Russell,
3465.
Owner &amp; Operator .
12·28-ltc
5-12·1fC
HOUSE , 5 rooms &amp; bath on Rt.
C. BRADFORD, Auclllloeer
124 w1th 3'h acres of land ;
, Complete Service
phone 992·3908.
Phone 949-3821
1·3·61c
RaclnJ. Ohio
Crill Bradford
NEW 6 room house and bath , lf2
5·1·1fc
mile East ol Rutland; Sidney
:-::::-:-::-:::-:-:---:--:----:Hayman.
1·J.6fp SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

JERRY BROWN

camper ; includes spare tire,
canopy and plastic storm
w•.odow . Trailer has been
wired far electr ic, 3 outlets
Excellent condition , $675 ; call,
992·5815 after 5 p.m ..

1959 MOUNTAINEER Camper,
yr . $7600. Phone 992·7661 .
excellent condition, SLOOO ;
1+3tc
ca ll 992·2789
l-3·6k

Musser, phone. 742·

5223.

For Sale

CASH paid tor all makes and 1972 APACHE Eagle Fold·up

W1lh your meat problems.

automatic, p-st .. air .

2 Dr . H.T., p·St ., p.-br., ·p-wds ., p;seats , air, v-roof, stereo
AM FM.i'dliketomovethissoon,seeonprice.

:Odillac . Oldsmqbue

la~gest End

$7.00 Per.Ton

-

·.KARR' &amp; VAN ZANDT

PAPER Hanging and painting;

piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

Biscayne 4 Dr .

. ~ · '(lay se~t.

DOZER and back hoe
ponds and septic tanks, dif. SEPTIC • TANKS AROBIC
ching service ; top soi l, fill
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN· '
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
cavatlng . Pnone 992·5367,
SANITATION. STEWART,
Dick l&lt;arr, Jr.
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
9·1·1fc
10·4·11C

--,-:-----

110 Mechan1c St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

porches ,

Radiator Specialist

1968. CHEVROLET.
...
:
.......
s1095
v.a,

Gold fin ., black vinyl roof, full pow. equip. including
factory air. 13,000 mL, jOst like new.

FI,JRN ITURE

Bulldozer Radiator to the

USED. CAR

IRIMIMIIR WI SILt QUAliTY &amp; IIRVICI) _ .,

Custo.m 4 Dr . Sed .. V-8. automatic. p.sfeering.

and

Smatl~st

HARRISONVILLE
2 Story frame. 4 bedrooms.
bath,
dining
area,
·RECEN.TLY RENOVATED.

1970 FOR0 ...•... -...............$1595

· • No Payments Until After Feb. 15,

Heater . Core.
Nathan Biggs

Dr . H-top , '3b4 ' V-8,' automatic. p.sf.. v ·roof, air con d.,
~
sharp .

OFFICE SUPPLIES

From the largest

Pomeroy

·. 1970
JAVELIN
...........
.,
...
}2195
2

'6100

If I HAVE
To Go
Take Me To

601 E. Main

· 72 ,Cadillac Coupe DeVille

Pomeroy

START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT·
WITH ASMITH N.ELSON v Y"'

to these llh~new cars

'

fdnditloning, 5 new whitewall tires ,

Re.al Esti!te For Sale
CLELAND
''REALTY

-

992·2094

606 E. Main

oo~~rM~~~~

'·

Dark grey finish wl;t, red leather Int., full power
wJpment. AM. FM stereo. Climate Control air

HOME &amp; AUTO

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

$4,500.00.
Syracuse; price S3.900 phone
people ; 2 years of college ·
· $6500.00
992·2360.
preferable but not required ; RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
1·5·11C
No investment needed except modern bath and kitchen.
servlcable automobile, for
Front porch, nice lot, out of 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
which we will pay mlleaQe ; high
water.
l large lot, natural gas, builf·in
Salary open; Hospitalization
cabinets In kitchen, close to
and paid vacat10n; send
radio station in Bradbury,
LOOK AT LAST YEAR,
quallfio::e;tions.and experience
Phone 992-2602.
In .,wn handwriting to : Box WOULDN'T YOU Ll KE TO
12·21 ·20tp
.729.A, C·P The Dally Sentinel, MAKE MORE IN '73. COME
IN AND SEE OUR OF· :5-:R:;:oo=M;--;h::oc:us::e:-:;a:;;n;rd bath. 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
12·31 ·6fc FERINGS, THEN INVEST
porches, big flat lawn, fur·
FOR YOUR FUTURE.
nllure Included 58000; located
WORK · WITH
MISSILE
at Enterprise on Rt . 33. Phone
LAUNCHERS IN .,EUROPE
HELEN .L. TEAFORD,
992-6362.
OR KOREA. FULL PAY
1·4·3tp
ASSOCIATE
WHILE
YOU
TRAIN.
NOSUNDAY SHOWINGS
Today's Army will help you
992·3325

PART,TfME babysitter ; phone
after 5 p.m. 992-5535.
1·5·3tp

and

all

advertised company. E)( tremely
high
earnings
potential. Our top producers
earn commissions of $25,000
... to $50,000 per year. If you can
travel extensively and have a
good car, we'll prove it to you .
For additional information
and personal interview, call
Mr Porter, toll free at 18001

clerical work in my homei

ARNOLD
BROTHfRS ·

of

such as man who has
successfully sold land, in surance, mutual funds, home
Improvements,
franchises,
freezer
plans.
vending ,
education , etc. Can have

I·Oic

Hot Water 'Heaters
· Plumbing
Electrical' Work

minutes

and

clos~r ,

and Gun Club, New Haven, W.
Va ., Sunday, Jan, 7 Noon 'Ill ..

Club.

attend

meetings of the board and
such dulles as 1)1e Board may
direct. Applications shall be
submitted prior to Jan. 10,
. 1973 to Betty J :. Hayes,
President of the Board.
1.7-ltc
_W_A_N-TE_D
_:___E_X_P~
ERIE
-N-CED
SPECIALTY SALESMAN TO
ESTAB.LI.SH NEW AC·
COUNTS GUARANTEED
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST
COMMISSIONS. One·call

- -- - - -

- -- -WILL DO bookkeeping

Board,

Cha Hdwe. to.

1-7 .Jtc

AKC toy p~dle puppies, $75.
S85; Siamese kittens, $10;
phone 1·256-6247.
H ·10tc

Daughters who have helped In
so many ways during' her .past
four months of confinement.
Words cannot express the
appreciation we feel to so

co~strucflon

make excellent

pets Call 992·5072.

Eichinger wishes to e&gt;1press
their most sincere ap preciation to all the many
people who M 1ped in so many
ways to make Paula 's Chnstmas a most happy one while
she is cohflned to bed . Special

Concrete Work

POMEROY

price

reduction on all dogs. All AK·
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
12-13·1fc

HOURS

c1 Thanks

HEATING

,

PARKVIEW Kennels going out
of

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment
•s •55

~emodeling

Employment Wanted

'

;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;--;:::=======:::::::q"]=:;:;:;:..q:=;::-·:-:.:::;_:·-::::::::.-=:-=i· ·

OHIO 992·511 3.

Charge per

· Card

·,

PLUMBING

On The ·Best

•

.Business Services

~~g~~- HJ,~'flt.E~t~f.

L-eTs HUW( fT

..

'

Notice

TEXAS QIL .COMPANY needs TAX Serv ice, Federal and State

BLIND ADS

Additiona l 2Sc
Advertisement.

~-

... ..

·· .Be~er ·.Buys

.'

.

'

~

25-TheSundayTimes-~ntinel,Sund9v . •1on 7 t ' 3

.
Time~-Sentinel
Classifieds
For Fast 'Results 'Use. The. S.u nday
.
.
.
..
WANT AilS

.....

"

.

Fees

Paid

---

'

Gordon

H. Caldwell

County Auditor of f"elgs Cou"ty

License must be·obtained not later than Jan. 20,1973. to avoid paying penally. Alter this date
penalty will be !MOfor single tag and SS.OO for kennel license.
'

,

'
I

~·

-

�•

.. ·

.....

,·

•:

..·. '·

~

·~

'
26 - The SWiday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 7,1973

.

.

.

.

.

For Fast Results
Use
The
Sunr)ay
Times-Sentinel
_
C
lassifieds
.
.
-

.

•

-

WANTED

radials, AM &amp; FM stereo,
excellent condition, . 446-3732

after l : 3

TYPEWRITERS ,
Corona , Royali

man-u al

and

..e.)ectric. Simmons Pr inting
and Oftice Equipment.

-

235-tf

PIPES, Pipes, Pipes, GBD,
Cheratan, BBB, Jobey. Hilson
and others. Tawney's Pipe
and Trophy House. 422 Second
Ave.

home or remodeling, see us.
We are builders. Distributor

for

NewGMC

Hotpolnt. Appliances,

Allison Electric .

-~ervices

Wellston, Ohio

2-6

Rota RD!&gt;Ier
SEWER and Drain Cleaning,
National
Service
· now
available locally. For any

etc., excellent running con - TERMITE PEST CONTROL
dil ion . Phone 245-5048.
_ FREE Inspection. Call 446-3245.
3 6 Merrill O'Dell, Operator by

Junction of 346 and County Road 78

Formerly Koppers·Co. Mill

1964 v, T. GMC PU
1966 v, T. Ford PU
1967 1 T. GMC Dump
1969 '12 T. GMC PU
1968 '12 T. GMC PU
1960 1 Ton Ford flat.
1967 1;, T. GMC Pickup
1964 CO 1.600 International truck
1967 '12 T. GMC PU
1966 ~. T. GMC PU
.
1967 •;, T. GMC Pickup
1968 •;, T. GMC' Pickup
1961 1/2 T. GMC Pickup
SOMMERS G.M.C .
'!;RUCK&gt;. INC.
133 Pi.ne 51.
446-2532
267-tf

For Sale

For Sale

For Sale

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture - - - - - -

wringer washer... stainless

steel tub, $25. Ph. 446-2927.
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales
4-3
&amp; Service . All models In

AKC Toy Poodle and Pekingese.
Phone 256-6553.
4-3

- - -- - -

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio

queen size. Save up to 540 a

2 STORY Brick house, electric

set. 995 Second Avenue
446-1172 •

Located oo edge of town. 1V2

6-lf

Over 80 vears old . Mad• bv
Tayl or and Fraley Organ Co .•
Worces ter, Mass . One bellows

typ e.

Phon e

Syracuse. 0 .

year old antique brick home,
3 br, w, bath, large L. R. and
dining area, built In range,
oven and cabinets, S. G.
doors, to rear patio, 2 car
atlached garage. 120 II.
frontage, city schools. Call
446·0949 for appointment.

~~

10-Dtposltl

7So:-Molllfy
75-Sirtlltle
77-Mohemmtd•n

14-lnltlal
19-Mtlodic
21-c1vll
22-lhree

priest
78-At • dltttnee
80-Trl1onometrlc
fiJUriS

23-CIIIIMI

81-Bust of

24-Annoys
26-Town In
28-Biby's
wardrobe
29-wrlllnl fluid

burden
82-:-Related
84-Enthuslesm
86-Natlve
·American
87-0welt

J~IStUrbiOCI

89-EJ:Ist

32-Trap
33-fruit SHdS

92-Warninl
device

34-Suffl~e :

95-Qnce more

follower of
35-Go by boat

98-Fish tiUCe

:n-Halo
39-suffl~e :

pert1lnlna: to
-40- Walkina: stick

oii- Aalaed
42- Luk lhrouah

.t4-Looked at
Intently
46-GIIIIC
t

l{
•

r•

i.·
{

47-lscaptl
48-Wolk
unste•dlly

50-Bow•" of
latticework
52-Winter vehicle
53-Printer's
me.uuie
55-Harnst
57- Preposition

58--Htraldry:
Kflfled

t

SP-Imlteted

~

60-Cyprlnoid fish
62-Ftll behind

f
1

~

.

.I

71-livt\y tune

M-Unltof
lta118n
currency
66-Two (Romtn

number)
68-Preflx: down
69-Skidded
70;-Period of tilf'le

99-Struck with
stones
101-Qutnches
103-Dimlnuti'olt
suffix
104-Free of
105-RI.,.er irt
Sibiri•
106-E.rth 10ddess
107-P•rent
(colloq.)

108---f&amp;nore
110-l.tmprey
Ill-Babylonian
deity
112-Lt..e
~ 13-&lt;Jbstructs

115-Nt&amp;ttlve
117-Jo&amp;
119-M•n's
nlckn•m•
l~Futl

121-Kinsmtn
124-Stnd forth
126-Applaud
127~F,Prk prona
128-Follows
13G-M•n's
·' nlekn•m•
132-Femlle
stuct.nt
133-M a/orlty

134-Unlt ot .
Bul&amp;arla n

17-Sob
18-CDfnered

-88-LI.m b's

currency
135-WIIk
137-Fether
139-EICCIImltiOn

2Q-SIIkwonn
23-Sitevelen

89-Near
90-Fellt
91-Cropsy

140-Bind

141-Drinks
h11vliy
lH-Sand1r1c tree
145-Mtn's
nlckn1me

146-Crutures that
live In nests

148-ironed
150-Aicompense
152- Mountaln

nymphs
153- Arternoon
Plrtlll
154- Decorete
156-Posh•re
157-Birds' 11omes

158-l.lmbs
159-0ISI)IIch

160-Performed

DOWN

c;lotk .
25-Dinner co·urse
27-rr..t
28-Boundlry
31-Aiiowence
tor waste

33-Free ticket
36--Condesc:endina:
look
38-Danlsh Island
·0-AIII)OQUiln
lndlan
•t-lost SIP
43-Skln of fruit
45-Purlfy
46-Chemlcll
compounds

47-Escaped
•9-0en
51-Country
of Aslt

52-Flavored with
condiments
53-Girl's neme

54-Post
1- Waistbtnd

worn by
Filipinos

2-Piaces for
combtt
3- More dtrin&amp;
4-DICa)'
!i-Rivtr In
Bel1lum
6-.t.iternetlna

currtlnl (lbbr.)
7-Chlnue
PIJOdl

8-su ea&amp;ies

9--Breed of dol
10-Cublc meter
11-Grett L1ke
12- M•n 's
nlckneme

13--ConJunction
lot-Fiirill
15;--AnKer

16-Withdrawn
ll'tlm bUtiniiS

baths, large lot, 1052 Second
Ave. Call446-1991 after 5 p.rn.
3-3

- - - - -- -

AKC Toy poodle pups, $7S, $85
Siamese kittens $10 each. 256-

6247.

3-30

1960
1973
1968
1966
1966
1968
1960
1969
1973
1913
1967
1969
1973
1971
1970
1970

19 Belmont- Dr .

267-lf

Central Air Condilioning
&amp; Heating
· Free Estimates

MOBiLE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
Shultz 12xl0
Elcona 12 x 50
Elcona 12 x 60
Peerless 12 x 60
Whitney 10 x 46
Holly Cart 12 x 60
Roycraft 12 x 50
Schull 12 x 50
Schull 12 x 50
Elcona 12 x 50
Whitney 10 x 46
Stalesnnan 12 x 60
Peerless 12 x 60
Kingswood 12 x 60 .
Topper 12 x 60
Atlantic 12 x 60
Holley Park 12 x 65
Sylvan 12 x 60
Hallmark 12 x 60
Holley Park 12 x 60

Stewart's Hardware

Vinton, Ohio
" HOT -SHOT"

144-lf

Washmobi le.

Wash, wax and degreaslng
with mobi le u.nit. 446-4441.

.

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Palriol Star Rt.. Gallipolis
Ph. 379-2133
243-lf
BOB

complete
Bookkeepi_ng and Tax Ser-

LANE'S

vice, 424112 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga. Business by ap -

pointrnenl. Ph . 446-1049 .
Please call alter 6 p.m .
218-tf

1967 Town &amp; Country 12 x 60

BANKS TREE SERVICE
196S Richardson 12 x 55
FREE estimates, liability in ·
1962 Great Lakes 10 x ll
surance . Prun i ng, trimming
1961 Raycraft 10 x 46
and cavit9 work, tree and
1960 New Moon 10 x SO
slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
1954 Castle 8 x 21
73-tf
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand 51.
DOMESTIC cleaning service
Pt. Pleasant
carpet s_h ampoOing and
(Next to Heck's)
general cleaning, 388-8154.
292-lf
3-6
1972 ZIG -ZAG Sewing Machine
left ,_in layaway . Beautiful STEWART Eleclrjcal Service &amp;

- - -- -- -

R&amp;..5fel color, full size model.
~built - in to buttonhole, do
stretch sewing and fancy

stitching . Pay ius! $48.75 cash

Repa ir, house wiring ; electric

heating . Phone 446-4561.

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russell's Plumbing, 446-4782
291-tf

5-6

56-Chlet .
tKec:utive
59-Adjustment

60-Country .
ot Aslt
61-Title of

respect

pen ntrne

92-Sntke

93-Spanlsh·
Amerlctn
l)lalns
94-Cooled lava
96-Vir&amp;inia
willow
97--Girl's
• nickname
100--Note of scale
102-Certeln
lOS- Jump ·

109-EICplosive
112-Peruse
11 ~- OepressioA
114-Piunaes

11 6-B urden
liB-Cravats
120-Gralifles
121-Ascend
122- Furnlshes
123-Btlstlt

12S-Thrtt·pron&amp;ed
spea/
126-Stlc:k to
127-Covers"

129-Wti&amp;ht of
indlt (pi.)
131-Stupor

132--Church ltw
133-Pianet

63-Commenltd

134--CII)'e)' tlrth

65-l.ended

136-Strokn
138-flnlshtd

67-Posseulve
pronoun
69- Symbol for tin

70-lssue forth
72-Sub]ecl
74-Prlnler's

metsu,.
7$-Bon•
n -.:Likeness
79- Wooden pin

83-lnlet ·
85tr-Mlh:l 1m ends
86-1 rril1tes
87- Unutuel

140-Sprt~de

tor

drylna

141-En&amp;lith
•t,.etcer
142- Withe,.cl
lU-Giri's n1rne
147-Makel•~·

148-Throulh

149--Nolll
151-l.otoc:ellln
153-Symbol for
ttnltlum
155-Physlelan'
(ebbr.)

1972 FORD Galaxie 500 low

mileage, Harold Davis . 446·

tachments, cordwinder and

cleaning

paint spray. Used but in like

house wreck ing . Ph . 446-9499.

new cond1tion .

Established in 19.40.

Pay

$£4.45

and

rdpalr ,

also

cash or budget plan availllble.
lo9-lf
446
4312
~-~-------H ' . Phone - .
l -6 D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son . Wafer
l
Delivery Service. Your
, AT SPECIAL- ..~ •-PqQR.,Gt;."'~'riBe•~toh,1 4,c;u- ~ _eatronage :Viii ~e ".!':.
9 _years o_ld, upright p1ano
'jjreclaled. Ph. 444'C.w.l:"
LOWER PRICES ft.1n ,fa1r
cond1t10n. Phone .4462-tf
NEW &amp; USED
9286
I-BEAMS. Channel, angle,
.
l-3
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
0418.

IF YOU are building a new

sheet and plate steel , rounds,
flat~ ,

reinforcing bars and RrFRIGERATOR , 1969
Chevrolet Caprice,· 2 door

~ mesh, rai l, pt,e, culverts and
equipment. rompt drilling.

Neiman Co.. Nel sonvi lle.
Ohio, P.O. Box 298, Ph. 7531554. Call ~ollect.

home or need new car.pet,
pho'W, Jerry Halfett, 446-1158 .

hardtop, P.S., auto . trans . Ph .

245-5l3S.

for ree estimates .

215-lf

l -3

DRY WALL service by con tract . Willard Bosley , 446·

llil-lf 1965 PONTIAC temans, VB 326
engine , new battery, new

IRISH

Setter

pups

AKC

registered ,
great
with
children, dark red . Phone

Chesapeake 867-5535.

COMPLETE line of Starcraft
~-------- 4' 3 travel trailers and fold down
CORN - Carl Winters Grande, 245-5115.

Rio

4954.

brakes and plugs. Phone 24558
n $250 .
l -3

cam pers, Quality and service,

highest discount In Tri-State.
4-3 Camp Conley Slarcraft Sales,
l{oute 62 north ol PI .
-----Pleasanl. behind Red Carpet
SONY HP580 Ster eo with
component and FM Stereo · Inn. Phone 615-5384.
5-lf
radio, dual turn table, head

282 -tf

Cherrington. 446-1317.
2-6

------

Plumbini! &amp; Heatinl!

GENEPLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
'Condllloning. 300 Fourth Ave.
Ph. 446-1637.
48-tf

phone s,
pitch
control. ---~-Auxil iary unit, loudness and USED saddle "Big Horn ," very
good condition , $125. Call
high filter con trol , must sell,
alter 6, 446-4225.
moving,
call
Libby

l -3

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4471
165-tf
ST-ANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Heating
214 Third Ave. , 446-3782
187-tf

--------REGISTERED half Arabian
RUSSELL'S
colt. Ph . 388-8155.
VACUUM Cleaner new i972
5-6
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
model. Complete wllh. a II
21 Gallia Ave., 446-4182
cleaning tools. Small paint - - - -- - - - 297-tf
damage in shi pping . Will take SELECTIVE breeding AKC
127 cash or budget plan · puppies Australian Terriers, -~:-------=-Cairn Terriers, Dachshund,
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
available. Phone .446-4312.
AND HEATING
2-6 miniature Schnauzers. 1 male
Dachshund, 2 years old. Also
Roule 1'60 at Evergreen
------Phone 4-46-2135
PAINT DAMAGE - 1972 Zig - retiring son breeders, Kand P
Kennels, 388-8274.
187-tf
Zag Sewing Machines. Still in
l -1
original cartons. No at-

--------

ta chments needed as our
con trols are built-in. Sews NO GIFT SAYS QUITE SO
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
MUCH as a diamond!
Whether it's an engagement,
buttonholes, sew· on buttons,
anniversary, birthday or
monograms, and blind hem
st1tch . Full cash pri ce SJS.'SO
commemorat i ve
service
award,
we
offer
you
or budget pian available.
Phone 446-4312.
prOfessional service and

------1970 12 x 60

2-6

prices thai are right. At
Tawney's Jewelers.

DETROITER

5-2

2-6

fastback, 390 engine 4 speed
trans . Phone 245-5323. Price
1900.

mobil e home, air conditioned. - - - - - - Phone 446-4051 alter 5 o'clock. 1968 FORD Falrlane 500,

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sell anything for
anybody. Bring your
ilems to Knotts Community Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olive.
For appointment call
446•2917. Sale every
Soturday evening at 7.

'

.

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furnish Water - Sewage . Garbage Collection . Ample
Parking . TV Antenna . Woll-lo-Wall Carpeting .
Draperieo . Ranges • Refrlgorotors • Air Conditioning .
Garboge Dlspouls- Dishwashers- Heat Lamps - Prlvato
Pltloo . Swimming l'o!ll - ClubfloooM,

...

A.UCTiON .
1

SERVICE

''SEll. TH~ AUCTIO"

NAY"
JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

t'fl 446-;$444

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

TARA

1'12

WISEMAN ~cy

1

WISHES YOU A

, &amp;ppy.New Year

And would also like to thank each and every
person in the area for helping us have our
most successful year. We broke all the real
estate records ever set in Gallia County.

Here's Another
Bargain
17 YR . OLD BUT BUILT
BETTER THAN MO ST ON
THE

MARKET

3

CAR PETING, NICE KIT CHEN, FIREPLACE,
FULL BASEMENT AND
G A R A G E ,
t ·l T Y
SCHOOLS . 2- MILES OUT
160.
BED~OOMS.

Beat This Price
If You can
COMPLETELY CAR PETED J BEDROOM
HOME
WITH
UN BELIEVABLE KITCHEN,

FU LL BASEMENT AND GARAGE. FIRST OF·HR'
OF I 16,SOO BUYS IT . •
Want To Live
In Town

1

·New 3 Bedroom
Dream Home
SETT ING ON A GR·ASSY
NOLE IN NEW SUB DIVI SION WITH ALL
CITY UTILITIES . THIS
BEAUTY INCLUDE S 2
BATH S, FAMILY ROOM, 2
CAR GARAG,E, LARGE .
PATIO AND CENTRAL
AIR . EXCELLENT
FINANCIAL
TERMS
AVAILAB LE.

Henkle Ave.
$12,900:00
SMALL 2 BEDROOM '
HOM E IN EXCELLENT
NE IG HBORHOOD AND
IN GOOD CONDITION .
11.500 D&lt;;JWN BUYS IT .

WE HAVE 5 TO CHOOSE

FROM . LOOK AT THIS
ONE AND SEE WHAT
YOU
THINK .
3
BEDROOMS
WITH
CENTRAL

AIR

GARAGE. 116,900.00.

AND

Investment Property
3 Unit Apartment
ONE OF THE BEST LOTS
IN TOWN ON

2nd AVE .

NEEDS SOME REPAIR
BUT WILL REALLY PAY
OFF IN THE LONG RUN .
YOU CA N BUY IT FOR

Sold, Sold, Sold
WE HAVE BROKEN ALL
REAL ESTATE SALES
RECORDS THIS YEAR
BY A HUG E MARGIN'.
YOU GUESSED IT, WE
NEED I. ISTINGS LIKE
NEVER BEFORE . IF
YOU'RE THINKING OF
SELLING CALL US FOR
THE BEST RESULTS
PO SS IBLE

" 520,000.00.

3 Very Nice
4 Bedrooms
YOU ' LL
ONE

REALLY

OF

THESE.

GALLI A CO .' S LARGEST
LIKE
Jl/2

BATH . LOVELY KIT CHEN. DINING ROOM ,
GARAGE AND CENTRAL
AIR . GOOD LOCATION . 1
IN 'IOWN, 2 OUT OF
TOWN ,

REAL ESTATE
SALES AGENCY
OFF ICE 446-3643
EVENINGS CALL

E. M . "IKE" WISEMAN
446·3796

E. N. WISEMAN 446-4500

BATHS

TOWNHOUSE ·
APARTMENTS

For Information Call Shirley Adkins-~67-7250

WIN AT BRIDGE

Return Opener? Not Always
NOK111

REALTY .

·8

West's queen of diamonds
lead guaranteed th~ jack and
showed t ~ r e e more . This
made 23, and since South had .
·A~B
sho'fn
at least 16 by his open- .
WEST
EAST
'ing
no-trump,
the most West •l
.532
.K84
~ CRHid. , ho~l\ W,9JI ~!i. l~1 PI!II1
piimlinore. The dtamifna re~ ~o s,s 3
turn
would set up West's suit
"''63
,i,.'Ks2
at
the end of the hand
but
SOUTH (D)
West
would
still be waiting
.QJ97
lor
someone
to
lead It to him .
¥AK6
1
Then
where
could setting
• AB
tricks develop? In hearts, i1
.Ql094
We's t held the jack.
Both vulnerable'
Could West hold the jack
West North East South
of he arts? Certainly. He
'
1 N.T ,'
might have one point and a .
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
jack counted one point.
OP.,ning lead- • Q
East shifted to a heart and
since South had to lose both
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby black suit finesses, he wound
up in the soup .
One way for a brid~e play(NEWSPAPER ENTUPRISE ASSN .)
er to gain popularity IS to return his partner's lead on
each and every occasion.
Most of the time he will be
popular, with his partner but
The bidding has been:
qmte o ten he also will turn West North
East
South
out to be popular with both
3
•
Dble
opponents.
Pass
4¥
Pass
'
East was careful to put his
You,
South,
hold:
kin~ of diamonds on his partner s queen. South let the .2 ¥AQ9875 .A32 ... KQ7
What do you do now? ·
king hold and it was time
for East to do a little think·
A-After reeovertnr from
in g.
Y4i'Dr surprise, you jusl ~ss.
He could return his part- Your partner needs a lot fof a
ner 's lead and set up the dia- Alim.
mond suit but would this get
TODAY'S QUESTION
him anywhere?
Instead of bldding four hearts,
Dummy showed nine
your par t n e r bids four diacard points. East was
monds. Wha~ do you do now?
ing at 11 ·
.A106
"7 4 2
• 7654

·H9J tc1 91•l

ATTENTION
HOME OWNERS!
It's a long ' way from . ~'FOR
SALE" to "SOLD". We know
the Jhortut rOtJte! So If you
. want someone else to ow~ '
your 'home just give us a ealt.
We get results - and we need
your listing now I

. '1,000

ALL MONACO &amp; POLARA MODELS

.

IS TAKING THE GUESS WORK

vinyl roof, delu xe steel wheels.
dual racing mirrors, radio, W· S· W
tires. 1.4.000 act . ml
one
owner. A real cream

steering , p. brakes, tinted glass.
· lac. air cond .• w-s-w tires, wheel
covers . .very sharp.

2 Dr. hardtop, JIB V-8, standard
shift; 3-speed floor, w-s-w tires,

STICKER PRICE.
Mb'' I ~UESS WO-RK FO·R·.YOU

steel

pa in1.

_, -~

.--....

.'68 VOLKSWAGEN
'70 CHEV. MALIBU

G•lllpolis

•

carpeted, has alum . siding ,
storm drs. and windows, new
roof and city water . Located

JSl V-S engine , auto. trans ., W· S· W
tires, radio, r eal nice in excellent

cond. Has 82.000 miles.

446-3273

$1595

New H-70x1l steel helled .

ceilings,

CHEV •.•.•.• ~ ......................... •1895
'h Ton, long wide bed, custom, chrome bumpers. front &amp;
Western mirrors, deluxe fully Insulated custom

GALLIPOLIS,

0.'

REALTOR
. Real Estate For Sale

Priced 515,000.
·
·
OffiCI 446-1066
.
Evtnlngl-\
Ron ,CIIIIAJ +N-:1636
RusMII Wood 44'·4611

ROOM house with full
basement, natural gas heat,
and hardwood floors, also 2
trailers one 12 x 57, other 10 x
55 on large lot. $29,000. «63409.
307-6

------

STROUT

REALTY
Largest

World'~

THE LEADER SINCE 1900
IN
SERVING
THE
NATION'S BUYERS &amp;
SELLERS.
Ph. 446-0001

CLOSED
· FOR
VACATION

Real Estate For Sale

OHIO RIVER
Realty

'69 CHEV •.•.•••..•.....•.•.••.......•.• •1695
Ton. long wide bed, blue and white paint, radio, Deluxe
";,

'69 .FORD ....... : ...................... '1695

. '67 FORD •..•••••••••••••••.•••.•.•...•.. '1195
"FCIOO, long narrow bed, heavy duty springs, new 700x1l6
ply truck type tires.

'66
GMC ·······························•· •895
Shorl wheel base, narrow bed. custom topper . Less ihan
35;000 act. miles.

owner .

·

452 Second Ave.
446-3434
Osc•r Baird
Doug Wetherhott
BEAUTIFUL RIVER VIEWLarge home ~n 61!1 acres near

Gavln plant with view of six
miles of river. Extra metal
building for garage or shop.
Plenty of watef and low tax
district.
Eyonlnts Call 446·4244
Steven Betz. 446-9583

Extra

paneling ,

an~

awnings on windows. Locaied

on a A A. lot with plenty nice ·
shrubbery . Lotts 42'x 410' and
goes lo the river. Gar. 20'x24'
plus a new metal bldg . Pr ice
$23,000.
NEIGHBORHOOD , RD. Sectional, 24' x 55', si1Jl1e as
new, double lavoratory bath·
, with shower. Lot 85' x Ill' .
$14,500.
RODN-EY -'
1972 Schullz
.89 A. lot. Pri ce $14,900.
CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
bdrm. Ranch. II has H.W.
floors with carpel in liv. rm .
and hall. Some paneling .
targe kitchen with plenty
cabinets. City water and nal.
gas. A good l)uy at $23,500.
FARMS
95 A. Woods Mill Rd.
92.S A. Pleasant Hill Rd .
40 A. Near Rio Grande.
49 A. King Rd. $16,500.
163 A. Ward Rd .. vacant land.
Financing available.
30 A. Bidwell ; good house.
ANY HR. 446-1998

Chcs tnui 'StrEet. .Jusl r ecen tl y
pililllcd inside and ou t. Ca rpel
in living r oom and three

___ __

KANAUGA, OHIO

f&gt;cdr"norn s.

Wou l d ' make

q• rXl inv cs tn1ent..

.

.

LOT 67' x 11 2' lo&lt;aled at 54
Garfield Avenue. $1 ,000.
NEW LISTING
~ eE DROOM hon1e al 1809

BY OWNER, 3 I!R hOrne. 2
batha. Excellent condition.
close to town, must sell, price
reduced $12.900. '446-4182.
...._
S-lf

SMITH AUTO SALES

Mobile home, 14' x 18', all
eleC. cen . air and located on

Neal Realty

a'

'ilftllNt ID1t ~-u..t ;;;!!;;! IIIMilC
C!J
\!:!} ~~ . . . . .
Iii

Unscramble theoe four Jumble~
one letteJ~&gt; to each square, to

form four ordinary words.

[

tENSICC

j

II

\

.

"

• t '

l

SEI.IA

J

II

I.I I

·-·

PUT DOWN 1"0
COME UP.

lh··--.. . .

DII'EEM~ · .
Now an-anre the circled lett.n .
I 1
. r _
'1 . ot-. rorm
r...
~::!:-:; .::!:·=:::=::::!s.~J:;~~siii~HI~.~ted by the..,... cutooa. _

·1

·

_

_:Prill~-c::tlle=SUI:::::FIIISl:::.::IIISWIII=::::::•~......~I

Evenings

Charles M: Neal 446-1546
J. Michael Neal ·446-li03

_

. ........
&amp;I'"'"'
'""Cio&lt;''" ''"'..

I OEI'I,E

Office Phone 446-169t

'12 acre on Rt. 588. Ph. 7:U-38BJ
or 446-4467.
- - - - - - - - 4-3

'.

NEAR K.C. H. Sc. - Beautiful
Colonial , 8 big rrns ., 3 baths,
all carpeted, · full finished
base .. $15 per mo .. · Nat. gas
heat. Located on a 3 A. lol.

nice, 5 rooms on first floor,
with ·rec . rm . and c:ooking
facilities in base . This house
has all new carpet , tile

'70 CHEV ········· :····.··· ·············· •2295

wheel covers. Sharp.

$14,000.

GARFIELD AVE . -

TRUCKS

.112

pear,

cherry and apple trees. Only

and storage bldg. Asking ·
$40,1100.

steering, fac . air cond. , Deluxe
.luggage rack, radio, w-s-w tires .

WOOD MOTOR SALES

has berries, grapes.

Also has a metal barn 30'x60'

V-8 auto. trans .. p. . brakes, p.

'1

When you ' re shopping for a hardtop, the object
is to be a sport ... not tlie last of the big spenders.
So take a loo k al the new Datsun 610 2-DoorHardtop. If 's a luxury car with a Datsun price that includes a lot of no-cost extras:
• 1800 cc overhead ca m engine
• Power-ass ist brakes- discs in Irani
• Inde pendent rear suspension
• Sports interior
• Rear window defroste r
• Sports console
• Power-flow ventilation
• And lots more .. . all standard equipment!
Test drive the new Datsun 610 2-Door Hardtop
at yo ur nearby Datsun dealer's and discover why
we call it a Datsun Original. Drive a Da1sun ...
Ihe n decide.

on 1.25 A. good garden land ;

Ranchero, 6 tyl. engine, p. steering, radio, w-s-w tires,
nice.

windows, one· car · garage.

luxuty.
•
IJI1Ce·:·

VINTON - 7 rms . and bath,

'69 MERCURY COUGAR

'1895
EASTERN AYE.

FIVE room doll house completely remodeled, beam
ceiling •.- carpeted, full
basement, storm doors and

kitchen. H.W. floors, walnut
trim , full base. and dry . Gar.
20'x20' (block), v, A. lot with
plenty shrubbery. This house
has quality hard to find in
today's construction . Only
$27,500.

constructed and located on a
large lot . Price reduced.

Custom Deluxe Pickup. long wide hed with Deluxe custom
topper. 27,000 miles.

NEW ranch slyle house on
'Route 35. 1'!• baths, carpeting
wlfh garage. Lol size 70Xt70.

llv. rm . 13' x 28' with F.P.,
formal dirl . rm., modern

with elec. dr . This house ha s

speed, bucket seats, W-s-w tires,
real sharp!

brakes, ~adlo, lac. air cond .• platinum silver
finish, red interior, new w-~-w tires! Extra
Clean.

6

'"

cen. air , is only 4 yrs. old, well

2 Dr. hardtop. 350 V-8 engine, 4

4 Dr. Sedi!n, auto . trans., p. steering, p.

WOOD

Datsun610.

Realty, 32 State St
Tel. ~.46:1998

disposal. Large liv. rm. with

'69 PONTIAC CATALINA

'

MASSIE

wide closets, all factory
kitchen with dishwasher and

'71 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN

RUSSEll :

..

carpet, large rec. rm. with
carpet and bar, 2 car gar.

t639 E.sterft Ave.

' Jay Sheppard 446-0001 '
Denver K. HighleY 446-0002
.
.

I

SPRING VALLEY - Bi-Level,
3 large bdrms. with deep and

2 Dr .• radio, excellent condition .

.Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

THURSDAY, JANUARY 18th
STARTING AT 10:30 A.M •.

·Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp., air cond. vinyl top, one owner: .Extra
nice.

to

NEAR CLAY SC. - 4 Bdrms.;

$995

radio, excellent cond .

STICKER PRICE $5,239.25
FACTORY INVOICE PRICE OR OUR
COST $4,080.53.-

FOR LEASE. New ' ux70 3
bedroom Mobile Home.

Three

Real Estate For Sale

$2095

2 Dr . hardtop , 289 V-8 engine,
standard sh ift , steel wheels.

1973 CHRYSLER 4 DR. H.T.

LARGE RANCH HOME . 4
bedrooms. Lois of closets,
large living room, country
· kitchen, cozy family rD!&gt;m
with llreplace. Garage. Extra
land available.

·1970 BUICK .

$1795

AMG~-

EXAMPLE:

NEAR NEW 4 bedrooln home,
bath and half. Patrlo. Large lot. Price reduced.

wheels , orange

Sharp.

AT THE COST PRICE AND
MAKE US·AN OFFER.

39 ACRES, 3 bedrD!&gt;m story and
hall home, garage, barn.
Fenced. $15,000.

9 ACRES 2 rnlles from Rio
Grande. $3,500.

•3295

UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY

$2495

'72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER

tHE CUSTOMER. JUST LOOK
•

31;, ACRES. Rural Water .
· Beautiful setting. Nice home
or trailer slle. Asking $5,1100.
Make offer.

.

'70 FORD·TORINO

WILL BE ON THE WINDOW
NEXT TO THE RETAIL

LOTS AND ACREAGE for
residential or commercial on
Rt. 35 and Mitchell Road near
Hospital .
·
ADDISON TOWNSHIP
25 ACRES land. Some fenced .
Outbuilding. Make offer. ·

One ·

"

2 Dr . hardtop, V-8 auto. , p.

10-1 ACRE Beef or Dairy Farm:
Large very good barn. Pond.
Land level to rolling. Tobacco
base. Located on state high·
way. Forty some head of
cattle
and
machinery
available. Otmer will help
llnance. -

.

Skylark 4 dr .• air co~&lt; owner. like new.
. ..

'1495

2 Dr. hardtoo.
engine; · p. bralkes.

OUT OF BUYING A NEW CAR.
OUR -INVOICE COST PRICE

HEIAPOIJA'RT·ERS !of..-- Gal)ll-'
County Real Es'tate. 'Listing's
j
needed.

'

1972 BUICK:

2 Dr. hdtp., 307 engine. auto .•
P.M., low miles.
choose from .

~

•3695 ~

1968 CHEVELLE

re
and the price of
automobiles.
know that we have a better deal for
you and we would like · the opportunity to demonstrate this.

. '·

Electra 4dr. hardtop, air cond .,
24,500 miles, local do·ctor's
trade. Like new cond. ·;,.·

1972 PONTIAC

.

'

1971 BUICK

•2995

RANCtiO RE~L tO~$,'

NICE neighborhood close to
schools 6 rooms with part
basement, air conditioning,
' carpeting, I car ' garage In
- baseme111. Vacant, ready lor
Immediate occupancy.

' 419-5 .

Ventura II. air con d .• red. black
vinyl top. Sprint package.
12,000 miles. Sharp.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

..•

t .... '

.,

•3695

50 STATE ST.

.

~.

'" ...
"'·,,..,
·t ..

Catilina 2 dr. harp. Brougham,
gold with dark brown vinyl top.
air cond .• low miles.

CARROLL -NORRIS DODGE

•

frame ·cottage, 1 floor plan,
air-conditioning,
carpellng
also 2 outbuildings. Use of
alley In back.

'

1972 PONTIAC

-

.. '

VALUE PACKED!
Beautifully cared for~ 4 BR
home, stone fireplace In LR.
all electric kltchen 0 and DR,
large family room, 1'17 bath,
carport and extra large
workshop, all copper plumbing, a well built home.
RIVERVIEW FARM
All electric brick home located
on Rt. 7, 6 rooms and bath,
stone fireplace In family
room, carpel throughout, a
luxury kitchen, petlo, brick
garage, large rolling lawn,
fruit trotS. tobacco base, 96
acres level to hill land and
woods.
C-0-M-F-0-R-T
Here -Is a charming home, easy
to ~;~re for , newtr, palnled
Ins ide. Large pane ed LR, 3
BR. large ealln kitchen. low
upkeep and modestly taxed,
deep lot with garoge and work
shop, all for only $13,1100.

110 THIRD Avenue. 6 room

Gran Prix, red, white '(1'1\yl top,
white bucket seats. ~.2® mUes .

'3795

SAVE UP TO • • •
~

Dadge.

the large picture window.
C.thedral ceiling In LR and
large eat-In kitchen. J large
BRand plenty closets. Double
carpprt and slorage rooms.
Near town. Price 527,000.
RETIREMENT SPECIAL
16 Acres, all ·etectrk home.
beautiful LR with fireplace,
eat In kitchen with range and
ref.. v, basement, well
stocked
pond.
30'x60'
building . Quick possession.
"T·BONE" VALUE~
HAMBURGER PRICE!
On!&gt;lhlrd acre lot w_ell landscaped. 7 rooms, 3 BR, 2
baths. family room, all
electric kitchen In color,
carport,
laundry
and
workshop.
SURPRISE-The owner - Buy his horne
while he Is on vacation. A
beautiful 4 BR two &amp;lory home
on yery large lot. Plenty room
for the children to play.
Banquet size electric kitchen,
formal dining room or •TV
room, large laundry room,
stone entrance, garage and a
quick possession and good

.,

..' ,

Blazer, wheel drive, 4 speed,
350 eng., 13.000 miles. Never
been. off hard road.

PO LARA 2- 000R HARDTOP

and a panaramfc view from

44&amp;-1066'

1972 PONTIAc
• ''I '

PUBLIC.SALE
Location:. From Gallipolis take Route 35 to
Rodney, turn right on Rodney-Bidwell road.
Watch for sale sians , Reason for seeling - .
-death of husband.
·
1963 Chev. I ton stake truck . 1970 Chev .
Fleets ide Pickup truck, Oliver corn ' planter,
weed sprayer. hay elev&lt;!tor, International
tractpr model M. mowing machine, 2 electric
welders, 2 rubber tire farm wagons. brush · _
hog, windrow rake, fertilizer spreader, McCormick manure spreader, 2 John Deere
balers, rototiller, Minneapolis Moline with
cultivators, . turning plow, two plows, New
Deal corn picker, No. 10 (686), McCurdy grain
wagon, Allis-Chalmers turning plows no. 3,
mowing machine, International tractor, AllisChalmers tractor WD, Allis-Chalmers W045,
14 ft. trailer wagon, Ford tractor m9_del BN,
hay baler; Massey- Ferguson, SN13:i'7-001581,
International mower 7ft. cut, ·New Holland 24
ft. bale carrier, International rake ·pull type,
grade blade 3ft. hitch, Ford scoop 3 pt. hltclj..:
Farmall tractor, model H, cultlpacker double,
disc harrow 3 pt hitch, Massey· FergusoiJ .
brusll hog, hay grass seeder, lots of . new
lumber, corn elevator, blacksmith forge,
miscellaneous lot of tools and . other equipment .
Not responsible'tor any •ccldents
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED
Ethel K. PICKENS, OWNER .
A, French,

...

."• :

19724 CHEVROLET

MONAC0.2-DOOR HARDTOP

OREAMHDME
You should see 'this beautiful
redwood -rancher now. It
won't last long. Large plush ·
carpeted LR with fireplace,

finance.

JANUARY CLEAJWtCE,
GOING QN NOWf
.AU CARS HAVE TO GO! .

DOC ..
SMITH
.SAYS

25 Locust st.
Howard Brannon, Broltor
Off. 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446-1226or446-2674

271 -lf

------

or terms available. Trade-I ns

accepted. Phone 446-4312.

The

210-lf

SADDLE. bridle, blanket and ~-------breast collar. Ph. 446-9700.
ELECT R 0 LUX Va c u urn
3-3 Cleaner complele with at - GILLENWATER'S septic tank

SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1973

'

heat. carpet throughout,
garbage
disposal ,
new
cabinets in kitchen , has
dining room and firep lace, 11/2

992-3904 _-

SUNDAY
CROSSWORD
P
UZZLE
I

C•llfoml1

Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap·
proved dealer, 58 Court St .,

-----~---

t

ACROSS
1-Unaer
6-The IWHhop

from $69 .95 . French Ci+y

selection in stock - twin, full ,

original e,;cept new bellows.

--..

stock . Free delivery. Servi~e
guaranteed. Models priced

FRAMUS 6 string bass guitar
Ph . 446-9255.
308-11
with case, and 80 walls Fury
bass amplifier. Call 319-2189
after 5.
1964 CHEVRO LET Impa la, 2
4-3 door hardtop, very clean.
NEW: Serta and Bernco matgood condit ion. 446·9242.
tress and box springs. Large
3_3

used units . Camp Conley
276-lf
Slarcrall Sales, Route 62 N. of
Pl. Pleasant behlng Red - - - - - - - - - Carpet Inn . Ph . 675-5384. .
289-If ANTIQUE pump organ. ali

"
1W.
I

_mj

3h" . TAPPAN gas range, 1961 COR VAl R. Phone 4-46-3762.
4-11
Coppertone $1'80, Maytag

with converter, same hig h
discount on fold downs, some

I'

1966
1968
1968

PHONE 384-64i1

STARCRAFT
Christmas Sale
24' 7" WS $4,892 lor $3,892
22' 7" WS $4,475 lor $3.519
20' 7" WS $3,954 lor $3.165
18' 7" WS $3,499 for $2.199
SELF-CONTAINED sleeps 6,

''

Exterminal Term ite Service.

1965 RAMBLER station wagon.
Phone 446 -2909.
3-3

.

Grande. Phone 245-llll.

kind of stopped-up drain, call
675-5195, 24 h.OtJr Serv.
307-tf

1969 CHEVY. 60 Series dump

1970 1;, ton Chevrolet Pickup
1969 lh ton Chevrolet Pickup

New 11 ft . camper

Offered

remodeling and paneling.
interior decoro~~ting . 446-9-487.

truck, new ,ires, and brakes,

1969 3 ton GMC
1968 v, T. GMC PU
1968 1;, T. GMC PU

5-1

B &amp; S CARPENT~R work.

Truck Headquarters

1966 GMC '12 ton PU
1970 Chevrolet •;, ton PU
1969 GMC '12 ton PU
1967 FORD •;, ton PU
1968 Ford '12 ton PU
1966 GMC 1;, 'ton PU
•
1970 GMC •;, ton PU
1967 Chevrolet •;, ton PU
1966 -1;, Ton GMC Pickup ·
1969 Olds 88
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1971 '3 lon Chevrolet Truck

ap -

-----:---~

154-11

Attention Farmers
WINTER fertilizer prices now
in effed 16-16-16 or 6-24-24,
$74 .50 per ton thru Jan . 13,
weekly price adjustments.
Kenneth Higley, 245-52 18.

HINCHCLIFF PRODUCTS CO.·

199-tf

$30,000 shown by
pointment. 4-46-0208.

IF YOU are bu11ding a new

•

-

roQms, 2 baths, gas hot air
furnace.
Present
~rrangement 2 ·apartments.
Easily converted to ·one
family \ dwelling . Asking

------

t/J~ .

·Real Estate For Sale

·SALE ' by owner. 2 story
building FOR
brick hou·se at 4S2 First Ave . 7

123-tf

SAW MILL.LOGS~ AND
STANDING TIMBER

Srn.ith,
Ol1vettL

of

materials, block, brick, sewer
·pipes, windows, lintels, eoc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande·.
0 . Phone 24S-5121 after l .

4-6

••

Underwood ,

. AL'L TYPES

Real Estate For Sale

•

.

'

Real _Estate For Sale ·

For Sale

For Sal.e
1972 DATSUN 240 Z air, rnagsn

.

'

.

'11- The Sunda)lTbnes-1!iDunei,Sullclay, Jan;-7, 1973

l

u I TI ]
. (-....-.rl

1· •

lumlde-. SMOKY CHAI. DIPICT LIGACT

l'~•l•rd•y'11

~n•••rz Tltr.y-d ~ f'~f'f"f~d

.

·

to IIIKift!' .,._-CHICU

'

./

�•

.. ·

.....

,·

•:

..·. '·

~

·~

'
26 - The SWiday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 7,1973

.

.

.

.

.

For Fast Results
Use
The
Sunr)ay
Times-Sentinel
_
C
lassifieds
.
.
-

.

•

-

WANTED

radials, AM &amp; FM stereo,
excellent condition, . 446-3732

after l : 3

TYPEWRITERS ,
Corona , Royali

man-u al

and

..e.)ectric. Simmons Pr inting
and Oftice Equipment.

-

235-tf

PIPES, Pipes, Pipes, GBD,
Cheratan, BBB, Jobey. Hilson
and others. Tawney's Pipe
and Trophy House. 422 Second
Ave.

home or remodeling, see us.
We are builders. Distributor

for

NewGMC

Hotpolnt. Appliances,

Allison Electric .

-~ervices

Wellston, Ohio

2-6

Rota RD!&gt;Ier
SEWER and Drain Cleaning,
National
Service
· now
available locally. For any

etc., excellent running con - TERMITE PEST CONTROL
dil ion . Phone 245-5048.
_ FREE Inspection. Call 446-3245.
3 6 Merrill O'Dell, Operator by

Junction of 346 and County Road 78

Formerly Koppers·Co. Mill

1964 v, T. GMC PU
1966 v, T. Ford PU
1967 1 T. GMC Dump
1969 '12 T. GMC PU
1968 '12 T. GMC PU
1960 1 Ton Ford flat.
1967 1;, T. GMC Pickup
1964 CO 1.600 International truck
1967 '12 T. GMC PU
1966 ~. T. GMC PU
.
1967 •;, T. GMC Pickup
1968 •;, T. GMC' Pickup
1961 1/2 T. GMC Pickup
SOMMERS G.M.C .
'!;RUCK&gt;. INC.
133 Pi.ne 51.
446-2532
267-tf

For Sale

For Sale

For Sale

Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture - - - - - -

wringer washer... stainless

steel tub, $25. Ph. 446-2927.
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales
4-3
&amp; Service . All models In

AKC Toy Poodle and Pekingese.
Phone 256-6553.
4-3

- - -- - -

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio

queen size. Save up to 540 a

2 STORY Brick house, electric

set. 995 Second Avenue
446-1172 •

Located oo edge of town. 1V2

6-lf

Over 80 vears old . Mad• bv
Tayl or and Fraley Organ Co .•
Worces ter, Mass . One bellows

typ e.

Phon e

Syracuse. 0 .

year old antique brick home,
3 br, w, bath, large L. R. and
dining area, built In range,
oven and cabinets, S. G.
doors, to rear patio, 2 car
atlached garage. 120 II.
frontage, city schools. Call
446·0949 for appointment.

~~

10-Dtposltl

7So:-Molllfy
75-Sirtlltle
77-Mohemmtd•n

14-lnltlal
19-Mtlodic
21-c1vll
22-lhree

priest
78-At • dltttnee
80-Trl1onometrlc
fiJUriS

23-CIIIIMI

81-Bust of

24-Annoys
26-Town In
28-Biby's
wardrobe
29-wrlllnl fluid

burden
82-:-Related
84-Enthuslesm
86-Natlve
·American
87-0welt

J~IStUrbiOCI

89-EJ:Ist

32-Trap
33-fruit SHdS

92-Warninl
device

34-Suffl~e :

95-Qnce more

follower of
35-Go by boat

98-Fish tiUCe

:n-Halo
39-suffl~e :

pert1lnlna: to
-40- Walkina: stick

oii- Aalaed
42- Luk lhrouah

.t4-Looked at
Intently
46-GIIIIC
t

l{
•

r•

i.·
{

47-lscaptl
48-Wolk
unste•dlly

50-Bow•" of
latticework
52-Winter vehicle
53-Printer's
me.uuie
55-Harnst
57- Preposition

58--Htraldry:
Kflfled

t

SP-Imlteted

~

60-Cyprlnoid fish
62-Ftll behind

f
1

~

.

.I

71-livt\y tune

M-Unltof
lta118n
currency
66-Two (Romtn

number)
68-Preflx: down
69-Skidded
70;-Period of tilf'le

99-Struck with
stones
101-Qutnches
103-Dimlnuti'olt
suffix
104-Free of
105-RI.,.er irt
Sibiri•
106-E.rth 10ddess
107-P•rent
(colloq.)

108---f&amp;nore
110-l.tmprey
Ill-Babylonian
deity
112-Lt..e
~ 13-&lt;Jbstructs

115-Nt&amp;ttlve
117-Jo&amp;
119-M•n's
nlckn•m•
l~Futl

121-Kinsmtn
124-Stnd forth
126-Applaud
127~F,Prk prona
128-Follows
13G-M•n's
·' nlekn•m•
132-Femlle
stuct.nt
133-M a/orlty

134-Unlt ot .
Bul&amp;arla n

17-Sob
18-CDfnered

-88-LI.m b's

currency
135-WIIk
137-Fether
139-EICCIImltiOn

2Q-SIIkwonn
23-Sitevelen

89-Near
90-Fellt
91-Cropsy

140-Bind

141-Drinks
h11vliy
lH-Sand1r1c tree
145-Mtn's
nlckn1me

146-Crutures that
live In nests

148-ironed
150-Aicompense
152- Mountaln

nymphs
153- Arternoon
Plrtlll
154- Decorete
156-Posh•re
157-Birds' 11omes

158-l.lmbs
159-0ISI)IIch

160-Performed

DOWN

c;lotk .
25-Dinner co·urse
27-rr..t
28-Boundlry
31-Aiiowence
tor waste

33-Free ticket
36--Condesc:endina:
look
38-Danlsh Island
·0-AIII)OQUiln
lndlan
•t-lost SIP
43-Skln of fruit
45-Purlfy
46-Chemlcll
compounds

47-Escaped
•9-0en
51-Country
of Aslt

52-Flavored with
condiments
53-Girl's neme

54-Post
1- Waistbtnd

worn by
Filipinos

2-Piaces for
combtt
3- More dtrin&amp;
4-DICa)'
!i-Rivtr In
Bel1lum
6-.t.iternetlna

currtlnl (lbbr.)
7-Chlnue
PIJOdl

8-su ea&amp;ies

9--Breed of dol
10-Cublc meter
11-Grett L1ke
12- M•n 's
nlckneme

13--ConJunction
lot-Fiirill
15;--AnKer

16-Withdrawn
ll'tlm bUtiniiS

baths, large lot, 1052 Second
Ave. Call446-1991 after 5 p.rn.
3-3

- - - - -- -

AKC Toy poodle pups, $7S, $85
Siamese kittens $10 each. 256-

6247.

3-30

1960
1973
1968
1966
1966
1968
1960
1969
1973
1913
1967
1969
1973
1971
1970
1970

19 Belmont- Dr .

267-lf

Central Air Condilioning
&amp; Heating
· Free Estimates

MOBiLE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
Shultz 12xl0
Elcona 12 x 50
Elcona 12 x 60
Peerless 12 x 60
Whitney 10 x 46
Holly Cart 12 x 60
Roycraft 12 x 50
Schull 12 x 50
Schull 12 x 50
Elcona 12 x 50
Whitney 10 x 46
Stalesnnan 12 x 60
Peerless 12 x 60
Kingswood 12 x 60 .
Topper 12 x 60
Atlantic 12 x 60
Holley Park 12 x 65
Sylvan 12 x 60
Hallmark 12 x 60
Holley Park 12 x 60

Stewart's Hardware

Vinton, Ohio
" HOT -SHOT"

144-lf

Washmobi le.

Wash, wax and degreaslng
with mobi le u.nit. 446-4441.

.

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Palriol Star Rt.. Gallipolis
Ph. 379-2133
243-lf
BOB

complete
Bookkeepi_ng and Tax Ser-

LANE'S

vice, 424112 Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga. Business by ap -

pointrnenl. Ph . 446-1049 .
Please call alter 6 p.m .
218-tf

1967 Town &amp; Country 12 x 60

BANKS TREE SERVICE
196S Richardson 12 x 55
FREE estimates, liability in ·
1962 Great Lakes 10 x ll
surance . Prun i ng, trimming
1961 Raycraft 10 x 46
and cavit9 work, tree and
1960 New Moon 10 x SO
slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
1954 Castle 8 x 21
73-tf
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; Viand 51.
DOMESTIC cleaning service
Pt. Pleasant
carpet s_h ampoOing and
(Next to Heck's)
general cleaning, 388-8154.
292-lf
3-6
1972 ZIG -ZAG Sewing Machine
left ,_in layaway . Beautiful STEWART Eleclrjcal Service &amp;

- - -- -- -

R&amp;..5fel color, full size model.
~built - in to buttonhole, do
stretch sewing and fancy

stitching . Pay ius! $48.75 cash

Repa ir, house wiring ; electric

heating . Phone 446-4561.

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russell's Plumbing, 446-4782
291-tf

5-6

56-Chlet .
tKec:utive
59-Adjustment

60-Country .
ot Aslt
61-Title of

respect

pen ntrne

92-Sntke

93-Spanlsh·
Amerlctn
l)lalns
94-Cooled lava
96-Vir&amp;inia
willow
97--Girl's
• nickname
100--Note of scale
102-Certeln
lOS- Jump ·

109-EICplosive
112-Peruse
11 ~- OepressioA
114-Piunaes

11 6-B urden
liB-Cravats
120-Gralifles
121-Ascend
122- Furnlshes
123-Btlstlt

12S-Thrtt·pron&amp;ed
spea/
126-Stlc:k to
127-Covers"

129-Wti&amp;ht of
indlt (pi.)
131-Stupor

132--Church ltw
133-Pianet

63-Commenltd

134--CII)'e)' tlrth

65-l.ended

136-Strokn
138-flnlshtd

67-Posseulve
pronoun
69- Symbol for tin

70-lssue forth
72-Sub]ecl
74-Prlnler's

metsu,.
7$-Bon•
n -.:Likeness
79- Wooden pin

83-lnlet ·
85tr-Mlh:l 1m ends
86-1 rril1tes
87- Unutuel

140-Sprt~de

tor

drylna

141-En&amp;lith
•t,.etcer
142- Withe,.cl
lU-Giri's n1rne
147-Makel•~·

148-Throulh

149--Nolll
151-l.otoc:ellln
153-Symbol for
ttnltlum
155-Physlelan'
(ebbr.)

1972 FORD Galaxie 500 low

mileage, Harold Davis . 446·

tachments, cordwinder and

cleaning

paint spray. Used but in like

house wreck ing . Ph . 446-9499.

new cond1tion .

Established in 19.40.

Pay

$£4.45

and

rdpalr ,

also

cash or budget plan availllble.
lo9-lf
446
4312
~-~-------H ' . Phone - .
l -6 D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son . Wafer
l
Delivery Service. Your
, AT SPECIAL- ..~ •-PqQR.,Gt;."'~'riBe•~toh,1 4,c;u- ~ _eatronage :Viii ~e ".!':.
9 _years o_ld, upright p1ano
'jjreclaled. Ph. 444'C.w.l:"
LOWER PRICES ft.1n ,fa1r
cond1t10n. Phone .4462-tf
NEW &amp; USED
9286
I-BEAMS. Channel, angle,
.
l-3
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
0418.

IF YOU are building a new

sheet and plate steel , rounds,
flat~ ,

reinforcing bars and RrFRIGERATOR , 1969
Chevrolet Caprice,· 2 door

~ mesh, rai l, pt,e, culverts and
equipment. rompt drilling.

Neiman Co.. Nel sonvi lle.
Ohio, P.O. Box 298, Ph. 7531554. Call ~ollect.

home or need new car.pet,
pho'W, Jerry Halfett, 446-1158 .

hardtop, P.S., auto . trans . Ph .

245-5l3S.

for ree estimates .

215-lf

l -3

DRY WALL service by con tract . Willard Bosley , 446·

llil-lf 1965 PONTIAC temans, VB 326
engine , new battery, new

IRISH

Setter

pups

AKC

registered ,
great
with
children, dark red . Phone

Chesapeake 867-5535.

COMPLETE line of Starcraft
~-------- 4' 3 travel trailers and fold down
CORN - Carl Winters Grande, 245-5115.

Rio

4954.

brakes and plugs. Phone 24558
n $250 .
l -3

cam pers, Quality and service,

highest discount In Tri-State.
4-3 Camp Conley Slarcraft Sales,
l{oute 62 north ol PI .
-----Pleasanl. behind Red Carpet
SONY HP580 Ster eo with
component and FM Stereo · Inn. Phone 615-5384.
5-lf
radio, dual turn table, head

282 -tf

Cherrington. 446-1317.
2-6

------

Plumbini! &amp; Heatinl!

GENEPLANTS&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating &amp; Air
'Condllloning. 300 Fourth Ave.
Ph. 446-1637.
48-tf

phone s,
pitch
control. ---~-Auxil iary unit, loudness and USED saddle "Big Horn ," very
good condition , $125. Call
high filter con trol , must sell,
alter 6, 446-4225.
moving,
call
Libby

l -3

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4471
165-tf
ST-ANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Heating
214 Third Ave. , 446-3782
187-tf

--------REGISTERED half Arabian
RUSSELL'S
colt. Ph . 388-8155.
VACUUM Cleaner new i972
5-6
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
model. Complete wllh. a II
21 Gallia Ave., 446-4182
cleaning tools. Small paint - - - -- - - - 297-tf
damage in shi pping . Will take SELECTIVE breeding AKC
127 cash or budget plan · puppies Australian Terriers, -~:-------=-Cairn Terriers, Dachshund,
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
available. Phone .446-4312.
AND HEATING
2-6 miniature Schnauzers. 1 male
Dachshund, 2 years old. Also
Roule 1'60 at Evergreen
------Phone 4-46-2135
PAINT DAMAGE - 1972 Zig - retiring son breeders, Kand P
Kennels, 388-8274.
187-tf
Zag Sewing Machines. Still in
l -1
original cartons. No at-

--------

ta chments needed as our
con trols are built-in. Sews NO GIFT SAYS QUITE SO
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
MUCH as a diamond!
Whether it's an engagement,
buttonholes, sew· on buttons,
anniversary, birthday or
monograms, and blind hem
st1tch . Full cash pri ce SJS.'SO
commemorat i ve
service
award,
we
offer
you
or budget pian available.
Phone 446-4312.
prOfessional service and

------1970 12 x 60

2-6

prices thai are right. At
Tawney's Jewelers.

DETROITER

5-2

2-6

fastback, 390 engine 4 speed
trans . Phone 245-5323. Price
1900.

mobil e home, air conditioned. - - - - - - Phone 446-4051 alter 5 o'clock. 1968 FORD Falrlane 500,

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sell anything for
anybody. Bring your
ilems to Knotts Community Auction Barn.
Corner Third &amp; Olive.
For appointment call
446•2917. Sale every
Soturday evening at 7.

'

.

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furnish Water - Sewage . Garbage Collection . Ample
Parking . TV Antenna . Woll-lo-Wall Carpeting .
Draperieo . Ranges • Refrlgorotors • Air Conditioning .
Garboge Dlspouls- Dishwashers- Heat Lamps - Prlvato
Pltloo . Swimming l'o!ll - ClubfloooM,

...

A.UCTiON .
1

SERVICE

''SEll. TH~ AUCTIO"

NAY"
JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

t'fl 446-;$444

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

TARA

1'12

WISEMAN ~cy

1

WISHES YOU A

, &amp;ppy.New Year

And would also like to thank each and every
person in the area for helping us have our
most successful year. We broke all the real
estate records ever set in Gallia County.

Here's Another
Bargain
17 YR . OLD BUT BUILT
BETTER THAN MO ST ON
THE

MARKET

3

CAR PETING, NICE KIT CHEN, FIREPLACE,
FULL BASEMENT AND
G A R A G E ,
t ·l T Y
SCHOOLS . 2- MILES OUT
160.
BED~OOMS.

Beat This Price
If You can
COMPLETELY CAR PETED J BEDROOM
HOME
WITH
UN BELIEVABLE KITCHEN,

FU LL BASEMENT AND GARAGE. FIRST OF·HR'
OF I 16,SOO BUYS IT . •
Want To Live
In Town

1

·New 3 Bedroom
Dream Home
SETT ING ON A GR·ASSY
NOLE IN NEW SUB DIVI SION WITH ALL
CITY UTILITIES . THIS
BEAUTY INCLUDE S 2
BATH S, FAMILY ROOM, 2
CAR GARAG,E, LARGE .
PATIO AND CENTRAL
AIR . EXCELLENT
FINANCIAL
TERMS
AVAILAB LE.

Henkle Ave.
$12,900:00
SMALL 2 BEDROOM '
HOM E IN EXCELLENT
NE IG HBORHOOD AND
IN GOOD CONDITION .
11.500 D&lt;;JWN BUYS IT .

WE HAVE 5 TO CHOOSE

FROM . LOOK AT THIS
ONE AND SEE WHAT
YOU
THINK .
3
BEDROOMS
WITH
CENTRAL

AIR

GARAGE. 116,900.00.

AND

Investment Property
3 Unit Apartment
ONE OF THE BEST LOTS
IN TOWN ON

2nd AVE .

NEEDS SOME REPAIR
BUT WILL REALLY PAY
OFF IN THE LONG RUN .
YOU CA N BUY IT FOR

Sold, Sold, Sold
WE HAVE BROKEN ALL
REAL ESTATE SALES
RECORDS THIS YEAR
BY A HUG E MARGIN'.
YOU GUESSED IT, WE
NEED I. ISTINGS LIKE
NEVER BEFORE . IF
YOU'RE THINKING OF
SELLING CALL US FOR
THE BEST RESULTS
PO SS IBLE

" 520,000.00.

3 Very Nice
4 Bedrooms
YOU ' LL
ONE

REALLY

OF

THESE.

GALLI A CO .' S LARGEST
LIKE
Jl/2

BATH . LOVELY KIT CHEN. DINING ROOM ,
GARAGE AND CENTRAL
AIR . GOOD LOCATION . 1
IN 'IOWN, 2 OUT OF
TOWN ,

REAL ESTATE
SALES AGENCY
OFF ICE 446-3643
EVENINGS CALL

E. M . "IKE" WISEMAN
446·3796

E. N. WISEMAN 446-4500

BATHS

TOWNHOUSE ·
APARTMENTS

For Information Call Shirley Adkins-~67-7250

WIN AT BRIDGE

Return Opener? Not Always
NOK111

REALTY .

·8

West's queen of diamonds
lead guaranteed th~ jack and
showed t ~ r e e more . This
made 23, and since South had .
·A~B
sho'fn
at least 16 by his open- .
WEST
EAST
'ing
no-trump,
the most West •l
.532
.K84
~ CRHid. , ho~l\ W,9JI ~!i. l~1 PI!II1
piimlinore. The dtamifna re~ ~o s,s 3
turn
would set up West's suit
"''63
,i,.'Ks2
at
the end of the hand
but
SOUTH (D)
West
would
still be waiting
.QJ97
lor
someone
to
lead It to him .
¥AK6
1
Then
where
could setting
• AB
tricks develop? In hearts, i1
.Ql094
We's t held the jack.
Both vulnerable'
Could West hold the jack
West North East South
of he arts? Certainly. He
'
1 N.T ,'
might have one point and a .
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
jack counted one point.
OP.,ning lead- • Q
East shifted to a heart and
since South had to lose both
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby black suit finesses, he wound
up in the soup .
One way for a brid~e play(NEWSPAPER ENTUPRISE ASSN .)
er to gain popularity IS to return his partner's lead on
each and every occasion.
Most of the time he will be
popular, with his partner but
The bidding has been:
qmte o ten he also will turn West North
East
South
out to be popular with both
3
•
Dble
opponents.
Pass
4¥
Pass
'
East was careful to put his
You,
South,
hold:
kin~ of diamonds on his partner s queen. South let the .2 ¥AQ9875 .A32 ... KQ7
What do you do now? ·
king hold and it was time
for East to do a little think·
A-After reeovertnr from
in g.
Y4i'Dr surprise, you jusl ~ss.
He could return his part- Your partner needs a lot fof a
ner 's lead and set up the dia- Alim.
mond suit but would this get
TODAY'S QUESTION
him anywhere?
Instead of bldding four hearts,
Dummy showed nine
your par t n e r bids four diacard points. East was
monds. Wha~ do you do now?
ing at 11 ·
.A106
"7 4 2
• 7654

·H9J tc1 91•l

ATTENTION
HOME OWNERS!
It's a long ' way from . ~'FOR
SALE" to "SOLD". We know
the Jhortut rOtJte! So If you
. want someone else to ow~ '
your 'home just give us a ealt.
We get results - and we need
your listing now I

. '1,000

ALL MONACO &amp; POLARA MODELS

.

IS TAKING THE GUESS WORK

vinyl roof, delu xe steel wheels.
dual racing mirrors, radio, W· S· W
tires. 1.4.000 act . ml
one
owner. A real cream

steering , p. brakes, tinted glass.
· lac. air cond .• w-s-w tires, wheel
covers . .very sharp.

2 Dr. hardtop, JIB V-8, standard
shift; 3-speed floor, w-s-w tires,

STICKER PRICE.
Mb'' I ~UESS WO-RK FO·R·.YOU

steel

pa in1.

_, -~

.--....

.'68 VOLKSWAGEN
'70 CHEV. MALIBU

G•lllpolis

•

carpeted, has alum . siding ,
storm drs. and windows, new
roof and city water . Located

JSl V-S engine , auto. trans ., W· S· W
tires, radio, r eal nice in excellent

cond. Has 82.000 miles.

446-3273

$1595

New H-70x1l steel helled .

ceilings,

CHEV •.•.•.• ~ ......................... •1895
'h Ton, long wide bed, custom, chrome bumpers. front &amp;
Western mirrors, deluxe fully Insulated custom

GALLIPOLIS,

0.'

REALTOR
. Real Estate For Sale

Priced 515,000.
·
·
OffiCI 446-1066
.
Evtnlngl-\
Ron ,CIIIIAJ +N-:1636
RusMII Wood 44'·4611

ROOM house with full
basement, natural gas heat,
and hardwood floors, also 2
trailers one 12 x 57, other 10 x
55 on large lot. $29,000. «63409.
307-6

------

STROUT

REALTY
Largest

World'~

THE LEADER SINCE 1900
IN
SERVING
THE
NATION'S BUYERS &amp;
SELLERS.
Ph. 446-0001

CLOSED
· FOR
VACATION

Real Estate For Sale

OHIO RIVER
Realty

'69 CHEV •.•.•••..•.....•.•.••.......•.• •1695
Ton. long wide bed, blue and white paint, radio, Deluxe
";,

'69 .FORD ....... : ...................... '1695

. '67 FORD •..•••••••••••••••.•••.•.•...•.. '1195
"FCIOO, long narrow bed, heavy duty springs, new 700x1l6
ply truck type tires.

'66
GMC ·······························•· •895
Shorl wheel base, narrow bed. custom topper . Less ihan
35;000 act. miles.

owner .

·

452 Second Ave.
446-3434
Osc•r Baird
Doug Wetherhott
BEAUTIFUL RIVER VIEWLarge home ~n 61!1 acres near

Gavln plant with view of six
miles of river. Extra metal
building for garage or shop.
Plenty of watef and low tax
district.
Eyonlnts Call 446·4244
Steven Betz. 446-9583

Extra

paneling ,

an~

awnings on windows. Locaied

on a A A. lot with plenty nice ·
shrubbery . Lotts 42'x 410' and
goes lo the river. Gar. 20'x24'
plus a new metal bldg . Pr ice
$23,000.
NEIGHBORHOOD , RD. Sectional, 24' x 55', si1Jl1e as
new, double lavoratory bath·
, with shower. Lot 85' x Ill' .
$14,500.
RODN-EY -'
1972 Schullz
.89 A. lot. Pri ce $14,900.
CENTENARY - Good 3 or 4
bdrm. Ranch. II has H.W.
floors with carpel in liv. rm .
and hall. Some paneling .
targe kitchen with plenty
cabinets. City water and nal.
gas. A good l)uy at $23,500.
FARMS
95 A. Woods Mill Rd.
92.S A. Pleasant Hill Rd .
40 A. Near Rio Grande.
49 A. King Rd. $16,500.
163 A. Ward Rd .. vacant land.
Financing available.
30 A. Bidwell ; good house.
ANY HR. 446-1998

Chcs tnui 'StrEet. .Jusl r ecen tl y
pililllcd inside and ou t. Ca rpel
in living r oom and three

___ __

KANAUGA, OHIO

f&gt;cdr"norn s.

Wou l d ' make

q• rXl inv cs tn1ent..

.

.

LOT 67' x 11 2' lo&lt;aled at 54
Garfield Avenue. $1 ,000.
NEW LISTING
~ eE DROOM hon1e al 1809

BY OWNER, 3 I!R hOrne. 2
batha. Excellent condition.
close to town, must sell, price
reduced $12.900. '446-4182.
...._
S-lf

SMITH AUTO SALES

Mobile home, 14' x 18', all
eleC. cen . air and located on

Neal Realty

a'

'ilftllNt ID1t ~-u..t ;;;!!;;! IIIMilC
C!J
\!:!} ~~ . . . . .
Iii

Unscramble theoe four Jumble~
one letteJ~&gt; to each square, to

form four ordinary words.

[

tENSICC

j

II

\

.

"

• t '

l

SEI.IA

J

II

I.I I

·-·

PUT DOWN 1"0
COME UP.

lh··--.. . .

DII'EEM~ · .
Now an-anre the circled lett.n .
I 1
. r _
'1 . ot-. rorm
r...
~::!:-:; .::!:·=:::=::::!s.~J:;~~siii~HI~.~ted by the..,... cutooa. _

·1

·

_

_:Prill~-c::tlle=SUI:::::FIIISl:::.::IIISWIII=::::::•~......~I

Evenings

Charles M: Neal 446-1546
J. Michael Neal ·446-li03

_

. ........
&amp;I'"'"'
'""Cio&lt;''" ''"'..

I OEI'I,E

Office Phone 446-169t

'12 acre on Rt. 588. Ph. 7:U-38BJ
or 446-4467.
- - - - - - - - 4-3

'.

NEAR K.C. H. Sc. - Beautiful
Colonial , 8 big rrns ., 3 baths,
all carpeted, · full finished
base .. $15 per mo .. · Nat. gas
heat. Located on a 3 A. lol.

nice, 5 rooms on first floor,
with ·rec . rm . and c:ooking
facilities in base . This house
has all new carpet , tile

'70 CHEV ········· :····.··· ·············· •2295

wheel covers. Sharp.

$14,000.

GARFIELD AVE . -

TRUCKS

.112

pear,

cherry and apple trees. Only

and storage bldg. Asking ·
$40,1100.

steering, fac . air cond. , Deluxe
.luggage rack, radio, w-s-w tires .

WOOD MOTOR SALES

has berries, grapes.

Also has a metal barn 30'x60'

V-8 auto. trans .. p. . brakes, p.

'1

When you ' re shopping for a hardtop, the object
is to be a sport ... not tlie last of the big spenders.
So take a loo k al the new Datsun 610 2-DoorHardtop. If 's a luxury car with a Datsun price that includes a lot of no-cost extras:
• 1800 cc overhead ca m engine
• Power-ass ist brakes- discs in Irani
• Inde pendent rear suspension
• Sports interior
• Rear window defroste r
• Sports console
• Power-flow ventilation
• And lots more .. . all standard equipment!
Test drive the new Datsun 610 2-Door Hardtop
at yo ur nearby Datsun dealer's and discover why
we call it a Datsun Original. Drive a Da1sun ...
Ihe n decide.

on 1.25 A. good garden land ;

Ranchero, 6 tyl. engine, p. steering, radio, w-s-w tires,
nice.

windows, one· car · garage.

luxuty.
•
IJI1Ce·:·

VINTON - 7 rms . and bath,

'69 MERCURY COUGAR

'1895
EASTERN AYE.

FIVE room doll house completely remodeled, beam
ceiling •.- carpeted, full
basement, storm doors and

kitchen. H.W. floors, walnut
trim , full base. and dry . Gar.
20'x20' (block), v, A. lot with
plenty shrubbery. This house
has quality hard to find in
today's construction . Only
$27,500.

constructed and located on a
large lot . Price reduced.

Custom Deluxe Pickup. long wide hed with Deluxe custom
topper. 27,000 miles.

NEW ranch slyle house on
'Route 35. 1'!• baths, carpeting
wlfh garage. Lol size 70Xt70.

llv. rm . 13' x 28' with F.P.,
formal dirl . rm., modern

with elec. dr . This house ha s

speed, bucket seats, W-s-w tires,
real sharp!

brakes, ~adlo, lac. air cond .• platinum silver
finish, red interior, new w-~-w tires! Extra
Clean.

6

'"

cen. air , is only 4 yrs. old, well

2 Dr. hardtop. 350 V-8 engine, 4

4 Dr. Sedi!n, auto . trans., p. steering, p.

WOOD

Datsun610.

Realty, 32 State St
Tel. ~.46:1998

disposal. Large liv. rm. with

'69 PONTIAC CATALINA

'

MASSIE

wide closets, all factory
kitchen with dishwasher and

'71 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN

RUSSEll :

..

carpet, large rec. rm. with
carpet and bar, 2 car gar.

t639 E.sterft Ave.

' Jay Sheppard 446-0001 '
Denver K. HighleY 446-0002
.
.

I

SPRING VALLEY - Bi-Level,
3 large bdrms. with deep and

2 Dr .• radio, excellent condition .

.Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth

THURSDAY, JANUARY 18th
STARTING AT 10:30 A.M •.

·Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp., air cond. vinyl top, one owner: .Extra
nice.

to

NEAR CLAY SC. - 4 Bdrms.;

$995

radio, excellent cond .

STICKER PRICE $5,239.25
FACTORY INVOICE PRICE OR OUR
COST $4,080.53.-

FOR LEASE. New ' ux70 3
bedroom Mobile Home.

Three

Real Estate For Sale

$2095

2 Dr . hardtop , 289 V-8 engine,
standard sh ift , steel wheels.

1973 CHRYSLER 4 DR. H.T.

LARGE RANCH HOME . 4
bedrooms. Lois of closets,
large living room, country
· kitchen, cozy family rD!&gt;m
with llreplace. Garage. Extra
land available.

·1970 BUICK .

$1795

AMG~-

EXAMPLE:

NEAR NEW 4 bedrooln home,
bath and half. Patrlo. Large lot. Price reduced.

wheels , orange

Sharp.

AT THE COST PRICE AND
MAKE US·AN OFFER.

39 ACRES, 3 bedrD!&gt;m story and
hall home, garage, barn.
Fenced. $15,000.

9 ACRES 2 rnlles from Rio
Grande. $3,500.

•3295

UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY

$2495

'72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER

tHE CUSTOMER. JUST LOOK
•

31;, ACRES. Rural Water .
· Beautiful setting. Nice home
or trailer slle. Asking $5,1100.
Make offer.

.

'70 FORD·TORINO

WILL BE ON THE WINDOW
NEXT TO THE RETAIL

LOTS AND ACREAGE for
residential or commercial on
Rt. 35 and Mitchell Road near
Hospital .
·
ADDISON TOWNSHIP
25 ACRES land. Some fenced .
Outbuilding. Make offer. ·

One ·

"

2 Dr . hardtop, V-8 auto. , p.

10-1 ACRE Beef or Dairy Farm:
Large very good barn. Pond.
Land level to rolling. Tobacco
base. Located on state high·
way. Forty some head of
cattle
and
machinery
available. Otmer will help
llnance. -

.

Skylark 4 dr .• air co~&lt; owner. like new.
. ..

'1495

2 Dr. hardtoo.
engine; · p. bralkes.

OUT OF BUYING A NEW CAR.
OUR -INVOICE COST PRICE

HEIAPOIJA'RT·ERS !of..-- Gal)ll-'
County Real Es'tate. 'Listing's
j
needed.

'

1972 BUICK:

2 Dr. hdtp., 307 engine. auto .•
P.M., low miles.
choose from .

~

•3695 ~

1968 CHEVELLE

re
and the price of
automobiles.
know that we have a better deal for
you and we would like · the opportunity to demonstrate this.

. '·

Electra 4dr. hardtop, air cond .,
24,500 miles, local do·ctor's
trade. Like new cond. ·;,.·

1972 PONTIAC

.

'

1971 BUICK

•2995

RANCtiO RE~L tO~$,'

NICE neighborhood close to
schools 6 rooms with part
basement, air conditioning,
' carpeting, I car ' garage In
- baseme111. Vacant, ready lor
Immediate occupancy.

' 419-5 .

Ventura II. air con d .• red. black
vinyl top. Sprint package.
12,000 miles. Sharp.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER·
PLYMOUTH

..•

t .... '

.,

•3695

50 STATE ST.

.

~.

'" ...
"'·,,..,
·t ..

Catilina 2 dr. harp. Brougham,
gold with dark brown vinyl top.
air cond .• low miles.

CARROLL -NORRIS DODGE

•

frame ·cottage, 1 floor plan,
air-conditioning,
carpellng
also 2 outbuildings. Use of
alley In back.

'

1972 PONTIAC

-

.. '

VALUE PACKED!
Beautifully cared for~ 4 BR
home, stone fireplace In LR.
all electric kltchen 0 and DR,
large family room, 1'17 bath,
carport and extra large
workshop, all copper plumbing, a well built home.
RIVERVIEW FARM
All electric brick home located
on Rt. 7, 6 rooms and bath,
stone fireplace In family
room, carpel throughout, a
luxury kitchen, petlo, brick
garage, large rolling lawn,
fruit trotS. tobacco base, 96
acres level to hill land and
woods.
C-0-M-F-0-R-T
Here -Is a charming home, easy
to ~;~re for , newtr, palnled
Ins ide. Large pane ed LR, 3
BR. large ealln kitchen. low
upkeep and modestly taxed,
deep lot with garoge and work
shop, all for only $13,1100.

110 THIRD Avenue. 6 room

Gran Prix, red, white '(1'1\yl top,
white bucket seats. ~.2® mUes .

'3795

SAVE UP TO • • •
~

Dadge.

the large picture window.
C.thedral ceiling In LR and
large eat-In kitchen. J large
BRand plenty closets. Double
carpprt and slorage rooms.
Near town. Price 527,000.
RETIREMENT SPECIAL
16 Acres, all ·etectrk home.
beautiful LR with fireplace,
eat In kitchen with range and
ref.. v, basement, well
stocked
pond.
30'x60'
building . Quick possession.
"T·BONE" VALUE~
HAMBURGER PRICE!
On!&gt;lhlrd acre lot w_ell landscaped. 7 rooms, 3 BR, 2
baths. family room, all
electric kitchen In color,
carport,
laundry
and
workshop.
SURPRISE-The owner - Buy his horne
while he Is on vacation. A
beautiful 4 BR two &amp;lory home
on yery large lot. Plenty room
for the children to play.
Banquet size electric kitchen,
formal dining room or •TV
room, large laundry room,
stone entrance, garage and a
quick possession and good

.,

..' ,

Blazer, wheel drive, 4 speed,
350 eng., 13.000 miles. Never
been. off hard road.

PO LARA 2- 000R HARDTOP

and a panaramfc view from

44&amp;-1066'

1972 PONTIAc
• ''I '

PUBLIC.SALE
Location:. From Gallipolis take Route 35 to
Rodney, turn right on Rodney-Bidwell road.
Watch for sale sians , Reason for seeling - .
-death of husband.
·
1963 Chev. I ton stake truck . 1970 Chev .
Fleets ide Pickup truck, Oliver corn ' planter,
weed sprayer. hay elev&lt;!tor, International
tractpr model M. mowing machine, 2 electric
welders, 2 rubber tire farm wagons. brush · _
hog, windrow rake, fertilizer spreader, McCormick manure spreader, 2 John Deere
balers, rototiller, Minneapolis Moline with
cultivators, . turning plow, two plows, New
Deal corn picker, No. 10 (686), McCurdy grain
wagon, Allis-Chalmers turning plows no. 3,
mowing machine, International tractor, AllisChalmers tractor WD, Allis-Chalmers W045,
14 ft. trailer wagon, Ford tractor m9_del BN,
hay baler; Massey- Ferguson, SN13:i'7-001581,
International mower 7ft. cut, ·New Holland 24
ft. bale carrier, International rake ·pull type,
grade blade 3ft. hitch, Ford scoop 3 pt. hltclj..:
Farmall tractor, model H, cultlpacker double,
disc harrow 3 pt hitch, Massey· FergusoiJ .
brusll hog, hay grass seeder, lots of . new
lumber, corn elevator, blacksmith forge,
miscellaneous lot of tools and . other equipment .
Not responsible'tor any •ccldents
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED
Ethel K. PICKENS, OWNER .
A, French,

...

."• :

19724 CHEVROLET

MONAC0.2-DOOR HARDTOP

OREAMHDME
You should see 'this beautiful
redwood -rancher now. It
won't last long. Large plush ·
carpeted LR with fireplace,

finance.

JANUARY CLEAJWtCE,
GOING QN NOWf
.AU CARS HAVE TO GO! .

DOC ..
SMITH
.SAYS

25 Locust st.
Howard Brannon, Broltor
Off. 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve. 446-1226or446-2674

271 -lf

------

or terms available. Trade-I ns

accepted. Phone 446-4312.

The

210-lf

SADDLE. bridle, blanket and ~-------breast collar. Ph. 446-9700.
ELECT R 0 LUX Va c u urn
3-3 Cleaner complele with at - GILLENWATER'S septic tank

SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1973

'

heat. carpet throughout,
garbage
disposal ,
new
cabinets in kitchen , has
dining room and firep lace, 11/2

992-3904 _-

SUNDAY
CROSSWORD
P
UZZLE
I

C•llfoml1

Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap·
proved dealer, 58 Court St .,

-----~---

t

ACROSS
1-Unaer
6-The IWHhop

from $69 .95 . French Ci+y

selection in stock - twin, full ,

original e,;cept new bellows.

--..

stock . Free delivery. Servi~e
guaranteed. Models priced

FRAMUS 6 string bass guitar
Ph . 446-9255.
308-11
with case, and 80 walls Fury
bass amplifier. Call 319-2189
after 5.
1964 CHEVRO LET Impa la, 2
4-3 door hardtop, very clean.
NEW: Serta and Bernco matgood condit ion. 446·9242.
tress and box springs. Large
3_3

used units . Camp Conley
276-lf
Slarcrall Sales, Route 62 N. of
Pl. Pleasant behlng Red - - - - - - - - - Carpet Inn . Ph . 675-5384. .
289-If ANTIQUE pump organ. ali

"
1W.
I

_mj

3h" . TAPPAN gas range, 1961 COR VAl R. Phone 4-46-3762.
4-11
Coppertone $1'80, Maytag

with converter, same hig h
discount on fold downs, some

I'

1966
1968
1968

PHONE 384-64i1

STARCRAFT
Christmas Sale
24' 7" WS $4,892 lor $3,892
22' 7" WS $4,475 lor $3.519
20' 7" WS $3,954 lor $3.165
18' 7" WS $3,499 for $2.199
SELF-CONTAINED sleeps 6,

''

Exterminal Term ite Service.

1965 RAMBLER station wagon.
Phone 446 -2909.
3-3

.

Grande. Phone 245-llll.

kind of stopped-up drain, call
675-5195, 24 h.OtJr Serv.
307-tf

1969 CHEVY. 60 Series dump

1970 1;, ton Chevrolet Pickup
1969 lh ton Chevrolet Pickup

New 11 ft . camper

Offered

remodeling and paneling.
interior decoro~~ting . 446-9-487.

truck, new ,ires, and brakes,

1969 3 ton GMC
1968 v, T. GMC PU
1968 1;, T. GMC PU

5-1

B &amp; S CARPENT~R work.

Truck Headquarters

1966 GMC '12 ton PU
1970 Chevrolet •;, ton PU
1969 GMC '12 ton PU
1967 FORD •;, ton PU
1968 Ford '12 ton PU
1966 GMC 1;, 'ton PU
•
1970 GMC •;, ton PU
1967 Chevrolet •;, ton PU
1966 -1;, Ton GMC Pickup ·
1969 Olds 88
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1971 '3 lon Chevrolet Truck

ap -

-----:---~

154-11

Attention Farmers
WINTER fertilizer prices now
in effed 16-16-16 or 6-24-24,
$74 .50 per ton thru Jan . 13,
weekly price adjustments.
Kenneth Higley, 245-52 18.

HINCHCLIFF PRODUCTS CO.·

199-tf

$30,000 shown by
pointment. 4-46-0208.

IF YOU are bu11ding a new

•

-

roQms, 2 baths, gas hot air
furnace.
Present
~rrangement 2 ·apartments.
Easily converted to ·one
family \ dwelling . Asking

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t/J~ .

·Real Estate For Sale

·SALE ' by owner. 2 story
building FOR
brick hou·se at 4S2 First Ave . 7

123-tf

SAW MILL.LOGS~ AND
STANDING TIMBER

Srn.ith,
Ol1vettL

of

materials, block, brick, sewer
·pipes, windows, lintels, eoc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande·.
0 . Phone 24S-5121 after l .

4-6

••

Underwood ,

. AL'L TYPES

Real Estate For Sale

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Real _Estate For Sale ·

For Sale

For Sal.e
1972 DATSUN 240 Z air, rnagsn

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'11- The Sunda)lTbnes-1!iDunei,Sullclay, Jan;-7, 1973

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lumlde-. SMOKY CHAI. DIPICT LIGACT

l'~•l•rd•y'11

~n•••rz Tltr.y-d ~ f'~f'f"f~d

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to IIIKift!' .,._-CHICU

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••• ?Jtt~~=..l.c::;!::llo
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Young couple on
Haiti assignment
. TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
Bernard L. · Bennett, Tuppers
Plains, has been notified !hat
her gra ndson, and his family,
· Daniel and Deborah Collins,
and 3 month-old son, James
Lewis Collins, have le.ft the
United States and are now
residing in Jacmel, Haiti. They
are affiliated with the
Evange lica l . Bible. Mission
stationed there.
Daniel is to help enlarge the
Mission Clinic and to assist
Rev. .Charles Bustin, while
Deborah hopes to be able to
help in the clinic and teach
small children. They are only
20 years olil, and are on a
special missionary training
' program designed to have
them learn the language first·
hand : ·
They were · in the ·Tuppers

Plaili's area in November at
two churches explaining the
life of the natives around
Jacmel ; descri bini} the
superstitions, sacrifices, lack
of housinJl, medical knowledge,
or even the simplest living
conditions as we know them
here in the United States.
Daniel is the only son of Gene
L. Collins and his wife, the
form er Nola Jean Blake,
daughter of Elmer and Elvie
(Founds ) Blake. Both Gene
and Nola Jean were raised in
. the Tuppers Plains • Joppa
area and have many relatives
here. The elder Collins have
lived in Decatur, Ind., many
years, but presently are in
Donna, Texas where Gene · is
constructing a church. He and
Nola are also the parents of
three daughters, Brenda,
Joyce, and Judy.
North
Bethel
United
Methodist Church in the
Northea~t Cluster is helping
sponsor
th'e
young

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Protesting rate proposal

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ADDITION MADE - This 40 by 60 foot strucbural steel
addition has been constructed at the Royal Crown Co.
MEMORIAL STAMP
WASHINGToN (UP!) - A
memorial postage stamp
honoring former President
'

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Harry S Truman will be issued
May 8, ihe 89th ariniversary of
Truman's birth. 'Post{riaster Thursday the stamp probably
General E. T. Klassen said wiU be sold first in Iii-

depehdebce, Mo., Truman's
hometown.
•

Elberfelds .January Sale
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET .

r--;.;;;;~~~-~-;;;,ARY SALE PRICES
1
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ROOM SIZE, RUGS

• HOT WATER HEATERS in 20, 30, 40
and 50 gal. capacity . Gas or electric.

• Ll NOLEUM in 9 and 12 foot widths

• Rubber Back Carpeting with extra
thick backing.

e UTILITY WARDROBES
CHINA CABINETS :. BASE CABINETS

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...,.._,.,_.._._

e~s ... in

_______,.,

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At
Special
Sale
Prices I

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(1) ELECTRIC (1) GAS or FUEL
60'
X

Choice of
two automatic cycles
or timed drying!

PLUS:
• Custo m Dry control shut s dryer
off at pre-selected dryness

• 3 temp selecllons

control
• Fast drying system wllh large
• TUMBLE-PRESS'

drum lor minimum-wrinkle drying
• Extra-large lint screen helps

catch that fuzzy slulf

12'

They'd push chicks in the creek

* 2 BEDROOM

*UTILITY
FRONT DINING ROOM ·- KITCHEN ROOM - LARGE LIVING ROOM MASTER BEDROOM in Rear .- DINETTE AREA
- CARPETED THROUGHOUT - DELUXE
FEA lURES - ·3 OUTSIDE DOORS
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y ·1,:·F,i - -~-~· ~; :~);
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.UNIQUE FLOOR .PLAN-LAST
TWO AVAILABLE. SAVEl
SEE IT TODAY AT JOHNSON'S
Delivery i5 Set-up Free
HRS: Mon. lhru Friday 9·8
Sat. 9-5
Closed on Sunday

* Taliru• &amp; Ter., TraUer• *

Middleport, Ohio
Dec. 30,1972
Dear Editor:
J~ st writing to let you know I am absolutely disgusted with ·
people who drop their unwanted pets for some one else to take
ca re of.
I have had a number of kittens dropped at my house. They
are so lonely, hungry and lovable. It makes a lover of animals
right downsick.
My neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Snowden and family have
also had this happen to them.
.
I only have one large tiger tomcat name of Zipper. These
poor little kitlens also are being fed by Mr. and Mrs. James Euler
and M'rs. Vivian Waddell, also neighbors.
I have also had a large possum visit·my kitchen porch for a
handout !
·
Let's all ge\ behind Mrs. Dorothy Fisher and help with a
donation for a shelter for these pets.
Animal.Lover, Mrs. Amanda Murray.
P. S. - Anyone who would be so cruel, I am satisfied, would
push little chickens in the creek.

- _____

----1i-::. .....

Ano!her Big Shipment ·

Food needed on Saturday
Dear Sir :
Would some one please find out why the Food Slamp Office at
Gallipolis is not open on Saturdays?
-A lot ·or people who get Food Stamps get paid on Friday
· evenings and can't make it ·there at the office by 3 p.m. This
makes·a family have to wait until Monday before they can get
!heir stamps. It sure would help a lot if ,Ye could get them on
Saturday. So we wou!Bn'l
,, have that 2-day wait.
·
Name Withheld on request.

MASSU.WN,
OHIO- STREET DEPARTMENT
workers,
.
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(Continued on Page 8)

MAGIC CHEF RANGES
CHOOSE GAS OR ELECTRIC AT
JANUARY SALE PRICES!

' 7

Wltti.'these important featur6s:
Lo-Temp oven control'
Removable oven door and door seals

Color coded controls
Lighted background and appliance outlets
High performance unl·burner
Many models with continuous clear oven

Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street is open Everyday from
9:30a.m. to S p.m. and on Friday and Satur~y . from 9:30a.m. to 9
p.m. Use our own sensible credit service to budget your payments.
.

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PLENTY OF .FREE ·PARKING AT &lt;ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

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en tine

MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

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uns _Ips
NEW ORlEANS (UP!) Two helicopter gunships and
police firing annor'jliercing
shells blasted away today at
two black snipeli'B who fought
back from atop a downtolJ!ll'
hotel wbere they kllled at least
six persons during 24 hours of

and arson.
.Afl marksmen in the Marine
helicop\fr and 600 officers
stationed on the ground and in
nearby skyscrapers fired at the
cubicles, one of the snipers
apparently crawled acrbss the
roof under a cover of darkness
and IIIFPld up . at thr. b!llck'
house on the other side. The
sniper· who remained in the
first fortress fired at officers
with a high powered rifle.
Officers ' perched. 50 yarda
from the blockhouses in the
neighboring Raul! Center,
where five persons died in a
fire less than two months ago,
fired annor piercing bullets
into the snipers • fortresses.

The most delicate of the five
infants, Thomas Allen, appeared to be gaining ground.
against a respiratory infection,
~ hospital spokesman said
Sunday.
.
·
Dr. Thomas Gardner, the
quints' neo-natal care specialist, said he was considering

HONOLULU (UP!) - A by this insane war," ·he said. He helped plan the raid and
highly-decorated Green Beret
.
was "very disgruntled" when
paratrooper in Vietnam, who · Pounder, 28, of Peoria, Ill., was U.S. hellcop~rs landed to find
• was once a member of · not always anti war. He was a' no prisoners.
l')'esident John. F. Kennedy's member of President Ken·
.
security detail, has become a nedy's White House securit~ ,;~y .Ptnindersaldhewas "lOOper ,
conscientious objector because detail attached to the ~ret,' ~cent · ill )~'(llr~' .,of America's
of "this Insane war." He said Service when Kennedy) is'it(d?:'·.Yietnaiil 1role when he shipped
Sunday he will refuse to wear Ireland . Pounder was to Southeast As.ia in 1964 but "I
his uniloim after Jan: 15.
. responsible for security of the saw first hsnd the brutality and
Sg\! J.C. Ernest R. Pounder president's hellicopter, its fuel insanity or the war," he said.
s¢d he has applied for con- and airports. The six-foot, "I then began to question, my
scienUous objector status and · short-haired 'soldier, a veteran' God w)ly, when 1 observed th~
hss returned his 24 medals for with 11 years in the ArmY and . cruel horror or' a fatally
.. gallantry in ~outheast Aaia to three tours of Vietnam, said wounded. human being flopping
. . the Army's adjutant IIIJieral. the "final straw" came during and kicking and spitting his life
"I can no longer candone the the t~nsuccessful Nov. 21, 1970, blood away."
i
horrible injustlcei to ma!lkind raid on the U.S. prisoner of war
Pounder. applied for a dis·
which .are be~ perpetuated camp at Son Tay near Hanoi. charge as a conscientious

••

att e snipers

Marine helicopter gunships
'lew additional sorties over the
hotel before dawn, firing into
the snipers' lairs.
"Apparently they're trying
to make (the snipers) come
out," a policeman said. "It
worked once, so it may work
,!lgainY ·
• ..
Six bodies, including that of
the assistant superintendent of
police, were recovered. The
body of the sniper, shot to
ribbons as one of his comrades
yelled "Power to the people!"
remained on the roof of the
building and officials would not
state flatly he was dead. But
his bndy was pummelled for
five minutes with machine gun

'

lire from the helicopter.
One of the first persons shot
was a fireman who was scaling
a ladder to fight one of the fires
started by the .terrorists. He
was woundect in the ann, the
first of 10 injured by the gunmen.
- "'Jlhisoblack fellow came out
on the balcony about two
stories above· the fire and shot
him, " said Michael Knapp, 37,
of New York City,aguest in the
hotel. "That's all I saw. I
turned and ran like hell. I've
never been so scared in my
life."
Three of those killed by the
snipers on Sunday were policemen. Another was the assistant

manager of the hotel and two
others were ·a Virginia couple
vacationing in the city, famed
for its Mardi Gras and Sugar
Bowl lootball game. All were
white.
Since 1970 there have at least
five s~Jlllrate racial incidents
lnvi&gt;\vlng blacks and pollee in
which six persons died, three of
them policemen. In the latest
incident New Year's Eve, a
sniper fired a high powered
rifle into the police depart.
ment's central lockup parking
lot, killing a 19-year-old police
cadet, a Negro, and wounding
another policeman.
"I am convinced that there is
an underground national

suicidal group bent on creating
·terror In America," William V.
Guste, Louisiana attorney·
general said. ' ~eir purpose is
to cause the people to be
dissatisfied, to bring race
against race, black against
white, yo,una against old .:..W
cause tnterilal natlbnaldlaos."
During the night, one of the
· snipers crawled across gravel
on the roof under cover of
darkness and popped up in one
of the concrete structures at
the end of the block-long hotel.
Another sniper was in a cubicle
at the other end. Their dead
companion, his rifle beside the
spot where he fell , lay
(Continued on Page 8)

:=~~:~:::~:~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::;:;::::::~: ;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::i:i:i:i:i:?.;;~ ;;;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;

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::::

Deadly violence too USJ.UJl
tJ

;:;:
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - Deadly violence between
::;~ police and blacks is both dreaded and unexpected, but It
docs occur with alarming frequency In Louisiana. The
te~or killings of six persons, tliree of them police, by
::; swpers from atop a downtown New Orleans bote! Sunday
;:( was the state's latest outbreak of violence with racial
~
~:;: overtones.
1~l
On New Year's Eve, a sniper fired rounds from a high
:::: powered rille Into the New Orleans Police Department's
'lj Central Lockup parking lot, killing a 19-year-old police
::::: cadet, a Negro, and wounding another policeman.
:!:l
Miuntes later, at a warehoose several blocks from
~::: Central Lockup, another New Orleans policeman was shot
:!:!: in the back as he attempted to get his K-9 dog out of his
r~ cruiser to investigate a br~ak-ln report. Police said the two
::; Incidents were related.
·.
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Il Clark succeeds
~:·:

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p
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K
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f.
resi ent arr
~:l

~::
the use of human milk to
~;!
supplement their formula.
~
~::
llowever, the hospital was
R~bert Clark' was elec~d
deluged with phone calls from
~
president,
Warden Ours v1ce
women offering to donate their
:_j:.l.
president
and
Martha·
milk for the infants, and the
;~
Chamber~,
clerk,
m
the
annual
hospital'· stressed that Dr .
:;:; orgamzallo~al meetmg today
Gardner had not yet decided to
§l of the Me1gs County Comuse human milk and asked
:;:; mission.
women to refrain from calling
~j~
Charles R. K~rr. Sr., the
until a decision was made.
:::&lt; th1rd comm1ss1oner, served as
The quints' mother, Lynn, 26,
:;:; president the past five and half
who has not seen her oobies ::.::::::::;.;.::::::;.;.:;:.:·:·:~:·:::~"!.'!8:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::i:i:::::::::::::::::::
year.s.
since their birth, was expected
Other appointments made
to be released Tuesday from
were : Gary Dill, dog warden ;
Highland Park Hospital.
Jim
Corriell and Carl Nelson,
Her husband, a 3G-year-old
co urthouse
custodians ;
stockbroker, has been ITJal&lt;ing
Everett • Holmes, apiary in·
Sheriff Robert C. liar· no damage to her car.
regular trips to both Highland
At
10:02
p.m.
a
car
owned
by
spector,
and the following to
Park and Evanston hospitals. tenbach's Dept. investigated
't .
I
the
Commun
I Y 1mprovemen
ABide from doctors and nurses, two accidents Saturday night, Gary Lee Bauman, Reedsville ,
he has been the only visitor one fatal to a deer, the other a Rt. 1 parked in front of his corp., and the subdivisions
residence was struck by an . th~y represent, Bernard Fultz,
regularly allowed to see the hit·skip.
At 8:59 p. m., in Bedford unidentified car. There was Middleport ; Howard Frank,
Infants, who are in a special
nursery hidden behind white 'rwp. on US 33, three·tenths of a damage to the front end of Racme; Eleanor Robson,
mile south of Burlingham a doe Bauman's vehicle. Officers are Syracuse; Elber\ Robinson,
curtains.
Besides Thomas, the other deer died when it ran into the ga thering evidence leading to Pomeroy• and Ve~non Weber'
Infants were Elizabeth, Dou- path of a car driven by Rhonda the identity of the car's driver Rutland, and president of the
glas, . Edward, Leslie 1and G. Gibson, Athens. There was who did not stop.
--"'- - - - - - - Vickie.
:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::m:::::::::~&lt;:::::::::::::;:::::::::::.
" BOARD TO MEET
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
RACINE - The Southern
Wednesday throll'gh
Local School District Board of
Friday, highs In · the 30s.
Heavy damage was reported Education will meet at 8:30 p.
Lows five to 10 Wednesday, to a car driven by Dorothy m. Wednesday at the hig h
objector In September of 1972 moderating to the teens and Riley, Pomeroy, wh en it school here.
and said the Army has been low 20s Thursday and cras hed into a wall on
"harassing" him for it, failing Friday . Chance of snow Pomeroy's West Main St .
to even look at it for about two Thursday and Friday.
Saturday night.
.DRIVE PLANNED
months. The discharge ap- ::~~=~:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::
Police said Mrs. Riley told
The Meigs County Jaycees
plication, extensively
them she swerved right to announced today their annual
documented 'a!ld approved by
VEHICLE REPORT
avoid hitting a motorcycle or membership drive wm· be
his commander, Is under study
Larry E. Spencer, clerk of mini·bike which was in the launched Wednesday at the
by Washington officials. ..
the court of common pleas; road. Mrs. Riley was not in· Meigs Inn banquet room at7:30
Pounder said be · will no said today Meigs Countians jured; however, she was cited p.m. All men between the ages
longer wear his uniform lifter purchased 97 new vehl~les and to mayor's court to answer to a of 18 and 35 are in,vited. David
Jan.15, when "!will spend the 117 , used vehicles during charge of driving while in· . Grindstaff and Sherman
whole day iq church." .
December, 1972. New vehicks tuxicated .
Hopkins will give a brief
· Pounder said "They can sent - purchased were .trucks, 16;
outline ·or Jaycee Interior and
LoCAL TEMPS
a man to Vietnam fast enough. motorcycles 9, trailers .10, and
exterior projects and other
The temperature in· down- . activities . Anyone wishing
They can cut through the red cars 62. Used vehicle~ pur·
·tape and approve my dischar- chased were trucks · 14, town Pomeroy at 11 a. in. more . Information on the
ge. To continue would - be motorcycles 3, trailers 2, and !Yionday was 24 degrees, under Jaycees should call 992-W86 or
cloudy skies .•
hypocrisy." .
cars 98.
992-5480.

Deer 'killed in 33

.

Green Beret·hero now objector

I

Store located on East Main St. on property fonnerly owned
by Franklin Rizer are rising. Ground was broke last fall . .

~

• MoscOW - THE SOVIETS TODAY hurled an unmanned
Luna 21 rocket into space enroute .to the. moon, the Tass news
agency said. The first moon probe launched by the Soviets in 11
months streaked into earth orbit at 9:55 a.m. (1:55 a.m. EST),
· Tass said.

- - ,_ _::...--·:----.

... .

POMEROY·MIDDLEP.ORT, OHIO

past l ··hurdle

State aid to Ke, or, uh ...
• Custom Dry control shuts dryer
off at pre-selected,dryness.
• 5-setting temp selector
• TUMBLE PRESS® control helps
restore creases to clean Permanent
Press fabrics that are wrinkled .
• End-of-cyc le reminder buzzer
• 2 automatic cycles plus
timed dryin g
• Extra-large lint screen

VOL XXV NO. 185

Newe~t . quints

r

S-A-V-E on EITHER
OF THESE 2·MODELS

·~ · .

Devoted To The Interest! OJ The Meigs-Mruon Area

ISRAEL'S FRONTIER WITII SYRIA ERUPTED into a full.
scale tank, artillery and air battle today, with the military
command reporting fiv~ Syrian 'MIGs shot down ·against no
losses-Dfnlsraeli planes. UPI correspondent Thomas Cheatham
quoted the military command in Tel Aviv as saying the batUe
opened with Israeli planes attacking two Arab guerrilla CjUIIIJS,
lour army-poelllons and two radar statiOn'S along the froftt line bloocb ~ .lbal. ~ble&lt;!
ah_!t In sou.Uiern Syria in response to recent Attacks on Israeli urban gueri'lllil warfare.
Two snipers where holed up
poSitions from there.
·
Tbe ~onunand told Cheatham the Syrian jets were downed atop the 18·story lloward
while challenging the Israeli raiders but that aflerward.Syrian Johnson Hotel. The bullet
opened up against the Israeli-held Colan Heights. A- military riddled body of a third sniper
spokesman in Damascus said Syrian planes shot down two of the lay between their concrete
intruding Israeli aircraft while Syrian artillery scored direct hils blockhouse fortresses.
The gunmen retreated Sun:
on a number of Israeli military positions along the cease.fire line
between the two countries. He said three Syrian warplane~ were day lrito one ol the cubicles
above the top floor stairwell
also shot down in the air battles.
after a 13-hour frenzy or killing
WASHINGTON .... U: S. DISTRICT COURT used a list of
1,000 prospective jurors today to start selection of a panel to try
the "Watergate Seven" - . the men accused of bugging ·
the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee last
June. Two former White House aides and the-former chief of
security for President Nixon's re-election committee are among
the defendants in the case, which will be tried before U. S.
District Judge John J. Sirica.
They are charged with conspiracy, second degree burglary,
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
illegal eavesdropping and possession of lllegal wire tapping
quintuplets born to a Suburban
devices. Five of the men were arr~ted in the Democratic offices
Northbrook housewife have
in the Watergate complex in Washington early in the morning of
passed the critical three-([ay
June 17, 1972, and the incident led to charges that widesmad period for premature infants
political espionage had been conducted against the Democrats.
and the doctors say they are
optimistic about their chances
HELENA, ARK. - TilE MISSISSIPPI RIVER, inflated to. for survival.
an 86-foot depth, 20 feet above normal, by winter rain, today
A hospital spokesman an·
pounded against a sinking oil barge which had lodged against
noWlced Sunday that James
the pier of a major river bridge. About 75 pet. of the b\lfge's Biler, father of the quints,
800,000 gallon load of diesel fuel had leaked into t.lje river, and the would hold a new conference
rest was expected to seep out before salvllge crews could ~ull the today at Evanston Hospital.
vessel to safety.
The two boys and three girls
Hagan Thompson of the federal Environmental Protection 1were born one month prema·
Agency said the large volume of water was dissipating the fuel, turely Friday to Mr. and Mrs.
lessening the pollution danger, but officials were concerned Jlller at Highland Parlt Hosabuut the pressure on the bridge. The barge was one of four pital, but were taken to
which broke from their two lines Friday and careened down- Evanston llospital shortly
stream. Rlvermen tied the other three barges Friday, and towed after because it had better
.them upstream Sunday to be unloaded and repaired.
facilities available.

,.

"..:a_:•

Briefsl·

.
BY United Press International
COLUMBUS -STATE SEN. RONALD MOTrL, D·Parma,
said he would introduce a biU to correct "the major inequity " In
the state income tax when the legislature r&lt;:Convenes Tuesday.
Mottl's bill would give working married -couples the option of
filing joint or separate state income tax returns.
Mottl said a section of state law requiring couples to file a
joint return with the state if they filed a joint federal income tax
return Is unfair because it forces many famiUes to pay higher
state tateS than if they filed sepsra te returns.

Washers
and•
Dryers

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• WEST BEND &amp; ARVIN HUMIDI·
FIE RS to put more moisture in the air
in your home.

Jan . 2, 1973

'

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PROGRESS GOOD -Despite frequent rainfall and cold
weather, excellent progress is being made at the site of a
major construction job in Pomeroy . Walls of the new Kroger

BASKETBALL ACTION - Jeff Lewis, In white, of the
Wabama Falcons getS a perfect block of the ball that Meigs
guard Rich Bailey would like to put skyward Into the hoop
Saturday night in this action in the Wahama gym. The game
was Won by Meigs, 74-59, its third straight. The Marauders
shot a sizzling 51 pet. from the field. See details on page 3
today. Picture by Sam Nichols Ill.

AT ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

Rebuttal from the 11eighbor

Dear Mr. Editor :
. Yea! Kyger Creek School start yelling!
I see Gallipolis, Hannan Trace, North Gallia, Southwestern
received state aid. You didn't receive any. Oh, I forgot, you are
receiving aid from the Kyger Creek Power Plant and soon from
'
th e Gavin Plant. But you won't when Kyger Creek Electric Plant
closes down.
I'm wondering why the big gripe ; as long as they get aid. If
and when consolidation goes through, will state aid quit? Then
just aid fro;n the Gavin and Kyger Creek plants, so, for all the
schools will they be receiving very much money. People in Kyger
Creek area do pay taxes to support the above schools.
Beller think, Mr . Big.
· Mrs. Vesta Ham, Cheshire, Ohio, 45620.

·.

.

Tho said ·of the talks : "The the Hanoi·Haiptlong complex
decisive moment has arrived." then suspended the raids Dec.
.In i&gt;ast sessions, delegates 30, setting the stage for today's
arriving first have re-emerged , session.
to shake hands with their
Neither Kissinger nor the
counterparts. There was no White House disclosed if he
visible hand.sh8king session was carrying any new
today.
proposals to put before Tho.
The two sides broke off the Nixon was described as neither
22nd roUild of negotiations 27.. optimistic nor pessimistic
days ago after accusing each about prospects for reaching a
other of balking on points settlement and two major
already agreed upon in a poinls appeared to he holding '
tentative October accord up a final accord - the
. announced by Washington and question of whether Vie1nam Is
· Hanoi.
one country or two and how a .'
When those talks stalled, cease.fire should be policed
President Nixon ordered lull· once a peace agreement Is
scale resumption of bombing of
(Continued on Page 8)

building on North Second Ave. in Middleport. The adilltiOn,
which faces Front St., will be used as a warehouse and as a
maintenance headquarters by the botUing company.

._.._._.._.._-- ·------~·------·---·......

Cheshire, Ohio
Dec. 27,1972

..···· ~·

PARIS (UPI) - Chief U. S. peace negotiator Jlenty A. ,
Kissinger and his Hanoi counterpart, Le Due Tho, held their first
round of new secret talks on a Vietnmn peace in nearly a month
today in a suburban villa owned by the French Communist party.
The 23rd round of direCt, pr1v.ate ana so tar unsuccessful
lll)gotiations between the two men began just after II a.m. (5
a.m . EST) and followed promises by l{issinger that the resumed ·
talks would be characterized by ''patience; goodwill and hope."

Middleport, Ohio
Jan . 3,1973

Mr. Editor :
l am writing protesting the telephone raise in the interest of
the aged and pensioners who will be hurt the worst.
The telephone is all the security the aged or widow has. You
feel safer when it is near. How many times have you heard an
elderly person had fallen, but managed to crawl to the phone'
The pension check will not stretch only so far, and it takes
gond management to stretch it a month without going hungry the
las! week.
'
If this raise which would be around $2.40 more is allowed 1
feel the company will lose more in taking out phones and back
bill• than they'll gain .
Meigs telephone service certainly wouldn't r~ te lA anyway,
havmg called the opera lor as much as four or five tinies with no
response, myself.
Thank you. (Name withheld on request. )

,,

,,

Kissinger,Tho talking

~-~D

To the Editor :
I'm writing this letter in hope that the parents of Chester
Kindergarten Classes will read it and be informed,
.. SOme of the children get very tired in all day classes. I spent
an afternoon with them and saw how tired and sleepy some of
them were.
· Here is a list of some things you should know:
I. Some children get on the bu,s at 7:00 and off at 5:00. 1 don't
like-those hours myself. That makes them get up at 6:00 or 6:30.
2. The teachers of the Eastern Local School are for hall-day
classes. They feel it damages a child, for later school years, that
age.
3. It is the only school in the Tri-Cilunty Area having all day
sessions.
4. The Association of Classroom Teachers in Columbus
requires only 2 ~, hrs. daily.
'
5. 1l is a State Law that the kindergarten has to be bused.
If it is not changed this year, I doubt if it will next year. Think
of !he children in years to come.
·
Please seild your letter back to the school board. I urge you
to vote to change this to half day sessions.
.
Thank you for at leas! reading this letter and for all the ·help
we fl!ay get. "
Mrs. Pearl F. Edwards, Rt. I, Lon_g Bottom, Ohio, 45743.

,.

.,

I
I
I
I
I
I

Dear Sir :
This is in reply to my neighbor 's letter published in the
Sunday Times December 31.
First of all, I do not have 25 cats, far from it. I did not ignore
her pleas to do something about them . I ran several ads, at different intervals, and gave well over half of them awa y. I was not
missionaries.
aware they had started up again!
This dog scattered my trash over a three yard area 2 or 3
COMPUTER SHOWS BIAS
OAKLAND, Calif . (UP!) times a week, and was over to my house like clockwork twice a
good deal as our car Teachers think Oakland school day at feeding time. lie ate the food and carried off the pans . I
insurance.- a Stale district's new computer needs had to retrieve these pans several times from their yard. I did not
Farm Homeow ners a little educating .
complain to her because she was very well aware of what the dog
policy. Call metoday! . They COJCIIJ?lai~edWednesday was doing, since they had thrown the pans in our yard them·
the machine overpaid one selves .
Caroll K. that
They kept a constant vigil of our home, so that it was
teacher $10,000 on her monthly
Snowden salary-il!ld made it up by necessary for us to keep our drapes closed and to purchase a
Park Central underpaying 500 others be- blind for our porch in order to have any privacy at all, this I
Hotel Bldg.
assume was for the purpose of counting our-pets.
tween $25 and $300 apiece.
Secon~ Ave.
Phone 446-4290
Dr. Lee Panttaja, an assistI know I am at fault! or not realizing my problem in time, but
Home446-4518
ant superintendent, said the I cannot mistreat animals, so I did not fee! I could just dump
Gallipolis
snafu was caused. · by a them . I may also add that I have enlisted outside help to find
changeover from an old com- homes for my cats.
Her problem was much simpler than mine. He could have
puler to a new model, which
STATE FARM
fi11 11111 Cnualt1 C1111pa.r
'"""" ~ the district leases for $163,000 a been tied up and kept fed . I aiso want to make it clear that I had
HGr11 Ollict : Blt~emi111011, lllilais
· year. He said it will b"' nothing to do with whatever happened to her dog. Improper
" 6471
feeding, I am sure, was part of the problem here .
corrected soon.
--":"'":"'~::"'~~::"'~~~~~~lllll~--"'11
I guess to my neighbor, invasion of privacy is permissible if
it suits your purpose.
· Mrs. .Charles Roberts, Neighborhood Road .

by REDMAN INDUSTRIES

•'

Rt.l, Long Bottom, Ohio

•'

Da11iel, Deborah a11d ]ames Colli11s

. +--

!

So that parents m,::y know .
•

..

Auto crashes
into road wall

j.

board of commissioners, Mr .
Clark.
The commissioners in other
business accepted the bid for a
motor grader for the Meigs
County Highway ·Dept. from
the Southeastern Equipment
Company, Cambridge, in the
amoWll of $18,812.
Transferred from the
general fUQd was $1,000 to soil_
conservation, $4,808 to public
assistance and $2,616 to the ·
crippled children's fund.
Rex Cheadle was paid $400 on
an animal claim for the loss of
19 sheep, and Garland Caldwell
was paid ""
"8.85 for the loss of'
four sheep, Attending were
Karr, Clark, Ours, and Mrs:
Chambers.

Dinner SpiCeS

day of labors
Middleport Mayor J~hn
Zerkle, Councilmen David
Ohlinger, Fred Hoffm an,
Richard Vaughan, Lawrence
Stewart, and William Walters,
and Solicitor Bernard Fultz
combined business.o with
pleasure Sunday when they
met at the home of Village
Clerk Gene Grate.
Purpose of the gathering was ·
to work on the 1973 ap·
proprlations resolution, The
work was interrupted for a
'dinner served by Grate . -.l

Weather
Snow accumulating one to
three inches in the south today
and tonight. Lows tonight 10 to ·
15 south. Cloudy Tuesday,
~ighs 20 to 25 in·the south.
!.

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